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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-05-10 - Orange Coast PilotSte11:m.er Slips Divol!ce to End , Away; ltipection Stormy Marriage Remains Mystery Of Princess M~g ' .. . DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 10, 1978 VOL"· NO. .... sccno.-.. P.&09• r ~ ........................................... .,,t • ~ ~ Edison Co. Workers Reject Offer, Strike I ~------------------------------------------.,,..J .-1 • • ., ' I ~ j .t . \ • ' l !Moro's ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-; • ' 'Fa~ily --Bitter ~ ROME <AP> -Four terrorists . shot a Milan industrial executive '. in the legs today, keeping up the 17 war on the Italian establishment despite nationwide revulsion at the Red Brigades' murder or Aldo Moro. Officials or the Christian Democrat Party announced, meanwhile, that a state funeral will be conducted -without Moro's body -in the Basilica or St. John Lateran on Saturday. They said private funeral services will be held according to the family's wishes at Torrita Tiberina, 30 miles north or Rome. The day or the funeral was not announced. Alter the body of the former ~ premier was discovered Tues· dav. the Moro family, em bit· " tered over the government's refusal to negotiate the kidnappers' demand for the release of 13 imprisoned terrorists, asked that there be no • state funeral, national mourning or any ceremonJes. In one of the numerous letters • he wrote during his captivity, Moro criticized his party's ada· .mant stand and told its leaders to stay away from bis funeral. ; The victim of the Milan .. kneecapping" was Franco I Giacom82Z.l, an executive of the ~ ,s tate·owned Montedlson • chemical Industry. Police said t.bree men and a woman gunned him down and fled Such attacks are a favorite i tactic ol the Red Brigades, and 1 Giacomuzi wu lbe fifth person ' kneecapped ln northern Italy in j fivedaya. ) The ultra~leftist terrorists were • expected to follow up tbe murder ~ or Moro with attacks on more political leaders, and the 1 newspaper Corriere della Sera 1 said police protection of likely • target.I bad been lnlen.slfied. l The founder of lbe Ked \ Brigades, Renato Curaclo, • ilaouted ln a 'J\lrtn courtroom to- day that tbe auuslnaUon of j Moro wu "an aet of revolu.. ttoirary jultice, the hlgbest ac:t • of humanity poulble ln tbJs society without Juatlce and divided into claues. •• He was (See MOltO, Pap Al> ! llOME SIREET . . . llONOBS lt4R'l't'BS ROME <AP> -Vla Marlo Fant, th• tree-abadtd street "'bere tbe Red Bri1ade1 kid· ... napped A.Ide Moro and ktued hla ~ ftve boclYauaidl Marcb lf, wu renamed b7 _tbe tlt.y todey the "Street of th• llarc:h 16 Martyn." Ilario hnl wu an edUcator. t ' t1 ~ .,..., .......... ., ll9lrti:tl O' .... PICKETS MARCH OUTSIDE EDISON COMPANY POWER PLANT IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Elecbtctty Still On, But Talka Are Off; Key IHU• I• Whet Con1tttute1 • WHk•nd SS Catal,ina St,ea/,s Aimy In Darkness The S.S. Catalina slipped out of Newport Harbor under cover of darkness late Tuesday night. Its whereabouts today and its destination remained a mystery. .. It's gone, thank Goo;· said Dave Hanhbareer. director of marine safely for the City or Newport Beach. Harshbarger said boat sbow promoter Duncan Mcintosh ar- ranged for the 301-foot "Great WbJt.e Steamer" to be towed out ol Newport Harbor at 11 p.m. Tuesday .. He said be believes the shiv, In Its heyday the cbJef means of transporting tourists from tbe mainland to Avalon on Catalina Jalahd, was beaded for San Diego. But San Dle10 barbor authorities said they know nothing abopt tbe CataUna 'I impendina arrival theN. Mcintosh, wbo brought the ship to Newport Harbor AC>rll 2S as an attraction at bis boat show. couldn't be reached for comment. The Coast Guard aald lt doean 't have any Idea where the Catalina la. And the 1h1p'1 owner. Hyman Sio1er d Beverly Hilla, wasn't talking. He la embroiled In a dl1pute with the City of Loa Anlelet over t:ao,000 In docldn& and towtna feet offlclala claim ht ow11 that city tor buthiq thebt1v....i. Workers on Strike At Edison Plants By ROBERT BARKER OtllleDl!lty,._SUH Power station workers went on strike at 12:01 a .m . today at Southern California Edison plants in Huntington Beach and San Onofre and al eight other locations in Southern California. Nearly 1.100 members of the Utility Workers Union of America, Local 246, voted to take to the picket lines at ail sites after overwhelmingly re· jecting the company's "last of· fer" Monday. It is the first such Yoong 'Nazi' Held in Killing LANSING, Mich. <AP> -A lS.year·old sell-proclaimed Nazi has pleaded no contest to murdering a classmate after be- ing taunted for hla beliefs. Roger Needham of Lansing, a frail· looking boy, wore a Nall party emblem on his Jacket when be entered his plea. He will remain in the Ingham Coun· ty Jail tmW Junt S, when Circuit Jud1e Donald Owens wnt decide where be Is to go for detenUon and psycbolottcal treatment. Needbam, &OB,of a Cooley Law School proteaor, 1uffer1 from a rare form d mental lllneu that madt him "a true paranoiac" accordlna to a paychlatrtst'a re• port. I I strike ngalnst,Edison since 1953. A union spokesman said that picketing which began at 12:01 a .m . would contfnue on an around the clock. A last-ditch effort to avert the strike failed wben talks broke down Tuesday. Edison bad pre- viously terminated the contract with t.be Ulllon etf ective at mid· night Tuesday. Bob Hull, a spokesman for Edison. said that supervl!ory personnel are taking t.be place ol the striking union members who maintain and repair power units. He said that be ls confident that the company can contibue to produce electricity at normal capacity "as long as it ls ne.ceuary." An Edison oftldal that aala that about 1,500 conatrucUon workers on a $2,4 bOllon e.t· panston project at tbe San Onofre nuclear plant have ap- parently honored picket lines and dldn't fO to work at 9 a.m. The workers are employed by the Bechtel Po•er Company and other sub-contractors. They are fepresented by various other \mo ons •orkln1 on planu Numbers2and3. An Edlaon official aald the comp•01 la explortni ways to 1et the conatructlon workers back on the job. About 3,000 employ-tn all work on Ute tX· panalon pro~.----.~_.,... ........ (See STalKE, Pije A2> - I ., l Rogal Divorre f Princess Meg, ·1 Mftte to Split LONDON CAP> -Princess Margaret and her husband Lord Snowdon have agreed to a divorce, Buckingham Palace an· nounced today. An offkiaJ statement announc· Ing the impending end of the stormy marriage said: "Her royal highness, the Prin- cess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, and the Earl or Snowdon after two years or separation have now agreed that their mariage should rormally be ended. Accordingly her ryoaJ highness will start the necessary legal proceedings." Margaret, sister of Queen Elizabeth II, separated from ber photographer hus band March 16, 1976, after 16 years of mar- riage. The 47:year-old princess and Lord Snowdon. 48, have two c hildren -David Vicount Linley. 16. and Lady Sarah Armstrong.Jones, H . A s pokesman at Kensington llB Girl, 19, Hel,d, on Two Robbery Counts A 19-year·old Huntington Beach girl who allegedly used a toy gun to bold up a Costa Mesa liquor store Tuesday night was apprehended by police after a patrolman spotted her nmnlng from the store. In custody todb at Orange County Jail on s uspicion of armed robbery ls Donna Von Sprecken, ol 173Ql Keelson Lane, Huntington Beach. She is belng held lo lieu of $25,000 bail. Police said she is a suspect in the May 5 robbery of a Costa Mesa liquor store on 19th Street In which a young woman escaped with about $100. Police said a woman matching the. desc.rlptlon ot the sus~t ln the earlier bold up entered Flacbet'a Uquor, 3135 Harbor Blvd., at about 11:30 p.m. Tues· day and asked for a pack ol cl1arettes. As the clerk reached for the cl1areltes, the young woman al- legedly revealed a realistic· looklna toy r.volver and de- manded cub. Tht cleric compUtd, handlna over an unknown amount of money before the woman ned on root, acconlln1 to CO.ta Mesa police Detective Gerry Thom peon. Tht woman wu spotted run. ntn1 from the store by Patrolman Jeff Clark, who eop. tured her. ' Palace. Mareartt'• bome. said· the princess would continue to have custody of the eouple-s two children, but Soowdoa wiU have access. The spokesman said the prin-· cess bad .. no plans ror remar- riage.. ·• Margaret bas drawn criticism.: In recent months for her.' friendship with 30-year·old~ socialite Roddy IJeweUyn. t She is in King Edward vn -: Hospital in London Hfferiog ' from suspected gastroenteritis. > The Kensington Palace, spokesman said Margaret was ' ..making progress . . . The re.; suit of tests taken by the doctors will not be known until Friday." ~ He said be bad no knowledge • of Lord Snowdon's plans. ~ ..We are not in a Position to~ comment about Lord Snowdon.•· . Lord Snowdon bas been linked> by gossip columnists to assistantl' movie producer Lu•y Undsay. Hogg, a divorcee. The last member of the Britishf royal f amlly to be involved io divorce proeeedinga was the Earl of Harewood, &he queen's I cousin, who divorced 11 years . ag~ : The spokesman said the-~ divorce proceedings were under~ way and the princess wlU be ' represented hy the queen's lawyer. Matthew Farrer. <See DIVORCB, Page AU Coast Weactier Night and morning low cloudin~ss, clearing to hazy af&moon sunshine Thura.:L. Cooler clays. Lows gbt ln 505. ltighs Thursday lo upper 60s along beaches. INSIDE TODAY Mod con pnldMc«f for the 1916 model Jlll!G' &., A~n MotOrl 1CiU be rttaUed by /ftlnol order. Sn Page Af. t } Z OAILV PILOT s Wedn.eday. May 10 1979 1Carter to Concede? ·20 More Warplanes to Pacify Israel WASmNGTON IAPl -Two Cabinet officers are recom· mending that President Carter promise 20 additional F-15 Jet fighters to Israel in an elfort lo win congressional approval of tbe sale of warplanes to Israel, Saudi Arabia and Eaypt, a While House source said today. The recommend a lion by Secretary or State Cyrus R. Anti-gay !Ptiative ,ightDue .. 1 , ·SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A ~ kiatewide campaign has been ~ taunched lo combat an anti· , 1'omosexual teacher initiative, · )Flth organizers calling the " jneasure insidious. dangerous ~Dd undemocratic. • The Bay Area Committee Against the Briggs Initiative - a c oalition or politicians , e ducators a nd community leaders -went public ln a Tues· day news conference. The target or the campaign Is th e a nti-gay proposal s p earheaded by Sen. J obn Briggs or Fullerton. a Republican candidate for gov· e rnor. It would allow school boards to fire or refuse lo hire teachers and school employees who a re avowed homosexuals or puMicly support gay lifestyles. "It's an attempt to play upon rear and prejudice and find false scapegoats for real problems in the educational system," said Sally Gearhart, a San Francisco Slate University professor and .avowed lesbian. "More than gay rights are in· volved," said J ames Ballard, president of the Ame rican Federation of Teachers Local 6~ He said several teache rs' unions and other AFL·CIO affiliates would offer financial support to the coalition. Har vey M.ilJ<, who became the first proclaimed homosexual e lected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, last year. urged more gays to speak out a nd tell others "it's my rights you're taking away ... we have -to let everyone know who we are." T h e committee boasted .seve ral letters of support, in· eluding statements from Mayor George Moscone, Rep. Phillip Burton , D-Calif., and As· sem blyman Willie Brown Jr., D· San Francisco. In a statement read at the ne ws conference, author and pediatrician Benjamin Spock said lhe initiative would "teach children to rear homosexuals. which would be as bad for children as teaching them to be afraid of any group or category of people." KilkrFaces life Sentence SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Ramon Salcido, convicted Killer of a San Francisco policeman, will be sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole after a jury deadlocked over bis · penalty. The automatic life sentence is required under California law when a jury can't decide whether to impose the death penally in a first degree murder of a police officer. Superior Court Judge Claude D. Perasso discharged the jury Tuesday after it was unable to agree on six b,Uots in two d•ys deliberation. The final two writ· ten ballots were split 8-4 In favor of life imprisonment, the Jurors reported. ORAMGll COAST· ' DAILY PILOT -·· Vance and ~retar,y of [)ef411111e Harold S. Brown would brtn1 to 110 tbe number of Jet fighters promised Israel ln the arms sale controversy. Tbo IOW'ce said Carter wtll not change the terms ol t.be pro- posed sale or 60 F•las to Saudi Arabia, 75 F-169 and 15 F·lSS lo Israel and 50 F·Ss to Egypt by 1983, but would promiH to sell North State Temps Drop By The Auoclated P~a Temperatures will con- tinue to drop toda)' In parts of Nort h e rn California as winds pick up and scattered thun- ders how era threaten mountaln areas. The National Weather Service predicted susts or up to 30 mph ln tbe Stockton and San Fran- cisco Bay areas. A small- cratt adviaory was issued. A slight chance of after- noon and eventn1 abowen or sc attered thun · derslorms was predicted (pr the Sierra, the Mount Shas ta area and tbe northeast corner of the state. f',...p,._"AJ STRIKE •.• A spokesman for the Utility Worke rs Union said that mem· bers are adamanUy opposed lo the rotating work schedule which bas been a chief slum· bllng block in negotiations since last Octn.ber. Edison is seeking to imple- me nt a schedule in which union members would work weekends on a rotating schedule without receiving overtime pay. Pickets also were posted at two Long Beach plants. Ormond Beach, Mojave, El Segundo, Redondo Beach, Oxnard and Mandalay <near Ventura.) There are 125 members or the striking employees at San Onofre and 66 at Huntington Beach. The f aciUty lo Huntington Beach has a capacity or produc· ing 990 megawatts of electricity a nd can serve a population or about 750,000. Man Booked In3 Rapes OXNARD <AP> -Police have booked a 27-year-old Ventura man for lnvestigaUon or three kid.napplng-rapea at knifepoint, all occurring within less than two hours. Oxnard officers said Michael Linley was arrested late Mon· day night while driving a stalion wagon that reportedly matched the description of the veblcle tased in the rapes. The victims were described as an 11-year-old girl, seized Mon· day night outside her bome; a 15-year-old girl, walking near the beach in the Channel Islands area; and a 17-year-old girl, g rabbed from behind in an alley near her home. Man Survives Leap NEW OllLEANS <AP> -Erle Ferrier, 29, survived a 115-foot fall aft.er jumping from the Mis· aissippi River Bridge over In· terstate 10 Tuesday. pOltce said. They said Ferrier landed on a soft, muddy bank. He wu re- ported in sftioua condlUon at Methodist Hospiul. Israel the addltlonal planes alter that. Administration officials believe Carter's concession will pick up enough voles to win a go-abead for the sate rrom the House International Relations Committee. Congress has until May 28 to veto part or all of the sale. 1C the House committee defeats veto resolutions against the sales, it would be impossible for the full Congress to act on them and tbe sales would go through. The 20 additional sophisticated s wing-wing F·15s for Israel, in addition to the 15 already planned by Carter and the 25 F-lSs Israel already is buying. would give the Israelis the same number as the Saudis. Former Secretary of Slate Henry A. Kissinger m testimony to the House committee repeal· ed today bis proposal that the additional planes be sold to Israel by 1983 at the same time the original planes are being sold to Israel, the Saudis and to Egypt. But administration sources say the additional planes could nol be manutactured and de· livered to Israel that rast. Meanwhile, Brown sent mem· hers or tbe Senate Foreign Rela· lions Committee a dran letter spelling out Saudi Arabian as· surances that its warplanes would not be used against Israel. Brown's letter reportedly said the Saudis agreed among other things that they would t ake planes only with defensive mis· sites that cannot be used against ground troops. • The Saudis also bave agreed to station their jet fighters far from Israel's borders and not to buy planes from other countries during the time the American planes are being delivered. Jet Skier Facing Hit, RunChluge SAN DIEGO <AP) - A man riding backwards on a mini· motorboat called a Jet Ski mowed down a man lo a rowboat on Mission Bay and authoriUes are seeklng a water· borne blt.-and·nm driver. City lifeguard Don Ashton put it tbl5 way: Rower Mike Daly was pad· dllng along Tuesday wben the Jet Ski rider,wiabletoseebecausebe was riding the craft backwards, cruised over Daly's boat. The mishap did about $100 damage to the boat and lnllicted minor in· juries to Daly. . After stopping to belp right the boat and get Daly to shore, the skier got back on bis machine and rOared away, thus leaving the scene of an accident, pre-sumably a violation of the state penal code. .. There ls a very good pos aibility" a bit-and·nm charge will be filed as a result from the acci· dent, Ashton said, noting Daly got the Jet Ski's regi.straUon number and gaveittoa.uthor:lUes. TaimedPot Probe Slated SAN DIEGO <AP> -Despite advice against it, San Diego County will Investigate on its ow n whether Mexican mari· juana sprayed with the toxic de· foliant paraquat poses a health hazard to smokers. The Board of Supervisors vot· ed 4·1 TUesday, ordering county health officials to report back within a week. Earlier, Dr. John Philp, coun· ty health director, advised the county to take no action on the matter. 'No Questions' Burglmy,Suapect's On/,y 6 WAYLAND, Mlch. <AP> - Police say they cannot question their prime suspect ln a nearly year-long str ing of Alle1any County bUrllarles. She la only s yearaold. .. Because of the younpta's ace. we ean'l talk to Mr " re- ported at.ate pollc. Sat. James M*YO ol the Wayland poat. "We can't even see ber. At ber qe, she can't even be held reaponsl· ble." But an lnvesU1aUon 11 movtna along while the alrl ls ln the custody of her pa.rents. Tbo aeries of burllartea ln the area around :::Jlr1'1 home Just outslde Way 1topped lion· day. "She was cauaht twtc. In t.be 11me home, ancf lbt family de- cided to notify autborltt11/' Mayo Nld Tuillld&J. The Mf'IUDt N1d &.be &lrl aJ.. leaedl)' 6e1ah ber crlmlDal career lut 1ummer. when lbe wa1 5, "and bad numeroua burglaries to her credit" The child bas been caught before, Mayo said. '1'he people would feel SOITY for her and would not tuna her lo ll sbe returned the stolen aoods. It's bard to think of a S.year-old as a henkorecrlmlnal." The nnt,arader usually en· tered homes t.bro'-'lh unlocked wtndo• and left the same way, Mayo aalcl. "We were able to pin this down from the telUmony of one woman who saw an open wlndow and a ·~ putbed a1alut it wtlb one little footprint on the 1too1." "· No detal.11 '"re Ii ven on the value ol the It.ems ahe toot or what the dld wttb them. But moat or the loot waa 1mall, Mayo aid. • 'Tbe Mil lllformatlon we have at Ulla~ la \bat lbe'd t.ke 1ma1l Uke pUen. In Ofte lDltance, 1 took a cake and alt It." ,., ....... PRINCESS MARGARET, LORD SNOWDEN TO DIVORCE After Stormy Marriage, a Rift In Royal Farnlly FroaPageAJ DIVORCE PLANNED. • • The queen bas been kept in· formed of tfie situation but her constitutional consent is not necessary. ~-"The princess ls suing for divorce. 'Ibis is a technicality, one party has lo start the pro- ceedi1,1gs," the spokesman said. "The marriage has broken down and the couple have lived apart for two years. These are •Ob- vi o u s lr, the grounds for divorce.' The 1960 marriage of the ef· fervescemt 29-year-old princess and globe-trotting photographer Antony Armstrong.Jones - raised to the peerage of the Earl of Snowdon in 1961 -was a glamorous match that caught the fancy of romantics throughout the world. But as the years passed, it became clear the relationship was wearing thin. Even before their formal split In 1976, she began to be seen with Llewellyn. a brewery heir who aspires to become a night club singer. Tbe two took frequent vaca· tions together on the Caribbean island of Musllque and often s pent weekends together on Llewellyn•• Wiltshire farm. Crltlca, including Church of Enaland clerics, aald the affair was damaging to the image of t.be royal family. and some said Llewellyn was distracting Margaret from her royal duties .. It WU disclosed last mODLh that Margaret intended to con· tinue her public life. and the im· plication was she would not see Llewellyn so often, at least not publicly. In the mid·~. Margaret suf· fered her first disappointment in love. She was forced under p r essure to abandon her relationship with Royal Air Force Group Capt. Peter Townsend . becausebewasadivorc~~man. Her intention to divorce Lord Snowdon was a nnounced eight days before the Church of England Is expected to change its rules and allow divorced persons lo reQlaJTY in church. The church currenUy allows OO· ly a service of blessing. The change will remove a serious obstacle to the remar· riage of members of the royal family. Because the queen is officially the temporal bead or the Church of England, the church probibi· tion was one reason royal ob· servers believed Margaret and Snowdon would never divorce despite their legal separation. Margaret's uncle, the un· crowned King F.dward VIII, ab- dicated in 1938 because be want· ed to marry the divorced Amerlcan Wallis Wa rfield Simpson. 'lbere was violent op- position from the Church of England and the British govern· meat ol the day. f'roatPageAJ MORO •.• dragged away in chalni5. Curacio and 14 other Red Brigades members are on lnal in Turin oo sedition charges. Authorities In Rome a n· nounced that 2' or the 26 persons arrested May 8 in a police dragnet for suspects In the Moro kidnapping had been released for lack of evidence. They had been held on chargea of sub- versive association. Moro's murder strengthefted the allian ce between Moro's Christian Democratic Party and the Communists and promlSed election galn5 to the government party. In a spontaneous burst of emo- tion, mllllons of Italians poured out or factories, abopa. omces and schools Tuesday to demonstrate against terrorism after Moro's body -chained and rid~led with 11 bullets -was found in a parked car In the beartof Rome. More than 100,000 people crowded Milan 'a Plana del D uomo. More than 30,000 marched around the Colosseum in Rome, carrying hastlly· fashioned white banners for the Christian Democrats and red (or the Communists along with black· framed portraits or the 6l ·year-0ld former premier. The nation's unions called a two-hour general strike today so workers could attend mass meetings against terrorism. Stu· dent demoostratlons also were scheduled, and some student groups "excommunicated" the Red Brigades from the anti· government movement. Pope Paul VI said Moro's as· aassination is "a bloody mark which <li5honora our country." He told children who just re· ceived their First Communion and others gathered in St . Peter's Basiftca today, "This crime bas shocked every honest persdn in the world, the whole of society." Actor Urges Reform Study NEW YORK <AP> -Cliff Robertson, whose missing $10,000 check sparked an ln· vestigation into corruption In the movie industry, urged his fellow actors Tuesday to dare lo speak out on wrongdoing in Hollywood. .. It is truth, no matter bow dil· ficult, that will arrest corporate crime in our industry and set~ free," Robertson told about 400 m embers or the New York Screen Acton Guild at their an· . nual meeing. Jn a question session, the actor suegested that a board of ex· pe rts study the industry and recommend reforms. • DREXEL • HERITAGE •. BAKER • HEKMAN • MASTE RCRAFT • WIEMAN • HIBRITEN • • 0 i cc < ~ • • ..J w x w a: a • w C> < .... a: w J: • • a: w :w: < CZ) • er § u z 0 1-z < t; • If your bag is leather, stop In now and view our exciting all new leather gallery. Select from the largest collection of leather sofas and chairs in the area TORRANCE 236'9 HewthOrne Blvd. (113) 318-1279 Fiw P,,,.,..,_. •fllll ,,,.,,., o.n,. COSTAM&SA 1595 Ntwport Blvct. (71') '42-2050 LAGUNA BEACH 345 North COlst Hwy. (1W 494-6551 • )> l) m r-8 ~ gJ m 0 0 z Gl .. • :r m z :D m 0 0 z • ~ 0 0 ~ )> l) "' 0 :D Gl z )> r;; • • • • • KARGlS • HICKORY CHAtR • DIXIE • WOOOMAfU( ORIGINALS • MARGE CARSON • t • l 17 Orange Coast EDITION ~ l\ ¥ t VOL 71, NO. 130, ~SECTIONS, 46 PAGES l APWI ........ PRINCESS MARGARET, LORD SNOWDEN TO DIVORCE After Stormy Marriage, a Rift In the Royal Famlly [ Princess Margaret, ! Snowdon to Divorce I I I l f 4 LONDON <AP> -Princess Margaret and her husband Lord Snowdon have agreed to a divorce. Buckingham Palace an nounced today. An official statement announc· ing the impending end of the stormy marriage said : "Her royal highness, the Prin· cess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon. and the Earl of Snowdon after two years of separation have now agreed that their mariage should formally be ended. Accordingly her ryoal highness will start the necessary legal proceedings." M.a .-.ant~ slater of Queen Elizabeth U, separated from her photographer husband March 16. 1976, after 16 years or mar· riage. The 47-year-old princess and Lord Snowdon. 48, h ave two children -David Viscount Linley, 16, and Lady Sarah A.rmstron~·Jone s, 14. A s.pokes man al Kensington Palace, Margaret's home, said the princess would continue to have custody of the couple's two children. but Snowdon will have access. The spokesman said the prin· cess had "no plans Cor remar-riage." Margaret has drawn criticism in recent months for her friends hip with 30-year·old socialite Roddy Llewellyn. She is in King Edward VII Hospital In London suffering rrom suspected gastroenteritis. The Kensington Palace * * * spokesman said Margaret was "making progress ... The re· suit of tests taken by the doctors will not be known until Friday." He said he had no knowledge of Lord Snowdon 's plans. "We are not in a position to comment about Lord Snowdon." Lord Snowdon has been linked by gossip columnists to assistant movie producer Lucy Lindsay- Hogg, a divorcee. The last member of the British royal family to be involved in divorce proeeedings was the Earl of Harewood, the queen's cousin, who divorced 11 years ago. · The spokesman said the divorce proceedings were under way and the princess will be represented by the queen's lawyer, Matthew Farrer. The queen has been kept in· formed of the situation but her constitutional consent is not necessary. "The princess is suing for divorce. This is a technicality, one party has to start the pro- ceedings," the spokesman said "The marriage bas broken down and the couple have lived apart for lwo years. These are ob· viously the grounds for divorce." The 1960 marriage of the ef. fervescent 29-year-old princess and globe·trotting photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones - raised to the peerage of the Earl of Snowdon in 1961 -was a glamorous match that caught <See DIVORCE, Page AZ> * * * Princess Meg's Life Often Controversial LONDON <AP> -From her impetuous childhood through her precocious teen-age years to her stormy middle age, Britain's Princess Margaret swirled through life trailing controversy over her men and her deportment. The announcement today from Buckingham Palace that she and husband Antony Armstrong-Jones would seek a divorce after nearly two years of separation was only the latest episode ln a life that seemed the very stuff of novels MARGARET WAS BORN IN August 1930, and made her first public apJ>earance at the age of 6 at her father's coronation. Since then she has been continually In the public eye -often with heav'y con.sequences for her private life. She was a lively child, known to cartwheel down Buckingham Palace halls, defy orders and make scenes. "My first memory," she said, "is half.falling out or my pram baby carriage. A great to-do. J imagine I must have wanted to be noticed." She was a capable horsewoman, spoke a number of languages, and loved piano. Both Margaret and her older sister, later Queen Elizabeth ll, were proficient swimmers. BUT WHEN TUEY WERE awarded a uresaving certificate together, M&r1aret became so angry she picked up her sister's dog, tbre-.l lt lnw Buckingham Palace's lake, and then, clad ln ber bestpartydreas,Jumpedlotorescuethedrenchesanlmal. "Mar&aret. always wants whet I wan " ber sister once uld. "Wbe.n my sister and I were growin1 up," expTalned .Margaret, "abe was made out to be the goody.goody one. That "aa boring so the press tried lo make out I was wicked as hell." Margaret blossomed into a precocious teen·a1er and Jet-aetter. a beauUf ul young woman with violet eyes, brown hair and nawleaa skin. She waa aurrounded by the British press and Idolized bJ the royalty-loving public during the austere post-World War ll y&an. "THE PLEASURE-SEEKING PKINCESS:• headline wnten called her. She was always ore to nlghtclubs trallln1 d\.lket, &uard offlcen and other eligible youn1 men. There were plcturet Of her 1mokln1 ln public. Her eleaant claarett.e holdera becamelamoua. In her mld"20I, her m.rated roma.ote with Royal Alr Force Group Capt. PetQr Townsend brought ber wtdeapread sympathy: Towntend. a Battle or Brit.aln hero, waa equerry lo Mar1aret'1 rather KiM Geor•• VI. But the duhlnc fiahter ace l)'"d been • . ~ (lee PUBLIC) PllNCESS, Pace Al) • I r ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA C TEN CENT 418 N-M Employees By MICllAELPA.SKEVICH Ol .. o.lly~Staff Newport·Mesa Unified School District trustees unanimously ordered notices of dismissal mailed to S8 teachers and 360 non.teaching employees Tues- day because of declining enroll· ment in Harbor Area schools. "It's a terrible action we have to take," said school board President Donald Smallwood, following a verbal protest by Don Kimble, president of the Newport·Mesa Education As· sociation <NMEA). which represents the district 1,200-plus teachers. "We have looked, we have listened. we have tried." said Smallwood. "There rs not any among us <trustees> that has any sense that this is a good dea I." Trustee Carol Martin stressed that the cutbacks aren't related to the possible passage of the Jarvis·Gann tax initiative. The dismissal notices. to be in the, hands of leathers by Mon· day. are due to steady declines in enrollment, about 2.800 stu· dents over the past two years, dis- trict officials said. NMEA chief Kimble asked, "Why not take advantage of the decline and reduce class size? You should consider people rirst and things second in your budget priorities." Unlike the action to mail dis- missal notices to teachers. the school board's decision to send similar notices to 360 classified <non-teaching> employees does not mean that all 360 will be withoutjobs next year. District oHicials estimate that . actually. about 150 classified employees won't be rehired. The district has released a list of non-teaching employees with the least seniority in their respective jobs, including 205 In- structional aides. 86 teachers· aides and 56 noon supervisors. Re -employment for next school year will be based on seniority and any retirements that may occur in the meantime. District officials said the cut· backs are necessary to avoid overstaffing. Jn addition to the cutbacks in teaching and classified person· nel. Superintendent John Nicoll said, there will be five fewer ad- ministrators next-year. The dismissal notices to S8 teachers are firm. The action climaxed a two-month series of public bearlnfs and the dis· trict's filing o necessary legal documents. Kimble noted that the 58 teachers account Cor about 30 full-time positions. adding that the district already has decided not to rehire an additional SS teachers working under 10· month temporary contracts. He said the ·district should have made more extensive cut· backs in administrative staff and that the teachers would be willing to work with reduced supplies. "The cuts are not in the best interest of the district and the students we serve." said Kim- ble. (See DISMISS. Page AZ> Planners Detullocked On Freeze The Costa Mesa Planning Commission has deadlocked on setting new development standards for a north city area that is currently under a four· month developmentfreeze. A trio of 2-2 votes during Mon· day night's planning com· mission meetings means the zoning fate of the area will be up to the City Council. Involved is the area between Baker Street on the south, Paularlno Avenue on the north, JeCfrey Drive on the west and just short of Bristol Street on the east. Reacting to intense "develop- ment pressures" on the area. the city planning stair won coun· ~ii approval ror a development freeze on the area until a traffic circulation plan and new de- v e Io pm en t standards are worked out. o.lty ...... ,......., #ffy a- OfflCIALS HURRY SNAKEBITE VICTIM FROM MARINE HELICOPTER TO HOSPITAL Helmer Tschugg of San Clemente We• Struck WhUe Hiking on Santiago Peak The area currently is a mix· ture or light commercial and residential development, but is zoned for high density in the city's general plan. The Planning Commission was asked to consider three alternatives. One was simply to leave the area as it is. Snake Victim Reseue Sets Pace for Year By JERRY CLAUSEN Of 1M Delly Plle4 SIAtfl County paramedics and Marine Corps Search and Rescue teamed up Tuesday to rush a rattlesnake-bite victim by helicopter to Mission Communi- ty Hospital, Mission Viejo, from Santiago Peak in Cleveland Na· tional Forest. It was an effort expected to be repeated several times this year, county officials agree, because 1978 is expected to be a dangerous rattlesnake season. Tuesday's victim, Helmar Tschugg, 36, of 129 Avenida Mariposa, San Clemente, was reported in satisfactory condi- tioo in the hospital intensive care unit. Villa Park-based paramedics said Tscbugg and a companion were ln the Cleveland National Forest biking when a snake struck him on the right ankle. The two walked a half hour to the peak to contact electronics technicians who service relay equ"lpment there. They , paramedics said, called the County Fire Department. Tacbugg was the second rat· tier vlcUm treated at Mission (See SNAK~, Pace AZ) Swimming Lessons Slated at YMCA The first swimming lessons atart June 19 at the Orange Coaat YMCA and registration for those classes will be held Ma;y 17. Slanupt will be taken from 9 a.m . lo • p.m. at the Y. 2300 University Drive. Newport Beach. Claases ln awlmmlo1 and Uteaavlna are open to children and adulw. • • • • Irvine Council OKs Suit Against IRWD By PIOLJP ROSMARIN Of tlle Delly ...... Steff A constitutional test will be made of the legality of land- owner dominance of the Irvine Ranch Water District board of directors after the Irvine City Council voled Tuesday to rue lawsu1l against the district in Superior Court. The vote to sue the district, and try to stop a scheduled land· owner election Juqe 19 that would authorize the district to is- s ue $1 billion in bonds for water and sewer projects , was unanimous. The council directed Roger Grable, assistant city attorney, to file suit challenging the pro· Mesa Heists posed bond authorization on two grounds. First, the council alleged the IRWD failed to comply with re· quirements of the California En- vironment a I Quality Act . because no environmental im· pact report was prepared to analyze impacts of the drawing· board projects the bonds would finance. Second, the council declared the lRWD board of directors, lo which only two of its seven members are publicly elected, is unconstitutionally composed. in violation of the one man, one vote principle. Five of the lRWD directors (See WATER, Page A2) Female Suspect Held in Robberies A 19·year·old Huntin1ton Beach girl Who allegedly used a toy gun to ho&d up a Costa Mesa liquor store Tuesday ruaht was apprehended ~;y police after a patrolman apotted her running Crom the store. In custody today at Orange County Jail on suapiclon of armed robbery is Donna Von Sprecken ot 17301 Keelson Lane, Huntington Beach. She la belnt held ln lieu ot rzs.ooo ball. Police aaJd the ls a auapect ln the May 5 robbery or a Costa Mesa liquor store on 19th Street In which a youn1 woman escaped wttb about $100. PoUce llld a woman matchlnt the d script.ion of the auspect lit the earlier hold up entered F~cher's Liquor. 3135 Harbor Blvd., at about 11 :30 p.m. Tues- day and asked Cor a pack of cll(arettes. As the clerk reached for the cigarettes, the youna woman al- leeed ly revealed a reattstic· looking toy revolver and de· manded cash. The cleric complied. band.Inf over an unknown amount or ~Oney be(Ore the woman fied on root. accordlnc to Costa Mesa police Detectlv-e Gerry Thompson The woman was spotted run· · nina lrom the store by Patrolman Jeff Clark, who cap. tured her. I The other two alternatives in- volved added high density de· velopment. with or without the extension of Randolph Street across Baker into the area for a linkup at Paularino and Platte Drive. Each alternative ended with a s plit vole among the com· missioners. Commissioner Dick Carstensen abstained from all three votes because he ha~ property interests in the area in· volved. The matter will go to the City Council Junes. Drivers Strike SAN BERNARDINO <AP) A bus drivers' strike here has caused about 350 school children. most or them students in special educallon and desegregation programs to miss a day of school. omclalssay. Coast Weather Night and morning low cloudiness, clearing to hazy afternoon sunshine Thursday. Cooler days. Lows tonight in SOS. Highs Thursday in upper 60s along tM:aches. INSIDE TODA 't" Moat cars produced for the 1918 model y«ir bfl Ammcan Motori ~ll be recalled by federal tmln. SH Page A4. •••ex M Al Y-WwlQ A1t MellM• ~.. :: :-.:!:' ... ..... ._.._. ..., M ....... ..... ...... A$,.. ...... ..... Otj .,,,..... CMlltY ..,,,,, ...... re... ~.':.a.. .... M Meitll...,._ ..... u ... --~ .,. ....... =--~81== ~ tii ........ •• .. M Alt w •t.t AU ., .. .... M M . - : McNtilly P.A~ifHil Cob?man SWJ1iised . ll was 1 perfect setup that ' lured Jack Coleman, popular principal of McNa.Uy CooUnua- t1on High School ln Costa Mesa, to Tuesday ruaht 's meeting or Newport-Mesa school trustees. He ~ved a phone call Tues- day mornln• trocn Balley Daugherty, principal of Sllverado ConUnuation School In the Saddleback Unified Dlllrict. ·~ Coleman w as t o ld that :~· NcNally's director of student ~ ~tivities, Dorothy Hauser, was ·~ .. to receive the second annual .:.:-Orange County Adminlatraton' :-a''W a rd ror "Continuation Educator of the Year." Mn. Hauler'• ftllow teacben aod 1tudent1 in attendance. Coleman also kleked ln '10 for a bouquet to present to her. "I kept wonderln1 why she wasn't talking to me at lbe m• in.a.·· Coleman said JodlY. MOit 11.kely, Mn. Hauser ~ ll')'lftl to SUpJ'etl the laulh• that broke out wbeo Dauttaert)' a onouncted that Coleman was the award winner. "That'• the damnedest trick l ever heard of," Coleman told trustees. ''If I'd have known l would have dressed up," Hid Coleman. who was weartn1 a blue Jelsure suit mlnua Ue. -. Colema WOUid b&,ve been pi. sooted In February but was de- layed until the dlatrict worked out a nnal declslon on the re· location or the downtown Costa Mesa facility. The continuation school will be movlna to Monte Vista Elemen· tary Scbool 1lte in Costa Mesa at the start of \he 1979 school year. The award is n ow in Coleman's hands as the best continuation school educator in lbe county. And yee, be got back the $10 he donated for Mrs. Hauser·s nowers . SURPRISE HONOREE Principal Coleman f'ro•P~AJ WATER DISTRICT SUIT. • • are elected by landowner vote. Wllbln the dl1lrict, t.be 1rv1ne Company owns more than 90 percent or the undeveloped Janel The election amounts to an ap- pointment of directors by lbtt company. The council action came alter a one-hour session that was closed to the public. Councilman Larry A1ran made the motion to sue. "It's laraelY a question," he said In an Interview today ••of whether you can undertake a project of auch large proporUona without the appropriate environ· mental Impact 1tudles, and without livinl tbe citizens of our city a proper opportunity to tully consider such a maaslve un· dertaklna. ·'The ~ Issue ls a ques· lion of whether such an un· democratlcall1 constituted board consutullonally has the aulborlly to commit Ole clty. for decades lnto the future. on the quesUon ol water policy.·· "Underlying the whole cue." Aaran added, is the far more fundamental queaUon of who control.a developmental policy ln the city ot Irvine. ··wm developmen~I policy be raahloned by duly elected repreaentaUves -thl"O\llb OW' 1eneraJ plan adopted b~ tM Ctty Councll -or wtll it b9 dictated bt the action• or an un · democraUcallY and unCOftltl.tu- tl on ally con1tltuted water board!" So naturally. Coleman made arrangements to have many of "We thou ght you were." quipped one trustee. Daugherty said the award to 'BafJg Jflin1101es' Too Terror Mounts in Italy Councilman Davld SUll, a1lo ~ntacted today, concurred. "The IRWD." he aald, "ll one of the laat vesU•es of land baron rule ln the Weal. ~ve Shot"" Moro Death ProtatA Riae Fl.Sh Fry lnvi•tes aoME<AP>-Fourterrortsts "Next month, one man -the president of the Irvine Company -wm cut over 90 percent of the votel to authorise a SI bUllon dollar public bond luue. abot a Milan lnduatrial executive in the lep today, keepins up the Be C war on the Italian establishment auty Ontestants deapite naU~wide revulsion at ~-the Red Bn1ades' murder of Aldo Moro. Babes and babies alike are be· ing sought to strut their sturr before Judges at the Costa Mesa- Newport Harbor Lions Club an- nual Fish Fry and Carnival June ·. 2·4 al Lions Park ln C06ta Mesa. . AppllcaliOJU are now open tor ·~ would-be claimants tD the "Ml.ls Mermaid/Miss Costa Mesa" and .. Baby Minnow" thrones. Unmarried young women between 17 and 22 years old are eligible Lo compete ln the 1978 Fish Fry Beauty Contest. Resi- dents of all Orange and Los Angeles County cities are eli1i· ble for the "Miss Mermaid" honor. If the winner lives or works in Costa Mesa. she also will be crowned ''Miss Co6ta Mesa." Applications for the beauty contest can be picked up at City Hall, the Chamber of Commerce · or Brecht Orchid Gardens In Costa Mesa. MoreinformaUon is avallableat541H316. There also will be two "Baby Minnows" selected at this year's festivities. The baby contest is open to kids in two categories - between six months and one year old and between 13 monlhl and 2 yean old. • Parent.a can re1l1ter their bablea at Cal'a Camero, 1770 Newport Blvd, Co1ta Meaa. Deadline for entries la 5 p.m. June 1. l"rof!' Page AJ PUBLIC PRINCESS. • • divorctd. and that brought family and chutch preaaure that eventually forced the princess to renounce him. Four and a hatr years later, in May 1980, she married globe-trotting photographer .Annatrong.Jones -later elevated to the peera1e at Lord Snowdon -alter a secret love af'fair. Mllllons watched their wedding ceremony at Weatmlnater Abbey or on television. THEIR On'EN ROCKY MARRIAGB enthralled Brttona but effectively ended 16 yean and two children later wlth a separation. 1 "I don't see myself marrying again," the Prlnceu aald ln 1977. "It would probably be too much o( a bore." Her latest Q\fD, and -1uitably her latest scandal, waa llodd' Llewellyn, a socialite and former hippie turned a1plrin1 supper-club crooner. Margaret came in for sharp crlticlsm ln Parliament, In public and among Church of England clertea for her frlendlhlp with Llewellyn, with whom she frequently was seen and ln whose company she took vacations on the Caribbean lsland or Mu.aUque. It was announced Jaat month that Mari_aret would conUnue her public life -the implication being that abe would not see Llewellyn aa often at least in public -and the Bucklolbam Palace announcement today aald she had "no plans for re-marriage." * * * * * * ,,....P~AJ __, DIVORCE AGREEMENT. • • the fancy of romantics throughout the world. But as the years passed, it became clear the relationship was wearing thin. Even before their formal split in 1978, she began to be seen with Llewellyn, a brewery heir who aspires to become a night club singer. The two took frequent vaca- tions together on the Caribbean island of Mustique and often spent weekends together on Llewell~n·s Wilts hire farm . Critics, including Church or England clerics, said the affair was damaging to the image or the royal family, and aome said Llewellyn was distracting Margaret from her royal duties. It was disclosed last month that Margaret intended to con- tinue her public life, and the lm· OAANGECOMT DAILY PILOT plication was she would not see Llewellyn so often, at least not publicly. In the mld-SOs, Margaret auf. rered her first disappointment in love. She was forced under pressure t o abandon her relationship with Royal Air Force Group Capt. Peter Townsend becausebewasadivorcedman. Her intention to divorce Lord Snowdon was announced eight days before the Church of England Is expected to change lls rules and allow divorced persons Lo remarry in church. The church currently allows on- ly a service or blessing. The chanae will remove a serious obstacle lo the remar- riage of members or the royal family. Because the queen ls ofnciaJJy the temporal bead of the Church ol England, the church prohibi- tion was one reason royal ob- servers believed Margaret and Snowdon would never divorce despite their legal separation. Margaret's unclel the un- crowned King Edwara Viti. ab· dicated in 1936 because he want- ed to marry the dl vorced American Wallis Warfield Simpson. ~re wu violent op. position from tbe Church of England and the BriUsh 1ovem· ment ottheday. F,....PGfll!AJ DISMISS ••• District olficlala estimate thai the cutbacks wtU aave the dta- trlcl Sl. 7 mllllon ln teacher 1alarlea and ttto,ooo ln ola11tned 1alartes. Teacbttl who dO not receive tht dl1mt11al not.le•• art as· IUred ol Jobi ~ Jut despite the pottntlal PUHll of tbe Jarvla-Gann lnillaUv. <Pl"OPOll- tlon 13), tn&at.eca wd. Officials of the Christian Democrat Party announced, meanwhile, that a state funera l will be conducted -without Moro's body -in the Basilica of St. John Lateran on Saturday. They said private funeral services were held today accord- ing to the family's wiabes at Tor· rita Tiberina, 30 mUes north or Rome. About '00 persons at-·tended the service. After the body of the former premier was discovered Tuea- da v. the Moro family, embit· tered over the government's refusal to ne1otlate the kidnappers' demand for the releaae or 13 lmprisoned terrorists, uked that there be no state funeral, naUonat moutnlna or any ceremoolea. County OKs Noise Gear For Airport Orange County Airport will be aetting $199,579 worth of new nolae monltorln1 •qulpment, aupervisora ~lded Tuesday. Tbe board also will decide next month whether to spend another •1.eso to expand the monltortns QStem to El Toro M arlne Corps Air Station aa well. A contract ror the monitoring equlpment waa awarded to Tracor Inc. the low of two bid· ders ror the nolae systems. Supervlaon decided last year to replace the exlatlng noise monltortng equipment. The new ayatem will be financed with airport revenue and a $65,S93 state granl A report to aupervlaors said Installing the noise monitors around El Toro could help in land u.ae planning for areas Im- pacted by hilh jet noise levels. However, expanding the system could force the hiring or addition3;1 county employe&, the report s&1d. Nude Batlwrs Arrested in South Laguna Orange County Sherm's of- ficers moved in on nude bathers Tuesday and Jailed three al- legedly naked beach.goers who reportedly offended other sun seekers on the 9th Street beach In South Laguna. Booked lnU> the county jail on charges or public nudity were Richard 'lbomas Colbert, 26, or 2510 S. Coast Highway. Laguna Beach and two transients : Bruce Donald Sutherland, 24, and Diana Deedee Bicknell, 18. Deputies alao l11ued a citation to a woman who allegedly was found lying nude on Lhe sand near the point of the three ar· rests. She was ldenUlled as Gwen- dolyn Ann Jones, 25, or 31667 3rd St., South Lagtma. 'roNIGHT COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Re1ular meettn1. 1310 A.d1m1, 8 p.m. "COMEDIANS" -South Cout Repertory Theater, Tuttda,y·Sunday tbrouab June U,lp.m. TllUa&DA Y. MAY 11 occ· LECTURE - ' BackJ*)dnl,'' FlM Atta 119, 1:30p.m. ' In one of the n•Jmeroua letters he wrote during bis captivity, Moro criticized his party's ada· mant stand and told its leaders to stay away from his runeral. The victim of the Milan "kneecapping" was Franco Giacomazzi, an executive of the st a te·owned Montedison chemical induatry. Police said three men and a woman gunned him down and fled. Sucb attacks are a favorite tactic or the Red Brif(ades, and Giacomaz:t.l was the fl!th person kneecapped tn northern Italy in five days . The ultra-leftist terrorists were expected to follow up the murder of Moro with attacks on more political leaders , and the newspaper Corriere della Sera said police protection or likely targets bad been intensified. The rounder or the Red Brigades, Renato Curaclo, ahouted In a Turin courtroom to- day that the assassination of Moro wu "an act· of revolu- Uonary Justice, the highest act of humanity possible In this society without Justice and divided lnto classes." He was dragged away In chains. Authorities in Rome an· nounced that 24 of the 28 persons arrested May 8 in a police dragnet for suspects ln the Moro kidnapping bad been released for lack of evidence. They had been held on charges Of sub- versive association. Moro's murder strengthened the alllance between Moro's Chrlatlan Democratic Party and the Communists and promised election gains to the government party. ln a spontaneous burst of emo- lion. mlWona of ltallans poured out or ractories, 1hope, omces and achooll Tuesday to demonstrate against terrortam after Moro's body -chained and riddled with 11 bullets -was found ln a parked car ln the heart of Rome. More than 100,000 people crowded Milan's Plana del Duomo. More than 30,000 marched around tbe Colouewn In Rome, carryin1 hastily· rubioned white banners ror the Christian Democrata and red for the Communists along with black-framed portraits of the 61-year-old former premier. The nation's unions called a l wo-hour general strike today ao workers could attend mass meetings against terrorism. Stu· dent demonstrations also were sche duled, and 1ome student. groups "excommunicated" the Red Brigades from the anti· government movement. Pope Paul VI said Moro's as· sauination i.s "• bloody mark which diahonon our country." He told children who Just re- ceived their First Communion an a otbera gathered in St. Peter's Ba.silica today. "'Ibis crime haa shocked every honest person in the world, the whole of society.•· FromPageAJ SNAKES ••• Community Hospital Tuesday. Four·YeM·old Aaron Johnson of Mission Viejo was bitten when he stuck hia band down a gopher bole, omclals said. He la rePort· ed in good condition. ··we are aimply a1ktn1 tbe court to "live the other n11ldtllts In the community an equal voice in their a(faira." Lanat.na EberUn1. president of \he JRWI> board, Hid today be WH "dlNppolnted" by the COW\· ell action. "l thought we were com- municating with them." he said. "I alao thc>Qgbt that adding two new members on the board who we re publicly elected was the beginning of a board more publicly represented." The board plans an eventual transition of power by adding new, publicly elected members as water uae fi1ures dem· onatrate that resJdents are uaing more water than land· ownen. ''The idea or tranaltlon." Eberllna 18.ld, "Hl"el the needs of all t.be parties. I tblnk it'• a fairwayofoolng lt." Eberltng said water me pro- jectiona indicate there will be a public majority on the board about 1984. He said the board position on the environmental laue is that impact reports are not needed until actual projecta are pro- posed ror building. Eberling baa called an emergency seulon of the water board f<M" 2 p.m. Saturday to dls- c u11 the city lawsuit. The 1e11lon will be cloHd to the public, under erovtaioaa ol the Brown Act wh.lcb allow public bodies to meet secretly to dis· CUSS lltlgaUon. • OAEXEL • HERITAGE • BAKER • HEKMAN • MASTERCRAFT • Wj.EMAN • HIBRITEN • • 0 i a: < :E • ...J w )( UJ a: 0 • • • . • • If your bag is leather. stop in now and view our. exciting all new leather gallery. Select from the largest collection of leather sofas and chairs in the area. TORRANCE 23649 Hawlhornt Blvd. (213) 37&-f279 Flw F•ndhlH tlU IfltMer om,. COSTA MESA 159S Newport Blvd. (714) M2·2050 LAOUNA BeACH 34J North C:O.st Hwy. (714> 494-6.551 • KAftGES • HfCKoAY OiAfR • DIXIE • WOOOMARK ORIGINALS • MAROE CARSON • • ? JI "' ,.. 8 iC CD ,,, 0 0 z C> • • % ,,, z :I> m 0 0 z • ~ 0 0 0 iC J> ::I> ~ 0 :I> Cl z }> ,... <II • • ,, ::D m 0 ::D n ~ • . ~ ~~~--~--------------~...---~----------------------------~--' \ I I ' ' I I • I I ' , , c • A A G 14 9 0 " • ( ,, • ti " '* ' w '* N Wedl'leld!)', Mey 10, 1978 DAIL v PILOT A.1 \ E • on Workers Vote to Picket Trash Ref1•nd? Power Cutback Counly Area. May Benefit About 30,000 residents of unin· corporaled Orange County will get a refund or credit ror traah coUecUon fees paid during the three-week strike, U Sa.u>ervtaor RalphClarkhashlsway. C lark's fe llow supervisors Tuesday agreed to have county officials negotiate with tras h haulers for either a rdund or c r edit for fees paid while workers weren't collecting ref· use. Cla rk said the county can force the refunds or credits through haulers' performance bonds. He also su1u~ested city of- ficlals might follow the county's lead and seek slmtlar refUnds for resldeots. In ott.er action Tuesday. supervisors closed the Hunt· ington Beach trash transfer sta- tion to the public except tor Its periodic weekend opening. The station bad been available for residents weekdays during the strike. But it now will be re- served for Uli4! by commercial haulers only e-Jcept for its reg. ular noon to3:30 p.m. openlng the second and fourth Saturdays of eachmooth. Not Due By ROBERT BARKER Of .. Deity ...... Si.If Power station workers went on strike at 12:01 a.m. today at Southern California Edison plants in Huntington Beach and San Onofre and at eight other locations in Southern California Nearly 1,100 members of the U tillty Work ers Union of America, Local 246, voted to take to the picket lines at all sites after overwhelmingly re· j~Ung the company's "last of- fer" Monday. It ls the first such strike against Edison since 1963. Carter Urged to OK More Israeli Arms A union spokesman said that picketing which began at 12:01 a.m. would continue on an around the clock. A last-ditch effort to avert the strike failed when talks broke down Tuesday. Edison had pre· viousJy terminated the contract with the union effective at mid- njgbt Tuesday. WASHINGTON <AP> -Two Cabinet officers are recom· mending that President Carter promise 20 additiona l F-15 jet fighters to Is rael in an effort to win congressional approval of the sale of warplanes to Israel, .Saudi Arabia and Egypt, a White House source said today. The recommendation b y Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance and Secretary of Defense Harold S. Brown would bring to 110 the number or jet fighters promised Israel In the arms sale controversy. · The source said Carter will not change the terms or the pro- posed sale of 60 F-tss to Saudi Arabia, 75 F-16s and 15 F·lSs to lscaeJ and ® F-56 to Egypt by 1983, but would promise to sell Is rael Ute additional planes after that. Ad ministration officials ~heve Carter's concession will Diver Killed By Octopus TOKYO <AP> -Police found the body of Yuki Otaka, a 34-year-old postal clerk and amateur diver, in 15 feet of water. On his back was an emotv tank that had held enough oxy- gen for an hour. Fifteen feet away was a six-foot octopus dead from cuts by Otaka's knife. The police said there were no wounds or bruises on the diver's body, They believed his oxy- gen ran out while he was fighting the octopus and be suffocated. plck up enough votes to win a go-ahead for the sale from the House International Relations Committee.· CongTeSS bu until May 28 to veto part or all of the sale. U the House committee defea(s veto resolutions against the aales, it would be impossible for the full Congress to act on them and the sales would go through. The 20 addiUooaJ sophisticated awing-wing F·l.51 for Israel, in addition to the 15 already planned by Carter and the 25 F-1.Ss Israel already is buying, would give the lsraells the same number as the Saudis. Former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger rn-tesUmony to the House committee repeat· ed today his proposal that the additiona l planes be sold to Israel by 1983 at the same time the original planes ·are being sold to Israel, the Saudis and to Egypt But administration sources say the additional planes could not be manufactured and de- Li v~red to Israel that fast. Meanwhile, Brown sent mem· bers of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee a draft letter spelling out Saudi Arabian as- s urances that its warplanes would not be used against Israel. Brown's letter reportedly said the Saudis agreed among other things that they 'would take planes only with defensive mis· sile·s that cannot be used against J{round troops. The Saudis also have agreed to station their Jet fighters far from Israel's borders and not to buy planes from other countries during the time the American planes are being delivered. Bob Hull. a spokesman for Edison, said that supervisory personnel are taking the place of the striking union members who maintain and repair power units. He said that he is confident that the company can continue to produce electricity at normal capacity "as Jong as it 1s necessary." An Edison official that saJd that about 1.500 construction workers on a S2.4 biJlion ex- pansion project at the San Onofre nuclear plant have ap- parently honored picket lines and didn't go lo work at 9 a.m . The workers are employed by the Bttbtel Power Company and other sub-contractors. They are represented by' various other un· ion s working o n plants Numbers2and3. An Edison official s aid the company is exploring ways to get the constrµclion workers back on the job. About 3,000 employees in all work on the ex- pansion proj~t. A spokesman ror the Utility Workers Union said that mem· bers are adamantly opposed to the rotating work schedule which has been a chief stum- bling block in negoUations since last October. Edison is seeking to imple· ment a schedule In which union members would work weekends on a rotating schedule without receiving overtime pay. Pickets also were posted at two Long Beach plants, Ormond Beach, Mojave, El Segundo, Redondo Beach, Oxnard and Mandalay <near Ventura.> There are 125 members of the striking employees at San Onofre and 66 al Huntington Beach . The facility in Huntington Beach bas a capacity of produc- ing 990 megawatts of electricity and can serve a population of a bout 750,000. Campaign Effort To· Be Investigated County Board Ba£1at Prop. 8 Orange County's new Fair Ca mp aign Practices Commission will bold a bearing next Tues day on the first complaint to come its way. Truman T . Legg, an ad m inistralor In the county clerk's office and one of six candidates for clerk-recorder, told commissioners this week he suspects an opponent of using misleading information ln a campaign brochure. Legg alleged candidat e Marshall Norris , a deputy clerk, used misleading Information concerning his education and background. Commtssaoners agreed to invite Norris to reply to Legg's complaint at a 7 p.m. hearing next Tuesday al the county Registrar of Voters office. Mc Fadden and Grand Avenues, Santa Ana. Commission Chairman Willia m Thom told Legg the commission has no power lo stop distribution of any campaign llterature The commission, created by s upervisors lo oversee campaigns or co unty government officeseekers. can hold hearings on complaints and make publlc findings of any wrong-doing. LOS ANGELES CAP> -The county Board of Supervisors has voted 3·2 to oppose Proposition 13 -the Jarvis-Gann initiative -and support a rival measure -Proposition 8 -ln the June 6 primary. The propositions are designed to reduce property taxes by ap- proxi mateJy SO percent and 31 percent, respectively. Supervisor Ed Edelman, an ~utspoken opponent or Proposi- tion 13 and other critics or the in· itiative, contend the measure would deprive Los Angeles County of about S738 million in revenue and the state of about $7 billion. Riley Offers Cats Help Adoption of Urudt,ered A.dUlts Proposed By KAftlY Cl.ANCY °' ... ....., ..... &Uft Orange County Supervisor Thomu Riley haa a sugaeaUon of bis on tor improvlng condl· lions at the county anlmal sheller. He wants to make it posslble for famlllee to adO .. t or reclaim unaltered adult cats so tbe animals won't have to be destroyed. Riley's proposal comes on the heels of a decision by the board of s upervlaora Tuesday to chance u.e,,., ~ omtlall 91tro1 ao,ooo amwantect ~ at the sMlter Mcb Jdt. Tbe bNi'd fallowed Supetvilor PblUp Aatal0a1'• rKommenda· Uon to eloae do,.n· decom· pruslOll cts.mben at the •Miter ror at teaat Vie nut year and destroy unwaftt*' pets bf bdlt· tion instead. the shelter unless tl•ey have Anthony called the l"2ec""'wtttt-m-1S~ bten 1payed-0r neutered. "unquestionably humane," but ''Basically, this policy re- labeled the chamber "absolutely quires the destruction of all lnhumane." adult cats whlcb are impounded Anthony's proposal waa sup. at the shelter." Riley lMlid. ported by more than 50 dttzeos Vet, he continued. county of. ln the auperviSOC'I' hearint room ficials may release both dop Tuesday and drew no objecUons. and kittens at the sheller once However, Supervisor Ralph owners or adopting famllles p'4 Dledrtcb abstained from votln1 up a spay or neuter deposit. until coune., ofnciala retum with That deposit ls returned once a plan tor tmplementJng t.M now proof of neutering is shown. animal euOuanalla 1)'1tem. Rll d Rlley had planned to offer his ey aaJ a literal interpreu. proposal on cats at Tuesday's lion of state Jaw prohibits re- meetlna as well. but waited to ~~·u~:r:J. cats unless they are 1tvo County Counsel Adrian. K\lyper tlmeto review it. However. he said, moat other RUe)' said it wu "a cte.p con· clttea nd counUea have ln- cern for humane treatment ol terpreted the law so that adult anlmall" t.bal l.t to hta objec. cata can be released to ownen Uon to a eounl)' p0lk:y that pro-or new homes, then altered 111.ar bJbltt ,.... o1 .twt cm from on. I ., o.itr "'-' ...... " l'.ertdl 0'0..11 PICKETS MARCH OUTSfOE EDISON COMPANY POWER PLANT IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Electr1cfty Stttl On, But Talk• Are Off; Key IHue la Whet Con1tttutea a Weekend Jarvis Measure Studied Panel Says Price Tag Too High/or Refonn Passage of Proposition 13 would cul property taxes without reducing the size or gov- ernment or the total tax bill paid by Orange Countlans , county supervisors were told Tuesday. That was the assessment of. rered by the l~member Citizens Direction Finding Commission <CDFC > after reviewing the Jarvis-Gann property tax lim1ta· lion initiative. Janice Hall. an Anaheim in· sura nce representative and comm ission chairwoman. said the m e;1sure would achieve propen(y tax reform but at too high a price tag. Mrs . Hall and fellow com· missioners predicted the measure would lead lo higher stale income and s ales taxes as well as a loss or local control over local government. Proposition 13 would hm1t property taxes lo 1 percent o( a property's 1975-76 value and clamp a two percent per year cell· Westminster Vletim Arraignment n~ In Double Slaying Prosecutors were pondering today whether or not lo ask for lhe death penally In the double slaying in Long Beach o( a Westminster market owner and his clerk during a $150 robbery Co urt a rraig nment was scheduled for the adult suspeet in the case, Charles A. Mosley, 23, of Compton. His alleged ac· com pllce is a 17-yea r -old juvenile. Victims in the double shooting were Parshotambhi Patel. 47. the s t ore o wner from Westminster. and his clerk. Jaroon Direjlt , 33, of Long Beach. Patel, of 15952 Diamond St .. and Direjil were forced to kneel on the floor behind the store counter in their final seconds of life. One shot was fired into Patel's brain ; one into Direjil 's and several more shots were then fired into the second victim's back, Investigators say. Police claim the suspects, both from Compton. were re- corded on a remote control security camera snapping shots each two to three seconds in· tervals. The actua l shooting of the kneeling men is not seen on film, according to police. but the loot· ing or the cash register is. A third unidentified employee of the 7·Eleven Market owned by India-born Patel. was also cow· ering in a storeroom unseen dur- ing the killings and robbery and wi ll be a witness. He called police when the armed robbery team ned and Mosley and his teen.aged compa- nion were arrested within five minutes about two miles north of the blood·spatlered Long Beach Boulevard grocery. Investigators allege that a .22 caliber revolver and m oney were confiscated from Mosley and his associate, who are held without bail, the younger male charged as a juvenile. mg on increases. Proferties would be reassessed al ful value. however, whenever sold. The CDFC. in a report to supervisor s . conte nded the measure would pt>nalize fam ilies forced to move often since they would (ace tax increases each time they purchased a new hom e. As a result. the report said. owners or identical property could have tax bills that vary Jn addition, they criticiztd the initiative as leading to a shift in tax burdens from business to in· dividuals and offering no relief for renters. Mrs. Hall told s upervisors the critique was not intended as an endorsement ror or against the measure but to lel residenti. know o( some of the initiative's consequences . The commission was created by supervisors to advise them on matters affecUf\8 local govern- ment. Five members" are .appointed by supervisors. five by the League or Citizens and nine by the commission. Orange Coast members in· elude Dr. Richard N. Baisden. dean or UC Irvine extension. Michael C. Gering; Newport Beach attorney, Dr. Henry Kaufman: Huntington Beach op- tometnsl. and Jerry King, plan ner from Corona del Mar. Also, Frederick M. Lang. CJ South Laguna landsca pe architect; Sheila Malakoff. a Huntington Beach consultant . Richard Spooner . a Newport Beach attorney. and Shirley Commons, a Huntington Beach real tor. Supervisor Philip Anthony said the idea behjnd his pro posed legislation would be to lessen the immediate impact or Jarvis on local government while forcing the stale to con lend with the long -standing school finance question. Gem Talk Costa Mesa Kiwanis Clu~ By J.C. HUMPHRIES G~rnologist TAKE INVENTORY of j,'OUr hom~·; ooluables It's not a pleasant thing to think abOut. but If vou were to suddenly lose vour valuable Jewelry and other Important PoSWSSlons throUQh theft or fire, would you be able to furnish your Insurance company or police with a complete II sting of your losses? It's a QOOd Idea to get an ua>to-cMte, quallflecf appralsal of your valuabfes, and to make up an Inventory list. The ~st kind of Inventory Is k.,,t In a simple card flle. UH b8 c.rcts, so there's room to attach phOtographs of vour value~ obJt<tl to each card, along with description and value. AllO llst w'*" and Where the obJeCt was ecqulred. Famlly pltces Should get speclal attention. There should be • written record Of second, third and· fourth gtMreUon Items. All lmport.nt , pieces should bt •ppralMd by a quallflec:t professlonal your Insurance company will eccept. Add more tl'len f u5t the obvious things to your Inventory, lnctudt objects thlt do not "stand out" In the household, but wl'llch l'lav• some. PANCAKE BREAKFAST .,.::::.--=---=-= TIME-==========n This Saturday, May 13 7:00 a.m. ·noon PLACE I I COSTA MESA LIONS PARK I Donation •1so Pancake• -Entertainment -Beverage• SauHgel -Prize• Galore -Fun for all ALL PROCEEDS TO HARBOR YOUTH Intrinsic Y•lue to YoU. KHp • copy Of CONVENIENT TERMS BtnkAmorloatd-Mastet Cl'large ttte Inventory outslci. your hOmt, In • 30 YEARS IN THE SAMC LOCATION Pt:t()llU; S48-340t aato deposit box or with an 1ttome~. . ,. ,. ,. ... •OM.YN.OT' w~. Mir lO, ll71 NATION / WORLD -4'•.t .. ?:. ~easting ~ 1976 AMC Cars Recalled .. I • ....... ~ Tom~~\' M11rphlae Upstaging Candidates RICKY TICKY POLITO:: You can almost work up a measure ot pity for candidates aeekina eleetlon in our upcoming June primary. Tbey seem to be drawinl acant attention tn the public prtnta .. lnate.d, the greater volume of public political ink ud radio and television time seems to be devoted to a man named Howard Jarvis. Mr. Jarvis Isn't running for any public office. He ta, however, a central figure in the June electloo as CO·autbor of the Jarvis-Gann property tax limitation initiative which wlll appear as Propositloo 13 on the ballot. , JAav1s EVEN THOSE CITIZENS who only follow politics in the margins have heard about Proposition 13 by now. You may not know who seeks the state Senate seat in your region but it's become increasingly difficult to ignore Number13. In event you have been absent from our Sei:tor of the globe ln recent limes, you should know that PropoetUon 13, if adopted by the voters, would limit property taxes to one percent of the market value of real estate. It would further limit froperty value increases placed on rea estate to two percent per year. This drastic cutback has drawn strong criticism from public school people and city and county officials, whose operations would suffer heavy cash loses if Proposition 13 becomes taw. • As for Howard Jarvis, he seems to be putting in considerable lime in our coastal region in campaigning for his measure. He must figure our area is a lush hunting ground for votes. In two of his most rei:ent appearances, Mr. Jarvis bas found bis principal antagonist In debate in the form of Orange County Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner, who resides in Laguna Beach. SUMNER AND .JARVIS went at each other for an hour on Channel 50 television the other night and clashed again later in a Laguna debate where Sumner bad an ally in Laguna schools chief Bob Sanchis. There is an enormous difference in the style and approach of the two men as they debate the pros and cons of the initiative. Jarvis, in promoting passage, leans heavily on the glittering generality. He talks about "peeling the fat" off of government and how there Is enough cash surplus in Sacramento "to float California on $100 bills." .JUDGE SUMNER, IN urging rejection oC Proposition 13, gets to specifics on bow the initiaUve would, in bis view, hamstring local government and school boards and surrender tax revenue control to Sacramento. Sumner's most telling argument notes that under ProposlUon 13, local govemmenl4 must get a two-lhlrds vote of all tbelr registered voters to pass any new tax revenue proposal. And of course it's virtually impossible to even gel t~lhtrds of the voters t~ the polls. So the debate rages on over Proposition 13. You may never bear from any candidates. Tbey may not get Ulllr names in print until the ballots are issued. 'Perfect' Air Crash i.Puzzles Authorities PENSACOLA, Fla. CAP) -Federal officials have begun their investigation to learn why a National Airlines jetliner, in no ap- . parent trouble, made a .. perfect landing" into Escambia Bay, in· stead of oo the runway thM miles ahead. Flight 193 crashed into the fog-shrouded waters late Monday with 58 people aboard. Three or the 52 passengers drowned. Investigators say they bave no immediate indication why the three·engine jet wasn't at the prescribed altitude of 1,250 feet when it hit the water. "There were no changes in pitch or power," said Jim King, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board. "It was ln stable position. Once they went In, many of the people on board just thought it was a particularly bard landing." Tugboat operator Glenn McDonald of Gulf Breeie told in· vestigators the plane "appeared to be malcing a perfeet landing - into the waler," King said. McDonald and crewman BW Kenney became heroes when they pushed a construction barge next to the plane, then pulled scores of passengera to safety. WASHINGTON CAP) -The Environmental Protection Aien· cy ordered American Motors Corp. today to recall virtually all its 1976-model automobiles because the vehicles spew ex· ceaaive amounts of nitrogen ox- ide pollution into the alr. The unprecedented recall or· der Involves about 270,000 Horneta, Gremlins, Pacers and Matadors, the EPA said. Only those 1976 autos manufactured for aale in CaJJ!omia, whose air poUuUon standards are stricter than the federal rules, are cur- rently exempt. BUT THE 11,ltl California· market cars are Ul\der in· veatigatlon for possible recall because of the same problem. the EPA said. Ex-envoy's Wife Dies In Suicide MOSCOW CAP> -Leongina Shevcbenko, the wife of the So· viet U .N. diplomat who refused to return home from the United States, committed suicide, her son said today. • Gennady Shevchenko told Western reporters by telephone from the family's Moscow apart- ment he could give no details about his mother'& death-Mon· day "but I confirm that she com· mitted suicide." EAJlUER THE SON, like bis father a dtplomat In the Soviet foreign service, told reporters who telephoned him his mother bad died of a heart attack. "I just did not want to say im· mediately that she had com- mitted suicide," he said in a subsequent call. Soviet sources with good of. ficial contacts made the first disclosure of the suicide, saying Mrs. Sbevcbenk<J dlM ffom an overdose or sleeping pills and that her body was found in a closet of the family apartment where she bad been living with her 16-year-old daughter since her return from New York in April. ARKADYSREVCDENKO,tbe lop·ranking Soviet citizen on the staff of the United Nations, left his post as undersecretary. general for political and Securi· ty Council alfalrs on April 5 because or "differences with bis government," • U .N . spokesman sald. Informed sources said he re- fused to obey an order from the Soviet government to return home, and bis wile went without him, taking their daughter, after a violent ugument. The Soviet government blamed the Ukrainian-born diplomat's defiance on a "frameup" by V .S. inteWgence agents, but the U.S. government sa~d it had nothing to do with hi.a actions. SOVIET· DIPLOMATS at the United Nations circulated stories at the time that Shevcbenko was having an af. fair with an American woman and also bad a drinking prob- lem. There wu also specula· lion that be was a secret American agent and bad been round out. Mrs. Sbevcbenko told re- porters on her return that her husband's action was a "crude provocation" by American authorities and that be would never have wanted to stay in the United Stata. Most of Nation's Dry • South Sees Ckar Sides; Eaat Warming Te-.peratures AIDll qu. Athevllle AllenU ' S.ltlll'IOt• llOIM 8os10ft ar-nsvlll• llllff•lo Oii~ Clncl-11 OewtlaNll Del Ft. Wltl Demer 0.11'91t ......... "-!UlU HwitOft Jeckl'vlll• K•n•t City i.asVeeH 'UltleROdt LOt A"9'1W Nllllft'll f'AllWWU. M!ll .. st P Hetflvllle NewOrfMM IM'WYon • "°"811l \ Oil ... CllY OnleN OtlllftdiO Ml ... "" 7S 4' a SI IO " a sa .a 1t • .IS '2 S4 ·" '° n ., ., ·°' ,. 4$ A1 '1 ... .. " II S1 "' ,. ,. ... ~ 7S 4' ,10 17 16 " 70 " ,.. ... .. 51 " ., 11 " ... ,. .,. n S1 4S .02 JI 41 7t 17 .., IS U .JS u » .14 " •1 ... 1S SJ " " .. 14 •• IJ.S. s 11111 .... A Mtll ....... .,_.a klHe ..,.. ,....., .. ••n••rc ._..., ......................... Eatl., tttot11l11t tampere111rH ---tll9 MllOft ,.._. *""' M Ill ... ._. Cillo.. ............... Alla. te IO 111 Oel ltle, T-Md ~ W .. t. Fie, s-.11--.TIM• ......... y lllCIM'-StM~2.I ...... Mtll tt~ .. ""··· ,.....,,.., ~,.,... , ... fllt,, .. , ll'lnl 111911 1 t IS""" u ~... . ... ~""·· s.c.Mflltll ta:tta.11\.U ..... t1MtS:tu.111., Mii flt>'·"'· Metft ,._ 1 ... a,lft., Mtt IOIU p.111. srwt-..re M ........ IMdl:W ........ tt ........................ .,_ c~. CeM!tlttll ,_,, Ntw"'1 INdll II,,....,, .... .._ In addition. the agency said it was recalling 40,000 1975 and 1976 model Jeeps and Post Of- fice dispatcher trucks made by AMC because or the same problem. The EPA's order was the first recall ever by the agency to in· volve virtually the entire pro- duction of a single automaker in a model year. THE PROBLEM WITH these vehicles is a faulty joint in the emission control system that frequenUy bas broken. causing high levels or nitrogen oxjde ex· hausts. said EPA Deputy Ad· ministrator Barbara Blum. "This pollutant can contribute to breathing lllnessest chest pains and bronchitis in cnlldren. Ariel Sp!Us ll helps Conn smog, that all·too- famlllar source of headaches, smarting eyes and coughina among cJty ret1denll," she told reporters. .. rr the public health threat from air pollution 1s to~ abated. 1t is crucial that cars meet the emis sion standards set by Congress." THE EP" SAID the recall was prompted by an inadequately brazed joint in the back- pressure sensor, which impairs the ability of the air pollution control system to r educe emissions ol nitrogen oxides. Ford Motor Co. recently wu ordered to recall 640,000 vehicles for a similar defect. The EPA said both Ford and American An 18-wheel tanker-truck lies on its side after overturn· Ing and spilling its load of acid on Interstate 8 east of Gila Bend Tuesday. Traffic was blocked for several hours while officials pondered the best way to clean up the acid. 'Tell Mom You Love Her Motors purchased the defecuve parts from the Eaton Corp. of Battle Creek. Mlch. The EPA said the part costi. 120 but (av~ no immediate estimate of the total COil of the recall. saying only about half the car~ recaUed are normally brougbl in for repairs by their owners. THE GOVERNMENT·s action was seen as part of a new aet· tough attitude by tbe EPA roward oossible violaUoos of air quauty standards. Wichita's Gay Rights Law Loses WICHITA, Kan. <AP> -In a resounding "mandate Cot righteousness," Wichita voters told homosexuals to lteep their lifestyle to themselves and re- pealed a gay righta ordinance by a S·to·l margin. "Peopfe are saying loud and clear tQ.lhe nation that America does not feel that pro· homosexual legislation brought under the civil rilht.s lsaue ls legitimate," said the Rev. Ron Adrian, a Baptist utinister who led the group that forced the referendum. "I think God's using this vote to avenb' rebuke the.pro. homosexual forces.'· THE VOTE IN favor of repeat was 41.246, and 10,005 supported retention or the seven.month-old ordinance, which prohibited dis· criminalion in bousint(. employ. ment and public accommodation because of "sexual or affec· tional preferences." <Related story Page AS. > Similar ordinances were re- pealed in Miami last June and ln St. Paul, Minn., on April 25. A referendum ls scheduled later this moolh in Eugene. Ore .. oo a gay r1glils ordinance there. The 83-to.17 percent victory margin came in one ot Wichita's largest election turnouts, with 44 percent ol the city's 128,888 registered voters casting ballots. Both supporters and opponents of the ordinance had expected re- peal but the margin of defeat sur- prised all ADRIAN, WHO RAD predict· ed a 2·to·1 defeat, said he foresaw no backlash against the gay commlDlity due to the vote. "I thln.k homosexuals will be just as welcome in Wichita tomorrow as they ever have been here." be said. This Mother's Day send Mom a greeting all rhe world can share on Sunday, May 14th. Express your love in a Daily Pilot Mother's Day Greeting. It's easy. Write your message ro fie one of our chree convenient sizes and bring it to any Daily Pilot office prior co noon May 12. Or, you may mail a clipping of the border with your message and payment ro Daily Pilot, 330 ~~Mesa •. Ca. 92626. ~· ~~~~$15 Ads come in three sizes: $10. 11', and U fur d~ special ctiild's size tald. <You muse be under 12 yan of a~ to qualify fur tM littlst gree<ing). If you wish you may create yow own decorated gn:tefing. Using bbdc pm dnw your d~ ro fir OM of che don:cd outlines shown hctt. You may fill the entire spece. Only~ and lines drawn wirhin tM docted line will appear in your completed Mdthcr's O.y ad . r-----------...-----------~--, I r-------------------., ! I i r-----------1 l ,. f I I I I : t ___________ J I ' I I I L--------------~------J I I L------~-~~~--------~~-~~--~ If you want Wp compo1111g • .Wta.ble ~rt'crtntt or have any qunuons t'llll 642-'~678. A fi~ly [)ajly Pilot ad-vtWt will be ~lad tO twfp you. And. if you Iller you un elm~ your Morhcr'a Day ad. YOU( cttd1t is good wirh us, or you mey UM your Mucer Owp Of BankAmtricard. -. DAILY PILOT I • f 9 c c ( I ~ I • t . CALIFORNIA Pigat Work University of California researcher Tom Peterson runs pjg test on treadmill on San Diego campus. The porkers jog 25 miles a week for a year. but studies failed to prove exercise helps avert heart attacks. The theory that jog. ging helps humans should be reviewed. say researchers. . . . . w~. May 10. 1978 DAILY PILOT tJt5 Bay Area Gftys on Marci} 1,000 Protest Repeal of Wichita Rights Bill ,,.., , ~ SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Some 1,000 chanting San Fran- ciscans, many or them homosex- uals. marched through city streets In protest just hours after voters In Wichita, Kan. repealed a gay rights ordinance. (Related stories, A4. Al2> The protest Tuesday night was peacerul, police said. "WE HAD WORD there would be a protest as soon as the Wichita vote started coming through," said Officer Elsen Broich. The march appeared to be a com bi nation protest over the Wichita vote and a statewide in· illative that, if approved by voters in November, would let school districts fire or refuse to hire avowed homosexuals or lhoae who support gay lifestyles. THE MARCHERS, swelUng lo number about 1,000 by 11 p.m .. chanted "Wichita means fight back," "Civil rights or civil war," and other slogans as they strode 10 and 15 abreast from Castro Street down busy Market Street, then up Polk Street and over to Union Square. Castro and Polk streets are pre- dom inanUy gay neighborhoods. Earlier in the day, a Wichita ordinance barring dlscrimina. tion against homosexuals was overwhelmingly repealed by a more than 4·1 margin. Two weeks ago, when a similar or· dinance was overturded In St. Paul. Minh .. San Francisco homosexuals staged a slmllar but smaller march. police said. A city ordinance banning dis- cri m inatlon against homosex· uals was just recently approved h ere by the board or Smog Stations Hit For 'Deficiencies' SACRAMENTO <AP> -A California auditor general's report says nearly two-thirds of the state's auto smog inspection stations are deficient, and omctal lamp and brake stations are hardly ever inspected. The report. out Tuesday. recommended that the Bureau or Automotive Repair increase its stair to take care of the problems. BUT CONSUMER Affairs Director Richard Spohn, whose de· partment administers the bureau, said the report contained "numerous raise statements. halr·truths and distortions ..• The bureau also licenses most auto repair shops and mediates consumer complaints. Some of its operations are paid by license and registration fees. Deficiencies cited by the report included failure to have proper tools ror lnapectlon and engine tune-ups, failure to e mploy a licensed pollution device installer, and failure to keep up with the latest polluUon control technology . ., supervisors. without «fl t roversy. There has been ~,o move to repeal that ordlnance.1 PomFilmA Jml Pmr IMPERIAL BEACH · (A P> -An elementary school teacher has been ; arrested for In vestigation · of making pornographic ~ films invoJving young boys • after police confiscated · more U1an 100 sex-oriented rllm s and slides at his ( apartment, officers said. Bail for Archie Murray .. 39. a rourth-grade teacher at West view Elementary ) School, was set Tuesday at ; $4,250, Imperial Beach ! police said. Richard RolUngs. 18. a security guard identified as Murray's roommate. · a lso was arrested Monday ~ when police armed with a ~ search warrant arrived. ' r Jarvis Drops d ; Libel Claim I ' ' ' I: .......... SAN DIEGO <AP> -Proposition 13 co-author Howard Jarvis says he.;U dismiss bis $800,000 libel claim filed against the Gr~mont High School Dis trict over a story printed in a student newspaper. The story appeared March 10 ln the Granite Hills High School Clarion and was written by 16·year-old Brad Teaby. It tried to explain the controversial property lax limitation initiative on the-June 6 ballot. But part or Teaby's story alleged Jarvis and Gann were "prominent real estate owners" who stood to reap "several million dollars" in tax savings if the proposition passed. 15 E•eape Air Cr1Ula SACRAMENTO (AP> -Twelve passengers and three crew members walked away from a twin-engined transport plane that skidded an estim ated 1,500 feet on its belly, an official reports. The accident shortly ~He r 6 p.m . Tuesday ( ) involv e d a n STATE e x e c u t i v e • t y p e ..____ ____ turbo-prop plane of the Santa Barbara-based Ap0llo Airways. The execuUve dir~tor of the airport, James Ellingsworth, said "It did leave the ground by about 20 feet when. for some reason , the pilot aborted. He set it down on its belly and it slid probably 1,500 feet." He said he didn't see any obvious injuries. IJUl11n9 SIDel& F...a LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. bas pulled off lhe most lucrative rund raiser ever staged by a Democratic gubernatorial incumbent, convincing 1,000 people lo contribute more than $300,ClOO toward his ree lection campaign. After all the bills are paid, the $250-per·plate dinne r Tuesday night al the Beverly Hilton Hotel will have netted Brown between $210,000 and $250,000, said campaign manager Gray Davis. Brown has coll~led $700,000 so far, Davis said, and hopes to stretch that to at least SJ million before the June 6 primary, in which be is unopposed. Drink Dr,_,• Fine LOS ANGELES <AP> -A Woodland Hills restaurant where television actor Dan Haggerty was bunied by a naming drink bas been fined $1.SOO for fire code violations. Representatives or The Red Onion pleaded no contest to two charges or serving a naming drink and one charge of over-crowding before Municipal Court Judge David Kennick Tuesday. One of the n a ming drink violations occurred Nov. 19, 1977, the same night Haggerty, who portrays Grizzly Ada ms, was burned. However, Los Angeles Fire Department Inspector Gene Lindley said none of the charges related to lhe Haggerty incident. Gts~es 1'1alte9 Apo..,,,, LOS ANGELES (AP) -Police Chief Daryl Gates has made a public apology for making a stai.ment last week in which he called Latino police officers "lazy" and "unmotivated." Gates delivered the prepared apology Tuesday shortly after Chicano groups gathered outside police headquarters at Parker Center. Mother's Dayis May 14th. Give her a gift that grows from · ~s Gardens. I 8HOPEABLY I :-cO...•MNIOO ..................... ' fiJ ~~ starting, May J J. 1.,..1aulll•nw,_ ....... Mlle ....... ,,..,.. ...... CElEBRA TION SPECIALS World Famous BEEF STICK· SvlRftter Sausage' 204 LB. OFF 404 LB. OFF .:r.:-.=--.:::. REG.PAICE REG.PAICE Enjoy the wondertul tudcory-smob flnor of this f1mous 111· beef summer ..,.... It's popul1r u •snide -with crackers ~d cheete. M.ty u• it different w1y1 especi1lly for 1ppeti· zers, cook"'9 and fondues. CITATION•WHEEL SWISS 20' LB. OFF REG. PRICE Tarte this moist Mtur., chMle -cut freth from the wheel so vou 19t the~ the dwelelftllker intended .•. the BEST ... the only wwv to buy c..._. FREE ~[,~~' MUSTARD WITH THE PURCHASE OF$6 OR MORE DURING OUR GRAND OPENING Sweet-Hot Multard from Hk:korv fet'ms of OtWoa _..,•ape- ael iest to e¥9fVthfnt you ..,.. with It. You'll be bedc fat morel NOW 1C FOR A BOX OF OLD·FASHIONED CRACKERS OR CRACKED WHEAT THINS With TM Purc:hMe Of A Hldlorv Ferms of Ohloe CHEESE BALL Either of thew cndcers .. "lust the thlnt'' for ~Int our dtllcloua CHEESE BALL -mede from 1 blend of eged ct.... cove,.d with nuts Ind toPP9d with• cMny. ·souf:MiiisA· BUY THREE PACKAGES -GET ONE . FREE Oilcower for vou,..lf the rldl, heerty full flwor of U.. soups. One of 1 e flevon .... be NmpMd NCh day during the pend open. Ins. Tlke edv1ntlfl of this ..-ci•I offer • FOOD GIFT PAKS Vow neerby tfldcory fllf'fM of °"loe 11ore l1 •GIFT CENTER, too. rt dlapt1y1 end often • wide •lectlon of food tlh peka for •II oc:caliOfll, They OOIM in •II lizes. •t prlcM. W.'11 even •nd YCMlr ff icil"' ferml~~~·==::~. ., DF DNID • W Hfcllff rlala I 7111 & ....... • tll-r:t ..... • '42.ot72 ttmMWt "1161a'lll il~~ ~ ..... •MNOJO ... .,,,,.. ,. ' .... 1116 ... 11-1 . .. p 91 C• c d 10 A B g h Edita.._ .. , .~ .. ~.~ ................................... Ro.~.rt_N __ W_ffd .. /P·u·bl.1SM .. r .. T·homa· .. '·K·M·V·il/·E·dl_t~ • ._., _.-:u . .:;;, WecSM9CMy, May 10. 1a11 Barbar• K~lblch/Edltorl•I P1199 Editor Cities Must Shun Freeway Dispute Not quite a decade u"o, lhl' ctlws o( Newport Beach and Costa Mesa found themselves on opposing sides in a dispute over the constt·ucllon of the Pacific Coast Freeway. Both cities \\anted the frt:eway built, but Ne\\port Beach residents , who were faced with having the roadway In their city. said it belonged in Cost a Mesa. Their neighbors in Costa ~lesa didn't ugrct!. That dispute died along with the freeway ui the earl:- '70s, but the specter of it remains and could haunt the current efforts on the Costa Mesa Freeway. Costa Mesans are working diligently to get CalTrans to make a commitment on completion of the Houle 55 freeway through their city to its encl at the Newport Beach city line. Newport officials arc having some reservations about the traffic the route could dump onto already overcrowded city streets. These officials seem to be saying Costa l\lesa is goin~ to have to make some street improvements to keep through traffic out of their city as the price for Newport Beach's support of the project. Costa Mesans seem amenoblc as long as Nl:wport chips in to pay for the project which would aid the beach city although the work would not6e in Newport. The cities need to work tog<.•ther. The 141.000 res1 . dents of both communities don't deserve <mother Pacitk Coast Freeway debacle. A Practical Approach The Costa Mesa Police Department, its ·vouth' Service Program and the community at large have proved that progressive programs can often he achieved by taking steps backward The new Community Restttution Program is just that. u return lo the old-fashioned concept of working to c·orrecl misdeeds lhut have cau~cd a fmanrial burden Lo victims of juvenile trimes. Considering that juvenile crime t:OnHnues to rise' ~an cslim ated 10 percent last year >, the program seems a worthy alternative to the taxpayer-funded juvenile court system. If a youngster <aged 10 to 17) causes property damage or commits some other crime where damage .. does not exceed $400, admission of guilt and a willingness to work may qualify the offender for the pr~gram. Everyone, it seems, s tands to benefit. Early patterns of criminal behavior could be reduced by a bit of S\\Cal and strain throuj!h a job <which Ci.ln be• kept afkr lhe clt•bt is repaid ) or volunteer work in the community And the victim. so often relul'tant to use the courts to rcc:laim damages. will benefit more directly through the signed contract agreement for repayment. If the youn~ offender fails lo fulfill his or her contract, the police de- partment can send the case to juvenile court. It's all very simple. and that's one of the program ·~ I most outstanding features. ·Olher citjes would do well to .follow inCQsla Mesa'sfoots teps. \ C:OlllDlendable Spirit ' It could have been Costa Messv were tl not for the pioneer spirit shown by so many residenls during the ap- parently ended trnsh strike. We had neighborhoods getting together to oq~anize trips to the county dump, constant updates from the city Sanitation District, and even a few "phantom" garbagemen who picked up where the strikers left off. It was also encouraging to note that violence did not spill into Costa Mesa during the strike. The residents look it upon themselves to pick up the slack. and although there were a few isolated sorespots, a potential health hazard was never a real factor. While another strike would be inconvenient, it's good to know the city can weather it. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed oa this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Partners ByL.1'1. BOYD Three partners put together a business firm that required one or another of them to be on the road alternately much or the time. When all three were in town. they decided, each would be a vice president. But when any one of them was out on a sales trip. that one for the nonce would be the president. Theory was the top title would cive leverage in negotiation. Actually, though, it was their private joke, and they claimed Jt worked to let them keep on balanced good terms with one another. Thal man said to be the richest in America, Daniel K. Ludwig, routinely flies tourist e l ass. Dear Gloomy Gus Rai n 't the Harbor Sbo pplng Ce n ter e noua h woes what with 1tores closing oft their "mall" doon;, without the whole parking lot ~ing made lnto a rot· ten m ... ? They're drlv· lna business away M.8. &IM'"f ~· (~Hit ., .. ... """"' h , .... ,. •1141 .... . a:.:r. ,...., .. •"'9'1 .. .. ...... ,.., ......... . , G-. °""' 11'1 .... A cat in Fnirbanks. Alaska, licked its paws -it shouldn 't have -and when 1t put them on the cold cold ground , they froze there. stuck solid. A fireman freed the critter. Q. "When chd the British government issue postage stamps with paid avertising on them?" A. In 1881and1887. The ads for Pear's soap were on the gufllmedsidcs. Q ... Whal do savings ac· counts pay in the Soviet Union?" A. From2to3percenl. Only one out of five murder victims Is killed by somebody unknown to said victim. You see what this means, don't you? You'rE> a lot safer hang. ing around with stran,:ters. In the North Temperate zone, the wverage person wei@hs mor~ in Scptem~ and less In February tban In any other months, report the science boys. How big the goldfish grows depends on how big it.I bowl ls, that you know. But the ques· tlon an 81 to Just why • "mall bowl tends to stunt Lhe fish therein while a bl~ Pond l<?Lc; them Qet larger. Its now .believed tho.·u~ flsh 1eC'rele n growth·inhibltlni sub!ltanct. Presumably, l·s potency is at• fected directly by how t'Oncen- lratcd it i", hlahly so in a a mall volume ot water, less ao tho lar1ert.bevolumeorwater. Nicholas Von Hoffman Real Estate Bubble Can Burst The incapacity ot the ed· mln1:;tratton to come up with an <&nti·inflation policy that a rea· sonable person can trust will i;timulate the flight or depositors from savings banks and other thrift institutions. Ten years ago rampant cor· rosive inflation was such an un· familiar ex- perience that i eople ke pt {heir savings ,\n cash and al· Towed the ir purchas ing power lo be corroded. After a dee· adc of detl· .icated infla· tionists in Congress and the White House, people have come to un· derstand that they 're being robbed when the savings and loan association pays 6.5 percent while the government destroys the SURE, NUC1.£AR PoWERIS DAN~~ous, BU'f'WH!:RE 5'.SE CAN We G£r E'NeRGY~ Mailbox value of money atthe rateof8per· cent and then has the gall to tax the interest from the savings ac- count. People have been taught by politicians that only children save; put it Into the bank and the guys in Washington 'll steal it. Thus more and more mill ions of us are learning that you never lend money. you borrow it. Bor· row money today and, with Jim- my Carter in the White House, you'll be able to repay the loan six years from now at 60-cents on the dollar. Solvency is for suckers. IN THEIR determination to never a leqder but a borrower be, many people are going ioto debt buying real estate. Their reason- ing is plausible. Jn the last few years, through inflation and re· ce~s1on, residential real estate values have held up very well. Stocks and bonds have been a dis· aster; gold has only made money for a few shrewdies; antiques. jewelry. art and objets d'art. Ukt rure stamps and oriental rugs, de- mand spedalized knowledge, and anyway, you can take a bad beat· ing, even iC you've made a good buy, in theeventyouhavetosell In a hurry. Real estate, especially homes, has had the best track record. They're easy to sell compared to gome or the things mentioned abov~ and the price on residen· ti a l housing has not only kept pace wlth inflation, but far out- distanced iL That's wby you hear of more and more people re· financing t he homes they themselves live in so they can re· alize the enhanced value of their property immediately. Many of t he m are taking t he money they're getting from refinancing their homes and buying other properties, not to live iu but as ao investment. 'llRE DIFFICVLTY .,1th that ls that rents haven't kept up "1itb housing prices. People are payin1 $100,000 ror tbe house which sold for $75,000 three years aao in ex· pectatlon that in lbree or four years th,ey'll be able to seU !or $140,000. to the meanUm~ they must rent It and a lot of them are discovering the rental price won't even pay the monthly mortgage installment., much less taxes and upkeep. Jn the banking business they call people who're paying out two or three hundred dollars a month now In hopes of realizing a $40,000 profit down the road ••overex· posed.•• Everything depends on the market in residential real estate holding up and there's no guarantee of that In fact, the signs indicate this is a poor time to buy residential real estate for any purposeotherthanlivinginit. Jn many parts of tbe country. residential real estate prices are being driven up not by potential occupiers but by people hoping to sell laterataprofit. They're going up so fa§t it looks like a buyers· panic is on, with people's business judgment swept away by an hysterical conviction that if they don't buy now and buy at almost any price, they'll lose the op- portunityof a lifetime. IF YOU really think real est.ate prices will continue to shoot up in· definitely with no relationship to the price of other goods and services, then this is th~ moment to buy at any price. Jn the rear world such a situation is unlikely so that the danger grows that a bad collapse is coming in a couple· of yea rs, a collapse wnich will find many innocent, hard-working people badly dumped on. The last recession saw that hap~ pen with certain kinds or real estate. Second or vacation home prices were murdered as was the office-building segment· of the rea I estate industry, Residential rea I estate. of course, did well, but that was last time, when prices weren't climbing at the discon· certing rates they are now. In times like these, remember the new adage, don't seek shelter against inflation where too many others are already huddled. A Time to Think About World Hunger To the E<:htor : Everyone who has ever heard a baby cry knows thal feeding a hungry child is the most natural thing in the world, yet each year 20 million deaths occur from starvation and diseases related · to malnutrition. Since November. 1977, more than 100,000 people across the nation have made a personal com mitmenl to look within themselves to discover what they as individuals can do to end death by starvation in the world within 20 years. These in· dividuals, with their ranks ex· panding every day, have aligned themselves in the Hunger Pro- Ject. THE IDEA of the hunger pro- ject is to utilize the power o( .the individual to create a context .•. something that no organization or government can do. In simple terms, creating a context invol•es willing some- thing to manifest and then personally committing yourself to make this happen. The thousands of individuals already enrolled in the Jtunger Project have all personally com· milled themselves to end hunger in 20 years. Individuals across the country have been creating their own forms or participation to make th.is happen. For example, the governor of New York declared the month ot May as a time for the state or New York to become aware ot the problem. In Wasblnaton D.C., May 14 has been declared a day or awareness of world hunger. The Laguna Beach Hunger Project weekend of May 13·14 ihcludes a beach run on Main Beach at 8:30 a.m. Satur· day. Entry ree is $5. TERESA EDWARDS TheBnt To the Editor: I think I've read everythlna that's been wrltten o n Jar vis-Gann in t he last 1ix months. Last night's <May 4 > Pilot editorial was the best I've seen! Bravo. JEAN HA"RMON- C'wt Deatl.., ••• To the EdJtQr: The tncrcasing almost hysterical outcries by Governor Brown and oth t politicians on Prop. 13, gives 50tne clue as to their lcur that this bnllotlng In June wUJ find the voters soUdly glvfng tM Jarvis-Gann meuur. their 1uppon. !or a leaner. more omcJent aovernment. Governor Brown's statemenLs ·about "taking so me $8 million 'out of circulation' will cause disaster and unemploy- ment .. are fear tactics obviously unsupported by economics. He should know better. By removing the surplus tax revenues and cutting into the fat public trough to the tune or $8 billion (most now say $7 biUion > will be putting money into circulation, and where it can do som e productive work. We have yet to see our tax money work productively. JC some or the inefficient workers on the public payroll are lopped of£, it will be for beneficial purposes, while the over- burdened home owner has some relier. Public borrowing on the bond market will be affected and the big banks like the Bank of America may not like Prop. 13 for that reason. But public bonds are borrowing by the govern· ment and should be also slowed down. IT SEEMS useless to threaten that our schools will be arrected, when they are so inefficient in educating our youhgsters now. perhaps clearing out some of the deadwood may result in the hope that the students can at least be educated to read and write before graduating from high school. As soon as it becomes Jess onerous to build and maintain houses and apartments, with less tax burden, more shelters WUl be built and· the almple SUP· PutU!la . ply at the marketplace will bring down the rentals and thus benefit renters under the Jarvis· Gann initiative. America was built on the free marketplace enterprise economy, not by the politicians making new and more restric· live, more involved laws to restrict free enterprise. The Jarvis-Gann initiative is a simple direct method of making the Legislature and the ad· ministration more efficient and responsive to the people whom they should be serving, and cut out the deadwood in the opera· lion of the public machinery. LADISLA W REDA Y To the Editor: Jarvis says landlords will lower rents if Prop. 13 passes. How can he speak-for every- one? I've kept rents on my triplex SSO lower than others in the area for several years. I live in fear of rent controls -getting caught with my rents down. This prop· erty is alll have. I cannot lower rents to please Jarvis the way owners of big ·rents a nd commercial prop· ·erties can. Such landlords are the only ones who would profit by .Prop.13. G. A. ANDERSON Appredate To the Editor: For some time now, demands have been placed on government .-.....:_.._·• -------·-- to provide more services to citizens, the results of which do not always meet expectations and objectives. It is, therefore. continually refreshing to see -. large group of citizens donate their time in an endeavor that meets its objectives. I AM referring to those un· selfish men and women who coach, manage, and in other ways make the community youth athletic programs a suc- cess. 1 have three daughters who participate in bobby sox softball. The lessons learned, friendships made, skills developed, and time constructively utilized havt! made my daughters better in· dividuals. For this, my wife and 1 are truly appreciative. MR. & MRS. HARRY BUDDS Notludl!e To the Editor: Recently read a newspaper story about the California judge who had seen fit to place an in- junction against a mother and father, preventing them from coming within speaking distance of their daughter, or even speak- ing one word to her. Grotesquely, he had on several occasions seen fit to place them in jail when they had gree t ed their daughter peaceably in a public place. Is that really what jails are for? Such an injunction would ap- pear to be a pitiful violation of civil, moral and human rights. FEW !air-minded people could say that reconciliation is not ham pered by such a cruel and unusual injunction of lhe civil court, !or does not reconciliation come from com m unicatlon. even if it ls but the sight of a once beloved parent-aow fallen from our grace? · Denying a mother or. father lbeir civil r ight to m ove peaceably and freely about in public, in order to deny them a glim pse of their own daughter-, also denJea t ho chlld that glimpse of parental agony. which might be tho ultimate salvation or both. ' What good Is served by suci. a na wed decree, wh.lcb ortera only •tumblini blocks to contriteness and rcconcWaUon? · One can aee the agony, but not the Ju1Uce, nor the wi.Sdom. REBA WILLIAMS • . ~~"·~:r::..::~· 1: ....... .............. ~ M""'"-.a'-"'*-'~~ ~ t=:: = :-:.::,...-...:; ................. . QUEENIE 5-10 o · ... --···--··-- "Offhand, I'd aay you'l'e not &oina to get a raile or a rDie out ol him today " Deatlu' Elsewhere LONDON <AP> -The painter Duncan Grant, 93. last survivor of the celebrated Bloomsbury circle of intellectuals, died today at the home 1of friends in A l dermaston, Berkshire. Grant's group lived in elegant houses in the MAll'Tl" Bloomsbury district of London, around the British Museum. PASADENA <AP> The Rev. Basil MUler. 81, died Sunday after an extended illness. Miller directed World-Wide Mission, an independent Pasadena-based agency. and authored about 200 religious books. PUBLIC NOTICE FLORENU MAE MARTIN, tell· NOTICE INVITING alDS oet\t of a.ttioe """''*"•· C.. Pasted •wn Ofl IMy 9, "11 et IN ... of U. 1,:0.:.:.cr: ~ ~~:!y :•:::He!: Survlwcl..., '-rnon.r Meri. Slnllft eomn1t•nlty Calleo-Olstrld Of Or.,. ol Newport Beecl\, Ce., •Isler Counly, C.llfomte. will rec.en._.., KelNrl,.. ~ et Mlclll9W1, •"" bids up to 11 eo Lift., Tt11;r.S.y,.June • llo'Olller·in-i.w Jolwl -of ,..__, '· ""· •• .,,. PurcM&11111 o.sic. ol Mid lleec:ll, C. '-Ai Mr¥1<~ will De Kl>ool dostrl<t locillM II 1310 A09ms lletd on Frleley ,,..., 12, 1'19 A4 Ille Avenue! Cost• ,,...., C.IHomle. at Slnltll Tuthill LamO Weslcllff OWltlel, wllk ll 1 -said bids win be publkly ' C27 E. 1711\ St.. Coli. MeM., Ce. wilft ~ -.... tor: Re¥. Robert 8. ~d. Jr. of Tiie STATIONERY BIO Cllrlst a,..,g, By Ille SM ett1ci.t1f19. All bids -to11e 111 Keo<.,_ wllll 11\terlMftt wlll M et Mtlr-Alllley IN Bid Form lflWi&tloM and ~ Mewuleum 111 ~. C.. Smllft tlom encl Soeclhutlol'I •Id\•• -T..U.111 Umb Co5U M9M __ ., Ofl Ille i1M INT M sec...-!ft Ille off lea dltHton ....-_ of Ille PWdWilflll Aelnt of said tdtOOI RAMMING district. AGNES R. FLAMMING. a reslClllftt Ee<f'I ~ ,.,,.., klOmlt wlltl Ills Super selection 9f misses~ famous name ·Sleepwear sold elsewhere for $12toS22 OUR PRICE ~ of Cost• Mesa. c.. PelMCI •••• °" bid• <nllir• dlKk, c:e<lllled CIM<k, M.ty 10, "11 A4 IN eoe of 11 Bel-or Blclder't,,bond ~ PIYRI• .. "'8 mother of Gladys R•I-of c:osi. order of cit troe Coesl Community llMY, C.. ,_ .. -vklH ere pend-Cotl19f Olstrl<I BcNrd of Trwstees 111 1119 el Smitf'I TllWll l.Amb Coslil Mele •n emownr not i.M ri-Hw percent Mor1Uilry...,..... 15%1 ol the sum bkl n • ouarentn ~7,.fc)~~llJ WAGNIR ttwl 11\e D'-win enter inlo Ille pro-o.; MRS ALMA M. WAGNER, rnlclenl POMtd Co11trecl 11 lhe sem<t It awarded of L•Ownil Hiiis, C.. Pe1seo ewey on lo nlm. In ,,,. -"' of fellun to enler Mil'/ 1. 1911. Survived by lier dilugllt..-lnlo wch COfllrect, Ille --of rr. Mrs. Ellabelh Schlegel, SOfl-ln·l•w · he<k wlll De forfelted. or lfl tr. case Glenn M. Schlegel boll\ Of LAIOWM of •DOfld. the fwll w m lllef'eof will De Hiiis. Ce., et10 swrvlved by her •orltil•dlOSAidscllOotdlslrk'- vren0son Of'. stUlll"t A. Scf'ltegel, ...., No bldeler ,,,.., wllhdraw "~ bid few ll"•ndde"l!lllw-4,.....A-eyScf'l119e1, •period of torty·ll•e IO I d•'l'5 •lier ,_ o,..•H1r....._, L.Hftenl a. •lld ""',..,.set for 1r.-1n9 ,..,•of. WI"'..., Sdlie9tf, ell of Seftlil Cruz, TM Boen:! of Trust-r_,,.., IN c.. •nd by -MPMW Albert H prlvlleQe of rei.ctlflll ... ., -•II bids Meyer of SeM.e ...,_.., C.. F-•• w to wel,.. any .,.,....,..tin or lfl- Mntl<n 9ft ~ M.ly 11. tm et fO('INllt~lflenyblCIMlfltr.Didcll.., IO·JO AM • aw OW..,.1 of O'Cotinor ~ E. WATSOH LA9UM Hiii& ~. 2SI01 All<i. Se<tt. 8oenlof Pet'lr-.,, ~ Hiiis, C.. ~Iver. Tnaste8 --... tw femltyonly In I,.._ f>Yllllslleel Orengt Coe$t o.11'1 Piiot Perl! C.metw-,. O'C-Mf' UOWM ,,..., 10, 17. 1f1' 1151·7' HllKMommy....,.,_ RITOllE GEltALO W£STBRC)()t( RITCHIE. PUBUC NOTICE ..SIGeflt of Car-•¥¥, C.. PMMCI ---.. -,CT-l_T1_0US __ a_U_st_M_IU$ __ _ •••Y Ofl ,,......,., IMy S, l'11. SWvl-NAME STATEMENT by 1\1$ wl .. ......,. clMlgllt ... Petrklil The tot----It ..... _, .. _ .. Herwy of c:ar-del Mir, C.. tr.in. -~... ..... -.... ....,. •-eftd '--el PKlll< View. fllU n : Not Rlldli.-ii,.,..,.,.... of -SM-FOREST MARKET, 230 Foresl I ta 4-GIMaW'V Club -• CM,,., Aw .. L..-9Ncl'o, CA. ~1 ......,Der ot IN 1totMy o..i.. Newport Roltert Pe11I Hullmefl, 1430 BN<f'I, Ce. He -lfl IMUr•1u end BIWblrd ~ Or., i..aoi-~II. rMI fflet• In c.or-c111 Milr, ea. CA ms1 tine• about 1"'5 ""'II Ills retl.-1. Tl\ls butlnna 11 condUcteO by llfl '"" I MllAD dl•ldwer. CLARENCE E. MEAD, retldltnt of !toe.rt P. H41fflMfl Cosle MHil. --_., M.ty 6. 1'71. This ti.i.n.nt -filed wlll'o IN 5'1r¥1-by• -. BrYCA S. Meecl of Couflly Cl«tl of Or•119e Cow\l'I on Bridgeport, Com., 3 broll'oen, Heflll "Ofll 1•, "71. MHd end Bob Me.cl boll\ of Confl., -Htl991 Roger 'Med of ....,Ade, -sitter, PwbllSlled Orang!' Coasl Delly Pllo1, Dorothy Gellbomner or Confl., ...ci •111',2',MlyJ, 10, 1'71 u1•7t tle!MIAU9h1tr JA<q<Jellfll MuflOI OI Cost• M•Y. GrefttlOe MrYICH Ofl Th110di1Y #Nly 11 et 2:JO PM OOocl PUBLIC NOTICE Sf'lellN<'d ce~. 11e11 Br-••• ------------• Mof't.,.rll clirwclon. "ICTIT10US 8USIMESS &.MIK~D NAME STATeMSNT HAROLD v. LANKFORD, resldeftt The IOllowlflO -ton Is dol119 _,. of S.11 Cl-I, PffMCI -·· "'4!y S, MSS es· 1'71 lfl Safi Clemente. Survlwd by toll, SHERRILL & CO., e.m Suf\Oeem Dale T. LM*hlrd ot Sacr-to, ton. Clr., Hwfltlfl!llOfl Beech, ca.~ Keflflllll Leftlllorcl of GMo9A P•rk, Sfl«rlll M. l>Mrlct<, Mil s..tlbeem fSAV911t..-"-4• ~I of Bolw, Clr .. HwntingtOfl llffeh, C.. 9264 ldal>O. CrypU!Oe .....,"" lllwndey This IMIJlnns "Condllclotel Dy ... In· Mn 11 et 12 ,_ et Peclll< View dlvlCl.,.1. -morl•t ...,_, JSOO P«llk View Dr., ~ill~kk Newport B••cll. P•c lllc View Tlllt , .. ._. we filed wllh 1r. _,,.,.ry ~.. Co<ifllr c1er11 of 0rAflQI Counly on ETHEL L CHUTEA, ........ of .,.,II ll, 1'71. Aft7D U9WIM Hllll, ........ _., M.ty •• PWllShed Or ... Olelll Dllltr PllOI "11. Suntl"'9CI 11¥......,,.. IAOO!elWr MilyJ, 10, 17,~ tf1' 1116-71 of~ HWtl, W.OW, Geof9e SIMr PUBLIC NOTICE ltOTICll CWTltUST.IE"S SALE of Plec_... MIW Lllllen Fl"" of a1oomfle1C1, N.J . 5entkft TI1wrsc1a., 1 .,..., 11 et IO AM In tN °""'91 et Pacific View _,_l•I Perk, UOO Pacific View Or., N...-t Bff<ll. P..:lflc VlewMW1!Mryclnctorl. On J-11, 1m. •I 11:00 o'clock •.m., MIO CITY INVESTMENT CX>M-L-----------i PANY, uOUlr appointed Trust .. wn- IAL~ N•ALHOMI Corona del Mar 873-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 der arid PUf-' to OMd Of Trust r• corded S.llC~ 30, 197S In Booti t ISU. P ... U6S, of Offl<lal Aeconb In tr. Office of tll9 CIDuflty Aeccwdtr of 0rAnQe County, CellfomlA, Wiii Hll •t pwbllc auction to the hlo'-sl bidder few CHf'I (peyellle M U-of Mlle lfl lawflll _, Of U. Ufll'8cl Stillesl et 1119 norlherty entraflce to the Cou11ty Cowrtl\OuW louted et 700 Ovlc Can .... Orlw West, s.nt. AN, Cellfomle, ell Exquisite Form® 3-way contemporary bra sold elsewhere for 4.50 OUR 1 PRICE • Sheer and seamless for the natural look you want Use as halter, crlea-croa or conventional. Dainty floral design on lacelike nylon/spandex. ·. mi...OADWAY NOln'UAaY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 842·9150 rltM, tltle MCI ll'IWnst conver9CI lo ....... -..----~'/ Mid flOW held by It ""*' NICI Deed of Trwst 111 ,,. .....,., tlllMlec:t In Mid SMl'M'MllLWAMI wnn:uPJ CHA.NL 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mela•~ Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broldwlly Santa Ana• 547.-.131 ......... , ~LN8M Moeim 7801 Botta Ave. w.tmlntter 193-3625 PAC#llC YllW reDllALPAM c.m.tery Mortuary a.>et 3800 '-dfic View °'114 'NIWl>Otf, catlfomia 8"-2700 " Co1111ly end~ dncrlbed n : Lot 14 et Trect S212 es per INltl ,.. COrOed In 900ll 11f, P.-3' encl •Of M•P•. In the offl09 of the CMMr RecOf'def' of Yid Oliurlt'/. Tiie ,,,... ....... encl otlwr - --~ If ....,, of .,,. ,... ~·~--.. ~ to De: •n o+oucntar Drive, cata ....,_, OtlltornlL T,,. ..,...,...,.. T""'" dltcl .. ,,_ .,,, llM!llty for ..., lllC1Dn"ktM19 of IN ttrMt ..,_ encl ..., COfn"*I o.t1vn-llOll, If eny, .._ ._lin. Seki ...... " .. ~ but wHllMlt c~ •_,_,,,_....er lmpllM, •to till«,~ er -c11m1>r--, lo pay Ule ,_,...._ "lnclNI NII of h note M<wad llo/ Hid DH~ 9f TrlfSt vhh lnl•rHt ~. -..,..,,..... '"Mid ..... -Ylfteff Wltll ....... .,.,_ n ~ 1tklN In .... ONdof T~ If any, -eer U. ..,.,,. of uk1 OMC1 of Trwt, '"'· ,...,_ .... ....-.. TNll• Mil ef ... tnats c,....._.., MldOeMefT,...._ Tiie ~ _.., ulcl ~"' Tr11tt ...,....._ 8JIKVIACI end de• llnrect to tlle Trvst" • wrttto11 Oeclw•llon Of Deflllllt ellCI • wnttlft Netta of DlfMlt ... Mtctloft .. sett. ~ Metia Of CllfMllt encl Mettlell .. 9111 WH ,_... lft tM CCIUl!ly ~ .. ,.., ,........, .. IOcetatl. DMMt Meyt, 1911 MICIOt'/ ,_..,,... °""'*" atT"*9 e., "· °"""' ... " f'lllllllMllOr ... CMll DlllY ...... ,._., tO, 0, )4, "" 1tt1-71 I '.,, DAllY P1LOT Large assortment of misses' fashion bk>Uses in easy care blends sold elsewhere for 7.99to13.99 OUR PRICE Ill Find pretty blouses and gorgeouuhlrts in a wide choice of tabr1cs ... polyester/cottons, Ultressae polyester and more. Solids and prints, too. Buy a bunch for yourself; or gift that special someone. Either way. lt:s a super special that's too good to miss. So hurry in now. . Famous name fashion bikini• a hip-hugger underwear sold elsewhere for 13 to•& OUR PRICE /$ From the feeding natne9 in women's underfuhions. At OUt unbelievably low ~al prices. Sig aeleotk>n of styles, fTIOlt In nylon trlcot with ootton crotch. P,S,M,L. • " •t '' . ·' !1 \• 'J i .1 ' • l a .. ~ ' ~ • . .. • 1 !, I I ~I • . . . , . ' J . ... '• ' . .. . , ' I n rFamlty DlecountStore \ I ' ~-l~.~~'MrY . ·· 1 SAN~A ANA: · .: { 3lll0 8o. ""'°' -Mo. fl/f lo, Qo.-,... • ()peft L ft *ts I t•tot._....,1:3010l-llt.t,..,.10toe ' ~ PRELL SHAMPOO • 11 oz. LIQUID or • 5 oz.. CONCENTRATE 1.49 r1r1AXF1Ei;:s miiChooo1ates I =~!:~~s in 2 50 l ·Lb. BOX • Famify ~IOX3.95 c IDONMU•IC d IFblenex I ~--·1 DIAL MASSAGE SHOWERHEAD • 4 Show•heads In One! • 4 Great Feelings! D • I (WIM Ma) 16 95 IDM-12'0 8 DH tall II II , 3-PIECE MOLDED LUGGAGE SET I • I Vinyl covering wt1h heavy ~~ duty laminated frames.. Easy open locks wtth keys. • 14" IEAUTY C.. • 21" WEBEIEI • 24" PUUMA• ~1 24.95 I SA~:.o LIQUOR Count Vasya VOD1~UTa 6.49 Fast• Creek e YR. oLo BOU,~!~ 7 • 59 r.DRSAGES for Mom on Her Day! Each Corsage contains lta own water vial rf/IO/ to wear. •&"POTS AIM'1001itPASTE with S11n11as FLUORIDE AD PRICES PIEYAll: Wed .• May 10t~ lhru Sal~. Mly 13th "Florentina"LEAD CRYSTAL TABl£WARE A Gitt Idea for Mou. ... 2ft Leid Crystal made In Germany. r-....att~ • DINNER BEU •CANDY BOX ' • BUD VA.'?£ • NUT D~H • COVERED BOX • 6" BOWL --. • PERFUME BOTTLE BONUS PACK STAYFREE MAXI-PADS Beltless Feminine Nal*lns •·••FIE£ 1.79 "Gets th• Red Out" Soothes Irritation. 'Ir IL IOTTLE 99° "Oii of Olav" YldfirY•ilm Mclilt _.., oll .. prollcll 1hl skin_. wrtnkll~ SECRET SPRAY. lllotlcmt 7 oz. • Alll-rtnplralll I u. Makes food preparadon fast and L . ~p msy. T alces the drudgery out of most kitchen dlorQS. ~-fM11115 89.95 WEST BEND .. AUTOMATIC" GRIDDLE wl" B ·STICl Alf SH :~·2·oaa ,3529 • FIBERWARE 12" FRY PAN FARBERWARE wltb COVER Sbinless steel =s-11.99 1 Qt. SAUCEPAN Stainless steel with allllllnum-dld bottom and cover. 6.99 1811 SEAL-A-MEAL ftr ,_~Id Amr I Ecommr s.,. tllfl CllllMd .-....... Bagi g 88 ateo mlablt. ISMl-t • SIGNAL •mWASH & SAllGLE ... 19c aern.E .. ' 1629 14.95 CORNING WARE ~~' "GRAB-IT' ~~ PWS SET ce~;;~~ 4whlte bowlsplusa • •·• ~~ 3-qt. covered AUCIPi1l1. ·~ A great gift. 18 88 . y • • IP-100-8 •MAtl DIRECT TO I.E. FOii 3.00 lllATI Spray. Stam & DRY : ff201 IRON ~:~le. 17.88 PRoCToR-SILEX Steam/Ory IRON· whb EASY TO READ FABRIC CotmOl 20st;f~;:nts. 10.88 PROCTOR-SILEX 2-Slica Toaster ' :£~ 11.88 . NORELC0· 10 CUP Coif ea Maker .......... ' =::: 24.95' 101ElCO TOAST-ft..RANGE Mn• BBTllC "Walla Pimria'~ · • TOAllh um• mu ~ PIZZA BAKER : : ' --. . --·"':"" .. I ~~--44.95 ::.;:.; 15 a8 '. p(zu. IM()368. • ' f SUNBEAll "POITAILE" • HANDMIXBI -lMJI, ~ beafft induii- ............ In -=~ 10.88 SEA I SKI TllOPICB CASCADE AUTOMATIC . DUNCAN HINES RAGU SPAGllml 1 • . l t DISHWASHING DETERGENT 1.89 650Z. "PRO MAX COMPACT" CAKE MIXES In delicious assorted flavors. KODAK EKTRA I CAMERA OUTFIT •• Sliding cover protects lens and locks shutter to prevent accidental exposure. IA1CR 19.95 FLIP-FLASH t ~·Hair 0 1 ry 5 er 88 1000WATTi'~ 19010. ' • .. SMOOTH & SILKY" -=~ Ladles· Electric .. CLAIROL zo·· · IAstant Hair Setter MagiCubes -~ 1I88 Razor !~r.5;&'0019. 88 for lnstamatlc 1 59 Cameras. 1 PAK Of 3 SAVE NOW on PANTYHOSE ~ "NO NONSENSE" : 3 00 ""EASYTO BE MF' 2 A I • Panties and hose all in one. 2 , 4 1 1 "'CONTROL TOP'' ' •To firm and smooth hips and tummy. • • "NO NONSENSE'' • Regular Pantyhose. ~~ . AIR SUPPORT ALL NUDE SUPPORT Pantyhose 2 5 Flattering sheer ~ $ to the waist. 1 DUSTER .,,,,..~ Pretty solid collar and cap sleeve edge with button down front. ~·t. colors. t1r1rrrrilri'ftsoes s.~.:9.o 7 .88 . ' : . ·LOOP TERRY Loungewear High fashloo striped lounging gown With 2 button yot<e, zipper and striped hood w/solld lining. S-M-L 17980. 2!2.00 Beautlful BLOUSES • ~ .. SLEEVE LACE BLOUSE .. 100% polyester with quarter length crocheted trim sleeves and appllqued cameo neckline. • FutalonMt 1004¥o POLYESTER Rawl.. ltlm.4 Cotlar With pretty peak-a-boo opening. . ci~;gE 7 .88 EA. LADIES' PRE.:WASHED . Fashion JEANS -",l In ass·1: styles with lots of detail work. ~ SIZES 5/6 to 15/ 16 -11.88 11 188 WlttldrlW· string waist. S·M·L --------1 ,,.1_~--------­~---------.,. SAUCE Fashion DOLLS by ESSKAY 13"TALL With beaullfully styled gowns. A doll YQ'1' , child wm treawe. ~-..t..~ .: ~>. 4.99 LADIES' ... AMITY" Checkbook CLUTCH \ Complete with removable check· book holder, multlvlew card C¥e and outside coin I I 5 pock el • Humming Bird ~· FEEDER "'Pwty r.r Has tour ~:1' feeding unl1S with bee guards that protect food for your feathsy friends 3.99 Tufted foam filled vinyl I 4 I cover. 24''x72". #KE a Chair PAo Tufted foam filled vlnvt cover. 24''x72" ICKE. HIGG~ "HYPER-CHEC" Blood Pressure KHs Now take care of your blood presue at home or anywhere! HYPER CHEC II 17 .98 29.95 23.95 CU Phlnnlclm •• hlgtlly trained In thefr pro- 1-lon. Lit Iha htlp you °" lnY qutldona you flaw about medlcdons. IAV..Qll PHAlllAClm ARE: • LIYIL • 1WITWOITllY • ceacal9JI lllP08TED flfOM FllANCa l!f POITaO flKUI ntANC• ~fil:L VASE SPflll VASE "WINDSOR.. -mSTAL et.Wl'" s .. chip bowl 1 9 I '4111" dip ~~~der. I Anobfect of beauty. Approx. s·. 1.49 AICCllOB llOCKllB Pagoda Jar.SET Crp1al Cltlr Set contains: 3 -121h oz. ,,_ __ stack Jars and .......... ......., 1 cover. 1.79 HEAD ~/ 169 • SHAMPOO ~ ~ • :;;;mONm t39 for shine & manageablllty. 111 a. WIES. "VOGUE" Watchbands LADIES" "TIMEX" Wristwatches LEATHER & METAL 25 0/o OFF PYREX WARE 4-Pc. BOWL SET • SPIOG ILOSSaM GREEN • wtOIMNO • IOTIE1IFL Y IOLO .. ' LIBBEY 8-Pc. BEVERAGE SET "TAWMY SOMERSET .. .. . . • . .. I TH •'AMIL\' CJH 'US. 8)' UU Keane "Mommy! P J talked to a stranger! Do you w~t to scold him or shall I do it?" "Goi a problem" Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getbng the ~• and. action you n«d to •ol~ 1Mquit~1 m government and bwlu,,. Mail your qwltionl to P.al Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coaat Doily Pilot, P.O. Bo:r 151tJ, Costa Mesa, CA 92826. A.s many lett.ra. GS-J>OHlble wiU ~~. but phoned Jnquiriea or letters not mcluding the reodn's full oame.addreuand business hour1' phoM number cannot be consv:lered. Thi3 column appears daf. lJI t%Cep( SaturdaJll " C'••JH11111 Ulces Preiecied ldees DEAR PAT: I have an idea for a new product that J would like to submit to Johnson & Johnson. I "thought of this years ago when my children were growing up, but I dldn 't know how to go about pre· senting my idea to this company. Will you look into it for me" C.L .. Downey AYS cc.tacted Thomas J . Marplay, d.lrec&or of oatalde SllQesdou for Johnson & Jolmlon. Be malled a "Policies Concerning Sqgested Ideas" brocbure to yoa, wbJcb outllnes b1B company's COD· dltlons of submlsalon. Another belpfal booklet, "Sabmlltlng An Idea," by &be American Bar As· sodatlon, wu lDcluded. The ABA bookie& conlalns general lDlorma&lon helpful to all penons who have new product Ideas. It explains wby most companies ask you to agree to cenaln ground rules before an Idea wlll be con· aldered, and I& e:rplalu steps YoQ can take to pro- tect yoar Idea. Coples are anUable for ZS eenta from: Ottuladoa Department. Amertcaa Bar ,u. soclation. 1155 E. MUI St., Odcago, DL 11137. ' Pell.._, 6 ...... W-'t a. Be.rf/I DEAR PAT: I ordered 50 gold-plated state comme morative p e nnies from American Consumer Inc. My $14 .95 check was cashed in February, and I h aven't bad any notice that my order would be delayed. It just hasn't come. J heard unlavorable things about this company after I sent away for the pennies. Have I been bad? M.B., Huntington Beach Not &Ills Ume. A YS contacted Ameriun Consumer, and a refund will be lasued &o you. Tiie pennies yoa ordered art" no longer available. Delayed or cmdeUvered merchandise la a frequeat complala& aboat tlal.t Orm, wbJcb bas been la· volved la Jecal actloos witlt several stata, lacludlq CaWonta. &lddee depledoe of stock wl&b lDade· quate followap OD refuels al9o bas been a common problem of AYS readen. L.C., HanUag&on Beach, who ordered mercbudlae la December, wUI be contacted re- agardlq ber andell.ered order. Tbe porcelain bells 1be wanted also are out of stock. A refund or replacement witb similar bells will be ananged, accordlng to ber preference. Aaiaefds llpsei A11iu.leik Aeilea DEAR PAT: Can antacid products react with anUbloUc drugs and make them llleffec:tive? L.P ., Balboa A warnillg ls reqalred oa any u&acld Illa& mlgla& la&enc& wlt.b other drags. For Hample, uy prodaet &II.al contalu ahlmbuun mu& wan een- ••men not ao take It while aalDf a prescripdoll drag containing any form o &e&racyellae. Aluminum can reduce &be effectlveaeaa nf tetracycline by preventing or redHIDI Its absorp- tion In the bloodstream. Label directions for use also m• IDclude recommeade4 Sime latenal dosage, age poap dosage, U approprtate, aad be f0Uowedby .. ora1dlrectedbyaphyalclu." Tbe type, amowa& aad mlx&a.ttt ol aatacld ID· gredlen&a are ael by FDA repladou. Tbe label mut &ell la clear, simple terms wlaat tJae proclwet I• llltemded &o do aad ll must IDclade wun1.D11 oa ovel"Ue. Prodlld8 that con&aln certain lagred.leatl .._ mm an'J warnings for the benefit of people wllo •a..e cenal.D dietary or medical problems. aead u&add prodaet label canf.U, allddo no& ue a com blaaUOll product aaleu 1oa bne bo&ll a headadlleudapteta&omaeb. .. Mother's Day is ·May 14th., Give her a gift that grows&om Rpger's Gardens . f 8HOPFAllLY " 3 Officials Recalled Over Housing Issues Dad Nixed On Taldng Kid's Cash BIRMINGHAM, Mich. <AP> -Three city commissioners who aup- ported efforts to provide hou.sln1 for the poor and elderly ln this affluent Detrolt 1uburb have been recalled by voters. . on the ballot but renewed their con· CONCORD. N.H. <AP> tract with the church eroup. Critics -The New Hampshire then began clrculaUng recall pell· Supreme Court says tt lions, charging thal the com· man does not have the missioners ignored citizens' wiahes right to withdraw money in trylng to pusb the housing plan Crom his child's bank ac· through. count for hls own use If AT YOUR SERVICE/NATIONAL DEALING SINCE 1956 WESTERN ART INOIAN & COWBOY COLLECT ABLES -APf>RAISALS- 31808 CAMl'JO CAPISTRANO SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -.w·--493·1023 "'In leaving on this type of Issue. my conscience doesn't bother me,'" sald commissioner Ann Dropiewski after the special election. "I'm very comfortable about what J did and I wouldn't do it any difrerently." "DEMOCRACY HAS BEEN he no longer lives with the child. restored to Birmingham ... said Nan· The court. In a un· ~.Y Elby, a leader or the r~all drive. animous decision Tues· The people have spoken. day. upheld a Superior Complete, but unofficial results Court ruling denying a showed Mrs. Conrad was defeated on divorced man access to Spec,al Selections For MOTHER MRS. DROPIEWSKI and the other defeated commissioners, Patricia Watt and Dorothy Conrad. walked out of Monday night's regular com· mission meeting when the res ults were announced. a vote or 3,257 to 1.749; Mrs. hill two daughters' sav· Dropiewski, 3.049 to 1,866, and Mrs. ings. · Wall, 2,889 lo 2,006. At '~ALLYSONS'' RESTAURANT Served 8:00 a.m. to I :00 p.m . Under city law. the remaining four commissioners will appoint tem· porary replacements who will serve until the Aug. 8 primary. "We saw a need for housing ror a segmenti ot the community and we stood for that need,'' Mrs. Conrad said. "We supported that need and for that we've been recalled ... There's no bitterness. You take your chances -that's politics." Th e judges said a parent's right to earn· ings or a child is not absolute "and continues o nl y so long as the parent retains custody and conUnues to support hia minor children." 1 The Clasllic Marco Polo Omelette: chicken. ham and broccoli w1momey i.auce. white cheese and ham. About 34 percent of the city's 14.937 r egistered voters cast ballots. Tbe turnout was less than in last month's special election when voters defeated the controversial housing plan and recalled three other commissioners who had backed the proposal. THE OFfEN BITTE R recall dnve began last fall when opponents of the housing plan demanded that the city not renew its contract wilh a local church .gr-0up t.o build s tate· s ubsidized housing for the poor and elderly. NEED A LAWYER? Low&AplFee •Divorce • Bankruptcy • Crlm lnal • Wllls-Prot>ate • I ncorporatlon • Accident-Injury • Eviction • Collections 640-2507 C.11142-5171. ti T he Pretentious Spinach Sou me Marquis . w•poached egg. momcy sauce. white cheese and ham III The lllgh Pleasure Eggs Alexander two poached egas on artichoke hearts ser ved oHr spinach. w 1 Hollandaise sauce. capers and hum. ALL ENTREES INCLUDE FRESH FRUIT AND SOUR DOUGH E~GLISH MUFFINS MOTHER'S DAY AFTERNOON DINNER 3 to 8 P.M. Reservations Sunested •, Block from Edwards Udo 'lbea&re City commissioners pul the issue 'hHR. CONSULTATION-t10 Put • few word• lo work tor ou. Newport Beach 615·6220 3421 Via Lido \'What~ 2 arms, 2 le~, end witt5s? '' '' II IOOMD ... \ United gives JOU more of this great land than 1111ot11er airline. Now wbsn you take o1f in the tMendly skies, you ca.n take off 40% to more cit1es tba.n ever before. Just fly Mon~ through Thursday to any United citur, Hawau and Callfornla 1ntr8state filghts excluded.. Save 30% when you fly Fri~ th.rough~ Kida under 12 travellng with you save 60% off regular Coach fare. Super Saver to 81 cities Make your reeervattons and~ your Super Saver t1oket 30 ~before departure and steur 7 to 45 ~­ Return tllg'.ht reeervatiOns ID8'Y be changed, but you must do so at least 30 ~ beft:>re the nsw date of your return. Beats a.re Hmited. So oall your Travel Agent. Or O&ll Untted at 537-7521. Partnsrs tn Travel w1th Western Int.ernat1.0nal Hotels. The .American Express" Oard. Dcm.'t leave home without it.au Tomakeyour vaoatton even easier to take, you.can mctend p~onthe A:mertoa.n Express Ca.rd "Sign & Travel• " plan. If you don't liave tbe Ame:r10&n Express 08.t'd, oal1 toll.free (800) 628-8000 for anapplioatiOn. Akron Allentown Baltimore BaiyCitQr Bethlebem B1rmtngbarn Boise Ba:1ton Buffalo Cant.on Cedar. Rapids Charleston Charlotte Chattanooga Chlcago Cleveland OOlumbus Davenport IlQtOn Dmvar De8Mo1nes Detroit Durbam F.aston Eugene Flint FortW~ Grand Junction Grand Rapids Greensboro Hampton Hartford HJghPo1nt Huntsv1lle IowaCicy Xa.nsas C1cy Knaxvfile l&nstng IBSVegas IJnonln Medtbrd. Memphls Mtdla.nd Milwaukee Mollne Muskegon Newark Newport News New York Niagara Falls Norfolk Omaha Pendleton PbJladelphi& P1ttsburgh Portland. Portsmouth Prov1denoe B&letgh Reno Rtcbmond Rooheeter Rock Island Sag1naw Salem Salt. lake City Bee.ttle ' Sharon BoUthBend Spokane 8prtngtleld Tacoma Toledo Toronto V&ncOUVer Vtrgtn!a Beach Warren Washlllgton. D.C. WUJtamsburg Wlnston.aalem Youngstown Bol>ody beats linbed's Super Saar Fan. Bo~. J!.IJtblfrind\Jskl•of. • r ORANGE COUNTY PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIDUI IUSINaSJ MAMl ITATIMINT Tiie tot10•1no pen~u ere Clotno MftOUaJ 1 .. TH STltl!IET PAltTNl!ltS, &Jto 011 K•rmen Avenue, Suite 400, N••PGl'l 9"<11, CA flMO O.li OI_._ i .. M9rltwey P•u Road, Mont....,''"• CA. tl154 PUBUC NOTICE Tw• unit 141\0Clur• avallM>I• for ro moval -retoUll"" •••"•l>fl•lt of slrOKllllt lor ,..._ •• 1...0 '''°'""°"I> for Ml tOllMC:Ull ... <•lend¥ d.on from hi NY of l'Ul>ll< Nolote lnloro•led pull•• •1'1011111 COfll•t l Slupe• Vaftcle•w-Otwtopt;*". 141 Mall\ St , H11nt11>91on Be•<ll, C:..lllornt• n ... Publl\twd 0r'""9t C:O.•I 0.llY Piiot M•y e. t. 10. II, 12, n. 1', 11, le, lt, lt7• "' .. " RM Hal,,_, '1• Monl-y PH~ 1-------------RMd, M..-.V Par•, CA. t 1154 D J Roy, S1' Monterey P•n Road, Monlwov Parto.. CA. t11M O.J Aov. Jr., Sl4 Monterey PHI Road, Montwey P•rll. CA. 9175.A J .0 Oiimen•, II, S16 Monltt•Y Pan RIMCI, Monttrty P•rk, CA t17M Teel II. C¥119nlet, 2500 WevKre1t Ortve, eor-Del Mer, CA. t2W O'l>OfwWll, 8rf9htm and P•rt_.., 401 Von K•rm.n A-. Sill .. 400, Newport llMdl, CA. t2..0 Thlt buslneu 11 condU<IH by • -••I ~lr'WMIP. John o. 0·~11 T·1111 tl.e-t .., .. filed wllll ,,_ Countv Clttll ot Or•nge County on April JI, 1'11. C>IMAaCO,el~ O•EINll!•O. TMltAU ANO SLUSHllt CMel UI 14•---' ClMltr Otl w a.11•-N~ 9-tl, CA. nMI A"-rtalUw PUBUC NOTICE . l<ICTITIOU$ eUSINUI NAMe STATIMINT Tiie to11ow1no persons •re dolno l>UMMU•I CAN /AM INVESTMENTS, JIU San Ju•n urw. eo.ta Mtia, CA tt•• arenda J Whwler, 21U s.r. Juan Lane, Co1!.9 MttM, CA m• 01rl1._... A. Wheelet, 27U San Juan Lane. C:O.la Mete, CA n•2' Tllom~ E W•l.,l, I~ Cllru• Aw., I.a liellre He\Olltt. CA te»JI Jot111 s TIOfle, usn via Sot11. San Juan C:..pltlr-. CA 9767S Tiii$ business h conducted by • gener1l ~CI Brende J w.-.... Th 1lel-1 wa> filed wllll Ille County Cl-Of 0r'""9' County on April I•, ltlt. Hftfn Pul>ll•-OrMQt C:O.\I Deity Piiot. PVBUC NOT1CE Pul>lllhed 0r"'9 C:O.st Delly Pllol, A.prll It, Jt, May i. IO, 1'11 , ... ,. SUl"lato.t CIOUl'1 Oil TMI STATI Oil CAUllOaNIA ,Ott TMI COUMTY Oil CNIAN•I ........... Aprll 2•, l<My J, 10, 17, 1971 1•10.11 -------------· ------------------~ PUBLIC N011CE MOTICI Oil MIAalM• 01' f'ITITIOlt PIDtl NOeATI 01< WILL CllMU AND Laneas TasTAM&MTA•Y HtJm Eitel• Of l!UUR L. PRESHO, l'ICTITIOUSeUSINHS De<eued. NAME STATEMENT NOTICE 15 HlaEaY GIVEN 11\el Th• IOll-lno perton I> dOir>Q t>usl RONAL.0 E. MIGAUO Mio fll911 h«eln neu as: a t19tltl011 lef" Probltt.9 of Wiii end Is-HAIR CALI FORNI A, H•O So wence el Lat•n Tes~tery to lhe Pier• Ortw, S.nl• An•. CA. 9170. Ptllt1-f.~towlllc1111rnaoe Georoe w. Plletta. Mil Lido P• IOf' lurtller par1kular'-ltfld tlllll ,,,. Orin, Penthouw 9E, Newport Beach time a11d piece of llMtlno tlle •am• CA. 976'0 .... Men ... for May n. 1t11. •I 10:00 Thi• bullrws• Is condu<lecl by ... I a .rn .. 111 !tit courtr_,. ol 0.pertment dlvldual. No. 3 ot I.aid court, al 700 Clvk Clnler George w. PNIP6 g:::-:M~~ "' .,. CllY •• Sent• ..... Tiii• ll•ltmenl WU l)led wlll'I .... O.Wd May J, '"' Counly Cl••-of Oranoe County on WIWAM I . IUOMN, ~~J~~~1:c.ow c.ouMy Oer1I COit l"O It A Tl ON PUBLIC N011CE CHoW ~ PICTITIOUS eUSINIH NAMI !lTATIMINT Tl>e foll-Ing pttton I' OOll'Q b<Jtl neuu· ENVIRONMENTAL COM MUNICATIONS, INC., 3HO Pullm..,, Cost• Maw, CA. mv l!nvlronmental Communlutlon1 IMOf'POf•led, • C:..lllornla COf'POt•llon, JIS0Pullman,Cosl•~H.CA.t1•17 Tiii• buslnHd. Is c_u.,. by • CM~ pell'• I loft. l!nvl,,,..m•nt•I CommUftlC•· llOM 1 tlCOf'PO( A led Allef\SNfan, President P.VBUC NOTIC~ ... ..., NOTial TO Cll&OITOal AfMllclecl ........ nm SUl"lltlOll COtJltT Of' TM a STATE OP CALJ'°ltNIA ,Oa TMI CIOUHT'f 01' OflAMH In Ille M•ller ot Ille Ellele of LORENE AMES HIHICEL. Al(A LO,.ENE A HENKEL., AKA LOltlNI! HENKEL, AKA LORENE AMl!S,Oec-. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 creditors llevlno Ciel"" aoelnst II• .aid Otcedttnt to Ill• uld ctelm• In Ille oflk • ol UW Clerk of Illa •fOlet.ald court or lo 11'"'"'1 llwm lo Ill• un· ders(9ntd •I Ille office of MUllRAY PALITZ. Uhl 8••ch Blvd .• wutmlntter, CA t2'13, 11u1 m-441>/ ..... S!GI, Wflkll lalltt otflte IS Ill• citaoe of bustneu of IM u11· OtrtlQntcl In all matttts pert.•lntno to Hid ••••••· Suell clalmt .with ,,,. neceoary 'llOUC!len must be flled M preHnl•d H •IOAMld wllllln four monlhl Mier U'W fir.I publlUllOll of tlllsnotlce. Oeled Mey I, 1971. CELI• OU~AY FAY EmKutrl• Of 1119 wllt of Yid dkedent MUaaAYl"AUn AlterMY. ... WW 1 .. , ....... ~ ....... ............. c..,,.., PUC.tltlllcl Or ... CMll Delly Piiat MayJ, 10, 17,lA, '"' 11i•11 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS eUSINESS NAM.I $TATIMENT The lollOO#lnQ penon It CIOlnQ bull· neuas UNIQUE RUGS, 22IO Ma(lnoll• St., Coll• Meta, CA. '2tl1 w1111am J. Anderton. 220 ~noli• $1., Cott• MttM, Ca 97627 Tlllt blJMMIS 11 conduCIA!d by an In· dlvlduel. Wllllam J. Anderton Thll st•i-t w•> lllecl wllh 1,,. County Clerk of O••noe Coutlty on Aprll 28, ""· ,.nn1 Publlslltd Ora1199 C:O.>I O•llY Piiot ~y), 10, 17,24, 1'71 1'71·11 PUBLIC NOTICE aoeE•T A. IA.STllt\AM 111 Seoilll llllMis m ... ,_ ....... M• llJ AIWIMlm, CA. t.ot Thl1 llal-1 WA\ 111911 •Hh lhe CO\lflty Clerk of Or•nge County on April JI, "78. NOTICI M W. l"ATalCJC O'KEE,E, JA OIUOLUTION 01' AttwtMJ•lt..fW • l"AaTNEaSMtl" •HanllMaltlSt.. PU9LIC NOTICE IS HEREBY w .. 1.s GIVEN l"-1 R08EAT MANCE. •nd S.ta Au, CA. tvtl FREO CHRISTOPHER CAMPBELL, 11e .. 1o1or• dolr>Q buslneu unoer ,,. UB Pvbllthed Or-c:o.11 O.lly Plloc, llclltlou1 llrm name •nd 1tyle of P LIC NOTICE PUBLIC N011CE Aprll lt, l<My 3. 10. 11. ma ,OR o ASSOCtAT Es. at mu Et -------------1' .. ------------..1 t•11·71 Oor.Oo Orlw. CJIY of Inell.on ~Ill, a .J... "ICTITIOUSIUSINESS County of Riverside, Stale of SUl"EIUQa C::OUln' 0' TMI NAMI STATEMENT -------------ICAlllOf'nl•, Old on ttw Ill O.y al April, s~~~'c:~1=::~ ..... ~~· TN follOO#fnt Pt<'ton 11 Clolnt busl· PUBUC N~ICE !:~:· ::.:;..u::~ ~:;::::~~i:.': N-.......,... MS$c::~EAT LIFE ASSOCIATES. llAll------.-.,-tJU------lre~•llon\etP6flner1thereln MOT I CE 01' MIA at NO 01' Monrovl• Sea. n. Cos .. ~w. Ca. 92W NOTICI TOCREOITOltS urlller notice I• hereby QIWn llwl l"ITITIOM '°" l"aOtaATI 01' WILL Ille Undertl(lne<I "flll not bR r-•i· ANO iroa LETTlaS TESTAMIN· Gena 8i"eland, lMS Monrovl• 59 SU,aalCMt COURT OF THE t>te, from tllls oay Or\ for any Ol>llQa-TAll'f n. CostaMna.CL•UV STAT&OPCAL.,OltNIA "OR llon ll't<«Ad by ... other In his o- Etl•h 01 JOHN HARLEY Tllltl>uilnHalscondu<'ffbyanln-TMICOUNTYO,ORANGI! name ... lnltw...,.,.oflllelltm. MUTCHLER. •ISO known .. J . dlYldual ..... ,....., OATEO AT N••PO•I •••ch, HARL"'Y MUT~ "'A Ge<w 81rkeland In the M•ller ol Ille Ett•t• of C lllo I lhl f 1 Cl ~ -.nL ... •150 ~.. Tiiis 1t•t-• •as m~ -1-1~ FRANK OEI! 8AUGH. ·~· FRA~K 1•.11. rn •. s "' sll day of May, '· H. MUTCHLER, o.c...d. --"' .,.. " NOTICE IS HERE8'f GIVEN !NI C:Ounly Clttk ol Or•nge COun(j 611 &. 8AUGH, ~. Rotien ~·--KENNETH c. NEWELL hat filed Aptll 21, .. ,._ NOllO Is NreOy 91 ..... 10 creditor• Publlihed Oranoit Cout O.lly PtlOI ~In a 119t1t1on tot ~le of Wiii .....,,, havtno ctalm$ AQelnsl IM Hid dee• May 10. 1'71 1an.11 •no to• 11-..c:• of uti.t'I TKtamefl. Publlslled Ore<191 Cout O.lly Piiot dent to Ille said clalms In Ille olllc• of tery, rtterence to wNcll la m.oe tor M•Y J, 10. 11. 2', lt18 1605-11 Ille clerk of Ille ~es.old courl or to f.,,,,,., P«1ku1en, end ,,,., Ille lime prewnt ''*"to Ille uneler\l9neo •t the el>CI place of llffrlno the wm• llas PUBLIC NOTICE office ol MURRAY PALITZ. 13161 l>ffn \al IW May 30, lt7'. •I 10.00 BeKl'I etYd., Suitt '7. Wtslmlniltr, SUPEltlO« COUltT 0' •.m .. In Ille <.OU<tr-., Of 0.perlmenl CA 92"3, Wllldl t•tlPr olllce Is tr.a CALll'OllNIA No. > of .aid court. •I 100 civk Center R1"'5 plau DI t>uMnMs Of I,,.. ut>O•r\lllnf'd In Orlve Wnl, In Ille City ol Sant• An• SU,l!ltlOlt COUltT OF THE •11 ma lier\ Pffl••nlno 10 '"'" .. t•le. 1~~~~~c::..~~:::,, Calllornl•. • STATI! O'CALIFOANIA FOii Suell cla lm1 wllll th• ncu\ury s.ineuo O•led Mey'· 1971. THE COUNTY OP: ORANGE YOIKlltr\ mll$I be )tied or pr~ .. M'll u S.llUIAn•.Collfoml• WIL.UAM E. SI JOHN. no.AtiJM eloroeld within four monlll\ ~lltr tr>e CAH NUMe"'lt ft 1., ... 17 CounfyO.r~ OROEltTOSHOWCAUSE ll"lpubOcellonot lNsnolict • .,. •-JOMM M. WMATLa'f In In& Maller Of the Appltc.tlon of Oaled Aprll 24 l911 SUMMONS IMARRIAGEI W*wlty..... GLENOA VIRGINIA HOAR end Fl0<•J•M8A11Qh '" r~ ,.,. m.trrlaoe ol Pwlllloner D4 IHI c.Mnde9I"" TE,.RV GLENN HOAR,• minor, by Exe<utoroflMwill C HE RV L E W ILSON • n a l"•-•,CAtllt1 GLENOA VIRGINIA HOAR, llh ol ... ddecl>denl Pe\POnO.nt FRANK W Wll,.SON ,_.JIN ..... ,...,, -I. lo<°""_..,. N•-· MUltltA'f P.t.un NOTICE I YMI ... y. --· ,..,.. •11-rter:"9411*'"' WHEREAS. GLENOA VIRGINIA , .. , ... clletvd SI• n ( ... ,, mode<·•-l11t1,... ... u11e111 C.leM-. CA$» a~ Ne.,,....... .. Tel:..... l'ttUJI Atter.y Mr......,_.. Publl1NctOr-C:O.il Delly Pitol. Pul>llShecl Or ... CoMI Delly Piiot April 2• May l 10 11 lt7t Mey'· 10, ... 1971 1179-71 • • • • PUBLIC NOTICE Wedneeday. May 10, 1978 OAIL y PILOT A J l Back Bay Ecology Eyed OCC Team Studies Cats' Effect on Rodents By JACKIE BYMAN OttMDelWf'ffttlUtff Studyina t.be ecology or Upper Newport Bay isn't usually a source or embarrasament to scientists. But Orange Coast College in· structor Don Baud admits h.la re- search project has caused some red faces among his four student assistants. That's because they have to knock oo doors in homes around the bay and ask for aamplee of kitty litter. "THE HOMEOWNERS think they're crazy," said Baud. who is studying the effects of cats on the bay rodent population for his masters thesis at Cal Stale Fullerton. Part of the study Involves dis· solving the samples in acid. The acid gets rid of all but tiny ro- dent bones, permitting re- searchers to determine what ro- dents have eaten. BAUD EXPLAINED that there are four common types of small rodents in the Back Bay. They are the house mouse, the deer mouse, the California vole and the Western harvest mouse, of which one subspecies may be endangered. Baud said he's checking to see whether -or not the .cMs, both tame and wild, attack mostly the more expendable house mice or the native rQdents. · "Possibly fhe cats have a positive effect If they eat more bouae mice," Baud said. "If they're eating more of the others, maybe somethina should be done to keep them out." BE NOTED that other effects of cats, auch aa disturbing birds, are not included in his studies, nor are the effects of dogs. ... haven't seen any dogs catch r mice yet," Baud said. Actually, be said. well-fed Newport Beach cats don't seem to be eating many either. Judg. ing by the results of the four· week-old study. BAUD SAID HE has yet to find a mouse jawbone in the cat' leavings. Hia next step, he said. will be to place kitty boxes around the Back Bay in the hopes that formerly tame cats now living there will make use of them. He said he's also seeking state Department of Fish and Game permiaaioo to live trap rodents. THAT PROCEDURE. which be said doesn't injure the animals, would be used to estimate the ratio of the dif· ferent species. ~ trapped ro- dents would be released after they are identified. Baud said. Baud, wbo ls Interested in teaching or working in the na- tional park system alter he te· ceives bia M.A .. said he'll pro- vide the results of bi& cat-rodent. study to the Department of Flab and Ganie. and hopes to publlab them in an ecology journal. Repair Ordered On Courthouse Final repairs totaling $182,000 were ordered for the once-sinking West Orange County Municipal Court.house by county supervisors Tues· day. The non-structural work will include jacking up the slab in some areas to level the floor as well as cosmetic repairs to walls. OCC INSTRUCTOR Don B•ud •Fiddler' Aids Diabetics The Ofange County Chapter of the American Dlabeta Associa· Uoo wUl spoasora charity presen· talion of "Fiddler on the Roof" June 4 at Sebastian's Dinner Playhouse ln Anaheim. Donation la $25 per person and wlll benefit diabetes research and education. ncket sales end May 19. Sebastian's is located in the GrandHotelatl Hotel Way. Addi· Uonal information is available b~ calling 639-t912. MOTHER'S DAY ON THE BAY Row.1 for The Lacltl The work will be financed by bonds from the Orange County-Westminster Civic Center Authority. SPICIAL EAIL Y HOURS Clso"'fHIPW' B~lt From 8:30 .4.M. OlJUUr From 3 P.M. Publls-0r.,,.. eo..i Delly l"llOI HOAR, on -II ol herself and lier Westml111ter, CA'1W y .. r .,.,,. _,.., WllHS,... ~ ~ytf6, 16, "71 1&31·11 ton, TEllllY GLENN HOAR. NI filed Tel· (7141 "4 SMI •llM11 H ~ lte.cl Ille lrttor_I .. • petition wllh Ille Cieri. of this Court Publl•lled OrM>Qe Coa•I 0•1ly Piiot .,.,_ tor an order c1>•no1no oelllloner>' Aprll n. May J. 10 11. 1'11 AVISO! UIMd ,,. JIM Nm•-· More than a year ago the county completed a $783.800 repair job on the Westminster building to correct damage caused when the facility began lo sink into a bog below the g round. 2735 w. r.oa.t Hwy. namn from GLENDA VIRGINIA 161• II El lrllHIMI _.. de<kllr ~tno IU. _____________ ,HOAll •ncl TERAV GLENN HOAll ID __ , ___________ ;,. ... ,. ••dlefl<I• • menH ~II· Utl i---------------------------------------------------- NOTICEO" l"UIUCHIARING GLENOA VIRGINIA M<HARG end PUBLIC NOTICE ••~• ... ,. • lO d•H. Le••• PUBLIC NOTICE Punuanl to order of Ille Calllornla TEA RV GLENN M<HARG. ,.11>9<· tnl.,fl\•Clon-il9"9 C.otsl•I COfl\rnl~lon, notice ot public lively; I To Ille Rnpo.-nt ,_•rlnoh,,.,.l>yQI...., IT ISOllOEREOfllalellpenons ln· ltt~ • Tiie petition.er hu llled e Seid puOlk -tno b .-1 ... °" terttlecl In the -lilied matter "CTITIOUS IUSINESS ~llllo" conurn1nq your ,.,,.rrt•Qe "'9MayU,lt71. eooeer b•lore '"ii Court In • NAMESTATEMENT Youm•ylll~•wrmenr.-1ewll1Mn Aoend• tor •llPfk•llon for ~mil, courtroom of Oei»rtment a on Me~ n . Tiie to11ow1no per>0n• •rt 001no >Oday, of Ille <Ml• lhel this""'"'""'' number P-+11·~3090 H tut>mllled by tt71, In Santa Alwl, Callfornl• •I Ille l>u$lnHt •• I> served on you SIQnal Loa"""*•· Inc !lour of 11:00 A.IA. encl S110w uww, 11 A I Sil VER CLIPPER, US"> b II you f•ll to Ill• a written Tiie IUOle<I ·-· II lo permit eny,wlly lllepetjlJonlortlwn09ofnarna aro•d••r. Costa Mn•. c.111or11I• ... ponu •tlll1n \UCll time, your Recordellon of Tract Map Nos 971'. 1llouldnoll»llf'8nltd. 9762' delaull m•Y be .,t•reo encl Ille c.ourt t»O. •no .-Ul creatlno 32S loh where IT IS FURTHElt OllOEAEO 11\el • V•lenllne S It, IS~ P••k m•y tnler e IUdQtnenl conl•tnlr>Q ... Ml grost acres now u lll. Sula•· copy of this "'""' to \-cauw i.. Newport, NeWllC)(I ch C:..lifoml• 1nJuncllvt OI oti.r Olde" concemlr>Q quent P"Y>ltal clevetopment will '-put>tl5'1ed In The Or-C.O'"' Oeily 92..0 dlvtslon of l)rOll9r1y, 1pousal >11~. done unct.r Ille City of liunllnoton Piiot, • ne~ of QerMral clrcu••-NorHn J, Sc11u1u, IS•O P•rk cl'llld cuttOdy,cl'llld IUPllO<t. •Hor,,..,·, a.ecl'I c..1.,1uo1 Eaclutlon on the !Ion printed In Orange Couf\ty Ntwporl, He-1 S.acll. Caliloml• , .. ,, cosh. •nd SUCll other relief es IOUtllerly tld9 Of T•ltltr1 Avenue ti the (Alllornlt , one. • -" IOI IOIH' sue'. f2'40 s.<'lnQOAlt •-lnlerwctlon, Hunt· cenlv• •MM prior 10 tne d•I• Mii fOf' mo IHI gr41ftlecl b'( IM <Ollft. ""'lcll lnoton ··-· C:..lllomlL lle••lno on ... petition This business I• C.onduell'<l by •n In· tOUld rttull In Ille o•rn11nmenl of c.o~::.:,o:::.;:.~~ ~~;'1;. tt~~ OAT E ~~~\~\'J~N ER dlvldual V•ltntlne s. S/lulu :.=•;e'1~~no of money or prCJPer1 Y • or •I Hunllnotnn 8HCll City Council JUDGE Of THE Nor .. nJ. S/lulll c. II yOll wllfl le Hiit ltleadYl'9 et Cll•m1Hr1, 2000 Mal" Sl,..1, Hunt· SUPElllOlt COURT Tiiis Stal-I •H 111911 wllll Ille •n •tl0f'1te'f In 11111 matter, you slloulcl lnoton 8NCll. C:..lllonll• County Cler'll of Oranoe County on do Ml promotfy '° ,.,., your wtlHetl Ourlno wt.•::':!' en__., ellller "'"'LLll" WAUH Aprll 12, 1'7L responu, 11 any, m..y be lllM 011 ume. levortno or no the -Uullon U« W•llMll Gftve Aw. l'tm• Oaltd AUQllSI 2•. ,.,, wlll .,. lle•rd THiimony illould be r•· ••MmHcl, Celllonil• ttno Publl1Md Oranoe eo.11 0.lly PllOI WIL.LIAM E. ST JOHN, l•ted to IUUH •ddrUMld by Ille Tel: UISI 5n·1'01 Apr. lt,2',MayJ, 10, 1971 IS27·71 Clerll CAlllornlt Coellal A<I of 197•. Any AtlerMy tl Law 8y KAREN SVNCO. written c~ r999rd4r>0 Ille Pu1>1i1"9d OrMQt C:O.st Dally Piiot UB OtPuty •ppllc,atl.., lf'oukl lie Cllrtcted to thll Aprll U, l<MyJ, 10, 17, 1971 P UC NOTICE CSE AL) efll'• prl• '°Ille lle•rln(I dale. t•tS-tl 1-------------1 HONIG & CHIOU . .0 All In•--lndlv!Owlt -wl111 •-------------..I "CTITIOUS BUSINESS Allwneys •tu• addltlon•I lnlorm•Uon may cont1KI PUBLIC NOTICE NAMESTATIMliNT •UClvltCent«Drlvow .. 1 tll~:t~~I H, ltlt _""""'."""""-:--------l>u~:::..~o~ow1no person• or• doing ~~:.J:.. •• Collfenll••l7tl ~~~:cl« ,::;~~~~::'o'::.:e COIT OAAPERV ~ CARPET 1710t7Mltl Pul>lll,lled Or ... C:O.st Delly Piiot, STAT& Of' CAUl'OaMJA l'Olt CLEANERS, INC . 1101 Newporl Attw11ey1 fer: ......0-Mart, 10, 11. 1971 TME COUNTY Ol'OtlANOI Blvd., ~ta~. CA '1611 Published OroMIOt Coast O.lly Pilot -..._. ll&R o~ inc .• • C:..H•ontl• May l 10 11 u 1'71 112• 11 __________ ..;1~1»-;;:;.:7~1· •••• ,. ol SYLVAN WOLF. corl)O(•tlon,1702N••POf'IBIVG .C:O.I• • • . PUBLIC NOTICE o.~esed Mew, CA ~v PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HERE9Y GIVEN '°tile Tiii• buslneu h conducted Dy • ------------ -------------1 creditors of tll• •bove nelfted coroo<ellon lt·MMt decedent tll•t •II persona It••· R&A O_,.,., Inc IM..,I CotltrMOr .... Coulltf MllN<l,.1 Collft SU1"aa101t COUaT 01' TM a lft9 cl•lml .... ,., Ille Mid ~nl Wllllam B H•utllllon ST •Tl OI' CALI l'O•NtA l'Olt .,. AQUl..CS '° II .. the~ Willi the v ~ & ~welery 1• Clvf< C-Ol1w Wast TMI CIOU,.:"' ...=••N•• neC.HM"Y _...,..,In IN offk• of Ille Tllll ... ,_, w~ !lied wlll! ,,,. NOT tea Oil "a• lhM.,_c;, clerk of the llDOW entlUed coun Of' to County Cl.,. Of Orange County on l"ITITIOff "°" f'ttOeATI Oil WILL preunl ti..m, wllll the nace'u.ry ~~~a~::i110. HAUGHTON SMta""' Cal"°""• PLAINTIFF : S4NTA AN A ~~~ ~o~C:':T":: :O: ~:'1-':: ~,o;:::~·~!;0~~ ~~ wwyen AUTMOltllATlOtl TO AOMIHtlT•• tury Park ti Ht, Sult• llOO. L.01 "'•••111"' It. St•. JU LINCOLN·MERCUR'f, I Calllornl• corporation OEl'ENOANT · JEAN AL I! )(ANO ER, en lndlvldua1. end OOES I llwOUQl'l 10, lnclu1lw SUMMC>flS UNO la THI INOl ... MDIMT AO. Angeltt, CA taolil, wtllell Is IN place C:.Ste Meu, CA '1UI l'tnt1S MINllT•ATIOM 01' ISTATIS ACT. of buSIMH of lN lllldenlgned In •II Pul>ll!,f>ed Oranoe C:O.st O.lly Piiot. Ell•I• ol HELEN 8 . RIED. malle<tpeNl/tl"910llleHlat•OfMld Aprll19,2•,May3,10,m• CASE NUMBER 1Jlfft NOTICE I y.., Mve -swd, Tiit DecH..O. dececle11t, wttNn lour montm llfl•r lhe NOTICE IS Hl!RE8V GIVEN '"" llnLpul>ll<•llon of this notice. 8AR8AAA LEE A9SHIER II.ti llll!d '"''° Aptll u. me. ... rein e 11911tlon IOI' PniOele of Wiii 15A8ELLA WOLF end Codlellt -IW luuence of Let· EJ<t<utrlx Ol lhe Wiii of I••• THl.9fl\tflfMY and for Aulllorlt• tht •llove named decedent llOll lo Admlnl>ler -the lndepen-IUCHAaO C. KURTZ dent Administration Of EllelH Act.,. 2'4• Cotltwy ,..,_bit. f•,.nc• to wtllcll I• ,,... tor IUf'tller Stollt '* parllculen, and 111•1 the llrna end Le• AllfAI-. CA...., place of '-lno ,,. -lln been Ml Tel: 0111 271.a.. ,... Mer JO, 1'11, •I 10 00 • m • I" the • .....,.., fw lu<wlrla courtroom of ~-Ko >of Mid Pvt>llslled Or-Coast Delly PllOC. court. •t 100 Cli;k CMlttr Or1w West. Aprll It, u. Mey>. IO, 1'71 Ill,,_ CllYof ~M-.Ctlltwntt UIMI Utt.7 ------------1 c ... rt MAY lllK'* "91MI yeu wlllleul PUBLIC NOTICE fOllt Nlflt Merci Wll"S '(OU ""'°"" •1111111 '° .. .,.... ••ad Ille llllorlftAllOll l-------------· ··-· "CTITIOUS e\ISINISS AYISOt Ullell IN ..... --.-. NAMI STAT•MaNT II TrlltWlel _. ..... COlltr• UI. Th• ro11-1no PfflOll 11 c1o1no tN•I· 1111 ••clle11cl• • ,.,, ..... 4•• u•. MU H ' ,._.... llMlln cit )0 ..... Lee I• SOUNO AFFAIR RECORDING lnlarlftaclelt• ...... · STUOIOS. 2n1.Q Croeldy W•y. lotlnt• I TO THE OEFENOANT: A CIVIi Ana. CA. complelnl llu bHll tiled by tM c,ron Coatings Co Inc., • pltlnllll fl9ilMt you. CS.. lootno1e•1 Calltoml• c~•llon. 12)1 Pl ... ftll • If YOU •ISll to de,.IWS lhll Oattd Mays. mt. WILLIAM L .. JOMM, c.wnty()eR MAMM&MAMM Or .• ear-. Ce. tll20 tawtull, vou ITIU\t, wttllllt *OWYt•lt., -------------4 Tiiis butlNM "~led bY • COi'• 11111 •um-It """" Ofl -· II .. PUBIJC NOTICE POl'•llOn. wllh 1111\ c_.1 • writ..., pleadlno In CatCMAaO G. MAttNI ....... •11.C:.....et\IC. ........ 1,CAt1lt1 A......., ... ,,..._ ...,..,....., Or .. CNM Deity 1"1191 ,__., •• 10, '" ""' lawt PUBLIC NOTICE Cyron eoetln(ll Co .. Inc. rttponH to tl>e cornpl•lnl tit • Vl"91nl• L L.eei>er. Justice Court. you lnlA1 Ill• wttll the 9K/TrM1urer court • '""""' ~ Ml n.11 ... ~ was fll«I wltll Ille or•• PIHdlf'tl lo De tnti111 111 Ille Coilnty Cieri< ot Oranoe County on do<ktl.I ~youclo1D,,.,,..d9f...it "'-'1121, 1'7L will be ent ..... 111POn aPCllkallon of IN Htl7M pt•lnllfl • ..er 11111 QOUt1 may enter• l"llO!lllllcl 0r.,ge Coell Dally 1"1101 Jud9itrntt1I eo-11111 you ~ h ,.fief MaY J, t0, 17, 1•, H7t 1661·11 c1tmand4td In lltt comptalnl, Wllldl ------------COUid l'lwtl Ill .... l.,,_t ot ...... PUBUC NOTICE MOTICI TOatlotTOlll SUl"l•tOtt COUH Of' TMI IT AT I Of' CAl.ll&Oa!ftA l'CMt TMI COUNTY Oil O.,•HOI •....u71 ~stale flf BESS 101"'4 NIQOLLS OLNl!Y, O.C..WCI. HOTICI! IS HIRl!IY GIVl!N 19 llte crHllorl of the aDo\le Nrned Cit~ 111111 ell ..,_ MYlllll cltlrM aMf\11 llw Miit Mecltn4 ere rAQUll'lld lo itlt tl11tm. wltll Ille -ury -•'-111 '"' office Of tlw clerll " 11111 •MW t11lltltd c~. or to iwotetll tMfll1 wltlt tit• neuoary ve11c11era, It •~ v-rtloned al '°'t Office ...... ll•IM voron taitt.s. c;.-., wt1tc1t 11 IM Ill•• "' _._. ef Irle under•""" 111 ... fllel~ l*Ulnlne 10 the ••'* ... ., •~. wltltln ,..,, -IM alltr lllt flrtl JllUDllUllOll of llllt MCl(.t De ... A41rll ... tm. Wlllltm f!fk.111 OIMV ~eflht Wlll .. llW ...... lleirntd0.C"8fll CICll.. .. T9"Jlollll ... YMT•itOI ,....OftlulM .. ~ ... w..-a.....,ca ..,,. ., .. ,,,....., , ....,..., .... __ "'9111Nd er.,. c:.Jil o.ttY Ill ... MAO, 10, 11, U , mt 1/U.lt te'1nt ef ,,_., Of ~y W 9"llr rel .. f ~ 111 Ille ctmjllelnt • •. Ii ............ -Mwtc:e., ... •*""Y ltt .... tMttW, ............ ... ,......., ..... .,., """"' re..-e,N .... -V .. ll6ltl•t6Mf. OA TEO: ,...,._y I, tm DONALD L ARMOUlt, C.ltl'll By Jl!AHNINI! OATH. OttlUtY • Tiie -0 "comcilel"'" ln<lllCIH c~COrntMollnt, "ptelnlllf" lnctudet crtu•co111111alnt111. "O.l•ndenl" 1nc1t1dH cl'Ot'°"ltlldtlll, '11'19Ultr J11cl\lttl IM .iwet Ind IMKYllM 'l11c1ueu tetttlnlne end 11euter A Wfllllll lllMdlnl. lflel"""' ... ~·-. dtmurrw, tic., ,.,,.,., • In ll'lt ,...m '"ulrtfl lly t.. C:.llt.rnl• Rlllel ef (»wt y-.,,...... ""°'"' IMlt .. tllM In Wt '*"" wllll pl.,,., 111"'9 fWt IM Cll'OOf IMI t copy IM,.-#U lltf ..... Oft .. tll plallll1"'1 etlOl'MY aM ell •a<h .i1111tllf Nt t~ed.., ... AltwlltY Tiit 11'"9 -t wmmoftl II ~ w\19d Oii • ,any m•y ,...,., tlefltl\dllll Ill "" ,,... ., terVIC. l'lf' ellclmlllt. -CCII f!S. 10 lllrtlltfl .is 40. 1Ml~••o .... 1,...eao• DUHOAI , .. .,..,. ........ ,. ....,..---.Cl ...... (JUllU .... ........... , "'4Mtff ""*llhtf Or .. ONtt Delly "'"" Maf S, 10, II, t4, '"' 1 nJ.lt '' '1 work hard all day long. So I sure ap_preciate being able to ride the bus to my job. That way I can relax all the way there and back instead of bucking traffic jams~' The bus makes life easier for a lot of QCople in Orange County. To find out how the bus can help y9u, call Orange County Transit District lnformation at 547-3311 or toll-free ZE.N1TH 7-3311from6AMto10 PM weekdays and 7 AM to 5 PM Saturdays. .. W~y M y 10 1978 "' Liability Reversal Sought MOTHER'S DAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH FROM 8:3Q A.M. DINNER FROM 3:00 P.M. "-........ ,.,. n. &.let OH NEWPORT BAY 'M/)7 w. C.oolt Hwy., 646--0'101 ORCHID CORSAGE $ ,,~ ORDER EARLY LIMITED SUPPLY~ LOCAL / CALIFORNIA / NATIONAL Police Tipped 200 But Silver-haired Bomb Bandit's at Large • • ut the omce or laving down the • NEWTON. Mass. <A Pl - Suspicious shopkeepers and public-spirited neighbors have s upplied police with tips on about 200 little old ladies the past six weeks, but the silver· haired bandit who twice held up a Newton bank is st.Ill aflarge. For a while, edgy bank tellers waited apprehensively for the round-faced little wo m an to m a rch in again. threaten to blow eve.cyone up and then demand more money. HER LAST ROBBERY was a month and a half ago. "I think she probably went ln· to retirement," said detective Charles Feeley. "When you're balling 1.000. you don't want to take a chance of dropping down to "66." The one-woman crime wave started St. Patrick's Day when a woman wearlne a knitted bat and carrying a plastic Ice cream bag s trolled to the middle win· dow of the Newton-Waltham Bank and Trust Co. in Newton. an affluent s uburb west of Boston. SHE HANDED THE teller a note sayina she bad a bomb and wanted money. The teller gave her l200 ln S20 bills. The woman turned and went out the side door. On March 28. she was back. The mochas operandi.,as policy s ay. wu similar. She wore a bat, tbls time a wide-brimmed rain hat. carried a whlte shop. ping ba1. went to thc.-same teller and delivered a bomb note de· mandlng $200. She took the money and zipped out the side door again. ''Every bank in the city is at· tuned to this and on the lookout," said Feeley. "It's a sensitive thing to them. and it's a sensitive thing to us." WIDELY CIRCULATED bank camera pictures show a plain. round-faced woman. who is matronly. possibly 60 years old with a deeply veined complexion and, all in all, rather ordinary looking. "Everybody tblnks he knows her." 'Feeley says. People report they have spotted her in the supermarket, • street. • .. We 've identified a couple of • hundred little old ladies, and • none of them really looked Uke .• the pictures ... Feeley said • ~-...-. • HERB • EITHER THE NOSE or the • FRIEDLA~DER • chin or some other facial feature • · • • turns out to be wrong. But the • IS MAKING • Ups still come in. • GREAT DEALS • "Anytime anybody sees a lit· • F RE E • lie old lady with a knit hat or a • • ~~~"ah~. l~k s~~~~3:· i~~~; : 50 GAi~ : says. • OFGAS • ................................ ~· .... ,_ ....... Occ St d ts • orml.('llA"tt:~ • U en • -----~,., ... ..,. • It u..., .. ,_....,,_nr 4r • e HONDA e tr Make Grads' : uim, ' 11::.:=" ~ • .•• * • * * * * * * * * ·: Dean's List • MG-TRIUMPH • : e JAGUAR e ! A number or Orange Coast stu· • FIAT· LANCIA • dents have been named to the • Qt nw·~.:::=: .. ·:..m • 1978 graduate dean's list ot ""* * * * * * * * * * * *• University Scholars and Artlsts • e TOYOTA e • at Cal State Long Beach. • · ••••·••.,."•....... • The list recognizes achieve· • c ........... r ui '" .. • . . •* * * * * * * * * * • ~ ment an academics and In cam-• pus activities. l'10TORH0~1 F. • On the list are· ., S.\LES & RE~TAl.S • " •• ...,.... 9Ndl -Jo11n F P•l"OCI•. J-"· • R F.SrR ,. •· ""'.OW • C.IOWell, El!Dbetll Rllenour, Ft•M.H 0. Minn, Jt ,.. r . • •, _. -llnule E. Glblion. ::'>7 7777 f ' I 500 .., SHI aMcll -FteMlne L. R .. lencl, L'"" • •hl • .X • -tr StonUd _, OorlN Hume. .. * • * * * • * * * * .. w~~~~·'i'.:~:,L~~:S.:';!:,.. e LEASING e • Jemes UWH<IC,. • "" ..... _....... .......... • ~ ..... -Ellr.Hetll GecwY, 0.vld Moo-• hr A._ 11Me 11M,.. _ ·~~-IC-LErk.. • 537·7777 Ext.600 • Ulle~-0.leA. .......... f ****** * ** •·• ... Gay Market Did Dr. Flcmzer win• Osccr? Emrepreneurs C~hing In SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Entrepreneurs are « cashing in on this city's big gay population through coupon booklets offering discowtts at businesses owned by homosexuals or employing large num· be rs of them.' One hundred businesses -from baths to bars, restaurants to remodelers and hotels to hair stylists -paid for advertisements in the $12.95 booklet. It offers discounts of up to 20 percent. SO FAR, SOME 2 .... booklets have been sold from a first-run pribting of ID.000 a few weeks agQ, said promoter Jim Hoffman, 32. ··n •s too early to tell if it wlll be a fabulous success or just another curiosity," he said. "But 1l 's beginning to snowball ... He estimated the city's homosexuals spend some Sl.4 billion a year. They are believed to number one of every seven of the city's 650,000 re· sident.s, alt.bough some estimates are higher. ONE ENTREPRENEUR WHO CREDITS the booklet with a boom in bis business is auto mechanic Bob Senter, who paid $100 for bis ad. "It's the best thing that ever happened to my business," be said, noting that he's booked up ror three weeks in advance. He s aid the sexual preferences or h is customers are of no concern to him. · · "U It doesn't affect their carburetors. I don't care what they do in bed," he said. ,.- Unfortunatety, there wun't a categoty for good dental health. Not eYen for a eupporting role like Dr. Ranl.er'a. But the Costa Mesa Dentilt ts wetttlng on a new ptot. It's a mvstefY. How some people get all their dentlt worf( don• at no cost to themselves. He calls it a wht~ ... lt. ts It the dental insurance? ResetVe a chair for your own private showing. ACT TODAY! Dr. Arnold H. Ranzer, DDS 3701. 17111Street Costa Mesa 642.0112 Rape Prevention ~::::::::::==========;;;;;-Program Slated Remember Mom with more than acarcl. MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR WHOLESALE to ... PUBLIC Come In To See Our •• Spring Line Just In Time For w ........ uc .. .,-.. •~·· ...... , • )...> Orange Coast residents are invited to a rape· prevention program June 3 sponsored by the Santa Ana police Department Explorers Post and Santa Ana College. Offering the tbree-bour . program will be Frederic Storaska, author or "How to Say No to a Rapist -and Survive" and founder of the Na· tional Organization for the Prevention of Rape and Assault. Tickets are $3 in advance and $4 at the door Proceeds will go to the explorer post. Lectures will be offered at 11 a .m. and 7 p.m. at the college gymnasium. Tickets may be obtained at the Santa Ana Police Department, the college ticket booth or by dialing 834-4169. Campaign Goal: Improved Image SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico <AP> -The Puerto Rlcan eovernment is launcbJ.n& a slx·week TV ad· vertislng campaign to improve tbe lsland'1 Imai•. Gov. Carlos Romero said tbe purpose o( the $800,000 campaign is to counter ne1aUve DeW# stories and promote Puerto Rico'• culture and it• business and vacation potential The commercials will be shown in Atlan~ Boston, Chicago, Los Anaeles, New York and PhJladelpb.la. weMe~nt®r~eptar room..... v• ca et tectlona and bMut ful wet bar unit. 3 fMt-8 fMt, Mlow C06t Join us Mother's Day May14 treat Mom in person or buy a.gift certificate. -Open at 12 noon. ·G; R•BTAURANT8 ® 17920 BROOKHURST FOUNTAIN VALLEY • -\I -GOil>N1" .I>., ~TO ~OVIDe' f:~ 1'LL YC>Uft. ~·M>~ • Wednesday, May 10. 1978 DAIL V PILOT ..113 Anxiety ,(J (;ause of HypeMJentilatWn I By DR. STEINCROUN Dur Di. &dJI~: ' wu sure I was havin$ a baart at· tack. While shopping the other day J &ot a sudden pain in my chest and had trouble rtlllng mr Ju~$ wilb air. So 1 got myself off in a corner of tbe s~enna.rket and began takiQg deep b.re.aths, lHti~ up l'JlY chest as tar as lt would eo to rm my lunes. Mter • le.JN m.in.l.&W I lelt wo.rae. I beeao lo pen;pire My heart felt as if it were running away with 1tse\f. I ha'd palplta· tiQOS. I felt tl~ey and faint. SQID40N ~qte a lone. caw I was distr~ssed. and heiped me and my groceries lnto my car. After resting a while, l felt less faint. I was able to driYe home. I've had quite a few of ~ese attac~. I've ~f!P tdld they are due •to nervouan~s. !'Vit bor· rowed some tranquilizers from a friend, but -they don-It seem to help. 1 e~ 4he na:t ~is a ~dart ito a .doctc1r1 \Y'•? -11.n. IL COMMDrf: First. one don't: <Mii USlD AS <UDY DISH .gapo1sH •NUTOISM •JillYDU $UP•NKI • UGWS aoaumo ALSO AYAtlAllUl fiM,ICIM llOl£SI ~49" fOOD PROCISSOI c.., ................ _... .... . ..,,,..,_ .................. . CRYSTAL CURIOS <~~.·~::~:~.-:-_· ~. ~:~ .. ...-rl' 9Zll J to 6 •MINS' SIUS6~ ff t 99 CAJUUDIPJ IPICtll .. .•\ fJ.I DM't PllOT WedM9day, M-, 10, 1171 o.ily ~tuft,_ ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER DEBBIE M9SER HOLDS FLAPPING CAPTIVE IN IRVINE Barn Owl Which Went Hunting Hum•n• Taken Into Cuatody by Authorities Irvine Predator Held Barn Owl Captured After Attacks on Peop/,e By PHILIP ROSMARIN Of .... Dally ...... '~" A young barn owl, whose nfolher ap. AT5:30A.M. TU~SDAY,policereceiveda parenlly hadn't taught it the niceties of call from another resident nearby, on Walnut planned community living went hunting Avenue. . . .. Irvine residents this week. "There s a big owl on lop or my roof, The residents complained to authorities from the safety of their Willow area houses. the man said ... He won't let me out!" Miss Moser sped to his rescue. She SPotted the owl in a tree The owl was captured bv animal services offi cers and handed over Lo a veterinarian who plans Lo· teach 1t to hunt smaller prey. then release 1t. "First we tried to coax 1t out or the tree." s he reported "ft d1dn 't work. We took a fish· ing net, and ta ped 1t to the end of a broomstick. climbed a ways. and were going to try to throw the net over him. DEBBIE MOSER, WHO grabbed the owl from a net on which it alighted. said it began stalking people Monday night. One man calJed to complain the owl was :ittacking him every time he tried to get out or lhe house on Fireside Circle. "BUT ntE OWL JUMPED right onto the net. As (a helper> lowered it down, I grabbed it. .. Miss Moser said she explained she would have to wait till mor.ning to try to capture the bird. because owls see a lot better in the dark than animal control services oCficers do. The bam owl went to University Park Veterinary Hospital. where Or. Kent Walker examined the bird, pronounced it Cit but Possibly <.'Onfused about diet matters. and vowed to set it straight then free .. Jarvis Meas11re Debated Mesa Mayor, Real Estate Man Trade J'imm Costa Me s a May or Ed McFarland has declared lhat the Jarvis-Gann Property Tax Initiative "would defraud the a people" and do nothing to help those it says it wall Joining in a spirited debate on Proposition 13. Orange County administrative aide Paul Raver. a Costa Mesa resident. told a group or west side homeowner!\ that they might as well forget a bout the development of Fairview Regional Park if the . Jarvis iniliati ve passes. BUT COSTA Mesa real estate man Don Bull. like Raver. a former city council candidate. countered: "I don 't think it's go. mg to hurt the city lhat bad ... Bull suggested that the city make up for reduced revenues by charging ror ser vices such as fire calls for home flooding a nd increasing the cos ts for recreaUon programs. The effect or the passage of the Jarvis initiative on the Newport-Mesa Uniried School District was much on the minds of ·the 35 Me s a West Homeowners Association mem· bers who turned out for the de· bate at Rea Middle School m Costa Mesa . DISTRICT SCHOOL Superln· tendent John Nicoll said the loss of $18 million in property tax revenues to school would have a significant effect." He said the district's Com· munity Service Tax would be wiped out, therefore cancellng the use of district facilities for community groups and some after-school athletics. Mayor McFarland said he backs the Behr Bill. Proposition 8 on the JWle 6 primary ballot. Re said lhe Behr bill would provide financial rellef to rent· ers and senior citizens. pro· visions not provjded for in the Jarvis lnitlltive. McFAIUAND SAID paMage of PropaslUon 13 would cripple the downtown redevelopment agency. increase big govern- ment al the expense of city rule and create "a tremendous windrall" ror businesses. McFarland's comments drew criticism from Virgil Elkins, Orange County chairman of the pro·J arvls United Organl.zation of Taxpayers. EUtlDI said "It's about Ume people put 1he government W'I· der control." He cited wbal he ••Id ,v• a 111 percent rise ln the slate ~ ,and a 121 J)fl'cenl blke tn property laxes over tho past two years. Follow\QI a preeeataUon t>y county employee Raver, Elklos t" I charged lhat county government is being run by "a bunch of Viet- namese and illegal aliens run· ning up and down the halls lry· inJ:? to look busy." RAVER EXPLAINED that the Jarvis initiative would cut the county's current Sl63.2 million slice of property tax re- venues down to $68 million. The county's overall budget for '78 was $544.2 million. This would mean cutbacks in county fire personnel. county . run libraries <two in Costa Changes In Jail Mesa> 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 tn the county 's Sl4.7 million harbors, beaches and parks fund, said Raver. Rounding out the pro·J arvis side .was lrvlne resident John Sherwood who contended the state constitution assures ade· quate funding of schools "'--OC Sheriff Gates To Appeal Order ' . r i . By TOM BARLEY °' flllt Dlllly l"tlM 14aff Orange County Sherm Brad Gates said that he intends to appeal part or a federal court order calling for immediate changes in the operation oC the Santa Ana County Jail. Gates said adherence to all the directives issued by Judge William P. Gray would cost county taxpayers at least $300,000 for alterations he feels are unnec~sary. GATES SAID the county has already incurred legal costs of $200,000 in fighting lhe federal lawsuit. "I think the public in Orange County expects me to resist t.bis kind of financial burden , .. Gates said. "We will be filing an ap- peal immediately." Gates condemned criticism of the county jail and its office.-. as unjustified "and I believe the public agrees with me on that point. We've been letting mlnori· ty areas oJ the community come in and dictate to us and this is the cause of many of our problems," the sheriff said. Bicycle ROOeo Set for Kids Saddleback Valley boys and g&rls. ace 7 to 10, are invited to attend a bicJ(cl• rodeo Saturday from t a.m. to 2 p.m. in lb• Mls· slon Viejo HJ&b School parting lot. Event.a include. an obatade courae and drtvtn.s contata. A bike 1et~ theck will t>. made and bike Mitty wtU be tau1ht, apokeaman Dave M~., said. The rodeo Is epc)ftjoH(I ti~~ Scout. TrouP 728. GATF.S SAID he intends to rile a counte r suit against the American Civil Liberties Union CACLUl, the organization which took legal action on behalf of six jail inmates nearly three years ago. "Only 10 of the original 195 areas or complaint in the lawsuit were left when the Judge made his ruling," Gates said. "To me, lhat is a sure indication of the strength of the allegations that were made against us." Oates said t.be ACLU suit. C01Jt county taxpayers $200,000 in Je1al expense.. "Our legal ac- tion wtU ~ aimed at getting it, or most oltt, back," be said. J UDGE GllA Y'S order calls for Jail authorities to allow in· metes more Uroe to eat meals, increased communication with vlaitort more and better sleep. ln1 areas and better accesa to maaaitnes and aewspapera. Gates noted tod•y that every allegation of brutality by Jail of. ncua tuad been struck down by Jud1• Cray. He said the Judi• 1tmllarly rejected chuiea or Improper and 1nsufflcit!llt medical treat· ment at t.he Ja11. Judge Gray i.dued hJ.l IJJt of 10 dlrectlvea arter tourl na tbt county J11U and l-1Jtln• and eat- ln1 with inmates • LOCAL / CALIFORNIA Rental Bill Killed Age Bias Ban Defeated by Panel SACRAMENTO <AP> -A bill th•l would ban •1e discrlmina· lion by landlord.a baa died in a Senate committee, despite pleas for support from parents and senior citizens groups. The measure. SB 1688 by Sen. David Roberti. D·Los Angeles, rell four votes abort of passage Tuesday on a 2-4 roll call in the 11-member Senate Governmen- tal Organization Committee. IT WAS mE second time this year an ~e-related rental bill was killed m the Senate. A more limited bW dealing with rental discrimination against persons with cbUdren died on the Sen•te floor in January. With some exceptions, SB 1988 would make it Illegal for a land lord to refuse to rent to in- dividuals or families on the basis of the renters' ages. Viola- tions would carry a minimum fine of $500. The bill would not apply to owners of nursing homes or senior citizen facilities, mobile- home parks or college residence halls . AN AIDE, MICHAEL Woo, said Roberti might seek to re· vive the bill but had not made up his mind. Bill supporters said the ability of landlords to pick and choose tenants on the basis of age worked a hardship against senior citizens, young adults, minority groups and families with chiJdren. "There is a myth goin} around lhat senior citizens are regarded as ideal tenants . That's not true." said Roberti. adding that there was a tendency to divide New Zip Codes Effective in Musion Viejo Four zip codes for the Mission Viejo community are officially effective, says Elmer Meis or the Mission Viejo Post office. The codes are: -29691 -Persons residing west of Marguerite Parkway to the San Diego Freeway. down to just south of Avery Parkway. -92692 -Persons living east of Marguerite. -92690 -Persons using a post ofrice box at lhe Mission Viejo faci lity, 28081 Marguerite Parkway. -92693 -Persons using a post office box at the San Juan Capistrano office. MISSION VIEJO'S former zip. 92675, now is the mailing code for the city of San Juan Capistrano, Meis said. According to Meis, the Sota Ana main office ls set up for the new codes, but has yet to set up machines to handle them. ONCE 1ruE MACHINES are set up, which Meis said should be any time. incorrect zips will definltelys low down deliveries. Additional Information is available by calling the Mission Viejo facility, 495·5020 or the Santa Ana office, SJe-2513. 'Hand Grm' OK lnNewport - Surfing Styk After they were convinced that the event wasn 't exactly what it sounded like. Newport Beach City Councilmen •P· proved a permit for body surf"mg and band g&an contest. Councilmen , slightly taken a back by the request, were re· Ueved to find out lbal a hand igun. in this case, ls not a weapon, but. rather. the latest thing in surra.ng. It's a foot-long plastic device held in the band which gives body surfers more mobility in rkS1n1 a wave. The conl.e$t, ·~ by the manufacturera of UM! hand aun. will be held Jul>' 2t and 30 from a a .m . to 4 p.m. at l8tb Street. Contest organisers needed council approval lo get the s tandard aurfln& regulations •alved for their event. Councllm'an Don Strauu asked or1aniters, "Have you contldered any other name than 'hud1un'?" Toll Fee Rem•ina SAN l'RANCISCO <AP> - Golden Ga~ Brids• oommutera wtll continue pa,)'lfll' a S1 toll for the tlme betna after a court or- der that tolls be cut ln baJf 1tart· lq today WU lJ>pealed TQes. day. young and old lnto rental "ghel· tos." "ONE HAS A SIGHT to choose his neighbors," he said. "But that right ls limited to not tJenylng another peraon the ria,bt to housing." Dora Ashford. director of the Fair Housing for Children c.oati· lion. contended that allowing SenunoPTO Plmu PotlU£k A potluck dinner. hosted by the Settaoo Student Teacher Pare nt Organization, la scheduled at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the intennediate scbool....2t662 Jeronimo Road, El Toro. Gues speaker is Mission Viejo High School math teacher Michael Nardoua. He wiU share his experiences of a year-long hike over the Pacific Crest Trail. Taking a sabbatical from teaching, Nardoza hiked 2.800 miles from Mexico to the Cana- dian border. ( Piiot Lo.a-. ) landlords Dot to rent to persons with children acted as a form of "defacto discrimiHUon •gainst minorities and women ... Si¥ty·lwo percent of female renters. 41 percent of black ren- ters and 54 percent oC Spanish s urname renters have minor chlldren. she said. BUT DOUG GILES. a lobbyist for the California Association of Realtors, said persons who do not want to live In apartments that allowed children or with persons ol a different age should have that right. "There are resldentlal pro- perties which serve only special age groups or families without c h i ldre n and hundreds of thous ands of Clifomians seek those facilities," he contended, SEN. MILTON MARKS. a supporter of the bUI. attempted before the vote to keep the bill alive by having it referred to the Local Government Committee. which be chairs and which ap- proved the narrower bill. His motion failed on a ~4 vote. one short of the six aye votes needed for approval. Meadowlark Song. Recalls Boyhood By AaTHVa R. VINSEL °' .. o.MJ "" ..... SHIMMERING GREEN weeping wiUows and towering sycamores stood sentinal over the bubbly, stone-strewn creek beds of boyhood, where a naUve-rainbow trout lurked and you could still smell the real world. An uncommooly heard meadowlark's familiar "whip-whip- whiddly-wheep" in the midst of Orange County suburbia re· minded me just the other day. One remembers that sweet, strange song from years ago, when it echoed between the high forest walls of Lopez Canyon. on the opening day or trout season. THE RISING SUN would splash the far fortress-like green mountainside and one could still taste the strong 4:30 a .m. cof· fee, riding out two-lane potholed Edna Road in San Luis Obispo _County. . Wild mustard higher than a small boy's eye told the world 1t was a glorious spring when a fishing rod was a wonder to bold in your bands. Splashing, spritzing crystal waters of Lopez Creek made a mad dash toward lhe sea through a gauntlet or gravel. pebbles and rock. And ll we got there early enough on opening day, we could bear the shrieks of nighthawks golng home from the hunt. Red-winged blackbirds presided at fence post podiums beside the road and bob-a-links made their own melodic dawn speeches. Y0\1 COlJLD CATCH the smell of ba~ rrying somewhere nearby as we waded through poisan oak, hoping for a wicker creel run or rainbows, maybe 12to14 inc hers, nestled vtNML in leaves of cool, crisp fems. Now. you ftnd them in plastic foam t.rays under see-through plastic film at super markets. We'd start at lbe WPA Bridge by the gravelworks. then move on up Lopez Canyon to fash in front of a little cabin where Pop'6 old work buddy Harry lived in bashful bachelorhood with a couple of devoted bounddogs. Born in Brooklyn, Harry got as far away from civilization as he could. He drove bis Jeep 20 miles eacb way to wortc. He was bound to the ground, deep back there in Lopez Canyon, but he owned a Piper CUb be kept at county alrport, a magic place leased by the· Hoover Brothers and where my scout master was operations manager. I DON'T KNOW whatever happened to Harry and his dogs, but they don't live in Lopez Canyon anymore. The dairy where he and Pop were mech~nics and drew paychecks is now a com- plex or artsy. craftsy boutiques. They call It thee Cremery. and somebody probably has Boston fems banging in Pop's old workshop. He is at 1.0.0.F. Cemetery just off south Marsh Street but at least within listening distance of a busy truck stop and a run· ning stream. When I heard the meadowlark the other day and noticed that brilliant, vibrant yellow wild mustard in this lush new springtime, I remembered those fLSbing days of yesteryear. STATE AND COUNTY authorities have damned Lopez Creek now and buried a boy•a childhood landmartcs under thousands of acre-feet of water, murdering a bit of magic that can never be again. Tbemeadowlartcs and f wouldJustsay: Damn Them. . . Butwbate.rthlygoodeouldltdo? Viejo'• GreealJeli MAC to Discuss .. Jarvis 'Impact' Potential plant loss lbroup rech.lced maintenance of Mission vieJo's areenbelts, parks and median 1lrip1 should the Jarvls·GaM property Lax llmltation lnh.latlve pau wm be dltcussed Thursday by Municipal AdvlJofy Council me•.,_,.· County officials have tolcl MAC members the controversial in· iUaUve's pasaage June 6 could spell diluter for the area's Gpell spaces and parb. That's because, county of· flcl•ls said, there wouldn't be enough money available for up- keep of exisUng greenbelt and park areu. MAC members will bear re- ports from Davo Kina and Joe Cardello ot tile county'• En· vlroameata.I Manaiement Alen- cy. Tony Bonacoral and V(nce E1po1lto ~ ~ &Uulon Viejo Company will alto preaent ln· formation on plant Ufc in the event ~ redllced upkeep. Tbo 7:30 p.m. study seulon wtll tllte place at MAC omce1, noa1 La Pu Rd., SuJte aK. tfV Bnrglar Gets 82.221 in Loot Property valued •t $2,221 was tatt.n from a Ml11lon Viejo horn• by a burtlar who lifted Ule window olf lta track to 1aln en· try. Orance County aberlfr's or. fleer-. aakl .)49welry, a televltlon aet and cameras were taken from the home or retiree Richard Carl Oppenbelmer. 81. ~ of 2ee$2 Vl,a del So&. The vktJm •. was away on vacation at the llm•. · LOCAL I BUSINESS o.lly f'I• Slaff,.... THUNDEROUS CLAPS SHAKE, RATTLE AND ROLL ALONG ORANGE COAST Jessica and D•vid MacFarl•nd Protect Ears From Noise ~ooms Finally Cease By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI ti• O.Uy f'llOI SUH Ellen ~th White dreamed of the day when the sonic booms, or earth tremors or whatever they were., would stop, and now they have, at least tern. poranly. And furthermore, there is ;ln explanation for the thunderous claps that shook, rattled and rolled the Orange Coast recently for a period of nearly a month. NAVY SHIPS MANEUVERING off San Clemente Island and firing cannonades from their guns -complicated by freak atmospheric condi· lions -were to bl ame, authorities say "Thal's all it was." says Dr. Jack Ryan. of Cal State Fullerton's Department of Earth Sciences. Navy orfteials confirmed that exercises were' being conducted during the period in which a few of the concussions knocked pictures on walls a skew and made window panes wiggle. The worst shocks made some small children cry and Mrs. White, a southeast Huntington Beach worn an, swears that one or them bent her aluminum kitchen window frame so it won 'l open . .. MY HUSBAND BOB WAS sitting at the table having coffee one morning and he liked to've Jumped into the kitchen s ink." declares Mrs White. The Whites live near Banning Avenue and Magnolia Street. at 20701 Hula Circle, near the beach. Caltech seismologists who denied the shocks Workshops Set For Businesses More than 1,600 people have attended small· business workshops offered as part of the Sad· dleback College Forums for Learning program. Those who haven't will get another opportunity this month. Two workshops co-sponsored by the college. the Service Corps of Retired Executives and the U.S . Small Business Administration will take place Saturday and May 20. THE INITIAL SESSION IS a "pre-business seminar" dealing with the elements necessary for planning a small business. It will run from 8:30 a.m . to 4 p.m. in room 313 of the science and mathematics building. The program on May 20, "Start Your Own Business." will lake place In the same room and include an evaluation of current trends affecting small businesses and methods of sharpening awareness of small business opportunities. The pre-business workshop costs $10 a person or $17 a couple by pre·registration or $12 and $24 at the door. The other session costs $15 a person or ~ a couple by pre-registration and $17 and S34 at the door. ADVANCE REGISTRAnON FOR either or both events may be accomplished in Building Q on the Saddleback lower campus. Mail-In regisll'al.ion must be accompanied by a check or money order coverlntJ the fees and a note indicating which session 1s desired. The Community Services registration office is located at 28000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. Serrano Group . Plans Art Sale An art show and aucUon have been scheduled Saturday for the benefit or the Serrano In· termediate School Music Boosters' Association at the Lake Forest Sun and Sail Club, 24752 Toledo W a.y, El Toro. Custom.framed works ol art by contemporary American and European artists, u well u works of such muters as Cbaaau, Picasso, Miro, Dall and Calder, will be on exbibll at 7 p.m. wJth the auction be8lnnini at 8, club secretary Fk> GWl· dersen said. The event features a n~hoet bar with refresh· ments for a donation of $1.50 per person. ProceedJ will be used t.o buy uniforms for members of the school band, Ms. Gundenen said. MV FirRl Joins Van Line Syste1D · Gordon Movln1 " Storage, In~., 2S728 Vla Fabrlcante, Ml .. (Qn VleJo, has been named A a1ent for AUas Van Lina, Irie., a oaUonwlde household 1oodl carrier baaed tn Evansville, Ind. The ~al company bu Gperat.ed ln Mlulon Viejo for mor~ than four yeal"B. Ila faclUtles In· elude a 121,000-cublc-root warehouse. could be caused by earthquake activity said they received reports from as far inland as Riverside . ._but said most came from the Orange Coast. ·'It just got worse a nd worse,'' Mrs. White said at the time. THE HOUSEWIFE IS STILL mad about her bent patio-view window, which she can't open to get the breeze. She says it's a wonder the glass didn't shatter. "I'll give you $10 if you can open it ... she said. Dr. Ryan explains it is nothing to be alarmed about, adding that shock waves from the guns often richochet off dense atmosphere and back to earth this lime or year . lie. however. may live 111land. PRIZES! PRIZES! PRIZES! PRIZES! We Cater To Loveable Rascals SALE WILL ALSO BE HELD IN OUR SEAL B~CH STORE ·---c.; w~. ~ 10. 191e DAILY PILOT A J3 B Wmpany Onofre Supplg Store Reports Stat~ Seeking Bids Gains Net Income of Rosamoor Co rp . Laguna Hllls, Increased to $750,000, or 23 cents a share. for the second quarter ~ed Marci\ 31, with $238 000 or 7 cedts for the ilke quarter ot fiscal \977. This bro.utht net In· come for the six months to $1,954,000 or 60 cents a Bids are being soufht by the CaUforula Department o Parks and Recreatton for tM installation and operation 'I-a campers supply store at San Onoire State Beach. Bids will be accepted for the five· year contract at the department's concession office, Room 1147·19, 1416 Ninth Streel, Sacramento until 2 p.m. May 16. Prospective bldd~rs can purchase the prospectus and bid forms for $5 a\ the Pendleton Coast State Parks area office at 3030 Avenlda del Presidente, San Clemente, or by mall from Department or Parks and Recreation, Concession Office. P.O. Box 2390, Sacramento, 95811. Checks should be me made to State or California Department of Parks and Recreations. For more information c all 918-445·9060. ~ Clvll Grumbling la GloomyGus In the DAILY PILOT sh a re. on revenues of -pii!;eiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--~~;;m;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~p;;;;;;;;;mt-S22.8 mUUon1 compared d . with $722,000 or 22 cents ran pen1ng on revenues or $14.6 milli9n for the cor· aema responding "Period of lls· • //fa cal 1977. /// 4 FOOT SCREEN T. v. SECOND·QVARTER revenues increased to $10.1 million from $.5.9 million, UP. 71 percent from the like quarter a year earlier. due to the delivery of 165 residen· tial units during the quarter compared with 69 a year earlier. Ross W. Cortese, chairman of the board. said profit margines im· prov e d during the second quarter as re· venues increased faster than fixed costs. AT LAGUNA Hills Leisure World, the com· pany's primary opera· tion. 119 units were de· livered during the second quarter. com. pared with 65 in the like quarter or 1977 . Deliveries at the com· pany·s Join( venture con· dom in1um project 1n Palm Springs totaled 46. compared with four a year earlier. II SEEN BY 100,000's IN DON JOSE. HOWARD JOHNSONS, SHAKEY'S P1ZZA, HOLIDAY INNS& HILTON HOTELS NATIONALLY, NOW HAS A HOME MODEL AT A 25" T.V. PRICE. $795 ==:-~~ 6R."-$895 7fL~$lOH OuASAR, G.E. OR SONY PROJECTORS GIVING BEAUTIFUL. BRIGHT COLOR "'r.V. NOT AVAILABlE ON THE COMMON SYSTEMS YOU MAY HAVE SEEN. * 500% BRIGHTER * WASHABUSCREENS * 2 YR. PARTS & LABOR WARRANTEE * BLANK VIDEO CASSETTES RCA 4 HR.19.00.SONY2HR.13.00 * fM.l 'MIO-.o C>WM.I. , WllO (I.WE, ...... ,. ~"'"' * 6. 7 FOOT + OVERHEAD PROJECTORS AVAILABLE * RCA, SONY, ZENITH VIDEO RECORDER $850 &ti HOME VIDEO CENTERS 17071 MAGNOLIA. FOUNTAIN VALLEY o BU<. so. OF 405) 847-5005 G te X MOVIES OI V'IDU CAS$ETTES mT -stll list FU TUllSRI TO VIKO CASSETTES FRANCHISES AVAILABLE FOR SELECTED AREAS MON .. SAT. JOA,..."*' SUN. J2 NOON·SPM DRAWING ON sso UNITED STATES SAVINGS BOND LOOK FOR GUM DROPS TheCown -. . . ----.. ~~ ------ ,\ f-1 CWLY Pll OT Continental Imports Imported especial! y for Mother's Day from the Continent of Europe. Many gifts to warm her heart and delight her. Please come in and see our large collection of Tea Sets, Cup and Saucer Sets Hand-Painted Bowls, Planters, Clocks, Music Boxes; Candle Holders, Flowers Capo De Monte and Figurines, Llandro' Pieces, Soup Tureens and much much more all at CONTINENTAL IMPORTS in South Coast Plaza Village. 556-6131 MOTHER'S DAY OR ANY DAY, The ORAOON LADY Has the best Of Delicious CHINESE FOOD For Your Oriental Palate 1st Ftoor- Mercantile Bl~ .~·O"AOON LAOY 546-1147 L'ACADEMIE Art Gallery .. J Etchings, engravings, lithograph" - fine graphics of all kinds -or have favorite prinL or photo framed. by our quality experts. Cards for aH occasions by ,,__f . . . ~ • ~~ 4th floor-Mercantile Bldg. 557-3611 Crystal "DEWDROP VASE" from Kosta. Sweden $18.50. Handsomelv. gift boxed, compli~ntary giftwrap. ~ S"'lt4U lff Se~~ lsr floor-Mercantile Bids. 979-8827 .. FREEi Cymbldlum orchid to Mothers on Saturday and Sunday. MOTHER'S DAY SPECIALS! Parakeets 40% offl Regularly S12.99, now $7.99. Mandarin patakeet cages -Regularly $9.99, now $7.991 SPECIALS DAILY on the finest tn pedigreed puppies, eJCotlc birds & tropical f fsh at the world's f I nestl I . .. is brim ful~ of unique gifts! Old-fashiorfed handcrafted items, household accessories, a large selection of cards. Margaret presents a variety of unusual presents especially for Mother. . 557-2702 Marina Blffin Art Gallery/Art School honors Mother's Day with a 10% Discount Off on all art pieces and supplies through May 14th!! 549-2020 ~~ Mother's Day Luncheon Special EGGS BENEDICT CREPES ALA RAINE from noon on. Standard evening dinner menu starting at s pm 556-7525 DflLES F001WORKS I GIGI Available In canvas: white, beige, rust, navy, black, red, brown .-$19.99 Also in Leather: camel or rust-S24.99 We carry a large selection of casual and fashion footwear from Cherokee, Famolare, Bare Traps, Bass, La Vista, Natural Comfort -and imports from around the world. Bankamericard and Mastercharge welcome. 979-9252 .Mothers Dag ~it ~Uide Discover Orange County's most exciting Speclalfy Center. You'll find true adVenture In Its 70 unique shops. with merchandise from around the wor1d. I . , Enjoy a leisurely shopping spree, strolling cobblestone streets, trees In bloom, and the tantlllzlng aromas from outside cotes. Shopping Is a pleasant day - the Vf llage way. I &.n1ow« a Bear streett INSTEAD OF MOM TREATfNG YOU. TO THOSE DELICIOUS HOMEMADE CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES, THIS SUNDAY TREAT HER TO SOME OF THE VERY BEST AT THE COOKIE CUTI'ER. 1st floor.-Mercantile Bldg. 546-1911 COFFIE TIUIDE& The Trader specializes in most exclusive line of home cappuccino & espresso machines. Exotic Kona Coffee from Hawaii. COFFEE TRADER • Mercantile Bldg. 557-9678 ~ . 5ouc~ o/ W/iim6eg, GIFT SHOP ~ FIGURINES -Exquisite, original & handcrafted - by prominent artist Elaine Osterhout. Ideal for Mother. $19.50 to $29.00. 4th r1--t\1m,111ttlt 8/df.. ~ 5fl '(jlJ.! Santa Am, CottfcmkJ 92704 Oppcefte South Coast Plato Moll Coll 761-6695 HOURI: MONDAY.,AIOAY 10 A.M.-9 P.M. SATURDAY 10 A.M ... P.'M. SUNDAY 11 A.M.·5 P.M. for general Shopping Center Information. .. • I ... . HEALTH • COUNTO., U~ TO ~OVtOI!' f:Ofl "LL '/01>9'. tc.W•N)~ .r- COSTA MESA 233 E. 17th It. COSTA ESA 2300 H1rbot' It WlllOn Wedneeday. May 10. 1978 DAILY PILOT .. l J 3 AnXiety a Cause of Hyperventilation BJ DL STEINC&OHN Dear Dr. S&elacrelaa: 1 wu sure I was bavan. a beart at· tack. While 1hoppln1 the other day I got a sudden paln ln my chest and had trouble fiWng my lungs with air. So I sot myself off i n a corner of the supermarket and besan takln1 deep breaths, llfUn1 up my cheat as far as it would co to fill my lungs. After a few minutes I felt worse. I began to perspire My heart felt as if it .were runnin1 f'ANTlf ' HfJS8 away with itJelt. I baddalpita-Uons. I felt dizzy an faint. Someone came alon1, aaw I was dllt.reued. and helped me and my 1rocertes into my car. After res tin I a while, I felt Jen f ainl. I wa& able todrlve home. I've had quite a few of these attacks. l 've been told they are due to nervouane11. I've bor· rowed some tranqulllzera from a friend, but they don't seem to help. I suppose the next step fa a visit to a doctor? Yes? -Mrs. H. COMMENT: First. one don't : DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE Never borrow pllla from a fr1end -eapeclally tranquilizers. You know the old story -otten, the underlyln1 cause Is anxiety. The patient breathea deeply and often, Somettmu the patient doesn't realize be or abe ia brealhinl rapidly. All the while loaln1 too much carbon dioxide and upaettlng the body cbemialry. Thia produces the symptoms you have been bavlna. YES, I SUGGEST THAT you H~ your doctor. He will pre- 1crJbe treatment for your anxie- ty. He will also teach you how lo breathe, using your diaphragm rather than lifting your chest · blah to b~athe. Al children, many of us were tauaht to fill our lunes by Jlftlng the chest rather than learning diaphragmatic breathing. Until you can control your attacks of byperventilatlon, your doctor ~ llOYD'S ClOCllADIO ALSO AYAJlAIU AT SWCTID STOIUI WUf USID AS •CANDY DISH •SOAP DISH •NUT DISH •JlllY DISH SUPER PRICE CRYSTAL CURIOS ,_, ...... Jl ~~~~.c:_~ wey '' -...,, ..... .._ , ..... tr411"9y,,... ............ .................. """ .......... ...., ...... FRAIRAllCES MOM WILL LOVE 11· JOVAN ~.oL MUSK OIL SPRAY MIST 700 4so .. IANTAANA 1• w. ldlftttr' Bri•tol ---- NTAANA 3325 lrtttOl It MacArthur 1·01. MAJA PUii SPIA Y COlOGNI _. flll llAm SOAP ·1.00 VALUE 500 THRIPTY , .. PRICE · PULS-AQUATIC MASSAGE SHOWER HEAD f .. '9 ""1nfAZ;ll .... I ....... = .. ~--.... c...... .. ............ " ...... ~~~;: sconicui .. ,., ~· ... ::~ .... FOUNTAIN VALLEY -EL TORO --. HUNTINGTON BEACH •1Mam11t~ Megnott1 It Telblrt E TOfO It '9oddlltd FOUNTAIN VALLEY 11141 ...... ) .. WESTMINSTER . ............ ltGoNlftWelt ' I may ask you to keep a brown paper bag with you to rebrealhe into. Thls belps restore the carbon dioxide-oxygen balance in the blood and terminates thQ attack rqore quickly. ••• There ls mucb to do for acne, even lhouah It oflen stubbornly resists all efforts by parents and doctors to overcome it, says Or. St e lnc rohn in h is booklet "Acne" A Family Problem.'1 For a copy write hi m al this paper cncloeing 50 cents and a etamped, self-addressed en- velope. •IOYS' SIUS l to 6 •Mf.NS' SIZlS 6Yl to 9 99 WHILE STOCllS LAST! CAMERA DEPT SPECIAL . 4'' EXPOSUH SAU PRICE POLAROID 108 COLOR FILM .. ."' ........ '-"· ' HUNTINGTON BEACH 21131 Beech Blwt. 1t Atlant1 HUNTINGTON BEACH •1w1mer I .. .. w~. ~ 10. 1111 --------------- Continental Imports· Imported especially for Mother's Day from the Continent of Europe. Many gifts to warm her heart and delight her. Please come In and see our lar:ge collection of Tea Sets, Cup and Saucer Sets, Hand-Painted Bowls, Planters, Clocks, Music Boxes, Candle Holders, Flowers Capo De Monte and Figurines, Llandro' Pieces, Soup Tureens and much, much more all at CONTINENTAL IMPORTS In South Coast Plaza'Village. 556-6131 MOTHER'S DAY OR ANY DAY, L'ACADEMIE Art Gallery The ORAGOH LACY Has the best Of Oellclous CHINESE FOOD For Your •Oriental Palate 1st Floor· Mercantile Bldg .~·ORAOO" LAOV 546-1147 Etchings, engravings, lithograph~ - fine graphics of all kinds • or have favorite print or photo framed by our quality experts. Cards for aJI occasions by~~· 4th floor-Mercantile Bldg. 557-3611 Crystal "DEWDROP VASE" from Kosta, Sweden $18.50. Handsomely gift boxed, complimentary glftwrap. $. S'4114ett l1f Se •• ~=~ lsr floor-MC'l'cancile Bldg. 919-8821 FREEi Cymbfdfum orchid to Mothera on Saturdty and Sunday. MOTHIR .. DAY 8PECIAL8t Parakeets ~ offl AigulwJy $12.99, now $7.99. Mandarin parakeet e11ges • Regularly $9.99. now $7.991 IPECIAU DAILY on the finest 1n pedtgreed pupp&ea. exotic bird• & tropical fish at the world's finest! I..) -·- is brim full of unique gifts I Old-fashioned handcrafted items, household accessories, a large selection of cards. Margaret presents a variety of unusual presents especially for Mother. 557-2702 Marina Blffln Art Gallery/Art School honors Mother's Day with a 10% Discount Off on all art pieces and supplies through May 14th!! 549·2020 ~~ Mother's Day Luncheon Special EGGS BENEDICT CREPES ALA RAINE from noon on. Standard evening dinner menu starting at s pm 558-7525 DALES F001WORKS GIGI Available In canvas: white, beige, rust, navy, black, red, brown -$19.99 Also In Leather: camel or rust -$24.99 We carry a large selection of casual and fashion footwear from Cherokee, Famolare, Bare Traps, Bass. La Vista. NaturaJ Comfort -and imports from around the world. Bankamericard and Mastercharge welcome. 979-9252 MothefsOag ~it ~uide - Discover Orange County's most exciting Speclalfy Center. You'll find true adventure In Its 70 unique shops wl1h merchandise from around the wortd. Enjoy a leisurely shopping spree, strolling cOOblestone stree1s, trees In bloom, and the tantfllzlng aromas from outside cotes. Shopping Is a pleasant day - the village way. 5u"llower a. Bec:w S1ree1s Scl1to Ano. Catlfomkl 9'2704 ~South Coast Plazo Mall Call 751-6595 tor generol ~ Cent9r Information. I ( , . -.. •'"\. " ... . . ' ,I ' • c \ INSTEAD OF MOM TREATING YOU TO THOSE DELICIOUS HOMEMADE CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES, THIS SUNDAY TREAT HER TO SOME OF THE VERY BEST AT THE COOKIE CUTTER. 1st floor-Mercantile Bldg. 546-1911 COPRITUDE~ The Trader specializes in most exclusive llne of home cappUcct.no & espresso machines. ~otic Kona Coffee from Hawaii. COFFEE TRADER • Mercantile Bldg. 557-9678 . :JoucL o/ UJ/iim6eg GIFT SHOP ) FIGURINES -Exquisite. original & handcrafted - by prominent artist Elaine Osterhout. Ideal for Mother. $19.50 to $29.00. 4th flfM'Mwr1111fllr Bid~. ~~6 '(14)1 .. ,... .... I f 7 INSIDE: •Movies •Ttlevlslon s ·stocks •Business iDO,..tS ~ ...... ~~!lli!' ... 1!111 ........ '!!' ...... ~ .. iplm .... ~ ........... w.edl•~•le9d9 .. y •.• M.ay~1·0•.1•9•78 ............. D~AA. .. Y.~.LO .. T ........ .:;;;;;:-_..:. ~ ., Oeltr NII ......... ~ K.-Nr VERSATILE MAURICIO BARDALES THROWS THE JAVELIN. SlJNS SI'.4R D.4YIS NIU TOP ROOKIE -z" UCI's Decathkte Rejects TypeCast By ERNIE CASTILLO Of .. Delly ...... Maft A virtual one-man track and field team, Mauricio Bardales would Uke to dispel the notion that a decathlete ls. as the saying goes, "A Jack of all trades, muter of none." "That makes me mad," seethes the compact UC Irvine senior. his Nicaraguan temper ignited. "I Jeel if I could concentrate on any one event, I could be one of the best in the United States.•• After a quick pause, h& relaxes somewhat into his normal peaceful mood. "I'd have to exclude the shot put," he says, glancing al his legs. "I just don't have the size." At 5-8 and 170 pounds, Bardales doesn't strike you as being an athlete who can excel at everythin1 from jumping to javelin throwing and sprinting to middle dlstance runnine. But he is on a pace that, stretched over three yea.rs. make' him a good bet to reach his goals -an Olympic medal and a world record. Currently ranked fourth In the nation, Bardales will be the favorite to capture the Pacific Coast Athletic A.ssn. de· cathlon title when thf conference meet begins Friday in Fresno. Yet, ooJy four years ago. the chances or finding him competinc in any collegiate track and field event, let alone 10. seemed slim at best. Indeed, it wasn't just because or his size that few col- leges took Bardales seriously as a track athlete. His higb school times in the 440 <S0.2) and 880 (1 :56.5) were con· sidered only marginal. His potential. be was told, was limited. Four years later, the average athlete that nobody wanted is now one of the nation's fastest rising de· cathletes. As a freshman. his best score was 6,352. A year latec...J1..was up to 6,985 and in the 1977 NCAA Division II championships, he scored 7.621. In the NCAA Division I finals. he finished a surprising third and in the process set an NCAA decathlon record in the javelin with a toss or 239-4. Not surprisingly, Bardales. still young for a world class decathlete at 22, set some lofty goals Cor this season. "81 or 82 hundred is definitely within my reach," he says. ''I'd be one of the youngest guys to do that." Though he has competed In just two decathlons in the last hall year. he is closing In on tbe 8,()()()..polnl plateao. In December. he scored 7 ,641 on a dirt track in Glendale and See BARDALES, Page B3 It's Fairly .. THE DISCUS IS ANOTHER TOP EVENT FOR BARDALES. Clear- PHOENIX <AP> -Forward Walter Davis of the Phoenix Suns was named National BatketbaJl Association Rookie or the Year Tuesday. Davis won the honor over No Rocking Chair for Angel Jokerst No Joke For Surf • Marques Johnson of the Milwaukee Bucks, Bernard King or the New Jersey Nets. Jack Skima ot the Seattle SuperSonics and Norm Nixon of the Los Angeles Lakers. "I tried to think about it as lit· lie as possible, but it was awful· ly bard," Davis said of the bat- tle with Johnson for the honor. .. Marques la a sreat player, and there are probably three or four other guys who deserve the aw•rd as much as I do." Davis averaeed 24.2 points per game. RON FAIRLY Dodgers Win, 3·1 Forster Findill(! Niche in LA Pen LOS ANGELES (AP> -Terry Forster was just a king In a bullpen full or aces last year in Pittsburgh, recording just one save all season. But since Joining the Los Angeles Dodgers. Forster bas four saves In Cive weeks, despite being out two weeks with a band ailmenl H Is latest save preserved Doug Rau's fifth victor:y without a loss Tuesday night in a 3· l vie· tory over St. Louis, and Forster predicts the best is yet to come . .. My hand 1s still a little pufCed up," said leftbander Forster, "I don 'l really have my good fastball. I'm not yet side·arming guys and I don't have whip in my arm. But l will." Forster was American League fireman ot the year in 1974. He joined Pittabw'gb in 1971 when he played out h1s option before signing with the Dodcera lut winter. The Pirates got excellent reUef work from Rieb Gosaaae and Kent Tekulve wblle. Forater worked tbrougb •ome a'm problems. Forster relieved Rau in the elehtb lnnina with one out and two Cardinal runners in scoring position. Lou Brock was Ill third after a doW>le and Garry Templeton followed with another double on a play where Brvck had to hold at second wa1ting for the ball to stop boonclne around the infield. Keith Hernandez.. who started the night hitting .340, was the next hitter, . "He WM'the man\ knew I had to get," said Forster, and he got Dedgers si.ie All.._.• KAIC aMle 0 .. 1 Tonlohl SL l.olllt M LotMtllft ' 1S n.v~., k l.cMll• .. .._ ....... 1 u flrio.y Ollc...-etLM.,...._ 7•2S Hernandez to atrike dut. Tbe next batter was ,Ted Simmons, batting .469 aaatnat lef'l·handed pitching. •·1·m no Elmfteln .. But I ain't no dummy either," Forster said. He gave SimmonslnothiDI to bit. fin.ally walking h m to fill the bases. He finally worked out of the problem by iettin1 JeTJ')' Morales to ground lnto a force play. s S'f.LOUtl .. , .... 4 0 I. .. ,. •••• U): .. , • ' , 1 •••• 4 0 1 0 10 •• '." .... " .. •••• •••• • "1 LOS_...Ull .., .... , ' ' 0 •••o J 1 1 I , 0' ' 4010 ' 1 1 • 1000 4 0 It a 01 o 101' ooot DETROIT -Ron Fairly re- fuses to be shoved into a rocking chair. The veteran first baseman· outfielder, who turns 40 in July. continues to rock opposing pitchers. And he doesn't mJnd rocking the boat a little. either. over the prospects of being a part-time player. Fairly made it fairly clear Tuesday night that he wants - and perhaps deserves -lo play every day, as he drove in three runs with three singles to lead the California Angels past the Detroit Tigers. 7·5. IT WAS THE ANGELS' fourth consecutive triumph. "I played in 135 games last year and I could have played in 10 more." Fairly said. "And I could do it again easily this year. I can't get tired playing this game. I didn't in 18 years and I can't see why { should now." Fairly. acquired i n a December trade from Toronto. has been platooned at firsl base with right-banded hitting Ron Jackson. .. l'D LIKE TO CHANGE that thinking," Fairly said of the pla· loon setup, although admitting that Jackson also deserves a regular spot. Jackson is batting .349 and bas driven in 13 runs hl 19 games. Fairly. on the 1977 American League All-Star team, is batting .304 and has 11 RBI in 16 games. The left-handed s winger walked in the opening inning, rued out to the warning track in ARgebSlate All O-. e11 KMl"C 11...i. 17111 TOftlOhl Idle Tllurscs.y CAl!llornle •I Detroit • U Frkley CAl!ltornleel C ..... I~ • JS right field in the third, singled in a run in the fU'th. singled in a run in the sixth off starter Jim Slaton. then broke a 5·5 deadlock with an RBI single in the eighth orr Steve Foucault. THE LAST HIT MADE a win· ner out of Dave La Roche, 3·0. in relief of Detroiter Frank Tanana -who was five years old when Fairly broke into the major leagues with the Los Angeles· Dodgers in 1958. Tanana looked like he'd become the majors' first six· game winner until Detroit rallied for three runs in the seventh to tie it 5-5. "I'd much rather have a save. no question about It.·· s aid :VoUeybelJ doesn't always draw as well as some other high school sports. even If lt 's the CIF playoffs. Lonely Stephanie Ber1 and Mary Dale cheeT Estancia to vle· tory ln Tue.day nlaht'• match. To be fair. ll should be • La Roche. "That ·s why I reel I didn't do my job today." Don Baylor opened the scoring with bis ninth homer to lead orf the fourth -breaking a string or 23 sc<freless innings by Tiger pitchers. The Angels are idle tonight and resume the two-ga me series with Detroit Thursday. The scheduling quirk is because Detroit bas arranged for an ex· hibition benefit against the Cin· cinnall Reds tonaJ{ht. CALlflOllNIA •llr ~ '4 R Mlll•r rt J 1 0 0 Clwlk u s 0 0 0 Bostock cf • 1 Jo F•orly lb • I l J S.ylor II 4 I 1 I L•ndruus If O O O O Sol•H• dll 3 I I 1 Rtllt nmund dtl 1 o O o Grl<ll 2b l 0 0 o Lenuord lb s 1 1 o Humollrev c • o I o OETllOIT Hrl"I Ltl'lort cl • 1 I I W•OMr \S S 0 I I Sl-dh SI I I J T"°mpson lb• 0 I I lttmplt 3 o 1 o WoOenl111.•rt • t l 1 P•H ·~ ( • 0 0 0 • Rc1roue1Jb • 1 Io Dlllercl 1b • 0 I 0 TOl•ts :k I II • Tol•I• JI S 10 S C•lllornle 000 131 Ot 1-1 Delroll 000 110 ~ E-L•F•ore. 0..lk OP--C.lofo<nl• I L08- C•lllorn•• 13, Detroit 1 79-Bosto<k 1, •. Roc1t •ouei. J. "'°""*"'· YMford Je-w..,..... HR-B•YIO! 191. Wockenf\lu Ill. Sof•ll• (II se-R Mii~. t.eF•-S--0\all•. SF-Mlller T•,,.n• L•ROCh• CW. J.01 II' M II Ell NIO CALll<ORNIA •') . 1--. l OITllOIT l 0 s I 2 0 Sitton S"> I S S s 1 Cr•wtorc1 '·> o o O O O Fouc•ull IL. 0.ll 1 l I ' 0 Hll~ I I I 0 I HBP -Grlcfl Cby Sl•lonl, B•yCor lby Cr••lordl. Ren_.._ Cblt Fouc.ulll. WP- T.tf'•n•. T-1 ~ A-11,°" By HOWARD L. HANDV °'ti. D.ilf ........... Staging its most prolific of· tensive display or tbe season, the California Surf vaulted into first pface in the American Con· rerence Western Division stand· ings in the North American Sex-· cer League with a 3·0 victory over the Ta mpa Bay Rowdies Tuesday night at Anaheim Stadium. The smallest crowd 0£. the home season, 9,591. sat in on th~ affair. Dave Jokerst set a club record for shutouts in a career. It was has ninth and fourth of the cur· rent campaign for the Surr which bad not scored more than two goafs in any of the eight pre· VIOUS games. "It meant a lot to me to get the shutout tonight," Jokerst said after the game. "I knew I was tied for the club record and with John Jackson coming in this week, I wanted it very much." Jackson, the N ASL 's third leading goalkeeper last year for the team in St. Louis, spent the English season at Orient and helped his club to the semifinals o( the English F.A. Cup. He ar· rives Thursday. Does it bother Jokerst that he See JOKERST, Page Bi 82 OAllY Ptl.OT W~. Mey 10. '978 Fer Sari Foe Disneyland Trip Was the Clincher The proml.se of a eood soccer match waan 't enouah to lure the Stutttart soccer team from Germany for an exhibition with the California Sur!: but when they threw In a trip to Dl.sneyland .• well. that was me clincher. Stu=rt will play the Surf Friday n11ht at Anaheim Stadium. Ort ally the Surf had arT&nled to play the exblbltton a1ainst Duasel • but that team cancelled so Surf general manager Paul Deese started negotiations with Stutt1art. Wben Deese promised a visit to Dl.sneyland for the German contingent, the deal was finalized. Stuttgart's team arrived in Southern California today. wtll spend 1bunday with Mickey Mouse, Goofy and friends at the M a1lc Kingdom then play the match Friday . .,.... lt'oa't Tt"tlde Careeo Rod Carew. the six-time American League batting champion who says be wants to be traded to a contending team. won't be leaving the Minnesota Twins if Clark Griffith, the club's vice presi- dent, has his way. "We're going to make every effort to make a deal with him and sign him to a new con· tract," said Griffith, son of Twins owner Calvin Griffith. "I'm confident we'll be able to slgn him. hopefully in the near future. I don't like to go ahead with things unsettled. I'd llke to get it settled earlier rather than later and it won't be a trade." Carew. the AL's leading batter again this season with a .378 average. has this year plus next season's option year remaining on the •oouaaw three.year. $200,()()()..a.year contract he signed in 1976. He reportedly wants a long-term contract in the free-agent market for an estimated S2.5 million. Bllllft• r,.. to Wrap It llp The Philadelptua 76ers will be facing ellmlnallon at home against the Washington Bullets while the Seattle SuperSonics try to break a 1-1 deadlock against the invading Denver Nuggets when the NBA playoffs resume torught. The 76ers trail the Bullets 3-1 in the Eastern playoffs and have to win three straight. including one on Washington's home court Jn tonight's fiftti game at the Spectrum, Philadelphia will be seek- mg more sconng from superstar Julius Erving along w!l:h better defense and rebounding. ErvJng is averaging 15.8 points in the series and leads the 76ers in shooting percentage <44.6). But Washington has had the rebounding edge. shutUng orr the Sixers' running game. Led by Elvin Hayes, who is averaging 26.3 points, 16 rebounds and 3.3 blocked shots a game in the series, the Bullets are averaging 117 points. Jn Seattle. the SuperSonics are confident after splitting the opening Western playoff games in Denver. The Sonics have won 17 straight at home. including five In the playoffs Seattle is coming off a 121 Jll victory over the Nuggets Sunday.· Borg Gal•• WCT S~lllaai. DALLAS Steady Bjorn Borg. seeking bis second World Championship of Tennis title, diffused Dick Stockton's powerful serve-and-volley game with an array of rum- bling shots from the baseline Tuesday night for an easy 4·6, 6-2, 6-1, 6-0quarterftnal victory. The 21-year-old Swede totally domina&ed the mistake-ridden Stockton after the first set, brt'aking Stockton's service eight of nine limes and winning 12 straight games at one point. Borg won the WCT crown in 1976 after two eonsecutive years as runnerup. He sat out the WCT tour last year. however. because of a con· tract dispute. Borg advances to Friday's semifmals and will meet the winner or tonight's match between Raul Ramirez and Vilas Gerulaitis. Elw~ l• Sport .... ,.._.. aJO•N ac>ftO COLI.EGE BASEBALL -Fonner Mission Viejo High and Saddleback College standout Rieb Rommel pitched a six-bitter in leading Cal State Fullerton to its 19th straight victory, a 9-3 de· cision over Long Beach State . . . Larry Kubacki, ex-Golden West star, had three hits in t Chapman College's 11·3 win over San Diego State . . . UC Santa Barbara snapped USC's l~game wmning streak with a 6"'4 victory as the Trojans' BUI Bordley lost for only the second time in 12 decisions . . . Pepperdine won its eighth straight with a 5-1 victory over UCLA. BASKETBALL -Buffalo Braves owner John Y. Brown looked over Dallas Tuesday as a possible new home for his NBA team ... ••CM ltOMM&L Dwight Anderson scored a game-high 21 points as the Indiana high school all-stars defeated the touring Russian all-stars, 95-85. in Anderson, Ind Tuesday night. The Soviets were undefeated in three previous games in the U.S. SOCCER -The San Diego Sockers of the North American Soc· cer League acquired high-sconng center forward Walker McCall on loan Tuesday from the Ayr United team in Scotland . . . The Los Angeles Aztecs have suspend~ I~sb socc.er star_ G~e Best for skipping practice The suspension lS for an mdefirute penod. BASEBALL -The Jim Rice shift, designed to slop Boston's slugging outfielder, backfired Tuesday as Rice bit his 10th homer of the season and led the Red Sox to a 4-3 win over Kansas City. originator of the shill . . . Catlllb Banter al- lowed one blt in six innings for bis best outing In almost tb.ree years and El Toro resident Grall Nettles joined llegpe Jack.Ion in bitting homers as the New York Yankees beat the Minnesota Twins, 3-1 ... Kansas City Royals third baseman George Brett will be Ineligible for ac- tion until May 19 with a badly bruised shoulder . . Mark .. Bird" Fldrycla threw on the sidelines for about seven minutes prior to Detroit's home game against California. The sore-shouldered pitcher went on the 21-day dis· abled llSl May J . . Huntiqtoo Beach Higb '•°' ..... ,. .... grad Im Brofaamer went two-for·three and seored a n1n a.a a des- ipated bitter for Bolton's Red Sox Tuesday nlpt ... O.Car Ga•ble 1ays bl.a San Diego PadreS have too many outlle.ldera and ii t.he team makes a trade, be wouldn't mlnd belag a part of it. D\lriOI the olf·season Gamble slped a six-year, $2.85 mlWon eon- tratt O'IUE& SPOaTS -Huold a.... beat Job Newcombe and loleee Tamer defea\ed Pla.U Dell&, &lvinl the U.S. a 2-1 victory over Auatralia in the Nations Cup tennis cbamplon1blp in Dusaeldorf Tuesday . . 'S&e-te Jeuea scored biJ tblrd 1oal of tJte thJrd period with one-teeond remllDlnl to live Team USA a W 4 tie with East Germany Tuelday lD tbe World Ice HockeJ Cbam- • ploa1hlpa • • • Ta.lb lnvolvtna a ptopOled ..nea ol exhlblUoa bouts 1 a& lladilon Square Garden &.tween ••••ad Al and ~ SWt-bave broken off •• Former Nebraaka nmninl back ••&e ......._, wu cbar1ed Tuelday with two felony drug coaau. Antboil1 'tfU cbar1ed with delivery of cocal.ne and mart- Juena. ..,, r s,..rc .... ....,..,r~ RADIO: Tonlaht -BASEBALL -St. Louil at Loe An1elea, .7 :30, KA.BC (790); SOCCER -Loi Anl•IN Alteel at Oakland, 7;30, KJIS CU.at>>; HORSERACING -Hollywood Park feature race, 5:30. KIEV <8'70>. TV: Tonight -WRESTUNO -Olymplc Auditorium, 8:30, Cb1nnel3'. . , \. I I 1'~ . ) ~ VOLLEYBALL I MISCELLANY FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S ROB VON HATTEN (6) BEATS DOUBLE BLOCK BY ESTANCIA'S SHAN ASKIN (1) ~NO CRAIG KEUP. Prep Volleyball Estancia Sweeps Error-plagued FV By ROGER CARLSON cia. with hustle and timing. 0t111eD1111y~1•s1aH made short work or the Sunset Combining their quickness League representative at the with well-timed placements and net. the ability to be in the right Jeff Gasper's hitting, the fi. place at th!? right lime. the nesse of Shan Askin, and the Estanci_a. High Ea~les swe~t overall play of Craig Keup, Kirtc · past_ v1s1tmg Fountam V~lley m Stafford and Kent Smith made it straight sets Tuesday night to ~ look easy advance to the second round of the CIF volleyball playoffs Fn-After. the 15·10 opener. the day night. E.agles Jumped to a 1~1 lead to Coac h Mike Pomeroy's virtua.lly put Fountain Valley Eagles. co-ch amps in the outofitl!lthesecondsel_. or an J(e County Le ague. ~n ~II. it took but 76 mmutes to qualified for a s hot at South chromate Fountain Valley, a coast League runnerup San te~m which boasted ~ three-_set Clemente Friday after nailing lrlu~p~ over La Qum~a High error-plagued Fountain Valley . earlier m non-league action. 15· 10. 15-11. 15-9. La Quinta and Estancia lied Only in the final set did Foun· for the Orange County League tain Valley manage to gain a crown and their two tussles s lim lead, moving to a 5·2 ad· provedeachtheequaloftheolher vantage. But returns into lhe -thuslheBaroosseemedtohave net. errors and a couple or nice the upper hand coming in to the effor t s by Estancia 's Tim contest. KrohnCeldt quickly erased the However. it was Estancia final doubt as t he Eagles which held all the aces, getting breezed. the right combinations when it Fountain Valley entered with needed it. plus a helping hand 6-6 Dave Greenleaf and three from Fountain Valley, which other starters in the 6-3 range hurt itself with some spotty towering over Its foe. But Estan· play Volleyball Teams Breeze Past Foes Jn routine fashion. sometimes to the point of boredom, Orange Coast area high school volleyball demonstrated its superiority Tuesday night in the first round of the CIF playoffs. In straight sets, Laguna Beach, San Clemente, Universi· ty and Huntington Beach tipped the opposition, to breeze into the second round of the eliminations Friday night. Only seniorlesa Irvine High was unsuccessful, dropping a 3-1 decision at South Pasadena. Laguna Beach trampled Tem- ple City, blanking the visitors in' the second game with Randy Smith and Kip Engen leading the way, in addition lo Eric Clark's outstanding job as an outside bitter. The Artists, de· fending CIF champions and South Coast League champions. wiH travel to San Marcos <Santa Barbara> High Friday mght. San Clemente destroyed Inex- perienced Workman High <City of Industry> Junior outside hitter Tony McGraw and sophomore setter Dean Kafll~zes sparkled for the Tritons tn their tuneup for Estancia High Friday al San Clemente with a 7 o'clock start. Ceiar Manapsal showed some fine passing •od defense ln University's laugher al Los Altos <Hacienda Heights>, while Huntington Beach dealt boat Riveralde Poly a quick exit from the playoffs behind Tom Peatoleal. Jog,..·tbon Set A Jo1·walk·•·tb0n la slated for Thul'lday afternoon at Park\rlew, School in Hunt.lnaton Beach with funds raised •et ror new hl1b Jumpiq ptts. The event wHI be from 3:30-4:30 for boys and atria tn 1radea 6, 7 and 8. It'• Ht for Tunstall Lane near Wamer and Golden West. Peaiona wtlh1n1 -to oontrtbut• or for turt.her tnformatlon call Mr. Jone1 or Mtaa Pattenon at 847-6008. .. Pestolesl led an attack in the second game at the net with several blocks as the Oilers scored a 15-0 decision with only two rotations during the issue. Huntington Beach. with the victory, qualifies for a home en· counter Friday night against Loyola <Los Angeles> High. which drew a bye. University, meanwhile, meets Dos Pueblos (Goleta> Friday at University High at 7 p.m. and idle Newport Harbor. Sunset League champion. will play ho~t to South Pasadena. ~ The ·Newpon-South Pasadena clash will be Thunday night at 7:30. a~~,..,.. 5-n C'-•-Wonl-1M, 154. IS.10. Es!M><ladltf ...... , .. ,, V.ilff IS.JO. IS.11, IM U111wrtlly• L.osAla1M, 15-4, IS.II. Laouna BNcll dtf TllfnOM City IW, IS-0, IS.10. L• Oulmadlf ScMllll TorT-• IS-0, IW, 1$.t. H unllflQllM a.tell -IU'tOff'liclt "°'" IS. U, IS.0, IS.10. 5ovtl\ PIMlltfte Clef ln.IM Hlgll IS.la. J.IS. IS.IJ, IS-7. S.,, Ma<at• lkltlti.J IS.1, IS.0, IS.. S.llU Moftlc:a dlf ~It' IS.0, IS-2, IS.t. Dot PutOlotdtl#lillr ...... u ••• IW, IS.12. E\1'ANCIA'S SHAN ASKIN HITS PAST RANDY HARRIS. UCI Nine Tunililes, 9-6 LOS ANGELES-UC Irvine's baseball team. which has had trouble holding leads all year long. blew another one here Tuesday The Anteaters Jumped out to a 5·0 lead after half an mmng but eventually lost, 9·6. to Cal State Los Angeles when the D1ablos bunched five hits in a four.run uprising in the si)(th inn in~ • Doug Chard drilled a three· run double to b1ghhght UCl 's rlrst inning outburst. Mike Hirano had two hits for tbe Anteaters. now 16-25 on the season and 10· 14· l in Southern Cahforn13 Baseball Assn. play UCl hosts Cal State Fullerton Friday afternoon <2 301 Saturday the Anteaters entl their season with a noon doubleheader at Fullerton uc1 ... _ ,., •o , ".,. CNrd lO I I I I M<IYH1 ... 11 Htr•"o, c.f WesfllflOtOn, rf Daw.on, Clh ~•Ol-r, tb MUllter, \' N~e. tt> ) I u I Moor• pl> '')? ~ • I ) t Wtc•.t I r; ., ,, ) 0 I (I Jtrn10-,., llf\ ; ,,,, ,, ) I I 0 Fr••Mt1e. u ~"? '• 4 0 I I e...m ...... •1 0 0 '• • I t t' Well\100 i. 0 0 (t •• 1 I 0 '1 foe .. , 14 't , , S<wety ....... , .. ,. sou 000 10.-. , I) Oltl 014 lh-4 tc. I CAUF•llA PHOEllX .. "'•"'• "' ,,.. _ ---. ~EBALL I TRACK I MISCELLANY SoCal Enters Nlllll Playoffs LA Ml RA DA -Southern Califonua Coll~ge of Costa Mesa be1ln1 Queiil of an NAIA D1stnct 3 baseb8..U championship aaainst Cal Stale Domlnguei Hills Tbur11day <tl:30> in action at Biola College here. ln the second game of the dis· trict tournament Thursday, perennial champion La Verne Collefe wiU race Aiusa·Pacific a t 3 o clock. Losers return to action Friday al 11 : 30 in the double-loss KEVIN ROMINE Player of the Year ehmanation affair. Winnen m~l at 3 wilh the finals Saturda,y. SoCal finished the regular seuon wit.h a 30-17 record. 1&·6 in conference. Dominauei Hills 1s 30.19 and 19·3. SoCal coach Doug Adams says he wl lllsend Bill Riddell to the mound against Dominguei Rills. Riddell has been the ace of the sec staff this season. SoCal and Dominguez Hills split a doubleheader Saturday to complete regular season play. DON TERRANOVE Coach of the Yea r FJl's Romine Tops Ali.Sunset Team Huntington Beach High 's Oilers, with a half dozen picks on the two teams, dominat.es the All-Sunset League baseball selections chosen by the Daily Pilot. Player or the year laurels. how~ver. go to Fountain Valley junior Kevin Romine, a s uperb All-Century Nine Picked Estancia H.igh's Eagles picked up a pair of all-league selections on the All-Century League baseball team as chosen by the circuit's coaches with catcher -Dave Pisarski and the versatile Bob Braunsdorf honored. Player of the year is pitcher Dave Leeper, who dazzled the opposition with a 1.37 ERA and an 8-1 record as be led the Villa Park Spartans to the title. Coach or the year honors are shared by Villa Park's Dave Ochoa and Bill Ross or Santa Ana High .,~ ......... P'lrstT-1'9t .... ..,., ...... P-Oew '--• VIiii> P1>1'11 P-JM H~. Twin P-<.lr~ Vl>klRI, SMleAna C·-MA111 ~.SanteMaVelley lnf-TOdd U_,, VIiie P1>r1l lfll-lkell H..+Qh, FOOllllll, lnl-O•w Scllllllne, S.te AM lflf~Qlt ~ FOCltlllll I nf-Mi>111 Suhlfl. Tustin Inf -Bob a..-11, OrM!Oe OF-Ed Hotllra, s.n41>AM V1111ey OF-KyleW~.Oral9 OF-De le -ICll$, Or.,ge OF-D111e HenNn, FOOUMll u1-e.n ..,,...._., Si>flt• Ana OH -s1 .... MKFerl-. VIII• Perk Q . Ml>ftr Sr f.1 Sr •3 Jr. S-1 k .• Sr. .410 Sr. .m Sr. ·* Sr. .361 Sr. .JU Sr. .320 Sr. .412 Sr .• I Sr. .m Sr. .m Sr. .n• Sr .. ~ outfielder who proved nearly impossible to ~et out at the plate. Romine balled .523 with 23 hits in 44 official appearances at the plate. He s lammed a bases· loaded homer in one game, was three-for -four twice. four-ror- rour on another occasion and three-for-three 1n another game. AdditionaJly. Romine was the core of Fountain Valley's de· rense in the outfield, and along with catcher Mifte Empting. led the Barons to their frenzied finish to lie for the crown. Coach of the Year honors go Huntington Beach's Don Ter- ranove, in a landslide. The Oiler coach took a Junior-dominated team considered a year away from making a serious run for the charnpiooship and turned it into the team to beat by mid· season. All-S-.Cl.e ... f'l"tT•-..... ..... ,.,., ICllMI a . a . ....... P-Erk o.ytOnl, W.Slmlnller S<. •l-2 P-Wi>JM .IWll, EdllCM'I Jr. S-1 c-•" £m11uno. F-ti>lfl v111ey Sr. • .. J c-~n Giii, HUfltlnotOfl 11 .. c:11 Sr. .l-17 18-StMI ~11, w.stmln •l•r Sr. .JIO 28-M.,lt O.P9tlo, Mil<lnl> Sr. .llJ 38-Jeff Pl~I. NewP0rt HI~ Sr. ..n SS-Jim~. HurollftQIOfl llH<h Sr .l77 OF-KeYln Romlrw, F-li>ln "•llev Jr. .52J OF-Tom SIGllM. EdllDfl mln. Sr. .m OF-<:1.,0.~w.st lef Sr. .11S DH-SCeves.u.nn.,. NH•-Sr. .AJO U I-ft ICO ""'""*"" H 8tlKll Jr, ,JM ._.T_ P-Sc:oll~. H1111t1not011 Sr .. , P-llte &on,M«IM Sr. .. , P-Bob W~ WestmlMttf' Sr. :J.3 c-v .. o Jann. EClliOfl So. .:m 1 a-stuert Mii•. Foutrt1>lft v.11.., J r. .n1 28-l!d R.,.._, w.stmlMter Jr. 190 Jll-DoUV Mln.nocN'f, EdllOll Sr. .l50 SS-00.. Hiii. EClltaft Sr. .J21 OF-Shawn°"'°· HllMlllQIOfl Be.ch Jr. •• OF Eric: lrwln, M9t1n1> !.r. .241 OF_.l~lt Mlel•e. MlrlM Sr. .313 OH-Joe Giei. HYfltiflQIOfl 8Mch Jr .11) Ul-GlrJ 5-wtnoer, MM'IM !>< .2'5 "They have excellent pitching and bit well," Adams says ot Oomlnauez Hills. "They have three pitchers, one a lefl-han4er and tbe other two are ri&ht· handed. I'm not sure which one will start anJnst us." Roy Ferguson, an outfielder for Dominguez HJlls, led the dia- tr1ct in base hits with 73 this season. In Friday 's game. Kehl Miyashiro or Butch Ward will get the starting nod from Adams. Oranges Dealt Loss; Evert Fans Ross Case and Mona GuerTant played key roles in a doubles sweep by the San Diego Friars in a 3().25 World Team Tennis Victory over the Anaheim Oranges Tuesday n ight at Anaheim Convention Center. San Diego improved its first place record in the WTT West Division to 5·3. while the Orangea dropped to 3-8 and a fourth place standing in the Eastern Division. Francoise Durr was a s urprise opener in the Anaheim lineup in women's singles, after San Diego's Kerry Reid had scored some easy victories over the Oranges' Rosie Casals in pre- vious matches. The move paid off. as Durr edged Reid 7-6. win- ning the tiebreaker 5·4. Anaheim also won the men's s ingles ln a duel of player coaches. with ClitC Drysdale over Rod Laver 7·6, including a 5·4 tiebreaker. But the doubles combinations or the Priars dominated all three sets. Guerrant and Case won the mixed doubles 6-4. Guerrant and Reid won the women's doubles 6·3. And Case and Laver cap- tured the men's singles 6·4. Meanwhile, Indiana's Diane Fromholtz defeated Los Angeles' Chris Evert 6·2 in women's s ingles as the Loves beat the Strings in overtime 23·20 in a WTT match in In·. dianapolis. · The Loves took the overtime period, a continuation of the mixed doubles' match, l ·O. Indiana's Georr Masters and Tanya Harford had lost to Bob Carmichael and Anne Kiyomura 6·2 in the regular mixed doubles match. But Masters and Harford recovered to end the match. by winning the first game or over· time. In men's doubles, Alan Stone a n d M a s t e r s d o. w n e d Carmichael and Ashok AmrltraJ or the Kings 6-2. * * * ~•.~-.nu Women -Durr CAI CMI. Reid 1·•· Reid· O-r11nl (SO) Cltf. c...i .. DurY ~ Mef> -~ IAI wt. LI"'"' 1-t, C-. IA.,... ISDI Cltf. 011·0rysdaie"'4 MIHCI -C.W-Guerr .... t ~01 CMI. Cfti>ls- Amrltr•l 10>•1 M. A -2~ .......... m. f.,_ 12, .............. 2t COTI Women -Fromholll Ill Clel. E,_.rt •·2; Klyomur•E...n (lAIOef. Mlppl,,.H .. 11orc1•2 .,,..,, -,._ Ill Cltf. v. Arflrllflj "'4; s.- Metlef'S Cl) Cltf. CMmldlMl-A. Amrllr11 ... 1. MIHCI -C.rmlc"9•l·Kl.,omur11 ILAI Clel. Metters-Herford ... 2. Overtime -M•ll•rs·H•rloro 111 Cl•t. C..rml<Net-Klyomur• 1.0. • -........ lfldl-oottL Sec:9MT_,. f'-sc.ttY-.,Sl.,._. P-AI 8retwn, Foollllll P-Afldv -·Oran~ c-oewe l'!MrlM, tb&MKI• Ut-a. • 1 S rt, E.u.da OH -«tnt ~ Orenge 5r. Sr Sr ,r, "· Sr ,., l ) 4 s .Z70 .m .300 .2l0 S11nset .League Tennis Reswts ,,,. -Mi>rll O.yus. 0r"'911 tflf-111<11 TOdd, El MOdene lnf-0.ve Knoll. FOOllllll Inf__. ~S. Tustl" 1,,f __ Floo/d, S..11 AN 1111-Pllll R-~ VIII• Parll OF-llOO Vettlul'Q. El Moden.I OF-0.ITetl K-. VIiie Parll OF-Jim 8U11. Foothill OF-DNllSullllf, Tvsllfl Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr Jr Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr • 3U .m .300 ,Jfl .m .1'11 .211 .J10 .2'1 s-etL....-T-ias11t '*' .......... M..nw """' "":.....-.... Gr•c:I• (Nlrilfpor'tl Clef. Wellll>r <Westmlnst«l M ... 2; I(~ (IN<'IN) Clef. Falt" (Edison) M . 7·•· M ; Stltnnls IWftlmln•tM) Clef. Holllnd INewporll M , .. I; O.mpwy CNewportl cPel. H1>mlll ll'owltl>lnV•l...,lW .... t. ....... .. .., Grec:la "'· KHl•r •• ,, •·•: DemPMJ Saddleback~--~~~----~--------~ Host Girls' You don't hava to buy a MW car Cage Event to haYI I MW lookifl car. The gloss level of your car's paint can be restored to factory original or better with the Ming Mirror Anish. Ming's unique process chemically rejuvenatee oxidized paJnt without the use of cutting compoonds, Increasing slgnlflcantly the beauty and value of your car. And Ming guarantees the Mirror Finish In writing for 3 full years! The first stale junior college basketball tournament for women, which bad been threatened because of a pending lawsuit, will get under way as planned Tbunday at Saddlebact College. The openln1 day schedule bas MlraCosta meeting Fresno at 2:30, followed by a 4:301ame between Hancock and Cypress, a 6:30 clash between Fullerton and Marin and an 8:30 en- cou nter between San Mateo and Los Anseles Valley. Feath er River Colle1e, an undefeated 1121all dMuoo team, bad filed a lawault qlinlt the Iara• atbools toum•· oient reek'na admlalon. But Wednesday. after lawyera from both aides fal1ed to reach a com· promlae after two boun of n••otJatlona in Sacramento. the pl'elld· lna Juda• ntUMd to •tin a temporary lnjunctlon b.alUna the tourney. The Ming Mirror Finish produces a gleaming smooth toughness that even newly painted cars can't match, because no method of application lays down a perfectly ftat coat of auto paint. Get a beautiful mirror-like shine that never has to be waxed again and protect your car'• paint against deterioration. Stop by and we will p.ocesa a teet won~ car at no~ Want that new car feating? Drive to your Ming Auto Beauty Center today. Ming Auto .. •utw Center FREE 19tQ of Coate ..... , TEST PATCH 1120 ltond•,,_ Ave. Coata M_, CA. 9,.,._.,,rmm 714·7141404 ~ ~-.. . -... -- W~. May 10, 1978 UCl'S MAURICIO BARDALES EYES THE POLE VAUL't. , ......... J . \ ,/ DAIL V PILOT •3 Canadiens Await Foe In Finals From AP Dlapatcbes Montreal's Canad1ens art' a lready in. and their opponent In the upcoming Stanley Cup championship seri~ may be ttte Boston Bruins. who took a com· manding 3·1 lead in their semifin a l serif:s w ith tht- Philadelphia Flyers Tuesday Toronto was eliminated Crom the race for the National Hockey League's most coveted trophy when Montreal scored a 2-0 vie· tory Tuesday In Toronto. Boston stopped host Phlladelpb1u 4·2 ,, Tuesday. Toronto coach ~oger Neilson accepted the elimination or hi~ Maple Leafs with reluctant res tgnataon "NOBODY LIKES TO lose ... Neilson said. "Bul if you have to. I'd rather lose to a ireat team like the Canadtens They're-well-balanced and ex· tremely well-coached. "I can't see anyone beatblg them -this year anyway." ~ The mighty Canadiens had no trouble "1th a ti.red Leafs' club. as goaltender Ken Dryden turned aside 23 shots -none or them difficult -to record his 10th career playoff shutout in 90 appearances. UC IRVINE'S BARDALES • • • MEANWHILE BOSTON defenseman Brad Park says the Bruins ought to thank teammate John Wensink for their victory o .... er Philadelphia. Bardales Is the first to admit a decathlon isn't for everybody. "It tears your body down," be says. "By Thursday, my body Is kaput . But any decatblete trying to get up in the rankings should spend no less than four hours training per day." Competition is divided l.nto two days. On the first, decathletes run the 100, long jump, put the shot, high jump and finish with the 400. On the second day. the schedule has t.he 110 high hurdles. dis· cus throw, pole vault, Javelin throw and the 1,500 run. WORKOUTS AND MEETS, Bardales points out. are equally tough. both physically and psychologically. .. Physically, you've got to call on your body to perform on the optimum level," he says. "It quickly becomes tiring. especially if the high jump or pole vault takes 12 attempts. "Psychologically, it's handling the pain. gettin& yourself up for every meet. thinking what you're going to do. You have to change your perspective 10 times and you have to let your mind take control or your body. "It's a constant thinking process when you're competing.·· Oddly enough. Bardales disagrees with those decathletes who feel theirs is the toughest competition around. "I don't think it is." he says. "A marathon might be. Plus. I've run some half miles that were really tough." Just as UCI was his second choice as a school. so was the de· catblon his second pick as an event. Both switches were out or necessity. BEINGTURNEDDOWNcompletelybyUCLA.tb.efirstscboolof his choice. only helped to strengthen his detttmination. Thus. when he enrolled at UCI arter hitch·bilcing from Los Angeles and parking himself on the steps to the admissions offic;e. t.e was ready and eager to do whatever was necessary to become "top notcH middle distance runner. Only things didn't tum out as planned. For one. UCI had landed Steve Scott, who eventually evolved into America's top miler. Second, Bardales got bored with Just running. especially when it conflicted with a hobby of bis-weight lifting. "My second choice of schools was UCI because-of Bill Toomey. but I wasn't sure if I wanted to compete in the decathlon." Bardales recalls. "I had thoughts but I didn't think or it seriously. "When I started runnini t.he hatr. I iot tired or constantlv run· nmg. Plus l heard heavy weight Urting was bad for running and l like weight lining. I wanted to switch events so 1 took up the de· cathlon." TOOMEY, WHO WAS UCl 'S head coach until 1976, seemed the perfect tutor since he had won the decathlon in the 1968 Olymp1<'s at Mexico City. Though Bardales now trains under Toomey's brothe~. J Im. It is obvious where his ins pi ration comes from . "l trained a month for my first decathlon and l did poorly. scoring just 5,110 points," Bardales says. "But Bill Toomey told me on bis first one he scored 5,100 points and that was when he was 22. "He wanted a world record so bad that be kept doing de- See BARDALES, PaJ(e 85 ,\ Wensink played 26 seconds of the first period -s itting 10 minutes in the penalty box - while Boston was building a 2·0 lead. Wensink had a fight with Bill Barber and then Rick La· Pointe. .. The Wensink rights rea11y gave us a st.art." Park insisted. "What should t say? He out· pointed Barber and made us aware that the Flyers weren't going to run us out or the build- ing." Maybe Park was right. that Wensmk did start the adrenahn running for the Bruins before t7,077 hostile fans Anteaters ·Sign Cager UC Irvine basketball coach Tim Tift announced Tuesday be has signed San Jose City College product Vic tor Conyers to a national letter of intent. Conyers Is a 6-7 forward wbo averaged 18.3 points per game and 10.S rebounds lasl season while earning All· Golden Gale Conrerence honors. In one game last yea r Conyers scored 52 points. Conyers becomes the thfrd Bay Area player signed by Tift in a span of 10 days. Last week. Tirt landed a pair or high ly regarde d Oakland prep guards. 6-4 Robbie BeaJ and 6·0 Louis Bremond. Beal, an honorable men· lion All·American. averaged 23.2 points at Bishop O'Dowd High while Bremond. an All· Northern California selec- tion, averaged 17 points and 7.2 assists ror St. Joseph High. 178 ZEPHYR LEASE FOR Baseball Standings s3999 Mo.+ Tax & Lie S89.99 mo. + tax & license & 96c for 36 mo.. Cap cost S.284. Tot .. of monthly payments S3271. R.-ldual S2142. 38 tn09 OAC. Sttc.. 170'5. AUTOUASIMG THI WAY IT AUTOlll AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Pct.GB Detroit 17 7 .708 Boston 19 10 .655 I 2 New York 16 10 .615 2 Milwaukee 12 14 .462 6 Cleveland 11 14 .440 611':? Baltimore 10 15 .400 71., Toronto 9 18 .333 91h West Division Oakland 19 8 .704 Angela 18 9 .667 1 Kansas City ts 12 .5S6 4 Texas 12 u .500 5'i'l Seattle 11~ .344 10"4l Minnesota 10 ao ,333 10\i': Chicago 7 18 .304 10 ,..., .. ._.. biluto ................................ T orotlto •• Ollllelld 0 '°"°" •. IC.el9ft CllY > , .... llftdl,s.M ... H ... Ven a, ..,_.ta I C.lltOf'ftfi> '· Detroltl T .. 1tt,MI.._.. ......... o-.. o.tt1~ u...-a 11etT-w1oanc., ,.,, N~"°" (I,_., 1·21 al 91>4U-W C"teMtM S.ellle IHllM'l'(utU•~I .. Clt""I-CWI• f.JI Ml-tolt C1ehn MI el Olla.tt Cw.of N I Ttnt t~ Ml et MllWIVMe ~ J.JI Otll., (Nmtt~ ,,.,,.., ....... ..., .. et .. ,tt.,. •. fl c.tl lfotWe .. Ottrott. fl 1111-""«.::C. ft Ofllyt ...... NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Pct.GB Philadelfhia 14 9 .609 Montrea 15 11 .577 l'z Chicago 13 13 .500 212 Pittsburgh 12 13 .480 3 St. Louis 12 l5 444 4 New York 12 18 .400 51::! West Division Dodgers 17 10 .630 CincinnaU 17 12 .586 San Francis<'o 15 ,,. 11 .577 l 1 1 Houston lt lS .423 s1,2 Atlanta 11 16 .407 6 San Diego lO 16 .385 6 1::? ,......,.,kef'W Alltfltl> M . Mofltrul 1·1 -ton S, l'lllledlttllN• I <lfl<ll'lftMI 1, .... Y4N11t. IO llWl•"O' 0.1< ..... ~ Oie9D ' LH Anotlft J, st. Loutt I S.fl ,,ll'<l'ICO J, Plltlllu~ 1 T..._'to-t f'ilklMirtP' C91y-n l·ll ll Wfl Fr1>11<1KO CaerT t4• Hew Yen CE..-1·21 at MoMr .. I (Me• NI HovtlOlt C~llO 2>31 •t Pnll•lllN• IL,o,,. llor9 ).II awe..-nt "-dle1 J.ll at S.ft oi..,.. t.-. 2·21 SI. LOUii (Oet11,. J. II at Lot A,,..lff CllMC!e1t ..01 °"'' (NINt 9<'*91.iled .,,..,....., .. ~ OllC.419t."" oi..,. Pllbllu~ Ill S.wi ~ellCltco "" Yti(1lel ....,.,...,, ~ Cllldftftetl et '911~. fl SI. t..eult «.._.,,....-,fl Ofll., """"~ LEASIN~ ••• ALL MAKES AtLMODELS NEW .... OR USED • 8 I OM. Y Pa.OT . Wectnwtay, 1'1ay 10. 1978 SOFTBALL/RACQUETBALL Softball Tourney Set for GW£ Top Racque tball Players Compete Area Sports Calendar U ndt'Cutoo Ct'rrtlO!i t'ollcae und host Golden We t ••II be oo u coltblon courst• If farlt·rouod pa1r1ngi. in the Soul.bern Caltforniu Junior college sec· taon.tl :.ortball playoffs go a£ t>cbeduled Thursday. CerrllOs meeli Puadcna etnd Golden West faces San Bernardino at 10 Thursday morning in opening action. The winners meet oo the G WC field at 7 in what could be a prelu de lo the championship finals on Saturday. Both teams have outstanding pitching with Cerritos' Tippy Borrego boastlnq a 0.09 ERA and Golden West's Kathl Rosen· bery a 0 22 mllfll. Each school captured a conrerence cham· piotuhlp, Cerritos winning the South Coat crown and G WC the Soutbun CaUrornia CaUfonlia Utle. Cerrito& has been rated No. 1 In th~ •tat.e moat of the year and breeied to a ?.8-0 record, 20 or the wins coming in conference play. Golden West had a 11>-0 conference record and was 28-S-2 overall. Rosenbery had three no· hitters but seldom plays when she isn't pitching. Borrego, on the other hand, plays in the out· field when not pitching and had a .333 batting average including SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY Se hob/a Espanol 4-PLY POLY TUBELESS TIRES 49 --.........~--- Pl US $1 .69 f.E.T. A78·13 BLACKW AU TUBELESS w~...:..:..:_;_::+o:::,=.~~;.;.;;:..=-:,.+..:.:=.:... 27 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY 4 PLIES IN TREAD AREAi 2 FIBERGLASS BEL TS OVH 2 PLIES POLYESTER CORDI $ 89 ' A78-13 PLUS Sl.73 f.E.T. WHITEWALL TIRES 30MONTH * LIMITED WARRANTY Sllf WHlff lUlflfU 878-13 C78.JA E78.J4 F78·14 l'llCE $22.99 $23.99 $25.99 $26.99 $27.99 21.89 $1.97 $2.19 $2.JA $2 .47 $2.55 $2.77 PEP BOYS . , STILL GIVES A LIMITED ROAD HAZARD WARRANTY* AT NO EXTRA COST IH( 'I• lOYS CIVlS A llMITEO WAHANIY ON CO .. illl 1105 '01 A SPlCll llO NUM8U 01 MONTHS AC.AINSI All l OAO HAl .. IOS IN NOlMAl PASSINGfl CAl USI OAMAG(IJ llVE Will Bl H•lACFO WITH "0 0 1£0 MONHHY AOJUSlM!Nl CHAll(;f ... S(O ON 'fCUlAl SUllMC', Pt tC( Al llMt 01 PUICtlAU 6 PLIES STRONG IN THE TREAD AREA! 2 FIBERGLASS BELTS OVER 4 PLIES POL VESTER CORD! $ 99 E78·1' PLUS $2.41 F.E.T. WHITEWALL TIRES 30MONTH * LIMITD> WARRANTY •"12-.:.1 i•~ .......... l ........ .. ,....," Nlf fWlf IUNUO . ,, ..... ... . .. .,, ..... i'2~1 ·····1 -~ :.:,-;;::: ~ i= ·.;: •tt .... •1• o• "' "" JUCTIONIJI fUNWJ .,..,.. a•" ......... . ...... · Marly Hogan i1 the heavy favorite as the $20,000 KuoNan· Leach racquetball tournament or cbamplons begins Thursday at King's Court In Wntminstet. The 20-year·old Hogan bas won eight ol n1De evenl.a oo thl.a year's pro tour and ls the No. 1 seed, followed by Charlie Brum· field, a flve·tlme national champion. Other players in the four-day event includes Steve Serot, Dave Bledsoe, Craig McCoy, Jerry Hilecher, Bennie Koltuo, Rich Wagner, Jay Jones , Steve Keeley. Mark Morrow and St.eve Strandemo .. w.-..~, TtMls--Unlwet~ty of S.n oieoo •t uc ,,..,,,,. 011.m.1. Git!& IOf._.l-CIDll• Moe et S.n C .. tMnle, CofOll• Oet MM et MIHIOft Vie Jo, 0.n• Hllll 11 EJ r-. IC•t••• a1 ~'-v.i1ay "'"et a. m. ~, TtMh~Mnl OlllloNlla JC -nty. Olrh IOf .. 11~-'SOA at N-,_i Harbff, Merine •t ~n Vetley, ~ml~ et-· l119ton 8ell<h lell •t >1; s.nl• An• •I IE01W1CMI UI; Harl&etit el H""'lftOtOI\ V •ti.y Clw'lltle<\ CJ:JO); 8MMI Owl•llan •t Liberty Q>r1111 ... CJ:JOI; 5ouU1W11 Qt JC ...-;ltloMls al Gol- W..11. Gltlt $1Wlmmlne-4an CJe<ne<\le •I Dene Hiiis. El Toro •I Ml•lon Vlefo, ~vvne 8 .. <n •I uni ... ""'· c:ar-_. -• c.ia MeM 1a11 ec 3.m. Girts ~ d9I l!Qr at MiWon Vltlo, IEI T-.. OKia MeM. U.-h.m et O.n• Hiiis (ell •U: UI. .. ,.... Basebelt-0 ..... ii-A •nd , •• pl•,OlfS "'"' 1.-1; Oii~ Flllll•rtonet UCtrvlne tt·:IOI. Tr.cl-0" M ~·llN 94 ~ HI• 14 pm I. Cll' 3 A ptetlmj et El -n• Hleh 12 p.m.I, UC 11'111,.•I PCAA ,.,..,, Ttrullt-<11" '-A Pl•YOfl.I ~ .. 1111n9C011 a.4dl el Coron• del -· Merl ... et Troy, Ultolw.Wtv .r Rolllnt Hiii•. Est .. cl• •t s_., HHI•. l..eftg 8H<h Poly et ~ iu..-.1 .. I •I I If. SOlllMl'ft llllMlt M UC lrvl,_ 12 p.111..>. ~­ Cellfo"'le JC~ Vol .. ybell-GIF pUryefft h4HOftd -I. Girl• ~I-El Toro •I u.1"'9'911Y ....... VloJo al 0.M Hiiis. Corone del M*f •t C.lt Mew <•II •• 3:1SI; Soutn.rn Clillfwlll.ll X ..c.. lion••'., (loldtn WMI (61119(t. Gitt• 9ymn&ill<1-.s..nut Ut .... flrl.Ma •I Merlft• H._, tu; South C:O.st IA..,_,.._ 1111 Dene HOii IJI; G&reltn Gn>-~ flMlt et S.11lle90HI• i.pm I. Glrls ~-..in ""'"'...,et~. H•WPOf'I H•rtlof •t WolmlMAler, HllllllllQ!eft Beech •I Merine 1•11 •t l . ISi • Glrn ttl<k-01" •A pre11ms •t Arced!• HIOft 14 pm.I; Cl,. ~A prellm.1 •I El •~..._ U p.m.l. setw*r lleitbell-tlC lrvlM et Cal S•ate FUllet'tln COoubleM..,. .. -1. COSTA MESA FULLERTON SANTAANA WESTMINSTER 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. PHONE: 870-0700 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547-7477 15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE: 893-8544, ADOS TO YOUI DllVltG COMJ-OIT KEEP COOi. AIR COOL CUSHION FLAT TIRE lllFLATI• & IEALIR '"'"''"' ,,, ••. ,..,.,,., i.o\, '" I'"' "'In••••· A llO<h to vol•• of lot '"""'°'--i.' KU' A CAN UllDY II YOUI CU 79' e HIAVY OUfY fl!Alol( •$HOCK AtsOltllMG •tAlt S'IUNGS • iACIMC SfYll HA1'4C>ll LU & SAC>Olf • CHROME CHAIM GUAaO e t>EIUXf lO·SPffO SHIMANO Qf.l,R • 21 IN. Jt 1 V. IN. <WMWAll nus • S Tf 1'1 SMfTtl • ltlCIC Sl AHO IN Olt6GINl.l CAlllOH 79'8 EASY TO llSTAU. • CIJIUACT $ PllCI MUSICAL HORNS WRENCH SETS Wl"JI J ""°" IWIO METRIC OR S.A.E. r •n .coeifloi. I' • ,,. 6 er 12 Veit . .,.,_ ......... ~. _.,.,_, ~:.,t-pl•r•d 1788 RUllER Cllt MATS fOI MOST ST ANO ARD Ol INlUMIDIA Tl CAIS • RflNfOllCfO IN HEAY'Y WLU AUAS • t()HG LA$11NG llESISfS WLU ~ SfAINS DRESS-UP ~ coMnm 444 YOUR CAR 4 ,.ICI HT H f Of &LACK ONl Y f'IOltT & IHlt ,_ WAGNER ,__!!Pi BRAKE FLUID HEAVY DUTY All SrEEl HYDRAULIC JACK TAKE YOUR CHOICE ftASU; Ri ch creomy po>le lormulo . 14 0 Z. PROTKTS AGAINST RAIN, DIRT & DtTIRGtNT WASHES ~PAYitou_s_1_o0l YOUR CHOKE FOR PURCHASING 1 2 98 IAllDAICI CAI WAX l MAil ENClOSfD COUPON TO I EACH OU PONT AND GET ~1 00 BACK. I WHITE @!> HEAVY DUTY ·POLISHING oa RUBBING COMPOUND COMPOUND •Helps your oil do o better job. •Helps reduce friction ond wear. •Helps reduce oil consumption. lSFLUID 99( OUNCE CAN W•llf • MfW STP GAS taUTMOll Mll"• • hflprove the clto11lftQ "°"'•' of oooolin•. leoded & unltoded • Ke•p carbure,or deon • Keep intoh volvtJ & iftlake "'onilold• cl.aft ...--• fight ""' In luel ,.,,,,,,. ~\:19~ UM"I g:E 59 ( ' IA.. fJ'[M CARBURETOR PCVVALVE & CHOKE SPRAY CLEANER : ~~o ~:!fm. 9& &.-' u oz. Sfl( 7· .. . :· GIRLS SPORTS / BASEBALL I BOATING GWC Captures Finale, 8·7 LOS ANGELES-Golden w.i Colle1e built • l 0 lead with dar· 1na base rwinln& but needed four conaecutJve walk• ln lbe .tJbt.b lnnl na to score what proved to be t.be wuuUn& run ln T&aotd~'a B·l Southern Calltornla Con· rerence basebaU finale over LA Southwest College. The RusUers finished second in the conference standin1s at 16-8 and were 24·11 overall. Leadoff batter J ohn Moses started a four·ru.n first innln& when be singled, stole second and scored on Steve Nemeth's single. After a wild pickoff tbrow. Nemeth ~cored on • 1round out by Ruu Pen/old. Prank Mera.1 WU aare on an er- ror •nd Rick Clark rouowed wtlh hla aecood homer ol lhe year. In tbe second lnnlnc. Dan Jackaon 1Jnaled. stole aecond and acored on Nemeth '1 second RBI slnale. In the flftb, the Rustlers scored twtce as Moees Je11ed out an infield 1ln1Je, Jtole a pair ol bases and acored on a single by Doug MansoUno who later tallied on a ground out. ' II • 410 010 010-. t I 000 OjO OOZ-1 tO 1 ......... ., Mrll .. ~ai-... JI ID "'""· <f • ) ) 1 JM--· lilt J I I 0 He-I\, tt S I 2 t Allen, :Mt 0 0 0 0 ............... )111 ........ < JOOO "9ftfeN, I• • I 0 I NHll>COO, P 0 0 0 0 MetH , rt ) I 0 I fltMentell, P 0 I 0 0 ,,_,fl Jo 1 o He1wi.r-.• o o Io OIR,.. • 1 I 2 Wllllt , • 0 0 0 0 .. verlft, .. I 0 0 0 Tot.Ct it I t I IOUnf•ttN CAL c:o•u•••••a LAHM'Mr GoldtnWesl c.-....... fltloHOfldo Senta M4lftke Los.""'. oc: LA~ , ..... ~,·.1c-. Geldltfl w.st a. LA ~11 CyP<eM S, RIO Hanclo • Cl21Msl w L T Ot II S I -, •• 0 J"t n•orti 1' • f 4 12tr06~ 6 '' 0 ,,~. 2U 0161.-t LA H•111W-Dy torftll -LACC Girls' Athletics For Coast Area F...-Page8J JOKERST ••. ia coming? "It 'a been a situation I am very familiar with in the past and it will be John's <Sewell> de· cislon which one of us plays." 5eColil TN"' a.. ........... .- Ofa .... CMM C.Vtl U\ltl IMta .-a s ....... Von Llllll>Of COi oet ... MOy .. 1. W . Joilmlon (01 0.1. Allen .. l. M . LIPIO'I CSI Gel. Me.,..rs 1-6, W . 7·S: !.hoM CS> def. McOonell M , 3-6, M ; My•U COi "'""· Klno Ml. s-1. M ; Sierra (01 def. 8oe11M,~7·$. o..Met Von L"'-Me .... ,.. COi def. Hanly·LI-._,, ,.. . Jof\n,ton-Mye" COi '11111 wlltl All.,..Sfl!M .. , ... l. McOaolell·Sl.,,a COi Otl lloell·Brldge •l ... 2 Bad ..... tOR '-....... Venlty ~l.i11 v .. ,.., dtlf N--1 Harbor, .. , HunlinglOfl llNdl dtf l!dCicwi, i... Merl,,. 11•0 Welt mintier . ..._ S.-CINtt ...... Yertlty Uo11Aa lteKll dtf Ow-ditl Mar. M El Toro"'"" Sen CletneM9 7·0. c.Mwyu.e-E,'-<ladtl. TU&UnM Mier Yef'IHy COl'Olle dltl MM 6, ~ 8Hcll I £IT0t0°"" SenO.-wM EUMt<la etf T1Allft1·1. SeltlHlll Vanity IMM tsl CJl C.. Valtey lrotiM-DuOrNn. ti ).).).0. Loclle, 211 1·1-, ~s. lb~. Wl<I<•, u M+I; OV.U., lb ~. o-. cf 1+1·3: Sl>a•. c ~; u ... rt 2~; Roberti. p ~ Totalt 21.s.).4 C.cw1tr-Valley~. u 4'4MM; O'.....,., lb 4~. -.yt>em, p 6-1·1.0, Wllllamtewl, c •-o+I; FutSI, :it>~; WNtney, II 4+1-1; Ron- c1 .. u, Jb l+l.O, A911t11..-. rf ,..., Tron., d l+H . ToU1•2l-)+1. Sciwe-.1 ..... r II • Irvine 001 O)I) 1-S l l C.PO Vall.... 000 100 J~ 6 I Julll.-., enlty '"""' en C61 C.. Yali.y Venlly hM<la (t ) (JI cw .. E stancof -Ool'tlgan, u 4.0·1·1: Biiyeu. lb M-7-2; P9noley, cl 4+H; McCollum, rf ).M.O, C.muon, rt 1.0-0.0: NISO.L c 2+41-0 SI mcitan. I b 441.0; .. l""H. II ).l+o· e.•vor, 7b M ·1.0· 11e91..,. p l·M.O. Tota1117·"4S • .._.._.,, ..... • II • t02 llJ ()-4 • , 110 -C>-2 7 s 6pl..nfn ~ We• I I (MUI (IJUI MMW Ve1111-1. S. S.WlflllW tMI I.I; 2 0r.....-u IWI 1.6; 1caieIMI1..1. lla r\-t. s. Ser....., IMI Io. J. Or....., twl 1.6.) Ao•J <WI 71 BM"'-1 Obeft !WI I .I; J. C:.0....C°" !Wl 7~: 1 ~:2:.·~tlel...._ IMI, L~ (MIU, ) Oofft CWIU Att·ro---1 S. S.WlllOff <Ml; J. Oller1 !Wl; J O•a9•sllu twl 0-Nlllt(1C1.61 C1JL41C..- r Vamet-1 _..,.CDl l.6,2.~CDI LJ;J M:1!~:_'f1:1!1 MorQM IOI,~ ICI U.: J Mui .... 1017.4. e .. m -1. Molll<.e CCI U ; 2. Millleft IOI 7'; J lffF'::.~!~~ .... !DI U ; 2. MMIU (CJ IA J. M~~r.,:~o. Moille.a ICI 31.I, 2 t•el Mlf'o- CDI. Mullen COi ll t s ...... Ya"'" e-.. cm1 1u1 "..,., ... c11 200 "'4'dlev m911-1. Eo1son 2.01.0. 200 lrtt-1. TrOllt !El 2:10.J; 2. Br-. CHI 1 I) 6; l. Lita-I IEI 2 17.7 200 IM-1 LAYf'•I CEI t ·3UI; 2. 8'-1<* !El 1 31.J; J. KodKtw• CEI 2;J7.7. so frtt-1 W•ISI> ( .. I ~I; Z. Blldrls IEI 27.7; l . o. ... nporl CEI 21..J. OlwlftQ-1 l'l<-!El 11•.U; 1. Weil-IEI 141 u · 3. OW'tilQPMr!IOft Cl!I M2.00. 100 i1y-I ~ IEI l·OU; 2. Roe.tU CEI t·o.i.t. l .... _ c .. 11 OS.t. 100 tr-I c;... CEI S7..J; 2. l6rral (El S7..S; ). Sl\IPll CHI I 01,0 )00 fr-I. Troul IEI S; ... ; Z. W...,. IHI S 42.A; l Lit.I CEI • U l. 100 tMtO-t F.a IEI IM>. 2 SMetca IEI Stars' Tryouts Set Open tryouts for the Orange County Stars pro volleyball team are scheduled tonight between 7·8 o'clock al Fountain Valley High's gym. Anyone is eligible to try out. Player·coacb Dodge Parker says the St.an are still looking to complete their roster with a fourth hitter. t :Ot.O: J. ~(El 1:11..L 100 iwe.t-1. o._. (El I IU, t eudrls (El 1:1t.l .l.Mfn9\lm C .. l 1.20t. .c)O frff r.lay-1 EdiliCn • ._, .. , .. va11.., W I Cltl '"-1 H••r 200 .....,..., reley-ffewport .. arbor l °' s 100 frff-1. CMtson CN .. 11 OIO, J. L-CNH I 2: 1 .. S; l . ~ (FVI t· IL1. 200 IM-1. WOOi-CN .. I 2:2U; 2. Pino (NHI 2:2'.0; J. TllNI CFVI 2:)7.4. $0 frff-1. KlftlPlend Cf'VI 27.0: 2. I.Hint IN .. I 21.t · J. Hewtend CN .. 127.7. olvlng-1 • .._ (FVl IM.t; 2. SUNftan CH .. , U .. 81; 3. Fr-(FVI 12.S.tS. 100 fly-I, Slll\oSOY (NHI 1:0...S! 2. Aldflclgt CFVI 1:07.6; 3. Weeltolk INHI l:IS.O. 100 ftff-1. Lavlns INHI ff.S; 2. Hewl.tftd CNHI St.6: ). Qlrilla CF'\ll 1:01.4. 500 lf'ff-1. CMllOll CNHI 5·3'.I; 2. Orlgos tf'VI 6:02.4: J. Lono (NHH:OU. 100 beck-I."""*' (NHI 1:11,0; 2. Wttlef tFVl 1:tJ.~; 1~CNHl1:1S ... 100 .....,_,.Piao (NIO 1:14.1; 2. TIMIK "VI I• 17 .3; J. Mlndlftolt IFVI t· lt.O. .00 trff ,....,~I HMbOr • o:I I MWt111 t•I WI W..tlftl111ter 200 meotey Nlay-1. Metina J :OU. 200 1._1. e.rett tMI 2:20.2; 2. W.Cllmelte< CMI 2:2•.t; J. Rlctllrdloft IWI 2:JO.t . 200 IM-1. ~ IMI 2"1U; 2 Crocl« CWI J; >4-•. J. 8ernMnll (MI t : 40, I, SO frff-1. ~ !Ml :ILi. 2. Mlllff CWI 2t..t. J. MdM+I IWUO.$. Dlvlftt-1. Glf«iw1 IWI Z. H. Meire-C>oil, J. ~ ""*-CM). 100 llr-1. -rrt CM> l:OLS; 2. M:e'" IMI I: ll.6. >. Deeom. CWI 1:22.5. 100 f .... -1. ~ tnll 1:0S.O; 2. "*'- (Ml 1.0.,0; 1 Miit« twl 1:05.~ SOI Ir..-.. 8arrett !Ml•· ; 2. Welllme"- IMI 6·42.0; l. Aave !Ml 6: 100 1»<11-1 . .._,!Ml 1:«1' . "-"'-CWI l:U.0, J. ~<Ml l:U.t. 100 breast-t. Wini,.., CMI I· .1; 2. hfMerOI (Ml 1:24.1; J. SM,_ CWI 1:2'..S. atrw,.....,-1.~•:41.•. l...-....0 Ct61 <171 C.... Valley JOO m9dley reley~ llMcll 1. 11.1. 200 trff-1. Bflll091e CCVI 2;1t.O, 1. ~ Cl81 t.n.o: J. Ko.tw CL8 12'36.t. 200 IM-1. Thorpe CCVI J:J7.3; 2. L.IHl9t'"""' CLlll 2:-..J; J. 0'9rlell CCVI 2:511. so ,, .. -1. Kotter CLBI u.s; 2. Hedley CL81 28.0, > R~ CCVI 1t.O. OIYl119-1. Kofllmelw CCVI; 2. 8urrlll tllll; l. ..11911lni CLBI. 100 llw-1. 911ce tCVl 1:0U; 2. LAOlrmen CLBI 1. IS.O; 3. Sltydw !Lill t:n.t. 100 fr--1 KoMlr CL81 9.6; 2. LAnt (L81 t :Ot .•; J. RClllerttCWI ICV I I :OU. '°°free-I. 8llltle91e CCVI •:21.2; 2. a.-IUI 6:2'.•: J. Boucllly (C\117:07.t. 100 UC.-1. Bila ICVI 1:11.t; 2. K~ IL81 1:20.t; J. O'•i.t CCVI 1:tt.L 100 br_.-t, ThorDe tCVI l :U. S; 2. fltCINllU !Lill 1:19..S;J. W ........ <L811:27.I. .. .,.. ......,.-'....1911N ...,. •: ... 1. JmlerV8f'llty hl99 IMlrl CJll ....._ 8Nc1t 100 medley .... -.-t. ~ 1:00,S; 100 tr.-1. Hale IEI l:OU; 100 IM-1. ~o IEI 1.11.J; so 1....-1. o.t1ee !El it.I; dlwlfl0-1 Wetdl IEI 0.0; 50 fly-I.-· !El JU; JO lt9dt--4. Lucero I El U .2; '8 brHM-1. LA<ocll CEI '7..J· 200 fr• relay-I. E4ISoft 1 · s.t.1 Sewell wu happy with the of· rense. "We got two goals in the first half for the first time thls year and that's very encouraging," Sewell said . "With another aame together. the orrense is coming around. "We used more width out there tonight and we weren't blocking the middle up as much as we d1d before. "Our forwards haven't been getting enough chances to score bul tonight they showed they can do It. Our forwards were very pleased with the service they got tonight." Tbe Surf picked up the max· imum of nine points with the vie· tory to move into the top spot with 48 and a 6-3 record. The first goal came at 22:42 when Ray Evans placed a penal· ty kick in front of Dan Counce who scored his third goal or the season. At 36:45, Manuel Cuenca took a perfect pass from Al Trost for the second score. Steve Moyers scored t.be final goal with 7:30 left. when he sent a header Into the comer of the net after a long pass from Chris Dangerfield. For Trost, the assist was his 21st and placed him second on the club career list in lhis de· partment. · Frid ay night the Surf plays an inte rnational game at Anaheim Stadium against Stuttgart, Germany starting at 7:30. Three Surf players are not expected to see acUoo, however, including captain Peter Wall who suffered an ankle ~W'Y Tuesday night. He joins George Graham and Malcolm Lord on the injured list. Graham and Lord did not play Tuesday and Sewell said it Is doubtful lf any or the three will play Friday. F,....P,,,,e83 UC IRVINE'S BARDAIAES. • • cathlon.s every weekend u.nW he broke It. That was 8,411 at the age of 29. U be could have pole vaulted better, he'd still have the world record." P erhaps lt is for this reaaon Bardales has spent extra time working on the pole vault, where he has a best or 15·6. His best high school vault was a paltry 9-6. • "They stuck me in the pole vault some times but we didn't have a plt so when we camt to a meet that was our practice and competition." Bardales says. His most polished event ls the javelin, bis easiest ls the 400 and his most dreaded ls tbe 1,500. Ube were to equal bis lifetime bests in each or the events, be would acore 8.300 points. After gradual.loo, Barda.lee plans on training at UCJ for the 1980 Olympic Games ln MOICOW. He bas hls sights set on scoring 8,SOO points next year and, eventually, 9,000. .. J'd like to be the first over 9,000," he says. "I'd lilce a record that will be significant and take a long tlme to break. The Olym· pies are a stepping st.one for future things. If I can go t.bere and do good, thal would be just a quarter of my ambiUona for the future. "Right now, tbe decathlon ls my thing. Once I'm finished with it, J hope to leave it." There's anotber aide or .8ardaJea that few people see. An in· tense, )'et quiet, young man, be would like to exploit bis succeaa as an athlete but not ln the nonna1 sense. Rather than trying to see what be can gain, be t.hlnU in terms of what be can give. "EveataaaUy, I'd like to open a probatloo camp for kJds," says the social science major. ''I'm loottnc forward to doinc something like thaL 1bat'a my major ambit.Ion. If you have a name, that belpa." Mother's Day ls May14di. Why pay 10to15 points to a broker? GM her a gift that Eliminate the middle man - DEAL DIRECTLY WITH LENDER •88¥9~ •Falt IPP!cwal • Funding ueually In onty 1·2 wellkl • Borrow men • 109M to 815~ d fair nwat vltue • Up to 101Mf'I to repey .,...... • It!~-~---.. ___ ,.....,,....., CALL TOOAY FOR OUR AAT£8 :"=~AL (714)752-LOAN ,._port 8ildl. CA .-0 I llfOW8 from · Roger's Gardens. SHOP EARLY our IMlll 1•11• rw enrrtltl• JOU want to knowebout rour ,..,. ...... DAILY PILOT .. ' • . . ' Wed~ May 10 1970 DAIL V PILOT 83 GRANDPA NORKSKOO PILOTS BOAT TO NEW PACIFIC OFFSHORE RECORD A Speed Record at GS Bob Nordskog or Van Nuys celebrated his 6Sth birthday Sunday by smashing a 12-year· old record for a run from San Francisco to Marina del Rey in his 39·foot. 850 horsepower boat. NORDSKOG MADE THE rWl in seven hours and three minutes to break the old mark of 11.6 hours set in 1966. The old record was established on a ruo from Marina del Rey to San Francisco. Nordskog averaged 55 miles per hour during the 400 mile dash which was sane· t1oned by the AmerfQan Power Boat Assoc1a· t1on. "THERE WERE NO PROBLEMS with the exceplJon of a little rough water between Monterey and Point Concepcion, but we ex· peeled that.·· said Nordskog Well wishers at Cahfom111 Yacht Club greeted him with champagne and sang ··Hap· py Birthday as Nordskog pulled his turbo· charged craft into the slip. Six Challenge for Cup NEWPORT. R.J. 1.(p) -Six foreign yacht. clubs. including one represenlJng England's return to competition, have challenged the New York Yacht Club for the Amer ica's Cup. The club's America ·s Cup Committee. which met Monday in New York. released the list or challengers for the 1980 races in a statement draft· ed by a New York City public relations firm. Australia. -Royal Yacht Club of Golhenburc. Sweden. -Royal Southern Yacht Club of England. and -Soc1ete des Regat.5 Rochella1ses of France. COMMODORE HENRY ff. Anderson Jr of I.he NYYC satd the hst oC foreign chaJlengers ts the largest in the cup's 127·year history. breaking the 1977 record of four. Cn.a• •ENGES ACCEPTED BY lb ·t· "Obviously we've got a lot to learn about who "f e commi some of these people are."' Anderson said "But tee camye '°htmCI: b d'H r F we're pleased. This will be the most challengers -ac u 1yeres o ranee. . · ever ... -Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron of Australia. Last summer. B&ron Marcel Bich brought two -Royal Perth Yacht Squadron or Western yachts over from Yacht Club d'Hyeres and the Macho Racers Battle Winds Four classes or dinghies braved strong winds Saturday and Sunday in the Los Angeles Yacht Club's Macho Regatta. Winds in the outer breakwater area whisUed up to 18-24 knots resulling in 15 capsiiings. All of lhe capsized boats were righted and finished the races lo which they were Involved. Results: 5·0·5 -1. Brauch-Beck. LA YC ; 2. Warfield· Gilmock. Rkhmond YC; 3, Paul Tara. Santa Cruz YC ; 4, Dennis Curtees, Palo Alto YC. LASER -1. Craig Healy, St. FYC; 2. Bill George. Richmond YC: 3, Paul Cayard, St. FYC; 4, Mike Smith, Navy YC. FINN -1, D.R. Wilson. Ventura Sailing Club: 2, Cary Brokaw. LAYC; 3. F.R. White. SCSA. INTERNATIONAL CONTENDER -1. Jim Andrew, Palo Alto YC; 2, Jerome White. SBSC; 3. Doug Brown, SCCYC. Wumians Score In ff t)bie Racing Orange County skippers came home with the lion's share of trophies from the Hobie Cat Family Retreat regatta at Lake Havas u City on the Colorado River. The Saturday and Sunday event featured eight classes of the speedy catamarans. Winds were moderate on the desert lake Satur· day and light on Sunday. ORANGE COUNTY SAILORS took six first places ln the eight classes. Summary ~r results: HOBIE·l8-l. Danny Gide, Dana Point; 2. Stu Wentworth, San Diego; 3. Dick Woodside, Long Beach ; 4, Bob Thomas. Oceanside: 5. Steven Zwiesler. Redondo Beach. HOBIE·l6A-l. Steve Leo. l..agWla Beach; 2, Larry Crooke. Big Bear Lake: 3. Nick Steele. Balboa Island; 4, Don Oltmans, San Marino: Jim Brooks, Costa Mesa. HOBIE·HB-1, KEVIN Hutt.on, Huntington Beach: 2. Jerr Hardjlraves. La J olla; 3, Joe Hernandez, Hermosa Beach; 4, Jim Grimes. San Diego; 5, Terry Niemeyer, Lake Havasu City. HOBIE·llC-1, Ray Howard, 'l'usUn; 2, Jim Sutton, Caplstrano Beach; 3, Jim Raffelt.o, Foun· tam Valley; 4, Ken Roy, San Diego; 5, Jon Flack, Phoenl". HOBIE-16 Novice-I, Blrf Leonard. La Jolla; 2, Frek Karef, Woodland Hills : 3, Barbara Bartik, Lake Havasu City; 4, Sig Wallen, Newport Beach; s, Rob Caine, Costa Mesa. ROBIE-HA-I, IAlllE Olson, Loe Angeles: 2. Miies Wood, San' Dlego; 3, John Golaen, San Dfe10. HOBIE·14B-1. John Kenieh. Huntington Beach; 2, Steve Hutten, Capiatrano Beach: 3, Ross Sutton C.plstrano Beach. H0BI£·14C-l:..Oon Crider, Garden Grove: 2. B. Munsey, Costa mesa : 3, Christian Banks Dana Point; 4, Jim Lant.I, Palos Verdes ; s. Bill Myrter, Dana Potnt. · Happy Tinte Tops Cabrillo Series Happy 1'lme, alclppered bf F.d Cummins ol the hoet clUb won the Roeer Roec:amp Perpetual trophy for tho betl performance in the Performan~ ha.ndtca_J> Ractn.i Fleet In the aecotld race of th Cabrlllo Beach Yacht Club's Cabrillo Serles Saturday The race wu from Loa Anrelea H1tbor around Ship Red olt Catalina Island &nd mvn. Final re· 1ult1: i -1 <*tC, , .._....,. OWdl,...,.. ..._ t. C:...t. __,. .._, a ~"-A-4 • o-. caver t. ....._._ ... "l'9Ufll. ~E~' .... LllllMI, Al o ..... CIYC;" .: .. ., c.n.tl' C.VC; ......... 1'.S. L.Dfr-.t, "' . . '· _.......... crrc. . Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron again sent veteran l'ampa1gner Gretel II to Newport THE ROYAL GOTHENBURG Yacht Club of Swedcm will be returning for ;, second t1 mE.-wi th Svenge. a computer·des1gned 12·meter that lost in the foreign finals to Australia in 1977 Royal Perth made its first challenge tn 1974 with Southern Cross. Alan Bond backed the Southern Cross effort but abandoned Royal Perth for the Sun City Yacht Club and the yacht Australia last year The RoyaJ Southern Yacht Club. which 111 mak· ing its first challenge. will represent U\e return of Britain's effort to capture the Amenc·a s Cup. Th~ last time England was represented was tn 1964. THE SOC1£TE DES REGATS Rochella1ses. which bought 195 defender Columbia irom the Sverif$e syndicate last yt>ar. 1s entirely new to America's Cup competition but will challenge in 1980. Last week. 1967 and 1970 defender Intrepid was returned to Rhode Island whue 8 1ch intends to use the wood·hulled yacht as a tnal horse for his two 12-meters. Rich. who made his fortune with ballpoint pens. stored France I and France H 1n Barnngton, R.I.. over the winter and is expected to have a newer 12-meter ready for 1980. THE DEADLINE FOR entering challenges for the next America's Cup competition was April 18. However. the cup committee decided to wait until a fte r ittt May 8 meeting to annou nce the challengers. The America ·s Cup was awarded to the New York Yacht Club in 1851 after the schooner America defeated a rJeet of BnUsh vessels Since then. American yachts have defended the cup 23 limes. Last summer. Atlanta Br:ives owner Ted Turner sailed Courageous to <t four·race shutout against Australia. Nelson Top Sailor Mary Jane Nelson of the Leeway Sailing Club won the Boswell Memorial trophy tn South Shore Yacht Club's Ladles Sabot sen es SWlday. The event drew seven entries Other trophy winners were: 2. Jackie Smiley, BYC ; 3. Mary Tyler. BYC. 4. Coline Gibbons. BYC. DOES THIS LOOK UKE YOUR DREAMBOAT? If so. contact Marvin at Ensign Yachts. He'll find one for you or a reasonable racsimile .• -· f 541-1131 SPICIAL OP THI DAY ••. 40'0.....Ca J'rt.t, ......... '11 ....... .., ..... IJS.000.: , \ ' I -DAll.Y Pll.Ot Wednteday, M11to,1978 Brown· Backs Coal Use PASADENA lAP> -Gov. Ed mund G. Brown Jr. says he aup· ports the developmeat of coal· fired power plants in Cahlomia as long as the environment is prolected. ( TAK ING STOCK J voted 9-7 Tuesday to send t.he blll to the full Senate. The crucial vote for reporting the btll came from Sen. J ohn A. Durkin, D·N.H., who said he would vote against the bill on t.he floor if it remains in its present form. A series of amendments by Durkin had been defeated by the committee and he promised to try again on the Senate noor. Saying "thil~ is an immediate challenge that must be met." the governor announced Tues· day the creation or a new agen· cy. the California Cl~ao Fuels Coordinating CouncU. lo oversee the sometimes 'conflicting ac· lions of boards that control power sources. Brown said the use or coal pre· aents environmental problems but added that he felt those could be resolved. He aaid the new agency will be responsible •-io quickly resolve problems ol air pollution," -5· socialed with electricity p('Odur· t1on "As far aa state government is concerned, our omcial policy is one of enrouragement, of work- ing with the private sector and with universities and the federal government to bring about a coal technology which is com · patible with the quality of life in California." Durkin said the committee· passed version would result ln "windfall profits for the big in· surance companies" while fall· 1n g to provide surricient safeguards for consumers. THE NEW AGENCY,,.Brown said. will coordinate activfties of the state's Public Utilities Com- mission, Energ)' ~mission, Air Resources Board, Water Resources Control Board, Solid Waste Management Board and the state's Washington, D.C., of- fice. No-tatdt B aeked J 1t Claa Brealc D..e WASHING;I'ON <AP> -Air travelers who go first·class will find lower rares later this WASHINGTON <AP > -A Senate panel h as cleared for floor act.ion a bHl est.a blishing a nationwide system of no-fault automobile insurance, a pro· posal sought by consumer groups ror a decade. The Commerce Com mittee month. · The Civil A ~ronautics Board has approved reductions or 13 to 20 percent in domestic flrst·cla.ss fares, effective May 19. :Q:;t..• • ~\W:~ , '"Mother's Day is May~~th. Give her a gift that grows from' Roger's Gardens. SHOP EARLY R~n<*d.M •~ -...n .IQ.qvu• •t MMAnhur • N~ H•kh 9•m~m RA ISS ... 1 .. 0 of H1f' •t>ovt "'~ wn qod~ ol •ncovit myl1to109y '"" '""o fSS I~ nol IM 90ll ol , ......... h <enlu•• ~""-li/llf)ff\. " ·~ the INSllTVTE for SOI.Alt STUDIES. o.diuled"' commtmOr<!llOll ol SUN DAY to lt.e (4'\M OI ~1119 IM~···~·· In ·~ PU<htdl uw OI '"' wn·, _.,9, <Mlli.111~ .,,,. our SoutfW!fn C•llfOf" .. hf.style TM INSTITUTE tor SOLAlt STUOlf$ •ntoc>un<~ to<m•llOll OI Summe< ~Kf' c~..es. ~-Wftfl OI Jirt JO. for l»fiCIM •nltr~ecl rn • Pl' .c ltC., IHlll!:f~ indf 119 oOl'lf" W of Ille wn·• tftC!f 9Y PlllNCIPLESO, SOL.All ENEltGY DESIGN OF SOt.Alt l!NERGY SYSYEMS INSTAUATIOM 01' SOLAR SYSTEMS la1tit11te for Solar St11die Cell I~ ltf91Slt•lor ~ mtQfTNttioft· 11'41551-7111 (714) 157•7125 ---P. 0 . Box 1b'Jf>, Coste Mesa. CA 92626 C714) "7·7124 _... AFFAIR OF THE HEAR'r W>ett>er It be 8 graceful 14K QOld heart or • r«Jiant pave diamond hellf1-St>e w/11 love you more for IL. Potlll*' HNtt Diamond P.ve 14K Qokj '9000 HMl1 '85()00 ) William Paul McKay has joined the starr of Estey-Uoover Advertising and Public Relations, Newport Beach, as an account executive. His background is in sales management and promo- tion, he was founder and principal of Omega Cen· tury Productions of Los Angeles. Char Hutchlnson, Mission Viejo, bas joined Seville Escrow Corp., Irvine, as junior escrow of· ficer. She previously worked with other licensed escrow corporations in the south bay area of Orange County. Her background consists primari- ly of bank management and tract and resaJe·type transactions. • Joseph V. Cherry, Newport Beach, quality as- surance manager for rectangular and circular connectors. has been promoted to director quality assurance al ITr Cannon Electric, Santa Ana .. lie is responsible for quality assurance at plants in Santa Ana. Pomona. Phoenix, and Whit· by, Ontario, Canada. • Stephen Shirley, Laguna Beach, has been elected a '"ice president or Kidder-Peabody and Co. He has been with the company for seven years and is resident manager or the Newport Beach of· fice • Robert Barnett bas joined Air Caurornla, Newport Beach, as general counsel for legal and regulatory affairs. He is responsible for administering the com- pany's law department, preparing and reviewing contracts and leases, and coordinating the pre· paration or rate and route cases. He had been with the California Public Utilities Commission for 15 years. Since 1975 he had been the chief examiner. a Utle that changed last year to chief admlnistrallve law judge. Earlier he was an examiner in the administrative Jaw division or the commission. att.!r starting as a legal assistant to one or the commissioners. • J. Demetriaa Vames, Seal Beach, bas /'olned the sales staff or the Newport Beach office o Bui· ness Properties Brokerage Co. He is a former salesman with Grubb & Ellis and wW $S)eeialize in retail leaslnJ. • Directon or State Mutual Sa'filals ud Loan As· aodaUon, 'Newport Beach, have elected l ames My en, Newport Beac. vice president. Marketing director for the association, he has been with the company since 1971. • Christine Harte, Costa Mesa, savings supervisor at the Newport Beach office or Los Angel~ Fedenl SavlDgs, hu been named assls· tant vice president. She has been with the association for four years. beginning as a teller. • lobn Lallll, manager of the Newport Beach of· fice of Los Angeles Federal Sav1D11, bas been named a regional vice president .. · He has been an administrator ln the merchan- dising and real estate industry ln addition to 11ls banking experience. • Rebecca Smith, San Juan Capistrano, has been appointed public relations account executive at Lenac, Warford, S&one, lac., Irvine. She is former promotional aide for the Caplatrano-Laguna Beach Reginal Occupational Program. • James L. Cooper, Newport Beacb, executive vice president and a director of Pean Pacific Corp., Encino, has been promoted to president and chief executive officer of the company. He succeecla ManiD Adler, who bu resigned as president but remains as a director of the oil and au development and production company. Cooper cootlnuea as prealdent of Penn Pacific Energy Corp., a s ubsidiary headquartered In Irvine. • WUllam C. Coles has been named vice presl· dent and real estate loan oCflcer or the Irvine· Newport Valley office of Imperial Bok. He joined the Bank in April um as a real estate loan omcer. He bad been with Union Bank tot 11 years. .. Robert G. Reete, Corona del Mar, bu been elected vice president of 9errJ lad=C.,. Reese ts former director ol ~at4 l>lann 1. He began bis career in ua wttb Maremont Corp. 9r Cbicairo. In 1m M moved to Dart In· dustrles. tn 1972 he jolned Pob·Optka, Inc., as controller. Before J0Jnln1 Berey, he wu t ... uurer ol Superior Optical Co. • John McGHI, Newport Beach, h11 bffn named • r•al eatale loan octlcer at the Santa Ana main of· flee ot Banlc of America. He joined the bank last year at the W•tcllff Pl11a otnce ln Newport Beaeb. He wu a l•aalnC repretentatlve wltb the Irvine Co. for tbrte ~·ra before that. I Fanq Plaones ~· . ., I New regulations by the Federal Com · munications Commission a llowing customers to buy their own phones have spawned designs such as these. At r ight ts a kangaroo model by Northern Telecom Inc. Al left is an l,P'l"-clock phone. Under - the regulations. Ctfstomer-bought phones may be plugJ:ted into standardized jach installed by phone companies. ComsatRateSDecreased WASHINGTON <AP> -1'he Federal Communications Com· mission has approved an agree· ment settling the l3·year-old Comsat rate dispute and said the public should be the eventual beneficiary of lowered rates and refunds in the settlement. The agreement calls ror the Communications Satellite Corp. to refund about SlOO million to its customers and to rile rates that wUI reduce its charges to its customers by 48.5 percent. provide service to the public but serves carriers that do. Among its major customers are the television networks and the Department of Defense. In genera l, the agreement modifies the base on which Com sat can calculate its rates. It was approved Tuesday. AFTE R SOME questions about details. lhe commissa~ approved the aereement un~ animously. Commissioner Ab[ bolt Washburn commented: "I'd like to compliment everybody concerned with this that we bring this to a conclusion after 13 years." COMSAT ITSELF does not The case began in 1965. David Irwin, an official or the FCC's Common Carrier BW't!au. caUed it "one or the most tortured cases that bas ever been before the commission.•• The record in- cludes 20,000 pages or hearings. The commission emphasi~ its intention to require that Comsat's customers make the ultimate user the beneficiary Of the refunds and reduction w rates. O ver T he Counter MASOUstinlp NEW YOftK CAPf ~Vlflt "' I lnlr•lnO 2 2\lt ~l"Y"M '° .. S<AIWtr 14Y> ISV. 1Jpsa11d De.,... -TIM tol~\I CIH 14"2 IS :~:~<ti.. SZllt 54 ,..,,0 "' -SwGlCI> ·~ 11\olo 11 a --t· Cll\1$11• lO 31\lt a • OllHTP 21 2Wt Swl!fSv 17\'> ta~. Iona I SKur1tla St..Oyn ~ 29\lt 30\1. lntttmk .-~ 0.-.t'IAlr ~Slit lSIM » NEW YOftK CAP> -Tiie tel~ lilt ~·r~t.:.ln.~ ~,.. .... tntm~ '='~ PCA Int 11"" 1J'4 SIOR~~ 2Sllt :itllt Shows t11t Oller • IM · Counm E~ ~~ tnBk P•~B 1~ ltllt SllMIH 2011. 2114 llO<U ano • .,,.,... 1"'41t i..ve QOfM llP ' lnM.Or..i(e & lnduSI· 2t'h 27\/t lweSoUI ~~ Pa<G•R 21"" 2714 st ... 1St ~ ~ al ltO<k~. • ~ J.,,.WPr s ... P.u=P 1'1fo ..... t.1i: .. 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' t ~ ~IO II j "'" HL .. .,., .... t. ~·Ol 1~1 t, Cmtt~ .... , wW!•L!. •,.JO NL 5CGI 11 I . e & • Hfl!'ll : A" 114~ ··5 I 1.w N lnl'n> SSf • "'""' ... NL llllllC ''" :It .. ,.,. 11 .. " " "" :-: • d IM ft 11 " ·~ ,, n H•rtlt i' ., • """"' 10.46 lfL. '"r ;·11 tt ='t\ u: ,.,.L ~IK !:a 1·11 ~~· ' ... 'l :rr '°.'l; .. 1. ~.::1 ,t&I ,·,, ~::;. o :•1 :JJ =nf]I. 11 ltt ' :=tr~ ~'1 St L-,~-~ ·u: ~tr. ,b = , ~ ~r~~: ·~ 1ti =: ~~u: a I (=:."if, :1:: ~ K ii u n£ ~·: ~ ..i;; 1: I&. 'J?U == =w "~Ir.' J:::., ~._. q.1 =: II i...1 lliWM"'o ai: • -... .-...----.... ---·-. ...-.. .. . ( •• ~ 11 • • - -~··••• r ~ •• .. . ... ~.. ~- ... Wedneeday, May 10, 1878 VN DAILY PILOT •7 Bored Workers Need a Voice 9)' SYLVIA POaTE& A bieh proportion of the mcwe thaa N mUllon Jol*>lden ln tbe United Stat. 11 deeply dlaeontendect Despite the lr1.ftl• bepellts, pay hlkes. com&>any at· tempt.I to provtcM an atmosphere of .. team effort.•• they feet ratleel. even alienawct. 'n'8 "extru .. bffome mean- ingleee when the Job le b0rhl8. trustratJng. without real , value. ~ , WRY? BECAUIE M08T WOUEU have so little to ">'·They MGM lhat &heir oplnlooli and recommendations att1 not welcomed or ntP.'Cled by man11ement. eo they· "*' lnterelft th wort. ' ' An old cartoon pta to the heart of this problem. It llaows a com~ pretidtllt teated behind his dwk. t.ikln1 to an emD&oYee. Tbe ca~ says. "We do live ln a de· mocraey: Pertlnt. but bere •e operate under an adthorttarian r:e&Lm•· 0 Tbe .Pn>blem lnvolvea more than unhappy wonen. It .,...... lo tbe fundameatal Issue of lnereulng productivi· ty -llll ~ to eurbtng lnflaUon and promotJq eco.iomle'ttablllt,y. Diaconteoted employees can be a drain. on tbe eftldeat nmnlng ' Of UJ bminea; people are a successful or, ganluUoo's most im· portanl asset u weU as tbe larges t single budgetary expense of most businesses. The goal is to make the ccet pay off. What. then. might be an answer! GIVING EMPLOYBU JIO&E PAaTIClPATION In management dectlioaa IDIY be tbe•ey. · U .s. industry ls movtna too 11owly toward this 1oat.' said the Late Dr. Alfred J Marrow. former prnldlat of Uae ~ational Academy of Professional PlychofoeisCI and a paooeer la social aad Industrial peycbolo1y. In Europe. what Marrow called .. particlpatlve !'f'&naaement" hu been wldeb' m.H for many yeans. But~ m our country. '"though the people wrbo bead orpnlut.ions' .recognbed that the.praent wort rotte is better educated , more affluent and brings to the job greater eQeetaUon~ 1or aavancement. tbe1 have alfected ~ m_. dantes• in their authoritarian managerial practica." AtDOmll basi~ ~~= ~ -AN EMPJ.OYBE SROllLD NOT be uked t~ participate whee bis or ber suggestions will bot influence! t~e ~ecision. Token participation Is destructive. Tbe objec· t1.v~ 11 to~ you tbe right of an effective ~"'the de· CISlOD·making proceu. ; In inviting exPftSSlon of~. bosses nm tbe risk of bear~g t.binp they might not want to ttear. If top mana~ meot aa surprised by employee opi.Dlom. &bere baa been a· barrier to communication. Manqement must be Pftparecf to respond, to give and to take. ....:_ 1be value of employee op6nlonl can be rated only by how well.informed employees tR. When emololeea are In· vited to make decisions they develop an "e10-ln"9tment ·• • in making it work. : -EMPLOYES SBOlJLD TaY TO develop a better at: tilude toward employers. Tb.la will happen as supervlsont concentrate not on "conlroWn&" employees. but oo uo• derstanding what motivates them and in watcblnjflhelr performance. Market S1'etulies After Dow Losses NEW YORK <APl -Tbe llOck market lbowed a tln.y lain toda.J, ateadyiq after tbe pullbeek of SM lut two sessions. Tbe Dow Jones •veraie of 30 lndultrfu. ott 1.021 pobats llooct.y and Tuesday. was up 0.09 tom. It. N Gy~ ~ loeen by about a 1·5 maratn amoni ew ~ Exctaaaae·Usted iaaues. Anab'sts laid tbere was no spee1a1 news to aeeowt ror tbe upswing. Tiley said t.M martret seemed to benefit rrom ··catchup" ~ ... by traders wbo had been •alt.inc ror • ~P after lul moatb's sbarp rally to increue lbeir bold· angs. Sl~b I• l'lw s,,.,B.,., ::ae:. 3'--..: =. ~~-"""'° Yertl .. .,:,..cr;..::r-'.-., •o.nonoct ..•.. m-.... ""' MOton. •• • • • • ~ • .. ~......... '-~·"' ;..::·.::· I· ~ : E\41 ..... ,,, ~- ··••··· ... +t ,.,,... OJ!.:..:.::·.::·.. m.• r ::: : ,.._'~..... m .M 6"' • ~ w.«* 094E...... Ht 1~ + ~ INCO l.ld.... •••• ""--141 ................... ~ ... ............... "'·~ Otkofp •••••••• Mflt + 1111 A ... rW..•l.e•llin -· Y09ltl fN')o 5-. ..... ..,.. =::..~ ..... ,.... = ., ............... :::= ... ......-. o ... ~.. ,,. ... ,,. + ._ EIK......... ,..,.. --·-"10:.::::.. 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In tN deatll ...................... • GUtllMoe<E Whlfl Matt 1119MI • young ~h robbet, hit ~ old9r bfolher end flt• OMO pureue IN merwhal. • THI IMDV IUNCH BoOby ... 10 hie friend•. lelllng IMm Joe Namatll drOQ9 by for dlnMt wt1e11 he'alnlown • ADAM-11 A plMMnl ~ tor M91oy end A9ed II Int«• r"'"9d by. teeneoe neigh- bor wlW> II high on ctNgs. • TVAUCTIOH (ContlnuH untll 12 midnight) G N8TOln' Of MDIOO ''RelloMJon· Rite Of c;.,. renu And 00r9g0n'' IAIONIW8 ti:ao 1'*~'The Mel~eH felcon" (Part 2) {tt41) Humpllrey ~ 9'dney ~r.-. A top prM1e eye It hired lo recowr a Pfie*W. jlwll euon.cled stetue. 11hr .• 30 min I Keystone Kops Kale Jackson <leru and Jaclyn Smith doll up as K eystone Kops as the search for stolen rocket fuel on Charlie's Angels tonight al 9 on ABC. Channel 7. • lllWfTCHEO Venua, noted tor her eNr'91, end Endofa. noted lof '* weird ..,_ of llurnof. tMm up agelnat Darrin • AOOKIQ A 18-yHr-old boy 11 foroed to lllk• the bttme for the CtlrMI of• fUnlllll. ID DIMEHtMOHI IN CUlTUAd •. Aellgiofl •• Cl) AMfRCA 2NIQHT 0 MPV OAIFFIN Gu .. 11: Eddy Arnold, $f\ieldl end Y emell, Herry .,.,.,,.. end Bend, Chrlt Kerno, Jim Olcwannl. Oaa1111rl l..l•ti119s 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles I l<'TLA (Ind) Los Angeles KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego e KHJ. TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego I t<TTV (Ind.) Loa Angeles KCoP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles • KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles fll!.> KOCE·TV(PBS) Hunttngton Beach "FDR And Hhler: A Study In Style" (Part 1) The t930'a give rlN to two of lhe~~llOf World War II: e demoetetlc IMder In the U.S.: a fuc:tlt dictator In Germ.,,y. D 8HANANA IOu.t~~GAMa MATCH.GAME P.M. JOl<EA'I WILO THe 8AADY llUHCH One of Jan'• precUcal I<*• boO!nerangt end the beoolMe '* own victim. e AMENCA ltlOtfT Gueet: ,..., Ma'lllell. e ITAMOAN> ''8'ende .., And For- ""' Oendn' '' Cl) • tll.000 Que8TION QJ) fAMILY FEUD uoe Cl> ~MIU.ER "King Of The Roed" Roger Mlllef ai.r. M ~on Ortm., a IM!l-retlred c:ounl'Y and"""'"'..,., MIO operatee a ..... Md lounge lor peop6e In the enleftelnment bualneN. Jonri ~ .,.., • ..,. ulllmMlf. D IQUACMAll "One Of Our Pl8yert la M....,.. .. HonW ... . ....., ... ..,... .... .. "aded to the fllOde llllflCI HeM. • MOYIE • • • v. "Thay Shoot Hortee. Oon't T"-Y'" ( ttetl Jena Fond1. Mlch••I Serrazln. A Oepreaalon·er• d1nce """"'°" It entered by • Yoil"O ~ In need Of ttMI prln inonay. (2 tw. .• 30 min.) •O EGHTll ENOUGH "WtlO'I On Flflt" The Bredfofda 11ka to the atege In order to help out 1 IOClll~ • MOVla • • V. "The Violent EnaMy'' (19581 Ed lleglay, SuNll'I ~. An IAA plot to 6eetroy • 8rttieh fllClory In • dalilnt geeture of lfleh k~ldel!Ce .. complicated br Mlftttl rnoti-. (2 hrt.) • CAAOI. 9UflHETT ANO~ Oueel: Joal Orey. • MOYlf *** "Th• Chepmen Repor1" (1"2) E"9m Zlm- balllt Jf., 4-Fonda. A -~. condueted by. femoua p1ychol09l1t, louc:Me the llvee ol lour lypk:ll IUtlurban WOIMll. ~hrt.) • TVAUC110N ~~ME:CQ MEMONAL PQTIVAl ''rt.Jau Mlnorl" l:tOD JOe&VAl!M ''TM Commltmem" Joe'• lrtende Me4llTla ttlat .... Md Vllerle will loend the night together when her rnottw IMVMtown. ·~ Soupr Salel on hla TV eaperlance1; lreettlfg canc:ier. Joe Foa. form« goyemor of South Ollkota. and hie wife OM OM era lnteMewed. t:OO. Cl) C8I MOVIE "Murder Al The Merdi GrM" (Premiere) o.wtd Gtoh. Didi Conn. A pelt of touriats lhare an Uftllk91l' romance and become ln'IOlved In Intrigue In .... on.er. during the Merdl Gt.: , 8 OIAHMMTIN ca&m9'0MT ,,_ S'-1 .. rou1ed by Orlon W9llM. Miiton a.n.. Jenet ~. June AllylOn. Lucille Bait. Midi· ey Rooney, Tony RMdall, TUBE TOPPERS KTLAD8:00 -''They Shoot Horses. Don't They?" Jane Fonda gives one of her best performances in this drama about marathon da~ing with Michael Sarrazin and Oscar winner Gig Young from 1969. CBS 9 9700 -"Murder at the Mardi Gras." A new TV movie set in New Orleans with Didi Conn and David Groh as tourists who find romance and danger NBC D 9: 00 -Dean Marti11 Roast. Jimmy Stewart is tonight's roastee with guest stars Orson Welles. Milton Berle. Janet Leigh. June Allyson. Mickey Rooney. Lucille Ball. Rich Lillie and others. FOiier 8fookl. Nc:h Uttta. """' Buzzi end otMr1. •OOHANJn AHOl1.I "Antique Angele" 8oelay and the Ange11 lnftltf 1te an antique uo ra/lty In tlMlr ~ for lt°'911 umplee of•-~•luel • ...WOfWFIH 0'*1111: Eddy Arnold. s'*"" end YatMI. Herry JllM8 Md Band, Chrll 1.<emo. JWTt ~.Dene ~. Jeer.w Thomae. Gii MJIT1N CfTY LMT1 "MeM Haggard Md The 8trangaril" Mette end hi• bend perform "Sliver Wlnga," "Sen Antonio AoM." "Old Fllhloned Love" Md "WOOiftO Man Cen't Oat Nowhere *lltn··ITAMKY& HUrQf "Ouedromanla" Hutch '°"' .. • cabble In .,, attempt to capture 1 vengMI ICa-Melllng kltt« who llU killed four tut drlYert 8lreedy. I =MAKE A DEAL TVAUCTIOH r~ • * ··spirit OI The W•f' (1932) Hoot Glbecwt. A cowt>or prettndl 10 be ~edlna~to -a glfl'1 ranctL ( 1 hr • 30mln.) =1u=NEW8 ••~ "The t.ut waoon .. (19541) Rlc:Nrd Wldmat11. fellcla Ferr. On l"8 way to be hanged. • COflYlc'9d klllar tumt hero and l>ftnge tlJc YoutlO peop6e aaltly 11Wough the Araon• wllda. (!_ hrS.) •TMEOOOCOUPLI Oec:ar Cleddel to run tor city coundlmll'I wtl9l'I he ....,_ that • partl ,... UMd to pay In la the lite of • -orb bulldlng • MONTY "'1"HON'I R.YING CIQ'8 1'::10 8 (I) HAWAI AYl-0 "Bait Once. Bait Twice" McGamttt -'*""" .. the belt to lure • key wit. ""' agalnSt • gambling operaffon out Of hiding before ttle trial (Rl D TONIGHT Hoat: Joflnny Caraon OIMtt: Mao OeYls, CarOI ....... Erma Bombectc. Ronny Graham. • L0YE. AMENCAH 8TYU "Love And The Merrled Baohelof" I.any Pfel .. tMt he'• menied to keep hfl glrtlrtenda II bey. "I.ova And The Mlaed Merriege" A "**81 mix· up creetee pre>bltm9 for ~MdJotln. • GI POUCE STORY "Cop In The Middle" A ~ poliCernan de\'-.. a tc:helne to mall• """""tooll ~l (R) • THATGIAL "The()\. .. • OETIMART ''The King U-.?" Mu . .,, f ~ IOoll--• for the King .... t!) ...... hll ~-•decoy. • MAa&. I &.&RR ~ MORNING t2:00. lWllJQHf ZONE A lhc~~ Cftld has an entire \own terrified of lllm. I~ Meettno a friend trom out 1 NBC Can~t Roll on ·'Wheels' Alone NEW YORK CAP > -NBC scored with the first chapter of "Wheels," a miniseries based on the novel by Arthur Hailey, but it was the network's only entry among the week's 20 most-watched shows, A. C. Nielsen Company figures show. ABC, meanwhile, was first again in the standings. Esther Rolle Rejoins Show . NBC won the ratin1rs race two weeks ago with' its. 'ltolocausl .. miniseries, but "Wheels" -the first episode SWlday night was No. 6 for the week ending May 7 -was far less controversial and received re· latively liUle advance attention. THE NETWORKS SAY that means in an average prime-time minute. 18.4 percent of the homes in the coun· try with television were tuned to ABC. CBS and ABC had two shows al the bottom of the list of 66. ABC's ''Mel and Susan Show" was No. 62. NBC's "Hanna-Barbera Happy Hour" No. 63. "Sugar Time" on ABC No. 64 and two CBS programs, "The Rita Moreno Show" and "CBS Reports" 6Sth and 66th. Here are the week's Top 10 shows: "THREE'S COMPANY ... with a .. Fantasy Island.'" "Carter <Aun· try" and "The Phenomenon or Ben· ji," all ABC; "Elvis in Concert," CBS; "What's Hapoening," ABC: "All in the Family" -and "Hawaii Five.o ." both CBS. and "Barney Miller." "Batlle of the Network Stars" and "Starsky and Hutch." all ABC. 'Bud and Lou' 1V Film Set .. LOS ANGELES <AP> -Harvey . TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS of town. Ralph tttee to s-1 lllmMlf off .. the hMd ol"" bul company • CAPT10NiO A8C NIWI tl:IOG MOVW ••• "ly Lovt Pcttfft"Cf'' 11981) L- Turntf. Efrem Zlmbellal Jt A wHlthy 1ttornay • liMl'Chl!lg '°' hl!l'IMll. " d(awn Into an lffllr ( 1 hr , &6 min I • MOVtl * * * "They Ori~ 8y Night" ( 1940) ttumptlrey Bogltt. l<M SNrldan. A dUo of ·~--become lnYOIWd with mutd« cktr· Int one of their NOL (2 hrS.) • MOVIE a* ~A Nice Ul11e Bank Thlt Should Be Aot>btd" 11961) Tom Ewell. Mlc*ey Rooney. Aft« utlng up IUndl from their llt1t banll robbery. • Pelf of -t-• plan anolhar '1 hr • 30min I t2:J7 8 (I) KOJAK "t W .. HeC>l>Y WtMwe I WM" In 11'1 1t1empt to aotve • ..,. 01 murOen. 1 young Puerto Rican ~ cer la brought becll to wort! undtreowt In 1111 Old nalghbomOod. (A) • 9 A8C MYITERY MOVIE • • "OHth In Deep Wet•" t 19751 iltedtord C>lllmli), Suuo Fwmar. A lormer memt>« of an American crime eyndtcete la~ by ht• ••<OI· le1guH 10 a Brllllh Mutlore YIHega. t:OO 8 TOMOMOW Don Rlcktn wlll dllCUll llil ~ 11 a oornedlan and ector. • llf'V "Sulteble For F,.,.,,lng" t:.468 NtWS ~a~NEWS • • "Stvage Seet0n" (1970) Ron Harper, Diane Mc8ain A lreeaute OI rlrt platinum lta09 to an unu- tual Ctl ... ecrou the ~ (2hrtl 2:198 MOYIE • • • "Mirao-· 11ees1 Gregory Peck, Oline Baker A p1ycn111r111 doubts h11 p1tlent'1 -· but aor-to tlalO him •fl• btcomlne lmlOl\led In • ..,... of etrange eYenll (2 hrs • 10 mtn, 2:211 NEWS 2:30 MOVIE Ii*'" "01 Love And Oealra" ( 1tt31 Merle Obeton. 81-Codvan. A weeltfty women alt'"'ll4• to ~ WtWld ..., ecwdld '** by rnanylng ~ """ ;r ~t hr .. 69 nlln.) a..tt• "~orce Of M ' (11M8)JoMQarfleld, Marte Wlndeot A ,....., equat>. b6e .... tt\9 ,_,.. ~·· lilada to .,....,.. ~Ill 'he bullnaU. C2 In.)~ •:OO. MOYl9 • • • °" "8taughlef On Tenth Avan!H" ( t951) ~d eo-n, Jen 8.,,... Ing. After .,, hofieet ~ bON .. ~. inva.t~ o•tora h•v• tro1,1bl• obtaining lnformatlofl ''°"' . dodt worti ... (2 In.I ... I = ll!DWANMt •:ac> MOYW • • "Aendeivo111 At Midnight" ( 1835) A9'ptl Bellamy, Valtrte HJobeon. The -police COflllNa. "°'* beglnl .,, lnYMtiOl- tlOn into the dMttl of '* e!Mcaeor.(1hr .. 3QftWl.I • MOYtl • * ''Mara NHdS: Women" (1"4) TOf!W1¥ Klftl, Yvonne Craig. A UJr.'. decoding center ,.,.. • my9tertous (l'l9MIJ08 .,.,.. Mars which d•"'•ndt women. ( 1 hr., 30 mtn.) Tlaurada•'• aa,,i i•~ ••.,w• MoRNIHG 11=*' • • •'A "Homecoming" ( 11M8) Qlrtl Olble. ~ Tutnel'. A ICICiety doctOr IMrnt ,_ v._ on ltlt battlefleld wtian "'' ""'98 dle9 of woundt lnfllcC9d bf the enemy, (2 twt.. 20 """'. AFTERNOON 1~•··~ "SUl!etc:llewan·· ( 1954• Alan Ledd, Shelley Wlntafl. A C•neCllU Mounted POlloe tneoector and -Indian ~ d,.,,,. the Slou• ll1CMnr aciro. tM t>ordllf. (1 IW~ 30/TWI I S:OO llJ * •...., "The Arrenoe- ment•• (1teft '°"' ~ Feye 0.,,...,. An edYer• tleing executive -a- for ,,_q In• lh t"9t ...,,,. _., • --of empty rOltL ( t lw., 30 "*"• s:ao e • • • "The nme Machine"' ( 1HOI ~ocl Ttytor, YY9tl>e Mlmleua. A eclentlet Yltlts the tuture with "" .,.. of ..... tJme machlni (1 iir .:30 niiiiT"'"'" ' LOS ANGELES (AP> -Esther Rolle will return to the CBS comedy 1'Good Times" in the fall after a year's ilbsence. ABC's .. THREE'S Company" was the week's most-watched show. as it had been often during the fall and winter, followed by two CBS pro· grams. "M·A-S·H" and "One Day at a Time." Another ABC program. "Laverne and Shirley." ranked first by Nielsen for the fall-winter season, had the same rating a s "One Day at a Time" but claimed a s maller share or the audience watching al the lime it .,vas shown. • 28. 7 rating representing 20.9 million bomes,'ABC; "M·A.S·H," 28.4 or 20.7 milliou. CBS: "One Day al a TilJle," CBS, and "Laverne and Shirley.'' ABC, both 26.7or19.5 million: "Hap· py Days," 23.8 or 17.4 mlllion, ABC: Korman will play Bud Abbott and Bud-' ~;~_,~,.,~~~c dy Hackett will be Lou Costello in the NBC movie about the famous comedy · The sbow dropped In the ratings Jfler Miss Rolle quit the show, leaving lhe children without parents. Earlier, John A mos had left the show. · During past year Mtss Rolle starred in Broadway in "Macbeth" and just finished the CBS movie "l Know Why the Caged Bird Sings." She will also star in a movie for NBC. ''The Summer of My German Soldier.'· The ratin~ for "Three's Company" was 28.7. Nielsen says that means of all the homes in the country with TV. 28.7 percent saw al least part of the program. ABC claimed five or the week's 10 top-rated shows -and 12 of the first 20. CBS had seven of the top 20. The configuration contributed to a rating for the week for ABC or 18.4. CBS was second at 17.3 and NBC third at 15.S. Big Event, "Wheels," Part I. 23.2 or 16.9 million, NBC; "60 Minutes," 22.6 or 16.S million, CBS; "Charlie's· Angels," 22.5 or 16.3 million, and "Love Boat.:• 22.3 or 16.3 million. both ABC. and "Lou Grant." 22.1 or 16.1 million, CBS. The next 10 shows : team. "Bud and Lou." Red Button will portray Eddie Sherman, the comedy team 's manager in the two-hour film . George Lefferts based bis script on Bob Thomas' book about the off. camera feuding between the two com· edians. WINNER OF · SM ,,,... du molt fatnOIU WOfNOll ;,. tJ.e world. He wu a Jl'iU""t., a pirau, o 1lsarlr. 7ACADEMY A\!~1~DS Beat Ortgln•I Scofe . Beet Fiim Editing Beet Coetume Design ' j • ' ' • • .· ... NE\\TPORT ( ........ ,..J: . , . . ... ,. . '., ' "CLOSE ENCOUNTf:AS OF THE T RO KIN MOWTHUA&-t 00 Rlt-1:»1ort6 .., ........ ~~" "THE L'.AST WALTZ" MON/THUR8-f'.fMJOM41~t .. 10;30 SAT-I tW~...-:1 .. 1 8Ut+-1:1~11 "FM" (PG) ONLV-++10 SAT/&U .......... 10 "BOYS JN COMPANY C'" (R) "THE LAST DETAIL" "THE J.;AST WALTZ'" "PHANTOM OF PARADISE" "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" "LIFEGUARD" ,,. "HOU8£ CALLS .. "ANNIE HALL .. (PO) "THE~RY" "EV1L"(A) What IN"'"""''""' willt rrunuy he 1tok witJ. ''°""· ~\.L£N ICUIN "--• ANTI-IONY JACQUELINE QUINN Bl~ 1HE@MK~ =:;.,. RAF VALLONE EDWARD ALBlllrr CHARlES OOJ\NINC LUCIANA PALUZZI .. CAMILLA SPARV M~l\ILV TOl.0 and JA:MES FRANCISCus .......... ,_.~ ........., lit llOT flW• ,_ ... ~ MAH~ltt • wtlf ..,IW_, llOIT""' ~ HIOO MA"°"'alt _. LAVllllO MvW 0-.... I. \.It TitOWtOlt .....-... "llUO ~ "-' fl'r 1.AIC>ltt.I M .. ,._ .....,._ A~ ....... ~l§1p!MMI "':.'~- ~~ ;J • Brea• Realized? Didi Conn stttrs as a hash house cashier from Cleveland who wins a trip to !"llew Orleans tn the TV mo1.:it• "Murder at the Mardi Gras" tonight at 9 on CBS. Channel 2. ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC BOX I MOVIES WedneecMy. Mey 10, 1978 DAIL V PILOT 89 :" 'METAMORPHOSES' at once the complete opposite and logical successor to 'Fantasia' .. Held Over! New Concerts· Planned It does the saddened music writer's heart good in these warung weeks or the tm·78 season to see those dedicated music lovers who are already planning forthe next season. A round of applause, if you will. for the de- dicated volunteers of the Harbor Area Community Concerts Association whose flve·day membership drive begios next Monday. T0MBARLEYi Music Box · members be seated rlrst before vi,sltora can be ac· commodated. . : 2nd Smash Wee South Coast Plaza ~---· ... -.... ~~'";,~·.-.. "" .. ., Mon-Frt-t:30-8:15-10:00- S•t/Sun-1:15-3:~:4M:so-8:15-10:00 Working under the presidency of Gloria Patrona of Westminster. they ak"eady have three concerts lined up for the 1978-79 season: the very popular Odessa Balalaikas. who brought the house down on their last visit to the Orange Coast. pianist David Laure n and harpist Susann McDonald. BUT AS PUBLICITY chairman fdarllyn Kunde re'minds the column. ll takes a substantial numb of memberships lo provide the nationwide community concerts organization with the funds Frankly. looking at that coat again, it'• hard to s_ee how they can do if· yeat after year. Student tickets ~· ,adults St2 and fiunUy mem)>ersbips for l30: It Just has to be the blgftest musical bargain around and this writer always has a well used community concerts card tucked away In his wallet. -------------------that make it possible to send such top flight artists Again. the more members these volunteers can drum up, the better artists we will see in oar part of the world. THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY so. c~::r·~WA "Mlf ~~~~~1'?1~ .. trGJ h11111ti.t IAT,_ -11~3~ . .W:JO Jiii 1111111 •:1 .. 10-00 Stt 11n JUI,.._ UJIN'S ..--,A_,,_,,..T,_ so. C8AST PLAZA "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" (A) C.11.tllul KAllY I tAa.Y-"41-,,....,,.. ,.~':::' I MO PAISll IATf,__l:H>llrJIMo*,....,.. I~ AWAllO MOMINATIOMS ..... rs ,_IOU, - -"CL.OSI EHCOUNTllS OF THI so. COAST PWA THllD KIHO .. IPGI .., """'-_l(lm'f_,....--., llA&f-~·- --ussa 1At111M-1a1........,11--.1•11 •AHHll HALL" ... ,_,. IP'GI IAT/l-'-1 .. ......,I "AMBICAH HOT Wil .. aAAY..-a.t-IAT .. , .... IUD'S -s11o en~ .. IGI CINEIWJMD UT/~~.,~ MM s..""" 'til~T rur ~ .... ,,_ ,.._ __ •_u_,.. ___________ s_AT~f~_ Md6-llQI llUPMlllM "THI llTSY" Ill DAii.Vt>~ IA"**-2:1M:»t•30 "AUCL SWIET AUCr Ill DAILYl!ato:41 IATISUN -•:-:IO :4-~'iE.".: to the Orange Coast. This writer never tires of pointing out what a marvelous bJlrgain these community concerts memberships are You get all the concerts scheduled for your own local group and you can travel around and take in concerts in m any olher communities who subscribe to the same plan IN ALL FAIRNESS, of course. organizers an other communities must insist that their own THESE S PLENDID VOLUNTEERS have always had the strong support of this column and always will have. But memberships provide the grist for th~ mill and that's where you. genUe re· ader. come m . Call Marilyn Kunde at 894·8S31 or Marge Palmer at 5484739. Remember, it's never too ear· ly to plan for our next season of music. 'Apocalypse' Previewed in SF By ROGER CELS TIWI HoltY-* 11_.-ter SAN FRANCISCO -Francis Coppola's unveiling of his , "Apocalypse Now" for around 300 invited exhibitors appeared to leave most decidedly unim· pressed The curtain closed on the 135·mmute i.creenang, which was barred to the press but to which this reporter gained entry. 1611 W. SUNFLOWEA W , Al T LCM 6410061-4 4 -._. •• H .. Wd'..,.. v .. UNIT mr without applause or any other noticeable reaction save a few muffled comments. Those exhibitors questioned after the screening expressed reservations concerning the out· look for the film . one referring to it as a "white elephant." Special effects will no doubt be the se lling point of .. Apocalypse." and while it ap- pears the effects will indeed be astounding, the film goes well beyond the bounds of expensive tricks . The photography and ef· ,,_ --494.1514 •t-...... °' ...... feels were first rate, and the mood and tone were established and held with a gripping intensi- ty. even In t he rough-cut version . ---' .. ~l\t'i~'f ..... ......,,, ... ·.. . -:: HB.DOVER PRO TENNIS Stemng· Rosie Casals. Chit ~e. Mark Cox. Francoise Curr. Anand Amritraj. vs Indiana. Dianne Fromholtz May 11 Loa Angeles. Oms Evet1 Mav13 Indiana. Allan Stone May 15 near P11tC1S S IO/Sl,IS7/S5• TM7:JOP.M. .................... ", .............. v.,.... • __ ..... _ fl-''AMESUCAN HOTWAX ''INI 494 1514 -..,_ 496-1253 ..... a.. •• ROWID ll ROS(NB(RG . AtfRtD SW:~'°" ALICE. SWEET ALICE lntroduct,. BaOOK£ SHIHDS 0..-~ br ROSDMR'Y RINO ll1d Al.fR£D sru ·Produced br RIOWIO It ROSlN8£RC AMAl9tt COMY8n'IOM C8CTla ................ ! o...d bJ Alffl£D SW· Tlotl~~ M.UEDMTISTS lltUASl cm .. • • • • . ' .. =~ ,... ... " ...... ,,.._., YOU UIMT ':;MY UNCNt .. ,.~I Mi~==C'lllOM.-· ~ •a MOW ll'lll'Y WftM MOW W" .. t:Jt Ii:=:-=;..- ~·· ~ H 1 ,1, r. ~ j • 'I • ·~ :'."9 sn11•111 • ""..,. _,..._ M1UIMYNllM'fnYa111 ..... PlATl'IMIY 10W 1'111 "M 11111111110PM_.. AP-CAN MOf WAXfNt ..... ~TaT .... _..,. MUl~Cll --.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Jane Fond• end Bruoe Dern give atrong performencea, a nd Jon Voight la excellent." -Stewert l<leln WH!W·TV ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST ACTOR Richard Dreyfuu NeU Simon'• It began as a dream ... andbeeame an adventure of a lifetime. ~e SEA GYPSIES . ltlOt one great experience Is wolfing r0t you •eum ' ...... , .. ~ ........ .., .• ..,.., ~ -·-n.t ,, t ••• DAil v ~o~ W~. M8Y fO •t18 Flieks in Freneh Style Sex Movie Director Crit.izes Rating System ~ By J~N·CLAUDE BOUIS NFW YORK <A Pl -Unlea. they were accom pan1ed by parent or JU•rdlan. the child stars in &eVeral ol FreMh ~1r.ec:tor Lou Mala.:& tuma c.-ouldn 't .u•t walk ln to the theater where thev BP· peared on t.ht' screen M1lle's first film in America -"Preuv Baby." atarrin(l Brooke Shield~ -is no exHPtk>n Shields. who turned 12 during the shooting or thi' film. plays the child of a prostitute who grows up in a brothel in Storyville, the New Orleans red- light district The rum -set in 1917. when tbe bOrdell~ were rlosed down by the Navy ·-als1> stars Keith Carradine and Susan Sa .. andon. IT IS RATED R. WHICH means restricted · •·unde .. 17 require11 accompanying parent or adult gnrdian." accord mg to the industry code The lilm has been banned in parts of Canada. "IT'S HAPPENED TO ME several limes and I think It's verv hvPOCritlca.l. but what can I do aboul censorship. said Malle who admitted that · Pr-etty-Baby" -whkh has no explicit sex scenes -deals wt°' a touchy subject. He said. however· that he believes the ratings system for movies is "ridiculous" wher 'violence is very. very heavy .or American TV.'' Malle said he would not hesitate to s how his chtldren his ftlms. "My experience with children, and l 've been dealing with a number of them in all these recent rums, [s that they know a lot more about everyt.hing than adults wanl them to know "P~ple asked me: 'bow can you direct Brooke ~hields to do lhin~s she doesn't ltnow everything about'!' I'm sorry. she knows everything about it.' Especially children today. 12. 13 •... with TV, sexual education now large•y orov;ded ;n schools, they know everything.·· • The star m "Murmur of the Heart.'' whict- won Malle an Osrar nomination for best srreenplay in 1973. 1s a 14·year-old. It's the story about a bo~ who sleeps with his mother. MALLE, 46, HAS .TWO childre'l. aged J and 6. '"I'm not married. no, but I have two children I was married. a long time ago. but I've bee., divorred since 1968. -~ ......... "He ('()Uldn't see the movie in France:• Malle said m an interview "It wat forbidden to peoele under 18. and I thmk I had the same pN'MPm with 'Zaiie Dans le Metro."' tiis third fin ~). It war adapted from Raymond Quenav's kf>~t i.Plling com ic novel about the adventures of s preru<'1ous 11 -year-old vLSiting her transvestite uncle in Paris "I spend a lot of time with my chi1dren .. And if I spend the summer working here. I'll havP them with me, so that I'll spend time with them." said Malle, whose next film talres plac~ in New York. ''I'd like to do a very ironic film. which would have the appearances or~ comedy." he said of the as·yet untitled project for Paramount. Malle has never avoided taboo subjects. His "Lacom~. Lucien." which received the Oscar nomination for best for~igp film in 1974. deals with the long·suppreased topic of the involvement of or dll'ary Frenrh citizens in Nazi coll boration dur ing the World War II The title chnacter is 17 Travolta Signed For 1bird Movie STAR, DIRECTOR OF '.PRETTY BABY' Kelth Carradine WatchH Loul• Malle He feels a personal attachment to "Lacombe. Luc•en" because he was 11in1944 and. "It was a very traumaUc experience for a child to deal with what was goingonm France In 1944." IN IDS HOTEL SUITE, Malle spoke in lightly accented Englis h about why he concentrates on adolescence in his mms . ".It's. a moment or rebellion. and it's very creative ma lot or ways. It's a moment of lucidity and you're also afraid and you're insecure and it's a key moment and I'm really interested in that period in the life or anybody." Malle saic' he had an easy childhood because he came from a wealthy background. but that he went through a stage or rebellion from age 11to17. "It's probably the most traumatic moment in a lifetime. when you're just about to enter the world <;>f adults. and you start finding out about hypocnsy and the lies. and start reconsidering all that you have been taught all those years." LOS ANGELES (AP> -John Travolta will star in "American Gigolo." bis third major film ror ------------------- Paramount. He was nommated for an Academy Award as best actor for "Saturday Night Fever" and is in the upcoming "Grease ... In ~e new movie he. pla>'s a Los Angeles gigolo Slmultaneously falling m love and being framed for murder. All~'*'"" ,....,.,ti~~ ·~- -flS: -.... '"""tltU.t • ........ 0 .. .... ............................. lllSTOl CINEMAS Costa Mesa CINEOOME Orange 540-7444 634·2553 STADIUM DRM·IN Orange o:F-ano A her her divorce, ka got to know_ some pretty Interesting perople •• -. Including herself. - ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES Slave-trading Movie Slated LOS ANGELES <AP l 'A shantL" a story of modern·day s lave trading in Arrica and the Mideast. has begun f1lmina in Ken,ya and Israel. ll slars Michael Came. OTnar Sharif, Peter Ustinov. Rex Harrison, Telly Savalas and Beverly Todd. Sharif plays a nomad who teams up with Caine to track down a ruthless slave trader played by Ustinov, who has kidnaped his wife. played t,y Miss Todd. Savalas Is a mercenary helicopter pilot and Harrison is a representative or an w>eterground an tislavery organization Photog Fil~ Set LOSANGELES <API -Martin Elfand'sfirst•ri. dependent production under his own banner. T:. Productions, will be "Double Exposure ·· Dick Richards will direct the film. a love story about a New York photographer. Elf and previously, - produced "Dog Day Afternoon,. arui "Kansas City Romber." AMERICA'S No . 1 COMEDY HIT ~ edwards CINEMA HA~P,1'j h 1 .\~ AJ .. ' COSTAME<.A ;H llQl ~1~ ..,, ~ Pt.UI 'THE ONE ANO ONLY" .. I • -~ •... J ...... -..... -.. . J . I I f • . • • ' J • .. l l ' , .~ \ INSIDE : •Featuring ... •Slim Gourmet •Club. calendar •Ann Landers /• Do It Yot•rself What could mukc Mom happier on her day lhan to have dinner prepared by Dad und the kids., A quiet Sunday dinner at home can be much more relaxing than the confusion of an over-crowded restaurant. So here's a no-fuss meal to help make that·possible. Best of all. the kids c~n help prepare a foolproof dinner that t·veryonc, especially Mom, will enJOY Try Magical Mui.hroom Pot Roast Simply put a bonell'ss chuck roast in a casserole or bak- ing pan no browning necessary. Then let the children mix together an -envelope or mushroom J!ravy mi x, water, and lemon juice lo pour over the meat Stncl' it 's not necessary to turn, stir, or watch this pot roust as it bakes. you can lake Mom for a short drive, or a walk around the neighborhood to e njoy the s pring flowers. As if by magic, you'll return to a lender. nicely· browned ro.ist. with plenty of mushroom gravy, rcady-m:Hle for ,>ou in the pan. For an appeal· mg ~alad. you can prepare a Sunburst Corn lklish Mold tht• ni~ht hefore. Lemon gelatin, enhanced \\ilh mayonm1ise and zesty prepared \'f'llow mustard. acccnt whole kernel corn. What ~ surpn s1 ng twist for corn Hound out th1~ family dinner with green beans, rolls an<I butter, and strawber.;• sun- daes. Who knO\\S, Dad may receive the best compliment of all from Mom when she asks him for the recipe for lh1!' carefree meal. :.1AGICAL Mt;SHROOM POT ROAST 1 bonelei.s chuck roast. 3 to 4 pounds l cup water l eO\ clopl' l'' 1-02. > mushroom gravy mix 1 , cup chopped pimiento 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 <z teaspoon garlic sail Arrange meat in shallow baking pan or t:asserole. Stir logclher water. con(ents of grav>- mlx envelope, pimiento, lemon juice, and garlic salt ; pour over meal. Cover with foil. Bake in 350 oven 2 to 3 hours, or until tender. Slice m eat and serve with the pan gravy. 6 to 8 servings. SUNBURST CORN RELISH SALAD I package (3·oz. l lemon-flavored gelatin I cup bolling water 1 ~ cup cold waler ·~cup ma,>onnaise 2 tablespoons prepared yellow mustard l can < 12·oz.) whole kernel corn. drained Dissolve gelatin in boiling waler. Stir in cold water, chill until partially set. Beat in muvonna1sc und mustard; stir in corn. Pour in· lo greased 11 :i-quart mold. Chill until set. 4 to 6 servings . Wednesday. May 10, 1978 On Mother's Day, treat Mom to flowers and a nice, tasty dessert. -.. DAILY PILOT Food Cl All for Mom At whatever meal you hold your Mother's Day celebration. flnlsh it orr with a dessert that any mother would be proud to serve. Made with natural 1n gredients such a~ yogurt, cottage cheese and fresh fruit juices, the Citrus Yogurt Cheesecake Is a dessert even diet-conscious moms will be able to en JOY . Whether Mom makes it herself or you do it for her, a food. preparation machine cuts prepara t1on time to a minimum by chopping the nuts for the crust and blending the ingredients for the filling to a smooth, creamy consistency. The delightful dessert that results should pro- vid~ a pleasing accom- paniment for a,ny meal CITRUS YOGURT CHEESECAKE 10 graham crackers. shredded o/.6 cup pecans or walnuts, finely chopped 2 tablespoons sugar •a cup butler or margarine. melted 11 :i tablespoons un- flavored gelatin 2 tablespoons cold "alcr 2 eggs. ~eparatcd 1 ., cup ~ugar Peel of l orange. finely chopped Peel of l lemon. finely chopped Jwceol l orange J wee of l lemon 12 ounces creamed cottage cheese l carton CS ounces) Citrus Yogurt Cheesecake. lemon yogurl rack. Orange and . lemon Sprankle gelatin over 2 .!>Lices. if desired tablespoons cold water. Heat oven to 350 set aside Plucc egg degreei. yolks, 1 :i cup sugar, the Mix graham crackers. citrus peel and Juices m nuts. 2 tablespoons sug-top of double boile r ar and the butter. Press Cook over simmering mixture firmly in bot· water, stirring constant· tom and 1 inch up side of ly. until thickened: re· 8-inch springform pan. move fro~ heat ~nd s.tir Bake until golden, about in gel atin until dts- 10 minutes. Cool on wire ·solved. Combine egg mixture. cottage cheese and yogurt , blend unt1 I smooth. Beat egg whites until soft peaks form Fold m to cheese mixture. Pour mixture into crust Refrigerate until firm. at least 4 bours. Garnish with lemon and orange slices. Makes 6 to 8 serv- ings. Best Buys The bleak ve~etable situation of last week 1s lookmg brighter now Volume has increased for some commodities causing prices lo drop. Whik the industry has not returned to normal, lht• s1tuat1on. at least temporurily, 1s improved. Vt;GETABLES All md1cauoni. poml to a dramallc reduction this week .m the price of iceberg and other let· tu<.'es. because of greater volume from Salinas More shippers are begmning to harvest matur<.' hc<ids Volume 1s still not back to normal and prices will not be as low as a year ago, but the overall ~1tuallon 1s improved Weather has stabilized allowing crops lo mature properly. Should the weather remain moderate, the total situation will gradually re- turn to normal. If excessive warm weather de· velops, then heads will mature rapidly and another gap wUI develop. The prospect for the next month is a gradual return to normal with some peaks and valleys until mid June. Cauliflower is looking much better. The price has come down while supplies increase. Broc- coli is also lower but quality is marginal. An over supply of tomatoes has caused prices lo drop. Quality on the large tomatoes is average, but the cherry tomatoes arc good Squash is arriving from both Coachella Vallecfv and San Diego. Quality and price vary. depen · mg on the growing area. The Imperial Valley 1s shipping bell peppers. Quahly is only average. Florida and T<.'xas should start shipping this "eek, so look for improved quality Mos t stores are carrying quality corn from both Florida and the Coachella Valley. As the volume from Coachella 1ncreai.es next week, ' prices should come down. White rose potatoes from Bakersfield con- tinue to improve in quality. Supplies arc good . There is litUe change in the asparagus s1tuat1on. Quality and supplies remain good • The bebt buys this week arc radishes and green onions. Radis h quality is excellent. while the green onions arc improving m quality daily. FRUIT May' should be an excellent month for s trawberries. With the days gelling warmer and drier. quality keeps improving. Prices should hold steady. Apple supplies coming Crom storage are diminishing. Hect and golden delicious apples continue to be the major varieties available. This situation will continue until the end of May when Granny Smith apples from New Zealand arrive. For Mother's Day, you could make lunch for Mom. A disease problem with the Mexican can- taloupe has hindered supplies. They are ship- ping only about 20 percent of their usual volume. This shortage will cause prices to .... A Spee.ial Meal Lunch for Mother's Oay •hould be as lovely as a spring garden. And it can be i( you serve Eegs &ent!dict with Welsh Rarebit Sauce and fresh asparagus. A Mother's Day Cake and cookies make a perfectdeHerttor)lourspr- fng lunch. especially when the cake is blossomlnt with paper spring rtowers. To decorate your cake this way, place a small dolly over the hole or the cake and atlck the ate ms or the nowert throueb lhe bolea "' the dolly Before servfne the cak•, the dolly and flowers can be re- moved. Welsh Rarebit Sauce Crecipe follows) Put toaated English MuUin halves on plates, top with bacon and eggs. and ladle rarebit over all. Serves4. WELSlllL\REBITSAUCE 2tablesi>oons butter VJ cupftatbeer 111 thSpoonaalt '4 'eaapoon dry mustard • 1 ieaapoon Wol'cestershlre • IOUC8 1 pOWtd sharp cheddar cheese, 1raled • ln the«>por a double boiler, slow- ly mtlt buUer. Add beer. salt, muatalil And Worcatershlre sauce. ff ee t until hot <not bo1Hn1 t. Gradually add chttH and mix Tilth 1 Wirt wtililt until ~heese ts melted. LdltOftl'..., lmmodlately. • climb. A good substitute is the cranshaw melon. The eating quality is good and supplies are plen- tiful. The first shipments of peaches are available along with a few California cherries. The resl of the fruit situation remains the same. ) • 7 -- ·, . ·I I ('2 DAil V ~ILOT Wectn.dsy, MIW tO, 1fN FOOD Prepare Interesting Food for Bland Diets U someone In your family is suffering from a chrome ulcer, you may be s lrugallng lo pre- pare interesting food for the bland diet the doc- tor usually prt.l.cribes fort.his condition. The major points lo keep in mind for the ~land diet is lo keep the portions small and t.o increase the number or meala served a day. Serve all food at warm temperature, rather than very hot or very cold. All pits,. skins, and seeds should be removed and the patient 6ho4ld be reminded to eat slowly and chew well. · Heretofore, ulcer patients drank whole milk between meals, but the current thinking Is to serve skim mllk drinks to avoid the extra cholesterol. Fruit juice may be served but should be sipped during the meal alter some of the food has been eaten. Avoid fried foods, breads with seeds, coarse grains b\ bread and cereals, and fried potatoes, potato chJps, and whole-grain rice. Instead, serve white toast, saltines, zweiback, cooked enriched fine white cereals, corn and rice flakes, and puffed rice cereal. Also serve boiled Sped al Diets By June Roth or baked <no skin) mashed potatoes, barley. pasta, and white rice. Sponge cake or angel food cake are good choices tor dessert, as are plain sugar wafers. custard, frutt-tlavored gelatin, and plain pud· dings (except chocolate). Avoid desserts pre· pared with chocolate , coconut. nuts, or dried fruit. Pepper can be an irritant lo the tender area but there are several herbs, such as oregano, basil, rosemary, marjoram. thyme, and tar- ragon tba( can perk up the flavor of bland diet cooking. You may also use salt, cinnamon, paprika, vanilla extract, and lemon juice for taste enhancers. Avoid all condiments, salad dressings, cloves, garlic, ginger, mint. (Tesh parsley, spices with seeds, jams and preserves. The whole family w'll enjoy these recipes that have been devised to meet the needs of the person on a bland dlet. For severe cases. Lhe doctor may suggest that all vegetables be pureed for a llmlted Ume and that animal pro· tein be limJted to finely minced chicken or while fish. Ask t.o be S\.lre. CARROT SOUFFLE 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 3 tablespoons nour 1 cup hot mtlk 3 eggs, separated '4 teaspoon salt 1-tup cooked pureed carrots Preheat oven to 350° F. Melt butter in a saucepan; add flour and stir until thick and bubbly. Remove from heat; gradually stir in milk until smooth. Return to heat, stirring con- stantly, until mixture is thickened. Remove from heat. Beat together the egg yolks and salt; stir into milk mixture. Add pureed carrots. Beat egg whites until sutr peaks form; told into car· rot mlxture. Spoon lnto a well-buttered 1-quart. ring mold. Set mold into a pan wlth l·inch of hot water covering bottom. Place in oven and bake for 35 minutes, or until firm. Loosen edges and turn out onto platter. Serve at once. Makes 6 servings. BAKED CDlCKEN AND PEACHES 1 brotler chicken, cut in serving pieces 1 1 tablespoon flour ' t2 teaapoon1alt ~ 2 tablespoons butter . ·~, 1 can (lS-Ounce) peach halves with syrup V. teaspoon cinnamon Preheat oven to 350° F. Place chicken pieces ln a flat baking dlstr. Combine flour and salt; sprinkle over chicken. Dot chicken witti butter. Bake for 30 minutes. Place peach halves around chJcken parts: spoon some of the syrup over chicken and peaches. Sprinkle with cin- namon. Return to oven for an additional 20 to 30 minutes. Makes 4 servtnis. \ ~ I '~ '"esistible peach pie. •' Just Peachy Pie White most Am ericans could undoubtedly win any internationa l pi e· eating contest w1thoul undue effort. the pie 1:? cup sugar 11:: teaspoons apple pie sp1cc 18 teaspoon salt • .-atini:est places in 1 tablespoon lemon JUicc knives used scissor· fashion until mixture re· sembles coarse crumbs. Cover and refrigerate. In a large bowl combine remaining 3 tablespoons flour with sugar, apple pie spice, salt and lemon juice. Add pears; stir until coated. Spoon Into lined pastry shell. Sprinkle with refrigerat· ed flour mixture. Bake in a preheated hot oven 1400 F.) for 10 minutes. R e duce oven tern · perature to m ode rate (350 F.) and bake until golden, about 30 minutes longer. · America must su re l) have been the oldlime form communities dur- ing the har\'esting of grain)>. Twice ~1 day the hun gry crrws \\ere served the women folks, all ds or lemptin~ dis h· , with pies in var iety 5 the finishing touch. ~ ·here would be apple s, peach pies, pear s, plum pies, grape ies. lemon pies and anana pies. The rivalry ong the hostesses of . e n ei~hbor hood was ~tense. LD FASHIONED SPICED PEACH PIE Pastry for two crust. ".>-inch pie -.• , ' cup su~ar .. ' 1 cup flour • l teaspoon ground .:dnnamon • '.a teaspoon ~round •l\utmeg .... ''"teaspoon salt • 6 cups sliced peeled :~aches (6 or 7 peaches l 1 egg, lightly beaten 1 cup heavy cream ~ On a lightly floured ;NOard roll half of the r. astry }O fit the bottom ~ a 9-mch pie pan; line · ·ie pan with pastry; re· : rve remaining pastry r later use. In a large bwl combine sugar. ~ur, ciMamon, nutmeg •'1 salt Add peaches; • r until coated. Spoon to lined pastry s hell. ·x together egg and ream ; pour over aches. Roll remaining :»~1try to cover pie; l~ce over peaches; Pfe edges to seal: prick , of pastry to let tieam escape. Bake In a eheated hot oven (425 i for 15 minutes . duce oven tern · ature to moderate F .) and bake until Is golden, about 30 utea. Serve warm. ,. PICED STREUSEL PEAR PIE Pastry lor one crust )Acb pie . 1 cup plus a t.abl n1 all-purpoee nour. • ividod •• '-' cup flrml1· cktcl l1bt. brown ar· ~i cup lMllttt inarsarlne 5 me dium pears. peeled and sliced (about 6 cups) On a lightly floured hoard roll pastry to fit the bottom of a 9-inch pi e pan ; line pie pan with pastry; set aside. In a medium bowl com· bine 1 cup of the flour with brown sugar. Add butter; cut in with a pastry blender or two Smoked naturally-the Old Fashioned way ... A gourmet will tell you what makes real Thuringer Sausage ... strictly the finest In meats and spices. That's why Schlrmer's semi-dry Thuringer is right at home for banquet hors d'ouvres or in a sandwich. This teutonic tempter is a delicious blend of pork and beef, cured slowly and naturally, then hickory smoked for that special flavor. ........... --Look for the lltt,. Schirmer'• S1u111t M1hr on tftt pach1e In your market. ~\ .. ·~ Schinnat® the Sociable Sausage 3~ FRESH LOCAL ITALIAH BARM BONELESS TAVERN GOLDEN RIPE ARANAS 5 lbs. HAMS r.~ ShnH..-.: 9 to 9 Dailv ·S~ 10 to 7 hfc" IHwcttft Thurs., May 11 ...,, Wed.. May 17 f'rtc" ~to Stock M .._.,We.....,:::.:::,.-~ We • ...,.., T'-e llJtjlt To U...it " AM ...... I* To D....,. AMI WlloteMien. LOWER PRICES! FRESH FOS TEI OR ZACKY FARMS CALIFORNIA FRYINI CHICKEN 59~. USDA CHOICE SEVEN-BONE BEEF ROAST •, . 1~~ BAY M BULK SLICED BACON 1~~ FRYING CHICKEN MEATY BREASTS LEGS & THIGHS ·129 LB. 89~. OSCAR MAYMI OZ. IW79.C OSCAR MA YER 8 OL IARM SLIC~D BOLOGNA ... :, EA SLICED BACON KERNS TOMATO SPllMMll.O f:ltlAM COlll DIL MONTI cur j_ . . ' . . . . .. . BULK WIENERS MARY KITCHEN CORNED BEEF HASH 15 OL C.AH 69c 160L ·59c 1onu JZOL 79c 1om1 llAWMY PAPER TOWELS I JUMBO ROLL 55c • -... • • t .. ~ ._ ' ... ' - FOOD Wednesday. May 10. 1978 DAILY PILOT C:J GREAT nm STRIAGTll. J GREAT nm A ncr.~ GREAT nu PRICL Tropical beef'ring for a dressy dinner/ Try Tropical Beef ~Ring ·. Ground beef. favored for its economy and versati lity , makes showy company fare in Tropical Beef Ring. The cenler of this savorv meat loaf is filled with a crunchy fru1l and vegetable medley. While the beef ring is in the oven, prepare a smooth glaze combining brown sugar, ganger and cornstarch with syrup drained from pineapple chunks. And when the meal loaf is don~. lightly saute drained pineapple chunks with slices or green pepper and sliced onion. To serve, fJU the center of the unmolded beef ring with the sauteed vegetables, and spoon pineapple glaze over all. A garnish of tomato wedges and parsley add to the col- orful appeal of this com- pany dish. The California Beef Council reminds us that for nutril\.ve value and cconomi~ meal plan-· ning, ground beef is ha rd to beat. Providing high quality protein, a generous portion of iron and s ubstanlial amounts of B vitamins, its con- tribution t o a well - balanced diet makes it an e xceptionally good value al tht> meat counter. With barbecue season upon us, ground beef becomes the backyard chef's favorite for juicy burgers, kabobs. skillet dishes and other over· the-coals specialties. For homemakers who want to keep summer kitchen time to a minimum, opting in - stead to enjoy outdoor activities, ground beef offers quick preparation of numerous entrees. casseroles and sandwiches that family or guests will enjoy. TROPICAL BEEF RING 2 pounds l ea n ground beef 1 cup c rack e r crumbs i,; cup finel y chopped omon 2 eggs, beaten 1 ~"' teaspoons salt 1/4 teaspoon pepper 1 can C20 oz.) pineapple chunks •r.i cup brown sugar 2 teaspoons corn- starch it.. teaspoon ginger 4 tablespoons butter. divided 1 green pepper, s li ced 1 cup sliced Onion Tomato wedges and parsley, for garnish Combine ground beef, cracker crumbs, onion, eggs, salt and pepper. Mix well and pat into a 4-cup ring mold. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour. Drain pineapple. reserv- ing syrup. In saucepan, combine brown sugar, cornstarch and ginger. Add 2 tablespoons butter and reserved pineapple syrup. Cook over medium heat, stirring con s tantly, until thickened. Wh en beef ring is done, saute green pepper and onion in re- maining 2 tablespoons butter for 3 or 4 minutes. Add pineapple and heat through~ Unmold beer ring and fill center with pit1'eapple mixture. Spoon pineapple gtaze over all. Makes 6 serv- an~s. That Special Someone H aving that special someone to dinner that you want to impress but empty pockets save you from going the filet mignon route? Ground beef is your answer. There's no doubt about it. Even with the price of food inching up in 1978. ground beef is and probably will always be a boon to the hom emaker who i" watching the food budget. And, s in ce larger s aving s ca n usually be obtained on Jaq:er packages of this product. it's a good idea to buy in quantity and package the meat at home for your individual serving needs. To give ground beef the creative ''oomph" it needs for an impressive dinner, try Jndividual Wellington Loaves. ll is three notches above a standard meal loaf because it wraps the scaled-down loaves in a convenJenl pastry crust. And, the meat loaf is ex- tra delicious -the secret ls a tangy season· ing of ketchu p and horseradish and a rich wine sauce. Since cleaning up left- overs can ruin a n in- teresting after d inner conversation, this recipe serves two -and only two. INDIVIDUAL WELLINGTON LOAVES Y.a lb. extra lean ground beef ~ cup fine dr y bread crumbs l egg, separated 1 tablespoon pre- pared horseradish ~ teaspoon salt IA teaspoon monosodium atutamate 1 cup tomato ketchup .L 1 pie eruat stlCA Wine Sauce <reclt>o !ollow1> Combine ln a medium bow J, ground beef, bread crombe, tH yolk, hor1eradl1h, 1alt, monosodlum glutamate and ·~ cup ketchup. Shape mixture into 2 recuncutar loavu. Bake on rad: In ahallow baldnl paa al 4004 15 minutes. Cool on rack S to 10 minules. Me anwhile, prepare pie crust stick according to packoge directions. Roll into 2 reclangtes , large enough to wrap around loaves; place loaves in center of each pastry. Wrap pas try around, overlapping edges on bottom. Trim off excess pastry at ends. Moisten edges and pinch together to seal. Make decorative cutouts from excess pastry and ar· ra~ge on top of each loaf. Place on ungreased baking pan. Brush en- tire s urface with egg white mixeJ witb a tittle water. Bake al 400° 20 minutes longerJO Serve with Wine Sauce. Makes 2 servings. Wine Sauce ~ Combine remalning ketchup, •14 cup wine, and 1h tea· spoon crushed tarragon. Simmer over low beat aboutlOminutes-.. Chops for· Quality 1 cup water 1~ teaspoon pepper 2 large potatoes, peeled and sliced Farmer's Pork Chops takes advantage or the quality, inexpensive pork You'll find in the market now. Trim fat from chops; coat with mixture of FARMER'S PORK flour, 1 teaspoon salt CHOPS and l teaspoon caraway 6 lean pork chopa, seeds. ln large skillet, cut 1-inch thick brown chops on both 14 cup fiour aides In oil; remove 2 teupoon salt chbps and draJn tat. To 2 teaspoons caraway skillet add knockwurst, seeds c e le r y , on l on a n d 3 tablespoons pure pkklea; sprinkle with veiet&ble oil . pepper and temalnlnt 1 tar,e tmockwurs~ aalt and caraway aeedl. U,lnly sliced Retum chool to 1kWet. 1 cup chopped ln a bowl, combine celery tomato paste, beef WO 1 onion, chopped and water. Arran1e 2 sweet pickles, potatota over meat; diced pour tomato paste mix· l (6-oz.) con tomelo turr. over all Simmer ... paate co v " red • 3 S to ~ 5 1 UO~-\~z.) tan beef minutes. Makes a ~rv· b.rOlh lnl•· I ' Individual m~atloaves for dinner for two. SYDNEY HARRIS mixes his philosophical dissertations with quizzes and thumbnail observations to keep readers on their toes. Save 23$ on Nestea. (It's lilm.ftUing more than ........ --== -:::--~ 0 q••ft .... ai_. 4t..11a..11a.. ') • ~ --· ~ Ill uaa·~ •~ You can't beat Nestea for pure refreshment. And now that refreshment costs even less. Use the coupon below-It saves you 23< (more than the price of 2 quarts) on Nestea K Instant 100% Tea or Nestea • Lemon Flavor. ' • f • • t ' { • I • FOOD lu\ineriean Dishes From the -Britisii Scotch eggs are easy to fix and eat. !!'be English hne been ten lrito round ~•-inch cornmeal. Cover and caUed the "Invisible Im-thlek patties. Shape chill, Bake on shallow ml1Tanu." Unlike many sausage around hard pan in a 4SO'F. oven 20 others who flocked to cooked egg ; smooth sur· minutes. Serve warm America's shores during faces until there arc no with Hollandaise or tt,, 1800's the British c r a c k s. Coat the w hi t e sa uce w Ith were not set apart by s ausage ball with slight· parsley. Makes 6 Scotch Janguaae or looks. They ly beaten egg and roll in Eggs. w"re assimilated into _:;_~iiirmmm~i'immllimiiiii!Miriimm~nmi,iiii!imir.innmli1mmlml!iiimmnnmilmmii the mainstream of the n&w country with re· latlve ease. These new Americans from the British Isles brought with them man y ceflebrated favorite f<Jllds. Today, some of these foods are considered American dis hes - roast beef, fish 'n chips, and pot pies, to name u few . Others remain highly regional and na- tionalistic in character. their history and lore a pa.rt of ethnic America. Cornish pasties are one such dish. A pasty is u whole meal wrapped in pastry. 1t was brought to the United States by imm1· grants from th e Cornwall region of Southwest England. The Cornishmen came to work in the copper mines of Michigan's Up· per Peninsula and the lead mine s o r Wisconsin's Mineral Point area. Before the age of the lunch pail, the miners carried their pasties lo work in a cot· ton pouch called a crib bag. The miner reheated hi~ pasty on a shovel held over the candle he wore on his hat. Canadian bacon is another food of English origin, which has an in· teres ting history. 1l seems England import·· ed bacon from Canada when pork was scarce in Britain. Bacon. as Americans know it, is taken· from the side of pork. Canadian-style bacon is taken from the lean, center portion of the loin or back . Although the imported bacon from Canada closely resembled English "back bacon" it still retained its own uni. que flavor. So, the English called it "Cana· dian Bacon" 'and the name remains to this day. The histocy of Scotch Egg s i s rather a mystery. It ls thought by some, that the Scotchish farmers wrapped scrap· ple around hard cooked eggs nnd carried their lunch to the fields . Without plates or utens ils the farmers found Scotch Eggs an easy meal to eat. CORNISH PASTIES 1 tube <1 lb.> ground p0rk sausage 2 (9-inc h ~ frozen deep-dis h pie shelli; l s mall o ni o n . chopped ~.. 1 can (1 lb.) sliced white potatoes. diced 1 can (814 oz.) sliced dlrrots, diced 11_. teaspoon pepper Cook s ausage over medium heat about 12 m inutes, stirring and separating sausage as il cooks. Re move pie ahells from aluminum pans a nd thaw 10 Minutes; flatten pastry. Repair cracks and tears bt moistening area with ~mall amount of water aod pressing together. Drain sausage and com· blne with potatoes. Oilton, carrots and pep- ~l'. Spoon sausage mix· ture on half or each ple ahell. Fold pastry over ., filling, sealing edges toaether by pressing with a fork. Using a la r ee turner, place pasties on a shallow baking pan and bake in j OO•F. oven for 30 llalnutes until golden bltoyn. Makes 2 pasties. 4 1ervinp. SC<n'Cl:I EGGS 1 tube (l lb.) ground fOfk sausage \1t cup fine dry keadcrumbl 2 eggs, slightly beaten .. bard-cooked eggs ~ti •••. •lightly lil1W ~ eommeaJ BoUaridalle or white llJ11ee wtCb parsley JQ ~ Jars• bowl, com· ... pert aausage, ad crumbs and 2 u.p eQI. On waxed p e r d ivide pork ¥!; ...... m.Cxture into e flUal port1ona and Ila~· Oeltr,. ...... ""*• .. ••· o.c.o. ....... ..... _. ......... . ~ -'YOU .A1WAYS SAVEi WITH STATER BROS. 'OW•IOW PRICES WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO Ulifl OR AV'USE SALES TO COMMERCIAL D£At.EllS OR WHOLESALERS La 5 1" KRllSI "OllED s .... CHUCK ROAST BLADE-CUT •T.&na ..... LUNCHIOll . MIATS ASSOATfD • .OZ. PKO. 7.9~ 79~ ....... PORK LINKS FARMER JOHN • I-OZ. PKG. c . ... RIB ROAST LARGE END sis! '' HUNTO···MAITIWIO TOES 39c BOUILLON CUBES =···· .11 •.•• U-OL 25c ., . · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ····.·.·,•.I-OZ. APPLESAUCE MOn·• • 53c .BANANAS LAJIOI • ---• CllfTllA4,4MIJUCA" awl 6 l'tTTI • "10., HOT. Ofl HICKORY ltATUflAL 'I;' 20.CZ. 'BBQ SAUCE 57 c NECTAR ~=;:.,.,_T ......... t .11 .. M>Z. $1.03 liiFiiiD 111ANS .......... .'.:~39c 1~:~mcE .-...... '&e~· ' '°"D!H. C°'1tl CMAMUI s 11 s SPEARS V\AllC. "'°""ACIC CREMORA ........... ······· ..... ··· 11-0Z. t'&11p r TOMllo.cll. . .. i~z. 7nc LAUN09'YDITIJIQIHT • KINQllZI • PRICllHcL4" OF" LAHL 521, ~ 91.• -:: ....... , ... 4 •••.•••••••.• ••• U.OL ii~ COLD POWER .................. ~z. PINTO BEANS -.,ITA .. ... . ...... ~47 19cL& STRAWBERRIES .._ . ._., ....... 33• IAllCIT . .._.,_.,.~-3 c AVOCADOS .................... 4 .......... _._ . ONIONS .......... ... .. . . . ... 17 -·PTM•<UilCY•AU-63 c ASPARAGUS . . ..... .... ~-·LIOUI0 •01ANTllZl•l'NCllHCl..2040fFLMEl s 105 SMALL RED BEANS IWwrt .... t llM>L 31c AJAX CLEAllER .............. 2.oz. KEG-0-KETCHUP "'~z .. f ......... 12'0,_7gc ·e tTanasav1naav1You•OMY1 -~:;::::~! ::-,~~~~::;::~~.~~·; .. -=:-.-:=:,~o;~:',':7.~:.!:.=~":':::::::.~:~:: ,;:~:· • LADY sc:on. "' ... Tl • 41c Ii. REiiliCHER I IA IH TISSUE "" """" .. " .... l' POPCR " " ..... .... .. ........ 85C /lo w /low C7 C7 J n . .. moAKT•1oo~l'tMt! . _ ol.-c of-c J rozen Joo /-'r ice., ORAlllE JUl(E ................... •..OZ, $ 117 MUSTARO ~amr .. f ........... .oz.25C tBANQUET·BUffET SUPPERS 1v~.-,. <Ju-oz. $137 REFRIED BEANS ' 47c COMBINATION PIZZA vAH ou•MP·s.. ~ ... 2u6-0z. $2 3' t oun·s t PRIMA SALSA 9 em Ofm: .. NT•........ . ... ao.oz. JIMl'S BURRITOS ::-o..•c::Ji~· .... f .. ·-··· . 5-0Z. 23• CHILI SPAGIEll sm:E MIXES JACO SAUCE ~~~· · If..... . ... ~ 48' PEAS --· . -65 • WAFFLES ·-• .... a 7• RIG., 49c wrii.:',,,. s109 . ~'="'64c SALSA OllftG.\ .• , ..•••.••••.•..•.••• 1 .... J.(ll.~ PIZZA :t:=~~.~-l<M>l. s229 COOL WHIPL uuo1 64• ft~ ·~ J~~o. P.ICANTE SAUCE "•c~ .f ....... · .. M>z.51c FANTAIL SlfilMP .-1~SH• . . . .11 .. 1e.oz. $3 17 VAJllLLA WAFERS fllll'OE. ••••• 11~.4' APPLE PIE =~~TCH .• • • .. ! 31-0Z. s137 I/ 4,1 & J? f A . I : PRESERVES "'"'' & 93c PECAN PIE J0+4HSTt)N •• • • .... •• ia-0z. SJ 41 -H-ealth f!.:>eau 'J ../:l-td6 . ,llR•w•m .. :?······ 1.or. -·~ GENTLE TOUCH :,::IY~ ....... f ... moz.25c • Min t M "d CUI.Al 1a9s,...,-. u e ai ~'!AAS =~·YAL~s.11• -~~;:~~F~~ .... u.or.a3c LEMONADE LIMEADE IMM:T. llEG. OR !'IHI< "IQ. OR PINK M>Z. 2}c 45c 26C f MOTHIJt'IDAY ORCHID CORSAGES LAllGI • llAU'Tlf\ll ASST. C°'-Ofll• IH GIFT IOlt • IA. ~ .... -...... -..... -• ..!.. • """ ., ri., '. ' if"--.._ ........ --.. --• • ..... .. • MUMS s2·•• ' . - ' I " FOOD Wednesday, May 10, 1978 DAILY PILOT ~ ! __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ .:.::.._...:_.....:..;__.,.:_ ____________________________ ~~,~ Ignore Well-Meaning Friends, and Relatives Do you have uny or t b e a e • • W e i g b L never lets you forget this weekend. By the sympathetic soul. By God knows one little ing to devour you wiS Problems?" your affliction and her way, are you coming magic, manages to turn banana split couldn 't sympathy. This persolk' The ones we're speak· Sii• good fortune, even withus,orcouldn'tyou everything into a burt,it's mosUyfruit. is the worst of the tof; ing of aren't medical af. though she sounds so find a bathing suit in the "special occasion" that "And. besides, it's my not at all sympathetic or fhcllons but people af. Gour.et sympathetic: Stout Shoppe?" Believe takes the calories out of birthday, and I ordered inte r ested in yo~r Clictions ... those "Listen, I KNOW ex· it or not, that kind of fatteningfoods. it just for you, and welfare. The last thin& seemingly well-meaning aclly what you're going ''sympathy" is thinly• "Just this once" is his wouldn't it be a shame he/she wants is your friends and relatives By Barbara Gibbons through. I have the veiled envy over some or her charmed incanla· to waste it what with all success. Here's bow tbe wbo do or say the wrong SAME problem, only in aspect of your life that's lion, holdin&: out that the starving children in G o o d i e G o d ~ thing -usually an the reverse. That darling working better than calorie poisoned apple India. You r eall y mother/father really guise or helping -other people into mental and never gain a n size 6 bikini I bought last hers. Or his. Gloaters str ud el. He or she wouldn't make me eat sees your relationship : thereby making your cases? Physician, heal ounce, but never without week i n the discount can be both sexes. KN 0 WS how ha rd alone now, would you? ''I'm okay. But you're a diet doubly difficuJt. thyselr." an audience, preferably sample shop is slipping WEIGHT PROBLEM you've been trying, how My feelings will be poor Cat slob who's lucky WEIGHT PROBLEM WEIGHT PROBLEM a dieter whose ~tomacb off m y hips already. No. 5: THE GOODIE well you've done with hurt.'• J ust as you sus· I bother with you at alt No. 1: THE CALORIE No. 4: THE GLOATER is rumbling with hunger. "I'll have to stuff a ll G 0 D M 0 T ff E R your diet, how close you peeled, the GG is really Now, don't go and • COP -knows the -can stuff herself siJly The Gloater never. week on pi:z.za to wear it <FATHER) -also a are lo .your goal, and the Wicked Witch, wail· change things." calorie count of every-----..-..;.;--..=:.::.::.:;.....;="------------.....:...-.:...:....:_.:....:...::..:.:::.::....:.:.........:.:~.:......-----------------:....::....:....:.........:~:.:..:.......:..:..:.;:_-=.:....;~----__;,---~~:...;.._;~;;::.:.----- tbing and doesn't wait lo be asked to tell it. Buys you diet books, tears out newspaper articles and sticks in· s pirational cartoons on your refrigerator. or. ficiates al your weigh. in, phones the doctor to make your appoint- ments. drives you to the diet clinic and leads you by the hand through the s upermarket diet foots. The Weightwatchdog does such a good job of running your diet that there's nothing left for you lo do except scheme for a junkfood jailbreak. Your self-appointed con- science probably means well, but the message implicit \n bis or her methods is that you are a spineless softy who couldn't possibly cope alone. Trouble is. you might begin lo believe it. Or, if you have any spunk at all, you might put on a potato chip protest. But that spites only you. Better to tell the Calorie Cop to turn in his or her badge. WEIGHT PROBLEM No . 2 : THE LOVE SHYLOCK -quite literally, this one de· mands a ''pound of flesh·• as the price of respect or affection. Things are just peachy ~o long as you toe tbe ('aloric straight·and- narrow. but any dietary indiscretion on your part 1s interpreted by the Love Sh ylock as a personal affront. With or without so many words, the Shylock's message is: "You are unaccepta· ble. So. if you want to be my friend (lover, mate. child, parent) you'd bet· ter shape up" Or: ''Tilal piece of cake is evidence that you have no regard for my feelings. You know bow it distresses me to see you put on weight." Love Shylocks are so self·centcred that they cannot understand that your food problem is s trictly personal. and has nothing to do with them. Sometimes the Love Shylock's methods work, but the r el a- tionship is a sick one. The only person really to please with weight loss is yourself. WEIGHT PROBLEM No. 3: TllE AMATEUR SHRINK -without a fee. without a couch, li cense or degree - w i lhoul even be1 ng asked -this person does volunteer casework a mong the hungry, shar· ing his or her remarka- ble insights into the Real Meaning of your meals. Milk s hake s are withheld Mother Love : hot dogs are phallic symbols, birthday cake is fear of aging, a cheese omelet is your repressed maternal instinct ... every food is fraught with Freudian flavor. Sign yourself out of Dr. Fraud's mental hospital before you begin to believe it. Ask him or her: ·'Why are you do- ing this? Why do you feel this need to turn PRICES IFFICTIYE WED., MAY 10 TltlU TUES., MAY 16, 1971. AUllJAl!lm ltMTS ....... llO SAU TO DfAUIS GI IOI IUW OI COIUUICW. ._ • WE AT MARKO IASKO ARE SO SIRE• MR LOW ,.KES, GUAUTY & YALR IRAI .•• WE'RE MAKINI THIS TRIPLE llARANTEEI rl·-•ADYEITISED ITEM GUAUNTHI --i i2-roTAL SATISIACTION GUAIANTIEt--, r3----------Tl1Pll TltE DIFHllNCl G~AUNTHt-----------., I U01•1m1,_a_TOMt&Uatat-.tN1WA • I I ... ~ , ... , u llAAO UJUY ll .. UMTUt NI,_ I I ..... .-t1111TllNTM..,,,__,._ua __ ~OY-.Lt1111 ... at Mf•t-.~·wurwu,. I I U01 _ _,,UC1Pt&1~•111Ta•t1111&e.•tn tot&l 1&!1llACTI09 ~ Of-AOWa.., 109 41! llOI I --.a1KAN•tOlAllltouua•-n1U•t0•u•1&¥1-ttt-UMnlAl&ll I _ .... -... _ ....... ""' -"',_ CMICI I I $AllSlflt9. UIUT -•IU ltlUO '"' ,,. ........ WM I I ••U-lllMSWWTllltOl-UllMllTl&lllt--UlNtCB•IWllAMllYIJllAtHtCITllllW"l•Ulfl',111111Mtolll I I • a COW&&AIU lllll. -ata11.uu, lllUO. 1111 l&IU I I tlMD OI • cow&&a .. .._ OI ..,.... ,_.f'WCllAW PllU. I 1$ -·••MCI•-ITUltl .. IUllUt IAllll'f -nt lut .. flll OBlll IUolUTS l'IKU , ..... , MIUl .. WI""', .. '°"""" I "''-• • ua CMCI ..mumo '°" ro "9CllAll flll aev1mwa I ,., -.a. • ua • I -~~~~1=':.'mf ml~~------~ L-----------------~ -------------------------------===~':.~U:-~ FLORAL QUALITY SMALL MAlln IASln HAS MADE A SPECIAL BUY ON FINE QUALITY HAMS. WHEN COMPARED TO MANY LARGER HAMS: * LESS GRISTLE * LESS FAT * MORE UNIFORM SLICES * EASIER TO CARVE *OUTSTANDING FLAVOR (.H.B. ~. CAISUP . J 1 . OAllV P\LOT . . ' W~nncfay, May 10. 1978 -·--t~ .... ..,. FOOD Fad Diets Can Be Hazardous to Y 011r Health ( ] twke the calories. Why and starch composition. good. Lettuce prices are are due to the rain Q. What bippeood to this difference? Also, after dried peas expected to be three which disrupted the the artichokes t bla Mandoesnotliveby q..w-A A. Peas grown tor arecooked,theycontaln times higher than ~crhoewduelres8'8p01danwthi1ncgh year? T he price baa bre~d atono -nor by .,.. freezing are picked only 70% water, while normal due to lack of ., been 60 blJCh. diet& of nothi~ bul la when they're still im-cooked frozen peas have supplies. Predictions on damaged lettuce Just A. Artichoke growers u1d protein, recent mature -before the 82"1, water. A higher when we'll get price re-due to mature. evidenceind1cates. protean and starch aro percentage of water hef tor fres h salad Meanwhile, find ways report that their plants, As a result o( the eat a large amount or b e hazardous to our t•ompletely formed . means a lower percen-vegetables vary. Some to substitute less ex-adversely affected ~Y cleatbs of 16 women, all of nothing but that food . health. Peas used for drying are tage of protean, starch, say the shortages may pensive vegetables and . excessive rains early In b h 1 Nutrients work Q.lwascbeeklng tbe allowed to grow until and calories will be continue through June. fruits for sa l ~d th~ season and heavy ~nom were usmg t e 1· together in our bodie~. n utrltlonal value or they are mature -and found in the frozen peas. During May the supplies vegetables. Use more rams recenUy, Just b~ve q\aid protein fasting diet, and we need to eat a lroaeo peas and dried then the protein and and prices of all lettuce canned or frozen not been able to provide tie Food and Drug Ad-wide variety of foods to peas •od found that the &Larch are fully de-Q. W~n. ob wheo, Js are expected to nuctuate vegetables -green th~ us~ bumper c~p m inistration <FDA) in-supply sufficient quan· cooked dried pets hive veloped in them. Dif-the price of lettuce and due to erratic tilanting beans, broccoli, car rots, this spnng. Harvesting iliated 8 study in whjch titles or all the different halt 11al.n 11 much pro-ferent varieties of peas other fresh vegetables schedules. Supflies may peas -which can be baa been s low, supplies rats were fed nothing but nutrients. . teln and nearly twice IS are grown for these two going to come down? be temporar ly good made into saiads r ather Ii m I ted • a nd that• s liquid protein. Fad diets based on one much starch 11 cooked purposes. each having A. The outlook for the with s h ortages l n than served hot: Serve what's causing the high Preliminary results of or just a few foods can frozen peas, and almost s lightly different protein next few weeks is not too between. The problems more tr u it s a I ad. prices. the study show that or.--------------------------------------....._ __ _;;___: ________ ;__ ____________________________________ :__ ____________________________________________ _ 200 obese rats, only 5% survived after being on the liquid protein diet a month. The s urviving rats were all male -females seem to be more s usceptible to whatever is harmful in this diet. The liquid protein diet was developed as a method for severely obese individuals to lose weight under close medical supervision. It was never meant to be used as it has been -as a fad weight diet by peo· pie not under a doctor's care The diet is actually a fast. calling for the elimination of food for one or more months. In place of food. dieters are given a 30U calorie formula kno\\ n as pre· digcst(•d liquid protein. The liquid protein is usually made from col- lagen, a fibrous protein derived from animal bones, hides, and con· nective tissue. The col· lagen is hydrolized -or broken down into si m pier s ubstances known as amino acids <the reason for the term predigested > into a gelatin type liquid. Minerals and vitamins are added. Unlike other animal protein, t'Ollagcn is not a complete protein. rt is low in ct•rtain <'Ss(•ntial ammo acids which our bodies must gel from foods in order to build body protein Uul this does not necessarily ex· plain why some people died on the diet. <FDA h as received uncon· fir med reports of 58 deaths associated with use of the liquid protein.) The FDA-sponsored study in which the rats dted when led nothing but liquid protein is just one of a number of "sole food ·' experi rl},,enta I diets that have bfen fed to laboratory animals. The rc•:rnlls all show that single food diets are haz.a rdous, if not deadly. In 1>ne studr. young rats were dl\·1ded into n1n t:' i.:roups of six rats each, and each group was fed JUSt one food: com mcrc1al dog food, whole pastcunzed milk, hamburger, nonf<it dry milk, enriched white bread, enriched breakfast ('ereal, frozen french fried potatoes, frozen orange Juice con· centrate, or fresh spinach. C rowth and health of the rats was measured over a 13-week period. The only group of rats that did Wt'll was the one rect'iv1ng lht' com- mercial dog food, which is formuJated lo provide all the nutrients needed by a dog -or rat. None of the others grew well. None of the rats fed spinach survived more than three days. Those eating whole milk were closest in growth to the dog food group. but were pale and anemic. All the rats in the groups fed whole milk~ white bread; and frencn fries sur· vived Just one rat l'ach sur- vivt'd the 13 ~eeks from the ornnge juice and hamburger groups. The h amburger-fed rats showed weight gain at first but then became severely paralyzed. Two of the six animals fed nonfat dry milk died, a ll became blind with cataracts; one of the breakfast cereal rats died. All the animals fed white bread, breakfast cereal, french fried potatoes, and orange juice showed loss of hair and none gained much weight. . The results or this study do not show thnt you will get cataracts if you use nonfat dry milk, become paralyzed lf you eat hamburger, or lose your hair It you eat white bread, bruklast cer eal, frencb fries, or orange juice. Whot they do tell you is that a one lood dlet is unhealthy. No one food has all tha nutrients we need. And If the one food b11 a substance &bat. mlcht be batrnluJ, ••'re much more Ukely to b harmed by Jt. when wo - y ·-~~ 6;rt;·s F~I ~§Fish Portlons1~~~.'!~_! .. _ ·-........ , ....... '" · = Unit One """ Ind One Coupon ,., cweonw. ~n sUPii' COui>oi _ ~- .... 72 wlll Coupo11 . ! :::: General M Illa ~ ::Cheerios II ~§Cereal 10oz. ~ ·-·-: : Unit ON IWn Ind One Coupon P., Cl.lllamlr. ~i siiPii COUPoi SH I Chuck Bled• Cut Roatt or Chuck Steak per lb. Regular or Thldt Sliced Fanner John Bacon 1 lb. pkg. 28 Golden Premium Meats l lff 1.ll+.12Tuwlth C...,.. t l With Alt8ched Tlee ~ :3 Heftv-1.awn • l'l'W · :: Leaf Bags 1oct _ .. _ .. :: pq ............... ... : = Unit One """ Ind One Coupon ,., CUllOmlr. ~1 siiPii' COii-Poi l Relpht-Hom•tyM OI' : 3 But11111dll 1 ... :::: Blsallts .. OL ::::: pkg. _,. ............... ~ = Lmll ON ltlm n1 One Coupon p., eu..am.. ~siiPUCOUPoi "•lphl·A Blend of Qround IHf I Soy Pro191n Concent11te Super 3 Lb. Pkg. Blend 'M Ralph1 per II lb. In OU or Watw Chu'* Light T111a 8''2 0•·11 can Super Del/ f s For,.....,, ............... Al11'thl .. now Open 8 ......... , ..... 9 cun. lundar <O Hwryt MOit oftara expire May 15, 1978 Pick up Ralphs Super Savings book for C°'4>0ftl CY)LIC>N couNtRY SJIFllRI Jack La Lann e's llltoptlD HealtbSp11 ~q1l§ FORUM OR1'flOl\HI . USE ~WllEHEHO P~•s This week'!'; ~ Coupon Off er AelJ)N Crack~ Wheat Bread 24 oz. lo1f II 25' Off Pack-Extr1 Ory, light Powder or XX Arrid Anti.Pers pi rant 4oz. II can Super Bakery 111oi.-.I lt~ ,.iiiiiiBiii •• ONi"Ci:Uii" 1'7• ,,,. .lS • 02 ht •Ill Coupon F1mlly SCott Bathroom Tissue 4 roll pkg. .57 Unit Olw Item Ind One Coupon Per C"*"-· Coupon El'lldlft May 11-May 17, 1'71. .. h1.\CouoonVM-CS 0Nl••....,.Of"~~"~~0"fCk.tDC.4'd ..M ~-·········COUPON••••••••••" Super for Salads LettUlii'9 3 3 each • """".. 39 '"Salad Size Tomatoes ~ • ,, Libby's Tomato Juice 46oz.ll Can Supet' Produce '\,S0i7 IMI Clludl ,c~01C.!J 7-Bone .Steak 99 D llalpfte ~--., ': • Mild Chadd• 111 ~8-;a;ci;;I " :0 •• 89 ~ R.i 'arapefruit 5~.59 ,,., Ill USDA IMI Cllllct•Clod Cut ~001(( Bonelw Rolled Roast '::. 111 ~ Led;Sik*t Meat Joi. 45 D r.race&'kt;Mp 1foL 89 ~e:~;; ~ .17 ~·. P-1· I USDA &M IA_..i clO•cc Tip Steak '::. 119 ~ R-Creasing ~A., Food Ring !;21 N .. cropT••n ~.17 ''°' 85 Un 89 Yellow Onions ,., . pkg • &@ s~Ri'bi ':: 148 111 ~ lltlphl~lelt!orlou~h !Y1 B~kMission Figs ,., .. Enar•hM ns P-0· 33 lot. 99 Ill. ol I • , .... .... ~•so~, Clbe Steak ': 2oe Home 'N Leisure ~ p~cLQk; 11Ne1.wi.oi. °' 111b Hatt '::. 138 101 ~ Fieirc0ii8r Ca• DiiJkia.;FOmier oech 1s1 Super Flowers for a Super Mom ~ c:~LG~~~ Hen 101 197 can MPPiMts .. <II 321 ''""c"' Marguerite Daisies bv!lcfl 129 Pantry Fillers COIO<lul-6" Pol •Kii 349 ColOfful 1" Hybrid Liliel Mixed Bouquets bu...:11 ~ Kibbi;d"oog Food ,..,, 57 ~A&vtR~eer ., •... 89 .,_ ... ,ti, • • ._.... .. ,°' .. ell 3 49 OrdNm 149 Mum Plants hid Corsages u cll Colomll•I",., 589 f1t1hCut 1H Hydrangea Plants Carnations ;;. tech ltuncll ~ h'OYaia8latin to1. 31 ~B~Mix ·::i\67 '"' . ~ cr~r Jacks ~ar;o:·r~e p!. .74 Whllt Supply L11ll P'•· 39 ol 3 I ~ S loc-Out11 ~ siftj Cleaner 7hL 79 torageB• 2Sct. 67 .... . bll • ~cwi~t:;a·· ... ... 68 ~P;ii'c~ 17.IOL 89 PLAIN WRAP 'M Clft I 1141. I MMt our ¥0_.'I fa1mly ~tki~d'o~ Uo1. 117 .... ~ "ml!J llt ... HO"'"' Cacade ..... 1'' •• IWNWRAP 229 Ground Coffee ~~~ Pftcm~ M1y 11lruMty17, 1178 r-••f{D*'••., r• -·~R0••., r-. ,~go .•• , I 1411 11 1471 11 ... , ... ·•'••c..-"11 I ... .21+.02T•..-C...,... IM ..... 0...-'t-OIMMM I ~""'·''°''..., 11 ....... 11 Sllllw•Pn '100 I Fabric 139 Zest 29 Cookware _.. 10fF I SOftll• 14-tt... 11 .. Soap ~!" I 11 :.:=-..::::.=' -~ I ~=--=~--... ,_, ....... ....... I c ..... Ytur .... , .. ., ... "" 1.MOrlt ... •OM '-C...· lNO..llllllMOM ,_~ ~O..llll!llNION~,_~. =::."':".!::°11•.,...:, I ~ ..... ...,ti:., 11. 1111 11 a..-..... ...,=...,,,,,.. I c..... Ulllalli9..., 11 ..._.,..11. 1m I _ ---- L cous:tON I L COUPON J L cou1Ju1v J ':'::J'•.::.-• •• -• • • •~ ----------------~--• l 11a ST .. CISTA D Paut K YM.OllA, u.A ll1S •SM....,IONlr•u UM -TISlll, llCWNIT I .. an. m11 Ua ST .. Tm* llMIOI & Ill.SH COSTA IKSA • • ' • • r. ·~ ...... ,,,. .. • • • ~ ...... .-......... '. "' ,. -. . . ., -..... -.. .. .... ... .. I t . 15411 S. ••llUIST. IUIMltCSltl SJDn HOUIS: 1-11 My, MS., I - l .• l .. -, 'I L t • •l . t .. ' .. . ' FOOO CAIL V PILOT CJ A. Festive Peanut Fluff I Them are 200 ways to use peanut butler in a new cookbook wbkb bas clearly bf.en written for people with a passionate interest in the :spread The author ls William I Kaufman and the new book (bas 92n d cookbook) Is the Peanut Bulte r Cook book . A lifelong peanut butter Can, Ka ufman has col· Ject e d pe anut a nd peanut butter r ecipes from all over the world for th ls book . AUTUMN FESTIVAL FLUFF 1·1:.i cups graham cracker crumbs •,:or c u p f i r m 1 y packed light brown sugar 1:i c u p crunch y peanut butter '" cup m elted butter or m a rgarine 3 , c u p co nrec- tioners' sugar 11.1 cup crunch y peanut butter 1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese ~" cup granulated sugar 2 c ups (1 pint> heavy cream, whipped 1 can (1 pound, 4 ounces) pie-sliced ap· p ies, drained Ground cinnamon Combine the crum bs. b r o w n s u g a r , •,2 c u p o f peanu t b ut· ter , and the butter. Mix u n ti l crum bl y. In another bowl, combine the confectioners' sugar and 1 a cup or peanut but· ter. Mix until crumbly. Mash the cream cheese and beat in the granulal· ed sugar gradually until the m lxture is very soft and creamy. Fold in the whipped c r ea m . Sprinkle two-thirds or the graham crumb mix- ture over the bottom of a 9 x 13-anch pan. Press crumbs into place even· ly. Spoon half of the cheese mixture over the cr u mbs. Carefull y s pread cheese into a n even la.ver. Place apple slices evenly over the cheese. S pr inkle with cinnamon. Sprinkle two- thi r ds of the confec- tioners ' sugar mixt ure over the apples. Top with t he r:e m a lnln g ch eese mixture, spread· ing cheese evenly over . crumbs. Top with the re- m a 1n1 n g gra h am cracker crumbs and re· maining confectioners' su gar mixture. Cover pan wath foil and chill for 24 hours before serv· ing. Cul into squares to sen·e C'lllCKEN DJAKARTA 1,2 c u p m i n c e d onions 2 c loves garlic. minc<!d lh teaspoon dried ground chili pepper oil ·~ cup peanut butter l teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon peanut 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1 cup water 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 2·1f.a·pound broiler· fryers cut into eighths Combine t he onions wit h the garlic, chili pepper, peanut butter and salt. Saute in the peanut oil for 4 minutes. Add the soy sau ce, water and lemon juice. Cook over low heat for 5 minutes. Cool. Marinate chicken in sauce for 1 hour. Broil the chicken . for a bout 30 minutes 4 to · 6 Inches from source of heat. Turn the chicken frequently (every 2 to 3 minutes) a nd br us h each time w ith the · m arinade. Heal remain· ing marinade and serve as a s auce fo r the cooked chicken. MaJces 8 1ervings SOUTHERN SWEET POTATO P E ANUT BUTTE R CASSEROLE 6 sweet potatoes, cooked, peeled and mashed l,"l teaspoon ground mace 'tl cup rirml y packed brown sugar ~ cup butte r or margarine, m elted ~ cup smooth peanut butter Inc h -thick crouwl6e 3 navel oran1e slices. Layer the sweet V.. cup dry bread· po t a to m i xture a nd crum bs oran ge s ltces i n a •:s c u p sa il e d greased 2 -qu a rt peanuts casser ole, ending with Max the mashed sweet the or ange slices. Mix potatoes. mace, brown the breadcrumbs and sugar, half ol the melted peanuts with the re. butter and the peanut mainlng melted butter butter witil smooth and and s poon over the top. well blended . With a Ba ke in a preheated sh arp knife, slice and · moderate oven (350 P--> peel the white m e m· ror 25 to30minuteaorun· brane from the oranges. til piping hot. Makes 8 Cut the oranges mto ~-servings. This Mother's Day, serve Mom a French classic. Festive fluff uses peanut butterss a base for dessert. -~ ~ And . the Cordon Bleu~~~~~ shows you how. Mom, it's your day to turn that apron in. Attention Dad and all the kids, this Mother's Day give Mom a day off from the kitchen. Lucky and the Cordon Bleu make ti easy with this week's simple to prepare recipe. TOURNEDOS BERNAISE (pronounced Tournedoughs Bay·R·Naiz). You can refer to it as Filets with Bernaise Sauce. It requires a shopping list of filet m ignon and an array of other ingredients to make the zesty sauce, including onions, tarragon , wine vinegar and Qggs. Everything you need to make this dt>ltcious recipe for Mom ts avai labl~ at our every<lay low discount prices. What so proudly we hail. It's our honor and privilege to be able to proclaim that our beef meets the standards of the Cordon Bleu, the world famous Cooking School of Paris, France. It's an acknowledgement we take a grea t deal of pride in, because it tells just how good our Bonded Beef really Is. A collection even money can't buy . The Cordon Bleu has prepared a dozen different recipes for us, each one characterized by its own unique and distinctive quality. A quality that epitomizes the finest in French cooking. You·n find a new Cordon Bleu recipe free each week, JUSt by stopping at our meat counter and picking one up. There's no purchase necessary. Collect the entire set and treat your family to something very special. Come into Lucky today and turn those humdrum meals into exciting French cuisine, using the beef that meets the standards of the Cordon Bleu. The Beef that meets the standards of the Cordon Bleu CROSS RIO ROAST LO 158 OCUll(~HlOI• Olllll <HUCI' .•.••••••••• OEEf FILET MIGNOM 10 J .98 ~~;~MD P.10 STEA·K· . 18 1. 79 LAP.GE END P.10 ROAST OOOOIDOHI . • . . ............ II 1, 7 8 Fresh Meats OEEF NECK OOM£S •• ......... • •.••••••••• 10 .58 fl\ESH SALMON • ""°'' ()l\H•ll •• , ••• •• ,10 2.88 ~~E~~ S~':MOM STEAKS 18 j ,48 PORK SPAP.EP.IDS 10 1.29 ... ,,..,..,~,. ..... POP.K LOIM ROAST I•' O"'Clll •Yf>..,, Jllll • ..\.0 1,J8 POP.K LOIN P.10 CHO~ ............•...••.•• o 1.76 POP.I< LOIN CHO~ l!•Df"'Oo' •• •• •• • , ID 1 • 98 SMOKED SAUSAGE "•I-• • • .. 1.66 f AP.MEP. JOHM SAUSAGE \o<llllfnlJH'L) •...•... 1or 11114 .4'9 LADY LEE.SUCW DACO~· .'.~.'. ·:~. ·.:: 1.38 GP.ADE A DUCKS :~·~.::::;a . 98 1v)1.oroocu l\OUNO .lO 17 8 T ·DONE STEAK ID 2.26 V·· JIOOUf lOiH TOP SIP.LOIM STEAK OOHlll\IOO'IOIOlllfl10IH ••••••• ID 2.46 Tli• rvalu&UM and •PP•fl"~I ~y I~ c.,.d,.., Blru • .,,,..i, ""IV"' Lvc~y Rmd•cl e,,.,1 p11ducos 111 rh•• 1dv•t1lwmvn1 Canned & Packaged HARVEST DAY ~.~~~ ••.•• H OZCAN e 2 2 b OE·l-~~-~!E CATS.U~10011111 _55 b ~K,!!0~~~~~~ ••• lOl CAN .45 b ANTHONY SPAGHml , ........ , •••••••••• 3JOl"'6 .77 L TP.EESt.'E[T ONMKS "IVll 4\IAAlll4~ •••••• t •Ol C..WI • 7 J r LADY UE DMMGts 0 l)l\•~f\160f~l ••• •lf-...• 25 l ~"!~~~~~~or to• .55 ,. IHSTAHTTEA 6 U>Otlll ............... ~Ol,.... 1.09 • PIHEAPPlE JUICE b IAOTlll, ••• ,. •• , ••••• <1601 CM .59 L ~~~~~~.~ ..... ,.01 CM .47 L IUD TAG GP.EEM DEANS CV1 , ....... , • , ......... faOI (A>I o 24' Canned & Pac kaged b HARVEST DAY PEACHES 49 (L()(l\I"' HALVE~ on !>I.ICC~ 2Q Ol 0.N • b POTATO ~~~~~6l LOM .49 A ~.~~Y'ST~~!~.~U!J, ,.,. .49 b ~~~~IM.~~,~~JOI C>~ 1.29 b :~!!~~~.~ ...... ,.,or , .... 55 b HUNT'S POTATOES . . .. . . .... ···.01 , .... 27 L ~~~'c:.~?~ ... ,, ~ 011 • 93 L ~~~~CKlES '601 JU 1 . 1 9 Dairy & Frozen l' LADY LEE 6 ~U~~!~IN e 99 L ~~·~'-~~ ...... ••OT<•~ .58 L Gl\£EH GIAMT POTATOES :;~~~-<(!\ .. •001 ""' .53 A PICTSVEtT P£AS .. ....... .. . .. ••OI "'4 ,09 ~ OP.E-IOA POTATOES r (!ll)Ol~I .......... >OOI~ .79 6 CEl.ESTE PtllA . Dll\llll .............. >l'10I "'6 2.29 °"'"-...._""'-" __ _ _, ............ ___ .°"' _.......,_IM\ltlt 18ufld a lull HI of 12 n,.d 1h•m O<\ly ••our mu1 <OUftlfr ) Delicatessen b OSCAR MA YER OOLOGNA 109 ~UC(0(4 VAl\1(11(~) . .... n oz PllG Health & Beauty Aid s A ~~E-~.1H.~~~~~., •m 2.99 DAN P.Oll ·OM .t ()(()t>Oll.,.I l(fMl!O V•Y.I• lt'I 99 0H(I(°"'" • • • • ) ... / "" • r DIAL ANT1·P£RSPIRANT b t•!,..()l\l(!MllO • • 4 "•l 'II 1 , 29 p "HITE P.AIM HALP. SPP.A Y 6 ::.~,:~~«":·~~ .... 1 )~I(~_,• 99 L VIDAL~M SHAMPOO • 601 11\ 1 . 79 Household & Pet Household & Pe t 1 ~~~~.E;~~~l~L Tl~~,E~, .j9 p AJl\J. DETERGENT 1 OS 6 ll()u.() ,v, 0'1 • A M.P.S. DOG FOOD 54 9'.MUlilf 7> C'l/ \.t.._i t L PUP.IMA PUPPY CH~';' O•'· 6. 21 Liquor, Beer, Wine GALLO WINE (1t••""'' ""'''f",.•l\'f"' r.o'-' ~ \1lf\ Dh 2.39 GOLOEM CROWN DEEP. 1 "4 , 0 ''0/ (A~ ,l,.-1 ANCIENT AGE OOUP.OOM """"I• e,m0<.1• .. • 1>••~ o" 11.49 Produce FRESH CORN COA04CUA M~I 0 1 )~N l\Al\0((11l IA~~ ONMMEOl.AM 101 (A .09 fA .39 LARGE AVOCADOS HM~V ... l\f[IY RUDY RED GRAPEFRUIT ••••• ~LO (C LOOM:. .49 HAWAIIAN fu!!'oo~~~~-.. (A • 7 9 .......... 14 .10 ... what discount is all about. •t.NAHllll I etl 10. tTATI COL&.101 II.VD. JUU.UTON Na lllO. IUCUO AVI. Ju ITOAUOnN DAILY t A.M. •OA"Ol"4llOVI 1MHIUCUDAVI. •NUNTINOTOM HACH •NUNTINOTOM IUCtt ... , ATUNTA AVl.NUI 1NOI I OUA CHICA AvutUe ' ('8 OM1 PtlOl MARMADUKE by Br1d Anderson ''It's dog yogurt!" I FUNKYWINKERBEAN ~SHOULD l SW:.l\T 1URN LEFT UP HERE ! 111 IS TE.& T? l'VE DRtVE./l:i ~E COOR&E 00ZEN$ OF 1iME5 ! CASEY MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX ~ ~INAL..L..Y ~veo ~™E" MC.GUI~~ OB?e$$10N 'TO P'21Ve l ...----.-,...-.--- DENNIS THE MENACE • He's SM Cf A C'LLECTOR~ ITEM ... THEY 1 DOtfr' M4¥£, 'EM LIKE 1HIS Hi'f Na.f..' I ,, . . MISS PEACH '~H f.iAT? !llA, YOt..t ~k: Ml. WMY YOU FeEL.. F='llLA~Tll.A'T'!D? vveL.L., VVH'I 00 YOIA ,.MINK "-'10~ S:EiL.. ~~U~Tl'ATED? ............... ,.,.,.. by Tom Batiuk DOOLEY'S WORLD by Mell PEANUTS SORR~. MANAGER ... WATCHING ~OVR GRACEFUL MOVE5 ON THE PITC~ER'S MOUND LULLED ME TO SLEEP! COMICS 1 CROSSWORD .•. by Charles M. SchuJ:~ .... • :· --~~~~~~--. HOW C~N YOU r~Ll ASLEEP IN THE A\tr'C'L~ OF A 8,.\LL Gr\1\\E -: "{ L/ES, I CAN SEE HOW THAT 1\\lGHT HAPPEN ... by Roger Bradfield MDM'S BffN UFSETSl~CE SHE SfARTED WATCHING H£R WEIGHT! WMV'S THAT ? SJ.4£5 WATCHING IT 60 UP! .JUST ATINY POF<TION FOR ME, PL.E',AS~ . by Charles Rodrigues !)·/0 DR. SMOCK MOTLEY'S CREW WEL.l .. , GU'{5, 11''5 GREAT FOR exeRC 151 NG 'THE OL.D He:AAf,. GO.,.-HAM PAL-, 10 WIN, IN 'THe 'THIRD A'I eeL-MON"I I by George Lemont by Templeton and Forman GORDO by Gus Arriola TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE JUDGE PARKER YES, S1R ••• &JT J'M NOT MR. OORELL FOR MRS. SORE SHE'S HOME! KINGSTON, PLEASE! "'< '."'· TUMBLEWEEDS NANCY OK! 8UT l'M HOMESICK FOR THE SIGHTS IN ALASKA! HELGA, THERE'S A YES. I'LL TELL GENTLEMAN HERE HIM~ JUST A FOR MRS. KINGSTOI'! by Harold Le Doux IS THAT THE MAID? PEAAAPS VOO'D &ETTER LET ME TALKlOHER! by Tom K. Ryan SORfOFA LOOSE PONV f:XPRfSS Rll7e:R. ... . . . .. ... ... ",.. .... -.............. "" ......... -...... -........ ,.. .. -. ,, ' r ACROSS 1 Grafvon-: Ger. admi· tal 6 Fabaceous shrub 9 M111chandls- ln{l events 14 AWJV 15 Mentallv heal1hv 16 Avoid fulfill- iog 17 Rectangular p.1as1er 18 RalnlChan• dr.fs wife • 19 Actor David 20 N. Atl. 1epub. 21 A1ctic land mass: 2 WOldS 23 Bnng back 11110 use 25 01S1ribute cards 26 Emmet 27 Student 29 Local per- son: Sull•it 32--chard 36 AulhOf Thomas .. - 36Stamp 37 Join 38 Ruined: Slang 39 Trim 40 Samovars 41 Materials i" veins '2 Coal and peat "'1 Man's name: Abbr. 44 Reared 45 Fish feature 46 Carbona1ed drink 48Car11oves- Sills 52 Have 8 priof ()()Inion 56 fl!fTl<)i. "'" 57 Slow: Music 58 Contrallo 59 Baseball hit 60 Fod lho k111v 61 HalO 62 --now: Ht1ctof01e 63 lmlablo 64 Throw 65 B1. W(lOpon DOWN 1 Kind of c:aso 'Br. money 3 Colorado park 4 Belor& 1he1 .. 5 S1a111 6 Artie" 7 Against 8 lnclono 9Felt 10 Sp. province 11 Pendaot Of• UNITED Feature Syl'ldlcale Tuesday's Puzzle Solved i.~ 2.~ A T • •I• [~ t a • l s l •• s l ·~ . " ( ' T H ( s I A --A C I H O Ir ---" ' • l • f •• T l It T •• • • s• r l r. L A II D I II ( . ... [ s H £15 0 • I ( l I • l L 0 I I • 1 l s ( c " l r c l [ . • • H Cll ( I H 0 .. u .. • • l G r I• . ( ( s . ,., u 0 . ( l It S l l II I s ~ " • y ~A I N U H •• v l l ~{[ ' A [ s ~ . • ol I A .. £ II T T II U If 0. [ r. 0 !!till A H l S IS " ( s ,, l •• [ s - - t ' . ., " ' - I l I p ( • 1 • • 1 f s & t t 1 ii I t /. c ti s \ fl s a ( < r F \ f 1 d 1 f 0 I\ .. l s a F ~ fl s ' l i • I 1 • f. 'I. t '1 .. ~ i . • \ .. ( , g c q ,. ~ " (( . ' ' r 9 . ti ~ . ~ . USDA Choice Baef Rib Steaks IBllEI R-IZODDI CHAn EfffCTllE APlllL 11, 1971 -.... ... ... ma&. 1 ts II ·-NIDI 11llllT 11CllTI TIClllTI .... 11 1.711.-0 134,111 11.- 11.-111 11....a 11317 ...... 11• .. ... 4Al7 2.244 111 1.111 11MZ -... .. 1,411 U01 ... m 11 --173 M 7 TOTALS ... 12A •• 13 7 These odd• are in effect untll one month aft« start. Updated odds wUI be posled in all participating stores and any newspaper adS. Promotion available at Safeway Storee located In Catlfomla counties of: Los Angeles. Ventura, San Bernardino. RlvefSlde. San Luis Obispo, Inyo. Orange. San1a Barbara. Kem and Mono (186) and In Clark County. NeYada (13). v Beginning Aprll 19 and acheduled to end July 18. 1918 or when all tickets are dla1rlbuted. Promotion termination wtll be announced ' Here Are A Few 8111110 Wlnnera •JOSE RODRIQUEZ '2,000 Winner LoaAngetes • RICHARD GENTILE '100Wlnner Long Beach •JUDITH LESINSKY '100Wlnner Losbgelel •DALEDAVIS •1.ooow....., Loa Angel• •HILDA TAPIA •1oow1nner Sllenilln 01111 •A.R. HUFF '100Wlnner Pactftc Pllllades •ROYLOZANO '100Wlnner Antn •JORIE CORTQ 11.000 Winner Glendale • CHAllW DOI.AN •1,ooow .... FOlllMa . •EDWARD DOLL •1oow..._ Plalllo lelch •CllYSTALSALAPATAS .,, ....... Plcltlc ,.. ....... $3.00 CALIFORNIA SURF PRO SOCCER GENERAL ADMISSION TICKETS •.. .OM&Y 9 1.00 CALIFORNIA SURF vs. STUTTGART, MAY 12th at Anaheim Stadium SAYE 12.00 TICKETS ON SALE AT ALL ORANGE COUNTY SAFEWAY$ Sure Winner•~ Sa/eUNJJ' Fine Quality! •YubanCoftee =.: ':-'37 ' g::-;>Chlll I l•ns H.!a~n~0s~e1 43:-9!r 79 1--i·Rlce·A·Ronl oofdenor~n ~ 490 . l--i1Fabrtc Soft8ns White Magic = 890 Fanner John Pork Steaks Freeh s Pork Shoulder 19 Beef Rib Roat $.U1 USOA~Beef Smell End la. ~ - ~~~~~ ..... •a• . i ~~.~ .... ., •• Blade Cut ................ ftfta OoelHot EJICMd 80% Fet •• JIL IR1,.. ~~~Weight. ... •111 ...,Fram. ...,. Saf.._Premium ... 1 ........... . ~.~.~ .. '1'' LARGE "AA" EGGS Lucerne ~69° SUNNY DELIGHT ~~~:.=89° FROZEN VEGETABLES ....._~~99° d' ~ BABY DIAPERS I TrulyFlne ~~ Dlapoa•:•s•• SOFT DRINKS Cragmont Plus 4 $'100. Depollt _, CAKE MIXES Mra. Wnght'I Layer var1et1e1590 111,M&. ..... '"" ~-!l~c.'2'1 ~J;!3'='"'1 ~c~er1.!iw P~~.~ .... ti 790 Bottle Shop Buy•! PrlceS E"9ctM In UCeMed s.t..-y GIN or VODKA SEAlllAM'S Winner's Cup 7-mwl 80-Proof ,611 :t;= ,1111 1-S> t;:= S$ t:" . CHEllN BLAIC CABB• I SAUVlllOll inglenOOk Paul ~ =:es .,..s3so Serve Maaaon .,..s3so Ill. Chilled Ill. ,. Raisins Town House Et ..... Fr11ll .... 1 _.._. , .......... U.S.No.1 .. , .. ,....... ........ .. 21' ...... :r:.~ .... 11111111 w~.:;-· a. .. Safeway Hu .i4 FU.. S.lftetlon of ROWBS AID PWfrs For Mo1Aer'1 Day, Sunllay, May 14 ·,.are one of the mott romantto glfta YoU can or recefVe. To hefp you In your ..,ectiOn, away It oner;.-,g a wonderful 8rf1lY Of belutlful cut ttowera, bud and bloomlng llouee l*ftta of treasured beauty. Each plant or bouquet purchued i. fully guaranteed for fr•hnea and quality by Safewly. ......... ,o.•m \ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE f Students Design Fashions Designs by Saddleback College students were featured at the annual open house of the s~hool's Home Economics Department. Spin- ning and weaving demonstrations and fashion shows of original student apparel designs were among the activities. Chade. wearing a gauzy outfit of GuatemaJao fabric. ln addition to clothing exhibits, the open house included basket weaving, Ice sculpture and make-up demonstrations, plus interior de· s ign projects, puppet and slide ,Hows. art ex- hibits and displays on food and'116trilion. Above. left, i~ Denise Fales, modeling a polyester draw·slrmg dress. At right is Vivian ( Boroseope ) Reading Isn't ..,,,._ ___ Tl_IU_RS_D_A_Y_. M-A-Y-,-.---"' Everything By SYDNEY OMARR ARI~ <March 21-April 19): Home. secun· ty. warmth. knowledge that you are loved - these are emphas ized. Taurus, Cancer, Libra persons figure prominently. Remove safety hazards , make abode more beautiful. harmonious and safer, too. Bring priorities into focus. Take nothing for granted. Check lease,· bill-of-sale. TAURUS <April 20-May 20): Cbe<:k data. Get appraisal, especially in conne<:llon with land, property. Element or illusion, rumor or deception could be present. Relatives, calls, short journeys , visits are part of scenario. Pisces, Virgo figure prominently -and so does the number 7. GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Strong money position indicated. Emotional responses also are accented. Nothing ts halfway -there are pressures. added responsibilities. You win, gain prestige and, most Important more self-esteem. Cancer, Capricorn persona figure prominently -so does the number 8. CANCER <June 21-July 22>: Cycle at peak -know it and lead the way. Be a sell-starter, take lniUative. Highlight bright colors, personal appearances, direct and original approach. Trust your own judgment, intuition. Aries could come into your life. LEO <July 23·Aug. 22 >: Obtaln hint from Cancer message. Shake off suspicions, fears - be direct, Independent, display sense of showmanship.and creativity. Welcome chance ror new start in new direction. Aquarius and another Leo are part of your scenario. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Accent on de- sire, romance, friendship, result or business transaction. Cancer, Aquarius person,, are in picture. Rise above petty differences, red tape. Wish is fulfilled If you share knowledge. You gain tbroup teaching process. LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22>: Reach high, don't sell yourself short -one In authority Is im· pressed, will back you. Diversify, make in· quirles, displ•Y versatility, fitness and sense of humor. Stick with number 3. EnJar1e horizons because you're going places! SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: What appears a trap could become an escape hatch. Know it and be optimistic. Accent on travel, meaningful spiritual experience. You will be capable or put· ting pieces together and coming up with com· plete story. SAGITl'ARllJS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21>: Time moves, illu.strate meanings, realize you are capable of capturing the public imagination. Appeal quotient now is sky-high; know ll and act as tf aware of lt. Deep feelings are evident where members of opposite sex are concemed. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on public relaUons, getting point across and still retaining allies. Home, marriage, detecting subUe hlnt.s, signals are on agenda. Taurus Libra and Scorpio figure prominently. You feei much bette1" as result of legal decision. AQUARR18 (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Don't fool yourself by staying too long at tbe fair. Be truthful wttb YoUrsell concernm, losin1 proposi· tlon, bmlness, personal -or both. Spotli1ht on health, work, getting some dependents to be mor• Mlf ·rellant -and dependable. PISCES <Feb. 19·March 20): It's all or nothing -you have phmged.lnto sltuaUon and C ou can wtn. If you retreat, )'OU 1urvlve at a rice. Accent on vanety, youn, persons, gam- 1ln1 and love. Stick with number 8 and Capricorn. II May n ll yoar blrUHlay you are ln- tulUUve, have delicate dlaeaUve system. are a natural teacher and you draw to _you AquariUJ. Cancer and Capricorn persons. December wlll be an out.standing month for you In 1978. The year features m1rrla1e. It already married, there could be an add1llon to your famll)'. You travel, expreu, create. make chan1 and feel h•PJ>Y to be alive • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently you ran a letter from a woman whose husband can't read. It was signed, "ln A Dither." That letter brought. back some childhood memories. My father couldn•t read either but Mom cov- ered for him to keep us kids from fmding out. She used to say, ''Don't you kids mess up the paper. Your lather basn 'tread it yet." Mom would often get out our favorite nursery rhymes and ask Dad to "read" them to us. She knew he had 4.hem all memorized. Once we saw Mom sign Dad's salary check. <He couldn't even write his name!> When she spotted us watching, she said, "Your father hurt his hand and can't write very well today ... By lhe time I was a teen-ager I caught on. I a sked Mom one day. "Mom, Dad can't read, can he?" Her ans wer was ," "No, be can't. But don't ten the others kids. And don't let your father know you know." She then explained that Dad could do a lot of other things -like carve wood. <Oh, how I re· member the beautiful table a nd chairs he made, and the cabinets, and the little doll house with Uoy dishes and dolls with shoes -au carved out QI wood!> Mom told me, "Your dad is the best mechanic Aaa Lallflers in the country. He ean fix tbe smallest wristwatch or the largest piece of con- str u c Uon equipment there is. And there ts no one better at math. He can figure numbers in his head raster than any adding mach.ine." Mom then told me bow she bad tried to teach Dad to read When they were first married. He just couldn't learn, and he cried with shame. I was unable to bold U.e tears back when she was telling me lhe story. I kept thinking of my dad. that big, strong man. crying over a little book. He has been dead more than 20 years, but I remember so well how be always said, "Time will show we have a genius in the family.!' t can't help but t.bint Dad knew he was married to one . -NAME WITHHELD 8Y REQUESr DEAR NAME: I'm sare 1oar ~•I ae&.. ter broa1 tleata to ma•y eyes. Mltte In· claded. Tbank 109 N maeh for wrlUng. Sunday Scones Perk up a continental lo tiny, crumbly blta. breakfast or morning Beat ego with cream. tea with these bread of· Reserve 1 tablespoon ferlngs from the British egg mixture to use as a I s le a • glaze. Use fork to stir SVND.ay TE' .. sco remalnlng ea mixture ,. n NES and curraoll into nollt' 2 cupsnour 3 tablespooas suiar mixture. SUr Just until a or hooey dough fonns. Tum out 2~ teaspoons bak· doutb onto a floured tng powder surf ace. Knead Just unUl 1 teaapooo Hit well mixed -10 &.& \5 6 ta...___ b u turns. RoU or pat douab or mar1;;;:-°' u er to IAl ·lnch thlcltoeu. 2 eaa With a biscuit cutter, cut IAI cup heavy o r out dou1h Into 2-incb whlpplna cream circles. Place about ~ w. ts tneb apart oo a areuect ~ curran baking sheet. Bt'ulb tops In large bowl combine with reeerved ega mlt· flour, sugar, bakln1 ture. Bake at 425 F. for powder and aalt, Cut about 15 minutes, unW butter ln chunkl. With . tops of aconoa ar~ fln1tn, rub butter Into cold ert. Ser\le bot. nour m1xt.ure u.nUJ lt !I Maltos about~ •• .II'\ r, ,,. , ,. '"' "'•, ~ ~ • ' .. -• ... .. .. -- -• µ .. .... ' ,, .. ., -....... ' ,. J • ~ , . • KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA ALUMNAE: ld9tall•Uon ol omcera ror 1m 19 wm be held at 11:00 Thursday, May 11 For reservationa call M .. IJ· Fran.kiln Wrl&ht, 79-0089. THURSDAY MORNING CLUB: The Nhport Beach uoup will host its annual spring r~lon show and Installation beginnina at 11 a.na. Thursday, May 11, at. lhe Balboa Bay Club. • SOlJTH COAST LITERARY COUNCIL: Thit annual award luncheon and Installation or officers will begin at 11:30 a .m. Friday, May 12. at the Crown House Restaurant, Laguna Niguel. TOWN AND GOWN JUNIOR AUXILIARY: Tbe annual rundraiser to provide scholarships for women students attending the UnJversity of Southern California will take place on Saturday, ~lY 13, atCBSStudlos. Studio City. • FULLERTON COLLEGE: The fas hion coordinating class presents its traditional luncheon and summer fas hion show benefit at 11:30 a .m. Saturday, May 13. at the Holiday Inn iJ> Fullerton. Reservations: 871-8000, ext. 330. SOROPl'IMIST INTERNATIONAL CLUB: Invites Lhe public to attend a fashion show beginning at 11 :30 a .m. Saturday, May 13. at the ' Airporter Inn. 18700 MacArthur Blvd .. Irvine. SOVTH COAST JUNIOR WOMEN : The club will provide a soft drink booth for visitors to the Fountain Valley Arts and Crafts Faire on Saturday, May 13, to be held al the Fountain Valley Community Center. REMARRIEDS INC.: The South Orange County Chapter ls hosting a potluck dinner on Saturday, May 13. Interested persons may call for reservations at 496-3834 or 495·1074. LUNCHEON FASHION SHOW: Angels of AU Ages will be the theme of a fashion show s lated to begin at 11:30 a .m. Saturday, May 13, at Saint Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church. Corona d~l Mar. VALPARAISO UNIVERSITY GUILD: The Orange Chapter will host a mother-daughter tea from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, May 13. in the Fireside Room of Christ Lutheran Church. 760 Victoria St .. Costa Mesa. RSVP: Mrs. Edward Reese. 993·2028. MARDAN CENTER OF EDUCATIONAL TUEllAPY: A salute to Tom Rlley or the Board or Supervisors will lake place oo Saturday, May 13, at the Marriott Hotel, Newport Beach. For further information. call 5404113. MONDAY MORNING CLUB: Installation or new officers will take place at 10:30 a.m. Monday, May 15. at the Huntington Beach Inn, Huntington Beach. BUSINESS AND PROFESS IONAL WOMEN: The Huntington &ach Club will in· stall officers at their regular meeting beginning at 6 :30 p.m. Monday, May 15, at the Crossroads Restaurant, Fountain Valley. KAPPA DELTA: The Newport Harbor Alumnae Association will hold its annual in· staJlaUon of officers at the home of Mrs. John Llpyanlk In Newport Beach beginning at 7:30 Celebration Estelle Manbeck. Catherine Steffers, Lucile Chapm an and, in uniform, Lora MrCJain, above. plan dual birthday party luncheon for Queen City Chapter No. 57 of the Women's Army Corps Veteran's Association and the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps <WAAC>. They will meet al noon Saturday, May 13. For in· formation call Mrs. Chapman at 892·8>19. Flea Market W'endy Whitesell and Jane Faulkner, above, sort Items ror Spring Flea Market sponsored by the Irvine Terrace Philharmonic group. The event, including luncheon, will be held at noon, Wednesday. May 17, at lhe Balboa Yacht Club . • ;rlckell will be avaUable at the door. • MOTHER1S DAY SPECIALS! 511°/o °"DRESSES 300/o • 40°/o OFF ON BLOUSES•• PAMTS '11tAffia 1ultimu H.AllOI Cenll-2111 HAllOll IL 141-JIJO ... ,.... COSTA MISA .. • Club Calendar Wedneeday. May 10. 19711 DAIL V PILOT (;I l p.m . Monday. May 15. For reservations, call 891.(1626. SAN JUAN WOMEN'S CLUB: The 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 16, meetln1 will feature Mr. Tom Werner and his antique plate collection. Reservations are necessary and may be ob- tained by ra1Ung Edna Given at 493·1835. ORANGE COUNTY PlllUIARMONIC: The Harbor View Hiiis Committee will install new officers at a luncheon beginning at 10 a .m . Tuesday, May 16, at Lhe home of Mrs. Robert McLean. 30 Bodega Bay Drive. Spyglass. Corona del Mar. DELTA GAMMA ALUMS: The Santa Ana· Newport Harbor group will meet for coffee at 10 a .m . Tuesday. May 16, at the home of Mrs. Jim D. Boddy. 838·0179. RANCHO VIEJO WOMEN: Will hold a "Give of Yourself" meeting beginning al 10 a .m . Tuesday, May 16. at Peoples Federal Sav- ings in El Toro AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF RETIRED PERSONS: The Huntington Beach Chapter will hold a business meeting beginning at 1 p.m . Wednesday, May 17, at Murdy Park Center . Huntington Beach. CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S CLUB : The Newport Beach group will meet at 11 :45 a .m. Wednesday, May 17, to hear Ney Bailey, a sur- vivor of the Colorado flood disaster. Tbe meel- ing will be held al the Airporter Inn. Irvine Nostalgia Night The Assessment and Treatment Services Center will present its an· nual fund raiser from 6 to 10 p.m. Friday, May 19. at the Fun Zone on Balboa Peninsula. above. are Mrs. Lewis Akerman, Mrs . Charles Loos, Police Chief Cha rl es Grass a nd Lewis Akerman. Tickets. at $17.50. are available from ATSC. 549-1814 Checking out the ferris wheel. Conference On Violence A spring community conference on Violence in the Family will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p .m . Thursday. May 18, at the Elks Lodge, San· ta Ana. Tickets are S8 and may be obtained by callJng 838-7377. Discussing plans. above, are, from left. Mrs. Paul J . Sullivan <Philanthropy Chairman, Assistance League or Fullerton), Sandra Nichols <Community Vice President, Junior League ol Newport Harbor>, Mrs. Bette Frazier <Mental Health Chairman, League of Women Votera}, Mrs. Edwin C. Lillie <President, As· sistance League of Fullerton> and John Von Glahn <Executive Directdr, Family Service As· soc:iatlon ). Club CaUndm nm.t N.eh WedMldcif m the Dcil11 Paler and containa notfc11 of womn'1 attd •eroice club mttffngt and .writ• /or the /ollotofltg toHk -Thvr•· day throooh Wf'dMJc1a11. Send notfct• to Club Caln· dar, DaU11 PU«. P.O. 8oz 15«>. Cotta Mao, CA 9262$. Be N't to fnclutle J/C)Ur nmrw and phoM num~ Notk:a m1'lt be tn our IJondt two toHa ifl adti0net. STEVE BLAIR HAS RETURNED TO Luzzetta Bernard lndMduol Hair Deli~ DESIGN PlAZA 240 Newport Centllf' Or . ~ BMCh Ste. 220 &t0-8023 • Fa$hion Showing SCart Being The \\bman lbu WclnttoBef Joh~ PfP :01JAl OfVElCll'Mun t. MOOl L \" SCMOO\ < ORANGE 3 Town f, Countf\f (7 14) 54 7 8228 ( \RT HOPPt: ) SATIRIZES In the DAILY PILOT ~fRANCI~-ORR, .. fine statiooery corona del mar • Spiral sliced for easy serving • Honey 'n Spice Glaze •Cooked 30 hours tl . . n • Nationwide shipping service H te OtctgUtO~ ·•. • Full service Delicatessen 6'D11ey . 01d world cheese shop WI';' ~ •Sandwiches to go. ~g!~~~"!!, otlMr'a Day ••• Mer, 14tta. ORDElt HOW .•• YOUR HOMEY IAJCED HAM For Mott.er'• Day .,....... J700 I. COUT ..-y • c.--.. ..._. • PMOMI '7J..to00 Otlter locafK>tlS . . . Anaheim, El Toro (Now Open), Orange. Palm Spmg... U Habra MISSIOH VIUO -.. ...,..., .. 211f2 .,....,..., .. P\y. .... --.. -_,...., __ 495-5902 __ ._, .......... , ON SALE NOW MOTHER'S LIITLE La Z B ® MoffMr'• •• oy s...Dz,. in new. lady-like styles with the velvet touch for Mother's Day ---·COUPON--------, AH s2000 OFF I AD~TIOMAL I OM ALL LA·z.IOY CHAIRS IM STOCK : OF THE SALE PRICE l Wttti 1'Wt c...-I I Exolres May 13 I L------------~-----~ I 111 u1t•d i fl It• 1:n l .'I . Ul .. 1.1 \ l ·:H \ • I COSTAMISA ~lliCH l" L 17 ... s..-t ·-~~ .._,_.,,.It. --...-.-642-1657 --• .......... 1 w. .... FEATURING THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS- 18 Karat Yellow and White Gold Ring with large center stone and pave sides. A most Impressive setting tor a 1.00 Karat or larger oval or brilliant cut diamond. Price as shown with fine quality oval diamond '8100- Pric:es may vary due to wstomer preference In diamond ..-tton We would wek:ome the opportunity to mount your stones In eny of our Httlnas. 127 Fash1on Island, Newport Center. Newport Boach Telephone:(714)6'4-0501 .. ' TOMAT049c JUICE Cloraettn µreferred quality' 46 oz Sour Cream llT•nott 33c :--prml(lleld. forvalue1 12ozrup Ritz Crackers .• 79c '\11b1i.co'i. crisp bultery wafen.1 16 oz CI RCorDITllrTt SJ19 0 a SIX PACK • • • • • ) our choict-in I 'l ounce cam. HEINZ 79 KETCHUP c More value m the :12 Ill size Apple Juice . • • &gc I >rink tu \Ullr health' Springfield 46 O.£ Mint Jelly . • . • 39c <:not mnte fur lamh' Kern'._ ... 1007. Whipping . Cream 49c Springfield-half pint carton NATURAL MOTT'S APPLE 49c SAUCE EnJO\' the Helter Way' 2U oz 1ar Cake Mix ~. • • &3c C'hmt·e of nll layer varit't 1e ... Zee Napkins • • • 29c • A-. .. oned q1lor11 package of60 D • IOIMSTElfS 4 9 ress1ng Low CAl • • c Vm111~rette, ltal111n, Ital w/Cheese -8 oz Dog Food .••• 49c 1-\nl Kfl11 Ml-'S :.!:11 ounce can ~:~TS 25c Creen Giant gold whole kernel - 12 ounce vncuum pack can Cold Power . • • c 139 I lNerl(ent m 49 oz package (15c tff) Cat Food = ... 55c l'urm11 all varieties-18oz Bowl Cleaner • • 79c Lvs11l liqu1d-ea&y to use' 24 oz Liquid Bleach • • 59c !-,pnnglleld for ' alue-gallon BIC 59 LIGHTER c Hutane filled-and disposable! .. .., When tilt bi'ds n nntinc in tilt hes ... when tlle mes display their llTIY of colon ... when the elms brea ilto folia&e . • . when El Rancho offn,Sprinc LM* ... JOU don't need 1 calendar. You Just know ••• then .•• that it's really Spin&! SMALL LOIN LAMB CHOPS Fresh! Western! U.S.D.A. Choice! • FRESH! WESTERN RAISm! BOND.ESS LOIN LAMB CHOPS Saratoga cul fre11h ll.S.D.A. Choice --... LARGE LOIN LAMB CHOPS Fresh! Western! U.S.D.A. Choice ( ;11rw111r SprinR I.am b .. Pre.\h and rcmed in lh£' WP.,t . . thr be.,t "'the be:.t, and Kradt·d , • US lJ A Choice '" yuu can be •ure' Roa.H a IPK t11 11 1:0/den dunt>n1'" this u eek . w ,,.,n e "ten hrc,1/i•d lamb ChOp\ I )'our jolh u 111 lrn <' vuu for 11, and you 'II b1· J!/ad \Otl found thP Bett1•r Wa\ 1 Ground Lamb • • 89~ Fresh!-and ifs U.S.0 .A. Choice lego'Lamb =~ ............ ~lll Lamb Roast t•cur. s32~ Chuck Steak • • • 99~ Ground Beef ~~ s1 3~ Western Spring Lamb· U.S.D A Chorl'l' U.S.O .A. Choice beef for more value! Lean· does not exceed 22<:i fat . 7 Bone Roast •• s1 1 ~ Beef Roast =~ .s2o~ 0 Bone Roast • ~1 2~ Churk cut lJ.S.D.A. thoice heel Chuck cut shoulder clod-Choice! Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choire beef Park Roasi · :~~~~s~ . • • • • • • .... 1l2/l Sliced Bacon •. s1 ·~ Bratwurst n waters s 1 5~ Ranchero Steak s21~ El Rancho's thicker ''ranch !<!)'II'" Pork. \eal. !-eai.rinini: nu nllrilt"• Select small end Choice btef nh Sausage rrALWI snu s 1 5~ F.I Rancho's own . with no n1tnle"' WE FEATURE MILK FED VEAL Tht-Re11I thin~ . . look lor thr <itll('wnn• London Broil ••• 521 ~ Rib cut U.S.0 .A. Choice bed SpBRCBP 86BHk..s.D.A. choice • 13. 1 /l Looking for 11atii;factwn 1n the hearty goodneRR of beer? Let w,ur i.earch end up with this rib cul ll.S.D.A. Choice beel' Salisbury 49c_ STEAK Shaped. pan-ready! Net wt 5 oz ea. SUNDAY IS M other 's D ay! RPmC'mbl'r hpr u Ith n J:tfl of flou rr'-flou rn that ,,pt•ak the lnnJ!unl(t' of /nee! Cut flou "'' nr /lon~t qua/1tv living plant.\ 'nur' at El Ranch11 FRESH 2 29c CORN FOR Season'11 first from Coachella Valley Beef Rib 99c. BONES Meaty! Choice! Bake or baroecue S uper Fres h Produce STUFFED FOR ROASTING! Chicken 79~ Extra large Grade "A" lr)eri. IPBR.IJh~[~fo·m/!:.~I Cherry 49 Tomatoes c Red ripe little gem11! 12 oz bskt. GREEN PEAS 39~ Carden fresh in cnsp pods FRESH FllETS! PACIFIC RED $20'.· Snapper Offer them from oven, skillet or b-b· True Cod F111Ts ••• 121~ Flavor they're sure to appreciate Halibut Steak •• s37~ Center cut from firm Northern fish =~ $24! Meaty! ... from Alaskan waters Cooked Shrimp '3'' The right size for shrimp cocktail! Perch u..owo ••••• s 1 •t: Pan ready for your satisfaction FRESH CHltOOK · SiiAK ~37! Center cut! Get our basting recipe GALLO WINE s3~UTR leH er lllllty CeltetMt . Almaden Sherry s2t• Goldtm, Cocktail or Cream-fifth Pontet Latour •• s31t H & (~ Bordeaux White. Red ... fifth Frozen Foo d VEGETABLES Miaed VecttaMts or Pus · SprincfieW 10 oz PICUC• 29c Wheat Bread • • 59c Hridgeford· pkg of two 1 lb loave11 Vegetables FCI snw &9c Mar11hburn Farms ... I 11i lb packa11:c ICE CREAM Springfield hall gallon-all flavors Pie Shells WHAM , • • 79c l'<'l Rll7-pkg uf two 9 inch size Wattles • • • • • • age Aunt .Jemima-heal 'n' eal1 lfi oz Macaroni • am£ • 59c \',in de Kemp's big 20 ounce package APPLE PIE .Johm1lnn's Reg or Dutch· 38 oa Delicatessen l'r1C 1'' '" f'/frC'I Thur Mn\ 11 rhrnuJ!/i W<'d Mn ... 17 Liquor D ep 't. Buddig's MealSsoz 69c Wafer thin slices in your ftivorite varieties-Family size' (3 oz PtlC .. 45e) Iceberg Swiss • • s32~ Dorman '11 sliced baby 11w11111 c-heese Skandor Cheese s3is Dorman's-free sampling May J 2, 13 Oscar Mayer $129 FRANKS C'hOOle Beef or Ment-16 oi pkjt (SMOll .S ... 12 et ... Sllt) , Cheese 111am. • • • s359 Dorman'11-low chole11terol product Shrimp Cocktail 49c La11cco-in 4 ounce 11erving gla1111 Wisconsin S 199 MUENSTER • Oorman'll-by the piece (SIGM ••• SUI•> Open dot!' ~I tri R SundO\ /IJ tn 7 N11 .~ale.~ tu d,•o/a, Rum .... ~~~:~~'!~ ........ 5429 Our own label-Liitht nr Dark P uerto Rican Rum ... Redured SI 00 Quert Popov Vodka •• sa•• The 1.i5 liter size offer!' more \alut• C d. S649 ana 1an •.••• Windsor ... for sippin' or mixin'' Qt. VODKA SJ99 or GIN Our own Holiday Times . Quart Beefeater ..• s15•~ Reduced $1.IO ... 1.75 hte111 of quality Peter Dawson s 11 •i Fine Scotrh reduced 1.00-1.75 liter-, Seagram's s ;ci 7 CROWN 6 .~:. fo'omou1 blended whiskty.Quart ARCADIA PASADENA SOUTH PASADENA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH EASTBLUFF IRVINE LAGUNA HILLS Sunsel and Huntington l10 W Coloradc Blvd 'r•monl end Hunllngton Wern•• and Algonquin llJ1 H•wJ""'' Olvd 1!>!>!> Ee•lblull 01 Un1v•1a1tr and Mr'h•l•on J l.a1 Moulton Par11.,.,., •El Ranch" C"n'"' , , C ol Oreng1tgra.• ,Southeaal torn•• 1Harbour M•llJ On'"" ""n•n•ula 1 'lastb1u11 Vtll•hlt" C•nl•• !Part. V•"• Center' Moulton Parlcway Plaie STAY FREE MAXl·PADS ••.••• $2.29 Yuu •a"l' on 11\t! bonus ptck of '.lfl HAI .SE/CONDITIONER ..•• $1.19 A~Rl•ul11 or Balaam -8 01 (l~ elf) .US 8R£CI IWR SPRAY •.• $1.19 Hf•, Hard tn Hold, l'nattnled, Supu 9 oz BAYER ASPIRIN •••.•••••••••• $2.29 Tht 200 count 11ltt tab• 1.,,ay morw achu VALU-U.PACK CUM •••••••••••• 39c T'rtdf nt Pklll ot '" • rho1~ n( 5 n.~ KITaD SCRUB 'N' SPONGE •• 29c Srotrh Brit I''• h11nd~ hou•"hold ht lj'I( r RISE SHAVE CIWt ......... $1.19 H•I>> P11re, Rr11 , Lime . HH•' 11 ot (ISc elf) RIGHT CUARD ••••• ,. ••••••.•••. 99c Gtlll'llf• 111 iC'k drodMant l ;, 1•t ''" VIDAL SASSOON SIWl»OO •• $1.98 Ht ceneinly know. 1hampoo• 8 '" alit . r.ElmE TOUCH BATH SOAP ••• 29c ,\I that tht nllmt 1mplw too! lrli.- . ' .. ~" .............. ',,. ._,., ... ' ... --.... ' --.\. ~ •'-' :•" ' ... .. """ ... -. . ....... • ! c I J ... ) ~ I ~ f ' I PILOT ADVERTISER - -1 ·- • II' ..... •; ANY New FIESTA or PINTO lnourHuge Inventory PciYONLY '73 PONTIAC SAFARI f rASSIMGH WAGOH Auto 1,.n• o 11-.nQ o --. loc:lcwy "" l1111919e rllCll, nollye -. r-.!ICI he11 ... .. ,.. linled QIHI lie tU&JEA SI~ -1921A. '73 FORD COUllH • C'f'I 4 'De«' t.oQ hNllW l e •9719tN SI• t 11$3Al 5 1977 '77 SUBARU DLWAGOH '76 DATSUM 710 STATIOH WAGOH • c(I 4 ·-...,. '°°' "''"° tt<>t.O gi.u. t 0111 ·-~ Len ""'" tl.000 mtlet llC tlT.IPCf' Slk 1878A 53480 '77 MERCURY COUG .... XR7 crE. V 8 •u•o trans f«::tCM"Y .. , cond1t.on•no power ""'"1"9 rldto hetltfllf p.ad"1N y,nvi root C'"41fll ~ ttft llMftnO ~ LIC 1SJC606 SI• •- 55888 '11 PONTIAC IOHHEYILLI HOUGHAM 4 4 cvt . 6 ~ IM:tory.,, cond<lloning, rldlo, he11er root r.c:k. recfia' lirea Leu lhan 11000mol• Le t 7225"0Sli.. 11""4A DOOi V-t. I ulo 11-.. lllClory el< CO<ICllllO•MO. oo...-er stfler1no oo••r t>nt1e1, oo•er "'"°°"" --·• AM/Fl.I fa(IH) Wllh I trod!. vonvi rOOf Loe •863ASC Siio I 715.4 53989 "69 FORD CLUI VAN ""'· •u•o It-. -brti<ea. nldlo -· ·~uttom 1 ion 10 -.._. lie tZlJ370 !>lk 11003A T E•tra N1ee1 11tHdore ....... Jr. 52294 ·- • ~ '63 IUICK Sl'IC!M. 4 DOOi y .9 I UIO tr1na. PoW9f lllMflrtQ, r1dl0 hell.,. l-llwl 76,000 ono•ne.I mttet Lie. t0 t<N183 Stk. 13414A ---·----........... --... O~IL y PILOT 0 I ROBIMS·READY U!.10 CAIS I•..., UH4 C• Wt S.- M"'I He•t P•M4 n...1 l lfl4 ftth ,_ • f'HfO•MAt4CE •UH" AHO • ULIAllLITY 1.0wo ... -... ......... h.......,0.,...-t .( BRAKES llol"'J•· Poww Sy.t- Hyd...,01fk Sf'- ./ ELECTRICAL ..__ U.,.9'. ,,...._ M<IP•wwS-,.- ./ FROMTEMD wi.et AN .......... Shclu. ..is1..n .. s,.- .( POWER TRAIN Tr•• .. h•M.-lit<tro<Mc s..,. ....,....01..,...i. I LUBRICA TIOM u...011e._,.. ....... ()ti Alfow 2112 ACRES OF TOP CARS BACKED IY OVER 56 YEARS OF SERVICE TO ORANGE COUNTY W~ay. May 10. 19711 Come in and drive Europe's most successful new car. You'll love it! OVER ~FACTORY INVOICE!! '75 vw ~TJDOO. A cyl. tu-... ..,.,.._, '"''f'd O'-rao1a4 hre1 ....., Low Mttes• L< 1038NIA :>rt.. t81lA '76 HOMDA CIVICCVCC STATIOt4 WAGOH , tt't • tOMd tuQOIOI' C¥fl"" 1.nt.O 91,s\ rld•O he11 .. L.C: o(Jl).JP8Y S'" •P3226 53283 '75 FORD GllAHADA 2 DOOi Flclory 1ir condll!Onlng AM/fM 11.,.90 tldH> OOOd 5twl> Cwll Lie Ull6MVI '74 TRIUMPH Sl'1TRH IDSTER. '73 DODGE 1100 suva YAM V-t automel>C: -· OOW9t 11-A,..tH•l llereo ..,.,, e 11-. ---•"'Cl I ncl Ol"e!lllQ _..,,., PM>f. 11'"'!1 -•Ill\ wtde '"" ~ t1>4331' Siii t U70A f , 53410 '74 FORD rlHTO IUHAIOUT .ti eyl ' IOMd AM rad.IO wttn 8 tr11Ck ¥1nvt root f1ntect qt._ ~ COYfli"'I r.Otal '"'e-. l>C .. 6~1.'0E 511! •3209 5 1893 '74 FORD LTD HOUGHAM 4 DOOi v-t, 1010 .,__ '11c:Corv .., conc!•!lofllt>O. oowtr sle•rl-'O. POW'!tr br1k•n. power '"'"°°""· AM/FM Sl..-.O r.mo. vmvi toot. ll>hl "°"""' -Miii Lie •68~TRS Slit. t P312&. '76 MERCURY MOHAICH GHIA cour1 I CVf , 4 -· r-. -·· llC l~X Slit. ••~3A V-8. IUIO IT-., loK:IOf'( 8lt conclrt.,.,.no. _,,...,no.-~ -•fffs. AM/FM •• ...., rllC!H). .inyt rool, HI! -· C<\llS• con1rol Uc l 116NIN Stk 118771'.. 54499 • 'I 10 Acres of the most modem FORD fKUttles on the Wnt Collat. 140s8211 2060 HAf!f!~ .. ~.9STA MESA 842s0010 ,, . . . . ' _,_ .... EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNlTY ~'•Mdtkr. All real estate advertl.aed tn this newspaper ll •ub-Jed to tbe Federal Fair Housing Act or 1188 which a.kee it llle1al to advertlae ''any pre ference, Umltat.ioft, or discrimination .hued on race,color,reUlioft,1ex, or natiaDal orit!n, or an intent.loo so make any sueb preference, limlta· uoo. or diacriminatioo. •• Thia oewspeper wiU not lmowtnflY accept any adve rt11la1 for real estate wbicb la m Viola• nonotthelaw alOIS: Actn.rtfsen ... ct.ck ...... .., .... ...,.... rora .... claWf. DAILY PILOT .-1 , ... ., for ... ftnt "°'red ... ...._,.,,. •••••••••••••••••••••• G1M1Clll •••••••••••••••••••••• • CLOSE-TO-BEACH CONDO xcepdonaJly lovely 2 bdrm . 2 baths on one noor <no apt. below or above>. with many upgra dt!s. ~hows as well as any model. Lowest priced Piao l on sinAlc level & only a short walk to our b~~t beat·h. S107 .500 759-0811 Ki'il-~ I 002 ,Gawr.. I OOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP OF SPYGLASS Finest Spyglass location -gorgeous New Be dford ModeJ. w /spiral staircase. pool. jacuzzi. breathtaking ocean & bay view ~~ GeMral I 002 GeMNI I 002 DUMPY FIXER •••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Overgrown w /weeds &1--------•I ttrass • Huge grounds. rustic 3 Bdrm! Wood beam clgs ! Choice loca· t 1on' l.o t s or ptl'S5lbilities' Won't last! Call· 645-0303 WHY PAY RB4T1 Yoo can buy a home for 9i2.000 with only Sl.750. down or vets no down. Easy to quallf7. call now ror more info &t illage Real Estate ONLY SS0,900 Freshly painted condo, real wood bunung frplc .• large garden patio, A/C, F IA heat. Call Cor app·t. BBfTSON & BROWM REALTORS 833-9711 FOREST E OLSON •"'-<.. ... •'-"0 ..... ~71(~1)54&-8103 HANDYMAN'S DREAM 1--------•I Garage Cu.Uy insulated. Bw It in work bench. ------1 or Realtor Associate. Large lot with RV ac· 2 STORY $54,000 Have need for l good ac-cess. Newly pairited, REALTOR Fabulous townbomc an tivesalesperson. paneling and wallpaper. Tus tin Huge laving RoyMcCardle Four Bedroom Home in room, gourmPt kitchen OM. d Mesa North. Truly a King t.tze s uites Call 181 wport II• Great BuY for $76,000. now. won"t last 546-2313 Costa Mesa 548-7729 546-2313 01~N ,,, o.,, \ •u"I rn tu ~,,... 1~~~~~~~~~ C>1N h1 q .. ''\tuft.. tCHO ""'"' (elllffl l~IRllll GREAT BUY IN MESA VERDE STEAL IT!. Beautiful 3 bedroom '---~~~~~~I SIB,000 under market!! home with shake roor & East.side! 2 Bdrm +den large bedrooms on a or 3 Bdrm! Cozy (pie! qua et tree· ltned street ln HELP! Newly painted! Luxury Costa Mei.a's finest Owner has painted in & townbome! Owners of. areas S84,900 CALL out, Installed NEW feriag give-away pn~! 1 ~ carpeting thru-out AND Hurry Call :~. .SELECT niduced to Rfl.950!! Va· cant 4 Bdrm "SOL _PROPERTIES VISTA" In nice area! As· -----sume low mterest VA. FOREST E OLSON OCEAN & submit y o ur offe r ! IA Y VIEW SJJ ·.5ll>O open eves. '"'°'~ .-.. Al"O•• $96,500 W1REfwtworll Hard t.o fmd one story condo w 12 bdrm + den. 2 Jmt Listed For Y oa! ba w1comm pool, Jauczz.I & sauna Walk to the beach Our e xclusive i''lrst limP on market 64&m1 DESIGNS> FOil EXECUTIVE (~111mmaamNJ Real Esuu..e UVIHG Th.ls clean 3 BR charmer on quiet cul de sac an great OC location. Vets O Down. Won't last at SSl,900. 63l-4!J60 Agent. This beautirully up. graded Buccola Home! Spacious Laving Room with big Flreplac e. Large Muter Bedroom, ... ~RT BE .... CH bJgbly upgraded with "'"'",.-"" "" private entrance to OCEAN VIEW garden area. Slump $91,500 stme planters highlight Dehgbtlul 3 bedroom, 2 the room-backyard. story with view. Walk to Mesa Verde Living at Its N Po l T Ce Beat! $129,000. Call -; w r er r a . , 546-2313 p~vate heated 6 Wlm· ()PfN f110 •ll\IUNIOHINt(I ming pool. sauna & I :acuz:d. Ca~~7788. 1~· IHftljJ • P.€ALTORSA !;;/~'-~''"'~-~-~=~-~··~-~·.,f Ge•r .. 1002 Gwr .. 1002 .•.•..........•........ . ..................... . 'II~!~~ RIGHT DOWH THE MIDDLE OF THE FAMILY is the view from this well located Big Canyon townhouse. 2 Bdrms. & a den, security gated, cathedral ceilings and ready to move in. Next to pool and jacuzzi. $239,500. A COLDWILL.,.... CO. 644·9060 . .............. , ............................. . G...,.., I 002 CieMNI I 002 ~!!~.~....... ~. t For•~•••••••• Houses FOf" SaN HcMdH For S-. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Qi•ral 100 G1•Nll 1002 G1•r.. 1002 GtMrol 1001 .................................................................... ····•···•····•········· ~COATS & WALLACE . 'C:A:P REAL ESTATE , INC. :' tOl'All~ OWNlD COMPANY SERVINC !HI \Oli!H COASI Af<f ,, C)INf.f 1%! VILLA61 LIVIH• -Feel the Invigorating aroma of fres h air. Discover what living in a beach community is like in the 4 Bdrm. 2 story home. PRICE REDUCED TO $95,000. Call for details 640-6161 . 0 4 YEARS OLD" A fireplace ln the family room of this fine 3 bdrm home in Mesa Woods. Some Spanish tile roof and ~~ought iron gates. Excellent cond1t1on ! ! ' Only $98.000. CCII 546-4141 St·r 111119 Co~til Mesa·lr111nc Huntington Beach -Newport Beach G1•0.. 10021Gwrcie 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• W l<Sl.!·: Y ~ II TAYLOR CO. Hl-:1\l.TOl\S ~1111·1· l~l·l fl HUMTIMCiTON HAllOUI $399,$00 On the water! Dock for up to ss··ooat. See this beautiful 4 bedrm home today! Fam rm, formal dining rm & 3·car _garage. Concrete cantilevered deck as entirely glass walled. Soft colors, wet bar. marble fireplace. Perfection thruout ! By Appl. WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO .. REALTOIS 21 I I S-J .... Nh load MEWPORT CEHTa, M.I. 644-49 I 0 ,G1•r .. 1002,GtW .. 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ONLY ONE LEFT Spacious Wllllams bire beaUly with 3 bdrms, 2 betbt, & formal d111mg room. Beautiful grounds. Notluog compares w Joor low pn~. Terrific pool. sauna & recreation are as. J ~t luted. &t&-m1. (~1wnraa1m1m1 Real F.stat.e AIAMOONID- ARTISTS CHALET 1. Beach home with view of ocean from your fron· tyarcl. Be tbe first to caU for um unique find. Only '69,900. Call now ! 86.U767 Ol'fN llHI• ti\ I~ t0fll Py<f [Cd!lil I 8th CENTURY FOURPLEX MEWPORT Huntington Beach Newport Heilhts to be 3-Ul; lovely re.aideotial exact! Secluded nora &: area. property in Up.top rauoa entryway. Large abape. 3 Bdrms .. 2 balh living room hosts an 18th owner'.a uoh. Priced tc Lingo RulERm EARLY ILUFfS SPYGLASS HILL Hen'• a • ..,11c•. Faw IMl*OOM M-. of eoaad comfort .. -of .... ,.,, ..... toceHOlls ..... """ of bay, oc... .ct ..... lqlilh. $479,000. HARIOR VIEW Fov bedrOOMr two bcdtt wftlt a bright, .... ly CIG9tl 't ldtdNtcl. LoYaly patio-... ~ wftll .......... ~ Hie, woodl. & w~. Tiiis IMtt lally la •••aHI•••· ,,.. yoa OWft .... 1 .. d. $166,900. APPEALING UDO HOME Street to .... prf•acy, a. fMI 2 lae*aa-. z .................. mcl ....... tied. Irick finP'oc• hi IGl'C)e lftlig room ...t ::.r._. df•l119 area. Gf'fft ...-.•• tin. $212,500. ON THE IEACH Two ocea11 fro•t lots plus a third o•ertooldhg the Poclflc. ZoMd 1-2, bid cotllcl occwdate a C81ta. ..... wttt. pool, or paddle ....... $550,000. SHORT WALK TO THE IEACH T.,11 2 bedroom, ocea .. lew Ito.• I• La9H• IHch, Is loceted la a 1 .. .,. perll .. lb lot in Woods Con. Prbate backy..ct l:tcltldlltCJ 9a1 bcr ..._... CIUld pottlulg ..... s 163, 900. NORTH LAGUNA ESTATE Century bandcarved sellatS215,000 fireplace, massive & IGIMMllayProp. Two acrn with ocem •lew. Sh lae•aa-. . ' ' .""."... . . • !· ·~· •• ,, .! ~~·.··-""' f" r. • • • • ""·"'"' LOOtC FOR THI LITTU THIHGS . . . In this big home ! A 5 bdrm wood and glass two story featuring brand new construction with old world craftsmanship. Incredible views from all 3700 sq. ft. or living. but really. it's the little thin~s that count: solid oak cabinets, circulating hot water systems. wide hallways and floor safe in master suite. This is an exciting home with subtle quality. Open daily at 460 Mendoza Terrace in Corona del Mar. Presented at $375,000. U ,._. l()U I: li()Ml:S >REAL TORS". 675-6000 2443 East Coast H1ghwav, Corona del Mar also on M<'SJ Vt•rc1c d i 546 1)990 GtMr .. ' 1002 GH1ral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MESA VERDE Attractive 4 bdrm .. 2 ba. home in immac. condition. $99,000 LIDO ISLl Newly remodeled 3 bdrm .• family. 211'\ baths ; l·story home with attractive So. patio Price reduced to $238.000. IACIC BAY Fine 4 bdrm.. 2112 bath family home on quiet cul de sa c. Oversized pool, playhouse, extra storage $189.500 BAYROHT Several f me bayfront homes with pier & shps BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J 4 I ~ 11 , , d .. (J, , ,. ~l h 6 7) 616 l G1•ull ....................... Q.OSE TO BEACH 3 Bdrm, 2 bath pllU faml· ly. Former model home Immaculate Ne1tr Ed1soa Park in llnut· inglon Beach. Won't last at only $89,900 Ca 11 546-:i880. -~~~ HERITAGE • • REALTORS 1002 CORONA DEL MAR Vacant 4 bdrm. family room. great ocean view. New t"all>('IS & pa int tn· Std('. JU~I wa1tmg for you LO movf' an. Offered at $'24-1.aOO J!Kl7 Inlet Isle ~ l l \I>. II fl I \I f' • ' I 151~ £ Cow H•i Cow 11e 141• gorgeous! 'ormal dining Realtors 4' L....&L ...._ 3 * "---room. St.epdown family * 675-7060 * 1/2 -...-be~•• CJllllt-Poe&. C:.W .. Mar room boats wet ba r & 5 car gcrop, prf•ah *"•· tla .. I 1 •.... POOL HOME. Just rc.1--------• wall to wall glass! area IH&e tWs ... $1,000,000. ducecL Tbas home hu:. EASTSIDECM Pr l vale tropic a I JOG TO BEACH many custom reatur~ :t Bdrm. 2 bath + ram. bacllyardhostsmagnifi· Fromthla3BRPnde ol VICTOR•• IEACH Larl$e courtyard . quirt strl't'L 1n prime cent blue free-rorm pool ! Ownenhlp Home. Great ~ bemil.iful olive ~ and a r 1· d. x t r a <'I e a n - Immaculate landscap· for entertainment rmny roe.e bUlsbH. Bltn pr o f " s s 1ona11 y ang. Just $1tod89,500--Cal! Al 113,950, Owner will help W.-&..L ......... "*'t•wal• • .__.,,.. lft-&-.1-boc*Mdves. formal dlll· I an ti " c ape d Ca 11 flll.t,t t.o aee ay ftnan~. Only $3.500 total u~ ~ -.,,._ ·~ ing rm. paneled ram1ty 54&~ 752-1700 downtoqualifiedbuyers. leoch. wWa. ~ tt. ...... ma. rm w/perquet noor. 873 OPfN"•9·•1 \'~10"'""'' Attnow.call~67. your "•••d brick' ffreplece. Teak Sandcutle0r.S219,900. l•NMHl 1~iiflftt1 ~a ~;;:..-::~r~ .-AANCHJU -'!~HERITAGE ~ ..• REALTORS $56 900 . , = :::::11:••••-bewHfwt ...,_ wtttlla a .......... ffllo-ow• of VA NO DOWN -$63,900. ' UKE .... EW tM Pacific. Tiree~ two -.di ane Sweeping drive. Lar~~ '''""""" l?l l M•on SI H1111tinf1cn 6uch Sharp, spacious fmly re· " &...u L.........._ $222 500 sidence w /cheerful frplc Well located 4 ~droom, ..._ .. -• • IMVESTMBfTS farruly sized livmg room, & xtra large room sizes 2 bath home m great IH beamed cedings. Coun· lhruout. Xlnt location. ~pe. lt has new carpet 644-7020 UAL ESTAT! ~~~~f~r tia:s1~::; BeauUful grounds creat ing. new roof, new paint 2123 SAN JOA•''~lllM HILLS ROAD •Residential Income or COYered pavilion and park like setting around ln &out&: loaded with ex· ~ •Duplexes lush grounds surround th Is I m m a cu 1 a t tras. li\Jll price is $93,500. NEWPORT IEACH •Apartments t his m 1 n i r a n <' h . townbome. Belt~r take a CALL 751·3191. -COmtnertilll Separate w in g for look! 646-77ll. c;:: SELECT Call & let u.. locate the hideaway master suite & T'PROPERTIES GaMr'll 1002 GeMrClll 1002 Newport-Costa Mesa In· <'h1ldrens quarters COUMTaY UYIHG 3 BR. 2 BA, seUer very aruoom fl wanta an otrer. on um rancb at,yle in the country. No VA. low down FHA. Of fered at SSl,000. 540-3666 Wllela11 REt..l ESTATE ---------•••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• vestment that rats your Hurry for this unique MES .a. VERDE Req111rements. bargam! 963-7881 A llYIMECONDO SP.AMISH 67S.3637 Oi'I"' '''"""'Uf'< •0 111>;(1 · ~.::f.~.~:~::t. *l~.o;:f~.:~~:~~: -~ ..... .::::::: ... 1.&Ntfll1tl ed. Like a new home. thnaout. 'I'hrM ceneroua cukle-ilac ln u.e BIUfCa. Dail1 Pilot Cluaif1ed Ad. j!.~,~~~~~-~~-~-~1~·~-~--~~~ Way too many new ~rm. Is boom Wrougbtlron•_redbric.k --ral 1002 Ai•r.. 100..,. things to mention. Cost.a rm ... "" .. approx. 2200 t Cl blt •-· • "' Mesa 's best area for ~~a:!!t!li~'~~!i ~ce. ~!-'~ai dm~ ..... •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••-•••••• $145.000. Call now. lo•. Brltbt kitchen. ~ ,....,.. price to oaly $113,900! • ,..,.,..._.,, llwTvl 56-,._1 er.kfast patio. Family · -room boats secluded d 9UAIL PLACE fO,..Tla:JOP.N.1 pat.lo too! H\.lie bonus room! 2 wet ban. 3rd Patio with greenbelf view! Just $174,500. Call VITS FUEi EXC&.USIVE HOUSES! O DOWN, O CONDO $56,900 COST. Any city ln O.C. F the d rt . U g IEASTSIDI CONDO DeauUrul 1ln1le story coodC>-3 Bdnna., family room, stone fireplace, prtvata patio. two t.enn.is today 752-1700 Ol'flw ltf 9 •II\ llJN IO N lw(I • OM WATEI. PAVILION YEW Clltao =F'OOln ......_ wlttl ._.of .. door .. tertcbbCJ ...... L se,er • 2 bedroo• c.of:.• wltt. ftrapl.c& Sold ca .. latety fWwl Nd -.di illlt Ill tilCfte to OWCI llOW cmd -ieJ tt. ..... eflfs of IA If cmd wluthrnwWt °" o WATEIRONT J""OP•rty. O..llar• IWOCM'ic19llwlwM $450.000. Hurr1! Call yo ur or esc mma n I 1 couple Large master veterans apee a let. suite, formal dining, _ 75 __ 1·2216_1_• __ 16-_N7_1 ___ 1 guest bedroom. Gourmet MINI kitchen. Xtra large liv- ing room. Enclosed patio. Secluded & quiet. Pool & rec. ball. For more details. call -RANCH 9!~•1rs •~·o~N~1 THE REAL 1 CIOUltt, 2 party room.a, i ...;;;;===;;;;;......;_;. __ _ pool at •P•-ls more! Don't m!aa It, call today! ~J --' EST~TER~ $'79,500. 673-8550. OlfN 1119• II S flJN IOIJI NI((· ~THE REALl ESTATE RS -,, Want Ad Reeulll 6U·:i6'781 DUPLEX $185,000 One bUt to beach. less than 4 yrs. old. bike new bltm. nice crpt'g & dJ1l8 . Frplca. 'Car 1ar. JACOIS REM.n 675-6670 s ..... ..,, ... ltv 315 Mame Ave. Bd>Oa Island 673-6900 a=~~:. ~t:~J l~IR6ilfl finance! No Qualirying! · G1Mo.. 1002 eawc.. 1002 _. 1002 GeMr.. 1002 Coo:Jeand11eeitNOW! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• G ... r. • • REDCARPET754-1202 Want Ad Help? 642-S8'78 ....................... .................... . ,.,...,., ..... . ,, ... 1002 ._, .. 1002 ~II. macnab I Irvine CE llDBll ILlllS aa. °"" ........... .. w .... ~-i.-oi~..-­lhear.._.C.... Mtal~­.,,..,., dmlMW .............. ,..aMll MllN .... 4 IMaffcliM. ... ........ ,.,..... .. ..., ..... ,. ~111 .... wlltlw. Y• CM dwfl ,.W ad. °'· ,., It "" ,_ Mcntlr °""'"~ ........... """' ........... °"""" c..tllh .., .... 642-5678 DAILY PILOT • hilrtM=s llnm IN I' I' I* I' I' r I ! '4C?w!#' ""m I I I I I 4 I SCl+M""'1._,,.,.. .. Ca.1 fflc.9tlo. IOIO . ~ . ,, ....................... . •..................... •UAU. •ATI COMMUNITY .. c ....................... er-. T1lh w...... .......... , -· .. -2 .......... =,.... ....... , ... .... , ...... ~ ......... d .... .., ...................... . .. , ..... c = ........ ...... c ......... ,... 1,000 Watnfro•t Ho•" 2633 W.Cout Hwy ~S..Ch 631•1400 • ' ••I ... .................. ~ . ~ realty llG CANYON Beautiful nJte-Ute VIEW trQm this spacious Broadmoor home situated on lg. comer lot w /lush cardens surrounding every room. Country Kitchen -hand·carved front door -teak parquet entry -POOL. '38',500. LyMe Valentine 6"-6200. <Y·ll8> '42·12H ...... 200 ten Oo"9r Drlw HMlbOr View Cef\a.r t"'IM .. ~Valley~ 751·1414 r ..................... , .. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE ... OME OF A KIND Owner Has Drastlcally Reduced The Price Of This ··Bluffs" Townhouse $8000. Your Ofportunlty To Purchase A Love y Ho~~ W /Spacious Bdrms. 3Ba. + Family Room. Patio Ove rlooks Pool .& Ramada. $149,500. Owner Will Consider Leasc/Optlon. II I OOftl DIJYI 631-1800 j , . ~ I .. ' ' c; ' .. I • • L 0 } MltL.Dm S 1,ISIDI SLllPB LARGE t.EVEl. LOT H"duced t o Sl9~ 000 Best kK'auon Many fruit Owner w corus1der t•cm u-ee. +sl.llrt~r home of 2 tral't ol &ale, second 'J'O. bdrm 2b th...-~ uw. .)OU name 1t' Owner • i. ..,..,...,., mt.lbl sell 1m101t c 3 Br 2 ~t°°~·~·~L1l:~e1.11Rll-.,~1M~ !!11~0£1~vt ~:1~: a~' ~ ~ZJl~IG !kAnta, Al(t eo.taw.... 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~HERITAGE REALTORS MESA VY DE HST PRICEDTOSELl. L.:e 4Br. ideal for Camlly WIUlting spac rms. 3 car Real &tale gur w/lrlr dr to rear yd. --------- Lge tam rm+ frml dlnlng H ACH HOUSE rm. br & bath dn. Beaut 4 Br • .a Ba, lge s undeck. 1 d raped. m l!tl c u lou s yr new lJ\ rap1dily di.! l11nds c p 'g, pr1m t• veloplng beach area netghborbood. $125,0-00. 616 20th St Cal Funnan A.11oc. ~.ms '6~2421 SUPER MOTIVATED SELLElt RANCH llM.TY 551·2000 •VA $1751<• l work with Orange Co. Vets only. Homes to S175.000. For info call. Offers this lvly 4 br rmly rm home ni cel y landscped en move in :!..._~·-_ ~-0800 condl™>n Priced below «..&-~ MESA VERDE Bargain pnced at only market Pnced for rasl sale 963·5671 $79.990. 3 large bdrms. 2 --------- baths, big ram rm. Xlnt Owner transfered. 4br. location. walk to park. 2ba. 1700 sq n. t mi to schooli. & shop llurry, ocean. New crpl. noor· just W.ted! Call 540 115l mg, waJI paper. paint. .• :~.:.HERITAGE Assumable l oa n . 'Thousands under mrkt at S95.SOO. 968·0763 PRICESLASHB>!! ln College Park. The owner must leave the st.ate and has reduced Lhe price on this Colum· bia Sl.2.500. He Is open to all oHers. A large 4 bedroom home for a moderate price. Call for details. Wed~y May 10, 1978 • WOODS COVE AREA -Located on o larv-lot wifft mmy tr.ff, fftJ1 3 e..droon9. 2 bath IHMM abo ha • ocHft •lw. Dowt11talrs hctl a qpcrat• ntry, tW1 i.e.... It loact.d with ce...tw .. $167.500. DANA 8£AUTJFUL MONACO H.V H .• 3 Br. 2 Sa. llal We ent & kit. nr pool &c pk, xlot cond. fee, 1131,000 ~l«O SOUTll LAGUNA 499·4551 497.3331 LAGUNA NIGUEL 495·1720 POINT O F I k •93 S8l2 C UNTR V ee -oa noon. custom krt. pool. view. Open Fri/Sat. l 5. 1198.000. 644-0940 DAILY PILOT 03 ' , • ,..,, • • ~r.., • + • • • t ..11 I LI .. .#\.., .. SEE WORTHY Classy townhoml! 111 Aecludod area LJrgt· bedrooms, 1mprel>l>I\ t· fireplace Xlnt 1nves1 ment. Cell today 645-72<!1 CENTURV21 WF~'TC Uf'F Hi!:ALT\ lrYIM I 044 U.,.0 •odt I 041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HAIDWD FLOOl.S f'.-Low 0o ..... 111 HANDYMAN Must sell l.hls week! 4 t,;;;,ms, ; bath;." j~\ Orange Tree Condo Adult only comm 2 Bdrm . 1 ba Premium lot back patio on the lake. plus outstanding clubhouse · sw1mm1ng pool lighted tennis l'OW1.S cr.-.-1 ... 1 Beaut. condo. 2 br 2~ ba, ~l,y leaded glass we n --~ ~ den +-iludlO & llbrary DUPLEX Side ocean view Owner dows, French doors. till' ATVICTORlABEACH 642-ta.2or642·6706 roof. hke nt•w 171 :! H ER E · S A R EA L Highland Dr. N li SLEEPER! Located off IY OWNet •IEACH r.iaiiiiiiiiii;niiiii., the ocean s ide of the ts Just 200 s teps away. ~ hwy .. WITII EA5V AC· 3Br. 2Ba. frplc. 2 car gar CESS TO TIIE BEACH. 1n a Carmel·llke sett.mg I•!~!;;;;;;;:;;;~ Single s tory architec· on a pvt st. m Udo Sands Iii hae. built on level lot 1138,500 64~126211---------· - W/ALL SORTS OF BEACHTIME REMODEL * * JASMINE CRE.EIC Professionally decorat ed. Beaiiuul two story, cathedral ceilings, three bedroom, ram1ly room, 2'12 bath. Lowest price!~=~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~I llsted en Jasmine Creek GOLFCOURSE ,,. • REALTORS RANCHO LA QUESTA Popular 3 br San Miguel model tughly upgraded w/lge fmly rm & cov'd patio Must see. Seller is motivated. Submit. 963-5671 POSSIBILITIES. The '"Reduced lO l108.000. 3 br larger unit ha s +bonus.2bahse.Pools! SPACIOUS LIV. RM. Tennis!Appr 3 blks bch. W/OPEN BEAMED ()pen daily 1·6 483 62nd CEILING . MASSIVE St. l/6JO.SS76Agt. WHAT IF I told you this Dover Shores home woulll permit you to hvc.> l1kt' u Roman, surrounded b~ Italian marble. loung1n..: by an indoor pool, g1llln14 across Ba c k Ba\ Wouldn't you call me for furtherdeta11s·• Outstanding value For VIEW more informa t1on r:i 11 C OLE OF HEWPOIT REALTORS 675·5511 411 +POOL Close to ~ach 3 Bdrm h ome on beauti ful t ree lined street Only $67,300 Call Del Larson at So. Calif • ....., 546-5605 SO COAST PLAZA FIREPLACE OF OLD 3br. 2ba, view, K.. V.H. B.RICK. ETC_. .Compact Sl67 ,500. 2244 Port RANCH IEALTY ~523 CAMPU5~1RVl~E ~~~=~c~ ~m:pe~= C..rbse. 644-4887 55 I ·2000 to secluded patio. Unique llG CAHYOM b a t h h a s D B L Magru!icent "front row" UNIVERSITYPRK RACQUETClUI P U L L M A N & golf course view o r It's roomy. it has charm. M A H 0 G A N Y d r •-Vi I I. I. mod1f1ed PANELED WA''" IN pon s, airways'"' •GI I 2 1t bas location; may be ~ a e ns 1.· ues t e Assume 81'2'r oan Fordhamtwn.bse.1900 sq NAUTICAL DECOR ,.,r e r:.11q I Pauos. cntrl ate. 2 pools. ft eod ·t 4 b 21 ba used as a '1or5 BR home. AuguslJt Plan. 2 bdrm & -...EYMoouas uru • r , ,, · with formal dmmg and a This strurturaUy sound. & Jae . t enn is erto; H"'" " Open House. Sal/Sun. f I o lde r duplex IS IN den, 2.tm ~· ft of un· Consider trd Pnnc only $6.290 down Townhouse. 4332 Seoisa Way. By pleasant ame Y room. NEED OF PAINTING ,. compromised elegance. B 6 6 72 2 I bdr r I · delightful pal.Jo. 3-baths; "' LaV1Shly """"led Not y owner 73· 6 or g ms. rp , patio. Owner . Reduced MINOR REPAIRS. Jr ap,...._, · Ulr..Chlc:btl ~ 673~0 gar, comm pool, trees & fromS106,tm to $103.000 near park and tennis h d . d eel designer's tot.al effort. t--------• .,,, ",... . . ' . It couldn·t hurt~all qwet Bike lo beach. 551·0404 or 975·4980 courts and pnced at a ~oLAuCEa;.Te TH~;::Ac~ Absolutelv "award WI.II ,,__ ____ _ '""=:;:::::~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&1 By ownr. immal' 3 Br. $62,900 Ownertbkr. kd very competitive figure nmg" at $249,000. i'~or 1ru Farm, room for I [ 'e. I Ou.ick Nash about a re h lot l kt h w ys. ol ........ UV\ It's the 3,000 Wt RENTAL INCOME. 11 ll~ft'llt uge .nu cnry le 7>i-12l918932764. --'--------~ol\N • app't. t o view ca honle,ch.ickens,roomfor ' j wardmg career in real Sac $67 900 Open hse ---------SEClUDfO sq ft Monterey and il"s th.is may be your last 640-S560agent garden. Has tJck rm , ~ j est.ate. Free training H 64S-812l or 5j1.1535 . 4 bdrm, 2 ba, comer lol SMO«ETRH a beauty! chanceatthe prkeor placeforgreenh.'le,ah.0:1 _ ----···!'!!~ youquallfy.~·5IOL Nr schools, & shopping $167.500 $10,000DOWH BR, ram rm, frplc, 2 !)a .--------·1'--------•I Mesa dcl Mar. By Owner $73.000 gd financing avail .\. llOUiht·after 3 Bdrm. SEE Harbor Vtew. 3 BR. 2 ba, home. Must see to ap CROWDID? Immaculate 4 bdrm. RV 14352 Trop1cana Ln single story end urut on TIDSONETODAY ' • Cl o II """"'•ate. Close to Ba"k storage. nr everything 892 7193 greenbelt n ear pool. MISSI~ R~"'LTY ean. SI 75 mo. I' .... -~ " 20HALOT Reduced to S127 ,500. 2 Bdrm. house plus a bachelor apt. Steps t(1 beach. You own the land! 673-3663 642.2253 E VCS IHLAWS?TEEHS? S88,ln>SS&IB54 --------jacuzzi, tenrus and bike vn 110A finance , no c r e dit Bay area SllS.OOo nus sharp Mesa Verde C.OOdorrunlum Hunt111gton trails. ~~~~~~~~~ 98SS. Cst Hwy· Laguna needed. P P. 751-8775 557·3161 home affords pnvacy for Reduced Slt.650. 2 story 4 Harbour Walk lo beach. Reclllceclto $79,900 -\ __ "--___ 49_4-0 __ 7_l _I_ BY OWNER the entire ( m ly . A bdr Rose garden 3l03 Near bay Boat sh p Cal 644-72 11 TURTI.EROCK separate s 1tt1ng rm, Roanoke Ln CM Agt usually available. 3 ten FOR DETAILS 3 bdrm. fnmily rm, dm· Over 10"' Acre R· l. H.V. HOME BUILD YOUROWH CUSTOM HOME OMTHEOHLY RESIDENTIAL LOT associated bdrm & bath from your nls c rts, 2 pools & ing rm, with 2 ba. Near LagunaBeach.Ocn&ca· P a lermo St 58,800 lvly 3 bdrm. 2 ba home. LOVELY jaculz1. Buyer ·could pailk & pool. $109,SOO. By nyon views. Poss 10 to 25 lsehold. 4br. 3ba. 2 frpcls BROKERS-REAL TORS :.;:· 'th l.J•Cit• . .J •'•·J •6l Only$79,950wtVAterms moveinJunelst.S83.SOO. Owner. Pnn only. Open sites or pvt. cluborten & t wetbar. Appl loo!Callnow.545·9491 [lt'JSIO[ Call H~bert Hawkins Sat/Sun.833·9688 niscrt.$246.000. 644-8134.Pnnonly . Real F,stalc "'1 Rllrs, Bill Empey UGIODDYRLTI 'J'.119400,home772·3496 WOODlllD~E 494-8611 BIG CANYON :I flr · Paneled ram rm Lar1te yard Woodbridge Arborlake. • Hwtl~on lake or mtn view from ~22 Pebblewood I • -wt-...t I 052 Townhouse. fl 37 .SOO ~~~ .. !~.~~ --S-EllER--S._M_O_V_B>_ $92,500 Hcrbow I 042 every window 2 br + A delightful single leve 2 --,.... ~ 640-9019 ....................... . ...................... --------- den. upgra ded hrdwd Bdrm. Just s teJs to i---------HAUoa VIEW AV All.AILE IN EXCLUSIVE 3 BR. 2 ba . ,, blk to bay Now $179.500' Marshall RJty 675-4600 Desperate for offer' 3 BR. 2 ba , cul de sac, Mesa Verde $85.000 eu,.u10 1 BOAT DOCK AT YOUR BOOR JBr. 2ba condo, frpl, 1800 :.q ft 2 s undecks $164,500 Agl 213/439-2115. 438·3678 . ~~ 1& ~a:s:;u;_g1, :~ci, ::rt.to: P~~:~ ~k NORTHVIEW CARMB. ( e a r t h t o n e s J • and numerous upgrades. F..asy llVlJlg ID th.Ls lovely 3 br. 2 ba. fam nn. dtn SPYG~S H!LL $219,500 ~tr..o ~ach I 018 A Johnson Bkr 979·4964 ~ 0""' ltOllM "LU" t703~.eo.1.-. landscaped. lo ma int • SB9,900 3 BR. 21<J BA + family rm, on lg cu.I-de-sac lot. used brk patJOs. $135.000. Call for details . room home. Pool sized RV /boat yd. 2008 Port ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 br 3 ti.. + den. exccut.Jvc home Fene:.l bluff \'1ew 1n So Cal $360.000 Owner Brkr714/492·ti700 645-9161 By Owner. 552-6327 644-nl I ya.rd w/large covered Albans Cir. Owne r . p a t I o . L i t e l o S149,900. Open Sat/Sun Dnve up & 11~ what .. happen.mg! MESA VERDE TRINIDAD ISLE Just reduced pool home. 3 see? ... Sl.28.000. 1·5. IH0-084'1 BR, 2 ba, sep dining. wet ~ MICJll9I Realty IFB!l Pnme capestrano Beach 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •PRICED RJo:DUCJo:D• 2 sty, remodeled. upj(rd exec home 3 BR 2 Ko . den. & deck w /v1ew towards Catalina en old CdM S206 ,950 Hrkr 759-1288 CHARMING 3br. 2ba +~uest house Frpl, 2 patios. R 2 lot. Pnn only Sl.57.000 Owner.G4U-7030 ASSUMABLE LOAM Huge (2000 sq.ft. Home> W /custom family rm, 2 rplc's and overs ized yard Only $569 mo Buyer may assume u - 1sting VA 8~'2<; loan S79,900 full pnce 754-7800 6A~ 4 bedrooms and den make thtS a perfect fame ly home! VA terms! Low Down! Motivated owner' Waterfront 4 br. 3•,• ba. 40' dock, view down mam channel, Fantastic buy at $365,000. Open Sal & Sun. Call Joan. 846-1371 or 592 2825, Tobm Realty. Appraisal ordered! <:all l"IM I 044 REDCARPET754·1202 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GO FOR IT! $64,750 Nice 2 bdrm. & Camel) IRVl.._.E CO .... DO rm. home with 2 frplcs .. 3 " " car garage, guest unit, Two bedrooms. two RV parking: big R ·2 ~ths with bea m ce1l· Newport Heeghlo; comer mgs. Just steps to .the lot. Only S92,SOO. Call JJC?OI with great location. 646-4463 Air conditioning. Only $64,750. C..11752·1920 ~ l eol h lote Inc OCEAN VIEW. spec taeuJar ocean & Newport _ -· A 1..'i~~ -~co,.. n l:JO PM. 1 By Owner. Halecrest --------- Harbor view. Pool. wood ---------rune. 3 br l i,..41 ba. xtra I~ decks. 4 bdrms . 2 ba . ~kyl.Jghts thruout Comp remodeled & updated i!:asy maintenance 1 S2Z4.SOO Interested & quail/led buyers only Ry owner 494·&468. Courtesy MESA VHDE lot. S74.900. 540-5683 for Lovely 38drm. 2 bath appt. home. Ready to move·m ___ R_m_uc_m __ _ cond1t1on $85,900 for k 1 4 Br, 2 ba, formal dining, qwc sa e. brick frplc. comer lot. 2 IN SMOlmEE bar. fncd corner lot. LoU 496-241 l 493-9494 o( xt.ras. 187.900. 552-3008 495-5220 130..5050 lrvin~YT~us~ Lge ~~~~~~~~ Luxury for ad.its, pvt 1400 living/din ing area & Wiiiows 4br. $69,900. S.F. 2Br home, formal paneled Cam rm. 2 br & Lowest pn<'e in tract. By din, patio. fn{'d yd, 2nd ba upstairs. Fn<'d Owner. 640·0088 or $89,900.0wnr~6177 yard & patio. S00.710. Pis 640-5400 call today. 551-0547 1---------4 BR. beaut. yard & patio. O"• Wallt to school. $86,900. RANCHO S.J . 3 BR. San i..,._ leach I -0.. Cioff Course Luis Rey, 12th green & •••••••••••• •••••••• ••• Gate guarded street of lake Vu. Sl55.000. 28 OCEA.MFttOMT luxury homes. 4 BR, & Nuevo.547-7044 for this price? 2 Bdrm .. 2 den. $239,tm. Also 4 BR. --------•I bath & huge master 2 ranuly rooms $242,000. state. MobUe home local· JfJy W. Yeah Co. REDUCED $15,000 Won't last I.he week! 2650 sq ft of house on ooe of the largest lots in town! Vacant, 4 Bdrm. fam rm + bonus rec room w /professionally landscaped yard & Iota fruit trees! It really ls a deal!! Hurry. Call 1m.•1o..ty RIDCAIPET 133-3310. ed in much sought after 499 1z37 South Laguna park ., $35,.500. $96, 900 AWAY FttOM Price redlleed on this 4 --caowos Bdnn. 2 ba home. Super 'ns lkQ' ! Call Del Larson at Beautifu l & peaceful So. CGlfR..tty country setting. Loads of fix· up potential: ex· ___ 5_4_6-_5_6o_s __ _ ~Y comforta~le as Lllce new. built in 1972. is. Laguna locatton. 2 Lrg liv·rm brick frplc Bdrm .• 2 bath plus huge 3br: expa~dable, 2ba: den. Sl21,500. lndry rm, Cam·tm. patJo, ().y.() We kitchen. Lot 7lxUl9'. ~~~~~~~~ prol lndscpd. S89.900. Call ·---------HEY, LOOIC ME 0¥BI A deluxe FEE LAND home in prestigio us Promontory Bay area awaita your inspection! REALTY INC. 714/846·1371 Designed for gradous 1 ________ _ liVlng,lhis3bedroom (Or ------· __ 2 w /den > has pre va le patJO lush with foliage, slate entry. 2 fireplaces, open beam living room, many custom extras. YOU OWN THE LAND' Don't wait! Call 675·7661 or 833-0610 e75.000 fo'or sale by owner. AT LAST HARBOR VIEW KNOLL 3 BR. Cape Cod ln·level Open space view. f'/R, DIR. 211'.2 ba. pool. teruus. Prlnc only. $179,SOO 640-4848 •Highoatt.Hll Above ocean an N.B. 4br. w/fam·rm. 3 yrs new. Security System . Spacious & Luxurious . OfferedatS PBFOttMAHCE 848·2241 2 HOUSES Newport Beach SIZl,000 for loth Agent 64S· I t03 IT'S A TWO STORY FRAHCISC.AM Model located in Jh<' Newport Bluffs. NB. Oal.. parquet noon.. custorn <'amel color carpeh. used bnck fp & its cl~l· to. beach. Back Bay &. Newport Center Sl.32.000. VALLEY 640.9900 ---------Find what you want In Dally PilotClass1rieds. Lo realt.on. OCEAN VU.OWNER 2 fantastic buys. Harbor Vu. 3 b r, frpl, must see. 644·2641. 644·8722 l 114 White Sails. Open 1·5. Sat/Sun. POOL. POOL car gar. 900 Dogwood. 38drm. 2 bath, ram rm, $73,500. Phone 751·0774 =y~a~~wA·~e~~~d,: _e_v_es_. ______ _ A fabulous 2 s tory 3 bedroom ho m e with family room, fireplace in the master bedroom and living room, and up· l(raded throughout. In add1t1on. a beautiful bri ck patio Asking $86,500. ASSUMAILE l o/•% Ln. Sl9,000+2nd T.D. 3 Br, 2"' bath Townhome, Prime Park loc . Deerfield . $84,905 Own/Bkr552·5880 -Large 2 bdrm .• 2 bath 'h evs. 49S-0088ownr block to Laguna's Main --------Hewport IHcJlt I 069 HewpoJt INch I 069 Beach. Light, airy & UniqueWood&Olass ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l 1 on, i mm e di ate "Reduced" E/side cust. clean. S89,500. ·Huge expan 5 br, 4 ba.1 .. ----------------• FR. DR. game rm. possession. $86,900. 2000sq ft. 3Br. ram rm. 3 HR S. CST r LAli car g a r , R · 2 . A gt ....ORl ... S RI! .a.• .-v sauna. Huge swim'g pool " " 511l• 1 1 w /Jae. + yard area. Ra· 4Bdrm, 2 bath. 2 story on 646-7171. quiet Cul·de·SOC street ln ---------Relu * 494-1057 * diant beat. 3 car gar. 2 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;J exec ne ighborhood . r..tmr Valey 1034 • SO. Of HIGHWAY Completely rerurbished •-•••••••••••••••••••• Those including carpeta. aifit. 3 er house, Pvt communi· OCIAMVllW llTUAT Ex.ecullve Townbome. f rp l, WHAT MORE COULD YOU WANT? S24.5,000. Bond Realty, 831·1411 or '95·4773. Charming two sto ry appliances. Sale pncc ty, ...wJ, 00 quallfyinf{ Aches'. home 2 Bdrms+fomlly aooo ........ room home with a lovely S:S.000 down. Move rig lo your luxurious custom Crackling frplc. Wet bar. -------- big front yard (59'x30') RoyMcc.nl. in. take over payme.nt.s RAMCHRIALTY Jacuzzi! Executive Large worbhop. 2 car lllONewport.,•d. ~ 551·2000 Cornell home with bonus gar+nearly lSOO IQ tl of Coda Mno 541.772911 --•• ...,,--_-.-_..-. -I 0-4-0 --------room, 4 bedrooms, din· II v Ing spa c e 0n1 y ---------••••••••••••••••••••• •• OHL y $16,SOO ing, brick fireplace and S13S.OOOCaU rordetal~ 4U-llACH BU) UMfT more. Reduced to family room. formal din· Ing rm. Expansive master suite w /pvt ocean view balcony. 1145.950. 644-7211 BY OWNER OPT10M-S7001 Woodbridse btand now $114 .900. BKR. Call ~a~~ 6:r·u~~;::,· n~ Jog to ocean from lhia oo tbe market lbia $40.1720. __ M_E_D-IT-ER--R-.--1 hi h · XI Park Place. exe.cutl ve cbarml.na unit. Cbolce TR Rial sc s & ~ op g. nt home. Formal Din. rm., greenbelt location near --. ~ J ust a abort walk to ....-. R.E. Netwon 9').0167 cond. 185.500. 549-8007 spaclous kitchen. fam. park " pool. Only 8 mo -----beach Crom uniqiae older ~~~~~~~~~!Mesa Verde 3 BR. 2 ba, GI t Bo oom 4 old · 2 lge. bdrma, 2 ba, '"*t .. Cll•*_._.. home. SpUl·level dalin rm. an nus r • 9un•r UJ>"raded. otfered __ ,,. ___ -_____ .._ ___ .. __ ...... 2 8 8 , ram/dJn. FR, 2 frplc 's. 3082 ldnp1u bedrooms. Lots ...... • ..... "'"'" "' Samoa Qui ck ule of oak noorin1. Very atM,S00. 759-1501 --------11111 rm. Ir many extraa. $77,900. Ownr. 540-7998, anJdOul eeller! Will lrue O.'t Loolll IUUOO 1e1 Uve ln ~ Is rent the _NS-__ '31_04 ______ with :f'!on at $700 mo. Unless )'OU are ready to other. Cklle tot.be beach, •LL .... EW Prlc under market' Real l!latat.e ~ ! You wtU fall in love CDMDUPLIX MIGU&SHOUS llOADMC>Ott • Bedrooms. family room & formal dining room. tastefully &i carefully decorat ed. Wide open ocean view. walk to beach, tennis le pool. This model ls in de· mand & competitively priced at 1239,SOO tiJ Cold~ll Bo nker a Monarch Bay "1aaa LqunaNiauel 4'6-72U 111.otH 1hoppln1 • churches. "' " Callfast! 7$2.-1700 w/Ul.i,a 3 BR borne .on a Prldt or ownerablp! 100/oDOWH Ol'fNrn•t1PVN IOllf~t· cornerlOtohcuJ deaac t•1t•Ylefe 1067 Low. lo w p rl c• of Y•TIERMS Brand n•w Turtlerock 1treet, w/trlr acco11 •••••••• .. ••••• .. •••••• $172.500. "' coodo, Jaamine 3 br, 2 poulblllUet. Located on. llUST SELL. Make your VAU.IY 64M900 Vaca.ot Ir complete.ly rt· bai vparaded crpL' & b' "'bloclt rrom c:om m .1.-==....;;;;;;;;._.....;._-.-_1 olleronthlsauperba BR, ... ~., &mu Cd bOme '1: ~ ~AD view. IBR. Pv\ t..cb accwt 1144.500 "-'Dao f?&.2311 1ha '--draw m ltMt W•L • .a DailJ PUol 0..ifted Ad. t4Wr11. furbished. New paint. t I e . V l e w • A gt . park, w/tA!nnla, pool, & WOULD 2 be, home. Out.atand1nt carpet.I, kitchen, water -==~-----ANT----<213H33·0051, C7l4) rec room. Onty a abort YOU-..YL u p1redu . tmmac beater. copper plumb· 11.M M5-«!30 walk to acboola. New Ii.at· lodscp1~ 1dras. 101. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath Bia. bricbt , btO home --------• Jni,IOhW'f7icaJI: .. t.hatW8ha'*t.bedNam Owner. eva 41 wtenclosed paUo. Sl47S wtover 2300 •ca ft or IU• BY OWNER-Btn Wood· 1•• -o Jot )'OU've beim wa1ttn1 --.a.. down to veu. Corner lot. wioua llvln1 at a prtce brldae Condo, 2Br. UD.,.C .. ·=-. fOf'I Pr1m• R·2 lot In _ ... _ ....... _·------1 allTIOlt 7.000 aq ft. Try you can afford. 4 huge l.,..&, t&4.900. Ml·4390 t.asuna. clOM to hl1h Ml.,.... ltoc.h I 0'9 any ternu! Try any of. bdnnl. Chtf'• kitchen. ldloDI Ir downtown area. ••••••••••••••••••••••• fer1 Wall to wall rrpl<' RanchoSan Joaquln2BR ~~~~~~~~ PricedatlliS.000 • RED C'ARPET 84S.:3474 t m.s8'TL & den, San Joequl.n plan, - top level. 180 d arce vu of hll&J. park ll nttc-lites O.rnrt a1t. l -3~·8808. UNIY•san Ntl Real F.a 1.11.te II 752-7"'4 wltnds 3 Br. 2bl. S.p dln rm, hulle bonus rm, Ind land. SU0,000 Owntt 552-1401 IAYCllST !x.ql.Ult.e pool home. 3 bdrm a ba lmmacwa~ • Plfct!d to tell. Prin· d"1I onlY. A#,1. 666-7711 THREE LOVELY HOMES NEW OH MARKET Lovely Lido Isle home has just become available. 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths, charming kitchen & brkfst. area. Price includes plans for 2nd stor y addillon. We ll priced at $235.000 IA YCIEST CHARMER Lovely home. newly listed. has 3 bdrms:. 2 baths, huge family /dining rm., geared to lovely back garden. All this + 2 frplcs. Has space for RV /boat. Home is in immaculate condition, wlth ne w carpeting thruout. $1~.ooo. VIEW'S TERllFIC!! 2-Story 4 bdrm., fam ily rm .. 3 bath home; family rm. & mslr bdrm. have been beautifully paneled. Home is new & never lived In. Includes tennis cts .• pool, Jacuzzi & guarded gaWt. $279,500. LIDO REALTY 673-7300 A Olvl~lon al Rod Hiii Roottv It ~ c •• '· It .. t I. J. 'l l) I, D l · .. . . .... DAILY PILOT • W.Oneeciey, t.Ailf t 0, I t 71 ~Rtaf&tott ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ ._~ H..nllwW. ~l..tk.... I ~::'r4 eo.e.w... 3224 .._.. l~ tto..1U~ Al I 11b,__.,._, A.flalw4 •u.r... ............................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •too ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ....._.. ·'····················· ............................................. .. Hit ..... ._.. & 06t S-• ....................... . .._.. 31'f C0tta Meta JS24 •••••-••••••••••••••• c~t-O ""*1• WS. I ZOO .............. ••••••••• 8eauUIW M.a d9I Mar . , •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• .._...,.,..._. 17'9 ..... •••••••••••••••••• .... --I 71 •••-•••••••••••• .. •••• I d l I C pool ho-e .. cab• .. •Jt Luxurioua adult Uvinf 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -•v•n n u • r 111 on ... .. ... 8R d H ·•-eanlront I br older bd b lb r.. ,.. ••••••••-••••••••••••• TWO A.CRIS domuulij!U. ~ nu units 3br. lll.tba. s:ies. 7S1 zoeo con o. uni.waioa ~ Yrly l500 rra 1 a , new c~ HUDtst'O&IGHT f'aalQUcY1ew(romllu1 ad,olnlft• lb~ o c or54CM891 ~1~~'r°'m~,·1 TSLM1mt ·M2·1'03 SW.STOllACH carpeu ~dr•pes.blMJU. •~7 500 ft..e.r upper home oo the Al.rport,3200•41006Qft . •ua ~--• eue. ~ 2B&.Jba.yrb' GIQ S2»-.Act 131M011 .. • fldae ot the Clevol•nd OimUa<.t Western Terrain SZ05 Nice. kids. pet.I ok MJke 8'l1Unn for appt Westdill. c:tJ.armmi 3 BK. IAYIW>MT ~~r:n~z'1t1:. ~c,:,c~io~~: NatJouJForeal.BKR lnc., O!IJI &•mpua t r· g:-iecref~ore ++. 752-2.809. t\.'a ba. pal.IC>. oo pel.I, 2 U~.~b'. ~ ~-,:';:ft!.\v,ri Newpoct ••eta coUqe. tb11 • BR. arcltttect• <7u>.-'7l'l •UO. N.B · 9Z68I> H. •Ca..;. ur•aC...•• a Brtwnhff. W/D. refng, l!iZStmo.646-2:389 .. ~ rm. ai. itm c . Meyer loc.IC.td iD De A.n:u Part dream bocnf'. ln1lde OR5n20IO 714tNe-l480 -·new cpta, no peU. S400 Newport Shores. st.epS to rMaCUOO Pl K.!ds OK No pets wrth all the ammttles Terra Cotta tile, cedar C..~Loh/ LohfwS. 2200 $27S A b1.11e 2 br. Kids. ~mo. Wk, 7$4·0SOO beacb.3 br.2ba,yrlyl.ae. 2 B1l. i ba, YT'b l3IO ~ po o I ¥. J a cu i 11 b ~·· custom Us.bl· ,..~ I JOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets, dabwbr. Kore!! Sm aft 6· 964-2140 ( 7 t 4 ) 6 4 s -12 1 t o r t--u--.. -d--.. --,-b-a-1 t I k -7,,.. I ..... ~ r, .. , , o... . c ubhouse. 1111 uatom rp c ma e ....................... OfftCI! ILDG sm ee -·~-(213)45-0281 Cwpotl. peal. trJI. IDO· NEWPORT WI a pace out ol Home TWO CHOICE t:emetery HunUnetoo Ueach •Cu ,........ t•h• 3242 ~ Blg Canyon 2Br, %Ba ll&mto'lpmMHIM IEACH ~=~o.it,'>~~;t:.: ~2·~~ b'a~dep;~,/~ 27.000 sq. ft. lo\ near S295 Mu.t Me. Gar, n ice ••••••••••••••••••••••• Twohome. btfl golf REDUCED BENT Tbal4BR•denfamJly )'OW"I to experience by GARDEN MEMORIAL P acifica Hoapltal. 5 toe. ~c. More! Ccndo.~R.3Ba,2 fpk. coune view,pvtga.ra19. forhteduttes.f.mUy.no holnitw-.UdD1distancc C&1.Un1 p ARK , ea EA . ~~·~tr•CMc Smftt. ~t!.~r:ce·&001• 17SO mo . 640·812'. pets. 3 Bil. 2 ba. f'OCJll, to tbe elementary, Jr VALUYllALTY 213/W7·98'9 '-'Cll ·-• •e-.-1o.t•• • P· 889 833-3'73 83l·2919 High & ll1ah 1choQls. " 49Mf77 7114050 Davld Bourke IUtr •· "'6-ts3I •--------Just a bicycle away from C-rclal 546-9950 S330 3 Br. 2 ba, kid ok . .,.... 3144 Plush 3br, 3ba w Ibo• ~*-t • •1-eaa vu ltiS mo. 2.Br. tpC.a. dtpl, I.be oc~. Tbe perfect Property 1600 FOREVER VIEW Sharp, nice patio. Good ••••••••••••••••••••••• s lt p 1 blk to beach. ... Wt a..,. 12'*1 mo ~. "° pet.a, ~ Ca famllY home for $185,000. ••••••••••••••• • • •••••• loc. Sm fee.~ lt&fT ALS S68-M34. 64().4919 ~'/all S llroo Apt B 8.1H!l65 aft 0 llAC:H/COMM'I. of ocun & c anyon. •C-r'•Glll•• TbeBlul'fs. oc.&\DlTBONT clehae a,_s._a1p_m _____ _ Ready to build. So 3BR,2Ba........ ~ r vt br .. ba r..i pell 38RONLYS51,900 St.ore bldg. 2000 sq ft+2 Laauna Aliso areu. 3br, 2ba. frplc. lovely 38R.2Ba.. ..$.550 4br, 2i,.;ba. am rm. P · • ·PT 0 Nrw 2 Br. 2 ba. Joel adjacent Iota. Near Cl~ _.. Y 8 rd . g 8 r . n r 48R.2....,ba 1575 palio. frptc. S575per mo. Now t11Jw.e3.~ t1CUi~ " bl1J06 w /'l I • , ~~v:!1!?'; ::!a:i~~ Hall on Newport Blv . abop'g/scbls. $430 per SBR. 2~ ba .~ 644-1480 ; 830-5050ext 22 l Bt P«*~· AvaJl car Pf'k'~ 310 Viet.on.it ~-A -~£~ .. -port to lnvC$t w/little dn $325,000 WATERSKJERS! mo S48-282S 3br. 2YJba, beaut. cond rnoat.bb' °' wMl1 rrom ... _642_-_21_54 _____ _ ..,,..... ~ 1 Home sites situated --·--------b J 1 A & lo payments. Spac. around larae lake, all i BR 2 Ba. nr Nwpt Hbr Tennis·pool·rec area. June ~l . u y , ug . NEWBBEEDAPTS Balboa Island Reahy mgl sty penthse. candle uUUtJes tn. Clubhouse & Hi, W/D. refria, can etc. S500 per mo. Call Sept.644-t.~ J Br w l\oft avail. Pooi. ''"""""'"·~~" glow d1a 'g , pool too! • TI4·S47-6'748 -J•-·•za· Ga1 pd Ap golf course. 1..., hours partly fum. 9650. 5411-1418 PARK NEW.oO.RT 2 BR, 2 ... _ · · · 673•1700 831·3'750; 4'3·2202. Wall Crom L.A. Beginning FREEUTIUTIES ba.Jun/Septortakeover plumtt.a,a.arqe.Aduha. OCEAN VIEW StreetReal F..istate. $8900 Terms. Agt . F.aat.sd flower 3bd 2ba, SlSO Near bch, rerrtg. lse.unrurn.~'41.1!001 no p e t s . SZ90 HJ it__._•-IOIO Coast Hwy., N.B. 50lal3 n4·Jt7·7288 lrtdrl lr. kid pet ok M9S q1.11el. Must see Act now' -............. Harrulton 645 4411 Newport Crest condo. re· --Fl. lot w /r etail 1tore ---------6'2-7611/833-0052 FantasU Apt /¥1' .. .-ducecl to ll.29.900 for f ••••••••••••••••••••••• +apt.orolfice.Sl9S.OOO •m:•CHT11•u'"-LI ---------Smree~!IOO. c · I lBr apt Ad.U:.only No sale. Lea vine area. FHA-VA Profess. Bldg. across -5125 0A0"0-•••MESA VERDE 4 br. •C~r'sewde• Ing bay, doclr •,;•~· peu, LRG KIT . dmm.: Ocean view of Caualln 1uv-s f NBPO '"""' ~ • 2ba,frplc.nupaint,cnt", 11ut."3C.au&1 "'--I pool fplc. yrty ~~ ~ area & pool, 1887 ~ rom · · · · ...,., · 10 Un1ls, near llunt· ... A . ~ • .,...... Redw"ood-u 4 ""'rvS~ RVIME R...tah 4hllore!! ~..:!,.~J~ Aut. -· M-~via. --. "'-·7""·1. from a,.k:ony. Excthn Great area . house need6 ft. Lease $900 mo or le I ,.._ -........ .......... v•,,.-·. umu --"' Plan .. w/master bdrm lo In CU all Sl.25,000. Agent6'6-2414 in gt on Be a c h Civic Ave 642-7743 0 E E R F 1 E L 0 We have tOOO'sofhouses. s\8t.e &111ttlngroom.Call "gcare. P your---------Center. City has hoal ----------dptxs. ap ts now. all S21lO 1CeZ br.bu.m ce1I. owner/bkr f>42.8631 res .. ideas Crom Ho\1$e BUl & e.co.. P'ropttiy 2000 plans, can build in 30 4 Br, 2 Ba. huge fn cd back TOWNHOUSE 2 Br. den. areal, all prices. Sm ree. If. ...... P•tio. PoOL 1&.ov~ & ,,.,., .. 011 f( tnake t.hia your dream ••••••••••••••••••••••• da""'.Aoent.~ yd w/trees. 3 car gar . 2 ba. wood d~k. 2 car .... ,..~->s"--'•* "• lilleCt ttfnu. Nr. •bopping .,..,.,,...., o . home only ~7.900. Lge 7UMITSC.M. ~:..; _ _... w/workahop. SUoken llv gar w/elec opau. mir .. -~--":'! ••••• :=: ........... Aduib,oopeta. 3U 1701 DUPLEX cov'd patio · Many fruit -""-"' rm frplc RVaeeeu Yd rortd wardrobes. Nr _________ , G 4 JIOZ J>tacto.AptL.642-Ui-4 trees. 897·0321. Beautiful brand new H rrwrt1y 25 50 ma'i'nt. i'ncl. •""". ·mo. pools. ""'rU & schools. ~-,..._....._ 3276 G l I t '-•~ blk b I_. (/ 3 2 b 1 IL. b ..._ ..,.,., r-.-. ---•••-•••••••-•••••• rea oca ..,n, ,.., · r. un, p. · r, ,. a ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ti'm 751.1A,,., Sorry. no pets. $450. 1 3 Bd t ( l''""'l•••t:I••-h II bl """" ••••••••••••••••••••••• l3742 Nawta nd Str•"t, ocOeoaunb. I e gramr. aun,1:.· ~lJU \1HlrtUHI town ouse, a ln1. ~or640-7072 .. --~ .. . -,,_,_______ crpts, drp5. Hurry, buy ,arilrtoce-OctGMide MESA VERDE 3 BR 2 Ba Jbr, 2ba 2 st.ry Condo No. Ga r den Grov e . f\imished & booked for Real°Estate now. Tom Lee. Rltr, 2 &JBEOROOM homew/fptc•lgeyard. Woodbridge: 3 bdrm. 2 SanClemente.$450.Agt Beautiful. lwo bedroom .,..·e 2 br, 2nd noor apt w• veranda. Xlnl Joe. I bHt from Irvine Bl Ad.\.ii.W. no pel.6 &iD-4.568 summer rentals. 1192,000 642-1603. VA FHA Submit on children or sly, across Crom park & '92-6700, 496-8432 townbotl5es in excellent NIWflORTIEACH BY OWNER-3Br. 2Ba, GARDENTOWNHOME. pets.U75mo. l.st +last. school. Chlld. small pet San.Juan oe1gbborhood. Private e z BR. nu paint, fix REALTY 675·1642 g1anl fam rm .. New-•2Trt .. Hff* 2car garages. + $200dep. Ca.115'6·S880, OK . $425 . 833·8714, C1Platrmt0 3278 patio Vlew from lovely tures. pvt pat.io. no pet:. <roof, paint, dnveway, NearLakePark.Mln .t.o 1•41~9924 asklor Le8Ue.aft6PM. 631·3624 ••••••••••••••••••••••• katche•: enc l osed Avail .now. $27& mo sprinklers. carpel, bch.l-4BR.3 ba; 13 BR. r ll54&-007& •---------garage s. pool . 646-434l UDO BAJFIJNT . drapes). Move in now-2h ba; 1-3 BR. 2 ba. 5 hH 1-757·'623 ca Beaut model home, 2 BR 2br. lba condo. Close to $320/monttt Call Clyde - 1-A ... .....-A.~8) Warner-Greenville area. garages, frplcs. $189.000 ---------2 eJt. l \.'.i ba, frpl.. I yr or l BR &dlden. B11tns. schll..!~~·g. pool. S325 <Mana.er. Apartment PIUME~TSIDE •r , _ ..,__ 161,900 w /low down. C411 each. 1709· 1713 Alabama. ---------old. Lge. yd .. gar . $395 Auto gar., ~ ll rec acil mo._,....._. #00) 891-100. Cuu t BR aWdJO apt. re 40 Jl't. rronlage, Lido 536-<7757. Hunt. Bch. 536·1718 IOA.CURAHCH Agt.973-fT72.552-0434 incl 8 tennis crts. Adlt.s. w........... 3298 dee. You'll ~ke 11. Ava.ii Nho0td, chtbarm11n&.old11er ---------• Owner. Remodeled ranch home N ,._ M lo 1 fnopeta.$:175unlum,$475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •IUMOMEW• 6/l.S22Smo.t>S0-2981 me w1 Per "' s P Tl'(IT! ----------1 with open beam ceilings . .......,ta esa. ve Y 3 um. 548·2402, 5.59-1209. •.-.L..&... ,.__.___!1• Cherry Cr eek Adult Sli:i0.000 YOU'LL UU IT ---------c &r views in all directions. Br. 2 Ba. newly carpeted. 542-7609. --_. Apts. l &r 2 BR. fpk'1, we BR. $275, ql&et. ad tu. no Lseoptiooonlovety•br. IMVESTMINT The pool spa & bhclt boouarm,aep.mdryrm. ---------WehavelOOO'sofhouses. have laltea. s.11.V.Dl\ pets,utJfpd Nr .1h~ Lawson 3be home w/everytbing. Commerclal building in s-tio are' fenced m for lge fncd yard wtpaUO', Senaatk>nal 2 br. !ab• dplu. apts now, all jaCUlll &r poot Located park.S48·7689 __ _ SP a -g a s BBQ -ocean area with aecure complete pnvacy. The fruit trees. Ownr/agt. wp/frplck. dshowhrl . Ki3" &r areas. all prices. Sm fee. at 2701 S. Falrv1ew. Jldt ._.......... 31116 1 ....... rrom G -m-t . r CAI\........ el 0 . n y s •5 "'"C-••r'•'"~.. s oC Wam'"'r N ot s D ..._ .. 714-675-4562 wetbar-2 patios-...-..... ov ..... "u remauungacreagelS or .,...,..,.,., 96:)...4587.Agt NoCtt • &A... --..... enclo5ed entry-2 frpks. Agency for sale. Equity you to do w1th1 aa you 2 bdrm nu pat, cpts, stove. ---------64S-4iOO Fwy, 556-1.991. No pets. Near So. Cst Plaza-By build up and caab on cash please. Call now ref n o, ...,.,,.. Isl, la.Bl & 4 BR Ill The !Unch C ... -L-r.. owner. Courtesy to ..,.,, · ,,., $100.sec.dep.Adltsooly, ._.. '" 11L..& -L..._d 3425 12621 Flowe r Str eet. Garden Grove. Larae return for ---000 down 97'9· .. 626 • -"'--M.l~uodel ·4BR. c..cama..- Blas payment. Call for de .. HWdtlt.LhK nopetsOO·l9lsaAePM 2 BA. am•lY room with ViilW-NwDf Crest Condo -e57-0l2A tails FP. fresh paint, great ••••••••••••••••••••••• I aft. 3ba. Pool/~. BY OWNER Lemon M .A y 0 c K l83lE.l7thSt•C .. SA lmmac. t br dollbouse. location. Ctuldmt & pet S700mo.2 Br2Ba.onthe Now on yrly lse Sl45, Heights. Beaut. view on co .. •(l"A' 10.. new cpli, etc. Older adlt 0.K. ocean at Blue Lagoon Prtn only. Ph 640.1751 9/lOt.h acre approx. 3800 380 GUNNEYPf ltftllab or cpl. Rees. siss mo.ulll RED HJLL REALTY Villa. Tennis. 2 pOOIS. Pvt ooe bedroom townhouse•--------- clo&e to sbogpmg. Laun ana Pumt-snper ocea..-. dry fac 1lilles. No view Newl$50sq.ft .Zbr, dlildren: no pets Call 2..,..til.50.644-5742 Clyde at (714 > 891·1013 1-1-0r-2-bdr-m-. -al_l_n_ew_c_rp_t.:t_ sq fl rambling Spanish LAGUNA ~ •••••••••••••••••• •• • •• tncl. 549-3325 alters. 552· 7500 bcb. 213·703--0230 !Ml Portofino, 3 bdrm home, 3br, 2ba. fam·rm. ~)~·2148 .._...Fu,...,.a.d bonus rm, pooJ, fee lund. fnnl dln·rm. lrg liv·rm, 2 --------••••••............... ... MESA DEL MAR L.,.. •och 3248 To""1t1DllM Sl95.900. Pr1n. only frplca. 2paUoa. 3car gar. LagMa •ac.h .3141 3 BR. 2 ba. recenUy re· ._.................... u..tw.•d 3525 drpa, garages. sn~S325 lal.oare•Alla 3807 Refs & depos r eq'd. _Own __ e_r._644_--4_137 ____ 1 Hone property. S4SO.OOO. IEACH TRIPLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• dee. Cls to tennit. Avail Exclusive Moo~cb Bay 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 83G-4648 C . ....M apptonJy,call642·2928 r-C'--nte S375. 2 BR. •em1·.rurn. 6/l .S49Smo.640-2981 bdr, den. dining rm. 13742 Newland Street. G1Mtrottt ~ ....., " · *" 100 0 Garden Grove. Beaut1ru1 ft lk Walk to beach or Del AdJta. 190 Canyon Acres ocean view. •• m · ~ob~:;tb.!:1s 1~ tc~:,s. Ott.rRHl•tat. Mar Shopping. Quie t Dr. (213) 399·2501, 1!~w~B~ ~1~\s~~do A&t.Dorothy.4'7-1781 ~~~~~U:e~ Lovely I BR. $295. Walk to M'--to--.. ---.,-11-... -,. bay or beMrh. 216 E .._...,.. --- Balboa Blvd. 496 5660. ••••••••-•••-·•--• 661·2333 P, beub, 2 Ii: 3 BR. $162.950. ••••••••••••••••••••••• area. w /greal 3 BR 392-6393. faciliues.Eastalde.lsml LalJmaHlls l250 neighborhood. Private Balboa P e n -West rrpl. d isbwa&ber. garage. patiae. 96&-2358. C..tfnMlt o.f•x Mobile Ho..1 owners unit. Upper 2 BR Houses Unfurnht.d pet OK. $375/mo. Contact ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio view from lovely Newport. big upper 4 II u g e s e <.' u 1 d c d florS. 1100 units w/ocean views ••••••••••••••••••••••• R.tta ~9161or64.2·1Sl7 Jbr. 2ba condo, all kitc hen : enclosed bdrm. 2 bath. den. view, LIVE NeaTThe ~ach' CCllO def Sol ~autlrul Adult Apts Gas & W.utr Paid 21661 Brookhunt, HB 962-6651 ll22·-------~ waterfront paUo. 3 br ....................... J~lialedat ltec>.000 GeMral 3202 ~ amenltles. Highly up· garage s. po o I . parking conven1t!nt l'acWh.. Sl .. ~ff.•auty •FANTASTICAL BER11fA HENRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• graded. Lae 1395 mo. $3201n10nlh. Call Clyde 9600/lse. . ._ RJ!:AL TORS "'-Point l226 137.3741 < Man ager . Apa rt · 642·07201642·8728 2l5 Del Mar 492-4121 llOMEFJNDERS -mft>t,30). (714>891 ·10~ ---------3 Br. 3ba + F.R. Back on 'IbowlandsOf Rentals ••••••••••••••••••••••• a..--..... l252 --------- mmrket at only ma.soo. CISb Mesa For Stile ly ~ Get Fut Results t bdr 3 ba, fam rm. den. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12621 Fl owe r St re e t . ~lll'C..a .. Mar ~wport sa.or.t "'"'--· 1 dbl .... d 1 AAMD MEW Sample encl. yard. dbl ear. $525. Luxury for ad.Its. lg 2Br Garden Grove Large J Br. 2 ba + Jacu.c.u, im .,. ..... bgry· a Btn '::...! 2Bwt-6 Urut apt w/r..,. room. S1702br house Orallje Lv Msg 675--0702 home, formal dm, avail one bedroom townhouse.•--------mac ~.t ...... QC/\ Al~ ury ving. UJU> r. ..... $175 lb bs k da/ ·-I bop . L · """'· _..,.,.,..,.,. " 2B Sk JI · dull units are a ll r ented. r e 1 pe... JtmeSC75mo ~177 c ose lO s pmg. aun •·1 br fee slmplil a a Y nt: 10 a -...,,,.3br .. , ... g ge d r 111t · N • "' It wt g J zzi S2.400 mo. mcome 4 · 3Br. _.,., iuua, ara Fomt• V.., 3234 . r_y a c 1 es · o ~ -" $139,000. t•r ·~1 a'f~tiv~~~es 2....,88 studios, 2 . 2Br. UFETIMESERVJCE •••••••••••••••••••••••Top of bill location, lease children: no pets. Call '[1,, l'l.~!""~"~ MARJMA REALTY gal!~e. All ror ~nder !Ba. 17091 Elm St .. H.B. 557.0122 Nice Family Area opt.IC?" considered. tExb · Clyde al 1714> 891·1013. . ~ ~" ~ _ o..H......a-•-1 """'"' d ecuuve view home). 3 r. ._....... __ .,,,, 124,000. Park r e nt $:175,000. 848·-..... ays, lcAool.a.d 3206 Sharp, only $4.50. 4 Br. country kitchen. famUy .,.._xesu.fwll 3600 642·8850 S1Q5.ll40. 536-1173eves/wknds ••••••••••••••••••••••• Crpl. walk to schls " room. dining room. frpl •••••••••••••••••.-••••• GARDEN APTS e .. forwlaPodfk TRIPLEXC.M. Lovely 3 BR. 2 Ba. (pie. parlt.Hurry,call862-77B8 in living room. close to Elegant duplex. 3 BR. 3 CORONA DELMAR S..ae.tllte 107& MobUeHome Realty ...... pets $625 or549-9568. beach. park. country ba, frplc . $600 mo. 2 Br Townhouse. frplc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2706 Harbor,St.e208 By ownr. xlnt cond. Inc new c.,~. no · b Own 23 ~21ll 646-'6303 Pool. tennis. Some ocean ---=. Sl.50,oooc.-.5777. )Tly. 494.3223 clu . er. 770.. 17 . Cl ""6de.tW 540.5937 ~ -Hunlift9 leoc.h 3240 & CataJJ.Da views ose Hek+ti H-l·BR •. d•n. nicely rum.. COVl ..... GTO..... STEPS TO BEACH. cute 1 :::.::!'! ............ &Mle Forfft 3255 2 Br. 1 ba. new cpti & to Fashlon Island & hne ..,... "' " " " BR hse, patio. lawn. uUI ••••••••••••••••••••••• dJiia, mature adult.3. no beach. Also 1 Br. 644·2fil I Last ch.a n ee l o buy contact mgr. 525 Falrfaic FOURPLEX pd. $360 lease. 673.5439, New-elegant·2 bedroom pets. SJOO +. 634 •-------- Oceanside home in Dr. Costa Mesa. off 673-79$4 ($550) or 2 bedroom + &5/per month Avail Shalimar 964-1055. ~=•::n~!~1r~~t11i.!~ Harbor. ~~S'o~w~:~·P~~;s~ eoro.a .. Mm-JUZ ::. <e,1!!;.c:'1:fo!'b'~ MaylSth. Delux~3BR.2 ..... ~Fllntished ::/~e!~•.c·:~ C: phase. From S79.000. An FANTASTICAL a rea. Great income & ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. Prl vale 2·car BA. lrg: famUy room, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-968'7 early Omt is r ecom · e PRICED RIGHT. Won't SPYGLASS HJLLS. view garaae. Fully matn· C/0 , air. microwave lalMtolllmd 37061--------- mended. 02·2780. sunset last, so buny & call lo-3 Br Fam Rm, S950 mo. tained yard. Adults. No oven. 2 car gar .• fenced ••••••••••••••••••••••• alJt to bch. 2Br. 1 ~Ba . Padllc Home Builders. Sea SW. •-'Y Ml day for more details. IN. 6'73-894l pets. Ioquire S2:S 18th St. yard. Hope 640-6600. lbr. $350. A Vail May 26th. Uv rm. patio. poof. S38S Sea cape &r aunaet.s. a 540.3666 (714) 960-6331 No pets. mo. 556-0960, 96IH025 bldl family P.r.dUl. e 3 BR. 2 ba., den, frpl. nice vi.Li. 1267 675-9229 2Br. + bonus rm in Ei patio. Close to ever · DON'T MlSS OUT ON Mb"-·-..- Morro By the Sea, your ythlng. Older couple 11US Sharp 3 BR 2 BA. ••••••••••••••••••••••• C:0... Mno 3724 own pvt bch, park rent pref., no pets. S625. Agt. fplc. w/cpt.s, med yard, 23682 calle Ganador. 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• only Sl60. CALL TODAY 673-5354/497·3388 conv area. $&25. ~ bdrm 2 ba, lrg comer lot. $50 WEB & U, ..,_ _______ _ CPKl006) agt.nofee. remodeled kitchen, Studio, I bedroom 3124 FIX& SAVE $89,500 r. cluldren welcomA?. no pets. startmg al 045 mo 846-QI07 Sawind Yillage- New l&.2 bdrm luxury adult apts m 14 plans from S270 + pools, ten- nis, waterfalls, ponds' From San Diego f'Twy dn ve North on Beach to McFadden lhen West on McFadden to Seawmd V1ll1Re. (714 )893-5198 HEARIEACH & CIVIC CENTER BRAND NEW. Spacious deluxe 3 &4 Br. All bltns. frplcs, gar, lge yd. 502 Yorktown · Just West of Beach Blvd. 960-2219 NEW XTRA Dix lwnhse apt. front unit. Lg 3 Br. 2"'1 Ba. formal dm rm + bks(st rm. fplc, bllns. W ID hkup. patto. dbl at Vtew of ocean " tull1. Great fixer w1lh a 3 BR, l~ BA, large dining. £Mmily room w tdbl hreptace. +secluded den, study or 4lh BR. Priced to aeU. Calhw!llia Podfic DUPJ..EX 2·3 BR, avad. 2 Brw/gar. $265. New cpts avail. tmmed 962-6898. Maid service, pool Mobile HomeReaJty p R I D E 0 t-• ~~~~.~~k. jac. & Ille. Water pd. 2710 49M8llll5 237~~S:~· LAMAMCHAAPTS Deluxe poolside xtra lgp 2'106Harbor,Ste208 OWNE RS HIP Near ··c" Delaware. Call ......... adl l26' Large 1,2ft3 bedroom 2br, 2ba. bltns, dshwhr tach 1tar. 5480. 545·3604 BERTHA HENRY REALTORS 540.5937 ocean-Coat.a Mesa New 4 R...tah Galore!! 636-41201·5 M·F. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUS CASIT AS garden apls. Dsbwhr. Nr beach. Adi ts. no peU; Plex . Bkr ~57·0283 , 6'TS.!163l We have lOOO's or houses. GO SEE THIS! 3 BR 2 Ba, NO FEE! HcJuse;, coodoa. Nicely furnished t bdrm .bltns, encl. gar. gas bbq 125<>. rno. 536-8362 21' Roadcrafl. W /W 215Del Mar 492·4121 carpel, drapes. Ille. ---------dplxs. apts now, all w/brickfplc,cpb,cov'd dup!exes . Rental Closed gar. $230 up. Pool. Gas Pd. 778 Scott areas. all prices. Sm fee. paUo. toed yard. Only Pavilioa. 81.5-4912 Bkr. Adults. no pets. 2110 1-Pl_. 642-__ 5'T1_3_____ QUIET ADULT tiWwport•ach You Loved to Yrs Ago 4 ~aut. c ust homes suoo. Sharon 975-6794 dy, &&2887ev w /p~noraml c ocean forScH 1200 views avail for sale from •••••••• • • ••••• •• • • • ••• 8211,000. You mwst 1ee the quality of these ~---~ homes. An early visit is NEW TRJ.ft.EX •CGn = W•• $4.JS. 963-4567, aet. DO fee. BIG Canyon 2 BR + den. Newport Blvd. e 3 Br townhouse apt. !:u~~~e!-'~~~~1~'. ~v:: BY BUILDER REAL FINE 4 BR 2 Ba FantutJc golf course vu. t Br trailers. SJ.65 to $185 2i,.. frplc, patio. aarage. bch. $325. 960-1279 (l) 4 Br. 2 ba. single 3br, 2ba w/beaut. yard. w/,_." D/W ftlcd yarci' sec .• tennis, SSU. + uUl. 133 E . 16th St. Qiiet cornc>lex. Adults, 1---------story •deluxe owner's un· K'75 1 I •.-. • • 547 7044 833-3215 c...a 42 C M 642 9193 no pets. $:175. 645-3381 or Large 3 br. 2 ba w f(rplc. it w/attached dbl gar; ..,, •per mo. annua se. kids & peta OK. Only · ; ._.,ce · · · · 675-5949 $360. mo. 7911 Holt. (2) 3 Br apacloua dlx un· ~iasua. S44-06l4 or $435. 1163-4567. agent, no SIAYllW Large furn bach. $160. t----------83S-0211 pager9373Agt. Ila. Bike to bch from fee. Unobstructed vlew of Pre f. middle age . Br, l""ba townhouse, , recommt!nded. 498-0200 or 831·9122. Sunset Paclllc Home Builder.i. I 09 ACRES here. $198,000 rull price. 4Br. 3ba Broad moor view $250 Lge 2 br, 2 ba. Hurry. ocean Is Newport Beach. ~2679 or 548·0868 patio. yard, Crplc . encl. 1 block from ocean. lge 3 ~~~f~~ej~~~ ~~7~elaware, H.B. home. Re decorated . Kids. yd, patio. Sm ree. 3 BAR 2 Ba. new. FU!I Larle 1&2 Bdrms from ~~~rm.fil~i603 t':2~~~g~~ water well. Natural•---------Grdnr.te00.640-0008 64.S-4900 • security, t.ennla, jacuzzi. $215. Quiet building lNSTANTIN AtJ.. I .._, NICIDll~HT San Clemente'• foremost value. "C.ntamar" 4 BR. Camlly home on cul· cl~·sac corner , high above the ct.ly. can for long list of outatandlnt feat.&U'e9. Only $1S4,SOO. BER111.A HENRY REALTORS 21.5 Del Mar 492-4121 CkeanC:ront hie for sale by ownr 498 .. (Y719 •· I · · R·Z.PREVlEW·E /SIDE --------•c:on.-r1GW•• swlmmtna. WtCOftltder wtbeaut. laftdscaping. •--------water • e ectnctty 00 Live In or rent thla re· MEW!lll lse opt. Agt/O'!nr. Ideal for adults over 35 c.entral Joe. 2 Br. l~ Ba NEW 2&3BR,adultapts. ~~~~~~ ::aia~~:~s~~ modeled 3Br. 3Ba house Oceanvlewhorne,just~ ~ c~ :-~:oibrs:.! ·751.QrnukforOary No pets. LEEWARD a pt. Fncd patio. aar . pool. paUoe. fplc. FUii Outstandtna build Ina while YoU build deluxe blk. to the beach ; 3 f .... aa..,...,. • • APTS, 2020 Fullerton t-S325 __ ._~------security. S36S & up. 1702 • '>n-2Ba unit All plans " """ ...........,., " f1orida at Adams. view sites. Exlstisli or· -• bdrma. + convert. den. 3 •C. _ -> ~.. ~1 a .... like rent 4 nve, Br ..... pct ""'""'-_ .. cbard-7,000 trees. each J:rmils approved & paid baths, 2 (rplcs., famllyx_.-1_ J;:'"s'be~cum.etc. 17u 11 blk east Newport Ave No Pd:: yjr"';'4"'.'i96c) UltraAttNdl .. with drip Irrigation . :ft'i 1:i:!:":'n~~~~ room. Ocean vlew, sun· AVAIL. NOW 4 BR 2 Ba Hltbland. $325,000. & 1 blk So. Boyl . Wallac:e,MS-7181 NE w l w 0 3 BR ~narcla':1eea, 30r!'axch60~ousoe~ Ll1lln1 oext week at declalaittil: encio.edthpallotr& W/$, freab.l,y painted home. 631·0397 t--Br--1-.. -.. Ba-.-___ -...... -.~e-'townbomea . Pool . • • 11 o ooo N S99 soo w you~ e ms · thnlout, good loc. Only llwl...,...._. 3740 • "' ..,............, · jacuui, u una, up · meta I bu, I Id in g. 4t ...... ~'._/a·.,. 7~':!'-c.J\ · · ~.:: wow SUOO Per S43S.963-4S6'7, agt no tee. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ara1e1• pdau1o . poo1 I. --... Great loc&Uon. necet1sary arm eqwp-""'Ulla ... _._..,.,. ....,..... Jacun . A u ts oa ., . ;,;:s.;75. See daH,y at ment •--------H u N T l N G T o N STUDIO SJ15. M-2010 Hen • ., L Acta. R1ckarci or RAl8s COST A MESA HARBOUR brand new ""Wteldv ....... :11.~~n/ · • .,.en PETE BARRETI 6UMITS Mdlttoryatmtn.2 ba· ~lltitchenatTV -REA' TV-Here·1 what you've been all butlttn. Jae. pool, etc. BLUFPS3br.2~ ba .. )ov UnensltUtllitles NJCE2 BRapl, paUo, pr. L.t ' k>oking ror. New 6 unit Privacy. $580. 846-4408. ety. $550 Month MILE TO OC~ lndry rm. nr Warner at S. ,,_ '4Z.S200 apt house. 2 Br, 2 baeach Aicnt 644-lJ.33 Row4 Smiht Moht Beacb. szeo. 673-2252 Ctiphtn.o 1071 unit complete wtcpt.s & 3 Br. l~ Ba. dbl car. bltn 72'fYi 'nlurin. only 2 left. 1-------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~~~~~~drapes. All elec kltch A Olv1:41on or ~~k.q~·,::=· 8302 z Br, 2~ baN ~·View. Beach14r':V~ Brand nu 2 er. 2 ea. No i----.------.. · ..... --• .. - w/bltlna. 2 car prk'a lf11rbor lnvestmcnl Co 146(). mo. ope .... · ·~£, A .... 11 pets. Xlnt loca. '73-2058 ·---* * * * * • • 8 ACRIS each unit. 310 Victoria. -------CJoee to beacb, 3 br, 2 ba 64MZlJ: MS-e161 Dorll --or~ AU new 2 bdrm. 2 Wth In -. ""-In• mlnl ranch tilt set.. ...... "'-·-1111•· d h b ,_ d t--------HB at 8lca Hamilton St. IMCHA•Me-.,.,.. • · • -vwn .-.. C...MeM 3ZJ4 w/t~e, • w r. tne 28r oceaatmLDvlews or IWDbicboom,wmlleto $lllO ltoS.-.Clll oldSUJuuClplWano. So.clOran1eCo. AUttler---------....................... yd. $MS, -...sa. ~ ore.an. F .. b bl. U..bleda. ......... pit: BR, 1 BATH. All :w mo. A tt o r dab I e u P . ~~· b ut workable. PAST ISClOWll NtW2brcoodo. Pool,1pa. All.No ee. w/D: frpk. 2 car pr, ...-. cpt, drpa, paint, •· al.&lra/downtlairt con· (714)f77·~l Owner-will can')' tal at From $175. Kldl & Pol.I NICE I BB I Ba, Cleu, -.,'1'Nl17 ...... ...., JJ• =...-=-:· 'IM-B W. 1panl1b style, llDtle =:i:;;,:u::m~~: OR522-~ 1~ oowlthlo~0001t ~· OK.671Mtl281tr. ~ tioc.Uon. 1q1a1J pe\ BOATOWNER'SSPEC ................ _...... =-~.,!!::-;;~:: _;-:.a•, built·in11, two •=· -· uuwu. New 3 br, 2" ba • u.t. 2 welcome. Sl$O mo. Call 1.A&xwioua twalunt S br, LAGUNA BEACH MTR. I -I /W ...... ~~ennP;;I• ~ p»tlo. Rv 1--------•I ~OOO& __ _.. be c:oodol. Pool. dbl pr, 546-5880, ull tor LelUe, ~\I\ b&. frpJc, patio, vlew INN. ISS/Wk Is up, Jtbid a ... a .e arner. r-· # _. -v""" ~beam . ""•llln""· aft6P. M,call54M078 =· aa• boat slip lnel. serv. l'Olor TV. ti.ated 1Sl·t805 0~~~!;~; or call OWIJIS'. Non. thru Thurt. -·• •-s IJ"'t711 .. ... ..-.. _ .... """ _..v•v• (dayt). c•ll 646-ZJ58, OPPOITUMITY ,__,_ -your carpel. ~ Btacb nit condo.! br, 2 leue. 752·1920 or pgol, (714> 4SM._..., -E. 2 Br 1"' Ba, 2 Prl. tbru Sun. ldaya> fc k.nock.• on.eo wben you--------., $450 . West bl urc ba, upcradtcl cptt. bltna. aAerepm875-l.215 N.CoaatHw)'. yrs old. fplc. pV\ paUo. Lc•3 Br. 2~ ba. ram rm, rvenln11. call <710 we re1ult·aettiftg Dally Vlllaa . Victoria & Ca· Yrly I •• $S 25 . N..-Sbn,i tepmtobeach. 10 ,1.,...Je. Ulil pr,n•wpalnt,aduJl.l,oo lf1>1c, 1ard. Nr ocean. ~ Pllol Claal.lted Mt to l...oae10mec.hlnf. valuable' n.yon.6312080 ( 1 14 ) 84 $. t ! l 8 or .. .,. , .. -CA pd ~ .. wmo. lsl *-1--•: pm. P>Omo &46-7027 tlOO/mo _., pt d , _ J br, 2 ba yr..,._,.,. mo. .,.,.., • - SEU.. Idle ltn>a with a Oa1lY Pllot Clualfled Ad -·· ~•ch the Oran1• Coast act an n our .._t (213)4»0281 •M-A'"' .-. .._._ .. •..... bdr t , N w ,.a ...... t • .. ....1.. ... market · aod Found t>olumna. Barcaln 9hoppera read -..... -··-"''-•....-l m, cot ai• ,..ype, • " ·-'"'•-•· PbontM2-5G78 'nl&t'•wberepeoplelook t.beUttleadainCIN1trled Sharp• BR. l~ be, Co•· BU1PTSCondo1Z BR BeautatUdio•Pl'rWMik. end.tat,prtv.Jl!ltio,utJI fenced yanl, tide Olt. 3 -* theY've found an rel\llatt1. And th«)' nnct eredpeUo View, tum/Wlf\u'o Oowntowa ""'-•·walk pd.-.aaB llqer t>t bdr. sm. 2 bdr. 1111>. ttemohalue. wbatt.bey'rwlook.lnltor. 213/$8MU0•f\fpm fTl.'1177,~ tot.dl.CaU414--.. .....ae.ms 1.m.om ______ _ • ·- _ .............. , ... ,,.. .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DTVORCE/Bankru tr HelpWanhd 7 100 HefpW..e.d 7100 W..tecl 7100 Loist 3 yr an we S1am~b~ ~· .,. hr P · Y •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ks r 1...-. 4ZOO...... ....... 4450 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ._ ..... 1140 • QUICK CASH 5025 Lost .. Fo.td 5300 p_,...onals 5350 WOdne&day Moy 10. 1978 OAILY PILOT •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Cl..AMORO ~ 4 DH.UXI Ole S .. Ut ~o. r~ln1 a1 Conl rm . 1eat 25, 1111 ~ ond. PIX.II Laundr) 2 Bdrm, 2 & In Prorouo paneled, wm w~ ln rt: r w1I l"on\ In<' a Hon tGr7 Poi.Bl wab forever ar I or 2 yr IC"iu~ l..ike ,\~utl'IY nu JM:lll' ~ VI £W Decot11lor f'orcst wrl'1' Kt•nt cat V1C Broodmoor J CdM -.,. .... service. Act.ion 1st & 2nd Trust Oeed Reward. ti44·!'>273, LeeaJTyptng.960-5'19 1--------1 *AUTOLOTMEM IOA.TIMGi lo.ans arran&ed for uny ¥33-9983 Ofac,.... OutcaU -~ .......... RB~kpna 1'ull or SMlrt ttme. Learn Pol1Uon avajJ, inourJJ?"O- r\'uon C.:red1t no pro-'~-the auto bualm .. 'ti9 from dU<"llOD yacbt. na&inil blrm. Borrow on them· •551-3278• Rcgl$ter Today to work th~ 1eround up! Op-·dept Kno wledee of creuat'd value or your Lost Old Eng. Sheep doJ: Moi-/ModeUnCJ on vuriow. uc:countw.: & pe>rtunl.ty for u~vance-m 3 t ' I~ & 5 w a a lrn: tw7-87tn lW'D.ISbcd Pool, Jat'Ulll Harlun. .. I bdTm, nll frt>m b..o<1t h ~1i1lk to 11~p111g, pauoi. Ir.: fenr yard, c:tuld OK no ~ So!'_., S36-8990 u ~ 13 1287 '103 lbtl3 Uolore:. •auna, t.ecuu!> IMO wk 714 ~.l !l:tlJ humt!. Citlltoday for fast, Reward Loved vttry ...----bookkeeping n11sian· rnent ~e Mr. 0 Neill or helpful Seeure Job for l'OU.rte<>w.inlorm1.1llon mur h. No quest1on11. ments. Work clo8c lo Mr Pierce llOWAR~ rc1op Pt'rl'on. Call for , ~7511 4t--'a1Clubl 5400 your home 1-'l gurc Chevrolet. Dove & Qwul annf OUtltH>U ONTllE BF..A,.11 Corona del Mar on C..."Ollbt _. Cl k l S A .... _ N rt De h u...., ..... ,,........., " H oo "" ('ood r.-...,4 ~ •••••••••••••• ••••••••• er s o r ccoun """·· ewpo ac __ _ ~ lid rm hOIOt' w II h wy. 11 liq.. • £).4 ax co FOUND. Female 8e11Rll', t11n ts needed lhruoul privary. SlOOO/wk park111111. xlnt fronta~jt' n ·~ •. ' !All I(~.: vie Newland & Atlanta. The SUlglt>'.s Solutmn Orange Co. AUTO MECHAHIC * Uoul:I $1200 mo '1~ g'.!W H B 96(). ...,28 Date by c..'hOICl' f ll"t WA1'tRFRONT HOM~ _ Llcen~cd Home Loun · · "' Nol Chan<'<' Robert Hlllf'1> l<'orcmuocion l<."5l :1c 1 Y PARTS PERSON CalJ631·1400 Approx 400i.q. 0 . C :!, 130 Brokerit itcrvlnJ: So. Lon 2 Blue plustic bag!> t:all. lntrovu•w7S:! ~ll Accountcm!Jli w/thorou.ib knowhid.:t• Mllnnc cng & hardw<1n• ('ozy 2 bd, nr b<·h, aor E J7th St, $140/mc> Cuhf. for 17 yrg, CUii our btwn 18th & l 9th 00 ~JS M1t.1n,Stc501 of emission control com f'tr. Apply 2431 w. Ci.t '>rd, pets/child OK. $3lo CALLME FOR -_Doyle~·ll68 n ea r et. t off I cc, Balboa Blvd. Sat May 6 Tro•tf 5450 Nu Tuwcr, Union Bank ponents & tuneup pro-llwy,N, u. •'"'71• 8th 960 2"87 L -71 .. """ ""H Rew"rd' 772 209l ·rh" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ln TheCilyofOr0tnge cedurcs on lute model ------,, .. • · . " AGOODCHOICl£0P' E/SIDL' •· .... Shr•p", ,,..,.,, • .,,... .. " f ' ,, •- 111lig. SUMMER RENTALS o/,.,s, r.bob .... by",'' w"~l:.u::1• ·--------• _M __ cW_n.,;;;g_ers Are you u1tercstcd ln a ·--•71•4•/835-4-•1•00---i <'8nl. Accuracy o JOu.,. Bookkeeper, Glr'l Friday P B JU .... '"' ...... Cunbbean Crulse't The tbu proce11i1ing ol de· 100 hni mo approx. Gen'l ln'IM 3144 eg roma tr645-1S31 111g, gen use. Fr. $8S WHEN YOU Lng hair brn/blk cJoi.:, ss· Skvward will .. _ ~a·'· tailed paper work ,a of'flce exper, typing, Tl' • •••••••••••••••• ••••• Vacatioft R .... als 4250 _.....,. '"' wearing Ii ca rf. J n 1na to tour sunny Lrop1cal ne<'ci.:11 y. ay req q r . ma o ice, A t <-.,...,.9 ~ ""' ~ u Acc'l clerk, neat & cons-t M be d ui 00 s ll ff' f WOOD.RIDGE Orange 538 ~ ~~ 0 be '1 1978 clentioos person needl'<l lo U\stall !>pecial "quip. 2 · 642·0212 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7S> Sq. rt. c 2 on Newport NEED c•~ff . . ports on cto r 1 • . to train for compulur mentor mstrumeutation -·-----PIMES APTS Palm Springs yacallon B l vd L e3se. Call IW ' Found: Blond Cocker Pleu!.~ c·all Se.i CllH acc'l& perform various an tesl vehicles Havi! IOOICICEEPER .. , Cm>do on Miasion Hills "'··•• oc12 Sp3nje} an Nwpt Jlgts Trove! 536-0534 clerical duties. Mus t ~ -~•--'-··i bl · f E W,ow you c an Jive in "'-·-•...,Club."""'"'""" _.....,....,,____ COMT"'CT f ownt"""'...,.,ra e. Parttime orM DICAL b "'1Wl~.r .....,........., • area. 646-l757 ufl 5 good w/ igures, type & A. J In QL,FJCE M t h oocJ "· dge too. Enjoy Pri·m .. lo~ata o p•o U ~-...... & ppy person r • us ave e;oc •~ <rL-... .. • NIOH -----,,._.,... have bkkplng ar acc't 01 Labo t •-bo rd te 'wimmmg, s111lmg, b1k· "'""-to~ 4300 t~~IOll· al/busJn s' J.fc or Found: Silky haired tcr · at.__ C 1 son ra onl•is per. u1 peg a sys mi. ing & volleyb31l after a ....................... ...,.,lit l 1 5 u 1350 HOMELOAHS -.pal ICM background. al Su(• Olvl!>ionolSCI &medansurance •Jay of work, as '* •IESl!l.ECTIYE* ~,~\ YS~~t; ev~~ r e· Uruon Home Loans ur· ~=~~ re~~l~d~tt~B~ ~V;~•••••7••0•7•5• _McLeodatl>W-4100 421 E.Cern to.'I, 54S-9441 member of lh<> V1lla1te • li b "" . · • range Joans for home or ...._ Anaheim --~~ialion R ti,. 1 ., .1 C.am a re a le deed exte u mler, col· nrnperty owners of $l,OOO May 30. 847·21S3o ••••••••••••••••••••••• i.·~ 111 n.·por Employer l:SOOKK EE p E R Trla 1 """"" · ui. ' ... • roommak. or coord111 led-paneled. ,...v lr1ature young woman ADDRESSING ~ ~ -Balance lor CPA. Ne,.t bedroom ap.ts. set '" ~ 645-7464. lnqwre 714/492 4739 a ft lo SlOO,OOO or more. And 1-'0UND Female blk tan wunts clllld care pos dai L.oolnng lor consc1en Auto Mechanic, eicper tn appearance, 5 yrs ex per 1 .ui.h poplar & p ine •SJIAREA llOM~• 6pm through Union Home dog 1 pupp), PO!>l> lyorbythehr.2Yrsex tiousself startertohead foreign can. m u1 nly preferred, mature, d~· land.scape -------L 0 an :i Y 0 u g e t Dol>crman 4 8mC'lt> old per m Swi1>s chtldren·l> up our addressing dept German make•. Mus t pend3ble. type accurah• FROM ~ Respfeml5+to1>hrnew lttdlntriatR...tat 4500 Hom eowner Term s . Crown Valley Mar home Xlntdriver.Refs. TyPlllg&hllngexpera haveowntool!l.642·1604 Salary open 548-117!1 1714 )552·0400 3 Br 2 Ha CdM apt ••••••••••••••••••••••• which are generally qucrite, MV 4964541 49'1-3'7~ must Sal + bonus & day!>, 67 i. 4253 afl \'or t:ulver & Barrirnt·a &13 1775 IUILD TO SUIT much bettcrtban finance dys. 495-00f7, eve:. benefits Apply Pen A. u l 0 m 0 t 1 \ e 7PM/wknds Orangetree Condo 2 Br I IJ.a pool, spa. tennis. AC. SJ75 +1s t la:.t + $1 50 r{'rry 4~·4954 Ha•ifMJ T ,._.,.. 1'Uidmg a Roommate" ProCe!i&lonal People Use 5 000-20 000 Sq rt c:omC~~~~·T L'ound small lono huir'"' Will baby!oll & housekeep, nysaver, 1660 Pl11cenlla, TRANSMISSION RF.·----p.la-nt1~A 'vh. c.u . . -'""" .,,,.. r " 'u CM BUILDER Fully ex.w.r'd Bookkeepe r thru trial ~.. ... "' m wbl dog w/blk VI(.' Sprin 11ve 111. Reference:.. ,,.. W~LEYTAYWR CO that flt your dale/Heil.S46 5137 S36-8280 .a.II makes. Stoo per wk + balance n e ede d 101 REALTORS 6+t·<a910 bud')tt Sefed Admuustrabve1'rne med mediatelY for PR & a'1 Hous...MatH ll1r Orange Tree condo. 832-4134 2 5 O O t o 7 o O o '11 rt ' Lo6t: M 1 Urcy iwht Ion~ Will house !>ll S<.•pt '71< tu e..siMss Aftatylt AAMC.:0, Capo lk b . vertislng firm. Contat1. har, wht collar. Keward! June '79 Mature fom Aggressive careeris t (714)496-1211 Berniceat63J..5001 FULLY AMORTIZED PARTLY A.MORTl%B> 831.7.,.,,, XlntrelS41-6777evt> """''ht by mt'l co oCfer ....., ...._ · AU'fOMOTIVf; • Bookkeeper, full charge. h I lllg unlimited advance-L o s t bl k (ierma n Nun;e/T erap1st a va1a ment! Bonus! Call Bill PARTS Porfo'tr,manufacturing r•ool, tennis, lake sctlini: l~pcndable Ser vice wa r e h ouse s pa cl' . Avail June 10 SJ la. Since 1971 1mmt."d occup. Mo-lo·mo bi5·9229 ---or short term lse. ZJr /sq -2 girls need Cerna le rmmt. ft.N.B. address. 642·5113 IMT'EREST OHL Y LCMJl8"CI leach 3848 lo share 3 bdrm apt. $1SS --- ·•••••••••••••••••••••• +ulil. 673-JS85 aft 5PM. · Rtfttals Want.cl 4600 ! BR duplex, stove, ref, --. ••••••••••••••••••••••• i·pt.s drps c:l06e to b ·h Male wanted till about Wanted: house to lease. ,tor~:.. b~s. $350. N~n'. June l5th. Beo~h house Min. 3 br 1to2 yrs. Must 'moiling 3dults 325 Myr· ZJrd. St. NB $22 75 wk have opt to buy. Bob repaynwnt plans in ac· cordc11tc. with .tot~ law. Shepherd, 4 m tJ. n r . ble~5. 8J3.2700Dennis &Dennis COUMTERPERSON bwnness inCM.549·3942. Katella & Harbor. Please -631 2939 Personnel Service o r Rolls Royce & BMW CX• llooadc-to SI I 00 call 968-4031 Mark ... ·ng or Buyer ~x-Irvine,~ Michelson : · r ..,, c 11 --r-· ""' penenc.-e pre err<:'U. u 100% Free to applicant per . Avail. lo travel. Glenat"'A" ,,.... e h y k WST: (;rescent shaped gold broach w/s1mulat1•d pearls 675-1544 aft 5. Reward Aggressive beauty-......,............ Newport c. ourt3 c tit> St. 494·4005 &i5-l74'1 _ 640-0776 '>p.ic1ou:. Studio, 1 , blk to Hse to s~are. Oana Pornl, Exec. -relocatmg cJes1n•i. IJch. Creal loc. St•cuntv c 0•11 Ke 1th 9 5 p M • to leuse, prfr lease opl&oo Jr for any reason we can· not arrange a loan for you there will be no cost or obli J:t1l1on -S:.'70 Util. prt 496-5LJ'1 or exchange s hoppinit ~93 7 137or4~ 2797 lor2Cemalcnol)-smokers center f/vry ntl'e ND UNION -• home or condo, c:ons11Jer 1)1.;t;AN VU, 2 Br, p.itw, to share Lagun~ Bc_ach lum. No child pct:.. C;ill . HOME iiool, bllns Adlls. $37S house. Pvt rooms & balh. my broker 751 0144 h e Wkdys <1 99 4044 · SlSO & S200. 1 995-8484 Wlmd.<>499-2621 ' weekdays on!) WANT 2 .l:Sr, 2 ba. l i.tor) ~ ~OANS ...._ __. •-h 3869 Cle311, re:.p woman love-house w /gar attached k;.J ~w,.... • -oc I h!.c pool S200 mo Nr Beach. Will pay J ••••••••••••••••••••••• y · ' year advance for t he..· ·•--¥ .. ---·n·-·······-PARIC HEWftORT f' v 962-217~ 5pm....:.... -ngbtdeal. f>41·3580 Loan Brokerage Firm Ua c helors. 1 or 2 Femw/ch1ld sks fem to &Toro 770-3031 ~drooms &Townhouses find & s hr hse/apt in ~P marned cpl w yng .-.. lc.h 848-2225 From $:»1 so CdM or NB Q&ll Laura chlld seek hse tn lrvme ·-~~~~~~~~ Spectacular spa t ot31 645-2347 ~r beach area lo Ml dur· • · ' -mg remodeling of them ret:r eatton program, Officea-tat 440 West.cliff hme. Approx '>oc1al progrlra"!.t7J><><>hl~. 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7/1 thru 10/15 Rc:fs C.:oll tcruus cou s. " ,,. as ion hn p 1:-.land. Jambort!t! & Sun THE EFFICIENT Jo or oily 642·9~2 Joaqwn llills Roud ALTERNATIVE June 15. Sc pt. IO , (7141644-1900 _ Mo. to mo. rent incl: 2+bdrms, Nwpt Uch Ll-00 BAY FRONT R ec e P l . s e r v • • area, UJ!. to $700 mo ltedec 1 Br. $S2S. 2 Br. personalized phone CO\"-furn ., SIJOO unfurn cJ~n. 2 ba, frpl<' S!.J4S. eragc, conf. rm, mail 675-3'm....!_ eves ,\gent 645-5044 serv , underground prkg Wanted to care for small & more m Newport. q1.11et house or apt. Non HAY FRONT 2br. 2b<1. Yr THE EXECUTIV E s moker. refs To ~7s be Sec bhk Call l!:\·l'lyn SUITE, 64().5470 642.a!65 631 2A82 ---OFFICE SPACE lusinns/111Yest/ •D6UXf. for lease. 2200 sq ft. '2 blk Rnmtee 1-.a:.tbluff 3 br. 2 ba o(f S.D. t'rwy on Crown ••••••••••••••••••••• •• LA'a.'>e. lncl. spac. mas ter Valley Parkway. Mission luiiness ;.u1te. din rm & dbl Vse)C>.8.11·2861 Opporlwtffy SOOS i:ara ge Auto door ----••••••••••••••••••••••• 011ener avail P ool & 2a<lj.ofcs, p\."tent. approx ---------• rt>CrealJon a reu Adult:. 8x33'. $350 /mo. 1827 only No pets. S425 WestcUll. NB631·0900 CARDS & GilFTS Prime location. iclnt 865Am1 gos Way :>.r bch, 28r, I~ upper, 1·11ts, drp:.. bltns, gar , ::.&00 mo. yrly. &t2·3443 -- :! kr. 1'2 bo lnhousc stylc. \dulls. no pets. S2r>5. 5-18-26112 Large 3 HR 2 Ha, sundeck, bllns, cpts. parking. Nr heoch. 2()1 4Jrd St. $325 mo. yrly. 49<1·6044 'Pl Ill!> 3 Br duplex. .1vail 6 11'18 & 7/1178 ~25 mo Frst. last, + df'p·s. Chldrn & pct.s ok . 'i.'l7·9180 FREE RENT! facility. Sell for less lban We've g l spring fever at asset. value. Lido Marin a Village. •CHAR--•T•E•R---54•9-8623-- Whlle it lasts we're offer---------- ing free rent on beaut. of· ---------• rice space over looking the Bay. Space from 290 EXERCISE SA.LON lo 1270 sq. ft. incl. crpts, Beach location, steady d r p s . A IC , 5 d a Y customers, ru pro.fit. janitorial serv. & all ulil CHARTER 549-8623 pd. Take advantage of ~~~~~~~~~~ our spring fever ... & free - rent offer. We'll pro· bably come to our senses by summer. Call or slop TRAVEL AGENCY FRANCHISE by any weekday bwtn The new way lo own a 8:30&5:30. travel a gency. Travel Lido M3nna Village Network. Start your own . 3475 Via Oporto Exp. not req ul red. Yeorfy tatNwpt Beach Blvd) Complete suppe>rt & Ion~ D-h Pr rt (714)675-8662 term service provided _.ac ope 'Y C a l 1 M r • C h a r I c !t :! BDRM .......... $625 250-500 sq. Ct . deluxe of-714-838·92ot2 I BDRM . $75-0 lice. W. 19th St. C.M .1--- :! BDRM .. $1200 from $150. mo. Tom, Coff~ shop, loc11ted in Peg Broms Rtlr615 1531 540-2200 prol'l bldg, S day opera ----lion. 7 .J0.3. Buy direct Wn .... hr 3891 FULL SERVICE from ownr. 586-9419 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DB..UXEOflACES ----;- MlOW AY CITY. 2 hr. or Personal telephone/ re· Family Restaurant for beach+405. Gr o und r · t t r sale. Costa Mesa. Mmt rtoor. Draped, plush cep ionis ' secr e al' cond. Modem new shop· bl l'Ol'lference .room, C?f ee ping center location. 1•pts, Refrig + tins ~ hospitality ~erv1ces. Beaut. inten or. Seats so, S2'15. (714)892·8139 ExceUe~t locat ion, near plenty or parking, other ~nh Furnished freewayS · interest. Asking $100,000. '•t. 2ltd & 3rd T.D.LOANS ARRANGED Credit Ho Prob .. m 633-3910 lkr 95% 2nd Trwt Deeds Arranged !of appraised value I ~.000, SS0,0002nd TD Lower CoslJI 1-'ai.-ter Ser vice No Prepaymen1 542-8834 Broker I 1t, 2ltd & 3rd T.D.'s LOANS AV Al LABLE Credit no problem. 752-5903 Arranged by Coast Home Loam DOYOUNEEDCA.SH? 1st, 2nd & 3rd Home owner loans arranged fast. Borrow $1000, $100.000 flexible terms, past credit no problem. Call us noobligaUon. STERLING FlN. SVCS 714/955-1610 (bk.r) Mori~, Tnast DHcb 5035 •.......••............. LOWEST trit.restlcrhs 1st T.D.'s. also 2ltd T .D. Lo.ts. 1''ajrest Terms since 1949 Sattler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 545-061 I Retired couple has money lo lend. 1st & 2nd ro·s Agenl, l-83'7-l744 Private party will pay more for your 2nd T .D. Fast srvc. 642-3573 cw Unfwftlshed 3900 IA.KER CENTER Some terms lo qualified ...................... • (714)979-2161 buver. Main St., call Mr Annomc:1•nh/ THE EXCITING I ... YFRO...,. OFFICES ecisey, 833·0.121 PW'SOltlllllt/ , ALM MESA A'1'S. A "' -----Lott & FcMtd MlNUTESTONM' cannery Village-New of· DIST.AVAii.AiLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• BCll. fi ces from 300 sq ft . Reputable firm No ex· ~........ 5100 Bacb, l&2Rlt fantastic views. lg perience n ecessar y. ••••••••••••••••••••••• patios parking & P lease conta ct Da le Pl nn1.n Do • from $220. & up 'J'anitorial included 2808 a g 8 P3rty? n l Adults.NoPeb Silver.675-9816 forget musi c Ca ll 1561 MesaDr Lafayette Ave. NB Detrtmy,easyllsteningto fN 673-1003 "'Almost Antique Shop" _ _.rock.7141551_.,.,... CS Bl ks East o ewport Costa Mesa area. lndds ••un "°°' Blvd.) A1RPORTOFFlCES fixtures & inve ntory. G.,..,. WHA YOU WANT S46-9860 l & 2 room suites, all "-L T -----services. No lease req·d. Sll,000.548-1418 IN A RELATJONSffiP. ROOMI 4000 FromS145.mo.~S. E. •DIRECTOR* f)-ee seminar. Tuesday, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bristd SU Ile 200 N B May 16, 7 : 30 P M. Mar- Room w/ kitcheneUe ,7 )u:' 0 0 ' · · Now selecting party with riolt Hotel. Barksdale sso we8 & up. 14 .... 7·7 1 · desire for Hi.5-dlgit In· Selt·Elsteem Programs. 548·9755 EXECUTIVE CIRCLE. come ~wkly to start. ~at.Ions: 751-1334 ---------One person ofc swtes in ISM Cash r eq . (sec) Ambassador Inn in Coeta pres tigious San Juan Refs. exchHd 673-9122 Lod& ~ 5300 Mesa, 2ZT1 Harbor. Cen· Plaza . Ca ll Barbara ext.lf4 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• \;~~~!,~b~~~'::: Bassett,861-c»s4. _ Inns._,.. ~i~!~ds~r.~:~~ phone & TV. Swimming OC airport, Koll Irvine O,p•rtuNfy 5015 League537·22'73,noCee. pool. J&cuza1. and Nlc. Center. 40"x40'. Open ofc ••••••••••••••••••••••• room Osily & wct-kly bay w/altaCh\.-d recopt tnGH RF.TURNS $3,000to LOS't': Boys PllPPY 1 • 3 mrto rstes starting lmm ~ n &/tK oxc ofca. Up to lflOO PI0.000 3 mQOI. to 3 yr3. Golden, Lhasa m x. I a week sq fl . Additional spc Secured by R K -Dkr. St.:. CdM. f5'73·3288 00-440 avaJI. Will rcmocl<-1 to 714·6.16·9070 0 0 G N A p p 1-: 0 , Easts1df C M , non · ~'1Sl_!700 TROPICAL PAl\A.OIS!o; REWARD. HELP. Tan amokcir , non-drinking Office for rent. o c..' Beautiful ocunfront w/blk race male Chine:tc Male nds rm. Pr1v ent. Airport on Brtstol <2500 ft) lArac pArccl of Pua. Fat. ugly, lovable. 63t·S019 54()..2218, ~2874 land on major tropical Loet. 5-1·18, Dana Pnt. •~ & lo__. it1land In one of the most Slit.er &ri•vlng. 493-7089 -.-v 4050 z offices for Jse. 16th & ~pe<.UcuJar p1ar•diaes In blr 1Z,~aft5PM •••••••••••••~•••• .. ••• ~pertor. f\ally paneled, the South Paclllc. Now 1----------- R/BlorUtehouaekeepln•. nu crpta, wetbar, uUl pd. beina mastuplanned by Loat: 5 /8 Deorfl1ld For elderl y man ~43/675-6759 FAMED International Comm .. Irv. I YT blJc F . w/beach apt. Collet atu anee suites 4 blks from architectural firm for mixed breed w/bm spot dtnt pmerred, M/F . re· ocean, Ideal for real golf counH, marinaa, over ea. e.ye. Bm/wbt Uable. 675-934'1 -talAI. llOO • ....,10• S3S-O. contto.. homtiA etc. Will chat. Name: Sutic. ISO -.. MU cheap . IJ'OUOd noor Award Call 5Sl·313S, S.-ra...... GOO New buildln1 -..rth A/C QPPC¥. Will earl')' bac.k P..8S32Alk rorJoan. LOST: RcwurcJ. Sml f'crn b urgu nd y Golden Rctnever w/gold choke chitin. Lost Jrvine arcu 517. 83'7·1675 Lo!>t ; Sml Chihuahua, Terrie r mix , goldPn longhair Vit'. w. l!lth C.M . &16 !1544 Found Hlk frm Cocker S paniel. \'1(" 11.B 847-8120 f' o u n d : W ~ 0 D 1 N G BAND. Mesa dcl M3r 3rea. Owner 1dcnt1fy 54&-8301 Found: Ye llow Parakeet. vie. Summll Way, Lag Bch. ·194·5687 l<'ound : Ferrutlc. I i-:Yl', Setter1Dalmat1 on White. black bPoL'> JIB 5S7-3.590 Found Siber Husky m.ik pup, 4-5 mo old <.:d M Can't keep 644 221it Penot1als 5350 ·····••4•••············ Spiri tuai Reoder 1815 So. El Cam.ino Real Sa.n Clemente. f\Jlly IJc. For appt. 492-7296 RELA.XlNG MA.SSA.GE &bJames-Llc Masseur OutraJI 9-9, 494-5111 MASSAGE FIGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCAUONLY '31·3111 *SANDY1S* Outcall Massage 973-0329 •SHERI LEE• Certified M asseusc House Calls· By appt. 8:11·6838 FOXY LADY OutcalMas~ M/C 731-3561 PREGNANT? Carin g, confidential coWtsel&ng & referral. Abortion, adop- tion & keepmg. APCARE 547-2563 LINDA & VICKI Outcall Mcnsage For tt. Fun of it! 6Jl·293!1 conscious individuals to ROY CARVER charge attitude & F/Chg represent a new-lo-Calif ROLLS ROYCE abilities a re truly needc.'<1 ftefined h ve·m Prot.11cal Nurse. Geriatncs prel'd biJ-8120 exl 223 BOOK.KEEPEH w1.:.h1..'S to do accounts at home, will pickup & deli ver, reUa· ble & efC1c:ent. Call 536-0007 Nan Woman want:. Apartment managing, Motel. P .8.X. work Cull or part t1me-- exper. 714-898.sOSJ Exp e r. Lady to do H oubewor k . Own transport ation Ca ll 548-0595 . HdpWanted 7100 ........................ Account Representutive, advt>rlising s11leic. Ex- pe rie nce prefe rred. Permanent position. Ex· cellent benefits. Apply 1600 Placentia, CM ACCOUHTIHG CLERIC I\ full time po:11t1on 1:. a vailable for an en d1v1d ual who likes to work wtth flRUres 3nd ha1o a high level of skill. 3CCuracy and Speed. Of C1ce expen cnce 1s essen· t1al lor this position. Work 1n pleasant en· vironment w1tb good company benefits Inch.Id· skin care & malte·up pro & IMW here to handle accounl- gram. Earn extra money ing related to propert~ by introducing this ex-Auto purt:i counter peo. management. Present cellent product. Euro-p I l'. Cos t a M e ~a • person will train & l~· pe3n faclal stroke u:ied. Newport t>cach are.i. I "On Call" tf needed. Jt Fantastic opportunity• need 3 exp'd counter peo· you enjoy working with J Control your own work· pie for both lull & p/t dynamic firm, you 'll lt>\"1· lllghours.f'orfurthur10 work Good benefit:., top th1:.. Abigail Abbot formatJon. 955·l720 P3>, full insurance. i''or Personnel Agrncy, 4500 111terv. call, Jim Walter Cam pu s Ur. N. B , Ambitious Couple Wanted ~ 646-1647 557-Gl.22 to manage a small busi ness p/time. Will not an· AUTO SALES terfere w/ your present Wa nted : Experien ced job. Mus t be willing to import car :iales person leam.Mr.Hall,642-1634. nel for top agency 1n An established firm bas Orange County. Straight opportunity for exper sell. Excellent company g a r a 8 e d 0 0 r i n • bene(lLS & demoru.trator staller /service person. plan. Apply in person on· Fringe benefits, salary ly lo Sales Mgr. No phone calls please. ('Ommensur3le w/exper Will consider tru ince w related exper. Send work history lo Classified Ad #203, Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. <.:al 9'J627 Animal Hosp. Bather, kennel. as:.'t Mon-Sat. Irvine, 644-5461 ASSEMBLER for hghung flxture ,.o. Irvine. 546-2901 A.:.sembler s rur suilmaker. Will tram. $3 st.art. Bill. 546-9311 196' H..-.,. lh4. c ......... . ""'446·9 )0) -540·94' 7 Babys1ttmn )uur hou~e. 11 • yr old 111rl. 20 25 hr week. N B an•:.i Call 673 88i I Kath) UABYSITTl-;H mJtUrl' IOOKKEEPEJt J P e rson Office. F et• P:ud. Top quality firm Bkkpng & gc n~of.­ dut1es, Profit sha & more! $867. Also cc Jobs. Michele Kuhn 540·5001 Snelling & Snelling of Newport Beach A9!ncy 4340Cumpus Drive Uur g lar alarm in - staller/service person Expcr preferred. S31an OJ.ll•n. Apply 228 Fore .. l A"l'. Luguna Beach. IUSIOY Luncbes. Apply ut ~rson LeBi arritz , 41'1 1'. Newport Bl , N . U 64.>6700 ing 2 weeks vacation l•---------al\er one year, company "'-Oman. to IJabys u I \ r old bo}, 2 d):. wk 7 30 5 non-i.moker 581 ~15 BABYSITTER ('Jrc for CAMERA PERSON To work a verticle com- m er c 1 al c amer a . f'alll.lliar w/PA!T pro cess. Exper prd"d or will train . f'l time. Co benefits Apply. P en n)'!>3ver, 1000 Placentia. CM pa id group insurance, credit uruon, elc. Apply at: ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 330W. BAY ST. COSTA MESA Between the hours or 8AM-5PM. Call lor ap· poinlment please 642-4321 ht. 277 ~ual Oppor1unity Employer Accounting SENIOR ACCOUNTING ~SEMBl.ERS SO Trainee Assemblers Needed Immediately Long & Short Term Assjgnments JSltifta Available. Must have own transp. CCIII Today 556-1520 Free. Top Pay. VacPay Victor TltllpOrary 5«'YiCH Div Walter Kidde & Co 20825. E. Bristol ste 10 Newport Beach (Comer of Bnstol & C3mpus behind Carl's Jr) Eq\lal Opportunity Employer MI Jo' loddJer, Mon-Fri. M V area 6<16-0JQI or 634·5224 BABYSITTER needed, hrs vary. my twme. re· liable, 548-8884 brr SPM Babysitter, reliable for Ol'Casional weekends, 1 child. 546-34311 Babysitter , m y home, from 5/16-6/3. Must hove references & t ransport a lion. 642-1460 Bankmg COMMERCIAL TELLER CARPENTRY Fmish carpenter. com m'I exper. Door hdwr. fascia, siding, exper nee Foreman cap acity. 493-8844 CARWASHHELP Full &part-time l8&0ver Metro Car Wash 2950 Harbor Bl. CM CASHIERS CLERK ---------- cen·1 accounting exper.1 •--------· United CaliCom1a Dank 2220cean Ave Laguna Beach 494·G546 Equal ()ppor Employer !"/lime. Good Pay Growth co. 5 Locat1on'\ We tram. Co. Benefits METRO CAR WASH 2950 Harbor Bl. CM in A/R, A/ P req'd. 10 Assembly Key by touch Lite typ TRAINEE mg. Xml working conds & benefits. Apply, Na· lt'SfMBLERS llonaJ Systems Corp. 4361 M Birch St, N.B. <Near OC & PACKERS Airport) Equal Op portunity Employer NEEDED IMMEDIATELY!! TOP PAY!!! CASHIERS rmmed. employment for ---------•I car was h cashiers. Banking Lai:una &. H .B. area:.. T eU.r, P /ti,_ 644-4460. Branch olc seeks bonda ble, p/llme teller w/ncw CASHIER accounts eicper. prel'd. 32 Hrs per wk. Sat/Sun Call Lee Porterfit:ld, U, other hrs to be ar (714) 558-1801. ranged. Exper'd. Serving ull Orange Co. 835-7313 -AC(.'OW1Ung All shifts, day, swmg & DANCE OF FUN Beaut. nude girls danc~ & rap session. Pvt m1r rored room~. lOA.M to JA M Mon-Sat. l2PM t11 8PM Sun. 625 N. F.uclid. Anah. SJ.S.~ WESTERN FEDERAi. ICerm Rima Hanfwar. SA. VINGS 2666 Harbor Bl. CM FREE SESSlON WI AD THJ.o: graveyard includes MARRIOTT HOTEL wknds. Long & short IS SEEKING term assignments. Holi· NIGHT ... UDIT CL" day &t vacation p3y. lGS Town & Country Orange. Calif. l<~ual Opp Emplyr m/f • "' Hos pitalization p l a n Exper. m accounting & avail. BANKING calculator skUJs pre!'d. EXPERIENCED Enjoy excellent com- CASHIER Telephone. Wknds. Ap· prox 16 hrs per wk. ~ J)t!r hr. &s.2-1753 ext l l or app· ly, Tile F.arl's Plumbing. 15 33 W . Lin co l n Anaheim. pany benefits. Apply MOTE DEPT . __ P,ALM & CARD i~e~n, Mon Fri CLERK CHILDCARE READINGS 3841 C-.us Dri•• Resp girl needed during Special If.I price with th1i. OOONewport <:enter or t1c"!:~~m SOUTH COAST }~'J::::~· c~~ :o~~~: ad. Has Psychic power ol Newport Beach 644-700$ an 6:30 wisdom. Whal you hear F.qual Opp Emplyr m /f Orange Co. Airport) MA TIOMAL IAMK 1-------- wtll amaze you' Sho will ---------i Equal {)ppe>r Employel' An Independent Bank CfllLDCARE ~U your Past. Present, & ---------1---------849 Sunllowcr Street. Responsible person for 9 :!~ :~~~e l°e~~ ACCOUNT AMTS MAN~~Ta~PLE ~~i~-:sa ~.ol~u~::,:::charn:: ness. Avail. for private OVERLOAD for 147 unit complex in ---------i d.ianapolis. Refs. Moo- gJ"OUJl'I . Olfers top pay, a variety Santa Ana. Hus band BAR Girl wanted, exper'd Wed, l<>-2PM. 960-2598 221 W. WhlltJer Blvd. 1 l kno Int for friendly tavern. Good La Habra 213/«l'7·9'Z72 of Interest ng as1 1n· must w ma enance. wa.ies for right airl. Civil En11neerlng ments, aerves the entire Aie30 +. Rd'nequlred. &3l·989Sor645-l960. Draftsman M/F, l yr Very attr11ctive buxom Orange County area and $700/mo + 1 Br apt. Call min exper, sub-division b r u n e l l e d es i r e ic needs experieneed. between 9&5. 54&9860 BEAUTICIAN work in Orange, LA, Sill\ li(enerou1 boyfriend over Ace a LtlfRg C._...s Attorney For Ba i I e Y s II a 1 r Bernardlno counties. 38. Box l~Q.Jo', 2.'>G So looldlnpers• REALESTATE F1111h1on11·. 964 2 1 ~0. J .P . Kapp & Auoc. Robe rticon, Revt>rly A.cco...tfRcJP~ ATTORMEY 962-4747 1_1_1_41_547_-8445 _____ _ Hills. CA 90211 ut •II lovel1 Call today Newport Bch Outstand· Beauty Stylist A#Alictant . Clerical INSURANC~ Attorney, 33, 6". l701b.'f, andletus tell1oubowto IJ\8 ()ppOr. for A1lom •y Top waaes ~u ll l be B l LLJNG CLERK dlvor. Avail for datinA become G b1a1y, well paid w/2·3 yr!' upcr. & 11 e r ntlvc-. Al'llo want P rrlme, required for Write PO Boie 1148. Accountants Overload S\,IJ!erlor academk back· Jullett~ M11nlcuri3t 11n· buay buatneaa o ffice. Carden Grove, 92G42 proleaslonal. around. We are a arowth med. 83'7·4250, 837•8779 Medl..C.re/Medl C.I, l.r 547-7631 ortcnl41d, med·slzed lDw Lake Forest. aenoral ofc e xper. tc· Young profe311lonttl photo tcm No. Main, &Ille 1018 llrm aeek lnil an utt.y . quired. ttra. 12 noon to llJ"apber, 29, ho.a received Sanla Ana w/part.nership poienUal Boat.I, oxper mast as· s\>M, s dJ)'I. Pleuecon· c:ootract to photo1rapb NotapubUcacdn1flnn le both lbe ability " de· temblec,SuperSpar. tact. Jan UlUyor at Northern U.S. Would llke 1--------·1 sire to handle lnte.resUna 89.).!J93. '40-0140 to meet ""'" lady to ac· •-=ti ...... -•I -t ...... I AccounUn1/Payablea • ca-.. ......... --------.............. ::,~~mtoc;m~o:{ To$U,400 teePaJd .. ated buslneta mat· ca.I FetPald Supervlaory dutlu ters. Replies hlld in To..i .. ceyourmena•o l1hc:..._Dept. . ly Pilot. PO 8o• l560, hlahlite auperb pot ror 1tr1ct confidco~. 8end _. belore&M • Pft'aoaable indlv wlll en- CM. $2638 caner Meter w /retped· IWUlnol to PO Boie 5559• joy varttl)' In this MWI)' ••••••••••••• ••• ••••••• S. 7504 double lnv tment w /in Lux becb .,... blk to bell. one year 125,000 down ! Krt, Inell)'. pool ., >ac find what 7ou want 1n Sc-rfous pnncipaf~ onJy • l200wk m~ DallyPllotClaal~ <.StllertS.U-14-43 Sellwtlh £ASEi lt'1 a BREEZE CJaalOed Ada 642·~ o.tc•Met-. •642-5654• _ twfo/Appt. ed corpl Call Shannon. lkverly Hill•. CalH readlntpubllr, created pas. Call Wllla, ...ua, DIODie • ~· 9021.2 phone m-2100. Aleo Fee J obs. n,tt Ptnoonel Service ol Melle }'our aboppin1 C1aaDtl,:~.~~~8 DIDnia •Dennis Penon fbmtinaton Beach, tl161 ell&Wr br Uliq tbe DaJJy uwu ...... ocl Servtce GI lrviM. 20ll2 Beac.b. AIDt CluaJfled Ads Ill llCD • Wedi t My • ...., •O tt11 C-•/c.c.r.te Bedrtc:.I ..._,_. Strvlcn ~ , ..... " ...... '"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sdloai as• childrwn my J\m'a Do»\ carpen"'r " Found•tl<>n11. retalnln& ~ &ctrtc The Price ts Riaht ! For f1oors . carpet... b~ths. Pt:r.ERS PAINTING Rt:: ROOF l''OR LESS ....__ .._ada " Garfleid llbcrll¥11 rapalra. etc walls. blo~ka. patios U c 327136 64S 6874 t~ best 111 drl vt-way seal walls. patios. w1ndow1' ~·pr d, Re~11 R11t c11 hut.alll'tl factory dire-ct . CCOUNTlNO ---6 .... 78 ~l Lie d C"••U1•1. ""'""' etl San c~ pncerorv;mantrt'· l'rt'e E.1l <.:all Ct'nt! estab~)'M Ca l1H11rold A ~ 163 9203/84(Ml40 Lo rat.al."°'',..._..., ""' ""'-"RICI""" P'"' ..... d --,, .-'"'" ~ ... ., ,..,.... G ,.,.,,. """1 BUSINESS S~RVICES ~· "n ""'"' ders Asphalt Scakoat :;1dences .,._......., W\11 ... .-.. ..., S1SlelDI " procedu a nhut s.rwke c.,.t S.-.ke ~or~na .s:ourln g & rleht-free esyma te on 1na. 751 940\. 12408 Thot.eGeys 974·08IO All PROP'~SS ION AL EPAIR • REROOI-' All •~ta · •C'ee 'I ·-•••••••••••••••••••• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• tnJi n&·s t your own laraeorsmall obi LosanSt.CM Immaculate Cleaning Co P.iin11n1. lnte r/Exte r 1y e es c;h1nale ' 'baaclal 01•at•ment1· Du-.' .......... •--·! ""'-l M&D wlll &.y yours ~~!!!7· ave money Licensed 673 03.5& a ... u .. ""' "'''"' h • 1 ,. ... •• rJVUnJ.-..... ..., 1 ............ .,. _._ For those who de&erve ·-·woraJuar ...... ,..,__, roe 1 1h.eb comPo ar cocl acct 1. cub Let our OMV expert• or mine. Repa rs • Uyou need ll&bta. ouUets .,._-;1 ~best 7 .. "........, f''rHesLS41 $930 ~: purcbutn1 help you. Call AlM £0 clealWli tool Ouar work All pbaaea concrete & or rewarini. rel>. or ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUVo.>•' Pawling Extrllntr 1-:x • inventory control; tcrpriaes Cor freti coo at bluer 1avtnp. Free ~ Catm brkwork comm. c a 11 Na i m llaul, i1 k1plo11der dump Rosemarie's Houseclean· pr'd, honest. neat. reai; ~· llbrariea catalo1ed; IUltaUon.~ esl,1·~54 Llc'd/Bonded.&42·6894 979-3927 lrk. gradina, tree wrk 1111. ft.els. reason. Own l..ic'd964·100Dave ••••••••••••••••••••••• valuablea documenta .... ~ .. -'-in ho Shampoo" at.am clean ~.-.-.__...... demolillonsetc 8311257 trans 642-1403,645-3439 F\ E"" P . . b Skyhghh brighten up tion catl ncatlMISI ex ~""'VU'I my me. · -~ .-----. M ,.~er. ainung Y rooms O v41r 2~0 an pertl 114/MS-42U Wlll pkkup tk deliver. C:O.or br1ahtenen: wbl ....................... ....................... Hancfywlan Xlnt cle aning. e "pe r.. R. Sinor. St. Uc .. ins. Try stallt.>d.' Calif. Skyl1~ht11 -=---------1 Olll968-~ cJQ 10rnln bl .. ch. Clean Cbildcue In my home. WESI'ERN FENCE CO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• dep .. rea.son. Own trans. me.s.5!)M.S24 hrs. Dana Pnt. 661 ·0151 =·~ii: P'A-n!~~~-AdvertitlnaService ~ :'~~~ ~o. ~~ Mon·Frl. s.e. A&es u . . Wood &Chawmk ~~t~~ a~ne[:1 z~'·c~~~ ss13726 Lv mess. Paint Your COltle Tile •21CJ9eves. F l yen. brochurea , ~ G\l&I' cUm pet odor. SZSwk.~ Lic~S-l5l S36-l83T ser vtce.646-5167aCt 12 DAISY FRESH Spec1a.IJW\& in r~lden· ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------~ copywrtUns. Exper. and Cpt repair. LS yra expr. CoRhodor FonNca CLEANING SERVICE t!al homes. mt. & ext. CERAMIC TILE Special· ...... re • ..,... reuoD.511-4.535 Do work myseU. ReCa .............................................. ~ Will clean your house or Please check our re· ty: Eotnes/Oooni 2S yrs ...................... CllllllitM '"9 SJl-0101. RJ.ffuffman&Sof\. FormicaCounterTopem· ....................... apt & leave ll Daisy ferences. LH' • 3.20881 e xp S ml r e pairs BTRlftJ ADl>lipa aiMnceGESe$lrvO. •••••••••••••••••••••••We Care Carpet CleaMrs Retnodel&add.ltlon.a. stAlled lo your s peclltca· ()(,--C Student. I Ton truck Fresh 675-2839 Guar . insrd. free r-at 962·1.883 ..,!CHARM•• .. SA Ca..._...._.,...,._., ................ "''-am cln or atulm""" 64.S-4&64orS48-4541.. lions. Latest colors & de· Trash. lree tnm. Ron ~~-h Ted 636-7~ ---------~ .... ~ ............. ~ ..... -~ """' ,, __ ..,.,,,.Boo_.__. sj""" Fr ..... -., ""'"3118 &42·5700.979-6489 -=r .. g New & remodel: tubs ~3'22 ' 9s7.01m try.Smalljobswe~come. AlsoupholsUry.AJI WO!k ....... ~.. """'· -· ....... .-.u•or ••••••••••••••••••••••• Profpamtme&prep ~xt showers drainboards. & Eves. 813-5125. AJvtn. guar. Truck mount unit. Pion take·ofl consulta· ..._. . CHEAPEST hauling '" Land.'icaplng Tree tnm &.inl Low ralei.. Rcfi.. entnes 873 6082 " •~-,,.._ -A Fr. est, rus. rates. tion. Residential · -~""'9 town. Fr. ests CHEAP' mmg Clean up 8 yrs SJ6..4780.536·4383 4 ... -r-r• '""*"*" ~3716 commerclal·lnduatrial ....................... 642-299Sor645·1390 exp. Free Ult. Noboru. ------ICERAMlC tal~ Neworrc ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• N j VER •" p 848· .. """or897 "°"'' YOUNG Ml\N 5 yrs e xpr mode l F'1t-c uc. Sml •SaveM ........ y• Carpenter. Free "--*-0 proect loo smiill * YuvW RJCES• Rubbish Haulln °. ......., """"" """"" · ---... Low LO reasonable rlites. On Gardening Ma111t .. 1----------1 1n wallcovenni:-Free JOblt welcome ~36-2426 Onveways•Parking lot estimates. Anysliejobs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r~-F\.imiture moving & tree LANDSCAPING ests.~76 Andy. art :'> •Repairs •Sealcoat1ng Tony,64&-9886 CABANA Pau1S7S-7l4S. '"""ge 549·2015 tnmmmg. Reas. rebable Heasonablepnces. ---------- •Lie. NB. CM SlcS "·-t od II 15 f'lne catering. all oc· DtcoratMg Clean-ups. Haul1n1. 497·87 968-8783 Earthtones Exterior WindoweleaMag Asphalt64&-<t87l. "...,.om rem .e ng, casklns.645-98511. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laodsc aping . Im . ---------• home ~lgnang & pauil· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~..;._-------• yrsmarea.,reud/comm. ed t r c .. ~ Dig · It Lands c ape . ing Make your home Windows r leaned. re '"tr/ ext u -1-..... ·-un· ·--tic Slip Coven. Drapenes. m I a e s e v I In... • ••••••••••••••••••••• -.......MM... ... auoc~ • ""-bed ~..... ho'-Le oo 9907 • Reason pnces Free est look like a model home ason3ble. bus1nesse:.. _, ..... ..,. usual wor k welcome. •••-•••••••••••••••••• s.,...,..,.., up ..., ry 1--· -------Wanl a R£AL.L Y CLEAN "-II an"'Jme "'•"7070 N B h ., ... 709 -••••••••••••••••••••• cush1·ons •· pillows ....._ ,. ....,.. wprt r -· 1 homes&ap\S &fl 4461 PalumboConsL 962-8314 tic ceilings le walls .. · HOUSE! Call G111gham My . home. anytime. Nr. textured. Rsnbl rates. Custom fabncs. free est. G ,..,. S..-.kff Gari. Fr~ est 645-5123 Ums • J ;a.,oiw' Fairview &r Baker. C.M. Carpentry le Masonry. 5e-70LS Jerry's Int. Decorators ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••. Res1denl1al tavg SW-30>. Commerr 1al. Rental). 63l·«Zl7.64H032 919-9134. ~2640 Fences. cvra. decks. welcome, 962·-lBS HANDYMAN. Homes & uHouseclearung done by 1 . b Neal patches & textures OuJd ~.all hours. cou-~~. ~l!·-~nJcohnrete. U you're not readlnc the Claaalfied Ads are the apts. Consc ientious reliable couple. Rers Bnckwork. Smal JO s . At&EST 193-1 439 pie with refs Our home r1"""...,.. _.,_ little adl ln Clasalfied, answer to a successful Crafuman. Cal\645·0002 S4Q..l'193 ~~~~e~e:'a & 1.----·------•Have you read today's in COM . Baby-sit. all SELL kite ltem.s with a you're missing a lot of prage or yard sale! It's HANDYMAN: Carpentry, I clean 2br apl'J or condos•---------Trade your old stuff for (..1~ilied ~ds! If not. qes lhru summer For Daily PUotClaultied Ad. newsy Information as a better way to teU more electncal, plumbing & for $20 max. Refs. Call Have something to sell? new goodies with a YoU re mw1ng ihe besl tnfoall759-1S74 6C2 '878. weUuaome creat buys._ people! firs. 847·27S'1. SSH504 Tami.S36--0773 Clasalned ads do al well. Classified ad. 642-5678 bargauu ln town! tw,W..W HllpW..t.d 7100 tWpW..t.cl 7100 HtlpW..t.d 7100 HelpW•ted 7100 tfflpW.te-ct 7100 HeepWmNd 7100 twpW..ted 71 ....,W..e.d 7100 ...................... ................................................................................................................................................................ ··············•••······ --------mm4 COOKS Dellvery man, early FOOOSHVlCE Housekee-per. live an lnsuran<·e serretary. OencaJ BreakfaallFry. "'-ood mor ning, L.A. Times Electroolcs Pit days. apply Pup N IRL WANTED fo r Child <'are & hs hld Comm & pers. Imes. e"· MACHINIST Exper'd ln mill, lat.be & chucker. Must read pnnls & know s etupt>. Call Dave. 540-6426 ATTBn'ION! Id C ditiort' d route, C.M .. Htg Bch. JR. IUYER Taco. Harbor/W1lsoo. general deaol.llg & lite duties. 2 wks oH ea mo per. xlnl working cond. SpKWlltly b:e,-:S.Ph" .. ~:e~t Must have dependable Plac-e&expediteorders C.M.J..Spm.646-5841 s anding. call afl 6, f:ves : 551·0317, day ; CostaMesa.642--6500 RecnHillCJ Oflk. 430 Holiday loo, Lag car. Good pay. 54644111 for electronic com po· Full-Time lite work. S2851_63_1_-..-wa_______ 833-8830 x3Ul. J1t111tona~Work t.1-JllM...... Hllls nenta. Min exper. 6 mo's per hr. S-4 :30. Apply. GU "'nDS Housekeeper wanted. Cew Prr& 1-'IT ~y-Dt1-"'MW731p1r inelectronlcslndustry. l821 E De Rd SA A•k . ~ hourstday for e lderly 546-l330 .,._.. -Coal&ajlmPenatlS ._.,,., . ...,... · Yr • " F/time J>OSltions avail. wornan &son.Musthave Coa• nlaece Permanent part-time Job E/M ASSEMILERS for Judy Above avg wages. Paid . car.,,.~ •cc .. _ ~Cftlt()pr . Exper d . busy N.h . law f11 m . Call Debb1t>. 64().01.30 Appl) in person, J olly delivertno early morning ' __ .. ,_ •· old rl f ... ...,........,_ Roger. Irvine, 1727 E. LA Tim;; to homes in pe""'~ \i e ~g _o Fullumeemployeework· wkly. UnifO'l'm & eqwp KEU. Y S&YICES lll-0542 Dyer Rd. bet uam & aft Irvine/NB areas. Must • Wl ng wire mg on small boats in fum. Paid vacs. transp & Housewife opPortunlty 3p harnessing. Mual know Costa M Contact T d pbooe req'd Interview· Want an office career'! m. berel.iable&bavedepen· colo~ code, re add Spnnge:S-· 642.0846. a ang ,920S. MainSt,SAon Part time. must type Cook.a wanted Gn nder dable transportation. bl11eP,11h.nt.s. speak fl rea 78SW. l7t.hSt. lff. C M May 11th. 1978. Call Wtll do some trauung AJJ ofCace & mduatnal ~t 1400 P•c 'cat Hw~, Salary S3SOmo. S46-003S Engl.isl 547·8507. Call aft2: 642-0212 slrlJla needed lnt~t· NB .&...Ju tn --0 k Gn...t .. CLERK Fu t ing, jempor&r) asaign nn-v pe,,,.,,. Oebvery man. S dys1w . ~., rn1ture sore. exper men• waitlng tor you. 5'/br L.~ Times. small home Must be accur. lyplst (SO saleslady wanted. P rr Wortc when you ,._0 t <AunselLors. ~ our ad delivery route. 4am~m. wpm), like dlvers1fie<i Accent Interiors. 333 Paid vae8 You don't underbousecounaellors. $275/rno. ,,,_."'-.,, wori, have pleasant Marine Ave , B .I. pay. we pay you. ~ 673-2:515/.....-1 .. ...,. . telephone manner. Ma.n _673-__ 2860_. _____ _ olc ex per. 2 yrs. GAL FRIDAY OrC..Ow Counterhelp Corsandwicb DBffALASSIST F.Qua1 Oppor. Employer Hair~ Progressive w /cltent.ele to work in contemporary salon in Laguna Beach. Guaranteed 70'7,. Call 494.9729 Wed. Thurs or Sat for intervw. shop. Ideal for mother OrthochnldeF/f&P/T oHers good pay & Type, file. ans phone. lrmdlOfflu w1c._" .. -n•"'sc ....... '. "·k RDA pref 'd, Ca 11 benefits. oppor. for ad· Orderdesk. Errands. •---------~·-L 13~144 1 ......,., m "'"" "" Call957 1292 Handyman, painlln~. .-.-... --ror Marvin. 646-3820 -=642-=-·51197::.;.__·______ vancement, congerual at· -----·--·--clean-up. small jobs, etc. Do I mospbere. G ... no~ER 645-5126 O'I' 637 ·589S COUNra HIELr Dental Asst. you re ate u you qualify tor any or ""' '"" CLBKTYPIST P/Ume &r F!tln>e. days. well with people? Full these openings. call for 1.day week only. Shop· Hardware Sales. Apply a.n Pttlme. Sharp •·people Apph . Orange Julius. mout~ reconstrucll<?n interview TODAY pang center & tennis p <' r s 0 n . C r 0 w n ........,... .• to work p/Ume betwn 10· 12 711 E . practice needs exper d DECC club. in Huntington Sch. Hardware 3107 E Coa!il ..-~ · Balbo u• Balbo. team member. Please 53&8832 . INDUSTRIAL/SALIS U you req\11 re •No Travel •ProC1l Sharing -company Bl:nehts • Personal1ied Traanlng Program •High Eamlll.gs •&SIA! Repeat Sales We reqUire you CALL COLLECT BOB BELDING <714 I 291-8796 JANITOllS/C-.a. Apply in persoo. ll31 Back Bay Dr .. NB K~,-cltOpr-Maid. hve m. lovely N 8 r-home wlpnvate room. !I The Jolly Roger lnc \s days. wknds off Eng taJung appllcations Cora speaking preferred lead data entry operater. Housekeeping. coolcing. Mtrumum of 1 yr exper n~ own trans. Non· on I.he LBM 3741or3742 is &mkr ti44-058S required. Permanent full -------- lJme day shift. Pay will Ma1ds . top wages paid. be based on experience Apply · The Inn at level. Apply in person Laguna, 211 No. Coast 8AM·5PM. Mon-Fri at Hwy .. Laguna Beach. 17042Gillette Ave. Irvine ted ""·ll . --Matdwan , .... t1meor totdlR Helper pt lime, SeacllfC Mot.el. Days. Call 548·7418 1661 So. Coasl Hwy. Lag Ask. for Maur1t"e Bch. 494-4892 ------~~- Legal Ofc S7800 -------· s.cnt.y Trailtee Maal Department in exec. olc. XJol lYPUJ& a uo, a phone 631.2490 for con· lrvlne ~731 _1_1w...:yc..._C_D_M_. ___ _ ~kills (65 wpm,> 25 Counter Help. part time. fidentiaJinlervw. ---------~EHEIAL HELPER ~i.> <J~x~ needed for equip. renta1 1 ---------•·-------• ASSEMILY STAT£CHl:MtcAL co benefit.a Contact J a.o stre lOAM·3PMtrues· DfHTALASSIST. Escrow ~n Manuf. co seeking Need person to learn MFG.CO. Hess. (7l4)i:n.aJ. Sat United Rent AU, ~f!\~J':hapCfe'ori!!~ &Q'OWS.C,..._.H trainees ror day shift to sh1ppmg & rec. Also.--------- State Mutual Savings Costa Mesa 64.5-0760 .,,...venta veorc in Hunt. assemble electronic some maintenance & •""JJll _ ....... NB .,.~ Weareint.heprocessora switches. Xlnt op· cleanup. Printing plant. lnd"'1riaJ ....., a""" ... ur. Counter girl wanted. ex· Be h . XI n t sa l ary . large expansion pro· au1r.11r ....... JOIS Professional 1nd1v ClHJCfDRJYB w/llte skills will lovt' Vanous mail depl duties • busy ,pot w /prestiglous to Include post offare ore Call Amy. 848·1288. plrkupg Ci errands. Must Demus & Dennis Person have valid Cahf. drivers nel Service of Huntington lie & good driving re- .Beach. L6168 Beach cord. Apply. National Systems Corp, 4361 Birch '""'ual Oppor EmpJoyer -• lull t ' ....., ......... ~. portunities. Attractive S3lostart. S4(H!()27 iwll:A" ~ per vu•Y. 1me sum· .,..........., gr am and have Im· co. benefits Including 10 Cocld.aW.Mnn mer emp l oyment.---------• mediate need for 5 paid hohdaya. profit Help wanted Kentuc ky ,...__.HMd/WOMen Goodenoug h Natural Dental Aas\atant-parl· escrow officers and 5 sharing. paid med/den· Fried Cb.tcken. day shift _..,."' ScJ.ool Food. 105 Main St, lime, 2 dys wk, exper escrow secret.anes. Will tal msur. Apply ln person Must be 18. ms S . Coast & MtltT~ E&m I.IP to SJOO per wk. Balboa Pier. 673-2345. preCnoSat. CM ss7-01oo hire an escrow officer & lo Hwy, Laguna Beach Low twUOCl. Placement r usa•tU?S ~--·~• ..,.,1 .. ,..., IMTI DirlalfR--'· secretary team or Most.w-<--~ ~ ..-_,,,_ '" ··~ D•'J• Y "" -r:· ....aacement to0 ether in an _,.._...... HOSTES.5. mature. over PAa •GUS C k ii .l E ... """"tL ~•_._ Appo,ntment and in· :;'rrice . L7.cations 1640 MonroviaAve JO. restaurant exper, !> "" A>C ta wdaa reFss s\ MCU iftCJ'--"' suraoce expr. X-Ray throughout Orange Co Co5tsMesa.Ca92627 days. contact 540-3840 GIH.LAIOllBS perience . r 11 a Full Ume position open license. Seal Beach are available. Advanced Equal Opp The Riviera Re5tauranl. SOlDEREltS 01tchts o nly . Apply a& a video display (213)431·29'29 Emplyrm/f/h 3333 S. Bristol, Costa INSPECTORS Thurs .. 9 ll.AM Ask for tenninaJ operator for a e scrow training pro · the manager 3300 W. Basic /Four mini · Dental Asst. recept .. grams for escrow or General0fflce-lotsofde·1-M_es_.a_. _______ Day-Week-Month or Pac.CoastHwy,NB computer . Some ex· cha.irslde asst. Send re-ricers aod training for lail.MusthavegoodtYP· HOST/HOSTESS looger.it'syourdecision. periencelsdeslrabte. but sume to Classlried Ad escrow secretaries to ing skills, be l?OOd EnthusiasUc person to Isl & 2nd shifts avail. Companion. live-in. Lite will train individual with #185, Dally Pilot. P.O. become future escrow of· w/numbt'rs & well or· work as Hoel/Hostess in Paid vacations . You hskp'g.~dysweek.okler demoostrat.edlypinaac Box LS60, Costa Mesa, ficers.Expr'dapplicants ganized . If you lake of N . n-t don'tpay.wepayyou' '4'00Win prefd. Ocnfront and ,...... w.. k CallC .......,..., only. Xlnl medical and responsibility you'll love one ewPOrt 5 owes CALLOR hm Ask for Kathy, curacy s.....,.... or · ..._, dental beoe(its. Please h 11 restaurants. Apply an COMEINTODAY ! in pleasant envirooment 8 p pl A l is job. Please ca persoo, Velvet Turtle. 59 bl~1441· with good company DIHTAl.ASSIST. contad · eo es or · ~forappt. Fas'"·oo •~•-..... N"'wport IEL[~ 0 bod ' b Id Hall at Transamerica Tl· ----....;...'-----w ..-uuou "' Companion/helper. beneflta includ ing 2 rt ont c c rs e . Ue J ............ ce Co if you ---------1 Center ~ed lady to care for weeks vac•Uoa after ooe F /Ume. K.B. 962-2'05. are tn"te""~. 547-9571 GeoeraJ OfClce --------- seau-lnvalid widow. Live year. company paid Dental Aul C h rsd , TRAIMH ID oomfortab&e Cdll bch group loaurance. credit f/time. Good benefits.-,--------Variety of duties. Req's home 3dayaperweetat unioo.etc.Apl)lyat H .B . Call 893·5032, Ex.ecSed/eePal~$10,800 typing 50+ wpm. $100. 955-1313 ORANGE COAST 84&-3Si60 number aptitude helpful. HCJTEL rAHTlY wonas COOi( D ... •LY pt• ,OT · For bright tndJv w 1mktg COMPAHIOM "" .,. Dltihle~t ~-to aaatst VP or Apply, Natk>nal Systems MARRt01THOTB. Woman. 5 days a week. 330W BaySL,CM Exper'd only. Benefits . quality co. Call Candace ~~~rt~E~~~ ls seeking reliable people bve in. k>vel.y oceanfront between the hours of RB. 1183-5032. 846-3MO 848-12.88. Also Fee Jobs. 0p-··-'"y Employer •~ work in· our kitchens home. Newport Beach. 8:00AM-5:00PM Dennis II Dennia Person· ,..,........ "" LL bouset-""""ficook· Call for DESK Cler k , Nigh t nelServ\ceofHunUngton E'ljoy excellent com· ............. A..nnh. --• le pany benefit.a. Apply: tna Prefer ooo-amoker. ""'...,...t.....,... P ase Aud.it«, Telepbooe Oprs, Beach. 18168 Beach. ---------1 9pm·ooon Personnel SER VICES 1401 Dove Street Ste 340 Newport Bch 833-1441 IMSURAHCE Excellent oppor for girl who can take over penona.I Imes for H.B. agency. Start $1000. Rapid Advancement. Legal Stt'y, busy N.8 . St. N.8. lNear OC law offc seeking sec'y Alrporll Equal Op· who desires respons1btb· portunity Employer. ty. DutJes 1.nd Mag Cardi•-------· II operatJon & handhog ------- clients. Xlnl skills a MAIMTBfANCE must. 644-9190 MECHAMIC , ~ Pd Dlagnotle & repair pro-.....,gaJ to S8SO Fee duclaon equl p such as SECaET ARY lllME punch press. bndgeJ>()rt Prominent atty's ore mill. drill press . Will seeks poised tnd1v Call start & maintain a pre· Kay. 833-2700. Al<>o r-·ee venuvc ma ml. program. Jobs. Denrus & Denn111 l\Jso. ~en'I maint duties Personnel Service of s Yrs exper. lf'Vllle. 2082 Michelson. We offer -<Intro. benef1ti. UTE Manufactunng As· &compet1tivewages. sembly, S3 hr starting. Mashr Spedafties Day atuft. 7:30-4pm, sw· 1640 Monrovia Avt> mg shift, 4pm-12·30am Cost.a Mesa, Ca 92627 f /tame . Call Bruce Equa&()pp Waclrtd,&t.2·5.2S4 Empl.yr m/f/h Lot AHHclmRt Ma.1tre'd . private country Mmt be 18. f\111 & Part· clu b. For appt call tJme. Call 848-221.2 ._644-_5404 ______ _ •MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Mope d :., 3-lJ .30. Xlnt salary & Nwpt Bch location, 12131 benefits. ContaC!-Dir. or 74~7193 btwn 1~ Mon· Nursing, Park Lido Conv Fn Hoep. ~ F1agship Rd, 1-------- N.B 642-8044. Manager Trainees 67s.6161 6~=~)~21. ext 27y7 full fl p/L Sao ClemeoLe EXEC r-"IET ARY GENERAL 900 Newport Cent.er Dr .....,..... lnn.125 DplaDdlan, San ~ Newport Beach C 11 at at._ Em yer Clemente. Adm.in/Asslslant F.qual ()ppor Employer MACHINIST Dl1'• ..... a..1& in Laguna ror president LABORERS PrecwonMachlning 9112--YHT. UTOTEM Foad Stores R di •-s •-DONUI' SHOP. p /time & of Real Estate Co. Must Insurance Mactune precasaoo parts Hapti Y grow.ug • ........_&.A... Opr f /time. All alln &r eve be expr'd with 9•-ng W~ently Needed!'' Cou llor seeks reap indiv to pc>1Jt _... -· J w u v House n.se s ror blueprints. sltekhes l •. d" b The Jolly Roger IJ>c. Is abift.I avail .. omaa afe bookkeeping & educa· Married cpl only. No MEDIC •L & verbal iostr uclions. !!_.~ ~!.'?.!,,_188c,2!.!e· =• ..... 1caUooafoca 2S or over . Apply n tlonal background. StockClerks h 'id II · "" ·UQ>-............. ~ ta.,,...•-to ,_,,.. Di-My Doauta Sal Shi.....i-g & Reeelvlng c I re n • v e . In CLAIMS EXAMINER Operate lathes. milhng & answer phones Xlot en .. ., opera r. ,,........... -·· • aryopen. ......., Supervise 6 teenage mactunes, surface gnn· benefita & advancement Minimum of 1 yr exper. l&St Newport Blvd, CM Gm iilt• Ir Assoc. Mu.at have phone & relia· girls. Sal +exp. ~47~ den & conventional in· op.,.y on the IBM 3741or374.2 ls * 0 • ...-.... 494-9421 ble t.ranspl · Long.~ sHbool.art u-·-~te·-... ----'ed. Min I yw-exper. s pect Ion equip. Be ~ ......,"'_.. Permanent Cull "' .. _.. term 881 gnmen..... · ~ ......... ~ 1111..1/P "'--..u) b · Cool.act Jan Heas ·~-·~ Good d •-rw 1•-..... , ramlhar w / luepr1nt mt383 time day shift Pay wUI Mature, over 18. F /C book.keeper tbru P & ay • vacation pay. Maltue. TopSS.Carnec. symbols & callouts in· •··-• be based on experience drivina record. Deliver L. Over 40. Know payroll Hosp\talliat\on plan 642-1403 645-343> ,...__... sal range. Xlnl co. I d . I I !:~~:.aA's level. Apply 1n person grapblc aupplles In taxes. Salary open. Send avail. HOUSECLEANING. Full ~Ls. 37 Hr work wk. ~~r1::c~';.e :=:~~I .,.._,.10ppEmpl II IA)l.5p j1·, lloa·Fri at Oraaae Co. Full time. ~to Dona. Acct'g New attractive oCc. malung. 5 Yrsexper . .....-yr m 1'7042GilletteAve,lrvtne Med /den ta l p lan . <Xfice 2810 8 Avoo St. or p /Ume, own lrans. Coogemal associates. Weotferlllntco.benefits C1 .... Mwt DataProcealn& =~~a:-Call _N_.B_._9286:_· _3_____ ~"{ary· 64.2·7~ or &O.E.m/f. &compet.itivewages. Elcpar'd oal1· Good pey COMPUTR 1 Female. P /t Uam-2pm Mosfw~ Are Seeking Career Mtnded People For· MANAGER TIAIMEES Uaveopenln gs for f/time & p/lime clerks oo 2nd & 3rd stufts. IC mterested. contact our neares t market or go to ~421.ampson G. Grv Monlhru f'r19am.5pm for lnforma lion phone (1141 ~ "4840 Equal Oppor Employer as beollJta. APPIY, Jolty _ ..... Oil Drtver, parl time or M-F. Stu Burgen, 899 3141 c:r,; Drf•e Housecleaners, Tues-Fri, Ca 11 Jud Y HI er s. l640Moorovia Ave Rapr,400S COutHwy, _._, floriallbop. ,_ .. St C ... 8·3PM. Call Janice's Regional Manager or CoeLaMesa.Ca92627 t.acuna Beach Syatem311od 1Slnstalla-586-1301 w ....... • ... eta. 546-741 RaggedyAnn's.&45-1800 Supervisor for appt. EquaJOpp ufacturtog Uoo. oeeda a 2nd s blll Female penak>ner compa· <Acron From 558-1.246. Emplyr ml( /h Small pa111l manufact1u. Cook·Broile:rExp. operator, lmowledce of Drtver, aailboat part.a, It nLon, Cor handicapped OrangeCo.Alrport) Housecleaning 51SN.CabrtlloParkDr 111g romPMOY or S. Ci1t Cleancut. eaersetic, o. C. L . need ed . H rs 1t.ocltroo111 trainee. Sol man. It hllewk & cookfna. F.qual Oppor Employer lmmed. operung. ex per· ~ 120, Santa An• Macbtne SboJ>-Mech'I As· Plau needs person to fltlmeNBloc. ~·1Nt 7PM-aAM. lodutrlu. 1932 E . carneceuary 673-6866 or will train. full & Ptr. sembly. Lead E.xper'd work ln our production SANTIAGO IA.MIC Pomona S&., SA. Edinler ' Own trans. ~9~. TIIE UMCOLH MATIOMAI. only. Advancement op-dept. Foritllft exper de· COOK mE. lslSt.,'l'usUD exit.off SS. FINANCE Ge.10fcW...._. SUNSHINE GIRLS Ufet.-•re• Co por.SSl-4384 sired. Gd benefits & Eqs'd ID l.u&ltutmal -,...,... £ 0 .,. R ld'I C .1 ~t · g exper. u.--..i.--workln& oond. Will train COOlr.IDI All or P M --. ·"'· LarJe e• I omm Mf Co 1.184 ~· p _ ... , .. _ ~al F1••• .. 1 -,,-5 Builders/Developer re· ey g. ·• H47B AUCI AwlY Ml Bebr roces~ IMIUW ._.. DBIVBY _,,_ Clndl Id ltobead P!acentiaAve.C.M. UINllllSJS Corp,t603W.Alton.San· C o o•. enter , 46 d d bl 25Ynoroklel'.Know\he v WI UveUl.$100per weeklor1---------WINlfll t1&Ana P'latabl p Rd, N .B. Mature, apeo a e ~ dUft. Net 1180 a div. Stronl con· 0.1S...Wortl 3chlldreti. Pvtrm Must 60mM peraon to malte cl•· week or more. Orange t.adltodevelopC>Ommit· Start1n.a $.1 ~er h.r . Ad· havecar.67S-601'9£va Insurance person Machine Tool Builder AT URE WOMAN llverin, handle office OJat VtUow Cab !7300 menta forprojectloaM& vancement aaaund for w/aeneral ln.~ur•M>e ex-need 8 11 enera1 p /t1me to welcome c..11.lapw-.t IUPl>ti•A aq"~nt & Mt.Herrmann, Fountain equitycaptial.Ttackre· cooaclentloua in -Houaekeeper. p /tlme. perteoceneeded.S&Mtat mztchlnlsh ror wade n•wcorMra Is ~ontacl '1 Bed Coow. Hoap. t.U• care of 1ea'I otc Velky. (No. ot Slater cord&reta a must. Write dlv\duaJa. Ool1 putlea ntt1ble brt. ?OO smoker 11501month and up. varlet.yofclosetolerance metthanc.s. Flexlble hn . ~ needt: heavy li~ • batwn N ewbope 4 Vaco l>e~~n, Inc. deai.rtnl l/Ucne employ· toustinaenthouMhold Roy14arcom.Jr. workincleansbop.Short Nffd car, Ute ~ping. ---------1 =:r:.~~~%.~';; ~ldl ~.~ • L•swta men t need appl y . ~r·~~r::~p;.~rt IJ\lunmceAaency runa on engine lathes • .._M?.:.....;..·_~_. ___ ...-__ COOi ly. J ack 0 &aub Co. _SS1_·2'13_1_. -----•-'~....:....'----------·--l1.14•)•_..,_ .• :m:s_. __ , vartlcle 6 horizon tal ecbaoJai. So. Or. Cty ~ ~ Sal:"'~i Attn: btber Rosen. m Drt¥'tl', aw 1 Tractor ft P'llbin1 tackle nles & Olnpam Olrl Houteclng H-..... u...-mm.. ranch. uperlenced ln THE Baker St. Cotta 11 ... 40• eno., _.-pert~ Ml'Vlce work. Newport aervice ocb women Prt. For lovelY small r~re lnfuran~ wetdln1. aa• & dteael Jc:oed.oL• y'Pl~oW~. 203, _m_•_>_7_$1_.zs_10____ ~ .. btkl pocta. At 1.att Be.cb. Oood lmowled1• top f. car nee. 66·5123 rnent home In Covlna. Le• Insurance A1ency Apply At cngtMs. Excellent frinac u ·-l "' wt\11 rtference.e 1c at Pactnc Cout la M••· ui. boulcwork, no cook· tw open.Ins In FounLaln Paul Dosier benefits. Salary open. llariH An. Balboa OIUVllYPllSOM f::i drhlOI r ecord. lcantlahlnJ. P!uarea.tOD. Stop!! Take USM to relu tn1. Elderly lady prd'd Valley Ofc for cus\Of'Der Attocliti .. IK. 714/4$3.l.571 <W send na ...;•;.;;•';;"';;......';....tTM120. ______ I Part·Tlso•. R e1ular •&tilt.ln·mt meebaole•I ability r•· and •ho9 al home. tr• (TI4)55'7·0734. 1erv(ce po1llloa E•· I Ul'M lO: .a7I on.,. work, _plAau t coodl· qutred. Penmnant, toe aimJ)M with Dally Pilot pettence helpful. Paid 3050Redb.1U Ave Hwy . s an J u• 0 Wblllber JOU.,. bQJtq tlona. Cbace of advan. Oryclaaura· P fll m e pay for filht man. send ClalaUled Ada. And If Houuheper /II ve in vacatlocl fl sick leave + eott71u4,M5ta1:.792152JS07• Caputraoo, 92875 :e:, 01 ... ln.d fd, c:emml. AlJply In panon aarbr 6 count« help. ,_.mt to: Box 174., % )'OU bava .omet.bing to Family or 4 de.Ires compaoy benefit•. .. ~ wm "'J'OU.r coe.t Offt~Equipmtnl. A.llllt1. V•'• DrJ~lean· Dally Pilot. P .O. Boa tell call a friendly matu.R. exp'd person Salary commen1uratc Medt bacltofc.pedJatJics. mi uactoU.riO&PtO-2121 Harbor Blvd. Colta tu. •u £. Cat Hwy, l.MO, <Mc.a Ilea.a. Ca. Clwlfled Ad·Vlter at Rert.•lll be cheeked. No w/~=rience. Call L&n· f.QualOppor £mplayer some ex~r. Mon thJ'U ... calJ Todarl ~ ...... C.Ut. CdM • -te!8'78 1mk I pref'd. '44-4118 da 1tl --------l"'I. P'ntn Valley. 54f.3W ,, .. """"'. ···········-·· ..... ~ ' . . .. ) ,. , _ -. • • Ai ~'!.~ ..... ?~~O~?~-.?!.O! ~~ ..... ?~~ Wtdnetdly,May 10,1078 • _ ~All.VPn.OT D7 !!~~~ ..... ~.•oc ~'!!"!-49--... ,·' .... oc~L~~ ..... ?!!C! ~:"aeed ~~t!!. s.n.Sta.AtteoclPJUme. ~~':! ..... ?!~ ~!.~~ ......... ~~ .;; ..• -~-..... ~!!! W ' ,....._ ... WDln PIXA.mwwS... P l ...,.N»&O!Uln MMll EQ. :typist.Sa1117 Ba.,.r'd, lite mecb'l Tow 'huclr Drt""' ft• DmOPEANANTIQUES. )l:aat RU water bed, es· -l9C ap. • ..s olc an-...e _ .. , .. a..=.tt. 6rm. a ;:::r n-Mt-41l3 bowledre. AJ>pq 2llO W4 ~ PQ. App~. Houletootmall. peaelvo coach, many .._,..1m111....,_.1.n-..... , ..... _.., Qllln4. le-e4va.a. SALES·• at ar e opea.. • NewportBl.C.K. t.A:W'hwi.ns. lOOOinioe llUSI'SELL.ll$1-3B otber tlema. Good buys. dQd. ...w, hlal.ory LO J pm ... m, p/Ume. c:cmd to 1qa1 aee"y. aaies1)erl0Dfortulll&p/t • A'9.N81GUSZ I 4 S , Z 5 2 D a l'Cewpurt I• Dr. Prefer 9Qrl'. bat will Oll1 ~Jlira&el'M4o.ao71 pnelt~ Xlnt wort.int SECRET' .a.11y Sew In i )( a c b hu Orieatal IUI ulo. l~ . SlGN8118) lra111. Call for •Pill· --------· conc11. LAMPS a us. lltA Operalort. ProdllCtion TRAVB. dlecounl tJina K!l1 uu.. Frleldairerefria,toptnr. _______ _.. 1.1s.12a. E.O.E. ~OMST pboaalG2'1'19. 'JbeJoUy Roger, Inc baa aailmaldor: P.W.: exper Expert. cleanln1 • re. wshr/gu dr)'r, d.ln rm MeclicalAAtrcraDtts»t. Tbo Greater Irvine an openlne lor an ex-pref'd; cm train. BUI. AG&IT p&irL UHd ruaa accept, aet.etc.MS-2'758 back oflc.:_iS•lar)' nXOpe,..._. a.dtlUDliooballmaaed. &AL&Ci-MJF. we have a per'd sec'y to report to 5tH.\U 4 years minlmum up. .tastracletnaorbouibl UkJ d1neUe etlllSO ~:::.O"'U tram. m:r·: ':v:.°! ~!°; ::nl~r rec~ ::=m:11~ba~ ~~~~ = Sewtot, lnd111triaJ,ooex· ~=i&a· ~ Sbab~~ KJ!a':: wata-~ $100: -----------.. wknds. Call 140-1110 101'? a;;:r:erlt 1tronc musical back· l>ivisioo. Outstandio& sh per r eq'd. Hot air Maln,6.A.':tl400 m.a9~. lldc:el belwn8-4:30 padu&p Pklaaecallllr srouocUcmastbeableto &typing skills arer eq'd balloons.&t2-3:WS TIAY&AGIH? ~dining set oik & ,.._,Ofc $700 PBX 0 N t Bymoais.51-.im read music. Ple.asant for this posltlon. XJol Newport/ln'ine. Mln 3 .... men 1010 alaacoftedseDdtabtes Errective ~tor W pr ..... 0 0 _!!.e. working coocl1, liberal working coods & benefit SWltplag Clerk yrsexper.Call7S4-J.5SS ._._ ................. Jllnl.8'2-~ • for patient eon\.art poe oman ovr ._. _,.,_ve Receptionist wanted, cocnpaoybenefits. pkg which locludea Callt57-129Z wt.-.b'l prac. foll Ka¥ & fill orden by pbo~e. perm J1Q11Woa w/f\iture COASrMUSlC various group lnsurao~ TWOJ>9Sl!IONSOPEN, FRGHT DAMAGED Baaset& Bedroom eel. am.2700. Dennis• [)ea. Service oriub.. W1U advancement potential. 646-0271 benefits&profLlaharing. Sblpplng Is .receiver !orpeoplem needof&up· llOTPOINT SALE. 3308 compl. Price4 to tell. ma Ptt9onnel Seniee m train. Start $.l br. Sam· Salary eomrnem wJbck. A.ppty ln person. Wpm supen>isor. Duipatcb 6 plemental Income, tbru W. Warner nr Harbor, pp 91M034 or 5:§?.0W lrvtne 2U12Mlcbehon lpm. 40 Hr wk lnclud all om.m-J.l80. Moo-Fri. 110t2 Gfiletle scbeduhng delivery part time work. CalUor SantaAna.9'79-29'll aftG ' · S at/Sun. Call Mrs, SALm A Irvin trucks. Supervise pack· appt.CM-5168 •--------- MEDICAL ASSISTANT Evan• 8:30am·3:30pm NEED ve. e. iog d. epartment. '~f I ~~) .. e:.,<•ln-rSofa,xlntcood.,prieed • Full lime lor N .B. 642-91955. llC.-nONIST dayw-40 hr wk. Or. Cb' ~.accurate or moun ·-· tolell,pvtpt1. \ ) -Medical pradlce, prefer ---The JolJ7 Boser Inc. ls MONEY? airl>ort area. Company ·~firm in CdM. Xlnt 14.2-1&10. 9'lM034 I eqJert..~ar lab" X· }pcnOfc/Cowstr -$lzK lookln& for a f /Umc C_.LLUSI Swcael•f Sll,200 beneflU.5'6-llll90 ~CS:1~wcddnl, eoo· Uted Waate Kina Dis• ray. :;uary very com· perm. recept. Must be " • Poised professional will SHIPPING bwasher, worts &ood. GtregsSde 8055 ~petjl.lve.664-1881 ~erks ::: personable, attractive & We need energetic, Jove the challenge & Fast erowing shipping WAITER Yellow, ~O/bst ofr. ••••••••••••• .. •••••-• Ml H B>S p It Gen Ofc to $5 hr ex per' cl. PoaiUoa HU! articulate people we can vari«y in this stimulat· deputment hu 2 open· 4.5 Eves. Apply Sturt &&!90 8 whl bike, cost $269, price ' ,_.,Pin. lrvinePersoonelAgency lor good typing skills. tralntolntroduceTime-lngpostbatbastreme.,.. ingsavallable. We need Noodle Restaurant, 215 Top loading Lady K~ ~:gasrange~'299. I ,__._ 488E17\hC06taMesa fy~5~o:>°Jilf~~~:-. Ufe Boob toC'UltAlmen douspotent.C.llMarion, an experienced forkhft Rivera ldo Dr, NB more d.iabwaaber, ~Po pnce ~; rerng cost ~ Sulle224 642·1470 Irvine. lnU1Dnyareaa. 83:>Z700. Dennis & DeJ>. driver" are willing lo 548-7418 per.almostnew.54&«188 $400,~ceSBO;tolletcost F /time belp. Im med ~..._...,_.. $$SS$ nis Personnel Service of train an eot.busiasUc in· $14, pnce SIS. J2iaZ So. openinp for both men & llG MONEY Irvine, 2082 Michelson. div id u al a s yard WAITIRS Relric, white, GE, bottom Everglade, S.A. '151-8422 ~!~:!1.:. ~!..Pr~Jde!!IY Personnel Clk Recept toSI0,200 t~ D..U man/order checker. Prefer over so )'ears or rreez.er, runs well $100. Moving Sale' Ev rythlng ~..,,._..,.... -•.tlfllr-Ofca •-DL..&•'--'"--_ .... _ _....., Good beodils include age to wort at private 6'4-7183. E tbluff 2682 410E.17tbSt.,CM Vanety pos in lrg co -r -.., , ... _. ~.,.......... dental. Excellent work· country club. Newport goea. as • w/mucb people contact. Fantastic froat pos HourtyW09t TYPISTS m&: cooditioos. A.PPl.Y at Beach. Excellent Holpoint eye level dbl Balft'OOd.~. MESS84GER Need mod typ1Dg & some pa :,.:0~~~l/yr :: '!~elit lo-H sbapping dept. Extruded benefits Call 844-MOt for oYen range Excel cond. Met.al patio set $SO, Gas lmmed. P/time opening sh or spdwriting. Salary " C__...·•-& SECRETARIES Plaaucs Co. 2205 S. Stan· appt. 673-6000Alt. 7 Piii lawn mowe" ••o. Twm· far rellabl ind lri clients. Call Lisa, _.__ • - penoo.wt:.O c':. ~~ ~7:SE:'I 1;iE~e~aii !:"~"'t~~i Nat'IPl"od..ct Doyouoeedext.ramoney ~ve. Santa Ana. Waiters, waitresses & W b C~HP~ 1 i ~:=-G~~~~ Wkdyw. Call lrvtoc Sav· Coastal Personnel Agen· IRVIHE OFACE & enjoy variety. Let the captain.a 1 r I ry ra e r I $10 Twin b • headbrds tn.., ..-""""EO £. c.an.""""< 2790Harbo HWJtiQgtcm Beach, 16168 W-kPartorF/time ........... _m •-flexib1lity of SUM ..... ~wo•n' Needln"' persons ex· workin1ornot9574U33 • rass . • ~. ,.,..,._,., · · cy, ,,..,._, '· Beach. .,. "_,..,,, .,. --perlen9ced in food . $50.Coldspot refrig, gold MOTEL MAIDS CM 833-8095 working temporary as· FOil STUDEHTS service People oriented FriP1aire refrlc.17 cu ftr $150.548-8642 FbU time, Tides Motel. frlSTCONTROLTECH Wa~!7fJ:1'~~cfgood TIMI-LIFE ~~:S;!J.0ia~~i~~ :>dfvft~~~f'_t;~tc~~ good benefits. ~ll ro: ~:a:r-R:l~~r::';'d!o~ Jewelry 8070 ~inperaon,494·3494. Steady job for rieht phone personality re· Ubrari.s.htc mediately be 18+. Call (714) :~c:!~oi!'.' ca -~r.$?75.bi5-057S. • .... ••••••••••••••••••• MOTOR ROUTE necessary. Profit sbar· In rmance & travel. OC WAITRESSES lkydes 1020 WANTED person. no exper quiredbybu.ycompuny EqualOpporEmpJoyer fiO~ office • 846-8154or871·2SOO. ,,_ .. ,, ~eD~tePit!olMi:::io: ~g~;~~~b:~~th.L~J~ =~>iv1:s~ re· SALES PEOPLE 0 overload s¥~~~ ror fttiremeot home 1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP CASH DOLLAU Viejo. Moo thru Fri af· Pcsl ConlrolS66 £.Dyer 557 "061 Callfornia credential H.B. Day/eveshilts.Call lllCES & MOPEDS PAID FOR YOUR -v 848-38ll ask lor Gail. JEWELRY, W ATCHF.S, ternoona. Sat & Sun Rd.,S.A. RECE:f'TIOHIST Wll.l\t.ed IOI' retail lamps 3723 Birch St, NB levels 4·8. Apply in New ft; used, buy. aell, ART OBJECTS, GOLD, IDGl'ftinp.Mustbavede-Sharp,oealap""'ario" store.Xlntworkingcoo. ll'AalOp EI persoo,F.V.ScboolDis·w it t d trade.Cycle &:Co.2488 ERVICE pendable car. $50 cash PLANTS Mus t type .-N i c~ da. Part or full tlme, -u por mp oyer t r • c t • C r n e r a ress ., a 0 e ' Newport Blvd. C.M. SILVER S • depositreq.Gooddriviog Full " part t!me, ex· telephone voice. Part aa.les exper. beJplul. but Newlaodfl'albert Sta, ~~~~u:.; s:e~O:. &&Z-7910 FINE FURN & AN· record. Call 642·4321 pen~cedsal.esmplants. lime9tol,MoothruFrL not nee. $2.75-$3.25 to F.V.E.O.E. 2121 Balbo Bl .. NB TIQlm).645-2200 Leave name & phone Start immed~at.ely. Good .... br. N_..-Ceo•·-•tart.a ... 2779 ...__.. a v_ . . 'J'hree.wbeeler,like ..,,._ d"~ ... -u n·ng l "' •-be ef ... In N t -... -.-·· """ .. ~ *SecretarieS* Su .... r v1sor, of toy de· .~wn.r5pm. ...... .,...rnon """'"""' • "' Your call will be re· pay.,. n ....... wp area. Call flX' interview. r-new.~ di---.1-total 61l' uo turned. 8ch.67S.56S7 640S7809r640-17S2 mon.strators, P/r work. WAITRESSES all ebllts. 645-0068 ~~-~set. -===-------·1-------. -b-SIS,000 F Ftr pay. Samples.free, Apply, Stavro's, S830 w. . 67>1712 MOTORROUTE Presser·Sillc Finis .er Repro t y pis t. ex· SALES EmployersPayAlJ ei!S party plan expeneoce Coas t Hwy, N.B. DoC)f 8040 --------- The Daily Pt.Jot has a wanted._ woman, Live perienced. Fast, ac· P/timeincludingwk:ods. Liz ReindersAgency helpful, oot ~ecesnry. between2-Sprn. •••••••••••••-••••••••Seiko quartz LC Chrono· large route in Newport Wire Cleaners, 439 curate. Xerox 800 duul· Mature, resp. woman 4«.!0B.itthSt,Stel~ Limited openinas. Qall • graph l yr old $175 Beach. Moo thru Fri af· Forest Ave, Lag Bch. tape operator. Variety. w/jewelry sales exper. Newport Beach m.8190 House or Lloyd coll.ect, Waitress lor dinner house Golden Retr~ever pup· 6'75-05is. • · tero~ns. Sat & Su o 4!M-3S36 Ailport area. 1be Office. pref'd. N.B. 673-4734. CaU for appt/estab '64 21.3-3'i3-232L experienced. Lunch only, ~· ~Ct Field & shod' monungs. Must have de· Printed circuit board mfr 7S2-0893 6 days a week. Apply pe. • 0 s, worm.e • .• pend.able car. $50. cai.b bumg trainees $3 2S pr Salesperson, part tlme. Security Guard Man or SUPPLY ClERJ( 9-llAM Thurs Ailk lor raised wrrLC. Xlntdisp . ., 1078 deposttreq. Good driving hr lo start. 40• hr. work Restauraot·Help Wa.nted, Telep~one & counter. woman to serve 81 Progressive S&L seeks the M~naaer: 3300 w. (213)425-1S61. ••••••••••••••••••••••• record Call 642·4321 week 3002 S Oak St run & p/Ume positions Expenence preferred. security guard at con· lndiv. forentzy levelpos. Pac. Coast.Hwy.NB DOGTRAINING Lathe, B new 19x44" Leave name & phone Sant .. Ana • ' avail. days. Start to $3 Apply Pennysaver, 1660 structioo site. No ex· to rm supply/form or· Pvt 18 &bo d' $3,500. MJlling B new Your Call will be re· · hr. App10 in person only Plae:entia, CM. dcrs & relieve mall Waitre.u~ ex.per only. c saes ar mg 8~x28" $~00. (213) v • ~--_,;.. _____ , perience or uniform re· tr John Manln 548 0059 t-·-....o PRl.....,Ell to Jim at, Del Taco, 2112'" . clerk. Some heavy lifting P , 10:30am-2:30pm, no · 961·3434 w-ucu "' s 1 to i t qui red $3.00 pr hr. Su d ... _______ _ S.E.Bristol N.B. a es person ass s 831.3861 &in·housedelivery.Xlnt Saturdays or nays. IJlaaa •-o female 3mo ...._ __ LY ... /C"'--P/t. Day or eve. l850 ' ownr ol alarm co. in de-640 4032 E tbl f f .._ ' ' ' 0~dial drill 4' Ge--n11 ~ " , ... Y" M I · s · & I benefits & adv oppor. · • a s u • gold wtwhite markinp."" • • .._ Jt-7 Shift. XJnt benefits. u t1. tnp Pates. RH..._. Help •eloping .o.c. alarm Contact Jan H ess, Newport. ..,,.,. Ph 631·23N 1960, $3000. Lathe geared C Rosan. Inc. Nwpt Bch. BeA be fth sales Aucho Alarms lie 833 0.,.,., _..... bd, 22x48", Hvy dtv. Ba yview onv. Hosp. S48·SS33 Equal Oppor mem ro e pre· · • ....,.,., 2055Thurin, CM 642-3505. Emp ferred staff al Anthony's 10720, 714/848·3180 *SECURITY* Slate Mutual Savings WAREHOUSEMAN Golden Lab Retriever, 16 German $3000. (213> Pi.er .II. accepting ap-Salespeople. exper only. 1 4001 MacArthur, N.B. mos old, well-behaved, ... 96_1·_3434 ______ _ HURSERYMEH PRINTING plic!IUonsfor:,Busboys, person for sportswear& F.qual()pporEmployer Need perso11 to learn excel. w/cblldren .•• _ IOIO Full-Ume, mature mule Waiters, Wa1tr~sses. lpersonw/experlnsales *AGENTS* shipping & rec. Also. 661-0067 dys, 770·80'10 over 21. 6 Days Incl Exper·d business forms Bart.enders, Cashiers & cl wetsuits. Mature. Pt· Switchboard Oprs, will some maintenance & eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sat/Sun. Work with collator operator. Should the Oyster Bar lrom time&: full time. Eves *AIRLINE* train. Apply 250 E. J7th cleanup. Printing plant. IUnlversily Athletic Club e_lanll,trees&deUvery. know s oapout & con· 3-Spm Mon. Wed & onty·673-6980 ~~:r·St.el,(uP11tain) $3Tostart.540-802'7 ~:Y~~Ji~: .?~i! Membership for: sale. Exper. prerd. $3 Hr up. tinuous forms. S.A. area, Thurs. No Pbooe C.lls • WAREHOUSE old F $200 ln pet shops save $100. Mr. Gilmore. Laguna HJlls Nursery, OrangeCo.S40-8027. Please. lo.l N. Bayside SALES !!~~~steel T~/Coodiltator WORKBt Tbis~k$100.S48-672lall 547·9151 dy1; 832-0989 Inc. E1Toro.8J0.56S3. •--=---------Dr.NB Resp. penKlD wanted for '",_.._...._.T Summer employment, 4 1 evs. MUllSES AIDES 7-3& 11·1. Exper'd. Coun· t ry Club Conv. Hosp. 549-JOOL PRJMTIHG Restaurant sales in one ol Orange •Providing sttunty :ind k 0 . d Looklne for mature, i..:.--------·t:"---:--=~-:--:::--:-~dUtho OPEHIMG SOOH Co's largest lighting fix-service to the airline ~~. lr~;&find~~t alert individual willing lo Mo T II E R s DAY ~ewport Be~cb Tennis RotaryOHwt Rasimmedopenmplor tureabowrooms.Muslbe traveler fam1hes for Japanese l earn ~b~\~tce~l PRESENT ~u~ '~%'~t~:sfei: ..___ O able to work Sats. Some •Meeting and greeting i.ludcnls. Teaching exp. res Pons 1 ' i Y 1 n TINY TOY Poodle pup· rs p, r ,..,......, pet"afOll HostnMs decorallne background hwidreds of important helpful. Send resume lo established N.B. fir'!1 in· pies, males $7S, frmales lee. 9'7s.3265 dys 552-'136 Must know snapoul & W......._ pref'd, but will accept people every day I nterstudy, 1339 No. volved in yacb~1ng, SJ.00. alao okler dogs $25. evs/wknda contiouousbusiness ~·u•·partU tl bit•t "'·UU rt ··· baclrpacking&sluwareAKC"""""'l9 i--,--------MURSHAIDES formspresa.S.A.areaof cu ... • me crea ve a J y. •ru meoppo um ies Columbus, Glendale textiles. Secure future .... ....,, ~·high metal stairway, & OllDHUES Orange Co. 714/540-8027 ~ l':!nst!~~r ~~: WoodJllbtmg, 5'6-2llOL ~rts be~t l~:g!~u~~~ 91202 for right person. Filling Old Eng. aheeep doc dbl wall gas beater. Both \ Xlnt benefits. Bayview .__ ..... _a.1--y-=--pref'd, but will train. SALESlllPTRME indmtry TELEPHONE ol orders Is 1eneral wanted. xlnt.Bestoflc-673-6336 Conv. Hosp, 2055 Tbuno '"~nv11 ._.... Day & eve abil\1 avail. ToS12KFeePaid •FreeParlung SOLICITORS warehouse duties. 37 'h 552-3644 Metal Inventory racka, 7 CM, 642-3505. Rubber hose products. Apply, 9AM-3PM Wed. & Famous maouf of con· •Uniforms furni.shed Pros only. Sell Daily hr week. call 645-1066. Yorkie pups, tiny. AKC. sections, extra shelves. ---------1 lrviJle area. Must pass Thurs. aim So. Coast s umer product.I seeks Pilot from you1· home AlllochampairedShihtzu $400 or bat ofr. 10x20 Nursing RH'S ~~·c:bir~~81. ~~\'i1~~~ Hwy,SouthLaguna. degreedindiv.forcareer AMIYouPouns: Earn $1 60·$200. wkly WATER CO. needs man pupe.Realon.8'2-0771. Canopy $80 or bsl. pos. Co. car, exp, bonus •ACbeerful,pleasantat· Part or "'II time. Must w/exp.Nootherneedap· . -..eein. EMBGEHCYROOM appt.540-7639.E .O.E. I•-------• +top beneflta. Call Van titude be over 21 Call 83S·64S3 ply Call 8.5 wkdys Male Old English Sheep•-1-u-· --.t-A_thl_U_'_Cl __ h Full lime positions ProcM:tion~ RESTAURANT 833-2700. Also Fee Jobs. •A courteous, willing 1·3PMonly • Dog w/papers. 21fl yrs. ruvcrsi Y e c u available on all shift~. 6 To$10,800 FeeP~d Dennia&Dennl.sPerson· andsmcerepersonallty 545-l060,545-4050 Free to good family membershlp$350. mon~ acute hospital Talented indiv sought for JACK IN nel Service of Irvine, 2082 w/lots of apace. Reply to 637·6863 experience required. challenging pos w/mfg THEIOX Michelson. AMIYouHav•: TelephoncSales YOWlg Mao, mechanical· Box 261, "lo Dally Pilot. 1 Voice Pager w/G mos· JCU·CCU background area of growing firm. SALESWOMAN •ACar MO EXP NEC ty&electrically inclined P.O. Box 1560, Costa aervicefree$325. preferred. Ex~ellent Advmt loo! Call Can· Family Rnhlllranh Ungerie shop. 40 Hr wk. •A telephone ,'-That's right, we'll train to learn alarm installa· Mesa, Ca 92626 637-6863 salary & benefit pro· da"", 84S·l288. Also Fee r , t lion. (1) 994·2680, . . C ~... COUMTa Ovr 40. Call for appt. you ' you re encrge ic, 973-1890. Siben an Jlus~y. cm, 6 mo 4 ticket.a for King Tut, gram. LU CK Jobs. Dennis & Dennis 642-1197. Thin Ceil 0.-Apply In e n t h u s l a s l i c & old. Nels rabtS shots only. u~~ 31at SlOO SADD A Personnel Service of PIRSOHMEL Plt"IOllAt: articulate. Earn a ~ AKC. $100. 5:')7·4846 -v 557.9678 COMMUNITY HOS,. HwiUngtoo Beach, 16168 Seamstresaes wanted, ex· g~ar!'flleed wage com· ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Luana 3"Sl Via Estrada, Lag Beach. Immedlate openings for per, mu1t have own BURNS m1Ss1on&boouses. ~ IOOS ---------1.Pool tables, exquisite old Hls 837-4SOO, Ext 371. ~fullPel"IOl'llld partet otin all machines, able t.o sew FULL TRAIHIMG ••-••••••-•••••••••• ""'"'° Yoa 8045 fashioned model witb E.O.E .......... an me. decorathe stitch. hatew..tloftal &EXCB.Le...1T •••••••••••••-•••••••• artisticpianolegs.Slate. PRODUCTION Day-6blft starting wage 960-2831 s.c.ity '""" FOR SALE! Female Siamese cat, 1 Leather pockets. ruoo .,.~~! .. MNG:/S:C hl TYPESETIER !2l·75 8 1 .. bo1url0; ga~ia-a~Ule --r -•• -....,.5-99-15-S--r--:,._ •--EARMIMGS A beautiful antique year. Call 661·3067 aft. 6 value, sacrifice $485 • ..,.,.~ · • ac .. • ... • ~ '"" .-.-.._ .. ~ Your Job'. partner desk wilb two PM. Deliver Cree. 836-8102 sales needs sharp ag-w/experience(part·lime $2 .85/bour; an d Mlnsewingexper.req'd. 177SECeot.erSlreet db k l 1 greulve Jal to run lbc days) graveyard-shift starting F /time days. 3025 S. Anaheim 635-4630 Will consist of calling presse ac aw ve Lovable '2 yr spayed dog Food processor & bread sbow.ii'Js.8137 wage $3 /hour. Appli· Kilson, S.A. Dyer&Nwpt Equal Opportunity Tam e · Life Book chairs. Call Shirley Moo· hke Min. Sheep dog. maker. Vita Mix3600. Nr IBM cants must be 18 and Frwy. S4CH144. Employer M /F customers & potential day thru Friday at 979-1835, Ext 32. days. new. $165. 640-9358 Part time office help SB.ECTRIC II over. Please apply in --------• customers 1n Calif. & 831-2880 needed. Call after 5 PM. Excellent Working person: ---------1 Anwna Old Eng. Sheep dog, to good rune only. Dyna Gym exerciser. $?75. 644).9356 • 963-8086. Conditions Secretary SOU .... D PAITTIMEOMLY ApplyiDPerson 12051obr EDUCATIOMAL Security 1"'1111 Mmt oow be employed & ORANGE COAST Costa Mna DEP •RTME ... T MAUJOTI HOTB. GOOD? i free to work in my small DAILY PILOT ~ " CALL b l r · 330 W Ba st '!l•s E. 17th lnteresllna -ition as JSSEEKING: a apps us oess o air • Y • -.,.,.. ~ treatment equip. M·S CoetaMesa CoataMelo secretary to diredor of SECURITY 833 8095 1 6-lOPM It Sat 9:JOAM-Asklor Paul Ward education. Variety ol OFFICER • PM $300 1 E ua1 Op rt •tv duties. n-•a 0 ood typing TIMrLIFE 2:30 . mo sa . or q po um I Equal Opportunity skills oo+ wpm. Good Some law enforeement u~ t AMERICAN OAK Largest Selection in Orange County Stewart Both Antiques 750 E. Dyer Rd. S.A. (at Nwpt Fwy) 751-89'22 551-s.930 1.Dvable shaggy male dog, med. size, can't keep, 646-5352 2''Tul"tlckets, May 2.Sth,5pm. $20.00eacb. 963-8856. 150 yr old round oak lbl (4 Adorable nurry kittens, 1 Go F1y a Kite KITES ARE 1eave1 ) $ 8 O 0 . A tn wks old. 3 whl, 2 call co. UP 116 23rd St. Newport sideboard $300. 548-0542 645-5313 Pier profit sharing. No exp Employer Employer M/F benefits & working con· exper. prel'd. Must be ----••· nc.. nee. For lnterv, call art ---------,·--------d s. Apply National able to work llexible F.qualOppEmplyrm/r CHEAP!!! Calleo cat, spayed, all sc11u 'ETS 1Pll979-3861 P'wchalillgACJ"f SystemsCorp,"36lB.itth hours. Eojoy xlnt co. ENGLISHMANOR shots. housebroken, nn. ToSl0.200 Fee Paid SALES St, N .B. (Near OC benefits. Telephone app't sec·y. ANTIQU~C.M 979-JSOO. Evenings. Hll'W£1$ Expansion positlon of· Artifact•" collectibles, Airport) Equal Op· Apply9am-noon Mon·Fri Pleasantwork,short hrs, ll25A.Victona • Free adorable kittens. M.J fered by local mfg firm p/time. mature woman. portunityEmployer Personnel Dept lop pay. Set app•ts. No 642-4763 boxtralned,6wbold. Denote-Tacky- EVENINGS desiring sha.rp. long Inter . desl1n exper ---------SK)()NewportCtrDr selllna. Talktotopexeca, 96J'65i26 C.ste-Eslate - term careeris t. Call helpful. Ea.er Eye, ·--------NewportBeacb profess pro9pects only. · M · Bo 1 SOAKED Sb&onoo, M1·1288. Also Balboa llllaod 873-4734 Equal Opp Emplyr m/I Hrs, 9om-12noon, Mon· An1:: M::~esf• Doberman, male. 2/U yn I can't win. All year I ~ wltb outttaodlng, Fee Jobe. Dennis & Den· ,_l_or_a_.ppt.__.______ SECRETARY -------->-r--Thurs. Ex per woman on· Cloe.ks 1 old, toadlts only. 546-1450 saved up for a rainy day, •ttrad.ive person~ties nis Penonnel Service°' i--------• MARKETING SECY/RECEP't ly apply. Call Mr. Lows, HUGESELECTION ~ft.Spe. and then lbe IRS came wbo eQjoJ working with Huotin&lon Beac.b.16168 SALES For ooe litl R.E. eomtr 657-1721, af\ooon. •-. rt-fi-·wlM• IOSO a)oqandSOAKEDme. kids. Start at $3.50 per Beach. Be b. -- br. Pbane MM321 #250,•--------ASSISTANT SECRETARY ~ ~~~~:C,. TW.ERJP-Time Inf;,....... ·--••11 -::--·-• .. Dtate Sale; .. J:!~ebold b«ween3:00.5:00P.M. Real~tate MAMAelRS bootkeepine & neat ap. Good spot fn Dana Pt. OpenWed.thraSat **I BuY** iteml,tapes.uuutU,HW- AallforShcroft For a great eareer •a Fashion bactcrouod In A d1venilted.-exciting peara n ce required, Type 40 wpm, work 20 JIOZ.Kitt.eriAg,ln. Good used P\tmlture ft ~.!..~ ktoooitoUnumge~~tos. Equal Opportunity &eat fui!:re in Rc:1 European clotbtoa & poeltion currently exists 7l4-75'2-lOll2 hr 9 wk 1 y. ca 11 (114)'75Hm Applianca-OR 1 will ~. 1951 Ros°e-;;;ry Employer late w a great • sportswear necess. at Der Wleoerscbnitzel (1)686-e060, ext. 168 lor _ .... , SELL' y C M ( in 20th -~-'-------•with unlimited eamlnp. Opening tmmedlatel.Y tn Service .talion attendant appt E 0 E llCUOI' 1or ou. Pl., .• runs to -------·1 call Al Stellato for con-our men'utore. lor an lndl•lduahritb ex· Ml / Mech A · · · · J,...,.._.AJH .& .... $ MASTBS AUCTION St, betwn Orange & Npt • PAYIOU. CL.HK fidentlalappt. 96S-sm. THI LOOK cellent tn>lna. short.hand w ':fM~2PM, c:~,! T ..... Tme $6'1 "'" ~" '4M"6 • lll·9'2S Fwy) Fri. Sat. Sun, May '\' The Jolly Roaer, Inc., 8 [ C.1110.m~m Moo·Sal ~Sec~~~~ $taUon, 3000 Fairview, Financial &iant seeks ANT19UES C~Rt>AID 1_12._13_. _14_· ----- fat powma reslaurant~lj'ljll!f;flt'IIDll 644-4100 tor ot Mar'keUna. Dlrec· C.M. career ind.Iv. for powtb Btll gltla at affordable For gd used rum Anli· carpeting $1 yd .• shag ln ~e"~hur'd•!,0.!::I°c,!~~ Real Ell.ate !~~~~~~~~~ wr ot Public Re.latloos, Ser ... lce Station Allen· poe. Call Leelle, 833-2700. prlcea. In Cuner1 ques&clrTV'•~7.41133 good cond. bcadbrd ~. ... " _, • • a n d P r o m o t I o n s 'd D •-Dtnnil fr Dennla Person· Vfil&ac. 422 31lt St. MC A Ftn! extinlllbhtra *'O towor ioa2penondept SALES · dant, exper • ay • _,..,.,_,1-..11rv1-··-" 'lno.1.-.t>Nt.1 "-Id•-ta .. cut cotton ""' le C.ocsd.lll.at« JOU wlll be Ev-.hU6p/tlmc.A,p-iiu..-.• ........ au-.-u""'v,.......,., vv .. u Nlshtstand $20. llm b1ecllltll approx. "°° llALTOlt Exper SalUet!C>Ple for Involved in a vade\1 of ~l SC.U.on l ?lh le Mlcbe1'on. _ ... -.. ""-·tSaJ-.._ velvet sofa, like nu. $'l00. divider $10. Bar •tools emplo1e••· Com-or 9 ealtor A1•..:•1at1 F/tl& Pit podlaaL Tbe 11'*&aat ........ toene requlr ' •-,...,-""-' -• on1-Decowin•chr '") tzo.GooM occk dale :uu=s:s.~Y">llwel~b Hav~needl«l~aC:1_Pla_ce....;.. ....... ______ l:,;;buc contact. A NB. s..tce. THE CENTER wbt fu,';; w/yell c~wef bmp '7.50. Kitcbea lad· -'•••rant p•ayroll e·· UveaalelpetlOll. sal111al ·P/T. for mirbdnlb8ckaroundls Service Sta. Attnclant. JOOL OfTIME bu moved to nowera.Docowhl&lccost der $4. Mote Junctu e. j;~'"cWlnite plua. ~t RoyMcc..le WOCMD'a apeda1tJt lbop. -n1it•11Ud1ood pboeM aper'd. IWI ot p/Umc. :n8:F11 Avo. CM. .!.IJJ.-..,now $300/ofr. llontlcollo Complex WaddllC cor>dl "benent 1110 ... ...,. .. ._ Will tral.D. a1.-or nllDl!l'ttma • mU1t.. We Appl)t, Arco StaUoll, 17lh __...., 54.5-1291 pqwtoworforadv.Sal c.t.MeMl•·77Zt 1_• __ •_1 _____ ~ ~~ &lrvtno,CK MAKERS Deslper aora, cbalrs,1_A_n_t_l_qu_,.o_E_n_g_l_h_h_ c1oc:i:unensu:ratew/exper. SALES·Jlt. Women•1 BtDDIDI 1t ('714) S.VQaJJelpneededlm· "°'IY&IT MOW151HIT1ME tables• other ml1e. Bruklront. '375. Zenith At!tlt'/.ln person b4tttm Faablcnl.CQer.pnf'd. TIM5U..Exl:.UOflPPb' med. Moat be 18. torjobeeetestoclleck 411M0'74 atereo console, $200. tam 6 5pm or •tnd r.. Receptlooiat wanted, Adnoceaia\ poNlble. klpanon: Day/nlJbl ahlfta avail. APPUCATIOMS \,. tM Dally Pilot Help K1n 1 b.ct doubt box Jtn.U•h cocktail table: . .-ume lo: UOU Glllelte iood otn~. •ood wort. ApPlJ In person. The hll °' p~. Apply 990 E. Wmt.d laaaift u 11 • • ze t • $40. Ma)'tal eompac:l Ave.lTviM. f::t pay. Will train. SMiaacl Gtw., Jm w. .,. QtHwy,NB lxulut...., IM Job~.,.: i:~ ~b!:~ ~;:;,wood wa.ahcr/dryer, '110. 80 900 Oceamrilll&.NB. wa..nct.ftal s.rncc Sta. AUendantJ &~N..... -..... 1Wmithuoulder · )'dagold~J1>etlna,~. PBX s.ctpt/HOltal,MJUme. o.tOaa:NCleb '"40VooKarmanAvo (4) P/Ume DOI# to fW.l Clllf«&DaPJIOfa\meot oll'trlo1 100!' Nn'ta. Pl'.On.•ut.1 .. •srn m.&•?m. AnswulDI Hnlce Appl)' at H7 .. Oao f«W'lllT ... ftq NewportBeachQADIO Ua.a ln &l.mmcr. Wlll (114) US::~, ... -.c.0 &Cl ad tn the lob txctl toad. Telescope For Sale 4 Bob n,tan ~ operator Ml II Ptr. Call Partway. llluion Vi«Jo. wl&ltaallialWM · EqulOppSmpl.JrM(I' train. Apply, 2510 :,.:;:. ~r.-. • = calqGI)'. PboM = refra~lor IOdO Ucba t.0.-Jlllle z. frt· lawlllll~=======:-=====~1 Mm~~tbnl~fti.~~~~3p~m=·:=JL:··:=:~Qall~~::::~~J.'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~N~aw~pm~~~Bl.~Cl&~=:::;;:::t~~~~~~~J::::::::=:::=::=:::Jl:::~IG==tlll==::;:=:::;l~dq~.C&l~l~Sll~lt7~~=c~=: . ~ -. ~ , . ...... .. PART TIME ----·- I .. ......,,_ row•l' 9040 lotlh. SU,_/ 4 W1ttti1 Drhff 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Doc:b 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• N DAILY P1&.01 • Mite•• ,._ 1080 °= ,.,.._.. & to.h.. Power f040 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• . R d 1 . A.Ytot. tmporltod Autot. Import.ct Atltos, lntpon.d ••••••••••••••••••••••• : .. 101• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tu"'· motor torpedo Sll.P w&an.led for 27 • Motor 7S eneaca e. o m1 s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -!" • s b tires, winch, roll bar. & • ...&I Lt-...l.-9727 r-~t...... 9750 W .&HTED ••••••••••••••••••••••• boats. rum ·runners. atler, Nwpt ll11r or ~ f;ve.,, t>'13ti4>46 -9707 ~ ___..... "' ? H~n ot Cal le&lll sra 1•y BOATS ~ m • 11 ! re I g ht er!> area reward 759 14'77 .............................................. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ro .. CA.l)tl UOl.l. \ft aui· 2 drwr file cabwct:. U A WNilt'vt!r your dt!lm~ Want to buy or rent '75 GMC, shtbed, camrx•r "73 Auch 1001-'i Aulo."'~ dr WOW! 1972 911T TJrt(J Alloy\ PA ID t' U K \" 0 ll R • i · -.al 1ram d"k lop y_ n..n 1n u bool we can find 1t Newporl Bay moonng shell ~no 331 8owhn11 sW\l'OO(, AM tf .. M. 12200 A C. AM FM r .i" JRWELR\' "° \ll.'llE:S LI ~l' nu $1 7 s o ( r ..... vpv Cur you Ensign Yiecht ror 4 2 • boa l 0 ys . Green 7!W 15"96 Ph 492-Ml5 '75 Hond" CVCC Station ~oru.s pp Dys !OJ 2900. ART 08JtX.b . GOLU b44-4.\M Until... Sale1 $84 llJl ~J300; e\'s,673 I~ Wagon Air c:on<11t1onm.,: l'\'S64o.04QJ SlL\'t!R ~ER\ l l t-;. nll ---Toy '72 Lnd C r s r . AM FM i.ll'rt°'o . Nt'w --------- f"IN £ t 'U RN & J\ N Cunrerence table. 60" lk>at s lip wanted ror 34· wtChevy V8, new tires. ~ 9709 ures. new brakei.. new 1977 Porscbc: UllS. onl:. TIQU~ ~2200 round walnut lop. 6 1 dawt I Welk. :W SkJpJack '75. lraiJer. aatlboat S3200 640-2715.642·0922 ••••••••••••••••••••••• battery. lugg.tl(•' rJ1·k 4SOO m1. air. sunroof dW.1"5 ~ 6" beige nub I" loaded. Reduced to sell Call833 7934 Tf"Cb 9560 lGM 3000 MK Ill. wire fanc y Pin Str1 pp111 g leather. AM /F'M, loadc:d UKiGAGE TAGS by weave couc h new, WEEKEND NOW • (714) 846-2995, ••••••••••••••••••••••• whls. overdnve. nu inter. 129115 496CabnlloSt CM Mus t sel I $18.500 rrom your bu.Ito~ l·ard Si!.50 ·83J.95SOor640-M23 1213) 592·2941 Slips -S ales posll 1on '6:1 ln•-'I PU Short box. ~bod1 !...~.287en~ wm/xtra.s. cacross Crom Wl'i.tcllH b4().8208 "--' -• r h -avail Yachting Aasoc "" 11 ~ ._.. .., p Plaut> 645-0376 ---------""'"u OOt! ca.u or t'llC .. __ • "'---"' 1090 • bo o ,.._ N pt 8 h uAu ....... 1 wht spoke whJs, lrg knob· · TJ Dod~e Van, cust tnl Jll l<all pli» one IJ)Urt: We ~ ---...--SPECIALS 14cl"u~•u1cn. aS7!l s• 'mu,. 194 '-"'V w c .,..,,-"""' return p rmanenlly ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.. .,., boat b1es . 4·r yl entc Ofr IMW 9712 1915a,., Wagon. new rood pwr. At. stereo. n 111· ,,,_,ed attrn1••v .. t .... & BaJdWUIOl"iJlD Xlnlrond trlrSDS 673-9164 Trmatporlatioft 979-0183or7540146 ....................... N4:W M1<•h1·l1n zx ·.. cntrl. 3110 V8. szg50 :>C4IJ .. ~,' ' ... St~k #S54, 2'' Cuddy · ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2950. Mui;t sec 645 0034 64()..4330 Slrap, meeting uirhne BestOf(er. Cabm loah. Rent/ ~ s•/ ·72 SS El Camino. 1•1s. --------- 1.D. reqwremen!Ji Pre M7·7257 Mere 22tl, trlr. many C........ 9050 1ttftt 9120 P/8. A/C, mags, 12000. 1976 Honda Civ1d 11pd. Renault 9755 vent los." & theft ! For a Thomas Organ. Cost xlras ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call642·332fan6pm. XJnt cond ••••••••••••••••••••••• personalaed tag enclose SlSOO, sac $850. Still un $14.438 + T&L Charter 60' Plush yacht. '71 VW Safan Camper, '64 lntematlonal VS. p U 644·5633afl 5 30 TISTDRIVEOUR ~~!~di:.~·~:::•~~~ derwrty675-1712 Reas. Hourly, daily, xlnt condition. $3200. 3 spd S700. Alter 6PM '74HondaC1v1c,good "LECAR will back & trl m your Moving to Condo. must Stock #MJ, 22' weekly, Mexico. 675-2172 631-0148 645-5175 c6~7~~l~~ .. n, Of THE YE •R" 0 d k Overnighter, Mere 228. .............._ __ .... 1u.-91,,.0 ........,"' "" tugs r try two r ur Ii s ell Rare. New Yor trlr. loaded lcMh. Sail 9060 _.._ ,_, .. '71 Vega panel, 350 v II & 1978 BMW's Good inventory in stock l>Mck tobaclt made Behning Baby $13,960 + T&L ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• turbo trans. looks stock '78 ACl'Ord. 5000 m1 '!i, 5 Hurry whilelhey last: PRICES Grand. $1700, like new. RIJl -YAMAHA Yamaha Chappy <'72CC) $2400/besl.493-9595 HERE NOW! spd, w:trranty , xlrai.. Mll.AClE Sleaor3/$.5 PP.846-8365 k , Cudd 0r.••sts xlntcond. $300 _.__/offer 494 2226 ....... ~ .... 191:M•ULT 4 5La""Sl.60ea ---------1 Stoc #537• 22 Y _.. Callaft4PM u•n0339 1977 Dodge True Sp1fit ..,......, .....___.,_...._. 6 9ta&;Sl.50ea LOWERY·Thealer Spinet Cabin Mere 228, trlr, YllCht Brokerage •'""" p u All power. auto. COMPLETE 2150Harbor Blvd tOormoreSl <1-0ea Organ w /Leahe spkr. manyxtras. llitingsWanled! Moped Puch, $325 Like Air, blk wigold tnm. IOOYSHOP ..... 9730 COSTA MESt\ SaJesTaxlncluded rtiyt.hm section. bench & $12,771 + T&L s.thw"tenl new. many extras Call headers. mags, & more MOWOPEN ....................... 645-5700 NO CARD~ music. $600. 673-5439 YocN SdH 644-5118/640-1752 $560() 49J.S329eves. Draw your own or send Wurlitzer organ. Walnut Stock •57o. 20' Open 2616 Newport Blvd Mopeds New Only 1299 '63 p U Ford Falcon. de nam. e, address. phone & fi•n .. h. Mov•"g msl sell Mere 228. trlr. Newport Beach • 11 wt! IJ make one card per u.... ,,H":V.,~7 GOOD LOOKER '' 73-9211 e11ch. .-1ust se 2 only pendable. eronom1cal. '"'""""' r•L <714 >6 Call840-4542 us0 ful 3 spd S650 tag. Add 25' each · SI 0.050 + • "' Send check or money or TY, Rocio. Catalina 27. VHF, elec. ~J...~I 673-1314 or673.QS9 dcr Lo HIFi, Steno 8091 HAIUUSON"S start outbd. xtnt cond. 9150 EXCEUIMT SfilCTIOH OF IMWRESALES Jaguar XJ6 1972 Clai.Mt' Roll Roye. 9756 Lo m • Ver y <'I ~ an ••••••••••••••••••••••• Custom ">nrf willow "lDEALERINU SA gmtlan Mu11l itell IL'700 · · or b6loffer 64().8201 , ROY ' CARVE A PILOT PRIMTIMG ••••••••••••••• •••••••• SIA I.A Y Sl 1,950. 83o.508S PO Box 1560 23" TV Black & White 3101 Coast Hwy, N B. Col '3 diesel, race/cruise. '78 Yamaha 250 IT, mono ••••••••••••••••••••••• We may have your next '76 Ranchcro. gd cond. car in our invent.ory ·Call us today! Mmda 9 738 P IS, air. till whee l. 831.~040 495-4949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ AOllS·ROVC£ <.:ostuMesa.Ca 92626 portable~. Good run· 631-2547 9 bags of sails, loaded shock, 100 mi's, brand ,_ ... o.11!.ECOU..-Y'S rung cond. 751--4840 / · pp 556-9133 new 631 1810 ..,,_,,_ "' De:!.1gners Leftovers Liv. w eqUJp_, ______ 1 ---·--·-----OLDEST crwse cont, delux int. ___ .. _____ _ new tires. make ofr 67~124 rm Brkfn1t $400/ofr Sora Color TV for Sale Good HOUSE BOAT, 43', 1973 22. Pierson FU Uy eqwp'd '74 Honda XR·75. exrell. '74 GBC o/4 4S4 enK. Xlnl & tble $65. Lg Ant. chair coodilioo 19" console~-River Queen on L,ake xJnt cond.' $3600. Bill 0; condition. Bes t offer. concf. P tS, P / U, uuto, OX>. Bdrm furn $50-$400. 547·3182 Powell. Sps 8. Spacious Jim 549-S4?7 646-8387 AM·FM 8 lrk. fac A/C . Antiques 120 up Hdbrd & sundeck. 2 Chrys ler an • ---------chrome s ide exhaust. :.pread $225. Sleeper sofa ~& M.itte boards. Xlnt cond. 6 mos PACIFIC SEACRAFT 25. 71 Honda CR 125 Never cmpr shell, IT\llf? whl.s SaJes..5ervlce Leas ing Sl.2S. Sal & Sun 9-5 332 ....,..,._nt old top quality carpel. sailmg cruiser. inboard raced. Clean $005. or best $4250. 557.5637 Evening C11nyon Hd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Leaseable for $800/wk diesel, fully eqwpped. offer963-71J7 Roy C.-ver,lnc. CdM Gewn:ll 9010 Sacrifice at $14,750, Make oHer. P.P . Dys ---------V-. 9570 Rollsf<oyce HMW ••••••••••••••••••••••• direct from owner 768-4111 Eves1·493-0218 '73 Yamaha lOO MX New ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.540Jambortt HEYER 15' aluminum Gregor ris· 837-1033 rim, tires , overhauled ---------1 Newport Beach 640-6444 lung boat. commercial ETCHELLS-22 eng. gd cond. 768·4418 58.ICT AUTO SAi.ES DUPLICATOR ~rade. blu nylon cover. • Seacraft, twin Volvn :.>'rac111gsloop P.P _e_v_es ________ Home of select vans, will $150 Model 70 compll'te fa ctory trlr .. seat 170HP, I /O's . Cuddy 496 21JO '76Honda750Yellow6.000 pay top dollar for ni~ ly rebwll, u.-.t-d 1 time. cu!>h1ons. unchor etc. cabin,oulnggers.dav1ls, 1974 Hobie 14 w /trlr, MBestofCerXlntCondi low mile used vans. lnd udes cht•mical & Brundnew.$995.768-9052 tandem lrlr. Trade OK c ustm sails W/Jib& uoo548-6743 772.9900 paper Call 1·737 6449 -.-.. .._,,_i__ 2l3-83S-7393. tra,._,. set. New blocks, ~ -· ~-'76250 KTM, MCS. xlnt MiscellclMcMts ~pn9nt 9030 IAY LAUMCH hne ~ lraofmf po~~ Sl230030 cond. $850. WGl'lted 8081 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 18', diesel, teak seals & or ..,.,,.t er ~ : 64&8682. S.9pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANT TO SELL • console, s urrey top wkdys: 645-1138 or --------- '73 Chevy van, V 8. auto. cslm tntenor. Best oHer 846-2553 ti o I I C I u b ., o Id c r R 055 w h 1l e 11 n e re 675-7665 645-9829 GLlOOO, Winjammer far· ~cG r e g or or llogan l'Order 400 n.: swim lad· 14. Hobie --ing. sad. bags, cusl seal '73 Ford van wtCUSTOM ··-...... -11roni. 549 07M der. two step, stainless: Good Cond. $800. & more S2100. 4.93-3422. Camper Int. lo m1·s, xlnt ............ cond. DIVORC ED/· MwsicG-and misc. boat parts. FOR SALE 846-3465eves 1974 Honda 450 s t. MUST SELL! Work. IMtrwm..+s 8083 Call Dale at 498-2709. 1975 24' Reinell Segdan ob • machine, excel I. cond 631-2272. Home. 631·3077. Bndge, OMC 225, xtra 2 11 ie, 16 race eqwp Must sell. $595 768-9052 pp ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cstm Llghl bar made to clean. dual station, VHF. Good cond. Pnc~ to sell. -·-·--....... ---- !'/\Yamaha t::MJOO 2 fit your boat trailer. No depth finder. ba it tank. Eves497-4234 MotorHot.s. Sale/ '73DodgeSportsman Van ,,pkrs, mike, extrah $600 more wet Lights or "ir · many xtras. Pnced to Sol Cal 15, 1 yr new, Very ..... /SforCIC)e 9160 Good cond1l1on Extras CREVIER &I Sf & HOADWAY SAIHA AlfA 835·3171 I YHf. Ul.flaU• ff ONVIHG -CHIHt! •USEDIMW1• "712002 4 spd C7S314 I '73 2002 4s pd 3EllKBV "74 2002A,A/C/ C598LPO l "755:n Auto. (916MTV>. '752002411pd.SR.137MUK 71320l 4Sp .• st.ereo<0998> '77 320;4spd ,S I RC · RBMUUI CloMd °" Sundays miracle mazda 2J50 ..... ll•d. Cote. Mesa 645-5700 1972MAZDA RX3COUPE A real rotary hum• 4 speed trans. <568G WY I ONLY SI 185 9740 ....................... '73 2311>, !ltid, ire blue. clean. Must sell' $6500. 637 .J321. 6394325 1976 450SL. xlot cond $18.700. 644-8890 or 955-07 40 U40J.tmwtt .... _, .... < .. ..._ ) C1ostO SVNOAU 9762 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '3288 11A.e~Jf')1 JhlPS... ·----...., -------..... -=-....,._,12-- ""'•"9"' -~ ''"' ,., •• 16-~12102') co ......... adsenfu Aft6 pm. 546-4799 --in~ Fred 968-2349eves move. Umited use, xlnt cond. all ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3000. 642.2344 art 6 flute Bundy St'lmerloah,Power 9040 $12,750. xtrah, w /lrlr. Call Rent a 1977 Executive Allio•-'--9580 00 be l 'r '' II 968 1670 Motorhome or Minim· ~ 17555 Beach Blvd. I 7;0::;-~0~~t .m~~~~: Huntington Beach AM/FM cass .• full pwr, 842•0675 ·77 320 BMW. auto, Talteoverlse 631-4560 I~::::::::::=:::::::~ AM/FM slereo cassette. sunroof, mag whls. Good cond. 83().1..929 S1 . ior s 0 er "11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• motorbome'from Herb ••••••••••••••••••••••• b'75-~ 36' Drake·Craft Catalina. HARRISOM"S Schock Sabot. new s ails, Friedlander. Call any or HaYIRcj difffc..ety Offic.eF.mitwe& rly bridge sedan. 14' SEAR.AYIOATS readylouse.Super-valur thesenumbers ..._ t.rlRcJorleasincJ £-.& nt 8085 beam. Walk around alS50.Call67J.4121. 99• L771 ._ ....,..,... decks. Bendix auto pilot. 3101CoastHwy,N.8 . -acarortnlek? ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631 25 .. 7 537.7777 C .a.I I l(EU 5,aft7559 Tnmatic trim labs, + • .. Cal 25, new cushions, ,.._ ....,. .. "'" !'! draw~r lateral files, many othe r extras. RDF, Knotmeter, inflat. 82M888 $225. draft mg lbl $70. S29,500 fu1J price. 673·5099 dinghy. Honda OB, 2 arms $65, work tbls forfurtherdetails. Bay boat, 18' Lapglrake tanks, SB.750 54().0093 ~$45. stora~e t·abmeti. Classic ; Gray l /B. XJnl. --------- $65 Books helvci., chrs 18" lob6ter swordfish skiff. $2495/trade 759-0260 Sailboat motor. 1974 Mere alltypes,newwooddesk '77 Johnson. Extras .---------7.5HP. long i.haft. Sll9 Wood file S60 $4500 After 6 PM. Bay boat 18' inboard, tlOO w/remote sbJJt & throt· Couches & chrs $.5 & $10 545-8734 hrs Covers , xlras, $2500. lie. Good s hape. $300. Ulied wood desk S75 &12-MSJ 768-9052 C E. WHOLESALE 13 ' W ha I er. 5 ob pr------------------ OFFJCE FURNTTURE Evi.nrude, immac cond. 50'7o Interest i.n a lm 24' PCC Lark, 46' sloop, btrul 2044 PlacenuaC.M. + trlr & rover, '2450. Searay. In slip at Dana cood. calJ Ted Rogers. _63_l_·U17_ 631·2570 3'6-4921 _Pt._494-8629 _______ 631-02S3. 176- VOGUE-321 •Luxury coach-8300 m1, •S27.950or Jong term rent •appl. only 751·5665 '77 Winnebago, Sports Den. 24 ·, loaded-has everything. !)56.7176 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEWILLIUY YOURDATSUH rAID FOR OR NOT TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP CARS BARWICK DA TSUH ...... I. j. 1'' I q. l 111 8 31·1375493-3375 '68 BMW 1600, exccll condition. 540-5790 Capri 9715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "76 V-6. Must sell AM /FM cass., 646-1578 '71 MBZ 2.SOSL, 2 tops, brown. tan int . $14.500. Dr Miller. 639-490l "41J280SE. s nrl. air. AM /FM. neweng &ures XJnt rood. $-1.850 714·673 2790 MGI 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• complete sales and service SUBARU BRAT T..-....S. TraYef 9170 ss 900 Dtl9wn Ofl ~CIWtl Dafml 9720 1966 MGB~GT. runs great Tell Mom You Love Her Thi~ Mother\ Day send Mom a grt.'Cting all the worlJ can share on Sunday, May 14th. Express your love in a Daily Pilot Mother's Day G reeting. It's l"3.Sy . Wrire your message to fir one of our three convenient sizes .ind brin~ ir ro any Daily Pilor office prior ro noon May 12th. Or •. you ~ay mail a clipping of the border with your message and paymmt to OaJly P1lor. ~ ~O W . Bay Sr .• Box l 560. Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626. Ads corm• m rhrtt m~s: SI 0 , $ l 5, and S3 for the special lh1ld"• size urd <You musr Ix under 12 years of age co qualify for the lmlest 1o1rttting). If you wish you may crc~are your own dt-c:or:nt'J g rttting. Using black pen draw your dl"S•lln Ill fir om: of the dorred outlines shown h~ You m•y fill the cnrnr sp.ict. Only words and lines drawn wnhm rhc dnul.J lml" will Jppt';ll' m your completed ~fothcr\ l)1y JJ ,( /,..,_ ' r' .( I --~--------------------, r--... If yuu want hdp compc»ing • su11ablt 8fttt•1l3 or havt-any qun11ont call 642-5678 A frit-odly Ouly Pilot ad-v1llt'r •111 br 8h•d ro ~Jp you I I I I ' I a I j I I I I I I r--~-~----------~-----~ I I I I I r~----------, I I I I I I I I I I I I I · : I I L ___________ J ·I t _____________________ J 1----~-~-----------~~----J And, 1( you l1kt-you can c.harge your Mother·, O.y ad. Your cttd.ir ta 8oocf w,lrh u). OI you may ust ,our M&Jrtr Char11~ Of BankAmeriard. DAILY PILOT ... ,. .. .,. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE BUY ClEAHCA.RS &TRUCKS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good trans portation. LAIGI SE:L£CTIOM ._.. Airstream 31' tWUl 1970 Good condition Extras include easy hft hitch S6.295. Phone 646-6096 Spaces for rent 8x30, weekly /monthly. Adultt. no pets. 548-6173 St.arcraft tent trlr, s ips 8, like new, $1895. Xlras. 673-1522 Jwlo Stnlc.. Perts Ir Accessorl" 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 117lHS 4 wheeler tires, oo stock rima, less than 3.000 mi, xlnt cood. $12S. 541H193 afl 3PM CONNELL CHMOLET 2828 Ha rbor Blvd COSTA M ESA 546-1200 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLA.5SICS lf YoUr car is extra clean see uis first. •DRJVEA * *LITTLE-.* SAVE A LOT SHOP&COMPARE BARWICK DATSUN 'II• I, 1n I .q•I t: .11111 831 ·1375 493.3375 67~2604 after 7pm Opel 9746 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Renault Ra. Caravelle. $400' Ope I '71, Sl!IOO. Ca II 494-8660 Dtl•try!! '\ 17555 Beach Blvd. Ponct.. Huntington Beach .................. !?.~~ 842-0675 ==:::;::=======--• 11 yellow Porsche 914. ... 9765 . nd& some work, ideal RV .Oyota tow car Cuslm frame & •••••••••••••••••••••• • lDw bar avail S3000 to m7 Celica GT lftbck. lm- s e t 1 I e a n es t a t e . mac cond $530()/ or or 714 /646-llOO. 21J/98(). 7441 fef". ~s:BJ r~---------Y olls wCllJfft 9770 VolllWG91" 9770 . ............................................ . Car phone, 12 channel, $275 firm. 675·8336, 67> 7280 or Iv Ol$g. IAUBtlUIQ( 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979-2500 &:.;.~i;;iiiiiii;;;iiiiiiii;iii;;;iiiiiiiii;iiiiiii;aJ Buy your new VW for ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9510 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ttcr.ing dfffiailty t.r· W) or llosirtg a car. tnlck or airplaM7 Call ""' 540-7559 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lite blue Triumph 2000 4-dr, 1967. Collector's Item. S950 or best offer 54S-03Q2 WE BUY USED CARS CALL GARTH Used Car Mgr 540-5630 IOll~SO~ & so~ • LINCOLN · M HiCllRY Sacrifice '74 Datsun 260Z. auto, radio, healer. Air. Best offer over S<IOOO. Call 675-Q66 ·77 Datsun 280Z AtC, AM/FM stereo g track. mags, louvre window~. 4 spd. 18.000 m1. Pvt pty 963-0867 & 542-2790 2626 HARBOR BLVD Grad Special. '72 240Z. COSTA MESA clean . mags. A 1c. --------,-; AM t FM , $3500 /B.O WE IUY 831-0744. , USID CARS!um ___ D_a_ts_un_5_l_O_. -a-u-to-. -4 We re the n~w Chevrolet dr. deluxe int .. AM/FM. dealerslup in the Irvine rur. xlnl l'Ol'ld. Orig ownr. Auto Center We need $1500. 67s,31175 your used car! JOE "74260Z. AM/FM. air, xlnt 9530 M•C PHERSON 6~~k--..9!'8. ·7506arter ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ill a:-QI; ~~ CHEVROLET Rat 9725 21 Auto Center Ori ve ••••••••••••••••••••••. IRVlNE XI Air conditioner ror RV. 76 .. 7222 Fiat 71 sport 850. nt cond. One owner. 64-000 4 w...t DriYH 9550 ----,,.-----r miles. $1800. Ml·0454 Large size. t.lftd once Make offer. ·213-924·7631 or eves, 714·642·2778. ....................... Alrloa. .,.ff '72 Fiat Wgn. lo ml. xlnt COSTA MESA 0•••••• .. ••••••••••••;;0i cond. PP. Bes\ orrer AMC.JEIP _, 642·7494 #1 ... ~r SAVE! SAVE' SAVE' Here's just one of the many reasons why' NEW1978JEEP CHEROKEE (J8A11NN0'751'6) $7195 Includes vs. auto. tran.s., H.D. swspeoalon le cool· log, pwr. steering & mott! Similar discount• on every Jeep In alock. Huge seledlon to cboole from. Our dl1coun\a nade ua #l ln Callrornl1 el; COSTAMISA AMCJHP 25.M Harbor Blvd OC8TAM~A 549-1023 .. ·,-~·-- ....................... --------- '78CAMARO ·75 Xl9. clean, AIC. VS. auto , P /S, air cond . A~/FM stere~ cass . T Top 1Lic.714TPR > mugs, 2S,OOO mi s . S<l lSO $6599 -552~-8829~~~~~~ ·73 Fiat, xlnt rond, musl '11 TOY OT A PU s e 11 Ca 11 a fl 7 pm . WtCAMPER S H ELL. _842_·7271 ______ _ L O W m i I t' 5 • '89 124 Sport Cp 5 sp <Uc: 1F40540). d t>e' r· $4Z'9 $1 47 /.otMO. super nm con , lll u r 36tn0. $.Wt> down lncludea pvcr $1050. 548·6321 tu & ll cense. Def. HoMlll 9721 ~.ail A.P .R. S\8.0 on •••••••••••••• •••• •••• • approved credit. ar..d New "71 Groth Chorolet 11211 1 .... hll•d 1111,.ll"'Jl'Cfl hoc~ 847-6087 S49-33ll Lookln• for • borne of your own• You'll tlnd many bomee advertlMd Cor Ille ln Claultled evteyday • HONDA Can MANY Toct.o1M,.._.I UNIVERSITY o.. ..... .._. C... • GMC Trab 2850 Matbot Blvd. 0.. ..... 640-9'40 . .. . -. ,. .... , C~ST +10% Thru Su11day. 5/14 Harbo•r Volk1wagm wlU HI •y ..w VW Sclrocco, Rabbit, C.xcept chseU, Dasher, lus or c..,... in stod for dealet cost pills I 00/o. Offer does net include optional eq11lptMlll • UMit.d ......,., of frH Calfcitnia s.f IOCC... tickets atlll G¥ailabl• for '"' dri•ht9 a MW Rcebft. Uc4"1Md. driYen Ollly. UtNt of 4 tfcbh per *-ily. CLEAN USED CARS '75 vw ................. $4195 StMeo, air, lo m1 ( 145MYPJ "7] vw las •••.••••••.••• $3595 AM/FM stereo t~. sunroof 1513JEXJ '7 J vw ... . ..... --...... s 3195 4 sp, srereo-slifc. stnpes 1571HYHJ 172 VW lug COll•ert .•. : .... SAYE •23876 Z •74 u-Grande IUCJI fro. Sl695 ( 120MUO) (4'48MNL) 3 Ka.,..... Ghla1 .... frOlll S3295 71 !363HOUJ '72 (~2461 ) 73 !007611 '7 4 VW rhhlt .............. SA YE lie 320C.OU '7 4 vw s.,.r a.iv ..•..... $2711 lie. 09780 Harf>our VoHcswagttn 842-4435 11711.._..lkd..M ...... IHcla S.a• Hrs: tt• lrt 9.9, S• f 0 7. S. I 0-7 ,..,._,..,._,~ aL-Ott"'--C.- OllWC-t •• ,. . . . . \ i. - I Ailto1,U1td Auto1,U1ed AMtoe. ...,....... ...... UMd ....._ Utt4 c;.;,;,::~· ••••••ttSS •••••• •••• • .......... .. Wednteday. May 10, 1978 D>Jl,.V Pit.QT " ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• " D Mad H70 T... '7H .... ,_. ttot Qu;•t ttJO ;;~:;;:;:;~~::·:~:; ----••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• d. 1 • u ·ea11 llFOUYOU 71B.CAMINO 77MOMZAJ+J ::nn'!~pm9 • ?l,,........, S&1 YOUl CONQUISTA. Au to .• Auto. Pl&. air cond lo-....&..... 99rr7 AutomaUe. v.r.Nerta1 To'OT P'" 1leer101. air, ml' CU ..OPIB) • .--~ & brakes. new Urea. A. ~Y Fllf 1tere o tape, 1. Pitt · ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM /Fil 1ter90 • on.I.)' SEE us• ser 406m "7• P\llto Wain. 4 11pd, air. a.ooo miles! Pri. pty. MA.IOUIS TOY.OT A Ssttt 77 CAPIJCI ~~~ 11900. or or-~.:~ 892· um be lore s aoSslON VIEJO 77 CHIV VJ TOM Auto., PIS. air cood .. T· • lll·JU04t5-IJIO PICKUP. VS, 4 wbff' Top.Wt,powerwlodows. "12~to3-drRuaabout,1o * 67d. T1·BIRD. Clas~lc 77CBJCA6T ) spd. AM /FM Li pe, A.IC. x:lnt cond, ~. M7-010:S UdY but dependable 'f8 Corolla, runa well $599. 499-1011, 4!M-431f '70 CORONA Ma rk II. New til'!!S, gd traoa. P /P. • c u 1 to m l n t e r l o r . m.i 1, auto. $1500 to aetUe con oaded, lo ml 1. drtve. AM/FM. P /S, (Uc.mJ>KY) an estate 7141~1109, Sl47S. P.P. ~ P i e . ••Pd , c uatom Slltt 213'*-7441 wheel• le tires. tSer. 1---------1 '73 T-Bird. Lthr int, xtru. lli2650). 9t60 33,000 mi. Orig ownr. $6599 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3500. 751-201.5. 1174 Ply. Satellite Sta. '67T Bird Full power Nice Wq. 9 peu .• P /S. P /B. cleu bater Gd numln Air. Gd. Urea, trans. cond.. $1585 Ml 3830 t Grotil Cht>•1 oltt 1ll1 1 ~<><~ l t•d Hwnhnqlon lro~h Gro"' Che...,-olet 11211 .. och l t•d. H11nlinql.,., '"""h 847-6087 S"9-33J I 84 7·6087 S4Y.JJJI Coole r , air shocks . · • trailer bitch. CB Radio '7S Chevrolet Monte Carlo incl. Good Cond. Sl.800. Vi Avanll II '73, sliver, ltbr. Vinyl top Air Cond, 82J S.Orange.S.A. 991 tt74 ---------~opt.Ions, lo ml Xlnt AM/FM stereo caaseu.e ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Ccrolla, •uto. radio, m/out. PP. 213-883--0863, Power ateering, Disc '7$ Duster, V-8, a uto '74 W1gon A/C. Auto. ext. perfect, &ood oood. n H l94-71.57 Brakes Qlll after 6 PM trans. P /S. P /B. AM/FM R&H, New b1Ueriea & $700. 832-45.W $12915. 631M882, 547-1871, 1---------1 673-3t6% cass, xlnt cond. 645-3061. tires 11100. $48-8618 &»1087 77CHEVMOVA ,_,_ 9965 '76 STATION WAGON Auto .• PIS. P /B. radio. c..,-tt25 -................... .. CORONA. 2SMPG +, beater. vinyl top. (!Jc.••••••••••••••••••••••• _ .. , .. G p del WRXT) d b E •~ uaa rand rix uxe Vega Wa100, '73, n ew tires. good transporta· tion. 11100. 754-0ll8S auto. air, h.cea&e rack, ~2799 97$ Cor o a xcep-coupe, 29,000 mi'a. Wile's s tereo, new tires, -tJonallycln.Sl.996.Days, car no c hild A '71Veppuel.~V~& ed/bl ... 1 1 ~Pvt"")i" • . • • .......... ·-~ ....... _ ... r •· o m • $4200. 75 FORD c .............s--~ · BEAUTY. Int like nu. .... uu w ........ .._.. •toe•. 499-Wl __...... 9927 $3850. 664-1192, Bi& Ca· _S2400 __ 1bes __ L_.t93-_9596 __ _ '76 Celie• GT trtbck. 5-21.000 mt. 4 spd., radio, ••••••••••••••••••••••• DJIOO. MUST SELL! '74 Ve1•. 4 .w1 heater. (Lic.1Cl8638 ). ,,___,..,. dr 1 pd s.,... AM·FM stereo, au. $2199 $96MO '7h.uu ..... 2 ,auto.S ey , SELL kDe Items with a s . clean. runa great lo mi. 5'995. 848-3573 . J6mo <r,0;;:00• • • -"lud • lmmac. 21.K mi. Rtif. Dally Pilot Claaaified Ad. S1aOO. 673-7570 . _,., wn m.. es Olli 640-1086 WED. -lHURS. -FRI. -SAT. CAIS AU FUIMISHID IY IHI FOUOWIM6 AUTOMOllU DIAl.aS 4TUI CHIYsa.a/PLYMOUTH 2929 Hsbof' 81\Jd. 546-1934 IAUll IUICllOf'ILl•nSM UYLAMD 2926 Harbor Blvd. 979-2500 COMMIU. CHIV.OUT r 2828 Harbor 81\Jd. 548-1200 COSfA MBA IUllC/J&# 2524 Harbor 81\Jd. 549-8023 COSTA MBA DATSUN 2846 Harbor 81\Jd. 540-M10 IAlLI Ill 10YOTA/YOUO 1966 Hwbor 81~ 64&-9303 JOHMSOM AND SOM UMCO&.H/MmCUmf 2628 Harbor 81\Jd, 540-6830 ALAM MAGMON POMnAC 2480 H•bor Blvd. 649-4300 MllACU ~191AULT 2 150 Harbor Bl"1d. 046-6 700 MAllH CADI I •c: 2600 Hwtx>r 81'4 54().9100 JMIOOOU ltcma flOO 2060 Hwbor 8tvd. 842..0010 UMIYllUTT OLlllWC/HOteA 2850 Harbor 8!\ld. 64<MMMO The DAILY PILOT Is the people'a marketplace for new and used cars along the Orange Coast • Call 642-5678 DAILY PILOT '7l Corona Mark 11. Auto, A/C, AM·FM stereo Orig oumr. $1.500. 962·28(Y1 lax & license. Def.1--------- 13889.84. A.P.R. Sl8.0 on Cuth:111t:al 9910 ~· ~ew 9100 ~Mew tlOO Mew tlOO .._.Mew · 9IOO Alltol. Mew '800 ...... Mew 9100 approved credit. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••• ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-• .. ••••• ••••••••••••••-•• .. ••• ••••••••••• .... •• .... • •••••••••••• ........... vo11a..,.. 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VOUCSWACiEMS WEIUY&SEW Lea ... Seledloft '69 voucs $799 (297ADA> '68 VOUS $599 <055DlL) Gro"' Chevrolet I 821 1 8.och li•d. H.,nlinqlon l<'och 847-6087 S49 .J33 I '77 Mark V, cream color. bMled, 20.,000 mi's, lllnt cond. Stl,$00. P.P. 64-8444 wtdyt t-5 1972 Mark IV. Loaded. . Beaut. blk on blk. Mint Moving -Selling all 3 coad. $3500. 648-2231 farruly c:ars: '74 4dr Im--------- pala: '76 VolareWgn; '73 Luxury for less. 1975 Pontiac. All xlnl cond. Mark IV. Everything &torr. P.P. 586-4839 like new. Call 6PM. 7»0067 '69 VOLXS $999 AMC t90S eorwtt. 9932 C414DHP> ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-•-•••••••-•••••••• . $56 per lllOllfh . ~i::. J.eZn~m'!:: "1:~~=E Borrow l!OlB.36; OAC; perfect, 29,000 orig mi. W,P-=eCGr, APR ls 22.5 p/c.: pay $2.200. 6173-0200 days, eP. (n4)$40-n.59Keo ~11.,;.~13'4 00 in 24 541H046eves/wknds. -COl'Qi iiS--· FREE TV '7• Hornet Sportabout • 7 5 v el T • T 0 p • Wen. PS/PB, air. SllB5. ("""'1100) Immaculate' New set & with t.hJ.a ad at Pb 646-7672 ruv • · umeolpurehase. •---------• '77 Vet-cnue (67750t). Ukenew! WESTGERMAN Great Buy! 1970 Am-•7s Vet-Orange. IMPORTS bassador $500. Nu (mn.'5). Priced to sell! '"°"'Ha bo 81 d. C M tires/brakes/lune up ,68 Vet-(9l9H.IW Rare ......., r r v , . . ~UBS Gem! 714/645-6120 '76 Vet-4Spd. (4018.17). Cadiloc tt I 5 ~per Cood. VOLKSWAGEN ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Vet-Convertible. S•1 Senic• Wt (w.MUEQ).Nicecar! .... , ... ~ Top Dollar &Sportc.-C ...... Paid for Used VW's 2001s. Mancheeter COMMOMWULTH • Anaheim 7~2141 MOTOIS 0.-,. eo.ty•a Ca rg 9t33 SIMCI 1953 Se-¥• C...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• "42So. Bristol • '61 Coular. Vinyl top. Santa Ana oeeda &ody work. 289 546-0220 OVER I 00 ~m ereat.. seoo. Approx. 2 ml. No. or CADILLACS South Coast PJ..u. TO CHOOSE FltOM r.d tt40 '7S VW Bua. 7 pau, 43.000 mi. AM/FM, gd cond. $4700. 6'2--8968 aft 6 PM MIYERIMPORTB> vw ATALLTIMIS Nabers Cadillac 2600 H.11 h111 Blvc.l. (.11'>IJ Mc~ 540·9100 ....................... • PHIL LONG FORD 47,000 ml. only 2 owners. Re built tran1m1ss1on, almost new mot.or. Ex· ceJ.l. interior. Good tires. Needs body work and pa.ant. Just bad tune-up ~.Call ~Me$. Cad '76 SevWe. RR 1rill. L .. ••-l--~-.. ..... __ c-,_ tape, crse, loaded. PP . '72 BUS. good cond, runs $9250. SS7-9750en well, looks nice, must U .... "" ,,."7"°.. ""' El Dorado. Wbt/bl"e '73 Gran Torino Sport, _se_._........, __ ·"""' __ ..... ___ "ia00a' _ .. ,_ 1 .. loaded! 43,000 ml, must '61 vw, good cond. u, mal\al.IMI ealh sell this wknd ! Low S700orbeatofr. inlr. lmmac. $5800/blL wblse book $1500 . 960-26.53 49!HCRaJU PM. MO-U. ---------· 73 Coupe de Ville. good '76 F rd Elit I '74 VW Bug 31.000 M1 cond, loaded, make ofr. 0 e. mmac, Good cond. 6'2-32:>9 or PP. 332.3952 &40-'19'9 io.ded,llkenu,20,000ml. 21384.2-411.S eva ' Mich tires, custom blue . W/Wbt lnt. PP. 646-7782, '71 Sqrbck. '72 rblt ens '68 Cadillac vry 1ood evs979-T189 sum cond. 59 M Loaded Must•--------- 673-25$7 sell $990 7GlH44-4 1970 Ford Galaxy, x:lnt · runnln1 cond. $900. '67 VW Bt.11. new reblt. Excell. buy, won't last S900. Mk for Karen. '73 Coupe De Ville, _631_..J5_15 _____ _ $3,000 5J6.QIS 754-Q82. Eves SS6-72:M -------- ·m LTD wgn. Good cood. $700/bst oiler. 673-7094 '71 VW SQuareback, 1un· shine yellow. exceU. blk interior . .,_, best offer. Must aell I P.P. 486-7985 '63 eua. $775. Good condi- tion. AM /FM 1lereo. 830-95 aft. 5, 631-G88 t772 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..OUYOUIUY A USID VOL YO. Set us at Southern Oraqe Coun\1'1 Volvo ~·VOLVO "iiiSiioN v1EJ0 lll·JllO 4t5-1210 ..u um week. '76 llooarch, V-8. •·dr, loaded. Xlnt cood. Sacrifice ts,t50. P.P. , ____ ,.. ___ ,_Gil "7e Luv 4-wbJ drtve, muy Hl2 extras. See to ap--••·-·--•••••• <:.+Ml COUMTY predate. 5«).4M28 IN paint. wtde tar., VOLVO 191111 1.mpa1a a,per Sort ID&n11tr11. '1JOO. P .P. EXC.USJVELYVOLVO cpe. 327 ens. Orl1. Dave,IG1M1.Mf.no1 1Arc-tValvoo..Jer owner. SSH/bat o.tr. lnOraqeCowlb'I 4DM748 BUY«LEASE •--------·• DJUCT •CHIV. '77 1---------1 MOMTI CARLO ' lluatanJ U batdabec:k. ~ =..!:=;;l'!::··· a ~i:Sl ~~· HOWAIDCM•rollt =~n: atHl at Anaheim 760-2011 DOVE4'QUAILSTS. ~auvN-C•Rf -------· --<NearMacArtbur. """• .. ..., "' '76VolW>,1$4, 4 Dr, A/C, Jamboree&Bristol) '71 Muetan1 Grandt. AM/PK. B&a.ndard trana N'i."WPORT BEACH Boqbt new, Stored I X1n& cood. l Owner. C.11 llJ.OHS yra. 20,S78 mt. Ori1. e~.lltallday. ~.•VI. auto ... k ·-Cl 1 v 1 1974 Caprice Elute Wp. ~.:· PIS. viD1l ..., ~ UI C 0 VO PJ&. *if/B, stseo. J"ll • top. ...... BacUO, SacrUlce .. 00/l"lrm = ...... ......... pp :-.:::-·•••pa O-ecind.•1211 •nu, --· • • ·--• . aatJaMtn. ~-.. ...... ---.. ··-- • # • ._Lzw .. ••••Slsal•• ''S•WllMES'' II All -2 PM -4 PM SArmtAY&~y MAY 13 & 14 See the Fastest Guns in the West compete for 1200000 Prize Money. Special Demonstraffon of Fastest Guns from the Far East featuring Japan's Finest. , c ••• Emfr, .., latel ,,, .... ......... ¥ ... _ .... ......,. ......... ,,,.,,,...,.. ............. ""' •ldtO . ................... ............ -er.-ClOMrOI LAC ....... 1m.o11 .............. Y.f. eulO. ....._ ~-=~=we. '"" ,,, ..... ---·-...... I. • c,e . -.... .,.,.,.. ::g., .... ....,. .. ...,, c-.. " ..... -· lillD'r .. , CD~~ ...... t>O••• Chte iw...... reot0. ~ ._ ....... -.l!fll«I 1111!,,, 1111 wlleel Se r t011u1l61•1a si-•'4•& •5499 I I \ ' \ I • , ' 111111 ....... , ' f .. T / ~ t ) • J 1 .... cl d II >- d cl f :--,h lfl k· tl )0 01 ,. te or th ~e a so SS ,U· re nt he li· ·~· irk t.'· re· on St his est I of t I " ~ "" ..... .. .. M "" 111 ., .. AU ., • ... •• A4 .. .. .. l . \' ~ I ATLAS CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH SERVICE HOURS: MOHDA Y THIU FllJDA Y 7:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. SATURDAY 8:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M. _____ ., ~ ~ ., .. BJO PILOT ADVERTISER Wednesday, May 10, 1971 N f )'l'I f ~I~ ALL BRAND NEW I MOU H VOLARl:S 2 DOORS, 4 DOORS, STATION WAGONS, ALL r-SAPPOROS, ALL FURY 2 DOORS, ALL ARROWS, ROLLING OUT AT ONLY $75.00 OVER INVOICE ••• NO GUESS WORK, ALL INVOICES DISPLAYED ON WINDSHIELDS • • • UNBELIEVABLE SAVINGS ON COMPLETE CAR INVENTORY, INCLUDING CHRYSLERS FOR FLEET SALE OR .. . . LEASE INFORMATION CALL BRYAN HESKETH 546-1934 AND ALL MODELS PL YMOUTHS • • • PUBLtC. FLEET DEALERS AND WHOLESALER INVITED.· DOES NOT Fabulous "8 .. See These u~~d on Fine Used Cars Outstanding Used CManVy, Many M~;~ ar alues• '77 DODGE . '77PLYMOUG V-8, automari'OUU SIOAH H sreering c, air COndrtlon/ Whltewai1 ~ (:alf.es. AM rad':g· hPOwer .• $13is84SHQJ. eater, V-8, .?!.~'i~U,LER steering, ~ ~._COndrllon;ng AM/FM Sier .,,~es. "°'4-er ·. i:>ower trres, viny1 roo'f'C:U8d1 •o. hearer, ::h~dows. t l\ . ' .. •75 CHEVROL • cylinder 4 l uY ,,cwu,, ET m~· ·sa;s-· ·-·~. '71 FORD 4 cylinder a~o cou,. radio, heat9r. c490~~Ullc1. air Condltionln . g, '. s1195 Auto?.! ~k!.~UTH steering • 8" condrllonin rao;0 With~ brakes, AM/~M Power ~nyl root. (371/:RtJeater, Whilewa11 s:1':'eeo . s, S3695 sQ9573TJ~a/I I • c,11.:~7 'r,2!0TA C1F8t956J • 4 speed, radio h · • eater. s3395 · '76 PLYMOUTH V-8, automat· ~AGON sreerln •c. arr condition Wnrte:;Jj tl'!!!_'llle(tri::: .. b.(akes, ra~g·hDOWer s~ its· ...... HARBOR BL VD. L!bus) 0 ... ' :~ . ( I .. 1 ' .. I J ,, I Huntington Beac- Foliittain Valley EDI TI ON * * . .. . "''ernooo N.Y. S•oeks l VOL. 71, NO. 130, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEON ESOAY, MAY 10, 1978 TEN CE:JTS f 17 t . Pickets Hit Edison Plant l .,. ............ PRINCESS MARGARET, LORD SNOWDEN TO' DIVORCE After Stormy Marriage, a Rift In Royal Family Princess Margaret, Snowdon to Divorce LONDON <AP> -Princess Margaret and her husband Lord Snowdon have agreed to a divorce, Buckangham Palace an· nounced today An official s tatement announc· ing the impending end of the stormy marriage said : "He r royal highness, the Prin cess Margaret, Countess or S nowdon, a nd the Earl o f Snowdon a fter two years of separation have now agreed that their manage should formally be ended. Accordingly her ryoal h1J?hness will start the necessary legal proceedings." Margaret,' sister of Queen Elizabeth II, separated from her photographer hus b and March 16. 1976, after 16 years of mar riage. The 47-year-old princess and Lord S nowdon, 48. have two c hildren David Vicount Linl ey. 16. and Lady Sarah Arm s tron~·Jone s. 14 . A spokesm an at K e n s ingto n Palace. Margaret's home, said the princess would continue to have custody of the couple-s two children, but Snowdon will have l.nyoff Notice To Be Sent to V tdley Aides Fountain Valley (elementary> School District trustees agreed Tuesday to send 205 possible lay off notices to all but 20 or the dis· trict 's part-time teacher aides The exact number of aides lo be laid off will be determined by individual school principals when their plans are completed just before the sta rt or classes in the fa ll, officials said The sebool board's action shocked about 20 aides who at· tended a special trustee meetlng Tuesday. "Most of the aides I know are going to file for unemployment." said Dorothy Brandt, a Fountain Valley parent who is also an aide at Fulton Elementary School. Mrs. Brandl said aboul 80 per· cent of the teacher aides In the Fountain Valley School District are also parents of youngsters who attend school there. Assistant Superintendent Jack Mahnken said that not all or even hall of the district's 225 part-time aides will be laid off. ffe would not estimate the number at U1il Ume. Mahnken said the ai. cul· becks will be based on seniority rights determined by the nwn ber of hours worked. Some aides work between two and six hours per day. ofticials indicated. Superintendent Bill Plaster 1a1d the d11lrlct will r ly more heavily oo volunt.eera to handle duUes formerly given to teactler aides. The school board decided not to cut the six bilincual and 14 or· thopedlc aides employed by the dlatrtct. - access. The spokesman said the prln· cess had "no plans for remar· riaji!e." Margaret has drawn criticism in recent months for h e r friendship wllh 30-year·old socialite Roddy Llewellyn. She is in King Edward VII Hospita l in London s uffering from suspected gastroenteritis. Th e K e n s ington P a lace spokesman said Margaret was ··making progress ... The re· suit or tests taken by the doctors will not be known until Friday." He said he had no knowledge of Lord Snowdon's plans . ··w e are not in a position lo comm ent about Lord Snowdon." Lord Snowdon has been linked by gossip columnists to assistant movie producer Lucy Lindsay· Hogg. a divorcee. The last member or the British royal family to be involved in divorce proceedings was the Earl of Harewood, the queen's cousin , who divorced 11 years ago. T h e spokesm an sa id the divorce proceedings were under way a nd the princess will be represented by the queen's lawyer. Matthew Farrer . The queen has been kept in- fo rmed of the situation but her con stitutional consent is not necessary. ·'The princess is suing for divorce. This is a technicality, one party has lo start the pro· ceedangs," the spokesman said. "The marriage bas broken down and the couple have lived apart for two years. These are ob- vi o u s l y th e grounds for divorce." The 1960 marriage of the ef· fervescemt 29-year-old princess and globe·trottjng photographer Antony Arms trong-Jones - raised to the peerage of the Earl of Snowdon in 1961 -was a glamorous m atch that caught the fan cy of romantics throughout the world . But as the years passed. it became clear the relationship was wearing thin. Even before their formal split in 1976, she began lo be seen with Llewellyn, a brewery heir who aspires to become a night club singer. Seitz Wins Election in Seal .Beach' Harold K.. Seils won a place OG the Seal Beach City CouncU Tues· day, defeatlnc Incumbent Thomas C. Blackman 837-729 in a runoff election for the third dis· trtctseat. Seltz la a laboratory supervisor for the Los An1elea County Santtatlon District. Blackman, who had beerl teTYtn1 as the city's mayor ,llateacber. Tu adey'• runoff eh!ctlon was scheduled after none of the thJ'ee candldatet ln the reaular election in March wu able to collect a cleu majority In the third dlitr1ct rac:e. ' I Power Cutback Not Due By ROBERT BARKER Of .. o.11, ,.. ... St.ltf Power station workers went on strike at 12:01 a.m. today at Southern California Edison plants in Huntington Beach and San Onofre and at eight other locations in Southern California. Nearly 1,100 members of the Utility Workers Union of America, Local 246, voted to t ake lo the picket lines a t all s ites after overwhelmingly re· Jectang the company's "last of· fer " Monday. It is the first such s trike against Edison since 1953. A union s pokesman said that picketing which began at 12:01 a.m . would continue on an ar~und the clock. _ -~.-.,.,;..,_.._..,.ij;., A last-ditch effort lo avert the ~ ~ Oilll' ,_. ... ~.., PWidl O'Deutll s trike failed when .talks broke down Tuesday. Edison had pre- viously terminated the contract with the union effective at mid· night Tuesday. Bob Hull, a spokesman for Edison, said that supe rvisory personnel are taking the place or the striking union mem hers who maintain a nd repair power units. PICKETS MARCH OUTSIDE EDISON COMPANY POWER PLANT IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Electrtcity Still On, But Talks Are Off; Key IHue Is What Constitute• • Weekend Terror Mounts • ID Italy He said that he is confident tha t the company can continue to produce electncity at normal cap acity "as long as it is necessary.'' Executive Slwt as Moro Death Protau ffise An Edison official that said that about 1,500 construction workers on a $2.4 billion ex· p a n sion project at the San Onofre nuclear plant have ap· pa rently honored picket lines a nd didn't go to work at 9 a.m . The workers are employed by the Bechtel Power Company and other sub-contract.ors. They are represented by various other un· ions workin g o n plants Numbers2and3. An Edi.son official said the company is exploring ways to get the construction workers back on the job. About 3,000 employees in all work on the ex· pansion project. <See STIUKE, Page A2 > Yo11ng 'Nazi' Held in Killing LANSING, Mich. CAP> -A 15-year-old self-proclaimed Nazi has pleaded no contes t to murdering a classmate after be· ing taunted for his beliefs. Roger Needha m of Lansing, a frail-looking boy, wore a Nazi party emblem on his jacket when be entered bis plea. He will remain in the Ingham Coun- ty jail until June 5, when Circuit Judge Donald Owens will decide where he is lo go for detention and psychological treatment. Needham. son or a Cooley Law School professor, suffers from a rare form or mental illness that made him "a true paranoiac" according to a psychiatrist's re- port. ROME <A Pl -Four terrorists shot a Milan industrial executiv~ in the legs today. keeping upthe war on the Italian establis hment despite nationwide revulsion at the Red Brigades• murder of Aldo Moro. Officials or the Christ ian Democrat Party annouoceo. meanwhile. that a stale funeral will be conducted -without Moro's body -In the Basilica of St. John Lateran on Saturday. They said private funeral services will be held according to the family's wishes at Torrita Tiberina. 30 miles north or Rome . The day or the funeral was not announced. After the body of the former premier was discovered Tues- ' dav. the Moro family, embit· ter e d over the government ·s r e fu sal to n egoti ate the kidnappers' demand for the r e l ease or 13 i mprisoned terrorists. asked that there be no state funeral, national mourning or any ceremonies. In one or the numerous letters he wrote during his captivity, Moro criticized his party's ada· mant stand and told its leaders to stay away from his funeral. The victim o r the Milan "kneecapping" w as Franco Giacomazzi, an executive or the sla t e ·owned Montedison chemical industry. Police said three men and a woman gunned him down and fled. Such attacks a re a favorite tactic of the Red Brigades. and Giacomazzi was the firth person kneecapped in northern Italy In fi ve days. The ultra-leftist terrorists were expected to rollc;>w up the murde r of Moro with attacks on more Rapist of Girl, 7, Sought by HB Cops Huntington Beach police are still searching for a thin, mid· dle-aged man who raped a 7· year-old girl al an elementary school April 30. The girl was riding her bicycle at Creal Vlew Ele m e ntary School, in Huntington Beach when she "as attacked that SW"I· day. Police said the man grabbed the child end pulled her behind a classroom wing. The attacker ned ln a white and ahJny green sedan. The suspect was described as a Caucasian ln bia 40's with black hair , grayina al tbe temples. He ls slx feet tall aod wore sunglasses, a green shirt wltb a white collar and U1ht tromera at the time of the al· tack, pol.ice 1atd. Polf ce have released a draw· tn1 of the 1u1pect and have uked anyone who ml1hl have lnformltlon about the case to call Detectlve Art Oroz at 638·*53 . I ) HAY! YOU ll!IN HIM? Ponce OraWlng of R•pl•t political leaders, and the newspaper Corriere delta Sera said polke protection of likely targets had been mtensiried. The rounder of the tte<I Brigades, Renato Curacio, shouted in a Turm courtroom tc>- day that the assassination or Moro was "an act or revolu· tionary justice. the highest act or humanity possible in this society without jus tice and divided into classes." He was dragged away in chains . Curacio and 14 other Red 7 Finalists Picked for BB Trustee Post Members or a selection panel have identified seven finalists as candidates for a vacant seat on the Huntington Beach Union High School District Board of Trustees. Steve Smith, s pokes man for the five.member panel. told the four remaining school board m embers Tues day that t he seven finalists, chosen from a list or 40 applicants. will be in· terviewcd publicly Friday night. The public interviews will take place at 7 o'clock at Huntington Beach Hjgh School, 1905 Maan St.. Smith said. The school board plans lo con· s ider the pane l's nomination for t he appointed post at a 10:30 a .m . meeting Saturday al the district offices. 5201 Bolsa Ave .. Huntington Beach. The school board vacancy was created last month by former trust ee Don MacAllis t er's resignation after he was elected to the Huntington Beach City Council. The seven finalists for the trus tee post are: -Victor F. Johnson. 9147 El Azul Circle, Fountain Valley, a special projects offi cial with a Los Angeles medical firm : -Lacila Ochoa Laing, 5471 Shre wsbury Lane. Westminster, currently serving on the Orange County Grand Jury. -Brian Lake, 8464 El Arroyo Circ l e, Huntington Beach, general manager of Huntangton Sea cllff; -Alex Lo1an. 19682 Sacra me nto Lane, Huntington Beach, a private attorney and a former deputy district attorney; -AndnlW J. Masley, 16561 Wanderer Lane. Jtuntln&ton Beach. director or scientific re· aearch al McDonoell Doualas In Huntlnaton Beach: -Cynthia Royce Sbofer. 8501 Martlnique Drive, Hunt1n1ton <See VACANCY, P11e A.2) ... ' Brigades members are on trial in Turm on sedition charges. Authorities an Rome an nounced that 24 or the 26 persons arrested May 8 in a police d ragnet for suspects in the Moro kidnapping had been re lease<• for lack or evidence. They had been held on charges of sub· versive association. Moro's murder strengthened the alliance between Moro·~ Christian Democratic Party and the Communists and promised election gains to the government party. In a spontaneous bu~t of emu lion. millions of Italians poured out of factories, s hops. offices and schools Tuesday lo demonstrate· against terroris m after Moro'!-. bodv -chained and riddled with 11 bullets -was found in a parked car in the heart of Rome. More than 100,000 peopl<• c rowded Milan's Piazza del Duomo. More than 30.000 marched around the Colosseum an Rome. car rying hastily· fashioned white banners for the Christian Democrats and red for the Communists along with black-framed portraits or t he 61-year-old former prem ier The nation's unions called a two-hour genera l strike today so workers could altend ma ss meetings against terrorism. Stu- dent demonstrations also were scheduled, and some student groups "excommunicated" the Re d Brigades from the anti- government movement. Pope Paul VJ said Moro's as· sassination is "a bloody mark which dishonors our country." He told children who JUSt re· ce1ved their First Communion a nd others gather ed in St. Peter's Basilica today. "This c rime has shocked every honest person in the world, the whole of . society." Coa~t Weather Night and morning low c loudiness, clearing to hazy afternoon sunshine Thursday. Cooler days. Lows tonight in 50s. Highs Thursday in upper 60s a long beaches. INSIDE TODA~ Motl cors.prodJ.lc~ /or the 1976 m~l Jlftlr by American Motors wUl be recalled b11 /e<Urol ordn. ~e Page A4. •••ex Al Y-W11ke All IMll•a A6 ... title ., ,.,,," ..... L. M. ..... • M IMll< 114• et .... _. ... , M4lt'N4 ,.,.... .. Coll".... At............ A4 E· ":. DM t ~ "" Cl .,,.,...,._ ...._.., Cl......_ ., .. .. .._ A1 Or.~ All ... tw!M... "' .............. ., .........._. •tt " .... "*' .. ......,.... C.tt ftNW. •tt ..... a.tt:..... .. =::.... Cit .... .._ M :\2 OAIL't' PILOT k F w Meg's Life 'Like a Novel' LONDON <AP! -From her ampetuous childhood lbroulh her precocious teen-uge ,years to her stormy middle age. Brltain's Princess Margaret swirled through life trailing controversy over her men and her deportment. The annoWlcement today from Buckingham Palace that she and husband Antony Armstrong-Jones would seek a divorce after nearly two years or separation was only the latest episode in a life that seemed the very stuH of novels. MARGARET WAS BORN IN August 1930, and made her first public appearance at the age or 6 at her father's coronation. Since then. she has been continually in the public eye -often with heavy consequences for her private life. - She was a lively child, known to cartwheel down Buckingham Palace haJls. defy orders and make scenes. "My first memory," she said. "is half.falling out of my pram ,.l-baby carriage. A great to-do. I imagine I must have wanted to be :-: ·.noticed." :-She was a capable horsewoman. spoke a number of lanauages. -and loved piano. Both Margaret and her older sister, later Queen ~ ~ Elizabeth U. were proficient swimmers. : ·.=: BUT WHEN THEY WERE awarded a lifesavin1 certificate together, Margaret became so angry she picked up her sister's dog. threw it into Buckingham Palace's lake, and then, clad in ber :· • best partydress,jumped in to rescue the drenches animal. .. Margaret always wants whal I want," ber sister once saJd. •• "When my sister and I were growing up," explained u.. Margaret. "she was made out to be the goody-goody one. That was boring so the press tried to make out I was wicked as hell." Margaret blossomed into a precocious teen-ager and jet-setter, a beautiful young woman with violet eyes, brown hair and nawless skin. She was surrounded by the British press and idolized by the royalty-loving public during the austere post-World War II years. "THE PLEASURE-SEEKING PRINCESS, .. headline writers called her. She was always off to nightclubs trailing dukes, guard officen and other eligible young men. There were pictures or her smoking in public. Her elegant cigareue holders became famous. In her mid-ZOS, her ill-fated romance with Royal Air Force Group Capt. Peter Townsend brought her widespread sympaUay: Townsend. a Battle of Britain hero, was equerry to Margaret's father KinJ{ GeorJ{e VI. But the dashing fighter ace bad been divorced, and that brought family and church pressure that evenlually forced the princess lo renounce him. Four and a half years laler, in May 1960, she married globe-trotting photographer Armstrong-Jones · later elevated to the peerage as Lord Snowdon -after a secret love affair. Millions watched their wedding ceremony at Westminster Abbey or on television. THEIR OFl'EN ROCKY MARRIAGE enthralled Britons but effectively ended 16 years and two children later with a separation. ··t don't see myself m arrying again." the Princess said in 1977. "It wouJd probably be too much of a bore." Her latest man, and suitably her latest scandal. was Roddy Llewellyn, a socialite and former hippie turned aspiring supper-club crooner. Margaret came in for sharp criticism in Parliament, in public a nd among Church of England clerics for her friendship with Llewellyn, with whom she frequently was seen and in whose eompany she took vacations on lhe Caribbean island of Mustique. It was announced last month that Margaret would continue her public life -the implication being that s he would not see Llewellyn as often al least in public -and the Buckingham Palace announcement today said s he bad •·oo plans for re-marriage." Carter Urged to OK More Israeli Arms WASHINGTON (AP) -Two Cabinet officers are recom· mending that President Carter promise 20 additional F-15 jet fighters to Israel in an effort to win congressional approval of the sale of warplanes to Israel. Saudi Arabia and Egypt, a White House source said today. The recommendation by Secretary or Stale Cyrus R. Vance and Secretary of Defense Harold S. Brown would bring to 110 the number of Jet fighters promised Israel in the arms sale controversy. The source said Carter will not change the terms of the pro· posed sale of 60 F·15s to Saudi Arabia, 75 F·l6s and 15 F·lSs to Israe l and 50 F·Ss to Egypt by 1983, but would promise to sell Israel the additional planes after that. Administration officials believe Carter's concession will pick up enough votes to win a Everest Scaled KATMANDU, Nepal CAP> Two Austrians became the first lo reach the top of Mt. Everest, the world's highest mountain, without the help of oxygen, Nepal's Mirustry or Tourism an· nounced Tuesday. OAANOE COAST "''" DAILY PILOT ~i:r.~~rr:::;::;:;:;..=. C.0.-1 -ltlll.,. '--"• ~--,.,,,. •r• -··--·· ,,.._ ,.,.., ..... Co\1• ~ -...... Hwnl-lloMfl ~­I.ti" Vell••· lr••M', S.Od~ta Y•ll•y .,.. '--...... ._ .. c;.o..1 "...,...........,..,, ,_ " _,_ .,.hwd .. , -,_.,._ ''"' ll'•••tl,,.. Dllblltlllnq of•1'1 " M XII -"'6t ~ c.on• ._ ... c..111..,,.. • .,.,. ....... -..... ..,. ........ ,.,...._ , .... (-V•<•"' ............. i.. ...... ~ YMMt•IC-r:oot .. ...-.............. M<IMtlfttlllt., ~M.U. __ ,,Moll AUIMIM ~'MtlftO IAll!tn --M \10••-ttvM•lllittt H11Mlnaton ••lldl <>Moe 11tlh .. c~~" M411llllQ .. ...,,,.,, "0 .,.,.,..,, '1t4I otflcH ..... ~=·~~~~.";:;~~ftlf -1t-• llaller · H701I.A,.,11-el atft Ottet ,.,_ go-ahead for the sale from the House International Relations Committee. Congress has until May 28 to veto part or all or the sale. If the House committee defeats veto resolutions against the sales, it would be impossible for the full Congress to act on them and the sales would go through. The 20 additional sophisticated swing-wing F-15s for Israel, In addition to the lS already planned by Carter and the 25 F·l5s Israel already is buying. would give the Israelis lhe same number as the Saudis. Former Secretary of State Henry A. IGssinger in testimony to the House committee repeat· ed today his proposal that the additional planes be sold to Israel by 1983 at the same time the original planes are being sold lo Israel, the Saudis and to Egypt. But administration sources say the additional planes could not be manufactured and de- livered to Israel that fast. Meanwhile, Brown sent mem· bers or the Senate Foreign Rela· lions Committee a draft letter spelling out Saudi Arabian as- surances that its warplanes would not be used against Israel. Brown's letter reportedly said the Saudis agreed among other things that they would take planes only with defensive mis- siles that cannot be used against ground troops. The Saudis also have agreed to station their jet fighten far from Israel's borders and not to buy planes from other countries during the time the American planes are being delivered . Tainted Pot Probe Slated SAN DIEGO CAP> -Despite advice against It, San Dteeo County w11l lovoall1ate on Its own whether Mexican mari- juana sprayed with the toxlc de· rouant paraquat posas • health basard to smokers. The Board ot Supervisors vot· ed 4-1 Tuesd-.y, ordertna county health officials to Npott back within a week. "Earlier. Dr. John PbUp, coun· ty health director. advised the eount.y to t.a.k• no actJon on the mauer. SUCCUMBS AT 64 V. I. "Biil" Mahaffey Mahaffey Honored in Last Rites Memorial funeral services have been held for Huntington Beach's V.I. "Bill" Mahaffey. operator of the Mahaffey Machine Company and a well· known local churchman and Boy Scout leader. Death came to Mr. Mahaffey April 28 at Palm Harbor GeneraJ Hospital following a long illness. Known for affecting a jawity black string tie like a Kentucky colonel, Mr. Mahaffey was 64 and still actively operating bis firm until a few months before his death. The c ompany at 231 6 Delaware St. was founded short· ly a fter he moved to Huntington Beach in 1957 and deals in custom machining and Cabrical· in~. A m ember of the Community Bible Church, where memorial rites were held, Mr. Mahaffey was also active with Boy Scoot Troop 1 for years as a trustee and ror a time as assistant scoutmaster. He was also a member of the Christian Businessmen's Com· mittee lntemalionaJ. During much of its earlier years, the family firm was engaged in work for the bustling petroleum industry but was capable of a wide variety of machining work. "People used to say if you want it done right, take it to Bill Maharrey," says one or his sur· viving sons, Dan. Survivors include his wife of 34 years, Dorothy; sons Daniel. Patrick and Robert; a daughter, Patricia; sisters Marie, Clara and Dorothy; plus brothers Jack, Raymond and Harold. The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society's Orange County unit in Mr. Mahaffey's name. Drug Agent Plans Talk At FV School A federal agent is set as the featured speaker at a Thursday nlgbt drug and alcohol abuse prevention forum at Fountain Valley High School for adults only. The forum will be held at 7 o'clock in the high school choral room, 17816BushardSt. Hugh Shanahan, Drug En· forcement Administration supervisory agent, will show films for parents on PCP, or "angel dust," and what should be done if drugs are found at home. Fountain Valley pollce will also be present to answer ques· lions about the various types or drugs and their effects. Young Artists To Be Judged For Festival, Judging of Orange County school chlldl'CD •s art will be held thla weekend to select art that wUl be exhibited this summer at the Laguna Beach FesUval of Arta Junior Art Gallery. Children from kindergarten to high school throughout Orange County are particlpatJng in lhe a nnual school art compet1Uon, and a &elected group or 150 award·wlnnlng works will be displayed at the F_.Uval ol Arts. Chairman for the Junior art exhibit at tbe Festival la Marie Skelton of L11una Beach. The Junior Art Gallery wtU be local· ed in the lower portion of th Forum Theater on the festival groundl durtna I.be Uni aeuon. which l'\IDI from July 11 to Au1. 27 thlJ )'~U. Woman Held in Robbery A 19-year-old Huntington Beach girl who allegedly used a toy gun to hold up a Costa Mesa liquor store Tuesday night was apprehended by police alter a patrolman spotted her running from the store. In custody today ut Orange County Jail on s us picion or armed robbery is Donna Von Sprecken. of 17301 Keelson Lane, Huntington Beach. She is being held in lieu of $25,000 bail. Police said she is a suspect in the May s robbery of -a Costa Mesa liquor s tore on 19th Street 1 n which a young woman escaped with about $100. Police said a woman match1.J1g the description or the suspect in the earlier hold up entered Fischer's Liquor. 3135 Harbor Blvd .. al about 11 :30 p.m. Tues day and asked for a pack or c1~aretles. As the clerk reached for the cigarettes. the young woman al· legedly revealed a realistic· looking toy revolver and de· m anded cash. The clerk complied. handing over an unknown amount of money before lhe woman fled on root, according to Costa Mesa police Detectiv e G e rry Thompson The woman was spotted run· ning from the s tore by Patrolman J eff Clark, who cap· tured her. Fro• Page A I STRIKE ... A spokesman for the Utility Workel'I Union aald that mem· hers are adamantly opposed to the rotating work schedul• which has been a chi ef slum· bling block in negotiations ~ince last October. Edison is seeking to ample· ment a schedule in which umon members would work weekends on a rotating schedule without receiving overtime pay. Pickets also were posted al two Long Beach plants, Ormond Beach, Mojave, El Segundo. Redondo Beach, Oxnard and Mandalay <near Ventura. I There are 125 members of the s trik ing employees at San Onofre and 66 11t Huntington Beach. The facility in Huntington Beach has a capacity or produc· ing 990 megawatts of electricity and can serve a population or about 750.000. F,.....Pflfl'tAJ VACANCY. • Beach, a paralegal assistant and tax consultant; -Allan Thompson. 6582 Jardines Drive, Huntington Beach. a computer systems firm manager. Bribe Plan Probed NEW YORK <AP) -A federal grand jury is investigating whether the Ford Motor Co. bribed Indonesian officials to ob- tain a $30 million contract for a s atellite communi cations system for that country in un5. the New York Times reported today. Campaign Effort To Be Investigated Orange County's new Fair Ca mpaign Prac ti ces Commission will hold a hearing next Tuesday on the first complaint to come its way. Truman T . Legg, an administrator in the county clerk's omce and one of s ix candidates for clerk-recorder. told commissioners this week he s uspects an opponent of using misleading information in a campaign brochure. Legg alleged candidate Marshall Norris, a deputy clerk, used misleading information concerning his education and background. Comm1ss1oners agreed to invite Norris to reply to Legg's complaint at a 7 p.m . hearing next Tuesday at the county Registrar of Vote rs office. McFadden and Grand Avenues. Santa Ana. Commission Cha irman William Thom told Legg the commission has no power to s top distribution or any eampa1gn literature The commission, created by s upervisors to oversee cam paign s of county government officeseekers, can hold hearings on complaints and make public findings or any wrong-doing. Tiro Face Murder I Charge Prosecutors were pondering today whether or not to ask for the death penalty in the double slay ing in Long Beach of a Westminster market owner and his cle rk during a $150 robbery. Court arraignment was scheduled tor the adult suspect in the cast!, Charles A. Mosley, 23, of Compton. His alleged ac- c om p 11 c e is a 17-year-old Juvenile. Victims in the double shooting were Parshotambhi Patel, 47. the store owner rrom Wes tminster, and his clerk. Jaroon Olrejit, 33, of Long Beach. Patel, of 15952 Diamond St .. nod Direj1t were forced to kneel on the floor behind the store counter In their final seconds of life. One shot was fired into Patel's brain; one into Direjit's and several more shots were then fired into the second victim's back. investigators say. Police c laim the suspects. both from Compton, were re- corded on a remote control security camera s napping shots each two to three seconds in· tervals. The actual shooting of the kneeling men is not seen on film. according to police, but the loot- ing of the cash register is. A third unidentified employee of the 7-Elevcn Market owned by India-born Patel, was also cow- ering in a storeroom unseen dur- ing the killings and robbery and will be a witness. He called police when the armed robbery team fled and Mosley and his teen·aJed compa- nion were arrested within five minutes about two miles north of the blood-spattered Long Beach Boulevard grocery. Investigators allege that a .22 caliber revolver and money were confiscated from Mosley a nd his associate, who are held without bail. the younger male charged as a juvenile. ROME STREET HONORS MARTYRS ROME <AP> -Via Mario Fant, the tree-shaded street where the Red Brigades kid· napped Aldo Moro and killed his five bodyguards March 16, was • renamed by the city tOday the "Street of the March 16 Martyrs." Mario Fani was an educator. • DREXEL • HERITAGE •. BAKER • HEKMAN • MASTERCRAFT • WIEMAN • HIBRITEN • • ...J w u. u. ~ II) • ...J w x w a: 0 • w C) ~ .... a: w I • • • • If your bag is leather. stop in now and view our exciting all new leather gallery. Select from the largest collection of leather sofas and chairs in the area. TORRANCE U649 HlwthOrM Blvd. (213) 378-1219 Flw FIWWilttn • .J ,......, Dirnr COSTA MESA 1595 Newport Blvd. (71') 642-2050 LAGUNA BEACH J.45 North Coast Hwy. (71'> '9''6S51 • l<ARGES • HICKORY CHAIR • DIXIE • WOOOMARI< ORIGINALS • MARGE CARS-ON • • ~ ::11 m r 8 ~ aJ m 0 0 z Cl • I m z ::0 m 0 0 z • l I Co11ncil Sets an Unwise Precedent Now matter how large or small, redevelopment 3lways has been a corct.roversial item in Huntington Hta<'h. The most recent redevelopment plan for a 15-acre shopping ('enter at GQ!den West Street and Warner Avenue is no exception. The plan has been in the works for sever a l years and the City Council <then ancluding four members no longer serving) signed an agreement to participute in re· development with the center's developer last year. A representative of the developer says that because of the city commitment. the company has already spent more than St million on the project. However last week, the reorganized City Council vot- ed to scuttle the center as planned by rejecting a zoning change for the area to commercial use. The s plit decision was based chiefty on complaints by businessmen in the imroecliate vicinity that the area is already over-commercialized. There also were concerns ubout sewage and traffic problems. The zoning denial was taken despite advice that the city faces possible legal action because of the alleged com mitmenl. The majority of the council said that businesses other than the planned supermarket and super drugstore sholild be studied. 11 One \\onders if the new City Council majority wasn't feeling its Cheerios in ~monstrating its independence by wlo ing the zoning. One must also ask if the city is embarking on a prece· dent thut it might be wise to avoid in restricting competi· Lion in ;.i commercia l m-..ca. School Cutbacks fountain Valley <elementary> School District of· ficialB \\ 111 face anotner crowd of angry parents and teachers Thursday mg:ht. For the past three months, the school board has been confronted with the same group of irate citizens t,1psel over proposed program cutbacks·. Finul board action on the cuts is expected Thursday. Some par<.'nts and teachers argue that the proposed l'lll h<•d•' \\Ould destroy programs like music, l\lentally G1fl1·d ;\linors and the so-called Learning Center concept. S('hool officials oontend thul these programs will re· m:11n IJ11l onlv be altC:'.l'ed. 01 ficials ·say the cuts arc necessary to have teachers s pend more time in the classroom and less time on ad· mmhtrall\ c and special program duties. The distric t alse> hopes to save funds by eliminating ex t r a :-.a lnncs pn1d t.o teachers who hold these part·time posh along with their regular classroom duties. Soml' 1e~whcrs receive an extra 10 percent boost in thl'll n ·gul:1r s<.i la r.v for taking on these extra duties. IL .., l'asv lo st'<.' \\ hy teachers are up in arms over the p1 o po..,ed cuts th:.il \\C'Al.Jlcl hu1-t them in the wallet. OI l·ourst·. mud1 ol the rhetoric agains t the cutback plan cL•ntcrs around how great these special programs are and what a loss they would be for students if the hoard cuts them. l'\o matter what decision the hoard makes, someone is going to be unhappy. All thal remains to be seen is how unhappy some people might get. New Colonia Delay The slow-movm~ bureaucracy involved with bringing thP firs t sidewalks., gullers and curbs to Fountain \";illc~··s Colonia .Jlwl"cz area appears to be stalled again. This time the delay is blamed on a cement shortage. C1l v ol r1cials say \\Ork on the long-promised street imprm(·ml·nts is du~ lo hegin this week. W<• h:l\'l' heard lh1s before. 'l'lw resl'nlmcnL .and distrust for government" already }Jl'e \·.i lent in the predominantly Mexican-American area is fuek•cl b) this lates t in a long series of delays. 11 1s n fact that Lhc city has taken a greater interest this year in trym~ to speed lhe work along. But Id's face it. the people of the Colonia have not seen one s tone turned and still have to let their children walk to i,c hool on muddy patils Th~ink goodness t he rainy season is over Whate\·er lhe reason, the city should try to head off \1ny more delays. This projecl s hould get top priority. After ~111 , Colonia Juarez, localed just a block from city hull. is an en-ca almost three times as old as the City of Fountain Valley. • Opinions expressed '" the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd/Partners ByL.M.BoOYD Three partners put together a busin~s rirm th.at required one or another oftbem to be on the road alternately much of the time. When all three were in town, they decid ed, each would be a vice president But when any one or them was out on a sales trip, that one for the nonce would bethe president. Theory was lh1~ top title would acive leverage Jn negotiation. . .. Dear Gloomy Gu8 H s Ix secretaries cun stir up dty hall for one job It shouldn't take the Jarvis bill to ~et rid of them. There's a de· mand for secretaries In the want ads -or do they quallfy? i .L. Actually. though. it was thei r private joke, and they claimed It worked to let them keep on balanced good terms with one another. Only one out of five murder victims is killed by somebody unknown to said victim. You see what this means, don't · you? You're a lot safer hang- ing aro'.:'nd with strangers .• In the North Temperate zone, the average person weighs more in September and Jess in February than ln any other months, report the science boys. Takes only .002 -that's two one-thousandths -of a second to pop a balloon. How big the goldfish 1rows depends on how bit its bowl Is. that you know. But tbt qu~· t1on arises 81 to Just. why a small bowl tends to stunt tho rish therein while a bl& pond lets them iict larger. Il's now .bclleved those fl11h secrete a growtb-inhibltln1 substance. Presumably, Ile potency Is tf·. fected directly by how concen· trated It ls, hlahly so In a am1ll \•olume of wattr, less M> I.be tar1erthevolumeotwater . Robert N. Wffd/Publlshlr Thonwal K•vll/EdllOt Wednt&d1y, May 10, 1978 Barbara l<relblch/Edlt0tlal P191 EdltOf' Nicholas Von Hoffman 1 Real Estate Bubble ·Can Burst The tncopocity of the Od· ministration to come up with an nntl-lnflation policy that a rea-sonable person can trust will stimulate the ntght or depositors from savings banks and olber thrlfl Institutions. Ten years ago rampant cor· tosive inflation was s uch an un· lam iliar ex- perience that people kept their savings in cash and al· lowed their purchasing power to be corroded. Afteradec· ade of ded· ·icatcd infla· ti on is ts in Congress and the Whjte House, people have come to un· derstand that they·re being robbed when the savings and loan association pays 6.5 percent while the government destroys the Mailbox valueormon~y atlhe rDte of8per· cent and then has the gall to tax the interest from the savings ac- count. People have been taught by t>Oliticians that only children Rave; put it into the bank and the guys in Washington'll steal it. Th ui:; more and more m Ill ions of us are learning thHt you nevt!r lend money, you borrow it. Bor· row money today and, with Jim· my Carter in the White House. you '11 be able to repay the loan six years from now at 60·cents on the dollar. Solvency is for suckers. IN THEIR determination to never a lender but a borrower be, many people are going into debt buying real estate. Their reason· ing is plausible. In the last few years, through inflation and re· cession, residential real estate values have held up very well. Stocks and bonds have been a dis· aster; gold has only made money for a few shrewdies; antiques, jewelry, art and ob jets d ·art, like rore stamps and oriental rugs, de·· mand specialized knowledge, and anyway, you can take a bad beat- ing, even lf you've made a good buy. in the event you bave to sell in <.1 hurry, Real estate, especially homes. has had the best track record. They're easy lo sell compared to some of lhe thlngs mentioned above, and the price on residen- tial housing has not only kept pace with inflation, but far out· distanced it. That's why you hear of more and more people re· financing the homes they themselves live in so they can re- alize the enhanced value of their property immediately. Many of them are taking the money they're getting from refinancing their homes and buying other properties. not lo live in but as an mvestment. THE DIFFICULTY with that is that rents haven't kept up with housing prices. People a.re p~ng · $100,000 for the house which IOld for f75,000 three yean ago la ex· pectaUOb that in three or four years they'll be able to aeD for $140,000. In the tneanUme, they must rent it and a lot of thern are d.iscoverlng the rental price "'On 't even pay the monthly mort1age installment, much less tues and upkeep. Jn the banking business they call people who're paying out two or three hundred dollars a month now in hopes of realizing a $40,000 profit down the road "overex· posed.•• Everything depends on the market in residential real estate holding up and there's no guarantee of that. In fact, the ·signs indicate this is a poor lime to buy residential real estate for any purposeotbec than living lo it. In many parts of the country, residential real estate prices are .being driven up not by potential occupiers but by people hoping to sell lalerata profit. Tbey'regoing up so fa.5t it lqoks like a buyers' panic is on, with people's business judgment swept away by an hysterical conviction that if they don't buy now and buy at almost. any price, they'll lose the op- portunity of a lifetime. IF YOU really think real estate prices will continue to shoot up in· definitely with no relationship to \he price or other goods and services, then this is the moment to buy at any price. Jn the real world such a situation is unlikely so that the danger grows that a bad collapse is coming in a couple of years. a collapse which will find many innocent, hard.working people badly dumped on. The la.st recession saw that hap- pen with certain kinds of real estate. Second or vacation home prices were murdered as was the office-building segment· of the real estate industey. Residential rea I estate, of course, did well, but. that was last time, when prices weren't climbing at the discon· certingratesthey are now. In times like these, remember the new adage, don't seek shelter .. against inflation where too many others are already huddled. A Time to Think About World Hunger l j ··~ ~ To the Editor Everyone who has ever heard a baby cry knows that reeding a hungry child is the moi.t natural thing in the world, yet each year 20 million deaths occur from starvation and diseases related to malnutrition. Since November, 1977, more than 100,000 people across the nation have made a personal commitment to look within themselves to discover what they as individuals can do lo end death by starvation in the world within 20 years. These in· dividuals, with their ranks ex· panding every day, have aligned themselves in the Hunger Pro· ject. Tll E IDEA of the hunger pro- ject IS lo utilize the power Of the jndividual to c reate a context . . . something thal no organization or government can do. In simple terms, creating a context involves willing some· thing lo manifest and then personally committing yourself tom a ke this happen. The thousands of individuals already enrolled in the Hunger Project have all personally com- mitted themselves to end hunger in 20 years. Individuals across the country have been creating their own forms of participation to make this happen. For example, the governor of New York declared the monlh of May as a time for the slate of New York to become aware of the lfroblem. In Washington D.C., May 14 has been declared a day of awareness of world hunge r . The Laguna Beach Hunger Project weekend of May 13·1( Jncludes a beach run on Maln Beach at 8:30 a.m. Satur, day. Eotry fee is SS. TERESA EDWARDS 'IJleBe•t To the Editor: 1 think I've read everythlng that's been written on Jarvls·Gann in the lut six months. Last night's <May 4) Pilot editorial wa!I the best I've seen! Bravo. JEAN HARMON· Cut DeadtDOed To the Editor: The lncreulng al moAt hy1terlcnl outcries by Governor Brown and other poJiticians on Prop. 13, gives some clue as to thclr f tar that this ball0Hn1 ln June wlll find the voters solidly tMng the Jarvaa-Gann meuure thtlr support, tor a leaner, more ttnclent aovemm nt. I Governor Brown's statement~ ·abo u t "takin g s om e S8 million 'out of circulation' will cause disaster and unemploy- ment" are fear tactics obviously unsupported by economics. Jfc s bould know better. By removing the surplus lax revenues and cutting into the fal public trough to the tune of SB billion (most now say $7 billion) will be putting money into circulation, and where it can do some productive work. We have yet to see our tax money work productiv~ly. If some of the inefficient workers on the public payroll are lopped off. it will be for beneficial purposes. while lhe over- burdened home owner has some relief. Public borrowing on the bond market will be affected and the big banks like the Bank of America may not like Prop. 13 ror that reason. But public bonds are borrowing by the govern· ment and should be also slowed down. IT SEEMS useless to threaten that our schools will be aCCected. when they are so inefficient in educating our youngsters now. perhaps clearing out some or the deadwood may result in the hope that the students can at least be educated lo read and write before graduating from high school. As soon as it becomes less onerous to build and maintain houses and apartments, with Jesll tax burden, more shelters wilt be built and the simple sup· Panela ply at the marketplace will bring down the rentals and thus benefit renters under the Jar111s- Gann initiative. America was built on the free marketpl ace enterprise economy, not by the politicians making new and more reslric· t1ve, more involved laws to restrict free enterprise. The Jarvis-Gann initiative is a ~1mplc direct method of making the Legislature and the ad· ministration more efficient and responsive to the people whom they s hould be serving, and cut out the deadwood in the opera· lion of the public machinery. · LA DISLA W REDA Y Loacer~t. To the Editor: .Jarvis says l andlords will lower rents if Prop. 13 passes. I row can he speak for every On(•" l 've kept rents on my triplex S50 lower than others in the area for several years. I live in fear of rent controls -getting caught with my rents down. This prop- erty is all I have. I cannot lower rents to please .Jarvis the way owners or big rents and commercial prop· ·crties can. Such landlords arc the only ones who would profit by Prop1 JJ. G. A. ANDERSON Appredat~ To the Editor: For some time now, demands have been placed on government ' ( , ,. "Welf congritulatlone Mr. H1rvey, your fears concerning how much all this la going to cost you are perfectly rauooat." lo provide more services to citizens, the results of which do not always meet expectations and objectives. It is, therefore, continually refreshing lo see a large group of citizens donate their time in an endeavor that meets its objectives. I AM referring to those un. selfish men and women who coach, manage, and in other ways make the community youth athleti+ programs a suc- cess. I have three daughters who participate in bobby sox softball. The lessons learned, friendships made, skills developed, and time constructively utilized have made my daughters better in· dividuals. For this, my wife and 1 are truly appreciative. MR. & MRS. HARRY BUDDS n.o.ua.Ean To the Editor: I enjoyed your favorable editorial on John Thomas. It Thomas seems to come on like ••gang busters" it is because many citizens ate leaning on him to rectify all the past. Hunt- ington Beach City Councils' wrong decisions. The past city council was ar- rogant, they didn't have one ounce of compassion for the small weak people. They didn't ca re about those protesting plane crashes on their land. They didn't care about.the 200 people who signed a petition ask· ing that a tarden nursery stop spraying poisons into their homes and pools. They didn't care about the vtctJms of their "lop of the pier plan" or the "save Botsa Chica .. group. THE STRONG could get away with anything, the weak wilh nothing. This is the first lime in my lite 1 worked Cor political candidates and didn't even ask what political party they belonged to. I think lhat the ,..w council wiU glve everyone an even break, for the most. part. I have my doubts about a couple of &be old mem· bera though. J . COLLINS t CALIFORNIA W.S.~. May 10, 1978 DAIL V PILOT A 5 Bay Area Gays on Marc~ • .. 1,000 Protest Repeal of Wichita Rights .Bill I • ,Jf~ r-··~ ·.1 Pigat Work University of California researcher Tom Peterson runs pig test on treadmill on San Diego campus. The porkers Jog 25 miles a week for a year. but studies failed to prove exercise helps avert heart attacks. The theory that jog- gin g helps humans should be reviewed. say researchers. Jarvis Drops Libel Claim SAN DIEGO <AP) -Prop0sition 13 co-author Howard Jarvis s.ays he'll dismi~sJUs $800,000 libel claim filed agamst the Gross mont High School District over a story printed in a student news paper. The story appeared March 10 in the Granite Hills High School Clarion and was written by 16·year-old Brad Teaby. ll tried to explain the controversial property tax limitation initiative on the June 6 ballot. But part of Teaby's story a lleged Jarvis and Gann were "prominent real estate owners" who stood to reap "several million dollars" in tax savings if the proposition passed. 15 E•ea,,. Air Cra•ll SACRAMENTO <AP> -Twelve passengers and three crew members walked away from a twin-engined transport plane that s kidded an estimated 1.500 reet on its belly, an official reports. The accident shortly SAN FRANCISCO <AP) - Som e 1.000 chanting San Fran· ciscans. many or them homosex- uals, marched through city streets in protest just hours after voters in Wichita. Kan. repealed a gay rights ordinance. <Related stories. A4, Al2) The protest Tuesday night was peaceful, police said. .. WE HAD WORD there would be a protest as soon as the Wichita vote started coming through,·:,. said Officer Elsen Broich. The march appeared to be a combination protest over the Wich ita vote and a statewide in· ltlative that, If approved by voters in November, would let school districts fire or refuse to hire avowed homosexuals or those who support gay lifestyles. THE MARCHERS, swelling to number about 1,000 by 11 p.m .. chanted "Wichita means fight back." "Civil rights or civil war," and other sloaans as they strode 10 and 15 abreast from Castro Street down busy Market Street. then up Polk Street and over to Union Square. Castro at after 6 p.m. Tuesday ( J i-nvolved a n SI' ATE e x e c u l i v e • t y p e A penoMll U..lfatloll "'°"'Mike Mm1. Proprietor ____ turbo-prop plane of the ----Santa Barbara-based Apollo Airways. The executive direct.or of the airport, James Ellingsworth, said "It did leave the ground by about 20 feet when. for some reason, the pilot aborted. He set it down on its belly and il slid probably 1,500 feet." He said he didn 'l see any obvious injuries. Dinner s.,,elb ,.._d LOS ANGELES tAP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has pulled off the most lucrative fund raiser ever st.aged by a Democratic gubernatorial incumbent. convincing 1,000 people to contribute more than $300,tJO toward his reelection campaign. After all the bills are paid, the $250-per-plate d inner Tuesday night at the Beverly Hilton Hotel will h ave netted Brown between $210,000 and S250,000. said campaign manager Gray Davis. Brown has collected $700,000 so far, Davis said, and hopes lo stretch that to at least SI million before the June 6 primary, in which he is unopposed. Driak Dra"'• f'lne LOS ANGELES tAPl -A Woodland Hills reslaUTant where television actor Dan Haggerty was burned by a naming drink has been fined $1,500 fo r fire code violations. Representatives or The Red Onion pleaded no contest to two charges of serving a naming drink and one charge of over-crowding before Municipal Court Judge David Kennick Tuesday. One of the flaming drink violations occurred Nov. 19, 1977, the same night Haggerty, who portrays Griuly Adams, was burned. However, Los Angeles Fire Department Inspector Gene Lindley said none of the charges related to the Haggerty incident. Gates Make• Apology LOS ANGELES <AP> -Police Chief Daryl Gates has made a public apology for making a statement lut week in which he called Latino police officers "lazy" and "unmotivated." Gates delivered the prepared apology Tuesday shortly after Chicano groups gathered outside police headQuarters al Parker Center. .. and Polk streets are pre· dominanUy gay neighborhoods. Earlier in the day, a Wichita ordinance barring discrimina· t1on against homosexuals was overwhelmingly repealed by a more than 4·1 margin. Two weeks ago. when a sim ilar or· dinance was overturrled in St. Paul. Minn .. San Francisco homosexuals staged a s1m1lar but smaller march. police said. s u pe r viso rs. w1 t hout eolt•; troversy. There has been move to repeal that ordinance. A city ordinance banning dis- c rim i natton against homosex- uals was ;usl recently approved here by the board of PomFilms ]ail Pair Smog Stations Hit For 'Deficiencies' IM PERI AL BEACH <AP) -An elementary school teacher haa been arrested for invuugauon or malting pornographic films involving young boys after police confiscated more than too sex-oriented lllms and slides at his apartment.. officers said. SACRAMENTO <APl -A California auditor general's report says nearly two-thirds of tbe state's auto s mog inspection stations are deficient, and 0Hic1al lamp and brake stat.ions are hardly ever inspected. The report. out Tuesday. recommended that the Bureau or Automotive Repair increase its staff to take care or the problems. Bail for Archie Mvrny. 39. a fourth-grade leaeher at Westview Elementary School. was set Tuesday at S4 .2SO, Imperial Beach poUce said. BUT CONSUMER Affairs Director Richard Spohn, whose de· partment administers the bureau. said the report contained "numerous false statements. half-truths and distortions ." The bureau also licenses most auto repair shops and mediates consumer complaints. Some of its operations are paid by license and registration fees. Richard Rollin.es. l&. a security guard identified as Mu:rray·s roommate. also was anmed Monday when police armed with a search warrant arrived. Deficiencies cited by the report included failure to have proper tools fof inspection and engine tune.ups. failure to employ a licensed pollution device installer, and failure to keep up with the latest pollution control technology. CELEBRATION SPECIALS World Famous BEEF STICKe Summer Sausage ' 204 LB. OFF A04 LB. OFF~.:-:::::., REG. PRICE REG.PRICE En1oy the wonderful h1dtory·smoke fl~ of this famous aft· beef summer sausage. It's Popular as a 111adt -with ctadters and cheese. Many use 1t different ways espec11lly for appet1· zers. cook 1n9 and fondues. CITATION·WHEEL SWISS 20C LB. OFF REG. PRICE Taste this moist n1tur1I cheese -cut fresh from thew'-''° vou get the flavor the chlestrnaker intended ... the BEST •.• the only way to buy cheese. FREE s!~:/:;r MUSTARD WITH THE PURCHASE OF $6 OR MORE DURING OUR GRANO OPE~lllG Sweet-Hot Mustlfd from Hidl0ty Farms of Ot110~ ad*• •· c11l 1ut to everything you serve with 11. You'll be bKtl b morel NOW 1C FOR A BOX Of OLD·FASHIONEO CRACKERS OR CRACKED WHEAT THINS With Th• Purchale Of A Hldlorv F1rms of otllofi CHEESE BALL Either of these aackers ••"lust the dllng" for .-edlno our dehc1oui CHEESE BALL -made from a blend of aged c.hffsa covered with nuts end topped with 1 cherry. IMPORTED YANKEE TRAOER.- SOUP MIXES BUY THREE PACKAGES -GET 0N£ FREE OiKOYer f0t yCM.trwlf the rid!, hearty full flev0t of thne soupa. One of 16 flaVOtt will be sampi.d each d.y dur1nv the ••nd open. ing. Take edunt191 of th1$ special off If. FOOD GIFT PAKS VCM.tr nearby Hldlory Firms of Ohlo9 110te It e 01 FT CEl\l.TER. too. It di1pl1y1 end otfen e wtCM •leotlon of food gift paks tor all oecasioM. They oome 11'1 1ll 11i.s. 141 prices. Wt'll ewen wnd your ff i lcor1 ftrml:.~~-=:::: .. OF ONIO 9 Wntcllff Pina 11• a.,...... Mei:' a..a. •4z..otn .....,,.., 'II t 'Tl ' ... '111 • ' \ m FASHION ISlAND ar.1 NEWPORT cemA ............. 64MOIO Mee..fri. ..,. • ht .• , .. ' .... 12.a . \ i , Lag una /South Coast EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 130, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1978 - Afternoon N.Y. St~ks TEN CENT Princess, Lord Snowdon to Divorce LONDON <AP) -Princess Margaret and her husband Lord Snowdon have agreed to a nounced today. An official statement announc- ing the impending end or the stormy marriage said: "Her royal highness. the Prin· l cess Margaret, Countess of separation have now agreed that their mariage should formally be ended. Accordingly her ryoal highness will start the necessary legal proceedings.·· Margaret, sister of Queen Elizabeth 11, separated from her photographer husband March 16, 1976, alter 16 years of mar· riage. The 47-year-old princess and Lord Snowdon, 48, have two children -David Vicount Linley. 16, and Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones, 14. A spokesm an at Kensington Palace. Margaret's home, said the princess would continue to have custody of the couple-s two children, but Snowdon will have access. The spokesman said the prin· cess had "no plans for remar· riage." Margaret has drawn criticism in recent months for her friendship with 30-year-old socialite Roddy Llewellyn. She is in King Edward VII Hospital in London suCfering from suspected gastroenteritis. T h e Kensington Pala ce s pokesman said Margaret was ··making progress ... The re· s uit of tests taken by the doctors will not be known until Friday.•· He said he had no knowledge of Lord Snowdon 's plans. "We are not in a position to comment about Lord Snowdon." Lord Snowdon has been linked by gossip columnists to assistant movie producer Lucy Lindsay· Hogg, a divorcee. The last member or the British royal family to be involved an divorce proceedings was the Earl of Harewood, the queen's • • cousin. who divorced 11 years l ago. 2 The spokesman said the ~ divorce proceedings were under way and the princess will be • represented by the queen's lawyer. Matthew Farrer. The queen has been kept in· formed or the situation but her constitutional consent is not necessary. <See DIVORCE. Page A2) ~ Snowdon , and the Earl or J Snowdon after two years of l i Edison i . Workers Vote to Picket 1 I GannCloi m f i I t \ ' ' r l . Too Few Know Of Tax Effort? By ANNE COOPER Ol .. o.lltl'ileC5~ Ignorance on the part or a sub- stantial portion of the state's voters may kill chances for passafile or the Jarvis·Gann prop- erty tax initiative on June 6, according to the measure·s co- author Paul Gann. - Gann tl)ld a Laguna Beach Chamber or Commerce audience this morning that a recent sur- vey s howed 23 percent of California vot~rs still do not know what the initiative is. "That's what will hurt us at the polls," he said. "An unin- formed voter usually votes ·no'.·• Gann, a real estate salesman, told the Chamber of Commerce breakfast meeting of about 150 people that supporters of the J arvis·Gann initiative h ave established a statewid e telephone network to talk person-to-person with voters who may have questions about the ballot measure. Joking about the "help" the mitiative's supporters have re· ceived from government of· ficiaJs, Gann said the proposi· tion 's wording on the ballot authorized by the Secretary or State, is likely lo cause con- fusion Delly ............ "..,., a- One Hurt In Laguna Car Crash · · u sounds from the ballot wording as if your taxes will go up 2 pel"'Cent a year," he said. "Of course that isn't true." In truth, be said, the measure, lt approved, would allow county assessors to increase an assess- ment by no more than two per· cent over the basic 19'7S·76 as- sessment. OFF1CIALS HURRY SNAKEBIT! VICTIM FROM MARINE HELICOPTER TO HOSPITAL Helmer Tsctaugg of San Ctemente Waa Struck While HlkJng on Santiago Peak A Laguna Beach woman was seriously injured Tuesday night when her car struck two other v•hicles as slle apparently tried to retrieve a purse lhal had s lipped from the seat. A home assessed at $100,000 ln 1975-76 would cost its owner Sl,000 <ooe percent> lo property taxes the fust year if Pr;oposi· lion 13 passes, Gann said. OC. Warned of Rattlers Julie A. Bushard, 36, of 58 Lagunita Place remains in sta· ble condition in the intensive care unit at South Coast Com- munity Hospital following the 9 p . m. cras h at South Coast Highway and Oak Street. San Clemente Bite Victim 'Satisf acwry' , Police said the woma n ap· parently reached for her purse which had fallen off the seat when s he entered the south· bound lanes of Coast Highway. Her car allegedly sideswiped a car driven by Wllflam Renwich, 27, of 1205 Miramar St. before colliding head-on with another car driven b y Mi chael M. Greene. 32761 Mediterranean Dnve. LaKuna Niguel. The woman was treated by paramedics at the scene and rushed to South Coast Communi· ty Hospital where she remained in s urgery through much or the night. Greene was treated at the scene for minor hurts and re· leased. police said. The most the county assessor could raise the assessment the following year would be two per· cent, bringing the assessment to $102,000 and taxes lo $1,0~. "Most of us can live with a $20 <See GANN, Page AZ) 'Ibieves Get Moral Valued at $4,000 Orange County sheriff's of· ricers are investigating the theft of a mural that once covered one wall of a Three Arch Bay bome. Deputies said the coasUy can· vas, bearing a Mexican motif and valued at $4,000, was report· ed stolen by John C. Davis, 22 N. La Senda. They said the thieves entered via an unlocked door. ~a Girl In the Ct1rl By JERRY CLAUSEN 0t .. Dall'f l'llet SIMI County paramedics and Marine Corps Search and Rescue teamed up Tuesday to r~sb a rattlesnake-bite victim by helicopter to Mission Communi- ty Hospital, Mission Viejo, from Santiago Peak in Cleveland Na- tional Forest. It was an effort expected to be repeated several times this year , county officmls agree, because 1978 is expected to be a dangerous rattlesnake season. Tuesday·s victim, Helmar Tschugg, 36, of 129 Avenida Mariposa, San Clemente, was reported in satisfactory cond1· tion in the hospital intensive care unit. Villa Park-based paramedics said Tschugg and a companion were in the Cleveland National ~oung awfer at Brooks Street ln Laguna Beach stralahtens out after wave breaks tn trmt ol ·her. The surf wa small, but ·· 'We!M~vfl kept a small crowd or surfers m the 81-degree waters. In fact, With 1unny skies, and 76-desree weather. it was bard to set out of the w.ater afler lhe noon·hour break ' . Forest hiking when a snake struck him on the right ankle. The two walked a half hour to the peak to contact electronics technicians who service relay equipm ent the re . They, paramedics said , called the County Ftre Department. Tschugg was the second rat- tler victim treated at Mission Community Hospital Tuesday. Four-year-Old Aaron Johnson of Mission Viejo was bitten when he stuck his hand down a gopher hole, officials said. He is report· ed in good condition. That's not too unusual. "From one end of this county to the other. we are turning up rattlesnakes," said Joe Oliver . Orange County's chief animal control officer. Oliver 's training officer, Dick Robillard. said several factors contribute to th e increased snake activity -a larger adult populationL construction ln areas formerly inhabited by snakes and drenching rain that flooded holes and burrows in more re mote canyon areas. Oliver said his department normally receives about one or two snake calls weekly at this time of year. This year, though, he is getting about 10 a week. Robillard s aid about 30 to 40 percent of the calls result in finding rattlesnakes. They are decapitated on the spot. Harm- less reptiles, be said1 are re- located to remote areas. Areas expected t > be most snake infested this summer - and especially this fall -are the developing s outh-county neighborhoods and Anaheim Hills. While the snake problem will be difficult this summer, animal control officers said. it will be worse this fall when thirsty s n a kes seek out waler 1n backyards and swimming pools. ''All I can add at this point," (See SNAKES, Page A2) Bulldozer Cuts Off Phones in Clemente About 9,000 San Clemente resi- dents were without telephone ser vice late Tuesday after two phone cables were cut by a bulldozer grading a new road on the Reeves Ranch. Robert Gannon of the Paclfic Telephone Company said today that one cable cun:onnected all of San Clemente with "the outside world." The second cable pro- vided telephone service within the city. Gannonmetwithcltypollceand •fire officials after the problem was detected about 3:30 p.m. to a rrange for an alternate emersency communications system, heaald. A local radio station broadcast bulletlnsevery 15 mlnutes to alert resldenta that emer1encles wauld have to be reported ln person to cl· ty hall, as telephones were not opera\tna. Service wu Nltored to m01t of the ~lty overnt1bt, but the SboN<!llfta area of north San Clement. wu not expected to have phone service until about noon today, Gannon said. Police. fire and county sheriff personnel went door to door in Shoreclifrs neighborhoods Tues- day to lnf'orm residents or the telephone blackout. Tbe police department added extra patrol units to respond to emergencies, but encountered no trouble through tbe night, a 1pokesmansaid. •'Fortunately there were no emergencies.. the police and flremen weren't able to handle," said Gannon. "It was just like the • 1976 rtre -they were right there for lhe people who needed them.·' Gannon sald the contractor whose bulldozer severed the cables will be bllled for repair costs. More Coverage Other aoutb Oranao County coveraaa appear• today on Pages Al3A and A138. I Onofre i l ~ Hit by .• ; Strike - By ROBERT BARKER Of .. o.llt ...... 5&Mf • Power station workers went on strike al 12:01 a .m . today at Southern California Edison plants in Huntington Beach and San Onofre and at eight other locations in Southern California. Nearly 1,100 members of the Utility Workers Union or America, Local 246, voted to take to the picket lines at all sites after overwhelmingly re· jecting the company's "last of- fer" Monday. It is the first such strike against Edison since 1953. A union spokesman said that picketing which began at 12:01 a . m . would continue on an around the clock. A last-ditch effort to avert the strike failed when talks broke down Tuesday. Edison bad pre· viously terminated the contract with the union effective at mid· night Tuesday. Bob Hull. a spokesman for Edison, said that supervisory personnel are taking the place of the striking union members who maintain and repair power units. He said that he is confident that the company can continue to produce electricity at normal capacity "as long as it is necessary." An Edison official that said that about 1,500 cons truction workers on a $2.4 billion ex- pa n sion project at the San Onofre nuclear plant have ap. parently honored picket lines and didn't go to work at 9 a.m. The workers are employed by the Bechtel Power Company and olbe r sub-contractors. They are rE'presented by various other un- ions working on plants Numbers:?and3. An Edison official said the company is exploring ways to get the construction workers back on the job. About 3,000 employees in all work on the ex. pansion project. A spokesman for the Utihty Workers Union said that mem- bers are adamantly opposed to the rotating work schedule which has been a chief stum- bling block in negotiations since last October. Edison is seeking to imple· ment a schedule in which union members would work weekends on a rotating schedule without receiving overtime pay. Pickets also were posted at two Long Beach plants, Ormond Beach. Mojave, El Segundo, Redondo Beach, Oxnard and (See STRIKE, Page AZ) Coast Weath er Night and morning low cloudiness. clearing to hazy afternoon sunsh ine Thursday. Cooler days. Lows tonight in 50s. Highs Thursday in upper 60s along beaches. I NSIDE T ODA 't' Mod can produced for the . 1976 model JIC'OT by American Motors wfll be m:oUed by ftdtrcd 01*1'. ~e Page Ac. l•d ex' _. .. ,. .. .. M "" ., ••.s AU Ill • .... ~ ... f From Page Al GANN. • • increase on our tax bills," he said. "The way the system operates now . if a neighbor sells bis home for $150,000, all the other homes in the neighborhood are s udden- ly ~ssessed at $150,000," said Gann. "That leaves a homeowner the choice of selling h.is home or staying and letting the stale sell it for him," be said. "Proposition 13 won't solve all our property tax problems." be said. "But let's put it in. Then. ir there are inequities, we can clean them up." Gann said reports that he and Howard J arvis will save great sums of money on their own property tru<es are greatly exag- gerated. Each of them owns only his home, Gann said. · · 1 only wis h I were the wealthy property owner I've been made out to be," he said. ·•Actually. I'm a real estate salesman who never made it to broker. I haven't had a paycheck since December, 1973." Gann said a "no" vote on Proposition 13 will "rubber stamp" government spending. "In fact.'' be said. "some or our local officials may go right into outer space " Actor Urges Reform Study NEW YORK <AP> -Cliff Robe rtson , whose missing $10,000 check sparked an in· vesUgation into corruption ln the movie industry, urged bis fellow actors Tuesday to dare to speak out on wrongdoing in Hollywood. "It is truth, no matter how dif. ficult. that will arrest corporate crime in our industry and set us free," Robertson told about 400 members of the New York Screen Actors Guild at their an-nual meein~. Fl"09IPageAJ STRIKE ••• Mandalay <near Ventura.) There are l2S members or the striking employees at San Onofre and 66 at Huntington Beach. The facility in Huntington Beach has a capacity of produc- ing 990 megawatts of electricity and can serve a population of a bout 750,000. Needs Unit Meets The Laguna Beach Human Needs Committee wlll meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m . In the Girls Club, 1470 Temple Hills Terrace. DAILY PILOT From Page Al DIVORCE ••• ·'The princess is suing for. divorce. This is a technicality, one party has to start the pro- ceedings," the spokesman said. ''The marriage has broken down and the couple have lived apart for two years. These are ob- vi o us l r, the grounds ror divorce. ' The 1960 marriaae of the er· rervescemt 29-year-old princess and globe-trotting photographer Antony Armstrong.Jones - raised to the peerage of the Earl of Snowdon in 1961 -was a glamorous match that caught the fan cy or romantics throughout the world. But as the years passed, it became clear the relationship was wearing thin. Even before their formal split in 1976, she began to be seen with Llewellyn, a brewery heir who aspires to become a night club singer. The two took frequent vaca- tions together on the Caribbean island of Muslique and orten sp e nt weekends together on Llewellyn's Wlltablre farm. Critics. including Church of England clerics, sald the affair was damaging lo the Image or the royal family, and some said Llewellyn wa-s distracting Margaret from her royal duties. It was disclosed last month that Margaret intended to con- tinue her public lire, and the im- plication was she would not see Llewellyn so often. at least not publicly. Terror Still Plagues Italy ROME <AP> -Four terrorists shot a Milan Industrial executive ln the legs today. keeping up the war on the Italian establishment despite nationwide revulsion at the Red Brigades' murder or Aldo Moro. Officials of the Christian Democrat Party announced. meanwhile, that a state funeral will be conducted -without Moro's body -in the Basilica of St. J ohn Lateran on Saturday. They said private funeral services will be held according to the family's wishes al Torrita Tiberina, 30 miles north of Rome. The day of the funeral was not announced. Arter the body or the former preJTliCr was discovered Tues- dav. the Moro family. embit· tered over the government's refusal to negotiate the North State Temps Drop By Tbe Auoclated Press Temperatures will con- li nue to drop today in parts of Northern Callrornia as winds pick up and scattered tbun- d er showers threaten mountain areas. Tbe National Weather Service predicted gusts of up to 30 mph in tbe Stockton and Sao Fran· cisco Bay areas. A small- crafl advisory was issued. A slight chance of after· noon and evening showers or scattered thun · derstorms was predicted for the Sierra, the Mount Shasta area and the northeast comer or the state. Niguel Park Plans Given County Okay Plans tor a one-acre Laguna Niguel Parft which will include a lookout area over the Aliso Valley were approved unanimously by Orange County supervisors Tues· day. kidnappers' demand for lhe re lease of 13 im prison ed . ttrrorists, asked that there be no state funeral, nalional mourning or any ceremonies. In one or the numerous letters he wrote during his captivity, Moro criticized bls party's ada- mant stand and told its leaders to stay away from his funeral. T he victim of the Milan ''kneecapping" was Franco Giacomau.I, an executive of the st ate-owned Montedlson chemical industry. Police said three men and a woman gunned him down and fled. Such attacks are a favorite tactic of the Red Brigades, and Giacomazzi was the hrth person kneecapped in northern Italy in five days. The ultra-lertisl terrorists were expected to follow up the murder of Moro with attacks on more po litical leaders, and the newspaper Corriere della Sera &aid police protection or likely targets had been intensified. The rounder of the Ked Brigades, Renato Curacio, shouted ln a Turin courtroom to- day that the assassination of Moro was "an act or revolu- tionary justice, the highest a~t of humanity possible in this society wltt)out jus tice and divided into classes." He was dragged away in chains. Curaclo and 14 other Red Brigades members are on trial in Turin on sedition cbar1es. Authorities in Rome an· nounced that 24 of the 28 penons arrested May 8 in a police dragnet for suspects in the Moro kidnapping bad been released for lack of evidence. They had been held oo charges of sub- versi ve association. Moro's murder strengthened the alllance between Moro's Christian Democratic Party and the Communists and promised election gains to the government party. ROME SFREET HONORS H4Rl'fBS ROME (AP> -Via Marlo Fanl, the tree-shaded street where the Red Brigades ltld· napped Aldo Moro and killed his live bodyguards March 16, was renamed by the city today the .. Street of the Marcb 16 Martyn." Marlo Fani was an educator. ( Pilot Logbook J Taking Laguna's Problems to Top By STEVE MITCHELL Of-o.llY,_.._ Freshman Laguna Beach councilman Kelly BoYd took on Governor Brown ln a verbal exchan1e in San Diego last week, and, according to news reports and tesUmooy from fellow councllmen, the Laauna official came out on top. Brown spoke to delegates to a Leque of CalllomJa Cities meeting for new council members and mayors T~ursday evening at the Sheraton Hotel on Harbor Island. After his remarks. he said he would take questions from the new city orticials in the au- dience. Councilman Howard Dawson helped Boyd scribble out some rough notes. and the young Laguna councUman l"06e to his feet to address the governor. RE COMPLAINED TO BROWN that Laguna Beach picks up the ~.000 annual cleaning bill for its beaches. which are used by people outside of the eovo Art Colony. • "l told h.im the State Coastal Commission requires us to provide public access to our beaches, which Laguna Beach has done willingly," Boyd said in an interview following the convention. ''But l told him it costs us $350,000 a year wtth no relief at all from the state. I told him we need relief for our park· ing problems caused by providing public beach access." Boyd said the governor was less than candid in his replies, which prompted the councilman to interrupt Brown. "BE TOl,.D US HB DIDN'T realize Laguna had this problem, but I told him ll wun't only Laauna Beach. it's beach cities up and down the coasL" Brown is quoted in a San Diego Union story following the confrontation aa calling Boyd's request ridiculous, especially if the Jarvi.s·Gann tax initiative is approved. "We are talking about a tax revolt." the Union article quoted the governor. "There's no way you're going to get more money." ·'Then why don 't you repeal the coastal commission and let us run our own cities," Boyd responded holly. THAT REMARK DREW APPLAUSE from other coun- cil members. the Union article said. The governor replied that a majority or the people of California enacted Prop. 20, which created the State Coastal Commission. Repeal, he said, would be tmlikely. But before Boyd sat down, Brown turned to Richard Silberman of San Diego. bis executive a.salatant. and or· dered him to "write that down." BOYD SAID RB AND MaYor McDowell were later in· vited to Sacramento to discuss beacb access and state funding ol coastal city problems aometlme later this month. Meanwhile, the freshman council member is doing his homework, seeking out complai.nl.a from other beach cities to take to the governor. •• 1 want to have information from other cities when we go up there." he said. "My main concern is turning the cities back ove.rto us." In the mid-SOs, Margaret suf- fered her first disappointment in love. She was forced under pressure to abandon her relationship with Royal Air Force Group Capt. Peter Townsend becausehewasadivorcedman. Rldgeview Park, ort Ridgeview Driv e n ea r Hi g hlands Avenue, would contain a tot lot and multi-use area in addition to the view area, a report to superviaon said. • OAEXEL • HERITAGE •. BAKER • HEKMAN • MASTERCRAFT • WIEMAN • HIBRITEN • Her intention to divorce Lord Snowdon was announced eight days before the Church of England is expected to change its rules and allow divorced persons to remarry in church. -·The· change will remove a serious obstacle to the remar- riage or members or the royal family. Because the queen ls officially the temporal head or the Church or England, the churcb probibi· lion was one reason royal ob- servers believed Margaret and Snowdon would never divorce despite their legal separation. Park construction bas been estimated at $46,000 and yearly maintenance would cost $2,400. Supervisors authorized the preparation or construction documents which later would be used lo seek bids for the project. From Page Al SNAKES ••• said Robillard, "lS that we seem to have a bumper crop or adult rattlesnakes this year." And they could, be speculated, turn up ne ar south-county beaches fed by streams that have washed the snakes toward the ocean during heavy rains. Improvement Courses College Class Fee Eyed in Saddleback Saddleback College classes - currently offered to district resi· dents at no charge -tould have fees attached to them next year under guidelines proposed by Trustee Robert Price. Residents can be charged for classes which are not taken for credit toward receiving a col· lege degree, Price said. The classes be believes the district could begin charging students to attend are "sell im- provement courses" such as ten- nis, arts and crafts and recrea- tion. .. Jt 's kind or shitting more things into the community services area," Price said to- day. "The community Is ap. parenUy willina top~ a minimal fee for worthwhUe cluses so we could move some of our existing courses into that area.'' Price said his suggestion was prompted by concern over PoSSi· ble budget cutbacks as a result or diminishing district revenues should the Jarvia-Oann amend· ment be approved by voten. "Right now, t~nnis ia free because It's In the curriculum for credilallon," Price ex- plained. "ll we ahlf'l It into com· munlty services, we rnlcht bo able to break t feft on lb• cost of the coune throuah ch1rgln1 fees." And that would ease tbe burden on tax revenues necessary to run regular college degree programs, Price said. "The next year for the college will be a test of survival," the trustee said. "Even though we are not In as bad shape as some districts, it will be a severe and austere period." Price also is proposing to "im· mediately curtail all plans lo operate a north campus for the 1978-79 school year." And he suggests that college offic ials figure ne xt year's budget f undlng levels at a rate less than the extstinc tax rate and assessed valuation increase estimates. Thal means a potential reduc- tion or almost $2 million in the collece'a 1978-79 budget. "That keepa us with pretty much the same proaram we have operating now," Price said. He indicated the cutback would also protect the district from cutbacka as a result of tho Behr bill Trustees are scheduled to dis· cuss Price's 1u11eated 1uldtllnea and next year's budcet et a special meeUng Monday. The aeulon will becin at 3 p.m. in the Library/ Cluaroom ~omplex, 21000 Marauerlte Parkway. Room 1c.s. ln MlAioD Viejo. • • -' w x w a: 0 • w " < ..... a: w :I: • ~ a: < 2 0 z :5 • • If your bag is leather, stop in now and view our exciting all new leather gallery. Select from the largest collection of leather sofas and chairs in the area. TORRANCE 2~9 HawthOrne Blvd . (213) 378-i279 Fitw Ft1ral,.,,,. •-' 1..m.r Dtn,_ COSTA MESA 1S9S Newport Blvd. (71~) 6'2·2050 LAOUNA BEACH 34S North Coast Hwv. (7'4> 494-6SS1 • KARGES • HICKORY CHAIR • Ol)(IE • wooqMARK OR IOINALS • MARGE CARSON • • > :0 m ,.. 8 ~ CD m 0 0 z C> • • % m z ::JJ m 0 0 z • ~ g 0 i: > :0 ~ 0 :JJ C> z )> ,... VI • • , I t l . I 17 ( ( I' l. • .. • D s b • d pl Or ng CoMtDai1yP1lol Editorial P!YJ.e ....................................................................... .&Q I.. Wednesday, May 10, 1978 Robert N W~~/Publlstler Tnomu KMv•I Editor Barbara Knibleh/Edltorl•I P•99 Editor Fire Road Fills Longtime Need C'lt~ Counrll upprov<.11 <11 n firL' tu<HI linking tht• Top uf the \\'orld fire slut1on '' ilh the.• 1\rc·h Bcat•h lltt1i.;ht:-. coll\· munity was a good move for st'' L'r<.tl n·a::ion.., The Arch Bc:acb I le1ght:-. <H"l'a ha~ Ion~ bt>('n vulm•ra- ble to d1sast('r by fire, and a blutt' that gultt!d thn·c homes and damaged 3 fourth (·arhcr this month only ..tC· ccnted that vulnerability. So il camo as no surpri~c that hill~itll' r esidents en· dorsed the program outlined by Laguna Hcach councLl members last week. What made the fire access road pa latable to residents <>( the two communities was inclusion of gates at bot h ends of the narrow roadway and a promise t~nt the road would be r estricted t o police, fire, am~'l_lancc and paramedk use -and would only he used in case of eme rgency. Fears of an l'xpandec.l puhlu: access route were sof· tencd b\· councilmL·n, who 111dicated such a move would be unlik0ely durmg their tenure . However, the City Atlornl'y w<.1rnecl thnt the current council cannot slop futute city councils from changing that road designation. It will be up to hillside residents opposed lo through traffic between their communities to make their feelings on the subject known to future city fathers. ID Overdone La.i;una Beach Councilwoman Sall~ Bclleruc is badgering her fl.!llow council members for <.1ccepting ~omt> pretty impr(•ssi\"C idenlllicalion badges la~t week. The gold <llld d1romc tnnkl'ls ;,ire inst•nbL·IJ '' 11 h t tw "orns. ··1.aguna He<.1ch Councilman," but the fact thuL her huclgc do(•sn·t :,ay "Councilv.oma11.' 1s not \.\hat bothers the coun<:1l memllcr. She thinks the badges might promote a pompous <Jt· t1tude among her pt::ers. adding that they "set the cou1H:1l apart from the rc::.t of the citizens." 1\1 rs. BelleruC' also said she is confused as to the purpose of the official looking ID badges. She suggests tha t perhaps they are to be di~layed to peace officers in • case a council person is pulled over while rushing to a meeting. or such. While it is highly unlikely any Laguna Beach official would use the badge to curry favor. the shiny baubles do appC'nr a bit ridiculou.<;. The nc>arlv S140 cost <if the five council medallions <·m1lcl lw,·c ptuThascd <.1n :l\\ful lot of business cards \\ h1eh \\OU Id hcH C i-erved thl· -.amC nurpO~l'. \ h11 11101·4· mnclesl I~. pe>rhaps. The People's Business '( l Terming it a "cheap shot," two city officials have taken issue with a Daily Pilot editorial which questioned the San Juan Capistrano City Council fol" meeting in 5ecre t session. . , The council cons ide red :in airport land-use i!isue in closed executive session last month, because local pilots were threatening a lawsuit to J.wep the strip open, accord· ing to City Attorney J ames Okutaki. Under the Ralph M. Brown Al'l -state law ~tipul:..it · in!! open deliberation by el~ctetl offi cials ·-the council ts forbidden to discuss such threats or possible action re- garding s uch threats in secret. 13ut Okazaki disagrees, claiming atlomey·client r ela· tions hips involved are in complete accord with state Al· torncy General guidelines allowing closed discussions. According to a 1960 opinion of the Attorney General C36 Ops. Alt. Gen. 175) a n agency can hold executive sess ions \\ith its legal counsel to discuss actual litigation. but when legal counsel is souf!ht as to legal implications of a matter under discussion, the a ttorney-client privilege does not apply, and the discussion must b(• held in public. The key is '"actual litigation." f'o one hart filed s uit or paid a filing fee in an effort to keep the airport open. The councilmen acknowledge this. Pilots had only ~uggestetl that such a suit might hL· forthcoming. The question; Jlow far <:an the attorncy·client n•la · tion~hip be stretchetJ to discuss controversial issues m privcilc? . . What will he the next legal guise or threatened suit that sends city officials scurrying behintl closed doors to avoid public scrutiny? .. Cheap" or not. a s charged by Okazaki and Coun· cilman J ames Thorpe, the Daily Pilot will continue to fi re q uestioning salvos at public groups that fail to meet open· Jy while talking ahoul the people's business. • • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of th e Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors ano artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. ' Boyd/Partners ByL.M.BOYD Three partners put together a business firm that required one or another of them lo be on the road alternately much of the lime. Wh en all three were in town. they decided. each would be a vice president. But when nny one or them was out on a sales trip, that one for lhc Dea~ Gloomy Gus See the OCTD directors a r e up lo their old tricks -a 43 percent. rise In o~rating costs ($10.2 Million) out of you·k n ow ·whose pocket. while bragginJt about holding the fare al the same old 25 ccoLtl 0 M.J.M. ~ .. G4ll -· -.... ....... . , ..... ,. .... -... , ~ .................... .,_ :::::,~"'-.-..... . nonce would be the president. Theory was the lop tiUe would give leverage in negotiation. Actually, though. it was their private joke, and they claimed it worked to let them keep on ha lanced good terms with one another. Only one out of fi ve murder victims is killed by somebody unknown to said victim. You i:,ee what this means, don't you? You're a lot safer hang. ing arolllld with strangers. In the North Temperate zone, the average p&rtOQ weighs more in Septembel' and less in February than ln nny other mooths, report tho science boys. llow big the goldfish arow~ t1epend6 on how big its bowl Is, th at you know. But the ques· tion arises as lo ju.,t why a ~mall bowl tends to stunt the l1~h therein while a bl~ Pond lNs them get lar.rcr. It s now believed those fish secrete a growth·lnhibillna substance. Presumably, Its Potency 11 •J· fected directly by how concen· trnted It Is, hJ1hly so In um11l volume of water, Jess so the laraertbevolumeof water. , ... _ Nicholas Von Hoffman Real Estate Bubble Can Burst Tht• iru:apa1:1ty oJ the ad· min1sltallon to t·ome up with an anti-inflation policy that a rea- ~onahh: person l'an trust will stimulate the fli ght or depo!litors from 1 .. .1vings bank!\ and other thrift iru!lltullons. Ten years ago rampant cot• ro~ive inflation was such an un· familiar ex· pcrience th<tt people kept their savings in cash and (jl· lowe d their purchasing powe r to be corroded. After a Ul'(" ~•dl' of dt•d · .1catcu infl:.t· t wn1sls in Conl{rc~s and the While House, people have come to un· derstand that they're being robbed" hen the savings and loan association pays 6.5 percent while the government destroys the Mailbox \'aluc of money ~t the rutC?of8 per c·ent and then has the gall to tax the interest from the ~avrngs uc· c.'ount People have been taught by politicians tha t only children save; put it into the bank and the guys in Washington'll.steal it. 'J'hus more and more millions or us are learning that you never lend money, you borrow it. Bor· row money today and, wlth Jim· my Carter in the While House, you'll be able to repay the loan si:c year s from now at 60-cents on the dollar. Solvency is for suckers. IN THEIR determination to never a lender but a borrower be. many JX.>Ople are going into debt bu ying real estate. Their reason· ing is plausible. In the last few years, through inflation and re- cession, residential real estate values have held up very well. Stocks and bonds have been a dis· aster; gold has only made money for a few shrewdies; antiques, jewelry. art and objets d'art, like rare stamp~ und oriental rugs, de· mand SJ)('.'Cfaliied knowledge, and unyway, you can take a bad beat· ing, even if you've mude a good buy, in the event you have to sell in a hurry. Real estate, especially homes, has hlld the best track record. They're easy to sell compared to some of the things mentioned above, and the price on residen· tialhousinghasnotonlykeptpace with inflation, but far out· distanced jt. That's why you bear <>f more and more people re· financing the homes they themselves live in so they can re· alize the enhanced value or their· property immediately. Many of them are taking the money they're getting from refinancing their homes and buying other properties, not to live in but as an investment. THE DIFFICULTY with that is that rents haven't kept up with housing prices. People are paying $100.-000 for the house which sold for $75,000 three years ago ln elC• pectaUon that in three or four y•ars they'll be able to sell for ${40,000. ln the meanUrne. they must rent it and a lot or them are discovering the rental price won't even pay the monthly mortgage lnstaJlment, much leas taxes and upkeep. · ln the banking business they call people who're payingouttwo or three hundred dollars a month now in hopes of realizing a $40,000 profit down the r oad "overex· posed." Everything depends on the market in residential real estate holding up aod there's no guarantee of that. Jn tact the signs indicate this is a poor time to buy residential real estate for any purposeotherthanllvinginil. In many parts or the country, residential real estate prices are being driven up not by potential occupiers but by people hoping lo sell later at a profit. They're going up so fast it looks like a buyers' panic is on, with people's business judgment swept away by an hysterical conviction that if they don't buy now and buy at almost any price, they 'll lose the op· portun ity oru lifetime. IF \'OU n•ally think real estalt- prices will continue lo shoot. up in· definitely with no relationship to the price of other goods um.I services, then this is the moment to buy at any price. In the real world such a situation is unlikely so that the danger grows that a bad collapse is coming in a couple or years, a collapse which will find many innocent, hard·working people badly dumped on. The lastrecessionsawthathap· pen with certain kinds of real estate. Second or vacation home prices were murdered as was the office·building segment . or the real estate industry. Residenth.t l real estate. of course, did well, but that was last time, when prices weren't climbing at the discon· certing rates they are now. tn times like these, remember the new adage, don't seek shelter." against inflation where too many other5 are already huddled. A Time to Think About World Hunger To the Editor: Everyone who has ever heard a baby cry knows that feeding a hungry child is the most natural thing in the world, yet each year 20 million deaths occur from starvation and diseases relat.ed to malnutrition. Since November, 1977, more than 100,000 people across the nation have made a personal commitment to look within themsclvc·s lo discover what they as ind1vu.luals can do to end de:.ith by starvation in the world within 20 years. These in· div1duals, with their ranks ex· panding every day, have aligned themselves in the Hunger Pro· jccl. THE IDEA ot the hunger pro• ject is to utilize the power of th e individual to create a context ••• something that. no organizatiol\ or government can do. In simple terms, creating a context involves willing some. th in g to manifest and then personaJly committing yourself tnmakethishappen. - answering sandbagging and pumpin g calls. I saw supervisors work the night through; everyone pitched m and worked au day and well into the nighL · None of these acts was ,in their ••job description." No one had to help. They have wive-; and children at home but yet they worked their tails off. NOW WE have a trash strike and what is happening? Bins are being provided for the residents in various locations. Men are going out of their own departments and hauling trash all over the place. Regular trash . truck drivers are training men to pick up trash, and the results? Trash, in spite of the hostility and shots fired, is still being picked up. No one Is holding a threat ovet" their heads to make them do It -·quite the opposite. These men care. The thousands of indivi<Juals already enrolled in the Hunger Project have all personally co m· mitted themselves to end hunger in 20 years. Individuals across the country have been creating their own forms of participation to make this happen. For example, the governor of New York declared the month or May as a time for the state of New York to become aware of the pro&lem. In Washington • D.C., May 14 has been declared The city employees <and even non·employees) are keep· ing our city beautiful and I think it's high Ume we let them know how grateful we are. I am darn proud to say I work for the city of Laguna and consider myself blessed lo be able to work with men and women or this caliber. To every one of you, from firemen to sewer department, 1 think you're tops and all deserve a medal. I hope rou get back a little of what you ve sown. I ap. preciate you and commend you for your fine example of loyalty. NAME WITHHELD Die Bat To the Editor: a dny of awareness of world hunger. The Lag una Beach Hunger Project weekend of May 13-14 includes a beach run on Main Beach at 8:30 n.m. Satur- day. Entry fee is $5. TERESA EDWARDS Grate/Ml To the Editor: You may feel this letter Is a blt biased. but I fool compelled to bave my say, I work aa a bus driver for tho city of Laguna Beach. Consequently I gel to ot). serve the way our city crew operates and th e caliber or work done. lo the past four montM l ha ve been wttn~s to two crises: Tht> rains and subsequent nood· in lil and this trash strike. On both occasions l have seen men In all kinds or Poail1ons don work boots, hard hats and gloves to assist tbe rostdt-nt.s or Laguna. J know or omc~rs wbo waded In thigh. high boots in wat.tr and mud to h 1Jp evacuate people from en· dan1ered homes. I kno• of firemen who 1tayed up all nJabt ' . I think I've r ead ('verylhing that's b een written o n Jarvis-Gann in the last six months. Last night's <May 4) Pilot editorial was Lhe best I've aeen1 Bravo. JEAN HARMON Blaee:d To the Editor: A more blued editorial (Ma,y 4) I have ever heard. First. the Jiomeowners, mlllJons or them, are voling 0 Yes" on Prop. 13 to save their homes from eovernmenlal spending and that ls no pipe droam. THE STATE has $R billion out ot income laxes to help the schoole. As for the inventory lax, only Ronald Reagan helped business on that. De mocrots always voted against " reduction unUl IL wu politically expecll~nt lo set a Behr Trap tor lb voters. For once the people ahou1d win. A ~orttY YOlecl for lbe deatb' peDalt1; -poUUdaa - denied them. A majority wanted to keep the Panama Canal; the two elected Senators denied them . In reference to the two bond issues, they were not fo r essential needs. For once. we . would like lo win. . CARL C. KLASS lfnhappfl Naae•ake To the Editor: .My name is John Manfredi , a rather uncommon name in these µarts until last week. Since lheo, however. it appears that there are at least two of the same name around. One John Manfredi is involved in a law suit !iied by San Clemente Mayor Bill Walker and councilwoman Donna Wilkinson. The other John Man· fredi is Die, owner of Trotter Sign Company and a member of the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce. I would like very rnuch to make it clear that there are two M anfredis and would like to help your readers dis ling uis n between the two. Unfo rtunately, I don't know the other Manfredi nor do I know what he looks like. However, I will describe myself and give your readers my back· g round. I hope the other does lhe same. I AM MALE, white, 5'8" tall, weighing 180 Pounds, not count· ing my black moustache. I am 38 years old. One may readily recognize me by the standard work clothes I generally wear. These clothes are necessary because as owner of Trotter Sign Company. I design the signs, layout the lettering, do some irr stalling and repair, and sweep the floor after everyone has gone home. <l do not do win· dows? > The fact that my company oc- casionally does work for Mr. Bill Walker and hls Orm, ud that l also support blm, Donna Wllklnson and Roy Hamm adda nothlnJ( to my appearance, but, l feel, docs Pohit to good judS• ment. Thererore, I would appreciate it your readers ever see or meet the above descnbed lohn Man· fredl on the street. l n a restaurant. or at a job site, please wave or say hello. rt not, nnd if this mfstakon identity con· tfnues. I may be forced lo change my name to John Smith. JOUN MANFREDI Se3tAaCUtMln To the Editor: In his dietrlbe a1&1nat tbe bomo~• (.Mallbo~ Ma.J a), the aood Geor&o w. K.eot ovedooU - evidence that be s hould be aware of or within availability to as a University of California. Irvine, professor of Com· paraUve Cultures. According to the Sex Informa· lion & Education Council of lhe United States, one of the nation's most respected a uthorities on the subject of sex: ••An - thropological studies show that in cultures t h at t olerate homosexual activity all men participate in it as well as in heterosexual activity. In fact. the evidence from comparative zoology suggests that sexual at· traction to both sexes is the norm and that exclusive heterosexuality is culturall,y im· posed." Dr. Wainwright Churchill, Director of the Philadelphia Mental Health Clinic's P sychoanalysis Department states that .. in complete con· trast to the attitude of Western civilization a fter the rise of Christianity, the pagans believed that sexual passion enobled every relationship (and> ••• beauty ••• was surrounded by an aura of religious awe. The young of both sexes were en- couraged to cultivate whatever nat~ral beauty they had througn excercise, sports and gym· nasties (and) the human body was revered as the mos t beautilul of all nature's crea· lions. •'THESE attitudes were partly responsible for the pagan al· titude toward homosexuality. Jt was not felt that sexual feelings would spoil a friendshlp nor that they were reserved for only ••. procreativity nor was it felt that masculine beauty should be ap· preciated only by women and feminine beauty only by men. "'The sexes wer~ not polarized in the pagan mind. (They> · believed that all bumnn beings possessed both lemlnlne anct mascWine attributes • • • thaL man, in bis original form. wu a bl.sexual creature • ~U exc:lusive heterosexuality was raro amoas them, so was exclusive bomosexualit¥. People were not eJtpected to choose · between two ~utually exclusive ways ot loving." BRUCE S. HOPPING ' .. f \ l I Wedneedlly. Mey 10, 1971 DAILY PILOT A f Bay-Area Gays on Marc~ ~ 1,000 Protest Repeal of Wichita Rights Bill Pigat Work u nive rsity of California researcher Tom Peterson runs pi g test on treadmill on San Diego campus. The porkers .1 og 25 miles a week for a year. but studies failed to pr~ve exercise helps avert heart attacks. The theory that Jog. ging helps humans should be reviewed. say researchers. Jarvis . Drops Libel Claim . SAN DIEGO CAP> -Proposition 13 co-author Howard Jarvis says M 'll dismiss his $800,000 libel cl~im filed against the Grossmont High School Dis trict over a s tory printed in a student newspaper. .. The story appeared March 10 in the Granite Hills High School Clarion and was written by 16-year-old Brad Teaby. It tried to explain the controversial property tax limitation initiative on the June 6 ballot. But part of Teaby's story alleged Jarvis and Gann were "prominent real estate owners " who stood to reap •·several million dollars" in lax savings if the proposition passed. 15 Esca~ Air Craslt SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Some t ,000 chanting San Fran- ciscans, many or them homosex· uals . marched through city streets in protest just hours after voters in Wichita, Kan. repealed a gay rights ordinance. <Related stories. A4. A12> The protest Tuesday night was peaceful, police said. "WE RAD WORD there would be a protest a s soon a s the Wichita vote started coming through," said OUicer Elsen Broich. The march appeared to be a combination protest over the Wichita vote and a statewide in· iliative that. if approved by voters in November, would let school districts fire or refuse to hire avowed homosexuals or those who support gay lifestyles. THE MARCHERS, swelling to number about 1,000 by 11 p.m .. chanted "Wichita means fight back," "Civil rights or civil war." and other slogans as they strode 10 and lS abreast from Castro Street down busy Market Street. then up Polk Street and over lo Union Square. Cas tro and Polk streets are pre· dominantly gay neighborhoods. Earlier in the day. a Wichita ordinance barring discrimina- tion against homosexuals was overwtielmJngly repealed by a more than 4 ·1 margin. Two weeks ago, when a similar or1 d lnance was overtutrfed in St. Paul. Minn .. San Francisco homosexuals staged a similar but s maller march, police saJd. A city ordinance banning dls- crim ination against homosex· uals was just recently approved her e by the board or Smog Stations Hit For 'Deficiencies' SACRAMENTO <AP> -A California auditor general's report says nearly two-thirds of the atate's auto smog inspection stations are deficient. and official lamp and brake stations are hardly ever inspected. • The report, out Tuesday, recommended that the Bureau of Automotive Repair increase its staff to take care of the problems. BUT CONSUMER Alfal.ra Director Richard Spohn, whose de- partment administers the bureau. said the report contained "numerous false statements. half-truths and distortions." The bureau also licenses most auto repair shops and mediates consumer complaints. Some of its operations are paid by license and registration fees. Defibiencies cited by the report included failure to have proper tools for inspection and engine tune-ups, failure to employ a licensed pollution device installer, and failure to keep up with the latest pollution control technology. (i s upervisor s . w i thout COit• troversy There has been no move to repeal thal ordinance. Pom Films Jail Pair IMPERIAL BEACH <AP> -An elementary school teacher has been arrested for investigation of making pornographic films involving young boys after police confiscated more than 100 sex-oriented films and slides at h is apartment, officers said. Bail for Archje Murray, 39, a fourth-grade teacher at Westvtew Elementary School, was set Tuesday at $4,250, Imperial Beach police said. Richard Rollings. 18. a · security guard identified as Murray's roommate. also was arrested Monday when police armed with a search warrant arrived. SACRAMENTO <AP> -Twelve passengers and three crew members walked away from a twin-engined transport plane that skidded an estimated 1,500 feel on its belly, an official reports. r!J~~ starting, May 11. The accident shortly ( a fter 6 p.m . Tuesday STATE ) in v olved an e x ec utive -typ e turbo-prop plane of the ----S anta Barbara-based ...... Apollo Airways . The executive director of the airport, James Ellingsworth, said "It did leave the ground by a bout 20 feel wheo. for some reason, the pilot aborted. He set it down on its belly and it slid probably 1,500 feet." He said he didn't see any obvious injuries. Dlnaer Steel& f'llllCI LOS ANGELES <AP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has pulled off the most lucrative fund raiser ever staged by a Democratic gubernatorial incumbent, convincing 1,000 people to contribute more than $300,COO toward his reelection campaign. Aft.er all the bills are paid, the $25()..per-plate dinner Tuesday night al the Beverly Hilton Hotel will have netted Brown between $210,000 and S250.000. said campaign manager Gray Davis. Brown has collected $700,000 so far, Davis said. and hopes to s tretch that to at least SJ million before the June 6 primary, in which he is unopposed. Drirtlc DralD• f'ltte LOS ANGELES <AP> -A Woodland Hills restaurant where television actor Dan Haggerty was burned by a naming drink bas been fined $1,.500 for fire code violations. Representatives of The Red Onion pleaded no contest to two charges of serving a naming drink and one charge of over-crowding before Municipal Court Judge David Kennick Tuesday. One of the flaming drink violations OCCWTed Nov. 19, 1977, the same night Haggerty, who portrays Grizzly Adams. was burned. However, Los Angeles Fire Department Inspector Gene Lindley said none of the charges related to the Haggerty incident. Gates /tlalces ApolOflfl LOS ANGELES <AP> -Police Chief Daryl Galea has made a public apology for m~g a statement la.st week in which be called Latino police officers "lazy" and "unmotivated." Gates delivered the prepared apology Tuesday shortly after. Chicano groups gathered outside police headquarters at Parker Center_. Mother's Day ts May 14th. Give her a gift that grows from ~. ~s Gardens. SHOP EARLY .. 11.,.... .......... .. fl"OM Mlb Mma. Proprietor CELEBRATION SPECIALS World Famous BEEF STICKe St&mmer Sau~· 20' LB. OFF 404 LB. OFF.:r.:-:=. · REG. PRICE REG.PRICE Enjoy the _,,.rfut htckory-smoke fl1111or of this f•mcM.15 a41· beef 'umnw sauup. It's popular as• tn.c:k -with cr-*•rs \ 1nd cheese. M.ny u• It different ways especially tor appet1· ,I zen, cooki"9 .-Mf fondues. CITATION•WHEEL SWISS 2oe LB. OFF REG.PRICE Tait• thil moist natw• dleese -cut tr.th trom tM wt.el so you Qllt the fi.vor the ctwnemlkef inmndld ..• the BEST ... 1he only way to buy chene. FREE s!~/:~T MUSTARD WITH THE PURCHASE O~ ti OR MORE DURING OUR GRAND Of'ENING Sweet·Hot Mustard from HidlOfY Far1n1 of ONG• ed1b • _. c1al HSt to everything you .,,,.. with It. You'H be bed! for rnorel NOW 1C FOR A BOX OF OLO·FASMIONED CRACKERS OR CRACKED WHEAT THINS With n. Pwdllle Of A Hldlory F•ma of Ohto9 CHEESE BALL Either of t.._ cndlera .... 6'm U. thi"' for ...-1n11 our delicious CHEESE BALL -lftade ffom •blend of lllld dleae COY.,..d with nuu and topped with• cherry. IWORTEO YANKEE TRADER• SOUP MIXES BUY THREE PACKAGES -GET ONE FREE Oieoovw for ycwu•U the rich, hearty full tlev0t of theM 110Ups. One of 16 fllwort wlll be umpled wcfl day during the pend open- inf. Taike actvanc.ga of this apec11~ offer, FOOD GIFT PAKS Yow nearby HldcOtV FMmt of Orioe stor. 19 • OlfT CENTER, too. h dllfll!IJ• .,,.. ofhn • Wide •11 c1kMt of fOod tift pllik1 f0t ell a aDlllOM. T...., OOIM "9 elf Mns. .et sine-. We'll even l9fMI your fli kor1 F1r111~~t~=~~ OF ONIO W ntclff Plaaa 111aa.....,•Mai:t.._.•MJ.ot12 ............ ... ....... • "~~ ~, ..... , .. ,,. M "11tW.1'16S.. ll·I t - , Irvine EDITION OL 71, NO. 130, •SECTIONS, 46 PAG~S I ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A Today's Closing N.Y. Stocks WEDNESDAY, MAY 10. 1978 tEN CENTS 1 Prineess, Lord Snowdon to Di1'orce . ' .. , .. ,....... PRINCESS MARGARET, LORD SNOWDEN TQ DIVORCE After Stormy Marriage,• Rift In the Royal f amlly Princess' Career Often Contrmfersial LONDON CAP) -From her impetuous childhood through her precocious teen-age years to her stormy middle age, Britain's Princess Margaret swirled through life trailing controversy over her men and her deportment. The announcement today from Buckingham Palace that she and husband Antony Armstrong-Jones would seek a divorce after i nearly two years of separation was only the latest episode in a life r that seemed the very stuff or novels. 17 • M,ARGARET WAS BORN JN August 1930, and made her first public appearance at the age of 6 at her father's coronation. Since then, she has been continually in the public eye -oft.en wit.b heavy consequences for her private Ule. She was a lively child, known to cartwheel down Buckingham Palace halls, defy orders and make scenes. "My first memory," she said, "ls ball-falling out of my pram baby carriage. A great to-do. I imagine I must have wanted lo be noticed." She was a capable horsewoman, spoke a number of languages, and loved piano. Both Margaret and her older sister, later Queen Elizabeth 11, were proficient swimmers. BUT WHEN THEY WERE awarded a Ulesaving certificate together. Margaret became so angry she picked up her sister's dog. threw it into Buckingham Palace's lake, and then, clad in her best party dress, jumped in to rescue the drenches animal. ··Margaret always wants what I want," her sister once said. "When m y s ister and I were growing up," explained Margaret, "she was made out to be the goody-goody one. That was boring so the press tried lo make out I was wicked as hell." Margaret blossomed into a precocious teen-ager and jet-setter. a beautiful young woman with violet eyes, brown hair and flawless skin. She was surrounded by the British press and idolized by the royalty-loving public during the austere post World War II years. .. THE PLEASURE-SEEKING PRINCESS," headline writers called her. She was always off to nightclubs trailing dukes, giJard officers and other eligible young men. There were pictures of her smoking In public. Her elegant cigarette holders became famous. In her mid·20s, her ill-fated romance with Royal Air Force Group Capt. Peter Townsend brought her widespread sympathy: Townsen.d. a Battle of Britain hero, was equerry to Margaret's father Kin~ Geor~e VI. But the dashing fighter ace bad been divorced. and that brought family and church pressure that eventually forced the princess to renounce him. Four and a half years later, in May 1960, she married globe-trotting photographer Armstrong-Jones -later elevated to the peerage as Lord Snowdon -after a secret Jove affair. Millio'ls watched their wedding ceremony al Westminster Abbey or on television. THEIR OFrEN ROCKY MARRIAGE enthralled Britons but effectively ended 16 years and two children later with a separation. "I don't see myself marrying again," the Princess said in 1977. "It would probably be too much or a bore." Her latest man. and suitably her latest scandal, was Roddy Llewellyn, a socialite and former hippie turned aspiring supper-club crooner. Margaret came in for sharp criticism in Parliament, in public <See PUBLIC PRINCESS, Page A2) Steaming Out ~Catalina Headil South A Long Beach towlng firm confirmed todau' that the S.S. Catalina, wblch slipped out of Newport Harbor late Tuesday night, is beaded for San Dieao. A spokesman ror Jones Tug and Barge said the 301-foot "Great Wblte Steamer" was to arrive in San Diego this aft.er· noon. But the U.S. Coast Guard ln San Dieto said they haven't heard a word from the ship, which tell Newport Harbor a day an.er Its dock.Jot permit ex- plred. The vessel was brought to Newport April 25 for a boat show. "It's gone, thank God," said Dave Harshbarger, Newport Beach's director of marine safety. · He said boat show promoter Duncan Mcintosh arran1ed for the boat to be towed out of the harbor at 11 p.m . Tuesday. Meanwhile, Hyman Singer of Beverly Hills, the lhlp'a owner, ts embroJled ln a dilpute with the City of Los Antelea over $30,000 in dookin.g and towtnc f ecs otncJaJs claJm he owes that clly for bert.blnc the bia venel. Port ol Sao Dle10 authoriUee sald they'd also bad no contact wftb tbe ship, whfcb Newport Beacb autborltielt aald baa P«mlaion to use • San Dleto ~berth for. eo days_ In lts heyday, the Catalina was the chief meana of transPOl'tlna tourlala from t.M mainfand to Avalon on Catellna J11and. LONDON <AP> -Princess Margaret and her husband Lord Snowdon bave agreed to a divorce, Buckinebam Palace an - nounced today. An official statement annowic· ing the impending end or the stormy marriage said: "Her royal highness. the Prin· cess Margaret, Countess or S nowdon, and the Earl of Snowdon after two years of separation have now agreed that their manage should formally be ended. AccoMingly her ryoal highness will start the necessary legal proceedings." Margaret. sister of Queen Elizabeth II. separated from her photographer husband March 16. 1976, after 16 years or mar· riage. The 47-year-old princess and Lord Snowdon, 48, have two children -David Vicounl Linley, 16 , and Lady Sarah Arm s trong .Jones. 14 . A s pokesman at Kensington Palace. Margaret's home. said the princess would continue to have custody oC the couple·s two children, but Snowdon wlll have access. The spokesman said the prin· cess had "no plans for remar· riage." Margaret has drawn criticism in recent months for her friendship with 30·year-old socialite Roddy Llewellyn. She is in King Edward VII Hospital in London suffering from suspected gastroenteritis. The K e n s ington Palace s pokesman said Margaret wa:. "making progress ... The re· s uit or tests taken by the doctors will not be known until Friday." '"e said he had no kn owledge of Lord Snowdon 's plam. "We are not in a position to <See.DIVORCE. Page A2> h·vine to File Lawsuit Against Water District· Legality Test Planned By PlllUP ROSMARIN ~ Oittil Ody ...... s.... A constitutional test will be made or the legality or land· owner dominance of the Irvine Ranch Water District board oC directors after the Irvine City Council voted Tuesday to file lawsuit against the district in Superior Court. The vote to sue the district, and try to stop a scheduled tand- ow n er election June 19 that would authorize the district to is· sue Sl billlon in bonds for water and sewer projects, was unanimous. The council directed Roger Grable, assistant city attorney, to file suit challenging the pro· posed bond authorization on two grounds. First, the council alleged the IRWD failed to comply with re- quirements of the California En· vironmental Quality Act, because no environmental im- pact report was prepared to analyze impacts of the drawing. board projects the bonds would finance. Second. the council declared the IRWD board or directors, to which only two or its seven members are publicly elected, is unconstitutionally composed, in violation or the one man. one vote principle. Five of the IRWD directors are elected by landowner vote. Within the district, the Irvine Company owns more than 90 percent or the undeveloped lan.d. The elect.ion amounts to an ap- CSee WATER, Page AZ) Another Shot As Terrorism Shakes Italy ROME <AP> -Four terrorists shot a Milan industrial executive in the legs today, keeping up the war on the Italian establishment despite nationwide revulsion at the Red Brigades' murder or Aldo Moro. Officials of the Christian Democrat Party announced. meanwhile, that a state funeral will be conducted -without Moro's body -in the Basilica of St. John Lateran on Saturday. They said private funeral services will be held according to the family's wishes at Torrita Tlberina, 30 miles north or Rome. The day of the funeral waa not announced. After the body of the former premier was dlscovered Tues· dav. the Moro family, .embit-tered over the 1overnment's refusal to negotiate the kidnappers' demand tor the release of 13 imprisoned terrorist.I, asked that there be no state funeral, national mourntni or any ceremonies. In one Of the numerous letters he wrote during his caJlUvity, Moro criticized hls /arty 1 ada- mant •tand and tol lt.s leaders t.o stay away from bis funeral. The victim of the Mllan "kneec:!flna" waa Franco Olacom , an executJve oft.be stale·o•ned Montedlaon cbemlcal lnduatry. Police uJd three men and a YtOman aunned hlm don and n.d. · • DlllY ,..... ~.., Jeny 0-n OFFICIALS HURRY SNAKEBITE VICTIM FROM MARINE HELICOPTER TO HOSPITAL Helmer Tachugg of San Clemente Wes Struck Whlle Hiking on SantJago Peak Snake Victim Rescue Sets Pace for Year By JERRY CLAUSEN Of .. o.u,~s- County paramedics and Marine Corps Search and Rescue teamed up Tuesday to rush a raUlesnake-bite victim by helicopter to Mission Communi· ty Hospital, Mission Viejo, from Santiago Peak in Cleveland Na· tional Forest. It was an effort expected to be r epeated several limes this year. county officials agree. because 1978 Is expected to be a dangerous rattlesnake season. Tuesday's victim, Helmar Tscbugg, 36, or 129 Avenida Mariposa, San Clemente, was reported in satisfactory condi· lion in the hospital intensive care unit. Villa Park-based paramedics said Tschugg and a companion were in the Cleveland National Forest hiking when a snake struck him on the right ankle. The two walked a half hour to the peak to contact electronlcs technicians who service relay equipment there . They , paramedics said, called the County Fire Department. Tschugg was the second rat- tler victim treated at Mlnlon Community Hospital Tuesday. Four-year-old Aaron Johnson of Mission Viejo was bitten when he stuck his hand down a gopher CSff SNAKES, Pafe AZ) ROME STREET HONORS~ ROME CAP> -Via Mario Ftnl, the tree·abaded street where the Red Bri1•dff kid- napped Akto Moro and kllled hlt five boclYIUU'ds March 18, wu renamed by the cit)' today, the • •stuet of th• llarcb l6 ll&rl11'1." KUiO FQJ WU an ectuc~tor. Non,.teaching Pact Slated for Hearing A public hearing on a proposal for a new working contract for 600 non-teaching employees of tbe Irvine Unified School Dis· tricl is scheduled at 7: 30 tonight. The board or education meets at Venado Middle School, 4 Deerfield Av e., in the music room. The employee group is asking for a salary increase or about seven percent. The school board, in a counter-proposal, left open the question or salary, pending the outcome or the June 6 primary election and the vote on the Jarvis-Gann property tax in· County OKs Noise Gear For Airport Orange County Airport wtll be getting $199,579 worth or new noise monitoring equipment, supervisors decided Tuesday. The board abo will decide next month whether to spend another $61,650 to expand the monitoring system to El Toro Marine Corps Air Station as well. A contract for the monitoring equipment was awarded to Trac:or Inc. the low of two bid· ders for Lhe noise systems. Supervisors d~lded last year lo replace tbe existing noise monitoring equipment. The new system will be financed with airport revenue and 1 $65,593 state arant. A report to t\(pervlson said lnstallln1 the noise monitors around El Toro could help in land use plannlnC for areas Im· peeled by l\igh Jet nolH level.a. However. expandln1 the aystem could rorco lhe h1rin1 of additional county emptoyea, the report uld. -, ' iliative. H the measure passes. d1stnct orr1cials esllmale school rc" enues would be cut some 41\ percent . Other negotiating points of the employee group proposal in elude formation of an agency Cun ion I shop. Employees would be required to pay dues. or if they preferred otherwise, to pay an e quivalent a m ount intc scholarship funds. Employees also are askinp, that arbitration or e mployee· employer disputes be binding Salaries for the non-teaching, classified employees currently range from $563 a month for a food service worker, to a senior construction engineer's high pay of Sl,648 a month. Coast Weather Night and morning low cloudmess. clearing lo hazy afternoon sunsh\ne Thursday. Cooler dS\yo; Lows tonight in 50s. Highs Thursday in upper 60:. along beaches. INSIDE TODA'\" Most ca~ prodt.lced for the 1976 model year by Ammcon Motor' ""U ~ "calkd bf/ /ederal order. Se~ Page A4 l•dex •• .... ~ '" .. M ... , ... ,,,, "'' ... .. .... "· •• - .. North State Temp1Drop By TM A.aodated Pre Temperatu.rn wlU con - l1nue lo drop today in part1 of Northern CaUfomla as winds pick up a nd scattered tt\un- de r s howers threaten mounlaln areas. The National Weather Service predicted gu.sta of up to 30 mph in the Stockton and San Fran- cisco Bay areas. A small- craft advisory was issued. . ·. A slight chance of after- noon and evening showers or scattered thun · derstorms was predicted for the Sierra, the Mount Shasta area and the northeast corner of the state. FroaP~AJ SNAKES ••• hole. officials said. He la r eport· ed lo good condition. That's not too unusual. "From one end or this county to the other, we are turning up rattlesnakes," said Joe Oliver, Orange County's chief animal control officer. Oliver's training officer, Dick Robillard, said several factors contribute to the increas ed snake activity -a larger adult population. construction in areas formerly inhabited by snakes and drenching rain that flooded holes and burrows in more re- mote canyon areas. Oliver said his department norm ally receives about one or two snake calls weekly at this Ume of year. This year. though, he is 1etthtg abol.lt 10 a week. RobUlard said about 30 to 40 percent of the calls result in finding rattlesnakes. They are deeapitated on the spot. Harm· less reptiles, be said, are re- located to remote areas. Areas expected to be most snake infested this summer - and especially this fall -are the developing south -county neighborhoods a nd Anaheim Hills. While the snake problem will be difficwt this summer, animal control officers said, it will be worse this fall when thirsty s nakes seek out water in backyards and swimming pools. "All I can add at this point," said Robillard, "is that we seem to have a bumper crop of adult rattlesnakes this year." And they could, he speculated, turn up near south-county beaches red by streams that have washed the snakes toward the ocean during heavy rains Jet Skier Facing Hit, Run Charge SAN DIEGO <AP> -A man riding backwards on a mini- motorboat called a Jet Ski mowed down a man in a rowboat on Mission Bay and authorities are seeking a water- borne hit-a nd-run driver. City lifeguard Don Ashton put it this way: Rower Mike Daly was pad- dling along Tuesday when the Jet Ski rider. unable to see because he was riding the craft backwards. cruised over Daly's boat. The mishap did about $100 damage to the boat and inflicted minor in· juries to Daly. After stopping to help right the boat and get Daly to shore, the skier got back on his machine and roared away, thus leaving the scene of an accident, pre- sumably a violation or tbe state penal code. ·'There is a very good pos sibility" a hit-and· run cbar~e will be filed as a result from the acci· dent, Ashton said, noting Daly got the Jet Ski's registration number and gaveiltoauthorities. ORANOI! COMT DAILY PILOT Tiie Or-CMlt o.l•y ,. ......... _ .. " ....... _fllo..._.-._,,,.,..._..,"-Or-Qetl-1 ... 1 ... ~ ,..., _ _,_.,. =~":~~':'=...:.....--.:...~· ...,. ,,,.. .. .,. , .. , .... suo-" v.,..,, -~--CN•I • .,.,..,.....,_ UM Ii _._ ~ ..... -"""""" T,_ =t"'CO:~~~~.:~no wtt1 ..., ......... _ ~-..... -,~·· ""'""' Ylc•---0.--~ ,._,._ ... , .. Class Fee·s Mulled ' Budget Sparks Saddleback Concern Saddleback CoUeae claases - currently offered to district re5i· d nt. u hO cbarte -could have f ee1 attached to &hem next year under guidelines proposed by Trustee Robert Price. Residents can be charged for classes which are not taken for credit toward receiving a col- lege degree, Price said. The classes be believes the district could begin c:h•raln& students to attend are "self im- provement courses" such as teA· nis, arts and crafts and recrea- tion. "It's kind of sbirtinc more tbin~s into the community services area.·• Price sald to- day. ''The community is ap- parently willing to pay a minimal fee for worthwhile classes so we could move some of our existing courses into Ulat area.•• Price said his suggestion was prompted by concern over possi- ble budget cutbacks as a result of diminishing district revenues should the Jarvis-Gann amend· ment be approved by voters. "Right now, tennis is free because it's in the curriculum for creditalion." Price ex- plained. "U we shift it into com- munity services, we might be able to break even on the cost of F ..... PageAJ DIVORCE AGREEMENT. • • comment about Lord Snowdon." Lord Snowdon has been linked by gossip columnists to assistant movie producer Lucy Lindsay. Hogg, a divorcee. The last member or the British royal fa mily to be involved in divorce proceedings was the Earl of Harewood. the queen's cousin, who divorced 11 years ago. The spokes man s aid the divorce proceedings were under way and the princess will be re presented by the queen's lawyer, Matthew Farrer. The queen has been kept in- rorm ed of the situation but her constitutional consent is not necessary. "The princess is suing for divorce. This is a technicality, one party bas to start the pro- ceedings." the spokesman said. "The mamage has broken down and the couple have lived apart for two years. These are ob· viously the grounds for divorce." The 1960 marriage of the ef· rervescemt 29-year-old princess and globe-trotting photographer Antony Armstrong«Jones - raised to the peerage of the Earl of Snowdon In 1961 -was a glamorous match that caught the fancy of romantics throughout the world. But as the years passed. it became clear the relationship Llewellyn's Willshire (um. Critics, including Church of England clerics, said the affair was damaging to the image of the royal family, and some said Llewellyn was dis tra cting Ma rgaret from her royal duties. It was disclosed Jasl month that Margaret intended to con- tinue her public life. and the im- plication was she would not see Llewellyn so often, al least not publicly. In the mid-SOS. Margaret suf- fered her fi rst disappointment in love. She was forced under press ure l o abandon h e r relationship with Royal Air Force Group Capt. PeteP Townsend bee a use he was a divorced span. Her intention to divorce Lord Snowdon was announced eight days before the Church or England is expected to change its rules and allow divorced persons to remarry in church. The church currently allows on- ly a service of blessing. The change will remove a Set'ious obstacle to the remar· riage or members of the royal family. Because the queen is ofCicially the temporal head of the Church or England, the church prohibi- tion was one reason royal ob· servers believed Margaret and Snowdon would never divorce despite their legal separation. was wearing thin. Even before Margaret's uncle, the un- their formal split in 1976, she crowned King Edward VIII. ab- began to be seen with Llewellyn. dkated in 1936 because he wanl- a brewery heir who aspires lo ed lo marry the divorced become a night club singer. American Wallis Warfield The two took frequent vaca-Simpson. There was violent op- tions together on the Caribbean position from the Church of island or Mustique and often England and the British govem- spent weekends together on ment of the day. * * * * * * FroMPageAJ I PUBLIC PRINCESS. • • and among Church of England clerics for her friendship with Llewellyn, with whom she frequently was seen and in whose company she took vacations on the Caribbean island of Mustique. It was announced last month that Margaret would continue her public life -the implication being that she would not see Llewellyn as often at least in public -and the Buckingham Palace announcement today said she had "no plans for re-marriage." Fro111PageAJ WATER DISTRICT SUIT. • • pointment of directors by the company. The council action came after a one-hour s ession that was c losed lo the public. Counc ilman Larry Agran made the motion to sue. "It's lMgely a question," he s aid in an interview today "of whether you can undertake a project or such large proportions without the appropriate environ- mental impact studies, and without giving the citizens of our city a proper opportunity to fully consider such a massive un· dertaking. "The second issue is a ques- tion of whether such an un- democratically constituted board constitutionally has the authority to commit the city, for decades into the future, on the question of water policy." "Underlying the whole case." Agran added, is the far more fundamental question of who controls developmental policy In the city of Irvine. "Will developmental policy be fashioned by duly e lected representatives -through our general plan adopted by the City Council -or will it be dictated by the actions or an un- democratically and unconsUtu- ti on ally constituted water board?'' CouncUman David Siias. alao contacted today, concurred. "The JRWD," he said, "11 one or the last vestiges of land baron rule in the West. "Next month, one man -Ute president of Ute Irvine Company -will cast over 90 percent of the votes to autborbo a $1 bUUon dollar public bond Issue. "We are almply askln1 the court to give the other residents in th• eommunlt)' an equal volct lD their affairs." Lanatna Eberllna. president d the 1RWD board, aald today be was "dlNppointed" by the COUD· cil~cUon. "I thought we were com- municating with them." he said. "I also thought that adding two new members on the board who were publicly elected was the beginning of a board more publicly represented." The board plans an eventual transition or power by adding new. publicly elected members a s water use figures dem- onstrate that residents are using mor e waler than land - owners . "The idea of transition," Eberling said, "serves the needs of all the parties. I think it's a fair way of doing it." Eberling said water use pro- jections indicate there will be a public majority on the board about 1984. He said the board position on the en\fironmental Issue is that impact reports are not needed until actual projects are pro- posed for building. Eberling bas called an emergency session of the water board for 2 p.m. Saturday to dis- cuss the city lawsuit. The session will be closed to the public, under erovislons d the Brown Act which allow public bodies to meet secretly to dis- cuss llUgaUon. Actor Urges Reform Sh1dy NEW YORK IAP> -Clltf Robertson, whose missing Sl0,000 chock sparked an lo· vesllf atlon Into corruption in the movie lnduitry, ur1ed hls f elJow actort Tuesday to dare to speak out on wronadoina In Hollywood. "It la truth, no matter bow dl f · flcutt, that wiU arrat corporate crime In our induitry and let us free," Robertson told about 400 memben or 1he New York ~reen Acton Guild. • the course through charging fees." And that wol.lld e ase the burden on tax revenu e s necessary to run regular college deitree programs. Price said. "The next year for the college will be a test or survival," the trustee said. "Even though we are not in as bad shape as some districts, it will be a severe and austere period." Price also Is proposing to "im· mediately curtail all plans to operate a north campus ror the 1978·79 school year." And he suggests that college offic ials fi g ure next year's budget funding levels a t a rate Jess than the existing tax rate and assessed valuation increase estimates. That means a potential reduc· lion or almost S2 million m the college's 1978-79 budget. "Thal keeps us with pretty much the same program we have operating now ." Price said. He indicated the cutback would also protect the district from cutbacks as a result of the Behr bill. Trustees are scheduled to dis- cuss Price 's sugges t e d guidelines and next year's budget at a special meeting Monday. The session will begin at 3 p.m. in the Library/ Classroom comple x. 28000 Ma r guerite Parkway. Room 105, in Miss.ion VieJO. Young Artuts To Be Judged For Festival Judging or Orange County school children's art will be held this weekend to select art that will be exhibited this summer at the.. Laguna Beach Fes tival of Arts Junior Art Gallery. Children from kindergarten to high school throughout Orange County are participating in the annual school art competition, and a selected group or 150 award·wann ing works will be displayed at the Festival of Arts. Chairman for the junior art exhibit at the Festival is Marge Skelton of Laguna Beach. The Junior Art Gallery will be local· ed in the lower porUon or the Forum Theate r on lhe festival g rounds during the 43rd season, which runs from July 11 to Aug. 27 this year. Pretty Babies A pair of baby os tric hes. less than a week old. take a look a~ the world around them al Marine World Africa USA in Re dwood City. They were ha tched in an in- cubator. When full grown. they'll weigh in a t about 300 pounds. Women Take Over Newspaper Offiee AMHERST, Mass. CAP) -It could be a dormitory, with clothing, guitars and books lying around, but the 50 women in the four rooms are a force of oc- cupation. not residence. For 10 days, the women have barricaded themselves in the basement office of the Daily Collegian, the 20,000-circuiation student n·e ws pape r o f the University of Massachusetts. protesting what they claim is a lack or women's news. Their barricade is made or desks. chairs and couches. which double as beds. They lake sponge baths in two adjacent bathrooms. using soap. t o we ls, tooth brus hes a nd toothpaste s muggled in by sym- pathizers. Supporters have also brought in food and hot plates. "Jt 's been very encouraging," said one sopho m o r e de m- onstrator. "The spirit is very high. I personally knew a lmost none of the women here and I've gotten very close to all of them." The object of their ire, the "male-dominated" starr of the Collegian, continues to publish, but in abbreviated editions put together in temporary quarters about a five·minute walk from the "barricaded office in the Campus Center Complex. A security guard sits outside the new office. Fmal exams begin in Less than two weeks and the paper is scheduled lo shut down next week for s ummer vacation. Some protesters leave briefly each day to attend classes, but say they will stay in the omce into the summer lo press their demands . Those demands are for one full page of women's news each day. with its content edited in- dependently of the rest of the newspaper. and a women's de- partment editor selected by the campus women's community, not the newspaper staff. Associate editor Beth Segers opposes the protest : "If the women had looked at who ac- tually puts out the paper each night they'd see that 50 percent of the news editors are women. a ll of the copy editors are women and three out or five issue ed itors arewomen " • DREXEL • HERITAGE •. BAKER • HEKMAN • MASTERCRAFT • WIEMAN • HIBRITEN • • ~ w x w a: 0 • w (.? ~ a: w I • • • a: w ~ 0 u z ~ z c( I-V) • If your bag is leather. stop in now and view our exciting all new leather gallery. Select from the largest collection of leather sofas and chairs in the area. TORRANCE 23649 Hawthorne Blvd. (213) 378·1279 Flw p.,,.,.u...-. aruJ I~ Daip COSTAMeSA 1S9S NewPort Blvd. C 7 W 6'2-20SO All tTOM:I ONH MQHDAY'""" aA T\#IDA'I' -• NII ro 'JO""' LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast Hwy, (714) 494-6551 • )> ::0 m r 8 ~ CJ) m 0 0 z C> • I m z ::0 m 0 0 z • ~ 0 0 0 ~ )> :D ~ 0 ~ C) z )> r-(fl • • . ----------------------------------------------------------------------~. • KARGES • HICKORY CHAIR • DIXIE • WOODMARK ORIGINALS • MARGE CARSON • I l . ~ I I .. • -... Orange Coast EDITION Tod ay"s Closing~ N. 't'. Stoeks ~ VOL. 71, NO. 130, ~ SECTIONS, 46 PAGES O RANGE COU NTY, CALI FORNI A WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1978 N TEN CEN NB to Detail Traffic Phasfilg Policy' By J OANNE REYNOLDS Ol tll9 o.w, ...... $Utf Newport Beach's newly enact ed traffic phasing policy pro- duced a lot of unanswered ques- tions and city officials were hud· dling today to try to work out the answers. City councilmen approved the measure Monday. ll will limit building of those projects that won 'l increase traffic congestion on major city streets. Local developers aren't happy about the policy. They say it amounts to a moratorium on building in Newport Beach. "It kind or makes the game not worth playing," said Kevin Hanson of Emkay Development Company. The policy was taken from a proposed inJtiative measure be· ing circulated by a group known Al'WI ..... PRINCESS MARGARET, LORD SNOWDEN TO DIVORCE After Stormy Marriage, a Ritt In the Royal Family Princess Margaret, Snowdon to Divorce LONDON CAP > -Prmcess Margaret flnd her husband Lord Snowdon' have agreed to a divorce. Buckingham Palace an· nounced today. An officiaJ statement announc· ing the impending end of the stormy marriage said: "Her royal highness. the Prln· cess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, and the Earl of Snowdon afte r two years of separation have now agreed that their manage shouJd formally be ended. Accordingly her ryoal highness will start the necessary legal proceedings." Margaret, sist er or Queen Eliiabeth 11. separated from her photograpber husband March 16, 1976, after 16 years or mar· riage. The 41-year-old pnncess and Lord Snowdon. 48, have two children -David Vicount Linley. 16, and Lady Sarah Armstrong.Jones, 14 . A spokesman at Kensington * * * Palace, Margaret's home, said the princegs would continue lo have custody or the couple·s two children. but Snowdon will have access. The spokesman sa"id the pnn· cess .had "no plans for remar riage." Margaret has drawn criticism in recent months for her friendship with 30-year-old socialite Roddy Llewellyn. She is in King Edward VTI Hospital in London suffering from suspected gastroenteritis. The Kensington Palace spokesman said Margaret was "making progress ... The re· s uit of tests taken by the doctors will not be known until Friday." He srud he had no knowledge of Lord Snowdon's plans. "We are not in a position to comment about Lord Snowdon." Lord Snowdon has been linked by gossip columnists to assistant <See DIVORCE, Page A2l * * * Princess Meg's Life Often Controversial LONDON <AP> -From her impetuous childhood through her pre~ocious teen-age years to her stormy middle age, Britain's Princess Margaret swirled through life tramng controversy over her men and her deportment. The announcement today from Buckingham Palace that she and husband Antony Armstrong-Jones would s~k a divorce after nearly two years of separation was only the latest episode in a life that seemed the very :;tufr of novels. MARGAllET WAS BORN IN August 1930, and made her Cirst public appearance at the age of 6 at her father's coronation. Since then' she baa been continually in the public eye -often with beav'y consequences for her privat.e llle. She was a lively child, known to cartwheel down Buckingham Palace balls. defy orders and make scenes "My first memory," she said, "Is half.falling out of my pram baby caniage. A great to-do. I Imagine I must have wanted to be noticed.'' She wu a capable horsewoman. spoke a number of languages. and loved piano. Both Margaret and her older sister, later Queen Elizabeth n. were proficient swimmers. B UT WREN TREV WERE awarded a lifesaving certUicate together. Marpret became so angry she pic~ed up her sister's dog. threw it tnto Buckingham Palace's lake, and then, clad in her beatpa.rtydress,Jumpedinlorescuethedrenchesanimal. "Marearet el ways wants what I want," her sister once said. "When my slater and l were 1row1n1 up,.. explained Maraaret, "she wu made out to be the 1oocty-goody one. That was boring so the press tried to make out l was wicked as hell." Margaret blossomed Into a precoeloua teen-a1er and Jet·aett.er, a beaullful young woman with violet eyes, brown balr •nd flawless ulo. Sbe was surrounded by the BriUsh pre11 and tdollzed by the royalt.y-tovina public durina the austere post.World War U years .. THE PLEA.SURE·SEEKING PRINCESS," headline writers called her. Sbe wu always off to nlghtclubs tralUna dulces, 1ua.J'(l officers and other el111ble younc men. There we~ picture.-of bet 1mokina ID public. Her ele1ant ciaarette holders became famoua. _C&Jie PUBLIC PlllNCESS, P ... A2) ~ as the Legal Environmental Analysis Fund <LEAF>. Mem· bers of LEAF are pleased about the council action. Jean Watt, organizer of LEAF and president or Stop Polluting Our Newport ISPON >. said the passage of the policy and the statement by Mayor Paul Ryckofr that be would seek an identical city ordinance, takes the pressure orr her group's pell· lion effort. She said the petition worl.. would continue whale her or· ganizataons evaluate the City Counc ii 's efforts. "We'll have to wait and see what happens with the or· dinance." she said. Ryckoff &aid bis policy and the pending ordinance will be copies of LEAF's initiative which pro- hibits the issujng of a building permit for any project of 10 or more residential units or 10.000 square feet of commercial or m· dustrial space IAn average Newport t each restaurant. or dinner house. as about 10.000 square feet.> Exceptions to the prohibition can be granted only if the proJ· ect does not add more than one percent to the traffic on co ngest· ed roadways, or if its benefits to the community outweigh its traf· fic impact. Ctty Trame Engineer Bill Darnell is charged with 1denllfy. ing the congested roadwayii US· ing criterht set forth in th~ policy and he 1s responsible for figuring out how much tramc a J7roposed project would produce. City Manager Robert Wynn said the purpose of toctay·s <See POLICY, Page A2> 418 N-M Employees To Get Pink Slips Trustees' Decision Painful By MICHAEL PASKEVICH OI W. Delly ...... Staff Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees unanimously ordered notices or dis missal mailed to 58 teachers and 360 non-teaching employees Tues· day because of declining enroll· ment in Harbor Area schools. "It's a terrible action we have to take.:· said school board President Donald Smallwood, following a verbal protest by Don Kimble, president of the Newport-Mesa Education As· sociatlon <NM EA). which represents the district 1,200-plus teachers. 'We have looked. we have listened. we have tried," saJd Smallwood. "There is not any among us (trustees> that has any sense that this is a good deal." Trustee Carol Marlin stressed that the cutbacks aren't related to the possible passage or the Jar vis-Gann tax initiative. The dismissal notices. to be in the hands of teachers by Mon· day, are due to steady declines in enrollment, about 2.800 stu- dents over the past two years, dis· trict officials said. Dellt 11'$ ......... "'_.,., 0-.. OFFICIALS HURRY SNAKEBITE VICTIM FROM MARINE HELICOPTER TO HOSPITAL Helmar Tschugg of San Clemente Was Struck Whlle Hiking on Santiago Peak NMEA cruer Kimble asked, ·'Why not take advantage of the decline and reduce class size? Yoll should consider people first and thmgs second in your budget priorities. • Unlike the action to mail dis· missal notices to teachers, the school board's decision to send similar notices to 360 classified <non·teacrung> employees does not mean that all 360 will be without jobs next year. District officials estimate that , actually , about 150 classified employees won't be rehired. The district has released a list of non-teaching employees with the least seniority in their r espective jobs, including 205 in· struclional aides, 86 teachers' aides and 56 noon supervisors . Re-employment for next school year will be based on seniority and any retirements that may occur in the meantime. District officials said the cut· backs are necessary to avoid (See DISMISS, Page A2> Snake Vic tim Rescue Sets Pace fo r Year By JERRY CLAUSEN OI U. Dalt1 ~li.t $1.tff County paramedics and Marine Corps Search and Rescue teamed up Tuesday to rush a rattlesnake-bite victim by helicopter to Mission Communi· ty HospttaJ, Mission Viejo, from Santiago Peak in Cleveland Na. tional Forest. It was an effort expected to be repeated several times this year, county officials agree. because 1978 is expected to be a dangerous rattlesnake season. Tuesday's victim, Helmar Tschugg, 36, of 129 Avenida Mariposa. San Clemente, was reported in satisfactory condi· tion in the hospital intensive care unit. Villa Park-based paramedics said Tscbugg and a companion <See SNAKES. Page AZ) Steaming Out ~ Catalina Hetu/8 South A Long Beach towing firm confirmed today that the S.S. Catalina, wb1ch shpped out or Newport Harbor late Tuesday night, is headed for San Diego. A spokesman for Jones Tug and Barge sald the 301·foot "Great White Steamer" was to arrive in San Diego thls after· noon. But the U.S. Coast Guard in San Dlego said they haven't heard a word from the ahip, which left Newport Harbor a day after it.a docking permit ex- pired. Port ot San Diego aulborlt.les Hid they'd also had no cont.ct wlth the ship. which Newport Be8$h authoritlea said baa pern\l11lon to UN • San Diqo bortb for 80 dtya • . The vessel was brought to Newport April 25 for a boat show. "ll's gone. thank God," said Dave Harshbarger, Newport Beach's director of marlne safety. He said boat show promoter Duncan Mcintosh arranged for the boat to be towed out or the harbor at 11 p.m. Tuesday. Meanwhlle. Hyman Sln1er of Beverly Hllls, the ship's owner. is em broiled ln a dispute witb the Clty ot Los Angeles over $30,000 In dockln& and toWin& re.a officials claim be owes that city for berthln1 t.he blf veaseJ . In l\a heyday. the Catalina was the chlef mean• of t..rantport.ln• tourist.a from t.he mainland to Avalon on Catalina I al and lroine Council OKs Suit Against IRWD By PIULIP ROSMARIN Ol t .. Delly I'll .. SU.ff A constitutional test will be made of the legality of land· owner dominance of the Irvine Ranch Water District board of directors after the Irvine City Cou ncil voted Tuesday to file lawsuit against the district in Supen or Court. The vote to sue the district. and try lO slop a scheduled land· owner election June 19 tha t would authorize the district lO is· sue $1 bilHon In bonds for waler and s ewer proJects, was unanimous. The council directed Roger Grable. assistant city attorney, to file swt challenging the pro- posed bond authorization on two grounds. First, the council alleged the IRWD failed to comply with re- quirements or the California En· vi ronment al Quality Act. because no environmental im· pact report was prepared lo analyze impacts of the drawing· board projects the bonds would finance. Second, the council declared the IRWD board or directors, to which only two or its seven members are publicly e lected, is unconstitutionally composed, in violation of the one man, one vote principle. Flve of the IRWD directors Swimming Lessons Slated at YMCA The flrat swimming lessons start June 19 at the Orange Coaat YMCA and re1l1lration tor those classes will be held M.iy 17. Slpups will be taken from 9 a .m. to 4 p.m. at the Y, 2300 University Drfvt', Newport Beach. Claaies lh awlmmlna and Ufenvlna are oped to ch1Jdten and adults. arc elected by landowner vote. Within the djstrict. the Irvine Company owns more than 90 percent or the undeveloped land. The election amounts to an ap· pointmenl of directors by the company. The council action came after a one-hour session that wa!\ clos<'d to the public. Councilman Larry Agran made the motion to sue. .. Jt ·.. largely a question." he said in an interview to<lay "of whether you can undertake a project of such large proportions without the appropriate env1ron- men t a I lmpacl s tudies, and without giving the citizens of our city a proper opportunity to fully consider such a massive un· <See WATER, Page A2l Coast Weathe r Night and morning low cloudiness. c learing to hazy afternoon sunshine Thursday. Cooler days. Lows tonight in SOs. Highs Thurs day in uppe r 60s along beaches. I NSIDE TOD~~ Moat cars produced for thf' 1918 model t1e9r by Americon Motors wlU be recalled by federal order. See Page Af. laelex f Y,._OT w JAtueator's Award , McNally PrirreipaJ Coleman Surprised f • ll w a p.irfecl &etup that 14ra. Haer'• fellow Leac.ben CoJtm would have been pre-lur~d Jack Coleman, pQPuJar and 1tudent11 io attendance. sente/fn .F'ebruary but wu de· principal ol McNaUy Continua-Coleman also kicked In SlO for 1a layed until the. d.lstrlct worked • ti(JO Kigb School in Costa Mesa, bouQuet to present to her. out ~ final dec1S1on on the re- to Tuesday night's m~tina of • • J kept wonderinl( why s ht: location of the downtown Costa Newport· Mesa school truateea. wasn't talking to me at the meet· Mesa facility. . . He received a phone call Tues· day mornlna from Bailey Dauaherty, principal of Silverado Continuation School in . ~Saddleback Unified District. ~·::·Coleman was told that i~ally'a director ol student i vllles, Doro&.by Hauser. was : • J'eceive the second annual ) ange County Administrators' ing," Coleman s1ld today. The continuation school will be Most likely Mrs. Uau.ser was moving to Monte Vista Elemen· tryln1 to 1Ql)raa the lauahter tary School site in Costa Mesa at that broke out when Daugherty the start of the 1979 .school yea~. announced that Coleman was Th e award 1 s now 1 n the award winner. Coleman:s hands as tbe best "Thars the damnedest trick I continuation school educator In ever heard of," Coleman told the county. trustees. "U I'd have known I And yes, he got back the $10 ~e would have dressed up," $aid donated for Mn. Hauser s Coleman. who was wearing a flowe rs. blue leisure suit minus tie. SURPRISE HONOREE Principal Cotem•n Beaeon Ba11 Lease Negotiations To Reopen? Newport Beach city coun· c ilmen are laying the aroundwork for the renegotla· tion or the Beacon Bay lease. Two committees have been established to work on the com· pllcated problem. The lease for the 72·bome waterfront development expires al. tbe end of 1981 and coun· cilmen are eaaer to get a better price tor the property that now pays them a meager $9,7218 a year. Renegotlatlon has been stymied because about ao of the homes occupy huid deeJgnated as Udeland.s and 1tate law pro- hibits permanent residences on tidelands . A bill , sponsor•d by As· semblyman Ron Cordova, D·El Toro, wUl remove th•t obstacle If the city can acquire aome land to add to the Upper Bay Ecolosical Preserve. --•ard for "Continuation ¥ducat.or ol the Year." . ~ naturally, Coleman made 'vTaogementa to have many of "We thought you were," quipped one trustee. .. Daugherty said the award to Fro• Page A J Terror Mounts in Italy One of the committee• ap. pointed Monday by Mayor Paul Ryckoff will work on that ac- ctU Is I Uon. Us members are Mayor ProTem Ray WUUarm, a former president of the Friends of Newport Bay, which aided in state purchase of the Upper Bay, and Jackie Heather, wboee council dJatrlct encompasses WATER DISTRICT SUIT. • • dertaking. ''The second issue is a ques- tion of whether such an un· democratic ally c ons tituted board constitutionally has the authority to commit the city, for decades into the future, on the qu~slion of water policy." "tlnderlying the ~hole case," Agran added, is the far more fundamental question of who controls developmental policy in the city of Irvine. :-: "Will developmental policy be (es.)aioned by dul y e le cted c,epresentaUves -throush our general plan adopted by the City Council -or will it be dictated by the actions of an un- democratically and unconsUtu- ti on ally constituted water board?" Councilman David Sills, also contacted today, concurred. "Tbe JRWD," be said, ''ls one or the last vestiges or land baron rule in the West. "Next month, one man -the president of the Irvine Company -will cast over 90 percent of the votes to authorize a $1 billion dollar public bond issue. . ··we are simply askine the court to give the other residents in t..he community an equal voice In •heir affairs." Lansing Eberling, president of the IRWD board, said today he was "disappointed" by the coun· cil action. "I thought we we re com- municating with them," he said. ··1 also thought that adding two new members on the board who were publicly elected was the beginning of a board more publicly represented." The board plans an eventual transition of power by adding ne w. publicly elected members as water use figures dem· onslrate that -residents are uslng more water th a n land · owners. "The idea of transition." Eberling said, "serves the needs of all the parties. I think it's a fair wayofdrungit." Eberling said water use pro- jections indicate there will be a public majority on lbe board about 1984. He said the board position on the environmental issue Is that impact reports are not needed until actual projects are pro- posed for building. Eberling has called an emergency session of the water board for 2 p.m. Saturday lo dis· cuss the city lawsuit. The session will be closed to the public. under erovisions of the Bi;own Act which allow public bodies to meet secretly to dis- cuss litigation. ! . . FroaP~AJ PUBLIC PRINCESS. • • In her mid·20s her ill-fated romance with Royal Air Force Group Capt. Peter 1Townsend brought her widespread sympath~: Townsend, a Battle of Britain hero. wa' equerry to Muaaret a father KJnJC OeorRe VI. But the dasblnt fighter ace had been divorced. and that br?ught family and ~hurcb pressure that eventually forced the pnncess to renounce him. . Fou.r and a half years later, In May 1960, she marned globe·trotUng photographer Armstrong-Jones -later ~levated lo the peerage as Lord Snowdon -after a sttret love atf air. Millions watched their wedding ceremony al Westminster Abbey or on television. THEIR OFTEN ROCKY MARRIAGE enthralled Brilon.s but ,, .. dfe cli"'.ely ended 16 years and two children later with a separauon. . Id · l977 "l don"l see myselr marrying again," the Pnncess sa in · "It would probably be too much of a bore." Her latest man, and suitably her latest scandal, was R.~dy Llewellyn. a socialite and former hippie turned aspirmg supper·club crooner. . Margaret came in for sharp criticism in Parlia~ent, ~public and among Church of England clerics for her fnend~h1p with Llewellyn , with whom she frequenttr was _seen and m .whose company she took vacations on the Canbbean tsland or Must1q~e. It was announced last month that Marearet would continue her public life -the implication being that she would not see Llewellyn as often at least in pubhc -and the Buckingh.am i::~lace announcement today said she had "no plans for re·marnage. * * * Fro•P,..eAJ " 'N ., •oung az1 VORCE ••• Held in Killing !?..~.producer Lucy L;ndsay· Hogg. a divorcee. LANSING, Mich. (AP) -A The last member or the British is.year-old self-proclaimed Nazi royal family to be Involved In has pleaded no contest to divorce proceedings was the murdering a classmate after be· Earl of Harewood. the qu~n·s Ing taunted for his beliefs. cousin, who divorced 11 years Roger Needham of Lansing, a a90. frail-looking boy, wore a Nazi The spokesman said the party emblem on his jacket divorce proceedings were under when he entered his plea. way and the princess will be DAILY PILOT ·-·-~·~·---~·. Qrif'r lll<•">_M_0._M~ T-ICtnM L*I« -•A,~ ............... " represented by the queen's lawyer. Matthew Farrer. Tbe queen has been kept in· formed or the situation but her constitutional consent Is not necessary. "The princess ls suing for divorce. This is a technicality. one party has lo start lbe pro- ceedings," the spokesman said. "The marriage has broken down and the couple have lived apart for two years. These are ob- vi o us l y the grounds for divorce." The 1960 marriage or the ef· ferveacemt 29-year-old princess and globe·trottlng photographer Antony Armstrong·Jonea - raised to the peeraae of the Earl of Snowdon in 1961 -wu a l(lamorous match that causht the fancy of romantic• throughout the world. But as the years passed. It became clear the relatlon1blp was wearlna thin. Even befo~ their fonna1 1pllt In lWJ&, •he began to be seen with Llewellyn, a brewery helr wtw asplrea lo become a nlpt elub 1ln1er. The two ~ f ttq~t vaca Uon1 lottthtr on lhe CaMbbean lslaod ot Muatique and often 3pent weekends to11tber on Llowellyn's Wlltahlre farm. ~ive Slwt as Moro Death Prote111JJ Rise ROME <AP> -Four terrorists dav. the Moro family, emblt· shot a Milan industrial executive tered over the government's In the legs today, kee ping up the r e fusal to negotiate the war on the Italian establishment kidnappers' dem and for the despite nationwide revulsion at re I ease of 13 1mpr1 soned the Red Brigades' murder of terrorists, asked that there be no Aldo Moro. stale funeral. national mourning Officials of the Christian oranycercmonies. Democrat Party a(lnounced, -;none of thtl numerous letters meanwhile, that a state funeral he wrote during his captivity, will be conducted -without More. criticized his party's ada· Moro's body -in the Basilica of mant stand and told its leaders St. John Lateran on Saturday. to stay away from his funeral. The y said private funeral The victim of the Milan services were held today accord· "kneecapping " was Franco ing to the family's wishes .at Tor· Giacomazzi, an executive of the rlla Tlbertna, 30 miles north of s tale · o wned Montedlson Rome. About 400 persons at-chemical Industry. Police sajd tendedtheservice. three men and a woman gunned him down and fled. After the body of the former Such attacks are a favol'ile premier was discovered Tues· tactic of the Red BriRades. and Fro• Page A J POLICY DETAILED. • • meeting was to work. oyt the de- la lls or Oarnell 's assignment and to address conflicts created by projecta that are about to re- ceive building permits. or proj· ects that have permits but are not yet under construction. Meanwhile, the fate of another new proposal, called the road tax plan. remained in doubt. The proposal was flnl brought to the City Council Monday. The plan. which had the back· ing or developers, called for in- creasing the financial contribu- tions to road construction in the city As proposed. the funds could be used to make improve· menls not necessarily directly related to development, but ones seen as necessary to relieve con· gestion. attorney, .. but we need to deal even-handedly with the whole community. "The responsibility is now in our camp lo move in a poslUve direction." Sie baj. who helped write the LEAF Initiative, said he will be working with the city attorney·s staff to draw up Ryckoff's pro· posed ordinance. He said he will also be pushing for ·'solutions lo the problems that produced the need for the policy." He suggested an inrormal committee to study the road lax pla n. improved bus service, park and nde service and other citywide transportation pJaos. Giacomazzi was the fifth person much of the Upper Bay. kneecapped in northern Italy in The aecood committee, COD· fivedays. slating of Ryctoff aad Ceun· The ultra·leftlst terrorists were cilman Paul Hummel, wtll begin expected to follow up the murder meeting wlth Beacon Bay of Moro with attacks on more homeowners to discuss the lease political leaders, and the illelf. newspaper Corriere della Sera The homeowners bold in- said police protection of likely divldual subleases eranted by targets had been intensified. the master lessee. the J . A. Beek The founder of the Red Company. RepresentaUveaottbe Brigades. Renato Curacio, Beek firm al.so wt9 be involved shouted in a Turin courtroom to-" ln the neaotiatlona. day that the assassination of The value to be earned from Moro was "an act of revolu· the new lease bu not been set lionary Justice, the bigbest act according to City Manage~ of ~umanity possible in this Robert Wynn who told coun· soc1ety wl·lhout justice and cllmen there bas been no recent divided into c.lassea." He was appraisal or the property. dragged away m chains. "Our la.st appraisal was made A utborilies In Rome an· 10 years ago and the staff's only nounced that 24 lJf tJ;le 28 persons position at present Ls to get fair arrested May 8 ·~ a police market value," he said. dragnet ror suspects m the Moro kidnapping had been released for lack of evidence. They bad been held on charges of sub-F ..... P.,,eAJ versive association. KES Moro's murder strengthened SNA the alliance between Moro's • • • Christian Democratic Party and the Communists and promised election gains to the government party. In a spontaneous burst of emo- tion. millions of Italians poured out of factories, shops. offices and schools Tuesday to demonstrate against terrorism after Moro's body -chained and riddled with 11 bullets -was round in a parked car in the heart of Ronft. Arsenal 'Feared' SAN RAFAEL (AP> -The Marin County Board or Supervisors Tuesday uraed Synanon to dispose of its con· troversial arsenal of firearms. were In the Cleveland National Forest biking when a snake struck him on the right ankle. The two walked a half hour to the peak to contact electronics technicians who service relay equipment there . They, paramedics said, called the County Fire Department. Tsohugg was the second rat· tier victim \reated at Mission Community Hospital Tuesday. Four-year-old Aaron Johnson of M isslon Viejo was bitten when he stuck his hand down a gopheF hole, officials said. He is report· ed in 1ood condition. Al least two of the ,city's big- gest developers, Emkay and the Irvine Company, remained cautiously optimistic that the plan still could be workable • DREXE L • HERITAGE •. BAKER • HEKMAN • MASTERCRAFT • WfEMAN • HIBRITEN • Robert Shelton. speaking for Irvine Company President Peter Kremer. said the institution of the traffic phasing policy was "very negative and a deep dis- appointment lo us. There was ~o expression of encouragement ~t all to the development commuru· ty to go forward with the road tax plan." But like Hanson at Emkay, he said his firm would continue to work with city stalf members on the road tax proposal. One LEAF membe r who backed the traffic phasing policy said positive programs. such as the road tax plan, now should re· ceive more emphasis. "We're euphoric about it," said Ed Siebal. a Balboa Island FroaPageAJ DISMISS ..• overstaffing. Jn addition to the cutbacks in teaching and classified person· nel, Superintendent John Nicoll said, there will be five fewer ad· ministrators next year. The dismissal notices to 58 teachers are Clrm. The action climaxed a two-month series of pub'tic hearings and the dis· tricl's filing of necessary legal documents. Kimble noted that the 58 teachers account for about 30 full-time positions, adding that the district already has decided not to rehire an additional 55 teachers working under 10· month temporary contracts. He 11aid the ·district should have made more extensive cut· backs tn adminiltrative statr and that the teachers would be wlllina to work with reduced supplies. "The cut. are not in the best interest of the dlstrld and lbo slu~nta we serve," said Kim· bl•· Dl1trtct omclals ettlmate that the cutbacu wlll save the dis· trlct t l. 7 million In teacher 1alarie1 and tU0,000 ln claaalfled salaries. Teachers who do not receive the dlsmlssal nollctt are as· sured ol jobl next ye1r desplle the potential pH111e of Ulc Jarvle·Gann iniUattve <Pl'OPQli· lion 13), trustees said. f , • • ...J w x w a: 0 w C) c{ .... a: w :x: • • a: w ~ 0 u z 0 ~ <{ .... VI If your bag is leather. stop· ih now and view our exciting all new leather gallery. Select from the largest collection of leather sofas and chairs in the area. TORRANCE 23649 Hawthornt Blvd. (2t3) 378·1279 Fhn FtaraU•N .9' I'*"-Drlfp COSTA MESA 1S9S Newport Blvd. (714) 6tMOSO LAGUNA BEACH J.4S North Coast Hwy. (114) 4M-6151 • CD '" 0 0 z Cl • • x m z ::a m § • 'Tl :a m 0 :D n ~ AU tTOflCI ~ lllOHOif.'t' 1W11U IA TUMA\' -t AM fO tJIO,.. "---------------~----------------------------------------------------...... • KARGES • HICKORY CHAIR • DIXIE • WOOOMAfltc 0fUG4~LS • MARGE CARSON • , • WecJnetldty. May 10, 1976 Robert N. Weed/P1.1bll$hlr Thomas Keev11/Edltor ~rber• Krelblch/Edltorl•I Pave Editor °' nvec-.io8"vP•k>• Editorial Page .............................................................. Traffic Phasing Hits Developers lt didn't t ake lon~ for the honcymf>on to to>nd in Newport Beach. Monday. less than a month after the new L'ounc1 l was elected and P aul Ryc.:kotf was chosen c.1~ muyor, city council members enacted what they de~cl'ibc as a traffic pbasing policy . Developers and th~ city's rnajor land owners say it a mountecl to a m oratocium. Three of the newly elected rounl'il members -the so-called new and g reen slule of Evelyn I lart, Paul l lum. m el and Donald Struuss --Joined Ryckoff and Ray Williams in voling for the restrictive measure . They made it clear they will follow Monday's action -institu- tion of a policy not bearing the wei~ht of Jaw ··-with an ordina nce containing the same provisions. The move came as a blow to developers who had b een working on r educing future building as part of the drawn·out general plan review and who backed a new plan to pay road development money to the <:1ty in ad- van ce of construction to finance additions to the city's circulation system. The passage of the policy was also c learly support for the anti-growth faction. 1t will save them the time a nd ef· fort of circulating their initiative petition from which the policy a nd the pending ordinance are copied. So much for the spirit of moderation that got so muc:h attention during the campaign. Avoid Freeway Fight Nol quite a d ecade ago, the cities of Newport Beach and Cos ta Mesa found themselves on opposing sides in a dis pute over the construction of ~acific Coast Freeway. Both cities wanted the freeway built. but Newport Beach residents , who wer e faced with having the roadway in their city. said it belonged in Costa :\Iesa. Their neighbors in Costa l\tcsa didn "t a grN.' That d ispute c.Jit.•d alon~ with the free\\ a~ in thl• early ·rns. but thl' SJ)l'C'lL'r of it remains and to11ld haunt lht' C'u rrent efforts on the Costa Mesa Frcewa v. Costa Mrsans arc working diligently "to (!el C:.alTranl> to make a commitment on co mplclion of the Route 5:> freeway thro ug h the ir city to its end at the Newport Beach city line. Newport officials are having some r eservations about the tr affic the route could Q,ump onto already overcrowded city st reels . These officials seem to be saying Costa Mesa is going to ha\'e lo make some :,treet improveme nts lo kel'P through truffic out of thl•ir city as the price for Newport Hc~ch ·s s upport of the project. Costa ~h.:sons seem amem1bll-~·s long a:-; l"L'\\ port eh1ps in to pay for the project \\hic:h would au! the bcLich L'lt.\' a lthough the work would not be in New port. The cities n eed to work together. The 141,000 resi· d ents of both communities don't deserve a nother Pacific Coast Freeway debacle. , . , Arts for Everyone Saturday murks the opening day of .'.':rwport lkach·, "'~.>ck-long City Arts Festival~ an event plan ned to provide- a little something for ever yone. The festiva l has g rown considerubly sinl'l' the days when it used to be a two-day dis play of paintings on the lawn outside city ha ll. This year. the city is co.sponsoring the event with the help o f Coastline Community College and the Fashioa Island Merchants Association. The point of Newport Beach's festival is not to copy Laguna Beach's summertime event. but to provide a set- ting where residents a nd a rtists from a variety of fields c<.1 11 interact with one another. Il includes not only the vis - ual arts but film a nd the performing arts as well. The events themselves will take place throughout the city in locations ran~i ng from the Corona del Ma r senior citizens center, to the streets of Balboa Isle.ind, lo the walers of the bay lo Fashion Is land. The city's recently converted Performin~ Arts Center • it. used to t>e known as the Praise Ye the Lord Church • wi ll be involved in pres entation of a children's theatel' production. • This year's festival promises to be the best yet. fl would be a shame for residents not to take advantage of it. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot: Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Partners ByL.M.BOYD Three partners put together a business firm that requ1re<1· one or another of them to be on the road alternately much of the time. When all three were in town, they decided, each would be a vice preside nt. But. wbe.a any one oC them was out on a sales trip, that one for the nonce would be the president. Theory was the top title would give leverage lo negoUaUon. Dear Gloomy GOB W h e n the Fashton Isl and fire staLlon opened, the obsolete station on Balboa Island was Lo be closed. Political pressu re cauted the council to m1lntaln it. Now lax· payers are paying StS0,000 a year for a aurplus fire station. 1''.R.M. :i1~~1 ::·r:::.':'.·9i.::r:. -::; --"·~ "'*' .............. .... ==~..:-~_.. ... . Actually, though, it was their pri vatejoke, and they claimed it worked to let them keep on ba lanced good terms with one another. A cat in Fairbanks, Alaska. lic ked its paws -it shouldn't have -and when it put them on the cold cold ground, they froze there. stuck solid. A fireman freed the critter. Only one out oC five murder victims is killed by somebody unknown to said victitn. You see what this means. don't you ? You're a lot safer hang· ing around with strangers. ln the North Temperate zone, the average person weighs more in September a nd Jess in February than in any other months, report the science boys. How blg tho goldfish 1rows depends oo bow blflts bowl is. that. 7ou know. But the ques- tion arises aa to ju1tl why a .~mall bowl tends to s tunt tho fl11h therein while • bl• pond lets them gel larger . Jt'e now .bellevtd those ri11h secrete 1 l(row\h·inhlbiting subatanc • l'resumably, its potC!ney is af. rected directly by how concen· trat~d It ls. bli}lly 10 In small volurno ot waler, leu so th lar1utbe~lumeofwater. Nicholas Von H offman Real Estate Bubble Can Burst The incapacity or the a Cf· mrnistration lo come up with an uoti-inflation policy that a rea- sonable person can trust. will s timulate the fUght of depos itors from savings banks and other thrift institutions. Ten years ago rampan~ cor· rosive inflation was s uch an un-ra m iliar ex· perience that people )<ept their savings in cash and al- low ed their purchasing power to be corroded. After adec· ade or ded· ·icakd infla· tionists in Congress and the White House, people have come to un- derstand that they're being robbed when the savings and loan association pays 6.5 percent while the government. destr oys the Mailbox value or money at the rate oC 8 per- cent and then has the gall to tax the interest rrom the savings ac- count. People have been taught by politicians that only children save; put It into the bank and the guys in Washlngton'll steal it. Thus more and more millions or us are learning that you nevel' lend money, you borrow it. Bor- row money today and, with Jim- my Carter in the White House, you'll be able to repay the loan six years from now at 60-cents on the dollar. Solvency is ror s uckers. IN THEIR determination to never a lender but a borrower be, many people are going i nto debt buying real estate. Their reason- ing is plausible. In the last few years , through Inflation and re· cession, residential real estate values have held up very well. Stocks and bonds have been a dis· aster; gold has only made money for a few shrewdies; antiques. jewelry, art and objetsjl 'art, like .J rare stamps and oriental rugs, de- mand specialized knowledge, and anyway, you can take a bad beal- i ng, even JJ you've made a good buy, in the event you have to sell in a hurry. Real estate, especially homes, has had the best. track record. They're easy Lo sell compared to some of the thin11 mentioned above, ~the price on reslden· tlal boll!ting hos not only kept. pace with inflation, but tar out· distanced it. That's why you bear or more ~ more people re- fin an cl ng the homes they the mselves live iJ) so they can r~ aJize the enhanced value o! their property immediately. Many or the m are taking the money they're gelling from refinancing their homes and buying other properties, not toll vein but as an investment. THE DIFFICULTY wUh tbatis that rents haven't. kept. up with housing prices. People are paying $100,000 for the house which sold ror $75,000 three years ago in ex- pectation that in three or four years they'll be able Lo sell for $1~0.000. ln the tneanthne. they must rent It and a lot of them are discovering the rental price won 't even pay the monthly mortgage installment. much less taxes and upkeep. In the banking business they call people who're paying out two or three hundred dollars a month now in hopes ol realizing a $40,000 profit down the road "overex- posed." Everything depends on the market in residential real estate holding up and there's no guarantee of that. In fact , the signs indicate this is a poor time to buy residential real estate ror any purposeotherthanlivinginit. In many parts of the country. r esidential real estate prices are being driven up not by potential occupiers but by people hoping to sell later at a profit. They're going up so fa~t it looks like a buyers' panic is on, with people's business judg m ent swept away by an hysterical conviction that if they don't buy now and buy at almost any price, they'll lose the op. portunityor a lifetime. IF YOU really think real estate prices will continue to shoot up in· definitely with no relationship to the price or other goods and services, then this is the moment to buy at any price. In the rear world such a situation is unlikely so toot the danger grows that a bad collapse is coming in a;:ouple of years. acollapsewh1ch'wi1Jfind many innocent, hard-working people badly dumped on. The lastrecessionsawthathap. pen with certain kinds of real estate. Second or vacation home prices were murdered as was the office·building segment· of the real estate Industry. Residential real estate, of course, did well. but that was last time, when prices weren't climbing at the discon· certing rates they are now. In limes like these, remember the new adage, don't seek s helter against inflation where too many others are already huddled. A Time to Think About World Hunger To the Editor- Everyone who has ever heard a baby cry knows that feeding a hungry child is the most natural thing in the world, yet each year 20 million deaths occur from s tarvation and diseases related to malnutrition. Smee November. 1977, more than 100,000 people across the nation ha\'e made a personal comm1tmcnl t o look within themselves to discover what they as individuals can do to end death by starvation in the world within 20 years. These in.: d1viduals, with their ranks e:ll'll panding every day, have aligned themselves in the Hunger P ro- ject. THE IDEA or the hunger pro- ject is to utilize the power o( the individual to create a context ••• something that no organization or government can do. In simple terms, c reating a context involves willing some- thing to manifes t a nd then personally committing yourself to ma kc this happen. Tbe thousands of individuals ;llready enrolled in the Hunger Project have all personally com- mitted themselves to end hunger in 20 years. Individuals across the country ha ve been creating their own fbrms or participation to make this happen. F or example, the governor of New York declared the month or May as a time for the state of New York to become aware of the problem. In Washington D.C., May 14 has been declared a day of a wareness of world hung e~ The Laguna B,ech Huneer Project weekend of May 13-14 includes a beach run on .Main Beach at 8:30 a.m. Satur- day. Entry fee i.s $S. TERESA EDWARDS To the Editor: t think I've read everythlna that 's b ee n written op Jarvis-Gann in tbe last six months. Lost night's <May 4) Pilot editoruil was the best. I've seen! Brav~. JEANHARMO~ QltBeacl~ To tho Editor: The lncreulnl almost hysterlcnl outcri by Governor Brown and other pollUclana on Prop, 13, gives some clue aa to their fear lhat this b3llotlna ln June will nnd lb Yoten soUdly &lving the Jarvl~·Gtnn measure t.hclr 1upport. for al.eaiier, rnore etnclent government. Governor Brown's statements ·about ••t akin g so me S8 million 'out of circulation' will cause dis aster and unemploy- me nt" are fear tactics obviously unsupported by economics. He should know better. By removing the surplus t ax revenues and cutting into the rat public trough to the tune of S8 billion (most now say $7 billion) will b~ putting money into circulation, and where it can do some productive work. We have yet to see our bx m oney work productively. Ir some o( the inefficient workers on the public payroll are lopped off, it will be for beneficial purposes, while the over· burdened bome owner has some relief. Public borrowing on the bond market. will be affected and the big banks like the Bank of America may not like Prop. 13 for that reason. But public bonds are borrowing by the govern· ment and should be also slowed down. IT SEEMS useless to threaten that· our schools will be affected. when they are so itrefficient in educating our youngsters now, perhaps clearing out some of the d eadwood may result in the hope that the stude nts can al least be educated to r ead and write before graduating from high school. As soon as it. becomes less onerous to build and maintain houses and apartments, with less tax burden, more shelters will be built nnd the simple sup- Punelt ply at the m arketplace will bring down the rentals and thus benefit renters under the Jarvts· Gann initiative. Amertca was built on the free m a rketpl ace e nter prise economy, not by the politicians making new and m ore restric· live, more involved laws to restrict free enterprise. The Jarvis.Gann initiative is a simple direct method of making the L r gislature and the ad· ministration more efficient and responsive lo the people whom they should be serving, and cut out the deadwood in the opera- tion of the public machinery. LA DISLA W REDA Y LotDer Rent• To the Editor: J a rvis says landlords will lower rents if Prop. 13 passes. How can he speak for every· one? l 've kept rents on my triplex $50 lower than others in the area for several years. I live in fear of rent controls -getting caught with my rents down. This prop. erty is all I have. I cannot lower rents to please Jarvis the way owners of big :rents and comme rcial prop· ·erties can. Such landlords are the only ones who woutd profit by .Prop.13. G. A. ANDERSON Hoorayt To the Editor: Hooray for Mayo r Paul RyckoCf's proposal to limit new ----=-~ ......... _:;1:..,__-r>::;stt•_. . ... :~-~ .. ;:;;;;·-:~-= '>~;..o. ·-·-·· .. development in the city or Newport Beach to those that. will not further d eteriorate our prese nt disastro u s traffic s ituation. I only recently m oved here , but all of us moved here because It is a nice place to live and raise children. Were the growth of the city l e ft lo l a nd developers' decisions, we'd all be climbing over each other in our Mercedes and SevlJJes. Let 's stop long enough Lo catch our breath and see where we're going. R.G.SMmI No t .Jaudce T o the Editor: Recently read a newspaper s tory about the California judge who had seen Cit to place an in· junction against a mother and father, preventing them from coming within speaking distance of their daughter, or even speak· ing one word to her. Grotes quely, h e h a d on several occasions seen fit to place them in jail wheo they had greeted their daughter peaceably in a public place. ls that. really what jails are for? Such an injunction would ap· pear to be a pitiful violation o( civil, moral and human rights. FEW fair-minded people could say that reconciliation is not hampered by such a cruel and ·unusual injunction of the civil court, for does not reconciliation com e from communica tion, even if it is but the sight or a once beloved parent-now fallen from our grace? · Denying a mother or father their c ivil right to move peaceably and freely about ln public, in order to deny them a glimpse of their own daughter, also d e nies the c hild that glimpse of pare ntal agony, which might be the ultimate salvation of both. Whul good is served by such a nawed decree, which offers only stumbling blocks to contriteness and reconciliation? One can 8ee the agony, but not the JusUcc, nor the wisdom. REBA WILLIAMS • t ...... CALIFORNIA Pigat Work university of California researcher Tom Peterson runs pig tes t on treadmill on San Diego campus. The porkers Jog 25 nules a week for a year. but studies failed to prove exercise helps avert heart attacks. The theory that jog- ging helps humans should be reviewed. say researchers. ' . " Wedneeday. May 10. 1978 OAIL Y PILOT A 5 Bay Area Gays on MarcJ, 1,000 Protest Repeal of Wichita Rights Bill ·: · a.~· SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -and Polk streets are pre· dinance was overturrfed in St. su pervisors. without clth Some l ,000 chanting San Fran-dominantly 1ay neighborhoods. Paul. Minn .. San Francisco troversy. There has beeet~o clscana. many of them hom06ex-Earlier in the day, a Wichita homosexuals staged a similar move to repeal that ordinance.! ual1. marched through city ordinance barring dlscrimina-but smaller march. police said. streets in protest just hours after lion aealnat homosexuals was A city ordinance banntn1 dis- voters ln Wichita, Kan. repealed overwhelmingly repealed by a criminallon against homosex· a gay rights ordinance. <Related more than 4·1 margin. Two uals was just recently approved stories, A4 , A12) weeks ago. when a similar or· h e r e by the boa rd of The protest Tuesday night was peaceful, police said. "WE HAD WORD there would be a protest as soon as the Wichita vote started coming through,''. said Officer Elsen Broich. The march appeared to be a combination protest over the Wichita vote and a statewide in- ill ative that. if approved by voters In November. would let school districts fire or refuse to hire avowed homosexuals or those who support gay Ulestyles. THE MARCHERS, swelling to number about 1,000 by 11 p.m .. chanted "Wichita means fight back." "Civil rights or civil war." and other elogans as they strode 10 and 15 abreast from Castro Slrftt down busy Market Street. then up Polk Street and over to UnJon Square. Castro Smog Stations Hit For ~Deficiencies' SACRAMENTO <AP> -A California auditor general's report says nearly two-thirds of the state's auto smog lnspection stations are deficient, and oUiclal lamp and brake stations are hardly ever inspected. The report, out Tuesday, recommended that the Bureau of Automotive Repair increase its staff to take care of the problems. BUT CONSUMER Affairs Director Richard Spohn, whose de· partment administers the bureau. said the report contaJned "numerous false statements, half-truths and distortions." The bureau also licenses most auto repair shops and mediates consumer complaints. Some of ii.a operations are paid by Ucense and registration fees. Deficiencies cited by the report induded failure to have proper tools for inspection and engine lune-ups, failure to employ a licensed pollution device Installer, and failure to keep up with tbe latest pollution control iechnology. PomFilms Jai,l Pair IMPERIAL BEACH <AP> -AT\ elementary school teacher has been arrested for Investigation of making pornographic 1 films involving young boys after police confiscated more than 100 sex·oriented n lms and slides at his . apartment, officers said. Ball for Archie Murray. 39, a (Ourth-grade teacher ' at Westvlew Elementary School, was set Tuesday at $4 ,250, Imperial Beach poUce said. Richard Rollings. 18. a . security guard identified as Murray's roommate. also was arrested Monday when police armed with a search warrant arrived. : • ; . ' Jarvis Drops Libel Claim SAN DIEGO <AP> -Proposition 13 co-author Howard Jarvis says he·u dismiss his $800,000 libel claim filed against the Grossmont High School • District over a story printed in a student newspaper. fficlcor1 The story appeared March 10 in the Granite Hills High School Clarion and was written by 16-year-old Brad Teaby. IL tried to explain the controversial property tax UrnitaUon initiative on the June 6 ballot. But part or Teaby's story alleged Jarvis and Gann were "prominent real estate owners" who stood to reap "several million dollars" in tax s avings if the proposition passed. JS E•cope Air Cr1Uh SACRAMENTO CAP> -Twelve passengers and three crew members walked away from a twin-engined transport plane that skidded an estimated 1.500 feet on its belly, an official reports. The accident shortly after 6 p.m. Tuesday ( ) inv o lv ed an SI' ATE e x e c u l i v e · L y p 'e "---------turbo· prop plane or the Santa Barbara-based APOilo Airways. The executive director of the airport. James Ellingsworth, said "It did leave the ground by , about 20 feet when. for some reason, the pilot aborted. He set it down on its belly and it slid probably 1,500 feel." He said be didn't see any obvious injuries. Dialler Saeell• Ftatd LOS ANGELES <AP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. bas pulled orr the most lucrative fund raiser ever staged by a Democratic gubernatorial incumbent, convincing 1.000 people to contribute more than $300,030 toward his reelection campaign. After all the bills are paid, the $250-per·plate dinner Tuesday night at the Beverly Hilton Hotel will have netted Brown between $210,000 and S250.000. said campaign manager Gray Davis. Brown has collected $700,000 so far, Davis said. and hopes to stretch that to at least SJ million before the June 6 primary, in which be is unopposed. Drink Dra1es Fb1e LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Woodland Hills restaurant where television actor Dan Haggerty was burned by a naming drink bas been fmed $1,500 for fire code violations. Representatives of The Red Onion pleaded no contest to two charges of serving a naming drink and one charge or over-crowding before Municipal Court Judge David Kennick Tuesday. One or the n aming drink violations occurred Nov. 19, 1977, the same night Haaerty. who portrays Grizzly Adams, was burned. However, Los Angeles Fire Department Inspector Gene Lindley said none of the charges related to the Haggerty incident. Gates /ffalea Apo .... LOS ANGELES <AP> -Police Cblef Daryl Gates bas made a public apology for making a statement last week in which he called LaUno police officers "lazy'' and "unmotivated." Gates delivered the prepared apology Tue1day shortly after Chicano groups gathered outside poUce headquarters at Parker Center. Mother's Day ls May 14th. Give her a gift that grows from Roger's Gardens. SHOP EARLY 1rms ~~~o starting, May 11. .,.... ... """ .... ,,.. Mlb Mml. " ..... CELEBRATION SPECIALS World Famous BEEF STICKe Summer Sausage.• 204 LB. OFF 404 LB. OFF :.:e:.= .. REG. PRICE REG.PRICE Enjoy the wondertul h1dcorv·1moke flevor of this famous all· beef summer sauuge. lt01 popu.., as a ~ -with ~ackers and cheew. 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One of HI f fhlOf'I wilt be umpled eactt day durtno the ••nd os»n· int-Tak• adv.it~ of this special offer, FOOD GIFT PAKS Yow neerby Hldlorf Fenn. of °"'°• stOt'e lu GIFT CEtHER, too. It distJlav• and of fan a wide eetectlon of food gift •• fOf all ~ Ttwv oe>me In ell 1lz-. .,, pr-., W.'11 even tend your ff id0'7 ,,,,,.:.~~=::::ftl • I OF ON/O. .. w. .. tcllff Plaza 1711 I ....... • •i::-...... • H2 ... 7J ~.... ,. ... .,. . Ila FASHION ISlAM> atlNEWPORT~ ~.._.•64MOJO Mt.; . 11tW. ttll 6liia.11-1 r . ' I ' . \, . . Saddlehaek EDITION Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks 1 ! i VOL. 71 , NO. 130, ~SECTI ONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1978 TEN CENTS ·Princess, IMrd Snomdon t .o Divorce I LONDON <AP> -Princess Margaret and her hus band Lord Snowdon have agreed t o a divorce. Buckingham Palace an· nounced today. An official statement a nnounc- ing the impending end of the stormy marriage said: .. He r royal highness, the Prin· cess Margaret , Countess of Sno wdon, and the Earl of Snowdon after two years of separation have now agreed that their mariage should formally be ended. Accordingly her ryoal highness will sLart. the necessary legal proceedings." Ma r garet , s is ter of Queen Elizabeth II. separated from her photographer husband March 16, 1976, after 16 years of mar· riage. The 47·year·old princess and Lord Snowdon, 48, have two children -Da vid Vicount Linley , 16, and Lady Sarah Arm s trong.J o nes , 14 . A s p okes man a t Ke nsington Palace, Margaret's home, said the princess would continue to have custody of the couple·s two children. but Snowdon will have access. · The spokesman s aid the prin· cess bad "no plans for remar· riage." Margaret bas drawn criticism i n recent months for her friendship with 30-year·old socialite Roddy Llewellyn. She ls in King Edward VU Hospital in London s uffering from suspected gastroenteritis. The Kensington Palace spokesman said Margaret was "making pl"O(reas ••. Tbe re- sult of tests taken by the doctors will not be known until Friday." He aald he had no knowledge or Lord Snowdon's plans. "We are not in a position to comment about Lord Snowdon." Lord Snowdon bas been linked by aoasip columnists to assistant movie producer Lucy Lindsay· Hou. a divorcee. The last member of the British royal family to be involved in divorce proceedings was the Earl of Harewood, the queen's cousin, who divorced 11 years ago. T h e spokes man s aid lht- divorce proceedings were under way and the princess will be rep r esented by the q ueen·s lawyer, Matthew Farrer . The queen has been kept m· formed of the situation but her CQnstitulional consent is not necessary. (See DIVORCE, Page AZ) 'Edison Workers Vote to Picket l Remains Secr et I Welte's Letter I I • , I I Ruled 'Public' j By WILLIAM HODGE I OI .. DMlf f'li.. Slaff Contents or a letter that prompted Saddleback Valley I Uni fied School District trustees to , call for an audit remains secret t despite legal advice that the doc u· mentispublic. A deputy county counse l's ( opinio n that the letter lo the board J from the district superintendent L is public has not satisfied the f Terrorism 17 ' Comimies In Italy ROME <AP> -Four terrorists shot a Milan industrlal executive in the legs today, keeping up the war on the Italian establishment despite nationwide revulsion al the Red Brigades' murder of Aldo Moro. Officials of the Christia n Democrat P arty a nnounced, meanwhile, that a state funeral will be conducted -without Moro's body -in the Basilica of St. John Lateran on Saturday. They said private funeral services will be held according to lbe family's wishes at Torrita Tibe rina. 30 miles north or Rome. The day or the funeral was not announced. After the body or the former premier was discovered Tues- dav. the Moro family, e mbit· tered over the gove rnment's refu sal to negotia t e the kidna ppers' demand for the r e le a se of 13 impr is o ned terrorists. asked that there be no state funeral, national mourning or any ceremonies. board majority. They want a legal opinion in writing. Trustees cited the letter -re- cei ved from suspended Supt. Richard Welte in closed session -as their reason for asking that an audit be done months ahead or the district's annual a udit. They have refused to discuss • the teller's contents. But Deputy County Counsel Edward Duran said today he had the letter read to him and could see no reason for Us con- fidentiality. ··From what they read to me it didn't sound as though there was anything in the letter that would be c~dential," Duran said . Duran asked school officials to mail him a copy o! the letter so he could examine ll to make sure it should not be kept secret. Dis trict officials, however, have asked for a formal written opinion on whet.her the letter can be released. Th.at process will l ake several days. Duran said. Concern o ver the letter's st atus as a public document ap. parently springs from its being marked .. confidential " by Welte. ··They (school officials> said because it was marked confiden- tial they weren't sure it could be released," Duran said ... You can stamp anything confidential but when you're dealing with a public agency the document is public unless it's covered by the education code." Duran was surprised when district officials reques ted a formal written legal opinion. "My unde rstanding was it would just be an oral opinion," he said. "It's IQnd or ridiculous but we'll give _them a written opinion if they want one ." Duran said school officials are (See LE'ITER, Page AZ> OC Warned of Rattlers San Cwmenle Bit.e Victim 'Satisfactory' By JERRY CLAUSEN °' .. OM!t ...... SUff County pa ramed ics and Marine Cor ps Sea rch and Rescue teamed up Tuesday to rush a rattlesnake·bite victim by helicopter to Mission Communi· ly Hospital, Mission Viejo, from Santiago Peak in Clevela nd Na- tional Forest. It was an effort expected to be r epeated sever al limes this year. county omc ials agree, because 1978 is expected to be a dangerous rattlesnake season. Tuesday's victim , Helmar Tschugg, 36, of 129 Ave nida Mariposa, San Clemente, was reported in saUsfaclory condi· lion in the hospital intensive care unit. Villa Parl<·based paramedics said Tschugg and a companion were in the Cleveland National Forest hiking when a snake struck him on the right ankle. The two walked a balf hour to the peak to contact electronJcs technicians who service relay e qui pme nt the re. Th e y, para medics said. called the County Fire Department. Tschugg was the second rat· lier victim treated al Mission Community Hospita l Tuesday. Four.year-old Aaron Johnson of Mission Viejo was bitten when be stuck bis hand down a gopher hole, officials said. He is report- ed in good condition. Thal 's not too unusual. Jn one or the numerous letters he wrote durlng his captivity, Moro criticized bis party's ada· manl stand and told its leaders to stay away from bis funeral. Saddle.,,.«!k College "From one end of this county to the other. we are turning up rattlesnakes," said J~ Oliver , Orange County's chief a nimal control offi cer. Oliver's training officer, Dick Robillard, said severa l factors contribute to the incr eased snake activity - a larger adult population, construction in areas formerly Inhabited by snakes and drenching rain that flooded boles and burrows in more re· mote canyon areas. The victim of the Milan "kneecapping" was Franco Giacomazzi. an executive of the ( s tate·owne d Monted h on l chem lcal industry. Police said three men and a woman gunned him down and Oed. Such attacks are a favorite lactic or the Red Brigades, and Glacomaui was the fifth person kneecapped in northern Italy in five days. • The ultra·leftlsl terrorists were expected to follow up the murder: of Moro with attacks on ~ore political leaders, and the newspaper Corriere della Sera said police protection or llkely L tar lets had beenlotensi(ied. J The founder of the Red . Brigades, Renato Curacio, r shouted ln a '!\gin courtroom lo- , day tbat the auaaalnalion or , Moro wu .. an act or revolu· tlonary Jt.mtlce, the highest act of humanity po11itile lo this aoclely without Ju1Uce and divided Into classes... He was (See MO•o, Pa1e AZ) ROME SIREET HONORS M4RTYRS . JtOME (AP) -Via Marlo Fant, the tree·ahaded atreet where the Red Brl1adea kid· 'napped Aldo Moro and kllled Ills five bodyl\W'dl March 1~. waa renamed by the city today tho "Street of the lt arch 18 Karlyn." Marlo Fanl WAL~ educator. Class Fees Pondered Saddleback College classes - currenUy offered to district resi· dents at no charge -could have fees attached to them next year under guidelines proposed by Trustee Robert Price. Residents can be charged for classes which are not taken for credit toward receiving a col· lege degree, Price said. The classes he believes the district could begin charging students to attend are "self Im· provement courses" such as ten· nis. arts and crafts and recrea· tion. "It's kind of ahi!llng more things into the community iervlces area," Price said to- day. ··ne community is •P· parently wiWne to pay a minimal fee for worthwhile classes so we could move some of our exlltJnl courses into that area.'' Price said his auuestlon was prompted by concern over pouj· ble budaet cut.backs u • result or dlmlolShlns district "venues should tbe Jania-Gap amend· ment be approved by voters. ''Rleht now. tenolt lt free be<!auae It's 1D the cWTicul\lm for credlt atton," Prlce ex· plained. "If we ahlft It Into com· munity eervtces, we mlaht be able to break even on the cOI\ of the count throuab cbar1ln1 fees." And that would H ae the burde n on tax revenue• neceuary to nm re1u1ar colle1e de1rM Pl'Olrams, Price aaJd. "The next year for the college wlll be a test of survival," the trustee said. "Even though we are not In as bad shape as some districts, it will be a sever&and austere period." Price also is proposing to ''im· mediately curl.ail all plans to operate a north campus for the 19'78·79 .chool year. "v And he suggests that college orficials fi gure next year's budget funding levels al a rate less than the existing tax rate and assessed valuation increase esUm ates. That means a t>Otential reduc· tlon of almoat $2 million in lbe college's 1978-79 budget. <See FEES, Pa1e A!) Stea•ning Out. ~ Catalina Heada South A Lona Beach towing firm confirmed today that the S.S. Catalina, WbJch slipped out ot N~wpon Harbor late Tuesd~ ntebt. is beaded for San Diego. A apokaman for Jones Tug and B.1r1e said the 301·foot "Great White Steamer" was to arTive in San Diego this after· noon. But lbe U.S. Coast Guard in San Dieao tald they haven't heard a word from the abip, which left Newpon Harbor a day after ill docking permit ex· pl red. Port ol San Dte10 autborltl• aaJd theJ'd allo ta.d no contact •ltb tbe 1blp, which Neft'PC)rt BHcb autllorltlea uld baa permllaion to uao a San Ditto berth f« to days. The vessel was brought to Newport April ~ for a boat show. "It 's gone thank God," said Dave Harshba rger, Newport Beach's director of marine aa!ely. He said boat 1bow promoter Duncan Mcintosh ananeed for the boat to be towed Out ot the harbor at U p.m. Tuelday. Meanwblle. Hyman Sinter of Beverly Rills, the lb.ip'a o...-, la embroiled ln a diapute with tbe Clty of Loe An1elea over sao.ooo ln docklnc and toW'lng rees offtclall claim he owea that city for bertbhla lhe bii vllMI. tn lta heyday, the Catalina wa1 the ~blef mean1 of tranaPOCtifta tourist.a trom Ute mainland tO Avalon on Catdoa l1land. Oliver said his department normally receives about one or two snake calls weekly at this lime of year. This year, though, he is geWng about 10 a week. Robillard said about 30 to 40 percent of the calls result in finding rattlesnakes. They are decapitated on the spot. Harm· less reptiles, he said, are re- located to remote areas. Areas expected lo be most snake lnfested this summer - and especially this rail -are the dev e loping s outh-c o unty neighborhoods and Anaheim Hills. While the snake problem will be dl!flcull this summer. animal control officers said, it will be worse this fall when thirsty s nakes seek out wat e r in backyards and swimming pools. Stereo, TV Set StOlen in Viejo - Stereo equtpment and a televlalon set wtth a Joint value of 1970 were carried orr by a bllralar Who fore~ his way into a IUaalon Viejo home. Oran1e County aht rltf's of· ficere said tbe Intruder twisted otr the rront door knob to 1aln entry to the hom or service st•· Uon operator Carl Ray Motley, SI, or 27381 Tosaamar Drive. Onofre Hith .Y Strike By ROBERT BARKER Ol U. o.lly PINC $CMI Power station workers went on strike al 12:01 a.m. today at Southe rn California Edison plants In Huntington Beach and San Onofre and al eight other locations in Southern California. Nearly 1.100 members of the U tility Worke r s U nion or America. Local 246, voted to take to the picket lines at all sites after overwhe lmingly re· jecling the company's "last of- fer " Monday. It is the first such strike against Edison since 1953. A union spokesman said that picketin~ which began at 12:01 a .m. would continue on an around the clock. A last·ditch effort to avert the strike failed when talks broke down Tuesday. Edison had pre· viously terminated the contract with the union effective at mid· • night Tuesday. Bob Hull. a s pokesman for Edison, said that supervisory personnel are taking the place or the strtttng anion members who maintain and repa ir power units. He said that he is confident that the company can continue to produce electricity at normal capac ity "as long a s it is necessary." An Edison official that said that about 1,500 construction worke rs on a $2.4 billion ex· pans 1on project at the Sa n Onofre nuclear plant have ap· parenlly honored picket Jines and didn't go to work at 9 a.m. The workers are employed by the Bechtel Power Company and other sub-contractors. They are represented by various other un- ions wo rk in g on pl a n t s Numbers2and 3. An Ediso n official said the company is exploring ways to gel the construction workers back on the job. About 3,000 employees in all work on the ex· pansion project. A spokesman for the utHlty Workers Union s aid that mem- bers are adamantly opposed to the r ot a ting wor k sche dule which has been a ch1er stum- bling block in negotiations since last October. Edison 1s seeking .to imple- <See STRIKE, Page A2 • More Coverage Other south Orange County cover age appears t oday on Pages A13A and A138. Coast Weath er Night and morning low cloudiness . clearing to hazy afternoon sunshine Thursday. Coole r da ys. Lows tonight in 508. Highs Thursday in upper 60s along beaches. I NSIDE TOD" Y Molt oar$ produced /or the 1916 model year by American Motor• MiiU t. recoUed b11 /«Ural orrm-. &e Page Af. . .. .,. M ..... .. .. ,.. "" ., .,. AU ., .. ..... A• M .. . . • . . . •• ~ ... ~ OA.U.Y N.01 Fighter Boost To Israel? WASHlNCTON <AP> -Two Cabinet otlicera are reeoin· mending that P?-esld nt C1rter promise 20 addlUonat P·lS Jet fighters to Israel ln an effort to win congressional approval or tbe sale of warplann to Israel, Saudi Arabia and Egypt. • White House aource uld today. The recomrnend•tloo by Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance and Secretary or Defense Harold S. Brown would bring to 110 the number of jet fighters promised Israel In the arms sale controversy. The source said Carter will ll<ll. change the terms or the pro- posed saJe of 60 F· lSs to Saudi Arabia, 75 F·l6s and 15 F-lSs to Israel and SO F·Ss to Egypt by 1983, but would promise to sell Israel the addltfonaJ planes after that. Administration officials believe Carter's concession will pick up enough votes lo win a go-ahead for the sale from the House International Relations Committee. Congress has until May 28 to veto part or all or the sale. Ir the House committee defeats veto resolutions against the sales, it would be impossible for the full Con~ress to act on them and the ~ales would go through. The 20 additional sophisticated swing-wing F-15s for Israel, in addition lo the 15 already planned by Carter and the 2S F-lSs Israel already is buying, would give the Israelis the same number as the Saudis. Former Secretary of Stale Henry A. Kissinger in testimony to the House committee repeat- ed today bis proposal that the additional planes be sold to Israel by 1983 at the same time the original planes are being sold to Jsrael, the Saudis and to ~ · Egypt. ·• But administration sources say the additional planes could not be manufactured and de- livered to Israel that fast. Meanwhile, Brown sent mem bers of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee a draft letter spelling out Saudi Arabian as- s urances tbal its warplanes would not be used against Israel. Brown's letter reportedly said the Saudis agreed among other things that they would take planes only with defensive mis· sites that cannot be used against ground troops. The Saudis also have agreed to station their jet right.en far from lsl"Jltrs boJ1lers and not to buy planes 1rom other countries during the time the American planes are being delivered FroaPageAI STRIKE •.. ment a schedule in whjch unjon members would work weekends on a rotating schedule without receiving overtime pay. Pickets also were posted at two Long Beach plants, Ormond Beach, Mojave, El Segundo. Redondo Beach, Oxnard and Mandalay (near Ventura.) There are 125 members or the striking employees at San Onofre and 66 at Huntington Beach. The facility in Huntington Beach has a capacity of produc- ing 990 megawatts of electricity and can serve a population of about 750,000 PLO Peace Pledge BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP> - Vasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization pledged today lo try to prevent radical guerrillas from attacking U.N. forces in southern Lebanon. Mahmoud Labadi, spokesman Cor the PLO high command, said the PLO's official policy is .. peaceful coexistence" with the u. N. peacekeeping force. DAILY PILOT Fro. Page AJ DIVORCE AGREEMENT. • • ''The princesa i$ suina for divorce. This is a technlcallty. one party has to start the pro- ceedings," the spokesman said. ··The marriage has broken down and the couple have 11 ved apart for two years. These are ob- vi o us ly the grounds for divorce." The 1960 marriage of the er- fervescemt 29-year-old princess a nd globe-trotting photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones ;- raised to the peerage or the Earl of Snowdon in 1961 -was a glamorous match that caught the fancy o.f romantics throughout the world. But as the years passed, it became clear the relationship was wearing thin. Even before their formal split In 1976, she began to be seen with Llewellyn, a brewery heir who aspires lo become a night club singer. The two took frequent vaca- tions together on the Caribbean island or Mustique and often s pent weekends together on Llewellyn's Wiltshire farm. Critics, including Church of England clerics, said the affair was damaging to the image of the royal family, and some said Llewellyn was distracting Margaret from her royal duties. It was disclosed last month that Margaret Intended to con- tinue her public life. and ihe im· plil'ation was she would not see * * * Llewellyn so often, at least not publicly. In the mld-SOs, Margaret suf- fered her first disappointment in love. She was forced under preasure to abandon her relationship with Royal Air Force Group Capt. Peter Townsend becausehewasadivorced man. Her Intention to divorce Lord 'Snowdon was announced eight days before the Church of England is expected to change its rules and allow divorced persons to remarry in ch1.1rch. The church currently allows on- ly a service of blessing. The change will remove a serious obstacle lo the remar· riage of members of the royal family. Because the queen is officially the temporal head of the Church of England. the church prohibi· lion was one reason royal ob· servers believed Margaret and Snowdon would never divorce despite their legal separation. Margaret's uncle. the un- crowned King Edward VJJJ, ab- dicated in 1936 because he want- ed to marry the divorced American Wallis Warfield Simpson. There was violent op- position from the Chur ch of England and the British govern- ment of the day. * * * Princess' Career Often Controversial LONDON CAP> -From her impetuous childhood through her precocious teen-age years to her stormy middle age, Britain's Princess Margaret swirled through life trailing controversy over her men and her deportment. The announcement today from Buckingham Palace that she and husband Antony Armstrong-Jones would seek a divorce after nearly two years of separation was only th.e latest episode in a lire that seemed the very stuff or novels. MARGARET WAS BORN IN August 1930, and made her first public appearance at the age or 6 at her father's coron•tion. Since then, she has been continually in the public eye -often with heavy consequences for her private life. · She was a lively child, known to cartwheel down Buckingham Palace halls. defy orders and make scenes. .. My first memory," she said, "is haH-falling out or my pr:.m baby carriage. A great to-do. I imagine I must have wanted to be noticed." She was a capable horsewoman, spoke a number of languages. and loved piano. Both Margaret and her older sister, later Queen Elizabeth U, were proficient swimmers. BUT WHEN THEV WERE awarded a lifesaving certificate together, Margaret became so angry she picked up her sister's dog, threw it into Buckingham Palace's lake, and then, clad in her best partydress,jumped in to rescue the drenches animal. "Margaret always want..s what I want," her sister once said. "When my sister and I were growing up," explained Margaret, "she was made out to be the goody-goody one. That was boring so the press tried to make out I was wicked as bell." , Margaret blossomed Into a precocious teen-arer and Jet-seller, a beautiful young woman with violet eyes, brown hair and nawless skin. She was surrounded by the British press and idolized by the roya}Ly.Joving public during the austere post.world War II years. "THE PLEASURE·SEEKING PRINCESS,., headline writers called her. She was always oft to nightclubs trailln1 dukes, fuard officers and other eligible young men. There were pictures o her smoking in public. Her elegant cigarette holders became famous. In ber mld-20!, her ill-fated romance wlth Royal Air Force Group Capt. P~ter Townsend brought her widespread sympathy: Townsend, a Batlle of Britain hero, was equerry to Margaret's rather Kin.c Geor"e Vl. But the daablnt fighter ace had been divorced, and that brought famlly and church preuure that eventually forced the princess to renounce hlm. Four and a bait years later. tn May 1960, she married globe-trot.tin& photographer Armstf'Olll.Jones -later elevated to the peerage as Lord Snowdon -after a secret love atfalr. Millions watched their wedding ceremony O\ Westminster Abbey or on television. TH£1R OFTEN ROCKV MARRIAGE enthralled Britons but effectively ended 16 yean and two cbild~n later with a separation. "l don't see myself marrying a1a1n," the Prtnce11111Jd In 1077 "It wouJd probabl,y be too much of I bore." Her latest man, and suitably her lat.est 1cat>da1, wu Roddy Llewellyn, 1 1oclallte and former blppie turned asplrln1 aupper·club crooner. Maraarcrt came ln for abarp crlUcllm In ParUarnenl, ln public a.nd amon, Cb\l.fch or En1l~d clerics for her friendlhlp with LleweUyn, wttb whom abe frequent.l.Y was '"n and In whole company ahe took v1catlona on tbt' Caribbean I.eland of Mustlqu.. u was announced lut month that Marcaret would contJnue her pubUc Ure -the lmplJcaUon belnl th.at abe would not ae1 Llewellyn as often al least lo public -and the Bucklfttham Palace announcement today aaJd she bid "no plant for N·marrtace." Suit Tests Legality l"'ine Ranch District to Be Served . By PIUUP ROSMARIN Ol .. DMIY ...... Meff A constitutionat test wlll be made of the leeality or land· owner dominance or the f rvlne Ranch Water District bo8l'd of directors after . the ltvine City Council voted Tuesday to file lawsuit against lhe district in Superior Court. · The vote to sue the district. and try to stop a scheduled land owner elecUon June 19 that would autborlie the district to ls· sue Sl billion in bonds tor water and sewer projects, was unanimous. The council directed Roger Grable, assistant city attorney . to file s uit challenging the pro- posed bond authorization on two grounds. First, the council alleged the IRWO failed to comply with re· qulrements of the Callfornia En· vironmenlal Quality Act • because no environmental im- pact report was prepared to analyze impacts or the drawing· board projects the bonds would finance. Second. the council declared the I RWD board of directors. lo which only two or its seven members are publicly elected. 1s unconstitutionally composed, in violation of the one man. one vote principle. Flve of the IRWD directors are elected by landowner vote. Within the district. the Irvine Company owns more than 90 percent oC the undeveloped land. The election amoun\S to an ap- pointment of directors by the company. The council action came after a one·hour session that was closed to the public. Coun cilman Lac.ry Agran made the motion to sue. "ll 's largely a question," he said in an interview today "of whether you can undertake a project or such large· proportions without the appropriate environ· mental impact studies. and without giving the citizens of our Ff'Olll Page A J LE'ITER ••• probably concerned about doing things legally since the board Is being sued over the Welte sus- pension. "They have a lot of problems right now," he said. "Maybe they misunderstood that I just wanted to see the letter when J asked for a copy of it." city a proper opportunity lo fully consider such a massive un· derlaking. "The second issue is a ques· lion of whether such an un· democratically constituted board constitutionally has the authority to commit the city. ror decades into the future. on the question of water policy " "Underlying the whole case." Agran added. Is the far more fundamental question of wt10 controls developmental policy in lhe city of Irvine. "Will developmental policy be fashioned by duly elected representatives -through our general plan adopted by the City Council -or will It be dictated by the actions or an un · democratically and unconstitu· tionally const1tultd water board?" Councilman David Sills. also contacted today. concurred. MORO ••• dragged away in chains Authorities 1n Rome an· nounced that 24 of the 26 persons arrested May 8 m a police dragnet for suspects in the Moro kidnapping had been released for lack of evidence. They had been held on charges or sub- versive association. Moro·s murder strengthened the alliance between Moro's Christian Democratic Party and the Communists and promised election gains to the government party. In a spontaneous burst of emo· tion. millions of Italians poured out of factories. shops, offices and schools Tuesday to demonstrate against terrorism after Moro's body -chained and riddled with ll bullets -wasfound in a parked car an theheartof Rome. More than 100.000 people crowded Milan's Piaiza del Duomo. More than 30.000 marched around the Colosseum in Rome. carrying hastily· fashioned white banners for the Christian Democrats and red for the Communists along with black-framed portraits of the 61-year-old former premier. The nation's unions called a two-hour general strike today so workers couJd attend mass meetings against terrorism. Stu· dent demonstrations also were scheduled, and some student groups "excommunicated" the Red Brigades from the antl· government movement. "The IRWD." he stud. '"It< ontt ol the last vestiaes of land baron rule in the West. "Next month. one man -the president of the Jrvintt Company -will cast over 90 percent or the votes to authorize et $1 billion dollar pubUc bond Issue. ··we are simply asking the court to give the other reaident..s in the community an equal voice in their affairs.·· Lansing Eberling. president ol the IRWD board. said today he was "disappointed" by the coun- cil action. "I thought we were com- municating with them.·· he !'laid. "I also thought that adding two rtew members on the board who were publicly elected wu the beginning of a bo•rd more publicly represented ·· The board plans an eventual transition of power b)' adding new. publicly elected mttmben. as water use figurt's dem· onstrate that residents are using more water than land· owners. "The idea of transltlon ..• Eberling said. "serves the needs of all the parties. t think it·~ a fair way of doing 1t. •• Eberling said water USE' pro· ject1ons indicate there will ht-.. public majority on the board about 1984. He said the board position on tht-environmental issue.-'" that impact reports are not needed until actual proJects art-pro- posed for buildmg. Ebultng has called an emergency session or the water board for 2 p.m. Saturday to d1s- c us s the city l<1wsu1t The session will be closed to the public. under prov1s1ons of thl' Brown Act which allow publJc bodies to meet secretly to dis· cuss litigation. F,....PageAJ FEES ••. "That keeps us with pretty much lht same program we ha ve operating now." Price said He indicated the cutback would also protect the distnct from cutbacks as a result of the Behr bill. Trustees are scheduled to dis- cuss Price's s uggested guidehnes and next year's budget at a special meeting Monday. The session will begin al 3 p.m. in the Library/ Classroom complex. 28000 Marguerite Parkway, Room 105, In Mission Viejo. • OREXH • HERITAGE • BAKER • HEKMAN • MASTERCRAFT • WIEMAN • HIBRITEN • • ..J w x w a: 0 • w I.!) ct l- a: w :::c • ~ er ct :i 0 z ct ..J • • er w ~ 8 e z < t; • If your bag is leather. stop in now and view our exciting all new leather gallery. Select from the largest collection of leather sofas· and chairs in the area. TORRANCE UM9 Hawthorne Blvd. <213) 378-'279 Fn.. ,.....,.,. llfttl ,......,. °""9 COSTAMeSA 1595 NtWPQrt Bhtd, <114) 642-lOSO LAGUNA Bl!ACH 3'S Hol'th Coast Hwy. . (714) 494""55' • !! :I) ,,, r 8 ~ CD m 0 0 z Cl • • l: m z :D m 0 0 z ~ 0 0 0 ~ > :D 1t 0 :D Cl z )> r VI • (") l: )> ~ .,, ~ )> z • • • • l<AAOES • HICKORY CHAIR • OIXIE • WOOOMARK ORIGINALS • MARGE CARSON • \ A d Gliding Across the Channel .,._.,........ ~ -David Cook. 37, wings his way out to sea to beach below Walmer Castle near Deal and make aviation history as the first man to touched down at Calais. France. just over cross the English Channel in a homemade an hour later. The glider. has a nine powered ban~ J!lider. He took off from the horsepower. go-kart type engine. Jarvis Measure Studied Panel Says Price Tag Too High/or Refonn Passage of Proposition 13 would cut property taxes without reducing the size of gov- emm ent or the total tax bill paid by Orange Countlans, county supervisors were told Tuesday. That was the assessment of- fered by the 19-member Citizens Direction F\nding Commission CCDFC> after reviewing the Jarvis-Gann property tax Umita- lion initiative. Janice Hall. an Anaheim in- surance representatlve and commission chair woman, said the measure would achieve property tax reform but at too high a price tag. Mrs. Hall and lellow com· missioners predicted the measure would lead to higher state income and aalea taxes as --Trash Refund? County Areas May Benefit About 30,000 residents or unin- corporated Orange County will get a refund or credit for trash collectlon fees paid during the lhree·week strike, if Supervisor Ralph Clark has his way. Clark's fellow supervisors Tuesday agreed to have county officials oegoUate -with trash haulers for either a""refund or credit for fees ·paid while worlte~ weren't collecting ref· use Clark said the county can force tbe refunds or credits through haulers' performance bonds. He also sugges&.ed city of- Campus Protest ficials might follow the county's lead and seek similar refunds for residents. In other action Tuesday, supervisors closed the Hunt- ington Beach trash transfer sla· tion lo the public except for its pe riodic weekend opening. The station had been available for residents weekdays during the strike. But it now will be re- served for use by commercial haulers only except for Its reg- ular noon to 3:30 p.m. opening the second and fourth Saturdays of each month. Women Take Over ' Newspaper Office AMHERST, Mass. <AP> -tt could be a dormitory. with clothing, guitars and books lying around, but the 50 women in the four rooms are a force of OC· cupation, not residence. For 10 days, the women have barricaded themselves in the basement orrice of the Daily Collegian, the 20,000-c\rcuiaUon student news paper of the University of Massachusetts, protesting what they claim is a lack of women's news. Their barricade Is made of desks, chairs and couches, which double as beds. · They take sponge baths in two adJacent bathrooms, using soap. towels. tooth brushes and toothpaste smuggled in by sym· patbizers. Supporters have also brought in food and hot plates. ~·s been very encouraging," said one sophomore dem· onstrator. "The spirit is very high. J personally knew almost none of the women here and I've gotten very close to all of tbem." Tbe object of their ire, the "male-dominated" staff of the Collegian, continues to publish, but in abbreviated editions put together ln temporary quarters about a five-minute walk from the barricaded orrtce in the Campus Center Complex. A security guard sits outside the oeworfice. Final exams begln in less than two weeks and the paper is st'heduted to sbut down next Di,ver Killed ByOcropus TOKYO <AP> -Police found the body of Yuki Ota.ta, a :W..year-old postal clerk and amateur dt.er, In 15 feet c-A water. On his back wu an empty tank that had held enough ox- yien for an hour. Fitteai feet away was a slx·toot oct.opua dtad trom cuta b1 0&.Ma 11 Im.lie. The poUce •aid ttm'e ftre no wouadl or bnUeil oa the dlm'abodr. Tb•J bellned bl• OX· nen ran out whlle be was npUnc the octopus and a..aoc..d. week for summer vacation. Some protesters leave briefly each day to attend classes. but s ay they wiJI stay in the office into the s ummer to press their demands. Those demands are for one full page of women's news eacb day, with its content edited In- dependently of the rest of the newspaper, and a women's de· partment editor selected by the campus women's community, not the newspaper staff. Associate editor Beth Segers opposes the protest: "If ihe women had looked at who ac· tually puts out the paper each night they'd see that'SO percent of the news edjtors are women. all ot the copy editors are women and three out of five issue editors are women.'' But Julie Melrose. leader of the protesters and women's editor of the Collegian, said she had been frustrated in getting articles on women's issues print· ed. For example. she said, two articles related to birth control for women -smoking and the pill -were submitted but never used. The Dally CoJlegJan has called the administration "irresponsi· ble" for allowing the protesters to bar access to files and equip. ment. William Field, dean of stU· dents at the Amherst campus, s aid the UMaas student judiciary system was consider- ing holding suspension hearings for the protesters. Rape Pris.on Terms Backed SACRAMENTO CAP> -Alter testimony rrom three women who said they were '/\cums of rape, the Senate Judiciary Com· mlttee bu approved• blll requir· ins pnsoii terms for anyone convlctedof forcible rape. SB 1479 by Sen. Geor1e DeukmcJlan, R·Lona Beac:b. was 1enl to the Senate noor Tuesday on a 7·1 vote. One of the three women, Carolyn Scbcnn1n, tullfied, "I don't feel 1..re. l feel as Jr lhere ans raplata walJdnai the atreeta •berever r turn." well as a loss of local control over local government. Proposition 13 would limit property taxes to 1 percent of a property's 1975-76 value and clamp a twopercentperyearceil· ing on increases. Properties would be reassessed at full value. however, whenever sold. The CDFC, in a report to supervisors, contended the measure would penalize f amllies forced to move often since they would race tax increases each time they purchased a new home. As a result, the report said, owners of identical property could have tax bills that vary. In addition, they criticized the initiative as leading to a shift in tax burdens from business to in· dividual.9 and oUering no relief for rente'~. Mrs. Hall told supervisors the critique was not Intended as an endorsement for or against the measure but to let residents know or some of the initiative's consequences. The commissiQn was created by supervisors to advise them on matters affecting local govern· ment. Five members are appolot.ed by s upervisors, five by the League ol Citizens and nine by the commission. Orange Coast members in· dude Dr. Richard N. Baisden, dean of UC Irvine extension; Michael C. Gering; Newport Beach attorney. Dr. Henry Kaufman; Huntington Beach op- tometrist. and Jerry King, plan· ner from Corona del Mar. Also, Frederick M. Lang, a South Laguna landscape architect; Sheila Malakoff. a Huntington Beach consultant: Richard· Spooner, a Newport Be ach attorney, and Shirley Commons, a Huntington Beach real tor. Other commissioners Include attorneys, housewives. a civic volunteer, a consultant and an insurance broker. In another matter relating to the Jarvis initiative, supervisors voted 3·2 Tuesday lo study legislation that could pass the cost of public education on to the state should the initiative be ap- proved by California voters. Supervisor Philip Anthony said the Idea behind his pro- posed legislation would be to Jessen the immediate impact of Jarvis on local government while forcing the state to con- tend with the long-standing school finance question. Supervisors Thomas Riley and Ralph Clark joined with Anthony in calling for the study or such legislation. But Supervis ors Ralph Diedrich and Laurence Sehmit were opposed s aying they don't favor the idea of state control or local school districts. County OKs Noise Gear For Airport Orange County Airport will be getting $199,579 worth or new noise monitoring equipment. supervisors decided Tuesday. The board also will decide next mootb whether to spend another $61,650 to expand the monitoring system to El Toro Marine Corps Air Station as wen. ' A contract for the monitoring equipment was awarded to Tracor Inc. the low ot two bid· dens for the nolse systems. Supervisors decided last year to replace the existing noise monitoring equipment. The new system wUI be financed wtth airport revenue and a $65,593 state granL A report to supervisors said lnstalHng the noise monitors around EJ Toro could he~p ln land ute plann.in& fQr veu lm· pacted by bJ.lb Jet noise levei.. Howner. expanding the 1y1tem could lortt the blrlna of oddlllonaJ county employea. tb reponuld. • Cat Help Offered By Riley By KATHY CLANCY °' ... Delly ,.. ......... Oranee County Supervisor Thom as Riley has a suggestion of hla own for improving condi· lions at the county animal • shelter. J He wants to make it possible for families to adopt or reclaim unaltered adult cats so the animals won't have to be destroyed. Riley's proposal comes on the heels of a decision by the board of supervisors Tuesday to change the way county officials destroy 30,000 unwanted pets at the shelter each year. The board toUowed Supervisor Philip Anthony's recommenda· tion to close down decom· PJession chambers at the shelter TOr at least the next year and destroy Wtwanted pets by injec- tion instead. Anthony called the injections "unquestionably humane," but labeled the chamber "absolutely inhumane." Antbony,'s proposal was sup- ported by more than 50 citizens in the supervisors' hearing room Tuesday and drew no objections. However. Supervisor· Ralph Diedrich abstained from voting until county officials return with a plan for implementing the new animal euthanasia system. Riley bad planned to offer bis proposal on cats al Tuesday's meeting as well, but waited to give County Counsel Adrian Kuyper time to review it. Riley said it was "a deep con· cern for humane treatment of animals" that led to his objec- tion to a county policy that pro- hibits release of adult cats from the shelter unless they have been spayed or neutered. "Basically. this policy re- quires the destruction of all adult cats which are i.mpaunded at the shelter," Riley said. Yet, he continued. county or. ficials may release both dogs and kittens at the shelter once owners or adopting families put up a spay or neuter deposit. That deposit is returned once proof of neutering is shown. All'ag From It All Riley said a literal interpreta- tion or state law prohibits re- lease of cats unless they are neutered. Brian Ripley. a student at Colorado College in Colorado Springs. located a unique place to study when he moved a chair onto the roof of his porch to get some fresh air and a bit of sun. However, he said. most other cities and counties have in· lerpreled the law so that adult cats can be released to owners or new homes, then altered later on. Nude Bat/Mrs An-estedin South Laguna Nuclear Device Tested in Desert Orange County Sherlrt's of· ficers moved ln on nude bathers Tuesday and jailed three al· legedly naked beach·goers who reportedly offended other sun seekers on the 9th Street beach in South Laguna. Booked into the county jail on charges of public nudity were Richard Thomas Colbert. 26, of 2510 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach and two transients: Bruce Donald Sutherland. 24, and Diana Deedee Bicknell, 18. Deputies also issued a citation to a woman who allegedly was found lying nude on the sand near the point or the three ar· rests. She was identified as Gwen- dolyn Ann Jones, 25, of 31667 3rd St.. South Laguna. f LAS VEGAS (AP> -An un- dergroWld nuclear test was det- Qnated beneath the soutbern Nevada desert today, moved two houn ahead of its originally scheduled time by a weather front approaching the Nevada Test Site. The weapons·related test, code-named "Transom," was conducted at 8 a.m. in the Yucca Flat area of the desert test range some 90 miles northwest or here, said spokesman Dave Jackson of the Department of Energy. The shot. with a yleld estimat- ed at between 20,000 and 150,000 tons of TNT. apparently was not felt in Las Vegas. Tests at the upper end of the yield range generally can be felt in many areas or the city. especially in the hlgb·rise hotels along the Strip and in the downtown Casino Center. "We've conducted a number or tests out there that we felt might be felt in town," Jackson said, adding that the DOE genE'rally announces such tests beforehand. The test. conducted by the Lm. Alamos Scientific Laboratory of New Mexico. apparently caused. httle motion at the DOE control point al the sprawling test range. JaQkson said. Jackson said there was no re- ported radiation leak. Jackson said the shot original· ly was set Cor 10 a .m. but was moved up due to the weather front moving in from the Paclfic Coast. He said the front prob-ably would pass through northern Nevada but might have delayed the test if it had been fired al the original time. Weather conditions play an important role in the under- ground test programs. Shots generally will be postponed if prevailing winds -which could carry any potential radiation leak -are blowing toward in· habited areas. Gem Talk Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club By J.C. HUMPHRIES Grmologlsl TAKE INVENTORY oJ JIOU' hom~·, valuable& It's not a pleasant thtno to think about. but If you were to suddenly ios. your valuable Jewelry and other Important PoSMSSJonS through theft or fire, would you be able to furnish your lnsur,nc• company or potlce with a complete llstlnQ of your losses? It's a QOOd ldff to get an up.to.date, Quatlflecf appraisal of your valuablts, •nd to make up an lnvtntory list. The best kind of lnV9ntorv Is ktpt In a simple c•rd Ille. Use 6d ~nil. so there's room to attach photoVf"•_P!'s of your valuable objects to MCf'I ~rel, along wltfl OHcrlptlon end v11u.. AllO list whtn and where the obJtct wes acquired. Famlfy pieces shOuJd Ott ~fal attention. There lhOuld De a written record of second, third and· fourth gitntratlon Items. All lmPOttant pieces should be •PPr•IMd by a quallfled professlon•t your lnsur..u companywlll accept. Add more than Just the obvl°"s things to vour Inventory. Include • PANCAKE BREAKFAST ................ TIME---=a-=--.===~ Thia Saturday, May 13 7:00 a .m. -.noon PLACE I I COSTA MESA LIONS PARK Donation •1so Pancake• -Entertt lnment -Beverage• Seuaagee-Prtn• 01lore -Fun for 1tr ALL PROCEEDS TO HARBOR YOUTH obJtd• that dO not "JtAnd out" In the household, but whfch have some. Intrinsic valu. to you, ktep I copy of CONVENIENT TERMS tf\e lnvtfttory outslOt your home, fn • 30 Y!AAS IN THE SAME LOCATION saft deposit box or with •n attorney. WIOl"tfdtr, ~ 10, \111 NATION / WORLD C) 1976 AMC Cars Recalled ....... ~ To•~~\\' M~ldae Upstaging Candidates RICKY TICKY POUTIX: \'ou can almost work up a measure of pity for e•ndldates seeking election in our upcoming June primary. They seem to be drawlna SC#nt attention in the public prints. Instead, the greater volume of public political lnk and radio and televislon time seems to be devoted to a man named Howard Jarvls. Mr. Jarvis Isn't running for any public office. .IAltYll He is, however, a central flgure in the June election as co-author ol the Jarvis-Gann property tax limitation lnillaUve which will appear as Proposition 13 on the ballot. EVEN mOSE CITIZENS who only follow politics in the margtns have heard about Proposition 13 by now. You may not know wbo se~ks the state Senate seat in your region but lt'a become increasingly difficult to ignore Number 13. In event you have been absent from our sect.or of the globe In recent times, you should know that P?o~iUon 13, if adopted by the voters, would limit property taxes to one percent of the market value of real estate. It would further limit rroperty value increuea placed on rea estate to two percent per year. This drastic cutback has drawn strong criticism from public school people and city a nd county otficlaJs, whose operations would suffer heavy cash loses ir Proposition 13 becomes law. As for Howard Jarvis, he seems to be putting in considerable time ln our coastal region in campaigning for his measure. He must figure our area is a lush hunting ground for votes. Jn two or his most recent appearances, Mr. Jarvil bas found his principal antagonist in debate in the forlD of Orange County Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner, who resi'des in Laguna Beach. SUMNER AND JARVIS went at each other for an hour on Channel 50 television the other night and clashed a1aln later in a Laguna debate Where Sumner bad an ally In Laguna schools chief Bob Sancbis. There is an enormous differenee in the atyJe and approach of the two men as they debate the pros and cons of the initiative. Jarvis. in promotin& passage, Jeans heavily on the glittering generality. He talks about "peeling the fat" orr of government and how there is enough cash surplus in Sacramento "to float California on $100 bills." JUDGE SUMNER, IN urging rejection or Proposition 13, gets to specifics on how the initiative would, in his view. hamstring local government and school boards and surrender tax revenue control to Sacramento. Sumner's most telling argument notes tbat under Proposition 13, local govemments must get a two-thirds voteol all theirreptered voters to pass any new tax revenue proposal. And of course it's virtually impossible to even get two-thirds of the voters t~ the polls. So the debate rages on over PropostUon 13. You may never hear from any candidates. Tbey may not get their names In print until the ballots are i.ssoed. . ''Perfect' Air Crash · Puzzles Autlwrities PENSACOLA, Fla. <AP> -Federal officials have begun their investigation to learn why a National Airlines jetliner, in no ap- parent trouble, made a "perfect landing" into Escambia Bay, in· stead of on the runway three miles ahead. Flight 193 crashed into the fog-shrouded waters late Monday with 58 people aboard. Three 9t the 52 passengers drowned. InvesUgators say they have no immediate indication-why the · three-engine jet wasn't al the prescribed alUtude of 1.250 feet when it hit the water. "There were no changes in pitch or power," said Jim King, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board. "It was in stable position. Once they went in, many of the people on board Just thought it was a particularly hard landing." Tugboat operator Glenn McDonald of Gull Breeze told in- vestigators the plane "appeared to be making a perfect landing - into the water." K1ng said. McDonald and crewman Bill Kenney , became heroes when they pushed a construction barge next to the ' ptene. then pulled scores of passengers to safety. WASHINGTON <AP> -The Environmental Protection Agen· cy ordered American Motors Corp. today to recall virtually all Its 1976·modet automobiles because the vehicles spew ex- cessive amounts of nitrogen ox- ide pollution into the air. The unprecedented recall or· der Involves about 270,000 Hornets, Gremlins. Pacers and Matadon, the EPA nid. Only those 1976 autos manufactured for sale in California, whose air pollution standards are stricter than the federal rules. are cur- rently exe01pt. BUT THE Zl,141 California· market cars are under in· vestigation for possible recall because of the same problem. the EPA said. Ex-envoy's Wife Dies In Suicide MOSCOW <AP> -Leongina Shevchenko, the wife of the So- viet U .N. diplomat who refused to return home from the United States. committed suicide, her son said today. Gennady Shevchenko told W estem reporters by telephone from the family's Moscow apart- ment he could give ~no details about his mother's deatb Mon· day "but I confirm that she com- mitted suicide." EARl.JER THE SON, like bis father a diplomat in the Soviet foreign service, told reporters who telephoned him his mother bad died of a heart attack. "I just did not want to say im- mediately that she bad com· milted suicide," he -said in a subsequent call. Soviet sour.ces with good of- ficial contacts made the first disclosure of the suicide, saying Mrs. Shevchenko died from an overdose of sleeping pills and that her body was found lo a closet of the family apartment where she had been Uving with her 16·year-old daughter since her return from New York In April. ARKADYSREVCBENKO,the top-ranking Soviet citizen on the staff of the United Nations, left his post as undersecretary. general for political and Seeuri· ty Council affairs on April 5 because of "differences with his government," a UN . spokesman said. Informed sources said be re- fused to obey an order from the Soviet government to return home, and his wife went without him, taking their daughter, after a violent ugument. The Soviet go.vernmeot blamed the Ukrainian-born diplomat's defiance on a "frameup" by U.S. intelligence agents, but the U.S. government said it bad n'Othing to do with bis actions. SOVIET. DIPLOMATS at the United Nations circulated stories at the time that Sbevchenko was having an af. fair with an American woman and also bad a drinking prob- lem. There was also specula· lion that be was a secret American agent and had been found out. Mrs. Sbevchenko told re· porters on her return that her husband's action was a "crude provocation" by American authorities and that be would never have wanted to stay in the United States. Most of Nation's Dry .. I South Sees Clear Skies; Eallt Warming T~pera111re• HI Le P\'C 7S 4t 13 SI '° ... u" .. 71 •• tS •1 s. ·" 90 17 ., ., .. ,. 4S .01 ., ~ ..... 11 S7 .. ,. ,. ~ ... 7S 4t .IO 17 ,. " 70 .. 70 ... .. SI .. .., 7' H .. y .. ,, $1 •••• . " ,. 47 ,., . .. .. u u .u .. ., ... 1S A .... .. )4 .ot • c.atenda HHY l-"IM Md C004~ le~ .-r•t--hlf9Collt llW '"""1cllv • wta-ewtr-..... eo.i.i '°'end low CMWt a-"'t ~ Irle .... tlonel .... Senlce Ml'L Te""9HC-4110f19 U. 11eeC11 _. Ill Ille v.ale'ls -~ IO lie m«ll ,...., TIM.nder. wilt\ llltlM '" .,,. .,.._r tOa .._. .. c:wtC 9M Ill ~ "''• ,.. "' .,. ,.,, ~. s.. f'erne1u10 end Se" ••t11er•I .. ,,.....,.. s-.M .... Tldn WWDNUMY IKCIM !OW S;l4'°"'' U lec9lld "'-' thJa ''"'· 4.t 'IMIMllOAY 7; ... 11\.Q.t t:U-.m.U •.ocp.m.U t.c..Wlllt'I 1t1n .. 111.u S. rt-•i•t.m .. ..W 7:Q p.m. MOOll r• t: .. t .m .. Mtt !O:SJ ""'· In addition. the a1ency said lt was recalling 40.000 1975 and uns model Jeeps and Post Of. fice dispatcher trucks made by AMC because of the s ame problem. The EPA's order was the nrst recall ever by the agency to in· volve virtuaUy lbe entire pro· duction or a single automaker in a model year. THE PROBLEM WITH these vehicles is a faulty joint ln the emission control system that frequenUy has broken, causing high levels of nitrogen oxide ex· hausts, said EPA Deputy Ad- ministrator Barbara Blum. "This pollutant can contribute to breathing Illnesses, chest pains and bronchitis in children. Arid Spills tt h~lps form smoe, that all-too- f am1 liar source of headaches &martin' eyes and coughlni among city residents." she told reporters. ··u the public health threat from air pollution is to be abated, at is crucial that cars meet the emis sion standards set by Congress ... THE EPA SAID the recall was prompted by an inadequately brazed joint in the back- pressure sensor, which Impairs the ability of the air pollution control system to reduce emissions of nitrogen oxides. Ford Mot.or Co. recently was ordered to recall 640,000 vehicles ror a similar defect. The EPA said both Ford and American An 18-wheel tanker-truck lies on its side after overturn· Ing and spilling its load of acid on Interstate 8 east or Gila Bend Tuesday. Traffic wa s blocked for several hours while officials pondered the best way to clean up the acid. Tell Mom You Love Her Molort pun:hased the defecuve parts from the Eaton Corp. of Batlle Creek. Mich. Tbe EPA sald t.he part COSlb S20 but gave no tmmedtate estimate of the total c:osl of t.he recaU, saying only about half the cara recaUed are normaUy brought in for repaJn by lhelr owners. THE GOVERNMENT'S action was seen as part ol a new get· tough attitude by the EPA tows.rd DOS8ible vloJaUons of air quality standards. Wichita's Gay Rights I.aw Loses WICHITA, Kan. <AP> -In a resounding "mandate for righteousness," Wichita voters told homosexuals to keep their lirestyle to themselves and re- pealed a gay rights ordinance by a 5-to· 1 margin. ··Peopre are saying loud and clear to the nation that America does not feel that pro· homosexual legislation brought under the civil rights issue is legitimate," said the Rev. Ron Adrian, a Baptist minister who led the group that forced the referendum. "I think God's using this vote to openly rebuke the pro- homosexuaJ forces." THE Val'E IN favor of repeaJ was 47.2«6, and UJ,005 supported retention ol the seven·monlb-old ordinance, whJch prohibited db· crimlnation in bouslnR. employ. meot and public accommodation because or "sexual or affec. lion al preferences." (Related story Page A.S. > Similar ordinances were re- pealed in Miami last June and in St. Paul, Minn .• on April 25. A referendum is scbed11led later this month in Eugene, Ore., on a gay rights ordinance there. The 83·to-l7 percent victory margin came in one of Wichita's largest election turnouts, with 44 percent or the city's 128,888 registered voters casting ballots. Both supporters and opponents of the ordinance had expected re. peal but the margin of defeat SW'· prised all. ADRIAN, WHO RAD predict· ed a 2·to-l defeat. said he foresaw no bacttash against the gay c:ommwtity due to the vote. ··1 think homosexuals will be JUSl as welcome in Wichita tomorrow as they ever bave been here," he said. This Mother's Day send Mom a greeting all che world can share on Sunday, May 14th. ".... Express your love in a Daily Pilot Mother's Day Greeting. It's easy. Wrire your message ro fit one of our three convenient sizes and bring it to any Daily Pilot office prior to noon May 12. Or, you may mail a clipping of the border with your message and payment ro Daily Pilot,;~~i M~. U. 92626. ff ~ ~-~ ~~ ~~~'i'Jlil Ads come in rhrtt sizes: SI 0, S l 1. and S 3 for the special child's siu card. <You mu.sr bc undtt 12 yean of age to qualify for the littlest grttrin~). If you wish you may create your own dccOC"ared grttting. Using black pen draw your dcsisn to fit one of thc domd outlines shown Mn. You may fill the amrc spl(t'. Only words and lines drawn within chc doued lint' will 1ppcu in your completed Mor~r's Day ad . r--------~-----~-~-~---------1 ,-------~-------------~ I r-----------1 t I I I I : l ___________ J I I ' I • I I ,. I I • I I I L---..,...,ww ______________ J f'1 If you wanr http composing • suiu.blc Jtft'cring or havc any q1Aucions call 642-1678. A fiimdly Daily Piloc ad-viKr will be glad co ~Ip you . And, if you like you an charge your Mochcrs Oay ad. Your ucd1t is good w1ch us. or you may '* your Maun o.rp °' BankAmeric:ard. ~ . DAILY PILOT .. 1 58 0rangeoo.stoa11vPi1o1 EdikJrial P~e ................................................................ Wedneeday, May 10, 1918 RObert N. WHd/Publlsher Th0m41S KM~ll IEdltOt S.rb.tra Krelbleh/Edltor111 P~ EdltCN" School Audit Call POints Up Secrecy Last week. Saddleback Valley Unified School Distrn·t trustees called for an auclil of the district ·-at tbe end of a regular school board mttting. Trustees offered no reason for their demand of a full · audit months before the regular annual district ~udit is due. The only comment made was reference to a letter re· celved in executive session from suspended Supt. Richard Welte. Several trustees cited the letter as reason (or the audit but refused to divulge its contents, saying the Jetler was marked confidential. But Deputy County Counsel Edward Duran said this week he could see no reason for not releasing the letter lo the public. His opinion was based on a conversation watb acting Supt. ·Donald Ames over the contenl of Welte's let· t~r. But following the conversation. Ames sent a formal letter to Duran asking for another opinion, apparently at the behest of Board President George Henry. . Now, Henry says trustees will not discuss ·-or of· ficially call for -an audit until the next board meeting May 17. But trustees s pecifically called for an audit lasL week. And, once again, the public is left out in the cold as lo a reason for the expenditure of public funds to pay for the audit. t Trustees a lso have refused to reveal their problems with Supt. Welte other than characterizing the split as a ··conrtict." The same philosophy of !)Ccrcc:y is uominatin~ the discussion of an expensive audit. 'fheSaddleback dis trict has shown an alarm mg tendt'n· cy to control the flow of information dunng its latest round of political and philosophical crisis. And the real loser in the situation can only be the public -which pays for the schools to operate ·-and the children -who are supposed to benefit trom the schools' operation. \ Solar Energy Step Last wee!.. El Camano Heal School in lr\'ine flipped on the switch to its new solar heating tnd. cooling system The S428.000 device. funded largely by the federal Energy Research and Development Administration, takes up most or the school's roof with banks of glass col- lector tubes. lt will both heat and cool the school. aufomatically switching on the auxiliary electrical system if there isn ·t enough sun power. The project lS aimed arstimulating private farms In install similar s~ stems 111 their huil<lmgs. thus ... a\ ing ros::-il ruels. The school \\a~ ~elected for tht' project m nationwide competition. Trus tees of the Irvine L.'nified School Dis- trict deserve praise for their decis ion to pursut:: tht.' projecttoitscompletion. And staff at the school sbould also be commended for involvin~ students by teaching about solar energy and even training some youngsters as tour guides for visitors to the project. No Apathy Here When Laurie Kahn screamed for help as she ran from an attacker in her Mission Viejo home. s he got at. Sheriff's deputies credited a number or her New Castille Homes neighbors -including lwo women with chasing down and subduing her alleged assailant when he ran from her home. Laurie's lip reportedly was cut when a man knocked on her door. forced his way inside. demanded money and took S64. She apparently was othenvise unharmed possibly because of the response by neighbors who still care. A deputy noted that the incident reflected a zeal for n eighborhood awareness, something his department would like to see a lot more of. A fine tribute, indeed. at a lime often marked with apathy and unconcern. • • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. 8ox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Partners ByL.M.BOYD Three partners put together a business firm that required one or another of them to be on the road alternately much of Ute lime. When all three were Jn town. they decided. each would be a vice president. But when any one of them was out on a sales trip, that one for the nonce would be the president. Theory was the top title would give leverage in negotiation. Actually, though, it was their private joke. and they claimed It worked lo let them keep on balanced good terms with one another. Dear Gloomy Gu See the OCTD directors are up to their old tricks -a 43 percent rise ln operaUng cost.a ($10.2 MlUlon) out or you -know·who ae pocket, while br111lng about holding \.he fare at the same old 25 cents! M.J.M. Only one out of rive murder \'ictims is killed by somebody unknown to said victim. You see what this m eans. don't you? You're a lot safer hang· ing a round with strangers. In the North Temperate tone. the average person weighs more in September and less in February lhan in any other months, report the science boys. A cat in Fairbanks, Alaska, licked its paws -it shouldn't have -and when it put them on the cold cold ground, they froze there, stuck solid. A fireman freed the critter. That man said to be the richest in America, Daniel K. Ludwig, routinely flies tourist ('}ass. Takee only 002-that's two one-thdusandths-of a second to pop a balloon. How big the go1dlish 1rows depends on how big Ill bowl Is, that. you know. But tho qoea· lion arises aa Jo Just why a s m a ll bowl i.ftd.s to 11tant the n~h thcretn ,.-hile a bl~ pond let8 them get larger. Its now beliovcd those llsb • cr1te a ~rowth·lnhibt\lng sub~tance. Presumably, Its potency ls If. fect«'d directly by how concen· trgt d llis, hJtJbly so in u small Volume Of T(llCr, le ftO lh Lar••r tbe YOJ umeor wat.er Nicholas Von Hoffman Real Estate Bubble Can Burst ThP 10<.'apac1ty or the ad· ministration to come up with an anli·tnflation policy that a rea· so~ble person can trust will stimulate the flight or depositors from savings banks and other thrift institutions. Ten years ago rampant cor- rosive inflation was such an un· familiar ex· periencc that people kt!pt their savings m cash and al· lowed the ir purchasing power lo be corroded. A rt er a de<'· ade of ded· •teated infla· tionists in Congress and the White House, people have come to un· ders tand that they're being robbed when lhe savings and loan association pays 6.5 percent while the government destroys the Mailbox value or money at the rateof8per. cent and then bas the gall to tax the interest from the savings ac- count. People have been taught by politicians that only children save; put it into the bank and the guys in Washington ·u steal it. Th us more and more millions or us are learning that you never lend money, you borrow it. Bor· row money today and, with Jim· my Carter in the White House, you 'II be able to repay the loan six years from now at 60-cents on the dollar.Solvencyisforsuckers. IN THEIR determination lo never a lender but a borrower be, many people are going into debt buying real estate. Their reason· ing is plausible. In the last few years, through inflation and re· cession, residential real estate values have held up very well. Stocks and bonds have been a dis· aster; gold has only made money for a few shrewdies; anliquel>, jewelry, art and objets d'art, like rare stamps and oriental rugs, de- mand specialized knowledge, and anyway, you can ta.ke a bad beat- ing, even ti you've made a good buy, in tbeeventyoubavetoaelllD a hurry. Real estate. especially homes. has had the best track record. They're easy to ~u compared to some ot the things mentioned above, and the price on residen· tlal housing has not only kept pace with inflation, but far out· distanced it. That's why you hear of more and more people re- financin g the homes they themselves live i.o so they can re- a lize the enhanced value of their property immedlately. Many of them are taking the money they're getti.ng hom refinancing their homes and buying otht:r properties, not to Jive in but as an investment. THE DIFFICULTY with that is that rents haven't kept up with housing prices. People are payinJ $100,000 for tbe house wblcb 10ld for $75,000 three years aao In ex- pectation that In three or four years they'll be able to ..U tot' $1'0.000.. Jn the meantime, they must rent it and a lot or them are dlscovering the rental price won•t even pay the monthlt mortcare Installment. much less taxes and upkeep. In the banking business they call people who're pay in• out two or three hundred dollars a month now in hopes of realizing a $40,000 profit down the road .. overex· posed • ., Everything depends on the market i.o residential real estate holding up and there's no guarantee of that. In fact, the signs indicate this is a poor time to buy residential real estate for any purposeot.ber than living in lL In many parts of the country. residential real estate prices ere .being driven up not by potential occupiers but by people hoping to selllaterataprofit. They're going up so fa!t it looks like a buyers' panic is oh, with people's business judgment swept away by an hysterical conviction that if they don't buy now and buy at almost any price, they'll lose the op- portunityof a lifetime. IF YOU really think real estate prices will continue to shoot up in- definitely with no relationship to the price ot other goods and services, then this is the moment to buy at any price. In the real world such a situation is unlikely so that the danger grows that a bad collapse is coming in a couple of years.a collapse which will find many innocent, hard·working people badly dumped on. The last recession saw that hap· pen with certain kinds of real estate. Second or vacation home prices were murdered as was the office·bwlding segment· of the real estate industry. Residential real estate, of co1Arse, did well, but that was last time, when prices weren't climbing al the discon· cerling rates they are not.-. In times like these, remember the new adage. don't seek shelter .. against inflation where too many others are already huddled. A Time .to Think About World Hunger To the Editor : Ever)onc who haji ever heard a baby cry knows that feeding a hungry child is the most natural thing in the \\Orld, yet each year 20 mi Ilion deaths occur from starvation and diseases related to malnutrition. Since November. 1977, mare than 100,000 people across the nation have made a personal commitment to look within them sel\•es to discover what they as ind1v1duals can do to end death by starvation in the world within 20 years. These in- dividuals. with their ranks ex· panding every day, have aligned themselves in the Hunger Pro· ject. THE IDEA of the hunger pro- ject is to utilize the power of the individual to create a context .•. something that no organization or government can do Jn simple terms. creating a context involves willing some· thing to manifest and then personally committing yourself to makelhis happen. T.tie thousands of individuals already enrolled in the Hunger Project have all personally com· milted themselves to end hunger in 20 years. Individuals across the country have been creating their own forms or participation to make this happen. For example, the governor or New York declared the month of Mar as a time for the state of . New York to become aware of the problem. In Washington D.C., May 14 has been declared a day or awareness of world hunger. The Laguna Beach Hunger Project weekend or May 13·14 Includes a beach run on Main Beach at 8:30 a.m. Satur· day. Entry fee is $5. TERESA EDWARDS 'l'heBest To the Editor : J think I've read everything that '& been written on Jarvis.Gann in the last six months. Last nlght'i1 <May 4) Pilot editorial was the best I've sel'n ! Bravo JEAN HARMON a. DHdleoH To tho Editor: The increasing almost hysterlcol outcries by Governor Brown and otJ\ r polltlcians on Prop. 13, gives some clue as to theta-rear that this ballollng ln June will rind lhc votars solldly glvini th Jartls-Oaon measure tholr support .. for a leaner, more ctnctent ~overbmcnt. Governor nrown ·s statements about "laking som e SS million ··out of circulatton' will cause disaster and uncmploy· ment" are fear tactics obviously unsupported by economics. He should know better. By removing the s urplus tax revenues and culling into the fal public trough to the tune of $8 billion (most now say $7 billion> will be putting money into circulation. and where it can do some productive work. -We have yet to see our tax money work productively. If some of the inefficient workers on the public payron are lopped off, it will be for beneficial purposes, while the over· burdened home owner has some relief. Public borrowing on the bond market will be affected and the big banks like the Bank of America may not like Prop. 13 for that reason. But public bonds are borrowing by the govern· ment and should be also slowed down. IT SEEMS useless to threaten that our schools will be afCecte<I. when they are so inefficient in educating our youngsters now. perhaps clearing out some or the deadwood m ay result in the hope that the studenl<; can at least be educated to read and write before graduating from high school. As soon as it becomes less onerous to bwld and maintain houses and apartments, with less tax burden, more shelters will be built and the simple sup· ply at the marketplace will bring down the rentals and thus beneClt renters under the Jarvis· Gann initiative. America was built on the free marketplace enterprise economy, not by the politicians m aking new and more restrlc· live. more involved laws to restrict free enterprise. The Jarvis·Gann Initiative is a simple direct method of making the Legislature and the ad· ministration more efficient and responsive to the people whom they should be ser ving, and cul out the deadwood In the operu Uon of the public machinery. LADlSLAW REDAY £otoete Bettu To the Editor: J arvis uys landlords wlll lower rc.-n\3 If Prop. 13 passes. How can he s~ak lor every· one? I've kept rent.a on my lripl x $50 lowtr than others in the are ror several yea"'-I lh·o ln fear of rent conLrols -fellin& caU&ht " l ; with my rents down. This prop· erty is all I have. I cannot lower rents to please Jarvis the way owners of big rents and commercial prop. erHes can. Such. landlords are the only ones who would profit by Prop.13. G. A. ANDERSON IJ11happf1 Nante•ake ~ood George W. Kent overlooks evidence that he should be aware of or within availability to as a University of California, Irvine, professor of Com- parative Cultures. According to the Sex tnforma· tion & Education Council of the United States, one of the nation's most respected authorities on the subject of sex: "An· t hrOpological studies show that TotheEditor: in cultures that tolerate My name is John Manfredi, a homosexual activity all men rather uncommon name in these participate in it as well as in parts until last week. Since then, heterosexual activity. In fact, however, it appears that there the evidence from comparative are at least two of the same zoology suggests that sexual at· name around. traction to both sexes ls the One John Manfredi is involved norm and that exclusive in a law suit filed 'by San heterosexuality is culturally im· Clemente Mayor Bill Walker posed." a nd councilwoman Donna Dr. Wainwright Churchill, Wilkinson. The other John Man· Director of the Philadelphia fred i is me, owner of Trotter M e n t a I H e a ll h C l i n i c • s Sign Company and a member or Psychoanalysis Department the San Clemente Chamber of states that "in complete con· Commerce. trasl to the attitude of Western I would like very much to civilization after the rise of make it clear that there are two C hristianity. the pagans Manfredis and would like to help believed that sexual passion your r eaders distinguish enobled every relationship (and) between the two. Unfortunately, .•• beauty ••• was surrounded I don't know the other Manfredi by an aura of religious awe. The nor do I know what he looks like. · young of both sexes were en· llowever, I will describe myself couraged to cultivate whatever and give your readers my back· natural beauty they had through ground. J hope the other does the C'xcercise, s ports and gym· same. nasties (and) the human body 1 AM MALE, white, 5'8" tall, was re"ered a s the mos t weighing 180 pounds, not count· beautifuJ of all nature's crea· ing my black moustache. I am tions. 38 years old. One may readily' · "THESE attitudes were partly recognize me by the standard responsible for the pagan at· work clothes 1 generally wear. titude toward homosexuality. Jt These clothes are necessary was not felt that. sexual feellngs because as owner of Trotter Sign would spoil a friendship nor that Company, 1 design the signs, they were reserved for only . . . layout the lettering. do some in· procreativity nor was it felt that stalling and repair, and sweep masculine beauty should be ap. th fl ft h preclated only by women and e oor a er everyone as feminine beauty only by men. gone home. (I do not do win· "The sexes were not polarized dows!) in the pagan mind. (They) The fact that my company OC· believed that all human beings caslonally does work for Mr. BiU possessed both teminlne and Walker and bis firm, and that I masculine attributes .•• that a lso suS)port him, Donna man,inhisoriginalform,wQa Wilkinson and Roy Hamm adds bisexual creature. nothing to my appearance, but, 1 "IC exclusive heterosexuality feel, d~ point lo good Judg· was rnre among tbem, so was ment. l Therefore, I would appreciate exclusive homosexual ty. People were not expected to choose lr your readers ever see or meet between two mutually exclualve \.he above described John Man· , fredl on tho street, ln a ways of loving.' restaurant, or at. a job site, ~ BRUCE S. HOPPfNG please wave or HY hello. U not, • and if th.ls mJstaken Identity con-Lttkrl /1'0m r1odtr• an i«lcome. tinues, l may be forced to TM rig~t lo COM~ff lfttn-1 to fil change my name to John Smith. IJJCICf or •ltnrinote libel is r~nroed. JOHN MANl'REDI Lftttr• of JOO worda or ~" wfU ~ Q-AUICIMiea. ~pr•/IMIC•. AU ldter•ml&ftbl· ~ • duct. afpai11re and mailing oddrtu To the Editor: bid nom•• mo~ be tDUhM&d °" n: In bl• dlatr1be aOllllt lhl Qllltt ff-~ RG*Jft It~. bornopb.08 (MaUbox., May I). tbo .Pomv ..W.., bf~ 'I CALIFORNIA Pigat Work University of California researcher Tom Peterson runs {>ig test on treadmill on San Diego campus. The porkers JOg 25 miles a week for a year. but studies failed to prove exercise helps avert heart attacks. The theory that jog. ging helps humans should be reviewed. say researchers. • Jarvis Drops Libel Claim SAN DIEGO CAP> -Proposition 13 co-author Howard Jarvis says -he'll dismiss his $800,000 libel claim filed against the Grossmont High School District over a story printern a student newspaper. The story appeared March 10 in the Granite Hills High School Clarion and was written by 16·year-old Brad Teaby. It tried to explain the controversial property tu limitation initiative on the June 6 ballot. But part of Teaby's story alleged Jarvis and Gann were ''prominent real estate owners" who stood to reap •·several million dollars" in tax savings if the proposition passed. JS E•cape Air Crcuh SACRAMENTO <AP l -Twelve passengers and three crew members walked away from a twin-engined transport plane that skidded an estimated t,SOO feet on its belly. an official reports. The accident shortly after 6 p.m. Tuesday ( ) involved an ST ATE e x e c u l i v e • t y p e ___ ___, turbo-prop plane of the ......____ Santa Barbara·based Apollo Airways. The executive d1rector of the airport, James Ellingsworth. said "It did leave the ground by about 20 fei?t when, for some reason, the pilot aborted. He set it down on its belly and it slid probably l ,SOO feet." He said he didn't see any obvious htjuries. Dhlaer Saeelb Fmtd LOS ANGELES <AP> -Gov. Edmund G. "Brown Jr. has pulled off the most lucrative fund raiser ever staged by a Democratic gubernatorial incumbent. convincing 1.000 people to contribute more than $300,CDO toward his reelection campaign. Arter an the bills; are paid, the $25().per.plate dinner Tuesday night at the Beverly Hilton Hotel will have netted Brown between $210,000 and $250,000, said campaign manager Gray Davis. Brown has collected $700,000 so far, Davis said, and hopes to stretch that to at least SI million before the June 6 primary, in which be is Wlopposed. Drhdc Draan Flfte LOS ANGELES <APl -A Woodland Hills restaurant where television actor Dan Haggerty was burned by a naming drink has been fined $1,500 for fire codevtolations. Representatives of The Red Onion pleaded no contest to two charges of serving a flaming drink and one charge of over·crowding before Municipal Court Judge David Kennick Tuesday. One of the {laming drink violations occurred Nov. 19, urn. the same night Haggerty. who portrays Grizzly Adami, wu burned. However, Los Angeles Fire Department Inspector Gene Lindley said none of the charges related to the Haggerty incident. Gain Make• Apolofltl LOS ANGELES <AP> -Police Chief Daryl Gates has made a public apology for making a atatement last week in which he called Latino police officers "lazy" and "unmotivated." Gates delivered the prepared apology Tuesday shortly afler Chicano &foups gathered outside pollc:e beadQuartera at Parker Center. Mother's Day ls May 14th. Give her a gift that grows from Ros9f's Gardens. W~. Mey 10, 1978 DAILY PILOT j\$ Bay Ar~a Gays on Marc~ -~ 1,000 Protest Repeal of Wichita Rights Bill ~ .. ·1 SAN FRANCISCO <APl - Some 1.000 chanting San Fran· clscans, many or them homosex· uals, marched through city streets in protest Just hours after voters ln Wichita, Kan. repealed a gay rights ordinance. <Related stories, A4. Al2l The protest Tuesday night was peaceful, police said. "WE HAD WORD there would be a protest as soon as the Wichita vote started coming through," said Ofticer Elsen Broich. The march appeared to be a com bi nation protest over the Wichita vote and a statewide in· itiatlve that, if approved by voters in November, would let school districts fire or refuse to hire avowed homosexuals or those who support gay lifestyles. THE MARCHERS, swelling to number about 1,000 by 11 p.m ., chanted "Wichita means light back," "Civil rights or civil war," and other slogans as they strode 10 and ts abreast from Castro Street do'YD busy Market Street. then up Polk Street and over lo Union Square. Castro and Polk streets are pre- dominantly gay neighborhoods. Earlier In the day. a Wichita ordinance barring dlscrlmlna· lion against homoseituals was overwhelmingly repealed by a more than 4· l margin. Two weeks aao. when a similar or- dinance was ov4tumec:t ln St. Paul. Minn .. San Francisco homosexuals staged a similar but smaJler march. police said. A city ordinance banntn1 dis· crlmlnallon against homosex· uals was just recently approved here by the board or Smog Stations Hit For 'Deficiencies' SACRAMENTO <AP> -A Callfomia auditor general's report says nearly two-thirds of the state's auto smog inspection stations a re deficient, and official lamp and brake staUons are hardly ever inspected. The report, out Tuesday, recommended that the Bureau of AutomoUve Repair increase its staff lo take care of the problems. BUT CONSUMER Affain Director Richard Spohn, whose de- partment administers the bureau. said the report contained "numerous false statements.llalf·truths and distortions." The bureau also licenses most auto repair shops and mediates consumer complaints. Some of its operations are paid by license and registration fees. Deficiencies cited by the report included failure to have proper tools for inspection and engine tune-ups. failure to emplpy a licensed pollution device installer, and failure to keep up with the latest pollution control technology . I supervis ors. without ;o~ troversy There has been de) move to repeal that ordinance. PomFilms Jai,l Pair IMPERIAL BEACH <AP I -An elementary school teacher has been arrested ror investJgation of making pornographic Olms Involving young boys after police confiscated more than 100 sex-oriented films and slides al his apartment, officers said Bail for Archie Murray. 39, a fourth.grade teacher at Weatview Elementary School, was set Tuesday at S4 .250, Imperial Beach police said. Richard Rollings, 18. a security guard identified as Murray's roommate, also was arrested Monday when poUce armed with a search warrant arrived. at Ii)~~ starting, May 11. CELEBRATION SPECIALS World Famous BEEF STICK· Summer S.usage' 20$ LB. OFF REG .PRICE Enjoy the wondertul h1c::kory1moke flaovor of this famout all· beef summer uuAge. It's popular as 1 sn.c:k -with crackers and chees9. Many us. it different ways etpedally for appeti· zers. cooking .,d fondues. CITATION•WHEEL SWISS 20' LB. OFF REG.PRICE Taste this moist naturel ~ -cut fresh from the whMI so vou get the flavor the chenamelcar intended ... the BEST .•. the only way to buy china. FREE s!~:,~~~r MUSTARD WITH THE PURCHASE OF ti OR MORE DURING OUR GRAND OPENING Sweet·Hot Mustard from Hiduwy Fenns of Ohlo8 addt a_.. oat lest to ewryth n9 you .-w with It. You'll be blldl fOI morel NOW 1C FOR A BOX OF OLD-FASHIONED CRACKERS OR CRACKED WHEAT THINS With The Purchllil Of A Hldcorv Ferma of 0.-tos CHEESE BALL Eithef of tlwM credtars.,. "just the thlftt'' fOf' lf)f'Mdlng our dallciou1 CHEESE BALL-madll from e blend of aged dMete covered with nut• end topped with• cherry. IMPORTED YANKEE TRADERe SOUP MIXES BUY THREE PACKAGES -GET ONE FREE DllCCW« f~ vourwlf the r~. NM'IY e-itt flllVOt' of thna IOUps. One of 16 flavors wm be 11mpled NCh day durent the grand open· Inf. Tiil• advtn'-91 of this apacial offer. FOOD GIFT PAKS Yow ~ Hldlorv Fenna of OtMoeteor• iu OIPTCBNTEA. too. It di....,_ 8ftd offers• w1dll •lectloft Of food tfft pelt1 fOf ell OOMllonl. They oome ln 111111 ... all pr6Cill. W.11 ewn ...,.. your ff iclco'1 f tfml~:.~=::::~. , OF DNIO • i=l FASHION ISlAND m NEWPORlicemA . Wntclff Plala ''"' ......... wit:! ...... 642.ot72 ......,..,.,., .,. ..... . SHOP FARLY """"".._. • '4WOIO M..t.M 'tit ht. 'Tl 6 la 124 . • ........ STOCKS I BUSINESS Wedneaday~ NYSE COMPOSITE 2 p~m. (EDT) Prices , 11 s DAILY PILOT •7 Bored Workers· Ne~a Voice 81 SYLVIA POllTER A blp proportloA of the more than 93 mllUon joblloJderi iD tbe Ulllt.ed States IS deeply disconteoded. ~the friqe benelita, pay bikes. company at· tempta to provide an atmo9pbent of ''team effort," they fefi rest.liell, ewa alleeated. The "extras" become mean· iD wbea the job la boring, ftusttaUna. without real va A YCO Community DevekJpen Inc. sbarebolden beard an optimistic future pn!dided for tbe San Die10-bued de· veloper of new t.owna. At tbe &Dllual meetiq of sbarebolders. JaJes a. Kerr chairman ol tbe board, called the company's progresa "tremendous" and added ... We look towards a profttable and Pl'OIDi&Ull future for ACD overall ... R. Barry Mc:Comie, president, told tbe sharebolden lbat about 900 housing unita wen cloled during tbe year and that an additional $32 IDillioa in commereial and bulk land sales were made. SALES AT TBE END o::crru IDdicated • promislq 1978, with 278 bouai.o:UDita at ACD communitiel for the year to dale. C~ 33$ bomee were made for the same Deriod. ~ -approximMely m million in ules, Mc:Comlc said. Commercial and bulk land activities sbowed Sll.5 mUllon In sales conclUdecl by tbe eod ol April, Including a 20-acre, $2.1 mlWon sale to the BunoulhS Corp. for a re- seareh and development facWty. Kerr said future m~ment strategies lnclude con· centratlng on design. deveJopment and of homes in the compaD)''s current pro.)eeta; eGlll1mliq to build and sell at ACD 's Georgia property wttb u eye toward liquidatina: aeekln1 Joint ventures almUar to Windemere: ( TAKING ) ::3 °''...U.:. plannl•i: STOCK otbe:=~. Kerr and Mc:Comlc, . voiced optJmlam U.at, tbe m·· eoutal· properdel at ........ Nlpel W'OUld be -.a.~ IDI &!lat ACD waa looting toward 18to bel&D • ..... r:c•t ,, eurrentlJ neaotlat1n1 •ltb ... varlou a a;Dd we are eonfklimt tbat a mutuatt,. aatlatactory ent Dian IOI' tbe coutal JM'!8lt' Wiit , be a1reld upon wt die eout.l fiODe Commlu.loa. .. kerr said. •ANAORBNT NOlllNBIS toa the board were re- electM diNcCGn. Tbe*re Kerr, ellalnnan ud chief ex· •~ve elllcel', Aveo Md ebelrma. Avco Communt-t.J o.,91op1in: o.or.. f1ot1me, PNl&deDt and chief operatilll oMcer, AYeo Qorp.; lleColliic, ~;Alex C. Mc-·M, attoraeJ; FrUdl lt Suoal, .te. ~ and trt•••· Aveo Carp.,; Brtut R. Wei.II Jr •• former Pf'Mldelt. TltJe IMUruee • Tnllt 0.., IDd Paui. O. Zlm· merAtr~~-=~-r:=..~dv beld ~ tliat .. ~ Rwbo BeiuntD, VDta1e Pai:tf11a-~s.waa ... ~ 1D La Jolla and i..cuD~ N.,_ la 0...... Coaat7. Neefti111i ............ . -OAIL't' PtLOf WldneeCMy, Mey 10, 1971 Tel~dsion TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS \\I II"..,.,,, EVENING --11CMNEWI •. =.cv ONIJ Or .~.., le lnYOMd In en .,tomobll9 ~· wtllCll ,_,.., In the dMlh ol I llllle Oitft lllllet • OUN8MOKI When .,._t ~a young 111gec;oec;ll ro~. hl1 notorloul otOer brottl« encl I* gAf'll ~ Iha m.-.NI. • THI IMD't' MINCH eot>by Ilea to hi• friend•. t .. llng tMm Joe Namath drape by tor dlnotr ~ 11e·11n town • AOAM-12 A l)IMlant ewnlng for Malloy and Reed II lnler· ruptecl by • .-. neigh- bor wflo 16 hlQr1 on <1ruga. • TVAUCTIOH cconllnuu unlll 12 midnight) '9 HISTORY~ MEXICO ··~ion: R4M Of Cer· fllrlZlt Attd Ot>r9g0n'• 0 A8CNEW8 8:308 MOVIE Keystone Kops *** • .. The Meltete l'elc:oft•' (Ptt1 21 (UM 11 Humphnly Boget1. $10ney 0~1trMt A 109 ptt\1911 1y9 11 hited to rec:oYer • prleella. ~lled 1t11ue. ( 1 hr • 30 min ) Kate Jackson I left > and Jacl•;n Smith doll up as Keystone Kops as the search for stolen roC'kel fuel on Charlie '~ Angels tonight al 9 on A BC. Channel 7 • BEWITCHED Venu1. note<I tor her chann, and Endora. notea lor her weird MnM of hOOlor. teem up ega1n11 Darrin • AOOKl£8 A Hl-year·old boy 11 forced to take the blame tor the en,,_ ot •junkie. G OIMEHSION8 IH CUl.TUM.8 "Religion" , Cll AMERICA 2NIOHT ltDl UERVG""'1N Ou11t1. Eddy Arnold. Shlelcn end Varnell, Harry Jamee tnd Band. Ctlrl1 Kerno, Jim Olovanno C'hann~f Ll•tl11gs 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KN6C (NBC} Los Angeles D KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cll KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ. TV (Ind) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC} San Diego e KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles e KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles • KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles I!> KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunhngton Beach "FOR And Hltief: A Study In Style" (PW1 1) The 1930·, gl"9 rlM to two of the majof ant-oontat• of World Wat II: I democ:tlllc leader In 1M U.S.; • 1..a.1 dictator In Germany. G SHANANA ~t: Bobby Rydell. I NEWL't'Wf.OGAME MATCH GAME P.M. JOKER'8 W1U) THE~llUHQH One ot JtdL~ jokee boo!Ml-oa Md IM beeoonee her own '<licllm. • AMENCA ltDff au.t: p..., Mlrlhlll. esr~N> "&enda Simon An<I For· -Oanc:M''' Cll S121.0000UE8TION 0 FAMll.'t' RUD l:OO. Cll "'°°""YU.DI ••King Of The Ao9<1'• Roger Miiiet 1wr• M Cotton Grime., e Mmk9tlred count!)' and -•em llrtger who oC*'lt• a motel and toungl '°' Peoo6e In tM en*1tlnment bu•lneH. Jenn o.Ad9on gueet .... uhlmMlf. a AOU..EMIM.8 "One Of Out ,,...... I• MIMlng.. ~ 8M I *"'* ----... I& tnlded to ttie Rhode lal8nd ...,,.. • MOYl9 * * *lot .. Tiiey 81\oot Hot.... Don't They'P" ( 1tet) Jane Fond•. Mich••• Sarruln, A O.pre111on·•r• dance IMtMtloft II en..,_, by a young couple In need of tM pnre money. (2 llr9., 30 iiilt EGHT• DIOUGtt "Who'• On Flrlt" The 8rldlofds telc• to the ... In order to help out • local orphanage. • MOYll • * '4 •·Th• Violent Enemy" (1968) Ed Begley, Susan H~•· Ari IRA plOt to deetroy • 8rttlltl factOJY In • Olftent gesture of lrW1 lncMc>elldela II eompllcttld by Mffllfl mott-ea. (2 llta.) • CWQ. IMMNITT AHOFNEHOI ciu.t: Joel G19Y. • ..ova * * * .. The Ctlac>man Report'' ( 19&2) EfNlft z.ir,.. baMat Jf .• ,,_ F-ondL A ... iuvey. conduc:t9d by • t1mou1 p1yc:t1otogl1t. touc:Me ttle .._ of four typlcel eubuft>ln women. ~hra.) • TVAUC110H ~EJ•ea<E MEMOAW. FUTIYAI.. "The Jazz Minon •• uoa J01&vALEM "The COmmll1nt1lt" Joe'• lriend9 Utuml 11111 he and v lllerle will "*"' ttle llight • .... wtMln her mottler IMVMIOMI. I a.oea-wrra OV9'IAl't' Soupy 8alea on 1119 TV open•n~v. nntllfCJ ea,oer; Joe fota, k>rlftW oo-nor of Souttt Otliota. and Illa wtte OM OM -Int.Mewed. HO 9 Cl) C. MOYIE •'Mut'der At The M#\11 OrM" (Pr~) Ortld Orotl, Didi Conn. A plllf of tO\lriltl Illar• an 1#1111.ty romanc:e and become lnVOMd In Intrigue In ..... OrtMna during tM Mardi °' ... 8 DEANMMT1N caaNTY ..oAIT J-Stewert II roested by Ot90n WellM. Mitton ...... ...,,.. IAlgll, .M'9 Allylon. L.uc:ih llall. Mlc:lt· ..., Rooney, f OtrPf RMdall. TUBE TOPPERS of town. Ralph tnee 10 Qa. hlrnmlf ofl M Iha riMd ol tha bu• company • CAPTIONll>MC NEWI KTLA e 8 · 00 -·'They Shoot ijorses. Don't They?" Jane Fonda gives one of her best performances ln this drama about marathon dancing with Michael Sarrazin and Oscar winner Gig Young from 1969. 12!.IO. MOVll! • • • .. By Love p~· (1H11 Lana Turner, Efrem Zlmballal Jr A wealthy attorney, ~Ing tor hlmMlt, le drtwn Into an affair Cl hr. 66mln.I CBS B 9:00 -"Murder at the Mardi Gras." A new TV movie set in New Orleans with Didi Conn and David Groh as tourists who find romance and danger • M0"1I * * * ··TMy OrM By Nlghi" C tf'()) ~pl\r*V 8oGAft. Ann Sherld..,. A duo of trudler• beCOml Involved with murder <¥· Ing one of their rune (2 11<1 I . NBC e 9:00 -Dean Martln Roast. Jimmy Stewart is tonight's roastee with guest star~ Orson Welles. Milton Berte. Janet Leagh . June Allyson. Mickey Rooney. Lucille Ball. Rich Little and others. Fo.t• llfOOU. Rldl Ut11e, Ruttl Buzzi and Oltlel'9. •• CHAN.IE'8 AHGB.9 .. Antique Angtll" 9oeleV and tM Anoe41t lnflftrate tit' ar1ttqUe auto rf/ty In tl'IW IMld\ tor ltolan ~ of•-~tuel e....vGM'M Oue111: Ectdy Arnold. SHelds and Yarnell. Heny ~ and SMCI. CMe 1Stm0. Jim Olovennl, Dena v,..,,, ............ Thofnla. • AU8TIN cny UMfT8 •·Merta Haggard An<I Ttle Stranoer-'' Melte and hll bind perform .. Sliver Wlnga... "San Antonio AoM:· "Old fUlllOned Love" end "Wortdng Men C•n•t Get Nowhere 10:00 ti'9 .. ITAMK't' & HUTCH .. Quadromenlt .. Hutch poeea u • cabble In an attempt to eepture a Ye119WI09 Meklng killer wflO hU llllled lour taxi dl1d1 I •WdJ. I = MAKIA DEAL 1VAUCTION ~ ** .. Sc*lt Of The w ..... C 19321 Hoot Olbeon A eowt>oy pt91end1 to be dulMwttted In • IChenl9 to -• g1r1·1 ~ (1 hr . 30mln.) =1u=NEWS **"' '"The LMt Wagon .. ''*' Alc:Nfd Wldmarti, FtllQa Ferr. On hla W9)' to be hengld •• ·conv1c1ec1 ~tum. hero and bfingl .,. young people ufety ttwough tM Mione wll<ll. CD MOVIE * * "A Nice Little Sri {!_hra.) That Sl'loUld Be Robbed" • THIOOOCOUP&.E (19581 Tom Ewell, Mldley Oecat dec:ldee to ""' tor Rooney Aller Ullng up city counc:llmen wtlerl he fund• from ''*' tlr11 be'* ...,,,. ,hit• pet1I he uMd robtMHy. 1 pelf of 111\41- to pity In II ttie Ill• of a teun plan another ( 1 hr • ,_ Offtoa buldlng. 30 INl'I I • MONTY '"'1'HON'8 1t:S7 8 (I) KOJAK FlYINGCMCUS ··t Wu Happy Whete t U:tO. Cl) HAWAII RV5-0 WM" In .,, •ttempl to ....,. Once, 8elt Twice.. IOIW a MriN of muroere. McOarren -NmMll • • young Puerto Ricen olfl. tM tialt to tur• a lley Wit· cer 11 btougl'lt bec:tc to ,_ llQlllll1 1 gamt>llng -or1l und«oowr In hla Old oe>eratlon out ot hiding neighborhood IRI befOfl the Irie! (RI • 9 A8C MYSTERY G TOHIOHT MCME Hoit· Johnny Carson * * 'OHth 1,. Oeeo Oueata: Mac; Davia. CtrOI Water" I 19751 8'adlord Neblett, Erma Bombed!, Olllman, Suzan Fllfmllf. A Aofwly °'**"· former member ot an 9 LOYI. AMERICAN ArneriCart crime 1~•11 IT't'U .. pur9Ued by htl e•-col- "LOW And The Married fuguH lo • 8fllllll Bldlllof.. Larry pretends MUhore v111age. ttlal he'1 ll'lllTted to keec> 1:00 D TOMORROW Illa glflfrlencM tt bey. Don Rickie• wlll dlecuaa 1111 .. Low And Tiie Mllo.ed CAf9er .. u comedl~ and Mllriage .. A medical mix· Kt«. up c:naM PfobMmt tor D I SPY • ~and JoM. ··Suttable For framing" •a -----+-~ ... ._JEWS ··~ In The Middle" A 2:00 I • ., NEWS dlltlonlst pollotn\en de¥· • MOVIE i... a ac:Mrne to rnlltle • * "Saveoe Seaaon .. hlmMlllOolt ~. (R) (19701 Aon HtrPer. Oitne • THATGIN. Mc8tirt A tr._,,e of rare ..The 0\. ·· platinum IMOt to an unu· • GET~ IUal CfllN ecroM the •"TheJ<Jng UYMr Mu. en deMrt (2 hrl I Uacl look-ellk• for !tie 2:15. MOVIE King. tgr9ll to t•e his • * • .. Mirege t 19651 ~ .. a decoy Gregory Peck. Ooone • M/l.CNEl/LEHAEA Btktr A p1ycr1111r111 RIJIORT doubt• his p1t1en1·1 .-.RNING arnneeia. but ·-to -.. helO him anar becoming 12:00. l'MUGHT ZONE •nvoiv.cl In a _... 01 A 1111.,_<()ld Cfllld has en strange _,.. (2 11rt . tO en1" towll ten1fled ol him. min.) I~ ::1: Meeting• tnend from out 1 • *°" .. 01 Love And NBC Can't Roll on 'Wheels' Alone NEW YORK <AP I NBC scored with the first chapter or "Wheels." a miniseries based on the novel by Arthur Hailey, but 1t was the network·s only entry among the week's 20 most-watched shows, A. C. Nielsen Company fi gures show. ABC. meanwhile. was hrst again in the standings. Esther Rolle Rejoins Show LOS ANGELES CAP ) -Esther Rolle will return to the CBS comedy "Good Times" in the fall after a year's absence. NBC won the ratings race two weeks ago with. its -''lto)ocaual" miniseries, but "Wheels" -the first episode Sunday night was No. 6 for the week ending May 7 -was far less controversial and received re· latively liUle advance attention. ABC's "THREE'S Company" was the week's most-watched show. as it had been often during the fall and winter. followed by two CBS pro· grams. "M·A·S·H" and "One Day at a Time." Another ABC program. "Laverne and Shirley." ranked ftrst by Nielsen for the fall-winter season, had the same rating as "One Day at a Time" but claimed a smaller sbal"e of the audience watching at the lime it was shown. THE NETWORKS SAY that means in ao average prime.time minute, 18.4 percent or the homes in the coun· try with television were tUAed to ABC. CBS and ABC had two shows at the bottom of the list of 66. ABC's "Mel and Susan Show" was No. 62, NBC's .. Hanna-Barbera Happy Hour" No. 63. "Sugar Time" on ABC No. 64 and two CBS programs. "The Rita Moreno Show" and "CBS Reports" 6Sth and 66th. Here are the week's Top lOsbows : "THREE'S COMPANY." with a "Fantasy Island.'' "Carter t:oun· try" and .. The Phenomenon of Ben· jl." all ABC; "Elvis in Coneert." CBS; "What's HapP.ening:· ABC: "All in the Family · and "Hawaii Five·O." both CBS. and "Barney Miller." "Battle or the Network Stars" and "Starsky and Hutch." all ABC . 'Bud and Lou' 1VFilm Set LOS ANGELES <AP> -Harvey Korman will play Bud Abbottand Bud· dy Hackett will be Lou Costello in the NBC movie about the famous comedy team. "Bud and Lou." Oe1lr•.. c 19831 Merle 00.on. s .... Coc::nr.,. A .-lthy -"1~ lo ...,,. behlnCI lier 10r<lid put by ~ 1"' men Iha io-. 11 hr., 66 rn1n I • MOVIE • • • .. Force Of Evtr' I 11M81 JoM Oet1leld. Man. WlndtOf A ttmlly ~ ble lnllde tM nwnbera. ..,ndlQta ~ to break"' ~In the~ (I hra.) '-'00111 MOVla • • ~ .. Slaugh I., On leftth Avenue'" C 1H7...- Rlchatd Egan, Jan S~ Ing. Aller an honHI pier boM It murdered, inv9U. gatort have !rouble obtllnlng lnformttlon tror11 dodt won.era (2 hrs I ':211 ITIVI EDWAAOS NEWS 4:30 MOVIE • * .. Rendezvour At Midnight" ( 19351 Ralpll ltllemy. VAierie HJobton. The new po11oe c:omm11- 111oner begin• en 1nw11ig.. lion Into the dMtll °' .... pt9decelor ( 1 I'll' • 30 min.~ • MOW! •• .. Mart Need&~ women.. 11964) Tommy Klrtl, VYOMe CrliO. A U.S. deOOdWIO cen1ar r_,.._ a ITl)'Ster10u1 measage trom Men w111c11 demands women p hr • 30 min I Tluar•datf• Bayt I•~ Hovi~• MORNING 11:30. * * ·~ "Homecom.ng .. (10481 Clartc Gable. Lane Turner. A IOCfety doc:lOt teem• new v•"-on the bettlefleld wtlen hi• mirM dlel of wound• tntllcted by Iha enemy. (2 hrs.. 20 min.) AFTERNOON tt:OOG ._._.,. "Salkate11-an•· I 19541 Alan Ladd, Shelley Wlnten A Canadian Mounled Potioe inseleCtOf and -Indian triende <1r1ve the Slou• lndlant terOM the border CI I'll'., 30IM'I.) 3:00 9 * * '~ "The Arrange- ment" ( t968) Klrtl ~ Faye Ountw11y. An ldvef· llalng exacutMI aearc:ntl tor munono in a lite thl'I ~ tnerelr'/ a --ol empty rOlel ( 1 hr .• 30 mtn.t 3:30 •••• ··n.e Time Mechine" I 19801 Rod Taylor. V.,e Mlmlewi. A; eoientltt \'11111 the future wtlh fha UN of 1111 time mllCttlne (I hr .• 30 min.I The ~how dropped in the ratings after ~1ss Rolle quit the show, leaving the children without parents. Earlier, John Amos had left the show. The ratin~ for "Three's Company" was 28.7. Nielsen says that means or all the homes in the country with TV. 28.7 percent saw _at least part or the program. 28. 7 rating representing 20.9 million homes, ABC; "M·A·S·H," 28.4 or 20.7 milliou, CBS; "One Day at a Time." CBS. and "Laverne and Shirley." ABC, both 26.7 or 19.S million; "Hap· PY Days," 23.8 or 17.4 million, ABC; Big Event. "Wheels." Part I, 23.2 or 16.9 million, NBC; "60 Minutes," 22.6 or 16.S million. CBS; "Charlie's Angels," 22.S or 16.3 million, and "Love Boat:· 22.3 or 16.3 million. both ABC. and "Lou Gr.ant.'' 22.1 or 16. l million, CBS. Red Button will portray Eddie Sherman, the comedy team's managerinthetwo-hourfilm. Dream Reali:ed? During past year Miss Rolle starred i~ .Broadway in "Macbeth" and just fm1shed the CBS movie "I Know Why the Caged Bird Stn~s." She will also star tn a movie for NBC. "The Summer of My German Soldier.·· ABC claimed five of the week 's 10 top-rated shows -and 12 of the first 20. CBS had seven of the top 20. The confi-guraUon contributed to a rating for the week for A BC or 18.4. CBS was second al 17.3 and NBC third at 15.5. The next 10 shows : WINNER OF 7ACADEMY A~~~DS Best Ortgtnal Score Beat Film Editing Beet Coatume De8lgn ' . r w·.·· . NEWPORT . c~, ... .a • . . . . . ' . '. Mon-Fri 7:30, 10:00 a.tllun 12:00 2!30, 5:8!>1 7:30, 10:uu "HOUSE CALLS" (PG) MOH/fRl~-00 SAT ISU-«H.16 "FM" lPG) OAIL'f' ..... tO SAT/tu~IO "BOYS IN COMPANY C' (R) "THE LAST DETAIL" "THE l:AST WALTZ'" "PHANTOM OF PARAot$£" "SATURb~V NIGHT FMA" "LIFEGUARD" George Lefferts based his script on Bob Thomas' book about the off. camera feuding between the-two com- edians. SM MW tM ""''' fomo1U womo11 111 IM worlJ. He W4I o peaottt, ~ pitou, " .Urlr. Wluu lu '°""• '• hy wldt rrumey lee .rtolc wide d1onn. r Didi Conn stc.trs us a has h house cashier from Cle\·elunrt who wins a trip to New Orleans in the TV movie "Murder at the Mardi Grus .. tonight al 9 on CBS. Channel z. ''F·l·S·T" 1