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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-05-09 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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DAILY PILOT Great White Steamer
* * * 10< * * * On Troubled Waters
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 9, 1978
VOL. 11, HO. IJt, I HCTIONI, 12 f'AO•S
'
• • • • •
Gunfilan Ends 13-hour Standoff
Tugboat Rescue
Three Die, 55
Survive Crash
PENSACOLA. Fla IAP> -A
National Airlines Jet carrying 58
persons crashed into Escambia
Ray whiJe coming in for a land·
mg. forcing stunned passengers
to scramble out emergency
doors into fog and a sea slicked
"1th jet fuel. Three passengers
"ere killed.
Most of the 52 passengers
aboard the Boeing 727 were
saved because a tugboat captain
SS Catalina
In Troubled
WatenAgain
By JACKIE HYMAN
Ol 1 ... o.lly ~llol SLIH
The S.S. Catalina was in hot
water again today. and, un-
fortunately for her owners, that
appears to be the only water it's
going to be allowed to stay in.
The legendary 301-root vessel,
which a rrived in Newport
Harbor April 25 to preside at a
boat s how, overstayed its
welcome when its permit ex
p1red Monday
But it appears to have
nowhere to go -certainly not
back to Los Angeles. There. city
attorneys, claiming the ship's
owners owe nearly S30,000 in
docking and related fees, have
asked a federal court to force
the sale of the Great White
Steamer to par the alleged debt.
The S .S. Catalina was
' purchased two years ago by
• !" Hyman Singer, a Beverly Hills
real estate developer, when it
was sold to pay the delinquent
, docking fees of its previous
owner. The ship runs up about
S1~8 a day in docking fees.
Singer srud.
A spokesman for the Newport
Beach Marine Safety Depart·
ment said he has been told that
Duncan Mcintosh, promoter of
• tt1e boat show that brought the ship to Newport. Is making ar·
rangement3 for Its removal.
However, Mcintosh couldn't
be reached for comment today
Previous suggestions as to
what to do with the steamer
have included moving it to Just
Inside the jetty for 30 days, or
moving it to Ensenada.
The ship's owners have
CSee VESSEL, Page At>
Davis Tales Lead
SACRAMENTO IAP>
Former Los Angeles PoUce
Chief Ed...Davta has taken a nar·
row lead over Attorney General
l!velle Youn1er In the campalan
for the Republican nomination for
governor, accordln1 to a Gannett
News Service poll.
~ i
who saw the crash brought his
barge to the rescue.
The passengers had no warn·
ing that anything was wrong un·
tit the plane hit the water Mon·
day night and came to rest about
500 yards from shore. settling in
mud about 10 feet below the
bay's surface.
··we were on our final ap-
proach," said Capt. Ronald Gift,
a Navy pilot from Carmel,
Calif., who was a passenger.
"There was no warning, no
voiolent maneuvering, no surg
ing of the engines."
The airline initially listed SS
passengers, but later said three
or those had never gotten
aboard.
Three bodies were found float-
ing near the plane. Divers sent
into the partially submerged
craft said everybody was out.
But fog and haie hampered
rescue efforts during the night.
and a thunderstorm that moved
over the bay eitr ly today
churned up the seas as divers
searched for the missing. A head
count was further confused
because passengers were scat·
tered among six hospitals and
several rescue stations.
Hospital officials identified the
three victims as Paul V. Wilkes
Sr. or Virginia Beach, Va., and,
trances Lane and S.J. Fan·
tauzzi, 29, both of Pensacola.
The a,ies of Wilkes and •}Ira.
Lane wer~ not immediately
available. • ,
The Fantauzzi woman has a
3-year-old daughter listed in fair
condition at a Pensacola
hospital. Wilkes' wife, Virginia,
is listed in fair condition at a
hospital in neighboring Santa
Rosa County. ·
Many were injured in the
crash. but dozens escaped safely
(See PLANE, Page AZ>
J/oten Cl.oae
OnTaxCuu
~ACRAMENTO CAP> -
California voters favor
Proposition 13 over
Proposition 8, but the
margin between the two
tax-cut issues ls too close
to pick a clear leader, a
Gannett News Service poll
says.
The si.tewide survey of
1,001 voters found 40 per-
cent ravor Proposition 18
and 37 pefcenl ravor Propoalllon 8.
Twenty percent said
they were undecided; one
percent said they would
vote for both, and three
percent aald lbey would
vote against both.
Moro's Body Found
A,. .......
BLOOO.SMEAAED BODY OF FOAMER PREMIER ALDO MORO FOUND IN PARKED CAR
Kidnapped Victim Was Shot In Back of Head; Hands, Feet Chained
Moro's Body Found
&premier Kidnapped, ChaUwd, Slwt
' ROME <APl ,_ The blood-
smeared body of former
Premier Aldo Moro. shot in the
back of the head and his hands
and feet chained, was found tn a
parked car in the heart of Rome
today. SS days after he was kid·
napped by the Red Brigades.
Police said they found five
spent cartridges In the car, a
stolen red Renault bearing
Rome license plates.
The 61-year-old Moro a lso bad
several wounds In the back:
police sources said.
Tbe body, hunched over on the
floor of the Renauit 's back seat,
was clad tn the same dark grll)'
suit Morq was wearing when
kidnapped March 16 by a dozen
terrorists who ambushed hls
two-car motorcade on a Rome
str eet, killing fl ve police
bodyguards.
A blue overcoat and red
blanket also were wrapped
around the body. It was dll·
covered by a pol Ice bomb expert
who broke Into the car. Firemen
who saw it said the face was ex·
tremely pale and Moro's live·
foot-11 frame had lost considera·
ble weight.
His Marxist revolutionary Red
Briaade ltldnappers claimed
Moro was a symbol of "im-
perlallattc" oppression or the
working class. Frtday, the ter·
rorlsl.I lJaued lh• last of a aeries
of meua1es. aaylna they were
"carrylna out " a death
) •t
., .........
BODY DISCOVERED
ltaJy'1 AldO Moro
"verdict" against Moro because
the Christian Democrat.a refused
to negottate their demand ror
the release or \3 Jailed terrorists
In exchange Cor Moro'• lire.
After the body was round,
Premier Giulio Andrc!OtU called
an emergency Cabinet session
and President Gt<Jvannl Leone
scheduled an oddress lo the na·
tion. Italy's major unions called
an eight-hour work stoppage.
In Washington . the State
Department tondemned the kill·
Ing as a "cowardly and con·
templible act."
The Vatican radio called it a
"barbarous murder ... which
takes on in this tragic hour a
nearly sacrificial value."
Upon hearing the news, Pope
Paul VI, a personal friend of lhe
slain politician. went to pray in
his private chapel.
Former President Giuseppe
Saragat said, "Moro's body is
the body of the First Republic,
which is now dead." He referred
lo the 11epublic established in
1946, when the Italian monarchy
was voted out in a plebiscite.
The body was found at l :30
p.m .-5:30 a.m. PDT -on Via
Michelangelo Caetanl, a narrow
cobblestoned street of l~th and
16th century palaces running
a longside Communist party
headquarters and just a stone's
throw from Christian Democrat
headquarters. fl was just two
blocks from the busiest Intersec-
tion In Rotne.
omcers went to the area and
discovered the body after police
headquarters received an
anonymous telephone call by-
lng a bomb had been placed in a
car parked on Vla Funari, a<lJa·
ctnt to the 200·yard-long Via
Caetani.
<See MORO. Pa1e At>
1>
9 Freed
In Heist
Attempt
TORRANCE <AP I A gun-
man surrendered today, ending
a 13-hour standoff with polict-
which began when the former
m e n ta 1 patient took nine
hos tages after an abortive
Jewelry s tore robbery,
authorities said.
Police said the man identified
as William John Dwyer. 28, fired 75 to 100 shots during the night
while he held two hostages in-
s ide the store.
But at 7:20 a.m., after a series
Of telephone negotiations With
police. Dwyer walked out or the
store wilh his hands up. He wa!>
taken to an unidentified location.
Lert inside when Dwyer sur·
rendered was his 2-vear-old
daughter. who police said was
a hostage. The girl had been
brought to the store by Dwyer·~
wife at his request, police said.
"He was so exhausted he gave
up," s aid Jim Papst. a
s pokesman for the Torrance
Police Department.
Papst also sauJ Dwyer ap-
peared to be under the influence
or an unidentified drug.
Owyer's surrender came two
hours after he relea sed two
hostages he had held throu,gh the
night. a pair of s isters from
nearby Redondo Beach. They
were the last of nine hostages to
be released. One hostage, Pat McNellis. 49.
of Redondo Beach. was shot
l wice in the lert thigh with a
pistol as she fled the store in the
Rolling Hills Shopping Center.
She was hospitalized in stable
condition.
Mrs. McNellis' husband. Carl.
said by telephone lhat he heard
about the robbery on the radio.
Because his wife was already an
hour late returning from her job
<See HOSTAGES, Page A2>
Coast
Weather
Low cloudiness tonight.
clearing lo hazy s unshine
by late Wednesday mom
ing. CooUng trend. Lows
tonight 52 lo 58. Highs
Wednesday 67 to 74.
INSIDE TODAY
What nghtl doea a woman
hoot when her husband or
Che man 3he Uve& with btats
her' See Feotunng. Page Cl
•••e x At Y-lwtta Al1 l11!wml._...,. · •r--....ca CJ A1111 LA..._ L.M ... ,-M Mew.t ...._. ; .... ~, ...
CAIOIWlloa AJ MllMI I""'* I At NaMMIN ...
.. 0.ll ON!ltt~ CA.,,.,_
..
Q .. ..
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., .... .. ., • A4 M
' J
'
I
. .\2 DAILY PILOT s
'Delp Me! Save Me!'
Tuboat Skip-per Rescues 55 Crallh Victims
PENSACOLA. Fla. <AP > -A tugboat
captain said he was orr course and virtuallj
lost when he saw an airliner gUde with thun·
derous hiss into the foagy bay.
they didn't have their lifejackets on. they
were clutching them around their necks."
"There would be three people over here.
10 over there. l had to tell BW to leave lbe
three and get the 10. I had to glide the bar1e
bet ween people driflng In the bay and I wor·
ried that some had drifted away and would
be missed when we came back around." he
said.
His tug and its barge became liferaft for
survivors.
GLENN McDONALD, 41, A COOL, in·
dependent mariner. said it was only by
chance that his tug. "Little Mac," was near
enough to the downed National Airlines 727
jet so he could see il in the fog and reach the
panic·stricken passengers.
While McDonald steered. KeMey threw
ropes to the survivors. going into the water
several times to help urt out victims
traumatized by the ordeal.
"We were where the Lord put us," said
McDonald. who along with his mate. Bill
Kenney. a husky 28·year·old, pulled all SS
s urvivors onto their construction barge in
Escambia Bay.
"IF WE HADN'T BY CHANCE been
there. many people would have died. They
couldn't have made it. When they got on the
barge, I know il was an hour before the boats
round us ... said McDonald.
He said he was about 300 yards from the
plane when it went down.
Three passengers died.
"People were screaming, 'Help me! Save
me!· when we came over. About haU a dozen
were a top the fusel age scrambling,
crawling. slidJng. The others were in the
water." said McDonald.
When all the survivors had been
transferred to rescue boats. McDonald and
Kenney moved on down the bay. They said
they went straight home -"Only because
the bars were closed." said McDonald with a
laugh -and after two hours or sleep were up
again heading to the construction site.
HE SAID MOST APPARENTLY had no
time to prepare for the splashdown. "Because '
HEROIC TUGBOAT CREW RELAXES AFTER SAVINO AIR CRASH VICTIMS ......
Capt. Glenn McDonald, Right, and Flrat Mate Biii Kenney
Fro•PageAJ
HOSTAGES
al the store. he phoned.
"I talked to the ma n -he was
hysterical -and he said he had
a .45 caliber revolver," McNellis
said. "Ile told me ·1 know how to
use it. and I can use it again.• I
told him to stay calm a nd asked
him what he wanted. He said ·a
car.·
"I tried lo bring him my car.
but couldn 't get through the
police roadblock outside the
store." McNellis said.
The incident began about 6
p. m .. police said. when Dwyer
tried to rob the store. He loaded
a shoppmg cart from a nearby
m arket with jewels, walked to
the front or the store, but ducked
back inside when police who
answered an alarm drove up to
the front.
Police s aid the g unman .
armed with two pistols, fired
shots out both the front and back
doors of the store during the ear·
ly hours or the siege.
Seven hostages were released
or escaped within an hour after
the incident began, police said.
About 7 p.m .. pqlice began us·
ing the telephone to negotiate
with Dwyer. during which he
m ade a number or threats to klll
the two sisters, police said.
A large crowd of sighl·seers
gathered at the shopping center.
police said.
ORANGE COAST ~
DAILY PILOT
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'~· (114)"°'4121 Cf•lllflH MMft ...... 14.'o!.1171 _,..,., .. ,_°""' ... ..,,0
~s...ci.-11
4tMIOO
l'•Wll-lllOr-CluM•~ 146-1230
'Ghost' Thief
Found to Be
Driving Boy, 8
HAMTRAMCK, Mich. (AP> -
Hamtramck police may have
thought they were seeing ghosts
when a car zipped by them, do· in' 70 mph With no sign or a
driver at the wheel.
When -after a high speed
chase through residential streets
-the officers finally caught up
with the fleeing car Monday.
they found no phantom, just a
short 8-year·old boy.
The pint·sized car thief, whose
identity was not released.
managed to elude patrol cars in
this Detroit-a rea community for
several blocks. leading them the
wrong way down a one·way
street before ramming a rence
and abandoning the vehicle.
When police caught up with
the culprit on a nearby street
corner. officers said. he readily
admitted stealing the car from a
gas station and driving ll.
Officers said the boy was so
short he had to peer ttetween lhe .
spokes of the steering wheel as
he drove.
The child, whose mother had
reported him missing, was held
in the Wayne County Youth
Home pending juvenile court ac·
tion.
HBChamber
BacksJarvU
Directors of the Huntington
Beach Chamber or Commerce
have come out in favor of
Proposition 13. the J arvla·GaM
property tax limttatlon
measure.
A chamber resolution endors·
Ing the measure sald that
economics in government ls
growh\g completely oul of hand
and that Proposition 13 ls a
beginnini measure to brln1 big
government back under control ot the people.
Copies of the re.soluUon have
been mailed to city, county and
slate officials and the California
State Chamber or Commerce.
Testing Pondered
LOS ANGELES (AP > -
Be1tnntn1 next fHr. flral·
throuih 1hrth·1radth tn the Laa
An1e1 .. city achooll may be re·
quired to Pall ~adin1. wnUnc or mat.b,pl~ct tall befor. ~
in& pro~ Lo thi nut 1rade.
F,....P~AJ
VESSEL •••
another idea. They want to
donate it to the Orange County
Ed Davis for Governor Commit·
tee for fund·raising purposes.
The proposal wafi reportedly
made to commiU.~ chairman
Goldie Joseph of Lldo Isle. who
also couldn't be reached· for
comment today.
Davis, a former Los Angeles
police chief, said the plan to sail
the boat up and down the coast
to raise runds bas .. great merit"
and that his campaign st.aft is
studying it.
Amin Orders
Ugamla Police
cmers An-est
KAMPALA. Uganda CAP > -
President ldi Amin ordered the
arrest Monday of Ali Towelli,
former director of Uganda's
police training and operations
department, the government an·
nounced in its 4ally newspaper.
The voice of Uganda said
Amin disclosed the arrest or
Towelli and "other high.ranking .
officers or the Uganda police
and prisons" during an ap.
pearance in Busoga Province SS
miles east or the capital. He was
quoted as saying the arrests
were made "pending investiga.
lions lnto their activities."
Amin has said be will weed
out ofllctals who make mistakes.
The arrest of Towelll apparenUy
ls a part of that program.
Sailor Dies
Scuba Diving
SAN DIEGO <AP> -A young
ullor who lapsed Into un.
con1clou1neas during a scuba
divin1 clau last month at the
Naval Training Center has died.
says a spokesman for the Navy
Regional Medical Center.
Gary Arnold, 20, of Lansing,
Mich .• died last Wedneaday
from lack of oxy1en to the brain,
the apokesman 1a1d Monday.
Arnold, a petty officer third
claaa1 had been 1wtmmln1 about
45 m mutAll tn run dlvtn1 equip.
ment when bll cJaumatea
noticed be· wu havirta trouble,
ofllclats laid at the time of the
accldfnt.~-=--
. ... ...........
FLORIDA MARINE PATROLMAN TAKES CLOSE LOOK AT DOWNED AIRLINER IN GULF
Netk>MI AlrHnea 721 Bounc:ea on Rough Water In PenHcola Bay After Wet Landing ..r
Fro•Pa~AJ
PLANE •••
when tugboard captain Glenn E.
McDonald. 41, pulled his barge
the Lit.tie Mac, to the plane, t(ed
il up and helped men. woman
and cmidren c1ami:>en1board.
"If that barge hadn't been
there, there's no telling how
many would have drowned."
said marine patrol Sgt. William
Clenny.
McDonald's wife Janet said
her husband. a marine supply
shop owner from Gulf Breeze.
was in the vicinity of the plane
because he was lost in the fog.
"He didn't know why he was
there. but now he believes he
was there for a reason." she
said. "He thought it was about to
crash down on top of him, but it
cam e down about 300 yards
away."
Arter spending the night pull·
ing survivors from the wreck,
McDonald went home, slept for
two hours and returned to work.
The plane, Flight 193 out or
Mobile. Ala .• crashed on the
western lip of Florida's Panhan·
die, 20 miles from the Alabama
border and so miles from
Mobile. as it made a final land·
ing approach at the Pensacola
airport. disappearing from the
radar screens three miles rrom
the runway.
"That plane skipped across
the water like a rock on a pond
and then seUJed into the bay.
There were two loud reports
'blam, blam' as it skipped," a
witness said.
Many passengers emerged
from the water soaked with jet
fuel which leaked rrom the plane
when it went down with 2,700
gallons or kerosene left in its
tanks. Spectators were ordered
out of the area for fear a flame
could touch orr the ruel.
James Stockwell, first omcer
on the downed plane, was being
examined by doctors when he
said he felt the aircraft made its
approach to the field too low.
"We were apparently below
altitude. I can't believe we were
that low. but apparently we
were." said Stockwell. who was
reported in good condition.
"There shouldn't have been
any problem making that land·
ing," said Jack Barker. a
spokesman for the Federal A via·
Uon AdminiBtration. He said vis·
fbility was four miles despite the
fog and that was "above stand·
ard'' fortheairport.
The night originated in Miami
a t 2:20 p.m. PDT and made
stops in Melbourne and Tampa
in Florida, New Orleans and
Mobile. Ala .• before heading back
lo Florida.
Many Drivers Baek
No Meetings Set
In Trash Dispute
No formal meetings are
scheduled between striking
Orange County tras h t ;uck
drivers and representatives or
disposal fir ms. a federal
mediator said today.
However. mediator J ohn
Courtney said he is continuing lo
talk lo both sides and that there
is a possibility they may be talk·
Ing to each other without notify.
in~ him.
;,We don't discourage t he
parties from talking to each
other without a m ediator 1£
that's what it takes to ~el a set·
Uement." Courtney said or the
three· week-old strike.
Although Teamsters Local 396
.
remains on strike. the errects of the walkout have ended for most
Orange Coast res idents.
Ser vice. which resumed eight
da.) s a~o with nonunion labor.
c·on tmued to catch up with un·
col lected trash this week as
more and more union drivers re·
turned lo work without a con-
tract.
They beJ?an returning last
w e ek afte r n ego ti a tions
deadlocked. Drivers, who had
been earning $4.50 an hou r. had
asked for an immediate raise to
$6.50 while management stood
firm on anofferorSS.25.
Many drivers still remain out
on st rike. but m ostly in thl!
Anaheim area.
E'roMPa~AI
MORO'S BODY ...
They found nothing on Via
Funari but then checked Via
Caetani. The car apparently had
been parked on the street for
several hours, police said. They
said Moro may have been shot an
the car.
Still wrapped in the blanket.
the body was blessed by a pnest
from the nearby Church of Jesus
and then was loaded Into an am·
bulance and taken away to a
morgue for an autopsy. Police
cordoned the area. Crowds or
weeping Romans congregated
on the tiny street.
"Bastards! Bastards ~" one
woman cried. "He suffered so
much."
Hundreds or other ordinary
c itizens gathered outside the
Moro home rive miles away in
Rome's Monte Mar io section.
and -on the nearby tree·shaded
Via Mario Fani. scene of kidnap
ambush.
Police cars with sirens whin·
ing sped through the city. de·
serted as usual during the early
afternoon lunch hours. Police
said they had received other lips
before the discovery or the car
and were throwing out dragnets
across the city.
The Italian Communis t
Party's directorate went into
session immediately. and party
official Giancarlo PaJetta said
as he entered the meeting. "This
1s a crime of sadist ferocity."
Moro was president or the rul·
inf? Christian Democrat Party
and a five·t1me former premier
and had bee n expected to
become Italy's next president.
Showers Due
Along Sierra
By The Associated Press
California's northern edge and
the Sierra are in for some
showers today, while part ly
cloudy and cooler conditions
prevail throughout the rest or Northern California, the Na·
t1ona l Weather Service says.
Thunders howers broke out
over the northern mountains in
late afternoon Monday but
ended shortly after sunset.
Forecasters said the showers
are caused by a weak weather !>ystem moving throug h the
Pacific Northwest.
Union Backs Brown
FRESNO (AP I -Gov. Ed·
mund G. Brown Jr has won en
dorsement for re·election from
Callforrua steelworkers.
cro~orn wilh~
Jjvm%u ... and
Wickgry'Pa~
A delightful colMlng cookbook ...
just add kids Wld crayons and Pf•·
s.nt Mom with a keepsake •h•'ll
tl'9asura.
Come in end •lact from a wide ••ietv of temptmg. tasty gift paks ..•
prettily boxed Just for Mother'• o.y -W., I 4"'-
lt Mom llftl out of town, we11 tand her gift for you .
WESTCllff PLAZA ,.,.. • .,,.,,, u •• ,. ...... .....,. •• z.ttn
~'Tl' w . 'Tl. s...,..
MAAIMu·s YtLLAG60MCA POIM'T
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~ra~k~rt1 fc1rm~ (IF (Jf/10 e
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I: , Orange Coast
EDITION
l
Today'!; Closing
N.~. Stoeks
. ,
1 j
lvoL 71, NO. 129, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1978 c TEN CEt-4 TS l
17
I Newport Linrl.ts· Building to Ease Traffic
I Newport Beach city coun· Opponents -most or the city's Newport Beach environmen· Projects l a rger than the mea ns of specific criteria set hospitals.
t cilmen -i!Said Monday it ls DOW landowners. builde rs and de· talists. Leaders of the group minimum could win permits on-forth in the measure. A spokesman for the Irvine i their Policy to limit new con· velopers -say the policy were on band at Monday nitht's ly Ir shown that the traffic they Another provision or the policy Company. the city's largest land
t struction in their city to projects a m o u n ts to a bu i Id in g council meeting to appla~ the would generate will be less than calls for approval of large proj· o wner, said adoption of the
I that won 't increase tramc con-moratorium and will. in effect, adoption of the policy. one percent of the existing traf· eels by the city's planning com-policy was premature and total·
gestion. shut down new construction in IL would prohibit the issuing of fi e on certain Newport Beach mission. if a given project is ly unnecessary. He noted that
Proponents of the measure, Newport Beach. a building permit for any project r oadways idenllried as con· deemedtohaves1fnifirant benefit the city's major landowners and
adopted in a 5· l vote, call it a The policy copies an initiative of 10 or more residential units. gested. to the city, or if it Includes out· developers aJready were hooor-
policy. It was introduced by Legal Environmental Analysis square reel of commercial or in· fi e engineer is responsible for visions. Examples would be fire pending the outcome of studies
f
traffic phasing development proposal being circulated by the or that involves 10.000 or more Under the policy. the ~lly traf· standing traffic mitigation pro· ing a self·imposed moratorium
MayorPauJ Ryckoff Fund <LEAF>. a group.of dustrialspace. identirylng congested streets by stations. concert h alls or (See TRAFFIC.PageA2)
i Ex-prenller Moro's Body Found
f------
Enrollment DerHne
Trustees Mull
Victim
Shot 12
j
Times i N-M Dismissals '
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Oft• 0.11, f'llol S~ff
Newport.Mesa school trustees
wall consider malling dismissal
notices to nearly 400 employees
because of declining enrollment
in Harbor area schools.
Involved are more than 300 in·
r slructional aides. teacher aides
and noon duty school employees.
I
•
I
I ~
I I
I
'
Appeal
Plaruwd
By Gates
By TOM BARLEY
Of I .. O.lly .. , ... ,....
Orange County Sheriff Brad
Gates said today he intends to
appeal part of a federal court Or·
der calling ror immediate
changes in the operation of the
Santa Ana County Jail.
Gates said adherence to all the
direc-tives issued by Judge
William P . Gray would cost
c·nunty taxp ayers a t least s:mo.ooo for alterations he feels
are unnecessary
Gates said the county has
already ihcurred legal costs of
$200.000 in Cighling the federal
lawsuit
"I think the public in Orange
County expects me to resist this
kind of financial burden." Gates
said. "We will be filing an ap
peal immediately."
Gates condemned criticism of
the county jail and its officers as
unJust1f1ed "and I believe the
public agrees with me on that
point. We've been letting minori·
ty areas of the community come
an and dictate to us a nd this is
the cause of m a ny or our
problems." the sheriff said.
Gates said he intends to file a
co unte r s uit aga ins t the
American Civil Liberties Union
<ACLU). the organization which
took legal action on behalf or six
Jail inmates nearly three years
ago. /
"Only 10 of the original 195
a reas or complaint in the lawsuit
were left when the judge made
his ruling." Gates said. "To me.
that is a sure indication of the
strength . or the allegations that
we re made against us."
Gates said the ACLU suit cost
county taxpayers S200.000 in
legal expenses. "Our legal ac·
lion will be aimed at getting it.
or most or it. back," he said.
Judge Gray's order calls for
jeil a uthorities to allow inmates
'more time to eat meals, in·
creased communication with
visitors, more and better sleep-
ing a reas anl! better access to
m agazin es and newspapers.
Gates noted today that every
allegation of brutality by jaU or.
Clcer:s had been struck down by
Judge Gray.
He said the Judge almllaflf
rejected charges of Jmproper
and insufficient medical treat·
m ent at the jail.
Judge Gray issued hla list or 10
directives after touring the
county jail and talklng and eat·
Ing with inmates.
lnOue nce Aeked
58 teachers, five administrators
and an unspecified number of
classi fied <non -teaching )
employees.
The dismissal notices don't
mean an automatic loss or Jobs
for those who receive them .
school Superintendent J ohn
Nicoll emphasized.
Rather. the proces1> 1s a legal
requirement needed to protect
the Newport-Mesa district from
being overstaffed when school
opens next fall. Nicoll explained.
The anticipated cutbacks are
not related to the potential
passage of the Jarvis/Gann tax
initiative on the June 6 primary
ballot. he noted.
Seniority and normal school
district employee attrition will
play roles in determining how
many of the employees put on
notice actually will be dis·
missed.
Tonight's school board meet-
ing begins at 7:30 p.m . in Costa
Mesa City Council Chambers.
The proposed personnel cut·
backs will tie into continued dis·
cussions or a tentative budget
for the 1978-79 school year. Cut-
backs in salaries for teachers
are estimated at $1.7 million and
for classiried employees,
$690,000. Nicoll said.
Police Catch
CYAEscapee
PACOI MA <AP> -Police
have recaptured the convicted
murderer of Pacoima ice cream
vendor Mohammed Mofrad four
months after his esca,pe from
the California Youth Authority.
Alvin Holmes. 20, surrendered
to police Monday after hiding· in
the attic or a Pacoima apart·
ment complex.
.,...,_s.utt .......
ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER DEBBIE MOSER HOLDS FLAPPING CAPTIVE IN IRVINE
Barn Owl Which Went HuntJng Human1 Taken Into Cu1tody by Authorltle1
Irvine Predator Held
Barn Owl Captured After Attacks on Peop/,e
By PHILIP ROSMA RIN
Of ti .. 0.11' Pllet "Ml
A young barn owl. whose mother ap·
pa rently hadn •t taught 1t the niceties . of
planned community living went hunting
Irvine residents Monday night and early to·
day.
The residents complained to authorities
from the safety or their Willow area houses.
The owl was captured by animal services
omcers and handed over to a veterinan an
who plans to teach it to hunt smaller prey,
then release it.
DEBBIE MOSER, WHO grabbed the owl
from a net on whicb it alighted. said it began
stalking people Marlday night.
One man called to complain the owl was
attacking him every time he tried to get out
of the house on Fireside Circle.
Miss Moser said she explained she would
have to wait till morning to try to capture the
bird. because owls see a lot better in the dark
than animal control services officers do.
AT 5:30 A.l'I. TODAY, pohce received a
call from another resident nearby. on Walnut
Avenue.
"The re's a big owl on top of my roof."
the man said "I le won't let me out' ..
Miss Moser s ped to his rescue. She
spotted the owl in a tree
.. First v.e tried to coax 1t out of the lree."
she reported "It didn 't work. We took a fish·
ing net. and taped at to t he e nd of a
broomstick. climbed a ways. and were going
to try lo throw the net over him
"BUT THE OWL JUMPED right onto the
net. As la helper > lowered it down. I grabbed it. ..
The barn owl went to University Park
Veterinary Hospital. where Or Kent Walker
examined the bird. pronounced it fit but
possibly confused about diet matters. and
vowed lo set il straight then free
Jarvis Issue .Debated in Mesa . "
Costa M esa Mayor Ed
MeFarlan.4 declared Monday
that the J arvis-Gann Property
Tax Initiative "wouJd defraud
the people" and do nothing to
help those it says jt will.
Joining in a sp1rlted debate on
Proposition 13. Orange County
administrative aide Paul Raver. a Costa Mesa reiident, told a
group or west side homeowners
that they might as well forget
a bout the development of
Fairview Regional Park if the
Jarvis initiative passes.
But Costa Mesa real estate
man Don Bull, like Raver. a
former city council candidate,
countered: ··1 don't think It's ao·
Ing to hurt the city tha\ bad."
Bull suggested that the city
make up for reduced revenues
by charging for ser vices such
as fire calls for home Ooodlng
and lncreastng the costs for
recreation proarams.
Mc Farland said passage of
Proposition 13 would cripple the
downtown redevelopment agen-
cy. increase big government at
the expense of city rule and
create ··a tremendous windfall"
for businesses.
Mc Farland's comments drew
criticism from Virgil Elkins.
Orange Count.y chairman of the
pro-Jarvis United Organization
of Taxpayers.
Elkins said "It's about lime
people put the government un-
der control... He cited what he
said was a 161 percent rise in the
state budget and a 121 percent
hike in property taxes over the
put two years.
Following a presentation by
county employee Raver, Elkins
charged that county government
ls being run by "a bunch or Viet-
namese and Illegal aliens run-
(See DEBATE. Page'A2>
The effect of the passage of
W7.0le..,.. C''-,•e the Jarvis Initiative on the r 4 • 0 Ula Newport· Mesa Unified School
District was much on the minds
of t h e 35 Mesa West On T,..-C•••a Homeowners Association mem-
Pet Destruetion
....., '"'° hers -who turned out for the de·
SACRAMENTO <AP> _ bate at Rea Middle School tn
CC)11nty Approves .
California voters favor Costa Mesa.
Pro Po s l ti on 13 over School Superintendent John
Propos ition 8 , but the Nicoll sald the loss of $18 mU·
mar.gin between the two lion In property tax revenues to
Injection Method
tax·cut issues ls too close school would have a "sl1n11lcant The 30,000 unwanted pets to pick a clear leader, a effect." Gannett News Service poll He said the district's Com· deatro7ed ea,ch year et the
Hys. munlty Service Tax would be 0r1~n .. e_e .. ~led !r., .~~lmUal sheotlteinr
The statewide drvey of wiped out, therefore cancelln1 w U'C NL U-1 w.1ec on, n
00 a decompreulon cl\amber, the l, 1 voters ro1m 40 per· the use of district f acllltles ror county Board of Supervisors de·
cent faTOr Proposition 13 communlly groups and aome clded today.
and 37 percent favor after achool athleUcs.
Proposition 8. Mayor McFarland said be However, county animal COO·
Twenty percent said backs the &hr BIU, Proposltlon trot officials satd lt may t.ake tbey .-ere undecided; one 8 on the June e prtmaty ballot. two months to Implement the
percent aald they would He aald the s.n.r bill would new method ohnlmal euthanasia
vote lot both, and lbree provlde ftnancJal relltf to rent· and ret!Athechambera.
destruction oC anim•ls by both de·
compression and injection.
' He called use or Injections
"unquestionably humane" and
the decompression c hamber
··absolutely Inhumane.''
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich was tho only board member who
dld not vote In favor of An·
thony 's proposal
ROME <A P l Thl' blood
smt'a r ed body of for m er
Premier Aldo Moro. shot m lhl•
back of the head and his hands
and feet chained. was round in a
parked car m the heart of Rome
today. 54 days after he was kid
napped by the Red Brigade~
Moro, 61 , ulso had been s hot al
least 11 l1mes around the heart
Police Saad thc•y round fi\'(:
spe nt cartndges an the car. a
stolen red Renault bearing
Rome license plate~
The body. hunched over on th<•
floor of the Renault's back seat .
was clad in the same dark gray
!'uit Moro was wearin~ when
kidnapped March 16 by a dozen
terrorists who arnbushed hii;;
two-car motorcade on a Rome
st ree t . kallin~ five police
bodyguards.
The wounds had been inflicted
within the past 24 hours.
A blue overcoat and red
bla nket a lso were wrapped
around the body It was dis
rovered by a police bomb expen
who broke into the car Firemen
who saw it said the face was ex-
tremely pale and Moro's five-
foot-11 frame had lost considera
ble weight.
His Marxist revolutionary Red
Brigade kidnappers claimed
Moro was a symbol of "im
per1alistic" oppression or tht•
working class. Friday. the ter
rorists issued the last of a sene:-.
of messages. saying they wen·
"ca rrying out" a death
"verdict" against Moro because
the Christian Df-mocrats refused
lo nfgottate their demand for
the release of 13 jailed terroriSL'>
an exchange for Moro's life.
Arter the body was found.
Premier Giulio Andreotti called
an emeri:icncy Cabinet session
and President Gi ovanni Leont.•
scheduled an address to the na
lion. Italy's major unions called
an eight-hour work stoppage.
Moro's family issued a bitter
statement calling on the govern
me nt not to hold any state funeral
or other public ceremony to
mourn his assassination.
Moro himself in n handwritten
letter April 24 requested that no
government or party official at
tend his funeral.
· "The family locks itself up in
si lence and demands silence."
the statement said "History wi ll
pass judgment on the hre and
death of Aldo Moro."
In Washington . t he State
Department condemned the kill·
ing as a "cowardly and con
temptible act."
The Vatican radio called it a
"barbarous murder . . . which
(See MORO, Page A:?>
Coas t
Weathe r
Low cloudiness tonighl.
clearing to hazy sunshine
by late Wednesday morn-
ing. Cooling trend. Lows
tonight 52 to 58. Highs
Wednesday 67 to 74.
INSIDE TODA 't'
What right& doe1 a woman
have when her huabond or
the. man !M Uues With beats
her? Set f'to.turing, POQf er. .....
Al .,_ S.We AU tl!Wwll ....
lr--...-0 QAM ......... &..M .... 11t ..i. --~ it Ml!lek ... EJ.. cs-u =~'= c-=c.e.ty ~.:.~ ... ~---_..._
.. a .. .. ..
M Alf .. ..,
~
MIO, Mich. CAP> -~ldenta
who want to block burial of t>8·
8 contamlnated animal• In
Oscoda Co\.Q\t1 ·~ they have
tent a telear'm to Soviet P.rtal·
dent Leonid Brezhnev a1kln1
... hlm to use h1I lnflu•ce wtth
percent uld they would era and senlor cltlttna, pro· Supcrvl1or PhlUp Anthony
•ot4P. aaainst both. vlslona not prov1dtd ror In tbe rec om endtd the lnJecUon
Dledrlt h abetalned, aaytn1 he
would vote later when county of·
llclals pre.<1ent a plan for start. Jna up the ntiw proceduh.
Gr.".n.1 ..... ~ ,....,!Ma ·~~ ...... crl~= ;;;.;;... Cl w ........
.. ... ... -PrnllJenl ~ llMtlr beh.llf. ---.------=:=:::....:.,,,, -Jaail&.Jnltiai.ive.:-__._.....,a...~•ft_er wltneasln1 ~e
i + I
-t
( J
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.112 OAILVPtl.OT C Tue:!!y.M!x9,t971
Italy Mo111•ns Moro·
Crowds Fi lled With Anger, Grkf
ROME IAPI ''M•donna
Mia." wept a housewife y,hen
she learned or Aldo Moro's death
at the hands of terrorist kidnap·
~rs. "They are assassins. a::.
~assins They s hould all be shot
to death."
Sirens screamed. sobbing
crowds gathered on street cor
ners and others sought solace an
nearby churches today when
word spread throughout Italy
·that Moro's bullet-ridden body.
his feel chained. had been round
* * * f'ro•Pa~AJ
MORO •.•
takes on in this tragic hour a
nearly sacrificial value."
Upon hearing the news. Pope
Paul VI , a personal friend of the
·saain politician, went to pray an
his private chapel.
of\ tht noor of 1 1tolen Renault
paTked an the heart of Rome.
"Butards ! Bastards•" a
woman cried. "He suffered so
much."
Pope Paul VI went to pray In
his private chapel. Italy's major
labor unions called an eight-hour
work s toppaae. In Milan.
workers planned a massive rally
in Cathedral Square.
Premier Giulio Andreotti
called an e mergency Cabinet
session and President Giovanni
Leone scheduled an address lo
the nation. Leaders of the Italian
Communist Party met lD 1he af·
ternoon.
"This 1s a crime of sadist
ferocity." detlared Giancarlo
PaJetta. a top Commumst of-
racaal as he entered the meeting
Italian and party flags were
immediately lowered lo half
staff at Christian Democrat
headquarters.
Moro alter a "peopl•'• trial."
Workers abruptly left their
lunches. most oot bothering to
return to work. Old and young,
men and women, filed Into
neighborhood churches for
prayer. They made no attempt
to hide tears.
Thousands gathered on the
tree -shaded street outside
Moro's apartment in the Monte
Marlo section or Rome near
w~ere the politician was kid·
napped on March 16 and his five
bodyguards were killed.
Eleanora Moro and her three
daughters and son viewed the
body for five minutes at the
morgue of the university where
Moro had taught law.
The family locked itself
behind a wall or silence but Is·
sued a public statement asking
the Italian government. which
refused to negotiate for Moro's
release. to avoid any "public
demonstration or. ,ceremony or
speech'' to mourn his assasslna-
tton.
, ...
Fast F ood Cit y
Structures that will make up "Bristol
Village" arc going up nt!ar intersection of
Red llill Avenue and Bristol Street in
Costa Mesa. When village is completed it
will include a fast rood restaurant row
u coffee !>hop. a taco stand. a fish · ancf
chips outlet and a hot dog emporium
There will be some offices and olhcr retail
outlets. too. Former President Gl~eppe
'Saragat said. "Moro's body ls
the bod:, of the First Republic.
which is now dead." He referred
to the republic established in
1946. when the llalian monarchy
""as voted out in a plebiscite.
The body was found at 1 :30
p.m 5:30 a.m. PDT -on Via
Michelangelo Caelani. a narrow
cobblestoned street of 15th and
J6lh century palaces runnlng
alongside Communis t party
headquarters and 1ust a stone's
throw from Christian Democrat
headquarters It was JUSt two
blocks from the busiest intersec-
tion in Rome.
Tbe groundswell ot reeling
surrounding Moro's tragic death
recalled the American reaction
to the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy.
As president of the ruling
Christian Democrat Party and
five-time premier. Moro was one
of Italy's best known public
figures.
Pendleton Site OK by Badham
Officers went to the area and
discovered the body after police
headquarters received an
anonymous telephone call say·
ing a bomb had been placed in a
('elf parked on Via Funari, adja·
cent to the 200-yard-long Vaa
Caetani
"We need to bring back the
death sentence," said one emo-
tionally WTought man.
Capital punishment was
abolished after World War II.
Silent and sullen crowds
milled around the narrow , cob·
blestoned Via Michelangelo
Caetani where the maroon car
bearing Rom e license plates
N57686 was abandoned between
Communist Party headquarters
and Christian Democrat head·
quarters with Moro's body
slumped in back
"Maybe it's not him." said
one onlooker. remembering the
previous hoaxes surrounding the
Red Brigades' threat to carry
out a death sentence against
U .S. Congressman Robert
Badham, R-Newport Beach.
said today he would not object to
use or Camp Pendleton for a
liquefied natural gas terminal -
if no other option ls available.
"I must stresS' that we just
don't have the luxury to quibble
over the use of natural re-
sources... Badham said in a
statement released through his
office.
California Coastal Com ·
mission staff named the Camp
Pendleton Marine facility. just
south or San Clemente, as its top
choice Monday for the site or a
liquefied natural gas terminal.
M 1 lltary officials announced
immediately their intention to
fight location of the terminal at
Camp Pendleton -one of four
California coastal sites under
.consideration for the terminal.
Badham seryes on the House
Armed Services Committee and
Jts subcotnmittee on installa·
lions and facilities .
Congressional approved. re-
quired to locate the terminal on
federal property. would appear
more likely with Badham ·s sup-
port.
Badham's statement indicated
ha is coneerned that the
terminal, If located at
Pendleton. would not be opera-
tional before 1985. If localed
near Point Conception, 40 miles
west of Santa Barbara. -the
sa te preferred by the gas
partnership. Western LNG
Terminal Associates. which
would construct the facility -it
would be operating three years
earlier.
··The state coasta I com·
mission staff~ recommended
ranking or the possible <liquefied
natural gas I sites in California
ignores the advice or its own
professional consultants and
substitutes its own arbitrary
standards:· Keith McKinney.
president or the gas partnership.
a joint venture of the Pacific
Gas and Electric Co. and the
Southern California Gas Co .
said Monday.
that once they do this. they will
open up the whole base. I think
at ·s the first step an an attempt to
do away with a major natural re-
source "
Allen said the exe<'utave com
mattee of the Chamber of Com
merce was scheduled to meet to
day at noon The proposed
termina l location at Camp
Pendleton was on the a~enda. ht'
said
They found nothing on Via
Funari but then checked Vaa
Caetana The car apparently had
been parked on the street for
several hours. police said. They
said Moro may have been shot an
the car
Still wrapped in the blanket.
the body was blessed by a priest
from the nearby Church of Jesus
and then was loaded into an am
bulance and taken away to a
morgue for an autopsy. Police
cordoned the area. Crowds of
weeping Romans congregated
on the tmy street.
Water Heats for Ship
"The proposed site near Point
Conception is farthest from
population <'enters. stale
beaches. parks. maJor highways
and recreational boating ...
McKinney saad. "In short. it 1s
the best site.··
The Southern Cal1forn1a
Edison Company, with its San
Onofre nuclear generating plant
located w1thm five miles of the
proposed gas terminal site. will
be represented Monday at a
public hearing when the coastal
commission will consider the
staff's recommendatioh.
TONIGHT
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL
BOARD -Regular meetmJ?.
Costa Mesa city council cbam
bers. 7 30 p.m. SS Catalina Overstays Welcome in Ne wport COASTLINE LECTURE
"Women in American Film."
Costa Mesa Women's Club. 7
Pm. Hundreds of other ordanar:,-
citizens gathered outside the
Moro home five miles away in
-Rome's Monte Mario section.
and on the nearby tree-shaded
Via Mario Fani. scene of kidnap
ambush.
· Police cars with sirens whm·
ing sped through the city. de·
serted as usual during the early
afternoon lunch hours . Police
said they had received other tips
before the discovery or the car
and were throwing out dragnet..,
ucross the city
The Italian Communist
Party's directorate went Into
session immediately. and party
official Giancarlo Pajetta said
as he entered the meeting. "This
1s a crime of sadist ferocity."
Moro was president of the rul
ing Christian Democrat Party
and a five-time former premier
and had been expected lo
become Italy's next president.
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of.,,. o.11, ...... $!Mt
Th~ S &. Catalina was 1n hot
water again today. and. un·
fortunately for her owners. that
appears lo be the only water it's
gomg to be allowed lo stay in.
The legendary 301·foot vessel.
which arrived an Newport
Harbor April 25 to pre:;1de at a
boat show. overstayed its
welcome when its permit ex
µired Monday
But it appears lo have
nowhere to go certainly not
back to Los Angeles. There. city
attorneys. claiming the ship's
owners owe nearly $30,000 in
docking and related fees, have
asked a federal court to force
the sale of the Great While
Steamer lo pay lhe alleged debt.
The S .S. Catalina was
purchased two years ago by
Hyman Singer. a Beverly Hills
reu I estate developer, when it
was sold to pay the delinquent
Mang Drivers Ba~k
No Meetings Set
In Trash Dispute
No formal meetings are
S<'heduled between s triking
Orange County trash truck
drivers and representatives of
disposal firms. a federal
mediator said today.
1 However. mediator John
tourtney said he ls continuing to
talk to both sides and that there
ls a possibility they may be laJk-
~ng to each other without notify.
1n~ him
OAANOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
. ...., ... ..... ....... ~, .... ~.-
'"'" CWlrr .,,, ...... "-''""'Go<w•-
Til .... •tk.MVd
l!dltOI '-···-........... & ....
~ .... 1.-Ille-I' ... "
"'"•' ... ' ~·•01111 ••ton
c
"We don'l discourage the
parties from talking to each
other without a mediator if
that's what it takes to get a set·
tlement." Courtney said of the
three-week·old strike.
Although Teamsters Local 396
remains on strike. the effects or
the walkout have ended for most
Orange Coast residents. ...
Service, which resumed eight
days ago with nonunion labor.
continued to catch up with un
<'Ollected trash this week as
more and more unlon drivers re-
turned to work without a con-
tract.
They beun returning last
week after negot iations
dudlocked. Drivers, who had
been earning $4.SO an hour. had
asked for an immediate raise lo
S6.SO while management 1tood
firm on an orterofJS.95 .
Mony drivers still remain out
on strlkt. but mostly in the
Anaheim Mea.
Anchovy Bait
Bill Halted
I
SACR.AM ENTO CAP\ -
California Aaaemblymen have
stopped • but to permit Im·
medial• anchovy bait n1hln1 tn
Humboldt 81')', on th• North
Co11l near Eureka.
But the author of AB 2311 As·
Hmbl.yman Lawrence KapUotr,
D-San Dleao. aald b would
amend th• bill to be•ln tho perml11ton Jen . l, 1879, and
brina llupforaoothervote.
docking fees of its previous
owner. The srup runs up about
$158 a day in docking fees.
Singer said.
A spokesman for the Newport
Beach Marine Safety Depart·
ment said he has been told that
Duncan Mcintosh. promoter of
the boat show that brought the
ship to Newport, 1s making ar-
rangements for its removal.
However, Mcintosh couldn't
l'rone Page A J
DEBATE •.• . oing up and down the halls try-
ing to look busy."
Raver explained that the
Jarvis initiative would cut the
county's current $163.2 milllon
slice of property tax revenues
down t.q S68 million. The coun-
ty's overall budget for 1977-78
was $544.2 million.
This would mean cutbacks in
county fire personnel. county-
run libraries ltwo in Costa
Mesa l and the probable demise
of approved plans to develop
Fairview Regional Park on
Costa Mesa's west side, Raver
said.
The elimination of the 260-acre
recreational facility would stem
from a more than SlO million cut
in the county's $14.7 million
harbors. beaches and parks
fund. said Raver.
Rounding out the pro-J arvls
side was Irvine resident John
Sherwood who contended the
state constitution assures ade·
quate funding of schools.
Death· Penalty
Try Rejected
SACRAMENTO CAP> -An
Assembly committee has reject·
ed a proposed extension or
California's death penalty to
tlrst-deeree murderers or
children under 14 years of age.
The bill, AB 3551 by As-
semblyman Jim Ellls, R·San
Diego, iot a motion for passage
but no aecond Monday io the As-
sembly Criminal Jua\lce Com-
mittee.
Ellls said a "prollreratlon ol
chlld killings" prompted him to
Introduce It.
Satellite Ban
Talia Slat.ed
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
United States and the Soviet
Union wUI begin ne10UaUon1 on
babnln1 "huntu ·k Iller"
aatellltes on June 8 In Helslnkl,
the State Department Hid' Mon·
d•J'· Oepartment 1poke1man Hod-
dint Carter aaid °'• neiotlatlona are expeated to be "abort and
oNUmlnary ln n•tur•."
be reached for comment today.
Previous suggestions as to
what to do with the steamer
have included moving il to just
inside the jetl.y for 30 days, or
moving it to Ensenada.
The ship's owners have
another idea. They want to
donate it to the Orange County
Ed Davis for Governor Commit
tee for fund-raising purposes.
The proposal was reportedly
made to committee chairman
Goldie Joseph of Lido Isle. who
also couldn't be reached for
comment today. ~
Davis. a former Los Angeles
police chief, said the plan to sail
the boat up and down the coast
to raise funds has "grealmerit"
and that rus campaign staff is
studying It.
Fro• Page A I
TRAFFIC •..
aimed at lowering the allowable
densities on the remaining va-
cant property in Newport Beach.
But Mayor Ryckoff asked city
officials to put the policy in the
form of an ordinance for future
consideration by the City Coun-
cil. The policy adopted Monday
night, although binding on the
council and city officials, does
not carry the force or law.
Jn a letter to the commission.
th~ electric company said a liq-
uefied natural gas terminal.
located so close to San Onofre.
might not be compatible with
federal Nuclear Regulatory
Com mission s ite criteria
··with out possible design
modifications and major nuclear
plant reanalysis."
The city of San Clemente has
also written lo the Coastal Com·
m ission. asking that the gas
terminal not be located at CaMp
Pendleton.
"I'm against it. .. said Bernard
Allen. president of San
Clemente's Chamber of Com·
merce. "My personal view is
Santa Ana Heights
Home Burglarized
A burglar whb removed a win·
dow from its track to gain entry
took jewelry. a tape recorder
and an automatic pistol from a
Santa Ana Heights home.
Orange County sheriff's of·
ficers valued the total loss at the
home of Peter Alex Guzelis, 1691
Mesa Drive. at SJ .490. He was
away at work at the time
"BE HIND TH E
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T
Brown lecturer. OCC Forum.
7:30 p.m.
"COMEDIANS" -Soulh
Coast Rep~rtory Theater .
Tuesday-Sunday through June
11. 8 p.m.
WEDNESDAY. MAY 10
COAST CO MM UN ITY
COLLEGE DISTRICT BOARD
-R egula r meeting. 1370
Adams. Sp m.
Showers Due
Along Sierra
By The Associated Presti
CallfomJa's northern edge and
the S ierra are In for some
showers today. whale part!)
cloudy and cooler conditions
prevalJ throughout the rest of
Northern California. the Na
tlonal Weather Service says.
Thundershowers broke out
over the northern mountains in
late afternoon Monday but
ended shortly after ~unset.
Forecasters said \h~ showe~
are caused by a weak weather
system moving through the
Pacific Northwest.
A delightful coloring cookbook .•.
just 1dd kich and crayons end pre·
tent Mom With • kHpHk• she'U
treaure.
for Moth«'s Dav
Come In end select from a wi• vatt.ty of tamptlng.~tltty gift p1ks."'. .
prettily boJCed just for Motbet't Oay -M., t 4tt..
If Mom liv" out of town, we11 tend her tlft for you.
'
T'*Ciay, May 9 1978 OAIL V PILOT 1l 3
3 Die; 55 Survive Jet Crash
. ~Reid
;
Gunman Ends
1
) . Store Siege
: TORRANCE <AP> -A Viel·
nam veteran who had been in a
mental hospital until January
surrendered meekly today afler
a 13\2-hour siege in which nine
host.ages were taken and more
than 100 shots were fired. police
said.
began at 6 p.m. Monday when he
allegedly tried to rob the store.
said police U. James W. Papst.
Dwyer was booked for in·
vestigation or robbery. assault
with intent to commit murder
and assault with a deadly
weapon. He had been armed
with a derringer and automatic
pistol.
William John Dwyer Jr . 28.
walked from a bullel·rtddled
jewelry store carrying his 2·
year-old daughter shortly after
sunrise. ending a drama that
Edison Co.
Prepares
For Strike
By ROBERT BARKE R Of._ O.lly ...... Si.ti
Edison Company officials
were gearing up today for a
strike that may occur al mid·
night tonight after union mem·
bers at the power plants over·
whelmingly rejected the com·
pany's "last" offer Tuesday.
Members of the Utility
Wur~ers Union of America.
Local 246, have authorized a
strike at midnight at Huntington
Ueach and San Onofre electrici-
ty generating plants and al other
Edison localtons in Southern
California.
Union officials were unavaila·
ble for comment on whether or
nol the strike has been called at
the Edison locations.
Jim Bull. a spokesman for
Edison, said that negotiations
with a federal mediator are
scheduled al Edison head
quarters in Rosemead today.
·'The contract ends tonight
and a strike has been liUthorized
~l midnight if the union chooses
to do so." he said.
"We won't know any more de·
tails until later in lhe day," he
said .
Another Edison spokesman.
Bob Hull. said that the company
has made plans for a walkout
and will use supervisory perc.on-
nel in place or union members if
there is a stnke.
He said today that the plants
The only person inJured in the
siege was 49-year-old Pat
McNellis of Redondo Beach, who
was shot in the thigh as she fled
from the store. She was the
sevent~ and last escapee and
was reported in stable condilion
at Torrance Memorial Hospital.
Papst said Dwyer's wife told
poli<'e the gunman had been con·
fined to the psychiatric ward or
a Miami mental hospital until
January, although the nature of
his illness was not immediately
known.
Throughout the night. Dwyer's
wife, Sharon, acted as an in·
termediary between police and
her husband. carrying messages
and demands, taking Dwyer
pills and bringing him OQe of rus
children. •
Papst would not say what type
of drugs were delivered to
Dwyer. but added. "He's either
an addict or a very heavy drug
user."
Dwyer had demanded the
police bring him hi s two
children. guarantee him safe
passage out of the country and
provide him a helicopter, Papst
said.
The only demand that was
met, Papst said, was having
Mrs. Dwyer take the gunman
one of his daughters after she
assured police that he would not
harm the girl.
Dwyer, his wife and daughters
had been living in a Torrance
motel. Papst said, but he said
did not know when the family
came here from Miami
Finn Headed
ByOC Crime
Figure Sued
will continue to produce elec-Damages totaling nearly $46
tricity at normal capacity million are being demanded
He also said that temporary from Pension Funds of America.
and permanent personnel may the now defunct Irvine company
be hired to lake up the slack. once controlled by convicted
Th e I.JOO members of the crime figure Gene Conrad.
Utility ~orkers Union maintain Named as codefendants in the
and repair power plants. Orange County Superior Court
Th«:Y voted by a 3 to 1 margin lawsuit filed Monday are Don
to reJect.the c:ompany propos~k h art a nd Harry Levi. ~onday ~ Edison power plants Conrad's partners in the loan
in tf unl rngton Beach• San brokerage enterprise.
Onofre, Long Beach, Redondo The action was filed by
Beach, El Segund_o, Oxnard. lawyers for Precision
Ormond Beach. Ellwanda and Tubedrawer and Machining Inc.
liarsto"' . . It is alleged that the Conrad
N e got 1. a t 1 o ~ ~ h ~ v e bee n g r 0 u p was pa 1 d a t 0 la I of
snagged since last Oct~ber over s158,000 in fees for a $3.8 million
a proposal for a rotating work loan that was promised but sche~ule. . . . never delivered.
Edison as see~mg t_o 1m~le· Conrad, a one time paid in·
menl a schedule 1n which union ro mer whose services were fre· members would work weekends r .. on a rotation basis without re· quently ut.~ by the O~ange
ceiving overtime pay. ~ounty D1stnct Allorne)'. s of·
The union objects lo lhis pro· f1cc. reeently pleaded guilty an
posal. federal. court to ~raud ~h.arges
An official for Edison said that stem~mg Crom his operation of
the rotating work schedule 1s Pension _Funds.. . .
necessary lo meet rismit costs . It was stated during related incre~sed electricity demands court act1on agu111 .. L ham ~n
and for Cull-time manning or the Orange .county . tha_l he m .. ,('
plants. i;u~s~ant.ial cont:1but1.ons to local
He said that other unions have poh llcal campaign~ m .19711 a_nd
been on the rolallng schedule for thaH'~ had ~xte~s1v~ lmks with
some time organized crime m this area
Grouch9's Manager
Files $75,000 Suit
LOS ANGELES <APl Erin
Fleming. Groucho Marx's em·
battled live-In manager, has
filed a lawsuit In an effort to get
money she clairna the lale come-
dian wanted her to have.
Mlss Fleming. who became in·
volved in a meay court battle
with Groucho~s ramily Jusl
berore be died. taY• In her aull
that the Bank or America Na·
tlonal Trust and Savln1s As· soclallon rejected her claim for
more than S75,000.
She baaed her claim on two
1972 contracts wllh Marx, one
nam lnt her as Groucbo 's
pcrsonel manager for seven
years and the other makinl her
associate producer ln conn~llon
with a record he made.
The bank, which b actllll u
executor of GroucbO'• estate, ll
repreeenled by th• Hmt at·
torney WbO t«Ved u COW*I for
Oroucbo'• eoo, Aul.bur, when be
tried lo wrest bis lather'• ton·
prvnl rs"i~ rtom ~U11 Flemln•
in the months before Groucho
died.
Miss Fleming's attorney. Ron
Rolnick. said Monday that the
bank appears to have taken the
same attitude toward Miss
Fleming that Arthur Marx had,
"thal sbe committed these un·
godly acts against him and was
fraudulent in her dealings with
him."
In seeking to have Miss Flem·
Ing ousted last year. the younger
Marx claimed Mias Flemlna
abused and took advantage of
hi• father in the six years that
ahe was with him.
Rolnlck said the money owed
M 1111 Flemlng was money
"Gro~cho Marx waat.ed her to
have. We're Just m1n1 a
creditor's claim, trying to retaJn
ror her what Groucbo wanted
her to have."
ln addiUon. RolnicJc said Mlu
Fle-mtnawu neldnc Mt.1821he •
spent on \e1al rees while ahe wu
baUlln1 to remain 11 con·
Hl"VllOf ,
.~ .........
HEROIC TUGBOAT CREW RELAXES AFTER SAVING AIR CRASH VICTIMS
Capt. Glenn McDonald, Right, •nd First Mate Bill Kenney
'Delp Me! Save Me!'
Tugboat Skipper Rescues 55 Crmh Victims
PENSACOLA. Fla. (AP> -A tugboat
captain said he was off course and virtually
lost when he saw an airliner glide with thun·
derous hiss into the foggy bay.
His tug and its barge became liferaft for
s urvivors.
Gl.ENN McDONALD. 41. A COOL, in·
dependent m_ariner, said it was only by
chance that his lug. "Little Mac." was near
enough lo the downed National A1rllnel> 727
jet so he couJd see it in the fog and reach the
panic-stricken passengers
"We were where lhe Lord put us." l.a1d
McDonald. who along with rus mate. Bill
Kenney, a husky 28·year-old. pulled all 55
survivors onto their construction barge m
Escambia Bay.
Three passengers died.
"People were screaming, 'Help me ~ Save
me!· when we came over. About half a dozen
were atop the fuselage scrambling.
crawling. slidmg. The others were in the
water." said McDonald.
HE SAID MOST APPARENTLY had no
time to prepare for the splashdown. "Because
they didn't have their hfe Jackets on. they
were clutching them around their necks ...
"There would be three people ove.r here,
10 over thert:. l had to tell Bill to leave the
three and gel the 10. 1 had to glide the barge
between people drifing in the bay and I wor·
ried that some had drifted away and would
bt' missed when we came back around," he
:m id .
While McDonala steered. Kenney threw
ropes to the survivors. going into lhe water
"leveral times to help lift out v1ct1ms
traumatized by the ordel:ll
"IF WE HADN'T BY CHANCE been
there. many people would have died They
couldn't hl:lve made 1t. When they got on the
barge, I know it was an hour before the boats
found us. "said McDonald
lie said he was about 300 yards from the
plane When it went down.
When all the survivors had been
transferred to rescue boats, McDonald and
Kenney moved on down the bay They said
they went straight home -"Only because
the bars were closed," said McDonald with a
laugh -and after two hours of sleep were up
lfgatn heading to the con~truction site.
Evidence Links Suspects
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot ,,. 0.11, "'1e1 si.11
Evidence that police allege
links two suspects to the Sl50
holdup and s laying of a
Westminster merchant and his
clerk. as they knelt in his Long
Beach market. was to go to
authorities today.
Detecllves said they were in
final stages or preparing the
materials. including a film from
a remote control security
camera purportedly showing the
suspeC'L'i
area al lhal facility pending J
juvenile court appearance.
Funeral services held today at
Fairhaven Memorial Park
Mortuary in Santa Ana for Mr'
Patel. whose cremated ashes
will be nown home to his native
India
The customary rites were lo
be performed by Swami
Sarwananda . according to
mortuary spokesmen
Survivors include his widow,
Mirmala: sons RaJ1sh. Nilin and
Tiyush : a daughter J ayshree.
his father. GopalJ1 Patel and his
mother. Baliben Patel
One survivor or the murder
s prN• 1n Mr Patel ·s s mall
market m central Lon~ Beach
was ;,1 St'COnd clerk who hap
pened to be m a back room when
the bandits entered. police say.
He hid m horror while the kill
ings of his employer and co
worker occurred. then called
pohct-when the bandits fled
Investigators consider him a
pnme prosecution witness and
decline to disclose his name
..
National
Jet Lands
In Water
PENSACOLA. Fla. <AP 1 -A
National Airlines jet. carrying 58
persons cruhed into Escambia
Bay while coming in for a land·
mg . forcing stunned passenger<;
to scramble out emergenc~
doors into fog and a se.i slicked
with jet fuel. Three passenge~
were killed
Mos t or the 52 passenger~
aboard the Boeing 72i wen•
saved because a tugboat captain
who s aw the crash brought has
barge to the rescue.
The passengers had no warn-
ing that anything was wrong un·
til the plane hit the water Mon-
day night and came to rest about
500 yards from shore. settling tn
mud about 10 feet below the
bay's surface
"We were on our final aP·
proach ... said Capt. Ronald Gift.
a Navy pilot from Carmel.
Calif . who was a passenger
"There was no warning. no
violent maneuvering. no s urg·
ing of the engines."
The airline initially listed 55
passengers. but later said three
or those had never gotten
aboard.
Three bodies were found noat·
ing near the plane. Divers sent
into the partially submerged
craft said everybody was out
But fog and haze hampered
rescue efforts during the night.
and a thunderstorm that moved
ov e r t ll e a y e a r I y lo d a y
churned ·up the seas as dive~
~earchoo for the missing. A hel:ld
eount was further confused
because passengerc; were scat·
tered among six hospitals and
several rescue stations.
Eight Women
Hit oc Jail
With Lawsuit •
Ea~ht women who were 1n
mates at the Orange County Ja11
during a riot July 4 when they
allegedly were forced to striµ
naked and sit in front of maile
guards for two hourc; have taken
legal action against the county
The plaintiffs. who claim ui
their Superior Court class action
that they represent all women
prisoners at the 1a1I . ask thar
damages be determined by ,,
trial court
Damages totaling $140 million
were demanded in a claim that
was recently rejected by county
s upervisors.
Naming the county and 20
sheriff's officers as derendants.
the women claim that they wert'
rorced to strip and sit in front of
male guards for two hour~
before nightgowns we re issued
to them.
They claim that they were
then forced to sit. in their
nighlgown.c; overnight and wen·
d1sc1plined next day without
benefit of a heanng.
Sheriff's officers deny the a!
le~allons. They contend that 1f
any naked women were seen by
male guards at any time dunng
the fire and riot last July 4 11
was because or the emergency
s1luat1on and the measure!-
needed to restore order in tht>
Jail Killed almost instantly early • Sunday were Parshothambhi ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Patel, 47, of 15952 Diamond St..
Westminster. and his employee.
Jaroon Direj1t. 33. of Long
Beach.
investigators said both men
were shot lrom behind as they
kneeled on 1the floor of Patel's
7 ·EI even Mark et in the 4200
block of Long Beach Boulevard.
directly behind the counter.
Captured within rive minutes
followin~~ the armed robbery and
murdt!rs were Charles A .
Mosley. 23, and a 17-year-old
male. both Compton residents.
Investigators said Monday a
22 caliber revolver and tct~h al·
legedly taken from lhe till after
Patel and Direjit were slain only
inches away were recovered
when the suspects were ar·
rested.
"We'll be presenting the case
lo the D.A. today." said Long
Beach Police Department
Homicide Detail Detective John
Miller
lie said he expected formal
complaints lo be Issued by late
thl~ afternoon. allowing Mo~le.)'
and the youth whom they a lleae
participated in the bloody
episode to be arraigned.
They were booked on suspi-
cion of murder and armed rob-
bery following their capture on
Lone Beach Boulevard about
two miles north or the hold"'p
and 1laytn1 scene
No ball has been set, because
the death penalty applies tn
CHOI lnv0Mn1 capital crimes.
Motley 11 held at the Lona
Beach Ctty Jail. 1lon1 wtth the
17·year-old youth whose ldenUt.y
waa not relea ed due to hia ag~.
JuveJlilea are held ln a specl&J
• .
Among the many attractions
of Cleopatra was the tact Iha!
she owned her own EmeralCI
mine She was one of the first
of h1s1ory s famous names to
adorn themselves with the rrch.
lustrous green gem. which 1s
the birthstone for May Emerald Is one ot the 01oes1
known gems on earth ano was
tounCI In the marttets ot ancient
Babylon TOday 11 Is s111rone or
the most admireo ano
cherished of gemstones
In ancient times many stones
were m11ukenly called Emerald
just because they were oreen
Even too.y some 19W9ler1 tend
to m11lead tl'le cuttomer by u1·
tng ml-"C>l'l'leA such as ·aven·
1ng emeralo' (pertClol) "or
Oriental emerald' (gr"n sap·
phlre) Thele and other qualify·
tng terms refer to different gemstonu entirely. The
American Gem Society stnctly
forbid• the UM of any such
term• that mlllem<J the public, 10 you can trull your A Q S
jeweler 1n thl9 matter '
The Emenld Is a variety ol
the mtn«al befyl II 11 a ver,
b .. uuful and apt atone tor the
month ot May ltt lovely coot
w
EiEMWl!iE
Marv 98'1' Cen111eo GemotQi11sr
CHARLES H. BARR
green co1or and 1n~eflO•
"garden" (patterns created by
1nc!us1ons) remind me ol a
treah apnn9 day. TheH •n·
c1us1on1 are very character1st1c
of this gemstone end d 11aw1ess
Emerald of fine color is very
rare rndeed ano therefore ct
very vatuar>te item
Most ot lhe fine Emerald maned today come!' trcm
Columbia Other sources are
Rhodesia. Aussie, India ctnd
Brazrr
We do have " soi.rce of
Emerald tn rhe United Slaln
too tn Norttl Carotma near
H•OC1en1te This depoart was
discovered rn 187~ and 1n 1970
.. rock hound found d 50 cera1
emerald wt11ch Wh cut to 13, 14 cer4'tS This stone holds the re•
cord for fl'le larges! and llnetl cut Emer-,id round 1n North
Amerrca Three othef excellent
tuamplti-$ 0 1 dc m11s 11 c
Emerald• •re Included In the co11ec11on at the Smlthaonran.
White we can't show you eny
oomet ttc Emeralds 1n our
atortt. we dO, at the pre .. nt
trmt, ha.,. • .,.ry good Mlec·
t•on 01 ttne Emeretd1 trom
other pane of th• world Come on and ... our co1lect1on
•
I
.. ..
, t.J DAil V f'llOT 1~. Mayl ,.,.
.. .
NATION / NOFcLO
Jost
~oasting ~ 'Salute' Backfires
with"l~ Tom~~''.r Two Clash on U.S.-Israeli Policy
Marphine
Beautiful But Deadly
ROAD TO YESTERYEAR: Come rtde with in~ briefly
lnto Orange County's past; down a twisting, wlndlnt little
country lane that is beautiful now in the springtime sun.
The torrential ralns or yesterday have passed and the
hills on either side of this rural lane are carpeted in green
and waves of golden mustard.
Two small. reed-filled lakes alongside the lane are filled
now. Birds litter overhead. Cattle graze beyond the ranch
fences flanking the roadway.
SOME PLACES ALONG the lane. there are wlde, un-
paved areas where you may pull off the road and rest
beneath large shade trees On weekends. merchants hawk
their wares in these locations. selling everything from
corn to woven blankets to saloon mirrors.
Indeed. this brief s tretch of two-lane roadway gives
you a glimpse of Orange County's past; bow much of our
region looked decades ago when agriculture was king.
This country lane links Laguna Beach to the inland ln·
terchange with the San Diego Freeway. It follows the
twists and bends that were once the path for the Santa Ana
to Laguna stagecoach line. It is called Laguna Canyon
Road.
Too bad that Laguna Canyon Road couldn't alway re-
main a place for a brief. leisurely journey into Orange Coun-
ty's past. But that hasn't happened.
WASHINGTON (AP> -It was
billed as another salute to
llrael'• 30th birthday, but it
turned Into an impromptu and
heated debate between Sen.
Lowell Welcker and an aide to
President Carter over U.S.
policy toward Israel.
W aicker. R-Conn.. and pres-
ide n ti a 1 counselor Robert
Lipshutz squared off Monday
night before a stunned audience
at the birthday party in a
Washington hotel.
THE SENATOR HAD just
finished a wide-ranging attack
on Carter's Middle East policies
when Lipshuti. who was not
scheduled to speak. told the au-
dience of 1,000 that Weicker was
··preying on the emotions of the
J ewlsh people.·•
Lips hutz's remarks wei'"e
touched off by Weicker's in-
direct comparison between
Carter administration policies
and Lhose of Nazi Germany.
Welcker said the United States
is attempting to disengage from
Its historic alllance with Israel.
"We know from history that
time aga10, when national
leaders ran Into difficulties. they
found 1t convenient to blame
their problems on the Jews,"
Weicker said.
.. IF THERE IS A meaningful
distioction between those his·
torical proclivities and the
signals which national security
adviser Zbigniew Brzeiinskl 1s
sending today, I don't know
what it is. ('....
"I can tell you that if I were
president, and I had a national
security adviser who singled out
American Jews as an lmpedl·
ment to my policies. I would
have his r esig nation for
breakfast.•·
Weicker said the admlnlstra·
lion insisted that Israel accept
the "absurd" Arab demand for
Israeli withdrawal from all
fronts before negotiations beliJ:'.
"OUR RELATIONSHIPS with
the Arab slates carry the un-
mistakable odor or appeasement,
and the MmS pat:kage is only
the latest evidence of It." he
added. referring to President
Carter's proposed sale of jet
fighters to Israel and two Arab
countries.
Lipshutz. who received boos
and applause. said in his five-
minute response·
"When Sen. Weicker states
that this administration Is
following the pattern of tyrants
and demagogues by blaming its
problems on the Jews. the
senator Is dead wrong. The
senator is unworthy of his au-
dience and he knows it.
1 .. 1orMu•
... ...,..,.....
PRESSURES OF REAL estate prices ln Laguna have
driven industry and commerce out into the canyon area. Now
Laguna Canyon Road serves such diverse enterprises as a
school bus storage yard. telephone facility, electronics plant,
art school.automotive ser vices and horse stables .
10,000 Purehased
''WHEN SEN. WEICKER
states that the national security
adviser of the president ad·
vocates that this country dis·
engage from Its historic alliance
with Israel. it is dead wrong . . .
and he knows it. America will
never abandon Israel. never.
America's new junior Miss
is Kim Crosby. 17. a senior
at Kickapoo lligh School in
Springfield. Mo. In Monday
night's <.'Onte st . she ws
award e d a $15.000
scholarship. She plans a
career in fashion drawing.
Mushrooming development in Laguna Kllls has in-
creased traffic volume. Laguna commuters add more traf-
fic. Three art festivals add more. Summer beachgoers add
more.
Little two-lane Laguna Canyon Road is all too often
overloaded with traffic.
Explosive Recipe
Leads to Recall
"Any attempt 1D prey on the
emotions of the Jewish people is
a disservice to tbe United States.
to the state of Israel and to the
ca~se or peace ...
Guerrillm Kill
Tuv at Resort
In'RhOdesia At times. dnvin.R it is a bedlam of horror. The traffic
mix is a recipe for disaster. Leisure Worlders motor at
easy pace in their big gray sedans. Speeding beachgoers
roar a long in dune buggies and vans. Weary commuters
who have just spun oCf the superhighway mix in. Slow-
speed trucks and buses of commerce grind along.
NEW YORK <AP> -Random House has issued a recipe recall The exchange overshadowed a
later speech by the former chief
of staff of the Israel defense
forces. Mordechai Gur.
SALISBURY. Rodes ia <AP>
-Two bla~k guerrillas burst in·
to the dlning room of a luxurious
mountain hotel in eastern
Rhodesia and sprayed diners
with machine-gun fire, killing
two white Rhodesian women and
wounding three other white
guests. the military command
said today.
The publisher announced that there was an error in a recipe for
"S1lkv Caramel Slices" in its recent book. "Woman's Day Crockery
Cuisine" by Sylvia Vaughn Thompson, which "could cause a serious
explosion."
THE EVER-INCREASING accident toll has
chronicled the grim results or the deadly traffic mix.
Numerous Lagunans oppose any improvements to
Laguna Canyon Road as they strive to save the bucolic
past and preserve the ~reenbelt aimosohere. Their
motivation is laudable but their reasoning is flawed.
Laguna Canyon Road must be widened, straightened
and improved to serve the pressures that have already
been allowed to encroach upon it.
Perhaps a more reasoned approach would be push Cor
improving the road in a fashion that would preserve as
much or the rural beauty as possible.
But lo~ic suggests you do not work lo preserve a death
trap.
Tentative Contract
Emls Public Strike
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio <AP> -A tentative contract agreement
that gives an across-the-board hourly wage increase of 35 cents to
2.000 municipal employees has ended a one-day strike that saw
police and firefighting services reduced to s keleton crews.
Striking pol.ice and firefighters returned t-o their jobs late Mon-
day. and sanitation workers, clerks and public works employees
were expected to return early today.
The tentative settlement was announced late Monday by
Mayor J . Phillip Richley and Thomas Sbipka, a spokesman for the
six striking public employee unions.
The average hourly wage of municipal employees ln this city
of 140,000 persons has been $5.43. The $1.2 million, one-year
package retroactive to Jan. 1 also includes unnamed fringe
benefits.
The city has 150 police officers and 235 firefighters. For most
patrolmen and firemen the contract will increase annual salaries
from $12,910 to $13.638.
Joan Little Ordered to Jail
ALBANY, N.Y. <AP> -The
state's highest court today or-
dered fugitive J oan Little re-
turned lo North Carolina to com-
plete her prison sentence for
robbery. but gave her lawyers 10
days to appeal.
Miss Little became nationally
known when she was acquitted
on charges of killing a North
Carolina jailer who she said had
attacked her sexually. She
escaped from prison in Raleigh,
N .C .• late last year and was re·
captured in New York City in
February.
Random House said Monday it
had recalled all copies or the
book Crom wholesalers and re-
tail bookstores. but added that
about 10,000 copies were already
believed in the hands or buyers.
It urged that the recipe, on
pages 230 and 231 of the Random
Mormon Will
Testimony
Wrapped Up
LAS VEGAS. Nev. <AP>
Testimony has ended in one of
the longest and most complex
trials in Nevada history -a
trial to determine if Howard
Hughes wrote the "Mormon
Will."
Six months and one day after
the trial started. attorney Paul
Freese anno unced Monday,
"The contestants rest ," At-
torne y Harold Rhoden
responded. "No rebuttal, propo-
nent rests."
The trial is being held to de-
termine Lr the purported will.
scrawled on three pages of note
paper. was written by the late
industrialist.
Freese, one of several at-
torneys representing relatives of
Hughes, contends that the
purported will is a forgery.
Rhoden, who represents long-
time Hughes aide Noah Dietrich,
named executor of Hughes'
estate in the document, hopes to
prove it is authentic.
Clark county District Court
Judge Keith Hayes set next
Monday for the start of closing
arguments in the trial, which
has generated more than 12.000
pages of testimony. lte said he
expected the final arguments to
last "at least a week. for the
whole thing."
South Ripped by Storms
At LeQJjt 20 Injured in Georgia Tornadoes
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House edition. "be obliterated
with crayon or black ink
marker ...
According to a statement from
the publisher. "If the recipe is
foll9wed. the condensed milk
can could explode and shatter
the lid and liner of the crockery
cooke r "
WHAT HAPPENED?
Spokesman William T. Loverd
said that •·somewhere along the
line" an ingredient, water. got
dropped from the recipe. A Ran·
dom House employee was trying
the recipe, noticed that it wasn't
working and reported the prob-
lem.
Lover<! said the company had
nol heard of any exploding
crockery cookers or injuries. He
said the recipe would be dropped
from any future reprints.
House Seeks
MIA Action
WASHINGTON <AP, -The
House or Representatives has
voted 369·0 to urge President
Carter lo seek United Nations
help in accounting for
Americans still listed as missing
ln Southeast Asia.
The concurrent resolution.
sent Monday to the Senate. says
Vietnam bas "provided but
meager information" about
those unaccounted for since the
end or the war in Southeast Asia.
Government records show 5S7
Americans Us~ as missing in
Southeast Asia: 481 from host.lie
action. 52 from non-hostile ac-
tion and 18 others.
Tell Mom
You Love Her
One guest at the Montclair
Hotel was slain as she was eat·
ing supper. The second victim. a
hotel employee. was killed near
the door. according to first re·
ports.
While the two gunmen were
Inside the dining room, other
guerrillas fired rockets and
mortars at another part of the
building in the lnayanga Moun-
tains. destroying a room, a wit-
ness said.
First reports said the military
closed the hotel, bul later the
owner. Ann Lount, reported by
telep~e. "we're carrying on."
She said damage to the 56-room
hotel waa nGt extensive.
This Mother's Day send Mom a greeting all rhe world can share on
Sunday, May 14th.
Express your love in a Daily Pilot M0ther·s Day Greeting.
Ir's easy . Write your message co fir one of our three convenient sizes
and bring ic co any Daily Pilot office prior co noon May 12. Or, you may
mail a clipping of the border wich your message and payment to Daily
Pilot, .~30 W . Bay Sr ., Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626.
,
~l\!M~4'&-A!Git~.,
Ads come tn thrtt Mm: SIO. SI ~. and U for~ tp«W
child"s sazr card. (You must be w1dtt 12 yean of age ro
quahfy fw dw littlesr greeting). Jf you wish you may
crate Y'O'O' own decon«d gtttting. Using black pen draw
your cks1gn tO fat one of rM dotted outlines shown httc.
You may fill the mrire ..-cc. Only words and Ii.on dtawn
wuhin dw dott~ liM will appear 1n your completed
Mochcf"s Osy ad.
$10
$15
r---...---~------~----...-----·1
I r-------------------., I I I I
\.. ____ .,/ $3
If you want help compoelftg • Wta.blc
'r~t'tin' or hnt' any qunt1ona call
642-1678. A fiicndly Deily Pilot ad-vdicr
w.U be glad lO hdp you. I I
I
I I
r--'--------------,
I I
I I t ___________ .J
I
I I I I L-------~---~~~~~-~..-J
L .... .---
'
I I I
I
I
And, if you like you "" chugt' your
Mochtr'a Day ed. Your cttdlr is good w1th
-. or you may uw your Masrcr ~ or
BankAnwricatd.
.. ~ ..
DAILY . PILOT
)
CALIFORNIA I PEOPLE TUMCS.y. May 9. 1978 DAILY PILOT 1\.)
Conm~iton 01'erfwrned
Corona Gets New Trial
SAN FRANCISCO <AP, -ln a slashlo& attack
on his attorney. the •tale Court or Appeal grantoo
convicted mass killer Juan Corona a new trial. rul
In& the lawyer was too inlere£ted in selling a book
on the case and •anored a key insanity defense.
Al the same tlmf. however. the court said
Monday m Ha 7l·paae declslon lhat circumstantial
evidence or Corona's guilt In lhe hacking deaths ot
25 transient.larm workers was "overwhelming."
IN A CAUSTIC criticism of Richard Hawk's
work as Corona's attorney, the three-judge panel
unanimously declared that Corona's sole defense
In the machete murders was insanity. Corona is
now 41.
Hawk's conduct. the court said, "constituted
not onl,y an outrageous abrogation of the standards
which the legal profession has set for itself . . .
but also rendered the trial a farce and mockery "
decJa100 and said Corona was ·•very happy." •
lits partner In the successful appeal. Michael
Mendelson. ioa1d other lawyers will handle
Corona's defense in the lower court, und it will be
up lo lhem to make any motions on bail. Men·
deJsoo said It was premature to even discuss bail.
TED HANSEN, district attorney for Sutler
County where the bodies were buried. said he ex·
peeled the state attorney general's office to appeal
the reversal of the conviction. He said "the prob·
lems in trying any case as old as this are ex·
tensive. ll would be extremely difficult ror
anybody to prosecute.··
In May, 1971. the 2S hackedup. decomposing
bodies were dug from shallow graves in beautiful
peach orchards which stretch along Sutter Coun·
ty's meandering Feather River.
THE nRST BODY was unearthed after a
grower noticed a 7·bY·3'h·foot depression in the
ground one morning, and then saw it had been
filled lhat afternoon.
Pl
CONDUCT FLAYED
Richard Hawk
Married and the father of four children.
Corona was described by his priest as "an ex-
emplary falher and a fine Christian."
UCLA Students
Many Admit
To Cheating
LOS ANGELES <AP I -Almost one-fourth o
the students respondln1 to a survey at UCLA hav
admitted cheating while at t.be Wliverslty, accord·
ing to newly compiled figures.
Although the results released Monday showed
a lower percentage or cheating than several pre· :
vious UC studies. they do not necessarily reflect a
decline In student cheating at UCLA. ,
In tact. more than three·lourths <83 percent l,
or those questioned responded that "some" stu-
dents usuaJly cheat. said Willie Banks of the stu-
dent Education Policy Commission, which co-
sponsored lhe 1urvey.
Ja,,,U BIU t'lfteed
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Los An&eles County
officials say that if Proposition 13 Is -passed by
Califomla voters June 6, the county could go broke
by mid·July.
IT SAID HAWK acquired all litterary rights to
Corona's life story and trial in lieu or salary. hired
writer Ed Cray to sit at the counsel table during
the trial, and wrote an afterword in a book about
Corona written by Cray.
A search by sheriff's deputies. wearing sur-
gical masks soaked In perfume. led to the dis-
covery of 10 bodies In two weeks. All had been
dumped in lheir graves on their backs, their arms
raised and shirts puJled over their heads.
BUT AUTIIORITIES revealed he also had Chief Administrative
been a mental patient. whose derangements in· ( J Officer Harry L. Hufford Such an agreement. the court asserted. was a
connict oC interest on Hawk's part and suggested
he was more interested "in his own pocketbook"
than in the legal rights of Corona.
eluded paranoid schizophrenia. and had been STATE said the county would not
named man $800,000 damage swt by a young Mex-go bankrupt, but he said
The number soon grew to 2S and each grisly
find sent a new tremor of fear through the com-
munity. One grower told the hordes or newsmen
who descended on the countryside. "Every or·
chardist is looking for a lump in the ground."
ican·American farmworker who had been mutilat· ~--------Monday there would not
ed with a machete in a bar owned by Corona's be enough cash on hand .
Hawk, reached al home. angrily denied the
court's contention that he was "in gross neglect of
his basic duty" and described the decision as a personal attack. "If the question is, 'does it hurt me,'
bell yes it hurts," he said.
brother in Feb. 1970. to meet the COWlty's payroll In July.
Prosecutor Dave Teja won a conviction in Even a so-called Jarvis alternative budgt!l.
Corona's 1973 trial solely on circumstantial orooosed bv Hufford last week. would stm depend
evidence. No explanation or motive was developed. upon S300 million in state funds to replace lost
THE VICTIMS WERE a collection of drifters,
winos and transients, all between the ages of 40
and 63, who slept in $1 a night flops and boxcars. A
labor official described them as "the dropouts or
society ... people who nobody would miss."
but Teja produced a ledger found in Corona's pro~ertytaxrevenues.
HA WK SAID ALL the profits from the book
went to pay for Corona's defense. "That case cost
me a minimum of S150,000 of my own money,'' be
said.
home which contained the names of some of lhe • --r etaa---s Mind murder victims. ......,~ ~,,-
Expressing "delight" with the reversal. Hawk
said there "was no psychiatric support for an in·
sanity defense."
He said he refused to claim insanity because
Corona "insisted he didn't do it, and I tlelieved
him. and I still believe him."
Al the time the crime was the largest mass
murder In American history. It has since been sur-
passed by 1973 homosexual assault and torture
slaylngs of~ teen-age boys in lhree Houston. Texas.
area locations.
Before and after the trial, Corona suffered
several mild heart attacks. and while Imprisoned
at the California Medical Facility al Vacaville. he
was stabbed 32 times in an attack by fellow
prisoners and lost the sight of h1s left eye.
Tax Refund Asked
SAN FRANCISCO <AP l -Traffic backed up
off the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge as far
as the eye could see before a young San Francisco ·
man finally decided not to jump and gave himself
up to fire department authorities.
Duril\I( the drama, which began about 11:25
a .m . Mondar. San Francisco Battalion Chief Lu· cien Langlois. 52. posed as a psycn1atnst and•
talked the man. identified as Gary Damm, back
onto lhe sale side of the bridge raHlng. CORONA, CONVICl'ED in 1973 of killing the
2S farm workers and burying lhem near Yuba City
100 miles north of San Francisco, is serving a ll!e
sentence at Soledad State Prison.
CORONA, A LABOR contractor who recruited
transients and supplied them to ~rowers in the
Feather and Yuba River valleys, was arrested after
a search of his Yuba City home turned up a machete
with an ~inch blade, a meat-cleaver, a double·
bladed at-and a wooden·clubwithstams.
For G c t No EIR for Airport as us om.ers LOS ANGELES (AP> -A federal judge has His current court-appointed attorney, Alan Ex·
elrod. said a counselor Lold Corona of t.he court's
Garho Flays Author
Actress Denies Colkiboratirqr on Biography
From AP Dispatches
Greta Garbo has signed two affidavits denying
she collaborated with authors or any biographies.
and her attorney says publishers have made "ex·
traordinary, six·figure" offers tor the reclusive ac·
tress's autobiography.
"Miss Garbo has been offered, through me, extraordinary sums of money for an aut.obiog.
rapby,'' her attorney, LUUan Poses, said in New
York. "U she doesn't want to do it and cash in on it
herself, doesn't it make sense that sbe wouldn't
help anyooe else for nothing?"
Tbe 72·year-0ld actress denies any collabora·
tion wit.b ~ Gro110wlu, whose biography of
Miss Garbo has been purchased by Simon &
Schuster for a reported SlS0,000 advance. It would
be published after Miss Garbo's de11tb. • Prime Minister Robert Moldoon and about 21>
hostile demonstrators welcomed Vice President
Walter F. Mondale lo New Zealand as he arrived
at Wellington for a 26-hour visit al the end of his
foreign tour.
The demonstrators( )
c hanged "Mondale go n:EOPLE home" and waved ban· ,-,
ncrs i.aying "Detente is a ---------
fraud."
Mondale. accomp.Jlllied by his wife Joan and
son Ted. ignored the cllanting demonstrators. • ·'He remembers he sat behind me in the
'Copycat,'
Slrangkr
ColWict,ed
seventh grade."
Actor CUii Robertson, get·
ting his 1941 high school class
together, remembered even
more -the names and aging '
faces or classmates.
The graduating class of La
Jolla High was SS strong, and 77
showed up at Robertson's
Spanish-style home overlooking
the Pacific Ocean. For many, it
was their first meeting in 31
years. • Actor WW Geer's $350,000 estate will be split
a mong six persons, according to the terms of his
will.
The document was filed in Los Angeles County
Superior Court, naming his daughter Ellen, 37, as
executirx. The other hews Include his daughter
Kate, 39, son Thad, 27. adopted son Roland
Meyers, 38, former wife Herta Ware, 62. and her
daughter Mellorah Marshall, 21.
Geer died in a Los Angeles hospital last month
at 76 from respiratory arrest. • He took his uncle's advice and swigged some
Australian beer during a picnic in Sydney.
"My Uncle BWy told me to try plenty of this
down here." 28-year-0ld Cblp CaNr grinned.
President Carter's son and daughter·in·law,
Caron, 26, are representing the United States at
Australian·Amerlcan Week celebrations.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A consumer advocacy
group bas asked the state Public Utilities Com·
mission to refund the benefits of a tax break to
customers or Southern Califomla Gas Co.
Officials of tbe Campaign Against Utility
Service Exploitation said Monday the tax break
was given to shareholders of the parent company.
Pacific l.Jghting Corp .. in the last five years.
THE GAS COMPANY called the complaint by
CA USE a "misunderstanding," and suggested the
group make its complaint with the Internal
Revenue Service Instead.
CAUSE coordinator Burt Wilson told a news
conference Monday that shareholders of Pacific
Lighting, with whom the gas company con-
solidates income tax returns. had been collecting
the benefits of the consolidation while its
customers got nothing back.
WILSON QUOTED a PUC s,l.aff report issued
in February as saying 34 Pacific Lighting al·
filiates, which are not regulated by the PUC. bad
incurred total losses ol $109.2 million from 1974 to
1976, ••half of which were offset by tax subsidies
from SoCal ratepayers."
"It ls apparent that the tax benefits resulUng
from the filing of consolidated tax returns do not
accrue to the ratepayers of SoCal but rather to the
stockholders or lhe parent company." he quoted
the report as saying.
WILSON ASKED that the PUC refund to gas
customers all revenues the PUC determines were
diverted to nonutility use for the past five years.
Gas company spokesman Rick Nemec said hls
company was simply following established federal
procedures in filing the consolidated tax returns.
"CAUSE's allegations are untrue," be said.
"and just show a general misunderstanding or the
whole situation."
PUC spokeswoman Carol Kretzer said it would
take at least six months lor Wilson's complaint to
get a hearing.
ruled against a coalition or homeowner groups op-
posing sale of the Hollywood-Burbank Airport on
grounds an environmental impact statement was
inadequate.
U.S. District Judge Irving Hill ruled Monday
that no environmental impact statement was re·
quired because the sale would not Involve any
airport expansion.
lndkime11i DeeUttftf
SAN RAFAEL <AP> -The Marin County
grand Jury apparently has declined to Indict
Superior Court Judge Charles Read Best of per·
jury after allegations that he falsely algned payroll
affidavits. claiming no cases were on his dockei
for more than 90 days.
Tbe grand jury made no formal annoWlcement
or its decision but disbanded ahortly before 11 p. m .
Monday, after three days or closed hearings.
without Lakin& steps usually taken when an indict·
ment ls handed down.
MOlHER'S DAY IS ALL DAY
And, for this reason, we're opening early. We 're taking reservations from 12 noon
to treat mothers with such food fa\/Orites as
Com-Belt beef, lobster tails, king crab legs,
Teriyaki chicken and our plentiful salad bar.
We have ~n impressive wine list
and serve an impressive cocktail. too
Newport Buch, 752-2538
1660 Dove Sr.
MacArthur 10 Birch to
Dove. Next to Mane Callender's.
LOS ANGELES <AP)
-A man has been con-
victed or fatally choking
two women last
December in killingsl..=====================================================================================~====== .._-~--------------.............J which at firs t were
believed related to the
Hillside Strangler
murders.
Stephen D 'Orsey
Devezin was convicted
or two counts of first·
degree murder Monday
in the so.called
"Copycat Strangler"
deaths. Superior Court
Judge Julius A. Leetham
found blm guilty follow·
in1 a six·day, non-jury
trial, and set sentencing
for.June2.
Devezin remamed 1n
custody without bond.
Devezln was also con-
victed of heroin
possession and WU IC·
q ul tted or another
char1e of belnl an ex·
convict carrying a gun.
He was char&ed lo lhe
murders of Carolyn
ffobaon, 21, and Paula Owen Ward, 18, whose
bodlee were roune In Los
Afttelea and Pa11adena.
respecUvely.
lllAJCJASf
lUNCH SPEND
Mother's Day
AT
c_Airporter C/nn
Wotel
POOL-8IDE
CHAMPAGNE su-FF ..... 'ET
FROM 10 TIL 3 P.M.
CALL FOR •5ss CBJLDREN S3.7S
mERVATIONS UND~~i:;_-~
CHAMPAGNE BRUNClt SERVED IN THE MEDITERRANEAN ROOM
FROM It UNTIL 3 P.M.
MOTHER'S DAY DINNER
SERVED FROM 5-10 P.M. '
RESERVATIONS &13-2770
Durlnf the trlol. IN NEWPORT e MVINE
THIS DAY, ESPECIALLY,
FOR CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH,
A SPECIAL DINNER MENU,
An enchanting experience In dining!
Perfect Mother's Day dreams come true
here. Efficient, quiet service, superb
cuisine, and the ambience of Japan.
Also offef'lng our special Omakase
Mother's Day dinner.
Ch•mp•gne brunch from 11 •.m. to 2:30;
Mother'• D•r Dinner .. ,.ed from 4 p.m.
fl ua•atl1
MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW
Century Plaza Hotel, Century City
(213) 2n-1840
60 Fashion Island, Newport Centor
(71•)~11 •
Deputy Dlltrl~t At· 11111 M•cA1111v Blvd. • as.mo
torney Harold Prukop r~!!!!!!~~!(!~!!~!~UM!!!AJl!lfl:l!!~!t!!~!!!!!!!!l!!!!l .. l..!!..~~~====~~==~~~~iiiiii~~~~· letUfled that the womm
bad been &Jven cocaine ( ] ~o:!1"fn1° i!', U::n~~ ART HOPPE SATIRl~!I In the
last Dec. 23. • ·
<
(
DAILY PILOT
" ••
EXTRA EXTRA EXTRA
The
·$5.88
PRIMERIB
DINNER
Special
On·the·Mall at South Cout Plua N~CarouKI
on tM Plrwt Level. ~ raen&HoM call: 540-1811
•
Ota n Coast Daily Pilot ~~1t~~~1 ~~~.~ ........................................ R.obe .. rt.N .. W.Hd .. '.P.ub·l·ls·M·r .... T~ .... '.K·ff·v·i·l/·E·d·lt~. ~-U"r... ..-=~. Tuelday, May9, 1978 Barbar• KrelblctHEdltori•I P~ Editor
8
Alternative to
Jarvis Initiative
Th<' Jarvb-Gann initiative. Prop. 13 on the June 6
ballot. b. a bum propos ul The Dally Pilot has said so and
told ~oml' of the 1·et1s ons why
Now we ure aske d. if Prop. 13 is rejected is there uny
~ens1ble other way of obtaining property tax relief?
The answer is yes Prop. 8 on the same ballot.
It 1s not without fa ult. but Prop. 8 does offer a
prttctical. workable plan to reduce taxes without the
g rav<.' flaws in the simplistic Jarvis proposal.
Prop. 8 is the s tate Legislature's answer to Jarvis. It
wo uld put into effect SB 1 -the so-called Behr bill -
provided Pro1>. 13 is defeated.
On the s urface. the Behr bill does nol appear to offer
as much cash m the pocket as Jarvis a minimum 30
pe rcent cul in property tax on owner·occupied dwellings,
<.is OPPoscd to a 60 1>ercent cut for all property under
Prop. 13.
But. a~ pointed out in an earlier editorial. the
S7 billion re .. enue loss to local agencies resulting from
passage of Prop. 13 would unquestionably have to be
mudc up by inc reas es in income and sales taxes and
how much of the property tax saving would be wiped out
b~ thut m a neuver is anyone's guess. Prop. 8 projects an
S80 million revenue loss statewide.
Prop. 8 offers ut least two features clearly s uperior to
1ht· J <.i rvis proposul :
Thl' Behr bill would become law as a statute that
tun be amended or modified by the Legislature as may
b1.:comc necessary. Not a word of Prop. 13 could be
t hanged without anothe r vote of the electorate.
The property tax cut proposed in Prop. 8 would
apply only to owner-occupied dwellings. There would be
no re duction but no increase either for the
C'O m rncrchil and industrial properties that would stand to
ga in 65 percent of the benefit promised in the Jarvis
m l'a:,ure
Thb spht would require the state to assume the share
uf "c lf:.i rc. '.\1~di ·Cc.tl and family assistance programs now
l'i na nct·d b.' homeo'' ne r property tax. while the large
property 0'' nc rs would continue to contribute the balance
ul these cos ts .
The Behr bill. unlike Jarvis. offers help to renters by
m e r casmg the ir· present S37 income tax credit to S75.
Th<· bill also provides additional tax relief for both
hom eu\\1w rs und renters O\'er 62 years of age by raising
incom e and ussessed valuation ceilings for special tax
,1ss1s tance .
It ~els specific controls on local and state spending by
lim1lmg the umount of revenue local governments may
ra t!'ll' from property taxes and by limiting the Legislature
to ~70 million a ~·ear for new programs. rather than the
pr<.'!'lcnt average of $200 million.
Cndcr the Behr bill. the guaranteed 30 percent
ho m eowner propt:!rty tax cut. along with the other
hcn<.>fits. could be accomplished without cuts in local
... e r dccs or the imposition of any new taxes for at least
1hn•l1 1011,·1· \l'urs
This '-'Ould be done by using the state's S2.9 billion
... urplLl!'I th<: result of overtaxin1'( instead of new taxes
ll> make up cloll<.ir deficits.
While major prope rty owners and businesses don't
-!'>land to gain from the split roll tax approach. many are
read.' to agree thut Prop. 8 and SB 1 add up to a much
m ore ~cnsibl~ and workable tax relief program than
.J a r\'ls Prop. 13.
.\nd voters s hould remember that in order to put the
lk hr bill into effect. Prop. 8 must be approved and Prop.
13 delc uted on June fi
Tardy Candidates
Cncler provisions of the Political Reform Act of 1974.
t·andidatcs for public office in California are required to
fil e their campaign financial disclosure statements with
1 he Rt'gistrar of Voters by April 30. '
This ye ar. the candidates got a filing break because
the JOth fell on a Sunday. Consequently they had until 5
p. m. May 1 to make the d eadline.
And Orange County candidates· statements were s till
~traggling in four clays later.
Most of the early reporting tardiness was due to
whatever it is that has tended to make-prompt postal
M.•n ·ice in the U.S. something of a joke.
But it's ha rd to imagine how any serious candidates
for public office could fail to meet the scheduled deadline
hy pos ting their re ports on time or far enough in advance
to allow post office handling.
Those who rile late are subject. at the discretion of
the Registrar. to a SlO a day fine.
Come Ma~· 25. the next campaign statement filing
clcadlme. thl' Registra r should sock the fines to tardy
c:andidatC!-1
After a ll. they're the ones who are publicly pledging
thl•m selvcs to play the game by the rules. • Opinions expressed m the space above are those ot the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boyd/Hairpieces r
ByLM.BOYD
Q. "What proportion of the
men are bald? How many
wear hairpieces?"
A. One out ot 15, at least,
are said to be bald, or
somewhat so. As for that
matter or how many wear
hairpieces, nobody knows,
not even those who sell same.
Q. "Has there ever been
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
My television set blew
up thi1 week, and iueu
what? I'm not fOIDI to
bother havin1 It l'lxed r
R.R.R.
soow on the ground in all the
United Slates at tbe aame
time?"
A. In all except Hawaii, 1
once. Happened on Jan. 31,
1977. As far as is known, It wa.s
the first time.
Queatlon arises as to
whether Paris, France, was
ever the world's bi11eat cl~.
That lt wu, but for one year
ooly, ln 1884. Tbe next year,
Lou la XIV kicked the ::1uenotl out of France, that tblnned down ~
Parts ~lion, IO Loadon took tbe top spot.
Presldnt of Swarthmore
Oolle1e, founded l!f. tbe
Quaken, la 'l1»eodoN Priencl.
Cbalrma.n of tbe llualc
Department: Dr. 8wln1 ••
Cb1lrman of tbo ReU1lon
Department: Dr. Swearer.
Q. "Are prlJOnera 1\m kept
ln Ute Towe?' of Loadoo ! ••
A. No, not lll)'ftlore. NUl
Rudolf Beaa waa the lut ~ tMn dwiat World
Jack Anderson
Cambodia's Tragic 'Holocaust'
W ASHINOTON -There is
another Holocaust story. every
bit as stark as the recent TV
saga, which should be rubbed in·
to the world's conscience.
"Holocaust" dramatized the
ordeal of the Jews who were
brutalized
and mas · sacred by
the Nazis 40
years ago.
We have com·
piled an
equally stag-
gering story
of the horrors
that are going
on inside
Cambodia today.
The Nazis began the
systematic slaughter or all Jews
under their control. The Cambo·
dian communists are trying to
eradicate not a race but a
culture. They are engaged in a
deliberate. disciplined campaign
to remake the society from the
ground up. Intelligence reports
tell of "completing the execution
of all people who are not from
the poor farmer.working class ...
Six million Jews perished un·
der the Nazi heel; this was more
than six percent of occupied
Europe. There has been no body
count of how many Cambodians
have died from mistreatment
and execution. Competent
sources have offered estimates
ranging from 1.8 million to 2.5
million: about one-third of the
seven mlllion people who
formerly inhabited Cambodia
THE NAZIS tried to conceal
their monstrous crime from the
world . They u s ed s uch
euphemisms as "resettlement."
"removal." and "special ac
lion" to describe the mass ex·
ecutions. The Cambodian com
rades also have their special
vocabulary . A former com·
munis t official. who ha s
participated in the killings. told
U.S. intelligence sources :
"The Khmer word for 'kill, as·
sassinate. e xecute' was never
spoken when the annihilation
policy was discussed. The
Khmer term used was 'baoh
caol '-Ii teral ly ·sweep. throw out·
or 'sweep. discard;' or 'boah
s'aad.' literally ·sweep clean.' "
The Nazis used firing squads
and gas c hambers to ex-
term inate the Jews. In Cam
bodia. the communists began
with firing squads. But they de·
cided that bullets were too pre-
cious to waste on their victims
So hundreds of thousands were
simply bludgeoned to death and
buried in mass graves.
Paul Harvey
The favorite weapon of ~X·
termination in Cumbodia has
become the garden hoe. The
same grisly report keeps recur-
ring in intelligence dispatches.
"'Each man was blindfolded. led
to the edge of a ditch and be'lte,n
to death with a hoe... ,.
THE BRUTALITY began even
before the communists swept to
victory in Cambodia. Some of
the last classified cables from
the U S. embassy reported that
c ommunis t guerrillas had
turned upon the civilian popula·
lion with a sudden savagery.
·'The attacks are seen by the re·
fugees as enemy punishment in·
flicted upon them for rejecting
KCP I Khmer Communist Party>
offers to come over to the KCP
side." alleged one of lhe final
cables.
The communists s warmed
over the capital city of Phnom
Penh on April 17 . 197~. The
wholesale slaughter began on
the same day. It was not the
ravages of undisciplined troops
gone wild. Rather. It was the
calculated. cold·blooded policy
of the communist conquerors to
eradicate all vestiges of the ex·
isling social or'der.
"The KCP rationale is to com·
pletely rid the society of all ele·
ments which are not of the lower
social class." according to a
former communist official.
The communists were told by
their leaders that former gov·
ernment and military personnel
were "spoiled rotten" and had to
be "swept out. .. Declared a de-
fector to U.S. authorities: "KCP
members have been told that the
party views these people as an
unreliable and dangerous ele-
ment that would. if kept within
Cambodian society. pose a
serious threat to the party and
the people at some future time.
Party members have been told
that this element must be swept
out. swept ctean."
NUCLEAR
GAR8A6£
.» ---,,o.,...>_""bo., ......... \." , --
''MAyH we cou\ci P"kdfe it AS 4 soil <OftdiiioNr.'
Officers o( the former
army were the first to die. "The
KCP simultaneously began ex·
ecuting all wealthy farmers.
prostitutes, high-level monks,
teachers. fortune telters. rormer
enlis t ed men and civil ser·
vants ..
NOR WERE their families
s pared. An lntelligencf report
s tates grimly: "Entire families
were ordered executed because
the s urviving s pouses and
children would harbor resent-
ment toward the government
and would only create problems
in the future."
The crude bludgeonings con·
tmued for more than a year.
"Toward the latter part of 1976. ,.
the intelligence reports claim.
"the search for an execution of
old society peopte slackened off.
In April. 1977. however .. it
once again became a primary
party activity to search out and
eliminate the last vestiges or the
old society "
The most recent cable we
have seen on this subject was
dated Feb. 13. 1978. It declares
tersely: .. A renewed emphasis
was placed on completely
eliminating all vestiges or the
former government and com-
pleting the executions of all peo-
ple who were not from the poor
farmer· working class."
THIS MANIACAL attempt to
establish a new order by mass
murder was s upposed to be kept
out or the history books. The
communis\s tried. with frighten·
mg success. to hide their horrors
from the world. They have
sealed off their country tightly.
The borders are mined and
patrolled
Yet a few refugees managed
to escape. some after harrowing
experiences Less than two
months after the communist
takeover. we were able to get
enough eye-witness accounts to
report on June 4, 1975: "It ap-
l)ears that the Khmer Rouge, as
the Cambodian communists call
themselves. may be guilty of
~eoocide against their own peo· pie.··
Now we have compiled in·
telhgence reports and eyewit·
ness accounts two inches thidt.
The evidence is overwhelming.
It is the world's most hideous
story about the world's most
brutal dictatorship. Every
American with a conscience
should cry out to the United Na-
tions. to the White House. to
Congress. to condemn Com·
munist Cambodia.
Across the Nation: Enough of Crime
Americans will be pushed just
so far -before they begin
pushing back.
In cities where they have been
frightened off streets they have
paid for behaving taxpayers are
beginning to react.
The law is being reinforced. You go into a Dunkin' Donuts
shop or a
McDonald's
or a Ken -
tucky Fried
Chicken out·
let ln Detroit
-you get
your picture
taken free.
Fast-rood
restaurants
are using hid·
den cameras and bulletproof
glass and direct alarqi hookups
with police in a determined er.
fort to diSBuade, intercept or
capture bandits.
Art Hoppe
They're not asking' whether
concealed camer as invade
anyone's constitutional privacy.
After a 16-year·old Kentucky
Fried Chicken salesgirl was shot
to death by a bandit. the pro-
prietor of the place did what he
felt he had to do.
AT THE SAME lime, BuUer High School in Pennsylvania is
getting tough with toughs. The
meanest kids in school are no
longer escaping punishment for
flagrant misbehavior.
They are taken on visits to
prisons and mental hospitals so
that they can see and sample the
results ot disruptive behavior.
It's an effort to trans form
chronic bullies. truants and
class clowns into responsible
students.
For about hair of them it
works.
Each such errort to punish
wrongdoing brings out the pro·
testers who protest that punish·
menl is "uncivilized."
But these protesters are get-
ting less forum than heretofore.
Where the law has tended to
favor the lawless. that. too, is
being corrected.
ILLINOIS has adopted and is
enforcing new anticrime laws
which may become a model for
every state.
Illinois has increased sen·
tences for violent crime, has
abolished the concept of parole,
and has lowered the boom on re·
peat offenders.
Illinois ' Gov . Big Jim
Thompson is a former state's at·
torney. He pledged himself to re-
form the state's criminal justice
system and this is a bold first
step.
For any of nine felonies the
least sentence any court can
give 1s six years -and it might
decree "60 years.••
NO MORE plea bargaining
with the state's attorney. No
more slaps on the wrist by le·
nient judges. No more parole.
Now. for s pecific crimes,
specific punishment.
The three-time loser for any
major crime goes lo prison for
life'
Some 2.000 separate crime
prevention programs are in
operation across our nation as
Americans take steps to
s afeguard themselves, one com·
munity at a time. from muggers
and robbers.
One thing more: Chicago's Ci-
ty Council. 41 to 0, has voted a
new antivandalism ordinance. For vandalism by any minor
child the cost of repairing or
replacing anything he destroyed
must be paid -by the parents.
Man-on-the-Street Wins Out in Reverse Poll
Oooc:l news! The latest Trotter
Poll shows that President J im·
my .Carter now approves of the
way a mftjority of Americans are handllng their jobs as
ciUzena.
The President expressed AP·
proval or 51 percent of the
public; di.sap.
prov1l of 33
percent: and
remained un·
decided on IS
per~ent.
The pub·
ltc'1 Job
ralln1. which
had ~•Up. pln1 1te1dlly
In pol11 of
C111er since bls lnaqurallon,
reubed a low of 47 percent last
moatb. Tbe cauae for tbil sud·
den reftl'Ul in Prtttdentlal Opln·
loo could not be lmmedJately
eiplaloecl.
Alao creatiq confutloo were
aeveral poll& earUer in the week
1bowlni the pubUc's popularity
tlW tlnkinc rapidly with Carter.
Iii some cues it wu lower tba11
with any President since
Truman.
Whatever the reason for the
dramatic reversal in the
Trotter Poll, it was cauae ror
restrained Jubllation In many
American households. "Maybe
we've tu.med the comer." Hid
one citizen hopefully. "We must
be doing something ri&ht."
As might be expected, the
President rated Democrats
more favorably <83 percent>
than Republican& <37 percent>.
Southern blacks also s~o~ bet·
ter wlth Carter (56 percent> than
women <SS percent>. What this
Indicated was unclear.
NATuRALLY, Southerners <56
percent> were more admired
than Mldweaterners (51 {Ht~nl)
and there wu no quuuon tbat.
Carman, with only 1 44 percent.
approvtl rattrw. were ln trouble
with the WhJte HOUH.
tn 1 tJplcal man-on·lh·lltreet
latenJew to ~xpanct on the Poll
re1ulbl, Prelld nt Cuter •lnCled
out. iffany Armbrutter, ~. or
Del MOlDe.. N.J .• u 1 typlcl.I
man on the street.
"Frankly, I suppose Harry
is a decent, weU-meaning citizen
at heart," the President said.
"but what's he done for the
country?
"LOOK AT his energy pro-gr~m . He talks a lot about Hvln1
energy, but he's bumlna more
gasollne. electricity and heating
oll tban when I took ollice.
·•Despite a lot or palaver. he
hasn't come up with a single
Quotes
"ll waa a conspiracy of
American businessmen, con·
1ressmen a.nd Koreans to mak~
blatantly improper paymenu
over a sustal.ned period or ttme
with U.S. ~en· money. The
d~t1l11 are revolt1n1." Rep.
Brwee c.,.&e. R·N.Y., discuss·
tn1 cl01ed·door wumony by
South Korean buatnesaman
Ton11un Park before the House
ethics cornmtttee.
solution to peace ln the Middle
East. He was derinitely wishy·
washy on the coal strike. And if
he's done anything to keep
prices down why ts Rosalynn
paytng S20 a pound for smoked
salmon?
~· 1 had a lot ol confidence in
him , when he voted for me for
President. I thought he ml&ht
help tum th.is country around.
But he's been a real disappoint·
menl. When it comes to being a
cltiien, he's obviously in over
his head."
ARMBRUSTER declined
direct coa>m ept. "Like mott
cltliens, t don't pay HY au.en.
lion to Presidential opinion
polls," he said, "unless they're
highly favorable. And as for
mu-on-thc·street interviews,
who urea what aomo dumb
President thlnka 1bout the man
oo the at.roet!
"The oo1y thins 1 don't see,"
11Jd Armbruster. "1.s how come
he always blames all bl•
lroublca on me.
"It couldn't all be my fault"
NATIONAL T"81Klay, May 9, 1978 DAILY PILOT A 7 .
torians Seek Seopes Trial '1'flkes' ~
DAYTON, Teno. <AP ) -
t11storlam are lookibg for two ol
the microphones used to
broadcast the Scopes monkey
trial live over the first national
radio hookup 53 years ago.
·'They are particularly
1 m portant s ince that live
broadcast marked the first time
it had ever been done." said Ted
Mercer. president of Rhea
County Historical Society.
RADIO STATION WGN in
Chicago. one or the nation's
oldest. used three squash·sited
mikes bearing its call letters for
t he broadcast. Program
manager Dick Jones s aid
r ecently that one of tbe
microphones is on display at the
station. He said he had no idea
where the other two are.
WGN wanted to broadcast
Chicago's sensational 1924
Leopold and Loeb murder trial
in which two well·to-do young
me n were co nv icted of
kidnapping and killing a 1mall
boy. But more than 10,000
listeners voted against it for
reasohs or taste
The next year. WGN didn't
bother to ask whether it should
broadcast the trial in southeast
Tennessee of John Scopes. who
had been accused of teaching
evolution. The station jumped at
the chance to air Clarence
Darrow 's c lassic con ·
frontalion with William
Jennings Bryan
"STATION WGN OF Chicago
decided to broadcast the trial
over the first national radio
hookup and sent Quinn Ryan to
coordinate the effort." Rick
Beard wrote in the Smithsonian
Institution's history of the trial.
"The WGN microphones would
become a fixture ln the
courtroom."
On July 11. 1925. WG N
technicians installed the mlkes.
one on the judge's bench.
another on the defense table.
and the third in froot of
prosecutors. Judge John T .
Raulston test~ the system from
the bench by scolding t he
gallery of reporters.
Half a century later. county
officials decided to renovate the
Rhea County Courthouse with
about Sl million Jn ata(e and
federal money lo make it look
as it did in .1925. Only the
microphones were missing when
the historic building was
reopened to the public this
month.
"VIRTUALLY ALL THE
furnishings ln the courtroom are
original," Mercer said.
·'The courtho use and the
courtroom had not been change
in any significant way." he said.
·'Certain parts had just been
abandoned. And that turned out
to be a good thing, in retrospect.
becauite It. meant very little
reconstruction ...
A Stopes museum will be built
in the basement within the next
year. Mercer said. And to
accommodate the expansion in
the county government. the
architect added office space in
the unused third noor.
"The renovation even includes
the old brass cuspidors which
add a glow to the room," Mercer
said. "We're just hoping no one
uses them." ... ..,.....
DEFENSE COUNSEL DUDLEY FIELD MALONE L1STENS TO RULING FROM BENCH
1925 Photo of 'Monkey Trtal' BroadcHt Live Over National Radio
'lm~ihle' Goal Asked
KIRKLAND. Wash. <AP> -Determined to
pay for a $1.6 million church auditorium with cash
"before the bulldozers move the first dirt:·
leaders of the Overlake .Christian Ch urch are urg-
ing members to hock their valuables and mortgage
their homes for the money
The money also is being collected to retire a
$200.000debt for the church.
"WE ARE UNDER THE deep conviction that
God wants us to pay cash for the building. Human-
ly speaking. it is impossible. but we know the Lord
wants 1t to happe n." says Pastor Robert
had their lifestyle affected because of an offer-
ing."
The independent church. founded nin~ years
ago in this well-to-do community near Seattle
when more conservative members of the Bellevue
Christian Church split away. has about 750 family
units and 1.700 panshaoners. ·
WAS IT SCRIPTURE THAT inspired
Moorehead to undertake the project?
"We JUSl felt 1l was good stewardship. good
business. not to have the church pay nearly S2
million in mterest. .. over 20 years." he said.
Moorehead. r.:================~ The collection plate will be passed June 25 for
the bonanza. and Moorehead says $310.000 has
been committed by church members in six weeks.
"One man sold the boat he had just bought."
Moorehead said. "One or our single women is sell·
ing her home. giving the equity of about $25,000 to
the church." he added.
MOOREHEAD SAID THE CASH must be in
hand "before the bulldozers move the first dirt."
"lt 's a wild approach. I'll tell you. The key to
we are changing our dlspfay
room ... we have cabinet ..cuona and a beautiful
wet bar unit .
3 feet - 8 feet. below cost
2960 ••ndolp9' co•t•in••• ~!
.,......_.. the whole program is the word sacrifice.·· said the
FAMOUS MOVlE TOLD STORY BASED ON SCOPES 'MONKEY TRIAL' pastor. "Our people are pretty arrtuent. Most of
754-0370 10-3 ~!
Barker~?
Spencer Tracy, left, and Frederic Mar~c:h~in~L:_e~ad~R~o:le:'.s~l:n~·1:n:h~e~rl:tt~h::e:_:W:::ln:d:_' ______ _:th:e:m:_::h:a_::ve:..:.:n:.ev~e:.:_r_:m=ad:e:_:a_:s:.:a:c:.:ri:fi.:ce:._T:.:h:e:::y_·v~e:_n:e:v:.:e::r-1::=================~!.
Battk Site Restored
BANGKOK. Thailand <AP> -Vietnam is
restoring the battlefield of Dien Bien Phu where
CommUnist forces overwhelmed a French gar·
rison 24 years ago this month, marking the end of
French domination of Vietnam.
The official Vietnam News Agency said plans
call for restoring relics of the two-month battle.
setting up a victory monument and building a mus
eum, hotel and airfield
WNG JOHN SID7ER'S
Wednesday SHRIMP SALE
MIGHTY BIG SHRIMP
at a mighty small price.
• 9 Golden Fried Shrimp
• Fabulous Fryes
• TangySlaw
• 2 Crispy Hushpupples
• $4.61 , ..
.
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MYl-TMIU S•Ytcl AVAIL.All.I
Our tMm tell• rou everrthln1 you
w•nt to know.about rour •••m
In the DAILY PILOT
Dick Sincl1tr !ells
You Bow !o Get A
Pomona l'int rederal
Property Improvement
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1
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Fountain Valley
894-7542
Mission Viejo-El Toro
788-4378
Newport Beach
848-7755
San Diego
482-4990
Santa Ana
557..()320
Tuatln.O,.nge
1.19-3913
• DAll.Y PtLOT N/C T uMdlY May 9. 1918
Don't Look Down
H1('k Makin's outdoor job provides ~
panoramu: view of downtown San Diego
that 1s if he can bear to look down.
Washing a 26-floor window. Makin. 20. is
he ld by u half-inch braided rope.
Boat Owners
To Register
ForMV Lake
Boat registration for residents
who plan to use their craft on
Lake Mission Viejo Is scheduled
lo begin May 22. according to
Don Danyko, lake manager
"Boal registration is a safety
procedure." he said, noting that
all Lake Mission Viejo Associa·
lion members planning lo use
personal vessels at the private
recreational facility must com·
plete an ins pection before
launching.
APPLICATION FORMS,
available at the lake administra·
lion office or upon request by
phone or mail, should be com·
pleted before securing an m·
spection appointment. Danyko
.said. Boats us ing the lake must
have single hulls. Sail boats up
to 16.5 feet will be allowed. he
said. Also allowed will be elec·
trlc-powered boats and r ow
boats up to 18 feet long.
NEW HOMES sold in the com·
munity include a utom atic lake
assoc iation members hi p.
Dan y ko said . Howeve r .
hom eowners whose propetty
does not include m embership
have up to a year following the
lake's scheduled June :.i npcning
to join, he added.
Association dues or S7 pt>r
month are to be collected begin·
ning July 1, he said.
Signals Adjusted
At Leisure World
Traffic signals al intersections most often used by Leisure World's
e lderly residents have been adjusted to allow more street-crossin1
time. county officials report.
Supervisor Tom Riley. whose fifth district encompasses the retire·
m ent community, said the longer crossing times are the result or re·
quests by the Gray Panthers, a
senior citizens oqianizatlon
Trial Slated
In Slaying
Of Cultist
SAN DIEGO CAP > A 37·
year-old woman identified as
one or the 13 wives of fugitive
polygamist cult leader Ervll
LeBaron says she 1s innocent of
the June 1975 slaying of a former
cult member
After a rraignment Monday,
superior Court Judge Wilham T.
Low orde red Vonda Evelyn
White of National City to stand
trial July 10 and set her bail al
$350,000.
She is accused of the fatal
:-hooting or Dean Grover Vest.
40. a 7-foot-tall follower of
LeBaron's Church of the Lamb
of God. Prosecutors allege Vest
was slain when he tried to break
away frol1) the sect of outcast
Mormons
TH E AVER AGE per s oh
crosses a street al six feet per
second. said a county traffic
technician. In areas frequented
by the elderly, time is extended
on "WALK" signals to allow for
travel al a slower four feet per
second.
But In areas surrounding
Leisure World -in Laguna HilJa
and El Toro -even longer
periods are allowed for "the
almost infirm." he said.
A TRAVEL rate of between
two and three feet a second is
provided al such intersections as
El Toro Road at Rockfield
Boulevard. at Avenida de la
Carlotta, at Pasco de Valencia,
al Calle Sonora. and at Avenida
Sevilla.
Also lengthened. he said. was
the walking time a llowed at
Paseo de Valencia and De la
Plata.
However. a trafric survey
showed that Leisure World real·
dents w~ cross El Toro Road at
Moultonp>arkaway have picked
up the pace.
LOCAL/ NATIOf'llAL
Crude Oil Studied
Cqlif ornia, Alaska F onn Committee
SACRAMENTO <AP > -
There's a glut of crude oil on the
West Coast. and officials from
California and Alaska agree to
attack it together -from seven
different ways.
At a meeting Monday attended
by reporters, the officials
agreed to form a committee for
further work.
T E L E P H 0 N E consultations were set up for next
week to deal with committee
m e mbership, timetable. and
stratefy for approaching the
federa government.
DlscUSled but not agreed upon
were the possiblliUes of produc·
ing a paper. and trying to
persuade legislators from both
states to hold an historic joint
hearing.
The seven approaches to be in·
vestigated as possible avenues
of action were: The proposed
Standard OU of Ohio pipeline
from Southern California to Tex-
as; the hailing of production; oil
prices and federal controls: ex·
changes for foreign oil; import
restrictions: other transporta·
lion possibilities.
EVERY DAY 1.2 million bar·
rels or Prudhoe Bay crude pour
from the trans·Alaska pipeline
into tankers bound for the West
Coast. But West Coast energy
demand has dropped. and
California does not have enough
refineries. The dally surplus is
about 650,000 barrels.
The glut is costing both states
money. Some oil ls going
through the Panama Canal to
the Gulf Coast, but that costs
more because the biggest
tankers can't go through the
canal.
The higher transportation cost
Judge's Widow
Wins Pension
After Denial
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Los
Angeles County Superior Court
judge bas ordered the state Com·
mission on Judicial Performance
to award a $15,000 annual pension
to the widow of a Compton
Municipal Court judge. ft had
been denied after her husband
died or the effects or alcoholism.
The commission refused in Qc.
tober 1976 to grant Judge Joseph
Armijo a disability retirement
pension. requested just days
before he lost a bid for re·
election Three months later. he
died of severe liver disease and
other effects or acute alcoholism.
Judge George M. Dell ruled
Monday that the commisslon
must grant the pensions because
Armijo's alcoholism was a dis·
ease.
Summer Rec
Classes Set
At Newport Y
The YMCA In Newport Beach
has a nnounced a schedule
o f recreation c lasses for
young people to be orrered this
summer.
Volleyball wtll be taught at
Ensign Middle Sc~ool beginning
June 5 for youngsters aged 10 to
17 . Softball . also at Ensign. will
be offered on Saturday after·
noons rrom June 1 through Sept.
t. and racquetball will be of.
fered Saturday momlngs begln·
ning May 13 at the YMCA. 2300
University Drve.
Weight training Is being
taught at the YMCA on Tuesday
and Thursday afternoons.
Additional information is
available by calllng 642·9990.
is cutting the price or oil at the
wellhead. therefore reducing
Alaska's severance taxes by
$100 million a year
CALIFORNIA'S OWN oil.
which is heavier. Is being forced
out of the marke t by the
shortage or refinery capacity for
that grade of oil. Much or it
comes from stale lands.
Three possible solutions were
proposed by Arion Tussing. a
University of Alaska proftssor
and consultant to the Alaska
Legislature: <I > Pus hing
transcontinental p1 p e l1nes
toward lhe East : 121 renovating
West Coast refineries Lo handle
heavy crude. and CJ I sending it
to Japan in exchange for the de·
livery to the East Coast of oil
from foreign sources.
But President Carter and
Congress would have to approve
such export exchanees.
Tussln1 said he learned in
Washington that Carter wanted
the two stales to have a definite
program before he and Congress
begin considering exchanges.
HE SAID FEDERAL officials
would particulartr want to know
about California s progress In
grantln& permits for a SSOO
million. pipeline that Standard
Oil of Ohio wants for pumping
Alaskan oil from Long Beach to
Midland, Texas. Sohio is negotiating with slate
and local air quality officials on
permits.
The Orm bas also agreed to m·
st.all pollution control equipment
on a neerb) power plant to make
up for incre3!'C'rl 1>0llut1on (rom
the proposed tanker port r
Snake Story
Man Sirollowed tty Pytlwn
JAKARTA. Indonesia <AP) -A »root python swallowed a
rarmer bdt when the snake wu killed and It' stomach ripped
opell: the dead man was found without any .. outward damage ...
a newspaper reported.
The daily Sinar Harapan sald•the farmer cried for help
whet the snake attacked him at nlcht near bls home tn the
jungle of central Sulawesi. Vllla1era wnt to look for him the
next day and found the python whole stomach was bulalng so
that it ·could not move.
The paper said villagers killed the snake and removed the
corpse.
Not Enough Diamonds
Too Much Baseball
Problem in Viejo
Baseball America's national pastime has struck out with a group of
Mission Viejo residents.
''The major problem ia that we have too many baseball teams and not
enough diamonds." Saddle back Valley Unified School District Ad·
m inistrauve Services Director Ken Anderson told trustees recently.
ANDERSON WAS responding
to petitions from angry residents
<1round Montevideo School.
where several Little League
games are played.
The neighbors are complain·
ing or the massive influx or
baseball players and families
who nightly descend on the
school's diamonds for league
games .
Residents allege hazardous
traffic conditions. a fear of van·
dalism and concern over litter
and bathroom facilities at the
school site.
"WE'RE ASKING you to aad
the Little League in establishing
a racllity that is more ap·
propriate to this popular game."
Nikki Robertson of 24232 Carrillo
Drtve told trustees.
She cited impossible parking
conditions ln the evening In front
or her home located across from
the school.
And she told or a neighbor who
was rorced to open ~er home's
toilet facilities because the
school's were locked up.
ANDERSON RES PO~DED
that the Little League group had
spent $12.000 building crushed
brick infields and dugouts at the
school.
He said problems Increased
when the North Mission Viejo
Little League took an unexpecl·
ed jump in participation-from
23 to 30 teams in a single season.
"Four or fi ve teams were
planned for the school but up to
J7 teams ere playing there." An·
derson said. "We could possibly
move some of the teams to
Cordillera School because
they're not housing as many
teams."
ANDEBSON PLEDGED to •
open rest room f acllllies at the
scbool and to police the area to
keep it rree from litter.
"Hopefully residents will
respond but if they don't we'll
h ave to take more drastic
measures," Andenon said.
He did not stipulate what other
measures might be taken to ease
the strain on Montevideo School
area residents.
wague President Pat Kelly
said his bands are lied because
the league has committed funds
to a Mi ssion Vieio Com
pany-sponsored baseball ractllty
expansion In a basin above Lake
M Issi on Viejo.
"SINCE WE HAVE to commit
funds to the basin project we
can 'l do improvements at any
other schools." Kelly said. "But
it Is very doubtruJ the league
will be moving to those facilities
this year."
Kelly said the league was
sy mpalnet ic to the
neighborhood problems but was
experiencing potential problems
of its own.
"If the northern part of Mis·
sion Viejo rontlnues to grow. I'm
sure the league will continue to
grow." he said.
Voters Om
On Tax Issue
In Bay Area
Bible Shunned by Anti-gays
OCC Seminar
To Aid Small
Businesses
A four-hour seminar designed
to he lp small.business people
recognize and solve legal
problems encountered in their
business will be offered May 20 al
Oran_Je Coast College. SAN FRANC ISCO <AP ) Turnout on the first day of
absentee ballbting in the San
Francisco Bay area was much
heavier than normal, and elec· tion ofriclals credited the emo-
tional debate over property tax
relief.
"There's realty a lack of voter
apathy this year." said San
Francisco C hief Deputy
Registrar Jay Patterspn. "It's
probably Proposition 13 that's
brinaiog them out." Ke sald the 150 ~raons who
ca me to City ll'atl to cast
absentee ballol.a Monday were
about 10 times more than
normal.
Dora Dtcklnaon, deputy clerk
or San Mateo County, old
turnout wu "veJ')' heavy'' t.bert.
"They all 1ee1n to be interest·
ed in the .Jarv\1 Propo1llton 13
llnd Behr Propo1ltloo 8 pro· poaall. They doil't want to mlaa
out on thl1 w ue." The propotlUonl would reduce
proputy tax 1 bJ v•rylna
amounts. ·
EUGENE. OTe. (AP> -In this univenity city, the campaign
to repeal a homosexual rights law ls doing without dUt.slde aid and
quotations from the Bible.
Instead, the repeal group says homosexuality la only a lifestyle
-a question of choice. which the law hu no business protecting.
WHEN THE MA1TER comes up ror a vote May 23, lt will be
the foUrtb such repeal referendum to go before voters in clUes that
have adopted homosexual ri&hts ordinances In the tut several
years.
lo Miami. Fla.rand In St. Paul, Minn., repeal efforts led by
fundamentalist ministers have achieved lopsided success. In
Wichita, Kan., a similar movement bas forced a vote today. Alt
those drives relied heavlly on arguments that homosexuality ts Im·
moral. But this campaign ls dlrferenL. It araues, primarily, that
homosexuallly ilmplY ls not like race or rellgion.
"WB THINK IT'S a Uteat.Yl• queaUon," aald Larry Dean. cam·
palgn manqer f~ VOICE <Volunt~ Organtted ln Contlnutna
Enactments). "We've never seen le1IalaUon paaeed to protect a
nreatyle. It'• not. le&l•lallve 111ue. •• •
EuJeAt. a city of about 100.00t: 11 home of the UnlvtraJty of
Oreeon. The amendment which added seituat orientation to tht
list ot cateiortn ror which thc,clty's clvil rt1hta ordlnanet rorbfd1
dllcrJmlnatloh, pused lb• City Council l•l Novembt.r. ll did not
10 into efleet. however, because 10,000 signatures wtre qwckly col·
ltcted on ,.UUona lO refer lt to a popular vote.
r DEAN ACKNOWLEDGES that moral luua are bWolved
somewhat -that opponents or gay r1thll fear the law will make
•
homosexuality more acceptable and encourage homosexuals to
flaunt their lifestyle.
But Maureen Geiber. another VOICE leader. says the issue Is
that employers and landlords should not be forced to accept
homosexuals If they rind their way of life offensive.
"Homosexuals are free to pracllct It, to preach it and ad·
vertise it. What else do they want•" she said. "Society has never
accepted homosexuality as being natural."
LARRY MONICAL, a member of the Eugene Citizen• for
Human Rights. whlch want.s to keep the ordinance. Is skeptical
about the differences between this campaign and others.
"The opposition Is getting a lot slicker and a lot slyer." he
says. "But we think the average citizen can see through it. At the
bottom or everything they say Is the same sort of myths."
He rejects the notion that homosexuals have a dltrerent claim
than others to protection Crom bias.
''THE EFFECTS OF discrimination are the same whether you
are black or gay." he says. calllht It "a l~&lllmate human ri&hll
queatlon."
But even Monlcal concedet VOICE'• financial Independence.
saying both aides are avoldJ/w out.sld• flelp. In St. Paul and
Wichita, the repeal movementa were aldtd by entertainer Anita
Bryant'11roup, the architects or repeal In Miami
80 FAit, WOIC::E has ralsed more .than StS.000. but Monlca1'1
•toUJ. cl.trna even more success -more than 125.000 toward a sso .ooo soa1. •
Mon.lea! said be eKpecta lhe vote to be close. but Is hoping the
city'• ·'broad mlnded tradlUon" wtll fend orrthe repeal drl ve
Titled "Legal Aspects and
Problems/Solutions for the
Small Business." the seminar
runs from 8·30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. In OCC's Science Lecture
Hall 2. It is co-sponsored by the
Small Business Administration
PRE·REGISTRATION fee ls
$2.50. Chetka. made payable to
Orange Coast College, should be
sent to Buslnets Management
Development C-:nter. OCC. Z701
Fairview Road. Costa Mesa
92826.
ReelstraUon wlll be conducted
at the door at 8 a.m. on a space·
available basls. Reelsttalion at
the door ls $3.50.
SEMINAR LECTURER ls
Kenneth J. KukUda. an attorney
and lecturer who specializes ln
real estat~. taxation, and
bltslnua.
A queatlon·and.answer session
will ronow.
1
ANAL YStS I CAREERS
Canal Contrasts Clear
Cranston Consistenl, Hayakaim Wavers
8)' 11IOllA.S D. ELIAS
Contrula in atyle and aub-
1tance between California '1 two
United States aenators were
never more stark than in their
performances the last 18 months
on the Panama Canal treaties.
r SOtrrHERN
CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
didn't feel 1 should be the one to
talk to him. Thal was best left to
the Republicans.'·
In fact. Republican leader
Howard Baker or Tennessee did
bes eech Haya kawa and both
senators said they discussed the
possibility or Hayakawa even·
tually getting a seat on the
. .
TU99clay May 9, t978 DAILY PILOT AS
1n1urcance
TWO ADDITIONAL YEARS
OF GUARANTEED
.. NO INCREASE
IN PREMIUMS ..
Business Packages. Commercial Fire.
Condominiums and Apartment Packages
Alan Cranston, as usual. was
consisteot and careful. doing
homework and counting votes.
·'I got out the list or senators
sponsoring a resolution opposed
to any treaty giving the canal to
Panama," Crans ton said.
·'There were 38 on the list and I
talked with every one and urged
them not to take a stance so ear·
ly. The consequence was that on-
1 y one Democrat, John
McClellan of Arkansas. stayed
on tbe resolution, so tt was never
introduced."
prestigious Foreign Relations BOB PA LEY Committee. NORTH OC • 546-3205
S.I. HAYAKAWA eventually
voted lbe same way, but not
without wavering and colorful
commen1-'.
Whether that swayed him Is
s till unclear. But Hayakawa & ASSOC l~C SOUTH 0C 642-6500
staged a dramaUc lad-m~~eJ~~~~~~=·~~~=·~~~~=·~~~~=
AP .... ijililil9
DOES HOMEWORK
Sen. Alan Cran1ton
COLORFUL COMMENT
Sen. S. I. Hayakawa
Since the margin was just two
votes and Hayakawa's was in
doubt the last few days , his un·
certainty spurred headlines. But
Cranston's role was no doubt
more important to the treaties'
oassage.
During his 1970 election cam-
paign. Hayakawa dismissed the
canal matter with a flippant
comment: "We stole it fair and
square and we should keep it."
CRANSTON, MEANWHILE,
c Ii m bed onto the treaty
bandwagon even before the rmal
version was written.
"I was the first senator to get
active in the ratification effort,"
Cranston said in an interview.
His activity began in early 11rn. before Jimmy Carter bad
even been inaugurated. After a
day of meetings with Carter and
the men who would become his
top foreian policy advisers,
---------Cranston said he became con-
Honor Earned
El Toro High School
student Richard Scalet-
tar took fourth place in
Ca l Poly's annual in-
dividual math contest
held on the San Luis
Obispo Campus.
vinced the canal treaties would
be the new president's first
foreign policy crisis.
SO CRANSTON, WHO bad just
been named the Senate's majori-
ty whip, began working behind
the scenes to defuse potential op-
position.
Cranston labels those 38 calls
and meetings the most impor·
tant thing he did to assure the
treaties' passage, since it re·
duced the opposition before it
ever began.
MEANWHILE, HAYAKAWA
was just beginning to adjust to
being a senator. Until the
treaties were actually signed in
mid-1977, be said nothing about
them.
When Carter and Panamanian
dictator Omar Torrijos signed
them, Hayakawa announced hls
support. risking alienation of the
con servative Ca lifornia
Republicans who nominated and
elected him.
His vote was taken for granted
from then until the very end,
when he began expressing fears
• that the treaties were a sign of
weakness and Indicative of a
general timJdity in facing Com-
munist lnfJuence.
WHEN HAYAKAWA BEGAN
bis wavering, Cranston adopted
a strict banda-off policy.
entrance and cast hls vole for
the treaty.
CRANSTON, MEANWHILE,
quietly continued bis vote·
counting and persuasion or other
senators. most notably Dennis
DeConcini, a n Arizona
Democrat for whom Cranston
had staged a Los Angeles fund·
raising dinner in 1976.
Did that dinner have any in·
rtuence on DeConcini 's eventual
acceptance or a compromise
amendment giving the U.S. the
right to take military action if
there is any threat to close the
canal?
"It certainly dldn 't hurt,"
Cranston said.
CRANSTON'S QUIET work
long before the issue came to a
vote thus had given him a valua·
ble chip to cash.
Hayakawa bas few if any such
chips a nd so on issues less
urgent lban lbe canal treaties,
he can get attention on ly
through flamboyance, the same
quality that got him elected.
NEEDALAWYER? J
Lowlegal'"
•Divorce
In One Beautiful Locatiora
In addition to complete mortuary services,
Fairhaven has Chapels, Ma usoleum,
Columbarium, Garden Crypts. All this is located
in a tranquil setting, hidd~n almost entirely
from the casual view of passing traffic. But
Fairhaven unfold s its inner beauty as you
proceed along its winding drives, lined with
trees of rare variety.
We will be pleased to discuss mortuary and
cemetery costs or any other detail of
importance to you. Many families are find ing
how convenient it is to have EVERYTHING IN
ONE BEAUT1FUL LOCATION.
RALPH W. GORDON, Mortuary Manager and kl:U Y W. FUSSELL
comttine over 50 years of mortuary exoerience in serving
area families. They both extend a warm invitation to their
many friends to stop by for e personal tour of the new
facilities.
Wildlife Management
''What he was up to, I don't
know,•• Cranston aai~. "But I
• Accident-Injury R
Field's Outlook Dim
Italian Nun ~ ~~wg;.~ foirhovm nemoriat · por1 .
•Eviction Beatified •collections MORTUARY -CEMETERY
640-2507 <714) 633·1442
By JOYCE L. KENNED\' ( CAREERS J By Church !::Yl:H:A:. CONSU===LT:A:T:IO:~==o~==l=7=02=E=. F=a=i=rh=a=v=e=n=A=v=e=. B=e=t=w=een=1=·us=ti=n=A=v=e=. &=G=r=a=nd=A=v=e·=· =Sa=n=t=a=A=n=a=~
Dear Joyce: I roaldn't get a job
with a baehelor's degree in wtldllfe
management, so I got • muter's. I
still un't get hired. Wbat now!
-T. T., Tupelo, Miu.
Your letter reminds me of the someUmes painfully true joke about
the student who was advised after
each successive degree that he must
acquire more education if he hoped
to find employment. At last he ob-
tained his PhD. Then l)e found
employers were seeking younger ap-
plicants. The game may not be worth the
chase. While studies show that
roug hly 30 percent of wildlife
bachelor's degree grads and about 60
percent of master's find work in their
chosen field (usually with state gov·
ernment.s>. compared to roughly 85
percent or doctorates (usually with
colleges and universities), face the
reality that you've picked a field with
an uninspiring outlook.
WILDUFE SPECIALISTS mostly
work for federal, which ls the best·
paying sector, and state govern-
ments. and for educational institu-
tions. Federal hlring prospects are
dismal. they're only a sml~ge
brighter at slate and local .agencies.
Budget cutbacks are causing many
colleges and universities to hold or
reduce the line on faculty hiring.
The private sector offers some re-
lief ror job seekers, by environmental
consulting firms and by big CC?m·
panies dealing in timber, ranching,
mm1ng, energy production. and so
forth. These jobS may boil down to
writing environmental impact state-
ments.
Despite competition -and modest
pay -if you remain wild about
wildure, remember that some people
ftnd employment in job-thin fields by
becoming resourceful, dedicated
t rackers.
COMPILE A DOSSIER on wildlife
employment as an aid to identlfying
all options and potential employers:
expand your contacts ao you'll be an
"insider" who hears of openings; be
certain you understand the finer
points of seeking government
employment. While you're ginning
up your search, seek any related job
that wW support your long-term ob-
jective, from sales rep for an animal
feed company to clerk in a pet store.
Should you obtain a doctorate? On-
ly after hefty research on job market
prospects, and reassessment of your
devotion to this career. You need a
good game plan.
RE:ADER SERVICE: To obtain a COJ111
of the National WHdlife Federalion'a 45-
page brochure. "Compenaalion in the
Fields of Fiah and Wildlife M~.
1971," which include• job outlook in-
formation. und Jl(>Ur postcard request to
Joyce Lain Kennedy at thia newepaper.
Aak for "Wildlife."
VATICAN CITY <AP>
--Siste r Maria
Enrichetta Cominici, an
Italian nun who
pioneered settlements
ror her religious order in
India during the last
century. bas been
beatified.
Pope Paul VI said in a
homily at a beatification
mass In St. Peter's
Basilica that Sis ter
Enrichetta reached the
Roman Ca thol ic
c hur ch 's final step
before sainthood by be-
ing an ex.ample of obe-
dience and chastity. A
36·year-old Ita lian
worker was said to have
been cured of an in·
t es tlnal Infection
t hroug h h e r in ·
tercession.
Born in a Piedmont
village in 1829, Sister
Enrichetta founded the
first house of the
Congregation or St.
Anne of the Providence
in central India in 1879.
Since then, 29 houses
h ave been found e d
there.
C.11 U2-5678.
Put • few words
•o work for ou.
New dally nonstop service from nearby Orange County airport.
Economical Sunjet Tours plus discount fares fi;>r families and groups.
Ry Air California and make it 005'/ on yourself.
llReCALIFmlA
We're easy to toke. •
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...
Tu.day May t . t971 ORANGE COUNTY/ POLITICS/ OBITUARIES
By Bil K eonf' Maddy Aided; Hanna on TV II
• HOMEOWHYS
• AUTO tft•urec•
''YOU Q".t.Lf'T
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Ol llw 0.llr ~ilel IWft
The Republican Associates of Onmge County
are throwing a cocktail party Wednesday for GOP
gubernatorial aspirant Ken Maddy
It 's scheduled for 5 30 p.m an the Regency
Room of Anatleim"s Grand Hotel Call Marilyn
Olsson. 835-lOM>, extension 202. for reservations • • •
MADDY HAS BEEN endorsed in his bid for
the Republican lf'ominalion by Congr essman
Robert Badham. R-Newport Ueach.
Hadham. who served with Maddy in the stale
Assembly prior to moving on to the halls of
Congress. says he's convinced the Fresno as·
sem blyman has the best chance of beating Gov
Urown an November
• • •
DemocrGt1c National Mid-term Conlerene1: next
December tn .Memph1:.
Thursday· s mett1ng "111 be conducted an the
Little Theater Jt t;n1vt:rs1ty JLl~h School an lrv1nt
If you want to know whc.t time it :.tarts. call Mr">
!fall ,11 893· 1381. or Orange· County D(!mO<'rut1c
Headquarters, 835· i460
• • •
YVONNE BRAITHWAITE BURKE. the Loi-
Angeles congresswoman who 1J ~.teking !ht
Democratac· nomin;tt1on for callomey gener111. 1!.
scheduled to bt: tht special guu.t Fridb) nigM
when the Irvine Demo<. rc.1t1c (.;lub holdt. 1l!> annual membership party
The (·vent ~els under wa)' cil i 30 p m cil the
home of Mr and Mrs Jim Alu1ous. 5636 Southcall
Terrace. lrvmt-
A $5 donation will be :.ought :.al thl' doo1
For reservations. call Duma Walson. 55:·6861
or Pat Donnell). 5.59·4262
-RABBITT
INSURANCE
541-5554
tt14 HA.-eoA BLVD.
COSTA MfSA
"Con we stop to buy some crayons on the way
home, Mommy?"
"THE DICK HANNA STORY.'' an interview
with the former Orange County congressman who
wt:nt off to Jail Monday for has part an the
Koreagale scandal. will be aired <tt 8 p.m Thurs
day on Orange County's KOCE-TV. Channel 50
KQCE's Jtm Cooper traveled to Arkansas.
where Hanna now makes his home. to condu('t the
30·minule interview or the SIX-term Orange County
congressman
Storm Aid Filing
Date Set in OC
Saa ....
I
:
St-n kt'
Deaths Elsewhere • • •
ANN ARBOR. Mich.
I AP I Samuel Trask
Dana. 95, first dean of
the U ni versi t y of
M1 ch1gan School of
nuturnl resource~. died
Monda y al the
llermitagc. a retirement
home in Alt·xandria. V:.a .
SCOTTSDALE. Ariz.
1AP> R a y mond
Rublcam, ss. co-rounder
and a former chief ex·
ecullve officer of Young
& Rubicam Inc • ad-
vertising agency, died
Monday
LOS ANGELES IAP >
Pioneer real estate
developer R e ube n
Frederick Ingold , 85,
died Thursday. lie wa!>
president of the Los
Angeles Investment Co.
and helped develop the
Southwest Los Angeles
area, including View
Park. where the 1932
Olym pac Vi llage was
located.
018SOH
FRANCES M GIBSON, •Hldenl OI
L•Qun• Hiiis, Ca .• P•Ued •w•y on
M•y 6, ""· Sur.lvtd by brother
Oon•ld DvnQlln ol Cos•• Mew. C•. Fu,,.,r•I ~••k.,. will be Mid on WtO
nud•r May 10 •I 3 00 P M. •t
W•verley Chu<th, S...IA An.e. Ca Wlll'I
tnt•rment '" Fe1rha..-.n Memortet
P•rk 8•11 e.-w•y Morlu•rv dire< 10<\
SHOltT
SAN DIEGO IAPI
The Rev. Dr C. R .
Wallace, 99, former
president o f Wesley
College in Grand Rap ds.
N . D . died Friday at
home.
SAN DIEGO IAPJ
Tom Gw y nn e, 70 .
veteran newspaperman,
columnist and an
nouncer at eallente
Racetrack in Tijuana.
died Thursday at a
hospital TELLS STORY
Ex-Solon Hanna
EVERCOPY
SELLS COPIERS BUT •••
HOWARD JARVIS. co-author or the con
troversial Jarvis-Gann in1tial1ve I Proposition 13
on the J une 6 primary ballot I will spe~k Friday to
the Orange County For um of Town Hall of
California.
.. It Took Guts lo Do ll" will be the title or
Jarvis' noon talk al the Disneyland Hotel
Luncheon reservations are necessary ClA ll
Debbie Skeffington. 547-0954. or Jan Dockstader .
752·9100. • • •
FORMF.R CONGR ESSIONAL candidate V1 ·
v1an Hall of Irvine 1s calling Democrats in the 40th
Congressional District lo a meeting Thursday.
She says the purpose of the meetmg is to begin
the process or electing delegates to the 1978
What about service afterwards? we·re different' We'll earn your
business by giving you service first. then when you're convinced
we're good and it's time for a new copier. you'll probably buy your next copier from us.
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----.------------~-----------------EVEACOPY Name Tille
1 700 E Garry • 120 Co
Santa Ana, CA 92705 Address
0 I want better se<v1ce now C11v Zip
O I need a new copier Phone
O I need more info about bolh Present Copter ts
Orange Count} residents who h&vt-yet le; rile
claims for federal s torm relief may do so M&y HI
when officials of the federal Disaster A&blSlance
Administration will v1s1t t he county
County officials said thf:' v1s1l wall provide res1
dents w1th J lust c hanc<-•o f1lt fol' low interest
foderal loans to repair dumage Crom the• februar)
storms
OCftc1als of tht Small Businesi-Admin1btrutton
and federal Ot•partmt-nt of llousmg and vrban
Df:'velopment w1 II mcH I rom ~ a m. to 6 p m in the
county's Office· or Emergency Services. Room
B· 103. 625 N Ross St . Santa Ana
Information may be obtauned from H Roy
Manning. county emer gency services coordinator.
a l 834·2323.
... I .,1 .111 •••
hHJGeldsl
• weicomt> Odck lo IN! b.lc~yard'
• 1e1 cooking tho\ ~umme• w111\ OU•
l•oOOlar'<i •l"()n~"
I') •l'J 8.99
, I 'J w•lh )t<1nd 9 . 99
i\nt1qut-
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•Prnb11ll Mu\·hme'
•B1 u~i. Cash He~1Sll'r!o
•Ant1QUl' Arl·adc Equipment
2009 !1<. ~lain St.
Santa Ana, C.\ !12106
1n11 83&-1110$
A Y<Hlr D•llY Piiot c.n be
Aecycled.
OCC-lltH
official Uni•• '°' eo.t ......
MACK I( SHOR! re•odenl 01
NewPOrl lke<l'I. C. . P'l\M<I .... , on
M.ty I, 1'1& S...V1~ b'r NS wlle An
n•. lwo \1$19" ~s.en Pflce -R..a>y W•llon ot Color-Mr si-1 was •
..... mber 01 ... El~\ Loooe • .. LM
A"9ele\, Gt P,.lw•le l•mtly """'H
,.111 be hekl on ~y "' 11 00 A M.
•• Grttn ~"'~pal, Gr~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Memorl•I Pan.. s.n P9clro C• w1111-
Mr Gerry Oii Ofl<t•ll"9 T~ who
w1U\ '" hf'U off~" m•t m..~" oon .. loon\ I,,. Ii.. lie*<I Fund 01rf'< lf'O Dy 8tll 8ro4dway MorllU<Y ~AWVL.A
CLARA M PAWULA. rttocl+nt of Con• Mew Gt P•Hed •w•v on M•Y
1. 1911 S..rv1...o Dy ''"' h<l\b.tnd JOfln
Pawul•, 1-wns. Kt,.,,.lh of !Mo•llle ""•'"'"9'"" ano 0. ROberl P•wu•• of ~n 01~0. Gt • lhrH d.l"9f\ltr\ Joy<e A11er,,.111y ot CNc.t90, llllnooi, Sendra
P•wul• Of S...la Cru1. Gt •ncl JuOltl'I
P•wula ot Costa Me'"· c. .. d.tUQlllff· lft·low Hellyn P•wul• of Se•llle.
Wnh1n91on, tour oro1i.." Bern•rd
8urn\ Of Ml'N .. n, Harry Bre)h Of W"con,on Md Anl!'IOny •nd Anortw
Brt01 001n Of Illinois. lour "''"" Htlen Konlor. \/1t1ori• Cord•.
C•rollne Kruck-end Mery Sl&llheni,
ell ot llllnoll Mrs P•wul• w.n •
member Of Ille GvY\ &. Oolll 8-11~ Lei19.,. In C:O.I• Mesa. ,t;,e. S.rvlus
will be l'leld on We-A.ty Mey 10,
1'11 •I 11 00 A.M &tll Brolt<lway
C:h•P81 wllll P•,I~ Gt99 L•urlt of· fltl•lln9. lnt41rrn.nl •I Pa<lllC Vt-
Memorl•I Per~. llelf 8ro•.S...•r Mort1>ery dlrecl0t\
HOOOSOM
WALTER P HODGSON, ol Corone
Otl Mar. Ca, ---•Yon M•y 1. 191' SurvlveG Dy wile Edllll. \on
Chltrltt G. ~ Of He..,,.11, Ca •
d.tU9f'ller ""''-Fr...ctt J. Gr•vson ot Artlt<I••. C. S •-ttlldrltf'I. ll>ro!Nr
M<tr•ll•ll J . ~-.. unu,ter. C• ~<YIU\ wlll .. l'leld !PM on Wedne ..
oo Mey 10 "" •' P•<lll< view Cflepel wllh et>l-1 al Pa<lllC
View Mtmoro•I Park tl'I lttu ol
,._,,, l•""'Y requ.sh mf'morlal ron·
troout1on\ Ii. ..._ lo IM •-nun
Cer•ter So<1tly P•<1l1< Voew
Mo<IU41ry ClmKIOI\
~ IALTUH•HOH "
fUMHALHOMI
Corona del Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa 646-2424
HU.llOADWAY
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110 Broadway
Costa Mt!sa
642·9150
SMmt-~MI
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427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa • 646-4888
Santa Ana Chapel
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Santa Ana• S.7_.131
"8CllROTHHS
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627 Main St
Huntington 88fteh
~!)39
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7801 Boise A ve
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8D3·3525
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cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
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res May 3 t. 1978
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'Venderetter Kitchen
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• II>'> I Ov II I he lever
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c.ou111er IOC ddchhon
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• nom~ remeay •or ..
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<..I •• 405-1776 ,..., MAIL T'Htl COUflO 1 PHON!-----...___.. _ _..._,__,__._ __
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HUNTINGTON BEACH
Huntington Center
LAGUNA HILLS
Laguna Hiiis Ma ll
' -'-I -
Al YOUR SERVICE Tuesday. May 9 , 1978 DAIL y PILOT A • I
QUEENIE "Got a problem~ Then w rite to Pal Dunn Pat 11,nll
cul red tape. getting the ana~rs and achon llOll need
"I
Pianos 1 E: f\
and ) ,. ~ :_~ ~ ·
Organs l · ' ' ~
..
to aoltJe 1Mqu1t1es tn govttnmmt and bwmeu Mail
11our queat1on& to Pat Dunn. At YOMr Servtce. Orange
Coast Daily Ptlot. PO Box 1560. Costa Me.a. CA
92626 As many letters as pas81blt unJl ~~ed.
but plwn«l mquanes or letters not mcludmg 1he
reoder'a /ull name. oddreu and bulin11t hours· phone
numbercann.ol be considered. This columnaPJ>tarsda1·
f Kfor/ '11lllttlnf
lESSONS . IN!.TRUMENTS ,._MUSIC
CENTER
'lehtoft ltleftd .......
lfOll I r•L W-•
ly ezc~ Saturdays ·· Looking for carpet? Check our ..
..
: ~-· .... :
I , .~ .•t., ' : '•
f. ' ; 15'·9 ~,
"And now the same memo as done by• C.B. freak."
PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
17Cl'-1t PUBUC NaJ'ICE
"CTITIOUS 8USINIU
NAMl ITATIMINT PUBUC NOTICE T~ 1011owi119 --•~ OOint tMl-Mu et ----NOT-=-,, .... IE....,0-~----t TH ~ s Tfl ~ 0 ltOU p uua
"C*·ltlES~SlllLITY Sl!'fCNrk BIYO., lrvt,,., CA 921 i.
NOTICE I~ ~f;RE.8Y Gl\/EN 1~1 Oevod Fren111rn Stein, 9 LAQ11nlt•,
!tie undtrslQntd wlll no!'be re1-1lblt l.atUIMI 8Mctt, CA n1•
19r ~~ clebls or 11.0.llllM <OfllrllCled Th•s bull-Is <onducU!d b., an,,..
bf -~ oc,,.. tMn MVtotlf. on or dJvielu<lll
alltr thl• '191• David F Stein
ColUMhiaG~
DEAR PAT· I malled $15.95 to
Columbia Research Corp. In
January for a three-day, two·
night Las Vegas vacation. J 'm
disabled and live on Social
Security, so this sounded like a
"God.send" lo me. I haven't
heard anything since. and my
check has been cashed.
S.D .• Irvine
Unfortunately, you have
Joined lhousands of others
who were taken ln by thla vaca·
Ubn offer. The president of
Columbia Research Corp.,
Raymond Anderson, ls stlll ap·
pealing extradition to California
to face civil and criminal
cbar1es. Postal authorities say
they are powerless to atop CRC's
continued mass malUn1s. A YS
bu bad repeated warnings
about this operation In the col-umn since 1975.
Yoa and others who paid
for tbe SJS.95 vacation and have
proof of payment are asked to
1end materials to Deputy At·
torney Gi!neral Jamea Cuneo,
Office of the Attorney General,
60M State BuJJdlng, San Fran·
d1co. Calif. 94104.
Na.wa.Saae
DEAR PAT : I read that
pumice and oil can be used for a
final rubbing on newly re-
finished furniture. ls this the
same pumice stone 1 used to see
in my grandfather's workshop'
M.M .. Newport Beach
It's the same pumice, but It's
not in atone form. Pumice used
to treat furniture Is ln powdered
form .
Dated'"'' 111 day ol May, 1971. Trtls Sltltment WIS filed with trte
lluuellG.Slner County Cieri< ol 0••1\99 Co11ntr on 114:ittleh.-...la and Bird•
3'3Htmlllon. L• AP<il 11, 1911. Put>1tsc;::•:.:.~~1tyP1tot Pv1>11"'900r.,.eo.110.11~= DEAR PAT: My botllebrush Mao 3 , 197, ,11271 AJll'il 11, :u. May 2. •.ma bushes are in full bloom and the
.--·-·-·-------.:-.. _______ ___:1~:..;.:...;.1•1-.J hummingbirds are starting lo
arrive. I misplaced your hum·
mingbird food recipe from the
San Diego Zoo. and would ap-
preciate it if you 'd repeat it
again.
J . D . San Clemente
The recipe, which follow1 , can
be reduced according to your
needs: Z8 ounces of wblte cam-
sugar, thtte·quarters ounce of
super hydramln powder (op·
tlooal), small amount of vanilla
navorlng, one gallon of water.
and red food coloring, If desired. Mix thoroughly and place In
feeder as needed.
Bola 't'our•ell?
DEAR PAT: We've decided
we want aluminum siding on our
house to cul down on the main·
tenance. Does the installation
h ave to be done by pro-
fessionals. or could it be a do·ll·
yourself project?
C.V .. Costa Mesa
It's possible to lnatall
alumlnam siding yourself, but
only If you know what you're do·
Ing. You can't team lo do a good
siding Job overnJ1bt, accorcllng
to contractors. Tbey uy "lt usually takes several months &o
train novices to handle tbl1 job
In a professional way.
Ari Ion Ll11e•
DEAR PAT: We noticed on
our cross·country vacation last
summer that a lot of newspapers
carry action line columns like
your's. How many are there' J 'd
also like to know which one was
first. ·
J W . Laguna Niguel
A forenmner of the action line
column, ''The Friend of the Peo-
ple," appeared on the editorial
page of die Chicago Tribune In
January 1911. But "The Friend"
djd not solve individual com·
plaints. "IUs function wlll be to
throw such Ugbl as he may upon
questions that are puuling
readers of the Tribune, with
1peclal reference lo those mat-
ters that are of general Interest
and application, .. the column's
introduction promised. And
"The Friend's" scope was limit·
ed to "complalnta ... regarding
the municipality, other
She's crying for h~lp. Are you listening?
She simply can't handle her problems by
herself anymore. She needs help before it's too
1ate. And ~tie's not alone. Every day, people no
different than you experience an e motional
crisis of ten provoked by a troubled personal
relationship.
Someone may become so despondent she
grows fearful or nervous for no apparent
reason. She loses sleep over insignificant things.
She explodes over trivial matters like the car not
starting. She can't carry on with her family.
She needs help.
Professional help. The only real hope fo r
regaining a normal, productive life.
The kind of help available at the Problem
Talk Shop. A profes.sionally staffed counseling
and referral service for people trapped In •n
emotional crisis.
At the Problem Talk Shop we care for
poopte.
Problem Talk Shop ls a free service which
provides a warm, friendly environment where
skilled counselors help people sort out their own
lives. Here people gain new resources to handle
the problems they thought were too big to
handle .
If you know someone who is experiencing an
emotional crisis, call the Problem Talk Shop.
A traJned counselor will be at the other end
of the line. Ready to help. Ready to answer any
questions you may have.
Please make the call that will show her
somebody cares enough to listen.
(7l'f.) 997-1831
1110 E"ut Chapmln Avenue, Suite 109
O.ranp. Calllornla 92666
(7l'f.) 768-3831
25283 Cabot R<*I. Suite lOC
Lq\&na HW.. Oal1fqrnla 998&1
branchft of the 1overnment or
the public atrvl.ce corpora·
lions."
Similar column• appeared In
r.apers acros1 the country dur·
01 the ltzo1 and 11301. The
Houston Chronicle presented
the first phone.In column ln 1911.
and Cblca10'1 American
became the Rnt pa~r to ue the
name "Actioo Une • ln IMS. An
A11oclated Preti survey tn lt73
said that 186 of tbe m papers
queried began their column•
between 1166 and 1971. Today,
more than Z8S newspaper offer
action Uaes.
LOWER
PRICES!
900 Samples to Choose From!
Car~1 Brobrs and D11uibucor'
are dtlermintd co give you rhe
lowes1 1><>4Jible price on qualicy
name brand carper! You11 fuld
over 900 11mples of carptt and
14 ma!or brands in out
Lonfl Bnch 1howroom.
Costa Rica
Bars Vesco
From Return
SAN JOSE. Costa Rica <AP>
-President Rodrigo Carazo\has
fulfilled a m-.Jor campaign t>ro·
rnise lollowtng hls inauguraUon
and barred fugitive American
financier Robert Vesco from re·
turning to Costa R~ca .
Here's how we saw at'd
pau 1ho1e uv1np on tn (
you: 411
Vesco. wanted in the United
States on charges of e mbezzling
$224 million. left Costa Rica
April 30 for a business trip
around the Caribbean. his al·
torney said at the time. He 1s
believed to be on the island or
Grenada. off Venezuela
Ca razo made 01n election
pledge to kick Vesco out and
fulfilled 1t Monday at a session
of his Government Council of
nine cabinet ministers 1m·
mediately after he was sworn an
as Costa Ri ca's 36th president.
4332 ATLANTIC AVE.
LONG BEACH
3 blocks Nonh of c:..r-5'
(213) 597-3637
"Owned and optt1Ked by rhr W'tllbanlu family,
llttVMg ~ Soudmnd'• CIWpd needs kw 0¥tt jl yt'anw
You will
stop smoking
on Jane 16th
.• J( you~ SmokEnders now and follow our sua:essfuJ
progrmn. SmokEnder• will be a pleasant surprise. No
one at SmokEndera wU1 tell you to throw away your
dgarettes. or try to frighten you with talk of cancer. emDh~a and heart disease. We won't shock. you wtth awnlon therapy, either, or use hypnosis. What
we wdJ do la teach you how to stop easily. just as we
c:ld ounelws. SmokEnden ls a>mmitted to making the
quitting experience Interesting and truly rewarding.
Plan to llbrJ1d a FREE EXPCANATORY SESSION ...
and bring your cigarettes .•. by June 16th, you won·t
need them anymore.
FREE SEMINAR LOCATION SESSIONS STARTS (come to any one)
CoetaM•-Monday Mond•f Souttl Coatt Plaza Hotel M;f 1«1 ~ts Ml Anton Ii.cl. 7: pm r 7: pm
Weetmlaeter/H••tla•o• a-ell Mondaf Buffum• Monday
Wfftmlnster Mall May t °'I May15
8ofM A"·· at San Diego Frwy 7 pm 7pm
(Qutlt Room Rfftaurant)
Saa4'-• Caplnraao
Tundaf Women'• C1ub Tu.day S14GEJ~ M:z20tl M:z11 off Ian Diego rwy 7: pm 7: pm
H•atla~oa Beada Wednetda/ WMneedaf Humr= a.actt Inn M:lSot1 M;817 21112 acttlc Coaat Hwy 7: pm 7: pm
m•HIU. Wednetdac{ Wednetdat l.odge ~1«1 M:lt7 aMO de Valenclt 7· pm 7: pm
New~ ... cla Th&nday Thuraday N1~ Merriott Hotel M:& 4°'11 ";•• IOO rt C..... Drt.e 7: pm 7: pm .a..c .. Saturday 1atun1ar
lnnll>el Webb't Mayl0t1S llaflO 11 JaMbofMRoed 1oam 10am
21W Ventura II~ .• WOOdl•nd Hiiia. Cal. 91384
& .
• t ..
1 i
,
I
I
J 2 CWl Y PtlOT Tueedey, Mly I , 1178
Bis Stuclent Dro1Dfted
. .. .
CALIFORNIA I NATIONAL
Grape Pact Negotiated
Farm Worke184, 7 Growers Reach Accord
FRESNO <P> -The United
Farm Workers has annount'ed
that it reached contract agree·
ments with seven table grape
growers at Delano. where Cesar
Chavez began his battle to
represent field hands 13 years
ago.
The contracts are with
growers where a majority of
workers voted for UFW
representation during the first
weeks of California's historic
agricultural secret-ballot union
elections in 1975. They include
aQ agreement with M . Caratan.
where the UFW won its first ma·
jor victory in those elections
which were aimed at endmg
years of union-farmer strife.
"THIS MARKS THE first big
success in the UFW's drive to
recover grape contracts lost in
1973 when most Delano grape
growers signed with the
Teamsters after their UFW
agreements expired." union
spokesman Marc Grossman said
Nonday.
"The same Delano vineyards
were originally struck by the
U FW at the beginning of the 1965
Delano grape strike."
That 1965 strike and a later
boy~olt of table grapes launched
Chavez into national pro-
minence.
of $3.50 an hour. effective last
Friday, compared to the pre-
vious base of S3.1S Lo $3.25 an
hour at those ranches. he said.
The Delano pacts will cover
about 2,000 ,workers during fall
harvest.
Besides M. Caratan. the union
reached agreements with Tex-Cal Land Mana1ement Inc .•
Nick Canata. Nick Bozanlch.
olack Radovich. Jake Cesare and
Sam Barbie.
THE VFW AND Delano grape
growers signed a contract in
1970. but the growers refused to
renew it three years later.
charging that Chavez mis·
managed the UFW hiring hall
that ~upplled workers.
De lano's 29 table grape
growers signed with the
Teamsters in
1973. spurring
renewed
picketing that
led to 3.500
arrests or
UFW sup -
porters and
the shooting
death of one picket.
CMAVU c h a v e z
then suspended the strike but re·
newed the boycott. which he
ended this year on grounds that
the state's Agricultural Labor
Relations Act was working.
IN THE FIRST HOUR months
of voting in 1975, the state con·
ducted 400 ele<:Uons. The UFW
won most of the Individual ranch
elections and almost a majority
of the overall vote. bul the
Teamsters led In total victories
at Delano grape vineyards.
However. the Teamsters
withdrew from farm labor Or·
ganizihg last year.
Man Eschews .
Bad Habits,
Lives to '137'
BANGKOK, Thailand CAP> -
Daeng Wana.ko, who claims to
be 137 years old, says he's gottt>n
this far by eating two meals a
day and cutting out all smoking
and dr1nk1n g, the
English-language Bangkok
World newspaper reported.
Daeng lives alone in a small
house in northeastern Thailand.
receiving numerous people who
come to ask for his blessing.
Thais believes blessings from
the old will help them live a long
life.
Diving )nstructor Ronald Joyce collapses
on Pensacola c Fla.> beach as divers
recover the body of one of his students
from the Gulf of Mexico. The student
failed to return from the rough surf with
the rest of the class.
THE SEVEN DELANO con·
tracts will be signed in about a
week. Grossman said. The
agreements call for a base wage
That act was adopted in 1975
by the Legislature under pre-
ssu re from Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. to guarantee secret
ballot farm union elections.
Last month. the Bangkok
administration s ponsored a
contest to find the oldest person
in the country. A woman who
claimed to be 108 emerged the
winner. but Daeng apparently
had not put his claim forward.
Give her your heart
Trinket box in hand-
made crystal
measures 3x4"
reg. $25$20
china & glassware 126
-south coast plaza
for the sporty me: travel blouses
Give me cool, classic shirtsleeves-to go!
I can wear them with all my sport slacks.
Polyester pullover in white, red, peach or
navy, sizes 8 to 18 $16
misses sportswear 39 -south coast plaza
Why not please oil of me
with gifts as memorable
as lam?
for the charming me: 14K jewelry
When I'm really dressing the part I like
to accessorize with classic charms and
charmholders from F and R Creations.
a. oval with four charms $100
b. circle with three charms $75
c-. triangle with four charms $85
fashion jewelry 13 -south coast plaza
for the intimate me: camisole and tap
You'll love me when I slip into this softest
antique rose underset spiced with beige
lace. Flair camisole, sizes S-M-L $11
tap pant, sizes 5-6-7 $'
lingerie 28, 190 -may company south coast plaza
for the exciting me: Chloe
Give me an experience I
can enter into. Give me the
fragrance of Chloe.
Perfume in classic bacarrat
crystal. from 1250 to $120
cosmetics 163 •
may company touth coast plaza
.......___mother's day Is may 14th-----------------------~-------...................................... ~
er ·moQJallyQt30~Y.:unS?.fll pa ny
' 3333 brJatol st., 548-9321 -may co westmlnster. ~tmtnster mall golden west at san dlego fwy, 898-2521
reme.m
may co south coast plaza,
•
t
.,
• ' INSIDE: •Stocks •Business s ------·M_o_v_i•s_·_T•-•e_v•-s•o-"--------------~~------------..;;~i ftO,...tS Tu.day. M1y 9. 1978 DAILY PILOT ..r.. • ••
' I sun Tests Tougil. R~wdies
l It will be hther h1gh-sconng
foe for thl CalHorn1a S urf
t onight (7:30) at Anaheim
,
Stadium as the Anaheim-based
team entertains the Tampa Bay
Rowdies in a North American
• Soccer League game.
l The Surf moved to within four
t points of American Conference.
f Western Division leader San
•Diego with an overtime. 2·1 vie·
• tory Saturday night. San Diego t had scored at least three goals l in three games prior to the Surf
• outing. t The Rowdies. leaders in ~he
Eastern Div1s1on. have likt:wise
done well 10 scoring and are led
by some of the best attacking
talent in the league.
Striker Derek Smethurst has
~ored 57 goals in three seasons
and winger Steve Wegerle and
midfielder Rodney Marsh have
11 assists each.
Al Trost. one of the top players
to come out of the U.S.. scored
twice Saturday night. his first
goals of the current season. With
the aid of Danny Counce <two
assists>. they figure to beef up
the Surf attack.
Highlight or the Surf .season to
date has been the defensive
play. With Dave Jokerst in goal
and Peter Wall. Andy McBride.
Len Renery and Joe Clarke in
the defensive line. the team has
given up few goals and only one
team bas scored more than two.
Following tonight's game. the
Surf will host Stuttgart. West
Germany in an international
game Friday night at Anaheim
Stadium. Stuttgart is a first
division team from the Euro·
pean circuit. 1
NASL Western Division leader
San Diego is idle tonight so lt\e
Surf could wrest away the front
position with a victory.
The Surf will be facing a Tam-
pa Bay team hampered by in·
Juries. Smelhhurst is recovering
from a pulled hamstring muscle
while Wegerle suffered a con·
cussjon in the San Jose game 9n
Sunday.
Another top player ror the
Rowdies. Adrian Alston. bas ..
strained knee ligaments. He's a
veteran or the Australian World
Cup team.
Angels Bi~
For Carew;
, Face Tigers
DETROIT-Frank Tanana will
try to help the California Angels
extend their winning s treak to four games tonight as
he takes the mound here against
the Detroit Tigers.
Tanana will be seeking to
become major league baseban·s
first six· game winner of 1918. He
takes a 5· l record against 'Jim
Slaton <3· 11. ·
The two-game series 1n
Detroit beg10s a five·city trip for
An~bSlate
All 0-.,. ICMl"C lladle (11')
fonlgM •10.troH Sp m
WtO.,.\O•y IOI•
T 11ur\d•Y •t O.tr0tl Sp m
the Angels with stops also 10
Cleveland. Toronto. Chicago and
Milwaukee
With consistent pitchtng and
the s uddenly revitali:r.ed hitting.
Californi a has moved into
second place 10 the American
Ll·a~ue West. just two games off
th<' sizzling pace set by Oakland
Detty ............ ~ htrk* O'o-11
Uut i\ngl'ls owner Gene Autr)
1s apparently of the op101on that
then• b alwa)s room for 1m
pro\ ~ment. a nd he has reported·
ly made an offer for the ser vices
of Mmnesota star Rod Carew. PETER BENNETT (14) ANO SURF FACE TAMPA BAY AT ANAHEIM TONIGHT.
Waner's ·Hit No. 3,000
Got 'Two-inch Writeup'
Last year's MVP and balltng
champ has made public stale·
ments that he is dissatisfied with
the Twins and would like to
move on. citing New York.
Boston and California as ideal
s pots.
The New York Times said
Monday that California and the
Texas Rangers had made trade
offers for Carew.
Low Bridge
..... _
Bo:-.lon Red Sox· lkrnll' Cc.1rbo II 1 du('k~ lo tt\01d lhru"
from the Kc.1nsas· Cit' RO\ab· Fred Patek dunng tlw fir~l h<.flf of a doubt~ plciy :\londa~· nJJ!hl al Fen\\ :J\
Park Hoston won the j?amt·. 8·~
Oranges, Friars Vie
Evert Upset by Barker
The s trugg ling i\n1:1he1m
Oranges bring a disappointing
3·8 record into tonight's <7 JO 1
Wo rld Team Tennis match
agai n st San Diego at the
Anaheim Convention Center
Coach Cliff Drysd ale. who has
seen his Anaheim team lose
twice already lo San Diego's
Friars. plans a different
strategy, but he isn't tipping his
hat
"The fans are going to get a
s urprise tonight when they see
our hneup for the San Di ego
match." Drysdale says. "The
Friars have defeated us twice
and it's mostly my fault I think
wecanovercomethesatuatton ·~
for winners that Evert. suffering
a rare lops ided defeat. tried
desperately to hit he r returns to
the Briton's backhand
Barker's triumph put the Rae·
quets ahead 23· 17 with only the
mixed doubles to µlay
l11 e Nasla!>e and Ann
K1 yomura . playing f()r the
Strings. defeated Kristien Shaw
and Dean Marlin Jr .. 6·2 and
forced an overtime under the
WTT rule requiring the winning
team lowmthefinalgame
However. the Racquets won
the first overtime game.
Earlier. Nai;tase had managed
to cope with the powerful serve
of Butch Walle; and score a 7.5
victory in men's singles. OKLAHOMA CITY <AP>
Newi. item: "Cincinnati's Pete
Rose got his 3.000lh major
league hit Friday night and re·
cc1ved a 5-minute standing ova·
lion from 37 .823 hometown fans
in Riverside Stadium."
elusive club. And. yes. Lloyd
added. he remembered how 1t was
when Paul got his3.000th safety.
EXCEPT THERE WASN'T
much to remember.
··1t wasn't like it is now."
Then 1t was no big deal to Paul
or anyone else when he got No.
3.000?
"No. no ... Lloyd said. "They
hardly mentioned it. •
"To tell you the truth. I was
still with Pittsburgh and Paul
had gone to the Boston Red Sox
and I didn't 'ven know when
Callfom1a stirred from a long
batting slump over the weekend
with a three-game sweep over
the Cleveland Indians at
Anaheim Stadium.
Angel bats ripped 42 hits in the
three dates for a .393 average
but the Halos· opponent tonigl1t
has been among the top two hit·
ting clubs in the league for
weeks.
The Oranges have had two
days of rest s10ce they were
beaten. 31 -21 . 1n San Diego
Saturday
Meanwhile in Jockson. Miss.
Sue Barker used deva stating
forehand ground strokes to upset
Chris Evert 6·2 and lead the
Phoenix Racquets to a 26·23 v1c
tory over th e Los Angeles
Strings Monday n1~h\
Barker and S haw topped
Evert a nd K1 yomura 6·4 in
women's doubles. The Racque~
broke Evert's serve twice. in-•
e luding the final game.
The item was topped by a
huge headline and large picture.
And tacked onto the end of the
story was the list of the 12 others
who've surpassed the J,()()().hit
plateau. Among them was the
late Paul Waner with 3.152.
"Big Poison's" brother, Lloyd
"Little Poison" Waner, li ves in
Oklahoma City. Yes, he said.
he'd been following Rose's
progress toward joining the ex
Lloyd said with a laugh. "It was
hardly mentioned. He had about
a two-inch writeup in the paper.
"They 'put things on' now.
They used to not do those things.
Everything now 1s BIG ' Like we
d1dn 't have the All-Star game
and all that stuff back when I
played. They had ii the latter
part of my playing days. It start·
ed in 1935 or '36 and I started
playing in '27."
Mlisial's Forgotten
Record: 7,000 Outs
ATHENS, Ohio fAPl -Stan
Musial ranks as one of the
greatest performers in National
League history, a seven-lime
batting champion and a Hall of
Fame selection among other
things.
M us1al. now 57. pokes fun at
himself today.
"One record of mine few peo·
pie know about." said Musial at
a speaking engagement.
.. I had 3,630 hits and batted
11.000 times, but I hold the rec·
ord for making the most outs.
7.000. JC anybody can make 7,000
outs and get into the Hall of
Fame, everybody's got a
chance."
Musial, who retired in 1963.
eredit.a fellow Hall of Famer Ty
Cobb with giving him unusual
advice on extending his career
"Cobb told me he'd seen me
play that day and satd my legs
looked pretty good. He asked me
If I smoked or drank. I didn't
amoke. But occasionally I en·
Joyed a couple of drinks before
and arter dinner.
"He told me to try wine. I did
and damed if I didn't play five
more years."
The tousbest pitcher for hlm
to bil'>
·'Curl Simmons or tba
Phillies," Musial replied without
healtatioo.
Sim~ may bave been •an
exceptlOla The lert.-baqded hit·
tln1 Musial ta•ged other
southpaw pitchert well. lnclud-
lna lho 1reat Warren Spahn.
Mu1lal batted .314 and rapped
lC home runs off Spahn. "He
was the only batter I ever inlen·
tionally walked with the bases
loaded." the former Braves'
pitcher said of the St. Louis
Cardinals' hitting star.
Musial. from Donora. Pa .. re·
called -tie almost went to the
Universl\y of Pittsburgh on a
basketball scholarship. "I was a
pretty good basketball player. but
my firstlovewas baseball.
"I was only 17. The baseball
scout came to my home three
different times trying to sign
me. But my dad wanted me to
go to college. My dad reluctantly
gave in. It proved a blessing In
disguise." ·
l
DODGERS F.4CE
CARDS TONIGln'
LOS ANGELES -The
division-leading Los Angeles
Dodgers host the St. Louis,
Cardinals tonight lo open a
three-game series and a 12·
game homestand at Dodger
Stadium.
Doug Rau <4·0> wlll lry to
keep hls record perfect as· he
takes the mound 111tnat Erle
Raasmuuen <2 ·3>. The
Cardinals are 1truulln1 wlth ~
12· 14 retord, lodaed ln flttb
place In the National Leaaue
East. Tonlaht'a same c•n be
heard at 7:30 Oil KABC radJo 780.
The DoCtien h•ve been on the
road tor 1$ day; and alnce spring
training began Fob. 27. they've
been out ol thetr home town 58 ot
the 70days
'Paul got it myself. Somebody
showed me a writeup about it. ..
THERE WAS A STORY that
Paul was aware he was about to.
log No. 3,000 and wanted to get it
before the home fans in Boston -
and deliberately got himself
called out at first in a road game
by refusing to touch the bag.
What happened. Lloyd said.
was. "he got what he called a
·scr atch' h it. He thought it
should have been called an er·
ror. He wanted to get a good hit
to make 1t 3:000 so he had 'em
make itanerror.
"He motioned to 'em up in the
press box thatlt was ·no good'."
But if you think that Paul's
having logged 3.000 hits was a
big deal i n these native
Oklahoma brothers' rem·
iniscences. forget it.
·'He never did mention
anything about it.'' Lloyd said.
"There wasn't much made over
it. There wasn't anything made.
hardly. It was just in the paper
that he got his 3.000th hit and
that was it."
THEN PAUL GOT no 5-minute
ovation a la Rose' Laughing
again, Lloydsatd. "Oh, no!"
Asked what Paul considered
the most satlsrylng of his many
hittlng reats. Lloyd said, "He
always said, 'Just getting one
good hit lo help win the game is
bette~thanaolng4-for·4. •
Lloyd said he "dldn 't come
close" to 3,000, adding. "I got
2.458, I believe. l missed most of
two )'ears, once after getting
pneumonla ln the s prlng and
once with colitis. And Paul played
a couple or years more than I
did ...
But Uoyd wound up wllh a
lltettme battln1 averaae or .317
and in the Hall of Fame
alonttslde his brothar. And which
of his feats was the most satisfy. ing'>
"To tell you lhe tl'\lth ... ~
said, "I was more tt\rllled by the
first game I played in the 11\tijor
leagues than anything else.
"I broke tn ln •zr wit" the
Sft WAN ll, Paae B!
I
UK .t.,..eltt 16, ...,...,,. U
W°""tn 8.>r•tr IP I ~f Elftrl •·2. 8•<'-tf.
Shd* I Pt OPI Everl IC1vom1m,.~
Mf!n -Na\UI~ CLAI Gel W•ll\ f·S. W•ll\-8.ttl
4PI Oef 'ti. Atn'•"•• A Amr;tr•, .....
MtatO Na\I.,. IC•yomur• CLAI Oel sn.w.
M4trlon •·1
Detroit is also the only team to
beat the Angels in a series this
season. The Tigers swept two al
Anaheim May 2·3.
Barker rifled <\O m anv
forehands deep into the corners
or N•\le~ ICtyomurd CL.t.1 ael Ww
,....,,," 1 0
" , 000t\1•1n41lecl
Lasorda'sPysch Works
Hooron Motivat,ed by Dodger Manager
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Ol IM O.ilf l"le.t Si.ff
Burt Hooton 1s probably the strongest
booster of Los Angeles Dodgers manager
Tommy Lasorda among the players on the
current roster.
Aooton expressed his views on Lasorda
and a number or other things at an informal
gathering in Anaheim recently.
"Lasorda has done a great deal for a lot
or players." Hooton said. "He has taught
people how to win. He's a winner all the
way.··
In what way has he
motivated Hooton since he
was acquired from the Cubs
and Lasorda was a coach
under Walter Alston before
taking over as manager a
year ago·1
"I have tendencies to
think in a negative way."
Hooton explained. "He will
get me psyched up before a
game and I forget all about
other things and go out
there and want to kill
somebody ..
When he was with the
Cubs in Chicago's Wrigley
Field. he played under
three different managers.
Including Leo Durocher. ··Leo never said much
to me but he did a lot to
help me." Hooton said In
recalling his early days in
the majors. "He felt hlgh enough about me to put me
ln the rotaUon and leave me the~. That was
unlike lhe two managers who followed him.
"It lan't so much t.he park you play In as
the people you play tor. After Durocher left,
we were Ued to and told to do thlnts when
they were totally unexpected It la tous~ to do a Job when you don't know what your Job Is
-starti"' or being ln tbe bullpen or both.
"None of tht pltchln1 coaches In Chica10
helped like Red Adams does with thl'
Oodsera. Red will watch you throw and tell
you It you are doing woll. He Is down to earth
and 1£ you have a problem. he will sit down
il nd help you a nalyie 1t.
··A lot of coaches try to get you to pitch
hke they dld But you can't teach a new
machine to do what an old one does and it's
the same with pitching."
Hooton has had his troubles so far this
voar as far as his won-lost record is
concerned. He is 2·3 so far as the Dodgers
open a 12.game homestand against St. Louis
tonight.
Pitching 1s a mental
sjt uation a s well as a
physical one and Hooton is
the first to admit It.
"Sometimes I go into a
gam e a little teary and
other times I go out there
reeling nobody is going to
hit me. And it's easy to get
that little twinge of doubt
when you pitch against a
team like Cincinnati."
Hooton broke a Dodgers
record by winning 12'
straight In his first season
with the club in 1975. He
erased the names of Sandy
Koufax and Don Drysdale
from the list. each having
collected 11 straight in their
careers.
Is there any team that
gives you more trouble than
others?
"When I was with the
Cubs. you could put a
Houston Astros uniform on
anybody and J couldn't gel lhem out. I was
up for suggestions.
"But when I came to the Dodgers and put
a Los Anaeles unlform on, all of a sudden
they tan 'l touch me. And I'm throwing
exactly the same plteh l dld ln Cbka10.
"I clldn't win my tl~t 1ame in the Dome
until I was traded to the Dodaers -311'1 years
In the major leagues without a win over
tht!m ."
This was embarraasil'll to the native
CSee HOOl'ON, Pa1e 82)
•
l
' . fl2 OAllY Ptl.OT lU111Klay, Mey II. 18T8
Randle Tripled
On 4-and-2 Pitch
From AP Dllpatebt1
Wllt'n you're not hilting, you need all the help you can aet. And
l,.enny Randle of the New York Met.a . whose average was under
' .200. got some assistance from umplre Jobn
Kibler Friday night,
If you car. believe it. Randle tripled on• 4·2
pitch. Everyone in Philadelphia s Veterans
Stadium except Randle and Kibler thought that
Phillies reliever Tug McGraw had walked Ran·
die on a 3·2 pitch. Pitching coach Ray, JUp-
p elmeyer. charting pitches in the ~ugout.
turned to manager Danny Ozark and said.
"Hey. l haven't any more room in the ball col·
umn." Randle. who was traded from the Texas
._...1 iwtou... Rangers last year. then smashed the next pitch off
the left field wall for a triple.
"What did you want me to do, go out there and insist they send
. him to firstJbase?" asked Ozark. "If I knew he was going to hit a
triple. I'd have done it."
NHL PlaflOll• ae..,_e Toniglai
The Boston Bruins tangle with the host Philadelphia Flyers in
the fourth game or their best-of-seven National Hockey League
semifinal playoff series tonigbL
The Bruins won the first two games of the series in the Boston
Gardens and the Flyers reduced their deficit to 2·1 with a victory
at bome Sunday night. ·
It's a key game for Philadelphia, which does not want to go
back to Boston trailing 3· l.
Meanwhile, in Toronto, the Maple Leafs, down 3·0 in games in
their semifinal series against the Montreal Canadiens, lace elimlna·
lion tonight.
"It's been frustrating," says Leafs captain Darryl Sittler in
summary or the series to date. His frustration stems not only from
the team's poor showing against the Canad1ens, but also from the
shutout collar he and linemale Lanny McDonald are carrying in the
series
·"olan Ponders BcuefJall Future
Surgery worked before for Gary Nol~n -but t~e one· lime starter
for the Cincinnati Reds 1s a sore-armed pitcher again and now he won·
den; 1 f going under the knife is the right answer.
The 29-year·old right-hander has already missed the
t-quivalent or four seasons because or s houlder problems. After
missing most or the 1973 and 1974 seasons. he underwent surgery
and <'ame back to win 15 games in 1975 and 1976.
Now, the shoulder problems are back and
he is back home in Oroville. Calif. "I'd have to
say I'm kind of leaning away from the opera·
lion,·· he said in a telephone interview ... But
who knows? I may wake up in a couple of weeks
and say. 'The heck with it.• and go have it done
I'm going to try to decide whether to have
1t done by the end of the month. It's not a tough
operation. They just have to scrape the calcium
deposits off.··
The drawback is not the surgery. It 's the
months of rehabilita tion. "For 30 days. you 0.UY HOLAN
don't know if you can raise the arm up. let alone throw the ball. I
don't know if I want to go through the same ordeal again."
Nolan's last regular-season appearance was Sept. 18. 1977. for
California. He was 0-3 for the Angels last year after being traded
from the Reds in mid-June. He became a free agent at the end or
the season and spent part of this s pring in the Milwaukee Brewers'
~raining camp before the shoulder forced him to the bench.
Ebeaoh••re in Sport11 •••
COLLEGE BASEBALL -Oral Roberts University has been
selected as an at large team in the NCAA <Division 1' playoffs and
wall host the midwest regional May 26·29 at Tulsa. Former area
standouts Vince Bienek, Bill Springman and
Ron Meridith play for Oral Robe rts ...
Washington State will host USC in a best-of·
three series to determine the Paclfic-8 winner
May 20·21. USC is 42·7 overall whHe WSU has a
36-13 record. The winner will qualify for the
western regional playoffs ... Chapman College
or Orange has been picked to participate in the
NCAA <Division ti ) westem regionals. Chap-
man has a 36·20 record with three games remain·
ing this week.
VINCIE lllENllC
BASKETBALL -The University of San Francisco bas picked
up 7 -foot center Wallace Bryant, a higb school star from Gary.
Ind .... Bryant averaged 28 points and 18 rebounds a game last
season . Eddie Holbrook, basketball coach at Gardner-Webb,
was named coach at Furman Universlty in South Carolina Mon·
d av . . . Mike Gale, a 6-4 starting guard for the San Antonio Spurs
of the NBA. signed a contract Monday. Terms were not disclosed.
BASEBALi~ Jim Rice or the Boston Red Sox. who batted
.552 with four home runs and 15 RBI last week, was named the
American League player of the week ... Pete Rae, who collected
his 3,000t.h maJor league hit last Friday, was honored as the Na-
. t1onal League's top player ... Catcher Ray Foue, obtained by the
. Milwaukee Brewers last November as a free agent, is scheduled lo
· undergo surgery in Los Angeles Wednesday to repair torn
cartilage in the right knee. He'll be sidelined two or three months
. . Boston pitcher Luis Tlant pulled a hamstring muscle in Mon-
day mght's game with Kansas City and was forced to leave the
game. The inJury is not believed serious.
TENNIS -Paolo Bertoluccl and Adrtaao Panatta won the de·
c1sive doubles match as Italy beat visiting Chile, 2·1. in the open·
Ing round or the Nations, Cup tourney Monday. The pair beat
Patricia Corejo and Jaime Ftllol, 6-4, 6-4. Earlier Panatta defeated
F'illol, 6-3, 6·1 and Heinz GUclemelst.er upset Bertolaccl, 3·6, 6·3, 7·5.
Today the United States meets AustraHa .•. Martina Navratilova
of Boston. who twice defeated Cbrts Enrt last week. was named
the World Team Tennis player of the week. ..
FOOl'BAU.. -The Seattle Seahawb signed el1ht f~ a1ents
Monday, Including UCLA safety Fraak St.epbeu (6·2, •> and
USC's Howard Studard (6-4, 208> ... Despite losses oo tbe field,
the Green Bay Packen showed a net profit of $288,810 In 1977,
stockholders were told Monday.
GOLF -Tom Watson took over first place in PGA tour wln·
nings this year with $174,264 following ba victory in the Byron
Nelson Classic Sunday. Jack Nlcklau la second wtth 1171,990,
followed by HaHrt Greea, $142,860; Gary
Player, $142,333; Lon Hlnkle. $102,132; Hale
ltwln, $101,430 ; Lee Tre•lno, $93,W; BlU
Krauert, $81,800; Bill Ro1en, $79,07•; and Gll
Mor1aD, $70,554 ... a record 4,897 entries have
been received for the 78t.h U.S. ()pe8 cham·
pionsblp June ?!H8 at Cherry H!U• CC in
Englewood, Colo
OTHER SPORTS -A blll Pl'OS*ln1 that
i,be U.S. Olympic Committee be the national
coordinating body for all sport.a played ln th•
Olympic and Pan American gam• la exl>ffted .,_ WATIC*
to draw quick action in the House. It was pused unanimously by
the Senate Monday ... Ethelda Blel1Kre1, a swllnmer who won
three gold medals tn the 1920 Olymplca, died In Florida Saturday
al the an of 76 ... Meammad All b11 told the uae of b1a name to
I an intemation•I marketiq firm bued ln Saudi Arabia .•. Seit·
, tie saew. the ltn Tripi. Crown wtnner 1 ma., resume hb horM rac·
.• Ina career Sunday al Aq•uct Rae.track ln New York, accord·
lna to owner Mlcke7 Taylor ... Dtfendlna champion
Cttch01kwlkla edaed Sweden, 3·2, In a playoff m1teb of the World
Hockey Cbamplonlhtpa tn Praiue Monday.
,; f s,..,... .. ._.._,T..,..._
l BADIO: Tonilht -Anaeli at Detn>lt, 5 o'clock, XMPC C'710H
• St. UndlCardiDallatLoeAil..iti, 7:30, KABC C790), 1
'· TV: Tonlcht-Noevem~wtd.
•
MISCELLANY
Western Sprints. Ne~t for OCC
Orange Coast College's junior varsity eight s hell 1s
heade d for Los Ga~o~ in the Bay area Saturday etnd Sun·
d.ay f~r th~ pre~t1g1ous Western Sprints rowing cham·
p1ons h1p. 1 he Pirates will be looking to imorove upon
their fourth place finish Saturday in lhe Newport Regal·
ta. Also rowing at Los Gatos will be UC Irvine. which
won lhe P .A. Palme r Cup in the Newport Bay event.
Volleyball Playoffs Begin
CJF playoff volleyball ac·
lion begins tonight for seven
Orange Coast area teams. with
each billed for 7 o'clock starts.
In the area are m atches at
Estancia. Laguna Beach and
San Clemente. while Huntington
Beach, Irvine Higb, University
and Fountain Valley <at Estan-
cia> are on the road.
N e~port Harbor's Sunset
League champions draw a bye as one or the elimination·s
Stephenson
Quits Eating,
Wins Tourney
HILTON HEAD ISLAND.SC
(AP > -Five pieces of toast with
peanut butter and ri ve strokes
under par have worked wonders
for Jan Stephenson.
The blonde Australian won the
third annual Women's Interna·
t1onal golf tournament Monday
and picked up $12.000 by coming
in with a 72-hole total or 283.
That was four strokes better
than amateur Beth Daniel was
able to score over the Devil's
E lbow course at Moss Creek
Plantation.
We aring a green T-shirt pro·
claiming. ''I'm on a diet." the
already-svelte Stephenson said
she deliberately gave up a heavy
breakfast in hopes that it would
help her game. Maybe It did. but
she still came perilously close to
losing the tournament to Daniel.
the current women's amateur
champion from Charleston. S.C.
Daniel also had a 74. two over
par. in the final round and ended
up rour stroke s behind
Stephenson. But Dame! was only
one stroke away from catching up
after Stephenson bogied three
holes.
However, Daniel bogied the
12th hole and Stephenson sank a
lS·fool puU for her first and only
birdie on the lSth to move out of
danger. Daniel had four bogeys
and 2 birdies tor a four· round total
of287.
Daniel . 21. a Furman
University senior who wlll turn
pro in the fall, sAld she thought
she could have won the tourna·
ment and was more ''dlsappolnt·
ed than hapov" that she came in
second.
,.,,.., K-'"thew-·• lntffnati-1 Golf
To.irMm.fll el HlllOJI ..._ ltl...0 wllll l'l'IO/lty
won
Jan SI..,._. $11,000
• hlll Ollftle! DoflM Ceponl Y'*'Q. "-»l
Pem HloglM,,..JJ3 ~,PY4&.14.JJ3 JeM Blel«k. '3,433
JllCly Aen•lft. '3,Ul
1<1111y PolU-111. ta.W
S.lly Lltlle, Jl,916 Belly lurNlllClt, Sl,916
Mlc••Y Wright, $1.•7'
NIMJ ~r. $1,tl•
A"'Y Alcott, $1,91• O.llOM Avttln.tl.100 Jerilyn anu, $1,200 -..11~•m L.evr•leuet\"2J
S.Mlrl PlllNf, ittt ~~~~.fl,'22
O.bl>MMHMy.t.s
C.rol MIM, $IOS
Pet Ir.Oley, '1JO
ic.t11rA11Wn.mo 1et11si-,tno SIMI Ben•e«lnl, '610
Mery Miit.. WO
~-1-
... ,, ..... ,4-21)
1 .... 11·1'-31 11-14-12-11-al
70-10-7~1')-al
1~, ..... ,,_.
l).7>-72..._ .. ,,.....,,.,2-M , .. ,, .... ,,-at
14·11·11-69-2'1
7H7-704t-2'1
n·1H~I
12-13-12-1•-1'11
,,....,..,~1
'"'"'~'~ 1MS.11·1S-n7 ,. ..... ,._,,_,., ,,.,,.1 .. n-m
1 .. 1 .. 11.n -m IHHH>-m 1 .. 1J.1o.14-ltl
"·10.7"1'"""4 ,,.,,.,,.,,~
,,...,.n.n~ rs.11.r .. n-m
1Ht-7t-71-4'S
11 IH)-13-3
n .1s.1 .. 15-lt6
seeded entries. thus the Sailors
await the second round Friday
night.
At Estancia the host Eagles.
co-champs in the Orange County
League. collide with the Sunset
League's No,_3 entry-.Fountain
Valley.
South Coast League champion
Laguna Beach, the defending
CIF champion, plays host to
Temple City. The Artists of
JIMGMUR
Coach of the Year
Laguna Beach will be without
All·CIF star Jamie Plummer,
who broke his ankle recently.
As ide from the Estancia-
Fou ntain Valley collision.
tonaght"s menu includes Hunt·
angton Beach at Riverside Poly.
Irvine a t South Pasad e na ,
University at Los Altos <Hacien·
da Heights>. Workman <City of
Industry 1 at San Clemente and
the Tem~le City at Laguna
Beach
DALE BOUCHER
Most Valuable Player
Mesa's Boucher
Tops All-loop Nine
Costa Mesa High's champion
Mustangs grabbed most valua·
ble player and coach of the year
laure ls on the All·South Coast
League baseball selections as
picked by the Daily Pilot
Da le Bouche r . a versatile
pitcher with a knack for produc-
ing when games were on the
line, is the circuit's most valua·
ble player after leading his team
to the crown with a 10·4 record.
The versatile Boucher had a 6·2
won·loss record on the mound
and he also came through with
so me timely hilting. The
Mustang pitcher had only 19 at
bats. but produced eight hits and
eight RB1, and if he wasn't scor·
Ing the tying or winning run. he
was knocking ln the tying or
winning marker.
Coach of the year is Jin.
Gmur. who rallied his team
from an 0-6 non· league record to
edge several others In the
tightly·knlt loop. which included
three 4·3 victortes.
JC Net Results
SOUTH••N CAL TaAM TOU•NIY (Al hit LA CilU-1 ,. ..........
LA,._ O~l 11~1 Or_,. CNM .......
JoMtOfl IPIWI ....,.,.1, .. 2,t·I; 8elle IPI WI
TelMI .. ,, W; llenoll CPI Clef M<OoNlcl .. ,, .. 1,
Kerri• IOI Clef 1.HlwY M . • i 1 Ooldm.,, CPI Clef Aellll .... 2.._ .. 2; tAmerl IP) Oii Mot!Ofl t·7 ..... .. ,
~ ll•tt·Banall CPI Clfl ~fy.fO"'ll .. s, M , J«lflMn·~Y .,, NI Mlttoll Smltll .. ,_ ...0. •.-.swedllllf IOltllCIOtl411Nn•UITWltl 7• ••
A"·s...t!o CN•l u-........
Fl"ITeam .... "''•Yff, tdloOI Cl M.lr1t P-Cerl Binder, El Toro \t 4-<I
P -D•ll' Boucher, C:0.14 Mew Sr .. 1
C Ci.aroo -·· Co>IA Me•• !or 2w 18-Sttve Tlllft. Un1wr .. 1v ~r JI~
18-D<l•l' (;eflllle. UnlW ... IY \t 110
JB-Joe Mull, Un1wr\th Sr 2"
SS Ed Mct.enn. Min-V1t'10 !or 4U OF-Muk MerU.-.. Cor-oet Mu <.t 1t6
Of Pell' Owt~I• Et Toro Sr J41
OF -Sten WycMt, Sen Cle,.,,.nl~ Sr lAi
OH Andy Mur-o. Unl,..r\llY St .J7'
UI Jell Hudcllftton, El Toro Sr •·J
Sec-Tffm
P C nrl• Arr.,_, CorOfl.a elel M•r Y • l c -Mlkt Brooli•. o.n. Hiii• Jr •• ,
•B t•n GetOttWOOd. l.tQUN Bel<ll !>< .JIS Int Jolln MelllOfl. Corona Clef Mer jr .n>
IM Kvrt 8--lstH, Coslt Mew 5' 176
1111 J~fl N.wton. Mt"-V1eio Sr M
lnl Jim Rt<N""°1. UQUN Butll 5' l33
OF-C1>r1s .Jollnslon, Corat\e 0.1 M•r jr )'IS
OF-Dick Jeflen., Dane Hiii• Sr .1'9
OF-JoM 8ry..,t, El Toro Jt lJJ
OH-Joe S..ley, Cost• Mew \t. .l'IS
Ul-Bruce K•I&. MIHIOJI Vle10 Sr .173
f'ro•P~BI
HOOTON •..
Texan who grew up in Corpus
Christi where he started playing
ball with a Cub S<'OUt team and
later was an "JI.American at the
University of texas.
His stock in trade is a knuckle
curve and he is the first. if not
the only major league pitcher to
throw this pitch.
"I tbrow it with my knuckles
down on the ball. not with the
Cln1ers dug into the seams like
Charlie Hough does. I learned
1t when l was a kid when I tried
to throw a knuckleboll and that's
how 1t came out. ..
CAIM Tops Tennis Pairings
Corona del Mar Hl1h will open
defense of Ill CIF 4·A tennis
crown Friday wJth a home
match a1atn1t Huntington
Beach Tbe lalenl·laden Sea
Kln11 are 1eeded first ind a
aolld pick CA> repeat. .a
Also drawtna a home mcch
for tbo CIF lint·round playoff
w11 Newport Harbor. whlclt wlll
hoet Lona Bucb Poly on Frida)'.
The 8aUon have been Hflded ln
a bracket oppoelw Cotooa del
Mar. creatlna the poalbUlty oC a
1bowdown betweeD lbi>a• lwo
~
Orange Coast area powers In the
finals.
On the road Frid1y will be
Marina Hlth <at Troy >.
Unlvenlty <at Rollins HUis > and
Estancia <al Sunny Hiila >.
In the 3·A bracket, Mater Del
hes also drawn a road assign· .man . TM Monarch• will visit
San Mart.no HJ&h ln P111dena.
~II playoff match 1 ere ten·
tatlvety1chedwed for3p.m .• with
final dctermlnaUon to be madt by
lhe schoOll mvOl ved. •
•·A M11atl...,... leKll et c.r-WI Meri .. ...,1,
Hot\ at ll~r; LOwell II Loa A1-10o
1...,. ltK11 Mllllken II lur~. ,..._., "'••II •I Mir-...., MlftM al rr..,, P•.-.e et Sefll• ....... 1.1111__, et lt .. 11"' Hlllt .....
MaftM 11 ~ 0.11•, Cy'"'U e4 Lotlel
IHtll Wll-. htlll<ll It t.-y Mlllt, 0..
P11UIH •I ~ G•nw1e1, •11rU11• ..... O.~l•I a...~ .. et ....Wll, lent IH<n
llotyatM ...... ....W.
a.A Mal~ ... el ,_.. ..,.._...,., Lft Am19" et
Cllll\I, W•I fllf~ ,. (Hllr; Mont•Mo et
llltllllll, toll\11 Mllll •t HOOtltt; tcftWf el u,..U. a.o ~At Pell'nllolle, lellUI hr· ••110 •I ,..., ltlwr~IW. Wll-HH~
l'flltM.-al A"'!~-e4 ... ..._, ~ a,tl~t .i Cl • c.tll~le el 11;.-l.; ~ .. Y Mir .... l.e ~It LM Allll6;
Anltl-Velteyet wtllttltr; ueieMlei uGulfM
I
f'ro•Pagt-81
WANER •••
Pirates and we played at Cincin
nati in old Crosby t~ield. Ot
course. they had a ball park
fill ed and ropes around the out·
fi e ld . That was t he biggt:st
crowd I ever saw in my hfe
m aybe 35,000 -and. good gosh.
almighty. here I was starting
the ball game.
"It ended up I made a catch in
left field to save two runs and
tben got a base hit and Paul hit
me m and I scored the winning
run We beat 'em 2·J. I was pret·
ty we ll pleased. And it happened
to be against Pete Donahue. who
was the leading pitcher 1n the
National League the year
before.
··Then we go to Pittsburgh the
next day to open with Ci ncinnati
and Dolph Lugue was the
pat<'her He was· considered one or th~ b~ller pitcher<; tn the
lea~ue . too
"You know. it happened the
samt· blooming way. In about
the l'ls;!hth inning I made a run-
ning catch tn left center. jump·
in~ against the fence with the
ba:.e" loaded Paul had doubled
me in from first ba'>c and we
"on that game by one
"When the game was nvcr. I
couldn't hardly ~et m from left
field The fans i.warmcd the
field Sonw kid stole my glove
and some kid got my hat Hut I
got ·cm ba<'k through new'ipaper
stor1t·::.
"Thill wasquate J thrall to me "
me
Sunset Loop
Tennis Results
s-s.t u...,. tt>divldoul
T ..... ,T-p.tNe-tH•,..,
Siltfl .. (ff"I ,....,.. )
(
Gor•CI• INHI °"' Franco IWI •·I. •.O. r.nv IFVI IOSI 10 Fullbrlqlll IWMI 1s •• 1; Foy IMI
Clef LH Cf'VI ..... Cletaull, Jolln\On IHBI IOSI lo
W••••r IWI ~. 6-l . F""" (Et""' Voun9 (Wt M . 6·1. Ptrouml.,, INHl dl'I Demuth IEI •-O • ..0
Hemllton IFVI O.f Wiii IM I I S • l . l(Hfpr IMI
<Ml Pooley IHBl '"°· '"°· Hollencl INHI -F Ptroum•an (NHI lt-l, •.O Pu<~tll IMI .,., Ftll
!W I 6 l ,. FeOcle<ly IH81 oel 01\0n <El .. l •
• J s ......... IWI Ott M1cu1wn IEI • 2, .. 1.
Hamm ti IFVI oet BOftla IH8 I ti l. • 1 Berrie IE I def,,.,. (Ml ,,_., 1 S, S119ull"" IF-VI Clef VHOt·
leull • o. Mou1.moulft (WllMllO 0.mPWv (NHI
6-0, • I '
$1f1111ts IMCltll!I ,_,,,,
G•ac•a INHI ""' Fullbright IWI • 0, ....
Wtlkt1 IWI def Foy IMI 2-4. •.O. 1 S, F•rlh IE 1
()el Ptrnum• .... (NHI 16. 6.J, 6 l, KHltr !NII c»t
Hem•llon IFVI ...... ,, liolland INHI Oii Pu<k.911
IMI • 1 •I, ShermtS IWI def Fedderly IHlll .. I, oetaull ..,.,..,.,., IFVI Off Barrie IEI, O...-v
!NH) oel Wcju.lan IFVI .-0. •-O
°"""'" '""' -' Selu•r Phttllp\ IE I dfl Rey.,.r9.0 eWllclf
INH I > •. •·l,. I, HiudlnQ•ICOSll IWI del
JOlln,lon S<....,,.n IHBI .. J, ""'• IC01tn•·IC•ern•
INHI del T1llohon°Clllton IM> .. J, &·1. Ete""'
Pigeon (Ml clft Hellman-lee IH81 lt-0. •·i:
81tlCker·OttMOll INHI oel Lton.,O·Ceml>etl IEI
6 o. • 1. V•~r Sllv.tr <FV> def Davis Nu-
IE I • l . ""°· Fr..,,c;ll-Bernerd IHBI Cl<tf Dunlap. Mt f•rl•no (WI • J ..... S.•ton·S.• .. (Ml Ml
ICtnclrO MtddO<l\ IFVI .. 1 t 1
All-LA .. W JPdcl l>f'-y INHI . Mlk• Oracle INH I.
Cl>u<k Bl•IC~•· (NHI, Owl• O.Moll CNH I. Rte'
ICHltr IMI. Kt>,,ln Bttflarcl IH81 Eric Holl-
INHI. HeruMtl S""rml• IWI. Tom Y•'9er
IFVI, Ot<kS..1.u•r IE>.
Oolllllft
M•rk l>~••on IMI, '>COii S.IM IMI. NW•k H•rd-
•llQ (WI, JOl' 'IOllM INHI. Jc)ltl PhtlllD' (El, Run
P•Qeon IMI O..rton Elem IMI, Merk Jolln-.
IH81
N~er Captures
Capo Tennis Title
Larry Nagler captured the
men's 35 s ingles crown with a
6·4. 6·2 decision Sunday in the
fina ls of the Prince te nnis
tournament over Alan Roberts
at the Capistrano Racquet Club.
Sunday'& chumpaonshlp re·
suits: Mell'• Si"'let 'lllllt U -Lam IU91er def, Al.,, 11"8rtt ._., • 1.
•!. 8oCI ........ O.f Freel Hetttl, I !., W .. 1
Ml-Ed ll;awdtr def '""'' H<*Nrd, .. 1. 1 .. , U Art GreyCllll dtl Oeve Martlfl, M , M . .._ eoe G<ll-.•Y Clef .. Hiii. '· , I •• 1. t)-..lafln Fe1111<e def O!Otll SWN!OflM, I-!. ,,... •• OMMet ...... 1.
U -L.ff<ll •Iii.< Otf Out-tl••· .... IUlltta.. M .
..2. 0 0.Yl .. ~Otf. ltl-Mel!llffH,..a.
1 t ._., *'""" 111••1• a> CM,._ Hll-.nd ~I P•t McCllllM ._,,
""' .O--tfomle v .. 1 Otf ""'""" '\tr•,. ,.., .. ._ l .: ~-ll'tlplht '411t ••• ,_, twl , •• w. ...... .,......,. ... 1.
tt-Ho_. Mltlll-_. Adltt•lttaw t-4.
t i .... ~ ... flit• ·..!
U Jtftfl eM ~ HlllfftllNflt 4'tf ... , '°'' llld ""' --, ............ Oil ...... .,. ... . 1111111 .. r .. , ••urMry lrt•n •M OMte'•'
YeMllley .... M.
I\
•
(
MISCELLANY Tue6day. May 9 1978 OAIL Y PILO r 8;J
What's Doing
Outdoors
JIM NIEMIEC
Salt water angling has been off aod on depend·
Ing on the weather. During sunny days good
catches of bass. bonito, mackerel and barracuda
are beil\i made by sportfishen running out of
nearby ports.
• In San Diego, Fisherman's Landing reports
that the yellows are still in the area. but the bate
bas slowed down during the past couple of days.
All sport ftsbing sklppen anticipate good fishing in
May.
Rock cod are stiJJ producing the most fish for
anglers on a weekly basis as our shallow and deep
water reefs are loaded with fish. The bait situation
continues to improve and should cauf'e no
hardships on fishermen or pnvate sportfishers this
season.
There are some big yellowtail being caught at
the outer islands. but they can nol be considered
consistent biters. The harries that have been taken
or anchovies at Catalina have been in the log
class, and It's nice to see them coming back. A fair
bite on small yellows is going on at the Rocky
Point area, for those anglers who rtsh out of Pedro
and Redondo.
Cold and wet weather greeted most fresh
water anglers last weekend as they fished the
~treams and lakes of the high country over open-
ing weekend of the inland trout season. Fishing
was good for those who could put up with the
weather and many limits were taken at most popular spol.s.
Early in the season bail is most productive for
trout when the water temp is cold. but lu.ees like
the Luhr Jensen are extremely good during the
month of May. Later on trout will go for flies, hot
shots. fishbacks and flatfish trolled slowly. Dave
Davis rigs with flashers and big gobbs of worms
also are very effective for larger fi sh during the
first months or the season.
Big Bear lake is very good for trout in the one
to two-pound class. with cheese. Zeke's, salmon
eggs and worm rigs getting easy limits. The lake
is very high and there are no weed conditions to
contend with yet at Big Bear. Bass fishing is start-
ing to come alive but they are running on the small
side hitting good on Rebels and Rapala~ worked
slowly just under the surface when the wind
doesn't blow.
a.a l'UM•9 Is c..Ntettt
Bass fishing bas been very good at all
Southem California lakes. The San Diego city
lakes are ~slst.ently giving up nice catches or
lar&emoutbs in the lbree to eight.pound class.
Henshaw is red bot right now and is expected to
remain so for lbe next couple of weeks.
Orange County angler Fred Borders bagged a
pair of bass at Henshaw this past weekend on pur.
pie worms. One bit lbe scales at eight pounds,
lbree ounces whJle the second topped the six.pound
mark. CasU.as and Cacbuma are slowing down,
mostly due to bad wealber. Siiverwood, Perris and
Vail are good for all varieties.
Some big catflBb are also coming out or Lower
Otay Lake. One couple flab.lag with mudsuckers
took home a doable limit of cban.nel catnsb that
totaled more lb.an 175 poands. Cata are also active
at Irvine, Sherwood, La'una Niguel and Poway. • .,,,s..., ......... ,. ....
Some nice catches or bass have been coming
out or Newport Bay recently. especially from
a r o und the Balboa Pavil ion. Mike Groz.
spokesman for Davey's Locker in Balboa. reports
that strippers in the 16 to 18 inch class are hitting
around the bay bridge with an occasional bass
taken in excess of 15 pounds. Both skiff and dock
anglers are doing well in the bay.
The croaker run has not developed yet . in fact.
1t is very late. Usually by mid-April good catches
are being made all over the harbor. Barred perch
and corbina are hitting in the surf at most spots
that have produced in the past. One or my favorite
stretches or beach is the area between 14th and
17th streets. Fished on the incoming and outgoing
tides, this area is very good for both species using
soft shells or cured mussels. This is a very produc-
tive time to surf fish as summer crowds are not in
the way
/fl~ l'uW-. l•p,...,~•
Marlin and dolphin are slartlnl t.o show in bet·
ter numben around Raocbo Bueaa VI.st• waters.
accordblg t.o anglen returnlng from the area. Fish-
ing 11 far better on lbe east side of Baja than It Is
rtgbt on the Cape. Look to good flsblnl to remain
iDlO July this year, mostly due to the late start.
It lt'asn't BasefJall \t·eatlaer
Two plump fans wait under an umbrella
for the start of the Toronto Blue Jays·
Oakland A's baseball game in Toronto.
While this pair took up nearly four seats.
most parks around the maJOr leagues were
empty Monday night as five games wt-re
postponed due to ram. including this one tn
Toronto
USC a Mystery Team
'\ ,
Trojans to Have Wide-open Attack
LOS ANGELES tAPI -
Southern California football
Coach John Robinson. whose
team wrapped up s pring drills
last week, predicts the 1978 col-
lege football season is going to
be an exciting one in many
ways.
For one thing, Robinson is
looking to the Trojans going to
Tempe, Ariz .. to play Arllona
State. The Sun Devils, along
with the University of Arizona
Wildcats. become new members
of the Pacific·8 -thus Pacific-JO
-this fall.
THE COACH ALSO SAID he ex·
peels use to having a wide-Open.
high.scoring team. although he
added he wasn't certain how long
it would take the Troj ans to Jell.
And Robinson, a football fan
as well as coach. said he·s look·
ing forward lo the season in
general. because he believes
there wall be many exciting col·
lege teams in the country this
fall.
Talking about the conference
newcomers. Robinson said the
addition of Arizona State and
Arizona was definitely a plus.
"WE'RE GOING TO GO into
Tempe and there'll be a sellout
crowd and electricity in the air."
he said. "Our fans are already
complaining that they can't get
tickets to the game. All that·s
good for us and for the con-
ference ..
Robinson added t hat he
believed the Pac· 10 will be the
strongest conference in the na-
tion next year. with the Sun
Devils and Wildcats contributing
to the balance and strength.
Although Robinson said the
Pro Soccer Standings
AMl•ICAM SOCCI• LIAOUE Centr•I 0tYtll .. EASTERN DIVISION w L T G' GA ... "'' lut\.4 ~ J ,, • ll .,
l ll • 17 3' NV Eagle-7 0 l J 1 J IS IJ•ll•• • l ) • 1 . ,.
I ndl •n•pol I\ I l I J • J 10 Mtnnt..oi. 7 ~ • n . ,.
Cono.ctttut ' 7 0 7 7 7 I Color•do
NV Apollo I 0 0 ' 0 I • Wttlttn OIV11iofl
Clevel•nd I I 0 , 7 , • VancOU¥fH s 7 17 • ,, .,
New Jerwy 0 , 0 0 ' 0 0 Portland • • I] ,. 13 J1
w1n111M DIVISION ~'""~ • l 10 1 10 34
LM AnQelH 1 , 0 l I) LO\A~IH ' s 1 ,, • 11
C•llfornl• I I , • ,, AMllllCAN COH,HllHCI
S.Ocr•mtnto ' 1 0 1 1 IHl9"9 Otvllloll
Soutl\trn C.. 0 ' ' 1 J I l Tampa B•Y J 1 " ll II ,.
Five PO'"'' •warCleCI le><• vl<lorv; Two llOlt•I\ Phtl•delplua ) l a " 8 26
Forl Lt~r04 J • 10 ,. 10 2~ •••~ for• lie; -tionu• point 10< HCll 90tl New Englend l 7 I ( • 7• KClnd UP IC • mulMVm ot three r-r IHm per C.11trt1 01 .. bi ... Q"me O.tro1t • 7 • • • l3 S~y'1Scort Hou\t°" • l. • " • 11 CotiMCllCul t , lndlMl.tpoll\ 0 Mcmon1• 0 • • IS • • TonlglW'I Matcllff Ch1C•QO 0 1 J IS J ) No m•t<ht\KN<lultd Winlern Dlvltlell
NORTH AMl•ICAN Sin Dttgo s ) ,. u 1JU
socatt LaAOUE Ca1tforn1• $ ) • 10 ~,.
HA TIONAL CX>Nf'attEHCE S•n Jo" • • " " 10 lC
lffteno Ol¥11H9 O•kl•r><I • ' 1 I I JI
w LGl'OA '""'" S•• l)Otnl\ ..... ro.d IO< V•CIO<Y, ont -point
(O\mO\ • 0 19 , IJ .. •w•r~d for Hell QOtl sce><ftl uo lo • m .. 1mum
Wa\n1no1on • ' 1l 4 " .. of 111rtte rwr tNm per Qt,,....
kO<l\@SIW 7 J 1 • 1 "
TonltM'IMalCllM
TOf"t'tf'lltO 1 • • 7 4 10 Tempe a.vat C.llle><n1t
Trojans will be a mystery team
until some of their less ex -
perienced players are tested. he
indicated USC could field an out
~la nding squad.
"I think wc have excellent
talent. .. he said. "but we really
won •t know what kand or a team
we're gomg to have until we se<>
some or the younger players an
action. orrens1vely. we have the
potential to be even more pro-
duct1 ve than last year. when we
rolled up school record yardage
but were hurt by rumbles and in·
terceptions."
THE TROJANS WILL HAVE
Charles White back at tailback.
with the hard·running Lynn Cain
at fu II back Tbei r offens1 ve
fortunes depend. however. on
Paul Mc Donald. an untested
junior quarterback. Defensively. use will return seven starters.
and apparentJy will be at least as
strong as last year. when the Tro·
1ans wereS.4 and finished No. 13 m
the college rankings.
Robinson said spring practice
was not as productive as he'd
hoped. mostly because mJwies
and class conructs made man~
players \Ulavailable.
Antic1pat1ng this fall 1n
general. Robinson remarked he
ex pects lo see a lot of changes in
many teams.
"I think passing has become
much more of a factor in college
football," he said. "and I expect
to see more versatile teams this
season.
"The wishbone was 'the of-
fense· at one lime, aod then the
veer. but teams have slowly
figured out how to stop those of.
fenses. so a blend is the only
way to keep today's defenses
guessing. That makes for good.
exciting football ...
'78
ZEPHYR
LEASE FOR
Baseball Starldings #
Coast Area Sports Calendar .........
Ttnn11-onl"'1'llty ot San Oltoo •t
UC trvlnt U p.m. I.
Olrlt '""'mm;~s.n Cltmtntt at O.na Hillt, El Te><O•I MlulOn Vlt10.
U9Un.t llNcll ac Un1wn1tv. ~oe1 Mat at Cost-. MeU ltll ti J ISi. AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct. GB
17 6 .739
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Dlvlslon
W L Pct. GB
Philadelphia 14 8 .636
Gir1s sol-1-<olta Mew ti San
Clemente. CorOIW Oil Mar at MIUIOn
llltjO, D•nt Hiiis at El TMO, Ktlella
at cap11t•-va11ey 1•11 •l J. u1 'nlwMay
Tennls-Soutllttn C.lllorni• JC
Olrf\ beclm4nlon-Corona CMI M4ir
•t Minion vi.io, El foro at Cost• Mesa, Lavuna llM<h ., D•n• Hill\
lall ttl IS).
Two-dog Meet ...
Drag Racers
Vie at OCIR
Don Prudhomme. the three time World Funny
Car champion, will be competing at lhe National
Hot Rod Association Winternationals Winston
World Series at Orange County International
Racewa:v Friday and Saturday. Prudhomme, who
recently relinquished his point margin to 81lly
Meyers, as drag racing's all-
ti me w1nn1ngest driver and
has current No. 2 standing in
the field to Meyer marks only
the second lime in rour years
that the 36·year·old veteran has
not led the Funf\¥ Car pomt
standings
Among the r1eld that
Prudhomme must contend with
is Winternalionals c hampion
Kelly Brown. who has returned OOH ~•uOHOMM1
to drag racing after a five-year layoff and stag-
gered the drag racmg world by upsetting the field •
in Top Fuel to claim his first NHRA national event
title.
Among the top challengers are Tom McEwen
of Fountain Valley. John Lomardo. Pat Foster.
John Collins. Dave Hough and defending
Southwest champion Jake Johnston of Long
Beach
McEwen leads this list as a sax-time national
champion. while Lombardo was the winner of the
opening event of 1978 at Orange County Interna-
tional Raceway. and was fourth m world standings
for 1977
Foster recently captured the 64 FLlllny Car
event at theOCIR facility. ..
Collins wall be an his all-new Fireb1rd
Trans·Am
In the Top Fuel field is Gary Beck of El Toro.
who has won a pair of titles recently.
Qualifying is set for Friday and Saturday with
final ehm1nat1ons billed for 6 o'clock Saturday
t-vemng
Women's Golf
'#OMl!:N'S~F
llANCHO SAM JOAOUIN CC
lf'•\t Potl\ f ournamf"nt A
.. ltqllt-1 Ginn" s1aoo. H . l(a.,
Mdv 11 B Flight-I M•'Q~ lluchllot1. 1' l M .. ,,,.. Slr.<kl•no ll C Fl1QM I O.tty S.•erwn. Jl, 7 lt'*I B.,b<l<t Srntll\, lletly V•UQIWtn. J3 0 Fllqht-1 ft,.. Elmo,.., 34
P•rtner' R•••Y I Tina Elmo'"· Phil Goe-. &1''7 1 lt•PI C.ro1vn
W•IDnOgp M••v•I BrtOhl Sue Ewers. lletly S.•Pn<>n, 66 • Aila
Rttnh<Md. Gonny !.•r.~o. ''. S G•nnv
Bonk. '°"""' e.r,,..11. .. • K•Y May Jan• J«kton sq 7 At• of 1111 ,_,,,. !Ur Wt a Smlfh.
LAGUMAaEACH
T & F Toum.menl A Flo(lflt-•
tt1,.t H,..tpn Cotti"' M•OQ•f' W•te-rnan . .,. • ., 8 FllQlll I ~uln
l•Porte, lS1>. 7 Pat Gul•<k. H > C
Fl09111 -I G<nny 0..al•. 1'''>. 1 B•lh• TPtehOUI, 7•
Field St<Oll~ A ~hQhl-1 MaC)(I•@
W•t••m•n. Cl''" 7 Marine ~ .. u
mont. "'"· ), Helltfl O<exellll'>, "''' B FhQhl-1 JH,.. At>a1o•n. CO. 1 L•I ~rh ... C Fl'911t-I V~•e Q\rt\
"""wn . .,...,, 1 c,...,,,. Be••• ~··•
HEW"°•T 00\." AS.SOCIATIOM LOW GrO'o\, L-Net TOUfnam""I A fl1Qhl IG;c>MI I MM99 Wtll\On,
16. 1 ll1PI Irene Sturm. K•lny
Softball
Results
vanity
H!Mt. llN<" ltl fll N--t
Hunfington Be•<h -L•llmf'r ••.
6 1.J.4: wennen. 11. •1·10, Mana.
]b, ).1.1 1. C:o1•rn•n, <I, J.00-0 .
Hino. P. 3.1 I I. H•n<l•r~". 7D.
0 1.0.0. l1 FIM, C •.0.0.0. llerNI. rl, ' 0 0 o. !>ulfon ,. I O·O 0 V•n
Do•w•Hr, rf, I~. lu Finn, •D. 1 I 1.0. Mart1nu. 11>, 1.0.0.0. To1e1s n ..... 1
N1wporl HtrllOr-HouslOft. 7D,
) 0·0·0 , Nt<hol\, ID. l ·O 0 0 .
Grey\ho<k, \\. 3.0 1.0, Burb9nll, JD,
1.0-0.0. -. t ~HI. R-Y. If J 0.0.0, HerrtnQtOft. rl, I O I O
OrtDerQ. rl, 1 0 o.o, C:~Pl>@ll. P •
100-0. C.tht¥1, cf, 7.0-0.0, Tot•I•
2l.O·l •O.
Hunt Be.en
Npl Ht>r
, " . 000 OU 0-f • I
000 000 0-0 J 2
V~ty
1411..., IOI "' M.lrl9'a E<l•\On-Htndef\on, ID, • 0 O·O.
Belt••· 11, J.O.H>. B•um. n . 1.0.0-0
Bottorolf, lD. l·O Io. Mll•I\, cl.
l.0-0.0. 8¥ton. 7D. l.0.1.0, Jolln'IOn.
rt, l ·O 1-0. Scl\r~ilM'r, <. l·O o.o.
Holut. P. 7~. Tot-.ls 7..0-..0
Mer1n.1-1n11n.u.•.0.0.1. lloc:l,.,p
c-4-t.O, 8reiney. <. •·7·7.0; Nutler, II
l 1·1.0 B~rry, <I,• 1·2·2. C..Slltr, lD,
• 7·1·1. Sch1ue1er, rf, 1-0·0•0,
l'letcher. ID, ).0 l·J, Biro. tb, 1.0-0.0,
Tola!\ . .)0.6-t s
S<en"rl......._
• " e ooo ooo o~ ,
010 Ill a-4 I
J11111..-VenlfY edlMll ltl ISI MarlAt
Grothm•n J•n•t Poor V.tnf\tt• SturQI\, 11 I Nell-I. JeHy fro, \J
1 E 11nore Grfffl, 60.
B FllgM !Gr~I-' Lit etr•to 17 1 Oorotlly W•lker 81 J R•<h1c
Pooer. '1 !Nell-I Lucy Thr .. -H . 1 RU111 S.zelle\, SI, l . Oor"
HoelKllf'r,,.
C FllQhl IG<'OU) l AIVI Moore,
" 7 J .. n Oion, 100, l Adrtennt>
RHI, 107 (Nell-I M.lrtlWI !Mrry,
.o. 7 J•n• C.•n. ''· l "'"°' Pnne. n
Low Gro••· Low Nfl A J ltQlll IGroul 1 V•nn1e StvrQI\, H . l
Ole I MUQ<' Willson, Eltnore (ire.tn,
n . !Nell 1. MOiiy Oooe1w1n. ll: 1
W•nov t av1or. Sl.
8 f 1•(11\I CGroul ' II•••
E1o1-th C.rtto. Bu M<Cra~ken
IS INetl ' Lucy TlHOn\cn, )0, t Dorothy Wel~r. SJ.
C FltQlll IGr~I I. J.,... C.1n. •l
1 Jun Dion, ~. (Natl I Adrienne Reel S1 . 7 G<ace P..intt, U
Banquet Trail
$al!OetNnteH .... V.-alty._.,tlNll
MO•I VallOMlle: .JolWI c.nGn; 8-sl Dttenllve c..... o..ino ... JV..,_...11
Motl Vat-: Rou S..CIOn, -·· lmproveel: R~ly Manis.
''""'"*'a.stwtull M0$1 V tf uallle: T'on y Cl\;KIWUI ,
MO•t Im.,,_: T-Tu,..,,.r , ......................
MOU VtfuMlle: Jacfr Sltvtn..,,,
Be\t Delenslve. ICeV1n fMC .
s3999 Detroit
Boston New York
Milwaukee
Cleveland
Baltimore
Torodto
18 10 .643 11-"i
15 10 .600 J
12 13 .480 6
lO 14 .417 71~
10 15 .400 8
Montreal 14 10 .583 1
Pittsburgh 12 12 .500 3 tourney. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Mo.+ Tax & lie.
189.99 mo. + tax &
li<:eraae & 96c for 36 mos.
C.p cost 14264. Totat of
monthly payments 13271. Residual $2142. 36 mos.
eAC. Stk. 17045
AUTO LIASIM«i
THI WAY IT
AUTOll!
8 18 .308 101AI
West Divlllon
Oakland 19 7 .731
Angels 17 9 .654 2
Kansas City 15 11 .577 4
Te-xas 11 12 .478 6"'2
Seattle 11 20 .355 10"'2
Mi~nesot.a 10 19 .345 10~
Chicago 7 16 .304 10~
MMNy'ak-.
Chlcaoo .i S.IUmore, t, POii .. r•in MlllMtOla Ill Hew Yortl, pfld.. rctln
O.llltnct at ToronlO, ppct., rel"
8otton e. IC-Qty 4
0..ty ----llCll9dU!eel T.._,.OMMI
C:l\l<•vo IWorll\m111 O· II et 8•1tlmtre
IMcGreoor t-31
0.lllencl IBl*f'O 4-01 411 TorOlllO IUnOlf-
0-)1
ICaMes OIY (Colborn Ml 11 llotton IE<.....,.,
' " Settt .. ~Ill WI al a. ...... (Hood
Ml
MlflMIOta <Thol mo1tto•• 141 •t l'M• Yen (Hllftl., 141
Clll~lll• CT-'"' I at o.tro1t ISIM.Oft t.11
T•ua U9!*1nt NI M Mlhll""'" COHootll t.11 .,., ... , ......
Oekllnd .. T.,..,.., 11 Ml~ et awe.. 11
... , ... et llal-•. n Tuu at Ml'-"". 11
S.atllettta.wi.no,n Only....,..~
Chicago 12 13 .480 3' 2
St. Louis 12 14 .462 4
New York 12 17 .414 Sir.I
WestDMslon
Dodgers
Cincinnati
San Francisco
W L Pct. GB
16 10 .615
16 12 .571 1
14 11 .560 1112
10 15 .400 5~
10 15 .400 51h
10 15 .400 51-lz
· Atlanta
Houston
San Diego ---···sc.r... HOl.lllOll 411 Pl\lladltlpflla, ppcl., rein
Montreal at AllMt., ppc1., rain
New Yor1t '· Onclnntll J 1101 Only 09"'" Kheduleel ,..._ .• ca-..
MoftlrNI (°"'6 • 1 encl llotef• J.J I ti Alt.Ila
lllulllvtn t..) encl Nltllro Ml t·n
Ho1,.ton l'llcllaro l·U at Ptlll•Cl•IPl'llt
IO>rt•l-HI Na. YOfll IK-NI at CfncinMtl IHyme , .. ,
OllC ... '""""*' 0.JI et Saft OlaOO lllllrlff
0.JI
St. Louh IR•""'4Mll 2-'1 at l.91 .._. ... Illa\! ... ,
~1111~ 10. Aollln-Ml at W l'f9"'1tto
IMolt19flltCO Ml WW•t-11111t.•ft11Y'I Oelllet ... ttllltH'tlll .. 1111 "r-lllC!O .... Vorllat ~.fl H-IMalf'N~ .. n
C:llk ....... CMeot."
''· l.oull • Ull ""'"'"' .. CMty--~
LEASING •••
ALL MAKES
ALL MODELS
NEW
OR
Girts IOflllell-EdlM:tn •I NelWPO'I
H•r-. Marina et Fowtt411n Vtlley,
Vllntminstw •I Hl#lllngton Beech
tall at 31; s.nt.,,,,. •t Es Ian< la Ill.
Htrltt99 ti HunllnQlon Velley Cllrl5-
ll9!1 tl:>OI; 8et .. I Owlstien •t LI~·
ty ChrlsOan 13.3111 ; So<Ahlfn C.I JC
N<ltlo<\e~ at Golcliwl WHt I
PRO TENNIS
Starring: Rosie C.sals.
Cliff 01)'9dale, Matte Cox.
Francolee Durr, Anand
Amr1traj.
vs San Diego, ROd Laver
May&
Indiana. °'8nne
FrornhOllZ
May 11
• LOI Angelea, Olrls Evert
Mav 13
1noi.na. Allan Stone
~15
ncmPllCIS Stl/11(17/11•
fM7t1tP.M.
•NOtlt AVMAILC; M ..,,..,. I 11
tM unowl __, " " pnce on ~--.........
r..., .. ...._ " AIWIMf!I
:".:i": =~er:.:: .,.. ....._ _ ,,,., ...... 1 ...
.... fWIMf ~ ..... ffl9 ONlltet ..... ,.,,., .... '"°
SEIKO
THE ULTIMATE GIFT.
LADY ·SEIKO QUARTZ.
Ne. YJOllM-tut.00.
'l'•llOW tOl)/tt•l"'"t •tffl
INGk. JMll'Cflfn•nt Cll•I,
.. AltDl.IX '"'"'"'" Cf\ltt•I.
.... YROM-IUS.00.
Yell-t09/tlalnlHt ttMI
ti.tell. lull nv"'•rel1 on
lilt Cll1I •
If you must have a m1crnfic.nt
gift, lady Seiko Quartz is your
answer. Seiko 1lone can make
the thinnest, most elqant qu1rtz
watch for women. Combine th la
superb fashion look with auperb
accuracy. and'>'Ou have the
ultimate gift. Come In and
choose from a variety of out·
standlne deslens. Seiko Quartz. ea
•. <"": • ..,. ... -\.11· ... ~:-';'.
I : ,! • _.. .,. ,.
J''•'•''''· hy 1o~ept1
:\ USED '.....,.,
r' co:.~ ctNT1I
South Coast Plea • Coate Mesa
540-9088
MHtet CMrp • A~ft lllf"eN
a.nkAmerlcerO-VUJA •~Terms ~i~.-.--------------~-----------.------...--....;. ...... __ ;._~,~----------
'
o.lly P'tMC ...........
HARBOR HIGH STUDENTS TO DEVELOP SOLAR HEAT FOR OL YPIC-SIZE POOL
Ray Galentine, Andy Beupre, Geoff Gree Work on Project
Solar Energy 'Pooled'
Harbor .High Students Take On Project
It costs Sl.200 a month to heat
the O l y mpic -size pool at
Newport H arbor H igh School.
but students trunk they can do
something about that.
ll may take a while. but An·
drew Oliver's industrial design
class is on its way to developing
a solar heating system for the
pool
"WE :.RECEIVED a memo
Crom the superintendent asking
us to become invol ved in solar
ener gy primarily because of the
pools," said Oliver.
He decided this spring that the
prejecl would be a good one for
his students. who previously
tackled such challenges as de-
signing and making a better
mousetrap-powered vehicle.
T he small vehicles, powered
by wind-up mousetrap springs,
are raced a~ainst each other,
Oliver said . T he record distance
traveled so rar is 285 feet .
AND SO, THEIR minds like
steel mousetraps, the students
have turned to devisin g a solar
pool heater.
Of course. their work serves
an educational purpose too.
Oliver noted.
··our real object was to make
the students aware or the energy
the sun sends us each day." he
said.
The dozen students, mostly
seniors. began by experimenting
in techniques for solar collec-
tors, looking especially at cost-
effectiveness, Oliver said.
FIRST THE STUDENTS
a na l yzed lhe proble m s, r e-
searched existing sol ar collec·
tors and made their plans, then
constructed a 3"'2-foot-square
solar collector . I t was install ed
last week on the high school
TOO(.
U sed in the cons\ruction were
coppe r t u bing and s hee t .
ply wood. spun glass insulation. a
<'irculating pump a nd ·a re·
servoir tank. Oliver said.
The collector may remain on
the r oof for as long as sever al
years while data is collected on
how it functions and what its
capabilities arc. he said.
THE NEWPORT -M ESA
Unified School District supplied
funds for the project, allhoµgh
most of the parts are re-usable,
Oliver said. Ile said the cost was
minimal.
The collector t\as a capacity of
50 gallons of water. It was in-
stalled at 9 a.m . and by 2 p .m .
had heated the water . to 135
degrees Fahrenheit
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
LOCAL I BUSINESS
Coast Companks Report
leases Signed in Newport Beach, Irvine
NB 8M8i11a• Feat•red
Robert L. Trujillo, president and chief operat·
ing officer of Der Wieoerschnitzel Joternational.
Newport Beach. will be shown on Western
Airline's in-flight audio program Econo-scope with
interviewer Carl Teriian in M ay and June.
The twenty·minute segment covers a variety
or topics centering around the Cast food industry.
C/tf Banlc co Open 8ra1telt ·
Citizens Bank or Costa Mesa has announced
that approval has been r eceived from the State
Banking Department for a branch opening on 17th
Street in downtown Costa Mesa. Citizens Bank
first opened in December 1972 and this will be its
(irst expansion effort.
Russell T . Gilbert has been elected to the
board of d1reclors. He is president of California In·
Jection Molding Co .• Inc.
on a 90,000-square-Coot site.
Associated 11 will build a lS.000-square-foot
two-story office building on l.3 acres and Clegg
Construction Co. will put up a two-story l S.000-
square·foot o!tice building on just over two acres
G era Id Chai.en will construct a t wo·story.
20,000-square-Coot office building on l.6 acres.
lmree BldlcHng• Lea.ed
New E ngland Life Insurance Co .. Boston.
Mass .. has leased two of its buildings In the Irvine
Technol ogy Center to Kaufman and Broad. a Los
Angeles-based home builder. and Science Appllca·
lions. e La Jolla-based research, development and
engineering firm. according to Coldwell Banker
Commercial Brokerage Co .• Newport Beach.
which handles the transactions.
Both firms are expected ~ occupy their new
buildings by June. New England Life owns four
buildings. totaling 84 ,000 square feet. in the center.
Science Applications leased a 13,400-square-
Coot building at 18872 Bardeen Way, Irvine. and Smtlt Declares Dl1'1dead will relocate division offices in Santa Ana to the
Directors of Smith lnternatlonal. Inc.. new site. About 35 people are employed in the San-
N ewport Beach. have declared a quarterly t a Ana operation. Science Applications signed a flve-
dlvldend of 23 cents a common share. p;1yable May year. $396,000 agreement.
31 to shareholders of record May 15. The dividend Kaufman and Broad will relocate its 50-person
is a 28 per cent increase over the previous quarter-Southern Calllomia divisional headquarters from
ly dividend of 18 cents. a smaller building on Sky Park Circle, Irvine. to
The company has reported net income or the 15,970-square foot facility at 18902 Bardeen
$11 ,867.000, or $1.22 a share, for the first quarter ......--W_a_y_. ________________ _
ended March 31, compared witb $8,008,000. or 84
cents a share. for the ~om parabl e quarter of 1977.
Net income for the quarter increased 48 per·
cent and earnings per share rose 45 percent over
the prior year·s period, reaching the highest levels
for a first quart~r in the company's history. There
were an average 9.716,000 common shares and
equivalents outstanding in the 1978 quarter. com·
pared with 9,641 .000 shares in 1977.
Plaza Letues Anno-~
Coldwell Banker Commercial Brokerage Co .•
Newport Beach. has announced the completion of
E-ight transa'ctions totalin g $7 million involving
Phase 1 of the I rvine Co.'s Corporate Plaza in
Newport Center . Newport Beach.
Phase I of the 38.3-acre project will include 13
one-and two-story buildings. ColdweH Banker was
responsible for ground leasing eight of the sites
and will be exclusive leasing agent for seven build·
ings Corporate Plaza will eventually have 26
buildings.
The office negotiated long·term ground leases
for H ome Savings and Loan Association : Western
Federal Savings and Loan Association : San Diego
Federal Savings and .Loan Association: Teacher's
Management Investm ent Corp., Newport Beach ;
A ssoc 1 ated 11. a Newport Beach -based
partnership : William Lyon Homes, Newport
Beach; Clegg Construction, Irvine; and Gerald J .
Ch azen . Glendale. All will construct build1ngs.
The remaining Phase l build1ngs will be owned
by Newport Equity Funding. mortgage bankers;
Allstate Savings and Loan Association; Virtue and
Scheck. a Newport Beach l aw firm: Borg-Warner ;
and Bruce Englebrecht. a Newport Beach al·
torney
... it's her Jal/!
You can count on an ecstatic reception
when you reward Mother with the most
meani~ful gift of all ... diamonds ..
the gift of love.
... from lk vu'l 9i/kd jewder
REPORT OF CONDITION
Home Savings and Loan wall build and occupy
a 12.000-squarc-fool br anch facility on a 45.000·
square-foot site. Western Federal Savings w i ll
build a 20.000-square-foot. two-story facility on a ~u•uc NOTtca 2 000 f t I NOTICIE M AVAILA•tU'TY P'ICTITOUS •USl"l!SS 7 • -squre-00 parce . South Coast Plazm • Coat• Me11
540-9066 IRVINE NATIONAL BANK of Irvine In the state of
California, at the close of business on March 31, 1978
published In response to call made by Comptroller of
the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Sec-
tion 161 . Charter number 16168. National Bank
Region Number 14.
ASSETS I
Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Thou~nds of dollars
Ca sh and due from banks ...................... 3,993
U.S. Treasury securities . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. .. . .. .. S.O
Obligations of other U.S. Gov't.
agencies and corps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 745
Obligations of States and political
subdivisions ...............•................ 1,265
Federal Reserve stock and
corpofate stock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .................. 4,000
Loans, Total <excluding
unearned Income>
Less; Reserve for possible
loan losses 166
Loans, Net. ................................ 17,746
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other
assets representing bank premises .......... 1,029
O ther assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 314
TOTAL ASSETS .............................. 29,994
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corps .•.................. 13,321
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corps .•................... 10,987
Deposits of United States Government . . . . . . . . 535
Deposits of States and
politic.al subdivisions . . . . . .. . . .. .. . . . .. . . 100
Certified and officers' checks ............... 1,425
TOTAl DOM ESTIC DEPOSITS . 26,368
Total demand deposits lS,281
Total time and savings deposits 11 .087
Other liabilities .............................. 263
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures> ...................... 26,631
EQUITY CAPITAL
common stock a. No. shares authorized 322.300
b . No. shares outstanding 301,313
(par value) ............•....................• 1,507
Surplus. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86$
Undivided profits .............................. 991
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .................... 3,363
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO
EQUITY CAPITAL ......... , •............. 29,99.C
MEMORANDA
Average for 30 calendar days
ending with report date:
Cash and due from banks ...........•.•.•..•• 3,671
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ..........•..•...• 2,800
Tot•l loans ••..•..•.••...•......•.•.•...••.•. 17,268
Time deposits of $100,000 or more in
domesuc offices . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,000
Total deposits ••..•.......••.•...........•.••• 2.C,323
TOTAL ASSETS ••..•.•..••••..........••••••• 27,944
T ime certlfltatfl ot deposit In denominations
of $100,000 or more
<outstanding as of report date> ...••.•....••• 1,940
f, ROBERT KIHM, Vice PrMldent/cnnler of tM
at>ove-namec:t bank do hereby declare tr1•t this
Report of Condition Is true and correct to the best of
my knowledge and bellef.
/S/R08ERT KIHM
Aprll 26, 1'71
Wt, the· undtn.19'*9 dlr~tors attest tr.. eorrect-
ntH of this statement of r9tC)urces and llabUIUes. Wt
dKlert that tt has been exalftlned by us, and to the
best of our knowledge and btlltf Is true and correct.
RICHARD E. DUFFY
G. W. McCLELLAN
JOHN VIRTUE
Olrectora
PubllShedOr•n;oColtt Dally PtlotMayl, 1971
1766-71
o,. A"NUAL uf'OlllT NAME STATEMENT W illlam Lyon Homes will construct a two-
Pursu•n11o 5Kllon 6104ldl of the In· bu~r!,~o~~O•lnv rwrwns •rt dolllV Story, 15,000-SqUare·fOOt corporate headquarters lern•I Re-..nue Code. notice is nerel)y Assoc I ATE D MED I CAL
I
•
MHtef Chlf99 • Amencen EirprtSI
81nkA!Mfteard-VISA • Pereoft1H1tdT1r1111 •
0
viven '"'' 1t1e ann1>11 ,_, IOf the SEAvicEs. m.s. ""'"" Rut •m. on 1.3 acr es of land and TMI will have a 25,000-c.iend•• veer 1'77 Of Amcord Found• Minion Vlelo. CA 92.iS Square-foot tWO·StOry Office building COnstrUCted t~.•p~v~e~~l~.l••v•i~b.. Mr. Gtr•ld Brenn~k. M 0 . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ et tne founo.tlon s prlncilMll 0H1ct I« Seroe1 Loo.irrfl M D . 111S1i Pverla 1ns114c lol>n durln9 r119u1., business AHi, Minion 11i.1o. CA 9267S
hOUn lrom 1·JO •In. lo S.00 p.m by Murr11v Mar90ll\, M.0 .• W1ll1•m al'ly <Illian -r-1• ,, •lllHn llO 5<1\tppecll M 0 • 77.S. ~,. A .. I cs.vs alter IN o.te Of o.is pubhutlon M1u1on ll~IO. CA ti•JS T ... lo....s.tlon's prlnclpal off~· ,, Carl A T •H•\trO. M 0 . William louteo •• ,.,,. floor. 610 NewpcH'I Smith. M D. 271.St -· AHi. MIS· Center Driv•. Newport Oe•cll, slon 111e10, CA92.,S C.lllornle AICllArd Ja<ob, M D . Aol'lald Tll• Jlf'fn<IPAI ~of IM foun· !kllr•tber, M.D. 278S. ~a Aul,
CS.lion I\ F. G Glllll-Mh"onlllttto.CA'261S G S WHEELDON Tiiis b.nlnen Is cond11cl.O by a
•10~ (;el'llH Drive gener•IPArlNo/lip N-t8N<h,CA926'0 ~1Lock¥eff.M.0 P11bll5Nd 0r-. Cofft <>ally Pilot, Tiiis ttattmenl WH llled with t ... Mev t, ltTI 1851·79 Counly Clert.ofOrenqie CollmyonM•v
•• 1971
PUBLIC NOTICE l"IMOJt Publls...O Or.nvt C.O.sl O.lly Pilot May'· "· n. :io. tt11 ,.,,.,. R·I"" SUPCRIC» COURT Of' THE STATR CW CAU l'ORMIA f'OR TMt COUNTY Of' ORANGE
PUBUC NOTICE
..-_,...,... f'ICTIT10US eUStNUS
MOTICa 01' MaAIUNG 01' NAMaSTATa.ME"T ~aTITtON l'OR PROUTE 01' WILL Tll• foll-1"9 persons ••• Oo1n9 AND l'OR L~ERS TEITAMIN· bUslntJSa\ TARY ANO !'OR AUTMORllATION WARREN, MCVEIGH, GRIFFIN TO ADMINISTaR UMOllR TMa & SAVAGE. 100 N•wp0rt Genie• INOaPaNOIENT AOMINllio'TRATION Drive. Newport BHdl, CA '2WO 01' tSTATU ACT Devld W•rr•n. ~ Dlebto View Estal• ol HARRY MACRES, Orlv•.Orll'lda.CA Dtcused Oonn P Mc lltlQfl, 21M9 L.,'"" NOTICE IS HEREBY Gii/EN tnat Strffl, San Francisco. CA JOSEPHINE H. MACAES hlts lllltd Clyde C. Grlllln, 193'2 S•ttrra Mr•ln e ,.1111on IM Pf"ot>Ate or w111 Chula Roed, lrvll"lt, CA 92664
and iw lswan<e OI LAtt.rs Testamen· Kenneth J. Sav._, 21001 Vl<l<lf
••ry •nd to• Au111or1ia11on 10 Ad· Slr~:s T:U~=~ ~ ~Ou<tt>O b~ 4 mlnht•r under tne l~t AO· mll'lllltAlfOl'I ol Est.tH Ac:t, ,.ferenc:t venerel parlne~p lo wllltll Is meoe tor further Clvde C.Gtlffln 1M1rtlc1il•rs, •"" 111et Ille time ano Tiiis ttolemenl w.s llle<I wllll 1ne piece o1 '-',. u...,..,,.. -Ml County Cltr1t or Orenoo Coun1., ~
fM Mey u. tt11. et 10.00 •.m .. In the Aprll 20, t'71 f'otnU courtroom Of °"*"lment Ho. l of HIO «Kiri, •• 700 Ovl< Center Drive WHI, Publl•""' 0r""91 Coast Deily Piiot.
In the City of Sent• AM, C.lllomle April 25, -y 2, '· t•. 1911 l~TI Oa led Aprtl 21, 1911. WILLIAM I!. SI JOMN, County Cieri< --·----------PUBLIC NOTICE
eALDlkOSIU, kt.OTZ & CIOOPUI ·-·----------1101 De,,., Slllle 10 l'ICTITIOUS eUSINl!U New,.•t llNcfl, CA •Htt NA.MR STATllMl!NT
Tel: Oltl m-till Tiie fo110..1nv persons •re doing Att-vlsl tor: Petltl-111111nass as: PubllshedOHf191tCoestOei1yPllof. THE GREEN GAOCl!R. 9'40 Mo i. i. '· 1'71 1701·11 Hem II ton, HunUnvton BH<h. CA '1U.
PUBUC NOTICE Dennis JemH Ceml)bell. 1173 M9ndo1e 11D,Cosl•Mes.e.CA92U6
------------W•Yl'l9 ...__ Jeftlen, '"°' PIM R-141$1 SI , Wtslmlnllff. CA 92613 NOTICW 01' SALll 01' Tlus busll"ltSS 11 <onducteo !ly • RUL PAOPl!RTY ventrAI pertner'1>1p AT ~RIVATI! SALi! Oennla .JarnH Cempt.11
Ne. A-9112' Tlllt Jtat-t •A$ ltted with Ille In IN Supfflor Cou'1 of Ill• Stole of County Cler1t OI 0r .... .,. Coul'lty on C.lllornl•, In And lor tne Ceunty of Aprll 20, 1'11 ORANGE. l'Otl114 In Ille M•lt•r Of .... Est••• of Publl•""' Orange Coast Delly Piiot, AICHAAD JOSEPH SMIH1. Oa AprllU,May2.t,t•.tt18 AICHAAO J. SMITH, eka AtCHAAO
J SMITH SA., elCA RICHAAO SMITH,
oect•~ NOTICE 1$ HEREBY Gii/EN tllet Ille Ullderlltned •Ill Wll •I privet• PUBLIC NOl'ICE
wt•. to ,,.. Ntf\nl end belt bktclff. • ,,CTITIOUS •UStNESS \ulll•C t to COl'lflrmet Ion ol said NA.Mii STATllMaNT Superior QIUf1., or afler IM 1111\ d•Y of M•Y ,.,. at Ille olll<• of Tiie lotlOWl"9 119r)Oftt •re 001110
HARCOURT H0EAVEY, Ill, 107'4 b Ull~~·.~NATIOHAL AESEARCH & Wf>ltt 09ll A.,._, Or"enecle Hlllt, C•lllornle t1U4, co 11nty ol Lot DEVELOPMENT, 417 Estllar St .. A"991e• St• ol C.Hlotftl• •II IN (Mia-... CA mv rl9'1t, title .,,., lnltf'est ol wld oece-L. H•ll Tl,.•, fl1 E1t11er St , Coste
Oef\t end to ell .,. ori.tn rNI proper-IMM, CA n.27 ty 11!11•led In Irle c.ouricy or Orel\Qt, L•rr H. Tiner. to7tt Skimmer State of Cellfornle. putl(Ulerly L-. Huntlnv!Oft IMdl, CA,,.... deS(rfbed as '9ftowl, to-wn Tiii• buslMH Is cond11ct.a b'f •
Lot ao Of Trec1 HO. 1110. 1n tlle 111nera1 ~~~..!r
Co\ll'lty o1 Oreriot. Sl•t• Of C.lllor'nl•, Tiii• stei-t ••~ flltd •ii" tt1e •• per ,,,. recorded 11'1 booll 95, p!aOet u . a.. JI n •· Mltcell•-M-. County CltR ol Dr•noe County .,, 1n u. Offlea • ""~Y 1t11<-o1 Allf ll '•· tt78. u lel co11nt(. ~ tOf'llf'nOnly 1u,.wn ,..,,... et 0'1 !'yte WI}', MllllW•'f Cllh , P11blltllell Ol'ar199 Cliett Delly Piiot
CltllfOfnla. Me¥'· t, 1', U, "" Term\ of ... Ulll In 1.wtlll _, 1'41NI
Of tfle UllllM lt.C9'., tOftflrm~Hloll ol l-----------
PUBLJC NOO'ICB Mte T9fl .-1llf-·11«1 I• lllt .....alwdwltflll6cl •1• If'~ ..... '" .,111"9 -~----------"''" '9 rec.IM et ... etoreMld oftia ~e&.IC: NOftc.t •t •ny time .... II• flt'M llUMIUtltll MOTIC8 w AVAU.A&IUn M,..hllll....,_Cllttot ..... 0,..,...UA'-llllPORT
0.ltcl INt)l'd .. yet Mil'(, ltlt TM 9Muel 1'"'9flllf IM Gf-,.... HARCOURTHIRlllY,111 ,,.,. ln\1111 ...... tr.II .. ewllaOW -li.(lltoret tM lntlltttlOfl ti 12' S.1tPlll•• A•• • •1t••..io .. , .. ttlW, .... #flllflt!Mft(,.., ~ .,.., cilia., wr. raQUe1o11 It ... 1111111 '" , •• Ol•ICKl.WtlTKAM~ d•Y• alttr 1111• 1t110lle•t1111. PfM>llt AIWMy.e.uw (710 •J'HllllW •1.u.ao1
"1'tt WM .. 0.-A..._ llM•K ClO._.IH IMI 1". .,_...Mllft,U.t~ ~ ~llOllllM °'** CO.•t o.11v -.1111 f'11blllllM OP...-ca..1 Oelly f'llet ... ., .. t, u. tt71 ..... ,. • ., ,, ,.,. 111$l 7t
~epublic
IS good
L for the
economy •••
Yours
How would you Uke to double
your money In nine years? It can be
done safely and surely at Republit
Federal Savings. A good way to d,
sound economy for yourself regatdless
of business or stock market cycle~.
Here's the kind of nest egg ycu
can build with a Republic 7·3/4%.
s1.ooo minimum deposit. 6 to 10 year
term certificate. which compoundr.
deily for an annual yield of 8.06'l
s 1,000 7-3/4'1.
~ 5.000 7-3/4t. ------$I 0.000 7 3/4'1.
Your 9.yur
... 11t99
8.06'\ s 2.008.69
8 06" '>I 0.043.45
--~ --8 06<g $20.086 90
Republic Federal ha~ similar
certificate savings plans for shorter
terms -from 90 days to 4 years -
with effective ennual yields from 5.92\t
to 7 79%
Federal re9ulation5 permit early
withdrawals, subject to substantial
reductions rn interest earnings.
However. 1n the event that you need
immediate cash. you may avoid these
penalties by using your account for a
~ loan at only l t. above the rate
paid by the certlfkate.
Drop b~ or phone one of our
courteous representatives for m ore
Information.
•••••• Every time the Rooster Crows your Money Grows
RFS REPUBLIC _ ~~~~~'t SAVINGS
11111111 Fau1 IOc.itron• in °'"'"It' (Oun!~
SANTAANA 17th St. W,estof Newport Frtewoy 17141 ~1-5286
ANAHEIM 202 Anahein') PlaUt, 500 N. E\lc:lld St. (714) 956-8290'
LACUNA NIQ<JEL J02.lj1 Crown ~anty Parkway ( 714) 49.5-0850
WESTMINSTER 134 Wmminsttr Mall/BolN r, San Diego Fwy
(714) 894-~347
Hud Ofllce: Al TA0£NA 2246 N. l.Alke A-wc C2131791·12811681·661 I
Twe.lvt LoutJon1: Al TADENA • ANAHEJl'i\ • ARCADIA • IS<JRBAMK
CLAREMONT • HACIENDA HEIOHTS • l.AGUl"IA N~EL •LOS ANOE.LES
PASADENA • PtCO RIVE.AA• SANTA Al'tA •WESTMINSTER
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Business Tueeday May 9. 1978 DAIL y PILOT B:i
Lark's
Closure
Delayed • LARK. Utah <AP J -Ken·
necott Copper Corp. has postponed for one year closure
or the town of Lark.
The company told residents
Monday it would give
homeowners or renters a $1,000
relocation allowance If they
moved out before Aug. 31 , 1979.
Those who leave by the original
shut·down date of Aug. 31, this
year. will get a S500 bonus, tthe
company said.
THE TOWN IN the southwest
Sall La k e Valley has 107
(am i lies. The company said
value of residences in Lark
averaged $7,913.
Kennecott also offered 120 per-
cent of either a private or of-
fi ci a 1 state appraisal of the
value of privately owned homes.
The company said it would pay
for the appraisal. !t 'I ~ * \ Ar..,.._ A meeting between a commit·
tee of townspeople and Ken-
necott officials was closed to the
public. Kennecott distributed the
new offer in a news release.
KENNECOTT COPPER CHAIRMAN GIVES REASSUR~NCE
Leona Peterson. Resident of Lark, With Frank Mlllken
'Hot Potato' ON SUNDAY, THE chairman of the giant corporation and an
81-year·old miner's widow came'
back to Lark -one to assure re·
sidents of fair treatment when
the company levels the town, the
other to promise nei~hbors she
would make him stick lo his
word.
Amtrak Services
Frank Milliken. chairman of
Kennecott Copper Corp. 's board
of directors. spent 90 minutes
chatting with residents of the
company-owned town.
Reduction Eyed
An hour after Milliken left.
WASHINGTON !AP> -lnflucnt1al Senate and House members
are gi ving mixed reviews to Transportation Secretary Brock Adams'
plan to cut Amtrak's 27 ,OOO·mile rail passenger networl< by one-third.
Hilda Grabner. a former
schoolteacher and 49-year Lark
resident. came home to the
cheers of about 50 neighbors and
a dinner at a civic club hall.
Adams. acknowledging that eliminating routes could provoke the
ire or congressmen who would lose stops In their areas, also recom·
mended a hike in fares Mon~a.y "CONGRESS HANDED me
Federal Amtrak s ubsidies this political hot potato and I'm ha.v~ soared to more than S500 trying to avoid getting third·
mil hon a year degree burns." Adams said.
MRS . GRABNER WAS
spokeswoman for a group of
Lark residents who went to New•
York last week for Kennecott's
s tock holders ' meeting. The
~roup complained that the com·
pany had not said what it would
pay for the homes and what 11
would do for renters.
Mrs. Grabner attracted na·
t ional attention when she de-
manded fair play for Lark resi-
dents and later joined a sil·in at
Kennecott headquarters when
she felt company officials were
not adequately answering her
questions.
MILLIKEN ARRIVED by
helicopter at boarded-up Lark
School. He then visited five
homes. reminiscing with Ken·
necott employees about people
1 hey knew and saying they
would be pleased with the com·
pany's relocation offer.
Kennecott announced last
December that it would shut
down Lark because it did not
want to be in "the town busi-
ness." and because ll needed the
town's land for its open.pit mine.
Low Fare Approval
Asked by Airlines
WASHINGTON (AP> -Trans
International Airlines . the
world's largest charter carrier
has asked the C1v1l Aeronautics
Board for approval to ofrer a $79
scheduled air rare on 10 flighL'i
this summer between New York
and Los Angeles.
The one.way low fare would
include all taxes and would be
approximately one ·third the
s tandard economy fare of $220.
Hot meals and beverages would
be provided at no extra cost.
Coors Light
Test-marketed
In 3 States
Special to tbe Daily Pilot
GOLDEN, Colo. -"Coors
Light," a new low-calorie beer.
is being placed on retail shelves
in test-market cities in Colorado,
California and Texas, officials or
Adolph Coors Company an·
nounced.
These markets include San
Diego. metro Denver and four
Texas cities -Corpus Christi,
Brownsville, McAllen and Alice.
COORS HAS BREWED only
one product for 20 years.
"Coors Light baa the potential
to become a strong volume pro-
duct for our company," said Joe
Coors, president of the nation's
firth largest brewer.
He declined to disclose how
long the lest marketing would
run.
COORS LIGHT, WITH 110
calories -20 percent fewer per
12·ounce serving than regular
Coors -is made the same way
a s Coors beer, with Rocky
Mountain spring water. Cand no
artificial ingredients, additives
or preservatives, said Peter H
Coors. vice president of sales
aod marketing.
Coors Light feature a Coors
script logo in r ed. a script
"Light" and a new, enlarged
waterfall scene. The beer has a
new slogan: "Coors Light bas
something no other light beer
has. The real taste or Coors."
8.50%
Congress asked Adams to pre·
pare recommendations on run·
ning the Amtrak system.
Rep. Harley 0 . Staggers. D·
W. Va.. chairman of the House
Interstate and Foreign Com·
merce Committee. called
Adams' proposal to reduce the
present system to 18,900 miles ii·
l·timed.
"We are all concerned with
Amtrak deficits ... said Staggers.
··But I believe Congress will re-
ject a piecemeal approach to
solving the problem ...
TWO ROUTES Adams wants
eliminated serve West Virginia.
One. the Shenandoah from
Washington to Cincinnati. runs
lhrough Stagger's hometown of
Keyser.
Staggers has been instrumen·
ta l in blocking previous at·
tempts to change the S~enan·
doah's route.
The proposal also combines
the San Francisco Zephyr.
between Chicago and San Fran·
cisco, with the Southwest Limit· ed between Chicago and Los
Angeles.
A TRANSPORTATION sub·
committee was scheduled today
to consider a bill by Staggers
that 's designed to prevent
Adams from filing notice to
eliminate any Amtrak route un·
tit Oct. 1. 1979
Adams proposed that his plan
take effect May 1, 1980. But
St agge r s b e li ev e s that .
technically. Adams could begin
the paring process in July of
1979.
By October of next year. Stag-
gers said, Congress will have
had an opportunity to complete
a comprehensive review of the
entire Amtrak system
New NB
Office OK'd
U.S. GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED
PAYABLE MONTHLY
American City Bank
has received regulatory
permission to open a
banking office at ACB 's
Newport Beach Service
Center. 2743 E. Coas t
Highway , Newport
Beach
GNMA" Mortgage-Backed Certificates are U.S. Oovemment Ouaran·
teed on "'the timely payment of both principal and lnterest"-the
same as a U.S. Govemment Bond. Interest and princl~l will be peld
monthly-Ideal for those who want c urrent Income with U.S.
Government safety. Units of $2~.000 and up are •llable.
•No Ndemptloa ~as Is the case with Bank ~
ond Sevlngs r, Loan Certificate of Deposit accounts. 4S' •
•An opportunlly Is nvallable to qualified people
for .. ,.,... of tma on lnlerest Income.
·a.--~MotlQ!llt ~· o... .... ~ c~
POI' moN lafonaatlon contact Parker Dale.
Senior Vice President. ot (714) 644-4620
or ot the addreu shown !>flow .
.
~~nes
The facility is expect-
ed to open by mid.June.
Housing Replaces Stock
'Little Guy' Tums to Home lnvestrrwnt ~/
By JOHN CVNNlt'F
A~ a.l.u AHly1t
NEW YORK -The securities
industry is paying a lot of atten·
lion to housing these days, not
just because or houslpg stocks
but because or the competition
from housing as well.
Yes. some people are buying
houses instead of stocks, and the
stock market ls feellng it. It
helps explain to some extent the
absence from the securities in·
dustry or the so-called Uttle guy.
GOLDMAN SAC H S, a
securities firm. states in a re· port that "homes have replaced
common stock as the most im·
portant major component of con·
sumer wealth." and concedes
they make good investment.
Business Week magazine
reatures a special supplement in
its current issue on "Do·it· y ours elf investing in real
estate." citing examples of bust·
ness people who are dabbling in
rental housing. It concludes that "Increasing
numbers of smaller Investors.
leery or the stock market and
seeking high profits. are going in
for an expanding array of do·lt·
yourself deals."
ONE ATTRACTION, OF
course, is the rising price of
houses. an ascent that one small securities firm equates with a
balloon-filling with air beyond
its capacity. It forecasts a col-
lapse -and a return to stocks.
Goldman Sachs and several
other firms disagree. Analyzing
the prices of single.family
houses . 1t concludes that on ave rage they appear lo be
reasonably valued in relation to
income.
H maintains that d e mo·
graphics. tax benefits. the price·
income relationship. the rental
return or the rent saving if
owner-occupied s upport the
average price or a new slng&e
family home.
WB-ILE HOMEOWNERS
seldom analyze values with the
NEW YORlt tAPI (IH
_ Tiie 'olU•' 511, tS • MIK I· !:~ IOftAI W•tlef p,:•1r~:-~ ~el> t-IO 111-a-K• & lllCllAI· nnsn, al SIO<U. 11• ed ~fii~~ :E:. ... 0 If'< ta, .. ::C,'l'sa~ ytMal ortn Ad¥ fl OU ~~~ .t.oYMl<t AIWts ~ Al•aAlu AllCOlll< yEI ~~T~ ec:r,s anCru AF11rn ., .... "" Yltl AGrHI ·~u lt()ft AMl<ro• ,,..,._ 11'11 AhCom · 41 •Yi "' "8' AWeldn<;I I) 14 ••• 8 Am terr 2 .. ,. 2>1. ~kill Antc11Ce ,.... , ... lfOft ........ \1$8 7) 13'h bffli AnttCp ~ , .... OllL~ :~~=i~ 1i11o ,,11. , ...... ldlrBe Asd<At• 1931. m: IC<~. ~uc;.,u UY> ~'l't ::~~~ •'l't 1 .. nfOtv IS ISV. "'"'/'" BllemRC 10•1, 10~ E~I Ball<lh ,.,.. to ... JI nAI BH~llF 1'14 ..... 8eylsMk 1214 IN FjdUf!lf Beelln• 1lli 1'* 1'~111 BtuLAb ""' l'llo "IC5•' Bll>l!Co """ 11 ... F Sin 8 1rdSon ,., »-'> l'llEmpSI Blrld1r ,,,. , ...
BlkHlllP )Sit.~ FIWftFl11 BofttftUI sv. s~ '!k ilo• BrtnU 1\, .... FltW•bU er-s 11·~ 1114. Fon11 B""'Tom 1.,... "" Fonn~ 8rwftlft9 IO 11 Frtnll 8U<k;-S SY> Franll Bu<keye II ~. IJV. Fr..., tu Burn~S Slit SYt IUEtt
g 1w1 • l lY, l3 lhlllS mpl)Cll vEF11 1 .. 16 11~1· Ml ~rtdH ,., 2'\lo ,., .... ,.
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NEJJIS ANALYSIS
same professional detail or
Goldman Sachs. they apparently
reach the ume eonelu~lons ,
based on the amount or money
they have invested.
Ten years a~o. the securities firm observes. the value or one-
t o rour -famll y home s
represented 28 percent of con-
sumer wealth.
* * * Survey Shows
Homeowners
Rise Sharply
WASHINGTON <AP) -There
isn't any .. typical" home buyer
and the belief that most houses
are bought by wealthy. middle·
aged people is a myth. the na-
tion's largest group of mortgage
lenders says.
"In spite of more than a de·
cade or excessive inrlatlon.
Americans are buying homes in
record numbers." Joseph P .
Benedict. vice president or the
United States League of Savings
Associations. said Monday.
Benedict's comments came as
the league. which represents
many or the nation's savings and
loan associations, released a
study or 8.500 mortgage loans
made last year across the COWl·
try
Sixty percent of home buyers
are between 25 and 39, according
to the report, and 12 percent are
younger than 25.
The survey termed
"somewhat surprising" the dis·
closure that 17 percent or
homebuyers are single, and 4
percent are unmarried couples.
At the end of 1977. however,
the $844.5 billion of real value in
11uch home" represented 35 per·
cent of lh" $2.42 trillion total of
real rtnanciul <issets. Stock hold·
logs amounted lo $635 billion.
SOME OF THE change results ..
from the rapid price etppreciu· •
lion of houses. New home prices
in th~ 1910-1977 penod rose at -arr ,;1
aMual compound rate of 10 7
percent. Existing homes rose at
9.3 percent.
Still. Goldman Sachs relates.
prices are t>etow the home pnce·
Income relationship that pre-
vailed in the early 1960s. Th~
suggestion exists. therefore. that
home prices sttll are within
budget limits.
WHAT THE STUDY doesn't
show are some or the non·
financ-ial aspecl!\ or home
ownership. such as the sense of
security provided by a roof over
one· s head. a sec u rlt y unob·
talnable with a stock certificate.
When market analysts ask
where the little guy is -and
millions or his kind have aban· doned the stock market since the
late 1960s -the literal truth
may be that he 's at home. livinj{
in his security.
NB Bwiness
Changes Name
Shareholder of National
Systems Corp., Newport Beach.
have approved a change in the
rompany's name to National
Education Corp. The change will
be effective June 1.
National Systems has more
than 70 vocational sc hools
throughout the U S.
Shareholders also re·elected
three directors for three-year
terms. They include John J
McNaughton. chairman. H.
David Bright. president. and
Wallace 0. Laub, senior vice
president. marketing.
Over The Counter
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C losi~ Price~
Tuesday, May 9. 1918
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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STOCKS/GUSIN~SS
Buyers _ Wiim
Bic, Gillette Lose
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
• One way lo aet lower price~ I~ l(J h .. v(' I wo b1~ companies
sluf It out tor leadership in .. product chlegory Something
like that Is happening in the market fo.r disposable lighters.
where Gillette is battling an old nemesis, B1c Pen.
When the disposable lighter a ppeared. 1t sold for a.s
high as $1.50. The head-to·head compelilion raging in d ir·
ferent parts o! the country has dropped prices to as low a:,
39 cents.
GILLETTE WAS THE EARLY leader of this m1arket
when It introduced its French-made Cricket li ghter here an
1972. The muket then amounted to some 15 million
lighters 1t year. Votume has since soared to more than 150
million a year. a Juicy m arket indeed.
The trouble is that it's turning out lo be 1t profitless
prosperity.
Bic. a French·controlled company. challenged Gillette
with its disposable. which at priced lower than the Cricket.
~tte responded with price cuts oC its own, and the war
was on.
The latest report from the battlefront is that Bic has
s nared 50 percent or the market. leaving 30 percent for
Cricket. But neither company is making money m Dispos-
able lighters.
Gillette safd last
month Its profi t :;
declined by ll percent
in t he firs t thre e
m-o n t ti s of t 9 7 8
Cricket's factory price
has dropped to 36 cents
a· unit. A year ago It
wa5'50 cents.
Money
Tree
B\.c increased its sales from $122 milUon to Sl34 million •ast year. But its profits eroded by more than 30 percent to
S6.8 m illion.
T HE SIC-GILLETTE CONFRONTATION involves
more th~ disoosable lii?hters. The two went to the mat in
the ballpoint pen business. with Blc generally outperform·
Ing Gillette's Paper·Mate divis ion, Then Bic grabbed the
lead in disposable lighters.
Emboldened. Bic took on Gillette again by fielding the
Bic disposable razor. pricing it at 19 cents. 6 cents below
the Gillette throwaway, Good News! And that may have
been a serious miscalculation on Bic's part. Here It was at
tacking Gillette where it lives -and the Boston company
retaliated quickly and sharply
To foi~e Bic s haver's introduction, Gillette ran all
kinds of s ial price deals on Good News~ Soon both com·
panies wer combining products in a single package. You
could buy a Good News! razor packed with a Cricket
lighter or Bic lighter with a Bic pen or Bic shaver.
IN EFF ECT. GILLETTE AND BIC were giving away
their products in a race to achieve dominance. That's good
for sales but not for profits .
The fiJ(ht isn't over. but at this point it seems as if Bk
has hardly dented Gillette's dominant position in the shav·
ing business. When it launched its dispo~able razor. B~e
had hopes that it would become as ub1qu1tous as the B1c
ball point pen. Thal has not happened.
Sic has been able to sell more disposable lighters than
Gillette. But 1t has been a costly victory. The real winners
here are the consumers who benefi t from lower prices,
Trading on Market
Slow for a Change
NEW YORK <AP> -Stock prices were mixed today 1n
the quietest trading since before last month's explosive
rally .
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was off 2.51
points to822.07.
Gainers held a slight lead over losers among New
York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Analysts said traders were taking a cautious approach
lo stocks in the belier that the market was due for a pause
a fter its sharp runup last month.
They also noted continuing concern about the interest·
rate outlook. The Federal Reser ve has twice tightened
credit in the last few weeks, and maay Wall Streeters have
predicted more moves soon in that direction by the t'entral
ba nk.
.'it fH"k• In Tlar
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In • "'° • ..... r. t .. ( ! • '-I"'' VM11 -'" J •·' m1111;ore Of -·'°""' ...,,..,na, oer•-11'11 · -· -,..;fc t M , l:!. ~ . 1 ~ Sf ,~ . c ..... " • , ., 'ti .... . i ~ ~ w•." 1 'j! . .. " ~-mrt:r " 1~ , ··~ r.·••Cll:t'f 111e ...... , •""*"" -n·no• 1'9""' I ·-· , i. m~ ·~ . i · .., . , .. -\.o 'iii ·t -" , ., •• l . . . . i -.,,., .1.. • , "' .. " .. ,;: b 4. 1110 ••• :.·1pr1e.. "'°' ..... r ~~ ptOtn·· "6-• ., 1: I I ~:·•~ t'1 ' 1 -•• rt I ,,_,.. 1 t I ._,\" "''¥ t tltl ... 111 ,.,_ ,_ ("9 ~J ,l•r. h tl'lj Pl ,'"" t-(~ ~ '.::;t • : :; ~~ ;jij'I =·~ '•·•~ .... ;.: E\';I ,i D}i!·i~~ ia'f~·. ~~.~ f :K;; itt:=~ ~ ~fi.ar ~ l::& :1 111:'tn:-:.~ ---·~·;·i"mt~:: t=:,'= 7. 'r:::::::.~
" '·" •. ..... . '\ ,. • ' f
J
·~
' Tele1'ision Tuesday. May 9 1978 DAILY PILOT 87
II l·~IH \
EVENING
l.'00 I i :. Nl"W8
IMIRrilHCY OHS
Patemedlc9 011911 &11d
OeSoco __,. to Ile pwt of
the euggeeoon «>mtn4tt ..
unlll they Md out about
~lllY prooedufe • OIJNIMOKE
Kltty~~ble
10< • wented murdenlr
end. bellevtng him lnno-
C901. rwtuMe to tum him
~ to en out-of·t-
lherllf
• THI 8AADY BUNCH
Cindy vollln•-• the temlly
10 do • .. 1we of the teliy
IM "Snow While ..
• ADAM-12
Reed end Melloy work wtlh
the Internal Alf.,. OM8IOll
...... detectM • --.,~~·
(Continue• until 12
~ti G PEASONA1. Fl~
"Stodl Mattlet BUICa" Ill ABC NEWS Cashing In 8:'$0 8 MOVIE • *** "The Malleae Felcon" (Part 1) (1941)
H~ Bogart, Sidney
o-wtr•t A loO prlvete
.ye le hired to ,_ a
pric:ielMa. ~
st.we. ( 1 "' • 30 "*'-> e IEWITCHED
Eemerekla decidee to rlgttt
• ~ by •lralghlenlng
the LMin1nO T Olllet of Ptea.
.. AOOKIE8
Cleavon Little and Maril yn Coleman
s poof money-minded evangelists on
Komedy Tonite. a new comedy -variety
specia l tonight at 8 on NBC. Channel 1.
The blood bllflk .. the hoe-
ptlal le ro«>tled end lta ~
tem. IOld to the bled!
m.-.. · Ct THE GROWING
YEAA8 "Morlll o..111opmen1··
(I) AMERICA 2HIOHT
(fl MERV OJW'FIN
cw.tr. Sergio francfli.
OeYtd Brtr>ner, Harry
J-andBend
7:008 ..CNEW8
Channfl'I I.bf ings
9 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles a KTlA (Ind.) Los Angeles
G KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(I) KFMB (CBS) San Otego D KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
9 l<CST (ABC) San Otego e KTlV (Ind.) Los Angeles e KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles
• KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
• t<OCE· TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
/tlen of tlae A lamo
I NEWl. YWED GAME 9 HOl.LYWOOO SQUA..U
I JOKEA'I WILD
ntl BAADY IUNOH
<Keg ie In hot water after
he colleG1a money tor ttdet "°"" his btotherf and
ala'ter9. then .. fired "°"" hill Job end CM't buy the
CM m AMERICA INGfT
~:Rob~.
• NEW8CHECK
NI lnfonnetlve c:iolectlon
of Ore.not County -.
government end~ a,..., people end eporU.
Cl) ntE GONG SHOW
l:OO 9 (I) C88 MOVIE
• • • '"' "The Alamo"
41960) John W8)'M. Rich-
ard Wldmattl. A dr.maUc:
portr.y., of the Battle of
the Alamo and Ille heroes
who fought to ,,_ T-
trom Mexico. (R) D Ka.mrt TONrT!
Comedy ahtehee and
~ produo-
Oon numbtfll .,. ... tunld '" "* ..,... fl.mg "' d-t*dl oomedy compeny
tncJudlng ~ Utile
Richard Widmark, Laurence Harvey and John Wayne <from lefu.
play Alamo heroes Jim Bowie, William Travis and Davy Crockett in
.. The Alamo." Wayne's 1960 adventure movie airing for three hours
tonight at Son CBS, Channel 2.
Children's Video
~are Discussed
WASIDNGTON <AP> -A citizens group,
cooteodmg that television needs to dean up its aci
for childttD, bu been exhorted by the bead of the
FWeral Communications Commission to exercise
less rebtoric and a greater understanding of
economic realities.
FCC Chairman Charles D. Ferri8 made the
atatemmt in the cootext of detailing for memben of
the organization -Action for Children's TelevtSion
IACT) -tbekiodsolthlnp bis agency expects of in·
dualries under 1t.s re1ulaUon.
.. WE AllE GOING TO expect less rhetoric and
argument. and more facts and rigorous economic
analysis. from the industries we regulate," be
said, adding:
·:And we expect the same from you as
concerned citizens as well."
While concedlna room for Improvement tn the
Industry, Ferrll cautioned dUsen groups aucb as
ACT to exerclse .. dllcipllnt and endurance" whlle
monltortng the broactcuttntlndustry and the roe.
However, Ferrts also told the group, '1tbe i.
gulatoey stow ii richer, t.htcker and more nourtabln1
~•useotyourefforta. ••
"I LOOK UPON YOU and the penpective yoQ
brlnl to our a1enda, not as an adversary, but u a
conaclenee," the FCC chairman told a three-day
sumpoelum marktn1 the loth annive.c'lary of the or· ganllatlon'a founding.
' The Boltoo·bued ll'OUP bu petJtloned the
FCC te place rHtrlctlon1 on commercial
advertllement.1 on TV Ibo.a aired primarily tor
children. And It Is preplq the Federal Trade
Comml.11100 to ban from children"• shows tbe
klndl ot ~merclal that extol the vJrtUM ot
1uper·1welt cerea11 and otbel' mack foodi.
Stan Set
For New
WMooie
LOS ANGEL~ <AP>
-John RlUer, Carrie
Fisher and Buddy Ebsen
star in "Leave
Yest erday Behind,"
airlne on ABC on
Sunday.
Ritter, atarrine In
"Three's Company,"
plays a young athlete
wbo ls paralyr.ed for lire
In an accident. Miss
Fisher, who was
Princess Leia in .. Star
Wars." plays a woman
who fall.a in love with
Ritter.
Ebsen. star o f
''Barnaby Jone1," plays
a crusty COUDtl)' doctor.
end P1lul• l(elfy t.oec:iel b ~Paul Lynde.
* •~ "Th• Shuttered
Room" ( 1981) Gig Young,
CerOl Lyt\leV. A young cou-
ple W\erlt 8 Cll'Md Mill•
llCMIM. (2 hH ) 8 al HAPf'Y DAYS
"Do vou went To o.ncer
fonzle recruit• the geng 10
help out • troubled bthl
llChool run by an attractl\19
young 1 .. chtr (LHll•
Brown I G MOVIE
• • "PldtuP On 101"
41972) Jack Alberteon.
~W-A~lful
c:oMge •lu4enl. a hObo
end a young mullclen
team up to heed f0< the
"ff .. life." (2 hrs )
• CAAOl BUANETT
ANOFRIENOe
GUM!: Paul s.nd. Cl> MOVIE
• • • "Fat• I• The
Hunter" ( 1984) Glenn
Ford. HMO¥ Kwan. An elr·
line oompeny'• ,._1.
ettw trtee to deer• pilot'•
nWM by'~.
lei.I CIMh. (2 twl.)
• TVAUCTIOH
(OOHrO}
G TURNA80UT
"About Feet" Women In
combel? AK Force pilot
Vldty Cf.wford end w .. 1
Point cadet UllM Pftlllce
talk about their poNlble
combat~. l:30 . 9 LAVUINE &
8HIALIY
"The Debutente Bell"
Sodety tufters • ettbec* .... .__.,,. •n.nda •
bell wtth Lenny wflO hM
rec.ntly dlloo\Jelect he ...
COi.Wit.
I CWIWtTI
OY8'1Mf'f
~ Dina Mln1I on
tM!lly, ~ lfld '*
WOftl with the Jwenle Ole-
.__ f'ouncSation: Mlchlo
~ on Tiiie XX. Soc:lal
Secunty Aci; oon.umer
prot>lemt; Chicago'• only
Alderwomen, Esther
~.
l:OO . WHEEL8 Acs.m·• uec:utMI wOf1d
beglr'8 to crvmblt wherl
his pet protect. The Hewtc.
la ........,: Ile la fofced to
end hie relllllonlhlp with
Bertler9 ~ Illa ton
Kirk (JamH Cerroll Jordan) ,... ~ love wtttl
Iler. -his youngea1 9()fl,
Greg (Howwd Mc:Omnl.
YOlurltMr9 '°' Glty In Viet.
Nim. __{Pert 3 d 5) •o "MEE'S eot/tPAHY
T U BE TOPPERS
CBS U 8:00 "The Alamo." John
Wa yne dfrected and stars us D<.1vy
Crockett in this 1960 epic western with
Richard Widmark. Laurence Han ey
and Richard Boone. <See photo below>
NBC GJ 8:00 -Komedy Tonne A
new comedy showcas e headed by
Cleavon Little and Paula Kelly with
Paul Lynde and Lawrence Hilton Jacobs.
Jacobs.
ABC D 11 :30 -The Fifth Annual
UqofCicial Miss Las Vegas Showgirl
Pageant. Chorines from up a nd down the
Strip compete in this tongue·in·cheek
beauty contest.
"Bird Song" Jedi !Inda
~ In trouble wt1e11 he .... °" the bO• oontlllnino
Mrs. Roper'• a11ni-uty I>'-•· .MM\#0 ..... Guests: Sergio F'*'CN,
OaYld Bret1ner, Harry
,,_ end Band, Sll"8a &
Heftderlon. Patti BtOOk.1.
L~ CIMwllll. ID MABTEA~
ntEATM
"Oui' Mutual Frieftd" Mt.
8offtn QOlltinu. to grow
miserly; John ~
~· ..... ~· (!_lft 4 of 7) ta • Ill CAlmA COUNTRY
"Roy's Enoountet" Alter
a.. Roy -wflat he
"**9 le • UFO. he con-
~ a.er 10 reeum to
trw mountain lllle with'*"· 10:00n --,MA.V
"SIMplng Oypey" Buddy's
llffol1s to help • t.lleltted
but WIPOPlllel ~
(Dinah Manott) ,.. """'
the gll'f INllta on doll'(!
things her own way.
., LET'9 MME A DEAL fD TVAUCTION
~
An lntorrnetlve oolltc:tlon
of er.,. County -· goy&•••••t Md coneutnef" .,,..,., ~ end apona.
10:IO •• NEWI BWICOUAR
CAPO'AU8M
W'-GAF dtClldld to NII
rether tt\an '"-' In ~
tton control ~ tN
ubesto. mine "°"' .... bouCl'lt the ~ and ••now mllk~ profit.
11:GO 8 8 e Cll (II NEWI
• LOVE. AMENCAN STYLE
"LO¥f And The Anniwr·
uty" Oeof'ge and Mertne
~ to the motel whet•
they "*'' their honey· moon. D MOYIE
• • •~ "Blgoer Then
Life" (1958) J-MDOn,
Barbera Rueh. A __,. 111-
MM llftectl the "-of ell
the members of a fwnlly. (2
twl.)
• THE ODO OOUPlE •
Felix trtMI to hllO Myrna
win bD her old boyfriend. e MONTY PYTHON'S Fl.YING~ CD MACNel I LfHA!A
AIPOflT'
11:IO 8 Cl) CM LATI! MOYIE
•• .,, ~e.,.onc1 The Ber·
muda Trtangle" ( 1975)
FNd ~. Oolww
Mila. A~~
man IONS hill fuc:lnation
with the Bermuda T ri8ngle
wf'9fl 1111 naneee and
f'rtendl ~ while on a ,,.....c:NIM In the -
• TOMQHl'
Hoit: JOtlnny Ceraon.
OuMts: Loula Nllllr, Tony
Randell, Buddy Rich,
Joenna C-on.
g LOV!. IMllllCAN
8TY\i
"l.Olle And Who?" Fled
--.. up In a motet room
wll1I • ll8"gOVW end •
brand new merrlage
llolNe. "&.ove And The Fur
Coat" Leroy trlea to
lmpreea his glr1friend e 111 A8C aNC&AL
"The Rftlt Annuel Unom-
c:lal MIH LH V1t9H
Showglrf PllOM"t" NIM
lhowglrte vtt tor Ille crown
Hallmark ln1'iting
Writer's Break?
By JAY SHARBUTT
LOS ANGELES <AP> 4-So you've
got an origtnal drama for family
viewing, but don't know where to
send it? Don't expect miracles, but
NBC's "Hallmark Hall of Fame"
may be the place. Be warned,
though, that:
-For legal reasons, you need an
agent or producer to proffer your
goods. Without same. you're just
wasting your postage.
. -Because "Hall" averages but
five shows a season and hopeful
authors are compelln1 with
experienced pros, a rookie's odds of
success are so thin they'd be marked
absent if turned sideways
ALL '11118 COMES from executive
producer Ron Hobin. He studies all
potential scripts at his office in
Chicago, at Foote, Cone & Be1dlng
an ad agency that's repreaent;;'d
Hallmark for years.
Though he works mainly with the
top teleplayera of Hollywood and
New York, he says ''we are always
open to new writers tf they're alming
at the same kind of quality programs
that we have."
HOBIN EXPLAINS it this way: In
TV's so.called Golden Age of the
1950s. ther e were many young writers ••particularly interested in
•doing good. original drama ror
television" as opposed to routine series scripts.
··But a lot have J(one on lo movies.
And there doesn't seem to be a
developing pool or that klnd or writer
these days."
MOST "HALLMARK" shows get
critical praise but middling to low rat-ings. Do NBC moguls grouse about the
show'sNielsens?
Nope, be said: .. It's like a
gentleman's agreement among them.
Jt gives them something to be proud
about and tell their kids about.·•
Okay, but do they ever play TV's
new demographics game, urge a
production with, say, three lovelies
and three handsome dudes, purely to luretheideaJ,atnuent, 18-to35-gangof
viewen?
"NO, THAT'S THE runny thing ...
Hobin said. "It's almost as if they
put on a different bat. They don't
say, 'Let's have three guys and three
girls in shape to 10 along with our
objectives. They aort of make a else
for us."
In lh1S .....,., ••lllh 5141'1•
Aiterl and PllylNI Diller
llOellng end Rich l.Jllle.
Foti .. Broolcl end Jeyne
MMOOwt .. IUdOM 4D THAT OlfU..
"CeM Of The Wiid"
ti) GnSMART
Srn1111 end 99 Mafc:h ror •
l<AOS egent wno h.. the
entldote 10 tome poi80f'I
MU•~
MORNING
11:00. TWIUOHT ZOHI
"The MU111"
• HIOHHOPP
• HONEYMOONEAS
Ralpfl'a advOct IO Ed on
llOw IO gel 8 j)(ome>llOn
tieekl11es. IMYlng Ed wllt.-
oul •1ob
• CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
1a-.aoe MOVIE ***'_. 'The Oroucf'
( 111681 Shirley Knigfll, Ekl·
ebelh Hartman. Eight
WTtlfC>lltlble C01teoe friends
-reunJted at a lunefel (2
rwa .55mtn)
• MOVIE * •. _. 'The lfon Majof"
118431 Pat O'Brien, Rot1er1
Ryen. Frllnlc CaYanaugll's
~Shmenll In World
wer I and on the lootbatl
field are ohtonldtd (2 hrs.) ., MOVIE
• • • ~ "It Happened One Summer" (1945) ,,..,_
C.-eln. Dena Andf9wa. Art
towe farm tamlty expen.
enoe low end edllenture
during their ..... et lhe
State Fu Ct tw • 30 min.I
1;00 8 TOMOMOW
T nimtn Capote wll di9-
a.. his bout wflll ailcCINl6-
Wll and Ille atete of jour.
neliem In America 1 :=8
"Happy 8lr1tld9y E"'9f'l'-
1: 1S~ K()JM(TME
APPROX.)
Kojak .,...._ lie IS llnally
on trw trelt of • PIYCflOtjc:
Id.., t9'T041zlng Manhat· .. i .!:-
•• MAe¥erlgl8 .. My o.ai..
,.,,Mc 1971) °"" Aotllnaon,
Ella lngrem. Upon ,.._
Ing from Vll4Nln. ......
an uncowq a myMefy
lnvoMng "" .... and two men. (2 twa.) 2:211 NEWS 2:IO MOYIE
• • • ''Ct'altlout" ( 1956)
Wlllltm e.ndtx, Gene
EY8nS. Sill corMc:ta etruo-
gle tot freedom after their
eec:ape lrom prtaon (2
hr• I
3:008 MOVIE
• *'"' "Raneno Notorious"
( 19521 Mulene Dietrich.
Mel F .. ,.. SMiiing the
lo:Hler of his flllllOM, e COW·
boy rune acrOM 1 dln<lf
hlM q_. end • 91Mblet
whO may hold the key ( I
hr., 50 min I a:251 N&W8 3:30 MOVIES * * "The Mad Ooc:1or Of
Metket SlrMI" ( 1941 I Une
Meriltl. Lionel Alwtll A
Med ec:lenhll hal obleoned
the WOtlhlp ol a lnt>e lnne-
bltlng an unc:tYlllnd leland
(1hr .. 25 min.)
• • "Man-Made Monater"
(t94t) Lon Cheney Jr .•
Uona1 AIWlll. Through en
•oertment ..... th elec:lrlc:al
c:hatVeS. • man le turned
lflto a human dyntmo. C t
hr)
4:000 MOYIE
• • ~ "The Tattered 0r ..... (1957) Jeff Chan-
Olet, Jeenne Crain A
county aNrff1 ~ a
Cftmlnal i.wyer wtien he
dec:ldH lo defend •
...m.y c:oup1e 1nc11c:teo for
murder (2 ht1 I
4:30 4D MOVIE
• • ''The Scar" ( 1948)
Peul Henreld. Joan
Bennett •
lt'fl'd•e•d arf•
Daflf lau! fllo l'l e•
MORNING 11:ao• ...... "CNnaS..."
( 1935) Qartc Gable. Jun
H8'1ow. Piracy ttrtlt.. a
~ c:errylng • valullbte
gold lhlpment. (2 hrs., 20
min.)
AFTERNOON
12:GO ...... ''The Of'ett
~ (1949) Bob Hope,
Rhonda Flen*lg. A boy
scout lleder ,... tor •
OuCheea while on a trena-
Allantlo crulM. ( 1 hr.. 30
min.)
a:GOO ••'h "Doctors'
WlvH" (1971) Oyen
Cannon. RN:fwwd C.-enne.
Sodal end personal prot>-
leme plegue • group of
doctors' wtvee. C 1 hr., 30
min.I a:ao • ·•~"0.-.11"
( 1973) Alex Cord. Marlett•
Hattley. ~ 150 ,..... In
suspended •*'Mltiol•. a
young nuc:tes adenllat
...-.. to tlnd ttie WOftd
rebulldlng lltler • nude.-
tlo6oc:aWt. (1 hr .. 30 min.)
Ballet in Boots1
Henry Winkler as Fonzie takes some ballet
tips from Oscar nominee Leslie Browne in
this scene from tonight's episode of Happv
Days at 8 o'clock on ABC. Channel 7. ·
w
PLAYING
ROBERT &
TOMOUOW
fRITZI
BURR EU.ENS1EN IN
1,054 'Gods'
'W8 Profanity Total,ed, DINNER PlAYHOUSE Dofn'DRINK
A '" T"E wwma
TUPELO, lltiss. <AP> -The word, "God," ls
the third moe\ frequently used term or rrotanity on prime-Ume television, says the Nationa Federation
for Decency after monitoring 86' hours
of prlme-Ume viewing, and registering a total of
1,054 profane utterances.
The Rev. Donald E. WUdmon, the Met.bocUlt
who heads the NFD, says the study found that
American Home Products, maken of Ana,cln and
Ford Motor Compan)' spon.aored shows with the
most pl'QflDlty, that CBS aired the most profanity,
with ABC next and NBC the leut.
ly Academy Award Winner
WOODY ALLEN
Penta allo Uled th• ooCMloa to announce tbat
cable TV and uteW&e ~may MIOll ~
able to provide the bula for~i,pecii.UHd cblldren'•
1ervtct1 not now avaU1bl• on commerclal
taleNk&
FROM Fashion Island
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS. OF THE HARBOR
\
I
j
t
f . . r • .. . .
J
f r ...
!
f
Jl8 DAIL V PILO T T UMday, Mav 9 1978
'A ny Numbe r Can
Die ' Howling Fun
You wonl ftnd t'red Carmichael's
"Any Num~r Can Die'' Jn any of the
Great Plays anthologies, but don't let
that dissuade you from calcl\lng It at
the Wes tminster Com munity
Theater .
It's a sterling example or
what too few local theater groups are
willing, or able, to
do these days -
pull out all the
stops with a
freewheeling. if·
it works-d o·it.
anything goes
type of farce. Not
the play,
necessarily. but
Westmi nster's
hilarious produc-
u1cH11LD•"u tiOn Of it. Ron Albertsen.
a director well V\:rsed in the art of
turning such sow's ears into silk
purses. lets hi s imagination run wild
in this broad spoof of mystery plays.
Carmichael's script becomes the
foundation for some outlandish
c haracterizations -of which
Albertsen's vignette as a
hunchbacked butler is t~e most out·
rageous of all by a company which
resembles a group or fugitives from a
Mel Brooks movie.
ON THE PREMISE that almost no
one in the play is really who or what
they seem, the Westminster cast re-
vels in its assorted identities. Few
facets of the creaking.door thrillers
are lert unskewered.
At the core or this carefully con-
<:octed nonsense are a pair of finely
<'lc h ed ..comic
performances by
J 0 . Reichel ·
derrer and Lois
Farah as two
elderly detectives
pursuing their
first case
Reichelderfer
beautifully enacts
the bumbling
bravado of his
rhas:acter. while
Miss Farah is
equally funny as the crochet}'
s pinster who joins him in pursuit or a
prolific murderer.
Topping the supporting cast are
rirst rate portrayals by Karol McGill
as the endangered heiress and Susan
O'Connell as an ominous Haitian
/flovie Revieae
fil Intermission J __ ;: ___ 11_om __ T_it_us __ _
maid. Miss McGill elevates her in·
genue assignment with a stylized.
Betty Boop character. while Miss
O'Connell veritably floats about the
set to the beat of voodoo drums
...........
YUKON MOUNTIE
Dick Simmons JEFF HAAS AND Ron Grigsby---------
skillfully satirize the rivalry between
upper and lower-class swains for
Miss McGill's favor. Ruth Dorward
and Kenneth Mi ck require more
adrenalin to maintain the pace or the
"ANY HUMellll CAN 0111"
A comedy by Fr..S C.rmlclleel, dlrecled by Ron
All>erlMn, WI .. ioQll by All>erlMn -Kerry Mon••. sound encl llQllllno by Jon Bl.ire Mid Fred AlllrlQM, pr•
1entlt4 Fr~ end Set"'deY$ et I JO ttvOUQ1! J.,,.. J el tr.e Wutm1ns .. r Com,.,..,,lty Tl,.el•r. 7272 Mec>1e St . Wutmln\te<. R.-vellOftl~
THllCAST Hennl.,.I Hix. • • . • . J o Rek11e.-r•r
Ernttll,,. Wlntergrffn . . . . . .. .. . . LOI\ Fer ...
S.lly Ven \/Iller . . . • . . • • . K•rol McGiii
Zenia . . . • • . . .. •. , . s-O'Connell
R-r MOlHI • • • . .. Cl-Bu"'°"
Cuter F~\tmen . • • • . • . • . • Jtff H-
Jec-. Re_..t . . . . . . . • . . ........... Ron GrlQabv Cell• L•UWOf). . . . .................... Rl.1111 Oonoerd T. J . Lelllf'OIJ ...... .............. ... KeMetllMl<k
EdQotn ........ . . . .. Aon Albet1Mn/~rtln Fuell•
production as a gold digger and her
fortune-hunting husband, while Clark
Burson does a flne job as a stuffy at·
torney.
The Westminster show is not so
much directed as choreographed,
with Albertsen's eagle eye for comic
timing very much in evidence. When
audiences are not being regaled with
the physical comedy of the show they
are. at the least. being nudged in the
ribs with the play's Inherent satire.
"Any Number Can Die" may very
well be the· funniest community
theater production or the nearly com-
pleted seasoii on the Orange Coast. It
continues Fridays and Saturdays
through June 3 at the Westminster
Community Theater, 7272 Maple St..
Westmi.nst.er. • BACKSTAGE -Two matinee
performances of Woody Allen's
"Don't Drink lhe Water" are
scheduled for the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .. just
north or Costa Mesa ..... the
matinees will be Wednesday and
Sunday, the latter a s pecial Mother's
Day brunch, with doors opening at 11
a.m. and curtain at 1 p.m. . .call
979-5511 for rP.servations ..
Protesters
Picketing
SF Theater
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> ...:... Wheelchaired
protesters. some of
them Vietnam veterans.
staged a sidewalk
protest in front of a
theater that is showing a
movie about the
handicapped. but which
is inaccessible to them.
The film. "Coming
Home." opened with the
600-seat Regency ll
theater only about a
quarter filled. Between
the theater and the
sidewalk are 28 steps, an
obstacle to people in
wheelchairs
OUTSIDE, dozens of
protesters wheeled
around. urging mov·
iegoers to boycott the
film. which stars Jane
Fonda and Jon Vmgbt as
a disabled Vietnam War
veteran.
"Whal this dem · onstrates is the
length to which our
movemeni still has to
go,'-' said Goden Hall. in
a wheelchair, who had a
bit part in the movie. He was on the picket line.
"IT'S OBVIOUS that
sensitivity still has not
s ifted down to the
movi e -making
industry," he said. "It's
all fine and good to work
wilh disabled people (or
a few months, but when
the movie is done. the
L di idea or accessibility is U Crous set aside."
Theater manager Al
Nei lson said owner
'Deathsport'
By EARL DA VIS n.._.,.... • ...,.
New World Piclura' "Deatbsport"
is a limp science-fiction effort whose
obvious budget deficiencies are equal
to its lack or overall invention.
After the inevitable nuclear war,
future populations can get t heir
bloodthirsty jollies only by watching
costumed gladJators e ngace in trying
to run one another off the road at the
same time they're attempting to ia,p
one another out of existence with
their ray guns. The fact that the
ceremony bas about as much
excitement as a lethargic drag race
doesn't make the movle ring with
either credibility or entertainment.
T HE P RIMARY preoccupation of
the film is to have a.a many shots of
motorcycles klcldne up clouds of dust
as the) can as well as structure what Robert Blumenfeld
passes for a script to include plenty o f f e r e d t o h a v e
of opportunity for mayhem and em PI o Yee s carry
explosions. wheelchaired patrons up
Add a h ea lthy dosage of the stairstothetheater,
ultra-violence and nudity and the but that offer was
formula is complete. The actors have _r;...e.;;..je.;..c;...t_ed;;;.. _____ _
to spout ludicrous lines which tax
even their abnormally straight faces,
thanks to the scetiario provided by
Henry Sll.'O and Donald Stewart.
SU.SO~ ALLAN Arkush directed
strictly by the numbers. although
they're helped repeatedly by Larry
Bock'sediting.
Davld Carradine, Claudia Jennings
and Richard Lynch star \n the film.
Glven their surroundings, they dJd
manage to keep their attention on the
material. Too bad none of that wes
Lett over for the audience.
1HUTREl-OAANGE CO
SENIOR 01IZEN5 S2.00
After her divorce,
. lupttoknow
some pretty
Interesting
peclllle •• ,
• Inducting herself.
c :\aT•ePP )
50 COAST PLAZA
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SO COAST PLAZA
IATlfUZ!I In tM DAILY PILOT
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"FM " (PG}
DMLY~tO .,.,,.,,.........,0
"BOYS IN COMPANY C .. (A)
"THE LAST DETAIL"
"THE t.AS~WALTZ"
...... ANTOM OF PARADISE"
"SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER"
"LIFEGUARD"'
"'LL DIUV&~NSC>Nflt 6dlPM......n.t
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ENTERTAINMENT/ INTERMISSION/ MOVIE REVIEW
Sgt. Preston Recalled
CARLSBAD !AP I Sgt. Preston of the Yukon
is not righting lhe bad guys ln the deep &nows of
the Arctic anymore He 1s busier with paperwork
and planning for a trailer park.
But Dick Simmons still looks like the famous
Mountie. even down to the pencil-thin mustache.
The 60 -ycar -old Simmons runs Rancho
Carlsbad. a 168-acre mobile home country club
near this San Diego beach city. looking after a
myriad of recrealional facilities aod planning ac·
tivities for the 850 residents. most of whom are re·
tired
HE HAS NOT BEEN in front or a camera in
years. but says he still gets offers. "I had recent
offers that involved several months shooting in
Europe. but couldn't get away rrom the rancho."
From 1955 to 1958. when the television show
was canceled. Preston served the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police by relentlessly pursuing the bad
guys across the s now-covered reaches or
northwest with the help or ttls dog, Yukon King.
Actually. said Simmons. there were several Kings.
"One dog could do ooly a few t.runas. so we'd use
several for any one sequence "
Location shootlng was done near Aspen. Colo ..
tn temperatures as low as 40degrees below zero
Simmons got into movies by chance. After col·
lege, where he took Army of!icer training, he
" 'METAMORPHOSES' at once the complete opposite
and !oatcal successor to 'fantasia· ... --. s.-11~ ...
f(IUNlAIN ~ VAL IE Y
[1111111 114
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ClOSI INCOUNnlS
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COMACfoOl
HUS swtn HYINOI (HI)
JOintd lht' cavalry. CH'ntually flying transports in
the Air Corp'>
"I WAS FLVING FOR an alrllne af\er &be wu
and was on vacation In Palm Springs where r met
Louts B Mayer." he baid. "We went to lunch one
afternoon and he orrered me a movie contract Jt
paid well. so I look it ..
A number of filmi; followed. with people such
as Esther Williams and Robert Montgomery. For
14 years. he interviewed stars on TV's "MGM
Report." then came Sgt. Preston.
Now. 20 years later. reruns of the show are
still being shown and it has been dubbed into a
score of languages. Simmons says he once caught
the show in a Tokyo hotel. "I wanted to hear King
bark in Japanese," he said.
Cannon Plays Madam
LOS ANGELES <AP I -Dyan Cannon will star
as Sally Stanford. the San Francisco madam who
became mayor of Sausalito. in the NBC movie "Lady
ofthe House "
The movie 1s based on her book. which traces her
colorful story from childhood lo her election as
mayor of Lhe wealthy Bay area community. It in·
eludes the 1930s and 19405 when she was madam of an
opulent Nob I Lill bordello
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Festival''
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•Horoscope
•Classified
T~y. May 9. 1971
Happenings
By Marcia Forc;berg
'Twas Night
For the Stars
/ ~!
Sparklin~ stars and silver ~oona bung
from the ceiling at the Registry Hotel Saturday
night for Sta.rflight '78, the third annual costume
ba ll sponsored by the 35-member Sandpiper
support group for Hoag Memorial Hospital
Presbylerian.
Each year, Sandpipers raise funds for their
sole charily -the Donna Maguire Duffield
Memorial Radiation Therapy Center at the
hospital -through ba ll reserv(ltions, patron
donations and sales or business advertisements
and personal messages in their memo-directory
book. The books were given to each couple wbo
attended the space-themed dinner dance.
Almost $20,000 was raised for the Radlallon
ThPrapy Center , according to Mn. George
Elkourt, founder of the Sandpipers.
The space fantasy atmosphere provided an
out-of-this-world backdrop for 300 guests clad ln
zany and inventive costumes Winners or the
masquerade competition included Mr'. and Mn.
Jack Secoy, Mr. and Mn. Len Bergbaaser, Mr •
and Mn. Walter Coarsen. Rocer Grable and
Annita LogardL .
Contest judges were Robert White, George
Elkouri, Dand Kagnorr and Robert Pike.
Chairman of the other-worldly event was
1'1arge Shears. She was assisted by Raby
Schwab and Jacky Wblte. as well as the other
Sandpiper members.
Donation Worth Gold
Members or the Angelitos de Oro are worth
lbeir weight in gold. At least that's the opinion
or Big Brothers of Orange County.
At the recent Angelitos de Oro 17th annual
black lie ball and dinner, the group celebrated
its presentation of $25,000 to the local Big
Brothers organization .
"We're very grateful and very pleased,"
said Jo AJnaDder, executive director of Big
Brothers, who attended the ball. '
"A111elltos de Oro has presented us with
$25,000 for the past 17 years, and that adds up to
quite a large amount. We think It's great."
The proceeds are added to the Big Brothen'
general operating fund to carry on the work or the self.supporting agency. Mrs. Alexander
added. ··u·s an important part or our budget
every year."
Angelilos de Oro support group is
well-known throughout the Big Brother
movement ln the United States, she said. In
fact, "Big Brothen of America bas named
Angelltos de Oro the most outatandl.ng women's
auxiliary supporting a Blg Brother agency,"
she added.
The dooJ lioo was ps:;esented to Kell~
Barnbam (president or the board of dlrecton ol
Big Brothers of Orange County) by Mn. Dould
S&arU.c <AnaelilOI president). ,; ,,. He accept.eel by tellinc the suesta that Blc
Brotbel"IJ. wbicb ls now lo ita 20tb year tn
Orange U)Wlty, served 700 yowig boys In the
paat year
I ii
The mcDtY la ralMd through the publication "
or file Gold Book, a pictorial calendar. 1'h1I
year, under the direction ol ltn. Sa• GvleJ,
the book contained more than 300 P81t!'· The Aqelltoe do all ot the wort before
bandlna the book to the print.er -that includes
selling advertlsements, complllq &>botolraphl
and puttilll the book toaetber. Each C-'9
received a copy of the Gold Book at the bait
held at the Marriott Hotel.
Arrangement.I tor the event were wader tM
dlrecllon of ,Mn. att•ard D. AllH, WI
cbalraan. Alllatln1 ber were •n; Jellil K
lalJU., lln. WllUa• 8. Rel~, •n. ..
I ,
DAILY PILOT Featuring_._ •• __
Cl
Fighting Baek
What legal action can a woman take if her husband beats her?
Thi. conclida a aema on batt~ed 1D01Mn
which began yelt~ in Featuring.
By MARCIA FORSBERG
Of ffle.Oelly "lot,....
Dinner is late, or he can't find his
cigarettes. or the newspaper was
thrown away before he read it. or she is
asking him if he'll be home from work
early tomorrow'night.
Sometimes·· any minor incident can
trigger his e motions. So, feeling
frustrated, pressured, depressed, angry
or tired, he hits her. Slaps her, punches
her. lakes off his belt and beats her.
threatens her with a kitchen knife.
Later, after the violent attack. he
might feel remorse. He wants to make
up by kissing her or making love. so she
complies because the only time she gets
any affection is after he's beaten her.
But the physical attacks bel:ome
more frequent and more· severe. She's
afraid l'\e's going to kill her.
But she's also afraid of calling the
police, of pressing charges, of having
him eo to jail. She still loves him, she
doesn't want her children to be without
a father, she doesa't want him to have a
criminal rerord, she bas no income of
her own and doesn't want to go on
weUare.
WHAT LEGAL ACTION can a woman
take .ii her husband or the man she lives
with beats her?
··A woman can go to court, before a
judge, and ask for a temporary restain·
ing order. There are various kinds. Jt
can tell her husband not· to bit ber, or to
get out of the house... says Frances
Coles. UC Irvine instructor who teaches
a course titled "Women and the Law."
But controversy surrounds the docu·
ment .
Pamela Bigelow, executive director
of the Women's Law Center in Tustin.
says, "Women have told us that the
police would not enforce that restrain·
ing order. So why bother to have it if the
police don't treat it with dignity?
··w e tell women that the restrairung
order is worttiless because the police
won't enforce it."
IN FACT. she adds. "Many police
have told us it's absolutely worthless.
One officer said a restraining order is
just a piece of paper. and a fist can go
right through paper.
"Women have a tendency to think it's
a shield. and it's not.··
Chief Jon Sparks, Laguna Beach
Pdlice Department. disagrees. ··Anyone
who would tell a woman that a restrain·
ing order is a worthless document is do-
ing more damage."
The reason. he says. is bee a use of a new
law <which amends Section S27 of the
Code of Civil procedure) that went into
effect in January of this year. In the
past . if a woman did not want her
hu•ha?!d-.a.~ ~ u ~riminai cm.rxr.
generally the only other way she could
legally have the court order ham to stop
beating or harrassing her was to first
me for divorce before she could obtain a
restraining order. -.
BUT THE NEW Jaw does away with
that stipulation --the woman no
longer has to first file for divorce and
1t also calls for the Coumy Clerk to
forward a copy Q( the._order Lo the loretl
police department. mforming them lhol
a restraining order i!) tn effect
Therefore. if she as being beaten and
she calls the police. "the pohce don t
have to charge the man with as:.aull
Ttiey can charge him with contempt of
the order and can arrest him for that
violation of the restratning order:· ex
plains Ms. Coles.
She adds that the worth of the
restraining order is "legal protection
. Also. it lets the police departmenl knc,w
what's going on. so if somelhmg else
happens later. at least Lhe woman ha:.
taken that prelimmary step ...
SHE CITES another ldW (which am ends Sttlion 273· 0 of lhe Pena I Code 1
that has been changed from felony ware
beating to felony woman beating. H
stales that "you don't have to be married
to be charged with felony woman beat
mg,"shesays .
Patricia Herzog. Corona del Mar al
torney. says. "I don't think that this
tmaking the crime a felony instead or a
misdemeanor I is going to have the de·
sired effecL ft may increase the re
. sistance of law enforcement to pro·
secote. •
"I don't want to come across as being
anti the Justice system . but the justice
system just is not geared lo handle this
problem effectively or well
"I believe m a diversion program.
where people will be diverted from the
(Sff LEGAL. Page CZ>
Among those attending Starflight '78 ball, above. were
Margot and Allen Condon, Corona de/ Mar, and left, Mr.
and Mrs. L,eonard Berghauser of Newport Beach.
Mrs. s.,.,, Gurley was
Angelltos de Oro ball.
_i (2 DAI 'I PILOl
Deaf Kids Form Own Language
By TEPllANIE f'iolANN
WASIUNGTON tA P J
Deaf children huve u
"nuturuJ mclinalion" to
develop their own 21\ruc·
tured ~1~n language
without ouh;ide help,
studies by two universi·
ty researchers show.
The researchers also
suy that any humJn be
ing isolat ed f r o m
normal communication
has the ablllty lo "apon·
lltn e ous ly develop a
structured sign system
lhat has many of the
properties of natural
ap()ken langua1e."
[)r. Susan Goldin·
' . • • • Dappen1ngs
(From P oi;e <:1 >
Danl~I Kilmer, MrH. Ti:uothy A. Devine and
Mra. Richard Bertea.
And There Th ey Go!
Members and guests of Oig Canyon Country
Club celebrated the 76lh running of the
Kentucky Derby Friday ni~ht at a Kentucky
Derby Party.
Festivities included a Southern style dinner
and dancing to oldies but ~oorlles. Each guest
was served a mint juhp in a souvenir Kentucky
Derby glass nown an rro m Lou1sville for the
occa sion. The glasses, a Ocrby tradition, list all
the winners of the horse race for the past 75
years.
Co-chairmen of the event were Mr. and Mn. Maarlce Dewald and Mr. and Mrs.
Matthew Osborne. Assisting them were Mr. aod
Mn. Kenneth Bartelt, Mr. and Mn. Gerard
8a1Uuue. Mr. and Mrs. Deula Geller, Dr.
and Mn. Harvey Helnrtcba. Mr. and Mrs.
James Morrison and Mr. ud. Mn. Richard
Nelaon.
They Burned It
More than 70 active. sustaining a nd
associate members or the Newport Chapter or
National Charity Le ague met recently to
celebrate the burning of the mortgage held on
the chapter'• senior citizen center localed ln
Costa Mesa.
Hors d'oeuvres, wine and cheese were
se rved as guests \\ atc hed Mn. Donald
Palmquist (president ) set fire to the mortgage,
wh ich was paid In full m April. The property
was paid for from rm.reeds earned by the
chapter's operation or the Ticlrtocker Thrift
Shop.-.
Philanthropy chairman Mrs. Paal Kua led
League members in converting two houses oo
the property Into a senior center tbat provides
lunch. companionship and activities.
Mn. Allen Goedaon ts dlredor of tbe
Golden Timers CentU
People Peering
Dlan&ba Lyu Dollllu will take permanent
vows to become a member of the Communffy or
Christian Family Ministry <formerly The
MW1lard Tree) during Holy Eucharist at All
Saints' Episcopal Church, Vista ... Mrs.
Donald ff. Palmqulat, president of the Newport
Chapter o( National Charity League. bas named
Mn. Gerald Frulcla Doan the 1978 Debutante
Ball director. The ball will be held Nov. 25 at
the South Coast Plaza Hotel . . .... Corona
del Mar resident Nancy Englert, who Is a
student at the University or Arizona, has been
honored at Women's Night. The campus.wide
banquet was sponsored by Mortar Board, a
national scholastic, Jeadersblp and service
honorary ... Laguna Beach's Queen of Hearts
Guild for Chlldrens Hospital ol Orange County,
raised $16,000 for the hospital at a recent art
auction ...
Glean Martin, executive omcer or tbe
Newport-Costa Mesa Board ol Realtors, was
honored witb the title "Knight of the Blue
Garter" by members of the SoropUmiat
lnternaUooal of the Newport Harbor area. The
award was given ln recognition for Martin's
anterest and dedication in serving the
community. . . . • . A $500 check has been
presented to Vlqlnla Coape. executive director
of Big Sisters of Orange County. by Hazel Poad.
chairperson of community aervlce for the
Altl'\l.Sa Club ol Saota Ana .••• Winners ln the
Spring Poster coatest, sponsored by Westdiff
Plaza and open to schools ln the Newport-MeH
School District, are Keu7 Miller. Darren
Reinhardt. Corlue Scblb. Roa Pel'l'OD. Leslie
Redick and Mlcbele Dore . . . Among the
wioninl mannequ.lna at the 40th Amlual Lu
Floristu Floral Headdress Ball were Mrs.
Ta1tor ltlqardson, Huntington Beach; Mn.
MattlD ......._ and Mn. llOcUel Ball, both or
Corona del Mar.
I/ p Mew cm Uem for ffGAJll_., Nnd U lo
Mta'da Foti~. Orange COOll ~Aloi. P.O. Sor
15'0. Co"4 Nao. 92f)1S. Or coll UMDJ.
•• .Legal Bights
Meadow of the Um verst Tbe studies ::.howed
ty or Chicago and Dr. the s ix childre n each
Heidi Feldman of the produced between 366
University of CaUtomla and 4,854 signs referring
at San Diego atudled six to objects or people and
dear children between between 95 and 210 ac·
the ages of J 1,".1 and 4 uon or attribute signs.
years who had not been From video tapes o(
exposed to conventional the sessions. she noticed
sign language. that the children were
They said each of the not m erely imitating the
deaf children Invented I e s t u res or the i r
h i s or h e r o w n mothers. Ms. Goldin·
s ystematic 1 lg n Meadow saw that the
language, ges tures mothers invented fewer
representing people, ob· signs and made fewer
Jeets and actions. combinations o( s igns
··Even under difficult while "the kids are in·
circumstance&," Ms. venting more and string·
Goldin-Meadow aald. ing them together.··
"the human child re· Since these observa·
veals a natural inclina• lions. reported recently
lion to develop a struc· lo Science magazine.
lured communication abe has followed the pro·
s ystem. A lin1ulSl1c tress of three of the
model is not necesury original six chald re n.
to develop languaae." She s aid their simple
Observers visited the phrases have· been ex·
children and their panded into more com.
mothers in thelr homes plex thoughts.
and wat.cbed them play "They are starting to
with tops supplied for put two s entenc e s
the occuions. Ms. together ... sort of like
Goldin·Metwiow said the coordinate clauses.·· she
toys alv•n to tbe aaid.Shegaveanexam-
children were "thins• pie: "I went to the store,
that require manlpula· and so did you.··
lion. 10 they have to ask Because the children's
for help." parents did not combine
' She aaid the children's -gestures and signs the
first reactions were re· way the children did.
quests for their mothers Ms. Goldin·Meadow con·
to act or contments on eluded that "there la no
the toys' actions. For ex· Indication that the
ample, ahe said. It the children learned to lnte· ~hUd saw a picture or IO· grate their characteriz·
meooe eating, the child Ing signs into an ordered
mi1bt point to the food i}'Stem by imitating
and then to hia own their mothers' produc-
mouth and make an eat· lions . . . . in« motion. "This communication
Later, the youngsters system appears to be
developed so-called at.-lar,.ly the invent.ion of
tribute si.gns. she said. the child himself ratMr
The child miabt tom· Uaaa of tbe caretakers."
pient 1boul Ult •m of a t.tle •alcl. .. You don't
Mlokty KOUN doU by '9ed a ftDdy tuned en· polnllu to bll owta ..-. .trooJDalt. a nurturing .
and ttMn &ttlUl'lDi .C.·•••lroament" for
abow tit llM end..,. H••oae to develop
of tbe doll'•..,., l•P• IWll.
<From Pap CU
Justice system." she says. The proeram
would be one designed to "cha.nae t.belr
living habits and alter their behavior. not
punish them." The concept would be
similar to d.river•s education or traffic
school for one who has received a traffic
ticket.
In some c11ea, abe adds, .. the
restra.lning order may be helpful; ln
some, it m11 not. U things are IO bad
that you need the assistance ol the
court. then they're ~retty bad. G« eome
klnd of counseuni. •
beaten "arm•t usually tbe type or peo·
ple who uy. 'I know my right.a,' we
need a w91 to bridge the gap between ,
tbe law and tbOle wbo Deed to utl11le the
law.•• aya Frances Colet.
.. After the course Is completed, then
the c~l cue would be dlamlued."
5he exlfll"'
REGAJU>ING THE restralnlng order.
Ms. Herzoe says, "it 'a only a pteoe of
paper, and 11 the person does not bave
respect for the law. thtni tbe paper
means nothln1.to them. I'm not aaylng
the restralnlnl order ls useless. bul lt
doesn't protect you from the fast."
PA•ELA BIGELOW says tbe
Women's Law Center recommends tbat
battered women ftnt leave their home.
"Once tbey're aale. there are a vartety
of tblnga to do. If they want to st.Q ln a
married altuaUon. we suggest optiom (such u counsellq) ...
. Ma. Bigelow added that the center
makes no actual recommendations. but
rather lets tbe woman decide wbat
course to take.
Dr. Barbara Star. member or tbe
board of directors for the Southern
Calllornla Coalition oo Battered Women
and faculty aaember of the School ot
Social work at use. aareea.
She advocltes ••Laws that ~rmlt
alternativee oeber than dlVOtte or Jall.
Women want sntectloo. Dot permanent
separation. We need an lntermedlary
step that bridles the 1ap between no
legal . acUoo and pre11ln1 crttnlnal
charges that result ln lmpriaonment."
HOROSCOPE /RESEARCH
Horoseope
WEDNESDA 'V . MAY 10
• By SVDN ~y OMA RR
ARIES <March 21·April 191. Make in·
qumes. Refuse superficial responses. Analyze.
d1g deep. You can strike pay dirt -if you read .
probe. piece together bits of Information until
complete story is obtained . Gemini, Virgo and
Libra figure prominently. You will receive mesaage which nashes "1reen light."
TAURUS <April 20·May 201 : Relatives.
home environment, ans wen to inquires -these are featured. Libra, Scorpio and another Taurus
rt1ure ln acenarto. Good news comes through
call, letter of special messenger. You are
challenged -ror your own benefit.
GEMINI <May 2l•June 201 : Someone wants
somethin1 tor nothln1 and could think of you as
tarcet. Steer away from get-rich-quick
i;chemes. Guard valuablee, protect possessions.
Investment procedures •re bi&hUghted. Pisces.
Virgo figure lo picture. Romantic interlude
could lend spice.
CANCER tJune 2l·~ly 22): You rttelve re·
co1nition, position. authority. llelationsh1p in ·
tenalflea. You make rtabt moyes, personality
aparklet -and you could gain weight.
Capricorn i.a In picture. Wear bright colors.
make penonal appearances. You win -by a
wlde margin!
LEO <July 23-Aua. 221: EJ;tend sphere of
activity, influence. Be rid of abAckles. financial
and emotional. Express full)' and freely. Face
rears, doubtl and send lhem scampering! Aries.
Libra n1ure prominently. Obtain valid hint
from Cancer meuage.1 v1aoo (Aus. 23-Sept. 22>: Stress creativi·
ty. pioneering. •t>lrit, Independence, co\irage of
convlctlona. You reeelve mal'Velous compli
ment1 tncouraaernetit. Yea, member of opposite
sex figures prominently. Leo reveal.a eecret.
New friend enters your Ufe -and it could be important!
LIBRA <~pt. 23-0d. 22l: FoUott tb.roueh
on hunch. Teacher from put repeats a lason.
You can achleve goal, but Dp"e ol .,. lnveat·
ment 1s required jn Ume and effort. Aquarius,
Cancer and Leo figure in scenario. One ••at top ..
will lend support
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov 21 >: Good lunar
aspect promotes travel, communication. bring.
ing pbU01opbical concepts Into focus. Spread ln·
nuence, set goal and price. Gemini, Sagittarius
figure prominently -so does the number 3. Ac:
cept social lnvttation.
SAGnTAaJUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21>: Study.
basic luuea. Be aware of history aa well as
future potenUal. Stlck with facts. Accent on un-
locklni doors previously ''off limi.ts." Partner
or mate has something relevant to report on
· finances, investment or budget.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19>: Good news
from "legal department" indicated as hidden
clause is located , interpreted. Be analytical .
give full rein to intellectual curiosity. Gemini.
Virgo, Sagittarius individuals figure prominent·
ly. Yes. the change \a necessary and will prove
beneficial.
AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): SetUe family
disputes. Be dJplomatic wbfle standing nrm on
principles. Acree to adjustment wblcb adds con·
veniences. makes home base more comfortable
and attractive. Taurus, Libra persons figure in
scenario.
PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20>: Romance.
behlnd·aceftes glimpses. intrigue and glamor
could be featured. Pleasant news rttelved con-
cerning one who ls confined to home or hospital.
Virgo and another Pisces figure promlnently.
Be discreet, avoid selr·deception, see places and
people as they actually exist
If May llth I• yo.r blrtt.claJ you are ·
dramatic. emotional, creative, temperamental.
determined. loyal, stubborn. Leo. Aquarius and
Scorpio persons play important roles ln your
lire.
She advises women who are victims
of battering to "protect themselves by
not putting themselves in a vulnerable
position. Walk away. don't have:• con·
lrontation. 'Jlere are a lot oNh1np you
can do ti you see that the 1ltuaUoa la 10-
lng lo erupt ln vlolence-.-Yolf have a du·
ty to yourself to do u. a06 not rely on a
piece of paper."
"She can me for aeparation, nte for
divorce, seek counsel.ln8. If she ft1• U·
sault and battery cbar1es, she ha to be
willing lo press cbar1es. That's where
the rub comes ln. A lot of women back
out. rr she does It clvllly, then lbe can
sue fOl' damaaea. '' 1be added.
Dr. Star believes ln "readina the vlc·
tlma their rtpta. and clearly tellin1 the
women the le1al alternatives available
lo tbem and provtdlna an advocate who
will help tbem tbrouah the crim~
Justice proceu lf charaes are pl'elled." '
She adds. "Tbe woman Is bleed~lDJ but 1he•a aaylng 'I don't want him to CJD <fftf om wffh'Uwe
jfom'%u ... and ,. to Jail.• Wbat abe wants ts for aome
SINCE wo•&N WHO are belDI to Intervene.•· ·
1\
-Subbling·G~
Idea!
What a
fine way to say
"I love you''
on Mother's Day... ~
a beautiful 4
6" high
hand-blown
bud vase
from Swedish
craftsmen who
know how to
capture the gnce
and elegance
of crystal,
luvlns just a kiss
of a bubblt
to float magically
from tne base.
$18.50
NEWPORT BEACH
S4l2Vla Udo•61S.21l1
LOI AlitGllU.._,.OINA/IA~A tAaMlA
rALMlfl~
. .
ti~~LTti CLUl3
.·
. ffi~lKMI:~
Come'to Miio
for "cum" tD Spring
Fwtr th•t •rw more fun
th1n running. Exercl•to-
mutlc, for lnltlnee. Or enfoy
recquttball, IUPtfVfted weight
condldonlng, end relaxation In
our S1Un1 or J1eu111.
WiCkgt!_'Parms
OF OHI04P
A
L•rrnted Edition
Gift
Come In end •ltot from • wfdl ••letv of ttmptlng. tatty tlft pelca. ••
sntdly boxed just for Mother'• o.y -,.., 14th.
A ..._,lful coloring cookbook... ~~'E J•t ldd ~ end cr•vont end prt•
.nt MINft whh • kffpuke ahe'll
trlllUfl.
wftft lnY ~ purcih8Md
for MDthlt'• Day.
If Morn liv .. out of town. w.11 llftd her Ifft for you.
· · ff iclcory fGrms
OF ON/08
couA &out11 r .. 1 ?Im °'= ':/::,,.
Mis.& Lftw C. I 1.e Mii ..., flt• I,_ ,. ...... s. ... '"--., .... .....,fr
""--TB& 8VPD cum 11.AaKnT ... -~
. ·
ANN LANDERS/ ERMA BOMBECK
Working From Home
Presld~nt Carter and I
ar" the ooly two people
tn th1~ country 1 know
who ~·ork from our
home.
He's got the ~:st or 1t
Surrounded by all that
St'CUtity. having a desk
that locks. and no one
rin~ing his chimes in the
middle of the day to sell
him pastry brushes and
lip gloss.
Oh sure, he has his
share of interruptions,
but does he ever Urt his
phone and discover so-
meone has entwined a
popsicle stick in the
cord? Does he ever get
involved in a high.level
phone conversation a nd
have to excuse himself
lo turn the timer ofr on
the ham? Is he ever in
the midst of drafting a
piece of legislation that
will change the history
of the world and hear a
yell from the other e nd
of the house, "We're out
or toilet paper '"
E,...a
Bom~k
The bl..: prnblt•m with
working rrorn your
home is no one treats
you like a professional
Pes t control men shurtle
in and out spr:iylng an
sect1cide on my feet.
children draw faces on
my calendar and color
my rol l of stamps
yt!llow. •md at least once
a da~ my husband calls
with instructions to, "Go
to the garage. Turn the
power mower over on Its
back. On the bottom.
j u st under the right
r otary blade. is a serial
number Copy it down
and call it m to the re·
pair shop so they!ll
know wht1t they're deal·
1ng with >Vhen you're
out 111rking up my clean-
ing, you can pick up the
purt "
As a humor writer J
<-all only rencct on the
flashes or Wit lhal might
haH been had l only
had a typewriter with
set margins, paperclips
that weren't strung into
'' ··necklace." a die·
t1nnary with a ll the
vowels, and a pen a nd
pencil by the phone for
messages.
Sometimes. l torture
myself by wondering
what 1l must be like to
r.11 a wastebasket you
don 'l have to empty i.1nd
the peuce of ·not h~v1ng
to let a dog in and out
175 limes a day
But the real klck~r is
convincing your friends
tmd family you are real-
1 y working . The
telephone calls that
began. •"You busy? So,
what's happening? Still
working for lhal crazy
lady who won 'l let you
go to lunch or play ten-
nis" So, let her fire you.
Ha. Ila."
Like President Carter.
I too have my Camp
David. It's calm. serene.
and private. I tell no one
l'm going there. I JUSt
slip off with my work
and sometimes just a
few hours makes all the
difference an the world.
When I return. things
are in perspective. and f
am once again ready to
do ba ttle with the steady
stream of Interruptions .
The I RS is 'questioning
my expenditure or a new
s hower curtain for my
oHice. but what do they
know"
T uesoay May g '111 a
P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
SU,.llllOll C:OUllT 0, THI tMttff CP-... J
ST4YI 0' CALl,OllN14 '011 SU,.lrlUOll COUllT 01' THI NOTICS TOCll•OITOlll'
THI COUNTY 0"011ANOI STATI ()ti CALll'OllNIA ,0. \U,.llllOll COUllT 01' Tl!E
.... A·•SMI fHI COUNTY 01' OllANOI STATI 0 , CALll'ORNIA 1'011
HOTICI 0, N•A•INO 0 " .... AtMd TNIC:OUNTVOl'OllANOI
,ITITION l'Oll "llO•AT•O,WILL NOT ICI 01' HlA•I NO 01' N• A·ttlJl AMO l.ITTllll THTAMU fTA•Y l'ITITION 'Olt l'•Ol4TI 01' WILL ESl•I• ot CHARLES H CASE.
Ell•I• ol ELMER L PRESHO, AND CODICIL$ ANO llO• Lt:TTIRS 0.C•O\td
0.(HWd Tl•TAMt:NTAll Y AHO '011 NOTICC•'>1>4EllCbVGIVfNtorM
NOTICE IS HE A EBY GIVEN 1n.1 AUTHO•IV.TIQW TO ADMINISTl• <r.Oolor\ ot tht "4N•• nu,,.d decec!Af\t
llOMALO E MIGAUO ... ~fol" l\er•ln UNOlll TMl tNDl:,.INOIHT 40 1 ... 1 "' oer.on• i..vonq <1•1ms -•n•I
• pelfllttl IOI Prot»le ot Will <1nd I• MllU$Tll4TIOll 0' ISTATIS ACT u .. '••d OK•-k• r-lred lo Ille ·~n<•olt..119r\T .. 1 ...... nt•rvto1,,. IE••••• OI HELEN B AEEO lhem ..,,,.,,,,.,..CtHMY•OU<l'ltt"'"
P911t1-r. rtle<enet to wl\l<I\ '' m-0.CtHed ,,,. OtlK• Of lht <._ 04 Ill• <1Don en•
ta< '"""'' l)Al1KutkS """ ..... ,,,. NOTICE 15 .. EAEBY GIVEN llwl "'"'" ~outt .... lo P'•Wfll W..m ••11111 """ •nd 111.-<t ol ,,..,,nq Ille W<n• llAABAAA LEE AllSHIEA "•• "'"" ti•• n•on•r• ,_,,.,. to ,,,. ""
... , bffn ... IOf M.ty JJ. "" •• 10 00 Mr•1n • pehlion IOt "'-·· ot Wiii "•"•0"..S •• '" '•U\I OeNllM*lll, a.rn In "" courtr_.. OI Oeo.r1 .... 111 •"" Coolclls.,,., IOf IUYl>n<• of l•t uni P•~.,. V•lenct•. '"I M•~·
No ~ OI H id court, •• 100 C••K Cent., ,.,, , ........ " .... " •ncl la< A11t11ot1a.. Svll• JO• l.<191111• Hiii•. CA •'6S3.
Orovt Wnl 1n llli' CHY ol S.nl• All•, tloft to Aomlroi.r .-., .,,. lndePM wl\•cll '' u,. l)l~e 04 INJ•M\\ ot It.
C.lllornl• I Adrnlnhlf•llon ot Eslalet Acl. r• Vncl4'r\IOned In all mall..-• -•••n•nq
O•ltd M.tv ), 1'11 ltrence lo W!lkll I\ -tor fur Iller lo Int ~Sl•lt ol w1C1 Ot<teltlll, w11nu1
WILLIAM E. SI JOHN. N•ll<u••n. MIO ,,,., .... lime ~nd tovr monlll• •lier .... tlr\I PUbll~llOI'
(ounly Cltrk piece 11t .... ,1119 trw •.me llH bffn ut or '"" nollu-11011 llT A. IASTMo\N ta< M•Y lO, 1971, ti 10 00. m . •n .... O•l•d Ap<ll 7~. ,., •.
VI Htf!Mr ........ SYlle JU courtrocim of 0.0.flm4nl NO. J 01 •••d BANI( OF AMIEtllc.A
DAILY PILOT
PUBUC PllOTICE
"CTITIOUS aUSINl:5'
NAMI STATIMINT
C3
I"• lollow1n9 ""on• •rt 001n~
bVSfl'"fi' '" ALPHA OESIC.fll ..
PHOfOC.Ro\PHY 11•)1 L•mberl ~I •
Sit 104 E1 Toro CA.,.,.,
Oewn E !.Iii"'"'· 1)1'1 YortN SI S.nt• A"•· CA•1IO) T llorn•• J. lolllltr l•.,\ Cllo•
rvwood .,.n J1Hn C.•phtr.,.o (A '2Ul
llll\ 011w1 .. \ ., tond11tttc1 lly •
Qeneral HrMtrllfl•D
Dt-E S~•""" t "" ,,.,.........,,. .,,.,. t teo w1tn '"°"
Cowily Cl.,k ot Or•nQe County 01•
AP<ll 21, •tit ,....,..,
Pulllf\""' Or-CW>I 0••1• Pllol
M•v l. •. i.. ll. t•1t
1108 18
PUBLIC NOTICE
C.1ta Mew, CA tU2' <ourt. •t TOO CM< C...le< Orn•t WUI. NATIONAL fAUST ANO
Ttl ........ In Ille Clly04 Wit• An• UlllOfn•• SAVING$ AS50CIATIOH I' I CTI nous •U•t1HU
AlterMy tw ... 110-r D•ttd M.ly S. 1'71 lly CMolLuik ,HAMI STATa MtNT
PllOI"'*' 0r..,.. '°"'' 0.oly Pflot WIU.14M I "JOHN, ~tor of""' wm ot Tiit toflowlnq perqi .. , ., .. OO•nQ M•'r t, 10 1'. 1'71 ,., .. ,. Coun1v Cl•r._ the_,,..,.,.,.., oe~nl ll<IS•NU .is
HAHN&HAHN WILLIAMV SOIMIDT COM PONENfS FOR COM
llUCHAllOG.HAHNI M S•,.Mitye!Dr .. Ut.MI PUTE RS, 17'1 Oii••• Atvtr Av1• PUBLIC NOTICE S411M... Nl'W,..-t .. acao. CAtt... Founl•ln Vatlay, CA ttlCI
·-----.--.-------1 Jet a. Cel•-a1.. Ttl: OUI ...au w111,...,, P •-so-r 11'1 Otta .. J
R·TfHl "•~a. CA ttltl 4 11 .. M y fer 1 1.ec-R1v1r A.,. • F-1 .. 11 V•lltv. (.A ~2/0I NOTIC~ TO CllEDITOllS Alltr,..y tw fMJ~ PuOll\l>ed ()o-C:.0.\1 0.11v P•IOC, Sflell• M. ltnlWui.r 11'1 on.,.,d
HO. A-4MM Pvlllllllt!d O'M\Glf C.0.•I 0.llv Piiot May 7. •, ••. U, ttll Alwr Ave • F01.11t .. n Vallev. CA ~2108
SUttlRIOll COUttT 0, TNE M<ly t, 10, 16, 1'11 tll0-19 •-----------'•_ ... _,.~ Tiii\ 1111.,,..0 ,, C-v<llcl by •' STATE M c:ALll'OttHIA l'O• •• ~r•I Nrtnen.lllP
THI COUNTYOf'OllANGE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE Wiffl-P •mn.uwr
In the M•lltr or t~• Etlalt of Tiii\ ,lal.....,,t wn 111«1 "''" '""
HAROlO f SEGERSTROM, O• j Counly '""" ol Orenoe countv on H T SEGEASTROM, Aka HAAOLO lwo unol \lruclurt •••ll•btt ror ,~ LIOAL HOTIC:I April 11. 1t7l
SEGERSTAOM.0.CUS.O mo•61 and ttlO<allon Ave1ra1tt111v of NOTtCJ! INYltlNO llDS 'OtU~
NOllU I\,,., • .,., olven lo creditors slrU<llHt lor remov•l MICI rt1ou11on o\ NOTICE '' HERIEBY GIVIEH tllll Pullll\f\eO o,..,,.Ot Coast Dttllv Pllol. Nl•lnQ <!alms •Qlllnsl ,,,. "11id dt!<e· tor Ml <O,.\eCvtl"9 c••-.r cs.ys from Ille Bo.rel of Truiltts of ,,,. Ocean M
cltnt lo tile wld <IAllM "-Ille office ot ht .Uy of Publl< Nouu 1n1t .. •led View S<lloOI Ol'1rlc.t Of Or-Cou"· •v 1• •, ••. U, 1978
Ille <ltrk of,,,. a10tes.•d COU<I or to p.rlus slloulo <ont•ct StvP•k· tv. H11nti11Q1on Be.ell, C.lllorn••. will Prt"11nl l,,.tn 10 I,,. ""°'"IQMd •t Ille Vandtrwooo Otvelopmtf'll, /fl Mau• reul"9 IHIH to ~r off lo equipment
Ollie• ot AA NE s LINDGREN. Sl .Hullll"91on8tKll,C.lilom1•t1MI •nctpUrC"-~lff.8'cl.lwllltle-.
1706 11
LA THAM -WATKINS. Attorrw~ Al PUllllSl>ed OrAnQP C:O.sl DAiiy P•IOI , ..... .., uo to' 00 a.rn May, •• ,,,. •• ---..,,.---..".""'."'."'.""" _____ _
l.... Hl So\1111 ,,_., s ....... Lot Mo .... 10, 11 • ., IS .•• II ''· ,. tl\e AdmlnlSlrallCHO Office Of Hid •tCTITIOUS eustNISS
PVBIJC NOTICE
""'9••~. C..ltornl• .,, wl'lleto IAtler1.':..:'.:.:"~....:;••;..;•;.;; ... .;..'"--------ScllOOI Ohlrlc.1. 1'n w-Avenw . NAMl ITATIMUtT
office" Illa Ill«• of ~"'" 04 llW un Hunt11191on tleAOI, c.MI-· tlM7. al T ... fOI~ --Is CIOUIQ bu•~ ders19,,.d In •II"""'" peri.lnlnQ to • PUBLIC NOTICE wtllcll 11-Wld lllclS •Ill tie -necl lleU••
\Aid Hl•I• Su<ll <•••rns "'"" .... ------------.,..,..d•l\ACConl...Cewllll$"9<iflU-MANAGE MF NT PLUS. •H• Is It a Record? n<KtnarY¥OUC'-'Sm ... tOl' llleda< pre !loft\ ,,_ on tilt In the oftkt Of Nici AOOPOtnl 0.., HunllnvtM B .. cll. CA -------------1 ~nled H alottMld w11tMn lour monlllS f'ICTITOUS •USINESS D1Slri<I ., ...
•lle<llleti"tpUllllc•llonoftl\1\1\0ll<e NAMI STATIMINT ~ All ltt"IS 0<cwi-........... lllb &Id Oof'I c Noll '53
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: This year's
G uinn ess Book of
Records having already
gone to press. I'd like to
nominate my wife as the
world's champion at ln-
venling excuses for not
wanting to participate an
normal hus band-wife
lovemaking. It's lucky
·we had two "accidents"
early in our marriage or
we would be childless.
t We will celebrate our
30th wedding a n -
niversary next month.>
I don't know exactly
when this "starvation
diet .. started -or why
but we manage to gel
together two or three
tames a year.
My wife lays claim to
every ache and pain and
minor ailment. plus a
rew major ones (all
with a p hys ician 's
vt•rification >. She has
tht.> "Too Formula "
down pal. (Too tired. too
late. too early, too hol.
too cold, or too upset. l l
al~o get the cliches "Is
that a ll you ever think
about?" And. "We're
too old ror such roolish-
ness."
I challenge anyone in
the countrx to beat her record. Will you please
poll your readers?
PACKED IN ICE I N
CA LIFORNIA
DEAR PACKED :
Tbaaks a heap, but the
ans wer l.s no. I alrudy
have more mall on that
s ubject than I need.
I can te ll you right
no"' your Sad Saga or
A•• Laaclers
Sexual Star vation will
never make the Guin·
ness Book of Records. t
hear regularly rrom
both tws band s and
wives who would gladly
settle for three e pisodes
a year.
Som etimes lhe pro·
blem can be solved by
frank and open com-
munication -"Let 's
work this out together"
-rather than "I'm en·
tilled to more," or
thr eats t o look
elsewhere.
There ls no reason for
sex to be cut orr al any
age if the couple is in
reuonably good health.
Joint counseling should
be sought as a last n··
sort. But make ~ure the
thua pisl has the a p-
proval of the American
M edic al Assn. or the
American Psychiatric
Assn . or the Family
Service Assn. CA phone
call will dolt.( P.S.: U
g roup therapy is s ug-
gested, run, don't walk,
ln the opposite direction.
DEAR ANN
LAN OERS: Everyone
knows Murphy's Law,
but no one ever men-
tions Mrs. M urphy's
Law. I hope you will
,.~~~
l nM4..h J. .... 101' o~. er ,~
• I ~ in Lorge & Half-Sizes )?
;y Sizes \:
JS to 46
.... , ..
1: . , , .. ....
Give Mom your love 1~ ;~~~'\' ·..,. <n and a blouse from ~
Ello Nor's. We'vt ..,
j
got what she wonts ~-~
for Mother's Doy. You 11
~ con count on us to be ~
right because we've J.
been specializing in her ,J)
size for 18 years. ~;
from S 15.00 ,
Gift Cettthates aV11ll1bl• from u.oo ~
MOTHIR'S DAY SPECIAL r~
SU e.rtlflc1tes for ttt
Ella Nor's
llAIJF~SIZE SHOR . MLllt'fON HUN11HGTON llACtt
U•O• ,,...,,... , • .._,.__C.111tr
LAGUNA HILU COSTA MllA
~........ t lOJ "·~·~·
1 IHO, SUNOA'f '2·S Ct•~ Cesta Mtul
BtlkAmtrica,. • Mamor O•ra~
strike a blow fo r equali
ty amon~ the sexes and
print it. Iler~ 'tis:
"Anything that can go
wrong will go wrong
WHILE HE IS OUT OF
TOWN ." -MRS .
M U RPHY. VALRICO,
FLORIDA
D EA R MR S.
MURPHY: I hope you
have learned by now
that when Mr. Murphy
leaves town ll's a good
idea to know exactly
where he can be reached
at a ny giv'en momept.
Start Being
The~lbu
WantCOBel
Ma~~ 1q18 your 1urn1nQ po1n1'
C..111 o• come 111100 .• ., 101 .•
1 omphmen1.irv .1n.11v~·~ .ind
p•o~rJm d1\C~\''on Joh="
Pl ll MAI ll[V[l Ol"M ',
\ Ml'{Jf ll'•C· SCHOOi
ORANGE
) Town (, Country
(714) 547·8228
Mother's Day ls Samday. May 14th
THI SC.., Nlt4T DlUS llos h own ~O!• Kai :i
QtCIOI D G ~ for ..-. !'he beout•I"' P""' ~ ~omcl!<
flowfs w.flt llnpM ill '°"0\1 polyo\I• ~ W Sloe~ 1().16
hlOO
, ... e&.Oll rb oua IAIT IMT'IAMCI
AT-0.M....ouA
D•t«IAP<il 10, "" Tiie lollowlnQ """o'" •r~ "°'"Cl must meet llll .-lc.4btt federal. state H U I 8t "·CA..' Rockpoint D• H•rotd r Se-rslfom Jr bvsinHI a\ •nd IOCal <OOtS UIOT . 110 on «Ill, •2606
... LE N MAR A ENT 4 L s •H Tiie Bo•rd Of Tn11tees ·-rves Ille "" bus•NU s c-.cted b\' •" '" ~ -=~~~e::,;""' Junl:::.,~ E ~::,~·,~ ~',!,.ro ~r.:::::~~,!;.~~~t~" •nd lo dMOU•IDoll C. Hoke>
LATHAN &WATKINS Or, Co\la -.. CA 9261• O•ltd MAY I. '91' Tiii\ \1•1-••• filed •Itri '"" ARNIE s. UNDOlllEN Ltriort M Fl41\lltr, •d JUllll)e•O OcNfl View ScllOol Olllft(\ COvnh Clwk ot O••noe COu<tly on
Att ... 11er• at Uw Or . Coll• M9~. CA.,.,. 8y · t>arrltll C. c.n..-AMl127, 1'71. us Soutll ,...._ s1 .... 1 flll\ i.-neu ,, ,onouc1tc1 b• an 1n ci.ni of IN ....,.w
L.M A .... 1-. CA 90011 dlYKNal 8owd of Tl'\n ... S "'1b!ISll«d OrM\Glf C:O.tt 0.llv Piiot, Publl•lled O'MO&' Coast a.fly PllOI, AUIYlll e. Flt.wr Pullll•lled OrMtt Coast 0.•11" Pltee. May 2, • .... n. ,.,,
AOf'lt2S,andM.ayJ,t. I•, 1'71 Tiu• •lat-I w., hied will\ tilt May t , ••. 1'11
1.0.-71 County Clerk of Or-c-.ty °" M.IY
PUBLIC NOTICE .. , ...
SU,.lrlllOR COUltTOF THE
STATI: 01' c:AURIRNIA l'OA
TNE COUNTY OF ORAHOf.
Ne. A·tt6&4
NOTIC:E 0, HIARING OF
"lrTITION Riii "ltOaATE 01' WILL
AND 1'011 LITTERS TESTAMUt· TAllY
Etl•lt of JOHN Hl'RLE.Y
MUTCHLER, •l\o known •S .J
liARlEY MUTO.LEA, •l•o known as
J H MUTO.LEA. Oe<t•.-o
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN t.,.t
KENNETH C NEWELL llU lil..i
1Wrt1n • petition for PrObalP of Wiii
•no tor 1t\UAl\Ce 04 ltl•n THl•.....,·
'""· r•I-• lo wtoi<ll 11 ....-ta< lurtlWr 1>«lkul110. -tllal ,..., time
arid Pl«~ ol -lnQ Ille wme llM
llffn •tt to< ~Y JO, 1971, •I 10 00
11 m • '" Ille courtr-.i ot ~-tmem
No l ol , .. d court. •• TOO Chi< Otnltt
Ort•e Wttl, In Ille Oly ot SAM• M•,
C:•l•lornt•
O•ttd M<ly \, lt7'
WILLIAM IE SI JOHN,
County Clerk
JOHN H. WHATLIV
SUSt<11r1ty•1e1t.
J>4 I.HI c:.ltr-llvtl
"H•dtfta, CA tttOI
T .. ·71'4W .. l..alJ
Att ..... y .... 1'911"-t'
PubhSNcl O'anot COtl\I OJ1ly Pilot
MAv•. tO. l•. ttll 1131 ·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
..
,
4, 1971. ~
PUllll\hed Oranot C.0.'I 0.•IV Piiot
Mii• • ••. n, JO. "" ,, ... ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.,~,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS I USIMHS
lfAMtl ITATllMIJfT
Tf'l4o lotlowlfto fl'l'IOI\ lsdotllQ !lust·
MU•\
CHU(l(ER SPECIALTIES, MU< At"11Ar<ll 0.., Hunllf9CHO llffcll, CA •i..• Ooftald w. 81tm, "41·0 Pau tk: W•y. A....,..m, CA.,_.
Tiiis ~s Is Qlftdlu(ted by 111 111-dtv~I.
OonatdW I tem
Tiiis ••• ...._. WAS tlltd with tlle
C:O... I y Cle"< of Or MQ11 Couftty on M/jy 4, 1'7a .....,.
Plltll!Sllecl OrMP CNll o.l ly Pl tot May• •••• 13, JO, lt71 ttl .. ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
•T~ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICT1nou5 •USINDS
NAMa STATIMIENT
Tiie '"''°""""' --1, dolllo """ neuu. OlO WORLD T·SHIATS, /)61
Canter Dr., • ii, HIHIClllQlon Beach
CA92W
Sv•vt• S. Ollver, '4SO P•r•moun1
B1vc1 .• Lonv llNcll. CA~ '
Tll1s b\dl,...s IS~ llv •n on dlvidual.
SyllrtaS 011 ... r
Tl\1\ si.t-""" llled ••Ill llW County c1 ... 11 01 0..tftge County on
_,,,II 21 • lt11 ,..,.,,
PwtM•"*9 Or-Coast O.llv Pltot. Mey 2. •. ••. n. ma
PUBUC NOTICE
110T-li
"""'° PW!lslled Or<ltl9t c.oes1 0 .. 1, Pilot.
May 2, t, '" "· '"'
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'iCflfiOUi eUSINUS
NAMI STATIMaNY
T,,. IOll-11\Q tlertOfli •~I! Oo1ng
_.l'lffS8'
THE OAKS, OJ Oallll<t A~t' <MOiia .i M.,. CA mzs
EllHl>etll Allen Otllmer. u~
0.1111• Ave .• Coron. det M<lr, CA tt67)
Jofln Ak lltlrd Cl•rke, 41.S Oa1111.1
Ava •• Cot-one dfl ~r, CA ttO.S -
Tiiis llusln .. $ 1\ (Gnd..a.d bv "
oener•I P91'1-.illtP JOfln R Clkktt
Tiiis \lei-. w•s tiltd ""''" in.. COW'lty CIWtl ot or.,,.. C-ty o" April 27, ltll.
4
' !
( .. .. < ,,
A
0 .,
O; ... ..
Al
M.
-
Cl OAll'f' PIL.01
MARMADUKE by BrAd Andtnon BOOMER
"Heyl You forgot to tell me where the
brakes are!"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
CAS£\
WHA'T°IF~~
~ IN tfi.) U\'1E
~I'M~10
1RkE ~\JE ACnoo ~ I HrT A AR.EPUJ6.
GERIATRIX
")QJ ~ l!S~ He-~ ... MS a.A.VN> ME~
~T ~ 10 tNl4efZITec ~
\..IF=e L-N"ll\.. ™6 Fe~"~ Ptl.J ~ ~~ row...,H.. ~~WM
A ~Al~!
MISS PEACH
by Tom Batiuk
by CharlH Rodrigues
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
·:1:-"=-YoU~S, JOE? l.ET1S
GORDO
NANCY
SEE ... Wilt., w.l1'Tc.KA ~~-
I WONDER HOW 1 GOT
HOLD OF IT·-I NEVEF'!
use
ONt:.
WE,OGE CUT
LAYERED CUT
PERMANENTS
RAZOR CUT FEATHER CUT
ANGLE CUT
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
A voice '1°01..P Me '1'0 'T'AKE: -rwo
C RACKE:RS
ANP CAU.... TH e: i;::roc:roR
IN 'T'H6
MORNING.'
tliiiii....
by Mell
by Gus Arriola
THl5 IS LIKE AN l/i!OIJ 61..0Vj;!)jJ A VELVET ";f?Tf
I
' '
COMICS./ CAOSSWOBD
PEANUTS by ChirfeS M. Schulz
~o~. ~1k~1 L~3 UJE'LL SEE!!
't'OU WHEN '1-'0U'RE
OLD AND GRAY?
by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemont
TODAY'S GIDSSIDID PUZZLE
ACROSS 47 Sludge
1 Food: Sling 49 Congers 5 Feeing the 50 lrtlh sea
pitcher: 2 god
wonts 51Vapor191 10 lmciure et. SJ-'ctle
mosohele 56 S.ngle: Pre·
14 Affection fix
'5 Sells with 56Colp. ~
flit Mg
16 Burden 61 High tlfds
17 Loss of SM 62 HolM of
sanon Commons '9 Related by 64 Accu11te
blOod 66 Mount1Mn
21) Of teeth llymph
21 Held'*' 66 Anzooa aty
22 T epee·s rel-67 Gef. Hao
llJYe leade<
23 fnsults 68 ffts one
2S Scotland WltNn II\•
Y1<ddYp Othef
28 Cooking 69W8'god
ingredient DOWN l) Canoontst IWeenng Glrdoef .•.
31 Ham100ll9S doctlts
34 Bay Window 2 GM! an
J6 Assign as a edge 10
share 3 Stove com·
38 Logger's partmof'tl
tool 4 London's •• 39 Trvstworttn· End
ness oert1f1· 5 MISOl'lry cate: 2 stone
IHOfds 6 Golf Pf<>P
42 A tr net eon: 1 Menll'lblue·
Abbt. 2 llV<lfds
43 8o!edom 8 C8llos -·. 8~1>f8$SIO!l Sp. Pfem1er
44 A.ultlOt 9 AlrtOC:ltt:
Horatio ·-Vlf ~ Teetet 10 o.gn.1es
bol<d 11 Colweft 10
UNITED Feature Syndicate ~y·s Puzzle SOived
ila: (i :€ -l!--!. !..!. . ,. .. , ,,
lo y I • •• I I c • Y Dill ... l I 0 A TI e MO l 1111
0. A I' I • '.i ' ,. I 111 T~
' ' Ml . ' I I •• • I
A . I' I . ' l I
' I ' ... ' A a I II I • y N ',. I I ·-· • 0
"la r. 1 • '0 • . ' 0 D ( ' 'i. • I •G-f I •I
• c 0 ' ' ' . t .. l
A t I " . ' . ' Alo
I ' • I I ••o CI • I I S
1.1. 1. c l• ll ll ..! .! ..! • ~~ 1.1. 1.1. r. ~~i.!! ..! '..!..!
coins 2 37 ~ey·s
words relat...e
12 Nolwgod 40 Haul
13 Felow. In 41 Tac> dnnk
fonNl ~ TOllCh, 18T~ sigtlt, etc
24 eo-·s 48 Frcm and ll'UIUf• Niven
rnen1 SI Kind ol 25Home dfum
1Quat1um S2 Affifmanve fosh vote 26 farts 10 •tn SJ T1odden 27 Sharp ridge track
2B Fr. CMdinal 64 land UM ltldQue. 56 Preposi!IOI\
'""" 57 Raubeft·s
29 Gelman
lf1ICle ' 8ov11Y 31 NZ. bord 58 [®al
32 SUfpess 59Noun end· 33 Ptophe~ ng
l5 ttGypsy fiO Allllne
loYe" com· lbbls
OOWI S3 MIC> abbr
J
Pl 8LJC NOTl {'t.
ltO~lte l .. •1'1 ... llCK
H•l•t• ' P"9rf•r t •••n •~• "" I O•tf Of tt11<et1 ... Of 11\o 11 •I,..
Vl\oll•O Sc-I O"l"<I .. Of• .... Ceuft1, C..tH'Of',_• '*'" ......... ...a IOlf\ vp lo l QI)• m l>I """Hll'I .. , Of ~r '"' 01 wl!K" ll""" ....., IMO• *'" ......... ,, ............... ,.,
Uflllorm R•llUll ono l..t-r, &."'H.•
811 <O"Cllh--1.,lltvtl•• •nd ~ IOtm\ M•Y lie ......... ol l ... Qltlo(e Of
1111 ..... ~, ..._..., '-••It~ ~· AllOft A .. n.,., 11'111,.., C..ll""n•• ,,_ Olt
trlcl ,....,"" llllt rltfll te re)« I enr.,
•" .. lb .... '° -~ ..,., ,,, .. .....,111 ..
Of 1n1or,.,.i1t1et In Mr bllb °' 1n 11\o bidding.
1 ........ Ul\lfled
Scllool oi.woc:1 G-Ha•lllM A11ttlott~ed A .... f fl Pul>llM!eO Or .... (:.OHi 0.lly Pilot, M•r t , 1', 1"7
lllf..71
PUBLIC NOTlCE
PICTtTIOUS IUSIMtH
NMllt STATtMtNT
TN loll_.llO Wton It ciol"9 bll
MUU:
J S . AMMI RATO ANO 4
SOCIATt!S, MS ProchKllon Pl
NeWPG<I Beech, CA.,.._,
Josel)ll s.mu.1 Ammlr .. o, MO
Eler•c:.1\1 .. o. ... Point, CA "2•1'
Tltlt lllltlflKS It <onclllttocl by
c11v10 ... 1
J-l'fl S Ammlreto Tl\I\ .,.,_, ••• 11100 Wlf
Count' Ctertr. ol Orange C:O..n Aprll 20, 1'11
PIAllllMO Or-.oe Cout 0.11 APt"ll U, Mey 2, 9, ll, lt11
NOTIQ 10 CIUOITO
SU .. llUOlt COUllT 011
STATt OP CAUl'OllNIA II
TMt COUNTY OF OllA
-A·M1tJ
Est•te al ROGERT H AT RT°",
O.ceewd
NOTICE IS HEREBY Giii to lhe credltOf'S o# 1119....,...... <-I
tl'let ell per-N•ll'IQ <l•i egelMI
Uw ulO -ort reoui to Ille u..m. will\ ... NCff .... Y. IWr~ In tlW ot ttce of trw ,,.,,. ot t.l\e w .,..
tot led court, or to prewnt t • •1111
11\• MC••~v VOIKl>er•. ,,,. 1#1•
Oer\lgMO et the otllc.e ot J EPH A
OAlllS. 17to HorWr 81..S., lie >U. Co\le Mffe, CA ma, n It 11111 o•oc• of bwl...s• °' Ille IQMCI 111
•" rn.tt.n ll0'1elflll'IQ '° ttl ... of •••ct H t eoent. •llllln 10 ••ter tne II rat publl<ell notice.
D•led Aorlt •, 1971.
t..owell 5PM>gter
EllO<Utorof llWWI
tlW-nemeo
JOst .. H II. DAVI$
Vto He ..... llw Ste. >U
Cnta M ... , CA "6» t ano.,.., fW Emocwtw
Publi-Oreng11 Coe
Apr!I II, U, ""'V 1, ~. 191
l)QJ.1'
P'ICTITtOUS IU IMtU
NAME STATt:•NT
Tll• following perM>tS er~ Ootftg 1>1111nenn .
lllSA I.EASING.,.., Me<Art""'
l!two., Suite 200, trvlrw, tA t111S
Gen•••I C•r le~lng In< • C..lllornl•Coroor .. _
Tllll butllWSI ii c.ondJ<led by e tor•
llO••tiOn
Gener .. Cer UblnQ '"' A_,G Fri .. .....,
Pres.loan!
TM• '1•1-t •et filed w1tll fie Co11111y Ct-ol Or•nae Go<i111v on
Aprll II, 1911. ,..,,.
Pubhs-Orenve O>Ht O.lty Alot.
Al)'ll II, U, Moly 2, t, 1'11
PlJBUC NOTIC.
lllCTtTlOUS tUSIM£$1
NAME STAUMtNT
T II• following i>erton• •rl Ooi119
buitne'' .,
S M CO •• 8'01 Oiltllct9 f>1'•· Hun·
llftlllon Be«n. CA 9'l'4 Homtete 8 . Marotte. wi c11111io.
Oriw, Huntington 8Md\,~'1~ 81\•••I 8. Mef'olie, ClllhoOe Drive. Hl#lllnglon &Merl, ,,_
T 1111 b1nlfws1 11 conthoet by en 111
01vlctuel.
Hemlete 8. Merel
Tll1l sle-1 w•s II wlll\ Ille
County Cl•rk ot Or•n County 01\ •or11 20, n1a.
"""" PubllSl\td Or-~I 0.lly POol,
AP'll 1S, Mey l. 9, 16. 19p
'"S-11
PVBUC NOTICE
MOTICS TO QHDITOIU
SUl'tlllOlt CQ.lllTM THt
SUTt M CAUFOllNIA llOll
TH a COUNTl 01' OltAOt He.MSm
bl•t• ol HOWI AO 8. HOl.OEN •II• HOWARD 800REAM NOLDEN, oe HOWARD HOLDEN, ek• H.1. HOLDEN, O.C..MS.
NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GlllEN to !fie
<redilo" ot nw -... 111n.ct oec.-1
tner ell ""°""' ,,.,,""' ct•lms eoefrtt ,,,. 1Alct -w• reoutroo to rte them. wl!I\.,. _..,, -hen,111
,,.. off I<• of tlW <~tr. ot trw •-""
l•tled <OWi. .... to --"'°"'· """' 11'1• M CHIMY vtue.l\en, to llM .....
oersl9Md •t tlW offk• of 1114! PIMic AOmlnulretor o# 0.-Collnly, 'JOO
5011111 Greno Ave11ue. S•nl• An•, C•llfor11ie 9'l70S, •Men II the plao ol
bllslll•U ol 11\e ""*'llllfWO In •II NI
tefl ~rtau\Ong 10 11\e ntate ol ult o.-c-t wlt,..11 lour monlM •ll•t ,,..
flru ou1>llulton of tttl• notice.
De led A."'11 21 1'11.
JAMES E. HEIM,
Pllbllc AOmlnlstr•lor
•• Admlnlstr .. or Of ,,.. .tel• Of 11\e
•-nernoct ct.c-nt AOlllAN ICUY .. 1111,
COUNTY OOUNSlfL
•r>f l tNJAMIN I'. DE MAYO,
Dt .. UTY ~.o ... aun 5..,,. AM, c.1 ...... ,,,.,
Alt-YI '9r -..lstr•tor
Pllblls-<>-eo..i Del~ Pilot M•r 1. •.a. 23. "" 1u.1e
PlJBLIC NO'rICI
'
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6
4
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5
6
7
8
.......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY ,_.....,..,Motlu:
GeMHI IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••
All real estate advertised
In Ui.la newspaper is sub-ject to lhe Federal FBLr ----------
ltous in g Act of 1968 lllh CENTURY
which makes at Uleaal lo HEWPORT
advertise "anr pre· Newport Heights to be
rerence, llmltattoo. or exact! Secluded nora &
discrimination based on fauna entryway. Large
race, color. reUgion. sex. living room hosts a n 18th
or national on gm, or an Century handcarved
Intention lo make any fireplace. massive &
such preCerence. lim1ta· gorgeous! Formal dining
uon. or d.J.scri m10atlon. · · room. Sc.epdown family room hosts wet bar &
This newspaper will not wall to wall glas., !
knowingly accept any P r 1 vat e tr op a ca I
advertising for real backyard hosts mainJCi·
estate which Is an viola· cent blue free-form pool!
tionolt.helaw. Immaculate landscap·
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DUMPY FIXER
Overgrown w /weeds &
grass! Huge grounds.
rustic 3 Bdrm! Wood
beam clp! Choice loca·
lion ! Lots o
possibilities! Won't last!
CalJ:~
FORE ST E
OLSON ....... ,.. ...... ...
HANDYM.AM"S
DREAM
Garage Cully 11\Sulated.
Buill io work bench.
Large lot with RV ac·
cess. Newly painted,
paneling and wallpaper.
Four Bedroom Home in
Meaa North. Truly a
Great Buy for $76,000.
546-2313
Ol'tlll Ill 9• ft S IUN IOr<l •m I'
!e.llJI
STEAL IT!.
$6,000 under market!!
Eastside! 2 Bdrm + den or 3 Bdrm! Cozy fplc !
Newly painted! Luxury
townhome! Owners of·
(erlng give·away pn ce! !
flurry Call: 64.5-0003 . '
FOR E STE
OLSON
• •• ' 'u .... ··----
iog. Just $189,SOO! A
must to see today-call
752·1700
0'11111119 ••I~ /(JN fl)1<l llll(/ • [WZdNll
COUNTRY LIVIHG
3 BR. 2 BA, seller very
anxious & wants an offer.
on this ranch style house
In the country. No down
VA. low down FHA.()(.
fered at $56,000 .
540-3666
tllfltela11
R E~L ESTATE
41R +POOL
-$62,500
Family sized II ving
room, gourmet kitchen.
windmg stairs to large
master suite. Beautiful
decorated garden home
with plus h carpeting.
CaJI 9113-6781
Ol'fN 111 9•11S llJN 108{ 1111(1•
1•1111
OWNER ANXIOUS
Creal family room in a
w~ll establ ished
nei&hborbood. Formal
living room. family room
with cnclding fireplace.
O>eery kltcben with bit·
lns and breakfast bar. 3
big bedrooms. Nice yard
for children. Owner has
purc ha sed another
home. will entertain of·
fers. Call now lor in·
formaUon. 546-23-U
Ol'fN 1119 • 11 \ /lJl\l lll1'1 lllK t • [•1111
A.IAMDOHID-
ARTISTS CHALET
Beach home with view or
ocean from your Iron·
lyard. Be the first to call
for tbia unique rind. OnJy
$69,900. Call now!
963-6767
OPfN ru 9 • 11 \ llJN ro f;I No< I• IY1t1 1i~&ll
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1002 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Pan Place
0c.e-i.
VAJFHA Z & 3 Ill's
'rOWMHOUSIS
1&2STORJES
2TENNlS COURTS
2CARGARACES
FllM 16,475!!!
MORE-
... ntAN I UST A ROOF
OVER YOUR HEAD
DISC OVER PARK
PLACE·OCEANSlDE
VA/FHA LUXURY
HOMES lN A SMALL,
PRIVATE
RF£Rl!!ATIONAL COM·
MUNITY. NOW UNDER
CONSTR UCT ION &
PRICED TO SELL FOR
THOUSANDS ANO
THOUSANDS LESS
THAN O RAN GE
COUNTY!!!
$56,475-$65,600
YA.FHA.
COMV.TstMS
FACTS:
BRAND NEW 1 &2story
designs. 2 & 3 Bdrms.
Fenced patio & garden
a r eas. Huge 2 car
garages. Formal entry
halls. Elegant m aster bdrm suites. Spacious.
sunny kitchens. Wood
burning fireplaces. 2 ten
nis couru & swimming!
VIEWS!!!
FEATURES: AU homes
include VA/FHA quality
cpl! + ceramic tile
kitchen counters! +
wood shake roors ! +
Westinghouse range +
dbl ovens! + Weal·
lngbouse di&bwasher ! +
Cireplace! + patio slab
fencing! + 2 C AR
GARAGES! + West ·
lnghouse washer +
dryer <Plans 3&4>!
Butcher block design
ca binet.s ! ! !
THE LOCATION IS
RIGHT! Walk or bike to
MIRA COSTA
COL.LEGE + Tri ·Cities
Hospital & Med Ceoter. 2
car minutes to all shop·
ping. 4 car minutes to
MAY CO ·EL CAMINO R EAL REG IONAL
SHOPPING CENTER!
10 car m inu t es tc
Carlsbad & Vis ta
Employment Centers.
PARK
PLACE
lkeanside
DIRECnOHS:
FBOM ORANGE COUN·
TY: Come south on FWY
5 to HWY 7~E~. Now
East on HWY 78 approx 3
mi to COL.LEGE BLVD.
Take COLLEGE uit
then turn left <uoder
freeway) to VISTA WAY
<1st Stop Sign>. Now left
<West> oo VISTA WAY
and come ahead approx
300 yds to PRINCETON
Ust right turn>. No.,.
ri&ht to Sales Center
Signs will assisl you
OR ....
FROM SAN DIEGO
DEL MAR : Come North
on FWY s to HWY 78
EAST. Now East on BEACH HOUSE HWY 78 approx 3 ml to
Tueeday May 9 1978 DAIL y PILO r ( ,;
~~~!.~.~.-...... ,~!!!!:'.~.~.· ........ ~:~!.~~.~ ........ ~~!!:':..~ ....... .
GtMf'OI I 002 G....,... I 002 G.-Nl I 002 GeMt'ai I 001
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MESA VERDI
Attracllve 4 bdrm . 2 ba. home in
1mmac. condition. $99.000
LIDO ISU
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm .. family.
2 11:.! baths: I ·story home with
attractive So. patio. Pr1c~ reduced
to $238,000
IACK IAY
Fine 4 bdrm .. 2 112 bath (am1ly
home o n quiet cu l d e ~ut·
Oversized pool. playhouse. extra
storage. $189,500
IAYNOHT
Several fine bayfront homes
with pier & slips
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J4 l B·1 ~11l•· !>1 •v• N R b /S 6161
G1Mral I 002 ,GeMral . I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
CORONA DEL MAR
Exceptionally attractive 2 bdrm.
home. recently refurbished thruout -
PLUS neat l·bdrm. unit over large. 2
car gar age. Great lax s helter.
inflation hedge & fine appreciation
possibilities. PRICE REDUCTION OF
$2.000 -NOW ONLY $166.500.
759-0811
4!.>0NIWl'Olll UNl llllHllVI /!.>!IOS!ll
IOOZ G1Mral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
UPGRADED CARMEL
Super Carmel model in Harbor V1t~v.
Homes: a 3 bdrm with family room
and every possible upgrade mctudmg
water softener. nightscaping. tlrep1t.
BBQ and profess1onatly done
I a ndscaping. It 's a gas! at Just
$162.500.
U ~ lf)U I: liVMl:S
REAL TORS"'. 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Cororia del Meir
cJlso in Mesa Verne <11 546 ~990
1002 Gwral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
c:..... .. w..
Ju.tt ~uced. nu. home
has many c u stom
f e ature s. L a rge
courtyard . beautlCul
olive tree and many roee
busht>s Bl l n
bookshelves. formal din·
REALTOR or Realtor A.ssocrale
Have need for l aood 8('
Uveu.tesperson.
RoyMcCarch
1110 Hewport llvd
Costa Mna 541·772t
ing rm. paneled farruly i---------rm wtparquet Cloo r .
19
________ _
huae pool 873Sandcastle
Dr $2216.000.
~
I I '• liJ I I \I I ~
?:~ J Mi•o \t ~uottnf1on !txh -CDMDUPUX
SOU'rn OF HJGHW AV
4 Years old. 3 Bdtms. 2
WA T'ERFltOMT
Beautifully decorated
&U.BOA COVES 2·story
home. ENTERTA IN
royally from the hug(•
recreation rm .. wet bar.
rabulous view & boat
slip. too! OnJy S'l75,000' laJboo toy Prop.
Realton * '75-7060.
OHL Y OME LEFT
Spacious Wrlhams hare
beauty with 3 bdrms. 2
baths, & formal dirung
room. Beautiful grounds.
Notlung compares w lour
low price. Ternfic pool,
sauna & .r ecr eation
a reas . Jus t l1S te d .
64&7711.
ba ths down1ta lrs. 21•--------•
Bcinns. 2 baths up1tairs.1---------
Large katchena with CORO .... .a DEL IUILDBS built.ins. 4 Car garage ""' E/SIDESLHPSl with load.a or storage. MAR
SPA.MISH
MANOR
THlllUFfS
Spanish M&AOr on quiet
cut-de-sac in the Bluffs .
Wrought iron & red brick
entry. Classic while
fireplace. Formal din·
Ing. Brighl kitche n .
Breakfast patio. Family
room hosts secluded
patio too! Huge bonus
room! 2 wet bars. 3rd
Patio with greenbelt
view! Just $174.SOO. Call
today 752-1700
COLLEGE PAD
Sought after area wllh
peacelul cul-de-sac loca·
IJOn. Warm wood panel·
Ing & charming !rplc
compliment this xtra
spacious 3 bd. 2 ba home
that gives that real Cami·
ly feeling. Immaculate
condatioo. Shows like a
model. 640-7'711
~ Walker & Ll!e
LARGE LEVEL LOT SLM.SOO.Seenow! Vacant 4 bdrm. family
Best location. Many fruit PETE BARRETT room, greal ocean view
trees +starter home of 2 New carpels & paml in·
bdrm. 2 bath 164.SOO. -REALTY-side. just waJllng for you
400[.""~ lllYI a11 ,,.2.~,,_ to move in Offered al u ""'~ •• ;!,£.. 1244.SOO. 3907 Inlet Isle C.Md'351'tt.aw ~~~~~~~ ~
I I ' f.. lli II I \ I l ' :
.~1~ f C"•~f M• ~"a• .1 0!1 M,r
HllDSPAIMT!
So bri.na your paint brush
and Save. Save. Save
with this 3Bdrm. step·
save kitchen. family
area. m assive brick
fireplace. RV access.
qwel cul·de·sac. Sur
rounded by SI00.000
homes for only m .soo.
'Ibis ba1"1aln won't last
Call for appointment
963-7881
()Pfflit "' >. t • '" 'l ...,, ,..., ' r••M~itl
j)
JASMIHEC ...
Professionally decorat·
ed. BeautiluJ two st.ory .
cathedral ceilings, three
bedroom, family room.
2"'1 bath. Lowest price
lisUld in Jasmine Creek.
Out.at.anding value. For
more informa t100 call :
IMVISTM&n'S
IM
UAL.ESTATE
•Reslctenu.1 IJ\come BACK IA Y :=~~ts HEATED POOL
oC.ommerc1al $86,900
-0.11 & let us locate lhe Four large bedroom ...
Newport.CC.ta Mesa In· Newport Rivie r a two
vestment that rit.s your story. Huge family room Require6m7~n3ts637 Gigantic patio. Walk to
.,. private tennis court!>
G.H. Robert.loo Realtor Call 646-4477
MIMl-IAHCH llR ,,Q. K€Y
VA NO OOWN-$63,900. ·v R€ALTOP.sii Sweepin& drive. Larae ·---------
ramUy sized living room.1--------·
beamed celllJ'l&s . Coun· P'tfce Reduced
try kitchen & d1nlnR Owner says let"s talk. room. Wall of giass view Soper s harp Newport
ol covered pavilion aod Heights 3 Bdrm. 2 bath
lush grounds surro~nd home. Atnum entranc~.
th 1 s m i n 1 ranch . formal dlning room 11nrl
Separa te win e fo r family style k1tche11
hideaway master suite & Very pr 1 11 at e a n d
childrens quarters secluded. Call546-:i880
Hurry for this unique
barpin ! 963-7881
()PIN 1t1 9 ••I~ IUlll 10~1 ... ,
f'lllJM
IEACH TRIPLEX
"'"!~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS
SI 15,000 COLL EOE. Left on Real eitate
2 BR starter home tn fan· COLLEGE to 1st stop i----------
tasttc loc Nr Newport sign <VISTA WAY>. Left JmfU.hdForY•!
COLE OF NEWPORT
REALTORS
675-5511 Walt to beach & shop·
piq. Very desirable un·
its in good condttton &
always rented. Only
Sf.29.SOO. CALL 556·2660
BACK
BAY
Harbor Yacht Club. again on VISTA WAY to
Reduced SH,000. Hurry PRINCE:l'ON then right.
for lhe summer ahead. 1-433-9924
JACOBS REALTY hes 1-757-1621
HELP! 67>6670 ~~AJ}f~a
Owner bas painted io & --------EQUAL HOUSING
out, In s talled NEW WantAds Call642·56'18 OPPTY
carpeting thru-out AND 1----------•·------~ueed to &.950!! Va· GtMral IOOJ IOOZ
cant 4 Bdrm ·'SOL•••••••••••••••••••••••
VISTA" in nice area! As· .. •••••••••••• ..
MIHl-«ANCH 411.
sume low Interest VA, ' s ubmit your o rre r !
531.saoGopen eve1.
lttt1 RI MetwOl'tt
macnab /Irvine
realty
POOL-$66,400
VA MO DOWN
Circular drive. Large
family aizCld living room.
Country kltcbeo. Dane.
Wall ol glaN view or COY•
ered pn1Uon " lush
1rouoda aurroundlng
H&F Freeform pool.
Separate wing for bide·
away Master Suite &
cblldren'a qua rters .
Hllrt'Y for thia unique
barpln ! 96.1-7881
Ol'flll llt 9• If~ IUN fl)et ~<I
l•INI
COIOM4 D& MAR
B.EGAMCI
Bteat.bt•k\na view or lhe
oceaft Md canyon. tbll delant 3 bedroom and
den must be aeen to fully
appreciate. Tranqulllt)'
for "'75,000. Call fer
appl f7U550,
()lltN lrtV• ti ~ lllN ION Nlt I• f l"'MI
VIT'SPlllJ
HOU&BSI 0 DOWN, 0 oosr. Aa1 dtr ln o.c. y_.,,,, Ct' )'OUf
veleren1 a~clalla t.
T5l·Z211\ "G4MCT1
SUMSm & HIGHT UGHTS
Love ly 2 BR + den townhorne in
Rancho San Joaquin overlooking
golf course. Highly upgraded ln
earth tones. Close to pool & tennis.
$122,500. Lila Harper 752·1414.
(Y·ll7)
642·8235 644-6200 to1 Dover Drive Harbor View Cenwr
lrvlne •t C.mJIUS VllltY C'.eftter
752·1414
FAMILY HOMI ON IAUOA laAND
Trwty a ww wt ........ .._ wttlt
wood, ltrlc:k ••d ........ Tot•llr
ceor•n•HI ._ a. .... ,_. ......
Two .._... of dlilr. ..... J ••*U•t, .......................................
,,.. .... .tdoor ,.tto •• ••••~ ltr l"t•""Y·SZJS,000. ...... ,,
·-~ 315MarNA~
Bal>oe laland
671-6900
This clean 3 BR charme
oo quiet cul de sac
greatOClocauon. Vets
Down. Won 't last a euoo. 6.11"'660 Agent.
ONLY sso, too
Freshly painted condo,
real wood burrung frplc .•
large garoen patio. A/C.
F /Abeat Callrorapp't .
llMTSOH & IROWH
llALTOllS llJ.9711
Ge.rat I 00'2111i,._lf'tll 1002
' VIEW OF WATIR & LIGHTS/POOL
A spedoe. hcwY c.d oplll f""'9
hotH 111 Do.,.,. · ilMwH wllh .,_,ftd
~ ctRlftcp ...S cocw dlnated decor.
D1H9'1tM 4 '*"' hOIM with .......
Mite. L-. ,... ..... r.door /OltAdw poal
Hd f•MllJ roo1tt to uloy la'fll ..
•ttrf I b9' TM 'thtw Is ,_...ic tty
c19y or ""I'· SlH,000 GIMI JOI' owa tM
a-4.
Watafroat
Hom••
2633W.Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
631·1400
CSELECT
I PROPERTIES
20MALOT
Reduced to $127.$00. 2
Bdrm. house p lus a
bachelor apt Steps to
beach. V ou own the I and!
fi73..38ll3 642·Z253 Eves
associated
llW •'-I II'. il I I\ l ' ( 11 '.,
1 ,'' 'f\, fl It l ~ • 'f>t• I
4 ijdrms a nd family
room! Come see th~ ran
t.utic Back Bay View•
Call Now•
REDCARPET7!>4·l.202
'lie~~
DIST1MC11VI C~IM A DICOll
No amenity has been overlooked in
this tastefully appoin~ed s bed.room
Deane home ln Unl\rersity Park.
Pool. Jacuni. extensive decking &
prl v acy prove th ls to be the
ultlmate in Callfornaa living.
S19S,OOO. ree .
A C0UMaJ. MlilCll CO.
844·9060
t111 IM~Hlu.t "O. _,,_..TCIMTI"
C8 DAILY PILOT T~y. ,.,._.,I. 1171
........ ...,. 149 ~..._.•...,. s,-. "-•"Fer StM Honea Fors• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
G1•r• llOJ &i .. arel 1001 e ... re1 1002 Go...,-., 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~ t;UA I . & W~LLAt;t
CLP REAL ESTATE , INC.
"' lOl ·~Lil ll~Nlll l OMf·~ro ')tHVIN(;
IHt !IOUI H tOA~I Alff ,'\ 'ilNCl l9td
MESA Vat>I CUSTOM -This beautiful
stately 2 story home is a must! Made
ror the family who hkes to swim The
big 40' Ion~ pool will prove It ' 3 BR.
Family Rm, and formal Dining Rm
loo! Outstanding area, it's really
prestige, at Sl49,500. Call 546·4 I 4 I
TIUE VALUE Spring and Summer
value can be yours for only $92.500.
Enjoy lush gardens and grounds in the
privacy of your patio. Assume VA
loan at 81h %. Call for information,
640-6161
Serv1rtg Costa Mesa -Irvine
Hunt1nqton Beach-Newport Beach
I I 0 I
"'. L~Lf-, 1 N
TAYLOR co.
H 1-::\ l.TOHS ~11wt· 1 !J4G
CAMEO HIGHLAMDS--Sl75,500
Attractive 4 bdrm home with ram rm.
fo rmal dining + bonus rm. Situated
on a nice corner site. Cha rming living
rm ~/cathedral ceiling. 3 P rivate
beaches. Ocean & sunset view!
WESLEY M. TA YLOI CO., RIAL.TORS
2111 S. J ... Hlfh Road
NEWPORT CEMTBt, N.L 644-4910
1002 GfllffOI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
MESA VERDE
VIEW HOME
Proress1onally
landscaped, 4 ~room. 3
bath home w1tb large
de<•k overlooking Hunt·
ington l:leach city hghts,
QCean, beauuruJ trees &
Calalma. Romantic sun·
sets can be yours at the
afror dable price of
$137,900 Fle,dble terms
Call 752-l920 4 9UAIL --co!.'f.S~~.
1be fast.est draw in the
West. . .a Daily Pilot
OESIGMB>
'OR EXECUTIVE
UVIMG
This beauurully up
graded BlK'cola Home!
Spacious Laving Room
with bag Fireplace
Large Master Bedroom.
highly upgraded with
pri va te entran ce l e
garden area. SI ums:
stone planters highlight
the room-backyard.
Mesa Verde Laving at it~
Best! $129.000 Cal
M6 231.3
~ified Ad 642-5678. Oaaallied Ads
A COHV£N1£Nl SHOPPINC AHO
SfWINC CUIOE FOft THf
~ON THf CO
Great Travel Tote . Tops, Tops, Tops
7238 '
Id~ oll tor a day or weelltnd
with this handsome striped tole'
How you can't lose you1 um
breHa-cairy 1t snuely r11ht on
this big tote Crocllet quickly
of ru& yain 1n a chttfful 3
coloi combination Pattern
7238 011ections foi baa
9068 '
8-20
"" 11T t..\i-1ff c...i' .... Sl.50 lor each pattern Add 3~ each paltetn for fllsl clau , SEVEN, YES SEVEN TOP TOPS auma1I and handltna S.• to: 11e yours to pau with pants.
MIU ""*' S/lofts and slurt partnm' Saft Needlecraft Dept. 10S money-sew one or two now Ille
Daily Pilot test lhe nest seuon• lranslei
lol 113. ow QlehM Sta., ..... 1ncludtd TA flT 10011. Prllt ....... Pttnltd Paltein 9068 M1Utt
.,..._ Zip. PltMnl """bit. Sim II 10. 12. 14. 16. 18. 20
VALUE Pl(looed 1978 NHOU· Yt1d1Ct$ 1n pattern
CRAn cetaloc. Choose lrom ""' Sl 50 .. --~ 275 d!Sl&nt. 3 tiee 1Mldt All a.. nt' .. _.. fllltn ..; c111tJ. Knit. C.ochtt Stftd 7S( firll<da ._ ~ bit Gitta ••• o.-•lltl .. Sl .50 ""' tt; • .. ,...~ ....... .suo
Stiff '11' fitff QllltS ...... lU5 IWIU MAm• Stitdl '•' Plldl Qljltl.. . US
CttcNt wlllt s.sai-...... SUll Patte rn Dept. 4'2 Credllt ............ $1.00 Oallv Piiot
"'"' Aftt Qliiftl. .. .... · 1-.... 01C1Mt ~ .. . . • . .00 tlZ Wtll llttl St., ... Tort,
s.W & lllit w .. . .. .. 1.25 '" 10011. '""' a111c1 ao. 11a••r,:.w .... .. i.oo = ztr. size 111C1 ~m1 ,.._ M ..... l.OCI R. ,
...... Clldl« .... .. . ·ll,Ot LOOK RICH. YOU NG. SMART ltllllM Cledllt W ...... l.00 on • bud1111 Stw new soft
lllllM!t Mia ... W .. ~.00 d1essn tgps, Sk11ts. pants 1M1111t ~ ..... .. .. 1.00 -111 in N(W SPRINC·SUM ~Clft.... .. .. . .DO MCR PATilRN CAtAlOC f1 .. ~1114 .. Jl.01 petttrn COUpolf $tnd 754 lfMI . •tl.. ...... 7tf 117 . ...._ S.-. W .. $1Jt ...... 11 fl. .. 7S. ........ , ........... .
... 1%. • ·"-1&1..-. CllCllet W.Sl.00 " ,..., n . 11t llf.Tlwt9'J """ w suo
.-........ 15'
EARLY BLUFFS
Rar• three IK>droCNft "G" Plan in ecrly
lluffa witt. •lew of 'romontory 'oi"t and
parti• lack lay. Thi• c"-mlftCJ cOftdo la
located Oft a lo•tfy CJ"H,._.. with IMC111t
cellh•cp, MW carpeh, c1r..-. c.d wood
floor in IMng room. St.,a to putffncJ IJ"ffft
ond CQIUU ....... ty pool. $159,500.
SPYGLASS HILL
Her~'1 a lhowpace. Four IMdroom hOfM of
1ofid comfort In one of Mewporl'a fiMtt
locotiOM with •6-ws of bcry, ocfflt and
ni9ht Ughh. $479,000.
HARIOR VIEW
Four bedroom, two bath with o briCJM,
fomlly country kJtctt.n. LoYefy patio, dKk,
land1c•ng with pond. M•w cClf'l"h. tUe.
wood1, & wallpafMr •. Thia b.at buy Is
immaculate, plu1 you own th• land.
$166,900.
APPEALING LIDO HOME
Street to strada pri•ocy, In thlt 2 btdrOCNa.
2 batt-, ho.M. Show.,. •d kJtcMft Cll'e HI~
Irle• fireplace In lcrge U•INJ '°°"' and
Hparat• dlnln9 or.a. G"ot Hpanslon
abiHHn. $212,500 .
ON THE IEACH
Two ocean front loh plua o third
onrtooklng tM 'aclflc. ZoMd 1.2, but
could accomodate o cu1tom home with
pool, or podcle tennis. $550,000.
SHORT WALK TO THE BEACH
Thia 2 bedroolft, oc•an•l•w hom• In
Laguna leach, la located In o lar9•
'park·like lot In Woods Con. rrlYOte
backyord includln9 CJal bar·IM-qu• and
pottil'IC) shed. S 163. 900.
NORTH LAGUNA ESTATE
Two OCl'fl with oc.an •lew. Sht bedroom,
4 112 bath. plvs 3 IMdroom guest hoetle. Pool.
5 CCII' gcrap. pri•ote drin. MoffMng In the
area lib this OM. S 1,000,000.
VICTORIA IEACH
W atdt h whitewot..-Oft bffutfful Victoria
leach, while enjoyi~ the warWh from
your "used brlclr' fireplace. Teak
coblnetry, IOHd o4* butcher block COURtw
topa, ..t bar, spiral ttofrcOM, deck. and
mny '"°" custom featur.s tnhonc• thb
beautfM home wltt.ln a "ston.'1 throw" of
"-• 'adfic. Titrff IMdroom. two and o..e
half bathl. $222,500.
644-7020
2123 SAN JOACi)UIN HILLS ROAD
NEWPORT IEACH
GARAGE SALE ads in When you need expert
the Daily Pilot bnng hap· service or repairs, turn
py results. To place your to the Service Directory
drawing card. phone an Classified to solve
642-5678 today! your problem.
1002G....,.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
tE
110111 ILllRS CD.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
GOLF COURSE VIEW
Big Canyon. New Listing. Spacious
Cus tom Built Home. Fiv e
Bedrooms, Study, Rumpus Rm. S'h
Baths. All E~ectric Kitchen
Beautifully Landscpaed. Situated
On An Oversixed Lot Overlooking
Big Canyon Golf Course. $495,000.
ti I DOV& DRIVE 631·1800
S©~~~-a~~s·
Tllof Intriguing Word Gettftt wltlt o Cltud/e
.... "'CIAf ll. *'Not-----
·~..:": .:::-~ :: low lo ..,,.,.,. ._ lltOoPle _.
I S U N F I E
• 1 1 1 r 1
I· t rn I ;
I: CE PN E 1 .. -l -I I I I . ~ Old Pol«< pll'tf'• ""'., <11-, Chey juet °""1 In their -.
L AHONAP I
"'"L ... ::1 ::1 ::r~:I ::1 ~ • ~i:: :-.... ci:~ ~ """"..,.,,_....,,. J~
I """' Nt.Jli4(ttO u ruc; .. lt!Ul,5QllAIU
• UN$(iiiiiif AIO\lf \lfJU$
10 OU Alo!SWU
rr rrri
I I I I I I
' ~.~~.~~ ....... ~!!:.~~~ ....... !~!~!!.~.~..... ~!'.!.o.r ~ Ho.Mt FOf' s• r .. . ............. ·······················
GeMrol I 002 ~-~~~ ... !~!.,~ C.ta W... I 024 ....... IH4 I 040 ar.-. I 044 .•...................•. . ............................................. . COM DU,LEX •••••••••••••--•••• ••
,RESTIGtous IY OWNEJl sura OVER 70 MESA YBtDE Live an one & rent the 2 slry 6br I " ba L g
SACRIFICE' Personal other <.:l<lelHOthebe11ch, fam r~" hv ;m n r LOCATl°' GOOD ar•~oNS
reasons r.eqwre a rast s hopping 41 churchei achls & shop·g ' x~~~ Upgrudtd 3 bdrntionw uw
sale on this lovely home Pride or •wnt-rs h 1p • rood a&.500. 549-8007 Io ca I e d n I! a 11 11 Why bu.)'er.c call Ranch
inlhebestofareas Wide Low. low prlC!! of Freeways 'nd ~lly Webaveover70 ~e entry, floo~ to ceillng Sl72.500 Westnunster Mall t 's a bomei for you lo choose C1repl.ace domtnates the VAUIY 640-9900 r. l:\4 ba. stone frpk, ex· steal at $65,500 All from All pnce runges
family ro~~ Also f:nsive Crpls. corner lerms. andaaus.SomewiJlbell
fireplace m. hvma room ~ la~ wndrd w. cmr lot. pool lllJISt-.~~·,~• .•. ·. V.A amd FHA Some Formal dining. Huge luc Y • fru1t trees, R.V l•i...~!..____ , have pools and many
bonus room for ~amily nnn\ Estot<Z -~ •lol"age, 10' 1ate Grt 962-4471 m~ -3 h11ve central air. For
fW'I and enle~alnmg. 4 !'"!.::: _ loca. S98 Sturgeon Dr complete lnlormat1on on
Big bedrooms 'fhe 546-7325 ' homesmthelrvinearea
backyard is the ultimate MESA ya.--.1 i.::.:T Owner transfered. ~r. awe us a call '
1 n P rt v a c y -a sun Costa Meta I 024 -.... ._. 2ba, 1700 SQ I\, J n'llto
bathers delight call now ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRJCEDTOSELL ocean New crpt, flt\r. on this Sacrifice Sale Lie 4Br, Ideal for family aog, wall paper. pa1t
Won't last. Call 546-2313 AXBt UPPER wanting spac rms. 3 car Assum ab I e I o a1
Ol'I" "'" ·"' •v"' ·0~1'••1 Needs aome TENDER gar w/trlr dr to rear yd. Thousands under mrkt.t
le' I LoVING C RE . Lgeramrm+frmldining S85.500.968-0763
... -~1•aJJ1!\:11 paint & w~llp~p:~n~ ~~:~:. bi:nlbe~~:::! ---------1 _ _!!~.!!~~-bdrms, great location. I a nd 8 c p · g, p rt me CUSTOM CUTIE w /new roof & copper jn .. borbood Cus plumblng. Xlnt invest· ne "'' · tom 3 BR. 2"'1 B
ment opportunity at only Cal Furman Assoc. family room. 6 mOll ne RAHCH REALTY
Ca 96A .,4., 1 ceramic tile entry. plus 5 "OO This one's better than 164..500. 11540-1151 v-a • carpet s. skylights 51·• 0
POOL TIME
new. 3 Bedroom. 2 bath H d · h · sty me, by owner. "tra an some sta ined ~ wat a sparkhng pool " b t h lrg lot. Eves 542-8953. ca ine s l ru o ut y• $1751< new plush wall·to-wall 542·6661 -Sunken l 1v1ng room. * A *
carpeting, bwlt·m coun •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliitiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiilla 1----------Huge bra l' k r r p I c . work with Orange Co
try kitchen. Localed tn -vely 5Br. 2300 sq rt Sll.5.900. One milt! rrom ~ets only Homes lo p r 1 m e . p r 1 m t Mesa Verde pool home. beach 175,000. f'or 1nfo call.
neighborhood Pnced le w /sl udy $12 9 .500 . '«N:t. 541--0800
sell at $99,950 CALL s.ts-3152
751-3191.
C:SELECT
T' PROPERTIES
E.ASTSIDE CUSTOM
+ IUILOAILE
Custom home-R2 pro·
perty. Room for 2 morr
uruts. A steal at recently
REALTY INC.
714/846-1371
MESA VERDE
Bargain priced at only
$79.990. 3 large bdrms. 2
ba~. bag Cam rm. Xlnt
location, walk to park. j~~~~~~~~~ schools, & shop. Hurry.
Just listed! Call 540.1151
reduced price. Call ror ---------~~HERITAGE
HONEYMOONERS
96.290 down. Townhouse,
2 lg bdnns. frpl. patio,
gar. comm pool, trees & details. 646-7171. MESA VERDE quiet. Bike to beach
POOL $62,900. Owne r /bkr
home. 3 bdrms. fmly rm. 754-1239/893-2764.
t h1s lovely home an a SUPER IUYH By O wne r . This one
• • REALTORS
quiet neighborhood 3 .Br+buge family rm doesn't need any f1X1ng
s h ow s p r i d e o C w/Swedi$\ Crpk. Lge lot up. 3 bdrm 2 bath. den IRVIME CONDO ownership. Call today Cor w/fruil trees. VA/FHA 900-28 This Oxford model m appt to see. Only $85,900. or., $84,900. Agt 645-1103 m.soo. 27
Univ. Park Ill shows 54S-9491 4 bdrm, 2 ba. comer lot
pride of ownership Clowtoleoclt Nr schools. & shopping
V.l TERMS ~autilul Brentwood tn
Qoeentree Homes
f•tures 3 l argt'
b•rooms, a country
kf.chen. com munity ~' park and walk to
grade school. Ex·
c enl home (or the
vetran wishing to use lu:N.A. eligibility
thruobdrmsut .. dTmh.rreme.g~nboeronusus (~IA'fl!;rn1iJUUI 3 Bdrm home o n $73.000gd fmancmg avail "' beaut iful tree-lined 14352 Tropaca na Ln -.MCHREALTY
rm affords approx. 220C Real F.atate street. Only $67,300. call 892·7193 SS 1·2000 sq fl of It vang ar ea ,._________ Del Larson at •----------1---------
Mottvated seller reduced•· So Calf R~ Condorruruum llwmngton U..VERSm PIK pnce to onb $113.900' UbChlcket15ouwa •54LS60._S., Harbour.Walkto beach. Viii I , modified
Hurry! 545.9491 ll couldn't hurt to call ----------Near bay Boat sltp Ford~m twnhse, 1900 sq
Chuck Nash about a re · SO COAST rLAZA usually available. 3 ten· rt endurut. 4 br. 2"'z ba.
wardmg career tn r eal Assume 8"'2% GI loan 2 na s crts. 2 potls & Open House. Sal /Sun.
estate. Free tra mmg 1f Pauos, cntrl a/c. 2 pools_ Jacuzzi. Buyer tould 4332. Seoisa Way. By
youqualify.540·5101. & Jac, t e nnis c rts . moveinJunelst.SlD.500. Ow er . Reduced
Conaider trd Pnnc onJy. Call Herbert Ha~kans fro 06,000 to $103,000.
By owner 673.6672 or Rl trs, Ball Em?ey 551· 404 o r 975-4980 "O" 9UALIFYIMG
Owner says submit any
and all orrers • Pr1 me
Eastside huge 2000 sq fl. 4
Br + Cam1ly. Pool sized
lot. Move-m tomorrow
Call today ~ 646·7171
CROWD&>?
IMLAWS7TEENS7
This sharp Mesa Verde
home affords pnvacy for
the entire rm l y . A
separate s itting rm,
bdrm & bath Crom your
lvly 3 bdrm. 2 ba home.
Only $79,950 w /VA terms
too' Call now. 545·9491
S73-66iO 997·9400. home TI2·34ai wried ~.
pl ,,, ''I 'J • 1• \ l(ifl llJf I tj I
lolboa Peninsula l 007 •••••••••••••••••••••••
J BR. 2 ba., •n blk. to bay
Now $179,500'
Marshall Rlty 675·4600
Real Estate ---------SEUERS MOVB>
Desperate for orfer I
3 tlR. 2 ba .. cul de sac.
Tri pt ex. 3·2· l BR ; n r . Mesa Verde $85,000
elem school. $235.000 A. Johnson Bkr 979 4964
Marshall Rily 675-4600 ----~----By,.Owner, H alecrest lune. 3 br 1,,.. ba, xtra lg
Capistrano leach I 018 lot. S14,900. M0-5683 for
•••••••••••••• ••• •••• •• _a_ppt..;..._ ______ _
1br3 ba +den. executive IB>UCB> borne. Finest bluff view · s c I S360 0 4 Br. 2 ba, formal dmang.
"' 0 · a · ' OO. bnck frplc, corner lol. 2 Owner/Brllr 7141492-6700 car gal". 900 Dogwood.
Prime capistrano Beach $73.500. Phone 751·0774
By o'WTU'. immac 3 Br,
huge lot, nu entry kitch.
Sac $67 .900. Open hse
645-8121or531·3535
Mesa del Mar. By Owner.
lmmaculale 4 bdrm. RV
storage. nr everything.
$88,800 556-~54
Reduced Sl 1,650. 2 story 4
bdr Rose garden 3103
Roanoke Ln CM Agt
LOVELY
WTSIDE
3 Br· Paneled £am rm.
Large yard
$92,500
S&S POOL HOME
Beaut 4 BR & bon•s
room, located an preslltoe
Goldenwest Park. o~
cul·de·sac. Just hsted'
Under market! S162.500
I
REALTY INC.
714/846-1371
e Daily Pilot e classifieds e workfor
• you. call
642-5678 e forquick e cash sales. •
colt.EGE PARK
~RACUSE
Lowestpriced 4 bedroom
home in the College Park
area of lrvine. This home
as located on a large lot
with loads of privacy.
Also 3 community pools.
park, walk to school and
t.able T. V Asking only
~.000.
DMCH REAL TY
551-2000
Palisades location. Nu eves. u---------
4br on large comer lot. i---------
Worksbop area. ocean "Reduced" E tside cust,
vu, lots of trees. $155,000. 2000 sq I\, 3Br, fam rm. 3
Ownr, 1 ·493 ·2190, car gar, R -2. Agt BRAND
NEW
oodtridge Arborlake.
lake or mtn view from
every Tt'indow. 2 br +
llwlWOli den, upgraded hrdwd Mm..... 1042 Oooni &4carpeting_, AIC.
1-493-6651 1-646-_1_11_1_. _____ _
••••••••••••••••••••••• wall~co vering ~ <ear htone sl, TRIJIDAJ ISLE 'lanrlsca ed. lo ma mt .. used br patios, $135,000.
1022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SPYGLASS HILL
Delightful Portsmouth
on comer lot. Two frplca.
Orig. model street.
$258,500.
Cal 640.S 112
' . . ,, .....
' ' • f Jt I •~I •f I I',
ASSUMAILI LOAM
Huge (2000 sq.ft. Home>
Wtcustoro family rm, 2
fplc's and oversized
yard. Only S569 mo.
Buyer may aasume ex-
isting VA 8Ya% loan.
$79,900fu1J price.
754-7100
East.side Condo $66,000
REDCARPET754·1202
0-ro1aat I 026
Waterfront ' br. 3112 ba, By Own . 552·6327 40' dock. view down roam u-~-+-----
channel. Fantaauc llllY u_,t reduted pool home. J
al $365.000. Open Sat, & BR, 2 baJ sep dining, wet
Sun. Call Joan, 846-1371 bar. rnca romer lot. Lots
or 592-21125. Tobtn Reath!. ol xtras. pt7,000. 552·3008 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------~~ t-.:.;_..:.;_~.,;._;. ___ _
WANTED!!! lnil9e IO~ IY OWNER
Builder for two gentle •••••••••••••••••••••1• Irvute Townhouse. Lg!!
sloping R-2 Iota in the rand new Turllero~ lavang/din1ng area &
lleart of Dana Point, condo. Jasmine 3 br, paneled ram rm. 2 br &
clo6e to everything! Ask· ba. upgraded crpts 2nd ba upstairs. Fncd
ing $42,500each. t 1 I e . V 1 e w . A gt yard & pali<>. '66,770. Pis
1213 >433·0051. ( 714 caU tod.ay 551-0547
fi~fim~ ~ RANCHO S.J . 3 BR, San
•PRICEDREDUCEO• ~W' Willows 4br. $69 ,900 Lw Rey, 12th green &
2 aty, remodeled, upcrd VA CANT ,99•2800 Lowest price an tract. B lake Vu. Sl55.000. 28 exec home. 3 BR 2 Ba, o 640 0088 ".u den, " declt w /vlew STARTER ==;..;.....:;...;;..._____ -wner · 0 Nuevo.547-7 .......
towards Catalina in old •-M:~.-owner will carry f-ctain Valey 1 o34 ,_640-_S400 _____ ___,. •irsu•~ .. -£ a~1 "" • -""""""'" •••• ••••••••• •••• •• • ••• --..,.4 -,0 ""· ~::iiiss$206,9SO. Brkr. ~~~:8t! '!~O:.~: 3 Br house, Pvt communi-An Inside S19,000b +2rlh dTT.D.b3 Br. ty, pool, no qualifying. 2"11 al own ome. Good area. Needs a little L at• l P k I CHARMING 3br. 2ba ~.ooo down. Move right OC IOft Pr me a r o c
+guest house. c-....1, 2 wortt.J ustllsted,SI00,'795. In, lake over payments ....._,_"A" Plan In Peters Deerfield . S84,9o5
.-.., Won't last ! Call now, """ Own/Bk u"S880 {>&tios, R-2 lot. Prin only. 675-4955 Townhosnea has an ideal a...:---r-->-._-___ _
$157,000.0wner,640-7030. 645-CT22~URY ~I "lnsJde" corner location
m1 A , .............. 1040 backing to a greenbelt. Reial
OCEAN VIEW, spec· WfttclHledty ••••••••••••••••••••••• T WO pr o f ess . tacularocean&Newport 1--------=:___-1 411-llACH landscaped patios . ' Those
Harbor vie,.-. Pool, wood 1--------•I Decorated In light colors. decks, 4 banns .. 2 ba., MESA VBD! OPTIOM-$700! 2 Bdrms.. 2 ba. Only Aches!
skylights t.hrUout. Comp. Lovely 3Bdrm, 2 bath Jog to ocean trom tbJs SllUOO remodele & updated. home. Ready to move-in Park Place executive ~~.~~~~!~:a~~Je~ condition. $85,900. for =0us~clb~~· 1~'!:
qualified buyers only. By qwck aale. rm. Giant .Bonus room, '
MU ..... .,.. c rt f<>Of... fOOL w--ize bedrooms. Lots owner ... ...._. ou e.sy 38d.rm " ... lb f -to realt.ors. • ' .,.. • •m cm. of oalt Ooorlne. \'ery new root, new decking, anx.lom seller ! Will lease
IY OWMl:R 2 II many xtru. A·l coodl· with ....,,"'"' at $700 mo 022 8600 t Ion • i m m e d l a t e Pric~der market ! ~· So. side. 759-0l58 ,_ _ 900 pcmes5JUU. -· • Call fast! 7S2-1700 Red~ed to $U5,000. MIS.CSTPtAzA Ol'fl'ftt1•»tr~111Nro11N1C1• ee~.~n.~~~ ;~~~t~b:::E~ f *'lff 111 ---------1--'-------
muat sell lmmac 3 Br 2 Completely refurbished ~.~~~~:.-~~=~-~··!·~-~-!!. IVBY Ba home w /Vi e w of l.ncludiol CUJlela. alot, OMCllMAWHILI
ocean It pvt beach ac· appliancea. Sate price WALITO llACH .. \be rare aem appears.
eesa. 516 DeAnza. Agt. ..llOO. Prom this lvty h toty eit· This Pt.a D Cbanaellor
67S-2311 lorMcC.• qiUllel,)ldecoratedhome ii one ol tbole. Vau.Md 1110 ............ 4 W/ encl'd paUO w/trplc. cellinp, elevated diniog
C.... MeM 141·172t ISW871. room, rear yard paUo •on WMte s.u. ~ Walker t; lee Spacioua • Bdrm. r•mlty room borne tn orlstnal
Harbor View w1tb formal MF•Ra, V2erdetr 3lc~sR,. 230t>.82• Real lltate dlntlll. pool, a Jacuasl ·p aod a aOC'ltoUa view or S•moa. Qwct aale S6S tt.ale Speelall1t1 .
the ocean, harbor, bland $T7,llOO, Ownr. 540-7999, S,4 6t 5 bdrm model•
• n d n 11 ht 11 ah ts . 94WTCM avall. 1om1 • 1pool1.
Reduced to Jm,000. OPEN SUN 1 s __.. Call for detallA • Pmnln&lon Properties L4L7"1' 345 E. Wlltoo St. ~=-=------=---· • ..-• T1'l1t darUni Eaatalde 3 llACH HOUSI
with privacy, nicely
landscape d : c o1or
coordinated In earth
lonea, luteful use or
wallpaper. Cul-dt·UC atreet. Property prtced ·-~__;,: ___ _
atSlOU!O
red hill .....
s.:-:~oo bdrm. I ~ t>. beauu.tul 4 Br, s Be. 11e 1undeck. 1
c:ounll) aettlnr starter yr new In rapidilY do-~~~~~~~~ (...;;;~;;:::.;~----
bome or retirement vtloptn1 beach area. _..._ _,.. •. .J1 1 rJn '.1',I .
I 11\ \ \ r I l,.
home onb' '79.500. Ctn· siu ooo eie 20th Sl ,._ YoU1' ""' ...... or
t ury 2t 0 01 It Co. 538-llll a•.:..ro1Ut1 wUb a Realt.an, M!·llA ied eel IC·5f'ft
!\'i'JUl 1,\1 f
It n'-S. j Ho.MtJ.Wt Heuet,_W. ~!!~~•••••••• ~~.~.~!~ ...... ~~~4!'.~!~~•••••• ····•··•·············· ·······~·····,·~::: :::.·=·.:~:::.····1•0··,·,· c.-,.'-........_ 1016 .._ oo Hau u tt-'~'-....1 Hane u f~ •-a-__. _ ... ~.,..-.------Moba.How.t r.:-n.rty 2 0 •• • -™ ...._............. .. .... ~ .. ~.::::::: .... ........ ._,. I 041 ........-• ••• •• •• •• • • • ••• •• • •• • • •••• •• •••• •• •• •• • ••• • • • For We I I 00 •••••••••••••••••• ••• •• ••••• • • • • •• •••• ••• ••• • ••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• ................ ••• •••• .................. •• ••• rr.ti....W • •••••••••• ••••••• •• ••• Coeta...... ]224 lrrMe 1144 . ..... 1269
SI 0,000 DOWH tt.f4Jht1 H°'"9 Dbl Wide 3 br rum w T1UPUX C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••·········· •••••••················
Tiasday. May 9. 1978 C1 DAIL. Y PIL.OT
Lingo
Rulbun
P4NCMtAMIC OCEAN VIEW
-TWa J bedroom. 2 both ....,. alt0 hol o
large .._ n.. root of Hiia r.... hol a tpee...._. rwdwood .ct -ou acloHd ct.ca. Wsr•ty Clft appUmcn. .. $152,500.
SOUTll
LAGUNA
499 ... SSI
497-3331 LAGUNA
NIGU t-;L
495 1720
DANA
f'OINT 493 8812
Harbor Viti"· 3 UR. 2 l>a. Last chance to b uy Newport lncl:s · Washer By ownr. xlnt cond Inc New 2 br condo Pool. spa RINTALS FREF: l1Tll.1Tlfo:5
Clnn, 1107) mo I 'll Oct•unalde homl' 10 & dryer. $1l.SOO Mulll $S05.Sl.S0.000648·5777 fi)oom SJ7S KJds & ptitlf JBR.2 8'1 S50Cl SJ.SO Nt•ar heh. r1•fn.:
fln •nc c'. n o c·rcdll Pre111denliMI u ahts 10 sell. M .. r•n u Really . OK.875-4912Bkr . OR . n-H~\ quiet.Mu8l !>l't' Al'l now' needed. r P 7Sl·87'1S Homes a vail in la:.t .. ' .. HEWTRf.PLEX ~eR'2~.'::'b" · ····• :::;"5 Smfec.645-4000 ' S42..lf8SO BY BUILDER New 3 br. 2~ ba & 2 br. 2 .. · ·• a ·-r~ .. -• '--I.de phase. From $79.000 An .... ~"'~ p 1 dbl alik.l!'~bu .~90 •-rs-• Mml Farm. room for 1
~. chlckeo.a. room for
garden naa tack rm.
place for frttnhlc. al50 3
BR. ram rm. frµl c, 2 ba
home. Mu.l see to ap
preelate Clo.e to &ck
Bay are a . $8~. 000
S57·3161
early v1111t 1:s r ccom· <1) 4 Br. 2 ba. 111n11le .,. ............. oo • 11ar.
mended.•·2'780 sunsel Ac.ntapforSale 1200 swry.deluxeowner's un open beam celhnis
Pacific Kome Uw Ide rs ••••••••••••••••••••••• at w /lltta~ dbl gar. Choose your carpet ~ TWO ACRES (2) 3 Br spacious db un & S4 so Wes t blur r FIX & SAVE Fant.sue vaew from thL" Its 8ike to bch from Village, Vktona & C.:1a
$89.500 fllter upper home on tbll here $198.000 full pnce nyon_._83_1_2080 ____ _
edge of the Cleveland 2412 Delaware. H 8 Spacious adult condo. 2br
View or ocean & halls. Nat100al Forest. BKR 536-1718 Zba. AIC. new cp~. d""' Great fixer with 1t 3 BR. · .... l~ BA. larae din1n.i l7l4>&7B·5717 R·2-PREV1EW·t:/SIDE ericl gar Bllns & pools 2HOUSES ra mily r oom w /dbl. ORS22·20llO Live in or rent this re SJ75.Aft 5.832·5262
Newport •ach (I replace. +secluded 8 ACRES modeled 3Br. 381.1 house Beautiful Mesa del Mar tt5Z3 c.otPUsl>tdRVl"E den, study or 4th HR. E while you .build deluxe pool home + c abana. $121,000 for loth Priced to sell. xlnt mini·ranch site. 3Br.2Ba urut. All plans & 3br. ll\4ba. $595. 751·2060 o E E R t' 1 E L D
AgentMS 1103 BER'nlA HEN RV So. of Orange Co. A little permits approved & paid or540-4891 TOWNHOUSE 2 Br. den,
REALTORS rough, but workable. for. Loan assumable or 2 ba wood deck 2 car
llewtahGaloN!! w .. huve IOOO'i. nr how,c11
d'lxb, •Ph now. tfll ~as. al! pnce1> Sm ll·•·
•C.._.r'tGuide•
&tS-4900
SEAVIEW. 3 UR. llJ1
Harbor. guuded t;dtl'.
t.enrus. ocean vww $1150
547. 704-4 • 833.J2 l.) ---
SliVIEW
C....,.,Olll ~· 215Del Mar 492·4121 BKR will . consider contract ~ Nice .. kids. pets ok aar ·w/elec opn;, mlr· ~~!!!!~!!~~~~~~~~!!~~!!!!!!!j Pride of Ownership. (7l41677·5«1Jl Llstmg next week at Gar. refng. More ++ rored wardrobes. Nr. h u g e . s e c I u d e d Hewport lead OR 522-~ SI 10.000. Now $99.500. Sm fee. 64>4900 pools. parks & schools.
Unobstructed vu•w of
ocean & Newport licach.
3 BAR 2 Ba. new t-\111
Reunty, tennis. Jacuu1.
swam ming. W 1con:.1der
lse opt Agt /Ownr
7Sl-6373 ask for Gar) rn. I 04• L091ftO H..... I 052 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
waterfront patio. 3 br YouLovedlOYrs Ago Ownertaet.752-~ •CoM-r 'tGWde• Sorry. no pets . S4SO.
each. $22.S.OOO. fee or 4 Beaut. cus t homes C....hfy Loh/ IRdlatrfal 640-0864or640-7072
SL82.5001easeb01d. w/panor.amic ocean Ctyph 1500 ~ 1275 A huge 2 br .~ids. , ----SMOICITRH Luxury for adlls. pvt 1400 MARIHA RliLTY views avail for sale from ....................... Ptopety 2100 pets, dsbwhr. More Sm Woodbndge: 3 bdrm. 2 l•--------
lfll Deodar S F'. 2Br home. formul 642-1150 $228,000. You must see lWO CHOICE ~metery ••••••••••••••••••:•••• fee.~ • sty. across rrom park & Open! 8'0' like rent. 4
A de l ightful and din. patio. fn cd y d . ---------1 the quality of th.ese lots.sadebyside.bothfor ln d .u s tr1a I C o n •COftlWMrtGtllde• school. Child. small pet Br.3t>.,jacuzzi,etc.1712 ~ou ghts Cler 3 bdrm S89.900.0wnr536-6177 ITSA TWO STORY homes. An early v1s1t as S7 2 5 . ME Mo R v domlDJums, 2 nu units OK S4 25 833-8714 . Highland S325.000
single story end unJt on rd& . FRAHCISCAM recommended. 498·0200 GARDEN MEMORIAL a~Jo1nang the O .C 1295 Musl see Gar. nice 631·3624 home greenbelt. Near pool. 4 BR. beaut ya . palao. or 831 ·9122. Sunset p A R K e R E A . Airport, 3200 & 4100 sq ft. loc. Cozy frplc. More! ~;;iimiiiiii'it:mii~
Jacuzzi, tennis & blk Walk to school. $86,900. Pacific Home Builders. 213/007-9849 Contact West.em Terrain Sm Cee. 645·4900 Beaut model home, 2 BR l!!l!l!!!!!J. trails. S19,900 On Goff Cowse Model localed an the Joe .. 4320 Campus Dr. •COllllMlltr's G-W•• or 1 BR & den. Blt.ns.
Call for details Gate guarded street or Newport Br11uffs. NB. Oak ..-:•••y ,....,.1 "'CRE #110. N.B. Ca . 92660 PH; Auto 1ar .. adJts rec facil 644-7211 luxury homes. 4 BR. & parquet oors. custom ~ "" ..,. Conwmrclclt 714/S49-1480 $330 3 Br. 2 ba. kid ok incl If tennis crts. Adlts, ,
den. S2l9.000. Also 4 BR. camel color carpels. OCIEAHFIOMT f>roperly 1600 Sharp, nice palio. Good no pets. SJ75 uruum. $475 •---------
rJD.NIGEl
(lAIL(Y &
2fam1ly rooms S24.2.000. used bn ck fp & Its close Zoned R·3, 150 feet or ••••••••••••••••••••••• for S. 2200 toe Sm fee. MS-4900 furn 5411·2'02. SSS· 1209. BLUFFS 3 br. 2•., ba .. lov
Jay W. Yeah Co. to. beach. B&tk Bay & oceanfront. Sensational 11!."CH/COMM'L ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• •C..,..r't Gulde• 542 7609· __ ely. S.'550 Month
ASSUCIATES 499 2237 Ne w p 0 rt ~ e n t e r · views' Large 25 room ~ OFFICE ILDG SITE "~ · I 2 b b Agent 644· 1133 • $132,900 home." Room ror tennis, Store bldg. 2000 sq ft +2 3br. 2ba. frplc. lovely .x:nsauona r. 1 a
--------•Miuioft V&-L. 1067 VA.U.IY 640.9900 pool and6to8newcondo adjacent lots. Near Caty Huntington Beach Y " rd . gar n r w/Crplc. dshwhr. Kids & 2 Br. 2', ba condo Vie~
•-leach 1048 •••••••••••••••••••••• -= "' $325,000. Pacifica Hos pital. 5 mo.S48·282S 963-4.567 ~ Nofee. 645-92Ul.645.9161 0ons ........... !I I uru·ts.29"'0own.Owner Hall on Newport Blvd 27.000 sq. rt lot near sbop'g/schls. $430 per Pet ok . On ly S395 . MSO.mo.No peti.
--rm-3 bd c d pr f ~O'"' ~ willcarT)'.$845,000 P"'"'tsShop.Cntr&C1v1c ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm or ovn. o . o~\ CO)• '"' ""'' landscaped upgrades "v;~ Center $135 000 4 BR 2 Ba. nr Nwpt Hbr 2 Br. ocean/mtn views . nr OCEAHFROMT . d Oava·d Bo0urk0e RJtr I -___ ... ...241 k F h l I '> Must sell. We will eal. Hi. W I D. refr1g, can __,.....--... ., par . ocean. a~ ~. for th.as pnce. 2 Bdrm .. 2 8J0.20ll NPS. Canalfront. 4 BR, 546·9950 partly furn. S650. 548-1418 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W ID. frpk. 2 car gar.
bath & huge mas ter 2"2 Ba, walk to beach. 3 Monarch Bay Plaza Ocean view 2 Br. den. 2 $495. 873-8617
swte. Mobile home locat· Newport leach I 069 pools & teMis. Sl62.9SO. 49,,,7La2e2un2 a N81tue1_i0836 FOREVER VIEW •oMESA VERDE 4 br. baths. 3 blks to beach. BOATOWNER'S "P~C
ed in much sought after ••••••••••••••••••••••• Manna Realty. 642-8850 -., of ocean & c anyon. 2 ba. frplc, nu paint. cpts. sundeck frplc garage "
South Laguna park ---------•*°""Property 2000 Ready to bu1 Id So. etc. ZOO. 2932 Redwood StiSO Lag u~ a Rlt y Luxunous lwnhme 3 br. 135.500 GOLFCnURSE HEY LOOk MEOVEll! r-..._ Laguna Alis o area Ave.642-7743 ..,.. ,,_., 2""1 ba. frpk. patio, view ...,.. , _. _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• . · ...........,, ' deck. 32· boat shp an~·L
VIEW A deluxe FEE LAND r.-1.-... 107f 49U .... ITS 493-Ql84 B 2Bab f dbak AWAYFltOM
THE CROWDS
Beautiful & peacdul
1.:uunlry seltmg. wads or
(ax up pot ent ial , ex·
Lr~mely comforta ble as
11'. Laguna location 2
Bdrm . 2 bath plus huge
den S121.500.
O.Y·O
Best pnced view home Ul
Newport Beach Only
Sl.20.000. for lhL'I 3 bdrm.
3 bath. family room
home tluge cul de-sac
lot with RV access .
Hurry. won't last ! Call
546-5880
~HERITAGE
REALTORS Large 2 bdrm .. 2 bath 1 2
block lo Laguna's Main ---------Beach. Light. a iry &
clean. S89.SOO. BEAUTIFUL MONACO
H.V H . 3 Br. 2 Ba. ltaJ
MORIMS REAL TY ute ent & tot, nr pool & pk, xlnt cond, fee. * 494-8057 * $138.000 640-1440
HARDWD FLOORS
OCEAN VIEW Must sell this week!
RETREAT Beaut. condo. 2 br 2"'2 ba,
Executive Townbome. den + studio & library.
Crackling frplc. Wet bar. Sade ocean view. Owner.
family room. formal dtn· 642·1242or642-6706 1ng rm . Expans ive ---------
master suite w /p vt IYOWHSl •IEACH
ocean view balcony. 15 just 200 steps away.
$145.950 3Br, 2.Ba. frplc. 2 car gar
lnt'I R.E. Network tn a Carmel-like selling
963-0867 ona pvt st. 111 LldoSands
---------· S138.500 645·1262
PANORAMIC Guest F.owe. util. paid. VIEWS SlSO mo. No kitchen.
Or a m a lie pa nor am 1 c _548_· 7_368_._N_o...;cpe_ts_. ---
ocean & bil[ view com· llG CAMYOM
plement this hideaway Magnificent "front row"
home In upper Mystic golf cours e view of
Hills Bright & btrt, pon ds, fairways &
!1pac1ous&airy4bdrm · greens . Exquisite
2 bath nest.Jed peacefully Augusta Plan, 2 bdrm. & among the lulls & ocean. .. f
X lg l t All th. •. den. 2.000 sq. ... o un· tra e o · is • compromised elegance.
much more for only Lavubl)' appointed. Nol·
1179.500. 1514 Caribbean. ed designer's tot.al effort.
640-7711 Absolutely "award win·
ning" at $249,000. For
app't to view call
640-5560 aeeot.
HewPOrt Shorff
3 Br, 2 ba. You own the
land. Best slngle story
noor plan. l'll time of·
fered. $139,000. By appt
only.
Westclff leauty
3 Br + family room.
--------• Decorator's delight. A 3 Arcb Ba~ vaew home steal al S1S2.500.
Magnificent Beac h .
coa!'ltal & ocean vlE'ws.
ibr, apt w/beaut. pool.
Quiet area near beach &
sboppuag. OnJy $89.500.
Fina ncing available
Opn Hse daily. 499.2094
Must sell Dupt.x
499.3933 ___ 3 br + 2 br. Rents sum·
Lg ocean vu lot w /plans & mer· winter. Yrly income
permit, overlook log $910. mo. $189.500
Bluebird Cyn. city & up MAIUHAREALTY
roast. Top ()( The World 64Z..1150
2805 Bernard Ct. 847·5887 ---------
Discriminatina
Dramatic Chn1 Abel de
sign w/sweepmg ocean &
cyn VI.Ill. 5 Levels. over
2200 sq. ft. Many decks. 2
BR. den. $250.000 (924 >
BY OWHER
H.V.HOME
Palermo $158 .800
lsehold. 4br. 3ba, 2 frpcls
& 1 wetba r . Appl
644-81.34. Prin only.
BIGCAMYOM
Townhouse, $137,500.
640-9019
IAYCREST
Exquisite pool home, 3
You .. 1 f •• 1 bdrm 2 ba. Immaculate
- -& pnced to sell. Prin· an love w /this completely c1pala only. Agt. 646-7782 remodeled 3 BR hm.,._ _______ _
Short walk to bch, blk to••
shop·g. Sl.52.000
%AGIODDY RLTR
494-1611
WHAT IF
h tlgl _..,...,,_ " •---------4 r. · uge nc c ExclUStve Monarch Bay 4 S875 lease 752-1920 or ~::o~~o~r~Y a~~= ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRJDE OF WATER SKll-.:RS' yd w/t.rees. 3 car gar. bdr. den. d1n1ng rm, aller6pm 875 1215
awaits your inspection! Home sit es s ituate d wtworllsbop. Sunken hv ocean vaew. SHOO mo.
Designed for gracious * * * * * * * OWNERSHIP around large lake. all nn, frplc. RV access. Yd Af),.. Dorothy.49'7-1761 S-CW...e. 1276
lj11U1g. this 3 bedroom <or IM CHARMING One great locaUon with uulilJes an. Clubhouse & ~~~~·1.:~· $500;. mo.
2 wtden l has private old SanJuan Capislrano. large units and for goll c~rse. 1.,,, hours '1llEWHALETOWER" •••••••••••••••••••••••
A I and mark home . r, 2ba 2 stry Condo No
STAN DING A DOVE San Cle~nle. $450. A81
TifE CRA.SHlNG SURF 492·6700,496-8432
patio lush with foliage, A r f 0 r d a b I e u p $1,300,000. Call 752·1920 from L.A. Began n1ng
slate entry, 2 fireplaces. stairs/downstairs con· $8900. Terms . Agt. MESA VERDE 3 BR 2 Ba
home w/fplc & Jge Y•rd·
Submit on dtildren or
pets. S47S mo. 1st + last. + $200 dep. Call 546-5880.
ask for Leslie. aft. 6PM.
call 549-0076
many custom extras. baths. carpeting. window ,.. 1••cH-l "' ... GLE
open beam living room. domlnium. 3 Bdrms . 1'12 d '-'UAIL 714-ii7·7288.
YOU OWN THE LANO! I · pi •CE '""' 1" -""""
Don't ~a1't•. Call 675-7661 coverings. bw t·ans. two ~ SI 25,000 -car garage & pal.lo. By --10,.. Tl. l=JO P.M. t
AT VICTORIA BEACH. S. ,,_
Towenng 3 BDRM. & CGpfs""-"> 3278
OEN FLOOR PLAN.••••••••••••••••••••••• b1.1lt on 3 levels. Located or 833-0610. S275.000. For owner. Moo. thru Thurs. 10 Units. near Hunt·
_s_at_e_b..:.y_own __ er_. ___ --4 <days). call 846·21S8; 7 U ... ITSC.M. logton Beach C1v1c
a FEW HUNDRED FT. bdrm 2 ba, llVlnJ~ rm
FROM THE SAND. farrulyrm.2cargarage.
W /OUTSTANDI NG fenced bkyard. tenn~~
OCEAN VIEW Will No petS. s:uo ~ '¥1a
lease for 11200 ~r mo. De Gav1lan 492·5771 after
Fr. thru Su <d 1 & "" Center. Caty bas final •High•tt.Hll 1• n. ays Beautiful brand new 4·1 plans. can bwld in 30
2 BR. l 'AI ba. rrpl_ l y r
old. Lge yd .. gar S395
Af),.. 973-4T72. 552.0434 AboveoceaninN.B.4br. evenings, call l 7l4> br.loft,f/p.3·2br.11,o;ba days.A&ent.5368836
w/Cam-rm. 3 yrs new.,.•93-0588--··-----· townhouse, a ll bltn!>.•---------
S ecu r1 ty S ystem .---------crpts, drp6. Hurry. bu~ o.tof~ N. Costa Mesa. lovely 3
Br. 2 Ba. newly carpeted. l!onus rm. sep. lndl")' rm,
lge fncd yard w/patio.
Good ref. required. For,_7P_M _____ _
Spacious & Luxunous HUDISTDELIGHT now. Tom Lee, Rltr. Properly 2550
Offered al$ 642·1603. •••••••••••••••••••••••
furtber info. call Wed I 1ter 32'8
Mission Realty 494-0731 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PatFORMAHCE
848·~1
Pvt. jacuzzi, sundeck &
covered patio surround ---------1 this 4 BR. a rchitects PRIVATE dream home. Ins ide
COMMU .... ITY Terra Cotta tile. cedar
"" paneling. custom light· $37 .500 ing & cuswm rrplc make
Get away from the sum· this a page out of Home
mer traffic In this 2 BR, Magazine. Spacious &
Newport Beach cottage, sensuous. only 188.500. &
located in De Anza Parit y00rs w expenence by
with all the ameruties calling
pool s. Jacuu1s VALLEYIEALTY
clubhouse. 496-4977 7 Ujlltlil\ NEWPORT •
BEACH
This 4 BR & den family
home is walking distance _
to the elementary, Jr. SPANISH HIDEAWAY
Hlgb & blgb schools, Spanish tile & brick s ur ·
just a bicycle away Crom round this immac. hm.
the ocean. The perfect Solid constr w /flavor of
family home for Sl.85.000. Old Mex.lco. F1owing tile
0 rtn behind pvt crtyrd.
Reduced t o $71,900.
831-3750; 493-2202. Wall
Street Real & tale.
_. r:L•:1lwl • 5-la AINI I oao ..aai!C di 'Ill ...... -............ ~
Balboa Island Realty FHA·VA
\\U l\\'l"t1itit•1,1 "'~""'" IUYBS 673-e7oo Great area· house needs
DUPLEX
Great locaUon. 'r'a blk.
ocean! 3 Bdrm. units.
Do ubl e garage .
FUmlsbed & booked lo
summer rentals. $192,000
MEWPOIT IEACH
REALTY 675-164
UDO BAYFRONT
I st TIME OFffUD
40 Ft. rrontage, Lido
Nord, charmln& older
home with pier & slip. . $650,000
Lawson
Realty Comp.my
loving care. Clip all your
ideas from House Blfl & make this your dream
home ooly SS7.900. Lge
cov'd patio · Many fruit
trees.1!97-0321.
By Owner: Bradford Pl.
3br. lYlba coodo. $59,700.
Evs~7629
IAYVl&W ~s:--• 1100 ~l:cy fr!e::~r:;.~~~ .. F .• ANT······AS····,··,·c···A··L·
is included ln one super e
P::f!rty on NewJ>Or . P ula. The home is f'-6. U-a bdrms.. ramily rm.. .,_.,. WIGN
baths 6: a aunny patio; Shanirt·l• dbl wtde tux·
the apaclous apt. ls l· UI)' Uvin1. Blll 1978 2Br.
bdrm .. 1 bath & terrace. 2Ba Skyline lo adult
$349,500 park, awtmmlng, Jacuzzi
& social activities
falore. All for under
U ,000. Park r e nt
$105-$140.
c.lforlH PCICtfic
lloblle Homo Realty
270I Harbor,&. 208
S40-stJ7
*2Trip1Hfl*
Near Lake Park. Min. to
bcb. 1-4 BR, 3 ba; l·3 BR. 2~ ba: 1·3 BR. 2 ba. S
garages. frplcs. $189,000
each. 1709-1713 Alabama.
Hunt. Bcb. 536·1718
Owner.
IHVESTM~
Commercial building in
ocean area with secure
lease rrom Government
Agency rot sale. Equity
build up and cash on cash
return for $50,000. down
payment. Call for de·
tails.
P.tr~kle
2&3BEDROOM
VA·FHA
GARDENTOWNHOME.
2 car garages.
1-43J..9924
hes 1·757-1623
frwt trees. Ownt/agt. U.,..Hils 3250
540--TT30 ...................... .
...... Galon!!
We have lOOO's of houses,
dplxs, apls now all•
3br, 2ba condo. a 11 areas. all pnces. Sm fee: 0-Poillt 1226 amenities. Highly UP· •Cwm•r'I G.ltde•
••••••••••••••••••••••• graded. Lse S395 mo. 645-4900 ~ bdr 3 ba. fam rm. den. 837·3748 1----------. eod. yard. dbl gar. $5.25.
_L_v_Mll-'g=-·-67_5-07_02 ___ L9IJma..,... 1252 3425, ......................•.....•...•.........•.. ,
IOACIEUHCH Fo t•Val.y 3214 OCEANVIEW 2br, t '1'iba. mo.2Br2Ba.onth~ ·
Remodeled ranch home ••••••••••••••••••••••• tenrus. pool. bch. sec, ocean at Blue Lagoon
with open beam ceahngs Nice Family Area many x tr a a . ss 1 s . Villa. Tennis. 2 pools. pvt
& views in ail directions. Sharp. only S'S(). 4 Br. 661-6575. _ bch. 213·703-0230
1be pool, spa & bnck f 1 lk t hl & • patio are fenced in for rp ' wa 0 sc 5 Luxury for adlts lg 2Br O#lt. a II• complete privacy. The park. Hun-y, cal19S2·77B8 home. fonnat din. avail U.fw..W.d 3525
remaining acreage ls ror or549-956B. Ji.meS475mo.~77 •••••••••••••••••••••••
you to do with as you llwllacl•leoch 3240 . 13742 Newland Street
pl.a ... Call now, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Top ol lull locaUOll, lease Garden Grove. Beautiful .__. · opbOO coosidered. <Ex. twobedroom townhouse:. 'o""""u 'o" 973-4626 New-elegant·Z bedroom ecutive vaew homeJ, 3 br, 1 n e x c e I I e n 1 ~~~E a.. HWde R.L htc ($5501 or 2 bedroom + .. , b f u
MAYO CK
~"' ~ den ($S7S). c.edar & win· country outc en, am Y neighborhood. Private ~~ 1631 E . 17th St •C .. SA dow home. 5 Blocks to room. dinmg room. frpl patJo view from lovely ~~~~~~~~~ beach. Private 2-car ut lw111g room, dose to kitc h en : e n c los ed -.._.. aarage. Fully main· beach, park. country ga r ages . p 0 0 1 • IEACH TRIPLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• tained yard. Adults. No club. Owner. 110-2317 S320/monlb. Call Clydt· , .. ,, '"'""' 18th s 1 ........_ --..... 1255 (Man ager. A p a rt San Cle11M11te .-1 peta. untwre _,,, t. _. ~ ment#JOI. (710 891 · lOLJ. ....... U.fatwlhed <714) 960-ml ........................ ________ _
Walk lo beach or Del••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN VIEW -San
Mar Shopping. Quiet Gener.. 1202 Freshly painted 3 BR. on 85/per month. Avail Clemente. 2 sly end umt
area, w /great 3 BR •h•••••••••••••••••••• cul de sac. Walk to park 8 owne 't u 2 BR •. .._,_ 2 •A'>C May l5lh. Deluxe 3 BR. 2 1'fnhme . 3 BR. 2'h a . . rs um · pper HOMEFINDERS .. ac........... car gar, _...... BA, trg . ramily room. rec facll. Walk to shops &
units, w1ocean views . lbousandsOfRentals mo.968-&'i88 C/D, aar. microwave bu_,. $475 mo. 770·2317. J&LS~listedat~~o:'v GetFaslResulta DON'T MISS OUT ON oven. 2 car gar .. fenced ownertagt. E:~TORS Sample: THIS Sharp 3 BR 2 BA, yard Hope64(Hi600. • ___ ..;;._ ___ _
21.SDelMar 492·4121 Sl702brbouseOrange fplc. W/Cpts, rncd yard. 12621 Flower Street Sl751brbsekids/pe\S SUS 963-4567 Carden Grove . Large
For e ....... , ,,___ PX>3brkids,gara~e conv area. · Me lftftftleoclt 3269 one bedroom townbow;e -y...,_-C aat.nofee. -r--,__ h L • .... ....,..MEW LIFETIME SER I E .. ••••••••••••••••••••• cruac: lo s oppmg. aun
6 Unit~apt wtrec room, 557-0822 2Brw/p r. $265. Newcpts MA~FICEMT d r y fa c ll 1 l 1es . No & tile. Water pd. 2710 cUEll•y I •1(1!. ctuldren; no pets. Call units are all rented. "C" Delaware. Call ~ -19 Debb1eat(714l f>36.7343 SZ.400 mo. Income 4 · 3Br, .._. ,.._.. 3206 63M1201-S M·F. 3 Br home only S71S/mo.
2YJ.Ba studios, 2 · 2Br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• nus choice toe. haS fis· ~ires Unfwon 3600 lBa. 17091 Elm St., H.B. Lovely 3 BR, 2 Ba, fplc, SUPER SHARP 2 BR 1 bing, swim'g, & boating •••••••••••••••••••••••
$375,000. 848·~ days, new cpt.s 00 pet& $625 Ba, w/D/W. cplS, fncd w/Lake Arrowhead at-Elegant duplex. 3 BR. 3
S3M873evestwlmds yrty.4~ · yard, oo!y $385. 963-4567 moapb. Trulyachaoceof ba. Crplc. S600 mo
agt, no lee. a llletune. Call now, just 645-2111, 646-6303
COVINGTON CoroeadelM• 3222 GOSEETID.S!3BR2Ba, l.as~.•UnitedBrokers 2 Br. 1 ba. new cpts & FOURPLEX ... •••••••••••••••••••• w/bnck fplc, cpts, cov'd Joll'I Carey,646-7414 drps. mature adults. nu
A beautifully maintained SPYGLASS HILLS. vlew patlo, fncd yard. Only pets. S300 + 6 3 1
"Covington" located m 3 Br Fam Rm, S950 mo. $US.~. agt, no ree. NO FEE! Houses. condo8, Shalimar. 964-1~
a n e q u a I I y r 1 n e lse. 67J..BSM1 d u p I ex es . Re n t a I
neighborhood of pro-REAL FINE 4 BR 2 Ba. Pavilioo,87>4912Bkr. .&. llh~'-d
3 BR 2 b den f .. 1 w/CpJc, D/W, fncd yard, _,.-lw rw~-perties. Pnce: $190,000, . a., , rpr, o ce Hurry, call 752.1920 patio. Close to ever· kids & pets OK. Only BIG Canyon 2 BR + den. •••••••••••••••••••••••
ythlng. Older couple S43S. 963-t567. agent, no Fant.asUc golf. course vu, Costa Mna 1724
d 9UAIL pref .. no pets. $62S. Agt. ree. sec .. t en ni s , S8 50 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• PLACE ()73.5SS4/4!r7·338S $2:50 Lge 2 br, 2 ba. ffWTY. ~'M044; 83.1-32l5
10,..llt:llP.M.t DUPLEX Z.3 BR. avail. Kids. yd, patio. Sm fee. Oceanfront 1 br older ~!~'i!t~:
---------• Open views, deck. Jae. ~ bol.lse. Yrly. SSOCl.
Covl ..... '-:T~ l650/S600. 752-0617 •COM-r•1 GW•• TSL Mgmt 642·1603 Maid service, pool "w VI"' 2376Newport 81,C.M. FOURPLEX ._.. ~alore!I $32S Circle this! 3 br at Westcliff. charming 3 BR. 548·97S:S or 645-3967
Pride of ownersblp units. We have 1000's of houses. bch. KJds ok. Pool. Sm 1 "'-ba, pa tao, no pets, SUS CASIT AS
Xlnt So. Coast Plaza dplxs. apts now. a ll fee. 645-4900 • $525/mo. 646-23S9 NiceJy furnished 1 bdrm
area. Great Income & areas. all prices. Sm fee. •Ca 1 •' • Wde• Newport Shores steps to Closed gar. 1230. up
PRICED RlGHT. Won't •CoMa•r'sGul•• AVAIL.NOW 4 BR 2 Ba beach.3br,2ba.,yrtylse. Aoultll. no pets. 2111J
last, so hi.QT)' & call lo· 645-4900 w/c.J• f~hly painted ( 7 I 4 ) 6 4 S • 1 2 1 9 or Newport Blvd. clay for mOl'edetaals. lt'W"• (2'")•"" ...... l CHARMING Irvin T lhruout, good loc. Only ,,.. ............, l BR furn, 1235: 2 BR unf. 540.3666 race home, 4 BR~ ~~: M85. 963-4567. •at oo ree. .For be 3 or 4 BR hse, sm~, I.Ii.et adUs. no ~ti..
IJ"dnr & pool avc lncld •t H U N T I N G T 0 N F.utbl"'· <NB> Magnlrt· utll . Nr abopa & park
llSO, lee. 644-9615 HARBOUR brand new cent view. completely re· 548. 889
4Br, 3ba Broadmoor view end l stoey 3 bdrm 2 ba modeled, decorated. _;;_;..;__..;__ _____ Sl_85_
home. Redecorated. ~ bullt ~c~tc: ~.~· &:Na~p~!:~'. 1 :rutJr."~· :.851~ St. JUSTRIDUCED Gnmr . .OO.MCM>008 vacy. · Cloeeoosdlla"sboppnsg Sp.et:42,C.M &'2·919.1
1--------• 3Br, 1.,.. Ba.dbl tar. bf\n cntr. $795 mo. Call Thia home plua duplu 1.. .,_1111 stv. quiet. S435/mo. 8302 mu4tdays lfon.Frl. lArge rum bach. Sl60 ... 1000 a ... _ ... _. .,...,... Pref mlodle agt-now... . · ....... ., u»..:... PoUt <2.13>4»8968
tlfltela11
REAL t~T.~TE
11e~SHOUS
3 BR. 2 BA. 2 car prare.
Very private 1arden
home. New landataplng.
SOUkllnl clean-move ri'cbl m ... P.500. 1
•--··--•"'•""·-----.. •·BR• cko. nlcel.Y fum .• cont.act mgr. 525 l"alrfax told you thla Dover ---------Dr, Cotlt Neu. off
Shores home would S.Clea• 107' Harbor.
bedroom home w Ith Ocean view home, Ju.st.,.. · · New Bia Ca~ 2Br. 28a 645-2JS79or5411..Q868
aep&rateJ&Jd.Twoveey bUt. to the beach; 3 Cloaewbeach,3br,2ba Twnhome, blfl 1olf
............ Hiity
4'M220 4t6-24 'l
4'M4'4 110.SOIO
St6.t00
Price reduced oo lhla 4 Bdrm. t be homt . Super Butt cau Dtl wnaon at So.c.lf~
$46-5'05 .
pcrmlt you to live lllce a ... •••••••••••••••••••, _.._ ______ _
Roman. aurrounded by f'IUTAS Italian marble, lounaina PIUC• llfMfT • Ml lSJICAL !~~~:°B~· 11:!~~ ~u~~':'fa'::~~l SM sa.~MI
Wouldn't you call me tor BR. family ho~ on cul· Sea ca111 ft l'\lftteU a
fw1herdelalla? de·aac corner , blth btdl ramlly par adi'se.
above. the dty. Call for 2Br. + booua rm In El Soni U.t ..lll oulatandlna Morro By tho Sea, your
................
6~0.IU7
\
reauu..•1111'4.500. own pvt bell. park rent
BER'IRARl.:NRY only aeo. CA.U.TODAY R&ALTOlt8 (PKJOel)
2JJDtJlhr 411-4121 c ....... ,....
Otu.nfraot bM tor aale by Mobile Home Reill)' ownr. l'IOf lbttlot, aoa ~Lt l40-ltJ7
nice two bedroom apart· bdrml. +convert. den. 3 w1rrp1c . dshwhr. fncd oourse view, pvt garage,
rnent.slnrear.Call oow! baths, 2 f~la . family yd. Oft1Y $465. 963-4567 SUO mo. U-0·8126, llut..,••edi 3740 752.JJ20 room. Ocean view, sun· Alt. No fee. •31J73 •••••••••••••••••••••••
P R D E 0 F
OWNERSHIP Near
O('Uft•Ool1.a lleaa New • Plu . Bkr 'n OtU. msm
(lieclca. encloHd paUo & 1-=----------Wlit Ul you tee the mstr. NICE 2 BR a Ba . Clean, Pluab 3br, 3ba w /boat
bdrm., wow! $1200 Per idnl location. amall pct slip. l blk to beach.
STUDIO
"W..tdvletn••
Full kitchen & TV
Unens & Utilities
MILE TO OCEi\N
month welcome. $350 mo. Call _sse.8534 ___ • 640-49 __ 19 __ _
!MMllO, ask for, Lealle.
aft t PM. eall 549-0076
A {)jv1111on of
llurbor lnvt'lt"?.,t'f'll Co
llMIW• lt11taw
The Blufrl.
4br, 2\i'tba, ram rm, pvt
paUo, hl>k. ms per roo.
1242 9'4·1480: 830-5050ext 22
...,.. S..ht Mohl
'121 Yorktown Blvd
Beach Blvd at Yorktown
••••••••••••••••••••••• I Bdrm + de n 0 N 516-0411
Conde>, 3-48R. 3 Ba. 2 fplc. WATER. •SplclOUll wt1b --------
encl pr• Ctrr1ce PooJ. v I e w s J 2 o o / mo TW10 bedroom, one mile lo
\mllil, bcMat slJp. Lease Watc-rfront ffomee the beach. Man11er. ph
•. ..... 831·1400 860-11.119
Office...... 4400 ........ /l,.••tt I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • FfrlMillee
OAA.V P't..01 ~.~.~ ... !~.~~ ~~ ......... ~!.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~.~~ ..... !~~~ . ........ ~ ............ u.fwtl. ........................ . ........................................... . ml l'ACl8"'T •••••·•················
............ 1741 ~~ ••••••• ~.~~ ... .,.. ... 116'
ALTBMATIVE ...._,
Mu lo mo. renl Incl Oppcrt..tty ·SOOS 95% PR t:GNANT• Carine
1.'0nlldt:ntial l'O'unsehnl( &
referral. Aboruon, adop Uon & keeping.
ACCOUNTIMG cun Allom_r1 ..
lllALISTATe
K ecepl . 11~rv . •••••••••••••••••••••••
penonaliied phone cov TRAVEL AGENCY
•••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
UOUNA Bt:ACH MTR lA MAMCHA Al'TS pA.IJ( MIWPOIT A full time poe1t1on ts
ttv.illsble ror llrl '"
d1v1duul who hk"'s lo work With rl.:ures 1tnd
hll!I u h1ih le\el of -.kill.
aC'curacy and spttd Ol
rice expenence IA es en
l111l ror this position
Work in pleasant en
vlronmenl wit h aood
company benerltJl lnclud
1ng 2 weeks vacation
after one year, company
paid group lnsuranct',
<'redil uruon. ~c. Apply
at:
AnOtt.MIY
NewPort lkh. Out&l;,ind
1n1 oppor. tor Allorney
w/2·3 )'fl exper & a
superior academk bal'k
l l"OW>d. We are a growth
oriented, med alzed ldw
firm aeekln1 an atty
w/par\Oenhlp potent1ul
& both the ablUly & de
sire to handle lnteresllng
" IOPhlaticaled real e11t
& related bus111ess mat
ler~. Replies held in
11trtci confidence. Send
resumes to PO Box i559,
Bever ly Hilla. Ca11r.
ll0212
0 1wll: fs 14> Mal Larit l ?,f,3 bedrO(>m Ba l' h e I 0 ,. 1 0 r 2
Mil'\ color T\ h at Cd 1arde a •Pl• D•h• br. liedrooma • Tuwnhmi6l'l> rra1e. conr rm. ma11 EA .a. i..aCHISE ttrv . W\deraround prka ~
28dTrwtD ...
Arr•nted (ol apprailed value > ~.OOO. l50.0002nd TO
Lower Coe'-
Futtt Service
No Prepayment
APCAR E 547.~
"°°I 1714> 41M ~. bh.oa, tt1C'I pr aas bbq t-'rom SJOt xi
N co.st Hw)' Pool VIUI Pd ns Scoll Spectacular 1pa. total
& nlOnl •n Ne-wport. Tile new way to own a TIIE t;Xl!:<:UTIVE travel a gency T ravel UMDA&Ytau
o..tcalt M .. s09t
fwtt..'-ofltl ~IUDJO w aaraar. uul Pt 642 !14173 recnat 1on pro.r am.
pd SirTh mo lsl It IH t Larlle 3 Hr townhouSe apl. l()Clal Pl"O{Cram T ~· •
SUITE. 640-5470 Networlt Start your own Exp. not r e qulrtid
1XP AMOIMG 711 Complete support & Iona Servin1 all Oranae Co
BJ.S.7313 ..... ,....., aft 6 pm 2 "'•. frnk, "•tlO, 1ara11~. tenrus C0WU Al fo a hi-On ""' ~ .,. '" ,... " •-1··-... Ja-bo-... •-"an Q\ll<'l complex luJulta, .... iu "' • "' .. • ~
Oeaut atudio a pl oy wftk
OOwn&own Uiauoa. wal
to beach. Call 41M 3'1M
oo ptL\ cm 6Q 33111 or J011.quln HUit Road m -5'M.9 C714t 644-ltoO
Fully .erv. ore epace lerm aervice provided.
at&N at W sq ft In the C 8 11 M r · <.. h a r I es
dynamic N.8 . airport 714-338·9342
bul .• ,.. •. Sp.cc a vail : Colleo ahop, located in
81»18,000 aq fl & warehae prof'l bldg, 5 day c:rrra· ap. » 1q ft. ProJ. Mgr Uon 7 ""
542-1134
Broker DANCE OF FUN
Beaut. nude girls dance
It rap 8eS$ion. P vt m1r.
rored rooms lOAM to
JAM Mon Sal. 12PM to
8PM Sun. 625 N. Euclid Anah. SSS.5363 •
~ Br. 1 tnba townhou.se.
patio. yanl. frplc, encl. Mewport ~ 3769 gur. lau.ndry rm. S37S.
LIDO BAY FRONT
Redec 1 Br. ~ I Ur.
den. 2 ba. frpk S»O
Aaent &45·$0U
Judv Clark. 833.a813 or • : ..... 3. Buy irect , fromownr. 586-9419
ht, lad & lrd T.D.'a
LOANS AVAILABLE .
Credit no problem.
752-5903
Arranged by
Coast Home Loans
•••.e•••••••••• •• • •••• • • TSL Mgmt 642· 1603 at<>p by Commerce P arlr
·UOO Hirth. l BR w1101\, fµlc. iiar. ocean view, blk to brh
UtJJ Inc. MM> mo. IM0.3"117
INST,\NT IN
SlVSTOllACH eentrol lor 2 nr. l '• Ba OFFICE SPACE 2 BR.2ba,yrly. S3 10 apt f'nccl patio, gar. IAYFltOMT $325.64s.~ ---forleaae.2200aql\. \AJblk
8 do I -----1 D&UX.. olf S.D. Frwy on Crown 2 R ron •year » ---pd Chlldre k • Vall•)' Parkway. Mission '650moo\h 2 Br. ut1I n o · Eastblulf 3 br, :l ba. ... pdJ( UDO No pets Mgr Apt 4 l96tl Leuu. lnC'l.apac. meeter _V_l_t\J0_ . ..,_1·_288_1 ___ _
2 BR. 2 ba. yrly $4395 ~ce. H I~ 7181 suite. din rm 4. dbl aadj. oles. pvt ent. appro:ic
2 Br. p , Bu townhouse. g ara 11e . Auto d oor h3S', S350/m o. 18?7
associated
o~c" UI'> llt 11 , r.u~s ;r : ~ ,,, b 1 ~ I,.,, j
g a r a ge . patio . pool. opener avull Pool fl WestcUrr. NB&.11-0900 recreation al't!a Adullll ---------~cs~~ 2()~:u llti o nly . only No pet' ~. PltHIENT! -----1 --~ Am1110. Way _ We've aot spring rever at
Lido Marlna Village Nr bch, 2Br, Itta upper. While il lasts we're ofter·
Bay rront •Pl w/ocean v ~!:~• .....•.. ?~.~~ ~~~.~ly.~~.rr· Ina free renlon beaut. or.
IOO. boat slip S2000 mo. Duplex. ocear view New rlce apace overlooking ~17 alls 1640 sq ft ? br, 2\lt ba. 2 Br. 1 i.., ba tnhouse atylt'. the Bay. Space from 290 Adults. r o pl'ls. $255. to 900 sq. ft. incl. crpts,
OCF.ANFRONT deluxe $450. mo 7~ ~-2682 d r P. s . A I C • 5 d a y
br, 2 ba, gar. No pets. Dana Point-s uper ocean ---Jarutorial serv. & all util
NowW June 3 67J.tl640 view. Ne-. l550sq.n . 2br, l.argt' 3 BR 2 Ba. sundeck. pd. Take advantage or bltns, cpts. parkln& Nr our sprl11" fever •-tree Lge 2 br duple• a p 2i,,ba s.i~ 644·5'742 .. . .... beach 204 43rd Sl. $325 r ent orrer. We'll pro-
fumisbed. Across frorn } Or 2 bdrm all new crpt.s mo. yrly. 494.004 1 bably come to our senses ocean. Newly dE'COr ated. ' ' b Call cpb , palnt. Yrly $450. drps. ~arages. S275·~· Npt Hts 3 Br duplex. Y summer. or stop
675-59t9or64S 33111 !!.!.'.",,.!' de po~ r eq d . av<1il. 611178 & 111111$, by any weekday bwtn
f>i74J '"'"" ..,,.,~ Fr l I t + 8:30&5:30. · -------•__,/mo. 5 ' 118 ' '·doM ' Viii I BT Par~ Newport Ava 11 HwltincJton •och 3840 dep's. Chldm & pets ok. ..., anna age Ti:'~i'5:h. j~l~ly ~om ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~i-9186. lul~~iX~~~~vd ) Sept.4;44~S8 ug , SHARI'. beuch. 2 & 3 BR. W w'aa Jltl (714)675-8662 ~ ................... ______ , rrpl. dis t-was her , "'-ter
garage, patios, ~2358 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 250-SOO sq. ft. deluxe of-
----MIDWAY CITY. 2 Br, nr nee. w. 19th St. C.M.
LIVE Near The Beach! beac h +405, Ground from Sl50. mo. To m,
••••••••••••••••••••••• Cena .. Sol rtoor. Draped. plus h ~2200 3802 BeauL1rul Adult Apts cpts, Refrlg + bltlns . __ FU_U_S_ER_Y-IC_E __
••••••••••••••••••••••• Gas & Water Paid. SZ'l'S. (714)892-8.139
12621 Flower Str eet. 21661 Brookhurst.HB •-I ............ *cl DEl.UXEOFFtCES
Garden Grove. Large 962-6653 ~ =fw.W.d JtOO Personal telephone/ re-
one bedroom townhouse ceptlonlst, secreta ry, C'IOt>e t.o shopping. Laun· HEAR IEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• cooference room, coffee
dry r a c ii 1t1 es . No & CIVIC CENTBl THE EXCITING & hospitality services.
t·hJldren. no pets Call BRAND NEW. Spacious PALMMISAAP'TS. Excellent location near
Oebbieat636_·7343_. ___ 1 deJuxe3&4 Br All bltns. MINUTESTONPT freeways.
•llAMD HEW* frplcs. gar. lge yd 502 BCH. IAJCER CENTER Yorktown Just West of Bach, 1"2 BR. (714)979-2161
Che rry Creek A dull Beach Blvd. ~22l9 from $220. & up.
Apt.S. l &2 BR. Cplc's . we Adults. No Pets IAYRtOHT OfflCES
h ave lak es , s auna. NE\\ XTR.A Dlx twnhse 1561 Mesa Dr Cannery Village-New of-
1acuz1.1 & pool Located apl, front unit. Lg 3 Br. 15 Bl.ks East or Newport fices from 300 sq fl.
at 2701 S. Fa1rv1ew. Just 2Yt Ba, formal din rrr + Blvd.) fanta s tic: \'iews, l g
S olWamer,N of S.D. bksrs rm fplc, bltns, ~ r a lios ·park i ng &
Fwy.5.56-1991 No pct.&. W ID hkup, patio, dbl at-...,.. 4000 anJton al included. 2808
13742 Newla nd Street, tachgar. $480. ~-3604 •••••-•••••••••••••••• afayettf' Ave. N. B.
G a r d e n G r o v e . Deluxe poolside xlra lge Room w / kitchenette _67_3-_lOOJ ______ _
&·autiful, two bedroom 2br, 2ba. bllns, dshwhr. 150 week & up Al RPO RT OFFICES
townhouses in ei..1.-ellenl Nr beach. Adlts, no pets. 548-97~ t & 2 room suites, all
neighborhood. Pr1 ' ate $2:50. mo. 536-8362 l N J 'd patio view from lovely ----Ambassador lnn In Costa seFrrv ces$ • ... 0 ea~esq E.
kitche n . e ndosedl..arge 3br,2baw/frplc. Mesa,2277Harbor.Cen· om 14 ... mo.~ · ·
t( a r ages : po o I ; $360. mo. 7911 Holt. trally located. 23S room•. Bristol, Suite 200, N.B.
SJ:!OJmonth. Call Clyde ~11 pager9373Agt. MANY wltb kitchen, <714 >~7·70lO.
I Manager , Apartm~nl 1 block r~~ ~ean. lge 3 pbooe & TV. Swimming EXECUTIVE CIRCLE. ~> 891-1013. br. 2 ba $4.50 mo. 208 19th pool. jacuul. and rec. One person ore suites in
lalloaP--.. 3107 &. ~ll pager 9373 room Daily & weekly prest11lous San Juan rates starting Crom S54 a Plaza. Call Barbara • •• •••••••••• ••• •••• •••• As#-. week. Basaett.. 661-04.54.
tAvel.y 1 BR. '295. Walk to NEW 2 &3 BR adult apts 64.>4840 bay or beach 216 E. 1 • ( Ful, OC airport, Koll Irvine Balboa Blvd. 496·S660, poo · patios. pie. 1 Eas ta lde ('. k .• non-Center. 40'x40'. Open ofc
661 2333 aecunty. SJ6S & up. 1702 smoker. non.drinking bay w/attached recept
Ba lbo a P e n -W est
Newport, big upper 4
bdrm. 2 bath, den. view,
parlung convenie nt.
SliOO Ilse.
6"2· 0720 /642-8728
C.-.. M9' 3822
Florida al Ada~--Male nds rm. Prh ent. &tor exc ores. Up to 1600
Ultra Altrodi•• 631·~19 1q rt. Additional ape ~ E W t"' o 3 BR S.-.rl.... 4200 avail. Wiii remodel to
t o wn homes . Po o I. ••••••••••••••••••••••• aull. 751-4760 jacuzzi. s auna. up-
grades Great location
s.'>2S-SS7.>. Set> daily a t
AlgonqwntHeil. Agent,
Lux bach ~ bit. to bc:h. orfice tor rent. 0 c.
Kil, lndry. pool & jac. Airport on Bristol
S200 wk. ~7-49!>4. 540-2218, 536-2874
Family Restaurant fo r
sa.le, Costa Mesa. Mtnt
cood. Modern new shop·
ping center loc ation.
Beaut. interior. Sea'-so. ttert;19u, Trwt
plenty or parking. other DHdi 5035
Interest. Aaldna s100.ooo. ••••••••••••••••••••··•
Some lerma to quaUC1ed
btzyer . Mam St.. call Mr. LOWEST
Casey, 833-0421 ..............
DIST. AV AIL.AILE I 1t T .0. 'a. alto
Reputable rirm. No ex-Zed T.D. Lo.s.
perience necessary FairestTermsslnce1949
Please cont a cl Diile ~ ............... ~ C SU 67"'98 _.........,. .... ~ o. ver. ..,. 16 64~2 I 71 545-06 I I
"Almost Antique Shop" Ret.lred
Costa Mesa area. lnclds to lend. couple has m~ney
fi•lurea & inventory .... llUc2ndTD s •.ooo. 548-1418 · "6enl, 1"837·3744
FREESESSJONW:AD
PALM&CARD
RUDINCiS
Special Yt price with thia
ad. Has Psychic power or
wisdom. What you hear
will amaze you! She will
tell your Past.. Present. le
FUture & advise you on
Love, Marria ge & Busi-ness. Aval!. for pn vale
groups
221 W. Whittier Blvd
l..a Habra 213/007·9272
Huntington Harbour man
wants to meet rer1ned
lady to 40 for sincere re·
lation.ship. Please wnte
*DIRECTOR* Private party will pay to P.O. Box 2065. Seal
more for your 2nd T . D. BeaC'b, CA. 90740
Now seleeting party with Ful srvc. 642-3573 desire for Hi->digll in-___ _;_;,:;...::..:..::.__ FOR TIIAT SPECIAL
come SSOO-wkly to sta rt. TOUCH OF CLASS
lSM Cash re q. tsec> AlwMMlrtee•llh/ •MODELS•'
Refs. exchgd 673·9122 ~~
ext. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •ESCORTS• """""'at Lott & fomd 5300 The discreet ones Oppru lmlty 50 t 5 ....................... '714) 646-7111
••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost or Found a pet? Call <213> 428-6330 HIGHRETURNS $3,000to Anima l Assistan ce ___ M_1C_·B..:.t_A_-V_IS_A __
$300,000. 3 mos. to 3 y~. LeagueS3'7-2273.no(ee. DIVORCE/Bankruptcy
Secured by R .E.-Bkr. $50. 2A hr service. Action 714-6J6.9070 l-Ost; Rhod. 'tidgeback, Legal Typing. 96().5419 male. hver nose . vie :
TROPICAL PARADISE Scots man Cove area . Control hunger & lose
Beautiful oceanfront 548·9892 weight with New Sb<tpe
l2500 ft> large parcel or Diet Plan & Hydrex
land on roaJor trop1C'al SCRAU 'ETS Water Pills. At College
island In one ol the most wt1. Pharmacy & Costa Mesa
s pectacular paradises in IM~WERS Pharmacy the South P acil1c. Now M,J
being masterplanned by Wuse -Crawl -DiKnet Oukall
FAMED International Pence -Orphan -•558-3278• architectural nrm ror CHIPS
golf courses. mannas , Old i>e>ker players never Moa~/Modehc)
condos. homes etc. Will die. they just cas h 1n seU cheap . ground noor theirCHIPS. Very attractive buxom
oppty, Will carry back b r u o et l e d es 1 r es
double Investment w I m l-Ost: Shih Tiu. male. wht generous boylnend over
one year. $25.000 down! w/blk & tan mark.ing.s. 38. 'lox 1.269-F. 2S6 So.
Serious principals only ! SUtchesinneck. Vic. Los Robe rtson. Beve rly
(Seller) 955-1443. Ali sos & Mu irlands . Hills. t:A. 90211 ____ _
$100,000 r e qui r cd ror \f.V./EI Toro. Reward. Attorney, 33, 6'. l701bs.
PRIME R.E . PROJECT. _8J0. __ 834_7 ______ divor. Avail for dating
$100,000 profit w/in one Lost Pyrenees pup. male. Write PO Hox 11411 ,
year. Secured & aua ran· whlle/t.an. lrg 8 mo old. Garden Grove. 92642.
teed. Reply to B x #270 name Hi-LI. SlOO reward Pft"IOMll 5-nlcn 5160
Daily Pilot. on delivery. call675·S530 ---=---------Mamy to Loan 5025 FOUND: Male Cockapoo
••••••••••••••••••••••• type, long. shaggy. wht,
9UICKCASH brn mar kng. May 1.
Golden West College.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Phys ical fitness, Euro·
pean instr. Heart rate
computer monitored .
Your home. ladies only.
SC8.f»65
ORAH&E COAST
DAILY PILOT
330 W. BAV ST.
COSTA MESA
Between the hours ot
8AM ·5PM Call for a p
pouttmeot pleue ,
642-021 ht. 271
~uotl
Opportunity Employer
*AUTO LOTMEH
f\111 or part·Ume. Learn
the a uto business from
the ground up ! Op ·
POrtwlity ror advan<:e·
ment. See Mr. O'Neill or
Mr. Pierce. HOWARD
Chevrolet, Dove & Quail
Sll .• Newport Beach.
-------1 AUTO MECHANIC
A<'ctn_J Bkkpng Foremisalon test facibty
TEMPORARY w/thorough knowledge
Register Today to work or emission control com-
on van ous accounting & ponents & tuneup pro-
book k eep In & ass\gn · cedures on late model
ments . Work close to cars. Accuracy of job &
you r hom e . F i gure the p o · " r d Clerks to Sr A"coun-r ceasm,. 0 e-.. tailed pape r work a
tants needed thruout ne<"eSSity. May be req'd
OranaeCo. to tnatall special eqwp.
Robert Half's ment or instrumentation
AcC'ountemps m test vehicles. H11\1e
500 4C. Main. Ste 501 OWTI tools desirable. No Tower. Union Bank Apply In person
In The City of Ora nae Olson Laboratories
714/8.lS-4103 Division of SCI
421 E. Cerritos.
Ac<''t clerk. neat & cons· Anaheim
clenllous person needed t£Qual Oppor Employ\>r
to train for computer AtrroMCYTIVE
acc't & perform 1artous p RTS clencal duties. Must be A
aood w trigures. type & COUMTER PEltSOM
~ave b1tkpin1 or acC''t Rolls Royce & BMW e"·
background. Call Sue penence preferred. Call
\1c Leod at 644·4100 Glen al 640-6444.
ADOIESSIHG
IOYCARYER ROLLSRO~CE
&IMW ~king for t'Onsc1en · tJous self starter to head•----------
up our addressing dept. Auto parts counter peo..
Typ\llg & Obng ex per a P I e . Cos t a M e s a .
must Sal + oonus & Newport J:>each area . I
benefits . Apply Pen. need 3 exp d counter peo-
oysaver. 1660 Placentia . pie for both ful l & Pit CM work. Good benefits. top
pay. full insurance For
Ullerv. call. J im Walter
545-8408, 646-1647 Age r e111ve be auty ·
t'OC\SCIOUS individuals lo repre.enl a new·to-C3llt.1---------
skin catt & make· up pro· A.eo Spe«*w
gram Eam extra money a..t•ation & Wirin9
by introducing thts ex-Must be hard worke r.
cellent p roduct. Euro· Small growing co. Good
peun facu'I stroke used worlu.ng t'Oflds. S3 hr to
Fantastic opportunity • -.tart ~-
Control your own .work· . ing hours. For rurthur in· BabysrtUng your house.
rormahon. 955.3720 1"'2 yr old girl. 2().25 hr
-----•week, "i.B. area. Call
Ambitious Couple Wanted 67~4 Kathy
to manage a small bual·
892.()68}
~ p/time. Will '\Ot in· BABYSITTER-mature
terlere w / your present woman, to oabysll l yr
job. Must oe .vilUng to old boy, 2 dys wk. 7:30-S. ~ ~!i!:cr:orD!:SY LOST: Boys puppy, 3 mo SodalClubs 5400 learn. Mr. Hall.642·1634. oon-smoker~l-05~--
reaaoo. Credit no pro-Golden. Lhasa mix. Ins •• •••••••••••••••••••• Animal Hosp. BABYSlTI'ER-care ror
blem. Borrow on the In· St.CdM.673-3288 1beStngJe'sSolutlon Bather. kennel. ass't. toddler ~on-Fri, M:V.
creased value or your Oateby Choice Mon-Sat. lrvme.644 5461 _!tt•~or634·S22A Lost 3 yr male Siamese Not Chance home. Call today for faat, cat .-ie Broodmoor I CdM C.U lntrovlew 752.541 1 Assembler BABYSITTER needed,
courteous in.formation. Reward. 644. 527 3 , T .. -----Expenence in PC boards ~ vary. my home. re
• 833-9983 nrT 5450 & w 1 r 1 n g . s 0 m e ~able.~-8884bfr5PM_ • ·ax co ······················· • D 0 G N A p p E D . An you interested In a meC'hanlcal. Excellent Babys itter. 'DY home.
-f!.TAIE l.0¥o!> REWARD. HELP. Tan Cartbbean Cruise" The beneftt.s "opporturut1es. from 5/UHi/3. Most have
Licensed Home Loan w/blk race male Chinese ss Skyward wiU be sail· Wage open. E.O.E Call ~erences & transports
Brokers s erving So. Pug. Fat, ugly. lovable. angtofoursunnytropica~ ~J!~~-Ask for Ray tion.642-1460 ____ _
Calif. forl7yrg.Call our Lost 5·1·78, Dana Pnt. portson 0ctoberl4, l978. Ba1t e r y Salesgirls
••••••••••••••••••••••• 846--1311
~--------NICE 2 BR apt, patio, gar,
lndry rm, nr Warner &
Beach. S260. 673-2252
GLAMOROUS
2 Bdrm, 2 Ba in Promon·
tory Point with forever
VIEW . Decorator
near e • t of ri ce. Sister grieving. ~-7089 Please c all Sea Ch fr _________ .. \fature pref'd. FUii &
Prime location in 11th 714-83'1-3744 blr 12. 493-4586 aft 5PM Travel 536-6534 ~S£MBLERS p/tlme .\pply at The
Street aboppin& center.I•--------Lost : S/6 Dee dleld ·~ llf& Bake Shop.3444 £.Coai.t 1330 sq ft w/check out WHEN YOU Comm .. Irv. 1 yr bl.k F. :!99 t' SOTratnee Aa&emo1ers Hwy, Corona del Mar count.er. 55f/sq n . Call . mixed breed w/bm spot ..... ...,_..... Needed Immediately -----------
Commercial Dtviaion. over ea. eye. Bmtwht ••••••••••••••••••••••• f..ong & Short Term --------1 tumished. Pool, Jacuul, -n.leachMU. .. sa\tna, lerull.s. $350/wk.
GARDEN APTS All new 2 bdrm, 2 bath In
CORONA DELMAR HB a\ 9842 Hamilton St. ONTHEBEACH •
RED CARPET'
845-3474 I 2 Br Townhouse. frplc. $3SOmo.8lo5. S46-41.24. 4 Bdrm home w llh
Pool. lennls. Some 0«an privacy. Sl0001wk ~~~~~~~~~
& Cat.alma views. Close WATERFRONTHOJIES to Fashion bland & fme Spanish style, ~ana~e . 2 offices for IH. l6lb & beach. Also 1 Br 644.2611 level, 3 BR owner s unit, C.ll 631-1400 &Jpertor. Fully paneled, ------·---I on cul·de·sac. Nr Spr-nuCTPtJJ, .-ether. util pd. lngdale1Warne r 1425. Vocatto.lentall 4250 645-0743/67$-67'!8
2 BR28a.fplc.M25.N.o Agt. 846·1371; or call •••••••••••••••••••••••
Hwy, clean 67~ & owner846-6707 Palm Springs Vacation ....._._... 4450
ti7S..91!67 Lge 3 Br. 2~ ba. fam rm, CCndo 00 Ml.ulon HUl.s •••••••••••••••••••••••
Walk to bc:h. 2Br. l YtBa, lrplc. yard. Nr ocean. Country Club. 968-5'30 4 DILUXI Of1C•s
11~ nn. patio. pool, S38S S400tmo. 536-9987 ._..to se.r.. 4300 Coal. rm., aeat ~. all
mo ~. ~ New c arpet & drapes, ••••••••••••••••••••••• paneled, sm. wbse in re-,..__.._ .....,~-.,,.2• fenced yard. kids OK 3 •IE SB.ECTIVI• ar. 1 or 2 yr. leaae. Lake _.._.... -~ Gal relJ b Forea l area. Kent
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ..... ~· 2 bdr. S260. roonma ma~-le ~.
EA.5TSJDE near new 2 °'""'"'"" ""'' 714·581·9393 ·
Br. 1 ea. fplc. encl gar, 1 bdrm, ml from buch, •SHA~~'toME• avl May 15. S325 per mo. walk to shopping, patios, Q>rooa deJ Mar on Cout
Ownr; agt.673-1181 trg lenc. yard, child OK. tte.t.gT,...... Hwy, 1100 aq.n . Good ~ Th -nl' 2 1 f\ no dog.a. S290. 536-8990 or F\ndini a Roommate., parldng. xlnl frontage.
unn, 0 Y e · 213 1287 • 7633 16632 Professional People u se Sl.200mo. 7se-9»
Brano nu 2 Br, 2 Ba r-.o Dolores "'r.i pets Xlnt loca . 67J.~ "-•Matti x. 400sq. ft. C-2, 130
or673-4852 Cozy 2 bd, nr bc:h. gar, 832·41.34 . 17th St. $140/mo.
yrd, pets/child OK. S330. Dependable Service Doyle 548· 1168
Mesa Verde, 2 Bdrm. 2 627 .... 8th. 960·2887 l,v Slncelt71 EtSIDE C .M. Shops,
' ~;!·v:c gar. $300. msa. 2lirllneedfemaJermmt. ofc's, bobby, wholesal·
t
-lnm 3144 tosbare 3 bdrm apt. 1155 Ing, gen uat'. Fr. S8S
2 BR, 1 8Ani. All new ••••••••••••••••••••••• +util. 673-3585 aft SPM. 548·'1349
cpt. drp~. palnt, di~· WOODIRIDGE -------hwuber. S2'75. 794-B W. Male wanted till about
18th. 557~19 PINES APTS June 15th. Beach house Prime location, pro ·
R. be 1..., Now you can live In 23rd. St. NB $22.75 wk feuJon.al/buslneaa ofc or
3 B 2 ... • upper unit. Woodb-'doe too. EA 'oy 67S..3744 quality retail; 675 or l.3SO S325 mo. Avail now. n .. ..., aq ft. Street level; re·
751-ta)S awimm1n1. sallin1. blk-Hie to aha.re, Dana Point, dec'd exter/au tater. col·
--------' Ina " volleyball after a ca 11 Ke It b t · 5 PM, __...,_ ted led 1WNHSE. 2 Br l ~ Ba, day of work, a a a or 1.vunuiia -pane . y~ old, tplc, pvt paUo. member of the Vlllaie •5137. Inquire 714149Z-C739 aft
gar, ne• paint. adults. AlaoclaUon. RusUc 1. 2, a l or ?fem.I• oon .. mokera1 ... 6P:...m_. -------
peta. llOO mo. 646-7027 bedrooCn apts. set tn a to share La1un.a Beach II llmtfW ...... 4500
1 bdrm, cottage type, lush poplar fr pine boule.Nroomalcbalb. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• d ... t1 11 landlcape. $150. fr $200. l/91115-84M IUILD TO SUrT ~ :.~· :ey:~u~I. FROM ate>. weeli;dayaonl)'. 5,000·20,000 Sq. It
-...,NCMJ775 Cord!::~~ Fem •lchlla ab fem to PlacmtlaAve.C.M. • ' anca find " abt bae1 apt In WESLEY TAYLOR CO.
2 bdrm 1 batb, new Orancetr89 Condo 2 Br 1 CdM or NB Cell Laura REALTORS &44-4910
carpet, 6 drapes. blt·lnl, Ba pool, ,.,_, tennis, AC, 64.5-234'1
SZJSmo.A&L.sa.aoal ~+lsl·lut+U 50 --------500 to 7000 .aq tl 2 Br, lea. cottaie t.ype, tlM9S4 h... war•houu apace.
et1eL pr, pvt paUo, Wt for..., 4210 InuNd occup. Mo-to.mo
rm. IZllO. 2038 c. M9" ...... .._.. Jl41 ••H•u•••••••••••••••• Ott abort term lse. 23'/IQ
Pl. Kids OK. No pets. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• S35 aln1le aloraae aar. ft. N.8. addn91. t4.2·5113
~. 2 B1t dUPlex, atove, ~r. Safe • ucure. 72• W-"td 4600
AEDUCEDRENT cpta, ~· cloee to bcb, Jamea,C.M.678-77f1. .. ..................... .
forU&.dUU•, famUy, no =.:UJ~:o.;· WANT: Sln&le 1ar for anted: houae to leue. ~~BR, 2 ba, pool, UeSt.4"-as · Y • atora1e onl,r, haehld Min.Sbr. lto2yrt. Must tumlablap. Cdll arwa. have opt to b~. Bob
Whit a Wonderful w Id 8Pacloua Sludlo, .,, blk to m.m1. MMmt.
of ......... .w « heh. o,..at loc. Security. '"'°J!~,t rl&hl al S270. Util. pd Oataie. E·alde Co1ta l:uc. relocac.tna d-1,.. ~~11~ il~Zt •7mor 4IM.zm ~or541-oea :"::t::~~o=
Adi. To plate OCEAN vu. 2 Br. pet.lo, center l 1vry nice NB
1C*' 8d. ceU Ml-5171 Ud DOOi, bJtne. AcQta, GTI Rav. eomet.ldnt you want homt or condo. C!Otlllder ~,aCl ... ftedM-Vlaor Jae. wtd71 4H·4044, to•UTCl...uiedadldo f~.Nochfld/pei..C.11 ·~PJ'OU. WlmdaGt-21821 ll..U.1Gt111. D11brokar75l·Ol44
NEm CASH chest. Name: Susie. sso ,,_ W.ted. 7075 Aaslgnments
' reward. Call 551·3135, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Shift.sAvailable.
Banking
COMMERCIAL nu.a COMT'"CT 836-3S32AskforJoan. Mature young woman Mustbaveowntransp. ,.. --w ts bild d i Ca1Todav55MS20 UNION Lost: Old Eng. Sheep dog. an c care pos. a · Free. ~rop Piay. Vac Pay Umted California Bank
2220ceanAve
Laguna 8each 494~
£,qu.aJ Oppor Employer HOMI LOAMS Reward. Loved very ;:: ~ =·c~d:e~~~ Vidor TltlllpM m ~
Unioa Home Loans ar-mucb. No quealions. . Xlnl driver. Refs. SerYfua
rao&e loans for home or 640-'TSU 497-3754. Dlv Walter Kidde & Co topropertyllOOOOO~oUlAn.oood FOUND: Female Deagle.ww __ ba_b_ys_i_t_&_hoo.! __ et_ee_p_ 2082 S. ~. Bnstol
• -more. vie Newland & Allan•· ' St• 10 Newport Beach ea-i.:-• Utroqb Union Home H.B. 96().3728 .... Uve-ln. References. "•Comer or Brutol & ..........
t-----.. ----
Lo a n s Y o u I e t 536-8280 Campus behmd T...,., r /thM
Homeowner Terms . I.oat 2 Blue pluUc ba". Will bowe-slt Sept •78 to C..rl's Jn 8rancb olc ~eeks bonda·
wblcb are generally bl wn 18th & 19t h on June •79. Mature fem. Equ.aJ Opportunity ble, p!Ume teller w /new
mucbbettert.banfmance Balboa Blvd. Sal May 6 Xlnlrel54.1-6i17eve EmployerM/F acrounts exper. pref'd com.pe.nytams. Reward! 772·2091 The---------________ _,Call Lee Porterfie ld ,
Ct11ue1'11eT9nM Metztngers Nunet'l'berapist ava1la· --------11 (7141SSl'r11K>l. ........,.....-& ~f.S WESTERN FEDERAC. -""yow Lng hair bmtblk dog. • Asaembl)' SAVINGS t.dgtt. Select wear I n 1 sc arr . I o &31-2939 165 Town & Countty
<>ranee. SIB-0505 Marketing or Buyer Ex· TRAINEE Orange, c.aur.
FULLY AMOITIUD
PAITL Y AMOITl%B>
IMTBEST OMLY
=•.-.•oc· • with state
law.
If for any reuon we can-
not arranae a Joan for
)'OU tbefe will be DO COil
orobllpUon.
UNON . HOME
rilLOANS
Nat.loo's Larpst Home
Loan aroa.-aa• nrm
8Toro 770-lOJf
tWldl 1-.2u1
DOYOUN!:EDC~HT
1 1 t • 2 n d " a r ... d homeowner loan• ar·
ransed faet. Borrow
SlOOO • Sl00,000 • flexible t.-ma. t)all credit no pro bltlr'I. C.ll US • DO obllaa·
tloo.
STERLJNG F'rN. SVCS.
7l419M-16l0 (bkrl
F d Bl d C k per. Avail. to travel. Equa10pp Emplyr m1r
oun : on oc er 631-295 l~S£MBl.£RS Spaniel In Nwpt Hgta -------"'1
area. 646-3757 aft 5. Relined live-In Practical & patwERS
""'--"· """' h-'~ Nurse. Geriatrics pret'd. """ r~ • ..,.....y au-. ler· 6'73-8120ext223. NEEDED roer. Female. 8\wn ---------Slater le Newland, HB, BOOKKEEPER wishes to 'MMEDIATELY ~·
May 30. 847 ·2830 do accounts al home. will TOP PAY Ill
-picJnu> " deliver, relia· All snlfta, day. swing & FOUND: Female bl.kttan ble & eflt~enl. Call graveyard in C'ludea do 1 1 pup p )', pos s S36-(l807Nan. wknds. Long & s hort
Doberman. 4-81D08 old. term asslgnmetlts. Holl-
Crown Valley1Mar-WocmnwantaApartment day & varation pay.
quertte, MV. 496·4$41, maoaliai, llotel, P.B.X. Hospitalization plan
BANKJNG
EXPERIBfCB>
NOTE DEPT
CLERK
SOUTH COAST
NATIONAL IAMK
An lndependeDl Bank
849Sllnfiower Street dYI· 495-0641, eve1. work~ or part time-avail.
Found small long haired exper. 714'18H083. -~~ l !J Costa Mesa wbt doC w/blk vie Sprin· Hltp W..ted 71 O~ • • E.O.£.
da.letJYu. 846-sm ••••••••••••••••••••••• -h"'-~A-,...... sno ~~~~~. llc..,,...onve eaC::::.ercwT.u.r
••••••0 •••• .. ••••••••• St.art your own career in 546-4741 Exper'd, r 1time ~llwl...... a fast growing business. Or~(Ac~. =rt) u.lted C .. f . ._.
181.SSo. El Camino Real Invest a fe"' spare hrs a Equ.aJ por Employer t Monarch Bay Plau SanClemellle. FUiiy Uc. wk to buitd ftnaodal In South Luttuna.
Fouppt.da-7291 dependence. Ca ll G6-l.273
RELAXING MMSAOE 768-S080. l------111111111•1 Equal Oppor
BobJamte·Uc Maueur Account Repretent.ative, ASSIST. MAMAGta 1'.:mployer
Outcallt-9,494.Slll advertlaln1 sates. E~· Sa.le9 Is admlnlatraUon. ---------perleac• preferred. f\&U time oa.t.Y. Appl)t in nauig MASSAGI Permanent position. Ex· Pt~ to: Mable Austin, C-rcW Loe. ~•u MODELS ceUent benefits. Apply Draper'•. LafUlla 111111 ~ nwv 16'0P1aceoUa,CM. Store . 23611 Moulton ISCOln Partway Plua. lndepeode:nl ba needs
,.,..-•••.,,.....LY -------· ·~~~~~~~~j banlt e.xper'd comm'I -•v-~ Accowrtina -lotftt ~1 Apply al HI.Jiii 519..ilOR ASSISTANT SAMTIAGO IAHIC 51"1111 MANA0£RCOtJPLE St ..... a In for 147 wtlt comple1t In 53$ E. tat ' ' wol ACCOUNTING San la Ana. Hua band t.qual ~~mploytr
CLERK mual know maintenance. *SANDY'S* , .. ,wa W 0utcau11a ... 1•
T.D.LOAMS mom
All.RANO£D C.... Mo "9allh"' •SHEfU L!:E• Cttti11td MaueuH 6lJ.ltl0..... ..,... Calla . 8) 1ppt.
.1'11l moved lato town?, ___ ....; .. ;.;.;;.. ... .;,,;.;.;.._ __
1blo lilt acqaul.At..s wtth
th Claulfl•d Ada. n..,•re the uaiftt w..,
to ftnd Juet the llltN and ....tOll~~I
Aile 30 +. Ref'1 r.qtiNd. 8EAtmCIAN Gea'I accountint ••per. '700/mo + l Br opt. Cell For Ba 11 e ys ff a Ir ln A/R, A/P req'd.,. 10 bltweeoW.546-llllO. Faahlon•. 984·2\50,
Ke1 bY touch. Llle lYl>· GG-4747
In&. Xlot worlc~c:ondl I.\ A.Ill 8alel1 Conaultanta t--------
• bmlllta. AP • Na n • e de d . E v e s • •Ul)' Styli.It Alalst.ant
UonalSysteMt • .atl weekftMis. TralnJn1 pro Top waau. Muat be
Blrch St. N.8 . (NHr OC vided, no aalllnJ. Sl20 a r ru tlve . Aleo 1unt
Al rporl l Equal OP· ..-It ui> P'ot'tnte.rvlew JuUoc.tM Manlc:unat lm·
portUnJty EmptOyer appt only call (1131 med. 831-4250, 117~779
4.%1.-Lako Jl'otwt
r~
' ' ,
,.
•
• Tuesdtry May 9. t978
_ This variety of fine schools Schools and Instruction could introduce Call 642-5678
DAIL V PILOT c:f • '
HtlpW..t.d 7100 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
DA.TA.ENTIIY
\
WE CAN HELP
•READING• MATH
•GRAMMAR
• STUDY SKILLS
GIT YOUI NOIUM
HAMDLID MOW!•
, STUD EMT
IMPIOVEMEMT CIMTElt
tOI Do.er,
M • .,.,. .....
1714164Z.tOll
CALL IMMEOIATEL Vt • . ,,
• IALllT
• J/IJ:Z
• GYMMAmcs
• '61AWT
•TAP
Al.WAYS A NEED I
I.URN
NURSING . __ __,
rt
NURSES
AIDE
TRAINING
PROGRAM
Classes Start June 1st for 5 weeks.
Earn While You Learn
A Rewarding Profession.
Park Lido
Convalescent Center
466 ... ; .., lcL Mewl*'f .....
642-8044
Allard Academy
announces
Summer MusiKamp
..... lfttl""" .... ., Jlth
Monday, WeclMsdoy Md Fridoy
10:00. 2:00
1617 East Fourtt. Stnet
Scmta AM 714/116·7100
CHILDREN·
TmG-ADULTS
• DISCO
• TllMTO
IHYTHM
~ene [)ance
Cen
NOW
REGISTERING
MICROWAVE
COOKING CLASSES
All New Gourmet Wine Class
A~ last ~ complele class in cooking
with wme. Gourmet dishes from
around the world.
ADDED IOHUS • C..,U1Ml'4wy WIM1
Mow t«*bMJ NMrYaffoM
Ulllihd Seathtg
For lesenatlaa. CaH
768·501 I
MICROWAVE MAGIC
COOKING SCHOOLS
"NOG~ 4 ~ SUMMER 4'f 4 (j DAV CAMP s r:. ' 1 :::)_
0 ---~ .NM19·Sept I 111111 ...... •oy•. Otn•
1·14
IX ..... CI A WHllU PROCNAM OJ
HIM DIYIHG, SAIUHG & OCUMOGUPHY
• SHTet~ C:.st, ........... ..,....... c.i.,. write tor tree w.c ..... .,....,.
SAIL IOATlllNTALS SS per/'-'
11 · Stinger Sa1lb0ats located at
Newport Dunes.
operated by NewPort Oceanaul!~
• Call for group or YI day rates •
MEWPOllT OCIAMAUTICS
1 lH A•ocedo rtece, Slllle JJI
~ IMcti. Ctlfonl• t2HO
l714164Ml40 ut 4106
PLEASE. CALL
I 962-s:'40-I
tltl , ... , ... .,.. Hw. ..... •IMO
Just W of Br~hurst.
next to Skinny Haven ReS1aurant
MOii lHAM JUST A JOI
BEGIN A CAREER
FACIALS & MAKE UP
Let R1Chatd s Beauty College help you start
develop.ng new skills as a Cosmet!Clan. Alter
only 20 weeks you can be earning a good
h111ng
COSMITICIAM CL.ASSIS MOW!
Llm•ted Enrollment-Call NO'M
Top instructors give Help and GuK!ance
Pl81lty ol Practical Experience. Too.
TUmOM PA YING
PROGRAMS
AVAii.AiLE
PLACEMENT
ASSISTANCE
MAMY OPPOaTUMmES:
• Interesting Work
• Personal Sat1sfact10n
• Secunty..Jot>s not 114'<1'0 economic situation.
• Vou progress rapidfy to become thoroughly
•lulled .
• Sell~mployment OpPOrtuni11es
CALI. 962-llll JOI
IMFOaMA TIOM
~TCHA~I16 BEAUTY
COLLECtE
Clete Duer tu.llJ I
tf0601r• ...... ti If ........
you to a new tomorrow
.,, Irvine College
of Business
Ext. 321
lndeoendence and Co,,ltdence are yours with an mterest1n9 well paid 1ob' Al 1rv1ne we
cthaerere T kaJX>ut VOY ab01 ut the good 1ob that you want lo have We It ne1p you 10 get a e VOtJr cno1ce o careen'
"CHTAH • UC'"10t41ST MfOICAL-LIGAL ll'ICIALUATIOM
STIHOOUl'MH • IOOHll'U TY"MG. SHC>rlHAHD t lUSH.Uf'
Olt4HAL OflACI A Hf ST AMT
DAY AMO IVINIMC9 PIOGIAMS
A proper and correct business enwonment. located on the nub of the Newoort·tr111ne
Business 8n(l Industrial Complex Job Placement Assistance? Most certainly' 111 tl'le 1as1
15 monthS over •OO employers have ruouosted lrvtne graduates CtlMOWfw-..IMf• ....... _......._
1700 I . OURY A¥L IAMTA AMA tJJOI
(N~ Fw..t. at Dyer Rd I !156-11190
A.cc~Cterir
Full time Position open
a:1 a video dis play
terrrunal operator fur J
Bai.1r 1Jo·our m1n1
computer Somt.> t•x
pcrlence 1s desirable. but
will tram lnd1v1dual with
demonstrated tYPll\ll ac:
curacy and speed Work
m pleasant envtronm(•nt
with aood ronrpany
benefit'\ 1nclud1n~ 2
weeks vacauon after onl'
Yl'ar. company JH.111.l
group insurance. cn ·d11 uruon. t'IC Apply at
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
330 W. Bay SL.. CM
between the hours of
8:00AM~;OOPM
Cull for
Appointment plea~e
642-4321, Ht 277
Equal Opportun1t)
Employer
Data Processing
COMtUTEA
OPEAATOR
. .
~ System 3 Mod 15 mstalla·
~ ~· ... ~ lion. need.c; a 2nd sh11\ SCATS
GYMNASTIC
CHAMPIONS
Olympian Cathy Rigby was a SCAT
and now it's your turn!! THE
SCATS ACADEMY now ha s
openings for beginning gymnasts .
Classes ror boys & girls 2·5 years
also available.
CALL 197.7750
Or Slwp ly, 5122 le...-dl Dr.
H•t ..... leoch 197-7150
INTERNATIONAL
MONTESSORI
SCHOOLS
For chll*111 2112 ..,. 12 pars
SUMMER TUTORING
Is your child having problems
with school ? Qualified
teachers using Montessori
methods In math or language.
9 A.M. to I 2 Moon
S40 Per Week
Day·Care AYaflalH
Newport leac• 979-9241
20221 Cypns1 St.
i. operator. knowledge ot
~~. , ; . .<t.,' ) O.C.L. needed. Hrs ~ 7PM·3AM.
1; SANTIAGO IA.MK ~ PROFESSIONAL DOG TUIMIMG ~~ ~E. tstst.. Tustin I: , 832-5200 E.O E. ~ ~10--EAL~-E-RS~W-ANT--E-O_T_O
~ AT HOME SERVICE gHred to jf install spray foam In·
personalily and temperament or ~ sulation m old and new
d ~ bwldings. 1-:very home
og '.4 and bulldtnK owner can
Rangmg from basic obedience
(on leash) tong leash. olf t•ash.
and protectton ru1nin~
~ me it. On the JOb train
'1 lng. No fees. We are only ~ interested in selling
'I ( d ~ oam an equipment
, 1 Can be applied all year
~l;l around. Call Mr. Miller s 1 at (201 I 242· 151J or wnt1· PECIALIZINO IN PROBLEM Royal Industr ies, 23I
SOLVING: 'f Johnson Ave, Newark. . -~~:;·l-: • !11 NewJersey 07108
'!j,: ," 1•i Deli very man. t>a rly /,/ t~ 1' morninf(. L A T1mcl> ' .,Rb·~' .. · -. ' ~·t route. CM. Htg Bch _ Must have dependabll·
car. Good pay. 546-4481
' I , 1 • DEUYERY
Jump mg
~ Mature. dependable
Cdf TOlll Tack.tt for Fne COMllffatlOft ~. person to make de
r livenes, handle oHice
. 542 -9414 . '! supplies & eqwpment & ~ take care or gen·1 ofr I needs: heavy bftin~ &
movement of furniture
req'd. XJ.nt benefits. App·
ly. Jack G Raub Co
Attn· EBther Rogers. 125
Baker St. Costa Mesa.
(1141 751-2.510
DBJYBY PHSON
Part·T1me Regular
work, pleasant condt·
llons. Chance or advan·
l~~§§~~g}g~~iii:l~~~~fE~iJI cement. Apply in person ~ -;.zz.-..,. Coast ()((ace Equipment.
BEA
TRAVEL
AGENT
Day & Night Classes For
Men& Women
PACIFIC ntAVll SCHOOL
6 I 0 .... I 7tlll Sft-eef. Seate .... C:. tZ70 I
CMJ. 17 I 4t 54J.t4t5
Esraohsned 1963
F1nanc1al Aid Programs
Accredited By Ttie Accred1tmg Cornm1ss1011 ol
The Na11ooa1 Assoc1a11on o l Trade & Tecnn1ca1
Scnoo1s
2121 Harbor Blvd. Costa
Mesa.Cahr
Delnry jlWwspmp er
Permanent part.time job
delivenng early morning
LA Times to homes in
Irvine/NB areas. Must
be reliable & have depen·
dable transPortation.
Salary $350 mo. ~5
DENT AL ASSIST
Ortho chrside F tr & P rr
RDA pref 'd . Call
642·599'7
DF.NTAL ASST. ,certified
ROA. 4 day work week.
Laguna Bch. 494-4685 or
833·0200 -----
Dental Asst. Do you relate
well with people'> Full
'===~~~==~====!!!::=:=::!.l!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I mouth reconstruction 1 practice needs exper'rl
team member. Plea~l'
phone 631-2A90 for eon
hdentiaJ intervw. Our Computer-scored Diagnostic
Reading Tests are Free. Call.
M_a~e a free test ~ppointment tor your chtld. Students from Grades 2 through 12
~re ehg1ble. You r~etve the test results in clear plain talk -no holding back. There
1s no charge for this parent/counselor conference. You are shown the exact reading
skills your child knows. and the skills he or she needs to learn.
l_f you then decide to enroll in a REAOWRITE Summer Progr51m. we have a
confidential . r~~rd ot your youngster's present reading ability. We can design a
completely 1nd1v1dualized program. based on his or her reading test results.
ICall for a free afhr..achool or-·S0191clay-test appoinhweetl
640-1262 READWRITE EducatioMI ProgrCllU
Foaltlon 1.-ct/Mewport Cftlhr
D&fTM.ASSIST.
Exper'd, happy. rNltun·
111dlv. for people onented
preventall"e ofc In Hunt
Re h . Xlnt salary
89'l·3353
Dental .\l>sistanl part
Lune, 2 dys wk, exper
pref no Sat, CM SS7-0700
Dental Asst. recept .
cluurs1de asst, Send n·
sume to Classified Ad
#185. Daily Pilot. P.O
Box 1560, Costa Mesa.
Calif. 92627
DENTAL.ASSIST.
Orthodontic chrs1 de.
f'/lime. H B. 962·2AOS.
a.&a&..w--.a-..a Dental Ass t Chrsd. HelpW..ted 7100 .. ...,.. --.-7100 HefpW..ted 71 HefpW..ted 7100 HelpWCllthd 71 HefpW..tecl 71 HetpW.t.d 7100 HelpW..t.d 710 r1time. Good benefitl>
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11.8 . Call 893-5032.
Bookkeeper thru trial CAanMTaY CHILDCAU CoddollWaltrett Cook· Broiler Exp. Cooks wanted. Ortnder 846·3S40
balance needed Im · Finish cafl)enter. com· Resp llirl needed during Clerical 5c19oo1 Cleancut, energellc. Rest. 1400 Pac. Cst. Hwy. --------
Position avail. in our pro mediately for PR & ad· m'I exper. Door hdwr, summer, HV homes. A'nEMTIOH! k f/timeNBloc.548·7'948 NB. Apply tn person. To o.ta1•.c~lst
duct1on yacht rigging vertl9ing firm Contact fascia,slding,expernec. F tllme. Car & refs. Sptdal~ e:~u~~a':"m~nt $a/hr. E •r---dept. Knowledge of Bemiceat633-S001 Foreman capacity. 6"·'7095atl 6:30 •~-...1 COO« xper'd only. Bencf1b
IOATIMG
mat• ts & 5 wag Ing 493-1!844 MCt&filg assist. 751·9194. Exper'd an lnsUtullonal Counsellors, see our ad H B. 893·5032. IJ.46.3540
helpful. Secure job for Bookkeert\r, full charge, --------1Civil Eqineerina lft ...... Mapef Cocktail waitress. Ex· cooking. AM or PM ~.!!ouse counsellors. DESK Clerk, Night
resp person. Call for PorF .manufacturing CAIWASHHK.P Draft.Iman M/F, l yr ParYow perlenced. Fri/Sat shilts.Applyatf1agsblp .....,...,... Auditor,TelepboneOpn..
appt. 549-88SS. business ln CM. 549-3942· FUii & part-Ume min exper, sub-division C....._e nights only. Apply Con v · Cen ter• 4.6 Counter help rorsandwlch full & p/t. San Clemcntt'
Boats, exper mast as· Boys&glrlstoworkafter 18&0ver wortlnOranie,LA,San 1burs.,9-11AM.Askfor Flagship Rd , N .B. shop. Ideal for mother 1M.125E&planduin,San
sembler.SuperSpur. school from 3·7:30PM. MetroCarWash Bernardino counties. KBl.YSBVICES the manager. 3300 W. M2-8CN4 w1childrenmschool Ask Clemente.
893•13915 Mon· Fri. Must be neat __ 2950 __ H_ar_bo_r_B_I..;..' C_M __ 1 71J .4P1~K.~f.P & Aasoc • ll 1·054J Pac. Oout Hwy, NB. COOK for Marvin. 646-3820 -.. ---.-G_RO_O_M ___ _
appearing. Earn S60 wk ... ,........ l'VW U\ +bonus. Call Ted Wynn. CASHIBS ~ --------1 Compan.lon, Uve-ln. Ute ~'!n!~a:tf~~ C.OUOter Help, part lime. Must do 111 breeds. S.A •Boats PARTS PlltSOH
Marine eng & hardware
P/1'. Apply ~31 W. Cst
540-5:18laft.er3PM. Fttlme.GoodPay ,..,_.cal All office & induatrial bskp'a,sd)'sweek,oldtt ..-lM~ 619 ""-pv Holl needed for eqwp rental location.~ll Growthco.5LocaUons WCI'• akllls needed. Interest· wom1n pref'd. Ocnrront · 01'~ , ow stre. lOAM ·3PM/Tues· --------lrithtPenGll WetrainCo.Benefits •I.Cl.Ell Ing, temporary assign. hm. A1k for Kat-by , lll,LagBeach. Sat. United Rent At1.00fllUTSHOP.ptllme&
Good w/numben for ac METRDCAR WA.SH meots wattln1 for you. sn.7447. CA-.u CostaMesa.645-0760 f1dtne. All af\n & evt'
counllng poslllon 2950Harbor81,CM *SI Cl.ERi Work when you want. --------"""" shifts av11I. Woman age Bookkeeper, Olrl Friday SG8830. • Paid vaca. You don't COMPAMIOM F/1', exper. Salary open. Counter girl wanted, ex· 25 or ovu Apply in
100 b.n mo approx. Gen'I CASHIHS •Q.£llCA[" ~f'J pay, we pay you. Woman, s days a ~eek. Xlnt benerits & work'g per oo1¥. ruu time sum· penon, Dlppity Donuts.
office exper. typtng, re· IUSIOY lmmed. employment for ~ • Uve In. lovely oceanfront cond. Apply at: THE mer em PI o Y men t 1854 Newport Blvd, CM
Hwy,N. B.
qlirod. Small office. Af\ I..unches.Applylnpenon car wub caablers. varied Jobi with " O..C•Ow home, N~rt Beach JOLLY ROGER . 203 Ooodenough Natural ___ .:_. ___ _
2;&42..Q2.12 LeBlarrlli. 414 N . La1W1a Ir H.B. areas. wit.bout uper, ln Cood "'-dtOfflc. U.bousdeeptng•~· Marine Ave. Balboa Food, 105 Mai n St, •DlllVB•
•
_,.,._ Newport Bl, N .8 . ~. atca~gs.C.llto-...._.lea. IJJ.l441 ~ .... i;e1 fer oon·tmoker. laland,61M720. BalboaPler.673·2345. MatUtt, over JS. Good
__..._ 64S-6700 da¥' 11 ....... ,... "''"''"' driving record. DcUver
Patt·tJme for MEDICAL CASHI• .. MO COOKS hNMrY()pr 1raphlc supplll"li 1n
OFFICE. Muat have ex· CAMllAPBSOH 3Z Hrs per wk. Satt5'1n fFllSfi Clerloal INSURANCE ~ ...... ,_. Brealr:tut/Fry. Oood The Jolly Roie.r Inc. ill Orange Co. Full lime
per. In peaboard 1ystem1 To work a vertJclt com· M. Cit* bn to be ar· ft8~ O Ce • e I LL IN O CL ERK EQer'd oa.1,y. Good pay worktna conditions, gd taldtla appUc.aUona for 11 Mt d I den ta I p I an &raedl.naurancc merclal camera . raniecl~'d. overload P/Ttme. r~qulred for & bendlta, Ap_ply, Jolly beoeflts. Ph5116-5000,eX1 leadclataentryoperator. 12.65br+ tncenUve. QIU
546-NU Familiar wtPMT pro· ................ t:2' buttneu office. Racer. 400S. Coast Hwy, 430. Holiday tn.n, Laa MinJroum o(l yr uper. MarkSlpes751·2686
0 ., P£ cesa. ~perprel'dorwlll 2666 Harbor Bl. CM llJ-006I -CaNIMedl Cal, fr _Lq--=-W\8--Be_a_c_b. ___ 1W1s ontbtl8Mamor3742 h1
1----="-----
e9oal K .... EIE CPR .. TNrial train. F'l tlme . Co. 3'72381ttbSt NB aener-al otc uper. rt · --------reqtired.Pennanmtfull I enc. 1or "· eat benefita. Appl(.. Pen· • q\ired. li'a. 12 none to Utt.le ta DI•!! Claatnod Coobjha ...,..., lime 0.y thlft. Pay will 8'op. I Taite Ume to relax
1ppeaTance. 5 yrs ex per ""'"•-r, ,..,. p a"'"'ntia, llh Ir:• lb o 1 e Io o d Equal ()ppor &m,ployer 5Pll, • ......... P1e -... d .... Apply tn perlOl'I, Jolly be baled on experience and abop at bomc lt 's pref ,,,_, mature. de C'M ·-uou '"" bouMhold ltema you're tact." J:r Hillyer~v;·t ~~·t.or~ullfe .. '!'!:~ Roger, Irvine. 1121 E level. A.fib' 1n per1on llmple wtlh Daily Pilot ~ble. l)•pe accurac.e QOt ualn1 av11l1bl• to PtopleW'ho~ 1 ..o.ouo calll wtt.tl b Naderthlp Oyer Rd. bel llam" aft 8AM·5P • Mon·Frl at Clauifled Ads. A.nd 11
Salary open 548-1178 Kah your 1bopptn1 to1Deot.herfamllybyad· tllolalda=c=th• --------andbt~rtl !Toplace _11>..;_m_. ______ t?OUGtuetc.eAve,lrvtn~ .>'OU11 have aomethln1 to
da11. 1?3·4H3 aft ~byU1in&t.heOally vertislnlU..mforaaletn .._ .. _ rectory tr .. ·-m.L ""'-tt.omt ..... • '" . call • friendly TPMIWlmds PUotClualtledAda. a..uJtid.Ca11Mt·51'11 ~DAaYPTL~...,. o.uy~Clw.ltledAd. 'f:/:y&a~ ad, call a:~~. ~~'J:':r.ooe· ~~cd Ad·Vtaer at
...
Aa• ..... :_:_ .•• W.lc.
······················~ ••..••.•••..........••.
K A T H I.. t: ~ N ON\ P"rubkm• •
FL.A.NAGAN Let uur DM\I opt'rl" ..\C C OUNTINO &: .. _l 1• 11 AIM.,;,
BUSIN"""'" SL'RVIC""" ..,.-P )OU "'a i LoO>O> .E< ~ terpns-.-s ror rrte con ~yatems ts procedurt~ <>llltuuun ~ (,i22t
i1pttl&!Uts. acct'& lhnA ----
rinaodal SlalemcOl$, ,\dH•rllsll\J $en ll'l'
CO!lt ucrt'a. <'ash now Flyers. b roc hun'
pro)e(lloot. purchastl)j,J copywnuni:. E~i>tr 11nd
41 Inventory control; rea.'>-Oll Siil ·.ulS llbranos utaluRecJ , --
'aluabln do<"ume nta C.,.•et 11on Call neatness ell:· •••••••••• ••• •• • ••••••• ~. 714 /645-4212 t: :i r P e n t e r i-· r c l'
esUtn.'.lles. Any &Ill' Jobis t,,ewe a.,-r Tony, 646 118t:6 ·······················------B & J Appliance Serv
TRf PCHARGE SlU ~Main.S.A
s.$·2422 9S7-01Ql
Custom remodeling. 15
yrs in area, res1d1comm,
intr/ ext Uniqut-& un
usual work welcome
PalumboC t. 962 8314 Aaphalt Repairs ---
••••••••••••••••••••••• Carpentry & M osonry
•SaveMone)'• Fences . cvrs. dec ki;
Dnveways•Parking 101 Bri<'k'. blk . conc rete
•Repairs •Sealcoatln11 Freeest 546·7~ Joi~
•L1<• NB . C M S&S Jim's Boal l'a~nter &
Abphalt 646...CS71 fiberglass repulrs. etc
Lo rates. refs. 646 4778 lllbpitttRg --
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~t Ser•lc• My borne. anytime. Nr. •••••••••••••••• •••• •••
Fwrvlew & Baker. C M C3rpt•t Mnn will lay yours !119-9834.979-2640 or rn1ne Repairs &
cleanll\g too' Guar work
al bigger savings Free
••••••••••••••••••• ••• • est. 1 988--6754
c.,.t Ser•lt•
•••·••••··············· Sttampan & ~t•• .. m ch.•otn
(;olor lmtthtcn'"n,, ~hi
cptJi 10 min bhHlch Clcnn
ll'. din rm. hall Sl5 Av11
rm 17 SO. cooch 110. chr
~ Gu.ir \'11 m ix.·l odor
Cpt n •pll.lr 15 y~ l'xpr
Oo wurk m)sel( Rd'>
~1·0101
We l."Jrc C:i~t Cleanc.-r.
SteMm ctn or !>h11rn1>00
Also uphoh1tery. All work
guar. Truck mount unit
Fr est. rea& rate&
645-3716
CoterittcJ
ChUdC.-. Formica
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1'h1ldc1art' In m> h<.>mt-. Formtl'U Counter 1'olb 1n
Mon 1-'ri. t>-6 Awe~ 3-8 stalled to your s~c1ftca
~wk &15 ~J<I lions Latest c<.>lors & dl'
Contredor -sign:, t-'tee est 675 311a
••••••••••••••••••••••• a..rdrt1Mn9
ft.J . llufrnwn &<Son ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~model & addition!! •VERY LOW Pk IC I-:.<;• ~4644 or 548·4S41. On Gardening Ma int
Licensed & Bonded Cieor&e !>49·2QlS
....__--w.... Clean ups. Hauling.
~-........ Land sc aping Im ••••••••••••••••••••••• mediate ser v1t·1ni.;
~!'!1 •••••••••••.•••• ~~ •.•.••••• ftaifttfncJI'~ ReofilMJ • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~ud~~f 1 tTon m:t•J< Honest. hardwork1n.: di 1-''lne Exter Pa1nt1na h)I REPAIR & Rt;ROOF. All
64.2 5703 979 ~m on .i.va1lahle Own tram, R Sinor St lie , 1111> Tr) 1 y pl'11 i1 h 1 n w 1 e.,
--· ' _ Call now 6't2 3494 me 836-SSS.524 h" ro<'ksh1o1kt•i. conipo 1.11
CHEAPEST hauling 1n DAISY F'ft t::Slt -Pa .. · t Your CasAI-t'Yt't'~ ~· 59311
town Pr t'SIS CHEAP' l'LEANING s1rnv1n•: l1'll' ~ Gll-2996or~ 1390 Will cleun your h'lU''' or Six.-c1aUtm~ 1n rcs1drn -, .. fjrts L & ' • ual homes. mt & "'"t ••••••••• •• ••• • • •• ••• • • Rub b 111 h Hau I 1 n g dp It'~\ .e il Dsui>y Pl east' ('hel'k our rl' Skylights bri ghlen u i1
i''\Jmllurl' moving & tree l'resh GTS·2839__ rcrences Lit' • 32~1 room11 Over 2SU 111
tnmmmg Re1i., rellable Guar . 1n11rd tret• ehl stalled CahC Sk) hghl:.
497·2007 Lmc:kcopincJ Ted 6JG 70ILS Dana Pnt 001 -0151
~a.-ln9 ---~····················· -
Slip Co\•ers. Orapencs. &&2-9007
bed spreads. upholstery 4 ---.... -r-at_c. ___ -1-c·-.-..
••••••••••••••••••••••• ndscapCi.nl g 1 re•· In m· 7:~tarJ,:g r~f..':P ,:;~! !!': ............. •• •• •••
W min~ ean up II yrs " -ant a REALLY CLEAN exp. f'tl•e ~·st Noboru S:J6-4780. 536-4383 CERAMIC Tit,£ Sl)t.'{'1ul
HOUS1';" Call Gingham 848·4043 or897 ~ ty Enlril'., rtoori; 2.'> Y" cushions & pillows -_,.-,, • <,'uStom rabn(.'S, free est ••••••••••••••••••••••• Girl Free est 64S·5l23 _ YOUNG MAN 5 yrs expr e' p Sm I rep a 1 r .,
Jerry ·a Int. Decorators HANDYMAN Homes & CABANA welcome, 962-4185 a pts. ConliC 1 e n llous ••Housecleaning done by
Fine r atenng. au oe --Craftsman Call 64.5-0302 rehab le 54~~.fuhe Refs
••••••••••••••••••••••• LANDSCAPING in wallt'ovenng 1-'rce 962·1883
Reasonable pnci.-s e:lts 645·8576 Andy 1---------
968 --New & remodel. tub~ ~783 _ Rt'ason .pr1ct' int /t'\'.I is howtt!I dratnboords. &
cas1ons. 645-98:)8_:_ __ a.ctrfcaf
Ceilngs. Aeoet1tlc •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~bard Electric
Acoustic cc1llngs & waJh1 Lie 327136 645-0074
textured. llsnbl rat.es. ELECTRIClAN-Pnced ~-70IJ _____ righl·free estimate on
Cemtnt /Concnt• large or smD II Jobs
••••••••• •••• • •• •• • • •• • Ucensed 673·0359
Foundation~. retaining If you need llghls , ouUets
walls, blo~ks, patios. or rewiring. res. or ~I. Lie d c omm . Ca 11 N a 1 m
Forming, pouring & 979-3921
ri.rllshlng. Set your own
forms . Save m oney Ftftclnc)
64.>3257 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HANDYMAN: Carpe ntry,
electncal. plumbmg & nrs. 847·2787. 557.4504
The Pncc 1s !light' For
the best m dnveway !>eal
coalmg. Free est. San
ders Asphalt Sealcoat
1ng. 751-9401. 12408
Logan St. CM
Floors. carpets . baths, Masonry walb . patios. windows ••••••••••• •••••••• • • • •
Spec pnce ror vacant re· Brickwork. Small Job11
sidences • Newport. Costa Mesa &
ThoseGuys 974·081 0 lrvme 67S·3175eve-. ---------
Immaculate C..:leaning Co. p~ ,.._..ftn F->r those who deserve _,,.,...,,, -....-·· ,
house p1tmllng. i''ree est entnc.. 673·6082
531 87811 Jark -----CERAMIC..: tile. New or rt'
Earthtones·£'11eri9r model. Pree est Srnf
home designing & paint jobs welcome 536.2421,
ing Muke your hom t· aft s
look hkt" a model home. -------Nwprt B(•h S48 7091 Window Clffnitt9 --------...................... .
lh• best. 759 1)377 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PETF.RS PAINTING PlaaterfR•polr GrodlncJ Rosemar1e·s llouse<'lcan
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ng Hefs. reason. Own
Haul, sk1ploade r dump trans 6"2· l403. 645·3439 _
f.xpr'd Reas Ra tes •••••••••••••••••••••••
f ree t:sl Ca 11 Gent Neat patche1:1 & tcxturei.
5.52·045!f Fl& EST. H 3. I 439
Window~ c l~ant·d . r•·
a1>onablt'. bus1n es~l''>
homes & apt.-;. 847 4461
Res1denllal <avg $2~301
Commercial. f{~nt:ib
6.1 \ ·0217 . 645· 2002 trk. grading. tree wrk. Bach .homes.apts.wttha All PROFESSIONAL a_,;__
demoUtionsetc. 831 1257 PERSONAL TOUCH Pa1nl10J( lnterii-:..,.ll•r .__, .. "J
All phases concrete &
blkwrk Cstm brkwork
U c'd/Bonded. 642·68~•
Have something you want Rers !>49-9372 or 536·6728 Reas~or~guar642 ~386 ··~~.·~~~;;.;;;;~·~~~ ••
WESTERN FENCE CO ID sell? Clasa1/ied ads do Xlnl dean1nu. f''f PE'r Pamung Extr lntr F.x Installed factory dirct't
Wood & Chaintink 1t well -Call NOW. dep . reason. Own trans pr'd. honei.t. nl'al rcas ~tab 35 yrs t:all llurlild
Get GREEN cash
for WHITE elephanl.l>
with a Classified Ad
Call 642·51!7R Llc11245· 151 536 1837 642 5678. 557·3726 L\• mess L..ic:d 9"~• ICM5 0 ,1\ t' Gunn ~9 2961
~~~ ..... ?!~~ !!~~~·~·~.!~~ ~~~ .. L •• !!.~~ ~~!.~~·.·.~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~:.~·!~ ..... ~!~~
Dnver. part time for ~n.w..=~.a:1'7.w ~-'l ~W--L. MACHINIST
~~~ ..... ~!.~~ ~.~.~~ ..... !!~! ~.~~ ..... ~!~.~ HelpW_.... 7100
MANAGER needed. must PARICIMG Atttftdoftt Printed circwt board mer ••••RECMioMtST••••
be v.ery resp<>ns1ble & ex p I l I m l' • m <> ., I I Y tunng tramee11 $3 25 pr Sharp neat appeann~
per d salesperson. ror weekends . Mus t have ~ to !ttar1 ~O hr wo~k Nice 'telephone vo1c1•
Burl rurn & crafts valid dnvcr·)o ltcense eek. 3002 S Oak Sl. Part time 9 to \ Mon
Fl t ho Financial Secy S'OOO -._. • • . ons 5 p. P It Gen Ofc lo s.5 hr Starting $3 er hr. Ad· lndustnal Exper d '" mill. lathe & 5861301 ResConstrBkkpr Sl2K vancement assured for I LUEJUHJOIS c hucker. Mus t read
Dnver. sailboat parts, & Recepllonist.s lo $700+ <'on s c 1 en t 1 o u ~ 1 n pnnts & know s ct ups·
i>tockroom tramt•t.>. Sol Irvine Personnel Agency div1duals. Only parties U--' H...-d/Wonwn call Dave. 540.6426
lndul>trics . 19U E 488El7th CostaMesa desiring f/t1me employ-'i'M...Train~
PomonaSt.S.\ Ed1oger Swte22.1 642-1470 ment need appl y t•x.1t orr s.s .__..-~~ s.s7_·27_3_1. _______ 1 -------,I
Drwer. Cla:>i> I Tractor & flMAHC E G l R L WANT ED for
.io· trailer, expenenl'ed d. C . general cleaning & hte household goods. Al least La~ge Resi 11 omm 1 s anding c ull aft t> I ~·r with rerercnces & Bwlders/Oeveloper re-631·4343 . .
J quires individual to head
sood dnving r {'cord finance div. StronR con· GU "'RDS
. Local & dist. 847 7278 tacts lo develop commit· "'
ments ror project loans & F /time positions avail Ury cleanerl> P l 1 m e Above avg wa"e~ Paid
k & Co "'IC h J ""'uity ca"" •al. Track te· .. roor er u.. r e P· -.. Y" wkly . Uniform & equip
I V · o 1 cord & refs u must. Wrtk App y. ans rye ean· furn. Paid \'acs. trunsp & "c12 E c l H Vaco Developers. Inc mg. o>J s wy, phone r"""'d Interview· CdM P.0 Box 2949, Laguna -.. Hills, 92653 ing, 920 S. Mam St. SA on
ESCROWOFCR -Ma) tltb. 1978. Call
. d. Fishing tackle ~ales & 547·8S07. i'or heavy tract esk. service work. Newp<>rl . --
Good benefits. Managf' Beach Good knowledge lla~r .styli~t., expcr. r~~
mcnt p<>lenllal. Sal:iry ot Pacific Coast & M ex-Mission V1eJO children s o~n Irvine Savings & J<'an f1Shll\K. Plus reason . salon. Im med. chentel
Loan call J. Andrewi.. mechanical ability re· For info: 768·8801
ASSEMBLERS
PAa<AGEttS
GEN. LABORERS
SOLDEREttS
INSPECTORS
Day -Week -Monlh or
longer. it's your decision.
tst & 2nd shifts avail.
Paid vacations . You
don't pay. we pay you !
CALL OR
COMt= IN TODAY '
!ELL~
~E l"IVIC£ ~.
1101 Dow Street
Ste 340 NewPort Bch
833 1441
MACHINISTS
Machine Tool Builder
nl'ed s i.:en('ral
mach1n 1sts for wide
van ety of close tolerance
work lll clean shop Short
runs on engine lathes.
vert1clt• & hon 1onlal
mills.
A1>pl) At
Paul Dosier
Associates. Inc.
:J050 Redhill A \l'
<.:osta Mes a. 92620
l714) 556-7075
Equal Oppor Employer
7$2-2600. _ quired Permanent . top HANDYMAH
--------•I pay for nght man Send for apt complex Costa l .... SUR ........ CE ~Cord tl 0 £..crow Officers resume to: Box 174, •,i " ,.." ···-1 pr. tlOil Daily Pilot. P 0 . Box Mesa. $3.50 hr 5. days a Excellent opPor for girl Exper d . bw.y N B la"
&crowSecrdariH 1560. Costa Mesa. ca week 645-338lor67S-5949 who c an lake over fir m . C all Debbie
w._. are m the proc~ss of a 92626 -· Hardware Sales. Apply in personal linl'S for H. B &W·0130 ~a:ag~ ~x,r;n~~~~e ~~·,;.-.-,;,;.-,;.-.-,; _____ , ft!.d!a~e~ 3107C~ i::s~ ~~~~~YA:~:~~e~~~~. M.Ud. IJve·in. lovely N fJ
mt-diate need for 5 RnER C 962.~ home w1pnvate room. 5
eltcrow officers and 5 & SEAMSTRESS Hwy. DM_______ days. wknds off. Eng.
t.'llcrow l>ecret:lnes. Wiii Full time onl)' l\pp\y tn Help wanted K entucky ---------•I s peaking prert>rrt•d
gallenes. contact Mrs Must be neat & persona-Santa Ana th.ru Fri S1 hr N~wpoM
Hanson 41S 497-341 1 or b le. C all ror .Jppt PRINTING Center are~. Call ror 111 (2131767 1528 for appt. 631-4820 Do not l·all afler tHv1ew 640 5780 or
Manufactunng 5/l0/7H Exper'd bus iness forms 640 1752
Small pamt manuf'actur-Part ttme of(cce h.:lp collator o~ralor Should ----
lng company nr S Csl needed. Call t1ftl•r !> PM know s nap<>ut & con· RECEPTIONIST Plaza needs person to 96J·80tl0 unuous forms S.A area. Im med openin~ N. u
work I.fl our pro<.lu<'tion --------Or:mgt> Co !>40.8027 law firm seek!> ex per d
dept forklift ex per de PART TIME OHLY recept to handle bui.)
st red Gd beneflti. & Must now be employed & PRIMTIHG phones Good l y p1n~
working cond. Will tram free to work in my sma 11 &pet-'d Lffho ability. paid park mg. Aµ
Apply at Behr PrOl·es~ apps bus in cs:,. or air Rotc.y Offset pl y 1n person · b Io
Corp, 1603 W. Alton. San· treatment equip M s Pf'ffs O--'or l'llewpon Ctr Dr. Stt: 122U
ta Ana 6·10PM •· Sat 9 JOAM· .-.· -· NB644·9311 ___ ~ _ _ "' Must know 1>napout & ---------
M AT U R 1-: W 0 M A N
p 1t1 m e lo vn· I{' o me
newcomers & contact
merchants Flexible hr;
Need l'lir. lite ty ping
547 .3095
Medi back ore. µed1;ttncs.
some E'xper. Mon thru
Fri. i''nln V.Jllcy. ~9 8133
MEDI CAL; Assistant
Soml' front/back t•xpr
In tne 552· 75 ll
Med.Jc al assist for M 0 in
NB Sel· exp & med oft•
exp re11 Send resumr m
d ud salary history to
400 Newp<>rt <.:enter Dr
St 400 NB 92660
2.:K>PM S300 mo sal or t•onllnuous bus 1nc!>i. i---------• profit shanng. No -t•xp rorms press. S A. area of Re;taurant n~ For interv. call aft Orange Co. 7141540-8<>27 lPM 979-3861
PART TIME
,EVENINGS
Pf'Odtlctioft Traiftff
Rubber hose product"
ln'Ule areu Must pasi.
t•o phyS1('al including
back x ra Y" Ca II for
appt S40 7639 E 0 E
Adults with outstanding. 1·---------ull.ract1ve personalities
who enJoy working with
luds. Start <il SJ.SO per
hr. Phone 642·4321 #250.
betweenJ·OO.s OOP M
Ask fOf' Sharon
Equal Opportunll )'
Employer
PRODUCTION
TYPESETTER
w1expenencelpan umc-
d11ys 1
IBM
SELECTRIC II
BOB'S
fHonw OfThe
IM)loyl
I mml-<ilule 01>4•nmgs 1n our family restauranti. :it
nearby locations. We rt•
quire no previous expcr
Jom our friendly team
Come see us today betwu
2-4pm
WaittnfWaitnstH
CookTrailtffs
CcnhMn
... f(i & ed.""-· l"'~urance Housekeepm0 • l'OOkm0 • mre an c>Scrow o cer person to Managt•r. Ma Fri ...... cken. day ~h1fl. '"' " "
l f " need own trans Non ._,,,_~: • YR :,.ecretary cam or ble Austin. Drape r 's Musl be 18. 005 .~ Coast .._._cofAsst PA OLLCLERK
l)lacement togetht'r in an Laguna Hills Store. 23621 Hwy, Laguna Beach MEDICAL smkr. S44·o:!o95 G P of fie• need!> e x-The JolJy Roger. Inc. a
Excellent Working
Cond1t1ons Apply in Person
ORAHGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
7311 Edin~er. Hunt Bch
23952 Averuda de la
Carlotta. Lagi...a Hilb
4501 Campus Or, frv1n~
1.54 E 17th St. C. Mesa
9842 Adams. Hunt. Bch
Equal Opp Emplyr m 1 r off 1 c e Lo c a ti o n s Moulton Purlrway Plaza ----------CLAIMS EXAMINER Maids; top wages paid penenced medical ass1s rast growing restaurant
throughout Orange Co HOSTEs.5. mature. over Apply : The lnn at tant.646·3903 chain.bnsanopenmg for
arc available. Advitnccd :Ki. restauranl exper, 5 Min I yr •wlllll'r. La 211 N Co l an exnor'd payroll clerk
l'• .. row trainlno pro FOOD S£ftVICE days. contact 540.3840 "-r-guna. o. as MEDICAL ASSISTANT ~ .,. " ...,.. .....__ RI R IFull/P/ti 'I) Hwy .• Laguna Beach to work m d 2 person dept s:rams for escrow of· Pit days, apply Pup N .,..... viera estaurant. ,,. G'fGI Fu 11 t 1 me ror N. B. handhng approx. 1500 ftl·crs and training for Taco. Harbor /Wilson , 3333 S. Bris tol. Costa Maid wanted. Full time or MedJcal practl<'e. prefer em p I 0 ye e ._ c 0 m
l!M:row !tCCretar1es to c M J.Spm 646-5841 Mesa Good sat range. Xlnt 1·0 pt·llrne, Seacbff Motel. exper. nunor lab & X · putenzed payroll exper .bc{-ome futureescrowof ----------benefits. 37 Hr work wk. 1661 So. Coa..~L Hwy, Lag ray. S<1lary very com· a m u s 1 . w , 1 h
3r:'ta ~:S~l Restaurant-Help Wanted.
Ask for Paul Ward full & p/t1me posit1om.
Equal Opportunity av&JI. days. Start to s:J
J::mployer hr Apply In person only ---------•I to Jim ut, Del Taco, 2112 s E. Bristol, N 8 ficers E1Cpr'dapplicants Furn1lure store. expe rH0 0ETRETLO P .BX New attractive <>fc Bch,494-4892 petittve.644·1881 restaurant payroll cx
only Xlnl medical and saleslady wanted. P 1T. P . A .R fl · 3 0 Congenial associales Real Estate d~ntal benefits Please A<:<"ent Interiors. 333 AM ·.3.00 PM Shift E.O.E. m 1f. MEM EDS per. a der1n1te plul> Xlnl fo'or a great career & a Restaur.t Help
l'Olllart u Peoples or A Mar 1 n e A ve. R 1 Awportff Inn Hot•I Mail Department family Pina worktn~ cone!.~ & benefit ~real future 1n R1..•al Be A me mber or the pn•
Hall at Ti ansamcnca Ti 673-2B60. Coolac\ Mr Hannan Ca 11 Jud y H 1 er s. CLERkfDRIVEtt p~ pkg w/opPor for adv Sal Estate with a ~real Co. rerred slaff al Anthony\
R M -..--. commensurate w/e1Cper h uni ed o. 11 tic Insurance Co ir you G•L£alD•Y 833-2770 eglonal anager or Various mail dept duties F it m helwmm d Apply •n ""'r"'.n n bct~n wrt. im1t earnings . .-.er . act•epllng ap art>U\terested. 547 957 \ ,.. "' A -----I Super visor ror appt. to include post ofhce I e . e u• .... ''" .. Call AJ SleUalo ror con· pl.icallons for: Busboys, ---------•I Type, rile, ans phone. House Counsellors 558-1216. pickups & errands. Must openings Cor men & Sam & Spm or send re· fKJeoltal appt 963-5671. Waiters. Wa itresse~.
-------Orderdeslt. Errand.a. Married cpl only. No 51.SN.Cabnllo Park Dr have vaUd Calif. dnvers wome n . Apply daily sume lo: 17042 Gillette Bartenders. Ca~h1ers I.
Call9.S7-1292. children. li ve.in . St.e120,SantaAna Uc & good d.nvlng re· afte~~~·1~~~~~~Man, ·A~v~e~·~J~rv~i~n~e~.~~~~~I (~IWD!3?JjlUUI the Oyster Bar from DEC SECltnARY Super vise 6 teenage cord. Apply. National ---------= 3·5pm Mon. Wed &
Adnun/Assistant GARDENER girls. Sal +exp. 5fo.4754. UHCOlM HATIOHAL Systems Corp. 4361 Bu-ch MESSEHGEA PBX Real F.state Thurs. No Phone c.11,.
m Laguna for president 1 day week only. Shop· HOUSECLEANING. Full Ufe,_._.Co St, N.8 . <Near OC tmmed. Plume opening Answerin g s ervice --------•Please. I03 N. Bayside
of Real elltate Co. Must ping center & tennis or p1Umc. own trans. Airport) Equal Op-for reliable mdustnous operator full & Pff. Call REALTOR i-Dr_. N_B _____ _ ~=k~;~~n;i~ !~~~~~ club. in Huntington Bch. Top salary. 642-7430 or ---------· portudity Employer. person w1own car 11·3 83S-3S61 or Realtor Associate. tRestaurant
ii o n al ba c lt ground. _536-8832_ -------• 646-487l -----• lnsur anee secretar y , ---------Wkdys. Call Irvine Sav---,.-X-Alls--w-..---Sen--.-flave need for 1 good ac· OP&UHG SOOH
Salaryopen Gener al OCfi ce. light Houseeleaners, Tues-Fri, Comm&pers. lines,ex-Ma.ltre'd,privatecounlry 1ngs,7S2-2600E.O.E. UvesaJespe~on Jfas 1mmedo~nmgsfor
G&nib\lterliAssoc.. ~keeplng.teleptres. 8·3PM. Call Janice's per, xJnt working cood. club For appt. call MOTEL MAIDS ?~~:::~m ~h~/l~~~. RoyMcCwdle Hosht.1H
494-9421 rerer motorcyc e or R.a ggedy Ann's. 645-1800 Costa Mesa,642·6500. _644-__ 5404_______ d Prefer exper. but will 1110 .W•porl ll•d. WaftnsMi
----------•automobile agency ex· -~--'------• M NAG EM EN F\111 time. Ti es Motel. train. Call for appl . ,.__...._ ..... ~-s,.•-7729 Fut1 •part-t1me E X E C U T r V E penence. 5 days week. H.ouseclearung Janitoria.J Work * A T Apply tn person, 494·2494. '-'Vanl ---"' sECRETARYOrthodon-starting $600 month. Jmmed.opening.exper Prr&Frr. TRAINEE Mopeds. 833·9282.E.OE ---------t Better than ave rai;t·
Ile Corp., S. Orange Co., Award Motors. 1680 or will train, full & P(f. 546-1330 ~~i:c~~a~i~. :J::i~ The Mg:i>YR ~~~~~as a PIX ap.rator Receptionist wanted. :~d~b~f !J.~r·tr;1"i,"
poise. reliability. self NewPort. CM 642-4343. Own trans. 540-9525. THE Janitors, pt-time eves. Fri large route in Newport Exper'd or will lroin ((ood omce. good work, D<!y & e\'e shifts avail ~::v~s~o~g~s~nt:z.l~ ----------i-S_UN_SHIN __ E_G_l_R_LS ___ , over 21. El Toro area. Beach. Mon thru Fri aC· Artn & evt:s . Some good pay. Will train Apply,9AM·3PM Wed.&
flexible. s alary com· GeneraJ Office Housekeeper 533-4881 MANAGEMENT ternoons. Sat & Suo wknds . Call 640· I l 10 6454900 Thurs 31721 So. Coa:.t
mens urate w t abihty. TRAJMH H41Ff AUCE $1 ,000Moftthty morrungs. Must have de· betwn8"" 30 Recept/Hostess, rullume Hwy.South Laguna.
Resume to PO Box Sl2, Variety of duties. Req·s Liveln.$100perweekfor Th KJ~R Opr Expanding vocational dpendaenn.aibllre,.;.eGrood. $50d.ri~~n&gh PBX Opr. No type Apply at 26742 OsCJRestaurant
EIToroCa.92630 typi n g 50+ wpm . 3chlldren.Pvtrm.Must e :oily Roger tnc. Is school with 22 localions ...,,, --. W o R Parkway, Miss1onVicJO c~s number a-·1ude helpful. have car. 675-6019 Evs taking appl.icauons for a naUoowide has growth record Ca II 642-4321 oman ovr 4 ece1ve M th Fr 10.3 "'""
F/C bootkeeperthru P& Apply,N~alSystems ----------• leaddat.aenlryoperater poalllon available. Leave name & phone & fill orders by phone. on ru 1· pm,_ Positionavailable.NU
L. Over 40. Know payroll Corp, 436l Birch St. N.B. Housekeep~r. p /tlme, Mirumum or l yr exper. CounseladuJts interested Your call will be re-Service organrz. Wlllr Receptionist Npl Cntr law &75-6220
taxes Salary open. Send !Near oc Airport> Equal flexible hrs, ~on smoker on the IBM 3741or3742 is ln t.a.k.ing vocational pro-turned tram. SUrt S3 hr. Sam· firm. ss wmp typmg re Resui· t
resume to Dona. Acct 'g Opportunity Employer ID asst in gen I household required P~manent full gram~xcelleot growth lpm. 40 Hr wk includ all qua red. Possible ad van uran Office, 2610 B Avoo St, _.._ ______ _,duties. Own t.ransp. Refs lime day shift. Pa.y wlll opportunity with rapid .,.....LVM/C.... Sat/Sun. Call Mrs. cement to legal sec'y. HOSTESS
N.B. 912663 req'd. 543-l732for appt. be based oo experience a d v a n c e m e n t 11·7 Shift. Xlnl benefits. Evans 8 30am.J 30pm Call Ruth Brazer644-207l Pa.ition avaihtble. NB.
G.1 Ofc Wortr.r level. Apply in person pagslbdiUes. Full com-Bayview Conv. Hosp, 642·995S. 675-6220
Female. P it llam-2pm With typing ex per. HCohui~edkeceapre:· &ll~~~rd· 8AM·5PM, Mon· Fri a l pany training with 20551burln. CMM2-3505. Receptionist wanted . Resta t
M-F. Slax Burgers. 899 Kingsley Mfg Co 1984 17042GilletteAvt?, lrvine liberal benelils. Must PERSONNEL perm position w/lutu~ uran W.19th St. C. Mesa. Pt · C ·• dutll!$. 2 wks off ea mo. MURSHYMEH advancement Potential. CASHIER acentia Ave. M . Eves; SSl-~317, day. KltdMttHetp.r have good commuruca· F\JU-Ume, mature male Salary commens w/bck-Position available. NB. 8J3.8830x31B. Days.CallS48·7418 llon skills and previous 21 ., 0 1 Our growing agency gmd.6.1I·'""". ,...,..,.,.,,.
DOING BUSINESS
UNDER A
FICTITIOUS NAME?
If you have lust flled your new
Flotltlou1 1ualneaa Name and
have not )et submitted It for
publlcdon, pl9eae don't forget
that tM limitation la 30 days
from date of fUlng. The DAILY
PILOT wlll publiah your
atet•ment for S31.SO . Our
circulation lnclud•• th~ entire
Orange Coaat ar•• end legal
notlcn appear In all ecltk>n1. In
order to eubmlt your mt•ment
for publk:atlon Mnd ~ate
capy end • ch•ck toE PAIL Y
PILOT, P.O. Box 1580, Coata
Meaa, CA. 82129. We11 do the
reet. for lnfonnatlon about legal
advertlafng pteaM c.11 642-4321 E.xt. 332.
s ales experience re-over · v ays inc seeks dynamic indlv. w..... v• .. ..,.....v __ _ Housekeeper wanted. few AskfOC'Maurke quired Will consider re· Sat/Sun. Work with w1sales bkgd & good,.._ ________ .._ _______ _
U d plants, trees & dell very. •· hours/day for elderly Legal Secy. Exper pro-cent co ege 1ra -uP lo Ex f'd $3 Hr personality to tram to RECEPTIOHIST
woman &son.Mustha ve bate admln. Temp<> 1.2 $1.000 mont h ly if La:C~·.P~ll~ Nune~~: become _,mployment The Jolly Roger Inc. 15
car.645-1563. mo. .. w/....,.,•lble lonaer qualiried. Call Mr Friedli l El"' ........... c.. counselor in fnendly ore loolt1n1 ror a f /t1m .. ..--at 714-8J4.1964 nc. aoro . .....,.........,. · w/"""laxed t h "'
Housewife opportunit y. ranf: opp\y. Good steno AMERICAN cail"carry F~~~-~: perm. recept. Must be
WP ant
0
ao office career ! !~ 0&0 ~!elinr ~manest~ .. :..o BARTENDERS MURSES AIDES Coutal Personnel Agen. penanable, attractive & rt t lY ..._,. "'" ~~... SCHOO 7-3&117 Exper'd Coun exper'd. Position calls ~ll me, ID~ pe. Small law ofc, Airport L t~ct1~.b Conv. 'uoap: _c.;;.y_.2790 __ Har __ bo--'r._C_M __ for good typing skills.
Wi do some lng. area Nwpl Bch. 833-9982 -c~L TICH lY75 lo t800 ID start. App. Call aA2; 842-0212 .... _, """""' ly, 17°'2 Gillette Ave.
t--------·iLeaal Sec'y, busy N.B. Man11er~ees MUISISAIDES Steady Job ror ri1ht lrvtne. law oCfc seeking sec'y UTOT£M &ORDBUIS person, no exper 1 _______ _
U you require
•NoTrav~I
•Prolk Sbarlng
oComl>M.Y Beoeftta
• Pft'lonalistd
••
TraEiProiram •Ki&b
~Repeal e$
We require you:
CALI.COLLECT
808BELDlNO
(1lf)28)...,..
who desires responalblli 1 necessary, Profit shar. 1---------
ty. DutJes lncl Mq Card f--a ..,_ XJnt beoefiU. Bayview ln.c & iroup beatt.b.. App 111'-:..9',KllWllt~
nos-rat.ion & handling .... ~, .. es C.orw. Hosp. DSThurio ly Mon·Fri 9·12 Lloyd Off4CET'RAIHH
cUenl.a. Xlnt skills a ANSeekinJlCareer CM,M2·3505. Pest Control 586 E. Dyer Fee Paid. Good typing &
musl &M-9190 __ Mmded PdOplo For OFftCE CLERK Rd. S.A. sparkling SQ'lle for exclt
MAMAGlll TIA.1.,.ElS f\Jll lll'H. Knowled"e of J>re.aehool Teacher tnJC co in Fashion Island . LITE Manufacturing At · eembl,y. $3 hr st.artUig.
Dty abifl. 7:30-4prn. aw-ln.s thlft. 4pm·12:30arn.
Fttlme. Call Bru ce
Wachtel, 642-52:54
Lot boy. clean • detail oew boata. Full Ume.
631-2S47
LYM,PJtN-
Have open.lop for r /Um~ " N ... Ce t u It_. To .00 Also Fee Jobft •. ,., 1 ...__ 2nd ,,_ 10 U)'. Uta typing. Ute ewpo.. n er I\ "" MJ .... -• ... K· ... n ....,,.._CN\1 • P1ume C •·-oo • bkkplns helpful, 646-323l Methodl1t ChW'Ch Pr~· ~·~"' ... .,..,.....,., 3rd. ahlfta. If lnl.ereated. School '* now •cceptlng Sncllln& & SIM!lling ol
contact our nearest OFflCIMG•JSIC appllcatJocufor quaUtled Newport8eachA1ency
markeloc &Oto Expandlne N a. Yacht prt•echool teacher• & 4340Campus Dt1ve l>«ZLAm~on 0 . Gn aal~ nec0a aharp ag· aubftl\utea for Fall 1m. Receptloru.et !Secy T:'~.=::= .,._..ve rl to run Ute 644-0740bttwn9'm·8pm. WurnAfritndJywflood
(lt.4)S3'7-4MO abow.8?5-1J'1 Preuer·Sllk Finisher phone per1onallty re
Equal Oppot Employer wanted, woman. Live quired by buay compan1
3-11 30. Xlnt salary & ~~~~~~~~I bentf\ta. Coot.act Dtr. of Bar11ln 1hoppera read
SeU ~tb EASEi N1&n11ln1&. Park Lido Conv &be UtU. ad.a In Claulll~
Sl'ATICHIMICAL
MN.CO. Ken farnill• are ie&UnJJ Wire Cleaners. 439 In flnance & Lrav l. OC
the camp!Aa "bus.:" Ulla Fore:at Ave. Laa Bch ~r\ loc. 'l'ypllll re·
year. II you have a _494-_ltS_as ______ "wred. 962-aeeeeves.
U'u ~EZE tap. ~ ~111»h1p Rd. rtl\lWIY. Md tbty find ClaulnedAda~I ~~ _ what the1'rek>oltln1 ror.
camper that 'I D0t getting n.crtatlon PT1 Vale day
UNI( Mtl It now wllb • Hlw tOme&.b.lnl lo sell! camp dinrtot Newport
Clautfiecl Ad. Q ... ln.d ad.a do it well. Beach. &tt~
~AURA.NT
JACKIM THEIOX ,....., .........
COUMTB
PllSOMMIL
lmmedlat~ Ol*linP for c.oum.r Pvsonnel on all
llh!IU, full and part time.
Dt\y-sbU't at.artlna waac
12.75/ hou.r: swlna·sblft
starting wage
S2 .8S /hou r ; and
graveyard-shift at.artlns
wage 13/hour. Apph
canta must be 18 and
over. Please apply in
~=
1205 ......
Coet.MeM
JISI. 17*
C....Mno
EQ~I Opportunll.Y tmployer M/P I
~!f.?~ ..... !!~ ~!~ ..... !!~ ~.~~ ..... !!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~ ~.~~ ..... ?!.~ ~!~ ..... ?!.~ TU!!dly. M!X 9. 191a 91 :'1.v ~T ~!~
.. SICllTAAY sw••wCMm TIUTYPIOPll Tow Truck Driven .. HlfpW..tM 7IOOHlllftW..W 7JOO ::':!':!.~ ............ -< llSTAUliMT , ... ,...c...... 11011nwn ~O EXsuP ..... EC ~!d.'r~t·iZ~~~tf: 1::-r!:tr.1~1~!~., .............................................. c~HPA10
HELP Exp, Pt \yllkl Liar) .. Of Pwhrolpres.cr1bed n n DiatrihaUon intra-orfke Ave, NBf42..l253 UTILITY Pen~ n!ahta. Waltt'ft for dinner houae Fot id uaed furn, anti.· °'*' IM•U •'-ilvily. 1\1.U • 11t. Muat nuat's right, we'll train 4s aor6o fiUni Hrs 9 8 Xlnl pay• benefits. experienced Lunch only. QI*• clr TV'a 957-8133 We nr"all.1 "-~• lO -be 11+. C all (714) you If you're energetic. w/heavy late ·urternooo TRAVEL 557~700exl2448 6 days a week Apply
OOtftiaa fOf' ib4hldaala 1464UMorl'Tl·Z500. en thu s I a s t l c & activity Salary open re W"'IT... 9-llAM. Thurs. Ask for Gold 4' tan l'Ul cotton wlala .om. fut food U · SICRITAAY SUBSTITUTE articulate Earn a exper. (714) 495 1980. AGENT "" sa the Manaaer 3300 W Ytivetsola, llk~ nu. 1200 Pltt!.~requ1· ~JerT ... ~~ Ttw JoUy Roeer. lnc b.u T"' ... Cll"'aa guimmteed w•e• com· Mrs. Kraft/Mrs. Kujawa 4 years m.IJUmum exp. 4·5 EYea. Apply Slult Pac Coast Hwy. NO Orta '750. Deco wln1 chr. II c.... 1·oeu ..,,,_ an nn.-'"I for """' 1;1.--'--ion a.. boo uses Empk>yee bencflta Noodle Resuu.rant. 2U ...111 wht Unon w /"•II crewel
.,.. fwl and l>UM.lme i;i.r'd..-_:i:--1 to ,.::n•: California r redentlal f::Uu."'TutNIMG 87$-79« · Riverside Dr . NB Wa ltnrss. exper only. flowera.oeco'whlllec05\
Dri.n.nly d&1 OoetUon.a the Vire Pr-et. In rba .... e level• 4·8. Apply in Ta&.ERIP·TI... 641-7418 PIT.10 30am 2.30pm, no H OO, now $300 /ofr
lfoun aod aalary are ol lhe 8 Id "-i! P9'IOI\. F. V. Sc:bool Ola & DCB.LINT Good spot [n Dana Pt DAV& ACHtih' Saturdays or Sundays . ~ ro:; ~ply m ~n.oa 1.1 ma -0 t r I c t Cr n • r 1£ ........ 1..aGS Type 40 wpm, work 20 Newport/Irvine Min 3 WAITBS uo 4032. Eutblurr. --------
d.y-Fr d."• D6\'\Skln.0.1Ct1McU,,1ab NtwlaodlTalbert Sta. ~" hrs wkly . C1all Call n........1-r ov•r '""yea-of Newn.'rt Desl0 ner aofa. rha1ri.. , • typtn1 sJulla are req'd v IL' 0 E y Jobi ( ~ r yraexper. . 7S4·15SS ............ " ..,., .. D -.... .. a.apm. ror tlua pc»ltlon xrnt P'. r. • 09" • 1,._,._, ext 168 or age to work al private tables It olh~r misc,
wonun1 COAds It benefit Swi\chboard Oprs. will Wlll con.11st or calling appt. E.O E 1WO POSITIONS OPEN. country club, Newport WATER CO needs man 48N074
-T"'CO a~ It bl I l d T' Llf • 8 oil forpeoplelnoeedoC s up-Beach . Excellent •--------"" • ~ P g w cb .n c u ca train. APDtY 250 IC. 17'tll • m 8 • "' 0 P\ill·Time lite: work, S2 ~ plemental income. lhru benefits Call S44·S404 for wlexp. No ocher need ap. Must aeU watc:r bed, ex-1721DSupenor Ave vanous 11'0@ lll.Surance St., CM,-Ste 1, (Ul)9taln> customers & potential per hr. 8·4:30. Apply, part Ume work. Call for ply. Call 8 ·.5 wkdys pen111ve couch. many
Colt.a Mesa, CA benefits & profit sharing. 64$-8197 cuatomen ln callf. & 1821 E. Dyer Rd, SA A.ak appt e4·.5l68 appl. M.'>1060, ~ other item.a. Good bu,ys.
Equal()ppEmpl)'rM/F Apply In person. 8-5pm Arbooa forJ\Xfy. ' Waiters. waitresses & 8 4 .5 · 2 S 2 9
--------•Mon-Ftl 170'2 OUiette THCMr/CHllllfw SOUND TYPIST-cards. 1mmed captains
., .. , .. 0 p 1 b Ave, Irvine. &amener empl.oyment. ' opening, Uti 19e . Co. Needlnrl persona ex. Mire••••• Frigidaire ref rig, lop (rzr. ~ erson n g ls, wlla . Or1anlied pro· GOOD? TOOL benefits. Sal + bonus. perlenced 1n roo d ••••••••••••••••••••••• wahrlgas dryr, din rm Jdnt pey 6 benefiu. gram, t.rwp It find host Apply. Pennysaver, leGO aervlce. People oriented. ......... 1005 set. etr ~·2758
SST-4700extJHI ~ry ramiUes for Japanese CALL Placentia Ave, Costa iooct. benefits. Call for ••••••••••••••••••••••• uu new dmelle set 11so.
SALIS EDUCATIONAL ~~':'s!:~ugm:xro 833-8095 MAKERS Mesa. ~~-C::~c1~1 ea A b~~?u~~lque =,;::~~ *100• Artifact.a •collectibles, DEP•RTMl:.UT Jnteratudy, 1339 No TI~Fl 1'YPl.st. rut. accurate ror --------
fl'&Ame, mature woman ~ 501"'111 Columbua. Glendale Llif•tea. IK. FOlt EY&.11' design fU"lD lo Cd?d. Xlnt WAJTllSSES ~.e:d d~kckwl!~1~~~ Oak dinlo1 set, o~k &
nter. design exper lnterestma position aa 81202 "'Aual()pp£mpi...rm/f APPUCATIOMS benefita fr working con· for relltt::ft home in cbaln.CallShlrley Mon-aJa.acolfee&endlablei.. helpful. Eaeer Eye, secretary lo director ol MOt •1 d's. 644-1000 Ke o bitt Call xlnt 642 1955
Balboa laland 673-4734 educat100. Variety of TELEPHONE bcellwt Salory S48.8si~~~o: Galt day thru Friday at · · · forappt. dutles. Req'a eood typing SOlJCITORS Ir~ Pd..___ Uttle Miaa Muffetsaton a 831·2810 ---=-.:...------1 skills eo+ wpm. O<>Od Proa only. Sell Daily .... , --• Tutret, along came a w a 1tre91 wanted . --------
--------' benefits &: working con-Pilot rrom your home Telephone app'l sec'y. Callfonnappomtment spider and read in the Original Piua, $3 hr + IM yr old round oak tbl <4 Gwep Sole 1055
SALES ds. Apply National Earn $160-$200. wkly Pleasantwork,shorthrs. (7l4)1!jl:J3&l Dally Pilot Classified Ups. Apply in person. leaves > ssoo . /\m ••••••••••••••••••••••&~ ASSIST AMT Systems Corp, '381 Birch Part or l"ull time. Must top pay. Set app'ta. No .,...,.. section about Mias Mur. 2121 Balboa Blvd. N.B sideboard $300. 549.0542 3 whl blke, cost S269, pnce • MAMA&RS St, N . e. <Near oc be over 21 Call 835-8453 aelllng. Talk totopexeca. fet's Tuffet and boughtit betwnJ.~pm. ~;au range costS299:· Jl'aahk>n background in Airport> Equal Op· 1·3PMonly pro(eu pro1pects only. for SB.95. You can sell CHEAP!!! price $85; refria cosl.
European clothing It portWtity Employer Hrs. 9am-12Doon. Mon-WOULDN'lYOU your tuffet and lots o WAITRESSES all shills ENGLISH MANOR MOii. price $80; tollet coet
sportawear necess . Have aomethJ.ng YoU want Thurs. Exper woman on· ratberbeaaWng-t oLber thlnas through Appty, Slavro's, S930 W ANTIQUES SM. price 1.15. lat2 So. Opeoini Immediately in to aell? Clutified ada do ty apply. Call Mr. LoUll. Seeclas.silicaUoo SIOllO Dally Pilot Cl111s1fled Co• 1 t Hwy, N. B ll2:S A. Victoria C.M. Everglade, S.A. 751""22 -•
ourmen'astore. Secretary to the ad· itwdJ.942·5171. M'7·1721,aftnoon. ltcanbea,.a.Uty! Adl.C.UM2·5678 betw~n2-5pm . 942.4703 Last Day Chance Mov
THIL()()t( miniltrator 01 a major HelpW9'" 7100 HefpW•tH 7100 HelpWmhd 7100 HetpW..tect 7100 HelpW9hd 7100,1-------•l tne. eveeything in tht!
Call lOam-tpm Mon-Sat •'?lthcomplex. 0Mu1st de~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Anllque Music Boxes! House goes. Better thah 644-6500 wt tenanu. rat en«.. Slot Machines! Swap Meet. Boat, trlr.
tact requl red. Good q,, ~ J, , , "~ ~~-Hd' ~-~~l~ll{'f;,;;:;, · · • Clocks! mini-enduro bike, fisbut~ --------1 salary & benefits. To ar· • , , · ,• ~;• , ~~ } , , HUGE SELECTION eqwp., clothe~. lots of
Sales1al·P IT , for range inte rview call ., c, •. , ' • ~ ._ri.:. miac.Junk.2913Jaca~~'l'.
women's apeclalt) abop. 644-1900. Wt1...tioMI da. Metia Verde. ~52211 Wiii train. 631·8936 or All day Wed.
7»9951 Secw1ty Guard Man or What'-• ••about •a··· Open Wed. thru Sat -wo man to aerve .. s sn~.. ·~ .,,. 1802Kitterlo1. Irv. Jewelry SALES·J R. Women's security guard at COO· ..... ~4 (714)754-1777 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1070.
Fuhlons. Exper. prerd. struclloo site. No ex· ;'IJ Sal.,. ~~~.~ W .& ......,.ED
AdvanCflDent poaslble. perience or wtlform re· ·~ 'II• e,I~.' An 1 Apply In penon. The quired. S3.00 pr br. JONATHAN'S TOP CASH DOLLAR ~Glance. 2122 w. 831·3861 Ask some #Jo .-I-th .&llo..ITl'-'UES PAID FOR YOU R· Oceanfroat,NB. OIJe ~ lll~s erf!A Anl ,.. JEWELRY, WATCHES. """4 G. 8tt1 lifts al affordable ART OBJECTS. GOLD. Saleslady, experienced I C SILVER SERVIC t:. rorjeweJ~~=· •SECURITY* ~w~::.·422~UlSl~M~L ·h'~u~~~:~" AN .
SALES -Ma ture
salespenon ror full & pit
po1IUooa. Xlnt working
conda. LA.-Ps R us.
phone M2·Z1'19.
SA&ISMAN
MEB>m
Ne• amazing home
burglar alarm, top com·
mlasloos. Tralnl.og avaU.
For lnforma Uon "all. Be Olad You Did. Bill
Brown. 71'~11
•AGENTS*
*AIRLINE•
NY•Anhlhrnt.d
111"9Folow ..
•Providing security and
service to the airline
traveler
• Me«ioa and 1reeHng
hundreds or Important
~eevery day • r-uu Ume opporturulies --------1 •The beat wages and beoefita in the security SAL~
NEED
MONEY?
CALLUS!
We need enercetlc,
utkulate people we can
train to lotroduce Time-
Life Books to customers In many a.reu. sssss
116MotilEY
.... kW Desks "°"' Dht u... Ho.rtyWage ·-" Ca-tks&o. ....,,,....
llVINI OfRCE
Work Part ot P' /Ume
833-8095
TIMM.JN
Lilllr'M ... e.c
F.qual OpiJor Employer
industry
•t;'ree Parking
•Uni.forms furniahed
AllCIYMPOSMtl!
•ACheerfw. pleuanlat· tilude
•A courteoua. wlllinf
and aiJlcere personality
Aftd Yow Have:
•ACar
•A telephone
Theft Cal Or Apply bt
Peno11M:
BURNS
b ..............
Sea.tty s.n1c .... e.c.
1775 E Center Street
Anaheim 635-4630 F.qual Opportunity
Employer M /F
Sec'y jlkkpr
t'11£S PEOPLE Tax experience, full .JN. lime. lmmed. opening. wQ\ed for retail lamps Weber Nameplate, Santa
l10n. Xlnt worlllng con Ana • .SS6 ·6222 dya.
cb. Part or fu.11 lime 548-U!Sl e ve..
... exper. helpful, but --------
DO( nee. Sl.75·S3.2S tc Sec'y/Receptionist
at.art. SU.mi lrvme adverwln1 aaen· -------~ cy. shorthand 80, typing SALES 65, good phone voice.
P/Ume lncludlng wknds. Prefer aharp, young in-
Mature, resp. woman divldual looklna for
w/jewelry sales exper. arowtb potential. Call
pn!f'd. N.8 .673-4734. ~.~ 3PM-S; UPM.
Salesperson, part time.--------
Telephone • counter. SECY/RECEPT Experience preferred. For one 1irl R.E. Conatr
Apply Pennyaaver, 1680 Ofc In Newport Bearb. Placenua,CM . Ute typtn1. abortband.
booltkeepln« • neat ap-Sa lea person to assist pearance nqul red.
ownr at alarm co. ln de· '114-752-1082
veloplng O.C. alarm --.-------ula. Audio Alarrna. Uc Service ataUon attendant
10120, 714/841·3180 full or p/l. Mech exp. AP· ply 8AM·2PM, Cttevron
SU.people, oxper only. 1 StaUoo. 3000 Fair view,
peracn for sportawear & C.M.
l penoo w/exper In eaJes --------ol wtUW&a. Mature. Pt· Service Statloo Allen·
time 6 full time. Eves dant, ex~r'd. Day & mty · ..,,._ Eves. FuU I& p/Ume. Ap-
• ply, Shell SUt.lon, 17th &c ~STOii lrvine,NB.
Exper-in birda It flab.Se --rv-i-ce-S-ta-. _A_t_te_n-da-n-t,
F/Ume.8»-0311. .xper'd. Full or p/Ume.
SAU:S Apply, Arco SUUoa, 17th
Resp. penoo wanted for 4' Irvine. CM
saJM In one ol 01'8J\le Sttv Sta Help needed lm-
Co'• tarsest liabtln1 fix-m e d . Mu 1 t be 11 .
tu.re abownloma. Must be Day /night 1hll'l1 avail.
able to wortt &ta. Some Jl\JU or pit, Apply MO E.
deoontlnl wk,-round Cst Hwy NB .,...,.d , but will accept __ _..... ____ _
c r •a tl v • a b I It t y . Service Sta. Attendants WoodllCbtina. 546-2801. (4) P/tlme now to ruu
· lime in Summer. Wiii SALllWOMAM train. App1y, 2590 IJaill't• abop. «>Hr wk. Newport 81, CM
OtT «>. c.ri for a,ppt. -.un. s.rv. SU. Altencl F/Ume. Exper'd, Ute mech'I s.m.tr.MI wanted. tit-knowledge. Apply 2NO
per, must bave OWJ\ Newport Bl. c. M. mHbJnea. able to HW ..,__. __
decoratlvt tUtcb _ lnduatrtal, no H ·
tl).ml per req 'd . Hot air
ballOoftl. Ma-IMI
=-=-· Kin a yn aaldertQ1 ~
wlrtn1 Hper. req'd. lome dltU prtM, m.cb'l -..mblJ ex.pc1r. halpf\al. Cole lutruinent Corp,
-.aIOO. £.O.I: 1,..;...;:-,
I'
If 'yOU re an eng1(Jeer. techmoan or designer. and have ever considered !BM as c! VISA 67"600'---1-------~·
I 1n!. bab", l-ecJ •1 1JI 11,. .... CMG.. 10 I 0 Diamond Cocktail ring, 19 pofen/1a ernfJ'Oyef. you pro 'Y have as,,.,, yoursel1 Some quest10nS v vr 18( ••••••••••••••••••••••• diamoncss. total 6K, also
about Chal/ennmg nm1ectS ... work environment . jOb secunty .. benefits Qlt1!Ylr. FRGHT DAMAGED Traditional wedding set ::J' f'J' "'J ,_,,_,v, HOTPOrNT SALE. 3308 67~1712
tunftles for advancement? ?'· Warner nr Harbor.•-.... -.-c-h_ht_•,,-,---,-0-7-I
One of the best ways to get those ansvvers would be to ask a f(Jend Santa Ana. m-2921
••••••••••••••••••••••• GE Air condiUooer (Win· [Lathe, B new 19x'4 ' who IMYks wrth IBM But. 1{ you don't have such a contact. heres a chance to dowmounled>. $185. $3,SOO. Milling 8 new
do something about 11 SG·l.830. :S1.~" suoo. <213 1
Anaheim exploratory interviews
IBM is oonductmg speCJal 1nterV1evvs for engmeers. £echmCJans and deSJgners on
Friday and Saturday, May 12 and T 3. IBM personnel w!ll be on hand to conduct
exploratory mtervrt!NS. so make plans to anend and get the information you need
to make an informed deaSJon about your career
The following positions are available now
Chemical Engineer I Environmental Planning
V\i? need an expert m mdustnal waste-water treatment. competent to set up waste-
water laboratones. and to audit laboratory and mdustnal waste-water plant opera(lons
'tbu woukf cpnsult on mternal chemical enwonmental procedures and mterface with
governmental agencies. Background should mclude a chemical eng1neermg degree.
()I equNalent experience m the water treatment field. with further enwonmental
eng1neenng exper1811C8
Electrical Engineer
Expenence reqUtred m analog and I or d1g1tal dBSJgn of complex test systems V\br,l;
1rrvoN9s des19nmg. b.Jtldmg. debugging. documentation dnd suPfX){f. Should have
knowledge of statisllcs. magnet!C recordmg and micro processors
Mechanical Engineer
Fbs111on involves ~k tn support of vanous product and process Imes tn ft!e. d1Sk and
magnet!C head techno/ogleS ResponSJfJ1/1ttes also 1f'MJ/ve the deslgmng. b.11/dmg and
deb.Jgg1ng of mechan!CEJ/ tools and test eqwpment as "Nell as prx:ess capabtltty studies
{Ytx:8ss opl!mtZatK>n anBfyses and com{)OnfY1t evaluat10ns
Test Equipment Specialists
These posmons reqwre a mm1mum of two years· recent expenence m mmnra1mng speoal-
IZOCi test fX:/U!pm817t such 8S computtr-controlled testers Must have sold background m
electromcs. lo[}lc and basic {YO{}'ammmg. Fbstt!OnS are also ava!lable for fatx1Caoon and
tn1tl8I test of r1EM'fy d8sJgnr:KJ testers. Candidates need extensNe knowledge of electronics.
bg!C and fatncatJOn technques
Thin Rim Process Technician
This position as a laboratory technte1an requ1r9S an AA degf88 m el6ctrom8chsntcsl and/or
matenals saence curriculums or equrvBlent experience. Add1t10nsl background m vecuum
tschnolorJ't IS deStrab/e.
Tool and Mechanism Designers
)bJ Wiii deSlgn complex puductm tools and mechomsms for soph1St!C8l«i manufactunng
fYOC8SS8S )b.J wtH also pepare fai,-Outs. deslf}f1 chang8s and suppomng docurrmtBt/()f)
Thts position requif8S a mm1mum of fNe )o196tS' desJgf'l exp97811C8 wtth emphasis on
mechanlSm and electror11cs manufactoong Knowledge of el8ctromechan1C1JI. hydraullC and
{Y'l8Uf'f18t/C O{)fr8ted ~IS hJgh!y d8slrsb/9.
&t:ellent benefits
IBM ptt:llldes llberal. comf)8ntp8d benefits tneludtng ho/days. vacat10n. fife 117SUf8nce.
IUlflOfl t8lund. /9tJf8fn8f7t. medJCBI and dental plans
Call collect or write
If yQJ IJl'e 1nterssted m explonng th8S8 opportunmes snd feel you are qualll!ed. please CBI!
rollect (408) 256-19 78 If you are unable to meet With us. send your rssume m
confidence to IBM COff)Or8t1on. General Products DMS1on-Roc:tu1ttng. Dept 20.CA49
56CO Cottle Road. Ssn Jose, CA 95193 ----.... -------.. --------------------~-==-= -::. An EQull Opponunny Empiov.t
----
l
Good Lady Kenmore -------waaher & gas dryer, Radial dnll, 4' German
SJ.25 64S-4829 1960, $3000. Lathe geared
hd, 22x48", Hvy dty Whirlpool waaher or gas German $3000. <213 I
dryer sa:i. K"'more gaa 961-3434
dryer $75 . G.E . elec•-.. --.. ------dryer $35. Guaranteed &1Mtlal-1901• 1080-
debvered. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Uaed Waate King Dls·
hwasher. works good.
Yellow. SSO/bst ofr.
m.8290
Top loading Lady Ken-
more dlahwaaber, cop-
per, almost new. 546-6088
Refr1«. white. GE. bottom
freezer. runs well. $100 .
644·71&1
Hotpolnl eye level dbl
oven range Excel cood.
~M.7PM
C~HPAJD
Wahr I Dry rs I Refrl g
wortuog or not 95741133
lkyctes 1020 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ll(IS • MOPIDS
New " used, b\G'. sell, trade. Cycle & Co. 2'88
Newport Blvd. C.M.
642-7910
DoCJS 1040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Golden Retr1oer pup-
pwa. AKC Fteld & ebow
pet. Sholl, wormed,
raised w /TLC. Xlnt d.Jsp .
(213) 425-1S61.
DOG TRAlNING
Pvt clasaes & boarding
John Martin 548-0059
WANTED
TOP CASH DOLLAR
PAID FO R YO UR
JEWELRY. WATCHES.
ART OBJECTS. GOLD.
SILVER SERVICE.
FINE FURN. & AN
TIQU~. MS-2200
WGGAGETAGS
from your business card.
Send one card for each
tag plm one spare. We
return permanen tly
sea.led attractive tag &
strap, meeting a irline
l.D. req111rements Pre·
vent 1ou It theft ! For a
peracoaliled la& enclose
wallpaper, fabric or
"Day Glo" paper & we
wlll bark & trim your
tap. Or try two cards
back to bark.
PRICES.
Sleaor3/~
4/Stap Sl.60ea.
6/9taga 11.soea.
lOor more Sl.40ea . Sales Tax Included
NO CARD!
Draw your own or send
name. address, phone " we'll make ooe rard per
tag. Add~ each.
Send check or money or·
derto:
PILOT PRIMTIHCi
Ena. Bull Dog. Male. P.O. Box 1560
Brindle roarllinga, 2 yrs. _Coe_ta_M_es_a_._Ca_._Ql26_'_
PlO. mornlngs.644-1.993 Designers Leftovers Liv.
Yorkshire Terrier. male.
4 mo's old. Lovable
w/pedlgree . $160 .
75-9467 eves.
nn .Brklmt S4001orr Sofa
tble l&S. Lg Anl chair
S300. Bdrm furn SSO-S400.
Antiques 120 LIP Hdbrd & 11pread Sl25. Sleeper sofa
Lhasa Apso, female. 3 mo. $125. Sat • sun ~5 332
gold w/White markings. Evenina Canyon Rd. $.'IOO. Ph 631-2394 ,_Cd_M ______ _
Go&den Lab Retriever, 16
mm ofd, well-behaved.
excel. w /children .
Mll-0067 dya. 770·8070
ewa.
HEYER
DUPUCATOR
Sl.50. Model 70 complete·
ly rebuilt, med 1 time.
MOTH E R S D A Y Jncludea chemical " PRESENT paper. Call 1-737-1449
'MNV TOY Poodle PQP· • pies, mal• f7S, remales University Athletic Club
SUK>. alto older dop 125. Memberablp ror sale.
AKC --1" aave SlOO. Mr. Giimore. ,v,_,, • ~7-1151 dya; 832·0989
Old Ena. abeeepdoa eva.
wanted. •---~--~~ ~*' MUST SELL!
Yorkte pUlll, tln)'. AKC. Slnalo mattreas, boxspr-
A.laocbampalredShihtzv lnp • rtame ONLY $.W.
sqia. Reuon.8'2·0'171. 8*8$79evee. ,,_to Y• 1045 Newport Beach Tennis
••••••••••••••••••••••• Club family mem ·
Female Siamese cat, t berahitJ:> + lranarer ~· Cllll 661-1087 aft. 6 ~:·:lu>da d~ 553-4136
Lovable z yr apayed dog 8' bilb metal at.airway.
Ute Min. Sbeep doa. dbl wall pa heater. Both
f19.lm. ~ az. d&)'I. a1nt. 8-t olter f7M336
Old ba, m..., doc to llN1 lnventoo' nckl. 7
pxt bJM onb' ' MC.tlalll, uva abelv ... '51·D ltOO or b•t otr. 10x20 Canopy sao or bat.
Lovable .auaw cml• dot. -...n.
med. W., can't keep. •·1-Unl-V«ltl--y-Ath-leti_c_C_lu-b
~ •AIO ~P.,!!O· ...... --·--························--------••I IUY•• 1:&::~~16 moa'
Good uaed Jl'umttare 6 G7-e.3 ~pUancet-OR I wlll •---..... --1VT----
..Uor 8£LLtor You. 21'cbta~ht4pm. MASTm•uenOM '4M616 I IJM'21 ~ =~ ipm ezt. Ito
C,J2 OAJ V PllOT
Mliaul••-IM IMh. Power t040 ~~•/ 91 so
••••••••••••••••••••••• ........................ Sc ••••••••••••• ••••••••••
I.tool labl t' qu&tilt' okJ Ba1 boal I.I' 1nboard. 800 '13 Y•m.iha 11JO MX Nt•w t 1h1onf'd mudt• with bft. Co•~. r.tras. S2500 nm. llr~•. ovcrhaultotl
11rlbuc piano lt>p al• MZ ~ ~nlol i.1d cond 768 4 1 ll!
l.¥1&tb•r P<>Ckcll SI~ • . 0 b eves ulue u<'nfln $4U 13 Whale r. 5 P ----Debve~ frtt 83118102 Ev1nrudt-, lmmac cond Moliw ..._._ Sdtt/
- -+ lrlr " cover 124~ Rellt/StoHge f 160
Food pl"Ol'1!5SOJ' " bread ~1 ••••• •••••••• ••••••. ••. maker Vala Mix 3tlOO Nr 1977 ..... R l a l!J77 Execultvt! new S165 640-93:!4 50% uiteresl m a -co ------~ Searay ln slip al Dana Motorhornl' or Mtnim
()yna Gym exercuier. Pt 49Ul629 mowrhomc'lrom llerb $275 · Fr1l'dJandtr <.;all 1tny of
640-9356 36' Drake Crall Catalllla. these numbers
--------• fly bridge sedan. 14 ' 89a.6777
2 '1'ut .. l1ckets, ~by beam. Walk a round 777 2.Sth. Spm. $20.00each. decks. Bendix auto pilot 537·7
96:WW6. Trimatic lnm tabs. + 828-8811
-I
...... W.-hd 9590 A.uto1. IMporffd A.uto1, haported Aldo1. l"'porW 1A.uto1, UMd ~~·.~~••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WIWIUIUY MM~lea 9740 Meradlt.._ 9740 Toyota '76S AMC 9905 Ford tt40 YC>UID~TSUtrt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
PAJOf'OROKN01' '14 Hornet Sp<>rlaboul .PHIL
TOP DOLLAR LEASE FOR ONLY S 17704 ~-,., ~'xt eo::J!:t.at~ r~~~· ~~ PS7.,!!8, Mir SUDS LONG FORTOPCAIS ~--~1,_,G-8882. S47 1871. rn_,.. v•" FORD
1975 Mil JIO SIOAM .....,. ..,, Greet Bu1 ! 1970 Am BARWIC K DA TSUN
if, I 1 1! I ,1,, I I
831·137S 493-J 37S
,WE BUY
CLEAHCAIS
lrTRUCICS
W1lh stereo. cruise control. pwr busador 1500 Nu windows. air cond. & low mi•es. ·16 ST,\TlON WAGON l1res1brakeat tunc up y CORONA 25M PG+. 645-UIM U 14 548 ). Cap cosl·Sll.39$.00 . auto. air. luggage rack. --------
residual-$6152.92: 48 month open stereo, new tires .
end lease w1th equal monthly redtblk, lo mi. 54200.
payments of $177.04 plus tax. Cap 499-447l ••••••••••••••••••••••• l ••• , ..... , •• , ... ~··-···
reducllon-$1000.00 : pay only v•...,... 9770 e ., .. _ .... c-,_
$1440.66 lo take delivery O.A.C. •••••••••••••••••••••••
T 0th OLKSWAGE..._. '72 Ranchero GT, magi & otal of payments-$9007.68. er " shell, Very good cond.
models to choose from. s•1......S..ice • 541'411.89
991 5
Go __ Fl_y_a_Ki-.t-e_K_J_T_ES_A_R_E 1 many ol her ex tras .
S2UOO full price. 673-5099 UP 116 23rd St Newport forfwther details. Pier
'76-
VOGUE-32'
CONNlll
CHEVROLET
2828Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
S.A6-IJOO
'7l LTD Country Sq
Wagon, 9 paas. Air, disc
brtcs. P IS, rack. Gd cond.
$1199/bs t ofr. 642·7574,
675·25!!0
..
---lB' lobster swordfish skiff.
'77 J ohnson Extras .
$4500. After 6 PM. IOll 545-3734
COior 1V for Sale Good
coodition 19" console $SO.
547-3182
•Luxury co1tch.S300 ml.
•$27 ,950 or long lPrm rent
•appl. only 751-5665
SEA UV IOAJS ':.~~ .. ~p. y <'72CC) SB.ECT AUTO SALES
11 ..... ~WUl&o-Homeoheled vans. will 'TT 320 BMW. auto,
'72 Mazda 4·spd. 2·dr,
reblt. sunrool. FM, rum
xJnt.. Sl!95. 545-1276
9740 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1976 4SOSL, xlnl cond.
$18,700.
644-81111> or 95$-0740
'78 llBZ IOOD. Extra fuel
tank. U ,000 ml. Mint
114,000. pp 493-2575
'701BZ280C Btnk or Newport
Call 645-3330
complete HI••
•nd Hrvlce
SUBARU
BRAT
s9900Dwlnn
Of!~~
LAIGI
Slt.ICTIOM ,_. ...
DllHryll
t 7555 Beech Btvd.
Huntington Beech
842-0675 s. ca at the N~rt tn Call all 4PM. 640-0339 f:! top dollar ror nice AM/FM stereo cassette. _..._ w m1'le used vans. sunroor.rnacwbls.Good UD•-·-·-"-n • .,... o. -•* ....... moe .. __. Pucb, 1325. Uke· llllU-~--· ,, 9761
'61 VW, good cond.
$700or bestofr.
96()..2653
.... UMcl •••••••••••••••••••••••
Gu 1 .. 9901 .............. -........ .
?l&CAMIMO
CONQUISTA. Aulo ..
pwr. steering, air,
All/Fii s t ereo tape, Ser.am.
$19'9
•
OVER 100
CADILLACS
TO CHOOSI FIOM
AT AU.TIMES
•73 Gran 1'or1no Sport,
loaded! 43.000 m1. must
sell ltus wknd ! Low
whlse book $1500.
!)40 1088
'76 Ji•orct Elite. Jmmal'.
loeded, like nu, 20.000 m1.
Mich Ltres, <'uslOm blue
wlwbt int. PP. 646-7782.
evs979-T189
• • Must sell this week. '76
• • Monarch. V·B. 4·dr.
• • loaded. Xlnl cond
• • Sacnf1 ce $3.950. P.P
• • 882-6352.
ROGER MILLER SA VS. Mitstmig-------,-,-5-2
"Low PricH!"
LEASING
494-1131 54 .. H67
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'68 Muslang Convert . VB.
auto. an. needs repair.
$1250 or best orrer
831-2926 or 49'l-6l21
'68 nu paint, wide tires.
\.. many xtras, $1500. P.P .
·' Dave,642-1488.544·7101
Gro"' Ct..n~~t
1821 1 ~och l l•d.
H~nh"'1"" l~och
84 7 -6087 S'49·3ll I
•CHIV. •77
MOMTICARLO
Slaff car. With auto . trans. Ir loaded l (3399).
Mow o.ly $49'1
MOWAID ce.woe.t
DOVE.tiQUAJLSl'S.
(Near MacArthur.
Jamboree & Bristol)
NEWPORT BEACH
lll-0555
'6S Mustang convert. red.
nu lop, low mi aft 7 PM
751-6666
?l 1HUMDBlllRD
Automatic, pwr. steenng
.ti brakes, new tires.
AM /FM stereo & only
63,000 miles! Pri. ply.
Call 892· 1832 before 6
p.m.
• '67 T·BIRD, Classic cond, loaded, lo mi's .
11475. P.P. 754-0460
V191 9974 •••••••••••••••••••••••
75 VEGA COUPE 77 CHIV 1/J TOH Cllii tiler 9925 3 speed tram. & only PICKUP. vs. 4 wheel ••••••••••••••••••••••• 29.000 actual miles! dri ~e. All/FM. P IS . 1975 Cordoba Eitcep· <DMNG). A real •teal P/8, 4.spd .. custom Uooallycln,S:U95.Days, al
wheels • tires. lSer. Q56..&450Pvtply. ---• OMLYSl61S
162850). c M I ... 9'30 "~'' ...................... .
G rottl Ch~ .. r~t:t
11;11 l.ra<~lhd
~ ... 1inq1<w> hoc•
um Mark IV Continental
fully loaded. Uke pew,
taerlfice 111100. ~7800
wtd.ys 53Ul57 wk.Deb
'7' VIGA WAGON
4 speed trans. '6 llkc
NEWt (909NZB>. Wqo't
lutat av=-~127·30. ~many extru. Call T72·ial0 cood.830-1929. 11790. • .................... ..
SON'S 844-5ll8/640-1752. '77 BllW 5301. 4 spd, SSZ.08Mall5 ..OUYOU -'Tl Mark V, cream color, SIAIAY IOATS '13 Chevy van, v.a. auto, meWUctopazclr, 41pkr Tl MBZ. 3000, met bm, SIU. youa 77CHIVMOYA to.cled, 20 .. 000 mi's, xlnt
847 6087 549.3331
n oiCoutH•" NB Mopeda New On.lY ~.; csllDlnterior. Bestolfer. AM /FM stereo, 12,000 tobacco tnt .. aunrr. TOYOT.a., N:IA •• PIS. P/B. radio, cond. Sll.500. P.P.
t3t25C7'' · ~~tell 2 ......,. 846-2553 ·~mac. $12.750. Pb AM/FM cUI .. lull pwr. ,.. beater, vin11 top. <Lie . ....,...Wkcblt-5 l~=======-
~~~~~~~~f---------1 '13 Fotd van w1CUSTOM Tueoverlse.Cl.11-4560 SEE USI mBXT>Sntt 'Cw uwthl ttl2 M•A~! ~fter;~tf;
._ ~--2$' UU new tU:1:'f'dft/ -so camper Int., lo ml'•. x.tnt c..,t 971 S '71 MBZ 280SL. 2 tops, MMO .. $ TOYOTA •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• Urei .. too SGl-8618 '" uv,.... • • Su twas 71 cond. DIVORCED /· ....................... brown tan mt., '14,500. MISSIONVl&IO '7800RVETTE _.;._,_ .. ,;___. ____ _
canvu, VHP', cnmt sell ........................ MUST S£LLI Work. '72 Qiprl 2000, 41p, snrf, Dr. Miller.639-4901 -7JJOIDC.....,. •SPDS'MCK Vega Waaon, '73, new
=Pb: 5S85IM or is Yamaha 400 Enduro. 631·2272. Home, 631 &ff17. newttres, Sl.595. IJl·~O 4tl-IJIO 21,0i!O ml.. 4 spd., radio, llldrP-.c•. lira, aood tran.sporta·
Like new S700 or orr. P.P. 137-6417. 1974 Silver UOSLC · '11 CBJCA GT be.ter. (Lic.JC18Sll>. PP. cn•)M0-75'9 Ken lion. $1100. 754--0986
lt' Glaupar flsbln& ~ '73 n...e~e ~·-"n Van ~~ 9720 Loaded. Xlnt cond. 5 l~d AM /FM tape $219' • • • ••• St6MO J """V • ,,_ l J l8 pl tank 185 ~ ..,,..,. ........ -Sl8 000 673-2700 · • • • asmo t.oo down lnelud '74 Vet. 4 spd, 350, full -n Veta pane • _, .., • ~~ere. lo bo:u. Yamaha 500SC Dirt Blko: Good cond1tlon Extras ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ' · ~.!,,:,,!Int cond. $41150 lu • 11 cenu Dtf. pwr, white w/aaddle ln· turbo tram, looks stock.
v:..C.Lrtr oulOpllbal· mwena, daya, 63l·OOl8, $3000.642·23401\8 tm Dataun 510, auto, 4 67 250 S. Muat. see. Air, ....; __ ,..,.,."'--------.... 84. A.P.R $11.0 ter.l2,000ml'1.940-2118 S:UOOlbnt.•BS
•-''00' _. __ ...._ xt.ru eves.~3lukfor8ob ._......_._ ._. 9510 dr delu••tnt All/Fii auto,AM/Fll."50Q.Call u.1 ........ d --·bl ·-a-vederedlt. _,,, ~ _._., . _ ... _, ur I CC1C>cS 'on ' 7 .. 5105 ~ uu• •.-.·-0 e -rrv CJ I 9tl3 MUST SELL! '74 Vep, _.
IDOO/otr. '714/-..ea2aft "11Yamaha250 IT, mono ........... •••••••••••• .. ~ 0
87t .. 387.;. aowor. •Coroll
101
a1, ~.11•• tse8 ............. •••••••••• .JPCI, cltan, nma areal
epm. 1bock, 100 m1'1, brand ......... fft_., --· .... bO.. •••SE,snd,a.lr, .-.-'l'f Coe11ar:. Vlful top, taJOO.m-751'0 Groth C hrvr olr"I
IJ I 1. ... I'•' JJ'.,, ----=,~ OIW.GMllO ~-...... =·.:-s~ AMI~~-'TO CORONA Mark II. Deida· boclJ work. -ab J'OU •boppln1 4Gbi Mere~ OIJ 'Tr Holda CR 1ZS Never ecswtndO a.ntc:.DlNd.cln'lDOM llnloond. .. .aa ~=--=trw.PfP. ~~u snt•l. •· _...b,allUt.haDaily
\.rlr, met. 14t•T2•• nced.C1Mnl96.orbeat CAU ... Mo.7119 DAll.YPU.OT T\U'D-2*. -••-PlatClmUWA.dl. 'JM.TIO on.-•NT
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•
B1•ntington Beach
Fountain Valley
EDITION
* I VOL. 71, NO. 129, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGe COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY'9, 1978
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
!Ex-premier Moro~s Body -Found:·
I ~~~~--=~~~~~~~ ,_o;.....o.._ ......... ~------...... --~--_;...;;--;;;;;;~~;._.;;.......... h
r Huntington Plant Victim l:
' Edison Gears Shot in ·J;
r
r For Walkout
..
I
l
!
J
l
'
71
' J
By ROBERT BARKER Of .. o.lly ~ ... Staff
Edison Company officials
were gearing up today for a
strike that may occur at mid·
njght tonight after union mem·
be rs at the power plants over·
whelmingly rejected the com·
pany's "last" offer Tuesday.
Members of the Utility
Workers Union oC America,
Local 246, have authorized a
s trike at midnight at Huntington
Beach and San Onofre electrici·
ty generating plants and at other
I ~ C OM!,,.... ..... ,.. r -· ... ro., ..
Orange Coast College coed
Regina Woods. 21. has been
('rowned Miss Fountain
t Valley. The Los Amigos
t High School graduate was
chos<'n from field of 13 con-
testants in a nnual Fountain
\'alley Chamber of Com·
mercc pageant.
~ HB Council
I Se"lects 1
' As Planners
Seven Huntington Beach plan·
nang commiS&ioners were ten·
tatively selected Monday night
by the City Council. ·
Appointments to the new com-
mission include two holdovers
Crom the previous planning com·
mission Chairman Ruth
Finley and Ron Russell. Others
who got the tentative council nod
were Frank Higgins. Robert
Baier. R a lph Van Buskirk.
Margaret Carlberg and Stanley
Cohen.
'J'he appointments will not be
.made final until next Tuesday
because of a requirement that
U}e posts must be advertised 10 l working days after vacancies
' qccur.
, The commission was to be of·
.ftcially dissolved May 3. When
council members took the action j April 17. some said that not all
1 previous commissioners
• represented a cross-section of I the community.
Controversy later broke out
when three former planning
~ commissioners -Prim Shea,
Susie Newman and Frank Hoff-
man boycotted meetings
scheduled before the new com-
mission could take office.
About 50 people applied for the
planning commlsaioo posts. A
final field of 11 candldatea wu
interviewed by council members
Mooday night.
City Attorney Gall Hutton said
that appllcations for the post
still must be considered untll lhe
appointments are made perma·
nent.
She said that il Is conceivable
that some or th~ tentative ap·
pointmenta could be bumped if
the council chooses.
Mayor Ron Shenkman seld lo·
day that the new commission Is
I well balUH:ed aod that altr.~nl· i m nta wert teu pollUcal ln
rttenty~
• Ke aaid tbat while applicaUona
sllll muat be accepted, tl i1
btably unli.ltely that any of .. on.
.Y. l!,!iht'• appointments would
be removed .• -
.,
Edison locations in Southern
California.
Union officials were unavaila·
ble for comment on whether or
not the strike has been called at
the Edison locations.
Jim Bull. a spokesman for
Edison, said that negotiations
with a federal mediator are
scheduled at Edison head·
quarters in Rosemead today.
·'The contract ends tonight
and a strike has been authorized
al midnight if the union chooses
lo do so," he said.
"We won't know any more de·
tails until later in the day," he
said.
Another Edison spokesman,
Bob Hull. said that the company
has made plans for a walkout
and will use supervisory person·
net in place or union members if
there is a strike.
He said today that the plants
will continue to produce elec-
tricity at normal capacity.
He also said that temporary
and permanent personnel may
be hired to take up the slack.
The 1.100 members of the
Utility Workers Union maintain
and repair power plants.
They voted by a 3 to 1 margin
to reject the company proposal
Monday in Edison power plants
in Huntington Beach, San
Onofre, Long Beach, Redondo
Beach, El Segundo, Oxnard,
Ormond Beach, Etiwanda and
Barstow.
Negotiations have been
snagged since last October over
a proposal for a rotating work
schedule.
Edison is seeking lo imple-
ment a schedule in which union
members would work weekends
on a rotation basis without re·
ceiviog overtime pay.
The union objects lo this pro·
posal.
An official for Edison said that
the rotating work schedule is
necessary lo meet rising costs,
increased electricity demands
and for full-time manning of the
plants.
He said that other unions have
been on the rotating schedule for
some time.
A company spokesman said
that he didn't think it likely that
other Edison employees would
go on strike. ·
He said that this would involve
a secondary boycott which he
said is in violation or the Tart·
Hartley Act.
HBChamber
BacksJarvU
Directors oC the Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commerce
have come out in favor of
Proposition 13, the J arvis-Gann
property tax limitation
measure.
A chamber resolution endors·
ing tbe measure said that
economics In government Is
growing completely out or hand
and that Proposition 13 is a
beginning measure to bring big
government back under control
of the people.
Copies or the resolution have
been mailed to city, county and
state officials and the California
State Chamber of Commerce.
Huntington Lions
To Flip Pancakes
The Huntington Beach Lions
Club will hold it.s-27th annual
pancake breakfast Saturday
morning at Lake Park, 11th and
Lake streets.
Money from the breaktut wlll
be used lo buy eyeglaasea for
needy school children. PrJce of
the breakfast, which will be
served from 6:30 lo 11 a.m .. Is
$1.50.
Shootings Kill 2
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Two
unrelated ahootinaa tn
Sacrament.o's nortl\ area have
olahntd the clty'1 28th and 27tb
homicide vlcUm• 10 far this
year. polJce report. TMf are
Haney Hera. 12=and MeMn hllOo, 17. Both np were
In the nrty boun ot ay. :J
.... , .........
HEROIC TUGBOAT CREW RELAXES AFTER SAVING AIR CRASH VICTIMS
Capt. Glenn McDonald, Right, and Flrat Mate Biii Kenney
/. 'Help Me! Save Me!'
Tugboat Skipper Rescues 55 CraJjh Victims
PENSACOLA, Fla. CAP> -A tu1boat
captain said he was off course and virtually
lost when he saw an airliner glide with thun·
derous hiss ~t.o the foggy bay.
they didn't have their UfeJa~k~ on, they were clutching them around their necks."
"There would be three people over here,
10 over there. I had to tell Bill to leave the
three and get the 10. I had to glide the barge
between people drifing in the bay and I wor·
ried that some had drifted away and would
be missed when we came back around," be
said.
His tug and its barge became liferaft for
survivors.
GLENN McDONALD, 41, A COOL, in·
dependent mariner, sa•d it was only by
chance that his tug, "Little Mac," was near
enough lo the downed National Airlines 7Z7
Jet so he could see ii.in the fog and reach the
panic·slricken passengers.
While McDonald .steered. Kenney threw
ropes to the survivors. going into the water
several times to h elp lift out victims
traumatized by the ordeal.
"We were where the Lord put us." said "IF WE HADN'T BY CHANCE been
there. many people would have died. They
couldn't have made it When they got on the
' barge, I know it was an hour before the boats
found us," said McDonald.
.1 McDonald, who along with h.is mate, Bill
Kenney, a husky 28-year-old, pulled all 55
survivors onto their construction barge in
Escambia Bay.
Three passengers died.
"People were screaming, 'Help me! Save
me!' when we came over. About half a dozen
were atop the fuselage scrambling,
crawling, sliding. 'The others were in t~
water," said McDonald.
He said he was about 300 yards from the
plane when it went down.
When all the s urvivors had been
transferred to rescue boats, McDonald and
Kenney moved on down the bay. They said
they went straight home -"Only because
the bars were closed," said McDonald with a
laugh -and after two hours or sleep were up
again heading to the construction site. · HE SAID MOST APPARENTLY bad no
time to prepare for the splashdown. "Because
3 Kifled in Jet Crmh
55 Survive; Most Rescued by Tugboat
PENSACOLA. Fla. CAP> -A
National Airlines jet carrying 58
persons crashed into Escambia
Bay while coming In ror a land·
lng, forcing stunned passengers
to. scramble out emergency
doors lnt.o fog and a sea slicked
with jet fuel. Three passengers
were killed.
Most of the 52 passengers
a~oard the Boeing 727 were
saved because a tugboat captain
who saw the crash brought his
barge to the rescue.
The passengers had no warn·
ing that anything was wrong un·
t1l the (>lane hit the water Mon·
day n ight and came t.o rest about
500 yards from shore, settling in
mud about 10 feet below the
bay •s surface.
"We were on our final ap-
proach," said Capt. Ronald Gift.
a Naty pilot lrom Carmel.
Calli., who was a passenger.
"Thelle was no warning, no
vololent maneuvering, no S\U'I·
ing of the engines."
The alrllne initially listed ~
paasengers, but later said three
or t hose had never goUen
aboard.
Three bodies were found noat·
Ing near the plane. Divers sent
Into the .partially submersed
craft said everybody was out.
But fog and haze hamperod
rescue efrorta during the nl .. Jt.
nd a thunderstorm that moVed
over the ba)' early today
chumecJ up the seas at dlvws
1earebed for the mtulna. A ~
count waa further confuaecr
becauae panenaers were seal·
tered amoa1 •Ix hotplta.11 and
aeveral rescue 1taUon1.
Hospital officials ldentiried the
three victims as Paul V. Wilkes
Sr. of Virginia Beach, Va .• and
Frances Lane and S.J . Fan-
tauzzi, 29, both of Pensacola.
The ages of Wilkes and Mrs.
Lane were not immediately
available.
The Fantauzzi woman has a
3-year·old daughter listed in fair
condition at a Pensacola
hospital. Wilkes' wife, Virginia,
is listed in fair condition at a
hospital in neighboring Santa
Rosa County.
Many were Injured in the
crash. but dozens escaped safely
when tugboard captain Glenn E.
McDonald, 41, pulled bis barge
the LilUe Mac. to the plane. t(id
it up and helped men. woman
and children cfamber aboard.
"If that barge hadn't been
then. there's no telling how
many would have drowned, ...
said marine patrol Sat. William
Clenny.
McDonald's wife Janet said
her husband. a marine SUPl>lY 1 ahOp owner rrom Oull Breeze, was iit .the vicinity of the plane
because he was to~l In the foa.
"He didn'~ know why he was
there, but now he believes he
was the,.. for • reason," the
said. ••Jte t.houaht ltfwaa about to
crash down on t.op or him. but It
came dl>wn about 300 yud•
away.''
Aner apendtn1 the n!1.ht pull· Ina aurmor-from th• wl'9cll. McDontil'nnl hotne1 •lept for
awo h°'8'S end ret"1'nea to wortr.
Tb~ plane, FUthl 193 out of
Mobile, Ala., crHhed on the
western tip of Florida's Panhan-
dle. 20 miles from the Alabama
border and 50 miles from
Mobile, as It made a final land-
ing approach at the Pensacola
airport, disappearing from the
rapar screens three miles from
the runway.
''That plane skipped across
the water Hke a rock on a pond
and then settled into the bay.
There weret two loud reports
'blam, blam as it skipped," a
witness said.
Many passengers emerged
Crom the water soaked with jet
fuel which leaked from the plane
when it went down with 2,700
gallon"& of kerosene left in Its
tanks. Spectators were ordered
out or the area tor rear a name
could touch off the fuel.
James $lockweU. first olficer on the downed plane, was being
examined by doctors wben be
said he felt the aircraft made It.a
approach t.o the lteld too low.
•·we were apparently below
altltude. I can 't! belfeve we were
that low, but· apparently we
were,'' aald StocioNell, who was
reparited in good oondltton.
•'Tb ere shouldn't have been
any P,roblem -makJna that land-
i n1. ' said Jack Barker. a
s_pokcaman for the Federal Avla·
lion Administration. He'fald vis· ~bUlty wu four miles de1plte the
fos and that was "above 1Uftd·
ard" forlhealrport.
The fUghl oriltrlat4d ln Mlaml
at 2:20 p.m. PDT and made
• atope ln Mel~ Ind Tampa
in Florlda. New Orleau and
(See PLANE. Pap AJ) ~ ,, ..
Head
ROME <A P > -The blood·
s meared body o r former
Premier Aldo Moro, shot in the
back or the bead and his hands
and feet chained. was found in C:t
parked car in the heart of Rome
today. 55 days after he was kid· naru:>~d by the Red Brigades.
Police said they found five
spent cartridges in lhe car. a
stole n red Renault bearing
Rome license plates
The 61-year-old Moro also had
several wounds in the back.
police sources said .
The body. hunched over on the
floor of the Renault's back seat.
was clad 1n the same dark gray
suit Moro was wearing when
kidnapped March 16 by a dozen
terrorists who ambushed his
two-car motorcade on a Rosnc
street . killing five policl'
bodyguards.
A blue overcoat and red
blanket also were wrapped
around the body. It was dis
covered by\.a police bomb expert
who broke Into lhe car. Firemen
who saw it said the face was ex·
tremely pale and Moro's five·
fool· 11 frame had lost considera
ble weight.
His Marxist revolutionary Red
Brigade kidnappers claimed
Moro was a symbol or "im·
perialistic" oppression or the
working class. FFiday. the ter-
rorists issued the last or a series
or messages, saying they were
"carrying Q..it" a death
.. verdict" against Moro because
the Cbrlstlan Democrats refused
to negotiate their demand for
the release of 13 jailed terrorists
in exchange for Moro's life.
Afier the body waa round.
Premier Giulio Andreotti called
an emergency Cabinet session
and President Giovanni Leone
scheduled an address to the na-
tion. Italy's major unions called
a n eight·hour work stoppage.
In Washington. the State
Department condemned the kill·
ing as a "cowardly and con·
temptible act."
The Vatican radio called it a
''barbarous murder . . . which
lakes on in this tragic hour a
nearly sacrificial value."
Upon hearing the news, Pope
Paul VI, a personal friend or the
slain politician. went to pray in
his private chapel.
Former President Giuseppe
Saragat said. "Moro's body is
the body of the First Republic.
which is now dead.·· He referred
to the republic established in
1946, when the Italian monarchy
was voted out in a plebiscite
($ee MORO. Page AZ>
Runoff Held
In Setd Beach
Balloting was under way today
in Seal Beach in a runoff
election between incumbent
Mayor Thomas Blackman and
challenger Kent Seitz. Polls re·
main open until 8 p .m .
Neither Blackman or Seitz
gathered a majority of votes in
the councitmanic primary, thus
forcing today's runoff election.
There are 3,506 voters eligible
to cast ballots in the runoff.
Coast
Weather
Low cloudin~ tonight,
clearina to hazy sunshine
by late Wedoesday mom·
Ing. Cooling trend. Lows
tonight 52 to 58. Highs
Wednesday 67 to 74.
INSIDE TODA~
What rtgtlra doe• a woman have when her ht11band or
the man the Ht>es wUh boats
hlf'~ S.~ Ftoturing, Pagt C 1.
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DA&l.Y ~LOf HF
Mo-~d
Citations
VpinFV
A crackdown on Fountain
w.alley 's youthful mo-ped
operators bas resulted in a 300
percenl Increase in lhe in·
cadence in traffic citations is·
s ued so far this monlh, police re·
·ported today.
All patrolmen have been given
a s pecial "hot sheet" listing
c;alifomia Vehi cle Code viola·
~)ons that apply lo the popular
ijttle motorized bikes.
· -Trame Bureau Sgt. Richard
.pavenport says the program has
Jed to issuance or 17 traffic
!i_ckets as of the firs t five days of
~ ay. compared to 16 for the en·
~ire monlh of April.
· He said more have been is·
s ued. but intra-department pro-
cedures result in a two to three·
.day delay m the keeping of hard,
arcurale ticket statistics by the
traffic bureau.
Safely is the key fartor in the
campaign initiated by the city's
youth commission. according to
Chairman Gary Bowen.
Orange Coast la w enforce·
ment agencies have issued a
number of appeals previously
for better education or mo-ped
riders about lhe laws.
Printed materials are avalla·
ble al most police departments
relative to. mo-ped rules of the
toad. ~
· "We are not 'out to get' people
who ride mo·peds," Bowen as-
i,erted. "We just want to make
them aware of the laws and
s afely procedures involved.
which many people seem to lg·
nore .
"The whole safety campaign
1s based on the idea ~t~at bad
news travels fa'st. '' Bowen
added. "And a ticket is bad
news."
"For every citation issued, six
or seven people will become
aware or the law and start riding
'more cautiously," claimed Beth
James, vice chairman or the
youth commission.
Police have offered several
lips that might prevent a mo·ped
ticket. These include :
-Mo-peds a re de finitely
motor vehicles, contrary to what
some dealer agencies advertise.
Operators must have a valid
driver's license.
-One may drive a mo-ped
with only a learner's permit but
·only during daylight hours.
· -One absolutely cannot carry
a passenger with a learne(s
permit only, instead of a vahd.
-full-Oedged driver's license.
A mo•.ped 1mus t ha•e a
passenger seat and root pegs for
the second r ider, to carr y
anyone but lhe operator .
-H an operator is caught rid·
mg tandem with a passenger
and without these accessories,
the passenger can be cited too.
-Carrying any load that can
theoretically interfere wtth safe
mo-ped operation. such as a surf·
board, lsalsoa citable offense.
-Mo-ped riding on bicycle
trails. such as that running
along the Santa Ana River and
up the Huntington State Beach
road. Is illegal.
-Recent s tate law revision
does allow riding them in reg-
ular streets' bike lanes so lhere
is less risk Qf accident or in·
terference with automobile traf-
fic
OVSummer
School Slated
Summer school In Huntington
Beach's Ocean View School Dis·
tract. including virtually every·
thing from remedial reading to
cooking. arts Jlnd crafts begins
pext month.
1 Complete Information may be
1 obtained by calling the district
1 al 847-2551, Extension 282, ac·
t cording to administrators.
The June Z1 lhrough July 28 1 summer classes require attend· 1 ance for a full 4.25 hours per day I series of courses. I
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OR ANOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
.. ~..,.....
BLOOD-SMEARED BODY OF FORMER PREMIER ALDO MORO FOUND IN PARKED CAR
Kidnapped Victim Wea Shot In Back of Head; Handt, Feet Chained
E'rowePageAJ
MORO •.•
The body was found at 1:30
p.m .-5:30 ·a.m. PDT -on Via
Mirhelangelo Caetanl, a narrow
cobblestoned street of 15th and
16th century palaces running
a longside Communist party
headquarters and just a stone's
throw from Christian Democrat
headquarters. It was just two
blocks from the busiest intersec-
tion in Rome.
Officers went to lhe area and
discovered the body after police
headquarters received an
anonymous telephone call say·
ing a bomb had been placed in a
car parked on Via Funari, adJa·
cent to the 200-yard-Jong Via
Caetani.
They found nothing on Vi a
Funari but then checked Via
Caetani. The car apparently had
been parked on the s treet for
several hours. police said. They
said Moro may have been s hot in
the car.
Still wrapped in the blanket.
the body was blessed by a priest
from the nearby Chureh or J esus
and then was loaded into an am-
bulance and taken away to a
morgue for an autopsy. Police
cordoned the area. Crowds of
weeping Romans congregated
on the tiny street.
"Bastards! Bastards!" one
woman cried. "He surrered so
m uch."
Hundreds of other ordinary
citizen s gathe red outside the
Moro home five m iles away in
Rome's Monte Mario seclton.
and on the nearby tree-s haded
Via Mario Fani. scene of kidnap
a mbush.
Police cars with sirens whin·
ing sped through the rity. de-
serted as usual during the early
afternoon lunch hours. Police
said they had received other lips
before the discovery of the car
and were throwing out dragnets
across the city.
The Italian Communist
Party's directorate went into
session immediately, and party
offi cial Giancarlo Pajetta said
as he entered the meeting, "This
is a crime of sadist ferocity."
Moro was president of the rul-
ing Christian Democrat Party
and a five-lime former premier
pnd h ad been expect e d to
become Italy's next president.
Davis Takes Lead
.S ACRAMENTO <AP ) -
Former Los Angeles Polire
Chief Ed Davis has taken a nar·
row lead over Attorney General
Evelle Younger in the cam paign
for the Republican nomination for
governor, according to a Gannett
News Service poll.
SIDOke Area Fro• rage Ai
Sought for !~~;h:ad:n,back
to Florida. Besides Stockwell. the night
Edison High crew was identified as Capt.
George Kunz. copilot Leonard
Sandersen and flight attendants
Trustee John Handley wants
the Huntington Beach Union
High School Board to rekindle
the question a llowing student
s moking on campus.
But Hundley plans to wail un·
Ul a new school board member
is appointed before taking action
on the one-time t<>ntroversy.
The school board wHI receive
a report on s moking problems at
tbe six West Orange County
campuses at a 7 o'clock meeting
tonight at the district offices.
5201 Bolsa Ave., Huntington
Beach.
"I'm a non-smoker but I feel
t he problem ls getting out of
hand," Hundley said.
Hundley said he Cavers setting
aside supervised areas on cam-
puses to allow students a place
to smoke.
"My daughter at Edison High
School can't stand to go into the
restroom because or the smok·
ing problem." Hundley noted.
"She has heavy a llergies and
can't go lo school the next day if
s he goes Into the rest.rooms at
Edison." he added.
Hundley said the lack of a
s moking area on campuses
causes truancy and a loss of
funds to the district due to drops
in average daily attendance.
The school board snuffed a
smoking area plan on a 3 lo 2
vote m J anuary 1976. Trustee
Helen Ditte. the only remaining
board member from that era.
voted against the plan.
Mrs. Ditte said today she has
not changed her opinion on the
m atter because or "the harmful
effects of smoking."
Mrs. Dille said, "It would be
hypocritical if we approved this
very unhealthy habit."
Hundley said be expects lhe
smoking Issue to return to the
board in June when a new ap-
pointed trustee is seated.
A selection committee plans to
nominate one candidate from a
list of 40 hopefuls fo.r the trustee
seat.
The school board is expected
lo appoint a new member Satur·
day at 10·30 a.m.
The vacancy on lhe school
board was created by the res·
ignallon or former trustee Don
MacAlhster who quit las t month
lo serve on the Huntington
Beach City Council.
Ca rl Greenwood. Debbie
Verplank and C. Crawford. all of
the Miami area.
Investigators from the F~A
and the NaUonaJ Transportation
Safety Board were sent f~m
Washington. D.C .• to determme
the cause of lhe crash.
Gtinman Held
After Sie~e;
Nine Released
TORRANCE <AP > -A gun. men surrentlered today. ending
a HJ-hour st-andoff with police
which began when the former
mental patieat took nine
hoslafes after an aborti ve
jewe r y s t ore r o bb e r y,
authorities said.
Police said the man identified
a s William John Dwyer. 28, fired
75 to 100 shots during lhe night
while he held two hostages In·
side the store.
But at 7:20 a .m .. after a series
of telephone negotiations with
police. Dwyer walked out of the
store wilh his hands up. He was
taken to an unidentified location.
Left Inside when Dwyer sur-
re ndered was his 2-year-old daughter. who police said was
a hostage. The girl had been
brought to the store b~ Dw~er's
wile at his request, po11ce said.
"He was so exhausted he gave
up," said Jim· Papst. a
spokesman for the Torrance
Police Department.
Papst also said Dwyer ap·
peared to be under the infiuence
of an unidentified drug.
Dwyer·s su.rrender came two
hours after he released two
hostages he had held through the
night. a pair ol sisters from
nearby Redondo Beach. They
were the last of nine hostages to
be released.
One hostage. Pat McNeHis. 49.
of Redondo Beach. was shot
twice in the left thigh with a
pistol as she Oed the _store in the
Rolling Hills Shopping Center.
She was hospilahzed In stable
condition.
Area Arson Suspect
Remains in OC Jail
Golden West College Student
Senate member Chester Ordway
Morrls, accused as the Seal
Beach arsonist who caused
thousands or dollars lo dama1e
since 1976, still remains Jailed
today, one month after his ar·
real.
Morris, 39, an art student, was
appointed to the QWC Student
Sena(e about two months before
hi• April 10 Jrrest near the
sce..ne ~r a 19,000 boat and
aaraae f.irt.
rested near the scene ol the
April 10 fire a week later by of·
ricers staked out In that ariea.
based on lhelr theories ol where
one or the m)'1tery fires ml&bl
occur next.
He pleaded Innocent to the
charges at his arralenment in
connection with the last fire to
occur under clrcumstanccs
aim liar to the others.
Generally. they happened
primarily ln the Old Town Seal
Beach reslon, but early this
year spread to Sunset Beach and
finally Huntlnaton Harbour, in·
vesU1aton sata.
TaeoSlain
Theft, M11rder
Evidence Cited
By AllmlJR R. VINSEL
Of ... Delly,. ... ....,.
Evidence that police allege
links two suspect.a to the $Ui0
holdup and slayin1 or a
Westminster merchant and his
clerk. as they knelt in his Long
Beach market. was lo go lo
authorities today.
Detectives said they were in
Cina) stages of preparing the
materials. including a film from
a remote control security
camera purportedly showing the
suspects.
Killed almost instantly early
Sunday were Parshothambh1
Patel. 47. of 15952 Diamond St ..
Westminster. and his employee.
Jaroon Direjit, 33. or Long
Beach.
Investigators said bolh men
were shot from behind as lhey
kneeled on the floor of Patel's
7-Eleven Market In the; 4200
block of Long Beach Boulevard.
directly behind lhe counter.
Captured within five minutes
following lhe armed robbery and
muf'ders were C harle.s A.
Mosley. 23, anCI a 17-year-old
male. both Compton residents.
Investigators said Monday a
.22 caliber revolver and cash al·
legedly taken from the Ull after
Patel and Direjlt were slain only
inches away were r ecovered
when the suspects were ar-
rested.
"We'll be presenting the case
lo the D.A. today." said Long
Beach Police Department
Homicide Detail Detective John
Miiier.
He said he expected formal
complaints to be issued by late
this afternoon, allowing Mosley
and the youth whom they allege
participated in the bloody
episode lo be arraigned.
They were booked on susp1·
cion or murder and armed rob·
bery following lheir capture on
Long Beach Boulevard about
two miles north or the holdup
and slaying scene.
No bail has been set, because
the death penalty applies in
cases involving capital crimes.
Mosley is held at the Long
Bea ch City Jail. along with the
17-year-old youlh whose identity
was not released due to his age.
Juveniles are held in a special
'Ghost' Thief
Found to Be
Driving Boy, 8
HAMTRAMCK. Mich. <APl -
Hamtramck police may have
thought they were seeing ghosts
when a car zi~d by them, do-in~ 70 mph with no sign of a
driver at the wheel.
When -after a high speed
chase lhrough residential streets
-the officers finally caught up
with the fleeing car Monday.
they found no phantom. jusl a
s hort 8-year-0ld boy.
The pint -sized car thief. whose
id e ntity was nol. re leased.
managed to elude patrol cars in
this Detroit-area community for
several blocks. leading lhem the
wr ong way down a one-way
street before ramming a fence
and a bandoning lhe vehicle.
When police caught up with
the culprit on a nea rby street
corner. officers said. he readily
admitted stealing the car from a
gas station and driving it.
Officers said lhe boy was so
short he had to peer bet ween the
spokes of the steering wheel as
he drove.
area ut that facility pendin& a
Juvenile court appearance.
Funeral servic~ held today al
Fairhaven Memorial Park
Mortuary In Santa Ana f<Jt""Mr.
Patel. whose cremated ashes
will be flown home lo his native
India.
The customary rites were to
be performed b y S wami
Sarwananda. according to
mortuary spokesmen.
Survivors Include his widow.
Mirmala; sons Rajish. Nitin and
Tlyush: a daughter J ayshree.
his father. Gopalj i Patel and his
mother. BaJiben Patel.
One survivor of the murder
s pree in Mr . P atel's s m all
market ln central Long Beach
was a seeond clerk who hap-
pened to be in a back room when
the bandits entered. police say .
He hid in horror while the kill·
ings of his employer and co·
worker occurred. then called
police when lhe bandits fled.
Investigators consider him a
prime prosecution witness and
decline to disclose his name.
RB Teen
Injured,
Critical
A 19-year-o ld Huntington
Harbour boy is r eported in
critical condition today at
Pacifica Hospital after he
severed an artery by pulling his
arm through a window pane
while sleepwalkin& early this
morning.
David 8artel of 16255 Tisbury
Circle underwent surgery short·
IY after the 2:48 a.m. incident
and remains in the hospital in·
tensive care unit, officials said.
Former Huntington Beach Ci·
ty Council member Harriet
Wieder . who lives next door to
the Bartel family, called police
when she first heard the sound
or shattering glass and screams
or . 'help, help ...
Barte l family members
rushed the stricken youth to lhe
hospitaJ by auto, Mrs. Wieder
!)aid.
The accident occurred during
a n e lectrical failure that hit
about 150 homes on Humboldt
Island.
The exact cause of the power
ra1lure was not known im·
m ediately, said Southern
California Edison spokesman
Bill Compton.
As of 10 a.m. today, 60 homes
were still without electricity,
Com plon said.
Council F ete
Set for HB
The Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce will hold
a breakfast May 23 in honor of
the newly organized city council
and the new city attorney.
All seven council members
have agreed to attend and will
give brief talks. according to
Ralph Kiser. lhe director of the
chamber.
Reservations for the S4 per
person breakfast at the Hunt·
ington Beach Inn can be ob·
ta 1n ed by contacting the
ch~mber at 18582 Beach Blvd ..
Suite 224, Huntington Beach.
A dlfltfrtful oolotlno cimkboolc •••
jutt add kids 9ftCI CHYON end Pf•
tent Mom wi~h • k"pHke lhe'll
tr .. 1uf'9.
\
• Ht. 1.a c:urrentlY held •t. Orange
Coant)' Jail tn lieu or ~.ooo tall
pendlng a May D prellmloary uartna Jn Wet 'OraA&e Coun')' .JUdlclal Diatrtat CoUrl on arioi\
chareea. .
lnvesUgatons said at the Ume •
he had been quesUoned th• _pre· ..
Golden Wetl Colleae student
leaders and officials expreaed
shock at Moma' beln1 cbaraed
1$ the arsonlat wbo sparked a
concerted tuk torce of four
flrert1ht1n1 aaencles to pool
thelr efforll.
C..... In and ..a.et frCMft a .... ......, of t.'""""9. Urty gift ptb ..•
prettJty boxed juat for Mother'• Dav -Mey I •Hl.
• · ·v1ou1 week f ollowln1 a ~000 ·
arson-set flre at hJ1 own apart·
ment t'lome, 219 Seal Beach
Blvd., and Js considered a 1\11· • peel.
lnvesUptort be1an studying
the pat.tern of lntentlonaUy"ltl
bl~HI -1 they belleve there wero
at leaat 17 ot lhem -and nouted
a dlltlnct pattern. ~
Morris wu aubleqUe9tl)# ar·
' \
--.-
"I'm shocked. He's bffn a
1ood representative. He wu
really Pltecrlve," owe StudeftC
President Keney WeU 1a1d at the
time.
Morrll, an art 1tudent, was
described u an orr·aftd-on ral·
dent of Seal Beach who baa H\'td
in desert communtuea too.
I
If Mom liftl out of town, we11 eend i.r gift for you.
WESTOJFF PLAZA
IM 111 .... '"ii' .... ~.,.MMtn. I ~'ft .... .,.,_ '
........ tt YILU• DAMA POINT
,... 4'6-1670 Mon.·Sat. 1111 s-. ~ ... .
--
. . . .. . .. . ...
NATIONAL DAILY PILOT 7
torians Seek · Seetpes Trial 'Mikes~
DAYTON, Tenn <AP J
Historians are looking for two of
the microphone s used to
broadcast the Scopes monke}
trial hve over the first national
radio hookup 53 years aeo.
"They are particularly
important s in ce that li ve
broadcast marked the first Ume
it had ever been done," said Ted
Me rcer, pres ident of Rhea
County Historical Society.
RADIO STATION WGN in
Chicago. one of the nation's
oldest. used three squash-sized
mikes bearing its call letters for
the broadcast. Program
m anage r Dick Jones said
r ecently that one or the
microphones is on display al the
station. He said he had no idea
where the other two are.
WGN wanted to broadcas t
Chicago's 5ensationa l 1924
Leopold and Loeb murder lnal
in which two well-to-do young
m e n were co nvi cted of
kidnapping and killing a small
boy . But more than 10.000
lis teners voted against il for
reasons of tasU>
Tbe next year. WGN didn't
bother lo ask whether it shoold
broadcast the trial in southeast
Tennessee or John Scopes. who
had been accused or leaching
evolution. The station jumped at
the chance to air Clarence
Darrow's c l assic co n ·
fronlation with William
Jennings Bryan.
"STATION WGN OF Chicago
decided to broadcast the trial
over the first national radio
hookup and sent Quinn Ryan to
coordinate the effort.'· Rick
Beard wrote in the Smithsonian
lnstilution ·s history or lhe trial.
"The WGN microphones wou ld
become a fixture in the
courtroom "
On July 11. 1925. WGN
technicians installed the mikes.
one on the judge's be nc h.
another on the defense table.
and t h e third in front of
prosecutors. Judge John T.
Raulston tested the system from
t he bench by scolding lhe
gallery of reporters.
Half a century later. county
officials deeided to renovate the
Rhea County Courthouse with
about Sl milUon in stale and
federal money to make ll look
as 1l did in 1925. Only tbe
microphones were missing when
the his toric bulldi(lg was
r eopened to the public this
month.
"VIRTUALLY ALL THE
furnishings in the courtroom are
original,'' Mercer said.
·'The courthouse and the
courtroom had not been change
in any significant way." he said.
''Certain parts had j ust been
abandoned. And that turned out
to be a good thing, in retrospect,
because it meant very little
reconstruction ..
A Scopes museum will be built
in the basement within the next
year. Me r cer said. And to
accommodate the expansion in
the county government. the
a rchitect added office space in
the unused third floor.
"The renovation even includes
the old brass cuspidors which
add a glow to the room." Mercer
said. "We're just hoping no one
uses them." ..............
DEFENSE COUNSEL DUDLEY FlELD MALONE LISTENS TO RULING FROM BENCH
1925 Photo of 'Monkey Trial' Broadcast Live Over National Radio
'lm~ihle' Goal Asked
KIRKLAND. Wash. <API -Determined to
pay for a $1.6 million church auditorium with cash
"before the bulldozers move the first dirt ...
leaders of the Overtake Christian Church are urg. mg members to hock their valuables and mortgage
their homes for the money.
The money a lso is being collected to retire a
$200,000debtforlhechurch.
"WE ARE UNDER THE deep conviction that
God wants us to pay cash for the building Human·
ly speaking. 1t is 1mposs1ble. but we know the Lord
wants 1t to happen ... says Pastor Robert
had their lifestyle affected because or an offer-ing ..
The independent church. founded nine years
ago an this well-to·do community near Seat,le
when more conservative members of the Bellevue
Chris tian Church spht away. has about 750 family
units and 1.700 par1sh1oners
WAS IT SCRIPT(;R F. THAT inspired
Moorehead to undertak<' th<' project?
··w e JUSl felt 1t wa:. good stewardship. good
busmess. not to havt• the church pay nearly S2
m1llionm interest .. over 20years, "he said.
Moorehead. y;:;;;;:::::=:=:=:=:==:=:=:=:==:=::=;:;:=;;;;;;~
The collection plate will be passed June 25 for
the bonanza. and Moorehead says $310.000 has
been comm1tled by church members in six weeks-.
"One man sold the boat he had just bought ...
Moorehead said. "One or out single women is sell-
ing her home. giving the equity of about S25.000 to
the church." he added.
MOOREHEAD SAID THE CASH must be in
hand "before the bulldozers move the first dirt."
"It's a wild approach, ('II tell you. The key to
we are changing our dlsplay room... we have cabinet sections and a beautiful wet bar unit.
3 teet-8 feet, below coat '
754-0370 10-3 !
AP....... the whole program is the word sacrifice." said the
FAMOUS MOVIE TOLD STORY BASED ON SCOPES 'MONKEY TRIAL' pastor. "Our people arc pretty affluent. Most of
29110 rendOlph. c.oal•m••• i~
Barker :it?
Spencer Tracy, left. and Frederic Mar:c.:.:h_:ln:::_L:e:a:d:R:o:le:•:':n:_'.:.:ln.:,:h:e:_:r_:lt~t.:,:h:e_:W:l:n::d:_' ______ _:th.:.:e:m:,:h::a:_:v::_e_:n::e~v::_e:_r _::m:a:d:e:_:a _:s.:a.:.c ":_:· :,:fi.:.ce:.:._T~h.:.:e:_:y_· v:.:e:_:ne:_v:.:e:r~===================::!..
Battle Site Restored
BANGKOK. Thailand <AP > -Vietnam is
restoring the battlefield of Dien Bien Phu where
Commurust forces overwhelmed a French gar-
rison 24 years ago this month, marking the end of
French domination or Vietnam.
The official Vietnam News Agency said plans
call for restoring relics of lhe two-month battle,
setting up a victory monument and building a mus
eum, hotel and airfield
LONG JOHN SIIYER'S
Wednesday SHRIMP SALE
MIGHTY BIG SHRIMP
at a migl1ty small price.
• 9 Golden Fried Shrimp
• Fabulous Fryes
• TangySlaw
• 2 Crispy Hushpuppies
• $4.61 , ..
~ Clongr:fohn~®
SEAFOOD SHOPPES
3095 H..._. ll•cl. ill Costa MfH
DRIYloTHRU SMYICI AYAILAIU
our t••• tell• you everything you
want to know about your team
In the DAILY PILOT
Spokesm&11 for PYF.
Mr. Dick Slocl&lr
Dick Sinclair !ells
You Bow !o Get A
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If you're thlnkJng about. tmprovtng your home, st.op In
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for a low-coat, 9111-to-&rl'&llCe home Improvement. IO&DI
0 KITCHEN REMODELING
0 POOL 0 NEW BATHROOM 0 FAMILY ROOM 0 PATIO 0 FBNCING
D OTHJm
B OARAOI CONVIRSION
DR.IVIWAY •' 0 OARPITUIG/DBAPIS 0 fIR!PLAOI 0 BIDBOOlil ADDITION 0 ODTRAL AIR oormmotflHG
B OIN'l'RAL HIA!llG
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ran 81U111i'1 "ldlu ltr
lmporill.C Tom Bome0
tJ\18\ tor oom1nC In t.o Ill about. our low home Improvement.
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Pomofta First Flldenll
$Ali/NG$ ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION
..... , ....... CIMTll LAeuMAHU.I ~ ........ ..... ftwf, •NW;. I
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I I
OAILY PtLOT HF
Wilderness Maintained
.. -.,.-Natrue Conservancy Buys Santa Cruz Island
-,
:
4> ·-{". \ . :"?---SANTA CRUZ ISLAND <AP>
-Or. Carey Stanton is selling
his beautiful, unspoiled laland
olf the Southern California coast
for only ~an acre. ' .. ·• , · >-, , _ Th e bu yer , the Na tu re . 'r-(; / / Conservancy, aays lhe purchase
· ~ of Santa Cruz lsland for $2.S
· million is "perhaps the beat land
buy since the United States
• J bought Alaska."
•' , /_;.-~.-j' ?·. FRANK BOR EN OF the V' / · ---•"0-7--Nature Conservancy said the
· • -· _ -.._ ._...,.,.. " 1roup will maintain the Island
1 as a wilderness.
.• · Stanton said he could have '1That'a the last straw-a Japanese parking meter. sold the 82-square mile island
r for millions more to developers,
! b F but the Stanton family has bffn ar or reeway rejecting lucrative offers for 42
-ye a rs. Stanton owns about 90 r percent of the island 75 miles Busway lJ•gied northw~t of Los An&~les. The
• 1 remalrung 10 pertenl ts owned
by other lndivlduala.
ByCaltram
LOS ANGELES <APJ -The State Oepartmentof
Tra nsportation has urged federal officials to add
lt\e Harbor Freeway to the interstate highway
system so it can qualify for federal funds to con-
!>t(uct a bus way, Jt was r eported.
"My father bought this island
in 19$6 and loved it to the day he
d ied." said Stanton. "I love this
island too. and J think the best
thing that could happen to Santa
Cruz Island would be to leave It
the way it Is. At all cost."
STANTON GAVE UP h is
medical practice 20 years ago
when his father died and took
ov er the family cattle ranch.
The cattle arc raised an the
Island and sold on the mainland.
• • J moved oul here in the 1950s
because my rather had no other
llvlof family and l fe lt l had a
faml y responsibility to protect
the Island against developers,"
Stanton said .
Stanton. SS, Is a bachelor aad
has no direct heirs.
"When l realized I wasn't Im·
mortal, I began to worry about
what might happen to the Island
after I died."
SO HE ARRANGED TO sell
the island to t h e Nature
Conservancy, a national con·
servatlon group. which has until
July s to come up with the
money or secure pledges.
A number of rare birds.
animals and plants exist on the
island. including at least 75 en-
dan1ered species. Al night, wild
raiorback hogs roam. Stanton never drives his jeep without a
high-powered n ne.
The Island's rugged topo·
gr aphy 1s vu1.ually unchan1ed
from the way it appeared to the
Spanish explorers "'ho set foot
on Santa Cruz four centuries
ago. Beuche~ are dotted with
driftwood and abalone shells
The lush island valley 1s fra
grant with sweet grass and wild
licor\ce.
STANTON WrLL CONTINtJE
managing the cattle ranch after
the sale.
"I couldn't ltve full-time in the
city." Stanton said. "I never
could get used to all that con
crete. And the air Well. once
you breathe the air of Santa
Cruz Island, there's nothing to
compare."
Stanton's ranch 1s a world of
its own A small housekeeping
·s taff and a dozen laborers live in
cabins. Mail and groceries are
flown in at a small landin~ strip.
Underground springs give fresh
water. A diesel generator pro-
vides power.
"I don't own a boat. plane or
h e licopter." he said. "but
there's nothing that prevents me
Crom chartering a plane if. say. l
want to attend a party In Santa
Barbara or a concert ln Los
Angeles. And I do that quite often .··
CALIFORNIA
7 he money would help ----------------------------------------------------------------
to help pay for a $128
m ill ion b us w ay for-------------------------------------------------------------------.
buses and carpools. The
c on crete g u id e w ay
wo ul d pr ovid e hlg h-
~p eed t r a ns it l anes
similar to lhe ones on
t he San Berna rdi no
Freeway b u s w ay
between El Monte and
downtown Los Angeles.
CAL TRANS SA VS the
proposal is part of a
:rtO-m1le freeway transit
~ystem being planned to
~et better use from the
reg i o n '& c r o wded
freeway network. It is
estimated that when the
proJecl 1s completed by
1982. the total cost would
be nearly $175 mi llion.
Caltrans says its goal
is to bui ld the new
busway, which would be
alternately elevated and
at the freeway's surface
level. along a 7.6·mile
~tretch of the Ha rbor
Freeway
THE FREEWAY is
-one of the oldest in the
Los Angeles area. It is
o ff icially p a rt. of
California Route 11.
The busway would be
located in the center or
the freeway, between
t,Ji e Sa nta Mon ica
f reeway and the pro-
posed Century Freeway,
and portions or the
elev a led sections would
e xte nd ov e r th e
freeway's inside lanes.
ALTH OUGH THE
busway would make use
ol exclusive bus-car pool
lanes. Callrans officials
say it differs sharply
from the aborted Santa
M o n ica f ree w ay
diamond Jane project.
which took existing traf-
fic lanes out or regular
use.
Rather. Caltrans plan-
pe r s say, addition a l
lanes would be con-
tructcd, as they were
qn the 11-mile busway or
Ut e San Be rna r di no
Freeway, and stations
would be built to serve
bus passengers. ,
IF THE H arbo r
r reeway were lo be
alaced in the Interstate
•igh way syst e m . it
would qualify the pro·
tosed exclusive bus-car
t ool gu1d eway for 92
percent Ceder.a l fund-
tpg .
• So Callrans Director
Adri a n a Gianturc o
flrote to the federal
Highway Adminls tra-
•on 's regional office in
S acramento r ec ently
an d asked t hat the
freeway be so deslgnat·
•d. The Los Angeles
County Transportation
Co mmission endorsed l er request. p
THE DIVISION ad-th iniatrator for the ~cramento office ol Ute
'(ederal Highway Ad -
tnlnlatration, Omar L. Bom me, responded a 'tew days later by saytn1
supported M1. Gian-
~ •• request snd bad
rwarded lt t o shtniton.
here. Homme aaJd,
• propotal woul4 be viewed, and a ~llSon
uld be made bf
retary of Tran.port&.
n Brock Ada,:121.
me l&ld he beU....
project tw • 10od anc e of wlna•DI
"''' •pprcwal. n a11y event, 111.
c
..... ,.. ... ,.....HJ
Would you say
--~.rA\'-!1'1. you're pleasingly
plump'? S1ocky'!
Zoflig'? Very
healthy? Lefs
face ir.
They"re all
just kind
synonyms
for that one
unkind
word: fat.
A nd there's
no reason for
you to ever be
that unkind
~::::::=~~~~ word again.
Ever. ....... , ...... ,.. ......
We're specialists in dealing
with people who can't seem to
shake 1hose pounds no matter
how hard they try. We use beha-
vior modification as well as
we ight conrrol. And we know that
your body can't do what your
mind won't let it ...... ....,..
.::~ ,......,.._.,,.
Ywr.W.
We don't care how
many diets you've tried.
We don't care if you're a Weight
Watchers drop-out. Or if you
failed at MetrecaJ, Dr. Atkins,
grapefruits and Slender Now. We
can help you if you're serious
about it now. And if you realize
that yo ur overwe ight problem is
not only from the neck down. It's
from your neck up. ln your head.
... ,.,a1111td wlll ..... ,...
Work with you. Every week.
Discus.1 your eating habits. Probe
into those sneaky raids on the
cookie jar. find out why you can't
bear to throw away lef tovcrs.
And what makes you ~to
f ! \
finish off that cold spag ·
hetti in the middle of
the night. The truth
is that even if you don't
think you·re a com-
pulsive eater, you
probably are. It's just
that you're clever
enough to disguise
your eating patterns
beautif ulty. .... ,.,.... .... ..... ,...
Before we start you
on our weight reduction
program. we wan t to make
sure you are in
"'-.._ good physical l health. So you j recei~ an
~ extensive
/ medicaJ exam -~ /i .. ina1ion,com-
'I plete with blood
tests and EKG.
Naturally you must
follow our pro-
gram fai thfully.
A nd as th05C
pounds go melting off. you
will be re-examined weekly
and your progress moni-
tored by a physician.
Y .... , .. " .... ......... . ........... .......... ..,. .............. . ...........
Two or three Bloody
Mary's make you feel real good.
But what they add in minh
they also add in girth. Shrimp
scampi and duckling in orange
sauce taste terrific. But 1hey don't
look so terrific on your hi ps and
thighs. So you get angry with
yourself. Go on a crash diet.
Suffer. And then reward your
self by going on a Baskin Robbins
spree. We know the routine
very well.
.. ~•uu•n4• ........... ~ ... " ..........
How much has ir cost you? In
desperate fad diets? And special
foods? And clothes two sii.es roo
small that hang unworn and for-
lorn in your closet? How much
has it cost you In aggravation and
heartache? Isn't it time you got
serioui onoe and for all?
Yt9wa't•Jt....-., wa,..t
If it was all that easy for
you to lose weight and keep
~ f it off, you wouldn·t be
'· reading this ad now. You'd
have the figure you want
already. But willpower and
self-control haven't worked for
you. That's why we·re here. To
help you lose weight. Understand
you. Hold your hand. Encourage
you. Every inch along the way to
your new figure.
W. ... ,, Int tell,... wMI te .. ..... ,,, ..........
Our weight reduction pro-
gram is very effect ive. But what
you also need is reinforcement
and support. A nd that's what we
give you. Our program is medi-
cally and psychologically
supervised.
And as we
monitor
your pro-
gress we
help you
to get rid
of t hose
old eating ...... _ ...
patterns once and for aJI. And we
help you change the way you
think about food. Convince you
that food is anything but lo~. , .................... .
We know how frustrating and
debilitating it can be to see
weight come back on that
took so long to take
off. We promise that
if you stick to our
program it wo n't
happen ever again.
The weight you
lose by our dual
method or weight
control will come off
daily. You will actually see
encouraging results. First on the
scale. then in the mirror. A nd
then in the admiring glances that
start to come your way.
That's a very heavy statement.
But we can make this claim
without rear. Because years of
testing aod research brought us
.. .. llRCDlilca_, 8IHIVIOR MCIDl1Cll•
Cll1 (714) 635·0320
•
to one conclusion: you should
be able to have the figure you
want. Ir you are serious about it.
And work hard to get it. The
right way. Our way. ............
..CIWJ .............. . ...........
Our secret is no secret at all.
We employ hours of behavio r
modifica tio n wi1h a sensible,
healthy. medicaJly supervised
weigh! toss system tha1 works. We
supply you with all or the neces-
sary nourishment and nutrients
your body needs to function
effectively and efficiently. ..... ~ ........... ,......., ........ ..,.
As we check your progress..
we'll become your conscience
and your guide. Supporting you.
Encouraging you. Answering your
questions. Congratulating you on
your good results. We know thar
it's very easy to fall back into old
habits. A nd we·11 do everything in
our power to keep you from
losing hear< .
, ........ ,... ........ [ ..... .
RIMIM.lrr ............ .
How can anything that makes
you feel unattractive and old and
sluggish be love'! Food is noc a
tum on. It's a turh off. feeling fit
and trim and healthy is love.
And looking
smashing on the
tennis coun.
and dance
floor. and
on the beach
is your bes1
reward.
tlte111a1r ,.. ............ ., ~ ,... .... ,.....,.
We hope to see you
at our modern. new
clinic soon. And if we
do everything we say we
can do for you, we hope
never to sec you at our
clinic again. .., ..... "
Call now for the details
and an appointment. The new
you is only months away.
A nd thal's a promise.
antww lbould aet •
Jll9ly b)' JulJ 1. HotltaM
said: ----------------~-----------------------------~-----------~--.---~~-------------~------~--------------
I
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Irvine
EDITION
I VOL. 71, NO. 129, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES O RANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
T oday's Clo sin g
N.Y . Stoeks
..
t
T UESDAY, MAY 9, 1978 TEN CENTS f
· Newport Limits Building to Ease Traffic 1
Newport Beach city coun-Opponents -most or the city's
1 cilmen said Monday it ls now landowners. builders and de-
their policy to limit new con· velopers -say the policy
struction in their city lo projects a m o u n ls lo a b u i 1 din g
thal won't increase trafhc con· moratorium and will, in effect.
geslion. shut down new construction in
Proponents or the measure. Newport Beach.
adopted in a 5-1 vote, call it a The policy copies an initiative
traffic phasing development proposal being circulated by the
Mayor Paul Ryckoff. Fund <LEAF l. a group of
Newport Beach environmen
talis ls. Leaders or the group
were on band at Monday night's
council meeting to applaud tbe
adoption or the policy.
It would prohibit the issuing or
a building permit for any project
of JO or more residential units,
or that involves 10,000 or more
square feet of commercial or in-
dustrial space.
Projecl!I larger than the
minimum could win permits on-
~Y if s hown tllat the traffic they
would generate will be less than
one percent or the existing traf·
fi e on certain Newport Beach
roadways identified as con·
gested.
Under the policy. the city traf-
fic engineer is responsible for
identifying congested streets by
means of specifi c cr1ter1a set
forth in the measure.
Another provision of the policy
calls for approval of large proJ·
eels by the city's planning com·
mission. if a given projeet is
deemed to have sifnifi<'ant benefit
to the city. or if 1l includes out-
standing traffic mitigation pro-
visions. Examples would be fire
s tations. conce rt hu lls or
hospitals.
A spokesman lor the Irvine
Company. thecity·s larges t land·
owner. said adoption or the
policy was premature and total· .
ly unnecessary. He noted that
the city's major landowners and
develoi)ers already were honor
ing a self-imposed moratorium
pending the outcome of s tudies
<See TRAFFIC. Page A2) I
' policy. It was introduced by Legal Environmental Analysis
Ex-prenrler Moro's Body FOund
Petitions Council
Ousted Irvine
Cop to Appeal
J\n Irvine police officer. dis·
missed from the department to
eta :. for reasons not . publicly
disclosed. plans lo appeal the al'
t1on to the City Council at its
7. 30 meeting tonight.
Officer Paul Rose was placed
on administrative suspension
la st month pending ad·
ministrat1ve appeals of Police
Chier Leo Pearl's recommenda
t1on to d1sm1ss him
lroine Eyes
Park for
Nortlu«Jod
The Irvine City Council will be
asked tonight to allocate St
million m developers' fees for
Bryan Community Park 10 ~he
vill age of Northwood.
The nearly 20-acre park site is
at Bryan and Yale avenues. It
1s s urrounded by residential de·
velopmenl: a three-acre portion
or il is being used as a tern·
porary municipal storage yard.
The park would serve an
estimated 3,500 neighborhood
residents this year. plus 6.000 to
10.000 more during the next two
years .
Plans for its development in-
clude ball fields. picnic a reas. a
clubhouse, and space for basket-
ba II, racquetball and volleyball
The council meets at 7:30 p.m.
at c ity hall. 17200 Jamboree
Blvd.
Other items on its agenda in·
elude:
Hiring of an architect for a
proposed performing arts
theater. A citizens committee
recommends retaining Wurster.
Bernardi and Emmons Inc. of
San Francisco.
Approval of a city s ummer
re<'reation and cultural arts pro·
gram, at a cost lo the city of
$66.156.
Establishment of a civic
center committee
SS Catalina
Can't {dnger,
Can't Leave
By JACKJE H YMAN °' .. .,..,., ......... "
The S.S. Catalina was in hot
wate r again today, and. un-
fortunately for her owners, that
appears to be the only water it's
1olng to be allowed to stay ln.
The legendary 301-fool vessel .
..thlc h arrived in Newport
Harbor Aprll 2.5 to preside at a
boat show. overstayed its
welcome when It.a permit ex-
pired Monday.
But it appear:s to have
nowhere to go -certainly not
bark to Los Angeles. There, city
attorneys, claiming the ship's
owners owe nearly $30,000 in
docking and related fees. have
asked a federal court to force
tbe sate or the Great White
Steamer t.o pay the alleged debt.
The S.S. Cata l ina was
pQrchased two years a10 by
H)'man Slnger,-a Beverly Hills
real estate developer 1 when It
wu sold to ~Y th• aelinquent
docktn1 fees of lta prevloua
owner. 'lbe ab.Ip ruN up about
$158 a day In dockln8 fees,
S1n1er said.
Peitrt's recommendation was
upheld by both City Manager
William Woollett Jr. and City
Personnel Officer J a mes liar·
ring ton
Rose's next action will be to
ask the council to appoint an in·
dependent hearing officer. prob·
ably an ~dministrative law
jud~e selected by the state, to
rule on his case.
By law, the council 1s required
lo appotnl such an orficer.
Harrington said Pearl claims
Ros t' "viol ated num erous
policies and procedures of the
police department.
"This." he said in a report to
the council , "combined with sub·
.standard ~rformance and pre-
\llousty documented v1<1lalions of
city policy. led to the recom-
IT)ended termination "
Harrington said the exact al·
leaations against Rose are con·
fidenllal.
Rose is represented by Los
Angeles attorney Stephen Silver.
a specialist in public employee
matters.
Silver said Rose denies the
police chief's charges. and as-
serted that, even if the charges
are true, dismissal is excessive
punis hment
A slate hearmg probably could
not be held until August. accord·
ing to llarrington.
Although other Irvine police
officers have been asked to re
sign their posts since the de part·
ment was formed in 1975. Har
rington said, Rose is the first
who elected to fi ght dismissal. .
Rose has been a police officer
nine years, and was a member
of the city's first com plement of
policemen. He worked previous·
ly in Costa Mesa and Laguna
Beach
Sailor Dies
Scuba Diving
SAN DIEGO <AP> -A young
sailor who lapsed into un-
consciousness. during a scuba
diving class last month al the
Naval Training Center bas died,
says a spokesman for the Navy
Regional Medical Center.
Gary Arnold, 20, of Lansing,
Mic h., died last Wednesday
from Jack or oxygen to the brain,
the spokesman said Monday.
Arnold. a petty officer third
class, had been swimming about
45 minutes in full diving equip-
ment whe n bls classmates
noticed he was having trouble,
officials said at the time of the
accident.
Yoten CIDse
OnTaxCuta
SACRAMENTO (AP> -
Calilornla voters favor
Propos ition 13 over
Proposition 8, but the
margin between the two
tax-cut Issues is too ctose
to pick a clear leader, a
Gannett News Service poll says.
The statewide survey or 1.ocu voe.en round 40 ·per·
cent favor Proposition 13
and 37 per cent favor
ProposlUoo 8.
DellyfltMCiUff~
ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER DEBBIE MOSER HOLDS FLAPPING CAPTIVE IN IRVINE
Barn Owl Which Went Hunting Humans Taken Into Custody by Authorities
Irvine Predator Held
Barn Owl Captured After Attacks on Peopl.e
By PHILIP ROSMARIN
0t 1M O.llJ r1le4 SlaH
/\ young barn owl. whose mothe r ap· AT 5:30 A.M. TODAY, police received a
parently hadn't taught 1l the niceties or t•all rrom another resident nearby, on Walnut
planned community living went hunting Avenue
Irvine residents Monday night and early to.:__/ "Thert'·s a bi g owl on top or my roof."
day. lhl· m itn suid. "lie won't let me out!"
The residents compl~1ned to ~uthorit1es Miss Moser s ped 10 h is rescue She
from the safety of their Willow a_rea house.s -;potted the owl tn a tree
. The owl was captured by animal s~rvi~es "First we tried to coax it out of the tree ...
officers and handed over to a vetennanan she reported. "Tl didn't work. We took a fish-
who plans lo teach it to hunt smaller prey. tnl-( net. and taped ii to the end of a
then release st. broomstick. climbed a ways. and were gomg
DEBBIE MOSER, WHO grabbed the owl
from a net on which it alighted. said it began
stalking people Monday night.
to try to throw the net over him.
One man called to complain the owl was
attacking him every lime he tried lo get out
of the house on F ireside Circle.
"BUT THE OWL JUMPED right onto the
net. As <a helperl lowered it down. I grabbed it ..
The barn owl went lo t:nivers1ty Park
Veterinary Hospital. where Or. Kent Walker
exam ined the bird. pronounced 1t fit but
possibly confu.<;e<t about diet matters. and
\'Owed to set it straight then free
Miss Moser said she explained she would
have to wall till morning lo try to capture the
bird, because owls see a lot better in the dark
than arumal control services officers do.
Campus Work Delayed
First Rain, Then Jarvis Hamper Plans
Saddleback College officials
are exploring possibilities for
temporary north campus
facilities -delayed by heavy
winter rains -while passage or
the controversial J arvis-Gann
amendment could spell disaster
for tbe new Irvine campus.
Those facts emerged from dis-
cuss ion Monday by college
trustees over contingency plans
for fall classes In the district's
northern area.
The district's new campus at
Anchovy Bait
Bill Halted
SACRAMENTO <AP >
California Assembly men have
stopped a bill to permit im-
mediate anchovy bait Cishln1 In
Hum boldt Bay, on the North
CoHl near Eureka.
But the author of AB 23l 1, Al·
semblyman Lawrence Kapiloff
0 -San Diego, aold he would
emend the bill to be.iln th-: permission Jan. t. 1979, and
bring It up for anolher vole.
Jeffrey Road and Irvine Center
Oriv~ was scheduled to open In
September but bas been delayed
driving officials to consider con-
tingency plans for classroom
space.
But the whole effort could go
for naught iC Jarvis passes. of-
fi cials said.
"This Jarvis thing can be a
disaster to the whole north cam·
pus,·' Board President Larry
Taylor said. "The taxpayers
could lose a tremendous amount
of money on that facility. •
"I just don't see any way
we're ~onna do it (go ahead With
the north campusJ if Jarvis
passes."
Taylor and trustees were re-
acting to a request from district
Superintendent Robert Lom-
bardi that officials be allowed to
Investigate te mporary facilities
for clasacs In the northern area
this fall.
Those clasaes -ir orrered. at
all -will apparently be less
than officials originally an·
Uclpated.
"We'll probably Just do things
that ,,_,ould require a classroom
situation oaly," Lombard! told
tru tees, clUng rental cosll of
1pectaHzed classroom• su~h as
1elence laboratories.
estimate of whHt the program
will cost." Lombardi added.
He admitted the district prob-
ably could not begm a northern
program in the ran as big as
they had originally planned.
"We're fig uring a s mall
number to gel the program go·
ing and then they could get ii
open in February and bring on
the rest of the staff then." Lorn·
bardi said.
Trustees authorized Lombardi
to continue exploring altemaUve
facilities for full classes In the
northern area
Smellite Ban
T~ks Slated
WASKINGTON <AP> -The
United States and t he Soviet
Union will begin negotiations on
ban ning .. hunter·klller"
satellttes on Juno 8 In Helsinki,
the State Department said Mon-
day.
Department spokesman Hod-
ding Carter said the negoUalions
are expected to be "short and
preliminary In nature."
Victim
Shot 12
Times
ROME <API -The blood·
s m eared bo d y o r former
Premier Aldo Moro. shot in the
back of the head and his hand~
and feel chained. was found tn a
parked car in the heart of Rome
loday. 54 days after he was kid·
napped by the Red Brigades.
Moro. 61. also had been s hot at
least JI times around the heart
Police said they found five
spent cartridges m the car, a
stole n red Renault bearing
Rom e license plates.
The body. hunched over on the
floor of the Renault'<; back seat.
was clad in the same dark i;!ray
suil Moro was wearing when
kidnapped March Hi by a dozen
terrorists who ambushed hb
two·car motorcade on a Roml'
street. killing rive polire
bodyguards.
The wounds had been inflicted
within the past24 hours.
A blue overcoat and red
blanke t also were wrapped
around the body. It wa::; d1i.
covered by a police bomb expert
who broke into the car. Firemen
who saw it said the race was ex
tremely pale and Moro's fi ve
foot· l 1 frame had lost consideru·
ble weight.
His Marxist revolutionary Red
Brigade kidnappers cljiimed
Moro was a symbol of "tm·
persalistic " oppres:.1on of the
working class Friday. the ter
roris ts issued the last of a scnc~
of m essagei>. !>aymg they wen•
"carrying out " a death
"verdict" against Moro because
the Christian Democrats refused
to negotiate their demand for
the release of 13 jailed terrorist~
in exchange for Moro's life .
After the body was found .
Premier Giulio Andreotti caller1
an emergenry Cabinet session
a nd President Gwvanni Le<>nl'
scheduled an address to the na·
lion. Italy's maJOr un ions callecl
an eight-hour work stoppage
Moro's family issued u biller
statement calling on the govnn
ment not to hold any !>I aie funeral
or other publit ceremony to
mourn his assassination
Moro himself in a handwritten
letter April 24 requested that no
government or party official J t -
tend his funeral.
"The family lock::; itself up in
silence and demands silence ·
the statement said. ''llistory will
pass j udgment on the life Joel
death of Aldo Moro "
Jn Was hing ton , the Stale
Department condemned the kill -
ing as a "cowardly and con-
tempt1ble act. ..
<See MORO, Page .'\21
Co ast
W e athe r
Low c\oud1ness tonight.
clearing to hazy sunshinl·
by late Wednesday morn-
ing. Cooling trend. Low"
tonight 52 to 58. High"
Wednesday 67 lo 74
INSIDE TODA\'
Whal nglUs doea a women
ho~ tdlal her hUlbcnd or
the man w lJve1 1D1tll beo!:;
her? See Ff'Otunng, Page Cl
.... A apoketman ror the Newport
lleacfl Martne Saf oty O.Plrt·
(Sei va8El;Pace AJ>
Twenty percenl said
they were undecided; 0¥
pucent ufd they would
vote ror both, and three
percent aald JM)' would
vote ... t,.t ~ .
The blll reJ~led Monday~ a
41·25 vote required a two-thlrdl majority of ,. to 10 Into errect
when the aovemor sips It. Bu\ bllla that 10 Into ·effect Jan. {
t.ak• only '1 votee .
"UnUt we have the opportuni-
ty lo explore which faclUUes are
available, we can't alve any
The twQ countries aareed
earlier lhlJ year to dlacuss ban·
nln& the satellites. wblcb the
Sovlets have tested and whkh
the Unltod States la sU ll develop.
ln11. ,
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Pe11d leieli SICe ,.,.._ Page A I
LNG Terminal MORO •••
The Vatican radio called it _.
"barbarous murder . . . whJch
takes on Jn this tragic hour a
nearly sacrificial value "
. ; . OKbyBadham Upon hearing the news. Pope
Paul VI. a personal friend of lhe
slain politician, went to pray in
hie pr1vJte chapel.
Former President Giuseppe
Saragat said, "Moro ·s body ii.
the body of the First Republic.
which lS now dead " He referred
to the republic establis'1ed in
1946, when the Italian monarchy
was voted out in a plebiscite.
U S Congr essman Robert
Uadban1. R·Newport Beach,
sald today he wouJd. not objecl to
use of Camp Pendleton for a
liquefied natural gas terminal
'ifnootheroption ls available.
· · 1 must stress that we just
don't have lbe luxury to quibble
over the use or natural re·
sources." Badha m said In a
statement released through his
office.
California Coa sta l Com ·
mission staff named the Camp
Pendleton Marine facility. just
south of San Clemente, as its top
choice Monday for the s ite or a
Jiqueftednatural gas terminal.
Military officials announced
immediately their Intention to
right 10<.'ation or the term inal at
Camp Pendleton -one of four
California coastal sites under
consideration for the terminal.
Badham serves on the House
Armed Services Committee and
its s ubcommittee on ins talla·
t1 on s and f acilities .
Congress ional approved. re·
quired to locale the terminal on
federal property, would appear
more likely with Badham 's sup·
port
Bad ham's statement indicated
he is <.'oncern ed that the
t er mina l. If located at
' Pendleton, would not be opera
tional before 1985 Jr located
near Point Conception. 40 miles
west or Santa Barbara, -the
s ite preferred b) the gas
partnership, West ern LNG
Terminal Associates. which
would construct the facility it
would be operating three years
earlier.
.. T he state coas ta l com
· mission staff's recommendetl
ranking or J,.he possible Oiquefied
natural gas> sites tn California
ignores the advice or its own
professional consultants and
subs titutes its own arbitrary
standards ,'' Keith McKinney ,
president or the gas partnership,
a JOIOt venture or the Pacific
Gas and Ele<.'tric Co. and the
Southern California Gas Co .
said Monday.
·'The proposed site near Point
Con cept ion is farthest from
f 'ro. Pa.-A J
VESSEL ••.
ment said he has been told that
Duncan Mcintosh. promoter of
the boat show that brought the
ship to Newport, is making ar·
rangements for its removal.
However. Mcintosh couldn't
tw reached for romment today
Previous s uggestions as to
what to do with the steamer
have included moving it to just
ins ide the jetty for 30 days. or
moving it to Ensenada.
The s h ip's o wne r s have
a no ther idea. They want to
donate it to the Orange County
Ed Davis for Governor Commit·
tee for fWld-raising purposes.
The proposal was reportedly
made to committee chairman
Goldie Joseph or Lido Isle, who
also couldn't be reached for
comment today
Davis. a former Los Angeles
police chief, s aid the plan to sail
the boat up and down the coast
to raise funds has "great merit"
and that his campaign staff is
studying it
Police Catch
CYAEscapee
PACOIMA (AP> -Police
have recaptured the convicted
murderer or Pacolma ice cream
vendor Mohammed Mofrad four
months after his escape from
the California Youth Authority
Alvin Holmes. 20, surrendered
to police Monday arter hiding In
the attic of a Pacoima apart·
menl complex.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
~~~~;·r.:.:.:.:=~= tor.t llvblt\l\l""'C......•ftf S.0--•"4t""""'~~ _,.._ """' ..... ' "''~ ,,...,, ... C.0.1•
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T•l•PllOM (11•1~ Cte_.......Actf_,....,......,. --•v .. 1t1-0ltc• 111~to
,,_S-Clt---~1= ~ o:.:"! cm· .. ,,~~= ::r .. , .... ~,fj~-. .. r: ........ "'~ ~ ~::;,~.....:.'"-' -··· "'""'"
~Tr., .. ~~ .. ·.:::!~ . .: ...... (~:t. ~:.
=i::~,.·:..:~M -llfY .... ltt tty
population <.'enters . s tate
beaches. parks. major h11hways
and recreational boat inc."
McKinney said. "In short. it is
the best site." .
The Southern Ca lifornia
Edison Company. with its San
Onofre nuclear generating plant
located within rive miles of the
proposed gas terminal site, wiU
be reprei-ented Monday al a
'·public hearing when the coastal
commission will consider the
staff's recommendation.
In a letter to the commlssion.
the electric company said a liq·
uefied natural gas terminal.
localed so close to San Onofre.
might not be compatible with
federal Nuclear Regulatory
Comm 1ssion s ite criteria
·'witho ut possible des ign
modifications and major nuclear
plant reanalysis "
The city of San Clemente has
also written to the Coastal Com·
mission. asking that the gas
te rminal not be 10<.'aled at Camp
Pendleton.
"I'm against it." said Bernard
Allen. president o r San
Clemente's Cha°'ber of Com·
mer<.'e. "My personal view ls
that once they do this, they wtll
open up the whole base. I think
it ·s the first step in an attempt to
do away with a major natural re·
source."
Allen said the executive com-
mittee of the Chamber or Com·
merce was scheduled to meet to-
day at noon. The proposed
te rmina l location at Camp
Pendleton was on the agenda, he
s aid •
S trike One!
Debbit· C<issidy. a PBX operator ut the
Registr~ llotel in Irvine. puts oomph in
her s wing at a softball. Be hind her.
James Hobinson. a hydraulic mechanic
for the Navy's Blue Angels precision
fliers. makes u catch. The hotel staff and
the Blue Angl'ls staged a ~oftball ~ame
Monday at E l Toro Manne Corps Air
Base. \\i th the hotel team winnin g 19 to
12. The Blue Angels have been staying at
the hotel for several davs due to an au·
s how they put on at El Toi·o last weekend
Local Control Periled?
Judge Raps Jarvis-Gann in Lfwuna, Debme
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of Ille o.llY ~ ... Slaff
Orange County Superior Court ,
Judge Bruce Sumner said Mon·
day in Laguna Beach that the
Jarvis-Gann initiative would
virtually eliminate local control
over government.
•. Jt is the end or local govern·
ment." Sumner said during a
debate over the controversial
property tax c ut initiative.
Proposition 13 on the June 6
ballot.
was government spending
"Our state continues to spend
and spend. and It is evident that
all we gel is more and more
bureau<.'racy," he said.
The body was found at 1.30
p.m.-5:30 a.m. PDT -on Via
Michelangelo Caetani. a narrow
cobblestoned street or 15th and
16th century palaces running
a longside Communist party
headquarters and just a stone·,.
throw from Chrislinn Democrat
headquarten . It was just two
blocks from lhe busiest intersec
tion in Rome.
Officers went to the area and
discovered the body after pohce
headquarter'! received a n
anonymous telephone call say·
mg u bomb had been placed In a
car parked on Via Funari. adja
cent to the 20Q·yard·IOJl(.1Via
Caetanl. ,
1'hcy found nothing on Via
Funari but then checked Via
Caetani. The car apparently had
been parked on the street for
several hours, police said Thl'y
said Moro may have been shot in
the car
Still wrapped in the blanket.
the body was blessed by a priest
from the nearby Church of Jesus
and then was loaded into an am
bulance and taken away to a
morgue for an autopsy Polic~
cordoned the area. Crowds or
weeping Romans congregated
on the tiny st reet.
Hundreds of other ordinary
<.'1tizens gathered outside the
Moro home five miles away •n
Rome's Monte Mario section.
and on t~e nearby tree-s haded
Via Mario Fani. scene of kidnap
ambush
Grove Man Held
.. The debate. sponsored by the
Laguna Beach PTA Council and
Laguna Beach Ta xpayers As
soclation, was held before a
crowd of about 200 people in the
Laguna Beach High School
Auditorium.
The key provision of the
J arvis·Gann bill is to cut property
laxes to one percent of fa ir
market value. A large chunk of ci -
ty. county and school funds art!
provided by property taxes.
The debaters also disagreed
on how cutbacks as high as 40
percent in school budgets would
be met. with Steinberg saying
the state is obligated to fund the
schools and Sancbis saying the
state is required to pay only Sl20
per student per year.
* * *
Carter Sends
Condolences
To Widow
•
After Irvine Chase
A Garden Grove electrician
was jailed Monday on a misde·
meanor drunk driving charge
a fte r Irvine police chased a
careening pickup truck that they
said forced haJf a dozen other
motorists oH the road .
Jerry Greer. 31, was held at
Orange County Jail on S440 bail,
police said
Police said Greer was arresl·
ed eight miles from where a
truck that matched the descrip-
tion of his own bashed the front
fender of a car in a !(lancing
blow at high speed and con·
tinued without slopping.
Three police reportedly were
required t o res train and
handcuff hil'T' when the chase
ended. anti four countv deputies
Too Soon
had to puJI Greer from· the Police
car at the jail to book him,
police said.
None of the motorists forced
off the road. most o r them
traveling alon g Moulton
Park way. was inj ured. police re·
ported.
Authorities said the pickup
truck was spotted by an Irvine
police officer alerted to the pnor
accident. who watched as the
truck went through an intersec·
lion at SO miles per hour. without
pausing for the stop sign. hit a
dip in the road and wai; briefly
airborne.
The officer chased the truck
along Moulton. from Sand Can·
yon A venue to where it spun
out at Lake Forest Drive. poli ce
s aid
Corrit/pr Extension
Planning Assailed
1 rs too early no\\ to study
plans for extending the San Joa·
quin Hills traffic corridor across
Camp Pendleton, members of
the Orange County Transporta·
lion Commission said Monday.
San Clemente City Council
members had asked the com·
mission to s tudv oossible ex
•Ghost' Bemnd
Wheel Really
An 8-year-olJ,
HAMTRAMCK. Mi ch. <AP> -
Hamtra mck police may have
thought they were seeing ghosts
when a car zipped by them. do·
Ing 70 mph with no sign of a
driver at the wheel.
When -after a high speed
chase through residenU1I streets
-the offi<.'ers finally caught up
with the neelng car Monday.
they foWld no phantom. just a
short 8·year-old boy.
The pint-sized car thief, whose
identity was not r eleased,
manaaed to elude patrol cars in
thia Detrolt·are& community for
several blocks. leadtne them the
wrong way down A one-way
street before rammln1 a fence
and abandoning the ve6Jcle.
When police cauaht u_p with
the culprit on a nearby street
corn.r, of:ficera said, he readily
admitted at.eaUng the car rrom a
gas staUon and drivlna It.
Ofticers Hid the boy waa so
short he had to peer between the
spokes of the steering wheel as
he drove.
UDion BackaBrown
FRESNO tAP) -Oov. Ed·
mund G. Brown Jr. baa won en-
dorsement Cor ... -.tffUon from
Callfomla 1teelworker1.
tension of the proposed route
across Camp Pendleton so it
would hit the San Diego
Freeway in San Diego County.
not Orange County.
But Comm issioner Ralph
Diedrich said construction of the
San Joaquin Hills route is still
too far in the ruture lo begin
studying its possible extension
He said, however, there even·
tually will have l o be an
alternative to the San Diego
Freeway.
The San Joaquin Hitls route ,
expected lo be built some five lo
15 years from now, would begin
at the Corona del Mar Freeway
and link with the San Diego
Freeway near Saddleback
College.
San Clemente oHicials have
been concerned a bout existing
traffi c on the San Diego
Freeway inside city ltmits and
fear <.'Ongestlon would worsen
once the new thoroughfare is
open.
They also are worried that the
freeway would be the only
escape route from the city In
time of disaster. ·
Co mmissione rs noted the
potential San J oaquin Hills
transportation corridor ex·
t ension would be covered In
general as pan or a countywlde
tran11it and tramc study now be·
Ing prepared.
l'roraP~A I
TRAFFIC •..
alm~d at lowerln1 tho allowable
denalUee on the remalnln1 va·
cant property In Newport Beach.
8uL Mayor Ryekoff asktd city
ofnclals to puL the polJcy ln tht
form of an ordinance for future
conaiderauoo by the City Coun· ell. The P.Olicy adopted Monday
nlaht. aJthoush blndllll on the
council and city orne1111. doei
not carry the torce of law.
Opposing the bill were Sumner
and Robert Sanchis, Laguna
Beach school s upe rintendent.
Supporting it was investment
broker Ronald Steinberg, who
said a fellow Jarvis supporter
also scheduled to speak was una·
ble to attend.
Sumner based his opposition
on the idea that the amendment
would mean a fundam ental
<.'ha nge in California govern
me nt because he said it would
transfer the power to allocate
funds for local projects from
lo<.'al government to the state.
Steinberg denied that the key
issue was local control. s aying 1t
Sanchis said that in his opinion
education would suffer severely
from the amendment, forcing
massive teacher layoffs. Since
teachers by law must be laid off
in order of inverse seniority, he
said , the result would be that
many or the remaining teachers
would have to teach subjects in
which they are not speciali&t.s.
WASHINGTON <AP 1 -Pres1·
dent Carter sent a ~sage or
sympathy today to the ~1dow of
the slain Aldo Moro and issued a
public statement denouncing hii.
death as "a contemptible and
cowa rdly act. ..
White House spokesman Jody
Powell said Carter also sent
mess ages of sympathy to the
premier and president of Italy.
Mang Drivers Ba~k Carte r 's public state ment
said : "My sympathies and the sym
path1es of all Americans go out
to Aldo Moro's bereaved family
and nation. No Meetings Set
In Trash Dispute
"His murder is a contemptib~
and cowardly act. His death ad
van ces no cause but that
mindless anarchy But his I re
was devoted to buildlng his na
lion. and his political ski.Its ":Yerc
forever at the service Of JUStlCe
No formal m eetings a re
sch eduled be tween striking
Orange County trash truck
drive rs and representatives of
dis pos al firms . a f ede ral
mediator said today.
However , mediator John
Courtney said he is continuing to
talk to both sides and that there
is a possibility they may be taJk
ing lo each other without notify.
inj? him.
"We don't discourage tne
parties from talking to ea<.'h
other without a mediator tf
that's what it takes to get a set·
tlement." Cour oey said of the
three·week-old strike.
AlthOugh Teamsters Local 396
remains on strike, the effects of
the 'alkout have ended for most
Orange Coast residents.
Service. which resumed eight
days ago with nonunion labor.
continued to catch up with un·
collected trash this week as
more and more union drivers re·
turned to work without a con·
tract.
They bellan returning last
week after neg o tia tion s
deadlocked. Drivers. who had
been earning $4.50 an hour, had
asked for an immediate raise to
$6.50 while management stood
firm on an offerofSS.25.
Many drivers still rem&un out
on strike. but m ostly m the
Anaheim area.
"He stood for c1vilizat1on and
the rule or law. principles wh1rh
will always outlive the terronsni
that seeks to destroy them. ·
Carter said.
Earlier. Stale Department
spokesman Charles Shapiro also
conde mned the murder ai; a
"cowardly and contemptible
act ··
"We condemn the brutal
murder of Aldo Moro by a small
bund of criminals This con
templible and cowardly act of
fen ds the consc ience of a ll
Americans.·· said Shapiro
"We share the grief or the
Italian people at the loss of on~
o f their most d1s llnguiahed
citizens." he said
A dtllghtful cok>flnt cookbook ...
fun add kids and cnyon• and pr•·
Mn t Mom wUh • kHpttkt •he'll
tr .. •Urt.
Corne in end Mlect from • whtt nrittv of .. mpllno. tntv tlft Pllt• ...
prettily bo•td Jutt for MotMr't Dey -M11J t 4 ...
If Mom ll•n out of towi, •'II Mnd her gift for you.
WESTQJFF PLAZA
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Me&.M..,. .... 'Tl .... 'ft '
~IMll~ Yl&.LAMOAMA POtMT
Phone4,...WO N10et .. Slt. 'tJI I Sun. '111 t
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LSC Tuaday May 9 1978
/fl om Speeds
l
Mid-life
, Topic of
Seminar
A seminar. "Mid·
Lirery." is scheduled
May 19·20 through the
Saddle back Co llege
Forums for Learning
program.
The opening session is
scheduled rrom 7 to 10
p. m . and the second
rrom 8 :30 a.m. lo 4 p.m.
in room 103 or the Fine
Arts Complex on the
Mission Viejo campus.
DR. ROGER Gould,
psychiatrist and UCLA
psychiatry professor.
will speak on "Adult
Life Stages" and what
he believes are pre·
dicatable charac·
teristics, program
coordinator Ri c k
Capaldi said.
Author Dr. Edmond
LOCAL
Leading Cheers
Winning pep squad tryouts a t Saddlcback C0llcgc <irr front tow.
left to right. Jennifer lloselton. Erin :\lcC'ullough and Gina Biss in.
and back ro\\. left to right. Karen S\~cJnngcn . Dede Westgard
and T<ml Mathc\\s They will b~ lhe 1978·79 chccrleaders. Mrs. Sh aron Price of El Toro reads
technical material at 900 words a minute
wi th 100 percent understanding. Daughter
Jackie. 17. reads t~xtbooks at 1,380 words
a minute. But Saddleback YMCA speed
reading course isn 't over. and mom hopes
to become the fastest. The local Y plans
demonstration b y Educational and Hallberg is to discuss -----------------------------
Industrial Research, Inc. Saturday at 1
p.m . a l 23131 Orange Ave .. El Toro.
his work with middle-
age males in t ransition.
Also scheduled to
speak Is a counseling
psychologist and pro-
fessor at Cal State Los
Angeles. Dr. Herber t
Levitt. He is to present
New Tests for Cancer
Audit Move Delayed
By Sclwol Ti-ustees
Saddlehack Valley Unified School District trustees will hold off ap.
proval of a district audit untll their next meeting May 17 Board
President George l lenry says. '
Trustee Loa Young had called for the audit at the close of Wed-
hcsday's board meeting, citing a confidential letter received from
11u s pended Superintendent
U1 chard Welte.
El Toro Youth
To Academy
F o rmer El Toro s tudent
1l>aniel R. Waldman. now attend·
in g a Naval Academy
Preparatory School in New(>Ort.
.R .I., has been offered an ap·
.pointment to the U.S. Naval
Academy.
1 Rahnda Bozelli, who gradual·
ed in mid·year from El Toro
High School. has been offered an
appointment to the U.S. Air
_ Force Academy.
Nominallons for the a ppoint
ments were made b y Rep.
Robert E. Badham <R-New(>Ort
, Beach ), a spokesman said .
. .
..
WELTE AND trustees have
declined comment on tile letter's
contents.
"The letter we received from
We lte suggested there might be
a n eed for one (an audit),"
Henry said.
HENRY SAID trustees would
wait to choose from several op-
tions rather than conduct a
telephone poll vote of trustees
which had originally been sug.
gesled Wednesday.
He said the options trustees
would race involve whether to
call for a state audit, an audit by
the district's auditing firm or
waiting until a required aMual
audit due by Oct. 15.
Thrift Shop
At Hospital
Plans Party
. case studles and de·
monstrate skills he has
used in helping persons
Members of the Saddleback
Community Hospital Thrift Shop
will attend a birthday pa~y Fri· day at 7;30 p.m. in the hospital,
24451 Via Estrada, Laguna Hills.
The event is being held to
celebrate the shop's fourth an· niversary, its Third Disneyland
award and the volunteer's dona·
tion of $325,265.62 to the non·
profit hospital.
The Thrift Shop volunteer fund
raising project began May 13,
1974. It is solely operated by
volunteers, who in addition to
the cash donation, have con·
tributed health care equipment
for the hospital's adult day care
center.
Special guests include ex·
ecutive director. Harold L.
Gano, members of the board of
directors and spouses or the
volunteers. :,(>Okeswoman Mary
Weldy said.
in mid-lire crisis.
DR. AIJCE Pitman, a
clinical psychologist, Is
to discuss "Family Dis·
turbance in Mid-Life."
A Cal State Long
Beach Instructor .
Clarence D. Johnson. is
scheduled to identify
predictable crisis points
in marriage and work
and o rter a means
w hereby to those in
crisis can be assisted.
SCHOOL counselor
and instructor Sharon
Johnson will present
"Mid-Life Career
Changes."
Pre-registration is re·
quired and can be paid
in building "Q" on cam·
pus or by mail lo Com·
munily Se rv ices
Registra t ion. Sad -
dleback College. 28000
Marguerite Parkway,
Mission Viejo, 92675.
A fee or $2S includes
food and materials.
SAN FRANClSCO IAPI -Three
tests to check for possible cancer·
causing substances have been de·
veloped al separate University of
California laboratories. the universi·
ty reports.
"The three tests share a common
advahlage: they ure among the'flrst
to measure the effects or such
chemicals directly on human or
animal cells." uc.san Francisco an·
nounced.
"I N THE PAST, the most widely
used laboratory tests for carlnogens
-chemicals that cause can~er -
have measured their genetic effects
on bacteria," the university said.
Until now the most reliable test has
been a bacterial method developed
by biochemist Bruce Ames al UC·
Berkeley. The UCSF tests uncover
Funds Denie d
SACRAM ENTO CAP I
-A Redding foot doctor
ha s been suspended
rrom receiving Medi·Cal
fund s becaus e he
c harged ~omc patients
ror ser vices Medt·Cal
had already paid for. the
state said. The indefinite
suspension a ffects Dr.
Richa rd A. Reginato.
changes ln the DNA or animal cells,
the announcement said.
IN THE MAY S is.sue of the journal
"Science," UCSF cell biologist
Sheldon Wolff and Brita Rodin report
that pure saccharin alters the DNA
-t h e b asic m aterial In
chromos'omes of the cell nucleaus -
from humans and Chinese hamsters.
They saJd this provides new evidence
that the artificial sweetener may be
a carcinogen.
Wolff aaJd his test a lso can be used
to test the effects of chemicals on the
chromosomes or humans who are ex·
posed to them.
He said researchers in Sweden are
using it to look for dHfer:ences
bet ween the c h romosomes or
s m okers and those of non-smokers.
Jn Norway it is being used to monitor ..
workers who come into contact with
vinyl chlpride , a carcinogen.
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NATIONAL DAILY PILOT A 7
torians Seek _Seopes Trial 'Mikes'
\
DAYTON. Teno. CAP>
llistorlans are loot.inc ror two or
the mtcrophones used to
broadcast the Scopes monkey
trial hve over the flrst national
radio hookup 53 years ago.
.. They are particularly
tmportanl s ince that hve
broadcast marked the first time
it bad ever been dotte." said Ted
Mercer. president o r Rhea
County Historical Society.
. RADIO STATION WGN in
Chicago. one of the nation's
oldest, used three squash-sized
mikes bearing its call letters for
the broadcast. Program
manager Dick Jones said
recently that one or the
microphones is on display at the
station. He sajd he had no idea
where the other two are.
WGN wanted to broadcast
Chi ca~o ·s sensational 1924
Leopold and Loeb murder trial
in which two well·to·do young
me n were convi c ted of
kidnapping and killing a small
boy. But more than 10,000
listeners voted against it for
reasons or taste
The next year. WGN didn't
bother to ask whether 1t should
broadcast the trial in southeast
Tennessee of John Scopes. who
had been accused or teaching
evolution. The station jumped at
the chance to air Cl arence
Darrow 's classic con ·
frontation with Willium
Jennings Bryan
"STATION WGN OF Chicago
decided to broadcast , the trial
over the first national radio
hookup and sent Quinn Ryan to
coordinate the effort." Rick
Beard wrote in the Smithsonian
Institution's history of the trial.
"The WGN microphones would
become a fixture in the
courtroom."
On July 11 . 1925. WGN
technicians installed the mikes.
one on the Judge's bench.
another on the defense table.
a nd the third in Cront or
prosecutors. Judge J ohn T .
Raulston tested the system from
the ben ch by scolding the
gallery of reporters.
Half a century later . county
officials decided to renovate the
Rhea County Courthouse wilb
about SI million in stale and
federal money to make it look
as It did In 1925. Only the
microphones were missing when
the his t ori c building was
reopened to the public this
month.
.. VIRTUALLY ALL THE
furnishings In the courtroom are
original.·· Mercer said.
''The courthouse and the
courtroom had not been change
In any significant way." he said.
"Certain parts had j ust been
abandoned. And that turned out
to be a good thing. in retrospect.
because it meant very little
• reconstruction."
A Scopes museum will be built
in the basement within the next
year , M~rcer said . And to
accommodate the expansion in
the county government. the
architect added orrice space in
the unused third floor
"The renovation even includes
the old brass cuspidors which
add a glow to the room," Mercer
said. "We're JUSt hoeing no one
uses them." .,.~
DEFENSE COUNSEL DUDLEY FIELD MALONE LISTENS TO RULING FROM BENCH
1925 Photo of 'Monkey Trial' Broadca1t Live Over National Radio
.
'lmpoM~le' Goal Asked
KIRKLAND. Wash. IAP> -Determined to
pay for a $1.6 million church auditorium with c;1sh
.. before the bulldoze rs move the first dirt, ..
leaders of the Overlake Christian Church are urg·
mg m embers lo hock their valuables and mortgage
.their homes for the money.
The money also is be ing collected to retire a
$200,000debl for the church.
"WE AR E UNDER THE deep conviction that
God "ants us to pay cash for the building. Human·
ly spealnng. it is Impossible. but we know the Lord
wan t s at to happen ... says Pastor Robert
had their lifestyle affected becauioe of an offel·· ing ..
The independent church. founded nine years
ago in this well-to-do com munity near Seattle
when more conservative members of the Bell evue
Christian Church split away. has about 750 family
units and 1.700 pa rishioners
WAS IT SCRIPTU R E THAT inspired
Moorehead to undertake the project.,
"We JUSt fell at was good stewardship. good
business. not to have the church pay nearly S2
ma I hon an interest over20years,''hesaid.
Moorehead. r,:::;=::==::===:;;;::=:=:=:=:=====;;;;.i-
The collection plate will be passed June 25 for
the. bonanza. and Moorehead says $.110.000 has
been committed by church members an six weeks.
"One man sold the boat he had just bought, ..
Moorehead su1d "One of our single women is sell-
ing her home. giving the equity of about S25.000 to
the church." he added.
MOOREHEAD SAID THE CASH must be in
hand "before the bulldozers move the first dirt."
"It's a wild upproach . I'll tell you. The key to
we are changing our display
room ... we have cabinet Mctiona and a beautiful
wet bar unit.
3 feet-8 ffft. below coa'
21190 rendolph, 'ott•m•H !:5
754-0370 10-3 ,!..!
A,..........._ the whole progra m as the word sacr•fice." said the
FAMOUS MOVIE TOLD STORY BASED ON SCOPES 'MONKEY TRIAL' pastor. "Our' people are pretty affluent. Most of Barker~l
Spencer Tracy, left, and Frederic Mar::c.:.:h~in:.:_:L:e:ad::.:R:o.:.:le:.:s:.:i.:.:n_:'l.:.:n.:.:h:e~rl.:_tt::h:.:e:_:W:.:.:in:d:_· ______ _:th:_:e~m~h.::.a~ve:_::ne:_v:_:e:.:_r...:m=ad::e:_:a_:s::":cn:..:·:n:ce:._T:_:h:_:e:::y_'v:.:e~n:::e:.:v~e.:..r~=================~
Battle Site Restored
BANGKOK. Thailand CAP> -Vietnam is
restoring the battlefield of Dien Bien Phu where
Communist forces overwhelmed a French gar·
rison 24 years ago this month. marking the end of
French domination of Vietnam.
The official Vietnam News Agency said plans
call for restoring relics or the two-month battle.
selling up a victory monument and building a mus
eum. hotel and airfield
WNG JOHN SIIYER'S.
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at a migh1y small price.
I
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• Fabulous Fryes
• TangySlaw
• 2 Crl1py Hushpuppies
• $4.61 Vallle
•
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894·7542
Mission Viejo-El Toro
768-4378
New~Beach
848-7755
San Diego
482-4990
Santa An•
557.0320
Tustin-Orange
139-3913
..
Laguna/South Coast
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol tlM 0.lly l"li.4 Sl•ft
Edison Company officials
were gearing up today for a
strike th&t may occur <tt mid·
night tonight after union mem·
, bers at thl' power plants over-
whelmingly rejected the com-
pany's "last " offer Tuesday
M e m be rs o f t h e U t i I i t y
Workers. Union of America,
Local 246. have authoriied a
strike at midnight at Huntington
• Heach and San Onofre eleclrici·
ty generating plants and at other
Voten Crose
On Tax Cuts
SACRAMENTO <AP) -
Ca lifornia voters favor
Proposition 13 over
Proposition 8 , but the
margin between the two
tax-cut issues is too close
to pick a clear leade r. a
Gannett News Service poll
says.
The statewide survey of
1.001 voters found 40 per-
cent favor Propos ition 13
and 37 pe r cent favor
Proposition 8.
Twenty percent s aid
they were undecided: one
percent said they would
vote for both. and three
percent said they would
vote against both.
I ~ Badham: LNG r : At Pendleton?
l Can't Quibble
U S Congressman Robert
Badham. R·Newport Beach.
said today he would not object to
use of Camp Pendleton for a
hquefied natural gas terminal -
if no other option is available.
"I must stress that we just
don't have the luxury to quibble
over the use of natural re·
sources." Bad ham said in a
statement released through his
offi ce.
California Coastal Com-
mission staff named the Camp
Pendleton Manne facility. just
south or San Clemente. as its top
choice Monday for the site of a
liquefied natural gas terminal.
M thtary orric1als announced
1mmed1ately their intention to
fight location of the terminal at
Camp Pendleton -one of four
Cahfornla coastal sites under
consideration for the terminal.
Badham serves on the House
Armed Services Committee and
its subcommillee1 on installa-
1 tions and raciliUes . i Congressional approved , re·
! quired to locate the terminal on
-federal property. would appear
more likely with Badham's sup·
' port. Badham's statement indicated
he is conce rned that the
terminal . if lo cated at
Pendleton. would not be opera·
tional before 1985. U located
near Pomt Conception, 40 miles
west of Santa Barbara. the
site preferred b y the gas
partne r s hip. Western LNG
Terminal Associates, which
would construct the facility -it
would be operatmg three years
earlier. I ·'The s tate coastal com·
; mission staff's recommended
' ranking of the possible Cllquefied natural gas l sites In CaUfornia
ignores the advice of its own
professional consuatanls and
substitutes its own arbitrary
standards." Keith McKinney.
president of the gas partnership.
a joint venture of the Pacific
Gas and Electric Co. aad the
Southern California Gas Co ..
said Monduy.
"The proposed site near Point
Conception Is farthes t from
popularion centers, slate
-beache&, paru, maJor hl1hways
and recreatlonaf boating."
McKinney u d. ••tn short, lt ls
the best site."
The Southern California
• Edison Com pally. with IU San
---"(See LNG;Pafe Al) -· ....
Edison locations in Southern
California.
Union officials were unavaila·
ble for commenl on whether or
not tbc strike bas been called at
the Edison locations.
Jim Bull, a spokesman for
Edison. said lhal negotiations
with a federal mediator are
sc heduled at Edison head-
quarters in Rosemead today.
·'The contract e nds tonight
and a strike has been authorized
at midnight if the union chooses
to do so." he said.
"We won't know any more de-
tails until later in the day," he
said.
Another Edison s pokesman.
Bob Hull. said thal the company
has made plans for a walkout
and will use supervisory person·
nel in place of union members 1f
there is a strike.
He said today that the plants
will continue to produce elec-
tricity at normal capacity.
He also said that temporary
and permanent personnel may
be hired to take up the slack.
The 1,100 me mbers of the
Utility Workers Union maintain
and repair power plants.
They voled by a 3 to 1 margin
to reject the company proposal
Monday in Edison power plants
in Huntington Beach, San
Onofre, Long Beach. Redondo
Beach. E l Segundo. Oxnard.
Ormond Beach. Etiwanda and
Barstow.
Negotiations have been
snagged since last October over
a proposal ror a rotating work
schedule.
Edison is seeking to imple-
ment a schedule in which unjon
members would work weekends
on a rotation basis without re·
ceiving overtime pay.
The union objects lo this pro·
posal.
An official for Edison said that
the rotating work schedule is
necessary to meet rising costs,
CSee EDISON, Page A2>
Newport Limits
Bui,lding With
Eye on Traffic ·
Newport Beach city coun·
cilmen said Monday it is now
their poliey to limit new con-
s truction In their city to projects
that won't increase traffic con-
gestion.
Proponents of the measure.
adopted in a 5-1 vote. call it a
traffic phasing developme nt
policy. It was introduced by
Mayor Paul Ryckoff.
Opponents -most of the city's
landowners. builders and de·
velopers -say the roucy
amoun ts· lo a bui ding
moratorium ~d will, in ef~t.
shut down l)ew construction ln
Newp0rt Bt!ach.
The policy copies an initiative
proposal being circulated by the
Legal E nvironmental Analysis
Fµnd <LEAF>, a group o r
Newport Beach environmen-
talists. Leaders of the group
(See TRAFFIC, Page AZ>
EDITION
A,.WI,..,....
HEROIC TUGBOAT CREW RELAXES AFTER SAVING AIR CRASH VICTIMS
Capt. Glenn McDon•ld, Right, end First Mete Biii Kenney
'Help Me! Save Me!'
Tugboat Skipper Rescues 55 CrWJh Victims
PENSACOLA. Fla. <AP> -A tugboat
captain said be was orr course and virtually
lost when he saw an airliner glide with thun-
derous hiss into the foggy bay.
His tug and its barge ~ame llferart ror
survivors.
GLENN McDONALD. 41, A COOL, in·
dependent mariner. s aid it was only by
chance that his tug. "Little Mac ... was near
e nough lo the downed National Airlines 727
jet so he could see it in the fog and reach the
panic-stricken passengers.
"We were where the Lord put us." said
Mc Donald. who along with his mate. Bill
Kenney. a husky 28·year-old. pulled all 55
survivors onto their construction barge in
Escambia Bay.
Three passengers died.
"People were screaming, 'Help me! Save
me!' when we came over. About half a dozen
were atop the fus elage scrambling.
crawling. sliding. The others were in the
water," said McDonald.
HE SAID MOST APPARENTLY had no
time to prepare for the s plashdown. "Because
3 ·Kilkd • in
they didn't have their hfeJackets on. they
were clutcbing them around their necks."
"There would be three people over here.
10 over there. I had to tell Bill to leave tbe
three and get the 10. I had to glide the barge
between people drlfing in the bay and I wor·
ried tbat some hatf drifted away and would
be missed when we came back around ... he
said.
While McDonald steered. Kenney threw
ropes to the survivors. gomg into the water
severa l times to help lift out victims
traumatized by the ordeal.
"IF WE HADN'T BV CHANCE been
there. many people would have died. They
couldn't have made it. When they got on the
barge. l know it was an hour before the boats
found us." said McDonald.
fie said he was about 300 yards from the
plane when it went down.
When a ll the s urvivors had bee n
transferred to rescue boats. McDonald and
Kenney moved on down the baY. They said
they went straight home -"Only because
the bars were closed." said McDonald with a
laugh -and after two hours of sleep were up
again heading to the construction site.
Jet CrtJSh
55 Survive; Most Rescued by Tugboat
PENSACOLA, Fla. CAP> -A
National Airlines jet carrying 58
persons crashed Into Escambia
Bay while coming in for a land-
ing, forcing stunned passengers
to scramble out emergency
doors into fog and a sea slicked
with jet fuel. Three passengers
were killed.
Most of the 52 passengers
aboard the Boeing 727 were
saved because a tugboat captain
who s aw the crash brought his
barge lo the rescue.
The passengers had no warn-
ing that anything was wrong un·
til the plane hit the waler Mon·
day night and came to rest about
500 yards from shore. settling in
mud about 10 feel below 1he
bay's s urface.
"We were on our rlnal ap·
proach ... said Capt. Ronald Gift.
a Navy pilot from Carmel.
Calif .. who was a passenger.
"There was no warning. no
voiolent maneuvering. no surg-
ing of the engines."
The airline initially listed 55
passengers. but later said three
or t hose had never gotten
aboard.
Laguna ViewS Ideas
Three bodies were found float·
ing near the plane. Divers sent
into lhe partially submerged
craft said everybody was out.
But fog and haze hampered
rescue efforts during the night.
and a thunderstorm that moved
over the bay early today
churned up the seas as divers
searched for the missing. A head
count was further confused
because passengers were scat·
tered among six hos pitals and
several rescue stations.
Revenue Seen Through Gl,an..bottom Boat,?
By ~!.V~,.~ELL
A glass· bottom -.oat con·
cession operated by lbe city is
one of the more original fund-
raislng suggestions that wua be
~viewed by Laguna Beach city
councilmen when they meet
tonight at 6 p.m.
The suggestion is just one on a
three·page list of poaslble new
sources of revenue tor the city
which might be Jmptemented
should the Jarvis-Gann property
tax initiative be approved by
voters June 6.
Department heads were asked
two weeks 110 to come up with
mone)'·Savlng or mone1·
producing ideu within lh~lr de·
partmenu to be reviewed by the
councn.
And wblle a ctus·boUom boat
concea&ioll appean to be he_
most novel or the suegestiom.
city offtctals have come up with
some other lnterestlng revenue
raising schemes. ' Suggestions from he rlty
manager's office range from in·
creastn1 the bed tax from six to
nine percent, increasing busi·
ness li~nse taxes. city permits,
parking fines and increasing In·
come from city trams should the
bus system be transferred to
Oranl{e County Transit District.
The police department's rev.
eenue·ralaing Hat Includes g user charge for emeraenc y
services and beach access. a r.-.
vised bail schedule, and posslbte
concestion stands at Main Beach Part.
Fire department suuesuops
tnc9ude mandatory Inspection
fees and fire aeryice users ree.
The municipal services depart·
I
ment suggests rtt~ational zone
par«lng meters and an increase
in public work.I l*DJlts.
Community planning sugges.
lions include increases in lees
for residential property reports,
general plan amendments.
public 'works permits • .environ·
mentaa tmpa<'l rePort.s. zoning
amendments and staff In ·
lerpretaUons.
The recreation and social ~ervlcts department au11t1ts
eUmlna.Uon of free parkint ror
clty employees, as well as ln·
~reasea lo swimmfnr program
reea and adult team fees.
But It 11 the Utt of 1u11e1llons
from tho marine safety depart-
ment th•t contain the m~t In·
terett.
The Department sa11eat1
(8" REVENlJE, P11e A2)
Hospital officials idenUfled lbe
three victims as Paut V. Wilkes
Sr. of Virginia Beach. Va .• a.nd
Frances Lane and S.J . Fan·
lauui. 29. both of Pensacola.
The ages of Wilkes and Mrs.
Lane were not immedi:itely
a.otlable.
The Fantau%zi woman has a
3·Year-old daughter Hsted In fair
eond it ion at a Pensacola
hospital. WUkes' wife. Vlrainia.
Is listed In taJr condltlon •l a
hoapltGI in neighboring Santu
Rosa County.
Many were injured in the
crash. but doun.s escaped safely
when tuaboard captain G1enn .:.
McDonald, 41. pulled hit barae
the LltUe Mac. to th plane, lled
It up and helped men. woman
and, children damber aboard.
(Sff PLANE, Pa1e A.2)
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
Victim
Shot in
Head
ROME <APl -The blood-
s m eared body o f former
Premier Aldo Moro. shot in the
back of the head and his hands
and feet chained. was found in a
parked car in the heart of Rome
today. 55 days after he was kid-
napped by the Red Brigades.
Police said they found five
spent cartrtdges in the car. a
stolen r ed Renault bearing
Rome license plates.
The 6l·year-old Moro also had
several woun<M in the back.
police sources said.
The body. hunched over on the
floor of the Renault's back seat.
was clad in the s ame dark gray
suit Moro was wearing when
kidnapped March 16 by a dozen
terrorists who ambushed his
two-car motorcade on a Rome
st r eet. k1ll 1 n ~ fiv<' polict'
bodyguards
A blue overcoat an d r ed
bl a nket also we r e wrapped
around the body fl was dis -
covered by a police bomb expert
who broke into the car. Firemen
who saw it said the face was ex-
trt>mely pale and Moro's fiv e-
foot-11 frame had lost considera-
ble weight.
His Marxist revolutionary Red
Brigade kidnappers c laimed
Moro was a symbol of "im·
peria listic" oppression of the
working class. Friday. the ter·
rorists issued the last of a series
of messages. saying they were
"carrying out .. a death
"verdict'' against Moro because
the Christian Democrats re£use<1
to negotiate their demand for
the release of 13 jailed terrorisL.,
in exchange for Moro's life.
After the body was found.
Premier Giulio Andreotti called
an emergency Cabinet session
and President Giovanni Leon~
scheduled an address to the na-
CSee MORO, Page A2l
'Glwst' Behind
Wheel Really ..
An 8-year-old
HAMTRAMCK, Mich. CAP> -
Hamtramck police may have
thought they were seeihg ghosts
when a car zipped by them. do·
ing 70 mph with no s ign of a
driver at the wheel.
When -after a high speed
chase through residential s treet'>
the officers finally caught up
with the fleeing car Monday,
they found no phantom. just a
~hort 8-year ·old boy.
The pmt·sized car thief. whose
identity was not released ,
managed to elude patrol cars·i~
this Delroit·area community for
several blocks. leading them the
wrong way down a one-way
street before ramming a fence
and abandoning the vehicle .
When police caught up with
the culprit on a nearby street.
corner. officers said, he readily
admitted stealing the car from a
gas station and driving it.
OHlcers said the boy was so
short he had to peer between the
s~kes of the steering wheel as
held'rove.
Coast
Weather
Low cloudiness tonight,
clearing lo hazy sunshine
by late Wednesday morn-
ing. Cooling trend. Lows
tonight 52 to 58. Highs
Wednesday 67 to 74.
INSIDE TOD1' Y
Wllat nghtB does a womon
have when her husband or
th~ man she liueB unth twats
her? SH Featuring. Page Cl
•••ex At\'-~ AU f11WMltU... ,,,,.. ...-. a ,... w"'9n k!i .. ,_ .. •n.t
c.41=1. ~ =r::...
..
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a.utflM °''' Or .... c-ity =· g~ o.£::U. Att =.:=--M Att
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•
t.'
Y PILOT
Clement~
(To Fill
8 Posts
San Clemente residents have
until 5 p.m next Tuesday to ap-rnY for any of eight openings on
the city planning. parks and
recreation and trarrtc Jnd park
h,tg commissions .
•· Terms of eight city com
missioners will expire on June
30. said City Clerk Max Berg.
The commissioners may apply
for reappointment to their posi-
tions or for appointment lo other
commissions. Their applications
will be considered by the City
Council, along with those re-
ceived from other city residents,
Berg said.
In add1t1on lo the eight com-
m 1ss1on appointments. three
members of the city's arcbitec
lural review board also are ~cheduled for appointment by
(he City Council.
Of the five city planning com
missioners. Chairman Melford
Morgan. Clitford Gellatly and
Allan Wulreck have terms which
e nd iJl June. Wulfeck has re-~igned from the commission. ef-
fective June 1. The planning
commission meets the firs t and
third Tuesdays of the month at
7:30 p.m. at city hall. 100 Ave.
Presidio.
Park& and recreation com·
mission Chairman Carol Carlson
and Commissioners Jack Berges
and Pat Murphy are serving
terms which expire ill June. Tbe
parks commission meets lhe
second and fourth Tuesdays of
the month at 7:30 p.m . at the
comm unity clubhouse 100 Calle
Seville.
Traffic and p_arking com·
missioners Jay Durkin and Ed
Lyon are also serving expiring
terms. The traffic commission
meets the first and third
Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. at city
hall.
F roM Page A I
LNG •••
Onofre nuclear ~enerating plant
located within five miles of the
proposed gas terminal site, will
be represented Monday at a
public hearing when the coastal
com mission will consider the
staff's recommendation.
In a letter to the commission.
the electric company said a liq·
"uefied natural gas terminal.
located so close to San Onofre.
might not be compatible with
' federal Nuclear Regulatory
Commission site criteria
"without possible design
modifications and major nuclear
plant reanalysis "
, The city of San Clemente has
also written to the Coastal Com-
' mission. asking that the gas
terminal not be located at Camp
Pendleton.
"I'm against it," said Bernard
A l l en. presi dent of San
Cl.-menlc's Chamber of Com-
merce. "My personal view is
that once they do this. they will
9pen up the whole base. I think
it's t he first step in an attempt to
,do away with a major natural re·
source."
Allen said the executive com-
mittee of the Chamber of Com-
merce was scheduled to meet lo·
day at noon. The proposed
terminal location at Camp
Pendleton was on the agenda. he
said.
Laguna Folk Dance
Group Slates Class
The Laguna Folk Dancers will
learn "Pandalas." a Bulgarian
J!ance, when they m eet Wednes·
, day at 7:30 p .m. in the Laguna
i Beach High School girls gym.
\ Newcomers and observers are
' welcome al the dance program
;and a b eginners' c l a ss
, scheduled Sundays at 7 p.m. Fo;
j more information, call Lil
l Carlson al 494-3302.
i
J
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OflANO£ COAST
DAILY PILOT
fM>OrMIOP CN '\I 0.lty Pttol •t1'~1~tom .,..o ,,.. ,....., ~ .... , ""'•dllifd by .... °'""""°"' CO.O\l_•.,. .... C:O-...., s-<•~1-••• ::'~~~~~~·=~~ ~ t .. fll V•l .. y lt t;ltt•, ..... ...0.C:, \f60t¥ •..0 U.00-8"e<fll~~(.N\I ,....,..,.._, ....
uon '" p.t,lbff""" ~"'f....,, ,..., ~' '"""' r,::;~:'1:..:1..Z.,~ ..... 9'1• ·-.. -........... _,.,.._
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-
S l ,100 Per Home
Avco Pledges_
Schools Aid
By ANNE COOPER Of IM 0.llY l'I ... S.C.tt
A voluntary . pledae or s1,100
per new dwelllnl in cash. land
or Improvements has been made
to the Capistrano Unified School
District by Avco Community
Deve lopers Inc . or Laguna
Nieuel. Avco's announcement of its
agreement with the school dis·
trict followed close upon school
board passage or a resolution.
urgine Orange County. San
C l e mente an~ San Juan
Capistrano to requitt developers
to dedicate land or pay fees
equivalent to Sl.100 per new
home.
show that new development
would lead to· overcrowded
classrooms. County supervisors said that.
before taking action to adopt
such an ordinance, they would
want a report on how proposed
fees or land dedication would af·
feet new home prices in unin·
corporated Orange County.
The city of San Clemente has
instructed City Attorne y
MacKenzie Brown to draft an or·
dinance alon~ the lines proposed
by the schoOI district for City
Council consideration.
BLOOD-SMEARED ~ODY OF FORMER PREMIER ALDO MORO FOUND IN PARKED C~
Kidnapped Victim Wee Shot In Beck of Heed: Hende, Feet Chained
"Avco's pledge has been ex·
tre-mely helpful to us," said
Truman Benedict. school dis-
trict deputy s uperinte ndent
"We hope this sets a precedent ..
Benedict predicted that Avco
will maintain Its current con·
struction rate over the next Cive
years at least. completing about
1.000 new homes a year.
San Juan Capistrano's City
Council has requested additional
data Crom the school district, In·
eluding stat1st1cal information
on school capacities and student
yield from new developments.
s aid the sch ool district 's
Benedict.
Avco's Sl,100 per new home
figure is the same agreed upon
by the Capistrano school board
in April as the amount to be pro·
posed for Inclusion in local or-
dinances. Fro• Page AJ
MORO ••.
lion. Italy's major unions called
an eight-hour work stoppage.
In Washington. the Slate
Department condemned the kill·
ing as a "cowardly and con-
temptible act."
The Vatican radio called it a
"barbarous murder ... which
takes on in this tragic hour a
nearly sacrificial value." Upon hearing t}\e news, Pope
Paul VI. a personal friend of the
s lain politician. went to pray in
has private chapel.
Former President Giuseppe
Saragat said. "Moro's body is
the body of the First Republic.
which is now dead." He referred
to the republic established in
1946. when the ltahan monarchy
was voled out in a plebiscite.
The body was round at t :30
p.m .-5:30 a.m. PDT -on Via
Michelangelo Cactana . a narrow
cobblestoned street of 15th and
16th century palaces running
alon~side Communist party
headquarters a nd just a stone's
throw from Christian Democrat
headquarters. It was just two
blocks from the busiest intersec-
tion in Rome.
Officers went to the area and
discovered the body after police
h eadquarter s received an
a nonymous telephone call say·
ing a bomb had been placed in a
car parked on Via Funari. adja-
cent to the 200-yard-loog Via
Caetani.
Frot11 Page AJ
PLANE ..•
"If that barge hadn't been
there, there's no telling how
many would have drowned,"
said marine patrol Sgt. William
Clenny.
McDonald's wife Janet said
her husband. a marine supply
s hop owner from Gulf Breeze.
was in the vicinity of the plane
because he was lost in the fog.
"He didn't know why he was
there. but now he believes he
was there for a reason." she
said. "He thought it was about lo
crash down on top of him, but il
ca m e down about 300 yards
away."
From Page A l
EDISON ••.
increased electricity demands
and for full·lime mannin& of the
plants.
He said that other unions have
been on the rotating schedule for
some lime.
A company s pokesman said
that he didn't think it likely that
other Edisort em{>loyees would
go on strike. ,
He said that this woµld involve ~a secondary boycott which he
said is in violation of the Taft·
Hartley Act.
IBParents
Tell Goals
Fpr School
Parents or Laguna Beach High
School students have outlined
goals for the education of their
youngsters. and the final list of
those objectives will be dis-
cussed Wednesday night in the
high school cafeteria.
The results of a survey which
contained nearly 60 goals result·
ed In a list of 10 lop objectives
rated by parents.
Wednesday's meeting. which
begins al 7:30 p.m .• will include
co mme nts from s tudents.
teachers, parents a nd communi-
ty members. The group will at-
tempt to set up a method of de-
term inin~ success or the various
stated goals.
Listed as most important on
the parent survey was the need
to leach bas ic skills and study
habits, espeeially in writlen and
verbal expression.
Other obJectives include de·
velopment of reasoning ability.
critical thinking. creativity and
problem-solving abilities.
Parents thought they should
be notified of excessive absences
from school before their
children fail classes. They also
s uggested more challenging
aca demic standards and
establishment of a method of
eva luating teachers to e n·
courage high quality education.
FroraPage A J
REVENUE. •
funds could be collected from the
tourist population for such ac-
tivities as pay showers. ocean ex-
perience classes, glass-bottom
boat rental, sale of sea lion food.
storage locker rentals. It also
urged the city to deputize full·
time lifeguards to write animal
citations. a suggestion that could
raise $105,000 annually. marine
safety officials believe.
While no action is expected on
the suggestions tonight. council
members will be reviewing
them for possible inclusion on a
list they already have -just in
case they have to draw on those
suggestions in the future.
Davis Takes Lead
SACRAMENTO <APl -
Formeril..os Angeles Police
Chief Ed bavis has taken a nar-
row lead over Attorney General
Evelle YoWlger in the campaign
for the Republican nomination for
governor, according to a Gannett
News Service poll.
Mang Dri1'ers Back
No Meetings Set
In Trash Dispute
• No formal meetinss are
scbeduled between strtklog
Orange County truh. truck
drivera and repllUel1taUvea or
disposal firm•. *l fe4oral m~dlator said today.
However. medlotor John
Courtney said he ls conUnulng to
talk to both stdes and that t.her
is a pOtJslbillty they may bo talk·
Ing to eacb other without. notify·
tni hlm.
"We don't dlacouraae the
parties from talklna to each
other without a mediator If
tbal 's what ll takes to &et a set-
tlement." Courtsl6>' .,.Id or the
three-week.old 1trlke.
AJlbouah Teamaton Local 39S
,..... ... --
remalns on etrtke. the effects of
the walkout have ended for most
Oran1e Coaat residents.
Service. which resumed eight
days ago with nonunion labor.
continued to catch up with un-
collected trash this week as
more and more union driven re·
turned to work without a con·
tract.
They ~•an returninf last
week after neaotla ions
deadlotked. J)rlvera. who had
been earnlnf $4.50 an hour. bad
asked f01" an lmmedlat.e ralle to
16.50 while mana1cment 1tood
firm on an olf er of S:S.25.
Many driven atilt remain oul
on 1trtke, but mo9UY ln tbt
An1helm area .
•
TRAFFIC •••
were on°hand at Monday'night's
council meeting lo applaud the
adoption or the P.Ollcy.
lt would prohtbit the Issuing of
a building permit ror any project
of 10 or more residential units.
or that involves 10.000 or more
square feel of commercial or in·
dustrlal space.
Projects larger than the
minimum could win permits OJl·
ly if sbown that the traffic they
would 1enerale will be le&s than
one percent ot the. existing traf·
fie on certain Newport Beach
roadways identlfled as con-
g,sted.
Undet the policy. th' city traf·
fi e engineer Is responsible ror
identifying congested streets by
means of specific criteria set
forth in the measure.
Another provision of the policy
calls for approval of large proJ·
ects by. the cit)"s planning com-
mission. if a )liven pro1ect Is
deemed to have sifnificant benefit
to the city, or if it includes out·
standing traffic mitigation pro·
visions. Examples would be fire
s tations, concert halls or
hospitals. A spokesman for the Irvine
Company. the city's largest land-
owner. said adoption of the
policy was premature and total-
ly unnecessary. He noted that
the city's major landowners and
developers already were honor·
ing a self·lmposed moratorium
pending the outcome or studies
aimed al lowering the allowable
densities on the rem aining va·
cant property in Newport Beach.
But Mayor Ryckort asked city
officials to put the policy In the
form of an ordinance for future
consideration by the City Coun-
cil. The policy adopted Monday
night. although binding on the
council and city officials. does
not carry the force of law.
N~el Thief Gets
8 1,250 in Loot
A burglar who entered a
Laguna Niguel home via the
bedroom window while the occu-
pants were out for dinner took
property valued al $1 .250.
Orange County sheriff's of-
ficers said the intruder earned
off a te levision set. movie
camera. a ring and a gold ingot
from the bome of Leonard
Charles Murphy. 36. of 23852
Paseo del Campo.
tiimilar new home construe·
lion Is anticipated throughout
the 154-square-mile Capistrano
school district. which includes
the communities or San
Clemente. San J uan Capistrano.
Capistrano Beach. Dana Point.
Laguna Niguel and part of Mis·
slon Viejo.
District voters have reJeCted
three school construction bond
elections in lhe past two years.
leaving the district without
funds to accommodate an an-
ticipated 50 percent enrollment
jump by 1982.
The Avco contribution. which
may be in the fo rm or school
s ates or improvements as well as
cash. will be continued "until
this extraordinary cntical condi-
tion has been relieved" or until
governmental action is taken.
said James Smith. Avco vice
president and general manager.
T he Orange County Board or
Supervisors has instructed
County CoWlSel Adrian Kuyper
t o study the school district's pro·
posal. that the $1.100 per house
be a standard requirement aJong
with a similar request from the
Orange Unified School District.
The ordinance proposed by the
school districts would imple-
ment Senate Bill 201. new
legislation designed to require
developers to dedicate land or
fees. when a school district can
Capo Valley
Traffic Study
Meeting Set
The last of three public
workshops concerning a
Capistrano Valley circulation
study has been scheduled for
May 16 In San Juan Caplstrano.
Orange County planners said
the 7:30 p.m. meeting will be In
rooms 204 and 205 of Marco F.
Forster Junior High School.
25601 Camino del Avlon.
The traf!ic study covers an
area east of Crown Valley
Parkway, includlftg San Juan
Capistrano and extends south to
the coastline.
The study is designed to de·
termine what type of seeondary
highway network will be needed
to support major thoroughfares
eventually planned In the area.
Additional details about the
study may be obtained Crom
county planners at 834·~377.
Th e school oboard com ·
promised to settle on Sl,100 -
one·lhlrd the amount per home
which district administrators
said It would cost to provide for
permanent school construction.
including site acquisition. school
furniture and other equipment.
Arch Beach
Development
Plans Aired
Arch Beach Heights Associa-
tion members will hear plans for
portions of the Aliso. Viejo Com-
pany's development when they
meet tonight In Laguna Beach.
The general meeting will ·also
include reports on crime and
fire prevention. presented by of-
fi cials from the city's police and
fire departments.
II will be held in the commun1·
ty room of the Laguna Federal
Savings and Loan building, 260
Ocean Ave .. beginning al 7:30
D m .
Arthur S. Cook. environmental
affairs director for the Aliso Vie-
JO Company. will present the
proposed community plan for
that development. The plan in·
eludes the Moulton Meadows
a rea separating Arch Beach
Heights and the Top of the World
community.
Aliso Viejo officials say res·
adential uses in Moulton
Meadows have been relocated lo
other areas.
That decision could open the
ridge.top area to possible de·
velopmcnt for parks and o~n
space.
Residents will also hear 11
progress report on pending lll.iga-
tion against the City of Laguna
Beach over recent approval of a
land division in the Arch Beach
Heights area.
Shootings Kill 2
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Two
unrelated shootings In
Sacramento's north area have
claimed the city's 26th and 27th
homicide victims so far this
year. police report. They are
Harvey Hem. 22. and Melvin
Belton. 17. Both shootings were m the early hours of Saturday.
'To<f}Jorn Wilh~
J.rom'lbu ... and
Wickgtjr'Pa~
A dellghtiul coforlng cookbook .•.
jutt add kids and crayons and ptt· *'' Mom wtth a k .. sit.t<e the'll
treasure.
tor Mother'• Dav.
come In end setect from• w&• ..-f-1Y of tempting. i.atv gift PBkl. •.
pnttJly boxed tust for Mom.-1 Day -W.., I 4fft.
. ... . ,
If Mom li'vn out of town. we11 ~ har afft tor vou.
;
. . -
WESTOJFF PlAZA 11••"*• ... ,. • ._...._,.~a .............. "'t w . .,.'-. '11 1 MAllMll'S YILLAM DAMA POIMT
Pf9Me 4 ... 2t70 Moft.·l.lt. 'tit 1 5'1n. 'UI •
I
I
r Or ange Coast
EDITION
Today's Closing i
N.l'. Stoc.-ks 1
I VOL. 71, NO. 129, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ; TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1978
I
N TEN CEi·JTS }
I
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Moro.'s Blood-smeared Body Found
ROME IAP> The blood·
s meared body of former
Premier Aldo Moro. shot in the
back of the head and his hands
and feet chained, was found in a
parked car in the heart of Rome
today, 54 days after he was kid·
napped by the Red Brigades .
Moro, 61, also had been shot at
least 11 times around the heart.
Police said th~y found five
spent cartridges in the car. a
s to len r ed Renault bearing
Rome license platt!s.
The body. bunc hed over on the
floor of the Renault's back seat,
was clad in the same dark gray
s uit Moro was wearing when
kidnapped March 16 by a. dozen
terrorists who ambushed his
two-car motorcade on a Rome
street. kl lling five police
Enroll1ne11t Decline
Trustees -Mull
N-M Dismissals
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
OI t• O.lly f'llel Sutt
Newport·Mesa school trustees
"'Ill consider mailing dis missal
notices to nearly 400 employees
because of declining enrollment
in Harbor art'a schools .
Involved are more than 300 in·
structional aides. teacher aides
and noon duty school employees.
Appeal
-Planned
By Gates
By TOM BARI.EV
Ol IM o.lly l"tlet Si.ff
Orange County Sheriff Brad
Gates said today he intends to
appeal part of a federal court or-
der callin g for immediate
changes in the operation of the
Santa Ana County Jail.
Gates said adherence to all the
directives issued by Judge
William P . Gray would cost
county taxpayers at least
S300,000 for alterations he feels
are unnecessary.
Gates said the county has
already incurred legal costs of
$200,000 in fighting the federal
laws uit.
"I think the public in Orange
County expects me to resist this
kind of financial burden," Gates
said "We will be filing an ap·
peal immediately "
Gates condemned criticism or
the county jail and its officers as
unjustified "and I be lieve the
public agrees with me on that
point We've ~n letting minori·
ty areas of the community come
in and dictate to us a nd this 1s
the cause of many of our
problems." the sheriff said.
58 teachers. five admm1strators
and an unspec1f1ed number or
classified (n o n ·l eaching)
e mployees.
The dismissal notices don't
mean en automatic loss of jobs
for those who receive them.
i.c hool Superintendent J ohn
Nicoll emphasized.
Rather. the process is a legal
requirement needed to protect
the Newport-Mesa dis trict from
being overstaffed when school
opens next fall. Nicoll explained.
The anticipated cutbacks are
not related to the potential
passage of the Jarvis/Gann tax
initiative on the June 6 primary
ballot. he noted.
Seniority and normal school
district employee attrition will
play roles in determining how
many of the .employees put on
notice actually will be d is·
missed.
Tonight's school board meet·
mg begins at 7:30 p.m. in Costa
Mesa City Council Chambers.
The proposed personnel cut-
backs wi ll tie into continued dis·
cussions of a tentative budget
for the 1978·79 school year. Cut·
backs in salaries for teachers
are estimated at Sl.7 million and
for classified employees.
$690.000, Nicoll said.
Police Catch
CYA. Escapee
PACOIMA !AP ) -Police
have recaptured the convicted
murderer of Pacoima ice cream
vendor Mohammed Mofrad four
months after his escape from
the California Youth Authority.
Alvin Holmes, 20, surrendered
to police .Monday after hiding in
the attic of a Pacoima apart·
ment complex.
.
bodyguards.
The wounds had been inmcted
within the past 24 hours.
A blue overcoat and red
blanket also were wrapped
around the body. It was dis·
covered by a police bomb expert
who broke into the car . Firemen
who saw it said the face was ex-
tremely pale and Moro's five-
foot·ll frame had lost considera-
ble weight.
His Marxist revolutionary Red
Brigade kidnappe rs claimed
Moro was a symbol or "im·
pe riallstic" oppression or the
working class. Friday, the ter·
rorists issued the last of a series
of messages. saying they were
"carryi ng o ut " a death
"verdict'' against Moro because
the Christian DemO<.'rals refused
to negotiate their dem and for
the release of 13 jailed terrorists
in exchange for Moro's life.
After the body was found.
Premier Giulio Andreotti called
an emergency Cabinet session
a nd Preside nt Giovnnni Leone
scheduled an address to the na-
tion. Italy's major unions called
an eighl·hour work stoppage.
Moro's family issued a bitter
statement calhng on the l(overn·
ment not to hold any stale funeral
or other public cert'mony tcJ
mourn hls assassination
Moro himself in a handwritten
letter April 24 requested that no
government or party official at
tend his funeral.
"The family locks itself up in
silence and demands silence.
<See MORO, Page AZ>
·g Limit
o.llY Pl ... MM! .....
ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER DEBBIE MOSER HOLDS FLAPPING CAPTIVE IN IRVINE
Barn Owl Which Went Hunting Hum•n• T•k•n Into Custody by Authorities
Irvine Predatori'~.Deld
Barn Owl Captured A.f ter A.tta£ks on People
By PHILIP ROSMARIN I Of t1M O.lly PIMI SWtt
A young barn owl, whose mother ap·
parently hadn't t aught it the niceties of
planned community living went hunting
Irvine residents Monday night and early to·
day.
The residents complained to authorities
from the safety or their Willow area houses.
The owl was captured by animal services
officers and handed over to a veterinarian
who plans to teach it to hunt smaller prey.
the n release it.
DEBBIE MOSER. WHO grabbed the owl
from a net on which it alighted, said it began
stalking people Monday night.
One man called to complain the owl was
attacking hi m every time he tried to get out
of the house on Fireside Circle.
Miss Moser said she explained she would
have lo wait till morning to try lo capture the
bird. because owls see a lot better In the dark
than animal control services officers do.
AT 5:30 A.M. TODAY. police received a
call from another resident nearby. on Walnut
Avenue.
"There's a big owl on top of my roof."
the m an said. ·'I le won't let me out!··
Miss Moser sped to his rescue. She
spotted the owl in a tree.
"First we tried to coax it out of the tree."
she reported. "ll didn't work. We took a fi sh·
ing ne t . and taped it lo the e nd of a
broomstick. climbed a ways. and were going
to try to throw the net over him.
"BlJTTHE OWL JUMPED right onto the
net. As (a helper> lowered it down. I grabbed ll ..
The barn owl went lo University Park
Veterinary Hospital. where Dr. Kent Walker
examined the bird, pronounced it fit but
possibly confused about diet matters. and
vowed to set it straight then free.
Policy
'Traffic
Phasing'
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI t• O.it-, l"tlet Si.ff
Jn a 5·1 vote Monday n1Rl1t.
Newport Reach city counC"almen
instituted a poli cy which w1 I!
limit building to projects that
won't increase traffic congestion
tn the clt y
Proponents or the measure. ID·
eluding Mayor Paul R}ckoff.
who introduced it. call 1t a traf·
fie phasing development policy.
Oppone nts . which inc lude
most of the city's landowners.
builders and developers. said it
amo unt s t o a build in Jl
moralonum
The measure also was opposed
by Counci lwoman Jackie
Heather. Councilman Don Mein
nis was absent.
Mrs. Heather noted that the
policy had been given to coun·
cilmen Thursday night and that
there had not been adequate
time to 11otify the public of ib
impending passage nor for coun
cil members to famili a rize
themselves with it.
An attempt to put orr final UC'
lion on the measure until May 22
failed and coun cil member~
Ryckoff. Ray Williams. E velyn
Hart. Paul Hummel and Don
Strauss approved the measun·
moment-; later.
Ryckoff also asked city !>laff
members to prepa re the policy
In ordinance form so that it can
be enacted as a law /\ policy.
while binding on council and
staff members. does not earn ·
the force of law.
R yc koff . contendin g that
Newport Beach 1s "way bt!hind
the times" in imposing restnc
tive rules. said he acted in purt
bee a use of· ::a hst of bu ildi n~
projects that could be undertaken
in Newport Beach without further
City Council approval.
Gates said he intends to file a
cou nter s uit aga ins t th e
American Civil Liberties Union
<ACLU>. the organization which
took legal action on behalf of six
Jail inmates nearly three years
ago.
"Only 10 of tbe original 195
areas or complaint in the lawsuit
were left when the judge made
his ruling." Gates said. "To me.
that is a sure indication of the
strength or the allegations that
were made against us."
Pendleton. Site. OK by Badham
, Included in that list. ~aven to
councilmen during their after
noon stud y session . arc lht'
Irvine Company 's 15·acrt> 8 1g
Canyon townhome s ite. part~ or
Koll Center and Newport Pluct'
near the Orange County Airport.
t h e Irvine Company's Civ ic
Plaza and Corporate Plaza. both
in Newport Center and the com
pany's office·industri a l a re:.i
called North Ford.
The Big Canyon plans call for
160 uniL'I.
Gates said the ACLU suit cost
county taxpayers $200,000 in
legal expenses. "Our legal ac-
tion will be aimed at gelling it,
or most of it. back." he said.
Judge Gray's order calls for
jail authorities to allow inmates
more time to eat m eals, in·
creased communication with
visitors. more and better sleep-
tng areas and better access to
magazines and newspapers .
Gates noted today that every
allegation of brutality by jail of·
ficers had been struck down by ~udge Gray.
He said the judge simltarlf
r ejected charges of improper
and Insufficient medical treat·
ment at the jail.
Judge Gray lssued his llst of 10
directives after touring tbe
county jail and talking and eat·
Ina with lnmatea.
Influence A.eked
MIO, Mich. (AP) -Ruldenta
who want to blotk burial of PB·
l ·contamlnatetd animals ln
Oacoda County aay they have
eent a telegram to Soviet Presl·
dent Leon.id Brezhnev asking
him lo UM bis lnllucnce with Pt~ Catu!run thelr behalf.
U.S. Congressman Robert
Badham, R-Newport Beach,
said today he would not object to
use or Camp Pendleton for a
liquefied natural gas terminal
if no other option is available.
"I must stress that we just
don't have the luxury to quibble
over the use of n atural re -
sources,.. Badham said in a
statement released through his
office.
Yoten Close
On Tax Cuts
SACRAMENTO <APl -
Callfornla voters favor
Proposition 13 over
Proposition 8, but the
margin between the two
tax-cut issues is too close
to pick a clear leader. a
Gannett News Service poll
says.
The at.atewtde survey of
1.001 vc:Mra found 40 per.
cent favor Proposition 13
and 37 p e rcent favor
PropoalU6n 8.
Twenty petconl said
they. were undecided~ one
percent said they would
vote for both, and three
percent said they would
vote aaa1nst both.
California Coastal Com·
mission staff named the Camp
Pendleton Marine facility. just
south of San Clemente, as Its top
choice Monday for the site of a
liquefied natural gas terminal.
M llitary official~ announced
immediately their intention to
fight location of the terminal at
Camp Pendleton -one of four
California coastul sites under
consideration for the terminal.
Badham serves on the HOt.!Sf
Armed Services Commlttee ane
its subcommittee on installa·
li o ns and facilities .
Congressional approved, t"e·
quired to locate the terminal on
federal propert)'. would appear
more likely with Badham 's sup·
port.
Badham 's statement Indicated he Is concerned that tbe
t e rmina l. if located at
Pendleton, would not be opera·
Uonat before 198S. 11 located
near Point Conception. 40 miles
west of So.nta Barbara, -the
alte preferred by the gas
partnership. Western LNG
Terminal Associates, which
would construct the faclUty -lt
would be operatlng three yea.rs
e rller.
"The state coutal com·
mlaaton staff's recommended
ranktn• of the poulbl• <Uquened
natural 1a1> alt.es ln California
lanores the advice of Ill own
prof easlon.al con1u1lanl1 and
.auballt.Uta Ill own arbitrary
•
standards." Ke ith McKinney,
president of the gas partnership,
a joint venture of the Pacific
Gas and Electric Co. and the
Southern California Gas Co .•
said Monday.
·'The proposed site near Point
Con ception is farthest from
population cente r s. s late
beaches. parks, major highways
a nd recr~ational boating, ..
Pet Destruction
McKinney said. •·1n short. it is
the best site ...
The Southern Californi a
Edison Company. with its San
Onofre nuclear generating plant
located within fi ve miles or the
proposed gas t erminal site, will
be r epresented Monday at a
public hearing when the coastal
commission will consider the
<See LNG, Page AZ>
County Approves
Injection Method
The 30,000 unwanted pets
deatroyed each year at the
Oran1e County animal shelter
will be killed by lnjectlon, not in
•a decompression chamber. the
county Board of Supervtson de·
clded today.
However. toUnty animal COD·
trol otnctala aald It may take
two m()fltbl to lmplement the
new method or animal euthanasia
and retire the chamber•.
SupervJaor PhHlp Anthony
rec om mended th• lnJtcllon
tnetl:lod alter wltneaalnt lbe
.t
destructlonof animals by both de·
com presslon and Injection.
Re called· use or lnJectlons
"unqucaUonabty humane" and
the decompression chambe r
"absolutely lnbumanet."
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
waa tho only board member who
dld not vole In favor or An·
thony's proposal.
Oledrlcb abllained. saytng he
would vote later whan county of·
llelala present pllln lor atart·
ln1 up the new procedure .
,The office comp!exe~ an the
other plans could produce more
than 2.5 million square ft!et of
new buildings on about 186 acre:-
or land. but the three develop·
ment firms have indicated the\
do not plan to bwld to that al
lowed intensity. The c11 y cur
<See BUILDING, Page .\2)
Orange Coast
Weather
Low cloudiness tonight .
clearing to hazy sunshin~
by hlte Wednesday morn
, ing Cooling trend Low'I
tonight 52 to 58 H1 ~h'
Wednesday 67 ton
INSIDE TODA~
Whal nghts does a woman
haw wMlt ~ h1Ubond or
the man 1he Uve1 wUh beat$
Mr~ Stt Feoturtrtg. Pagt Cl
l•tl•x ..
Ct •• .. ., ... ,,,.
A!·J .. t ... ••
t il
D
•
I
•
' \,it CAIL 'f PILCH "' Tudo1y May 9 li78
Crowds Mourn Mol.!O
R 0 ME t ,\ P 1 • '\1 .Adonn•
Mla," w.pt a houatwlfe when
she 'tamed ot Aldo Moro's dHth
<•l tht.' hi.nd.., of tt-rronst l.1dnap pt.>n .. Tht•y an• ~'~a:.sms as
i.ai.sms Tht'> ~hould Jll be shot
to death
Sireni. screatllcd. sobbing
,crowds gathered on street cor
ncrs and others sought solace m
nearby churches today wht-n
word s pread throughout ltuly
* * * F ront Pagt-A I
.MORO •..
the s tatement said. "History will
µass Judgment on the lite and
. dealh of Aldo Moro.·'
ln Was hington , the State
Department condemned the kill
mg as a "cowardly and con
lt:m ptible acl ...
The Vatican radio called it a
"barbarous murder which
takes on 1n this tragic hour a
nearly sacrif1c1al value "
Upon hearing the news. Pope
Paul VI, a personal friend of the
stain politician, went to pray 1n
his private chapel
Former Pres 1dE:nt Giuseppe
Saragat said. "Moro's body 1s
fht: body of the First Republic.
which is now dead." He referred
to th(' repubht· established in
1946. when the Italian monarchy
was voted out in a plebiscite.
The body was found at l . 30
1> m. 5:30 a.m. PDT -on Via
Michelangelo Caetan1, a narrow
cobblestoned street of 15th and
16th century pa laces running
alongs ide Communist party
headquarters and JUSt a s tone's
throw from Christian Demoercit
headquarters. It was just two
hlocks from the busiest intersec
lion in Rome.
Officers went to the area cind
discovered the body after police
h ea dquarters received an
anony mous telephone call say-
mg a bomb had been placed in a
car parked on Via Funari, adja-
cent to the 200 yard-long Via
Gaetani.
They round noUung on Via
Funari but then t h(·c kcd Vw
('af'tani. The car apparently had
been parked on the street for
several hours. police said They
!>aid Moro may have been shot in
the car
Still wrapped in the blanket.
the body was blessed by a priest
from the nearby Church of Jesus
and then was loaded into an am
bulance and t aken away to a
morgue for an autopsy. Police
cordoned the area Crowds of
weeping Romans congregated
on the tmy street.
Hundreds of other ordinary
c1t1zens gathered outs ide the
Moro home five miles away m
Rome's Monte Mar io section.
and on the nearby tree-shaded
Via Mano Fam. scene of kidnap
ambush
Police cars with s irens whin-
ing s ped through the city, dc
~('rted as usual d uring the early
<tfl('rnoon lunch hours. Police
~aid they had n•ceivcd other lips
before the discovery of the car
<.1nd were throwing out dragnets
anoss the city.
The Ita lian Co mmunist
Party's directorate went into
session immediately, and party
official Gianc<.1rlo Pajetta s aid
as he entered the meeting, "This
is a c rime of sadist ferocity."
Moro was president of the rul-
ing Christian Democrat Party
and a fi ve-lime forme r premier
a nd had been expected to
hccome Italy's next president
D e ath P e nalty
Try R e j ect e d
SACRAMENTO CAP> -An
Assembly (.'Ommittee has reJect
cd a proposed extens ion of
California's death penalty to
firs t -degree murderers of
children under 14 years of age.
The bill, AB 3551 by As -
:Semblyman Jim Ellis, R-San
Diego. got u motion for passage
but no second Monday in the Al'\.
:;embly Criminal Justice Com.
1T1iltee.
°"ANGE COAST "
DAILY PILOT
~~:t.~~~,··:,=:.:::::o.: '°""~' Pvt>t1V1i·~C0tn0•n., ~ ttfl.01t~ .. ,•
pvftt1\Mi.J ~r"t'lly ''"°"Of\ Fr.cM, ftW CO'•• ,..._~ "ffi•DO'I &.Mh Hl,lf\f1f'qtan Ai-Mft '"'-""'
U ·n YAillll>y tt••"t. SaOOl"M t Vitltt11y ,.f'\lf
~~::~~.~~·,:~~~1 ;:..
JWt'Wl~I Ot;bl•'\'°"4nQ Ot'1M'tt "-"1 llO -~· ~.
"'"' C°'ta ~'* (altfnt~ta""'
, .. _.Cw...,
"''. P'yf\ ... ftl .,.. Offtlpt .. Mi9!'\lql9• ---1{-ldllor
·::,':...,'="8
CIN ..... 11 ~ ·~,, 114111 ""'"·~ ~ ........ ldllan
• • ..
'·
that Moro's bullel ridden bodyJ
hlt rttt ~ed. had bttn founo
on lbe floor' ol a 1tolen Rtn•ull perftd in~· hurt of Rome.
"811tard1 ! 811tardt• •· •
woman cried. "lie sufre red so
much."
Pope Paul Vl went lo pray m
his private chapel Italy's major
liabor unions called an eight·hour
wo rk s to ppage. In Mllan,
worker!> planned a massive rally
in Cathedral Square. ,
Pre mier Giulio Andreotti
called an emergency Cabinet
session and President Giovanni
Leone scheduled an address to
the nation. Leaders oC the flalian
Communjst Party met in the af.
ternoon
"This is a crime of sadist
ferocity," declared Giancarlo
f'roM P age A I
LNG ••.
staff's recommendation
In a letter to the commission,
the electric company said a liq·
uefied natural gas terminal,
located so close to San Onofre,
might not be compatible with
federal Nuclear Regulatory
Com mission s ite criteria
"w ithout .possible d esign
modifications and major nuclear
plant reanalysis."
The city of San Clemente has
also written to the Coastal Com-
mission. asking that the gas
lt>rminal not be localed at Camp
Pendleton.
"I'm against it." said Bernard
Al len . president of San
Clemente's Chamber of Com-
merce. "My personal view is
that. once they do this, they will
open up the whole base. I think
it ·s the first step in an attempt to
do away with a major natural re-
source."
Allen said the executive com·
mittee of the Chamber of Com·
merce was scheduled to meet to-
day at noon. The proposed
term in al location at Camp
Pendleton was on the agenda. he
s aid.
'Haml Glm' OK
lnNewport -
Surfing Style
After they were convinced
t hat the event wasn 'l exactly
what it sounded hke. Newport
Beach Cit y Councilme n ap·
proved a permit for body surfing
and hand gun contest Monday.
Counctlmen, s lightly take n
aback by the request. were re
lieved to find out that a hand
gun . in this case. is not a
weapon, but. rather. the latest
th mg in surfing.
It's a foot-long plas tic device
held in the hand which gives
body surfers more mobility in
riding a wave.
The contest. sponsored by the
manufacturers of the hand gun ,
will be held July 29 and 30 from
8 a.m . to4 p.m. at 18th Street
Contest organizers needed
council approval to get the
s t a ndard s urfing reg ulations
waived for their event.
Councilman Don Str a uss
asked organizers. ..Have you
considered any other name
than 'handgun"?"
'Ghost' Behind
Wheel R eally
An 8-year-old
HAMTRAMCK, Mich. <APl -
Hamtramck police may have
thought they were seeing ghosts
when a car zipped by them, do-
ing 70 mph with no sign of a
drive r al the wheel.
When -after a high s peed
chase through residential streets
the officers finally caught up
with the fleeing car Monday,
they round no phantom, just a
short 8-year·old boy.
The pint-sited car thief. whose
Identity was not released.
managed to elude patrol cars in
this Detroit-area community for
several blocks. leading them the
wrong way down a one·way
street before ramming a fence
and abandoning the vet\\clf..
When pohce caught up with
the culprit on a nearby street
romer, officers said, he readily
ad mitt~ stealing the car from a
gas station and drivlog It.
omcers said the boy waa !lo
short he had to peer between the
spokes of the steering wheel ••
he drove.
Santa Ana. Height&
Home Burglarized
A buc:glar who removed a win-
dow from lt.s track to 11tn entry
took jewelry. a tape ntcorder
and an automatic pistol from a
Santa Ana Height& home
Orange County 1heriff'1 or.
ncen valued the total 10&1 at the
hOrne of Peter Aloit Guulls, le&l
Mesa Drive, ot S\,490. Ho w
away at wortl at the Ume.
P aJetl•. a top Commllnist of.
f1cial aa be entered the meeting
Jlallan and party fl•t• were
lmmedlat•ly lowered to ball
ataft at Chrl1tl1n Democrat
headquarters.
The groundswell of feeling
s urroundin& Moro's traeic death
recalled the American reaction
to the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy.
As presideot of the ruling
Christian Democrat Party and
rive-time premier, Moro was one
of Italy's best known public
figures.
"We need to bring back the
death sentence," sai~ one emo·
tionally wrought man.
Capital punishment was
abolished after World War JI.
Silent and s ullen crowds
milled around the narrow cob-
bles toned Via Michelangelo
Pay Talks
Delaye(l, by
NB Firemen
Caetanl where the maroon car
• bear1n e Rom• llcenee plates
N6788e _,. abandoned between
Communlat Party headquarters
and ..Cbriat.lan Democrat head-
q u i t ers wlth Moro's body
sluruped in back.
"Maybe it's not him," said
one onlooker. remembering the
previous hoaxes surro unding the
Red Brigades' threat to carry
out a death sentence against
Moro after a "people's trial."
Workers abruptly left their
lunches. most not bothering lO
return to work. Old and young,
men and women. filed Into
n eighborhood churches for
prayer. They made no attempt
to hide tears.
Thou.sands gathered on the
tree -shaded street outside
Moro's apartment In the Monte
Mario section of Rome near
where the politician was kid·
napped on March 16 and his five
bodyguards were killed.
Eleanora Moro and her three
daughters and son viewed the
body for five minutes al the
morgue or the university where
Moro had taught law.
The family locked itself
behind a wall of silence but ts·
sued a public statement asking
the Italian government, which
r efused to negotiate for Moro's
release. to avoid any ''public
demonstration or ceremony or
speech" to mourn his assasslna·
lion.
Deputies Move In ..............
Jefferson County. Colo .• !>herafrs dL•put ies close in on
protesters who ha,·c blocked the path or a tram into the
Rock y Flats nuclear weapons plant OlfiC'ers sc.iid 25 ''"
ti -nuclear demonstrators. 111du<l1ng l'l'nl:.if.!On i.JOi.JI\ !'>I
Daniel Ells berg tin Stetson hut I. wen_> <1rrested ·on
charges of cr1m1n;.d lrl'~.pa ~:-. und ob~trutt1n g ,1
pu!:)sagewa~·
M e mbe/s of the Newport
Beach Fire Fighter's Associa·
lion agreed Monday to once
again put off discussion or their
proposed pay policy in order to
give city councilmen time to
study the issue.
The firefighters have sought a
policy identical to one granted
police officers since the police
policy was instituted in
Februury.
Water Heats for Slip
The poliee policy mandates
that officers will be given a pay
and benefit package comparable
to the top three Orange County
law enforcement agencies.
The firefighters' request was
put off until May 22 when coun-
cilman Don Strauss pointed out
that he was not familiar with the
police pay policy or the
firef@ters' requesL
Councilmen agreed to discuss
the police policy and the pro-
posed firemen's policy during
their afternoon study session
and to schedule the matter for
action during their evening busi-
ness session.
t
By JACKIE HYMAN
Ot•o.11, ...........
The S.S. Catalina was in hot
water again today. and, un-
fortunately for her owners, that
appears to be the only water 1l's
going to be allowed to s lay m
The legendary 301·foot vessel,
which arrived in. Newport
Harbor April -25 to preside at a
boat show, overstayed its
welcome when its permit ex-
pired Monday.
But it appears lo h ave
nowhere to go -certainly not
back to Los Angeles. There. city
attorneys, claiming the ship's
J
f'ro• Page A J
owners owe nearly $30.000 10
docking and related fees. have
asked a federal court to force
the sale of the Creal While
Steamer to pay the alleged debt.
The SS. Catalin a was
purchased two years ago by
Hyman Singer , a Beverly Hills
real estate developer. when 1t
was sold lo pay Ule delinquent
docking fees of its previous
owner. The ship runs up about
$158 a day tn docking fees.
Singer said.
A spokesman for the Newport
Beach Marine Safety Depart
rnenl said he has been told thal
Ouncan Mcintosh. promoter of
the boat show that brought the
s hip to Newport, is making ar
rangements for its removpl
be reached for comment today.
Previous su~gest1ons as to
what to do with the s teamer
have included moving It lo just
inside the jetty for 30 days. or
moving 1t to Ensenada.
The s hip's owners ha~e
another ide a. They want to
donal~ it to the Orange County
Ed Davis for Governor Commit-
tee for fwid-ra1sing purposes.
The proposal wai. reportedly
made to committee chairman
Ciolda• .Joseph of Lido Is le. who
;.i l~o couldn't be reached for
tom mcnt today
BUILDING UMITS. • •
However, Mcintosh couldn't
Davis . a former Los An geles
pohct• chief, said the plan to sail
the boat up and down the COB!ll
to raise fWlds has "great mertt ..
a nd that his campaign staff Is
~tudy1n~ it
rently has about 16 million
square feet of commercial and
industrial space.
The policy itself is a copy of
the initiative measure being
circulated by the Legal Environ-
mental Analysis Fund <LEAF>
whose leaders were o n hand
Monday to applaud the passage
of the measure.
It would prohibit the issuing of
a building permit for any project
of 10 or more residential units or
10,000 square feet or more of
commercial or industrial space.
Projects larger than that
could win permits only if it is
s hown that the traffic they
would ~enerate will be less than
one percent of the existing traf-
fi c on certain identified congest-
ed roadways.
The cit y traffic e n gineer
would have the responsibility for
Identifying the streets that fall
into the congested category US·
ing specific criteria contained in
the policy.
Another provision of the policy
would allow large projects if six
of the seven members of the
Planning Commission decide
that a project is of significant
benefit to the city, or if it in·
e ludes out s tanding traffic
mitigation measures.
Beneficial projects cited by
backers or the measure include
fire stations. concert halls or
hospitals.
Opponents of the measure said
it will bring building In Newport
Beach to a halt.
Robert Shelton. speaking for
Irvine Company President Peter
J<remer, said the measure was
pre ttlature and totally un-
necessary since all of the city's
major landowners and de-
'IV Dropped
By Burglars
In Newport
Newport Beach police are
seeking the thieves who ap.
parenlly left an Eutblulf home
In such a hurry that they
dropped a color television set
they were attempting to steal.
Royal Harwood Grubb report.
ed the break·ln at his home at
2•33 Blackthorn St. Monday. He
told police he'd been 1one for the
weekend and retumGd lo find
the homo ransacked.
lie listed about SS,400 worth or
Jewelry as stolen and said he
found his television set In the
busbea bellde bit front door.
Police aaJd the buralan tot in-to the home by prylna open a
1lldln1 alus door at the rear of
the house
•
velopers had voluntarily im·
posed a morato r ium on
themselves. All of the proJecls
listed by Ryckorr are included in
that m o rato rium begun in
August 1977.
Shelton noted that moratorium
has lasted 10 months and that
the developers were prepared to
mamlam 1t until the city com
pleles a pending review of its
general plan.
He said the Irvine Company.
as part of that review. had
agreed to lower its future res-
idential building by 20 percent.
to phase its developmenLc; so
that occupancy would not occur
until road improvements were
made and had agreed to help the
city with a road building fund lo
pay for those improvements.
.. Our feeling is that the policy
is effectively a moratorium, that
will have the effect of s hutting
down Newport Beach.
"It is a departure from the>
positive thrust of the general
plan review workshops "
Shelton also questioned the
haste with which the policy was
brought before the council
"We have no major projects
that are going to come up in the
next two weeks," he noted.
Too Soon
\. ~
Corridor Extension
Planning Assailed
rt 's loo early now to s tudy
plans for extending the San .Joa
qum Hills traffic corridor across
Camp Pendleton, members or
the Orange County Transporta·
lion Commission said Monday.
San Clemente City Council
members had asked the cC1m-
m ission to study possible ex·
tension of the proposed route
across Camp Pendleton so 1l
would hit the San Diego
Freeway in San Diego County,
not Orange County.
But Commissioner Ralph
Diedrich said construction of the
San Joaquin Hills route is sllll
too far in the future to begin
studying its possible extension
He said. however, there even-
t ua 11 y witl have to be an
alternative to the San Diego
Freeway.
The San ,Joaqum Hills route.
~x peded lo be built some rive to
15 years from now. would begin
a l tht• Corona del Mar Freewav
a nd link with the San D1eg;1
Freeway near Saddlebac k
College.
San Clemente officials havE>
been concerned about e xisting
traffic on the San Diego
Free way inside city limits and
fear congestion would worsen
once the new thoroughfare is
open .
They also arc worried that the
f r eeway would be the only
escape route from the city in
lime of disaster
Comm 1ss1oner'i noted lhr
potential San Joaquin Hills
l ra ns portatrnn corrido r ex--
1eni.1on would be covered 1n
~encral as part of a countywidc
transit and traffic sludy now be
mg prepared.
A delightful coloring cookbook ...
1ust add kids end creyons end pre
sent Mom with a kttpuke she'll
trHSUrt. (;l'N;f!i
for Mothtf'S Dey.
Come In end ... tc1 from a wt• v•ft ty of tempting, tHty tlft pakt .•.
preffily boxed just for Mother's Day -May I 4Ha.
If Mom livts out of town. we11 .,ct hlr gift for you.
WESTO.IFF PLAZA 11t•' ,,,. ... lls•r;• .......... 60-M12 ~.,, w...,.. .... .,,.
MARIMll'S Yiu.AM-DAMA POINT
t
-. -
)
t
I
' ' ,
Saddleback
EDITION
I VOL. 71, NO. 129, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
I
J
l
MAC Opposes
Proposition 13
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of tM o.itv Pl ... St41tt
Mission Viejo's Municipal Ad·
1 visory Council went on record
Monday in opposition to Prop. f 13. the Jarvis·Gann property tax
reduction initiative.
The council spilt, 3-2. defeat 1ng a motion to support the con-
troversial proposition For the
initiative were Kathleen Kelly
and Charles Kenney. Against
Prop 13 were chairman Ted
Voters Close
On Tax Cuts
SACRAMENTO 'cAPI -
Ca1trorn1a voters favor
Propos ition 13 over
Proposition 8 . but the
maq!in betwttn the two
tax-cut issues 1s too close to pick a clear leader, a
Gannett News Service poll
i.ays.
The statewide survey of
1.001 voters found 40 per·
cent favor Proposition 13
and 37 percent favor
Proposition 8.
Twenty percent said
they were undecided; one
percent said they would
vote for both. and three
percent said th'ty would
vote against both.
SS Catalina
In Troub"led
Waters Again
By JACKIE HYMAN
Ol 1119 o.lly Pitet Si.ti
The S.S. Catalina was in hot
water again today, and. un·
fortunately for her owners. that
appears to be the only water it's
going to be allowed to stay in.
The legendary 301-fool vessel.
which arrived in Newport
Harbor April 25 to preside at a
boat s how. overstayed its
welcome when its permit ex-
pired Monday.
But it appears lo have
nowhere to go -certainly not
back to Los Angeles. There. city
attorneys. claiming the ship's
owners owe nearly $30.000 in
docking and related fees. have
asked a federal court lo force
the sale of the Great White
Steamer to pay the alleged debt.
The S .S . Catalina was
purchased two years ago by
Hyman Singer. a Beverly Hills
real estate developer, when it
was sold to pay the delinquent
docking fees of Us previous
owner. The ship runs up about
Sl58 a day ln docking fees.
Singer said.
A spokesman for the Newport
Beach Marine Safety Depart-
ment said he has been told that
Duncan Mcintosh, promoter of
the boat show that brought the
i.h1p to Newport, is making ar·
rangements for its removal.
However. Mcintosh couldn't
be reached for comment today.
Previous suggestions as to
what to do with the steamer
have included moving it to just
Inside the jetty ror 30 days. or
<See VESSEL, Page AZ>
Citro~ Jarvis
Slate Debate
Keene. Gary Stoney and J ohn
Noble.
Their divided stand followed a
May 2 study session with county
officials who s uggested that
voter approval of Prop. 13 on
J unc 3 would require MAC
members to scrap plans for the
development of six M1ss1on Vie·
jo parks and clo::.c their l9cal of·
ri ce
Al that study session. MAC
councilmen reviewed proposed
county budgets which con·
sidered 60 percent cuts in prop·
erty tax income and finally
conceded that development of
the six proposed parks would be
impossible without maintenance
funds.
However, they dragged their
feet when considering closing
down their community head·
quarters on La Paz Road
Closure of the office. which
operates 30 hours weekly. would
eliminate the community's only
link to the counci l. they argued.
Monday night. members of the
County Administrative Office
outlined conti ngency plans for
tax.paid services in Mission Vie
jo. should Prop. 13 be approved.
tn the update by Dick Kelley
and Arlene Sontag, MAC coun·
cilmen were told that Mission
VieJO area water and sewage
services would race no serious problems because operating
costs could be paid by levying fees
on water and sewer users.
Fees also could be charged to
the users of tennis 'courts.
baseball diamonds and other
park facilities, they added, to
aid in park maintenance.
Property taxes lhat would be
received could go for street
s weeping and street lighting.
t h ey indicated, and street
dividers and parking areas
could come out of road funds.
However, the duo warned that
maintenance of open space
would be a problem, possibly re
suiting in unkempt slopes and
brown grass.
An a lternative. they said.
might be a county quitclaim.
deedin~ the greenbelts back to local homeowner associations.
Homeowner associations would
then be responsible for main·
tenance through increased as·
sociation fees, they said.
Prior to voting on a Prop. 13
<See TAXES, Page A2)
'Ghost' Behind
Wheel Really
An 8-year-old
HAMTRAMCK. Mich. CAP> -
Hamtramck police may have
thought they were seeing ghoets
when a car zip~ by them. do· lng110 mph with no sigo or a
driver at the wheel.
v,'hen -after a high speed
chase throUih residential streets
-the officers finally caught up
with the fleeing car Monday.
they found no phantom, just a
short 8-year-old boy.
The pint·slzed car thief. whose
identity was not re leased,
managed to elude patrol cars in
this Detroit-area community for
several blocks, leading them the wrong way down a one.way
street before ramming a fence
and abandoning the vehicle.
When police caught up with
the culprit on a nearby street
corner. omcers said. he readily
admitted stealing the car from a
gas station and driving It.
omcers said the boy was so
sbort he had to peer between the
spokes or the steerlng wheel as he drove.
Afternoon
N.Y. Stocks
t,
TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1978 TEN CENTSI
Found1
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
. .,
AP~
HEROIC TUGBOAT CREW RELAXES AFTER SAVING AtR CRASH VICTIMS
Capt. Glenn McDonald, Right, and First Mate Bill Kenney
'Delp Me! Save Me!'
Tugboat Skipper Rescues 55 Crash Victims
PENSACOLA. Fla. <AP> -A tugboat
captain said he was orr course and virtually
lost when he saw an airliner glide with thun·
derous hiss into the foggy bay.
they didn't have their life Jackets on. they
were clutch.mg them around the.Ir necks."
·'There wou1d be three people over here.
10 over there. I had to tell 8111 to leave the
three and get the 10. I had to glide the barge
between people drifing in the bay and I wor·
r1ed that some had drifted away and would
be missed when we came back around." he
said.
His tug and its barge became liferan for
survivon.
GLENN Ml'DONALD, 41, A COOL. in
dependent mariner, said it was only by
chance that his tug, "Little Mac." was near
enough to the downed National Airlines 72:7
jet so he could see it in the fog and reach the
panic-stricken passengers.
While McDonald steered. Kenney threw
ropes to the survivors. goin~ into the water
sl'veral times to help hfl out victims
traumatized by the ordeal
"We were where the Lord put us." said
McDonald. who along with his mate, Bill
Kenney, a husky 28-year·old, pulled all 55
survivors onto their construction barge in
Escambia Bay.
"IF WE HADN'T BY CHANCE been
there. many people would have· died. T~y
couldn't have made it. When they got on the
barge. I know 1t was an hour before the boats
found us,"said McDonald.
Three passengers died.
"People were screaming, 'Help me! Save
me!' when we came over. About half a dozen
were atop the fuselage scrambling.
crawling, sliding. The others were in the
water," said McDonald.
He said he was about 300 yards from the
plane when it went down
When all the survivors had been
transferred to rescue boats, McDonald and
Kenney moved on down the bay. They said
they went straight home -"Only. because
the bars were closed." said McDonald with a
laugh -and after two hours of sleep were up
again heading to the construction site. llE SAID MOST APPARENTLY had no
time lo prepare for the splashdown. "Because
Plane Crashes Bay • m
Three Kilkd, 55 Survive Watery Landing
PENSACOLA. Fla. CAP> -A
National Airlines jet carrying 58
persons crashed into Escambia
Bay while coming in for a land·
ing, forcing s\unned passengers
to scramble out emergency
doors into fog and a sea slicked
with jet fuel. Three passenaers
were killed.
Most of the 52 passengers
aboard the Boeing 727 were
saved because a tugboat captain
who saw the crash brought his
barge lo the rescue.
The passengers had no warn·
ing that anything was wrong un·
til the pljJne hit the water Mon-
day night and came to rest about
500 yards from shore, settling in
mud about 10 feet below the
bay•s surface.
"We were on our final ap-
proach;"' said Capt. Ronald Gift. a Na\ly pilot from Carmel.
Callr .• who wu a passen1er.
"There was no warning, no
violent maneuvering, no surg·
mg of the engines."
The airline initially listed 55
passengers. but later said three
of those had never gotten
aboard.
Three bodies were found noal·
ing near lhe plane. Divers sent
into the partially submerged
craft said everybody was out
Rut fog and haze hampered
rescue efforts during the night.
and a thunderstorm that moved
over the bay early today
churned up the seas as divers
searched for the missing. A head
count was further confused
because passengers were scat·
tered among six hospitals and
several rescue stations.
Hospital officials identified the
three victims as Paul V. Wilkes
Sr. or Virginia Beach, Va .• and
Frances Lane and S.J . Fan·
tauzzl, 29, both of Pensacola.
The ages or Wilkes and Mrs.
Lane were not immediately
available.
The Fantauzzi woman has a
3·year-old daughter listed in fair
condition at a Pensacola
hospital. Wilkes' wife. Virginia.
is listed in fair condition at a
hospital in neighboring Sant~
Rosa County.
Many were injured in the
crash. but dozens escaped safely
when lugboard captain Glenn E.
McDonald. 41, pulled his barfte.
the Little Mac. to the plane. tied
it up and helped men, woman
and children clamber aboard.
"If that barge hadn't been
there, there's no telling how
many would have drowned."
said marine patrol Sgt. Wiiliam
Clenny.
McDonald's wife Janet said
her husband. a marine supply
shop owner from Gulf Breeze,
was in the vicinity of the plane
becaute he was lost in the ro1 .
Victim
Shot 12
Times
ROME CAPl The blood·
smeared body of rormer
Premier Aldo Moro. shot an the
back or the head and his hands
and feet chained. was found in ti
parked car in the heart or Rome
today. 54 days after ht' was kid
na ppcd by the Red · Bngadei-
Moro. 61. also hac.I bt.>en shot at
least 11 llmc::. arounc.l the heart.
PQll<'<' said they found fiw
spent <·artrid~es in the car .. ti
stolen red Renau lt bearing
Rome license plates
The body. hunched over on th<'
floor of the Renault 's back seat.
was clad m the same dark gray
suit Moro was wearing when
kidnapped March 16 by a dozen
terrorists who ambushed his
two-car motorcade on a Romt•
s treet. k1ll1ng five polit•t•
bodyguards
The wounds had been inflicted
within thepast24 hours
A blue overcoat and red
blanket also were wrappccJ
around the body. It was dis
covered by a police bomb expert
who broke into the car. Firemen
who saw 1t said the face was ex
tremely pale and Moro's five
foot· I I frame had lost considera ble weight
I
I
Hi s Marxist revolutionary Reel
Bri~adl' kidnappe rs c laimer!
Moro was a symbol of "im
perialistic" oppression or the
working class. Friday. the ter
rorists issued the last of a seriei-.
of messages. saying they were
"carryin g out " a death
"verdict" against Moro because
the Christian Democrats rerused to negotiatc their demand ror
the release or 13 jailed terronst~
in exchange for Moro's life.
After the body was found.
Premier Giulio Andreotti called
an emergency Cabinet session
and President Giovanni Leonl'
scheduled an address to the nu
<See MORO. Page A21
* * *
Carter Sends
Condolences
To Widow
WASHINGTON (APl -Prei.1
dent Carter sent a message of
sympathy today lo the widow of
the slain Aldo Moro and issued a
public statement denouncing h1~
death as "a contemptible ancl
cowardly act "
White House spokesman JOdy
Powell said Carter also sent
messages of sympathy to th~
premier and president of Italy
Carter 's public s tatement
said
"My sympathies and the sym·
pathies of all Americans go out
to Aldo Moro's bereaved family
and nation.
··His murder is a contemptible
and cowardly act. His death ad·
vances no cause hut that of
mindless anarchy. But his lif<·
was devoted to building his na·
lion, and his political skills were
forever at the service of justice
"He stood for civ1lizat1on and
the rule or law. principles which
will always outlive the terronsm
<See CARTER. Page i\2 t
Coast
Weather
Low cloudiness tonighr.
clearing to hazy sunshine
by late Wednesday morn·
ing. Cooling trend. Lows
tonight 52 to 58. Highs
Wednesday 67 to 74 .
Orange Coun\y TH CoUector
I Treasurer Robert Citron wlU de-
1 bate Howard Jarvis, co-author
of the controversial Jarvia·GDM
property tax limitation In·
IUaUve. durl.ng a 10 a.m cable
broadcaat ln Laguna Hills
Leil!Jure World Wednesday.
MA.C Backs Home Plan
"He didn't know wby he was
there, but now he believes he
was there ror a reason." 1he
said. "He thought ll was Mbout to
crash down on tbp or hlm. but It
ra me down about 300 yard!
away."
INSIDE TODA~
What nohts doe1 a woman
hOvt whtn her hll.!band or
the man aht bvts watll beat~
htr~ $tt f'tatunng, Page Cl.
Citron sa1d the hour.tong pro-
1ram will be aired over CbaMel
6 for Leisure World residents
and also will be tiped for
rebroadcast later.
-The la• mea.sure, on the Jun l t ballot, would roll beck proper-
ty asstsaments to Ute 1975-76
Lr level and limit tax bUt. to me
I "~ ~ ... • 0£ the property'I 8l· --. ,,,.,.,
A 413-wut Mission V'oJo Com·
pany development scheduled ror
east or Marguerite Parkway Im·
mediately south of La Pas Road
was condiUonall~ recommended
for approval by the community's
Municipal Adv,1ory Council
<MAC> Monday ruiht.
The 1ln1le·f1mUy.bomea de·
velo]>Jneftl la to l~t on 16.3 acres,
comp•DJ offtclali tald. The ten· tatlv• tract map moH1 oa to the
county Planning Commission for
final approval, expected later
this year.
MAC ~uncllmen ar1ued at
length regardln1 methods for
handling maintenance of pro·
poted community oµtn apace In
the tract. County oftldals
believe approval of Prop. l3. the
Jarvls-Oann propeny tH litnita·
lion lnJUaUve, would re•""l 1n
drutic cu&a ln CUDd• uatft for ...
I t
maintenance or such "publtc"
property.
MAC members finally voted
3-2 to ~mmend that the coun·
ty accept no •lope areat as open
space until It can ba maintained
at taxpayer expense.
Councllm n Charles Kenney
end Kathleen Kelly voted
asalnst the move. For \he tee·
ommendatlon!J were Ted Keene.
Oery Stoney and John Noble .
After spending the night pull·
Ing 11urvivors from the wreck.
McDonaJd werit. home. alep\ for
two houn and returned to work.
The plane. Fll&ht 193 out of
Mobile. Ala., cruhed on the
wo1tcm tip of Florida's Pan.h&n·
die, 20 mllea trom lho Alabama
border and 50 mUes from
Mobile. as It mad a finfl land·
<Se~ PLANE. Pa1e A2 >
'
l•tlex ..
CJ .. .. .. .... .... .. ~ .. ., .. "" ....
12 DAILY PILOT SB
Campus
.Future
c -)Mulled
Saddleback College officials
are exploring possibilities for
temporary north ca mpus
racllilies -delayed by heavy
•winter rains -while passage of
the controversial Jarvis·Gann
· amendment could spell disaster
for the new Irvine campus .
Those facts emerged Crom dis·
cussion Monday by college
trustees over contingencr plans
, for fall classes in the district's
northern area.
The district's new campus at
, Jeffrey Road and Irvine Center
Drive was scheduled to open m
September but has been delayed
driving officials to consider con
• t10gency plans for classroom
:.pace.
But the whole effort could go
for naught ir Jarvis passes, of·
fic1als said.
"This Jarvis thing can be a
. disaster lo the whole north cam·
pus." Board Pa:esident Larry
Taylor said. "The taxpayers
could lose a tremendous amount
of money on that facility.
··1 just don't sec any way
we're gonna do it <go ahead with
the north campus> if Jarvis
passes."
Taylor and trustees were re·
acting to a request from district
Superintendent Robert Lom·
bardi that officials be allowed to
investigate temporary facilities
for classes in the northern area
this fall.
Those classes -1f offered at
all -will apparently be less
than officials orig1bally an·
ticipated.
"We'll probably just do Ulings
that would requite a olassrdom
situation only," Lombardi told
trustees. citing rental costs of
specialized classrooms s11ch as
science laboratories.
"Until we have the opportuni-
ty to explore which facilities are
available, we can't give an)
estimate of what the program
will cost," Lombardi added.
He admitted the district prob·
ably could not begin a northern
program in the fall as big as
they had originally planned.
"We're figuring a s mall
number to get the program go
mg and then they could get it
open in February and bring on
the rest of the staff then," Lorn·
bardi said.
Trustees authorized L9mbardi
to continue exploring alternative
facilities for fall classes in the
northern area.
Lunch S/,ated
For Parent
Volunteers
Valencia Elementary teachers
Dorthy Vanderveer and Merry
Lloyd have arranged a luncheon
from 11 :30 a.th. to 1:15 p.m
Wednesday to say ''thank you"
to the parent volunteers from
the school staff.
The event wil) take place in
the mulli·purpose room. 25661
Paseo de Valencia in Laguna
Hills
The volunteer group Is com·
prised of approximately 100
community parents who con·
tribute many hours of service in
working with the teachers and
students. a school spokeswoman
said.
Entertainment will be pro·
vided by principal Joe Baffa. on
the trumpet. teaming with
µ1an1 s t Jeff H erdman and
guitarist Gil Moreno. of Sad·
dleback's d1str1ct office. s he
•said
Testing P o ndered
/ LOS ANGELES (AP> -
1 Beginning next year, flrst -
1 through slxth·graders in the Los
1 Angeles city schools may be re·
1 quired to pass reading, writing
f or mathematics tests before be·
1 ing promoted to the next grade.
I
I ORANGE COAST SB
I
t
I t
I
I
I l
I
l
DAILY PILOT
I ,,,,,....,....
Nine Hostages F r eed
Gunman Held
After Standoff
TORRANCE (APl -A gun·
man surrendered today. ending
a 13·hour standoff with police
which began when the former
mental patient took nine
hostages after an abortive
j e w e l r·y s t o r e r o b b e r y .
authorities said. Police said the man identified
as William John Dwyer. 28. fired
75 to 100 shots during the night
while he held two hostages in·
side the store. But at 7:20 a.m .. after a series or telephone negotiations with
police. Dwyer walked out of the
store with his hands up. He was
taken to an unidentified location
Left inside when Dwyer sur
r e ndered was his 2·vear ·old daughter, who police said was
Mrs. McNelhs' husband, Carl.
said by telephone that he heard
about the robbery on the radio.
Because h1s wife was already an
hour late returning from her job
at the st.ore, he .Phoned.
"I talked lo the man -he was
hysterical -and he said he had
a 45 caliber revolver." McNellis
said. "He told me 'I know how to
use it, and l can use it again.· r
told him to stay calm and!ed him what he wanted. He sai
car.·
"l tried to brmg him m car. but couldn 't get through the
police roadblock outside the
store." McNelhs said.
B LOOD-SMEARED BODY OF FORMER PREMIER ALDO MORO FOUND IN PARKED CAR
Kidnapped Victim Wea Shot In Back of Head; Hend1, Feet Chained
a hostage. The girl had been
brought lo the st.ore by Dwyer's
wife at his request. police said .
"He was so exhausted he gave
up." said Jim Papst. a
spokesman for the Torrance
Police Department.
The incident began about 6
p m.. pohce said, when Dwyer
tried to rob the st.ore. He loaded
a shoppin' cart from a nearby
market wtth jewels, walked to
the front of the store, but ducke'.d
ba('k inside when police who
answered an alarm drove up to
the front.
More Earth
Dumped on
Trabuco Road
A tractor-induced s lide of
between 1,000 and 2,000 tons or
sandy earth fell on Trabuco
Road Sunday as Mission VieJO
Company workmen continued
cutting operations on the face of
a bill that dumped more than
400.000 yards of dirt on the road
last month.
A company spokesman said
workmen noticed cracks in the
exposed face of the hill along
Trabuco between Alicia
Parkway and Los Alisos
Boulevard and carved 1t away
with bulldozers.
The Mission Viejo Company
has been retained by Orange
County to repair the slope al an
estimated cost of $1.5 million.
Wo rk. said a company
spokesman, is, expected to be
completed in about two months.
Trabuco Road. used to store
fallen dirt until it can be used in
construction of a compacted but-
tress, will remain closed until
work is completed. he said.
Company officials said the tn·
duced slide. designed lo protect
workmen from possible un·
planned dirt slides. was along a
150·foot wide cliff face .
The spokesmen said there 1s
no danger lo two Moulton Niguel
Water Company storage tanks
at the slide location. The tanks
were drained of 2.5 m1lhon
gallons of water when the fi rst
slide occurred April 22.
He said more "sloughs" could
occur in the area as the sun
dries out the S'andy soil, allowing
slippage. Workmen are spraying
the cliff with chemicals to aid in
the retention or moisture, he
said.
Fro• Page A l
PLANE •.•
ing approach at the Pensacola
airport. disappearing from the
radar screens three miles Crom
the runway.
"That plane skipped across
the water like a rock on a pond
and then settled into the bay.
Ther e were two loud reports
'blam. blam' as it skipped.'' a
witness said.
Many passengers emerged
from the water soaked with jet
fuel which leaked f'tom the plane
when it went down with 2.700
gallons of kerosene left in its
tanks. Spectators were ordered
out of the area for fear a flame
could touch off the fuel.
James Stockwell, first officer
on the downed plane, was being
examined by doctors when he
said he-fell the aircraft made its
approach lo the field too low.
"We were apparently below
altitude. I can't beHeve we were
that low, but apparently we
were," said Stoekwell, who was
reported in good condition.
"There shouldn't have been
any P,roblem making that land·
ing, ' said Jack Barker. a
spokesman for the Federal A via·
tion Administration. He utd vis·
tbility was four miles despite the
fol a nd that was "above stand· ard" for the airport.
F re• Page A l
CARTER.:· •• .
that 1eeks to dfstroy them."
Cuter said.
Earlier. State Department
•pok.e1man Charla S1'aplro also
condemned the murder as a
"cowardly and contemptible
act." ·•we condemn the brutal
murder of Aldo Moro by a small
band of criminals. Thia c:on·
temptlble and cowardly act of·
fend• the con1clence of all
Amerfcant," said Shapiro.
"We ah.are the 1rtet ol the
ltallan people at the lou of one
of tbef r moat di1ttn1ut1hed
clUtena ... he aaJd.
F ro• PCJflf! A J
MORO'S BODY •••
lion. Italy's major unions called
an eight·hour \vork stoppage.
Moro's family issued a biller
statement calling on the govern·
ment not to hold any state funeral
or other public ceremony to
mourn his assassination.
Moro himself in a handwniten
letter April 24 requested that no
government or party official at·
tend his funeral.
"The family tocks itself up in
stlence and demands silence~"
the statement said. "History will
pass judgment on the hre and
death or Aldo Moro."
In Washington, the Slate
Department condemned the kill-
ing as a "cowardly and con·
lemptible act."
The Vatican radio called it a
"barbarous murder ... which
takes on m this tragic hour a
nearly sacrificial value."
Upon hearing the news. Pope
Paul VI. a personal friend of the
slain politician. went to pray in
his private chapel.
Former President Giuseppe
Saragat said. "Moro's body is
the body of the First Republic.
which is now dead." He referred
to the republic established in
1946, when the ltaUan monarchy
was voted out in a plebiscite.
The body was found at I :30
p.m .-5:30 a .m . PDT -on Via
Michelangelo <.;aetani. a narrow
cobblestoned street of 15th and
16th century palaces running
alongside Communist party
headquarters and just a stone's
throw from Christian Democrat
headquarters. 1l was just two
blocks from the busiest intersec-
tion in Rome. ·
Officers went to the area and
discovered the body after police
headquarters re ceived an
anonymous telephone call say·
ing a bomb had been placed in a
car parked on Via Funari, adja-
cent to the 200·yard·long Via
Caetani.
Avco Pledges Aid
To Sclwol District
By ANNE COOPER
Ol t .. o.111 ...... SIMI
A voluntary pledge or $1.100
per new dwelling In cash, land
or improvements has been made
to the Capistrano Unified School
District by Avco Community
Developers Inc. of Laguna
Niguel.
A vco's announcement or its
agreement with the school dis·
trict followed close upon school
board passage of a resolution.
urging Orange County, San
C l emente and San Juan
Capistrano to require developers
to dedicate land or pay fees
equivalent to Sl,100 per new
home.
"Avco's pledge has been ex·
tremely helpful to us," said
Truman Benedict. school dis·
trict deputy superintendent.
"We hope this sets a precedent."
Benedict predicted that Avco
will maintain its current con·
struclion rate over the next five
years at least, completing about
1.000 new homes a year.
Similar new home construc-
tion 1s anticipated lhrou~hout
MAC Suggests
No Revisions
In County Code
Mission Viejo Municipal Ad·
visory Council members made
no revisions lo a proposed
Orange County-imposed conflict
of interest code Monday night.
The code, resulting from the
state political reform act of 1974,
would require MAC councilmen
and planning committee mem·
bers to reveal income of more
than $250 annually from invest·
ments, businesses or employ.
ment within Mission VleJO, a
County Counsel's OUice
spokesman said.
Also requlred for declaration
would be gifts, other than cam·
palgn contributions of more than
$25.
the 1S4·square·mile Capistrano
school distnct. whicll includes
the communities of San
Clemente. San Juan Capistrano.
Capistrano Beach, Dana Point.
Laguna Niguel and part of Mis·
sion VieJO.
District voters have rejected
three school construction bond
elections in the past two years.
leaving the district without
funds to accommodate an an·
licipated 50 percent enrollment
jump by 1982.
The Avco contribution, which
may be in the form of school
sites or improvements as well as
cash. will be continued "until
this extraordinary critical condi·
lion has been relieved" or until
governmental action is taken.
said James Smith. Avco vice
president and ~eneral manager.
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors has instructed
County Counsel Adrian Kuyper
to study the school district's pro·
posal, that the $1.100 per house
be a standard requirement along
with a similar request from the
Orange Unified School District.
· Papst also said Dwyer ap·
peared to be under the influence
of an unidentifie<i drug.
Dwyer's surrender came two
hours a fter he released two
hostages be had held through the
night, a pair of sisters from
nearby Redondo Beach. They
were the last of nine hostages to
be released.
One hostage, Pat McNellis. 49.
of Redondo Beach. was shot
twice in the left thigh with a pistol as she Oed the store in the
Rolling Hills Shopping Center.
She was hospitalized in stable
condition.
Police said the gunman.
armed with two pistols, fired
s hots out both the front and back
doors or the store during the ear·
ly hours of the siege.
Seven hostages were released
or escaped within an hour after
the incident began. police said.
About 7 p.m .. police began US·
ing the telephone to negotiate
with Dwyer. during which he
made a number of threats to kill
the two sisters. police said .
A large crowd of sigbt·seers
,::athered at the shopping center.
police said.
F ,....Page A I
TAXES PLAN OPPOSED. • •
s tand by MAC members. roun-
cilman Noble said he was most
displeased with the measure
because to levy a tax to continue
local County Service Area 9
maintenance projects would re·
quire a two-thirds approval by
a II of the area's registered
voters. .
He said it is diCficult to secure
approval on tax items by only
two·thirds of the persons who
vote in an election.
Mrs. Kelly said, ''The issue to
me is can we afford a house for
ourselves and our children or
can we afford parks." At this
point. she said. "we can't afford
both."
She warned. "If P rop. 13
doesn't pass, those ... who
have a say so on taxes will say
that not enough people came to
vote on Prop. 13 and they will
have carte blanche to raise tax·
es to whatever they want. . . . "
Stoney warned that with
passage of Prop. 13 Mission Vie·
fi'ro91 Page A J
VESSEL •••
moving it to Ensenada.
The ship's owners have
another idea. They want to
donate it lo the Orange County
Ed Davis for Governor Commit·
tee for fund-raising purposes.
The proposal was reportedly
made to committee chairman
Goldie Joseph of Lido Isle. who
also couldn't be reached for
comment today.
l;)avis. a former Los An~eles
police chief. said the plan to sail
the boat up and down the coast
to raise funds bas "great merit"
and that hi s campaign staff 1s
studying it.
jo would lose the funds ac·
cumulated for development of
several parks. He said he also is
concerned that more power
would move to the state, which
would devise new taxes.
"I view this as a complete loss
or local control," he warned.
Kenney said he supports Prop.
13 because of what it is doing "to
wake us up." He said, "We're
now looking at what to cut. Why
didn't we do it before?"
Chairman Keene said he
believes the measure is "too
drastic," that he's not looking
forward to brown slopes and
dark streets in Mission Viejo.
Keene added that he doesn't
want to see more state control
"on this tiny little service dis-
trict down here" and predicted
"chaos" if Prop. 13 is approved
by the electorate.
Sailor Dies
Scuba Diving
SAN DIEGO <AP> -A young
s ailor who lapsed into un·
consciousness during a scuba
diving class last month at the
Naval Training Center has died.
says a spokesman for the Navy
Regional Medical Center.
Gary Arnold, 20, of Lansing,
Mich .. died last Wednesday
from lack of oxygen to the brain,
the spokesman said Monday.
Arnold. a petty officer third
class. had been swimming about
45 minutes in full diving equip·
ment when his classmates
noticed he was having trouble.
officials said at the time or the
accident.
era ~0111 WifhC/_,ove
Jjum%u.,.and
WiCkgljr'Pa~
A dellttnful c:ofori"9 c:oOkbook ...
just lldd kids end CHVOnt -"' pte•
tent Mom whh a kHpsake lhe'll
U'lalUte..
Recommended code wording
was submitted by MAC mem·
bers some two years ago.
Changes subsequently were
recommended by the County
Counsel's Orrlco.
Come in end ... ect from • wide w-•lety of .. mpdng. QJtY tlft pak.a •••
prettily boxed tutt for MotMr"1 Dav -*'i 14'L
MAC's code, along with about
90 other public aaency codes
throughout the county. is
scheduled to 10 to county
supervtsors for approval later
this month.
The first lncome and holdln1s
declaraUOOJ would have to be
filed within 30 days after
1upervl1orlal approval. the
county counsel '1 1polleam1n
said.
If Mom livn out of town. wa11 ttnd her gift '°r vou.
1
'Jail Degrading'
Assailed Morn Documents Day in D iary
Damages totaUnc nearly $46
million are beina demanded
from Pension Funds of America.
the now deruoct Irvine company
once controlled by convicted
crime figure Gene Conrad.
Named as codefendants in the
Orange County Superior Court
lawsuit filed Monday are Don
Eckhart and Ha rry Levi.
Conrad's partners in the loan
brokerage enterprise.
The action was fated by
l awyers for Pr ec ision
Tubedrawer and Machining Inc
It is alleged that the Conrad
group was paid a total of
$158,000 1n fees for a $3.8 million
Joan that was promised but
never delivered
Conrad. a one time paid in
former whose scrvicf's were fre
quently utilized by the Orange
County District Attorney's of
fice. recently pleaded guilty m
federal court to fraud charges
stemming from his operation of
Pension Funds.
(l was stated during related
court action against him 1n
Orange County that he made
substantial contributions to local
political campaigns in 1976 and
that he had extensive links with
organized crime in this area.
Restroom
Battle in
Assembly
SEATTLE <AP> -Carol
O'Shea, a "38-year-old mother
of five, shuddered as the
huge cell door c langed shut
She had refused to pay S25
in fines for two parking
tickets and instead accepted
a day in Jail -$25 worth of
time. She found the depths or
despair in the slow-inoving
mom ents.
"I GUESS IT was a matter
of principle,·· she said Mon·
day. "I cried for three days
after that. lt'c; a hum1Uating.
degrading place."
"Nobody cares " she
scrawled on a piece of col
ored paper as the hour~
ticked away
H er notes were 1m
pressions of 10 hours. begin-
ning at noon. April 12:
"The matr(\n took m y
books. my shawl. and made
me stand sWl while one lady
took off my wedding band
. . . . I got cold and asked 1f l could either have my shawl
back or a s weater. I was told
to wait."
SHE WAS GIVEN a sheet
and moved lo a Cf'IJ .
"I've been asking every 15
to 20 minutes to call my job
so I wouldn't lose 1l -the)
keep telling me to wait. As
one young ma~ron put 1t. · 1r
you keep bugging me. it'll
take that much longer ·
"Well. I'm gelling nervou:-.
. I'm afraid. I'll get fired
1f I don't call or show up
'NOBODY CARES'
Jail Inmate O'Shea
"I JUSl knocked on the
door The matron told me
she'd bust my head 1f J didn 'l
quit knocking. I told her I
had to call my job . r got
so mad I kicked the door
With that the old lady came
into m y cell and Look me to a
padded cell ··
LATER. "HERE I AM in a
padded cell . Kathy and Del.
mom understands you belter
now.·· They are two of her
teen-age children who have
bceo io homes for delinquent
children off and on
"I love my children and
have better compassion and
understandlng for thim. WIU
this nightmare ever ~nd?
"Just now one of the young
matrons came by and peeked
into lhis Hllle padded cell
... Nobody cares if I keep
my job. NOBODY CA RES
"IT'S NOW 2 P.M. I fmully
got to use the phone I
finally got nerve enough to
call my job. It was humiliat
ing for me to tell Joanne why
f wanted to talk to Al. but he
couldo 't come to the phone
anyway because he was
busy. She just said she·d give
him the message "
Back in her cell 'Tm 1n
here alone . I've cried so
much I feel a little sleepy
Nothing else to do bllt s it and
wait."
Dinner came The night
shift of matrons arrived. She
had had enough of Jail lier
husband Pat posted ball and
she left. She did not lose her
job.
"l'VE NEVER been 1n
trouble." she s aid Monda)
"I've nevt!r been in Jail I
never want to ~o through 11
again. Kathy used to tell me.
'I'm bored and lonesome ·
Del• \lsed to tell m <' 1t 's
depressing. I didn't believe
them Now I know whut the)
went through · ·
TRENTON, N.J . CAP > -The
sanctity of the N ew Jersey
Statehouse men's room has been
violated by a group of female
legislators who say they want
more privacy
Local Control Periled?
The A5sembly's 12 women
have been asking for a new
ladies' room so "wl.' won't havt'
to be besieged by lobbyists lying
in wail every time we go to the
bathroom.·· Assemblywom an
Ro!>emarie Totaro. D·Morris.
said Monday
Judge Raps Jarvis-Gann in~Debate
The Statehouse ladies· room
nearest the Assembly Chamber
1s alonR a main corridor
crammed with lobbyists during
legis lative sessions.
The female legislators cor
nered Assembly Majority
Leader Albert Burstein. D·
Bergen. in the men's room Mon -
day to express the ir needs for a
new ladies' room.
"He told us that he realizes
our desire to have a ladies' room
with the same privacy that is af-
forded to the me n." said As·
semblywoman Mildred Garvtn,
D·Essex. "But he told us that
there just isn 't enough space
available in the Statehouse al
this time."
The women were not ap·
peased.
··we do not have o ur own
restroom now. even though we
used to have one when there
were only three A s·
se mblywomen, ·· said Mrs .
Totaro.
That facility 1s now being used
by Republican Assemblymen.
Mrs. Totaro said she and her
female colJeagues have not
responded to an order to share 1t
by building a partition
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of the D.<ly Piiot Sl.atf
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Bruce Sumner said Mon
day m Laguna Beach that the
Jarvis -Gann initiative would
virtually eliminate local control
over government.
·'It is the end of local govern
ment. ·· Sumner said during a
debate over the controversial property tax cut initiative.
Proposition 13 on the June 6
ballot.
The debate. sponsored by the
La~una R<•ach PTA Council and
Laguna Hcach Taxpayers As·
!>OCial1on. was held bl'fore a
crowd or about 200 people 1n the
Laguna Beach lt1gh Sc hool
Auditorium
Opposing the bill were Sumner
and Robert Sanch1s. Laguna
Beach school !ooupermtendent
Supportmg 1t was mveslment
broker Ronald Steinberg. who
s:ud a fellow Jarvis supporter
also scheduled lo SJ>(>ak was una-
ble to attend.
Sumner ba~d his oppos1t1on
on the idea that the a mendment
Groucho's Mallager
Files $75,000 Suit
LOS ANGELES CA P ) -Erin executor of Groucho's estate. 1s
Fleming, Groucho Marx's em· represented by the same al·
battled live-in manager. has torneywhoservedascounsel for
filed a lawsuit in an effort to get Groucho's son. Authur. when he
money she claims the late come· tried to wrest his father's con·
dian wanted her to have. scrvatorship from Miss Fleming
Miss Fleming. who became in· in the months before Groucho
volved in a messy court battle died.
with Groucho's family just Miss Fleming's attorney. Ron
before he died, says in her suit Rolnick. said Monday that the
that the Bank ol America Na-bank appears to have taken the
tional Trust and Savings As-sam e attitude toward Miss
sociation rejected her claim for Fleming that Arthur Marx had.
more than $7~.000. "that she committed these un-
She based her c laim on two Ji?odly acts a~ainst him and was ()oUar Gains 1972 contracts with Marx . one ~~~~~lent in he r dealings with
naming her as Groucho's
LONDON <AP> -The U.S. personal manager for seven In seeking lo have Miss Flem·
dollar opened slightly stronger years and the other makin~ her mg ousted last year . the younger
in Europe this morning and associate producer in connection Marx claimed Miss Fleming
gained more than a yen in with a record he made . abused and took advantage of
Tokyo. The bank, which is acting as his father m the six years that
---------------------------..;;;...-she was with him.
0 -~Rolnick said the money owed
1ss Fleming was money
~ " roucho Marx wanted her to
' ~ '----" have . We're just filing a
creditor's claim, trying to retain
for her what Groucho wanted
her lo have."
In addition. Rolntck said Miss
Fleming was seeking $69,132 she
spent on legal fees while she was
ballllng to remain as con-
servator
Reds Visit Port
SPLIT. Yugoslavia <AP 1 -A
Soviet nava l detachment en-
tered this Adriatic port Monday
for an unofficial visit. The crew
will tour landmarks in the city.
VUJ i ting Rais
Not Welcome
RED DEER. Alberta
IAPl -Alberta's virtual
rot-free status Is being
threatened by rodents that
apparently a rrived by
train from the eastern
United States.
Deputies Jflov e In Four have been reported
at an Industrial park and
another was reported
killed by a dofl.
would m ean <i fundamental
change in California govern
ment becaust• h(' ~aid 1t would
transfer the power to allocate
funds for local proJecls from
local ~overnmenl to th(• state
Stembeq~ denied that the key
issue was local control. saying at
was government spendm~
·'Our state continues to spend
and spend. and 1t is evident that
all we get 1s more and more
bureaucracy." he said
The key prov1s1on of the
Jarvis-Gann bill ls to cutpropert)
taxes to one percent of fair
market value A large chunk of c1·
ty. county and school funds are
provided by property taxes
The debaters also disagreed
on how cutbacks as high as 40
percent m school budgets would
be met. with Steinberg saymi;t
the state is obligated to fund the
schools and Sanch1s saying the
state is reqwred to pay only $120
per student per year
Sanchis said that in his opinion
education would suffer severely
from the amendment. forcing
massive teacher layoffs . Since
teachers by law must be laid off
in order of inverse seniority. he
said. the result would be that
many of the remaining teachers
would have to teach subjects m
whiclrlhey are not specialists.
Steinberg based much of his
support for the amendment on
the concept that taxpayers must
force legislators to respect their
demands for lower taxes.
"No longer 1s lhe property tax
payer going to bear the burden
of every whim and project that
they drum up m Sacramento,"
he said.
Among \he many attractions
of Cleopatra was the fact thet
she owned he< own Emerald
mine. She was one of the first
or h11tory·s famotis names to
adorn themselves with the rich.
lustrous green gem. which 1s
the birthstone for May.
Emerald Is one of the oldest known gems on earth end wet
found In ttle markets Of encient
Babylon. Today 1111 atill one of
Iha most admtted and
ctierlshed Of gemat~
In ancient hmet m#ly stonff
were mlatlbnty called Emerald
just beeeuee they were ore.n
EYen tobay 101M jewelers tend
to mlsleacl !tie customer by us· ing misnomers such u ··even·
1ng emerald (petldot) or
' ~ental emerald" (OrHn sap-
phire). TheM end other quallfy-
1ng terms refer to different
gemstones entirety. The
American Gtm ~oc1aly strictly
forbid• the UM of eny such
term• ttlat mlalaad the public,
so you c:.n truat your A Q S.
j9Wtltr In th11 rNtt.,
Tflt Emttald II a variety Of
the mineral beryl. II 11 a vBfY beauutul end apt atone tor the
monltl of May, ltt 10¥91y cool
Tuesclay May 9 1976 s OA•L Y PILOT ;tl ~
Too S oon
Corridor Plan
Timing Rapp~d
ll ·-. too t>arly now lo study
plans for extending t.he San Jou·
Quin Hills traffic conidor across Cam~ Pendletoh. member'I of
the Oran~e County Transporta
tlon Commission said Monday
San Clemente Cit) Council
members had asked the com
mission to studv ooss1ble ""
BWomen
Prisoners
Fik Suit
Eight women who werf' 1n
mates at the Orangt: County J1111
during a not July I when they
allegedly were forced to strip
naked and sit in front or malt•
guards for two hours have taken
legal action against the county
The plaintiffs. who claim in
their Superior Court das:. uct1on
that they represent atl women
prisoners at lhl' Jtlll. ask thut
damag&; bt-determined b~ ,,
trial court
Damages totaling 5140 million
"t•re demanded in a claim thLt
was recentl) rejected b) count)
supervisor~
Na ming tht-count~ Jnd 2G
:.henff-. offlct-rs as defendant!>
the women claim that they wt>rt
forced to stnp and i..1t 1n tront of
ma le guards tor t "0 hour'
before nightgowns wert-1s:.ued
to them
The) claim that the~ wer<'
tht•n forced to s it 1n their
nightgowns overnight and \\ert-
d 1sc· 1 plined next duy without
benefit or a heann,g
Sheriff'" ofrtcer" den) the Iii
legations The) contend that 1f
uny naked women w<•rt• st·en b)
male guards <ti an) t1mt-dunng
lht• fin• and not laM Juh I 11
"-<JS becaus<· of the t•mergcnc.\
s tluat1on <ind lht• mt·ui..urt"'
needed to reston• order 1n tht·
Jail
Mom Protests
Light Term
MEMPl-llS. Tenn •AP •
Alohoa Johnson of MoorOt'. La .
v.hose daughter was killed by a
car on the day of Elvis Presley '
funeral. bun~ a portrait of her
daughter m a restaurant acros~
the street t rom the Pres le>
mansion to protest the sentenct•
or the driver
Juanita Joanne Johnson. 19.
was killed 1n f ront of lht
mansion Aug 18 She and Al1Cl'
Marie llovartar . 19. also o f
Monroe>. were run down by u car
that swerved into a crowd of
Presley mourners
Treatise Wheeler 111. 18. was
sentenced last week to two con·
current 10-year prison sentence!>
after pleading guilty to second
degree murder charges
List Scrapped
SAN DIEGO I AP ~ ,\
federal Judge has ordered
Sheriff John Duffy to scrap a list
from which promotions wert'
made that contained the name of
onl) one minority member and
to rescind six promotions 10
sergeant made from the hst
@
6EM WISE
Marv Barr, Cett1fied OemotOQ1st
ten:sion Of the f'rOJ)OSt!d roUll'
across Camp PendleLon so 1t
would hll the ~ ... n 01eg1.
F'reeway in San Diego County.
not Oran~e County.
Rut Commis:.10 n('r lldlr,h
Diedrich !>U1d construC'tior. of the
S:in Joaquin Hills route i!> still
too far an the future t1, begin
istudylng its possible extension
He '&1d. howt•vtff. thert> even
t u d 11 v w 11 1 ha v t' l c. t, l' Jn
:ilternalnt• tu the San Diego
f'recw(J)
Tht! San Joaquin ll ilb rouh'.
t'Xpecled tu be built '>Ome f.n : to
I.> year<. from now. would bc~m
ul thl' Corona dcl Mur F'reewa\
Jnd l ink with the San 01eg~
Fr~eway nP~r S a dd11 b dck
College
Snn Clemenlt' offtc1als havt>
been concerned about ex1st1ng
traffic o n lht• San D1e g11
Freeway inside city limit~ and
rt-ar congestion would wor-;cn
one•· th<' new thoroughfon• 1s
open
They also art• worried that thl'
fn•t>way would be the unh
t>H upP rouk from lhl' city 1r1
time of d1sustcr
Commt!-.!>1oner!> notecJ th1·
pott•nlla l San Jouqu1n H 1ti ~
I ran:-portation corridor t''i
tens ion would be coverell .n
loll'nl:'ral a:-. part Of <I l'OUnl) WICh•
1r;.1n~i l and traffic s tudv now bl· in~ prt>pared. ·
6 San Diego
Homes Face
Earth P e ril
Sr\N DIEGO ci\1-'1 'i1x
home!> \'alued al SOO,OO<J .md ..i~
an• In d<inJtC'r Of br('ak1ng Jparl
a~ lhl' t«.1rth l)'ly<;t<'rtOusl) \lip!>
from beneath their foundation:.
t\! ll·ttst on•· r('sadent "-<t !> lorced
tu movt•
lfotkyard:. at l':JCh Of thl' SIX
homt•!oo havt· dropped from two I<•
12 fN·t 1hc past two month:-..
:..omct1mes lhn·1· 10 four inl'he!> ...
du-'
Apparently nr1 ont· know<. why
Aaron Sanchc1., a !>pokcsmton
f Or l ht• horn l'OW nc r-.. Sd ad
he hai; talked with city plan
nero;, the building developer. tht·
r 1 ,. ti l' n g int' c r . c1 n d o.1 ~ o II
c:n~1nc•cr anvoh·cd with lht•
orig1nul project and "the> ull
pass the buck · ·
The hometii are nearly worth
less becaww or the slippage. Tht'
<'Ounty asi.c~sor ·i. orfiCl' '1a:-
v1rtually assurt!d the affected
homeowner ... lhe1r propert:, ta>.
c!> will bt• rc:duced bv .1bout onl· thmj ·
Rut Sanchez i..ay-. that even 11
buyt>r:-. could be found. no lend
ing inst1tut1on would lend monl'\ to them ·
· · Fmancially. we can ·1 move
and wt· t•an 't sell." he s<sad .
adding that insurance com panic!>
s1:1y tht>y can't help either.
Sanchez says there was " soil
com puct1on report for t>vcry
house in the !>Ubdivbion except
the· !>ix affected lots City of
11c1ab. however. :-.a) it isn·1
thl'1r rcspons1b1hty to s ee that
\•;ich lot 1!> t<'sled. he said.
City Councilman Larr> Stir
ling. who represents the worried
homeowners. said hl' will try 111
determine whether the• c1l) '"
responsible for the compucllon
lt>sts for the homes. which one n ·
s1 dent :.aid wcrl' all built on (tiled
land
green co1or ana 1n1er10•
··garden" (patterns created by
1nclus1ona) remind me of a
lresh spring clay These 1n·
clu11ons are very characteristic of this gemstone and a flawless
Emerald Of fine color 11 very
rare indeed . and 1herefore c1
very veluable Item
Most of the line Emerald
mined today comes trom
Co1um1>1a. Olher sources are
Ahocles1a. Auss1i. 1nc11a and
Brez11
We do heve c1 source ot
Emerald 1n the United Stites
too 1n North Carolina near
H1clclan11e. This deposit wa
011cov1ract 1n 1875 and In 1970
a roe~ found a 50 carat
emerald which wu cut to 13.14
carats This stone hOlcls the re·
cord for the lergest and fln"t cut Emerald found In Nonh
America. Three other excellent
e.c1mple11 of domestic
Emeralds are Included 1n the
collection at the Smlthson11n.
CHAR LES H. BARR
~ ~e.&.w
While we con't show you any Clomesllc Emer111<1s In our
store. we do. at the preaent
lime. hwe 1 wry gooo Mlac·
!Ion of tine Emeratcse from
otfler ~ ol the world. Come
In and ... our coUecfion Je£ferson County, Cofo,. Sheriff's deputies close in on
prQtesters who have blocked the path or a train into the
Rocky Flats nuclear weapons plant. Officers said 25 an·
ti·nucle r demonstrators, lncludinR Pentogon ealyst
Dan lei Ell berg <in Stet.son hat l . were arrested on
charges or crlmlnal trcspa s and obst.ructln& u
A vigorous control pro·
gram by the provincial de·
pa rt ment or a1rlculture
hAa kept the prov1nce
virtually lrH or rats tor
more than 20 yean. A.c~....-...4• ....
pa$.8 a&ewa) . • L.a1 .... ,
•
•
\ I DAIL V PILOT
Jo8t
Coa ~ting
TUMdlt)'. May 9, 1171
{!'.)
•Ith~ Tom ~~';r
Marphine
Beautiful But Deadly
ROAD TO 'YESTERYEAR: Come ride wlth me briefly
into Orange County's past; down a twisUng, winding Ultle
country lane that 1s beautiful now In the s-pringtlme sun.
The torrential rains of yesterday have passed aod the
hilh1 on either side of this rural lane are carpeted in green
and waves of golden mustard.
Two small. reed filled lakes alongside the lane are filled
now. Birds flitter overhead. Cattle graze beyond the ranch
fences flanking the roadway
SOME PLACES ALONG the lane. thece are wide, un-
paved areas where you may pull off the road and rest
beneath large shade trees On weekends, merchants hawk
their wares in these locations. selling everything from
corn to woven blankets lo saloon mirrors. Indeed, this brief stretch of two-lane roadway gives
you a ghmpse of Orange County's l?ast ; how mu~h or our
region looked decades ago when agriculture was king.
This country lane links Laguna Beach to the inland in·
terchange with the San Diego Freeway. It follows the
twists and bends thal were once the path for the Santa Ana
to Laguna stagecoach line. It is called Laguna Canyon
Road. Too bad that La~una Canyon Road couldn't alway re·
main a place for a brier. leisurely journey into Orange Coun-
ty's past. Butthathasn't happened.
PRESSURES O•~ REAL estate prices in Lag\lna have
driven indu6try and commerceoutmtothecanyon area. Now
Laguna Canyon Road serves such diverse enterprises as a
school bus storage yard. telephone facj}jty, electronics plant.
art school, automotive services and horse stables.
Mushrooming developmen~ in Laguna Hills has 1n·
creased tramc volume. Laguna commuters add more traf·
fie . Three art festivals add more. Summer beachgoers add
more Little two·lane Laguna Canyon Road is all too often
overloaded with tramc. At times. drivmJt it is a bedlam of horror. The traffic
mix is a recipe for disasler. Leisure Worlders motor at
easy pace m their big gray sedans. Speeding beachgoers
roar along in dune buggies and vans. Weary commuters
who have just spun off the superhighway mix in. Slow·
speed trucks and buses of commerce grind along.
THE EVER-I NCREASI NG accident toll has
rhron1clcd the grim results of the deadly traffic mix.
Numerous Lagunans oppose any improvements to
Laguna Canyon Road as they strive to save the bucolic
past and preserve the ~reenbelt atmosohere. Their
moti vat1on 1s laudable but their reasoning is flawed. Laguna <.:anyon H.oad mus t be widened, straightened
and improved to serve the pressures that have already
been allowed to encroach upon it. Perhaps a more reasoned approach would be push for
improving the road in a fashion that would preserve as
much of the rural beauty as possible. But logic suggests you do not work to preserve a death
trap.
Tentative Contract
Emls Public Strike
Y<?UNGSTOWN, Ohio <AP> -A tentative contract agreement
that gives an across-the-board hourly wage increase of 3S cents to
2.000 municipal employees has ended a one-day strike that saw
police and firefighting services reduced to skeleton crews.
Striking police and firefighters returned to their jobs late Mon·
day. and sanitation workers. clerks and public works employees
were expected to return early today.
The tentative settlement was annourtced late Monday by ~ ayor. J: Phillip. Richley and Thomas Shipka, a spokesman for the
six str1kmg pubhc employee unions.
The average hourly wage or municipal employees in this city
of 140,000 persons has been $5.43. The $1.2 million. one-year
package retroactive to Jan. l also includes unnamed fringe
benefits.
The city has 150 police officers and 235 firefighters. For most
patrolmen and nremen the contract will increase annual salaries
from $12,910 to $13.638.
Joan Little Ordered to Jail
ALBANY. N.Y. (AP> -The
s\ate"s highest court today or-
dered fugitive J oan Little re-
turned lo North Carolina to com·
plete her prison sentence for
robbery, but gave her lawyers 10
day!> to appeal
M 1ss Little became nationally
known when she was acquitted
on charges of killing a North
Carolina jailer who she said had
attacked her sexually. She
escaped from prison in Raleigh,
N.C .• late last year and was re·
raptured in New York City in
February.
'SalUte' Backfires
Two Clash on U.S.-lsraeli Policy
WASHINGTON (AP> -It was
billed as unother salute lo
Israel's 30tb birthday. but It
turned lnto an impromptu and
heated debate between Sen.
Lowell Welcker and an aide to
President Carter over U.S.
policy toward Israel.
Weicker. R·Conn .. and pres·
ldential counselor Robert
Lipshutz squared off Monday
night before a s tunned audience
al the birthday party lo a
Washington hotel.
THE SENATOR HAD just
finished a wide·ranging attack
on Carter's Middle East policies
when Lipshutz. who was not
scheduled to speak. told the au-
dience of 1.000 that Weicker was
"preying on the emotions of the
Jewish people."
Lips hutz's remarks were
touched off by Weicker's in-
direct comparison between
Carter administration policies
and those of Nazi Germany.
Weicker said the United States
is attempting to disengage from
its historic alliance with Israel.
"We know frpm history that
time again. when national
leaders ran into difficulties. they
found it convenient to blame
their problems On the Jews:·
Weicker said.
"IF TIIERE IS A meaningful
distinction between those his-
torical proclivities and the
signals which national security
adviser Zbignlew Brzezinski 1s
sending today. l don't know
what it is.
"l can tell you that if I were
president. and I had a national
security adviser who singled out
10,000 Purchased
Explosive Recipe
Leads to Recall
NEW YORK CAP> -Random House has issued a recipe recall.
The publisher announced thaC there was an error in a recipe for
"Silkv r.aramel Slices" in its recent book. "Woman's Day Crockery
Cuisine" by Sylvia Vaughn Thompson. which "could cause a serious
explosion."
Random House sald Monday it
had recalled all copies or the
book from wholesalers and re·
tail bookstores. but added that
about 10,000 copies were already
believed in the hands of buyers.
ll urged that the recipe. on
pages 230 and 231 of the Random
Mormon Will
Testimony
Wrapped Up
LAS VEGAS. Nev. <AP>
Testimony has ended in one of
the longest and most complex
trials in Nevada history -a
trial to determine if Howard
Hughes wrote the "Mormon
Will."
House edition. "be obliterated
with crayon or black tnk
marker ...
Acrordm~ to a statement from
the publisher. "If the recipe is
followed. the condensed milk
can could explode and shatter
the lid and liner of the crockery
cooker.··
WHAT HAPP ENE D ?
Spokesman Wiiiiam T. Loverd
said that "somewhere along the
line" an ingredient. water. got
dropped from the recipe. A Ran·
dom House employee was trying
the recipe. noticed that it wasn 'l
working and reported the prob·
lem.
Loverd said the company had
not heArd of any exploding
crockery cookers or injuries. He
said the recipe would be dropped
from any future reprints.
American Jews as an lrnpedt·
ment to my policies. I would
have h is resignation for
breakfast."
Wekker said the admlnlstra·
Hoo \rutsled lhal lsrael accept
the "absurd" Arab demand for
Israeli wlthdrawal rrom all
fronts before negotiations begin.
''OUR RELATIONSHIPS with
the Arab states carry the un·
mistakable odor of appeasement.
and the arms package ls only
the latest evidence or \t." he
added. referring to President
Carter's proposed sale of jel
fighters to Israel antJ two Arab
countrles.
L1pshutz. who received boos
and applause. said in his five·
minute response:
"When Sen. Weicker states
that this administration Is
following the pattern of tyrants
and demagogues by blaming its
problems on the Jews. the
senator is dead wrong. The
senator is unworthy of his au·
dience and he knows It.
"WHEN SEN. WEICKE R
states that the national security
adviser of the president ad-
vocates that this country dis·
engage from Its historic alliance
with Israel. it is dead wrong . .
and he knows it. America will
never abandon Israel. never
"Any attempt to prey on the
emotions of the Jewish people is
a disservice to the United States.
t-0 the state of Israel and to the
ca~se or peace ...
The exchange overshadowed a
later speech by the former chief
of staff of the Israel defense
forces. Mordechai Gur.
Hoose Seeks
MIA Action
WASHINGTON IAP> -The
House of Representatives has
voted 369·0 to urg"e President
Carter to seek United Nations
help in accounting for
Americans still listed as missing
in Southeast Asia.
The concurrent resolution.
sent Monday to the Senate. says
Vietnam has "provided but
meager information " about
those unaccounted for since the
end or the war in Southeast Asia.
Government records show 557
Americans listed as missing in
Southeast Asia; 487 from hostile
action, 52 from noo·bostile ac-
tion and 18 others.
Six months and one day after
the trial started. attorney Paul
f'reese announced Monday.
"The contestants rest." At·
torney Harold Rhoden
responded, "No rebuttal. propo-
nent rests."
Tell Mom
You Love Her
NATION / WORLD
laadorMbs
America's new Junior Miss
1s Kim Crosby. 17. a senior
at Kickapoo High School in
~pringfield. Mo. Jn M onday
"'ig ht "s contest. she ws
awarded a $15.000
sch olarship. She p lans a
career in fa:.h1on drawing
Guerrillas Kill
Tun at Resort
In Rhodesia
SALISBURY. Rodcs1a CAPI
-Two black guerrillas burst in·
to the dining room of a luxurious
mountain hote l 1n eastern
Rhodesia and sprayed diners
with machine·gun fire. killing
two white Rhodesian women and
wounding three other white
guests. the m1hlary command
said today.
One guest at the Montclair
Hotel was slain as she was eat·
Ing supper. The second victim. a
hotel emplo~ee. was killed near
the door. according to first re-
ports.
While the two gunmen were
inside the dining room, other
guerrillas fired rockets and
mortars at another part of the
building in the Jnayanga Moun-
tains. destroying a room. a wil·
ness said.
First reports said the military
closed the hotel, but later the
owner . Ann Lount, reported by
telephone. "we're carrying on."
She said damage to the 56-room
hotel was not extensive.
The trial Is being held to de-
termine if the purported will.
scrawled on three pages or note
paper. was written by the late
industriaUsl. ·
Freese. one of several at-
torneys representing relatives or
Hughes, contends that the
purported will is a forgery.
Rhoden, who represents long·
time Hughes aide Noah Dietrich.
named executor or Hughes'
estate in the document, hopes to
prove It is authentic.
This Mother's Day send Mom a greeting all the world can share on
Sunday, May 14th.
Clark county District Court
Judge Keith Hayes set next
Monday for the start of closing
arguments in the trial. which
has generated more than 12.000
pages of testimony. He said he
expected the final arguments to
last "at least a week. for the
whole thing."
Express your love in a Daily Pilot Mother 's Day Greeting.
It's easy. Write your message to fit one of our three convenient sizes
and bring it co any Daily Pilot office prior to noon May 12 . O r, you may
mail a clipping of the border with your message and paymenr to Daily
Pilot. 330 W. Bay Sr., Box 1560. Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626.
South Ripped by Storms
.
At Least 20 Injured in Georgia Tornadoes
Trt11JH>rat urea
HI Lo "" Albu'que '° 38
Al••,.t• 13 ., 1 s
B•llltner• ,. S1 .12 Boho ., •• 8~1011 11 SS 01
Br-own\-w1U1 " 11
Bulla lo s• S4 14
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HOV\ ton .. 10 Jaos•.,1r1e .. 10 ,.
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sunsntne, 4tll"°"Oll tne piclurw mey • Ii. \llQ!>\ly <IOUl:ltd In U.. neat ,_ Oays. Tne NetklNI w.atner Service pro-mlMCI more Of -..i.v·s _.,,,., IM
tlle rut of t"9 """"· wltll tem-P•• •I wru ciropplno only • le•
deQtHS.
But IMecalen seict low cloucli encl f09 eapectecl •tone Ille ~st tonlll!llt
could '""' Into the s..n htnendO •Ml Sen GMwlel Volleys by ••rly ~tday •
A 1110111 ceotlno tNM _. prectkt.
ed !or c~-•-tdey, with ,,,..,. •lono Ille l»«tl rN<lllno 10
Temp•r•ture1 MonCley were
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11trelUNI wlll l'llllflt bet-II Jt -12. Tiie wettr ....,._,.._ wlll lie ta
'
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¥r~~ .... ~~' $10
$15
Ads come in rhrtt sizes: $10. SIS. and S} for 'h« special
child's sitt card. CYou must br un<kr 12 years rl a~ ro
qualify for rhc linl~r grttting). If you wish you may
crcare your own decorarcd grttt1ng. Using black ptn dnw
your dnign ro fir one ol rhe docrcd outlines shown heft.
You may fill rhc enurc specc. Only WOids and lines drawn
w1ch1n the dotted line will appe.ar in your compl~cd
Modlet"s 0.y ad. r-------... ------~------... --..• ,
I t
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If YOll WJlftt bdp composing a swcabk
f'ttctin11 or havt' any quCJCiont all
642·1678. A likndly Daily Pilocw~·Ylkt
..... be Alad co hdp you.
,And, i( 1"4' like you can chu8< your
Mod\«'1 Day ad. Your cttdir is good wilh
ua, 0t you 1n11 uw youi M&Sctt ~ or
BankAmmcatcl .
642-5678
..
Business Tueeday. May 9, 1978 DAILY PILOT B ;i
Lark's
Closure
Delayed • LARK. Utah cAP I Ken
ne<'ott Copper Corp h as
postponed fo r one year C'losure
or lhc town of Lark.
The company told r esident.'\
Monda y i t wo uld give
homeowners or renters a $1,000
relocation allowance if they
moved out before Aug. 31, 1979.
Those who leave by the original
shut-down date of Aue. 31, this
year. will get a $500 bonus. the
company said.
THE TOWN IN the southwest
Salt Lake Valle..y bas 107
families. The company said
value of residences in Lark
averaged $7,913.
Kennecott also orrered 120 per· cent or either a private or or-
fi<'ia I state appraisal or the
value of privately owned homes.
The company said it would pay for the appraisal. " .~ ........... A meeting between a commit·
tee of townspeople a nd Ken-
necott offi cials was closed lo the
public. Kennecott distributed the
new offer in a news release.
KENNECOTT COPPER CHAIRMAN OIVES REASSURANCE
Leona Peterson, Resident of Lark. With Frank Miiiiken
•Hot Potato' ON SUNDAY , THE chairman
of the giant corporation and an
81 -year-old miner 's widow came
back to Lark -one to assure re-
sidents or fair treatment when
the company levels the town, the
other to promise nei,hbors she
would make him stick to his
word.
Amtrak Services
Frank Milliken. chairman of
Kennecott Copper Corp. 's board
or directors, spent 90 minutes
chatting with residents of the
company-owned town.
Reduction Eyed
An hour after Milliken left.
WASHINGTON (APl -Influential Senate and House members
ar e giving flllxed reviews to Transportation Secretary Brock Adams·
plan to cut Amtrak's 27,000·mlle rail passenger network by one·third.
Hilda G r abner. a former
schoolteacher and 49-year Lark
resident. came home to the cheers of about 50 neighbors and
a dinner at a civic club hall.
Adams. acknowledging that eliminating routes could provoke the
ire of congressmen who would lose stops in their areas. also recom-
mended a hike in fares Mon~a.y. "CONGRESS HANDED me
Federal Amtrak subs1d1es this political hot potato and I'm
h<1;v e soared lo more than S500 trymg to avoid getting tbird-
m1l11on a year. degree burns," Adams said.
MR S. GRABNER WA S s pokeswoman for a group or
Lark residents who went to New
York last week for Kennecott's
s tockholders' meeting. The
group complained that the com-
pany had not said what it would
pay for the homes and what it
wou ld do for renters.
Mrs. Grabner attracted na-
tion a I attention when she de·
manded fair play for Lark resi-
dents and later joined a sit·in at
Kennecott headquarters when
she felt company officials were
not adequately answering her
questions.
MILLIKEN ARRIVED by
helicopter at boarded-up Lark
School. He then visited five
homes. reminiscing with Ken-
necott employees about people
1 hey knew and saying they
would be pleased with lhe com·
pany's relocation offer .
Ke nnecott a nnounced last
December that it would shut
down Lark because it did not
want to be in "the town busi·
ness," and because it needed the
town ·s land for its open-pit mine.
Low Fare Approval
Asked by Airlines
WASHINGTON CAP> -Trans
International Airlines. the
world's largest charter carrier
has asked the Civil Aeronautics Board for approval to offer a $79
scheduled air fare on 10 nights
this summer between New York
and Los Angeles.
The one-way low fare would
include all taxes and would be
approximately one-third the
standard economy fare of $220.
Bot meals and beverages would
be provided at no extra cost.
Coors Light
Test-marketed
In 3 States
Spedal to the Dally Pilot
GOLDEN, Colo. -"Coors Light." a new low-calorie beer.
is being placed on retail shelves
m test-market cities in Colorado.
California and Texas. officials of
Adolph Coors Com pany an·
nounced.
These markets include San
Diego, metro Denver and four
Texas cities -Corpus Christi,
Brownsville. McAllen and Alice.
COORS HAS BREWED only
one product for 20 years.
·'Coors Light has the potential
to become a strong volume pro-
duct for our company." said Joe
Coors. president of the nation's
fifth largest brewer.
He de<:lined to disclose how
long the test marketing would
run.
COORS LIGHT, WITH 110
calories -20 percent fewer per
12-ounce serving than regular
Coors -is made the same way
as Coors beer. with Rocky
Mountain spring water. (and no
artificial ingredients, additives
or preservatives, said Peter H.
Coors, vice president of sales
and marketing.
Coors Light feature a Coors
seript logo in red, a script
"Light" and a new. enlarged
waterfall scene. The beer has a
new slogan: "Coors Light bas
somethjng no other light beer
has. The real taste of Coors ...
8.50%
Congress asked Adams to pre·
pare recommendations on run-
ning the Amtrak system.
Rep. Harley 0 . Staggers. D·
W.Va .. chairman or the House
Inte rstate and Foreign Com-
merce Committee. called
Adams' proposal to reduce the
present system to 18,900 miles il-
l-timed.
"We are all concerned with
Amtrak deficits ... said Staggers.
"But I believe Congress will re·
JCCt a piecemeal approach to
solving the problem."
TWO ROUTES Adams wants
eliminated serve West Virginia.
One. the She na ndoah fro m
Washington to Cincinnati. runs
through Stagger·s hometown of
Keyser .
Staggers has been instrumen-
t a I an blocking previous at·
tempts to change the Shenan·
doah's route.
The proposal a!so combines
the San Francisco Zephyr.
between Chicago and San Fran
cisco, wtlt\ the Southwest Limit·
cd between Chicago a nd Los
Angeles.
A TRANSPORTATION sub·
com mlttee was scheduled today
to consider a bill by Staggers
that's designed to prevent
Adams from filing notice to
eliminate any Amtrak route un-
til Oct. 1. 1979.
Adams proposed that his plan
take effect May 1. 1980. But
Staggers believes that.
technically. Adams could begin
the puring process in July of
1979
By October or next year . Stag·
gers said. Congress will have
had an opportunity to complete
a comprehensive review of the
entire Amtrak system
New NB
Office OK'd
• U .S. GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED
PAYABLE MONTHLY
American City Bank
has received regulatory
permission to open a
banking ornce at ACB's
Newporr9each Ser vice
Center. 2743 E. Coast
Hig hwa y. Newport
Beach.
'
GNMA• Mortg8ge-&cked Certlficetes are U.S. Go~mment Oueren-
teed on "the timely peyment of both principal end interest"-the
same as a U.S. Government Bond. Interest and principal will be paid
monthly-ideal for those who want current income with U.S.
Government safety. Units of $25.000 and up are available.
•No ........,Uoa penalty. as Is the case with Bank ~
and Savings r, Loan CertJfkete or Deposit accounts. .-•
•An opportunity Is ewllable to qualified people
for deferral of tmlu on Interest Income.
For mo ............... contact Part<er Dale.
Senior Vice ~sldent. at (714) 644-4620
or at the addreu shown below.
~gs~
lfltorpotalff
lflw•~ ~ SIM-.19J6
Membtfl New 'tbfll S.Xll l!.lectwna• encl OU-P!wlpl! ~
lo-~·6.n rr9"Cllco• ~ 8-eh•N.w --· Plll\Wld GOO So.at~~ Lot~ CA 9001•
,
' -
The facility is expect·
ed to open by m id.June.
•
Housing Replaces St-0ck
'Little Guy' Turns to Home ln:vestmenl
. ..
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP.._ANIY.t
NEW YORK -The securities
Industry is paying a lot of aUen·
tion to housing t.hese days, not
just because of housing stocks
but because of the compet.ltlon
from housing as well. Yes. some people are buying
houses instead of s tocks. and the
stock market is feellnf It. It
helps explain to some ex ent the
absence from the securities In·
dustry of the so-called little guy.
GOLDMAN SAC H S, a
securities firm. states In a re
port that "homes have replaced
common stock as the most im-
portant major component or con·
s umer wealth." and concedes
they make good investment.
Business Week magazine
features a special supplement in
its c urrent Issue on "Do·lt· you rself investing In r eal
estate." citing examples or bU&i·
ness people who are dabbling in
rental housing.
It concludes that "Increasing
numbers of smaller investors.
leery of the stock market and
seeking high profits. are going in
for an expanding array or do-It·
yourself deals... •
ONE ATTRACTION . OF
course. is the rising price of
houses. an ascent that one small
securities firm equates with a
balloon-filling with air beyond
its capacity. It forecasts a col·
lapse -and • return to st.ock.s.
Goldman Sachs and several
other firms disagree. Analyzing
the prices of sin gle-family
houses. at concludes that on average they appear to be
reasonably valued in relation to
income.
It maintains that demo
g raphics. tax benefits. the price-
income relationship, the rental
return or the rent saving If
owner-occupied s upport the
average price of a new single
family home.
WHILE HOMEOWNERS
seldom analyze values with the
,
NEWS ANALYSIS
sam e professional de tail or
Goldman Sachs. they apparently
reach the same conclusions.
based on the amount of money
they have Invested.
Ten years ago. the securities
firm observes. the value or one·
to r o u r ·ram1ly home s
represented 28 percent or con·
sumer wealth
* . * * Survey Shows
Homeowners
Rise Sharply
WASHINGTON CAP > -There
isn't any "typical" home buyer
and the belier that most houses
are bought by wealthy. middle-
aged people is a myth. the na·
lion's largest group or mortgage
lenders says.
"In spite or more than a de·
cad e of excessive lnflatlon1 Americans are buying homes in
record numbers." Joseph P
Benedict. vice president of the
United States League of Savings
AssoclaUons. saJd Monday.
Benedict's comments came as
the leaeue. which represents
many of the nation's savings and
loan associations, released a
study of 8.500 mortgage loam
made last year acroea the roun-
try.
Sixty percent of home buyers
are between 2S and 39, according
to lhe report. and 12 percent are
younger than 25.
The s urv ey termed
"som ewhat surprising" the dis·
c losure that l i percent of
homebuyers are single. and 4
percent are unmarried couples.
At the end or 1977. however,
the $844.:i billion of real value in
Over The Counter
HASDU .....
such homes represented 35 per·
cent or the S2.42 trHllon total of
real financial assets. Stock hold·
lngs amounted to $635 btlhon.
SOME OF THE change results ~
from the rapid price apprecrn-
Uon ot houses. New home prices ,
ln the 1970.197i period rose at an
annual compound rate or 10 7
percent. Existin~ homes rose at
9.3 percent.
Still. Goldmar. Sitchs relates. prices are Delow the Mmt: pnce·
Income relat1ons h1p that pre
valled in the early 1960s. Thi•
!'luggestion exists. therefore. that
home prices still are within
budget limits
WHAT THE STUDY doesn 't
show are i1ome or the non·
rln anc1al aspects of home
ownership. such as the sense of
security provided by a roof over
one's head, a security unob-
tainable with a stock certificate.
When m arket analysts ask
where the llttle guy 1s -and
millions of his kind have aban
doned the stock market since tht<
late 1960s · the literal trut~
may be that he'!> at home living an his security
NB Business
Dlanges Name
S h areholder of Nation:il
Systems Corp .• Newport Beach.
have approved a change in the
company's name to National
Education Corp. The change will
be effective June 1
National Systems has more
than 70 vocal 1onal school:.
throughout the U S.
Shareholder" also re-elected
three directors for three-year
terms. They Include John .J
McNaughton. chairman. 1f
David Bright. president. ancl
Wallace 0 Laub. se111or vice
president. marketing
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I
STOCKS/BUSINESS
Bic, Gillette Lose
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
One WI.}' to get lower prices i& lo have two bl& companies
s lug it out for leadership in a product cateaory. Something
like that ls h•ppenlJlg m the marttet for disposable Hchtcr&.
where Gillette is battlJng an old nemesis, Bic Pen.
When the disposable lighter a ppeared. it sold for u
high as $1.50. The head-to·head competition raging in dtr
Cerent part.Ii or the country has dropped prices to as low as
39 cents.
GILLETf£ WAS THE EARLY leader of this market
when 1t introduced its French·made Cricket lighter here in
1972 . The market then amounted to some 15 million
lighters a year. Volume has since soared to more than 150
million a year. a ju1cy market indeed.
The trouble 1s that it's turning out to be a prorilless
prosperity.
Blc. a French-controlled compan.y. challenged Gillette
with its disp05able. which It priced lower than the Cricket.
Giiiette responded with pnce cuts of Its own, and the war
was on.
The lat.est r eport from the battlefront is that Bic has
snared 50 pertent oC the market, leaving 30 percent for
Cricket. But neither company is making money in Dispos-
able lighters.
G\llelte said last ~ month its profits ....
declined by l l percent •4
In the first three ~. ~
month s of 19 78.
Cricket's factory price
has dropped to 36 cents
a unit. A year ago it
was SO cents
Money
Tree
Bic increased its sales from S122 million to Sl34 million
last year . But its profits eroded by more than 30 percent to
S6 8 million.
THE BIC-GILLETTE CONFRONTATION involves
more than ltisoosable li~hters. The two went lo the mMl in
the baUp6int pe-rr bus1ness. willri*t" t;eutrdiiy \:>utperiorm.
mg Gillette's Paper-Male d1v1sion. Then Bic grabbed the
lead in disposable lighters .
Emboldened. Bic took on Gillet.le again by fielding the
Bic disposable razor. pricing it at J9 cents. 6 cents below
the Gillette throwaway. Good News! And that may have
been a senous miscalculation on Bic's part. Here it was at-
tacking Gillette where it lives -and the Boston company
retaliated quickly and sharply .
T~ foil the Bic shaver 's mtroduclion. Gillette ran all
kinds of specia l price deals on Good News! Soon both com-
panies were combining products in a single package. You
could buy a Good News~ razor packed with a Cricket
lighter or a Bic lighter with a Bic pen or Bic shaver.
IN EFFECT. GILLETTE AND BIC were giving a way
their products m a race to achieve dominance. That's good
for sales but not for profits
The fight isn't over, but at this point It seems as If Bic
has hardly dented Gillette's dominant•posilion in the s hav-
ing business. When it launched its disposable razor. Bic
had hopes that it would become as ubiquitous as the Bic
ball point pen. That has not happened.
Bic has been able lo sell more disposable lighters than
Gillette. But it has been a costly victory. The real winners
here are the consumers who benefit from lower prices.
StuJ,y Unit Plans
Stops in Europe
:-
In a world or constantly changing values, the nuctuat·
ing value or the American dollar Is probably one of the
most perplexing and unpredictable. says Saddleback
College instructor William O'Neal. He has coordinated a
th.ree-credlt course, "International Finance in Europe:
Speculating and Investing in the International Stock
Market "
THE FIELD STUDY IS TO travel abroad from May 29
through JWle 19, with the first slop of the three-week study
In New York.
The London and Paris gold and silver markets are to
highlight the next two stops. A 10.day study of Swiss bank-
ing in Zurich and St. Morlu will <'!Jminate the course,
O'Nealsaid.
THE EDUCATIONAL PORTION of the course will be
very informal." he added. "Study will not be extremely In·
tense and students will have the opportunity lo study the
major domestic and European money markets and visit
historical and cultural attractions.
Fee for the study is SI .58.5. For additional information
contact O'Neal al 832-4681.
San Diego Winery
Eyes June Market
ESCONDIDO CAP> -Former Napa V1tlley
winemaker David Allen says 19,000 gallons of red and
white wines being bottled at the newest winery in San
Diego County will go on the market next month.
The million-dollar winery. known as San Pasqual
\11neyards, is located on a leased. 100-acre prfferve within
the San Diego city limits. Its fields were planted In 1974
and the grdl>ea harvested In 1976 and 1977.
Another 120 acres leased from the clty await.a planting.
Thirty-seven partners Jncluding Superior Court Judge
Charles W. Froehlich Jr. own the busine1SS ..
OC Accountants
Meet Wednesday
The National Association or Accountants. Orange
County Chapter t1S8, will hol<I ll$ seventh technical
session on Wednesday ot ~:30 p.m . at the Anaheim
Sberalon, 1015 West Ball Road, Anaheim.
Ouest speaker wlll be T. Robert Storevlk. The topic
will be "Financial Career Outlook ror 1978 and-1979."
ForreservaUons call Howard Bland6'0-4-450,or833-213l.
Chrysler Hikes
1978 Auto Prices
DETROIT CAP) -Chrysler Corp . followlnc the letd
of GtnttaJ Motors Corp • ;announced a price Increase
avtraalna l.4 pe.rccnl or S30 on all 1978 model cars .
The price boost. Includes an 1tverace S53 on the 1u1·
gtsted retail price per car and on averqt $34 on o~.
The acllon by the No. ~ automaktr wu oxpett.ed alter
OM. lhe tttnd·selter ln auto prices, 1M01ineecl • U per-
ttnt or $100 per car avera.tt prtce lncreat•.
l.J.ke OM. Ch.ryahtr aald lts "moderate" tncreaH oob'
partly or1teu the ncreased COila ol ,material and labor
alnoe the9 wt imeral