HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-05-02 - Orange Coast Pilot,
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DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 2, 1978 ... In· Mesa Verde Blaze
VO\. 11, MO. 1D, J HCTIC*I. • ~AOal ,, '
~~-.-B--r_e_a_k __ D_u_e __ i_n ___ T_r_a_s_h __ S~tr_ik __ e~~~.-----------------'=f ~--
j
• Dissension IDts Waddill Jurtr
•Bride Held in Spouse ~P_!ath
• Valley Educators Picket
~ . .
.........._
W~n't Appeal
..
OC Bride
Held in
-Slaying
A 25-year-old bride suspected
of murdering the man she had
married the day before re-
mained in jail today on homicide • rha rges, An aheim police re·
ported.
However. a spokesman for the
· Orange County District At·
torney 's offire said the case is
s till being reviewed and it won't
be known until Wednesday or
Thursday what charges. if any.
will be formaUy sought agamsl
Dorothy Hisey of Anaheim.
Mrs. Hisey, who had married
he r husband. Ra y. Saturday
after living with him for about
six years, told police Sunday
that an int.ruder walked Into the
home Sunday, shot her husband
and then walked out.
Police said several adults and
three children were also in the
house al the lime and that they
couldn't substaf)liale the un-
known Intruder story.
Hisey, Zl, dlcd al UC Irvine
Medical Center an hour and a
, half after the s hooting. No
motive was known, police said.
f Police Slay
' ; LA Stabber t ·LOS ANGELES (AP>
Sheriff'• deputies fatally shot Bruce & Cazabat, 31, after be
' stabbed bls brother, Anthony,
• i while they were questloninC him
• aricl then ltat&ed at the deputies.
Autborilles sald Monday the
, Incident occurred after deputies
had aone to Caza bat's apart·
ment in the Walntlt Park section
to tnvesti&ate a disturbance call.
Dad SiaYs son
. Chick Killing Stirs Attack
DALLAS <AP> -A father fatally-shot hi's 29·
year -old son after the son clubbed 24 ba by rhicks to
d eath with a hammer lhen~ame after his father
wi th the weapon. police sakl.
Investigators said Ronald Doyle Allen became
enraged Monday when he had problems while build-
ing a coop for the chickens. Reports said he killed
the chicks. carried them into the house. threw them
on a kitchen table. broke a window a nd came after
his father with the ha mmer.
The father. whom poli ce did not identify. re-
portedly shot Allen four til'l}es. The father g a\'e
police a statement and was re leased without cha rges
pending referral to the grand 1ury.
Homicide investigator Gerald Robinson said the
father was familiar with his son's "tantrums" and
"he knew what was about to ha ppen ...
Mediator Optimistie
Break Seen in OC
•
Strike N egotiatiom
The federal mediator In the
two-week-old Orange County trash strike said today he ls op-
li m 1st i c about negotiations
between drivers and manage·
ment.
"I expect a break In negotla·
lions tomorrow," mediator John
Co urtney said, noting he will
mee t with Teamsters and
management al 11 a.m. Wednes-
da)'.
Courtney said very little hap-
pened Monday, when he met
with both sides for about three
hours. On Saturday, TeanJsters
voted down what manas~rs of
seven struck firms had termed
their tidal ofter.
murder were Rafael A. Ramos.
29; Rafael R. Ramirez, 24; and
Daniel M. Cano, 21, all or Santa
Ana.
However, police aaid that,
when arrested, the three were in
possession odJy of two B.B guns
and that no bullet· had been found in the cab ol the trash
truck. However, inveatlgators
said they haven't dismissed the
possibility that a aun might have
been thrown from the station
wagon before ll was stopped.
Pellets were /ired at two new·
ly hired Laguna ~a'ch trash col·
tectora Monday, leavll'll a hole
tn the window of a Laguna
Beach Pisposal ltuck. No one
(See TRASH, Pa1• "2)
.
Anaheim
Resident
Killed
A man ,,convicted or three
murders and who allegedly
clai19s to htlve committed two
more undetected killings was sentenced to death today In
Orange Cotmly Superior Cour:t.
It was the first such Imposi-
tion of the death penalty ln
Orange County and only the
second in the state since capital
punishment was reintroduced to
criminal law last August.
Gregory John Teron Jr .• 25. who defended himself during the
non-jury trial that Jed to bis coo·
viction by Judge Kenneth E. Lae
on charges or first degree
murder. said he wilt not appeal
the death penalty.
Manacled hand and dool,
Teron remained impasslv~
day while Judge Lae hesitantly
pronounced the death penalty in
a hushed courtroom. Obviously dtstressed, Judge ·
Lae collected his papers on ttle
bench, took orr his &lasses and
then started to 'leavJ! the
courtroom.
He turned bitck, looked al the
silent Teron and told him: ''May
God have metty l>n your soul,
Mr. Teron."
Earlier. Judge Lae con·
demoed Teron as a ··very
callous killer who can no more
remember bow many people be
has killed than some people can
remember how many cups or
coffee they drink In a day."
Judge Lae recalled from the
bench that Teron told omcers
who booked hlm for the kltllng of
businessman Earl Reed in
Anaheim on Oct. 31'-19'75, that he
fully int~ed to kid Reed after
he robbed him ln a motel room
and that he caref ullY planned
the kllllna.
<See 0EA'111. Page AZ>
Boy, 2, Dies
In Mesa Fire'
A two-year-old boy visiting hi"s
grandmother iJl Costa Mesa was killed Monday afternoon when
Clre swept through a single-story
Mesa Verde home, fire depart-
ment officials reported.
The Orange County Coroner's
Office identified the victim as
Daniel Storlee, son of Douglas
Judge Views
Waddil~ Jury
'Di.ssemwn'
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ult Dl!Mf P'lltt IUH Dissension and c.tlssalistactlon
appear to be growing factors to-
day iJl ~n Orange County
Superior Court jury that ts try·
ing for the etehth day to reach a
verdict in murder trial of Dr.
Willia,m Baxtel'> Waddltl or Hunt-
ington Harbour. ,
Both factors became mcreas-
lngly apparent nuring the late
afternoon Mo11day when the
complaints ol jurors led Judge
James K. Turner to decide that
the panel can no longer be se·
questered.
The nine male a nd three
female jurors and the male
alternate juror all returned to
their homes Monday nl&hl after
making ll clear to Jud&e Turner
that continued sequestration at their Holiday lnn would mean
the end of Jury delibecationa.
Defense attorney Malbour
CSee DOCl'OR, Page AZ>
and Sue Storlee or St~nton. -
The boy 's 4-year-old :sister was r escued from the quick-
s preading blaze when the
grandmother. Enid Storlee, dis·
covered the fi re in her living
room and ran out or the house
with the girl.
Costa Mesa fire battalion
Chief Jack Perkins said today
that Mrs. Storlee tried in vain to
re·enter her home al 1796 Pit-
rairn Drive to rescue Daniel, but
she was driven back by s moke
and flames.
Exact cause or the blaze 1s un-
de r investigation. Firemen
believe the young boy may have
been playing with matches, or
the fire could have resulted from.
an unattended fireplace. Chief Perkins said the victim's body was found in the rear living
room or the frame house where
the fire originated. Bundles or
newspapers in the home ap-
(See FIRE, Page A2)
Low clouds late tonight
and Wednesday morning.
then most sunn y
Wednesday afternoon.
Lows tonight 48 to 66 Highs
Wedpesday66to72.
INSIDE TODA~
f
\ ~ PATS 'TRUTH'
\ DBm'S HER
RlcbaJ'd Nikon lied to hla wlre
and to b1I tamUy. Juat as be lied
to the country. a barah lndlct-
l ment end an Incontrovertible
fact, aceordlns to Leiter David.
The driven have been out on
strike since their three.year con·
tract expired April 17. More
than a million Oranee County res-
idents have ~n without trash
disposal service since then.
Vloltnee intenslfied Monday as some ttaah trucks be1an roll-
ing a1aln with llewly hired non-union dri\lera.
·FV ~eachers Picketing-
(elementary> 1cMoJ d1-trlct of.
flclals have met Uu'ee times
with atate·appointed medtator
Wllllam Drohan with hol)H ot
breaking the deadlock.
A 1tghttd woman finds fn
Braille o chance to ahare the
beautu and love that have
made htr ltf• rich. SH Page
84.
And on her nnal d•y ln the
Wblte .::= the wire ot 28
, yHl'I to her husband
pral1e ldl mother aa a aalnt.
ZJCCG"Pll h'om Davld'a biOC·
raphy; ol. PM Nixon CC)Olln.ue on
Pa11A'1.
The most 1erloua lnrident oc·
curred at M 0 Disposal ln
Fullerton, Monday afternoon,
when three men in a atatlon
waaon allefedly fired oae shot
at tbrff em.,loyea In the cab Of
a trash truck.
Arre~ on SWJplclon of u -
sault wltb a deadly weapon and
assault With Intent to commlt
Fountain Valley elementary
school teachen picketed dlatrtct
admlnl1tr1Uon offices for two
ho\lra Monday afternoon tO pro-test deadlocked contract
neaouauona.
Teacher 1roup leader Yale
Wl•hnitk 111d &he atte 1ctiOOI
plcktla may coatlnut all W4ek.
Wl1bnlck, Pountaln Valley
Education ANoelaUon <FVEA>
.... '
r.resldent. eald the major dispute
n the stalled contract talks in·
volves demand ror a hatr·bour
ptannln1 aeulon for teachena each Thursday. '
The FVEA chler said t~acben
and adminlltraton have not bad
aerloua diacusalon on tbe salary
luue. Teathen asked for a 12
percent .c."ON tbe board pay
hike tn lhelr h1lU1l 1>roPQ1al.
Teacbeti and Fountain Villey
But Wllbnlck 1atd Drohan'•
efforts have bee.a truitleea.
Di1lr1ct otndals ·~ expected to make a 1tatement on the altuatloo but could not Im·
mediately be reached for cocn·
meat. , •
• I -
7
·'
,.
dZ DAIL V PILOT s T'Md!Y M!x 2, I IJ79
Joy Riders
Rides Proposed to Thwart Car Thieves
WASHINGTON lAP> -It
would bt harder lo steal a car
under a rule proposed today by
tbe Transportation Department.
The rule would require
vehicles to have such burelar·
proo( devfces as U> special lenl·
lion wires to prevent a car from
being started without a key C2>
hood latches that can be re·
leased only from inside the car
Conspiracy
To Dump
Agnew Told
BOSTON CAP) -Two busi·
nessmen were chareed today
with conspiring to raise $500,000
for the alleged purpose of trying
to influence thcn·President Nix-
on to mak e former
M assachusells Gov. John A.
Volpe his 1972 running male.
M assachusctts Assistant At·
torn ey General Stephen
Delinsky told a Superior Court
judge thaf'Albert "Toots" Manzi
and William Masiello, both of
Worcester, conspired in 197"2 to
raise the cash for delivery to
Ni,,xon either before or during
th'e Republican National Con -
"~ntion that year.
lie said the money was an al·
tempt "to influence Nixon·s de-
cision to substitute Volpe for
Vice President Spiro A~n~w at
the convention." cA
Delinslcy charged that the two
extorted $10,000 from the New
York consuJting firm of McKee·
Herger·Mansueto as part of the
fund-raising effort.
Oclinsky also c~aqed that the
• wo ··threatened the firm with
financial destruction" by using a
slate employee to make trouble
on M BM 's state contract. He
s aid the men made ••other
threats d>f a political nature"
that he wouJd explain later.
Oelinsky made the comments
in asking that bail for each man
bf' set at Sl0.000. He noted that
e<1ch faced 45 years ln prison ii
• convicted.
Manz1 and Masiello were in-
dicted last week by a Suffolk
County grand jury in connection
with the 1972 aneged extortion.
Manzi is a member or the
Massachusetts Turnpike
A ulhority Board. Masiello is
head Qf a Worcester architec·
tural firm.
M as1ello pleaded innocent to
tht· four charges. Manzi pleaded
innocent to three charges.
There was no immediate com-
ment from the New York con·
::.ulting farm.
Volpe, in a broadcast in-
terview. denied knowledge of the
allej(ed st•he me.
· · I, never w o u Id have
;1uthorazcd it. r never heard of
11 . • · he told Boston radio station wnz
Oelinsky would not elaborate
on the. charges outside court.
<.1nd it was not known how much
of the money wa~ allegedly
raised and whether any of it was
allegedly pajd to Nixon or other
Republicans.
F,..,..PageAJ
FIRE ...
pa'tently contributed to the fast
moving fire that broke out al
about 3:25 p.m
0 3mage Lo the rear portions of
the home was extensive, but fire
officials have set no damage
estimate.
The two Storlee children
s ta yed often at their
grandmother's home.
F'ift~n Costa Mesa firemen
were on the scene. the first truck
company arriving four minutes
after the blaze was reported,
Chief Perkins said.
The fire was under control ln
17 minutes. There was no
damage to surrounding homes tn
the Mesa Verde area.
°"ANOICOASJ' s
DAILY PILOT
and (3) rounded door-lock
mechanisms that p~vent a door lrom being opent.-d by Poklnt a
coat hanger through a wlndow
crach.
The department's National
Highway Traffic Safety Ad·
m inistratlon asked for public
comments on the proposed rule
by July 31.
Joan Claybrook. agency ad·
McDonald's
I
'Hamburg'led'
LAS VEGAS. Nev. <AP>
-Las Vegas police were
holding 200 McDonalds
hamburgers as evidence
in the hamburglary of a
McDonald's restaurant
here during the weekend.
A restaurant employee
and his brother were ar·
rested and accused of em·
bezzling the burgera.
F,....PageAJ
DOCTOR •••
Watson said jury foreman John
Thomas of Los Alamitos told the
judge that the attitude or
sheriff's deputies assigned to
escort the jury led to objections
beingJ iLed with ._tadge Turner.
"They weren't being treated"
asJwman ~:·Wat.son said.
"We don't want an unhappy, an·
gry jury and we don't want them
taking it out on Dr. Waddill just
because we were the first lo ask
that tb.ey ~sequestered.''
The defense motion for se·
questration was denied shortly
before the jury began delibera·
lion&~ week ago.-
But Judge Turner later de·
cided lo seal off his jury when he
became concerned about grow·
ing press accounts of and com·
ment on the trial.
Judge Turner himself seemed
unsettled about 6 p.m . Monday
after an afternoon of interviews
with bristling jurots and anxious
lawyers.
He ·ordered spectators and
news people ln his crowded
courtroom not lo try and foJlow
jurors out of the courtroom and
into the corridors.
"Jury tampering ls a (elony,"
he warned. And he then asked
jurors lo report to him any at·
tempts lo contact them about
the trial.
The rapidly deteriorating at·
m~here of the trial Included
llle reporfoocomment by a juror
that she had suggested reaching
a verdict by flipping a coin.
Judge Turner talked to Mrs.
Patricia Lawrence or Hunt·
ington Beach after the coQ>ment
was reported lo him by another
juror.
She reportedly told the judge
that she did not intend the re·
mark to be taken seriously. She
told Judge Turner that it was de·
livered ln a fiippant manner and
said that she said It to lighten
the mood of a depressed jury.
Judge Turner appeared to ac·
cept Mrs. Lawrence's explana·
tion and denied an lm,mediate
motion for a mistrial by defense
attorney Charles Weedman.
Weedman and Watson said the
Incident will form part of their
appeal if the jury subsequently
convicts Dr. Waddill.
Watson described the jury as
being "damn near evenly
divided." He refused lo say what
led him to that co11cluslon.
Wedding belll added to the
growing clamor Monday when
another juror told Judge Turner
that she wants lo get married
Saturday, deliberations or po de·
liberations. ·
Judge Turner, a married man
himself, agreed to the request of
Kathie Davis of· Fullerton and
said the jury will be glven a one·
day recess Saturday 10 that
Miss Davis can be married and
spend the wedding night with
her h\lSband.
Re told her that she muat re·
tum lo JUJ'J deliberations Sun-
day 11 the Jury still has not r,·
ached a verdict.
,,,.._ Pllfle AJ
TRASH •••
waa injured.
And in Buena Park, thl'M men
in a car repof'tA)dly pulltd up
alongalde a traab truck and one
or them aimed what ap~ared to
be a handgun at the driver or the
truck but didn't fire. Ev~n before the new driven
were hired, llrea had caused
damage to several trash trucks
and Anaheim [)jsposal waa hit
by a SlS,000 ftrebombtng.
Drivers are aeektna a ralae
rrmom $4.50 to .SS.ISO an hour
over ti thrH·)'•U period.
Mana1ement b11 off•red te.
M 14•t•ment ibo h11 otter.ct
full dental coverap, 11 request-
ed, but NJ>Omdl1 not the nve • days llck &eave per ~u lhat
drlven are...tdq.
Spokesmen /or both sldet bave
decUned to 10 lnto fUrt.bor detail
about negotiations.
mlnistrator. said the proposed
rule is aimed primarily at
thwarting young thieves who
steal vehicles ror tral)sportation
or fun or to steal parts.
''The joyri~r thief ls involved
In at leaat a third of the actual
number of vehicles stoJen. b'-"'.,.;
accounts for a very large ma·
jority ot 1toJen vehicles that are
later involved ln accidents," she
said.
She said about one million
vehicles were stolen in the Unit·
ed States in 1976 and that the
cost to society ranges up to..$2.9
billion a year. StoJen cars cause
approximately 130 fatalities and
S.000 dLlabl.lni injuries aonually,
she added.
The proposed changes would
be e ffective beginning with 1981
model passenger cars and 1982
model multipurpose vehicles
and trucks with a gross vehicle
weight Wlder 10,000 pounds.
Many n ewer mod el
automobiles already include one
or more or the protective
systems that would be required
by the propmed rule.
The traffic safety administra·
llon estimated tbe c~t of. the
security im]>rovementa wouJd be
$1·$2 for each passenger car and
$3·$5 for each light truck and
multipurpose vehicle.
FroaaPageAI
DEATH •••
T~. judge said-Reed was
savagely beaten w death with
the -sanw kind' ot-'!altourintent
that Taron-displayed In two
other murders, both committed
in Mlchiian. •
Teron "was serving a Uf e sen·
tence for murder ln a Michigan
prison in 1977 when his boasting
about the murder of Reed led lo
his arl'elt for the Orange County
killing.
~ Before he could be returned
here he strangled and killed a
fellow prison inmate and was
tried and convicted for that kill·
ing. Again, he was sentenced to
life In prtlon.
Judge Lae recalled that
Teron's flrlt murder involved
the killing of an elderly woman
who was beaten into un -
consclousness and then choked
to death· by being hung from lbe
foot or her bed.
Orange County offfoers claim
that Tel'OO h&14 braaged about
two other~ a..woman in
An,belm and a man who was
murdered in an eastern stale
because he bumped Teron's ta-
ble whJle Teron was drinking in
a bar.
They claim that Teron has told
them he raped two women in
Orange County and bas not been
linked to the incldenta.
"J believe him." Deputy Dis·
trlct Attorney Ted Millardi..said.
•'This guy has no reasoQ lo lie
about these other crimes ·and I
accept h1s stories and believe
that he did these things ...
Judge Lae also noted today
that Teron has made many
threats to Orange County J-11
deputies who have been told that
Teron will knife them if be ever
regain• b1I freedom.
•·It Ls the randing or this court
that the aentence of dealb should
be impoeed," be said ... The said
penalty ia lo be lnfllcted within
the walls of the state prison al
San Quentin and l direct the
sheriff to escort you lbere."
Corpse Found
With 15 Dogs
SYDNEY, Australia CAP> -
Police found the remains of 53-
year-old Mervyn Sallows and 15
starvl.ng, vicious dogs when they
broke fnto a Sydney house today.
The poU~&ald the man apparent·
lyhadbeendeadforabouta week.
The police went to the hous2
aner the locaJ mailman reported
he bad not seen Sallows for
several da11. The coroner ordered an autopsy
to determine the call.le of death,
and the dogs were taken lo a
pound.
Nixon Fees
FattFight?
NEW YORK <AP) -A
Manhattan law flrm Is
considering an attempt to
block former Presldent
Nixon f l'Oltl. colleotin1 the
royallle1 &oro aates of hla
•oon -to-be-publlahed
memoirs "RN : the
Memoirs Oi Richard Nix·
on.'' <Relat.echtory, A?)
The f~rm , BerH)' &
Cou.aln•, represent.I Debra
J•nklns, a 24·1ear•old
l•t•I MCl'etaJ')' wbo worb
for lh• nnn. She a1ao ll 1U1mDlln1 to
prevent H.R. Haldeman
from collect.tnt royalllu
on h1a ~ pobllsW boot. • ·Tbe Enda .of
Power.''
·~·· ......... JOHNNY AND CAROLYN DOOOETT AFTER WEDDING
Facing th• Uncertain Future Better Together
Leve Doomed?
Man With Cancer Weds ... ---
WICHITA, Kan. <AP> -The cancer that bas invaded the
26·Year-0ld brtdegTOQm's body leaves the couple's ruture in
question, but Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Nottingham believe they can
better race tbe unknown as husband and wife. ""
"We don't care what the future bas for us, we want it to be
together," Carolyn Nottingham, 27. said Monday. "I think
Johnny will make it lf ~ejust stays in there. I don't know how
long. nobody knows that. We'll just take it one day at a time."
FOR 111E CEREMON\', Nottingham Jay in his fiospital bed
with a T·shirt that said "I Love Carolyn" covering his chest.
She stood al his side With a big red rose.
The couple met about three years ago_a_t a local restaurant.
He ran an exterminating business and sbe later went to work for
him.
"We had thought about getting married and we kept setUng
a date and then putting it off." said Nottingham.
Wedding plans had been made when he found out in March
that he had cancer.
HE ENTEJlED ST. ERANCIS .Hospital.for. brain surgery
and the date was pushed back until Saturday -after his
scheduled release.
Even though complications forced him back into the
hospital about a week ago. "We just got tired of putting it off so
we decided lo go ahead with it," Nottingham said.
· The Rev. Tim Hutton, a friend of Nottingham's, performed
the ceremony after asking two people be found on an elevator to
serve as witnesses.
BecJtuse of tubes and banda~es .. Nottingham could not i:et
dressed for the ceremony. So his bride -placecfthe blue T·sh1rt
across his chest.
••J made it for him,'' she said.
NO'ITINGHAM'S PHYSICIAN, DR. Kenneth Stanley, said
cancer spread into Nottingham's lung~ and abdom•n after
beginning in a testicle. S~ery removed a malignant brain
tumor that was discovered sbortly after the cancer was detected
in March.
Stanley, a urologist, safcJ although tne cancer is spread
"pretty bad," he believes a new type of chemotherapy that was
started with NotUngham three weeks ago may arrest the dis·
ease and "bail him out of this."
Policewoman Attacked?
Laguna Man Held
In 'Cop Kicking'
A Laguna Beach man was karate stance and said. "So you
jailed along with is his female want to be tough and use
companJon ·early today after of· karate."
ficers alleged he kicked a He allegedly kicked at the
policewoman. policewoman, striking her on the
Polices.aid Franz C. Roublson,"'hand at which time lwo other ~f-
30, of 223 Beverly St. approached ficers subdued the . man while
Officer Danell Adams in a Adams handcuffed him.
threatening manner after Police said the incident OC·
Adams arrested AUsann Gay curred shortly before 1 a .m. when
Smith, 18, of Newport Beach on Adams pulled a car carrying the
suspicion of drunken driving. two suspects over to the curb
When Adams spun around to near Jasmine Street on North
defend herself, Roubison re-Coast fli&bway.
portedly assumed a modlrled Adams said Roubison became
Attorney Drowm
LAKE SHASTA CAP> -A
Coronado attorney, Robert Mac·
Cartee, 36, was the vlcttm ot a
weekend drowning in Lake
Shasta. officials re]>Ort.
combative after she handcuffed
Alisann Smith, who was driving
the car.
Both were jailed. but later re-
leased .PO bail. Roubison's bond was $2.500 for suspicion or bat·
tery on a police officer. Miss
Smith was released on $440 bail.
Knauft·
Resigns .
OC Post
One membn or the new
Orange County Fair Campaign
Practices Commission resigned
Monday and another chose to
give up a Democratic party post
after ques tions about their
e ligibility to serve.
Roy Knault, a former county
planning commissioner and
part-lime aide to U.S. Rep.
Charles Wi1:gins, R· Fullerton.
turned in his commission res.
1gnation to Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich.
Diedrich was expeded today
to name former La Habra
Mayor Charles Stevens, a re·
altor. as Kiiauft's replacement.
Knauft was appointed to the
five-member panel last Tuesday
by Diedrich and was unanimous-
ly chosen as its chairman the
same afternoon
The issue of Knauft's eligibili·
ty arose because he also serves
a!> ·a Yorba Linda County Water
District director and as Wi ggins'
11 lternate on the Orange County
Republican Central Committee.
Gerald Margolin of Garden
Grove chose to resign as state
Sen. Paul Carpenter's alternate
on the county Democratic Cen·
tral Committee because of a
similar question.
The county ordinance that
created the new campaign prac-
tices panel says that no member
shall hold any other Jovemment
office. serve as an officer or a
political party or take part in
c9unl)'. aovernrpent eJeuion campaigns.
The rive-member panel was
created to oversee the conduci
of non-partisan county govern-
ment offices such as
supervisors, sheriff, tax ~ollec
to r-treas urer, clerk-recorder
and auditor-controller·
Both Knauft and Margolin
took their actions .after seeking
a n opinion from the county
counsel's office.
Police Seek
Bandana-clid
Rapist in NB
Newport Beach police said to-
day they are looking for a man -
weario~ a blue baru:l&lla and a
blue b~ cap who broke inU?
a Newport Heights home early
Monday morning and raped the
occupant.
The 29-year·old woman told
police she awoke to find the
man. armed with a knife, stand-
ing in her bedroom. She said he
told her be wouldn't hurt her if
sh~ followed bis, orders.
The woman said that after he
raped her and Jen the house she
tried to call police, onl)"lo find
that the man had removed the
mouth piece to her telephone.
She said she waited until 8
a.m. to go to a neighbor to call
police.
SIDRE'S GAU
Dl;UWS 3,000
Nordstrom·~. the Seattle·
based specialty store, opened its
doors at South Coast Plaza with
a speciaJ gala for 3,000 people.
See Featuring, Page CL
.I
f I
l ~range Coast
"DITION
Today's Closiug ~J
N. Y. Stoeks 1
t
TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1978
l ~ VOL. 71, NO. 122, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNl"Y, CALIFORNIA c
Si,ster Rescued
Visiting Gran~on ( ~· rtiesan overcomes
• ) .
•
l
t L
' I
j
I
!
By JAcitJE HYMAN Of ... Delty ..........
Jean Stark of Costa Mesa has a few
troubles most Orange Coast College
psychology students don't have to contend
with.
Fot one Wng, she's legally blind. For
anothet. she's undergoing chemotherapy for
cancer.
But Mrs. Stark, who al 83 is a .ereal·
grandmother six times over, has 110 intention
of giving up on lite.
;
"I BELIEVE YOU have power," said
Mrs. Stark, who came to the U.S. from
Russia when she was 19. "U you use your
brain. you can overcome a lot of things. ll aU
depends on your will of life."
Mrs. Stark had always been active,
managing a career as a clothes designer in
New York. and raising two children.
She also took classes in nutrition before
coming to Orange County during World War
II.
Then, iwo years ago, hardening of the
arteries diminished Mrs. Stark's eyesight to
the point where her doctor declared her
legally blind.
"EVERYTHING KIND or closed in ..
said Mrs. Stark, who lives alone in her tidy
apartment. "I couldn't e ven watch TV. It set
me back."
Then. a year later, she learned she bad
cance r or the colon.
"I think the stress and worry about my
eyesight probably caused It," said Mn.
Slark, who undergoes chemotherapy once a
week at Hoag MemoPial Hospital.
Determined not to give in, Mrs. Stark ·
began lo learn how to cope with a world she
can see only "through a fog." ,.
"I COULDN'T PUT a dime and a quarter
in the washing machine because I couldn't
see but I've learned," Mrs. Stark said. "It
was just a process or learning all over u ain." __
Dies in CM Bla.ze
A 2-year-old boy visiting his
grandmot.ber In Costa Mesa was
killed Monday afternoon when
fire swept through a single-story
Mesa Verde home, fire depart·
ment officials·reported.
The Orange County Coroner's
Office identified the victim as
Daniel Storlee. son of Douttlas
and Sue Storlee of Stanton.
The boy's 4-year-old sister was
rescued from the quick-'
spreading blaze wheJV'the
grandmother, Enid Storlee, dis·
covered the fire in her living
room and ran out of the house
with the girl.
Costa Mesa Cire battalion
Chief Jack Perkins said today
that Mrs. Storlee tried in vain to
-re-ente"" heP-hom~ et -1186-~t
cairn Drive to rescue Daniel, but
she was driven back by smoke
and names.
Exact cause or the blaze is UD·
d e r investigatlon. Firemen
believe the young boy may have
o.i..,~ ... SC.eH....... been playing with matches, or
NOT GMNG UP ON t;,lfi'l;;._-----11-Vhe fiFe--eould have resulted from
Mesa's Jean Stark, 83 an unattended fireplace.
Then one day a friend of'hers decided to
take a class in peer counseling and invited
Mrs. Stark lo come with her to the Interview
Mrs. Stark said she was so impressed
with the teacher that, "I asked, can I just
come in with Marie and listen once in a
while?"
Chief Perkins said tfle victim's
body' was found in the rear living
room of the frame house where
the fire originated. Bundles or
newspapers In the home ap-
parently contributed to the fast
moving fire that broke out at
about 3:25 p.m.
Damage to the rear portions of
the home was extensive, but fire
officials have set no damage
estimate.
The two Stor lee children
stayed often at their
grandmother's home.
Fifteen Costa. Mesa firemen
were on the scene, the first truck .
company arriving four minutes
after lhe blaze was reported,
Chief Perkins said.
The fire was under control ii\
17 mif\iltes. There was no
damage lo surrounding homes In
the Mesa Verde area.
7 I
Gradually, she expanded her acti vitles
until she could take the bus and cook her own
meals.
INSTEAD, THE TEACHER told her she
was welcome to enroll. and arranged for
cassette tapes lo be made or the books.
"So now I put on the tape, and I read,"
Mrs. Stark said.
Ski Accident
-Victim Rites
Set in Mesa Unwilling to stay home, Mrs. Stark
Joined a senior citizens center and the
Retired Senior Volunteer Program, in which
s he collects magazines for UC Irvine Medical
Cente r patients.
She said she's already planning to take
more <:lasses in psychology.
"I don't want a career," Mrs. Stark said.
But she stlll wasn't satlsfied. "It's N!t that I want to be able to help people
kno" how lo live. Ir you know tdOre, you cah
do more. A MUSIC LOVER. Mrs. Stark put her
~!lm~ on \)le Orange Coast College mailing hst so she could find out about musical
classes and performances.
Soon she was riding the bus to attend an
occasional lecture, especially on psychology.
"ll s timulated me for more, but
everything involved books lo read," Mrs. Stark
said.
.. I WOULD REALLY LIKE to be able to
counsel in homes for the aged. When I see
these people, I think that they can do better.
AU they do is wait for their death."
"Maybe If they see me, they will realize
anything ls possible," Mrs. Stark said. "I
don't ever want to stop doing rww things."
Expert Says
Hughes Not
WillAuthOr
LAS VEGAS. Nev. 1AP>
Yet another handwriting e xpert,
this 9ne hired by four uni-
versities and the Boy Scouts or
Ame r ica. h as testified that
Howard Hughes did not pen the
Mormon Will.
Lucille Lacy of Houston
testified in a deposition read at
the Mormon Will trial Monday
that "It was my definrte opinion
that the three pages or the
handwritten wiU were not writ-
ten by the same person" who
wrote other documents known to
have--been written by the late in-
dustrialist.·
Mrs. Lacy, a former president
of the American Society or Ques-
tioned Document Examiners,
was hired b~ Rice University,
the University of Texas, the
University of Nevada, and the
Boy Scouts. all of which stand to
mherit large sums of money un
der provisions or the contested
documeaU.
Mesa Assails Plans . -.
On FreeWay Viaduct
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH °' ... Deity ...... Staff
A CalTrans report on possible
routes for the Cos ta Mes a
Freeway 1Route 55) has drawn a
written protest from city of-
ficials who claim the report Is
biased in favor or building a
viaduct through the downtown
area.
The viaduct would be over
Newport Boulevard from 20th
Street south to the city limits at
15th Street.
Traffic would continue on
Newport Bcfulevard under the
viaduct which could' be 20 feet
high. One clty official compared
the viaduct to the much·
maligned Emt>a rc'adero
Freeway ln San Francisco.
It is only one of nine
alternatives tn the CalTrads re-
port now being considered by
state transportation eblef
Adriana Gianturco. She 11
scheduled to choose her f avorlte
byMaylS.
The viaduct proposal ls UM on-
ly ~e coosiderff comp.Uble
with Governor Brown 'a "Urban
Strategy Program."
That is because the viaduct
would not displace any hom~ or
businesses. The city's push for a
full freeway that would swing in
a westerly loop from Bay Street
would displace some businesses,
apartments and a trailer park.
The full freeway would cost
$82 million while the viaduct
would cost $38 million, accord·
ing to the report on alternatives.
City comments, in the Corvi of
a letter to CalTrans District
Director Robert Datel signed by
Mayor Ed McFarland, question
the fact that there ls no indica-
tion of funding for any of the
alternatives. ·
The city letter implies a lack
of flmmclal commitment on the
state's part. ,•
The letter also criticizes a Jack
of response to city requests for
traffic safety Improvements on
Newport Boulevard while con·
struc•lon on any of the
altematlves ls under way.
It . could take as tong as two
yean for tompletlon of u En-
vironmental Impact Report
should the state a\)prove one or
<See VIADUCJ'. -Pase A.2>
Funeral services are
scheduled Saturday for Costa
Mesa resident JOMpb Powell
Ritter. 33, whose body was found
near Aspen, Colo., C7'days after
he died in a March 14 skUn1 ac-
cident.
Services will begin at 10:30
a .m. Saturday at t6e ctiurcb of
the Recessional at Forest Lawn
in Glendale. Burial will follow.
Mr. Ritter, a graduate of the
University Qf Southern
California, lived in Costa Mesa
and sold real estate in Santa
Monlca.
Survivors lbclude Mr. Ritter's
wife, Gloria Ritter or Costa
Mesa ; his mother, Mrs. Nona
Riller or Los Angeles, and a sls·
ter. Mrs. Claudette Hinkle of
Anaheim .
Nixon Fees
Face Fight?
NEW YORK <AP> -A
Manhattan law firm is
considering an attempt to
block former President
Nixon from collecting the
royalties from sales of his
s oon -to-be-publl shed
IJlemoirs, "RN : the
Memoirs of Richard Nix-
on." (Related story, A7>
The firm , Berney &
Cousins. represents Debra
Jenkins, a 24-year-old
legal secretary who works
for the firm.
She also is attempting to
prevent H.R. Haldeman
from collectina royalties
on his recenily published
book , .. The Ends of
Power."
Attorney Drowm
LAKE SHASTA <AP> -A
Coronado attorney, Robert Mac-
CartM, 36, wu the victim of a
weekend drowning In Lake
Shasta, officials report. Peacock Pick
OfL4~
Elvis Peacock. a fleet
runnin1 back from the
Unlvenlty of Oldaboma,
was Mleetecl by the La
An1elea Rama u thflr In·
JUaJ pick in the NaUonaJ
Football LeQue draft lo·
day.
OC Killer· to Die z • •
Tb• Aamt' plck came in
the 21.lt round. Two Southland .
linebackers were chosen
on tbe openlftl rouad.
USC'• Cla1 Maltbt•• went to Cleveland ._ Dan Buna h'om Loni Btacb ~,.._=~·b)' the ..Or,.....,... detaila on
the did. ... a~ P~•· Bl. ,
remember how many cups of
coffee they ctrtnk ln a day."
Judge Lae recalled from the
ben~tl thlt TeNn told omcwa
who bQC>ked hlm for the kllllq ol
hu1tne11man Earl Reed In
Anaheltn Oh Oct. 81, 1975, that be
fully intended to klU Reed after
h9 robbed blm ln\a motel roC>ftl
and that be tar.fully planned
the ttJUnt.
The Judae said Rttd ,, ..
uva1e1Y beaten to ~eath with
the same kl.ad of callous Intent
tfiat Teron dl1pla1ed In two
other mui'dert, bOtll commllt*1
lA M lchlpft.
Teron w• eervtn• a life Mn· <See DEATH, Pase ) ---
• • o.tty .... ,...." htrldl 0'0.-11
TRASH MOUNTS UP, BUT THAT'S STRETCHING THINGS
Coata.Mesan G.t~round to Throwing Out Chrlstmas Tree.
Break Seen in Trash
/
Strike Negotiatiom
The federal mediator in the
two-week-old Orange County
trash strike said today he is op-
ti mis tic about ne gotiations
between drivers and manage·
menl.
"I expect a break In negotia-
tions tomorrow.•' mediator John
Courtney said, noting he will
meet with Teams ters and
management at 11 a .m. Wednes-
day.
Courtney said very little hap-
pened Monday, when be met
with both sides for about three
hours. On Saturday. Teamsters
voted down what managers of
seven struck firms bad termed
their final off er.
The drivers have been out on
strike slnce theit tbree-31'ear con·
tract expired April 111. More
than a million Orange County res·
idents have ~n without .trash
disposalserviceslncethen.
Violence intensified Monday
as some trash trucks began roll-
ing a1atn with newly hired non-
union drivers.
The most serious Incident oc·
curred at M G Disposkl lo
Fullerton, Monday afternoon,
when three men in a station
wa1on allegedly fired one shot
at three employees in the cab of
a trash truck.
Arrested on suspicion of as-
sault with a deadly weapon and
assault with intent to commit
murder were 1"f aeJ A. Ramos,
29; Rafael R. Ramirez, 2'; and
Daniel M. Cano, 21. all of Santa
Ana.
J{owever, pollce said that,
when arrested. the three were in
PoH•asion only of lWQ BB IUDS
S10RE'S GAU .
DIU~ 8tOOO
Nordstrom's, the Selttle·
baaed 1pecialty atore, opeaed lta
doon at South Coa.at Pina with
a 1pectal taJa tor 3,000 people.
Set Featm1ftl, Pace Ct.
and tha t no bullet had been
round in the cab of the trash
truck. However, investigators
said they haven't dismissed the
possibility that a gun might have
been thrown rrom the station
wagon before it was stopped.
Pellets were fired at two new-
ly hired Laguna Beach trash col·
lectors Monday, leaving a hole
rn the window of a Laguna
Beach Disposal truck. No one
was injured.
And in Buena Park, three men
In a car reportedly pulled up
alongside a trash truck and ont!
of them aimed what appeared to
be a handgun at the driver or the
truck but didn't fire.
Even before the new drivers
were hired, fires had caused
damage to several trash trucks
and Anaheim Disposal was hit
by a $15 .. ooo firebombing.
<See TRASH, P•ge A2>
Coast
Weather
Low clouds late tonight
and Wednesday morning.
then m ostl y s unn y
Wednesday afte r noon.
Lows tonJght48to56. Highs
Wednesday66to72.
INSIDE TODA 't'
A lighted woman· /fnd4 tn
Braflt. a chance lo lhare the
btoidJI and love that have
mode her Ifft rich. Stt Page
84.
l•tlex
. i --
I
1
...
.)2 . r-. Drivers Too
8y JACKIE HYMAN ... Dea¥,... .....
A year •to. 23--year-old Ju.n
M. Tapla eave up bis part Ume
truck dl1vm1 JOb m Los Ao&eles
when be round full·Ome work in
Huntington Beach.
Two ~ka ago, lb• C•ther ol
three walked off his new trash
truck dnving job with Rainbow
Diapoul of Hw:rtanalon Beach
add bas 1pent hl1 d•ys &lnce tb~o ma~hine back and forth ln
front of tbe company, cartylna a
plcket 11111. • ·
Tapia. who livet wlth hi• wlte
and young children in Long
'Beach. is one o( mort: t}\an 400
Teamsters on strike against
private Qjisposal firms lhiil serve
•
more than a mllUon Oranae
Cou.nt)' nlldtnta.
The 1trlke ls creatina
bardahlpi for residents who
have to llaul their own 1al'ba1e
to tle du.m-p. It's alao bard on
Tapia.
So far. he said, the union has
promised strike funds, but he
hasn't seen any. He and hls wlfe
are dipplng into their savi.n11.
"l llk• the Job." Tapia said.
"But we need more mooey and
job 1uaranteet,"
Tapl• aatd bis ramll~ has
found lt dlttlc\llt lo live on his
$4,50·an·hour waae. His children
range In age from 2 to 5 years. •
"And we don't have guaran·
tees on the job," Tapia said. He
Ransom Recovered
* * * F,.._PageAJ . Waddill
Jury Gets
F~om Teen Kidnap
Victim Rescued
TRASH •••
Management has offered $6.
Management also bas orrered
full dental coverage. as request-
ed. but reportedly not the ave
days sick leave per year that
drivers are seeking.
Spokesmen for both sides have
declined to go into furthe.r detail
about negotiations.
By !OM BAllLEY °'-°"" ........... Dissensloa and dJssatlsfactlon
McKENZIE. Ten!\; (AP> -A
wealthy businessma n's teen-age
d a ughter, kidnapped for a
quarter-million dollars ransom;
was rescued unharmed today
and r eturned to her home
buefoot and c lutching a red
rose.
Sare was Jodie Elizabeth
Gaine,s, 18, the daughter of Ben
and Ludie Gaines.
Authorities said two then and
a woman were in custody and
the ransom had been recovered.
The FBI was seeking a third
man in the case. No charges had
been filed.
Wearing a green shirt and
blue jeans, Miss Galnes reached
home with her father, walked
w1th him to a back gate and
stooped to hug the family dog.
She stood, took a few steps and
em braced a state trooper stand· mg by. -• -
Her lather pu.1.~his arms.
around her neck and they turned
Wel/,.wiAhen
Thanked by
John ~ayne
Newport Beach's John Wayne
says the good wishes and· warm
welcome he's received since re·
'turning to his home lo re·
c uperate from open heart sur-
gery have put him a month
ahead in his recovery schedule.
In a prepared statemFnt re·
leased Monday afternoon. the
70-vear-old movie star saved
special thanks for participants
in tt}e impromptu boat parade
staged SW'lday in his behalf. ·
"The medical profession tells
me that when they saw you
down the middle, carve out new
things for your heart, that it
takes about three months to get
feeling well again. •
• 'Well' is a 'wonderful word
and I think your welcome put
IT'e a month closer to it. Thank
you."
Wayne checked lnlo
Massachusetts General Hospital
4n Boston last month to have his
ruptured mitral valve replaced
with a similar valve from a pig's
heart.
W aync was showered with gef
well wishes and gifts while in
the hospital.
He returned home last week
and the Sunday parade was
organized by the Commodore 's
Club of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce to
welcome the city's famous resi·
dent back home.
Mesa Council
Has 'Breeze'
A potential marathon turned
into a sprint Monday ni~ht as
the Costa Mesa City Council
raced through its agenda in the
unofficial time Qf 39 minutes.
"That's the quickest meeting
in Ci ve years." said Coun·
cilwoman Norma Hertzog.
There was no "new business"
on the agenda a nd other items
were either approved lo one a~·
lion under the consent calendar
or set for a May 15 councll hear-
mg
DAILY PILOT
~~='?·=·==~= c-.. -....... ~-----='!":::..-t--.:.C:.':.~,~
tel" VeUey. lrvl... ~-a Vel .. w -~ .. ·""-"'"C....t • .._._. .... •-" _,_ .. ,..,...,. ...t """"'~ r ...
;;::.~~~"!:.:.:~~.:,.--... ·-··-P-rtll __ ,.,.,_
....... c.wr ""·--0.-.. ,._.._ T_._..
I di tor
YMfoMtA. ....... _,..., .... _,.,
a..tH" Yet Ill<-,., ... Anlt~ Ml....i ..... ...,.
Coet• ..... OMoe ~ ...... ·=:-rd \i~ ... .,.,.
J
C9 r the door. li e r hands
trembled. They said nothing.
Pending a news conference
later In the -day, olflcials gave
few details of'the ransom payoff
or the girl's release.
Drivers are seeking a raise
frmom $4.50 to $8.50 an hour
over a three·year period.
Begin-Carter
Talks 'Warm'
appear to be 'rowlng factors to-
day in an Oranse County
Superlor Court Jury ~at is try·
ing tor the eighth day to reach a
verdict in murder trial or Or.
William Baxter Waddill of Hunt·
ington Harbour.
Both factors became increas·
ingly apparent during tfle late
afternooJ\ Monday when the
complaints or Jurors led Judge
James K. Turner to decide that
the panel can no longer be ae.
questered.
The nine male and three
The FBI said a family
member made the $250,000
payoff Monday night near the
Tennessee·Kentucky border. Of·
ficers reached the victim al a
country cabin just before noon
Tuesday. She was taken to a
clinic ln Huntingdon, about 10
miles from her home.
Miss Gaines, one of three
children, is a stude nt at a
private Memphis prep school.
She had been mlssing since Fri·
day night when she d isappeared
while driving from a country
club where she dined with her
family to a cousin's house.
WASHINGTON <AP> -While
House Officials are aaying the
warm remarks exchanged by
President Carter and Is raeli
Prime Minister Menachem
Begln were tnore the result or
ceremony than progress in the
peacemaking process. <Related
story, AS >
The officials, who askeJl not lo
be identified, said there has
been virtually no change in the
vie~lf m either Israel or the
Carter admimstr•tton afttt
several days of talks lhflt
culminated Monday wlfh
Begin's bmf trip to Washington
to mark the 30th anniversary ol
Israel's founding.
. .fe male jurors and the male
alternate juror au returned to
their homes Monday night after
makin1 it clear to Judge Turner
that continued sequestration at
their Holiday Inn would mean
the end of jury deliberations. ~
A_ {amity friend ~aid Monday
night that '11 eflort to pay a
$250.000 l'.aDSOm .lor. her release
had fallen through.
"We have not paid the ransom
and we have not picked her up,
no sir." Gaines said at that
time.
Federal and state agents had
been waiting for a break in thE
case, with• only Miss Gaines
abandoned car and a r~ceiver
clipped from a pay telephone as
clues. A dispatcher for the Car·
roll County sheriff's office said
Monday night that Miss Gaines·
car was found abandoned earlier
in the day about 25 miles
southeast of McKenzie.
Also Monday. a receiver and
cord from a pay telephone In a
McKenzie service station had
been clipped by a federal agent
and taken to the FBI command
post at the McKllnz1e Motor Inn.
The' station's manager sald he
was asked who used the phone
Monday morning but he said too
many customers passed through
the station for him to tell who
may have called out.
The report of the attempted
ransom payment came after
Miss Gaines· mother and
brother. Ben Jr .. 20, left the
family home Monday afternoon
and returned by mid·evening. ·
FrotaPageAJ
VIADUCT •..
the nine alternatives. Actual
construction could take an addi-
tiona l eight years.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal
said there iS much concern over
the aesthetics or the viaduct pro-
posal, but, he said, the city's
current push is for approval of
any of the a[tematives, exclud·
ing the "no project" provision In
the CalTrans report.
Nonetheless, the atmosphere
Monday was decidedly different
from the chilly, formal air at the
close of Begin's laat visit to
Washington in March.
Later in the day when Begin
arrived in Los Angeles to con-
tinue his U.S. tour, he agreed:
"There was difficulty in March.
but now there is a great im-
provement."
Mondale Stans
5-Nation Tour
M\..ml.A. Philippines <AP) -Vlc~-P?;ident Walter F. Mon-
dale arrived in Manila today to
b e g in a llve·nalion t our
dem-onstrating the Carter ad·
ministration's commitment to
Southeast Asia and to human
rights.
"Where there are values and
traditions that both our peoples
cherish -freedom. individual
liberty, human justice, de-
mocracy and national indepen-
dence -1 hope my visit can con· ""'
tribute to their areater fulfill·
ment,'' Mondale told President
Ferdinand E. Marcos on his ar·
rival from Honolulu.
Smuggling Charged
MEXICO CITY <AP> -
FaustQ Cantu Pen•. former
chairman of the Mexican Coffee
Institute, and five other men
were behind bars today awaiting
trial on charges of smuggling
eight million pounds of coffee in·
lo the United States and evading
$10 million in taxes.
Let Us Wait
Lettuce Cost to Drop
By Tbe As.loclated Preu
Consumers who have watched lettuce prices soar until salad is
almost as expensive as steak can expect some relief next month, a
government economist predicted today. Lettuce was selling in New
York City for $1.39 a bead.
"This thing is temporary,'' sald Charles W. Porter or the U.S.
Department of Aariculture, dlscusslnl the high prlce1. "We're ju.st
aoing to bave to walt it out."
PORTER SAID SHIPMENTS OF lettuce from Califomia -
the nation's major producer -are runnlng half to less than half or
what theywere a year ago because rains In the Salinas Valley ln
February and March prevented farmers from planting and, ln
some cases, washed away seeds ln the growtd.
Broccoli, caullflower, and some other vegetables also have
been aff~ted by the rains, Porter said, but the Impact is less
.,..severe because the crop Is 1pread over a greater aeoirapblcal
area.
The lettuce crop, planted ln late March, should be ready about
June l And Porter said prices should come down asaln. He said
plantings or lettuce and other fruit and vegetable ero1111 are normal
and said that unless there ls some unusual weather development,
summer supplies should be adequate.
MEANWHILE, LE'M'VCE PRICES have soared to more than
double, and 1n some cues triple, 'wbat they were a year aao.
Retail prices vary widely from a~a to area and store to store.
In Wuhington, D.C. iceberg lettuce t1 aelUnl tor about 89
cents a hea~1 prices ln the Midw•t top St a head ln some plact1,
and In New York City the price ls up to $1.89 a head lft a ftw stores.
At the sblpplni point, Porter 1ald, i.ttuce la Ml.Uni Im $15 a
crate of 24 heads -"an W\beard-of price" -compand to a
normal rate of $2.60 to $5 a crate.
THE DECREASE IN SUPPUd f">m Calitomla bu caused
an lncl"Mle ln prices from other areu. Rqmat.ne from Flcrida bu
1one up, for ~ample, even thOuCh supplla a.re normal. Porter
said.
AlmOll nve btWon pound.I of &e\tuce ll •rown ln the UlUted Sta~• every year, accoTd.lni to Utt OD.ii.cl Frttb Prutt ud
Vea•t1blt Aaloclation. CalllOnlla prod'9C* about t.bne·louttbl ol
the total Ud, at some MUOI», provlda up to to per~ ol IMlfPl,y.
Drouchl lft 1178 and 1m In CIUfornla lllo caUHd teen 'ol a
lbortqe. but 1uppU11 or m<191t fruJtl ud ....-... nmiJMd ade·
qu.at.a,Jhankl to lrri&aUon ·~ conHrvdloll mtuuru..
Defense attorney Malbour
Watson said jury fbreman John
Thomas of Lo$ AlalQltos told the
judge... that the atti11.lde ol
sherlfl's deputies assigned to
escor,t the jury led to objections
being filed with Judge Turner.
·'They weren 'l being treated
as human beings," Watson said.
"We don't ~ant an unhappy, an·
~ry jury and we don't want them
taking it out on Dr. Waddill just
~~:J.OJie we were the Jirst to a"l<
that they be sequestered.·•
The defense motion for se.·
questrallon was denied shortly
before the jury besan delibera-
tions a week ago.
But Judge Turner later de·
cided to seal off his jury when he
be~ame concerned aboul-trow-
ing press accounts or and com·
ment on the trial.
Judge Turner himself seemed
unsettled about 6 p.m. Monday
alter an afternoon of interviews
with brisUing jurors and anxious
la wyers.
He ordered spectators and
news people In his crowded
courtroom not to try and follow
jurors out of the courtroom and
into the corridors.
"Jury tampering is a felony,"
he w~. And he then asked juro report to him any at·
temp to contact them about
the trial.
The rapidly deteriorating at·
mosphere of the trial Included
the reported comment by a juror
that she had suggested reaching
a verdict by flipping a coin.
Judge Turner talked to Mrs.
Patricia Lawrence of Hunt·
ington Beach after the comment
was reported t~him by another
juror.
She reportedly told the judge
that she did not intend the re·
mark to be taken seriously. She
told Judge Turner that it was de·
livered in a flippant manner and
said that she said it to lighten
the mood ol a depressed jury.
Judge Turner appeared to ac·
cept Mrs. Lawrence's explana·
lion and denied an Immediate
motion for a mistrial by defense
attorney Charles Weedman.
Weedman and Watson said the
Incident wilt form part of their
appeal If the Jury subsequently
convicts Dr. Waddill.
119id any mtscoMuct, even an
aecldent that Isn't the driver's
fault. can lead to lmmedlat4 dla·
missal.
Tapia also said drivers are re·
quire d to take their coffee
breaks while they're dumping
rubbish at the county transfer
station, which means they don•t
really get a break.
Asked about incidents of
violence that have marred the
strike in other cities. Tapla said,
"When guys break a strike.
everyone gets mad. It's the
same here. I get a little mad."
This is the first strike he's
ever been involved ln. Tapia
said . He lild be'd rather be
working -on terms he can ac·
cept.
Until then, he said, "I'll wait."
Seeing a different side of the
strike is Stan Tkaczyk. vice·
president of Rainbow DIJposal.
for which 'lapi~ru.
The firm is currently hiring
and ~a:ining nonunion drivers t.o
man lts trucks.
''Tb~ strikers have a right to
stand out there if they ~ant and
I have the right lo run my
trucks," said Tkaczyk. himself a
former truck driver.
The strike, Tkaczyk said. "has
a tremendous adverse effect on
the business .·· He said he
couldn't give exact figures on
bis firm's losses.
Meanwhile. Tkaczyk said. he
and other managers have gone.
back to driving trucks to provide
essential pickups for hospitals
and restaqrants. ~
In response to some of Tapia's
comments, Tkaczyk said he
believes a driver has adequate
recourse lf he's threatened with
dismissal.
.. A man does his job. there's
no reason to let him go,'' he
said. ·
As for the coffee breaks .
Tkaczyk said. "By law they're
entitled to coffee breaks and
they're entitled to take them. I
~·t know what they're refer· gto:"
He said most drivers at Rain-
bow have been there between
three and four years, some as
long as nine years.
"We take care or our people. It
speaks for itself ... Tkaczyk said.
Although he was upset by an
incident this morning in ·which
strikers threw a bottle at a trash
truc.J< .. Tkacz_yk said he still has
s ome sympathy for the In·
dlviduals involved.
"I know exactly where they're
coming from,'' he said. ''I've
been there. " Tk~aczyk said he believes
management's offer of a hike to
$6 an hour over a three-year
period is fair. Driver s have
asked for a raise to $8.50 an hour
during that period. Tkaczyk said
his firm isn't willing lo offer
more than it already has.
However. he said he believes
many of the drivers would like
to return to work if it weren't for
pressure by other drivers and
the Teamsters Union.
Mesan Hurt
In Accident
Costa Mesan Steve Burgoon
was listed in satisfactory condi·
lion today at Tustin Community
Hospital wbere he was taken
Monday following a traffic acci-
dent in lrvfne.
Burgoon. 23. of 3017 Fillmore
Way, was injured wben his car
collided with an auto driven by
Kathryn Daniels. 21, of 24922
Hayuco, Mission Viejo.
The accident occurred about
~1 :50 a.m. at the intersection or
Red Hill and Reynolds avenues.
Ms. Daniels received emergency
medical treatment, but wasn't
hospitalized, according to police
reports.
TONIO HT
"COMEDlANS" -South
Coast Jhpertory Theater.
Tuesdaf='Sunday through June
11, 8 p.m.
''SEHlND THE
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forum,
7:30 p.m . COASTLINE LECTURE -
"Wom en in American Film,"
Costa Mesa Women's Club. 7
p.m. •
FromPageAJ
DEATH •••
tence for murder in a Michigan
prison in 1977 when his boasting
about the murder of Reed led to
his arrest for tbe Orange County
killing.
Before he could be returned
here he strangled and killed a
fellow prison Inmate and was
tried and convicted for that kill-
ing. Again, he was sentenced to'
lire in prison.
J ud1e Lae recalled that
Teron's first murder involved
the killing of an elderly woman
who was beate n into un-
consciousness and then choked
to death by being hung from the
root or her bed.
Orange County officers claim
that Teron has bragged about
two other murders: a woman in
Anaheim and a man who was
murde red In an eastern state
·be.cause he bumped Teron's ta-
ble while Teroo was drinking in
abu.. - - -
They claim that Teron has told
them he raped two women in
Orange County and has not been
Linked to the incidents ..
"l believe him," Deputy Dis-
trict Att.Omey Ted Millard said.
"This guy has no reason to lie
about these other crimes and I
acct!pt his stories and believe
that he did these things."
Judge Lae also noted today
that Teron has made many
threats to Orange County Jail
deputies who have been told that
Teron will knife them if he ever
regains his freedom.
"It is the finding of thts court
that the sentence or death should
be imposed," he said. "The said
penalty is to be inflicted within
the walls of the state prison at
San Quentin and I direct the
sheriff to escort you there." ,
Police Slay
LA Stabber
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Sheriff's deputies fatally shot
Bruce E . Cazabat, 31, after he
s tabbed his brother. Anthony,
while they were questioning him
and then lunged at the deputies.
Authorities said Monday the
Incident occurred after deputies
had gone to Cazabat's apart·
menl in the Walnut Park section
to invesUgate a disturbance call.
PA.TS 'TRUTll'
DESEKI'S .. 11ER
Ri chard Nixon lied to his wife
and to his family. just as be lied
to the country. a harsh indict·
ment and an incontrovertible
fact, according to Lester David.
And on her final day in the
White House, the 9-'ife ol 28
years listened to her husband
praise his mother as a salnt.
Excetpts from David's biog.
raphy ol Pat Nixon .continue on
PageA7.
-
I
}
' '
Gates · Cites
Ora.nee County Sheriff Brad
Gates, whose personal financial
dealings and county travel ex·
penses are belnl lnvestigated by
the FBI, told Mission Viejo Op-
timist Club members this morn·
lne be amassed most or his
funds through hard work and
amart real estate investments.
Appearing for the Optimists'
Law Day observation in LaJ{Wla
Knauft
•
Resigns
OC Post
One member of the new
Orange County Fair Campaign
Practices Commission resigned
Monday and another chose to
Hills, Gates recounted thal he
began purchuing property
when be was 18 years old al the
urging ot an older brother who
recognlr.ed the error of squan·
deriog fonds on "cars and
chrome."
He said that in ensuing years'
he saved money to buy a duplex.
invest ln Fallbroolt area land
and then join with a friend in
construction of several single·
family homes. duplexes and
triplexes.
'Wise'
Gates said that. in 1974, after
deciding to run for the of(lce of
sheriff, be and b1I wife llqwdated
the.Ir holding,.
• Gates said he built 60 percent
or his current home on a San
Juan Capistrano hilltop with his
own hands.
''I'm fortunate to have made
money with some wise lnvesl·
men ts." he said. noting that
dealjng in real estate definitely ls
not illegal. He claimed only one
individual, an Orange County
/ give up a Democratic party post
after questions about their
eligibility to serve.
'
Roy Knauft, a former CO\Ulty
planning commissioner and
part-time aide to U.S. Rep.
Charles Wi~gins, R-Fullerton.
turned In b.is commwion res·
iga ation to Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich,
Diedrich was expected today
to name former La Habra
Mayor Charles Stevens, a re-
altor, as Knaufl's replacemenL
Knauf\ was appointed to the
live.member panel last Tuesday
I)}' J;>iedrich ·and was unanimous·
ly ctlosen as its chairman the same Afternoon. __ •
The issue of Knault's ellgibili·
ty arose because he also serves
as a Yorba Linda County Water
District director and as Wiggins'
alternate on the Orange County
Republican Central Committee.
Gerald MargoJin of Gardea
Grove chose to resign as state
Sen. Paul Carpenter's alternate
on the county Democratic Cen·
tral Committee because or a
s1mHar question.
The county ordinance that
created the new campaign prac· L.~
tlces panel says that no member Classg. Ca•v.e
shall bold any other government om~s an-Ofmu O&"-a--E¥en-lhough.be:S..been warned~~ his cab company to
political party or take part in stop "dressing up" for the jOO, llorClana, Ore • taxi
county government election driver Ed McGuire says he'll keep wearing his three· ca.r.,~airv::member panel was piece suit. He says his lips have increased since he
created to oversee the conduct adopted the classy look.
or non-partisan county govem· -------------------------
me n l offices S'UCh as
supervisors, sheriff, tax collec-
tor· treasurer. clerk·recorder
and auditor-controller.
Both Koauft and Margobn
took their actlons after seeking
an opinion from the county
counsel's office
Cowity Bride
Jailed in
Mate ~· Death
OCTD 'Runaway'
Expenses Queried
A 25·year-0ld bride suspected
ol murdering the man she had
married the day before re·
malned ln jail today on homicide
charges, Anaheim police re-
ported.
However, a spokesman for the
Orange County District At·
torney's office said the case is
still being reviewed and it won't
be known Wltil Wednesday or
Thursday what charges, ii any,
will be formally sought against
Dorothy Hisey of Anaheim.
Mrs. Hisey, who had married
her husband, Ray, Saturday
after Uving with him for about
six years, told· police Sunday
that an intruder walked into the
home Sunday, shot her husband
and then .walked out.
Police aa1d several adults and
three cblldren were also In the
house at the time and that they
couldn't substantiate the un·
known intruder story.
Hisey, 2'1, died at UC Irvine
Medical Center an hour and a
half afh!r the s hooting. No
motivewasknown,poUcesaJd
By KATHY CLANCY
Of -Delly ...... IUff A proposed SS9 million Orange
County Trusit District budeet,
showing 1978-79 operating costs
escalating at nearly twice the
pace of passengers and service.
came amder scrutiny of directors
Monday.
During a day-long review,
Director Philip Anthony asked
transit administrators to justify
why operating costs should
climb by $10.2 million to $33
million for the coming fiscal
year while ridership and service
will expand by just about 24 per·
cent each.
"Why are your costs running
away twice as fast as your out-
put?" Anthony asked. "Doesn't
it make you think that
sometbiag is wrong . . . or is
there some explanation for it?"
OCTD General Manager
James Reichert attributed $3.9
million ot the increase to overall
inflation in salaries, office ex·
panse and operations
Another $2. 7 million comes in
added COits for service to the
handicapped, short-haul com·
munily routes and Dial-a-Ride
programs, the bulk of that in
fees paid to private cont racton.
AnQlher $3.3 mlllion comes in
expansion of long.haul OCTD
routes and park-and-ride com·
muter programs, includin1 the
addition of 6S new large buses to
Mussels Out
Quarantined Till Oct. 31
1t•1 May and tbe Ume of 19aJ' that mUSHl loven hate. Offtdala from the ataw and county bult.b departmeuts
have lmpoeed the annual 'f:antlne on the takln1 of tbe
mollutb for f ooct. Tbe ban unW Oct. 31.
•OllTON NELaON, Orqe County Health Officer ex·
pl11ned that polJoftOUI oraanlsms f '°w In the red tides that are present ln Callfomla eouti watera at this time ot year.
The or1anlsm.1 are eatea by all mollusks -muasell,
cl1m1 and oysters -tb"8 maldn1 the seafood PQtsonoua.
But Nelaon aald the quarantine does not apply to clams
and oylterl becaute tbc»e lheUBab cu be cJeued.
.. g YOO CtJ'r OO'r and throw away the dark meat lit
a clam and Ulotoua.talY wMaa what's left before cook1n1 U will be .U rtCbt to eat.•• M Mid. '
Re Uld that oyaten cJoa 't consume u much of qae
pol9orllOCll Grlanllm and UD be fl.tled out tr left 1n a bucket Of.._ befon belal Gpened,
Tbe ~Une on muueli doel not apply to ue of
diem •·'*''°" ftlb&Pr.·oe11 to CClftlUIDJldaD ot them bJ ·"elloillald.
the system next year, Reichert
said.
The figures also include some
ooe·time expenses -$331,000 for
moving into the district's new
Garden Grove administration
building next fall, the general
manager said.
Reicbert's remarks prompted
directors to call for a projection
of just how much the new ad·
ministration building will cost
OCTD in the long nm.
OCTD officials said the move
will save the district $12,000 a
month ll now pays to rent offices
in Santa Ana.
But ther~ will be long.term
maintenance costs associated
with the building. ~
Ir the building proves too cost·
ly, Anthony suggested, the dis·
tricl could always sell it. The
new $2.4 million buildlng was
financed chiefly by the federal
government.
Directors also focused atten·
lion on the costs associated with
various services, costs whicb
range from $1.09 per passenger
for regular routes to $9.61 per
passenger for park·and·rlde to
$13. 76 per passenger for the han·
dicapped Dial·a·Llll service.
Director Al Hollinden said
transit district administrators
should consider c.ancelling some
lar1e buses on its park·and·ride
lines and replacing them with
carpools or vans .•
The proposed 1978-79 budget
calls ror no hike 1n OCTD 'a basic
25--cent pauenger fare and bolds
property tax revenues at $3.6
mllllon.
Lauded Prof
Overlooked
Dae to a pl'Oductson en"Of. the
name of Dr. Ke.Meth Weder ot
Irvine was inad vertently
dropped from the atory Monday
on the award.I for excellence
presented at the eighth '8.DOUal
UCl Lauds and Laurels Banquet
Saturday. · Dr~ Wealer. aasoctate pro·
fe11or of p1yel'loloay at UC
Irv lne received t h• Dia·
UnauJ,lbed ~da Award. He
wu cited f« b1I plooeerlns work tn m.U.matlcal aftd tMonttcal
pa1ebOllllCblltla. tM mldY al bow ........ ll~wntd. The.:~ 2llot n~ the er·
ror ..
.,1 Tl!!C!!y. May 2, 1i78 DAIL.V PILOT cl3
Land lnvestnients
newsman, "seems to ha ve
crlticlsm.1 don 'l know wby. · Gates told Optimists. ·•t ex·
peel to win overwhelmingly on
June 6," in bis bid !or re-election
and noted "there has been no
comment about my ability to ad·
minlstrate."
The federal probe into allega.
lions made against Gales by Wl·
known ~pie got under way
Aprll 13 m Los Angeles.
The FBI probe apparently is
retracing, in part, ground
already covered last fall in a
\..
State Report
state Attorney Ge neral 's In·
vestigallon lnto Gates' personal
und professional activities.
Like the federal investigation.
that inquiry was touched off by
allegations by unJdentified per·
sons. It ended Oct. 24 with a (lJld.
ing of no improper conduct.
Gates' dl.scussion of his
finances came this morning un·
de r questioning by Optimist
Club members.
In a speech prior to awarding
an Optimists' honor to one of his
deputies, Gates discussed the
status of a proposed s heriff's
substation in the south county
area. He indicated that passage
of Proposition 13, the Jarvis·
Gann initiative, could jeopardbe
Lta eventual construction.
Earning honors aa an out
s tanding ollicer in the Sad·
dleback area was deputy Robert
B. Giles of Irvine, lauded by
Gates for work in helping break
up major narcotics operations in
the ·Saddleback Valley area and
as a volunteer on the sheriff's
tacUcal aquad.
92 Linked to Crim.e
LOS ANG ELE.S <AP> -
California Attorney General
Evelle Younger today named ~
stale residents who a slate re·
port concludes are linked to or·
ganized crime activities costing
CaWomians $6.8 billion a year.
Former Newport Beach Police
Chief B. James Glavas, who
ct\aired the task force which
~epared the 88-page report, told
a news conference:
"I hope that businessmen will
be able to use this document in
identifying persons they might
have deallnga with."
The report released by
Younger al the news conference
also gave the home addresses of
the 92 individuals, including
Sidney R. Korshak. a Los
Angeles labor lawyer. The re·
port says Korshak is ''the key
link t>ttween organized crime
and big business." ~
Also on the list were Anthony
Accardo or Indian Wells, reput·
ed bead or the Chicago Mafia ~
James J . Lanza of San Mateo.
identified by Glavas as the
ringleader of organized crime in
the San Francisco Bay Area :
and Donald Joseph ·Wiener or
Chula Vista, identified as "a
major pornography operator in
the San Diego area."
"The best thing that could
ha pp en i§al these persons woul d ~le California,"
Younger saJ t the news con·
rerlnce.
The Organized Crime Control
CotnIDissioo identified 200 addi·
tional person5believed Ifnkeato
Delly .........
TELLS CRIM~ LINKS
Ex·Newport Chief Glava•
crime, but Younger said their
names would ·not be released
publicly to protect sources or
witnesses or because data on
their activities was not current
or adequately detailed.
"We've never poo-poobed il,"
Younger said. "But organized
crime is not the problem in
California that it is in some
Eastern slates with comparable
populaUons."
Glavas said that cohesive
leadership under Lanza h8'5
been established in Northern
California, "but in Southern
Calirornla it doesn't ~eem to
have reached that stage yet. ..
Younger and Glavas said they
don't believe a single leader in
Southern California has
emerged to replace strongman
Nick Licata, who died four years
ago.
The attorney general said
today's report will be followed
later this year by a second docu·
ment concerned with terrorism.
prison gangs and outlaw
motorcycle gangs.
Of Korshak, the report said:
"His name has been llnked with
organized crime for mort" than
30 years. and be has been the
subject of several organized
crime investigations. A U.S
Justice Department official has
described Korshak a. ~ 'senior
ac.t ~.·~· to or~anized crime
groups in California, Chicago.
Las Vegas and New York."
Other names on the list m·
elude John William Spatafore.
desc r ibed a s a major
bookmaker in the San Diego
area; Hadrian John Liberalort".
a former San Diego real estate
broker identified .at his 1974
arson·assault trial as "a well
connected member or organized
crime:" Rolland Simon Louden
of Mill Valley. named as an as·
sociate of James "Jimmy the
Weasel" Fratianno, a convicted
· pimp who is also identified as
the owner of several nude bars
in the Bay Area; and Joseph
Xavier CerritAof Los Gatos.
Nixon Plot· Al"leged
BOSTON <AP> -Two busi·
nessmen were charged today
with conspiring to raise SS00,000
for the alleged purpose of trying
to influence then-President Nix-
on to make former
'6f assacbusells Gov. John A.
Volpe hJs 1972 running male.
Massachusetts Assistant Al·
torney General Stephen
Delinsky told a Superior Court
judge that Albert "Toots" Manzi
and Willian Masiello, both or
Worcester, conspired in 1972 lo
raise the cash for delivery to
Nixon either before or during
the Republican National Con·
vention that year.
He said the money was an at·
tempt .. to influence Nixon's de--
cision lo substitute Volpe for
Vice President Spiro Agnew at
the conveoUon."
Delinsky charged that the two
extorted $10,000 ·rrom the New
York consulting firm of McKee·
Berger-Mansueto as part of the
fund· raising effort. Delinsky also charged that the
l wo • 'tbreatooed the firm with
financial destruction" by using a
state employee to make trouble
on MBM's stale contract. He
s aid the men made "other
threats of a poUtical nature"
that be wouid explain later.
Delinsky made tbe comments
in asking that bail for each man
be set at $10,000. He noted that
each faced 45 years in prison if
convicted.
Manzi and 'Masiello were in·
dieted last week by a Suffolk
County grand jury In connection
with the 1972 alleged extortion-.
Manzi is a member or the
Ma ssacbusetts Turnpike
Aut hority Board. Masiello is
head ot a Worcester architec·
tural fmn.
Traditional in taste ... Keeping in mind that
dressing for our area should be casual. comfortable and fun.
.,
f028 Irvine. Newport ~.ch
Cabf onu.. AIOM oU·1061
0
'•
~ ........
\
-
-.
rU..C..•a.1t7a
.; ..
~"' Jost
.. ·:~.~ ~easting ~ -····~ Tom~~'\'
Marphine
..
First, Get Attention
RICKY TICKY POLITIX: Slate Senator John Briggs.
the Republican frorn Fullerton who would Uke to become
governor on the anti-gay ticket. finally got aome public
print and air Ume the way be wanted it yesterday.
Briggs announced that he had enough signatures on bis
initiative petitions aimed at banning homosexual teachers.
He made the announcement on the steps of San Francisco City Hall.
The gubernatorial hopeful said he was
filing petitions 1n San Francisco
because the metropolis by-the-bay "is
the moral garbage dump of homosex-
uality in this country."
Meanwhile, his home arena or Orange
County will become the actual garbage
dump if they don't get the trash trucks
rolling pretty soon. But that's '1\0ther story.
ANYWAY. BRIGGS FINALLY got .. ,OM
the media attention he was striving for. This was an up-
turn for him.
News dispatches out of Sacramento suggest that &riegs
took a series of pratfalls in the pubUclty-seeklng depart·
·ment durin~ his recent appearance before the California
Republican Assembly In Fresno.
Briggs was there with other GOP gubernatorial hopefuls
in seeking the CRA 's en'dorsement. According to the dis·
patches. his first error came when, on his way to the
speaker's platform, he confided to a TV news person that
he didn't think the CRA endorsement was of great lm-
portancein the first place.
The reason he was there, he not.eel, wu lo get some free
media coverage.
Then he demonstrated how not to get it.
When Briggs got to the speaker's platform, he was faced
with a non-operating microphone. In frustration, be finally
threw the microphone away. .
THAT'TIJRNED OUT to be tne lhtW-t:hat belonged lo ,.
one of the covering television crews. -
Big :John didn~ make the G 01 clock news that night.
But the candidate's coverage woes weren'tover yet.
Kight aJter bis non-televised speech, he gathered re-
porters for a press conference. Proving there were no hard
fe elings, the television crew even shaitied up with &slightly
dented microphone. '
The ~athered reporters were already dazed and numb
after having listened to four gubernatorial candidates plus
the wife of EveUe Younger.
SO WHAT DID BRIGGS do? He asked the reporters if
they had any questions. They just sat there with glazed
eyeballs.
Finally, one or them mumbled. "Thank you. senator."
which is the traditional way to close a press conference.
Briggs looked startled. His press conference had opened
and closed without a single question. He'a done himself in
aialn.
Some days you win; some days you lose.
Aini.a Cavorts
Joim Traditional Dances
KITGUM. Uganda CAP> -President ldi Amin, sporting a blue
safari s uit and ascot, delighted a crowd of local tribesmen by tak-
ing up a spear and shield and joining traditional dances to the beat
or drums.
At one point during the May Day celebration Monday, Amin
a lso jumped on a bicycle pulling a sickbed on wheels and pedaled
around a grassy field.
IN A SPEECH. AMIN scoffed at the threat of an American
economic embargo, saying, "We will not feel it an lncb. ••
Last week, subcommittees of the House International Rela·
tions Committee adopted resolutions calling for an economic em-
bargo against Uganda because of alleged human right.a violations.
The Ugandan leader ab<> lndlrecUy confirmed a reported
purge within the country's military regime. He said be is "Big
Daddy" and free to make necessary changes ln bis government.
SOUNDING CONCILIATORY, AMIN TOLD bis audience
Uganda wants friendship with the United Stat.es. wb.icb does not
maintain an embassy in this country.
His U.S. foes say a boycott against Ugandan coffee. this coun-
try's leading export, would cripple Amin politically.
Amin vowed Monday lo strengthen Uganda's weak economy
and said those hindering national development had no place in its
governmeoL
··My aim today is lo assist people. . . . U I f&nd anybody in a
responsible position in my government is not belpiq. I cannot
have this person in my govemment/' be said.
"When I take this decision l don't want forelp Journalists to
even criticize me. I am Big Daddy and very atront in Africa.••
Recent reports have said several aovernment minl.sters were
under house arrest and Uganda's notorious secret police wu belo&
purged.
NATION I WORLD
Casino ~eig rs Bu1n
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . CAP>
-Fires believed set by an
arsonist erupted in at least rive
homes on the bay side of this ci-
ty today, forcing one family to
leap.A. from its home into the
frlg1a water lo safely, police
said.
Arson Blamed;lO Treated 5. and son PauJ. 2. jumped from
their two-story tondomlnlum
home into the frigid bay waters.
Police dived Into lhe waters and
commandeered a pleasure boat
to rescue the family.
"We've had several police of-
ficers ln the water fishing out
two kids and several adults,"
said police dispatcher John Lee.
THE COAST Guard sent two
boats and a helicopter to the
scene, across town from the
famous oceanfront Boardwalk
where hotel·casinos are soon to
ofter legalized gamblins.
Authorities said fires were re
ported in five homes - some of
them unoccupied -and three
other minor brush fires were re·
ported in the a'rea abouts a.m.
The blazes were under control
two hours later.
"It's absolutely without a
doubt arson." said Assistant
Fire Chief John Brenner. He
said two_peraons wer.e..beingquu-
Uoned, but no one had been charged.
WITNESSES SAID Steve
Labov. 31. chairman of the city
Rent .ieveling Board; his wile.
Debbie, 29: daughter. Jennifer,
The Labov home. whleb ba.n&s over tbe bay on elllts. wai;
gutted.
Officials at Atlantic City
Medical Center said the Labov
famlly was treated ror exposure
and released. Alao treated were
four policemen and two firemen.
Co-.rt-"IJattler , Suecutn"IJs
NASHVILLE, Tenn. <AP > -.. \Ylthout amputation, surgeons ments. massive doses or an· "SHE WAS NEVE• taken to
Mary Northern, 72, who pro~t-sa1d, s he would die. Mlss tibiotlcs kept Miss Northern the operating room " hospital
ed amputation or her frostbitten Northern would not discuss it: alive, retarding the spread of in· administrator John Stone said
gangrenous feet and haul~ the Carol McCoy, a young attorney fection from the necrotic tissues Monday night. "She bad had bure~ucrats ~ a draw, di a~ appointed for her, said her client and keeping a chronic case of some debreedment. that's all.
she bved, on er own terms an thought her feet would heal by penumonia at bay. .. the removal of dead Ussue and
alone. . . themselves. She had had bone Her coodlUon Monda H~r pb~s1c1an, Dr. Benton frostbite before. It would be a By the time the high court overa·ll· ~as stable and 1 1 sl'
Adk:S·Ji8::a Mohday ~g~~ after gross violation of her right to ruled, the case was medically had d eveloped some a :ilgb~ ~~lledeab 8 ~fcx~l~~o~ i~ 'h!~ privacy, human dignity and moot. Most .or the ne11b on her penumoaJa again. Her feet were
I Y personal freedom, Ms. McCoy feet was falling away. still in very very poor shape uogs. said, to force surgery. • ·
A PSYCIDATBIST said Miss
Northern was lucid and in-
telligent, but incompetent to de·
cide about surgery on her own.
The Human Services Depart-
ment sought Judicial permission
for emergencx. amputation un-
der Tennessfie's Protective
Services Act.
MISS NORmERN reluctantly
emerged from the obscurity of
her unheated. trash·strewn,
childhood home ln January. Her
ft"iend , the Rev. Palmer Sorrow.
had asked a welfare worker to
stop by the partly burned house
where Miss Northern had lived
alone for 17 years. Frost had bit·
ten the former debutante's feet. Trying to warm her toes in a From a Chancery Court In
fireplace, she burned them. On Nashville to ~e Supreme Court
Jan. 17, despite her misgivings. of th~ nation, Ms. McCoy _
she atlo"Wed"POfice to take her to .-ehalleagecl -th•· !a~~ :md lost at
• MeJr.opoUtan Geo.eral Hospital -~ery turn. l'brougb ·-~Pa-
BIGnaeil fo1--Deatla
Boy-killer's ~amily
Sues TV Networks
MIAMI <AP> -Claiming television proerams triggefed him to kill
his neighbor, 15-year-old Ronny Zamora and bis parent.a ttave sued the
three major television net works for S2S million.
Programs on ABC. CBS and NBC "showed the impressibnable teen-
ager ... how to kill." claims the suit filed Monday in U.S. District
Court in Miami by the boy and his -------------
parents, Frank and Yolanda
Zamora.
Zamora's trial attracted na-
tional attention because of de-
fense lawyer Ellis Rubin's claim
that the boy was a victim of "in·
voluntary television intoxica-
tion."
old Elinor Jtaggart in Miami
Beach. He was described in court
as a television addict who
especially liked violent pro-
grams.
Prison Protest
Guard in the maximum security wing of a prison at
Cranston. R.I .• wears a mask to protect him from the
stench of rubbish and human waste that accumulated
when 226 inmates protested confinement to their cells
They refused to do routine clean.up duties.
Zamora was sentenced to Ute in
prison and is currently in a
juvenile correctional facility in
Cocoa.
"THE SHOOTING and killing -------------------------------------by Ronny Zamora of his neighbor
was a, foreseeable response to the
stimulus of the offending pro-
grams, "said the civil a.ction.
The suit said Zamora had
viewed 40,000 lo 50,000 "violent
destructions
of fellow
humans" on
television starting when
he was 5 years
old.
The defen·
dants -ABC,
CBS and NBC
-bad no com·
ment. ZAMORA
The U.S . Supreme Court
cleared the way last week for a
California trial involving similar
claims.
In that action, NBC and a San
Francisco television station are
being sued for $11 million on
bebali of a9-year-old girl wbo was
sexually assaulted along the lines
of a fictional crime s hown four
days earlier in a drama, "Born In·
nocent."
ZAMORA WAS CONVICTED
last September or killing SJ.year·
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... -
1
CALIFORNIA
Uniform
Measure
Defeated
SACRAMENTO <AP> -The
Assembly Criminal Justice
Commit.tee has rejected a blll
aimed at bann1ng demonstra-
tions by uniformed Nazis.
Th@ measur e by A s-
semblyman Tom Bane, D-Van
Nuys, would have outlawed th~
wearing of any uniform re-
sernbllng that of a foreign
political party with intent to dis-
turb the · peact-or harass any
eroup.
DIC..maed
SAN DIEGO <AP> -A
Marine Corps Recruit Depot
drill sergeant hu been convict-
{...____sr._lf_TE __ J
ed by a special court-D\artlal of
three counts or ~ruit abuse.
Sgt Norman 0. Satchell. 23, of
~·Philadelphia was found guilly ~·Monday. ,-,
:~'Bl Ni.red -~ WASHINGTON <AP> -Com-
; merce Secretary Juanita Kreps
'fbas said she is against holding
i,the 1981 World's Fair at the On-
:'tario Motor Speedway, s•id Rep.
:•Jin" Lloyd. D-Callf.
· Mrs. Kreps sent her recom-
mendaUon in a letter to Expo '81
~.chairman Edward ~rlpps II, in
~)ch sbe also said she would
Tecom mend that invitations for .. Uie planned fair not be ilsued,
_Llo)'d ~d Monday.
SaapeetP~
SAN DIEGO <AP> -George
Shamshak, belng held for ques-
tioning in at least two of the-Los
Angeles Hillside Strangler slay-
. ings, has demanded to be re-
•'tumed to Boston,. claimln1 his
rights are being violated in a
~ovemment plot to charge him
with the murders.
Sh4mshak's outburst Monday
brought a hall to a court hearing
on his petition to be sent back to
stJlte prison in Massachusetts
,la rtU Elldonftl
. SUSANVILLE <AP> -Tbe
president of the California Cat-
tlemen's Association says his
group will endorse the Jarvis in-
itiative. Proposition 13 on the
June 6 ballot
Joe Russell told 150 cattlemen
. in Susanville over the weekend
that a survey of the association's
board of dire<:tors hasn't been
completed, but at mid-point it
1\ood at 72-S in favor of endorse
ment
QUeen Mary
Change Due
LONG BEACH <AP> -
The Long Beach Harbor Commission has agreed to
take over the Queen Mary,
which haa accumulated an
operating debt of $15
million plus an investment
of S64 million since its
opening as a tourut at-
traction in 1970 under City
Council authority.
The Harbor Com-
mission, which is indepen-
dent of the City Council,
made the announcement
after a ~minute, closed-
door session Monday.
However, commission
president Richard Wilson
noted Long Beach voters
would have to approve
changlnJ harbor district
boundanes to include the
vessel's anchorage before
the takeover is effected.
AnUque
•Slot Macbloes
•Ploball Machlnel •Brus c..b Rep.ten
•AnUque Arcade F.qulpment
-N ... 188t. 8u&e Au, CA ll7tl
(71') .. l•
Stolen Goods Reco1'er~
San Francisco-police officer . Dan . La":'son looks ove.r
someJlf the.stalen'goods netted in an eWl.t-month imll-
f encing operation. Nearly SS00.000 in property and 51 in-
dictments resulted from the operatiop by police and FBI
agents working undercov~r from a PhC?nS'_ lugg<;tge store
Just se\'eri blocks from c1t...v hall. The indictments . so~ve
298 reported rohbt>rics. hurgtarles and auto thefts m the
Bay Area. police said. and more arrests are expected
this week.
P riva te Detective
Off Murder Case-
I ..._
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Controversial private detective Jay J _
Armes bas refunded a $25.000 fee and agreed to withdraw from
the Aleta Sue Grosenbacb murder case even though be says he
knows who the killer is and ~al the murderer has confessed to
him. b City Councilman Bill Mitchell said Monday that e and
James Vaus Jr., presidtnt of a citizens committee that ralsed
the fee for Armes. met Sunday with the double amputee d~
live in bis El Paso, 1'exas, office. Mitchell said Armes 1ave
them a $25,000 casbier'I cbeck as a refund.
ARMES WHO 1'EARS BOOKS for the hands be lost in a
childhood a;cident, 1tyles himself an Lnvesligator able to sol"'.e
any case and he hal received.widespread news coverage for blS
usual $100,000 fees. . The committee, at Mitchell's suggestion, hired Armes to un -
r avel Uw mysteriOUS killing of Aleta Sue after police were una-
ble to solve the •year-old girl's murder. Her body was found
Aug. is, 1976, oo a slope in Scripps Ranch, five days after she
disappeared tr~ La Jolt~ after leaving her grandmother's
home to buy a oewspaper.
THE FOlJJl·MAN EXECUTIVE committee of the blue rib-
bon group ter111inated Armes' contract Friday and sent a letter
asking for return of the fee, Vaus told KGTV reporter Gene
Gleeson. . . . . An invefligalion by Gleeson ra1sang qu~slloos concerning
Armes' intA8rity was held for broadcast until Monday, the re-
porter said. to give MitchtU and Vaus_ time lo go to El Paso lo
retrieve the $25,000.
.. AU OF US ON THE committee feel that with the ques-
tions ttut have been railed and the crossfire. political and olberw~. involving Mr. ~· ~e P~!lbly coul~ make better
progresl'if we changed our investigator. Vaus said.
Gletson reported that Armes said he solved the case within
three dlys or bis arrival htre in February. But he was reported·
ly woriing to make the e.\ldence presentable in court. Gleeson
said.
POUCE HOMICIDE LT. Winston Yetta said the man •
Armes identified has been eliminated a s a suspect in the
Grosenbach slaying. .
Mitchell. meanwhile, aid the $25,000 had been put in a trust
account to be used in the ontinuing investigation.
EXTRA EX'lti
Rataurant
ud
Cocktail Lounge
The
$5.88
PRIME RIB
·DINNER
Special
..
T~. May 2. 1978 OAIL Y PILOT A-i
•
·Begin Lauds Carter
U.S., Israeli Relations 'Improved'
LOS ANGELES <AP> -
I srae li Prime Minister
Yenachem Begin has Joyfully
proclaimed that the relationship
between the United States and
his nation has improved greatly
since his visit to Washington last
Mar ch.
Begin. addressing 11.200 Jews
at a gathering Monday to help
mark lsrael's 30th anniversary.
s aid the. atmosphere al a
Washington reception earlier
Monday displayed "everlasting
friendship" between the two na-
tions.
"PRESIDENT CARTER
made a speech which will be
long remembered -which I will
always remember." he said.
Begin said Carter gave "a
magnificent reception" in
Israel's honor.
"The atmosfhere was or
friendship, o everlasting
friendship between the United
States of America and the State
of Israel," he said.
BEGIN, WHO WAS interrupt·
ed repeatedly by thunderous ap-
plause. joked at one point that
he had some sensational news:
"I spent the whole day in
Washington and nobody asked
me lo resign."
Begin's remar~ apparently re-
ferred to unconfirmed reports
which circulated following his
March vi.sit that Washington of-
ficials would privately pressure
for his resignation. Carter ad-
ministration officials denied the reports. ~
EARUER, UPON arrival at
Los Angeles International
Airport, Begm told reporters
there was a "great improve-
ment" in U.S. Israel relations,
noting there had been "some dir·
ficuJty" in March. He also said
at the airport he was pleased by
the U.S. decision to split up into
separate issues U~e proposed
sate of righter planes to Israel.
Saudi Arabia and Egypt.
BeglJt, who waa ttbeduled to
arrive in Chicago today to con-
tinue bis week-long anniversary
celebration tour, was accom-
-panied on the· podium at· the
Vtetim Suffocates
Forum in suburban Inglewood
by his wife, California Gov. Ed-
mund G. Brown Jr., Los Angeles
Mayor Tom Bradley and
numerous other oCficiais.
BRADLEY GAVE Begin a key
to the city and Brown embraced
him, saying "we stand behmd
you in your hour or need."
Several hundred persons car·
rying anti·Begin placards took
part in a demon s tration
sponsored by the Palestine Arab
Fund and the Ad Hoc Committee
of Israelis and American Jewi
for Pea<.-e Now.
INGLEWOOD POLICE Lt.
Tony Walker said several
persons suffered minor Injuries
in two scuffles that broke out
during the demonstration that
began shortly before Begin was
scheduled to speak.
Walker said Mabeel Salen, 27.
of Bellllower. was booked for in·
vt'stigation of disturbing the
peace and released on hi s own
r~cognlzance.
After 3-week Ban .
Dairy t o R esu me
Li~mited .Production
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Alta-Dena Dairy. the state's largest pro-
ducer of raw milk, has agreed to new sanitary restrictions and is. re-
suming limited production after a three-week ban. health o{flctals
say. . "' . The dairy was ordered by the state April 7 lo stop selling raw milk
and related products. The state
Health Department said some of
the milk was contaminated with
salmonella, but the dairy denied
it.
Salmonella causes an in-
testinal disorder than can be
fatal in extreme cases.
-JAMF.8 LABANA. a deputy
s t a te attorney general
repr~~enttng tbe-Treatlh Depart-
ment. said Monday that a setUe-
ment was reached Friday put-
ting new restrictions on sucb
things as health conditions.
treatment of wastes. and taking
samples or milk for testing.
Cabana said Alta-Dena has
met state guidelines with one of
the three herds al its dairy al
Chino in San Bernardino County.
and has been allowed lo resume
seJJing raw milk from that flerd.
KE SAID IT is working to
meet the guidelines with the
other two herds.
Alta-Dena processes milk at
the €ity-of l-0dustry tn Los
Angeles County. It normally pro-
duces about 20.000 gallons a day.
had drunk Alta-Dena raw milk.
Alta-Dena denies that its milk
has hurt anyone.
Sponsor (;ets
-,_ • -l~
Percentage
.~.Of.Treasure
LOS ANGELES <APl -Busi·
nessman Charles A. Kenworthy
of Tanana is entitled to SS per-
cent or the estimated $400,000 to
S4 m llllon value of the treasure
found aboard a sunken Spanish ~alleon. Los Angeles Superior
Court Judge Harry V. Peetns
has ruled.
In an order issued Monday.
Peetrls said Long Beach marine
archaeologist Willard Bascom
was liable for inducing Robert
Marx to breach an·agreement he
bad s\gned with Ke!IWortby:-•
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
Davld Fouchia, 26, apparently
suffocated after he was bound
and bis mouth wu taped by a thier after a robbery. Hla body
was foLmd Sunday.
The April 7 pasteurization or-
der was at least the ftfth against
Alta-Dena in the last two
decades.
The Health Department says
19 cases of salmonella last year
and five cases through Jan. 20 ol
this year involved persons who
Seafinders Inc. a firm set up
by Bascom and Marx, also was
held liable under Peetris' ruling.
The agreement called for
Kenworthy to put up $29,000 in
return for 55 percent or the •
treasure aboard the Nuestra
Senora de la Maravilla. found in
shallow waters off the Bahamas
on Aug. 24. 1.972.
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5) Maximum amount I might be
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6) Amount I'd like to borrow
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may qualify to borrow from $3,000 to $30.000 to use for your child ren's
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•
·~ --.,
lueeday, May 2. 1978
Robert N. WHdt Pubtisher T~s l(ffvll/EdltCH
Orange Coast O tlv Ptlo t Editorial P~e ............................................................ _.
• S.rber• Krtlblch/Edltorlal Paoe E41tor
Year of· Jarvis
Curbs Spenders
lf county government's posh nt:w S8 million Hall of
Admirustration wasn 't a lready an emba rrassment in the
year of Jarvis. a recent proposal to spend SS.500 to
dedicate the new building was.
Fortunately. Orange County Super vi&ors quickly set
aside the dedication ('eremony already e ndorsed by the
Civic Center Commission.
It is not likely that the S3.500 celebration in honor or
the building will see the light of day again until the fate of
the Jarvis property tax reform initiative is decided by the
state's voters.
That fact makes a significant point.
ff nothing else. the Jarvis initiative has al least some
government spende rs running for cover by cancelling out
s uch · frivolous spending sprees as S3.500 for dedication
cere monies
d Gift Horse Costly
-.
The federal government's willingness to h e lp
communities foot the bill for some of the amenities of life
is admirable but ~ometimes the accompanying red
tape makes it advisable to respond with. "Thanks. but no
thanks!"
Such was the case when the City of Irvine recently
rejected the offer of some practically "free" bus benctles.
Because Irvine prohibits advertising in the street
right-of-way. the c ity was qualified to obtain the $200
benches for a mere S40 apiece under a special grant1from
the Urban Mass Transit Administration to the Orange
Co.unty Transit District.
But there were a few strings attached.
The city would have to provide the labor and
materials for ins tallation: pre pare plans and
• ~pe~fW-a~~G:?S. f~.-4C~ ho!1<!hes and support pads; provide
an e nviromentar impact report :._provid~ inspection for
. (.it>rllplfaliC'e wifh-s~cificatf6'rl~~.-mate mohtl'lfy progress
rfil!orts to the transit district: take care of maintenance
and repairs : proviefe liability insurance: give proof of an
affirmative acliOJl program and prove that minority
businesses had been invited to bid on the project.
· · S ma ll wonder Irvine's trans portation officia1s
decided to get along with the dozen benches they've been
able. to. acqui.i:e--tJ:wough donations and hope thut route
may provide a few more
County Loses Again ..
Lute last week a huge hunk of earth apparently made
unstable by near record winter rains came tumbling
down onto a portion of Trabuco Road ~ Mission Viejo.
Those in_ the k.now_say lt may take as much a s
Sl mill1ontorepairthe damage.
And wouldn't you know it'! Owner of the iJ1 behaved
land i~ <:ounty go\'ernme nt or. put more accurately. the
public.
It seem~ lhe Mission Viejo Company convinced
·county officials that the all but · useless 16.S-acre parcel
adjoining Trabuco Road was a reasonable answer to
meet an open space and recreation dedication.
In fairness to those involved . no one could foresee
more than 33 inches of rainfall that touched off the costly
earth move.
It just seems that if something was to go wrong in
Orange County. though. somewhere in the middle ther~~
be a county official a ssessing the damage and ringing uµ
the taxpayer cas h register.
• Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
..
Boyd/Mates
ByL.M.BOYD
Our Love and War man is
s tudying the results of
another survey. This one, to
find out what qualities the
typic•l young man lhlnka im·
portent in bis proapectift
matrimonial mate. or the
fellows polled, 81 percent
said "that she loves me" is
the most significant matter
of all. No doubt, no doubt.
Sixty-seven percent said
"sense d humor." Sixty-four
percent said "intelligence."
Fifty-six percent said "self·
confidence." Now this is in·
leretting. Forty percent said
"nice legs" while only 33 per·
cent said a "pretty face." As
for "ample bust," a mere 16
percent named that.
Oliver Hardy 5'arted bis
movie career in 1913. Stan
Laurel began in 1917. So how
do you account for the tact
that the team was known as
"Laurel anll Hardy" instead
of "Hardy and Laurel"?
Average sale at a
household auction takes 45
seconds, that's alJ
Q. "Where in tbe Bible
does it way, 'Spa.re the rod
and spoil the child'?"
A. It doesn't exacUY. That
turns up in a Samuel Butler
Dear
' Gloomy
GJ.18
Al loast wtth the trash
strike on. and having to
empty my own CanJ, I
~ot the bottom hall ot
them dumped out for
the flrat time ln
montllfs. J.V.
poem. But Proverbs Xlll:24
reads: "He that sparetb his
rod bat.eth his son: but be
that lovetb him cbastenetb
him betimes."
Q. ''What rotors are used.I
most on the flags of the
various nations!"
A. Red, blue, green and
yellow, in that onler.
Is ll cooeeivable that in ex·
ceedlngly rare cases tfftl\
can grow out of people's
feet? Such be the a.stonisbin&
report.
Have you eyer heanl or a
North American Indian
woman who was rotor blind?
Neither have 1. Nor baa
anybody else most probably.
Realize far fewer women
than men are color blind
worldwide. Men, 1 percent.
W o m e ·n , 1 p e r c e n t .
Researchers say the women
rnost likely to be rolor blind
are the Chinese with an in·
cldence d 1.7 percent. But
the condition just doesn't oc·
cur among Indian women at
all, evidently.
u'Tbomas Jefferson hadn't
been so eager to put the Da·
Uonal capital clocse lo bla
Virginia blrtbplace, lt never
would've wound up at the
Wasbln,too. D. C., site, I'm
told.
Here's an odd occupation
for you. Edwin SQ.uirrell for yean woned in tfae prtntlnc
department d a toy firm In
Suaaex, En&l&nd. His job: lo
chew boob. 1be book• ln'
queatioo, about 300 a year,
were rag volumH for
chJldren. 'l1le ~aa wu to
make 1un they're C'9lor fut.
You. too, ~1 be 1urpriHd
to Mana tMr-. are men In· cuau u.mc tu N.-w Yott a.
t.J now tbaa were thneaboat1 wben Pettr
llleult bouldit Vanbattan for
$24 worth d lrlnkets.
Nick Thimmesch
Technology Sales Carry· Risk
WASHINGTON -In this cen·
tury. the world has shrunk to the
size of a tiny computer compo-
nent, and thus .has become ter·
rlbly complicated.
That's one reason why our
government frets over the sltua·
lion of U.S.
firms ((acing
tough com·
petition> sell·
i>ng Com ·
munlst bloc
nations so -
called -"high
technology." If U .S .
policy on ex·
port lice~ing
for sales to Communist natJons
is too strict. American firms will
lose billions in sales to other na-
tions. If U.S. policy is too lax.
might not these Communist na-
-lions use our technology for
military purposes contrary to
our national interest ? Or to
make cheap products which
drive us from world markets?
J . Fred Bucy, president of
Texas Instruments. is convinced
that the "transfer of military
significant technology has been
of major proportions." and that
the Soviets have narrowed the
gap in military capability with
the U.S. as a result.
But isn't this what one would
expect an enterprising. sue·
cessful Texan to declare? Aren't
all capitalists like Bucy wary
and suspicious of the Com·
munist.s. and rorever ulle.ting ....
warnings?
No. as a matter or fact. The
majority of capitalists these ~ys . here and abroad, are quite
1nlerealed in doing business with th~ Soviets. Bucy represents ~
mUlority view. Moreover, he is
also a renowned physicist. in·
tern•Uonally known for develop-
ing SOlid state digital computers.
a 01an who modestly manifests
his patrioliscn. and is not a saber
rattler.
WHILE HE observes Lenin
once rentarked that capitalists
would gladly sell rope for their
own haoglngs, he can note that
currently the rugital watch and
band·held ~mputer -common
in U.S. stores -embody a
technology with tremendous
military poltotial. Once, at was
military and space technology
<the 707 plane. Teflon> which
found civilian application. but
now it's the other way around.
Bucy says the sales or prod·
ucts t-0 the Soviets doesn't hurt
neat as much as the turnover of
inside secrets Oil how to make
them. Transferred technology.
he argues, is irreltievable. Bucy
claims that the Communist na-
tions get a quantum jump in
technology in retum for some
cas h. possibly a sbort·term
monopoly in one Eastern bloc
country.
He also .-dl'llS that the U S
should leam from Renault and
.._._ . .,. _,. . ,. ..
Paul Harvey
i'~iat -the auto makers -who
vastly improved Soviet auto·
making, and now race competi·
tion from Soviet-built cars
· Sen. Henry M. Jackson <D-
Wash.> joins Bucy ln tbls assess-
ment. and says it is an
"outrage" that the U.S . does not
have a coherenl policy on export
to Communist countrlta.
Jackson has entertained charges
that the Soviets make plain
suckers out of U.S. businessmen,
and might even wire-tap them
when they are in Moscow to find
out what their bottom price is.
THIS GRIM situation came
about. Bucy and others contend.
because of the Nixon·Kissinger detente policies.
But defenders of 'East-West
trade don't see all these goblins.
To begin with, U.S. trade with 12
Communist nations isn't that big. ll grew from $243 milllon in
1972 to $LS billion in 1975, then
slipped to $1.2 billion last year.
Compare .these figures wi&b the
S77 billion in total U.S. exports
last year. and the Communist
world looks small in our picture.
Moreover. all applications for
licenses for U.S. firms to deal
with Communist nations must be
approved by the Department or
Commerce. the Derense Depart·
ment and finally by NATO. Six·
teen applications from U.S.
firms to sell semi-conductor de·
vices <the k\nd Bucy developed>
to CommUDist nations have been
----..--' .... ---·-·
turned down in recent years.
'"If anything, businessmen
consider the process too slow
and restrictive," says Max N.
Berry. executive·director of the
East· West Trade Council.
FOR EXAMPLE , Pola nd
wanted lo buy a $50,000 spec
trophotometer from DuPont to
meas ure pes ticide levels in
canned hams, so they wouldn't
have trouble with the U.S.
Department of Agric ulture.
Commerc e okayed it, but
Defense balked, saying that Uus
device could be used in germ
warfare'. It was a hassle to get it
through.
Similarly, Control Data Corp.
failed to get a license to seU the
Soviets its Cyber-76 computer
for use in weather research
I. 8 . M .. after having one applica-
tion turned down, finally got a
license to sell its big compu~er~
to the Soviets for use during the
1980 Olympic games.
Where some critics claim that
the Soviets lure smaller firms lo
need or new markets. the record
shows that there are many U.S.
corporate giants doing business
with them, i.e., Bechtel, ITT.
General Electric. Pullman·
Kellogg. Occidental Oil. Dow
Chemical. ·
.. We don't need a natiortal
policy as much as we need more help for our exporters ," B~rry
sa ys . "We really need a
Ministry of Foreign Trade, the
way most industrialized nations
,..a~ one. If U.S. firms can'l ·Sell
to Eastern Europe. don't worry.
the business will go to other na-·
lions. Our ftrms compete with
each other and with other coun-
tries . Other nations only com
pete with each other "
THE HAWKS StlY that the U .~
government should be the buyer
itnd seller or hjgh-technology for
Communist nations. in the sam,:
way that the Defense and State
departments decade wruch na-
tions can buy what weapons
from the U.S .
Bucy. always v i gila nt .
believes that the P e ntagon
s hould compile a list "as quickly
as possible" of militarily sigruf1
cant technologies and link them
Lu "s ignific ant weapon :.
s ystems''
Oh. the world has shrunk. How
does the poor 200·year·old U.S.
manage to keep its wits when 1l
mus t s imultaneous ly worry
about being protected from
nuc lear war and k e eping
economically healthy by seeing
its e.nterpnsers prosper in th~
world market?
Isn 't it better to go fish mg
than to ponder this''
A Schooi Where SegregatiOn Is Condoned
On North Central Avenue in
Phoenix, Ariz., there ls a stricUy
segregated high school.
Race restrictions are rigidly
enforced.
And this segregated school is
supported by the United States
government.
How come
our gov~rn ·
ment, in this
er a w h·en
fchool busing
Is forced on
the rest oC us,
Is itself SUP·
portlne a
segregated
schoo l in
P.hoen.lx?
I can't get an answer lo that
question from anybody.
PerSQPall,Y, I am not recom·
mending that government policy
in this instance s hould be
changed -yet it is an interest·
Charles McCabe
ing inconsistency that proves
segregation is sometimes best.
THE SCHOOL is one of a
dozen schools in the Phoenix
Union High School District. The·
district has been seeking to com· ply with government requirv
tnents regarruog racial batanc·
ing.
Yet this one school -Phoenix
Indian High School -is entirely
of. by and for lnruans.
When you start asking ques·
tions of federal government of·
ficials as to why this instance of
segregation is condoned you ex-
perience a monumental buck·
passing runaround.
Nobody wants to be quoted.
Vaguely, some refer to treaties.
to legal precedents, to "tradi·
tion · · or to something they caU
·•the tr~t.'·
Phoenix Indian School opened
in 1891 when the federal govern-
ment undertook to prov1ae
education for Indians who were
then "wards or the govern·
ment."
I SINCE THE Indi a n
Citizenst\ip Act ol 1924. Indians
aid their childrea e njoy "equal
rights" with the rt!St or us -yet
pubiic education find Indian
~ucation contmued to be
parate entitites, .the latter ad·
mistered by the Bureau of In·
an Affairs.
In 1954 when the Supreme
urt forbade racial 5egregation
1• public schools. the decision
~as first applied to the South.
Snee the Civil Rights Act of 1964 f~deral courts have sought to en·
forte racial balance in schools
evwywhere.
Almost everywhere. .~mes Cook. an investigative
rf\Porter for Phoenix
Nts~a~rs, sought but found no
federal government pressure and
no apparent federal government
interest in requiring this Indian
school to balance itself racially.
In ·rucson, federal court 1~
conte mplating r e quiring
crosstown busing among whites.
blacks. and Mexican-America m.
-the latte r two minorities hav
mg claimed that they we re being
discriminated against.
VET INDIAN schools -and
the Phoenix school is just one of
many in the state --have not
been required to accept "out-
siders." and would, in fact . turn
away any non-Indian.
Some 150,000 Indians elect to
a ttend Arizona's integr ated
public schools.
S ome 5 1,000 r e m ain in
segregated BIA schools.
And having that choice, none
complains
Separation of the Sexes .... ~. Some Good Points
The other nlght Mrs. Margaret
Th etcher. the British Tory
political chieftain, was attending
a fashionable dinner ln London's
Belgravia section. Thatcher is
no ordinary Tory chlertain. She
is almoet certain to be the next
prime minister, trends going the
way they are. She Is also a
feminist.
Came tbe time at dinner when
the ladies rose to go ort to do
whatever
ladles do dur·
Ing these ~ reapltea at -
dinner, when
lbe seJ;es ared • • r se1 resale
for a brier
time before
the party
break• up.
Tb atcber
didn't budae. Sbe remained seat-
ed with lhe men, on the apparent
thew>ry that a future P.M. was
sexleas. Sh• 1'.U taken thls posl·
tton ln other matters, including
her election as the first woman
member or the Carlton Club.
NONE OF HER mate dinner
companions entered any objec-
tion. Nor were there any of the
dirty stories that supposedly em·
purple these male gatherings
over the port. Tho men, accord-
ing to one observer. were too
busy angling for some sort or job
In the next Tory government.
I don 'l happen to agree with
Thatcher or the other teminists
who srom this eminently civll
practice or separauna the sexes
after the dessert. On this lsaue I
am strictly with the fo&les.
When I Uved ln~91aa9. In the
mid· '609, I neve tard anyone,
man or woman, o ectlng lo the
pract,\ce.
There are some women who
vie N tb practice as a dtamlasat.
and 1 condelcendint one at that.
Uke sending the chtldren up·
Klalrs bc?fore the parents be&in
to eat I do nol see ft as anythfna ot the kind.
he more extreme rem·
ts view It. as they seem
le iew all relatioM between the
s es. as some sort or political
a a kind or mate conspiracy to
~p ladies down. I have even
h rd the practice likened to
t other Infamous political act,
t missionary position, by one
I ghtene d North Beac h
ale. •
Is nothing of the sort. really.
men-over·the·port Idea is a
entlon agreed upon a long
ago by clvilized men and
en as a way or improving
venlng. It 111 a convention no
demeaning to a woman
11 that other betei.aucrect
ntton, marriage.
N AND women have eoclal
oune, and eicchanac news,
dur Ute fairly Iona cocktail
bou1 d dinner It.sell. and f're·
que over corree afterward. Both xes treat uc'\ other u
lh•Y ld ln their own homes.
Wh ma.lea Lite 1e1re~
custom so agreeable to me, and
s o obje ctionable lo s ome
feminists. is th a t at is a n
acknowledgment that thert-art"
profound difrerences bet ween
the sexes, and long ll vl! the ~1f
ferences.
IT IS NOT so mu<'h that men
3re more interested in cricket
than women, or that women are
mote interested in their clothes
than men. There is a profound
ditference in outldok. about
everything. between the sexes.
These differences can co·e xist
for a long t1rne In 1& format social
situation, but spblle tensions do
build up. 1t i11 onlY when these
little tensions and abrasions are
relaxed by ~paratlon that you
can fully rccoenllc that they ex·
ist.
I am certain there would be a
aood many mor• ar9uments
between couples ln lbelr car on
lhelr way home It thls healing
[nlerlude had not occurred.
I
~NATl2_N_A_t ______________________________________________________________________________ .._;..,,,_ _____________ r_u.csav ____ .M_ay __ ~_._,e_1s ________________ o_A1_Lv __ ~_Lo_r ___ A~7
·-Pat Nixon 'Couldn't Say ·Goodbye'
EdHor•a Note . Tlw f°"""1ing el:froct., adopUd from
th• book, "The Lotwly Lody of Son Clem.tnte: 'T'lw StOfJI
of Pat Nizoft," fcJ 1971 by ~an David.. Reprinted by
p.rmunon of Thomaa Y Cr~U Co. Tia. fllll-~la
book wiU b8 publaahed by CroweU in late avmmn
By LESTER DAVID
Up to 10 days before Nixon reslped, his wife
was convinced he would ride out the storm.
_ All through June and July 1974, she-was meet·
ing with aides Lucy Winchester and Helen Smit.I),
setting up the fall calendar of social events. She
was planning a White House Christr«as, the
parties that would be held. who would be asked,
what would be served. She was even blocking out a
program of events for the following spring. .
AND MORE: SHE HAD been actively in·
volved in plans to choose a new set or china ft>r the
Executive Mansion, service for 250 persons which
would bear the presidential seal and be called "~ixon China."
It was no small matter. Presidential china.
preserved for history in the mansion, is a distlnc·
lion that Pat very much wanted for her hus band.
And since Congress does not appropriate funds for
White House acquisitions. the cash for these ex-
pensive sets had to be raised privately.
Clement E. Conger. the While House curator,
told me that Mrs. Nixon met with representatives
of the Lenolt China Co. of Trenton, N.J., and a
com mlltee on selections. The Lenox .Co. was to
take 30 days lo come up with a design for Mrs.
Nixon's approval.
PAT NIXON SAW NO REASON to halt the
negotiations until the last week in July 1974. Tben,
on J uly Zl, 29 and 30, the H®Se Judiciary Commit.
tee voted three articles of impe6chment against
her husband for "high crimes a nd misde-
meanors." After the final historic roll call in Room
1241 or the Rayburn Of(ice Building, she called
Clem Conger.
"She tol<t me that she didn't think it was an ap-
propriate time to raise money for the china. and to
let the matter rest. ..
Conger said Pat's voice quivered w)len s he
spoke.·
Almosl to the-end,. Pat.-Nixon he.J.i.eyed her
husband would not quit. A&ain and agaiB she said
to corr~pondenls who covered her: "I know the
truth. and the truth sustains me." '
BELIEVED HIM
Julie Nixon
'SMOKING GUN'
H.R. Haldeman
SAW IMPLICATIONS
David Eisenhower
LITTLE TO SAY
Edward Cox
House an two days. Movin(s from the Executive
Mansion 1s not exactly like moving a family from
one split-level to ano\her ~at Nixon had moved
many times before on short notice, but not on such
a gigantic scale.
ON AU<;. i, THE FiNAL DA\' OF the
Nixon presidency. Pat Ni..,'bn stood behind her
husband in the East Room as he said goodbye to
his staff. She was surprised to see that lights and
television cameras had been set up. She hadn't
wanted that because she knew that the mask was
slipping.
The president spoke for almost 20 minutes
Pat, lovely in a pink !lkirt and open·necked
sweater top. was to his left. It was a rambling
speech. often ~udlin, in which he talked about
the courage of Teddy Roosevelt. the glories of the
While House. his "old man," his mother. Many m
the room were weeping.
Terry Ivey was there. m perfect control when
she walked in.
"f wasn't thint<ing of. crying at all." s he said.
"But whenlsawthatlookon Mrs. Nixon 'sface. lJust
burst outcrying.
"HER WHOLE LIFE WAS IN her face. Jt just
said everything. There are no words that could
ever describe that look 1 f.ried to, myself. I even
tried to write il down, but l couldn't.
"ft wasn't even just her raee. It was her whole
self. the way she walked and moved. You could see
she was steeling herself."
Mrs. Nixon couldn't bring herself to s ay even a
word or goodbye to her own personal staff of press
ai<jes and secretaries . Eyes dead ahead. she
walked out of th(! room and toward the ollve·drab
helicopter which would take them to Andrews Air
Force Base. whe re the great silver-and-blue
presidential plane waited.
Helen Smith caught up with her. took her hand
and squeezed it. Mrs. Nixon turned her head away
and squeezed back. Other aides did the same. and
P at responded the same way to each. not daring to
look at any or them.
"SHE R EAL LY COULDN'T SAY goodbye,'"
says Mrs. Smilh, "lt would have been loo muoh~f
a strain. She couldn't, and we all said we love you
and we'll nuss you " ·
. On that final day, in that last speech. Richard
Nixon went into a tribute to his late mother.
before." She added: "The pressures of the pres-"My mother was a saint." he said . "Yes. she
THE QUESTION MUST BE asked : Would s he idency are so heavy and he had been so oecup1ed will have no books written about her. But she was
have been sustained if she had really known the explanation is twofold: a saint."
truth? It was a time of mourning. ror a tragedy had At this point Ed Cox. certain that the president
It ls a harsh indictment, yet the incontroverti-occurred, and never, in all the crises of her hard was about to mention Pat, pushed her gently from
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ble fact is that Nixon lied to his wife and to his ur~. bad Pat Ntxon asked for sympathy or wanted her position slightly behind him. toward the .-!::===================-
family. as well as to the country. about the scope of others to s hare her grief. She would bear it alone. president's side. But Nixon finished his talk (
ADDRESS
CITY STATE .ZIP
his involvementin thecover-upof Watergate. as she bad bprne everything etse. without once referring to the woman who had t:AllL WA TIERS )
He was telling them one version, concealing Besides, she was too busy. On Wednesday the campaigned with him (or 28 yeal's. .
another. While Julie was running around the coun· president had told her of hts decision to resign. She --. COVERS In the DAILY PILOT
try defending him and Pat was talking to friends knew then that they would have to leave the White tNEXT: Husband and Wf/e J SACRAMENTO
about the truth coming out. the clinching truth .. ------------------------------------------------------------that he had known about the Watergate break-in
six days after its discovery. was on a 1972 reel of
tape that Nixon was playing over and over to
himself. hoping to hear some word or phrase that
might show him a legal way out.
THIS WAS THE FAMOUS June 23 conversa·
lion in the Oval Office with Haldeman, the "smok·
ing gun" talks that finally doomed his presidency.
The tape proved the president had been lying
about Watergate for two years. ·
Jn October 1974, two months after Nixon re-
signed. I telephoned Julie and asked "Had your
father told you about that tape?"
"No," she answer.ed, "he.had noL"
She insisted that ''he hadn't listened to them
before." She added: "Ttie pressures of the pre-
sidency are so heavy and be had been so occupied
with trying to run the·country that be had forgot-
ten about them. and I believe him.··
ON FRIDAY, AUG. 2, ONLY THREE days
before he was forced to admit publicly that he had
tried to thwart the FBI investigation of Watergate.
Nixon finally told his family -reluctantly, David
Eisenhower remembers.
They gathered in the Lincoln Sitting Room in
the southeast corner on the second floor of the
White House, next to the Lincoln Bedroom. It was
shortly before 7 p .m . Nixon had ordered dinner on
a tray and head eaten little of It; the family "had
dined without him. He came to the room. took his
place in the brown chair and stared Into the fire.
lit as he had requested though the evening was hot.
muggy, Washington-mldsummery. As usual the
air conditioning was on, turned high. •
The family took chairs silently and waited for I
Nixon to speak. Pat, hands in her lap, was on the
red-and-green couch with its curved dark wood
ends. Edward Cox, flying in on the shuttle from ·
New York. would arrive shortly. ;
THE PRESIDENT DID NOT COME directly I
to the point. He talked at length about the situa-
tion, his enemies. the press, "the people who won't ,
rest until they gel me." 1
Then he said that there were some tapes that I
were damaging. General Haig, his chief of staff.
and J . Fred Buzhardt. spedal White House
counsel in the Water gate matter, were pess,mistic,
he said. They gave him no chance to surviv~.
David asked for the transcripts and read
them. By this time C'ox had come in. and be read
them too. David at once saw the implicatjons of
the Nixon admissions. Cox said little. Julie felt
neither shock nor surprise nor betrayal. just sad·
ness. Nothing was decided that night. The family
session ended at midnight. Pat had hardly said a
wont throughout the entire thing.
JULIE AND TRICIA, PPPOSING their
husbands and the entire White House group advis-
ing the president, wanted him to fight lt out from
the dock at an impeachment trial. Nixon look
them both into the solarium next momlng and told
them there was no hope.
They pleaded with him. tearfully. to withhold
his resignation. Apparently they convinced him
that maybe, just maybe, a fiicker of hope re·
mained, He returned to his office and a few hours
later jllfprmed Haig that be decided to IJO on na·
tiooal television. Re would tell Uie country about--
the June 23 tapes and ask for its support. For a
day. Nixon believed tbat he could replay the
Checkers speech and win again.
But the next day. on Sunday. Nixon cbanaed
his mlnd: There would be no last speech. He
ordered the June 23 traascript.s be made public
accompanied by a statement ln which be admitted
that the tapes were "at variance with certain ot
my previous statements."
Monday afternoon. the countr.Y hurd.
AND WHAT OF PAT NIXON du.rl.u thole
seven daya between the time 1he tearnecf of the
June 23 tapet and the d11 ahe left the White
KoU1e? 8he Wd not the tomble-Uke creature that
some bave ~bed. thoueh her staff beum•
alarmed becau.e IM wu not anawertn1 phone
calla, even from trtend.t be-had known for Yffrt,
nor rcplytn1 to momoe, unusual for her. The
e'renever
outnumbered.
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or 272·5656 · Weetwood
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Los Angeles. CA 90024
Phone 474·3503 ·Larchmont
Office 250 No. Larchmon1
Blvd. Los Angeles. CA 90004
Phone 462·6463 · Northridge
Office 18540 Devonshire
St. Northridge. CA 9 1324
Phone 360·2326 · Canoga
Park Office Victorv Blvd. at
Platt Ave. Canoga-Park, CA
9 1304 Phone 348-4 141
Fullerton Omce 3334
\orba Linda Blv4 Fullerton,
CA 92631 ft'hone (7141
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Omce 1634 San Miguel
Drive Newport Beach. CA
92660 Phone (7 t 4l 640· 1634
P, eru•L n, --~ ,_
~ ~ . . -· .....
' •111 &'.!s Home~,~:::· lt#; li'I . Cal"fl!lt !f r-eat111ent'
, ••
;
i
J
t
..
..
• CMtl V P'ILOf T ua:aday, May 2. 1171
QUEENIE
"When she'• In Ulia k.lnd ol mood she doesn't dictate a
letter, ahe nap a lett.et"
Death Notlees
MCOUt•• Survived by Ill • w ife Mary AVEltV M<OUlllE, retldent ol c .,mlcllael, son KennetAI A.
Cost• Mew, Ce. P••Md away on CarmlcllHI, de\IOMlf'I u .... J. and ~II 30. 1'71. l'uner•I MntiCff ere Aebecu A. Carmid1 .. 1 and sitter
penc11no •I Smltll Tuthill Urnb C:.ta Elouise Tllnton. Prlvete femlly Maw MortllefY. ~-F11neral Man to be lleld. Dlldey
CL"D• .. WOLf' Brolllers Morti.ary, dlrectlno .... ,.nn,
• "" "'L TON WOLF, reslclent of DOlllUS
Cost• Mase, Ca. Former resident of MARV JOSEPHINE OORIUS, 911•
(pf\reta. "9tlfllylyenta. PeHed a•ay '7, died Sunday April 30, 1'71 In lier on April l'I, 1t7' at Ille 9119 01 J6. 11ome. Siie wat sutferlng from• linger.
lletov•d llu•b•nd of Janet Wolf. 1no lllnns wt.n slla cOllllPS*J. Eftotts l'unar•I ..,,..l<H wllt be lleld on Tllu,... to revtw lier felled. SN , .. , born In
liay May 4, 1971 .t 10:00 A.M. at tllt Altadana, Ca., where she lillended
Grabftor Mor-y Chapel In Ephrata, scllool untll llff lamlly mo ... d to Santa
Pennsylv•nl• Interment wlll be et Ana In 1"°. SN gradUated from tlle
Mount Zlart Memorlel P•'11 In Akron, Unlvenlty of Calllomla In ller-eley In
Penn•ylvanla. Smllll Tutlllll Lamb J~llsm In 1m. Slit-• ellllleted
Co\!• Mes. Morluary In cllerge of "'"" Ille Delle Delta Dell• Sorority. tocel •rraf91MfllL ........_ Sii• wH IY*'rled to Kermit Oorlus I" IO~OWMU '™ In C.ta Mesa, Ce. n..y rellded VICTOR H. NITZKOWSKI !Y9 II, In Coste Mesa and Newport lleectl and
re•ldeflt of Hlol\tlflQtOfl BNcll, Ca .. Mammotll LAQs untll lier deelll. $lie
Jnu 190, Pnwd -•v on Satur!My, Is survl..S by lier --encl """ 'Prll 2t , "" at Hoeo Memorial clllldren, Lyn11, Krlsll11 •nd Merk
-to•pllel. e.1....0 llinband of Rutll OorluL SNtwaafo•.w:ttno-~ol
'lllLo w•ll•, felller o l Kenne111 111eorengeCoufltyw~·1Arcllltec·
'l1t1kows111 Of Huptlnoton 9Mcf\, ca.. a twet Le~ tte Orenoe Couney 1rend•on,, J im, Gree a11d 8ret Tri 0.11.e ,,.,_ AaoclatiO!I. SN
'llllll-.11J. •ISO survl..S ~ J t!Slff• ,., .. acllw In Ille Newport Harbor
llcll Nll1kowu1. end Ml'lnl• ltacouatOubt'ldMMl'edft lhPt"esl-
llUllo wul tlolll ol Manuto, Mlfl· dent In 19't. She recently ac!H ••
H<>te ar>el Florence Nltillowslll of Publlc RelellOfls Director for Ille
"-nla, Atlrona. Mr NllnOWllll wu Oranoe County Cll•Dler of Ille
• velera.n Of World War I & 11 -•loo Amtrlc•n Institution Of Arcllltecl' and
• member of tf'e DIWl:lled Amffl<an tennl• ~ editor for ""' HewPOr1
'elwan"' Fri-may <all al Ple"e snores Community Au«lallon Addi· 1rot11ers Smllll1' Mortuar1 from 11ona1 w rvl_.s are llef' mot.,.;. Mrs.
-tPM on TUHdey May J, lf71 wllent Junne SlllQletOfl of H11ntl111G1on 8Ncll, ll~ral ...... Cat will be Conducted el Ca,. lier Jl51er5 Ju,,,,. Rotlerts of > 00 A M. on w.dneoday May J. 1'71 wa111ut Cr-. ca., -Rite Butllls ol
•1111 Rev. Alben C. JenMfl P••lor of Hunllnvton llNUI, ca. and lier b<-r
,,. "'"' Unltld MetllOdlll Olurcll °" Jemes Sll\OlllDIJ or-Slnfl AM, c.. A c••llno. Interment will be In tllt Good Memorlel Swvke tn lier"°"°' ""II be
neP(lerd CltMetery. Pierce Brothers lleld tor Ille lamlly end<'-111-el
mltM' Mon_.ydlrec:ton. S..»t. St. Joeclllm Celhollc Cllurcll In Coll•
CAltMICMAeL Me ... Ca. on Wlldnesdey M•Y 3, 1'71
KENNETH L. CARMICHAEL. •oe •t • 00 A.M. In lieu of ,_rs. dona·
•· •Hldtnt of H1111llnoton e..c11, C.. Hons sllould be wnt to the Leuhm1•
• •nd away on Apr II 30 1t11. Soc1e11. tm Ketana Ave,. Anelletm,
Deaths
Elsewhere
ea. '2tcM.
MOU NA CECILE DIANE MOLINA, n 11dent
of L•ouna llNd\, Ca. Passed •w•y on
April 30, 197& LOvlno <laughter 01 Mr.
.. "'"· Geof'99~1M ... Of Lffl .. & Paul Molina, ell ol UOUN llff<ll,
Easing the Pain
New llabies Treatment Studied
WASHINGTON (AP> -Kristin
Belliard, 6, says her rabies shots
were like rolling on thumb tacks
every day, but scientists report some
reason for optimism in their battle
against the dread disease.
Kristin's story is a familiar one.
She and her 8-ye ar-o ld brother
Phillip went to a rarm in Ontario
three weeks ago to ride Lucky, their
aunt ·s favorite horse.
THREE DAYS LATER, Lucky fell
ill. Before the week was out. the
animal was dead. An autopsy proved
what the family had feared all
week-1'abies.
No one in the family had been bit-
ten by the horse or had any deep
wounds. But physicians advised them
to undergo the painful series or injec-
tions. JUSt m case.
There was a chance the virus.
borne m the horse's saliva. has
touched someone's eye or mouth
which collld lead lo transmission of
the disease . the doctors theorized.
SEVERAL DAYS AND 14 shots
later. Kristin talked or excruciating
pain, likening the injections to lying
on a bed of thumb tacks. She and her
brother were admlnstered the same
rabies Injections that are given to
some 30,000 Americans each year.
The series or painful shots is
necessary because there is no cure
for rabies once lts symptoms appear,
and it is believed to be virtually
always fatal.
The vaccine is derived from duck
embryos in a process developed
about 20 years ago, but which was 1
not used routinely throughout the
world until about 1972. The duck em··
bryo vaccine replaced the original
and more dangerous injections de-
veloped by Louis Pasteur from the
brain mau,er of rabbits exposed to
rabies.
THE RABBIT V ACCJNE, which
also was extremely painful to ad·
minister and could cause severe re-
actions including paralysis or even
death, was the one responsible for
J ( MEDICINE
• the awful reputation of rabies shots.
Now come sclenUsts and re·
searchers, saying with varying
degrees of assertiveness that they
may be on the verg~ or an important
development that could contain
rabies. which has been on the rise
among wildlife ii"! the United Stat.es.
Canada and much of the world in re-
cent years.
Or . William Winkler . a
veterinarian witb the Center for Dis·
ease Control <CDC> ill Atlanta, who
has been active in rabies research
for many years, said he expects the
government to issue a license thiJ
year for a vaccine derived from a
virus grown in human cells.
TUE VACCINE, KNOWN as m·
terferon, is available only on an ex-
perimental basis but has several ad-
vantages over the other embryo type
and doesn't cause adverse reactions
among people sensitive to duck pro·
tein.
It also can be adminstered in five
weekly shots in the shoulder instead
of tlt'e present dose of 14 to 23 'lnjec·
tions given under the skin of the
stomach. lower back or thigh.
The CDC, which Is part of the U.S.
Public KeaJth Service in the Depart·
ment of Health, Education and
Welfare. baa documented only three
caaes of humans who caught rabies
and survived.
ONE WAS A BOY lo Ohio who con·
tracted-ttJe"'disease...in !B'7J. .at lbe ~ge
or 1 aµd has recovered without any
arter·effects. Another was a woman
in Argentina. and the third was
a technician working on a new animal
vaccine in New York laboratory. The
technician had been inoculated and
was believed immune to <the .disease.
One year later, however, he con·
tinues to suffer some weakness and
speech problems as a result of brain
damage.
Trip Tip
Tie-in Et13y '" Find
'Squeaky'
~
Granted
Transfer
ALDERSON, W. Va.
<AP> -Lyn e tl l'
NATIONAL/ OBITUARIES
anon
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COMPANY---------·------' I
ADDRESS·-·--·---------1 CfT"(;; ____ _ ~--~---Zt~-~---1
I PHON -J
~~~~--~--~-------~-~
TOKYO IAP> -Peng
ibao·bul, 72, deputy chief
>r staff of China's armed
orces and a member of
he Communis t Party
::entral Committee. died
ast Tuesday in Peking,
he orricial Hs inbua news
1gency reported Mon· lay.
ea.. or •l'lddiuOMer of Mr. & Mri. E.
Molina of Colt:e llMY, Ca. Mau of Cllrhllen 8url.i w.dnalde'( ,._., 3,
1911 •t 11 ·OO 4.M.. .t St. C..lllM'IN '5
Mount Slnlll Otthollc CJl\lrdt wl"' Ille
Rev. MYlfl ~119llnen oftlclell119.
McCormlO L.eguna 8Mcft Mor11Nry
directors.
WASHINGTON <AP> -You don't have
to be a member or the Senate Foreign Rela-
tions Committee to love overseas trips. U
Sen. S.I. Hayakawa wants to go to Africa be
can always study palm trees or aquaculture.
"Squeaky" From m e. '-------------------------------
NEW YORK CAP> -
!lo.bert Beyer, 65, re-
ired managing partne r
•f the accounting firm or
rouche Ross and Co.,
10d former president or
he N atlonal Association
1f Accountants , died
"riday at his home in
~olorado Springs. Colo.
PARIS CAP.> -Robert
I>ebre, 95. scholar of
:hildhood diseases and
he father of forme r
··rench Prf'tne Minister
tlichel Debre, is dead.
Mef'AllLAND
JOHN McFARLAND. resident of
Cosle M.sa, CL PnteO _.,.on Aprll
lO. "" ....... Of ,,, Survived ...,
llll wife llleW M<FM1end.. f'ulWf'•I
w rvlces wlll Ill lleld Ofl W•dne~
May 3, 1'71 et 2:00 P.M. at lllll
Reformed Pl'flb'(terlan Olurc:ll In
Soutlllleld, Mldll9eft. ll'll•ment will
De at tM Soutlolleld Memorlel Peril,
Soutllllt ld, Ml(lll9aft. Sm iltl Tulllill
Lamb Costa MHe Mortuar y 1n <11••99
011ocal arrangeme"ts 646-'88t.
SMOUSE
TAMMY LYNN SMOUSE, nsldenl
ol Newl>Of'I llea<ll, Ce. P .. HCI awey on
April :IO, 1978 at Ille age of 11. SUrvlwo
ll'I' lier peren1s 811111 Jo and o.Grve
Smou~. Cremation end burial et -
co11cr11cted by Smith Tutlllll Lamb
cost• Mau Mor1¥arv ........
IOININO
GRACE 801!NING, resldellt of
lrvlne, Ce. Pn'911 •••Y on May 1, 1'11 at Ille age ol If. SUrvlved bl' ton
edward 8otnl}IO ol Irvine, Ca.
Funerel Mntltes ere PtOdlno •I Smltll
Tutlllll Umt> CollAI Mesa MO~y ~.
McGUlltE
AVE RY JASPER McGUIRE, rn•·
dent OI Gosta Mesa, Ce. Pauad ewey
on April 30, '"' at tlle 9119 of 6'. Suntlved by...., llstw Rubv HutlberO
of cost• ~ ca. and broeller LerO¥ Conner of CoslAI Mesa, Ca. Gr• ... lldlt
services -l11t•NN11f will IM llelcl on Friday May s. 1t11 et 11 :00 A.M. et
Fairview Ceme1e,., In 8owHno GrMll,
Kentucky Smllll Tutt.Ill Uml> OMIAI
Mase Mortu.-, In dl«9t Of loeel .,..
ranoements~
SANOe•
The California Republican is a member
or the committees on Human Relations and
AgrtcuUure, neither or which gets involved often with foreign policy.
BUT LIKE MOST senators, Hayakawa ls
Interested in foreign and defense policy.
Recently, he told reporters he hopes to go
to Africa and visit Rhodesia, Zambia and
Botswana to meet with different factions in·
volved in efforts to establish black majority rule in Rhodesia.
"Would the trip be charged against a
committee?" tbe senator was asked.
"I'm applying to one or my commiUees
for funding of It," he said.
"WhJch one?"
"SINCE HUMAN RESOURCES l>acked
the last one, I guess 1 have to ask A&riculture this time," sald the senator,
·'What would be the lie-in with
agriculture?" ·
·'I'll have to examine palm trees," said
Hayakawa. "I knpw what I'll do, I'll have to
examine aquaculture.
"I just had a bl~ hearing on aquaculture.
It isn't difficult to find a tie-in ••... i>nce
the agriculture committee decides they'd Uk~
to fund It, they'll have plehty of question., ror
me to ask when I get there."
sentenced to life 1 n
~rison for trying to a:.·
sassinate President Ford
in 1973, is being re·
ward e d for good
beha v1or with a transfer
to a California prison.
the wa.rd e n of the
Federal Reformatory tor
Women said today.
WARDEN CA RSON
M a rkle y s aid Miss
From me will be ri:eed
from the maximum
security unit here and
sent to the federal prison
at Pleasanton, in the
near future.
MISS FROMME is
from California.
"What we do is every
person who is assigned to
the unit is reviewed
every 90 days," Markley
said, adding that
transfers to the general
populaUon here or to a
prison closer to the in·
mate's home are based
upon "good behavior and
progress in tbe unit."
MOSCOW <AP > -
wtovie director Roman
<armen, 71, who won re·
1own for the front·line
locumentary films he
nade during th e
)panish civil war and
Norld War II, died, Tass
·eported Saturday.
ANNA HAZELGROVE SANDER.
ruodtnt of Senta Ana, Ca. Pan ed
•w•y on May 1, 1f71 et IN age ol 103.
S..rvlved by llW 111eca Mrs. Everett• Romig of COlfe'rlllle. Kensn. Funerai--------------------------------
Mrvlcn art ....,..no at SMl!tl Tulf\111
Lamll Coste MHe Monllary • ...-.
HAIGHT
E DITH E. HAIGHT. resident of <:Ml• Mew. Ce Pusao away on Ac>rll
----------JO, 1971. Survived bl' her r.on H•rwy F. Haight of <'.ml• Mau. c.a .• lier
11ro111er Wiiiiam Sandall and lier two
11,ter~ Mt\ Ehle H0•1•tll• and Mrt.
Joyce s1o11es •II of England, lour ora"d~o"' •nd two Qreat• orenochlldrtn. S..vlcM wlll be llelcl
on W1dn•S4ay Mey), 1971 al 2:l0 PM.
"' Baltz eerveron Costa Mesa O..pel. :.ervlces conchldl. lnuniment Sleepy
Hollow Cemetery, Nortll TerTytown,
New York. Beltz 8w99fOll l'untral Home Co.ca Mesa<tlrectors.
McCOIMfCC
MOITUAltlS
Laguna Beach
494-9-416
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Julin Capistrano
'96-1776
IA.LTWHCHION
flUMlllAL HOMI
Corona del Mar 6 73-9450
Cotta Mesa 646-2424
IB.&.UOADWAT
MOITUAIY 110 Broadway
Cotta Mesa
8'2-9150
SMftM.nmaa...u.MI
WISTC&llP CHAP& 427 E. 17th Sl
CostaMeM•~
Santa AN ChlPCtl
518 N. BroedwaV Santa Ana• 647-4131
.-cl~
IM'IMI" wonuAIT 827Meln8t.
Huntington Be.ch
638-8539 ...... ,
c~':"•AL
7801 8ol1& Ave Wntmlntttr
893-352&
~EH REA TTA MAY LOPEES, rftldl<!tol
L•OIM• Hiii•, ca. Paued •way On
Apr II 21, 1971 el tlle ... Of 7i. Swv1-
by Mr r.on.1 Freet lopen Of Ml11lon Vlelo, C• .• and Ric .. ,,. Lopees Of s.n.
I• Ana, Ca CAmatlon and burial at
•• conducted by Smllfl TUllllll Lamb
Coste Maw~ .......
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2,111 83
6 75\o . 698,
Alk aboui lpl01al raw on OD aoooanu of
$100,000 or monl
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
·'
...
. , TU19dlY1 May 2, 1978 I DAIL y PtLQl' A 9
Boy Reunited Witlt Fa1nily ·
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP> -A 4-year·
old boy. who told police his mother or·
dered him to leave bome was identified
today by h1a parents, who said he actua-
ly wandered away from an elderly baby sitter.
Police s,t. Willlam Rowe said the
boy, Charles Todd Jr., wandered from
the alt* after his parents dropped him
off at her house Sunday ni&bt.
THE YOUNGSTER WAS picked up
by police that night as be wandered
around the city's east iside with a suit·
case. He told offlc.ers that his mother
packed the suitcase and told him to leave home.
The chlld was expected to be reunited
with his parents, Charles and Anna Mae
Todd of Columbus, later today.
Rowe. who ~els the divl.slon or child
abuse. said he did not expect any
charges to be filed.
"THE CIOLD WAS with an elderly
woman that tbla family knew from
church. She wanted the child to stay
with her for a few days, and the ~ta
consented. They 'dropped the chlJd off at
the woman's house and be aw.rently
took bla suitcase and-walked out of the
home.
Rowe said the parents do not have a
telephone and did l)Ot know their son
was missing until they heard a news re·
port about the boy Monday nllht.
' "I TIUNK IT'S ooe or those situations
where l,OU can't r e ally blame anybody. ' Rowe said.
Nancy Essex, a community services
worker for Fraoklln County Children's
Services, said the worker who handled
the case ltlll want«! to talk }Vith the
parents before releaalni the 6oy, who
was under the custody of the county.
The boy told authorities he was 6
years old, lived in a red house and bad
two brothers.
Authorities said a speech lmpedl·
ment, or slow speech development.
made the child difficult to understand
and he was tmable to write his name or
addreu.
-I Y&Y DAY FROM 7 A.M. to I P .M.
For Tour
FRENCH BREAKFAST
with croissants.
brioches. quiches. etc.
225 Marine Ave.
Balboa Island 673-4001
l
---
l
T~. MtlY Z, t'7t
•
By Bil Keane
..........
"But Ooddy hos HIS elbows on the table."
··cot a problem'' Theri ti•nt~ to Pal Dunn. Pal will
cut red tape. getting the ansioors and ochon 1fOU Med
,to solve inequ1tws m y1w1•rnm~t and busineu. Mall
your questlcm.~ to Pot I>u1111. At Your Service,~
Coast DaJly Pilot, P.O. IJo:r 1560, Costa Meaa, CA
92626. As many Miers as possible will be ~td.
bu/ phoned mquanes or letters not hlctucfmg tM
reader's fuU namer. addreu a{ld bua&Mu hours' pll.oM
numbnca11not be coMJdered. This column appears dai-
ly except Salurdays ..
.
'Gag Order' R11Jing Due
WAS!~ ~~ru:he lo ~~=.~~~~dS b~~~.:.1 new•
U.S. Supreme Court has agreed ~avi.d ~ones, 21. were arr~led media.
to decide how much discretion lD Michigan three days later. · N t I R h l At a Nov. 4. 1976. pretrial Judges have in deciding when to . ews repor 5 n oc ea er hearing on a defense motion to keep reporters and lhe public said Greathouse Jed Michigan out of court proceedings. authorities to the place where be suppress certain evidence,
th h b · d Cl ·5 st le 1 S e n e e a C o u n l y J u d g e Setllng e stage for w al may ur1e app . o n revo ver. Daniel DePasquale approved a
become an important ruling, the Later reports said both suspects defense request and ordered all
Justices voted Monday to hear had confessed. spectators out of the courtroom.
the Gannett news organization's DePasquale ruled that some appeal ol a sweeping courtroom-A SENECA COUNTY grand dis access ruling by New York's jury indicted both suspects on matters cussed in the pretrial
highest court in a Rochester· charges of second·degree hearing might prejudice I.he de--
area murder case. murder and robbery. An ar· fendants' chances or receiving a
IN A HERALDED 1976 de·
cislon. the Supreme Court "ruled
in a Nebraska murder trial case
that judges almost never Are
justlfied In restraining reporters
from publishing or broadcasting
information gathered In open
court -restraints often called
"gag orders" by the news
media.
Although portrayed as a great
"free press" victory, the de·
clalon left unanswered whether
one of the other step\ judges
could take to ensure fair trials
could be closing certain portions
of the usually public proceed·
ings.
Use of such tactics has been
increasing rapidly since tbe 1916
decislon.
WAYNE CLAPP, .. a former
policeman In the Rochester sub-
urb or Briebton, N. Y .• was re-
ported missinJ{ July 19. 1976.
raignment after their extradi· fair ltial.
lion to R<>chester was widely
PORN DRWE
CR4LLENGED
CINCINNATI <AP> -The
president of Xavier University
has chided the Hamilton County
prosecutor. an alumnus of the
school, for dwelling on porno-
graphy in.stead of •'the roore
subs tantive problems or this
country."
The Rev. Robert W. Mulligan
wrote prosecutor Simon Leis Jr.
regarding Leis' opposition to a
proposed closed showing of the
film "Last Tango in Paris." Leis
last year successfUlly prosecut·
ed Hustler magazine ow.ner
Larry Flynt on charges or pan·
dering obscenity and engaging
in organized crime.
THE GANNETf CO. Inc .. a
large media organization head-
quartered in Rochester where it
owns two newspapers, objected
to the judge ejecting its re·
porter.
Gannett asked the county
court to reconsider its ruling to
make secret the pretrial pro·
ceedings. Since the hearing bad
ended be(pre Gannett 's com·
plaint. the ~pany asked that a
transcript of the proceeding be
released.
Relying on a "reasonable pro-
bability or prejudice to the de·
fend ants." the county court re·
fused to make public the hearing l'ecord.
A state appellate court dis·
agreed. and ordered the
transcript released. But the New
York Court of Appeals. the
state.'s highest court agreed
with DePasqu~le
~0~~~1lr!>ic!s SpUi ff.!.!_~• .. -··-Tight..,.-~ __
DEAR l'AT: l s there any way heir& to a ~ eez
moderate legacy can settle lhe estat~ without an ~ ·
utlorney.,
J.G., Laguna Beach
The new, sixth edition of "SeUllDI and
Safeguarding Estates lo California Wltboat an
Attorney -With Forms." is what you're lootlng
for. Author Clive HlnckJey bas covered everytblng
in tbis 240-page volume to enable tbe layman to
plan bis own estate or settle another. The bo01'
Includes Instructions, examples, cross·refereuces,
court addresses and a full set of forms. Look for it
In a bookstore, or order for $8 from Clive HlDckJey,
106 E. Sunset Drive, Re-.nds. Calli. 92373
fA1rnstarela Clearu IJp 1'ltt11
DEAR PAT: Help! My cat must have been in·
vestigating someone's garage. and he's covered
with what looks like car grease. He won't stand for
n bath and brushing doesn't help. How can I-get
him clean enough to allow back in the house? He's
getting depress~ being left outside all the time
' H.N., Irvine Try a cornstarch bath. Part yoar cat's balr
and sprinkle cornstarch into hls coat, or nab It ln lf
be baa short hair. Leave the cornstarda on loDg
eaoagh to absorb all tbe pease and tbeD brula
him vlgoroasly. 1bls me&bod also gets rid of dirt
and oil
R'anger'• Olliee Mo11t!d
DEAR READERS: Cleveland National
Foresl's Tnbaco Ranger Dlstrlcl Offtce (3' Civic
Center Plaza, Santa Ana> bas moved from Boom
926 to Room 526. ThJs office lssaes free "Golden
Age" Paasports to U.S. ctU.zens, aged 62 or older,
who 1re permanent residents.
Penoaal application wUb pro.of ()f age la re-
quired for the pass wblch enWles &Jle..hlder to free
lifetime admlulon to all national parka, mona·
menls and recreation areas. Holders also ncelve a
50 percent discount on federal ase fees and
facllltles such as parking and camping permits.
Rat Race t'ol~S~d
DEAR PAT: I ordered and paid for a $10 book
from Publishing Corporation of America on Nov.
12. 1977. The order form said t.o write the words,
"Seven Steps t.o Freedom -How t.o Escape the
American Rat Race," on a separate sheet of
paper. I don't know exactly what I should receive,
but my check has been cashed and I'd like my
merchandise.
G.D., Corona del Mar
Tbe Canton, Ob.Jo, publisher doesn't "exacUy"
know what you wW rettlve ell.ber. Appareatb &be
steps t.o freedom order abeet wu ued for sewenl
different pabllcatloas, according to a
spokeswoman for the publllber. A copy, of yoar
cancelled check <front and back> malled &o &be
firm will belp Hive &bis mystery becaHe
ldentlfica&loo codes were entered oa received
checks. Your order will be processed wbeD &lie
copy Is received. Le& A YS latow If tlal1 Sit
literature delivers a surefltt escape me&bod or lf ll
tarns ou\ to be another 1'1lDDJng of tbe mall-order
rat race.
Magazirae'• /tlaldng Ellert
DEAR PAT: 1 ordered some merchandise
from an advertisement in Family Weekly: I didn't
save the name-and address of the company and the
only information 1 have ls the name I wrote on my
Jan. 21 cancelled check ·Spring Grove Acres. My
order Is long overdue. but 1 don't know bow t.o con·
tact the company. D.M .. Huntington Beach
TbJa mercbaDdJse WH advertl.Md by a dlvlaloe
of Hanover Hoase, Haaover, Pa. Next time, date
and save the ad yoa me for yoar order.
AYS contacted Mary Ayres, eoa1amer
senlce9 dlrector for Famlly Weekly. SIM Iden·
dfied tile advertbet ud wtD eoatad HaDover
Roue oa yoar bellalf. c
lleaden are encoara1ed ao write &o Mary
Aym wben a problem oecva wtclt merc'•ed.IM
advertlled la Famll)' Weekl1. FW ew.tad8 &Ille M·
verUMI' ud foUowa throa&ll _. commmkatloll so Ute ew11•er. WrKe &o! ...., ~. J'aally
Weekl1, Ml Le~ An., New York, N.Y.
lent.
NEeD A LAWYIR?
&..o. ...... , ..
Thugs Carried Snake
WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP, N.J. <AP> -A
bandit wielding a five-root-long python had no trou·
ble persuading two teen-age gas station attendants
here to giveupS400, police say.
The bearded thief slung the snake, a non-
poisonous constrictor, around the neck of one atten·
dant after demanding money, police said. The allen·
dants, both students at Westwood High School, im· mediately complied.
POLICE SAID THE ~OBBER put the snake in a
white cloth bag, walked to his getaway vehicle and
drove ·ff.
The stick-up occurred at 9 p.m. Stmday at the U ·
Save gas station at P..as.cack-Road and Washinitoo
Avenue.
Detecrive Rober Maher said the youth who was
caught in the powerful grip of the snake was
frightened, but unhurt.
.. HE HAD QUITE a tale to tell his friends at,
school," said Maher.
Police said they were convinced the boys' story
about the snake was true.
Three HB Students
Win Merit Award
Three Huntington Beach youths are among
1,000 National Merit Scholars chosen from among
14,000 fmalists, the National Merit Scholarship
Corp. bas announced.
The youths, chosen on the basis of aptitude
tests, school records and recommendations, each
will receive a $1,000 scbol4rship.
Named were James J . Eastman of 16SS2
Marlana Circle and Michael M. Kong of 5402
Kenilworth Drive, both students at Huntington
Beach High School. and Paul E . Hunt of 16151
Ballantine Lane, a student at Marjna High School.
Coast College
Trustees Meet
Trustees of the Coast Community College Dis-
trict will meet tonight with representatives of the
Orange~ College AssocJated Students.
The meetlng will begin at 6~30 p.m. in the Stu·
dent Aff alrs Office, followed by a dinner 1n the
Captain's Table Restaurant oo campus.
A spokesman said trustees called the meeting
to meet newly elected offi~rs of the Associated
Students and as part of an effort by trustees to
maintain cle>Ser contact with students.
.Aid Workshop Slated
A free workshop on educational financial aid
will be held from~ a.m. to noon May ta at Orange
Coast College.
The workshop, which will cover the applica-
tion procesa and types of financial aid available,
will be beld In room 114 of OCC's Counseling and
Admlaalom Building.
REAL ESTATE
• CAREER MIGHT
Look u. OYW at a REAL TY WOJlLD career
Night ITeetJng.
DleocMr the adVltltaQ91 with the ~tzatfoft thll cen mau "A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE." .
FREE UCEHSaNG SOtOOL tc>quellfled penone
~TRAIHIN0progr81M
A9volutioNwy REAl8COPE m1~g toola
Nlwtpeptf • lV adYlrtlttng wpport
8llt MTIONAL rwferrat ayatem
can tor r..rvettont to '""' "°"' to 1»COme a full ti,.,. rtat Mtllt• prof .. lonal.
Tlmr. ~ o.i.: Thura., M914,,.1171
Plaoe: Limbert St. 8tA. 1402 E1 Toro
(Qnda ~ c.m.,}
.,.. ..... a
200-ft Gi,~ Wrap -Wire = • col' .... -............ -.. wwe meen bMloets b a rrUlltude of _,
Sllllll99c
mediuml.49
11,..1.99
J.tier3.99
LOCAL/ NATIONAL I AT VOUR SERVICE
Looking for ca.rpe.c? Check ~
LOW:ER
PRICES!
900 Samples ro Choose From!
' Carper Bro~n and Disuiburors
ate derermiMd w give you che
lowest possiblt price on qualir~
name brand carper! You'll fiod
over 900 samples of carper and
14 major brands in our
Lons ~ach showroom. He~·i ho111 we savt-and
pus chow savins-on to '/. ·
you: J,
.. ~-;:.-~ \;• . &'.~,
.::. ~rf~l
• v~
! l
• No<:.ommissioncd .\!~ ~ ,\ \
Salespersons ' ----=---· I \ • family Owned & ()peratW ~
• Only Open ~ Days a Week o:J L~
• No Credir Cards r-• .:2 , \..:
• No O>tdy ln"encory (
Our matoc' name branch iodude:
• Ba,.tlow • Catalina • Galaxy
• Evans & Black • World Carpets • Tuftex
• Cuscomweatt • U>roner a.·Monterey
If you're noc buying your carper at Catl>tl Brokers,
you're payina roo much! Chttk our Low~r l>rm today!
. T~·~L Hours. 10 a.rn.-' p.m.
4332 ATLANTIC AVE.
LONG BEAOI
} Modu Nonh ol ~ Sc.
Hundreds of beautiful pillows surround her.
Bil Ind bouncy sink-into= and ma"'y smaller sqUMeS ot comfort. tor cushions, pillows to floor. pillows to toss, pillows to throw, to flatter a settee or sofa ... even pillows to sleep on.
Your Akron store is~ pulsating pillow paradise populated by a ptethora ol pretty, plump, ~lar pamperers.
, Piflow.pursuanc? Here you II find yours at
. prices which are anything but plush. You may even find Mrs. Howard.
Oc1apnaJ Graphic Mirrors
• ~sides·
• our ectlt ___, mirror reflects tilll·scnened
~' offlowen .,., tlrdl .. .. .--.
Of--ln blulhed ... «GC**'
toi..
• etloul 18" _...
,...14.99 -· __ ....
ailliornla pllon l\CS
1.99
. ..,.._ ••wwe..,. ...
l
.
ORANGE COUNTY
6 Facing
. ~earings on
Gllll Charges
A WeatmJnst.er man and five
other men who allegedly sold
atolen euns to federal a1ents are
facing prelimtnary hearings on
a variety or felony char1ea.
Gary M. Meeker, 35, of 1102
Beatel Ave., Westminster, was/
released from Oran1e County
Jall on SS,000 ball following hla
arraignment last Thursday
before U.S. Magistrate Arthur
' Bradley in Santa Ana
He ls charged with aelllng
guns without a license. Hls co-
defendants in the case face a
varlety of other charf~S. authorities said, including aelllnC
firearms without a license, aid·
ing and abetting such sales and
conspiracy.
BOOKED IN addition to
Meeker were Robert Beman, 54,
of Bell; Ernest Newlin, 48, of
Hawthorne; Paul Isom, 52, .also
of Hawthorne: Duke Leonard
Fisher. 42, of Carson, and Ellis
LeP Huddleston, 50, of Lynwood
Ian MacAulay, Los Angeles
area supervisor for the U.S.
Treasury Department's Bureau
of A I coho I, Tobacco and
Firearms. said Meeker and the
other five have been under in·
vestigation since October.
Fund Goal:
ill ion
The United Way of
Oran1• County
North/SOuth baa set f7
mUUon u its fund·ra11ln1
1oal for 1918.
Last year, $5 mllllon
waa raised, United Way
officials aald. They said
tbey believe Oranre coun·
ty is capable o 1lvtn1
more because laat year
Seattle, Wash., with • population of 200,000 leas
than Orange Cowily. con·
tributed more than 112
aiUUon to United Way.
United Way helps fund
78 member agencies pro·
vidinJ a wtde ran1e of
social services.
Ope~House
At Goodwill
Goodwill Industries of Orange
Ceunty will bold an open house·
and orients.lion sesaion for
volunteers Monday from 1 to 3
p.m. at 5th Street and Fairview
Road in Santa Ana.
Volunteers are sought to help
rejuvenate the main faclUty
garden area: cond uct a
customer survey, help in
materials drives and prepare tor
future volunteer recruitment.
Volunteers serve as tour
guides. transportation aids and
recreation instructors.
Additional information is
.available by calling Mrs. J .
Anne Cohen at 547-6301.
State
It baan't taken lone tor the
nect1Ung California Transporta·
tlon Commission, particularly
lts chairman, financier Norton
Simon, to incur the wrath of
Oran1e County officials.
Orange County Transit Dis·
trict COCTD> officials learned
Monday that local officials as
well as those ln other counties
plan to Join ln protesting the way
the nine-member state com·
mlaalon conducts its business.
AT ISSUE IS the right of local
government leaders to addreu
Simulated
SpaceFUght
SetforOCC
''The Lef acy .' • the final session o Orange Coast
College's spring planetarium
lecture series, is scheduled to
begin May 12 at the OCC
Planetarium.
"The Legacy" is a simulated
night aboard an interplanetary spaceship or the (Uture and re-
y i e w s two decades of U.S. achievement in space.
The production will be shown at 7 :30 and 9 p.rn. on May 12. 13.
19, 20, 26. Z1 and June 2 and 3.
along witft a 3 p.m. matinee on
June 3.
They assertedly sold Z1 guns
int'ludlng pistols. revolvers,
rifles. ~sa~tf-::;hvtgun aod'fl
mach1n~ gun to ATF
platnctotbe5-operators -during
the probe.
..-··....-..: -------~
Although admission Is free, reservations are required and
m~ be made by eaWna556-ST12.
ABOtrr RALF of the weapons
bought by ATF a1enu were
traced back to their righUul
owners. who bad flied residen·
tial burglary report.a Uatlng their
losses by aerial numbers.
I
'\
Golf Meet
To Benefit
'Dimes'
Golfing bufrs are invit
ed to..$troll over the golf
course at Los Alamitos
Naval and Marine Corps Reserve Training
Center Thursday, that
yet.unborn children may
-someday walk too. ,
THE EVENT
sponsored by the Seal
Beach Police Depart·
ment March of Dimes
camapign is open to the
public, as well as all pre
sent and past military
veterans and police
-Patrol Capt. Sam
D ·Amico, the de pa rt·
ment 's March of Dimes
chairman, says the
tourney begins at 11
a.m. on the base at 4122
Orangewood Ave., off
Katella Avenue in Los
Alamitos
TOURNAMENT
awards will be ptesenl·
ed at a banquet that
night.
Organized originally
lo combat polio, the
March of Dimes bas
turned its allention to
rrnancing research into
all types of crippling
birth defects.
Further tournament
information may be ob·
tained by calling (213)
431·2541, D'Amico says.
Salt Marsh
Meet Set
A dl.scussion on pro·
t ection or local salt
marshes wlll be the sub· • ject or a meeting May 9
or the Orange County
Group or the Sierra
Club. •
The mee ting will
begin at 7:30 p.m. In the
forum' at Saddleback
High School in Santa
Ana.
Dr. Peter Eilers of Cal
State Fullerton will
show slides and discuss
his work on 1utdelin-es
for preservinl the salt
marshes. The meeting ls
open to the public.
( OlJTDOORS)
A bre1th ol fresh elr.
In the
DAILY PILOT
I
Student on Board
Rancho SanUago Community
College District trustees have
accepted a non-voting student
repreaemative on ttie board
beginning July t. The represen·
tatlve will be the president of
Associated Students at Santa
Ana College, board members de-
cided.
( THE BOOKH,\~ )
REVIEWS
In the DAILY PILOT
-You will
stop sm~king
on.lane 16th
•• Jf you Join Smokf.nders now and follow our IUCCe8lfuJ
program. SmokEnders will be a pleasant IUl'pt'IM. No
one at Smokf.ndera wW tell you to throw away your ~ or try to frighten you with talk of cancer.
emphyiema and heart disease. We won't ahodt you
with awnlon therapy, either, or UM hvPnollL What
we will do la t~ch i.i.ou how to atop ealdy, just as we
c&d ounelws. SmokEnders ls oomndlted to making the
quitting experience lnteres_t1119 ~ ~l' rewardlna. Pim ao .aexl a FREE EXPLANATORY SESSION. ••
and brtng your dgarettea .•. by June 16th, you won•t
need them anymore.
FREE
LOCATION 'SESSIONS (oome to eny 0¥)
Cona Ne.. Mondey
SOUft CcNl•t Pl•u Hotel Mey 1 or I -~~~~ ~~""
La .... llllla WedMMaJ Hyeltlodle May3or10
23111 PHIO dt V,._. 7:IO pm
SEMI NA .. ITA .. TS
Monday May15
1:10pnt
Moftdly
May15
7pnt '
... ~ .. .,.
10am
r •
For • COii= ... of .. 51 meetlnl looetlone throughout Loe ~ Venture, ~noe. Stn Bemtrdlno, S•nt• 8erbtr• end Rlvenldt Count ....... our tel In th• to. Altgt'I~ Tlma.
2f2A3 Ventura Bhd.,WOOCSland Hllllty ~ 9138'
/1 . .
T~. May 2. 1978
~
DAILY PILOT AJJ
Transit Panel Flayed
the commlaaion at Its monthly
meetinp.
cuss ruture rreeway buildlne al·
locations with the ~mmission.
rerred them to a three-member
committee that wUI meet tbls week In Sacramento. Al Hollinden. an OCTD direc
tor and cbalrman of the Oran1e County Transportation Com·
mission, said both he and Los
Anaeles County Supervisor Ken·
netb Hahn were barred from ad·
dressing the commission at its Aprll 21 meeting.
In particular. be said. they
wanted to protest a proposal by
CalTrans officials that would es·
sentially leav4l . local a1encles
out of the alloc6\lon process.
"We wanted to polnt out that we don't agree with that at all,''
Hollind¥ said ... They
(CalTrans> intend to keep locals
out of the priority process and
we say it should be done
locally."
Commissioner Frances
Mossmah. an Oranae County
planner who lives in Irvine, ls a
member or that committee.
Jn addition to protests expect·
ed rrom the four Southern
California counties who have
local transportation com·
missions, HolUnden said pro·
tests about the procedures or the
new state panel are expected
from the California League of
Cities and County Supervisors
Association of California.
"The chairman <Simon)
dresn't intend to get involved in
mundane issues like route loca· lions,'• Hollinden said. INSTEAD OF hearing com·
ments planned by Hahn and
Holllnden. the commission re· HOLLINDEN EXPLAINED
tbat he and Hahn wanted to dis·
I
-----
A ·UCB J.OllN
GOr <JSOIRCllMPER.
7HANl<S A MILLION.
•.. ANO MY VAClf170N.
iJIANKS A M//JJOH,
~~/,.
·\
~
... AND MY DIPJ.OMA .
7HA/'IKS A MIWOll.
. • AND MY /44NO.
... AND MV 80ff1:
71/ANl{S
7HANl<S
A MIL/JON.'
A MIJ..l/ON.
\ .
/
Now UCB is ping
1/2% Qff. the non11a1 inten:st
-~until July31
If you·ve been thinking about taking
out a loan, there's no better time than
right now. United California Bank is
offering most s)npte Interest Personal
Lo~ns of SlOOO or more at 'l'.2% off the
usual interest rate. And, if you have a
Unitc-d Account:9 you11 save another
~% interest on your loan-a total of
1% off the normal rate.
lbacaaeW11-..lvbvohoae. Dialt~~~~.
just call this toll-free number berween
9 a.m. and 9 p.m. weekdays. One of
oJr loan representatives will take your
application over thtt phone and. if
your loan is approved, you can stop m
at the brand1 nearest you to sign the
papers. uca·s Loan Sale cnd!duly 31, 1978,
so pick up your phone and call us
today. Or drop by any UCB branch.
You'll ht' glad you did.
This special limited-lime offer docs
not apply to real esrace or bomeowncr
loans; mobile home loans; mobile
home·lot loans; or to loans secured by
marketable securities, certificates of
deposit, life insurance policies, or
savings accounts. Special rat~s apply
only to loans of StOOO or more.
-,
la OAIL. Y PtlOT T~. Mly 2. 1f71
D iamond La ne Idea Not Dead
By 'ftlOMAS D. EUAS
Less than t.wo yean ago, Gov. Brown
took a abort drive UJ> the San Diego
Freeway in West Los An1eles and then
announced the scrappina of plans for
"blah ottupancy vehicle lanes" on that
roadway I
Brown's short aptn came about two
months after a federal judge ended the
diamond lane experiment on tbe nearby
Santa Monica Freeway, an abortive
push for mass transit that was probably
the least popular transportation experi·
ment ever undertaken ln this state.
DIAMOND LANES, OPEN only to
cars bearing three or more persons, re·
main ln use on some California roads,
mostly in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Even there, with freeway traffic loads a
bit lighter than in the Southland, the
diamond lanes are quite unpopular and
legislators occasionally try to get rid of
them.
This kind of unpopularity probably as-
sures there will be no new attempts to
install more bus and carpool lanes at
least until after the November electioo.
But two recent developments suggest
that when the political situation allows;
diamond lane experiments will be back.
FIRST CAME WORD that the new
Santa Mo nica Mountains Com-
prehensivel>lanning Commission would
A lbums
For Pets . ~ ---
-upcormng
TOLEDO, Ohio CAP>
-If p a r e nts buy
memory books to record
every detail or their off.
spring's first years,
why wouldn't doting pet
owners do the same for
U:teir dogs or cats?
Two Toledo autb,ors
think they will, and have
designed pet memory
albums they hope to
have on the market by
Christmas. 17
MG.TAR
. . , SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
take up the po$Slblllty of including tpah
occupancy freeway lanes In Its plan for
the mountain are' stretching from the
coaat near Oxnard to downtown Los
Angeles.
Several of the busiest and most over·
loaded roads in the natio~und
that range. Transportatlo~blems
perennially plague the area.
But the commission must be aware
that many leaders of the drl\'e to
eliminate the Santa Monica Freeway
diamond lanes live and work in the moun-
tain area. Pushing for new diamond lanes
. would be one sure way to alienate large
.. 4'! numbers of citizens from any good work
the commission might do.
Word comes also from the Southern
California Association or Governments
that high-occupancy lanes "will be a
main feature" of the public relations
drive that will accompany SCAG's
forthcoming regional transportation
plan.
SCAG'a NEW DIAMOND lane eff6rt
will be Joined by a county transporta·
~ lion commillsion and the state Depart·
m~t of TransportaUon, usually singled
19 17 17
tiG,W MG.TAR MG.TAR
THE ALBUMS are
e.alted-"My Dog's First
Five Years" and "My
Cat's First Five Years"
and contain spots for the
pet's photographs, fami·
ly tree and paw prints.
t2MG.NIC. UMQ.NIC. 1.0MG.NIC. 1.UG.NIC.
•'People treat their
dogs and cats like they
• do their children." said
author Marge Conrad,
53. "They'd buy them
anything."
THE TOLEDO
housewife got the idea
for the book when her
daughter received a
puppy for Christmas in
1975. She said it oc·
curred to her that "they
should have a baby book
for dogs."
She said she took her
idea to Tom Metcalf, a
family friend. Metcalf's
reaction was laughter,
but later changed to "if
pet rocks will sell, so
will this .''
2 Events
Set for
'Y' Unit
Two events open to
prospective members
will be held May 13 by
the Y-lndian Maidens, a
mother -daughter or·
ganizatlon ror first ,
second and third grade
girls and their mothers.
At 11 a.m. that day,
free hot dogs and punch
will be served at the
Orange Coast YMCA,
2300 University .Prive,
Newport Beach.
At the same time, free
cookies and punch will
be offered at Lions
Park. Park and Center
Street, Costa Mesa.
Additional informa·
lion is available by call·
ing 642·9990.
Gas Record
SACRA.M~O (AP>
-Callfomla motorists
burned 863. 7 m1111on
gallons or 1uollne ln
February, a record for
February, tbe state
Board of Equalization
reported. The board,
wtilcb collects the seven·
cent·l*'·lalloQ atate tax
on 1a101ln e, said
February tax recelptl weH t90.5mUUon.
~·
out aa the villaiD in past diamond lane
battles.
The transportation plan announce·
ment noted that the thr~ a1encles have
"no preconceived plans" for any one
tactic, but will use "the best technical,
roost s ocially feasible effective
transportaUon system."
Dlamond·lanes, thus, won't be used
,unless no other alternative can be
found.
STILL. PLANNNERS CONTINUE to
assume that preferential carpool and
bus lanes actually cut tr1.ff.: loads. But
the Santa Monica Freeway experiment,
on California's ·busiest superhighway,
demonstrated nothing or tbe aort.. With
available lanes cut by 25 percent, daily
trips by individual vehicles dropped by
less than 10 percent.
The combination or less space and
a lmost as muc h traffic produced
monumental traffic jams daiJ¥.
But diamond lanes are a pet idea of
both state plannen and federal agen-
cies like the Environmental Protection
Agency and the Urban Mass Transit Ad·
ministration.
As long as this la.true, plans to install
them will pop up whenever it is
politically feasible. In California, that
will probably be e.arly next year.
18 16 16
MG.TAR MG.TAR MG.TAR
1.2MG.NIC 1.0MG.NC. 1.1 MG.NC.
Wlaere's Bafr?
Looking more like Easter Island idols
tha9 performers in "Hair," members of
the Twyla Tharp Dancers rehearse a
scene for the movie, based on the 1960s
musical, at Sheep Meadow in New York
City's Centtil Park.
•
ANALYSIS/ NATIONAL
Curling
·Irons
1·
I
Recalled
WASHING TON (AP) -c. & s. Trading Co. or
Carson, Calif., ls recall·
lDI its Model 100 "Magic
Curl" band-held hair
curling irons sold
between January and
November 1976 because
of possible burn or shock
hazard, the Consumer
Product Safety Com·
mission said.
The iron bas no
permanent identification
mark, but the swivel
handle bb two stickers;
one has the name and
address of C. & S. and
the other says "Magic
Curl, 120V.a>c-s, H130W.
LOW l.SW,Korea."
Owners of the irons
can return them to the
dealer for free replace· ment or mail them to
C. & S. Trading Co., 138
East Savarona Way,
CaraQn, 90746.
·~~'"'
' ·--
18 ·11 18 14 . 18
MG.TAR MG.TAR MG.W MG.W
1.IMG.NC. UMG.NC. 'uMG.Wt MG.NC. Q.tMG.NC. UMG.NC.
._
"
5 r.
OnlY a mg. a I
As Iowas you can~ and
stlll get good taste.
\
•
•
INSIDE: •Comics •Movies s
-----·s-to-ck_s_·_T•-•e_v•s-1on .... ________ ~~~----....;~~-=~~nortS . Tueeday. May 2. 1978 DAILY ALOT :r-BJ
...
· Co11sy Raps Pro Sal&ry Stractur e
&NBA Star Now Commiasioner of Arrlerican Satter League
BOBCOUSY
.Wos' Brett
Duels Tigers
At Big A _,
With hopes that their second
moqth or the 1978 season can ap-
-proacb the sucress ·of the first,
the California Angels tangle wath the Detroit Tigers tonight
(7 :30) at Anaheim Stadium.
• Ken Brett <t·l > is penciled"in
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM
Of .. o.tty rllel SUH
The world of professional sports is an en·
dangered ~pecles. according to former Boston
Celtics star Bob Cousy4
"I think the salary structure is ludJcrous in
most pro sports today, especially basketball."
Cousy says. "I see the complete collapse of the
sports structure in the nelll d~ade if the lrt!nd con-
tinues."
Th<>M are strong words coming from the man
who h~lpeJ start pro basketball's first player's as-
sociation, but COUliY has now crossed the line from
labor to management.
Cousy is commlssioner of the American Soccer
League and sat in the press box recently as the
•f see a ..a•.i~ fafl t•rtt0ll cu t
flO aroUltd tlae COUllLl"fl'
California Sunshine played its season opener at
OrangeCoastCollege. ., .
Most observers see Cousy as a public relations ·
man -a famous name employed to help draw at-
tention to .the ASL. which bas always played in the
shadow or the North American Soccer League.
Cousy admits he has only a limited knowledge
or soccer. but he has some definite ideas about
how ll professional spart ought to be run. and his
words are as straight and true as his jump shot
once was.
"When owners bad the big stick. they us';;r it
to the detriment of the sport," Cousy says. "Now
the players carry• the big stick, and they're doing
the same thing.
~Don't get me wrong. I think a superstar
should be well compensated for what he does,"
eousy told the Daily -Pilot. "~ut lor •igbt.moolbs
. of _pJam '!..Child's game? Well, I think $150,000 is
more tlian adeqliS\e to buY'ffe groeeries alicfkeelf
the car running."
Cousy says the revolt won't come from the
beleaguered owners, but from the fans .
"I s~ a massive fan turnoff a.s I go around the
country," Cousy says. "It's impossible for the fan
to relate to the kinds of salaries the players are
getting these days.
··And when the owners are hit in the pocket·
book, it's eventually going to result in higher ticket
prices. It already has tn just about every sport."
Far from gloating, Cousy is instead distressed
at what he sees.
"If basketball goes down the drain. I'll resent
it." he says. "The sport had been good to me. All
the worldly goods my famur and I have enjoyed
are due to a child's game."
As commisioner of the ASL. Cousy is hoping to
guard against the trend he sees in other sports.
"Soccer ticket prices are lower than most
other sports and you don't see the sky·higb
salaries and agents." Cousy says.
But de~ite tbat. and the mushrooming
popularity of soccer in this country, attendance at..,.
pro soccer matches still doesn't rival most of the
other pro sports.
At the Stmshine's opener. club officials op·
timistically said they expected 7,000, but only 1.800
sbowed up.
"Realistically. we have a long way to go
before we can compete with pro football. baseball.
basketball and the other things vying for the en\er·
tainment dollar." he says. "We're .aiming at
becoming competitive about five or 10 years down
the road."
How does he propose to accomplish that goal?
"We have to acquaint the people with our
sport, and television is a big part or that." Cousy
says. "Also, we're tryiQg to Americanize it. We're
lil}liting the number oflforeign players each roster
can carry."
One problem that keeps major TV networks
away is that soccer is a contmuoussport there are no
tirneout.s for-commercials.
"I wish I had an answer for that one. but I
don't,.,~. 4 know the eddittoo of the
24-second clock was the salvation of baske{ball.
and we'll probably need some similar changes in
soccer to create more growth."
ror the Angels, opposing rookie
Jack Morris (0-0) on the mound.
Morris is still a tentative
starter. since he's recd'Vering
from a sore shoulder.
One ailing Tiger about who.m
the Angels will not have to
worry is Mark "Bird" Fidrych,
who was placed on the 21-day
disabled list Monday.
Fidrych was examined by Dr
Frank Jobe in Los Angeles and
Oilers Select Canlpbell;
Rains Pick Sooners Back
••-'• Slo HOUSTON <AP> -There ·~~ _ ~e _.__ ~eve.r_ was any doubt the
AllO-•KMf'Clt.._C11fl ---May 2 o.1ro11.c CA111°'n1'" 7:up.m o.us lon-""'Orrers w~U I cf" pa ck ~ Joe1n>1utc.t1torn1a MSt>m. Heisman ~rophy winner Earl
May ) c i..--•tGallfoml• 7•2Sp.m. Campbell in the first round or
told he has tendinitis of the right
shoulder. Fidrych ls 2.0 and his
chances of returning to the rota·
tion will be reevaluated arter his
-21-day rest.
The Tigers will b'e in Anaheim ror a two-game ffries whicn con·
eludes Wednesday night. and
after an oll-day Thursday the
Angels will entertain the
Cleveland Indians Friday and
Saturday nights and Sunday af.
ternoon. The Angels ' 14-7 record and
. 667 percentage for April
represent the f inest
performance by any Angel club
m any month of any season.
Manager Dave Garcia doesn't
expect a repeat performance in
May.
"1 '11 be satisfied with a .600
percentage this month," Garcia
says. "U we can play .600 ball
through May that, along with
our good start in April, should
· put us in pretty good shape."
Tonight the Angels are hoping
to return Joe Rudi to the lineup.
Rudi has been sidelined with a
leg muscle pull but Garcia said
tlJe steady left fielder should be
ready to return to his pasition
for the Tigers series
today's National Football
League draft. but the Oilers
pulled a surprise by having his
mother make the selection.
K. S. "Bud" Adams Jr., the
club.owner, turned tbe telephone
ove~ to Mrs. B. C. CampJ>ell of
Tyler. Texas. and she advised a
team representative in New
York or Houston's official aelec·
lion.
"He's the little country boy that grew up in the sand in Tyler.
better named as the Tyler
Rose." Mrs. Campbell said .
She then received a dozen red
roses from Adams.
Campbell was in New York
but was to fly to Houston for
mid-afternoon ceremonies to
sign a contract reported to be
worth more than Sl.3 million.
Meanwhile, the Los An·geles
Rams, picking 21st, selected
University of Oklahoma running
back Elvis Peacock, a speed·
burner.
Don Ktosterma~ general
manager of· the .Rams. saist he
couldn't believe Peacock was
still available.' so he did some
quick trading .and seleded the
big running back.
Klosterman swapped the
Tough Derby Task
Affirmed Bucking Sentiment
LOUISVILLE, Ky. <AP> -Laz Barren, trainer of Affirmed.
says his colt not only races .a tough rival in' Alydar for Saturdayts
104th Kentucky Derby, but he's bucking sentiment for the Calumet
Farm colt.
Not even the presence of Kentucky-born-and·bred Steve
Cauthen aboard Affirmed is expected to sway the favorite's role
from Alyda,r, winner or the Flamingo. Florida Derby and Blue
Grass Stakes.
''Logic says we should be the favorite," sa.id Barrera on •
chilly Monday monling at Churchill Do~. "We beat him four ofstx
races. If th.i.& r11ce was in California, Affirmed would be the favorite:
but tt 's Kentucky, so Alydar will be favor~d."
Alydar'a probable favoritism will t;>e built a '.ireat 'deal on the
fact that Calumet Farm, winner of a record eight derbies, Js a
leeend among racing fans, especially in Kentuclcy. ·
Adding to the sentiment: the owners, Admiral and Mrs. Gene
Markey, are in their 80's, and Calumet hasn't had a Derby winner
since Forward Pass won it ln 1968 when Dancer's Image was dis·
.qualified.
Affmned, owned by Harbor View Farm, scored those victories
over Atydar last year and emerged as the Eclipse Award winner
as lhe top 2·year-olcl. They haven't faced each other this year and
both are unbeaten as 3-year-olds. Affinned's bi1 wins this year
came in the Santa Anita and Hollywood Derbies.
··1 know one thing," sald'Barrera. "My colt ls very SOW1d and
tn beUuva good shape. All we need now ls luck in the race. Knock
on wood." The Cuban·bom trainer, who saddled ma Derby winner
Bold Forbes, .rapped bis knuckles on the wood at the tack room en·
trance.
Asked ii he waa apprehensive about havtnc youn« Cauthen, ap-
pearing in bis flnt Derby, as Afflrmed's rider. Barrera said,
"Cauthen learned how to be a Jockey oa this track. He's cool. He
rides like he's bhn ridin~for 100 years.··
Cauttien, ot Walton, Ky •• wbo turned 18 Monday, was the na-
tion'• leading rider In vtctor1~ <417> and purse earnlnes with more than t6 mlWon last year. He has been Alftrmed's reaui.r jockey .
escept fOf \he Santa Anita Derby when be wu under susl)enaion.
EARL CAMPBELL
Rams' 23rd pic1' and another on
the fourth ro\1J1d lo Cleveland.
getting the Browns' 2Mb selec·
lion-and Peacock.
"He·combines rare speed with
size.·· Klosterman said or
Peatt:ock. a 6-foot-l. 220 p0under
who's·reportedly been clocked in
4.4 ~econds for--tO yards.
"We just couldn't pass up his
kind of value in the drart."
Two Southla"*" linebackers
were tabbed on the opening
round. USC's Clay Matthews. a
232-pounder whose father played
for San Francisco in the m1d
1950s, was picked by Cleveland.
And Dan Bunz. a big. fast 280-
pounder from Long Beach State.
was selected by San Francisco's
49en.
Grambling quarterback Doug
Williams. an All·Ameracan. was
-ptcke<.FbYTampa Bay-=~m:
ing the first black quarterback
ever selected in the opening round. _
The first round took Just 2
hours. 10 minutes compared to more than 3 hours last year.
* * * How NFL Teams Drafted
l'IRST•OUHD
Hou•ton-Eul Cam~ll tT•aeu, runn•nv t>a<ll.
Kansn Otv-Arl 51111 11(..,tuoyl, ~1,..
end. Ntw Ori~ O..lldltr ll'IOrlOel. wtdot
f'Kettfef~ N•• YOf'fl Jets-OWis W•~ IOlllO Slaltl, Of
l..,slvt laOlt,
Bullelo-Te<ry Mlllff (Oklahoma State>. run
nlnv oao.
G'"" 8ey-Jemes L.otlOft 1s1 .... •°"' 1. wldt ,.,
cet..er. •
S.n l'r.-clKA>-l(tn MacAlet !Notre 0. ..... 1.
tlQlll end. .. Oncl11n.tll~oss 8roWller !Noire O•mtl, "'"
fenslvtend. SHltl~ltll SUnpson CMtlT\Olll. Slettl. Cle
,.nstw back. New Yofll Gl...,b~don KlllQ CSl..,lorcll. 01
ftMIYt tackle
Ottroil-uittl9r l!k'acllty (Molrt Oamtl, ele-
1-lve ba<lr.. Clewt...O-Oey~tttllwS CVSCI llneba<k.r
Allanta-Mlllt Kenn IMl<hlQ•lll, OllMSIY~
t.llllt. Stn O~ Jetfwson IArl-. Sltltl,
Wldot rKtl-. SI. Louis-Sltvt little CArlr.tns.nl,
pla<elllcMr~er. Cln<lnMtl~r ll4ISl'I (WAl/tlnotonl. , _ _..
Tampa &ay-OOUO Wlllla<ns lGram1>11n111,
Q~··~ .... New EllOllllCl-&b Cr~ !Alao.tma I, gu.trcl
SI. LIHll~ ~ IWaslli"91011 Slattl, a..
ltMlnba<I<. Cltvtl.nd-Tr.otcl to LOs AnQtlH tor the
R1ms· 11~ .io tourtti round p1<1<s
Los All(lltlel-Ehll• ~•coo <Ol<tahomtl, run-
1111\Q a.<ll M•nnt\Ol~ HoUoway 1Plllsbur9fll, Cle·
lensin i.<Jlle. Plllsbu~ JotlmOn IEAlttnl Ml<fllQ9f>I,
Cleltnllw b9dl. ~ Clevet~ NewlOf'M "fAt-.n.>. W>de
"c~•-. San FrMKIK~ 8""' ILonO ee.acn Slatel,
llnetiaoer.
8alllmor. Reece Mee.ti <Autwrn,., t19M -
Gf'Hl\ e.ty <tr...., ITOm 0.l<tandl-.-An-
dtnon IMIClll911"1. 11 .. 1»<11.er.~t.,.
O.nnr-<>on i..1tmer I Miami, l'la.1, ~lw
laOlt. . OallH-lMTv &eltlN 1Mk114Q9ft StAlt.l, Ot-
9-Mlw t.cllw.
llflJIPll 18t• ler C'aldlie• . "
-~..-~
SEATTLE'S GUS WILLIAMS DRIVES ON CORKY CALHOUN.
Port land Ousted
Surprising Sollics
"' .Dismantle Blazers i
SEATTLE IAP> -Suddenly.
1t becomes a question of how far
the Seattle SuperSonics can go.
Playing with the confidence
and poise that got them through
the rugged times early in the reg-
. ular s eason. the s urprislng
Sonics dispatched th e
bele aguered defending world
c h ampion Portland Trail
Blazers from the National
Basketball Association playoffs
with a 105-94 victory Monday
night.
The triumph before a wild
Coliseum sellout crowd or 14.098
gave the Sonics a 4·2 margin in
the best ·ol-seven series and
sends them into the Western
Conference finals against the
winner of the Denver· Milwaukee
series.
"It looks like we're in the
groove again. If we are. there's
no telling .how far this team can
go," said a smiling Lenny
Wilkens. who took over as Seat·
ue·s head coach Nov. 30 with the l
team mired in the Pacific ,
Divis ion cellar with a 5·17 '
record.•
"Our team showed lots of 1
courage all year long," Wilkens '
added. "It seems we have had to I
prove ourselves time and time
again. I think it will be more en-
joyable from now on."
For Portland. a city that went
bananas over its Blazers last
year as the club fa shioned upset
after upset en route to the NBA
title. injuries -and the Sonics
-rtnally took their toll in the
end.
"This 1s one of the greatest
group or individuals I've ever
been around . They've never
quit," said a d1~h~artened
Portland coach Jack Ramsay.
.. They've shown poise and as
much class as can be expected
with the adversity that we've
had."
A streak in the final three
minutes or the second period in '
which Seattle outscored
Portland 12·0 to take a SS-49 half·
lime lead gave the Sonics
momentum going Into the
second hair. ·
"We were all in tune for the
game. We were not going to be
denied." said veteran guard
Fred Brown. whose 11 second· •
period points s parked the I
Sonics' rally before halrume.
"They made that run. and up
until then it was pretty even,"
said Johnny Davis, whose 23
points paced the Blazers. "But
that's when they got their
momentum. They started play-
ing with intensity. They played
-super basketball."
Playing without regulars Bill
Walton and Bob Gross and key
reserve Lloyd Neal because of
Injuries, the Blazers stayed
close until mid way in the final
period. But six straight points on
a pair of Dennis Johnson fm!
throws and baskets by Wally
Walker and Gus Williams gave
Seattle an 83-73 lead with 8:07 to
play. Portland never got closer
than eight point.a after that.
While Alydar and Afllnned are expected to be the top two cholc~, Joeeph Taub'a SenA\Uve Prince, unbeaten in slx career
1tartJ, a.ad HJckory Tree Stable'• BeJieve It, the Wood Memorial
winner, also 8(9 ~garded aa top contenders ror the l"·tnU• race. nnt let ol tborou.abbred raclni's Triple Crown.
A neJd <:I. 10 11 Ukely, with the reet exS*ted to be Chief or Dix·
ieJaod, Hollt The Silver, Elopa Folblea, Dr. Valeri, D•rbJ Creek
Fellow jockeys sing Happy Birthday to
Steve Cauthen, who celebrated his 18th at
the Aqueduct race track In New York
Monday. From left are Nick Sa.o.Lagata.
Jorge Vctasquer.. Robert McKnight,
Cauthen, Jean Cruguet and Angol San·
Uago.
"We played well w.ith a lot of
lntenslty. but they deserve t"' go t
on to hlaber things," f id 1
Maurice Lucas( who scorec 22
points and pul od down 12 re·
bounds. "It was a rough sea on.
Unfortunately lt liappened wo
had to 10 with an elaht·•nan
squad at times dur}na the
MllOD • Road aid. ll81DM*l Earl. • • • .J ---
\
... .
Ill DA.IL 'r fttLOT
Ali Has
--Advice
For Foe
NEW YORK CAP> -Muh.am·
mad All. perh1p.s better than
anyone else, can understand tbe
problems of his recent con·
queror, Leon Splnks.
"Being world heavywei1ht
champion is not toueb at all."
Ali told a small group of ~·
porters that gathered around
• him befOt"e a new« conference
:-Monday to announce that the
Ali·Spinks rematch would be televi.sed Uve by ABC Sports Sept.
IS.
"But you can make it hard on
!"' yourself.''
--"""' .. The rematch. for which ABC
paid about S5'1 million after
CBS dropped out of the biddlng,
will be televised from 8-11 p.m.
EDT as part of a championship
tnplebeader. The other fights on
tht> card have not b"een an·
nounced
STRIPPIEDOFTITLE ~ ' Spinks. 24, who took Ali's
• ~: world heavyweight title with a
:' ~ is-round split decision Feb. 1S in
Las Vegas, has been arrested
twice in his hometown of St.
Louas since he became cham-
pion.
He was stripped of hts title by
the World Boxing Council for not
fighting Ken Norton before
agreeing to a rematch with Ali
in New Orleans. The World
Boxing Ass ociation s till
recognizes Spinks. ·
f~y. May 2. 1971
CAGE INDUCTEES -Men recently induct
ed into the Naismith Basketball Hall of
Fame pose for pictures after cere mony an
Springfield. Mass .. Monday. From left are
Cliff Hagan. athletic director at the
University of Kentucky: Joe Fulks. Jr ..
..........
who accepted for his father. Joe Fulks.
who was inducted posthumous l}: John
Nu.calola. a referee for 30 years : Jim
Pollard. an eight-year pro and Stanford
All-America: and Paul Ar1Z1n. 10-ycar pro
and Villanova All-Americar1
~·gel Bats Still Cold
Htilos 14-7 Despite Anemic Averages
MISCELLANY
Sports in Brief
PhiJJies' Ba.ts
HWitble Seaver
For the first ume lO bis career, Tom Seaver is concemed.
·•I've never had a period like the one I'm going through now.
lt's been a humbling experience." Seaver said after fa.lllng to fe·
cord a victory In six starts this year.
The Philadelphia Phillies. behind the
pitching and hitting of Steve Carlton. bom ·
barded Seaver and Cincinnati in a nationally
televised 12·1 romp.
lt was the third straight loss for Seaver.
who was roughed up for seven runs in the two
innings he pitched and admits he's struggling
through the . worst stretch of his gloried
career . ... ,
"At times I feel fine. then all of a sud.den.
out of the blue . " he said. shaking his head
without finslhing the sentence. TOM. UAVH
"It's embarrassing and extremely frustrating. I wlab I knew
what it was. If .I did. 1 wouldn't be in thlJ situation." Seavt>r's ~a med run average balloned to 6.52 after Monday'' outing.
11a A T rack Coarll Ctdb IJSC FaMrk~
LOS ANGELES -UCLA coach Jim Busti says he thinks his
Bruins and Southern Cal's Trojans will be the teams to beat in the
NCAA track and field championships nut
month. but adds. "Of course, we will have to
worry about Washington State, tJTEP. and
some oft hose other ·foreign eountries' "
Bush.Jong a critic of schools that recruit
foreign track and field athletes. said Monday
_that he thinks lbe Bruins WUl do very well in the
'NCAA showdown in Eugene. Ore.
··And after watching USC in our meet last
Saturday, I think they have to be the favorite."
he remarked at the weekly Southern
.11M uSM California track writers· luncheon. "I know
W asbington State is the ra vorite now. but if we apd the Trojans do as welJ as we did last Saturday, well. . .'' -
UCLA lost to Southern Cal 8H'O in the annuah dual meet He has been sued for back rent
or an apartme n t in -~----Philai;ielphia_ .:uJfl he has-Pm:·. · rowed mooey frorp his manager
While Angels fans were Pilot sports staff has concluded, mg IVA champion Stars opened showdown between the two cross-town rivals. but both Vern Wolfe.
~!&b.l:.ati.ne -.the-cl~&l • ., ~~~-by s~ ~&ion. Utat the-r.~ M1>nday at Santa Amr"CoUege. ---t.'1-.. ~h 'Ot1be'Wb:mlng-"rTOjans. and'Tfusb agreed they were pleased
ningest month ever-14·7 for World ChampiQllS_)Yjjl b~ J.lle _Am.opg.t.~new Jaccs in ~amp is •• ~ijltqeirteam'.spedormanbe. _ --• • > :.
prH-nu111age 'Daw Garcta"'~Clh~lnnatrRMS. · ~ • Mary Jane Smath: a back row "We had 17 lifetime bests and 13 add.ibonalsea!On's bests .. said ....,_.,._.,,_.=~o:r~. Mltt'BIOtles, 9tlo·har
..
•• .. . .. .
I
been struggling with Top Rank
Inc .. and Leon's attorney, Judge
Ed Bell, for control of the
fighter
seemed dissatisfied as he sat in The divisional winners, ac-specialist lured to Oran~e Coun· Wolfe. "andittookeverybiloflhattobeatUCLA/'
hisoffice. cording to the crystal baseball. ty from the Santa Barbara
''This isn't exactly the will be Cincy, Philadelphia, the Spikers. She replaces Hilary LA Prep Grid Star Gofag to ll•"'ard toughest part of our schedule.'' New York Yankees and the Tex-Johnson. who deferted to the
LOS ANGELES -Ron Cuccia, a quarterback who tossed~l
touchdown passes in three undefeated ·high school seasons sent a
letter of acceptance to Harvard Monday.
T he first arrest was for driv· Garcia concedes. "We should tx-as Rangers. San Diego Breakers.
winning a lot. Maybe more than mg without a license and d~ving
the wrong way down a one-way
s treet The second was for
possession of coeaip.e and mari·
1uapa. BeU says papers bave not
yet been served on the late-st
charges. and that Spinks, who
live!. in Detroit. will get a
Michi~an driver's license today
NO VIPTREATMENT
we have." VOLLEVBAt.L DREAMS-
Another locker room commenl Are you tired of havang your
which was almost whispered
came from first baseman Ron
Ja,ckson, the Angels' leading bit·
terat .~
"We need more hitting from
the catcher's spot and we need
more from the outfield,"
Jackson said.
Catcher Brian Downing is bat·
ting _.2.19 while o!lM_ielders -!oe
Rudi, Lyman Bostock and Rick
Miller are struggling at .250, .147
and .217.
· ··He's got to realize he's
human, and the law·is for every.
bod~... said AIL "There is DO
VIP treatment. I do things that
if I got caught, I would be in
trouble. too. I'm sure that the
things' that happened to Spinks have happened to everybody. ALL·STAR BALLOTS-They
"When the policeman comes call it the nation's largest non·
up to you, you sa}. 'Yessir. political election-the balloting
boss.· but he got proud and says. for the American and National
·com e on, man , you know who 1 League 1978 All-star teams
a m . ( • m L e 0 n s p i n k s , Five Angels are candidates
heavyweight champion or the Bostock, Downing, Rudi, second
world.· baseman Bobby Grich a nd
.. But you can't be proud." Ali shortstop Rance Mulliniks.
said. "You got to remember. Jf th~ vote w~re held now. the
Lhis policeman is making $300 a only Angels to make the squad
month. and Spinks is making would be two not on the ballot
$300.000 an hour pitchers Nolan Ryan and Frank
Dave
Cunningham
great diving plays go unnoticed
on the beach volleyball court.,
Think you're ready for the lights
and glamor of pro volleyball?
If so. you'll get your chance
Wednesday, May JO, when the Orange~unty Stars hold an
open tryout at Fountain Valley
High. Anyone is entitled to try.
Tryouts will be held between
7-8 p .m . and coach Dodge
Parker says the Stars are look-
ing for someone to fill their
fourth hitter spot.
Training camp fqr the defend-
<
BEACH BUNDLE-More than
Sl.000 wa s raised for
's cho l ars hips during the
Emerald Bay beach volleyball
doubles tournament. conducted
by the ~guna Beach Volleyball
Club.
Scholarships will be given lo
deserving student-athletes, and
one of the prime candidates 1s
Nancy Tresselt, a Laguna Beach
.High senior wbn.just happened
to win the women's division at
Emerald Bay. .
Tresselt teamed with Anne
Cunningham for her crown. She
was also named MVP for the
tourney. Men's division winners
were Skip Allen a nd Gary
Hooper. ·
Cuccia passed' for 8.804 yards and had total offense of 11.451
yards. both reported to be n~· nal high school records Harvard
was chosen. his father indi • because \t has a quarterback·
oriented football offense. Vic Cuccia. who also was has son's coach at Wilson High School
in Los Angeles. said the younger Cuccia wanted to a ttend a pre
dental program or an Ivy League school and also had considered
Princeton and Yale.
At 5-foot·9 and 160 pounds. Cuccia was coMidered too small io
play quarterback for college football powers after leading Wilson
to a 39-0 tecord in three seasons. But he did visit the campuses or
Oregon State. Wyoming. Paclf1c.-nxasl\ and Mand UCLA.
"USC showed no interest. You've got to be 6·2 to go there." his
father said
,ilnd in Ot fwr S port ..•.
BASEBALL -Marte "The Bird" Fidrych won t be flapping his
talented right wing for a while -which is good news for Detroit
opponents. Fidrych was placed on the 21-day
disabled list Monday with tendinitis in bis
ALL·STAR VOLLEYBALL-right shoulder ... Texas· Fergasoa Jmklu
Orange Coast area coaches are was named the American League Player of
kicking around an idea to hold a the week. Jenkins. a patcher. allowed one
north-south volleyball all-stac..---ellmed run, eifi(ht hits and two walks in beat-
match June 2 at El Toro High. ing Kansas City and Boston. He is 2-1 for the
The Mission Viejo Excban~e season ... A Bloomington, Minn. city at-
Club is offering sponsorship. torney said Monday that charges probably
would not be filed against New York Yankees
"And the policeman says, Tan_ana. . ·vou know who 1 am. I'm officer P atcbfrs for the squads will be
Jones. Let's go'." sele~ted by managers Billy
Later, during the news con-/ Martm of the Yankees and To~
ference. Ali told Spinks : "You Lasorda o;, that team across
know, you're doing something "' town.
real smart cause l wasn't rec· F. N AND P R OPHET-
King UpRts Eve,-t
15,132 See WIT Match
Ciltcher Tbarman Munson, who was accused'
O( Choking a 22•YC&r-Old Student WhO tried to TM,lltMAN M
secure an autograph on a fraternity paddle last.Friday naght ..
Cl«=.veland pitcher Wayne Garland will undergo surgery on his
right shoulder and will be sidelined for the remainder of the season
. . . Former slugger Frank &blmon. major league baseball's
first black manager. is mulling the prospect of piloting the
Rochester Red Wings in the International League. Robinson is now
a Baltimore coach . . . Cincinnati's Pete Rose went hitless Mon
day night, thus still needs four more hits to reach 3.000 for his
career . . . St. Louis Cardinals star Cart Rood is returning to
baseball as an announcer with the Oakland A's Flood makes his
debut tonight with veteran announcer Bad Fosler.
ognized as chameion until I Pennants have been predicted
beat Sonny Liston twice . . . all for even1iQPe from Seattle to
through history, the challenger Philadelptlll, from New York to
has bad to beat the champion Anaheim. Since they haven't ex·
twice before he was recognized. panded the number of divisional
But next time you won't catch titles to 26 yet, a lot of pre-
me off guard; next time you'll season predictions are going to
see ·a better Ali, and a better look silly come September.
Leon Spinks." For what it's worth, the Daily
NEW YORK CAP> -Billie
Jean King had trouble remem·
bering the last time she beat
Chris Evert. However, that
won't be the case today.
King posted a 6-4 victory over
· Evert Monday night, blghlight· '
ing the New York Apples' 31-18
AUTO
LEASING
THE WAY
IT
AUTO BE!
Baseball Standings
•
1978
14.MMYlaSAIY
COUGAR~
LIA.SIMI
A.SLOW AS -
5 12946
Mo. + TD & Lie.
Gap COit le660. Totll of
mo p~• ••eeo. H Realdult . 38 mot
OAC ........... ...., ..... , ...
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Detroit
Boston
New York
Milwaukee
Cleveland
Baltimore
Toronto
W L Pct. GB
13 5 .722
12 9 .572 21~
11 9 .sso 5
9 11 .•50 5
8 1 I .421 51".z
8 12 .400 6
8 13 .381 61h
West Division
Oakland 16 5 .762
Kansas City 14 6 . 700 .1 '>'I
Angels 14 7 .667 2
Texas 9 10 .474 6
Chicago · 6 12 .333 8a,.,
Minnesota 8 16 .333 9~
Seattle 8 18 .308 lO'h
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct. GB
Philadelphia 11 7 .611
Montreal 11 8 .579 1'2
Chicago I 1 9 .550 1
Pittsburgh JO 9. .526 1 lrl
New York 10 13 .435 31".I
St. Louis 9 12 .429 31,-l
West Dlvlslon
Dodgen 13 7 .650
Cincinnati 13 9 .591 1
San Francisco 11 10 .524 21h
Houston 10 12 .455 4
San Diego 7 13 .350 6
Atlanta 7 14 .333 61.-'l ......., •• ac.rw
Plltsllul'Vll 7, Sen OleOD t
Allent• 6, ....... York S
Pl'tll-*111111• 12, Clnc:l~tl ' S.11 Fr-lsat2, SI. UKllJ l
Oflly SIMMS ldlecllll.O • ,...,..,._,
S.11 Fr-tlCD (~Ml •t SI. L.Ouh II
Fon<llJ.21
LosA ...... lJollll"41M~(lt lt-"tl
J.21
HCMIS-(Ilic."*"' HI • Moll1Nel CTWlkMll 1-1cwo-•11,11
S.n 0'-911 10..CIMllko 1-JI _. PlllMW'tlll (Qin.
Olll•rl• 1-1). 11
Hew Yorll lS.111'11•'19' AllMt• (ltlllllWft 1.JI, n Oftly--~
Wll I 1..,..0-..
Loi ........ OllUoo
HOftlM• ~.n
s.no .... •"'~" N.-YOtti•~n
PllllMll,,... M ~I. II
S.11 Fr...a.»• SL Lolrit, n
LEASING •••
ALL MAKES
ALLMODB.S
NEW
OR
USED
World Team :rennis triumph
over the Los Angeles Strings
before a record crowd of 15,132-.
King, wbo had lost her last six
non-WTT matches with Evert.
said her victory may have been
the final step on a long come·
back road from a series of knee
operations.
"l think it's a start for me to
t back to playing the way I
I .. the six·time Wimbledon
es champion said . "Last
year w as t errible for me
psychologically. ··1 just wanted
to make a real effort tonight."
Evert, who has now lost four
of five career WTT matches
with King and suffered her first
WTT singles loss this season.
was never on her game.
· · 1 didn't feel I played my
game." Evert said. ..I didn't
feel I played ri&ht, I was stru~
gling. l was ~ little nervous
becausethecrowd was so big ...
In the only other WTT match
Monday night. the Boston
Lobsters won every set to crush
the Phoenix Racquets 31-17.
.... .,.,..,LM ....... 11
W-n -King (HY) dtf. Ewert. M ; Klno·
llV$Mll INYIClef •wrt.ICIY'Ol"IW• ... I.
M.n -0«111.it11 (HYI ... "· Amru .. 1 .....
R11tfels·ltllts•ll IHYI Clef. "· Amr1tu1 A
Anlrllr•J, M . MhlH -ftlAftl .. ltlllMll (HYI eet. ~W
l(IY9111Ufe,. l-S.
A-U,lltat*"'YOf'll
.... 11, ......... 11
Women -Hnr•lllon t81 del. "••· • 1
N•Yl'aUlcw.-.5W--OM.1NwStwlw-l'o1, 7.. -
Men -Emerton CBI 11•1. Martin, •·•. lliner-.ltoCN CBI Clef. Martl~ ... I, M . MIJIH -£t1t111'5levent l8llltf.1Nw-l.tH,._•
A -t ,1 M" l'tlwfll•
FOOTBALL -The Detroit Laons aequ1~ four-year .-eteran
FreddJe Scot.& from the Baltimore Colts for defensive tackle Herb
Orvis Monday .... Craig Mortoa signed ~ s.eries of three one-year
pacts Monday at an estimated S200.000 per year.
SOCCER -The San Diego Sockers of the North American Soc·
cer League accused the Fortuna team in Dusseldorf or absconding
with a $40.000advance for two exhibition games.
AUTO RACING -A record 92 entries have been rece1 ved for the
Indianapolis 500, including three cars for defending champion A.J.
Foyt. Practice begl.ns this weekend fortbe May28 race.
BASKETBALL -BUI Walton of the Portland Tra1lblazei\ and
two teammates have been named to the NBA all all-defensive team
selected by league coaches. Also on the team are Portland's Maurice
Lucas and Uonel Hollins, Denver's Bobby J ones and Phoenix guard
Don Buse .•. J a maal Wilkes of the Los Angeles Lakera underwent
surgery Monday to remove cartilage from his left hand
MISCELLANEOUS-The field for the 1978 NCAA volleyball
championship was completed Monday with the sefecUon of Pep·
perdlne Unlverslly. The Waves jo1n Ratgen·Newark, U<LA and
Oblo St.ate for the tourney at Columbus. Ohio this weekend ... the
Kings' Marcel Dionne sc:!ored two goals Monday night to help Team
Canada to a 6-2 victory over West Germany in the world ice hockey
championships ... J immy Connon has canceled hls exhibition ten·
nis mat ch with Roscoe Ta~r tonight in Tuscaloosa. Ala. because or
an attack of infectious mononucleosis. Hank PRster will sub for Oon·
oors
Quotalll. o-•e
Texas running back Earl Campbell. after being selected No. I
in the National Football League draft Tuesday: "I'll\ not going to
try to be Jimmy Brown, O. J, Simpson or Tony Dorsett, I'm just
going to work hard and I know what Earl can ~. I want my team-
mates to accept me as a human being as well as a football player
In order tor this to happen. f can't be nervous. Anyhow, iJ r get
nervou~. my blood pressure will just go up."
UCI Gets Oakla .. d Cage Duo
Two highly recruited guards
from Oakland have slgned let-
ters or Intent to attend and play
basketball ror UC Irvlne. coach
Tim Tlft announced Mond1y.
Ttn landed Robbte Beal. a 6·4
honorable mention prep All·
Amertcan, and Louts Bremond .
a 6·0 All·Northern California
selectton Beal averaaed 23.2
polnta al Blahop O'Dowd High
and Bremond scored 17 per out·
lnl while chlpplng in 7.2 a11l1\S
Beal has the potential to be
one oC the outstanding guard.'! In
the Pf'AA. according to Tift.
fiblle Bremond figures to play
point guard for the Anteaters.
Both played an Oakland's
Cathollc Lea1ue. Beal pulled
down 11 rebounds a game and
wlll leave hlab school with a
long llst of honors. lncludlna
Catholic Lea1ue .Player or the
Year. fit'9t te.m All·EHt Bay,
flut l~am All-Northern
· California and first team. all·
tourney at the Tournament or
f"hamplons.
Beal hod reportedly narrowed,
his choice to four schools before
choosing UCI. '11\e ot.ben were
Washington Siato, Laa Ve1a~
1nd USF.
Bremoad, a standout for St.
Joseph's ruoi. also made the all·
lea1ue, All·Eut Bay and All
Nortbem Callforala teams. ..
v
'
TENNi$ /GIRLS· SPORTS /MISCELLANY
Eating Dust
The San Diego Padres' Ozzie Smith get:-. c.1 fuce full of
<..lirt and a run as Pittsburgh Pirates c·atchcr Ed Ott
"ate hes the ba ll bounce Bway !\1onday night. Smith
M·ored the Padres' third run in Pittsburgh on a singk
by Bill Almon. butthe-Pirates won the game. 7-4.
Marina's Fletcher
-Tosses No-hit -Gem
Marina's J eni Fletcher and
Newport Harbor 's Kelly
Campbell hooked up in a tight
pitching duel Monday' afternoon
and when it was all over. Fletcher
had a l·O. no-hit victory and
Campbell a one-hit defeat.
Fletcher scored the only run
when she walked, stole second.
went to third on a fielder's
choice and scored on an over-
throw. The lone hit, a triple by
Laurie Bird, came in the fourth
inning.
Huntington Beach 's Laura
Hines pitched a two-hitter to
lead the Oilers to a 5·1 win over
Fountaln Valley and heep Hunt·
ington Beach on top of the
Sunset League standings at 4·0.
On the junior college front.
Golden West got .. a one-hitter
from Kathi Rosenbery to defeat
visting San Diego Stale in the
first game of a twin bill. l ·O. then
the Rustlers came back to win the
nightcap, 3·0.
Wast Area
Sports
Calendar
O r ange Coast lost to host
Chapman. 4·1.
VMlltY
NlltriAil lllltl ~
N"'pOft HMtiM...-IOll, ?b. 2A).O.O; Nkholt,
111, 2-0-0-0; Gtt't1hKll. "· -.o-4; a..,__ 31>. 2-G-04; ,,_, c, 2-cMMI; AoCOOy, II, 2.0.0-0;
Ortl>•ro, rt, 0·0-0·0; Campbell, p, 1.0.0-0,
C.thcar1, Cf, 2-cMMI. Tolah 17~ M«ille-lMn, st., >+0-0; fi'odle, 21>. 2.0.0-0;
Bral:M'f, c, ~; Wllllafm. 11>, 2.0-0-1; Nutter,
II, 2-G-04; Berry, cf, 2-cMMI; Bird, JI>. 1.0-1.0,
Duller, 31>, 0·0·0-0; Schlueter , rf, 1-0-0.0,
Fletdler, p, 1·1.0.0. Tot-'• 1~1-H. kere...,,..._
r II e
NewPOrl H-000 000 0-0 0 2 MarlNI ,001 000 a-I 1 2
JllMW Vanity Mat1M Ulll)~
Vanity
...... a..cJt LSI 10 'ta. V•tle't
l-4untlngton 8••<11-L•tlmer, u, •·l ·O·I :
W•rmer, If, 4-0-2.0; Mau., JI>. •+1.0; Coleman,
cf, •·H.O; Hines. I>. •1·1.0; HtncMSOI\, lb, ... M.O; Linda FIM, c. '-0-1.0; Sutlon, rf, l.J.2.0; L.,I
Finn. 11>, 1~; MarUnH, 11>, 2~. Tol;tl\'
JA.~ .. 1. .
Fountain Valley-Herl, 31>, .S.0.0-0; Key, c. 3-0-1.0; Watson, U, 3-0-0-4; CMrOll, p, J.O+O;
Houston, JI>,~. Sl•lllno. rf, 2·1·1.0; Aamwy, rf, 1-0-0·0; !>Minden, If, 2.0-0-0, Wallace, 11>.
2-0-0.0; ll>aQlr•Y. d , ~. Buettner, ct, 2-cMMI.
To1a11: 2'-l·J.O. ~,,, ........ r II e
Hunli"QIOll Bea<n 040 010 0-S t J
Founl•I" va1i., 010 000 0--1 2 I
JwltlorYentty • ~-Vettey 1141111 H""t. llMCll
Vanity UIHll 11J> (SI Wesllft!M(n
Ed•son--rson, 11>, S·2·2 1. B•llH, II, ~).H; B•um. U , •·J.>-2. Talleuc:fll, lb,. J.11.
811TtOn, ti>, •M'2; #IMIMS. <I, ..,._2·2: ...,._, rl,
•·0-1-0: Scflt'elll9r. <. •·1-1.0. Hollut p ~ WHtrnlMt ... -&O<lo, rl, ).1.0.0; c.. Fritsch, cf,
J.o-4-1; O..UU., u , •1·2.0; Miiier, P, H~.
Wllllaml, If, •·1·2-0; AOdrlgue1, <. J·l.O O,
si.arlol, 21>, •·2.0·0. e.nno, lb, 3+1·0. °'
Frftscll,,11, 2~: 8r1t-. 11>, t.0-0-0. SU..bfl•lftll , fl •
Edison 200 1'4 0-IJ t 1
wes1m1Mter on 200 o-s s • ..... 1wvan11y
e•-111 m westm1tt1ter
l'l"tO.-Oelclell W.Stl11 (ti SD l .. le
Golden WHl-Erlel, If, •-0-1-1; St<rl1t, cf, 3.o· 1-Ct; C,_, :lb, J.0-0-0; WlnklePIKk, <, J-0-1.0;
GllllO•n, 11>, 2·1-1·0; 8rl111on, rl, J·0·1·0;
M•dHrls. 21>, J.o-1.0; Kl\O~. u. l.0.1.0, AOten·
btlry, p, 2.0.2-0. Totlls: 2~1 .... 1.
San Oleoo SIM•
Golden Wfll
ktf•llyllllll1191 , fl •
000 000 0-0 I 0
000 000 1-1 • 0
S.C...-0-. ~ W.t IJ I Ctl IO S&ete Goldel\ W.st-£rte1, II, 1·1-0-0;•Secrlll, p,
l-0-0-0; Cross, Jb, M+O; Wln1Ut111Kll, lb, J.0.2·1;
Gilligan, c, ).1-1.0; Brll\SOI\, rf, H.0.0; MeclNf'ft,
21>, 1.0.1.0; 1(-. u. l.o-1·2: Meddeft, rf, 2.0-1.0:
llMnVm. rf. l+M; Mctwile, lt>, 1+1.0. Tota11·
22.J.M.
Sall Oleoo Sl*
OoldlnW ...
,_.....,, .....
r II e
080 OOI o-t J 0 100 200 .__,, , 0
~ (4) (l)Or ... Cliett
Or111199 o-t~fo ... 4-1·1.0; ~.
c. J.+O-O; ky, rf, 1~; Rollet1s. II, J-0.t.1,
Huber, u. W.1·t: G•ll•tfler, tb, J-0·1.0,
Tomas:sl, cf, 1.0.0-0; Wlll«fl, Cl, 1.0-0-0; Mee·
OoNld, 191, 1-cMMI; Safllo, P<. 2.0-0-0; ~. II>,
S-0-0-0; l lnoitl, p, o.o+-0; Croft, rf•P, M+O.
T.C.11:~1..S.1.
kwelWI ..... r II • Oranot CMll 001 000 0--1 5 S ~ cm ott • .-. s s
Tueeday, May 2. t978 DAIL V PILOT · B:J
f ,
Gauehe!s;Blg Asset: Being a -Lefty
By ERNIE CASTILLO
Of .. Deity "let ltatf
Brad FaJtermeler isn 'l exactly
what you would call your
average American tennis
player.
He took up the sp0rt reluctJJnt·
ly. rarely plays on weekends and
swings a racquet with his left
arm, not his right. ,
But the last item has been
more of an asset than a llability
for the Saddleback College
sophomore, the favorite to cap-
ture the singles title at this
weekend's Mission Conference
tournament. In fact. he claims
being a southpaw is the key to
his success.
"Being left-handed makes all
the difference in the world."
says the former University High
<lrvine) star. "Being a lefty is
probably the biggest advantage
any guy can have in tennis, bet·
ter than.having height and bet·
ter than having quickltess."
The reasons are obvious. In
addition to a reverse spin, most
tennis players are taught to hit
to an opponent's left side. What
would require a backhand re·
turn from a right-handed player
is now a forehand smash from a
southpaw.
"Everything comes
back wards." Faltermeler ex-
plains. ,.Lefties are-stitl a small
minor ity and if they'r.e good.
they'll blow you away."
Talent. he quickly points out.
is also a prerequisite .
··A weak lefty doesn 'l get very
Jar." he says. "You capitalize
on being a lefty by spinntng
well. If you can't spin well. you
might as well not be a lefty. It's
a combination of the ability to
"'irtt the stiee ~d rrtt-Wmt -ti5P-
spin. But if YO\I don't hi t the b_all
well, it doesn·t matter if you're
left-handed or right-handed."
. The middle member of a ten-
nis family, Brad has a n older
brother , John, who played and
coached part-time at Sad·
dleback, and a younger sister.
Gloria, who is currently No. 1 as
a freshman at UC Santa
Barbara. But though he has
been playing tennis for half of
his 22 years. it wasn't until re'!
cently that he began to like it.
"Dad was a big pusher," he
admits. "We played reluctantly
for years because we pressured
into it. I got into it only on the
team level."
For Fanermeie r, fhe Tun
began in 1975 when he-was un-
defeated in singles competition
and led University to a 22· 1 re-
LINDSAY MORSE
Morse Named
~UC-Irvine
Athlete of Year
Lindsay Morse, a senior from
Pasadena, has been named UC
Irvine athlete of"the yeitr ·at the
sch ool 's annual Lauds and
Laurels awards banquet.
Morse, who won the 1977
AJA W national singles cham-
pionship last June and led the
UCl women's tennis team to a
third place AIA W team finish,
became the first woman in UCI
history to be accorded athlete of
the year honors.
In addition to winning the
AlAW crown in 1977, Morse cap.
lured singles championships at
the Santa Barbara lnvitat1onal.
Arizona Invitational and was the
Southern California Athletic As·
sociatlon stogies and doubles
winner, leading the ~teaters to
th~ te am championship.
Morse wu chosen to represent
the Unlled St.ates in the 1977
World University Games at
Sofia, Bulgaria and teamed with
her former UCJ partner, Jean
Nachand, to capture fourth
place to Vr'Qmen's doubles.
A history m.ior, Morse was a
member or the 1974 Junlor
Wl1htman Cup team, as well as
the Southern California In·
tercollegiate chatnplon ln both
11tn1les and doubles. She ad·
vanced to the finals In both
events at the national ln·
tercolleatates that same year.
• Mone and the UC( team are
now prep~rln1 ror the 1878
Western AIAW Relionals ay
18·21, and ahe will 6e out to ~
fend htt natlonar Utle June 5-12
al S.lllbury, Md.
I
SADOLEBACK COLLEGE TENNIS STANDOUT BRAD FAL TERMEIER.
cord and a berth in the 1975 CJF
finals.
From there. he took the back
roads to Saddleback after bnef
stopovers in San Diego and
Berkeley.
His first college• c hoice .
Redlands,'Was quickly ruled out
because of light finances. He ...
jumped al the first scholarship•
dangled in front of him, to the
University of San Dlego, but
became disenchanted with the
private school and the tennis
program. He also got turned off
by the vastness of the University
of Berkeley.
Out of lack of any better
choice. he d ecidetl on Sad-
dle6ack. a .... decis1on henas never
regretted.
·'I took a break and got my
head straightened out." he says . ..
"My opt.Ions were few so 1 went
to a J C. which is a good place to
go when you don't know whe re
you want to go. Bil! I felt
welcome and I was glad I made
the move."
Falterme1er. who has a 3.5
grade point average, spends
more time studying for the 21
units of business classes he
takes than he does playirrg ten-
nis. Not playing on weekends, he
says, helps keep his game from
becoming stale.
Judging from his achieve·
ments one would guess he plays
around the clock. In conference
play he was unbeaten in 12 out-
ings and o~all he was 19·2
neadlng m{o -~asT week ·s· Ojai
tournament. Not surpris ingly.
Saddleback is enjoying its finest
season ever al 11·3.
JC, High.School
Tennis Results
Vanity
• .._.. 1191 ltl T'"lll1 , ......
Snvder (El def Barcley .. 1. *' Steml>ero "''· Clef Wiison ..0, def~ Mt; Arredondo (Et I0$1
J-t, won 7•. M, .. 2; OuHltf' IEI won .. 1, 7-t, ....
..O; Belyea IEI loll M , 0-t. -.. 2 ... I. 0.....
Plasuncte-Olllon IEI ICKI to Elllt-Moott :M,
1 .. ; def A ... S.Clerlleld M, •-o; 8allar-\lllti IEI
lotl l-t, °" -w. ..... • ~VanHy ·~ 111\lt) lllVtl TwsWa """* Hld101s <El loll 10 O.vls G-6, *' Peterscin ••.
def Stoll Mt, di! Alm .. 1; "9</"811 U!.l lellt H . won .. l, lotl M , _, .. 2; Han IEI IOsl W, 0-6,
•-t. t•. C-IEI IOsl U , 1•, .......
~ Brtoos-8«JI IEI di! Morrllon·Scflrlmsflef M
6-1, def Kelpper·Gl<l'dano '"'· •·2, O.malo-Wllllems I Et IOSt s-7, M ; 19411u.1 ...
Venlty '*" IJll ltl C.&e Mau st ..... Mel-Ol\lan (CM t loll to O.vld1oft 2•, to P6ul l>'f
O.laull, lo K•Ufnall l>'f dltaull, to Turtuie11 l-t,
LHllY ICMI IOll >•. w ..... J-t, Pall .. n ICMI lotl 2•. G-6, :M, , .. , Alllh ICMI loll 1-t, 1 .. , G-6,
2-t. •
Dwellef Uu-J. WerMt' ICMI lost to F<l'l>et-Atltttlonl
2·6, >-t; Iott to E~P•rr1111 1•, r•; o.
W.rner.0'"'"1 ICMI 1os11 ... , .. ; J '· 2•. ,,_.., Verslty
CllM ll»t (JIC..&eMau
lt"lfel C.H ICdMt def wo1i. .. ,, dlf AfclwlrdMn M,
Ciel Helnlla "''·diet Pel ... ton .. 2; S.l\CllH CCOMI
Readers' <;orner
Dear Howard Handy:
On behalf of myself and my
basketball team, I want to thank
you tor the outstanding coverage
you gave to us during-~ the CIF
playotr1.
Through your fine articles and
pictures, you not bnly kept the
community informed but you
also helped. us recruit many new
fans . ,
l
Thank you again.
Slneerely,
J ~aone Kellogg.
Huntington Beach High
•on •·J. .. ,, ... f. M ; Fewcett ICdMI Iott 1-t, won
..0, .. 1 ... ,. a..ntetn ICdMI IOlt 1-t, ""'IM• H. .. 1.
De*8I WilflOll·~ ICdMt def Tomll•Melkou.11
H, W. _,_.._,Hayward ..0, .. I; Lfl\ll·WOton
CCdMl#OllW,7·S,1-t ... 2.
Varsity
....,... CJ71111 l'bt. Vllley ......
llader IFI IOSt to.~acfa M. lo Holl•nO 1-t, 10
AHl>«O 0-t, lo 0.WOdl 1-6; Nollie (Fl IOll O•,
1 .. , 0-6, I .. ; Maddoa 11"1lolt0-6, S-1, ••. 1-t; LH
IFI lostM.-M,IOsl 1-',W•
. o..tel
Y•i9ff·Kenclro 11"1 lou to Blelker·O.MOll , .. ,
.. 1; IOSI lo l<041na-K~ 2-t, W; H.niilton-
Suqvitan (Fl lost 1-t, 2-t; W, •-t.
Jw6erV..-.ty ....,... m1 UI l"tA.. Vafl•y
~ K--(NI def lkwges ... 1. IOsl !)¥ dlfellll to
JohnlOfl, dltf Ev-W. def Folellrell' .. J. s
Plroum1 .. INI -... 1 •.. 1 ... 1. Mt; M<CM1NY' IHI #Oii .. 2. ... 2 ... I, loll J.t; Herre CNI _, ... l.
........ 1 ... 1.
Oeftles Murr•ll·Will<es (NI dll H•inH-Merrlll .... , S;
IOJl to RMIOJ.Pf!Ulrl\ 1-t, U , Htlftdrlcd~fi. ~llon INl-M,6-4 ... 1, .. J. ....... ,.
....,... IJll 111 l'ta. Valley , ......
Graf' INI def Miiier .. J. Clef ICefln Mt, def Meyen M, IOsl lo Serr-S-7, Pelef'lOft INI won
.. 1, IHI U , .... 2-t, W.-ileld CNl won H , M ,6 2,
M , Crayc.telNt-.. 2 ... l , .. 1, .. 2.
'*"'" Blrd·Mll~ (NI def JatkJOtl·0orMY6·1, •I, def Copelend-Townwnd 6-l, ... I, Ooyle-()pn IHI 10112-t, G-6; -'"'3 ... 1.
Vartlty H-. llMcll 114"") OSll'tl ,_..rtN ...... Be(Nf'd fHI IOSt to ICMftf', H. dlf Foy ..... del
kl" 6-0, dltf 0-... .. 21 ,,._,ly IH t won M , lost ~. Wiii' M , W ; 6onM Oh Iott 2• ... , , -"''• lost2•: Johnlon IHI losl4-t, wonM.•..Z. .. 1. °""" JOl!Ml-Fnnch (HI Sfllll wlltl l!le""Plolon •·t. •·1; 19411 wllll c 111-...end1tey ....... ,
Sl'lllmlrl·P-CHI IOSI 1-t, 2•; '11111 h ,M .
J.iwVenity H-. 8eKll (IYJI 11fVt) ~ , ......
Hellman IHI last to Pl .. 1 .... def~ 6-1,
def ICl\Oa•l.• ~II .. I; LA1911 IHI ... , t•, won, .. , M, .. 2; ~IHI ION >-t, H. 2 ...
U ; Pool9Y IHI "'n:a:,"'· IOsl >-t, S-f.
Y ...... al!lllM IHI ""II wlltt W ....... TMICflidl
••, W; loll to '-'Ort'°""A04fl J.t, I•, Smit,._
Elmore IHI los12•, W , 2•, I•.
Prep Baseball
Temttie Offltlell
C.po Vell•Y' QI,
r II • lit< 011 ,_ , ' \
U4 lU •-1' 11 •.
BasebaH Standings
. »
Since he ~ already beaten
all of the conference's top
players. Faltermeier had to
come up with some kind of in·
centive for the Mission Con·
ference finals which will be host·
ed by Southwestern <Chula Vi:-·
ta). So he decided not "Only to
win all his matches. but do so an
convincing fashion.
·"I'm hoping to do better than
before." he says with more con-
fidence than cockiness. "In mv
closest matches, I felt I just
pulled il out under pressur1: ..
What I'm looking forward to 1:.
some gQOd wins. really beating
people soundly. because that ·s in
Ure range of my ability."
1f he does win If. yoir can ~
-sure it will be his left fist. not hts
right, that he raises in a victory
salute.
GGShuts Out
San Clemente
Garden Grove pitcher Mark
Baker dazzled San Clement~
with a one-hitter Monday.
notcbing a 5--0 victory in a make·
up game of the Troy baseball
tournament at Garden Grove
High.
The victory gives Garde n
Grove third place in the tourn~y.
Scott Lich picked up the
Tritons' lone hat. ,a single off
Baker's leg in theJourth inning.
The only other runners San
Clemente had were when Lich
led off the game by beitlg hit by
a pitch and when Oave Law
walked in the seventh inning .
No San Cle m ente ru.nner
renched second base. a nd a
Garden lirove unearned 'run m
the fifth was all the ArgonauL'i
needed. They added four more
an the sixth as icing to the cake.
Badminton
Laguna Beach and Corona del
Mar a re rated one-two in the 3-A
girls badminton coaches poll
this week with Estancia'-.
Eaf les rated second in the 4-A
pol.
Two other South Coast League
t~ams are in the top 10 In the 3·A
division including El Toro in
s ixth a nd Mission Viejo in
seventh.
Huntington Beac h of the
Sunset Lea~e is seventh in the
4·A poll with Fountain Valley
seventh.
O~CINdlft .....
+ADl\'IU.
1. Mira Ollla; t. at-.C'9; J. LB Poly;•. t..os
•not, I. tfllail41 ii A 9Ncfl; •· Mutr; 1, .._..
Valley;e,LB.....,,;•.Olaff•y; 10. L8WlllOI\. ,... Dl¥11Ma
1 '-••-llMO; t . eer ..... , Mar: >. Hoialff, '-Walnut, J. GtfWll Gt-ow; •• a1 T-,
1. Mis'* Vlt;e; I. Hoowr; '· u QulllC.e, IO. BHMll.
,
.,..
1
I
.. ' .
.. DA!LY~T Busitiess
~ .
Braille Tells Her Love Story
. ..-........
'HOW SAD NOT TO BE ABLE TO SEE THE BEAUTY"'
Tranacrtber For Blind Mak•• Full Llf e for Herself
By .JULES LOH us..wc.ruu a '
ST. PETERSBURGH. Fla.
The apartment is small. just a
room. but it is meticulously ~idy
and as cheering as a sunburst.
A garden of foliage brightens
.the window ledge and the distant
view of Tampa Bay. A piano OC·
cupiea the wa.11 ofposite the bed.
A stuffed anima decorates the
bedspread. On a folding table, a
goose-neck l•mp hovers intently
over a Braille typewriter.
"MY MUSIC IS MY love. my
Braille is my love." Wlltrllmine
Andreason said. "And 1 love my
flowers~ Aren't the violets
lovely?"
Several pictures adorn the
piano. Tucked into the lacework
gold frame-of one of them. the
one closest to the front, Is a pur·
pie flower, a violet.
The picture shows a s lim
young man wearing a Sam
Browne belt and lieutenant's in·
slgnla·. Next to him. seated. a
young woman smiles adoringly.
She has dark, wavy hair and
dark, liquid eyes. She is.wearing
a pla.ln black dress and a single
strand or pearls.
"WHE~llE "CA.Ml: into our lace shop, in Brussels, we had
nothing. I was hungry and
frightened. The Germans bad
taken our home and everything
in it. That brass coffee pot and
the teap()l, on the table, they did·
not find. Those were buried in
the yard.
"He took me to dinner. W~
went to the best place irf
Brussels, and every time my
mother went with us. I was only
18, you see.
SenllnarS, Test Slated
Insurance, Trade, Finance, Business Examined
E111p~la1'fted
California's unemployment ·in·
surance program will be ex0
pla ine d lo Orange County
•mployers at a seminar Wednes·
day al South Coast Plaza Hotel.
Cm1ta Mesa.
Th e s l a t e Employ m e nt De ve lopme nt De p a rtme nt .
:-.pons or. e xpe cts a bout 500
employers to participate. The
seminar is designed to assist
employers in achieving tax sa v-
ings through increased
lrnowledge of claims-handling
pro~edures.
It wilJ be held from 8:30 a .m.
to 4:30 p.m .. with registration
beginning at 7:30 a.m. Registra·
t1on information is available
from Charles Frazier, seminar
chairman, at 633~
Test Sdaftltded
Orange Coast College, Costa
Mesa. will be one of more than
200 centers offering the 1978
certified professional secretary
examination Friday and Satur ·
day
A bout 5,000 secretaries in the
United States. ~anada, Puerto
Ei co and Jamaica will take the
exam to qualify to use the CPS
designation.
Topics in the exam include en·
vironmental relationshios in
business. business and public
policy. economics and manage-
m e nt, financial a nalysis and
mathematics, communications
and decision.making and office
procedures
( TAKING J
__ S_TO_CK_
More lnfonnalton is av.a~lable
at 556·5620. ·
Trade E.ra..iaed
A semmar on foreign trade OP·
portunities wiJJ be held Saturday
in Newport Beach under the
sponsorship of Coastline Com·
munity College
The course will run from 9:30
a .m . to 4 :30 p .m . at the
Newporter Inn. There Is a SlO re·
gistration fee.
birector of the workshop will
be Allan Siposs, who will discuss
entering and expanding foreign
markets for local businessmen.
More information is availablf'
at the college: 963·0811.
Wo•en BlglaUghted
The Women's Law Center will
sponsor a seminar on financial
planning on May 9.
Des igned primarily for
women,.il will run from 7 to 10
p.m . at the Registry Hetel.
arvine. Admission is free. •
Corporatlmt• Et1ed
"Creation, Care and Feeding
of Business and Professional
Corporations" is the title or a
two·part work.shop that will be
offered al Orange Coast College.
50%to600%
Tax Shelter Writeoffs for 1978
Costa Mesa. on May 13 and May
20.
Pre·registralion fee for the
two sessions. to be held from
8 :30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in OCC's
Scie11ce Lecture Hall 2. Is $2.50.
€becks .,.yable to the college
may be sent to Bus iness
Management Development
Center, OCC. 2701 Fairview
Road. Costa Mesa 92626.
Registration will be conducted
at the door for SJ.SO.
Lecturer is Richard A. Brown
Jr .• a tax and corporate law ex·
pert with the law firm or
Howser, Gertner and Brown He
is a member or the tax commit·
tees of the American Bar As·
sociation. Orange County Bar
Association and the Los Angeles
County Bar Association. More
information is available at
556·5880.
Ta.r T~t~• Dtae
Coastline Community College
will sponsor a one-day workshop
entitled "Tax Tactics for Busi0
ness Owners" from 9:30 a.m . to
4: 30 p.m. May 13 at the Holiday
Inn, Costa Mesa.
Lecturer Ronald C. Gable will
discuss tax considerations. de·
ductions. investments and estate
planning. The $10 fee includes
luncheon and materials.
Registration must be complet·
ed Friday.
More information is available
a t the college, 963·0811, ex·
tens ion 256.
Bosses Rapped
WASHINGTON <AP)
-A government survey
says a maJorlty or
federal workers think
their bosses are lncom·
petent. The study by the
National Center for
Productivhy and the
Quality of Working Life
also produced a word
from the bosses.
Taxes end Inflation. estimated to be 6-71In1978, are rnaldng It h~r
fOf people to retain ex build their assets. The IRS has aggressively eliminated
many tax Incentives used by Investors In the past. Vet with the constant I.AX
A majority of them
admitted they are un-
derworked and over·
paid. Most feel locked
into their jabs. law revisions, there are etlll oppoltlulldee ..,....... for Investors to
shelter or defer a.olla law wbttuat ......... laca •• (I.e. sala,Y
and commission). If you plan your 1978 program now, rather than
wait di yeer end, you'll have ample time to analyze
and~ choose the one which
wtJI meet your objedtve.,....
,, ............ ~tJoa.
1ncludlng If you wish your tex attorney or C.PA..
contoct ..._ n.a.. •• .. or Vic. ....,..at.
at (714) 644-41620 or the address shown below.
0 r
WIDEmA COVERAGE ~00.:..tA. Y?!
NO DIPOllT ON APPIOYID CREDIT
"Later. when he asked me LO
marry him. he brought a bou
quel of violets. That nighl w l!
went alone."
THE EYES. ~t years later.
a re as youthful as the day the
picture was made. They vary
from rich brown lo hazel de·
pending upon the light stream·
ing through the window over the
greenery. The hair. silver now.
ls wavy still.
"He was an engineer. He
brought me to his home. in New
York. and then we U ved in 32
states befort! we settled down in
Philadelphia. Oh. yes, 1 s aw this
beautiful country.
"I rode the bus every day in
Philadelphia and passed a
center for blind people, sort of a
clubhouse. 1 often thought how
sad it .must be not to be .able to
see the beauty 1 saw.
"THE BEAUTY OF this CQUn·
try is not Just its geography. The
real beauty Is beine able to do
what you want to do.· Here. in
America. the horiton of hope is
so vast
.. My husband made me rt!alize
lhat. He eave me so much and
asked for,ao little. He was every·
thing to me. l love the memory
of him.
"When he became ill and had
to go to an institution t took a
cottage across the street For
three years l took care of him
every day. When he died, six
years aeo. l thought my Ille was
over.
"IT IS ~OT. I am not lonely. I
am not bOred.
"Two years ago I went to the
Community Center for the Blind
and asked if I could learn
Braille. It ls difficult to learn. I
did my homework every night,
and r learned it.
"Now. every day, l get up at 7
Carter to A•k Help
( AMERIC..f J
•and do my household chore">
From 10 tb 11. 30 ( play the
ptano. Music is magic. If t am
morose or grumpy. by 11 :30 I
am singing. playing and singing.
"THEN I HAVE MY lunch
and at 4:30 my shower. After
that I get dressed. I dress
myself up just as if I were going
someplace. and go out and do
my errands.
"The rest of the day llnd lnto
the night I transcribe Braille.
"I do a lot of read.ing to decide
what to tr8JlS(:ribe. The people I
transcribe for are mostly elder·
ly. t try to select readings that I
think would be inspirational for
them.
"Don't you think people like to
Tead something inspirational->"
:Professional Fees Eyed
ATLANTA <AP> -The Carter
administration plans to call ip
doctors, dentists and lawyers to
urge that they bold down their
fees jo line with President
Carter's effort to control infla·
lion. according to the head or the
government's -inflation·
monitoring agency.
physicians, dentists and lawyers
-to determine what specific
steps they can take to ensure
that fee deceleration ineets our
target.
"And we will be asking that
Increases In executive ·COm0
pensation be held to s percent."
he said.
average rate for the last two years.
Bosworth said the underlying
inOation rate has been "stuck on
a plateau or between 6 and 7 per-
C811t."
Bosworth said the 0.ft percent
rise in consumer prices for
March, which translates Into an
annual inflation 1 ate of more
than 9 percent. reflected higher
energy costs resulting from the
United Mine Workers settle-
ment. higher meat prices and in·
crea~es in the minimum wage.
"We do not Intend to limit our
efforts to the industrial wage
and price arena." Barry P .
Bosworth, director or the Coun·
ell on Wage and i'Mce Stability.
s aid in a speech prepared for the
annual meetrng· ot Tlie As·
soc lated Press on Monday.
Bosworth said meetings
already have been held with in-
dustrial and union leaders.
EARUER TRIS mon.b Carter
as ked business and labor to
cooperate in a new effort to slow
down inflation. He said he ex·
peels industry and labor to keep
price . wage and salary in·
creases s1gnificantly below the
"IT SEEMS PRE'ITY clear
now that unless we can get some
improvement we will begin to
see an acceleration in the un
derlymg rate or inflation,.. he
said.
"IN mE VERY near future we~-11 begin meetings with
lea . representatives or pro·
fessiona groups -such as
HEW VOit IAPI ~r '° ,,.., -T,.. f04IOM~lll wTet l'IV. JllV.
t\ • MlecleO I· O.n ~~u.._
•on•t SK" lft ConPfCI ., «J
Out.n A$S11. -&i•'d 22111 n v. ,,,. C.Ol#llW =. UGo ,...,~
lftturefte• ~ ll'ICIUS . tr Fed y, ..
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AGrHI '"" ""' Id"' ~214 :r~ 17\o'J 11 ~<llG• 14108 10 .... *"" '°"' AWeld119 m .. 1>1<. Olinlll110
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MUTUAL FUNDS
#
STOCKS / BUSINESS .
es NYSE ~-~~~~!;!~K ..... !!~~~~~TIONS
••<l•MOO-rtl)CW1ild •v IN .......... , AtMd •tkWl9f $eeurlllft o.....-.-lnul ... t
1 \Mday. M•)' 2. 19/d l/N DAILY PILOT ftj
Hefty Loans
--Prompt
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
Three compunaes that seemed w be huded for obli
v1on have come to Ute aid of one another
Pan American World Airways placed an order of $500
million with Lockheed Aircraft for 12 L·toll 'l'riStar plun11s
powered by Jet enaines made by Rolls-Royce Ltd
PAN AM. WHICH F LIES TO 73 cities around the
world. made money last year for the first time since 1968.
This was its first major equipment purchase since the .ear-
ly 1960s. It was hardly in a pos1tton to go shopping, since 1t
stoggers under a debt toad of $1 billion.
Lockheed. one of the leading aerospace companies.
lost more than SlOO million ln 1969 and 1970 and then had to
be r escued by a bank loan guaranteed by the U.S. govern
ment. 1l was later shaken by disclosures of overseas
bribes, leading to the
depa rture of the com·
pany 's two lop otf 1cers Money
Tree
Rolls-Royce played
a part ln the Lockheed
debacle . having had
trouble deliverin~ the
engines for the Tr1Stars
on time. The company lost its financial footing and had tu
be r escued by the British government. which now owns it.
<The company lhal m akes Rolls·Royce automobile~. no
longer tied to the engine manufacturer. continues as "
private enterprise.)
IT WAS ROLLS-ROYCE. THE smalles t company an
this trio. that made possible the Pan-Am-Lockheed deal. It
s upplied the cement in the Corm of a British government
gua ra ntee of the loans Pan Am will need to buy these wide ·
bodied planes.
RQlls·Royce was competing against two U.S. engine
m anufacturers. General Electric and the Pral.l " Whitney
divtston of United Technologies. Lockheed was prepared to
place U.S.·built engines In the L·lOll if the· buyer • .Pan Am,
specified the m
But if Pan Am had specified Genera! E lectric or Pratt--
& Whitney engines, it would have bad a dinicult time ar·
ranging financing. Now it can teU lenders that the British
government stands behind tht loan.
Thal 's one way to setl a jet engine.
A SIMILAR TACTIC WAS USED by• Europe~n plane
builder to break into the U.S. market dominated by BoeinC
and McDonnell Douglas. Airbus Industries. a consorti"'1\
owned by the governments or France. Spain and. West
Germany, succeeded in persuading another debt-plagued
U.S . carrier . Eastern Airlines. to order 23 A·300 Airbus jets ror $778 million.
Eastern. which has run in the red fouc; times in the last
10 years. was able to come to the buying table thanks to
some generous financing a rranged by Airbus.
The 230-seat Airbus wtll be powered by a U.S.-bu1lt
e ngine. The builder. General E lectric, agreed to provide
Eas tern with a $45 milllon loan.
It appears that the only way to get airlines to buy your
planes -or engines -is to lend them the money to do so.
U only you and r coul<J do that with the things we wanted to
buy !
Stocks Off a Bit
In Heavy Trading
NEW YORK <AP) -The stock marktt slipped a notch
in heavy trading today, struggling against a buildup of bad
economic news over the past several days.
The Dow J ones average or 30 industrials. off more than 7
points in the early going, cut its loss to 1.55 but th~ fell to4.15
at840.18attheclose. . '-.
Losers however. bad only a 4-3 lead over gainers among
New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Sl~lu 111 Tier
Spolllgltt D•t1Jlo11nA r.P8p11
~U:'1'"'PI FINI Dow-J~• .... ,e91"
NEW YOflK !AP" s.lft, 4 pm. O"u o...n HiQI> Lo• C-C110 and NI <"""91' of IN IH ..... ..-1 «II,. lO tl\CI to.fl IMT.~ 133.42 IMO.II-4.U
-YO'tl Slocll Ekchanoe l\~ 20 Trn 125 . .11> 226.11 H3.02 124.71-O.IJ tredl"9 ... t!onally •• 11\0f'• NII " n Ull '°" 3' 11)6.'IO IOS.n '°" Jl-0 to 8nlrttwll • .. • 108 JOO 1~ + "' u s 111; '°'" ,., .. *"' m .ae-1 0t K mArl •••• ... S...000 24"--1.. lnd<I\ .............. ... ... 2,'56.JOO N0'10fl sim...... 110,100 20'4 . . T'r•n 1,132,«>0
C.n'let (4) ..... JOl,100 201!. + "" Ulil\ • ............ • ••• 3'6,900 TKllnkr 03.lOO 1l" + ~ U Siii .. ... .. 4,-.S,600
Soutltwn Co. . . 314,«JO '"° • ..,. r---------------=~"aMt. ~ ~::l ;!.,, :.·~ ,.,. Am , .. , 339,100 ... • ,., a.fl Molor~. . . . Jlb,600 6Wt -\to PeoMCo . . lU,000 tt~ • .. W..clll• tnc .. .. JOO,IOO mi. • "'
Doo#O..m .. . .. • 1'1,.00 U''> -" Eat Kodllk.. lll,400 U'lro "'
MtMLleC "" 111.200 41 -"'
M'lla'I SlfWk• Did
NEW YOAK (API
Adv&nced Oe<ll,...,
Un<ll•nv«I TOl•I lu ... ~ New hi...,.
.. _ ·-·
SALES
NEW YORK IAPI lfY $100 wt•> APC>rO• flnlll • • , 41,.00,000 Pr•vl~ O&r .. 31.020,QOO Weea •OD ' SS,I00,000 Monlll •OD . . 20, l:JO,OOO f .. r ~ ••• • . •• •• n.•so.ooo J:: 1"1:~ :: .. :.:·:.. "-"'·~
,.,, 10 0 .. 1~ • .. • • • ~:m:=:ooo .,, 1'16 lo CMte 1,IG9 Ml~
-AT AMEil OtO
NEW YOAK IAPI
\
..
ft DAILY PILOT Tuetday. May 2. 1918
• 11 I ._,ll \ ·,
EVENING .... , i :. NIW8
BiEWMNOY ONll
Or. E8ny Ulldarv-°'*'
hMr1 eurgery •ou,..~ Man Mid Doc .,. troutMad
by•~
.. ~ lllCOl't 111\ ~
oon'<liclt ~ a train trip to
OodOe-• THE 9MOY IUNCH
Marcia II dumped by the
cempua llero becauM her "°*' It swollen from an
llCCtdent.
I AOAM-12
F£EUHQ F'AEE
Gordon and Ginny ~
together making a pot,
Laurie lewna how to walk
with • Cine: Joa lnltO-
dUCM an actOf fOf Iha
Nltlontll Theatre Of The
Deaf.
man J'UPOUlhl• ,~,
Amat1ca'• defenM ~.
C.f>llllatla Ma<k Hanll. e MOVIE
• • "Tripoli" ( 19501 Mw-
ra.i O'Hara. John Payne.
Marin. are !Mt wlttl lll0-
11111 oppo11t1on whllt
attempting to rliM thl
U S flag on T t1o011 during
WOtld War II (2 twt.I • 9 HAPPY OAYI
"Joanie'•~ l(laa" Joan.
la ._.,.,.. Howard down
untN he ailOWI lier to 00
out on h« flrtt dltt. (R) G MOVlE
• 1t "Blood. SWMt And
Feer" (18751 .... J . CObb.
Franco Ouparrl. A young
narcotlca egant M1* out to
expoee a rn11)or lndultrlel-
111 .. the bfllftl behind a
Q(and-acale drug optr• -en (21vs.)
• CAAOL IURHITT
AHOllMHOS
Gueat: Stave Lawrance m MOVIE GD PEAIOkAL FlNAHCE
"ln1111llng Fixed Income" 9 AllCNEWS
9:308 MOVIE * • * "The Lall SunMI"
(Part t) lt981) Aock
Hudaon, Kirk OouglM. A
woman 11 pursued by thrM
men <Suring a MuJcc>.to-
T-cattle dnve. I 1 "" .
30 min)
Edgg Friend s h ip
• * ''The H~ Thlevn"
( 10G2) Rell Harrtton. Rita
Hayworth. Art thleYel plot
an elaborate robbery. (2
• 8EWtTCHED
Gil Gerard plays <1 reporter who visits a
hostile town but finds a friend in Valen·
tina Quinn <daughter of Anthony Quinn 1
in the TV mo\'ic "Kil1\ng Stone" tonighl
at 9 on NBC. Channel 4.
""' fJ!) COUSTEAU
OOY88EY
"Calypso'• s-e11 FOf
Atlantll" c.ptaln Coue-
taau explore• Crete'•
notharn coast Md the •
canlc '9lend of SantorW.
End0ra'1 annoyance with
Darrin prOYell very uncom·
fortal>la to him b\/t the alt·
uatlof> turn• out lo hla
advantage
D BOWUNGFOA
DOLLARS CD I LOVE LUCV
"Lucy Gets In Pleturn"
Lucy 111eres • bit part In a
mouon ptctU<e.
G) AOAM-12
fl) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT m> HOME OAADEHER
"Dile-"
Cl) JOKER'S WILD
• ROOKlE8
e-OYEAEASY
A0418mary Cloonay, Roae
Marie, Barbara McNelr
and Margaret Whiting per-
form and di9cual 11'0Wtng
older; l)f-tlon Of Cflma,
Robert Bullet on older per.
sone lilting wlll't their laml·
lial fm THE OAOWING
7:30 D YOUNG PEOPLE'S
8PECW.
YEARS ,
"Alpecta Of Intelligence"
Cl) AMERICA 2NIOHT
Gueat· Cindy WHllamJ.
I MERV OAlf'flN
7:00 NBC.NEWS
UAASCLUB 8 AllCNEWS
"Jenny And Me" Two c:nu.
dran of .o\ppalachlen coal mi,_. learn that tragedy
c.n be the beginning or
drNml .. well .. the end
of them.
I NEWLYWEQ GAME
(Ill HOLL YWOOO
80UAAE8
Claann~I Li•t. ings
8 KNXT ICBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind I Los Angeles
8 KAac·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angeles
9 KCST (ABC) San Diego
CD KT1V (Ind.) Los Angeles a> KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles
fD KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
'1ll KOCE·TV IPBS) Huntington Beach -~
A BC Canceling
Only 3 Series
NEW YORK <AP I -A BC. reluctant to tamper
With a winning formula, announced Monday it wil_Y
introduce only three and one·hall hours of~
prime·time programming this fall.
A BC said 21 programs from the schedule that
kept the network at lhe top or the ratings race with
NBC and CBS will be back. The casualties are
'The Six Million Dollar Man." "Fish" and
.. Barella."
The coming season on ABC. to begin Sept. 11,
will include three new com~es. an adventure
program sel in Las Veg(ls and a science.fantasy
series, the network said.
MOST OF THE NETWORK'S programs will
remain in their current time periods in the fall
ABC said. '
CBS and NBC will unveil their ran schedules in the nex1. several weeks.
The schedule is the first put together at ABC
since the announced departure of Fred Silverman. Silverman, as president of ABC Entertainment,
has been generally credited with guiding ABC's 1
rise from last place to first in the ratings,
Silverman will join NBC this summer as presi· d~nt and chief executive. Bec~use of the Liming of
his departure from ABC, Stlverman reportedly
was not involved in either network's ran planning.
ABC OFFICIALS, AFTER Silverman an
nounced he would jo,in NPC, maintained the
network's success in the ratings was the result or a
team effort, rather than one man's work.
"There's a uniqueness to our new programs,o
with fresh creative approaches in concept and
humor, with humor remaining the staple or our
schedule," said Anthony D. Thomopoulos,
Silverman's successor.
Three ABC comedies have been at or near the top of the ratings all season -"Happy Days,·•
"Laverne and Shirley" and ''Thtee's Company."
They will continue in that order on Tuesday nights,
followed at 9:30 p.m. by one of the new shows.
"Taxi." a comedy based on the lives of a group of
New York cab drivers.
THE OTHER NEW COMEDIES listed on the
fall schedule are "Mork & Mindy," a Monday
evening 8 p.m. series about a being from the
planet Ork wbo meets a young earthling named
Mindy, and "Apple Pie," a Saturday night 8:30
p.m . show about a 1930s family whose members
are recruited from the want ads.
"Battle Star: Galactica," an outer.space ad·
venture produced by John Dykstra, who won an
Oacar ror his special effects in the movie "Star
Wars," will air at 8 p.m . Sundays.
"Vecas," on the-ABC schedule at 10 p.m. Wed
nesdays, follows the adventures of a young private
detective ln Las Vegas.
'fBE l".A.LL SCHEDULE will include at least
three minlleties. ABC said, including •'Roots! The
Next Generation," "Ike," based on the war yean
of Dwlaht D. Eisenhower, and ''Pearl," a roman·
Uc drama set in Pearl Harbor just before the
Japanese attack.
The continuation of "Roots," ABC's record-
aettlne mlnlaeries of last year, wtll brtna the Alex
Haley family from the time of the Civil War to lhe
preaent ~.ABC aaid.
ABC said that, ln addition, "How the West Wat
Won" will continue u a aeries ot two-hour
eplaodM duri.nl tbe firat part ot 1m1 after con·
clu•lon of the Mtwork'1 "NFL MoOday Nicht Foot· ball'' tealOIL •
aEGA&OING THE PROl"a&IONAL football
aeason. ABC said lt would adt:: Sunday even· Inf and one Tbund•Y nllht me to Jta retular
lf·8•m• Mood.IY ntpt 1cbedu . ..
;
0 JOKER'S WILD ID THE BRADY BUNCH
"The Treasure Of Slet'ra
Avenue" Bobby find•
• S 1 tD<Lwntte _ptaylng foot-
ball and his decl1lon 10
ah81e 11 wlth hit bfolher•
apllll the famlly.
G) AMERICA 2NIGHT
Gwat: Cindy Wl"larn1 SI 21 TONIGHT
Cl) Newsa.ECK
An Informative collectlOn
of Ofange County newa.
government and coneumer
affalts. people and aciort•.
([) TH£ GONG SHOW
1:0011 ([) CBS REPORTS
Bill Moyers 41\d Marlene
Sende!'t wt•report on the
pros and cona of penelon
plans tn '"PromiM Now,
Pay Later": "Goodby•.
Congress" wtll ~ at Otl•
Pike (0.-N Y ). the fil'lt
Hou•• member to
announce hla ratlr-t
becauH of llmltallon1
plfloed on outllde Income:
ano "The Are Nut Door,"
an update on arT earlier
atory dullng wttn flrea In
the Bronx.
D MANFAOM
ATI.ANTl8
"The Siren" The liren
aong of a -nymph, held
captive by two men aa part
ot their plot 10 kidnap the
wtllcll -· both deattc>y9d lhouaanda of yeata ago.
Cf_lllt 2 ol 2) W TU"""80UT
"Tiie New Reformation" A
group ot klmleL Catbollc
nune, a women Refonn
rabbi, a female~
an pr!Mt looue on cnangaa
in their ctllKChn.
1:aoaa LAVEANE&
SHIRLEY
"The Horae Show"
8nlriaV'• love of anlrnM
oat• her In trouble With u.
l'tMllh ~t wtlerl ane mov. a hOrM Into tt1a
~wrT8 • OYi'AENl't
Rottnl8fY Ctooney, ROM
Marie. Barbara ~Nair
and Margaret Whiting per-
form' and diecuu growing
older; ptaYentlofl of Crime;
Robert Butlet on older per-
sona IMng with In.Ir tam>-
llet. ..
t:OO 8 THE FEMHHE
MeTAKE
~t Bonnie Frlinkln ~
a.Ill alarming facta about
me att.cta of cigalWtt•
tmOkJng on womeo. 1J .CMOVIE
"'Kllltng Stone" CPremlarel
GU Oer•d. J.O. Cannon. A
fr....ianoil writer battlea a
vlcioua amall,town aheritf
wflO hMdl the COWl'-41C) of
Filmi ng· Tl' Mov ie
Joan Bennett~ who made her movie debut as
a child in 1929. is filming Ross Hunter) NBC
movie "Suddenly Love ... Jn recent vears.
Miss Bennett has starred in soap operas.
Better Children's
'IV Shows ~bed
WASHINGTON <AP> -Action for Children's
Television opened its loth anniversary meeting
Sunday night with a star-studded call for upgrad-
ing television programs for children.
ACT has petitioned the Federal Trade Com-
mission to stop advertising sweets during
children's television shows and baa asked the
Federal Communications Commission to reduce
the amount of ads on chlldren'a shows.
Five television screens showed samples of cur-
rent children's shows.
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS fJ 8: 00 CBS Report!) The
pros and cons of pension plans a rt> ttX·
amined. a long with a retiring member of
Congress and report about fire an tht-
Bronx.
NBC II 9:00 "Killing Stone .. A
freelance Wailer cG 1l Gerard 1 1s pitted
again.st a small Lown sheriff 1J. D. Can
non> m a murder invctigalion in this new
TV movie.
CBS fJ 9.30 "Home to Stay ...
Henry Fonda stars as a farm owner ~P·
proaching senility who fights the al·
tempts of his son to :,end him. to a nurs-
ing hpme in this new TV drama <see re·
\'iew below L
• ~ llornlclde
ea THAIEE't
OOMPN/t
"Janet'• High School
S~" Janet IOaM
her oool *hen the groovy
cempu1 Adolll• of her high
IChOol d*'fl ahOWI up f°' a
date encl J8Ck and Chrla1y
coneplre 10 ....... lhafn
8IOfle In the apwtment.jRI
I MEW OAIFFIN
PLIDOEMfAK
Aegulw1Y ~ pro-
grenwnlng may be dala)"ad
dVI to pledge l>reeka. ID MASJERPIECE
THEATRE
"Our Mutual Friend" Tiie
Bottini' houaeflold growe;
Llma't education c:au-a
11rr. (Pan~ om -
Cll RITA MORENO
CPrernlare) Mlirle Co11an-
u '1 (Rita Moreno) Hie '"'*' on exciting new dlmenalon wtlln ... lnher·
11• a ""*" r-1 hOtal and ~cope With the dal-
.. ,, .. NA TioNAL
OEOGMllHIC 8":CIAL
"The Anlrnela Nobody
Loved" The muatang,
rlltlllN*e and CO)'CQ-
varrnlnll or W:tlma? t:to 8 Cl) H0Me 10 ITAY
The young grenddMIQhter
(Krlltln Vlgllrd) of a l«'M-
ltve, aplrlt.O f9ml owner
(H«lry Fonda) Mlpt him
dlapef tt1a epectars of old
age and the' nursing home
Into wt1icltl 1111 eon (Mictleal
Mc:Gwe) Wlllfta to e.ld
llkn. 89 CART!A COVNTfft' •
"Beetlng The Pounda"
T rytng to diet. Ctllal Roy' 1
Maygolng temperemenl
Hern• 10 be getting
thinner when tie It eccuaad
of police bNtllllty by a
prlaoner <e.mev Mcfac(.
dlnl.IRI
10:001 • HEWS (II ~AMILY
'''-Of S"*lowa'" After
having a nightmare about
runntno ~ • Clllld with
a cer. t<ate become•
lncrMllngly dlatu.tled aa
_,ti kMO ~ with lier
drN1111.(A) m LET'S MAKI A DEAL CD NIW8CHECK
An Informative c:oDaction
of Orange County '*""-oo-nment Md conaumer
aflalra, people Md aportl.
tG:30 •• NEW8 MICHAEL JACK80N
Mexlco't Ambuudot IO
the Untt.O Stat• HUGO
Ma<galn. dlacu-n1a
country'• tnternatlonal
ralifrona. (Paif 2) -
I IHl!AK PREVIEWS
11lCIO tt'Jf ~£W9
8TYU
"Loye And The Nutay Girl"
A girl trlaa to attract an
artll1 to gee a modeling
aaaignmenl. G MOVIE
... • • • "Ttle Snak• Pit"
( 1048) OIMe de Hftlllend,
Mark St-. A former
~patient racella wlttl
hOfror nar ••periencel
wlllla lnttltutionllllmd. (2
hl'I.)
• THE ODO COUPLE O.C.r cons Fell• Into revtawtnv p1ays 1or him
wtlerl hla ~·· dr• ma crttlc dllrna that •
IC)ort-iter can't wr1te •
credible f9Ylew
• MONTY PYTHON'S
Fl YINO CMaJS
• OC<CAVETT
Guella: Ooneld Woods,
author of the moat wldely
ayndlcated column 111
South Africa, Ind Peter
Magubene, a atatt membaf
of the Jonannett>uro Ranes
~Mall. G MACNEIL. I L.EHREA
...._ ______ _
'llonae to. S tag'
TONIGHT 'S LATEST LISTINGS
~
t1:30 9 Cl} C88 LATE MOVIE
• • 'l(iaa Me, 1(111 Ma"
1 t'l781 Sta11a Stevena.
M~ AnOe<ton Jr A
po11oa 1n....i1Qator oontil>·
ue1 to took lf'llO lhe death
of • young actlooltMChet
although l'tet 1uper1or1
think they alfaedy have the
crtm1nal and ttley
dlac:outega het from con·
11nu1ng '* work D 8E8TOFCA~
Hou JOl'tnny Caraon
Guaats Sha<lll Ka1t1er1ne
Crumbley of Ohio. Sammy
Oa1111 Jr Charles Frank
IAI
8 LOVE, AMEJVCAtt
STYLf
"l~ And The ConlUQal
Vlllt' Harry IS pan Of an
e11peumental pttton
ptojec1 '"love And The
lovely E-*'G" One but·
glat cnangea tnrae couplea' ,._
•9 A8CMOVIE • *°"' '"Pata 'N Tiiiie"
C t9721 Walter Mttthau.
Carol Bymatt. Alter an
•ff.,r. a mldclle--oed cou-
p le matfy, become
patents. end are forC41d 10
dNI With the Ir~ of a.
~child.
., THATGIAL
"A Friend "t ~ ..
• GETIMART
Mu and OSI are caught
and rMClltd lor shipment
oelllnd the Iron Curt-.n.
• CAPTtOHe> ABC
NEWS
MOANING
12:00 8 l'WILIGHT ZONE
"C....,AndMa"
• MOVIE • • * "Tiie MIOnlfle«lt
Ambereons" (19421
JOHPh Cotten. Anne
BaJcter Directed by Orton
Wellaa An ec:canrnc temlly
dlflO* 10 ~ dWlnO a
.. time of rliC)ld Change. (2
hf•I
1=r=..
MPORT'
12:30 9 MOVIE *** "Forni ~s" C11M21 t:red MacMurrey.
SUMn H9YW*d A. fOfnt
•et!Qllf muet conl9nd '""'h
two glrt9 wflO .,. both In
IOYe With him. C t hr , 2S
mtn I
• MOVIE
• •·~ "Tne Capta1n·1
TatM" ( 19e0) John Greg-
ton. Peggy Cumrnon. A
-c:eptaln of a luxury '"* must .-0 In • ,, ...
a1 ""' 1n °'°" 10 11eeo h11
l)fomotlon permanent. 1 t
...... »mwi.1
1:00 D TOMOMOW
Guett: Dorothy Alllton. a
New ,,.,...., nou-ue.
who "'"" dlacua her UM Of
payenie ~lo •Id poia
ffl Ill• atat• t04ve Cf\~
and locate m1n1ng
~ G 1aPV
"T"i.:_You're 11"
1: 11 e (I) l(().W( (TIME
A#ROX.)
··Moftkay On A S1nng" A
roung pOlloa offlClar. ~
llUfed Into workino tor the
undafwe>fld ~IUM of
1n«eulng gM1bling dabla,
•• toroed fo l'Mlle a~
w'*1 na la ordered 10 kill
CrOCller. 1:aol Ne#8 t:IS NEW8 2.-00 • NEWS
MOVIE
••• "'T.-Of Mamat-
ian'" C UM2) Ma Haywortn,
Ctianaa 8oyer
G MOVIE
• • '"H<>ng Kono Hot
Harb«" C1ff2l Marion
Cook. Klauajurgen
Wueaow An Arn«lcan
toumalilt, lnYeat~ "'-
oeacn of • friend In Hong
Kong, ~ lnYOIYed In
1 fight tor onanllcal
r4M1Mtell dOQumenta. (2
""·' • MOVt!
• • • '"Conlllctad'" (1050)
Gtann Ford. Brooeridl
Crawtord . 2".251 HEWS a:oo MOVIE
• .,_. ··Two-Way Stretch'"
(10611 Peter Sellars.
Wllfr9d Hyd9-WMe.
4:008 MOVIE • * '"Tiie Blacll .Panthet
Of Retana" (19&21 Mwt·
anna Koehl. Haln'°9'Khe.
-~ • 1t ""Fort Algierl" (1952)
YVC>Clftne De Cat1o. Cwtol
Thompson.
4:258 NEWS
4:308 MOVIE •'* 'h '"HouM Ot HorrOfa'"
C•M&I 8411 GoocMn. Rob-
ert L-v.
lt'ed ne•day'•
Daytl•e /tlo .,fe•
AFTERNOON
11:30. •••·'Thaeoy With
GrMn Hair" ( t941) Deen
StoelcWell, Aot*t Ryen. A
young or-pNn mutt '-"
to deal with relectlon wtwi
tMa ....., '""" ore--(2 hrs., 20 min.I
12:00 D • • 'h "Celling 8u4lcSo;
Drummond" {t9611 Walter
Pidgeon. Mergwet leigh-
1011 London'• lamoua
det41C11ve It celled out of
retirement 10 brllk •gang
or l'tOOdtum• who are ter-
rormng the city with
m'"IOft-dolt•r robberiea. ( t
nr .30mlnl
Fonda TV Drama Fine
By JAY SRARBV'IT
LOS ANGELES CAPI -Henry Fonda turns 73 ,
this month, but age hasn't diminished his ex·
cellence as an actor. Case ln point: his work
tonight at9:30on Channel 2 in CBS' ''Home to Stay.··
a gentle yam about the ravages of age.
He plays an old Illinois farmer. a recent stroke
victim slowly going senile but resisting attempts
by his son. Frank <Michael McGuire>. to put him
in a nursing home lo await an ungrand finale.
Two kids aid· hi.s fight. granddaughter Sara
and her boyfriend. Joey, 14, respectively played by
Kristen Vigard and Davl~Stambaugh in a manner
that almost steals the show from Fonda, a veteran
scenestealer.
"HOME" INttlALL Y IS a bit awkward in
establishing that:
-Sara'4 folks were killed in an accident and
her Uncle Frank resents the burden of carin& for
both her and his father at the farm.
-Fontta owns the farm, but refuses to sign it
over to his soi:s to back a loan needed to compete
against corporate farming companies.
-Frank. who says hls father Is "not sound
half the time," rears hls dad, occasionally acting
erratically and suffering memory loss, will unwit-
tingly deed the family farm to outsiders. But once this is past
[ ]
and the old man's sister TV REVIEW cFrances Hyland> put in the farm 's cast or
---------characters. the show becomes nne drama.
with Fonda etching a subtle. gently humorous
portrait of a man whos~ faculties are faillbg but
not his spirit. ·
THOlJGH WS SON HOPES to have a town
doctor declare Fonda mentally incompetent.
'flranddaugtiter Sara opposes the idea.
Loving the oltt1 man, hating the thought of him
in a nunlng home. she batches a plot to have
another doctor -1 married to her aunt -certify
him competent before Frank can act.
Problem: The doctor lives several hundred
miles away ln Chicago. So she enlists pal Joey to
put Grandpa's Crall old pickup truck in shape ror
the voyage. Then they whlsk him away.
Wlth Joey driving, Illegally, they take back
roada. J(et stuck in a r$storm. have mechanical
woes and must st.op at nightfall at a rural boarding
house with th.eir exhausted passflllger.
IN A roNNV BIT OF byplay at the house, a
saucy, pretty cook <Trudy Young> flirts out·
HENRY FONDA STARS IN TV DRAMA
Kristen Vlgard Plays Loyal Granddtlughter
rageously with the boy. Which prompts a jealous
Sara to warn : "Stay away from her. Joey. She's not
nice."
"Sara. just shut up. wlll you?" sighs the tired,
frustrated lad ... She's the nicest thing that's hap·
petted to me all day.''
What ensues when the kids and the old man
rinally wheel into Chicago in their wheezing. strip·
ped·gear steed? Well , I suggest ¥OU set aside 90
minutes tonight, turn on CBS and find out for
yourself. 'Phts .. proceedlng, in addition to excellent act-
ing, is solid In all other departments, including Su~anne Clauser's script. Delbert Mann's direction
and Hagood Hardy's unobtrusive score.
I I
COMIC§ I CRQSSWOAO
MARMADUKE
"Stop complaining. He's only reuirnlng the
junk you threw at him last winter!"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
CASEY
DENNIS THE MENACE
MISS PEACH
;
y
I .,
l
(8) A FLA6ttl~& RED
SIGNAL.
TUMB1.EWEEOS
&A$A WCKtWUY
CN(1""' l'i J.JHE 01lfeR INPUWSP
• by Tom Batiuk
(C) A lRAIN GOING
~.
by Chna Rodrtguea
I SUPPOSE THEYLL.
WANT ME TO SHARE
MY SODA WITH 'EM
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
by Mell
T~. May 2. 1978
PEANUTS
r«>W. TMl5 AN1.~io\L i
H,.\VE ~ HEiE
T~ 15 Cr\LLEO ,.\ DOG
7
DAILY PILOT 87
by Charles M. Schulz
by Roger Bradfield.
I
' " •
I 1. CATS DoNT . BARK
Fe;;A."f'WRING
i.,,OW, t..OW
PR ices ...
GOURM!S"f" i:::>ei...1cAc1es
ANP A.
CRAC.-<ESRt..IACK
S'T'A.FF .'
by George Lemont.
. . .
I .
_J,.. •
TDDAYrS GIDSSIG·BD PVZZLI
by Tom K. Ryan
ACROSS
1 s.oa-
s Most reunt
9 Ejects
14 Dumas 111Ck·
name
15 Turkish tflle
16Goddeues
ot the set·
sons
17-1uklp
11119611 Oscar
winner
19 Full ol verve
20 Couples
22 Pepped up
'l4 Hit hilrd
26 Rescues
• lrom harm
'l7 Comp1a1n
2'9 High rock
JO Asian shrub
33 Factory d1s-
tharge 2
words
37 St1nd In·
dolently
38 Combustion
residue
39-Galahad «> The March
KlnQ
41 Expited
42 Acts ol leat·
illQ
44 Untlape>y
45 Brow
4S0111onec1
the trulh
47 SkHI condt-
lion
•Furn.eede-
vic:e
S3 Baflistled
57 Biting inMci
58 Parallel lo
59 Eng. v111ev
61 Otpper con-
tlellltlon
62 Qell>fe now
83 ~lox's
molher
14 Russ
emperor:
Var
65 Sumfl'IOfled
by name
M Arrog1n1
one
67 Allention-
get1111g
WOfdS
UNrTCO Feature Syndic.te
Monday's Puzzle Solved
10 Battery 1er-31-...NQ1
0
sv pet·
m1nals 'Wir
ti lteland «> A batga1n
12 &eaker Sl109
13 Propagahve 42 Opeta star
DOWN plant par1 43 Clear
~ Begets 45 MantPUliled
1 ·c.gar: city 23 Actor -d1shones11v
2 Nom de ·Novello 47 Away from
plume 15 The police here
3 WNk: 211 Lead and 48 • _ come
Pl'lonlttlca zinc: 2 eleven
words 50 P~et
4 Took out JO Excuralofl 51 Try out
5 Fiii to 1teeo grouo 52 Liits up
up 31 Othefwlse S3 lmllte
I ~~ti girt 32 :::Wful 54 -K«zan:
7 .......... ttons 33 lumo• Movie v1P _
"""""' M Whefe S5 Of great du·
I Hiving Nepal Is rtliOn
ltlfee sides 35 Stor1ge ~ Fllghlless
9 Electric a~ atructure bird
pllance 31 Pointed end 80 Grab: Slang
. '
.,
Guest St8rs Coast
~ $many Acting NatD
Singer Sonny Bono, who launche.s an act-
ing career in "Esc~e_to Athena " stroll~
w~ his 9-year-old daugh er Chastity on
the island of Rhodes where. the World War
I I movie is being filmed.
Singer Files -Sllit
On Record Fil,n
NEW YORK (AP) -
Singer Gladys Knight
says. two recording com·
Buddab in lir76, .but Bud-
dab encountered rman-
cial difficulties.
A new comedy with veteran entertainer Morey
Amsterdam leads a lengthy parade of new produc-
tions onto Oran1e Coast staees thls week.
Amsterdam 1tars in "Funny You Shouro Ask,"
opening a six-week engagement at Sebastian's·
West Dinner Playhouse in San Clemente Wednes·
day. Shartna the opening ni&ht will be the vehera·
ble drama "Inherit the Wind," bowing 1n at Sad·
dleback College. ~
On Thursday the San Clemente Community
Theater rings up the curtain on MoUere's "The
Imaelnary Invalid," while Fri·
day rinds the Westminster Com·
muniLy Theater back on the
boards with a com le mystery,
"Any Number Can Dle." For
the younger set, the Fountain
Valley Community Theater has
a pair of children's plays open-
ing Friday.
AMSTERDAM IS THE
second headliner in Sebastian's
West's new policy of "name" guest stars (the flJ'St
was Mickey Rooney <in March>. The cello-playing
comic beads the cast or a new play by Gei>rge Tib-
bles, whose "Leonardo the Florentine" premiered
at Sebastian's.
Performances will be given nightly at varying
curtain times at the dinner theater, 140 Avenida
Pico, San Clemente. Call 4.92·9950 for reservations
and curtain information.
Another guest star. movie and television actor
Don Keefer, headlines the Saddleback College pro.
duction of "Inherit the Wind" in the role of Henry
Drummond. Keefer began bis career on Broadway
-20 years ago and bas wor~ed-witb-E*hel-Bal"
rymore, Helen Hayes, Jose Ferrer and Uta Hagen,
among others.
"INHERIT THE WIND~.. which fictionalizes
the Scopes "monkey trial .. of 1925, will be
i>erfMm1!CI Wednescfay through~ of this
week and next at 8 p.m. and May 7 and 14 at 5 p.m.
in the colle,e'a Fine Arts Theater. Tick~ts are
avail~ at the bo¥ office. • ,. San Clemente's "Imaginary Invamr• is a
.300-year-old cqmedy about a hypochondria~ who
tnes to rule his-daughter's romantic fife. Tom
Adams takes the tiUe role, with Stephanie Tatum,
Pnscilla Romero, William Reid, Barbara Davies,
Intermission
Tom Titus
David Men, John Parker, Eugene Frank. Robert
Shields, Susan Herczeg, Doug Brissey and Vance
Simonds cdmpleting the cast. Charles Aabbaugb la
directine.
Curtain time is 8:30 Thursday through Satur·
day for four weekends at the Cabrillo Playhouse,
202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente. Reservations
492-0465.
RON ALBER5N IS directing '"'Any Number
Can Die," a mys farce by Fred Carmicllael,
which takes up resl ence in Westminster Friday,
playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through
June 3.
Lois Farah and J .D. Reichelderfer play the
'leading roles in the comedy with Susan O'Connell.
Clar k Burson. Ron Gries by, Karol McGill, Ruth
Dorward. Roger Masters, Kenneth Mick. Jeff
Haas and director Albertsen completing the cast.
Performances will be given at the theater, 7272
Maple St., Westminster, with reservations being
taken at 893-8621.
The Fountain Valley Community Theater will
present ''The Pied Piper" and "The Elves and the
Shoemaker" at the Fountain Valley Recreation
Center for three weekends -Fridays at 7:30 and
Saturdays and Sundays at 2:30i Further informa-
tion is available-at 962·6202o~988«j()9.
O'Toble on Stage
TORONTO <AP> -Actor Peter O'Toole says
two productions he will star in will open this fall a~
the Royal Alexandria Theater here before moving to
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the Kennedy Center for the
Performing Art.sin WasblngtonJlDd to Broadway_...-
Ant.Qo Cbekhov 's "Unc1eVanya .. 'willopenSept.
11 and Noel Coward's "Present Laughter" is
scheduled for its debut on Oct. 9, theactorsaid.
panies are trying to-,.~liiiiiiliiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiir========::::;::::========;-:-:::::;;;;:-::::;;;;;:::--:::::;;:::-:::::::--:::::;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
k ee p from her the ~ • "'n possibility that one of "'l' e t~ .... them is going broke. K ft C•22hotalfloon, "'"
Miss Knight, star of 4.2 ....... 197cops, lMEAnlEl-ORIJGECO
Gladys Knight and the 390......._....., SENIOR011ZENSS2.00 Pips, ls asking $20 D~PLAYHOUSI 3,000...,st.rlcalfw
million from Buddab MOw Playillg keep .... ldllsfNm 50 COAST PLAZA
Records and its presi-w...a..Alft•• awt .. ctotheBe......, dent, Arthur Kass, and ,,,_.., MMllllLltNJll •,_
·'BRIGHAM YOUNG" (PG) Arista Records and its DON'T DRINK NO U1av.1 president, Clive Davis. ..,,. • DAILY-,.._ UT ... ,....,..~. Her complaint, filed in THE WATER
Manhattan Supr e me
C1>ttrt, ~id she signed-it
four-year contract with
"THAT OBSCURE
OBJECT OF
bESIRE" (R)
..USM SUl-nna
After her divorce,
rlca got to know
some pretty -
Interesting
people •••
lncludl.,g herself.'
• '"THI OMI a Ol&T" ...
"'W .............
"FM" (PG)
OAILY ..... 10 IAT/llUH U0010
'THE FURY" CR> OM.Ylct08AT~10 "EVIL ..
.. , ... ACNa '"1'MI eooDIYI .._ .. ,,.. _.,._,, ....... S.U,..._ lllL .. L ldL r-. NI
""
"CASff'S SHADOW'* ..,
"ANllEHAU."
ll!'l!!l'~ -NII ..... __
_ .....
... COUMtll ... ---
. .
ENTERTAINMENT I INTERMISSION
&-nlHulion •-0
... ...
• l '
i
(
l I
-•
-·
INStDa: •Ann unden •Horoscope
•Erma Bombeclc •Classltltcr , OM~~leatUrin9~~·· .... ·-·----c· ~.Mey 2. 1978 •
Bella Abzug: 7here Is no turning back the clock.'
Betsy Sanders, general manager, with the Nordstrom family, from left, Elmer, Jim,
John and Bruce. I
BflppenillflS
By Marcia Forsberg
SeauteTo
So1illilaad
The Pacific Northwest has come "° tbe
Orange Coast with enough shoes to reacb from
Seattle to South Coast Plaza. And ietting the very flm look at tla
shoes <u well as clothing, jewelry, ~metlcs
aud acceeaories> were 3,000 area reeldenti, wbo
attended a private champagne preview Sunday
nagbt at tbe new Seattle·based Nordstrom
speeialty store.
BellaAhzug
7here is nothing more important in tlJ,i§. country than
millions of women wot.WPg to pass ERA .•. '
' < • , By CHERYL ROMO • Of .. 0.!yf't ........
There was only one thing on former
Congresswoman Bella Abzug's mind when she
appeared in Orange County recently: Ratifica·
tion of the Equal Rights Amendment before
the March 22, 1979 deadline.
..We are anguished over the fact that we
are still begging and pleadlng to get what is our
right." said the flamboyant 58-year-old activist
to a crowd or about 140 gathered at the Corona
del Mar home or Patricia Heriog and Haskell
Shapiro.
Bella Abiug, the first Jewish woman ever
elected to Congress from her home state of New
York, whcMierved tMee--tenm before dropping
out to make an unsuccessful bid for a Senate
seat, and who recently lost the mayoral electJon
in New York City, was in Orange County for the
first time as a guest of the Federation ol Mex·
ican Business· and Professional Women of
OrangeCounty. • ·
"We need three more states.'' said the plnk·
hatted attorney. dubbed "Battling Bella" \>Y her ·
colleagues In Congress for refusing to recogniie
a "silence-Ls· golden .. tradition durln& her first
term ln the Capitol. , .
She said that more than 200 women's groups. i
across the nation are partJclpatl.nl ln a maJOr
boycott of stales th•t have not ratified the
Eqoal Rights Amendment. These are Alabama.
Arizona, Arkansas, r1orlda. Georgia. Illinois,
Louisiana. Missouri, Mississippi. Nenda.
North Carolina, Oklahoma. South Carolina.
Utah and Virginia.
In addition ro the boycott. she indicated pro-
ERA rorces are working to elect officials who
support the amendment and to "unelect of·
ficials who don't." She said women have been
oppressed. particularly in the areas of employ·
<see BELLA, Paie cu
...........................
Among those at the-patty were, from left, Rudi Bafltnfeld. Mrs. Anton SegetStrOm, and
Sally and John Nordstrom. . ·
The occasion marked the Nordstroll'
famUy'a first opmi.ng outside the Northwest ln
the 77·year blstory of the company, which start·
ed u a shoe store in downtown Seattle in 11101. Now. with stores throughout the Wublngtoa,
Oregon and Alaska areas, the South Cout Plua
ouUet ls Ole 19th in the Nordstrom chain.
Mrs. Gordon Cash, left. and Mrs. Clifton Webb, admire the. '
fashions.
Sampling appetizers are Newport residents Robert and
Lois Kemble.
Sunday's preview party waa a semi.format
benefit sponsored bJ nine local chapters of
Region not the National Alllltance t.eape.
Mn. JlleUel Vu 8eed <cha1rmm of the
event> and 111'1. W. BaP Olds <co-cbalrmm> reported that $40,000 was ral!ed. and that pro.
ceeda wW t>e used for the more than 30 contlnu·
Ing phll8'throplc project supported by the
Assastance\Leque. •
UPON OIUV AL, guests were oven com·
pbmemary wlDe ataases Imprinted with tbe
Nordstrom name. Champqne and wtalt were .
available at every turn ID the lntlmate. tbJ'ee.
level store. wblcb appeued to bt cboct·fulJ of
mercbandile. .
.. I've already ptcted out three pain of
aboes," remarked one woman. "I j\lll have to
have that raincoat." tald anotber. An extra
bonua for aoeak peeken • the cub reatatera
were open and salespeople bappll) traded
perfumes. necklacee. iweaten and aboea for
charge cards.
Providing a glimpse to Pacific Northwest
foods were the IM.food bats, wbkb tot tbe ~t
attention as p~·1oen aampled o;vatera
Rockefeller, ~m aalm<lft, lhrllQf and crab.
Also available ror .._,, ~and • vea•tables. fluter 1andwlcbel, aDd cracken
•l181C PO& llat.enifta and was of·
fenid b7 Hot Silk, a thrff.p6ece combo Loi
<See OPENING, hie CJ)
, ::
About 3,000 people
attended the open-
.. • . . ••
ing of the depart· l ment store Sunaay. ;
. . .
·~
..
.. "' .........
,
q IWLV OT T~.W.,2.1911
College Becoming a Costly Crunch
By JON HALVOUBN
BRUNSWICK Mulne <AP) -On May 1.
thousands ol bigb schGol senlon made one of
the mo.R Important decisions of their young
Uves -whk h ol the nation's elite private co}.
le1es to attend.
For some. the day of acceptance may have
meant fulfillment of an ambll.ion -tbeln or
their parents. For others, the decision may
a lready have been made for them. Either lbey
were rejected by the .schools or they didn't •P·
'ply because they're part of a 1rowln1 aroup
whose parents decided against maktna the hugt
financial sacrifice.
Although there are fewer low-and mldd1e·
income applicants and the overall percentage of
high school graduates enrollipt Jn four-year col·
leges is declining, the tOJ>:notch private acbools
have no shortage of candidates.
Last year. Stanford and Dartmouth aceept·
ed only one in four appllcant.s; Harvard, less
than oneinfive; Amberst, lessthanoneinslx. The cost or attending such tnsututtons as
staggering. At Bowdoin College, the UM-year.
old alma mater or Hawthorne and Longfellow,
next fall's 380 freshmen -of 3,600 who applied
-will pay $7 .250each, up from $6,SSOthis year, for
tuJUon, room and board, fees, supplies and in·
cidentalexpenses.
But al Bowdoin and other private schools,
the proportion of students from low-and middle·
income families is d.roPDinll.
••• Opening
<From Pafe Cl>
Angeiu, and Jack Sboo-p & Group from
Anaheim.
Highlight of the evening was a swinay,
choreographed fashion show featuring desilJlS
by Pearl and Albert Nipon. as well as a cross
section of clothing available in Nordstrom
fubion departments. The male models received
spirited applause from onlookers.
.. Great outfits," said a bystander durlng the
finale. which included a white-faced mime
cavorting among a parade of models dressed in
black nening gowns.
AMONG THE GUESTS were Albert Nlpoa
(clothing designer) and Joe Famolare <shoe de·
signer). Executives included .John, Elmer, Jim
and Brace Nordstrom and relative Jatk M~ v MWaD.
Also attending were Mr. and. Mn. Miles
Newby Jr. <she is president of National As·
slstance League), Mr. and Mrs. Leoeard Boaaa,
Mr. and Mn. Andrew Mortblaad. MT. and Mn..
Robert Blacker, M.r. and Mra. Robert Marvta.
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Hope, Dr. aad Mn.
Wllllam Oatway.
Also, Mr. ud Mn. GortJon AUdmoD, Mr.
and Mn.. Paul Grtem, Mn and Mn. Nick B.
Wllllama, Mr. aod Mn. WyneU E. 8eda1I Jr.,
Mr. aad Mn. Vlr,U Bowell. Mr. U4I Mn.
Cbarlea P. B.lpley, Mn. Sam Garley Jr., Mr.
and Mn. WlWam Moseley Jones, Mn. George u. Yndley J'r. -
Also, Miu Apes Blomqmt, Mr. ud Mn.
Roger DeYoaag, Mr. aad Mrs. Robert 0.
Basmajlan, Lob LaBude, Mn. Vidor Terry,
aad MT. uad Mrs. Richard Ladq, Just to name
a few
••• Bella
<From Pa•e Cl>
• • J Fewer families who "fall into what the
sociologists call the middle class ~ even ap·
plying to pJa~es that are very expe°'ive," says
William R. Mason, Bowdoin's director of ad·
miaslons. IDs office defines middle class as
families earning $15,000-$25,000, ''and you might
even push it up as high as $301000."
A Bowdoin study comparing its freshman
classes over an eight-year period -as the stu·
del\t ~ increas¢ from 955 to its present 1,350
-shows a growmg number of well-to-do stu·
dents and a decreasin& proportion of those less
affluent: .
ln 1968, 24.4 percent came from families
earning under $15,000; by 1976, the number had
dropped to 19.6 percent. ln 1988, 30.2 percent -
were in the $15,000-$25,000 bracket; only 2a.8
percent Wet'e 10 years later. Alld the freshmen
from f amllies with incomes of SSS,000 or more
jumped from 2 percent in 1968 to 37.9 percent in
1976. -
The study fagured family income in 1976
dollars to d.isco\Dlt the effects of tnnation.
The effect of soaring costs on families of
modest means hasn't gone unnoticed. At Bow·
do in, three alumni, each acting independently.
set up substantial scholarship funds earmarked
specifically for "middle·income" students.
"That's a new phenomenon," says C. War·
ren Ring, vice president for development.
ln his annual report a year ago, Bowdoin
President Roger Howell Jr .• noted that given in·
flation geqerally and the increased costs of at·
tending Bowdoin, .. there is nothing mysterious
abQut the growing need to provide aid to stu-
dents from upper middle-income families.
"We continue to be troubled, however,
f)bout the decreasing numbers ol low and lower
middle-!bcome studehts. . .and we will continue
to direct our recruiting effort to lower income
students of blgh ability."
Says Muon: "What we·~ trying to do here
ls admit a class without any notiOQ as to
whether they can pay" -and then aid every
student who needs it. A bout a third at Bowdoin
receive financial aid.
and tb1s year, u the east of attendance rose
from s:uoo to SS.SSC>. its scbolarablp arants and
loans cllmbed from S131,000 to about $1.S
million. BQt th.ls year, its total f\nanclal aid pro-
gram exceeded lt.s Locome by $230,000, and sa.Ys
Ring, 0 we're utilbina the reserve fund -the
savln1s -at an alarming rate."
ln 1968. 35 percent. or Bowdoin., freshman
aid recipients came from f amillea earning
$1S,000-$25.000. Now, more than ball fall in that
bracket.
Walt.el' H. Moulton, dirtttor of student ald.
says Bowdoin families in the SU.000-$20,000
bracket received average financial aid of $3.~
toward this year's cost of $6,500. The net cost to
parents was S3.100 -compared with $3.205 for
an-state students llvinc on campus at tbe
University of Maine at Orono.
Families earning $20,oo6-$25.800 received an
average of $2,150, leaving them with a net cost
of$3,800. -But even with the financial ald available,
Bowdoin and similar institutions see a "decUn·
ing public'' among low· and mlddle·income
families.
One reason, Mason says, is that tniddle·
class values have changed -parents are less
willing to make the great ftnancial sacrificea
they once did to pay for their children's colleae
education. Mason, who has spent 11 years in ad·
missions work at Yale, Williams and now Bow·
doln, adds: "The elhlc that prevailed among
parents when I first started was, 'Don't worry.
we'll make the sacrifice.'"
Now, be sa~s. more and more middle-class
families are usihg their disposable income "as
a kind of payment back for all their bard work"
by spending it on themselves.
·'They're saying, 'There are cheaper col·
leges than Bowdoin out there and they probably
give a pretty good education. Why should 1
make the sacrifice?' "That's a drastic value change that's going
on out there."
One recent study, by the College Scholarship
Service of the College Board, would appear to sup· port the view. • .
The study surveyed 10,000 families who ap.
plied for student financial aid for the Cun "lit
school _y~. The bieber the parents' income,~
study found, the less willing they were to con·
tribute what-was expected of them -based on
income and other assets -toward their
.,,. children's education.
The study did not measure what parents ac·
tually paid, but what they said the)' were willing
to pay. Among families with incomes or less
than $6,000, only 3 percent said they would COD·
tribute less than what was expected. Among
families earning $24.000.$30.000, 90 percent of· f ered to spend less than expected of them under
a standard financial aid formula.
Joe Paul Case, associate director of the
College Scholarship Service, believes that mld·
die-income families' ability, or willingness, to
pay for a college education .. perhaps is in·
fluenced by their own expectations of what is,
for lack of a better term. 'the good life.•
"Being couumer~ented and interested in
provldtn-g a comTortable-standard-o( liv·
ipg ... they may well be spending all that
they're eamlng," with little left for college.
Case says it's a myth "that middle-income
families don't qualify for aid -they do," but
when it comes to applying for admission it often
is the parents' perceptlom that count.
"U they're percetvtn1 they're lea able to
pay. then ti.e perceptloa beeomee tbe reality.··
[
HOROSCOPE I EDUCATION
Horoscope ]
W2DNDDAY. llAY J
By SYDNEY OllA&&
AalBS <Marcb 21·AP-rU 19>: take ln·
ltlatlve -stress lndef:ndeoce. confiden~.
Moon in YoUr algn cotnc dea wttb better timlna.
valuable contact&, retum of vttallty. attracUve·
nets. Refuse to be LoUmldated by ooe who talks
o{ ahadowa, but UWe of substance.
TAURVS (April 26-May 21)): You face ls-
suts and succeed. You get support frot11 thole in
autborUy. Special meeting, reorganization
favor you. Bring priorttles into focus. ReaUz.e
the .. game" l.s for keeps -if you had other
ideas. yoti were mistaken. c~, Capricorn penom ragure prorginenUy.
GEMINI <May 21.June'20>: Accent on wide
8PP1Jal, getting finger on pulse of public. II·
lustrate meanings, beliefs. Dramatize goals.
Ariel. Libra figure in scenario. You will com·
plete important assignment. Spotlight on
friends. hopes, wishes.
CANCER <June 2l·July 22>: Strive for
added responsibility, authority and tndepen·
dence. Obstacle now can become a legitimate
st.eppingstoae: refuse to be dissuaded from ]>Ith
leading to ultimate-success. Leo, Aquarius
persons could play key roles.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22 >: You gain rare In·
sights. perceive outline or your future -and
potential. Gain indicated through written word.
You get residual cbeck or payment for project
recently submitted for publication. Follow
through on hunch.
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22>: £xpand
horizons -your potential l.s greater than cur·
rentJy indicated. You can press buttons of op-
portunity. You learn now that your destloy ls Jn
your own hands. Gemini. Sagttta.rtus ftgure prom.
inenrra sodoesnumber3. BA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Accent on oppos.
ing views. publicity, partners1~n marital status. heeding signals. trends, fl a escape
hatch from tangle of red tape. Aquarius.
Scorpio, Leo individuals in picture. Maintain
steady pace. 8e thorough. sincere in approach
to projects and peopJe. You'U win!
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21>~ Communicate
with ~workers, dependents. Check be.altb of ~ pet.a. One you eare4w expresaes..feeling-9. -You
could be surprised. Gemini. Var o, Sagittarius
figure promlnently. A change occurs-wlilch
alters point ol view. You see differenUy, feel
more intensely. •
SAGl'M'ABJVS '<Nov. 22.Dec. 21)~ Good Moon aspect indicates creative activity. romps
with chlldreo, major changes at home base.
Taurus, Libl'a play key roles. Diplomacy wins.
'l'rymg to fortt your way results in frustration.
You come out on top in speculative venture.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 191: Land, prop-
erty values could command attention! See
places, people as the)' are. not as someone else
would bave you perceive them. Pisces, Virgo
figure m scenario. Build on base that has been
tested. You 'll understand!
AQVAIU\JS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: Short tri\)S.
passing fancies. older persons with definite
ideas -tbese are p~rt of your personal
scenarto:-CSl>rtc<rrn coutct ?evear-s-o-me
"'backstage" gossip. ln matters of speeulataon,
stick with number 8.
PISCES <Feb. 19-Ma rch 20> · Emphasize
costs, locations, rights. and permissions. You
get rid of burden. make cash now go -you gain
added recognition. You shake off role or martyr.
receive credit due. Know this and proceed in
dJnamic, confident manner.
ment and reproductive freedom, and said a re-
cent Gallop poll shows the majority of the
American people are in favor of EltA.
The amendment would benefit all women,
she said. \\'hen asked why many of the most
vocal oppon~nta are women, she replled·
"Every came bas Its .Judas.
"There is no turning back the clock. There ~
is nothing more important in tbls country than
millions of women working to pass ERA ' .• It
wlll never move anywhere but forward. Once
we push a little harder, we'll be in."
Since 1972·73, the college has met the
"calculated fanancial need" or every low· and
middle·income s tudent who qualified
academically. In previous years, some students
had to be put on a walling list for financial ald.
UnW th.is year, Bowdoin's financial aid pro-
gram kept abreast of its costs. Between 196M8
RUFFEU.'S .... .
LOSE WATER BLOAT
.WltH ODRINIL
-NAlURFS WAY
Are You Satisfied With
Tile Look Of Your Hair?
She appealed to conaervatlve women -who
she said don't all oppose ERA -and urged
them to begin working "in concert" with other
women and "stop llstenioe to the far·right
minority which domlnatea the power elruc·
lure."
Mrs.· Abzug stressed the need for a naUonal
network of women's groups working torether
with a coordinated plan of action. She urged
women to write and visit their congreaamea. U
necessary, ebe said, there will be a march into
W"hington D.C. in 1979 becauae "women
should get into the Conatltutioo ...
Queried about recent moves to extend the
deadline for ratlfic.atlon, and wbetber th.II did in
WHOLSTERY
W...T•W9' ...... 1m.......... •-C81hlfPYQJm..-. c.... ..... -141-0lff wtiQhl due to excess wat• re&entlon ._ .... _... .... .._ .... ...,,.....,_ .. donng the ll"Ml*1SINll cycle.
Trnel
'9!!!11Il"lnerph•r• •.•
rum lund•r• ___ ... , ...
DAILY PILOT
..._. gentle dU'etic Clllll)CUld-
contal\s 1111\lrll her1>S "'a tablet llll ls
eflectlvt and last l1Cf 1111.
. 009l-tllt "Natural" wat• P*-b
guaranteed 10 help you lose tlllt ~
con1ortable water bloat and t~ary
wllfOllt gain Of your money will be
retunded.
-Is df ... Olis pwllll ~
lMClng Drvg SfoNI
fact mean pro-ERA forces bad given UA.tryinC DONT JUMP! to get the amendment ratified be(ore tfle 1979
deadline, she replied: YOU C .& ~ "We are realllu. We are working very ._,..,.
hard. We are wort.lng hard in FlQrida wbere we LOSE WEIGHT! ooly lost by two votes. We are worldng very
bard in Nevada. We are ralstni funds all over BE THIM -
thle country . . . Any change that comes about STAY THliu
in this country is the result ot'people." "
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is that discrimination is felt doubly or lril>ly by "° horMDI-. e...,.ntwt by mec1ce1 doolor. ~ecially destined mlcrc>1cope. minority women" and slHssed that women are ,,..._ tll-2 not seeking to Just "compete with men" but are JJOI w.taSf.. s.a. iM. 122 ltb t.bis specJal ~lcro-Analy.,-
•ooue&M"-VAC11n•9 ........ ..,., 671..1061 ill be b·'"' to see for v .... ·--·· seeking equality you w a ~ """"~ -------------------------------------------------------------------------•ADY breakage, split ends, orotber
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1011 hyekte Dr. Ne=' 8etteh "*'*of ... ...,.... ilftd .,... Or.) ............... °' ...........
I I
ANN LANDERS I ERMA BOMBECK
Fashion FreedoID
I knew it wu only a
matter of Ume before
men sUU"ted lo get testy
about women ln pants. One or them a carpenter
from Illinois, hu aotten
downrlghl militant
•bout it and submitted
7~ signatures on a pel1·
hon t.o "get our girls,
wtves, and ladies back
into dresses again."
Despite the fact he
wants women in dresses
for a ll the wrong rea-
sons. J have to admit
I'm bored lo death with
pants. At first I saw
them as a lifesaver.
They'd keep my Jegs
from growing together .
They 'd give me
freedom. They'd be a
friend to my allergies:
washing and ironing.
They'd be a !irm st.ale·
ment for my equallty
and once and for all
they'd liberate me from
the contents of those lit·
tie chicken eggs that
batched panty hose that
fit me like a resplralor.
Thal was seven years
ago. The other night
( whil~ I was watching
) MASH, Klinger began to
look good lo me. He was
wearing a wr~paround
dress in a floral pink
with a V-neck and a soft
collar with a pair of dlacrlminated against us
pumps and a matching as they once did when
bag and gloves. we wore slacks? Maybe
I looked al myself. I we couldn't be seated
was wearing a pair of until we went home and
Caded jeans with paint put pants on.
swatches on the knee, a If we kept going in
T -s hirt that read. pursuit of f ashion
"INSANITY IS CON· freedom,. would we one
TAGlOUS. YOU C AN day end up IUce Diane
C A T C H IT F R O M Keaton <whom I love! )
YOUR CHILDREN." but who , at the
My legs were bqre and Academy Awards ,
my tennis shoes raggy. looked like she couldn't
Dressing up for ~ecide what lo wear. so
anym ore was wearing a s h e wore h er e ntire
clean T·shirl. Anti I closet.
wasn't the only one. l made a monumental
From toddl e r s to decision yesterday, I
teen-agers, t.o matrons lo went out and bought a
elderly women. all they dress ... a floral wrap·
ever wore were pants. around with a V-neck
Wh en I thought about it, and soft collar.
I h adn 't seen my My hus band said.
mother's legs since the "Good Lord, are those
Eisenhower administra· your knees or are you
tion. playing the cymbals?"
It occurred to me Maybe, like Klinger. it
maybe we had gone too needed il rifle over the
far. Suppose restaurants shoulders.
M~sic N~stalgia
O~R ANN: Tbis is
for "Born in 1963", tbe
is.year -old who de-·
fended his generation's
music. He also had a
rew blasts for the crazy
tunes o( the 1940s. The
boy asked. ''What is a
Fial-Foot Floogie with a
Floy Floy?"
l can tell him. ft•s the
ever-~pular slum de·
teclive 1of that era and
his loose airHriend.
"Born in '63-r' was bog·
gled by the "Three Lit·
tie Fishes in the Iddy
Biddy Pool.·· That song
was just another non-
sense tune like "Mairzy
Doats and Dozy Ooats antt--r:nne C:ambsie
Di vey ... " T hose
wacky numbers were
written during World
War II -to cheer peo.
pie up.
A•• La•den
His question that real·
ly wiped me out was.
"What does 'Beat Me,
Daddy, J Ate the Bar '
mean? .. Of course. he
meant, "Beat Me, Dad·
dy, Eight lo the Bar,"
Th ls refers to the
rhythmic pattern of a ll
boogie woogie music -
using eight beats in
every measure of 4/4
tirpe.
"Beat Me. Daddy" is
the way people asked
the· piano player <Dad·
dy > to play the songs
they wanted to hear. Today's It's "Play that
funky mu.Sic, Jack'."
Please tell the cat who
wrote that letter to
listen again, Ann. Some
of that cruiness can be
very enjoyable. -ALSO
BORNIN'63
DEAR Al.SO BORN:
Thanks for you r
enlightened response. I bookstore. IMtie book Is
can't allow tbe dis· out of print ill-an prob·
cusslon to end without ably be located through
addlDg a few oostalglc a second·hand store. -
reRec:tlons of my own. 3. The party of the
The best recording of secon d part s hould
"Beat Me D\ddy, Elg.ht NEVER lend the book to
to the Bar" was Ray a third party -at least M~Klnley's. What a not without obtaining
fabalous piano! And &be the owner's.permission. most doteable number r wowa pfefcr-n-ot"To
ln that whole spate of refer to these rules a15
elght·tO·tbe·bar tunes Book Etiquette, just wu tbe anforgetable basic good manners.
Andrews Sil&eTS' rend1· Ho)V about you? -D.C.
ttoa of "Boogie Woogie DEAR D.C.: Amen,
Bogle Boy from Com· Slater ••. and a couple
pany B." I challenge of ltallelujaJls. I hope
anyone who bas &bis everyone oul there who
gem in bis collection to has a borrowed book on
play It and stay off bl.a bl• sbeU wt.11 return It to. feet! day. ,
D E A R A N N CONFIDENTIAL to
LANDERS : I take Too Y9UD• to Be Mar.
pleasure i n lending rled?: S ince your
books t o Cr I e nd s ; mothtr (wbo was yoar
however, my library ls "mentor and guide")
rapid ly diminishing s bo'1ld have told you
because too many peo-tbat husbands, like fires,
pie fail to understand often go out when left
<as did Abraham Lin· unattended, I suggest
coln > that: Jolnt coumelfng -lf you
1. A book that one bor· can 1et him out of tbe
rows should be returned saloons long enough to
-within a reasonable go wltb you. If not, go
perio.d of time. The alone~
lender should not be put
in the uncomfortable
position of having to ask
for his property.
2. A book that Is los t or
damaged s hould be
replaced. One can be or·
dered t h ro u g h a
A Your Daffy Pilot
Caft be
Aecyded.
o.c.c.~•M• ofllcl.t .:.mer
torCoel• ......
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
•l~t'lout eutlNHS l'ICTl'10UI eUltN•U
NAM• STATIMINT NAMa UATIMINT
Tiie 101towl119 .-r'°"' •rt do•no flle lollowlll(" 11erso11a •r• doono
bwtln..1 •• Ou•lrwu ••· THe o.-~eN GROCE ... •uo WARREN, MelfEIGfi, o ..... ,.N
H.,,.llloll, H\lnll""'°" lle~h. CA.,... & $A VAOE, 100 Newport C•nler
O•nnh J ernH C•ml)Mll. >Ill Orlw , N•wpon ~ CA ttMO lliileftdO~a •O.ClDstUo\eS41.CAfU2' 0 .... ld Wl>UHI, ~ 01.olO Vttw W•YM ~ ~. 12'06 PIM Ortve, Ori .... , CA st . WHlrNftt ... CA.,.., Oonn P. M<Ve1ot1. 1..a L.•t-ln
T1111 llutiN.U ,, ~Oflehltted by • '""'· '-" "•anchc:o. CA .. ntr•I pertMMlp. Clvdt C. Grlllln, ltJO $1err1
o.Mll J-C..m•ll O\ula RNCI, ltvlrw, CA t76M
TtllS ilet_..c w• llled wllll llW 11(•,....tll J S.v~. 11001 Vklclr
Countv Cieri< 01 o .. ,... ~,., Ofl 51• .. t, TOf'f-.e. CA 'OSOJ
APf'll 20, 1'11. ' Thll OU"""' ll (°"4111<1'4 tlV • l'MIPM otntr•lp&rt...,.\lllP
'11tlll'llt.i 0r-.. O»•t O.llv Pilot. Chw c. ~lflln APf'll ).S, MtV 2. t, I•, 1'71 Tllh \VI-WM Iliff wilt\ Ille
1514" OUf>tV Clffl! of O••noe Count., Oft
------------1120, lt11.
-
_P_UB __ u_c_N_OT1 __ c_E ___ 1,. p"°"'..., 0ranoe c.o..1 0.11~~
ptll 15, May 1.' ••. ,.,.
l! ... 71
.. .) r
TUMday, May 2. t978
PUBUC NOTICE
·--,,tflTIOill iUl1Hds
NAMa STATaMCNT
flle lollowl119 pertoftt ••• dO•flo IU~IMU ..
INTERNATIONAL RESEARCl-4'
tEV.LOPMfNT. 4e1 Ell.,., SI
(Oii• Me"', CA ~17 •
l H•ll Tiner. 411 E•IN• SI . Co.t.o ~M. CA.,.21
L•rr H flMr 101•1 M.lmmer Lelle HIHlllnoton llN(I\. CA.,._
fl\I\ Ou11,...., I\ &ftdv<t..S Ov •
0-ller•I l)erlN""IP L Hall TINr
'"'' ti.-..... llled ""'" .... Co\lf\ty Cl .. \ o4 Oren119 C°""IY °" "'1<11 16. ,.,.
F•Jttt l'\ltlflllWd Or ... Co.Ht 0.11., Piiot. ,,,_.., >. •. 1•. n. 1•11
PUBLIC NCYl'ICE
, ... IOllO•lll9 perM>ftl .,. dolnO -------------·
bu\lllt\lM L.B T CO , lltSI W•lf'\11 St,
f-t•1n·v.11..,. c..111. ~moe.
Onld L "-4~. '"5' w .. nul
SI • Fou11t.e111 v.itey, C•UI t2IOI
OonN J P•n..--.. 1tfj1 Welll\lt SI., Founi.ln lf•llev. c.111 n1oe.
Tiii! tlUslMSl 1' C4nellleted by 4tn In dMctual.
David I... P•tt .. wn
1111\ Jlal ......... w•\ flltd wltll tllt
Co1mtv c1 ... 1t ol Of•"99 CO\ltll., on
Apr II ,, 1971. ...., .. ,
Putlll"*I 0rlft9" Coall Olllly PllOI
.A~n 11. 11. D. Ma., 1, ll71
su,.EatOlt COUlfT o. T'"IE
$TATE OI' CALll'O•ltlA !<09'
TH a CIOUMTY 01' 09'ANGIE
ttO. A-4SJ82
NOTICf. O" Hf.A .. ING 01'
t'fTITIOtt P'Otl .. lt09ATlf Of' Will.
AND L(.nl9'$ TUTAMENT'AltY,
l'Oa A'DTHO•IZATION TO AD·
PVBIJC NOTICE
IJ32·11
PVBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINISS MAM& STATEMf.ICT
"" ,.
PVBUC NOTICE
•ICT\Tte>ln aWCNU5
NAMe STATEMENT
Tiie lol\9wlno "'"°"' •·~ 0o;1111 buSIMU as
ALPHA OE'!.IG N ~
PHOTOGRAPHY, 21'SI ~r1 S4 Ste. 10., El Tor~ CA m» .,
O•Wft'f. Slllnl ... tl111 YOt'tltl St.,
s.ftl•AN,CA'2m
fhom•l J. Sllll~. ~IS OWr· ;;.v:rd· s.n J""" c.p1u, ... o. CA
Tiil\ MlllUS 1\ ~l9CI ~ a
..... rel """"""'!>' 0.-E. Slllnlltl T~~t•~ Wf' Hied •rtlfl 1"9 Co Cl~k of Or~ c:-ty on
Af)f I lt, 1'71
"~ PUOll\Md 0r9nQll ~I Deily Piiot
M.t., 1. •. '•· n. "" ·
1109-" Tiie IOllow.119 ~non •S OOillQ bu\I
"t'S~ .,
MANAGEMENT Pl.US. 9UI PVBLlC NOTICE ~~Point Or., HUf\llnvton 8HCll, CA. ,_ __ N_O_TI_a_T_O_C_•_l_D_IT_O_•_s __
Oon c. ~\. tUI Ror;kl)Olnl °' : SUP•••oa C:OUllT °"THI
HunllnolOfl Be.ch. CA.~ STATI °" CAll~aNIA ~· Tlli• OU•lneu I\ conoucled b'f •n on THI COUMTY OF OaAGI
dMOu•I .... AASm
Don C. NoU\ Ellale Of HOWAAO 8 H0\.01.M, Tiii\ t&.l_,t ..,., flled wllh the •k• HOWARO 900REAM HOt.OEN.
CoUftl'( Cl-of Or.,.99 Counly Oti ••• HOW•AO HOlOE ... au H 8 . Apf'il27. 191t HOLOEN, Oe<ffwef
1<09»54 NOTICE IS HER£8Y GIVE .. lo IM Publlslled Or~ Co..111 0.11, PllOI. creditor• ol Ille 4lllove ... ~ dK•d9nt
,,,_..,.,,. t, 16. 1l. "11 1 ... 1 •II --119 (l .. <M eQ&IMt 170HI Ille '•Id de<edent ¥e reQut<ed to Ill•
11\em, •llfl it. llKMMfV --~. In
I ... olllGe of 11W C*1! ol IN -8'\• ~. Y,.,.llftW!t~. wnfi
Ille ... UUM'( YOUCflerl, 10 I ... .,.,_ fflCTITIOUS eus1111ns ~r\'9MCI •t 111e otlkt 01 .,,. Pvtlli< ttAME STATlfMl!ICT Admlnlslr•lor of Or--. <:ountY. UOO
TM 1011-1119 per50fl 11 dotnt ~ Soulll G••nd A,,.,..,., S•nl• A11•.
neS\ •• Qlllomi• t210S. Wl>l<h Is Ille pl&« o1
MtHtSTla UNDI .. Tltl ------------
OlO WORLO l ·$HIRTS. 7S.t Outlnttsolllle-llQMdlfiellm•l· c.n-Ck~• 111, H....tln\llOll 8Hcfl, 19'1 JM'1 ..... n;lotM.--ofwidde-
CA ,,., 1 '9Clefll. w1tllln low montllS •I~ tlle
Sylvt• $. Oii.,..., SUO P•••-1 llrll l>t•l>llu!IOll of !Ills notice.
81"" , L°"O BNcll, CA talOS Oaled Aorll 17, mt
Thh IMnillMl "condlKlleCI bY.., Ill· JAMES f. HEIM,
------------dlvldual. Putlllc Admlnlstr•IOt l'ICT1'10US.US41CIU SytvlaS Oii,... ........... IF_ol
INDIEt'lfNDINT ADMINIST.-ATIO.
Of' UTAttl ACT.
Ett•t• ol EDWIN EME._Y
HINCHMAN, Oe<.eased.
PUBUC NOTICE
DAILY PILOT
PlJllUC WOTICE
'IC'TfTIOUI •UtHt8H ttAMI ITAfllM .. T
f11e IOllowlllQ 1Nrl0flt •t• OOtnf llutllle•• ...
•fCRL'TIO-. USA,_11S17 O.wn
,w• •d ..... "'"""'°'· v-"'20 c ....... l . (MnpOell J• .. 11)1)
O•v•n•Of't ltd , "°' Al•mllot. C/lo '°"° ltoCIDit I.. ~I. I IS7l Oav..,
port Ad .. l.Ol A14'ft\IW>t, CA '0120
Tiii' tl11tl ... u I' COftOu<-Oy • 9'119'•1 !MlflllWllWo, O\tf19'1..~1Jr
TM1 t&.~ Wff flied •1111 llW
Co\11\ty Cl~!! Of 0r•"9'1 Coo.Hit¥ on Apt II 6, t t1I.
'J fftu.I ~1.-er..,.. Coett 0.llV Pllol "-'II 11, It, >$, May 1, tt1'
13'S.19
·~11
PUBLIC NOTICE
fflCTIT10U$ eUSINHS
•AM& STAT•MaNT
Tiie lollOWl"9 i»rton II do!llQ Duso
M\SA\'
I( C ELECTRONIC CO .. '* E £dl~r Aw .. "C ' S.11ta An•. CA
927" l(WOft'J Cllu• c11 ..... .., . ., ••••
Ulord A"9., LO$ AnoefH. CA too4>
Tiii\ -••u Is conctutted O• • .,
llldlwldu•I l(.C.0...-,.
'"'' 1i.....,.... .... , fifed .. ,,,. llW
Co<llllY (Itri< of Oraf1419 CAMintY Ofl
Aorll •. ""'· fftnU4
Putllllftld Orange c.oau 0.11., P1to1.
A!Wll 11. 11,U .W'll. ltll
11'1·11
PUBLIC NOT1Cti
fftCT1nous•us..,.,.
NAME STATIMlttT
TM fol'-"'tl -ton 1; llOl"t 0..)•
""SU'
THI! WOOO SHAPE"'R Fllllf
f'UANtfURf. ANO CA8tNETltV,
lSO. W. Aomft• Or., .s.Ma ...... CA .,,.,.
VM4 ~ W•llKf Ill. l$06 W
A«*ens o. .. Sanle ...... CA<l?ICM
Tiiis IMlllnes•it c-.Ct4Hf •Y •. , 111
dlwldu•I. Vwd 11. W•ll«.e Ill
This st--""" t1ted ._,,,. tllf
Count., CltWk ol Or•noe Counly 011
Apr116, tt7t, tr•un
Pul>ll....O Or._ GMS1 0..ly PJ101
APf'fl II, ti, ts, May 1. tt1t
1»441
PUBLIC NOTICE
-'ICTITIOUS •usttttESS
NAMa STATUdNT
Tho 1011-1119 cienons •r• do•ncr.
IMUIMUU;
JEREMY'S HAIR FASHIONS,
111., er~. ,_ta1,,·v4111,.,, u-
f210I
l• .. O'f R. ~I. 9Sl4 RDOtn
A"9 .. F~ 'Valley, CA '21'1
M•o £. Coemtobett, 9S i. Robt,. .... ~llJIY:-~
TllU .,.,.._Is conducted by ... Ht
dlvldu411. ·
LellO\'l! (MnoOell
Tiiis st~ -tuec1 w1111 lllf
Counl., Clert ol 001199 C-IY on
~~·· 6, '"'· l'MttU
P\11111'1*1 Oranqt Co.Mt O.llv Piiot ~II II, 11. 2S. May 1, tt7t ,,..,.
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEltE8Y GIVEN IMI SECURITY PACIFIC l\IATIONAL
9ANI(, • H<ltloNI .,.,..,,,.. •uoc:l•llon
llH 111.0 i.er.lft • petition lor Pr-le
of Wiii end 1uu•n<• ot letters
THl•,,...nterv. end tor _,,.t-•o
admlnltlff under Ille lndeoe-1..,.. mlnltlretloll ol Eslettt Act. ,.~.
to which l a M•d• tor further
p.1n1<ular•. •lld tNl tM time .ncs
Cltt<t o4 ,_,1119 the -Ila\ tlMfl Mt for Mav l'-,.,.._ M IO 00 a fl'\, lft Ille
c Ollrl room Of Department l'M. l Of uld
court. •I 100 0111< Ce<t!M ~Ive W.•1. Int,,. City Of~ Ana, C.llloml•.
•AMAESTATCMINT Tiits It.I_. WM flled with fl'9 IN~ofl"9
Tiie lollowfno oenons •r• dOI,,.., County Clent OI ~.1199 Co.il\ly Oft AD•tA.:r.~~....... l'ICTl'nOUS•UllNHS Wilneu.,' Aprll11,tf71. -•r-.,, ~ NAMl.STATllM8NT
o.i.cr Aorll v. 1'71 w1w.-..1..stJ0ttN,
CountyOert1
SALLllS T. a aYNOU>S,..,_
JAMii O. CWNOllUOH ....... ~
2JSJ1 '·-•"·'-.. MIW"1
......... Mlfh,CA
Tel:l11·"60
AtlWIM.,.IW: .... ltiellff
Publl\lled 0raftQll Co.llsl 0•11' Piiot,
COTTAGE COFFEE SHOP. 561 I<"*! COt/NTY C:OUNSf.L TM fot-4111 11erMH11 •re do4n11 w. 19\tl Street, ~ta MM41, CA.,... Plltlll"'911 Oranos c.oast 0.lly Piiot. • ... •lfNJAMIN "·DE MAYO, WSlneu H
Paul Mid Ma'( HOM. 7'2' Replcb M41Y2, •. 16,23, 1'71 H"UTY COMPONElllTS FOR COM Ot . Humll'IQtOfle.-11,CAnMI 1~·11 ,,O .... U1' PUTERS. 81'1 Ottawa IUvn ir.vt ..
TfllS -Inns 11 (CWICN(ted llY .., I,.. ----------_:..;........;. 5Hta A .. ,""*""• fmt F-ielll ve1..-,, CA t110t
dlvldu•I. PUBUC NOTICE "=:.:.:" c:=~::· o.at1y PllOC 1 W1!1141m !...!..,,,,,__v • "'' Ottaw<t PltUl ~ M•11• e, l•. U, 1t7I llt~7I R ,,., ...... rvunltlll allrt, CA '17108
TlllS U•141n*>I Wat llled ..... '"" ,. Shell• M. ·-·· 1797 Otl••• "· ICTITIOUS aUSH•IU AIWf' A .... ,_..,,. Val...,,,& t110ll county Clerlo of vr•"99 COlilll'f on NAMI STATU.-ENT PVBUC NOTI E ...-Ap<-11 •. 1971. Tiie lollOW\119 pe<torl 11 dol119 Ml C TlllS b•ISlllH' i\ <°"""<1.0 Dy •
'"2SS6 ,.s, 9' -----,--. -£--.----~,., w""1n1,...,":1P.,-.....~ PutllillledOr~to.ltOallvPllot, fRONTERA PETRO ~ ~ .. Vft'T AOrll II, te. U. May>. 1t1t ,.1110 1 11_,...... CO • • ftOT1C910atlDITOa5 This ,...._. w.s flled wolh llW' tlJO." ..,. rn a """"' ,..rtMrtlllp, Jl 142 SU .. EltlCHI COUaT 01' T'Nf CouftlY Cltrll of Or.tnoe County 011 , _____________ , Holl., Orlw . So<itll ~.CA '1•77 STA Ta°" CALI'°""''" l'O• Aofll 11, ,., ..
C. ~t Rtf*ot>, ~•I PartMr. T ... ..-, PUBUC NOTICE llttl Holl1 Ol'h••. South LACIUN. CA ""' wvNTY Of' OltANO,& ,...,.,. ------------1 t7617 .... ~ P\llllillled Or~ C.0.$1 Ot1ly PhOI, Tiiis 11\ISIMU ,, COllOll<led "" • o!!!:!:. ol C.U.RLES H. CASE. May 2, 9, ••• 23, ""
NCma Of' Off ....
TO SI.LL. LAND
ay 8Nnt of Trustees act..., on
J•nw•'" >•. 1971. Ill• Hunttntlon
MKll UnlOl't Hl9" SclloOI O"trt<t II Of·
terlnv tor w•• lo ..,., llUOll< dl•lrtcl.
publf< eu1tclrlhH, .,..ell< •91ftCIH ,
llmlt.o -1nenf\11>. NOTICE 1$ HERE8Y GIVEN 10 lllt
C Nell RttlltoP cl"9ditor1 Of llw ~ ,,.l"Md CIKecHlll
c;...ra1 Pw*~•r ,,,., •" P9f10n\ n.v1no c1.i""' ...,.,,., •
Tllll \lal-.t •.ti flied w1111 ,,,. ,,,. wld dlC.otnl .,. ·-·red 10 Ille
Counly Clt rk ol Oret199 Countv Ofl uiem. with ltl9 nee .. ..,., vouc"9rl, '"
Aprll 17. tt11 Ille olflu Of lllt clerk o4 •~•!love -
PVBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE~ N°"' •H,.,..SI e1 LITY
IAlv t, J, I. "1t IV4-lt •lld olller Pofllfcel subdivision' or
------------putlll< tOfl*.wlklM In tills Sl•tt. lo the Fedtral Gown'wnent -to olNr "°"'
c. Niii. •tEHKO, lllled court. or to prewnt ltierl'. "'"" hll•D.•~ ,.,. nectUMY wouclltr~. to Ille..,..
...... M ll4ladl. CAfttSI cMf\lqn•d •t llJ TrU\I O.partmen1,
NOTICE IS HERl'BY GIVEN tlldl
tM uftdentqned will not tie ·-"01 ..
I« AllY cMllts °' ·~Illies COlllr«I"" llY tnV-otlle< 11\en mVMll, °" Qr alter lhll dtl•. PUBLIC NOTICE profit <~•rllMll• (OfPOr•tloni. IM
------------~0110.,lnt properly described u
,. .. ,.SS US2f P•MO 0. Vai-1•, ht MANI.
PUblhlled OrftlQlt Coelt Dally Piiot, Suite JIM. ~ Holl\. CA n•~l.
,,,_.., 2, 9, It, 2l. "" wlllCll •\ !tit plllCe of OuS. ... U of Ille
----------•;.;.l,:;01:..;l;.::I ~f\IQned In •II ,...lten .-rt•lftlf19 SUt'IHICHI c:ou.-T O• THI
STATlf Of' C.AUl'OltltlA f'Oa
TMI COUNTY Of< O•ANOI
N0.4-tt'11
NOTICf. Of< HIA•ING Off
.. ITITIOtt f'Olit ~lt09ATa 01' Will. ... o Lan1•5 TUTAMlttTA•v.
t<Oa AUTWOUIATION TO AO·
Mlllll STlf• U HOI!• THE
INDa .. INOaNT AOMINISTaATION
Off ISTAttS ACT.
Es•••• ot WILl.IAM 0 GIVEN,
0.C.Hed.
tlOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Ille!
Jf.AN F. GIVEN tt.K flltd ... relft •
petition f~ "'-1• OI Wiii •nd la·
wence of Lat-.n tesl-...•ry to tlle
Plttllf-r. and lor """'°"lutlOtl to ad·
minister undff Ille IM911eudet1t Ml·
lflfnlstr•llon Of EslatM •ct, ,.,.,tnc•
lo wlllcll i. "'•d• lor turllltr
perllc11laf\, •net lh•I Ille 11,.,. and
pl.tee ol 11Mrl119 ,,. s.me "••"""Ml
tor M•v U , 1'11, at 10·00 • m .. 111 the
(Ollr1•-71 Of 0.,...-1 ....... Ho J o4 said
IOllOwt:
Loh 2, • .,,., '· Bloc• 1'02, TrllCI No 12, In the City ol Hwttinoton ille«ll, C-tv ol Or~. Sl•le of ea111ornl•. PUBUC NOTICE
lo t.M ttlate ol said ~. ipltlltn
lour "10f\IM •IW Ult first pWtitalloll of lhlt notlc..
., per m4111 recorded '" 9ooll •. P-o-,. CT ous u. o4 MIK.ti-Mapa, '" .... Offk• I ITI •Ull ... H HAMI STA.TIMIENT of Ille Countv Reconter OI tald COllntv. Tfl• lollowlll9 perM>n• .,,. dolnq
and "'°" oertl<lllMIY dHCrll*S ·u bu"MU U '°''-'· 899IMlllQ at IN lntert«llOl't of the PROJECT NINE. L TO , JISIO
unterllMS a1 s.w-11 $1,...I •lld Mllr'l.,.tlt. P•l"kw..,. Mlulon Vl•io.
Utlu Street -•ll1elldlnq -EHi CA fU7S N'O• OO'GO"El afo11Q ,,_ UllWtllnt OI Fatou-J l(utlbe. U~lS B-
Ullce St...-4 • dlstMca of 12"' '"'. Pl•u. I.~ HUil, CA '76SJ lllence •I rlgllC ~ to uld ,.,,.· H•rry E. Wet'611, 2'nl Vlsl•
••rllnt &114 .......... -"°"" I MO· .... ,. Ori we. LfOur\I NIQWI. CA mn oo· OO" E> ... lO Herll J. 8efQllOtt. 4'.6 s "'""" • dlfl.w.•"' .00 ,.., lo the Blvd .. • 103. s.n Fer......,,,, CA tlUO T .. UE POINT OF llEGINNING; Thll tluslnen h (CMMllKled "" .. .,,.,.ce dwe E .. t IHtO" llO' 00'' El lfmlllld -~
... r•llel ID S411d utf<41 Strwl c•nlffllN Herry E W•llOI'
•dill•"<•°' m.n -· l'*'<• ,._.,. Tith \l•I~ was 111ec1 1111 111e II' ).t" e. 200.00 ..... u.nc. •• rlOfll ..
entltt•lld ...,.. era." w. 175_00 '"'· ~yClffkOfOl'ertgeGountvon~n
thence •I rlQllC frlOl9$ •nd S4J• 11' 5'" 'It I.
W, P¥allel lo I,_ ,.,,ltfllM of S..-t,,.
O•led Ac>rfl u. 1911.
8ANIC OF AMERICA
NATtON•L TRUST A~O
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION
D\' c..t'ol Lu\-
E ce<utor ol -Will of 111e llloW na.nK oec~t
WILLIAM V. SCHMIOT
:166 SawM..-c. .. Moe. Ml N~a..dl.CA~
T•I: Ut41~
Att_., IW lucllttr
PU114i111ed Or .. Conl 0..ly Piiot.
M.t, 1 .•• , •• u ... ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Dated lflls I~ df\' o4 May, 1'71.
RUSMll G, Siner
)t)...,...lloft,L•
~1.ws.. ea. m21
Put>ll•lled ()-911419 CMil 04lily P>IOI
M•y J. 3. t, lt1\ 111118
PUBUC NOTICE
1100"'
PUBUC NOTICE
• court. •t 100 OVI< Canler 0r1 .. west. tMfttll '""'· m .n IMI to .... T•UE POINT OF 81!'.G•lllNIHG.
ff"btO Pul>l~hed 0rfll09 Co.1111 0.lly Pllol.
#My 2. t , It. 2J, 1'11
. ChHse OI. 1'IHI Weelc
JUMBO IOIDA·
I •
Reg. ~lb.~s1• $3.29 Lb. Off w Lb.
OFFER EXPIRES 5-7-18
......., ..... Ollie ................. llP'-r,.... .............. .....
--~ 9'IG ..... ....,.. • ..., _ ........ ., ................. . ..... __......,....,.
South Coast Plaza Open dally 'ell I P.fft.
•turdly 'til I p.m.
•ndlly 12 te I ,.m.
PhOM:MM8\
In Ille Oly Of Sent• AM, ca111om1a.
f ..... Aprll Z7. lt1t
WIL.LIAM •• St JOffN,
Oluflty oer-JOS•PN a. OAVll
17'1 M.,,_ 94tM.. Mt IU
CeM• Meill, CA '2'26 , .. , S4t.au
Att-T hr: "91/ti-Pvl>ll•lled Or .. CO.SI Oelly Piiot,
M41V I, 1, 8. ltll
Cont•'"' t 112 Ac,.,,
Tiiis pr~ Wiii 0e offer-ed for Wle
fOf no lfta th&ll U00.000 I Two Hundred
TllOu..nd Oollers) tor• tl•ty-t611 .,.., -locf lleglftnlno ,,,.., t4, ttn ....,
term1 ... 11n11 °" .My ll. 1971.. llltffnl·
ed •ttnc:I• 9'IOuld contact Or. ~rles
A. Heu, AulSlatlt $U"tint~I.
B\IMMU Semen, Hunt"""" .. «II
U11lon Hltfl Sc:Nol Olstrkt, '•"""' trli' prooerty.
----------1;..;;•;.:7>-:.,;7:,;;I PllllllJ/199 Or ...... Coftt O.llr ~lot
PUBLIC NOTICE Ail''' '°· n. n. n. 14• JO. Mav '-'· 1• •. 10, 11. 12, u. 1-4, lt7t
lll0-11
PVBUC NOTICE
• 1 •
TueedtlY. ~ 2. tt?I
0
Betty Honor d
Patty Given
New A ,ttorney
f n>m AP Dlapatehes •
N eW1paper belress Patrtcla Hearst bas a new
lawyer to handle her fight to say stay out of jail,
attorney Al Joluulon announced.
.Johnson said Gffrge Mardnei, a San Fran·
cisco attomey, wlll replace him as Miss Hearst's
chief lawyer in her battle to avoid a return to
prison on a l976 bank robber ~convictiol'i.
He said he would continue to handle Hearst
famlly legal matters a nd also represent Miss
Hearst ln certain specialized areas. He did not
elaborate. .c,.
* Betty Ford, who helped popularize citizens
band radios through her use of a CB during the
1976 presidential campaign, has been named "CB
Radio's First Mama" by an industry trade as·
sociatioo "First Mama" was
( )
th e CB handl e. or nroPLE nickname. the tormer rCI' firstladyusedinherdrive
-------~· to gather votes for her husband.
The award was made by the Citizens Radio
Section or the Electronic Ind,ualries Assodatloo. • Actor Robert Redford, Interior Secretary Cecil
Andrus and Idaho Gov. John Evans camped along
the Snake River south or Boise
at the midway poinl of their
30-mile boat trip to the site of a
proposed dam.
Redford was a surprise ad·
djtlon to the flo at trip,
sp onsored by Nature
Con&ervancy, a nationwide en·
vironmental group.
The group is trying to call
attention to its efrort to buy five
parcels of private land in the ,..
Snake River Birds of P ·ey Area. The area was set
aside seven years ago to protect falcons. .awks
and eagleS that nest in the cliffs overlooklng .be
river ..
The environmental group !bntends construc-
tion of the proposed Swan Falls and Guffey dams
would destroy needed vegetation. • House Minority Leader John Rhodes or
Arizona will enter a Washington b~pital Thursday
for correction of an old football
injury.
Rhodes suffered a shoulder
separation while playing for
Council Grove <Kan.) High
Sc hoot. While the injury "
bothered him off and on over
the years, he decided on sur-
gery aft.er the shoulder poppe<4
out twice In one day this year
his office said.
Rhodes expectes to be in
Sibley Memorial Hospital about five da)(S.
* Thousands of Dutch citizens took part in a
traditional march past the steps of Soestdijk
Palace to mark Queen Juliana's 69th birthday.
·The queen stood with her bus band, Prince
Be rob a rd. and the rest of the royal f amJly at the
doors of the palace, some 25 miles southeast of
Amsterdam, as the two-hour-long procession filed
through the palace grounds.
The royal family exchanged waves and smiles
with marchers and some walked up the palace
steps to hand presents to the queen. • Ruth Carter SC.pleton. the president's sister.
says that if given a choice between equally
qualified male and female can-
didates for president, she would
choose the man.
"Jn places of stress and
teadershlp, I would prefer to
have a man." she said at a
news conference, in Blsmarck,
N.D. • Being a woman, I know
there are certaln times of the
month I don 'l function as well -
as others." she added . in
response to a question about the Equal Rlgbt.s
Amendmeni. • Calllomla 's controller accused Nevada or at
tempting a "monstrous land grab" that would
ntove 1,000 square miles of Callfomla land into
Nevada. Kea Cory said Nevada otnc:ials want the U .S
Supreme Court to move the slate's boundary
westward a.a much u 3~ miles.
an act he said would slice off
the eastern edges of 11
California counties.
"They are proposing to
literally steal 1,000 square mlles-
of Callfomia, an area that is the
size of the combined counties of
Marin, San Fnnclsco and San
Mateo," Cory said. • A lawyer said he filed a $7 million Ubel suit
against rock musician Frank Zappa and magazine
executives over Zappa 'a comment& about entertain
ment lawyers that were published int.be magazine.
published in the mapcine.
Attorney Marti.JI COben said he filed the suit in
Los Angeles Superior Court, namma Zapp, the
muslc trade =•zlne Record World and the
m11adne'1 pu er, editor and vice prealdent.
Zappa's Mothers of laveatloo group leaned
'°ward t.be b\Jarre durtn1 ita belgbt of popularity
in the late 1960a
• • . Pope Paul VI named three American sclen· tlst.a as members of tbe Pontifical Academy or
Sclencea, the VaUcan announced..
Tboee named were David Baltlmore. professor ot mlcrobloloo at the Massachusetts Institute of
Teebnolo1y; Al.saader Rld1, professor or
blopby1lc1 at the Massachusetts ln1Utute of
• Tecbnolo«Y, and ltoler Waleou SperrJ, professor
of psycbobloloo at Cal Tech.
The '10.member academy wu founded In 1803
and reoriantzed by Pope Plus IX ln 18'7 with the
air of "bonori.nl pure 1clences wherever the>: are and to develop 1cientiflc research.••
• • Retraclnl a portion of bll cbl&dhood root.a
"aulbor Alex Ba.MyJald a vlslt to Alabama di1:
eutslns the pllJht minontJes
"Wttb Gov. ~· C. WeUate. · Haley villttd p"®mla&Dt·
ty black 1\llkelM IAIUtute and
pva Wallace• copy ol. hit belt•
aellln1 boot "Rootl." Haley 1pen\ P•rt of hlt
c:blldbood la Hemililt. Tenn.
1Dd attendtd hltb 1cbool lD . Huntavtlle, Ala.. Jut atrou lhi
state line. --
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6
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.......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ... ,.. IOOZ " (5) ' ····;;;;·;:····
-Ov~rerown W/weeds & g r asS'! Deep lot•
!OVAL HOUSING EB'slside location: 3
Ol'PORTUH•TY large bdrms . Do it
,_..IMr'tMotlc•: y ourse,lf & save
AU real estate advertiaed thousands. Hurry: Call
In UUa newspaper ll sub· 645·0303.
Jed to the Federal Fai'i'
lfoualng Act oC 1968
wh.lch makes ll Ulegal to
advertise ·•any pre·
FOREST E
OLSON
·~ ... ~ .
fere:nce, Umitatloo, or ••~-"-
discrimloation based on1~~~~~~~~~I race. color. religion, aex,1•
or national origin, or an intention to make 8Jl¥
aucb preference, limlta·
tJoo. or diacriminaUon. • •
~ILL••• LIVHt• -Feel lbe
mvlgoratlng aroma oC fresh alr.
Discover wha t living ln a beach
community is like in the 4Bd.rm, 2 story home. PRICE REDUCED TO
$95,000. Call for det~Us 640-6161.
' MESA VERDE-6 Br, 3 Ba-Much in
demand. Tri-level w/large family
room w/frpl. breakfast nook & formal
dining. Tastefully decorated. lovely
front courtyard. quiet street. What an
opportunity ttt $141.900. PleaM phone
546-4141.
S" r v 1 no Cos I ;i M " <, :t I• 11' n I'
tlu11l111qton E3 1·.1ch N PWP•Jrf B1·.1c.t1
. MISA VllDI
Attractive 4 bdrm . 2 ba. home tn
immac. condition. $99.000
UDO ISLI
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm .. family, 2'h
baths; l·story home with attracUve
So. patio. $243.000
IAYRONT
Several flne bayfront homes
with pier & slips
IACIC IAY
Fine 4 bdrm .• 2!Al bath f amity hona,.on
quiet cul de sac. Oversized lll'f)l,
pJayhouse. extra storage. Sl89,500
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
• ; I "''Y •I• I•· ~· N "I b/':J 0161
.... ,.. • 1 ooz1•••rtll 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LARGE
This newspaper will not FAMILY k:nowi:n1ly accept any G ... r.e 1002 Ga•rll 1001 ..................... ,. ........ ,.If
adv•rd1io1 lor real ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
etl&te which la in viola-• Bedrooma+4ea make Ml'fWOITl•&HTS Uooolt.belaw. this a perfect family . Slot,500 --------•home! Great Area! Low 3 Bll bome to x1nt area. l•-------•I Down!VAterms!Call Hardwood firs. w1w RED CARPET 754-121QZ BtlOIS: AdY•lhen cupet.tns, blt.n ranae 6:
......__._,, ~L. a.lo...aL .. -------·I oven. Recently re-rooted --,_. ,..._.EVER" • re-ctuccoed. Accesa Is dllr md report er-" roocn COi' boat & Lrlr + ron hu .... ..,. TM bicdbhtora1e .
·DAILY PILOT.._, 11 •GAIN" JACOIS REALTY wmt,fw.._flrlt• ~ 67W670 correct ......... ...,.
, ________ , Out ol the ordlnaryl Lo1
-rHIWOOOs•
CoteO
Gor1eou1 unpcraded
ground level adult coodo.
2 bclnD. 2 bath, forma I
dining • eatm1 area bl
lar1e kitchen. Pool,
clubbou1e. Priced at
$'18,900. llll S . Coast Drive, E IOI , torr
Fairview), Costa Mesa.
400E.Jr .. RI All
PBal POINT IEDUCTIOM
Owner callee. from Oregon & said to
reduc~ the "turkey" $15,000! This 3
bdrm . + convert . den is
professionally decorated". Prime
Penln. Point location. 75% Financing
avail. from prime lender! You might
call on this one!
JEFF BRIERY. REALTOR
2602 ... ..,.. ........ Newport .....
675-9111 24 HOUR SRVICE
Homes for We .......................
cabin family room I
Large office or artlat'a atudlo! Separate
worbbopl Over 2000 sq
ft! Must aee to be.lieve I
HUIT)', Call &&5-0303
:..u:: tll;".,,.. Duplex, mlnt conditloQ ! Gt•rd I 002 GaMral I 002
On la.tee R·2 lot, ott:ao ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
aide of Blvd. Pride of ~n•R•CH·--------i SM•nMOTB. ownenblp! Priced at 1"115"ft.-V ~ •-_......, $17$,000 i.11chadlo1 the w·.._~..... ....,, LonlBeacb. lloltrooma
land! •ifOMi'"' Owner' bu ,.toted in & nmted~. •
a .... a1 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
m.3113 67~17~ Eves $ZS0,000 ~:t=ut N~~ ~5&0C:.OWM
_ Not a condo. but a real nducecl &o •.950 '! Va· llAl.TOaS llM711
JASMIMICllB •·-~ =~-:-940"= ~A~m8.!!.4P~~~--------
FOREST E
OLSON . " ., .... associated
Profealonally decorat· bo9l lllP .al 10Uf' froal mme low mter.l VA. 111•111•n
ed. Beautllultwoatory-POOL&SPA ~~~~~~~~door Owner leaviJll submit your offer• ~I
li ti ) ~ t W .... ._, f A 1 T ( 1 W ~ . ... ' '
cathedral ceilloga, 3 G~at corner location. _ -.call'J'D.1920. m.-.openeves. IA~AY
2~ bat.bs. Lowest ptice A ~~~~~~~~~I ._...,. ~ bedroom, family room & Walk to tennis cowu and d QU •IL ..., U......... "'-cul ac ... __.,
lilted in J asmine Creek. ~ from tbh 3 c.-cWMw p• •CE I· 3Br. deft, Cam rm . Outatandine val1.te. For m. 2 bath, CanUIY Jmt reduced. Thia home ~ SP~ breakfast rm, xlnt cood .•
moreWonnaUoo,call ~o .. ~-home. CALL bu maoy c ustom -~O,.lll:H?.M.J POOL&SPA many trees. bil yd, c-11tOFM~IT ,,. • .._.A.. features . Lar1e -Sl49,000. Ownr/a1t R"'"'' ~5o"'asr-v !pSELECT courtyard, beaullful ONE LOOK-ud you 675-~or67~ ~· olive tree and Dl&J1Y rose llACHIUY! are~ &o appreelat.eil!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 675-551 I ___ P_R_O_P_E_RT __ l_E_S_
1
bu 1 be 1 . Bl t n C.rlab9d·BY·TbeSea 4bdnm • eztra largeF ......._ ..... J , I ... ,_ ls wbere t.bia 4 BR 2 BA l~ room with brick
ST ~ ~:,m;a~ home la localed. Jot. nm frpl.c. Stairs lead to MIGHTY PRETTY
Decked in fresh paint,
this family home sports
an upsraded kitcllen.
new dra5s· and wallpa r. $79,950
NEWPORT --.rcottage
Hl!!den away in ex·
clualve De Anza Park,
this 2 BR, home is just
perfect for the couple
wbo wants to get away
kom~cmwd. v..,_.1-
ford.able at S37 ,soo.
WESTCUFF
Thia la probiably the
perlect home for your
tam.Uy wltb 4 BR le deo, a
fabulous master BR &t
spacious country
kilcbeo. What D>Qre do
YoU need? $185,000.
J<ft-Q
~~~~ry
673•1700
LOOllMG FOi A
Axm urrarrm
· ARTER / · t fl or bike down to tbe private master aulte and rm w parque oor, be h R I . .... ... f-•c. "'eat"--to bn•e-i 873S""d tl ac . e ax an )'Our -.,.. ~ ........
HOME ~ Jii'oi>o. .... cu e ;:f.-:e~~l;,~:~ ~~~":t,~l~ou!°~~t!~~
t60.4J61 Ii tropical ligbi. for WonllutlCalJISJ.7881
Hawaii effeet. Quiet Of'fN 11•q·"~'lJtoo' 111 Nt<1
3 Bedroom. Ufa .µIWJl:llla.,.ti":-c.Y~
area of older cu1tom toeeltat.UOO.Cllf ll~~~~Ml[ill~~
for tr.a ao three
bedroom• .Uh=-oi>en beamed family room.
LotaotSIZE! Call
75Z..lt20. ome. $63,900! Greatl~~~~~f€~~~ \'Olleyball /too. Reduced
homes! Don't watt! Call -WALU.ClaCO. I~
REDCARPET754-121QZ WATBflOMT llALTOU CBl"SMOV• d '-'U .... 'L IEACHTalPLEX NewportSbores new Uat-714-nt-HU l>etperatef«offer! T ~
Cklee to the beach with log, Laree 4 Bdrm 3 BR. 2 ba., cut de sac PLACE
ocun view from the u~ bome-ao mDCb men; tm.IOTIOPI =e:s·~ fO,. n .. , ..... ,
per unitl. It la 15 yean lam rm. eeparate dee,
okUdn excellent coodl· _.we •balltlnl. oewty SIWf IACK IA y 1119 Uan. Only $160,000. CALL ~ •draped. Lovely •~• ·y *LLS ..1 ._...Aa at ...._ -.,_
cut-~--deck., ._Sl49,nG. OFWl5~-::;.... ......... U.• ..... POOL w ----.. WO --· ~·-~ W"l5AI.., one Is clean, clean,
•
SELECT PETE BARRETT Cb a r min I t b re e Sl6, 900 clean. Only SS7.B! FOR
PROPERTIES nr!a1TV b d b Fow-larte bedroom. lnfonnaUoocall913-1881
. -~ ,-~o;:,;. t;::,. ~l Newport Riviera two oPfN'""''n'""''UlllNi<t• -:m z±&~ari-G: ~~ ~·~!!-IMIMl;I
~b~~·~i ;·~r deli&lll' S[&ke 71i-1no & K£Y c... Def Mer
9paci0dl LMn1 Room roofed, 5 t>ann'. a101 d '-'UAIL tffl' M:ALTOfUh 11.UFFLOT with big Fireplace. '*Ol:7 w/P9ti0\ lrPl, dbl , ...... -Fabulous one of a kind
Great ocean view In 1..aJ1e Master Bedroom, pr. Qtiet ~ cbe to LACE OCEAN VIEW LOT. Newport Hla. vmere the blthlY uparaded wltb abopa,acbdo&.c:hureba. -tO,..Tll:llP.M.t .CORONA DEL Panoramic views of
actloo la! Open EV~Y •rlvate entrance to -2,500. R\ath Laurte-. MAR beach. harbor entrance -•~ all Cl ... ~-1arden area. Slump air...,_ --"'all•"'--..._ ........ , c eo Wl'VI"' ttoDe pla.aten hJgbUgbl ' . SPUrL.1¥& Vacant ' bdnn, family ..,.. w-apec\acuJar
at &48-5389 or United tb b .. d -••IW'V room. '1'Mt ocan view. 1'8etl. Hear tbe pound· Broken &46-7414. P.S. • room-ac..yar · ,,._~ -· ,U New cer.,u • PlliDt in· inl•urfaDdeQjoyapark ~~EJ!,f e. t I y ~~tt:f.o~~a'r. °"'*" .. ,.lat'• talk. :J!.~U: =--~ ~~ .. :;~::er: ~~~::~.for ..;..,.;;..;;..;;;...._~-..;......--• =~~."~'~'°"'~' =.•:·~:C~ =,:::_~~~':ta~ -.-mr1nJet1t1e. d '-'UAIL
TWO STOIY bonie. Atrium eDtruce, Ba...__,_ A.._._ .. __. Bv T
11t1mJ din1D1 room anc1 ~Pri~ai PLACE
f'l'IUT family at1l• li:ltcben . .-r,nofortbe -to,. llaJIP.N.t
~~THE REAL ESTATERS 8IMI Vtt?Prl vate and rAJOLYwtTll -Ndud9d.CAU--. GOOD"ASr.E GtMr9i 10o2 --sas.ooo COUMT'IY WAU.AClaco. • ..................... .
-! ,._ HERITAGE :=:,~~btfd~~~ Sil Itta llALTOIS REALTORS wtn1. 20 Ft. blgb N tliole to tbe beach! 11MJJ '"' -eatedra l ceilln a• Seetbit bnDdaewoft•· mbance v-ctoua ltvtn1 illl that 9rovlde1
room inchadine AN· ~ f~ Uvlnl •ti-. ... ,.. 1ooz.e, .. ,... IOOJ
T I Q U E O A K Ha ftDel& to • bd, 2 ba ... •••••••••• .......... -• .. ••••••••-•••
p AN EL ING a,p d beauty. Only '83,0001 ··--··-------·•lllillll1i.:: maulve rock (}replace. •nu. ...i11 ~~:~=:·; 'Is~-·~--• Ballkar fered. Take advantage. ~WVll Exclusive agenta. call ___ ee_aJ_mJ_ta_te ___ , ~SICENTIAL BROl<£fb'Gf ~
s.o.am ~POOL A_ .. __._ OCIAMVllW ....... =:a:o1':rs!:
Clemente. Gor1eou1
HAMDYMMfS
DllAM
Garaae ful11 lnaulated. Bullt In work beocb. Larse lot with RV ac·
c .. a. Newly paiated,
paoelloc and wallpaper. Four Bedroom Home to Mesa North. TMJly a
Gteat Buy for S7S,OOO.
s.m3 O'IN IK••fl\IUNIOKI N<ll '
view ol tbe ocean, row,,,, pm b1DI and twiakllna
liibtl· Home bas atrium
fdzY, bit IMni room,, fam)ly room, kitchen,
rormal dinln•, two
bed.rooms, lower level
bu lnlge matt« 11.dta,
btl famlly room. b.a,e
yard with bt& reaced ID
pool. llaQY 6trul Call
~9••fS_.,, IOlll>#l(f•
PllDE OF OWNllSNP ,, ..
Turtle Kock Plan #8 with 2
bedrooms and den or 3 bedrooms. ~
baths. Very sharp. fll'd clea.o. lots of
used briek and large atrium. Prtced
right. $114,500 Fee.
~f THI: RF.Al
~ EST r\Tl:P.S [MIMI-------· ............ ~--·
OHL Y OMILIFT
Spac)OQ WUU=re
beau&J wtda ' • 2 betbl, • formal dtDln• room. BeauUful ,roundl. Notb1nC CIOCllpuel w /our
low J:Wice. Terrtflc pool,
HUDA • HC:rHUOll areH. J utt lltte6.
lttr71ll.
~ Walkt:r 1; lm~
EASTSIDE
mlblY ,:rraded' bdrm 2 fie -j . bolne .. , ...
fertcecl In ,.., yrd •
Cf1'1'd patio. New c:1*
......... pr(~
lo ..U (at. New GD tbll
market. Call DOW I
•1111.
~ Wi1lk1:1 1: 11:1:
macnab I trvtne
realty
llAU111'UL PAIK HOMI
Lg. 2·stocy fe~turtng 3 fplcs -1
each in the lovely living rm. faJnlly
rm & master suite . Prof.
landscaped w/deck. Walk·in wet
bar in family rm. Great location
close to pllrks. pool ~ «rade
schoola. SJ.44.500. Natalie ~•mlA
752-UH. (X·120) .
'42,423Sv '449'•
tol oowr Orlw H•bor Yltw CtMar
lrvl"-at C..mpus Valley Qftatr
751-1414
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I .. "' ·-"'•" fwS. "-"•Few S. H111n 9lw S4e Honn '9r S. HOltMn Por S. Hoael,.,. S. T~. May 2. 1978 OM.Y Pl\.OT ~ ......................... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• t4otnesllorS.
••••• 100• ., .. ,.. 1002 e ... r.. IOOZ G ... rel 1002 o,,...,._, IOOJ 01Mr.. IOOJ ~FwS. ..._.1ForS. ....................... . • . • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... .. •~1.. 10 .. 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••·••••••• • •••••••••··~··••••••• """'---~ ._._ Io•~ ...._. M9-I 022 Hlltlla:4• ~ .. J
CORONA DEL MAR
Exctspllonully attrac tive 2 bdrm.
home. recently refurbished thruout -
PLUS neat 1-bdrm. unit over large, 2
car garage. Great tax sheller .
inflation hedge & fine appreciation
poss ibilities. PRICE REDUCTION OF
$2,000 -N~W ONLY $166.500.
759-0811
.V.•O Nf Y\IJ>Oll l Cf Nll II OHi V f 1~!> Of:11
.... ,.. I 002,GeMral I 002 .................. , ........................... .
w1 :s 1 LY \:
TAYLOR CO.
1\1.:\I ·1 (JliS ·,1111 ,. l !l ·lfl
HUMTIMGTON HARIOUR $199,SOO
On the water! Dock for up to 55' boat.
See this beautiful 4 bedrm home
today! Fam rm. formal dining rm &
3-car garage. Concrete cantilevered
deck is entirely glass walled. Soft
colors. wet bar, marble firepl.
Perfection thruout! By Appt ..
WESUY M. TAYLOR CO., RWTOttS
2 I I I Saft JooqulR HW• Rood
MEWPOIT CEMTER, M.a. 64~49 I 0
G"'Nll 1002 G.-ral l002 ............................................ ,
CAPS COD OCIAM vte.w
SS'. 0 0 0 I $2 4. 5 0 0 Uoobstructed view or the blue pacific ocean from . DOWN this unique home. Watch
Windln1 roadway t o the beautiful a un set
soat1.n1 2 story retreat! from your private. ter ·
Private crotmds protect race. Priced for quick
secluded entry to lavish uJe at f;B,900. Be firat to
Uvin1 room. ·Ooarmtt call for a ·preview. kitchen overloolca sun· 963-6767
shine courtyard! Wind· Ol'fNlll9·"S'UN'081Noc1·
Ing s tairway leads to [ •. ,,.,~. ~~=~:u~~':~t:i:;~ , ·:lfllHlF
Hurry! SeUer tS aniuous I~· -~.,'2· ~~"'""==-=•:cm:•:•:•·~-~ M7~10 ~
Ol'fN Ill Q •If) 'U"' 10111 NICI •
{CRi6iffl
Trade your old stutr for
new goodies wHh a
Claulfa.ed ad. 642-5678
REALTOR
or Realtor Auoclate.
Have need for 1 good ac·
live uleapenoo. aoyMc""'C-a_. .. ~
lllONew,...t ll•d
eo.ta ...... 541-7729
A COMVtNIENT a.40~NQ ANO
RWIHC OOOE FOii T~
CAl OH THE CO.
Most-Warted To
Lingo
RIAl&wt
OCIAMYIEW-5TEPS TO SAND
PIER AIR
wt ... astfc MJ~. ff.W.V .... '-'llMJ
aba.ld .--cl tWs new comtry .._ ht
llsllop, ..., Mai 11t"' M-t• Tilrff ~ .... battl, fine fir1 .. K .. , ...
1tot to ••ntlo• a strea• MHttdtrhUJ
throlHJh .... IMCHJ Gt"H. c. b• ..... _,...... $325,000.
OLD CORONA DB. MAR
T9'fa well ..,-.ct two ~ hCMIM
phta gutst _,. I• being sold by tile orf,,_.
owner. ~ of oWMnhfp abo..._ Cw
lff It! $174,500.
LAGUNA BEACH CHARMER
Two .._....... OM bath, walk to bffch.
Mule• fl,..,.ac •. Oak floors• mtd feRced
yard. Perfect hom• for ..... ,, writer,
tNchttt, c...,_, wHbtldtn· Clld mryoM
who oppreclatea Laguno chora. O.ly
SI 10,000. ~
EMERALD IAY
Spectoqil• .-Jew home of ..... ":!~ OYerloaldiMj EMerdd lay. Perfect ·
hotM for those deslmNJ this great prl•ote
co11u1M1fty. Hen dartc room, ..,......, ahldy
plua atoroge. Four bedroom. two bath.
$495,000.
644-7020
2123 SAM JOA9UIH HIU.S ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH
Wltelc-.11
REAL ESTATE CUSTOM EASTSIDE
AIMeC>Me IY OUT IUDUCB>
Of STATI OWNll Huge 2000eq.lt. custom home oo R2 lot. Large $75, 900 ram. rm. host.a wet bar &
Priced SIOOO's below crackling frplc. Triple
market! Seller desperate detached gar. Won't
to sell this rambling last! CalltodavlW0-7171
38drm .. and I.am. r m. oP1111111Q •11\1u11111lH1f'w~1·
home. sunshine gourmet 1·· I ~~~:~:~~~e~~ :.lfiftHlf
for a POOL! Don't pua ~-~~,~-~·!1-==~··~=-!•~i:::~~~ ~ak~hl!n o:,~:;t~;dl!:; ...._,, I •• 100'/
Hurry I Gall 847-6010 •••••••••• •••••••• ••• •• ~,. 111 q.,, \'41N ro11t MCI· J BR. 2 ba .. ~ blk. to bay. ,_.A,,~-~:;. !fnlMKJ =-,:~:,.:-
v'f t-fl:lu 0 1::::!!!!~~ Newly remodeled 5
Theft's NEXT 10 HO S[WlffC,
and they cost next to notlt1n1 to
"hip up 1n Ill) Wiits. CllSll COi·
Ion bltnds 1 eam float and sun tunic •1111 $11orts, pants.
Printed P11tetn 9125· M~ S11cs 8. ID. 12, U. 16. 18.
Hall Sim 10~. W~. Wt 16~. 18~. 201;
5-' $UI r. .ti ...-. w. 1" ..... """" ... ~ ...... ...... s...s
.. UNI MAITlll
Pattern Oept. «2
' Oeily Piiot
,,..._,...__ Bdrm, 2 bath. 2005 E. fhna I aar<len of flowen WA·-"'"' Ocean Blvd. $185,000.
across sofa or bed-so 1nW11tnc! BeautlfuUy decorated Aat/Owner. 673-3&20
flowtfs 00 lldd a hes/I. happy BALBOA COVF.S 2·1tory
accent to a cozy 1t1han. Clo-home. ENTERTAIN Triplex, 3·2·1 BR: nr.
diet 5 inch squartS of syn· ro)'.alb' Jrom t.be buge elem school. $23.5,000
theht W01t.te<1 in a J.colof recreaUoo rm., wet bar. llanhall RJey 67~
comb1natwn. f04n Pattern fabulo1&1 view " boat
7061. <lirectaons. color Ideas. sUp, too! 0o1y Sl15,000! OCEANFRONT
SI.SO IOI tach pattern. Add ..... t.yfTop. 8th Street. 3Br, 2 batba.
3Se each pattern fCH fnst·c:lass ..... .,, z~w-. "-It 38011. Pb airmail and flandhn1. S.d te: ._.1 na
Allee BrooU · * 671-7060 * (213 > 79 5 • o 8 34 or
Needlecran Dept. tOS l714)67S,50IS
Dally Piiot
~'~, °'t.r.rr.-~~i!::.
Ad4r• llp. htt~ Nu111w.
VAi.UC px~ 1978 NEEOlE
CRAfl ~t11o1. Chooa from 22~ desians. 3 free 1nsldt Alt c11f1',i..~111t. Ciochet. Send 7~ f.lllJ liilT1I ... OrUNCtl .$1.50 ~How SNw-Otb ......... $UO
St1lft 1,; "" ...... . . . . lJ5
Stlttll '•' '*" -. . . . . us C11tMt .. S.-... .. .IO
C..lllta .......... 1.00 lllftr ffflY QiA . . . .. . . . • .. ~ """" .. .. . .. . uo s.tr & bft ... . . . . . . IJ.S .................... to "'"'~ .......... ... ...... ClocJllt ......... .$1.11
.... ~ ......... .$1 ... ................... t• , .................. fl .. ~CIKM ..... UO ~lflA ..... . U,_ Ill ....... ~ ........ 11 .. , .... ~:™ .._. wn ...... 15'
ISOllMI T .. fJ ....... TSc .... u. --...... ]Sf
s@\\.c41~-a£trs·
That ln"19uin9 Word Gome witlt o Cli11dle
-----....... loy C&AY I. M)UAN
•'-"""99 "-' of ~ '°"' ~ --.ft .,..
low IO '°"" fOUf ~ wOl'dt ~~-
8UYLOO
I* I I I I
FARoL· 1 ...._.I' ..,...1 -.-1-...l-1 I
OUFAR 1: Air pollutlott le wNfl JOU
WHAT DOES I.I.I. ST AM> F017
Be• ter Busin ess Bureau, right?
Wrong~ ll represents an incredibly
exciting three bedroom Bluffs
condominium that has one of the
better locations looking down a
greenbe lt. Inside. there's quality
cra fted woodwork . plantation
shutters. decorator drapes, terra cotta
entry tile and a thoroughly redone
kitchen. Oh yes. it's the popular
Bonita floor plan : that makes BBB
stand for Beautiful Bluffs Bonita at
$159.950
U~l()UI: fi()MI:§
_REALTORS". 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde. at 546 5990
~ .... ......-AA ~ .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •
I 0 3 3 White Soils Way
Spacious 4 bdrm .. f amity rm home 1n
ort~inal Harbor View with formal
dinang. pool. jacuzzi AND gorgeous
ocean. harbor. Island and nlght Ji~ht
view. Reduced to $252.000
332 PomHttla
South or Hwy. An absolutely charming
2 Bdrm coH~ge with gleaming
hardwood floors and TWO separate 2
car garages. Reduced to only $134,500.
Catt 644-7211 tot-defCllHs
..............
/Jn Nl[ill
[\l\ll 1 'l' ~
l\'J'lUl 11\I l ~
t024'C-.MeM 1024 ........ ...... , ••..............
Mfta
lOCAT10M
Uwaded 3 bdrm borne located near all
Free•ay a and Weirtmlns~r Mall. It 'a u
Ital al 983,90(). 1rnNftiMl.fl -4471 or ~
ffuntln1ton Seacltrf
Balboa model. Clole to
Seacllff tenol• le tolf cJub. \4 m.1 to beach. 4br. 2 frlSlu. 1plral
lt.a1rc:ue. ~u ea.rUt tone
crpb, drps. window cov.
~rl ng " pau\t. A gt .
5a&-1064 or 847-3584, ask
for SU.an
For Sale 3 BR 2"'4 Ba. dbl
sar. •ll bltna. fplc.
CaUfomla Cluaic. Ju . some VA Loan •l 8~"AI
w /$10 .000 d o wn .
Ownt I Aat. 846-21667 •TW
•OUPLEXES•
•EASTSIDE-
MISAYllDI Lovely 3Bdrm, 2 bath $4900 DOWH
home. Ready to move-lo Luxury Townhouse. 3
condition. SSS.900. for BR, 2 ba. den. Terum.
very clean Ir quiet. 2 BR c.,t h-IMdl IO 11 C:C... .. Mw I 022 uoita on coonedinl over·
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• a1z.ed lot. Best locaUon. .c br 3 ba +den, executive 461 SlllA DtL · c lose t o everything.
quicbale. bch. Owr,644-lDlM
flOOt.. POOL SACllFICE
3Bdrm, 2 bath, rarn rm, Beadt Houle. 3 BR. 2 ba.
new root. new deddng, form9l din rm. a lots .
home. Finest view in So. Corona Hitblands. Quality construction
C •II f . S 3 8 0 . 0 O 0 . prlv ate be achea. 4 w/mao.y lmprovementa.
0 w n e r I B r o k e r Bdrma, 2 baths, Cenced OPEN SUN 1-4PM
many xtru. A· l condJ. ....u 094 ti on. i mm e di ate _Ownr __ ._.,...._i ____ _
pouesslon .•• 800. • .... .._.
714/41'UTOO yard, fixer. Price re· 360as36416th PLACE OWNER/AGENT •LOVIAVllW• ~~c1~!_? .J..1!,9.,;.000. DEVINR.E.642·6368
.. S.CSTPLAZA Hahw 4Bdrm. a bath, 2 sloJ'y on ••••••••••••••••••••••• 104%•
OCEAN VlEW "'6• vw....,.-. Vf.r.JU<N --------
3 BR 2~ Ba, 2200 sq.ft. O\lplex. Lovely 3br re· MEW
cpjet cul.de-sac street ln
exec· nei1hborhood .
Completely refurbished
lncluding carpets, alnl.
appliances. Sale price
YOUR DREAM HOME
A ON&OF·A·KlND
SHOWPLACE AT THE
BEACH Ocean le bill view. Beaut modeled home + 2br UD· LISTING
uprrd•. prof lndscpd. it. Fplcea 4'2 car puking 3 bednn. 2 bath & pool on IN SUNSET BEACH
ProfeuionaUy decorat·
ed. 2 sty townhome
w /tlnest custom featu~s
thruout. Moaem, large. J
BR as Fam Rm . lnchxles
pvt self cont'd •'in lawi;
quarters" w/pvt entry
poqible. Juat 50 SUIPS to
lbe sand, adJacent to
Huntington Harbour Ii
cloee to all services. J ust
listed al $150,000 Call
now for a ll deta1li..
Agent.~
SK8.900 ea. filT1 Larlclpur. Prin. 60xl9') East.side private V1IW + POOl ooly. Byownr.640-1840 cul-de-sac lot with RV
118.tOO.
loyMc~
lllOMt.,_.llYcl.
~MIMUl-772' 3 BR 2 Ba, 1800 sq.ft. RV ft o-•II prkJ. Don't wait. ca.U for pa tk In 1 . pvt poo I ,,,,._ 6 details. &f.S.7221
w /llau enclosure for .So. side. 759-0458 CIMTUIY 21
view oc ocean. Call to COltOMA DB. MAI w .. tdtff .........
view. ...VUHIU.S --·r $67,800 VIEW REAL TY ~an vn C.ta.Uoa to New-3 Br •. 3ba., uecutJve 3 Br bome on beautiful
f.96.7122 770--05S5 Palo8Verdesw{P09l,lrg hm. Sunken II~ rm .. tree-linedstreet.Cto.eto ,.~ .. a....t-102% 3 bdr 2"' ba. Appt. only. wtcathedral ce1Un1s. beach . ca II DEL -_. MG-5307 frl>l, J&e fam f1P. formal LARSON ••••••••••••••••••••••• dlnlnl. dream ~ltcben. So. c.f"a..lty
•PRICEDREDUCED• •Udlltlame La Lee ya.rd. Submit aU of· C~S46-560S
2 •l>'. remodeled, up1rd 116ADMOOI 11 fen M.600. Prlncipala --------
exec bome. 3 BR 2 Ba. .___vu ..... •s ooly.642-5.548Afl.s Leue Opt.. S1!iOO alJQws Your ··someday"' dream
den, 4' deck w /vie'W S P..._E CT A C.._U LA R 1t•<11tfSID1t you 3 Br 2 Ba, home lge home i s a r ea 11 I y
towards catalina in old -., comer lot , close to S. _TO_D_A_v_· ____ _
CdM. $206,950. Brkr. Newport Harbor. ocean Slt,'50 Coast Plaza 646-1757 ....... 104+
79-1288" as Catalina .daY ft nllbt Quiet tree lined street. •••••••••••••••••••••• • view from this 4 br 2YI Formal 1J v. rm with Pool. tennis. jacuu.i CHARMING 3br, 2 ba ba,famrmbomew/3car green bouae wfodow. 3 Bdrm . 2t,1a Ba -
+guest bouae. frl>I. 2 Pf. OwnertAgt. 64().8260 Huge separate family transferred owner m ust Noti•ce patioa, R·2 lot. Prin only. or~ room boats crackling seU ! RealilUcaJlY pnced
$157,000. Owner, 1W0-7030. ColtaMeta I 024 l&8ed brick fireplace. 3 at 182.ooo-leu than 2
OCIAH VU.OWNS ••••••••••••••••••••••• kin& slzed bdnns. pool yrs old. IRVIN( ESTATE
2 l&Otutic buys, Harbor Mesa Verde 3 BR, "2 ba. sized lot too! Act now! Ba~~=lty 11:.1"'\-R SALE
Vu.-J.b..r.flJ)l. must see. F.l\., 2-.Srplc..'.• • .1082 ~~ ... ~411-""'' -----~--~ r:Y
644·2641, 644·8722 1114 Samoa. Quic k sal e [ I MISA VMDE Nearly Ii\ acre with the ~~~ils. ~D l·S, ~:. Owur. 540-799S. •·11~111111
3 BR 2 S:·~~!ily rm. ~1~~~:!·7to~~~r:ii
Reduced to S195,000. ••11:.A.STSIDI!.-• ~~~~!!·~-==~=~~!!!!-~! rucelY decorated, won't spa-1!00 aq. n.. or con· Owne!' w/eonaider ·con· "°"' .... last.C..11: crete patio wttb firepit.
tract ol 1ale, aecood TD. 2 ON LO!'P .... _.__ c-RUie trees line the yard. you name it! Owner •• 1•• Llllf~.-.,. Lotaolp-eaurearorthe
must sell immac 3 BR 2 $89 500• ···It couldn't hurt to call kids and garden. The _ Ba home w /view or • ' Ou1ek Nub about a re· 9\lllkAll'r' home is 3000 sq. fl. of de·
ocean Is pvt beacb ac· Front unit, 2 BR 1 Ba, warding career in real ~ OPllNHOUMllttALTY cor ators delight witlt
IN .. De-"---a.,. w~e IUDDY k.1tchen. ealat.e. Free tra.ininl U •1'Na-i...eoei.llMM di · eeea ... u. ~. .... formal n1ng room. 87S-23ll Smal er l BR unit. yaiqt&allfy. S'0-5101. 6.4~9161 separate ramlly room.
secluded under shade ~~~~~~~~~j ---------1 den and s or 6 bdnns. SPY61.ASS HIU. trees in rear. Rent.a are • IY OWMB Salie cuJ -'•·s•·c __ .. no ._, ,,,..__ I J b By Owner. Halecrest ...... , .,,.. 3 Br. famlly room. 2 ..,...... v w""'r w rep um Cdleee Prk. 3 br +den, aaaoctaUoo fees. &;:ti.er frplca, op corner lot. w/full price offer. Call rune. 3 br 1 ~ ba, xtra lg btt·in bar. No qualifying .... ~.
Ori&.modelatreet. liatinlofficeformorede· lot. S7f,900. '40-~ for to usume $42,000 VA ....... 1
13.,.3.,..o
C4111640-511 J talla. _a-'-ppt.~------1 )oan, WUJ cal'T)' 2nd T.D. I".; •• ~
DeTt.l.E. IYOWMR !.o
1
t!!_ .. prlce S84,900. RB>C.aPif
I ' • I I I ~ J ' 642-636' 4 Br. 2 ba. formal dining. _._ .. ~-------
brick frplc, comer IJ>l. 2 Jbr. l~ba. st.ooe lrplc, ex· ~~~~~~~~~
car gar. 900 Dogwood. pelajve crpts. corner BY OWNEfL 3 BR. 2 ba,
'""' , 0 ,, I •II'
Gftltf'al 1002 ~ 1002 $78~. Pbone 751·0774 bay wndw. cmr lot. pool Frplc. xlnt loc. priced
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••··~··••••••••••••••• eves. aiz.eyrd, fruit trees. R. V. right al $72.000. 552·8870
CSE:.
110111 BLllRS DD.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
PRIME SINGLE LEYB.
Gated Court Yard Leads To This
Immaculate "Linda" In "Bluffs"
W /3 Be<lrms. 2 ~~lus Dining
Rm. BeamedD l Ceilings.
Modem K.is akfast Area. On A Lovt: \le·Sac Of Single
Level Horr . Major Greenbelt
Opens To Pool Area. A "Joy Of
Newport" Listing. $165.000.
11 t DOVER DRIVE 631-1800
lllesa Verde beauty, 3 BR. storage, lO' gate. Grt WOODBRIDGE
2 ba customized home. loca. 498 Sturgeon Dr. New 2 story 4 BR 3 &.
Lr& formal dlo'g rm. 546-~ 2400 sq.n. .. den. fplc. lgc
fam rm. 3 r~tc's, huge By ownr. redec, nu kitch. badt yard. Must sell Pvt
paUo w /firepat. beauty SlOOO's below mrkt. 3 BR. Ply. 2L3·47S·4390 lndscpd front & back. 1 ba. huge lot, '8'1,900.
Elec garage door opener 66Sl2lor bus.; S3MBl2 Woodbridge Arborlake,
le much more $97.500. lake or mtn view from
By owner. pnn only. 3BR&POOL every wJ.Ddow. 2 br +
54().7610 MO ~ALIFYIHG den. upgraded hrdwd
ll_7 ,......,.. lloors a. carpeting. A/C, "Reduced" Etside cuat, ~ -....... w a 11 cove r i n I s 3lOO sq ft, 3Br. ram rm. 3 Dma ,.. I 026 ( e a r t h t o n e s 1 •
car gar. R ·2 . Agt ••••••••••••••••••••••• landscaped, lo maint .. ~nn. s,.a• M-*' WieC1 brk paUos. Sl35.000
ASSUMAIU LOAM Dana Point landmark By Owner. 5S2-Q27
Huge (2000 sq.I\. Home> converted to 3 units. EMOTIOHAU
W /custom family rm, 2 Perfect for owner oc· "'1ssy about where you
(pie's and oversized c upation + Income. Uve ?Then you'll loveone
yard. Only S569 mo. Ocean vlew. Impressive. of these highly upgraded
&Iyer may assu.me ex. pride of ownership as condos. Both a re 2
Isling VA 8'i'1% loan. well as sound in•est· bedroom, 2 bath, ••·
$79,900 full price. ment, $215,000. pensive wallpaper " lots
754-7100 MORIMSREALTY o f .excitin g ntras '. * 494-8057 * Several pools & Rec hall. Call 7S2· l920.
Oceanvlew twnbse. I
Bedrm. 1750 s q . rt.
I 002 .Ge1t1,.., 1002 t1r7,llOO. Owner '79-7090;
--------:-----1~493-6588=:..:==~·----------:-d QUAIL.
PLACE ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
ONM DAILY t ·I PM
62 l Udo , ... Dr, 2.C
OM THI WATM W11H SUP
Sl21,000
01tttndl1t9 IA YFIOMT cHdo•h•I .. , la••• wlffl toads of roo• to ro••·
P1oft11le111f _...... 2 IMI*• • •• M ......... ._,..._.~ .. c-r
.............. , ................ OM
\141 WAYll. M-r....., ..... ,, _. • ,. .................. ~ ~ A>ept1u, , ....... of ... ,.,, M
;t;C,';~~~·.c·=-= ..........
WOOO AMO MASS POR._ VllW
Loc-4 Mt•-a.rfr• & OcCllCIN••fi"'i• ... 11 Md~ .............. wy•~·~ ........ ~ ....................... .
t!Wrtwt ...,. .. -..... -•• I • u••.ooo. ~ .......... . ....
2633W.CoastHwy.
Ncwpott Beech
· a11-1•00 ..
..... ....... '040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brint --your Blkin• Resale Specialists .
I 3,4 or 5 bdrm models Delliblful pool home Hall. iome w /pools. wltb. t.r_eenhouae t 3 96IM602
bedrooms, family room. Penoingtoo Propert.les
dlnln1, Ureplace. 21------------
patlos. $94,900, BKR, llACH HOUSI ~1720. 4 Br. 3 Ba. l&e aUDdec:k. I
yr new bl rapidity de-
A Rl-L veloplnc beach area. IFt $125,000. 616 20th St.
'"ti lllC•t••u ,_m-__ 1'711 _____ _
--2Br twnhle, I"' ml lo bch. PIUMILOCATIC>til pool. frpl, aar, patio.
Meaa Verde Cul-de-1.ac trees 6 q uiet. 162,900.
street, 3Br. 2Ba, fam rm, B r o k e r ,
walk• bib to crac:l4!s 1-1. 754-1239~'*·
112,SOO.
1o,.n~P~1
Home & land . .Cbr. owner
$1C17.000 t.bia week only
Was $114.SOO. Accept 30
day F.acrow only. Wood·
bridge. 'Z1 Sonppam>w.
5'51-0238
RANCHO S.J . 3 BR. San
Luis Rey. 12th green &
lake Vu. SlSS,000. 2H
Nuevo. 54'7·7044
REDUCID
SI0.000
Won't tut the week• 2650
aq f\ ot boule on one ol
the lariat Iota in town'
Vacant. • Bdnn. ram rm
+ bonu1 rec room REESE REALTORS
7SMC13 ., , 910 w I p t o fe u IO n a I I Y
•• 1 .a.~1$• .a. . la.ndacaped yard• lot& of OPE:N HOl1SE .C B.R 2 Ba,
(pie, DOW epta thruoul.
BBQ plt, 1onlnc for
bonee. hlcl corr&!,. t'ck room. a.today •·~rM or
pboM for •PPl· asr.a111 aft IPM wkdaya 20291
Orchid. Sanle Au
.... ,,.,. fruit tnell It rully la It
n.t's a tnlaprlot. 3 deal! I Hurry, Call
Bdrm, 2 Ba Monterey '"'-'•Olllr
plan rib rallllly room. .. CAIPl"r
Onen , .. vtn. COWllr')'. llJ.3110. lmma~~I Priced IO ~~~~~~~~ ..U tlMI •11Mod I .;:
IWaMa • Aa>CARP&T·
J br2bl, 1rl c:o'lwed peUo ~74 ' ~'t;: del Mar. •1,IOO. •
IY Owt la DUPLlllS .
2 ..,,, *· i-ba. Lrt --.toaa.ooo
f&CP nD A Uv rm, n•., seen' -..&.T.Y ::!l•.:..::.0~~1l\ 136-7133
NOW YOU CA.N AF·
PORO, 4 8.ll. 2 Ba in
beau&.lh.ll lrvtne. w.a to s-R ,. school, on cul de
1ae, 1r1•l c.ond. Only sn.eoo. -.mo
You don't dlecS a ,aun to ...... fut" WMo fOU
place .. ed In the Dtily P0ot Want Ada I C&U now
•011171 •
-
red hill .......
5~2-7500
FIRST HOME IUYBS
-TW. .._ It .... for a ,-. 1-Ry.
Well located •Hr perils, school• Md
tJtoppr.• S,.C'-wltll l -..a-...t
11"• ......_ •• sat.too.
Otfter-Ital lstote Othet-•NI lat... OtMr leal lstcrte "-Mt U..tn.Md ~·H;.M; ......... .;;.:;;~;;;t; .. iooo CS1101&ii.IY ......... ;~·~;;::;:;; .... 1i;·4 ,_. s. ' '00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.,......, 2550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·Vikio·\·:0i~··ci::·~; lUUX C.M. ·;;:::·~· .. ·;;;,;;;· BR. l Ba. fin!place.
b· 1 By ownr. xlnt rond lnc ~ encloled yard. nr ecbool. mo 1 e omea. 24lr60 3 Br. 2 atory do. I ~ 847-02'79or847-3422 +den, 2 BR, 2 ba .• xlnt SIM)S. ll50.000$48·ST17 ba. Leu than l yr old. I----.,...--__:.;;__ __ ~u~-~wraa 11.en ~~. IUtLDa'S SAU New cpt. ctn-. D/W. crn-I lullMI• .._. 3240
""" .. ~ • .. •U\ • tr al air /beat. ~.000. •••••••••••••••••••• •••
80% Financing. R~ Hill AU.Nl)tt Eves ('l14)~41M64l Tom New·elegaot·2 bedroorn ReaJty553-7500 Duplex,SC-$154,900 (~) or 2 ~room + Duplex·SC·Sl».000 .._ no.. ,._ 2blocbtobeach. view ..... ._.. ($57S> ....... ar"' win •FANTASTICAL nouse-ee Sl29 500 ;;.:;;;·;.:;.:.:.;.·.;· ..... =:c~"':rie.~~:6c:~ Jbr2ba,J~tl.view ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ara1e. Fully main-Est.-a..... tained yard. Adult.a. No
~---HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
UTC' Sale 2loU·DP-S.11.000eacb ~~ ••••• ?!~ J*a. Inquire~ Ultb St.
Bh'fs "O" model Beautllul 24"60 2Br • 28a • W1tb SFH plan, CC a ppr $37S. 2 BR, aeml·fum. L90 (TH> 960-633l
119.500.38drms. Spacious 4 Bd 3 Ba. =r~ :::.~·$1:.~: CoostrucUonlnveatment Canyon Amil Dr. (213) LANOWAllCCOMDO
3 BR 2 Ba Dover Shores
i--------•I home. 'Nice. Call Dan. ---------• mues. ennin. •f
Aaent6'4-U33 Jaeutzi lo master swle . This excellen\ home 73l ·'608 •2501. 2br. 2b•. upgraded. --~iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;I 2 fireplace• . leaded available Cot lmmed OC· Pool side Palm Desert ... .,.... letlCla l I '9 fabuloos rec. Sec. $MS .
UVE LllE A ~windows · all new cupancy Enjoy the condo,2br.2ba,oogeoUe ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------~_us ___ _
kitebeo . oak plank noon finest all year round slope. Spectacular view OCeaftftoot houses avaU Crct. TMt•
IOMIU . carpet.i.q -d.500. smog free weather ln of valley " moy.ntains. now to June 15 $150 " • JUST .... M Orang~ County, .swim· Priced at S89.000. Will S200 wk or bv mo SI.SS 1' 1•r pool refrig.
You brine tbe •rapes " rninJc. Jacuul. soc1al ac· trade $40,000 equity for 646-2510 • , . dlwh. Petaok. more! Sm
497.JJJJ
•LAGUNA
NIGUEL
495-1720
SOUTH
'LAGUNA
499-4551
DANA
POINT
493-88l2
IMAGINE -UVltfesl&lore. equity in rent.al Wlita in -------1 fee.Sbare.M5-GOC>Agt .
. t~ room _,.,•u have tA>aa. We have" tbe villa Calfonlo ~ beach area. Write owner.
with 3 bdr0:S~ ... 2~ ba .• •-IHdt l041 Mlt .. Vlefo 1067 ~~~r:~~!~~ MobiJeffDmeRea y Ad #221. Daily Pilot .................. d sr~~e~ k~~.!t :.::
---t 2200 • 2 _,..... 2'706HarborSte P .O. Box 1560. Coat• ••• ••••••••••••••••••• s.,.-..over sq .... -••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~I Back Bay. ItaUa~•-Ck•dm 1076 a .a .,20 .. 664900Agt.. nreptaca one in fam s~~v·1ew 2BRCA.5ADELSOL marble pool jacu0 1 ---540.StJl/ Meaa,CA.9a626 Oil I ., A ___ .;;..__ ___ _ d · · ..,.....,~ · · .... · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·------•Y--•I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....., b• ... e ., .. _kids ok. Lge rm:--an tbe other Beautiful counlry 5 __ ., Full golf course view terrace. Nero ne'er had It FIX le S 1--..-,C ,,. -irv __. -..... mast. bdrm. Fast escrow with expansive vi;;,~ $89,900. 80 good! t!MZ Santiago AVE "5" .w _.._ HOMEFINDERS pool. must see. Fee.
possible. the ocean; very quiet & Fantastlccul·de-aac Drive. OPEN SUN t-5 or $If SOO 12'x44' Skyline in eit· 1967 Anaheim Ave. AU 2 Thousands Of Rentals 64S-4800Agt,
priv.•A. Loa .. -or fi·•-up FLO. RA MODEL. call for appt • cellent condition with Br. 2 ba. $!50,000 Prin on-Ge.t Put Result• -------------
"" U6 ..... -• View of oee&n & bills many extras. In C.M. ly, Bkr55'1-0283-.675-56Sl Sample: Lovely 3 br Landmark potentialyetextremely Tlleroof.onalot G tfl 'lb 38R II .. I ...__.._ __ .n......_ Ccmdo.U.-raded.Close comfortable as is 2 byltsell.$124,900. re• axerwt a . sma par •• ow rent. 010-. ............ ~ge r•
Bdrm. Plus l.rae d:..n. 4aRMADR1D. Walk to l~ BA. larre dining-631-3474evenings. 7900 sq It office building Sl75JbrhHkidatpet.t to beach. 962 -4454 ~ "' ramlly room w /dbl. Westminster. 8 mos old, DOO~ ldda. p.rage &a.016.1or lf172,2e&5.
$121.SOO. lake. $129,900 fireplace. +secluded New2brl'Al baKlngston. 2 bl.ks from Freeway. UFETIMESERVJCE DON'T MISS OUT ON O.Y..O 3BR,xlntcond. S65.900 den, study or 4th BR. carpet.,, drapes, refri&, lO.Sqrou.213/45-333.S 557-0IJZ
Larse2 Bdrm., 2 bath on· VALLEY lEAL TY Priced toaefr. blt-10&, encl. priv. paUo. OLD TO~ CclM ----------• 1HlS Sharp 3 BR 2 BA. Jy ~ block tp Main 586-4856 BERTHA HENRY Nwprt Bcb. $22,000 firm. "" ..... 11'-d 3206 fpk, w/cpta. fncd yard.
Beach. Bright & clean. BoborShirley ·REALTORS 83'1-'7854 TRJ-PLEX All 2 Bdrms. ••••••••••••••••••••••• conv a~a. $425. 968-4567
'u.5"2 C .... n.•5"-.fDVf"'E '8$,!iOO. 3 BR 2 BA Condo. air ------215De1Mar 492-4121 .&.-forS. 1200 $17?.000For·~-"-call Lovety38r.2Ba.frpl.ou _:.•.::.ll...:...no_fee_. ___ _
T '" ""'rv ~ """ NOllMS REALTY cond., c rpts, drapes, Newport sa.... San Clemente Custm =~•••••.......... ...._ 11!..=':...-a.w ~~. pets. 1625 yrly. GORGEOUS 4 br 2 ba.
HERE
IITTY Kim
Please don 1t let the kitty
• out when you LAV a look
1i this neat 3 t>edroom
coodowith a private spa.
CentraJ ajr for your sum·
mer comfort and com-
munity pool Now asking
only 167.000.
uMcHIEALTY
551-2000
nnnuaoac
ll!OADMOOR
4 BR. dinin& area & fami-
ly room. Completely up-
sn1ded. lmmac. cond.
* 49 .. •057 * pool, ljl story. $66,750. 3 Br. 2 ba. You own the hillside home nearing BUILDERS inssaTillnl'~ ---new paint & carpet. _., 71Af830."S085 pletl ooo f l114t751-606l fireplace. covered patio.
.IY...... ---------•land. Best single story f:dm on 2· sq. t. 3 Choice lots & acreage. _________ , ..... ,Hl111• 3207 huge comer lot w/frwt
·-M.wport •adt I 069 floor plan. lBt time of· rm, 2 ba, ram rm. Many to choose from in TWO •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• trees, near park "shop. COUt4TDOWM ••••••••••••••••••••••• onlfered. $139,000.!Jyappt. plbrUkfaetslbnook .dfi~e beaut. areas. all • • 2bl-,frplc.crpta,drpe.dbl ping. $490 mo. Avaal
6. LOTS. Laguna Beach, y . . ace. w ar. sun ec.. /le BKR DUPLEXE pr V ni S42S N grealoceanview. SJ0.000 ttlAITHESUIF c-alf1owtMPS 2~ car garage. No w r~4>m.'54B1 • S• ~. l-~-37:· . o now.847-<1967.49&-8895
s -808)1.. Chris Abel
designed home. $375,000
4 • BDRM .• Niguel
Shores custom home. $'J39,000 .
' 3'· BDRM .• %~ ba. Niguel
starter bome. •H.500
2 • R·2 LOTS in heart of
Dana Point. $42,500
Each.
1-R-2 LOT, close to downtown Laguna .
115.000
4 Br. 21h ba, walk to agents 714 S36-0074 ot114 OR522--0530 •E.ASTSIDEe $280 Huge 2 br. Near SMB.&. THESIA beach. ~ls & tennis. _960-4 __ 180______ C:.-.. Mer 3222 beach. Kida ok. More.
Duplex near the ocean. 4 Lota of extru. $\62.950. 3 Br. 2 ba Mira Costa fa. ACRES Very clean •'quiet. 2 BR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sm fee. 64S-4000 Agt.
bdrm upper, 3 bdrms W. Mciff....., Twnhae, or Camino de One ol the few excellent unitsonconnecttnaover· ll........_G.,.U "F lower. Jn heart of 3 B f siz.ed lot .Best location .,--3BRw/ftlfflrm,or4BR. Newport Beach. Hurry, r +. amlly room. Estrella & K ·Mar.t. ranch alt.es left. in So. close to everything: WebavetOOO'sofhouaes. bltns,fncdyard,S blksto
call for appt. to see! ~r:~:sc!ellsbt. A ~ Caeoll!;,SanBet0~eenCoOraFnge Quality construction ~~~s,alJapts noSaw, all belt' $42S. lmroedoccpy.
$196,000. Get ready for e a ;;:::;:: S.. .._ · -iego · an· w Jmauyimprovements. .. .,... pncea~ ve ~ •
summer re n t a la ! ! _.......... c 11111 I 071 tastic· price S35eO per OPEN SUN. HPM fee. 540-U.Sl 3 br + 2 br. Rents aum-111 i lllO # • acre. Terms. BKR. 360&35416tb,PLACE '45-4900 Jlvl 2Brw111ar. S216.'S. New cpL-1
Jo·~~ HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
mer-winter. Yrly income ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1714) 676-5717 OWNER/AQEJlfl' & tile. Water pd. 2710
SDlO.mo.$189.500. ORS22-2080 DEVINR.E.642~ SPYGLASS HlLLS. view .. C .. Delaware. Call
MAIJNAREALTY * * * * * * * Ca uarclal ---------• 3BrFamRm.aoyrly. fi36..tl20I·5M·P'.
6424150 IM CHARMING ,,..,.. • ., 1600 ••EASTSIDE-. _673-l!M __ l _____ SUPER SHARP 2 BR I
EXECUTIVE UVING
This Dover Shores 4
bedroom cuswm home is
bullt around a sunny
brick patio 1t offers
formal dining, gOW'ftlet kitchen. huge master
suite, 3 car garage &
much m6re. This im·
maculat.e home is of·
fered at S279.000. and you
old San Juan Capistrano. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• 2 ~LOT•.• 2 BR &den. guarded gale ea. w/DIW. cpts, fncd A f r o r d a b re u p · SHOflPtMG C&n"Bl "" comm. Pool & tenntS. yard, only S38S. 968-4567 =~!~~'i1d~~s.~~~ Near new-m H.B. on ••$89,500•• ~~ardener indd. agt.nofee.
baths, carpeting, wtndow Beach Blvd. Sl .l95.000 Ftont unit. 2 BR l Ba. '"9 3244
coverings, buill·ins, two SCO'n' llEALTY w /large sunny kitchen. 3 BR. 2 ba .• den. frpl, nJce
cv garage & ptlllo. By 5364533 Smaller l BR unit patio. Close lo ever·
owner M thru Tb secluded under shade ytbing. Older ~uple (d~ys'>. ~·II 646·2;i:;· C="9.!.-:'~f7oo trees in rear. Rents are pre{ .• no pet.a. t625. Agt
FrL thru Sun. <days> & ••••••••••••••••••••••• low. Owner w/replumb 673-5354/497-33118 !!e~gs, call (714) Bchwlk Tnbse . 2Br, ZBA. w/fuU price offer. Call ~E ENJOY our ex· ..._.......... listing oCfice for more de· f · · pri putting gre~n. lgr tails. ec amily bome, 4 BR or 3
•••••••••••••••••••••••
RENTALS
3BR.2Ba ...... -SSOO
3BR.2Ba.. . .. ~
4 BR, 21.A, ba. . ....... $.S75
5 BR. 2~ ba ......... $590
encl Wed ctyd, choice I<><' Dnill ll & den. 2"'1 Ba. Shutters. -MUDISTDIUGHT -or pooJs. uana & cheer thruout. Poot clubhse. nr tennis els, ___ 6_42"tt6 ___ t-___ wttt<JAttng ®\Ter-ro:-an l~~~~~~~~~l~own~~lbe land! Shown by .!: ' tmerrtonly:
Pvt. jacuzzi. sundeck & golf & bc h . 19752 year 1wimming nate
At"'""......... thas 4 BR. architects 190.900. 536-7313/842-68l9. Take' your pick 1 8dnn Separa~ fncd yard for
Picture this•Castle El ream home. Inside lftcoemPropet'ty 2000 S 1 2 9 • 5 0 0 Ag t Wonderful neighbors. 2
--.,.,,.,.. I covered patio surround Oceana.ire Ctr By Owner Bay or Ocean lighting for enterta.ining.
IMVESTOltS ~ d duplex. + bach unil. bedminton or tricycles
"'-" 3 an + ... en p !!:~;Leot~_J~e. cl.edhtar ••••••••••••••••••••••• 545-8424 /673-7737 blks to Balboa Island U&D. n, u , u -.,_....,..,g, c .... ...,m 1g . ---------p rdn ""'i-=:~~~~~====-1 graded in neutral colon. iDg & custom frplc make tumM UMfTS l>SlDE C.M. ool /g r serv incld at LOTS Of P r I c e d l o s e l l this' a page out or Home Elgbt 2 BR units all have 2 br oo 8100 sq. ft. R-2 lot. tBOO mo. lease 644-9615
CAINETS r:.:,;:~lfflty auiit:•1r••._ ::::~e~~~o~: r::~c:d ~a~:~~:edM~=l RoomD .dto8obuildk. tf»R.500! . ~EX·2·3 BdR. avail. 11fE TdEedRRCaACEb.ridbeau3t .... 9494 49ir 1rzl01t-=-...,."9m,.._l!Wlll_• _,.. ~· • · • . • ·b ... ,_..... ·Pl avt or e, tr, ...,_... views, eek. Jae. upgra m ge ...... ~ _ -~ 5 ZOOO yours to expenence y see at ......... .,,,ce. ease 546-9950. tllo50/'800. 752-0617 BR, 2 be, $S25. Ownr /agt.
llave been added to the 496-2413 N0-5050i1..-~_.,w,;,i..,,....,,..iiAi.,_W calling callformorelnlo. --------6"-5576,644-4895
kJtcben or th.is desirable~~~~~~~~! IYOWMER •llACH · VAWYllALTY 540.3666 TUmM4-PLEX DELUXE 3 Br. 2'h Ba. 4 bedroom ramHy home ___ Re_al_&_ta_te __ _, is Just 200,ateps away 49M9n 731-6050 3-2 ers. 1·3 br w/frplc. front dplx. 615 Mangold
that is near schools. O.GolfC-M IAYYIEW JBr.2Ba,frplc.2 cargar Goodloc.Comerlot. SSO!Smo.644·~ ~ tennis and shop-Gat.e aua.rded street of in Ca 1.... .....:-J)ralce&Assoc1ates pmg. A bright and homey Lg 2 br 2 ha mobile home a nne ..... e S,.;nu•K S3B·S700 New large 3br. 2ba. frplc. place to call home. Ask· luxury homes. 4 Br. den in exclu. Bayside Vill. on a pvt st. in Lido Sands 2 car parlung. no pets.
illgS14-.900. fi!?e·r.2famllyrooirui Clubhse, pool. jac., priv. ~$1~38~,500~ ___ !6'5-~1262~~~~~~~~~!~~ _________ ,_ ________ , SS7S 607 Larkspur.
IAMCH HAI.TY
551-2000
.... A .. 000 bch. poss. boat allp. Wu 1· ..... -s C.M. cosr· ... Ull!~ .a.· 640-1.840 -a..1-..... ~$>.67$-7903673-7848 111.Y 10% DOw .. ! ee.utH:ibr.oct. new .. 1 m;W"' c-.Mfto
Panoramic ocn view. 3._ _______ .... For Ulia plu.sh 3 Br & ,...~-•-.. 3 BR 1~ BA br, loft. ftp. 3-abr. 1~ ba All units with new •••••••••••••••••••••••
Br. fam·rm. contractors GOLFCOURSI Fam Rm. 2~ .Ba , ..., .... .....,. • townhouse. all bltos. carpet. drapes & pamt. New2brccado:Poof.spa. ~szso.ooo. VIEW w/custom Spaniah tiles. prden home ln . choice crpta. drpe. Hurry. buy Enclosed garages. fl-om $37S. Kids" ~Ls a-w Yeah Co Jcitchen. thick carpeting, loc. Gourmet kttcben. now. Tom Lee. Rltr, Priced to sell. Call OK.67s-4912Bkr. -•4,,· .... 11 Best priced view home in 2 FP's. beaut. custom frplc .• & pvt patio. &CZ-1803. 546-S890
'"66. Newport Beach. Only lndscpog. Decor~r·s delight.•---------New 3 br, 2~ ba I& 2 br, 2
YISl VRirt, YIE.S! ~.000. for this 3 bdrm, DOYElt SHaS HOME. '75,BOO. •2 Tri._.•· ba coadoa. Pool, dbl gar.
[.Ull[urious foot.bill patio home. Ht.11e cul·de·aac PllCm AM 0 bc.b. l~ BR. 3 ba; l-3 BR. Qoo8e your carpet. '550
bome-upgraded-urtb lot with RV access. WAYUMDaMICT INYESTMEHTS 2~ba: 1·3BR,2ba.5 It $450. Westblurr
3224
"''~ 3 bath, family room ~ CH IAGE Near LUe l>art.. Min. to open beam ceilings.
not.ooeaw'. l~ced7,.,,,, toFgOoR. ESTCall ~won't laatl Call So call Dan at 673-1168. C714t 496-7711 garages, trpJca. Sl89.000 Village. Victoria & Ca· SUPBt PATIO '"'"'-~ _.._ ext. 2102to make an appt each. 1109-1713 Alabama. Costa Mesa R·2 lot, nyoo.631·2080
HOME! E . 0 LS 0 N I N C · to see this property Hunt. Deb. 536-1718 ~'xl.55'. Upgra. ded 2 bdr CoUege Park~b 2ba. REALTORS before it sells! Earn Beautiful borne by the OWner. house. New carpet, "'---OCC.Av .. med. Shows like a model -pro----------\housands 00 your in-sea. 2stry, 4br. Ideal 1in brd d flrs 1 ,_,
resskloa.Uy landacped. 3 tli2.900, view condo. 2 br, vestment immediately, ram. home. Call for appt, ~ rm.''coun7ry lrtcbn~ B»-1097 big bdrms, rrmJ din, rm· ~ ba, air, Crplc. Prin on· ... 714-496-4168 l"""Y~--•-__, .
Own ... ~A .... ~ 1---------1 a.. " ~•,..5"• st.ove .... ._ngtncl.,2car •--"'-A..4.....1.---ff ~~:~~>!::~~-J.y. er ....... -7...... BEAtmFULMONACO Commercial bwkling in gar. Owner. S'tS,000. -~~.
SIUNfTY H.V.H., 3 Br. 2 Ba. Ital UVAIU fll SALE ocean(area with 1eeure Courtesy to brokers. S2lOioodare•lg more _.,900 tile ent & kit, nr pool lit LOVIAAI HOME lease rom Government ssv1182 .....,.. ...... 1 -d • _.. pll.xlntcond r y ll lo BY OWllEI Agency for aaJe. Equity . ... ... ...._ teY ~ +
Lrg. Uv-nn, brick frpJc, 3 $131500 ' eeMo-1440 ~ 1~ ~~~ buUd up and cash on cash 4-plex, Mes• Verde area, ~3br2br2k:ldsba· ~1 .. ,?Jce
Br. expandabJe, 2 ba, ' · .... .._·•, ldlninrm.. Walktolhebeachh'om retumfor150,000.down 32-BR,2ba,13·BR,2ha. _, "' .... !Dore Jaundrv rm, fam·rm, DU .. rv ........... orma I rm ...... 2 S . b l I A Cal f d Encl ' P-'-_,., lOOOsmoreavailnow• ~~ ~·•"-me' J ..,, .. _ I ~ .-..-A • beauty, just u.ted th.ii ...... aty. pana s y e.. payment. I or e · sar s. nuC o....,.. .
_... a.olcueu . .._ 71 Grut JocaUoo. ~bile. to week. PerCect Back Bay BR. 2~ BA. family room talla. Dys; 673-5252. Eves: Allare.u, all prices. •VA$17SK• by 169' Prof Jndlcpd. ocean! 3 Bdrm." 2 locaUon,nearallachoola w/ocean view .. Open MAYO CK 54&-298$ ~ • ..!.~~~' I workwitbOranaeCo. Ukeoew,1972.Callevw, bdrm. "nit•. Double •-abopp1'nr1. Origa·nal houae until sold ...... ' v l H t ~owne '" " • 0 """·---= .. 0
. "•0.".!.~T·E'~ ._..._....__11r...1... 1200 ~a11 ar'•.ft......lct;ee eta on y. omea 0 r. garage. Furnished & a.men have kept bou.ae ""''"" /bkr. ~·"" '" _...._. --Sl7S,OOO. Forlnfocall: SUPER BUY' Price r booted for summer ren· & yard in immaculate 1714>~ •••••••••••••••••••••••, _________ ,
Vf.t !!--_ _ ~--0800 duced to "6:900 oo th~ tala. $1.92,000 cond. ! Mao y ext r u OR 661-1535 ~ 4M•2Me OFRCI l&.DG SITI Townhse. panoramic vu. 3
,._•n&Jt.•n.w..:L..Ull"'I!\ 4 Br, 2 b • t b , home. MIWPOttT llACH make lb.ls a perfect faml· AIANDOMID Hunt.lngloo Beach lge bd.nna. 2~ba .• Crpl.
UMIVBSITYPllC ~/Agt IW.TY 675-1642 lY home. Soper value at AXa..,. D&.UXEUMITS 27.000 sq. rt. lot near gardropener. aU blt·ins.
V 111 . I • m o d I f I e d $214.5;00 Blk to twn/bch. Lag Bch Pacill ca Ho1ptta I. 5 PaUo Ii balcony. SS2S
Fordham twnble. 1900 aq EasY. Uvi!'9! ~~~~ .~. s:.:t!~r~ =-~e-~~;!::v: ~~ flnelt. super 3br owner's =~:~~"Civic mo. 842-55t8 •As. l ~ :t!~.!.b~a;11's!:: ~~c.!:!re!te;~~:. f ~Jt. f:.~~SJ.95.cpi. :·l:Mo:~~~~~~ =ti.::~ :U~o+ a1~~ O.vidBourkeRltr E/lide 3 BR. 2 ba, rrp c.
4332 Senlaa Way. By fireplace & more. Super o..,...;.n AUYTO"'S .s.zm. Superoceanvlew. ' ~9950 ~· ~dm~ ~
Owner. aos,ooo. 551-0404 comerlotatrorduecuri-"'"'c.n"'~A..A ·u WallSlreetRealmtt.ale UMODZICYILTI ADVAMCIMOTICI 675-8ooo,Wendy '
or97S-49>wrkdya. b'•prlvaey."5,900(46) Sbr,3bebeauty.Z700aqft 49 ... •ll OCIAMYllWLOTS .
in all. Room Cor boat & Oller RMI •Nte Home-buUdera beiJl& of. Spec1ouudult condo, 2br. motor home separate R-11r_._ 1y----r•r•d l at cboic"' of 2ba. endoeed •ar. BltM WOODBRlDGECONDO t b f th ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.... ..._. v........... ~ ~ ~ 0
Byowner8tlt2atorJend :.!a"uv! :!:n. ~UI no~ 4°""'!""""""-. Mlllle"-• · .._MIW' magolltcent ready-to· It poola. S376· Aft 5•
unit, 2Br, 112/Ba, c:ov-Jaat at $169,500. Call ,_541 1100 e Unit apt wrrec room, build ocean view lots. ,_132_·_S21112 ______ _
ered patio. Includes ~or912·2'ti6 UDO ••••••••••••••••••••••• units are •ll rented. Land Developer uries BR bouae. pooJ and ~lakes, pools parka & l.ICllill lJcltil-. I •FANTASTICAL S2,400mo.income4·3Br, Immediate response as Jacuui.s:m . •• acbla. "7,too-Or orrer ____ _.;;. ____ ,uoo ISLE. 2800 1q. n. _ 2~ea atuda. 2 -2Br,' juet a limited number oc &t.2 ... T58
: S7.IOO/Offtf'.5il.... --------i Own. finanCinl ... br, 3 1.Ba. 17081.Ela\ St., K.B. theee Iota are beinl of-•--------TC)ft()fl ba, dlo area,~ Uv rm. STEPS TO TENNIS ,._.. U-a $S75,000 .... 265$ days, feeed to buildera for sale Brookview twnbse, end
THl,VOl1.D Ofc ••l·up. od kit. COURT as BAY~ a BR 2 ~~ "'9H 53S-e73eva/Wknda at Ulla time. (n4)49M200 unit. 3 bl', 2~ b•. A!C.
Ai VW. lrotn w Pauo. Prlv Bch. S.rv. 8A den, Jacu.Utt •et ln ~-ta dbl "'dt hut· frplc, .:rz,:_:•, tennis, 1 UrrMllf neoreverwly rem"Jeled ! ~;.J;.f'I lot. $250.000. ·-· 8tlt ·-2a SAMCl.WI OCEAN FRONT pools, oecorated. u.u. .. v•-flanlprden. ury H..... Urta r, IMftP lOO'oUront.a1eoo21e1a1 Att. dbl c•race. M75. ~cta&Je below mtt.' bedroom H family1---------1 $140,000. C.-: 2Ba Sk~n adult 00 loll. Beaut. stairs to ..._; t7s.am $1~ ::.=,Latsel~= HaborVlew r'!'o~lal ad1li~~ Spetkll!'~9i1 Bil uolta oeea.nwttrnalllotcabln. -, ...... -11opia LL••• ~ 1 All f d Ith _ .. d rd Woo't lut '350,000. Mk ""' ,,., ..... , • BdPtan t +den borden f'"Dbell area. non r ore. or un er w 1ec uu• It en for Maril w Cbaoca JlaWYoQrownlloml!
:: ADQPIJ'8dll. sm.ooo . "COUNTRY ~ a~:~· Park rHt =·~L¥.!!te~a:i~ m.1001 or~ en. u .. ~~·E·~u.~ootr
. ..
• __ 17$.5'7M ___ .owner __ .__ C•.,..Pedftc added~•!. · Unique .R.E. Oo. En· DO dowll. rn " ... t
• ---1048 FRBilCH" o.wi.e. " dni&U anllbmt.Quallfynow. · l.llflM-~4S·91u1 Mobile Home Realty Jt.Jt.yNetWOtk.t57-MOO : ... .-................. IMciGattbS.yPJua "SOMERSET" 270IHarbor.Ste208 TlftD o.6ot~ '
•DW'UX* tapoaNla~ ~5beclroem. ...,... MN937 Stzt.IOO "•••ff JISOhMM Meu Verde 4 br
..-CkuD ... or'"" ln•I 4'6-7W 13t..oe a a.tb wttb Lbe outaide BJ Owner. ... ..... Soper locatton near ....................... W/plJOt. ~. Jarden·
: 1at.ea&Yaeet1atobtecll. l>rou1ht lndoor1. I br or 2+deft, •~be, fs..,19 •.a. beacb•Delllarahopa._~ IOM:lllAMCH Ina serv. ·•·mo.
.. .-... nablt mtaor ,. Profetlll.-llvdecoret.td llt.rham, pnced rilb\. WI ~ !t2 l BR ua.ltt PWS Remode*I twb bome *-IOA•enl. :· ,_ ..... • By O'WDlt 4 BR .!tome " ..--ora.SU4 B • • o.. a r •a , • 7 8 ....... JCSul for home·• llllUlt ..._ •ooo.. ' • IPlt•ded, mao) ,,_._ .. · __.,,open beam celltnp Nk'e3bOIMI saso. Firepl, lncoi:ne. Burry, only ~aVll&a.ISMat tUil\.Om appc>_latmnta. St•OOt-""" &alt&&n, 28r, 2Ba + BERnlAHENRY •¥iewlftaQdlrtdloaa. ftaced palfo, 541·'7013 9117.IDO Onlf wm • fllu.aoee. .. .,,,..... FA+ potth room: kw.. .. .. ~:0!!_...... 111e pool, tpa 6 bdck -OranallCM ..... a.elt, -.mt ........... . 1067 Ctll fr uk I« JOHlf HAB.BORVJ&W ly el•bltH, pool • -----~~ P9lio an fenc.d ID ror ...... -.............. 8H.!A. w o1 oar *' AMwDt Ml of SU0.000 at. l.r::· llt.500. Rutb ~ prtvaq. TIM 1 Br bOlile w11ma1J yard,
11nl Arcll 111.1 llome. S bdrm Cordova, prof pr_oleHIOHlt. Call SJ.080 ':~mac Btt,...._. .olSALllYOWMm rh.A'81qaaoe ... fllor MGYe•NfrlS.AduU,lllO . :--...=. ~~-= =:r~. u:ftr~: •-· =. r:.~.;:: ae• xW .. ntaltClll 1 er.. Tlt•Plti. aHr be~ oe Joa to~dD ~ a. 100 SMU· szso . .....,
Prta.a,plMM llNIU d_ 9'JAll. ~ .... lll.'T»ONI 3be,tam nn.A/C, ·one Giii SL Nwpt. ~000 ....... OIUaow! vtlOCDltbtnaYoU•aJU.
,1_ . .&-_,.E lhado1'• .. , lrvJH. Orut rtntal c;al t7J.4616 to Ml.I! a.allMd w do
np..dftedAd•.>•ovoM-Plnd ftirt ·JOU want lo ~~ •SelltbiniifaltwlthDally 5•WP•ft.8)'0ntr ........ OD -~dYI aft ....... u_ It wtil -C•ll NOW. -~ceatcr. o.lbPtlolClaatRedl_ -lo,.tftNtPM.t POotWIO&Adl IOI.-IPllJwbda 1.111E.l'Na8UG,.'1\ eo.Sl'1I.
WALNUT SQUARE coi.y
2 br, den, 2 ba twnhse
Pool. Ideal for cpl. No
pets. $390. 645-9799
L8e 3br + fam rm. 2'hba.
2 stry. townhom e •
Village I. Unav. Prk
Avail 6-1. $S25. SSZ-9444 or
!i6'2·S630evs
Woodbridge S&S condo. 2
bdr. den. 2 ba, imma ,.
A tC. end unit. Avaal
J 1me. MSC> mo. 6454344
2br Orange Tree Condo.
Pool & tennis. Lake ser
Ung. Avail now. SlSO.
675-9229
$500 mo. Woodbndge 3 Br
2 ea. compl rec racil.
lake sailing & poolb
548-9725
~t.ada 3241
················'······ i bdrm 3 ba. new view
borne. No pets. 529-5755
or 5.29-7897
M.wport lead 3269 •••••••••••••••••••••••
NO FEE! Houses, condos.
duplexes . Rental
Pavilion. 67S-49µ Bkr
....... Galoref!
We have lOOO's of houses.
dpbs. apts now. all
areu. •U prices. Save on
fee.
645-4900
Bl"fs, pan. view. lge. 3 Br. fam. rm .. 2..., ba.
pool. JB50 A&\. 844-0134
Large 2·1tory contem
porary home w t 4Br.
faro rm It den. Walk lo
bay & OCEAN. ()pen &
bright. llliSOtmo lease.
WATERFRONT HOMF.S
8.11-1400
Oceanfront I br older
house. Yrly. tBOO. TSL Memt M2·1603
Weetclifl. cbannint 3 BR,
1"' ba, patio, no pets.
tsZS/mo.-.aaa
TNl•UffS
3 Bdrm, 2 ba., 1in1le llY •
early area. Quiet l\reet. ac.u, r.-eah le vacant.
'550/Mo.
3 Bdrm.. 2"' ba.. split·
level , end ualt. Deliptfw view. Avail .
Datlt. 181S1mo.
AGENT
Tl*day Mey 2. 1978 OAILYPILOT C7 H111e1Uafw&1Mc1 Afiwt•aft,..1hd Afiomt .. llhu.fwa. ¥••hu..tunl. Offlcit._... 4400 ta..-toL.o. 5025 ......................... ·-····· •• ••• .......... • .................................................................... r.=.~: .........•••••••• Ml ~,. '-, .. ,, ....._.. 17 ~-• -·. 1 '-' • Fatmd n oo "' .... Ser-rlcff su o tt.t, W..eM 1 too u-=-.. -" -. ll14 Ma ,,_ t .._.. "" .._ sav1c "1 •ICK C _.SH ••••••••••••····"'····· ········••••••••••••••• -..... ••••••••• ····•·················· •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... ......acu TV ~ • -a Jd u ••••••••••••••••••••••• Na c C.n,.oa ll\r.18a -0 ....VA• vrT"1I ~t 0 money ( p, Atrobk• dance uerctH ~--------:'f ••b•me btfl aolr OCL\NVRONT al\&d s STUNNIN a BR 2 0., EASrtn.UFF. Stunnln& 2 Penortat telepboCle/ r~ lit a.. .. ...,. T ..,.___. Bank of AJMrlca. COM. l II w-.a F 1 ' ..._ • .. _ N ... -t.. apt Pool rec .._ .._ ~ O t ' i • 1' • • •mo rust ~ •-1Uala CBK. "ear '7• on -e us. on, """· r · ar~es ". pvt iara ... , .... 1•r o pell .-.-a · • UI", i -· Jc. orseous ~•e'!'.!~'roomiec. •2,rf~ loAnt anu1ed for any ~~..... Ea~ie" "n fro"nt . 6AM. Stretch your wul, IU~K UH mo · 140 1112• • NowtilJ~3 CT~ ~ IZI& 710W lllbSl bay v1w. ature adul\.s ..,.... ,_,,...., "" """" CM!t ...... v hri k u Cdu SO"'-al ....... •·M-mble-.,' -N t $47" & b01plt•11ty 1ervac-. reuan. no pro· Great sen mental value 1 11 your to · • u ·-~ ,_ • ~ m.~ ..
8
..
1
i.. o pe a. .,. mo . -".. bliem eo..-on ... _ ln ....... __ N~_,.lmm_,.·-tel· _ Lee 2 br duplex apt Q n , new pa nt, new f~· ~ ~cdlent k>caUon, near · ..... -"'"' • Ltberal reward: Call ------------~ C'UMI J
3 Br + fam ily rm furnished. Acrou fn>m tw., pV\ patio,• 3 freeways. created value of your IWO-l666evenJnoc 11r-a....1cL.a.... S_.00 Looa4'ShortTerm · N J .a~ BR. l ~ BA I • I ... II!. -.. • ..__.... • .,...,_ C--. home. ca.II today for f&it, .... ---.. l\ssliJlmen~ can.lfront r72S Ai.<> 2 ocean. ew:y..-vrat.ed, •now pant, rlfW ,,...me ._ sr"'U\ couneousinformaUoo REWARD •••••• .. •0 •••••....... JShlft.sAvaJlable
bf +den $5.50 Yrl.y Walk CJlU, pamt. Yrly. ~ ~ nxturoe. pvt patio, •Ullfw I bad 3900 (114)9'Jt.2161 Two toy Poocllu. I~\. TbeSln&le'1Sotuuon Muat havown trarusp
to beach, pooh wnnh1 17~orMS·Dl ''2$. No peta. 7ts4 '•••••••••••••••••••••• ""··o pn·-.. •pol offic .... /JA~ brown 4' apricot. vie Date by Choice ClllT_._. 556-1520 Crom both. W1uiru1 Rt!al Sballmar, Av.II now. THEEXCJTlNC •w un> ~0 ' 8X ~0-PCH & Superior. NB NotChaJ'lce _, ty,142.a&SO 4f. ...... , ~ ,ALMMISA APTS. w/your ~kioa lot. ,,..._t51.U'f~ Sat AM 873-t&33 CaU lntroview752·:ii411 Free. TOP Pay Vac PJy
PJuah 3br 3ba w;boat _..,,_ 11•1d • 2&', Good E. Slde loca· MlNUTESTONPT ~·~or real !,!~e· NrBe: Ucenaed Home Loan~: C~t. ire" stn ....... I I =• ~~,r .. '!!s•'f r l b'lk b h ....................... U.ao. no peu, now avail BCH. -..... ' Brokers 1ervln1 So J ....-• :ymr _....... -· ~.~t~ uc Q_,.. 3102 $23$roo. 63l·32'1l Bac~.1"2 BR. tall 1bopa. etc. Call Calif. for 17 yrg. Call our lem ~art~. cri~ed, ~ &IJ ....... Div WaJurKidde &Cc,
___ ;_,;,.:......;:...::.. ___ , ••••••••••••••••••••••• from mo." up. 6'J~SSS1 near e I l 0 ff i c e . 1::8 . ·~· ypar . ··················-··· 20825. E. Bnstol
Newport Crest Oceun J3742 Newland Street, 1 Br. iu •water pd. Adulta,NoPeta IAYROMTOfftCIS 71f.83'7·3744 581:~~. evs/wknda ... W..e.d. 7075 St~lO Newl)C>rtBuch vlew. 2Br. 2ba condo. 2 G a rd en G r o v e . Adults, no pets, no 1561 Me.a Dr. Canoery VUJ.qe·New or. ./ ••••••••••••••••••••••• (Col'flerof Bnst.ol 6
car aar. D/W, compac· Beautiful. two bedroom cblldren. 9220.64.5-8939 (58Ual Ea1tofNewport fices from 300 sq rt. NEED l..c6t: Black" tan female Mature r.ouns woman C&mpus behind
tor, W ID. newly decorat· apartmenta In excellent 2 Br 1~ ba 610 Joann St Blv~ fantastic vlew•, l" ./MO .... EY Setter. Fri nile. Oak St. wanu child care poe. d•I· Equ!rJ;;;;:~:Waty td. $48S;mo. 646·S350 nei&hbc?rhood. Pn vale Ad~ta. 00 ltid's. Smali 546-pa u 0 s . park in 1 & " Lai Bch. Hu nea collar. ly or by lbe br. 2 Yrs ex· Employer M IF'
evJW,lmds patio Vlew from lovely pe\.1.548-?63& IOGMI 4ooo Janitorial included. 2808 4M-0287Reward. per. in Swus children's.1~~~~~~~~!"
Toou-.a kitchen ; enclosed ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lafayette Ave. N.8 . • 1 home. )Ont driver. Refa.,. '""" S I a rag es . po o I ; Lce2br, l ba, patio, eocl. Roomw/lc1'tc .. -et•· rJa.1003 C•ITMO FOUN D : F. Go den 497-37~. 1--------• Many college students $320/monlb. Call Clyde gar. Nr. OCC. No pets. .. ... n ..... -IM Retriever type, vie Back Auembt.y
winter rentals, startin& (Manager, Apartment $290. 751.am6. ~week& up. Prime OC at11>0rt area. 2 r-"-Bay. 642-6033. p r ~ c · N u r s e I September. Our rental t30) 891-1013. 543.97:;s ..... of trecepl 2M a ltd TD..... ~eeper. s days wit. TDA1NE£ -.... _..,... __ ,
1
lis 2 Br 1 ~ Ba townhods .,._ cs w area. 75.5-1 Found: Hooey le wbt, 9 F/Ume Lave·in. Don' UUU -""· ...,.,..,, ., t.mp. · e. Sunny unf room SJ.35 mo 65csqft. 7S2·5SU Arr-Yv mos old, 1tandard·sz dri\'e. CaU Kay (213) Call ua if you have a •UA.MD HEW• garae~. patio. pool, +utll Kit pri~ W /D an&~ by Shepherd. Vlc; Bonita "'7-8758 ASSEMBLERS
vacancy problem. Cherry Creek Adult jacuzzi. Adults only . IW0-28io Newport.Sch ' Amba.slador lnn in <Asta c:o.t..._Locma Cyn Rd, Sat eve. Aft u.a..w_..._....
Bur r Whitl.' R ~dll\lr
Apta. 1 & 2 BR, £pie's, we ~s. 646-2010. ' · Mesa, 1ZT7 Harbor. Cen· ± 965-3276 • ...,. _..... 7 I 0 & PACKERS
have lakes. sauna, EASTSlDE near ne i On the beach NB,. very ~y located,235rooms. OOVOUNEEDCASH? •••••••••••••••••••••••
.'All Nt-w µun Blvd N B
'7 1 l ) b 7 5 4630
Jacuui & pool. Located Br 1 Ba fplc encl ~ar sm111 aleeplng room, 'MANY with kitc hen. i-. t , 2nd & 3rd Found: 2 fem dogs, lf• _______ _. NEEDED
at 2701 S. Fairview. Just avi May •15 $32s pe • furn. SSS mo. 675·11f6S pbode & TV. Swimming homeowner loans at· Germ. Shep, 1 sml black. AceounlinJ IMMEDIATELY ·~
S. ol Warner. N. or S.D. Ownr· agt 67a.ll8l r mo. Rm, ... .,.E FOREST kit pool, jacuzzi, aod rec. ran&ed fut. Borrow Vic : 19th • Newport ACCOUMTIMG TOPr4ym Fwy,556-1991. No pet.II. ' · ·. ~ • room. Daily & weekly SlOOO • Sl00,000 ·flexible Blvd. CM . 642-6822 . Cl~ AJI stun.s. day. ;~mg &
$nS. 4 BR, 2 ba, lra fncd~mmmiiiiili..iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~-Polilt 3126 pnv, pool, tennl.a. Resp rates starting from $54 a terms, put credit no pro-548-98115 Vanety of duUes. A.s11st . graveyard m e tud ~"
yard, t21 Tusho Ave. ••••••••••••••••••••••• male, rel581·~ week blem. Call ua . no obliaa. -------=---i ~EDP payroU prepara· wknds . Long & ~hort ~'~/o66wl·lnll6S u n I 3 . Bfist..1 1 BR. clean, freshly paint· Sa er........ 4200 645-440 lion. • Found: White male Spit~ tiOn" coUectaon re~. term assignments. Holl -T ":-. ed. gar. No pets. $265. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Office Space avail .. !or ST~~~8~~~~~>cs. }~~~~;. o~~~~s.t ~:l:Jfi'tr~~J ap~~~f•~t ~~~r.~La~tzc:.8t\1:: g~:n errace ~~ 8»9325 aft 6pm. meat.al health or beaJth j.;;;;;;;;;;~-;;;;~ c.au 539-3730. has some acctng ex per. avai
New 4-Plex bldp; 2 ~ 3 t>anl Point-super ocean 2 Bdr~~~~mon-~·'.:is~=C:aJas~~~ _Foun ___ d_: -M-a-le-Do-xi_e_M_lx~. =g r:f~ ~~;~:P~~ .
Blful 4Br. 383, pool, va·
c1&nt, $195/mo. Gard &
POOi serv1nc. SJ.9·2879.
Eastbhdf 3 BR, Fam Rm.
db! pr, remod kit, view,
$725 mo. Avl now.
Br units, pvt community• view. New 1550 sq.ft. 2br, p . with •·'--d. 714.7""'l7~" lllllN YOU Blk. Mat"'""' doa. 17lh •-N ti I S C covered prkg, pvt paUos. 21hba S4.50. 644-5742 tory omt forever _ .. _ .... _• ___ _. __ ...,___ ftllu. Grand ..... • • a ona yst.errus orp,
pool "rec rm. Located v I E W. D e co r a t or AIRPO TO ES NEED c•l'H, .SA. 835-3258eves. 4381 Birch St, N.B. (Near
near bus &: shopping In llwl ... • a.odl '840 funulbed. Pool, jacuzzi, R FFIC IN 0C Airport) Equal 0p.
desirable area of S.A. ••••••••••••••••••••••• sauna, tennis. $350/Wk. 1 & 2 room auites. all Found male Samoyed vie portun.ity Employer
1021 W. Central Ave. 1.~ SHARP. beach, 2" 3 BR. aervices. No lease req'd. CONTACT Brook.hurst " Banning. ~~~~~~~~~
Speci.al 2 BR, ocean1mtn mi No . of So. Coast frpl. dishwashe r , ONTHEBEACH Ftom$14S.mo.2082S E. 962-S038
VUlj, nr park. bay, Plaza. 644·2784 or garage,patios,96G-ZJS8. 4 Bdrm home with Bristol, Suite 200• N.S. UNION Found Toy Terrier. fem? ACCOUNTANT
759-0905
VOLT
f l Ml~(JJ~Ai'lt IU 1-'Vll It.
ll41C....Dri•• 5~741
(Across From
Oranje Co. Airport 1 Equal Oppor Employer Fashion Isl., S. Hwy, 751·5892 , privacy. $1000/Wk <714>SS7-70lO. HOME LOANS Vic Slater/Newman. !!:ex~bl · f com1pan1 y.
quiet WJO. h>lc . kith~~~~~~~~~I UVENearTMBeach! WATERFRONTHOMES •• .....,....... 4450 .Uq,\oo Home Loana ar· 847·2830 naopoosl e aor a ac·l·--------
fum I.&!. SSlS 1>73-8617 C.. .. Sol CallG3l·l400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• range loans for home or counting thru ftnanclal S 1t-c1e 12621 Flower Street, Beautifu1Adu1tApts ..aft.ll:luxe.OFC'S propertyownersof$1,000 l.<lstChmesePugdog&.an st.at.ements.PayroU&re· ASSI T.MANA~B -w• 3 276 Garden Grove. Large Gaa &Water Paid. .. ~ .. to $100,000 or more. And vie Clay & St Andrews. lated taxes, llibt typing. SaJes & adrrurustrauon
....................... one bedror:~artments 21661 Brookburst, HB V...._ ........ 4250 Coaf. rm .. 1eat 25, all through Union Home NB. Reward. 548-6106 Requires 2 yrs. account· fUU time only. Apply 1n
Hro:1ctmonr-.. Sanrtca ... 111••• close tQ s ng. Laun· 962-6651 ••••••••••••••••••••••• paneJed, sm. wbse in re· LHoomaeno!n!ro Tu e r'mest, Rew-.... , losl, movie lllm_ in& at college level. penoa to; Mable Austin.
I HR. 2 ba. ''"er hnnw dry facilities. No Palm Springs Vacation ar. tor2yr. lease. Lake _ ... .,.. Salary starting at l800 Draper's, Laguna Hllb fo'11ll11c•tan1u.t'u1'tlp;iL. children; no pets. Call 2Br,cbiJdrenwelcome,no Condo 00 Mission Hills HariipsFor&St area. Kent which are cenenlly NUTRIENTS, Aft Spm, mo. Paid vacations. Store, 23621 Moulton ~50 mo An11I J..uni· 1 w ~bble al636-7343. . ..... _ .. l-..c. r.-.-•-...c _much ....._._rlJhan fin•""'e _536..()7 __ 48 _______ 1 medical insur. Call Jo Parkwav Pla2.a.
rr .,....,~---a -mO---r. lub.*'6430 7J·1 581_:1t~ -,,..~w _.., -ur--.1 fr~~~~~~~~~~ 11 r1 pur1·ha .. •· 11111 ._....____. s • ~.07 ~· • ._, companyterms. LOST: Yellow. red-eyed """"' al Nolan Rea ~511-l:Jl:J 1lu1.. 19'' 11•1, ... , -r-c • '" -,.._..._ for ___. in ... am Cll -..-T p---'--· CJ St Estate Inc., La1una . -'"' •• •••••••••••• • •• • ....,...... ,.,,.. ,.. n--d I M Co l OllM ,_ ...._. ., .... """'•· Y\f. over , ,._ _______ _ t'\t·~&\\knrt.. • • • • • • HUllllACH moth 1 Bdrm & loft ............ e ar 00 as tWfltl:'"ct ~~· F'V. Reward. Buch.0..M73 1' OCEANFRONT •CIVICCEM'ra Frplc, HUDa, pool. Sl? Hwy, UOO sq.ft. Good _.......,. ---------1 ATTENTION!!' w..-..tw 3298 Spacious l BR. beamed BRAND NEW s 1 -·day 586-8l&7evea parking. xlnt frontage. ........ t80ROVB ....................... ceil , Ulekit&ba. S395m· · pac ous ,.... · · lUOOmo 75&-92169 .... 1ca•1 5350 Acctng Bkkllllg
a...tal't G°'°"!! cl util Adlt.s, no pets. deluxe 3 • 4 Br. AU bl~J ..... to sa.... 4300 . AIU. y AMOtn'1%1D ••••••••••••••••••••••• TIMPOIAltY ::r~oew ~:
We have lOOO'sofbouses. 673-&'112 frplcs, gar, lge yd. ~ ........................ Approx. 400sq. ft. C·2• 130 PMTLY AMOtlT1%B) Spiril!llllR..... •Regiata Today to work 0perun
dplxs. apu now, all Yortctown ·J uat Wdtof •llSB.ICTIVE• E . 17th St, $140/mo -•11r•-..LY 18USo.EJCamino ReaJ onvanous.-ccounting& ginCostaMesa are.as.all pn~ Sav•on BAYFRONT -BeacbBtvd.960-2219 G . U ble Doyle548-U68 '"'-.' VT'I ,..._ bookkeeping ass11n· '"'"' .. 3 BR, 2 ba, refrig , 81Dare a San"..emen~.fullylic. Man or woman Work fee. • dshwsr gas bbq frplc NEW XTRA Dllt twnhse roocnmate. 7SO Sq. ft. C-2 on Newport Foe appt. 492. 7296 men ts. Work close to w /young people. EDJOya
645.4900 __ A~ gar s~ndy bch' s72s' apt, front w\it. Lg 3 Br. 64$-7464. Blvd . Lease . Call ---~-----1 your bome. Figure ble & interest.mg work Le*.67a-7S38 ' · 21,Aa Ba, formal din rm + •SHARE A HOME• ~12 RELAXING MA.5SAGE Clerk.a to Sr. Accoun· wtrap1d advancement
3br, tba. rncd yard & nice bks{st rm, fplc, bltn.s. Bob James-Lie Masseur tants needed ihruout appor in our educational
laauly area. Pvt Twnbse w /beam ctg.,, W ID bkup, patio, dbl at· c.t cloww Warehouse or Work.shop U Joe any reaaon we can-Oukall 9'9, 494·5111 Ora.nae Co. products division. Age no
847·3584 Agt. patio & deck, 3 Br 2\.'l Ba, tacb gar, $MO. ~3604 UYmg &pctlln! Cent. CM.· up lo 3000 not uraoee a loan for e .._ Robert Half's barn er if 18 or over
COid • •-$.'560 ~1220 Sbarp2 bdrm, l'-4abaCon· Sharea bomeor aptment sq.ft.~eq.ft.642-4158 yoot.berewill be no cost MAS---fiE ~S'.C:::.~501 Must have pleasin.:
µ.twMIMd 3425 ear-.. Mw 3122 do. 3 Mi. to beach. S350. ~E-02.Aru UNuwra> UIXhrea, xlnl local.ton. orobligatioo AC'iUIE MODB.S No. Tower, Union Bank peniooatity. Call betwn
••h••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• m o . Ask for Leslie, Uk'i«~~-prive~parking. ESCOllTS lnTbeCitytJfOrange
9
:30am&
2
:30pm.
S700 mo. 2 Br 2 Ba. on the 5*S880 ~ ~ ~otwq 714-675-343! UNlON OUTCAU. OHL Y 714/135-4103
0«an al Blue Lagoon Deb.Ix. ""'01alde xtn 1., ~l ill·"•I Villa. -re.oms. 2 poolS-, pvt re--....... .. -------' .. "-----· ~Uii",
bcb.2J.3.703-oo30 'l1 I y 2br. 2ba, bttns. dsbwhr. House to share in Dana THESHIPYAllD I HOME Cost Ace~-.. ·~~!:',~ Nr-. beach. Adlts, no pets. Pt. 2 Br. $165. "-lJ Keat" I •SANDY'S* T~'!!~1••• d .,f...~~-~~ ..... -.-..~"""'-$?!IO.mo.53M362 btwo8-Sat~m I =!~~~!~~~~!~: d}l uo' ~NS Out.call Massage Job cost aystem. Prev
_.,.All 3525 GARDEN APTS BR 2 8 Be B d ~ ' ' 973-0329 ....................... 2 A. nr ach Iv Hcl'memates wanted. ly murbisbed shipyard exper req'd.
OCEAN v IE W. S 8 n CORONA DEL MAR & Inter Comm Hosp., M/30, med dog, CM area area. Ample parting. •SHEJU LEE• ROSAN, INC
Clemenu. 2 sty end unit 2 Br TownhouH. frpk . fplc, gar, pvt yard. Adlts Bob, 842-Z801. 67).4400 Nation's Larsett Home Certified Ma.ueuse 2901 W. Coasl Hwy. NB
Twnb Pool. tennis. Some ocean only, no peta. 847·3241 Loan Brokerage Firm Howe Us 548-5533 rne. 3 BR, 2'12 Ba. .. Catalina views. Cloee evs/wknds Prefer female, 28-35, Se1 HAR BOA BToro 770-lOl 1 ~ .,.;.!Y appt. F.qual Oppor Employer ~ fac11. Walk to shops & "" _._ ACCOUNTING
64M514
AUTOMCYnVE
PARTS
"~OUM't'a '8$0H
Bolls Royce & BMW ex
perience preferred. Call -
Glen at M0-6444.
IOYCAllVER
IOU.SIOYCE
&IMW bus. ,.75 mo. 770-2317, to Faahioo ltland fr nne 9UIET ADULT Terr. Apta. Sl67 .50 -+ Hllistlds 141-2225 --------1
-
owner/agt. beach. Alsol Br.644-261 1 utll. Llnda,493-5380 FQ,VV I •oy 2BRl~Ba.enclgar,pV\ ---------A I I.A
patio, new cpta/drps. Nr hfw=t!, 5030 ~ M sap
'"' lw5'h Fwwi .... d Cbarm'g 2 br, 1 ba, frpl, bcb. 1325. 980-1279 415( A D1Y1slon or 731\lUa
Newport Beach in· Automotive
suraoce ~gency needs TRANSRE·BUILDER
;:~:_;::::_•••l•.,••2•2• ~. ~~ ..... /~~.· Nr. Deluxe.beach apt for sgl. :::,:•::;.11··.·:::.·~·.••00•· 1,~ll~u~rho~r_~ln~-~~-l~"!~en~t ~Co~·~Need loanoo appreciating
penoo with a<:counung Full II expr lo traln for com· . Y exp, a make~
_._._ _..,,.. r-_,..~.,.... ............... ...,.. invest ment could be P REGNANT? Caring.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool. Jae., on PCH, ty t35 ~ 1916 w a ce 11 , l.w•~ .4500 shortterm.6'2·MMSally confideot.ialcounselingck
puter operation and Lead man sal to sao.ooo
perform various related +~RANS R-R MAN
duties. Mu1t be neat, Wage to ...,5 wk•u for rut LG S'MJDIO APT, $350. 2 B~. new paint, Sunset Bch. No ~ta. cM. ~Us; 83'7-5895 .. • • ---referral. Abort.loo, adop-$!00mo. yrly ~.2paUoa,pool,park· $27S.963-4636 ....................... MoulP.Jll. Trwt taoo •keeping. consdentious and have .,. • _., lots of i.niliative. Call Sue 1.y exper producer. Aam llj:Leodal 644-4100 co, Capustran o Bl·h 673-1055 mg.833-8080;673-20:a6 3 BR Condo pool 5.15 single storaae &•f IUILDTOSUfT Dtidi 5035 A.PCARE 547.25413 , • near Safe & secure. 72• ec.t.MeM 3724 CodaMeM 3124 Adami ~ookb.urst: J ames,C.Jf.m.77W7. 5,000·20,000 Sq . ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LUeA&VICICI
$1115 mo rn:u 962 3519 Placentia Ave. C.M. LOWlrtJ .........;~-------· 496-12ll ~~--~---••••••••••••••••••••••• •·.:;:-:::•::.:;5u• ~10.'exus7 ' Office.... 4400 ~EYTAYLORCO. , rw o.aiM•eoge ~~· ....................... REALTORS 644--4910 W••st..... Forfller.oflt! S50 WIS( & UP Laree 1,2"3 bedroom Large 3 br, 2 ba w /frplc. Serving.all Or Co Studio, I bedroom urden apt.a. Dsbwbr , S360. mo. 7911 Holt. TfiE EFFICIBIT Z2100 IQ ft bkta. 2lc ea n. l .. .f.a .... ..-· sas-73:-'e ·
AdminA.ss~tant Sl2K+1 .. -------------. RecepUooist STOO+
Maid service, pool bJtns, encl. gar, gas bbq. e-02Upager9373Agt. ALTEINATIVE three pbaae power, l yr WT.D."--
2376N rt Bl C •• Pool Gas Pd 718 Scott lse. J.835 Whittier Ave, Yairat.Termasince1949 DANCE OF FUN ewpo · .QJ. • • , 1 block from ocean, tge 3 Mo. to mo. rent incl: A 1 714~~ 548-975SorMS.3967 Pl. 6'2-5073 br, 2 ba "50 mo. 208 l9t.h ~e c e t . a er v . , · · ~Mf9. Co. Beaut. nude girls dance
phone 2400 -6600 Sq. ft. 15t Per '4Z..2 I 71 545-06 I I & rap session. Pvt mir· SUS CASIT AS HEW I-SIDE St. 835-0211 pager 93'73 COY· roted rooms. lOAM to
Nicely furnished 1 bdrm. 3br, 2ba. Townhouse. Up-Agl. :;!~·u:::{ir!:'cs ~I~ ;J: ~6~elgt~~·t,0~~~ Retired couple bas money 3AM Mon-Sat, 12PM to
Closed gar. $230. up. graded. Lge patio. NEW2&3BR adultapta •more in Newport. Meaa.540-USl tolend. lst&2ndTD's 8PM Sun. 625 N. Euclid.
Adults. no pets. 2110 Children ok. 645-9543 pool, pali06.' fplc. Fuli ntE EXECUTIVE Agent, 1-837·3744 An.ah. 53$-5383
F £ Bkkpr Corullr S12K
lnsuraneeSecy S12K Exec. Secy's to $12K
Irvine PersoM el Agency
488E17th Costa Mesa
Suite22t 642·1470
Ambitious Couple Wanted
to manage a small busa·
ness p/lime. Will not t.n· Newport Blvd. eves, 64&-4.262 days. seeunty. $365 fr up. 1702 SUITE, 840-S470 SNr.. 455 FREE SESSION W /AD
1 lwlMl• •oct. 37 40 Large 3 Br townboose apt, Florida at Adams. DP AMDtMCi> 71? ~..................... 1::t(~~ ;!~ /.~
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ~· frplc. patio, garage. 2 Bdrms. S28(Y. 3 Bd.rms, Full)' aerv. ofc apace ct:est!,°~!~b. ~[~C:: Fastarvc,642·3573
•SUI.I'S• terfen w I your present
Outcall M...-ee job. Must be wiUin& t
STUDIO Qui!!..co!!,P'5e!~ Adults, $325. Several apts avaU. starts at 66' sq ft in U>e merclaJ Way off Nwpt '•11-c1••h/ "W..tdylotn" ~s..""'*9 ..... · ->33Sl or 842-6801. dynamic N.B. airport Blvd, CM. RV le boat unit Ptnn•s/
f'uUldtcben&TV UlraAttnuctl-.e blm. area. Space avail: avail. All u ttl paid. Lolt&Foilld
LJJ>ens&UUlities 2 Br, l'hba townhouse, NEW 1 w 0 3 8 R 800-16,000sq ft&warebae 5e-31178;afterS548-8J16 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MILETOOCEAN patio. yard, frplc, enct tow nhomes. Poo l , ?t.is:o'cl':nt~·~M~ ._..W.e.cl 460ol.olt&'-d 5100
loyals.ltesMotet ~L~:'1:tryrm.~i603 jacuzzi, sauna , UP· stopbyCommercePark ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• m Yorktown Blvd grades. Great location. 4lOOBirch. ' Cal Stereo ABC music or Found a r,t ? CaU
Beach Blvd at Yorkt.own Lg 3 Br, 3 Ba town.house. $52$-~75. See daily at employee aetklng rm· Animal Au •tan c e
lOAM·2AM 731-4462 _learn __ . M_r._.H.a_U~, 642_·_1_634__..
DIVORCE/Bankruptcy,
$50. Legal auist, 12 yrs,
0 .C. Action Legal Typ·
..... Hotp.
Bather, kennel. ass 'l.
Moo·SaL Irvine, 644·5461
ing. 96()..5419 Apt.Manager Wanted,
mature couple. 20 uruts
in O.G., need maint.
skill. Nice 2 bdrm apt +
~min. 968-8633 536-0411 Nr. Fairview 4' Baker . Alaonquin/HeU. Agent, 2aclJ.ofca,pvtftlt.approx mates w/inupensive Lea&ueS37·2273,nofet.
SMALL BEACH HOTEL. $350.Nopeta.~1882 84&-l.3U. h.33'. $350 /mo. 1827 furn "home" Uv'g aitua. La>T: Sml Terrier type AMembler
ROOMS ...... SOW---L. r-2BR .., Wood be ._....._... ~•41 Westdiff,NB63l.-0900 tiooln NB/CM /HBarea. fem.-,.,., white w/brwn Ex-rienceinPCboards -""""" ...... ·II"· am -..------... ---· Terry, SVC dept 631-4010 ........ ""!..... 11 v PALM a CAID ....
TOUCHOFCL~S
ISCOIT A MOOa
.... Dhcnet
TI4-64&-T118, 213-423·12'70
~SI.SO/mo. 536-7056 ceilings, lrg kttcb, trg br, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~•. betwn ooon-9pm MOD/· s~ •. n:u co ar, le. &: w i r in C. some crpt.a thruout, blt.ns, No 2 BR duplex, stove. ref, We've eot apri.ng fever al Frt. l9lh fr Anaheim. CM. Aft REA.DINGS mechanical. Excellent
l'Um. bacb apt. On beaut. peta, 00 children. Call aft cpts, drpa, close to bcb, Lido Marina Villase. 4 /28 , ca 11 co II e cl Special ~price with thls benefits fc opportunities.
reaidefttia.I home's pro-2 wkdys ; 646·1751 ; 1tore•, bu.,~. ru Wbilettlastawe'reorrer· ... Hlljl....t/ 213-790-3352 . ad.HuPsychicpowerof Wage open. E.O.E . Call
perty. $180. mo. H .B. 675-6736 MyrtleSt.4SM.aS mstreerentonbeaut.of· Rl•c:e wildom. What you bear 557·9051. Ask for R1y
m-2.863 IN flee apace overlookloe ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~••U IEJS will amase you! She will =G=U=ma=n=.======J •-leodl 3741 SI'ANTIN Ml,,,....IHdt ll6t the Bay. sr,ce from 290 ...... WllM. teDyourPut,Present,& _,....... c.entral loc. 2 Br, 1~ Ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• .A ....,. ln l .. O 1_..,_ All$WEIS ~ •-d •~ •11r~-..•• -s •••••••••••••••••••'••• apt. Fncd patio. ear . d.., _., aq.A 1·c c 5. Cf'Pd ...ppawy 5005 ure •a v..,e you on -.vot-1..AGlJNA BEACH MTR. $325. 645-4655 PAIK MIWPOD ~ • a Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• e, Maniafce & Bual· We W l 11 T r a i n .
JNN.165/Wk & up. Maid BedrooBachel o!~· 1 or 2 L T.:! ':~'!t!,ueu~: TRAVB.AGEMCY g:i~A~~~~:. Dea. Avail. or private MacGretor Yacbla. 1631
serv. color iv. heated Brand new 2 Br, 2 ba, ma •• ownhou.tM .-~.4u~u"' CLOUD IJ'OUPI. Placieatia,CM pool. (714> 494-5294, 985 adults, no pets. 2085 From $299.50 our 1prlq fever ... 4' free ~HISI · 221 W. Whittier Blvd. .
N. Cout Hwy. Thurin (blwn Bay Is Spectacular spa, total n nt orfer. We'll pro-The new way to own a Air pul)ut.ion ls when YOU Li'Rabra 21.3/98T-9272 Just moved Into town.,
Hamilton ). 673·2058 or recrea tion program, blblY cometoouraensea travel asency. Tratrel aboal aa. arrow into the 'lbes:tptacqauinted with STUDIOw11ar11e; utU. ~ aodal proiram.7 poolt.8 by1wnmer.Call or atop Networt.Startyourown. air and p uncture a i:lderlyambulatorylady tbe Ctaulfled Ads .
pd. fl75 mo. 1.sl il last. i..w.cowts. At Faablon by ai,iy weekday bwtn Exp. not requl r ed . ,_a.o __ UD_·------1 needs nice room + Tbe)''re the ~asleal way
48'1·1236aft. 6pm 2 Br, 2 Ba, most uUh. pd. 1a1and. J amboree 6 San 8:306 5:30, Complete aqpport" loos minimum care & attcn· to find Just the Items and
Mo. to mo. $.100. AdulU J08C)W.HlllaRoact> UdoMarinaVWaae term aervtce provided.. Sellldlou.ems 64M678 Uoa.~Zl61cwl7s-MG4 aervicesyouneed!
642-5678
DAILY PILOT
Beaullt.udio apt by week. only. &22·H amilton . '7141644-1900 lM75Via Oporto Call M r c h a r 1 ea Dontown La&una. waJ.k 64$-0314 <atNwpt Beach Blvd) • n 4.-.au · Sdlull & Sc ... a SQ:ull & W1 •a
tobadJ.C.U41M-3't4 New 2Br. !Ba, ciraae, SUP91ACH&OI (714)t75-Ml2 II Ir•"-7001 lat &ti• 7005 lut111&.... 7005 tuatw:lkc 7005 Me..,...IHdt l76t dsbwabr, $270 mo . al Balbol Bay Club. SU Tax tlbefter b~ op. ... ••••••••••••••••••••• ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••-••••••••••-••••••
........ ••••••••••••••• ~~ S hort ter m r e n tal . *~ ~· portuntty In Fl n •ll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
------11--...:-----1 "1miehed '550, uofum AMAMllM Ar ts /Antiques, Min. YOGA IS WHAT YOU'RE lOOKING FOR!
S1W'S TO MACH 2 Br, uUt ~· Cb.l1dreo ot. tfJ'. ,,_ I IO 5411" SLSK. m.ma
281l. 2 ba,yrb._ $HO No pet.a. ff' Apt 4. 1980 W1buflcat""-1 Bank or AaMrtca Build· Bat.b Boutique, amuent IAYMOM'f W.0.ce,6'5-7181 ' Ct16ll•t400 l nl, l O 1tori11 o Nwprt Beach, Ca. Ntw
28Acondo.yearly, S2llO 2 BR. stove " retrt1. Anatwtm•a f1DCll offlco lhopptQi ~-Jioricla .-mcnth 7th LIDO BAYPRONT spece. !'.uJ r-r. accaa ~ M).'llM rA.llUDA ~L~ 31J l R.tec l Br. "25. t Br', covered park 01. Ari,1---':;.._-.._..,...__
Y ~~rptc $IMS. ~~ lnch.S.d. P rime...., .. ..._ 1011 z BR. a ba. 11'11 · S&25 1 Br• Jatove, refiii. ~ .__ locatlon • coml)etltive •••••••• .. ••• .. ••••••••
t4l'WfOll1 CllST "° b\w, .wr.. • uaom Ccodo rates Crom eOc •q rt. ltt, JMI & W TJ>. '•
t 8R.2batha·S415 Aduit.,oopett. Breat btHint vl•ws ~offer lutl. LOANSAVAlLA.BLZ
S4H5lJ ovtr&oolrlll• Newport ,call'17....r7l Credltnoproblem
ass ociated
.... ~ • ,J , • • ..
,•, .
2 br l~ be, ~ bit-~ 811 6 The Ca n· 5300 aq. f\. del\IU oC ........ 712-ltOl
1 n a , J 2 7 S , Ca 11 ,_,. tlaia --lWt· ftct. W. 11th St. C.M. BUS LOANS: 11~000 OC' m l'8IO-CIO, 'f:»UAM .., COlldoepetomlw tlle from '150. ino. Tom, tncn A!IO 1at.ln4 map. IOOd Ute at Newport. MO-aoo $10,o=ooo,ooo F l.ARO& S Bil 21i' Be, I MIO' of tped o• all"J Scott -=~~~~~I ...,. Sir ldala.~.,-0 ,mo, eoadofW .,. BR/I ba + ::::;; ........ IUle7 '~ 01' --"'°' llllconwd. • BlJ ho.cl ept W/Of!:U.D •u a.?& pvt ~ 1PICC9••000
-. Wt llip ..., mo. a---ut.-..t mo aa.. Ill-MM d•1 • '*"517 aft s --Adi tu-5f71 ... ..,.. ----....;;..--..;...;..,----11_;;;;.;;;;.;;;;;..;;.::..;.;;.:~=-~-
Thr'O'OI out tenaion, find petoe of mind Whtie YoU build a more healthy. ~lful bodvl The r~ tcltnee of Yoga•• taught at Yoga
Ctlnter 11 famous tor tr• ,r;hOlebodV ~h to a FULFILLED YOU.
Taught by Avtra l Anand& Vldya. two eJtpert & cn11mnig Neatem women YOQt a11ma. tones. cerme tl'le mind & Mtitllea througPI 1 inrouon. Leem deep relaxation. nutrition. ~. IMdltatlon. how to
breltl'le ~ fCf 111talltyl For~ 12· 72.
I
YOC1a· In The Morning!
~ oa10HSTIATIOM
TOMOllOW~J.T IOA.M.
YOCiACEMTER
f ....
QI DAI&. V PM.O l
•n• I ... c.,.t,.,.. c-•/CllHlk llMhtal ... *1., ' Ill uctl I I l=Oc51:b1 P~/P .... lar} lie ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
8 61 APDliwe Sen. Carpet Ila wW Lay 1oura Found•Uou1 retalnlnl ELECTIUCIAN-Prtced Yard clean-us» trim· Wet a REA.LL Y CLEAN LANDSCAPING YOUNG MAN S yn ex pr CJ!RAMJC TILi::. Special·
TlllPOIA.aO&llO or m1u. Repair• 6 wall1, blocu, pall~. rilbt·fre. ntimate on hrlni. F\tll main't FrM HOUSET Call 01.q.ta.m Re.uonableprl~ ~n wallcoverina. Frue ty Entrlea/floon. 2S yrs
WMaba.S.A. d•ntn1too! Guarwort :-511.1.Jc'd l&tseoumalljoba. Dt.Call Ped.ro.646-S40l Olrl Freu1t~l23 ~ •t.s.6'S-8576Andy. exp. Sml npairi..
56aGI •7..om al txuer aavinp. Free ~work f ll kinds Uc:maed 613-0059 0HouMcleani.a1dooe,b t1•a11 r SPRING SPECIAL 9&2·1Jll3 • ft I ltf 16t I est., t-....-r~ CUWo1. baoc:w:rk. ~ PHI... !!~~~~...... reUablt couple. Ref:. ....................... Exler rr $27S. Salis auar -N-ew--&-re_m_od_e_l_:-tu-b-s, ••-•••••••••••••••••••Shampoo & 1t.eaa) clean. Dl.558-075'1 •• .. ••••••••••••• .. ••••HANDYMAN Homes & 540-1193 Brickwork. Small Jobs Ajacs.675-3338.67S.7280. showers drainboards, &
.S.Yoe McmerDrivew•ys. Color brilbtenen: wht WESTERN PENCE CO t c · cte tlo\la The M ~ ... • Newport. Colt.a Meta & entries 673-6082 PHklal fot r t patn, CllUlOminblucb.Clean P'ormln1. pourln1 & WoodfsCbalnllnk . c:.tma:nc.ll~ op l • .:..~•t,~ our I.rvtne.6'75-317Sevea. CUSfOMPAINTING . •Hlcoat, Lie.NB.CM liv, din rm, ball '15. Ava nn•aNn1. Set your own Uc~l.Sl 536-1837 . name. e ...... 1 .. our . ......._. .._ 2S yn exp, lot/ext. qual y,.. S....lce SM•·-.... ._-1 "'""' b .. 0 h forma. Save money. HAND~'"'·C •-aame.CallS41-2393 --w1· .. ,_,, work & mut~rlals ........ ••••••••••••••••
---·-· . rm •• ·-· couc 416 • c r ~ • ... & -nn. arpenw". ••••••••••••••••••••••• Richard. 96().3361 1-.. -v--------...;.....;;__-f t5. Guar ellm pet odor. rw:suc• electric•l. plumblnt & f1oora urpeta baths ... :11 PROFESSIONAL Remov•la. trimming,
........ Cpt repair 1$ yn expr C ••••••••••••••••••••••• On 111 2717 557-45CM walJI ' "-' ' " pnmin1. Free est Uc'd ...................... Do work 'm elf Refs ... wd• FonnlcaCounterTo in· · • • • pa.._, windowa. Paintlnf. lnter/Exter . .....,.Jl(epalr insured..6a-2mM • '
Babyatttiq, my home, 6.11.-0101. ya . ··~·J••H••uf•f• .... :_•;::••• ata1led to your spec~ca-Gh 1dlt I =~ce for vacant re· Rtaa, work parM2·03IMS ....................... ---------
days or eves, or Harbor' · · man•~· lions. Latest colons & de-••••••••••••••••••••••• 111o1e·a 97 Neat patches & textures Tree Servtce. Tree Prun-• "'1ton, CM. 646-9546 We Care Carpet Cleaners. Remodel Is additloo.1. alp . Free est. 675-3118 Haul. akiploader dump ~· 4-0SlO ~d.~ Extr /lotr. Ex· ,.. EST. ltl-14lt ing. removal, topping .
.. , ~--Steam cln OI" shampoo. ~orse-t.541. trk. tradinl . tree writ Immaculate C&eanlng Co pr t, nea~ reaa. Lie. Ins. 646-4871: •-•·••"as.a~ A1ao upholstery. All work Ucemed" Booded. Ge ••Ill 1 derDoutions Mc. 831-1.257, Foe those who de.erve Lic'd 164-1°'5 Dave 497-4131
••••••••••••••••••••••• .iuar. Tnick mount UD.lt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• the belt 75&-0377 ltoofl9cJ ------,---
DllV Problema? Fr. est, reaa. ntea. Geotracteral -~!dindgdlt, .~nl· LANDSCAPING/CLEAN· Ila .. ta . F1DeR '"~Str. Plicain~IT~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wllldowca..r I
Let our OMV experts 6'5-3716 « ,,__ • ...... a UPS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rolemarie'1 Houseclean-· ~-· ·• auo. .., ROOFS lnstaUed factory •••••••••••••••••••••••
help )'OU. Call AIM En-realdentlal project•-Malntmance Immediate Palotl wallpaper, m,. Rees, reuoa. Own ine.831J.555Sa.hrs. dired; estab 3S yrs. Call Windows cluned. re-
terpriaea for ''°" coo-Carpet Cleaning. Aver joint ventures. Call aervtcJni,642.980'7 c~~en'I maint. tram."2·1403,645-3'39 p·-'-AY-C·•aa-. HaroldGunnMi-2961 aaonable, bualneaaes. siilletioa $25-6728 room. fl.00. Elim pet 960·4110 afL 4SP M or .-~;;(.=~·J. Wauib. _.. -ow homeslrapta "1-44el odor. Guar. Aja ca, 5.11M8'74 VERY LOW PRICES 6C2-080l Youq So Amer lady will Speclali.d.na in reslden· INOOFFOI LESS ~/675-7280. .. On Gardenln1 Maio-clean your house. ti&l homes. int. le ext. Comp.ahlngJe&hot Residential <av1 $20-.10). ....................... hcioa... teoanceGeorge ~2015 ..._ C... s.rvta Hooeat, efficient & re-Please check our re· Free est. C.1181M-0'2l Commercial. Reniala. C a rp enter. Free C..lwg ....................... •1 ..................... asoo.,84().4929 fe~cea. Uc• 320881 ---------1 lstqualit_y.131-G217.
estimates. Any a1u jobe. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUp Covers, Draperies, Prof. Japanese Laodacap-l\¥OID VACA TIOM Guar.. lnard. free est. R~AIR 6 REROOF. All TOQy, 6'&-9866 CABANA bed spreads, upbolltery Inc & 1arden1n1. Maint. , W O m a n • e x P e r . Teel 636-708S type s · a h 1 n g I e s · UtUe Mias MuHet s.too a ___ ....;.... ____ __. Fine caterin1, aJl OC· cuahfons " plllowa. lncl. mowinl, trimming, llPOFF ho u a e c I ea n 1 n I . rockabakea·compo·tar. Tuffet, aloo1 came a
lnd.. carpenter, comm'I. cuiona.64.S-~. <A.tom fabrics, free-a t. apraytng, weeding. Free Mature, clean. reap. References. 642·~SS6 Prdpaintlnglrprep. Ext. Freeetl.$4l·S930 spider and read ln lhe
res. No job too small. Jerry's Int. Decor•ton estimates. 545-7072 person will look a fter &QYtime. 6int. Low rates. Refs. Daily Pilot Cl•aalfied
John.$31-8082or646-5031 European Gourmet Cbef welcome 9G--O&S • yourbomeJunelattoJu-1 .a 1 S3M780,536-4383 5ar,A'+'i aection about Miss Muf· loralloccaaloosinyour ' GARDENING Jy l at. C•ll JohoKUIClfCI .,...,.. ret's Tulfetandbouabtit Custom remodelln1. 15 home. Andre. S48-7384 a.ctrlcal .SERVICE (213)697·0225 eves, ....................... JJ'S PAINTING .. Great ....................... !or $9.95. You can sell
yntnarea1retld/eomm, dys ••••••••••••••••••••••• 541-1375 (n4)-...17work ~pint. Tree trim· wortatgreatprices. ~k1l11hta brighten _up your tuffet and Iota of
lntr/ ext. unique fa un-. .... .. :... mm1. Clun.up. a yrs 557-100 rooms. Over 250 in· other t hings through
usual work welcome. Classified Ads. your one· Mi s ll'd 8tctrtc Fin<;I ·vhat you want ln SELL idle lte1115 with a exp. Free &t. Noboru. Sell things fast with D Uy stalled. e.aur. Skylights. Daily Pilot Claaalfled PalumboCcmt. ICU14 stop shopping center. Uc327138 6'5-8n4 Daily PilotClaasifieds. Daily Pilot Classified Ad. ltM043or89'1·21182 Pilot Want Ads. a Dana Pnt. 661-0lSI Ads. Call6'2·56'78
.W,Wmted 7100 HelpW..ted 710 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• HelpW..ted 7100 tt.lpW..ted 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 HtlpW.ted 7100 MllpW-.d 7100 HtlpW-.ct 7100 tt.lpW..ted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Auto radio lnstaller, ex· BOATS CLaKTYPIST DATA84TRY Deliveryman. early Driver. Cius l Tractor le perienced only. Apply ft>y wanted for general
U.S.A. Stereo, 3721 S. clean-up & maintenance.
Bristol, SA. SM-04.20 sz.~ pr hr. ·c.n al\er 6,
Some secretarial & Accoat::toClertl ~~ L.;.~ Times.
general omce exper, F\JU ~ poe n open · --pr mo. 40' trailer, experiencedl•--------
Auto Rental Trainee
Oppty for intelli1ent.
friendly, nut appearin1 young man over 18.
Previous exper. oot re·
quired. Start with
lockman duU-, ad¥an-cement avail. to auto
631-4343
Bookkeeper, Accts Te·
celvable, CRJ, Capo
Beach area. Full time,
start l600" mo. Send re·
aume to P.O. Box 138, C.po8ncbt21Dt---
rental countennan. Good Bookkeeper, full cbarte
d rt v in 1 r eq ul red . thru trial balance for ad· 831-3180or~ vertisini & public rela·
---------1 tioos firm. Needed im· Auto Tramm R&R man. med Call ~5001. ask
F /t. own tool.a. Ex per for Bernice.
pref'd. 548-2288. ----------Burglar Alarm Company ---------1 needs lnataller /service person. Salary open. Ex·
per only need apply. 228
Forest Ave, Lag Bch.
front office appearance. as a video display 673-251Sor64&-1413 houaebold 1ooda. At leut l yr with references &
1ood driving record.
Local "dial. 847. 7278
Good company benefit.a. t.ennlnal operator for a Delivery for early AM
5e-O'Tl3 Basic/Four m ini · ~P,aper in Npt. C.M.
CL .. .,'1'¥81ST computer. Some ex· Must berellable. $3SOmo -• • ..-. perience ls deslrab~. bill + 5'S-0770 Ex c l u 1 Ive Unisex Newport financlal firm wW train individual with · Newport Beach Salon aeeltin& versatile lndlv demoaalnlt.ed typin1 ac· Dental Asst, ortbo. chr, needs atyU.t, cllentele
-tHF11et1e1-" ••lee curacy and-speed; Wort -NB. 4~cb'lt; 0rtho etp.. Pftf!d. But -entbulium
dept. Office exper.-req'd. in pleaaant envi.roomeot R.D.A. '!9· MZ-26218 wW suffice. &ICMI023
Type so.e> wpm. Exper. wltb 1ood company w/lran.scriber belpful. benefits illcluding 2 DINT~~SIST Female Pacb1en. Merit
Some client contact. Xlnt weeks vacation after ooe Ort.ho chnide F'/f" P tr raiaea. Call 548-5125.
working con da 4c year, company paid RD~ pref 'd . Call llonroVlaAve,N.B.
benefits. Call 644-4360 group insurance, cttdit 642-5897. f1beJJIUs mold repair &
askror Shirley. union, etc. Apply at ~tal • Do flnaling ,..rsoo n---"ed
Codd.uWaltnu
School
E.m up to $300 per wk.
Low tuitioo. Placement
assist. 7Sl·9194.
uai Aas t-you want "" """"" OIAMGE COAST a career in ortbo using ror oo.t mtgr. Must be
DAIL y PILOT ~r RDA skills? ~b.!':r~ ~.~ocr.:
330W. Bay St., CM person-, 8-3. Mon-Fri, ~~=M~:= of Dental Recept. Desk only. Skipjack Boata lnc. 1763 BEA
SUCCESSFUL
SALESPERSON
JUST BEING Busboy wanted, expe1 ---------YOURSELF pref"d, A~ply in persor. COMPU'TB <>Pa.
C.llfor Good beneflts ~.B. PlacenuaAve,CM.
Appointment please 89.1-503:!, 846-3S40
642-4321 , •xi 277 Dan' AL ASSIST. Fiberglass mfg co. needs
GEIBAl.
l.ABOIEIS
W~Needed1 1 !
=~&ettivlD&
Must have phone" relia·
b&e tramp. Loag • abort
term Ulianmeota. Holl·
day • vacation pay.
Hoapitalizatic;>o plan
•vail.
VOLT
'I •<tf t•l.oAC•• '•f l•vM t o
••C....Drt•• 546-4741
<AcrouFrom
Orange Co. Airport)
Equal ()ppor Employer
EqualOpportunity Orthodontic c hrs lde .
Employer F /time. H.B. 962-a.os.
Sell A Yo do 't betwn 3-5pm, Mon thru ~on. u n Graveyard ahift. 2 Yrs oeed experience because Wed: Victor Hugo Inn, job exper. 360/'6 DOS, f/t employee. Exp'd 1---------
Avon practically aella 361CllffDr,LagBch.No famllla'r w /J CL &
itself. Earnings are ex-phonecalla. SpooDn.Servicebureau Data.....,Oprtr Dental Aaat Chrsd,
ceUent: hours nexlble. --C......---.-Hetper-----i experbelp(ul. Apply, Na· =oUY Boier lnc. .is f/time_._Good benefil.I. ~1.ei~~ 540-7041 P)Ume wori. lilin :Jnrs. tlon.atSysUmsCorp. 4 applications for a H.B. Call 893-5032, ----------1 Must have car. Costa Birch St, N.B. <Near OC ta entry oper•t.or. _M6-3540 ___ • _____ _ ---------1 Mesa, Newport Beach & Airport) Equal Op· Minlmum of 1 yr exper. Dellale>rte.o •--•
Babyaitter needed P tr Corona del Mar areas. portunity Employer en the IBM 3741or3'142 ls -
J1lY bome. S.E. HB area. APP.b• Newport Mesa --------• required. PermanentfuU M2-7T75
w !fbrgla. $3..15 hr. Over General Office
21. For appt. 536-6'160 HB Ml wport Ctr Ofcs
AUCLIU
spot for bright
Pleaaant work·
g d1. Oppor for
. .Girll"nday,.Stock.
brotttage firm 8-5. lite
typing. a ttracll ve.
articulate. growth oppor
Call Marilyn.~.
Housekeeper, Child care.
Able to drive. June/July.
Live.in. Respons ible.
Reh. Near bea
67S.S46S
LYM l-1 I
MedJcations. full or
p /tlme. Mesa Verde
Conv Hosp, 661 Ceoter St.
CK 548-5515
El>usetleeper, exper. Owni---------car. Pennn. only. Local
refs. MatU¥e, r eliab.,
good cook ror diaabled
lady. 161Yl'111'le
lndmtrial
ILUEJEAM JOIS
"""'""Metd/WOl9• & ... T11't HI
ASSE:M.,as
PACKAGBS
GEM. LAIOU.S
SOLDIUAS
IMSPICTOIS
Day-Week-Month or
~er. it'syourdeclalon
1.st & 2nd sblfts avail.
Paid vacations. You
don't pay, we pay you!
CAµ..OR
COME 1bl mDA V ~
IELL~
SERVICES
1'61 Dove Street
Ste340 Newport Sch
833-1441
MACllllSTS
Machine Tool Builder
needs general
machinists for wide
variety ot cklle tolerance
work in clean abop. Short nma on engine latbes,
verticle " borhontal
milla.
Tt 11 1esc-1•rec1
Apply At
Paul Dosier
AlsocJ•a. lltC.
3050 Redhill Ave Costa Mesa, 9262111
(714) 556-7075
F.qual ()ppor Employer
MACNMISTS.
TOOLMAKERS
\:~ to S:30 Moo·Frl, 2 Unified School District, Cook· Broiler Exp. time day shift. Pay will Dmlal asst. Do you relate
chklro 988-7071. Food Service Dept .. 1857 C1ea.ocut, eneJ'letic, be baaed 00 experieoce we II wit b p eople ? ---------t Placentia Ave, C.M. f/UmeNBloc.548-7948 level..oApply in penson Gnatbological practice
train.Ina " adv. 37~ hr wortl wlr. "75 per mo &o
etart. Call 549-4700, ext
2UI.
...... Offtel
Decronlca firm in C.M.
aeelillipesllOG w /&en'I ofc 1---------
GEN. MACHINISTS
Top wases, Jllnl benef'IU
" overtime. Toolcrllll-
King, Loe. 1820 llcG•w
Ave., Irv. n4-556-0110
IAIYSl'nlR S51>-3273. IAM ·5PM. Mon·Frl. at needs es~enced team un.d.,. 3 15 5 JS m 1700 GWeue Ave. Irvine
""' JU• : • : • Y CAllWASHHB.P Cooks. buspersons, member. leaaei=.e ~~~~.::ld.ce&u~:'7~ Full & part-time boetesa. Apply in person. Dau Proceulnc 631·3'92 for coot Ual
wkeoda" aft s. 640-S3S3, lB"Over ~~ ~ 1fAin~:727 COMPUTB _interview ___ . ____ _
s.Jpm. MetroC.rWash ll a~-3PM . ore OPBATOI Dental asslatHt chair
2950Harbor Bl.CM ora .. a · System3Mod 1.SlnataU.· aide. X-ray he. C.M.
IAIYSITIB CASHIER. part time. Ap· ~· break.fut lun~b tioo. needs a 2nd shift 1_SM-3GOO _______ _
Lave-In, s days for 2 yr ply Unlversi\,y Stereo, ~~~:ac:rker s, cr.c.'~· n'::re~eH~~ Dental l(ygienist. Laguna
old. Have other help~ Ex-1829 Newport Blvd, N B. · ' 7PM-3AM. Niguel ()(c. l ~ daya per
per'd, ovr 21. 61~. 642-9153l • •COOl(S• SAMTIAGO IAMK wee.It. 495-4600
Fl..,. ,.~E & lite bkkpng exper. ~'-Includes A/P lrJ A/R. Ez. Large Reald'l /Comm'l per'd. reliab~. mature
Bullden/Developer re· penoo desirable. Valor
qijrea individual to bead Electronics. SCC).92164.
f1.D81Kle d.lv. Slroq COO· 1---------
lacta to develop commit · GIRL FRIDAY
menta fM project loea " Recept. typing min of so equity captlal. Track re· wpm, phone order saJes,
cord"re(1 a muaL Write lite bkkp'g etc. Small
Vaco Developers, lnc. mfg plant. FIT xltn
P.O. Box 21N9, Laguna benefits. HB. E.O.E .
Hills, 92l8S3 n•-1M-sas1
lo need cl someone lS hr a
wk. Openings ror 2.
S50-S200 per wk. Call for
appt., 61S-G230
••w:. Esper Insurance Girl Friday for bway Costa
MACHIMISJS
Mlll machinists, N JC
machinists, Lathe operato r s. Mill
operators. Good beoef'rt.s
& overtime. Bouae Mfg
Co .• 4000 Campus Dr.
NB. 557·9090 Mesa office. 833-0t27 ---------MACHINIST
loaurance TOOi. IOOM
Need penon experienced TOP PAY
Babysitter. mature, relia· CHILD CARE Resp Buaboys"diahwaahers. S35E. latSt .• Tustin DISHWAStBS 1---------Gr•ndmother'a Helper
ble. Own trans .. my oldpenonboytoAftc~choofolar 13ltoy6r PN~~ 832-5200E.O.E. P/tlme. Weekend work. RTTa needed. Moo thru Fri.
in commercial casualty Set-up &: short run miJI,
to rut position lo Newport lat.he. PtmCb press. Gd
Beach agency. Ask• ror o p por . to expand
Miss Mitchell. 644-1S30 w /growing co. 5 Day /'6 home, pt-lime days. Nr · ~ • _._.._ Ba)'ViewManor&Conv. &SIAMSTllSS M . lrvlne area. C.all aft
Beach & Warner. Daya; pmW .. MKootUtbruScFribl . HNBr. Now acceJlt:ing •PPllca· Data Procelaln"' Hosp, 6'2-3505. .,.,., U-· .-1u, Apply ln 4; 559-5099 hr wk. Co pd life/hosp 962·7711 ext 519 /Pat, m e er • · Uona tz.s dally. 448 S. 0 ruu ..... .,...,., •---------Eves; 847-6629 960-1098aft7pm. Coast Hwy, Laguna PROJICTCOMT'IOL DISHWASHER. kitchen llUiootoManqer,Ma· HAIRDRESSER
JACl(.ol JIU
OF ALL TRADES • ins. Cole Instrument
Corp. (714) 556·3100
E.O.E. •--------tChlld sitter, 2:30·&:SO Beacb,497-4441 ADMDlmATOI helper, part-time, full-ble Auetin, Draper's WANTED We are aeekina an ag · time, Sa I a r y com · Laf\,llUI JO.l1a SC«e. 23621 Cont.ct Pat Or Karen Banking wkdy&. 2 cbildren-6 & 8 Cftj,_rt--'-1 cresaive-lndividual who menaurate W/exper. Mou!t.ooParkwazPlua 84().3306
Will Tram, But
Experienced Welcome.
T...,. Pl'h-yrs. CdM. 875-7355, F /Ume. Exper. pref'd. wW•ct uaaimultant& ~3820 , __________ , ___ ..;._ ____ _
Branch ofc0aeeks bonda· 7:;e.957o ApplyS.Spmdaily, admtnlatrative control I;:;:==;;;:.-----. HAM>YMAM
. SOLDERING MaJd, live-in, lovely N.B.
WOODPRE·FINISH home w/privat.e room. !i
ble, p/time teller w /new Oliropractlc office, Jirl to GODA uz point for all lnlonnaUon i DOING FRAM& IPldw. ror apt complex Costa
accounts exper. pref'd. asslat. No expenence 900 Bayside Dr, NB l)'lltema development -: • BUSINESS Experienced' for -cuatOm Mesa. $3.50 hr. 5 days a
Call Lee Porterfield, necessary. Will train. F.qual ()ppor E mployer projeda. Otbet duties in· : ':.,; UNDER A pctbre frame manufac· week. 645-3381 or675-S949 ITI4 )W.l801. Call forapN """"'·9373 elude admlniat:ratioo of lurer. Full time .
WESTERN FEDERAL .,_.,_ Copy,._._. time aceountinl 1yatem ::i: FICTITIOUS Park/Line Frames, Uri Kii
SAVINGS • .,_U.. PHOCON 3. Knowledge ·-NAME? lOMl Elli• Ave, Ftn. l'IUrUl
HEATSTAMP days, wknds off. Eng. UTEASSEMBLY speaking preferred .
MACHINING Housekeeping. cooking.
F\JUCompany Beoeflts need own trans. Non-
ln Coeta Mesa, 646-2123 smkr. 644-05i85
JANITORIAL OFFICE Ma.Ids; top wages paid.
Q.EANING 9PM·lAM. 6 Apply : The Inn at
a.lPta. must be LS. boo· Laguna, 211 No. Coast dable Ir dependable, call Hwy .• Laguna Beach..
Steve 831·7723
U16 Town & Country of COBOL. OS/JCL Ir U · Valley 9S2-0222 NHd peraoo to learn
Ortqe, caur. Clerical ca...a. TlllS. t perieoct in all pb.aaa ot " you llH• ,1,u•t:unt•d -.--1 shipping " r:ec. Also.
F.qual()pp Emplyr m1r ~ J:: Pdcl"-ba. an the Ule cycle or a de-~~~r"::: Ne!• :~: """'"' ~ some malntenaoce & *JR. Cl.Ell _\ ... for • COP" COO· velopmeot project re-11 ... not yet ~ Dedo your career w /ex· cleanup. Printlng plant.
...,....._ J q u I red . Project 1t tor putllkdoft, ,..... cltin1 firm. Customer S3Tostart. 540-8027 Barmaid. p/Ume. lOam· •SI. CLrM trol clerk typtat. Muat leadership uperience don't to•1•1 tll•t tll• coatact"more!To$850.
---------Maintenaoce, full lime in Key P'IBdl Oprtr lrviDe. Older person pre-
2pm. 5 D•ya wk. S3 hr. UHl type 4Swpm electric, 10 desirable. llMlletlon I• 10 cte111 MlcbeleKubn 540-5001 Help wanted Kentucky
Muatbedepeodable. Ap. *CLOICAL ••sr. key adding " handle "°"' ... of 11 .... TM Soellilla"Snellln1or FriedCbicken,dayshift.
1be Jolly Roger Inc. is fd w /electrical skills to
taldng appllcallons ror a incl pumps & motor re-
te.d data entry operater. pair. Willing to work
Mln.lmum of 1 yr exper. w/fbrglsa " resin. Start
on the IBM 3741 or 37~2 ls 1825 mo + benefita. Call
required. Permanent full 559-1800 betwn 10 &: 3pm
time day shift. Pay wlll Moo-Fri.
ply to penon. Klnp Inn, Al pbooea well. Job cooalata We 0 ( f e r a c 0 m • 0 A I\. y p IL 0 T w 111 Newport Beacb Agency Must be 18. 695 S. Coast
720RandolpbSt. Cll Vai'led jobs with & of copy oootrol. fillnl & prebenalve career de-ro~··~ /:'.',:~~ 4340Campua Drive Hwy, Latuna Beach.
-----'--'----1 without exper. ln good = clerical duties. velopmetit trainlng pro-wcut•tton lftcllude• 1ti.
Barmaid, flt days. Top ofcaurroun~.Ca.llto-unilyforadvance· Jram •nd excellent enllr• Or•ne• CoHI payrtlbllirl. C.M. day!! l ment. Excellent com· benefita. Send reaume to ., .. end teoat notice• 754•9497 MO FHS pany benefita. Al A1new Peraonnel •ppe•r "'.,.edition•. 1" For Interview • ord•r to 111blftll ,our
Bartender wanted, exper ~o~ 0 f .f i c e • Pleue call Depl. • t • t • m • " t ' 0 r nee. Apply in penon. O over 10 ad Penoonet Office PACIAC MUTUAL p 11b11 ee t1 on .. "d
betwn 3-5pm Moo tbru .... .,~'M1 e-. m 700 Newport Center Dr •pprvprtete oop, •ncl • Wed VI,,. ff J --. "" N Be ch CA clleall to THI DAllY ; ~or \110 nn, -AB .a. ..a..ll!t.E ~ .a.5y ewport a ' P LOT P 0 •·· ..... 381 Cliff Dr, Lac lkb. No 157..006 I ~ "'"',.. 9121163 I • • ' -1 .......
phone calla :1723 Blrcb St, NB DAILY PILoT F.qual ()ppor Employer ~~·~· C:-:e ': .. ~:!;
BWing Podloo open in eat
N. B. flrm. Good typiq,
Equal Oppor Employer 330 w. Bay St. lfltorm•INln •llcMlt letet ea.ta M ectvtrtNlftO ptHte cen
lOkey. Gen'I ~y duties.I ________ _, Equal 0no:~t)' SELL Idle Items with a M2..-J2t &. m.
Employer Da!Jy Pilot Classified Ad.
General Oftlce
TIAIMB
lot.erelt..lq pol. in our
credit dept. Variety or
duties. Req'1 typinl skill
of 50+ wpm, number ap-
titude belpful. A_pply, Na·
tiooaJ Syatema Corp, 4311 Blrcb St, N.B. (Near OC
Airpo rt> Equal Op·
portunity ployer
HOSPITAL
EXPERIENCE
be based on experience ---. ------
level. Apply in person Ma.ltre d, priva~ country
8AM·5PM. Mon·Frl at club. For appt. call
1700 Gillette Ave, Irvine 1_644-__ S40t ______ _ Programmer Anal.Yat. 2
yra aper. Cobol basic. LAIASSISTANT
Company paid rrtn1es. Salary open, Send re-F 1tlme. Expe r 'd in 1wne to Hospital)f'lnan· Venlpuncture. Call ror
cla l Services, 170 a ppt. 640·0140 ask for
Newport Oeoter Dr .. Ste _De_b_bi_·e_. ------
Manqer 'Trainees
UToTEM
Ftlll Stlns
No ab. $125-$130 wk. Benefits. Will train.
~·-·
Clerical
An&mONI
S,1cW .. ....... Offlc. ............ ... , ...
==.:a:uo~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!~
«MO, N.B. LEASIMG
,.~, orn-Hotel secret.art al poe. w /resp .• ~i.1 ..... DISK C&.RK powtb, & mgmt potqt.
llCOIDSCLRI Apply to pencio. Surf & Please call for appt.
Are Seekiol Career Minded People F«.
MAMAC.B Ta.AIMHS
Have openlnp for r /time
le p/time clerks oa 2nd &
3rd ablfta. If internted.
contact our nearest
market ot go to c ........
KB.LY •YICIS
lll..OS42
MM'754
C1mlw<glll11
~Wmltd Delaney 1 Salty Sam
Reltaurant, Ase min 11 11'1· MUil be able to work
betwn 1oam • tpm in· clud. wknda. Call 6'7Wl4S.
DRIVERS & ME~HANICS
APPLICATIONS BEING TAKEN
, IXPllllMCI IE9U•ID
CLASS I OR II DllVllS
LIC84SI llqUIRID FOi
DllVllS.
Great Western Reclamation
SCA Services Of Orange County
Laguna J3each Olaposal
Holthe Disposal
llOO ~ CHAMD Aft
SANTAANA
5~7761'
Varied pod.ion worll:lq Sand Hotel, 1555 So. g 45. 5 o o o. e xt 5 2 o
w/acbedl&lint " collec· Coast Hwy• La1un• 8:30am-5pm.
Uoo 'C· Type .(()+ Beach. LEGAL
wpm. a~~ SEC'Y IRECEPT. aper or train.lq w Homecleaners needed. be belptul. Ap_p}.y, Na· llature.Top$$.Carnec Bu1y F .V. law firm
tioaalS)'ai.maeorp, 4311 8'2·1403 64.5-3439 needs exp'd Calif. legal
Biftb Sl, N.B. (Near OC sec· y /rece pt. Work
Alrport> Equal Op-Houtec&eanen, Tuea-Ftl, w/mln. 1uperv. Start
poltllnlly Employer -8-SPM. C•ll Janice's 5/U. 982-2411
~Lampson G. Orv
Moo t.bna Fri 9am·Spm
for lnrormaUoo pbooe (n4> s:n.-.o F.quaf Oppar Employer
l~~~~~~~f Raaecl1Ann's.645-!800 UVE IN
HomeCowlseUon ..... 1d MAMA .. /BfM General omce Married cpl only. No to ... Ip care for e erly ..._, .... "---·---o.-r cbtldren, ttve -ln . mother. No cooklo1. aeekl tto ... 11aana1era __ .._,._.. s l Much free time. Pvt ca pable of auumlna SICllTAIY uperv H 6 teena1e room . Salary open. l tlrla.Sal +up. 540-47$4. Bluf[a, NB. /Un_ complete un t OJHtra· xm..tlq pol. which ln· ....,.__, Uonal retPODSlblllty In
eludes HCN(arfal dut.lea r. for few hrs lolnl Ore.nae Co. area. Good for tbt diredor of educ•· a clay, for elderly lad¥ Is ....;.~0....., pay. Vaca. Hotp tftlu.r.
tlon fl t~pln\, for aon. Mut t have car. '""_..'°" ~· PtntJon•ProfltSbaring ~.=.:.="• = te1553 ~~A!IHT ~*:; ~~~:r11:~ ~atWaot•+ wpm • ...,.eepe,., Uvt·la, s .,,...,_.aA__, n a1ent mtoOO AM> NaUOUJ 8Yl&.tmt .,_ own rm ba It TV, o.ded to 1enerat.t loa111 ---·------
Qin, 4.an Blrcb St. N.B. to1lli1t 1peattn1. '8S ~Ulev~: ~ N~= llanaaer Couple tw 1m1 CNeiat oe ""1lolt> Equal per wt. MS-OM. n •• 11..._ta'• ll mobile bome park In ~ Em&*Jtr . ...... --.. c. ,... 1'lleoll. Arhlona. Wrl&o ~~~~~~~~·~, ............. lull ttme. q 'd . Contact Nell P.O. Boa .a Bunt Bcb r-Iv.la or oa&. a cllllclren, Boaman, <213 > ....,.,or ma •
GEN'L ~.i. .... htmbtr I. t • U , 8 .8. area ('1'14)-.t.
apw. Al•• laY06dD&. DaJ't: ltS·nt•i £vea; LoaAngelel
Maat be-\nllit. St MMUS "'It or llr. FederaJSavlnp -.M>~N.I[ 8mltb lr.qual()ppEmplyrm/f
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r I ~ ... -.w..e.4 7t .......... w...... 71H....,W.....ce 1100tWpW..ted 7100 W..ted 7100 Tunctay.May 2,1978 '. OAILVPILOT a ~!~!!_ .... !!.. ~••-·•••••••••••• •••••••••••••uu•••••• •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• •••••••••••••••••-•••• ..... W.t.d 7100 MillpW-.4 7100 FrteteY• 1045
llaHf•d•lta•· ... •r•I PUX .. ~ uy Sa'-PUU•P!Ume. Da)'I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
IMtor7warUauport.ta Aoweri n1 nrvlu llALTOI RESTAUl\A" SAi.£$ 4''ftekc::r". Set-Y.'lmmed openlna in TVPlST. exper. aeofrom MoU.er/Dauahter C•U 11111* arm. l ::llM:OOP , ~ f\alU~ Pfl'. Call or Realtor A.uoclatt. HELP lntenlUld 1.o p/lime or l~.aa. ~· 1toc« brokeraae tape, ofc. 3 dys/wll , nds 1d home Whtte atub-
MN141. _;..._,_'-------1 Ha~ llllMd fw l &'OOd •c· W 1 b 10 oo·callemployment? Im· SALIS rJrUJ, exper nee lo atock Tbun-Frl-Sat. S.A. Ill' talU,mJ.ntclrS48·1S64
.... rl •• 8 •rd war PIX......, s.r.. UwtalelpenoD. • f'"'refnt ~-Alavivde _,_ mediate~plorday Rap pel"IOCl wanted lor brokeraee buaioen. ~~ F w Y. Mr•.• • . 1010 • a.,Mce96 open.np or""' u... evemn,-ICbedW. t ..-· 1n of Or Must be selfalarte.r. oo ,5SS-8333. ,. •• .....,.,..... ~tedl Graveyard ahitl avail. llllMe...,....._ wttb tome fast food ex· « -·-AY . ooe •nee S/H req'd. Call Sandy ...................... . =-~~f ~::•::.~. P~~''!ua c.e.....:-.._7719 ~reci'::c.~n:::! L.;.:H. ( ~~~:.f: '40-1460 . '::;!:f:t waureuea " **I BUY**
abl• to •orlr whd1. tnln. Call for 1ppt. .,. fuU and part·tlm• able to wOl'lr Sala. Some Sec'yTecMldmt NeedJn1 penoas ex· Good uuct Furniture & ~ 83.1-1'212. E.O.E. ~/Seey JJl'lmarl11 day ~. Apply lb person d~ratinl baillcklJ'OUDd Ute typlq "' of& duties pe rl enc e d ln food Appliances-OR I wlll .....11~ I ood lloun and ulary are lGam-ooonMon-Sat. prefd, but w a ccept for 2 man laboratory. suvice. People oriented, ffll«SELl.CorYou. MA.TUR E W 0 II A PBX Open.tor. teJepbooe Warm ft hi......., w C open. Apply m person Or 87 Appointment Cr e • t I v e • b JI I t Y · Will train for metallo-IOOd benem.. C.11 for MASTBS AUCTION
p/tlme to welcom anaweriat aervice. Over pbone peraooallty re· Monday-Friday , SanDlecoFrwyat Woodlllhtbie,$46-2901. grapblc laboratory aprpt. ~. Big Ca· '4M616&1Jl-f625 MWcomen 6 coot a 25. w /trai.D. Days, eves, qt.ired by buly co~ Upm. -.. El Toro Road dutia. Sal oego. Photo-D)'UD Cou.otry Club. ·~.ltuib)ebn •eraveya.rd.1.1$.3561 lnftnaDceloclt~A..; F.qlDl()pporEmployer SAUSJSRVICI 1rapby back1rouod CASHPAlD
• Need car, Ut.e typLoa. AifllOrt .• ,,.,_ te· DIL TACO, IMC Counter glrl. Neat 6 helpful. Sandidte W411tnu W-.4 For id \aed fun. anU·
SCT..-. P.8.X q\i.red. '900/mo. 8G-81111 1720&werlorAve e_euooable. Noack Met al I u r g l c al No phone calla pleue. ques•ctr1V'a95'1-8133 Pattlmeabift.I. Woriron _evee __ ·-------t eo.tallesa,CA &\LES-11\ill·Ume Trophy Eo1r11Vlnl Co. Laboratory, 2003 Qu.aU Apply moms, Sara•nU'a1....;. _______ _
Ui S Pc Allle bu1J awftcbboard. J>ay llC8'1"11"Y915f F.qualOppEJnplydl/F ALLTIMI m4>-.:n4J. St Ne. <Near OC KJW.1.9thSt,CM llovio1: Solid birch ~.!~~ 1 ~E~ &.!Adaya. Reta.u ..ses'~~b;.1m-~8:9.'~:f' SaJee·WeekencUelp.Only Ah1iori>~ Waitress wanted, :t!~1.e~rn;la~~.~~ ---------t---------t med opeolnc for a &irl --------1 Immediate openlng. Ap-wWIDCLowortaeedapp. ServSta Help needed Jm. ~ginal Pina, S3 hr+ Btrch end tbL !Hpc cor-.-.C:ALTICN PBX Reception ht. wbo can ana phones, Restaurant p(yinpenon ly. 14 or older. Ible 6 med. Muat be 18. tlpe. Apply ln penoa, oer sectional couc h . ~lie. Phone ~l Pleasant N.B. olfc seeb O'eet cmtomen 6 type •'S ZS'1So.Malo,S.A. fem. Call 548-1467 or Day/nJgbt ahlfta avaJl. Z1Zl Balboa Blvd, N.B. Chair. 644·08.H alt
_for_•..:..PSJt.:::....-lla_._H1ll. ___ -t :t;:~~C!hs':~ ==~e~!°:i'tt SALIS ~rorappt. l'U1J or p/l, Apply 990 E. betwn~. 4:30pm
Mlllc .. Ala1 dy6*1460 Kathy at558-2&13. Cttw Of Tiie -f1ne jenlrY desicner San Francisco lamJJy CatHwy,NB .Wa.it.resaes, ooe~ence Kraco Fii 8 track Stereo
G.P. office aeedl ex· ---------Recept/SH'v. Esp'd ligloyJ nda mature, resp, need.I eovemesa, aum· Service Statton Allen· ~· a~lla ~f:; wt&hapeaten SlO. 2 cold
periencecl medical uaia· PDP•ll ' Immediate op8nlngs in saJeapenoo who desiftl mer montb1 lo N .B. dent, exper'd. Day & s ee · · Kina aod Queen chain t.al.-..OS pel'1IClD w/froot ofc ap-ourfamilyrealauraotaat ao interesting PIT posi· Coottn1, lita bousekpJ. Eves. Full&p/lime. AP-Coast.Hwy.CD · S5Qforboth.Gotbicbutch
y !WP-Santa Anaofc. pe~s~aC:u·~~vp~~ nearby locat.ioaa. We re-tioo in a beauWul en· CbiJdnio age 8 & 6. lluat ply, SbeU StaUoo, 17th 4r lib new misalog drawer a br-.;: _ _.._tee +ex-2U~·ei!l>tt. CoRSTS.mn•nvRpaJMS-d wpm.Lite •a.' Small QUiftournopfri~ad~~~peram'. vitt«)ment llua1 t.ag. bavedd~.d.llc.n~!' Irvine.NB. $50. 2 end t611 $U.
•--dS lth ...., " _...,, Join "' ~ "" gresaive•aaleaorientecl woman...... nc :a to . W'IKllftl~nllU Padded~S5.63J..018S pen1e11.CaJJDavi m fringes. Salary open. _co_m __ peny __ ._540"'4Z'7 ____ _, Corneaeeuatodaybetwn w/proven sale• abll. M. PraU, P.O. Box 554, Service Sta. Altendanta llll~llft ~ Send resume to Hospital S Mpm. 673-f734 Elaine Schlup. Balboa~ (4) P /Ume now to full Need peraoa to learn Olntem~ Oak f~. S~a.vMOW $ Financial Services, 170 UC.nc>Mt T W.....,/WClltrnMI :.>t MarlneAve Balla time lo Summer. Will shlpplng • rec. Also. liv rm & dining eel, lite =..::apetitlons. ~B~\erDr., ~:!~/~/;~:ii:y Cool&Tr•DtH Sales ·Great~rt~y ~~SJn'!':. ~~~~y, 2~90 :Oie:up~~~;n;~~ new.ecz.~morm
P\all1partUme. 536-7711 ---------. retail 1tore. Beoeflta. So. Castal1n for advancemenl with Women '• Quality .BouU· d d S3Toawt.54NQ27. Depot Bdrm aet 6 PCI Cout Plaza. Call for 239S2Avenldadela fine ready·lo·wear que, Fatblon Jalaad. Servtce StaUoa atteo a t antique white carved MOTIL MAIDS aprpt. 548-lat. Carlotta, Laguna Hills Stora Exper Hies ' '15&-1201 F rr. A~ Chevron. WELDER wood, ban1in1 Imps,
l'UD lime, Tides Motel. 4501CampuaDr.lrvine ~ poait.iona, full 6 1251 N. Hwy, Lag Exper.Helian:b t-975«1 ___ e _____ _
A1P17lnpenoo.41M·Z.94. Our arowina afenc IEC8'110HIST IM E 17th St, C. Mesa pt·tl!X'e avail. Apply ~ :bi':'ec!dl:. Bch. C.11 Greg548-3613 Comp. baby nursery
Motel MAIDS. Ex· aeeu dynamic ndiv. ~e~t;.,:,'~iJ!! 9842Ada()ppmsE,Hunt.Bc~ Genes,So.Co&stPla.sa, Benefita S46-9311 . Serv.Sta.Atteod.F/time. Window Washing Assist cubed, atroller, walker ~eace aot necessary. wtsales bkgd' A g gen. ore. dutle1 . Equal mplfm/ CM.5'5-0'r.M . ::1~~d, Ille ie~ needed ror N.B. area. high chair mtclma x.lnt
ID411lre 721 Yorktown c:-:t~m\opl::ya::e! 7:30-4:I0.540-t142 ------'---•SALES Seam.atreaa oeeded for N_:_.,.e8e1.C PPY Calleva&a.s-7405. coad.'93-7425 81-vd. H•_..A... Be ch ---------,RMtaurant •~•"-st marine upbolatery co. ...-.-~ • · M. ---on a . eounael« ln friendly ol llCOIDSCLal ~SOON _..... • . Mustbaveexperinwork· . Women interested ln sup-WANTED: Good used _ot_caJJ_531MN __ u ___ --i wtrelued atmosphere. Sorne typlnJ required "-·immed.._nln,.•for Uyouwereatlookia.lfor ing w /naugahyde & Sewinl Operj1ors, over-plemenllng family la· bdrm furn, reaaooably
MOTORROUTE CalJCa.rryFox,54CMI055 /br wblle tralnln ll<U ... _ -a oew caree~, you vinyl ~adyworll good loct·alng.le needle. Good cometbrulnt.erestingpt. prioedbypvtparty,also
'lbe Daily Pilot has a Coastal Personnel A&en r~ Mra . St.ewarf: ......... wouldn't be reading~ coms)any benefits. Apply pay. M2·34'12. Dept. 3. time work in expanding ~nt desk w /chr. sm-
larp route in Newport _ey_,2"190 __ Har __ bo_r_._c_M_--t 673-0660. W........_ ~~o:~-:i~:~d~ in peraoo, S..3. Moo·Fri. Sheet metal workers. ~iness. Call ror appt. end tbl. am aofa. Pleaae
BeadL MOD tbru Fri •I· PETITIONERS FuU&part·Ume a job this ad would not Jack Cole Co., 1763 welding exper. Call t!M-5168 call645-7857.
ternoona. Sat 4c Sun Full/part-time.Good ...... \' ... .....,. Better than average be he'r•. If you a.re a Pl.acentiaAve.CM Greg,548-3613 woooc••-.it~.a.111.1 ELECTRIC FLEX-A -1--"""•t bav'" de n--Lo bet I 3: earnin"• to start:. Exp .. ~·-.. --· •-"' · pay dally. 536-ml .-... _. Delp w cus .,. .-career Jlinded adult & ..,.....,._ .__._.CID BED Single twin, dbl pmdable car. $.'50. c.ash ---------. malnl ol ettUlpmn'L pref'd, but will train. want the oppty to earn ;iwwrr-m;;R ..._..uu..... matt.resaes. electric ~n
depadreq. Good driving Pim Place in COii port to learn exciting Day & eve shi& avail. Ulree to five hundred *Sla'eflrilS* OPBllNCID F\tU Com•ny Beoefits trols, new condition. List record Call 642·43i 1 maJe, 18 or over! Ptr field & chance to ad· Apply, 9AM·IPM Wed· doll.an 8 week, call toll -.i:. 0.00 STAITJ?.50.MQ SALARY OHM _. Also custom heavy -~~L:J~~~ 1~~:~al And :=t.~~ =~~,!'·~1~~ ·free (1) 800f3!-1·9696 ~orcieki>rsJRecept QuickPayRai.Hs ·tneosti?tfesa.646-212.1 striped a'pread &: 2
tm9lld DI" "'TFOR ... SEC'Y tiaC.Y. l..aclma. !!1r'!amg!) (for recorded ~~PayAAll-F-ees ~NCompa.ny.~~l.23ftts Woodworkers. needed ror C~~t~~~d s1~ocev~~~·
..-.-n -........, " ~ncwuers gency ... ewport,,,_.~ uphol1tery company. • • COMMERCIAL 1.1.SA.LISftlSOM RETAIL SALIS ALESMAM 4020BircbSt Stel04 Manne uphol. co. nds 2 _511_._...o_l_, ____ _ .... Mdlt .....
Wltll I.,_ offiee aaaJst.
AllPlY ln penoa, Mon· Fri,· 9am-4pm. Salary
open. Sao Clemente Inn,
125 Avenlda &plandiao,
San Clemente.
TELLER Uc.Areyouinterettedln PoeiUoosnowopeofull& 5 NewportBeacb 833-8190 Switchboard Oprs, will persons in woodsbop. FOR SALE ANTIQUE
Prolresaivelndependen learniq about •Y11dica· p/\imeforoneofFashion Retallbard:"ari:1esstoa~ee°:e~! Callforappt/estab'64 trainSt CM. ~!l~(upsEta. ~t7Ulrs> Musthavesomeexperin FURN 2 Dlning room bank is opening ne tioo as udwiaea? Cwtls Island's fanes1 stores In ·• • ~ • all woodwork111g eqwp sets 1 Dinette aet l Corona del Mar office. lnvestOMnta llas opea-N.B. Ask 'for David salet people. Knowledge 663li7 Steady work. Good co Dropleattable 1 Dresser
in the Looi Beach facW· -'uJ ··•----bo at co W/I ue1.lwo, • t typ ... t. o S•~· •--.-r-8-3 M Fr' J k Cole "'·" ft ~ PM Currently Interviewing Joo in HB olc for •UC· _M_oore __ ._7~---· ---OfN b;'->al ta & eoodxperbe~i:e!:~· SjobECRXlnETAR'::JnlNricate -• .. •fni benefits. Apply in persqn wtr mirror Sliding glass
ty for immediate opea· :id Uk;'(o7x'p:l)d a.tall S .. IPm• insur. vac.atlon. Some Operate or learn to Im med open ng for eo· 17~· Pl~;ce:~a Ave ~......., a er .. MllneLVNJC....,. ings. Persona with ex· tbelr knowledge into in· Exper'd ~r hardware wtmd work. Beach Joe. operate Mag JI. Small sharp peraonable p/time C'M' •1 ________ _
11·75hlfl.Xlntbenefits. perience preferred. vertments•exchanges. &tor parnt. Laguna Call B . Morrison, Jaw ofc. Airport area. teller, 8:U ·S Tues & Newlyupholoff·wll.lte3pc
Bayview Conv. Hosp. Salary commensurate Up to 80'% comm paid Beach Lumber Co, IHlam.~1711. N.B. Thw"s. Sa~p &: ~n Would you like a business curved sectional. $600.
2055Tburin,CM642·3S05. with ex p e ri ence. while 1 .... _1A .. , Earning 49f~or540-&67. --------•! Nolegalexperleuce exper. prefd, but wall of your own? You don't PbS'1lH008 Copiplete benefit pro· ..... ......,. Ii CaJl833-9982 train. Irvine Savia1a. need an office to start.1---------
... SBYMEH gtam. Direct telephone ~.!"1 un':o:~C:. ~~ PJ ~ Sales 752·2600, EOE. Begin at home. full or Custm made 8' burnt
F\alJ.trme, mature male inqu.i rie s to Lynn 1162>~ aak f~ Vince Ol'PORTUMmES Secretary part/time. Ideal for orange coucb, :dot cond.
over 21. 6 Daya incl Qiwtoey, 8:3CHO:OOam. for coaCldenllal ln· RETAIL SALES in REAL ESTATE EXEe.. SECttETAIY TOOL & husband & wife t.eam. $400, wHl take offer
Sat/Sun. Work with l ::.>-5:30pm,2U/587'""'4 tervtew 'lbeJon~R.naer, lnc. bas ~ 613-4210
pluts, trees le deJlvery. AmericanCttyBan.k · Let us demoa.st.rate bow ....,, "'• n1r M•"Ef --&per. pref'd. S3 )Ir up. E.0.E. M-JF/li R.E.Sale t an._QPening for -1anm-e:exx..+--·f:U1IK:1t-t•M Mli(t•dlw IAPna-Hilb Nunery,, ________ _, OYAll .. O.-.•""a-1----ri~t~ime""'°'..,•t~Uwe~UJnewmo.M. "":Hi~.:-tck~ory~r:;: .=-. C-:C::1:fill:n per'd tec'y to report to Eledrooles Manul. co ....................... .
Inc. ElToro.0).565.1 . PRODUCTIO~ 2 posiUoos in ndtfng" Farms ol Ohio store tn dollars that wlll be ~ vs!'rrd1: .. c~T,0~ bas perm. pos~ open......... 1005 --------" expandlng0eatury21 Of. Fashion Island. Ideal for ea.med to C81if. Real • for tool & die ma.er wJ4 ...................... . ... SfSAIDE TYP15mER fice! Call for appoint· people who can work .Flllat.einl9'78. DM.slon.Outatand.ing sh y~s exper. Must be AMERICANOAK
Baleia Bills HoapitaJ, ti menttoday•d.lacover: morntnp or afternoons. f:,:Yf~ =•= r;J~~ ~to fl.ldng '!build· LargestSelectk>n i---------1.IOl lt 11th St, N.B. wJexperieaee(part· me +WbywearebeUer! Experience not neceas. COMPLETE wort0n1 coods & benefit mg dies, ~~bling fix· lnOnlngeCouoty Hanes ~60
-.sJOT. EOE. days) +Whywearesrowtng! Wtll train. Apply in INDEPENDENCE p~whlcb lnclud~ tures & aasiStlDf ·~~ .. ~ StewartRot.bAntJques -••••••••••••••••• •• IBM +Getyourlicemefaatl penon all.er 12 noon dai· lna engineers ~m aae~~ ?SOE. Dyer Rd. S.A. Ml.-slSAIDIS rn ~•e11 +WbYwetralnbetter! ly. CNoPbooeCalls) NOPRIORTRA.INING ~-~t-~~ & verbal instructions. (atNwptFwy)751~ Quarter Horse geld' . •OIOBl..mS ~'"' +Bow to earn big OREXPER ._......pf'()j ..... ...,.. Know bow to operate aU 1---------"----Has abown in stock
Xlnt beneetta. Bayview Ex~~ .. ~~g wy! ~~ti)~ NECESSARY Apply in penoa, 8-Spm tool room equip. Have Watem riding. Splrl ConY. Hosp.. 2055 Tburin ~.. BegJadYOUcalledt ~ I Mon·Frt. 17042 GWette own tools. Apply in AntlquellusJcBoxesl Waats e.xper r · r
ApplylnPel"IOll ~l050 UNLIPOTENTI.ALMITEDINCbME 1~A~ve~·~lrvine~~·~~~~ person or call Joe SlotMachlnel! 6'J3..SU8 Cll.MZ-S5m. ~ECOAST Ceal:ur)'21SW18.ulty ~~-i 1• Butku,M2-2427,ext2'3. Clocks! 1-------
ML'ISISAIDIS DAl&.Yl'ILOT ~ #f#ll/4 • Total state examinaUoo SECaETARY MGlhrSp1daltieJ HUGESELECI'ION AQffA
7·1. Ex~'d le trainees. 330W. Bay st. 1.1.••• --17 F1 *'o• I·~ llctralnlnefeeonl)'$UIO. I 1640Monrovia Ave. "-rte.. ... __ clabber bloodl1n ... ,..__ .-.A.a. "'-v u-p ..,_ ..... _.. ~ • ••M--XJnt opport. for elfic ent C4Sta Mesa, Ca 921627
1
--1.1 .. ......,., .. c~c1i""'"' · Askf:.'P:uiWard ~ .,...,.,...... GUARANTEED secm.ary. Top •kills. Equal Opp Emplyr .. auww.-Registered 7 years old.
· · 0ppo · · -" bl ~Opportunity ~ENT fast pace R.E. ofc. N.B. m /f /h OpeaWed.tbruSat Make offer. 737·6449,
O.FFICEBELP Eq~ploy~~y =-~~~IUllD~~ Emple>yerll'ale/Female PLAC.wu Xlnt oritr· for 1barp1---------1802Kitterin1.Irv. aftcr6PM.
Exp'd to nmofpropeJ!yl~~~~~~~~~l lti.geareawberetbereia .~ 'i' P.R.E.S.S. gal.Ca I la,833-2900. ~~~(~71~4~)7~54-~1777~~~ 8070
manasement c. 3 Y cona&ant buyiq ud sell· • _ R .E. SCHOOL Secretary, musl type, TOOL MAK& I-Jew•• r
per wk. 10 key, book· ProofO..nlM In.g. Unique Homes ln • 3U Maio St.Seal Bch,C. capable ol bandling ac· Exper'd. Fully pald '"'•i:" 1010 ....................... .
• keept.n1. Noa·smoker. =ooNrans,AND Meaa Verde h*8 a new htlilSales Call <213)58f.9"'2Now counta receivable, ac· benefits. Apply, betwn ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED
Start ~~-u~•ll 11 ~: exper. Contaooct manacer,aaew"70/30" • Fordetaila. co unt s payabl e . 8am-3pm. BralllOnFRGHT DAMAGED TOP CASH DOLLAR ~~~~~~~~-I Sbii..,.,. Sawyer, m.37 comml11lon achedule, ' Cwa cmief KJlowledee ol Burroughs Manuf., 1133 Monrovia B<YJ'POINT SALE. 33CM1
n..tom.trlc Aat't. Back•.._ _______ .. , several new llstln.p and M.'1'1 · 'd f .,._,_ ........,.. 'or '-e•-macbioe helpful but not Ave, Unit Z C4Sta Mesa. w. Wt.rnft' nr Harbor, PA ID F 0 R Y 0 U R ""' eon •• aoewleue. Weare look· Attract ve exper or.--..-·~'' ~-.. J necesaary we will train SantaAna 979-29Zl JEWELRY. WATCHES, olfc =iq, tact Beal ~lateSalea mg ror sales people, ex· high fasbloa store. ·Ex· atcre, e.xp not nee, full or Call 548.34&7 between Tow Truck Drivers ex· · ART OIWECTS. GOLD. ~ . .O:iroV:f~~i~ DON'TMISSOUT! periencedatoewl How per'donlyappJy. p /t , salary com · 9-12AMC4StaMeaa per'd. Top pay. Apply,17cuf\WestingbouseFF SILVER SER VICE. ~-. 32 bn per on yoor chance to be a about you! CaU Sandy APROPOS ~urate w/exp. WUl . . G&WTowing, lOOOlrvine refrlg $225. Maytag FINE FURN & AN
wt..a:;;;l prolesaiooal real estate Orlowald or Jlm Wood at 29Faabionlsland NB tram. 548-3402 SF.cRETARY. mature & Ave. NB642·12S2 Washer SJ.25. Kenmore TIQUES.645-2200
----------. agent with Lusk Really's ~. Call&M-2152' S.ALESPllSOM efficient, for MD's ofCice T k Ori e wanted gas dryr $85. West·
OIDIRl. y !;~·u°'~ •-------•1 Rdal1 Marine Jtantware In Irvine. 41At days week, ~m ~;,. must ~ ingbouse elec dry.r $75. MacMau r 8071 for Sat 6 Sun. 7.3 ror •Advancement o p · Restaurant Reta1·1 Sale.$ store. near marina, 833-tG3 exper.lnu4t.rans.~r Guaranteed •delivered••••••••••••••••••••••• coav. bmp. Esper'd pre· portunity tnto manage-Now taking applications aedt.s f!l sales person. 25.Call53fHJ974 54&-8672 Lathe, B new 19x44"
f'd. Apply ln person, menl for hoateu. caahier. Attradlve, eir;per, sales Exp rrerd, nat'I co. SECRETARY GEElectric,selfcleanillg $3,500. Milling B new Ba~ Ila.nor, 840 Vic-•BighbrokeraaespUt.s. bookkeeper le buapersoo. woman foe high volume w/Cul benefits. Some NnCMTR TVTndlDrfnr oven, 30" wide, white, 3 8~x28" $1500. (2131
&arta.C.11. •Outatandiag working Apply in persoo. Coast faabionatore. wknd work. Call Tom Exp, eood typist. 8-fary &T,..._ yrs okl. Xlnt cood. S200. 961-3434 ,,.a.cv &111!!..IMG coad.IUoo.s Ion. 1401 S. Coast Hwy. KIAZIEKAT% Walker 714-493-4455 for .open.644-4613 Mon thru Fri S..5. 'Dan's Call~atl5:30PM --------
"' RAW •RelerralSywtems Lq\maBeach. PAStlOMS interv. (DanaPntarea) 1V. l.5fJ6 Newport Blvd, RadiaJ drill. 4' German 5 .. ~cy•9 *Guaranteed sales pro-Costa Mesa. 1-----~~---1960. $3000. Lathe geared 983Ulamiltoo,HB. SecrefarteS W.a.n&Dryen bd, 22x48", Hvy dty llablre vtdual. 18 or gram RESTAURANT 963-7111 TYPIST Dix models, completely German $3000. (213 l older. Some hvy lifting. •Plus much more TO SI 000 reblt" refinished, 1 year 961-3434 No expr. necessary. Calltodayforlnterview. IHOILYM SALESWEKNOW NoSH,litepb's,loCFasb guarantee. You.r cbolce•---------
0.C.. llesa63H323 Speak Spanish, to work Island. S600 For appt call ~.Free Delivery. Println& equipment for
lnpleasantofflce ln San· YOU WANT 1700· Grand0peain1Sale sale DIM JIME la Ana. Call Margaret .._ JOBI TYPIST ThroughtheUlb. ITBCAMERA f"llftl fotappt.eeo-0140 " So.CoutAppUan~ PLATEMAICElt
W•Allolllow mary hickle agency IEC8'TIONIST {714JS31·3964orS37·2542 1().15 Enlarges and re· . runaNGS v.u.~ 170NewportCeoterur Arcb1lectural omce re· duces copy. see it run-'-''"' SAi.ES lrY•U.To'rfA SulteMSNewportBcb quiresaccu.r8tet.yplst ,6SDRYER, gas, wht, Ulte ning.714737-6449After6 Adlaha with outatanciing,l-Beal-•El•ta:-te•Loant----1 Immediate opentap for w .......... .._ Call640a20 wpm min. Mu.st be neat, ~~·..J!OO. 64•·1616, _P_M ______ _
llUrtdl" pel'IOD&lities ~~ Penonnel OD all efw reli b~ a.ad l l. ....,.......... .tioeaJo1 wontne with MOITaAMLOAM sblfta,fulludpartUme. DOYOUPLAY ~ a e peasan Mii:•••-IOIO
Idell. Sta.rt at 13.60 per OfPORTUNfTY Day-shift atartlDI waae THIOlaAM? ,._ Secty lhcept, PT . Wm. L. Pereira Assoc GllRIGBATOIS ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... f'bCIDe MZ-4321 #2.50, A major ltle lnaurance SU5/ hour; •wlni•hiA ff'°-....,.. ..Y be a loolll pro•ed l :SO-S:80 lloa·Fri for am MacArthur at Ford Rd 536-32'7! W.' .._~ED
Wwtf ~~· co. head_gaattered In a t a rt 1 o 1 w a I e car••r fw lo• •t teM•pMt :f:.hl~e;:,1:;·~~:~:.~ Newport Beacb lk,W. 1020 ~"I R
-----Newport 8'ach la leek· $2. 15 /bou r : a o d Ort•• lxc ••V•· dlmcefer -..,. h NB r OC (714)644-0620 ... •••••••• .. •••••••••• TOP CASIJ DOLLA =~-°ppor\uolty ~ t~ivc= ~ ~;!Y~=· ·~.~ s., ........ MW d J lh. •':"rwa i-~-·-'""--~-52._' _m_._4 _· -a--1 E.O.E. • 11 /F llUS & MOPIDS ~iv? ~Aki~
-p----.... --"",...-· _T_l _""'_E_I mcwtgag~ ~loflaa. Canta must ~ 18 and ..... w ............... .....,... .. 00 u....w~ 7ll0 New" used, buy, sell, ART OBJECTS. GOLD, ~11 ... .!,sal .. ,, ':..F We are I • loan over. Please apply in ffc -111. Pre•lo•• S..c.t...... HttpW.ted 71 ~ --trade. Cycle
81
&dco.C3488M SILVER SERYICAE, ~ "11'-.. : ... e ':..... cJosi.ng apeclallat W/BA penon: ... ~........... ~ ....... • ............................................. Newport v • . . FINE FURN. "" N
or._. _.. -· ., .. " &1·2yraexper.lnescrow ~,._.:_..,__. MZ-7910 TIQUES.645-2200
tna1p. Neat appear. title work or •lmllar 1205111111r .. wll . ,... c.I -.,.._ EPHOHE s•• rs 1040 ._wm_tn1n_._m_..u __ -. work 1n Joan ctoalag. ~_..._......___ Mrs. Jett, C714J -..111•11tNS. fil 11.L Data LUGGAGITAGS ~~~~~. ~~~= = .... = w.noz. c:r'c'~1 SEARS ROEBUCK & CO. ·~~~i;W:~~z::r~ ;:pl::r,~~;~ *-&At._._"'_..... "'~-•-_ _._ l ,._..._ ..-1 ~ r pet. ,t1.h~1, wormed, -ti ___._,equip. Ann. worjllUUa ........... •0 U· -........,. .. "'" 13~ •HS Has immediate onon[ngs ,or: -•-.J.~ ,..,_, ... ,_ return permanen Y .__. B('d tloos to problema tbat bow Dally Pilot CJ.... a-. .,...... ".._.,.. · .ium ~P · aeaJed attractive tag 6
JCm Newport v ' may artae. Ana1Y1la of £au.al OpportUDJt.y lfled adl dilplay thetr hr .All W11 ,.._ T ......... Stllff RepreMlllatlYn WI) .CZS.~. atrap, meetln1 airline
the loan transactJou II• Im.,_ M/F meuqea· with letibWty T1MIMJl'I yorbJll1. W'rler pus11. LD. nqulrementa. Pre-' ----~~~~·J b>'~tntblapoaitioo.1~~~~~~~~1 aodlmp1ct?Ourads,we 'I....... Full or c:,:rt-tlme, Excellent Ow:Qp b1ood.Jt.nea, lb>.1. wmtlola•tbdtt Fora PATIOU. ca.ma CoaJpdy on.-• UDenl 1; are Pl'OUd to aay. ruUy It abota. 1 lb m.s tentce. pertODallMd ta1 encloM -==~:!it~ ='•'='·= ~aulta . Pilon• Squa&OIPSmP11rm h~i;f~-:'/s. er:t~~y::i~1;:~~~~~: P*· . ?~'it:·~·~;::•::~ ..._._u~or Locover.a.J•· Seo.~·l •-......,--W--.A.---~--1-100-....... Wmhcl 7100 Enter a challenging world of DOOTRAIHINO Will t.ttt •trim 1our ~~·d---i• Lo: Al~ ----.. ...,. ..._ .......,. t l h "'al... P'ttcWlea6boardin1 t.p. Or trJ two carda ~-a~depl ~ •••••••••••••.......... ....................... e ep one 0 ""'"' JobnMarUn 548.005f brtdltobltct.
lumcll19f 1ppro~. 1500 PAClfllCMUTuA&. PRICES: ;.:.P~•H . Com· 'JOONwportO:rDr EDJ. Bull Doi, Male, C•oU/$5 --n -'IL,..-rt AO..-ca '3113 ........ ,...... 8rindJe marldD .. , 2 Jn. 411&a-::•··· .-ir•vu ··-· • ''"' .... Ulll1 "ut SALES-MANAGEMeNT _,....., ewin .a-"'°JM -a 111 • 1 t , w 1 t b ltqualOppor~ s.... luhcll A Co. ..-."'™' 1/ttap .llOea.
,.... ..... pa1roll u · THE LOOI ._._._C•h .. ~ REWARD lOormanllAOea. ~ pl-. XIDt -Two Pood1 Joa\ Salol Tu Included .-.. .:_ __..... a beoefk·-------• Famous ror the llnest in hJah luhion men'• 400 W. W--.r AH. -•· • NOCARDf
·--I" Eurora.n clothlnjf "IPoNWHI' ii ••.tna 't!!..,, .... apricot, vtc Draw OWD or Mftd -=~ ~.-t= To..i"'c.10Qr-••e for ,\Ht1t&nt Man•Jtr_!.:.!.~!lhlon rn~· H8. rwne,':r..., phone. ~ la ,._ Wont -b.cktl'«IOd nee.a. Salary + CUllll ..... Ol\ + we'll make one card per
-Altlm or MDII re-onthe Pro1'Uharil\I. ~ecc.,.... "'-.. ,.. IMI tas.MdZS'each.
• -IO: 110G Qlllette ~c, Mm..,_ Wt --4... -• .. •••••• .. ••••••• Smd ct'9Ck ot money or·
Aw.lr'ftla Dall1Pllot ,_,dot. m1Md bnld, dlrLo: a•W, I0#71 JDi • aned~loa-lt-:•:::·~~ 11L01 PllNTI•
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... c ... i.•.....,DAa.__..v .. PLO...;.;;.;;.;.r _______ r_URdtY_ ........ w.r_..._2·-'-91-1 ....,...._ .. s.11e1 ~ w....., 9190 Aattot.1~ AMto1.1 .. portH A.etos.1 ... pon.d ...... u .. d
t' I MNl!l..t._.... '"" ....... W 9060 .... /Sfoi. f 160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
_ .... -........................... ••••••••• ....................... WIW&l.IUY O"-t720 '' aret 9741 Vot.o 9772 Col••"' . 9tl2
, • CU '11 Dod1• 21', compl YGUaDATSUte --·•-•••••••••••••• ••-••••••••••••••••••• ••-••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
De .... lAft.tftw'I u~. n.z, tar rou a.Je b9cll "'1$ tl'll .)ppcr •ai.l~t. •p'd, lo m.l'a, newly PAIDFORORNOT * Dllvl .a. * '1S Pueaeot ao.GL. 38.000 -·YOUIUY "11001n1 .. .-rallrttr'M -lab Sol• r:: _._ n---............. contd. pop top, trlr, decor'd auoo. tM$..9203 ,_ ....... ~.. ., ~ mi. d oL coed *"OSO --1
"' ....... ti. .. 14 Allt. -· -· .,., ....... mt r Ir a traa . Mr . ' _,...,___ L ' ' .. · AUSIDVOLVO, ...,Pecec.r, -. Mna tur. lfO-tllt. 1W-#J • .,.. Sdnder. (915) 7'19-7111 FOITOl'CAIS * fnLE... * -..am See u1 a l Southern PP . (n4}~7WKen ~ • _. Hdbrd lY..... or (9U ) !'8J.eG. TNlln. T...wl ti 10 SAYE A LOT ,..,... t750 Oran&• County'• Volvo 9lll'Md p. Sleeper aol tM SW. aota lalaode I bd ................... !•••• "' ....................... Heaclqua.rten. "67 led C. , ....
aa. Set 6 a&a N -·-••• .. ••••••••••• bead ;J"~~rlni :~: ~ 31' twin ll"10 "12 Ponebe tllT Tusa MAIOUIS VOLVO 8Y OWber, 3:11 •uto. P IS. S na.la1 Caayoa .Ad. Hbcbt cok>I' T. v. 17 .. J.yr VHF: aplaoaker, SP, ful· Good 'coodit.lon. btru 5-spd macJ. Ll.ke nu. MJSSION VJ!:.10 futbect. oew lllcbelio Olli -.... $tW under warran· ly fouod, ln cida w•ll. include euy lift bJtcb $9500/ofr. 140·0988, IJl·.2110 491-1210 llres. Complet t lf re·
'1· aso. Call befbre a:oo. k>cated s . Bay mooring, .. -.ooPbonelMSIOll6 WE BUY 1·3:.JMl102., 1-m-ms worked mech. Rum Ir ~ 8681. $1.S.OOO. 71A~1117 aft I "l2 teat trlr. f,..i.t•-· •-. CllAM CAIS 1974 Pouche 914 2. o, Ol•Mel COUMTY ~77~· Wkd1s ~'!d1• • ~•... _.....,.W'bda -OJ.-VOL"O _. .. ; eves, W&0 11, IMft.ICATOR 8raDd oew • Samul re-_.,.,.,. · 1lp1 '· Good 1hape. &TIUCK$ clean. 1ood r unner, .-.-(714>'94-0181. _
Sl50 Model 70 00
_ ..... _ c:elver, Pbllll .. tum ta· 14' Manta Sloop, B.V., SIOO/t.tol:r.I0-7858 whiU with black, ma p . EXQ.USIVELYVQLVO
1y ,._It, &.-eel i"Um';. ble, tecbnics cassette W.P., trlr. T.A.S-0.8 ., NMIYD I AM/FM. prtced to sell •l Lariat Volvo Dealer 74 T-Top. au.to, pwr, air,
tncJude1 chemical . deck. Quadurartex aood cond, belt offer . ..._fwS. .,...LU. ~~ .. beat. 642·0ff8; lDBOran&UYoreLCounEAS~! =..tq. bill~~~
... -Call I .-.... _ ~-WllJ aeU SJOOO. .tva; 55ii-OHO ••••••••••••••••••••••• curu9ftl n _.__ 1:o ob1y -. r-.-· .,.,,_ Boqbt for S1250. Call 8 111 9510 l'&lllULU DIRECT PP. 'H4·796·9ll9 aft
sextant ftllted. marine before3:00.MS-Wl. ~lpl/ 9070 ....... •••••••••··~··•• 21128Had>orBlvd. ·~:,!!', D~~ eG~~!e~ ~,'4~~"'~1~ '1/Wtnda aa~~aftsPM Ad:mlralColorTV, $1.00 or ....................... "-"'II •HI~. ..... COSTANESA map,cover•bn.SSOOO. • Cr I nu
-----;._;,,...;:;.......:..;..:;:;:,. __ 1 bmtclfe.r, wood O'ain ta· Slip wanted for 27• Motor ... • ...... • c.r. 546-1200 Eves 140·7044, dy1 • ..................... ..
Stlacr'&J' Boys bite, Heve ble model.4175-8308 Sailer. N wpt Harbor trwdl er ......... ? Cal WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 54MD1 '76XR7. Fulb equlp·d. 400 8CoP 'Watch, Sid QooU lo.ti&....._ area.rewa.rd.158-1417 ... l40-75'9 FORTOPUSEDCARS '78acrl2+2.a.OOOmi'a, .... t755 2025 ~Manchester cu in . ena. 35,000 bu. Cl~)Pb6t6-3809 .. .. -& ro·nEIGN,00 ... .,..,....C 'illot~,~~· •••••••••••••••••••••••Anaheim 75()-2:()11 M500,~ _ _;......:..;~.;;...;..:..;,;. ___ .lt4 = Slip wanted for 38' power n •s:.o>u ~ :;"" lntneeo..tCountryClub ....................... bo a t. H unl ln a t O D lecr•lllll .. orCLASSJCS ·17 TISTDllVIOUI "'M Volvo, au. 4 Dr. A/C,.,.. 9tlS
membeuhtp . $700. .............. 9040 Harbor.&f.2-.7S(i0 Vellldts f530 ~fu![iaextra cleao 18 280Z, 2+2, 2700 orig -UCAR A.11/Fll.Staodardtran.a. •••••••M••••••••H•••• ~t«Ml360 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• .-IU._ mi .. warr., air, mags. OFTHIYEAR" X1nt cood. 1 Owner. Call 1i'14 Conmet. auto, A/C,
Sean"--
223
ft 4 8->' boat. 11' Lapatrake TtPlfCllt..._ l97Z Ford ~·too truck, ---FM. metalhc blue. evee~5.SalaJlday. \Oda)'OQly$1085. :u~· · cu~ Qaaalc; Gray 1/8. XJ.nt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 39,000 ml with 9 ~ • 2825Harbor8l\ld. -.-.eva Good lnventoey in at.ock. , 831·1257 ~ ~ ..... !.~..!'""". u: SM95/trade759-Q21SO C ,,, ... ....._/ camper , balbrm Ir CoaUMesa 979-2500 Hunywblletbey laat! '72Wp.navyblu,rfrack . .__ H .. O -• ~ --•""" .,.. • .._ 9 I lO shower self contained, '72 SlO 4-d.r. Needs won. Mlbc:&.I Mint coad. $1900 firm . ..--... ,.
HP li .. e "'e-Wied 3 ._;..a. WE BUY .wW\J~-..... \MM> """' """"'
0
···············-······ • .. •• ... -dual batteries, en1lne .. -uu--... MAZDAJ9SM.&l&:J _... ....,,....,.....,... ~~=~~-.....;.,~ ti~ MA ~---D-6..J.1 SEA UJ BO TS ••••••••••••••••••••••• . f . ~....., , ..... ~ • .._ -· _. no:ur• · A air, roo air, camper v•or-~Harbor Blvd. PHIL good cood., 150 lb freeur s~· Royal Coachman Jacb dual __ .. _ t. b' USED c •15 ~ ....,... ..... UMd
Compartment *"'0/bl t Cabo c b • ~us ig · A Oat.sun '7S 280Z "''lv•r ""°a A 11~ LONG -See ua at the Newport In ver mpr, as ever· t1retJ anU .. way ba •· C"' • 'GARTH • "" "' 6 .. 1t5700 ofr. Baker'• rack, Jt •"'--a•-, .. -. n...._,,,. ........ n, tncl""'u .... ~ • r ... IU.rl.I w/bilt lot, A/C, All·FM, ,._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• FORD ..., .. _. uuw u.o .... -,.,...... -. trans cooler. Real clean UaedCarllgr t i d XI ·~ P'eeft w/itau shelves, avallable,Aprtl27-30. maUctoilet837·780Z $1.9115. See at 179 E.18th 540-5e30 ouver w 0 ow. nl ... ~ 9756 -9905
3'" wide szo . .._.., HAIUUSOM'S Tnlcll Ir Camper: 67 Ford St. Cll. 548-1487 oood. 538-1'191 eves ....... •••••••••••••••• •••• .. •••••••••••••••••
WaJtan Line DeaJen Belt SEA RA y IOATS ~ Ton Ranger w 110W 4 ~A.a 9ir50 '72 Dataun 1200, 4·apd, # l DEALER IN U.S.A. '.!!_~mA Ja..~ .. D ~c:
Vi brator Exe rciser 3l01Coutu-v NB cab-o\ler camper. Sips 6. "_"'"... 81 A/C, All·FM siereo, --· ~ .
xtru. $2200. 8C7·9821 COST .. MES.. ~7 CARVEi '2.200. 673·0200 day1, l50/bstotr.m.-i 631-25..7"' . F\lUy sell-coot'd. Many •••••••••• .. ••••~•••••• 2828 HARBOR BLVD radials. Xlntcood. $1350. ~ aOY perfeet, a .ooo orig m1.
Mii •I••-!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! COSTAMESA . ,. ~ IOllS·ROYCE se.«Nleveetwlmds.
W....., IOll 18' South Cout Clusic Two campers, $4SO, & ·~ J-.. n. AGt "' '725 tMeJ•""-" 1965 Rambler Classic t"••-••-O..,O•·---•••••••••••••••• era Marine Eng. lllnl $325, gas/elec r efrig. ~ . Wlmv1 ••••••••'•••••••••••••• ........,. .. Kii wp. Orig. owner. 83,800 .... __ c:-,_
Would Ute to buy, re· ::f'. 517~· 675-9016 <ill 10-5, 63J.1174. #I Ill C411,_. U$ID CMS! '7Uat Spyder. Excel. COD· ....... ml. Good local traoa.1---------uonabq ~two bed, eva. ' • t tclwl.ad.... 9140 100 pis. ot pa We're the ~ Chevrolet di lion. Malle orr er. ClOSfO WNOAYS $Y7S. C.ll before noon 11'11 Graoada ESS. white :!;! t~ tb~ :"·f•;: *<R ... u-21•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FREI ~_! m ~-·~ 77CH.562evealswlmds. '76 SU\ler Shadow. Im· aQYday.912-Ul2S ' gray ltbr interior. ' " _....,,._ un Moped Almost Uk with the purchase of any n..... ...cuter. '"' n....,.. Brand oew 78 Flat 124 Loaded. $1000 Ir pay.
room. Call &t.S-7157 eV1 Twin Z25HP, Fut. Great 4 S225tbest ti Call new Jeep with this ad your used car! Spider Calvert. AM /FM, mac. condi G::~':ob~. "15 Gtti::"li ~· A~d· meat..e3-7282aft5 Pll
before10pm.Pvtpt.y. torFlahlDl.Loadedwtx· ~.64.S-:JOZt 0 er. ovaSTOCKED' JOE ste reo cus .• owner ::..:~ .. ~.m.mi·evs ~.. es,
ta.lal ~1~., ~~Jo>' new. eva, . 82 now available. Call & MAC ptBSOtf tramrd oveneas, l8800 ~"' ~ 1 owner 631-o31rf ·~ =· ~~;:y
• p -• IOIJ •-. '77 Peugeot, xlnt cond, save$$$. orbestolr.~ 67 Silver Sba dow, lefl eves stereo. Call after ~.
---••••••••••••• .......... / 40MPH. 80MPG, xlnt COSFAMESA CHEVROLET .._. 9727 band driv_e, ele1ant. Mel& HIO 54MWn6.*9QO,
Soundllasterl>rwnSet Q.-1tf 9050 trane. CaU 8C7·2UXJ aft AMC-J• 21Auto1ROent.eErDrive ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714-793-4808,546-0075 -••••••-•••••••••••••
Blue 1paitie_. =1J11ood --• .. ••••••••••••••• 6pm. :tVIN "15 Buick Sllytart. alr, SACIJFICE ! --..11 ~..1. 2$dll4CCISTHa~,!!~d. 7L•-7J22 •~U--l'Wf .._...~ ... r. Charter 60' Pluab yacht. Molarcr:::-/ n•~ .,... mtnmTU....., ' .... ' B~utl ful ~75 LTP c:::=•*"•01s ~.~e!f~·~~!h· •• ~: ..... :.!!~~ 17141549-1023 ..._, ,,1w HOM~YCars !:}.~~~ ....... -.. !?!~ io ==-=:~. :h?t:~b::; to::.•i!
........................... W 9060 Suzuki 80, Hadaka 100 "lln4Dodae Powel'Wagon, ....................... Toet.ooee"'-1 l90llYOU Sood cood, new Ure1. mUea1e. $3000/flrm.
2 matchh:a1 steelcue ....................... 80.mlnl·bike,othen. 5-pasaeoger cab, 4&4, G1 1.. t701 m.LY<MM' AJC.Sl250.-.-S t-cn_-3540 ______ _ deak~ •/coordinated FUJI. YAMAHA P.P. 644-l605 !5000iclfer. a43'4 ....................... UNIVERSITY TOYOTA. •• IUv\era. Xlnt CODd. muat aeU 75 Ford ~~~il 1-fil. x ~: DIA' as 76 ,_.. ........ 400 '71 lotern.alional Trval, 74 SUIAaU WGM a..... SEE us• Ab, eluate. $1800/t.t. Pmto Squire wa1on. air
wing, like new, retaU YedltBrokerage Call ~aft5pm ~T,3'5cuin, $?-500. P/S, 4 cyl., 4 apd., radio, .._. C.. • &MC MAROUISTOYOTA M418D,Mf..1829 cond, ~~·~er
price over $1400. All ' LkttnpWanted! '74 750 Yamaha Rebuilt auto,A/C.631·2801. beater. (Llc.142KXD>. Trails MJSsJONVJE.iO C r1: 9915 =·bestoff~r . .:.n:.·
pieces t&OO. ·BY all or Sa It•••• engine 8uJll great~ ac!!'..00~~=~ Costa~~B~9640 131.JU049~1210 ....................... "7SPintoRunabout.,4cyl, "*'· Perfed few •mall Yedrf Sales 964-ZHJ . Tndm 9560 tax 6: license . Der. -4 a Pd , A II • F II office. m-OUl8 2618Newport Blvd. cn79 cu A p R .-.8 2S ·-cvcc '75 Celica, GT,$ apd. Air ~Be ch '72 Hooda 750 CC FuU ........ ••••••••••••••• .,.... ...... • · · ... · on urn• stereo/cassette, Xlnt. ,.__ & °"1ml 1090 <n•> m-~u dress, low mileage ex· 71 a CAMIMO approved credit. Good Condition cond., stereo, clean· cood. lfusuell/make ol·
•••••••• .. ••••••••••••• cellent cood. $950. CONQUISTA. Auto., $2S00.496-&C77 $3150. 7S-7Sl.3 fer. 7:il-1742.
C..bforyouroldpianol OJIQ~l, race/cruiae, 84H308 pwr . steerin1, air , 77TOTOTAPU '71Honda600 Sdn, lo mi, '71 SRs, alnt. c:oad, 20,000 • 70,.....L: CoasUluaic t bao ol saila, loaded . AJl /Pll 1tereo tape, W/CAllPER S HELL. AM/FM,rnag wbls, mi, FK 8 trk stereo, :TDW..,..
Ml-G271 W/equip.PPs.56-fl.33 769AnlkiRll250165().~D Ser.am. L 0 .. m i l e • . 847·'1761 1D8U1Uru&IS-!r70:2 "50•631--0913
Wurlltm Orcu. liiOail -. tJOOPti/salls, ~"J;.~= For:eJP. S5n5 ;f~~~-7 /.0fMO. 'T1 CcnlJa wan. auto, air • 196fYalco1il"iifura~kyf,
4J40tim0. trtr, sz:m. Pvt l)Q. (7H) • 38mo. l'i00clown1ncludet ~ 9730 AM/Fii, $100. over Mao. P IS. 9!00. ot trade
&H-GIS1aft4:30pm SZlllaftlpm. ..._...._..S.V '77CH1Vl/2TOM ta& • Jlceo1e. Def. "•••••n•••• ...... -. ...... , .. S...'1738. OVER 100 831for~torcycle. P.P . -/S• 160 PICKUP. va. ' wbeel .._,.,
S' 1 .,.... 1094 tr SpUtt eat w ltrlr Uled -•• dri A 11 /Fii p s sm5JM A.P.R. Sll.O oa '71 Ja& E type, 2+z. vu ...... "-''-Del·--w A -• ,. .A "I' 1 .ACS • • -•••••••• .. •••••••• ve, , I , _ ___. __..., .-.... · cc.w n-..• of •~ ~ -"'· """uu, ~ ....,,.. H4S ••••••-•••••••••••••• once. rainbow s alla n-• ... _ . P /B, 41pd .• custom _.,...,..,.;.-. ......,811',_. ~ .. r. orl1 ow11er, AM/FM
Pool Table•~ Bmnrll '11DO.mec7 · -" • U77 _..eeut.l'fe wlleeh " tire1. (Ser. 55!"'81 stereo, idlmac $299S. TOCHOOSIROM Frm E Coad. d . lfotorbome or Minim· JlallSO> .. of!D.1.-971ir 98M031. AT ALL TIMIS 19118, Uncoln Con· • ac. la· Hobie 16, ·aood cond. motorhome'lrom Herb · _ -81 .. tlaeotal, xlnt cond., asaembled, full equip. Xtru. $1400 Priedlander. Call aQJ .,., _ .................... '71 Cellu.LU\becll, auto, stereo, tape deck. leath •
xtru Bit o1:r b)' llaJ s ~631-11166 tbe11ownben um ~vert. Xlnt coad. air, All/PM s tereo, NabeJS int., air, claaic coupe. 675-1154 lfM777 Nupe.;,m. .Uv/blk inter. Immac. IKJO/bstoffer.846-2782
-Tl C.taliu 2S, VHF, knot s-1m f73.4889 • 6625'18 Cadillac . WANT ACTION! meter, w/or W/OU1 trlr. ~,. Alfm"-o t705 Mllcmr 9950 -ClaMi(~Ads~ ~-JUPll 121-tlll n¥••«ft'••••••••••ff• 66Karman6bia,goodfor ¥a .. w .Ii 9770 ••-............... .. 1974 Spyder. Ivory /Blk, parts, does run, call·--•••••••••• .. •••••• 2600 H.1rllor Blvd. ORANOECOUNTY'S
... llll••••llllli••••••••&.•11111am•mim•• '631nterD'l PU. Short box, ong owner, abarp. pp. «-31131. $&iCIO or best of. WE IUY & 58.L C11<ilJ Mt'\,! 540·'1100 M1W15T
.... wbt spoke wbla, trg knob-n .. '76&Qt fer. LINCOLN-... ERCURY
TellMOm
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This Momer's Day send Mom a Grc:eting all th~
world ca.il share on Sunday, May 14th.
Ex~ess your love in a Daily Pilot Mocher's Day
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DAILY Pl(()T ..
-------·--
bie1, 4:CYI eng. Ofr. VOLISWAGEMS • 9'1!Ml&Jor754--0146 Allll 9707 ..._.. 9731 . DealenhiptanowdPEN
---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ... •••••••••••••••••••• LaraestSelectaoo d i6 Seville. RR griU. RAY FLADEIOE 77CHIVHOYA '71 •nns C! pd . Fii . InTheArea!!! tape. crse, loaded. PP. lJNCOLN·llERCURY ~·-·~ 4 I •all', ' '61 alU!.. $699 ~ 55797SOeVI Auto •• PIS. P/B, raQW, m1Dt. $1350. 754.3751, ..._ . . l~llAutoCeaterDr. ~)~l top. CUc:. 67MIB3 eves. <055DLL> .. Cad 4-dr DeVille, all SDFwy-Lake Forest exit
.uwnA.I. ~--.cw '701UCi $199 power, top condatlon. JRVINE
.. , .,., tOZl.BEJ) ~-830-Mll 130.7000
75 FOID Cosier
21.000 mi. 4 apd., racllo, helter. (Llc.1Cl8138). szm ...... tt.wo.
3Smo. S600 down llldudes tait 6 llcen1e. Det
... M. A.P .R. $18.0 on
aplJIOWld credi&.
G rotti ChpvrolPt
I 82 1 I ~ach l l•d
Hu.,h "'l'on l~c><h
847 -6 087 S4 9-ll31
Jl'10 GMC lell'Yice body,
w /ladder' • conduit rack.
'2,000. Call 556-3131
Jl'10 CbeYJ .. Ton. 46,000 mt. deluxe cab, 350 auto,
w/alr, P/S, P/B, alide in 8' camper W /bOal CU ·
ner. equip'd w/bvy duty
trlr auacb. CB, $3500.
EWIS Naapm, 548-3387.
"'15 CbeYJ LUV lllkado
P.U. Xlnt cood. Xtra.a. ...,_...,.15f1
1978BMW1s
HERE NOW!
COMPLITI
IODYSHOP
MOWOP84
DC9 1 1MT
SILIC1IOM °' IMWUSAl.IS
We may bave )'OW' om
carlnourloventory. Call
uat.oday!
$4Sper-=: El• Clualc 1970 whl El '72 Monwgo Wgn. 49,000
lkii10ti lBOl.01: O.A.C., Dorado la good cond. mi. Xlnt eond. Pbooe
9740 A.P.R. 23.76 percent: Frnt whl drive, vinyl ~1806all5pm.
....................... ::!.~·$lca>.oo iA 24 ::ea ':'b~~acu=: O..•bll 9955
1971...ZUO WESTGEIMAN ..... ·-.................... .
SEDAN. With stereo, ....,.... '73 Vtst.a Cruiser 9 pass
c:rWe control. pwr. win· IWOITS H2 wgn, SoRf, PIS. P /8 •
dows. air coad. • low 1*HarlJor Blvd., C.11' •••-•• ... ••••••••••• A!C. Fii racllo, l owner ~ <51711JU. Lease 714l64Ml20 • • Aslrinat247S&t.S-1119
S177.04MOMnf YOLKSWAGIN • • '72 Delta sa 2 Dr. a ir.
p I u 1 t a " . c a • • beater P IS P /8 radio
cos t ·$ll,3t s.oo : r e S•a 51nfce • it 29M actual miles $1300
aidual·$8152.S'2; 48 moo • it &eS009 P.P.
open end lea1e wtt Top Dollar • • io Toronado. lmmac. in
equal moothlY paymen Paid for Used VW's • • ai out. Penona1 car of ex· or $11'7.ot pl~ ~ Ca ~TH • • ec. Nu steel radials, rblt
reductioo-$1000.00: Pa MOTOaS • » running c:.nd. PP. $1200.
only $1440.66 to take de Sltlce I tSJ • it Dys 979-31185.. eVI 7SQ273
llvery OD approve u.-.. So. D-1-t.ol Jt lit> --.a-ff57 c r e dit. Total o -~ ~ pay rnenta-$1007 .81 SaotaADa ROGER MILLER SAYS. • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Other mode.II to 14"°2,JQ '\.ow Pricett.. '7S Pinto Runabout. Mu.st
OWtelCOUMTY'S from. :X~~No. of LIA.SING rieiltrm~~:;!z.
OLDISTG '72Bul.loodcmd,deao, 494-IUt 546-H'7 ..,._... H60
IJl.Z040 4tMf49
nm well. IOOd tires, t.rlr ···~··•••••••••••••• •• 1*ch. $2500.M).T31W 11J'74 Pl.1. Satellite Sta.
'73 Z!OD, stick, lee bl•-, .,_. d I W•d ~ P IC! P /8 c1ean. lluat sell! -.J;;. • • "• aee • eoi ne ... ·• '~ • .,._,_ "-·1-.• -uloo -~ ~ --e Air. Urea, trans. -----;::..=:,.__• 637-3321. -··-s5T~~ Cooler, a l r shocks • ~ ... ._., ...._ trailer bitch. CB •Radio
1'f1 Bl Camino. lull pwr, Jlalll Y~ BMW ·:_ 450SEL, ~· ove '11 atper Beetle auto loci. Good Cond. $1,800.
xlmCODd.,38,000m.l. Net 1540Jambotee °!.~ __: new nidia1s l ~ aO 921S.Oraqe,S.A.
Price $4,750. 752.1317 NewportBeacb ~ ~-·· • ..:... • 1 __ ;..._. ______ --------~. ml a, $1850. -..ens •P!ymoutb Valiant '72 4
~.131·1at W281SE4Grldedu. PIS W BtJS. Xlnl cond. New llalibuClauic, laDdau doc)r, Sl.350. Pvt party.
• Dawm PU, nu cltcb, ~ AM·FM. Ex· ens. clutch. tlres. Stereo tcp, nu Unle, JI.lat cond. m.im.
water pump. c:ust. paint, aft6Pll,M$.:i:,an· Cal tape.t2500/olr4N a.I i·dr, air. 68,000 ml'a. •--------~~ ·~g& ~~ "15 ~~~ UU 1tereo W lboo9ter, I ST & HOAOW~Y '11 &.1per BuaJ, rblt eQI.' ' 41,000 mi. alOl'DinO lll nm pod. $1200/betol'r. SANTA AMA 72.2SOCM~. new bratn. dutcb fl 71 Monte Carlo, air, 11. 138·6508 til 11. tcz.mtafts:ao 835-3171 l ldoLcoocl.,ta950. paint. Clean. '2200. AM/FM, Wt •bJ, •JIOrt 838·5510. lv au1.
lMUlnMA'90MINGMACMHI m.37•~ ga..'1517 wba, all pwr, xlllt eoud, Madl11t. '71 O.tl\ID truck. Mech. *. USID IMW ._ 28C8E unrool •it mat aee! SGDO. S&.eve _.......; _____ _
IOGDd. ...-bodY ~ •* • a ' • '77 SOver Bus. 1nrf, so-s1norl75-2117 t965 sroo. .,_.. '1120Clll41Pd (75314) new en,., Una. Very NEW! lo llGrace 1200 ....... •••••••••••••••• "' iuoorru~ <121Gll1> de1Ul.f1N'llO mL~ ' "73 MCllM Carlo LaJ:ldAiu. uu uo For SP u 1a
'74 ~t IOUDd proollnt, 'TUOOIZ4rpu•KBV •SLSU"'° auto, 2l.Olll Immae. "11b eqajp'd. l PlNbbd lo all, to.ded Puts valley abell. Boot "J551lAuto. (tWITV). Sharp. "70o 0, Offer· • VW N.w pablt. brb, onr. '2500/olr. Ill.tat, llbnew: "1116. sn.sa12: tdl50.811-Sl5i "1530GIZ4rpdAUTllUK ..,,..... ' cluccb, reblt en11ne, m.mt mto1eevs. '
"JO lm11'ra.elal}~ya. PS, '77=.f sr.~> If CLASSIC 300SL = ..... .... pp "JO 9tlldoa Wa. Ilic. p IS. Alen s. '· su.u. W1n.
PB. AC. auto. Am /PM I QMeilll Oii i •I! a~-.. ___. P JB, roof Nek, S100 or mint c.u..t sbrt 1• ml trt, duaa aaa tanka,• qt -· 5 topa, -WVWbus. 8ody6pablt belton..C1H30ll PP • ...U · · •IBelt otr. --cw n BMW -. loeded. cond., IJVl "'1· ..r..siss aJot. nblt ieoocc ••· Clll _.., ... 1 .,74 -.uao --i• --..11008 lt7f &SOSL lllot coDCI wino ml. 11000 flrm. i .,.,. .. -~ • • . ~~aft8pm..'7$-?m ·-··················· ._ ................... . '77 ToJota J.tpd lonl bed fllllO, l7lM0'7'7 $18.=-.or-.or.eo · 117 8 Cordoba ._J!-1 n t • a '71 CNIYY
f'Uw/SbeU.IMdedw/X· "T73IOI metallic sunrool T1 Bui, r1blt tnot. tood Blu/Wblte top iAHided llaAHATCHl .. -
tru, nu cond. Call AMIN cUI., 'a1c, iWt.i '&t MB 230SL. both l.Ollli tine, nms areat. lldt LowmUellO..._ AllbJaliU bl ~-
m.1S10aft5 CIOQd. P.P . ....-even· lvOf)' wbt, m111t .... pabi&..,.eomo C.ow."'".w ttJJ lac.mof l :.,~~~ ,.._IA••I 9510 !Ap. .,_,. ftl..-e or Ian•\ VW "11 8111. hnmae lft/· ....................... ri.lel.A ..... aleea.'.y! ....................... c.t f7tl ... .,... ClaL --...,. .... AM· •CORf 11 I IS (JllPJO).
Ui•lij •Ht • ., __ ......... _. ..... 'f'I llercMia Do. mlot PM ew. •UN. .-. • l&ICTIOM
.............. '11 Oaprt to mal•, nu ecDS. 800 ml'•• "'* 196UJAll maTOWJaa
._._...._., bnkea. ~ heaa.r 6 ...... ftrm.Sl14m '• vw Ptttlek. Oood HOWADC..Wl•t ~184140o-7119 dock. llua& •ll aJOO. q.t t7" -'-llMll..U. llOO!btl DOVBllQUA.ILITI. , ...... ..,..... ___ ..;.__~-· ..__, m..-o. -··••••••••••••••.... e .oau111.s. ... .,.. <Near ~ • .1am.-r=~~~=~=!!!!:!:::::.
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•
•
Huntington Beaeh
FOuntalD, Valley
EDITION
,.
VOL 71, NO. 122, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
J
ORANGI: COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoek8
TEN CENT
... Trash Strike Hard on : .. Dri.,ers Too •• !
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of ... O.lly P'tlet ltaff
A year ago, 23-year-old Juan
M . Tapia g_ave up rus part-time
truck dliving job in Los Angeles
when he found full-lime work In
Huntington Beach.
Two weeks ago, the father or
three walked off his new trash
truck driving job with Rainbow
Disposal of Huntington Beach
and has spent hlS days since
then mardl.ing back and forth in
--front of the company, carrying a
picket sign.
Tapia, who llves with bis wife
and young children in Loag
Beacb, ls one of more than 400
Teams ters on strike against
private disposal firms that serve
more than a million Orange
County residents.
The strike is creating
hards hips for residents who
have to haul their own garbage
to the dump. It's also hard on
o.lly "• ~.., hllk• O'O-n
TRASH MOUNTS UP, BUT THAT'S STRETCHING THINGS
Costa Mesan Gets Around to Throwing Out Christmas Tree
Tapia.
So far. he said, the union has
pro1»ised strike funds, but he
hasn~t seen any. He and hls wife
are dipping into their savings.
··1 like the job," Tapia said.
"But we need more money and
job guarantees." '
Tapia said bis famil)' has
found it difficult t-0 live· on his
$4.50-an·hour wage. His children
,, ranse in age from '2 to 5 years.
'1And we don't have guaran-
tees on the job.•• Tapia said. Re
said any misconduct, even an
accident that Isn't the driver.'s
fault. can lead to immedjate dis·
missal.
Tapia also said drivers are re·
quired to take their coffee
breaks while they're dumP,{ng
rubbish at the county traoater
station. which means they don't
really get a break.
Asked about incidents of
violence that have marred the
strike in other cltJes. Tapia said,
"When guys break a strike,
everyone gets mad. It's the
same here. I get a little mad."
This is the first strike he's
ever been involved in, Tapia
said. He :taid he'd rather be
working ....... on terms he ~an ac·
cept. 1
Until then, he said. "I'll wait."
SeeinJ a different side of the
strike 1s Stan Tkaczyk. vice·
president of Rainbow Disposal.
for which Tapia works. '
The firm is currently lJlring
and training nonunion drivers to
man its trucks.
''The strikers have a right to
stand out there if they want and
I have the right to run my
trucks," said Tkaczyk, himself a
former truck driver.
The strike. Tkaczyk said, ''has
a tremendous adverse effeet on
the business." He said he
(See STltlKE, Page AZ>
J
County Judge Sentences
. "\ .
Triple Slayer to Death
Anaheim
.~Resident
Killed
A man convicted of three
murders a nd who allegedly
claims to have . committed two
more undetected killings was
sentenced lo death today in
Orange County Superior Court.
It was the first such imposi·
lion of the death penalty in
Orange County and only the
see~d ,jn the sta~ 6inee eapit~
punishment was reintroduced to
criminal law last August.
Gregory John Teron Jr .. 25,
who defended rumself during the
non-jury trial that led to his con·
viction by Judge Kenneth E. Lae
on charges of nrs t degree
murder, said he will not appeal
the 'death penalty.
Manacled hand and foot.
l Break Seen in OC .
Teron remained impassive lo·
day w~ Judge Lae. ftesilantly
pronounced the death penalty in
a ht.ashed courtroom. _
Obviously distressed, Judge
Lae collttted his papers on the
bench, took orr his glasses and
then s t a rted to leave the
courtroom. 1 · Strike Negotiations
t l
I
The federal mediator in the
two-week·Uld Orange County
trash strike said today he is op-
ti m isli~ about negotiations
between drivers a nd manage-
ment.
"I expect a break in negotia·
lions tomorrow," mediator John
Courtney said, noting he will
mee t with Teamsters and
management at 11 a.m Wcdnes·
day. ·
Courtney s aid very little hap·
pened Monday. when he met
with both sides for about three
murder were Rafael A. Ramos,
29; Rafael R. Ramirez, 24; and
Daniel M. Cano, 21, all or Santa
Ana.
However. police said that.
wh~ arrested, the three were in
possession only of two BB guns
and that no bullet had been
found in the cab of the trash
truck. However, investigators
said they haven't dismissed the
possibility that a gun might have
been thrown from the station
wagon before It was stopped.
hours. On Saturday, Teamsters Pellets were !ired al two new.
voted down wbat managers of ly hired Laguna Beach trash col·
seven struck firms had termed leclors Monday, leaving a hole
their final offer. in the window of a Laguna
The drivers have been out on Beach Disposal truck. No one
strike since their three-year con· wa~ injured.
tract expired April 1.7. Mo re Arid in Buena Park, three men
than a million Orange County res-in a car reportedly pulled up
idencs have been without trash alongside a trash truck and one
disposalserviceslncethen. of them aimed what appeared to
Violence intensified Monday be a handgun al the driver of the
as some trash trucks began roll· truck but didn't fire. in~ agam wiUl newly hired noav..._ Even before the-new drivers
union drivers. -were hired, fires had caused
The most serious incident OC· damage to several trash trucks
curred at M G Disposal in and Anaheim Disposal was bit
Fullerton, Monday afternoon, by a $15,000 firebombing.
when three mea in a station Drivers are seeldng a raise
wagon allegedly fired one shot rrmom $4-50 to $8.50 an hour
at three employees in the cab of over a three-year period.
a trash truck. _ Management Jlas offered 16.
Arrested cin suspicion of as· Management also bas offered
sault with a deadly weapon and full dental coverage, as request.
assault with Intent to commit ed, but reportedly not the five
days sick leave per year that
drivers are seeklng.
Peat»ek Pick
O/L.4Rania
Elvis Peacock, a neet
runolng back from the
University of Oklahoma,
was selected by the Los
An&eles RarruJ as their In·
ilial plck In the National
Football League draft to· day.
Th• Rams' plck came ln
• the 218t round.
Two Southland
llnebact.rt were chosen
on the openin1 round.
VSC'• ClaJ Mattlrews
went to Cleveland and Dan
8un1 from Loni Beach
State was liJected by the
San FrancliCo &n,
Foe ectdJUOn&J deUlila on
the draft. aporta. Pae~
81.
.. LOS ANGELES <APl -
California Attorney Genera\
Evelle Younger today named 92
state residents wbo a state re-
port concludet are linked to or-
aanlted crime acUvlUea costlni
CaUComlans '8.8 bilUon a year. ~ormer Newport Beach Police
Chief B. JatUff 01 ... a. who
thalred tbe task fore• •hlch
prepared the •pa'e ~. told
a newa confe~:
"I hope that. bUslMllsnen wUl
be able to UM Ulla document lA
identtr)'lna penont they mil• • bave dealiap "1th."
The report rel••aeO ~
Youn•er alt.be news c6ofeNGe.
alao ••v• lbe hom• addr._.. of
tba 92 lndlvidpal1, includln1
Sidney R. Korabak, • Lot
Spr_lng Tradition He turned back. looked at the
silent Teron and told him: "May
God have mercy on your soul.
Mr. Teron."
Earlier. Judge Lae con·
demned T e ron as a "ver y
callous killer who can no more
remember how many people he
bas killed than some people can
remember how many cups or
cotree they drink in a day."
Third graders at ~qe Ocean View School
District's Vista Vie w School in Fountain
Valley perf().rm traditional Englis h
second and third graders at the school
danced under the Maypole Monday as
part of age-old rite of spring.
•Maypole d an ce. More than 150 first.
Judge Lae recalled from the
bench that Teron told orricers
who booked him for the killing of
<See DEATH, Page AZ>
Dissension .Hits Jm-y .
Panel 'Umequestered' ill Waddill Trial
Councilman's
Car Smash~d
In Huntington
By TOM BARLEY Of tM D.tfty ......... ,
Dissension ed dissatisfaction
appear to be growing facto~ lo·.
day in an Oran.ie County
Superior Court jury that is try.
ing for the eighth day to reach a
verdict in murder trial of Dr.
William Baxter WaddiO of Hunt·
Vandals smashed tl'le window lngton Harbour.
of a car belonging to Huntington Both Cactors became increas-B~_ach City Councilman John ingly apparent during the late
Thomas while he was attending afternoon Monday when the
a council meeting Monday night. complaints of juron led Judge
The incident was reported to James K. Turner to decide that
poll-at 11 48 the panel can no longer be se· .,... ; ~p.m.
Police sald that a blunt instru· questered.
ment was uied to shatter the The nine •mate and three-.
rear window of the new female jurors and the male
automobile. alternate jurot' all returned to
The glu1-w~s-amashed wber& their homes Monday ni&ht after
Thomas bad placed a "Thomas making it clear to Judge Turner
for Council" political sticker. t~at continued sequestra,lion at .No suspects have been ap· tt\eir Holiday Inn would mean
prehended. 'l'he e stlm•ted the endofjurydellberations.
damage is $1SO, police 'tid. "-. Defense attorney Malbotiir
Commission ldentJfied 200 adat·
tional persons believed linked to
crime, but Y~ger said their
names would not be released
publicly to protect source1 or
witnesses of because data on
their activj_Ues was not current
ot adequat~ ¥tailed.
"We've ne'ler ~poohed It,'
Yquneer said. ··aut or1anbed crlrn Is not the probllll.m In
CaUlomt• that lt 15 1r some.
Ea1tern atates wllh eosnparable
J)Opolatl~"
Olay111 ••Id thal cohe1lve
lelde....,ip1 under Lanu has
been .. ~1tabllshed, In Notthem
California, "but in Soutbert
Watson said jury foreman John
Thomas of Lo6 Alamitos to~e
judge that the attitude of
sheriff's deputies assigned to
escort the Jury led to objections
being filed with Judge Turner.
"They weren't being treated
as human beings," Watson said.
"We doJJ't want an unhappy. an·
gry )ury Jlnd we don't want them
taking, it out on Dr. Waddill just
because we were the first to ask
that they ~sequestered."
The det.nse .QJotion for se-
questration wu denied shortly
before the jury began dellbera·
lions a week •o· But Judie • Turner later de·
cide~ to &~•l off bis jury when be
became ~eerned_about 'grow-
ing press ac~unts 9r and com·
ment oo the trial.
Judge Turl)er himself seemed
imsettled about 6 p.m . Mon(lay
after an afternoon of interviews
don t beJleve a single le~der In
Southetn CatHornJa b as
emeried to replace 1tron1man
Nick Licata. who died four years
a10. The attorney general said
today's report will be tolfowed
later tAi.I Year by a second docu.
ment concemed with t.errortam,
prif'on 1an1s and outlaw
motorcycle l&ftlS•
Of ttQl'ibat, the repqrt aald:
"Hla aame bu been linked wtlh
or1anllicf cttme for more than
30 y11rt, lad be w t>Mn the •ul>J•et or -.everat Ol'(anlied
nJme lnve1tlc•ttolh. A U.S. Justice Del>artmeat 'Oft'ltlal tw dffcrtbN~k~k Ha •ten10r 'adY\Hr' to o,..aaiaeCS ~nm~
<W aBPOaT, P ... Al>
with bristling jurors and anxious
lawyers.
He orde red spectators and
news people in his crowded
courtroom not to try and follow
jurors out of the courtr~ and
into the corridors.
••Jury ta mpering is a felony,''
he warned. And he th.en a~ed
jurors to· report to him any at·
tempts to contaet them about
the trial.
THe rapidly deteriorating at·
mo15phere or the trial included
the reported comment by a juror
that she had suggested reaching
a verdict by Clipplng a coin.
Judge Turner talked to Mrs.
Patricia Lowrence of Hunt-
ington Beach after the comment
<Set DOCTOR, Pa-ge -'2> -
Coast
Wea·ther
Low clouds late tonight
and Wednesday morning,
then most s unn y
Wednesday afte rnoon.
Lows tonight 48 to 56. Highs
Wednesday~to'12.
INSIDE TODA~
A t1gllled ·woman /irW in
Bratll~ o chance to 17tar. the
beauiu and loti1t tltat have made MY' l/c nch. ~ Page
84. ....
,,
.12 DM.V PILOT HF l~!Y· Y!X g, 1971
. Suit. Seen as Shopping Center Sunk
•1 llOaEaT Ma &a -...............
A controversial U.acre ahop.
pang center was scuttled Mon·
day ni&ht when the Huntington
Beach Cit)' Council refused lo co
ak>n1 with • necesaary zonlnll
change.
~n
I
Kindergarten
Signups Set
Registration for
youngsters who will alt.end
kindergarten in Hunt·
ington Beach's Ocean
View School District next
fall is scheduled Wednes·
day and Thursday at all
campus.es.
Hours are from 9 a.m . lo
noon and 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Parents must furnish a
blrtb ce.rtificale aod proof
or immunization again.st
measles, polio, rubella,
mumps, diphtheria .
whooping cgugh and
tetanus.
Clinics will be held next
Monday and again Thurs·
day. May 25. to give free
vaccinations to children
who haven't been in-
oculated yel. Next
week's 3 p.m. to 8 p.m.
clinic will be at Oak View
Center on Oak Lane just
off Warner Avenue.
And a May 2S clinic ts
set for the same hours at
Village View School, 5361
Sisson Drive.
Children must have
been born on or before
Dec. 2. 1973 to qualiry for
kindercarten enrollment
this September.
Tbe acUon waa taken dtlpite
tbNata ot .,.aibM l .. al action a'n4 a ~ wamhl• by Mayor
Rc$SbeUraan.
Shenkqtan said that the 4·3 de·
nlal opened the door to Utilatlon
I.bat would be difficult for lbe ci·
ty to defend.
STRIKE •••
couldn't give exact figures on
bis firm's losses.
Meat)wblle, Tkaczyk said. he
and other managers have ione
back to driving trucks to provide
essential pickups for hosplt.ls
and rest.urants.
ln response to some or Tapia 's
comments, Tkaczyk said he
believes a driver hu adequate
recourse if he's threatened with
diamlasal.
"A man does his job. there's
no reason to let him go," he
said.
"s for the (!Offee brea•s. Tkaezyk ·said, •\By Jaw they're
entitled to coffee breaks and
they're entitled to take them. l
dQJl't know what they're refer· ring to."
He said most drivers at Raln·
bow have been there between
three and four years, ~ome as
long as nine yeara.
"We take care of our people. It
speaks for itself." Tkaczyk said.
Although he was upset by an
incident this morning in which
strikers threw a bottle Ill a trash
truck, Tkaczyk said he still has
some sympathy for the in·
dividuals involved.
"I know exac~ly where they're
coming from," he said. "I've
been there."
Tkaczyk said he believes
management's offer or a hike to
S6 an hour ove.r a three-year
.period' Is fair. Drivers have
asked for a raise to $8.50 an hour
during that period. Tkaczyk ~ald
his firm isn't willing to offer
more than It already hH.
However, he said he believes
many of the drivers would Ul~e
to return to work lf it weren't for
pressure by other drivers and
118 Driver
Crashes Into --thet-'Feamstera.JJnioJL _
Concrete wall-v~--k ki
Police theorized today that • l ~llZ OWS
Thomas Eugene Rumburg fell
asleep at the •!1eel Monday Services Set night jm& before bis car crashed
tbrougb a concrete block wall in
HunUngt.on Beach. In Honti gt Ramburg, 20, of 314 UlicaD OD
Ave .. H'IJltinglon Beacb, was
listed in OJOd coodltion today at
Huntington ln\ercommonlty
Hospital with iajwies sustained
in the 8:4.5 p.m. crash.
Police OUicet' Jlm Christensen
said iD bis ecddent report that
Rumburg apparently nodded off
while driving southbound on
Golden West Street near Talbert
I\ venue.
One witness told investigators
the sedan glanced off one curb,
veered across to hit another
curb, jumped it and smashed
through the wall in a shower of
shattered masonry.
Rumburg, according to re-
ports. told Officer Christensen
he can only remember awaken·
ing to find himself with his car
nosed into the back ol a house.
Homeowner' Robert M.
Davidson. of 6951 Los Amigos
Circle. also lost some of his
landscaping.
Rum burg was not cited.
PAT'S 'TRUTH'
DISEKIS HER
Richard Nixon lied lo his wife
and to his family, just as be lied
to the country. a harsh indict·
menl and an incontrovertible
fact. according to Lester David.
And on her final day ib the
White House, the wife of 28
years listened to her tlusband
praise his mother as a saint.
Excerpts from David's bloe·
raphy or Pat Nixon continue on
PageA7
DAILY PILOT
Visitation ls scheduled tontiht
and funeral services on Wednel·
day for longtime Huntington
Beach resident Victor H.
Nitzkowski, the father tu.s. National Water Polo eam
Coach Monte Nitzkowski.
Rites for Mr. Nitzkow ·. 81,
will be Wednesday at 10 a . in
Pierce Brothe r s Sm tb's
Mortuary, where friends may
call from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. today.
A resident of "the beach city
since 1945, Mr. Nitzkowski died
Saturday.
He operated Vic's , a con·
cession on the beachfront near
the pier for many years and was
retired from the U.S. Navy,
after service as a radioman
aboard destroyers and ashore at
destroyer bases in World War I
and World War II, family
spokesmen said.
He was a member of the Dis·
abled American Veterans.
Survivors include his wife,
Ruth, his son Kenneth Monte
Nitzkowski and grandsons Jim.
Greg and Bret.
Funeral services are under
direction of Pierce Brothers
Smith's Mortuary in HunUngton
Beach with tbe Rev. Albert C.
Jan sen or the First United
Methodist Church of Huntlnston
Beach olriciAtlng. Burial Will
follow at Good Shepherd
Cemetery.
REPORT •••
groups in CaUComla. Chlcaao.
Las Vegas and New York,"
Other names on the Ust In·
elude John William Spatafore,
descdbed as a maJor
bookmaker In the San Dleso
area; Hadrian John Uberatore, ·
a former San Diego real estate
broker identified at bis 1974
anon-assault trial as ... well
connected memb..-o( oqanJeed
crime:... Rolland 61moq J.ouden
of Kill Valley, named u an aa·
soclate ol James "-limmy the
Weasel" Fratianno. a ecmricted
pimp who 11 also ldenUfled as
the owner of several nude ban
In the Bay Area; end Joseph
Xavier Cerrito of Los Gatbs.
Valley to Dieeaae
.. Alternate ~et
Fountain Valley Cll)' Covncll
mtmben-bavo alaled -a 8:30
p .m . budcl= 1h1d1 1H1lon toniaht to Ufl city 1pendlftl
ii PfOSM•lijoa 8, kitoW'n u ~
Bebr .....uri. la 8&>Pl"OVed tiy
Callnlriala-.. June e.
The COIDCll wlQ ttUdY.Uie,pla.D
prior to U.i rfl\ll&r 8 o'CJOcl&
mMU.n1.
He Hid that lbe City Council
1l1ned a le1al contract IHl
Au1u1t to participate In re·
developQleDt oft.he property. ... , can't lsnore the advfce of
our attorney," Shenkman said.
However. three of four new
council members -Ruth
Bailey. Bob MaodJc an<t John
Thomas Joined with Richard
Siebert In rejecting the rezoning
from raldenUal-agriculture to
commercial.
The couocll majority agreed
with proprietors already operat4
ing businesses In the immediate
vlclnlty that the new ahopplng
ce nter would ••over ·
commercialize" the area and
may cause blight and economic
hardship.
The sbopping center, proposed
for the northeast corner or
Golden West Street and Warner
Avenue. would have been
anchored by a drul atore and a
supermarket.
Voting in favor of the project,
which has been in the planning
stages for a number of years.
were Shenkman. Ron Pattinson
a nd Don MacAlllster.
A representative of Business
Properties of Irvine. the pro·
posed developer of the center.
satd his company had spent
more than $1 million on the
project
~that expenses were in·
/curred after the clty agreed to a
redevelopment contract last
August.
The City Council agreed at
that time to assist the developer
in the acquisition and consollda·
tion of small lots in the area.
Monday night's scheduled re-
zoning was the last major btn'dle
for the center.
Mrs. Bailey argued that she
.,. reared blight because of too
many similar businesses in the
area.
She said that she also had con·
cerns about traffic congestion
and the adequacy of sewers in
the area.
Pattinson. who has consistent-
ly favored the plan, took a swipe
at current business people he ";l============jiiii1(ilEJl~t=~ •M~~' claims say, "I've got mine, to I S;;~!ili~S:~~.:l,.;___ hell with you.,.,
TEACHERS PICKET OUTSIDE FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DISTRICT OFRc'Es ... IUft,.... bes~i'::'fu S:!~o~=~t~Uii\temc:
After School Demonstration Draws Attention co Stalem•ted Pay Talka veloper and avoid legal action.
"I've never been against re·
"• development for the site, just against that _proposed develop-
ment." he said.
Frei. Page A J
DOCTOR.-:.
" ~as reported to,_hfm by another
Juror.
She reportedly told the judge
that she did not intend the re·
mark to be taken seriously. She
told Judge Turner that it was de·
livered in J Oippant manner and
said that she said it to lighten
the mood of a depressed Jury.
Judge Turner appeared to ac·
cept Mrs. Lawrence's explana·
lion and denied an immediate
motion for a mistrial by defense
attorney Charles Weedman.
Weedman and WatsorualdJ.be
incident will form part of their
appeal if..the..juey_subsequently
convicts Dr. Waddill.
Watson described the jury as
belng "damn near evenly
divided." Jte refused to say what
led him to Ulat conclusion.
"W eddlng belts added to the
grow{M clamor Monday when
another juror told Judge Turner
that sbe,,wants to get marri~
Satdrday,,deUberations or noee-
liberaUon.s.
Judge Turner, a married man
himselt, agreed to the request of
Kathie Davis of Fullerton and
said the jW')' wUl be given a one:
day recess Saturday so that
Miss Davis can be married and
spend the wedding night with
her husbapd.
He told her that she must re-
turn to jury deliberations Sun-
day if the Jury still has not re·
ached a verdict. .
"Without her husband." the
poker-faced Watson commented
late Monday,
Th~ weary Judge Turner was
also told Monday about an inci-
dent at the hotel Sunday when a
Juror's wire screamed and
became hysterical when told
that it was time for her to leave
her sequestered husband and go
home.
Sheriff's officers who have
been accompanying the jury to
meala and the hotel say they are
the tareets or abuse by Jl.lrors
who make U clear that they are
divided on the murder trial is·
sues and fiercely divided among
themselves.
Waddill, 42. is accused of
strangling a newborn baby girl
ln the nUJ"6ery at Westmins ter
Community H06plta1 on March
2. 197'7. just 12 hours-after be
tried to perform an abortJon on
the infant's 18-year·old mother.
lt. ls alleged that he choked the
child to death after predicting
thAt the saline ln which she bad
been immersed would have
destroyed brain functions and
)eft the baby as UUle more than
a human vegetable.
BB Appoints
New Planner
. , 'V
FVTeachers
Picket in
Pact Protest
E',....PageAJ
DEATH-..;
businessman Earl Reed in
Anaheim on Oct. 31, 1975, that he
fully intended to kill Reed after
be robbed him in a motel room
and that be carefully planned Fountain Yalley elementary the killing.
school teachers picketed district The judge said Reed was
administration offices for two savagely beaten to death with
hours Monday afternoon tQ pro-the same kind of callous Intent
test deadlocked ·contract that Teron displaye"&i in two
negotiations. other murders, both committed
Teacher group leader· Yale in Michigan.
Wishnick said the after school Teron was serving a life sen-
pickets may continue all week. tence for murder in a MicbJgan
· Wishnick. Fountain Valley prison in 1977 when his boasting
Education Association CFVEA> about tbe-mlU'der ot1te~diedto
president, said the m!jor..J!i!.eute'-.... b ..... i .... s a.uat!or the Orange County
m 1he stalfed contract talks in· killing. · •
vo lves demand for a half-hour Before he could be returned
planning session for teachers here be strangled and killed a
each Thursday. fellow prison inmate and was
The FVEA chief said teachers tried and convicted for that kill·
and administrators have not had ing. Again, be was sentenced to
serious discussion on the salary life in prison.
issue. Teachers asked for a 12 J.udge Lae recalled that
percent across the board pay Teron 's first murder involved
hike ih their initial proposal. the killing or an elderly woman
Teachers and Fount.in Valley who was beaten Into un ·
<elementary 1 school dlstrfct ot-consciousness and then choked
ficials have met three times to death by being hung from the
with state-appointed mediator foot of her 6ed .
William Drohan with hopes of
breaking the deadlock.
But Wishnick said Droban's
efforts have been fruitless.
District officials are expected
to make a statement on the
situation but could not Im·
mediately be reached for com·
ment.
J
Corpse ~ound
With 15 Dogs
SYDNEY. Australia CAP> -
Police found the remains of SJ.
year-old Mervyn Sallows and lS
starving, vicious dogs when they
broke into a Sydney house today.
The policesald lhe man apparent·
ly bad been dead for about a week.
The police went lo the bous~
after the local mailman reported
he had not seen Sallows for
seveMldays.
Orange County officers claim
that Teron has bragged &bout
two other murders; a woman in
Anaheim and a ·man who was
murdered in an eastern state
because he bumped Teron's llt·
ble while Teron was drinking in
a bar.
They claim tt_iat Teron has told
them be raped two women In
Orange Couhty and has not been
linked to the incidents.
"I believe him.'' Deputy Dis·
trict Attorney Ted Millard said.
"This guy has no reason to lie
about these other crimes and I
accept bis stories and believe
that he did these things.·•
Judge Lae also noted today
that Teron has m9de many
threats to Orange County Jail
deputies who have been told th~t
Teron Will knife them If he ever
regains his freedom.
"It is the finding of this court
that the sentence of death should
be imposed," he said.
Former_CitJLCouncil..member.
Al Coen, who represented exist-ig merchants opposed to the
(ew cen~r. suggested that the
area be designated for a movie
theater. bowling alley. skating
rink or similar projects.
Armed Gal
Bandit ffits
118 Station
1\--fttekte:faced;-red haired
female wearing a dazzling silver
jacltet an ran<liShing a pi!U>I
robbed a Huntington Beach
service station early today.
snatching abdut S50 and fleeing
in a small fcll'eign car.
Investigators who questioned
the female attendant on duty at
the Coin Power outlet. 6962 Ed·
inger Ave.-, said the bandit may
be the same woman involved in
a previous holdup.
Letha Davalos, the employee,
said she waa approached about
12:30 a.m. by the silver-jacketed
pistol·packer and ordered to hand
over the station's money.
money.
Investigators said Ms.
Davalos noted the woman's
rather flashy wardrobe which
included a blue scarf and the
shiny Jacket which appeared to
have a patch over the left
breast.
The woman, described as in
her early 20s. was last seen go-
ing southbound on Golden West
Street in her getaway car. polic
said.
srtJRE'S GAU
DR.4~ 3,000
Nordstrom's. the Seattle·
based specialty store. opened its
doors at South Coast Plaza with
a special gala for 3,000 people.
See Featw1ng, Page Cl. ·
...
Irvine
. \
Today's Closing .. I N.Y. Stoeks
!
VOL. 71, NO. 122, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1978 TEN CENTS,
I
.I ' l1·vine Coast Plan
• By STEVE MITCHELL J OtU.Oell, ...........
10,000·acre coastal site. destruction or paleontological
and archaeological .. sites and a
lack or low and moderate in·
come 'housing in the land use
PllUl .
Draws Criticisni
low and moderate income hous·
lng for the coastal sector. saying
the high cost of land alone would
prohibit thal lype or houslng.
ble because of a lack of fund·
ing."
Then he asked commissioners
where they thought the funding
was goini{ to come lor the
transportation corridor.
sta te purchase Of the 294·Unil
trailer park for slate park use
would a c tually reduce the
• number of low and moderate
cost units in the area.
Nearly a dozen speakers r'l marched to the podium in Hunt· ·1 ington Beach Monday afternoon to protest Orange County•s de·
velopment plans for the sprawl·
I ing Irvine Coast.
,l Their objections were heard
--.-by mem6ers or the regional
Soutb Coast Commission which
will eventually make recom·
mendations to the state com·
The commissioners heard
complaints from representaUves
or archaeological interests,
Friends of the Irvine Coast. the
Sierra Club. and residents of El
Morro Mobile Home. Park. a
community threatened by pro·
pos ed state acquis ition or
parkland in the area.
Their objections ranged from
an allegedly inadequate environ-
mental impact report prepared
for the coastal land to possible
Wesley Marx of Irvine
criticized proposed residential
development of Pelican and
Wishbone Hills adjacE"nt to
Corona del Mar. claiming earth
moving and grading or that land
will alter significant land forms
in the area.
He said Call(ornla can no
longer "afford to subsidize new
growth," clllne a proposed
roadway behind lhe coastal sec· tor as "the most expensive
freeway in the state's history."
Marx said he supports a na·
tlonal iirban park for the area.
"but the LCP (local coastal
plan> says that idea lsn 'l reasi·
"If there is no funding, then
all references to the San Joaquin
Corridor should be eliminated."
he said.
El Morro mobile home resi·
dent James Tieman joined Mar"
in his objections to a lack or Jow
cost housim~. saying a proPOSed
Dr. Walter Axelrod. a retired
Van Nuys physician who lives al
El Morro. lambasted the coun.
ty's declaralton or negative tm·
pact.
''The county said it does not
need an EIR because the coastal plan would not affect traffic,
(See COAST, Page A2>
717
l' Qlission for a ml\ster plan for the
" * * * Company
r Rebuts
·Report
Irvine Company othc1als con·
tend a report prepared by the
s taff or the regional Coastal
Commission contains "major in·
accuracies. and""'some "obvious
! misconceptions." about what the
4t trvtne Coast Local coastal Plan t is :
The Irvine Company's rebut· t tal came Monday during a meet·
mg of the regional Coastal Com·
mission on the county's pro·
posed development plan for the
10,000-acre Irvine Coast .
Irvine s pokesman Rick
Cermak handed commissioners
a five-page rebuttal or the staff
report. The rebuttal claims the
staff report "tends lo confuse is·
sues and make a meaningful re-
vie w or the plan impossible.'
~ The Irvine Co. statement also t objects to the staff's "vague ref·
. erences to possible adverse im·
' &)acts of land use changes."
lrvine officials said they obiecl
to the .. overall negal.ive tone or
the report," and the suggestion
that past concerns of the coastal
commission staff have been ig·
nored. • Th e Irvine Company
res ponded to so-called inac·
curacies including: I -A claim that the plan does
not assure preservation or land
in \ht! central and eastern por·
lions. The lrvine Company said
conservation, recreation and
, open space land use policies or
the plan cannot be changed in
; the future w\thoul Coastal Com· l mission approval.
-ThE" company counters a I claim that the land use plan will
l, "have significant adverse im·
pact on resources," by saying
any human use, public 01
private. will have impact.
--A staff comment that thE
plan would have significant lr!1f·
fie impacts which could rn·
terfere with pubUc access to the f area also is denied bi the com·
pany.
·'The plan provides for a
circulation syst e m wh\ch
enhances recreation access to
the coast and prevents conges·
lion from proposed land uses,"
company officials responded.
t
f
t
j
I
-A staff objechon which
CSee REBUTS, Page A2>
Police Slay
LA Stabber
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Sheriff's~ deputies fatally shot
Bruce E . Cazabat, 31, arter be
stabbed hls brother, Anthony,
while they were questioning him
and then lunged at the deputies.
Authorities said Monday the
Incident occurred after deputies
had gone to Cazabat 's apart·
ment in the Walnut Park section
to Investigate a dlsturbance call.
Anthony Cazabat was
hospitalized ln fair condition. •
Pea£Oek Pick
O/URama
Elvia Peacock, a fleet
runnlng b•ck from tbe
Unlvenity of OklaMina,
was selected by the Los
Angeles Rams at their in·
ltJal plck in tbe National
Football League draft to·
d•.Y· The Ram1• pick came in
the Zlat round. ·T w o So u t b l a n d
llnebacken were chosen on tb• open1~8 round. USC'• Clay Matthews
went to Cl4Weland and Dan
Buns from Lona Beach
S&.ate w11 aeleeted by the
San Fruellco 41era.
For addltlOclal detalll on
the draft., aee •ports, Paa•
111.
He also criticized the Jack or
AP•tr...-
Will Be Go Ape?
Ramar, a 350-pound m ale gorilla. was brou~ht to the
PbiladeU>hia Zoo from North Carolina ta make. JitUe
gorillas. Ramar is in qua rantine now. but tttere are
three lady gorillas in wa iling a nd zoo officials hope he is
interes ted in.mating.
DA's Office Rules
No Action in Fraud
The Orange County Di~trlct
Attorney's office has determined
that the remaining allegations or
election fraud filed in connection with the March 7 Irvine City
Council election do not warrant
legal action. Last_ month, Deputy District
Attorney William Evans report·
ed he found no evidence of voter
registration fraud at two UC
Irvine precincts. An elected can·
didate, Arthur Anthony, charged
that many or the students were
illega lly registered.
The olher charges Evans has
now written off were tha t:
-Council candidates Ellen
Freund and Larry Agran CAgran
was elected) failed to report re·
ceipt of money from the Irvine
Tomorrow committee. Evans
said that. because the commit·
tee was under the control of
neither candidate. reporting was
unnecessary.
-Agran failed to properly re·
port an expenditure for a com·
puter mailer. Agran reported a
down payment of $400 to Adven·
tus Systems of Fullerton for the
.mailer, but did ~l)ot include a
$2,100 payment made after re·
porting deadlin~ for the final
pre-election contributions state·
library _Cut See~
LOS ANGELES <P> -
Passage of the Jarvis-Gann
property tax tnltiatt\fe would
force closure or 1' of tbe 62 Los
Angeles branch public libraries
and cause 800 of their 2,000
employees to be laid off, sald the
Board of UbraryCommlsslonen. m1ss1oners.
m en ts.
Evans said that while his own
interpretation is that the full ex·
penditure should have been re·
ported as the date Agran
agreed lo pay for the mailer,
Agran's interpretation 'of the
rules was based on official re·
porting, manuals, and "was not
done with the intention to de·
cei ve the vo(ers."
-Irvine Tomorrow violated
the city ordinance limiUng con·
tributions to $250 per candidate.
The committ~ raised $526 each
for Freund and Agran. but
again, according to Evans. it
wasn 'l a violation because the
committee wasn't under the con·
tro) or the candidates.
-David Kidd. an Irv ine
To m orrow member and sup·
porter of Agran and Freund.
violated the same rules by con·
tributing both lo the candidates
and the committee.
Kidd gave $100 to Agran, S90 lo
Freund, and $250 lo Irvine
Tomorrow after it endorsed the
candidates.
By the same reasoning, that
lhe committee was an indepen·
dent aroup, Evans determined
Kidd's contributlons did not
violate the S2SO spending limit.
With his decisions, Evans en·
couraeed the city to clarify its
campaign ordinance "so that
everyone wUJ have a clear un·
derstanding of their obligations
unde.r the o1'dinance."
·•such amendments," Evans
aaid, "may in the long run save
~lb you and me time by getting
rid of complaints which are made
bee a use of the indefinite nature of
the words used in the ordinance."
ordlnance."
I
Killer of Five
I
Sentence of Death
A man convicted ol three reuow prison -inrrrate and 1"aS'
murders and,..wbo allegedly tried and convicted for that kill·
claims to have committed two ing. Agam, be was sentenced to
more undetected killings was life in prison.
s entenced to death today in Judge Lae reca lled that
-Ounge Q>wity,,SUperior-Court.--Teron's-first-murder invotved
It was the rirst such imposi· the killing of an elderly woman
lion of the death penalty in who was beaten into un ·
Orange County and only tht-consciousness and then choked
second in the state since capital to dealh by being bung from the
punish~t was reintroduced to root or her bed.
criminal law last August. Orange County officers claim
Gregory John Teron Jr., 25,
who defended himself during the
non-jury trial that led to his con· D-f,e A....,..lgs%-viclion by Judge Kenneth E . Lae ..., ••w. ·~
that Teron has bragged abotit
two oth~r murders : a woman in
• Anaheim and a man who was
murdered in an eastern state
because be bumped Teron's la ·
ble white Teron was drin1ting 1n
a bar. '
TIMJy claim that Teron has told
their he raped two women in
Orange County ahd has not been
linked to the incidents.
<See DEAnt, Page A2>
on charges of first degree
murder, said he will not appeal
the death penalty.
Manacled hand and fool,
~eron-r~lnal.neel Tmpassfve to-
day while Judge Lae hesitantly
pronounced the death penalty in
a hushed courtroom.
Families ·to GeL
'
Obviously dlat.r4med, Judge
Lae .collected bis papers on the
bench~ tOOI of( his gluses and
then started to Jeave the
cowuoom.
Coµnseling Aid
He turned back. \doted at t.lil'
silent Teron and told Him 1 .. May
God have mercy on your soul,
Mr. Teroo."
Earlier. Judge Lae con·
demoed Teron as a .. veo
callous killer who ,can no more remember how many people he
baa killed than some people can
remember bow many cups or
coffee they drink in a day.''
J.udge Lae recalled from the
bench that Teron told otticers
who booked him for the killing or
businessman Earl "'Reedln
Anaheim on Oct. 31, 1.975, that he
fully intended to kill Reed alter
he. robbed him ln a motel room· •
and that he carefully planned
the killing.
The judge said Reed was
savagely beaten to death with
the same kind of callous intent
that Teron displayed in two
other murders, bolh committed
in Mic~an.
Teron was serving a life sen·
tence for murder tn a Michigan
r>rison in Wl7 wben bis boasting
Dell' pt ........ ~
FAMll. Y COUNSELOR
Marti Malterre
about the murder or Reed led to
his arrest for the Orange County Mesan Hurt
killing.
Before he could be returned
here he stram,led and killed a In Accident
PA'PS "l'RUTW
~lrIS HER
Richard Nixon lied lo bis wife
and to his f amUy, just as he lied
to the country,· a harsh lndlct·
ment and an lncontroverllble
fact. accordJog to Lester Da\'.id.
And on her final day in the
White House. the wife of 28
years listened to her husband
pralse his mother aa a aalnt.
Excerpt.a from David's blog.
raphy of Pat Nixon conUnue on
PageA7.
Costa Mesan Steve Burgoon
was listed in sati.sfactory condi·
tlon today at Tustin Community
Hospital where he was taken
Monday following a tramc acci·
dent in Irvine.
Burgoon, 23, or 3017 Fillmore
Way. was lnjured when his car
t'Ollided with an auto driven by
Kathryn Daniels, 21. of 24922
Hayuco, Mission Viejo.
The accident occurred about
lt :SO a .m. at the intersection of
Red Hill and Reynolds avenues.
Ms. Daniels teceived emergency
medical treatment, but wasn't
hospitalized, according to police
reports.
By JACKIE HYMAN
OI .. Delly ...... Slaff
.. Wiiia J ta.a one child, l was
supermom. Then I had a second
child and I began to feel buried,
ineffective and unskilled.··
Mart1 Malterre, re laxing in
the study of her Huntington
Beach home. was describing
how she' began on a course that
was to lead her to earn her rami·
ly counseling credential and
help found the non-profit Fami· ty Study Group of Orange
County.
"I think parent education is
rea Uy a .great need." Mrs.
M alten-e said. "How would you
like to fly in an airplane wiUr a
pilot who had no training? Yet
we hand little babies to people
with no training."
For other parents who also
reel the need or further family
education. the Family Study
Group will present a demonstra·
lion inte rview at 1 : 30 p .m.
Wednesday and a followupat 7:30
p.m . May 10 at Bonita Canyon
Elementary School in Irvine. Ad·
mission is free During the presentation. a
volunteer family from the study
group will be interviewed about
their daily schedule. Through a
step-by step analysis of who
does what during the day, Mrs.
Malterre explained, an un·
derstanding can be gained of the
roles of the various family mem·
be rs.
Such examinations often tum
up power struggles between
chJldren and parents, and some
modifications of behavior will be
suggested. said Mrs. Malterre.
who volunteers her Ume with the
orgat.lzatlon.
Sh~ said she and, anot.her
(See FAMILY, Page AU
4;oast
Waddill J11ry Given Freedom
Weather
Low clouds late tonighC.
and Wednesday morning.
then mostly sunny
Wednesday afternoon.
Lows tonight 48 to 56: Highs
W ednesclay6'to 72.
a1tem• juror an retumed to
their hornet Monday nl&ht after
makln& lt clear to Judge Turner
that continued aequest.,.tion et
thelr Holiday lnn would mean
the end of jury deUberallons.
OefenH attorney Malbour
Watson caid jury foreman John
Thom...-of Loe Alamitos told the
)ud1• that tbe alUlud• of 1herlU'1 ctepu&lft a11lped to
• tt~rt UM Jury led to obJeetlam
beln1 fUlid W\tll J\ldl• Turner. ''Tbtr ....en 't bttril trMted n bum• betnp." Wat.on llllcL
"W• doa' want an iabppy, U ·
l(fl i.., ........ , wut tMm
taklna .~• •°'·Waddill Jmt ........ -..... t.ht ftnl i. ..
• •
-Into th~ corridors.
.. Jury tampering ls a felony,"
be warned. And he then asked
Jurors to report to him any at-
tem ptw-to contact them about
the trial.
The rapidly deteriorating at·
moepMl'e ot \he trial lnchaded lbe ,rel)Orted comment by a Juror
that the had 1u1:;ted reachlnl a ffrdtet by fUpp • coin. Judae Turner ta ked to Mn.
Patricia Lawrence of Hunt· tn«ton Beaeh alter the commeht
••• reported to h1m by another Juror.
Sb• ~·)' told the Judie tbat 1be ... not lnterid Ute R · <IM DOCTO•, Pa .. AJ>
INSIDE TOD~ Y
A tt(lhted 100man IWts in
Brafll• a chance to lhare the
beaMtll cmd love Chat hove
mact. lwtr U/e rich. Se• Page
84. .....
1 •
t2
ByTMAl-1atedPreu
CooaWPen who have wa&cbed lettuce pric: aoar until Hlad ii
almost as expensive as steak can ex.P9Ct some relief n•n moath, a
government e<:0nomist predicted today. Lettuce wu HlllDC In New
York City for$1 39 a head.
.. This tbmg ab temporary," said Charle~ W. Porter.~r t~e l! S.
Department of Agriculture, d~usslng the b&gh prices. We re Just
going to have to wait al out.''
PORTER SAID SHIPMENTS OF lettuce from California -
the nation's major producer -are runnin& half lo less than half of
what they were a year ago became rain• in the Salinas Valley ~n
February and March prevented farmers from planting and, &n
home cases. washed away s~s tn the ground.
Broc<.'Oli, cauliflower. and ~ome other vegeta~les als~ have
been affected by the rains, Porter said. but th~ impact is less
severe because the crop is spread over a greater geographical
area. The lettuce crop', planted in late March, should be r:eady abo~t
June 1 and Porter said prices should come down agam. He saad
plantings of lettuce and other fruit and vegetable crops are normal
and said that Wlless there is some unusual weather development,
summer supplies should be adequate.
Ball, Morris
MEANWHILE, LETTUCE PRICES have aoared to more than
doubl•. and ln 90me cases triple, what they were a year ago.
RetaU prlca v&r)' wldely from area to area and atore lo store
In Wuhlncton. D.C. Iceberg lettuce la aelllng for about 89
cents a head· prtcea ln the Midwest top St a head In some places,
and in New York City the price is up lo Sl.39 a h~ad in !1 few stores .
Al the shipping point. Porter said, lettuce as selhng for $15 a
crate of 24 heads -"an unheard-of price" -corppared to a
normal rate of $2.50 to SS a crate.
THE DECREASE IN SUPPLIES from CaUlomla has caused
an lncreue iD pricee from other areas. Romaine from Florida has.
gone up, for example, even thOugh supplies are normal, Porter
said.
Almost five billion pounds of lettuce is grown in the United
States every year, according to the Uoited Fresh Fruit and
Vegetable Association. California produces about three-fourths or
the total and, at some seasons, provides up to 90 percent of supply.
Drought in 1976 and 1977 in California also caused rears or a
shortage, but supplies of most fruits and .vegetables remained ade·
quate, thanks to lrrigation and conservation measures.
Kidnapping
Victi"" 18,
Released
UCI Pair Report
Better Redwoods
'Duke' Says
Thanks for
Welcomes
McKENZIE. Tenn. <AP> -
Jodie Gaines, 18-year-old
daughter of a prominent local
businessma.n. was released un-
harmed today. four days after
she was kidnapped, U.S. At·
lorney Mike Cody said in Mem·
phis.
Cody said two men and a
woman were ip custody and
more persons might be arrested.
Cody s 11id authorities re-
covered a $250,000 ransom which
had been paid by the family.
"She is distraught and upset
but OK," Cody said by
telephone.
He sald Miss Gaines was re-
leased at a cabin near the Big
Sandy River in the Springville
area in neighboring Henry Coun·
ty some 15 miles northeast of
McKenzie.
llis rusclosure followed word
from Carroll County Sheriff
Lawrence Garett that Miss
Gaines was alive. Garrett s poke
with reporters at the front door
of the family's home after her
father. Ben Gaines. hurried
from the dwelling where he had
kept a vigil since Friday.
Miss Gaines. one or three
childTen. is a stud~nl at a
pnvatc Memphis prep school.
She had been missing since Fn-
day night when she disappeared
while driving from a country
club where she dined with her
family to a cousin's house.
A family friend said Monday
night that an effort to pay a
$250,000 rans<>fJ\}Or her release
had fallen th.rou'jth.
.. We have not paid the r,,ansom
and we have not picked fier up,
no sir." Gaines said at that
time.
Federal and slate agents had
been waiting ror a break in the
case. with only Miss Gaines·
abandoned car and a receiver
clipped from a pa,Y telephone as
clues. A dispatcher for the Car-
roll County sheriff's office said
Monday night that Miss Gaines'
car was found abandoned earlier
·in the day about 25 miles
southeast of McKenzie.
Two UC Irvine botanists re·
ported Monday they have de·
veloped a strain df redwood tree
which provides higher quality tum ber and increases forest
yields by 30 percent.
Ernest Ball, professor
emeritus in the department or
developmental and cell biology.
and laboratory assistant Dawn
Mqrris. said the new strain was
created in the lab using samples
'or superior trees. '
Traditional 1 cross-fertilization
of trees carnes both desirable
and undesirable genetic traits of
Fro111 Page Al
COAST •••
residents, schools or the environ·
ment."
But he said it will affect more
than 100 families at El Morro.
increase traffic on Pacific Coast
Highway. affect El Morro
Elementary School adjacent to
the proposed state park site.
"and will most certainly affect
the environment of the area."
The dozen or so citizens who-
spoke Monday were not alone in
their criticism or the county's
Local Coastal Plan.
The regional coastal com·
mission's own staff came out
with a 55-page preliminarY re·
view of tbe Irvine Coast general
plan.
The starr criticized the
generalities they claim are lit
the county report regarding •
preservation or open space areas
within the coastal sector. "Except for a proposed state
park acquisitlon of a portion
(3,200 acres) of the Irvine prop-
erty," the report reads. "the
general plan contains no
mechanism for assuring the long
term preservation of major re-
source areas. . . "
The staff report also cites the
intensity of development, with
the county...plan calling for 38,000
residents in clustered develop-
ments.
Other staff objections include
alleged degradation ot visual
quality, lack or low and
moderate income housing, possi-
ble traffic congestion and loss or
major habitat and archaeological
resources.
the species used, but the UCI
sclentlats used an asexual
method to develop a strain car·
rylng only the desirable traits.
Miss Morris s aid that in the
wild , the Sequoia · r,edwood
normally attains a height. of 80
feet to 120 reel in 40 years.
growth. With the new strain, she
s aid. all the trees reach the up-
per limits of growth, providing
about a third more lumbe"
A bout 300 pf the super•
redwoods already have been
planted in Northern California
near Eureka, s he said. The
Simpson Timber Company,
whlcll provicled grants for the
research, cuts redwoods in the
area.
Simpson officlals said they
sent the Irvine botanists
samples from 200 trees selected
as most superior from some one
million trees they inspected. The
work has been in progress four
years.
Miss Morris said 300 more
redwoods of the new strain are
in UCI greenhouses ready for
replanting in forest.
The botanists h,ave received
new granrs, also from-the
Simpson company, to develop a
superior strain of Douglas fir.
another major lumber species. ·
DOCTOR •••
mark to be taken seriously. She
told Judge Turner that ll was de-
livered in a flippant manner and
said that she said it to lighten
the mood of a depressed jury.
Judge Turner appeared to ac·
c.ept Mrs. Lawrence's explana-
tion and denied an immediate
motion for a mlatrial by defense
attorney Charles Weedman.
Weedman and Watson said the
incident will form part or their
appeal if tbe jury subsequently
convicts Dr. Waddill.
Wat.son described the Jury as
being •"damn nea r evenly
divided." He refused to say what
led him t.o that conclusion.
Newport Beach's JoJm Wayne
says the good wl!hes and warm
welcome he's received slnce re.
turning to his home to re·
cuperate from open heart sur-
gery have put him a ~
ahead in hls recovery schedule.
In a prt!pared statement re-
leased Monday .afternoon, the
70-year·old movie star saved
speciaJ thanks for participants
in the impromptu boat f.arade
· staged&mda.vlnhlabehal .
· "The medicar proteslfion tens
me that when tbey saw you
down the middle, carve out new
things for your heart~ that it
-takes....about three. monui.s to .get
reeling well again.
" 'Well' is a wonderful word
and I think your welcome put
me a month closer to it. Thank
you."
Wayne checked into
Massachusetts General Hospital
in Boston last month to have his
ruptured mitral valve replaced
with a similar valve from a pig's
heart.
Wayne was showered with get
-Well wishes-and euts while in the hospital.
He returned home last week
• and the Sunday parade was
organized by the Commodore's
Club of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber or Commerce lo
welcome the city's famous resi· dent back home:
$4,000 Loot
Taken From
Irvine Home
A 25-year-old business ex·
eculive returned from his job to
his Irvine home Monday to find
the front door pried ajar and the
house ransacked of nearly $4,000
in goods.
•
Also Monday, a receiver and
cord from a pay telephone in a
McKenzie service station bad
been clipped by a federal agent
and taken to the FBI command
post at the McKenzie Motor Inn.
The station's manager said he
was asked who used the phone
Monday morning but be said too
many customers passed through
the station for him to tell who
may have called out.
* * * From Page Al
W eddJng bells added to the
growing clamor Monday when
another Juror told Judge Turner
that she wants to get married
Saturday, deliberations or no de·
Ii beratlons.
Richard Cairncross, of 26
Partridge, told pollce the
burglar took stereo equipment, a
camera, lens and strobe attach-
ment, an 1851 revolver, sport
knives, a shotgUA. a derringer, a
1920 gold pocket watch, a man's
ring. binoculars and a big suit·
case.
The report of the attempted
ransom payment came after
Miss Gaines' mother and
brother. Ben Jr .. 20, left the
family home Monday afternoon
and returned by mid-evening.
STORE'S GAU
DR4JfS 3,000
Nordstrorn 's, tb.e Seattle·
based specialty store, opened its
doors at South Coast Plaza with
t a special gala for 3,000 people.
' See Featuring, Page Cl.
' ~
' 1
OflANOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
REBUTS •••
claims. "the re11identlal uses on
Moro Ridge would severely de·
grade the habitat and open
..,. space values of tbe canyons
below." was termed as having
no justification by Irvine of.
ficiala.
"Residential and conservation
areas in the plan are speclCtcally
designed to allow compQttibllity,
and special policies were de·
veloped t.o ensure preservation
of the habitat," Irvine o!liclals
responded.
NixonPlam
Party in SC
ForMemoin
NEW YORK (AP) -Fonnei-
Pre1ldentRlcbardNlxon, whoun·
til recenUy kept blmself affluded
in Callfomia, fs planning a May 21
publishing party at bis San
Clemente estate.
The guests will include tbe
editor of Nixon'• memoirs,
Robert Markel of Gros.ett &
Dunlap; publisher Harold Roth.
end \WO ex4cutivea oi WarneT
Books. Warner paid Nixon a reported
12 mUUon tor right.a to "RN: 'Ibe
Memoirs ot R1c:hard Nixon."
The excerpt.a are beini l)'ll·
dicated in 50 U.S. and foretcn
newspapers and Derlodlcal• thls
""k. Tho $18.IS ~ wtll be pubU1bedMay 15. Nixon a1ao bu lnvlted former
U.S. prtlonen of war to bl1 bom•
May %7 durtal IM com••mor•· tlon In nearby Loa Aaiet.l of tbelr
release fft>m Nortlt'Vletna.m ftve
YHl'llJO
Fro.PageAJ
DEATH •••
"I believe hlm," Deputy Dis·
trict Attorney Ted M11lard said .
r'This guy has no reason to lie
about these other crimes and I
accept his stories and believe
that he did these things.''
Judge Lae also noted today
that Teron has made many
threats to Orange County J ail
deputies who have been told that
Teron will knife them if he ever
reaalns bis freedom.
"It is the finding or this court
that the sentence ol death should
be lm~,.. be sa d. nTbe sa1d
penalty ls to be lnfllcted within
the walls of the state prison at
San Quentin and I clirect the
sheriff to escort you there."
Nixon Fees I
FaceFighl?
NEW YORK <AP) -A
Manhattan law firm it
con1ldertna an attempt to
block former Pre1ldent
Nixon from collecUn1 the
royalties from sales of bla
soon -to• be·publl• bed
memoirs, "RN : the
Memolr'I ot Rlchard Nlx·
on.,, CJlelaUMS 1tory, A 7)
The firm, Berney ~
Cou•lna, rep,_...ta Debra
Jenk•ns, a 24·~••t·old l•••l aecmary who worb ror Use firm.
Sbe .-, ll attemptlnC to
prevent H.R. HaJd•man
from c:C>t~royaltles on bit bU1Mid
book. "The nda of Power.0
Though the burglar took cau-
li on to wipe c l ea n his
fingerprints with a chemical
spray. police said, he apparently
left behind tbe muddy tracks of
sizl! 10~ shoes.
0.lly ~ .......... i.y ... tn~ O'DMMll
TRASH MOUNTS UP, BUT THAT'S STRETCHING THINGS
Coate Meaan Geta Around to Throwing Out Chrtatmas Tree
Break Seen in OC
Strike Negotiatiom
The (ederal mediator lh the
two-week-old Orange County
t.r-agh at-rike said-toda)t--be-is op
timistic about negotiations
between drivers and manage-
ment.
"I expect a break In negotia·
lions tomorrow." mediator John
Courtney said. noting he will
meet with Teamsters and
management at 11 a.m. Wednes·
day. Courtney said very little hap-
pened Monday. when he met
with both sides for about. three
hours. On Saturday. Teamster-;
voted down what managers of
seven struek fir-ms hed ~rm~
their final offer.
The drivers have been out on
strike since their three-year con·
tract expired April 17. More
than a million Orange County res·
idenls have been without trash
disposal service since then.
Violence intensified Monday
as some trash trucks began roll·
mg again with newly hired non-
uniondrivers .
The most serious incident OC·
curred at M G Disposal in
Fullerton. Monday afte rnoon.
when three men in a station
wagon allegedly fired one shot
al three employees in.the cab of
a trash truck.
Arrested on suspicion of as-
sault with a deadly weapon and
assault with intent to commit
murder were Rafael A. Ramos.
29; Rafael R. Ramirez. 24 ; and
Daniel M. Cano. 21. all of Santa
Ana.
Microwave Ovens
Taken in El Toro
Burglars who apparently
knew the combination on the
garage Jock took s'ix new
microwave ovens valued at
$2,067 from an El Toro home.
Orange County sheriff's of·
ficers said the ovens were taken
from a home at 24391 Peacock
Drive. The ovens were the prop·
erty oC'the Butler Housing Com-
pany or Irvine.
However. p,olice s a id that.
when arrested. the three.were m
posse&&i-On only or two BB iJun"'
a nd that no bullet h ad been
round in the cab of the trash
truck. However. investigator'>
said they haven't dismissed the
possibility that a gun might have
beerr thrown from the station
wagon before it was slopped.
Pellets were fired al two new·
ly hired Laguna Beach trash col
lectors Monday. leavtnR a hole
in the window of a La gund
Beach Disposal truck. No onl'
was injured.
And in Buena Park, three men
tn a car reportedly pul1ed up
alongside a trash truck and onl'
of them aimed what appeared to
be a handgun at the dravcr of the
truck but didn't fire.
f'roa Page Al
FAMILY •••
counselor will conduct the in
ter view. Audience su~geslions
will be channeled through the
two interviewers. ..W s incredible what hap
pens.·· M rs. Malterre said. "Th<·
t:nergy that comes from tht•
group supports the:;e people."
A week tater. a follow up in
te rview will be held to see what
changes have occurred within
the family. she said
"Sometimes the recommenda
lions are that the parents
change and sometimes that lh<'
children change. but whoever
changes. there's a chain reac-
t ion in th e fa mily ," Mrs
Malterre said.
She said that when she first
began seeking family education
for herself seven or eight years
ago. resources were so scarce
that she ended up organazlng her
own groups .
A rorm~r school counselor.
Mrs. Mallerre said th(.' groups
soon grew to th~ point where a
fo rmal organ1zat1on wa s
necessary and the Family Study
.Group was formed.
Lag11na/South Coftst· Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
I 1
•
I VQL. 71, NO. 122, 3 SECTIONS, ao PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY r MAY 2, 1978 TEN CENTS 1
I Fire Access Eyed by Lag11na Council j
r Laguna Beach city coun· Beach Heights community fire r esponse time to Arch $750,000blazelastThursday. more lban 30 directors and enue sharing. funds -for con·
cilmen will be looking into possi-nestled in the hills above the Art Beach Heights from Top or the The group, comprised of neighborhood association mem· struclion of the fire road.
ble construction of a fire access Colony. ' World station from 15 minutes lo representatives from a half bers met the day of the fire to The fire access route was rec·
road linking two hilltop com-The proposed tire access road, two and a hall minutes. fire or-dozen neighborhood assocla· push for the access route. om mended for council ap·
munilles in Laguna Beach when which would be available only to flcials claim. lions. unanimously endorsed a City staff member~ will rec· proval in January by the city·s
they meet tprughl at 6 o'clock. emergency vehicles, would link Support for the fire road resolution urging the City Coun· om mend the council approve PlanningCommlsston.
The agenda item comes In the Arch Beach Heights with the comes from the Coalition or ell to undertake construction of an environmental impact report The agenda item was moved
wake of a blaze last week that Top of The World Community, Neighborhood Associations, the emergency access route. prepared last October for' the up to the beginning of tonight's
gutted t1'ree homes an<t_ whicbbasitsownfirestatlon. <CONA>wt)icbapprovedaresolu· Linda Ristow, chairman pro fire route. and appropriate meeting, which will be held in
damaged a fourth ln the A~h The mile-long route would cut lion for the route following the tempore or the ~alition, said Sl00,000 -possibly rrom rev· council chambers.
t eat
I
Coast Pllin Flayed
•
. Citi:1en.s Protest lrv_i~ Projects .•
By STEVE MITCHELL
OltaeOlllty" ........
-lil early a do~ speakers
marched to the podium in Hunt·
ington Beach Monday afternoon
to protest Orange County's de-
velopment plans for the sprawl·
ing Irvine Coast.
Their objections were heard
by members of the regional
South Coast Commission which
will eventually make recom·
mendalions to the slate com·
mission for a master plan for the
10.000·acre coastal site. ·
The commissioners beard
complaints from representatives
*
or archaeological interests.
Friends or the Irvine Coast. lbe
Sierra Club, and residents of Er
Morro Mobile Home Park. a
community threatened by pro·
posed s late acquisition or
parkland in the area.
Their objections ranged from
an allegedly inadequate environ·
mental impact report prepared
for the coastal land to possible
destruction or paleontological
and archaeological sites and a
lack of low and moderate in·
come housing in the land use
plan. Wesley Marx of Irvine
'If * *
criticized proposed residential
development of Pelican and
Wis-b-bone Hilts 11djai:enrto
Corona del Mar, clalmlng earth
moving and grading or that land
will alter significant land forms
in the area.
He also criticized the lack of
low and moderate income hous·
ing ror the coastal sector. saying
the high cost or land a lone would
prohibit that type or housing.
He said California can no
Jonge r "afford to subsidize new
g rowth ," citing a proposed
roadway behind the coastal sec-
tor as "the most expensive
rreew@Y in the sUite's history_·~
l Irvine Co. Rebuts
i Coast Plan Report
Marx said he supports a na-
tional urban park for the area,
"but the LCP <local coastal
plan) says lbat idea isn't feasi-
ble because of a lack of fund·
ing."
Then he asked commissioners
where they thought the funding
was going to come for the
transportation eorridor.
"If there ls no tundlng, then
all references to the San Joaquin
Corridor should be eliminated,"
he said. 7 t Irvine Company otflc1als con-
tend a report prepared by the
staff or the regional Coastal
Commission contains "major in·
al'curacies. and some "obvious
misconceptions," about what the
Irvine Co8St Local Coastal Plan
I is:
I The Irvine Company's rebut·
~ tat came Monday during a meet·
Ing of the regional Coastal Com·
mission on the county's pro-
' posed development plan for the
10.000-acre Irvine Coast.
1 r vi ne spokesman Rick t Cermak handed commissioners f a five-page rebuttal or the staff
report. The rebuttal claims the
sta rr report "tends to confuse is-
sues and make a meaningful re·
view of the plan impossible.·
The Irvine Co. statement also
objects to the staff's "vague ref·
erences to possible ad.Yerse lm·
pacts of land use changes."
Irvine officials said they object
to the "overall negative tone of
the report," and the suggestion
that past concerns or the coastal
commission staff have been ig-
nored. Th e Irvin e Company
, responded to so-called inac-
curacies including:
-A claim that the plan does
1 not assure preservation of land
in the central and eastern pot·
tiona. The Irvine Company said
conaerval.l~ecreation and
open space land use policies ot 1 the plan cannot be cban1ed ln
the (uture without Coastal Com·
missloe approval. l -The company counten a
claim that the land use plan will
' .. have iipificant aclvuse lm·
' pact on resou~." by sayiq
t
I r
any human use, public 01
private, will have impact.
-A staff comment that thE
plan would have significant lraf·
fie impacts which could in·
terfere with public access to the
area also is denied by the com·
·pany.
•'The plan provides for a
ci re ulalion system which
enhances recreation access to the coast and prevents conges·
lion from proposed land uses,"
company otftc.ials responded.
-A staff objection which
claims, "the residential uses on
(See REBUTS, Page AZ>
El Morro mobile home resi·
dent James Tieman joined Marx ln his objections to a lack or low (co~ housing, saying a proposed
nate purchase of the 294-unit
trailer park for state park use
would ~ctually reduce lhe
• number or low and moderate
cost units it) the area.
Dr. Walter Axelrod. a retired
Van N~ physician who lives at
El Morro, lambasted the coun·
ty's declaration of negative im·
<See COAST, Page AZ>'
6th Grades to Shift,
Capo Board Votes
Sixth graders from Dana
Point, Capistrano Beach and
San Juan Capistrano will attend ·
Capistrano School ln San Juan
next fall, Capistrano Unified
School District trustees ruled
before an overflow crowd Mon-
day night.
Trustees voted 6 to 1, with
Robert Bachelor of Laguna
Niguel opposed, to approve a
staff recommendation calling
for the following school aUen-
dance cbanaes:
-· Nest year'• flftll qnd
sixth ll'8de students from Mis-sion \fie.Jo will atay at elemen·
tary schools ln their own com-
munity. rather thJn being bused
to ca,lstrano School, as they are
currenUy.
Additional space wllJ be
available in Mission Viejo
schools with the September
opening of Carl Hankey Elemen-
tary School in the Cordova tract.
-With additional apace availa·
b l.e a t C a p i a t r a n o
School, it will be used as a sixth
grade campus1 accommodating
students from R.H. Dana,
Palisades, Harold Ambuehl and
San Juan Elementary School at·
tendance areas.
Deputy Superintendent
Truman Benedict ureed trustees
to adopt the proposed atten·
dance shitta, sa)'in1 lt would al·
low fol'"lbe best use of available
faclllUes and would avoid the in·
lroduction ot addltlonal portable
ualta ID the dlatrlct, except at
Capistrano Valley High School.
(See SWFI', Pa1e A.J>
• Deily ................. tnca 0'_.9.P-•
TAASH MOUNTS UP. BUT THAT'S STRETCHING THINas
Costa Mesan Gets Around to Throwing Out Christmas Tree
Break Seen in OC
Strike Negotiations
The federal mediator ih the
two-week-old Orange County
trash strike said today be is op-
ti mis Uc about neaoliations
between drivers and manage-
ment.
"I expect a break ln negotia·
lions tomorrow," mediator John
Courtney said. noting he will
meet with Teamsters and
management at 11 a.m. Wednes·
day.
Courtney said very liftle hap·
pened 'Monday, when he met
with both sides for about three
hours. On Saturday, Teamsters
voted down what managers of
seven struck firms had termetl
their final offer.
The driven have been out on
strike since their three-year eon·
tract expired April 17. More
than a mJllion Orange County res-
idents have been without trash
disposalservlcesince then.
Violence £ntensl!ied Monday
as some trash trucks began roll-
ing again with newly hired non-
union drivers. ,
The most serious Incident oc-
curred at M G Disposal in
Fullerton, Monday afternoon.
when three men in a station
wagon allegedly fired one shot
at three employees in the cab or
a trash truck.
Arrested on suspicion of as·
sault with a deadly weapon and
assault with intent to commit
murder were Rafael A. Ramos,
29; Rafael R. Ramirez, 24 ; and
Daniel M. Cano, 21, all of Santa
Ana.
However, police said that,
when arrested, the three were in
possession only of two BB guns
and that no bullet had been
found in the cab of the trash
truck. However, investigators
said they haven't dismissed the
possibility that a gun might have
been thrown from the station
wagon befbre it was stopped.
Pellets were fired at two new-
ly hJred Laguna Beach trash col·
lecton Monday, leaving a hole
in the window or a Laguna
Beach Disposal truck. No one
was injured.
Drivers ,..are seeking a raise
frmolll $4.50 to $8.50 an hour
over a three-year period
\.
et
Anaheim
·Resident ..
-~·Killed
A man convicted of three
murders and who allegedly
claims to have committed two
more undetected killings was
sentenced to death today in
Orange County Superior Court.
It was the fi rst such imposi·
tion of the death penalty in
Orange County and only the
second in the state since capital
punishment was reintroduced to
criminal law last August.
Gregory John Teron Jr., 25,
who defended himseU during the
non-jury trial that led.to bis con-
viction by Judge Kenneth E. Lae
1>n c harges 1>f ftrst d~gree
murder, said he will not appeal
the death penalty.
M anaeled hand and root,
Teron remained impassive to.
day while Judge Lae hesitantly
pronounced the death penalty in
a hushed courtroom.
Obviousl.y distress~. Judge
La,. collected bis papers on tbe
be•ch. took off bis glasle9 and
then started to leave the
courtroom.
He turned back. looked at the
silent Teron and told him: "May
God have mercy on your soul,
Mr. Teron."
Earlier, Judge Lae con-
demned Teron as .a "very
callous killer who can no more
remember how many people he
has killed than some people can
remember how many cups or
coffee they drink In a day." • -
Judge Lae recalled from the
bench that Teron told officers
<See DEAm, Page A%>
Nixon Fees
Face Fight?
NEW YORK <AP> -A
Manhattan law rirm i~
considering an attempt tel'
block former President
Nixon from collecting the
royalties from sales or his
soon -to· be· pub Ii s h e d
memoirs. "R N: the
Memoirs of Richard Nix·
on." (Related story, A7>
The firm, Berney &
Cousins. represents Debra
Jenkins, a 24-year-old
legal secretary who works
for the firm.
She also is attempting to
prevent H. R. Haldeman
from collecting royalties
on. bis recently published
book, "The Ends of
Power."
Coast
I
I •
PetM!OCk Pick
OflARama
Elvll Pea~k. a fieet
runnlba back from the
Unlvenlty ol Oklabetna,
waa ieleeUd bY the Loi
A.Qa.a. Rama .. tbelr In· tual pick ta u. Nauaaat
f'ootbaD Leasue draft to-
day.
Gates 'Worked for His Cash' We11&her
Low clouds late tonight
and Wednesday morning,
th e n most sunny
Wednesday afternoon .
Lows tonight 48 to 56. Highs
Wedneadaye&to 72.
,
t
The :Rama' pidrume ln
tbe2blround..
Two Southland llnebacken were ~bosen
on lb• openln1 round.
USC'• Clay Matthew•
went to OeftlaDd and Dan
Bua• from Lona Bea9
Sla&.e Wiii •lifted b)' tbe 8aD ftmdleo .... ror ldr'doMl clltaUI oa
tM draft, ... jportl, p ...
Bl.
81 IBB&Y CLAUSEN °' • ...,,. ....
Oraqe CCMmlJ 8herUf Bnld
Gata, wbole l*"IOllAl ftDaadal
cleallnp ad eounty travel ex-
penaet are belftl inve1t11ated by t.be FB1 told .. ..._ Viejo Op.
timllt uub memben tbil mom-tna be amaued mOlt of b11
f\ind1 tbroaO bard worlt and
amart rul eata .. illvest=.
AppearlAI for tbe -' Law~Day otilerv8Uon &n .........
Rllli, Gatat reeoaat.ecl that lie
1M1aa purcbula1 propert1 ._ tiil wu 11,..,. old at the
ilrllDI of -oldlr".brotMr wllo ......,.,. .... tM..,. of .. ..,.
derl•I tudl on •iean ••d dlrOil&."
He lllld tlaa& Ill ~ ~
•
newsman, "seems to · have crltlcl~m. I don't know why.' Gates told Optlmlata, "I ex·
pect to win overwhelml.na~ on
June s:~ tn his bld for re.election
and noted "there bas been no ~mment about my ablHty to ad-
mlnl1trate."
The federal pro.,. lnto allep·
Uona made 11alnst Oates by un-
known people got under way
April 13 ln Los An1e1e1.
Tb• F8l probe apparently ls
retracloa, in part, around
already co\ttted INt fall ln • 1tate Attom•Y Qeneral'a In·
veaUl•Uoa lllto Gata' penonal ~r,.rot..-al f.ctlvltlea. u.e fedUal lnv .. u11Uon.
uiaL taqUlry WU tANiCMd 6lf b:)t
allegations by unidentified per·
IODI. It ended Oct. 24 with a fmd·
in&ofnoimproperconduct.
Gates' dlacuaslon of bla
finances came this momin1 un·
der questioning by Optimist Club membera.
ln a 1peecb prlor to awarding
an OpUmlats' honor to one or hls
deputies1 Gates discussed the
statu1 or a proposed shertrl's
substaUon ln the south ccxmt.y
area. He Indicated that pauafe
of Propo&itlon 13, the Jarvls·
Gann lnltiatlve. could J4topardl&e.
lta eventual co"'truction. £arntn1 honort as an out·
1tandln1 officer ln tb• Sad· dleba~k area wu deputy Robert
CSee OATD, ~IP AJ>
IN8 .. E TOB" ~
' A aglrUd tOOmtlft = fJt BroiUc o cha?ice to Ute.
beOulM and ~ that have
rritJct. lwr Uft1 rich. ~Page
84.
I
. 2 DAU. Y P\lOT
Pn9S Tlll.ITll'
DISER'IS '!JR
Rieu.rd Nl~oo lied lO b..ls wile
IJWl lO hll lamlJ). Jua.t u be Ued
to th COWllry. a harsh indict·
ment and un incontrovortlblo
fact, acconbng to Lester Davld.
And on her final day ln the
White Hou e. the wife or 28
years listened to her husband
praise hus mother as a saint.
Excerpts from David's blog.
raphy of Pat Nixon continue on
PageA7.
Fro.a Page A)
smFr ...
Jaque Hickman. who said she
represented Palisades and R.H.
Dana parents. told trustees and
an audience of about 140 parents
and school administrators that
the district would save money if
it operated Capistrano s_c~ool as
a f1flh ·sixth grade fac1hty for
Ambuehl and San Juan Elemen·
ta ry students.
"It would really save money
to bus fifth and sixth graders
from across the street at San
Juan Element,ry and from
across the freeway at Ambuehl.
rather than busing sixth graders
from Palisades and R.H. Dana,"
£he said.
rn voting against the staff rec·
ommendation, Bachlor said he
fa vor ed the parents' plan to
make Capistrano School a fifth·
sixth grade extension or San
Juan and Ambuehl schools.
· · 1 start out by selecting a
philosophy, rather than a plan,"
said Bachelor, "and then I find a
plan to fit the philosophy. In this
case. my philosophy is the
netghbQrhood school concept.
"The closer your child is \o
your home -that's what t sup.
port." he said. "I also s upport
good utilization or your tax
dollar. J find (the parenB' plan>
more compatible <than the
staff's ) with my philosophy ...
Begin-Carter
Talks 'Warm'
WASHINGTON CAP> -White
House Officials are saying the
warm remarks exchanged by
President Carter and Israeli
P.'°ime Minister Menachem
Begin were more the result of
ceremony than progress in the
peacemaking process. <Related story, AS >
The officials, who asked not to
be identified, said there bas
been virtually no change in the
views or either Israel or the
Carter administration after
s everal days of talks that
c u lminated Monday with
Begin·s brief trip to Washington
to mark the 30th annJversary of
Israel's founding.
Nonetheless, the atmosphere
Monday was decidedly different
from the chilly, formal air at the
dose of Begin's last visit to
Washington in March.
Later in the day when Begin
arrived in Los Angeles to con·
tinue his U.S. Lour, he agreed:
"There was diUiculty in March,
bul now there is a great iro-
provemenl. ··
F11'8t Aid Class
Slated in Viejo
An advanced first aid and
eme rgency care class, including
instrucllon in cardiopulmonary
r esuscitation. will begin
Wednesday in Mission Viejo,
sponsored by the Capistrano
Unified adult school.
J
Registration is planned at the
fi rst c lass meeting at 7 p.m.
Wednesday al the Viejo Elemen·
tary School. 26782 Via Grande,
with instructor Dee Mocgan. Ad·
ditional information is available
by calling the adult school or-/ice, 498-0340.
0.ina Buys Arms
HONG KONG (AP> -Asian
newspapers say China is buying
E'rench antitank mtsstJes and
may be shopping for more-arms
Crom Western Europe.
DAILY PlLOT
COAST ••..
pacL
•'1'111 COUl"b' sald It doa not need an EIR *•use the coast&! plan would not a.Jtect tr.nlc, reaJdenta, ICbooll or tb• avlroc·
ment." But he said it will affect more
than 100 families at El Morro.
increase trarnc on Pacific Coast
Highway. arcect El Morro
Elementary School adjacent to
the proposed slate r.ark site. "and wiJJ most certa nly affect
the 4,'nvironment or the area ...
The dozen or so citiz.ena who spoke Monday were not alone in
their criticism of the county's
Local Coastal Plan.
The regional coastal com·
mission's own statf came out
with a 5.5-page preUmlnary re·
view of the Irvine Coast general
plan.
The staff criticized the
generalllies they claim are in
the county report regarding
preservation or open space areas
within the coastal sector.
"Except ror a proposed slate
park acquisition of a portioh
<3 200 acres> of the lrvlne prop-
i?rly," the report reads, "the
general plan contains no
mechanism for assuring the long
term pre5ervation or major re·
source areas ... "
The staff report also cttea the
intensity of development, with
the county plan calling for 38,000
residents in clustered develop·
men ts.
Other staff objections include
alleged defradalion or visual
quality, ack of low and
moderate income housing, possi·
ble traffic congestion and loss or
major habitat and archaeological
resources.
I.B's Price r
A Kentucky
Colonel Now
Long.time Laguna Beach man
0 . W. Price has been com·
missioned a Kentucky colonel by
that state's governor.
Price, 82, has been an officer
in American Legion Post 222 in
Laguna Beach for many years.
The retired Veterans Ad·
ministration official was lauded
by Kentucky Gov. Julian M.
Carrolllor 59 years of service to
veterans.
Price moved to Laguna Beach
in 1961 after retiring from the
VA at the end or 42 years ot
service
He recent.ly suffered a bout
with the nu. but is home resting
now. his wife. Elizabeth, says.
The new Kentucky colonel was
a Navy veteran or World War I.
Mondale Starts
5-Nation Tour
MANILA. Plilippines <AP> -
Vice President Walter F. Moil·
dale arrived in Manila today to
begin a five ·n ation tour
dem·onstrating the Carter a~
ministration's commitment to
Southeast Asia and lo human
rights.
.. Where there are values and
traditi6ns that both our peoples
cherish ~ freedom, individual
lit'.lerty, human justice, de·
mocracy and national indepen·
dence -I hope my visit can con·
tribute to their greater fulfill-
ment," Mondale told President
Fel'dinand E. Marcos on his ar·
rival from Honolulu.
Marcos, in his welcoming re-
marks, referred to ir.fitaUons
between their governments, in-
cluding lack of progress in
negotiating new military and
economic Areaties and U.S.
criticism of human rights viola·
lions by the authorHarian
Marcos government.
F,....PageAJ
REBUTS •••
Moro Ridge would severely de·
grade the habitat and open
space values of the canyons
below," was termed as having
no justification by Irvine of.
flcials.
"Residential and conserv.UOI\
areas in the plan are apeclfi~ly
designed to allow compatibility.
and special policies were de·
veloped lO ensure preservation
or the habitat," Irvine officials
responded.
Protesters Held
BARNWELL, S.C. <AP>
About 280 anti-nuclear pro-
testers were charged with
trespassing Monday after they
ocqupied property belonatna to
the Anted General Nuclear
Services plant tor About-U)ree
hours: 1be demonstrators, or-
ganbed by the Palmetto Al·
Hance. a stete _group, did not re-alat arrest.
SI'ORE'S G.4L4
DIUSfS 3,000
Nord1trom•1, lbe leattl•·
baaed IDtcl<y store, Ojelaed It.a doort ai Soulb c.o.at Plala ..-
• apedal .U for l,IOt piloplil.;
See Fututtai~ P ... Cl.
'-
Freedom
Granted
To Jury
By TOM BARLEY
01 tM Delly f"IMI SIMI
Dissension and dissatisfaction
appear to be growing factors to-
day in an Orange County
Superior Court jury that is try.
ing ror the eighth day to reach a
verdict in murder trial of Dr.
William Baxter Waddill of Hunt-
ington Harbour.
Both fact.ors became increas·
ingly apparent during the late
arternoon Monday when the
complalnts or jurors led Judge
James K. Turner to decide that
the panel can no longer be se·
questeft'U.
The nine male and three
female jurors and the male
alternate juror all returned to
their homes Monday night after
making it clear to Judge Turner
that continued sequestratlon at
their Holiday Inn would mean
the end of jury deliberations.
Defense attorney M albour
Wat.son said jury foreman John
Thomas of Los Alamitos told the
judge that the attitude or
she riff's deputies assigned to
es<;ort the jury led to objections
being filed with Judge Turner.
"They weren't being treated
as human-beings," Watson said.
"We don't want an unhappy, an-
gry jury and we don't want them
taking It out on Dr. Waddill just
because we were the first to ask
that they be sequestered."
The defense motion for se·
questratioo wa.s denied shortly
before the jury began dellbera·
lions a week ago.
But Judge Turner later de·
clded to seal oft his jury when he
became concerned about grow-
ing press accounts of and com·
ment on the trial.
Judge Turner himself seemed
unsettled about 6 p.m. Monday
after an afternoon of interview~
with bristling jurors and anxious
lawyers.
He ordered spectators and
news people In his cr~wded
courtroom not to try and follow
jurors out of the courtroom and
into the corridors.
"Jury tampering is a felony;•
he warned. And he then asked
jurors to report to him any at-
tempts to contact them about
the trial.
The rapidly deteriorating at·
mosphere or the trial included
the reported comment by a juror
that she bad suggested reatbing
a verdict by flipping a coin.
Judge Turner talked lo Mrs.
Patricia Lawrence,, of Hunt·
in1ton Beach alter the comment
was reported to him by another
juror.
She reportedly told the judge
that she did not intend the re·
mark lO be taken seriously. She
told Judge Turner that it was de·
livered ln a ruppant manner and
said that she said it to lighten
the mood or a depressed jury.
Judge Turner appeared to ac-
cept Mrs. Lawrence's explana·
tion and denied an immediate
motion for a mistrial by defense
attorney Charles Weedman.
Weedman and Watson said the
incident will form part of their
appeal if the jury subsequently
convicts Dr, Waddill.
Watson described the jury as
being "damn near evenly
divided." He refused to say what
led him to that conclusion.
Wedding bells added Lo the
growing clamor Monday when
another Juror told Judge Turner
that she wants to get married
Saturday, deliberations or no de·
U berations.
Judge Turner. a married man
himself, agreed to the request or
Kathie Davis of Fullerton and
said the jury will be given a one·
day recess Saturday so that
Miss Davis can be married and
spend the wedding night with
her husband.
Corpse Found
With 15 Dogs
SYDNEY, Australia CAP> -
Police found the remains of 53·
year·old Mervyn Sallows and 15
starving, vicious dogs when they
broke into a Sydney house today.
The l>Olice said the man apparent.
lyhad beendeadforabouta w~k.
The police went to the house
after the local manman reported
he had not seen Sallows for
1everaldays.
Tbe coroner ordered an autopsy
to determine the cause or death,
and the dogs were taken to a
pound.
Sadclle Rustler
Rita in San Juan
Three soddlot, loc1udlng a
We1lem saddle valued at Sl,000,
were atolen from the tack room
at Rancho Capistrano. San Juan
Capistrano, by an lntruder who
enlered via the unlocked front
door.
Orange County sheriff'• or-
nc~rt Mid tbe theft was report.
ed by Emtty Crean Tbomaa. 20,
of lb• hon\e at 29211 Camino
CaPtstnno. She dlleoftrwd the
theft wbm lbe W9Dt to tbe 1tlbht
Will Be Go Ape?
Ramar. a 350·pound male gorilla. was IJroughl to th<.•
Philadelphia Zoo from North Carolina to make litth.•
gorillas . .Ramar is in quarantine now. but there arl'
three lady gorillas in wa iting and zoo officials hope he 1s
inte r ested in matinl{.
Capo Board Picks
Portable Priority
New portable classrooms re··
ceived a high spending priority
Monday when Capistrano
Unified School District trustees
voted unanimously to scrap a
Laguna Niguel school building
project.
The fa st -growing Capistrano
Unified district has $2.75 million
remaining in school construction
funds . or this amount. S2.4
million is in State School Build·
ing Program eligibility. which is
currently tied up at the state
level with a proposed Laguna
Niguel elementary school proJ·
ect. ~ ,
The remaining $350,009/is in
general obligation bonds re·
maining from a 1973 bond elec·
lion.
Because the school district has
SC Planners
Ponder Home
-i:=!:J! .~~d=. to allow individual home instruc·
lion in some self-improvement
s ubjects will be considered
tonight by the San Clemente
Planning Commission.
The meeting will begin at 7:30
p.m. in council chambers at city
hall, 100 Ave. Presidio.
The proposed amendment
would allow musicians. artists
and craftsmen to give individual
in5truction in their homes, so
l-0ng as the lessons do not
generate unusua l traffic or
noise. said Clay Dillman. or the
city planning department staff .
said. The proposed zone change was
prompted by the application of
Buredell Mathis to t each
dassical guitar in his home at
2919 Via San Gorgonio. The city
zoning administrator denied his
application, saying guitar
lessons do not meet the criteria of valid home occupations. ac·
cording to the city·s zoning or·
dinance.
A public hearing on Mathis'
request to teach guitar at hoa:ne
is scheduled be fore the City
Council on Wednesday.
not reached agreement with Av -
~o Community Developer!> on a
school site in Laguna Niguel and
because Inflation is boosting
school ronstructlon costs at a
rate or one percent a month. dis·
trict staff reeommended that ron·
struction priorities be changed.
Monday's vote authorizes du·
trict staff to apply to the State
School Building Program lO re·
apportion eligible funds. The dls·
trict will apply for state ap.
proval for boys' s hower and
locker rooms at Capistrano
Valley High School in Mission
Viejo ($700.0001 and 53 new
portable classrooms to b~ local·
ed at six district school sites <"'
million>.
Trustees William Thompson of
Miss ion VieJo and Robert
Bachelor or Laguna Niguel
asked that dislricf staff explore
alternatives to "the standard
box configuration .. in portables.
Thompson suggested A-frame
portables. and Bachelor asked
for portables which would blend
in with permanent school bu1ld-
mgs.
Superintendent Jerome
Thornsley said the slate has en-
couraged the Capistrano distnct
to upgrade portables. which are
currently below sta ndard. Up·
grading will cut into the number
of portable classrooms the dis·
trict c•n buy , however.
Thornsley said.
Fro• Page Al.
GATES ••.
B. Giles of Irvine. lauded by
Gates for work in helping break
up major narcotics operations in
the·Saddleback Valley area and
as a volunteer on the sheriff'~
tactical squad.
Smuggling Charged
MEXICO CITY <AP> -
Fausto Cantu Pena. former
chairman of the Mexican Coffee
Institute. and five other men
were behind bars today awaiting
trial on charges of smuggh!"g
eight million pounds or coffee in·
to the United States and evading
SIO million in taxes.
Fro• Pa~ 1\ J
DEATH •••
who boOked him for the killing of
businessman Earl Reed in
Anaheim on Oct. 31, 19'7:5. that he
fully intended to klll Reed after
he robbed htm in a motel room
and that he carefully planned
the killing.
The judge said Reed was
savagely beaten to death with
the same kind or callous intent
that Teron dis played in two
other murders, both committed
in Michigan.
Teron was serving a life sen·
tence for murder in a Michigan
prison in 1977 when his boasting
about the murder of Reed led to
his arrest for the Orange County
killing.
Before he could be returned
here he strangled and killed. a
fellow prison inmate and was
tried and convicted for that kill·
ing. Again, he was sentenced to
life in pnson.
Judge Lae recalled that
Teron ·s first murder involved
the killlng of an elderly woman
~ho was beate n into un-
consciousness and then choked
to death by being hung from the
foot of her bed.
Orange County offfcers claim
that Teron bas bragged about
two other murders: a woman in
Anaheim and a man who was
murdered in an eastern slate
because he bumped Teron's ta-.
blc while Teron was drinking in
a bar.
They claim that Teron has told
them he raped two women m
Orange County and has not been
Hnked to the incidents.
··1 believe rum ," Deputy Dis-
trict Attorney Ted Millard said.
··This ~uy has no reason to hP
about these ot~r crimes and I
aceepl his stories and believe~
that he did these things.··
Judge Lae also noted today
that Teron has made many
threats to Orange County Jail
deputtes who have been told that
Teron will knife them if he ever
regains his freedom.
"It is the finding of this court
that the sentence of death should
be imposed," he said. "The said
penalty is to be infUcted within
the walls of the state prison at
San Quentin and I direct the
sheriff td escort you there."
Laguna, Man
Facing Charge
Of Battery
A Laguna Beach man was
jailed along with is his female
companion early today after of·
f1 cers alleged he kicked a
policewoman. .
Police said Franz C. Roub1son.
30. of 223 Beve rly St. approached
Officer Danell Adams in a
thr e atening manner after
Adams arrested Allsann Gay
Smith. JS. of Newport Beach on
s us picion or drunken driving.
When Adams spun around to
defend herself, Roubison re-
porledly assumed a modified
karate stance and said, .. So you
want to be tough and use
kn rate."
He allegedly kicked at the
policewoman, striking her on the
hand at which time two other of·
ficers subdued the man while
Adams handcuffed him. •
Po lice said the incident oc-curred shortly before 1 a.m. when
Adams pulled a car carrying the
two suspects over to the curb
near Jasmine Street on North
Coast Highway.
Adams said Roubison became
combative after s he handcuffed
Alisann Smith, who was driving
the car.
Both were jailed, but later re·
leased on bail. Roubison's bond
was $2,500 for suspici.on of b~t· tery on a police officer. Mtss
Smith was released on $440 bail.
I
Orange Coast·
• ,. EDIT I 0 N
I * * * )
Today's Closing l
N.Y. Stoeks
r' VOL 71, NO. 12{ 3 SE<;TIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1978 N TEN CENT
1. Mesan ·OverCoines State Commission
Citizens Protest
l1·vine ·Coast Plan
i ~
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t
r
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f
7 t
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Blind Cancer Victi~ Not f)ef eated
By JACKIE HYMAN OI ... Delly Ptllllt I&-"
Jean Stark of Costa Mesa hu a few
troubles most Orange Coaat College
psychology students don't. have to contend
with.
For one thlng, she's legally blind. For
another, she's undergoing chemotherapy for
cancer.
But Mrs. Stark. who at 83 is a gTeat-
grandmolher six times over, has no intention
of giving up on life.
"I BEUEVE \'OU have power," said
Mrs. Stark. who came to the U.S. from
Russia when she was 19. "If you use your
brain, you can overcome a lot of things. It all
depends on your will of life."
Mrs. Stark had always been active.
managing a career as a clothes designer in
New Vork,andraisingtwochildren.
She also took classes in nutrition before
coming to Orange County during World War
JI
Then, two years ago, hardening of th~
arteries diminished Mrs. Stark's eyesight lo
the point where her doctor declared her
legally blind .
.. EVERYTHING KIND or closed in,"
said Mrs. Slark. who lives alone in her tidy
apartment-··1 couldn't-e¥en wat.cb-'l'\l-lt..
me back."
Then, a year later, she leamed sbe bad
canl'er of the colon.
"I think the stress and worry about my
eyesight probably caused it," said Mrs.
Stark, who undergoes chemotherapy once a
week al Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Determined not to give in, Mrs. Stark
began to learn how to cope with a world she
can see only "through a fog •·
"I COULDN'T PUT a dime and a quarter
in the washing machine because I couldn't
see but I've learned," Mrs. Stark said. "It
was just a process of learning all over
again."
Gradually, she expanded her activities
until sbe could take the bus and cook her own
meals.
U qwllling to stay home, Mrs. Stark
Joined' a senior citizens center and tbe Retired Senior Volunteer ProgTam, In which
she collects magazines ror UC IrviJle Medical
Center patients.
But she still wasn't satisfied
A Music LOVER, Mrs. Stark put her
name on the Orange Coast College mailing
list so she could find out about musical
classes and performances
Soon she was riding the bus to attend an
occasional lecture. especially on psychology.
"IL stimulated me for more, but
everything involved books to read,'' Mrs. Stark
said
•Dissension Grows'
I
DIMiy l"llll Staff l'lle'9
NOT GIVING (Jp ON LIFE
Mesa's Jean Stark. 83
Then one day a friend of hers decided to
take a class in peer counseling and invited
Mrs. Stark to come with her to the interview.
Mrs. Stark said she was so impressed
with the teacher that, "I asked, can I just
come in with Marie and listen once in a
while?"
INSTEAD, THE TEACHER told her she
was welcome to enroll, and arranged for
cassette tapes to be made of the books.
"So now I put on the tape, and I read."
Mn. 8twk said,
She said she's already planning to take
. more classes in psychology.
"I don't want a cJtreer," Mn. Stark said.
"It's just that I want to be able to help people
know bow to live. If you know more, you can
do more. ,
"I WOULD REALLY LIKE to be able to
counsel in homes for the aged. When I see
these Pe<>ple, I think that they can do better.
All they do is wait for their death."
"Maybe if they see me, they will realize
anything ls possible," Mrs. Stark said. •·t
don't ever want to stop doing new things."
Freedom Granted
To Waddill Jurors
Memorial Rite
Scheduled for
Mary Dorius
A memorial service will be
held Wednesday for Mary
Josephine Dorius of Newport
Beach, who died Sunday at lhe
age or 47.
By TOM BARLEY Of dlt O.Uy pt ... M.eH
Dissensioo and dissatisraction
appear to be growing factors to-
day in an Orange County
Superior Court Jury that Is try-
iag for the eighth day to reach a
v&dirt in murder trial of Dr.
William Baxter Waddill or Hunt·
ington Harbour
Both factors became lncreas·
ingly apparent during the late
afternoon Monday when the
complaints of jurors led Judge
James K. Turner to decide that
the panel can no longer be ae
questered.
The nine male and three
female Jurors an<t the m,ale
alternate juror all retumecf to
their ilomes Monday nltht after
malting it clear to Judge Turner
that continued sequestration at
their Holiday lrut would mean
the end of JUO' deliberations.
Defense attorney Malbour
Mrs. Dori us. who succumbed
after a long illness, will be
memorialized by family mem-
bers and close friends at 8 a .m.
Wednesday at St. Joachim
Catholic Church in Costa Mesa.
The 24-year resident of the
Orange Coast was a founding
member of the Orange County
Women's Architectural League
and the Oranse County Tri Delta
Alu 91ftae AssoclaUon.
Slit was a former president of
'\he Newport HarbOr Racquet
Club, t.eDllls newa editor ror the
Newport Shores Community As ·
soclaUon and publlc relations
director tor tbe Orange County
Chapter or tbe American
Institute of A.rclrltecta. -
Mr•· Dorl us was born in
Altadena and graduated from
UC BJ!Tlteley, where she was af.
flllated with the Delta Delta
Delta Sorority.
She leaves her husband.
architect Kermit Dorius, and
children, Lynn. ltrlslin and
Mark Dorlus, all of Newport
Beach, Mns. Doriua also is sur·
vived by her mother, Mrs.
J,Jnne Singleton of HUf'lintton
Beacll: lifters, Jeanne Roberts
W-lnut'Creek and JUta Bulllis
of H~ Bffcb, and her
brotber, JMMI Slntaetoll ot Sen· ta Ana.
The family hH n11eated
memorial donations to the .LeuQmia Soo&ety, ma Katella
Ave.,~m.
By STEVE MJTCHELL °' .. .,.,., ...... swr-
Nearly a dozen S'peakers
marctted to the podium in Hunt·
ington Beacb Monday afternoon
to protest Oranse County's de-
velopment J>lans for the sprawl·
ing Irvine Coast.
Their objections were heard
by members or the regional
South Coast Commission which
will eventually make recom·
mendations to the state com·
mission for a master plan for the
10.000·acre coastal site.
~d an EIR because the coastal
pl8,n would not affect traffic,
residents. sc;hools or the environ·
ment."
But be said it will aff eel more
than 100 families at El Morro.
increase traffic on Pacific Coast
Highway. affect El Morro
Elementary School adjacent to
the proposed state park site.
"and will most certainly affect
the environment or the area."
'The dozen or so citizens who
spoke Monday were not alone in
* * *
.,
'
I
their criticism of the county's
Local Coastal Plan.
The regional coastal cpm·
mission's own staff came out
with a SS.page preliminary re·
view of the Irvine Coast general
plan.
The s taff criticized the
generalities they claim are in
the county report regarding
preservation of open space areas
within the coastal sector. "Except for a proposed state
<See COAST, Page A2>
* * * The commissiofters heard
complaints from representatives
of archaeological interests.
Friends or the Irvine Coast. the
Sierra Club. and residents of El
Morro Mobtle Home Park. a
community threatened by pro-
posed ·state acqulslUon or
parkland in the area ..
Irvine Co. Rebuts
Their objections ranged from
Coast -Plan Report
an allegedly inadequate environ· lrvine Company olflc1als con·
mental impact report prepared tend a report prepared by the
for the coastal land to possible s taff or the regional Coastal
destruction o( paleontological Commission contaiQS "maJor in·
and archaeological sites and a accural'ies. and sdtne "obvious
lack of low and moderate in-misconceptions." about what the
come housing in the land use Irvine Coast Local Coastal Plan
plan. . is :
Wesley M a rx of Irvine The Irvine Company's rebut-
criticized proposed residential tal came Monday during a meet-
development of ·Pelican and ing of the regional Coastal Com-
W ish bone Hills adjacent to mission on the couflly's pt_O·
Corona del Mar, claiming earth posed development plan for lfie
moving and grading of that land 10,000-acre Irvine Coast:
will alter significant land forms Irvine spokesman Rick
in the area. -Cermak handed commissioners
He also criticized the lack of a five-page rebuttal 9! the staff
low and moderate income hous· report. The rebuttal claims the
ing ror the coastal sector. saying stafftepon"tends to confuse is·
the high cost of land alone would sues and make a meaningful re·
prohibit that type or housing. view of the plan impossible.·
H• nid California ~an no The lfV'iM Co. ·statement also
longer "afrord to subsidize new objects to the staff's "vague ref·
growth," citing a proposed erences to possible adverse 1m·
roadway ~bJnd the coastal sec· pacts of land use chan ges."
tor as "the mos~ expens~ye Irvine offtcials said they object
freeway ln the states history. to the "overall negative tone of
Marx saJd he supports a na· the report" and the suggesUoo
tional urban park lor the are". that past eoncerns of the coastal
"but the LCP (local ~oast~l commissloo staff have been lg· plan> says that Idea isn t feast· nored.
ble because of a lack of fund-T h e J r v i n e C o m p a n y
ing." responded to so· called inac· . Then be a!fked cornmission!?rs curacies including:
where they thought the funding -A claim that the plan does was going to come for the
transportation corridor.
"If there is no Cundlng, then .r~ll f F• all references lo the San Joaquin im..m er 0 I Ve
Corridor should be eliminated."
not assure preservation of land
1n the central and eastern por.
lions. The Irvine Company said
conservation. recreation and
open space land use policies or
the plan cannot be changed in
the future without Coastal Com·
mission approval.
-The company counters a
cla im that the land use plan will
"have significant adverse Im·
part on resources." by s ayin11
any human use. public or
private, will have impact.
-A staff comment that th(
plan would have significant traf-
fic impacts which could in·
terfere with public access to the
area also is denied by the corri· pany.
·'The plan provides ror a
circulation system which
enhances recreation access to
the coast and prevents conges
lion from proposed land uses,"
company officiaJs responded.
-A staff objection which
claims, "the residential uses on
Moro Ridge would severely de-
g rade the habitat and open
space values or the canyons
below," was termed as having
no justification by Irvine of·
ficials.
<See REBt.JTS. Page A2>
he said.
El Morro mobile home resi·
dent James Tieman joined Marx
in his objections to a lack of low
cost housing. saylntt a proposed
state purchase or the 294·unit
trailer park for stale park use
would actually reduce the
number of low and moderate
cost units ln the area.
Michigan M~n Gets
sentence of Death
Dr. Walter Axelrod. a retired
Van Nuys physicial1 who lives at
El Morro. lambasted the coun-
ty's declaration or negative 1m·
pact.
"The county said it does not
Welt.wishers
Thanked by•
]ohnWa~
Newport Beach's John Wayne
says the good wishes and warm
welcome he's received since re·
turning to his home to re·
cuperate rrom Open heart Sur•
gery have put him a month
ahead in his recovery schedule.
In a prepared statement re-
leased Monday afternoon, the
70·year·old movie star saved s~cial thank.a for participants
fn the impromptu boat parade
st a Jed Sunday II) his beha If.
"The medical profession tells
me that when they saw you
down tbe middle, carve out new
things for your heart. that lt
takes about three months to set
feeling well aaaln.
" 'Well' is a wonderful word
and I think your welcome put
me a month cloler lo lt. Thank
you."
Wayne checked Into
Massachusett. General Hospital
in-UostQn tut monUI lo fiave h£s
ruptured mkral valve replaced
wlth a 1lmJlar valve from a plg's
h'earl.
Wayne wu showered with 1et well wllhet and 1lft1 white in
tbtr hOspttal.
A man convicted of three
murders and who allegedly
claims to have committed two
more undetected killings was
sentenced to death today in
Orange County Superior Court.
It was the first such imposi·
tion of the death penally in
Orange County and only the
second in the state since capital
punishment was reintroduced lo
criminal law last August.
Gregory John Teron Jr .• 25.
who defended himself during the
non.jury trial that led to his con·
viclion by Judge Kenneth E. Lac
on charges or first degree
murder, said he will not appeal
the death penalty.
Manacled hand and foot,
Teron rem1tined impassive to-
day while Judge Lae hesitantly
pronounced the death penalty in
a hushed courtroom.
Obviously distressed, J udge
Lae collected his papers on the
bench, took off bis glasses and
then started to leave the
courtroom.
He turned back. looked at the
silent Teron and told him : "May
God have mercy on your soul ,
Mr. Teron."
Earlier, Judge Lae con·
demoed Teron as a "very
callous killer who can no moro
remember how many people he
has killed than some people can
remember how many tups of
coffee they drink in a day."
Judge Lae recalled from lhe
bench that Teron told officers
who booked hlm ror the kllllna or
bustnessuran Earl Re.,d tn
Anaheim on Oct. 31. 1975, that be
fully Intended to kill Reed after
he robbed him In Q motel room
and that he carefully planned
the killing. .
prison in 1977 when his boasting
about the murder of Reed led to
his arrest ror the Orange Cotmty
killing.
Before he could be returned
here he stranli!led and killed a
fellow prison -inmate and was
tried and convicted for that kill-
ing. Again, he was sentenced to
hfe in prison.
Judge Lae ret'alled that
Teron's Cirst murde r involved
the killing of an elderly woman
who was be aten into un -
consciousness and then choked
to death by being hung from the
fool or her bed.
Orange County officers claim
that Teron has bragged about
two other murders: a woman in
Anaheim and a man who was
murdered in an eastern state
because he bumped Teron's ta·
(See DEATII, Page AZ>
Coast
Weather
Low clouds late tonight
and Wednesday morning.
then mostly sun n y
Wednes day afternoon.
Lows tonight 48 to 56. Highs
Wednesday66to72.
INSIDE TODt\ Y
A 11ghted woman /fndl in
BralUe o cltcn« tu share ~ ~auty end love that have
made her lJ/c rich. See Page
9f
liul@X
l•twwtl..... .. AMLI~ Q ,_,,._.........,u
Mffltt ... ....... , .....
.............. M ~ci..y ,.,, -.-.. . ... T==--::
He retumed home lut week
and the Sunday par1de was
or11nlied b1 tbe Commodore's
Ctu• ot tbe Newport ff 1rbor
Area Chamber of Commerce to \Ytrv;;-""'.~mi!Rue .cltrt moua ,... ••
The judge said Reed was
sava1et.v beaten to death wltb
the aame kind of callous tntent
that Teron d\.9i>layed in two
other murden, bo\b committed
1n Mlchlnn.
Teron ·w.. c • re Hn· nMW9 • :::r... :: ......,........,.___...~ bMlt ham•. lace rCll' murder lJl • Blichltan
l
_,
• \2 OAILYPILOT N
NixonFeea
Face Fight?
NEW YORK (AP> -A
Manhattan law nrm is
cons1denn& ao attempt to
block former President
Nixon from collecting the
royalties from sales of his
soon · to· be · publis hed
memoirs. "RN : the
Memoirs of Richard Nix ·
on." <Related story. A 7 >
The firm. Berne)· &
Cousins. represents Debra
Jenkins. a 24 -year-old
legal secretary who works
for the firm.
She also is attempting to
prevent H. R. Haldeman
from collecting royalties
on his recently published
book , ·'The Ends of
Power."
DOCTOR •.•
Juda• Twner appeared to ac·
cept ""· Lawrence's explana· Uoo and denied an immediate
motion for a miltrtal by deteme
attome)' Qlarlet Weedman. Weedman and Watson 11ld the
incident will form parl of their
appeal if the jury subsequently
convicts Dr. Waddill.
Walson descrtbed Jhe jury as
being "damn near evenly
divided.'' He refused t.o say what
led him t.o that conclusion.
Wedding bells added to the
growing clamor Monday when
another juror told Judge Turner
tbat she wantl to gel married
Saturday. deliberations or no de·
liberations.
Judge Turner, a married man
himself, ~greed to the request of
Kathie Davis of Fullerton and
said the jury will be given a one·
day recess Saturday so that
Miss Davis car. be married and
spend the wedding night with
her husband.
He told her that she must re·
turn to jury deliberation• Sun·
day lf the jury still has not re·
ached a verdict.
''Without her husband." the
NixonPlam
Party in SC
ForMemoin • poker-faced Watson commented
late Monday.
NEW YORK tAP> -Former
President Richard Nixon, who un·
til recently kept himself secluded
in Callfomla, ls planning a May 21
publishing party at his San
Clemente estate.
The guests will include the
editor of Nixon's memoir&.
Robert Markel of Grossett &
Dunlap. publisher Harold Roth.
and two exerotives of Warner
Books.
Warner paid Nixon a reported
S2 million for rights to "RN : The
.M emoirs of Richard Niiton."
The excerpt.s are being syn.
dicated in 50 U.S. and foreign
newspapers and periodicals this
week. 'l'he $19.95 book will be
published May 15.
The weary Judge Turner was
also told Monday about an lncl·
dent at the hotel Sunday when a
Juror's wtre screamed and
became· hysterical when told
that it was time for her to lellve
her sequestered husband and go
home. Sheriff's officers who have
been accompanying t~e jury t.o
meals and the hotel say they are
the targets of ab~e by jurors
who make it clear that they are
divided on the murder trial is·
suet and fiercely divided among
thmsel\ies.
Nixon al"° hAs invited former
U.S. prisoners of war t.o his home
May 27 during the commemor~
lion in nurby Los AngelH of their
release from North Vietnam t\vt'
years ago
Waddill, 42. is accused of
strangling a newborn baby girl
in the nursery at Westminster
Community Hospital on March
2. 1977, jus\ 12 hours after he
tried t.o per(orm an abortion on
• the infant's 18-year-old mother.
PATS 'TRUTH'
DESERTS HER
Richard Nixon lied to his wife
and to hls family, just as he Ued
to the country, a harsh lndld
m ent and an Incontrovertible
fact , according to Lester David.
And on her final day in the
While House, the wife of .28
years listened to her husband
praise his mother as a saint.
Excerpts from David's blog
· raphy of Pat Nixon continue on
Page A~ ·
Begin-Carter
Talk" 'Warm'
WASHINGTON <AP> -White
House Officials are saying the
warm remarks exchanged by
Pres ident Carter and Israeli
P r ime Minis ter Menachem
Begin were more the result of
ceremony than progress ln the
peacemaking pro('ess <Related
story, AS>
The officials, who asked n ...
be ideottried, said there ~s
been virtually no change ln the
views of either Israel or the
Carter administration after
several days of talks that
cu Im lnated Monday wllh
, Begin's brief trip to Washlnet.on
to mark the 30t.h annivensary of
Israel's founding.
Nonetheless. the atmosphere
· Monday was decidedly different
: from the chilly. formal air al the
. close of Begin's last visit lo
Washington in March.
Later in the day when Begin.
arrived in Los Angeles t.o con·
tinue his U.S. tour. be agreed:
• "There was difficulty ln March.
· but now there ls a great lm
provemenl ·•
China Boys Arms
HONG KONO <AP) -As1an
newspapens say China l~ buying
French antitank missiles and
may be shopping for more arms
• from Western Europe.
( DAILY PILOT
............ ...----·-. ~,, ........... 0.-...........
ftlMellt ..... ....
"':,.::;,.Tl/:"
o.:::..~........:.i::.:.': ..
TlllJll IH (114)'°""' n ... ,.,, .... ,...,.
..
ll is alleged that he choked the
child to death after predicting
that the saline in which she had
been immersed would have
destroyed brain functions and
left the baby as little more than
a human vegetable
ChiJi Comest
To Heat Up
At Bay Club
Some healed competition is
expected May 25, when once
again top chili chefs from
around the state will vie at the
Ba I boa Bay CI u b ·hosted
California State Chili Cham
pionship in Newport Beach.
A parade of 2S chili teams will
spice up the event, the winner of
which will go on to the World
Championship later this year.
Contestants were selected by
the state Chili Championship
Cookoff Advisory Board. •
"This ls not a contest for the
amateur." said c hili c ham·
pionship chairman W.D. Ray.
A varied panel of judaes will
oversee the event.
On the panel will be Ormerly
Gumrudgin, official hisloTian of
the International Chili Society,
Dally Pilot Edit.or Tom Keevil,
Municipal Court Judge Calvin
Schmidt and Superior Court
Judge James Walsworth, en·
trepreneur Father Durf y and ac·
tress Joanne Dru.
Also mixing into the Judging
will be Santa Ana Register
Editor Jim Dean, antique dealer
Beverly Ray , televlslon
personality Ralph Story, bu.si·
nessmen Jon Clark, W.P .
Hudgins. Bill Neale, Roy
Palmer and Burke Smith, and
chill personalities C. V. Wood
Jr .• Al Dunlap, W.D. Ray and
Carroll Shelby.
E' ..... PageAJ
DEATH •••
ble while Teron wu drlnkln& ln
a bar.
They claim that Teron bas to~d
them he raped two women m
Orange Oounty and bas not been
linked to the incidents. , .
"l believe him," Deputy Dll·
trtct Attorney Ted Millard said.
'"This guy bas no reason to lie
about these other crimes and I
accept his stories and believe
that be d1d these things."
Judge Lae al.so noted today
tbat Teron ba1 made many
threats to Oraqe County Jall
deputies wbo bave been told that
Teron will lcnife them 11 be ever
re1alns hls freedom.
"It ls the flndlng of lhla court
that the sentence of death should
be lmpocsed,'' be 1ald ... The aald
penalty la to be tnfllcted within
the walls of the -.i. r.rtaon at San QueoUn and I d re(t the
1thertrt to escort you there "
Sl'OBE'S G4U
DIUIJS S.000
N ord1trom •1, \'he leattl•·
bued a~alt) 1t.oN1 OMoed lU
doon at Soulall CoUt Pfau· wtth
• 11>eclal .... for 1,000 peop_k
See'Featurtnt. Pqo 01.
c
Boy, 2,
Dies in
CM Fire
•• ,
l
(
' t
AntU,ues Returned
Movers Bart Knaphus and Jim Brown un·
load a shipment of antiques delivered to·
day to the Newport Beach police station.
The items were recove red from a Provo
home occupied by burglary suspect Gerry
Branagan who was . arrested earlier this
year in coMectton with 15 burglaries in
Cprona del Mar .. The antiques. already
idenUCitd as belonging to :'llewport Beach
residents, will be returned to their
owners.
Kidnap Victim
Rel,etu1ed;
Three An-ested
McKENZIE. Tenn. (AP> -A
wealthy businessman's teen-age
daughte r . kidnapped for a
quarter-million dollars ransom.
was rescued unharmed today
and returned to he r home
barefoot and clulchfng a red
rose.
Safe was Jodie Elizabeth
Gaines, 18. the daughter of Ben
and Ludie Gaines.
Authorities said two men and
'a woman were in custody and
the ransom had been recovered.
The FBI was seeking a third
man in the case. No charges had
been filed.
Wearing a green shirt and
blue jeans. Miss Gaines reached
home with her father, walked
with him to a back gate and
stooped t.o hug the family dog.
She stood, took a few steps and
embraced a state trooper stand·
ing by.
Her father put his arms
around her neck and they turned
for the door. Her hands
trembled. They said nothing.
Pending a news conference
later in the day, orflcials gave
few details of the ransom payoff
or the girl's release.
The FBI said a famil y
member made the $250,000
payoff Monday night near the
Tennessee-Kentucky border. Of·
ficera reached the victim at a
country cabin just before noon
Tuesday. She was taken to a
clinic in Huntingdon, about 10
miles from her home.
Miss Gaines, one of three
children, ls a student at a
private Memphis prep school.
She bad been missing since Fri·
day night when she disappear~
while driving from a country
club where she dined with her
family to a cousin's house.
A family friend said Monday
night that an effort to pay a
$250,000 ransom for her release
had fallen through.
"We have not paid the ransom
and we have not picked her up.
no sir," GAines said at that
lime.
Federal and state agents had
been waltlni for a break in the
case, with only Miss Gaines·
abandoned car and a receiver
clipped from a pay telephone as
clues. A dispatcher for the Car-
roll County sheriff's office said
Monday nisht that Miss Gaines'
car was found abandoned earlier
tn the day about zs_ miles
southeast of McKenzie.
Also Monday, a receiver and
cord from a pay telephone in a
McKenzie service station had
been clipped by a federal agent
and taken to the FBI command
post at the McKenzie Motor IM.
The ataUon 's manager said he
was asked who used the phone
Monday momlng but be said too
many customers passed throu&h,
the station for him to tell who
may have called out.
;Police Slay
LA Stabber
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Sberlff's .deputies fatally . shot
Bruce E. Ca1abat, 311 after be
stabbed hls bro\her, Anthony,
wblte they were que1Uonlna blm
and then hmaed at the depuUes.
AuthortUtt aaid Monday the
lncld1nt occurred after depuUes
bad 1one to Cuabat11 apart•
mtnt 1n the Walnut Park aedlOft
t.o loveat11ate a dlaturblnct call .
Anthony Casaba\ wu
COAST.-;r.
park acquisition or a portion
<3.200 acres> of the Irvine prop.
erty." the report reads, "the
general plan contains no
mechanism for assuring-the long
term preservation or major re·
source areas ... " The staff report also cites the
intensity of development, with
the county plan calbng for 38,000
residents lo clustered develop-
ments.
Other staff objections Include
alleged degradation or visual
quality , lack of low and
moderate income housing, possi·
ble tramc congestion and loss of
major habitat and archaeological
resources.
* * * ) From Page A J
REBUTS •.••
"Residential and conservation
a reas an the plan are specifically
designed to allow compatibility.
and special policies were ~e·
veloped to ensure preservation
of the habitat," Irvine officials
responded.
Montlal,e Stans
5-Nation Tour "
~ANILA. Philippines <AP> -
Vice President Walt.er F. Mon·
dale arrived in Manila today t.o
begin a five -nation lour
dem·onslrating the Carter ad·
ministration's commitment to
Southeast Asia and to human
rights. -.
"Where there are values and
traditions that both our peoples
cherish -freedom, Individual
liberty, human justice, de·
mocracy and national indepen·
dence -l hope my visit can con·
tribute to their greater fulfill·
ment," Mondale told President
Fe rdinand E. Marcos on his ar·
rival from Honolulu.
boaplt.alJnd ln f aJr condlUon.
t ~-·~~--~~;::;.....::..;...~--..,;~~~
Police Seek
Bandsna-cliid
Rapist in NB
Newport Beach police said to·
day lhey are looking ror a man
wearing a blue bandan~ and a
blue baseball cap who broke into
a Newport Heights home early
Monday morning and raped the
occupant. ...
The 29-year-old woman told
police she awoke lo find the
man, armed with a ltnlfe, stand·
ing in her'bedroom. She said be
told her he wouldn't hurt her if
s he followed his ord~ns.
The woman said that alter he
raped her and left the house she
tried to call police. only lo find
that the man had removed the
mouth piece t.o her telephone.
Sbe said she waited uatil 8
a.m. to go t.o a neighbor to call
police.
NB Planners
Cancel Meet
The regularly scheduled
Newport Beach Planning Com·
mission meeting of May 4 has
been canceled due to lack of a
quorum, city officials have an·
nounced. ·
Several planni ng com·
misliioners will be unable to al·
tend, said Jim Hewicker. ass1s·
tant director or community
development for the city.
He said ·items scheduled for
that meeting will be taken up al
the May 18 meeting.
Smuggling Charged
MEXICO CITY (AP> -
Fausto Cantu P ena. former
chairman of the Mexican Cofree
Institute. and fi'(e other men were behind bars today a wafting
trial on charges of smuggling
eight million pounds or coffee In·
to the United States and evading
$10 mjllion in taxes.
A two-year.old boy visiting tus
grandmother in Costa Mesa was
killed Monday afternoon when
fire swept through a single-story
Mesa Verde home. fire depart· ~ent offlclala reported.
The Oranae County Coroner's
Office Identified the victim as
Daniel Storlee. son of Douglas
and Sue Storlee of Stanton.
T he boy's 4·year-old lister was
re scued from the quic k-
s p reading blue whe n the
arandmother. Emd Storlee. dis·
covered the fire in her living
room and ran out of the house
with the girl.
Costa Meso fire battalion
Chief Jack Pe"tklns said today
that Mrs. Storlee tried Ln vain to
re-enter her home at t796 Pit·
cairn Drive to rescue Daniel. but
she was drtven back by smoke
and names.
Exact cauie of the blaie is un·
der investigation. Firemen
belleve tht young boy may have
been playing with matches. or
the fire could have resulted from
an unattended fireplace.
Chief Perkins said the victim ·s
body was found tn the rear living
room of the frame house where
the fire ortglnated. Bundles of
newspapers In the home ap-
parently contributed to the fast
moving fire that broke out at
about 3:25 p.m.
Damage to the rear portions of
the home was extensive, but fire
officials have .et no daamage
estimate.
The two SloNee childreft
stayed often at their
grandmother's home.
Fifteen Costa Mesa firemen
were on the scene. the first truck
company anivtng rour minutes
after the blaze was r~ported,
Chief Perkins said.
The fire was under control in
li minutes. There was no
damage to surrounding homes in
the Mesa Verde area.
Vandals Hit
ruMHigh
Newport Beach police and 0£.
ficials at Corona del Mar High
School are seeking the vandals
who hit the school over the
weekend. causing S500 damage
and stealing S750 worth of equip·
ment.
School employees told polit-e
they found slogans painted in
black on walls in the quad. on
the gym and on the handball
courts when they reported for
work Mondaymoming.
They said some stage lights
left in the quad after the staging
of the school play Saturday were
gone and so was a machine kept
in the attendanct' office which
was used to stamp the date and
time on admission slips.
Tennis Class
Offered in NB
Classes will begin May 15 for
B grade tennis players In a pro·
gram offered by the l'lfewport
Beach Pa rks. Beaches and
Recreation Department.
Classes wilt be through the
mormng and afternoon on Mon·
days and Wednesdays at
Mariners Park.
Registration for the $20, five·
week sessions. is being taken at
city hall For further inrorma·
lion on registration and class
times call 640-2271.
'
Saddlebaek Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
EDITION
~
( VOL 71, NO. 122, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1978 TEN CENT~l
1
I
Gates
• l By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of .... Diii'( ,,. .........
Orange County Sheriff Brad
1 Gates. whose personal financial
dealings and county travel ex·
penses are being inveslig~ted by
the FBI. told Miss ion Viejo Op-
timist Club members this mom·
ing he amassed most or his
runds through bard work and
s~rt real estate investments.
Appearing for the Optimists'
Law Day o~ervalion in La"una
Cites ·'Wise'
Hllls. Gates recounted lhai be
began purchasing property
wb~n he was 18 years old al the
urging of an older brother who
recognized the error of squan-
deri ng funds on "t'ars and
chrome."
He said that in ensuini years he saved money to buy a duplex.
invest in Fallbrook area land
and then join with a friend in
construction of several slngle-
family homes. duplexes and
triplexes. •
Gates said that, in 1974, after
deci~iPR to run for the office of sbenrr. he and his wife liquidated
their holdings.
Gates said he built 60 percent
of his current home on a San
Juan Capistrano hilltop with his
own hands.
"I'm fortunate to have made
money with some wlse invest·
men ts," he said, noting that
dealinJC in real estate definitely is
Land lnvestnients 1
not i~egal. He claimed only one ~in Los Angeles. finances came this morning un·
individual, an Orange County The FBI probe apparently ls der questioning by Optimist
news.man , "seems lo have retracing. in pa rl. ground Club members. crtticasm.Jdon'tk:no~why.' already covered last fall in a Jn a speech prior to awarding
Oates ~Id Optlm1sls: "I ex· s tale Attorney General's in· an Optimists' honor to one of his
peel to .. ~tn'_overwhelmmgly .on vesligation into Gates' personal deputies. Gates discussed the
June 6. m his bid for re.election and professional activities. status of a proposed sheriff's
and noted "there ha~ .been no Like the federal investigation, substation In the south county
co.m.ment about my ab1bty to ad· that inquiry was touched off by area. He Indicated that passage
m1ntstrate." allegations by unidentified per-of Proposition 18. the Jarvis·
. The federal ~robe Into allega-sons. ft ended Oct. 24 with a find· Gann lniUative. could jeopardize hon~i:St Gates by un-ingornoimproperconduct. iu eventual construction. ,.
Death Penalty
kno . .;;•t under way Gates· discuss ion o! his (See GATES, Poge A» ,
posed ·in OC
Pt1hlic Notice Due
j
I
} SVUSD . t~>. R~veal Welte Re(JS_o~ing .
~ i By WILLIAM HODGE"
• Ol .. Oill.., ...... ~
Saddleback Valley Unified l~ School District's board majori·
ly, which suspended Superinten·
dent Richard Welte two weeks
= ago, is poised to reveal reasons
l for the action. board President
t
George Henry said Monday.
·'Our statement is being
l ooked at by the county
t counsel, .. Henry said. ··we'll
probably be able to give r something out on Wednesday."
The board majonty -Henry.
Mary Phillips and Carole
Neustadt -ordered Welte onto
"vacation status," saying a con·
flict existed between the
superintendent and the board.
The three trustees have declined
to comment on the natute of the
confLi<'l.
Board members William
i"' Kohler and Loa Young opposed
1 Welte's suspension.
Henry sa'd an executive
session would be scheduled
Wednesday·al 4 p.m. to continue
"working on a solution" to the
Welte conflict.
, He also indicated a requested
I legal opinion covering passlble
'('onrtict or interest btrtween a
( trustee and district employees I may be available Wednesday
.... .
evening.
The county counsel opinion
was requested by Henry after
Saddleback Va lley Educators
Association <SVEA>-President
Bill Mecham charged Trustee
Kohler with selling tax sheltered
i 10 Musion
Viejo Autos
Vandalized
Vandals sh attered the win-
dows on at least nine cars in the
Mass ion Viejo area Monday
mght and doused another with
paint. county sheriCf's deputies
reported this morning.
A south county sheritr's sub-
station spokesman said windows
in ,four driver-education cars
were shot out with BB guns or
slingshots at Mission Viejo High
School. Windows were also shat-
tered In a car parked at a
Chevron staUon at 26202 La Pu
• Road and paint splattered on a
car at 2A861 Venavlo.
The spokesman said deputies
, In the field bad taken four addi·
' Uonal ~ports this morning and l were expecting more during the
I day.
~
Peat»ek Pick
(J/URam.
ElvJs Peacock, a Oeet
running back from lhe
Unlveralty ot Oklahoma,
wa• Hleeted by t.be Loi
An1eles Ram• u thelr ln·
iUal pick ln the National
Football Lea•ue draft to-ct.y.
The Rama' pick came ln
UM rut l"OWMS.
Two Southland.
llntbacken were ebolen
on the openln1 10Gnd.
USC'• Clay Mattbew1
wot to Clevelaftd and Dan
8un1 from Lon• hach
SUte WU MJected by UMt
Sao rruetteo een.
For addltioniJ cl«&lli on
the d~ ... apoftl, Pa,.
81.
annuities to district employees ·
and Supt. Welte.
Welle has admitted holding an
annulty through Kohler. but
does not believe that constitutes
a conflict of interest.
~e said the annuity was a dor-
m ~policy he re-activated
following a $3,000 raise granted
by the board in January.
Kohler cast one or four votes
that approved tbe raise
Fifth, Sixth Graders
Viejo Busing Plan
Out for Next Year .
Sixth grader s rrom Dana
Point. Capistrano Beach and
San Juan Capistrano will attend
Capistrano School In San Juan
next fall. Capistrano Unified
School Di.strict trustees ruled
before an overflow crowd Mon·
day night
Trustees voted 8 to t, with
Rober~ Bachelor of Laguna
Niguel opposed, to approve a
staff recommendation calling
for the following school alt.en·
dance changes:
-Nexl year's filth a nd
sixth grade students from Mis·
sion Viejo will stay at elemen-
tary schools in their own com·
munily, rather than being bused
to Capistrano School, as they are
-currenttY.
Additional space wil1 be
available in Mission Viejo
schools with the September
opening of Carl Hankey Elemen·
tary School in the Cordova tract:
-With additlonal epace availa-
b 1 e a t C ·a p \ s t r a no
School, it will be used as a sixth
grade campuo, accommodating
students from R.H. Dana.
Palisades. Harold Ambuehl and
San Juan Elementary School at-
tendance areas.
Deputy Superinte nd e nt
Truman Benedict urged trustees
to adopt the proposed alten·
dance shifts, saying it would al·
low for the best use of available
facilities and would avoid the in·
troduction or additional portable
units in the district, except at
Microwave Ovem
Taken in El Toro .
B urglars who apparently
knew the combination on the
garage lock took sHt new
m Jcrowave ovens valued at
$2,06'1 from an El Toro home.
Or ange County sheriff's of-
ficers said the ovens were taken
from a home at 2439~Peacock
Drive. The ovens were tbe prop-
erty of the Butler HOU!lng Com·
pany ofJrvtne.
Capistrano Valley High School.
Jaque Hickman, who said she
represented Palisades and R.H.
Dana parents, told trustees and
an audien~ of about 140 parents
and school administrators that
the district would save money if
it operated Capistrano School as
a· fifth·lixth ~e faclUty for
Ambuehl and Juan Elemeh·
tary students.
••tt would really save money
to bus flftb and sixth graders
from across the street at San
Juan Elementary a nd from
across the freeway at AmbuehJ,
rather than busing sixth graders
from Palisades and R.H Dana,"
she said.
ln voting against the staff ree-
om mendation. Bachlor said he
favor ed the par~nts' plan to
make CapiStrano School a Cirlh·
sixth grade extension of San
Juan and Ambuehl schools-.
"I start out by selecting a
philosophy, rather than a plan."
said Bachelor, "and then I find a
plan to flt the philosophy. In this
case. my philosophy is the
neighborhood school concept.
"The closer your child ls to
your home -that's what l sup-
port," he said. "I also support
good utilization of your tax
dollar. l find (the parents' plan>
more compatible <than the
staff's> with my philosophy."
Solar Open
House Slated
In Observance of Sun Day, the
Mission Viejo Company has
scheduled an open house from 10 a.m. to ~ p.m. Wednesday at lls minimum energy dwelling.
A t epredntatlve will be
available to answer ,11ueslioos
and explain the technologies ot
solar home-heating, water heat·
ing en~ alr condlllonlng, a com-
pany spokesman said.
To reach the dwelling at 27232
Nogal St.. follow the Cordova
models directional signs in Mis-
sion Vtejo. .
Delt'f ...... ,..... lly ,.'"° 0'0-11
TRASH MOUNTS UP, BUT ~T'S STRETCHING THINGS
Coate Meun Get.a Around to Throwing Out Chrf1tmas free
Break Seen in OC
Strike Negotiations
The federal mediator ih the
two-week-old Orange County
trash strike said today be is op-
ti mis lie about negoltalioos
between drivers and manage·
ment.
"l expect a break in negotia·
tions tomorrow," mediator John
Courtney said. noting he will
meet with Teams ters and
management at 11 a.m. Wed.Des·
day .
Courtney said very little hap-
pened Monday. when he met
with both sides Cor about three
hours. On Saturday, Teamsters
voted down what managers of
seven struck firms had termed
their final offer.
The drivers have been out on
strike since their three-year con·
tract expired April 17. More
than a mlUion Orange County res-
idents have been without trash
disposal service since then.
Violence intensified Monday
as some trash truelu began roll-
wagon allegedly fired one shot
at three employees in the cab of
a trash truck.
Arrested on suspicion or as-
sault with a deadly weapon and
assault with intent lo .commit
murder were Rafael A. Ramos,
29; Rafael R. Ramirez, 24 ; and
Daniel M. Cano, 21. all or Santa
Ana.
However. police said that.
when arrested, the three were in
possession only o( two BB guns
and that no bullet had been
round In the cab of the trash
truck. However, Investigators ·
said they haven't dismissed the
possibility that a gun might have
been thrown from the station
wagon before it was stopped.
Pellets were fired at two new-
ly ttired Laguna Beach trash col·
lectors Monday, leaving a bole
in the window of a Laguna
Beach Dispasal truck. No one
was injured.
ing again with newly hired non· And ln Buena Park, three men
uniondrivers. in a. car reportedly pulled uP
The most serious incident OC· alongside a trash truck and one
curred at M G Dispoul in of them aimed what appeared to
Fullerton, Monday afternoon, be a handgun at the driver o( the
when three meo in a station truck but didn't fire.
striker· Teil.S · is Side ..
By JACKIE RY•AN Of .. Dllt¥ ...........
A year .. o. a-year.old Juan
M. Tapla aave up hll ~rt-time
ll'\tCk drivfna iob iii Loa 'Aft&elea wben be founcl full·Ume work ln
HunllqlGn Beach. ho weeka ...,, tbe father ol
thne walked oft bit MW lrUh truck dttvtna Job with Rainbow
Dl1po1a) of lletlnaton Beach
and h .. ·: 1pent bis d&11 since
lhen marebln• back altd rorth lo
front ol the e0mpan,, ctl'TYlnl a
ptck.t9itD.
Tapia, wbo Uvet Wttlt Ida wtte
and rout c:blld ... • I• Lon1 Baell, ts .. ~ more *8n .00
:r••mlWrl • alrH1• •I~
private di&potal flrm1 lhat Mtvt "And we don't baYe.. Juaran·
moNt than a million Oranae tees on the Job," Tapia said. He
County JWidenls. 1 said any misconduct, even an
Tbe •trike la ereatlna'-accident. that lsn't the driver's
hardthlps. tor resident• who f1ult. ff!l lead to lmmed1at&dia-
bave to haul tbelr own aarbaae mlssal.
to tbg dump. It'• alto liard on Tapia alto uJd driven are re·
Tapia. quired to take their coffee
So tar, he tald, the Ulllon bu bruks while t.hey·r~ dumplfta
promlled lttlke fundt1 but be rubbish at the county tran.afer
hasn't Men any. He ua his wtfe 1tatton. which mean1 they don't.
are dlPOlnl lfttO tbelr eavlnp. really pt a break. ··r Ilk• the Job, .. Tapia 1aid. Ae ked about Incidents of
''But we need men money and violence that •v• marred th
Job 1ua~." strtke tn other .clUea, Tapia u!d,
Tapia said 1111 f amll1 b11 "When ,u)"1 break a 1\rtte.
touftd_ lt dlftltutl '° Dve ~ b1I everyone 1et1 mad. It'• the
kfO;aiMloar Wlfil!.t Nii ~ tame here. t tel a little wnad." r~ ta._ fnMii ~to I 1tar1. Tbla .. the f1nt 1Uike be'a
c
ever been involved in, Tapia
aaid. He said he'd rather be
worklne -on terms he can ac·
cept.
Until then, hcuaid, "I'll welt."
Seetna a dltf erent slde of the
strike ls Stan Tkaczyk, vtce·
prestdent or Rall'lbow Disposal,
for which Tapia works.
"The atrtkers bave a rt•ht to
stand out there ti tbey want alld
I have the rlght to ran my
trucks ," Sllld Tbczyk, himself a
rormer truck dnver. •
The atrtke, Tbczyk saJd, ''bas
• a tr mendoua adverse etreet on 'h• bualneu. •• ff nld be
(See 8ftlKE. Pase Ai>
Anaheim
Killing
lnvOly_e_d
A man eonvicled of three
murders and who allegedly
claims to have committed two
more undetected killings was
sentenced to death today in
Orange County Superior Court.
It was the first such imposi-
tion of the death penalty in
Orange County and only the
second in the state since capital
punishment was reintroduced lo
crlminal law last August.
Gregory John Teron Jr .. 25.
who .defended Jlimself during the
non.jury trial that led to his con·
viction by J udge Kenneth E. Lae
on c harges or first degree
murder. s~d he will not appeal
the death penalty.
Manacled hand-an root.
Teron remained Impassive to-
day while Judge Lae hesitantly
pronounced the death penalty ln
a bushed courtroom.
Obviously distressed. Judge
Lae collected his papers on the
bench, took orr his glasses and
then started to l eave the courtroom.
He turned back, looked at the
silent Teron and told him: "May
God have mercy pn your soul.
Mr. Teron."
Earlier. Judge Lae con·
de mned Teron as a "very
callous killer who~ en n more r emember how many pie he
has killed than some.. pie can
reme mber how man cups of
coffee they drink in · Cfa.y.' •
Judge Lae recalled from the
bench that T~ron told orficers
who booked him ror the killing or
businessman Earl R eed in
<See DEATH. Page A2>
Viejo Victim
Of Car Dies
A Mission Viejo man died
Monday, apparently of injunes
surrered when hit by a car near-
ly a month ago. the county
Coroner's Office said today.
William Hill , 62, or 2S J62
Charlinda Drive, died at Mission
Co mmunity Hospital at 6:06 a.m .
Hill was struck March 4 by a
car driven by Charles Martin,
31, of 23831 Via Astorga, Mission
Viejo.
Highway Patrol repom said
Hill was dashing across Alicia
Parkway in a crosswalk at
Charlinda Drive against a
"don't walk" signal when he
was bit.
Coast
Weather
Low clouds late tonight
and Wednesday morning,
th e n mos tly s unn y
Wednesday afternoon.
Lows tonight48to56. Highs
Wednesday66to72.
INSIDE TODA~
A aight«I woman finlh ln
Bram. a~ Co a/tart Che
~cut11 and lot» that llaVf!
m4M Mr life rich. S.e P~
84.
7
• OAll 'f' PROT S B I
!ue~ax, Max 2, 111a
State fkltorf
YQunger l..inks
•
Freedom
Granted
To Jury 9 .2 to Crime By TOM BARLEY
TELLS CRIME LINKS
Ex-NB Chief Glevas
Fro.a Page A J
STRIKE .••
couldn't give exact ffgures on
his fi rm's losses.
4'teanwhile, Tkaczyk said, he
and other managers have gone
-i>?tck to drivm~ troeks to-provide
essential pickups for hospitals
a nd restaurants.
In .response to some of Tapia's
eom ment~. Tkaczyk said he
bet~ves a driver has adequate
reC'ourse if he 's threatened with
d ismissal.
"A man does his job, there's
no reason to let him go," he
said .
As for the coffee bre aks
Tkaczyk said. ''By law they're
t:ntilled to coffee breaks and
they're entitled to take them. I
don't know what they 're rerer-
rmg to."
He said most drivers at Raln·
bow have been there between
three and four years. some as
long as mnc years.
"We lake care of our people. It
speaks for itself," Tkaczyk said.
Although he was upsel by an
incident this momlng In whjch
strikers threw a bottle at a trash
truck. Tkaczyk said he still has
s ome s ympathy for the in-
dividuals involved.
"I know exactly where they're
coming from," he said. "I 've
been there."
· Tkaczyk said h e believes
management's otrer of a hike to
S6 an hour over a three-year
period 1s fa ir. Drivers have
asked for a raise to $8.50 an hour
during that period. Tkaczyk said
his firm isn't willing to offer
more than il already has.
However. he said he believes
m an) of the drivers would like
to return to work if it weren't for
pressure by other drivers and
the Teamsters Union. ~ Fro•Pa~'AI
GA'(ES ...
Earnin~ honors as a n out·
st a nding offi cer an the Sad-
' die back a rea was deputy Robert
B Giles of Irvine, lauded by
Gales !or work in helping break
up m a1or narcotics operations in
the Saddleback Valley area and
as ~ volunteer on the sheriff's
tacllcal squad.
Volcano Continues
C AT ANIA, Sicily CAP> -M o u~t Etna s hot molte n
matenal 1,500 feet into the air
::and poured flaming lava down
its southern slope today In the fou~l~ strai~hl day of volcanic a ctivity. The lava Crorn 10 ()()().
foot Etna. Europe's highest
volca no, was flowing In an un-
inhabited a rea.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
LOS ANG ELES <AP> -Callforn1a Attorney Gene ral
Evelle Younger today named 92
state residents who a state re·
port concludes are linked to or·
aanized crime activities costing
Californians $6.8 billion a year.
FQrmer Newport Beach Polle~
Chief B. James Glavas, who
chaired the task force which
prepared the 88~age report, told
a news conference:
"I hope that businessmen will .Pe able to use this document in
identifying persons they might
ha ve dealings with."
The report r e leased by
Younger al the news conference
also gave the home addresses of
the 92 individuals. includin&
Sidney R. Ko rs hak , a Los
Ange les labor lawyer . The re-
~rl says Korshak is "the key
lrnk between organized crime
and big business."
Also on the list were Anthony
Accardo or Indian Wells, reput-
ed head of the Chicago Mafia :
J a mes J . Lanza of San Mateo
identified by Glavas a s th~
ringleader of organized crime in
the San Francisco Bay Area :
and Donald Joseph Wiener of
Chula Vista, identified as •·a
major pornography operator in
the San Diego area."
The Organized Crime Control
Commission identified 200 addi·
tional persons believed linked to
crime. but Younger said their
names would not be released pubtRIJ 10-protel!t-SOUl'ces -or
witnesses or because data .. on
their activities was not current
or adequately detailed.
"We've never poo-poobed it."
Younger said. "But organized
crime ls not the problem in
California that it is in some
Eastern states with comparable
populations.'·
GJavas s aid that cohesive
leadership under Lanu has
been established in Northern
CalHornia, "but in Southern
California it doesn't seem to
have reached that stage yet."
YounRer and Glavas s aid they
don't believe a single lead~r in
Southern California has
emerged to replace stronaman
Nl~k Llcat.a, who died four years
ago.
The attorney general said
today's report will be followed
later this year by a second docu-
ment concerned with terrorism
prison gangs and oulla~
motorcycle gangs.
~f Korshak, the report said:
"His name bas been linked with
organiz.ed crime for more than
30 years, and he has been the
su~jecl. of st;veral organized
crime 1nveshgations . A U.S.
Justire Depa rtment oUicial has
described Korshak as a 'senior
ad viser' to orRanized c rime
groups in California, Chicago,
Las Vegas and New York."
Other names on the list in-
clude John William Spatafore
d es cribed as a majo;
bookmake r in the San Diego
area; Hadrian John Liberatore,
a former San Diego real estate
broker identified at his 1974
a rs'On·assault trial as "a well
connected member of organized
<'rime;" Rolland Simon Louden
of Mill Valley. named as an as-
sociate or J ames "Jimmy the
Weasel" Fralianno, a convicted
pimp who is also identified as
lbe owner of several nude bars
m the Bay Area; and Joseph
Xavier Cerrito of Los Gatos.
Of tM Dellr P41et l'-ff
Dissension and dissatisfaction
appear to be growing factors to-
day in an Oranae County
Superior Court Jury that is try·
Ing for the eighth day to reach a
verdict in murder trial of Dr.
William Baxter Waddill of Hunt·
ington Harbour.
Both (actors became increas·
ingly apparent during the late
afternoon Monday when the
complain~ of jurors led Judge
James K. Turner to decide that
the panel can no longer be se·
questered.
The n ine male and three
fema le jurors and the male
alternate juror all returned to
their homes Monday night after
ma king it clear to Judge Turner
that continued sequestration at
their Holiday Inn would mean
the C}ld of jury deliberations.
Defense attorney Malbour
Watson said jury foreman John
Thomas of Los Alamitos told the
j udg e that the attitude of
sheriff's deputies assigned to
escort the jury led to.objections
being filed with Judge Turner.
"They weren't being .treated
as human beings."' Watson said.
"We don't want an unhappy, an·
gry jury and we don't want them
taking it out on Dr. Waddill just
because we were the fU"St to ask
that they be sequestered "
The defense .motion for se·
questratloo was denied shortly
~fore the jury began deli~ra-
-llons..a week -ao.--. --
. But Judge Turner Jater de-
cided to seal off his Jury when1le ~came concerned about grow-
ing press accounts of and com-
ment on the trial.
Judge Turner bimseU seemed
unsettled about 6 p.m . Monday
after an afternoon or interviews
with bristling jurors and anxious
lawyers.
He ordered spectators and
news people in his crowded
courtroom not to try and follow
jurors out of the courtroom and
into the corridors.
A·Jury.tampering is a felony,"
he warned. And be. then asked
jurors to report to him any at-
tempts to contact thetn about
~e trial.
The rapidly deteriorating at-
mosphere of the trial included
the reported comment by a juror
that she had suggested reaching
a verdict by flipping a coin.
Judge Turner talked to Mrs.
Patricia Lawrence of Hunt·
iogton Beach after the comment
was reported to him by another
juror.
She reportedly told the judge
that she did not intend the re-
mark to be taken seriously. She
told Judge Turner that it was de-
livered in a flippant manner and
s aid that she said it to lighten
the mood of a depressed jury.
Judge Turner appeared to ac-
c.ept Mrs. Lawrence's explaria-
t1on and denied an immediate
motion for a mistrial by defense
attorney Charles Weedman.
Weedman and Watson said the
incident will form part of their
appeal ll the jury subsequenUy
convicts Dr. Waddill.
~alson described the jury as
be ing "damn nea r evenly
divld~." He refused to say what
led ham to that conclusion.
Wedding bells added to the
growing cl'amor Monday when
another juror told Judge Turner
that she wants to get married
Saturday. deliberations or no de·
liberations.
Let Us Wait
Lettuce CoBt to Drop
By The Aaloclated Presa
Consumers who have watched lettuce prices soar until salad is
almost as expensive a s steak can expect some relief next month a
government. economist predicted today. Lettuce was selling in New
Yori City for $1.39 anead.
"This thing is tempprary," said Charles W. Porter of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, discussing the high prices. "We're just
going to have to wait it out." ~
PORTER SAID SHIPMENTS OF lettuce from California -
the nation's major producer -are runninl halt to less than haU or
what Lbey were a year ago because tatbs-ln the Salinas VaUey in
February and March prevented rarmers from planting and, in
some cases. washed away seeds ln the around.
Broccoli, caullflQwer. and some other vegetables also have
been affected by the tains, Porter sald, but the Impact la less
severe because the crop is spread over a greater geoerapbical
area.
The lettuce crop, planted ln late March, should be ready about
June 1 and Porter said prlca should come down again. He said
plaotlnp of lettuce and other lrult and veaetable crops are normal
and said that wileu there la 90me unusual weather development
summer supplies should be adequate. '
MEANWHILE, LETTVCE PRICES have soared to more than
double,. ~d In some cases tr1l°)le, what they were a year ago.
Retail pnces vary widely from area to area and 1tore to store.
fo Wasblneton, D.C. Iceberg lettuce l1 selllng for about 89
cents a head, prices in the Midwest top Sl a head in some places,
anC! In Ne\\' York City the price le up to $1.39 a bead In ll few 1torea.
At the shipptn1 point, Portar said, lettuce Is aellln1 for $15 a
crate ot ~ beads -''an tmheard-of price" -compared to a
normal rate ol $2.50 to $Sa crate.
THE DEC&EASE IN 8UPPUE8 from Callfomta bu caUHd
an ln.creue ill pd~ from other ac,u. Rometne from P'lortda baa aooe up, for example, even tbOUlb 1uppUes are normal Porter
said. '
Almost live bllllon Poundl of lettuce II ll"OWD lD the VDlt.ect
States every year. aceordlnl to t.be U.ut.d Freal'I Fnalt and
Veietable Altoclatloe. California produce. about tbrff.foortbl or
lbe total and, eteome Muont, provldM up to 80 percenlohuppty.
Drouabt In 1978 and 19" 11' callforali A1iO ea\iied lean Of a
lhortap, td IUPIU• of mOll frulta and w.-.bleil Nllla!Md •·
quale, thanb to lni11uon and eonaervaUon meuures.
WilUle Go Ape?
Ra m a r . a _350;pound m ale gorilla. was brought to the
Ph1la deJph1a Zoo from North Carolina to make li ttle
gorillas. Ramar is in quarantine now. but there <1re
~hree lady _gorillas in wailing and zoo o(ficials hope he is
interested in mating.
Capo Board Picks
Portable Priority
~e"M po~able cla~sroom.s ~e-The remaining $350.000 is in
ce1ved a high spending praonty general obligat ion bonds re-M ~ f! day when. C~plstran o maining from a 1973 bond elec·
Umf1e<! _Sc~..!_.. Distract !!_u~tees _.lion.:-_ _
vofea una~1mous'ly fo scrap a Because tlie sclioonilsffict lias
Laguna Niguel school building not reached agreement wtth Av-
proJect. . . co Commwiity Developers on a
'J'.h.e "fast-~rowmg Capistrano school site in Laguna Niguel and
Umf1~d dis~nct has $2.75 miJlion because inflation is boosting
re matnJng m s~hool construction s chool construction costs al a fu.n~s .. o~ this amount. S.2.4 ~rate of one percent a month, dis·
!fl I I hon as m St~t~ ~~hool ~wl~-tricl stafrrecommeoded that con·
mg Progra'!l ehg1b1hty. which ts struction priorities be changed
currently lied U{> at the stale Monday's vote authorizes dis.
leyel with a proposed Laguna trtct staf( to apply to the State
Niguel elementary school proj· School Building Program to re·
eel. ap~ eligible funds. The dis-
trict \"ill apply for state ap-
Begin-Carter
Talks 'Warm'
WASHINGTON <AP> -White.
House Officials are saying the
warm remarks exchanged by
President Carte r and Israeli
Prime Ministe r Menachem
Begin were more the result of
ceremony than progress in the
peacemak.iJll process. (Related
story. AS>
The officials, who asked not to
be ide ntified . s aid there bas
been virtually no change In the
views of either Israel or the
Ca rte r admiJlistralion afte r
several days of ta lks that
(ulminated Monday with
Begin 's brier trip to Washington
to m ark the 30th annlvers~ry or
Is rael's founding.
Nonetheless, the atmosphere
Monday was dttidedly different
Jrom t.he chillY, formal a1r at the
close of Begin's last visit to
Washington in March.
Later in the day when Begin
arrived In Los Angeles to con -
tinue his u:s. tour. he agreed:
"There was difficulty in March
bul now there is-a great im~
provement."
Bias Reversed
MONTGOMERY, Ala. <AP> -
A federal judge ruled today that
predominantly black Alabama
State University bas dis·
criminated agairuit whites in the
hiring and promotion of faculty
members.
proval for boys' shower and
loc ker rooms a t.-Capistrano
Valley High School in Mlssion
Viejo ($700.0011'rirbd 53 ne w
portable cl~srooms to be local·
ed at six district school sites <$2
million>. •
Trustees William Thompson of
Mission Viejo and Robert
Bachelor of Laguna Niguel
asked that district staff explore
alternatives lo ''the standard
box configuration" in portables.
Thompson suggested A.frame
portables. and Bachelor asked
for port.ables which would blend
in with permanent school build-
ings.
Superinte ndent Jerome
Thornsley said the state has en-
couraged the Capistrano district
to upgrade portables, which are
currently below standard. Up·
gradil)g wilt cut into the number
of portable classrooms the dis·
trict can buy, h wever
Thornsley said. '
PAT'S 'TRU111'
DFSEKlS HER
Richard Nixon lied to his wile
and to his family, just as he lied
to the country. a harsb indict·
ment and an· incontrovertible
fact. according to Lester David.
And on her final day in the
White House. the wife or 28
years listened to her husband
pra~e his mother as a saint.
Excerpts from David's biog-
raphy of Pat Nixon continue on
PageA7.
Knµuft
.Resigns
OC Post
One me mber or the ne w
Oran1;e County Fair Campa ign
Practices Commission resigned
Monday and another chose lo
give up a Democratic party post
alter questions about the ir
eligibility to serve.
Roy Knaurt, a former county
planhing commissioner and
pa rt-time aide to U .S Rep.
Charles Wiggins. R Fullerton.
turned m his commiss ion res
lgnatlon k> Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich.
Diedrich was expected today
to name former La Habra
Mayor Charles Stevens. a re-
altor. ~ Knaurt's replacement.
Knauft was appointed to the
Ove-member panel last Tuesday
by Diedrich and was unanimous
ly chosen as its cha irma n the
s ame afternoon
The issue of Knauft's eligibili-
ty arose because he a lso serves
as a Yorba Linda County Waler
District director and as Wiggins·
alternate on the Orange Cbunty
Republican Central Co mmittee.
Gerald Margolin of Garden
Grove chose to resign as state
Sen. Paul Carpenter 's alternate
on the county Democratic Cen-
tra I Committee because of a
similar question.
The county ordinance that
c.reated the new campaign prac-
tices panel says that no member
shall hold any other government
office. serve as an officer or a
political party or take part in
coun ty government election
C~-------
The rtVe-member panel was
created to oversee the conduct
of non-partisan county govern-
ment orfic es such a s
supervisors. sheriff, tax collec-
tor· t reQsurer. clerk·recorder
and auditor-controller
Both Knauft and Margolin
took their actions after seeking
an opinion from the county
counsel's office .
fi'ro91 Pflfle AJ
DEATH .••
Anaheim on Oct. 31. 1975. that he
fully int.ended to kill Reed after
he robbed him in a motel room
and that he ..:arefully pianned
the killing.
The judge s aid Re ed was
savagely beaten to death with
the same kind of callous intent
that Te ron displayed in two
ot.ber murders, both committed
in Mlchjgan
Teron was serving a life sen-
tence for murder in a Michigan
prison in 1977 when his boasting
about the murder of Reed led to
his arrest for the Orange County
k11lin~.
Before he could be returned
here he strangled and killed a
fellow prison inmate and was
tried and convicted for that kill-
ing. Again. he was sentenced to
life in prison.
Judge Lae rec a lied that
Teron 's first murder involved
the killing or an elderly woman
who was be ate n into un-
consciousness and then choked
to de ath by being hung from the
fool of her bed. Orange County offi cers claim
tha t Teron has bragged about
t wo other murders: a woman in
Anaheim and a man who was
murdered in a n eastern state
because he bumped Teron's ta·
ble while Teron was drinking in
a bar. They claim that Teron bas told
them he raped two women in
Orange County and has not been
linked lo the incidents.
T~, M!y 2, 1978 s DAIL y PILOT A3
Mesan Overeomes =
Blind Cancer Victim N o t Defeated 8
8y JACKIE HYMAN Of .. Oel .. ,.... .....
Jean ~ark of Costa Mesa has a few
troubles mosl Orange Coa st College
paychology s tudents don't have to contend
wlth.
For one t.hing, s he's legally blind. For
another, she's undereoing chemotherapy for
cancer.
Bul Mrs. Stark, who at 83 is a great·
grandmother six times over, has no intention
of giving up on life.
''I BELIEVE YOU have power," said
Mrs. Slark, who came to the U.S. from
Russia when she was 19. "If you use your
brain, you can overcome a lot of things. It all
depends on your will of life." Mrs. Stark had always been active,
managing a career as a clothes designer in
New York, and raising l wo children.
She also took classes in nutrition before
coming to Orange County during World War
II.
Then, lwo years ago, hardening or the
arteries diminished Mrs. Stark's eyesight to
the point where her doctor declared her
legally blind.
"EVERYTHING KIND of closed in,"
said Mrs. Stark, who lives alone in her Udy
apartment. "l couldn't even watch TV. It set
me back."
Then, a year later, she learned she had
cancer of the colon.
"I think the stress and worry about my
eyesight probably caused it," said Mrs.
• Stark, wbo undergoes chemotherapy once a
week at Hoag Memorial Hospital.
. Determined not to give in, Mrs. Stark
began to learn bow to cope with a world she
can see only "through a fog."
-.. 1 c6ULDN'T Pt[T a 12ime and a-quarter
in Jbe washing machine because I couldn 'l
see but, I've learned," Mrs. Stark said. "ll
was just a process of learning ~ll over
again."
Gradually, she expanded ·her activities
until she could take the bus and cook her own
meals.
Unwilling lo stay home, Mrs. Stark
joined a senior citizens center and the
Retired Senior Volunteer Program, in which
she collects magazines for UC Irvine Medical
Center patients.
But she sUU wasn't satisfied.
A MUSIC LOVER, Mrs. Stark put her
name on the Orange Coast College mailing
list so"she could . find out about musical
classeslllld performances.
Soon she was riding the bus to attend an
occasional lecture, especially on psychology.
"It s timulated rne for more, but
everything involved books to read," Mrs. Stark
sajd.
Dlllyf'ttltSUH~
NOT GIVING UP ON LIFE
Mesa's Jean Stark, 83
Then one day a friend of hers decided to
take a class in peer counseling and invited
Mrs. Stark lo come with her to the Interview.
Mrs:-Staric--said-shc was 'SO tmpressta
with t~e . le~cher that. "1 asked, can I just
come in wtth Marie and listen once in a
while?"
INSTEAD, THE TEACHER told her she
was welcome to enroll, and arranged for
cassette tapes to be made of the books.
"So now 1 put on the tape, and I read "
Mrs. Stark said. '
i.be said she's already planning to take mor~asses in psychology.
"I don't want a career," Mrs. Stark said.
"It's Just that l want to be able to help people
know how lo Jive. lf you know more. you can do more.
"I WOULD REALLY LIKE to be able to
counsel in homes for the aged. When I see
these people, I think that they can do better.
All they do is wait for their death ...
"Maybe if lhey see me. they will realiie
anything is possible,·· Mrs. Stark said. "I
don't ever want lo stop doing new things.··
,.
Transit Budget Studied
t •
Directors Query 'Runmmy' Operating Expemes
By KA'J'HY CLANC.V
Of 0.. Dotlty ~ ... Slaff
A proposed $59 million Orange
County Transit District budget,
showing-tgTIJ.79 operating costs
esc~lating at nearl} twice the
pace. of passengers and service.
cam e under-scrutiny of directors
Monday.
During a day-long review.
Director Phllip Anthon)' asked
transit administrators to justify
why operating costs should
climb by $10.2 million to $33
million for the coming fiscal
year while ridership and service
will expand by just about 24 per·
cent each.
''Why are your costs running
away twice as fast as your out·
put?" Anthony asked. "Doesn't
1t m ake yo u think that
something is wrong ... or is
there some explanation for it?"
OCTD General Manager
James Reichert attributed $3.9
millipn of the increase to overaJJ
inflation ln salaries. offi ce ex·
pause and operations.
Another $2. 7 million comes in
added costs for service to the
handicapped, short-haul com·
munlty routes and Dial·a·Rlde
programs, the bulk of that in
fees patd lo private contractors.
Another $3.3 million comes in
expansk>n of long-haul OCTD
routes and park-and-ride com·
muter programs, including the
addition of 65 new large buses to
the system next year, Reichert
said.
The fi,ures also include some
one-time expenses -$331,000 for
moving into the dist.ri~t's n.ew coming year because of in· G~rd.en Grove admm1strauo~ 1 creases in county assessed
bu1ldmg next fall, the generar--valuation due to inflation and manager said. new building.
.Reichert's rem arks prompted However. ~D officials do~'t
directors to call for a projection yet know what impact potential
or just how much the new ad· passage of the Jarvis·G'ann prop·
ministration building will cost e r~y tax Jimitatlo~ initiative
OCTD in the long run. might have on their operation
OCTD officials said the move next year.
will save the district $12.000 a They fear passage of the
month it now pays to rent of""8 measure could reduce their
in Santa Ana. property tax revenue by $2
But there will be Jong-term million and jeopardize state and
maintenance costs associated federal grants which make up the
with the building. bulk_of OCTD's 9u.dget.
IC the building proves too cost· Director Robm Young sug.
ly. Anthony suggested. the dis· gested the .l~ss cou.ld be re·
trict could always sell it. The couped by h1krng basic rares to
new $2.4 million building was 40 or 45 ~nts and Dial·a·Ride
financed chieOy by the federal fares to 90 cents.
government. However. OCTD officials said
Directors also focused atten-the fare h.ike still wouldn't com·
tion on lhe costs associated with ply with state and federal reg·
various services costs which ulations which require the dis·
range from Sl.Cl9 'per passenger trict to maintain its present
(or regular routes to $9.61 per level of property tax sup~rt.
passenger for park-and-ride to They noted state offi cials are
$13. 76 per passenger for the han-willing to w?rk with OCTD on
d1 capped Dial-a-Lift service. new legislation that might be
Director Al Hollinden said enacted to allow for a shift in
transll dlslrlct administrators local supoort dollars.
should consider cancelling some OCTD'Counsel Ken Smart cau·
large bUses on its park-and-ride tioned direct.ors that before any
lines and replacing them with fare hike can be impo!ed the dis·
carpool5 or vans. trfct must complete an environ.
The proposed 1978·79 budget mentJll lmi>act report.
calls for no hike in OCTD's basic
25-cent passenger tare.and holds
property talC revenues at $3.6
million.
Thal means the district's prop-
erty tax rate may droJ? in the
Nixon Pla:tu
Party in SC
Mussels Out ForMemoin
UIMUYJ4ntu'letl Till Oct. 31 NEW YORK <AP> -Former ~residentRic:bardNlxon, wboun·
til recently kept himself M<ll'-Kled
in California, la plannin.c a May21
publlahing party al bis Sa.n
Clemente estate.
The-guests wUI include the
editor or Nixon's memoirs,
Bobe.rt Martel of Gtot1ttt It
Dunlap: publlaher Hatolltl.Rotb,
and two executives or Warner
Books.
Warner paid Nlxoo a reported $2 milllon for rlgbta to "RN: Tbe
Memoit'1of Ricbard Nixon.''
Tbe excerpt. are beloa •rn· dicaled ID IO U.S. and foretp
newspapers and pertodlc1l1 Ulla
week. 1be $19.95 book wtll be
published M91 l.5.
Nixon allo bu lnvlted rorcner
t) .S. prllOnerl ol Wb t0 hil tMnDfi :t:i:'~~ .... letofthell'
rtl .... from~ .Vlwaam nw 1ears .. .
OC Fans
Chili-Co~st
To Heat Up
At Bay Club
Some heated competition ts
expected May 25, when once
again top chili c he rs from
around the state will· vie at the
Balboa Bay C lub-h osted
California State Chill Cham·
pions hip in Newport Beach.
A parade of 25 chili teams will
spice up the event. the winner of
which will go on to the World
Championship later this year.
Contestants were selected by
the state Chili Chamninnship
Cookoff Advisory Board.
·'This is not a contest for the
a mateur," s a id chili cham-
pionship chairman W.D. Ray.
A varied panel or judges will
oversee the event.
On the panel will be Ormerly
G umfudgin, official historian of
the International Chili Society,
Daily Pilot Editor Tom Keevil,
Municipal Court Judge Calvin
Schmidt and Superior Court
Judge James Walsworth; en-
trepreneur Fathe r Duffy and ac·
tress Joanne Dru.
Also mixing into the judging
will be Santa Ana Register
Editor Jim Dean. antique dealer
Beverly Ra y, television
personality Ralph Story, busi ·
nessmen Jon Clark , W.P .
Hudgins, &ill Neale. Roy
Palmer and Burke Smith, and
chili personalities C.V. Wood
Jr., Al Dunlap, W.D. Ray and
Carroll Shelby.
Classy CalJfrie
Even· though he's been warned by his cab compa ny to
1SlOp-·''d:FeSSing-up-~·-for-the-job, -Porthmd,-Ore:-, ·taxt-·~ --
driver Ed McGui~e says he'll .keep wearing his three.
piece suit. He says his tips have increased since he
adopted the classy look.
-4 Held in Seajack
'Plot for Ransom'
NEW YORK <AP) -Four
men have been ordered held on
bail by a U.S. magistrate on
charges or plotting lo hijack the
Miami-to-Bahamas cruise ship
Emerald Seas and bold 1.000
passenger~ for $6 mllllon
ransom.
WAC Asking
Male Name
LAWTON, Okla. <AP> -A
woman soldier at Fort SW who
is undergoing ses-change pro-
cedures bas asked base olfictaJ.s
to change her military iden-
tification lo a male name.
Officials identified the woman
only as "Sharon." They told her
the Army Administration Center
at Fort Benjamin Har rison,
lnd.. bas to make such record
c hanges . The woman, an
Oklahoma native in her 20s, was
placed on temporary retirement
status last year after a motorcy.
cle accident, a base spokesman
s aid.
The plot -reminiscenl or a
Frank Sinatra movie called "As·
sault on a Queen" in wbiclr a
gang of desperadoes comman·
deered the liner Queen Elizabeth
-allegedly failed ~ause an
FBI man wonned hls ·way lnto
the conspiracy.
When lbe alleged plotters
were arres ted Friday,
aut~orities said. they bad in
their possession the novel "As.,
sault on a Queen," on wbicb the .
movie was based, a nd a
televlsioo script about a similar
act of modern piracy.
Those arrested were Jacob
Goldstein, 47, of Chicago, held in
$250,000 ball as the alleged chief
plotter; Robert Wayne Prtctett,
20, and RJchard ReJUy, 18, both
of Chicago, and Robin E . Hayes, so. of Staten Island, all heJd fn
$50.000 baJI.
Goldstein, who said he had a
heart attack after bis l\n"eS\,
was being held under guard at a
Staten Island hospital.
The oomplaint charged them
with conspiring "to seize, kidnap
and abduct and bold for ransom
or reward persons moving in
foreign commerce and in the
Traditional in taste ... Keepins. in mind that
dressing for our area should be casual comfortable and fun
--
\. ....
TUMllll/, -I. 1'71
fut ...... ~ To•~~~\'
M arpldae
First, Get Attention
lllCKY 11CKY POLITIX: State Senator John Briica.
the Republican from Fullerton who would like to become
governor on the anU-1ay ticket. finally got aome public
print and air tlme the way he wanted It yesterday.
BriHI announced that he had enouah signatures on bla
inltlatlve petlUona aimed at bann.lnc homosexual teachen.
He made the announcement on t.be steps of San Franclaco
Clty Hall.
The gubernatorial hopeful said he was
finna petitions In San Francisco
because the metropolls by·the·bay " ls
the moral aarbage dump of bomosex·
uallty ln this country.'•
Meanwhile, his home arena ot Orange
County will become the actual garbage
dump tr they don't get the trash trucks
rolling pretty 8000. But that's another
story.
ANYWAY, BRIGGS FINALLY got . u1oos
the media attention he was striving for. This was an up.
tum tor him.
News dispatches out of Sacramento suggest that Brigs
look a series of pratfalls in the publicity-seeking depart·
ment during his recent appearance before the Calltomla
Republican Assembly ln Fresno.
Briggs waa there with other GOP gubernatorial hopefuls
in seeking the CRA 's endorsement. According lO the dis·
patches. his first error came when;-on his way to the
speaker's platform, he confided to a TV news person that
he didn't think the· CRA endorsement was of treat Im· portance ln the first place.
-.The reason he was there, he noted, was to get some free
media coverage.
Then he demonstrated how not to get it.
When Briggs got to the speaker's platform. he was faced
with a non-operating microphone. In frustration, be finally threw the microphone away.
·-_ ...IHA.T 1'UBJIJED Ot.JJ l<> lie ~ mik~ lhaLbelonged.. to one of the covering television crews.
Big John didn't make the 6 o'clock news that night.
But the candidate's CO'i,eragewoes weren'toveryet.
Kight atter hts non-televised speech. he gathered re-
porters for a press conference. Proving there were no hard ·
feelings. the television crew even showed up wilb a slightly dented microphone.
Ttie eathered reporters were already dazed and numb
after having listened to four gubernatorial candidates plus
the wife of Evelle Younger.
SO WHAT DID BRIGGS do? He asked the reporters if
they had any questions. They just sat there with glazed
eyeballs.
Finally, one or them mumbled. "Thank you, senator."
which ls the traditional way to close a press conference.
Briggs looked startled. His press conference had .opened
and closed without a single question. He'd done himself in again.
.. Some days you wtn; some days you lose.
A1nin Cavorts
Joins Traditional Dances
KITGUM. Uganda (AP> -President ldl Amin, sporting a blue
safarHuit and ascot, delighted a crowd of local tribesmen by tak·
ing up a spear and shield and joining traditional dances to the beat
of drums.
At one point during the May Day celebration Monday. Amin
also jumped on a bicycle pulling a sickbed on wbeela and pedaled
around a grassy field.
IN A SPEECH. AMIN scoffed at the threat of an American
economic embargo. saying, "We will not feel it an lncb."
Last week, subcommittees or the House International ~a
tions Committee adopted resolutions calling for an economic em·
bargo against Uganda because of alleged human rights violations.
The Ugandan leader also indirectly confirmed a reported
purge within~ ~ounlr-y's military regi~. He said he la "Big
Daddy" and free to make necessary changes in bis government.
SOUNDING CONCILIATORY, AMIN TOLD bis audience
Uganda wants friendship with the United States, which does not
maintain an embassy in this country.
His U.S. foes say a boycott against Ugandan coffee, this coun-
try's leading export, would cripple Amin politically.
Amin }towed Monday to strengthen Uganda's weak economy
and said t.nbse hindering national development baq no place in its
government.
"My aim toda)' is to assist people .... If I find anybody in a
responsible position in my government is not belpin1, I cannot
have this person in my government," be said.
"When I take this decision I don't want foreign Journallats to
even criticize me. I am Big Daddy an4 very strong in Africa."
Recent reports have said several government mlnlatera were
under house arrest and Uganda's notorious secret police was belnt
purged. ~
NATION I WORLD
'--.::
Casino N~ig __
ATt.ANTIC CITY. N.J. <AP>
-Fires believed set by an
araonlst erupted in at least five
homes on the bay side ot this cj~
ty today. forcing one famlly to
leap from its home into the
frigid water to safety. police
said.
"We've had several police or.
ncers in the water fishing out
two kids and several adults."
said police dispatcher John Lee.
THE COAST Guard sent two
boats and a helicopter to the
. -. ArsonBlame~l OTn?aMd
scene. acrot• town rrom tbe
famous oceanfront Boardwalk
where botel-caalnos are soon to
offer le1allied 1ambllng. Authorities said fires were re·
ported ln five homea -some ol
them W10Ccupled -and three
other mlnol' brush nrea were re·
porWd in the area about .5 a.m.
The blazes were under control
two hours later.
"lt'1 absolutely without a
doubt arson." s aid Assistant
Fire Chief John Brenner. He
said two persons were being ques-
tioned, but no one b~d been
cbaraed.
WITNESSES SAID Steve
Labov. 31. ·chairman or the city
Rent Leveling Board; his wife.
Debble, 29; daughter. Jennifer.
'
s. 'and son Paul. 2. Jumped from
their two·story condominium
home into the frigjd bay waters.
Police dived into the waten and
com maocteered a pleasure boat
to rescue the fjlmily.
The Labov ~me, which hangs
ove r the bay on stilts. was
gutted
Offlcials at Atlantic City
Medical Center sald the Labov
family was treated tor exbosure
and released. Al.lo treated were
four policemen and two firemen.
Court-"IJattler Suceum"IJs
NASlMLLE, Tenn. <AP> -
Mary Northern, 72. who protest·
ed amputation of her frostbitten
gangrenous feet and battled the
bureaucrats to a draw, died as
she lived, on her own terms and
alone. ,
He r ph:,csician . Dr. Benton
Adkins, safd Monday night after
her death that she probably was
killed by a blood clot in her
lungs.
MISS NORmERN reluctantly
emerged from the obscurity of
her unheated. trash·strewn.
childhood home in January. Her
friend, the Rev. Palmer Sorrow.
had asked a welfare worker to
stop by the partly burned house
where Miss Northern had lived
alone for r7 years. Frost had bit·
ten the former debutantels feet.
Trying to warm her toes in a
fire place. she burned them. On
Jan. 17, despite her misgivings.
she allowed police to take her to
Metropolitan General Hospital.
Without amputation. sur1eona
s aid, abe would die. Miss
Northern would not dlacua1 it.
Carol McCoy. a youn1 attorney
appointed for ber, aald her cUent
thought her feet would heal by
themselves . Sh6 had bad
frostbite before. It would be a..
gron violation of her rl&bt to
privacy. human dlanity and
personal freedom. Ma. McCoy said, to force aw-sery.
A PSYClllA TRIST said Miss
Northern was lucid and in·
telligent, but incompetent to de·
cide about surgery on her own.
The Human Services Depart·
ment sought judicial permission
for emergency amputation un-
d e r Tennessee's Protective
Services Act.
From a Chancery Court in
Nashville to the Supreme Court
o f the natloi\, Ms. McCoy
cha,llenged the Jaw and lost at
every tum. TbNM!gb the argu-
meats. massive doses or an-
tlblotlc1 kept Miss Northern
alive, retarding the spread or in·
fectlon from the necro(ic tissues
and keeping a chrorflc case or
penumonia at bay.
By the time the high court
ruled, the case was medically
moot. Most of the flesh on her
feet ~as falling away.
"SHE WAS NEVEa taken to the operating room... hospital
administrator John Stone said
Monday nl1ht. "She bad had
some debreedment. that's all. the removal or dead tissue and
bone . . . Her condition M~.
overall. was stable and fair. Sbe
had developed some slight
penumonla again. Her feet were
still in very. very poor shape.
Blamed for D e a t h
Boy-killer's FamUy
Sues TV Netw~ks ·
MIAMI <AP> -Claiming television programs triggered him to kill
his neighbor, 15-year-old Ronny Zamora and his parents have sued the
three major television networks for$25 million. .
Programs on ABC, CBS and NBC .. showed the impressionable teen·
ager ... how to kill ," claims the suit filed Monday in U.S. DI.strict
Court in Miami by the boy and bis-------------
parents. Frank and Yolanda
Zamora.
Zamora's trial attracted na-
tional attention because or de·
fense lawyer Ellis Rubin's claim
that the boy was a victim or ''in·
vomntary television intox.ica-tion."
old Elinor Haggart In Miami
Beach. He was described in court
as a television addict who Pri!Jon Protest
especially liked violent pro-Guard In the maximum security wing of a prison at
grams. • Cranston. R.I.. wears a mas k to protect him from the
Zamora was sentenced to life in stench of rubbish and human waste that accumulated ,. prison and is currently in a h 226 · ed f' h juvenile correctional raclUty in w en inmates protest con mement to t eir cells
Cocoa. They refused to do routine cle an.up duties.
"THE SHOOTING and killing _ __;;-----------------------------------by Ronny Zamora of bis neighbor
was a foreseeable response to the
stimulus of the offending pro-
grams," saidlhecivil action.
The suit said Zamora had
viewed 40,000 to 50,000 "violent
destructions
or fellow
humans" on
le l.e vis lo n
starting when
he was s years
old.
The defen·
dants -ABC,
CBS and-NBC
-hadnocom·
ment. ZAMCNtA
The U.S. Supreme Court
cleared the way last week for a
California trial involving similar
claims.
In that action. NBC and a San Francisco television station are
being sued for $11 million on
behalf of a 9-year-0ld girl who was
sexually assaulted along the lines
of a fictional crime shown four
days earlier in a drama. "Born In·
nocent."
ZAMORA WAS CONVICTED
last September of killing 83·year·
Tell Mom
YOu ·Love Her
"fhis Mother's Day send Mom a greeting all the world can share on
-Sunday, May 14th. ---
Express your love in a Daily P.ilot Mother's Day Greeting.
It's easy. Write your message to fit 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 St., Box l 560, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626.
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Ads come in rhrtt siies: SIO, SI~. and S ~ fot tht special
child's sizc card. (You musr be under 12 yan of age to
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crcatt your own dttonttd grtt<ing. Using blade pm draw
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JtfCctin11t or have any qu~dom call
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DAILY PILOT
• .. ..
TIMC!oy M1y 2. 1978 s DAIL V Pt LOT 8.~
3 /flake D e a l
Hefty Loans
Prompt Sales
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
Th.re<> rompanies that seemed to be headed for obli-
vion have come to the aid or ooe another
Pan Americ,an World AJrways pJaced an order of $.500
mlllloo with Loel<beed Aircraft for 12 L·lOltll'riStar planes
powered by jet engines made by Rolls-Royce Ltd.
PAN AM, WHICH FLIES TO 73 cities around the
world. made money last year tor tht firs t time since 1968.
This was its first major equipm~t purchase since lhe ear·
ly 1960s. U was hardly in a position to go shopping. since it
staggers under a c:tebt load of $l billion. •
Lock.heed. one or the leading aerospace companies,
Jost more than $100 million in 1969 and 1970 and then had to
be rescued by a bank loan guaranteed by the U.S. govern·
ment. ll was later s haken by disclosures of overseas
bribes. leading ~ the
departure or the com
pany's two top officers. Money .
Tree
\it.Rolls· Royce played
a '1'9rl in the Lockheed
debacle. having had
trouble delivering the
engines for the TriStars
on time. The company lost its fjnanciaJ rooting and had to
be rescued by the British government. which now owns it.
<The company that makes Rolls-Royce automobiles, no
longer tied Lo the el}iine manufacturer. continues as a
private enterprise )
IT WAS RO~·ROVCE, THE smallest company ii\
this trio. that made possible the Pan-Am-Lockheed deal. It
s upplied the cement in the form of " British government
guarantee of the loa11s Pan Am will need to buy these wide-·
bodied planes.
Rolls-Royce was competing against two U.S. engine
manufacturers. General Eledric and lbe Prall & Whitne.)I
division of United Technologies. Lockheed was prepared to
place U.S.·buill engines in \he L·lOll if the buyer. Pan Am.
s pecified them
But if Pan Am had specified General Electric or Pratt
& Whitney engmes. at would have had a difficult time ar·
ranging financing. Now it can tell lenders that the Bntish
~overnment stands behind the loan.
Tha!'s O!!e ::f8Y lo sell a jet engme . -----
A SIMILAlfTACTIC WAS USED by a European plane
builder lo break into the U.S. market dominated by Boein~
and McDonnell Douglas. Airbus Industries, a consortium
owned by the governments of Franc~. Spain and w,st·
Germany. ~ucceeded in persuading another debt-plaguOO.
U.S. carrier. Eastern Airlines, to order 23 A·300 Airbus jets-
for $778 million
Eastern. which has run m lhe red four limes in lhelast
JO years. was able to come to the buying table thanks to
som e generous fihancing arranged by Airbus .
The 230·seat Airbus will be powered by a U S.·bwl•
engine. The builder. General Electnc. agreed to provide
Eastern Wlth a S45 million loan.
It appears that the only way to get a1rhnes to boy your
planes -or engines -is lo lend them the money to do so.
If only you and I could do that with the things we wanted to
buy' ·•
Downey Reports
Record Quarter
Downey Savings {;nd Loan Association. St1nta Ana, has
teporled net earnings of $2.979.000, or 95 cents a share, fo•
the first quarter of 1978. Thi.s represents a new high for
any reporting quarter in the a~iation 's history . 1 First quarter 1977 results were S2.035.000 or 64 cents a
share. The previous quarterly earnings record was fourth
quarter 1977. when per share earnings reached 81 cents. ,
During the first quarter of 1978, new loan production
totaled $122 8 m1lhon. up from the $97.5 milhon posted for
lhe )ear earlier period At March 31, 1978, Downey was
servicing SI 3 billion 1n loans. $768. l m1lhon for its own
portfolio and $538 million for others.
Stockholders of the association have re-elected present
directors. They are Maurice L. McAlister. Gerald H.
McQuarrie, Case Bradford, Benjamin Hansen, Or. Paul
Kourt. J . ~rthur Morris and Dr Schuyler Strang
McAlisler is president; McQuarrie 1s executive vice presi·
dent. scecretary and manager.
Gelleral A uio.atfo11 R.,,or•• Loa11
General Automation Irie .• Anaheim, was reported
finalizing a comprehens ive long-term loan agreement with
three banks providing $25 million in working capital ror
domestic operations
The banks are Bank of America. Fir-St National Bank
of Chicago and American Security Bank. The agreement
replaces an mformal line or credit arrangement with Bank
of America. lo addition to the increase in the domestic bor-
(_T,_~_N_f_]
rowing facility of S6
million. the agreement
allows an additional S4
million capacity tq
s ati~fy needs ror
standby letters of
credit. ,
The agreement also·
allows the company lo negotiate an Increase in foreigU•
borrowing rrom the present S6 million limit, up to a max•;
imum of $10 million. "
General Automation Inc. provides automation system~:.
and networks ror industrial, communications and data~
management applications and manufactures higlt,
technology minicomputers and microcomputers. •
~k9ara Report• Gain
Thltd.quart.er and nine-month net earnings rose 40 per·
cent on sales increases of 20 percent for the respective..
periods, Beckman Instruments, Inc .. Fut1erton:has report ...
ed. The quarter marked Beckman's 27th quarter of in·:
creased earnings and sales.
Medical and industrial sales continue to lead fiscal!
1978 growth. Domestic safes were strong In the third:
quarter and roreign sales growth accelerated. Incoming;.:
orders were comparable to sales for the nlne·month•
period. :
For the three months ended March 31. Beckman"s net-
earn,lngs were $.S,521,000. or 66 cents a share, on sales or.
$87,$40,000. In the prior year, third.quarter earnlnss wer~•
$3,933.000, or 48 cents a share. on sales of S73.378i000.
For the nine months. net earnings were $1S,OSS,OOO. or-
$1.82 a share. on sales of $246.079.000. Jn the prior year. het
earnin1• for lhe nine months were Sl0.780.000. or Sl.32 a.
share, on sales of $203,274,000.
Return on shareholders' equity rose to 18.7 percent for
the 12 months ended March 31, 1978. A year earlier. tho_~
flglire was t3 7 parccnt. ~
Carpel ,,,,... P•re luued
E . T.C Carpet Miiis. Ltd .• Santa An1 , has announ«d ·
purcbutof lh controlling mterest ln Roth lndusUies' com
mon stock. previously held by Sydney Roth. Roth wu t.b
founder and presldent ot Rolh Industries, a producer of re.,
sidenLlal carpetlna. Manulacturlna. •dmlnial.ratJv~ and
sales racUlties are tn 1 100,000.square·foot facSUty tn Santti
Monica.
--
-DAU..Y '"·OT l..-d • ~ 2. 1978
EVENNO e:ool I OM NIWI ...,'-:rev OMe
Ot EMty Ufldel9"1 Ol)el\ """'-gety G GUNIUOKI
MIU #Id Doc: lfl ll'OUbled
by • ~ W'OnlMI
.. they~ ... ..c..,.d
~ Ol'I a Vain U1p to
Dod09.
• ,... 9l4Nf( IUtOt
MMda .. ~ by the
Cllf'llPUS hero ~ her noae i. 9WOlerl from an
ac;dderlt
I A.OAM-12
FEE.UNG"'° Got~ and Ginny wort!
loge\hef making a pot;
Laurie learn• hoW to well<
W1Lh a <** Joe lntro-
duc.t 111 llCIOf' IOI' the
Natlonal Thealr• Of The
Deal. G PE.R80MAL fltWtCe
"Investing Fixed Income"
@l ABCNEWS u oe MOVIE Edgy Friendship
* * * "The LUI SunNt"
(Part 1) (19611 Rock
Hu<llOll, IS)rk Ooogtu. A woman i. pursued by tllr .. "*' during a Mexleo-10-
TeUI cau .. drill9. (t hr.,
30mln)
• BEWITCHED
Gil Gerard plays a reporter who visits :.i
hostile town but finds a friend in Valen-
tina Quinn <daughter of Anthony Quinn 1
in the TV movie "K1Uing Stone" tonight
al 9 on NBC. Channel 4.
enoora·a llMO)'anc. with
Darrin proves very uncom-
forltble to him but tne alt·
u1t.lon Auro• oul to hll
adY9"t9ge ·~y AoMmary Clooney, Row
Mlrle. B1fb1r1 McN1lr
end Margeret Whhlng per,
lorm end 0'9cus1 growing
older; pr._,11on of cnm.:
G 80WUNO FOA
00u.AA8
• llOVELUCY
"Lucy Oet1 In Pleturee"
Lucy en11 .. a bit part 1n a
morion plo111<e
• AOAM-12 fD MACHEL/ LEHRER
REPORT '9 HOME OAAOENER
''"'-"
(I) JOt<ER'S WILO Robert IMltlr on older per·
eona I~ with their faml·
lies. 7:30 8 YOUNG PEOPLE'S
SPEQAL '1l) THE OAOWlHO
Y£AR8
"t.apecta Ol lntelllgence"
(I) AMERIQA 2HI0"1'
Guwt· Cindy W1111atn1
MERV ORIFFIN
7:00 NllC NEWS
UARSCLU8
• Jenny And Me" Two cllll·
dren ol Appalac:tllan coal
JT1ln8C'1 team that tragedy
can be the beginning or
dr~a U well U Iha end
Ollhem
0 NEWLYWED GAME 8 9 HOU.YWOOO ~-----
ClaaRrael ~bt irag•
9 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
8 KNBC (NBC) Los A ngeles O KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angel9s
(I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego
0 KHJ-TV (Ind) LOS Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Otego m KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles e KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
tD KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles '1!> KOCE·TV IPBSl Huntington Beach
"" 0 JOKER'S WILD CD THE BRAOY 8UNOt4
"The Treuure-()( Sierra
Av11'1ue" Bobby finds
S 1100 Wiii .. playing foot-
ball and hi• ~on to
lhM• It with hlS brothers
~·t• the tam.ty. ti) AMERICA 2HIOKT
Owat: Cindy Willlam•. &l 28 TONIOKT
QI!> NEWSCHECK
An 1nlormallve coOecllon
ot Orange County '-'·
g011emment and conaumet
all81fl, people and IC)OrlS.
(I) THE GOHO SHOW
8:00 tJ CIJ CBS REPORTS
8111 ~I end MMlene
Senders will report on the
pr~ end cons of pet\aion
_Jlleos..Jn. .:.:PrOClllM...til.O
PJV Latif", "Goodbye.
Congyeu" wtll IOOIC at Ofts
Pike ID.·N Y.), lhe tlrat
House member lo
announce hit r~t
becau1e of llmllatlons
plaoed on outtlde locome;
and "The Fire Next Door."
•n update on 111 NrlMlf
111ory deaJlng with fir" In
the8'onx 8 MAHFAOM
ATl.AHTl8
"The Siren" The lllren
song of e sea nymph, held
cap1111e by l"'IO men as part
of their plot to kidnap 1118
man reapon1lble for
Am91c;a'a detefl• 9Yllwn.
c:epllwt .. Mat1! Herrll 8 MOVIE
• • "Trlpol4" ( 18501 Mw-reen O'H.,a. John ~ •
M111ne9 we met with vk>-
l1n1 oppoellfon whll•
11iemp11n9 to rllM the
U S ~ on T ripoff duflnO
WOfld Wat II (2 In.) • tII HAl'PV DAYS
"Joanie' a Flf 11 Kita" Jo.R-
te ....,, How.,d down
untM he ellowe her to go
out oo her flf1t d1te. (RI
• MOV1I * * "Blood. s-1 And
Feer" (1975) Lee J. Cobt>.
FrMCO GMparrl. A )'Ol.lng
nateotlc:a ~t Mia out 10
expoee • ~ lnduttriel-
111 .. the hr• behind •
gr~ac:ale drug oe>er•·
tlon (2 hra.1 C8 CAAOl IUANETT
AHO FRIENDS
Gueet: Steve Lawr~
Cl» MOVIE * * ··fhe Hepoy ThieYM"
( 1862) Ae.11 Harrilon. Rtta
Ha°yworth. Art thle119t plot an el•bor•ll robbery. (2
llrt I S)·COUSTEAU
OOYSSEY
"Catypeo't Search For
AU11tttll" Ceotaln Cow·
tHU HPIOrH Crete'•
nothern co.ut and tl>e vol-
canic ltland of S.ntorlnl.
wlllch -. both deltroy9d
thouNllds OI yeart ego.
,~Ti~
"The New Retormation" A orouo of former Cet11o11e
nun1, • woman Relorm
rabbi, a femlle Epllcopall-
an prlett 1oeut on ChangM
in their Cllufc:hN.
8:308 (Im LAV£AHE&
~IALn
"The Hor11 Show "
Shk'ley'• IOYI or animals
.ge11 her in trouble wrth the
health department wnen
the mc>Y41S I horM 11110 Ille
i rtment
CAOSS-WITS
OVEAEASY
R-.ry Clooney. Rose
Marie. 9ar1>1ra McNetr
and Matgtrtt Whiting per--mnn ·IMlJilcotl~rOWJ'rfO
older; pr-~ of cttme.
Robett Butler onOl<lef' per.
IOlll llvlng w.th their l•ml· ......
t:OO fJ THE ~MINtHE
MISTAKE
Hott Bonnie Franklin pr•
Mlltl llarming !ICU tbout
the effect• of ~tte
smOklng 00 WOn\ll'l. D N8CMOVIE
"IOlllng Stone" (PYemlere)
011 Gerard, J O Cannon A
tree-lance wrller baltlel e
VICIO\la sme•·t~ shetitf
who helld• file CO\llf oUP of
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS 8 8 .00 CBS Reports The
pros and cons of pension plans al'l' ex-
amined. along with a retiring member of
Congress and rcpol't about fare m the
Bronx.
NBC G) 9 .00 "Ktlhng Stone .. A
freelance writer 'Gil Gl'rar<l 1. 1s pitted
aga•nst a s mall town sheriff IJ D Can
non > in a murder tn\ et1gatton in tht!-t ne\\
TV movie .
CBS f) 9.30 "llomc to St av.··
Henl'y Fonda stars as a farm owner ap·
proaching senility who fights the at·
tempts of his son to send him to a nurs-
ing home in this new TV drama 1see re·
view below l.
• tcandaloua homicide e a THftEE's
COMPANY
.. Janet's High School s....._,... J~ loMt
lie' cool when the groovy
camput AdOnlt ot hef high
school dayw Shows up tor a
0.11 and Jedi 8M CMuy
cooapife to ,..,,. them
alone In the apartment lRI
I MERV ORIFFlN
PL£DOE BREAK
Regulady IChtlduled pro-
gramming may be delayed
due to p6adge break•. a.l> MA8TEAPl£CE THEATAE
"OIH Mutual Friend" lhe
Bofftn1· llouMhold orowa.
Ll:ale'1 education cauSM a
atlr. (Part 3 of 7)
CIJ RITA~
(Premler•I Marie eo.1an-
za'1 (Aita Moreno) hie
takes on exciting new
dlmentlon wNlfl lhe lnhet •
it1 a .,.,.,, reeort hoflll and
leMTII to coc>e With the d81·
'l'.._crlMI.
9: 15 tllJ NA TIONAl
GEOORAl'HIC 8PECW.
"The Anlm111 Nobody
Loved.. The mustang,
rattlelnake and eoyol•·
varmlnta or VtCttm1?
9:30 fJ (I) HOMETO STAY
The young gt811ddaughter
~le~·--.. --tlYe. apktttld farm OWi*
(Henry Forld1) helpa him
dl\j)el the 8111icten ot Old
9119 and the nurtlng home
inlO which Ns M>f\ (Mlc:Mel
MeGu;re) wan11 to Nfld
him. e a CARTER
COUNTRY
"Beating The Pound•" •
Trying to diet. Chief AO'{I
ea1ygolng temperament
seem1 10 b• getting
lhlnner when he Is accused
of police brutality by a
Pf*-' (Bamey McFad-
den) IRI
10:00 D CJ NEWS • a o fAMU.v
"F-Of Shtctowa·· AN1t
hevlnQ 1 nlghlmare aboul
runntno dOw!'I a clltld With
• car. Kall becomet
lncteallngty dl1turbed u
-II kMO pace With hit
dreams (R)
ti) LET'S MAKE A DEAL
'1l) HEWSCHEC.C
An lntormat1119 C-Oll.ction
of Orange County -· government and consum«
11talra. people and apor11
10:301 • NEWS M~JAa(S()N
Mei11C0'1 Aml>Hlador to
the lJMad Stat". Hugo
M11galn. dllCUtH& hit
country's '1nternat1onal
retatlont. (Part 21
'1l) SNEAK PREVIEWS
11:00 B •• (I) ®.l NEWS LOVE. AME.RtCAN
STYLE
"Love And The Nutay Gtrl"
A girl lrlet 10 1ttract 1n
artist to gee • modeling
aulgnment. 0 MOVIE * * * * "'The Snake P•t' I 1948) OIMa de Havilland.
Mark SltlV'tlns A former
mental patient r~ls wnh
horror her exper-ienoe1
while instrtutlonalized 12
hra,) 8» -THeOOD 00Uttt:2-
0ICV cons Fell• Into
rllVllWlng pleyl tor t>lm
wllec'I hi• newapaper's drl·
ma critic Claim• thel •
aport-iter can't write •
credible rftiew
Cl) MONTY PYTHON'S
Ft VINO CIACU8 fe DtCK CAV£TT
Guests Donald WOOCls.
authOr ot the moat widely
syndicated column In
South Atnca, 'and Peter
Magubantl. a stall member
ol the Johannetburg Rand
Qaily Mall
'1l) MACNEIL / LEH~
'Home to Stag'
r
TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
AEPORT
t 1:30 8 CJ) 088 LA 1' MC>Vtl
••
0'1(1u ..... Kiii 1.4e··
f t9761 Stell• Steven•
Michael Anderaoo Jr A
pollce 1n,,..tlgator con11n·
.-to lool\ into the deeth
ot • young ec:llOOllMC:f*
annough her iupertors
think they alrudv halftl me
crlm1na1 and they
dlacoufege ,hit rrom con·
tlnulng her work
D BEST OF CARSON
Hoar Jollnny Cerson
G~IS Sher1H l(alller•ne
Crumbley ot OnlO, Semmy
OaV11 Jr . Charles Fronll
tRI
8 LOVE, AMEAtCAN
STYLE
"Love And Tl>e Conjugal
VIII! H8fry .. pan of •n
e11per1man1al prlt>On
project "Love And The
Lovely Everung" 0... tiur·
glar cnangt11 three
C:OUplel' loves 8 ltll A8C MOVIE • *'• "Pele 'N T1lha·· I 19721 Walter Mallhau
Clll'OI Burnett Aller an
aflllr. II middle-aged COU-
p 18 marry. become
parent•. and era lorCed to
deal with the treuma of •
~ngchlld
• THATGIRL
• A frten<l In Need0
'
g) OETSMART
Mo and 99 are caught
and re.died tor 1111oment
blhkld the l~on Curt11n
8) CAPTIOHED A8C
NEWS
MORNING
12:00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE
··c-rAndMe" tD MOVIE * * * .. The Magn1tic9nt
Ambtraons" I 19•21
Joseph Cotten Anna
Baxter Directed by Orson
Welles An eccentrle !amity
cHngs 10 tradlllon during 11
time of repid Chfnge. (2 .. ,. ..
payeflle power to aid pollce
In 11x lt•I• tolve Cfime.
end 1oc1le IYUUlng
peraoN 0 tSPY
"T~You'rell"
1: 15 fJ (I) l(OJ.AK (TIME
~X.I
"Monkev On A Siring" A
young pollce ottteer. pr ...
..,,.., Into wor1ung for the
underworld bec•uM ot
onc;r...ing gatnellng debts,
15 torctld to malle " move
wMf\ he II ordered to lllM
Croelter 1:301 NEWS 1:55 NEWS
2:00 8) NEWS
8 MOVIE * • * "T11et Of Mlll'lhet·
ten" (1~21 Rlte Haywoflh.
C""1MSO....,
D MOVll
• • "Hong Kono Hot
Harbor'' ( 1e62) M.,lon
Coo II Klaullurgen
wuuow An Am.,.lcat!
1oumallst, Investigating lhe
oea1fl ol a lrlend HI Hong
Kong. t>«;-lnvol\led In
a loght ror chemical ,_.,.ct\ doc:umenta. (2
hrs I
CD MOVIE * * • "ConlllCltld" ( 1050>
Glenn fOfd. 8rode<1Ck
Crawford
2:268 NEWS UO fJ ~E
• • 7, "Two-Wey Streteh"
It 96 11 Peter Sellars.
Wiifred Hyde-While
4:000 MOVIE * * "The Blacll Pettther Of Allena" ( 1 IHl21 Mllfi.
anne l(oche, H8lt\l Dreche. CD MOVIE , * * "FOrl Algiers·· I 19521
Yvopnne De Clll'IO, Cer1c»
ThomPtOn
4:260 NEWS
4:308 MOVIE
**'~ "HC>uae 01 Horrors"
( 1946) Biii Goodwin. Aob-
llrt Lowery
ti) HONEYMOONERS
8l) MACNBL I LEHAER ,
12:30~~ Wrdnr11da11"•
••• "Fores• Rengers" Daytime Mo.,les
(18421 Fr«! MICMu,.,ay. _ ,....,.rn~-.-__ -stJunrr1yw111cr A TO!"nr· -...,...,-en·~ -
rtnger must contend wrth 11:30 CD • • • "The Soy With
two Of'I• whO are both in or..,, HM" ( 19481 Dean
love wtlh him. (I "' • 25 Stockwell. Roben Aytn. A
mill.I young orphan mull INtn
8) MOVIE 10 deal 111tth te1ec:t1on when
• • ·~ ··The C1ptain·1 11&1 heir tume ore-i. (2
Table" ( 1960) John Greg• hrs • 20 mln I
son, Peggy Cummins A 12:00 0 * • 'h "C9lllng Bulldog
,_ CtOll'll of a lu1tury Drummond" f t9511 Wallee
l"'8< ~ In a ,,.. Pidgeon. Maroeret Leog11.
a1 run 1n ofder to tt.eeo '"' ion t:ondon's famous
promollon ~manenl 11 detective 11 Cllled out of
hf • 30 mtn I •etor-1 to break a gang
1:00 D TOtooK>AAOW of noodluma wno fre 1er-
Gu.1· Oofothy Alliaon. a ror111ng 1111 c11y wltll
N-Jersey hou-11e molliorH!oltar robber,.. ( 1
who wlll d!ICUU .... UM ol hr • 30 m4n I
AB<; Canceling
:Only 3 Series Fonda TV Drama Fine
NEW YORK CAP> -ABC. reluctant to tamper
with ~ wmnjng formula, announced Monday lt will
introduce only three and one-half hours of new
prime-time proframming this fall.
A BC said 2 programs from the schedule that
kept the network al the top or the ratings race with
NBC and.CBS will be back. The casualties are
'"The Six Million Dollar Man," ''Fish" and
"Baretta."
The coming season on ABC. to begln Sept. 11 ,
will include three new comedies, an adventure
program sel in Las Vegas and a science-fantasy
series, lhe network said . ._
MOST OF THE NETWORK'S programs will
remain in their current time periods in the fall.
ABC said.
CBS and NBC will unveil their fall schedules in
the next several weeks.
. The schedule is the first put together at ABC
sµice the announced departure of Fred Silverman. Silverman, as president or ABC Entertainment.
has been generally credited with guiding ABC's
rise from last place to first in the ratings.
Silverman will join NBC this summer as presi-
dent and chief executive. Because or t~e timing or
his dep~rture from . ABC. Silverman reportedly
was not involved In either network's fall 'J)lanning.
ABC OFFICIALS • .AFTER Silverman an
nounced he would join NBC, maintained the
network's ~uccess in the ratings was the result or a
team effort. rather lhan one man's work.
. "Thef'.''S a ~lqueness to our new programs.
with fresh creative approaches in concept and
humor, with humor rem aining the staple of our
sch edule,'" said Anthony D. T homopoutos
Silverman's successor. ·
Three ABC comedies have been at or near the
top of the ratings all season -"Happy Days,"
"Laverne and Shirley" a nd "Three's Company."
T hev will continue ln that order on Tuesday nights,
followed at 9:30 p.m. by one or the new shows.
''Taxi," a comedy bas~d 'on the lives of a group of
New York cab drivers.
THE OTHER NEW COMEDIES Usled on the
fall schedule are "Mork & Mindy," a Monday
evening 8 p.m. series about a being from the
planet Ork who meet.S a young earthling named
Mindy, and "Apple Pie," a Saturday nlgbt 8:30
p.m. show about a 1930s family whose members
are recruited from the want ads.
"Battle Star : Galactica," an outer-space ad-
venture produced by John Dykstra, who won an
Oscar ror his special errecu in the movie "Star
Wars," will air al 8 p.m . Sundays.
"Vegas," on the ABC schedule at 10 p.m. Wed
nesdays, follows the adventures of a young private
detective in Las ~egas.
THE FALL SCHEDULE will Include at least
three miniseries, ABC said, including "Roots; The
Next GeneraUon." "lke," based on the war years or Dwlibt D. Eisenhower, and "Pearl," a roman·
tic drama set in Pearl Harbor Just before the
Japanese au.a ck.
The conUnuation of "Roots," ABC's re<:ord·
setting m.lnlsertes or last year, will bring tbe Alex
Haley famll)' from the time of the Civil War to the
present day, ABC said. '
ABC said that, lo addition, ''How the West Was
Won" will continue as a series of two-hour
eplsodet durin1 the first part or 1979, a fter con·
clu1lon oCtbc network's "NFL Monday Nl"hl Foot· balJ " season. •
&EGAJlOl.NG THE PaOFESSJONAl. rootb•ll ae11on, ABC said It would add tbree Swiday even·
lnc and one Thursduy ntaht aa.me to tta re1ular
l&-1ame Monday nJa.bl schedule.
Af'Wl .........
Filming Tl' Movie
.Joan Bennett. who made her mo\·ie debut as
a child in 1929. is filming Ross Hunter's NBC
movie "Suddenly Lo,·e .. ln recent veal'!:!
Miss Bennett has starred in soap operas. ·
Better· Children's
'IV Shows Pushed
WASHINGTON CAP> -Act.ion for Children's
Television opened its loth anniversary meeting
Sunday l}ight with a star-studded call for upgrad-
ing television programs for children.
. ACT has petitioned the Federal Trade Com ·
mission to st_op advertising sweets during
children's television shows and has asked the
Federal Communications Commisslon· to reduce
the amount or ads on children's shows.
Fjve television screens showed samples of cur-
rent children's shows.
FROM fashion Island
Newport Beach
By JAY SHARBUTI'
LOS ANGELES <A P > -Henry Fonda turns 73
this month, but age hasn't diminished his ex·
cellence as an actor. Case tn poin~: his work
tonight at 9:30 on Channel 2 in CBS' "Home to Stay.·'
a gentle yam about the ravages of age.
He plays an old lttinois farmer, a recent stroke
victim slowly going senile but resistmg attempts
by his son. Frank IM1chael McGuire!. lo put him
in a nursing home to await an ungrand finale.
Two kids aid his fight. granddaughter Sara
and her boyfriend. Joey. 14. respe<:tively played by
• Kristen Vigard and David Stambaugh in a m.anner
that almost steals the show from Fonda, a veteran
scenestealer.
"HOME" INlTIALL Y IS a bit awkward in
establishing that:
-Sara's fotks were killed in an accident anit
her Uncle Frank resents the burden of caring for
both her and his rather at the farm.
-Fonda owns the farm, but refuses to sign 1t
over to his son to back a loan needed to compete
against corporate farming companies. .
-Frank. who says his father is "not sound
hair Sohe time." rears his dad. occasionally acting
erratically and suffering memory toss, wtll unwit·
tingly deed the family farm to outsiders.
But once this is past
( )
and the old man's sister
1V Rcv1 EW <Frances Hyland) put in
.... the, farm's cast or
clwMacters. the s h ow ---------J becomes fine drama.
with Fonda et~hing a subtle. gently humorous
portrait or a man whose faculties are failing but
not his spirit.
THOUGH HIS SON HOPES to have a town
doctor declare Fonda mentally incompetent.
granddaughter Sara opposes the idea.
Loving the old man. hating the thought of him
in a nursing home. she hatches a plot to have
another doctor -married to her aunt -certify
him competent before Frank can act.
Problem: The doctor lives several hundred
mlles away in Chicago. So she enlists pal Joey to
put Grandpa's frail old pickup truck in shape ror
the voyage. Then they whisk him away.
With Joey driving, illegally, they take back
roads. l(et stuck In a r~storm. have mechanical
woes and must st.op at ntghtfall al a rural boarding
house with their exhausted pass&nger.
IN A FUNNY BIT OF byplay at the house. a
saucy, pretty cook <Trudy Young> flirts out·
HENRY FONDA STARS IN TV· DRAMA
Kristen Vlgard Plays Lo~af Granddaughter
rageously with the boy. Whidh prompts a jealous
Sara to warn: "Stay away from her. Joey. She's not
nice."
"Sara. Just shut up. will you'>" sighs the tired.
frustrated lad "She ·s the nicest thing that's hap-
pened to me all day."
What ensues-when the kid.S and the old man
finally wheel into Chicago in their wheezing. strip-
ped-gear steed? Well. I suggest you set aside 90
minutes tonight. turn on CBS and find out for
yourself.
This proceeding, m addition to excellent act·
ing, is solid in all other departments. Including
Suzanne Clauser's script, Delbert Mann's direction
and Hagood Hardy's unobtrusive sc0re.
STEREO SOUND~ OF THE HARBOR ,
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