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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-04-24 - Orange Coast PilotBalboa 'Raider' Hearst Review .... . , Wins Top Trophy Denied; Prison I 31 Ensenada I 1J 7 ! I . t ~ I t ' ·DAILY Pl.LOT ; . * · * · * 1oc * * . * ·.: . -' .• MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 24, 1978 VOL 71, MO. 11t, J HCTIONS, • P'AOH 'I Apologiz~ Hanna Given 6 to 30 Months ""~ SENT TO PRISON Ex-OongreHman Hanna Hearst Review Nixed; Prison DUe for Patty? WASHINGTON <AP> - Former Orange County con· f ressman Richard T. Hanna. the irst congressional fi1ure charged in the Korean influence- buying scandal, ·today was sen· tenced to serve six monlbs in a federal prison. Hanna, 64, appeared stunned as Chief District Judge William Bryant tersely banded down the sentence after lengthy appeals for mercy from both the coo· gressman and his attorne.)'. In a quivering voice, Hanna had told Bryant: "I apologize to the court, I apologize to the~ pie who elected me to public of. flee . . . I hope in the years that I have left I can do something to atone for what I have done." Hanoa, who served in Congress from 1963 to 19'14 as a Democrat from California, en-tered a bargained guilty plea March 17 to one count or COD· spiracy to defraud the govern· ment, a charge that f>ears a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 rme. Hanna's plea agreement averted a trial on a 40-count in· dictment returned )>y a grand jury last October_ Government attorney Jeffrey White dropped the remaining charges 8/ter today's sentencing. 1 Today's sentence allows tfan· na to become eligible !or PiUOle after serving six months. W ASHlNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court ref~ to review Patricia Hearst's 1976 bank robbery conviction. Tbe young newspaper heiress, r~ ' two years on $1 million bond, 'rbe eovernment said in the bargaining plea ,"1th the former con1resaman that Hanna "re-celved in excess of szocr.ooo In cash and cheeks between u. abet the end 0( 1975'L tor Uling Che power of bla olllce to further the interests of Korean bual· nessmaaToapun Part. soon may have to go to priaon. f The justices rejected Mias Hearst's appeal with no explana· Uon. Only Justice William J . Bren· nan Jr. voted to review her cue, and he said he would have limit- ed the court's study to the ad· mlssibillt,y into trial el'Jdence of l recordin1s of Mlas Hearst's t Jailhouse conversatlona .. t Lawyers for Miss Heant have 25 days {n wblch to ask the blab court to recoa.stder. One of those lawyers, J. Albert' John.son of Bolton, said he wu con1ider1111 such a move. Bann a 's attorney, Cbarles McNeU., argued in a loaf and emotlobal preautat1o6 to Bryant that wblle b1a client "did commit a aerloua mistake of Judcment ln bll relatlomblp with Tonpun "Park, .. Hanna bu since tried to redeem himself by (See llAHNA, .. ,. A!) ' MINISl'ER F ANTS . KIDS 1V JOIN IN l However, the court alm01t never grants recom1deratlon. o-91 mo Pa (AP> "AJIO under C!ODaldetatiQD are a:. a. .. &."1 '(R • • - moUons to the dlatrlct court in ~~1~\:'t!'8!r:: ~~= San Francl.aco.," Johnson added. infants, the Rev. Paul Hanna, a He said be mllbl ask tbat L th th t I ld court to ''cevlle "Ud revoke" u eran eo oc ani. to a M1.1 "---•'•Hilt.enc• -allow· wonbip conference at utberao ~ nc.&-Tbeol~ Seminar)': inl her tlme already Mrved to .. If •1 one t.b.bla a kld UD· aat.1.tfy her lmpoMCi priloD C.rm. derstands, it's food." (8ee R&\aS'r, .... AJ) lit\ ---~~-------- Tension ounts • In Trash trike Oltlt,... ...... .., .......... Cl.EAN GETAWAY FOR ENSENADA RACING YACHTS OFF NEWPORT HARBOR ClaH D PHRF Veuela Appear In Neer-Perfect Allgnment for Start 'Raider' Wins Trophy Bal,boa Yacht Haa Beat Time to E1111enada BJ ALMON LOCKA8EY ...,, .............. ,..., ENSENADA -The 31st Newport Beach to Ensenada )'acbt race dr1tted lnto the re- cord books today as the last nine boats were sttµggling to make the nn1lh line a( a a.m. DesplJe the slowness o( the last doien boats, Uie ra~ was comparatively fast 'with the big majority of the 485 flni.sbers ar· rivini belore sundown Sunday. UnOftlclal handicap results in· dlcated tbllt Raider, an Ericaon-46 skinoereCl by Jav U.O. derman of the Balboa Yacbt Clubl wu tbe winner of the Pret dent of the United States trop)ly for' th~ beat conected time in the International Off: shore Rule (IOR> dlvlslon. ~lider was tbe 12th boat to ftlallb with an elapted Ume of 20.azu boors. Her ,corrected time WU 14.1175 hounJ, Tbe ~ ot 1he President ot Mex.lco trophy " the beat cor· rected time ha Perfonnanct Handic•R f\ade neet <PHRF) appeared to be apricclo, a 28- foot Claaa H sloop, skippered b)' Peter Nooteboom of tM Kini Harbor Yacht Club. Official reaulta for all claases were due to be announced at &he \ trophy presentation today at 3 p.m. But there was no doubt about the first yacht to flnish. Oouble Bullet, a brand new 60·foot catamaran, Clest1ned, built, owned and akJppered by Bob PlUR' "6DED w COD Sl1Tl'Cll "I was amued. the first caller bad my ral.na>at and I bad bi&." That's tbe success story of the Newport Beacb man who ran this Dally PUot ad: U you left the C.O.ta Mesa Chamber of Commerce banquet '9arly and picked up a coat w\thoul checklne It caretulb. \r>' tt on. Cbaa~ are the sleeves wUI rau midyti,q betwt!ieh your wrist .n\d y0ttr •lbow. JI )'OU'U caU XJIJMlUX I'd be ba~ \0 arran•• an ex · ch1111e .•. Need help ftndlnl something? People alf alon1 the Orance Cout rely on the cluslfied tee· Uon of tbt Dall¥ Pilot. Just call 8'2·5'78.. ua"iiel of the Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club, breezed across -the t finish line at 5:13 a.m. Sunday to record an elapsed time of 17 hours and 13 minutes for the 125-mile race. The time was about three hours shy of the elapsed time record of 14 hours and one minuJe, set by tbe catamaran Aikane in 1957, Second yacht to finish, about two hours later, was another catamaran, the 36-foot Eighth ()a y, skippered by Roger MacGregor of the Lido Isle Yacht Club. The first three monobulls crossed the finish line in an almost dead beat short.ly after 7 a.m. with Fred Preiss' M·foot sloop Christine of the PacUic Mariners Yacht Club, edaing Bill White and BUI Paaqulni's 62·foot Ragtime by about one boat length. Ragtime was over· lapped with Harry Molosbco's 69-foot Drifter from the Long Beach Yacht Club. Drifter was given credJt for the first monobull to finis h because she started in a dif. ferent class 10 minutes behind Christine and Ragtime. Moderate but steady breezes kept the fleet on the move Satur- day night and Sunday resultina (See YACJRS. P••• AU Drivers -To Vote Today 1 By JACK.IE RYMAN Of .. OeilY ...... Melt Tension mounted today as striking Orange County truck drivers planned a vote on a "'final" management offer and owners of one disposal firm were cleaning up in the wake of a $15,000 fire believed related to the strike. A spokesman for Anaheim Disposal said a firebomb thrown over the firm's back fence about 11 : 30 p.m. Sunday ignited scrap paper and caused about $15,000 damage to paper and rubbish bins. It was the latest in a series of strike-related incidents, includ· ing numerous fires in trash bins during the weekend and the burning of three idled refuse trucks -on Friday at Jaycox Dis· posal Company in Anaheim. Members of Teamsters Local 396, who went out on strike a week ago when their three-year contr act expired, have been meeting with management representatives and a federal mediator. The mediator, John Courtney, said employers "made con· siderable concessions" in a re- portedly final offer given verbal· ly to Teamsters on Saturday. <See TRASH, Page A2) Coast Weather Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with a chance or showers Tues· day. Cooler on Tuesday with highs in the upper 60s. Lows tonight 53 to 58. Chance of rain increasing to 30 percent Tuesday. INSIDE TOD~ Y I/ you'~ ~tttng married ond hove que1Uons about wedding e'tUqueUe, don't mill o ftve·part teries by EUza~th Post, which begin.a todau in Featuring, Page Cl. •••ex Al Y-Wlltcl .. .......... CH IMI... IP Mtnle-Q L.M....... MAM~ a ..._. UMH ... _....... as ~ ASMt.._ ., c--t Al lta .... l Mlwl A4M O...n. U.11 ........ IN OMlkt asi.c11,,..... as o.._.. ay...,,.._ .. 0..-....... .. '11Mlln ., ............ M~ AS ....,_, __ ....,..,. ..... ~ . 4 : 2 ~y PILOT S Mof?d!y. April 14, 1171 • TV Responsib~ty Trial Due NBC, Bay City Station Face Rape Damag~ Suit W ASHJNGTON (AP) The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way today for a trial seetµn1 $11 mlllloo tn damages from NBC and a San Francisco televlston station for a 9-year·old girl sex· ually assaulted four days after a network movie dramatically portrayed a similar crime Moro Kidnap Demand Made ROME <AP> -A new ultimatum purporting to come Crom the R ed Brigades today demanded the immediate release oC 13 jailed terrorists in ex- change for kidnapped form e r Premier Aldo Moro. .. Only an immediate and positive response given without equivocation and <.'Oncretely carried out will allow the release of Aldo Moro," said the typewrit· ten message, received by newspapers in Rome, Genoa and Milan. It threatened the ~ecu­~on of the 61.y .. r -old pres- 1den t of the Christian Democratic Party unless. the terrorists were freed. Frot1t Page> A I YACHTS ••• in Cast finishes for the leaders. Yachts finished in large groups Sunday morning with more than 100 crossing by noon. A stir of excitement rippled through the rleet and race head- quarters here about 6 a.m Sun- day when .John Olson skipper of the yacht Typhoon. reported a man overborard about 10 miles from the finish. Crewman Chuck Schultz was working on the foredeck in a .15-knot breeze when a lifeline fit. ting let go and he slipped over· board. Ile was recovered within a half hour with no injuries. There were 558 original en- tries ln the race and tbe usual 10 -percent, Sl boats failed lo start. Latest reports were that 15 to 20 boats reported themselves out of the race. Ensenada was relatively quiet S unday and Sunday night des pite t he large crowd of crewmen and race followe rs ar· riving in the city. Kissinger Gets Court Delay WASlUNGTON (AP) -Henry i\ Kissinger won th e U.S. Supreme Court's help today in blocking, at least temporarily. government employees from combin g through sec ret telephone notes he kept as secrelary of state. The court granted Kissinger's request that it hold in abeyance a federal judge's order allowing State Department employees to begin processing the notes to de· termine which ones may be made public. Kissinger will mount a formal challenge to the order in the U.S. C1 rc u1t Court of Appeals in Washington. The order today said the materials will remain sealed pending appeal before that court. Strike Collapses · LONDON <AP> -A two-week- old strike at Claridge's, one of London's most elegant hotels. collapsed today when the hotel's waiters left lhe picket line and returned to work. ORANGE COAST $ DAILY PILOT n-.Or.,. CO.\t 0.1ly PHO' ..,.rt-Wf'Mtft ''f'°"'" bfnf'Olhe~ ~~\, ''P¥bt~~1r-()J.,.. <..nt P\#t\l\t .... 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A"11t•f\t Ml"°".11\0 EOOOf'\ otflc•• C.O.l•Mo\<t llOW.\18'1YSl-U0""•11t<K~ 11 .. 0-to~,..., HUl"'flf'IQIOf' &ta.<ft t717f8f.ec:f'l&ou~v•td s.tdllltNCOYOl .. t U10tLah1llo..i at ~n O•tOO ''"""'' Ttlephon• (714)642-4321 CIHtKftd AdwtrtltlnO '42-M11 ~,.,,.,_ Y•lltt-(lfll<t p1.a10 ,,.,,.~c1o- 4tMIOO ,,...i,.....~O.•-C-yC-11'" 540-1220 ~"°''1'~ , .... °'= (~~~ .. ~~":'":..= "":r •• , ... -:a..~ .. ~" .,.,.," ..,_., ... ........ c ............. -···""'II'""" .. ·-~·-· ~ • ..., t1M• "''•r. o.tHI ol Oottt ~~ (etuo,,ue -'••Ut •t•Of" '' cvrttt UM ""'"'~'': 111 .... 11 \4 tO ,_,..,, ........ , .. t-D M-l~IY The justices refused lo hear an appeal by the network and sta· Uoo KRON-TV that contended such lawsuits should be barred by the Constitution's free-speech and free-press safef uards. A state court tria in San Fran· cisco with momentous potential impact for the future of U.S. television will be scheduled. At issue in the appeal turned down without commeni b)' \he court today was whether ijroad- c asters may be sued on charges that they were "negligent" or "rec kless" in portraying violence which might be imital· ed in real life. Only Justice William J . Bren· nan Jr. voted to review the case. On Sept. 10 , 1974. NBC televised the fictional drama "Born Innocent." The two·hour movie was broadcast in the San Francisco area by KRON -TV, a station owned by the Chrorucle Publishing Co. The movie dealt with the ure of an unwanted child, a teen-age girl. In one segment. the girl was assaulted by other female r e formatory inmates and "raped" with a blunt instru· ment. Four days later, a 9-year-old San Francisco girl was attacked by four older girls on a local beach and sexually abUJed with a bottle. NBC and KRON su~e­ quently were named as defen- da nts in a civil ~uit seeking $1 mill ion in compensatory damages and $10 million in punitive damages for lhe young girl. - A state trial judge dismissed the suit, ruling that lhe broad· casters could not be held responsible in the young girl's attack. A state appeals court, however. overturned the judge's ruling and ordered him to hold a jury trial on the charges. After the California Supreme Co urt refused to review the case. the network and KRON ap-pea led to the nation's highest court. The "Born Innocent" episode, however, already has made television history. Out of the storm of protest about the mov- ie's depiclton of violence and its airing at an early-evening hour when many young persons were sure to be in the viewlng au-dience. television's "famlly hour" came into being. fi'ront Page A I HEARST ••• Miss Hearst conceivably could be ordered to prison in the in· terim. Her immediate fate appears lo rest with U.S. District Judge Willi am H. Orrick Jr. in san Francisco. He could allow Miss Hear st to remain free until lawyers exhaus t all legal maneuvers. Those could include a request that Orrick reduce Miss Hearst's seven-year prison term lo a period of probation, as was done last year for state charges of assault and robbery against her. Under Supreme Court pro· cedure, Orrick officially will learn of the court's action when receiving notice of it by mall within a few days. There was no immediate com· ment on the Supreme Court's ac- tion by Orrick. federal pros· ecutorsorthe Hearst family. If imprisoned. Miss Hearst would have to serve 14 months before becoming eligible for parole. She served 14 months before, during and after her eighl·week trial. S h e was convicte d of participating ln the 1974 armed robbery of a Hibernia Bank branch in San Francisco two months after her kidnapping by a group calling itself the Sym· bionese Liberation Army. Miss Hearst , daughter o( newspaper publisher Randolph Hearst and his wife Catherine, was 19 when SLA members ab- ducted her from a Berkeley apartment Feb. 4, 1974. The kidnapping, reports or her alleged subsequent conversion to the SLA movement and months of police frustration in efforts lo capture Miss Hearst and her abductors was intema· tional news. Miss Hearst. 24, bas lived with her parents and under conatanl private guard since the federal conviction. Her father posted a $1-miltion bond supported by a $100,000 cash deposit to secure her freedom. The conviction was upheld last November by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled that her appeal presented "no novel issues." Miss Hearst '• lawyers then appealed to the naUon'a hl1h~t court, essenUally usine the same legal arguments. They contet'lded that the late U.S. Dlstrtct Judie OUv•r J. Carter. who prulded at Mias Hearst's trla11L committed numeroua erron i.nat denied bet a ralr trial. Bitler Memorialized Ma tt Koehl. commander of the World Union of National Socialists. gave the Nazi salute as about 20 members of his g roup attended a secret weekend ceremony of the National Socialist White People's Party to m ark the 89lh an- niversary of Adolf Hitler's birth . T~e cer emony was held in a hotel room m Arlington. Va Berkowitz Sane; Trial Set May 8 NEW YORK <AP> -A judge ruled today that David K . Berkowitz ls mentally compe· tent to stand trial for the murder of Stacy Moskowitz, the last of six homicide victims or the Son of Sam. The judge ordered the trial lo begin May 8. The ruling might not lead to a trial. however, since Berkowitz haiysaid he wants to plead guil· ty. His lawyers want lo plead him innocent by reason of in- sanity, but since he has been ruled competent, Berkowitz is free to make his choice. provid· ing the judge finds the plea legally acceptable. ·'The court finds that the peo- ple have established by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the defendant does not, as a result of mental disease or de- fect , lack capacity to understand lhe proceedings against him or to assis t in his defense." Brooklyn Supreme Court J ustice Joseph R. Corso said in a six· page memorandum of law. Corso. who this month held four days of closed hearings on the competency or the 24:year- old postal clerk from Yonkers, set May 8 for either the start of pre· limlnary trial bearings or jury Girl's Death Clues Hunted MORAGA <AP> -A heavily wooded area near here has been heavily combed for clues in con- nection with the apparent strangulation murder of an 11- year-old girl. The Contra Costa County Sheriff's offlce said Cynthia Waxman was found fully clothed, with her hands tied. There was no indication of sex· ual assault, Investigators said. The body was found Saturday afternoon by the girl's mother. Bonnie Waxman. who went to look for her after she failed to return home with a friend as ex- pected after they attended a nearby athletic event. selection should the defense waive the hearings. "Deft:ndant is able to discuss the cas~ wilh his counsel and has never refused to do so. No claim is made that he has not done so.'· Corso wrote. "Indecision or vacillation as to the best legal course for him to pursue does not render him in- co m petent to s t a nd trial . Rather, it is indicative of un· derslanding of his predicament. "Nor does failure to adopt any proposed course or action ad· vocated by counsel indicate un- fitness. The law does not require him to adopt the advice of bis counsel or others," s aid the judge. The 349-page transcript of lhe competency hearing remained sealed. Corso said he would re-lease the document after a jury was sequestered. Corso said the defendant fulfilled both legal criteria of competence -to understand lhe charges against him and assist in his own defense. "The testimony indicates that defendant has given full con- sideration. pro and con, as to the legal alternatives available to him and understands them." Corso said. "It further indicates that he is appropriately address- ing himself to the Immediate problem confronting him." Berkowitz is accused of killing six persons and wounding seven others during a 12-month shoot-ing spree in Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens. The proceedings here addressed only the Brooklyn case. Anti-Nazis March COLOGNE. West Germany <AP> -Almost 15,000 protesters rrom West Germany. France and Poland. including gray. haired survivors of Hitler's death camps, staged an anti-Nazi march Saturday through the streets of Cologne. It was one of the biggest anti-Nazi demonstra- tions in West Germany since the end or World War II. Berets at the Read11 f'.-...PapAI TRASH ••• The offer was due to be sent to them in writing today, with a vote by drivers possible tonight. The strike bas left more than 1 m i Ilion county residents without rubbis h s ervice .. Homeowners takin~ their own trash to county. dumps have re· portedly had to wait as long as an hour because or the lines. Orange Coast communities af. fected are Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley,' Huntington Beach. Laguna Beach. Lake Forest . northern El Toro and Laguna Hills Leisure World. and in · dustrial parts of Newport Beach. Dispute between drivers and drivers helpers and manage- ment reportedly focused on salary and benefits. Drivers. who now receive $4.SO an hour. are asking for a $4 raise over a three-year period. wjth manage- ment previously offering $1.10. Drivers are also asking for five days a year in sick leave. They currently receive none. Details of the new offer were not released pending a vote by Teamsters. Drown Victim Identified as Niguel Woman A woman who drowned in Dana Point Harbor late Satur- day night was identified by a coroner's spokesman today as Betty Jean Hornbarger. 54, of 36641 Flying Jib Drive. Laguna Niguel. The drowning v1ct1m 's rully clothed body was pulled from the water near a yacht basin shortly after 11 p.m. Her time of death was set at approximat.ely 9:30 p.m. The coroner's spokesman said a n investigation in t o the woman's drowning will con· tinue, including toxicological tests. A report of the incident in· dicates the victim's auto was parked nearby, there was no in· dicalion of violence about the victim 's body and it ls not known if she Cell or jumped into the harbor. Members of a British reghpent adjust their berets before marching with mem· bers of the !OJ.at 4lrborne Division et Fort Campbc!ll . Ky. A unit rrom the King's Own Royal Border Regiment will train there for a month I ' FremP~AJ HANNA ... cooperaung fully with govem- meqt invesU~ators. ••What conceivable and earthly •ood would be ac· compU&bed by the lncarceraUon or this man?" McNell.s asiled. The lawyer eaid that while Hanna did receive money rrom Park. ''that ta not to say that he corrupted hb poUtlcal office." Noting that Hanna had been through extensive interrogations with government attorneys and congressional panels and a lie-. detector test, McNella declared tba t Hanna "did everything humanly possible to correct the grievous error which he knows and adm1ts he committed. "He leads from the heart rather than the head," said the attorney. "It is inconceivable that tle would do harm to bis country." McNelis Insisted that while Hanna had taken substantial amounts oC cash rrom Park. "he is not a bag man" and not one peon)! was 'delivered to any other politicians through him. ··He does not need the iron gates of incarceration. he needs a helplng hand." McNelis con· eluded. At that point, Bryant invited Hanna to speak ror himself. The former congressman stood silently as if to gather his composure. and when he finally spoke his voice shook and he seemed to be fighting tears. Hanna told lhe court that ''[ hope that what you have lo do will help atone for what I've done." Bryant. in serious, clipped tones. then ol"dered Hanna to surrender to the attorney general's office ror a deciision on which pnson he will go to. Hanna will f'emain free until that assignment, then will have 30 days to report to the insthu· · lion under Bryant's order. McNells asked Bryant before the sen1ence was handed down, "What reasonable man would suggest that 64-year-old Dick Ha nna. a first-term violator, really deserves incarceration?" The attorney noted that Han- na's wife of 33 years and several adopted children depend on him for support. McNelis acknowledged that Hanna had ·•an affinity for and deep interest in Korean affairs." and had worked "openly. active-ly and aggressively for closer ties between this country a nd that emerging democracy. For that he apologizes to.no man." he said. "But he does admit that the activities be had with Tongsun Park were a clear conflict or in· te rest and a clear violation of law." but since deciding not to run for re-election in 1974, Han- na has "attempted to extricate himself" ever since. As ournned by the prosecution. Hanna helped Park become the seller's agent for California rice exports to South Korea. thereby enabling Park to earn substan- tial commissions. Hanna also bolstered Park's standing with the Korean gov- ernment by introducing him to m embers of Congress and "otherwise aggrandizing Park's status in .this country," includ- i ng the implementation of "many or his pro-Korean posi· lions" related to congressional matters, the government at· torney said. Toro Marine Facing Charge In Kidnapping A sergeant stationed at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station remained In custody today, f&C· ing charges in what police allege was an attempted kidnapping of a Hoag Memorial Hospital nurse. Newport Beach detective Ken Smith said he arrested Thomas Jacksorf Patton. 28. or 8712"'.i Midway Place. Santa .\na, Fri- day at the Santa Ana gas station where Patton worked in his off· duty hours. Smith sald he traced Patton through a license plate number and car description given police by witnesses to the Thursday af· ternoon incident. Th e 25-ye ar-old hos pital employee told police she was ac- costed by a big. knife-wield.Ing man in the hospital's parking structure as she left work . She said the man ordered her to let him lnto her car. but as she drove out of the stru<.'ture. she jumped screaming from the vehicle. Her screams attracted three other hospital employees who pursued the neeing suapect back into the parking building only to lose him when he drove away. Smith said that at the time of his arrest, Patton was wearing a shirt that matched the shirt described by the victim and he found a pocket knife on Patton that also matched the knife deacrfbed by the victim. P.atton ls b•lng held In Newport Beach city Jail In lieu of $25.000 ball. Smith said he plans to seek chargflt of lcldnap- plnc and assault with a deadly weapon In the Harbor Judicial District Court. 17 • orange Ceast EDIT I ON Today's Closlag N. Y . Stoel(IJ 1 C TENCENTS~ Given Trashg Tips o.lly "'-' Staff ....... OPTIMISTIC COSTA MESA RESIDENT LEFT TRASH OUT WITH THESE RESULTS Garbage Truck Otivers Scheduled to Vote Today on 'Final' Management Offer Trash, Tension Mount Striking Driven May Vote Tonight on Pact Tens ion mounted today as striking Orange County truck drivers planned a vote on a .. final" jneb•1•m•t ca-aoAd owners of one disposal fi rm -were cleaning up in the wake of a $15,000 fire believed relaled to the strike. A spokesman for Anaheim Disposal said a firebomb thrown over the firm's back fence about 11 ·30 p.m. Sunday ignited scrap paper and caused about $15,000 damage to paper and rubbish bins. Jl was the latest in a series of strike·related incidents, includ· ing numerous fires In tras h bins during the weekend and the burning or three idled refuse trucks on Friday at Jaycox Dis· posal Company in Anaheim. Stonn System Carries Rain To North State By The Associated Prets Rain is likely for much of Northern Califomi' by Tuesday. the NaUonal Weather Service says. A storm system which de veloped north of Hawaii over the weekend already had spread considerable cloudiness over the state early today and brought a rew light showers to the Salinas area. The air associated with the storm Is quite warm and moist, meaning rain. rather than snow, wm fall at high levels in the Sierra Nevada and cause rapid' melting of the abundant snowpack Coas t We a t h e r Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with a chance ol showers Tues· day. Cooler on Tuetday with hlgbs in the upper 60s. Lows tonight 53 to 58. Chance ol rain increasing to 30 percent Tuesday. INSIDE TODAY IJ JIOU'tw ~ mcrried oA4 ~ q11ertioiu obout tHddbag -'"quttc. don't mUI 0 lf#e·f)Gf't ttrUI bJI E~ PoW, UlMch begflu todq m f'eotvrf~, Page CJ. ..... l't't..,._.. M ........... CH ~ :.===.. g ........ .. ............ E ~~E;:~G =.,. c;,......... .. ............ .,,........ 11 ==.-, .c ==.... J Members or Teamsters Local 396, who went out on strike a week ago when their three·,Year oo•tracl exJlire4., have been meeting with management representatives and a federal mediator. The mediator, John Courtney, said employers "made con· stderable concessions" in a re· portedly final offer given verbal· ly to Teamst~rs on Saturday. The offer was due to be sent to them in writing today, with a vote by drivers possible tonight. The strike has left more than a million count y residents without rubbis h service Homeowners taking their own trash to county dumps have re- portedly had to wail as long as an hour because of the lines Orange Coast communities ar. fected are Costa Mesa, Fountajn Valley, Huntington Beach. a..e.un Beath, Lake Forest, nortbel]l El Toro and Laguna Hills Leisure World, and in· duatrlal parts of Newport Beach. _J)ispute I between drivers and drivers helpers and manage- ment reportedly focused on salary and benefits . Drivers . who now receive $4.SO an hour. are asking for a $4 raise over a three.year period, with manage· ment previously offering $1.10. Drivers are al&o asking for five days a year m sick leave. They currenUy receive none. Details of the new offer were not released pending a vote by Teamsters Not Sequestered Dr. W addill's Fate Handed to Jurors By TOM BARLEY OI ... Dally flli.t M.1tt A jury that must now rule on the guilt or innocence of Dr. William Baxter Waddill on baby killing charges was sent to lunch today after listening to J udge James K. Turner's final inslruc· lions. Judge Turner ruled that his Orange County Superior Court jury would enter the jury room at l :45 p.m. to begin delibera· lions. Crash Injures Mesa Cyclist A 17·year ·old Costa Mesa motorcyclist was injured early today when he lost control or his small macblne and tumbled onto Harbor Boulevard near Wilson Street.. Police said. Daniel James Tryon sutrered numerous lacerations and a possible fractured collarbone ln the 7:55 a.m . accident. He was taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital where he was treated and released to bis home at 232 Rose Lane, Costa Mesa. Police said the youth was ap. parenUy tn a bony to make an 8 a.m. bowling class at Kana Lanes when he lost control. PCP Plant Busted CARSON (AP) -Three peo. pie were arrested after neighborhood complaints sent Los Angeles County sberut'a deputies to lnvesU1ate a suspect. ed "•ftlel dust" plam ln Caf'ICJh. Of ftcen seized about $200,000 worih ot ebemleals used in the manuf actureol PCP. - J The panel or nine men and three women will be allowed to go home each evening but has been warned to ignore radio and tel evision broadcasts and newspaper accounts of the trial. The jury was asked today dur· ing the reading of instructions to pick one of five possible verdicts carefully spelled out by Judge Turner: not guilty, murder in the first or second degree and attempted murder in the first or second degree. Court action was delayed for more than an hour today when it was learned that Waddill and his wile were involved in a traffic accident on the way to the coun· ty courthouse in Santa Ana. Waddill said the lone woman occupant of the other car was in· jured lo the Huntington Beach collision and he stayed at the scene to render first aid until the paramedics arrived and took over. Waddill said the woman was then taken lo a local hospital. He and his wile were shaken but un· hurt. "What a dlY for this lo hap. pen," Waddlll commented. "l tell you, it never rains but what It pours." Waddlll, 42, or Huntlnglon Ha_tbour, is accused of stran· gllng a newborn baby ln the nursery at Westminster Com- munity Hospital shortly after he learned that the Infant bad sur· vlved Ilia attempt to abort the 18-year-old mother. It was testified for the pros. ecuUon that Wadd.Ul predJcted lh4t filing of lawaulta seeking mUJlon.t OI doUars In damages a11illat him ll the baby wa.'I al. lowed to live because of massive brain damqe tnructed by the a.line be UNI for all 1uch abor· Uou. By JACKIE BYMAN Of• Oelt, PIWSt.ff Orange County city and coun· ty offJclaJs said today they don't beUeve the week-old trash truck drivers' strike has resulted in any health hazards. The strike has left more than one million county residents without rubbish collec:Uon. Orange Coast communities af. fected are Costa Mesa, Fountain Va lley, Huntingto n Beach, Laguna Beact\, Lake Forest. northern El Toro, Laguna Hills Leisure World and some in- dustrial customers in Newport Beach. Richard Robison, assistant county director of environmen· lal health, urged that residents take steps lo cut the danger oC future health problems. "Above all, they should use their garbage disposal to its maximum," Robison said. He noted that management employees of the firms against which Teamsters Local 396 is striking have been averting the worst danger by collecting trash trom medical centers and food establishments. "As it goes along tbough, it may cause a greater problem," tMe :S'f KIKE, Page .U> Ex-soWn A.poWgizes Hanna Sentenced: 6 to 30 Months WASHINGTON (AP > - Former Orange County con· gressman Richard T. Hanna. the first congressional figure charged in the Korean influence· buying scandal, today was sen· tenced to serve six months in a federal prison. Hanna, 64, appeared stunned as Chief District Judge William Bryant tersely handed down the sentence after lengthy appeals for mercy from both the con· gressman and his attorney. In a quivering voire, Hanna had told Bryant: "I apologize to the court, I apologize to the peo- ple who elected me to public of· fice . . . I hope in the years that l have left I can do something to atone for what I have done." Hanna . who served in Congress from 1963 to 1974 as a Democrat from California, en-tered a bargained guilty plea March 17 ·t.o one count of con· splracy to defraud the govern· ment. a charge that bears a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Hanna later said he will begin serving his term May 8 al the minimum·security prison at Maxwell Air Force Base near Montgomery, Ala. Hanna's plea agreement averted a trial on a 40·count in· dictment returned by a grand jury last October. Government attorney Jeffrey White dropped the r emaining charges after today's sentencing. Today's sentence allows Han· na to become eligible ror parole after serving six months. The government said in the bargaining plea with the Conner congressman that Hanna ''re· ceived in excess of $200.000 in cash and checks between 1969 and the end or 1975" for using, the power of his office to further the interests of Korean busi· nessman Tongsun Park. Hanna's attorney. Charles McNelis. a rgued in a long and emotional presentation to Bryant that while his client "did commit a serious mistake or judgment in his relationship with Tongsun Park,·• Hanna has since tried to redeem himself by cooperating Cully with govern· ment invesU~ators. "What conceivable and earthly good would be ac· complished by the incarceration of this man?" McNelis asked. The lawyer said that while Hanna did receive monev from Park, "that is not to say that he corrupted his political office." Noting that Hanna had been through extensive interrogations with government attorrieys and congressional panels and a lie· detector test, McNeUs declared that Hanna "did everything humanly possible to correct the grievous error which he knows and admits he committed. PIL<Tr AIDED OOA.T SWl1'CH 'I was amazed. the first caJJer bad my raincoat and I bad his." That's the-success story of the Newport Beach man who ran tbls Daily Pilot ad: H you left the Coata Mesa Chamber ol Commerce banquet early and picked up a coat wtthout checkine ll carefully. try ll on. Chances a~ the ~leeves will tall midway between your wrist and your elbow. lt )OU'lt call ux xxxx I'll be happy to sr r ange an e x · chanae. • Need help finding somethina? People all alone tbe Oranie Coast rely oo the tlusifJed sec· tlon ot the Dally Pilot. Jual call 6'2-$678. .. ,. ........ SENT TO PRISON Ex-COngreasman Hanna "He leads Crom the heart rather than the head." s~id the attorney. "It is inconceivable that he would do harm to his CQuntry." Mc Neli s insisted that while Hanna had taken substantial amounts of cash from Park. ''he is not a bag man" and not one penny was delivered to any other politicians through him. "He does not need the iron gates or incarct?ratton, he needs a helping hand,'' McNelis con· eluded. Al that point, Bryant invited Hanna to speak for himself. The former congressman stood silently as if lo gather his composure, and when he finally spoke his voice shook and he seemed to be fi ghting tears. Hanna told the court that "I hope that what you have to do will help at.one for what I've done.'' Bryant, in serious. clipped tones, then ordered Hanna to s urrender to the attorney l{eneral 's office for a declision on which prison he will go to. Hanna will remain free until that ass~gnment. then will have 30 days to report to the inslitu· tion under Bryant's order. McNelis asked Bryant before the sentence was handed down, "What reasonable man would suggest that 64·year-old Dick Hanna, a first·term violator, really deserves incarceration?" The attorney noted that Han- na's wife or 33 years and severaJ adopted children depend on him for support. McNelis acknowledged that Ranna had "an affinity for and deep interest in Korean affairs," and had worked "openly, active-ly and aggressively for closer ties between this country and that emerging democracy. For that he apologizes to no man." be said. "But be doe. admlt that the activities he had with Tongsun Park were a clear conflict of in· terest and a clear violation of law," but since deciding not to run for re-election in 1974, Han· na has "attempted to extricate himself" ever s ince. As outlined by the prosecution. Hanna helped Park become the seller's agent for California rice exports lo South Korea, thereby enabling Park to earn substan· tial commissions. Hanna also bolstered Park's standing with the Korean gov- ernment by introducing him to members of Congress a nd "otherwise aggrandizing Park's status in this country," includ· ing the implem e ntation of "many of his pro-Korean posi- tions" related to l'Ongressional matters. the government at- torney said. Court Denies Plea; Patty Faces Prison WASHINGTON <APl -The U.S. Supreme Court refused to review Patricia Hearst 's 1976 bank robbery convictJon. The young newspaper heiress, free two years on $1 million bond, soon may have to go to prison. The justices r ejected Miss Hearst's appeal with no explana· lion. Only Justice William J . Bren· nan Jr. voted to review her case, and he said he would have limit· ed the court's study to the ad- missibility into trial evidence or recordings of Miss Hearst 's jaiJbouse conversalions . Lawyers for Miss Hearst have 25 days in which to ask the high court to reconsider. One of those la wyers, J . Albert Johnson of Boston. said he was considering s uc h a move . Howe ver, Ute court almost never granu reconsideration. ' Also under consideration are motions to the district court in San Francisco." Johnson added. He sald he mtghl ask that court to .. revise and revoke" Miss Hearst's sentence -aUow· Ing her time already served to satisfy her Imposed prison term. Miss Hearst conceivably could be ordered to prison in the in· terim. Her immediate fat1.: appears to reet with U.S. Dir:~rict Judge Wllllam H. Orrick Jr. In Sa:n Francisco. He could aJJow Miss Hearst to remain rree until lawyers exhaust all legal maneuvers. • Those could include a request that Orri ck reduce Mis s Hearst 's seven-year prison term to a period or probation. as was done last year for state charges or assault and robbery against h Pr. Under Supreme Court pro· cedure. Orrick officially will learn or the court's action when receiving notice of it by mail within a few days. There was no immediate com- ment on the Supreme Court's ac· lion by Orrick, federal pros- ecutorsortheHearslfamlly. tr imprisoned, Miss Hearst would have to serve 14 months before becoming eligible for parole. Sb4? served 14 months before, during and after her eight.week trial. She was convicted of participating in the 1974 armed robbery of a Hibernia Bank branch In San Francisco -two months after her kidnapping by a group calling itself the Sym. bionese Uberatlon Army. Miss Hears t, daugh ter of newspaper publis her Randolph Hearst and his wife Catherine, was 19 when SLA members ab- ducted her from a Berkeley apartment Feb. 4. 1974. The kidnapping, reports of her alle&ed subsequent conversion to the SLA moveme nt and months of police frustration in efforts to capture Miss Hearst and her abductors was lntema· Uonal news. Miss Hearst, 24, has lived with her parents and under constant (See HBAaBT, P11e A.I) TONlGRI' Suspect Declared 'Sane' Balboa's Raider Winner? COSTA MESA Pl.ANNING COMMJ$,g0N -Regular meet· Ing, City Hall, 6 :30 p.m. COASTLINE LECTURE - • · U nderalandln1 Crtmlnal Jus tice System," Unllarlan Unlveraallst Church. 7 p.a> TUESDAY, APRIL ZS NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL BOA RD -Regular meeting. Costa Mesa city council cham· bers. 7:30 p.m. "BEHIMD THE HEADUNES" -Dr. Gtles T. Brown lecturer, OCC Forum, 7 '30 p.m. COASTLINE LECTURE - "Women in American Film," Costa Mesa Women ·s Club, 7 p.m. f'ro• Pa~ A I STRIKE ..• Robison said. Other measures residents can take, Robison said, are to cut the bottoms out of cardboard cartons and boxes and aluminum cans and flatten them to lake up less space. Also. he suggested s aving newspaper& to give to recycling centers, such as those at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa and Marina Hi gh School in Hunt· ington Beach. In addition, Robison said. animal wastes should be buried deep underground. Lawn trim· mings should be reserved in plastic bags. he said. Ofricen of the Orange County Solid Waste Management Depart· ment suggested persons hauling their own trash do so during morning hours when dumps are less crowded. As an emergency measure, the transfer station at 18131 Gothard Street in Huntington Beach cnear Ellis Avenue) is now open from 7 a.m to 4:30 p m. Monday through Saturday. with the least-used dumping time between 8 a.m. and noon, officials said. Also available to the public from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. is the Coyote Canyon landfill site located on Bonita Canyon Road behind \JC Irvine. Various city officials are also laking steps and are urgently re· questing residents to keep rub- • bish off the streets and curbs. In L~~a Beach, plastic bags are available at city hall and citizens may dump their trash at dumpsters located at the Agate Street Fire Station and across from the Fes tival of Arts grounds in lhe city employees parking lot. Allan Roeder. acting manager or lhe Costa Mesa Sanitary Dis- trict, said officials there hope lo have heavy trash bags available to the public by midweek. He said the city is operating a referral service to put people un· :ible to haul their own trash in touch with volunteers. He said the city won't refer people to unyone who charges to collect trash. John Whipple, administrative aide in the Huntington Beach Department of Public Works, said that city is working on plans to set up locations wher,e citizens could bring trash for Cl· lY trucks to haul. Fountain Valley officials said they can't make any promises but are trying to get a ri!bate for trash collection fees during the strike period. Jn Newport Beach , a spokesman said there haven't been any major problems re- ported because only a few In- dustrial customers are affected. ~ 19, Drowns MUIR B~ACH (AP) -A 19· year-old unidentified San Fran· c1sco man apparently drowned Sunday when he fell orr a rock while fishing ln this Marin Coun· ty beach area, the Coast Guard said. OflANGI COAST c DAILY PILOT =-~~:.~;·r,:::.::i:~= OoM*"""""'"'~ ----· ... -·--·• IN-l'rl•y ... C.0.1• ---.............. _ ...... ,-'-'" v .... .,.. ,,,,,,.. s..ctd~ v .... , •fllid :-:: =~~f:.;::;,r=:·;:. ~~':"'~~'1:.:i:!.::~ DI wnt a .. ·-"-......... -,.....- , .. -11. °""' llo<e ,.,, .. _, •"" 0e-o1 ,,_._ -·"-lOUo< T ..... t AM~ ..._.,,.u ... ~: .. !::' ......... :=-i:.. .... NEW YORK (AP> -A judge ruled today that David R Berkowitz. is mentally compe· tent to stand trial for the murder of Stacy Hoskowltl. the last ot six homicide victims or lbe Son or Sam. The judge ordered the trial to begln May 8. The ruling might not. lead to a trial. however, since Berkowitz has said be wants to plead guil· ty. His lawyers want to plead hlm innocent. by reason of in- sanity. but. since he has been ruled competent, Berkowitz is rree to make his choice. provld· ing the judge finds the plea legally acceptable. "The court finds that the peo- ple have established by a fair preponderance or the evidence that the defendant does not, as a result or mental disease or de· feet, lack capacity to understand the proceedings against him or to assist in hls defense." Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Joseph R. Corso said in a six· page memorandum of law. Corso. who this month held four days of closed hearings on the competency or the 24.-year· old postal clerk from Yonkers. set May 8 for either the start of pre· liminary trial hearings or jury selection should the defense waive the hearings. "Defendant is able to discuss the case with his counsel and has never refused to do so. No claim is made that he has ool done so." Corso wrote. "Indecision or vacillation as to the best legal course for him to pursue does not render him in· competent to stand trial. Rather, it is indicative of un· derstanding or his predicament. "Nor does rauure to adopt. any proposed course of action ad· vocated by counsel Indicate un- fitness. The law does not require him to adopt the advice of his counsel or others." said tbe judge. The 349-page transcript of the competency hearing remained sealed. Corso said he would re· lease the document arter a jury was sequestered Corso said the defendant fulfilled both legal criteria or competence -to understand the ·charges against him and assist in his own defense. "The testimony indicates that defendant has given full con- sideration, pro and con. as to the legal alternatives available to him and understands them," Corso said. "ll further indicates that he is appropriately address- ing himself to the immediate problem confronting him." Berkowitz ls accused or killing six persons and wounding seven others during a 12-month sh'oot· ing spree in Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens. The proceedings h e re addressed only the Brooklyn case. Moro Kidnap Demand Made ROME <AP) -A new ultimatum purporting to come from the Red Brigades today demanded the immediate release or 13 jailed terrorists in ex- change for kidnapped former Premier Aldo Moro. "Only an immediate and positive response given without equivocation and concretely carried out will allow the release of Aldo Moro." said the typewrit- ten message, received by newspapers in Rome, Genoa and Milan. It threatened the execu· lion or the 61·year-old pres· ident or the Christiani Democratic Party unless; the terrorists were freed. Sitter Held On Sex Rap LONG BEACH (AP> -A San- ta Ana man who advertised low baby -sitting rates In a throwaway newspaper has been arrested in connection with the molesting or a S·year-old boy . oollce sa1d. ' Ronald R . Rudd, 26, was booked Thursday ror investiga- tion of a crime against a child and related sex offenses. authorities said Friday. After placing an ad reading "I baby sit. Cheap prices. Ron," Rudd was hired six times al SO cents an hour to baby sit the boy, sald police Sgt. Phll King. The youngster later told his grandfather he had been molesl· ed, the officer said. Strike Collap8e8 By ALMON LOCKAB£Y o.llY ......... "-I Writ.It ENSENADA -The 31st Newrort Beach to Ensenada yach' r~ce drifted Into the re- cord books today as the last nine boats were struggling to make the finish line at 8 a.m. Despite tbe slowness or the last dozen boats. the race was comparat.lvely fast with the big majority of the 485 (inlabers ar· riving before sundown Sunday. Trash Truc!k Crunch Unofficial handicap results in· dlcated that Raider. an Erlcson..S sklooered bv Jav Lin-derman of the Balboa Yacht Club, was the winner of the President ot the United States tropb~ for the best corre<:ted time ln the International Off. shore Rule HOR > division. Raider was lbe 12th boat to finish with an elapsed lime or 20.2215 hours. Her corrected time was 14.8TI5 hours. Costa Mesa policeman Tom Twellman takes notes following 11 a. m. collision near 17th Street and Tustin Avenue that resulted in minor injuries to two women inside crushed car. Despite the caved-in auto Leanda Beck, 23, of Newport Beach a nd ' her 31-year·old passenger. Kim Com ella of Costa Mesa. only suffered cuts from flying glass. They were being treat- ed at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Police believe the trash truck driver. Genovevo Gradilla, 28, backed up into oncoming traffic. The firm owning the truck is not involved in current trash strike. The winner of the President or Mexico trophy for the best cor- rected time in the Performanee Handicap Racing Fleet < PKR'f l appea~ to be Caprtcclo. a 28-foot Class H sloop. skippered by Peter Nooleboom of the King Harbor \'acht Cl ub. OCC Offers Ted Patrick Beats Series on Imprisonment Rap Costa Mesa Charges of alleged false Im-entered the same plea on that Orrlclal results for all classes were due to be announced at the trophy presentation today at 3 p.m. But there ..vas no doubt about the first yacht to finish. Double Bullet. a brand new 60-foot catamaran, designed. built. owned and skippered by Bob Hanel of the Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. breezed across the finish line at5:13 a.m. Sunday to record an elapsed time or 17 hours and 13 minutes for the l25·mi1e race. The lime was about thr~ hours shy of the elaPsed time record of 14 hours and one minute. set by the catamaran Aikane in 1957 In honor or Costa Mesa's 25th ann I versary. Orange Coast College is offering a four-part. lecture series in May titled "Costa Mesa: From Indians to Freeways." The series, co-sponsored by the Costa Mesa Silver An· nlversary Committee and the Costa Mesa Historical Society. will meet on successive Friday evenings beginning May s. The lectures are scheduled for 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in OCC's Fine Arts Hall 116. Admission is free and the public is invited. Hank Panian, OCC professor of history and director of the his- torical society. is coordinator and host ledurer of the series. The opening lecture will ex· amine the first "Costa Mesans," a stone age people. Indian artifacts have been found throughout the city and Panian will explain why the Indians were attracted to the mesa. · Other lectures will focus on the Diego Sepulveda Adobe (the Estancia>. the "boom town .. of Fairview that sprang up on lhe mesa in the 19th Century and lhe "rush into suburbia since World War 11." Guest lecturers will include rormer Costa Mesa Mayors Alvin Pinkley and Robert Wilson For more information on the lec ture series, phone 556-5880. f'roM Page A l HEARST ••• private guard since the federal conviction. Her father posted a $1 million bond supported by a $100.000 cash deposit to secure her freedom. The conviction was upheld last November by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled that her appeal presented ·•no novel issues." Miss HeaMit 's lawyers then appealed to the nation's highest court. essentially using the same legal arguments. They contended that the late U.S. District Judge Oliver J . Carter. who presided at Miss Hears t 's trial. committed numerous errors that denied her a fair trial. Among other things, the lawyers objected to testimony admitted into evidence by Carter of Miss Hearst's ac- tivities after the April 15, 1974, bank robbery. Those activities allegedly in· eluded a bizarre May 1974 shoot- ing inck:tent at a Los Angeles sporting goods store. The appeals~ourt ruled that such evidence was relevant lo the bank ro.bbery charges because Miss Hearst's defense was that sbe had participated in the robbery "under duress." Evidence about late r escapades was necessary, pros· ecutors contended, to prove willful criminal intent -that Miss Hearst was not "forced" into her robber's role. M Isa Hearst testified in her behalt that SLA members threatened to kill her if she did not participate. During cross· examination by prosecutors, she invoked the Fifth Amendment prlvtlege against self · lncrlminatlon 42 times when asked about her alleged SLA ties arter the robbery. prisonment have been dropped in charge. She was fined $100 and Beverly Hills Municipal Court placedonayear'sprobation. against controversial depro-Patrick had also been charged grammer Ted Patrick. who with Illegally holding Pam Sban- served time in Orange County Jail non Wells, 17, another member of onsimilarcharges. • the Santa Barbara sect, but the Patrick bas also run afoul of the judge dismissed that case last law in Colorado for his methods week on a legal point when the used to persuade youthful mem· prosecution ended its arguments. bers of religious cults to return home. Judge Andrew J . Weisz has agreed to drop charges of con- spiracy and false imprisonment after a jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict. Jurors were deadlocked 10 to2 in favor offind· ing Patrick innocent. a court spokesman said. Patrick, 46, was accused of holding captive Dennis Hauswirth, 26, a member of Santa Barbara's Brotherhood of the Sun for several days in 1976 and 1977 in West Hollywood. Two other defendents in the case. Cliff Daniels and Rodney Casey. have not yet been located and face prosecution on con· spiracy and raise imprisonment charges. The young man's parents, Fred and Katie Hauswirth. were fined $125 and placed on a year's proba- tion after pleadmg "no contest" to a false imprisonment charge. Shern Dietrich. 27, of Lynwood. 22 Teen,.agers Arrested for 'Loud Party' Twenty-two teen-agers, most of them students at Corona del Mar High School, were arrested Fri- day night by Newport .Beach police who were called to break up a loud party on Balboa Island. The 10 boys and 12 girls were attending a party in a vacant house at which police alleged Jiq . uor and maruuana were readi· ly available. They were arrested on charges or lack or parental control. They were called to the Collins Avenue home just before mid· night by neighbors who said the live band at the party could be heard six blocks away. The party's host told ofrlcers he arranged the bash as a going away party for himself since his family had recently vacated the home. He also told officers that his family was unaware of the party he'd arranged. Police said 20 of the arrested teen-agers are students at Corona del Mar High School, one attends Newport Harbor High School and one attends a private school. All were released to their parents. Mesan Shot By Wadding From Weapon A Costa Mesa man suffered a painful arm bruise Sunday when hit by the wadding from a shotgun that accidentally dis- charged, police reported today. The victim was ldenUlied as Paul Joseph Fratiello, 21, of 216 E . 20t h Sl. Police said that his brother, Dennis, of the same address, Jokingly threatened his brother with what he thought was an un· loaded shotgun. It went off. Cyclist Hurt In Costa Mesa Traffic Crash A 22·ye ar -old Chino motorcyclist fell victim to con- gested traffic on Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa Sun- day when he was knocked rrom his motorcycle by a car at lhe Harbor Boulevard intersection, police reported. The accident that sent David Paul Way to Hoag Memorial Hospital with bruises and abrasions occurred at 12 : 15 p.m .. a time of peak weekend traffic on Route 55. The motorcyclist was struck by a car driven by 73-year-old George William Lee. of 502 36lh St., Newport Beach. He told traf- fic investigators that he didn't see the motorcyclist who was struck as Lee switched lanes. Police will continue investiga. lion of the accident. The victim was reported in stable condition today at Hoag Hospital. Beachgoers Jam Traffic In Newport Nearly 150.000 people took ad- vantage or the s unshine this weekend and came to Newport Beach's beaches, resulting in a massive traffic jam on Sunday afternoon. Police said traffic was heavy on the Newport ·Balboa Peninsula but they said it wasn't so bad that they needed to in· stitute any traffic control measures lo deal with it. Lifeguards said 55.000 people showed up Saturday despite the 61 -degree beach temperatures and chilly waters which reg· istered56degrees. Sunday, the crowd swelled to 90,000. Beach temperatures rose slightly to 63 degrees and the water also warmed slightly to 59 degrees. · Lifeguards said the cool water kept. most people out of the moderate surf and they re- corded only 13 rescues. Second yacht to finish. about two hours later. was another catamaran. the 36·foot Eighth Oay . s kippered by Roger MacGregor of the Lido Isle Ya<'hl Club. The first three monohu1ts c rossed the finish line in an a lmost dead heat shortly after 7 a.m. with Fred Preiss' 84 -foot sloop Christine of the Pacific Mariners Yacht Club, edging Bill White and Bill Pasquini ·s 62-root Ragtime by about one boat length. Ragtime was over-lapped with Harry Moloshco'i:; 69-root Drifter from the Long • Beach Yacht Club. Drifter was given credit for the first monohull to finish because she started in a dif· ferent class 10 minutes behind Christine and Ragtime. Moderate but steady breezes kept the fleet on the move Satur· day night and Sunday resulting 1n fast fm1shes for the leaders. Yachts fini shed in large groups Sunday morning with more than 100 crossing by noon. A stir or excitement rippled through the (\eel and race head- quarters here about 6 a.m. Sun- day when J ohn Olson skipper of the y achl Typhoon. reported a man overborard about to miles from the fimsh Cre wman Chuck Schultz was working on the foredeck in a 15-knot breeze when a lifeline fit · ting let go and he slipped over- board. He was recovered within a half hour with no inJunes. Mesa Housing Panel Open Several vacancies are now open on the Costa Mesa citiV:n's Hous ing and Community Development Comm•ttee. ac· cording to coordinator Anthony Cannarialo. The committee is responsible for the deve lopment and supervision of the city's Housing and Community Development Program wh ich is federally funded each year. Residents interested in apply· Ing should contact Cannariato at room SU at City Hall or by phon ing 556-5327. Applications must be submitted by Thursday, Ma) 4. Donny to Wed June Nuptiah Planned HONOLULU (APl -An early June wedding ten- tatively is planned for singing star Donny Osmond. 20 and Debra Glenn, 19 . a Brigham Young University freshman from Prd\lo. lJtah. The engagement was an- nounced Sunday in Honolulu, where Osmond and his sist~r. Morie. were filming the motion picture. "Aloha Donny and Marle." Osmond said he s till con- tinues to appre.clate hl~ f~ms and ·,ri'··· .. '~ -~ \ ~"' ~' ......... , LONDON (AP) -A two•week· old strike at Clarldae'1, one or London's most eteaant hotels, collaps.ed today when the hotel's waiters lett the picket line and ret.umed t.o work. The Los Angeles shooting Incl· dent led to Miss Hearst's receiv- in1 five years of probation after ah~ pleaded no contest to assault and robbery oharaes . Prosccuton had 11reed In re- tum to drop other ohar1es. In· eluding kldnapplna. In coMec· tlon wltb the lncldent omcen saJd the gun dldn 'l contain pellot.s bul lhe wadding, used to separate powder from shot, hil Paul In the rtsht arm. He wu treate d at Hoag Memorial Hospital In Newpor1 Beach and later released. wants lbem to support him now OOlllNY more than ever be Core. "They (the fansl have alway~ wanted me happy. and t truly am that." said O. mond "t have bee~ blessed wtth the greatest fans anyone could ask ror Mond!y. Aptil a4. 1973 Mil Y ltll.OT 43 Pat .Mson: Siie Never 'Canceled Out' • U~T AT HER HU88AND'8 SIDE DURING THE FAMOUS 'CHECKERS' SPl!ECH IN THE FIFTIES Pat Nixon Molded HerHff Into the Perfect Image of a Polltlcal Wife PAT NIXON (CENTER) IN NORWALK HIGH SCHOOL DAYS With Friend• Myrtle Raine (left), Louin Gwinn Pat Car Thief Girlhood 'Prank' RecalJed One day in early fall, when Pat Ryan was 16 years old, she and Myrlie Raine. who lived next door, stole a car. ll wasn't the first time.• "Hooking" an older brother's automobile was a frequent pastime in the teen-age set in Artesia. USUALLY THE INCIDENTS ENDED mundanely enough: the boys got angry, walloped their sisters ii they could catch them, and forgot abc;>ul it until the next time. On this occasion, though, Pat and her fnends almost got themselves into serious trouble. Myrtle, her sister Louise, a girl named Teresa Galvers, and Pat wanted to go to a dance at Excelsior Union High School, six miles away, too far for walldng and certainly not Cor returning late at night. The only logical w_, to go, it seemed to Pat, was in her brother Bill's Model-T Ford, which stood at the side of the house, alone, wiused at the moment, and practically waiting to be swiped. So she got in and drove off with Myrtle and Lowse, picked up Teresa, and headed up South Street toward the school. Ironically, it was Bill wbo had taught his sister to drive. IN FRONT OF THE SCHOOL another car was parked in the middle of the roadway, its Ughts out. Pat slammed into it and the Model-T filpped on itsl>ack, Its wheels spinning. Myrtle's chin and lip were cut and she suffered a deep knee wound. She sun bea.rs some of the scars. Teresa, Myrtle remembers, "got a hole on top of her head." but Pat and Louise escaped with minor scrapes. Pat Ryan exhlbited even then the coolness and control that, years lat~r. would become a hallmark of her character. Calmly, she crawled from the wredage, abed no tean, showed no hysteria. 'fhe girls. giggling by now, were rmbed to a hospital by a p&Mlng car. Then one by one, they were dropped home. Pat cau1ht mUd hell from Bill and her parents, and that wu that. * * * * * * Nixon Book Biased, Bis Editor Claims OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - Former President Nixon's memoirs contain u.w inform•· lion about the Nlxon years and "are very defUUtely blased crom Se.ion Be@ine UNITED NATIONS CAP) The U.N. Gen~ral Assembly begins a special session toda)' ~tompted by the Africans to ad- v once tbc independence of South-Welt Afr1ca. or Namlbla. The sesalon ls dolaytn1 Security Cc>uncll action oa a Western pro- potal aimed ... t makln1 th ter rttory ladependtnt or South Africa by the end of Lhe year. ' ' his viewpolnt," says editor David Frost. Frost -no rel•tlon to the television persoJ}ality who ln· tervlewed Nixon last year - says tbe memoirs contain some surprising inlormaUon about the people Nixon worked with and are "very candid , personal, stra ightJorward and di reel." "There ls no effort to mislead the reader, altbou1h this Is hi s <Nixon's) side of It," Frost said durlni • vtsll here. Frost spent eight months at the N\>Con compound In San Clemente helptna edit Nhton '• CortbCOll\ina boo. "RN -The Mea:uotnoflUchardNlxon.'' Van Kills Girl in Huntington A teen-ager from Artesia died Sunday, four hours after she was struck by a van on an access road at Bolsa Chica State Beach ln Huntington Beach and burled 87 feet by the impact, in· vestlgators said. California Highway Patrol of- ficers probing the fatal accident that took the life of Kathleen Ferreira, 16, said she was bit about 10 p.m. Saturday night. Sbe succumbed about 2 a.m. Sunday at Pacifica Hospital with head and Internal Injuries, but coroner's deputies said today an autopsy report must be complet- ed before a precise cause of death ls known. Michael A. Smith, 18. or Long Beach, was identified as the driver or the van which struck Miss Ferreira on the beach road just inside the entrance to the park. Investigators for the CHP said today she was in a marked crosswalk at the time and all California Vehicle Code regula· Uons apply to the beach proper- ty as weU as outside roads. Miller was not cited, but the fatal accident is still under in· vestlgation, CHP spokesmen said. They said Miller told officers he never saw the girl, who was walking toward the surf, before his truck struck her in an acci- dent witnessed by one other person from a distance. Funeral services were pend- ing today at Tulate·Mlller Mortuary in Tulare, Calif., which the victim's parents selected since they came from that area. Teen Stopped After Chase On Motorbike An El Toro eighth grader led Laguna Beach police on a short chase Saturday, running several stop signs and endangering downtown strollers before he was stopped. Officer Mark Miller said he at- tempted t.o stop the 14-year-old youth on Laguna Canyon Road when be noticed the mirror was missing on the boy's motorcycle. But when he attempted to pull the youth over, the boy allegedly sped orr down the canyon road toward the beach, running several st.op signs on Beach and CUff Drive before pulling across a service station lot. Police said he scattered several pedestrians during the chase, and finally s ped northbound on Coast Highway. · Pollce said the teen-ager pulled to the slde or the road near Myrtle Street, but sped off again when the officer ap- proached him. He was finally stopped at about 2:30 p.m . ln the 700 block of North Coast Highway and taken to the police station. The youngster, who was not identified, was cited for flight from a police officer. reckless driving, beln1 an unltcensed driver and operating an un registered vehicle. French Club Meeu The Alliance Francaise will meet at 8 p.m. Friday ln the auditorium of the Harbor Vlew School. tOO Goldenrod Street. Corona del Mar to honor winners ot the annual French·speaktng conteal & .:Career Filled With Sacrifice EDITOR'S NOTE : Thtt following t~t tr odapCtd {'tom tM book, "The l.onelJI Lad.JI oJ SO" Clemenlt : Tiu Slo'll o/ Pol Nizon," fc J 1918 by Luter David. Reprfnted by permtaaon of Thomol Y. Crowell Co. TM fuJl-Uflgth book Will be pubU•hed bu Crowell fn late aum- mn. By LESTER DAVID Thelma Catherine Patricia Nixon. the country's first lady from 1969 to 1974, became a virtual recluse after Richard· Nixon resigned as the 37lh presi- dent of the United States. She disappeared from public view, secluded behind the high walls and impenetrable trees and shrubbery of San Clemente. Helen McCain Smith, her press seerelary to the t.ime of the resignation, said after a con- versation with Pat: ''She doesn't leave often. She's just not well. Her blood pressure has not stabilized. She gets very tired because the pressure nuctuates. and she cannot stand much ex· citement." JACK BRENNAN, Nixons's aide-de-camp, who sees the family daily. told the San Clemente Republican Club not long ago: "She's not recovering as rapidly as we wouJd like." And Roy Day, Nixon's first campaign manager in the r ace which lawtched his career in p o I it i cs -a g a i n st J e r r y Voorhis, in l946 -told me sad- ly: "She's a recluse. H's a damned shame. She's a great lady." Day, now 77, still Ii ves in the district and has kept in close touch over the years with the family. There was always something magnificently tough and durable about Pat Nixon. "I do or J die," she once s&ld "I never cancel out." . AT THE TIME of her greatest trials -the duth of her parents when she was still a teen.ager. her struggles to earn a living as a you ng girl during th e Depression, the blows that had come as the wife of a hard- charging politician who could arouse a large segment of the population to fury -she was poised, self-possessed and, above all, rock-hard. One was convinced that P.at Nixon could never give way under any con- ceivable pressure, for she had taken almost the worst there was and didn't cancel out. In her late 20s she married Richard Nixon. Once she did so and became aware of his single- tracked passion for power and office, she consciously and de- liberately programmed herself to help him achieve his ambi- tions, submerging her own self. her desires. It was an awesome decision that was to alter her life almost completely. JULIE NIXON Eisenhower said to me: "Mother made many sacrifices," but the full extent of what Pat Nixon did can only be ~n by looking at the tragic tum her life took in its seventh decade. Pat Nixon believed in the sim· ple axiom that a husband leads and a wife follows . This was con- ventional behavior in the pre- feminist years when she grew up and got married, bred into her not only by the culture of the limes but also the example of her parents. Success In politics was Nixon's goal and he was her husband. and so she made herself into the very model of a political wife. spectacularly dutiful, standing behind him, shoring him up shaking the hands he missed in the long reception lines, defend- ing him. SHE BECAME KNOWN pe- joratively as Plastic Pat, Art· tisepllc Pat. Pat the Robot. Pat the Plu·Perfect, because of the perm anent smile that s tretched her Ups but did not light up her eyes, the hair that was always in place, lbe shlning race that never showed a bead of perspiration or a smudge of soot. the creaseless and spotless dresses and suits, her absolute tirelessness. She would remain for hours at state dinners, the smile constant, never excuslng herself to go to the ladles' room, which meant that nobody else could go, either. For most of her years in politics. she said as little as she could in public because she was terrified or making mistakes. While great events were happen· ing in the nation and the world, she would make only s mall talk with people of all levels. taking care to express no views or sub· stance. lest they turn a single voter against Richard Nixon. On· ly in the last years did she dare speak out in public on some is· sues. But privately, she was not plastic at all. There were deep emotional c urrents in her. At home or with friends she t~t­ ed. she was a wholly dilrerent Pat Nixon than appeared in public. Privately, too, the tight rein she imposed upon herself would sometimes slip and then even outsiders could see ber fears, tears, anger and -though 1l was hard to believe -the true li ghtness of her spirit. JULIE PUT IT best: "Nobody really understands mother. 1 feel that she kind or lost faith that journalists would interpret things as they really are. and Just didn't want to reveal herself at all." When the dam was bursting in 1974, she had been the coolest and most sensible Nixon in the family quarters. the one with the greatest self-discipline. The president bad his black moods. Juli e was orten overly emo- tional. Tricia was withdrawn. David Eisenhower and Edward Cox , the sons.in-law. were dJs- traugbt at times. But Pat was granitic. Davis said it best in the midst of the turmoil: "Mrs. Nixon 1s a lways there with a shoulder to lean on." BUT THE PRESIDENT'S downfall cracked the granite and her illness -she had never been ill -widened the breach. Following her husband's .re- signation. it was difficult ror her to talk about the presidency without bursting into tears. She will not talk about Watergate and its aftermath. Even the family does not discuss it now, because they all know how she has been affected. "She was devastated. and still is ." says Earl Mazo. the journalist who traveled with Nixon on four continents, assist- ed him with bis book . "Six Crises," and wrote the first Nix· on biography in 1960. M_AZO AND HIS wife Rita ha~ been family friends for years. ··1 would imagine." Mazo told me at his home in the Chevy Chase section or s uburban Was hington, ''tha t s he must have been burl even worae than be. "What makes you feel that way?" I asked. "She had the stroke. didn't she?" he said. Virelnia Counts. a classmate of Pat's at USC . is one of lh~ few old friends who has visited her at San Clemente. SAYS MRS. COUNTS: "She Is always glad to see me. We laugh and walk around the estate and talk small talk about old times ... But never about the events that brought Nixon down. Nor does Mrs. NbtoB ever mention the individuals Involved In Watergate. "I am certain the hurt stiU runs deep." Mrs. Counts says. "It will take a long. long while to get over that kind of pain " In Jame 1975, on the 3Sth an· niversary or their marriage. Pat Nixon emerged for a rare dnve with her husband around Dana Point. He bad proposed to her there, on the beach. looking out at the ocean. They drove around Golden Lantern street. marvel· ing at the changes that had taken place, the new homes and shopping centers built in what they remembered as an un· inhabited area. BEFORE HER STROKE they would sometimes go to one or tus favorite restaurants. El Adobe in San Juan Capistrano. eight miles to the north. She had even once gone into town to a local tiardware store to buy things she needed for the house. · Following her stroke. her out- side visits have been so rare that the uniformed guards stationed at the gates night and day can hardly recall them. One says: "ln 14 months, I've seen her come out twice." Another s aw her leave only once In the same period. Once. in the late spring of 1977 . she was driven out in a black limousine, on her way to visit Julie and David at Capistrano Beach. A guard smiled at her and she s miled back. Then she lifted her left arm and waved to him. IT WAS AN impressive act of bravery. Pat Nixon knows that the world knows her left side had been partly paraleyed. She was demonstrating. even to a lone elderly guard, that she was undefeated. Jn June urrr. she showed ·even greater courage. Julie 11-ad eooe to the Beverly Wilshire to pro- mote a book she had written a bout famous people she had known, and nad Invited her mother to lunch. Pat called in a hairdresser. dressed carefully in a beige pants suit and was driven to Los Angeles, leaving behind the cane she was then still using. She spoke briefly to the manager who greeted her and took the.elevator t.o Julie's suite. At the entrance to the suite she e ncountered U Pl reporter Roberta G. Wax, who com. plime nted her on her hairdo. Mrs. Nixon replied: "Thank you very much." and walked by into Julie's room . "SHE LOOKED POSITIVELY beautiful." Roberta Wax told me afterward. "And she walked straight into the s uite with a goo d stride and no lif P whatever." It was a magnificent gesture ''Even if t were dying," Pal Nix- on had once said. "I wouldn't let anyone know." fN EXT: PolitU:s and Pat J our ~r-round b 1ezczr ... our hz.et sel ]inQ blezczr 1n a hard finisn ~ ani worst.0i wool blend; lonq ~ring and good f'ooking. tailor<Z.dfbr us by CORBIN evai1ab1e in navy ¢khaki. - A4 rwa.v 9'ot Mondlly, Apnl a.. 1171 1· Jus t ·· -:~~ ~easting ~ ... , ... ~~ Tom~~'\'~ Marphine Getting the Picture UGllTS, CAMERA, AcrlON: We have juat bad a great assemblage of newspaper people here ln our coastal ,re2ion. They iathered at South Coast Plaza Hotel ln Coata ~esa under th~ auspices of Sigma J)elta Chi, the professional Journalism society. All kinds of journalists were tbere -columnists, editorial writers, news writers and news photographers. All loo often at these sessions. 'bowever. the photographers get scant notice. They are overwhelmed by the "word people" who can bl~ther oo at great length about the latest crisis faced by freedom of the press, or lack of same. THROUGH ALL TRIS, i had the u good fortune to be elsewhere. My wife and I were honored to attend the Greater Ir-vine Lions Club awards banquet across town at the Airporter Inn. The Lions, it developed, also bad a newspaper person in their midst whom they honored as Journalist of the Year. He is Richard Koehler of this sterling Journal. a man with whom J have had the honor of working over these past two decades on two newspapers. Koehler is a complete genteleman and, in my admittedly prejudiced view, one of the finest photographers who ever picked up a camera. He has been honored by his colleagues with prizes and awards too numerous to mention. Thus you might figure this is a column to honor Dick Koehler. It is not. It is to laud the Greater Irvine Lions Club for their good judgment. When it comes time to honor a news person, civic groups usually select some column.isl who has cranked out a fluff piece on the mayor or lauded the club president in gushy words. But the Irvine Lions had better sense. They honored a man who used pictures to tell the story of a growing com· mupily and they said Thank You to him. THE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHER'S life is fraupt with frustrations. Teying to ex>ver breaking news events, he is . jostled by crowds, squirted by fire hoses, blocked from eptry at disaster scenes by officious police cadets and shouted at a lot. When be gets the perfect picture lined up, some teen· age punk jumps in front of the camera and makes an ob· scene gesture. Editors yell at photographers. 4rhey can never produce a picture fast enough. When the photographer supplies the editor with a choice of four pictures, the editor always . selects the worst one. He crops it wrong. He gives the story writer a byline in huge type. The photographer gets a Uttle liny credit line under his prize work and they spell his name wrong. Then when the picture finally gets in print, it turns muddy due to ••technical difficulties." AND YOU WONDER WHY news photographers always seem to have stomach problems and prematurely graying hair. Thus it was a reaJ pleasure to witness a fine news photographer getting his well-deserved credits in our coastal region. I jW?t hope we can spell his name correcUy. 2CrewBeld Soviets Free Most -From Crippled Jet SEOUL, South Korea CAP> -Most of the pusengers and crew members of a Korean Air Lines jet shot don over the Soviet ArQtic completed their trip to Japan and Korea today as the United States pressed the RUS8ians for information about the pilol and navigator they detained. The downed airliner's co-pilot passengen chose to remain in said the crew received no warn-Europe, and a KAL flane ing from the Soviet MIG in· brought the rest -most o them terc:eptor that flfed into It early Japanese or Korean -via Thursd~y morning, .killing two Anchorage to jubiJant and passengers, wounding 10 and tearful welcomes in Tokyo and putting a grapefruit-size bole in Seoul today. the plane's fuselage. But Presi· Also aboard were the bodies of dent Park Chung-bee thanked the two dead passengers one a the Soviet government for re· Korean and the other a leasing the passengers and 11 Japanese. Among those waiting crew members and asked it to al the Tokyo airport was Rltsuko free the other two crewmen as a Sugano, the 55-year-old mother humanitariangesture. or the dead Japanese, who said A PAN AMERICAN plane look the 95 surviving passengers a nd 11 of the 13 crew members from Murmansk to Helsinki. Finland, on Sunday. Three of the No~nu.clear Red Satellite Fal,1,s, Bums COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (A p ) -A non-nuclear Soviet satelllte re-entered the earth's atmosphere but apparently burned up before impact, a spokesman for the North American Air Defense Com· mand said. CapL Tom Koch, information officer at NORAD, said radar In· dJcated the Cosmos 8C9 satellite re-entered the earth's at· mospbere about 5 p.m. PST Sun- day. Tbe re-entry apparenlly oc· curred somewhere in the ocean north of Australia, Koch said, but a more accurate location wasn't immediately calculated. ''Chances are very great" that the craft burned up upon re· entry, Koch said. The satellite •as launched in Au1ust 1976 and it& orbit recent· ly deteriorated, officials said. Interest wu created In the re- entry beeause ·of the reeent So- v iet nuclear-powered satellite which crashed ln northern Canada. to reporters: "How could they shoot our in· nocent and unguarded son? I cannot sleep when I think about his last moment ln the plane." PREMIER CHOl Kyu-hah led the welcomers at the Seoul air-port. Capt. Kim Cbang-kyu and navigator Lee Kun-shik were prevented from leaving Murmansk despite efforts by U.S . and Japanese represen- tatives to get them released. Diplomats in Moscow said the U.S. Embassy asked the Soviet Foreign Ministry for inform&· lion about them today, and the State Department made the same request of the Soviet em· bassy in Washington. The United States acted on behaJI of the South Korean gov- ernment because South Korea does not have diplomatic: rela- tions with the Soviet Union. TBE R~IANSALSOb&doo to the airliner's fligbt recorder, and the $15 million Boeln1 701 was still on the remote frozen lake in northwest Russia where it crash-landed. KAL President Cbo Choong-boon said the airline would not try to get the plane back. Co-pUot Cha Soon-do's report that the MtG opened fire without warning contradicted t.he official Soviet report that the Soviet pilot fired Obly after the Korean pllot ian<>n!d repeated orders to follow the MIG to a landing field ' _~".____-=-- ---.,, 9 Kille d In USAC Air Cr ash ARLINGTON. Ind. <AP> -A twin-engine plane carrytng seven staff members of the Unit- ed States Auto Club and two other people crashed and burned in a muddy field, killing all aboard, authorities said. The racing officials were re· turning home to lndJanapolia, 25 miles northwest of here, Sunday night following a race in New Jersey. USAC officials said. Also on board were the pilot and a member o( the USAC medical staff. USAC IDENTIFIED the vie· tims as Frank DelRoy, longtime chairman of the USAC technical committee; Ray Marquette, USAC vice president ln charge of public alfairs; Shim Malone, head of USAC's midget car division and chief starter at many races throughout the country; Stan Worley, USAC reg- islrar; Don Peabody, head of the USAC sprint car-division; Judy Phillips, artist and typist • who helped direct the publica- tion of USAC's newsletter; Russ Teegarden, assistant USAC technical chairman; Dr. Bruce White, a member of USAC's medical stalf; and Don Mullen· dore, the pilot. The aircraft went down in a 30-acre cornfield after passing near the farmhouse of Gene Gardner, about one-half mile east of the crash site. "I KNEW THE plane was in trouble," said Gardner. "The engines were wide open like it was in a power dive. It was real· ly screaming. There was a large thud and then a boom. When we looked out, there was a fireball." Gardner said he telephoned the Rush County sheriff's office, then he and bis 19-year-old son, J .B .• rushed to the scene, where the plane's im'?.ilCt, left a crater five feet deep and at least 10 feet in diameter . ''I've never seen a mess as bad." Gardner said. "Everything is just in pieces. When we saw there was no chance of anyone surviving, we got out or there ... 2Climbers <£kb rate ABC Coup ZION NATIONAL PARK, Utah <AP) -Their hands bloody. their bodies exhaust.ed, mountain climbers George Willig and Steve Matous celebrated their conquest of Angels Landing with meals to order. Safely down from the almost vertical climb up the 1,500-foot peak in southern Utah, Willig asked for two cheeseburgers and iced tea. Matous dined on chicken and a glass of JD.ilk. Then they showered away two days of~ sandstone grime. "MAN, I FEEL great, absolutely gl1!at. It was fun and exciting, but it's sure great to be back down," said Willig, 28, who survived a 30-foot fall from a ledge only aUMates before reaching the top. It took Willig and Matous 23 hours to inch up the steep north face 0£ Angels Landing, giving a weekend thrill to millions of Americans watching on television and from the moun- tain's root. It was not the first time a Willig climb was witnessed by a crowd. Last May 26. be scam-pered up New York's 110-story World Trade Center and gaJned instant fame. WILUG FELL WHEN the rock ledge be was standing on gave way at about 1,350 feet up. He fell straight down, turned head over beefs, and was caught by an anchored rope beld by Matous. rt appeared Willig struck his head as he was jerked against the cliff face by the sudden stop. "Just knocked the wind out of me," be sald a second or two later. "I'm OK." He resumed climb- ing within minutes. About two hours earlier. WUUg had slipped but caught himself during a free climb. ''I almost bought it," he said. 11BOlJGllT THE ranch, eh?" repUed Matous. "Man, l almost died," Willig said. Willig and long-time friend Matous. 23, a professional guide living in Boulder, Colo., were paid by ABC-TV, which sponsored the climb for its "Wide World of Sports." Portions or the climb were telecast Uve -including WlWg's dramatic fall-on Saturday and Sunday. The network also ex· tended its Sunday show to televise tbe two climbers reaching the top. I .,.,Sirocco's strappy sandal,- . :·· another charmer from our · / pleasure-to-choose from selection. Light on your feet, styled to make your legs look absolutely wonderful. So graceful and a perfect ·footnote for the new . se~son in white and bone. $48 .-......., may company NATION I WORLD ; ; DAil y PlLOT Ali r : J\eter Will Geer flrelaoase Tlaelt• -COSTA'...S• IOTAIY CLUa I 1 I I J I J t I ' ' l I I I , , t I 'Grandpa Walton' DeatJ. LOSA.NGELES (AP)-WlllOeer. whodiedthls weekend at 76, wu known to mlWona u the wbJ~. ba.1nd paOiareJa el t.elevialoo'a ''The Walt.om." But be wu a1IO a~ for eaOHI who wu blacldiated durinc the McCarthy era. Tbe veteran 1&a.1e, movie and televisJon actor died Satu.nt.y evelilnc ot r.splratory arrest at Midway Hospital. H1a family stood by ~Ospital bed and recited Robert Frost poems and "'tbil Land Is Your Land," a folk mualc cluaic written by bis friend and fellow labor aeUviat Woody Guthrie. en:• A 117$ Emmy winner as best supporting actol' for bla portrayal of Grandpa Walton, had been bospitaU1ed secretly since March 25 for a respiratory aliment, saidJanetAhtonofCBS. Ai tbe bedside when Geer died were his former Wife·. actress Herta·Ware, hli daughters Ellen Geer and Kate Linville, and Ralelgb Geer, who &lnce his childhood bad been so close t.o the late act.or that be adopted bis name. Ellen confirmed bis death, but said, "Hedidn 't like publicity and woutdn•t want talk about bla body." A MEMORIAL SERVICE at a date lo be an- nounced wl1J be held at the Tbeatricum Botanlcum. the Greek-style theater be founded for young actors in Topanga Canyon, a rustic area about 25 miles, northwest of Los Angeles, said Ms. Alston. He bad recebUy completed bis sixth .-ear on CBS wltb "Tbe Waltons." the story of a Dep""lon era Virginia family bued oo author Earl Hamner'• own Uf e. Tbe laat show filmed was about tbe ~um of Grandma Walt.on, bis televlslon wife played by Ellen Corby. MISS CORBY. who suffered a debilltatln1· stroke last year, said she was "very saddened" by Geer's death. Producer Andl White credited Geer with Mias Corby's return t.o 'Tbe Walt.oos." Geer visited her oft.en durthC her lhnes&, encouraging her to return to the sbow. He urged that she be writ.ten back into the series in her role as Grandma Walton. even though she remained an invalid. GEER, WHOM WHITE called "the great crusader... had long been a sueporter of liberal causes, and during the Depression traveled with folksinger Guthrie and actor Burl Ives, often performing at union organl%ing benefits. Geer was black.llsted for 12 years ln Hollywood after taking the Fifth Amendment before the House Un-American Activities Committtee in 1951. Geer told the committee, which bad asked if be bad ever been a member of the Communist Party, "The word 'communist' is an emotional word like the word 'witch'inSalem " 7 Tornadoes Sighted SUCCUMBS AT 78 Actor WUI Geer Law Told In Abuse Of Child Teen Nabbed In Burglary CHINO <AP>-A Cbln o teen-ager was booked for investigation or breaJtlng and entering local firehouses after luring firemen away by calling ln false alarms. Officers said shortly after one fire station was burglarized earty Sunday. a dispatcher tbou1ht he recognized the voice of a caller reporting another alleged fire. The dispatcher alerted firemen who left one man on guard at the station. A Fire Department spokesman s aid Rudolph Vicario. 18, was arrested within minutes by officers who said lhey found a television set. a stereo and speakers, all beJonetng to the firehouse. in his car 2 !II.we Betel ia !11 ... eae~ SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A San Francisco policeman was in Yerington. Nev .. today to ar- ..en The Coatll Meta Roto1ry Club 1i. happy to !>-: .. membEr of lhfo K0tary tama ly wllb c l11b.1a. thro14Mb0Ul the world Besides the cbarat.able 1 coo l ribullor.a an d assistance lO loc:a.I needs there 1s an e"en more 1mpo rl .. n l service offered. Loe .. a buai n r:u men meetlne once ~ week bave the opportunity of o p e n I y d{s c u s s I n g business problems a:. th e y r e l ate l o lhc community. The Rotary slogan "ta 1l ralr to all concerned?" 1s carried forth by its members and renewed on a weekly basis. Costat M esu businessmen interested ln attendmg • meetJng i.ho old phon .. .membentlip chairman. Ernmeu O'Donnell phone no. SSS-2.lllrl. or KJchard Broots at t7MS20 range for the return of two more youths arrested in the Golden Dragon Restaurant massacre of five persons and the wound-·• • • • i ¥ • ¥ i ¥ ¥ i' ing Of 11 last fall. ( J It Lt. Dan Murphy of ST A.TE • San Francisco's Gang • Task Force and Melvin • Yu and Peter Cheung, • both 18 of San Francisco. were arrested in Lyon • County, Nev .. at 4 a .m. Sunday by a sheriff's depu-! SACRAMENTO <AP> ty alerted by all-points bulletins. Several Injured aa TwUtsr Hit$ N. Miami -State schools Superin-"The investigaUon ls continuing.·· Murphy • tendent Wllson Riles re-told a news conference at the San Francisco Hall ! • .. minded public school of Justice. ·•we expect more arrests.·• He did not • personnel today that expand. 'l't!mtwrflt•rn 141-\..-l'c-. 4 flluqU41f-1• .0 Atra11ta .. S1 BaltifftC!f'• u " Boise S7 .. eo.ton u ., tlnw1mrlll• " .. 6uffafo 5' 3l Ollc-•• 41 .3' Cl"'IN\ell SS ,, .:M o ......... a )S ... s .OS o.t.•fl. Wart!\ IO S9 O...wer .. :M Ottrolt SI • .a. ... , .. a H JO "°'*"'" 13 n Hou'lten " " IC.anw& OIY 10 50 Las V•9M 13 SS Ultteltock 1S S1 LosArioela 11 St Ml...,I 71 " .11 MllwaukM 4.J n .Sol MinMaP011 .. sc. Pau1 50 44 JI -ville 1J 4j .. -°''-., ... lffw York •1 .. Ollf-.01'!\a OIV 11 50 OmM• ., u .01 ~lanoo 81 .. ""'11-•phl• tl "6 Plloe11I• " .Sii PlltsburQI\ SI .. .10 DellJ ,,... o•_., ......... ~ ~ay~F'IOaY If you dO nor f\4•to "'°"'-by SlO D"I QM belOrfl 1 .,,. --~-be-ea S11ur$y -8'tNMIY If -CID l'OI :;-,~ c::: ~ :.:' ..u C: -a ... ,. .. ,,.,._ ~ ..... Cou"'V ,,.,_ '°'4>11 Ponl-.Mt. SS ,, Portland, Or• s• ff St. Louis 73 ... St.P .• fampe 13 10 S.11 l eb Oty '2 41 S.I\ 01990 n S1 Saft Franets<o ., Sol 5e•tu• ~ .. ¥,Ste.Mari. " 1t UfM ,. .. We ... lnQICWI .. 4' CALIFORNIA . 16-rslow ar ~~ 81QllHr \• 21 8fyltle .. 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El-Mt"e, NQM wtll be i11 IM uo- per 60S •lonO the cont and fnl-ll'lli.ys, 111 IM llllPtr 40s and IOw so. 111 the~ Md,,_ .. to Tt In tM lllltl9t' CltHrls Md 111 ,,.. IOw to. lfth-dMHts.. A"41WH* MW a """'1 reckslkW '""' down ... llut -of tM -· bowMI t.fte$ ofµ 0~ 9ollMll'Md lrl Los AllQltlft, but road ~ 901 lo _,, ""'""'_., '° cM¥ -•v ,,.. °""''lat• SuN!ay. • CllaM• .. ~--...... ...-a1ur .. Tllttelly, wtlll 1!19N 111 Ille upoer '°' and lows lft tlW mid 50s. Olene• of r.tn»PHQl!t Tuesdey. l ltlll nrl•lll• wlllds tllro"fti. *'llM· C.O.s\al ~at\11"9S wlll r11199 Mlwee11 S4 alld "; f11t.,.d tem· peraturn Wiii ranoe t111m Sol to n. W•t.! ..,,,.,eturelUO. .S~ /ff~ Tide• M&>MDAY Second I-l :32 p.m , I l S.Cond lllQll t:46 p.m . s.t TURSOAY Flr~t lo• 4:44 a.m. .O.t Fl~tlllQll 11:0'a.m >• S.COftel -•:1'p.m 1 s $econ41119" lO::lt P.m. S.7 s... 11-s.tt .. l'l\.,wtst:J1 p.m . -,.., t::ltp.tr> .. -•:1' a.m ~ HunllllQIOll a..:t> __, __ ., Me-IU. S..0..-.ta ~a.-. 11.s.s , ... .,, Callteral• AN.. of raM ..-• ,._ stl'OftQ The llO"la of ... belfllV ~tile sen~ c:-.ir-tlM#IHrUOrms --'!WCI K«WM pest •-Is a ...c...., to Sou_,, 0..-Soutll ~ UQune N>OUel ........... -Ille ..-r11 Nit of trte ~tlOft c.1116"11a Of cleudlMSt. coolotr ..,... I this "'or11l1141, wllll• Ory -•• ... ,.,_ w.c1 lllDwen llu ty untn Cefttiftwdillttww.st. ftlld-11.111-.l<I••-~ Are you getting pit.dier's mouod? Maybe ycN.'re speMing too much time behimt bane plate. Aa you get olcJer it takes DXl'e than oa:asiooal wedreod spcxts to keep insbape. . AJ: Holiday Soa Health Cubs we can help you remove tlioee extra tmtmds and bulges with a persooal exen:ise ptogJan1 developed by our Progiam Director8 that takes your body, fitness level, and desired goals into aaxxmt We clfer exceptional to cootrol weight, Ux:luding nutrition ~developed by a staff cl. . 1tietmy consultants. work out on some d the finest exercise equipment available in the industzy, so you'll achieve maximum results in a minimum amount cl. time. Plus japing, handball ~uetbali and swimmmg at some du~ make Holiday Spa a cmti>lete fitness center. And added facilities like steam. sauna, whirlpool, and ~=make wOOring out even more ~·t make any more emn.Join Holiday Spa Health Cubs today. We1J put you on the winning team Di/femtt IMMIJuship fmJl/rams state law requires them to report evidence of Drag RGC!e KfU. C,,eU.t ·: child abuse. er LOS ANGELES (AP> -A drag race on a • HERB • In a booklet prepa_re downtown street that drew about 200 spectators • f R D • for ~chool use. Riles left a 34-year-oJd motorcyclist dead when be col· • IE LASDER • bigbhgbts the ~ost f~e· tided with a car containing two elderly women. • IS MAKING • quent . and per~nent _is-police said. • GREAT DEALS • sues involved m child Timothy A. Henry or Los Angeles was pro-• FR E E • abuse. He notes t~at nounced dead at the scene Sunday after a 100-mpb • • school per~el ~~e ·~-race with an unidentified motorcyclist. • 50 GALS • mun~ from liability m Henry's motorcycle struck a car driven by • • malung_ reports of abuse ?l:year-old Lillie Smalley of Los Angeles. who was • OF GAS • and evidence of sexual mJured slightly and trapped in her car for 20 • .............. w ................ ~.y • molestation. minutes. A passenger in the car, Effie Harrison. ~ or 011. ('llASG t:s • THE LAW SAYS it is 81, of Texas. was not injured. ! :::;::=,.~~!~.., : a misdemeanor to Inflict • e HONDA e • unjustifiable physical B Boo~ i• Coelcliglafa • 1n•1r•n•'4-• pain or mental suCCering CARSON <AP> -Eight persons were arrested • m .rm ............ ~' on a child. d ed ..-• * * • • • * • * • *~ This could include a an book on a variety of charges by s heriff's dep-• MG-TRIUMPH :: µties who said they broke up a eo<:kftgbting ring .. parent's failure to inCarsonaftera lengthy investigatioo. •. e JAGUAR e « furn is h n e c es s a r Y A sheriff's spokesman said deputies who « trothing, food, s helter. raided the house of Chavez Guzman. 28, on Sun-• FIAT-LANCIA • medical atte ntion or day, also seized 20 live fighting cocks and the • wn~49-..:=.:.::;:"•.!...,n • other remedial care. carcasses of two others. "'* * * * * * * * * * * *« CRUEL OR inhuman it e TOYOTA • • corporal punishment or mm•·-Pl-• te De11t.• • ,., ... ,_" ... ~·• « . • • fl . ~ ~ ·~G...... W •MMtt UlJUry is a e ony, as 1s a ld ... -.• * * * * • * * * * • •· lewd or lascivious act MALIBU (AP> -A 20-year-o man, reacwng "" with a child under 14 for his shoes while atop Malibu Dam during a hike • l\10TORH0~1 E • years of"age. with friends. overbalanced and plunged 150 feet t.o : SALES & RENTALS• Tbe booklet says in-his d~alh, autborttJes said. • RESERVE NOW ! dicatlons or abuse or A sb'eri!r's department spokesman said Frank • 537.7777 Ext. 500 • neglect include the Mejia of Venice and bis friends biked to the dam .. * * * * * * * • • * .._ avoidance of social con-for a picnic Saturday. MeJla bad taken otr his • e LEASING e « tacts , which turns shoes t.ogo wading. • Ml••,,,............. « children into "loners... A helicopter was sent to recover Mejia's body • ,. • ......,m:._,_.,._ and malnutrition. from among the rocks at the base of the dam. •* .51/ifl * ~;.. ':°* .! Buena Park 510 South Beach Blvd. South of Lino)ln Avenue ~ (714) 826·0381 ConaMeea 2300 Harbor Blvd. Harbor Cen\fr (714) 549-3368 Encino 17031 Ventura Blvd. West of Balboa (213) 986-6330 Huntington Beaoh 18.58.5 Main Street Main St at Beach Blvd. (714) 842·1451 Long Beach 4101 Atlantic Blvd. Comer of Carson (213) 426-8874 North & Wat Valley 9143 De Soto Ave. at Nordhoff (213) 882-5912 0ranQ9 622 wt Katella Ave. West of Tustin Ave. (714) 639·2441 Weatmimter 6757 Westminster Ave. Westminster Center (714) 894--3387 Hollywood 7080 Hollywood Blvd. Comer LaBrea Ave. Safa Medical Center (213) 469-6307 ·And our Progressive PbYsical Con· ditionina Prqp-am is oo&m the fastest. moM effecthe ways.to get in shape. You1J · avai/4/ik indwli¥ a two·wttlt i~ program. tor Mia •IMI Wanaea ()pen1f\9 IOOI\: Ow-,,_" WNt Loe Ange)M f6o:ilit7 at 1914 So. Bundy (Ne&r Olrmpio Bl..t.) Cbartv ~ a•ailah1-. C.U 820-7971. • ~.-.~t ~ ,.,_, .. Robtr1 N. Wted/Publlshtr Thomn Keevll/Edltor Orange Coast Daily Piiot ~-· o·.-... .-ge Mond.y. Aptf M, 1f78 BelWr• KNlbfCh/£dlt«Mll PIQ9 ~dttor . =Dial-a-Ride: A Costly Service The Orange County Transit Diatrlct's Oial·a ·Ride program will be comina to the Saddleback Valley lo June and to CO&ta Mesa in September. The program permits residents to phone for doorstep transit pickup either to destinations within their own community or to connection points with major Jong.haul OCTDbuses. And the nicest thing about the door-to-destination service is that it costs only SO cents each way. That's all fine, and residents should patronlze and en- joy the convenient new service. But there really is no such thing as a gift horse, as the Dial-a-Ride cost figures readily indicate. In the Saddleback Valley, OCTD officials expect to serve 119,000 passenger !ares in the coming year for a $398.935 operalinR total -or $3.35 for each 50-cent paying passenger. In Costa Mesa Dial·ii·Ride is expected to carry 89,000 riders between September and June for about $285,000 or $3.20 per passenger fare. Cast for Dial-a-Ride service now offered in five inland communities ranBes from $1.69 to $2.45 per passenger. Users should realize from the outset that they aren't financing the service with their SO-cent pieces, just as riders along regular OCTD routes aren't paying their way with the 25-cent fares. Instead, state and federal subsidies are making up the dlff erence and those subsidies come frbm the transit and non-transit riding taxpayer alike. On Second Thought. • • Just a year ago, members of the House of Represen- tatives, attempting to compensate for having accepted an increase in their pay to $57,500, adopted a code of ethics which included a limit on outside earned income. The limit. due to go into effect on Jan. 1, 1979, is 15 percent of the annual salary, or SS.625 a year. As speaker Tip O'Neill said at the time, the point was lo avoid creating "a suspicion of conflict, a suspicion of impropriety'' in connection with outside eam1ngs. But reluctant Congressmen soon began complaining that they were "bullied" into accepting the outside in- come limit. • Now there·s a move afoot in the House to get rid of the limit even before it goes into effect. When a major bill on financial disclosure and con- flicts of interest <HR 1) reaches the floor later this month, an amendment will be offered to repeal or modify the outside income limit. In other words, some Congressmen want both their pay raise and the chance to cash in on their positions of influence with lectures. writing and other activities, even in excess of the permitted $8,625 a year. Jt 's a shameful double-cross that should be promptly voted down. Lesson to Re01ember Although NBC's four-part series on Jewish genocide by Nazi Germany is reported to have reached up to 120 million Americans last week. many viewers said they s witched channels because .. Holocaust" was too str90g for their stomachs. Why they asked, drag all that horror up again? Too bad. especially if there were young people in the household. For, as has been said in many ways throughout bis- lory, ~ who do not learn from the mistakes of the past may be destined to repeat them. The series made two timeless points. Even basically decent people, if brainwashed into fear, are capable of actions that in normal times would be incomprehensible. And many of the eventual victims of the Holocaust were tmable, for a long time, to realize that such an in· credible thing could happen to them, in their own lands. How much more difficult then, must it be for young people. living decades later, to understand that all this did indeed happen? Could it happen again? Probably not on such a scale in this era of swift global communication. But there are those who remember ·when frightened Californians ac· cepted without a murmur the internment of all Japanese· • Americanst an action which was not even questioned un · til years later. And, more recently, when frightened American soldiers felt ju.5tified in slaughtering women and children at My Lai. Even today, the Soviets find reasons to incarcerate their citizens in camps and psychiatric wards. There is, ot course, no comparison with the attempt· ed genocide of the Jews. But human nature still has its darker sides. The lessons of the past must be taught and re-taught -even if they tum the stomach. • • Opinions eJlpressed In the space above are those of the Dally P ilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addrns The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Bedrol& BJ L.11. BOYD in Australia a bedroll ls That a blndJestllf was a known as a Mathilda. That's what the sontfu alludes to. man wbo carried bis bedroll "Waltzing Ma Ida" means with him was mentioned. hlking along with a bedroll. Failed to report, though, that Did I say the Indian tn the Dear ecology commercial was a Cherokee named Iron Eyes Cody? That's Just a stage moniker. Am now advised Gloomy h e's a Sioux from Pine Ridge, S.D., whose real Gus name is John Big Fire. Historical footnotes in· dicate Cl~atra painted her Good thing the trash eyebrows lack, her upper strtte started alter the eyelids blue and her lower deadline for taxes. I 'd eyelldJ green. probably have gone to Two of F.ddie Fisher's ex· the dum.p and the post wives, Debbie Reynolds and .. ofrtce on the same er· Connie Stevena. Jive next rand -ud you know door to each other in Malibu what would have hap. Beach. Tbat•s sweet. penodl ~ENT-MINDED One reason the avcra~e o•-1 °"'~·•,. ..... weight of the cltitena ot o d a=r• tfle ee ••I Sparta was so low La that tbe -~·-~_,,.. leaclinl Spartans kicked Ill f0.. the fit people out ot town. '* " ..................................... ._ ................. . Nick Thimm~ Americans: Fatter and Softer W ASRINGTON -Tbe Amertcan eeople rece.ot.ly 11l· formed Dr. Georae Gallup, tbelr aenlor pul.M.t&ker. that they are 1pendlq record amounta to feed their famlllea. For tbree moatba, our streets bave been Jammed with an~ farmen clalmlnr tbey can t make any money anymore. What'a lolaa on here? Well, tor openen, let's 111 lt'a lnflaUoo, a trend for Amertcau to let faUer an softer. and more evidence that we live in the "me firat" era. Assuming that people tell Dr . Gallup the truth, the cur- rent median average weekly ex· penditure for food is $50 a week for one family. This is an in· crease of $2 a week over one year ago, and tbe highest amount recorded since Gallup becan charting food spending in 1937 (it waa $11 a week, tben). As recently as 1971, people told Gallup they spent only $3S a week for food . ANALYSES BY other food· Earl Waters coet cbanen pretty well beclc UJ> G.Ugp'e illformltloa. In fact the Counell of State Oovern· ments reports that food prices have lncreaaecl 7S petteat llDee 11161. Since everybody eall, and worklna·clH• peo,le mast worry flrat about paytq for Ute's eaeatfals, any atory about food prices causes eyebrowa to raise and backs to arch. People will set. angry over J>Q'ial a extra S2 a · week for ~. but they'll bai.ily fork over almost 81 mucb u the weekly grocery bill Juat to take friends to dinner. Of courae, eojoyln1 yourself in a restaurant is ball recreatioo,sowbyoot? But back to the gap between farmers and conaumen. ID 1978, the farmer got 33 cents from each food dollar, and everybody else involved with that food re· ceived 67 cents. The estimate for last year is 31 and 69, so the farmer lolt a little. A QUICK LOOK at commodity price• shows that while they slipped some lut year, they are recovering now. Corn now brings the farmer S2.01 a bushel, compared with $1.83 last August. Wheat in February brought him MEEL! Q .SI, comparo3 wttb ta.CM tut summer. But the martet lu't tak1Ac the quanUtles tbat It did several yean •· wbeD tbenl waa a SM•t fontp demanc1 loJ' our aratu. Pume,. anm't J>l&Dttq ~ tbe f111ee1 now. rn ract, the new leatalaUon will probably pay tbem DOt to. Moreover, some t.rmen, especially thoae who dem. onatrated all winter, over· borrowl9d 1n t:bo9e neat. fat yeara to buy land and machinery, and an na1b' hun.. log. Ftnally, the COit ol openat. m. a farm baa rtaen ~. and even tbougb fann ~ rt..., the margin shrhWl due to tbeaebibs. SO 'rllE coosumer pays more, and the farmer 1ets less. More of that buck goes to tbe middle, and of all the characters tn the middle, labor is getting the bil· gest increasea. Increased costs for enerf)', transportation and packaClni allo fipre in. Tbe over-all fil\lh we're deallq wKh on food ls enormous. The U.S . Department of Agriculture reporta tbat _, bWlon tn food was sbipped last year .. Tbe supermarket industry says there are now 10,000 food products on their shelves, and tbat soo new ODel are Jnt;nldac:ed n~ momdl.. ~ are fUlller and tU.Ser, -.m aa tb«Y ~ fatter and fatter, and demand more and IDOl'6 ••eoaventeace•· food•. .. ConYenfflDCO" foods are the oaee you eoP _into tbe oven, or drop On plMtlc bal> 1D boU.lq wawl', or wbip t.ocet.bec with wateJ'. T!Jere la aa lavilible, but bUh salaried, cook·mald-batler biCldeo away lo theae w•ll· adve~•· Tbe dtmand for "coo-vea.leate" foodl ta built bJ ·ad· vert1•!%~:ularly on TV. Food · ls •" bUlion bo1ln•H· The Wednesday grocery ads are quite UNfut But those TV apota deslped to make clllldren demand inore _ junky snacks are not. They add S200 million a year to the nat.\ona.J roodbW. THERE ARE OTHER factors in the food price picture. Meat and poultry prices tend to be cycllcal. Fim, beef and bog pro- duction ii too great, and there are meat bargains. Then reed prices rtae, herds decline, and meat retail pricee 10 up. That's life In an overstuffed nation which pays ~ percent of its grocery bill for meat and poultry. Currently, beef supplies are down, so beef ls hi&)ler. Porlc and poultry are more plentiful~ So we make the best of what the current market ls. That family sought out by Dr. Gallup will probably be PQiD8 sis to el&bt percent more for food this year than last. Another st.lUstJc. But if we cu step outatde of ourselves for a moment, thus avoiding the "me flnt.. syn- drome, we will learn that no na- tJon bu more food available ln lt• stone tban the U .s .. that we eat far too much, that we spend less of our disposable incpme on food than any other miUor, in· duatriallzed nation. Jn 19'76, for example, Amertcans gave up 1S percent of their disposable in- come for food. But the Britl.ab spent 22 percent and the Italians, 26.5. OVa BODIES surter more from overeatma and Ingesting JWlt food tho from anytblng elae. We are an lnfhted nation and people. The more we eat or earn, tbe more we wanl Prest-• dent Ford was correct when be tept barplq OG inflation. Presi· dent Carter bas now caupt up. We conaume too mueb or everytbing, lnclading food. Bml>· State Candidates Come Out in Droves California's politically am· bltious have come out in hordes with 646 nmning for state offices in the Ji.me election. Thia makes an average of more than rour for each or the lS4 offices to be filled, not counting the judgeships and local elections. Although lbe numbers seeking office breaks no record, the total of 17 c baJ- l en g l n g the reelection of Governor Jerry Brown ls near an all time high. Another 40 are running for the slx o t h e r statewide posts of Lt. Governor'"', Treasurer, Controller, Attorney General, Secretary of State and Superintendent of Public Instruction. One or the surprises is the failure of the subetantially iJl. creased Congressional salaries, raised by $13,000 to $57,500 an- Art Hoppe nually last year, to attract a greater than normal number of candidates. While 194 are nm· nlng for the 43 setts in the California delerati0Df'2 of those are Jn the seven d.latttcts being vacated by retiring members. j In the legislative races '72 are seeking election to the .20 state Senate posts while 290 want to rm the 80 Assembly seats. In most ol those races the numbers are normal, ranging from two to 12, althouah three Assemblymen Stan Statham. J~~ Thurman and Norman Wa\Clllllf escaped opposition and are considered reelected as 0( now. BARRING unexpected defeats ln June and November, the turnover in the Legislature aa a reault of this year's eleellons will t>e much lower than in other r~nt years. Only four Senators and 14 Assemblymen are volun· tartly leaving office. SUll, tbere wW be some lntereltlng cootesta and a strong parUaan batUe between Governor Brown and tbe Republican nomJ.oee in No- ~ vember could lnfluence the out- come of some legislative races. One of the encouraging de- velopments of the election is the reentry of two former State Senators seeking to return. They are Clark Bradley or San Jose and John G. Schmits of Corona del Mar. Both were ~garded as men of the highest Integrity when they served here. Schmitz left to enter Congress but was defeated ror reelectioo largely as a result of a purge engineered by President Nixon. Bradley was defeated in 1974 aft.er 20 years 1D the Letislature by Jerry Smith and now is out to get a new voter verdict. A LESS encouraging facet of this year's election~ Lbe coniln· ulng trend of legislative aides to win seats for themselves. Already more than a dozen members have sprung into of. flee with little more quallftca· Uon tlwl baring worked brielly as an attacbe of the Leaialature. Seventeen ot the candiclates thla year are in tbe same category. Tbe aides seldoiu are longtime residents ot the. diAricta tbey seek to repreaeat and are more attn to carpet-baggers. They have neltber achieved a modJC!QJD ot lllCCelS ln business. or clric affairs 1D those diautcts nor do they truly UDdentand the people they wlab to represent. DESCRIBING thla tftnd, a de- feated candidate in one of the districts last election aptly taeged tbe situation as one where "We ustd to send representatives to 'Sacramento. Now they send them to ua." He WaS referring to tbe in- breeding, hardly in the spirit of representative government, where those in power groom as· sistants to nm, and finance their candidacies, as a means of ln- su.rin1 their continuing bold on the power. The trend can be directly traced to the advent or the •'full-time, professional legislator" philosopby which, in 1966, led to the adoption or the year round sessJoos and sub- stantial salary increases for the lawmakers. College Spells Catastrophe for Middle Class I beard some hammering next door tbe other day. I stuck my bead out and there waa my oelghbot', Mr. Crannlcb, potmd· ing a roR SALE sign Into bis lawn. "You're not giving up that home )'OU love so dearly, are you, Mr . Crannlcb?" t asked with grave con· cem. "Have to," b e s ald gloomily . "We've been struck by a flnancial dis· aster and we're not in.sured." "Flood? Earthquatef Holocaust?" "Worse than that. It'• our IOO, Herschel. We have to raise • '$30,0oo." "The poor kid," I said. "Does he need a delicate operat.ion by a Viennese podlatriat or he'll never play the piano aga.ln?" "Wonethan that." ''Don't tell me he's nm over Melvin Belll in the family car? Or been arrested for negligent genocide? Or .•. " "Worse than that," said Mr. Crannlch, shaking bls bead hopelessly. "He's been admitted to Y le." .. (looD~O!" I cried. For thla was at~tropbe every mlddle-class merican family dread• to contemplate these days. "Where dld )'OU, H pirentl, go wronl(?" "That's J~t the quesUon \he wlf e and l bavo been ukins ourselfe1," Mr. Crann.leb lllcl udly. •1teeveft only mo"' ft ne.er OMe helped hltn with b11 homework." "What parents in tbelr right mlnda .11VOUld?" l Hid. I thouabt proudly ol my own hllh tcbool daughter and her enviable straight DJ!:• avera1e. ll would be a p Junior coUqe for bet •t belt. I couldn't help but feel a twt.oie of smupeaa. "There, u.n., Mr. Crannlcb, I'm sure tt'a not your fault'. Maybe Henehel Just fell In with the right crowd."· .. Oh. no. wo screened bis rrlends very carefully. I ro- mem~r once we eauabt blm trying to sooak out on a d4te with the Sophomore Queen ot tbe Schol•nhlP Soclet.Y Naturally, we put a st.op to that.." 1 "Naturally . Bul stlll tbeae youn11t.ra do tend to emulat. tbelr peer aroups." "I know. Thal'• why be waa t.be first ldd on t& block to have a Harley-Davidson. And his mother sat up all night riveting, 'Born to lbte,' on the back of the black Jeatbet Jacket ~e gave b11.f tor Chrtatmu." • You c•n•t beat that for parental devotion," l agreed. ··vou•.e doDf Ill you could. Ob- vloutb' tbe schools are to blame. You never tnow wben these teaeben ue PUltllll ldeaa into our cblldnm's beada~" "We did our bet\ to counteract that by prvvtdlDC In lcleal home environment," aald Mr. Cran . nicb. "I ltUI can't ft1ure out bow a boy wbo'a required to wat.ch five hours of televl1lon every night can get ttral1bt f. ·s In an~·· -~ ••wEU.-cheer up Mr. Cran- nlcb," I N.ld. .. Wltb fuck be may flunk out of collese In bis Creeb.mao year ud become a plomber." · •. ,. ~----_. --~,;::1- Safet,9Car DAILY PILOT £ f People Power Mohilizetl Tactk Adoptal for Fldure Caner Drivea B1 raANK CORlllEB WASHINGTON <AP) -PresJ. dent Carter and bla advisers believe tbe1 succeeded In mobllllinS public opinion in tbe drive for the Panam1 Canal tre1Uea, and oow they're lJ7lnl the aame game plan ln etforta to overhaul Uwt tax code and tbe civil service. When the admlnlatratlon's high command aaa~mbled at Camp David to talk about the problems ot 1!5 months in office, they concluded that one bright spot wu the ·mobUbaUon of "people power .. for the treaties. SO IT SHOULD come as no surprise .that they plan concert~ ed drives to solicit and nurture public approval of Carter's am· bilious and controversy-laden proposals to overhaul the in· come tax system and reorcanbe the federal civil service. ( NEWSANALl'SIS ) 440NE OF 'nlE THINGS we found out oo tbe Panama c...i treaty. there bl a tremeodous n- servolr ot people In Ua1a eounb'y. some ol tbem who were actlve ln the campaign, some ot them wbo were not. who are easer to make tbe goals of tbta ad· mllllatraUoo their awn 1oala and to devote time and effort to travel, to speak, to do all ~ thln11 that communicate with the real ol the public • • • • " The optimism of Carter and Powell avowedly retleett their opinion that a moblllJatlon of pubUc opinion brou&bt about a dramatic abJlt In voter atUtudes toward tbe canal treaties. But wu that Indeed the cue! . IT DEPENDS ON which figures YoU look at. IMfftHi'J to keep the canal open and neutral, and to bave priority UM ill Wutlme. W1DN TUB MllE question wu uked wttbout menUoo ot the amendmelltl, 82 percent ol tboH 1'1n•Yed said they op- J)Oled tbe tl'eatlee. A Gallup poll on tbe amended treattea in February showed support from S1 pe!'ffnt of those questioned. A Louis Harris Survet oa the aame lasue ln March showed support by a 4' percent to 39 percent marlin. But on tbe &inlple question of yielding the canal to Panama, without mention of amendments to 1uarantee American rlght.s, the AP-NBC News poll continued to abow ~t;y opposition. Transportation Secretary Brock Adams ac- cepts delivery of $250,000 fuel-efficient, six· ,passenger safety car, built by Minicars, Inc. of Goleta. The car, which bas an ex· peeled fuel usage or 27 .5 miles per gallon, will be used for evaluation and demonstra- tion by the National Traffic Safety Ad· ministration. Although Carter, his Cabinet and senior assistants spent much of their secluded weekend in the Maryland mountains talk· ing about what's wrong with the administration. the 'prolonged battle for Senate raWication of the canal treaties was cited as a bright spot. In August. before the treaties were signed at a glittering ceremony here. an NBC News poll lndicat.ed 55 percent opposi- tion to the signing, while Z7 per- cent approved. TBUS IN IL\.&CB, atleT the Senate bad r•tifled the first of tbe two treaUes, the survey showed 55 percent opposition. 35 percent approval. Carter and Powell are com- paring public reaction to the original treaty terms with public assessment of the amended versions . ..... ~~· Sophisticated Bicycles Rolling Up Big Sales By tbe Alaoela&ed Presa Bicycle sales are on the rtse aeaio. and the new models are a far cry from the almple two-wbeelers that milllona of Americana remember from cbildbood. Today's bikes a.re equipped with a range or speeds and sophisticated styling which can push up the price to several hundred dollars. The variety of models also can be confus. Ing for shoppers, particularly ~ looking for bicycles tor youngsters. ••ABOUT 90 PERCENT of the kids' market is -high-style, said a spokesman for tbe Consumer Product Safety Commission. "You can still f ind others for small children, but It may be a little harder than it i.wed to be." Among youngsters. the most· popular models are tbose wttb bl&b· rise or "banana" seats and bf&b handlebars. Some people aay they •loot dangerous, but the Bicycle Manufacturers Association ot • America, Inc., says there la oo in- dication that these models are any leas safe than other bicycles. The product safely unit says lt baa had no more complaints about high· rise bikes than about any other varie- ty. New safety standards for bicycles took effect during 1976, but the com· mission, pointing out that the average life of a bike ls 10 years. says lt is too early to meuure the impact of the regulations or de· termine whether there are serious problems with non·compliance. BICYa.E SALES SOARED in the early 1970s as t.be energy crisis focused attention on potential fuel aavlnga from pedal power. The manufac:turera' aaaoclatlon says that the number of bicycles shipped by U.S. manufacturers and imported from .foreign makers went from 8.9 million In 1971 to 13.9 million lo 1972, an increase of 56 percent. Imports and U.S. shipments totaled lS.2 mllllon in 1973 and 14.1 mil.lion in 1974, 'but dropped to 7.3 million in 1975, partly because of m arket aaturaUon. The situation turned around again. however, and U.S. shipment.a and imports reached 9.4 million last year and are expected to near 10 million units this year. Llchtweigbt bikes, with one to 10 speeds and wheel sizes Crom 2t to Z7 Moderate Quake Jolla Montana;. No Aftershock? HELENA. Mont. (AP> -A "Moderate" earthquake that abook much or western Montana ls not like· b' to be followed by a more intense •bock. a aeotogy professor says. Residents ln several clUea felt SUn· day afternoon 'a quake, meuurina 4.5 on the Richter Scale, but no cuualUes or major damage were re- ported. Anthony Qumar, dlreetor ot the University ot Montana's earthquake laboratory, said earthquakes In lloo- t&Da are usually followed by several 1maUer ones, rather than leadi.nl to 1tronger ooes. The tremor's center wu plnpolnt· ed in the Seeley Late relioo about ao miles northeast of MfiaouJa, Hid WaverlY Persoo. a 1ec>Ph11dcilt ·at UM N atlonal EartbQqake lalannatloll Service in Golden. Colo. Ao aftershock ttiat foil owed 12 mloutea later meaiured 3.1 on the . Rlcbter Scale, be aaid. ( CONSUMER J ) inches, accounted for 54 percent of the market last year. So-called "juvenile" blcycles with 20·lncb wheels took 43 percent of the market and m•scellaneous styles accounted for the other 3 percent. PHIUP BURKE OF the manufac- turers' association said more than ha lC the Juvenile bikes were the "motocross" variety which looks something like a motorcycle with knobby tires. One indication of the increasing complexity or bicycles is the rise in the number of multi·speed bikes be- ing sold. According to the manufac· turen • group, 10-speed bicycles ac- counted ror onlY s percent of the market in 1970. By 1977, they ac· counted for 36 percent. In contrast, bicyclea wttb a simple coaster brake took '.13 ~nt of the market in 1970 and only S2 percent in 1977. The safety commission standard covers such things as sharp ed1ee, brakes, strength of handlebars, tires, forks aod frames and ease ot as· sembly. Both the commiMioo and the manufacturers' usociatlon s~s. however, that even the safest bicycle is daneerous in the hands of an inex- perienced or uneducated rider. Here are some things to keep in mlnd when shopping for a bicycle: -DON'T BUY A BIKE for a child to "grow Into." A chUd should be able to straddle the bicycle, both feet flat on the ground, with al least 1 inch between the frame's top tube and his or her crotch. To make sure you get proper size for a girl, have her try out a boy's bike. When you get one she can straddle com· fortably, you have the right alze; simply purchase a girl's model in that slie. -Inspect the frame carefully. Im· properly welded joints or a fracture in manufadturing or shipping can re- sult in a weak frame. Ev-en a tiny crack can cause metal to break un- der a sudden jolt. · -Watch for protrusions between the seat and the handlebar stem wblcb extend more than 3~ lnchea ~ack from the rear of the handlebar stem. -BE SUBE THE bicycle bas a chain guard unless the pedals can be rotated backward to release any clothine that ml1bt 1et cau1ht between the chain and the sprocket. -Check to see that handlebar ends are no more than 18 inches above the seat furface wben the seat is in its lowest position and the handlebar ends are in their highest position. -A void slippery pJutlc pedals. Look for rubber·treaded styles or metal pedals with serrated edges or firmly attached toeclips. -MAKE SURE THE bike bu a colorless front reflector, 1 red rear reflector, colorless or amber pedal retlectora and spoke reflectors, amber in front, red ln the rear. The top of the rear reflector should be set at leut 3 inches below the seat -Measure clearances. There sbould be at least 3~ lncbea between the pedal and the front fender or tlft and the pedals ahould not touch tbe IJ'Ound when the blke bl Wted 25 detrees ob a turn. -,\voMI equipment wbicb rllea more than 5 lDcbes above the rear or the seat; ft can interfere with the rider'• ablllt~ to diamount safely and quickly. Don't miss the BIG BOAT SHOW •tth• ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ..... from Dfaneylend NOW thra SUNDAY Crop Value Up MADERA CAP> - The gro6S value of crops 1n Madera County ex· ceeded $200 million last year for the first time, the annual crop report showed. And as a model for future ef· forts. Before turning to the validity of this sanguine assessment, here Is bow press secretary Jody Powell, reporting on the Camp David sessions. relayed ad· ministration lhlnkiog on the subject: In the months that foJJowed, the poll figures fluctuated wide- ly. depending on the way tbe canal quesUoo was put. In January, 65 percent of those quesUooed in an AP-NBC News poll said they favored the treaties with amendments to guarantee U .S. rights of military Intervention if Can they argue validly that the admlDiattaUoo succeeded in sharping public opinion in bebalJ of .the treaUea? Or would it be more accurate to say that the administration accepted, somewhat reluctantly, the amendment.a' and reservations needed to &et the pact approved. And we've got just the train for you ... whenever you're leaving. Choose from six trains daily. connecting San Diego and Los Angeles, twice as many as just 18 months ago. Have a full business day in Los Angeles, with our new 8:20 Los Angeles arrival and 5:30 departure. Call AMTRAK, at (213) 624-0171, or toll free (800) 648-3850, for information. Financed 1n pan by funds made available by CALTRANS (California Department of Transpartation) Here's our new schedule. LA.·SANDll!OO ---------------- SNf DEOO· L.A. §1 l / llu/Zl I :I /.,///;,/ ,/ ct 1 '°""'. • °'9111 • • 21...... ...... • I091!\• t-12...... '0 '°"". •·•a. '""" .,..,.. 703MI 1"""' ·~ ,,._ 111111111 ,.....,.. ll·Olplft tU'lpftt ....... 7«11111 7~ ,...,,.. ., ... ....... 1~ t~ 12111"' l41Pfll IOlplft """" 4'05p!I • 3°'111 ·~ u '"" • 4 lllf'I ''°""" • """' 1 09jllll ·~ • ~ u1.-t ••""' '~ 1:.llDM • ,.., ~ ...... UI-UI""' I~ to.tl!IM 1tlQlflll . ,.,.. 10-10.1 .... ta:..... n . '°911 '~ llJOJlw ,......,. 2 '°"" .... ..... ...... . ....... 5'0p!R .,,. ,,.. ,,... '· '""' ........ -·-·~to fUtt on. hour .. ,.,.,.., Apff 30. f971 . • ~' 11.a-..... tl:a.M i.,.. ~ ~ .,/ •:1Gllftt ..._ lt:IC19111 a~ ,..., ........ .48 DAILY PILOT ...,,., ~· --· 1911 PLANNING TRIP TO ALASKA Ginger Cox With CompanlOn, Will Row Alaska Bound Women to Row Boat SEAITLE <AP> -Like thousands of others. Ginger Cox and Letitia Davis are planning a boat trip to Alaska this summer. But the two Seattle-area women say unlike most vacationers, they 'U row all the way more than 1,000 miles. "I've wanted to go to Alaska since I was a little kid,'' said Ms. Cox, 23. "I thought of this trip years ago and everyone would laugh when J talked about it. Finally, I found someone else who thought it was neat and want- ed to do it. too. SHE F.sl'IMATED THE trip will take 60 to 80 days, averaging 80 miles a day in the yet-to-be-built ~foot Norwegian ''faering." The boat. s feet wtde and about 250 pounds. will have some. kind of sunshade or shelter rigged to a mast. Ms. Cox, who Uves in Issaquah, is a former collegiate rower for Dartmouth College. Her 21-year-old companfon from Kirkland is a junior at Dartmouth and will arrive here in June to prepare for the odyssey. "We're both rowing in the national regat- ta at Green Lake, Wash., <June 15-18). Then we 'U take a day to rest and go," said Ms. Cox. Ms. Davis will be training for the 1980 Olympic tryouts, she said. THE ROtJTE FOLLOWS channels, straits and sounds, weaving through dozens of island groups. The destination is Skagway, Alaska -950 miles away if one follows the main channels, nearly 1,200 if a small boat hugs the serrated coastline. The two women have been on several rowing and hi.king trips together, testing their compatibility in fair and foul weather Ms. Cox, who works as a carpenter's helper. rows at least 90 minutes every morn- ing, rain or shine, on Lake Sammamish or Lake Washington. THE BOAT WILL carry about 300 pounds of supplies. The women will take along most· ly grains, nuts and dried fruits, as well as fishing and clam-digging gear. Navigational equipment wlll include charts and a barometer to warn of weather changes. .. Sometimes the weather can be tricky. There are long, narrow channels with no real good place to put ashore. We1l just have to be careful and watch ourselves," said Ms. Cox. Rais e Sights Later Safer :Yule ·lights R~paired Pier Set To°"n BART Pay Up . OAKLAND <AP) - Bay Area Rapid Transit District technical and office employees are be· lng paid at a rate 10 to 44 percent higher than employees of other transit systems, accord· ing to a survey. Job BuiltB Confidence By JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear Joyce: My husband is reUr ing next week, due lo beahb pro· blems. We will be Jn • low income bracket. My age, 53, and my skills will not compensate. Will yoa pleue give me tafonnation on bow I will be able to do betle. for myself u a worker? · -B.T.T., St. LouJs, Mo. If financial need is urgent, take any job you can quickly find. A few ideas: car wash cashier, county or city library clerk, retail worker, ~pllal clerk, apartment re- ceptionist. supermarket checker. Even if the job isn't ideal, gettlnl paid will bo()st your confidence and may inspire you to obtain the train- ing needed for work you want. TRAINING OPPORTtJNITIES for mature workers are expanding, Jud«· ing from tbe fJow or college news re- leases across my desk. Community colleges, particularly, are gearing up second-start programs. But don't overlook four-year col· leges and universities. George Wasbingtoo University in the District or Columbia, for instance, offers a program aimed at mature workers interes1ed in allied health occupa· tiona. Mo&t secood·sta.rt programs focus on tffhnical or health occupations, altboush some are in the aoeial servlces area. ( CAREERS J Rep. Paul Trible of Vlrginla sponsoring a bill to allow homemakers to open their own In· divldual Retirement Accounts. An IRA is a personal, tax-sheltered retirement plan. Any wage-earner who is not a participant in another retirei:nent plan can establish an IR A . Under the present law, a homemaker cannot generally own an IRA because homemakers usually have no earned income. ! IF THE TRIBLE Homemaker Retirement Bill is passed, a homemaker's alter-tax retirement income could be boosted by 60 to 100 percent. says the bill's sponsor. You may want to let your senators and representative know bow you feel about this legislation. READER SERVICE: For a free copy of a new eight-page booklet. "Leaming ()pportuniUes for OJder Persons," enclose a stamped, self· addressed, envelope wlth )'Our te· quest to Joyce Lain Kennedy at this newspaper. 'lbe booklet, •bicb cov· era subjects from btgb 1cbool equlvalency to graduate study, la published by the nonpront Institute of Lif etlme Leaming. ( TH IE BOOIUl~N ) REVIEWS SWnaDNG ro ANOTBEll aspect or t h e problems faced by homemakers, bow to help the mllliooa ot them approach.Ing their senior years wit.boot any type ot re· tlremeot plan Is being considered by Conll't!IS. In the DAILY PILOT r ' NATIONAL/ CAREERS "LL MAKES! ·833-0555 Ask ForOur lWl SftCIAUST ot HOWARD 0.Vrolet eor-ot OcWe -Que.I S•• NEWPORT BEACH She's crying for heJp. Are you listening? She simply can't handle her problems by herself anymore, She needs help before it's too late. And she's not alone. Every day, people no different than you experience an emotional crisis often provoked by a troubled personal relationship. Someone may become so despondent she grows fearful or nervous for po apparent reason. She loses sleep over insignificant thin~. She explodes over trivial matters like the car not starting. She can't carry on with her family. She needs help. Professiona,l help. The only real hope for regaining a normal, productive life. The kind of help available at the Problem Talk Shop. A pro~lonally staffed counseling and referral service for people trapped in an emotional crisis. At the Problem Talk Shop we care for people. Problem Talk Shop ls a free service which provides a warm, friendly environment where skilled counselors help peop}e sort out their own Uves. Here people gain new resources to handle the problems they thought-were too big to handle. If you know someone who is experiencing an emotional crisis.. call the Problem Talk Shop. A trained C:OUftSelor will be at the other end of the line. Ready to help. Ready to answer any questions Y.OU may have. ' Please make the call that will show her somebody cares enough to listen. ... 1110 Eact Chapman Avenue.. Sult9 109 Orange, California 92e86 (11+) 768-3831 ,_ ____ . __ .. •• ,, •• ~- J ! .. • I . . .... i I 1l r '·· .. · ~. LOCAL I ANALYSIS I NA TI ON AL StuJ,y Shows Equal Power CHJCAGO (AP> -Feminists appear to tab the sexual lnitlat.lve more frequently and set more sexual satisfaction than wornen wlth more tradl· tional outlooks, a Vanderbllt University study has found. The study also found that remtnists have a ten· dency to have leas 1table marriages than other women. A«!t• Out.lateed Housing Law Grows Teeth 8)' moMAS D. ELIAS For the first time since they were written ln the early 1960s, California's fair housing laws are taking on some teeth. THE STUDY WAS CONDUCl'ED by VlrginJa Abernathy, Ph.D .. or the VanderbUt department o! psychiatry. Jl appears in the April issue of the ' Archives of General PsychJalry, published by tbe American Medical Association. .............. NoP ... er Untll this year, it was \lP to private individuals. who felt they bad been d.lacrimlnated aaaln.lt to me damage suits agaln.st real estate broken aod property owners who they felt had violated the open housing rules. Victims have also had help from private fair housing groups, m06l active in Southern California where the city of Loa Angeles helps foot their bills. She cautioned that her findings are tentative because only 50 women were interviewed for the study and the issuet are so complex. Or. Abernathy interviewed and tested 24 women idenUlied as femlnlsts and 26 "traditional- ly oriented" women, all of whom were primarily heterosexual. They were aged between 21 and 39 and had completed al least one year of college. FEMJNISTS ENDED FIRST marriages twice as oft~n as o_ther women, Dr. Abernathy found. The higher divorce rate is related lo feminists' greater independence and willingness to end un- Tony Boyle, convict- ed murderer or a un- ion rival.-has lost an atte mpt to be declared a pauper in order to forego the cost or his convic- tion 's appeal IN 1m, 15 YEARS after the Unruh Fair Hows· ing Act became law and 13 years alter the great political battles over the Rumford Fair Housing Act, state government took its (U"Sl strong action toward enforcement. The action came in · SOUTHERN , the form of new regula-CALIFORNIA tions from the Depart- ment of Real Estate, FOCUS which licenses all r eal ____ ._..;;;.._;;, _ __,,,,, estate brokers in California . satisfactory alliances. the s~udy indicated. OCC Sets Or. Abernathy said her study showed feminists The rules outlaw practices like "steering," or telling members of one racial or ethnic group not to buy in an area because no others of their group ever have. •·appear to be sexually more adventurous and purposeful;; tha.n the comparison group because lht-y had sigmflcantly greater experience with extramarital sex." NO DIFFERENCE WAS FOUND between the groups on the age at which they had their first in· tercourse or the frequency or intercourse in contin· uing relationships, the average being slightly less than twice a week for both groups. She also found that they were more likely than the other women to have power relative to that of their husbands, having equal or greater earnings t~an the men they dated. lived with or were mar· ried to. Seminar Slated For Eniployers The state Employment Development Depart- ment ( EODl will host a day-long $eminar May 3 ror employers to brief them about unemployment in- surance. The meeting will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p . m . al tht; South Coast Plaza Hotel, Costa Mesa. · Deadline for registration for the $14 seminar is Tuesday. The price includes an information packet a nd lunch. ~he course will cover the claims process, the 'hearing process. tax provisions and the depart-m ent's employment service. For further ln!onnation coniact Jobn Calderas in the EDD office ln Riverside, 7&1-32'70. . Toh Rae Ing Balboa Seeka Entriea Entries are being sought for the third an- nual bathtub races to be held Sunday off the Balboa Pavilion. . -Race organiiers say they've added a ~1mension to the race by dividing contestants mto classes -slow and fast. THE RACES ARE OPEN TO any craft of ~ess than eight feet in length. The slow class lS for those without a pointed bow. Prizes Include a two·nighl stay In Catalina and dinners at some or Newport Beach's restaurants. THE RACES WILL START at 2 p.m . after a pre-race concert ~f big band era music. For entry information, contact Davey's Locker in the PaviUon. Five-part Lectures "Looking at Ourselves," a live.part lecture series, will be of· !ered at Orange Coast College. The series meets on s 6ccessive Wednesday evenings, beginning April 26, from 7:30to9:30 in OCC's Fine Arta Hall 119. Admission is free and the public ls invited to at.- tend. SE&IES coor· dinator Is Betty Inman. OCC counselor and psychology instructor. The opening session is tilled "Becoming the Master of bur Body and Its PotenUal." Guest lec- turer will be Herb Livsey Orange Coast College as'. sociate professor of Englis h and OCC's former basketbalJ coach. ORANGE COAST art professor Victor Casados will examine the human form from an aesthetic perspective during the May 3 lecture. titled " An Artis t Looks al the Human Form." "Body Expression and Verbal Responses" is the title of the May 10 aesslon. Guest lecturers will ln- clude Freda Sathre, OCC associate professor of speech, and Glenn Smith, Orange Coast's speech pathologist. DR . JERREL Richards. OCC's as- sociate dean of Counsel· ing and Guidance and a profeasor al psychology, 'fiJI conduct the fourth lecture, titled "Explor· iog Our Attitudes About the Hunan Body.·· The final session, on May 2-4, is titled "I am One With Others.'' For information about the series. phon~ THEY ALSO BAN PROCESSING or some ap- plications to rent or buy faster than others solely because of race and refusal by a broker to eooperate with another broker just ~ause or his client ·s race, sex or national origin. These and other restrictions have been in the civil codes for years. but the real estate depart- ment couldn't enforce them until they were written into the state's business code In 1975. E ven with the department in the picture, pro- perty owners who discriminate still can't be touched except by lawsuit. But it's different for brokers who are openly biased. Just last month. two Los Angeles area oHices were hit by ~scrim.ination charges. In February, a San Francisco Bay Area broker was charged in the first such case. THE REAL ESTATE DEPARTMENT will hold hearings on whether to revoke their licenses. Each is accused of violating one of the 31 an~­ discrimination rules issued last year. In one case, the broker supposedly told sellers he would "do everything in my power to see that <these) buyers would not be allowed to purchase the property." strictly because they were black. The real estate department charged him with re- fusing to aJlow an appraiser access to a home to keep the black family from qualifying for a home loan. Another broker is accuaed of circulating a fact sheet on an apartment complex offered for sale and stating the building bad "two colored te- nants." The departmeo\ said tbia was "selective discrimination implying a sale limitation baaed on race." THE TIDRD CASE INVOLVES a broker who allegedly imposed a five times higher rent ln· crease on a black tenant tho oa whites. The t.bree license revocation actions are mere· ly the first salvos in a war on discrimination pro· mised by Real Estate Commi&aloner David Fox. "We want to enforce these rules aggresslve· ly," be says. Six new investigators were added to his stair this year to speetd enforcement. II their efforts succeed, the new rules may spur a new era in real estate sales, with the state's longstandin~ laws finally being enforced. Enrollm.ent 'Grows After Graduation LA JOLLA <AP> -All the guys and girls still around rrom Clilf Robertson's graduation class at La Jolla ffiJh back In 1941, and then some are set for bis reuruoo. · Robertaon, a motion picture star, bu asked friends to round up the classmatet for a cocktail party in bis La Jolla home May 6. OCC Team _____ 556_.5880_ · Newspaper publisher Don Lapham said that "about 200 are going to show up." Lapham said that's about three times the class enrollment. Wins 2nd Honors Oran1e Coast College'• apee<:b team finished second out ol 84 community colle1ea •t the National Speech Tournament lo Sacramento. OCC linlabed 21A points behind fint·place Palomar College. The team has compet- ed In Ove tournaments this year, wiDD.lng three and finis hing second twice. It is C03cbed by Peg Taylor and Mike Leigh. Rick Olguin of Santa Ana won three gold awards and one silver to tie for "Speaker of the T ournament" honors the first Ume an OCC s tudent has woo the award. Br ad Greeley of Newport Beach earned gold medals In l.Jncoln· Douglas debates and comm unl catlo.J Appebaied Newport Beach stockbroker Dick Smith has been named state chairman of programs and music of Kiwanis for 1978-79. Industry Chief Harbor Chamber To Hear Speaker Justin Dart, fhatrtan of Dart Industries, wnl be the guest speaker Tuesday at the aMual scholarship breakfast hosted by the Commodores or the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com· merce. The event is held each year to salute Lhe top 15 graduating seniors rrom Newport Harbor. Corona del Mar and University high schools. DART BEGAN his business career with the Wal1reen Co .. a Chlcago·based drugstore chain and later ~ame president or Liggett Drug Co .. and president of Liggett's parent company. United Drug, Inc. He later ~ame cbaJrman ot Rexall Drug and Chemical Co. That finn changed Its name to Dart Industries, Inc. in 1969. ~. Aprtl at, 1171 DasMng Dad Actor Paul Newman clowns with his ~aughter Susan, 24, over playing a roman- tic lead. The actress is featured in the curre nt issue of Ladies Home Journal dis- cu~sing among other things what it's like be ing the daughter or a movie star. Rogue ~ver Raises Flap ROGUE RIVER, Ore. <AP> -New restric· Lions on recreational boaters plying Southern Oregon's Rogue ruver have whipped up a politJcal flap as turbulent as. tbe stream's famous whitewater rapids. The Rogue is well known among drift boaters because of its rapids and deep, rugged canyons. Fis hermen flock to its waters for the annual runs of salmon and sl~elhead. N THE CONTROVERSY ERUPTED IN December when the state Marine Board slapped a 62-person-a-day limit on a popular 33-mile segment of the river between Grave and Watson creeks. The board imposed tbe rules to keep the ( OlJTDOORS) nominally wild river _ from being jammed with boaters. The limits apply from the Frtday before Memorial Day through Labor Day. Applications for trip permits must be made in advance. U more than 62 persons apply for a 1lven day. lots will be drawn. JACK llldlA.BAN. CllAllBEll OF commerce manager in nearby Granbt"'Pass, wouldn't be sur· prised ·if fl.stfights erupt when soo:iebody tries to enforce the rules. "Peciple around here think it's their ri1ht to use the RA>gue, and they are opposed to new 1ov· ernment rules on them because the river's getting crowded with visitors," he said. The 33-mile stretch in question ls the only part of the river covered by the federal Wild and Scenic Rivers Act -meaning it is to be preserved in its primitive state. THE MARINE BOARD RESTIUE:TED boat trips by commercial outfitters and guides in 1974 and has been under pressure rrom the federal agencies to extend the restrictions to private boaters. .. w e·re managing t.hls as a nationaJ river " said Lloyd DeWerff or the U.S. Forest Service. "Many people feel the river's being overused." '"There are people who want a wilderness area that means they can use it and nobody else," said Jack Sim, park director for Josephine County. "But the Rogue around here is a way of life, and people don't want outsiders telling them what to do." FEDERAL SURVEYS SHOW THAT 60 per- cent of the private boat trips last year were by Oregonians. half of Lbem residents of Jackson Josephine and Curry counties, through which the river flows. Marine Board Chairman Mel Jackson or Eugene said he voted for the regulations bec:au.ae the Rogue belongs to more lban just the people or south western Oregon. "I felt there was a need for regulations because the managing agencies felt there was a need ... The rules aren't carved in stone, but we have to get along with the feds." be saJd. BUT CALEB WADE OF Grants Pass, who cast one of the two dissenting votes, sees ominous overtones in the new rules. "I don't thln.k Lbe feds have any business re- gulating rivers that are wholly within one state," said Wade. who operates a resort and nms boat trips in ~ non-regulated portJon of the river. ''They feel somebody in New York bu aa much right to our rivers as Oregonians. "That scares me. ti they say that, what's to keep. them from damming our rivers to divert water to California.'" Historical Group Sets Fossil Tour •nalysl.s. Flip Hitchcock or Huntington Beach won first place tn Jn - formaUve speaking. 37 Officials Protest Mexican Pot Sprays RECENTLY, DART has been a proponent of economic educa· lion both ln schools and amon1 adult8. He hu bffn lnstnamen- ta 1 In provldln1 the 26-week COUJ'tC Cutf'CnUy being offered to members of lhe chamber of commerce. OUllT SPEAKER Jwtln Dart Fossil Day ls scheduled Maye from 10 a.m . to 3 p .m .. at Biey View Element.arY School, 2531 SUI.a -----------Ana Heights, by the Natural History Fo\lftdauon of Duties Offered SAN FRANC ISCO <AP) -The 1hertff'1 de· parlmeot has volun. leered to &11umt aecurl. ty dutJee for· crlmt· ridden Saa l"r.acl1co Ouera! Helplt&I , SACRAMENTO <AP) - Thirty-seven !tato tc1lsl1ton have slped a letter. released Thursday, proteettoa the federal 1overnme.nt'1 participation in lbe UH or the Paraquat herbicide to tll1 marijuana ln llllwto. Ticket.I for the 18 brea1tfaat, which wtll be held •t 7:30 a.m. at the Balboa Bay Club, may be obtained throu&h tbe chamber omces, 1•10 Jamboree Road, Newport S,&cb, 844-8211. I Reapn in China HONG KONO (AP) -Ronald Re11an. former 1overnor of California, Hld Saturday bla one-day vlslt &n Hon. Kong la ·'p\ll'ely a private one. ' Rdpn. accompanied by wtle and a par- ty of ortlcl•l•. arrived rrom Talw•n Friday ru,ht. Orange Counlv. The eveni will feature field trips to nearby Jee Aae fossil digs, recognition of donora lo the museum, a fossil jewelry sale and a picnic lunch lecture oo "Focs11 Marine Vertebrates or Lbe Southeast Los Angeles Ba.sin," by•Dr. Lawrence G. 8arMS. For advance re1istration call 558-l3M or 644·2239. • l .. . . . . DAILY PILOT A • Students Due Tour ·Of City DA VIS (AP) -The city ot Baterafteld ia the toi>lc of a coUege course called "Bakersfield Ap· preclation'' by a hometown boy who de. rends the place. Fifteen students have 1l1ned up for the new three-day course to be ta\lgbt by student Kevin Ernst at the University of California's ex· pertmentaJ college here. ••DEEMED THE armpit of the world, Bakersfield bas suffered a much maligned and perhaps unjust reputa- tion." says the descrip· lion of the course. "Yet ror one who is familiar with her, Bakersfield can offer many subtle if not obscure charms." Students will travel April 28-30 to Bakersfield, where they will march in papier mache costumes as or· ganic vegetables in the city's annual Heritage Days parade. TREY WILL go raft· ing on the Kern River, visit the site of a l930's "Okie" shanty town and observe the Saturday night drag strip action on Chester Avenue. "Most people are used t o h aving the Bakersfield 'Let"s Eat!' sign flash at them when they get off on Business Route 99, where there are a million flop motels and hotels. It's a pretty ugly street," Ernst said. "BUT YOU don't go to Bakersfield to ap· preciate the culture or the architectural won- ders. You have to get off on the people who live there." Nello Foxx, executive vice president or the Bakersfield Chamber of Commerce, was in- formed about the course a nd commented, "l think what be <Ernst) is trying to say ls that this is really a quality com- munity with quality peo-- pie.·· Camping Booklet Issued W ASHINOTON <AP l -Tbe National Park Service has issued the latest edition of its booklet "Camping in the National Park System." The updated volume includes information on park fees, visitor regula- tions. safety abd back- country camping. It includes a tabular listing of the services and facilities found in more than 400 camp- grounds in 100 park facilities from Alaska to the Virgin Islands. The booklet C06ts $1.40 and can be purchased from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Gov· ernment Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 20402. Order item numbe r 024 -005-00700-8. Magazine Cartoons Barred ATLANTA CAP> -A U .S . District Court judge bas barred Screw magazine from using what the Pillsbury Com- pany claims are depic- tions of its "Doughboy" and "Ooughgirl" engaged in sexual acts. The temporary order prohibits reproduction, republication or dis· tribuUon of a mock ad· vertisement which ap· peared 1n the magulne Feb. 20. The complaint said Pillsbury has spent at least $70 million to de· velop a wboleeome im· aae for its dough boy, named "Po ppln ' Freah ," and bis dou1h11rl companion, "Popple Fresb." 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Third Straig h t W i a ·Col/ ls llUmbli,;g . -·-But Not .to Player HOUSTON <AP> -One of Gary Player's standard com- ments, almost a code with the South African globe-trotter, ls: ''Golf is a very humbling, very strange game." ln the last three weeks he's turned il into a truism. His victories have been among the more unusual in American golf history and the game has, indeed. been· a very humbling one -to his competitors. In the final rounds of the last three events he's made up an ln· crdible 17 shots and won all three -the M,ast.ers, Tournament ment of Chatnp~ons and now the Houston Open. And there's no let~up in sight. He'll try the New Orleans Open this week for a fourth con- secutive title, which was last ac- complished by Jack Burke ln 1952. "Oh. no. You don't dare let voursel! start lblnking you can't be be;tten. You never think that " he s._.d., and repeated, · 'Goir ls a very ,humbling game. ··sut, .. he :tontinued: '.'I'll tell you t~is. W•· much easier ,dolng it this '!'a1" playing 10 tourna- metlts in a row and.having your ram Uy' ~th yw. .than commut- ing to South Africa, as I've dobe for lbe pest 20 years." Player caroe from seven shots off the pace·in tbe last rounds of the M~ and Tournament of Champions. On Sunday be came from three strokes behind -ac- tually he was ftve behind al one time during the final 18 holes - with a solid, no-bogey, 3-under- Oranges Face Bosto~ Emo Still seeking their first victory after two road enga1ement.1, the Ana"eim <>ruces open the ~ World Team Tennis bome se~aon tonight (7:30) at Alaheim Convention Center aaain.lt t.be Bost.on Lobstm. Sunday the Oranges lost a 27-18 decision at SacrameQto before 2,278 to this same Lobsters outflt as Ne•port Beach resident L~Y Bmenoo and his BoatOd crew uaumed a tl-13 halft.lme bulge and •lowly widened it behind the /lay of Martina NavraUlova an Greer Stevens. The distaff side of the Lobatera' araonal took the Oranges apart, 6·0 , while Navrat.lova won •omen'• slngles. S.S. over Roal• Cal'1s. par 69 that left him; a single stroke in front of big Andy Bean. His winnlng total was 210, a distant 18 shots under par oo the 6,997-yard Woodlands Country Club course and the best 12-bole toud on the tour this year. It made him only the 10th man in PGA tour history to win three cbn11ecutlve titles; the fmsl in two years; and the first foreign player to sweep three in a row slnce Bobby Locke, also of South Africa, turned the trick 31 years ago in 1947. Player also woo $40,000 Crom the total purse or fl()0,000. That pushed his earnings for the last three weeks to $130,000 -more than he'd collected ln any full season ln the 22 years he's been playing the American tour. And he's the first man to wln three Amerlcan titles this season. Importantly, the 42-year-t>ld physical fitness buff ls the win· nlngest player in the game th.is year and says he's playing bet· ter now than at any lime ln his ZS.year pro career. "It's a wonderful thing to be able to say. at ·age 42, you're playing better than you were at 22 or 32," be said. "I'm playing the best of my life, beUer even than I did in '74, wblcb was my best year ever. ··And, baning "injury or ill· See PL\YER; Pa1e 9Z \ ~.April~. 1979 DAILY PILOT \ LIGH'tHOUSE POINT, Fla. (AP> -ke 's 4.5 nqw and a auncll,y 235 pounds. A long wey' ~ youth snd weight ol la= m world heavyweight boxlna cbampioo. Bu gemar· Johansson aQS the lost days of yore hold no me for bfm in these relaxed dQS at bis suburban Fort Lauderdale home. ·1 don't live i.D the put:• be sald. "1 llve for what c:oWd be cor:ni.ng up." Johansson was 22, a Swedish champion when be fkat came to New York City to fight Floyd Patterson for Patterson's crowa. His flsts, .. TOOD4er aM Llab~." l>Ut Patterson to the canvas seven times in six rounds on the ftilbt of June 218, 1959. And \be world bad a new champ until Patteraoa took the tide back on June 20 the next year. "Tbe first fight was so easy fbat I thlnk 1 went a Utt.le bit too cocky in the second," Jobao.saon reflected during a recent in· lerview with The Miami Herald ... I was not preparing t&e same way. I forget about my tactics." Theo came the rubber match, wblch Johan.sson lost on March 13, 1961, al Miami Beacb. "I don't like to say things like this," be said, "but that fight 8 J ht Past was put on Miami Beach because that was the only place they could have their own roles." The rule he referred to was a mandatory eight count. Pal· terson went down twice in the first round and was up al the couht ot three. giving him five comits to regroup his senses and atrength. . "U that rule hadn't been on, I should have knocked out Pat· • terson in the rU'St fOUDd ... Johansson now Uves a relaxed style of life, playing golf almost every day and taking his time doing whatever he wal\ts. He returns to bis homeland every summer but most of his tible is spent in Florida. He said hls "best money" is in real estate. ''I'm sstisfied." he sald. He was not .apeclfic about his finances but denied that he got h1s start with money from boxing. ··1 was dealing with crooks," he sald. "I never got"to know how much I did make. lt would cost me too much to get It (his fair share> the legal way. so I Just forgot It.·· or the million-dollar pW'Ses in boxing today' Johansson smiles. ..I would be saUslied just to be their agent, to catch nine, 10 percent. .. _Suddenly Portland Is Fading Angels Host Mariners SEATI'LE <AP> -Time is running out for the world cham· pion Portland Trail Blazers, and the Seattle Super-Sonics know it. The Blazers. who lost the home court advantage in their National Basketball Association playoff series with the red-hot · Soolcs in game one and lost Bill Walton in game two, suffered another blow to their already woupded pride Sunday when Seattle muscled its way to a 99-84 victory before 1~98 Coliseum rans in game three . Suddenly, once-mighty Portland, which fashioned upset after upset in the playoffs last season en route to the NBA title, finds itself wilb its back to the wall, trailing 2·1 in the best-of· seven Western Conference semifmal series. Game four is set for Wednes· day night ln Seatt.le. where the Sonics have woo lS s traight. Despite shooting just 34 per. cent for the game, the Sonics got clutch performances from veterans Fled Brown and John Jobnaon ID llae second half SUn· day to bury tbe '8,Jury-plagued Blazera. . "The reason we could stay 1n t he gaine was because we played gOod defense.'' said Len· ny Wilkem, SeattJ.e•s coach. Leading 44·43 at halftime. Seattle came out roaring in the third period and ran off a 20-8 spurt capped by Paul.Silas' hook shot that put the Sonics ahead 64·51 with 3:58 remaining ln lb~ period. Job:oson, who scored all 18 of bis points in the second half, bad eight in that streak. Brown and Johnson then com· blned ror 10 points each in a 22-12 outburst at the outset or the final period for a 93-74 Sonic lead wlth 2:56 lefl to play. "Our guards got me the ball al the right time and I just put lt up al the right lime," said Johnson, who hit 9 or 12 shots in the second half. ''I can be very of· fenslve-minded when I want to be. I can open a game up." Portland, with jus t nine players in uniform, got into rouJ trouble down the stretch. Dave Twardzik ~d Tom Owens each bad five f'ouls and Maurice Lucas, Larry steele and Lionel Hotllll! bad rour each. "It hurts a lot. We can't sub· sUtute.'' said Lucas. Portland's musctdar forward, who scored only ~ four points lo the second hall to flnlSh with 10. •'The game wote us·doWn." Portland coach J aclt Ramsay said he couldn't rault the play or bls team. which miales Walton. wh9 suffered a broken bone in his left root Friday. Ain't Nobody Going to Meu With Us-Tanana Frank Tanana was Jritcbing for El Paso ln the Texas League, I;ee ·Majors was working on a new TV series tentatively called "Cyborg," and it was the last , time the Calilornia Angels were stx games over .500. . Thal was on JuJy 10, 1973. The Angels have played a lot of second division baseball in the meantime. Over the years Tanana joined the Angels, .. Cyborg" became "The Six Million Dollar Man," and the Angels became owner Gene Autry's $6 million men, as he added several expensive free agents to the lineup . The dollar signs are beginning to show vital signs. Although they are in third place in the American League West Division, the Angels have a 10·4 record as they open a 12- game bomestand tonight against the SeatUe Mariners. Toronto Blue Jays. Detroit Tigers and Cleveland Indians wlll follow the Marine r s into Anaheim Stadium, as the Angels get lbe season's fint look at Eastem Division teams. In looi.gbt's game. the Angels' Nolan Ryan UH> opposes Mike Parrott <O--O> . Sunday's Angels• game at Minnesota was postponed due to rain and wet grounds. It has been rescheduled for Thursday afternoon. June 22. But before the rains came, the Angels engaged in a wild brawl wittl the Twins Saturday at Bloomi.ngton, Minn., durtne a game won by California 5·3. The Angels' Bobby Grich charged Twins' pitcher Roger Erickson wheo Grich thought too many pitches bad gone toward his body instead or home plate. Although Grieb got thrown _out . ' A••ei.sr.ie a110-.. ~ ..... "* April 2~ SHUIHI c..llfoml• 1 .2S p.tn. April 1S 5HttM ~ c.lllaml• ''" p,tn. Aprll 26 SNtaut Qllton.i• r:2Sp m. or the game. took a rootball-style tackle from the Twins' Rich Chiles and some punches to the head. the Angels indicated the experience was an overall plus. "One thing for sure." said TaNina, the hard-throwing left· hander who improved his rec· ord to 4·0 Saturday ... Ain't nobody going to m ess with us or walk over us .as they have in the pa.st : .• This club bas a more seri'oos approach. If tt has to right. it will fight. It's good to lay the law early. set a prece· dent." Arter the brawl, Grieb said that between pitches he heard Twins manager Gene Mauch shout what he felt were orders to throw at him. FRANK TANANA "He <Mauch l was s aying things like: 'Okay. Do il now. we'll get him now.· 1 don"t blame Erickson. He's gotta do what his manager teJls him," Grich said. .. J don't like lo fight, but ac- tually it was kind or run." Grich said. ''I'm looking forward to the next one. I hope it ·s with these guys too." . Monday Convincing: .Brazilian His Back is Sound No Match LOS ANGELES <AP> -Rick Monday says bis only concern about this spring was convincing people his back is sound . ··r could have merely said it was all right." the Los Angeles Dodfers' centerfielder says, ··su geWng off to the best start in my lile cert.ainly makes it look better.·· Monday slugged his eighth home run or the season in Los Dodgen Sla ce AllO-• ICAK ._.. 1"'1 ""'11 2S Lol NIQIMft M Onclnn.U Al>f'll » Lol"""""" M Ctn<lt!Mtl ""'11 2' Lol An1ttes .c SI. 1.-4, h .m. 5p.m S JOp.m Angeles' 7 -3 victory over Houston Sunday. He leads major league baseball in homers and has twice as many as another National Leaguer. He also drove . in three runs for a total of 19 that leads the NL. The American League leader is Boston's Butch Hobson with 21. I DON SUTTON RICI( MOMOAY' ''I'm enjoying it. I don't know how long it will last, but I'm really not that concerned," Mon· day said. "When I tail orr. on lhi~ club someone else will get hot. ··1 happen to be swinging the bat very well." said Monday. who's batting average is .380. He also had a good start a year ago. but it becametheworstyearofh1~· 11 major league seasons. . Monday finished 1977 as a part-time perrormer, hitting on- ly .230. He was a victim of severe back spasms. eventually traced to a pinched nerve. The inJury occurred when he tried to make a diving catch on the Houston Astroturf May 31, 1977. Don Sutton pitched bis first complete game or the season and gave up eight hits. including Bob Wat.son's first home run of the year for Houston. Sutton has given up eight home runs in 221;!, Innings. .. At least." he sai41. "I'm tied with Monday." At the moment. Sutton's c.r.a. IS 6.95. MOUSTOtt Plihl II C..Dell )b CMeftO<I JCrut r1 WallOfl lb ,, ....... -< s.tnlljtop "°"" 11> ".Meltt« $S JNltllrop Wtlllllf pll KfOl'Kll P ~rrm•n < ..,, .... • J 2 0 4 0 I I l 0 I I • 0 I 0 J I I I '0 0 0 0000 3 0 I 0 • 0 '0 I 0 0 0 '0 0 0 I 0 0 0 '0 0 0 LOSANO•LH l-s2b Ruue11u ltSmllllrt •~••<I C.yJb O.•ny lb ... ~ .. Mollcl•y,.. v • .,, SullOll p Mrlllll 'J t 0 ) I 7 I ~ 0 I I 0000 • I 1 I iJJO 4 0 t I 3 I I J 3 0 I 0 tOOo For Lope z LOS ANGELES <AP> -It didn 'l take hard•hitting Danny "Little Red" Lopez long to re· alize he would s uccessfully de· fend his World Boxing Council featherweight championship in his latest outing. The 2S-year-old Lopez knew '"it was just a matter of time·· after landing a right to the head of challenger Jose DePaula late in the second round Sunday and s ure enough, the champion had no difficulties after that against the Brazilian. The end came at 1 :30 of the sixth round of the nationally televised bout when Lopez was hammering away at the helpless DePaula. It appeared that ref. eree Dick Young was about to stop the proceedings when a towel was thrown into the ring from the challenger's corner. ··1 got off to a little bit of a slow start, but then I got it go- ing," srud the unmarked Lopez. who recorded his third sue cessful title defense, a ll by knockout. "He never hurt me. but he knocked me off.balance a couple or times. He was a hard guy to find." The champion, a resident of Alhambra, hopes to fight again within two months. "I don't want to lay off too long," he said. "I want to keep busy. I'd like to fight again soon . m aybe in June. I just want to hang on to the title as long as 1 can and make some money. Maybe I'll fight Ernesto Herrera next, I don"t know ... The 29-year-old DePaula, who was stopped for the first time. was Impressive early in the scheduled lS..rounder but Lopez bad the situation well in control after stunning the challenger late in the second round. The champion unloaded a short left that noored DePaula in the final second s of the fifth round. a blow that opened a cut. under the Brazilian's right eye. 'IV Sport8 Meno ,._._.ton Tele.blon The ff.Dlshlnl touch wu In mixed doubl• where Stevena and Mlke .Eatep ripped Frucola Durr and Mark Cox. 8·2. 1 DAVEY LQllES GETS BACK TO FIA8T BASE SAFU V IN SUNDAY'S ACTION.> 8 :30 p.m. (7) -BASEBALL -The New York Yankees meet the Baltimore Orioles ln Baltimore. (ta~. ---:r ........ '. l",lb ..,,., .. ... .. .. " .. ~ .. .. 'fl' . ~ ~., l : ... • • • ~· ,. '·' PLAYER. • • Ceefl c r II Prem Pap Bl ne11, and you have to be lueb to avotd thole, II 1 penan tMw care of bJmaelt, there'• no rM· goo you eu 't ~u. Lo play weU, plav wlnnlQs 1011, at least unUJ~reao." The hulking Bean, M and 210 pounds, n£::~ to a 71 that left him a 1 e •bot back at 271 He bad a to Ue .ttb a 15-foot blr4ie putt OG tbe *b, but. as Player watched wttb Ma s-year-old dauabter ln hla arms, Bean missed Kellogg Picked Huntington Beach High School's Joanne Kellogg bas been selected to coach tbe South team 1n the first Oranae County girls All-star basketball 1ame that will be played at Orange Coast College June 17 as part of a doubleheader with the boys game. ._.,,April M . 1171 _.., ......... Kellogg, 'CO&Ch of the CIF f.A two-tlme basketball cbam· plonship OUers, baa accepted the invitation to oppose Cypress High 's Marie Upton in tbe game. SUZV KELLEMS IS TAKING AIM ON OLYMPIC GAMES. Sports CUpped Short Morgan's Streak Ends SAN FRANCISCO -Joe Morian'• record streak of con· secutive games without an er· ror ended at 91 Sunday when he made a wild throw in the second inning of the Cincinnati Reds' game against San Francisco. The Cincinnati s tar had established a major league rec- ord for second basemen when his streak hit 90 Friday night. The Reds won, 2·1 in 10 Innings before a crowd or S0,510. BorgR!p•C011110rs TOKYO -Bjorn Borg of Sweden served rerocio111ly on key points and blasted some sur· prise shots as he mastered Jim· my Connors, 6·1. 6-2 in the finals or a four-man invitational tennis tournament Sunday. Manuel Orant.es of Spaln beat -Guillermo Vilas or Argentina 3·6, 7·6, M for third place. Borg won $100,000, Connors got $50.000, Orantes $30,000 and Vilas $20,000. Mitt .... , ..... SANTA C'l.ARA -Bernie Mit· ton knocked off John MacEnroe, 4·6. 64, 6-4 Sunday to earn a berth ln toaliht'a flnals of the Santa Clara Valley Grand Prix tennis tournament. Mitton will face Arthur Ashe, who defeated Roscoe Tanner, 6·4, 5·7, 7-6 in the otber- sem i.rmal SUnday. &JctlrfH Ballin HOUSJ'ON -Brian Gottfried mastered the exaggerated spin shots or Ilie Nastase for a 3·6, 6·2, 6·1 victory Sunday in the finals of a World Championship Tennis tA>urnament, here. Gottfried earned $30,000 for his e ffort. 1t'aUrljt ..... MARTINSVILLE, Va. -Dar- rell Waltrip set a pace that proved destructive for anyone who tried to keep up wttb hlm and ran away with SUnday•s $110,000 Virglnia500GrandNatlona1stock car race, bls third victory 1n nlne starts lb.ls season. Dodge driven Nell BoMett and Richard Petty, who crashed into each other 50 laps from the end, took the next two places. more than three laps 1n back or the winner. Both cars were heavlly damaged. but able to continue. A_, .. ~ 11.S. NORCROSS, Ga. -Teen-ager Tracy Austin whipped Russian ace Natasha Borodina 6-1 · ln women's singles to 1ive the United States a 30-26 victory Sunday In the finale of the four. day Weis man Cup American. Soviet tennis series. The U.S. squad took the four. day series 111·99 after winning 80· 72 In the three· day event last year in Russia for a cumulative score of 191·171. Aleott Trl .. plu AUTO LWING THE WAY IT AUTO BE! Baseball Standings 1978 AMMYllSAIY COUGAR LIASIMI AS LOW AS 5 12946 Mo.+ Tu 6Llc. C.p coat 1$560. Totll of mo pymt• ueeo.H Rnldual t3863. 3e moa OAC AMERICAN LEAGUE Eu&Dh11lon Detroit Boston Milwaukee New York Cleveland Baltimore Toronto W L Pct.. GB 9 3 .750 10 s .661 ~ 8 7 .533 2~ 6 8 .429 4 s 7 .417 4 s 9 .357 s s 9 .357 s Wett Dlvlaloa Kansas City 10 2 .833 Oakland 11 3 .786 Angela 10 4 . 714 1 Chicago S 1 .417 S Minnesota 6 11 .3S3 6~ Seattle 5 14 .263 81Aa Teua 3 9 .250 7 ......,..,~ llosl'Oft "'· an.ltnel a.-10. ~ .. ,,.. 11 I~ Mfl9•. 1 Oetrollt·l, T•llft"I. N fMM, 11 IMlfltll Torotile ... ~O l(eMAl OIY .. e.tllmtrw 9 Mllw.-..a.,...Yorll2 0-.lllM $. SHttl• 0 ~•11 lornie et MlnNtota, Pf>d, r •In ,_...,..._.. Clt.,,.llWIO (Mood ~I at TManto 11.e"*'"Yll ~~· N•• Yorll C011ldry 1·01 •t ••lll"'OU CM<G,....rCHl,11 O.trell UNll...,.,., 1-01 et OMc.eoo Cltr-1·'1. II . W.•nu• Qty lo..nt Ml •I n ... co. Slllt l·U,11 Ml,_.. QAIW\ ! .. ) at Otlllllld (.,..._. U I, fl s .. tttt t"9rroct M> at Ctllfwlll• '"""" 0-1>. rt NA'DONA.L LEAGUE Eu& Division W L Pel GB Montreal 8 s .615 Chicago 8 6 .571 ~ New York 9 7 .563 ~ Philadelphia s 6 .455 2 Pittsburgh S 7 .417 2~ St. Loub 5 9 .357 3~ West Dlvtalo1l Cincinnati 11 S .688 Dodien 10 s .667 Ya San Franclsco 1 7 .500 3 San Dleso · 6 7 .462 a~ Houston 7 9 .438 ' Atlanta 3 11 .214 7 ......,.. .... ... ltlNtlll '"' "-"91111 ,... Ind tlfflt .... "'"'"· 11• lflll• Mofttf'MIS. .............. , CM~ J,. ..._ 'Alrtl I CU 11'1111!1111 Sell o ...... AtllM•4 (ltlNll•>-L.M ....... , ....... Clncll!llMI a. lM l'~lk't I (10 ,.._, ,...,..O- SI. I.WIS ("Wl'Mtlfl "21 at Melltr'NI <MW 0-11 ~ If',.,,,._ Ml el '91 .......... e II.MC~ •·ll, 11 -lltMuftll '"'°*" Ml at Mft M l2MHY Ul,11 ..,. ~ (~--.. o .. ""'*°" 1Af11111t., M>,11 °"''--~ LEASIN• ••• ALL MAKIS A~MODB.S '"'MIW 01 USID ) • GYMNASTICS I MISCELLANY -Yo~g Mesa Gymnast Sets Oly~pics as Goal .. By HOWARD L. HANDY ••Dlltr .......... Shi hll taken ballet lessons alnce abe wu ·3, bas an agile body and a hYPene.lve mental approach t.o ·the aport of gym· nuUcs at aee 18. For young Suzy Kellems of Coat.a Mesa, a 1opbomore at Eat.ancla Hi1h School, thlB is the Ideal approach to moving ahead ln the a port and perhaps attainingi the 1oal of every youn1 gymnast ln the world-an Olympic medal. • She recently captured the all· round championship in a re· glonal meet ln HawaU with a score of ~.6, winning three of the four events and placing ~4 lD the other. Her highest event score was a 9.75 <out or a po8slble 10) In optional events in vaultin~. She wtU continue in a sectional meet in Arizona late In May and in the U.S. nationals at the Astrodome in Houston in June. She competes in Class 1 this year but will move to elite (the top class> next season. "I woWd be competing in the elite class this year ll r hadn't tom the ligaments in my ankle in the first meet last year," she says. "I was vaulting and did a cartwheel on and a backflip off. I opened up too soon and fell on my ankle. Then 1 had to have surgery on my other ankle and didn't get Lo compete much last year." At the present time, she is 5-2~ and weighs between 98 and 100 pounds, apparenUy the ideal body dimensions ror a gymnast. Sbe has long legs and when she was ln junior high school, once leaped 5-llh ln the high jump when she stood 4-10. She practices about four hours da lly, six days a week at Gym. nasties, USA, in ~ Alamitos and her coach ls 20-year-old Darryl Davis. When Olga Korbut was the toast or the gymnastics world in 1972, she was shorter and had more arch to her back in com· petition. Nadia Comenici, the 1976 sensation at Montreal, was the same height and build as Kellems. How do the Judges look at performer• and make a de· cl.lion! "They used to want the back arched but now they~lve higher potnu to a stralght back, similar to that taught in ballet," she say~Tbls m a kes for cleaner m, 1es and better posture. They also want hard tricks as well as wanting you to look beautiful in performing them. They want you E1•1-orCostlg to look ~ out illere 1n com· A ltbou1b 1he hat watched petltlon. ' otben lD top.IUl.ht competlt.lon, 11 then any ~ of the tom· •h• bu no ldoll Iil the sport. peUUOD ab• Uket ~tt.er than • .., Jmt -.nt to be my.elf and anotb~!_!_ M-· ,_ ..._ 1 do the belt I can," ab• aays. "l .. , llUTill lllUUI" exerc--.a--'t ·-·-copu •nv-e'--.. work budest on the beam rilht ""'" wi "" " -.,vue -· now because It ll a chaUeqe. How did abe happen to 1et ln· until uu. year. I didn't do very . wtved '1th omnuUcs on this weU on the beam but in tbe meet level? ln H1wall, I got a 9.7. . "I took ballet ltllOftl ud went "l th1nk l am Mppler with a out for all •ports In Junior hl&h hlgb score on the bea111 became 1cbool," abe recalll. "One of die of th'\ a. It la really neat to get • coaches felt 1 could do well in bhrh mark and I fffl a lot Wtar. gymnaaUe• and I went home T.lf you do a hard trld. you and beued my dad to let me i et get bleber polntl than you do for lnto lt at • 1ym and be fl.Dally an easy one." · relented." la th1a aomethin1 that comes Sbe aUJI takes those ballet naturally! leuom but lln't comrr:n: for "My coach used to have to th E •·--'-Hi h 1-IY baby me to get me to Irv new ~uc:t::;:i I I r.-01• trick•," she says. "In aet. be "It wouldn't be fair to the used to have to make me do other lirls." ahe says. "I have th~ow 1 have the bug and 1 bad prlvate ~aching and It just look for the hardest ones. G)'m· wouldn' be fal,r... . nasties Is a lot of mental u ..-en While tbe Otymptca are ln tler as physical preparation. You immediate future slghta and have to have your head together goals, she la also looking beyond and have self dlBclpllne. ~I· Ill d t l Id "l admit I'm a ham when ll w ara ua e n m ·year comes to competlllon. I put and hope to prepare for the everything into it when 1 set Olympic tryouts and then not on- before a crowd and I ham on the 3; make the team but do well in charm I normally don't put on ln ;b~-=· compete ln the see- the gym. l .. al then "I'm not an lnttovert. I put Uona and nauon meets, everything into the competition co to Canada ln September. Next once I get out there in front of year 1t Wlll De the Pan Amencan people. Those who bold · back Games team to try for and then don't win... in 1980, ~Moscow Olympics. Pro ~age, Beekey 76ers Bury Knicks; BuCks Rip Denver NEW YORK -Doug Collins scored 24 points and Julius Erv· ing added 23 as the Philadelphia 76ers beat the New York Knlcks, 112·107. Sunday and completed a four·game sweep of thelr Na· Uonal Baksetball Association quarterfinal playoff series. Philadelphia, wbJcb deaJt New York ita fint '-0 blantfJlg evel' in a scheduled seven-same playoff series, next will meet the winner or the Washington-San Antonio series for the East.em Conference cbamplon.sblp. The game was by far the closest of the four between the teams, but Philadelphia was a ble to erase an early 13·Poil1t deficit and take conttol ln the s econd half. •-a,J43-JJ2 MILWAUKEE -Rookie Mar- ques Johnson scored a career· high 3S polnt.a, 10 ID Milwaukee's 40-point third quarter spree. Jeadin& the Bucb to a 14.3-112 NBA playoft victory OYer the Denver Nuggets Sunday. Blllkts,N-95 LANDOVER, Md. -Elvin Hayes' bit on a dunk soot with 46 seconds left and then blocked a George Gervin layup to give the Washington Bullets a 98·9S vie· tory over the San Ant.onJo Spurs Sunday to take a commanding 3·1 lead in their best-of-seven NBA quarter·flnal playoffs. ~ ... Ongais Places 4th DETROIT -Dou g Risebrough and Bob Gainey scored short-banded goals 24 seconds apart ln the first period Sunday to start, the Montreal Canadlens on the road to an s.o National Hockey League playoff rout of tbe Detroit Red Wlngs .. TRENTON. N.J. CAP> -A scor ing error that put Costa Mesa 'a Danny Ongais in fourth place at the finish of the Trenton 200 on the Trenton Speedway cannot be changed, the USAC sanctioning body has ruled. The race was won by Gordon Johncock, driving a Wildcat DGS powered by one of the few four-cylinder engines capable of running with the quick Cosworth V·8S. Ongals got caught behind the pace car during two caution periods late in the 134-lap race after scorers erroneously Usted him as the race leader. In fact, be was n early a tap beblnd ~ause or a lengthy pit atop. The error came when Ongais came in tor tires on lap 89 and Barracuda Hitting Barracuda have livened area s portsfls hlnJ? waters con- siderably, reports Lee Clark or Davey's Locker out of Newport Beach. "There are bi1 barracuda hit· tJna up and down the coast wlt.b a heavy blte," says Clark. spent almost 38 seconds making the change. He bad been running a close second to Jobncock at the time, after leading 31 laps earlier in the race. Just as Ongais was pulling out or the pits, Johncoc:k came in. and the scoring ollicials as· sumed that Ongais had taken over the lead. Jobncock made a very brief stop. Although Ongais pushed bard to make up for lost Ume, two later caution periods brought the pace car onto the track. On both occasions, the pace car picked up Ongais hutead of Johncock, lbe real leader. The pace car is supposed to set the pace during caution periods, holding back the first car. All other cars are allowed to cJo.se up at lbe rear, single file. When USAC reallied the er· ror, it was lap 125 -nine from the finish. Both the Ongais and Johncock pit c rews were notified. but by then It was too late for Ongais to catch Johncock. When the checkered nai came out, Jobncock was leading, followed by A.J . Foyt, Tom Sneva and Ongal.s. ,._.,. Lftil&, 3-J TORONTO -Borje Sabnlng and Stan Weir scored eoals 16 seconds apart In the second period Sunday night, sparking the Toronto Maple Leats to a 3· 1 triumph over tbe New York Islanders and tying their NHL quarterfinal playoff series at two. 8,....Steeep CHICAGO -Peter McNab scored twice in a four.goal rtrst period flurry Sunday bight wbicb carried the Boston Bruins to a S.2 victory over the Chicago Black HaWb and a four-irame sweep of their quarterfinal Stanley Clip playorrs. fr1tlen, 4-2 BUFFALO N .Y . -R ick MacLelsh capped a threegoal first period for Philadelphia with his sixth goal of NHL playorcs and the Flyera went on to deleat the Butralo Sabres 4-2 Sunday night to take a a 1 Jud in their best-0£-seven quarter-final series . ~a Sports Calendar Don't miss the BIG BOAT SHOW ltth• ANAHEIM CONVEff'.l'ION CENTER _...from DI~ NOW thru SUNDAY ' WE LEASE . AMnHIMGON WHEELS 24138 Month Mtlntenance PlllW A~ Free loan cars to lease customers: THEODORE ROBINS LUSllll CO. rDIJ•ff f \ lhl\ . " f I '' • 'o, • 2088H.,._11Yd. Cotta•• :MU-llZ11 II' 142 ... 11 . .. -~ .. .. r . ••• ~. ] . ... ~ • • 1 .. , .. .. ., HMNESS RAC1NG I PRO STANDINGS / BOATING Race Entries ~----­......... ,:. Plltt'T 11.u. -Ont .. tlf,. ~ Clal"'lf'lt ~ ~ 11MWt ,. "9fcaftt.. ' -... ts IM'Wfll Punt U ,IOt, Cltlml119 prlUI ~.-........ -(Oftl: hol• T-t ISMrtl; "91111 ""r<MI 1uc .. 1e1; IPrlMffi UI uir-1, ~· 0...0 CT ... I; ....... Clllllc.~I. UINlllld (Cit'llM!ll; '°"I A_., C~l; ......, °'9clt (1taa...-1. UCOMO ltAQ -OM ""i.. Pt<e. s ~ ... & llfder, -..._ ot woo t1 ... 1-. enw. Pina u.oao Sllfflt ~~ IOeMl•I; On HIOll tAclt ... menl; ~ T-!TOdd); Ntndlt Bf.tlrO CGr-oorrl; Ml~e MOftan lANl'IU). lord Plloeftla CDa,..tlltl; lllWni-• IOtudr .. ul; Sun Sll'O!la IMllUlll, 81g Otflc•r C ... rryl, TMl•D ltAC& -One "Ille. Pace. S .,.., OliK a. UllCltr, -'-3 racff IOI "°° llrat morw.,. C.I bHCb & .... , ..... ·-PutW $2,100 'ltPt•I Cl>tnnl•I: G.trrha/d (Aubin I. C.ro Hano...,. C~11I; AUQlc Oeut>er 1'41eman); Porl C~nc• CAciltrm..,I; Wllu-OCutbler), Hll1rlovsar.w CO. llalclllordl, l'OU•TM ltAC8 -Ont mitt. Pec:e Si.lllOnS & gMditl(p. S yff( Ol<b & Iii\· Ott, 110n•lnner l rac::tt 1or MOO first mOll•'r· C.tl brtcll, l r•ce&. ""'" $) ... •ndY~ Skipper 181.te-m•n I. P.ttlllc Ot111>er Cle,11ev >. KnoWbOdY' FOOi CPerry), Htbber RttilOlle IV•llendtnQIWlml. F•IM• 011lly (Keulf'l'•nl ; Tll• Punll I A11t1l11). 8 e rt Glt nv•I• 10 R.tlCllford); Mlratlt Eddie (GollClr .. 111, 9,19111 Bnll.• IOtnnisl ~ll'TM IUCI! Ont milt . P•ct. Non·wl,,,..r O.JOO 11·11 or STSO In les1 S sl.trtS. Aho •llglblt "°"'Wiiiner ~ ••tts for \600 llr\1 money. -·~• • re<u PUfM U.llOO s.,.. Mrrw (DIMMtl. ~·,,, _,,.,.. ICrul•I; CN11 (NII (QMl!lsl , 'lllvt I.Ord 10.UdfH ll), .. .tlttl l(llffll llw Tt,,.'1 h,lllttllllll, JKlt '' CMlee CWl111.,,.tl h llp .,........~, llltTM •ACS -Ont mllt. ltace . CltlmlllO l\Mdlc.ap. ~ 10 "ru<11 4 YHf oiti -'S lltfc.et\I. Pllrl.t U,JOO. Cl.iNr19IW'kft16,...._fOO Pralfi. L,.i t-...OY>; l.Yf"I Colll11& 10. 111.ttclllnl; Toronto H l°'41n· d~); T.,_ 10-1; "°"'" 8ot CT. ll•l<llford); 8ubbll11f Vl- IGo~ffll>: Olla4 UQMtoot (Valllfl OlllOll•ml ; Nl•rllt Pflmrou 1Bernal1, SMr-Alotl 14 tu 191111>1u1. SllVINTM llACIE -One mll~ Pa<• Ci.lmlno lltndl<.tD Pun• '4 .1 00. Cl1 lml11 0 pr ic e \ '" ,000. ".000-10.000 Hondo Myster, CGfagory1 w1nor Way <GoUlfreaul ; W•lll\eM Paul 10.&0mfrl, VI< 8 Ter (LIOhtllllll. Ed911w00d Stm!Kon I Fef'llUMll! I . J J& L~lltncltr CSPrl091I. ~ Ridge (Sl\orl); CJ Primrose <Dennis) IEIOHTM ltACI Ont mllt Peet Clalm ln9 ~lcep. Mere• 10 .,.,. eent Pur'I '3,JOO Cl•imlno prlu~ n .ooo.•,soo Announcer CAub ln l. S•no• Bronwyn 1 8 •~1D y I, Nallm Ct<veblt r l, Star Clleck lltcostel. Ouesl1011 A ICr•,,.I. S.<10• u vl• (0e)Om.trl. Sl<lll0 ... 11• IClllll, J J's P•lton 18•ylaul, Kiwi Amber IGovdrNul. HINTM ••ca ow.. mllt, P•c~ Claim ing l\tn<l•C•P M.trt~ :IO per. cenl Purse l-'.«IO c1a1mlno i>rk» llS.000-16,0ClO Ouun Sir.a-(V11111ndlnohoml. K•Melll IKai meltrl , My Olreti Kn19 h l IAullln l . Ev •s P11 !Goudrt.tul , Coolut Monst er I Perry), Tllrtt Slfp ILIQlllllllfl; N•ll•t s..-tO.nn•tl; Jame• Gem fLOrlQO), BM1lf> E•r1 ICt•nel Baseball's Top 10 ., n.._..W l'rfts AMIElllCAN LIAGUI! 8tttod°"lO•le.IL GA• II H Ptl. NATIONAL LIAoue B e .. 11 Cit •l •• " 71 .'38 o U It H Pel. Porte, ICC U O • •• 419 E.V•ltnl!M Mii IO 31 • 1S :tti C:.uettt •O °"~ .. u • n .,. llMM•r LA u ,. 14 It ·* CubD•9'1 Min 14 .. • II '°' Cay I.A IS .S4 • ti .US l(emp 0.1 I) 31 , I 1S 40S I( Htrl'•ndetSIL 14 50 9 11 .360 B•llor lor 11 41 • It• .m P.trrlSll MU 11 45 6 Ii .350 Herlow Bal 9 lt 1 11 .Jll P•rOr P911 U 47 • I• .:MO ltmon Cll1 11 •• I I .la& Almon so ll 48 • 1' .W C..rew Min t1 11 10 ta J80 OArver LA U M U 11 .»a Lrnn 8,n 1l S1 ' 19 .l73 J.CflU Hiii 1• '1 1 10 .Jlll "-tt- Grltfey Cln 1' 68 U 12 JU Hobson, Boslrlft, •: lh<e, Boston. H-•-i Coop•r, M ll••llh•. S, Hisle, M•,..IY, 1.-. .,._ltt, I : S Hen M llwa11ktt , i , G Tllom•s. derson, New York, 4, Mtllll•w,, Mllwaulltt, S. ••'*• Cllllwfll•. S· •11•nt•, 4; Benell, Clncl11ne1i, ~. McRae, Kan~ OIV. S Fergu10n, Houston, C. lit-Mt.O In ·-~·· HOD\Oh, 8 0\tOn 11 . Coooer. Mo..Uy, lM ......... It; a.rwy, M tl w•ull ee, 14. G.l llomas, Pro Cage, Hockey Playoffs w I. l'cl. • 1 150 1 l no Pfll..0.lpllle ' 0 1.000 New Voflt 0 4 .000 l"tlH-ljlllla wlfl) ,.,lfl •4 s .. uie Potlland s.tlti ~ .. , 333 O.nver 1 .. , M llw•llll.. 1 ))) s-.,·,Sc- Pflll•c1t'""'•1tt. New Y0tk 101 WHlllnqton ti, S... Anl0<1fo •~ MIJw.tull .. 14, Oeftver 112 S.•111• ... PwllMCll4 T ...... ,..~ O.nveretMllW~• .. we1lll"910ft at~ ...,,.onlo ~.,·,o.._, Porll-etS.atlle l'nay'a0-.1 S•n AntOlllo •I Wes111noton. II ne<•H•tV Mll•<hlkee •1 ~ ... , Monlrul OelrOll NHL l't..& YO,.•S ATAOLANCIE ~-· Seti", W L 01' CA l I 20 I 1 J I 20 Boston • o 1' • Cn"•OO 0 ' ' 19 SerlnG ,..,,.. York lslM!dto 1 I I loro<>IO l • I *'"" Ph1t•cl•IPlll• J I 11 • Bull•IO I J 9 )1 ~ ... S< ... 9$ MOnl•HI •• O.lro41 0 loron10 3, New V0tk lsl&nde" I P•ll•oelpllla •. Bull•IO 1 8oS!on s. O>tcll!IO 1 T-rs O.tmtt Oelrol 161 Molllre•I Toronto.ti Now Yo<k lil•nd••• Bullalo at Pllrl-IPN• TllwMNy'10.1Mt New Votk 1~anoer• •I Toronto P l'lrl•dt lpn1e •I Bull•IO. " rwce~Mrv Pro S occer Stand ings Los A~, H ; ~. CJn<lnn•ll, Mllw•ukee, U . L Mey, S.lllmort , NOlltfH AMlltltAN H . S.HenOerson, N~w York, 12. IJ; Rl<t, 8oslon, ll, Sl4UO, Oelro1l, SOCCl!ll lEAOUl "Benell, Clnclnnalt, 1i, Co. LU IJ, Hlslt, Mllw~lltt. 1l NAT1°'4AL c:otfl'lltl!NCE ...-in, 11; Wlnti.1<1. s.ti Dl900, 12. l'l'clllet Cl O.Civ°"'I EHien• OM \1111 l'ltcllillt CJ o.tW•ll T •tleM, Clll ..... la, ~. UOO; Spt•I· ., 1 ti ,. " P1' <>••Miley, Monlrt AI. 3 0, 1 000, lo<ll K•n~ CHy, 4-0, I 000. Let'. Wullonoton 4 0 • I e Jl Corne10, New York, l O, I 000. Boston ) 0. 1 000, AuQ1Ullne Ne.,V'orlt 1 0 17 1 I )l 80<1ll•m. OndnMH, l~. t 000. Jollft, Mll .. aulltt, J t, ISO, O.aoo, llOSlon Roche\ler o J J • J 3 UK ... ,..., •• u , 1.eeo; 8.Foncn s1 K1 ~.~.~.,~.c.~~~ •. ~~· l 1 .. , Tor0<1io o J 1 • 1 t -;L=ou=ls:. :).:':·:':SO=.=========..,.="'"====:;;;;~=~ Cc<>tr.i o<vm.., "Sklp,,.r" Attn Htle rnv/lea You ro The .. ···1r.;;iNNtii;:·······LJL~· ~ I Iii .... ,,. ·-: 1.:!~SHOl 1 ; APRIL 22-30, 1978 ) .•....•.•••.....•.....••.........•..•..... HUNDREDS OF EXCITING EXHIBITS l NEW BOATS I NEW ACCESSORIES I Dallas 3 t 10 1 u"• , 1 • Co1or•do 2 1 • MlnM-.Ot• 0 J ) wu...,DM\lt11 • I 11 4 6 II I S ti • ) J Porllend l l e 8 n ll•nc~u·•• l 1 • I l• S .. 111& 1 1 S S II LO~ Anoeln I J • J II • .,,..lllCAN CIDNl'lltl!NC~ la1t-OMu"' femP.t ll•y J I • I • 11 Phll-lph1• 1 2 S 1 S 11 Ntw En91""° 1 I l l l 10 l'I L•ucltrd.tle I J 4 13 4 10 Otttoll HOU\10ft Mtmohls Chl<•QO Ce11tr,.I 01¥1lton J 1 I • ~ ! ~ ' 0 • 2 1 wu1 ..... 01v111 .. ' 1S ' 19 • • t 1 S.n Diego ' I 10 • t 13 C.lltornla • t • S 6 lO O.ltlano J 1 s J S U San Jc>!>t1 2 • • 11 I 10 Si• points aw••~ ror vk lOfY; Oftt bonus ooint hit"'-tor .. ell ooa1 \<Oftd uP lo• mu lrnurn QI three per 1.am per oame. SWW.tr's Mltctlet NtwVorll3,0.ll.ttl WeslllrlQIOtl 1, MlntlfJOl.t 0, OT va ncou.,., I, c.otor-o Detroit 1. s.n Oleoo o Nt1w En9'•rd 1, Houston 0 TMl't't Mltcllft ~10 matches Khecl\llecl T-y'1Matct1 Cn1c•90 •t Seetllt Banquet Trail l!dl-Hltlt V.nlty Wnttlillt Most V•luaole: Todd Boyer, Gip 1a1ns, Frank Cl.Kry -Olff• Tes•e . Most tnaolr.t1lont1· Frank Curry JYWW'•llflle ~laln: tCI"' <><-. Moll V.th .. bl• Fr •nil A1Mrnt. ~SWll WmUlll9 Most Vel...,.blt: Sc.oil Posey; C.p- 111n· Jim l,_. ........ Welcome Aboara By ALMON LOCKABEY Ila been a long fight -approximately five years -on tbe part or boat owners who contend that their ooboard sewage disposal bas a D>humal -if any -Impact on pollution or navigable federal waters -but it appears tbat the Environ- mental Prot.edlon Agency <EPA> ls beg1nning to see the U"ht. Under a new policy, the U.S. Coast Guard and the EPA will permit continued installation and use of Type I marine s anit3tion devices on boats up to 65 teet lo length. It was the EPA, it will be remembered, that ins tituted legislation forbidding boat owners to have those nasty old "heads" that could be flushed within three miles of land in coastal waters FIRST IT WAS HOLDING tanks that would have to be pumped out at non.existing pumpout stations, which in turn wouJd be dumped in the municipal system -which in turn would eventual· ly be dumped back into the bays or offshore wa ters The Const Guard -which really didn't believe in such nonsense -had no alternative but to en· force the law. Leading the fight on behalf of bo$l owne rs was the National Boating Federation which finally con· vinced the EPA powers that some sort or chemical sanitary devices could be used which would allow flushing heads without polluting the waters. THUS WAS EVOLVED SVCll expensive con· trivances as Type I and Type U marine sanilary devices which all boats would evenlualJy bave to have aboard. But no one was really sure whal either of these device<i wQuld accomplish. Comes now the news from NBF that the Coast Guard and EPA will soon relax their regulations on marine sanitary devices. In an extraordinary joint reply to 8 letter or inquiry from Senators Warren Magnusen and Henry Jackson and otllcr lawmakers. Gommandant Owe n W. Siler and EPA Administrator Douglas M. Costle conceded that: "Technology does not presently exist to up· grade the Type t device which treats sewage on· board and discharges It often purer than the re· ce1ving waters." A TVPE·n DEVICE, equivalent to secondary treatment ashores was to have been the next step, according to NBF. But the letter continued: ·'There is serious question whether boat operators unskilled in sewage treatment can prop· erly m runtain s uch complicated systems . .. UpJ(rading from Type I to Type I_I wouJd in· i.·olve a significant increase in compliance costs w1.hout significant environmental benefit. (Either device can kill all bacteria.> And now here is the clincher : ''INDEPENDENT STUDIES snow that urban runoff and municipal sewage are the major Polluter of navigable waters -with small boat sewage having a minimal impact." (This from the EPA!l NBF has advanced all of these arguments dur· Ing five years of campaigning for fair pollution reg· ulations. It has been pointed out that the tiny trickle of pollution attributable to boats is literally not measW"able. Boat owners have also charged that the severe, costly and impractical restrictions im· posed the EeA are based on emotion rather than/ ct. e Coast Guard has no alternative but to enforce regulations -or to grant waivers. which it was r ~ lo do. "UNFORTUNATELY," SAID RON Stone, president of NBF. "the new policy contains a ref· erence to 12rovlsions of the Federal Water Pollu· tion Control Act which permits the federal EPA administrator to prohibit any sewage discharge - whether treated or not ~ \rt waters where states cao prove that adequate pump.out facilities exist to empty holding tanks. "The EPA has been granting such requests notwithstanding there are no standards under federal Jaw for determining what constitutes ade· quate pump-out facilities . It is feared this will lead lo a chaotic situat1on for cruising boats,•· said Stone. N BF is pre paring legislation that would tighten requirements for the EPA to make prior investigation and ror the states to prove adequate facilities exist. "Only early passage of such legislation would prevent a rush of state applications for EPA ap- proval or no-discharge areas. defeating a prime goal of nationwide uniformity," said Stone . • Mond9y. Apnl 2C, 1978 DAIL. V PILOT 8:1 NeuJJX>rt Sai lors TIU rd SpeclaJ to Ute Dally Pilol ANNAPOLIS -Thf National Collegiate Sail· Ing Championships for large boats held at the U.S Naval Academy w as won b y the Univers ity of P e nn · syl vania after three days of racing and seven events. The Un iver si t y o f Southern Cali£orn1a '1i eight·rnan te8m. led by skipper Don Ayres Jr and foredeck captain Doug Dea ver . both of Newport Beach . worked their way up to third place overall an the 10 team Cinals out of the 136 universities enter ed in the sailing competition use also was awarded the J udgcs Trophy (01· o ut s t a n di ng seamanship Other results : 1 Universily or Penn· !>~ lvania. 19 points. 2 MIT. 22 points. 3 use. 21 points : 4 UC Santa Barbara. 27 point:.: 5 Michigan, 28 points; 6. Ha rvard. 29 points : 7 ~avy . 31 point s. 8 University of Texas. 36 points : 9 College o f Charleston . 38 points . ·and 10 Not1·e Dume. 40 points. Olymp ic Cl ... in1cs Planned The United States Olympic Yachting Com· m ilt ee's Olympic de · velopment clinics will be he ld again this year at the Olympic Training Cente r at Squaw Valley Th e c l i ni cs a r e scheduled J uly 23·29 and July 30 to Aug. 5. • There are 19 openings in each clinic for top. level sailors in the non Olympic classes and six openJngs in each clinic for the Olympic classes. Clinics will include in· lenslve driUs, lectures and disc ussions and physical fitness testing Sessions will a lso be he ld on boat handling and tactics in Lasers on Lake Tahoe by P eter Isler and Dick Murray There will be two guest speakers al each clinic. Room and board will be provided by the U.S Oly mpic Committee at no cost to participants Sailo rs must provide their own transportation to a nd from Squaw Va lley and will be re quired to make a $100 • depos it a gains t boat damage. Sailors who wish to participate in the Olym - pic Development Clinics should s end a resume or their sailing background a nd regatta results to the US. Olympic Yacht· 1ng Committee , 820 Davis St . Evanston, 111 60 20 1 PlJBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ~--~--~--~~~~~1-~~~~~~--~~-- ll•M6M e10 NO; ""'' N01'1Cll fO ctleOfT'O•J CONT•ACT HO; 471 IU~IUUOlt COUR'I' 01' TMI. MOTIQ INVl1'11f0 •tot t'fAH Of'CMJIJOllNI• '" NOTICE IS HSIU!BY OIVIEH t~I tNa CI04HITYOf'CMIANOC Ult 8 o••d ot l dut t llOrl •I Ill• IM. ~ N••JIO"l..#ftt ""'''-' kflOOI Ol~rl<f 111 Ille Matl!Wof Ille ~~tat• ot KEH• Of Or•net oi-y Wiii ...c>ti¥t ... Itel H!'TH 8. WALK£1t, ~· M* ~ lo J!Oll it.in. Oft 11'111. !HI O.t-OI NOtlee If~.,._ 1ill <1•ltor"S ~y, '918, •I !ht ottM Of Uld $CllOOI Mvlllt Clelmt ..,in ..... Mild dfa.• Oblrlcl. ICK4ltd ., 1W Pltctnll• Oft>I to Ill• t.tld ctalmt In IM eflk e tf Slrtet , C..14 -.a. CtHfar11la, •I Ille t Hlfll of I,. -•>t!O c-t ot lo .r111<11 tlmt Mid bldt will "9 !ll*kly sw•Wnl llltm IOttlt IHIClfftlOned ti tile llJfltllH t11C1 ,.._, lor· OlllCt of Tllilllio\AN AHO SAGIE, 51111.t $1NOLl!SUltl'AC« l'UHf.lt H S • .001 T._.11941 C.nyon tlvd., All llldt art le lie It!«~ #1111 ~lend Hit•, CA '13'1, wM<fi lattw Co11dlt1011•, I n&1r 11ct1011&, a no ollk• Is u. p1ace of bu\lneu Ol tllt -5"(111ol!Mt -.1c11 are now on Ille In dtnlQNO In ell matten pert•lnlllQ to uw ofll<e GI Ille Pw<NiMno Olrtcror ••Id ul•I•. SU<tl cl•ltM With Ille' of Mid SCllOol ~·trld, 11$1 ........ 1 .. NO\,..,, ~ mll:Sl bt flHld or s.t .... t, C..t. ~CAI...,,,., f'»V prtwnt1d •• •for-kl w11111n '-No ea-......, WI~ lltt llkl la< montllS .. .., 1111 llm IM*lc:allon ot • pe'1o0 of torty.tl,,. (UI NV't •tier "''' ttoOtl(e. lttlt cl.II• NI for tllt OC*llno lhlAOI. D•IM Allt11 l0, 1'11. '"• 80.trd ol EduUllOft Ot lh• GOllOOH SICHJ 1""'"'1·-..W Uhlhact Sdlool Ohttto A.dmlltftlfatcw wllll Wiii •tfotf'lft II• '"'°' lo rtl4<t My • •It ·-* f/I .... HIM• 810. •nd noc ne<aMf'llY accept , ... of uld__..,t lowt&I S id, •nd lo wavl• •"Y In TIE•MAN AND U.01 lorm•rllr or lrTeQl/fMltr In .tll't' &id re ... , T ...... ~.,,,_. 10 1...i s.ii. tts WeWl.tM Ml ... CA '11161 Put>llalwd ()rangit C.0.11 O•llY Piiot. AP"ll 14, Mey I, I. IS, ttlt PUBLIC NOTICE -~~~~~~~~~~~- NEW~T·ME&A UNIF IEOSCHOOt.. DISTR ICT ol Oranve Gounlv, CA Corot,.,., H., .... ., Fl"'-<. CPM, P\jr~l'IQOlre<W n1· 17W Ss..3190 O•ttd:Aprllft,"11 Pllbllalled C>.,.. OWU Deily Piiot. ACH'll 14 -May I, 1'1t 1~11 Outboards T une d lJp ,. ~~5.f·~:;'~ ~' _• ·~ •v •: '"""..._,.._.:~ii-$· Z ,,J._.,;.;::.:%w:;:;. ~;:?':::;)·~"(!:M>~·,~> • " ·:~~ ~ ,_,_~•<r.~A~···"'·•-r~:,,~~:fJ."••"~~~·.,... 1~:;~ ... ·::i ·'~\:;::::;:::::=:::;;W.v>'. ,w,. · ' . a bargain. c1r1ve was 8 true ~n at nltloen\ Pontiac Sedan automobile value .•. \n 1928, the,ma~ot harder to find a g~ modem new car $825. iodaY It a a f Newport ofiera t e iha\'& wtrf ~\z.ed ieaslng programts are e1most always baf08in ••• ape . nd rnontlilY payrnen And by 1eas\ng lnlt\a\ caah out~~~\\onal flnancln~ opt\~~1~1ons ere \OW9f tt\81' other rt salesman s co dlreot at~: ~~~~~~t \o the rn~~ i~~r: t>us\nessmen~ el\m\natuu \easing rnaY have one to get a new · Tradttl~'!'praotlcal way fOf alrn~~speclallst todaY bu\'~--"'" by ca111ng a i...eul~,., program· on-1e a gul~al new car 1eas w at>Out your Bank of Newport ,,_-fOIC 1675-9840 I Boating Gear Checked Another boating season is near and boa ting enthusiasts are hoping 1he weather gods will relent from the pounding they have given ma riners during the past winter and early s pring months. But fair weather or foul. this is lhe time of year that boat owners start checking their rigs -s ail or power Outboa rders in particular will be Inspecting lhelr gear to be sure the motor kicks of( with the first turn or the key or pull of the string. OUTBOARD EXPERTS sa y the chances are good that things will work well if the owner has followed the recommended off-season and s pring uneup procedures. Most impor· tant thing to keep in mind Is to follow the owners manual. Best place for a spring tune.up is the authorized outboard dealer un ltss one is a do·it.yourseller. rr the latter. here are some valuable lips: Remove, inspect, clean and proper· ly re-gap the spark plugs. Replace defecUve plugs with those recom· m e nd ed by th e manufacture r Properly operating spark p.lugs are the basic key to good out board engine performance. Spa rk pluf(s s ho1·ld be cleaned with a wire brus h or 1 sot. vent. Never sandblast. WllEN TllE MOTOR was put in storage for the winter . the gear case should have been drained and refilled with recomme nded lubricant. H it wasn't , oow ls the time. On e lectric startin ~ outboards m a ke s ure the battery is fully ch<trged. Clean the terminals of dirt and corrosion. Same Cor the battery cable connections. lt is also a good idea to coat the cable connections with a light layer or g rease to help prevent corrosion. Check that propeller. If the blades are be nt -even a little -straighten them out. lf the prop is too worn. get a new one. Propellers are relatively inexpensive but very important. A small "ding" or bend in just one blade can grea tly reduce a motor's performance. Come ye Sailors one and all to JOSH SLOCUM'S for an Afternoon or Sea Stories & Grog Park Approval S A C RAMENTO - The California Public Works Ooard has appro ved s p e nding nearly $11 mllUon for purchasing lands for the State t>arlt Syatem. An additional $8 mllllon was approved r o r construction projects in atat.e park unit.a. 11 eppy llour f'rom •:ao.B.00 Dally Ntrwpor h lncludJnl( ffOrA d'oeuvru JGOl W. Coa.1t Hi&bwa.)'. Nev.pc>rt Beach 142.5193& - P VBUC NOTICE .. ,.,,, SUl'EIUOlt COUllT CW TMIE STAT£ MCAUl<OllNIA FOR TH£ COUNTYO,.<HtANO£ Ht ...... 154 NOTICE Ofl MIEAlllfllG OF' l'l!TITIOH 1'011 AUTHOlttTY TO £14TIEA IHTOA LEA$£. E 'late o t NO RVAL. C RAI G , Oe<H~ NOTICE I!. HEAE8V GIVEN 11\i!I EDGAR A. NATHAN, N S tiled lle<e1n a o.llllori tor Autlloflly to M'lltr lnlo d Le•'9, reference to wtll<h Is maci. lo• IU<ll'ltr panlcut-lfld ht Ille liml' •no 01 ace of merino tr. w me has been set •or May 8. 1m . at •:oo •·"' .. In tlle coum-n of O....rtnwnl No. 3 of uld c_., t4 7'00 O vk Ctn!w Orlv• Wetl, In Ille Clly of S•nla """ c.111orn1• 0.llKI' ........ , •• 1978 WIU.IAM I . $t JOHM, Co\lnlv a..i. P1mnout eUMNass MAIM ST~TSMS-.T Tltl lollOWll!I ,.,_ art dol1t9 WliMSSllS: SAPl"ELL t. M 'A O AM/ UHIERPlllSJ, e lltnlltd PtrtM<tlll.-, _, ~ •• lr1tlftf, CA.'7714 C!nCetprl .. OrMtruc:llon, 1,..,, a Gener.ti P•flMr, lt01 8•rr•nce, lnolt1t, CA. '7114 Tiii, l>WMi• It ~IM by a vener•I ...,b., ,.,,._, . £1118r•tt. Conslructlon, '"'· •O...tl-.Wt-u..ee."-. ~ Tllli .i1tt~ -flltlt wltll IM County c i.rk ol Of•nQI Count¥ 011 •""""·mt. ? Deatha LONDON <AP> Baall Deu, 89, act.or. author, theatrical pro· ducer. at.age .and film director and bead of Britbh armed forces en· tertainment in two world wan, died in Mid· dlesex hospital Satur· day. HY ANNIS, Mass. (AP) -Lloyd IL Neid· Unser, 76, a former dean of ~Dartmouth College, died Saturday following a long lllneu. He was executive ditector of the U.S. Council of Intema· lional Chambers of Commerce from 1953 to 1983. WASHINGTON <AP> -nomu "· Taner, 101, a biologist and for much of Ulla century a civil rights actlvilt, died of pneumoa.la Friday. NEW YORK (AP) -a. Lee Wa&ermu, 72, president of Corning Glass Worts from 18S4 until bis retirement from active service in 1971, died Wednesday. NEW YORK CAP) - lofln .Koch. 69, a leading realist painter known tor bts elegant C1ep1c- ti on a of fashionable Manhattan lite, dJed of a · s\rote Weclneeda)'. PAQPIC YllW ._..,lltALPAllr Cemetery Mortuary Chaoel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Callfomla 644·2700 McCOINICIC MOftVAltlS L,una Beach M·9415 • Laguna Hiiis 788-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1778 IALTZ•MIOM N•ALHO-.. Corona det Mar 873-9460 Costa Mn. 848-2424 -.L llOADWAT MOn\IAIY 110 Broadway Costa Meta 842-9150 SMll'Ntnmaw..u. ~c:HAM. 427 E. 17th St. Cotta Mela•~ santa Ana Chapel 618 N. 8r'Olldw9y Santa AN• &47-4131 Wlll01191 SNmtS" MOITIWtY 827MalnSt. .. _ Hunt~&Meh ,_,...., POUMAl N•M ttoe. 7I01 BolMAY9. w.trni'*W ~25 • Vandals Hit Synagogue · MIAMI <AP) -Ted Sloan surveyed the 1pray· painted awutlkaa and smubed wtodows of b1a aynagope. "Hlatory has an UJl&O(lly way of n!peat· lng ltaelf. This show• tbe Holocaust waa not Just a fairytale." Sloan, president of Temple Or·Olom, said the $10,000 worth ol vandalism clone tothe structure over the weekend would not be repaired hnmedlately. Comlne during the Jewtlb boUda.y of Passover and on the heels of a TV aeries about the Nuia' slaughter of the Jews dW'· ( J ing World War .JI, th& IN SHORT deaeeratloo wu sen by .... _ ---------Sloan as a symbol for bis congrega&ioo. Dtat•e11t'• llelecue StMled WASHINGTON <AP> -East German lawyer WoUgang Vogel will arrive ln Wublngton this week with "some opUons .. for the possible release of So- viet dJsaldeot Anatoly Shcharansky, an aide to Rep. Be!Uamin Gilman, R·N.Y., said. Vogel helped arrange a three-man prisoner ex· change, made public SWtday, involving the United Stat.es, East Germany and Mozambique. He also played a key role in the 1962 swap of U·2 pilot Francis Gary Powers for Soviet spy Rudolf Abel. LONDON <AP>-Becret.ary of State Cyrus R. Vance's talks In Moscow may have eased Soviet op· position to the Unlte41 States telling Its NATO allies how to build the cruise missile. but the Russians re· luaed to agree to limits on their Backftre bomber. Both were key bargaining issues In Vance's three days ol talks with Soviet Foreign Minister An· drei A. Gromyko on a new SALT pact to limit nuclear weapons. JERUSALEM CAP> -Prime Minister Menacbem Begin bu accepted an invitation from President Cartert.o meet next week in Washlngt.on to try to get Middle East peace negotiations going again. A spokesman for the Israeli leader said Begin bad been Invited to the Whlte House during a pre· vlously planned visltof a week tothe United States to mark the 30th anniversary of Israel's statehood. The prime minister is scheduled to arrive in New York May 1. but the date for his Washington visit has not been set. Frtatce Dftlles Nnaro11 Test PARIS (AP> -France denied today that It bas exploded an experimental neutron bomb, and a atat.emmtlasued by President Valery Giscard d'Es· t.aing'1 spokesman said no aucb experiments are planned. Tbe newspapel' France.SOU aaid lut week a re· cent aDdelpouud blut at Mururoa atoll in the South Pacific, the Freacb nuclear t.est1ng ground, was a "full scale laboratory experiment" of a neutron bomb. 1be report quoted a "seaior military officer" as Hying France was still three or tour years away from deploytngneutronweapoos. 'Boloeaust' TV Feature Two Honored Al Chapman Senior Richard Har· rt.naton and Junior Susan E. Boyens of Laguna Hilla have been named to the fall doan't Uat at Chapman College, Orange. Pt1llUC NOl'ICI! , PUISUC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS auSIMH5 NAN $TAT9MUO' TM followl119 .,.,_ .,. OOh•o ... ,_ .. : CAL·AMl!AICAN AENT·A·CAlll dOO c--Orlw, ~ 8Mc:I> Cell..,...."*' C•l·AM•r•c•11 •tnl·A·C•r corptr•tl•"· C•llftr111•, •soo c ......... Drift, .......... c. .. CM ........ ... T'Ma.,......lt~W•<• "°''""" CAL-AMll"ICAN •ENT4<All <m~TION ....... Or .. ,,.... TMI ,....._.. -fl,_ -the C.0-ty °"' .. °' .... Qlwlly -... u . ..,.. hMrtw.u-. ALfwC.I* ..... ,...., ........... o...0r_ ...... ........... ~ .... PuOllsNd ~ ... C.00. Dolly l'ilOI. Alrll 11.M, ... yl,1.tWI PUISUC NM'ICE Pl111UC NOTICE PICT1ftOUS 14$MUS MAIM ITA.,.,,..NT Tiie ... ._.... --., ..... Ml· -ff! ltWM ltAOlt!"f'r' MANAGEMENT CO., 201 Ptaentta, 541li. 111. ~ llHCll, C..lllom<• f'MiU 111•111111# ........ , ,.,... Cowl. ~ lloodt. (;tN~'"'1 Tlllt ....._ 11 ...... ~lad 11'1 MIRdi ....... lt•ljlfl w. MtClt TMJ •taWNM llled """' Ille (_,. < ....... Or .. °""""' ... Aorll " 1971 ntOMAl•LU ....., .. LA-...... ........ ~"­.. ...,..c..won .. ...... ._..CA .... ""*' ...... a-..., COttt 0.11':: .,, "· 14,Mly .... 1'11 NCmC8 °"Oft, .. TO .. LLUMO •• ..,,. tf ,,,..,.,. tct!oto on Je1111ery l4. ttre, Ille M111tll~IOft 9otCt1 UllMll Httll kMM Oittttct I• .. ..,Ille llW ...... MY "*IC dl~t, "*IC ~-It-~IC 'fNl(lft. .... ... ,.. .. k.. lllMl¥1tltlll .. ~k __ ......... w.s. ...... .,,. .....,••0••"""'91• ...... ...,...,. ,...... <11«1'*9 ~., .... ,, .... fellOWl"9 ,,,...,,, •tcrl .. d H ... _. Lob t. • Mf •. l6eO "Ot. Tract No. ti. .. Ille Qty .. _..... ... tlH<ll. O...y tf a-...,, Mm et Cellt-•. • -,... ,_....Ill ... t, Pfl9e "· ..... __ ....,"'Ille oHlc• ..... C:O-y ~ .. ,...,~,,. .,,_. ....,. lllrtiCMl••r _,..., ~ ....... : ... ,..,..,,. .. "" -...« ...... .,,. tMIWl-ti ti•••-"' ~l"Off and Utlc• 14,.... -.......,."° -E·HI ............ ., ...._, .. Oltlt«llM ot Ullct Stl'IM a dlll*arlClt .. n t4 -; ~ •• ,. ....... Vlei c-.... 1 .. _. ......... _ "°"" 1NO• WW'll •~eflOOD_.•IM flltUI "01NT 0, 810tNMtN0; tlltflct •ue •• tNW 00' w • ft ,,., .......... Utlc.t "'-•-tint ..... -.......... ~'"'' 17' '4'' ...... lltt1 ~ .. ,..,., ...... tlld H4I" 4' W" W, OSJIO •t; ....._ •• ntfll .,....,.. '4t' 1r ,.. .. W, -•I• tt "'9 ~lne .. ~ 9Mfltll Mr• JID.1J ._.IO -fltUE POINT W a'"OIHHIHO. Ollll .. 111 '·'" ACreoL Tlllt '""'1T Wiii .. efftred ltr ute .......... ._ ... ,.. (l'WO .._,,. TllM!MM Dallanl IOr aol~ Ull •'I'_ ... llttlMlfteMly M, tt11- -lltlNllll9 ... Jul' 13, me.. llllantl• ..... IK ........ C*O(IOf.~t "· ...... Ailltt~ lufef'lll-1, _._ ~ ............ hotll UlllM "'-' to.Ml DIMllCI, ........ .... lllh ,.."'9f1t' ........... ~ ci.r. Oelly Pllell ""11•1 111-. u.-.a...., 1, l. a.•. II. II. 1l, Iii. 14. mt 0 1: ..... I ... Of ~ IK· r..:i lft r.: liflld ..... ltlll It • I tl'I' ,..,. STOCKS/ BUSINESS Monday'• Cloelq Priee8 NYSE eoMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Mergers Fad Meraen and uqu.lllUooa are back ln atyle. A ~ pautoo, d~ t.be a&ock marbt boom years of the mld·U80a. they 1sabliaect 1D tbe 1"°' ln tbe wake of the antUrut Httle1Dent ttt.t forced lnteroatlol»al Telepbaoe aQd Telell'&Pb to live up three companks <Cantetll Corp .. Levitt Ud Som and Avis) and part ol a fourth <Orta.Dell> In mum for betq aUo•..S to keep anotherol Ha acqwat.lcol CHartlord Plre loaurance>. You bow merren are popular aplo wben you ate I'M' return to the bunt Out IAIWB81' OONGLOllEllA'l'B. with annual sales of $13 blllloll, lTT sre• to tb1s bloated me by eatlq otber companlel tbe way Idell Ht. potato cblps. Between 1960 and mo. ITI' gobbled up llO compant.es. ~year. aa mercer acUvilY began to pert up and Am. l6otn ol m. pUaed lnto t.be corporate corral of Norton Slmon Jnc., J1'T was on the prowl asaln. It brought el1bt companl11111 to ra4k aa the secoad matt. acUve cor· porate acqulrer ot 19'1'1. Jn flrat place, with 14 acqulsltlons, wu another old hand at buying other com · panies. Chromalloy American Corp. In third place, with Money Tree six, was a company lbat has never slowed down: Beatrice Foods of Chicago. For Beatrice, acquJsltie>n$ are always in style. It has bought more than 400 ot tbem and abows no sign of letting up. ORIGINALLY A DAIRY FOODS producer from Beatrice. Neb., Bfftrice conceatrated its early buying in the Cood lnduatry. It bought so much -Meadow Gold, Dan· non. LaCboy, Eckrich, Rosarit.a, Swiss Miss, Viva and Aunt Nellies are some of Its many food brands -that it's the largest food company in America. But it's into otber product areas too, all by dint or ac· quisition. Among the Beatrice·owned operations{ are Samsonite luggage, StUret lamps and Hekman fumi ure Last year it moved into the hl·fi equipment business with the acquisition of Hannon International. Tbts year it's moving into water purification with the pending acquisl· lion or Culligan International. Is that enough? No, for Beatrice, there's always another company that's ripe for pluckini. ln 1974. 19'16 and again in 1977, our Jargesl cereal mater, KelloR, made bids for Tropicana Products, the Florida shipper or single- strengtb orange juice. Each bid was higher than the pre· vious, the most recent. being valued at. l34S million. The dealfetlthrougheverytlme. ENTER BEATRICE FOODS, THE m.ster acquJrer. lt has bid a combination of cub and stock worth $490 million for Tropicana -and its offer has been accepted. It seems likely then that Beatrice, which had sales of about Sl billion 10 yean ago, will ride out 19'18 with a sales volume of $7 billion. And it may even be inclined then to teach Kellogg a thing or two about the business of merging and acquiring by making an offer to buy the cereal com· pany. That ·s one way Kellogg may be able to achieve its ambition of uniting with Troplcana. Kodak Gains Spark Anotlwr Stock Rally NEW YORK <AP) -Tbe stock market, led by \Eastman Kodak shares, turned ln a strong showing today ln a resumpt.l.on of the institutional buying that powered its sharp rally a week •go. Kodak, the second most traded Issue wasup3%. Tbe Dow Jones average ol 30 industrials was up 1.3.26 points to 826.06. The average's closina higb tort.he year to date was 817.74 Jan. 3. Gainers outpaced losers by a S-3 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issue5. Trading was active, although nowhere near the record 63.Sl mOJion-sbare pace of last Monday. The Dow Jones industrial average slipped 1. 74 points Friday after soaring more than 48 points the six previous sessions. Another plus in the news background was word that machine tool orders set a record in March, with producers projecting continued s trong demand in the months ahead. DolDl••••A rerage• l+(w You!AJ') FIMI ~awragn ITCKU JO lnO ~" ~.lt .~ g>::.,~ JO Tr11 m.as 22.4.09 no.oo mjI • 1 111 1$ VII 106.l'O IOT.61 i •. it 10.. + 0.20 U St• 21:145 211.0Z JllM m + l .2• lnOllS ...................... 2,612,CIO i1r,~ ·::::::::::::::::::::: ug~ U Slk .. .. .. . .. ... .. • .. ... .. l.tn,QOO What Sfof'k• Did NEW 'YORI<: (AP> SALES NEW Y~I<: IAPl NY Stock WIH "'1f;fo~ llMI ... .. .. • •. • J4,$1G,CIOO '"""'°"' ci.y .. • .. •• ... l 1,S40,000 Wftk eoo • •. .... . .. .. .. ... .. • ~,$10,000 Mo11111 •oo • . ... .. • •• .. .. ,110.aoo y ••r eoo . • • • • • • • . • • • . • • . • . . . • ,.'40,000 T"'9 WN••atO .............. !S~1- Jan I 10 -"".......... '1ff·m7""' "11 to .s.i. .. .. . .. . .. . .. .. I. , .ooo ,,7. to Ute • , ., , ...• •. 2.01 , , .. -AT AMIElt OID NEW YOAit IAPI Otl4 LoCs Telerision. TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS Ret~tion John Rubinstein plays a young terrorist who demands a rewrite by taking re· porters and editors hostage on tonight's episode of Lou Grant at 10 on CBS. Chan· nel 2. Claa""~I Lbtl•g• e l\NXT 1CBS) Los Angeles I KN8C (NBC) Los Angele~ KT\.A (Ind ) Los Angeles KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ.cTV (Ind) Los Angeles 0 KCST (ABC) San Diego I KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles 89 KOCE·TV (PBSI Hunttngton Beaeh T V Airing Country Style Fare · NASHVILLE. Tenn. <API ....L. Country music shows have been getting \Ulprecedented television exposure this year and more are lined up for· airing in the next several weeks. NBC has telecast three prime- time country music s pecials since January and will air a rourth in May . A~o scheduled next month is a Johnny Cash special on CBS, "Classic Cash: The Old and the New." ADDITIONALLY, A Grand Ole Opcy program was televised Ii ve in March by the Public Broadcasting Service for the first time in the S3·year history or the revered country music show. And a syndicated country music·taJk show, "The Nashville Seenc," began airing in January in 28 cities. though it has been discontinued al least temporari ly because or production costs and lack of a network sponsor. The three NBC shows were the highly rated "50 Years or Coun· try Music" and "Nas hville Remembers Evlvis on His Birth· day." both in January, and "The World's Largest Indoor Country Music Show." whjch aired April 5 The annual Country Music As- sociat ion a ward s s how is telt-v ised live each October by CBS Tltey're the Pitts .. James Murtaugh is surrounded by roller derby beauties -from left. Candy Ann Brown. Joanna Cassidy, Marcy Hanson. Rhonda Bates and Marilyn Tokuda --from the Pitts burgh Pitts · team on the new series "Rollergirts:· debuting toni~ht at 8 on NBC. C.hannel 4. Master of Malnpropism By JAY SHARBUTT LOS ANGELES <AP > - NBC 's Edwin Newman, who brood s about misuse or the English language, meet come· <.lian Norm Crosby. He cheerful· ly splits definitives "without fe ar or extradition ... Norm does those TV ads for o rertam beer. but "has trouble renouncing the name. " He con- cedes nobody, not even "beertenders," knows "how to verbalize the name, let alone put it In words. " But as he sees it, •·Who needs a whole resl.L'lcltation every time you order it'!·· AND, AS "A word to the wise ii, deficient." be just says keep thOse brews comll\g because "m> clavichord ts so dry." Crosby. a short, merry re· rugee from Bost.on, readily pleads guilty to comltUng ram. pant malaprop, which 111 a pro. fuse conf usioo of words that are slmllar in sound. He does it for fun and profit on the "TonJght" anll other TV shows. ln Las Vegas, and IOOn wtll be doing It on hls new syn. dlcated comedy series, ''Norm Cl"Olby'1 Oocnedy Shop.'' Norm, wbo served on a Navy subchaeef lo the Atlantlc ln World War Two, set out after the , war to be a traditional come- dian. How'd he come to insta~ the malaprop as an untradi· tlonal prop? ••1 FOUND IT accidentally. but I was looking for It when it happened." he grinned. explain· . Ing ~he happening th\s way: In 1963, alter he put ln years of labor at various New Errgland saloorls and smokers. the owner or New York's famed Latin Qucrrter caught his act and of· r~red h\m ~week's work. Facing the big time. Crosby realized be'd need a dUferent kind of comedy routine to make a .. asting Impression in Fun City. He found lt at a club he was working ln-SprJn1field , Mass., 90 milts from. Boston. The show had girl dancers .. Some stayed nights in Springfield. some com- muted ~ack home to Boston eacb evenlbg. ·rn, CLUB owner. a pal, had bl« ~yes for one or the new dan- ce rs, Crosby said, "and he told me. 'Find· out if sbe 'a staying over or If she communicates to Boston.· "l knew that waa not the word bo meant. And I said, 'My God, that's U)e way to 101• " And that's the"'->'. Crosby bas aone ever 1 nee. But be em· l>hatli~ the malaprop lan•t hla ir-. comedy act per se. It's instead just part of the act. "just a side tool to the basic humor.·· Does be ever s lip into malaprops wh.ile trying to be serious? "ALL THE TIME, all the time." he laughed. citing a White House function al which he commiserated. Lyndon B. Johnson was the president and Hubert H. Humphrey the vice president at the Ume. Crosby said be suffered a short-circuit between tbe ears and told all present that LBJ had just "declared war on puberty." Abo4t a month lat.er, a packa,e arrived in the maU. " "It was a nice picture of Mr. Humphrey." he beamed. "He enscrtbed on It: 'Remember, we· may need you In the Stale Department to explain foreian policy· " 'Magi' Set on TV LOS ANGELES <AP> -An orl1lnal 90·minute mualc1l special will be made from 0 . Henry's "Olft ol tb.e Maai" ror Christmas abo•lne on NBC Broadway composer Stan LebowtkJ la wrtUn1 the music and lyrt~lst Fred Tobl'8 la wrtt- lnl tbe lynca for Cat.ea Brothen Company -I I T UBE T OPPERS CBS a 8:00 -Notional Cheertead· ing Championships. Cheryl Ladd ol Charlie's Angels hosts this special pit· ting the top cheerleaders and gymnasts for $25,000 ln scholarships. <See story below). NBC D 8:00 -Rollergirls. The pre· miere of a new series abOut members of a female roller derby team ISee photo below.> · NBC 8 9 :00 -"The Mon· eychangers." Part two of this Big Event special with Kirk Douglas. Helen Hayes. Anne Baxter and Jean Peters. a dramatic miniseries about high finance. ~,MA. u.u.1 Joi Ott• • black eye. v 101111 f1lgn1 kar1t1 llle>Mtlte and Carmen llPOllet '°' a COl'n9Ut• dale. 9 IASEUU Alglonll -· ot l(8n. .a CitY Royels II TlllAI Ranow"a; Ctllcego Cuti. II PNlldllphla Ptlllllea. t:a08 ~AHOVAUM (Ptwnllre) "Thi Meeting" Joe beta 1111 roommal•. Frantc and PIUh (8111 0.V-• and 0.Yld Sllolt). flYe dolan "* hi can 11111 Vlllrie Hwt lrom her dancing pertner al thl dleoG. but wtlln Ille~ °' till prolit, .... punc:turll hll~of-~ hlragMI . • UIEUU. T_,. To Bl Announced. effaln; ... llMrlg. 11'»-on Mrm tor~. ...,... ElltoA ..._ on .,,. danger'oua talk of uncoY· ertno lhl ftc1a beNnd • credit card forging ecNme. (Part 2 of 3) 0 kl.YORAHAM CMJilADI •118V~ MOT1NG °" ..... In 1N1 episode, Theodore AooMwlt cllaclltMI .,,. Pfob4ema of 20tlw:lllntury America and Thomas Pline Olltllnlt lloW the nation *-fnOIClend· ent. St~ Allen 11 1M rnodlretor. (R) • DAVID 8USIKINO P.,, I "Our W ...... Beat lJI Up • Contlaalona Of Thr .. Battered HuabMdl" Pan II "Bol>Oy Helpem .. A Rall Ufe Rocky'' "" 'T~ Noguchi • abOut ~with deettl 10:t01 L::, L8NR ~ • CMOl.aMI.,,.. ...,......,. ,, •• "'. ()). NIW9 1'wu t.OYE. Mm·~ ·•()llorder Ill TM Coun" &otellll It ~ llMd by en ;r.=-taxidr!Wt. • * .. ,,....,. Of &ettle" ( 1970) w. Mlelot, l«tle 0e Luca. ,.,.. Ba*, I ~ ...... .,.,.. In tflelr bltMlr ltf'llOO!e kif lllldlpiliOlllOI agelr'lt the Polle #Id their Tert« ~ttimr9. (t hr .. 58 min.) e THeOOOOOUPL& f.ellll ,.,. Ole# "'°°"" llOfltWIQ II I~ In , , dlNh ~ ~ Otes ~ I wrong llOfte with money Feflx heel~ rim'°'"'°"* purpoae, • MONTY M'HON'S Fl.Y'INB~ • OQ<CAWTT "PublflhlnO: The Cfeltlon Of a.t Selllra'' ~ AoOlf S!l'WJI, 8ccltt ........ dlttt, RoOlrt Gottllll>. ~ ard~.(Patt tof2) • MAONEll / L!HAER NPOffT 11:30 8 Cl) C8S LATE MOVIE • ..... ,.. Cry TomGf· row" ( 1958) Su11n H~. Richerd Conte. An autobiogiiCJhleel story thll c11ronlc .. 1 Liiiian Roth'• d1clln1 Into llootlollem llld her lloW JOurfllY t>.oi to tlellth with the lld ot AlcOhollc:8 MOtt- iapld Delay) •111,000 OUO'T10N OVERl!ASY CGnar""""" Jotwt er-. mM (D. Indiana) on thl pending bltl to Change the ""'*toty "'"'~ age: gaatrolnt .. Unal lllnff1; Acwide SMIOon'• re1911on. aNp wlltl '* deaf. lrnpri9-ontd. ro.tergrandson. •.ao8 Cl) ONE MVAT A T1Ml Ann's MW neighbor. a hlndlO(Yll rece c. chant· pon. "* to find ttll key to lllr romtnttc Ignition and QjlnlraMI IOjne IM'lh· peeled lpatkl In 1111 proceea. (Pan I of :l)(A) ·~ ou.t he*: o.oro-Carlin. ~ Vlllkl Clltr. l<r .... kin Tew1da9'1 Da8tlmeM•l'l•• • l0\11, AMl!.NCAH ITYlE MORNfNG 10:00 8 Cl) LOUGMNT "l.cMt And Tlll Nuilela" Oo&-o tna to ptopoee to a ber"Oftell. "Low And Tlll Double TnlllbW' A unique ~ Olft ca.. pnlb-..,,._ 11:30 ••• ~ "Thi lady"~ ShltlQhll" ( 1948) brlCIO Wiiia.Ma ~ AFTERNOON • 9:008 THE ~ Roscoe Heyward con· .,,._ tM bank bOlrd lO go Into a deal with Glof09 ~ promplfnO 1111 rival. Alex Vend411 llOOl1, to "'-tlglt• Ille flMncilf"I A young tenorilt w.radll the Trlb ..-oom. llOldl l!Ostagea Ind Oemlndl • 12*)8 ..... "A8nr9r1n My ArfM" ( 195e) .11#18 ~-~. fM09••·""'9~0un" ~of • ltOl'Y lbout "" bt'ottW, "*" """' llOI0-··POl.a~ "Uni Of ,_.., A Y°'lllO 1 .. =(A) LET"I MN<E A DeAL MeCHAa. JAa<ION Loa Angalla County Cofo. pdice offtclJ joint .... Cllt unit ~ .,_. lalrn lO ~with ding. (Al • THATOR. (1984) Audia~ ..... ry Andera. • l:IO ••• .,,, ''The Oun Alden" ( 1988) Jim Ol'tla. Scott llfedy. ''TM Apar1menl" • • -. Chanaplonslaips Tonight ,. . . .. ·. Cheerers Boost Imag" • By J OHN NADEL LOS ANGELES <AP> -Al· tractive women from Dallas and Denver have done a lot to bring cbeerleading into roucs. so to speak. But one interested ob· server maintains the Dallas Cowgirls and the Denver Pony Express -prominent at the Super Bowl -are really no more than dancers. Television viewers nationwide can form opinions of their own tonight at 8 when "The National Cheerleading Championships," a 9(}.mlnute special, is aired by CBS, channel 2. ''Cheerleading is a serious thiflg," says Fred Putman. director or the Top 20 survey for the lntemational Cheerleading Foundation. wbkh rates college cheerleading teams around the country. "It's a fantastic alternative to sports. "THESE KIDS DAVE taken it to the top or their art." Putman says. "Crowds have a lot to do with athletic teams and cheerleaders can be a great motivator." Putman says he feels the TV speeial, taped earlier this month al the Los Angeles Sports Arena, will help make people take cbeerleading more seriously. "It's a serious, difficult thing to those involved," he says. "The women from Dallas. Denver and other professional football teams are just dan-cers ... FIVE SCHOO~ will compete for top honors -Southern Cal, Pittsburgh, North Carolina. Kansas and Florida. A total of S25.000 in prize mon.!y for _ scholarships is being offered. Each team of cheerleaders will do lls thing for six minutes. Judging·tbe compeUlion will be Bert Jones, quarterback of the Baltimore Colts; Charles Schulz. creator of the comic strip "Peanuts;" model Cheryl Tiegs ; and Christle Moller. Amerlcas's Junior Mlss. The rest of the program will be a variety show of sorts. featuring George Burns. Bruce Jenner. Cheryl Ladd, Lou Rawls and Gene Kelly. PUTMAN SA VS RE does not mean to put pro football 's cheerleaders down. "They have helped the concept and in· creased the profile, which is good, but this ls 100 percent dif· rerent. These kids are gymnuts, acrobats ~nd crowd motivators." The cbeerlead.Jng foundation, a non-profit or_iantaatlon, has been rating the Top 20 schools in the country since 1967. Representatives see aa many teems as poalble and lnforD'\a· lion ts r~lved Crom around th~ counll')'. A total of 143 NCAA mem~rs are ell1lble to be rated. Th~ llbow Is produced by Brad Marlcs . and Emmy Award- winner Lee Mendelson. ... .~ THEY'LL HOST CHEERLEADING CHAMPIONSHf PS · .. Cheryl Ladd, Lou R•wfa •nd Gene Kelty ~ TVPiraey > ' . . .. .. . .. .. : ... 'Deep Throat' Aired in ~ SYRACUSE. N.Y. <API -Federal officials are tryi~a lo locate the ''broadcast bandits" who turned the usuall~ dorm ant Channer 7 in Syracuse into a showcase for proj grams ranging from Oscar.winning films to "DeeJ? Throat" over the weekend. ... "We're very definltely in~rested in who's been broad· cuting the stuff," said .{ohn Theimer, director of the Federal Communications Commission office in Buffalo. Theimer was ln 5¥racuse on another matter. THE lJNLICENSED STATION reached viewers lo downtown Syracuse and sections or the surroundlnt Syracuse University campus. • Films featured included ".Rocky:• "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest ... segments of "Star Trek" and "Deep Throat." THE STATION, CALLING It.self "Luctcy 7.'· h1d all~ anqouncer, who viewers said was wearing a fas maslr a$ " noose around his neck. He sald he hoped viewers enjoyed the programming and prom.iaoo more eotertalnment lri coming weekends. .,,: • Televt11oa engineers here e wd an electronics buff wt'1 ~latively simple tQuipmtnt could accomplish the pro.. arammlna on lhe vacant cibannel. Tho crime calll for» l>Ol•lble ftlaxlmum sentence ol one year 1n prlson and-.f Sl0.000 flne. " • ··ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES I POP MUSIC ... -.. Apttl ~. 1871 ONLY Pit.OT •7 c .~.:_."!JePalnµi,: A Bloody Good Director · ~ . NEW YORK <AP> -la .. Phantom of the ParactiM''UM bero la dlaflpred .-hen bl.I bead la caqbt In a ~pbJc record presa. · In "Caine" tlie heroine, wbo 11 humiliated at tbe fflllar prom when a bucket of pis'• blood la . champed CID ..... tUrnt the blCb ICbool gym Into an ialeno. ; . • " la •-n.e Fury" the heroine, who can make blood flow from under people'• fiftgernal11 by =1 t.ele.k!Dllll, deltroya the vtJJaln by blowtq him to ~ ~p:Uu.er... wttb ber psychic powers. ... ~ '1Lll oaacroa BRIAN De Palma, who b ~ obeeMed wttb p1aly vtaual effecta wbicb be uaes to :; propel ddll1ng fables, believes tbele Gothic botror • tlrrtllera work "totally viscerally" on an audience. 1' He does not leel he's "pandering to the mob" and .. 'says manipulating the audience ls essential to ~ filmmaking. movies than there are today,•• he said la an ln- tervtew. "V~ few people know how to ~er to th~ mob because they really don't undentaDd the forin the1're Vr"Orkine ln." De Palma, who alao haa directed such films as ''Greet.lnp," (1988) 1tarrtna Robert De Nlro. and the HlUleock·llke i.obsesatoo." (1978) plans even bll mOlt blood·spattered scenes meUculouab' . MA.NIP'tJLAnNG AUDIENCES. he said, even with terrifying plot turns, 9r ror example, the spectacular car chue along the Chtcago riverfront in °Tbe Fury," la very difficult to do. "Especially ln contemporary cinema, because thetr bralna are banged out by watching televi.sloo all tbeUme. "They've been hit over the bead a hundred Um es -badly. "They're sbellshocked. They see the club com· ing and al.ready they're looking at you with a blank face." ~ "U more p!!q>le tnew bow to pander &<> the :: mob, tbil'9 w.Mald be a bell of a lot more 1uceeuful DE PALKA.. 31. A NAftVE al Pblladelpbla, .,. sat ln the dinlnc room of b1a 4araety furniabed !: ;:=======::;-::=======~ apartmeut oo lower Fifth Avenue. He cleared a ~· fter her di-• circular table of papers Jeavlnl oab a portable 1 .. _.._ typewriter and a box ot puabplns .. He uses tbe plna J rte. ~ to know to predlely line ,_P pa1ea ot the screenplays tor some pretty ~ upcocnJna fHma on the walla, whicb are dee· ~ ~ J . l ¥-. " . '·"' .t' .... or • ' ........ -........... .......... .....,_ ---......... --~ ~Ml .... ntt .......... •J; ~ AlllWa.mt ,...... ........... ·»e ,~ .. """' ~., ......... ,,, ............... "°' @••-* ••.-nnt ,...let..,...., ........ ____ .. _...., ---·-___ _. __ I I ·orated wttb forelp posters from some of bi.a mov· nt~ J9I .. lea. There are Yrench onee of ''Slat.era" and people... "Phantom ot tbe ParadtH," and a Japanese I ludl herself. poeier of "Carrie." nc ~ . • Asked .-by 10 mueb blood.spurts through his , . ftltn1, De Palma, whose father la a surgeon and baa.~ practice in Florida, replied that in "Tbe Fury • blood played a key part ln the story. "A girl with psychic powers haa the ablllty to bleed people; so you have to have a .certalo amount of scenes where you have people bleed· ln1." THE 8CUPT BY JOHN Farris, adapted from hla own nowl, -deals with tele}1alhic twt.ns, played by Amy lrvlnl and Andrew Stevens, who have never ~ and who are beln2 used by a seem U.S. government agency. The film also st&ts Kirt Dou1las, ,John Cuaavetes and Carrte Snod1ress. De Palma emptied t.be box of white pushpins witb abi.D.y 1tee1 point.a, casually acattertna them about ooJ,be tabl~ • =======::::!.=======~ ''I ltilnk the blood 1a used with taste and at the rt1bt ~laces. . • . The film la very carefully •true· tu.red.• he Mid, distractedly aliPlnC the puahplbl like troops. "ll'a a movie that bu bll complicated Ht plecea ln It. It moves, lt has kinetic enero. It ~ ...... ~~ : ~-.:.·F, I ·-:1-• i 15.: ---·---Ge..,,. .. "' 'ff' ........ ......... --·"'--..... 1'0UOI .... .... WOllANCSI) llAWOld "81 .wa MAST .... 'IUI_.. lllA"Sr'lltl ··--.... _ ........ W'OleWf CDElUL.-· .... ., was Just what I wu lr)1.D1 to do." , DE P.t\LMA SAID ''llAKING a fl.lm la very CHARLO'JTE AMALIE. Vl=~ <AP> -Aetrma I.Mlle Caron, wbo 1 la the ••i, Shaped Room," wtU be 1peodlng eom t.lme ln tbe courtroom. Mlae Caron and ber brother •rt contettlnc tbel.r fatber'• wtll ln t.be U.S. Vl.rl1q Ialanc:ll, wbere Claude II. CVCIQ 1pent near=30 ol bll llf• .. Mid Caron1 wbo also lft "Giii," Ar> rived last week \0 ult the tent al court to over· turn the wtll becauae, 1be allea•. "r father w-. manlpulued. Aceordlng to the court petition, Mill Cerotl and ber brother, Almery, we19 Jett Sl,000 ln cqh and pel'IODal effeda. The Caron ellate wu wol'tb $113,192. The elder Caron, who ditd taat year, left the bulk of bll •tale to bi.a u .s. Vltatn ltlanda lnaal· ,,... auodatee Robert and MCIDJQue Odell. n. Odella bave ~to comment oo-tbe 1ult. \;C1J, 6 C~ who raised his cblldten In Fro&. came the Caribbean iJ\ U. earl)t 1900s and buUl a Jew' company that tatitred moeUy to U.S. cltbeat. ~~-,i~'t \ * • . : ... ;; 'THAT OBSCURE OUCTOF ·°"E.,(R) SUMITLll "IWll\t1a.-.S•t1J ..... ~ .. "WllCH WAY IS .,,,.. .......... •• mueb Wee CCGductinC a camDAla. Y~ la&te a bla army with you •hlch haa ~a.-·u.. atDetJ.la, lleutenanta and tel'leantl." Wt main pnenl was 0 a 'Yer)* ~ 8Dd pnelle producer," hank Ya~. ··rt•• Uh bav. lnc a real Rommel on the field,•• aJld De Plb:aa ot the former bead of Para&noe*1t PtdW'tl .tao la now an t.ndepeodent produetr or tucb IUm.a as ''Tb.e Other Slde ot Mldll.l~t. •• •.J '"'!be :L'" vibrant~!'. bOae~ bf UM clnematocn of Rlch~~ ... ~t WbO lo\ an Olcar nomina tor •'Kldf Kong. and tM aeon by John WlWama, wbo won an Oscar for lbe male In "Star Wan ... DE PA.LllA SAID llS beUevM 1,11 tU..ateuo~ percepticlft oaty enough to mike tt work In ~ atory. but bu bad "no real Dr~ .. or telekinesis, the abilJty to move e>bJects by,t.bought processes. . He bas three script projecta "aJI pretty close to compleUoQ. •' arid not all MaliDa wlU. \be 1uper1iatural: 'Oaat.p' Stars -"~llovlee, .. a ••eru;y ~Mot&. a kid 1athertnl W~tte evidence on his fafbtt, '' De Jon Voight and young Ricky Schroder will Palma JI McUlna tt wf t.b students bt la teacfdas to play the leading roles in lhe remake of the •how tbetn bow to make low·budpt fllmt ., be did movie classic "The Champ," to be directed when bf.~ =~·a paycbolollcaJ auspeme Pk· _b_y_F_r_an_c_o_Zeff __ i_re_rn_·_. --------- ture. -"Tbe Demollsbed Man," an elaborate science ncttoo Oedipal murder ln a t.elepatblc society. \ By Tlae Auoc&aeed Preas The followtna are Billboard's bot record hits for the week eD4lni Aprtl 21 as "")' •ppear ln aext week's issue o( JUUboard maiutne. HOT SINGLES 1. "Night Fever" Bee Geel <RSO> 2. "If I Can't Have You" Yvonne EWman <RSO> 3. "Can't Senile Without You" Barr)' Manllow <Ariata) 4. '"Tbe Cloeer I Get To You" Roberta Flack <Atlantic> 5. "Wltb A lJttle Luck" Winp <Capitol) 8. "La¥ Down Sally" Erle Claptoa <RSO> 1. "Dult In Tbe Wlnd•• Kallal <Kirlllner) 8. "Jack and Jm•• Raydlo (Artlta) 9. "You're The· One 'nlat I Want .. John Travolta and Olivia Newton.John <RSO> 10. '"Too Much, Too Little, Too Late" Jobnny Mathlt and Dealeee WUllams <Columbia) TOPLP8 1. " 'Saturday Nlgbt Fever' Soundtrack" <RSO> 2:·~ .. Eric Clapton <RSO> 'a. "LoDdon Town" Wlnp <Capitol) •· "The Straqer" Bllly Joel ttbe Stranaer) $. ''WeekeDd ta LA'' Oeorp Be:DloG <Warner Bree.> BA.SY U8TENING 1 ... We11 Never Have To Say GoodW. Aaaln" lbfland Dan and·Jobn Ford Coley <Bl& 'tree> 2. ••1 Can't Smile Wltbout You .. Barry Nanllow <Arbta> 3. ''Ready J'or The 1'lll* To' Get 8-er" Cry•tal GQle <U111ted Arttda-r · 4. "Belen My Heart P'loda ~" Geee Cotton <Ariola Amertca> 5. ''Feell So"Oodd" Cbuet MaqJoae CA and fd) 80VL SINGLES 1. '"IW Moch, Too Llttle. Too Late't Jobnl>y Matbll and Dea.lee. WlWama 10ohanbla> 2. "~Broadway" Georae ~<Warner Broe.) 3. ''The Closer I Get To Jou" Roberta Plack wttb ~ Hatbaw~ <AUantle> . 4. • Boot1Ula • Boot17's Rubber Band (.Warner Broe.) s. •"hke Me To The Next Phaae0 Jaley Brothen (&iw:nbla) .' OOUNTaY SINGUS t. "Eve,rytlme Two Foob Collide" Keany Rod1en and'J>OUle West <United Artlatl> 2. "Hearta.On Fire" Eddie Rabbitt <Ei.artra> I . "It'• All Wrona. But It'• Altfcbt" Dolly Partoll(RCA> 4. •'She Can Put Her Shoes UrKler My Bed AaJUme .. Jobnny Duncan <Columbia) 1. '•l'tn Always On A Mountain When I Fall" Merle Haqard <MCA> ''THE FURY" "EVIL .. (Q) "THEFUAY'" D\ "EVIL" Crv AU. o .. tv•·'"' ONN a.MP.W.tletm.T Cll+M U~ 1 I ''" Utt•• • K1Hle """'*"M > .. ,.,._ _ _,_..., ............. . . f lillondly, Apftt ... 1111 AT YOUR SERVICE J NATIONAL BJ BJI Keane Pride of Ownersldp Beriv.es llown STUii~ CREEK, Pa. <AP> - StUJDP Oreek waa born into protperity over a rtcb vein of aoft . coal more than ., years aao and came pertJously clOle to dYina ln poverty wbeo the coal cars stopped rolllnJ. But tbe 100-aere patch of crumblln8 Appalachian homes wu cha.nee to become homeowners with a senae ot dvlc prl-. Stump Creek is 10 mn. DOrtll of houutaweey, a town of about 1a,ooo. The maln employment ln the area Ls miD1nl and trappina. ~--. ~...UL.I given new llfe when the lnsUtute on Selence and Man bought the enU.re town from a salvage dealer for a social experiment In ablall town ren~wal. .. OriCIDaUY a Jot of people uousnt we were nuts," a-1d Hal Wllllama, president ol the DOD·Proftt. education center baled ln Renlaelaervllle, N.Y. The lnsUtute bought tbe vWaae through a non.profit corporaUon and In 1973 beean a flve ·year development program. "I'm goin' to the bathroom, Jeffy. Cover for me." .... ..,, Sltf,..W .... ~, lll•telt DEAR PAT: I'm adding an extension to my one-car garage, but I can't find black aapbalt s hingles to match the ~xlstlng ones. Do I have to completely reroof the old garage or should I lut up new shingles on the addition and paint them. J.E., costa Mesa Rooftae manldactuen MW advbe •laiM& paiJIU.11& uplaatt slllagles. PallaUaa cu lanllda&e .a m a•.taetuer'a 1aaraa&ee aad ca... Miter problems, espedally U die pa1at ls llO& c:ompa&IMe wit.II the •111gla. Alk you dealer If lte cu erder 1-lack a.blqles, ud If he seems rellldaatt get Ute maa.tadm'er"1 adclren aad wrtce &o lalm ,...._.,, Even If yoa eu get new black....,..., ta.ere ..W lte some eolor'varlatioa betweeaUte.-. ucl &lteoid dM &o exposure &o I.be elementa. Tlall ..W lessetl a. time and wm not be too DOCJeeable a& ftrs& becaue plun of a roof reflect Ught dlffeready. €old Cl'ftla C.st Clalla119? DEAR PAT: Do you know a formula for cold eream? I've bunt the homemade kind costs a fraction of the retail varieties. K.W., lrviM HomemlMle cold cream requires Uiete lqre- 41e•&a: % C11P8 mbleral oil, ~ cap para.fl1a wu, I~ tablespoaea htu ud l cap water. Heat th mhteTal oil ud paraflla WU la Ute &op of a dotlble boiler ..0 panftJa melt.t ud eu be IUrred la&o oil. Cook doWll mlxtare to 1Zt degrees F. Separa&e- ' ly, lteat wa&er to 1Zt degrees F, ud 8*lr la boru. Pov water and boru mbtve lato bletlded mlaenl ell ud paralfta .. a .._., s&eacly stream, stlrrlq eomtutly. All Ute two are eeollq, oll· aolable perfame may be IU·red Ill u dellnd. When cOGled &o jast abon Ute IOlldlftcaUoa pelM, ~ poar Into coBalMr. · . . Spiees .... lt1aUe .. Slwll DEAR PAT: When packing for an upcomlfl8 move, should I replace spices and herbs I've had • for a year or so. J.low long do they keep their ~ flavor? ' F.H., Fountain Valley . Under favorable conditions spices retain mu- ., imum aroma and navor up to six montba. Whole spices keep tbelr navor almost indeflnitely. Herbs tend to lose fiavor more rapidly than lround pep- per, ginger, clnamon and cloves. However, prop- erly stored herbs retain their ftavor aJ¥l color for several months. Both spices and berba should be stored in a cool, dry place lD air-tight containers. •.. Warm storage hastens flavor loss, and a damp spot encourages caking, color change and infest&· lion. Coatalllen ....W be tlPdy closed after eaclt use so tbe wlatlle tOa of Ute apiff OI' llerf> ue aot lost. If you decide &o replaff some of )'OU...,,.. and spices, bay small coMa1aers .Web cu be used wllltla a few moe&U before Oavor ucl ~ begin &o fade. 1._,, w.u ler Tlelu!t llel-d DEAR PAT: What happens if a person loses an airline ticket? I've never lost Olle, but each time I buy a ticket I wonder about this. ls there an immedJate refWJid, or do you have to wait? J.J., Costa Mesa t.-t llcke&I Uoald be nponed Immediately &o the la1a111C canter. llol& cbr&e • fw pneealq a lolt ~ nlad appUcatlaa wlW. • ffrtala •time aatt. Aa a preca......, •Ike a Mte of JMI' ticket ........ • JOU dleell ar cftdk au at die U.e of ,.,aue. U ,.. PQ c ... , reeercl Ute nmlter ... bep lt la a Ale pl~. A walllal paled of di daJa ....U, la~ befwe u air carrier will laaJte a rdud. llewe't'er, alrllae Ucketa are.-for p1111ce for ome year from tlte da&e of llRe. U tlte tkW II foad ud aaecl b7 Hot•er penoa, tlte paiduer bean tile ..... Siil 91B• •Ne IA••er IJNfl DEAR PAT: I have bi"1 blood presaure. My doctor prescribed a medicine that eontrols It, but .Jtomeone told me sur1er1 can a•t rld of blperteaaion once and for all. ta tbll b'W1 U '°• what type~ suraery ts involved? D.F., Colt.a Mesa .. die put, paU.ta ............... . ~ (lllp .._. •n11a11) _..._ ... .. ...... 11. Iii ........... , ................ , • ..... 'Ille .. .,,., ~M ff~. di9M tJ•· paUtetk ...,. trwil ...._. .._. v..tmk I•· ••l1e1 • die eanbon1nlar 17a&em. TM ,,... ceclve, calW fllmpa~J. wu drulle Ma It ol&ea ~ bPe~wlteaaU .... ,....._ Toda7, ...... ilela.ll t...n &e •lfl1· • .._. dnlp ..... "dle•kal .,.~,. Uaat ca• M _.. .,. • ..., .. $ba .., ,...,.... .. ._ • ~· ..... MH80'ltr, dimlc.a ......... eM. M rn ...... by~. ..., .... .._,.,,....,lit ... trotW ~ adllli*IAI do.ace. ~. THE INSTITUTE PA.ID $1'15,000 to find out wbetber a group of lsolated renters cou.Jd lranaform a community if they were given a IT lJSED PalVATE Joans and government grantl for renovation. Houses were given new roolJ and indoor plumbing. Broken windows _Warning: The Surgeon General Has Oetemuned That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heatth. • and old w\riq were repl~ed. ••1 doll't tblnk we Tefatent«t 1he wheel," aald project director steve Pbolar. ..We <lid what I call struetured lnterventlon." lloet ol .the homes-were aokl to ~ants at eott. often for u llttJe aa ta.000 to M.000. A retidenta counct1 boupt the rest anct leued them to peopl• wt.odld,not want to~. AS .. OPSD, THE experiment instilled • 1e111e of pride il)..Stump Creek. wbicb had been owned by a real eetate and aalvaae firm slnce •1.IMt. < 'llJ'be people who bave lived here all tbelr lives are proud,"~ Karty Kos, former residents 1..eouncll · treasurer. "It's been a eood UUni for them.•' The community saved a bout $80,000 on a water system by ~ing its manpower for tbe heavy work. Work on a aewaee system is almost complete. N08TBWEST IUNING Co. built Stump Creek. One superintendent ruled tbe town ~e an ancient lling with .a heavy band, personally checking to see that lawna were mowed and outbome paths kept neat. In tlme the company could not afford tbe town's upkeep. It -.yas sold for $135,000 when the mine closed in 1949. 9 mg. "er"· 0.8 mg. 111COMt rv. Pf ciglmtt by FTC medlad. - ,. .. . ... . . . . • • # • i. INSIDE: •Ann LMders •LlfHtyle •Horoecope •Cl•lllflecl • ~. Apf11 24 1971 r------------------~ ...................... _ ...... • ,. ' L 1 . I• . t • I ~ l . ~ \ I .. I \ r ! I .. .• There is a new look in weddings today. They are more personal, more in- dividual, and often less formal than in the past. ThU u the first in a aemt bl/~ ~ Elb::obfth L. Po!$ on qwaffou ebou:t how to give o wedding. TM MTU!• tDiU conttm.le daily Um1tloh Fri- day in tM FfOturlng «etion. '\ By ELIZABETH L. POST June ls still THE wedding 1nootb t la spite of all the . sta'ttstlcs. and the efforts of the bridal industry to make weddlnla more ~ a year~round business, spring and weddings r~maili s1nonymous. Every ~ar in March and April. the questions about wedding procedures start to pour in. Some are from the parents ol the bride and 1room • .others from the couples themselves, a few from prospective attendants. and still others h'om those. wbo'will be guests .. Even tf you are DOt direc:t· ly invo(ved with 1' wedding in your famUy .. the chances are that you bave a friend wtio ls . There is a new took in weddings today. They are· more peJSOllal, inore individual, and often less formal tbap ln tbe past. Tbere are more second marrfases, and more divorced parents to be consldered. AU these tbitlis provoke questions, and perhaps the unfamiliar de· parturf' from tradition explaim the volume of questions that ar- rive. In aey ease, whether It ls you, your daughter or simply a close friend who is getting mar· ried, I trust this column will solve many of your problems WEDDING EXPENSES Q. Wltat erpeues are paid b) U.e bride ucl ber ramlly! A Traditionally, the bride's family pays for the following: in· vitations and announcements; all or the receptioo expenses; flowers tor the church, the attendants and. in some areas, her own bouquet; the bridegroom •s ring; an optional gill for the groom; presents for the bridesmaids; church and or- garust fees. other than the dona tion to the clergyman. In some areas and among some ethnic groups, it 1s custoauai'y COii tbe groom to pay f.Q.r tbe beverages. Also, toda)', it ls not considered in bad taste for the groom's family to offer to help out with ex~ if lhey would like to bave more people or a more elaborate setting than the bride's family can aUord Q. Wltat expeuea fall to die groom and hla parea\a! A. The groom's parents almost invariably give the rehearsal din· ner, although it is not obligatory The groom pays for the his bride's nng. the marriage lice~; gifts for his ushers; the ushers• ties, gloves <which are often bought rather than rented) and bouton· meres; in some areas. the bride's bouquet ; her corsage for going away, all expenses of the honey moon, and a donation to the c lergyman. Based on the elaborateness of the wedding, this fee may range from ten to several hundred dollars Q. Who pays far the lodglq of die atletwtallb! A The bnde and groom each pay for the lodging or their own at- tendants. The attendants pa) their own travel expenses, but once they arrive, the bridal couple are retRODSlb&e for them. Usually they are put up at the homes of friends or nl•tlves. Ct. W1lo pays 'tor a.e Jodghtg of tile 1room •1 parea&a II &bey are from oat of town! A. The groom's parents pay tl:Jeir owu ~DJeS if they must a\a_y ln public lodgings. Every ef. fort should be made, however, to find accommodations for them wllb ~tives or friends of tbe bride. U the expenses are more than they can afford, the sroom blmsell should help to pay for them. 1 Q. Mmt .., bride'• famllJ pay fer tile tralllportadoa or lod&DI. ol other 011&4'4owll pests! * A. No .. They ab9uld assist In ·every other way, by recon:iJD«ld· ing tbetalcest accommodatiOns, by sending brochures and price schedules, and by making reserva· Uons-when requested. WEDDING INVITATIONS Q. WJaea &be bride'• pa.retl&a are dlvorcecl, dla both dletr names ap. pear oa tlae-~lDvttalioM! A. No. The name of the parent <or parent and stewarent> who is paying for and hosting tile wed· ding is the name that appears. Tbe exception ·occurs when both parents are sharing expenses equally. In that case. both names <and thole of stepparents) appeu on the invitation. Q. 11 Ute &nuUUonal thlrd·penoa ltJle of lnvttatioll stW conalclered die. oab' aetep&able oae for a wed. dla1f A. No. In recent years, people who have felt that the tb1rd·penon form is CQJd and impersonal have written their own wording. even though the lnvJtation is as bt!~utiltilly engraved as wedding_ Invitations always have been. Here is my favorite: Our joy will be more complete 11 you can share in the marriage of our daughter • . . <names, Ume, date, location). We invite you to worship with us. witness lbeir vows, and join us for a receptioD at the Cold Hollow Club. Jf ywere unable to attend, we ask your Pre- sence in thought and prayer.- Parents' names Q. 8boUI lavUadou be lat Co people wtao live &oo far away Co at- &ead' A . Only if tbey are such close re-latives or friends that they would be hurt 11 they did not reeeive an invitation. Others should re<:eive· an announcement. which carries no obligation to send a gift. Q. ~ doll'& dte aamea of die s::m'• ,...... appear Oil wed· .. ~, A. Because invitatiooa are sent by the people who are giving the wedding and reception and these are generally the parents ol the bride. If only the groom's family are giting the wedding, then their nameJ would be the ones on the in· vitaUon Q. How eaa eme lacllcate • &be lavttalloa dial ddldrea are DOt ill· elllded! . A. One cannot write "no cbildresi" on an invitation. So the only aohition is to let people know by word of mouth that you cannot "(See~DDING,PageQ) Q • ..._ • ..,..er may M&, 1be a •~r fora brlclef , A. 'Beeause a sbowel' lnvttatlon, 1D ef. feet. asks for a glA. it ls eomidered in poor taste for immediate. family mem· bers -mothera and sistera -to give showers. There are exceptions, but as a general rule. it ia best for the bride's friends or more d1stant relatives to pve showers. Q. How muy lllowers may a bride II ave? A. There la DO bard·and-fast rule, bat it is an imposition to ask the same peo. pie to a number of showers. If the bride is given a very larce shower. that one ls enough. But she may bave two or even three sho~rs with different ·guests. At· tendants. who are asked to all of them, should be told they need not bring a gift each time. Q. Are &room1 ever bdaded I• lllowera! A~ Yes. Today many •bowers are held in the evening or al cocktail time and the company is Ulixed. Also, ushers oc- t:asionally get together and give a shower for the groom, featuring gifts for the·bar the yard or bis favorite bob· by. Q. M..t a bride write llluk·yoa Mtes for abower gifts! A. Not ii she bas thanked the donor in person at the shower Naturally, sbe must wrlte notes to people who cowd not be there but sent gifts anyway. Q. Is It pouJble co bave a ~r for an absea&ee bride! A. Yes, it is. You can have a fteipe shower and ask everyone to bring a favorite recipe and a small kitchen gadget which can be mailed easily. Or you can ask guests to bring small, UD· wrapped gills, and you provide paper and ribbons for a "wrapping contest." Gift certificate showers and (altbotagh I don't ordinarily recommend them> money-tree s howe r s are other alternaUves for absentee brides. ' Helping Ber Own People ..... Nhen she does start prac- ti Ci (1 g medicine, Ms. Morse will be a rarity -a doctor who is both Indian and a woman. BJ JUDITH OLSON Of .. Oelty ........... Charlotte Morse, 28, is a Delaware Iad.ian 8Dd bas a degree ln psychology. An unlikely candidate roe medical school? Most .l!(fmtuiona committees would tbibJt so, but Charlotte Mone baa proved them wnma. She ii a third·year student at ucr. medical school and ls quietlY mapping out plans tor a career amoag naal tnc:lian tribes. It hasn't been easy, especially the year and a ball ol c:ancentrated lclence courses, bul Ms . Morse ~ abe bu tbe ablllty tO bec:ome a &ood doctor. Wben abe does start praeticiDI m~lne. Ms. Mone will be a rarity in the profeulon; a doctor wbo ia both an Indian and a woman. There are few Indian doct.on in the U.S.. Ms. Mone said -a recent count found only 22 -and rew of these pracUee among their own ~. Morse decided to work oo"" ......, •. lion when sbe wu a staff member ol Upwatd Bound at tbe Uttivenlty o( Nevada Just after her 1nduation from that ac.booa. BER A8810NJIBNT, a.Ion& wlt.b .. "'*1 other mlnottty YoUDC people. waa to IDOtlvate <SeeDOCl'Oll. PaaeCI> .. ~· .. r .A '! '· . .. ., , .. ' Q DALY "'-OT t.. I rwomen f Get Wings • By SUSAN UNNEB HOUSTON (AP) -Six women whose fathen are all pilots have woo tbelr wlqa u first offlcen from Texas lntemational Airllnea, which now boasla more women in the CO·pllot'a aeat than any other m~or U.S. airline. The women, including the first black female lo qualify as a major airline plldt, Joined 32 men• last week in promotion ceremonies at ttie Houston-based airline. They are all first officers who will sit in the rigbt·hand seat. ~ Jill E. Brown of Baltimore, a home economics major who learned to fly alont with her parents when she was 17, said an article on the small number of black commercial alrtine pilots in the United Stales prompted her lo see how rar she could get . . j l '· "I contacted Warren Wheeler, who runs the only black-0wned scheduled airline in the coun· try. He gave me an interview and then offered me a job," Miss Brown said. She started out at Wheeler's Raleigh, N.C., based airline in August m7, flying Beeeh 99 aircraft. · Tl previously had no women pilots. Western Airlines has six women flight engineers. Marcelyn Bishop, 23, of Oroville, became • the first woman to serve as co-pllot on a I scheduled TI flight when she sat at the controls t or a DC-9 jetliner during a Dallas-bound run J later in the day. Miss Brown will be flying •O. •. passenger Convair propjets for several months . t ! ' • ' until the airline phases them out. The other women pilots are Alberta Parkison, 33, Irvlq, Texas; Duana Bucklin, 22, Jamestown, R .I .: Linda Greco, 23, St. Petersburg, Fla. and YaryRose Helfrtck, 22. Elysburg, Pa. Mias Parkison, who was a stewardess for 10 )'eara, taught her father, a retired Air Force of· fleer, to fiy a seaplane. Many ot the male pilots gained previous fly. Ing experience during military service, but Mlsa Bucklin, who plans to marry a pilot in August, said that didn't make much difference.' "Men probably get more encouragement to • t A,...,....... Six new female pilots have been given wings by a Texas airline. become pilots than women do," she said. "But we didn't have the problem of unlearning things from military flying experience like they did." TI vice president for flight operations Donald Breeding said about 75 women and 400 men were interviewed for openings in the airline's first pilot class in elcht years. Breed- ing said no women applied for the job eight years ago. . Although the airline, wb.lcb now bas 338 pilots and 26 DC·9 jets, is expanding rapidly, Breeding said it will be a few years before any of the new pilots moves into the captain's seat. ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE ( Horoscope ) TUESDAY, APRIL is SCORPIO <Oct. 23- BJ SYDNEY o.ua Nov . 21): Accent on . ~RIES <March 21 . savings, ex;>en4litures, locating what was lost April 19): Give run play or misplaced. Money. to creative drive. Reach beyond the immediate. authority, power figure 0 promlnently -nothing et messaae acrosa. ti lukewarm or hallway. TAURUS <April 20· 8A'GITl'AJUtJS <Nov. May 20): Your powen of perception are 22-Dec. 21): Take ad· heightened. You know vantage ol high cycle - w i t b o u t r o r m a l get mesaase ac~. be knowledge, you sense origlnal, independent, and are keenlY aware of creative and be rid of budget. foolish burden. GEMINI <May 21· CAPRICORN <Dec. June 20): Avoid confron· 22·Jan. 1.9): Llgbl-shines taUons. Do plenty of in area that bad been-liatening. observing. dark, obscured. You CANCER <J une 21• have access to special, July 22 ): Study Gemini privileged information. AQUARIUS (Jan. message. Take con· 2o.Feb. 18): Some of servative course. Keep y 0 u r pet p e e v e s , wort, diet, healtb, res· tbeoriea, projects are olutlons. LEO <July 23.Aug. spotlighted. You are given choice between 22): SwHt actions, easy substitutes and changes are featured. quality. Your own good Romance. creative en· deavors dominate. Ma-judgment should pre· vail. jor opp<>rtunity is due. PISCES <Feb. 19- ·vlRGO. (Aug. 23·Sept. March 20): Special 22 >: Be meticulous; be honor ls conferred by aware of essentials, peers. Gemihi. SaJ!it· homework. details, work tarius could figure· that has been done, prominently. Befiexible, work yet to be complet-adaptable. You are e d . K e e p c o u r s e achieving goal. simplified. -'iiiiiiiiiiiiii!il LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. ••• Wedding Ann Vs. Walter 22 >: Short journey, ap- plication of ideas. visits, telegram and important telephone call -these all are now a part ol your personal scenario. l <From Page Cl) accommodate cblldren under 16 ((or example>. Ask close fttends and relatives to help spread the word. · evening wear and is not correct in the afternoon. The daytime alternative ls the sack coat <a black or charcoal jacket> worn DEAR ANN LANDERS: Have you noticed bow many peo- ple, including those in radio and TV, pronounce February as Feb-YOO· ary? Walter Cronkite, no Jess, b one of the principal offenders. I wi 11 be mighty glad when these so-called ex· perts on the English language get with it. 1 've writlen to Mr. Cronkite to protest such sloppy usage, but so far, no reply. How about you trying? -FEBRUARY FREAK Q . Sboald self·addreaaed ea· velopea · be lDcJaded If yoa are sendln« response cards! -with striped trousers, pleated shirt and four·in·band Ue. Q. Do yoa eouider putaalta proper atUre for__...., peaa! A. Of course it depends on the style. There are .flowing, dressy pants which would be quite accep-table, but tailored or "sporty" slacks are not aa appropriate as a pretty dress. A. Yes. If you can afrord it, it is also a ;ice gesture to stamp the en· velope. Q. Is It correet to write "a.ad family" on the eavelope of a wed· ding lnvttatioo? A. It is permissible when every member or the family is living under the same roof. On the inner envelope, the first names of the children are listed. Q. Sboald the modlen ol tbe bride ud poom wear capes or coats u &bey walk dowa Ute a1ale wbea tbe weather b ffOIT . CLOTHES FOR nlE WEDDING Q. Must tbe motber of the brtde _ and the mo&.ber of Use groom wear the same lielagtb drea! A. Not neceaiarily. The bride's mot.her selects her gown fint, and the groom's mother should consult wlth her. Ir the latter feels particularly uncomfortable in the chosen style, she need not follow suit. However, unless she bas s trong objections, it makes a much prettier "picture" in the re- ceiving line when the dresses are the same length. A. It is perfectly correct to wear a coat or cape. However, many women want to show off their dresses as they walk down the aisle. So they remove tbelr coats when they arrive at the chureh and give them to an usher to be placed in their pews. They can then put them over their lboulders during the ceremoo,y. DEAR FEB: I sent yoar letter to Walter Cronkite wbo, laclclen· &ally, la a real papycaL AcroH &be top ol yoar letter I wro&e: .. Dear Walter: Tbe lady ls rtgbt. I beard yoa say IL Pleue clean ap yoar ad or get off the air." Q. b It C91111dered lleeeUUJ for tbe bride to wear «loves! Q. May bridesmaids wear stnp· leas, off·tbe-shoulder dresses la a church weddlog? A. Many clergymen object to bare shoulders. and it is in better taste to wear a shawl or other cov- ering over the shoulders during the ceremony It can be removed ror the reception. A. Not at all. U a bride chooses to wear long gloves, the ring finger must be slit so that it can be folded back when the ring is put on. A short glove must be re· moved. Therefore, in the interests of practicality, I recommend that the bride not wear gloves during the ceremony. Waller Croaktte telepboDed bis response. He let me know la DO UD· certal• terma tbat bb act doesn't Med dean· las ap. Moreover, Ile saJd be llu ao tnteatloa of getting off Use air. Mr. Cronkite claims the dlctlonarlea are dlvlded as to tbe pronanclatloa of February. . Q. Who pays for the brtdeamalcb' dresses! Q. la a tuxedo tbe corred aUlre for an afternoon wedding! A. No. A tuxedo, technically, is A. The bridesmaids pay for their own dresses. Most brides could not afford to pay for them, and, one hopes the girls will be able to use the dresses after the wedding. I cheeked several ref. erence books, however, and tbey all give Feb· yoo-ary a s second ••• Doctor <From Pase Cl> youths to go to college or seek to better themselves. "I realized, .. she said, "that even with all the stuff we would do for those kids, which was a lot, that there would be a tremendously long time between the time the kids from the reserva- tion would end up in medical sc.bool." She started thinking about becoming a doc- tor herself and rinally took the first step by go- ing back to school for a crash year in science. During her work with Upward Bound she had met people from UCI and when they beard about her decision to apply for medical school they began to encourage her. "They wouldn't give up on me," Ms. Morse said over breakfast between appointments. "They gave me a big charge of positive belief in myself. I went ahead and applied that year and was admitted. I was surprised." HE R VEAR WITH Upward Bound also brought her "first significant contact .. with In- dian cultures." Her great-grandfather, she said, was "the last chief ot the Delawares," but ln the South, where she waa born, it was "not fashionable lo be ldenWied with a culture." When Ms. Morse discovered the importance of her heritage she began to tb1nk about what her father had taught her. "A lot or his values were Indian values, .. she said. "They're real important to me.'' Her expertence in Nevada with the rural tribes also gave her a "whole bunch of ideas about how 1 would practice.·· \ Sbe acknowledges that many of her fellow medical studenta "wouldn't be comfortable" In the rural area, or "the aUcu," as she calls it, but saya that "on the other band, there are those of us wbo wtlJ be. 1 won't be sacriflclJll." 80 SEES BER work u Incorporating the traditional Indian beliefs about medicine wtth wb,tt she bas learned in school and "orsanhtq a •bole eommwllty a.round a mon bealtbful syatem." Ma. Mone probably will teach the tribes hygiene, make home vlalta and try to "malntaln tome sort ot moblllt.y" to the can cover more than one villafe. She recognius however that to aucceaaf\a.l· ty practice •he wttl have to be a majOI' part.lei· pant in the community ahe works tn. The reason for this, she aaid, ti \Mt she must build up trust before abe can treat the In· dlana. ''They have to aet uaed to you before they're tolDI to communicate wtth JOU• You may bave to talk wtlb t.Mm tor 1S to IO mlauta about tbemlelvt11. It wouldn't be a directed coo· venatioo." Medical studenla, in contrast, are taught to "take control or the patient, elicit a hiatory, ex- amine, decide on a plan and give advice." ANOO'HER DIFFERENCE she must lake into account ls the Indians' view of illness as op· posed to the whites'. Indians see Illness as "a symbol and a tool for uldnt for help" as well as "something related to a lotof otberlhlngs that are goinc on," Ms. Moraeexplalned. The Indian ls supported tn hla lllneu by family and friends and the attention the patient gets ls part ol the cure. Cures often are related to a social event which in turn ls 1pirltual, Ms. Mone said. "That's a rich, nowi.ablng support ayatem for them." Ms. Mone sees her practice as a brand new kind of medicine and said she will be "a new kind of doctor. I'll have to even lnvent all of this," she asserted. "It will be a rich, exciting framework, maybe with aolutlons that have to do with everyone in the country." Ma. Mone already conalden benelf as a new kind ol medical student, different than the sons and dauabte~ of doctors wbo are looking forward to urban practices Just like their parents'. SHE TALllS ABOUT keeplq her values lD· tact Qd maintains ber oplnloa that the beat doc· tors aren't neceaarUy those wbo set the blahelt grades in medical school. There ll a split betl'eeo thole who are iD· terested ln the scientJllc upecta ol medlcloe and thole committed to the social arena ud Ms. MorM UMrtl that slM LI AIDOlll the latter. It ti more dlfftcult for people Uke ber to aet throua.b medl-'-1 acbool, ahe tald. "W• (mlDort· ty and o&cler ..rudenta) have to bl mote motivat· ed than they ar. (traditloaal atudeGta Wbo have been 3"ll•Hbooled ln ti.. aeiene. and are perbape the IOU OC' daucbten of pbyalclan1). "It LI fmportUt for u. to bave a bumane, nourilhlDI envtroatMDt. M9dleal tcbool 11 • whole lot of b-"1 work but lt'I not lmPC*llblt. You need enero to do au \qt wort dd Mlf· confidence '' the key to milntai'Q.ln• ttaat ener,ftO.. have tc) believe that you'N?te to be' good at it, that you're worth dtve . n·· a fot harder for ua to f"l C9mf°"8ble • •• Me. Mon.t aaid she almOllt dtekled not to 10 to medkal acbool wi..n ah found °"' Uuit UCl would COil her man Utan '1 ,000 a J'Uf. .. But J deeldecl that .... dwnb NUOD oat to ao:• lbe said ... , decided Just to borrow the m~e1 every year and be in dtbt." Antt Landers on either side and say. ·•Peace." Well, that's bow I got a terrible case of ringworm. Is it all right if 1 send the doctor bill to you? I tried the church and they don't w a n t i t. -B.E E N THERE IN MID · DLETOWN, N.Y. DEAR Ml.D- . DLETOWN: I doa't cboace. (See World Book want h either. How Dictionary, Merriam about trylag tbe person Webster's New·•ho save yo• O.e Collegiate, Fant and tlagworm! Wagnall's, American ----- Heritage ud Random Hoate.> New Sel~tlon Of Antique Jewelry & Jewel Caskets from France One of them even bas Feb·YOO·ary as third cbolce. So Feb-roo-ary Is preferred, bat F•yoo- ary IS accepbble, aad that's tbe wa1 It la, Moa· day, April Z4, lt'18. Wedding and ~gage· ment annou.ncement.s run on Sundal/ in the Daily Pilot. Forrnl are available at all Daily Pilot offices or bl/ coUmg tM Featvres DepartTMnt, 60..UZl. Joh.=en • to aooid disappoint- mmt. prospectroe brides are ~ to have their weddmg stones, with o black-Ond·white glosiy of the bride or of the couple. PERSONAL OEVELOPMENT & MOOELING sat<>Ot.S DEAR ANN LANDERS: So you think it's OK to shake hands in church with the persons ORANGE coorrrv 1131 Weot<lllf On..- ".,_ ll"Onl W...C..blf Pl&u ~ lk~be:Jt.al o..MW-.y 3 Town(, Coun1rv Oronge 17141 ~78228 Tell Mom You Love Her This Morher's Day send Mom a greeting all rhe world can share on Sunday, May 14th. Express your love in a Daily Pilot Mother's Day Greeting . Ir·s easy. Write your message co fir one of our three convenient sizes and bring it to any Daily Pilot office prior co noon May 12. Or, you may mail a clipping of the border with your message and payment to Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay Sc., Box 1560, Cosca Mesa, Ca. 92626. , ,. .. __ $15 Ads come in dutt siies: $10, $1~. and S3 for the special child's size card. (You must be und« 12 yeas of *at to qualify for the littlest grftfing). If you wish you may cmite your own dec.ontcd grttting. Using black pen draw your design to ftt one of the docted outlines shown here. You may fill the ttui~ space. Only ~ and lines drawn within the dotted Ii~ will appear in your completed Mothtt's Day ad. ' --------------------------y ,-------~--------~-~--, ~ .. 1 r--.-~---.... ---, I I L _________ _J If you ...-mt help composing a suitable greeung or have any questions call 642-~678. A fi~ly Daily Pil(J( ad·YUa will be glad to help you. Aftd. if you like you an chltge your Mochcr's Day ad. Your credit is good with us, or you may use your Muttt Clwgc or O.nkAmcric:ard. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 ....... --- COMICSICR088W9!!D MAIMADUkl FUNKY WINKER BEAN HOW 00 EM1M an.D ~ - 1HING LIKE 1HI& HAPPEN ~ MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX I'M NOT' AA""'N6 1l1e UTIL.rN m>Plil>JY FOl2 -n-.e HOU2 we. l.~ SW\iCHIN6 11' ~'VL.1'5HT ~Vl~t DENNIS THE MENACE \ .. -{ BOOMER ( • I I by Tom Batluk CharlH Rodrigues by Ferd and Tom Johnson You'w. ~T A&.ON<S, '-Ar>Y P.·· you KNOW A SMATTE:RIN4 OF f;N~llSH AND HE SPe'AJ<S IT Fl.lJENTLY, --· GORDO WHILE Aeeff SPDICER DANCES WTTH .JULIAN KJNG5TON, JR., SAM OAA'ER TALl<S TO GEOftGIA! ~:< ,....., __ __ TUMBU!WEEDS by Wm. F. Brown and Mel C.sson 1'~ eeNOING '16tJ -0 A 1'H~1' 5Pe'Cl~Lt5T Aeoor iUA'f ~- DOOLEY'S WORLD v.bw! IS "Tf{AI I KITTUP1HERE . - DR.SMOCK SO NOW Y'OLJ KNOW, SN\OCK ... WH~N GIVING A SHO-r TO A PA-rlE:N-r O N A wA-reRe~P ... MOTLEY'S CREW by Gus Arriola He'(, CHl~F! ooe:ss WHA'flf r1S ~Ni! I KNOW, STUPIV, I KNOW. by Tom K. Ryan vour< L.ON6' JOHNS IS STARTIN' 10 ROT'TOO,HUH? NANCY ~Y Emle Busttmllltr PEANUTS by curld M. sc11u11 l1M OOIN6 A REPORT ~ ~OOL ~•()If{ ANIMAL FRJEND5 " by Roger Bradflelct by George Lemont .:. by Templeton and Forman TDDAl'S 1111sna nllLI ACROSS 1 Shadow boK ~Plant f1be1 10 Oyster stage 14 .Mahc1ous storv 15 Fir St SQUcld 'lworos 16 Tramp 17 News brief 18 Solar sys- 1em models 20 Electric con· 1rOI devlee 22-on Added 23 In this man- ner 24 Unpopular guy 25Come into •lew 28 Football ba· SIC 32 Arttele 33 Enter a~ a deb1 35 Jew1str feast 36 D1shones1 riches 38 Full up 10 here •O Femate singer 41 Oi>c>onents '3 Less clvtl .. 45 Ortg egpt UNITED Feature Syndicate mlr Saturday's Puzzi. Solved: 46 AO<>rnmen1s •8 w Hem. die· 1a1or SO En11ch S1 Overcharge Stan.:i 52 :)pans s11es 55 Fottowed 59 Art work 2 words s1 Cabbage 61Cuf)t(! 63 Irregularly IOOthed -------, l AS 14 S'.!~!. ~.! ..!i!. II l , A ¥ II I £ l • u l ( IO 11 l 0 A f 11 C II I A II A 0 • :. y ( OS I l r A G I S I I f 0 f I U ' .... f I l ' . , " 1• .. II I f ... • I •A II 0 ' ' ( A II A A II u ' A f ( l A II 0 f II I 0 ( .. ( 0 0 ( II I I , ( c r I 0 " .. • • l ( . ' 1• , :a IC I ... II D I f n • •O 0 . 'ii ' A f ( . All 0 , .! ~Lo! !!.!!. ~.! II A ,. I..!.!.! .!~~~ . ' l II II 6' Noun ending ma1e RF 6!> PreclOus 13 Hotned -39 Bridge stones Lizard player 66 MesSclge 19 Armored ve-C2 Means of 11s- rece1vea htcles cent 67 ExtQenc, 21 HerrlnO-hke •• Su hsti -rpnse at· DOWN 24 Predesuned ~k . ' lnsttgale 25 Al face val· 47 .,..ip - 1 Trail ue 2 words 811t collector l Away lrom 26 Prefix for 49 Uttered the Wl!lc.J barb1to1 5t Selected 4 Aloof ?7 Bombards S2 Plunder 5 Ecstasies 28 01sc1ple of SJ Harmless t> u S m1ss1te St. Paul S4 tota 7 For1e Slang 29 Blockhead ss Hard wor1c 8 JOhn. Gaehc 30 On no occa· ~Shrink 9 Kll\d of med· sion 57 In addition ICtne 31 Prelli for . 58 Conveyance tO Chained phone doc 11 Pig flesh ~ Revealed 80 ument 12 f11sh Rose's 37 LF CF Mountain: · ·and Preli• .. -. .. __ ... _ .. ,, .. 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'"' '""''" ~ ~ ... tlltff 111t11 .. o• 90..ot prl11\ed~lallYDle ... .....,,.: D•-ye•tt11 ~QALML.LOf .._. __ _ IAllTAMAa .. a1TA T"9Def«Jl9•0.W WAnrtl otA'aM:T Pera voter. _,_ llNI cri•J ( •I llllPaOYUllllllTDIST1UCT..O.t (ell 11114t t11 el <lltdnl OI WC.Clol'I SP.QA&. eGlllO 11&.aCTlON .._, OI It Ptl-• "SI" o ..._,., 111e, ~ '"' di It pelllllta ' NO" T-1 I•• Oolrn ............ ..,... ........ (Mt "'.,, ...... pr'OMlllO.J' lit<tl'I •• To •ott • ....,, • u.a I•> 11111111111 IWll9" 11111 .. lht vollnO lQll•r• efltr Ult word SI Ud. 111trC• INI. •-0 11\Vtlle "YES" or ellM ""_.."NO", All est• 11e1.i-. ........ t i Rt91tlrtd0r mtrU otlwwt•--~ •Vottl'l""y-,.. .. r._ tl'ICl"'••tlheb91IOCvold. PROPOSICION 0£ II you •ranolY merk, t .. r, or CM1ect &ONOS: ?lnc.,..rlre •I 01$· fhl• btllOI, ...-11Hto1'11 ltaQl~lrer Of tr Ito d• A911a de Sal'll• Votenwt4.-.ln-. Mt1"9trltt..,,. Ollli...IDl'I Y &ON D PROPOSl TION · tmltife -0. abl~IOtl Sh•ll '"" SWttt .,-..,1tt ...,.rel pert ti Dbtrlto di w.1 ... 01w1c1 lllCW M "" Melor• .... • ... •• <Mltidtd <1• btedlltn tnd tuue di $)1e,OOO)IOO -• I• ad-Qtntr•I «*IQalloll baAcb lor qulsldOll y toNINC.CIOO\ de lmprovt-Olwlct No.•. trtlMlot ...,-e It PfOduc<lon. '"IN_., 01a.-,ooo trtr1smlMon. tlmK-1•, y '°' ,,,. ec_,wuon Md COl'I· dlstrllludon de~ I*'• Ir· •lr1Ktlon °' ~ lor '"' rloeclon, ., propo11tos prO<lutllon, fr..wftlHlol'I, domullc06, lftCl:lttrltltt Y storeoe -Cllwlbutlon Of munlc~I• pert 1 .. ltr· wtttr lor lrrlge llo,., l'tllCll y Mlllltlll•dllnlrode <lomntlc, INlullrltl t l'ld IOt llml'" dt4 txtlf'IM 0. m.1111c1,.1....,....., w"" 01c11& c111v1i. di mt)or• • ., '""°' Md 1..,,...-S wllttl11 ta td4111l1klon y ~INC-11'9 t•191'1or lleufldtrlet OI clon 0. ao. tnlWljol ptf't It Mid , .. ,_. cllWl<t. colt<CIOll, ,, .......... 1 •• ' end IM .cqulsf11&11tnd,.... dhp01lcto11 d• &11ua1 d• •truclloll 01 -'> tor IN allltl'ltl, .......,. y -0. rollacllOft, 1,...lment Md YES llwlt, 111(1,,.,._ ellleNles dl ..... I OI ....... ..... prlnc:INI•, tr ..... lorlto di encl ~ ~. lllC1'ldlllt to v ta d • • \ b • 11 •I , SI tr111111 _., _..,. !rWI· tecllld•I" di rec:temo c1e mtllt, w•lw .-.CltmtllOll -· "'•d-• ,..,. llom-1.c1nu............. ......... wer.,1~..-... •nd lllthHllno ... IAHI, lerr•llOi, ., NllllMll" ..... •U•menb •ltd oUIW pro. tro d• 1os llrnltts Otl ••· perly nt<tuMY t,.rtlor lor terlw ci. dlc"9 dhlrllo a. lllt tend• •lld 1_.telils met«• y -· It tdQllttf.. •'1111111 IN txlttlOf bo\011 tlOl'I de I-O Ptrte Cll IOS o.rtes of MIO "'--• IOft<IOS dtf ..-io di dlcho dl\lrlct end fot llw ecou~l· dlllrllo de mtjot• Cprovltlo tloll Of ell OI or Pt" of H -•I lottl de ta <&1'11'- operetlno tlHI of ttld Im· d• ttln tondos eal ad provtmtnt dhlrlct (Pf.. q.olfldol noellclditf'ttllOllli Vldeel 11\tl llw t«tl -• lot,_ ... _ ..... of ~" """" .. tcA!llir9d clk!M ........ 0 por Mn Plr1- "''" llo4 ...... II\~ 0. dOI tl!OS, -ha lldO -I lo ti. total...,.,~ telculado p0r I• J11nl• co\ls or Mid '"•-•-Dlrt<llv• • dk,. Cll•trltol district for • IWO·•••r ' IOftOOI -· •• PtOO • period, •1 esll--..., llW •-1 los OHI05 de dl<ho ANrd of Oirec:Ws of Mid dl1lrllo de mtlort we! es 1>1,-r1co -1.-tor !!It pr'Obtl>la -....-M 11\Cur• pl,mtl'll of .,,.,., •-rldos y .. rtl'I PtOtd•rOJ ot utd tmpr-nt di.. •"le• ci. ta i.nnlnecloft de tr let •11tc11 It It PRINl>I• "" -de It termlneclon dt ... 111 b • ln<urred end dlcflOS 1re11eio-1111<111.,..- --PtY&lllt befOre llw ti lnleru iobre dlchos ~•porellon of --,,..... _., c11al .. -y es NO tht cornplellon of u ld pegadero anttrlor • ... •or•' 1111<.lll<ll"O IM In· le<llt y 11¥• t llAI dlneros 1-.1 on MIO_ ...,ich Is dtt dlllrllo dt ""'°"' tit It dllt •11<1 pjiYfDI• pr tor to NO tHO<t rla de diCllO dhtrllo. o 111•1 d•I• •"d tor whlcll cu•IH o. e111 ... _, ... ,. te ,,,_,, Of the l"'C)rOv•""'"' r..:10lrt" s-dl<ho dhlrllo <11llrlcl In u. .,_.,,., of di mt)or• dt Ulla •-•· .. id Dlsltlcl or lliffeetter to <lo" de lrnPu•1loi •n· It rectl•ad by t•ld Im· 1erlorme11te ll•lllO•Hlos """ IWO"'-dlltl'lct from .,, IMdK-), y el llSleblKl- AIU Umtlll pr••IOWllY mle11to .......... de ...... l ... ltcl Mt._....,...,, -ltNe cit t-IOI - '"" HI*-of ell ol <11•1 Hldrt dtl Pl'«tcll· , ... -ci -flllW..,.... .......~o ... -... <Ila-_.,..... ........ ., -......... ~ ... ..... _._ ... elle-C-CIOl'I c:.oot It~-111 co,,,,ectlell With the CIOll y el'll4llicMI 4t elk,_. evl-llMlolt -,......,. -· dlchos lloMs c ..... OI wld bonds. Mid ..,.. l.o llt•trt n ..,. i.rtlt o IMlffl _ Ila•• t11ttrt11 et • rttt "" o. ll'll•fff clltl 110 .,.,_,. rttn llOI lo nceed rw. por ti rw. por -· ~o .... tlll'IUm, "Ytllle M"'ltn• rnl_I_, ...... o ..... ~,.,, •aapl ,,... -............ dt4 pr1....,. -.. lot the lltst INY lie !Wiid ti puedt peotr •I flNI dt lllt 8'>d OI Mid-· ltw tc• dlcho -· 11 lwlf• O l&fllH lllAI rtlt or, ... tftd tlfnn Klutl y IM -da - of P•vment to be Cit· cue:u ""°"' _,,..,....i.s t•rmlnecS ti or prior to IM ourentt o -•tor al tl- llm• of .... !Nnof? ci.1twl'lttdelt1es? !.tld ,,,,,..._. Cll"'1cl .,..II toot-0 1,ho dlllrllo de m•lore COii· •lltutt • ~nQI• elocllan pr-eclnct tor 1tlt11ylrt un -dlJlrlto • •1t<<lan lht pur-t fl holOlnQ Mid tlectlan. -· ti propoMlO Cll -r dlClle tltC- ThlS Boerd fll'ldl -OtterrnlMcl -· CIOll. Ille Jllfll• t<Kuel'llrt ' .... ,,..,. •r• •-•i-~ ........... (JOO) ·-ll'lt -...., ~. trec:lellttl periOM•lfollllt10¥111ell'IMld-ll'ICI (>001 ,.,_,., •ll9IDIH. voter ... •nd thtrtf-~ to Sections dlthO cllstrlto de tlt<clOll y por HO ci. 21032 end 1005 " -of Ille Electlolls ecuerclO CCIII ltl Secc.-120l2 y 100S ~ of ti. Stat• OI c.illorl'll•. 11111 el Mq. c1t1 OldlQD • Elt<clones Clll 8 ... rd dt<I-11\tt l ...... will be llO Estedo dt Ctlllornle, Hie Junie polltno pteca -111et u. C11Mllfi.cl OKIM• -no flttlrM h•g•rtS de-.. voters '"'" vote ..., ..,_,, btlloh °' clOll ' qw los wttnlM u lllludol vote at IN oflk • ot Ult ReolSlr•• of voter•n por 1>elotts .,. tuMncl• o voten. ~Of OrtftQlt, uoo Solltll ..o1eta11.,. •• otlelnt c1t1 Reolstrador Or•lld ·-· ,..,. ......... C&flforllle, .,. Vot ... tet. c-de Ortl!Qt, IJOO Ol'I eltetlon city. ,,_ Reol1trer of s. Grtnd Avel'lut. Sanle Ane, Voters Ottlu -II lie --tt 7:00 Celltornl•. ti di• dt It elt<tlan. u o'clock A.M. Oft ti. mont1119 ot wld ofl<lnt dtl RtQIW-de VOC...ltt M •IKtltft Md ....,, Ila lilflll ~ unlH tllrlra t IH 1 00 A.M..,. It,,_,.. dt e·oo o'ctoell P.M. Ol llWI Cit\'. wtwn Utt did~• etecclori y N "*'"ttdt'• tbltf1• wm• llltll be clilled. llelf• ltl 1:00 P.M. di -di•, clltlldo To be -•llltcl ... ....., -to tit I• ml-• MctrTtrl. en1ttll!CI 10 wtt el Mid tltdloll. the Pere .., un volll'lte ullflc.clo Y perto~ m11St be• holCllt of lllle In wld per• 1-ctertcllO • volw durOl'ltt lmprofttnelll dlWkt. A ''holdtr of If. clkM •l«don, le ~ 11-- II•" 1nell ,_,Ille -of rteonl tf .... , PolKlan • ttert111rn.., dlcho '"" 1111• to t....t. IE.9cJt -&hell NW dlstrlto de mt)or1. "hne< -toll dt ,,.. ( 11 Vola fot _,, .,...,,, worth of •Krlhirts" quleft OKlr •I -,. ,...., to Whlcli.,. P101e llllt. M _... glstrtdo de ta tterlturtl dtl ~·­ ,,..., tor I,. District llOC hevlllll ...., CM• --1-re .., 111 volo po< mt<I• el'ICI ,.,.,.., tor lfle y Mf' 11'1 wlll<h ,.,..'doter o. velor del ••rr-• cu•I teld election ,, lo be "'Id. tlle last •• II-... -rlNrH. Un AYllUO ,.,. tQ<Ottlad -1 roll of IM ~ el OIJtrtto no.....,._._ htel'IO y Im ,., ot Orenoe 11 <011Cl1nlw .,.'*"'•of Pllt•fo pert ti -.,, cuel dlcllt tl.C· owner~lp -01 the vtlut 01 ltl'ld to clOll ttndrt •-r, I• ulllma lltl• de o wned. Every voter. or hit leQ<ll •••lw de .. leOlll-loll del ~ repruentttl,,. rney vote eltlitr 11'1 o. or--• ..,,_,, <0n<tu>1ve perM>n or by • ,.,_ dllly IQ#Olnl.l!CI O.I praplelarto y del valor dtl ltrrtflO Al llh proicy. "'--! ...,..._u.u..... de Cllt l tt -C:-vo ..... te O IU ""'eni en ofll<ltl of• ~.Mlon _,.. r.D .. Mllltl'llt legel l>U9dt voter ya - lnQ IAllCI ---t Ol*'ditll, U · tl'lpet'SONOpormHiodeUNptrwnt t<ulor or t4rnlnlatrelor of fht _,..,.of dtllld1mtnlt 11ombrtd• co mo Sii IM holder of lltlt 19 ltlld...,. Cel l••P. •llOd•tedo. "Rtpr .. enl.,,lt lt9tl' ootntect ...-tllt 1-. d ltlla 'ule, q11lert OK Ir un d kltl dt unt "'"'°'• lbl h enlllll!CI to --SIOll of ltw CIOll • Cuti I• perl~• ,.,,..,., y ettele't lend, .,,., 1<1 II ...-1..0 llT q11I•• OKlr un .,.rdltft, tjtculOf o IM •ppolntlnt c-1 to uerclM t1tt tdmll'llst,...,_ de los ~ clel dutno .,.,,_, rlghl, prtvlfooe or lmtnlll'lily o. ta es<r1tlll'es Oii terreno Qllllell Ct l wnlcll he _..., to ••rcl• ... tor• • e1 llOmllr-lle)o I• le't'H de tste ·-· ~pr.,.,,..,IW""' "°" •• Mid Estldo, 1111 I .... •r«lto • llOl&'lon etectlo,., flt must PrtHnl to Ille del ,.,,_ • IOI "'-· y Ccl HUI AeQmrer of v_, •~Hi.cl COCl'I' ti ..,torlieclO por un trlbllntt "'°"""°"'" wld •uthotlty. Whldl '"""be •etlt.,,., • •l•"ll•r el cltretllo perso11a1, llltcl •1111 t,_ ffi1•Nli of U. tlt<tkln. prMltQIO o INnunla.I Wei ti b\010 No tPJ>Ollll"""1 of I P'•Y ,,._II M e)tfclltr. AM" q119 un 1'9Pf-ltl'ltt velld, accepttd, or • vote ti~ ltOal putde voter_.,,,, dlcllt Mt<· lhtr•on lffll•• It metls •II Of tht CIOll, •I llell• Olla PrtMftttrl• •• toll-1119 r~: lel II h Ill ltetlllrtdor da Votant" .,,.. cople wrlllrio, (bl II 11 Ht(Ultd b\' IN c.,111~1 de ClldM t\llO(idtd, Cuti M pertont or 1oge1 -ttllllt ot the, ...ttlldra y -• erclillltN con los r• ptf'Mlft -· lft ~ "'"' -wlltdoldelltl«Clon. pro1.ialonl or '9<11&11 »ON of tht "' "•"" 11om1>re111ltnlo dt u11 catnorl'll• W.ltr Codi, ts 111nlled to ...,.,., .. -• w11•, «ePleclo, o.., '"" vol!ff or Whldl ti. P"llV It ol...,,, vota perrnltldo tollr'9 tel eperte caw l<I II I• ec•nowteCIOtd. -(di II ~..,,,... con IOI ~ ,_is!IOI: -'"" -llt<llon • wtMcli II I• to l•I .. "'"'n;nto, 1111 es•lt<.udt -.,_ UMCI. te llt'-• ,._,,.t111t "9al • la TIM •Pllofnl!Nftl o1 a '"'"' CM! lie ,..,_ qulen, • «lltf'dll con ltl _. llW<I only et 1M el«iloll ..-<Kled. YI~ Ot t• Se«1on 1500) Oel (odltO fVtf'I •PllOllll,,,.,.. ... prtiry It ,.. .......... C&llfoml• ....... ~. YCK4111tt ti Ille .,.._.. Of CM .. ,_ I• WI• pM't Cuti el poder el -. t1ttc11llno It ti flltY ti-..._ IM (cl et l'K_._ y Id) &tP«llkt It --eppolnled .. .,..., llltll ...... elt«IOl'I -· C'6tl .. -·· c .. t t llellot ...,...._11119 ..... wMftl« 11 Mmlw...,._ .-un '"llOdtrllda W'hkll tflt*""°'Mmtnt••91""'· ..-'"''" IAtr tolo •" la eltcCIOll If e-tMm CW of"" -tMl •I -llktd9. C-MmbrMlltnto de Mkl tlttlkln le-... ._., Uld 1111 ...... rtdt l'I ·--al pll!C« do --·· II°'* of 1..--t DIWtct It J19rl01'1t ~ye c11al~ .... • '" .... •JlCltdlflo"" """'"""' ............... ~ .. .,...._....., ... _, •!Med lttrwlll .,.., be ....,.. com• .,....... ....,, _,..._ 1t tl'td Mid tor IM _..... M( fO'lll Niota rtllf"-'8llllO IOI ,,_, Plf'I ......... tljjtf .. ~ern1911to .. di&. au••~,,..,,....1111'11 M clot~•-'" lllo\> * ltt Ctllltrt:I• .... , Dlttrlct L••· "'°'°'.,.._.,....dlcMtM<Cloll .... OMtlon u of .. w.i. Co*, Nkl • tevor c1t It emlallll dt dldlllt lltnot, tlettlOll nH .. Ullltd. ..... _. -_...*I Ol#ISI dt Mtjore Ho, •lie Clll(ted In 1M -~Ill tltt tll<tdloMt It ~ ... tlltll'IC ... I 8'1•LAW.. tt _,.., ......,. "',.,. dl<ltf• .... d!Mll'O "tfllltlrtft 1 tt ...,... of Ol1"9C ... ., .... Oltlfkt...... ......."' .............. tttA:llltcldo ,,_, llY llw 9Mnlf/l .......... t0f -4delllro. ~-'°""" Mid ..... ..,,. ... ,., ... -..... --Co\.llllY R__, ....... ON!t\f. vtt• t11 It u, dtl Oltlrl'6 • ..... dt T"h notice It olWll ~ • .,. QllfenQ. Ol'tltltll 1S _. COdllt O. _.ulltll 01 .. ._,. .. DI,._.. Of ~. dkM tM«lon tt ,...,. y -Still• Mt....,... W..-Ottt'id....,. dr• ,.,.., y -• <..-.CllUI •11 I• tc1"' IM JI!\ •1 fll •••, lf1L mener• "PfWlilt t11 lea ,..i-10.. FltlTllt.ITIUIDUNO -hey .. ...,._......_,._. ~· ... ...,... ..... -.. .Niie Olf'll(llV9 • Cll<ht of Dl1"9C .... tf ltllte Dllltl• • .........,.. por te JvlJtt dt __. ... ..., OlRrlct ~·-·· CllMNt cit Orllllfl., A'ftlON~ -h1W-ait111"9tl91J'...,.l(M. l'Olt HT11 MSOIO H OA AVllO ... de •lcMc:i.-. ... VIie tlteelillll ........ Ill..... ltlil t VI ............... (4'1 t ., ttftclr• ..._., ti ... a • _,. • rttMllCltll • II _,.,,.. Dl19Ctl'wt ... 1"•·-"'"' .. .,..,... .......... Ollltrl• .... ..,, • ..,...rttt • ~· .. ,,....... ~ •• .-i ......... ..,,,. l.7a. .:Ot.,,111 • tl<M•_. ... tMlef• II ~1t1nA. l~C>UNG ..,....,dell ..... ......., .. ' .,... ...... ,,~ .. ""'"'~ ........ ffllttcltll Dlf'9tM .. Dt* ... ti'Mf'tl dll DUitrlta .. •IW•'"' f A.111t•Alll•Mtf'lef'll.9 ... ,.,. ................... _ .......... Ormtlll Cllm Oell'I ~fM •••1<1111 •• t411lJ e11 •ftltlllt ,_.,.tlt,.'7,M. ..... l,"'9 It.St 1' 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 · 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 n.. ................... ~c- DAILY PH.01' a ASSIRED ADS ~C.. ... ttt,FIN!\lii2=iii78l ~e.ltlerw.t Tladl II Wtlll e ¥1111111111 ,... OMll HMMtforS41 ....... JorS. I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• G...,... I 002 Ga•r• I 002 ............................................... NEXT YEAR•s V ALiE. · TODAY! Lease with option to purchase; pay rent until ready to exercise your option lo buy at today's price. Save one year or normal appreciatlon. 1750 Per month. A great opportunity lf you plan to change residences in the near future. 759·08LI EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ............. Motlcr. All real est.ate advertised tn th1a newspaper is sub- ject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it Illegal to advertise "any pre· ference, limitation. or 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOltSI COUNTRY VISTA The peace and solltude of your very own acre ol ID'OUDd. A corral for at feast 3 bones,. pad re- ady for RV bkup, and a rambll.nt 3 BR 2V. Ba country home. Rustle fplc, w/heat·o·lator. garden areas, patio~ vtew ... what else do you need? $125,000. 714-72'·5'66 WALLACI & CO. UALTOllS Mondey. AP"l 24. 1978 DAILY P1LOT £'1 ~.~~ ........ ~!:.~~-~ ........ ~~-~~ ....... 1~:.~~ ....... ' CM•r• I 001 ~ I OOZ !i:=~ .......... !?~~ ~~ .......... !~~ .......................................................................................... ~ ~COATS & WALLACE CLP REAL ESTATE I INC. ;, l Ut •llll liV.Nl U l.O ~H~IO ,fffW'INt.. llfl SOUlll f llA'ir •\HI,'\ '.>INll 1% I POOL -Wby not move up to low care 3 bdrm Po<>l home? Rustle charm nestled among towering Eucalyptus trees. Just in time for the aummer at only $135,000. c• 640-6161 A MEW HOMI! IM, MISA YllOE -Not really, but better. Featuring 2400 sq. n .. 4 bdrms .. 3 baths and au the desirable elements. Truly an ''Instant Home -Beaulltul" on a chotce street. Unmatchable at $149,000. Please phone 546-4141 for appl. SPro11 n q Co·.1.1 M1..·-.,1-lrv111e I l i 111it1r:q 1,,11 '._l o .. iclt N1·wpor t 81·,~ ------------- ~ 1002fG,...,.. 1002 ······················~······················· \\'l.Sl .J-:Y N TAYLOR CO. ll.l-.t\l .T <ll i~' ·.ith •' t~Hf> HUM'r'IMGTOH HAUOUl-4399.500 Beautifully decorated 4 bedrm waterfront home with dock for up to 50' boat. Glass walled cantilevered concret e deck on water s ide. Perfection thruout. Sort colors. marble frplc. wet bar. Home of famous Christmas Cruise of Lights! WESLEY M. TAYLOlt CO., llALTOttS 2111 S. Jooq.18 HHh Rood NEWPORT cena. H.I . 644·4' I 0 A HOMA ON VISTA ROMA An immaculate. tastefully decorated. J b e droom condom tnium. tn the popular Bluffs development. ··a real nice homa on Vista Roma". This is a popular V plan. with levelor s hades. tile entry, track lighting, newer carpeting and neutral tones throughout. The location is close to schools, shops, tennis and pool. All this ror just $121.500. • U~l()U~ li()Ml:S REAL TORS"', 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also an Mesa Verde. di 546·5990 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEWPOIT HACH IEACH fOl UNDEA JOGGER 1002 $40.0007 Jog to sand & surf Crom wttb this 2 BR mobile this gorgeous California home. you can live in De Classic! Step• from AAaa. Newport's most prime cu1-de-uc location exclusive park complete to parks & schools. Large wtpoOls,jacmz.ia, &boat living room. Frplc . slips. ~·s kitchen & dining WISTCUFF area. J VERY spacious Almost 3000 sq. ft. of bedrooms, PLUS den' family living. 4 BR & Clean as a whistle! Just den 2 fireplaces & a reduced $5000 ! An x • su~r yard. Priced to sell ious-<:alH ast-752-1700 al $186,000, oPfN II: Y ••I\ rl)N 101<1 "'"I 1002 -~~?.':; .. !•INtll on the West end of Balboa lsJand. Just re· i--------discriminatJoo based OD ~~~~~~~~ race, color, rell&k>n. sex, ._ ... ___ ......... -•! Ge•r• I 00 G el er national origill, or an••r intention to make any REALTOR •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• duced ~.000. I YEAR MEW Custom built-3bdrm. 2 bath. family room. fl,..ace. F\Uly Insulat- ed, doubl e garaRe. East.side Costa Mesa. $82,900. such preference, llmita-or Realtor Associate. COVIMGTC>M llORM $74,950 tioo. or discriminatioo." Have need for 1 good ac-Super pride of ownership 'If A Ott AtA ;.··---9. tiveaalespenoo. fourplex. All unita with All new carpeting! J This new5paper will not ltoyMcc.cle washer/dryer hookups. spacious Bdnm. Pormal knowingly accept any 1110...._ rilt d Shake roof. Three dining room and country advertising for real NWwpoP • d b h klt-'--. Covered patio. esta•a which is in viola· Costa Meso 541-7729 be rooms, two at s """"' "' owners unit, of course! lmmediate occupancy RoyMcC... 1110 Mewport llvcl. lion of the law. Will exchange $188,000. to To qualified VA or Owner motivated. See FHA Buyer• Has RV our ad under "lncome parking s pbt too! Balboa Island Really A\01\\1""1-.e'f"~'ll~\ Costa ...... 548-7729 IASTSIDE sta0l5' AchertiNn $72,000. 673-1700 PropertySection". Hurry-call now for de· ......., dwc.11 tMir oda Super 2 bdrm, 2 bath. .wa.. Md = ...._ Modern living-dining· _, .........._ kJtchen combined. Room 752·1920 t&Jls. 752.17()() oPf•• ,,, o." \ '"'· •0~1 , .. " · IEAUT1FUL VIEW ran la n~. ,_. to enlarge. Single DAILY PILOT • ._, Jtarage. Large level lot in laWlfr for HM flnt • 'best area. _.i__ .~!t, [95fRdll sa~E; HEU'! Owner bas painted in & out. installed NEW carpeting thru-out AND reduced to llS.950! ! Va· cant 4 Bdrm ··soi. VISl'A"lnrucearea! A:.· sume low interest VA. submit your o ffer! 531~openevea. cornet IMertl• o.!y. ~.tlr A;• RMI~ HwtforW. ... _.... Joy llvlnc ON THE 4 II + ro<>L LOVE WATER. Eletantly de· Lvly private a~rlum corated with mirrors, home, well maintained. warm tones, plantation .........•........•...• .. . Lesa than $135.000. abuUera aad original de-~.::m<'f1 SAM HORSES? ~~Fi'~~:. G_,.. IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• DESPSlATE OWNER RIDUCID $5500 Newport garden home. Hilltop locatlon, beautiful eart.btones. 2 Sundecks off master suite. 6'6-7171 oPfN Ill O• II S IUN Int</ No(I • !•Billtll COUNTRY SETrlMG But close to the beach! See lbls brand new offer· log that provides spacious fmly living at its finest in this 3 bd, 2 ba beauty. Only $93,000 ! 64&-TilL (~1wnma1m1Ji Real Est.ate LEAVl~TOWH And must sacrifice tbi:s lovely two story home at this ridiculous price. Huge living room. with ftreplace. Formal dining room, separate family room, with wet bar. Open stairway to the seeond level and three king size suites. Some lucky persoo take advantage of this Beautiful Home, call this number for details. 546-2313 Ol'll~ 1119. ,, 5 IVN •oa1 No((. [~1111 NDDEN 2 STOIY Popular 4 bedroom, 2 bath plan with heavy shak e roof. Prime neighborhood. Bargain price at $118,500. CALL $2ili60. C:SELECT I PROPERTIES $56,900 Sharp, spacious fmJy re- sidence w /cheerful frpk & .xtra larte room sizes tbruout. Xlnt location. Beautiful grounds create park lite setting around th is Immac ul a t e townbome. Better take a took! 646-ml. ~Walker & lee Ru! Est.ate llVINE DIAHE ~ Walker t; lr.r. Real Est.ate RIST OFARIMG Lari• 2 bdrm. & den home with formal dining area; cozy frplc., many upgrades! Not leased laod : xlnt Newport neighborhood. $139,500 ilT~:5,':o"1o HOME NEWLY Absolutely aorseous ex· ecut.lve decorator home In University Park ·s WED Deane Homes ! Cathedral ceilings, formal dining, family VET? U together you're room. lots of glass-open taklnf home $1200 a & airy! Custom drapes, mont!l you might qualify common pooJ. tennis forth1s3 bedroom, 2 bath courts & park. S12A.500. home near South Coast Immaculate thruout. See Plaza! Call now I It today-call fast ! REDCARPET'154-1202 673-8S50 Ol'fN '" 9. "\ '""' •O l!f Nlfl. TRIPLEX l'l!Nlltll $~~:~~ ONE, RENT THE OCEAN & IAY OTHERS. $1 78,000 . VIEW $96,500 M a k e o ff e r B k r . Hard to find one story, _562-004 ___ 183&-__ 7_1524 ____ , condo w/2bdrm + den. 21•-----•-.-•I ba w/comm pool, Jacuul ptl II'( f,.J,. , sauna. Walk lo the ...,., UI beach. Our exclusive. PEJllES! Flnt time on market. 6*-Till. Sparkling clean 4 bdrm home! Owner asking OD· ly $72,500! Quiet loca· Uon I Large covered patio! Built·ln brick BBQ! Must see to believe! Hurry! Call ~ ~ Walktn J; Lee Real El tat.e DUPLEX 1 Bl.k to beach: less than 4 yrs. old, like new, bltna, nice crpl'I & drps. lri>lcs. 4 car /gar. $185,000 FO~EST E OLSON .. ''" JACOIS REALTY •·.:---.. 675-6670 I~~~~~~ W1UMetwOftl 5ecurlty, ptWU.ge and a~~~~~~~~~ Almost " acre near BOATSlJPavailableforl= Newport's Back Bay! No tarse boaL $32S.OOO 4.ft.EX S 165,000 Qualllytng! Owner will Unusual Income Proper f1nance! Zoned A·l. Call -WATERfRONT ty & Boom tor add.itionaJ REDCARPET754-l.202 HOMES wit.a with Deluxe Hasler HUMTIMGTON REALESTATE &ill.e. Call for Personal IEACH 631-1400 Preview. 6'6-1111 !'~~~~'u~w;N~ ·-~-t-ark-.-.u-'f'-~-eR-:1-~-ce-~-mp-~-~-~-~· 1iiiiH- Almott carries. OWner plush crpts, attach. gar. ~ Ciiiiiiiiiii wUI tnide. For profit pro-quiet street nr schools & ---- Jectlon Including tax sbop'g. $92,500. Ruth Cllarlie Brown sbclt.er benefit.a. please LaurteRJtr.~ and his new partner Bob call962-T188. ----------............ -.......... ,Bentson have an empty iiQ. K€Y MEWUSTIMGt desk in the office. Give CV P£ALTOP.SN Waterfront. beautifully us a call & let's talk decorated BALBOA about the advantages of MESA VERDE COVES 2·story home. sel.llngrealestatewith 1 l&ITSOM & IROWN POOL ENTERTAIN roya ly l4-0lOOVEST. Deli~ul 3 bedroom, 2 from the buge recJ"eation SUit.e 220 N'pt. Beach bath -11.... ul.. c rm .. wet bar. fabulous oo ..... ~ c ... e-sa · view&boatalip, too! On· REALTOIS 133-9781 One of several pool homes priced low at \)'S21S,OOO! MIMl~H41R. S93.~. CALL556·2660. ~Prop. POOL-$66,400 C: SELECT * '75-7060 * VA MO DOWN T"FROPERTIES 1~~~~~~~~ Circular drive. Large 1: family sized living room. IUILD COUNTRY UVIM• Country kitchen. Dint.> Dal!• ..... HOUSE 3 BR. 2 BA. seller very Wall or glass view of cov · 9'SAl"'I anx.lous&wantsanofCer. ered pavilion & Ju:.h WALK TO IEACH on this ranch style house grounds surrounding 'Ib1a vacantland b ready in the country. No down H&F Freeform pool for you. Build your way VA. low down FHA. Of. Separate w1og for tude· oo two 25' by 117' lots In feted at $.'16.000. away Master Suite & Huntington Beach.. Call 540..3666 children's quarte rs . us now: the Orange Hurry for this umque County Specialists. bargain! 963-7881 A '1~~~ [i ;ilii -~-10,.TWl:MPJl&.1 1-------• FonstPalace HAMDYMAM'S Private road leads thru DREAM producing avocado Garage fully insulated. grove. Home sits of Built In work bench. forest edge. Open beams l..arle lot with RV ac-& &lass reveal view or cess. Newly painted. pond & bird avartes. paneling and wallpapet'. C\l.1tom 2 BR. 2 BA & Four Bedroom Home ln many open areas . Mess North. Truly a Fe al u red I n t be Great Buy for $78.000. newspaper. Short nm to 54&-2S13 beadl. ~.ooo. sa&.SlS MOVB> Deaperate for offer! 3 BR, 2 ba .. cuJ de sat. Mesa Verde. $8S.OOO A. Johnson Bk.r 979-4964 MESA VERDE NORTH .CAPITAL. STYLES V T G H N T N I D C H R 1 A I A U 8 N I R 0 D 0 R l C Y C t H L M E 0 R H H Z S N 0 TTAQCETGAROME 0 I N H C U N K H C I C U R ()#fH '" 9. "s '""'ION NICI' WAUACI & co. ~~fi.~= l'llldd 7~~J~!. Like new 3 bedroom. 2 bath with atrium. new carpets, & paint. Below market al $96,000. CALI. 751·3191. C:SELECT I PROPERTIES G R t I 1 I I E T I N 0 Q 0 I H L D E 0 0 R M R R 1 ff A 0 S A T l G E S I N U 0 0 0 V N 0 C R E N H H C M S C I J 0 Q C M E 1 S C N E C t A C Q E C S N L K 0 R 6 U V A N E E B C I A U R A U E I 0 R T A M R Y A N I S G ff £ M G E T M E M A 0 N 0 X k M Y U H S 0 A R H H E R 0 R B D J C Z A 0 T 0 R T G S A K C I H 0 I K E R G T N R T --~ .......... "' 11-.W.....~ ft1 I ¢ ..... Ga•rol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CORONA DEL MAR 2 Custom homes to be bullt, tucked away on a tree lined street. 2 blocks from the ocean ln Old Corona del Mar. Still time to personalize. $280.000 each. A c:ouJWal. IAMlla CO. 844·9080 1111 IAH..oAOUtMMU.IM>. IN~CIJn'EJt .. I I Cll ~VPll.OT ~.Apl1124 1978 I tto.s..Foru. ~fcwW. HowiffforW. .._...,_w. ~.~.~ ...... . I ~ ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............ Wt 1"-"'-W. ._...,.,,w. ....... ,.,.w. C....Metel 1014 .... ,.... 1026.,.... 1044 ............ 1041 ~~ •••• !~~ ••••••••••••;•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ul1ique\Vood~<llaaa .... ,.. eoez ··-· I G....... IOOZ thMr• 1002 New 3 Br. 3ba . executive s, ........ _... ~TO Fiii' sw• •• YllW HQre ~ J ~ ... b41. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ·•••••••••••••••••••••••·••••••••••••••••••••••• htn Sunken hv rm , l>aoa Point l•ndmark • BeauUIDl, eountr)sett.ln& FR. D'R. teme rm. w/catbedral ceilings. converted to 3 units. Lataes ln lM Colony. wHb npanaive vtew ol &aWI&. ~ aw\m pool frpl. l&e lam rm. formal Perfect for owner oc and on1f ru•.800. A 5 the OC<e"1; very quiet Is w/jac. + yard .,...., fta. &.ma. IS&.I dining, dream kitchen. cupatlon + Income. bedroom home witb a privata. LoNa ot fl.x·up ditot heat. 3 Car~· 2 Newly remodeled 3 bdrm.th. Camlb'.02~ ~ Y~~bpt~~~~:f~ ~:' ~~e-:v!':~'v:~ ~iio'!" .~t~:1~·~ =~.b~e e~1':.e1~ UuL~HY~~ :A:,.~ baths: I.Story home wt attrac ve Oftly. M2·M41 Aft. 5 well aa sound anveal· block Crom J>OOI. tennis Bdrm. p(ut larce deu 124$,000 Bond ~alty So. paUo. IUS,000 EAST~lftf IZ anent. S215.000. and park. HtJRRY ON SUJ.SOO. 83l<M!J0t49M1'7! _ MntOMT -• MORIMsREA.L.n nnsoNE!' , o.v.o SeveraJ fine bayfront homes $70,000 49 ... 057 LarJe 2 Bdrm .• 2 bath on· STAITll NOMI .... _.., ••y· J>er\Y. Prime £ast..Jde. &tech. Bn&ht 4 clean. eouple loot1na for t.beir ---Murry! 646-7171. ~ -9.500. firat borne fft w1una Fine 4 bdrm., 21AI bath fa~ home on Ol'fN111Y•"" "''o""''' Newe•:~:::avlew ~ NORfNS REALTY =ft:9'~ Bdrm.a~ A lm*nata .. ~ ...... tin .-ct I .. .._ ................. die••& BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR wlthpier&iUps Huge buildable R2 pro-* ~ * I ly Ya block to Main Thia ia perfed for lbe quiet cut de sac. Overs11ed pool. . , Duplex, quallty con· * 494.8057 * paim 'tmide::i· iarse playhouse. ext.ta storage. 1189.500 1tructloo. 3 8'lrms and 2 ylrd with mature' trees. Bdrms. '142.000. Agent/ RANCH RU&.TY A R C H I I A C H Cklee to schools. See to- Owner. en.3620 111.zooo tGHrS. da)'at•r.500 ,,. •• ,. "'• ..... l •ty ........ . dr•••ffc 1Mod for l"•do•• ll•l•t· StJl.000. Jli IL1y,.t1 .. [\1v. I'. fl r,.", olol Eastaide 2 atry. by owner Xlra lrg lot. 542-8953. 5'2-6661 New home. 3 Br. den + L_ DYMoO-MITIDplx l-...11111111'41i11111111..._11111111'4_., tam rm. 3 Ba. View of_. . ~I?'& APPEAUN~ UDO HOME MOllLE HOME WITH VIEW EMERALD IAY 644-7020 2123 SAN JOA9U1M HlllS IOAD NEWPORT IEACH 100 1002 G1•ref Lee 3 Br owner's unit, 2 aea & canyOQ. 836-0514, · ~ ba PLUS 2 Br. 2 ba ren-•YA SI 751• ..832-1987 '"•2900 IOOZ GtMral , 1002 IJUC,.._SCMilp tal. Frplcs, big deck, r work with OraDge Co. --------i --=-------••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... It coWdo't hurt lo call iourmet It.itch. $135,000 Vets only ffomes to CHOtCI BUILDING 0.Gelf ~ AIAMQOt• IY OUT MO DOWN YA Chuck Nash about a re-Agt ?S-030i8 or '94-4420 ~:-::: For in.to~~ srn: w I PLANS. cloee to Gate Cuarded st cl hut- OtS STATl OWMB BestDriced3bedroom.2 wardina career in real UDUCIDSSOOO _..__..._. ........ ~ beach, view. close to ury hms. • Br. den $75,toO bath 1n town. Payments estate. Free training If Owtt.r transf'd , sparthng schools. walk to town. $239.000. al( rd -.. 500 you qulily. ~JOI 8 SJ39 CN\ ...... '"'t" Also • Br. 2 fam-rms ::::.c~~!::~~~::::~ t~~~ . .., ... ,~~~~~~~~~ F~~.3 u~!i1~r . PllCE . .....,.~....,q ~.~ .... to sell thb rambling -=SELECT OfllH HOUSE carport. te · poo • nr r1 Arff£Dll Panoram.ic ocn v•. 3 3Bdrm .. and lam. rm. T'PROPERTIES SAT/SUH 12·5 Marina. vu's, vacant. .AA) •• Br. flm·rm. coatra«oni ~ll"''"e.nSu.nsb.lne. and s'w'!'!rmpln~ Freshly painted Mesa ~1.,91·~0661P~. only, In Colleget P 1 ark. tthhe bome$250.000 . .. '"' ,,.., • del Mar delight. 3br. 2ba. ...,.... • . owner mus eave e Jttt/W Y..ts C master bedroom. Room ..... , ........ 1007 din rm + fam rm FORSALEBYOWNER slate and has. reduced tf 2217 ° ror a POOL! Don't pa&1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W/beamed cathedral • BR home. I~ Ba, Liv lbe price on this Colum-,~~~~~~~~~·---·--·---­up this opportunity. 3BR.2ba.,\ot blk.tobay. ceiling.lncludesnewno· Rm. 2 car gar. re-blaSl2.SOO.andasopentor I Make an offer today! Now $179.500! Wa}t nrs. sec. system. asonably priced 188.500. all offers. A large 4 (•--------Best V alll'e. =; f_al~ ~~~~. , MarshaU Rlly 675-4600 fruit trees & playhouse. 714-493-2440 bedroom h~m,e for a TOP OF This 3 BR. 2 BA ' patjo S84.000. By owner. 2858 moderate pnce. Call for T .. WORLD home looks like a model. I .'Jll.~Jf!·U· ,,....._ rohtt Drake. 557·3L60 Fo.t• Valey I 034 details. A forever view from this Vaulted cellln~. levelor ·:·. . 'JfdijJ( Newly remodeled 5 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ~ newly remodeled 3 e,finds: comnt:'~I & . -·=-=-=:o:·•~ Bdrm, 2 bath. 2005 E. IY OWHER bedroom and ramily jacuui & ~-.500 Octan Blvd. $185.000. 4 Br, 2 ba, formal djmng, B.EGANT MAHSIOM ~ room home. Large wood 138) • 4 IDIM AgttOwner. brick frplc. corner lot. 2 5 Bdtm. 3 bath featurei. deck . large sloping yard • 21;2 IATH 673-3620 car gar. 900 Dogwood. Wlique spiral staircase bonters greenbelt area. Super attached housl.og T . l 3 2 J BR . $78.500. Phone 751-0774 and floor to ceiling mir $159 000 rip e"· · · · nr. eves. rors fantastic floor plan. ' · In F. V. for less than elem school S235 000 · $78,000. PITl·$468/mo. Marshall Rlty '675-4600 Mesa Verde beauty. 3 BR. Truly elegant home In Call 8AJ\f to 10 PM. 2 ba customized home. P ~ e s t 1 g 1 o u s RANCHREALTY 961h3371. Cof'onocW Mer 1022 Lrg formal din'g rm. ne1gbborhood. Red~ced ___ s_s_1_._20_0_0___ 3Monatth Say Pina ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jam rm. 3 frplc 's. huge S5000. Call to see now. UNIVERSITY PU Laguna Niguel ~ 'fllfo ' I 067 COftOMAD&MAI pauo w/firepit. beauty lfm!B@Jjlfmllifill'\1 IYOWHH 496-7222 131-0136 ................. -... . IHCQME lndscpd front & back. 962-44nlr.::l546·8103 Viii l. modlf•e d RodllottOMPri~ 2 Bdrm. cotlag~ with two Elec garage door opener ' Fordham twobse. ~nd •--.a-.. 1052 Musl sell. Laf'1nilia rear Unll"· Excellent & much more-$97.SOO. ....,......,,_,,....,. 3Br 1,... b •r•-aded " B J t.__,~ •--a.. 1040 unit. 4 br. 2~ ba. Open ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ~ a "'"«>' . Joe.Ilion. qwet & coove-Y owner. prin °0 Y·==w+•~ House. Sat/Sun. 4332 I•--------S'TS.900.13"1321 nimt to beach & shop. 540-7610 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Senasa Way. Sl06.000 Pin&-Sl~OOO. "Reduced" Etside CUBt, 5% DOWN, TWHHSE w /SJOOO cash rebate. NORIMSREALTY 2000sqft.3Bl'.famnn.3 3BR.2BA.den.Tenna. 551 ·0404 or 975·4980 * 494-8057 * car gar, R ·2 Agt 't>each.Owner.644-1094 _wrk_d...;;.y_s. _____ _ 646-7171. Cb Coldwell Bonker lntt.r .. M.Y, CHARMING 3bt, 2ba •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• B.DUMPO S65.tOO rt's low down and dirty! ~ Uke a borne where t.be buffalo roamed! A handyman's paradise! PaJ.Dt Profit! Sprawling 38drms .. on larae lot! Sbovel'em out. Paint'urn up aod you've got Yourself an estate! Pnce din cheep-which seems only right' Call Now! 847-6010 +guest house. Frpl, 2 Bring patios, R·2 lot. Pnn onJy. S&S Resale Specialists 3.4 or 5 bdrm models avail, some w /pools. 968-4602 SECLUDED SMOUTREI: MOUMTAJH VllW On qwet c~-de-uc. 2 BR.. 2 BA. formal dlning. Newly redecorated. Commwuty clubbouae. pool, & athletic rleld. Original owner . La Pat San "f.ucu model 4br, 2 aty. Redecorated Price reduced to $107.900. 2.5261 Remesa Dr. Owner /Blu. "'"472' DISfGMB> ~IXlCUTIYE UYIMG This beautifully up graided .Buccola Home! Spacious Llvlng Room with big Fireplace. Large Master Bedroom. highly upgraded with private entrance t garden area. Slum stooe planters h1ghllgh the room-backyard Illes. Verde Livi.n,g at i Beall $129.000. Cal 546-2l13 CJPI"' ru 9 • ••) tur .. ''''" '" r [Wllltl ()Ofr, r1• 9 • 11 \ lt.N fl ft• r.flrl t (;flfili9 JASMINE CUB --- Pl'ofessionall> decorat· SPACED OUT? ed. beautiful. Two You'U never again lack story-cathedral ce1l storage space in this e"· ings. 3 bedroom, family panded , bdrm Green· Sl.S7.ooo. Owner.640-7030. Your Bikini OCEAN VIEW. s pec. Enjoy tbls 3 bedroom tacular ocean & Newport pool home! Dining. en· Harbor view. Pool. wood try, family kitchen and decks, 4 bdrms .. 2 ba., fireplace. Huge patio. skylight& thruout. Comp. Ca.II today! $77.950. BKR. remodeled & updated. call M().1720 Easy maintenance ! TAAIEU. $224,500. Interested & qualified buyers only. By owner. 494-6468. Courtesy '"#I la C4ilfornia" to reattors. room & Z"'i baths. ~cially = paUo. brook home. Kitchen is a ~ ........ •--h ""' cook's dream w 1cablbets '"" """'__, )' landsu . Ju3t pfore + milesolglisten· Corona Hlgblands 4 move ln fl relax at the ing COW>ter tops. Secret Bdrms, 2 baths. fenced pool, Jacuzzi or tennis stairwa)' leads lo yard. rlxer , $155.000. courts. Prestige area in hideaway bonus rm ror Agt/Owner. 673-3620 s.,...-. .... 2Br + den. S'TUOO. AJI new kit, crpting,& more. See 890 Joann. Sun 1-5 or call Schworer Realtor. ~7983-the heart of Corona ~el teens retreat. Hurry! ---"--------- Mar. Gated. community CaJI today & start pack· OCE.Ut YU..OWNU COST A MESA Wlth secunty guards. · " ""'" 2 fantastic buys, Harbor -·--"lt's great. I live there ~ .. S4S-.-.l. V 3 b r I t ,...,....._,. Pennington Properties IEACH HOUSE· SAC. 3 BR, 2 Ba. formal dm. 2 lots, owner. 644· 1094 IEACHHOUSE 4 Br. 3 Ba, lge s undeck. l yr new in rapidily de· velop1ng beach area. $125.000 616 20th St. A sougbt·after 3 Bdrm, single story end wlit on greenbelt near pool. jacuzzi, tennis and bike tralls. 182.500 Cal644-721 I FOR DETAILS /JD.NIGEL GlllL EY &. ASS(:)CIJ'.TES 536-1718 --------- lMEFRONT 4BR w /POOL QuicksaJe beJow mkt. IYdWNER Lge family rm. Liv rm. $149,500 din rm. 2 ba BrigbtM 2Br + den Pvt cpt 'd patio w /lge All upgrades pool. C3lm drps & dee. 675-5794. owner. Upgraded. SJ lS.000. Ph •-------- 848--3884. Woodbridge Sycamor e 6802 Bndgewater Dr. Sl07,000 2 stry house. 1C&1~~~RT (~IWl11!§1!1Jj ~;~~·~1~4:~~ \~~ ~~;~:<!3b~~~e~ SKJMMERlNG POOL. ....,.,. ""' 9 . 5 ~ . p 0 s i liv e I y dog nan, room for bad· REAL.vRS ___ R_e_aJ_Es_ta_te ____ Sa_ti_Su_n_. ______ , breatbta.king 6 yr old CASH Open House Sun 1·5 PM <hvner. 4br. form. dm rm. 27 Songs parrow 551-0238 Only ... $82.SOO. ......,......... 1069 L....-....... ..., ................ ~ ....... . 496-2413 495-5220 ll5T PIACI--· HI 493-9494 130.5050 This cbanning eoodo is 112.900. view condo. 2Br. 2.,.,Ba, air. frplc. Prln on· ly/ownr644-7S8S totally upg'l"aded .. 3 br. new cptg. & parquet Ors. Don't miss this new of· fertna at S83.000. 75?-1501 F'md what you want m ~Y Pilot Class•!i~ __ __;_;..;._~----· A OOHVtM(NT SMOPPINC ANO S(WIHQ CUfO£ fOtl fKE CAlON TH( GO Smcrt Stripes! minlon, croque t . 675-5511 Reduced to $195,000. dreamboatmmintcond. ForYourHoene spacious 4 BR. 2 Ba ---------31DRM & POOL Owner w1cons1der con· All 2 story studio apts. home ln the beach town $57,500 tract o1 sale, second TD. Owner's apt 1s 1450 sq n lft A Acnlt! WOODBRIDGE CONDO of Carlsbad. Kids jus JUST LISTS>!! Bike to beacb from this Jou name it! Owner Features incl bltJns. dis· SCOTT IULTY By owner St.fl 2stoey eod walkot'biketobeacbes.. NIWPORTHrS. beaut.lfUl garden home. must sell immac 3 BR 2 hwasber. patios. frplcs & 53._7533 urut. 2Br. 112/Ba, cov· plus all lbe xtras Triplex,two2bdrm.un· Large llv. rm. floor lo Ba home w /view or shakerool.ToplocatJon. ---------ered patio. Inc ludes Like ... bltns. fplc, new its+ ~lbousewitb l· ceiling used brick ocean & pvt beach ac. eastofHarborBlvd&NOComfyCondo,3br.2\.-2ba, lakes. paols parks & cpts,etc.1116.000. bdrm. l:arge swimming fireplace. gourmet cess. 516 DeAnza. agt. ofWiJson. lrg eocld paUo. 2 car gar schls. S67.900·0r oUer 714-413-6490 pool • 6 car parking. kitchen ONLY $2350 67:>-23U w-1J~Co W/auto opener. rrplc, $67,900/0ffer.SS1·390 , .... 1 ... E • l>riced at $189,500 in· total down. Won't last. --------._--· bltns aded th t '"'!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' w-c •CO. cludingland! · HURRY. call collect SPYGLASS HILL Redton · upgr ruou · i: IEALTOIS 678-3663 642·22:>3 Eves 963-6767. 3 Br. ramify room. 2 1213)937.3731 :=c~~~~~~~~· ~~~~~~~~~ Of'f..,,,.9 .,,qur•"ofl1"'"' frplcs. bn corner lot. hesl213J478-5603 963-8846. By Owner. p~ NO OUALJFYIMG! Eastside 48 .. ., wit wagon wheel charm. 2.000 sq. fl or happy family Living. Call for de tails.646-7171 Cl>tN II• 0•II\IUN1081 N•'I • associated [Hh • f US Pf A• ~CHIS Ji' l' ~ h II l "'• f""~ j !•11111~~~~· • -ping and schools. Choice 3 R + IONUS IM Huntington Beach loca- J acuz11. immaculate lion. Vacant-tmmediate F'antastac. Call 8 AM occupancy. SUbmit your W PM 968-3371. terms OnJy 568.000. Call 546-5880 . ~ ~ J-HERITAGE • .: t . . ~·· S4•.900 cun ' . unuaUGGa Bugged by high rents? Get your own pad & kiss that old buy·aboo the landlord goodbye. Ideal for slngle or duo. In Uus spacious l bdrm 1 bacon· do you'll be as snug as a bug while rents go up & away ! Call now ! ~MSl. ' . REALTORS llltCOMDOllYIHA l~~~~~~~·------­BeauWul sang le story,.________ $1100 TOTAL CASH CODdo-3 Bdrm.s .. Caml!y•• room. stone fireplace, PIMMSULA n. A L L T ff A T I S private paUo. two tennis Large 6 bdrm.. 4 bath · NEEl;>ED! to buy this cowts. 2 party rooms. home, steps to beach; 2 beautiful 3 bdrm. home ii pool & spa-& more! bdrms eouid be locked you quality .. Localed Don't miss It, call today! oil & rented as 4 bdrm. 3 near ma r 1 n a a n d associated $50,500 673-8550 Car garage. Priced al beaches-. Boal accel!s. Of'fN '" o. ,, , •uN •o 111..,,,., $260 ooo &.900. Take advantage. I.. I m:isa:J 642-2253 Eves For more information " ,,11~1n;t c~~?,7,,,~,,,,,,,,., On1.. model street. T'-·_ .. __ . 3 only. Cal 64" I I u .. w.,,.., panoramic vu, ---------u-5 2 lge bdrms. 2'hba .. frpl, ....._ I 044 I '''' 1 !1 'l•••'i• f11 l•i. )• ' • t ,,. OC'VIEW /Owner ... s-tti .... Just steps to Big Corona Beach. 3 Br+den. 2 bath home. oo 40' R2 lot w /x. Int rentaJ un&.. Bdrm & gtrden patios, lge kitch lbJtms>. used brick frplc w/attached BBQ. Beam cell's. $285.000. Prin & qualified please. Sat/Sun 1·5. oc call for appt. 304 Goldenrod. 675-0146 CDMDUrLEx Live In the 3 BR & rent the l BR lo help w /the mtg paymenLS. Close to shopping, churches & recreation. Jog to the beach. Really super for the plan ahead Investor + Just plain nice living. Call for appt. to see now. because it won't last long al this low price of Sl72,500. YA&.UY 640.9900 gardrapeoer. all bit-ins. ••••••••••••••••••••••• I P11tJo & balcony tl.06.500. 642-5548 aft 5. 2 Br. 1 ba condo. garage Will trade:: for 3 br house ~o. DESIRTIOH Gold fish desertion in sharp 3 BR Mesa del Mar home. VA, FHA or con· ventional terms. Adop. lion welcomed. 754-7100 LOVE BUG Cule 2 BR J Ba house on R210l, 5Qx140. Owner Just decided to sell! See right away, call: f\ WHY RENT? When you can buy SS0.900 · and this neat condo with a loft CllD be yours. ON THE WATER. Tenn.is, pools. spa, gym A whole lot of living for a very low pnce RA,..CH REAL n 551-2000 WOODBRIDGE PLACE Special offering. 3.5 bdrm. ContemPOrary de· tacbed falJllly homes In open, woodsy design . Just short walk to lake & parks in Village of Wood· bridge. From $115,000. 552-4101 FABULOUS WOODBRIDGE We have most every plan to suit )'OW' individual needs and pnce range. From townhomes to free standing homes. For complete information. Just give us a call rf j WOODUIDGE REALTY 551-3000 MOTIVATED SB.URS Want to market this highly upgraded new 4 BR, 3 BA .. plus FR Par· quet entry. lu.'lh brown carpet, good location and owner wants an offer. Asking $117,950 Trade your old stuff for new goodies •Ith a Classified ad. 6'2-~8 G 11 n" £ ~ '> "r II, ·('PS J" •, 'V\o (! t..l' [, 1 r ~ b I [tllfiNll DPAHDID CUSTOMIZED red hill ~· .. 552-7500 View, view. forever view! 10th tee, top tloor. Rancho San Joaquin Piao. 2 & den. 31 La ~~~~~~~~~I Senna. Sl~.000. Call for 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab I Irvine realty -------1 appt. S«-&5. Beautiful __ S_(i'Q_-O-~-..,..~ ,_:::J);::=-C;::~;:::c..=.,=--1 r1an 1 10 Turtlerock ~ I.' ~~ <b [:.,(/ ... ;} Glen. 3 Bdrms .. 2 ba .. earua tone carpet, prol. HOME won OM T AMTICiMJI CA&S71 ~~ ••••••• !~~~ wo car 1araae p us cov'd fenced carport off WAGON WHHL That lntri911in9 Worcf Gome with o Chudl• landscaped :? Lovely -----,_ ..., ctAT • H>UAN patios one off mast. alley w/parklng for 3 CHARM ·~~!...:.;::. cars or RV's. This My 4 Thls charming home just ..,_ "' 1°"'" ,..,, '""Pie-"' bdrm home + 523 sq n --------bonus rm ls Immaculate ca~ on the ~rket •nd , . 0 H W H A Y J & big b I y upgrade d won t . last. Wide entry. i--"""I _,_I -,-,...-, ..... , ~ tbruout. New flooring Ii. b!Ce living room, formal .__ .... _ __._...__.__ -.. -.£.__.. kitchen appliances dint.ni. gourmel kitchen . •--Ide •. · with bttakful bar. 5'ep· I c u o E N f Pnsb paint ua •out down family room I I I I 1 , +new crpta. Better c~I <maulve) big, blg 2 _ _ _ _ . now oo lhla one · 1 bedroom1 . Lovely · 5'5-tMll. backyard wtlh covered I H u 0 A Tl ! patio. M uu ue to I I J' I : 1 admire tombttOMt tie. belJeve. Call now, won't . . . . • caute ,,...v •• l1Ut IPMk well C::1 Walkm t: lee bdrm .. the other a com· btnallon brick redwood· coocrete. wtth tlJtered sunllght cover. 7464 t,~B~ Be 1eady for ~tMf COllle1 your way rn this top Smart. V·stnPtS ,in J colo<s add d1a1N to tilts my knit top. l\n1t of synthettt weiaht WOisted witlt Ctoellet w11s1 and "mltole bonlers, Pattern 7464 Sires 8·10, 12·14. Sl.SO for each pattetn. Add 35c each pattetn lat lust~ lust walk 1n and w1ap-the '11""11 . and llandhnc. S... II.: s-tftesl coolest, mos1 ltm1n1ne Allee lltlb summer dl'ISSIR&' And ff1e P'tl Needlecraft 0eptA05 nest-lllanks 10 Ille new ptllef Dally PllOt ell shoulders. ()lid seild 110w' .. Ill. OU ai.kae .._,""' P11nted Patttin 91tZ9 Mines YoR. lff lOOU. Prilll ..... S4m I. 10 12. 14, 16. 18 AM-. ZIO. htin1978 HN[ufmDl.a 1(· Sile 12 (bllSI J.4 ) ~kes J 118 VAlUE pac~ ,was 4!1 inch labl" CIWT cataloa Choose hom .. $1..51 .. ... ....... m dt$lins. l free tl!Slde. All -.. is. i. _. ,ettlnl .., ciafn.. "'"!.,Ciochel. Send 75c ~ -..i ....... blr Cifb • ar.-ta.JJ.50 ·s. II: • ,._ sa..Otta ... : .. ~Sl.50 . Sblft ••• Pllff Qlill ...... 1 .... llMTI• ~'II' Plldt QIMI ••• Cllc.llllt... ....... .. . . .. Pattern Dept. «2 Citdltt •..,.. .. .. .. a Dally Pilot Nifty fifty Qlilb.... M ..... c..diet. •. "~·· ru w.e 11111 St., .. '"' s.w a w w . . ..... us .., 10011. '""' Mllflt .. • ... ~....... .00 ...... ~CMilll .... . Pt.Mt 2 llOADMOOR Free·form pool , sunken coo versatlon area & all the amenities of living in Npt's most exclusive guard.gated community. This 4 BR home is truly · 'one·of .a-kind" -$399.000 fee. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. <W·121) ~al&ltate last. 5*ZU3 ol •men wnen he's -. l i'fifil~ I rnrr 1!$E"::.~;E IOUS, DP, 1111 .. 1m£ -W ..... , LOOK RICH, YOUNG, SMMT ,..,. ~ W .•••• on a blldpt! Sew '"lit. 50ft , .... .._,..a.. . M dimes, 109$. ~1 pants ,..._. M ....... • ,11 111 NCW SP~CSUM "-#"r:W ....... .00 MER PArr£AH CAIAl.OC free ~I flt.. JO M2.C35 644-6200 901 0o"'9r Orhe H•rbOr Vi.w C.nttr trvltW .. t CMnpus Velley Ctnter 1S2·14f4 ' .:: ---W·!!!!·-~ PlllN' NUMBU(O lllfU~ !ti r r r r 1 _ !tlCU S9\1¢tU . _ • • . 8 O•oer. 'Halec rHt bm-.3 br Ht ba, xtra lg kit, '74.900 54G-~ for aept, 6 ~~~~~~· umu I I .I I I SCltAMUTI .. ~SllO tttrn coupon. ~ 1~ J21'1a l 112. . .. :754 f&1 ...... s.... W . .$la lllleUI II ........ n. ':t= ,.._MD• ...._ ._ n ..... 1k I ~ M a 1S ~lf!ffl ..... 15( '"'"""'"'".... .st =·., ......... }Sf ., .. - ' I 17 t l r l t I I 1 I I J • ! t c t n b d t y t i g D n - ha ' N« tbl - . ' .. ~!!.!!~ .. '!!-.... ~.~.~ ....... f ~.~.~ ........ ~~~~.!!!~~ ...... 1~~.~~.!!:~~ ...... ~!£!!~ ... ~!!' ~.~ ..... !~~ ~.~ ........ !!!~ ~!:':~!!! .. ~!~ =:!'.'!!!!? .. !~ DAILY PILOT Othef'l ... ktat• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ei.c:..P1......, uoo .._..U.fw llsMcl ..._..u.1w .. 1d "°8MtU•fwll-.cl ............................................................................................ ~ llACHTnASUU Cosy llOtid home. near oceu ClD IOth. 2 Bfl 1 Bo. bard w o od fl oora . pS..000. B I ' ' w r , , ' H' ,ii !~ r • •. ' ,, I • ,, ti • • :1,_\l ~.!..-HERITAGE REALTO RS UDOISLI aoo aq ft, ftnest qual. br + i bai1 d.lD area. hg U rm. moa. ldtcbeo, of ael·UP, priv bcb, ser oorcb. patio. l& lot ·-· 67s.GS9 Lingo RIAl&WI 9UAIL PLACE PROPERTIES, INC. ORANGE COUNTY PROPERTY SPECIALISTS Guar.. 3202 ,.......,. • ..-3240 ~..-... lJ41 ~c:Llt9ffl .................................................................... . 0UPLD HOM"Enm>ERS LA(MIMA aatr AL $19,IOO 'Thousands Of Rent.Als l'J LAST Cbarm1ftl old«' 2 bdrm Sparklln1 l BR units AU areas au prtcea ft 'home Located in centnl with secluded 1ardeo Sample: A ...... Senk • Mdion of the vWa1e. 4 patio. PLUS separate 1160 bacb beach cottage Y• C•,... BLJCS. FROM BEACH 4t IUtt\ apt. Zoned C·l tor llJOlbrbae(Dcdkida At..._ Wltlll SHOPPING. Llv. rm. idded poeeoUal. ~~'8Eif:.cE WI &UilAMTH ~~~~ta:.-r1~~~ TllPUX 517.oaJJ •WMSesUeledlonpoN. • aeparate servtce SOUTH LAGUNA conAGE -w ............ ,,.... ........... plu 1t•d1 dolllto•H· RelH I• tit• a-.m...stt.500. 499.4551 Exchange up or sell on a tax deterred annuity balls. Whether you want a tax shelter. a hedge against inflation, an appreciation asset or an income dream -Call QUAIL and become one of our preferred clients. Our office CLOSES $5 to $6 mllllon in escrows monlhly. Call our professional staff of over 30; large enough to serve, small enough to care. SIH 100 ......... ..:_ •hJhouM!compulttaya. PG"Cb. Just completely • _ ..._.. 3206 •o.1.l)' ~lepbooHervtce redecorated. Excellent ~!Jsr& ~~~~'!.,~;,~~ :~.~·•••••• .. •••• .. ••• •Vacanclet vertlleddally rcota1 attn5month. Larae 1 BR unita PLUS ...,...,.y 3 Br. 2 Ba. frpl. nu •P\&ll st.att ol counselon IOSSION REALTY stud.lo crpta, no peb. -25 yrly. •Freetoaced656over 4M-0731 BERTHA HENRY $3223, •Freerenta1counaelln1 REALTORS C.... .. w_. o()pea 7 da)'J8:00.S:OO LAGUNA NIGUEL 49H720 DA.NA POINT 493·8812 LAGUNA BEACH 491-3331 You asked for it-We've got it! 215 Del Mar 492-4121 .................. !~!~ RENJIMES POaSA.LllYOWMH ......... !! Tri.pleJt, near beach oo We have 1000'• ol houses. 42nd St. Nwpt. $180 ooo. dplx~. apt.s now, all Great rental. Call areas.'allpnces.Saveon ::,6,d9f;!4~. wkdys aft Z:S..too Afl TUmM UMrTS Oceanfront home. yrly For Prof~Service call &31-4555 ORSTOPBY lf)6 ..... 11Td (J,A, blk No. ol 19thSt.) A Calif. Corp. Sm Fee CHMMI• ~ view. 2 bdrm. 2 bath. 2 car carport.a, sun· decb. ~. lease. Ready to move loto now. Super eettlA& for super person. MAY O CK EiPt 2 BR units all have lse. 3 BR. Fam Rm. 2 patios le enclosed de· BA. $2.000 mo. 673-3941 New-eleeant·2 bedroom~~~~~~~~~ tached garages. Must <S!iSO> or 2 bedroom + ..... U5i Numerous condo investment.s. Many single family residence investments. aee at this price. offered NEW den 115'15>. Cedar & win· -··-••••••••••••••••• 2 U · t d l $70 000 l $290 000 -dow home. s Blocka to ni up ex • B s' 4"-~,,, ... and Just"' blk. tot.be beach. Private 2·car MOM•ICH1'1RR. 2 Unit duplex $180,000 -~ beach: 3 bdrms. + con-f.~;!f9· Fully main· 3 Bdrma. 1c den. family 2 Newport Hts $179,900 vert. den. ocean view · yard. Adulta. No home. $750 Mo. Agt 3 Townhouses -CM $[25 000 5Undeck. enclosed yard. pets. IDquire S2S 18th St. ~lor.aM-UTI P "d f hi • eardeo side family rm. m•>~l 3 fl e 0 owners ps $135,000 with frplc. A distJnctive ---------1>x:a Terrace No. of PCH. 3 (House plus duplex) $137,500 home in a prime loca· REAL FIND! 3 BR. 2 Ba. mo to mo. Lovely 3 br. 3 3 (Three Br home + two) $141,000 tion. $12.00Permoot.b. wtcpts. fncd yard. Only ba in pvt community 1100 & 1300 sq.ft. units $155 000 $410. 96.'H567. agt. no fee. w /pool, tennis cts & C . U . • ..... h fall beacb. t615. 152-9213. 4 ovm~ton ruts $188,000 ,..aperty GRRREAT! 4 BR 2 BA. 5 (Two ouses +triplex) $200,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wtnew cpts. fncd yan1.Muicl•Vleto 32.67 6 Units -Whittier $160 Bur . ~ o. 3 4 8 sq ft kids & pet OK. $415. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6 New Townhouses _ CM $'314:= sprtnkleredat$28, Irvine 963-4567.agt.nofee. PURCHASEOPTION 6 Brand New -Hunt Beach riss,ooo Ind ustrial Park. 2712 A Division or 3 BR 2 Ba. Fam Rm. pool ~la~ Brand<~~PJ Dow Ave, Tustin. Agt. & Jae. presUae nbrhd. 7 Units -Costa Mesa $340,000 114/494·1163, 805/688-4460 I I arbor Investment Co ., 7 U d C tr ti -000 '8llO mo. 96M602 ~E OPTION n er ons uc on --· LobforS. 2200 PenningtooProperties $&95StealsThis 7 Hunt Beacb-Nr beach $.lS0,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• eo.teMesa 3224 Clean adult condo. Jbr, 4Br,3Ba (6313Pl FANTASTIC 11 Santa Monica $371,000 OfRCllLDG sm ....................... l~ba. clbbae, pool. SJ'° aw1i..1 631-4555 OCEAN Vl£W 12 Costa Mesa $360,000 tlunllngtoD Beach New 2 br condo. Pool. spa. mo 968-3680 Honor maJ. credit cards from this lovely 5 · BR 30 Condo Conversion-GG Sl,200,000 27,000 sq. fl. lot near From $375. Kids & pets•--· _ _.,;..____ .._.. 3269 Alto Capistrano home 56 Spacious units $1,400,000 Pacifica Hospital. s OK.675-4912Blu. ~AIXCOMOO llillrwa-' Spiral staircase leads to 117 Units-six Mo Orange County PolntsSbop. Cntr &Civic E/Slde 1 BR. very pvt. big 2br, 2ba, upgraded, BLUFFS mad"":,. view 1'0 m 166 Units-.'! Mos Old $1,000,000 ~;,~=• Rll• ~·~~· OK. •-=· -· :..a: Jmaster~==~E 752-1920 ...., .. :. -'Pool-.-ja-~_1 __ .-3-8-r-. -2-b-a.•-3-f'l_Z __ BA..-t-~-pl-c:-.rDeW-m-. _;_::S_d Neat!Y sroomed 3 Bdrm SIJJ,SOO IMVISTMEMTS d '-'UAIL l.tMrt 2400 frpl. dbl pr. lrg. fenced ya}da:ncUi duac. walk to 2 ba&ft wtUa lovely yard· Top location to'tmhorne 1714) 4tJl.771 I T" •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• yard. "51). Kida & pets Westmimter llall, GW Near shops, schools: with "MODEL" a~· .. =========-== PLACE ok 495-11860l'67s.6670 p arks. Asking only mosphere & decorato~ s 1• Mammoth Creek Exec · · College. S'S() mo. S250 $1S2,.500. To see call touch. Separate farruly Ala•da ud · Condo. 2 BR + loft. 2<n Fresbl)' painted 3Br. 2Ba, sec. $4().3911 ; 963-GM FEE! Houses. condos. duplexes . Renta l PavUlon, 67~ Bkr. G CANYON. Luxurious 2 Br, 2 bat h con dominium home New/never lived in. Wet bar/fn>lc. ISOO/or lseopt Salls R. E. 613-Q)OO ~1151• room over looks lush a..-~ ,.OPBlllS.IMC. Ba. compl rum, beaut fam~2cargarage.nr. 2BrCondo 1~ba Newly hanging garden. Call Cor n•--IOPIM TIL l:JO P.M. I view. never rented. Like Eatanc1a High Scbl. $425 • • R ..... Galore!! app<>inlmeot. you'll be Here's your c ance lo -------miiliiiiiiiliiiiiillliiiiil._ ___ new. $84,500. Prine only. mo.lstlst.+dep.631-0769 dee .. Frptc. washer, We havelOOO'solbouses. gladyoudid.64.5-1221 ·save big $$ w/imag & Mable...._. 714-SS1·5189 • . refr1g. N r s hops . paint. 4 Spac. Br. dining £--Sde I I OO .._ 0 New 3 br, 21,A, bale 2 br, 2 $325/mO. 963-1342 dplxs, apts now. al I ~ ~.:.-HERITAGE area, brick frpl. Hurry ..._. e.co... rr@tMrty 20 0 SACRIFICING lovely 3 ba condos. Pool. dbl gar. areas. all prices. Save on $13,900 831-3750 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm 3 story mounlalll open beam ceilings. ClrcleThh! fee. BEAUTLFUL MO o 21 493-2202 WERMAHCE MIGHT PENCIL retreat. Potential duplex Choose your carpet. S550 $13S lg gar pool refrig, 645-4900 A9' . NAC Wall Street Real &,,tale MOllLEHOM.,., or business. Crestline. & $450 . WeslbluCf dswh. Petsok, more! Sml----------=- H.V.ll. 3 Br, 2 Ba, Ital ~ OR MAY C~lif . $48 .000. Call Village, Victoria & Ca· fee.SbMe.6'.5-4900Agt. uffs. pan. view. lge. 3 ~ ~~~t~eenr pool & w~a_.... •• s.taAM toao for private parties who CAR.RY ITSELF Kirsten White. 642·1692 nyon.631.2080 ..,..,., 1g 2b .. ,d ok Br. fam. rm .• 21,; ba, ............. VUll,1' • -~ --r •••••••-•••••••••••••• buy or sell a mobile or<l>J38.4597 ...... e r ..... gar. pool.tl!50Alt.644-0L34 REALTORS 1137,:;oo 640-1440.•--------=---• bome. With a small increase in COl.LEGEPARJ( tOOO's more avail. Fee. WARM & WOODY FIDO /S..• S ...._ --..a.-rents and 25% down you Kona Hawaii Oceanfront 645-4900 Ail llG CAMYOM BIO Canyoa 2 BR + den. Good tu bUe4Br, tr ees. ,_~or--.,...-will be very cklse to a 3 Bdrm, ltn bath, frplc. · "Pinehurst ". Fantastic You can't miss with this Op Tues thru Sun. EZHOUSIMG POSITI V E CASH :::~:.~~ib~~ lge rec: room. washer & $325buge3br kids ok. Lge Lwturtous 2 Br. 2 Ba. golf course vu. $195,000. ~~~U:2:c1f0~~i: S&WlZJ 1664W.Broadway FLOW! This fourplex is (71•>546-3000. dryer mckl. 1st & Last pool, must see. Fee. ~n":~~t ~edr7~· 5C1·'1Mt;SSS.3ZU street In Newport Anaheim AskForPaul in a large pride or req.$4.50.p/mo.549-3924 MS-4900Agl. '8CIO/moocsubmltlseop· ---,,-Wl-'15'-Sr-.-C-Ul..;.....FF ___ , ~-i:mect for_:~; ~~~ 1714)6JS.0122 =~p~h~ ~c:'a.~., 2550 College Park ~~r. 2ba. Lovely 3 br Landmark tioo.WATERFRONT Pacina Dover Creek. :=e~C.T1°f::~.,P~. 3Br,boamrm.2cargar. two 3 bedrooms. ~nits ••••=-••••••••••••••• NearOC~:.:;:unmed. Condo. Upgraded. Close HOMES Sharp l.mmacu141e 3 BR. 000 Just p ainted. $.Si,800. •SIGNATURE• 1913 wit.b enclosed garages to beach-: 962·4454 : 631_1400_ deo.Oakplantf\ooc'.baiy siz. HURRY l7S1-4M4 Mx602Bdrm,2bathplus andfireplaces. ....tt~ 3 BR. 2 ba w/eocl gar, 842-0l63orl/'T72-2lll95. t--------- WlOdow' short escrow. Ii F.R. plus cl05ed porch. 152 1920 2 •-3 BEDROOM $375 mo lstldast +.., 00 Br 2 .. _ J ··--' be ge 2'story cont e m Andoua wUe. 1312 BY OWNER.JSR. 1~BA. Askins $29.SOO. Ruth · • • ... · • ..... ac_..., aut. Dover. Ownr I Agl. Fam Rm-Completely LaurieBKR.646-4380 d QUAIL VA·FHA Nopets.548-8594 yrd. nr. bcb. $4%/lae. r.:.~ ~0:!. w.J.itB[0 8C-019 upended. many xtras, p GARDENTOWNHOME. 3 BR. t ba. nu paint, cpts AvaiJS/lql9SU36S. baiy 6 OCEAN. Open & -------~ UOO RE.AA.TY Warner/Greenville area. YOUMG PIOPLf LACE Zcarearaaes. & drps, stove. washer le FamilySized48r2n. tJrt&bt. IQ50/molea.se. DUPLEX SiS,500, low down. ready Wantyou.rownbome? CO,..Tll:MP.M.1 l-4ll-ff24 dryr, gar. 2 pat's, fncd ~eCncdYard2carOar WATERFRONTHOMES Great locatioo, in blk. to n-noo tomovein.536-0757. Cozy. comfortable hft 1·757-1621 yd. Open house Sun; Frpl ~ (" .. """'Pl 6311400 · trailer for sale. Contact 7 U....-S C u E 6th St E c ~ -. ocean! 3 Bdrm. & 2 .. _d..., _ _.. NO DOWM "" -31141,A, · 1 · ves: liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii bdrm. units. Double Sue.642·996Saft.6pm. Beautiful brand new 4·1 631·388S, 213/315·'837 PURCHASEOPTtON FORLIASE aarage. Furnished & DOM"TWArT LOWPAYMIHTS '72 Vi.king. t.be class of br.loft.f/p.3-2br,1tn ba RAMCHESTATE Adults.nodoes.$350. Lovely3+2·FncdYard booked for summer ren· Lot.a ol charm & tran· mobile homes. 24x&O townhouse, all bllns. NEARAJRPORT ._..G ... !! Patio$41.5 (3816P) 3 Bdrm, fam-rm view ~ 'Ibis ~o must befsold qullityFHAin ~ 2 BR col· + .. -2 BR 2 ba xlnl crpts. ctrps. Hurry. buy Remodeled open beam .......,...,dspetsokgar. ._.... 611-4555 home. localed in J ,_ .. irva, llACH this w ....... ! ! ! Super a.mi· tage. ... VA termB, ""11• • •• now. Tom Lee. Rltr, =b home enveloping -iu private guarded area l I boo' •· ~ .. ,_ Jett t thi ri cood. 2 Storage sheds. Jae & brick patio ..,.,0 °ood area lg, more Honor maj. credit cards with m8'"' amenities Cor ltlALTY 675-1642 Y 5 ze. nr. sc 5 .,. ,....rung a 5 P ce. 1be Meadows. in Irvine . 642·1603. ' · _. 0 """ ---------•pl ayground. Interior Offeredat$SS.OOO. ~Financing. Red Hill -lOACRES.AlZONE 42'1()ltidslgeyd + + 3 Br. 1~ ba, lge yard. lease at SS60. mo. 2125 IEACH I ILK features new carpeting 540-3666 •2Tril•n•* -360degview,fenced $2652brlrldsoknlce Frplc. 16582 Thames YachtRadiant cor.y brick fp. oak floors'. Realty55.2-7500 Near Lake Parlt. Min. to -$1.3S,OOOCALLNOW ! S32S3br2balrlds more Lane. $4.50. Call 548-1258. 1 Bdrm funlshed apt 3 bdrm w/flreplace. BESl'BUYINBLUFFS. SKYUHE bch.1-4BR,3ba;l-3BR. 973-4626 lOOOsmoreavail now! 892·17U.ext552Uz. $215 . mo . 605 1 11 beam c:eillng/patlo Price $192,900. 2\l!a ba; 1·3 BR. 2 ba. s ... tWle R.E lllllC All areas. all prices. Marguerite SlU,500 Owner/ agt y ... •••y 64"'9900 Nearly new 12X44 with r I .. aoooo ~en1days9to6 2 BR 1 Ba. Some cpt.s, 3Bdrm.denhome,locat g. t 1 . mo. im· H t B h 6 .---.. ~ C .j, ft-I...._ 842 1205· ~ 36 Dr-'"es Bay ~(l~ mac. C.M. adult park un · c · 53 ·1118 -ns-.DRltt •st-ur --·--·------- 63l-OM8/Sl 6 7-l900 -~ v-awning. porch, storage garages. TP cs . ...,.., 1631E11th St #3, SA .,., ...... 1 , fplc 10 ard ....,c: ed Sp ..-.. liiiiii!!~j bld Ren $10 · eacb.1109-1TI3Alabama, ru ·~-wecome. . .,ey ._.mo. in ygtass._.,.,.mo I UMly WAY ~\ t::>~ -SmA•-1016 w/pool. c lub house. Owner. a.ro.n 2700 645-4900 Fee M'lrd-......--Bing •· Billiards 0 I •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ,._~ ....... ._..... ....................... O • · n Y SENSATIONAL 3 BR 2 • ....._. 3242 To UVE 1076 OHTHEIEACH &1i~·~ti!;~~~-IHVESTMBCT S.OZAC-1.ANCH ea. wtfplc. D/W. rncd .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ~ I I ' ... II I( I \ I I ' ~'~ t ~3l.' 11., ~.i onJ ~" ~1ir ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oceanlronl$169.500 Commercial building in _5 n•u PRICE yard. Only $635. 963-4567. Tri-level executive 4Br. Admirethemanyexlras FfX&SAVE Ownyourown2 Br,2 ba. AcnagtforSde 1200 ocean area with secure -n rv ageot.noree 3ba. big yrd. Xlot tbatOfllyabuilderwould good sec .• unimpaired ••••••••••••••••••••••• lease from Government 2 Br 2"' b a C do schools. $700/mo. CANAL FRONT. 3 BR. ~~:-~~eA ':~m~~srt!hl~ View olSl.!!!iO~ hil'•. panoramic vu, ocean, INVESTORS ~~P~~~o~~ $195Dowt1P~ wtbltns. range. odn/w , ~2118 =.,~b,Commpool. family home wlth a Great f~~t.b a 3 BR, surf. wbtwater. beaut New listings. Large return (or SS0.000. down $79. PER MONTH rrplcs in liv rm & mast .,.,_ 1244 ~or642-3361 'ourmet '"lt*'beo •-a sunsets. see the whales parcels-00 per acre. S I br. 2 Car gar. pool & ••••••••••••••••••••••••---------• .. "' 1% BA. large dining· go by, 2 car apace, sub· -payment. Ca I for de · . . Pvt 1 llllODderful enterialnmeot family room w /dbl. terraoean gar. pool. un· Acres-full price $1S,900. tails. Near beach and boat JacUZZl. comm ocat· REMTAl.S EASl'BLUFF, 3 br 2 ba, 2 ~jac:. 1.!!~~~ fireplace, +secluded furn. E-Z terms. Appl. 'r'J Ac~~sJ1KR. M A y QC K marinas. Lake or the ft 11g :::dFtl: M~Ti 28R.2Ba ........... $435 ~3· 2 Yl ~ar,lar.,au~o ·• den, study or 4th BR. o n I y • SW A R T z co .. •o•uT•o.. Ozarks Missouri. Road 833 0010 ·20 3 BR 2 Ba S550 I • ws r ry r re · -sligious Baycreat. Pricedtosell. REALTY,840-11Z7. OR522~ ~~ front.age. New survey by ~ ext 2 or •BR'.211.iba.":::::::·.~15 '8CI0.213/688-802l .000. BERTHA HENRY HORSERAHCHES -...n licensed engineer Iron · 5BR.2"'2ba .•....... $590 I cLOc REALTORS Other Red ll!s'9te u-14M"2M8 pins. Detailed survey 3Br, dbl garage, yd, new-. I c~y 215BeJMar 49?-4121 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BR, 2"' BA.dbaedm. l map. Giant oaks and ly decorated. 2202 NearDoverSboresmone Acre. Just re uc lo hickory in 8 grassy Pacific$36Smo.642·5ll4 ol Nwpt Beach's finest 3 Bedrm, 2 bat.b Ocean & ......_ HcMMs 189.500. IEACH TRIPLEX parklike setting. Much areas. 3 Br. 2 ba. frplc. Marina view home in For SM 1100 3 BR. 2 BA. new. 1 Acre. San Cli•nh wild game. Deer. will! 4 Br. patio. bltns. frpl, enc fr m I din r m . A Hai'bor Estates. $124.900. •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• fenced, trees. full price Walk to beach or Del turkey. roi. raccoon. gar. $525 /mo. Ca II Horticulturist's delight Marquar d Realty, OCEAMVllWFtlOM SSS.900. Mar Shopping. Quiet Year around fishin g. 567-4954. Cov'dpatio,greenhouse. ~~~~~~~~~ 488-0660or486-3523eves. -=-YIOOM 4BR.3 BA,5000sq.ft.2~ t 3 BR Wllderness area. Ideal l BRCOTTAGES27S courtyard, gardener. 5•-A 0 I area, w Jgrea W/D •· fri · 1 N San Clemen le Custm A spectacular home, BKR. woer anx ous. owners unit. Upper 2 BR location. Good high Large Fenced Yard • ....,,., .':" ~ !.,65mc, · 1ew --·.-... ~--.· • .,--•hillside home nearing plush&elegant.opcnflr · units w /ocean views . ground. Picture post tbild &PetOK (6422P) ~,.....,.pamt .•• mo se _.,_ completloo2,000sq. ft. 3 plan, 24x64 Levill. 1914. rg~>:J.6-:Ji,7 Justlistedal $160,000. card beauty. Invest In .. 573 CAMPUSDl~htvlME Owner644-4227 4•-SI 13,tOO. bdrm, 2 ba. fam rm. <LK-7343·4) Country · BERTHA HENRY ~anca..._~ .. ~~oamc: Lovely2Bdrm$265 Newport Shores 3 BR. <i Tbat'a not a misprint. breakfast nook, fl re Club style park for the Ar.a lwllh REALTORS pl~ly by '::U. Wrlle: Beaut Encl Yard Bltns MOVE RlOKT IN! Sharp ba, sbarp home. Tennis. Faces tA!DDls cowu with place. wet bar. sun deck. very discriminating. See for Sde 1100 215 Del Mar 492-4121 TRUSTEE, General Ac· Best area! t6462P > 3 BR 2 Ba. w 1crv, ltlds & pool.1163-8818 beautiful Cl.8D.)'OO view. 2~ car garage. No your beach area .. ••••••••••••••••••••• R _.._, 611 .. 555 p•l ok On y $ .. 15 Haa to move fast at I.bis agents 714 536-6874 or 714 specialist . PACI FlC N .... 8 unit apt for sale by SUI'& D&UXI CC!l)tance Co .. Box 329. --.... ,.:;. •U>'f agt 00 f .... '" . 2 Br. den. 2 ba. frplc. price! Vacanti 9llHl80 COAST R~ES. INC. ~Ider E /aide CM may 4-PLUES Osage Beach. Missouri Honor maj. credit cards .,_._,,' · ..,.. awim pool. 2518 E 15th St. 21035 Brookhurst, HB f1JUU1ce' 83l-0303. • Probably the biggest and 85065 or call collect 3 BR2 BA. Cplc courtyard SUPER DUPER! 3 BR 2 Nwpt Hts. Do not disturb • REOCARPET' 3 Br. 2 b'a Mira Costa 963.at · nicest nearly new Units m.v=~3. Nl1hts, entry, great'loc:. $41s. BA.+ den. fplc, D/W at tenants. 673-9336 a .. 1:347.. Twnbae, nr Camino de .. bll C rclal in Huntington n-ach 540-173> cpta. Only $425. 96M58'7, wkdys/eves. ~or. ,. Estrella "' K-Mart. .. o e .Home In Sad· Property 1600 Asking only S2Zs.ooo: agtnofee. f b ~~~~~~~~~ll~~~c--=-=:__~~ dlebec:ks newest park. ••••••••••••••••••••••• each.Eaayterms. ...,. O-PoW 3226 Ocean ronl 1 r older *•-rt.__.... 1A.JL•Na-rt•---.a.. 1069 ~wtban/w ..... baroew •. bonTri~~~ San Clem. 2 bldgs. SCOTTllALTY ••••••-••••••••••••••• -••••••••••••••••••••• THE TERRACE. beaut TSL~ Yrly.'8110 . ., .. ., 603 rw-r--'·--11'-'"r--"'"""' "" .... h d 1 d ' ...___'Ldill id ~r2br,tba.gar,J,A,mi upgraded Cambridge 3 .... amt U"Vo·l .... -•••••••••••• .. •••••••••• .. •••••••••••••• ut.IJ. room & appliances. ac e u e 'nc ome 536-75~1 .--..-•--· BR.2ba. 1525 Ownr/agt 0 w n e r b e 1 n g $28.800. Nr ocean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• beacb. ocean vu, pvt, 644-S576.~ •Illa cottage. shiny re· tnmferred. Make offer $300,000.496-1840 DB.UXIUMITS ...,..._. 1141 $32S.49&-84;t73-2'28 model. 3br 2ba. gar . CE 111111 ILlllS ca. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE 11.UffS IAl6Al4 Lovely Newport Bucb 3 Bdrm. 2~ Ba Jlome. Vacant. Immaculate Move In CoodiUon. Bright CheePful Setting On A Cul-de·sac. Custom Dra p es_. Select Wall P apers. SUla·J>eek. I.« Us Show You Th1s Fine Home. $145,000. A "Joy Of NewPorl., tlsUng. 631·1• 83'7·9691 Co•do••l-fToww-BUt to twn/bcb. Lag lkh ....................... Fa 1• y.., 3234 D E E R F I E L D !~R!~a&1 .~.__, mo. ............. 1700 finest. SUpeJ'3browner'• ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• TOWNHOUSE 2 Br. den. _....~.-·~ •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• unit + 2·1Br units + tbr CHAllMI~ 'Bed.room. 1 story. Foun· 2 ba. wood deck. 2 car 4 BR 3 Ba Fa R Con UVllM LAGUNA HACH 2Br, 20x48 Boftanla. 1964 <DK.8210·11>. Hillside k>cation near ocean. Just llstOO. Hurrr on thls one! -$U.l500. Member Calif. Muleip&. U.Una tervice. PAClf'ICCOAST l\ESALES, CNC. unit & lf'I. studio apt. Open vtew. 2 bdrm.s. 2 \aiD Valle)'. $G5. Sharp. aar wtelec opor. mir· • m m. · ~oceanvlew. bailba,2carcarport.sun· -i~-vac--• """·178Bor rored wardrobes. Nr. do, wetbar. Cplc. teruw. 4aSH.tOO. JAMODDYRLft decks In cent.er ol Tem· ~ --PC>OU. parks •schools. ~beach. 9675 mo. Brand new llltlna ! 49..,61 1 pie HJ Ila. $$25. lease. Sorry. no pets. $46$ . ...;...~------ Like a tingle famlly Rea4Y to move Into now. 3bdnn, 1~ ba, ffp, cloeed 64().0964oc840-7072 Westclltt. charming 3 BR. home with Y_o_u_.r own 8 EA c R Du p LE x Super aett.lng ror supor yd,nradool UNIV PARK Mnn , __ 2 1~ bai. peUo. no pe\a. private yant -2 car between bay " ocean, perlOO IC1.cz79:8f1·3422 BR. p0 vt yard.fplc,ten· '525/mo.8'8-2389 gara1e. Beautiful bullltn cloeetoatoree. TWol Bdr MAY O CK ldtchenandacparat.edln· ms. plus double aarage, SUPER SHARP! 3 BR 2 Dis,poob,55-0253 TNHSE, 3 BR 21,A, Ba. l1'I area. Beat nlue In plus storage. Sl2t,500. 380Gl'it.Hm Ba. w/brick ~c, clln1n& Charming aer. 2Ba, spa. Fam Rm, pool,.gar, fplc, com 0 AA p1ex-movotncond.l· Aaen.t , 545.842, or l.AGl.W.il>Ot area, cpts, ncd yard. frpl. crpts/drps. bltns. $41S.645-074S;5S7·1°'8 Laite Forest 5 Star aduJt "': ..... .-....... ·n '18-Tl31 (7M) 484 9t48 ~ "35.. 983-4567, aat, ~. 54&-SU0/642-4183 _ THI••·~ k beaut. nuuer ._,, --rr~ upJraded. 111t 642-1200 ParS.lyOww' l4lw-rt1Md Jl6t ~8r!Ba$QO U,...IHch 3248 3Bd1rm.2ban.~tnglesly .. 163..()9111 reuoo 581'°453 r.~~~~~~~~~ .... ...-~ 'r-c•~__. Yard ••••••••••••••••••••••• ear y area. "''"et street ->..., r9STT ••••••••e•eeeeeeeee•ee• -....U C1e frt'tJh & l '""'Trail 1 BR 1 fcA 8 Unit a-w/rec room, •• .a...w--..1--'v .. •.•br + Brickll'rplc (8338P> 3 Br. 2 b1. Fantastic _c!n. vacan · -er, • • a.-,..,.,., 2000 ..,. 11 d ....., auu .... -.. ocean vtew. Sml dog OK. ......,/Mo ~h,!!· ioo. ~ ~ d.' •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• uaUt are a ren~te . 2 ba. l yr &eue. "°°mo. ff\cU Br, 2 Ba w /PaUo ~ lae Lacuna Rhy _,_air --'2AJOOmo.\QcOCDe4 ·l • 8714512 .,_.,_ ......... _ .. --i ..... *-OCrn Ten~Jbclr J~U. JWIUoa, l • 1 _.;,.;..;_;_..;;._ _____ , .-~ru.,., ...... -------- fte r..-draw ln the units, encl. 1ar•pt· l J r 1811. 17081 Elm SL, H.B. Ckan fron\ 2br. UW pd. l:dnal • <182'7Pl .. o L "BR 2Ba ~..:...;~_..D!J,.11..!,Uot o1'1Ma71Jd. $415,000. O•n•r sm,ooo .... 36$S da71, .. mo,. -week till • a I 631-4HS .... ...: •• !•~.: .. ~_; u • ~,_,.,,...-.-.... ~evea/wlmdl Junets. ... -•,. .....-· .,.,_ ........... ay· _., HoDW!Dlj. ereditcards Stpt. S.1000 mo. 1·5'4·31157 l Bclm .. 2'-' ba. .• split· l•v~I . end unit ~1bttul YICW Avail now 181$/mu. AGENT l' DAILY PILOT .,..._..""""-Office...... 4400 ._..Wmhd 4600 LO&t~'-d 1300 ..._W.._.. 7111 HetpW..tH 7100 ··••···•····•••········ ............................................................................................ •·••·•················· Hwa U•fa ' ' '" 44 at awl• u...,.. Al• tawah UIJM-a. ....................... ······················· ······················· Mu,.,. leodl 31'9 ,... EfffCIEMT Rm or 1Lud.lo w1nted by LOST 1 mo. tem1le Acea ....,.,...._ A.SSll• •S '· ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnlelliacot dog, bis German Sh"phord. tan MacGrecorYtichll DllY 4r twlnt elill\t for Ml pm t .._.. Uff S•1 4 JIOJ C.. W... 1114 Promontory Point. 28r ALTHNATIV! human.CUC stdnt 2Sl w/blk face. Rew1rd! l42-4aO Be.llllt.J.11'COlta Mt*'. apt in adult complu Mo to mu. renl Incl: N 8 /CM 11 re a Rick 897-3808 Aak for llr. W1chtet • a..Mtilp. ..a ..... 181', l8a .-.. ..-MIW• Aviulable June oce11pan ~ l 11 er v •• aa~ ICl4'IS4 --1 BrCoU&ICI S!'70 cy CaJl6'73-9438. _ _. ..tu.ft.0 COY· Found·1'ny fem. Cocker ACCllfl1Nli ---------Condo. I 7 5 0 Cherry Crull Adult AllUtJIPald. R&S """'....,..u Need3Br1u.mmerrent11l. Soanlel mix 8 mo's old 1--------- ....................... ....................... •..••.••.••.•.....•...• ~IMMIJ.t.ev•. Al'a. 1 •2 BB. fplc's. wt U..t Loule 1~r > L.100 BAYFRONT eraae. cont. rm. mall 1f1 t/10. Vic: Harbor'." Vtcton1' ASSIST. MAMA•M S.Ql 1 ••• U7' bau lak~c• .. un11 , Redec l Bl' ~. 2 Br. ~:nu::~=~~ prkg 244 l.541 (213). Days: ~. Evce & Cl.Ell Sakll " admlnlstratlon. •• ·-·••• ·-••• •• •• •• •• J~ ta Loc11ted Channlna 2 Br 12'7~ den. 2 ba. f rple $945. THE EXECUTl v E Wlmds . S4ll-2'T19 M1p l .,.. eaqier. ln aen 'l "11l lime only. A&>Pb m a.Iola ~1111 ni.. : :O~~r~e:; i~6~ Av~J:~~O•t~Pl Agent6'5-*4 SUITE,640-:W70 .. .C:~••"t/ Found: 2 dogs; bUt ~le accoun.Una.10Key adder f:::.'!.: ~;!:~tt's ?!"u_.~~(~.,:...DS· fw)t.B-lltl.Nopeu. a--. 631-4555 Huae2+2VlewApt lnl9a.o..1A1...a.r-.781 Cocltapoo. female bytetl~~ft!!!,n.d.d1tory. Store, aasai Moullon .-u~·-·-Tennla,Jacuul. Pool ---~""' ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• Sbepberd. t /21. Vic. Ut .,..,......,._ Hoaor maJ. credilcl.l'dl Plus! I Sd> CIWtlP> Fully aerv ore spice ........ Jamboree It Brletol. Plrkw-.y Pia.a.a. ,.,. ..... , I .. Jto7 E!SkSe~et2 BR·~ Bl. at.ana al G& aq fl In the «>11•h11»1 5005 8'2-1729. Free to aood PBX C;. f WWW Jl71 ......................... .,. adJta 00 ...-~ Ele,1t1tlBrDIO dyniuxuc N.B. 1lrPort .... ~ .................. bolnelfnotelalmed. ··--•••••••••••••• Pvl WQble be I 0 • • • .,.._. A/C JacunJ. Pool + ! bus. area. Space avail: er ......... -.....--l(CEPTJmlln 28R.t-.i.blcondo l W/I amcgs. $325. 337 E . lSth St •-l VI MOP> 800-16,000sqft&watthBe -.n~_..,., FOUND ; German 91W,JI • pedo '5 d4ck. Steps to 675-6736 ~ve ;y ew ( sp. » ~ ft. Proj. Mgr G~ & Pet Shop. Shorthair Pointer, male. To run a very buay PWlh pool,nopet.s, bch. Yrly 2 Br 2~ Ba. --------....... '31-4555 Judy ci;,.k, 833-88l3 or R.et1rio1 1fter 7 iood Vic. Hell & MagnoUi, button (770 Board> fr Sf',\ mo. 488--0888 ~~~~~a. $550. DcMo PoW 3126 Hooor 11\lJ. credlt cards stop by Commerce P1rk. years. fine locatloo & FV /HB. IJ9S.1842 bully recepdon are• for a llAUTIM311 ....................... S-ce....ta 3176 .UOOBirch cUea~le.188.500. growing electronic Mlaalon Creek home, C:.-4Jt Mir ll22 Dana Point iuper ocean ••••••••••••••••••••••• · BERTHA HENRY maoufacturl.na division rim rm. Scar car. lg yd ........................ view. New lSSOsq.ft. 2br, l Bdrm. l bath apt lO Tr OFACE SPACE m0er::i-To~92-4121 ,....... 5350 olPria large con:r·.~· S S 5 o I m o · 1---------1 2"'-ba ~. 6'4-5142 pies with pool. 3 blk.a to ror leak. 2200 i.Q ft . '.-) blk r ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• or exper. ma 1 .... .,. 48S.cm /4!kl-21193 all 5pm. beach. $240/mo Sandra off s .D. f'rwy on Crown ..... ._VEl .. '-Elo.ICY «J.iNal ...... TypiJ'la helpful. _, SUNNY Sparkling clean l Harkness 4N· 15e1 Vall p k "' M;•st""' '""' ~-~ .,,,.... Wail I I• 3298 re .... .... Bdrm. bltins, gar. no v ey83f286Wlay. -"" FRANCHISE UU..SSo. EIC1ml.OoReaJ We otrer excellen~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• m I kl .. _ ts $235/ h ·-·,_.shed leJO. . Sao C1emente. FuUy Uc. Hluies " benefit.a io-you GOTTA Se• this ''" !t!!r;co~ ~,...u:o723olr pe . mo. ,. •L-f _. ~ 3900 1be new way t.o own a F ....,, ._,,_ l . "d "' t-. " "" " -....,. °' •1ll Mlhwv RRMTf lravel agency. Travel or a.,_ ,....., c udi.na 11 paid bou l )'il, smasblne 2 Sty, 4 BR. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• We'vegotsprt;"g'feverat Network.S~rtyourown. RELAXING MASSAGE 1 week vacaUon alter 6 BA w/cpta, tried yard, GARDEN APTS 2 BR Apt newty decorat-1'Hf; ~CITING E l . d BobJ i--Llc ~---eur mooths. Cbrisl.m.aa week ed ....,c , .............. .,it ...... -s Lido Marina Vllla~e. xp. no require · ......., ,..__, ..u .... th •-In only SUS. 883"4567 igent. CORONA Di:L MAR . _,.,.mo. ,_,.. ......_ ll4T' • Complete support •-lo·"" ,._,,,,,.all "9, ~ .... 5111 uu w• pay "' ifOUP nofee 2 Br Townhouse. frplc. · 675·7571 MINUTESTONPT WltlJeitlastswe'reofer-.,. .... , __ vu_.,~ __ ... _ ...... ____ , sw-ancest.artsoadayol BCH mg free rent on beaut of-term service provided. hire. A1TENTWN 11 ! llOlt0'8l Ho .... ~ Wort In new olfice Opening ln Costa Mesa Man or womaa. Work W/)'OUDI people. E*Y•· ble & lnt.erettloJ worj W/l'lpid adhncement oppor ln ow educational lle'Oductl divtaion. Age no barrier if 18 or over. Mut have pleasing persooality. Call betwn 9:30am&2.pm. 64M514 1...a•aGGaorell Pool, tenrus. Some ocean MallilegtOft hoch 1840 Bacb, l&.2 BR fice space overlooking Ca 11 Mr . Ch a r I es MASSAGE •• & Catalina views . Close ••••••••••••••••••••••• the Ba s ( 714 °.,.. ........ ~,.E MODELS We have UIOO'sofbouses. to Fashion Island & frne su .. RP. beach ... & 3 BR. rrom$220. &up y. pace rom 200 ....,.,.._..... nwv" DOCUMEMTOR .... ·-oLOTMIEU dplxs, apts now. all '"" " AdulLs.NoPelil t.o 900 sq. fl incl crpts. GIFTGALLEltY ESCORTS Addr-"""raph AV• "" areas, Ill prices. Save on beach. Al6o 1 Br. 644-2611 fr PI . d I a h w a ab er . lS61 Mesa Dr d rps. A t C . s day ~.. f'.Jll or put-time. Learn r.... 1~~~~~~~~~1 °arage pauos 96().2358 {5 B'"· East of Newport janitorial serv. & all util You work In my store OUTCAU. OHL Y Multigrapb the auto business from """' 1-.. · • • • ...., pd T k d f this summer & learn all 29'llS. Daimler St h d , o 645-4900 Afjt ForevervlewofC11talina. UVENearTheBeach! BlvJS.l · a ea vanlag1: 0 the facets of the busi· 631-3111 SantaAna.CA92711 t e groun up . P ---------"-• Ocean Bl & Femleat. 3 C ~it-• ~ our spring fever. & free portunily for advance-A SUPER 3 BR 2 Ba. Yrs new w/bltns. 3 Br. 2 CllO--rent offer. We'll pro· ness. *SA .... DY'S* (714>546-3SSl ment. See Mr. O'Neill or llV/cpU, tried yard, kids & ba. sundeck & frplc. Al Beaut.lful Adult Apts IEACH UVIMG bably come t.o our senses Secure your financing, f"'lll ~uaJ Opportunity Mr. Pierce. HOWARO pet OK. Only $395. lhe top of the stairs lo Gas&Water Pald. without high beach by summer. call or stop findyourlocation&Jwill OutcallMassage mployerM/F ~rolel Dove ad~ua1I 91S-"567aat,nofee. "''-aCove.avaUJunel, 216618roothunt.KB C!lces·Enjoy th es e by any weekday bwtn assistinmovinglhebu.si· 973-0329 SLs .. NewportBHcb. "uu' -962 1.65~ 8 30 "-5 30 ness for you. Call 10-12. • • Lse. $650/mo. Call owner ..., "' autiful luxury apts : "" : · •SHERl LEE• C •h a minutes from beach. Udo Marina Village 67~ Admln AISiat. SUK+ AUTO MECHANIC· fw ••d 3400 847-0668. 2Br, cbildren welcome. no Spacious 1&:2 bdrm aduJl 3475 Via Oporto Mclll9y to LOCM 5025 Certified Masseuse Euc Secy'a to S12K Exper. in ~n cus. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chann'g 2 br, 1 ba. frpl, pets, starting at 1245 mo. apts with pools. jacuzzi, Cat Nwpt Beach Blvd) ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jiouse~ appl. Receptionist $700+ Must hive own tools. Profess decorated. 2Br. patio. no pets/kids. Nr. 846-8I0'1 rec. room. fires ide <714)675-8662 2MI& lrdT D, · GefterllOffice $850 lmmedpos.&42-UlllM · w/ocn vu. Sum rental. sbops.5'50.64.5·1682. MEARIEACH lounges,blWardrooms& --SkY--SU-ms--.--l~ANSAVAILABL~ FOXY LADY lnsW'anceSecy SL2K AtrroMOTtVE ~CYf;~~~~Jya~e}:~: Costa Mesa 1824 & CIVIC CENTER sand volleyball. * ANAHEIM Credit no problem. 1~~~ ~=:y WAMTID!!! "'""ac:c:a. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BRAND NEW. Spa"'t'ous CAlfSPANAAnS lroker,752-5903 o.te•Mot..,_ TuneUpc:o---lawil .,..,......... 1 ... ua.~ua. .... 5 del •-B' II 15.200 M11gnolt11 ,,.._I SO Sq Ft 731-3561 ~te224 642-lt70 Lotboy ...,,..'" · _....___nAAr• uxe 2. 3.,. 4 r. A Wcstminstcr.839-0519 Bank of Amenca Bwld ·---------1---------1 Tow1Ac11e Large 1,2&3 bedroQ.ID bltns.frplcs,gar.lgeyd, Cl ...... ._...,~ ing. 10 stories or '· PREGNANT-? Caring, UneMecbanic UNflwallMd ·3525 garden apls. Dshwhr. ~Yorirt.own -Just West ..vuot...,., h~""'im's finest office WffEN YOU confidentialcounsellng&i Mwttif.-.. Secy Immediate opeoi.ngl>. ••••••••••••••••••••••• bltns. encl. gar. gas bbq. of Beach Blvd. 536-1718 CRl8C APTS ;;'.Easy Fwy access. refe1Tal. Abortion. a(iop-Secretary, mature resp. f\JIJ compa:'cfu benefits. Bi!fewc;~o&,Joc~~em& ~f0Ju~3Pd. 778 Scott One&TwoBR Seeatl407 ::t3~~~t1~ ~2!!creedlll. clpaudrked1n. gP.n'Amll NEED CASH, tlAonPC~kReeEplng. u:. ......... party w /ex per in ~ ~~~2$18 ':t.~; lake View. $795/mo. . De l awa r e, Hunt •g .... C .... a.ns __... " ,..., ~ architectural de1l1n o1 d l u ~ IA~ location & competitive nnn offh;e oroc:edures. » v · • 01 a ... ua 640-6716. E/Side, alry 3 Br, 2 Bit, Beach. Phone960-S329. 2S2ll&ockport rates (rom 60c sq ft. CONTACT ffDIU I~ TypingspeecU1accuracy,_SS6-"820 ___ . ------ .,.._......,. 3600 bl~ns. ~:,w~~l drps. NEW XTRA Dlx twnhse LagunaHills,581·6130 Hurry while offer lasts. UNION ~·~ a must. Expe:rtlae of fil. • ..... 5 ..... 1.,_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• pamL . . apt. !root unit. Lg 3 Br. Som.no pets! Fordetails.call7Tt"'671 HOME LOAMS ·-~ ing & file systems. Noa Salesperson nteded for USTSIDI CM HEWE-SIDE 2'h Ba. formal din rm + ...,... 4000 250-SOO sq. ft. deluxe 0r. Union Home Loans ar· NWn"'-i _•_maker __ . 540-__ 2llO __ • ---• °"' & used Porsche. VW 3Brduplex, end gar, 3br, 2ba, Townhouse. Up-bk.sf st rm, fp!c. bltns. ••u•••••• .. •••••••••• • f w 19th s c M rangt> loans for home or Anyhow -Dunce -1•--------•I & RV sales.. Immediate 1385.Agt.MM884. graded. Lee patio . ~~g':.utJ:ia~~at· Roomw/ltitchenetle f~r;m si5o. mo~· T~m: propertyownersoCSL,000 Daunt00~«.!bo-Advertilml opeaina. Full Ume. Fr-Chlldren ok. i4S·9S43 · · SSOweek &up. 54(}.2200 t.o $100.000 or more. And NODUCT10M lnge benefits. Call for ln· eves 648-4262days b b d ak 548-9755 through Union Home I admire tombstones terview; ask for Sales ....,_ 1w..t1 ,_,,.shed • . 2 r 2 a con o, sque Y FULL SERVICE L o a n s Y o u g e t because they at least PllSOM & ART M ••••H•••••••••••••••••Large38rtownbouseapt. clean. pool, great loca· Ambassador Inn In Costa Homeown.er Terms. speak well of a man ASSISTAMT '37-4100493-4511 lc6ool.a-d 3706 2ba.frplc.patio.garage. lion 5360· Call Kent. Mesa. 2Z17 Harbor. Cen· DB.UXEOFFtCES which a re generally wheuhe'sOOWN. Muathaveexper.lntype ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quiet cosnplex. Adults. M6-l37l or347·34ll trally located. 23S rooms. Personal telephone/ re· much better than finance LI.-._ • Vl ... 11I speciog &i produc 1og •AUTO SAU.I" ~10 inc util, attractive no pets. $375. 645-3381 or Sharp 2 bdrm. 11.lt ba Con· MANY with kitchen. ceptionist. s ecretary· companyt.enns. .....,~ -c•ean. well designed OPl'Ol1VNITY' spacious lBr. 30S'h 67~5949 do. 3 Mi. to beach. $350. pbooe & TV. Swimming conference room. coffee ChooMTI.Tenns o.tcalM••:ri hollhed art. Ap~ly in ,._,, __ 1,., ... CCak· of u: · A 1 · d & hospitality services or-.....__ r..--1 .,..__ Joll ,..e ~ ~ '"' .. , ... anne ve. EASTSIDE 3 Br 2 Ba. no mo. Ask for Leslie. poo · JaCUlll, an rec. Excellent location. near thatfity«Mr ~--..-VT person. u•e y -.. r. '78! HOWARD vrolel ,.__..._ .... __ 3724 ""'"· ........ 184 21st St. 546-5880 room. Daily & weekly [ ~ r....1......a Serving alJ Orange Co. lDc .• 1700 Gillette Ave. . lb 0 C l -.ru _._ ...,.., _.,., rates starting from SS4 a reeways. ..._.,... •• ~· 835-7313 Irvine. 8am-5pm. ID e range oun Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• 54&-6985 S350 2 Br. 1.,, ba. bltns. week. BAKER CENTER Airport Complex will add 2 Br·3 Br. 2 ba townhouse. trash masher. immac. 645-4840 (714)979·2161 FULLY AMORTl%ED DANCE OF FUN 3 lor EZ'stra1gbt sell & $50 WEB & UP · rd r I 1 Pool. jacuzzi & lighted ... -._ ..... _... .. _ Beaut. nude girls dance AmbiUous Couple Wanted lease. Auto experience paUo, ya • rp c. enc · tennis cts. Many extras. 2 A<ljotning rooms In pvt. Two prime spot offices ,_, .. Y-vaua.u1 & rap session. Pvt rntr-t.o ~ea small buel-oot~uiredbutprevious ::1J~~~I gar, laundry rm. From Near Hunt. Harbour. E-Side C.M. hm avail w/your own parking lot. IMTEREST OHL Y rored rooms. lOAM to oeas p/time. WW not la-sdling very helpful. Br· 2.Tl&NewportBl,C.M. ~·Mgmt 6"2·l603 Gemini Really 839-6623 ::~t.riU~Wl? w~lite r:!i~ewpo~ Bl~t NB. 3AM Moo-Sal. 12PM t.o ~er:i!t' CW°ifli~ u:: ~:;::''n:to. __ 548-__ 97_ss_or_~----12 BR 1 Ba. lndry facU, no Deluxe pool.side xtra lge be res~ 9a~~ -u~ tall sb';,:S. ~c . c!'Ti ~ ~ N. Euclid, learn. Mr. Ball~lat. ~or a~vancemenl.unSe~ SUSCASITAS pets. P5 mo. 1st & last 2br, 2bacb.bltns, dshwhr. clo'g dep. Call aft 5pm. 675-3551 FREESESSIONW/AD ADIW'erillC&enice .. Pq· Salesl(gr.,l>oYelrQuail Nicely fumiabed t bdrm. + $\00. 2e9 E. 16th Place. Nr. bea Adlts. no pets. ~785'1. PRIME C M OUTC .... • ua.•5a."'-E lng Full & f'.l' Ellp. oaJy1.-Sbiiiiii.iii.Niiieiiiw~rpot"iiirtiiiiiiS.iii1iidt.iiiiliiiiiS Closed 1ar. $230. up. 644·°'52.Avl4/22. $250.mo.536-8362 51 rllewtah 4200 LOCATiOM --.-. Aw vac & grp UIS. For (n.111 Adulls. no pets. 2110142B 2Bat.o h 3Br Condo. pool. near •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• Deluxe office & •731-0931• ter/appl Call 846·2462 AVON NewportBlvd. N Fr.. . ~Baokuse. Adams & Brookhursl. Sat/Sun g.s Mon & Tues BEA r. airview .,. er. SJ95 962 35 9 GLAMOROUS ware h ouse s pac e . •Switchboard 835-ms• SUCCESSFUL 2 br, newlY decor. pref. No pets. ~1882 mo. . 1 2 Bdrm. 2 Ba in Promon· 1100·8000 sq. ft. Full ANSWERSERV S2WK _4-_7 ________ , SALESPERSON non-l!mkr, adul~ no pets. Clean 2 Br apt. Refs. no 2 BR 2 BA. nr Beach Blvd tory Point with forever security. 642-4463 or UNION MAlLADDRFS5 SlWK API' MANAGER·WIDled. JUST BEING ::,.uire 179lfa bester. P e t s . $ 2 9 0 I m o . fp1 Inter Comm ~o~.. V I E W • Decor al o r 642·7604. •SUZI'S• mature, acSuJt °' couple, YOUBSEL1'~ . lsl/last+S150 cleaning c. gar. pvt Y.ar . t. furnished. Pool. jacum, 300 sq. ft. ore In Costa HOME Out all M 20 sm u nits. general Sell Avon. You don't Bungalow. Fpk, maid dep. 675-9869; 645-8869 last + dep req d. Adlts sauna. tennis. $350/wk. Mesa. pvt lav. $96. mo. lOAM-~ ass;ff..uQ etcma.ln~cep.:Jarderrederu. ·Inn~ need exi>erience because serv Employed person only. no pets. 847·3241 646-21.30; m-3709 U) ....,.~ na Avon practically sells non·;mkr.5'8·7197 'New2BRc~do, (pk. trsh evs/wknds ON THE BEACH : : l iQiANS Clean, pleasant & sup· come + atudlo apt. ttself. Eamillgs are ex· cmptr,darling.$415mo. NEW2lgeBR,l~Ba.gar 4 Bdrm home with IAYFROHTOFRC:FS ~ If\ portivefosterbomecare _494-033 ___ 1 ______ ,celJent; hours nexible. NICE 2 BR. good location. 640-5546 btwn S-8PM w/opnr. W JD hkup, fplc. privacy. $1000/wk Cannery Village-New of· IOI" i lhlelically inclined A/Rec. Clerk, eomeexper For details call 540-7041 ~-~;,~:i~13 no3Br,2balower,Mesa~el patio.$355.~3604 WATERFRONTHOMES fices from 300 sq fl· ":~~~~~~aesgel HFiormme 16yroldhigbscboolsW· pref'd, but not req'd.~or~1.eNt.b~~·~7~·1359~~~~~ _.,.._ .... _ _. _______ , Mar. $325. mo. Family, CaU631-ltOO ranlastic views. lg .,.,.., on,...... dent in Huntington XJot opPor. tor alertl-tWM9•leadl 374 oopets.545-4991 NEWDRUXE211 patios-parking & BToro 770.JOJI Beach. Write Classified penon. Gd benefits. Cal Babysitter. wanted for l •••••••••••••••••••••• Near beach w/fplc. Janitorial lnch.lded 2808 tWldl 141-2225 Ad No. 2SO, Daily Pilot. State Auto Parts, child w /eome lite STUDIO "Weeldvlat.." Full kitchen "TV Linens & UWIUes WLETOOCEAN lBrEastslde,woodbeam patio. encl gar, smoke TWO Summer Rel!tals. Lafayette Ave . N.8 . P.O. Box 1560, Cost• (!30.5950 bsetpnginalovelyhome ~&cabinets.stove alarm. Adults. $310 mo. studio apt, spacious, 673-1003 Mesa90826. ln Newport Bch. Work 4 ref g. $235. 731~1 536-2159 fplc, balcony overlooking s I w office pr1' v Short term R.E. S$$'s rast. DIVORCE/B "ruptcy ASSEM' Bl.EIS d1ys . 8 : 30 to 5: 30. ocean. S3llO wk. 384 Cliff m ne • · any reason. BUI Daven· an.. • 548-2825 Sl95 1 Br. incl. util. Pref. Spacious 2+2 $250 Dr. ALSO. 1 BR + studio parking, all util. pa.id. lSl por,t. 549-9803 '50. LegaJ assist. 12 yrs. 1--------- retl r ed car etaker . HtdPoolLgKitcben b kith JI 1 •· Commercial Way, al ' O.C. Ac:tioo Lepl Typ-IU\Tr••-~ ... ---bl-n-""'-" ~WteaMohl Adults,nopets.644-6958 Avail May 1st (5368P) couc · c ' v ng "' NwptBlvd,CM.548-3878; .;...aEED lng.9fl0.5419 -..,..,.,,_ ........ ....._ dining area. balcony afterS548-8llS " _;;;....________ Neededlmmedlately COMMllCW. overlooking ocean S300 ,_,Hal 5erTkes 5360 Long&SbortTerm LOAMSICatTAIY Charming 1 Br· Nr All wk. One efficiency apt. Prime OC airport area. 2 I MOH EY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Assignments Progresalve lodependenl Newcpts·HtdPool Avall May 1. S3llO mo+ pvt oles w/recept area. House4lltingwhi.leyou're 3ShiftsAvaillble. blnk seelr:ing banJt ex· 727 Yorktown Blvd Lge 2br Lower. new cpt.s. Beach Blvd at Yorktown drps. No pets, Nr. OCC. 536-0411 $299mo. 751·3006 SMALL BEACH HOTEL ROOMS $32.SO Week Apt SlSO/mo. 538-7056 S230Sleals! (8925Pl sec.384CliffDr.497-1303 65ccnft.752.5511 • f b N ~baveowntransp. per'dcomm'll01nsecy. lBr, upstairs. nr s. Cst. R...titaR1 63_1-4555 R...WS to~ 4JOO .... ClB>IT HO :~e ~0;100• ~'!'~abl: Cal Todm¥ 55'"'520 SAM11AGO 1AM11 Plaza, no pets. $240. Honormaj. credit cards ••••••••••••••••••••••• WATER VIEW PltOILIM now. E Ider I y c p I Free. Top P-.y. Vac Pay 53SE. lstSt. Tustin _54(}. __ 12_19_1_54_0_-84_9_3_. ___ 3 BR, new decor. huge •IESa.,.....IVE• NB Mariner's Mlle. ap-211d&lrclTDloaM References548-3289 VldorTa4a••r 832..s200 &.....-INclt . 37 I di N -· prox900sqft,2ofc,conf, .r.--.1-.. 1"AU11,_,_.,E plo er 2 BR 2 Ba, fplc, enc gar. rnstr. a ts. no pets. r Gain a reliable recep mu. Prv ba. util 752-5903 Soddellba 5400 _........_ ""' ...,_.... m Y •••••••••••••••••••••• MesaV~rde 4plex. $325. shops $350. 963-4196, roommate. . ~CJ\ c: . .ua,,_ Arranged by ••••••••••••••••••••••• DtvWaJt.erKidde&Co Ref . ...,.. d ,,,_.,....., evs. 556-SQn t>Ac:1A"A. me . ....,., . .....,....,,o. .., _ __,,, .....__ • --.......,S E Bristol LAGUNA BEACH MTR. --·--'-~ .. _,.,_iF"VO:>V___ '""'"...... _ • .._.._ TheSing)e'sSolution -• · INN. $16.S/wk & up. Mai INSTANTlN •-•--'-3848 •SHAREAHOME• a..innsR..... 4450 Datebyebotce ~10 NewportBeach serv color TV, heated __,---..;.n ••••••••••••••••••••••• OOYOUNEEDCASH? NolCbance. (CclrnerofBrist.ol& pool. (714) 494·5294. Central loc 2 B~. l\.'J Ba •••••••••••••••••••••••Home to shr, Irvine, alJ 4DB.UXEOFC'S l s t • 2nd " 3rd Calllntrovfew7S2-5411 Campusbeblod N. Coast Hwy. apt. Fncd patio, gar. OCEAN VU 2br. patio, conv's, Jae, Bill. 630-6007 Coor. rm., seat 2S, ail homeowner loans ar-earl's Jr) --------.-• $325.645-4655 pool, bltns. Adlts. $375. dys,SS1-0196evs.546-5l20 paneled,sm.wbseinre· ranged fast. Bor~ow liyl:v-d ~Opportunlty i,71JDJO w/garage; ulll. THE DYLAN. Nice lbr, Lse. Wkdys 499·4044, F t.o share furn 2 bdrm ar. 1 or2 yr. lease. Lake $1000 · $100,000 · OeXJble J't,_,......_ ployerM/F pd. $275 mo. lsl & last frplc, adults. no pets. 381 wlmdst99-2621 apt. 1.n CM $127. + util Forest area. Kent termsbl 'eapasllt creditoboo,f!°" ••••••••••••••-••••••• 497-1236 aft. 6 pm Hamilton. $250. 642·S2Sl . 54.5--0903 Aft 6 Harkins. 0:· us . no U6a· Jobi W-.d. 7075 Maw-ti IHch 376 or 6'&3798 Sf'~~·&lf~dg' ~~ ~ec~; . 7lt-581·9393 """ERLING FIN. S"CS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·r-Rmmt wanted to shr 2br. •u ,. •••••••••••••••••••••• Brand new 3 br. 2 ba. lge o l w n . S 3 2 S I mo. tuota.a1o..1R c---714/955-1610 <bkr> Maintenance Mecb1nlc 1&2 Br. Adults. not pets. yard, encl. gar. w JD 957-0282; eves497·3079 ~~~n:m~~~:;.~· eo':"Hn.. N '"""' '""Bch bcltgmd, electrical; re-F\irn or uni -yrly. h k up , w 1 ll c n s d r t wy, ewport BUS LOANS: Sl0.000 or sident:l.:J. comm. Some Assembles" ...CHAHIC.AL ASsae1aa IOTARY swrrc..s BankiDa EXPERIENCED PLATFORM SECY Must possess xlnt typing skills & like meetln& the public. UMITID· CGlhMMolawlt 630A Newport Ctr Dr NewportJ3e1cb, Coot.act Robert v.ndentraelen 84t-&4&4 F.qual ()ppor Employer & $250. 2421 E. 16th. N. child/pet. Nr alJ. $42S. 0ceanfrool2 Bdrm a~t. In •HOME SHARING SERV Lease 840 Sq ft. Ample more Also 1st-2nd mtgs. phunblngup C&llNalm Hts.646-1801 TSL 64"·1603 true old Med. V_11la. Nofee:tilplaoed prlmg. Marine related $10 000-$10 000 OO~F ......,._ . ,.. Trees, secluded. pnvate 5»2494 bus pref'd. All utiJ & tax-· • • "'~' beach cove. No children es paid. Call K. Witzel, Scott~ HlfpW-.d 7100 Oelux condo Bayfront 1 Brand new 2 Br. 2 ba, ~expanded ytstadel adults, no pets. 2085 Udo P<>?I• secunty ~m Thurin <btwn Bay & plete pnvacy S87S. tncld Hamilton). 873·2058 or Hive immediate open·---------logs In our 'flnal IS· Banking sembly departmenL Re-P100F OPHATOR quires i~ band dex· NCR 715 exper prel'd. terily w /aun 2 yrs es.per Hn 11· 7. Coat.act OI" pets. $7SO. mo. yr lse. Mother w/child will shr 556-0540 T ••••••••••••••••••••••• 49'7·Ul97 4Br D.P. bme. Must be Corona del Mar on Coast ~· mt 5035 -------- $250 I Br Cott.age resp. 493-76216/496-~. Hw)'' 1100 sq.ft. Good ....................... AllCAIL A8lllTT lo slDlll medl auembty. SAM11AGO IAHk Call Cole In1trument 53SE. lst St. Tuetl.n utilities 673-1020 673-4852 Util Paid! Encl. Yant LootclHCifOI Parklni. xlnt frontage. LOWEST ---------i 2br 1pl, Harbor/Adams Available Now (4971P) A ROOMMATE? Sl200mo. 759-9269 'ftllmft•t..r~ Corp. 556-31<>0. E.O. E. 832-5200. E .O.E. area. No children. no S f ffl •. W t •~ I uwnJIUUUU pets. $225 mo 1-1st & $320 2 BrW/Pltio CAU.HOUSE·MATES 3,000 q . t . o ces ...11e~.-.-NOWHllUNO la.n.557-1989 AJC.Enc. YdHtdPool 83Z-4l3t warebouse.Xlntloc.2034 ldT.D .... aho PIX~ MuchMore! {58lGP) The largest service Placentia Ave .• CM. ZftdT.D.Lo-.. Ace l'*<:aattls Ideal apt. mosaic kitchen. R....._. 631-4555 ~ MORE REFER· at&75l2 FalreatTennsslncelM9 _, dshwr, blt.ns, fam rm, Honorma,1.creditcards ProfeSaioaallySincel9'7l Ap\lrox. 400 aq. n. c .2. SaltlwMft.Co. s.!?::: .. patio aarden, sliding A/C 1t 130 E. 17th St, 642-2171 545-061 I __ ___,__ glass dr. Cruit trees. $350. Rent May 1. l.br, •PL lrl Two young male execs, $150/mo. Doyle 548·1168 rww _.. 6t5-4266 rooms, canyon vu. May .. ....a..." .. 3rd nnmate lo Retired couple bu money Cc Pill T-"--be seen week of Moo ~h 3 BR b 1 ,_.. •-t .. 2ndTD' .. _..... 2 Bedroom. 1 bath . 2'Ul _, In Ids tit • are me n .. • 1 .,.__.._. ..asoo t.o ........... • • BRAND NEW fourplex _.,.,, c u • oo Turtlerock, lrv. Ple1se •'" •I --,. Aaeal, l-837-37'4 ~ t. Sa: ti cblldreo. pets. 49t-3932 call eves 955-30«9 rent •••-•••••••••••••••••• e erasa area. ma . • --... TO SUIT 2nd Tnlst Deed w1nted c ldren welcome . t4a.,..1Hdt ll69 $155mo. -Subsl1nUal flnanctai ... lw•a WestAlde Costa Mesa ............. •••••••••u Shr u u.....a bme F 5,000·20,000 Sq. It. t ,..h C ll ft 6 ..,,_........ Call Chris or Meg1n , ... ..,~ -~· • ...-..e • ' PSaeeoliaAve.C.M. s rene• · • a • ••••••••••••••••••••••• N6-41'3. _,_"'""11'' non-s molter. $200/mo. WESLEYTAYLORCO M0-7822 GI 1 ti Jl02 ---------• 81cbelors, 1 or 2 75l~f973.1608extlZ1. REALTORS MH9l0 1---------1·-------- • .. •••••••••••••••••••• Shltp &elde 2 BB, pat. fledrooml 6 Town))ooses liGGI_,_.. ... a• c 1••/ Acctq Bkkpll --------11ar, klda OK. S300. FromSZllUO L..-*lri.. 4 ••• ZIJOaq ft blda, Ile ea ft, Pwi••/ llWObaY 67$-'7a>,M2-t83t Spect1cular sp1. tolal nir•• .,_ three pblM power, 1 yr recre1Uon pro1r1m, ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• -. 1835 Wbittler Ave, LoJta,... ~Today t.o work 2Bi;281 w /p1lio. todal pl'Olnm. 7 pools, 8 Slngle taraae, at.orage on· A·l. n~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oft vlrlom accounUng fl Tan...,., lmmed~p571.. $275. tennlacourta. At Fuhlon ly. m mo. 1918 Wallace, 4RSO Lolt&,_. 5300 bookkeepint ·1S1l1n• "''""" v•-r-.,. l&l...c!, J1mbotee &it San CM,6'5-51218;637-95 Siu• 9 ....................... menll. Work close to New t-Plox b , 2 & 3 JOICJuinHUls Road. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Loslor Found• pet? CaJl your home. Figure Brunita,pvtcommunJly, MISAPIMIS 17141644-1900 Oar1&e,$«>,1t.oraieon&· WAREHOUSESPACE! Anlm1l Au{stance Clem to Sr. Accoun· covered prta. pvt pallos, 1 BR. ms Pool, 1acuui. 325 J . 17\b Place. r IJl&S aq ft, $400/mo. be Leque53'7:22'13, no fee. tant• needed lbruout pool & ~ rm. ~ated adult1, no pell. 2650 SUPa IACta.Olt S1nta An• Ave. Afl or mo to mo 556-1601 Ora111eCo. near bl.l3 & shoppiq ln Harli Ave .. CM. <lleSI 1t Balbo1 Bay Club. UAll, New ~tor•a~ i•r•ce.. ~:~~~~. ==~ associated B Jl C ... f SI •, ii l ·' .. '" ~ ~ S 10: ~ I 1 r" " • , ~ CGl .... •Hatty 557-8122 4500CllDPll Dr, M.B. Assembly TRAINEE ASSEM8lEIS &PACIEIS NEEDED IMMEDIATE.L Yll TOf'PAYlll All ablfta. day, awinl • aravayard IDcludea wkndl. Lona • •bort tmn aaai,nmeota. HoU- d11 & YICltlOD pa7, Hospltall11Uon plu 1vaJJ. 74t (Acrou ~ Orai11• Co. Airport) F.qUll Oppor Emp&o,w deslr1ble aru of S.A. Verde Dr. I . oUHanor Short lerm renl1I. Office...... 4400 doMt.o~ 151 Com· S.A .. reddlah /bntn. F. IOOS.Malo,Ste$01 :f1 :'0.~~c~!~ _Bl_vd.....;.>_•_3'47 _____ , f\mUabed SSSO, unlu"' .............. ••••••••• lmercta1 W11 otr Nwpt 1nawer• Lo Sim No.Tower,UDJiooBanlt Have )'OU read toda1'• t>lau. t44-UU o r LARv£ a BR. or abop-tm. aa«lJ.oCm.pYtent. •Pl>f'OS Blvd.CM. RV•boltunll ' a E W A R D S lnTbea\)'ol()raqe a.allied Ada? U DOt. 751-92 ··=:m mawn adlL W~f6·~I , ...... 400 I lla.I'. SH O/mo. 1127 Hall. All u\ll pald. 56G525/llM183. Aatror n4)11Ml03 ,ou're mlAlQI tbt bat -;1424153 -a • WettclUf,NBaJ.olOO s.a.a78;aft41ra-.aut Jay. I~~~~~~~~' bu'lalnllftt.owal ... ·-·-.... SINIOR TB.Litt ColtaMesa w ... ~ ....... 1119 • H "ced H•lor t• l.r. Th ,...,..alblUtlH are •.ted •eel l•chtde •••••••••• , •••cl ......... Nl .. 1 ... . ......... ..., ..... . ................... ft IF ;fll h tdla• , .. , ..... .,... .. rE""' td. tf ,. .. ...... 14 ..... c... ... G&.8eAll fmllAL SAYIMOS 2300 llartlor Boule¥ard OoalaMeu.CAtlSas tn4)MMJU ~~~ , ' • t • ...:-. 17 ~ t •• ' t. 1 I t t I i } ( t II t cl g n rr - ha . Ne thl I Pe Co ~ - c.,.t...... Dice... .. di ... II I I ...... I I ......... PwWll;JP•t... . ..................... .. ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ...................... . WeOartc::ar,.CJeaers. SUp CO.en. Dr•.,.n.. l..ANDSCAPIN0/0.EAH· OOCSl&adeGL 1 Tootnc:t • .BettM Hou.aecleanlnJ. ''Two lltn Wlll Move YOUNG MAN. 5 nt npr ~~~Spec.dal· a-clD Gr 1h1m.poo. b.s ......... •'ClliollttrJ UPS 'l'taab. tree trim, Roa O.pend/HUOD. Xlat You" We handle ,,.. Ir la w.UcoveriDf. ,., .. ..,: --YT* Alilo~.Allwortl uabJona As plllowa. ~.taunedia&e ..um..,,.._ ref's. CaH for eat. aml mo•t1·offlce • -..~~. ~-Sml repairs. -----------_. par. 'l'nldt IDOllal &Id. a.aom falldea, tree est. aerW:lnl. M2ao7 CHEAPEST baulln lo ~ boulebolG. DlsWsce as M • ••••••• rr. ut, reu. ratH. '-'7'• JJllL Deeonton ·-y•,,.,,..,pD•,.,_ ._ ..... -. -J•pt 1 u u • c UL. T .. local, alao pack.lat. _cusro P~O. CERAJOCTILE ~ welcolDe ..... Y-.R w... ""'"'~ _ ... rJ". -· "'~ - -n n ... Lowest ••••l rate. -yn Gl)I', ,,_,__,_. --,.... .. ~-·-....................... • OD Oarde11ln1 llain· IG-2986or'45-UIO a..EAN'INGCOfortboee Uc/lmrd Cal T w....._ tertor qual work 6 "' ---~ -·- -&9e ..._,..Drt ... 1.1&. C•m... •dltclll t.alllDC'e0eorp ~ wbo cteMrve t.be best. ftaMM2Tt materlaJa. JUebarcl •IUpm.PauJ ParklDI fot repalrt ................... ._ ..................... •••• Rubbiab Haalio1. 'JSGID.'151.un -...t New Is rellllOdel· tubs aealcoat. Llc.NB,Cll CABA.NA II t I ..a•ctrtc Prot. JapueMLud•HP-1'1ndturellovt..,ll'J'ree Pal lk1JP• kt • · WAl;balt.....-n. ftDt caWrtn1. all oe· tk---· lDa Ir J.udeala&. ll••nt. Trimmlnl-a.a. rella· I.mmanlacieulq Co ........................ Pallldaa, ~ 6 utar, =--~ " __ ...._ ____ _..c...._~ IDd.aiowin(,tttmmiq, ble.4'7-97 Far tboee wbo deeerve PETEBSPAINTINO neat, ltefa. Pree ut., __ -.. _____ _ C.,••• ELECl'RICIAN·Prtc:ed sprl)'ing, weedJD&. Free Garbl&daTrub tbebelt. '54177. Expr'd Beaa Rates callOncMWat C·-a ·-, ..... ,. ...... ~opeanall ~LD Chet riabHrM estimate oa estimates. 5'5-'7012 $4 P1CICUP 1 t c "' I Free E.t. Call Gent ......, .. __.. · rpeo er . ree .or occ..._.. you:r •·-..-•mall~ 5&.cM:ll ,....,..-eatimatea,Any.U.~. home. Andre. 5'8·1384 U~ .,.._~ GARDENINO ~23'74or543-3381 ~·•••H•-.. ••••••••••1 _________ , ..... ,,., •••• •--•• T~.&1&411181 d)-s SERVICE Landscaptq. Tree trim· All PROFESSIONAL Nutl*ebellttaturts .,._ 1 t ,,.__.. .. CUstom Electric. lad., 54M3'75 lh•idu • 1 ming. FCleP.~P·t 8 Jyrs Palntln1. lat.er/Ener .... IST. 19J.14Jt nee •nee carpen er. _,.i /Cw1 • eiomm. res. Ir mal.Qt svs G ~ ~-exp. ree ..... . a y Beu wort iuar I043Bl l=-:-:-:::-=-;;::-:-:;:---1~=.=..:.:::.=:;....,.--eomm'l. res. Nojobtoo• ...... 1.; ............. Haoeatlrreliabl Fr 'lllf•-·--•• , .................... Noboru. 841·4043 or ' It .... ....... '5mall.Jobn.Sn-«182 AU phues concrete 41 est.~ e. ee ....................... ••tb.iaecle~ntn1dooeby 897·82 Paintlat. Edr/llltr. Ex· ...................... . blkwrt.. c.tm brtwork HANDYMAN. Somes Ir reliable collpJe. .llefs. pr'd, boaeat. ae.at. reaa. Ible 28. 7yn ccmt. exp. c:.,.t S. wtcie Uc'd/Boaded. MM8!M · O>aam. IDduatrlal. Res. apta. Conscientious $11).1113 U• t UJ Uc'd964-lOUDave WW upcrad8 your bome. •••••••• .. •~::•••••••• ELECrRJCIANS Craft.aman.CallMS--0302 ............... •••••••• ll'l .... ..._._ p., ... ~--b lD xcba.o. for llvLD1--------- caJ'l)et Mao w111layyoon Fouadatlona, retalnin1 Ue.l.Qluredaee920 l 'f'HI••----Brickwork. Small jobs •• ._ ~. -Y space 551-0913 leav or mine. Repairs &t w•Us , blocks, patios. P a n t i 0 I • _.._... Newport. Colla Mesa & R. Sinor. SL Uc., l.Da. Try mma. Dou. • IW .. IWCll L cleamnc toot Gu.ar wort 558-laCLLlc'd. ••c'-t carpel/houa~leu1n1. GIRLS 1rvine.11$.3175evesc me.~:Mbrs. _ ........ HZ ...... )' .. . at biqer savinp.. Free ....................... Lo prices, ins. Guar. RoCllecleanl.Da " office laaAlt adowa cleaned, re· est.~ Cement work of all kines.. WOOD FENCES. ALL 87S.a338/~72IO. spectalilb. Spec. on apts M'McmySpeclaliats Pm.t Yoer Castle .. _ ................. uonable. buainessea, " Shampoo .tr ate lea ~· blockwork. Free TYPES. Built to Order, ~all•J " R.E. work. Serv. 1 lllCK ONLY Sped•lhda1 ln reaiden· ROOFS tmtalled flld.or) boaM9"Qt.l.8C1-4461 Color bri~.:.~ .~ L~ Repalrs,orPoet.saetaod ••••••••••• .. •••••• .. •• daya wt. Bonded, ln· Fireplaces, P•Uo, ti.al homes, lat. 41 UL dlftet• elt.ab35'1'a-Call cptalOmlnbluch.Ctean Cowlsacl• yaubuUd.M2-2073 Haw, skiplo•der dump sured.~9525 vmeer,4t0yra.aper.Uc Please check our re· i'bnikiGUlm54W911 LIWeltilallulfttutoaa ilv.dinrm.ballll.5.Avg ....................... WESI'ERNFENCECO. trt. lfading, l1" writ, "boaded.673-2999 ~ces~c :rff~l ltl-IOOPfOILISS Tuffet, alonl came a rm Sl.50, coucb $10, cbrC'ustom remodelln1 (Ofl· Wood&Cb•lnllnk demolltiooaetc.83H257 lbe Moppets, that's our MOTICI Ted.63&.7085 ' · Comp..ahl.Dde"~ ~ ~trec't ~red ~ Guar ellm pet odor. b'>. 15 YR lD An!a, re-Uc~151 ~1837 name. Cle~ is our Freees&.catl8M-Of.Zl ., o aaa Cpt repUJ-. 1' yrs expr. aideatial/comm, lntr/ex· g8PM! Call548-2393 bow Daily Pilot Clau· Prof palatinc=pm ring r--eedklD abcM 11.lu lluf· Do work myself. Refs ter. Unique " unusual '°"'8lco ··~·-· lfted ads display their ~ft .. en. 8 · Refs. REPAIR ar REROOP' All fet'a 'Nlet ud boullbt it 531-0101. wcrt welcome. Palombo •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• Floors, carpeta, baths, messages with lellbWty ~ 53&"383 • • b i 1 • • • foe $1.95.. You can sell Qinst.NU314 FonnkaCounterTopsin· Painting. wallp•p!9r, walls, patio&, windows. andlmpad?Ourad.s.we • tyt:ti!t•. 01 ~ your tuffet and Iota cl SELL idle items wtlll a stalled to your specific•· carpentry, gea'I mau:iL Spec. price for vacant re-are prcud to say, really JJ'S PAINTING. Great ~ .. ~=pc>-· other tblnga tbroa1b Dail)'PilotClaulfiedAd. WANTACTION? &m.Latestcok>n&de-& rep•lr. J . Wau1h. sfdenees. e el reaulta. Phone wortatgreatprices. · Dally Pilot Cluatfled &f.2.5618. Qasslfed Ads 642·S618 signs. Free est. 6'7S·3118 $f,2-0ll01 1bose G\.\)'S 974-0810 642-5678. 5S7 • UMl Ada 142-5178 Ads. Call la..5171 Wtmlhd 7100 HtfpW..Mct 7100 HtlpWmted 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 HelpW..e.t 7100 HtlpW-.d 7100 HalpW..e.ct 7100 tw,W..W 7100 ................... ....................... ...•.••................ . ................................................................................................................ . tWpW..teca ....................... BanJdng CARWASHHB.P COMPUTEI Dent.alRecept.Deskonty. ~PoOdPvcpertllloe · HOUSEKEE.PER Ladiea need extra la· Iba. Perm State••& Fullorpart-Ume. OPE:ttATOlt Good benefits. H.B. And Hostess. 10·3PM, mature 7-3PM shill u; come? Expanclinl, will J)OlliUoa. Sl.arUDC salary c..tS...Clttil ~ee?_CarborWBlasCbM PCoart thpe help wanted1 • 893-5032,~ ~slDE ~~:.!."!· .!,a~1 food gueat~CM.MM716 =.1:.~=e~ !"_!! ~ !;!Ti,Leom&rucl2 ac...: Needed for small ln•1-____ .... __ . __ .__ mputer operator or DENTAL CnA.In. ·~--.. _.. Call E WC I t ......, •--.... depeudrn& ba.aJc w/xlnt Data Pol.ot UOO. Some ASSJ!n'A.NT, xlnt OP· G· .. -~ Howieteeper Uve·LD, no · · · or app • office complex in benefi Call ..... u f. lUER, dependable. bookkeeping experieoce portunity, x·ray ucea.se --,~· cblld, aml family. Gd ll8UW. Oraqe, Calli. Paid in· n.s. _.., or responsible, AM & Even· neceuary. Exc.elJe nt req.~. P/time for Temus Cl~b wqea..Ref.a.S73-!llH2 Laundromat Asalstant. aurance • •acaUon. _•.-ppt~·-640-S __ lOO_. ___ __. lllg shifts. Apply In workinl con4ltions. lnHmttBdL Onlyexprd Mature womaa. p/time. Piclrup truck helpful. --------person Gift Shop, OC Good compaay benerltl Dental Sec'y/b"pr for & mature need apply. lndustrial 673-UlllO Send nswne to O.P.A. Airport. Apply between lOAM it Newport Beach or· Mon/Wed/Fri ooJ,y. Call &UEJEAM JOIS tl Bn.w:*hoUow Dr. San· ICBL'YSIRYICIS 3PM ooly. Miuioa Viejo tbodontist.642-4612 536-8833 taAna.82105 UNITED CAUFORMIA BANK 222 0ceanAve. l.agun• Beach 49iM546 E.0 .E. CAS .. a Need lndiv. w (min 1 yr cashier exper, Pleasant personality & ability to deal w /public. Xlnt co. benefits. Call 844-3389 9am·noon THI llYIMI CO. 550 Newport Ctr Dr Newport Beach Equal ()ppor Employer Cashier IFoodt ~~~~~~~~~ F /Ume. Exper pref'd. BEAUTY OPERATOR, Niguel H•ir Fasblons, needs &ood all around Nights. Newpo!Ur Inn. 714 /644·1700 Call Bubara,ext523 E.O.E. hair .•'Yliat. '9&-2221 or CASHIER 49l.s128 llartne Hardware retail llCYC&.IMICH store aeeka caabler. Proo'esaive beach shop. Beadl loca, national Co. unflmll e d future good benefits , some posalbilltiea for en· weekend work. call B. UWsiastic worker. 111.D. 1 Morrisoo,645-lnt 111.0542 I m P o r t • • 2 I 7 O 1 Dent.al Alliat. cbal.r skie. General Office Mature Ur'fClll ""4/W-. LIASI• .. Marguerite Pkwy., !Ills· N.B. Pleasant group woman w/generaJ office &MaT,.._. Attractive eputment MJUUl.l'l'Trainela AJl om~ & indu.slrial skills oeeded. lnteresl· l.DI. temporary assign· meats waiting fM you. Work when you want. Paid vaca. You don't pay, we pay you. OrCalO... tr..aOfflu Mwpt lclt Illa 1441 Clerical STAT TYPIST sion Vlejo. 831·1740 or pr•ctlce. Exp pref'd. stills &exceU. telephone complex aeeka indlv. 495-1700. 640-1122 penooality for a 1 girl of. ASSBtKBS w/IUCceuful leaslng es· UJOTDI Co11 mt•ra....ch · lice in Nwprt Bcb. Hrs PACKAfi&S per. tosbow apta" ban· IMT'BtVIEWllS Dental recepliooist, 1'111 S.S. Please call ror appt. ,_.... I··--die leaaiDI arrange· r.-.1 s.__. days Expnec ?SZ-7321 --~~ menta.lluatbewillin&to .._ 1 ... N HOMEMAKERS: • ~ SOLDllllS wort weekends & have AreSeetiacCareer Choose tbe days you . General office, gd typing • IMSPICTOllS adaptablescbedule. MlndedPeopleFor: work. Pt-time days " ~washing & g~ clean· skills needed, 50WPM, 10 Day-Week-Month or Allo, need temporary p/t MAMA.all&•&S wknds. Positions lD cen· 1111 .Ptr for eqwp rent key by touch, must be tonger tt's)'OW'decialoo leaaing rep to wor 11a ... ~forf/tlme tral location test cntr at store. 16·20bu /wk. sbarp. on details. Ap· ..... & '2nd 11 .. , ... avail: weekend.sonly. ~Jtlme clerks oo 2Dd &c Westmi.nster Mall. Great 66-0760 •• 11 bei.n •-L ...... uu... call"H -· ,...c•Uoos I .... en. Paid vacations. You .......,_ sblfta. Ir l.Dterested. hra, 10·4pm " some DRAFTSPERSON n 4-893-3'21 or 531·1'7?5, don'tpay.wepayyou! hm"tilooon contact our nearest ~~~~~C';u~:~ Xlnt~w/expanding asJtforGladys. CA.LLOR THEllYIHICO IDU'Utorgoto grad&enjoy people. No firm. bdivisiooerpon· GBBALOFRCE COMEINTODAY! 550=~Da ::J:.m~.!;.:.: sellinglnvolved. ly. C.A. Reynolds Civil Eectroo1 firm in CM ILi I" ...,. Call Office l0.5Pm EDlineerinl. NB. Apply seS.s ~ w Jgeo'l .ofc ~LL.:J F.qual Oppor Employer for~~~ 714/llM-0908 m9-5893 & Ute bktpog exper. r--•~Elzml-er cOOk ·omva~ 1nc1ucSeaA1P•A1a .Ex-1:,~~~ ...._.s.c..-v .,...._~ -1 E.per pref'd. Mostly Neat appearance, 1ood per'd, reliable. mature SteltO Newport Bela Baa)' 1..bklll t:J:a law~~~~~~~~ eves. Xlnl benefits, drivinl record, over 11. penoo desirable. Val« ID-14'1 ale aeeb llrl fl1dl;1 wbo salary open. Apply at Delivery of blueprints & Electronics, S4G-92184. desires resp. DllUea LD· Jolly Roger, 203 Marine graphic art products 1.n elude Ma& Clnd D opera· Permanent po sition Ave, Balboa hie, NeWpcrt "1'uatin area. tioa II ba...Wng clfenta. ' ! . \ 'J yr exp iD null shop a must. Call 6'75-4J510 for more inlormaUoo anllablelmmediatelyi.n 673-8720 $2.65+ lncenUve. Call G£111Al 1~ Xlnl stUla a muat.1--------- CAS .. &fSll1adrl dtvtsloa ccotroller's of. Cook 1 I &IN700. INl'"U.IUll _MUJ.90 ___ . -----IJll.11DAjlef' for matenlJty ' -r• nee for dependable, fast • exper. App Y n I A8W'H (MECIWICAl) abop in WestmlDster Full time employment. typist capable of typing persoa before 4pm ; Tate DrycJeaningCol.lnterGlrl LRDUllUI~ LEGAL SECRETARY Men,!,~~ =1~·~~~~~~~ ~~~!;.400 Main ~~~~~~~mill w~Needed!!! Puncb pr.en exper . =H.C:j1}1!,~~ :i~!io:~1~Z.s~uc0r'!'; • aneaY '759-1622.10.mto8pm WOlabotypecorrespon· StocltC'lertul neceu. So. Orange Co. llfst bave xlnt skUls .... appt. _______ _ No exper. necess. Must CHILD E dence and perform otbel' COOKS , Shipping & Receiving ~ i;:. t°e>bs~ ~: salary b8Sed upon exper, --------be dependable & able to CA.It accountioc /clerlc•l f\all or p/tlme. Exper. ELECTIOICS Must have phone & relia· dleback Personnel Ag Mag card aper desira· Ult boxes. S3 Per hr + Resp. prl needed during func:Uoos. Requires typ. pref'd. Mesa Verde ble tramp. Long & short cy, 28570 Marguer~; ble llAllCUllSJ &~-~. beoefi5 its. Apply, =· ~b.&V'kle~: ~ apeed of 60 wpm and Ooov. Hosp. 661 Center <LABTECllNJCIAN) term uslpmeot.s. Holl· Pmvy, Ste 2l6. M.iasioa 1 ____ 847_.fCKI ____ , v~ busy aa1oa la in N....iuu.. ystems Corp, rdaled experience, pre-St. C.M. 548-5585 Solid state exper. So. d•Y Ii vacation pay. Viejo.-.s627. Loans need of a hbulous 4361 BlrcbSl, NB. (near _644-_7(»5 __ att_s_:_ll0p_._m_. __ ferably with Vydecliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Orange Co. 98.00 Per br. aHvo~p.ltaJlzaUon plan,_________ 1..,."'EPBEND...,... manicurist with all OC Airport) Equal Op. CIVILDESlGN typewriter. Excellent cooec..«rrcHEM Free Job. Other Fee ail. nv llill""I ·'"'ls G be fi 'P()rtlllllty Employer benefit package and Jobe. Call Saddleback _ _..._. LO.a. ... .a.~ ....... • real ne its, ~~~~~~~~ ENGINEER MAH ,.._,llL-•~ ~-"'..,..,...' paidvacatioo,auperpeo. -Subd.iviaion exp. ooly. working environment. Days & Dipt.s. Apply Penonne1 Agency, 28570 Fbr bealtll IJP•· Xlnt op-Exper'd Loan Agent pie to work with. For In· """-<r--t c A R Id Ci ·i Ple.se call domestic -""-!PM Marguerite Prkwy, Ste por. for .,.,. ... a men & d 1 all T -_,../we •r . . eyno • va employment man•eeror ........ 216, Miaslon Viejo. .--neede to generate t.erv ew c errence P/time 8-12. Landscape ~g, NB. Apply apply ln person belweeo ·:=-~ ~-::~: ~~l~o·:::: ~s'io~he c:~stal :'=' (714) 6"-2800. ~~~ctural firm.1---------t 9:00a.m. ancU:OOp.m. ?S1I • wy, · · 3141 C..-Drin p~y~~cal educallon Seal l:.cb io-S:O c1'::. F.qual()pparEmployer CLBICAL S • U'W'& FE Experienced 1ardener for 54M7 41 belllful. Apply in penoo, Real estate Uc. req 'd. IOOKkEEPB Newport financi•l firm """1.. OOOKS. brutfait lunch apt complex In Costa (Ac.roes From Tues ft Wed. from lo-3 Contact Nell Bosman, F' / Chg. t o aasu me often x1nt beDeftt.s for IMTIRMATIOMAL fs dinner. Ma Barker's, Mesa. ts50. mo. 511.t days Orange Co.Airport) only.F 1V80all30 Magnolia (213) 86CMl677 or (710 respoosibility for client sbarpi.ndiv.selfstarter. c--~.a.·TION 212E.17UISt.CM wk.64S-3381.or~*I F.qualOpporEmployer Ave, . ey. 636-0llSl. bltkima In C.M. CPA ofc. 2Dd Sb1:ft sem-1: aoam. VIV"~ hslptrial Spa hie. LOS ANGELES Mu.st havestrong payroll Acc1ountiD1 t,qd belp(ul, ~So. Main Street C 0 UN TE l H EL P: FACl"ORY POSITIONS FEDERAL SA VIN GS tax exper. Call S46-9ll6 10 key by touch. Must Orange. CA. 92668 P /time Days or evea. Cera m I c Casters • General office. Good lYJ>-Equal Opp Empb'r m/f -----------type 40.50 wpm. Call (TI4) 553.1300 Depeadable people only. gluers, fini&bers, day & log 8kills, me 10 key ad· b-mce ca.,_, IOOIOCEEPEI fi44..GIOaskforSbirley. C•ll Captain Mike's nlgbt shits. Over 21, der. C•ll 548·7040 for has immed. oPeOlDo for LOT ATTIHDANT y n g , a g gr es 5 1 v e An Equal ~2875betwn2-4pm. permanent position _a..;..ppt.;;._ _______ 1 RS. grads. Xlnt .Orking Must be 18 or over with Anaheim acct 'g firm CLERICAL Oppommhy Employer CUSTODIAN =en~tfr pre· GIRLFIJDAl c onds & benefits. valid Calif. drive rs ~nf /~~ ~:'f:r: PART-TIME .P/Ume Newport Beach Vob8nn of C•liro;::cr. Sportswear mtg. needs Premfum Audit Clk Ucenae. Benlfit.s--Oood quarterlies & misc offc 5 Hrs dally. UAM-4.PM Clerk CallEves .613-1690 34215 Dobeuy Park Rd.. well organized , s elf Lile t yping, good ~YfNPIRSOM duties. Ground floor op. Mon·Fri. Opening for MAILCLBJC DATAEMTIY Capo Bcb. starter. Inventory con· w/figures,hvypbones. porturuty Exper req'd. ~~e ~!~fe~~~ Need energetic person Acea slS..Cleril FACTOltYWORJta ~~Pt~sales. W"llr=~~b-::lng l"':J••• 71 '956-7800 1 f 11 w/inltiatlv~ & ~ ap· FUil lime posIUon open p~ _ __.ed for batch U '""-'d . ---------t operate sa es o owup lndi _ .. ,, d · a Id di l ~""" ~ opera ODS. c.Jlper m Bookkeeper for Dr's offc systems for new car de-~·distrtti~.rec':fv": ~ ~ators fora! mlldng & other misc. GIRLFRIDAY common band & power in lrvtne. DuUes Include: aler. Position located in log, small repair ar misc Bas i c / F 0 0 r m 1n 1 • work, some heavy ,lift-tools. Must be flexible. billing, mainlainin1 C.M. Lite typing. Good duties. Some be•vy lift. computer. So me ex-ing, chem ic11l ex~r. Uni1qtiue &f outalanding Apply In Person ledgers & receptionist. starting sal, adv within logreq'd. perieoce ls deeinble, but helpful. Mus t p us pos on or an u cep· W.COI 1 rw.Co Mature woman w/exper 60 d•ys. Apply, Wed Call644-33ll89am·nooa will tralD l.DdMc:hlal with physical. $3.30 p/br min. llonal, amblUollS elrl l1510Bnx*Hunt. FVly r eq 'd . As k for Dr. April 26tb, Nu Orm THlllYIMICO demoostnledtyplngac· N.tiooal CuelnofCallf. wbowantsvariely.lood S:ao..2MoothnaFri Johllaoo aft a pm. (714) Plana, 3194C Airport Ce Dr _ __. _.... W k 3'35 W. MacArthur, San· pay & fine wortcing con-~-··'OppEmp'-m/f u•,. ..... STitt:.-1 550N--aler CllJ'acy ...... a.,.,...... or """""~"" .-. "'30 ds n. ... ~ •--Iud Ute ....,._ ~· ---1---~---· -----t LoopDr.from9am-lpm. ~Beach in pleasant envirorune11l ':,.AIJ.a . .,,.....,_, ..... : ~.~oall5t. TopPa, Bookkeeper, exper in CLBICAL F.Qual()pporEmployer with good company ---------•public relaUons & aU tntervlewlni. pro· Set-up & a&ort nm mill. ANUFACTURER Penon wanted to work ln our productioo dept. fill· Ing palat fs other relalecf items. Must be playing with at least "° cards out ol a deck or 52 lD all areu. No jokers al· lowed. Good benefits. starting pay Ii workintt ccoditioin. Apply at UiOO w. A.ttca S.A. pegboard s ystems. Maintenance Secretary, benefits lncludlog 2 FACTOllYTRAIMBS around helper to prlv•te feuioaal Interior lalbe, punch press. Gd lrvine area..Salarycom· musttype4t0wpm. l850 CLBkTYPiST weeltsnc•Uonafteroae Art & crafta, exper Investor. Poslllon r e· Deaignen to share de-oppo r . to expand--------- meosuratew/exper. Call mo. Please call for appt. Nwpt Bcb life l.naur. co year, company P•ld belptl.ll, we make woven Q\&reS very good educa· 11.gnstudio,call83CM1947 w/growlng co. 5 Day/40 cal typlst/recep for $57-0SU 6'5-5000 ext 520, 8:30-5 needs 1ood typlat (50 group insurance, creclit wood shades. ·Apply tloo, late model car, + hr n Co pd llfe/boep NW]X Ceot.er olc. P/l' • • _.,,__ Mon-Fri. ~oo.for1~~~~uU~. ~<>n;.~~Ct10at.a.ST Kirsch Co, 17352 superb grooming. ap· J.mtor, day/porter, CM Ins. Cole instrument Mon·Frl, l ·Spm. Sal """'"~'""' _... DI"...,........, ..,,.. ~ -"' Arm.slrOq, Irvine (or pea.ranee Is wardrobe. area. Hrs 7-3:30. Must be Corp. (714) 55&·3100. open. Send resume U> RIU.CHAR•I ClBJCAL per deairable Sal '850 o··LYPILOT Redhill & MacArthur). 542-7127. neat. App_ly 1101 s. E.0.E. Box •121. D8il.)' Pilot. typing, permanent full Newport Ctr ruiancial Good co. benefits: "" 540-8503. Gnnd.SteH.SantaAna. OostaMesa,93S28. Ume, for Trust AcCOUDl· ft rm ls seek lag resp. 833-8450. :mW. Bay St .. CM ---------1Gi.rls, Sandwich Sbop, nr. S.?pm. 138-'°'3. Maid. live-1.D, lovely N.B. -----'----- lng S3H 725 Mr. Lyons person for cbalJengi.DI betweeolbebounof FINANCE OC Airport. Moo lbnl bome w!Private room. 5111edlCaJAsatforDr.'aolk Clerlc.l Po •. T~l.nl Clerk Typlat/Recep· l:OOACaMl·l~~PM Fri. llam-3pm.. 556-0670 J.._...~ .. r days. wknds off. Eng. limited lo medical •--&.Lo-F c Mi .... Large Resid'l/Comm'I i P /time, mature. speaking preferred. weight control. lmmed -·c"'· I atills, fisure •ptlt e Uon1st. uat be able to, A~tple•se Builders/Devel ....... , re· ar D~•--OK •10 u--~eepi ... -1 ... empl.nvment Musl be W t ..._.__ h I ti aaawer mWU button con .. q·"-,_ .......... alv,...to .. __ .. HELPERS for Cle--•-g ""'"'"" _,.. • l75-v 1 ~own-..lr~ .. :-. Noa'· ma .. .::!.. ._ ..:_ponslble. co4:.i;!:/110c~tedpu;5':A. ~,:~'Xi:tun~ aolepbone.TypeSSwpm 6 2-4321,.0277 ........ ~........ IKlaU IUIUI ~ ..... • ..... • ·~ .. and ··-ently need F JC conds •-co. benefits. "bave nice Ole appe•r. EqualOllllOl'hlnity finaDce div. Strooi COO· homes at apta. P\IU/p. Newport amtr.~ -..59..s.llt.i·Frl -· • Ple Wand EinolOY8" t.u to develop commit· time.Owncar.546-3420 Janitors. cpl, liviog qtrs. --------~eeper •1"""1 A/R ComactSblrley,644-060. aae contact 8 • mpoy8" tneotaf~pro loam& Apply io person, MAIDS. exclusive mot.el cal.llECEPT/BKPR bacqtowtd. Good op-~!!6• Equal Opp Deck band• pa1ot.er for equity ca . Track re-Belpwantedfull ftp/llme Newport Dunes, 1131 tn Laguna Beach. for Radiology Office, portunity for the right Clerical ___,.. • bo F II cord & a a m\.ISt. Write ODelllna, daya 4s 1t.1nllbt Back n .... Dr. NB. F/time. Call49t-8521 P /tlme/F /lime . Pe1 person. Please call for SI. TYPIST . C .... TYPtST ~~~~ ::·att ue: Vaco Developers. Inc. ablJb. ~Several poa OM ,,_,, board •ystem. must be app't.frJ't.7090. Newport Ctr financial 813-427hakforJlm. P.O. Box ZNt, i.a,una avail. Oootact Jim, Del JAMl1"0&S Malm..:: area. PIT. uper fn all types of BoyWutedapprox 16-17 I Dictapbooe firm ta aeetinc reap. ...._.___ Hllll.13851 Taco,21128. E. Bristol, P /Ume Hea 9·llpm. evee .. 0beoeaLApp. mediealimuraDce.Some d ~l i hall -' -·-• .---iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiilliiit NewportBeacb. ln82 Arm.atront Avo ly 1101 S. rand. Ste If. tn'Df.54.Mt41 frt ol · Lile f•ctory {IBM Executive =:. !!.. Muat~'!! For busy Newport ftllST JOe lrvtne.CaDSt0-1111. ' Saal• Aoa. IH·t0U . ..-.:....-=-------:O:e!~:mf~3:!tttn: t'Repro acouratftyplat, aome Tra.,.l A1ency. llual llw..., HOSllSS Mpn. ltaltlt/aec'y p/t. pdwcrbr.~ '1'edmical atat~:i'clbir-rr· ~:.~a:C.~ c..&..... ="='=~ IHllTWI Maida; top ..... paid. =-~o.&aMeu. Ca-.nu•--.~!.,.~~y ~~-cir ..!,l,:.1;. In a c1&71loo-Frt. Brl1 Free training For P/l' afttt 3pm Bob Buras """IUllW. Apply: Tbe Inn at r-per~._' -:::.-nu-•-~-•· a: ..-C. ~tun a wa1e + 1gllea1e. rew•rdln& c'areoer, 1485 Reatauraot, f'aabloa l:J1tra income. 3.s~ ~~~Qaeat AllllltltAl'lte'J, t&al.l ...,. u. • nrr· -'""' ...,.... • -· '""" ... ,_.. -.-.1 possible 1st ... ~ ..... .__. 1a1-.1 N.a.. bow'I a al1bt. Costa ., um., Dr'a ofte. Expw rot cust fumtture abop. alpment.s. Rollda1 ll muet. '['yplnctowpm re-1-----=--=--..-~-::--1 Mu,st h•~ a:;:,.~ -lltA • Balboa areas. prcf'd..._ EdwardJcqensen Furn, v a cat Io D Pa Y • q'cl Xlnt wo'4dnl cooda Ntay....... 9 lo 6 pm, Moo·Frl. flnneecleant"«.fWl or pit, ... ~/bow. Call (714) u-n~ 2S72l Obrero Dr, wilt G. Hoapltallsatlon plao A co. ll•tnta. Cooi.ect F/Ume. '""lY ~uto SSl-0442. own trw. Top aalef7. 521·11U. -..... ........ ~ Mission Viejo lndusl Pt, avail. Sblrlel.~. &lppl)'. 28142 Avary to-TGOorMHl71 u 71&1301 aert--.i ... 1.s, t • ru. ~ at s.1>. frwJ. WlDtratabftCl&lndi• to1111•111 ,..,_... yp, 1118dooV1ejo llo&llec....,.,.., Tuel-Fri, llYl'UMCHOI'& operate 1osert1n1 Top MODI)'. Must have C.Ut•A,.SOM lo&. pbaDe. lmelJ Nwpt . ""9 l ·SPll. Call JaDlce't Im.med~ for a maddne. llllllbecltpto• car.Dl&l To W'Olltt a vertical com-ofe. O!port. to learn Denial Aul, ortbo, cbr, &SIAMS1'Bll Ann'a.MS-llOO P'l'imt Of"· l dable •able to lift mall d mer c I a I c • m • r a . 3141 C'<c Drift ttn.nd• bu&. '152-tl.23. NB.•~ dp. Os1bo fJIP • NI ume oel,y. APlltY la ..... .,.. fer few bn Yr min e11P«'· oa Univac bap. ~· Natlooal II• k • t la 0 • • I 0 0 hmlll&r w/PMT pro-146-4741' Cec:U•W...._ R.D.A.req.1Ga31 ~tollana,.;,:, •• aes:a, fcre~lad.JA ino nq'ct: Apply: .Jeck $JltAllm '311Blttb bouMldd ~al:": ceu. &11pe~el 'd. (Aawaftola .._. DmtalAm't-DoJOGW&Dt ble Auatht, Draper'• ... '11oat bne car. 2-~~~L~n:' S&, N.8 . ( ear O.C. 80t .... ~"1811 P/tlJM. 0t bwtl&a._~ O....,.C..A1,,..t> · S.. .. IO -,_.wk. aw ln ortJ9o ubll ==-~Pl~ _ ... ...._LID...__ ____ -c ~:--=-rr1."':') Airport) Byaal Op· :::-.......... u; ~~-~U.11.'tr• ~ ..... QllfGl'SlllPloJer 1A1W tdttoa. P1Acem1at all JOW' RDA aJtUlat -., -....-- -".,. portlillll;tEmPIOJW Ol'l'l"h"lCelleaarl tta.-. 111111. 1'5l42M. MMl1ll lllM Help? IQ-SC711 m.mo ~·· Oi\LY N.OT _ _ ' Mondlw.~lal. 1t78 ~~~ ..... !!~ ~!!~ ..... ?!~ !~ .. '!~ .. ~ ..... ?!!~ !!'!1P.:~!.~ ..... ?!!4! ~.~!~~ ...... ~ .. ~~ !"!' .............. ~~~ tw. ....... 71 :_ W..eM 71 OI ...., W..ted 7100 SALIS S~ESS Ser.te. tal!On At tea-'IOOL SHA.llPENER. ex. 1 Dd•wa Pulls, AXC, for ...._ ..... -......... , i-;T. .. --............ ..,...................... C01medcl)9pertment =~='*·Pat· cl&Dt, ::I': d. Day Ii ~llatblneTool Jft1StC BOXISt,,..,... ..a.,twuola. ·JllaW-ftwl o.k ~ P.l••hrt wuUd . llC8'f/fY"ST Spel claltylDrq !!.°,,_i mmo o.tp. can Eves...ast~n:-. Cll.~,f· lab St. ptawl Nlckei.deolltt 181.mo(n4> b,.l'. req'd. Applp. s.lary, boouMS. comm. rro.tofftce 1~arance. ocated 0 Ne .-or ~ Pll••vat>bll Wo.rlill•a QualitJ ba. Bueb 1mn1....a oppr. AH-accural• typllt. able \0 Beach la aeeklo: a SEA.llSTRESS, upu lo .NB. Tow TNU Drt~en ex· l•r1eat Hl•ttloa. Dalmallu lO mot. old _ Sltd. ._.Part. tJ DOW I.DJ So BtUtol. b.aadle !Navy pboata. ~~·t:0~ c'c:: alt..-ationa. top pay. SEl' UP 6WAl'J'F.R Holl-per'd. Top PQ, AP,P.ly. Cataiotue SS; nest I la-~~~ alfectloute -..... ...S -8.A. w/aecurat.e meuaae•. ~;;;i, POiit'-,. ~°"~ 1:[ lml. 25105 La Paa 06WTOW\Ql, 1000t.mile sues sis. Also tub ,.. · '1..S Ml time. ~·d • r PU5SM•MP/f ~ l~~e:(::t quires. proven ulea Semtariee tat:t'.J:::..lf1lls. COG· Aw.NBIU-1252 llltlftv::°U:~'~an:; ~toY• 1045 U---. ~ ~ Some es~ clffirable. maO...•siM,113-«Jll ·~ID::'~:::·.~~ · • =e ornat'• •'Taj •••• 0•••••••••M•••••• t:v•m. 11ot:' wknd ~ • No. H.B. &~iw. lYflSTS =~:;,.~~,:;i:; TUN~ E:_yl·N·· llu.J"a~tloorau Goldea Retriever. mOY· ..__ ~. "°v~~!_tu----~· UC9"110MST Weolfuaoxhtt1tMtint &SBIEEJAl(S aom• 'ProductJoa. felbnd lD Lot'Asisel• btl.oeada&oodbome. ........ •• ...... e ....... v. PushbuUoo awtchbd. Lite .... .., miallo & ''Tlmea" and ''Suna•t ~ liosp.lllCen&erSt CM ............ ~ ,_, + COID o IACUna· Vle!Q,49W280. • Hwillncton 'feach City typ & cler. Apply Kir11cb colJ\pany benefltt. OorouDeedutramooey To the advutates o1 Ma11aalne." American All wbl 1 yr Peelapoc>. MUaSISAJDIS School Dtat., ..,49•9931 Co. 17352 Arm•t.rona, Pleue call Personnel at •aUoY' varlet)'. Let the Sewln& Operawn. over. commlMloll tales in a lGternatlonal; 1802·0 fem. No eblldren. &OIMl!•S per mo. Allllb, 135 14t.b lrvlne (nr lleCJblll & 21.W1&-0561 to Ht '*P &ll frMdom. Is flexibWty of k>ck·ilqle ~ .. Good ~dept. aton..A fWl· Kettertn1; l.rvlne, CA N).7&,14Nllt n.c to dderly patient.I St.H.B.Ph:.-i. MacArthur>. 1Pltl'VMwappoUWDent. wort:inl temporary u , Jll'.Y.e&Hm.Dept.3• time~ QOW exilt.1 81Z'11.4. Tel. <'114) 754-lm WllltnlnUqu.allfied.AU ~. THIGUILDDRU. tlpinentaofyourcboict 9 Ht P \)JN C " In OW'~. TV t OpeoWed.~Sat. Dos. 1ood •/kids, =:t~e.tr.f" .... llW.ISTATI i:.-.. -=.=.. ::=.i:.-Call Im-~=::~: :.r:;...~·.. ~U-cell· SALISPIOPU a.!~WILIMOW . ~0~ office • t~r· receivinl elm. 1urance u well~~~ ..... ," 1010 ,.due IOIO OfRCI Look.In& for a creat place z --.ttioDI tn ..... cttt ... " l'll r~ ' 0 overload •~~ ~~ pla~a ~of•• vacaasona. prcllt-.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••-•••••••••••••••••• Gm'l dutin for person to work? Before you ..-...... -~ --Urc&otil '""""• 4emp&oyeediscount.t. &: FRGHT DAMA GEi> * 1 IUY. w/1,)'p.lna & bkkpn1 ex-mate a declalon, call e~ Century 21 Of· $21.a all areas. No jokers this lnt.erelta you p&eaae uarP()lNT SALE. J308 * * * per. Oppor. to learn c6m· 540-5511 and visit with fice! Call for appoint 557.0061 allowed. Good benefita. atoplnorcalJM4·1212 w. Wamer nr Harbor, Good used PUmllure • puter operation. C.M. Dave Myhre at Heritage ~~~~~~~r: DO YOU PLAY 372381RbSt.NB ~!.~ n... •rrlay S.UAAa.m.a'll ADl>Uances--Oa J will CPAolc.Call5*a3H Real Eatate, Newport +WbywearegroW\ng' THIOR~M'O "t'l'V IB --1 ldlorSELLforYou. OFFICE MANAGER, Beach +Getyourllcensefaat! H to. ...... _, t. •Secretary W.Altao.5>.A, 47PttUt-w.MI Fer =~Refri MASTlaSAUCTIOM neat. t.)'pint, book.keep-+Wbywetrainbetter! c• .. r for Jott •t LOAMSICIETAIY Sl• .. U&CLllX ... .,,........ . /.,.,... 1 646H16&llM'25 1n1. non-smoke r pre-8&.t.I EST"'TE +How l O earn big Ort•• .......... Wi ..... ~ ... _ _....eel for Write ac ma orden, F.qual()ppEa:iplyt"M/J' 'llOR:inlornott5'1-8l33 f d S I ~ A -..y•. ...a .._ llU ..._ ~ ---~ _,_ .. ___ Neal 7' er-&.. .!1,,.~ a ary open. S"'LES .......,. S.. o,el&Q!p MW small independent bank .. ._ ............... ~-~ -...... v A Be&ladYOUcalled! .... w Ill w.. ...... w/xlnlbenefita.Salcom· bandwrtim.. IOIDe typ-. .••. w ....... aDrytn Rerculon material Before you make a mov-979-1050 .... 1ft• 95'7~8·3CM Typist. P/f for coo1hu1 ""-_ ....... _,_ .................... Y-'1~ and.._ .Pl"''d OFFICEHELP e-cive us a call. We Ceutu.ry,21&.al'fRealty fie .. u •. Prewlo .. mensuratew/exper. Call .._ · · firm in SJC. 10wpm +. UIA ~. wuoo.._-., ~to.:MS.'Seu- Exp'd to run property bave got a better deal at ........ __..... w Sw.l,forappt.. M0-~100. SHOP KAN. hand tool as· statis & report typin,. ~·~1: rnana.cemenl ofc. 3 day Select Properties. ResUurant we w9 .... yo& c• Secretarial. p tr help ln sembly, Cull time. start 851-6212. $130. Free DeJ.iVe:ry. CASH PAID ::,r:1. ·~.~~!;..=: ~~:/=." ~~"' BOB'S Mu. Jett, 111 • • ~·· ................ &~~-.t:," c':.: ":'l':t Typist. • rr. to "'"t · ~As.~ !:.1"...~·=~·· ~.!.. ~~J;r.-C' 11 C::. SELECT 1-Of 1'1lo 1116-7302. ... ~•• &d ...... abU. ""'"'Ave. C.M. ~ =.::.v:. ':, So. CoutAppll~ Twn bed1 . 'Motorola T'PROPERTIES llcJloy) SECRETARY SPRAY PA INTER procedures req. RexNi ffi4)5.11-38Mor53'7~ stttee>comole.2niceden PARTTIMEOHLY Immediate openJ.ngs In SALES We are looking for a Helper. 18 yrs old or Products.631·2900-cbrs, 1 llv rm chr. Must oow be emploYed & f -11,, restau ts t qualified • ....-ary wi'•.. over. no exper neces~. Washer dryer and Dlt-751-871'8, 897·9575 aft 4 our a......, ran a IW.f DAY ~"" "' M tb "OOhrt lYPIST h b A dli freetowork In my small REALTOR nearby locations. We re-Ugbt bookkeeping ex-us avecar,..,.. o was er ·l con t on • ..;;.p_.m_. ______ _ apps business of air or Realtor Associate. quire no previous exper. NICE PAY! perience to aceompli.sb start. '168-87"9 NEVERAPEE srs.eacb~ '1' Herculoft Couch. good treatment equip. M-S Have need Cor 1 good ac-Joln our friendly team. varied ofrlce duties . STOCIC RM CU< Nat'I coln """auU'asbioo Se.-s frost-free Coldspot eoad. twin bed, frame. 6-LOPM -& Sat 9:30AM-Uvesalespersoo. Comeaeeusloday betwn Muatbewell edl U .. i " bl """ _...... N -.. _t ---·--" hdbrd ld 2::11PM ......... mo sal. or a __.._ Enjoyable phone wor~ groom n-you .now rece v s p Iale seeks gOod typist to naul-ew. -or_,, ..... '4&~ • 0 _,., oyMcC--2-fpm. i•h d 1 dividual.frcntolficeap-Rl'OCedw'es.haveworked Join their ataff . offer.Befle>am;496-7ta5 ltere0.6"-T138 profit sharing. No exp. 111 o .._._ rt II .. Walhn/W....,._,.. w • goo aa ary + pearanc:e. Non-smoker. In electronics co before, eonc .. -'al boss Xlnt 1--------- 1 ·..;..;..;.;...;,,,;,..;....,...;;.. __ _ nee. For interv. call aft eosta.::::l-?7zt CoollTNIMes =='~ :~~:,L:nsal Ou•standin1 YiOrking call us for l.ntervW lM· bellt ~~sta:rdnc uJ Whirlpool Wuber or gas Chest drawers•· Birch 1PMIJ19.3861 c-u~ · blf II condttions. Please call MED. of S900 Call Rlta dryer $50. Kea.more gas dblbraetSZ00.2avocado _.. evenin1 11 ts ave · Barb a r a D a v I a • We are an equal op-·--.:...._ __ , -----: dryer •· lla.ytq gas velvet chn f15ea, usort- ltECEPTIOHIST 23952 Avenida de la phone ex per. helpful. ya, or appoint· partun.lty emploYer. or-nel Apoey 2'790 Harbor ... , ... --uaran • -1up, mtsc PART TIME 7311 Edin1er Hunt Bcb Good 11peak1ng voice & weekda r __,_ ...-.-. l"IR...... .-.... _.. G teed " ed ml tbl.s -. P/time. $.1 ht. Pleasant Carlotta, Laguna Hills College a tu den lS • ment. 642-16216 fer good pay, benefits. CM • • dellvered.546-8672 household 25• /up. • EVENINGS surroundings. Must type 4501C8mpusDr, Irvine house w Ives & SECRETARY-Intricate growth potent & coo· Ward's Sl.goature Stove ~ min 45 wpm. Reply to 154 E l'lth St. c. Mess mooolighters this i.s an job. Xlnt typui. No sb. genial atmosphere. TYPIST, eq,er, ceo from &eu than 1 old $200 • lsolid Wood dining t. 6 ...... _ t.b _ _.,_ Classified ad no. 243. c/o 9842Adams, Hunt. Bcb Ideal job. Operate or learn to ,_..__ DECC ~-~""'-~.S:t. dJ.~."'!; oiler.~ · or ~~!! ~~.ol ch;e~. Au.w.1.a "1 outstaJJUllJg, Daily Pilot, PO Box 1560. F.qual Opp Emplyr m/t ,..JI a'l'l •095 operate Kag Il. Small u ,....., ~,... -·-,..,... pad .-.ttractive personalities CostaMesa.Ca92626 .,_ N'1'V law ofc . ..,;,_.rt area. •. Nwpt Fwy . Mrs . Coldspot Refrit. S'lS, Queen'rrame/hd~ ~-whoettjoy working with "' AP all t NB ~..., Switchboard Opra, wlll Holkl:Ds.Sl58-833S-wbl te. 1ood cond . ..,_...,_ ...JA _ .. tbl ..c_ kids. Start at SJ.SO per Recepllonisl/Cashier for R e s t a u r a n t ~or enoo 0 ervw · · train. Apply 250 E . 17th 642-'1186. leave message ~ .,.... ...., hr. Phone 642-4321 t250, weelteod & holiday cov-CHANTECLAI R. tst TIME/UfE Nol~expe~esice SL. CM:SU I, (upstaln) 'between ~00-S:OOP.M . erage ~-5pm. Ability clad continental is in-833-M5ollW1 llTB ITV 12 cash resisters $6() each AsluorSIMrolt t.o deal w/public & neat lerviewina for exper'd lilran'es, Inc SECRETARY-Super UllUI 1 ~ ........... ~!!~ Kio& sise 'wtrbed Equal Opportunity appear. req'd. Apply in Waiters & ex p er 'd group ol atthit.ect.s need TAX __,... w/ahefMr Almost new Employer person . M ission Busboys.Applylnperson Equal()ppEmplyrm/f esceptiooal gal w /good NOPBTY f'Ul.JUl'I ..S&MOPmS t,4,price.siis.ee1.1619. ' Beecbcraft, 18741 No. from 3·5. 189.12 Mac SALESLADY exper. tor skills for very busy ore. TAXTICtNCI.,_ New & used, bu.Y. sell, PIX AMwer Set-¥. Airport Way SA Arthur Blvd. Irv me lni p I c 11 b t General Cleanup of of· tnde. Cycle • Co. 2'118 DiDdte Set $40, and King P1time 5hlflg, Work a • . Blk shop. Yvette'a ease a e wn We have over 70,000 lice " maoulactu.riog Newport Blvd, C.M . Sz headboard. SSO. both tECIPT10HIST Restaurant Blldnls. 112 Maio St .. 9am•12.631·1'100. acres ol Oranfie Co. pro-areas. Minor repa'r 6'2-'1910 IOQdcand.~2116' busy switchboard. Day H.B. Call for appl. Secretary pert)' "development of work bours1---------1-~------- .shittsooly. NoSUn. EOE. r-,s.bManufJ._co. D~es f:oODPllEPA.RATIOH 8'2-5353 e.c.c-v $1000. nearly every size & . llinhnum"4 __ , llesi'slOtpdllotobecanes Gel•s.le 1055 546-333.1. t~ :~>. ~:1e~P~~ PO:~~~~rB ' 100%;;;: to applican£. acope. We have need or ~~·r=~=:~· Mirage, white. 21" suo, ••-••••••••••••••••••• PBX tr a In . E qua I Opp SALES MULTIPLE More than a ,creat job. an individual to asslat lo Super M I r a g e • ISUN'. MON. 9AM-SPM. An swering service Employer. 1714)898-3475. Restaurant Looking for a chance to administering our pro-Paul DOSl•er sliver/grey 26" $160. 4'109 Va River St .. NB. ~perator full & Ptr. Call COOK show what you can do It perty assessments. Both xlnl cond. Call garage in alley off 47lh ~3561 Receplionlst/Secretary Position avail. Cont UNE INSURANCE be rewarded for il? As Resp. include prepara-Assodahs. IRc. George 492-0910 dys. Sl.. th blk off Balboa. 2 Imrnedjate opening for French cuisine.NB execsecytothi.sSt.V.J!. lion of payment for 3050RedhlllAve 498-1'1116eves. desks.S20&$10.5 lamps, ~peMenced receptionist 67 5-6221. o( martetinl for a top secure & unsecured pro-Co&tallesa,9262& SS·$10, Vacuum. SS. to handle bllSY phones. U al first you succeed, do prestige co .• you will find perty tax bi.Us & main· 1714, 55._ 7075 Dogs 1040 Chll~ Elec Organ, s,s. PIX OPERA TOR F /time day shift. Apply Hotel Laguna. 425 S . Coast Hwy, Lag Bcb. maU, good typing ability. RETAIL SALIS It again witb Sentry challe .. de, res p .• & a te:nance ol t.ax account· .,.7 •••••••-•••••••••••••• mini bike $30. skis & "'·b ·l allf' U b Insurance. a multiple -1 .... ---"· fil •-th Gold R t · · tands .,,,.. rru qu 1ca ons y Positions now open full ac "-~ •-~ aood natured fun staff. &&'& ""'v"""• es ... e ...... ual n....... EmpJ en . e never pup-boots, $30. 2 nite s • malJtoALawCorp.,610 p/timeforoneof'Faahion """"u.03urancecompany. Call Ablaall Abbott record retenllon ...... vn-oyer pies. AKC J11e1d at show $20. Paperback books . Newport Center Dr, Wand's finest stores In penanneJ A.gmcy, 4.500 aystems. U you're seek· pet. Sbou. wormed, 15' ea. 10 spd bike $30. PBX()perator,telephooe Suite 1220, Newport N.B. Ask for David ~l«YU:feredtosr:· Campus J)r, N .B . lnlachalleGgingcareer. WaitrH• oeeded for railedw/l'LC.Xlotd!lp. Redwood~t.op*5(>,4 answerinJ service. Over BNch9211180 Moore. 75e-OllS. u.raace u es &51.Q22.. . have s-4 Jl'S ol account-Original PIDa. full time W3)42S-15eL bUt/Wbt TV'•1_u is $100 4.!M-llSl 25. wttram. Days, eves, RECEPTIONIST penooonly! ~ ~~d~~~ r!!:,"~ Ii Ptr. $100 hr. + Ups. Yorkshire terrier pups. all. Pictures. ige&sm, S1 &era~ SZ.!5'1 Greater Irvine Credit Retail Sales Benefit package offers Secnt11Y/ClericGI including salary history 6'13-1451 OJ.amp bloodlines. Uoy, to SIO-Plants "planter Union bas immed. open-more to dependent's TbelrvilleCO.iscurrent-toLol.sAugusUne Wallpaper shots. 3 lb stud service. boxes. NRSOMHB:a.EP ing for receptionist. :~~:!:!:ne'w::Jdrr~~ ramily tban any in-lyseetingsecretarles: 'ftoellVIMICO. 2 Ptr. M/F. pleasant. 5»5649. Hann I060 to assist in all areas or ing. excellent benefit per' yapply. Califonua! ary plus Background ln R.E . de-Newport Beach yanceopp. Fastest~w-reg. Qwnp. lines. Call HOllSISFOR SA.LE Weareaeeklnganlndiv. Heavypbones.goodtyp. bigh~ashion store. Ex-sura nc~ coSalmpany In s.c.eo-.~t1 550NewportCenterDr hardworkers. Gd ad-Dalmatian pups, AKC ...... ••••••••-••••••• personnel; employment, package. Please call OPOS commission. velopment. escrow or Equal()ppof'Employer IDI wallpaper chain l.n aft.lPM.~1188 ll~eg.AQHAdaugbteroL employee r elations. 556-1492. documentation helpful. the wes t. Apply : Mister Alert & Clabber benefits "compens~Uon. RECEPTIONIST TYPIST 29 Faatii Island. N.B. Everung or Saturday ap-Type6S~m Wallpapers to Go, 2300 Low cost spaying & alter-blood line. Abobalf Arab Must deal effectively Need one more girl to Call644·2652 poinlmenta arranged. Seattcsy TEActB Harbor , CM C7 l4 > ing. Pie.It up• delivery Gelding. Show or riding. w1all levels of manage-round out busy office. ~ ~ Call: 1 Yr prior penoonel e:it-Temporary, Secondary. ~ • service. Adoptions & 1-137-6449 ment.CoUe1edeg&2yrs Basic orrice skills. & per. preferably in Artmajorapedalizingin boardiq S3S-3480 ---------exper pref'd. Xlnt co. pleasant ""'rsonallty 3 Tom Walker recruitment. wen or-metal· Jewelry. beeln-Warehouse & vehicle · Regl.stered Arabian. LS bcneflta. Send resume or , p r -RETAIL SALES 1321SE. Penn Street ganized &detail minded. nin& tbru advanced at.u-maintenance. deliveries. DOGTRAINTNC hands. well trained call 644 . 3389 gqm 'tll DlUlft •• lease call btwn · WhltUer,Calliornia Type60wplJl. deolll. Starting May 1, Good driving record. Pvtdasaes"boal"dlnC Engll.sh&Westem. musl noon. 9-12.631-1700 r:.h1Dlllsl9'd Call6"-33899am-noon ~).(18/day. Call Laguna Heavy Uftlnat NON-JohnMartin S43-005l9 se.IJ.846-1162 THE IRVIME CO. Personnel needed part-Se try THE llVIME CO. Beach Unified School ·SMOKER. Wortirlg brs p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jl 550 Newport Cenler Dr IECEPTIONIST time at the new Hickory n 5l50 Newport Center Dr District. 494-8546. Tues-Sat. 6: 3C)!3: 30. Start 6:'-Nale()pwport BeE ach 1 ~~00°~1~~ 1~~~f f~~ IRSna Newport Beach T~ SALIS ~ew~ ~:Woo~-i?b~: ""tu por mpoyer people who can work F.qual()pporEmployer ....,.,,..... for• not so or· SS6·6981. Window Train~Considered mornings, afternoons or dinary-good payipg Job? Designs, 3195-D Alrpor1 PETITIONERS Full/part-time. Good pay dally. SJ6. 7711 Mastics MoldincJ Machine OPERATORS With The Followin1 Requirements: Sharp Person Pleasant Appearance Good Telephone Personality Good Typing Skills Ho.~ Call Mrs. White ror in- terview appointment PcllllDosier Assoc.lllC COSTA MESA 1714) 556-7075 Furth er expansion creates permanent open- mgs for experienced It trainee machine operators on all shifts. Our training 4 merit re- view procedure assure rapid advancement for all employes who have the basic abllUty & de-F.qual ()ppor Employer sire. Good pay. nile shin bonus & xlnt ~nefits in-Recept/Sec'y, interesting clu~ng pr~f1l-sharlng. pos. w/smaU co. Handle ~or medical & dental busy phones. lyping insurance. skills a must. Llt.e bk- Apply 8am--4pm kpng. Never a dull mo· C I M C 0 rnent. 540-23.12 265BriggsAve .• C.M. Receptionist & Op- lrvine lndust. Complex tomet.rtc trainee for Mis- E .O. E. tioo Viejo office. Some SELL idle items with a exp .. La ins. forms. book- Oally Pilot Classified Ad. keeplOI. 49'-3039 Help W..e.d 7100 tWp W..e.d 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Opplrtlnities far Wllnet1 in tlle great outdoars If you'd ltke freab air. green grua. and blue akles as an omc., we have an opening for you. tr you quallly for tralnint, here are some of the Ol*linP available: Heavy OOOSlt\JCtton Equlpment Operator. lllstlle Maintenance, All' Traffic Controller, Carpenter/Mason. Helicopter Repair. For advmt.urOus women looklllll for a st.bit career. In tbe tt.U. or abl"Olld. Start at S3rT a month <Wor. deductiool). Food boultq, uniform" medical care aro all prov\cled. ~.,.., OpporM11111 C.... .... 140-1026 I ht • et• ..... t'2.-UI ........ 76f·Ull ........................ #Wf. evenings. Experience l213J94g..I05l Tallt to us now. We may Loop Drive CM. D<lt necess. Will train. or *Seer ._. * baveltl 531--0842 • Apply in person alter 12 17141 SZl..0461 ~iilllS TELEPHONESALES WAlt&fOUSE noon dally. <No Phone ReceptiooilltaSTS0.$800 Fast IJ"OWing company F /time, 40 Hrs, full Calls) F.qual Opportunity Must type SS accurately La lrvine needs 2 part beneftts. Call aft 3pm. ~mployer M /F Empk>yen Pay All Fees timuales people to work 548-7423. ~/i)~~ lliReindersA&eaey from our office. Salary --------(],~~d ir .. u.ir-irAa.1 4000BircbSt.Stel04 plus commission & W 1 N D E R S & ~~fl' ~-~ NewportBeaeb m.8190 bonus, company paid in· TERMINATORS need~ ~~~ 111)18\" & Craft demoostrator al Call for appt/eatab '6' sura.oee " vacation. For for transformer sbop m ~ 1, olltfJ Rug Crafters. So. Coast lotervlew. pbooe54CMI09l lyAnabei ....... ~ .... area. exper OO· VilJage. Must be ag-SECRETARY to matchliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif--..--------- 17Fallti•lsl9MI gressive & sales orient-quality surroundings of TELEPHONESALES Mewportleoch ed. Preler20yrsorolder. low key rul estate in· 111.10 EXP ll.IEC ****** F.qual Opportunity :.>Hrs per wk. $46-6340. vestment olc. IJte bk· " " ExnployerMale/Female SALESPEOPLE kpc, gd w/mlmben. de-That'• rigbt, we'll train WOMEM&MIM Earn S3400 a mo tk more selllne mobile homes. Will train. Call Paul, e-08:Z2 Anaheim. pendable typing. Posl· you ii you're eneraetlc. ~ . 1' Bricbt Future for aeU tlob avail· lmmed or e n thus i as t I c & starter to get ln on the timing can be nextble. articulate. Earn a RM'Sl2t 7-3 Charge nurse. Posi- tion avalJ May 15. Good Sal & fringe benefits. RN 3-11 Medications full or p /tirne. Xtra orienlatlon lime for nur8e who bas been Inactive. Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 Cent.er St, C.M. S48·SS85. ROUTE SALES Up to $200 wk to start. P/time avail. Car req'd. Fuller Brua h Co. 75U471. Sal ............. . Exper'd band worker Xlnt pay & fri nge benefl\11. Odyssey Sailmaters Inc. 2972 Century Pl. C .M. 557...a73. E.O.E. ground floor of rapidly Ask for Avis 833-392'1 guaranteed waie + com· ~g paid TV cable mlstlon &boo l ~~~~~~~~~ industry. $12,000 comm Secy/Recept. Holiday uses. 1. + per yr. co. fringe Inn. Laguna Hllls. FULL TRAINING Would you like a business benefits We wiU trairl. 586-5000Extl42 &EXCELLEMI' ol your own? You don't Call lmmed. for appl. Service Station Manager EARNINGS need an office to start. TeleprompterCableTV Trainee, exper 'd . Lie Beeln at home. fuU or Of Newport Beach pref'd. All benefits. Your Job! part/time. Ideal for (714)646-0585 &aper opportunity. App· Will consist of calling husband & wile team. Sales. p tT public rel a-ly, 2590 Newport Blvd, TI me -L I re B o o k ~ tiom w/rapidl.y growing _C;;.:lM..;...., _______ 1 customers & potential --------- financia l instllution. Seroce Station Attend .. customer• in Calif. & YAIDMAM Rental center bas open· tn1• for 2 men . MecbanlcaJ knowledge belpuJ. neat bandwrit· lnl nee. Weekday oct. Will train. Apply, 1J30 Newport Blvd. C II Salary + comm. Full P t time evest wknds . Ariiooa. time leaainl J)O.'IUOO also Ught mecb 1 lmowledae. SOUND avail. Call aft 3PM, Neatappear&bandwrit- 558-llOM inl· Apply, 25IO Newport GOOD? Blvd.CM SA~~ 1"-service Station Atteo· CALL n.&.>MTDIE clanta <2>. pan & fltime. a~~ ao95 TheStoteForTIMEX uper'd Apply, Carey ~~ Sales. Service ~vron. 604 s. Coast n~ 2541 s. Main. s. Ana 0.....' ft-.. n-acb. I -.A ...... Mti!f •I II uw3 ...-.WAmlJIC ........ .....,. •• .... ••••••••••••••••• SA.MDWlCHSHOP Setv. Sta Help needed tm· F.q\&a!Oppbq)lyrm/f A..... 1005 Sales Nr Oran1e County med. Full or Pit-Apply, ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOH!Y! Airport. 17881 Skypark ~ B. Ort HWy, Nwpt 1a.&'HOMISALIS FOR SALi! MOMIYI Blvd,&.!JteA.lrvtne.An· --------~pdoo TV. Salary A beautiful antique zoey. tboay'a Dell, hbifta Moo S d _&_;comm....__ __ &te....;.Ol5l5.;_. __ -1 partn« delk wJtb two tbna Fri; '1:30-3:30 & Servtce ta Atten · TELEPHONE pressed back swivel COMMISSIOH U : 30·5: 30. Apply l n F /time. l>aY sbift.s. Hr1Y APPf. SEC'Y Chain. can Sblrley Mon· For Ptr. $3.000/mo + perl00.556-06'10 +comm.Callm-3320. Pleasant work, abort da)'tbr'llFridl1•t pot&lble. New dynamic ..... _ ~ • .... 0 prochad.. wm train. own HtlpW..W 1100 HtlpW_.... 7100 ;".:a'u':.Pf'aittc;"i:S:: __ 1_._1_~----• car. Cltl 558-0&42, 9-5, •-••••••••••••••••••--•••-•••••••••••••• ..-~-1u ...... n•,C''"uO•.,. ~~ . ~~-· -· ~~~~ Houri. • UPM, llOft• LarieltSeleetion T11un. Jlat.ure1• H'P'd lnOranaeCoWlt)' SAUSPIRSOM GOURMET COOKWARE SHOP In ODL run u.m.. ONL v Scrioua Gourmet Cook need appl)'. Send l'elOmt ft nt1 to AdUl4, Dally PIM>t. Bo• 151(), eo.ta Meaa.C.\9121818 SALES-MANAGEMENT llJ,E L~ FamOUI for the flMst ln meo'a &r womto'• European clotbln1 bH (2) lnunedlal• openlnll for ualstant maoattn ill both meo'a lr women'• atoree at Faablco laland. Prior f..tuon blck(rowid IMICMI'")'. Sal + comm + prol\llbariq. Call lot appt. tOam~ Koo Uiru Sat wooaan int'd. .-b.r il Stewart B1IUl Apilqllel auaMecf. can Kr. Louis. nos. onr Rd. s .A. fSf.tmaft«noon. (atNwptl'wJ)TU"'22 1"1RS MOWOflM EXPO. PREFERRED AntbrGP09 Wa AMRG &outbwtllt BUk, Lacuna prtmltlvtia. orl.ull • BMdl. tr7·1111 for appt. aru from around tb• wor ld uoa A W . root. J(AltSR,.Sx'Pll-9d. MeeArtllur (olf Ratbor> 1\1111 pd beMftla, .._ lar Su&.IAD& ~ s.i. penan ap'd r /t tor ~ -.omeo'a ready to ..... H.u'• Sout1' Coast !!~~~-!!!~~~~~~~~~a!! :::. now lntervlewinl i Aa .... co11;•;•111m .. li1Wi' l'~f:ii: • )1 -. ...,,., bt ... ·IAll •• aUlhtalkE dtaln aPll at Brutoo Mfl, fr'OCD tbe Navy, l'llS ~ Unit • dfte .._ .--. Cll. ·-..... ....-r ' :1 ~ THE L• 1441S., 5tlt• J ' ,, ____ .___ ..... Tell Mom You Love Her This Modlcr's Day send Mom a greeting all the world can share on Sunday, May 14. Express your love in a l>.lily Pilot• Mother's Day greeting. It's easy. Write your message ro fit the flowered border shown here. Bring it to any Daily Pilot office prior to noon May 12. Or, you may mail a dipping of the border with your message and payment to Daily Pllor, 330 W . Bay St., Box I ~60. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Ads come in three sizes: $I 0, $15 and S3 for the special child's size card. (You must be under 12 to qualify for che littlest greeting). If you want help composing a suitable greeting or have any questions, call 642-5678. A friendly Daily ·~i~r ad-viser will be glad ro help you. And, if you like, you can charge your M<>ther's Day ad. Your cttdit is good with us, or you may use your Master Charge or BankAmcritard. r " ;~.·~ ~ J) g tt $10. _J. -- 17 ' t.. I I t j ~ I I p t I 1 .. I .. DOUGHIOYTYPE POOL 12 x 4, heavy duty liner, ft.Iler, etc. S75. 0 makeofrer. 1-737-6449 Designers Leftovers Llv. rm Brtimt S400/ofr Sof tble 165. Lg Anl. chal $300. Bdrm rum SSO-S400. AntJques $20 up Hdbrd & spread $225. Sleeper sora Sl.25. Sal & Sun 9-5 Evening Canyon Rd CdM MOVING!! Mattress & box springs frame $50. Misc . , ceramics. glasses. dis hes. odds & ends or wood. c lothes. much muc h more. 846-8579. 16241 Nassau Ln. H. B Dyna-gym. xlnt way o exercising utilizing you own body weight. Lik nt>w. $300/B.0 . Retail for $460. 640-9356. 2 Way Radio Transmitter 8)0. Copy machine SlSO Add machine $35, 2 smal desks. $20 ea . Smal animal blow dryer $25 Call S35-8480 · 40 channel CB radio · beam antenna, pwr mil: & more. SlSO. 846--0418 IAR & 2 STOOLS 839-8437 Cal if . K i ng 3 P Matching, b dbrd bedspread & bed bench. All while velvet. Llk new $2SO. 6734.565 SEA RAY 1011\SO\' \~SO\ • LIN\ < 'l r; ~f R':.URY '74 Dodie Van Tradesman. HI back aeala, A JC. mags, PS/PB. auto. $3500. 645-0221 eves, 548·0757 dys · SPECIALS '74 Ford Van, AM/FM cass, bed, frldie,· maQ1 2821 HARBOR BLVD. xtras.$3995.675-80ll · COSTA MESA •----------• '77 Dodge Van, fact con· 24'Cuddy228HP,trlr version, A/C, tape deck. loadedlooly ..... SU.985 FllC, "11 cuatomhed. sunroof. mag wbls, +all "78 lmprovemeota, metallic black, gold iJl. 22' Overnighter .228 HP loaded w /everything-ter. less than ~ mi's. trlr. lots of xtra.s Immaculate-the Rolla Call for appt. 586-5907 lonly .......... $13,380. of motorcoacbes. By AllloLHlilig 9580 owner,l73-808'7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HARRISON'S HMlgclfflalty SEA RAY tm Arrow Motor Home, ~or leasiag 3101CoastHwy,N.B. Z?', many xtras. Xlnt accrortruck7 631-2547 cond. 962·6587 eves & ._ ........... .._._wknds _____________ 1 __ C_All __ k_EH __ 5_4_~_7_5_59_ AMIDI Wmhd 9590 ~l~:r~fe 1!, 0T:.:1i:f !~'!.!~~ ... !~?.! ..................... .. Goodcond.Sll00.645-3646 1957 18' Terry Trailer. ~~::.. Bay boat. lB' Lapstrake Sips 6. 185(). PAID FOR OR NOT Clasmc: Gray l /B. Xlot. CaJl963-9350 eves. TOPDOUAlt $2495/trade 759-0260 ·n Holliday Trvl Trlr. 28'. FOtt TOP CARS lcMh, R.t/ sips 6 adlt.s. Rear bath. Cltartet-9050 full) sell /coot. Like new. ••• •• • • •• • • • • • •• •• • • • • • $4200. Ph ~9350 Charter 60' Plush ya~hl. Camping Trailer, com· Reas. Houdy. daaly. pact, Jr. Ice box. alove & weekly, Mexico. 675-2172 sink. It. wt. $800. 493-4088 loots. Sall 9060 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Allio s.r.b. , .... FUJI· Y 4MAHA Ir Accessories 9400 DEAi.BS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yacht Brokerage Front end damaged 1970 List.ings Wanted! VW camper, salvage s.thWftlftw sale. 1880 Whittier #Q, y adlf $a1H CM. 645--4719 BARWICK OATSU~ "",lfl l11,11J I ljll lf Ill• 8ll-137S 49l-337S WE BUY CLEAMCARS &TIUCIS CONNlll CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. ! • • • • \J •• ' ... BARWICK OATSUl'I I I ' • • • 8Jl-137S 49J.J37S EXCEU.EMT SB..ECTIOM IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY SALES-SERVICE PART&LEASlNG C OSTA MESA DATSUN 2.MSHARBOR BLVD. S4CM4 I 0 54~0Z I l 1976DATSUM 210%2+2 All t.be "goodies"·i.ncfdct. i.ng AM/FM stereo " al- loy wheels. 25,000 miles. (36541 >. Priced to aeU at OHLY $7140 Mir ode ~, ...... 2l!i0Harbor Blvd., C.M. 64M700 CASH REGISTER & Ad dmg Mach Combination N.B.C Manual. $1SO. P 673-4565 White desk w /sep bkcas 2616 Newport Blvd ---------• Newport Beach AMIDI for Sale (714)673-9211 ••••••••••••••••••••••• shelf top, gd cood, Co G-rilll 9510 COSTA MESA 546-1200 '75 280Z. 2 + 2, all 01>\5, -WE--P-AY_T_O_P_DO_LL_A_R_ 24. 000 m I's. XI n t . FOR TOP USED CJ\RS 833-8850, wkdys. 49M.954, FOREIGN, DOMESTIC wttends. ~ rm. $65, 4 r.cs alum 73 CoMlllMa 34 ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio furn S20. rg. BBQ Like new cond. Dix u-&... clffl .. ..._ a...... sso. ottoman S3. misc cuslm lntr. 7' headroom ·-·"""'# -·r -r b I k e f r a m e s . maln salon. diesel auxl. "'9 W ....... • c•, wtck.er/wd chrs, cash on auto pilot,'dlnghy, furl tr.II or~? Cal ly. Aft 5pm wkdys jib, xtras. Sacrlfit-e ._540-7559 orCLASSJCS '71 240Z. 4-spd, s lick, U your car Ls extra clean mags, Michelins, A/C, see us first. A M I F M , n u pa I n l. 645·7857, wkends art 127,:;oo. 714/~1-3S35 AA • IAUBt IUICX _67s._1371 ______ _ IOam. See & make orr -.-•/ 2925 Harbor Blvd. '76 allZ 2+2• auto trans, Costa Meaa 9'19-2500 AM/FM tape stereo, Catalina 27, VHF, elec. C1iu1Ca tSZO For sale, slorage shed. start outbd, x.lnt cood. ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• 5"x6', good shape, $50. SU.000. 8»5085 '58 FORD. e cyl Station Oill 673-25!15 32• DSL Cutter, '76 Wp. Can be seen aft 5 Game tbl. desk, liv rm F\llly equipped, distress ~at 913 oak St. CM. set, rerng , wshr /dry r. sale, thousands ol dollars __ e_~_.,_. ----- misc. Gd rood. 848-1248 be~~~E AFLOAT Recrellll• II ·2 cash registers, $60 each. YACHTS Yellldn 9530 King s ize wlrbe d ••••••••••••••••••••••• w,sheeter. almost ne~. 20lE.CsL Hwy,NB 1972 Ford~ ton truck, ... price. $125. 661-1679 675"3282· 39,000 ml with 9 ~' . Col 43 ctiesel, race/cruise cam per. bath r m ., WE BUY USED CARS CALL GARTH Used Car Mgr 1;1•11 2626 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA Leather ateenn~ wheel. 9 bap" ~ sails. loaded shower sell contained, 135. Ivory Ho Tai Buddha w /equlp pp 55&-tl.33 dual balt.erlea, eo1tne WI IUY 640-8688. fon:ed sale ' air, roof air, camper USID c ••51 CATALINA 27, IB, dinette jacb, dual eahamt, big -otfke fa wllw • Ir int., stras, slip avail. tires, anU-•way bar & We're the new Chevrolet 1¢; .. 8015 $1.2,900. PP. m,7327 tram cooler. Real clean dea.lenb.lp 1n the Irvine ................. '°:::~/ 9070 ~~.~~~79 E. 18th =~1~ We need DUPUCATOR ....................... 4Whee1Drt.... 9sso c~•AU A!C. mags, U,000 mi ·s. lmmac. f735(). 673-0874 Aat 9725 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 76 Flat Xl.9, AM /FM 8 trt, 11,000 ml.. xlnt cond. "500/bltofr. 714-'m·l.588 1970 Fiat lZA Sport Cpe, 5 apd. &atetto. ts.W • 552·5134 72150SPYDa Left froot fender deot. Runs areal! Can't 10 ~(~Jl'N). $1095 N L UJ f1 I 11\ I tr ·1f'( ]!\ i ~I Model 70 completely re. Boat sUp wanted tor :M' ••••••••••••••••••••••• MA If.--°""'" built, used 1 Ume. aailboat. 77\1\ Ford F · uo h4 CHIYROLIT· ...... ~ ...... ll Includes chemical ai CaUm.7934 wbeebtiNa,allftl'OO(, roll 2tAut.oC.nurOrtve 3~ ·~.....,. paper, '200. 1-737-6449 RA!ward. Slip for '4' vln· bar, U&hta etc. All power IRVlNE 142·9405 orn~chrsfromSl.toSlO tage yacht. 12' Beam. Auto V~lomiletlB.~ 761-7222 'TaF\al, UISport L, xlnt Wooden & metal claks completely rutored, 6'4-25U · 6 cond caU tcCMm. ScoU. $15 u .• Office partitions brut.ol cond. Call Dave, ·77 Landcrulaer Malt~ .._,I•• ttd Bellolf•. N~w •ooden riles. 2 12 13ltU-7&3l or evta. ofr. SO 000 mi. warr •••••••••\••••••••••••• ~;....;..;...;........; _____ _ drawer $84 ea C E. t714>&42·27'78or645-9234 DESPERATE.$$6-7465 ..,..._. '705 ..... WHOLESALE OFFIC , ••••••••••••••••••••••• FUR'UTURC ;.OH 91pwanledf0f'2'7 Motor '17 J~ CJ5, V-3, P /S. '7" Spyder Mint (Ol)d. 4cct1'4. ''77. U~O Placentia, C.M. 831· Saller. Nardwpt H.rbor U,700 mi. l5500. Xtru. Must Mil. Belt ol· '5350. Pvtpati)'. or'31..z570 area. rew . 759·14'1'7 498-8630 fer. M2·150I 551·&.9 280 llereedes Benz. 197$, atereo. cruise control. Plll 640-11160 owner. •• 4-dr sedan. Body com· pletely refiniabed. $4000. 759-11119/631-4860 "18 450SEL, take leueor purchase. 213-431-8947. '72 MBZ 250C. S pass cpe. Auto, loeded. looU new. Pvt pty $5700. 644·9978 Opet 9746 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 740PB.WXUX Auto., air cond. Runs ex· cellant! INPX748). $16'5 NEWPrJf\ r 1r•1rnHTs 3100 W.c:.nt Hwy. IU. -642-9405 .. 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Porsche '72. 9UT Targa 5-spd. 3000 mi on rblt eng. DU clutch. pot tc lop. Map. S8SOO/~r. 64()..()868, 1·33'7·5lm 66 912, Orange. eng runs good. nds int work, bes offer takes car. Call at 4PM. 554-0876 '4188 lllAM>MIW lt71 SUIAIU • CIOOr 1-. ..,io. -llllC pa1111. lloOY --·no "'" air ID•. Slk t2•JO S er1al t A2tL.ll'M c ............ ... ...a t 7555 Beach Blvd • Huntington Beach 842-0675 DAil y Pt\.OT Cl I W 142. Mr led, 4-spd, 1011\SO\ & SO\ • l INC<Jl N l\llE llC URV areat mJ's, slot cond, 26_ uaRBOR BLVD $1750/bsl ofr. P .P . 'u~ 66-4088 • COSTA MESA 74 Volvo St.a Wgn. stick. 9940 AM/Fii, air, Sl .250. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67Wl73 ....................... 9905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1976 AMC Sporlaboul Wagon. 31.000 nu, P JS. P/S. A/C. $3895. Very clean. 64&-0681. • OVER 100 CADILLACS TOCHOOSENOM ATALLTIMES Nabers Cadillac 2600 H,irhor Blvd C.1~1.i Mn.1 540-lJ I 00 • PHIL LONG FORD l ........... "~°""'°''· ... •• ............. ~ ,...,... 74FOllDLTD Factory air coodilioning. power steering. poweF brakes. radio. heater, vinyl roof. (186KY1 >. $2555 540-5630 1011\SO.\ ,\SO\ • l INl 01 N ·Ml h<.UHY 2626 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '72 R.anchero GT. mags & sbeU. Very good cond. $1800. 548-8189 9945 ••••••••••••••••••••••• !~~ ........... !?~~ J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!ll 75MAUIV Full power. leathe r powerseat.s. <924SWZ1 IEFOllYOU SB.I.YOUR TOYOTA. SEE US! MAR9'JIS TOYOTA MISSION VIEJO 831-2180 495-1210 76 CC>aOLLA WGN 4 cyl., auto trans , radio. beater. <52'7PJA>. $2777 540-5630 1011\SO\ & SO\ • LINCOLN· MERCUHY .. , ..... , CCJMMOHWl l\l TM ·~ MOfOll' •• l TO • . . . \ ~.,, , '' I I ' ~ "•H'• -• Ir ' 1'. \4* O'Jf'I • ·\ "''' CADILLAC SEVIWS 19'76-19T7·1978 30TOCHOOSE Fu.LI power. factory air $6969 540-5630 1011 \SO\ & so~ • LINCOLN·ME RCURY cond .• stereo tape, c. B.' 2626 HARBOR BL VD c:nUe control, Mtllinel 6: auto. dimmer. rear de· COSTA MESA fog1er. firem.lsl paint. Macay 9950 wire wheel covers ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• m.lles as lo~ as 900. ORANGECOUNTY"S (278NI>Nl. Priced Crom MIWEST OMLY $8995 LINCOLN-MERCURY ALLEN Dealership is now OPEN Olds/Cadillac/GMC RAY FLADUOE S.0 . Frwy.-Avery Exit LINCOLN-MERCURY LAOUNANlGtJEL UHSAuloCenter Or. C7 I 4J 495-6430 SDf'wy·La.ke Forest exit lRVlNE '77 Sedan DeVille. 13~7000 gorgeous buc k.sk.i.n, fire ml.at. ltbr pwrseat.s. wire Mmtc.g 9952 whls, AM/FM Stereo· ••••••••••••••••••••••• tape, tilt & telescope whl, ·s:; Mustang. gd cond. autotrunk,tempcootrol. $850 548-3140, leave auto lights. Must sell. message tr not home. PP. Take over lease wtoptlon or purchase "66 Mu stang. body gd $9150. Malnt records cood, $1000/bstofr . avail. 839·0962 days. 548-4258 557-4224 eves. PWo 9957 uno Sedan DeVtlle, 73,000 ••••••••••••••••••··~·· mi, ruJJ pwr, AC. new My rnends tell me I m paint xlnt Int. Call crazy, but I am giving Roger°s7~:551·2338 away my ·n P into -~-------1 Runabout for only $1750. mo De Ville. gold. Xlnt Cali 759-17'2 cood. Loaded. $1650 or -----~-~ besl.546-1421 r 74PINTOWAGOH a.o oMt 9920 ~~~'. (~~). radio. ....................... $2495 540-5630 1011\SO\ & SO\ • LINCOL N·MlRCURY •Plymouth Valiant '72 4 door, $13$0. Pvt party. m.1m. '70TEMPEST 4-0R • Sil95. 131·17llO -• -.._ .. • I . \ . ;: ........... 1171 ~.' i f l , 0 PMllp MAlnil l11e. t 971 Every smoker knows it's tough to find a low tar cigarette with enough good taste to switch to-~ and stick with. Does MERIT with 'Enriched Flavor~ tobacco deliver enough taste to make the switch to low· tar easy? . fur new evidence-solid ~vidence-read the results of a new national smoker study conducted .. with MERIT smokers. Results Endorse .. MERIT~. Confirmed: 85% of MERfPsmoker8 say it was an "easy switch,, from high tar brands. 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Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. . ·-""-.--=-- ----- -.Kings & tom / .. • • 'l i ? ·l I' ~ . . -j . ,\ ! ' .. .. " I r I I I l ' ' .. 17 .• I ' ,, I VOL 71. NO. 11.-, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES Ex-Congressman Apologizes Vote Set Todag Tension, Trash Mount in OC By JACKIE BYMAN Of-Diiiy PIMt Staff Tension mounted today as striking Orange County truck • drivers planned a vote on a "rinal" management offer and owners or one disposal firm were cleaning up in the wake of a $15.000 fire believed related to the strike. A spokesman for Anaheim Disposal said a firebomb thrown Accident Delays Waddill By TOM BARLEY 01 U. o.11, ...... ltaft Jury instructions in the murder trial of Dr. William Bax- ter Waddill were delayed today when it was learned that the t physician was involved in a lraf· lie accident in Huntington l Beach. Waddill. '2, arrived at tbe county courthouse one hour late. 1 and explained to attorneys that be stayed at the scene or the ac- cident to render aid to the woman occupant or the other car. Waddill said the two cars col Jided al 9:10 a .m. near the in· terseclion or Beach Boulevard -a nd Trask Avenue in Westminster. He and his wife were unhurt but the woman oc- cupant of the other car suffered what be described as un . determined injuries. W addHl said the woman responded to treatment provided by himself and paramedics who rushed to the scene and was then taken to a local hospital. 'What a day for something like this to happen," the defen- dent ruefully commented. "I'll tell you, it never rains but what it pours. .. W add.ill declined to speculate on who was responsible for the collision. Judge James K. Turner be'gan reading instructions to his Orange County Superior Court jury about one hour after Wad- dill's arrival as the murder trial or the Huntington Harbour ob- stetrician moved into its final hours. It is expected that the reading of instructions will take much of the day and that tbe panel or nine men and three women will begin deliberations later to· day. The jury ls being asked to re· turn one of five possible verdicts: not guilty, .murder l.n ihe first or second degree or al· tempted murder in the first or second def'?ree. Waddill is accused or stran- gling a newborn baby girl in the 1 nursery .at Westminster \;Om· 1 munlt.y Hospital shortly after be <See WADDDL. Page A.Z) PllDI' M,DED lXJ.41' SWl1'CH "I was amued. the first caller had my raincoat and I bad bis." Tbat•s tbe success story of tbe Newport Beach man who ran thi&-Dal.IY Pilot ad: If you ten the Colt• Mesa Chamber o( Commerce banqul'l early and pkted up a coat without chec:kin1 it carefully, try It on. Chances a~ the sleeves will rail midway between your wrist and your elbow. Ir you·u call JClUC·XXXX l'd be happy lo arrange an e x -change ... Need help fa.ndina somet.hina? People all aton1 lbe Onn1e Coast rely on tbe cluslfled sec- tion ol the DaUy Pilot. Just call 842·58'18a ~ over the firm's back rence about 11 :30 p.m. Sunday ignited scrap paper and caused about $15,000 damage to paper and rubbish bins. ll was the latest in a series of strike·related incidents, iDclud- ing numerous fires in trash bins during the weekend and the burning or three idled refuse trucks on Friday at Jaycox· Dis- posal Company ln Anaheim. Members of Teamsters Local 396, who went out on strike a week ago when their three-year contract expired, have been meeting with management representatives and a federal mediator. The mediator, John Courtney, said employers "made con· s iderable concessions" in a re- portedly final offer given verbal· ly to Teamsters on Saturday. The offer was due to be sent tQ Bank Giving TIU8hllags PacJClc Qt)' Baiik In Runt lntton Beach aanouneed t.odiay It wlll give away 2S 000, large trash bags to city residents inconven- ienced by the week-old ttBSh truck drivers strike. A spokesman said the 30· gallon plastic bags are available free, with no obligation, at t.be bank's two sites, Golden West Street at Edinger Avenue and Magnolia Street at Adams Avenue. Bank hours are 8 a .m to 8 p.m. weekdays and 9 a.m . to 1 p. m . Saturdays. There is a limit of one bag per person. them in writing today, with a vote by drivers possible tonight. The strike has left more than a million county residents without rubbish service. Homeowners taking their own trash to COWlty dumps have re- portedly had to wait as long as an hour because of the lines. Orange Coast communities af. fected are Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, Lake Forest, northern El Toro and Laguna Hills Leisure World, and in- dustrial parts of Newport Beach. Dispute between drivers and drivers helpers and manage- m ent reportedly focused on salary and benefits. Drivers. who now receive $4.50 an hour, are asking for a $4 raise over a three-year period, with manage- ment previously offering $1.10. Drivers are also asking for five days a year in sick leave. They currently receive none. Details of the new offer were not f'eleased pending a vote by Teamsters. Throngs Visit -tt- Beach in HB Lured by blue skies and balmy 74-degree temperatures, more than 100,000 people visited the nine miles or HunUngton Beach state and city beaches over lbe weekend. The turnout wu the largest ol tbe)'ear. The rush to tbe beuh was so areat that partdU lots for 1,600 vehicles were ftlfed early bo(b Saturday and Sunday at the city strands. Surf ls ninnlng at about three feet and the water temperature is 58degrees. Carten Worehip W ASIUNGTON <AP> -Presl- clen t Carter and bia wife, Roaalynn. attended church Hrvlces at the First 81pthl Church oa Sunday. Jt wu the firat time ln elJt weeb that they worabtpped at their re1ular churcb. S•peet Gr.calJ~cL Gary Wayne, 35, sits in a police car ln Phoenix. Ariz .. after arrest on charges he tbruttn.ed to blow up the First National Bank's main brincfCll'.he wasn't given $20.000. Police said the gau'ze on his face was part of his disguise. The bank's lobby was crowded at the time of his arr~t. Bonfa's ~ick Pay Blasted by Siebert ' By ROBERT BARKER Of 1111 Deify Pllet SIMI The payment of $15,395 In city funds to former City Attorney Don Bonfa for unused sick leave and vacation time was attacked today by Councilman Richard Siebert. Siebert claims that Bonfa, who was defeated in his bid for re- election April 11, may not be eligible for the termination pay because of questions over his membership in two city emp)oyee associations. Siebert claims that the matt.er was not properly researched before the check was given to Bonfa Friday afternoon. He said he brought the issue to the attention or City Ad· mlnlstrator Bud Belsito last Tuesday but that Belsito put ot'f seeking a legal opinio.n until the check was in Bonfa 's hands . Siebert claims that the pay was handled in a hasty manner without full ramifications to the ci~y being considered. 'Belsito said today that he was not aware that a legal opinion was required. "I couldn't have held up the check without the full concur- rence of the city council," he said. "Mr. Siebert could have asked for lbe legal opinion as well as myself." JJelslto, who said lbat city res- olutions accorded Bonfa the same benefits as tbose received by other employees, added that Boola could have riled a lawsuit aealut the city il the check bad not been paid. Siebert indicated that be mJ&ht be planning f\lrtber acUota to block payment and was re- portedly cl06eted with new City AUOmey Gail Hutton and fellow . councilman J ohn Thomu tb1a morning. Bonra was not reeched for comment. City Finance Director Ben Arauello aaid that Bon/a bad built up 883 hours of alc'k .,., and 324 hours of vacatJoo pay ln bis 10 years ln city office. Bonfa was paid batr bla ac· ct'1led alcll pay and all h1I vaca· Uon time. _,,iebert la queattonlna the vaudU.1 of the termlnation pay .... <See BONPA, Pase AZ> Del",.. ... St.ff ,...._ PAYOFF QUESTIONED Ex.Qty Attorney Bonfe r • MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1978 Afteraoob N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENT anna 6to30 Months Decreed WAS HINGTON CAP> - Former Orange County con- gressman Richard T. Hanna, the first congressional fi g ure charged in the Korean influence· buyine scandal. today was sen· tenced lo serve six months in a federal prison. Hanna, 64, appeared stunned as Chief District Judge William Bryant tersely handed down the sentence after lengthy appeals for mercy from bot)l the con· gressman and his attorney. Jn a quivering voice. Hanna had told Bryant: "I apologize to the court. I apologize to the peo- ple who elected me to public of· flee ... l hope in the years that I have left I can do somethlng to atone for what l have done ... H a nna. who served in Congress from 1963 to 1974 as a Democrat from California, en- tered a bargained guilty plea March 17 to one count or con- spiracy lo defraud the govern- ment, a charge that bears a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Hanna's plea agr eem e nt averted a trial on a 40-counl in· dictroent returned by a grand jury last October. Government attorney Jeffrey While dropped the remaining charaes after loday's sentencing. Today's sentence allows Han· na to become eligible for parole after serving six months. The eovemment said ln the bargaining plea with the-former congressman that Hannir .. re· celved in excess of $200.000 in cash and checks between 1989 and the end of 1975" for using the power of bis office to further the interests of Korean ,busi- nessman Tongsun Park. •H anna's attorney, Charles McNelis, argued in a long and e motiona l presentation to Bryant that while his client "did' commit a serious m istake of judgment in his relationship with Tongsun Park." Ha nna has since tried lo redeem himself by cooperating fully with govern- ment investigators. "What conceivable a nd earthly good would be ac- complished by the incarceration or this man?" McNelis asked. The lawyer said that while Hanna did receive money from Park, "that is not to say that he corrupted his political office." Noting that Hanna had been through extensive interrogations with government attorneys and congressional panels and a lie- detector test, McNelis declared that Ha nna "did everything humanly possible to correct the grievous error which he knows and admits he committed. "He leads from the heart rathe r than the bead." said the attorney ... It is inconceivable that he would do harm to his country." McNelis insisted that while Hanna had taken substantial (See HANNA, 'page AZ) Woman Robs Market in Huntington A red-haired woman, who bran- dished an apparent .38 caliber re- volver &nd then sneered when she got only $44 for the rtsk involved, robbed a Huntington Beach cor- ner convenience market early Sunday. Venturi Martinez. clerk at the U-Totem Market, 19490 Beach Blvd., told police that the woman bandit, about 30 and wearing blue Jeana, backed out of the store keeping her gun on him. She then dashed to a waitlng black, 1~ vintage getawa)' car which sped Crom the comer ol Beach Boulevard and Yorktown Avenue and vanished. DetecUve Sgt. Luis Ochoa said the pistol-packing female wu so angry at getting only $44 that abe prodded Martinez to lift up the caah reiLstert.ray. Sbe apparently t.houabt be ma.y have been conceall.n1 substanUal· ly more loot bidden lbere. ..... '"-.. SENT TO PRISON Ex-Congreseman Hanna .. Court Backs Pat Hearst Conviction WASJUNGTON <AP> -The U.S . Supreme Court refused to review Patricia Hearst's 1976 bank robbery conviction. The young newspaper heiress. free two years on $1' million bond, soon may have to go to prison. The justices rejected Miss Hearst 's appeal with no eJCplana- tion. Only Justice William J . Bren- nan Jr. voted to review her case, and he said he would have limit- ed the court's study to the ad- missibility into trial evidence of recordings of Miss Hears t's jailhouse conversations. Lawyers for Miss Hearst have 25 days In which to ask the high court lo reconsider. One or those lawyers, J . Albert Johnson of Boston. said he was considering s uch a move. Howe ver. the court almost never grants reconsideration. "Also under consideration are motions to the district court in San F rancisco," Johnson added. He said he might as k that court to "revise and revoke" Miss Hearst's sentence -allow- ing her time already served to satisfy her imposed prison term. Miss Hearst conceivably could be ordered to prison in the in- terim. Her immediate fate appears to rest with U.S. District Judge Willia m H. Orrick Jr. in San Francisco. He could allow Miss Hearst to re main free until law ye rs ex haust all l egal maneuvers. Those could include a request that Orric k. reduce Miss Hearst's seven-year prison term to a period of probation, as was done last year for state charges of assault and robber» agains~ her. Under Supreme Court pro· cedure, Orrick officially will <See HEARST, Page AZ) Coast Weather Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with a chance of showers Tues- day. Cooler on Tuesday with highs In the upper 60s. Lows tonight 53 to 58. Chance of rain increasing to 30 percent Tuesday. INSIDE TOD~ W If JIOM'~ getting morned and ho" questio111 about weddjng eUiquette, don't mfu o five -port imes by Elizabeth Post, l.Dhlch begins today fn Featuring, Page Cl. l•des , .. 1'7'1 Donny to Wed . June N1.pliah Plaluted HONOD.UIAJ (AP> -Aoa.riY·June nddilll ten· tattvely is planned for singln& slar Donft)' o.mood. 20, and Debra Glenn, 19, a Brigham Youoa U ntverslty fresl\man from Provo, Utah. The engagement was an· nounced Sunday in Honolulu, where Osmond and his sister, , Marie. were filming the motion picture. "Aloha Donny and 'Marie." Osmond said he still con· tinues to appreciate bis rans and wants them to support him now more than ever berore. DOlll'e., "They <the rans) have always wanted me happy, and I truly am that," said Osmond. "I have been blessed with the greatest tans anyone coutd ask for." Ted Patrick Beats Imprisonment Rap Charges of alleged ratse lm· prisonment have been dropped lo lleverly Hills Municipal Court ~gainst controversial depro· grammer Ted Pa~rlck , wbo servedtimeinOrangeCountyJail on simUarcharges. Pa trick baa also run afoul of the law in Colorado for his methods 11sed to persuade youthful .mem-bers or religious cults to return home. Judge Andrew J . Weisz bas agreed to drop charges of COO· spiracy and false imprisonment after a jurywu unable to reach a unanimous verdict. Jurors were deadlocked !Oto 2 in favoT orfmd· ing Patrick innocent, a court ~po~e-smansaid. Patrick, 46, was accused of holding captive Dennis Hauswirth, 26, a member ol Santa Barbara's Brotherhood of the Sun for several days in 1976 and 1977 in West Hollywood. Two other defendents in the l'ase. Cliff Daniels and Rodney .Casey. have not yet been localed and face prosecution on con· spiracy and false imprisonment charges. The young man's parents, Fred and Katie Hauswirth, were fmed Stonn, Syst.em <Arries Rain To Nort,h State By TH Associated Pren Rain is likely for much of Northern California by Tuesday, the National Weather Service says. __., A s torm system which de· veloped north or Hawaii over the weekend already had spread considerable cloudiness over the stale early today and brought a few light showers to the Salinas area. The air associated with the storm is quite warm and moist. meaning rain, rather than snow, will fall at high levels in the Sierra Nevada and cause rapid melting or the abundant sriowpack. This will cause some concern among state flood control authorities be<:ause of increased runoff Crom the mountains. 1'he rains also will be troublesome for farmers in the Central Valley, whose wet fields will have to dry out before they can be cultivated. l m proved weather is expected by Wednesday and longer ranee prospects indicate mostly fair weather the rest or the week. Marijuana Burned EVERETT, Wash. (AP) -Up to 20 tons of marijuana were burned after federal agents spirited the cache off a rusty old freighter and trucked it off to in· cinerators. The pot was the cargo of the Helena Star, an ag- ing, unregistered freighter seized by the Coast Guard off the W ash.ington coast last week. ORANGE COAST .. ,, DAILY PILOT Ti.0.-CMUO.llfl'I ... "'4111-~•\<..,. ............. '" ... ~.uh ............... , ... °'_ COM! llJl\ltltltNft9~Y Seo«•t•~1.._,.,, _.,_ -·· llW-FtlOtY ... eo,10 -· ... _. e. .... H"""""'"" _'_ '"'" Veit•"· 11,,lf\•, \.tctat.-.C:l VaHey and ~ .. 0< .. l\ovthC..•I ,....,..._. .. , ''°" ~ --Solu<dOlt ..... ~ Tht ,...,.,_.. -"'""" .,.,., •t •• SID -lov '4""1 CMtoMoWl.CAlll""""•-ll_N _ ··-.. ·--·- '"'" Qtrtty v .. ,,., .. ....,,--.. -.... ~ .. !( .... , a•tet ..._., .......... IM""91"'Edltor ~M.~ ~l'Moll ......... , ............. ~ ·--Wt\I Or-~·""· HwllttflCllOfl .... ~ IN 7TllH<ft-..... , .......... o ... ,..,_ u""'• .... "~~.,.,..~-· ""'"""°~ e:---~lle'"'"" ~··":~~~~i~ ...... - T•lettflOM (114)t001 Cl•Mlnecl Mwe'1111111~ _...,., .. 0r_c.-.~1• M)..1220 ~'Tr: =.~er.: .. ~..!..~ ,...r101 ., .. tt -I• llo1tlf1 Mtf "' ,..,,...,(.. I -1<14 ,Wff!lMIM et ,...,, .... ,_. ~r.:.~~~·",:::!~11=·· ..... ~.:. ~­:.:ire...•:, ;~:e -Nf, llNlll#Y $125 and placed on a year's proba· ti on a.Iler pleading "no contest" to a false imprisonment charge. Sherri Dietrich, Z'I, of Lynwood, entered the same plea on that charge. She was fined $100 and placed on a year's probation. Patrick had also been charged with illegally boldlog Pam Shan- non Wells, 17, another member of the Santa Barbara sect, but lbe judge dismissed .that case last week on a legal point when \be prosecution ended Its arguments. F,.._PageAl HEARST ••• , learn of the court's action when receiving notice of it by mail within a few days. There was no immediate com- ment on tbe'Supreme Court's ac· tion by Orrick, federal pros· ecutorsorthe Hearst family. Ir imprisoned, Miss Hearst would have to serve 14" months before becoming eligible for parole. She served 14 months before..._ during and after her eight-week trial. She was convicted of participating in the 1974 armed robbery of a Hibernia Bank branch in San Francisco -two months after her kidnapping by a group calling itself the Sym- bionese Liberation Army. Mias Hearst, daughter of 1lewspaper publisher RUldolph Hearst and bis wife Catherine, was 19 when SLA mem""bers ab- ducted her from a Berkeley apartment Feb. 4, 1974. The kidnapping, reports or her alleged subsequent conversion to the SLA movement and months or police frustration in efforts lo capture Miss Hearst and her abductors was interna· lional news. miss ttearst, 24, bas lived with her parents and under constant private guard since the federal conviction. Her father posted a $1-milUon bond supported by a $100,000 cash deposit to secure her freedom. The conviction was upheld last November by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled that her appeal presented -"no novel issues." Miss Hearst's lawyers then appealed lo the-nation's highest court, essentially using the same legal arguments. They contended that the late U.S. District J udee OH ver J . Carter, wbo presided at Miss Hearst's trial, committed numerous errors that denied her a fair trial. Among other things, the lawyen objected to testimony admitted into evidence by Carter of Miss Hearst's ac- tivities after the April 15, 1974. bank robbery. Those activities allegedly in· eluded a bizarre May 1974 shoot· ing incident at a Los Angeles sporting goods store. CdM Resident, Pal Beldin Lobster Theft A Corona del Mar man and his meal companion were arrested Sunday night after alleaedly kid· napping a giant lobster dis- played in a Huntington Beach restaurant. Jrwln Penn Holmes, 23, of 518 Iris Ave., Corona del Mar and Harold S. Maniloff, 24, or ~r· ly Hills, were sUU in their tank this morning in Ueu or ~ ball each. The rescued lobster was back ln Its tank too, POiice sald. Holmes and Manllort were captured across the street from Maxwell'~ 317 Ocean Ave .• In· side the \;apri Bar, ~ Ocean Ave .• after the 10:20 p.m. abduc- Uon, police said. Police said the two men snatched the tasty crustac.an out of it.a diapla, tank and ned. one of them cradling it inside his coat. Witoeatea said they ducked lo· to t.he doorway of t.he Capri, whose cuatomen were reported· ly admlrlnc tbe 'bl& loblter d.IJ· •• played by Holmes and Ma.m.Jalf u police arrived. Suspect Oeclared 'Sane' NEW YORK <AP> -A j~ ruled today that David R. Berkowiti ts mentally compe- unt to st.and trial for the murder or Stacy Moskowitz, the last ol six bomlclde victims of the Son or Sam. The judge ordered the trial lo begin May 8. The rulinl m1Jbl not lead to a trial, however, since 8erkowita bu said be want.a to plead gull. t,y. lilt lawyen want to plead him llu*ent by reason or ID· aanlty, but alnoe he bas been ruled compei.nt, Berkowitz ii free to make bis cboice, provld· ing the judge finds "the plea legally acceptable. ·'The court fmds that the peo- ple bave established by a fair preponderance of tbe evidence that the defend&llt does not, a.s a ~ult of mental disease er de- fect, lack carr:=ty to undentand the proceed ' agalnlt blm or to assist ln his defense," Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Joseph R. Cono said ln a six· paae memorandum of law. Cotao, who lb.la moo.th held four days of cloeed hearings OD the competency of the 24:year- old postal clerk from Yonkers, set May 8 for either tbe atart of pre- liminary trial bearings or jury selection abou14 tb.e derense walvelbebearinai. "Deflndant la able to discuss the ca~ with bis counsel and has never refused to do so. No claim ts made that be ha.a not done ao," Cono wrote. ' "lndeclaloo or vacillation u Lo the best lepl course for blm to pursue does not render blm ln· com petent to stand trial. Rather. it is lndlcative of UD· dentandlq ol b1I predicament. "Nor does failure to adopt any proposed ~ of: action ad· vocated by coumel Indicate un· fitness. 1be law does not require him to adopt the advice of his counsel or otbera," said the judge. The 349-paae transcript of lbe competency hearinl remained sealed. Corso said he would re· lease the document after a jury waa sequestered. Corso said the ddendant fulfilled both legal criteria of competence-to understand the charges against him and assist i..rl his own defense. "The testimony indicates that defendant has given full con· slderatloo, pro and con, as to the legal altemativ~ available to him and understands them," Corso said. "It further indicates that be is appropriately address· ing himself lo the immediate problem confronting him.•· Berkowitz Is accused of killing six persons and wounding seven others during a 12-month shoot· ing spree in Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens. The proceedings here addressed only the Brooklyn case. Cycle Crash Claims Life Of Oregonian A 22·year-old visitor from Oreson died early today in Newport Beach when be lost control of his motorcycle 1D lbe curves oo Bayside Drive. Police Identified the dead man as Jeffrey J . McCoy, and aaJd his temporary add.rus was 1007 E. Balboa Blvd., apt. 10. They said be carried an Oregon driver's license and part of bis family lives there. According to police reports, McCoy and a pas.seneer. Sherry Lynn Cairns, 26, of 515 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, were lranJm, westbound on Bayside Drive at a hlab rate of speed when the accident otturred. According to police, the motorcycle collided with the curb in the curves just west of Carnation Avenue and fell to the ground. McCoy died at Hoag Memorial Hospital about an hour af\er the accident. Mias CaJl'DS was listed In good coadltlon at the hospital. suffering from numerous lacera- Uone, abrasions aod possible chest injurlet, police said. Pope: No Word Pope Paul VI gestures to pilgrims at his studio window in Vatican City. He told a crowd of 40,000 he. had no news about the fate of kidnapped former Italian pre· mier Aldo Moro, ror whose unconditional release he is- sued a dramatic plea. ROME (AP> -A new ultimatum purporting to come from the Red Brigades today demanded the Immediate release of 13 jailed terrorists in ex- change for kidnapped former Premier Aldo Moro. "Only an immediate and positive r8$ponse given without equivocation and concretely carried out will allow the release of Aldo Moro," said lbe typewrit· len message, received by newspapers in Rome. Geno,t and Milan . ll threatened the execu- tton of tM 61-year-old pres- ident of the Cbrisllao; Democratlc Party unleSSi the terrorists were freed. Fro•PageAI BONFA .•• because be says that Bonla ·at one time was a member or the Municipal Employees Organiza· lion and the Ex~utive Manage. ment Team. Siebert contends that Bon.fa's membership in th e two employee associations was in· valid because he was an elected official. The pay dispute is the lat~t cootrovery involving Siebert and Bonfa. Siebert. riled a class action lawsuit against Bonfa March 6 seeking to recover public money that he claims was illegally and improperly spent by Bonfa. Among the list of allegations made by Siebert was the claim that Bonfa improperly participated in an employee as- sociation while an elected of· ficial. Bonta answered with a $7.6 million lawsuit against Siebert and Siebert's attorney. Ralph Marcarelli. Bonra alleged that Siebert slandered and libeled him in the lawsuit. Bonra also accused Marcarelll or being a "plant" ln Bonra 's re-election committee. Bonra said that Siebert's Sllit was designed to engineer his de· feat in the recent election. KUJsinger Gets Court Delay WASlilNGTON <AP) -Henry A. Kissinger won the U .S. Supreme Court's help today in blocking, al least temporarily, government employees from combing through secr~t telephone notes he kept as secretary of state. The court granted Kissinger's request that it hold In abeyance a federal judge's order allowing State Department employees to begin processing the notes to de· termlne which ones may be made publlc From Page AJ penny was delivered to any olher politicians through h.im. "He doe& not need the iron &ates or l.ncarcerat.ion, he needs a helping band," McNelis CQD· eluded. At th.at point, Bryant invited Hanna to speak for himself. Tbe former congressman at.ood silently as if lo g.ather his composure. and when be rmally spoke bis voice shook aod be seemed to be fighting tears. Hanna told the court that "I hope that what you have to do wiU help atone for what I've done.'' Bryant, in serious, clipped tones, then ordered Hanna to surrender to the attorney general's office for a deciision on which prison he will go to. Hanna will remain free until that assignment, then will have 30 days lo report to the lnstitu· lion under Bryant's order. McNelis asked Bryant before the sentence was handed down, "Whal reasonable man would suggest th.at 64-year-old Dick Hanna, a first-Let"m violator, really deserves incarceration?" The attorney noted that Han· na 's wife of 33 years and several adopted children depend on h.im for support. McNelis acknowledged that Hanna had "an affinity for and deep interest in Korean affairs," and bad worked "openly, active· ly and aggressively for closer ties between this country and that emerging democracy. For that he apologizes to no man," he said. "But he does admit that the activities be had with Tongsun Park were a clear conflict of in· terest and a clear violation of law " but since deciding not to run' for re-election in 1974. Han· na has "attempted to extricate himself" ever since. As ouUlned by the prosecution. Hanna helped Park become the seller's agent for California rice exports to South Korea, thereby enabling Park to earn substan· Ual commissions. Hanna also bolstered Park's standing with the Korean gov· ernmenl by introducing him to members or Congress and "otherwise aggrandizing Park's status in this country," includ· ing the implementation of "many of his pro-Korean posi- tions" related to congressional matters. the government at· torney said. f'ro• Page A J WADDILL. • was advised that the child bad survived a saline abortion he performed on the 18-year·old mother 12 hours earlier . It was testified for the pros· ecution that Waddill choked the baby to death after predicting tbal be would race lawsuits seek· in& millions of dollars in damages if be allowed what be believed to be a brain-damaged baby to live. Balboa's 'Raider' Winner· .. ..... BJ ALMON LOcollBY ~ ..... .......... .._ : . ENSENADA -The 31~ Newport. Beach lo Ense~ yacht race drifted Into the .. cord boob lofty u the last ~ boats ~ a"1&Ullnl to md• the fin.lab Une at 8 a.m. Despite the slowness of lt.e last dozen boats, tbe race W@I comparatively fut wlt.h ·~e ~ majority of tbe 415 flnialMrs ~ rivinc before sundown &mday ~ Unofncial handicap relQJt.s io:- d i cat ed tbat Raider. 14 EricSOD-46 akiooered by Jav ~ derman or the Balboa Yacb( Club, was the winner of U)e President or the United State$ trophy ror the best corrected time in the International Off~ shore Rule <IOR> divisioo,1 Raider was the 12th boat fl> nnish with an elapsed time ~ 20.2215 hours. Her correctitl Ume was i•.8775 hours. J" The wtnoer ol lbe President of Mexico trophy for the best COi'· reeled time in the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet f PHRl'"~ appeared lo be Caprlcdo, a $- foot Class H sloop, skippered by Peter Nooteboom or the King Harbor Yacht Club. Official results for all classes were due to be announced at the trophy presentation today al 3 p.m. But there was no doubt about the first yacht t.o finish. Double Bullet, a brand new 60·foot catamaran, designed, built, owned and skippered by Bob Hanel of the Cabrillo Beacb Yacht r.tub. breeud across-Lbe finish lloe at 5:13 a.m. Sunday to re~ord ab elap6ed time or 17 hours and 13 minutes for the 125-mile race. The time was about three hours shy of the elapsed time record of 14 hours and one minute, set by the catamaran Aikane in 1957. Second yacht to finish, abQul two hours later, was another catamaran, the 36-foot Eighth Day, s kippered by Roger MacGregor of the Lido Isle Yacht Club. The first three monohulls crossed the finish line in an almost dead beat shortly after 7 a.m. with Fred Preiss' 84-foot sloop Christine of the Pacific Mariners Yacht Club, edging Bill White and Bill Pasquini 's 62-foot Ra,time by about one boat length. Ragtime was over-lapped with Harry lloJo8bco'a 69-(oot Drifter from the Loq - Beach Yacht Club. Onlter was given credit for the first monohull to finisb because she started in a d.if. ferenl class 10 minutes behind Christine and Ragtime. Moderate but steady breezes kept the rteet on the move Satur· day night and Sunday re.suiting in fast finishes for the leaders. Yachts finished in large groups Sunday morning with more than 100 crossing by noon. A stir of excitement rippled through the fleet and race head· quarters here about 6 a .m . Sun· day when John Olson skipper of the yacht Typhoon, reported a man overborard about 10 miles from the finish. Crewman Chuck Schultz was working on the foredeck in a 15-knot breeze when a lileline fit· ting let go and be slipped over- board. He was recovered withln a ball hour with no injuries. There were 558 original en- tries in the race and the usuai 10 percent, 51 boats fa.iJed lo start. Latest reports were that 15 to 20 boats reported themselves out or the race. Ensenada was relatively qu.tet Sunday and Sunday night des pite the large crowd or crewmeQ and race followers ar- riving in the city MINISl'ER W .4NlS KIDS TO JOIN IN GETTYSBURG, Pa. <AP> - Maintaining that the Lord's Sup- per should be open to baptired infants. the Rev. Paul Harms, a Lutheran theologian~ told a worship conference at Lutheran Theological Seminary: "If there's ooe thing a kid un· derstands, it's food." . Campus Gates Locked · or the high school to attend lbe meeting. "Be prompt," the let· ter signs orr. By Sl'BVB IUl'CllBLL °' ............... I Somebody -probably aenior claae pnnluten -sneaked onto the L~ Beach Hilb School campu1 Sunday nl1ht and chained every 1ate on campus 1hut, and eome office doora. "We couldn't 1et on(o the campu1.'' aaJd Dr. Robert HutbM, prlnctpal of tbe twcre campue °" P~ Awaue. A coolc who INWed up for work at about •:at tbll momlna. round ••* cUlaed and ~~l aod bUndreda ol mlmeos.rapneu letters taped lo walls, applln!lDt- ly signed by the principal, say· ing school would be closed to- day. "Somehow they 1ot my sl1nature and slapped it on the bottom of the letter," Hughes laugfled. "The whole thin& wH really Ingenious." Fortunately, Hughes uld, maintenance crew. bad all the chains on and st.ins down by 'l a .m . "We bad to use bolt cutters to aet tbe cbalne off," be sa.ld. "Tbey bad Xeroxed 1l1ns on aH the doors and entrances to the school.'' The memo, with the bogus signature, said "To all faculty stafr and students. Regarding the closure or school "ln protest of the Jarvis-Gann property tax lniUaUve, Laguna Beach High School will be closed on this 24th day or April, In the year 1978. "Note there wtll be a meeting tn the Thurston Junior Kl11i School auditorium at 8: ts. "The t\Ote doesn't say moml.nt or evening.•• Hupes added. The letter orders f!l penonnel "I don't know where they lo\ my slantlture," Hughes said. The perplexed i>rlnclpal said he also has no idea where lhej got the heavy chains, locks; mimeograph machine, or the Idea. Sul he does have a noUon u W the lde.nU\,.YoltbeP..ranklt.en. : "I would think we bave a Yer)' Intellectual aenlor clau hwei and that lb1I would be OD per with their ablllties." ... •• .. LOCAL/ NATIONA\.. l'alletf Beatdies Ten of the 13 contestants in this year·s Miss Fountain Valley pageant smile for the camera. Pageant is slated May 6 at 7:30 p.m. at 1..-0s Amigos IIlgh School, 16.566 Newhope St. From left are: (front row> Cindy Cardinal, Yvonne Litteau, Regina Woods, Tamara Cova, Stephanie Coffman . <middle> Tina Sponholz, Tina Stanley, Kelly Hunt. (back) Vicki Powell and April Hammond. Not shown are contestants Liz Ellerman. Vera Grunke and Karen Oftelie. Tobacco Conte11t Reduced WASfUNGTON <AP> -Filters in cigarettes have been getting lor•ger and the length of the col· umn of tobacco shorter, says the Aerlcultur,. DepartmeoL Further, many of the s uper-long cigarettes, the 120 millimeter types, are skinnier. It all adds up to less tobacco being used in cigarettes these davs. "On balance. ·these fa~tors have enabled menufacturers to reduce tobacco requirements substantially per 1,000 cigarettes, the depart· ment says in a tobacco situation report . .. In 1977, U .S. cigarette manufacturers uaed an estimated 1.3 billion pounds of tobacco MOTHER DYING -Sandy Spencer 36 who's been given less than a year to 'uve'. is shown with her b~band, Bob. and three • ..~ ......... children (from left) Robin, 13; Kenny, 3, and Bobbie Jo, 6. The New York family is preparing for mother's death. · · based on the weight of leaf at the farm, about 6 percent below 1976," it said. Preparing for Death <B4RITY SWEETENED Mother of Three 'Will MU. Cldldren' TOKYO C\P) -A Japanese confectioner whose wife disappeared from a train between France and Switzerland while vacationing last sum mer says be ls donaUng about $181,000 from ber life insurance to charity. Kazuo Cbwada. 67, said be was giving the money as a .. token of gratitude" to foreign aul b6ritl es and Japanese officials for. helping bhn and bis fa mlly recover bis wit~·· body in a two·moatb search. FREWSBURG, N.Y. CAP)-"ltlao'tthe idea of dying that bothers me. It'a wbat I'm going to miss when my cbllclren 1~w up, helping them through problems. The tbougbt of Bob going through thia alone tean me apart." Sandy Spencer. a 36-year-old mother of three, is dying of cancer. Last October, she was given three to nine montba to live. 0 1F THE DDS ARE talking about going on a picnic this summer, I think to myself, 'I probably won't be here'," she Said. But she added, "I might outfox them all and still be here when they araduate." The trouble began about 2'AI years aco. Doctors discovered breast cancer and performed a modified radical mastectomy. Then last year, after suffertn1 a recur- rence and undergoing chemotherapy treat· ments, Mrs. Spencer's heart failed. She was hospitalized for almost seven weeks, barely clinging to life at one point. AFl'ER DOCTORS FOUND cancerous Wlalela One is N~t Hair stylist La Vonne Copeland has to choose between Fountain Valley city councilmen Ben Nielsen, <right> and Roger Stanton. They will be in line for haircuts May 7-8 from 9 a .m. to 6 p.m. when Ms. Copeland and other hairstylists hold a "cut-a-thon" to raise ftmds for Fountain Valley Girls' Club. Event will be held at ctub, 1.8490 Euclid St., with proceeds eoing to charity. Call 833·0304 for appointment. fluid in her pericardia! sac, part or the heart, Mn. ~ was told that statistics lndlcat· ed she eould expect to live less than a year. She admltathat her greatest concerns re· volve around her immediate family -her husband, Bob, 35, a seasonally employed bricklayer, and their three cblldren, Robin, 13, Bobbie Jo. 6. and Kenny, 3. · "I'm woirtec:t that I'm· hardly solng to be a memory," She confided. "Life does go on and people have to make a new life for themselves." . SHE FEElS ROBIN IS her link to the younger children._ that Robin will pus on to her sister and brother memories of her closeness to her mother and the fun times they shared. In a cruel irony, Mrs. Spencer bas bad to worry about medical problems ol her two younger children -Bobbie Jo's epilepsy and Kenny's eerious heart conditioo. "In one respect it's been good that they've bad these problema," she said. "If they bad been completely healthy, there would have been more self-pity. It's given me at>methlng else to think about.'• SHE AND BER F.AMU.Y decided to make puf>lic her illness to aid other dying people. I "I wtab all people facing problems like tbl1 could be open about It," she said. "It's not as if you have leprosy or somet.binl to bide." Mrs. Spencer spoke freely about the ad· vanta1e of knowing about her expected death. "I think the only real value ls being given the time to get things in order." sbe'said. VIC71M SUCCl!MBS C.11 142-1171. Pul • , .. wont• lo work tot u. • PLANNING COMMISSION OPENINGS ..... Aprtl at, tt71 s DAILY PILOT A. FINAL WEEK (ABSOLOTEL Y NO EXCEPTIONS) *THREE MONTHS MEMBERSHIP $38.00 *REGULAR PRICE $68.00 ~ Jntroducing- E LS IE HARPER • Elsie has so many personal reasons to~ be happy again she actually surrolMds herself with ecstatic vibrations. She spent last summer trying to convince herself she had reached middle age, she naturally had pains and problems, exhaustion was naturaJ for a woman her age and she would simply learn to live with her fat. I But-her husband saw the Venus ad In the newspaper and Insisted she see If the Venus program could help his "bride". Afterall. he had extra money burning his pockets, from race track winnings. "It's really pltlful", she said. Slr1ce NOYember Elsa has kept her weight at about 115 pounds. She wlll alway8 continue to exercise at Venue becauM ahe nMllly llkes herself again and her husband tells her almost everyday how fantastic she looks. Etale lovea her new Venus friends, too.She aaya, "We have a ball-It's Just ttke a big family." 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HOME FEDERAL SAVINGS of San Diego Huntington Beach Office: 2111 Main Street • 536-6511 Huntington Beach/Downtown: 411 Main Street· 536-6591 Irvine Office: 4543 Campus Drive • 752-6161 San Juan Capistrano Office: 32-039 Camino Capistrano • 493-0601 Santa Ana Office: 17th and Main Street• 835-4336 Seal Beach Office: 1350 Pacific Coast Hwy.· (714) 898-3481 (213) 596-5576 Home Federal Savtngs and Loan AssoctaHon of Sen Diego I For ndle on llCCOUftta of 1100.000 or more, plMM conlllCt JOU' local brwh IMNIOW· Huntington Beach Otflcet . { ~ ~ ,. > .~. ·~ i ( .. 1 . ! ' I i i , I • ,- VOL: 71, NO. 114, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1978 E%-Congressman Apologizes Teday's Cl.Slag 9 N.Y. Steeks j I TEN CENTS . ·i ~f .. ·' ... . ' ·.I ' for ., ~· anna Another City Tax Studied The Irvine City Council will consider. passage Tuesday or a new tax on development lo offset a predicted lack of cash for the capital improvements program of public works. The new tax, proposed at 0.5 percent or new building permit valuation. would raise $6.9 million over the next four years, according to calculations by city staff. The money would be used specifically to pay for street im· provements and traffic safely projects identified as needed but unfunded In the city five.year capital improvements program. MISSION VIEJO'S VIA BAHIA A PILE OF DIRT AND ASPHALT Massive Slide Along Trabuco Road Uplifted Bahia Sidewalk and Street James R. Harrington, director of administrative services, saio the tax "iasures that new de· velopment will pay a fair s hare or the cost of capital im· provemenls ... (the need for which was) created by the new development it.self." I 7 f Trabuco Road Covered as Earth Slides .. By JERRY CLAUSEN Of-o.llY Hill ..... An estimated 400,000 cubic :::::l!V°'i:'in "'~·-from a 140-root high hill onto Trabuco Road between Los A lisoa Bou.levard •nd Alicia Parkway In Mission Viejo. . Trabuco had been closed by county Environmental Manage- ment Agency <EMA> omclals Friday after gaps In the ridge area were discovered Thursday durlng a Mission Viejo Company monitoring program. The first slide, smaller of the two, rumbled down the hlll at 3:30 a.m. Saturday, county of· rlcials said. The second, which pl)ed rub· ble into the northbound lanes of Trabuco Road and actually pushed up asphalt paving along Via Bahia Street. occurred al about 3 a.m. this morning, a Mission Viejo Company spokesman said. Four geologists on the site concur. a Mission Viejo Com· pan) spokesman said, that neither of two Moulton Niguel Water District storage tanks atop the hill are in danger. However, he said, the waler district is not refilling the tanks as a precautionary measure. None of the utility lines beneath area streets have been broken by the slide, he added. The Mission Viejo Company volunteered its services to the county late last week after dis· covering the potential slide area. The company has been checking Mission Viejo area hillsides sub- sequent to heavy rains in the area t-0 determine if precautionary · measures might be required 1, the community. No homes in the area are threatened, the spokesman said. "I was amazed. the first calJer had my raincoat and I bad his ... • That's the success story of the Newport Beach man who ran this Daily Pilot ad: If yoo left the C011ta Mesa Cha.,,ber ol Commerce banquet early and picked up 11 coat without cbecklngll careluJly, try It on. Chances are the sleeves wtll rall midway between your Wrist and your elbow. U you'll ciUI XXX·Xll'.XX I'd be happy f'o •rran1e an ex-chanlje ... Need help finding something? People" all along the Orange Coast rely on the classified sec. lion of the Dally Pilot. Just caU 8'2·5678. Vote Set Today Tensions and Trash Mounting in County • f•eti!I: a"9•tM71@u. as :·=1=•-llf•'•Cf?Plilll~-· .. ~··M~W!l'verbat slFTICffi'g' Urantre CounFY"'"ti'uck r;" to 'Tei'mstel'S on Saturday. drivers planned a vote on a The offer was due lo be sent to "final.. management ocrer and ::them a *'3~ ,&Qday with a owners or one disposal firm wie r,;;tiiAfilltble 'tonight. were cleaning up in the wake ot The strike as left more lhan a $15.000 fire believed related to a mill ion county residents the strike. wit bout rub bi sh se rvice. A spokesman for Anaheim Homeowners taklng their own Disposal said a firebomb thrown trash to county dumps have re· over the firm's back rence about portedly had to wait as Jong as 11 :30 p.m. Sunday ignited scrap an hour because ofthe lines. paper and caused about $15,000 Orange Coast communities af- damage to paper and rubbish rected are Costa Mesa, Fountain bins. Valley, Huntington Beach. It was the latest in a series or Laguna Beach, Lake Forest. strike·related incidents, includ· northern El Toro and J.,agWta ing numerous fires in trash bins Hills Leisure World, and in· during the weekend and the dustrial parts of Newport Beach. burning of three idled refuse Dispute between drivers and trucks on Friday at Jaycox Dis-drivers helpers and manage. posal Company in Anaheim. ment reportedly focused on Members of Teamsters Local salary and benefits. Drivers. 396, who went out on strike a who now receive $4.50 an hour. week ago when their three-year are asking for a $4 raise over a contract expired. have been three.year period, with manage- m eeting with management ment previously offering $110. representatives and a federal Drivers are also asking for mediator. five days a year in sick leave. They currently receive none. The mediator. John Courtney, Details of the new offer were said employers "made con· not released pending a vote by siderable concessions" in a re· Teamsters. * * * * * * Harrtngton said there is a pro· jected $21.2 million deficit between needed city projects and city funds available lo finance the program through 1982. The development lax, called a systems development charge, would take t'are of street im· provements and traffic safely projects. but still would leave a Sl:S million shortage to finance prQP1.>~ nev:fublic bui_ldlclu. TtrWe t>uttdt.ig proJect'l""'tft• elude a city corporation yard/· maintenance facility, al $S :Jllilliln: Awl & ;srmaneot city -h-all. at $10 million. LHt week the council ordered a study made about whether a new city ball ought to be built at all. Harrington estimates that 65 percent of the systems develop· ment charge will be generated by residential building. with the rest paid by commercial and in· dustrial development. The proposed ordJnance e1t· empts additions or alterat to re- sidences that do not constitute an additional living unit. The current five.year capital improvements program, which also will be considered al the council's 7 :30 p.m. meeting at city hall, comprises .80 million in pro-jects, of which only $23 million is estimated to be available to fund them . Public Works Director Brent Muchow says in a report to the council, that unless additional revenue sources are discovered, neither the new city hall nor the corporation yard can be built within the next five rears. Another $15 mUhon project, T h P •ling u ? to lower the grade or the Santa ras I p. Fe railroad below ground level, also is currently unfunded, Muchow reported. Here's How to Cope 0 __ , ·~Estate By JACKIE HYMAN Robison said. 01 •• .,.,,, ,., ... siat• Other measures residents can f;' • F' __ J _ · Orange County city and coun· take, Robison said, are to cut the C lrln Mlf.ltred ty officials said today they don't bottoms out of cardboard believe the week·old trash truck ca rt on s and boxe s and drivers' strike has resulted in aluminum cans and natten them any health hazards. to take up less space. The strike has left more than Also, he s uggested saving one million county residents newspapers to give to recycling without rubbish collection. centers, such as those at Orange Orange Coast communities af. Coast College in Costa Mesa and fected are Costa Mesa, Fountain Marina High Sebool in Hunt- Va lley. Huntington Beach inlton Beach. Laguna Beach, Lake .Forest' lfl addition, Robison said, northern El Toro, Laguna HUJS animal wastes should be buried Leisure World and some In· deep underground. Lawn trim· dustrial customers in Newport mh111 should be reserved ln Beach. plastJc hap, be said. Richard Robison, assistant Ottlcen of the Orange County county director of environ men-Solid WuteKUl&gement Depart.- ta I health, urged that residents m eot 1ug1e1ted persons take steps to cut the danaer of haulln1 their own truh do so future health problems. durlnt morning hours when "Above all, they should uae dumps are less crowded. their garbage disposal to Its Aa an e11Mr1ency measure, maximum," Roblsoo said. the transfer ~talion fl 18131 He noted that management Gothard Street in Huntlnewn employees of the firms agalnst Beach <near Ellis Avenue> Is which Teamsters Local 396 is now open from 7 a.m. to 4:30 striking have been averting the p.m . Monday throuah Saturday, ·worst danger by collectlne trash wtth the least-used dumping from medical centers and food time between 8 a.m. and noon, establishments officials aatd. "As It goes ·along thoup, It Also available to .the public may cause a ireater probfem," 'ttee MTIUKE, Pa1e A2) An Irvine branch office of a real estate firm, housed In one of the so-caUed Twin Towers at 18662 MacArthur Blvd .. was flooded Sunday when a urinal broke orr a wall. Firemen said water spewed through the ~roken pipe and completely soaked t.te boltom- floor office; other damage was done to the basement below by dripping wate1'. Damaie to the Real Estaters office was limited to l2S yards of indoor-outdoor carpeUng and plumbing repairs, firemen said. The cause of the break was not im· mediately known. Art Theft Solved FLORENCE, Italy <AP> Police say an informant's tip about a barroom boast of a "big theft .. cracked one of Italy's most daring art robberies and led to recovery or a Rubens masterpiece and nine other Flemi.eh works stolen from the Plttl P•'•u muuum In Florence .. ,. . .,....... SENT TO PRISON Ex-Congressman Hanna Court Backs Pat Hear-st Corwiction WASlUNGTON (AP> -The U.S. Supreme Court refused to revie w Patricia Hearst's 1976 bank robbery conviction. The young newspaper heiress, free two years on $1 million bond, soon may have to go to prison . The justices rejected Miss Hearst's appeal with no explana- tion. •*'I' 1•11&1 William J , Bren· nan Jr. voted to review her case, and he said he would have limit- ed the court's study to tbe ad· missibillty into trial evidence or recordings of Miss Hearst's jailhouse conversations. Lawyers for Miss Hearst have 25 days in which to ask the high court to reronsider. One of those lawyers, J . Albert JobDS-On of Boston. said be was considering s uch a move . However, the court almost never grants reconsideration. "Also under consideration are motions to the district oourt in San Francisco.·• Johnson added. He said he might ask that court to "revise and revoke" Miss Hearst's sentence -allow- ing her time already served to satisfy her imposed prison term. Miss Hearst conceivably could be ordered to prison in the In· terim. Her immediate fate appears to rest with U.S. District Judge (See HEARST~ Page AZ> Irvine Cops lose Suspect In Break-in Ten lrvlne policemen, includ- ing six members of the depart- ment's special operations unit (a tactical command squad ), stalked a burglar three hours through a darkened industrial building today. After searching the building, owned by Plessey Semiconduc- tors Products, an electronics firm , police concluded the burglar escaped through a side door obscured by bushes. Officers originally were called to investigate an alarm at a Plessey facility at 1641 Kaiser Ave. By coincidence, according to police, that turned out to be an employee who accidentally set oU the alarm. But while leaving, one officer noticed a lone motorcycle parked outside another Plessey building, across an alley at 1674 McGawAve. omcers noted the cycle engine still was warm. and checked the building entran~. ~e found an open door, and when be moved it spotted somebody run· nlng inside the building. The special operations unJti s imilar to LAPD's specla weapons and tactics <SWAT) squad was called to assist. While officers, in bullet.pl'O()( Jackets and armed wltb sbotcuns. searched, a dozen firemen waited outside with a medical backup team. 6to30 Months Decreed W ASHINOTON (AP) - Forrner Orange County con- f ressman Richard T. Hanna. the irst <'Ongresslonal figure charged in the Korean Influence- buying scandal, today was sen· tenced to serve six months in a federal prison. Hanna, 64, appeared stunned as Chief District Judge William Bryant tersely handed down the sentence after lengthy appeals for mercy from both the con- gressman and his attorney. In a quivering voice. Hanna bad told Bryant: "l apologize lo the court, 1 apologize to the peo- ple who elected me to public of- fice . . . I hope in the years that I have left I can do something to atone for what I have done." Hanna. who se rved in Congress from 1963 to 1974 as a Democrat from California, en- tered a bargained guilty plea March 17 to one count or con- spiracy to defraud the govern· ment, a charge that bears a maximum penally or five years in prison and a $10.000 fine. Hanna later said he will begin serving his term May 8 at the minimum·security prison at Maxwell Air Force Base near Montgomery. Ala. Hanna's plea agreement averted a trial on a 40-count in- dictment returned by a grand . jury last October. Government attorney Jeffrey White dropped the remaining charges alter today's sent.enclng. Today's sentence allows Han· na to become eligible for parole after serving six months. The. government said in the bargain.Ing plea with the former congressman that Hanna "re-ceived in excess of $200,000 in cash and checlt.8 between 1969 and the end or 1975" for using the power or his office to further the interests or Korean busi· nessman Tongsun Park. . Hanna's attorney, Charles McNelis, argued in a long and emotional presentation t o Bryant that while his client "did commit a serious mistake or judgment in his relationship with Tongsun Park," Hanna has since tried to redeem himself by " cooperating fully with govern- ment lnvestiJlators. "What conceivable and earthly good would be ac· complished by the Incarceration of this man?" McNelis asked. The lawyer said that while Hanna did receive money from Park, "that is not to say that he corrupted his political office." Noting that Hanna had been through extensive Interrogations with government attorneys and congressional panels and a lie· detector lest, McNelis declared that Hanna "did everything humanly possible to correct the grievous error which he knows and admits he committed. "He leads from the heart rather than the head." said the <See Hi\NNA. Page A2 > Coast Weather Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with a chance of showers Tues. day. Cooler on Tuesday with highs in the upper 60s. Lows tonight S3 to 58. Chance or rain increasing to 30 percent Tuesday. INSIDE TODAY If 11ou're getting ma,.,Wd and llaoe qut1Uon1 about wtdding eUiqueUe, don't mlt1 a fiw-pat1 strfts by Ellmbeth i>oll, ldlkh btginl t<ffay th fi".atunng, Page Cl. .... x Al Yr!Sentclt .. ,....,... C1•t e-J.-i.~ :: ~-· .... g --==-.. .. CMI Ji ra:::: ~~ ge ~= .. ., M AS ...,_.._ M,M OllllY,... ........... LAKE MISSION VIEJO ALMOST READY TO OPEN AFTER TWO YEARS OF CONTROVERSY Cal If om I•'• Drought Hindered th• Flow of Water Into the Recreation al Faclllty 1..ake Mission Viejo Will Open June 3 Dump 5,000 pounds of rainbow trout ; add 18 inches of water, mix thoroughly in a double dammed. man-made lake and open on June 3- That 's the recipe for Southern California's newest recreational lake, Lake Mission Viejo, scheduled to open to residents who are lake ·association mem- bers. The Mission Viejo Company began rilling the controversial lake in October, 1976. The flow of M elropolltan Water Distric t water was halted in March. 1977, at the height of the three-year Calllornia drought. The development firm gained s tate permission to begin filling the lake again Jasl February at lhe rale of about 8.4 million gallons daily, and it is expected to be full, 528 million gallons. by May J, company officials said this week As the lake fills, lake associa- tt on personnel, including Jifeguards. are preparing for the first Saturday in June wben resi· Toro Marine Facing Charge In Kidnapping h sergeant stationed at £1 Toro Marine Corps Air Station .remained in custody today. rac- ing charges in what police allege was an attempted kidnappi~ of a Hoag Memorial Hospital nurse. Newport Beach detective Ken Smith said he arrested Thomas Jackson 'Patton. 28. of 81121 2 Midway Place, Santa Ana. Fri· day at the Santa Ana gas station where Patton worked in his off. duty hours. Smith said he traced Patton through a license plate number and car description given police !:>y witnesses to the 1'hursday af- ternoon Incident. -The 25-year-old hos pital ~mployee told police she was ac- costed by a big, knife-wieldjng man in the hospital's parking structure as s he left work. She said the man ordered her to let him into her car . but as she drove out or the structure. she jumped screaming from the vehicle. Her screams attracted three other hospital employees who purs ued the fl eeing suspect back into the parking building only to lost' him when he drove away. Smith said that at the time or hl 'I arrest. Patton was wearing a shirt that matched the shirt described by the victim and he found a pocket knife on Patton .thal also matched the knife described by the victim Patton is being held in Newport Beach city jail In lieu of $25.000 bail. Smith said he plans to seek charges of kidnap- ping and assault with a deadly weapon in the Harbor Judicial District Court. ORA~GE COAST DAILY PILOT TM Ot'.,. CM\t 0..11¥ Pt._ wttt\4f'Wf h IHf)m .,,,nt'O fft@I "'""-" Pffl'\t tU>Ubltfl'f'G b• lf'llt ()f ~09 CO.'t P\1 .. 1\f'llf\Q CGMOAhy ~Otittr•t•edUIOn\.tn INOU\oMd Mof'\d•'f 1"'°"Q" ,r•o.tr '°" (')'I" ...... Ne•OOf1 k•<". """"'·~ llie•" '°"' t•1n V•llt>'I lrYlft• ~•O<llflH(' V•l9*t AM ~ ::.~~~£~~.~::1·~~·r~ Dtl~tNI bUbf1Vtll't-Q Ol•"f It •f JlO """'' ~y Mr"' Co'\t• Mtw c..11torn••'7•1' .• ,., .. -Ptn10tn1 •'td Pvbf1~, , .. _ • Corloy \/11tt Pf"-tO.f't•"4°'"'"" ....... """"" Ttll~UKM'Vtl EditM ,_, .... _. ... ""'~ .. • ... [di ... a.. ...... 1.-..., ............ " A'"''•"'t M.tn.Q•"Q Cdltorl OfflcH e .. ••Mtw , .. .._. .. , .. ,,,, .... l.AOVl\lhMft 11 .. 0.._y,.Sl'WI 14-'"''"" llcl(ft I ltl) &o .. ft \lo<llO~..-o ---V111n 1$101\Al'al'l~lll ., ,,,..,. 01•ti0 ... , .... ~ Telepltone (1MI~ Cla .. llled Advertfelfto "2-5C11 ~-·· v11i.-, -0111<• 511 .. 1110 ~-=·~ii= ::, c: .. 9:ru!.,';Y:,\~~= "'.r •• , ., ..... ,,,,.""·•II"" ,..,.," ,.. •• '" "•'•ct~,.,. wu....,t , .. t ••• ~rtnlt\..,_ et <...-rl9'11- \f<-............... ~ .. °"'' """ (1tlfefftl1 ,VO\t' ••O\l&I\ b-. t•r"'•' 0 ,0 ;r,,:.:~r...bla.::!w.t:,:o ,.._.,, .. ,,. mUltat'f dents of the planned community are scheduled to use the facility for the first time. Sailboats. rowboats and paddleboats will be available for rent. said lake ope rations manager Don Danyko, and two association- owned beaches are being raked smooth for the big day. Danyko said rainbow trout will be stocked in the lake Mon· day for local anglers. Lake association members already are registering boats for use on the lake. a Mission Viejo Company spokesman said. The o nly craft allowed will be sailboats. rowboats and electric- m otor boats. Eligible for lake membership are the owners or homes within the planned commwtily. After an initial $25 ree. association members will pay $7 a month to use the lake and its facilities. the spokesman said. Of the 16,400 feet of shoreline. only about 2.200 reel have been designed specifica lly to serve recreational de mands of the community al large, the spokesman said. Most of the remainder will be devoted lo lakefront housing and privately owned boat slips. Company officials note that the lake, which averages 30 feel in depth and is 70 feet deep at its d eepest point. is unique in Orange County because it has been designed to permit swim- ming in the main body of water. Portions of lhe lake set aside ror general and community - not public -use Include two as- sociation beaches, a natural am- phitheater "'rea. picnic grounds, boat storage, parking areas and boat launching facilities. Three other beaches are de- signed for private com munities along the water's edge. The largest community facib - ty is along the north edge of the lake and includes the 300-yard- long main beach, averaging 80 feet in depth. Fro•PageAJ HANNA ..• attorney. "It Is inconceivable that he would do harm to his country." M~Nelis insisted that while Hanna had taken s ubstantial ~mounts of cash from Park. "he 1s not a bag man" and not one penny was delivered to any other poliUcians lhrou~h bim "He does not need the iron gates or incarceration, he needs a helping hand." McNelis con- cluded. At that point, Bryant invited Hanna to speak for himself. The former congressman stood silenUy as if to gather his composure. and when he finally s1>oke llis voice shook and he seemed to be fighting tears. Hanna told the court that "I hope that what you have to do will help atone for what I've done." Bryant. in serious, clipped tones. then ordered Hanna to surrender to the attorney general'~ office for a decilsion on which prison he will go to. Hanna will remain free until that assignment. then will have 30 days to report to the institu- tion under Bryant's order. McNells asked Bryant before the sentence was handed down, "Whal reasonable man would s uggest that 64-year-old Olok Ha nna, a first-term violator, really deserves incareeratlon ?'' The attorney noted that Han- na's wife of 33 years and several adopted children depend on him for support. M cNelis acknowledaed that Hanna had "an affinity for and deep Interest in Korean affairs," and had worked "openly, active- ly and aggresslvely foT closer lies between this country and that emergin1 democracy. For that he apologiies to no man." he said. "But he does admit that the activities he had wtth Ton.1sun Park were a clear conflict of In- terest and a clear violation of law," but aln~e decldlnl not to run for re-election In 1914, HGll- na has ''attempted to extricate himself" ever since. -. f'ro• Page A f HEARST ••• William H. Orrick Jr In San Francisco. He could allow Miss Hearst to remain free until lawyer s exhaust all legal maneuvers. Those could include a request t b a t 0 r rick red u c e M i ss Hearst's seven-year prison term to a period of probation, ~s was done last year for state charges or assault and robbery against hP.r . Under Supr eme Court pro- cedure. Orrick officially will learn of the court's action when receiving notice of it by mail within a few days. · There was no immediate com- ment on the Supreme Court's ac- tion by Orrick, federal pros- eculorsor the Hearst famjJy: If imprisoned, Miss Hearst would have tQ serve 14 months before becoming eligible for parole. She served 14 months be'fore. during and a rter her eight·w~k trial. She was convicted of participating in the 1974 armed robbery or a Hibernia Bank branch in San Francisco -two months after her kidnapping by a group calling Itself the Sym- bionese Liberation Army. Miss Hearst , daughter of newspaper publisher Randolph Hearst and his wire Catherine, was 19 when SLA members ab- ducted her from a Berkeley apartment Feb. 4, 1974. The kidnapping. reports of her alleged subseque nt conversion to the SLA movement and months of police frustration in efforts to capture Miss Hearst and her abductors was lntema-lional news. Mias Hearst, 24, has llved 'Mth her parents and under constant private guard since the federal conviction. Her father posted a $1 million bond s upported by a $100,000 cash deposit to secure her freedom. The conviction was upheld las t November by the 9th U.S. €ircuit Court of Appeals, which ruled that her appeal presented "no novel issues." Miss Hearst's lawyers then appealed to the nation's highest court, essentially using the same legal arguments. T hey contended that the late U.S. District Judge Oliver J. Carter, who presided at Miss Hearst's trial. committed numerous errors that denied her a fair trial. MINISI'ER WANTS KIDS TO JOIN IN GETTYSBURG, Pa. <AP) - Maintaining that the Lord's Sup- per s~ould be open to baptiied infants, the Rev. Paul Harms. a Lutheran theologian told a worship conference at Lutheran Theological Seminary. . "I( there's one thing a kid un- derstands, it's food.·· Stonn System Canies Rain To North State By The A11odated Press Rain ls likely far much of Northern California by Tuesday, the National Weather Service says. r A storm system which de - veloped north of Hawaii over the weekend already had spread considerable cloudiness over the state early today and brought a few light showers to the Salinas area. The air associated with the storm ls qulte warm and moist, meaning rain, rather than snow. will fall at tneb lfvels ln the Sierra Nevada and cause rapid m elting or the abund ant snow pack. This will caU8e some concern nmon g state flood control authorities because of Increased runoff from the mountains. The rains· a lso will be troubleaome for farmeri ln the Central Valley. whose wet fields wUI have to drY out before they cah be cu1Uvated. Improved weather Is expected by Wednesday and lonaer ranie prospects Indicate m~tly fair weather the rest of the week. Helped 1'ieii• Waddill Late; Cr.ash Blamed By TOM BARLEY Ot .. oellY ,.... Matt Jury ins tructions lo the murder trial or Or. WilUam Ba• ter Waddill were delayed today when It was learned that the rbysician was involved in a traf- i ~ ~cident in Huntlnttoh Beile . W ddiU, '2, arrived 1t the county courthouse one hour l•te and explained to atuineys that he stayed at tbe scene of the ac-~iden l to render aid to the worn an occupant or the other car. Waddill said the two cars col- lided al 9: 10 a.m. near the in- tersection of Beach Boulevard and Trask Avenue I n Westminster. He and his wife were unhurt but lhe woman oc- cupant or the other car s urrered w hat he described as un. determined lnjuries. Waddill said the woman responded to treatment provided by bimaelf and paramedics who r ushed to the scene and was then taken to a loeal hospital. "What a day tor something like this to happen," the deren- dent rl,lefully commented. "I 'll tell you, it never rabts but what it pouni." Waddill declined to speculate on who was responsible for the collision. Judgt Jamet K. Turner bE{gan reading lo&tructlons to bis Orange CoUnty Superior Court Jury about one hour after Wad- dlll's anival as the murder trial of the Huntington Harbour ob- stetrician moved into it.s final hours. It ls expected that the reading of instruct.ions will take much or the d$.Y and that the panel of nine men and three women will begin deliberations later to· day. The jury is being asked to re- turn one of five poss ible verdicts: not guilty. murder in the first or second degree or at tempted murder in the first or second degree. Waddill is accused of stran- gling a newborn baby girl in the nursery at Westminster t;om- munity Hospital shortly after he was advised that the child had s\lrvlved a saline abortion he per!ormed on the 18-year-old mother 12 hours earlier. It was tesWied for the pros- ecution that Waddill choked the baby to death after predicting that he would face lawsuits seek- ing m i llions of dollars in damages if he allowed what he believed to be a brain-damaged baby to live. Donny to Wed June Nuptial. Planned HONOLULU <AP> -An early June weqding ten- tatively is planned for singing star Donny Osmond, 20, and Debra Glenn, 19. a Brigham Young University freshman from Provo. Utah. The engagement was an- nounced Sunday in Honolulu. where Osm ond and his s ister. Ma rie. were filming the motion picture. "Aloha Donny and Marie .'' Osmond said he still con- tinues to appreciate his fans and wants them to support him now more than ever before. DONNY "They <the fans) have always wanted me happy, and I trulv am that.·· said Osmond. "l ha\'e been blessed with the greatest fans anyone could as k for." Berkowitz Sane; Trial Set May 8 NEW YORK <AP) -A judge ruled today that David R. Berkowitz is mentally compe- tent to stand trial for the murder of Stacy Moskowiti, the last or s ix homicide victims of the Son of Sam. The judge ordered the trial to begin May 8. The ruling might not lead to a Saddle back Trustees Get New Budget Saddleback College trustees will gel their first peek tonight at the 1978-79 district budget -a look that will reveal the uncut requests filed by each of the school's departments, divisions and offices. Usually, trustees do not get the budget before it Is trimmed and balanced by district of- fi cials. But officials say they want trustees to be aware of the work that goes into budget cutting - particularly with the possibility of declining revenues should the Jarvis-Gann property tax limita- tion initiative be approved by voters in June. The meeting is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. In the col- lege ·s library, room 212. The campus is located at 28000 Marguerite Parkway In Mission Viejo. trial, however. since Berkowitz has said he wants Lo plead gujl ty. His lawyers want to plead him innocent by reason of in- sanity. but since he has been ruled competent, Berkowitz is free to make his choice. provid- ing the judge finds tnc plea legally acceptable. "The court finds that the peo- ple have established by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the defendant does not. as a result of mental disease or de- fect. lack capacity to understand the proceedings against him or to assist in his defense,·· Brooklyn Supreme Courl Justice Joseph R. Corso said in a six- page memorandum of law. Corso. who this month held four days of closed hearings on the competency of the 24-.Year- old postal clerk from Yonkers. set May 8 for either the start or pre- li minary trial hearings or jucy selection s hould the detense waive the hearings. "Defendant is able to discuss the case with his counsel and has never refused to do so. No claim is made that he has not done so," Corso wrote. "lndecish>n or vacillation as to the best legal course for him to pursue does not. render him in- com petent to stand tria I Rather, it is indicative of un- derstanding of his predicament. "Nor does failure to adopt any proposed course of action ad· vocated by counsel Indicate un- fitness. f...,fne Honoree• Moro Kidnap Demand Made ftOM'E <AP) -A new ultimatum purporting to come from the Red Srigad today demandett the immediate release Qf 13 Jailed tem>Hsts frt eit-~hange for kidnapped rormer Premier Aldo Moro. "OnJy an fmmedJate and positive response glven without equivocation and concretely carried out will allow the release of l\ldo Moro." said the typewrit- ten message, received by ne wapapers in Rome, Genoa ai\d Milan. lt threatened the eic~u. ti on of the 61. year-old pres- Id en t of the Christian Democratic Party unless. the terrorists were freed. STRIKE .•• from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. ls the Coyote Canyon landfill site located on Bonita Canyon Road behind UC Irvine. Various city officials are also. taking steps and are urgently re- questing residents to keep rub- bish off the streets and curbs. In Laguna Beach. plastic bags are available at city hall and citizens may dump their trash at dumpsters located at the Agate Street Fire Station and across from the Festival o f Arts grounds in the city employees parking lot. Allan Roeder, acting manager of the Costa Mesa Sanitary Dis- trict, said officials there hope to have heavy trash bags available to the public by midweek. He said the city is operating a referral service lo put people un- able to haul their own trash in touch with volunteers. He said the city .won't refer people to anyone who charges to collect trash. John Whipple. administrative aid~ in the Huntington Beach Departmenl of Public Works. said tha t city is working on plans to set up locations where citi zens could bring trash for ci- ty trucks to haul. • Fountain Valley officials said they can't make any promises but are trying to get a rebale for trash collection fees during the strike period. In Ne wport Bea c h. a s pokesman said ther e haven't been any maJor problems re- ported because only a few in- dus trial customers are affected. Driver Injured Ramming Bus VAN NUYS <APl -An off-du- ty Rapid Transit Distract drive r was in critical condition after he r eportedly ran his auto through a red light at 85 miles an hour and was broadsided by a bus. William Brinkley, 30. of Van Nuy~. was taken to Valley Hospital Sunday with a skull· fracture. broken leg and multi-pit' cuts. The driver of the bus, Jasper Bullock. 42. of Reseda, was treated for cuts at the same hospital and released. He had ne> passt!nger.. Thief Gets Rare Pictures N e ar-antique rare wood- framed pictures of old Irvine. displayed in a model home at Yale Ave nue and Irvine Boulevard. Sunday were report- ed stolen by a burglar. Sterling Homes officials valued the m onetar:y lo~ S2,800, but said the nostalgic value was incaJculable. The 14 pictures depicted old buildings, farmhouses, orange groves and other rustic scenes. Man, 19, Drowns MUIR REACH <AP> -A 19- year-old unidentified San Fran- cisco man apparently drownect Sunday when he fell off a rock whilt• fish1nR in this Marin CoWl- ty beach area. the Coast Guard said. The Greater trvlne l.ions Club prese nted ltnnual community awards Saturday in ceremonies at Airportcr Inn. This year's recipients <and the category for whtch each won> were crrom left l Richard Vorle. UC I telecommunications manager <Achievement ); Dlane Kent. Irvine com· munlty services commissioner <Communi- ty I; Richard Koehltir. Daily Pilot staff photographer t Press Rclutlons >: and the Rev. Ron Allison, Univenil y Methodist Churc h <Citizenship>. <See column. A4> 17 \ l Lag1•na/Soath Coast VOL 71 , NO. 114, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES O RANGE COUNTY, ~lF-ORNIA MONDAY, AP R IL 24, 1978 Afternoon N. 'Y. S toeks I l TEN CENTS Laguna lligh Chained; larvis Named BJ Sl'EVE MITCHELL Of .. Mtr l'Mllt ta# Somebody -probably senior class pranksters -sneaked onto the LagWla Beach High School c:ampus Sunday night a nd chained every gate on campus shut, and some office doors. ·•We couldn't get onto the campus," said Dr. Robert Hughes, principal of the 14-acre campus on Park Avenue A cook who showed up for work at about 6:30 tb1s morning, found gates chained and locked, and hundreds of mimeographed letters taped to walls. apparent· ly 11igned by the princlplr. say· Ing school would be closed to-day. "Somehow they got my shcnature and slapped il on the bottom of the letter," Hughes lauebed. "The whole thinJ was really in1enJoua." Fortunately. Hughes aa'1ll. maintenance crews had all lbe cbains off and slgns down by 7 a .m . "We had to use bolt cutters to get the chains off," be said. "They bad Xeroxed signs on all Ex-Congressman Apologizes tbe doon and entrances to lbe tcbool." The iquno, ,wltb the bogus aipat= said "To all faculty staff at•.nta. Regarding the clOllilre ot scbool. "In protest of the Jarvla·Gapn property tax laltiatlve, Laguna Beach Hlah School wlU be closed on this 24th day ot April. ln the year 1918. "Note there will be a meeting in the Thurston Junior Wgli School auditorium at 8:15. ''The note doesn't say morning or eveflina," Hughes added. The letter orders all personnel of the high school to attend the meeting. "Be prompt," the let· ter signs off. "I don't know where they got my signature," Hughes said. The perplexed principal said he also has no idea where they got the heavy chains, locks, mimeograph machine, or the idea. · But he does have a notion as to the identity of the pranksters. "I would think we have a very intellectual senior class here, and that this would be on par with their abilities." rison Term for anna DeMy ,.... twf ..... LAKE MISSION VIEJO ALMOST READY TO OPEN AFTER TWO YEARS OF CONTROVERSY California's Drought Hindered the Flow of Weter Into the Recreational FaciUty Hearst Review Nixed; Prison Due for Patty? WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court rerused to review Patricia Hearst's 1976 bank robbery conviction. The young newspaper heiress, free two years on $1 million bond, soon may have lo go lo prison. The justices reJected Mi ss Hearst's appeal with no explana· lion. Only Justice William J . Bren· nan Jr. voted to review her case. and he said he would have limit· ed the court's study to the ad- m iss1bility into trial evidence or recordings or Miss Hearst ·s jailhouse conversations. Lawyers for Miss Hearst have 25 days in which to ask the high court to reconsider. Onl' or those lawyers, J. Albert J ohnson of Boston , said he was con sidering such a move . However. the court almost never grants reconsideration. "Also under cons ideration are motions to the district court in San Francisco." Johnson added. He s aid he might ask that court to "revise and revoke" Miss Hearst's sentence -allow· ing her time already served lo satisfy her imposed prison term Mbs Hel\rst conceivably could be ordered to prison in the in· <See HEARST, Page A2) 1..ake Mission Viejo Will Open June 3 By JERRY CLAUSEN OI ... DMIJ Pllol $t.tll Dump 5.000 pounds of rainbow trout: add 18 inches of water, mix thoroughly io a double dammed, man-made lake and open on June 3. That's the recipe for Southern California's newest recreational lake. Lake Mission Viejo. scheduled to open to residents who are lake association mem- bers . The Mission Viejo Company began filling the controversial lake in October, 1976. The flow of Metropolitan Waler District water was halted in March, 1977, at the height of the three·year California drought The development firm gained state permission to begin filling the lake again last February at the rate of about 8.4 million gallons daily, and it is expected to be full . 528 million gallons, by May 1, company officials said this week. Danyko said rainbow trout will be stocked in the lake Mon- day for local anglers. Lake association members already are registering boats for use on the lake, a Mission Viejo Company spokesman said. The only craft allowed will be sailboats. rowboats and electric· motor boats. Eligible for lake membership are the owners of homes within the planned community. Alter an initial $25 fee, association members will pay $7 a month to use the lake and its facilities. the spokesman said. or the 16,400 feet of shoreline, only about 2,200 feet have been designed specifically lo serve rec reational demands or the <See LAKE, Page A2) MINISTER WANTS KIDS TO JOIN I N GETTYSBURG, Pa. <AP> - Maintaining that the Lord's Sup- per s hould be open to baptized infants, the Rev. Paul Harms, a Lutheran theologian told a worship conference al Lutheran Theological Seminary: "If th~re's one thing a kid un· de~tands, it's food." .Temions Mounting In Strike By JACKIE HYMAN Of ... Dllltr ..... Miff Tension mounted today as striking Orange County truck drivers planned a vote on a "final" management offer and ownets or one disposal firm were cleaning up in the wake of a $15,000 fire believed related to the strike. A spokesman for Anaheim Disposal said a firebomb thrown overt.be nrm·, back fence about 11:30 p.m. Sunday ignited scrap pape,r and caused about $15,000 damage to paper and rubbish bins. It was the latest in a series of strike-related incidents, includ· ing numerous Ores in trash bins dutln1 the weekend and the burninc of three idled refuse trudts oo Friday at J aycox Dis· poaal Company in Anabelm. Mem bel"'ll of Teamsters Local 396, wbo went but on strike a week ago when tbeir three-year contract expired, have been meeting wlth manaa~ment representatiYes and a federal mediator. The mediator, John Courtney, said employers .. made eon· slderable concessions" in a re· portedly final offer given verbal· ly to Teamsters on Saturday. The offer was due to be sent to them in writing today, with a vote by drivers possible tonight. The strike has left more than a million county residents without rubbish service. Homeowners laking their own trash to county dumps have re- portedly had to wait as long as an hour because of the lines. Orange Coast communities af. rected are Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, Lake Forest, northern El Toro and Laguna Hills Leis ure World, and in· duatrial parts of Newport Beach. Dispute between drivers and drivers helpers and manage- ment reportedly focused on salary and benefits. Drivers. who now receive $4.50 an hour, are asking for a S4 raise over a three-year period, with manage. ment previously offering $1.10. Drivers are also asking for five days a year in sick leave. They currently receive none. Details of the new offer were not released pending a vote by Teamsters. _ ... , ......... SENT TO PRISON Ex.Congreu man Hanna SC Council To Consider 'Renovation' The San Clemente City Coun· cll will be asked tonight to ap- prove renovation of th e municipal beach club and swim· ming pool. Among those exp ected to speak at tonight's meeting, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in coun· cil chambers at city hall. 100 Ave . Presidio. are Doris Denison. whose father. Ole Hanson, donated the beach club and pool to the city in 1928. Peli· tioners supporting pool renova· lion will also be on hand to pre· sent more than 1,500 signatures from local residents who want the pool repaired. And a representative of the San Clemente aquatics team is ex· peeled to urge pool repair for competitive as well as general public use. The city's parks and recrea- tion commission will recom· mend that the pool and beach club, located at 106 W. Ave. Pico, be fully restored. Needs Unit Meets The council·appointed Human Needs Committee will meet in Laguna Beach council cham· bers, 505 Forest Ave tonight beginning at 7:30. Sewer Line Spillage in SC Pumped Back As the lake fills. lake associa· lion personne l. including lifeguards. are preparing for the first Saturday in June when resi· dents of the planned community are scheduled to use the facility for the first time. Sailboats, rowboats and paddleboats will be available for rent, said lake operations manager Don Danyko. and lwo association· owned beaches are being raked smooth for the big day. PILOT AIDED CDA.T SWITCH Sea Lion Deaths Flayed A clogged sewer line in south San Clemente spilled raw sewage into Alessandro Canyon this weekend, where it was channeled into a collecting pond and pumped back into the sewer system to avoid contamlnating the beach. "We've opened this up a cou· ple of limes and cleared it," said City Engineer Howard Benson today. "We'll be going Into the sewer main again this morning for a more extensive check 'lo determine what is blocking it." Bensoo said precautions have been taken to assure the blocked sewer llne creates no health basard. The sewer overflow was first s:eported Saturday morning by an A vent.ta de los Lobos ·Marinos retldent. "I was amazed. the first caller had my raincoat and l bad his." That's the success story of the Newport Beach man wbo ran this DaUy Pilot ad: If you left the Costa Mesa Chamber or Commen·e banquet early and picked up e coat without checking 11 carefully, try it on. Chances are the llleeves will fall midway between your wrist and your elbow. If you'll call ICXX·XXXX r·d be happy 10 urrange an ex. change ... Need help finding something? People all along the Orange Coast rely on the classified sec- tion or the Daily Pilot. Just call 642·5678. lAJguna Lifeguard Bkunes Animal Control Laguna Beach lifeguard Jim Stauffer blames the city's lax animal control with the slaughter of two convalescing sea lions at Crescent Bay .Beach last week. The two sea creatures were kllled sometime Wednesday night or Thursday morning near the rocks where they were re- cup er a tin a from bouts of pneumonia, lbe llreguard said. Stauffer said be found two dead sea lions and a third mammal near death at the Crescent Bay rookery early Thursday. "They bad puncture wounds in their necks and faces," Stauffer said. "And I would gueaa it was not Just one dog &hat kllled them I'd bet It wu a couple or three . . .. . dogs let looee by their owners to run free on the beach. "One ol them made it to the water, but came back the next day and died " be said. The t.blrd sea lion, which survived the beach attack, has not moved since Thursday. ''Re mieht have Internal in· juries, but he's ln really bad shape," Stauffer saJd. Tbe in· jured sea lloa was ta.ken back to lhe malreshllt rookery behind the city's sewer plant where Stauffer ls Carini for nearly two dozen ol the sick anlmala. Three other aea Uona released earlier tbi.a mooth at Crescent Bay Beuht a_w.reotty escal)ed the Ja• Ol tbe dots by •wlm· mlna out to sea, Stauffer said. "They're bl.ell on tbe beach, but I'm going to move them before they get killed too," he said. The Laguna lifeguard blames the attack on Laguna's lax en· lorcement and irresponsible pel owners. "Laauna's the only city in Orange County that even allows dogs on the beach at all," be said. "Some people are totally Ir· responsible with their dogs," he said. "1bey let them out at night to run on the beach, and that's probably what happened Wed· nesday night." Laguna Beach councilDlen have approved ttntative plaN for a sea lion tank to be ~n­ structed near the new Ufeguard <See ANIMALS, P11e A!) ' 6to 30 Months Decreed WASHINGTO N <AP > - Former Orange County con. gressman Richard T. Hanna. the firs t congressional figure charged in the Korean influence. buying scandal, today was sen· tenced to serve six months in a federal prison. Hanna. 64, appeared stunned as Chief District Judge William Bryant tersely handed down the sentence aft.er lengthy appeals for mercy from both the con· gressman and his attorney. In a quivering voice, Hanna had told Bryant: "I apologize to the court. I apologize to the peo- ple who elected me to public or- fice . . . l hope in the years that I have left I can do something to atone for what I have done.·· Hanna, who served in Congress rrom 1963 to 1974 as a Democrat from California, en- tered a bargained guilty plea March 17 to one count of con· spiracy to defraud the govern- ment. a charge that bears a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a Sl0,000 fine. Hanna's plea agreement averted a trial on a 40-count in· dictment returned by a grand jury last October. Government attorney Jeffrey White dropped the r emainipg charges after today's sentencing. Today's sentence allows Han- na to become eligible for parole after serving six months. The government said in the bargaining plea with the former congreisman that Hanna •·re- ceived in excess or $200.000 in cash and check:; between 1969 and the end of 1975" for using the power of his office to further the interests of Korean busi· nessman Tongsun Park. Hanna's attorney, Charles McNehs, argued in a long and emotional presentation to Bryant that while his client "did commit a. serious mistake of judgment in his relationship with Tongsun Park," Hanna has since tried to redeem himself by cooperating fully with govern- ment investigators. "What conceivable and earthly good would be ac- complished by the incarceration or this man?'' McNelis asked. (See HANNA, Page A2) Coast We athe r Mostly cloudy tonight and Tues day wiln a chance of showers Tues· day. Cooler on Tuesday with highs in the upper 60s. Lows tonight 53 to 58. Chance of rain increasing to 30 percent Tuesday. INSIDE TODA V If you're getting married and have queatfon.t about wedding dtiquette, don't miaa a five-part series by Elizabeth Po3f, which begi~ toda11 in Featuring, Page Cl . Waddill Late; Crash Blamed BY TOM M &LEY .. '-.. .,...., ......... Jury 1nstructlou !a tbt munter trtal ol Dr. WUU1m BU· ter Waddlll we... delayed tt>day when it was learned that the physician ~ Lnvolved an a traf. fl t' 1ccldeol tn Hunllnaton Beach. Waddill. u. arrived at the county courthouae one hour late and explained to attorneys that he stayed at the sce ne of the ac· cident to render atd lo the woman occupant of t.he other cu. Waddill said the two cars col· F rom Page A I LAKE ••. comrhunity at large , the spokesman said. Most or the remainder will be devoted to lakefront housing and privately owned boat slips. Company officials note that the lake, which averages 30 feet in depth and Is 70 feel deep at its deepest point , is unique In Orange County because it has been designed lo permit swim· ming in the main body of water Portions of the lake set aside for general and community - not public -use include two as- sociation beaches, a natural am· philheater area. picnic grounds. boat storage, parkin~ areas and boat launching facHiUes. Three other beaches are de· signed for private communities along the water's edge. The largest community facili· ty is along the north edge or the lake and includes the 300-yard· long majn beach. averaging 80 feet In depth Danyko said community resi· dent s are expec ted to participate ln a regatta, fishing <'ontest and organized games on opening day. tided at 9:10 a.m. near the ln· t.rsect.ioo of Beach Boulev.,-d and Traak Avenue In Wntmlmter. He and hi• wile were unhurt but the woma.n oc· cupant ot the other car suffered what he described u un· tietermlned injuries, W add Ill aald the woman responded to treatment provided by himself and paramedics who rushed to the scene and waa then taken Lo a local boapltal. "What a day for somethlna like this to happen," the deten· dent ruefully commented. "I 'II tell you, lt never ralns but what it pours." Waddill declined to speculate on who was res ponsible for the collision. Judge James K . Turner be'gan reading instructions t o his Orange County Superior Court jury about one bour after Wad. dill's arrival as the murder trial of the HunUngton Harbour ob- stetrician moved Lnto its rfnal hours. It la expected that the reading Of instructions will take much of the day and that the panel or nine men and three women will begin deliberations later to. day. The jury Is belog asked to re- l urn one of five possible verdicts: not guilty, murder in the first or second degree or al· tempted murder in the first or second de"ree. Waddill is accuaed of stran- gling a newborn baby 1lrl In the nursery at Westminster l;om· munity Hospital shortJy after he was advised thal the child had s urvived a saline abortion he performed on the 18-year-old mother 12 hours earlier. Jt was testified for the gros· ecuUon that Waddlll choke the baby to death alter predicUng that be would face lawsuits seek· Ing millions of dollars in damages ii he allowed what he believed to be a brain-damaaed baby to live. OC Panel Stymied In Airport Hassle An Orange County Airport Land Use Commission attempt lo contest a San Juan Capistrano City Council move to close the community's controversial airport may be rutile, a com· mission member said today. "I don't think there's anything they Hhe commission ) can do about it," Robert Bresnahan, Orange Cou.nty Airport manager , said this morning. Bresnahan s aid he was basing his opinion on preliminary dis· cussions with Deputy County Counsel John Grisel. who· is re- searching legal action the com· mission could take to contest a so-called negative declaration of environmental impact from the airport's closure. G riset agreed t oday there could be proble ms contesting the negative declaration but said his formal opinion would not be complete for two or three more days. 'Tm preparing an opinion for the commission on that now," he said "It appears that there are problems that would have to be c..ve rcome " Those problems, Grisel said, stem from a 180-day period out· lined by the stale Environmen- Lal Quality Act for groups or in· ilividuals wishing to contest a public agency's action on any project. According to Griset, tti'e move to contest the city's ne gative declaraUon must come "within 180 days or a public agency's de- cision to approve or carry out a project." The situation is complicated by a notice of determination form filed with the Clerk of the ORANOl COAST L sc DAILY PILOT ' Board of Supervisors last week by San Juan city officials. According to the Environmen- tal Quality Act, interested groups or individuals have 30 days to contest the notice of de- te rm ination of a negati ve declaration. That means groups could file a protest and, if successful . force the city to do a fuJI environmen· tal impact report on the airport closure. But the 30-day period falls beyond the 180-day period, which expired last December. Guards Pull 40From Se a In Cle mente Sau Clemente lifeguards re· ported about 40 rescues Satur- day and Sunday on beaches in that city and adjacent county beaches. Lifeguard Gary Frederick s aid s un worshippers totaled 20,000 each day in the city, with another 10,000 visitors each day on county beaches patrolled by city lifeguards. LHeguards pulled about 20 s wimmers from the water each day. but none was seriously hurt in scattered riptides. Laguna Beach lifeguards were available lb.is morning but ob· servers said beach use was heavy. Police said bumper-to-btimper traffic moved slowly along Coast Highway, with many visitors floc k ing to Laguna's Main Beach Park. f'ro• P age A l ANIMALS ••• facility planned ror MaJn Beach Park. But until then. Stauffer , aaJd, convalescing sea lions are open to attack. Square Dance Set At Laguna Church A square dance Cor L>a1una Beach sixth graders wUJ be held Saturday from 7·9:30 p.m . at the Nel1bborhood Con.rreaational Church, St. Ann '• and Glenn· eyre, Laguna Beach. Ticket.I are available at the church office or at tbe dance for 99 cent.a. which includes rel"'3h· menu. Further Information may b4 obLained by calllna Aatrid Slmaarian at 494-8061. • Daddft• a Swinger Fred Kirkpatrick kisses his daughter Da wn, 4, while the t wo swing in Kern Desert Regional Park in Ridgecrest re- cently. 2 Sentenced in Fraud San Clemente Attorney Placed on ProlJation SAN DIEGO (AP I -Two Southern CalUornia men con- victed or defraudio1 dozens of Investors out of almost S2 million in a dairy rarm tax shelter and other s chemes each have been !fentenced to one lo 10 years In prison. Superior Court Judge James L. Focht sentenced James E . Mack. 57, of Malibu and Donald E. Skelton, 33. of ~ncino to the maximum terms. Both are ex- pected lo appeal.. A third defendaent. San Clemente attorney John R. Curtin, 41, 2721 Via Verbena, was placed on probation, with terms and conditions to be set May 15. Focht also will hear argu- ments May 15 that Mack and Skelton s hould remain (ree pending appeal. The two have been free since s hortly after the county grand jury returned a 132-count indictment against them in May. 1976. The three men were convicted Feb. 14 of 251 charges or aecurltles fraud, grand theft and conspiracy. Their nine-month trial Is believed the longest in San Diego County history. Two other men, Robert J . F ro"' Pafl*! A I HEARST. • • terim. Her immediate fate appears to rest with U.S. District Judge Wllllam H. Orrick Jr. In San Francisco. He could allow Miss Hearst to remain free until lawyers exhaust all legal maneuvers. • Those could include a request that Orrick r educe Miss Hearst 's seven-year prison term to a period or probation. as was done last year for state charges of assault and robbery a&ainst hPr. Under Supreme Court pro- cedure, Orrick officially will learn of the court's action when receiving notice of it by mail within a few days. There was no immediate com· ment on the Supreme Court's ac- tion by Orrick. federal pros- ecutorsorthe Hearst family. If imprisoned, Miss Hearst would have to serve 14 months before becoming eligible for parole. She served 14 months before. during and after her eight-week trial. Sh e was convicted o r participating in the 1974 armed robbery of a Hibernia Bank branch In San Francisco -two months aft.er her kidnapping by a group calling itself the Sym- bionese Liberation Army. Ryan, M , of Pasadena and Earl A. Shimon, 54, of Van Nuya pleaded guilty to related charges before lheir codefen· ·dents went to trial. The five men were accused or Involvement Jn a number of fraudulent lnveatment schemes dating back to 1970 when Ryan rormed Ryan Group West. bued first In downtown Los Angeles and later in Burbank. ROW was conceived as an in· veatment marketing firm ualng lnsul'ance salesmen to promote the various schemes. f'ro. Page Al HANNA SENTENCED. • • The lawyer said lhal wbUe Hanna did receive money from Park, "that ls not tony that he corrupf.A!d bis political office." Noting that Hanna bad been through extensive Interrogations with government attorneys and congressional panela and a Ile· detector test, McNells declared that Hanna "did everything humanly possible to correct the grievous error which he knows and admits he committed. ··He leads from the heart rather than the head," said the attorney. "It is inconceivable that be would do harm to bis country." McNelis insisted that while Hanna had taken substantial amounts of cash from Park. "he is not a bag man'' and not one penny was delivered to any other politicians through him. "He does not need the iron gales of incarceration, he needs a helping hand," McNelis con· eluded. At that point, Bryant Invited Hanna Lo speak for himself. The former congressman stood silently as if to gather his composure, and when he finally spoke his voice shook and he seemed to be fighting tears. Hanna told the court that "l hope that what you have to do will help atone for what I've done." Bryant, In serious, cllpped tones, then ordered Hanna to s urrende r to the attorney general's orfice for a decilslon on which prison he will go to. Hanna will remain free until that assignment, then will have 30 days to report lo the institu- tion under Bryant's order. McNelis asked Bryant before the sentence was handed down. "What reasonable m an would s uggest that 64-year -old Dick Hanna, a first-term violator, Drown Victim Identifie d a s Nigue l Woman really des~rves incarceration?" The attomey noted that Han· na 's wlfe or 33 )'ears and several adopted children depend on him for support. M cNelis acknowledged that Hanna had "an affinity for and deep interest in Korean affairs,·· and had worked "openly. active· Jy and aggressively for closer ties between this country and that emerging democracy. For tbat he apologizes to no man.'' he said. "But he does admit that the activities he bad wtlh Toqsun Park ~re a clear conflict ol in· tereat and a clear vtoJation ol law," but since deciding not to run for re-election in 1974, Han· na has "attempted to extricate himself" ever since. As outlined by the prosecution. Hanna helped Park become the seller's agent for California rice exports to South Korea, the reby enabling Park to earn substan· tial commissions. Hanna also bolstered Park's standing with the Korean gov· ernment by introducing him to membe rs of Congress and "otherwise aggrandizing Park's status in this country," ioclud· ing the Implementation of "many of his pro-Korean posi· tions" related to congressional matters. the government at- torney said. lbmger Drive Projects Set Slgnups Cor a Hunger Project beach run a nd tennis clinic begin Monday at the Human Af. fai rs Department office in Laguna Beach. The Hunger Project weekend scheduled May 13· 14 is co sponsored by the City of Laguna Beach and project coordinators. whose goaJ is to end hunger in the world in 20 years. The weekend includes a run on Main Beach Park, tennis clinic and showing of the film, "I Want to Live." with John Denver. Proceeds go to the Hunger Proj· cct. For more information, call the project omce at 751-9752. Balboa's 'Raider'~ Winner ... .... .. By ~ON LOCXA8BY ; Dlllly .......... ....., · ENSENAOA -Tbe 3ltl Newrort Btacb to Bnaentida y1cb race drtfted into Use re· cord books today u the lut ~ boats were struggling to ma\e the finish line at 8 a.m. Deaplte the alownesa of the 1ast doun boatl, tbe race w•s comparatJvely fast with the big majority or the 486 ltnlahers at· riving before sundown Sund8.J-. Unotnclal handicap reswta l.Ja· dlcated that Raid er ,~ Ericson-46 sk.Jpoered bv Jav · derman ot the Balboa Ya Club, was the winner of the President of the United St•tes trophy for the best corrected lime in the International 00'· s hore Rule <IOR) divtsldf. R1tder was lbe 12th boat~ finish With an elapsed tlme_;f 20.2215 hours. Her correcwµ time was 14 .8775 hours. ·! The winner of U,e President~br Mexico trophy for the best cfl#- rected time in the Perform~ Handicap Racing Fleet < PHRY.> appeared to be Capriccio, a a foot Clasa H sloop, skippered by Peter Nooleboom of the King Harbor Yacht Club. Official results for all classes we re due to be announced at the trophy presentation today at 3 p.m . But there was no doubt about the first yacht to fLnlsh. Double Bullet, a brand new fJO·toot catamaran. designed. built , owned and skippered by Bob Hanel of the Cabrlllo Beach Yacht Club, breezed across the finish line at 5 :13 a.m. Sunday to record an elapsed time or 17 hours and 13 mlnutes for the 125-mlle race. The lime was about three houn ahy of the elapsed time record of 14 hours and one mlnute, set by tbe catamaran AUcane in 1~7. Second yacht to finl1b, about two hours later. waa another catamar!lJl, the 36-foot EightlT Day. s kippered by· Roger MacGregor of the Lido Isle VacbtClub. The first three monohulls crossed the finish line In an almoat dead heat shortly after 7 a .m . with Fred Preiss' 84-foot sloop Christine of the Pacific Mariners Yacht Club. edging Bill White and Bill Pasquini 's 62-foot Ragtime by about one boat length. Ragtime was over- lapped with Harry Moloshco's 69·foot Drifter from the Long Beach Yacht Club. Drifter w,._, given credit for the firs t monohull to finish because she started in • dil· ferent clau 10 minutea betU.nd ChrlsUne and Ragtime. Moderate but steady breezes kept the fleet on the move Salur· day night and Sunday resulting in fast flrushes lor the ·leaders. Yachts finished in large groups Sunday morning with more than . 100 crossing by noon. A stir of excitement rippled through the fleet and race head- quarters here about 6 a.m. Sun- day when John Olson skipper of the yacht Typhoon, reported a man overborard about 10 miles from the finish. Crewman Chuck Schultz was working on the foredeck in a 15-knot breeze when a lifeline fit- ting let go and he slipped over. board. He was recovered within a ha lf hour with no injuries. There were 558 original en· tries in the race and the usual 10 pe rcent, Sl boats failed to start. Latest reports were that 15 lo 20 boats reported themsel\'es out of the race. Ensenada was relatively qwet Sund ay and Sunday night despite the la rge crowd of crewmen and race followers ar-r1 vang m the city Uprising Quelled CHICAGO !AP> -Mental pa. tlents armed with pipes and s teel clubs tried to take over a ward of a s tate psychiatric hospital, but the uprising was que lled without injury by a squad o( police officers. "They put down their weapons when they saw the show of force,·· police Lt. August Annerlnosaid. Miss Hearst, daughter of newapaper publisher Randolph Hear1t and his wife Catherine, was 19 when SLA members ab- ducted her from a Berkeley apartment Feb. 4, 1974. A woman who drowned in Dana Point Harbor late Salur· day night was identified by a coroner's spokesman today as Betty Jean Hornbar1er. M. of 36641 Flying J ib Drive, Laguna Niguel. Dana Point Driver The kidnapping, reporll of her alleged s ubsequent conversion to the SLA rnovemenl and months of police frustration in efforts lo capture Mias Hearst and her abductors was intema· tlonal newa. Mis• Heant, 24, has Uved with her parents and under constant private guard since the federal conviction. Her father posted a $1 million bond s upported by a $1001000 Cllllh deposit to secure her rreedom. The conviction was upheld last November by the 9lh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeala, which ruled that her ·~peal presented "no novel f11ues. ftf iH Hear1t1s lawyers then appnled to the nation'• hfahest court, euentlally usJn1 Lhe same legal arruments. The drowning v1ct1 m 's fully c lothed body was pulled from the water near a yacht basin shortly after 11 p.m. Her time of death was set at approximately 9:30 p.m . The coroner's 1poke1man said an Investigation Into the woman's drowning wlll con· linue , including toxicological tests. A report of the Lncldent in· die ates the victim 'a auto was parked nearby, there was no In· dlcallon or violence about the victim's body and It ta nol known tr 1'be fell or Jumped into the harbor. Strike Collapses J.,ONDON <AP> -A two-week· old strike at Clarld1e'1, one of London '1 moat elecant hotels, collapsed tod4y when tho hotel's walten left the picket Une and returned to work. I Charged in Crash A Dana Point man whose car allegedly slammed into a vin- tage Rolls Royce in Laguna Beach earlier this month. has been charged with misdemeanor drunk driving and two other counts. officials at the District Attorney's office said Friday. Erle Werlhof, 21 , ot 33856 Silver Lantern, faces a May 8 court date on c harges of misde· meanor driving while under the lnfluence. reckless driving with injuries a nd carrying an open container or alcohol in a vohiclc. Ue was arrested at South Coast Commun.lty Hospital Aprtl l on susptclon or felony drunk driving tonowlng a colUalon ot the corner of North Coast Highway and Aster Street which sent a Corona del Mar couple to the hospital with major injuries. Werlhof, who was also injured in the crash. was released after his arrest on his promise to ap. pear in court, police said. Gary and Patrice Concannon. of 3135 Bayside Drive, Coron• del Mar, were released from the hospital after treatment for in· Juries sustained in the April l crash. The Concannona were mald°' a left hand turn onto Aster f~m Coast Hl1hway whon the colr lision occurred, police said. Qr· flcers believe Werlhof's nort.tt· bound vehicle et\tered the in· tersecUon aaalnst a red lJ•~t. broadsiding the Roll• Royce driven by Concannon. l • I ' .. J • ' I ......... ~tat,1t71 we can ' Now is the time to start fulfilling your dreams by saving. 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Stoeks VOL 71, NO. 114, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNtA MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1978 N TEN CENT~ I NB F~etnen Seek 'Ecplal P&y' Policy Newport Beach firemen tonight wm ask the City Council to tive them the same pay pollcy recently eranted to policemen. That policy, approved in February. mandates that police pay and benefit pacllaies must be .. comparable" to the top three cllies ln Orange County. Jack Hamllt.oo, president of the Newport Beach Fire Fighters Association which represents 105 firemen, asked last month that the pay policy be approved for bis group u well. Councilmen declined to act un· til the new council had been formed after the April 11 elec· tlon.s. In his lett.er to the new council, Bamllton said, "We believe Uuit the same fact.on which support this policy for police safety employees also support lts ap. •pUcaUon to the clty's fire safety employees." Doug Thomas, president of the Police Employees Association, said he would be on hand tonisbt, altbou&h be said be prob- ably wlll not address the coun- cil unless councilmen have ques- tlona tbat apply to his 1roup. The police association is the laraest of the city's six employee bargaining groups, representing about 180 employees in the police depart- ment. 'J'.he pay pollcY. artecta QnJy pohcemen, or about 1~ people. When the new policy was ap- proved, the only councllman to oppose it was Paul Ryckorf, who was elected mayor tut weet. Ryckort aaid his oppoaiUon was baaed on his belie! that it would. hamper the city's ability to negotiate wtth policemen. He also predicted at the time that the other employee groups would be seeking identical policies. So f~r. Ute only group lo come to the council with a request has been the fire fighters although the blue collar employees and clerical employees have indicat- ed they will seek a simUar poUcy through the negotiations process that bas ju.st gotten Wl· der way. Police association members based their request for the policy on a survey o! the 26 other law enforcement agencies in Orange County-. prepared joint· ly by their organization and city staff members-that showed them to be 14th in the standings <&e POLICY. Page AZ> Banna,Sentenced to Prison Term Beachgoers Jam Traffic lnNewpon Nearly 150.000 people took ad- vantage of the s uns hine this weekend and came to Newport Beach's beaches, resulting in a massive traffic jam on Sunday afternoon. Police said traffic was heavy on the Newport -Balboa PeninsuJa but they said It wasn't 1 so bad that they needed to in- s titute any traffic control meas ures to deal with it. Lifeguards said 55,000 people showed up Saturday despite the 61 -degree beach temperatures and chilly waters which reg-istered S6degrees. Sunday. the crowd swelled to 90.000. Beach temperatures rose slightly to 6.1 degrees and the water also wanned slightly to 59 degr~. Lifeguards sald the cool water kept most people out or the -moderate surf and they re- corded only 13 rescues. PCP Plant Busted CARSON <AP) -Three peo- ple we r e arrested a fte r neighborhood complaints sent Los Angeles County s heriff's deputies to investigate a suspect- ed "angel dust" plant in Carson. Orricers seized about $200 ooo worth o( chemicals useci. in 'the manufacture of PCP. PllDI' .4/DED C0.4T SJJ71TCH "I was amazed. the first caller had my raincoat and I had his.•• That's the success story of the Newport Beacb man who ran this Dall.1 PUot ad: Ir you lell lhe Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce banquet ea rly and picked up a coat without chccklnlf It carefully. try It on. Chances are lbe sleeves wlll fall midway between yoor wrist and your elbow. It you'll call xxx-uu I'd be happy to arrange an ex - cbana-e ••• Need help findlna aomelhln,' People all alon1 the Oranae Cout ~ on the elauJned a.tc· Uon ol t.be DaU., Ptlot. .Juat call 8'2·5678. ~atty's Appeal l(efused WASHINGTON <AP> -The U.S. Supreme Court refused to review Patricia Hearst's 1976 bank robbery conviction. The young newspaper heiress, Cree two years on $1 million bond, soon may have to go to prison. The justices rejected Miss Hearst's appeaJ with no explana- tion. Only Justice William J . Bren- nan Jr. voted to review her case. and he said he would have limit- ed the court's study to the ad- missibility Into trial evidence of recordings of Miss Hearst's jailbouse conversations. Lawyers for Miss Hearst have 25 days in which to ask the high court to reconsider. One of those lawyers. J . Albert Johnson of Boston, s•id he was constderlng suc:b a move. However, the court a most never grants reconsideration. Balboa's Jjn(ierman Ensenada Victor? "Abo under c:om&dtraUoo are motions to the dislrlcl court in San Francisco," Johnson added. He said he might ask that court to "revise and revoke" Miss Hearst's sentence -a llow- ing her lime already served to satisfv her imposed prison term. Miss Hearst conceivably could be ordered to prison In the in- terim. By ALMON LOCKABEY Delly ...... INtll'I --ENS EN AD A -The 31st Newport Beach to Ensenada yacht race drifted into the re- cord books today as the last nine boats were struggling to make .the finish line at8 a.m. Despite the slowness of the last dozen boats, the race was comparatively fast with the big majority of the 485 finishers ar. riving before sundown Sunday. UnofficiaJ handicap results ln- d I cat e d that Raider, an Ericson-46 skiooered bv Jav Un- derman of the Balboa Yacht Club, was the winner of the President of the United States trophy for the best corrected time in the International Off. s h or~ Rule <IOR > division . Raider was the 12th boat to finish with an elapsed time of 20.2215 hours. Her corrected time was 14.8775 hours. The winner of the President or Mexico trophy for the best cor- rected time in the Performance Haudicap Racing Fleet (PHRF> appeared to be Capricclo. a 28· foot Class H sloop, skippered by Peter Nooteboom of the King Harbor Yacht Club. Official results for all classes were due to be announced at the ~Catal,ina To Be Pan Of Lido Show The Big White Steamship, the S.S. Catalina, wiU come out of re- Urement Tuesday and brou1ht lft. to Newport Harbor to be part ol a boat show at Lido Marina VIiiage. Marina Village. The 300-foot steamship, which once carried passengers between JAs Angeles Harbor and Avalon, has been out of com mission for more than a year. Duncan Mctntosh, organizer of the show. said the ship ls M!beduled to arriv 1t about 9 a.m.. She will be anchored at the marina until May 8. Vllitors to the boat sho• wtll be able to board the Catallna where some of the v nd.on wW have tbelt wares dllplayed, he aid. • trophy presentation today at 3 p.m. But there was no doubt about the first yacht to finish. Double Bullet, a brand new 60-foot catamaran. designed. built, owned and skippered by Bob Hanel of the Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club, breezed across the finish line at 5:13 a.m. Sunday to record an elapsed time of 17 hours and 13 minutes for the 125-mile race. The lime was about three hours shy of the elapsed Ume record of 14 hours and one minute, set by the catamaran Aikane in 1957. Second yacht to finish, about two hours later. was another catamaran. the 36-foot Eighth Day, skippered by Roger MacGregor of the Lido Isle Yacht Club. The first three monohulls crossed the finish line in an almost dead heat shortly after 7 a.m. with Fred Preiss' 84-foot sloop Christine or the Pacific Marine~ Yacht Club, edging Bill White and Bill PasquJni's (Sff YACHTS, Page A%) Rape Atte mpts Her immediate fate appears to rest with ll.S. District Judge William H. Orrick Jr. in San Francisco. He could allow Miss Hearst to remain Cree until lawyers exhaust a ll lega l maneuvers. Those could Include a request that Orrick reduce Miss Hearst's seven-year prison term to a period of probation, as was done last year for state charges of assault and robbery against hrr. Under Supreme Court pro- cedure, Orrick oCCiclally will learn of the court's action when receiving notice of It by mall within a few days. There was no Immediate com- ment on the Supreme Court's ac-tion by Orrick, federal pros- ecutorsorthe Hearstfamily. IC imprisoned, Miss Hearst would have to serve 14 months before becoming e ligible for parole. She served 14 months before, during and after her eight-week trial. Sh e was convicted o f (See HEARST, Page A2) NB Police Seeking 'Tall, Skinny Man' Newport Beach police are seeklng \he tall, skinny man who broke into two central. Newport homes, apparently lntendina to rape the rfl:ltklents. However, In those cases, re- ported wltbln hours of each other Thu.raday and Friday, both intended vtctims escaped harm. "We're very concerned about th ls 1uy," commented Capt. Richard Hamilton this morning. The rtrsl break·in involving the man waa reported late Thund11 nl1ht by a 27-year-old woman who llv., on 23rd Street. She told l>Ollte she found the man. Wearlng a red bandana ovel' hll lace, slandinl In the ballwA)' outside her bedroom as •be p= so to bed. She told ice she barric.aded herself her ,PM and told lbe mu 1be had called the police. When she heard him rummaging through drawers in her kltcnen, she crawled out of her window and ran to a nearby home for help. The next cue waa reported t.wo hours later by a 22-year-old resident ol 45tb Street who told police she was awakened by a man whose face was covered with a towel. He was standing ln her bedroom. She sald the man was armed with a )dtchen knife which sbe grabbed when he Jot close to her bed. She told ottacers the man Oed when the blade broke off the knife. The first victim told police her assailant wu about stx feet tall and thin. The second woman added that the man who accost~ ed her wu dressed In bauy clothlq. :, .,. ......... SENT TO PRISON Ex-Congressman Hanna NB Visitor Killed in Cycle Crash A 22-year-old visitor from Oregon died early today in Newport Beach when he lost control of his motorcycle in the curves on Bayside Drive. Police identifled the dead man as J effrey J. McCoy, and said his temporary address was 1007 E. Balboa Blvd., apt. 10. They said he ca rried an Oregon driver's license and part of his family lives there. According to police reports. McCoy and a passenger. Sherry Lynn Cairns, 26. of 515 Newport Blvd .. Newport 'Beach. were traveling westbound on Bayside Drive at a hiJ?h rate of speed when the accident occurred. According to police. t he motorcycle colli ded with the curb in the curves just west of Carnation Avenue and fell to the ground. McCoy died at Hoag Memorial Hospital about an hour after the accident. Miss Cairns was listed in good condition at the hospital, suirering from numerous lacera· tions. abrasions and possible chest injuries, police said. 22 Teen-age rs Arrested for 'Loud Party' Twenty-two teen-agers, most of them students at Corona del Mar High School, were arrested FM· day night by Newport Beach police who were caJled to break up a loud party on Balboa Is land. The 10 boys and 12 girls were attending a party in a vacant house al which police alleged liq- uor and marijuana were readJ- ly available. They were arrested on charges of lack of parentaJ control. They were called to the Collins A venue home just before mid- nJght by neighbors who said tbe live band at the party could be heard six blocks away. The party's host told officers he arranged the bash as a going away party for himself slnce his family had recenUy vacated the home. He also told officers that his family was unaware or the party he'd arranged. Police said 20 or the arrested teen-a1ers are students at Corona del Mar fDgb ScbOOl, one attends Newport Harbor IDgb School and oneattendsaprlvatescbool. All were released to their parents.. 6to39 Months Decreed WASHINGTON CAP > - Former Orange County con- ·gressman Richard T. Hanna. the first congressional figure charged in the Korean lnflu~nce­ buying scandal. today was sen- tenced lo serve six months in a federal prison. Hanna. 64. appeared stunned as Chief District Judge William Bryant tersely handed down the sentence after lengthy appeals for mercy Crom both the con- gressman and his attorney. In a quivering voice. Hanna had told Bryant: "l apologize to the court. I apologize to the peo-ple who elected me to public of- fi ce . . . I hope in the years that I have left I can do something to alone for what t have done." Hanna. who ser ved in Congress from 1963 to 1974 as a Democrat from CaJUornia, enr tered a bargained guJlty plea March 17 to one count of con- spiracy to defraud the govern- ment, a charge that bears a maximum penaJty or rive years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Hanna later saJd he will begin serving his term May 8 at the minimum-security prison at Maxwell Air Force Base near Montgomery, Ala. Ha nna's plea agreement averted a trial on a 40·count in- dictment returned by a grand jury last October. Government attorney Jeffrey White dropped the r e maining charges after today's sentencing. Today's sentence allows Han- na to become eligible for parole after serving six months. The government said in the bargaining plea with the former congressman that Hanna "re- ceived in excess of $200,000 in cash and checks between 1969 and the end of 1975" for using the power of his office to further the interests of Korean busi- nessman Tongsun Park. Hanna's attorney, Charles McNelis, argued In a long and e motional presentation to Bryant that while his client "did commit a serious mistake of judgment in his relationship with Tong.sun Park," Hanna bas since tried to redeem himself by cooperating fully with govern- ment investil{ators. "What conceivable and ea rthly good would be ac- complished by the incarceration of this man?" McNeli s asked. The lawyer said that while Hanna did receive monev from <See HANNA, Page A2> Co ast Weath e r Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with a chance of showers Tues· day. Cooler on Tuesday with highs ln the upper 60s. Lows tonight 5.1 to 58. Chance of rain lncreasing to 30 percent Tuesday. INSIDE TODA~ If you'rt geUfng married and have q"1Uo111 about wedding eUlquett•. don't mlu a five·porl 11rle• by E'Uzobtth Pod. which begiM today in Ftotunno. Page ... Cl. .. •. ~---.-= == Ct~ L.M~ ... ==~~ =· :: :::.::.. ........ :: a.Mt.... C>l1 .... • ... c-tea 2 .... ,...... . es :::•:.=,_ 5; s::. : ~ .... M AS ...... 1 ..., ................. i Suspect Declared 'Sane' NBW YORK lAf» -A jud1e ruled loday lhal Davld ll. Berkowtu ls m nlally compe. tent to stand Lrlat lor the murder of SUic)' MOlkowtli, the 1-.t of 811 bomtclde victill\S or the Son ot Sam. The Judge ordered th~ trial to begin May 8. The ruling might not lead to a trial, however. since Berkowitz bu said be wanta to plead 1uil· ty. Hls lawyers want to plead bjm Innocent by reason of in- sanity. but since be has been ruled competent, Berkowitz Is free to make his choice. provid· ing the judge finds the plea legally acceptable. "The cOW'l rinds that the peo· pie have established by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the defendant does not. as a result of mental disease or de· feet. lat-k capacity to understand the proceedings against hlm or Io assist in his defense," Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Joseph R Corso said in a six· page memorandum of Jaw. Corso, who this month held four days of closed hearings on the competency of the 24;Year- old postal clerk from Yonkers, set May 8 for either the start of pre- liminary trial hearings or jury selection should the defense waive the hearings. "Defendant ls able to discuss the case with his counsel and has never refused to do so. No claim is made that he has not done so:· Corso wrote . "Indecision or vacillation as to the best legal course for him to pursue does not render him in· co mpetent t o stand trial. Rather, it is indirative of un· derstandtn~ o( hla predicament "Nor does failure to adopt any proposed course of action ad· vocated by counsel indicate un· fi tness. The law does not require him to adopt the advice or his counsel or others." s aid the judge The 349-page transcript or the competency hearing remained sealed. Corso said he would re· lease the do<'umenl artcr a jury was sequestered. Cor so said the defendant fulrilled both legal criteria or competence -to understand the charges against him and assist in his own defense. Coast Resident Charged; CdM Pair Injured A Dana Point man whose car allegedly slammed into a vin· Lage Rolls Royce in Laguna Beach earlier this month, has been charged with misdemeanor drunk driving and two other counts, officials at the District Attorney's office said Friday Eric Werlhof, 21, of 33856 Silver Lantern, faces a May 8 court date on charges or misde· meanor driving while under the influence. reckless driving with injuries and carrying an open container of alcohol In a vehicle. He was arrested at South Coast Community Hospital April 1 on suspicion or felony drunk driving following a collision at the corner or North Coast Highway and Aster Street which sent a Coronfl del Mar couple to the hospital with major injuries. Werlhof, who was also injured in the crash, was released after his arrest on his promise to ap· pear in court. police said. Gary and Patrice Concannon. or 3135 Bayside Drive, Corona del Mar, were released from the hospital after treatment for in· Juries sustained in the April 1 crash. The Concannons were making a left hand turn onto Aster from Coast Highway when the col- lision occurred, police said. Of. ficers believe Werlhof's north- bound vehicle entered the in· tersectJon against a red light, broadsiding tbe Rolls Royee driven by Concannon. ( ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ........ _ ~--­--·~ Vl<o--~--- '-.. IC-E .. , .. t-··~ .U-1 ... [•I• O..W.11 ~ 11~1' •M .. , .... .., ............. (Alton H .......,.Aet1!~,m· HANNA .•• P1rt, ''lbal ii not t.o H1 \Mi be ~ IUI polkleal olllff." NatlnJ tbat Hanna had beta ~,_... ~" w.rrocauau with ., •• ..,.,. •ttonMp ud toefrilllkleal .,.... and ••• detector tat. McNeUs d eland tbat Ranna ''dJd everything bwnub' J>C*lble to correct the 11rievous error which be knows and adrulta he commiti.cl. .. He leadi from thf' heart rather tban the head.'' sald the ~ttorne1. "[t ta Inconceivable tha t he would do herm to hls country." McNelis inai&ted that while Hanna had la.ken substantial amounts of caah ft;9m Parle. "he is not a bag man' and not one peony was delivered to any otber politicians through him. "ffe does not need the Iron gates of incarceraUon, be needs a helping band," McNeUs con· duded. At that point, Bryant invited Hanna to speak for himself. The former congressman stood silenUy as it to gather his composure, and when he finally spoke his voice s hook and he seemed to be fighting tears. Hanna told the court that "I holi that whal you have to do wl l help atone for what I've done." Bryant. in serious, clipped tones, then ordered Hanna to surrender to the attorney general's ofCice for a deciision on which prison he will go to. Hanna will remain free until that assignment, then will have 30 days to report to the lnstitu· lion under Bryant's order. McNelis as~ed Bryant before the sentence was banded down, "What reasonable man would s uggest Uiat 64-year-old Dick Hanna, a first-term violator, reallydeserveslncarceration?'' The attorney noted that Han- na's wife of 33 years and several .adopted children depend on blm tor support. McNelis acknowledeed that Hanna had "an affinity for and deep interest ln Korean affairs," and bad worked "openly, active- ly and aggressively for closer ties between this country and that emerging democracy. For that he apologizes to no man," he said. "But be .does admit that the activities be had with Tongsun Park were a clear conllict of in· teresl and a clear violation or law." but since deciding not to run for re·election in 1974, Han- na has "attempted to extricate himself" ever since. As outlined by the prosecution, Hanna helped Park become the seller's agent for Califorpia rice exports to South Korea, thereby enabling Park to earn substan. tial commissions. Hanna also bolstered Park's standing with the Korean gov. ernment by introducing him to m e mbe rs or Coneress and "otherwise aggrandizin' Park's status in this country,' lnclud· ing the implementation of "many or his pro·Korean posi· lions·' related to congressional matters. the government at torney said. Fro•P .... AJ YACHTS ••• 62-foot Ragtime by abou·t one boat length. Ragtime was over· lapped with Harry Moloshco's 69-foot Drifter from the Long Beach Yacht Club. Drifter was given credit for the first monohull to finish because she started in a dif· ferent class 10 minutes behind Christine 811d Ragtime. MC¥1erate -but steady breezes kept the fleet on the move Satur· day njgbl and Sunday resulting ln fast finlahes tor the leaders. Yachts fmisbed in large groups Sunday morning with more than 100 crossing by noon. A stir or excitement rippled through the fleet and race head- quarters here about 6 a.m. Sun· day when John Olson skipper of the yacht Typhoon, reported a man overborard about 10 miles from the fmish. 'G.rewman Chuck Schultz was working on the foredeck in a 15·knot breeze when a lifeline f\\. ting let go and he slipped over· board. He was recovered within a half hour with no injuries. There were 558 original en- tries in the race and the usual 10 percent, 51 boats failed to start. Latest reports were that 15 to 20 boat.I reported themselves out ot the race . Ensenacs. was relatively qUJet Sunday and Sunday night des pite tbe large crowd of crewmen and race followerw ar· riving in the city . MINISTER WANTS KlllS TO JOIN IN rOE'M'YSBURG, Pa. <AP> - Malntalning that the Lord's Sup. per should be open to baptized Infants. tbe Rev. Paul Harms, a Lutheran theoloalant. told a worRhJp conference at utheran Theological Seminary: "lf there's one thing a k.ld un- derstands, ll 's food " ~ ........ ,.... OPTIMISTIC COSTA MESA RESIDENT LEFT TRASH OUT WITH THESE RESULTS Garbage Truck Drivers Scheduled to Vote Today on 'Final' Management Offer Fro1" Page A I Vote Set Todav .. Waddill In Auto Accitknt 81 TO• B.ULBY °' .. ~ ........... Ju~y instrucllooa lo. lhe murder t.rtal ol Dr. WlWam Bax· ter Waddill were chlayed today when it was ~ed that the fhyslclan was lnvolved (n a tral· le accident In ffunlintcton Beach. Waddlll. 42, arrived a\ the county courtbou.se one hour late and explained to attorneys that he stayed at the scene of tbe ac· ci d~nt to render aid to the woman occupant of the other car. WaddiU said the two can col- lided at 9:10 a .m. near the ln· tersecUoo of Beach Bou.Jevard and Trask Av e rau~ in Westminster. He and hia wife were unhurt but the woman oc- cupant of the other car suffered · what he desc ribed as Un · determined injuries. Waddill said the woman responded to treatment provided by himself and paramedics who rushed to the scene and was then taken to a local hospital. HEARST ••• participating in the 1974 armed robbery of a Hibernia Bank branch ln San Francisco -two months after her kidnapping by a group calling it.sell the Sym- bionese Liberation Army. Tensions and Trash Mounting in County "What a day for something like this to happen," the defen· dent ruefully commented. "I 'll tell you. it never rains but what it pours." Waddill declined to speculate on who was ,.esponsible for the colUslon. Judge James K. Turner be'gan reading instructions to his Orange County Superior Court Jury about ooe bou.r after Wad- dJll's arrtvaJ aa the murder trial of the JlunUnetoo Harbour ob- stetrician moved into it.a nnat hours. Miss Hearst, daughter of newspaper pubUsher Randolph Hearst and his wife Catherine, was 19 when SLA members ab- ducted her from a Berkeley apartment Feb. 4. 1974. The kidnapping, reports of her alleged subsequent conversion to the SLA movement and months of police frustration in efforts to capture Miss Hearst and her abductors was interna- tional news. Miss Hearst, 24, has lived with her parents and under constant private guard since the federal conviction. Her father posted a $1 million bond supported by a $100,000 cash deposit to secure her freedom. The conviction was upheld last November by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled that her appeal presented "no novel issues.' Miss Hearst's lawyers then appealed to the nation's highest court. essentially using the same legal arguments. They cont.ended that the late U.S. District Judge Oliver J. Carter, who presided at Miss Hears t 's trial, committed numerous errors that denied her a fair trial. Among other things , the lawyers objected to testimony adm illed into evidence by Carter of Miss Hearst's ac- tivities alter the April 15, 1.974. bank robbery. Mrs. Dulaney Dead at 80; Rites Slated Service& will be held Thursday for long-Ume Harbor Area resi- dent Edith M. Dulaney who died Friday at age 80. Mrs. Dulaney, recently a resi· dent of Newport Beach, had lived in Orange County since 1914. She lived ln Costa Mesa from 1936 to 1967. For 21 years, prior to her re· tirement ln 1967, Mrs. Dulaney waa a sales clerk al Reinert's Department s tore in Costa Mesa. She was also a member of the Costa Mesa American Legion Auxiliary Post 455. Mrs. Dulaney leaves her son J ack Dulaney, of Petaluma: her daughter. Virginia McClell an, of Newport Beach ; her brother, Morrell Leaming, of Tampa, Fla .: six grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Services will be conducted at 11 a .m. at the Bell Broadway Chapel ln Costa Mesa with the Rev. Charles' D. Clark official· ing. Entombment will follow at Loma V\st.a Memorial Park. Tension mounted today as striking Orange County truck drivers planned a vote on a "final" manage""lent offer and owners of one disposal firm were cleaning up in the wake of a $15,000 fire believed related to the strike. A spokesman for Ana heim Disposal said a fireb()mb thrown over tne urm ·s oack fence about 11 :30 p.m. Sunday ignited scrap paper and caused about $15.000 damage to paper and rubbish bins. It was the latest in a series of strike-related incident.a, inch.Id· ing numerous fires ln trash bins during the weekend and the burning or three Ulled refuse trucks on Friday at Jaycox Dls· posal Company tn Anaheim . Members of Teamsters Local Real, Estate Finn Fh>oded An Irvine branch office or a real estate firm, housed in one of the so.called Twin Towers at 18662 MacArthur Blvd .. was flooded . SWlday when a urinal broke off a wall. Firemen said water spewed through the broken pipe and completely soaked the bottom- fJoor office; other damage was done to the basement below by dr!pping water. UamaRe to the Real Eslaters office was limited to 125 yards of indoor-outdoor carpeting and plumbing repwrs, firemen said. The cause of the break was not im-mediately known. Driver Injured Ramming Bus VAN NUYS CAP> -An ofr-du· ty Rapid Transit District driver was in critical condition after he reportedly ran his auto through a red light at 85 miles an hour and was broadsided by a bus. Wllliam Brinkley, 30, of Van Nuys , was taken to Valley Hospital Sunday with a skull fracture, broken leg and multi- ple cuts. The driver of the bus, Jasper Bullock, 42, of Resed a , was treated for cuts at the same hospital and released. He had no passengers. Man, 19, Drowns MUfR BEACH CAPl -A 19· year-old Wlidenlified San Fran· cisco man apparently drowned Sunday when he fell off a rock while fishing in th.is Marin Coun· ty beach area, the Coast Guard said. 396. who went out on strike a week ago when their three-year contract expired, have been meeUng with management representatives and a federal mediator. The mediator. John Courtney, said employers "made con- siderable concessions" in a re· portedly final offer given verbal· ly lo Teamsters on Saturday. The offer was due to be sent to them in writing today, with a vote by drivers possible tonight. The strike has left more than a million county residents without rubbish service Homeowners taking their own trash to county dumps have re- portedly had to wait as long as an hour because of the lines. Orange Coast communities af. fected are Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, Lake Forest. northern El Toro and L.tguna Hills Leisure World, a nd in- dustrial parts ot Newport Beach. Dispute between drivers and drivers helpers and manage· ment reportedly focused on salary and benefits. Drivers. who now receive $4.SO an hour. are as king for a $4 raise over a three-year period, with manage- ment previously offering Sl.10. Drivers are also asking for five days a year in sick leave. They currently receive none. Details of the new offer were not released pending a vote by Teamsters. CdM Resident, Pal Held in Lobster Theft A Corona del Mar man and his meal companion were arrested Sunday night after allegedly kid· napping a giant lobster dis· played in a Huntington Beach restaurant. Irwin Penn Holmes, 23. of 518 Iris Ave., Corona del Mar and Harold S. Maniloff. 24, of Bever- ly Hills, were still in their tank this morning in Ueu of $250 bail each. The rescued lobster was back in its tank too, police said. Holmes and Maniloff .were captured across the street from Maxwell's, 317 Ocean Ave .• In· side the Capri Bar, 204 Ocean Ave., after the 10:20 p.m. abduc. tion, police said. Police said the two men snatched the tasty crustacean out of its display tank and fled. one of them cradling it inside his coat. Witnesses said they ducked in· to the doorway of the Capri. whose customers were reported· ly admiring the big lobster dis- played by Holmes and Manito(( as police arrived: It ls expected that tbe reading of hulructfons wtU take much or the day and that tbe pa~l of .nine men and three women Wul begin dellbeTalions later lo· day. • Tbe Jury is being asl<ed to ~ turn one of five possible verdicts: not guilty. murder ln the first or se:cond degree or at· tempted murder ln the first or second degree. Waddill ls accused of stran· gUng a newborn baby girl in the nursery at Westminster vom· munlty Hospital shortly after he was advised that the child bad s urvived a saline abortion he performed on tbe 18-year.old mother 12 hours earlier. It was tesUfied for tbe Pl"06· ecution that Waddill choked the baby to death after predictinR that be WOOJd face lawsuits seek· ing millions of dollars in damages if he allowed what he believed to be a brain·damaged baby to live. Mesan Shot By Wadding From Weapon A Costa Mesa man suffered a painful arm bruise Sunday when hit by the wadding rrom a shotgun that accidentally dis · charged, police reported today. The victim was idenllried as Paul Joseph Fratlello, 21. of 216 E. 20th St. Police said that his brother. Dennis. of the same ltddress. jokingly threatened his brother with what he thought was an un· loaded shotgun. It went orr. Omcers said the gun didn't contain pellets but the wadding. used to separate powder from shot, hJl PauJ in the rtght arm. H e was treated at Hoag Memorial H06pital In Newport Beach and later released. From Page A I. POLICY .•. based on salary and benefit packages. A similar survey, prepared for the fire fi g hters . s h ow -; Newport's firemen are 14th oul of 17 agencies in Orange County Councilmen will meet at 7:30 p.m. at city hall Strike Collapses LONDON <AP> -A two·week· old s trlke at Claridge 's, one or London's most elegant hotels. collapsed today when the hotel's waiters left the picket llne and returned to work. Campus Gates Loeked 8y STEVE MnalELL Of .. Oel.., ""9t lwt Somebody -probably senior class pranksters -sneaked onto the Laguna Beach High School c iampus Sunday night. and chained every gate on campus shut, and some office doors. "We couldn't get onto the campus," said Dr. Robert Hughes, principal o! the 14-acre campus on Park Avenue. A cook who showed up for work at about 8:30 this mornln.g, found gala chained and locked. end hundreds of mimeographed i . letters taped to walls, apparent· ly 1lgned by the principal, say- ing school would be closed t.o- day. "Somehow they got m y 1i"nature and s lapped It on the bottom of the letter.'' Hughes la ughed. "The whole thln1 waa really ingenious.·• Fortunately. Hushes aald. maintenance crewa bed all tbe chains off and at1m1 down by 1 a.m. "Wo had to uae bolt cutter. to get the chalns off," he said. "They had Xeroxed altna oo all the doors and entrances to the school." The memo, with the bo1us signature, said "To all faculty staff and students. Regarding the clos ure of school. "In prot.e&l of the Jarvl!s·Oann property tax h\. aatlve, Laguna Beech High School will be cloced on thi~ 24th day of April, In the year Urt8. "Note there wlll be a meetin1 In the Thurston Junior Hl1h SchooJ audJtorium at 8: 15. "The note doesn't say morning or evening," Hughes added. The letter orders aJJ peraoMel ot the high school to attend the meeting. "Be prompt," the let- ter signs off. "t don't know where they got my signature," Hughes said. The perplexed principal sai<t he also has no Idea where they goL the heavy chains, locks, mimeograph machine. or the Idea. But he does have a notion as to the ldonUtyoltbe P.rantaters. ·•1 would think we have a very lnt~llectual ~enlor class hen!, and that this would be on par with their ab1UUes." ,. Siiddlehaek Afteraooa N.Y. S&oeks . ' -~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIL 2• .. 1978 I TEN CENTS . Mis Deity ,. ... Staff~ SION VlEJO'S VIA BAHIA A PILE OF DIRT AND ASPHALT Ma11lve Sllde Along Trebuco Road Upffftfd B•hl• Sld•w•lk end Street 17 : Viejo Land Sliding I ~· Trabuco Road Covered After Closure By IEallY CLAUSEN Ol .. Oelly ......... An estimated 400,000 cubic yards of earth and roclt have crashed in two massive slides from a 140-fool high bill onto Trabuco Road between Los Alisos Boulevard and Alicia Parkway in Mission Viejo I J Three SVUSD I Members Get f Recall Notices l I ) Proponents of a recall aimed at removing three Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees will present a listing of charges to those board members this week. Trabuco had been closed by county Environmental Manage- ment Agency <EMA) officials Friday after gape ln Ule ridge area were discovered Thursday during a Mission Viejo Company monitoring program. The first slide, smaller of lbe two, rumbled down the bill at 3:30 a.m. Saturday, county or- ficials said. The second, which piled rul> ble into tbe northbound lanes or Trabuco Road and actually pushed up asphalt paving along Via Bahia St.reel, occurred at about 3 a .m. this morning, a Mission Viejo Company spokesman said. Four geologists on the site concur, a Mission Viejo Com· pany spokesman said, that neither of two Moulton Niguel Wa~r District storage tanks atop the hill are in danger. orficials tomorrow. Oarl Net.on EMA assistant director. saiMtlli: at this point the county cliiiiii't know what action will be taken to stabilize tbe hillside and clean off Trabuco Road. "We'll know more on Tues· day." he said. The hill.side area belongs to county government and is con· sidered open space, which is maintained by a local service dis trict. The property was deeded to the countyoy the Mis· sion Viejo Company, which con- structed Trabuco Road in 1973, a company sl>Okesman said. A similar massive· earth movement occurred in Mission Viejo along Marguerite Parkway Just south of Oso Parkway on March 16. Ironically, another Moulton Niguel Water District storage tank was atop that hill. (See SLIDE, Page A2> · ..... ~ , :;.; -~ . . :· .j ..... 4' -. ' : ; ... ·:: lJ ....... , . 1 anna l'ote Set Today 6 to ·30 ' i Tension, Trash Months Mount m. oc ~~~~~~~ ·Tension mounted today as striking Orange County truck drivers planned a vote on a "final" management offer and owners of one disposal •firm were cleaning up in the wake of a $15,000 fire believed related to the strike. A spokesman for Anaheim Disposal said a firebomb thrown over the firm's back fence about 11: 30 p.m. Sunday ignited scrap paper and caused about SU,000 damage to paper and rubbish bins. ll was the latest in a series of strike-related incidents, includ- ing numel'O\tls fires it1 trash bins during the weekend and the burning of three idled refuse trucks on Friday at Jaycox Dis· posal Company in Anaheim. Members or Teamsters Local 396, who went out on strike a week ago when their three.year contract expired, have bee• meeting with m anagement representatives and a federal mediator. The mediator, John Courtney, said employers ··made con- siderable ~cessions" in a re· portedly fmal offer aiven verbal· ly to Teamsters on Saturday. Th4! offer was due to be sent to them in writing today, with a vote by drivers possible tonight. The strike bas left more than a million county residents without r.ubbish service. Homeowners taking their own trash to county dumps have re· portedly bad to wait as long as an hour because of the lines. Orange Coast communities ar. reeled are Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach . Laguna Beach, Lake Forest, northern El Toro and Laguna Hills Leisure World, and in- dustrial parts of Newport Beach. Dispute between drivers and drivers helpers and manage- ment reportedly focused on salary and benefits. Drivers, who now receive $4.50 an hour. are asking for a $4 raise over a three.year period, with manage- ment previously offering $1.10. : Drivers are .also ~king for five days a year in sfck leave. They currently receive none. Details of the new of/er were • not ~teased pending a vote by Teamsters. * * * Countians Told How To 'Cope' Orange County cHy and coun- ty officials said today they don't believe the week-old trash truck drivers' strike has resulted in any health hazards. The strike bas left more than one million county residents without rubbish collection. Orange Coast communities af. fected are Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley. Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, Lake Forest, northern El Toro, Laguna Hllls Leisure World and some in· dustrial customers in Newport Beach. Ric bard· Robison, assistant county director or environmen- tal heaJth, urged that residents take steps to cut the danger or future health problems. "Above all, they should use their garbage dis posal to its maximum," Robison said. He noted that management employees or the firms against which Teamsters Local 396 is striking have been averting the worst danger by collecting trash from medical centers and food establishments. "As it goes along though, it may cause a greater problem,·· Robison said. Other measures residents can take. Robison said, are to cut the bottoms out of cardboard ca rtons and boxes and <See STRIKE, Page A2> Former Orange County con- gressman Richard T. Hanna. the- first congressional figure charged in the Korean intluence- buylng scandal, toda.y was sen- tenced to serve stx months in a federal prison. Hanna, 64, appeared stunnect as Chier District Judge Willlam Bryant tersely handed down the sentence after lengthy appeals for mercy from both the con- gressman and his attorney. In a quivering voice, Hanna had told Bryant: "I apologize to the court. I apologize to the peo- ple who elected me to public '>f- rice . . . 1 hope in the years that I have le~ 1 can do something to atone for what 1 have done." Hanna . who served in Congress from 1963 to 1974 as a Democrat from California, en- tered a bargained guilty plea March 17 to one count of con· spiracy to defraud the govern- ment, a charge that bears a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Hanna 's plea agreem ent averted a trial on a 40.count in· dictment returned by a grand jury last October. Government attorney Jeffrey White dropped the remaining charges after today's sentencing. Today's sentence allows Han· na to become eligible for parole after serving six months. The government said in the bargaining plea with the former congressman that Hanna "re· cei ved in excess or $200,000 in cash and checks between 1969 and the end of 1975" for using the power of his office to further the interests of Korean busi· nessman Tongsun Park. Hanna's attorney, Charles McNelis, argued in a long and emotional presen tation to Bryant that while his client "did commit a serious mistake or judgment in his relationship with Tongsun Park," Hanna has since tried to redeem himself by cooperating fully with govern- ment investigators. "What conceivable and earthly good would be ac- complished by the incarceration of this man?" McNelis asked. "The charges are being writ· ten in fmal form right now by our attorney," recall spokesman Preston Howell said today. "The trustees will probably gel il Wednesday or Thursday." However, be said, the waler district is not refilling the tanks as a precautionary measure. None of the utility lines beneath area streets have been broken by the slide, he added. After Two ¥ears The lawyer said that while Hanna did receive money from Park, "that is not to say that he corrupted his political office." Noting that Hanna had been through extensive interrogations Howell's group plans to launch ;i recall against SVUSD Trustees George Henry, Carole Neustadl and Mary Phillips. Once the trustees receive the letter of in- tent listing charges, they have seven days to file their responses. Then the recall petitions, list- ing both charges and responses, may be circulated in lhe com- munil.v -a move Howell ex- <See RECALL. Page A2> Coast Weather Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with a chance of showers Tues- day. Cooler on Tuesday with highs In the upper 60s. Lows tonight 53 to 58. Chance of rain Increasing to 30 percent Tuesday. INSIDE T8DA Y II 11ou·~ gd1fng marrltd and ha~ ~11fo"' aboid w•ddl"ll ettiqu•tt•, do" 't min o /iW-parl 1mea b11 EIUobetb Potd, tdUch ~gm, todar1 '" P~unng, P• Cl. ... x AIT-t.rwtcle ,.... ...... CH ... ti... .. .... "°'" Cl L. M.-.,. A4 AM u..n Cl ........................... CMI...... ......... at ~ .................. .. ~ 0.0.... • ... ei-k• ca ..... MlftMI .. £~·= ~==-: M-...W M .... I llW ......... M.M The Mission Viejo Company volunteered its services lo the county late last week after dis· covering the pOtential slide area. The company has been cheeking Mission Viejo area hillsides sub- sequent to heavy rains in the area to determine it precautionary measures might be required in the community. No homes in the area are threatened, the spokesman said. Via Bahia, which serves tbe Barcelona Homes area, 1a bar- ricaded but the subdivision is served by other streets. Four geologists, two from the county and two consultants, were on the 600-foot-long slide scene this morning. Their re- ports are to be made to county PILUI' AIDED 00.4'1' SWITCH "I was amued. the first caller bad my raincoat and I bad bis." That's the success story of the Newport Beach man who ran this Daily Pilot ad: lf you left the Costa Mesa Chamber or Commerce banquet ea rly and picked up a coat without checking It carefully, try It on. Chances are the sleeves will (all midway between your wrist and your elbow. I( you'll call XXX·XX)(X I'd be happy to arrange an ex -change ... Need heir ftndin1 some&bini? People al along the Otanae Coast rely on the clallllled sec. Uon of the Daily Pilot. Juat call 842·5678. Viejo Lake Opening wit.h government attorrteys and S congressional panels and a lie-et detector test, McNelis declared that Hanna "did everything humanly possible to correct the grievous error which he knows Dump 5.000 pounds or rainbow trout; add 18 inches of water, mix thoroughly in a double dammed, man-made lake and open on June 3. That's lhe recipe for Southern California's newest recreational lake, Lake Mission Viejo, scheduled to open to residents who are lake association mem-bers. The Mission Viejo Company began tilling the controversial lake in October, 1976. The now or Metropolitan Water District water was halted in March, 1977, at the height of the three·yeai California drought. 'II Tbe devek>pment firm gained state pen:nlsston to begin ruling the lake again last February at the rate of about 8.4 million gallons dally, and it ls expected to be full, 528 million Jallons, by May 1, company officials said thls Week. Aa the Jake ftlls, lake associa· lion personnel, including Ufe1uardl, are preparing for lbe fint Saturday ln June when resi- denta of tbe planned community are aobeduled to use the facility for the first tlane. Sailboatsi rowboata and paddleboat.s wil be available ror rent, satd Jake operaUons manager Don Danyko, and two association· ow.-~ boches are being raked smoatb for tbe bi& day. Danyko saJd rainbow trout wUI be atocked lo the lake Mon-day tor locaJ anglers. Lue aasoclatton members already are ree11terin1 boat.a for \ use on the lake, a Mission Viejo Company spokesman said. The only craft, allowed will be sailboats, rowboats and electric· motor boats. Eligible for lake membership are the owners of homes within the planned community. Mer a n initial $25 fee, association members will pay $7 a month to use the lake and its facilities, the spokesman said. Of the 16,400 feet of s horeline, only about 2,200 feet have been designed specifically to serve recreational demands of the community at large, the spokesman said. Most of the remainder will be devoted to lakefronl housing and privately owned boat slips . Company officials note that the lake, which averages 30 feet <See LAKE, Page A2) and admits he committed. "He leads from the heart rather than the head," said the attorney. "It is inconceivable that he would do harm to his country." McNelis insisted that while Hanna had taken substantial amounts of cash from Park. "he is not a bag man" and not one penny was delivered to any other politicians through him. <See HANNA, Page A2) OM9r,... 9llllf ..... LAKE MtsstON VIEJO ALMOST A!AOV TO OPEN AFTER TWO V!AAS OF CONTROVERSY Cetlfomte•t Drought Hindered the Flow of Water Into the AecNattonaf f ecflty - \ Suspect Declared 'Sane' NEW YORJC (AP> -A judae ruled today that David R. Berk~·u: is mentally compe· tent to d trial for the murder o( Stac Moekowitz, the lut ot six ho j de victJms or the Son of Sa , e judge ordered the trial t gin May 8. ,.~.,,...... Mtf-........... LAKE MISSION VIEJO'S NORTH BEACH AWAITS JUNE 3 CROWD The Largest Of Five Communlfy.Own.0 8HChH Prepared for Bathers The niling might not lead, to a trial, however, since Berkowitz has said be wants to plead l\&ll· ty. Hl1 lawyen want. to pfead him Innocent by reuon ol ln· saolly, but since he has beel'I ruled competent. Berkowitz ia free to make his choice, provid· Ing the judge finds the plea legally acceptable. SENT TO PRISON Ex-Congre11men Hanna fi'ro•Pap Al STRIKE ••. aluminum cans and flatten them to lake up less space. Also, he suggested saving newspapers lo give to recycling centers, such as those at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa and Marina High School in Hunt· lngton Beach . In addition, Robison said, animal wastes should be buried deep underground. Lawn trim· mings should be reserved in 'Plastic bags, he said. Officers or the Orange County Solid Waste Management Depart· ment suggested persons hauling their own trash do so during morning hours when dumps are less crowded. As an emergency measure, the transfer station at 18131 Gothard Street in Huntington Beach Cnear Ellis Avenue) is now open from 7 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . Monday through Saturday, with the least·used dumping time between 8 a.m. and noon, officials said. Also available to the public from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m . is the Coyote Canyon landfill site located on Bonita Canyon Road behind UC Irvine. Various city officials are also taking steps and are urgently re- questing residents to keep rub. bish ofr the streets and curbs. In Laguna Beach, plastic bags are available at city hall and citizens may dump their trash at dumpsters located at the Agate Street Fire Station and across from the Festival o r Arts -grounds in the city employees parking lot. Allan Roeder, acting mana,ger or the Costa .Mesa Sanitary Ois- lrict, said officials there hope to have hedvy trash bags available to the public by midweek. He said the city is operating a referral service to put people un- able to haul their own trash in touch with volunteers. lie said the city won't refer people to anyone who charges to collect ·trash. John Whipple, administrative aide in the Huntington Beach Department of Public Works, s<tid that city is working on plans to set up locations where citizens could bring trash for ci- ty trucks to haul. Fountain Valley officials said they can't make any promises but are trying to get a rebate for trash collection fees during the strike period. In Newport Beach. a spokesman said there haven't -been any major problems re- ported because only a few in. dustrial customers are affected. ('!. •h 'Needled' Tl Z LG RADE , Yugoslavia <AP> A 28·year·old Yugoslav worn an has become the coun- lry 's first to give birth aided by acupuncture, the newspper Politika Ekspres reports. The r~port said doctors mserted 10 ~•Iver needles under the knees. m the abdomen and in the ears of Natasa Rosenfeld of Marlbor in northern Yu~oslavia. Th~ w~man gave birth to a boy and said she felt no pain throughout the delivery, the report said. ORANGE f(>AIT \8 DAILY PILOl 1"-0.-C..•I 0..llf Pllol ,..t~-<111•<­fal-ttltNoW\ ~ ... ,, __ ..., .... °'_ eo. .. """''"'' ... '"''''"ft• S.-.it.O•l--=~k~Plr;i:..:.i.:.. ~· t••" Yett••· ftvlM keld~k V•Uey eM ~=~~:,~ .. ~n•:T:" .. ,;t, ;',:!"r.,..~~~"!.~'.:;!,;~'~ JlO ......,, llo 11~11-,.,~ ...... --·-, .. ,11.c-, Vtte Pt-"''*"'·~ Ge""MMit~ ~ .. 11-11 •fMtOt "';..~'i;.,.~N ci..n..11 '-._ ..... . """·-~-, ........ . ........ V....,Ofl'oe ,..,l..t ........... -or-,_ •• omc.. c...1a>i1i1u "°"""e.ys--~ .... ~ 11111 ...... ~. ~ ..... ., llltO-...Mrwt ~· (11C)MMU1 ci...-... AllYertltlfttMMll'e ,__, Ylllt1 ...... Olllb "1-tttO "-lootClt-....... '*"'~:::.Or~~· !J".;.~= :'rttt ., ~ .. .....,\':'·,;;~ ......... ~-r::.... t t ·-··· P"""'"Itot ., It( .... ,, ... ~ ... ·r. .... "' C...t• ...... C1nt•'"'• S••ur •••o" •• ,~, • ., J) M =r-·~ :-~~ • "'"''"' INlttory Accitknt Delays Waddill By TOM BARLEY Of IM o.lt\' ...... S'-tf J ury instructions in the murder trial of Or. William Bax· ter W addilJ were delayed today when it was learned that the physician was involved in a traf. fie accident in Huntington Beach. • Waddill, 42, arrived al the county courthouse one hour late and explained to attorneys that he stayed at the scene of the ac· cident to render aid to the worn an occupant of the other car. Waddill said the two can col- lided at 9: 10 a.m. near the in· tersection of Beach Boulevard and Trask Avenue in Westminster. He and bis wife were unhurt but the woman oc· cupant of the other car suffered what he described as un· determined injuries. W add Ill said the woman responded to treatment provided by himself and paramedics who rushed to the scene and was then taken to a local hospital. .. What a day for something like this to happen," the defen· dent ruefuJJy commented. "I 'll tel\ you. it never rains but what it pours.·· Waddill declined to speculate on who was responsible for the collision. Judge James K. Turner be'gan reading instructions to bis Orange County Superior Court jury about one hour after Wad· d11J 's arrival as the murder trial of the Huntington Harbour ob· stetrician moved into its final hours. It is expected that the reading or instructions ~ill take much or the day and that the panel or nine men and three women will begin deliberations later to· day. The jury is being asked to re· turn one of rive possible verdicts : not guilty, murder in the first or second degree or al· templed murder in the first or second degree. Waddill is accused of stran· gling a newborn baby girl in the nursery at Westminster c..:om - munity Hospital shortly after he was advised that the child had survived a saline abortion he performed on the 18-year-old mother 12 hours earlier It was testified fQr the pros- ecution that Waddill choked the baby to death after predicting that he would face lawsuits seek- ing millions or dollars in damages if he allowed what he believed to be a brain·damaged baby to live. Ailing Marine Still Critical Mter Crash A Camp Pendleton Marine, who suffered massive head in· juries in a downtown San Clemente traffic accident late Friday, remaJned in critical con· dition today at San Clemente General Hospital. Paul Wilson. 20. was injured just before midnight Friday when his motorcycle collided at the intersection of A venida del Mar and El Camino'Real with a sedan driven by Jertrey Polasky, 18. of 27192 Tossamar. Mission Viejo. Polasky was not Injured. but Michael Yocca, 18, of 33465 Cockleshell Drive, Laguna Niguel, a pa.ssenier ln Polasky's car, was cut on the forehead in the collision. Detective Pete Ooodwln of the San Clemente Police Depart· ment Hid the Orange County Dlttrlcl Attomey'1 office will be asked to cite Poluky ror failure to yield to another vehicle. Polasky wu t.umlna left onto El Camino Real from Aventda del Mar when bJ1 car cotu.ded with. the motorcycle, southbound on El Camino Real. Ooodwln seld. E'ro• Page Al LAKE ••• ln depth and is 70 feet deep at its deepest point, is unique in Orange County because it has been designed t.o permit s wim- ming in the main body of water. Portions of the lake set aside for general and community - not public -use include two as sociatloo beaches, a natural am· phitheater area, picnic grounds. boat storage, parking areas and boat launching (acllities. Three other beaches are de- signed for private communities along the water's edge. The largest community facili· ty is along the north edge of the lake and includes the JOQ.yard- long main beach. averaging 80 feet in depth. "The court finds that the peo. pie have established by a fair preponderance or the evidence that the defendant does not, as a result of mental disease or de· feet, lack capacity to understand the proceedings against him or to assist in his defense,·' Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice J oseph R. Corso said in a stx· p~e memol'IQ'dum of law. Corso. who this month held four days or closed hearings on the competency or the 24·year· old postal clerk rrom YOhken, set May 8 for either the start of pre· liminary trial hearings or jury selection should the defense waive the hearings. "Defendant is able to diSCUSJ the case with his counsel and has never refused to do so. No claim is made that he has not done so," Corso wrote. Ted Patrick Beats Imprisonment Rap Charges or alleged false im- prisonment have been dropped in Beverly Hills Municipal Court against controversial depr~>­ grammer :red Patrick, who served Umem Orange County Jail on simllarcharges . Patrick has also run afoul of the law in Colorado for his methods Toro Marine Facing Charge In Kidnapping A sergeant stationed at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station remained in custody today, fac- ing charges in what police allege was an attempted kidnapping of a Hoag Memorial Hospital nurse. Newport Beach detective Ken Smith said he arrested Thomas Jackson Patton, 28. of 8712"'2 Midway Place. Santa Ana, Fri- day at the Santa Ana gas station where Patton worked in his off· duty hours. Smith said he traced Patton through a license plate number and car description given police ~Y witnesses to the Thursday af- ternoon incident. The 2s.year·old hospital employee told police she was ac- costed by a big, knife.wielding man in the hospital 's parking structure as she left work. She said the man ordered her to let him into her car, but as s he drove out of the structure, s he jumped screaming from the vehicle. Her screams attracted three other hospital employees who pursued the fleeing s uspect back into the parking building only to lose him when he drove away. Smith said that at the time of his arrest, Patton was wearing a ·Shirt that matched the shirt described by lhe victim and he found a pocket knife on Patton that also matched the knife described by the victim. Patton is being held in Newport Beach city jail in lieu of $25,000 bail. Smith said he plans to seek charges of kidnap· ping and usauJt with a deadly weapon in the Harbor Judicial District Court. used to persuade youthful mem. bers or religious cults to return home. Judge Andrew J . Weisz bas ag_reed to drop charges of con. spiracy and false imprisonment after a jury WllS unable to reach a unanimous verdict. Jurors were deadlocked 10to2in favoroffind· ing Patrick innocent, a court spokesman said. Patrick, 46, was accused of holding captive Dennis H4uswirth, 26, a member or Santa Barbara ·s Brotherhood of the Sun fo r several days in 1976 and 1977 in West HoUywoQd, Two other de(~ndents in the case, Cliff Daniels and Rodney Casey, have not yet been located and face prosecution on con- spiracy and false imprisonment charges. The young man's parents. Fred and Kalie llauswirth, were fined $125 and placed on a year's proba· lion after pleading· ·no contest'' to a false imprisonment charge. Sherri Dietrich, 27, of Lynwood, entered the same plea on that charge. She was fined $100 and placed on a year's probation. Patrick had also been char ged with illegally holding Pam Shan· non Wells, 17, another member of the Santa Barbara sect, but the judge dismissed that case la.st week on a legal point when the prosecution ended its arguments. Sitter Held On Sex Rap LONG BEACH (AP) -A San. ta Ana man who advertised low baby -s itting rates in a throwaway newspaper has been arrested In connection with the molesting of a S·year·old boy, police said. Ronald R. Rudd. 26, was ~oked Thu!'Sday for investiga· lion of a crime against a child and rel ated sex orrenses, authorities said Friday. After placing an ad reading "I baby sit. Cheap prices. Ron," Rudd was hired six limes at 50 cents an hour to baby sit the boy, said police Sgt. Phil KJng. The youngster later told his grandfather he had been molest· ed. the officer said Oopnyto Wed June Nuptiah Planned HONOLULU <AP> -An early June wedding ten· tatlvely is planned for singing star Donny Osmond. 20, and Debra Glenn. 19 , a Bri1tham Young University freshman from Provo, Utah. The engageme nt was an- nounced Sunday in Honolulu. where Osmond &nd his sister, . Marie. were lilming the motion picture, "Alo h a Donny and Marle." Osmond said he stlll con· tinues to appreciate his fans and wants-them to support him now more than ever before. '"*"" ·'They (lbe {ans> have always wanted ma happy. and I truly am that," said Osmond. ··1 have been blessed with the 1reatest fans anyone could ask ror." E'ro• Pflfle A J HANNA ••• "He does not need the iron gates of incarceration, he needs a helping hand," McNelis con· eluded. At that point, Bryant invited Hanna to speak for himself. The former congressman stood siJenUy as if to gather his com)>osure, and when he finally spoke his voice shook and he seemed to be fighting tears. Hanna told the .court that "I hope that what you have to do wiU help atone for what I've done.'' Bryant. In serious. clipped fooes, then ordered Hanna to surrender to U1e allorney general's office for a deciision ob which prison he will go to. Hinna wiU remain free until that assignment,-0.en will have 30 days to report to the institu· Uon under Bryant's order. McNelis asked Bryant before the sentence was handed down. "What reasonable man would suggest that 64-year-old Dick Hanna. a first·term violator. really deserves incarceration?" The attorney noted that Han· na 's wife of 33 years and several adopted children depend on him for support. McNells acknowledged that Hanna had "an affinity for and deep interest in Korean affairs.·· and had worked "openly, active- ly and auressiveJY tor cla11er ties between th.is country and that emerging democrac-y. For that he apologizes to no man.·· he said "But he does admit that the activities he had with Tongs un Park were a clear conflict of in· terest and a clear violation or law.·· but since deciding not to run for re-election in 1974 , Han- na has "attempted to extricate himself' ever since. As outlined by the prosecution. Hanna helped Park become the seller's agent (or California rice exports to South Korea, thereby enabling Park to earn subslan· tial commissions. Hanna also bolstered Park's standing with the Korean gov- e rnment by introducing him to members of Congress and "otherwise aggrandizing Park's status in this country." includ- ing the implementation of "many of his pro·Korean posi· lions" related to congressional matters. the government at- torney said. Saddle hack TM.18tees Get New Budget Saddleback ColJege trustees will get their first peek tonight al the 1978-79 district budget -a look that will reveal the uncut requests flied by each of the school's departments, divisions and offices. Usually, trustees do not get the budget before lt is trimmed and balanced by district of- fi cials. But officials say they want trustees t.o be aware or the work that goes into budget cutting - particularly with the possibility of declining revenues should the J a rvis·Gann property tax lirnita· lion initiative be approved by voters in June. The meeting is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. in the col· lege's library, room 212. The campus is located a t 28000 Marguerite Parkway in Mission Viejo. MINISTER JP ANTS KIDS TO JOIN IN GEITYSBURG. Pa. CAPI - MaintalnJng that the l..ord'!J Sup· per should be open to baptlied lnfanla. the Rev. Paul Harms. a Lutheran theolo11an\ told a worahlp conference at LUlheran . TheoloaJcal Seminary : "lf there's one lhina a kld un· derstands, It's food." Patty's Appeal Refused .. "' • ' ' W ASHlNOTON CAP> -'Phe U.S. Supreme Court refused to rev(ew Patricia Heat1t's lt78 bank robbery conviction. The youn1 newspaper belreM, free two years on $1 million bond. s-oon may have to go to priton. The Justices rejected Miss Hearst's appeal with ~explana. lion . Only JusUce WUliam J . Bren· nan Jr. voted to review her c~e. and he said he would have llmlt· ed the court's study to the ad· mlssibllity Into trial evidence ot recordings of Miss Hearst's jailbouse conversations. Lawyers ror Miss Heant have 25 days in which to ask the high court to reconsider. One ol those lawyers, J. Albert Johnson or Boston, said be was considering s uch a move. However, the court almost never granlf reconsideration. "Also under conslderatJon are motions to lbe district court in. San Francisco," Johnson added. He said be might ask that court to "revise and revoke" Miss Hearst's sentence -allow. ing her time already served lo satisfy her imposed pllsoo term. Miss Hearst conceivably~ be ordered to prison in the ln· terlm. Her Immediate fate 'J>pe&rs to rest with U.S. District ~~e William H. Orrick Jr. in' Sin Franclsco. He could allow Mias Hearst lo remain free until 1._wyers exh aust all legal maneuvers. Those could include a request that Orrick r educe Miss Hearst's seven· year prison term to a period of probaUon, as was done last year for state charges or assault and robbery agai&t hf>r. Under Supreme Court pro· cedure. Orrick officially wilt learn or the court's action when receiving notice of it by mail within a few days. There was no immediate com· ment on the Supreme Court's ac· lion by Orrick. federal pros· ecutors or the Hearst family. lf imprisoned. Miss Hearst would have to serve 14 months before becoming eligible for parole. She served 14 months before. during and after her eight·week trial. E',.... PflfleAJ RECALL ••• pects to begin ln two weeks. The recall movem ent comes in the wake or the three trustees voting last week to place district Superintendent Richard Welte on "vacation" status. Board Members William Kohler and Loa Young opposed the move to suspend Welte. The action apparently was a forerunner or the board ma· jority 's rumored plan to dis· charge the superintendent. But Howell insisted today the board majority's action against Welte was not the sole reason tor the recall attempt. "We feel the citizens deserve better than what they've got." he said. "They deserve a better school board. "The board majority does not seem to place a priority on the welfare of students but rather political ambilion and ego needs." Howell characterized a recent board majority rejection of plan· ning funds for a Laguna Hills in· termediate school as a "sub· terfuge." He claimed the board majority said they wanted to use the funds elsewhere but could not because the money is from school bonds and must be used for specific projects. "They could buy a few porta· ble buildings but that would be a drop In the bucket,'' Howell said. · Howell, a former trustee on the old San Joaquin Ele mentary School District. charged tha' the board majority's failure to ap- prove the planning funds would undermine district students• welfare. "It's going to throw aJI the dis· trict's intermediate schools into double sessions,·• he predicted. ·'The action sets construction of that school back one year and that affects all the schools." f'ro• Page A I SLIDE •.• The Mission Viejo Company inspections have determined that no other slides are probable in the community ar ea, the spokesman said. While the Trabuco slope Is county re."lponslbility. the Mls· sion Viejo Company has volun· teered to aJd In the slope re· habilltaUon projed. A company spokesman sald the firm has both the "eitpertlse and the equipment to do the Job.·· However, neither the c.!OW\ly nor the company will eaUJnale when ~pa.tr work wUI belin or when It will be completed. It is expected. however, tbal Trobuco Road wlll remain clo.cd tor at least two moctbl, • comp•IQ' spokeaman 11ld. .. • STOCKS/BUSlNESS '-" ... s.. .... ,... .... ~ ... Wilt ... s.. .... PI ,_, Ow 0t •'4 NII 0.. Of '-' \IOI C11ow ("9 Pt llOI ClaM 0.0. 'l l'Ol C. (1'Q P~ Hll 0... 0o. -.,11 "~ t .H =: ~ ~-.• •:: !V'r"'~·, ~ lllt! ::t:::ll ....... ' "1 'ti%~.~ =~~;U.'• l! ~~.~ ~=•1.e1~ mT~': ""' . . r.1·,. l' i r-I • • • lr:C ,. I • 5 _.c. .. h>a ..._. "=· ·~ t 'Ia 1~+ ~ =;;li'i'.....J~ H !F= 'I'll e:· J "I '!"~~ ·j., ~·~ aft .. ,•::Yi·~ ~·~id :~ N 't~~ :1.:a:.:=r:~1 ! ~1i~J.w r;~r;;t: := 11.;;: l,WW ,.. , ii In !-. lft . , ··~ l £~ •• ... •d1'11~+f\ RHmM 11&;:+:: f •lilt . ~· ·~ . 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IO • '°"' .. .C:M<r .• 9\\..... .tJ t ! \\ yU ltO 1 II lO .. 14 Ottt.M' •• --Hlktvt\ 17".. a. -"".-.L.Nft -• 4 1 ••••· !1114 ,.1100 St ••••. .,...,. -•-+ ~ ~ .lO t 7'11 +t\4 WftSlljt .... • ,, IPi• "" • ~ 1 • ·~-........... 1• 1i '!! ~. \4 McH ' .. IS lt\11-" =10 Ju llO ~· -idllltelr... • '°"'• 116 .JOll 12 I I " 19W11 ij'J 2 ll + ~ Oii I t.n 117 11J\h "' Hoftd.t ~ M ,at =-1111 IM 1.tl J ~ ID:···~ lttfl "4 7 IO --" KMIClfl i 0 ti"'+"' $ \ lift ..•.. w • \( Pf J6' • 14 J -! + ~ ~.. t 1Jt ~+ 11111 f·14 I 11S ~~ '. ,~1J ~·~ == r:::~tl*..t:im.;t I I, ;f} ~ t ~·~ = J'i ,j ~!ft g. f:~.~ ~~·i. :~,:;I ti".:: Zllfflt ~··'at~:.:·~ , • ' • • . , ' ~ -"' ., -"' IMhflllt I .. Ji + I~ ... . •.. '* U"= : ~· ., r fi~.~ f! l·Jl ·· ~· 1 i ~· ~ Mer~~ l: u 21: =· ~ .. I :f Y-+·~ LOS ANGELES AP) -Santa Fe 114 ,, t -.::·· ,.,,."" 11 ~ '•"• ~ 0 : 2~. ~ =:::. ·• X2lt ~ :: ;' li ::::: quarter earnln11 were do'!n $1 " 'I•· ~ ,~: ; tc~ :it lt ff:!"' ' t 'i =: =~•'Pt .-''' "f: IT! ~ I~·· ,m ;tt:-: 14 Industries Inc. bas reported tu tint No t ' Jm.+ e -,~ -t. j '-"• "" Multi t: 4' •2'4 •• .. :::: mllllon from last year's, primarily =:~1 ·· ~ ~ lit0 31: 4 11! ~~·I' ~.!' · 1T ff":.:.·~ ~~ 1't1r&1 ., ~\4! ~ ,. i: "": t because ol t.be wtnter'• heavy rah'8 • l ' 1t ~ ~~ ~:,. '~I~; It!:··::: "~;,.11 ff~:.: \to ~l:f.'1.1010 1 t•·" 11.=,~ ,ft ;5.; \: ln Southern CalllornJa. 1·!fi it • 4-:.~ d& 111-~ """''~ •• .-..-w. =w :Rf ·· ····· ~ :. t ; ·~... Th• drop In earnta11 to sn.s ""II~,. 1>4_ =: ~ Mt1rju~'I )4 ••• : ~\ !St 1'_ Wt::~ .,..wu·· \:! ., ,u :.: I "··1~ q n\11 ~.~ million rroro lul year'• S38.S million ua ~j ~. " .,811 ;t + S jY"' t.a • j t w.-.. ~ 1 Jl • " 101 • U"····· reaulted mainly from lncreaaed • ~· "' 'i(" • " +1 ""' u. .. •"' i:.• 1.n' ~ r:"I\ . , !'),_:::·· railway operaUn1 ~°"' c:amect 1-4t.f tn!; ~ !..-.r,. ,t, • B ~ ~·l +'6' M,~"' ·n\J ' + i "" . I 1M 111+ ~ b" tr.me: inltn'Upt10G8 beea111e ol ..MI .... ~ ckriJk II .. , + YI Al!I I • + )t i.11 • t • -....... -I ~" • 'll ~· . e11•tr • • ,, ..... 1111 • t • " Ml' ill • i~ 1..0 • "l Rl_: .. ::" bad •11lber, compaa}' Chairman l"1~:f· -~l r~ "•\n;j Juit ~~:1·: I[' i~ j ~:·· Mlf~! '. l I 1 ··c.; u" J'd g h,.;·" Johns. Reedaatd. 1:J1 a • _ " J • " ~~ •. t tl ~ ~ ... ,. ,.. , •• .,. c U • .n ii G ... .. .. """" 1111 n 1 + " ti-"*' . •• ,_._ " I ' , &. i Ip, lib'ldly, April a.. 1t1t s OM.YN.DT 81 Me~gers Ead Meraers IDd acqulllUoos are beck ln 1tyle. A r.,in, pualco, during tbe at.Qek market boom yean of the mid·l980I, tbey aubaided lD the lt1'0l ln the wake ol the anUtruJt settlement tbat roreed International Telepbano ud TeJearaph to cive up three companl" <Canteen Corp., Levitt and Som and Avll> and part ol a fourth (Grinnell> in retW"l\ for belftl allowed to Mu> another ol lt. aequlaltkloa (Hartlord F'l.re lnauranc:e >. You lmow merrera are popular .,ain wtaea you aee ITl' return to tbe h'8ll. OUR IA&OEST CONOLOIWE&ATE, with annual eales of $13 blWoo, rrr grew to lb.Ls bloated aise by ea.Ung other companies the w.,y kids eat potato cht.111. Between 1980 and 1970, ITT gobbled up 180 companies. Last year, aa meraer activit.y began to perk up and Avis, shorn of ITT, puaed into the c:o.rporate corral of Norton Simon Inc., ITT was on the prowl again. It broupt eight companies to rank as the secood most active cor· porate acquiter of 1.977. In first place, with 14 acquisitions, waa another old band at buying other com· panies, Chromalloy American Corp. Money Tree ln third place, with alx. was a company that has never slowed down: Beatrice Foods of Chicago. For Beatrice. acquialtiona are always ln. style. It has bought more than 400 ol them and shows no sign of letting up. ORIGINALLY A DAIRY FOODS producer from Beatrice, Neb., Beatrice concentrated its early buyln1 ln the food industry. ll bought so much -Meadow Gold. Dan· non, LaCboy, Eckrich, .Rosarita, Swiss Miss, Viva and Aunt Nellies are some of lta many food brands -that it's the largest food company in America. But it's into other product areas too. au by dint of ac· quisition. Among the Beatrice-owned operations are Samsonite luggage, SUCfel lamps and Hekman furniture. Last year it moved int.a. the hl·fi equipment business with the acquisition of Harmon lntematiooal. Thia year It's moving into water' purification with the pending acquisi- tion of Culligan lntemaUooal. Is that enough? No, for Beatric9' there's always another company that's ripe for plucking. In 1974, l978 and again in 1977. our largest cereal maker, Kellogg, made bich for Troplcana Products. the Florida shipper of slngle- strengtb orange Juice. Eacb·bid was higher than the pre- vious. the most recent being valued at S345 million. The deal fell through every time. ENTER BEATRICE FOODS, THE master acquirer. It has bid a combination or cash and stock worth $490 million for Troptcana -and its orrer bas been accepted. It seems likely then that Beatrice. which had sales of about $1 billion 10 years ago, will ride out 1978 wlth a sales volume of $7 billion. And it may even be Inclined then to teach Kellogg a thing or two about the buslneu of merliJlg and acqulrtng by making an otter to buy the cereal com· pany. Tbat•a one way Kellogg may be able to achieve its amblUoa ol uniting with Troplcana. Punch "I believe It's their bankruptcy party." Comniissary Serves Karcher's Outlets A $S mllllon commissary and distribution cent6r, whkb will serve more than 225 Carl's Jr. and Taco de Carlos restaurants in California. baa been dedicated Sn Anaheim by Carl Karcher Enterprises, Inc. : The 149,000.aquare-foot faclllty adjacent to t.be n~·s corporate headquarters includes a 20,000.gquare·fool com· mlssary for food preparaUon, a 45,0QO..aquare-foot dry goods warehouse, nearly lS,000 square feet of refrigerat.td storage areas, a 9,200-square-foot refrigerated dlatributJ•n staging area, a test ldkbeo. quallfy control 1.aboratory a.Gd orncea for product development. purchasing, dlBtribuU~ • constructJon, engineering, accounting and order procee· Ing peraonnel. . THE COMPLEX 18 DFSGNED to serve up to., Carl's Jr. and Taco de Ca.tl06 unlta. The commissary aectJon produces 23 food items, (n· eluding eoupe. sauces, salad dressings, aUced roast bel!r for Carl's Jr. sandwiches.· grated cheese for cbJU cbeete doga and sliced ooJons for sandwiches and aalad ban. : Lat.er tbi.a year, the commissary will be&in produclq hamburger patties for all Carl's Jr. a?d Taco ct. Car~ bamburgen at the HUmated rate of one mlWon pouncll s>f meat per moot.b. ProducUoo 1s to bee1n soon oa cataup ud on vaollla, chocolate and strawberry •Yl'VPI ror Carl's Jr. milk abates. • . TD£ PaGDUcrtON A&BA& WRICH lnctlide an ova that can ~-~51~ PoUDdl ol beef at a Ume, a 1Ucer that cu.ta 1,000 puuuua of beef an hour and mlxinC eqwpmeat Lb•\ can tum~ to a,ooo aaJ.Jooa of bleu ebeue dNMlU per hour. are arlJ lntpected b)' the u.s.D.A. and t4e Orance Count)' eallb Depa.rtment. The distribution centtt atockl mor. Ulan 800 ttema, rt.DJ1" from mapklns and bambW"(er wrappen to eoa.e. Lea ancJ mJlk. : la till d.lltl1.but.kla c:eawr lta!1oa area. 14 Joedla~ doeb pTOvlde for 1b1ppln• and recetvtai by the comp~ 1 fleet ol tnaclll, Wb!Ch deUYer producta to eacb unit &wlce a week. Four more lo9d.lq docb eerw the comalllaal'J'. ... I • ~ • ' Television. TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTlti.GS •. Retr~tion John Rubinstein plays a young terrorist who demands a rewrite by taking re- porters and editors hostage on tonight ·s episode of L<>u Grant at 10 on CBS. Chan· nel 2. 0 MIRV GAIR'IH GUMI host. Joey Blsnop. au.is: Anne Murray. Jedi Jonee. Jldcle Gayte 7:001 N90 HIEW8 UAA8Ct.U8 AICHIEW8 IOWUNOFOA DOU.ARI • I LOVE LUCY Lucy geta Ille Rlcafdoe ~ the Menz.a thrown In Clta11iwl Luting• • 11.NXT (CBS) LOS Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angele& I KTlA (Ind.) Los Angeles KABc-TV (ABq Los Angeles Cl) KFMB.{CBS) San Otego 8 KHJ·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles (II KCST (ABq San Diego m t<TTV (Ind.) Los Angeles e KCOP·TV (Ind ) Los Angeles 9 KCEi-TV (PBS) Los Angeles lrD KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach TV Airing Cowitry StykFare NASlMLLE. Tenn. (AP> - Country music shows have been getting unprecedented t.elevis.lon exposure this year and more are lined up for airing in the next several weeks. NBC has telecast three prime· lime country music specials since January and will air a fourth in May. Also scheduled next month Is a Johnny Cash s pecial on CBS, "Classic Cash: The Old and the New." ADDITIONALLY. A Grand Ole Opry program was televised live in March by the Public Broadcasting Service for the hrs t lime in the 53-year history of the revered country music show. And a syndicated country m u:.ic·lalk show, "The Nashville . Scene," began airing in January in 28 cities, though it has been discontinued at least temporarl ly because or production costs and lack of a network sponsor The three NBC shows were the highly rated "SO Years of Coun· try Music" and "Nashville Remembers Evlvis on His Birth- day," both in January, and "The World's La rgest Indoor Country Music Show," which aired April 5 'Daeg're the Pitts The annual Country Music As .,c1t•1a•t ion awards s how is · ll It-vised li ve each October by cos James Murtaugh is surrounded by roller derby beauties -from left. Candy Ann Brown. Joanna Cassidy. Marcy Hanson, Rhonda Bates and Marilyn Tokuda -· from the Pittsburgh Pitts team on the new series "Rollergirls ... debuting tonif!ht a t 8 on NBC. Channel 4. lMaster of Malnprop~m .. . • . By JAY SHARBUTT LOS ANGELES CAP) - NBC's Edwin Newman, who broods about misuse or lhp English language, meet Ct>tne· • Jian Norm Crosby. He cheerful- ~ I~ splits definitives "without ~ foa r of extradition." Norm does those TV ads tor a rerta1n beer, but "has trouble renouncl.ng the name." He con· cede s nobody, n ot even "beertenders," knows "how to · verbalize the name, let alone put it in words." But as he sees it, •·who needs a whole resuscitation every time you order ll?" AND, AS "A WOl'd to the wise i:, deflclent," be just says keep those brews coming because : "m> clavichord ls so dry." Crosby, a short, merry re- ·fugee from Boston. readily pleads guilty to comitUng ram- pant malaprop, which ls a pro- fuse confusion of words UJat are slmllar ln f(>und. He does lt for fun and prom on tho .. Tonight" and other TV 1how1, ln Las Vegas, and soon wlll be dolna It on hb new syn. dlcated comedy series, •'Norm Croeby•1 Comedy Shop." Norm. wbo eerved on a Navy subebuer ln \he Atlanllc ln World War Two, eet out~ tho war to be a traditional come- dian. How 'd he come to install the malaprop as a n untradi· tional prop? "I FOUND IT accidentally, but 1 was looking for It when It happened," he grinned, explain- ing the happening this way : In 1963, after he put In yean of labor al various New England saloons and smokers. the owner or N ew York's famed Lalin Quarter caught his act and or- fered him a week's work. Facing the big time, Crosby realized he 'd need a dllferent kind of comedy routine to make a lasting impression in Fun City. He fot.md it at a club he was working in Springfield, Mass .. 90 miles Crom Boston. The show had girl dancers. Some stayed nights in Springfield, some com- m uted back home to Boston · each evening. ·rHE CLUB owner. a pal, had big eyes for one of the new dan· cers , Crosby said, "and be told me, 'Find out lC she 'a staying over or 11 she communicates to Boston.' "I knew that wu not the word ho meant. And l said. 'My God. that'• tht way to go!· " And th.at'• the way Cros})y ha.a 1one ever since. But he em· pbaslaes the malaprop Isn't Ml comedy act per se. It ·s Instead just part of the act, "just a side tool to the basic humor." Does h e ever s Ii p into malaprops whlle trying to be serious? "ALL THE TIME, all the time." he laughed, citing a White House function at which be commiserated. Lyndon 8 . Johnson was the president and Hubert H. Humphrey the vice presJdent at the time. Crosby said he suffered a short-circuit between the ears and told all present that LBJ had just "declared war on puberty." About a month later. a package arrived ln the mail. " "It was a nice picture of Mr. Humphrey." he beamed. "He enscribed on It: 'Remember. we· may need you in the State Department to explain foreign policy· " 'Ma8i' Set OD TV LOS ANGELES (AP> -An orlglo.al to-minute musical special wilt be made from 0 . Htory's "Gift ot the Magi" tor CbrlatmH 1bowtn1 OD NBC Broadwa1 composer Stan Lebow*! la writlnc the music and lyrtclat ~ Tobias 11 writ· lnl the '1rlcs for Cates Brothen Comp&Q1 I TUBE TOPPERS .CBS 8 8:00 -National Cheerlead- ing Championships. Cheryl Ladd of Charlie's Angels hosts this special pit· ting the top cheerleaders and gymnasts for $2.5.000 in scholarships. <See story below>. NBC 8 8 :.00 -Rollergirls. The pre· miere or a new series about members of a female roller derby team <See photo bel&w.) NBC D 9 :00 -"The l'don- eychangers." Part two or this Big Event special with Kirk Douglas. Helen Hayes. Anne Baxter and Jean Peters. a dramatic miniseries about high finance. ~,ASA, U.&A.? JOt oet• • bleetc eye. Violeta feign• Urete ex.!Mf11M and Carmen 8'IPllee tor • computer date. 0 •-IE&W. Reglonel CCMf9Qe ol t<- NI City Aoyala 81 TelCM Raogera; Q1k:egO Cube It PhlllldelPhla ~ t:IO 8 JOE AHO VAl.IM (Premiere) "The Meeting .. JOt be1• hie rOOl'lllTll19I. F...mt and Peulle (Bill ~ and ~ Eliott), n.... dolllw9 t11et lie can tllke Valene~ from her cNtldng '*"* .. the dllOO. but when Iha leema °' hie profit • .,,. puncfutW 1111 lloPet of eYer Nllng heregeln. euao>u r-To e. Annollnced. iec>ed Delay) . f12t,OOO OUE.8TJOH OY'ERENN Congnelmen John~ mu (0 Indiana) on lhe pending blll 10 Change the rnlndetorf retirement aos; gHtrolntHllnel mnus: FIOfide Sheldon' I ratetion- ltllp wlltt '* deaf, .. OMd. io.ter grll'ldlol\. t:OOG THE MONEYCMAHOEA8 Roscoe Heyward con- vtncM !tie ber1k boerd to oo Imo • dNI wlltt Oeofge C>ulrt«naln. promc>tlng tlis rf\'91. Alex Vllldel llOOrt, to im.ttgete ttle financier'. eftllra; lfter NMno I prta- on i.rm tOf embGdernent. Mllel Eaton ta• on 1f!e dengerOllS ... ol ~ erlng the !ICU befllnct • credit card rorglng ~. (Pllt 2 of 3) • llU. y OIWtAM CNllADE I MEAY G"""1H MEETING OF MtN08 In ltlle epleod9. TModo<e RooMwlt ~ the Ptobierml of 20th-centuty America and Tllomu Paine ou"'"-how the netlon becerne Independ- ent. s,_ Allen 1a the ~atot (R) • OAVIO~ Pllt I "Our WIYee 8-t Ua Up • ConMaelotl• Of Three Bsntr«I Huabenda" Plft II ··Bol>by Halpern •• A RMI Ufe Aoclty" t:30 8 Cl) OHE DAY ATA ,.... Nin'• new nelgtll>of, • hendaome r-car cflarll.. pjon. tn. to llnd the key to '* romerotic lgnltlOn and gel..,..,.. --· i>«ted aperka In the ~(Pert I of 21(RJ 10;00 B (() LOU OfWfT A rOl"'9 l«rOftlC lr!Y9dN tM Trtt> new•oom. ncMcls hoetaget end cNmende • rewrite of • 11ory about his brottler, Idled wtllle hcJld.. l ••=(R) I.Erl MAKE A DEA.l MICHAEL JACKSON L09 Angelle County Coro- Claanapionslaips Toniglat ner TnoinM NogUOhl • IDOut ~with dMltl tO-M·~/LIHMA Ml'Olff' Ill CAA04. IUfilHeTT _..,,..... 1t:001 • • Cl) di Nl!WS L~ A.ltlll ICWll STYLI "Ollotder In The Oowi" Mebel le b9lnQ ll'9d by en unKf\IOlllOUI tll(I dl1Wr. GMOW! *. "Plelna Of Battll" (1970) W. Medor, Lenita De WC.. Ter• 8\111>1, e ()oeudl, ...,. hie .,.,.,.. In ltleir llffter struggle fOr hldel*ldelice ....,.. tM P°'99 end tMlr Tener ~ (1 hr., 56 rnin.J • THE 000 ()()WILl Feb ftnde 0-moon- llgtl t Ing -• 00Uft*'"8n In • dingy diner .,,., Oecer bedled • wrong hOfM with ~,..Md lldVmrad him lot another purpme . • MONTY PVTHON'S fl V1NG CIACU8 • OICKOAWTT """~ The CfMtlOn Of BMI Sellen'' Gueits: Roget st,.., SCOtt Mcwe- dfffl, Robert Oottlleb, Rich· wd Snydef (Pett 1 ol 2) -~l &..EHAER AEJIORT tt~8CI) CMlATEMOVIE **** .. , .. Cfy T-· row.. ( 19511) SuHn Haywerd, Alc:Nrd C<lnte • An eut~ atcwy tl\81 chroolctH Lllllen Aoth"• decline Into elooholt9m and '* "°"" jOUmeY be<* to llNlth with the lid of AlcoNlllcl Atton- ymc)U9. a TONIQH1" Gueet lloet: Qeofge c.rten. Gueits: Vllcld CWT. t<,.._ kin • LOY!. AloENCAN 8'm.a ''Love And The MulMnce'' OOl.g tnM to propote to • 1 wonee.. "Love And nie OoWle Ttoull'e'' A unique ~ gift c... prob-...... • 0 POUCI 8TORV "UM Of Fire'' A young pollce otlloef joins • llj)e- Clal unit end must teem io cope with kllllng. (R) • THATOR "The~" T~sdat1'i Da11d..e Mo.,w• MORNING 11~ •• * 'h '"The Ledy fl'Oflll ShenQNI" I IMS) OrlOft Web, Rita Heyworth. AFTERNOON 12:008 ••'h "A 81""911' In My ~.. (1t50) June ~ ...... °'*'dllr. a.i»O * • '"The~ Gun" I 19&4) Audie Murphy, Met· 'ryAndefs. 8:30 ••• y, ''The Oun RlderaH I 1989) """ Oevle. 8cot1 Btedy. • .- • .. ... :-. Cheerers Boost lmag~ By JOHN NADEL LOS ANGELES <AP> -At· tractive women from Dallas and Denver have done a Jot to bring cheerleading lnto fouc-s, so to speak. But one interested ob- server maintains the Dallas Cowgirls and the Denver Pony ·Express -prominent at the Super Bowl -are really no more than dancers. Television viewers nationwide can form opinions or their own tonight at 8 when "The National Cheerleading Championships." a 90-mlnute special, is aired by CBS. channel 2. "CheerJeadlng is a serious thing," says Fred Putman, director of the Top 20 survey for the International Cheerleading Foundation, which rates college cheerleading teams around the co untry . "It's a fantas tic alternative to sports. ''TH~E KIDS HAVE t¥en it to the top or their art," P\ltman says. "Crowds have a lot to do with athletic teams a nd cheerleaders can be a great motivator." Putman says he feels the TV special. taped earlier this month at the Los Angeles Sports Arena, will help make people take cheerleading more seriously. "It's a serious, difficult thing to those Involved,·· he says. "The women from Dallas. Denver and other professional football te ams are just dan· cers ... FIVE SCHOOLS will compete for top honors -Southern Cal, Pittsburgh, North Carolina. Kansas and Florida. A total of S25,000 in prize moo ~Y for scholarships is being offered . Eacb team of cheerleaders will do its thing for six minutes. Judging the competition wlll be Bert Jones, quarterback of the BallJmore Colts; Charles Schulz, creator or t he comic strip "Peanuts;·· model Cheryl Tiegs; and Christle Moller, Amertcas's Junior Miss. The feSt of the program will be a vaMety show of sorts. featuring George Burns, Bruce J enner, Cheryl Ladd, Lou Rawls and Gene Kelly. PUTMAN SAYS HE does not mean to put pro football 's cheerleaders down. "They have helped t he concept and in· creased the profile. which Is good, but th.ls ls 100 percent dlf· ferent. These kids are gymnasts, acrobats and crowd motivators." The ~heerleading foundation. a non-profit organliaUon, has been rattni the Top 20 schools in the country since 1967 . Representatives see as many teams as poulble and lnforma· Uon ts ~lved from around the country. A totaJ of 143 NCM members are ellglble to be rated. The tbow Is produced by Brad Marks and Emmy Award- wlonor Lee Mendelson. t THEY'LL HOST CHEERLEADING CHAMPIONSHIPS Cheryl Ladd, Lou Rawls and Gene Kelly TVPiraey *' . • . . , . . • . . 'Deep Throat' Aired in NY . SYRACUSE. N. Y. CAP I -Federal officials are trying' • to locate the "broadcast band.its" who turned the usually • dormant Channel 7 In Syracuse into a showcase for pro-• grams ranging from Oscar-winning films to "Deep .• Throat" over the weekend. · • "We're very definitely interested in who's been broad· casting the stuff," said John Theimer, director of the ! Federal Communications Commission ofrice in Buffalo. ~ Theimer was in Syracuse on another matter. THE tJNLICENSED STATION reached viewers in , downtown Syracuse and sections or the surrounding • Syracuse University campus. • • Films featured included "Rocky, .. "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." segmenta or "Star Trek" and "Deep Throat." . . THE STATION. CALLING it.sell "Lucky 7," htd a live : announcer who viewers saJd was wearing a gas mask and ,• a noose ~Wld his neck. He said be hoped vtewers enjoyed :· the programmlng and promised more entertainment ln comlng weekends. • ... • Television en1ineers here saad an electronlcs buff wlOI • relativeb' simple equJpment could accompJJsh the pro- 1ramming on the vacant channel. The crime calls for a • poulble mal.lmum sentence ol one year in prison and a · $10,000 flne. .; . . ~ _.. ,, ·' • "' . . ~'° . ... -