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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-05-23 - Orange Coast Piloti 7 • , 0 on ISe • . DAILY PILOT .Jimmg Durante Enters TUESDA Y A FTERNOON, MAY 23, 1978 Santa Jtloniea Hospital • ·* * * 10' * * * YOL. 11, NO. Ml, I l&CTH*S, a PAHi • • • • e Rape Suspect Captured EXTORTION TARGET Newport's Presley :Cruise Ship .Bomb Threat Being Probed LONDON CA P> -The Mini stry of Defense announced that a three·man bomb-disposal team left a British base late to- day to parachute onto the cruise hner Oriana ofr the Azores after a born b threat was received. The ~hip has 2.400 people aboard. The announcement said the team left the Royal Air Force transport base at Lyneham m a Hercules plane. T he bomb threat was con- t a m ed in a letter delivered earlier in the day to the London office of P & 0 Steam Naviga. tion Co .. owners of the 43,34~ton liner. P & 0 said the threat was turned over lo Scotland Yard, which alerted the Ministry of Defense. Capt. PbiJip Jackson, master of the Oriana, was also advised by radio, a P & 0 spokesman said. The company said Jackson or dered a search of his ship, which <Stt THREAT, Page AZ> "'"""' Our8nte ... NB Cops Capture Suspect By JOANNE R EYNOLDS Ol .. Oel.., ........... Newport Beach police used $250,000 in play money Monday night to capture a suspect they allege was trying to extort a quarter or a million dollars from Newport homebuilder Randall Presley. Undercover officers identified the suspect as Michael Edward Dempsey. 26, of Paramount. A second suspect is still sought. Police charge that the pair had threatened Presley's lire ir tie didn't deliver the $250,000. Dempsey was captured near Disneyland after a policeman. posing as Presley, left a brief- case stuffed with the phony cash in the back seat of Dempsey's car. The dozen officers who had s taked oul the parking lot where the car was left for delivery or the cash said they chased Dempsey about one mire. He was cornered after a minor col· lision involving a Garden Grove patrol car. Today, detective commander Richa rd Hamilton said a second man is being sought in connec· tion with the case which ap· parently had its roots in a finan· cial news story listing Presley's Newport Beach-based firm as one of the top 100 in Southern California. Hamllton noted that Presley's company bears his name and that he is listed in the telephone directory. Presley, a resident of Lldo Isle, first went to police on May 15. He told investigators that the preceding night be had received a vaguely threatening phone caJJ. <See PRESLEY. Page AZ> Comic Durante Hospitalized •'For TestinS' SANTA MONICA CAP> Comedian Jtmmy Durante, 85, bu been admlWKI to St. John's Hospital where he la undergoing treatment for an u pper respiratory infection. a spokeswoman said today. The famed "Scbnouola .. was reported in aatiafactory condl· lion. Spokeswoman Peccy Frank Sha.ff sald Durante was adJnllt.d Saturday ud WU U • peeled to be bolpttallzed "for about a week." Durante'• wife Marjorie, reached by telephone In the couple's Beverly HUJa home. satd she expected to know Sat.er today bow long ber husband would be bc»pit.Jlzed. She said ~nt.e wH • • for Hiit leatl.'' Workers construct a concrete vault in a cemetery al Vevey, Switzerland, where the body of CharJie Chaplin was reburied APWI,..._.. today. The vault is designed to insure against his body being kidnapped again. Guilty Plea Tossed Out? Ruling Based on· 'Sam's' Compemeney Exam NEW YORK CAPl -David Berkowitz's guilty pleas in the six Son or Sam murders couJd be tossed out because of the violent courtroom outburst that delayed his sentencing, legal experts say. Jf a new psychiatric examina- tion ordered Monday finds Berkowitz incompetent - despite two earlier rultngs of competency -the Judges would have no choice but to throw out the guilty pleas made May 8 to six murders and seven attempt- ed murders, the experts said. Purse Snatch Wot 81,800 Berkowitz would then have to be found competent again before criminal proceedings could re- sume, a process that could take years. In New York state, final judg- ment is entered in a case onfy after sentence bas ~en passed Therefore, in a tecb01cal sense. the guilty pleas have not been accepted as final. Berkowitz bad been scheduled to be sentenced Monday for the .44-caliber shootings that ter- rorized New York last year, but · be became violent in two separate lncidents that left three · court officers Injured, inchlding one with a bite on the lert arm. Arter h1s secood outburst, ln wblcb he called his victim a whore and said that lf he bact'tt to do over, "I'd klll her again," he was drageed from the coul1room A touriat wbo set down her and the proceedings were purse containing $1,800 ln postponedunUJJunel.2. valuables while abe sbOPped at a Under pre-sentence provisions Costa Mesa store Monday of law, the court bad a rtght, turned around momenta lat.er to wbl"(!h state Supreme Court flnd the baa ml.ulna. Justice Joteph Corso exerclaed, Police said EUubelh OJenn to order a new psycblatrlc Barrymore. 32, of Ketchum. ex~r ·round lncom petent. ldJho, loat a tt,300 ne•oUable Berkowls would then llkeJy be check, '800 ln pesos, SUO ln cash turned over to authorities from and her l&O baa. the State Deoartm.at of Mental The theft occurred at Sea Hysiene. who woul~ commit '"..ta7 18' ...... ~ --IH>itlff~IHln-&o • ........ peyC!hlaUi~ Jn. Hld. 1tlt\1Uon. .. There would be periodic ex· aminatlons. and If Berkowitz were deemed competent, the case would once again be ready for trial. Then Berkowitz could either take his lawyers' advice oC an insanity defense or once again plead guilty. ln the event he is found com- petent in his latest examination. he would be sentenced on June 12. M.4DDY W ANIS TAX DEBATE LOS ANGELES CAP l RepubUcan gubernatorial can· didate Ken Maddy challenged primary opponents Ed Davis and Evelle Younaer today to de· bate bitn on the mertts of the Jarvia tax inJUative. '"The pubJtc 13 incensed." he told a news conference. "This is what we 1hould be talking about.·· Maddy, Auemblyman from Fresno. la the only one of the three candidates woo oppoaes Propoaltlon H . which tax trusader Howard Jarvis co- 1utbored. F'ellow GOP hopofuJ Pett WUlbo, San Dle10 1 mayor, alao OppoMS l>ropoalUon 13. Viejo Man Held By Police BJ P IDLIP ROSMARIN Of .. DllllY ~,..., A Mission Viejo man who police said had been confined until receoUy for sex crimes was arrested Monday and charged with the rape and brutal beatmg of an El Toro schoolgirl. Booked at Orange County Jail early today on a charge of at. templed ·murder was Warren Dale Clewell, 28, a short.order cook. He was held on $250.000 bail. Irvine pohcc Lt. Jerry Boyd said additional charges of kid- napping with intent to comm11 bodily harm, and rape, would be sought today. Boyd said investigation con firmed a report that Clewell wa" released two months ago from Atascadero State Hospital for the~riminaJJy disturbed. Clewell had been under treat. ment for rape and kidnap of fenses for an undisclosed period ortime. according to police He was arrested JUSt after 4 • p.m. Monday in Santa Ana by Irvine detectives acting on in-~ formation from an•'alfonymous ~ informant. • The victim or the c rime With : which Clewell is charged, a 13- y ear -old girl. r emained in · serious but stable condition to- day at a hospital. She was kidnapped last Thurs- day as she walked home from Serrano Intermediate School. Her a bductor forced her into what she said was a dirty whitt· Cadillac. She told police he drove her lll <See SUSPECT, Page A2 > Coa.·t Weather Considerable low cloudi- ness through Wednesday, becoming mostly sunny Wednesd ay a fte rnoon. Lows toni ght 52 to 58. Highs Wednesday 64 to 68. INSIDE T ODA" WiUfam "Digger" Young Jr .• an uffdtrlaktr. lovt~ clowning around. See 3toru Pogt A9. \ " .U ~LYPILOT s T.-ci!y May 23. Hl7' Teen Tells of Sex Plot A 16 year old Hunt1n1Hoo Beach youth tesll.f1ed Monday lo Orange County Superior Court that defendant Sheldon David Diamond took him to a Lagunct Hills hotel last f'eb. 27 where M was to have homosexual rela- tions with a wealthy busi- nessman from New York. The student testified shortly a fter the non-jury trial opened 10 Judge J a mes K . Turner's courtroom that Diamond told him be would receive half or the $200 fee they would receive from Diamond's client. The young witness told Judge Turne r that h e ag r eed to participate with the New York bus1nessm1ln in sex acts In re- turn for the $100 lee. And the wtlness testified that he had P4lrformed similar sexual acts on prior occasions during the eight months be had known Diamond who often visited him at hls llunUngt.on Beach home. S heriff's offlcers booked Diamond. 31. of Los Angeles on charges or pimping and pander- ing after an investigator who posed as the wealthy busi- nessman from New York arrest- ed Diamond in a room at tbe Holiday Inn before any sex acts could taJce place. The investigator. who will ap- pear as a prosecution witness, said he paid 1'1amond $200 with the understand.uic that the HWlt· \ngton Beach youth brought to the hotel would recel ve $100. lt is alleged by the prosecution that Diamond had a number Of boys, ranging in age from 11 to 16. on b.iS books. All were readlJy available for male cllent.a seek. lng homosexual relationships, omcers said. Diamond Is being held ln the county jall with bail set at ~.000. Shot Down i• '71 Undenrorld Chief Colombo Succumbs l'f'091P~AJ NEWBURGH, N.Y. (AP> -Former underworld chieftain• part or a feud with the Gallo crime family. . SUSPECT CAPTURED. • • Joseph Colombo Sr., left alm06t totallr paralyzed by an aa- sassin s bullet seven years ago. died at St. Luke Hoepit.al here, hospital officials said today. He was 55. a dirt road in Irvine-little-used Barranca Parkway-raped her and beat her over the be.ad, thel) dumped her out or the car. Police. who at first thought the man had used a tire iron to split her face and fracture her skull in numerous places, now believe he may have used a large ~rench · The wrench is one of several objects sought today as police searched Clewell's home, where he was Jiving with his elderly parents. The child was round by a motorist who saw the little girl stumbling along the street, cov- ered with blood. Hospital surgeons patched her skull and face wounds, which re· quired hundreds of s titches. police said. The child's description of her attacker. which was published in newspapers. prompted dozens of caJJs from as far away as Santa FromeP~Al mREAT ... 1s carrymg 1.600 passengers and 800 crew. P & O would give no det ails of the threat or who made it. But it was obvious that the company, Scotland Yard and the Ministry of De fense were treating it seriously The Oriana left Southampton Saturday for a 20-day Caribbean cruise. The vessel was reported to be north of the Azores in the Atlantic at the moment. "We are not sur~ yet whether passengers will be evacuated." the P & O spokesman said. Dog Lover losrs Life BALTIMORE <API Chester A. Marshall's con- cern for a stray puppy cost him his life. pol ice said. The 23 -yea r -old Baltimore man saw the puppy running on In- terstate 95 Monday night and. fearing the puppy might get hit by a car, at- tempted to catch it. The puppy ran from hlm and was hit by a car. As MarshaJI tried to help the animal, the puppy turned on him, po lice said . Marshall jumped to safety atop a bridge raiJing, but lost his bala nce and plunged about 60 reel to his death, police said. Sex Law R ej ected SAN DIEGO <AP> -A st.ate appeals court bas thrown out San Diego's ordinance banning , "explicit sexual displays" on newsstands. The city law approved in 1976 is •'a sweeping invasion of a con- stitutionally protected area or _expression," said the 4th Dis- trict Court of Appeal in a 15· page opinion Monday. ORANOI COAST " DAILY PILOT Barbara. police said. The girl's description Lncluded her recollection ol a tattoo above the man's left elbow: "T.C. Tr iumph." Boyd said today ah old tattoo on ClewelJ 's arm, covered by a new tattoo police believe to be only days old, showed the letters "T.C." with a following word ob- scured. poyd said the fresh tattoo was otitained at a Los Angeles tattoo shop. Police a lso reported they believe Clewell shaved orr a mustache and cut his hair. in a crude job with a razor blade, to further change hjs appearance. He said preliminary searching or Clewell's house las t night and early this morning uncovered sandals, a shirt and glasses that were described by the child. Police also said they found a sc uba wet s uit in Clewell's bedroom. The girl had said she saw a wetsuit in the back seat of the Cadillac. Those articles and others were being examined today at the Orange County Sheriff's crime laboratory. Boyd said the girl would not be asked lo identify Clewell for several days. Her vision still is partly impaired because of her injuries. Residents of the area where the child lives have started a fund to help pay for plastic sur- gery doctors say she will need. Donations are being sent to Great Western Savings, Box 2369, Laguna Hills, 92653. in care of "Lake Forest Friends." Colombo. gunn~ down in 1971 at an Italian-American Day ral- ly in Columbus Circle in mid- Manhattan, died Monday night. the hospital said. He had been admitted in a semicomatose state on May 6. Dr. John C. Bivona Jr., who was attending Colombo. said death resulted from long-term complications stemming from bis injuries. The immediate cause of death was cardiac ar- rest, he said. A hospital spokesman said the former mob leader "passed away very quietJy." Colombo had been unable to lead an active life as a busi- nessman. an Italian-American civic leader and, according to authorities, one or the nation's most powerful underworld leaders since be was shot in the bead at close range three times during the raJly. He required round-the-clock nursing care. He could not t.alk nor write, and, except for the thumb and rorefln&er on bis rtght hand, he could not move. For mucb of the time since the Italian Unity Day rally shooting. he was semicomatose. A co-founder of the Italian- American Civil Rights League, Colombo was shot by Jerome J obnson on June 28, 1971. Johnson, 24, was fatally shot on the spot. Johnson was not a known m ember of the un· derworld, but the shooting wu considered by authorities to be Warrants Needed Workplaee Search Curbed by Court WASIUNGTON <AP > -The U.S. Supreme Court, voting 5-3. ruled today that the federal government may not make unannounced inspections or the nation's workplaces unless it rirst obtains a search warrant. The court struck down as unconstitutional a portion or the Occupational Safety and Health Act that has allowed Labor Department inspectors to carry out some 400,000 spot checks of factories and other business places since 1971. The Constitution's protection against unreasonable searches applies to commercial premises as well as homes. the court said in an opinion written by Justice Byron R. White. Today's decision upheld a 1976 ruling by a three-judge federal court in Idaho that government ins pectors must fit'15t prove to a judge or magistrate that they have "probable cause" to believe safety hazards exist at a certain work~lace. The court s ruling virtually guts the Labor Department's strategy of keeping prlvate employers alert to safety ne.da by holding over thom the possibility or a surprise via1t by government inspectors. Government lawyers had argued that "the errecUvenest ot the ·inspection syst~m would be largely nulllfied tr an employer could gain signlllcanl delay by refusing to permit an Inspection without a warrant." More than 6 million Industry a nd business locations are subject to checks by the 1,300 field officers or the Labor De partment's Occupallonal Safety an d H ea lth Adml~traUon. The U.S . Ch am b er o f Commerce. lo 1 statement by President Richard L. IAtbtr. praised the decltlOft, aa)'in1: "The business commUJtfty ..• a n d the 75 mllllon people earning paycheeka tn tb• private sector should be deJ,hted wtth thi• blow for freedom. ' The court also threw out an ot>sccnity convic:Uon on 1J"OUll4I the triaJ Judce erroneously lnslr uc:ted the Jqry to coDlider children a potAtntlal t~r1et of the obscene maleftal nen tbou«h there wu no evkllMe they bad recelved any. When deeldJns It m a terial violates • community &t.andard oLobutajlr •• a~ a~aUy m ~ • in the community when there is no evidence they were the i ntended recipients of the material, the Supreme Court agreed unanimously. How eve r , t he court split sharply over other related points on what instructions a jury should be given in obscenity cases. The ruling reversed a 1976 conviction agalnat Los Angeles distributor William Pinkus, who was sentenced to rour yean in jail and riMd $5.500. The court ruling permits Plnkus to be retried. UuterOKs TuvAirbome C.Ommand Jets WASHINGTON (AP> -Presl· den t Carter, roveralng his earlier decision, has approved Pentaioo plana for two more ul· lraaophlatlcated flyln" war room•. wh tch the natlon'a leader• could use to command U.S. forces in a nuclear war. Tbe addition a l Air borne Emer1ency Command Poets. at about $128 mi11ion each, would be thla country'• moat costly aircraft. Three of the Jumbo Jets are already operatlna. The fourth. with more advanced equipment. 11 belo1 readied for service nest year. Shortly after be became preal· dent laat year. Carter was briefed aboard one of the E4A command planet by members ot the mllitar)' baWo staff who wo u ld run the airc r aft's elaborate equipment tn time ol war. The planes would provide a haven for the pretldent and top clvlllan .and mWtary leaden In the event a nuc111r atteek threatened dettructloa of tbe eaplt.at. An er that fll~t. C.n er, ,._ Porltdly ~ed at the CQlt of lh• added Dtaw. told Dd._ S.Cretary :karold Brown fn fl, fe<:t not to buy tbe planned am. •nd. t lstb mcKWa. The m·plane ~ had b4MD :/Sl'n~.-. bJ._.tl!!.._ rcn • lm m e diate ly afterwards . power-hungry mobsters seized whatever Colombo's associates could not protect in the Colombo crime empire. Weighing In In 1968 Colombo was identified in the Congressional Record as a com missione r or the Cosa Nostra, as it was then called, and as a boss of the former Joseph Profaci crime family. ·A week-old peregrine falcon suffers the indignity of being weighed al a w1ldltfr center near Fort Colltns. Colo . devoted to saving the species from extinction. Murder Pretrial Begins 7 Bovan Killing Defendants Argue Motions Lawyers for seven defendants allegedly involved ln the murder of Stephen John Bovan of Foun- tain Valley continued today to argue pretrial motions that are expected to take several weeks in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Robert P. Kneeland is presiding over pretrial action which includes a defense motion that murder indictments re- turned by the grand jury are de· fective and should be dis missed. Defense lawyen ar1ued Mon - .day that evidence favorable to their clients was omitted from grand jury presentations and that the murder charges are based on evidence heavily weighted in favor of the prosecu· ti on. Other motions to be argued in- elude motions for dismissal. mo- tions for separate trials and ll motion for a court order that would compel a key prosecution witness to take a lie detector lest. All seven defendants are ac- cused or involvement in the kill· mg of Bovan, 36, who was shot nine times outside the El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Beach on Oct. 22, 1977. Jerry Peter Fiori. 41. of Hunt- ington Beach Is charged with the actuaJ killing a nd faces the possibility of a death penalty sentence. De fense attorney Roger Rosen, representing Fiori. told Judge Kneeland Monday that his client is not being allowed to ex- ercise in the county jail aod is being held for 24 hours a day in Did House Members Get Korean Cash? WASHINGTON fAP > -In- vestigators have circumstantial evidence that some present House members might have taken envelopes stuffed with $100 bills from a former South Korean ambassador, sources said today. But the House ethics commit· tee sources said none o(. the evidence is strong enough to pursue without for mer Am- bassador Kim Dong Jo's testimony. The sources, asking not to be identified, said the evidence is so circumstantial and vague that it is hard even to say how many current congressmen might have taken the money, but something like 10 ts more ac- curate than any higher range. "You really shouldn't play the numbers game," one in - vestigator said. "It ls hard to de- fine who you include and who you don't." The possibility that the House ethics commiUee has any sus- pects at all was leaked for the A few ye1rs ago General Electric created a few gem· size. fine quality diamond• as an experiment. These stones were given 10 !tie Smithton.an. They ..,_ extremely e11pen11ve to prOduce. much more ex· pensive than tlklno diamonds out of the ground. Neverthe- less. the resoll.nt publicity or GE's on.time expenment has led many people to be deceived into bellevlng that lmi!:\1on diamonds made from COi ... synthetic material are ecru.Hy synthetic diamonds. To com· pound lhe problem, some manufactUNra end sellert ot this materi al have given 11 name• 1na1 auggest diamond· like metef1al. No materlal 11 •te1rry dtamonO-like, no mattef what 11 la called. No gem approacnea diamond In herdn .. 1. In II• ab11tty 10 .-..l1t 10tatch1no anci. thua. It• ability to r8tain 1ta brllllance. first time on the eve of a com- mittee vote on whe ther the House should threaten to cut South Korea ·s economic aid in an e ffort to get the k m· bassador's testimony. The House International ela- tions Committee had planned to vote on a resolution softening the threat this morning but put off action until later in the day. if then. Leon Jaworski, the House e thics committee's s p ecia l counsel. and House leaders worked out a resolution that would state that no further U.S. economic aid should be voted for Seoul until the ambassador answers questions under oath. Committee leaders were try- ing to work out a compromise to say only that South Korea 's cooperation s hould be con- s ide red by Congress when it votes on aid for Seoul. The former ambassador was accused at public hearings of trying to give the envelopes stuffed with money to as many as 24 House 111embers. @ EiEM WISE a three.root by nine-foot cell. Flori ls one of three defen- dants . who. the prosecution claims . were imported he re from the East Coast when a con- tract was put out for the murder 1 or Bovao. It is alleged that the contract was authorized when Bovan and others who are expected to ap- pear as prosecution witnesses arranged for the kidnapping or Alexander Kulik , 28, of Newport Beach, who is one of the seven defendants. Police claim the murder of Bovan brought into focus a multi-mUlion dollar drug smug- gling ring which concealed its revenues in the asset.a or out- wardly respectable business operations in Orange County. It is alleged that partners in Prasadam Distributing Inc. of Newport Beach ordered the kill· ing o! Bovan and brought Fiori and two compa n ions to California for that purpose. Police claim that members ot the Hare Krishna movement - played a major role in the opera- tions or Prasadam. ,.,.... Page A l PRESLEY .•. Hamilton said that during the inves tigation or t he case, Presley received more Qtreaten- ing calls and a threatebing let· ter. At one point. last Wednesday. fours shots from a .4S-caliber gun were fired into Presley's waterfront home. Hamilton said no one was injured. Detectives are convinced there are at least two men in- vol ved in the scheme, he said, "because we heard two separate voices in the phone calls." Hamilton said Dempsey bas had Ii ttle to say other than to tell police, "I'm afraid for my Jife. I 'll just go back to prison." Hamilton declined to comment on the location of Presley or bis family other than to note that they are being protected by bodyguards. Dempsey is being he ld in city jall in lieu of $10,000 bail. an even better 1m1ta11on being sold aa a diamond aub6t1tu1e. II •s called "cubic. urcon1a" (Zr02). A nicely IJIQeled CZ ap- pears 10 be mUd\ more con· v1ncmg than 811Y of the other diamond 1mltattona and can pose a definite 1dent1tlcat1on problem to the unwary. Well. thia jeweler cen always lell. Gemo1og1cal tra1n1ng and years of expeoence gives me this confidence, and my custom~ benefit from my ltnow .... Diamond lmllatlone have • thalf place • • • lhet are co.- tum• i.weuy . : • •~to line jewelry. Thoee a.roe. flelhy ato~ .,. good tor ~tall pa.rty Chall.er. they ~ 8 IOI of ahock appeei and '*' be tun. Unfortun•tely, thtM ttonH acratcf\ and abrade com· -para11.,.1y MOily and thtlr grit· wr turna to gloom. Then ~ bo4y. noc only your jew9ter. will know for sure. When • campaign wH launched to mat1t•t Y .A.a • couple of YN't ago. th• ate• ment w .. oftetl mllde lhat not even a leMI« could 1111 the r• aJ from 1N t•. Now we h..-. CHARLES ff. BARR If you·o ttiw 10 ... a CZ. come 1n, we h..,. one on f\and to ahow ~ It Ja 8YI 111 harO- nesa !diamond la 10) and 11 ape ptOKl!Nttly 1,7 llmH ~avltir than c1i.mond. • • ......... Mwlcii .... hdfty ~c.... ·-~~~--~~~~~-----...... ~~- Orange Coast -::. , EDITION ' Today~s Closin(( N.Y. Stoeks \ VOL. 71, NO. 143, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY) CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1978 C TEN CENT~ Play Money Used in Capture Suspect Held • m Extortion . Aid Delayed Seoond Call Gives Location Costa Mesa police and firemen spent an anxious half hour today arter an elderly woman telephoned for help but, unable to hear the dispatcher, she hung up before making fh!ar her ad dress. For more than 30 minutes, un- til the woman called back at about 8:30 a.m . two patrol cars sped to possible locations and communications officers played and replayed a tape recording of the conversation while searching map books. ,The problem was that only the street number, not thf street na m e, were distinguishable on the tape in which the woman pleaded ror help, saying her daughter suffered a stroke and that she herself was ill Communications workers also placed telephone calls to possi· ble addresses but failed to locate Switches Stand the woman. Minutes before &he oalled bac k, police Lt. John Moquin said, "It worries the hell out of me because I know somewhere out there there's a little old lady wondering where the police and firemen are." When the woman call ed back. paramedic units wer e dis· p atched even before the call was completed: They reached the woman's north Costa Mesa home within minutes and reported that the daughter was in stable condition but drowsy. Pa ramedics were still at the scene almost an hour late r but said the woman would probably be transported to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. "I think when a person calls for help they're entitled to get it." L~. M'oquin said. "No ex· cuses." I Carter Approves Nuke War Rooms WASHI NGTON CAP) -Presa· dent Carte r . reversing his earlier decision. has approved Pentagon plans for two more uJ. trasoph1sticated flying war rooms, which the nation's leaders could use to command U S. forces in a nuclear war. The addition a l Airborne Emergency Command Posts. at about $126 million each . wouJd be this country's most costly aircr aft. Three of the jumbo jets are already operating. The fourth. with more advanced equipment. is ben~g readied for service next year . Shortly after he became pres1· dent last year. Carter was briefed aboard one of the E4A command planes by mervbers of MADDY WANTS TAX DEBATE LOS ANGELES CAP) Republican gubernatorial can· d1date Ken Maddy challenged prim ary opponents Ed Davis and Evelle Younger today to de · bale him on the merits of the Jarvis tax 1mt1at1ve. "The public 1s incensed ... he told a news conference. "This 1s what we s hould be talking about " Maddy. an assemblym an from Fresno. is the only one of the three candidates who opposes Proposition 13, which ta x crusader Howard Jarvis co- a uthored. Fellow GOP hopeful Pete Wilson, San Diego's mayor, also opposes Proposition 13 the military battle -staff who wou)d run the aircrart's elaborate equipment in time of war. The planes would provide a haven for the president and top civilian and miJitary leaders in the event a nuclear attack threatened destruction of the capital After that flight, Carter, re· portedly dismayed at the cost of the added planes, told Defense Secr etary Harold Brown in ef- fect not to buy the planned fifth and sixth models The six-plane Oeet had been originally planned by the Ford administration. Carter 's change of mind was indicated in a speech Monday by Assistant Defense Secretar y Gerald P. Dinneen at Hanscomb Air Force base. Mass. ·'The Defense Department has recently received from the While House approval to pro- ceed with the acquisition or a fleet of six . . . E4 aircraft." Dinneen said. He said the two aircraft would be purcnased in 1980 and 1981. Pentagon officials confirmed that the president approved a go.ahead for the two planes after Brown. in a review Carter ordered. reaffirmed the value of the program. rn peacetime, the aer ial com mand posts are assigned lo the Strategic Air Command, which always has one of the planes aloft. One E4 is kept ready for possi- ble presidential use at Andrews Air Force Base, Md .. outside Washington. The others are sta- tioned at SAC headquarters at Offutt Air force Base. Neb. _ Comedian. Durante Taking Treatment SANTA MONICA <AP l - Comedian Jimmy Durante, ss. has been admitted to St. John's Hospital where he ls undereoing treatment for an upper respiratory infection, a apokeawoman saJd today. The famed "ScbnozzoJa" wu reported ln eatJs!actory~condi· lion . Spokeswoman recu Frank Shaff said Durante wu ad mitted Saturday and was ex· peeled to be hospitalized "for about a week." · Durante's wif• Marjorie, reached by telephone in the couple'• Beverly Hllls home, u fd she eKJ>eCted to know Jater today how Iona her husband wouJCI be hospltaHzed. She aald Durante wu "In for aorne . .... -~ .. OLDEST MEDAL OF HONOR WINNER 101 YEARS OLD Wiiiiam Seach Visits With VA Chief Max Cleland Bero IOI O~st Living Medalist BROCKTON. Mass. <AP> -William Seach. oldest li ving re· cipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor. celebrates his lOlst birthday today almost 78 years after the Boxer Rebellion in which he perfo,rmed his valorous military service. Seach. a c'areer Navy man, is a patient at the Veterans Ad· ministration Hospital in Brockton. HE WAS CITED "FOR action with the relief expedition or the Allied forces m China during the battles of 13, 20, 21 , 22 June 1900 .. ~ach was part of a Naval Jandini party that was on a re· connalnance mission. At the time. he was an ordlnary seaman aboard the USS Newark. He aJso served In the Spanish-American War and World War I belorez.etiring as a lieutenant. SEACH HAS BEEN A PATIENT in the hospital's nursing home for three years. His wife. Caroline. 86. lives in South Weymouth. "This guy is sharp." said a hospital spokesman. "He's a lit· tie ha rd of hearing, but mentally he's very alert." Taubman Manager Of Fashion Island Irvine Company President Peter Kremer announced today that the Taubman Company Inc. wall assume management of Fas hion Island. the Irvine Company's regional shopping center in Newport Beach. Kerman made the an· nouncement at a morning meeting of the center's merchant_.iSsocialion. The Tin!bman Company is owned by A Alfred Taubman. one or the new owners of the Jrivinc Company and chairman or the land development finn's board of directors. No details were released about the terms of the management agreement. Irvine Company spokesman Martin Brower said Purse Snatch Loot $1,800 A tourist who set down her purse containing $1.800 in valuables while she s hopped at a Costa Mesa s tore Monday turned around moments later to find the bag missing. PoJlce said Elizabeth Glenn Barrymore, 32. of, Ketchu°" Idaho, 10&t a $1,300 negotiable check, S300 in pesos, $150 In cash and her S50 bag. the length or the managemenl contract and the money mvolvecf would be announced later. Such a m ove h a s been expected since Taubman a nd a consortium of investors bought the land company last summer for $337.4 million . Taubman Company Inc. is one of the nation's biggest regional shopping cente r developers The firm. which is based m Troy. Mich .. owns and oper ates 16 major shopping centers across the country _ Fashion Island. located In the middle of the Newport Center . includes six major department stores -Neiman -Marcus. Bullock's Wilshire. Robinson 's. Buffum's, The Broadway and J . C. Penney -as well as 80 other retail businesses. Kremer told the mcchants that the Irvine Company would retain ownership or Fas hion Island. Man Charged In Slaying KANSAS CITY. Mo. CAP> - The owner of an escort service. already charged with killing two of his young female emrloyees. faces two more counts o capital murder. Builder Tells of Threats By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI tM Dally l'l let Sutt Newport Beach police used $250,000 in play money Monday night to capture a suspect they allege was trying to extort a quarter of a million dollars from Newport homebuilder Randall Presley. Undercover officers identified the suspect as Michael Edward Dempsey. 26. of Paramount. A second suspect is still sought. Police cHarge that the pair had threatened Presley's life 1f he didn't deliver the 5250.000. Dem psey was captured near Disneyland after a policeman. posing as Presley. left a brief· ('ase stuffed with the phony cash in the back seat of Dempsey's ('ar. The dozen officers who had staked out the parking lot where the car was left for delivery or the cash said they c hased Dempsey about one mile He was c6rnered after a minor col· lision involving a Garden Grove patrol car. Today. detective commander Richard Ha milton said a second man 1s being sought in connec lion with the case which ap· parently had its roots in a finan· c1al news story listing Presley's Newport Beach-based firm as one of the top 100 in Soul.hem California. Hamllton noted that Presley's company bears his name and that he is listed in the telephone directory. Presley. a resident of Lido Isle. first went to police on May 15. He toJd investigators that the preceding night he had received a vaguely threatening phone call. Hamilton said that during the investigation of the case. Pres ley received more threaten ing calls and a threatening let· ter. At one point. last Wednesday. fours shots from a .4S·calibt'r gun were fired into Presley's waterfront home. Hamilton said no one was injured. Detectives .a re convinced there are at least two men in volved in the sche me. he said, "because we heard two separate voices in the phone calls." llamilton said Dempsey has had little to say other than to tell police. ''I'm af?aid for my life. I'll Just go back to prison." Ha milton declined to comment on the location of Presley or his family other than to note that they are being protected by bodyguards. Dempsey is being held m city jail in lieu of Sl0.000 bail Teen Admits Slaying Mom PITTSBURGH CAP> -A 14· year·old boy, who demanded at gunpoint that he be arrested. has been charged with murder for allegedly bea,ting his mother lo death with a pipe, poJlce said Edward Bathgate turned himself in to police Monday m o rning after driv in g his mother's car nearly 15 miles from their Beaver County mobile home. "I want to be arrested." the boy was quoted as telling Officer Alex Maxwell at the city'c; Public Safety Building. The boy reportedly had a silver·colored .25-caliber automatic weapon aimed at MaxweJI, but later sur· rende red the gun. T he theft occurred at Sea Suits, 837. W. 18th St., police said. James Michael McGuire. 29. Suicide Victim owner of QuaJlty Escort Service. Red Hideout Found waived a pre1hntnar1 bear1n1 • E"ound m· Fi·etd Monday in Jack1on County r1 ROME CAP> -A tert'Orls~ ragis~~=r C~::irt. tHbo r~j81~:1 The body of an Orange County hideout. P<>Hlbly used by \he n cus Jy .Wt ou n n e man who apparently committed Red 8rtgade1. waa discovered ln Jack&on County Jall. suicide was found ln a field In the nearby beach town ot OsUa 0Jle oC Ule char1ea flied the Cotta Mesa•Sanl4 Ana area durtna t Widespread telJICh for Monday In Wyandotte COunty early today. Santa Ana officers lb klUtn of former Premler Dlatrict C®rt accuses McGuire reported. Aldo Moro, polict said toda.y. of the February 1Jaytn1 of. a The man'1 ldenUt.y and details Police first reported the apart· former partner. advertl1tn1 about tho case were not Im· ment 1"H used by the Red eucuUve Robert Swope, 32. modtateJy avallabJt, otllcers Brlaadea, the aroup that kid· whole bod~ was ft>und in a .. ld. The man apparently llved napped Moro March 16 and partfM car. PoJlco 11ld ho bad on Sunllowtr Avenue and hla kllf ed h1 m 55 days lattr. but they been abot in the rt1ht aid• ol the body was (ound lltatby, potlce tartit;"'---;:----~~~--::-:--:::-111.1e.1~~~~~~·~1.!•ure!!!!~·-:--n~e~c~kU•~t~d~OM~ran-•_e_. ______ ~__,,••Jd.~~~~~~- • i,; EXTORTION TAR GET Newport's P resley Rites Slated For Newport's Mr. Aitchison Funeral services will be held Thursday for Newport Beach resident John Aitchi son. father in-law of Coast Comm unity College Dist rict Chancellor Norman Watson. Mr. A1tch1son died Mond<iy a1 the age of 8S A native of Scotland. Mr Ailch1;;on came to California an 1933 a nd lived in Northern California where ~ worked a.' plant manager for We ste rn Chem icaJ for 40 years. Following hla retl ... tnenl. he .moved to the Harbor Area. He leaves his daughter. Gwen· da Watson, three grandchildren and one great-grandson. Services will be conducted al 2 p m. at the Chapel of O'Connor Laguna Hill!> Mortuar y . 2530l Alicia Parkway. Laguna Hills Burial will follow in Ascension Cemetery. El Toro Reagan Raps 'Scare Talk' SAN FRANCISCO <AP 1 Forml'r California Gov. Rona!d Reagan s ay s thl' notly controversial Proposition 13 would "not only be beneficial to the business climate. but al!>o to the people of Cahforma . ·· At an impromptu nt>w' conf e r ence here !dond a ;. Reagan labeled a!; "scare talk" a r g u me n t s t h a I I h t' t ,, x r e duction m1t1a t1ve woulct crappie schools ~nd mun1C1pa! services Cit y Must Pay ,SAN DIEGO CAP• Tilt' Fourth District Court of Appeal has ruled that the City or San Diego must pay San Di~ Gas & Electric Co. more than S4 million for property the city in· eluded in its open.space plan. C o ast We athe r Considerable low doudt ness through Wednesday. becoming mostly sunny Wednesd ay a rtl'rnool' Lows tonight 52 to 58 Highs Wednesday 64 to 68 INSIDE TODA" William "Digge:-" Young Jr , en undertaker. love:; clowning around See story Page A9 l•dea .. a .. • ,,. .. .. .,~ .. " u M .... -- TONIGHT NEWPORT-MESA SCHOO!. BOA RD -Regular meeting. Costa Mesa city council cham bers, 7:30 p.m. "BEHIND THE HEADLINES" Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer. OCC Forum, 7:30 p.m. "COMEDIANS" -South Coast Repertory Theater. Tuesday-Sunday through June 11. 8 p.D\, WEDNESDAY, MAY Z4 COSTA MESA CITY COUN· ClL -Study session on freeway. 5th Floor conference room , 3:30 p.m COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. OCC DRAMA -"Creation of the World and Other Business." by Arthur Miller, Drama Lab Theater, May 24-27, 8 p.m Free. Teen Tells Of Coast Sex Plot A 16-year-old Huntington Beach youth testified Monday in Orange County Superior Court that defendant Sheldon David Diamond took him to a Laguna Hills hotel Jut Feb. 27 where he was to have homosexual rela- tions with a wealthy busi nessmanfrom New York. The student testified s hortly arter the non-jury trial opened in Judge James K . Turner's courtroom that Diamond told him he would receive half or the $200 fee they would receive from Diamond's client. The young witness told Judge Turner that he agreed to participate with the New York businessman in sex acts in re- turn for the $100 fee And the witness testified that he had performed similar sexual acts on prior occasions during the eight months he had known Diamond who oft.en visited hWr'l at his Huntington Beach home. S heriff's officers booked Diamond. 31. of Los Angeles on charges of pimping and pander- ing after an investigator who . posed as the wealthy busi ness man trom New York arrest· ed Diamond in a room at the Holida~ Ipn before any sex acts could toe place The investigator, who will ap- pear as a prosecution witness, ~aid he paid Diamond $200 with the understanding that the Hunt· ington Beach youth brought lo the hotel would receive SJOO. Jl is alleged by the prosecution that Diamond had a number of boys, ranging in age from 11 to 16, on his books. All were readily available for male clients seek ing homosexual relationships, omcers said. Diamond is being held in the county jail with bail set at $S0,000. Women's SessioD8 Planned at YMCA An informal rap program for women is being held every Thursday morning at the Orange Coast YMCA, under the sponsorship of the Y-Knots, the Y's women's division. Sessions begin at 11 :30 a.m. at the Y . 2300 University Drive. Newport Beach. For further in· formation call 642-9990. ·:Sex Law Rejected SAN DIEGO <AP> -A state "Appeals court has thrown out -San Diego's ordinance banning 'explicit sexual displays" on ewsstands. OflANOECOMT c DAILY PILOT . ...,. ...... "'·----,, ..... Qlrirf \/~•""'°' ... M-0.. .. Mon-. ~··-· 1414 ... "='a...~..i:- °'4,..., .. "-ltl<Ml9,. ... ,. '"'"1...i w,...11111•-• Coata MeH omc. uow."••.r~ """•l•"ll "'""'"" ,. Q ""' '* .,." Mobster Colombo • Sus peel Charged ID ·Hape I SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -·Attorney aeneral can- didates of both parties stUI are Jocked in an extrem~­ ly close battle for the nomination. according to the California Poll. which found large numbers or voters sttll undecided or uninformed on the race. Succumbs · By PlllUJ> ROSMARIN OI -o.lty rlle4 t!Aff A Ml11sion Vi~io mun who police said had been confined until recently for sex crimes was arrested Monday and char~ed with the rape and brutal beating of an El Toro schoolgirl. Booked at Orange County Jail early today on a charge of at tempted murder was Warren Dale Clewell. 28. a short-order cook. lie was held on $250.000 bail. Irvine police Lt Jerry Boyd said additional charges or ~· .napP.ing with intent to commit bodily harm. and rape, would be sought today. Boyd said investigation con- firmed a report that Clewell was released two months ago from Atascadero State Hospital for the criminaJly disturbed. Clewell had been under treat· ment for rape and kidnap of- fenses for an undisclosed period of time. according to pol ice. ~. was arrested just after 4 p.m. Monday in Santa Ana by Irvine detectives acting on in· formation from an anonymous informant. • The victim of the crime with which Clewell is charge·d. a 13· year-.old girl. remain.ed in serious but stable condition to- day at a hospital. She was kidnapped last Thurs- day as she walked home from Serrano Intermediate School. Her abductor forced her into what she said was a dirty white Cadillac She told police he drove her to a dirt road in lrvine-llttle-used Barranca Parkway-raped her and beat her over the head, then dumped her out of the car Police. who at first thought the man bad used a lire iron to split her face and fracture her skull in numerous places, now believe he may have used a large wrench. The wrench is one of several objects sought today as police searched Clewell's ho(Jle, where he was living with his elderly parents. The child was found by a motorist who saw the little girl slum bling along the street. cov· ered with blood. Hospital surgeons patabed her skull and face wounds, which re· quired hundreds of stitches. police said. The child's description of her attacker. whJch was published in newspapers, prompted dozens of calls from as far away as Santa Barbara. police said. The girl's description included her recollection of a tattoo above the man 's left elbow: "TC. Triumph.'' Boyd said today an old tattoo on Clewell's arm. covered by a new tattoo police believe to be only days old, showed the letters "T.C." with a following word ob· scured Boyd said the fresh tattoo was obtained at a Los Angeles tattoo shop MihlQuake Hit,s Oxnard OXNARD CAP> -A minor earthquake awakened residents in this Ventura County city early today. No damage was re ported. Pollster Mervin Field said today that U.S. Rep. Yvonne Burke and Los Angeles city attorney Burt Pines continue to divide almost evenly the votes of the 63 percent of .Qemocrats polled who committed themselves tu a candidate. Meanwhile. state Sen. George Deukmejian and former U.S. Attorney James Browning spHt lhe votes of the 49 percent of Republicans who have an oplnion in the race. Field said. The candidates have been nose·to-nose during Field ·s last three polls. The latest poll of 1.224 Californians shows Pines slightly ahead with 32 percent over Ms. Burke's 31 percent. while 37 percent of Democrats polled had no preference. On the GOP side. Deukmejian won 25 percent of the preference votes and Browning 24 per· cent. with 51 percent undecided. T?\c interviews for thP poll were conducted May 1·8. 2,480 People Abeard Cruise Vessel Hit By Bombing Scare LONDON CAP> -The Ministry of Defense announced that a three-man bomb-<lisposal team left a British base Jate to- day to parachute onto the cruise liner Oriana off the Azores after a bomb threat was received. The ship has 2,400 people aboard. The announcement said the team left the Royal Air Force transport base at Lyneham in a Hercules plane. The bomb threat was con- tained in a letter delivered earlier in the day to the London office of P & 0 Steam Naviga. ti on Co .. owners of the 43,340-ton liner. P & 0 said the threat was turned over to Scotland Yard. which alerted the Ministry of Defense. Capt. P hilip Jackson. master of the Oriana. was also advised by radio. a P & 0 spokes man said. The company said Jackson or- dered a search of his ship, which is cal'T)'tng 1.600 passengers and 800 crew. P & 0 would give no details of the threat or who made it. But it was obvious that the company. Scotland Yard and the Ministry of Defense were treating it seriously. The Oriana Jert Southampton Saturday for a 20-day Caribbean cruise. The vessel was reported to be 50 miles north of Graciosa Island in the Azores. "We are not sure yet whether passengers wHI be evacuated,·· the P & 0 spokesman said. Injured Tot Found LOS ANGELES <AP) -Eigh· teen hours after a 41h·month-old boy was believed kidnapped from his crib while his father grappled with an a rmed in· truder, officers found the child in an ln~lewood alley. NEWBURGH. N.Y. <AP> - Former underworld chieftain Joseph Colombo Sr .. left almosl totallr. paralyzed by an as· sassin s bullet seven years ago, died at St. Luke Hospital here, hospital officials said today. He was 54. Colombo. gunned down in 1971 at an ltalian·American Day ral- ly in Columbus Circle in mid· Manhattan. died Monday night. the hospitaJ said. He had been admitted in a semicomatose state on May 6. ~· • Dr. John C. Bivona Jr .. who was attending Colombo. said death resulted from long-term compJic~tions stemming f~om his inJuries . The immediate cause of death was cardiac ar· rest . he said. A hospital spokesman said the former mob leader "passed away very quietly." Colombo had been unable to lead an active life as a busi- nessman. an Italian-American civic leader and. according to authorities. one of the nation's most powerful underworld leaders since be was shot in the head at close range three times during the rally. He required round-the-clock nursing care. He could not talk nor write, and. except for the thumb and forefinger on his right hand. he could not move. For much of the lime since the Italian Unity Day rally shooting. he was semicomatose. A co-founder of the Italian· American Civil Rights League. Colombo was shot by Jerome Johnson on June 28, .1971. Johnson, 24. was fatally shot on the spot. Johnson was not a known m ember O[ the UO· derworld. but the shooting was considered by authorities to be part or a feud with the Gallo crime family. .,.Im mediately afterwards. power-hungry mobsters seized whatever Colombo's associates could not protect in the Colombo crime empire. In 1969 Colombo was identified in the Congressiooal Record as a com missioner of lhe Cosa Nostra. as it was then called. and as a boss of the former Joseph Profaci crime family. , Quake Shakes Japan; Tidal Wave Feared TOKYO <AP> -An earth- quake in the East China Sea rat· tied southern and western Japan today and authoties warned res· idents to brace for a possible "moderate" tidal wave in its wake Newport Nixes Plea By Ebsen for Pier Police said there w~re no im- mediate reports of casualties or damage on the southern islands nearest the quake. Yaku Jima and Kyushu. In Tokyo, the meteorological agency officials targeted the quake's center about 22 miles off the Japanese coast and said it registered four on a Japanese scale of seven. Newport Beach city coun· cilmen have turned down a re· quest by actor Buddy Ebsen to build a pier in front of his Balboa Island home. Councilmen further affirmed Monday that the pier that exists near the property line Ebsen shares with his neighbor. Carroll Beek, belongs to Mrs. Beek. The two neighbors got into a dispute over the existing dock. built by Mrs. Beek and her late husband 54 years ago, because Ebsen claimed he was given un· limited rights to use It in 1964. In a letter to city councilmen, Ebsen said Mrs. Beek has re- fused to honor that claim and he HEW Plans party asked permission to build his own dock. WASlilNGTON CAP> -The But councilmen noted that Department of Health. Educa-there Is a city policy prohibiting tion and Welfare. which spends construction of non-commercial structures would interfere with the beaches. The council members' objee- tions were similar lo a pos1t1on taken last month by members of the Joint Harbor Committee. a group that advises both the City Council and 1he county's Harbor Com mission. The committee's vote in op· position to Ebsen 's application was incorrectly reported in Saturday's Daily Pilot as being in favor of the actor's bid by the county Harbor Commission. The Harbor Commission didn't vole on the matter. Monday 's council vote was taken under the threat of legal action. The actor said he likely will take the matter to court. Ebsen said he believes the ex- isting pier is on his side of the property line and belongs to lfotpltalfzH ' Violinil>t Efrem z: mba!•st Sr .. 89. was listed ir. good cond1t1on today at St . M ary·s Hospllal in Rene . where he was undergoing trea ent for pneumonia. He was pilalized Friday. Airport~ ,7 • ' •artance Expected By JACKIE HYMAN Ol 1111 OllllY ...... 149" Newport Beach City Attorney Dennis O'Neil said today be ex· peels the State Department of Transportation to grant another variance from state noise Stan· dards to the Orange County Airport. O'Neil made his remark dur. ing a break in hearings held at the Orange County Courthouse on the county's application for a new variance to replace the one that expired in December. During that break. O'Neil said that. if the variance isn't grant ed. the airport would have to cut its scheduled jet flights from about 40 a day lo about four a day. "Realistically speaking. the variance is probably going to be ~ranted," he added. The morning's proceedings in· eluded O'Neif's questioning or Ai rporl Manager Robert Bresnahan about alternative sites for the commercial jets · that use the Orange County Airport. Bresnahan said he has looked at a variety or possible alternative airport sites 1n Orange County. including Los Alamitos Naval Air Station and El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta· taon. but declined to recommend any of the sates. He conceded that he believes it is possible to combine military and civilian uses at an airport. "The Southern California As· soctution o r Governments (SCAG > is about to undertake a new area s tudy to determine where best to meet· the air traf· fie needs of Orange County.·· Bresnahan said. Participating in the week-Ion~ hearing are the cities or Newport Beach and Tustin. the Santa Ana Heights Homeowners Association and the Community Airport Council. The hearings are expected to wind up Thursday. after which the state hearing omcer ir. charge will review the evidence and testimony and make a r~· Calte<:h seismologists rn Pasadena said the temblor, which registered 3.9 on the Richter scale, was centered in the Pacific Ocean about 20 miJes south of Oxnard. money at the rate of $500 million piers on the island because those a day, Is throwing a low budget--------------------------------"'--------birthday party to celebrate its him. om m endation toCalTrans . 25th year in existence. Cost of the two-day party will be "no more than SlS,000," said HEW spokesman John Blamphin. "That's less than the depart- ment spends in three seconds." Garden Grove Slaying Heroin AMict, 21, Guilty of Murder A herom addict who shot and kUled an elderly widow wbo took him into her home and tried to break him o( the habit was lound guilty o( second degree murder Monday in an Orange Counly Superior Court non-Jury trial. Judge Philip E. Schwab set June 2S as lh• date he will sentence Joseph fl'rtderlck GUI. 21. of Corona. He addllionally round GUI guilty of robbery. Gill was arrested by Garden Grove police Oct. 24, 1977, after he inflict ed on Mrs. Heier\ Maxine Reams, 67 whit was described in hJs tna\ as "a wUd , uncontrollable. 1ava1e nllac\ ... a very saO&(e beatfna durin1 a wtJd rage to 1et. bla dru•• back." · Glfl 1dmlUed to officers durtn1 quallonln1 that he tost hla temper and attacked hla benetactor because M hld h1a • wota from bh:o ln a bld lo bdp him control the habit. Arresllns orticers testified thal Olli told them be wanted to dio in the tN chamber for What he had done to Mrs. Reams. The prosecution did not 8"k the death penalty. Judie Schwab was asked, how•ver, to rind Gill guilty 9f first derree murder, a conviction that wo.i)d hav• meant Il le In prison wfthoul poutbUUty of parole. The judge found him auttty of 1econd degree murder, a conviction that wm five om not leu than four years ln state prl1on. om told J\Mlle Schwab dutlna th• trial: "I'd rtther 10 to the ft~ chamber. t can-'t 1a~ re now wtth her on my mind.' · rt w11 teatJfled that drui.•• used by Olll ln 1ddlUon to beroln Included barbiturates, LSD, PCP <1 n1•I du •t> amphatemlna, dexedrtne aod cocaine. A few years ago General Electric created a few gem· size. fine quellly diamonds as an experiment. These stones were g111en to the Smithsonian They were e1etremely expensive to produoe, much more ex· pensive than taking diamonds out or the ground. Neverthe- less. the re.ult1nt publicity of GE's one-time experinwtnt has led many P90Pfe to be deceived Into bellewtng lhat fm1ta\:i diamonds made from cOlor synlhellc meterfaf are actually aynthellt diamonds To com· pound the problem, some manufacturwa W1d •Ii.rs of thl• material h•v• given 11 names that suggest diamond· like matenaf. No material Is really dlamoncMlke. no matttt wttat It It called. No gem approaches diamond tn hardne11. m 111 ablllty 10 reeist ecrateflfng ana. thus. Its ability to retain It• brllll1nce. Whan • c1mpa1gn was l•unehed to n'lef1(et Y.A.0 . a couple of yean ago, the ltale- mtnt w• Often made thtt not even a ,..._ oould tell the re- al hom the fake. Now ~ hive ; @ EiEM WISE Marv ~rr. C.ert1neo Oemo1001tt ~CHARLE S H. HARR an even better Imitation t>eino sold as a diamond substitute. It 1s called "cubic l1rcon1a" (Zr02). A nicely laceled CZ ap- pears to be mU<:h more con· v1ncin9 than any of the other diamond 1mllatlona and can pose a definite 1dent1llca11on problem to the unwary Well, this 1eweter can a1waY9 tell Gemo1og1cal training and years of experience gives me this confidence • .Jnd my cuatomers beneltl lrom my knowledge Diamond lm1tatio"t tt•v• thatr place • . they .,.. cos- tum• )e'Nelry ... a oppo919d to fine jewelry. Those large. li.t'ty atonet are gOOd lot coctctail ~tty cPlatt9'; ll'ley have a IOt ot shock appNI Ind can be tun. Unfortunately, thete atones 1ctatch and abrsdd c::om· parattvely Mtlly end ttl91r gllt· ltr turns to gtoom. Then ...,. body.· not only your l~lef. w111 know ror ture. II you'd Ilk• to toe a CZ. como In, • htve one on hand to show you ft It I~ In herd- neta (dlemond 11 10) and la .,,. pn>.1el,,.ltly 1,7 tlmet ~avlef than di~n<I. I i I .. , Tu.day. May ZJ. 1978 ~-------Second Murder Trial Ordered---------.. . Dictionary Defined as 'E1'idence' p I By J.2~~~.!l~\' Jl cost taxp1Ayl'r~ ubout SlS.000 for the Orange County Superior Court triul that ended with David Louis Dominick of Huntington Beach ~mg found guilty of second degree murder. BUT NOW IT has to·be done all over again with the second trial set for June 12. And all bee a use of a $9.95 dictionary. . Judge Robert A. Banyard, who presided over the first tria l of Dominick, 23, ordered the second trial when Deputy Public Defender John Barnett told him ~bout the copy of Webs ter's Modern Reference Die· taonary that found its way into the jury room during de h berattons. B.\RNETT St;CCESSFULLY argued that lhC' u~e of the dictionary by jury members amounted to them taking additional evidence into the 1ury room Judge Banyard said he had to agree Juru.•s are not allowed to take evidence into de liberations with them and they must draw any guidance they need from the instructions g iven by the Judge at the end of the trial. Deputy District Attorney Bryan Brown. clearly irked at the setting aside of a trial that had quickly produced a guilty verdict. argued that the jury had only wanted to look up the m eanings of four words. ''base." "provocation .· "malice" and "bran· dishing" HE EXPLAINED that two women Jurors had worried about the exact meaning or the words to the point that u male juror brought the d1ct1on<Ary with· him for the final day or dcliberntions and looked up lht.• words they questioned Brown uni:,uccei:.sfully argued that the d1ct1onan had in no "'ay influenc~d the Juror!-\\ hl•n tht:> \Ott!d on a verdict or second degree murder And lo prove 1t. he produced affiduv1t:-. in \\h1ch the Jurors declared that they would haH· rcuched their verdict with or without the d1cllon<.1r) TO NO AVAJL. JUDGE Bunyard. commenting that the law was clear in such case~. ordered <.t second trial for Dominick. The ruling means that Brown. for the second time. will attempt to convince a JUry that Dominick s hot and killed Edmoun Paul Neal. 19. in the vie llm 's home al 10931 Talbert Ave .. Fountain Valley BROWN BELIEVES a ~ccond lUry will g1 \1c h1rr. the same ver:dict of second degree murder Ill' said he will only do onl' thing d1tfl'n·ntl} from •hr~ formal in th~ lir~l tnul ''I'll wat~'li v.h<Jl" tht·~· takt.> into tht..'.1uo roorr.. hl' ~a id griml) .. OC Jail 'hnproves' o.lly l'llet MMf ""'°'° MRS. MILAN MILLER (LEFT), MRS. ARNOLD KEARNS ADMIRE THE GREENERY Laguna Garden Clubbers Were Among Thoae Who Got Rare View of Smith Estate Monday Gardens Showcased State Conventioneers Tour Laguna Estate By STEVE MITCHELL OI I,_ O.tly P'llet SI.it The woman with the floppy hal put her hand over her mouth and gasped. "How on earth do vou keep the caterp1llers off of your pelargomums, '•she asked Alice Bechthold beamed and said. ··n 's a lot of work for three of us. believe me " Mrs. Bechthold led more than 200 members of the California Garden Clubs lnc. around the Lon V. Smith estate 'Monday during a day·long lour of south Oran~c.· County homes. The garden ladies are attend· mg their organization's 47th con· vl'nl1on in Costa Mesa this week, and a tour of the I l acre Sm ithcliff estate in Laguna Beacb provided the women ao opportunity to visit a home seldom seen by outsiders. Alice Bechthold met each of the five tour buses as they pulled up in front or the walled en- trance to the Smith estate. "Welcome to Smilhchffs." she said . "My name is Alice Bechthold and I live here I'm the gardener 's wife." As the camera.toting women climbed out of the buses and walked the 300 yards from th1.• iron gates to the blufftop, they viewed a variety of trees C:1nd plants some had never seen out hide a garden book. Evidenee 'Vague' Did House Members Get Korean Cl1$h? WASlllNGTON </\Pl ln· \'l'Sl1gators ha\'e c1rcums tanllal l'\ 1den<:e that some present House.' members might hJ\<: taken envelopes stuffed with $100 bills from a former South Korean ambassador, sources said today. But the House ethics commit· tee sources said none of the evidence Is strong enough to pursue without former Am· bassador Kim Dong Jo 's testimony. The sources. asking not to be ide ntified. said the evidence ls so c 1rcums tantfal and vague that it is hard even to say how many current congressmen might have taken the money. but somethjng like 10 is more ac· <:urate than any higher range "You really shouldn't play the nu m bers game." one in vesligator said. "It is hard to de· Bad 'Shine' Fatal, to Four ATLANTA <AP> -Four peo. ple are dead in west.central Georgia because a moonshiner may have tossed an old car bat· tery Into his mash, poisoning the home brew with lead, says Or James Collins. But reJaUvea or thoae victims a nd seven otbtrs who have become Ul wt.II not h Ip hJm finCI the still, Colllna aaJd Mond•>'· The doctor utd ht flrat nollud the symptoms •bout etab\ months •10. and the flrst vlcllm died eboui lwo months later. The most recent death was three WMb •eo. fine who you include &nd who ~ou don't " The possib1ht~ that the llouM• C'thics committee ha:. un) s u!- pcl'ts at idl wa:. lL•aked for lh1.• first time on the l'\ (' or 41 c·om m illee vole on "ht.'lht·r lht• House should threaten tn cut South Korea's economic aid in an e ffort lo Mel the am · bassador's testimony. The House International ReJa . lions Committee had planned to vote on a resolution softenmg the threat this morning bul put off action untH later in the day. I( then. Leon Jaworski. the House ethics committee 's special counsel. and Hous e leaders worked out a resolution that would state that no further U S economic aid should be voted for Seoul until the ambassador answers questions under oath Committee leaders were ·try. ing to work out a compromise lo say onJy tb•t South Korea·s cooperation should be con - sidered by Congress when It votes on aid for Seoul. The former ambassador was accused at public hearfogs ot trying to give the envelopes stuffed with money to ais many as 24 House members. Suit Umit Upped SACRAMENTO <AP> Anyone Su.ing for up lo $1S,000 will be able to go to Municipal Court inttead or the he3Vl1)' backlo&fld Superior Court, un· der a bOI slsned Into law by Gov. Edmund BroWl\ Jr The measure, AB 2192 by As· semblyman FrC!d Che!, D·Lona Btacb, w.. sl&ned Monday. • I "Is that a Melaleuca tree." Qne womaJ\ a¥ed. reaching up to strokt a twisted. wbite bark giant ' "The wind shapes the lrmbs." another responded. "That's why it's twisted around like that." A forest of junipers greeted the women next to the three· story weekend house of Lon Smith and his wife. Marguerite. And a real garden club pleaser \\ere pots full of cymb1dium or· ch1ds on the front porch of the :.1x·bedroom home. "Is it true you're not supposed to touch the lf'aves of cym- b1di11ms." a woman asked the gurdencr's wift• "Oh. I touch them all the tr mt•.·· Mrs. Bechthold laughed. running her fingl'rs along a long ~reen stem. "I never heard that before.·· The women moved past the SO-year old guest house to a lookout point overlooking the beach at Emerald Bay. "I don't see how you keep th1 s pl act• up ... a woman wearing a blue beret said. Mrs Bechthold, her husband Art. and groundskeeper Mike Newman work fullt1me at lh~ estate. mowmg lawns. pulling \\CCds and tnmming trees. "We lo::.t about 10 trees during th1~ year's s torms .·· Mrs . Bechthold recalled. "I bet Art made 300 trips to the dump with thl' ''hppings and leaves." The Bechtholds have worked for Lon Smith for nearly 23 years, the las t seve n a t Smithcliffs . Before that they stayed on a 210·acre ranch the 86 year-old oilman owned In Oak'ersf1eld M ikc Newman has worked at SmithchUs for the past seven ) ears The 78.year-old Iris h ~ardcncr said the Smiths come down from their B~v~rly HUis home nearly every weekend. ··And they always bring guests during the ~um mer months ... the gardener said. Newman said Smith made his money in the oil r1elds of Bakersfield. after beginning his career "selling everyttung from shoestrings lo neckties. to the gandy dancers on the railroad." Lon Smith still goes to his Beverly Hills office (1urlng the week. and Mrs. Bechthold said he can't wail to get to work on Mondays. That leaves five days for the two garde n ers a nd Mrs. Bechthold to get the Lagunp Beach estate in order. The groWlds are crowded with pines. olive trees. citrus t.rffs and acres or lawns and gardens. "ft 's a chore all right ... Mlkt: sold as h~ helped u garden club n)tmber aboard the tour bu.a "But the SmlthJJ are the nicest peopl~ I ever met In my life."' And th Smith estate Is one'ot the nicest the garden clubbers had seen. said state 11rden club prcaldcol lf~. Eugene Woe.sner {' Gra~d Jury Says Program Helpful By GARY GRANVILLE Ol IM O.lly l'llol Sl•ll The Orange County Grand Jury said Monday that cond1 · t10ns in the county jail have 1m proved over the past two years but that more improvement is needed On the plus side. the Jury said jail administrators have earned out most of the recommenda· lions for improvements made by recent grand Juries, The improvements cited in elude what the jury called effort "to increase communications between all levels of jail staff" and start of a new traimng pro· gram for jail de puties. Those efforts at improving jail conditions notwithstanding, the Grand Jury's report suid "in· mates are ~omet1mes treated in a thoughtless or inhumane man- ner." "And." the jur y added, "in- mate rights occasionally are violated." Some of the blame for those shortcomin~s in the treatment of inmates was blamed on the prat'tice or assigning s heriff's deputies to jail duty for what the jury call an ext'ess1ve amount or time. ··Every deputy interviewed . . . has expressed resentment and frustration about the long term of service in qte jail." the jury's report' said. It acknowledged t~t the same deputies vouched for' the value or Jail duty experience and em- phasized that it 1s the deputy's lengthy assignment in jail that causes problems. "His <the depty 'i; l attitude soon turns to boredom. resent· ment and hostility as the months and years roll by." the Grand Jury said. To corret'l that !>ystem, the jur y recomme nded that the Sheriff's Department : -Limit the time a deputy can be ass1gn'-'d unint errupted jail duty to one year -Rotate deruues assigned a second tour o jail duty among the branch Jai ls as well as the main Jail. -Abandon the practice of re· quiring added Jail service as a condition of promotion. -Conslckr adopting a 10-hour. four-day w~k for Jail deputies The Grand Jury also suggest· ed that the Sheriff's Office con s ider using full·time correc tional officers r ather thar deputies tostaffthe jail The Jury's report went on to rt:co mmend that annua l psychological tests bl' given Jilli deputies and that the booking area be monitored by videotape Other recommendations made by the Grand Jury included an stalling more telephones 1n the Jail and that the sheriff began making the adjustments in Jail operations dictated early this month by a U S. District Court JUJge. As far as the women's JUll 1s tonc t·rned. lhl· Grand Jur~ cnt1c1zed what 1t called the t•x cess1ve time it lakes to book and release woman prisoners Tht· JUry also srud understaff 1ng of the women's Jail 1!. a prob ll•m and tha t woml•n <sff• some'dmes held tor up 10 If; hours m the booking eel! without being fed Set at $995,100 OC Tramit Budget lncrel1$ed by 140/c A $995,100 budget proposal for 1978·79. up 14 percent from this year. was presented Monday to members of the l7·month-old Oran~'-' County Transportation Commission The commiss10n. created by state leglSlatJon to review local transit and road·bu1ldang pro grams. will conduct a June 12 public hearing on the spend ing proposal before con side r ing its adoption. ' The commission 1s one or few local government agencies not affected by potentia l passage next month of the J a rvis proper ty t ax limitation initiative. Rather than property taxes. * * * i'ts activiliP" are financed through a share of stalt.' <;ales taxes. federal grants and plan n1ng funds from th1.• s1x·coun1y Southern California Assoc1at10n ot Governments ·Thomas Jenkins. comm 1ss1on execull\'C director. -.aid roughly half of th1-. year ·._ SR7t .OOO budget will be left unspen1 ;1t thl· end of the rise al year. The bulk ot that fBrryover $355,000 -~\lme 111.iDJnds for • countywide ~ansp0rta11on study tha t won·t be spent until thl· com in~ (1<;c;i l ye;,r. Jenkin-. said Jenk1m: proposed budget alsC\ includes a ('Ontmgency fund of rrom $216.970 to $237 .940 * * '* Huntington Asks Corridor Purchase Orange County transportation commissioners hope the !.le1te Legislature will buy two miles 01 abandoned railroad righl·Of·way in Huntington Beach for a futur{' transit corridor But even as they shipped their Sl.2 million funding request off to Sacramento Monday. com· missioners noted that with 1ust SJ mil hon available for such prOJ eels statewide. the Huntington Beach proposal "tands l1tlll' ch ance or success The acquisition wa~ proposed b.} the Huntington Beach Crty Counc•1I and 0H1c1;al-. of rhl· Ore1n~c County Tram.11 D1~tnct They said the stretch. between Atlanta and Garfield Avenue:. could be developed u~ a b1kewav (or the present and later use<I for rapid transit OCTD offtc1a!s a!so art• pro rt-edinj? with effort<; to gt·I federn! fund~ to purchase seven mtle-. of .1bandon£>d ratlro<lc! n~ht or way between Sant ,I An.• and Stanton.'"'' ,1 cost of lx:-1\\et'n 57 million and SIO mtlhon CltEAM CHEESE with pepper IT'S NEW AND YUMMY I 3.59 lb. cut ~ Buv the wf'lole 2~ lb package for 7 75 SAVE 32¢ FASH,ON ISLAND .....,.... ...... ,~10 ...... "'°4. 'Tfl . s.t. "'11. 1-. I J ~ WESTCLIFF PLAZA ,,. • ......._ ........ ..__6Q ... ~ .....,.,"fl•W."'11•S...,,. s MARINER 'S VILLAGE, DANA POINl'. NATIONAL I WORLD r .la d · ~:~ ~easting Q .... , ... ~ Tom~~\'/ Inflation Big U.S. W9rcy Marphlne The Wild Blue Yonder CRYSTAL BALL DEPT. -Hearinas are c:urrenUy under way up ln Santa Ana to probe jet aircraft noiae out at Orange County Airport. Therefore, even before au the tumult and shouting dies, rour correspondent is going to chance a fearless orediction. l predict that Ule airport noi&e hearings are going to come out just like a friend of mine's directions for stufCing a turkey. A culinary expert or sorts, my acquaintance goes into some detail when explaaning how to put together all the ingredients for turkey dressing. Then comes his advice on how you should insert the dressing Into the bird: "Stuff the turkey full. Not too fulJ. PTetty full, though . . . " AND THAT SHOULD be just about the way the jet noise hearings will turn out. eeotH rtt0eu It will be concluded that lhe big passenger jets al our county airdrome a~noi'IY; maybe not too noisy. but pretty noisy, though. . . Out of all this might come some new rules aimed toward quiet nights. But don't hold your breath. You are. tiowever. allowed to hold your ears. Anyway. somebody is always making rules ror aviation. I have, for example. just been passed a set or rules that were alleged to be United States Air Service Operations Regulations. In this document, aviators are instructed: -DON'T TAKE THE MACIONE into the air unJess you are satisfied it will Oy. -Never leave tbe ground with the motor leaking. -Never get out or the machine with the motor running until the pilot relieving you can reach the engine controls. -Riding on the steps, wings or tail of the machine is prohibited. -Do not trust altitude instruments. -No machine musttaxifast.ertbana man can walk. -If you see another machine near you, get out or Its way. -Before you begin a landing glide. see that no machines are under you. AND TIIEN TIIERE WAS this added rule which must have been enormously popular with pilots: -In case the engme falls on takeorr: land slralght ahead regardless or obstacles. These aviation dictums were allegedly the rules handed down to plJots in 1920. l don't think they will help much in the current Oramte County jet noise heartois. The only one of these rules they probably paid any attention to in 1.920 was the last one, which decrffd, "If an emergency occurs while flying, land as soon as possible." Under these circumstances. some of those early birdmen landed sooner than possible. Court Vplwlds Nazi -Right to March CHICAGO <APl -Naris have a right to demonstrate in heavl· ly Jewish Skokie even though they "resort to hatred and vilifica· lion or fellow human beings," a federal appeals court ruled. The ruling, issued with "regret" and "repugnance" Monday by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal, upheld a district court rul· ing that three Skokie ordinances barring the Nazi demonstration were unconstitutional. VILLAGE OFFICIALS SAID THEY would appeal to tbe U.S. Supreme Court. The village also planned to ask for a stay to pre· vent the National Socialist Party of America from staging a planned "white power" rally June 25. The ordinonces barred marches in parJiamentary uniforms and the distribution or hate literatore and required a $3!>0,000 in· surance bond for public demonslrations. SKOKIE MAYOR ALBERT SMITH announced the planned ap- pea ls and said, "We will work to thwart the Nazi march unUI all legal avenues are uhausted." The Legislature is considering measures to block a Nazi march in Skokie Nazi leader Frank Collin, meanwhile, said be would consider not marching in Skokie if the courts clearly established that his or- ganization had a right to demonstrate "any place in IIJinois." WASHINGTON <AP > -The the council said in its quarterly government is handing out more inflation report. worrisome ~le news. say. The council also cautioned the ing meat prices tor the first postal workers' union and three months of the year jumped railroad employee~ that too 41 percent at an annual rate. large an increase or wages ln Other agencies were announcine contract settlements being a 2"'1·year high ror subsidized negotiated this year could ag· mortgage interest rates. gravate lnflation. In other economic develop· The cowicil noted that postal ments Monday: workers'. wages already have in· -HEW Secretary Joseph creased to 45 percent above the Califano Jr. blasted doctors and average for urban workers. The hospitals ror not restraining ris· council said any settlement ing cost.!. between the railroad workers -Ro BERT s Ta Av ss, and the rail industrr woul~ have Carter's chief adviser on inOa· les.s inflationary impact if the lion said the business communl· raaJ workers agreed to com· ty ~ow knows It must accept pror,nlse on work rules that are s maller price Increases before adding lo labor costs. labor cooperates by demandJng BOTH THE FEDERAL Hous s maller wage boosts. ing Administration and the f'ederal Reserve Board Veterans Administration said mt'mber Henry Wallich said , Monday their s ubsidized "llnl<'R!I wt• do more than the mortgages would hit a 2'n·year preside.mt propos('(f, J rear we'll high or 9 percent. find lnflullon will accelerate " The last time tbe FHA and VA Wallkh MUiUt~~lL'<l that a $19 4 rates reached that figure was bllllon lnx tu.1 fl11ure uC'ceptcd the period from September 197S by Cartor be reduced to SS to January 1976. billion to SlO billion. The secretary of housing and The Prt'Kidl'nt '11 C'ouncll on urban development, Patricia Woite und Prlt't• Slublllly 11old Roberts Harris, said the interest Monday that short ~uppll~• und lncreues were needed "to bring strong lncr~Hes in consumer FHA rates in line with other demand drovl' up m'•ul prices In competitive rates in both the theflrstquartl'r. mortgage and financial BUT MVCll or the rise com· markets. pensated for depressed beer "THIS CHANGE is expected prices over the last two yean.. to increase the availability or Zaire R e bels New Massacre Site Reported by French KINSHASA. Zaire CAP> -French authorities said today they had reports that paratroopers sweeping through Kolweli bad found a new massacre site with the bodies of about 20 whites apparently slain by rebels. A French Foreign Ministry spokesman said In Pans it was believed that.. the number of foreigners massacred by the re· t>els in the southern Zaire city may exceed 200, although no precise estimate could yet be made. The previous official estimate had been 170. The s pokes man said the ministry had received "unof· ficial information" about the re· ported discovery Monday of 20 more bodies. He ortered no other details ABOUT toe Belgian paratroopers took up station to- day in Kamina, 130 miles north of Kolwezl, as 800 French legion· naires patroJled this copper· mining city to keep order after a rebel invasion In which hun· dreds died. Belgian Pre mier Leo Tin· demans said in Brussels the mis· slon of the remaining paratroop battalion would be "to guarantee the safety" or the Belgina staying in Zaire's mineral.rich Shaba Province. Several thousand Europeans are still in the province, many living in Llkasi, to the east, and Lum· bumbashi. to the southeast. About 1,200 Belgians pulled out or Kolwezi, which normaJly has a population of about 100.000, and headed for the gov- ernment air base at Kamina on Monday after completing the evacuation of about 2,500 foreigners, leaving the city In the hands of French and Zairean troops. ROUGlll. Y HALF the Belgian paratroopers stayed in Kamina and the rest n ew to Brussels. The Belgians and French parachuted into Kolwezl Friday and Saturday and recaptured it from invading rebel forces who had crossed into Zaire May 12 from their base in Angola through a small strip or Zambia. Officials in Paris reported at least 170 whites were kllJed by the rebels after lbey captured Kolwezi. Some survivors estimated lhe figure at 200. The officials said SO French civilians and six French soldiers who served aa advisers lo Zalrean army units were missing and might have been take.n hostage by the rebels. French officers here estimat. ed the rebels also killed 150 Zaireans, both civillans and gov· ernmeol soldiers Rains D11mp on Plains Kansas Hit by Tomadoea, W amed of Floods 'rewaperaf 11rn ... "' Le f'W . .. n so 11 •S M • st '2 ,, ., ,. ..., ,, ,. lS 70 ••• 10 .. 9' JI .. n .... .. " .., .... 12 .. 77 u an 11 rs 60 ., ,, J1 " .. ., ,. IS .. ti ., n ,. 100 .. n ,. ,. JO .. ~ ... . .. N~ " .., .., ,.rtao4lert1Mll. SCroN .... "-ttllllldtf'lt°""' llMC ... _, ......... ,....., llMt "'ffl'ltfaf ~ "'°""' ... lf!Ul••111tonn• .... _.,.....,.. ... ~,. ....... tM "' ...... .., ...... .,,. .._ °"'' ......... ...-e< ..... '•'"' ............... ~··­'*'1Mn CllllW\lllol .. c.f'(ral W'ftnto 1'l.n.. ... ,.,..,.. In '"' nol'tlltfll poftlon\ of 1119 mt#e MIMIN!ppl valley efld the .... Ol'llrel Pl•ln._ Eerly momlnt vl111911ltlff ••• n.-r •••o In "'•"' toc.elfll•• ecreu nertllern Mtu o11rl •"d eastern ......... ........... ·~· ........ ,....._ _____ "'_ ........ CIMlltl.,.., Slla.t """' ""'"' Wf -.,.. ......,,..., .., "" ""'*"" -c-tr•• Of'tet Ulla .,.., """9 .... _._....,... ....... '"_' ll*t ......... eMNm ,. .. ,. tM ......... c-.a1 ....... des.rt --II a tow Pf..-e srt1em moves '"'o So11tller" Ge•1t0tnla_,..,_~. A trew~· ecl\'lsory wm bt lft ~­ let• tor Ml'd -°"''storm~ In Ole deserts 1°"'9flt. Wlncll '°"4d "11"9 UC> to lS .,,.,., et II"*-Gulla ere .eM ••· pect..s In tlle ll'IOWltelfl rieues. C:-.ya -In rlore for t.IW Lot A"9eles .,... tflrOOtQll Weclnnday, ""'' hl9M ,,. ... 10. Mones • .,., tep temperature •t .... CM< c.nier Wti n, And .....,., tap .,,.,. w• • ..,.,. edlObe ........... ,_., The '°'"' llr• -Olllclatty Nll•n ~ In tile Anoeln Ha· tlonet Fo,..st. l'oreat S111><1r¥laor Wllllem T. ~ .,.,,_ ,..,_,. 111et, 1111111 l11rlll•r notice, "° Cenlp11'ft wlll lie .eie..ect Mil*• _..,.,,~ Coastal lt'eatJter Ce111tderebl• tow cto11dlneu thrOll9fl ~ • .._....llO ,,..,., '' .-, w ... ....,.._. UVftt .,,.,.lalltt wlflds lllOM --Int~ ...... ...,. .......... . ... Coetl#I ~eClrft will ,.._. Ml•••n St end M lnle11d '""' PK•llWtt •IM ,.,. ......... U allf 71 The water....._., .. ,,,. wlll llt ... s .. ,M....,Tfde• TUaM>AY S.Cond low 4' IS...... u $Kond n'9" 10 ~ P-"'· ~ WIOtflrlOAY "'"'low ,, •• "'· .,,, ,.,...,_,.. U;l)~M 4A ~.._ s.m-.m. u ~flltll U:t4p.m, U illll tltiM s;«J a.II"., Mb r1D p"" MOOft rl-t!20P.flll-. Mb 7111ta.lft, S11rl Report Hllllll"ll*I tMc.11: Wt\IM -.. ""'"tMt Wltll ................. o.m.-. _,.... wttl c.mnvt twrfec• ,..,,,. COll'flltllf ....,. -· ..................... ......,......,, ........... .... .......,...__......, ... .-r ........................ , QMll ... .............. ~ .. , .. , .. ...... r; • r FHA financing for moderate in· come home buyers and sellers who are the maJor beneficiaries o f FHA·1ns ured mortgage financing." she said. The Carter administration vlews the discourag1n1 economic oicture as temporary. C'ritirs Protnt a (actor or the bad winter and singular market cond1llons. CaJarano said the cost of gov· ernmenl·financed health carf! this year WO\lld tut 12. 7 cents ~ every dollar. up from 12 cents last year Angry gun owne.rs p~~~ting proposed changes in gun laws made their cr1llc1sms known by sending the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Flrearms more than 150.000 letters. Sitting on the blizzard of mail is Richard Masalo. a bureau oflicial. Critics assert the cham~e would be the first step towards federal firearms registration. Ties 'Stronger' TOKYO CAP)-Zbigniew Bnezinsk1. President Carter's na- tional security adviser. told Japanese Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda t-Oday the United States "intends to strengthen its ties and pursue nonnalizallon of relations with China within the framework of the Shanghai communique." Brrezinski conferred with Fukuda after a three-day visit to Peking. In the Shanghai communique. signed by President Nixon a.nd the late Premier Chou En-lai in 1972. lbe United States and China agreed to establish full diplomatic relations. The United States saJd Jt recognized that .be future of tbe na· tlonalist Cbineae on Taiwan was for the Chinese lo settle themselves and promised to withdraw all its troops from lbe island. a process oow nearly compleled. China's condition for an exchange of ambassadors was tbal the United Stat.es not only withdraw its forces but break diplomatic and secw_:ity ties. .-. -.,,. - I ... CALIFORNtA 1 Doman Write-in Democrat LOS ANGELES <AP> -Jo.spired by a Pennsylvania con- gressman, who won both the Republican and Democratic primaries in his district in 1976, a California Republican con- gressman said Monday be wiJJ be a write-in candidate In the Democratic primary. Robert Dornan , a con- a ervati ve whose 27th Congressional District runs from Santa Monica to Palos Verdes, quipped: "1 've always wanted to be a Democrat ; there's so many more of them." E'reeaeag Flge r He explained as he has no Republican opposition in the June 6 primary, be will file write-in nomination papers and aim at winning ooe-third of the votes of the Democrats, who form 49 percept of the registered voten in his district. Riverside County Sheriff's Deputy Bill Frogue has not made an unusual traffic stop. This home-made plane landed on Highway 71 after pilot Dan Rihn. 23, of H awthorne ran out of gas. Afte r the Hig hway Patrol took Rihn to Corona Airport for fuel. he took off al!ain and con- tinued on his way. Police blocked traffic on the freeway, turnml! 1t mto a te m- porary i unway. Rihn--1s an aerospace engineer at Northrop Corp. L••llrukrW' .. STATELINE <AP> -A groundbreaking ceremony was beJd Monday for a controversial loop road around casinos here, as legal haggling over the $723,000 project continued. Abortion Bill Halted Dignitaries from Douglas Assembly BWcks $24.8 Million Fundi,ng ( __ sr,_:4_TE_J County, Nev., and South Lake Tahoe, Ca>lf .• were on band for the long-awaited event. The job is supposed to be completed by late September. The California Department of Transportation has appealed a federal judge's refusal to block the road work. Olargn ProfJed SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -The controversial Chilean tall stup Esmeralda is sailing toward San Diego as the FBI investigates a TV cameraman's complainl thal he was ki cked and beaten by Chilean se<:ret police while he filme d a protester being re- moved from the ship here. Assistant U .S. Attorney Robert Breakstone instructed the FBI Monday to probe a com- p l aint raised by a KTVU· Channel 2 cameraman. r.-Ferre Sft LOS ANGELES <AP> -The variety of legal issues that could e merge if Propos ition 13 or Proposition 8, or both, pass in the June 6 primary are being re- viewed by a special state At- torney General's Office task force. "This is a massive matter and you just can't be prepared on this the day after the elecllon." Eugene Hill, chief assistant at torney general in charge of the de· partmenl's civil division, said Monday , Fmloll1'nced LIVERMORE CAPl 7 Researche r s at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory rePorted Monday the firs t full-powe r fusion experiment us ing the world's most Powerful laser. In an experiment conducted Thursday, the Shiva laser system focused 26 trillion watts of optical power In 95·trillionth of a second onto a target the size o f a grain of sa nd , the laboratory said in a statement. SACRAMENTO CAP > -The California Assembly has stopped a bill bat'ked by the Brown ad· ministration to pay $24 8 million for abortions for poor women, but the author requested another vote later. The Monday vote was 44 -27 on AB 2967 by Assemblyman Willie Brown. D-San Francisco. But that was 10 votes short of the 54 needed for the necessary two- thirds majority on an appropna- tion bill. TECHNICALLY, the bill would give the state Health Department S70. 7 m illion to m ak e up a d efir1t 1n lhe $.1 billion Medi-Cal program for the fiscal year that ends June 30. The $24.8 million would pay what had been the fedct<1l gov- ernment's share of abortions, mo s t o f th e m al read y performed. But Preside nt Carte r withdrew these federal funds last year. The Health Department says 1t will run out of federal funds on June 1. THE BILL HAS been amended to restrict abortions. There would be no limits on abortions in the first three months or preg- nancy. but after that, the fund- in g would be allowed only in cases or physical danger to the mother, rape, incest. statutory rape, or a fetus llkely to be born damage<l, These"'"'"restrictions would dis- qualify about 15 percent of the abortion requests. and would ap- pl y only to abortions paid for during June. But they could set a precedent for the 1978· 79 budget, in which.Gov. Edmund Computer Cheaters r Foiled by Security LOS ANGELES <AP>-Students often try to break into uni· versity computers as a sort of challenge, officials say. But they don't usually try to a>ter their grades. However, two University of Southern California students. ap- parently unhappy with their grades and fin ancial aid, tried to tap into the university's computer to brighten the situation, a USC spokesman said Monday. BUT TREY FAILED to beat the security system. Associate Director of the USC News Bureau Burt Wuttken said. He said the 18-and 20-year-old students, who are still in school . were later booked for investigation in connedion with the alleged theft of computer equipment last February. Their names were not dis- closed. A USC computer science officia) said s tudents across the coun- try often try to break into univers ity computers just to see if they caq get away with it. "BUT IT'S NOT common for them to try to do something criminal once they've broken in," said Professor Frederic R. Carlson. director of the engineering computer lab at USC and as· slstant dean or engineering. "ParticuJarly for the very bright students. it's a challenge to see if they can pick the lock and get in and out without anyone find- ing t hem." "YOU WANT YOUR students to learn about the system and somewhere along the way 1t may not be too clear that they're straying over i.1to an area where crimlna) charges may be filed," Carlson said. JUDGE RlJLES: NO PARKING Looking for carpet? Check our .•. ., SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A judge has or- dered Unipark Systems, a valet service used by many city bars and res taurants. to stop parking customers• cars on sidewalks, in driveways and bus stops, near fire hydrants a nd in other illegal spots. The temp ora r y restraining order came ab<;>ut two weeks after the district attorney's office filed suit against the company for alleged illegal parking. Thanklbu, ~for Beautifullbmorrows! ,., LOWER PRICES! 900 Sa mples co Choose From!. c.~, 8ro.brs and Disrribucors are decennined to give you the lowesr pouib&c price on qu.lity iume brand carpet! You1l find over 900 umplet of ca~1 and 14 major brands in our Long Beach showroom. Herc's how we saw and pass thole savings on co you: • No Commauioned Sakspersons • Family Owned & Openttd • Only Open ~ Dap a Week • No Cndit Canis ~·· • No C.0.dy Jnvencory Our ma;or aaow brands iodude: • Bi~low • ucalina • Galaxy • Ev1m A Black •World Catpeca • Turtu • Cuatomweave • Coronet • Monterey If you're noc buyint }'OW' ~t at <Arpet Brobts. you're peyifla coo much! ai.c:k our Lower J>rices eodayl ~ues..S.c. Houn: 10 a.m.-4 p.m. .1 Brown Jr. has asked for $.14 million for abortion funding. THE AMENDMENTS were writte n by Assemblyman Richard Robinson, D·Santa Ana, who said he personally fmds abortions "morally repugnant." But Robinson said he felt the money should be paid as long as abortions are legal. "The law is the law and should not be different for the rich. l am not gomg to have the 25 deaths predicted from illegal abortions on my conscience." Robinson s~d.- DAIL y Pll.OT AS Church Bans Gay Ministers ~·: I SAN DIEGO <AP> -The \Jnlted Presbyterian Church, after ; mo~t.~ or t~. banned ordination of pnclicins homosexuals from '-ts miniltry Monday night. By an overwhelming vote, the church's 190th aoverning as- sembly OllWbeOICl9emaA p~ •sin, contrary to God's will. . Hoft.er, iD .a lllistcrie llep. the cllurdl reprtseDl.a11ves ap-• proved a1.1.Glia•cm to ltle mblWrJ ol boimolemls who seek to became h~"\lerosexual or remain eellt.te, whether or not they openly avow .taeU-Alomel~. IT WAS t\U f1Jtft' SDCb apAicit policy oa homoaexual clergy to be spelled ou.t • a iHJar Christian body. . . The action l 'Y the church came after an 1mpass1ooed day of noor debate, cuJ.u.linatiQI two y~ o! swdy and wade controversy fo r the 2.6 million ·J.llemher deDor&WUltioo. . .. "For the chl'\rch to ordain a self-affirming, pr~c~1c1ng homoaexuaJ person to ministr>' would be to act in contradiction to its charter and caJJln ~· iD Seriplatt, ··the assembly declared. The ordination of .oradieiftg.homolellua.ls failed on a show of hands. with an estimate•• --~ acaana. AND WHILE OaD.~~AftON or celibate homosexuals passed by about 800 to 50 so~~ *'~ objected to allowing any homosexual to beco~e a P.reab.rtert-llUniater. It is "a perversion of .the gospel of grace.:--the ~"· Laura Jervis or New York City tolc..i the assembly after its vote m the Con- vention Center, packed with .observers and ablaze with television lights. On the other side, Sandra .~ awdets, • Princeton theoJogj~aJ seminary candidate ror the mu\\stry, "ad taken t he floo~ dunng debate to dramatically ackno\vledae her homosexuality and declare: "We can discover and ftnd way.\· te share lM delicate and love. ly rambow of acceptance under wh1c\'1 God offers to meet us all." CITING SCRIPTVRE the assem(\\y said God intended "loving companionship" between 'maJe and fel\,aJe or celib~~Y: ro~lo~mg' Jesus' lifestyle. and that "the practice ol hGmosexuahty !'.sin._ However. the aaaembly said Ute hot.1'09e'Xual c~ndruon itaeff ordinarUy is not voJuntarily chosen and is-·;,more a s1gn cl broken· ness of God's world than of wilful rebellion. ""--'-. Repentant bomoMsuall able le redlreel ""'7: desiJ'es ~ward heterosexual marttqe or wtM> rem.U. cefibllt.e cu ~Y be ordained·· if ot.benrise quaJ..W. lbe usemb&y declared, adding: • "INDEED. SUCB CANDIDATES must be \Yelcomed and must be free to share their fuJJ kSetlmy." A major ecclesiastical bcJcb< bu never before .openly t.ateo that position. although homosexuals are ceneran1 a~w:umed to have served as clergymen sin~ ucient Umea. O ranoe Coast Oa1tv Pilot ~~1t~....I_.., P~~.lfll/j ...................................... q.o•bert .. N .. W•Md .. /•P•ub•l•lt•ht•r ... T.~ ... s.K•••v•l•ll•Ed•l1of .. Jl!I.. ........... =~.~ Tunday, MJrY 23, 1978 S.rbar• Krelbich 'Editorl•I PIQe Edit<>< Bette r Outlook For Fair Politics Since the early 19708 Orange County :Jt election time has been ammersed in a virtual tidal wave of fa lse. mis· Jeading a nd worse political campaign literature. Consequently. it was refreshing last week to see ~omething being done about shoddy campaign tactic's that have tended to m ake a travesty out or the e)ectit..>n process. That f"Q{r,eshing breath came when the new county Pa ir Political Practices Commission labeled a campaign brochure for county clerk-recorder candidate Mursha ll ~orris "false and m isleading." When calling a spade a spade in its first ruling, the fledg ling commission let it be known that. as fa r as it is c·oncerned il isn't political business as us ual.in Ora~~_ Count\ -· --· -· -· It· is unfortunate th<.it the commission t!, empowered only t o review what ts put out for voter ccmsumplion by µiose seeking elected county offi ces. "" And the commission should flex its muscles more by 1!,s urng a wr itten state me nt to go v.long with com- rr1ssioners· verbal comm ents at meetings. All in a ll, though, it was a fine beginning for a com- ' "l'lission that s hould have been on the scene in the early ·10s when politics in Orange County deteriorated to a la ughing stock point Airport Quest~ons Supervisor T ho mus Riley has withdrawn for further refinement his plan to bus 0 1·ange County air travelers to Ont<.trio Ai r port Though well-mtentioncd. the plan he h as insisted '' ou Id case some of tht> pressur£> on Orange County \ irport seems l'Stincd for the same file in which all UlO~t: airport studies and grand plans to movt• the airport ).1hewhere r epose Unfortunately. Riley's proposal just doesn 't mesh '' ith the fact that Orange Countians find their a irport useful and convenient Those who find it more convenient .. to use Onta rio doubtless are doing so a lready and s ub- ' -s;dized busing isn't going to change that m uch 1 However. Ri)cy's proposal does s uggest .a n opportu.ni- t, to re lieve som e of the surface traffic congestion a .. ound Orange County Airport. What should be studied is how bus ser vice to and {:'om the airport could be improved. pe rhap.s to the point )f elimina ting most private a utos from the a irpor t. Fer example. could the Orange County T ransit Dis- t tr irt ·s Dial-<\-Ride system be used for airport-bound ' passengers" Could an expanded system of airport ex· p•·ess huses. with pickup points throughout the county. be cstablished'1 Could a second passenger term inal on the west side of the a irport. with iitnevs to boarding gates. he useful in easing traffic on the MacArthur Boulevard $1de of the a irport? Instead of trying to marshal more informallon on his Orange County to Ontario pla n. Supervisor Riley should Jsk his staff to find th<.• ans wers to questions like tht·se . Therl' nill be 13 propus1t1ons on the June fi ballul '/'lie Va1l11 Pilot will ojjer com ment and recommendations on all lite proposition~ between now 01ld electwn day • • • · NO on Prop. 6 PROP 6 on the June 6 baJlot would amend the state .. constitution to require that all county s he riffs in the stale be elected. As things now sta nd. a ll s he riff's positions <tlready are elective offices, but voters in the 11 charter counties have the option of choosing e ither to appoint or ~eel a sher iff or to have no sheriff a t a ll. ' The 48 gene ra l law counties a re required by state faw. but not by the state constitution. to have elected \he r iffs. Prop 6 would re move the choice for c harter 'counties While there i.-, something to be said for maintaining the independence of a s heriff by making the offi ce direct- ly responsible to th.& voters;· the present choice of a ll counties. there a lso can be an advantage m the expertise to be gained by a ppointing s uch an officeholder after careful screening. as is done with police chiefs. In any case. there's no reason for the state to m a ndate the pro cedure local voters must follow. The Daily Pilot Tecommend.t a NO vote on Prop. 6 • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views e>cpressed on this page are those of their authors and art1s)S. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo• 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) S-.2·4321 .. • Boyd I Bride Bureau By L.M. BOYD Hokkaido i s an un developed Japanese island about the size of Maine The ... eligible farm boys tbere out- •\ aumber the eligible farm ifirls by five to three What's ftt>eded are about 8,000 more , pros pective brides. Hokkaido has no longtime yearound b.o\e and War man, as we have. to help ln this matter. So h. has set up the Hokkaido ·Fa rmland Bride Liaison Bureau. an omcial recruiting agency to import marriagea- ble women. One day. if we u~e long enough, no doubt ·•we'll see a cob'ledy tum • &bout all of lhlB. PoSSibly or Dear Gloomy Gus Do )'OU tJunk We can t'etneve our pipeline wbeo we live Muka back to tbe ltumanst N.J.C. the s even-brldes-for-seveµ broU ers variety. Right now, though, ll's serious business. David Phlllips of Rusl- inglon, England, has rigged up a fancy coffin for a sidecar on hls motorcycle. Getting ahold of the thing wasn't easy, though. Four- teen funeral d~tors turned him down before he made a high-priced deal. A third of all the cars In the Soviet Union' are jacked up on bloc~ during the wlnter monthl. Too UtUe an· Ulreeu, that's why. Lot ot drivers do get ahold or an· tifree2e, though. And some use vodka. At dusk In New York City, the lights begtn to flick on in th• empty office buJJdings, mulUpJytng beyond count, until even the sky reflect• tbe glow. 1be late ma)'or there, Wllllam O'Dwyer, once re- marked: "Every one Of those liahta is an lrish .cleanlnt woman lryint to ~arn enoush to aend her aon to tb_e .emlnery ao he can bffome• prtea&." Wn Hubert Tlnley who AJd: "Yesterday Is a can- celled cbec:k. Torn.orTOw ll a promla.lory note. Toct&7 11 read1 cMh." Rowland Evans/Robert Novak Afghanistan :Next Soviet Goal? WASHINGTON -Private \\o &rnlngs to presidential aides last month that the neutralist regime in Afghanistan was ''ripe like a r e d a pple" fo r a pro-Soviet Communist takeover m et ofClcial silence here, a non-response hi,hllghting tbe adm inis tra t ion s d a n gerous inertia in meeting the current Soviet worldwide offensive. T h at warning was quietly passed to top Can er foreign similar warninga rrom Pakistan. had no jmpact al a ll on the Carter admJnistraUon . here and high defense ofrlcials. "I'm not sure that J immy C art e r h as a g lobal perspective," one told \ls, "He tends to see things that happen abroad as isolated incidents. not linked together." Murmuring soft sympathies for the Shah, admlnl!tralion otrlcials lost a particularly time ly occasion to notify Moscow sharply that Sovlet s upport for a Communbt AN EVEN more melancholy takeover in previously neutral reaction, Widely held b)I experts ACgbanistan <whlch borders the here, ls this: presidential worry Sovie t Un ion 1 would have that a U>Qgh warning to Moscow d isquieting re per c ussions in not to pu.sh the U.S. too far known as Baluchultan. a i.hc~ of prime strateg1c territory alon~ Pakistan's western border with Ira n which runs to the lndjan Ocean. -.,P$-M~--0!---· ··--··· Washington might well require an equally ..... _ _,, •• • -. .. ... • • ... .--.--U)~,.,..LJ..S_ (.oJl~·UP-,. ..O!l~ fol"- T H IS 0 ST R I C H · L J KE , which the Carter administration ACCESS TO the lndian Ocean has a lways been a Russian dream. ln the glory days or the Br i tis h e m pire. wars we re rep eatedJy fought lo prevent Russian penetr ation s outh through what was British tnd1b to warm water port::. of tht Indian Ocean. · N'ii "1mnTedift~ mov~:::rtkrbiac ,._ I!> expected fr om 1he n~~ Communist regime in Kccbul. but agitatmg these ancient 1ribat rivalnet. acros!> 1l!> border~ woul d fo!>ter A f g h an nationalism. That is a proven method of building political support for any new regime. p a rti c ul a rly useful fo r a Communist regime trying to consohdale its power in lhe o rtho d o x Moslem state of Afghanistan • f1c1als three weeks ago Tht> ~ourcc: was a trust ed. Teheran- based em1s· sar y of th(' S h a h or Iran E ven if t he U.S. were not t ied into a straitJackel imposed by Congress as a result of post-Vietn a m po l iti cs. it prob ably would h ave been impossible ror President Carter or any other President to prevent the pro.Soviet takeover or mnuencc its urning But the warni ng from the Shah. and z . I 'ffi7' see·no-evil postu re or Carter lS unrrepared. for eign policy planners fed Bu . in fact. installation of a doubts among U.S. allies pro-Soviet regime in faraway doubts now reaching agonizing Arghanlstan sets the stage ror a proportions -that the ~vt~l ser\es of ~ew Communist probes orfens1ve in Africa and Asia is whic h will confront Jimmy incapa ble or engaging Jimmy Carter with even more difficult Carter 's interest. Instead . these c hoices. These future events. allies believe. Mr. Carte r 's spawned in the bloody Kabul current policy has a single aim : takeover, are what caused the do nothing that m ight offend Shah to sound his alarm here Moscow and put a t r isk the three weeks ago. p l a nn e d s umme r s ummi t ll is highly probable that the meeting with Soviet President new rulers in Kabul soon will Leonid Brezhnev to sign a new ex plo1t a nc ient t e rr1tor1 a l s tra t egic arm s llm1 t atlon d is putes about triba l la nds agreement <SALT>. adjoining both Pakistan and But that may be too benifn a Iran . The most important of view. a conc lus ion t ha 1s these would establish an shared by observant diplomats tndependent state en what 1s ,1pj)j; _~~ . Earl Waters But ev e n witho ut s uc h provocative politics. installation of the pro-Soviet government h8!1 a lready compeUed Iran to reinforce its eastern (rontie~ with both Afg ha n1 stun and Pakistan. The ta keove r is d second giant step toward what the Shah has always warned i.lga m st : enc irclement or the oil ·r ic h Persian Gulf region. mcludmg Iran and Saudi Arabic., by Moscow and its satellites The first was Soviet penetration of the Hom or Africa. FOR AN adminis tration seemingly so preoccupted with SALT the question of when Qr how to com e to grips with disconcerting issues like fa r a way Afghanistan and the Horn of Africa aoes to the back burner . Indeed, when Ai r Force Secretary John C. Stetson said on April 21 that the U.S. had a .. tacit obligation to back up" Iran in the event or a hostile Soviet move. he was publicly r e bu k('d by th e S t att" De pa rtment ror usin~ overly '5trong langua~e That was just before M OSCO\\- laid claim to Communist power m Kabul. Since then. there ha~ been no visible change in Mr Ca r ter's policy . Qulle t ht' opposite~ the change h as been one m ore de monstra t ion of Soviet disdain for U.S. will and one no t'\"h tig hte r in thl' - psychological Cear campaign against U.S. allies. Demo Candidates Offer 'Protest' Chance Ballot propositions aside. the mos t important decision to be m a d e in the fo rthcoming pri m a r y e lect ion is which Republican will be chosen to ch a lle nge Gove rnor J erry Brown's re-election next No- ve mber. For, although eight candidates are contesting Brown for the De moc r at ic nomination in the June elec- tion. hardly any voter will be awa'te of that until the s ampl e b a llots ar- rive. By then it will be too late lo rally s ufficient voteJ behind one or them to lake the election. None of these aspirants have been a ble to mount a campaign to attract notice As it stands their candidacies are better kept secrets than any CIA operation ever was. Not even the pollsters have deigned to recognize their existence. ln a slate or 21 million a can-, Art Hoppe didate mus establish both an identity and credibility to be taken seriously. Having both of those, organiza tional support must be gathered to win a following. This is the reason can- didates for st a tewide oHice usually spring from some other public office. THE CANDIDATES on the Democratic ticket for governor are not office holders and have no identity. Thus their can- dida cies are nothing more than ego trips. Their very numbers a re self-defeating for, giving Brown a nucleus of backing by reason of h1~ incumbency, the De mocarls who would favor som eone else will be splitting their votes in eight directions. For the record those seeking the Democratic nomination are: Raym ond V. Liebe nberg. an Oroville chiropractor; Gene Athe rton, a Newport Beach ph ysician; Alex D. Aloia, a Pasadena professor ; Jobn Han- cock Abbott, a Santa Clara political science teacher ; Jules Kimmett, a Burbank custodian; David Rock, a Hemet busi: n essm a n: Lowe ll Darling, a Davis artist : and George R. Roden. a citizen or Blythe . From the point of political re alism all are nonentities. In the vtew of many this is unfortunate since. based on Brown's record. any ·~ne or them probably could do a better job than he has. Had one of them spent enough.money and time during tbe past year building 'a naine the Democratic prima ry campaign might now .be some kind of a race. STILL. lo capture the im· agination or the public in a state of this si:te it bas become almost a.<iomatic that a candidate have become esta blis hed in some other political office as a spring· board. Only Ronald Reagan. who had achieved recognition in the e ntertainment fi eld. over- came that lack or experience. Even so it reqUired the spending of huge sums in campaign funds to do it. And money alone is not the key to winning an el~tlon as William Mat.son Roth, who spent Sl million of his own, found out four years ago. Neither does holding a public of(ice guarantee s uccess in a brd for higher office as Mayor Joseph A lioto . Congressman J erome Waldie and Speaker Bob Moretti ~II learned in that 1974 campaign. Edmund G. ''Jerry" Brown Jr. copped that one with tbe combination of holding the office or Secretary of State and a cam paign bag fuJJ of money plus The big plus was bearing the name of a famous father. Ir his name bad been Joe Smith he would still be just another "also ran." SO THE q uestion to be settled a t the polls in J une 1s not whe ther Bro wn can win the Democratic nomina tion. That is a foregone conclusion. The big question is can the Republicani. select a candidate who can de· feat Brown in November? The eight Democratic eandidates are performing a service however. They are affording Democrats a chance to vote for somebody other than Brown even If it only amounts to a protest vote. Inventors of Government Didn't Foresee This My friend, Al Rock, who wtll be 7346 years old this August, is v~ry sore at Senate BUI 1437. In ract, be says il makes hfm sorry be ever Invented government. Th e bill, spons ored b~ Senaton Ted Kennedy and John McCleUan. revlae1 and codiflet all f e deral crlm l na l laws . Tucked away among it.a 682 page la a section e ntitl e d. · Ob•tructlna a Go vern · m•nt Functlon by Pb)'Sleal fn· terf erence." Th\1 u cllon. ••Y cull llbertarlan1, would mu~ lt a , crime to ao mucb u discuss pkket1n1 or demon1tratlna •1atn1t 1uch aovernmenl ac· tlvllies as building a freeway through a park. "When I invented govern- ment." says R~k testily, "that sure wasn't wha t I had in mind." ROCK IS generally credited wlth Inventing government ln the year7314 B.C. "What happened," he recatla. "Is that I came at.rolling out ol my cave one day and thJs guy - I think his namb was Metzen- baum -bops me on the head. .. ·voucan'tdolhat.'says J. ··'Says who?' says he. "Well, I couldn't thlnk oJ a ready answer, hlm being. a root ta ller than me. But. then l iiot to Lalking to a doien other auys Met.zenbaum had bopped over the head. And It came to me ·Hey. I got It!' J sald. 'Let'• pais o law agains t guys bopping other fuYI over the bead.' "At nrst.. that 1ot me an ariu-ment. A CCM.1".,le o( RlU'I y,anted ), to know why they should give up their freedom to bop other guys over the head. But I pointed out that by giving up their freedom to bop other guys over the head, they would prot~l themselves from RK?tng bopped over the head. 'Hmm,' they say. 'Well. okay! 0 NOW m AT works pretty good so we pass some more lawa Like: No Throwing Rocks, Don't Fight Dlrt.y. ~nd No Loud Sing· lng Af\er 10 p.m. "Fil"8t t.blng you know, we got a 1ovemment and everybody signs up -each guy niunnc the aovernmcnt wUl proteet him (rom the oth(!r pys And It does. In all due modesty t aot to admit lt 'I a lft&t Idea.'' Since then. however, R~k ad- m lts the tdea hu had lll ups and dowoa. tn ~eot ytal'I, b• saya, t.h• covemment 'a come up wt th lbe ~ th.-i lea fuoetfon b 1 not only to protect him rrom himself. "It makt!S me withhold taxes from my paycheck and joi n Sod al Sec:w1ty whether I tlke 1t or not ~a\aSe it flgures I'm too dumb to save up for Aprll ts or my otd age," be says . ··And now lt wal\la to make me wear a motor.cycle h~lmet to keep mE' from killing m)'set!. r tell you. nothing like that was in the original contract." BUT WORST of all . Rock :oiays. lS the way government . over the millennia. grew mort" conce rned Wlth protecting itselr from Rock than with protecting Roek from others -Senate Bil\ l437 being a case In pomt. "Well. I still th.ink lnunUna government to protect me rrom iu11 llke Me ue11baum woi. a a reu l d a ," say R ock phlloaophic:ally. "Now ell I .rot to do Is Invent aomethlna to pro- l.ct me trom 1ovemment." •, ' NATIONAL ·SC..., .. \/frtl• Care Tempers Bitterness EIDOR'S NOTE: When Stephm O'RJIGll WCU atabt.d in ci Seatt~ atrttt lalt DecembeT, ~ beggtd an vain Jor 10- meone to call polJce or an amt>Wance to ~Ip #um." Wh11 did JIOU ~ooe me to•!'' uw tM queation he poacd tn a atorv wnltni for the Seott~ Posl-lnte~ and later carritd bfl The Auociated Preu and the Dady Pflot. O'RJ.IGn ~ rece1ued hundredl o/ lettera lince thm which he .wya ahow him that people really do care • By STEPHEN o·ay AN S.."9 .... , ........ c«· . l, SEATTLE CAP > --When they left me to die that afternoon I was bitter. I wanted lo know why, • and if irwas be~a11se they didn't care 1 want~the .! •·•• ·~"wortdto sayll. ~ ~ · ~ Aft.er r told how I was stabbed and then ig-nored on the sidewaik. and my story was printed in The Seattle Post-Intelligencer and carried on the wires of The Associated Press, letters began to arrtve. I HAVE RECEIVED MORE than 300 letters, and they are still arriving. They come from the Seattle area. virtually every state, from Canada. Panama and Central America. There are times when all of us wonder. but now t know -the human race is alive and well. Kathy Walsh of San Diego summed up the messages: "We may be a minority, but there are thousands and thousands of us scattered from town to town <who would have helped>. people you never hear from until they get a chance." Mr s. Robert Brinlee or Blacksburg Va . had this to say: "Years ago at the University or Missouri I had my st®ents write a theme compai"'tag the death of Kitty Genovese with John Donne's 'No Man Is An Island.· I don't trunk any or my kids passed you by that day. I would h av e helped you -m y husband and children Af' • ...,..... would have helped you STEPHEN O'RYAN I am so very sorry ~~ were not there . . . My story posed a question: "Why did you leave me there to die?" Many people endeavored to answer this question. ··Why? Bttause all thought you were drunk So blame it on all who sanction the sale of liquor.·· said a writer in Forest City. Fla. A LE'M'ER FROM NEW HAVEN, Conn .. read : 'Have you visited the graves who did get involved? Look at the man who rescued a woman from three attackers. They all are free. He is dead." Whlle many who wrote me felt that the fear or involvement is a modern disease, others saw nothing new about it. Mrs. Richard Nowell of New Hampshire said my story reminded her or another story she had read. The other story was about a man who was attacked and wounded on a highway, and everyone passed him up until a member or a persecuted race rendered the victim assistance. "It Is the story of the Good Samaritan." she said. · h Theresa Ptllon of Ontario, Canada. saw it t e same way. "THE PARABLE OF THE GOOD Samaritan was brought up to date. Why wer~ you left to~~? Because man hasn'tchanged much}n2,000years. Many writers wondered why rear of get~g in· volved would prevent people from makmg an anonymous phone call to the police. John Montgomery of Miami had an answer. "WHEN THEY SAW YOU ON that street, fear kept them from acting. But if the>'. called the police. it would have been admitting yo~r desperate need and they would have to face their own in1lction. It's so much easier not to see anything at all . . . . Betty Munson of Seattle said she is certain she would have helped me If she were there. . .. "I selUed that m my heart a Jong Ume ago. she wrote. "[ could not have stayed uninvolved. My life could never mean that much to me." These letters have left me with a comforting conviction that there are still millions of people who have a compassion for others -and who would help lf they were there. Springtinae With the temperature in the 80s. the spring day wa~ nearly perfect m . New York's Central P ark. A sun-worshipper gets an early start on a tan. while in the background a hot-air ball~n is a~ut to be sent aloft during a be nefit Wall<·a·thon to support community care for the re· ta rd ed. WNGJOllNS~ Wednesday SHRIMP SALE MIGHTY BIG SHRIMP at a migh1y small price. • 9 Golden Fried Shrimp • Fabulous Fryes • Tangy Slaw • 2 Crttpy Hushpuppies • S4.61 Value Olw good all day on Wednaday • WhUe SuPlllY l.Mu ~ ~Gfolm8ilver~® SEAFOOD SHOPPES 3095 Hmi»or llvd. hi Costa MffCI DIUV6" THRU SEAY ICE AV AIL.AILI New daily nonstop service from nearby Orange Counfy airport. I Economical Sunjet Tours plus discount fares for families and groups. Ry Air Califomio and make it easy on yourself . • •••1•11 We're easy t~take. .. • • Coll AlrCollfomio Reservatlom In Orange County. (714) 752·100l Downey. (213) 924-3313;.Loguno. (714) 496-6CXXl: Los Anoe'-· ('213) 627-5401: Son Clemente, (714) 496-6CXX); RIVeBlde/Son Bemordlno. (714) 8~. ~ vour IOCof Travel Agent I .. TUlldey. May 23, 1978 DAILY PILOT fl 7 Bhetorle's Revealing Little Known Facts Brought to the Fore By DONALD M. ROTHBERG ...... ""• •rtttr It's Clllbuater lime in the Senate agaln and thank good- ness. How else would we find out about the Tiger Rag. the origins of jan and the 1906 riot ln Van· couver, British Columbia? And the attempt to talk to death the so·called labor reform bill haaonly begun. Before it ends, millions upon millions of irrele· vant words will fill the Senate record. OPPONENTS, OF THE bill are assigned speaking time to fill and lt was Sen. S .I. -..K~, R.r~1-"-wM.ofler.ed . the little known facts about the Tiger Rag, Jazz and Vanc~uver. "l should like to explam how jazz was born." s a id the California senator. "This ls a very strange subject to brin~ up in this contellt, but it really is a fact." According to Ha't'.,akwawa. "Before and during the Civil War and thereafter . there exist· ed in the South, especially in New Orleans. a large class of Negro workmen. s killed workmen. craftsmen. people who were literate. people who could read music and belonged to fraternal societies and burial societies and played band music ... "AFTER THE CIVIL War and as the union movement grew and grew in the South what hap· pened was this: The Illiterate Af'WI ....... 'JAzz.Y' FlLIBU$TER Sen. S. I. Hayakawa fower-class Negro drirhng m from the fields. learning to play band instruments and getting Jobs in nightclubs and at ho~es of Ill repute and so on. constltut· ed part of the entertainment hfe of New Orleans. As the trade unions became stronger and stronger. what happened next was that the white trade unions drove out or their occupations the Negro plasterers. cigar makers, hat makers. masons and so on." said Hayakawa. HUNTINGTON BEACH Huntington Center The next step was that "&s~ literate. modertately w.11· educated amateur musicians. who could read French classical and band music. were thrown together with the illiterate mwn· clans" and. accordlna to Hayakawa, the result was Jazz. .. IF YOU WILL listen careflll· ly to somelhiug like Tiger Rag. you will hear the melodies. the construction. the composition. the forms of French. Belgian and German band music. but In the rhythms and the way the horns are made to drawl. rou will hear the influence of the lower-class field Ne"ro.'' As for the Vancouver riot. it was aimed at Japanese imrn1· grants. regarded as a threat to jobs. and It took place the same week that Hayakawa was born in that Canadian city. • HO~WNERS •AUTO~ IF YOU QUAlltlY •• RABBITT INSURANCE 541-55$4 19'4 liARllOR BLVD. COSTAME8A • l>unrl • 1M look o1 CMWd a "'• COlllC*tt Mtedion rwtreshq llaU'Wrtl double old festllon 29c lotdtw29c tumbllr29c "'"'ad Im 39c 64-Gl pltdlw 1.99 n lasw111 tn>m 1u1y • loo•una siassi • bllu111UI Mnd-blown llaU IS 5')8Clilly botromed With ~ CJ«•I CllsllnS .•• rocb,JljQ •nd htcnO.n smtSI • bl<·l'Onthtoek UPI Nefl99c LAGUNA 'HltlS Laguna Hiiia Mall - I I DAil Y PILOT ord ....... ~CIOA>T CO Ut'u.t'YY ltOt ... f AL ....... ..,. ....... ~ o. ... a-.. ~·" r-~ '"°"'•' De<' ......... ....,... N1911ff, 9fr1 ...-n."" lltr •... d Mr, H .. HH•tr ,.,, ~ ... twt,.Qlrh ""' .,.. Mn. lull ~. Ul-~1. tlrt ....... tm MK •11d Mn Wiiiiam E111to.ro ~ hecll. llo'( ...,.,,,, ,.,. """ •M MN.. Rl<Ml'cr Jac..OS, Den• POlnt. OO't _.., .. tt71 ,..,, .... d Mn . Robert Pltt•t•O, ~ HlcMf, 94'1 M,r. •net ~ A-t Brown, Solltl\ ~e.911'1 May•.1t7t Mr. •ncl Mn . Cr••o Soudir, Den• "°'"'· otrt .,.r •M Mn A_, Hot\NY. 1111•' 119" v•eto. oo, Ill• •"4 Mt1.. Tl>OfN' ....otoo E.1 • Toro, ooy ~.,,_ ,.,. "" er\O Mn fr6f'ltr £09tr\, ~II o-••·•"' "'-1•.1tn Mr..,,., Mr1.. AoOef1 Mou1s. "''"'°" v i.10. 91r1 t.Wtt.mt Mr. -Mn l..olll' IC'"41n Jt • S,,,, ~ C.1>1stt-. Qttl Mr •nd Mn. .I«' SllO-S.... Jwn C.lllHreno, 91r1 ""· -Mn Wllll6m Colter ~OU"" 9"ch,Qlr1 ll!r encr Mn. Rodne-'( Hiii S... JIUlrl C.pUtrano, Qlrt ""-' .. _ ,.,. Mr •ncl ~ MKllafl Heye\ ~Ult\ i..ouna. oln Mr •nd Mr\ J1mo B•mmo• L•QMll• 8"<:11, boy ...,., 11, ,.,, Mr. •"<I Mr!.. J•~ K"°'~t ltOll"• Nto~t. bOv SAN CLEMEHTE 0 1'.NliltAL HOSl'ITAL _., 11, 1'71 Mr ""° Mn . Renotll Pe.noe, !Min Cleme111e. bOY Mr aftd Mt\ O..rle' Cll•lv•r, Ml\ _..,, v1e,o, oort ,,., ind Ml• Sttven Nt''°"· Sen ei ......... e. boy llAr end Mr\ Ml<llatl Powrll ~01\lrano 6"<11. l>Oy f1At elld Mrs. 0...... (.Jerk, ~ JIM" Qp1Ur•t10., bOy fo\ey 11. ,.,, Mr a...i Mn w1111..., Bu..c:I\, S..- Clemenle, otrl Mr •1111 1i11n Clwlrttt WflQrlt. M1\ i.lonV .. Jo,ll'r1 Mlly u , lflt Mr a110 Mr> Jrtry Holl s. .. et.rn•nr•. bo't Mill'"·'"' Mr e...i Mn. si. ...... Bt .. >ter, S..n a-nte. bo't _,u,Hn lltr •M Mn Nflrr:y 5'e91"I, Et roro, !)Cly Ml .tnd Mr$. Ml<hHI Gall~. s.1! Oemente.91rt Deaths A Elsewhere S ANTA MONICA CAP) -Robe rt E. McClure, a novelist. <.'hair man of the board of Unite d Wester n Newspapers and former editor and publisher of the Santa Monica Eve· ning Outlook, died Sun- day a t the age of 81. AITCMISON JOHN M Al TOflSo.1, t'ftldl!nt Of Ne•~t llNO\, C.. P.sseo ... ., on Mo n. tm. t..cM119 , .. _ ot Mrs G••nG• WllWlll. •lso wr•l....S Dy l 9r•ncl<lll-ertd I qre•t 9'end'on Funero111 i..rlfl<.ti wttl t. hold on Ttlur\ <My Mey 2S, 1'71 lll 1 00 P M •I Ille c11o11pel 01 O'COllno• L•oun• Hill\ Morlu•rv. 2S)OI Al•t •I Po1tr~ ... 1y, L•g un• Hiii>. C• l"lerm~"' 1n 11\0ft\ICMI Cemetery El Toro, C• O'Connor LeQuM Miii\ Mor1u•rv dlre<IOf>. 0 '8111EN LEO PATRICK O'BRIEN, pa\~ away on Mey 11, 1m 5'J"'IYeG ov Ill\ .. 11e J06f'I, two'°"' Sll.twn and Otnlel. two O•uolller•, K•ll"••n and Mt1rouerit• o~Brien. t 't)ter. Maro~rl1e Meulna Aecltallon ot tile Holy Ao>¥Y w;n Monclay Mey 22. 1'78 .ti 1 00 P M 111 PM!\ F-ly O\lpel f'untral ~ T~y MeY D, 1.,1 olll 10 00 A M ... St Bor\6 .. "lure CAlholl< Oluttll lnt«,,....t II Good Sht-ro C.me1•rv MUU.Ell BEA l lti'ULLER, r~ldef'lt ot Co$1a Me\4 c.. P.H..O -•Y on Mty 21, lt11 Survl-by ,,.,._ J•Cll A , brother Jaclt ~·• ot C...~ Cth, Nf¥•0•. "'"9f'\ Uf' Hutcn1n\Gn ot S.uama1uo. CA. E•lller WelHr of Tr-l>t•.,.,., CA -Ruth U-rs 01 s.<•...,"9to. CA Gu~ serV1u~ wnl ~ held .,,, w.orwwi.v ~~ 14. "" •I 11 oo /4 NI Pac 1llc View Mrmor1•I Pa.-In heu of lio-<1 ~ tem1lf reounl• -mort•I con1r11>u hon• to The~ 0..ldrer> l Hofnto •t Co•lna, CA Pacific View Mof1u-.y dll'K_IOf'\. SMlmTVTMU.-L.AMI WISTCIJff CHAP& 427 E 17th St. Costa Mesa • 646-4888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N Broadway Santa Ana • 547·4!31 rt•ct llOTMlltS SMITHS' MOWTUA•Y 627 Main St Hunhngton Beach 536-6539 ,_, ..... y Coc.oMAl PUNIUL NOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 ,.C1AC YllW ~, ... Cemetery Mortuary O\aoel 3500 Paaf1c V•flW OrMt Newpon, Ca1tfom1a ~2100 MeCOaJ4CI( NOl'NAatlS Laouna Beech 494-9415 Laguna Hills 788-0933 San Ju8n Capistrano .. 96-f718 IALTZ-MION --A&.~ Corone ct.I Mir 8734450 Cmtt M4lea ~424 ~llOAOWAY ~ 11oan.t ... , COit•~ 842-9150 A -· l~.,..., 23. 1171 ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES Cella Aide c .. e $~1"otllA-"'E~S • PUBLIC NOTICE P VBUC NOTICE .PVIWC NO'J'lCf! R e tired Judge TAot lnt1i9uin9 Word Gomt wJ#li o Cliud le ------'"""' "'' (\AT a f'O\L/41! ------ 0 ._ ....... cl .... f 1,t K•O-blecl ...otO> b.- 1c;,.. IQ ''"'"' '°"' .....,i. WO'dt "C'TJT1~ allltNUS NAMa STATIM&lfT Tll• loll_f..,. IM''°"' era Clo•'"! 111nlnni• FOH T4'HA Mf.AOOW'> Hit Ma t Arfllur 8oule .. ro Nowoort 9-11.~taMO NOTIC8 TO c1o•n•ACTOllJ CA.U.JNG ..0. 8101 810N0..4 11 COffTIIACf NO .._,. SChOOI 0.'40 ICC H~WP()ltf MUA UN1 F1EO SCHOO\. OISTAl<;T H0f1C&0' ,.~8LIC HIA•tNG NOTICE Ht~eev ·~ GIVEN ..... ,....fl(..._..,. ............... '"" Alf oqtl L•lld UW (.oftwn'""'" •o• Ofoll/\00 C.ounh 0" ff¥'ldoll• J-I\ 1•11, •I I ~ D'" Ot .. -1M.-o11tt•• "' D01\11>1e Ill .... Con*'"'C• fl-Of tile "'" C.11t0f'11t• Corooute Meeo _,.,, llwtcliftQ. -.. e1rui si,.,., May Return A retired Orange County S"l)erlor CourtJ'ud1e may be asked to return to the court aa an a vlser 1n a new move to resolve criminal cbaraes raced by a former key aide to convicted Dr Louis J Cellet J r Luwyers for both sides in lbe proseeutlon of former hospita l administrator Stephen Robert Evans. 32. said Judge William C. Spel.rs' expertise may be invaluable in enabling them to assess Evans' chances In a lrial, ll a trial Is scheduled. DE FENSE A1TORNEY JAMES Riddel and assistant District Attorney Michael Capizzi were among lawyers F riday who discussed the Evans case with Superior Court Judge H. Warren Knight who may eventually be asked to set a trial date. Evans is currently serving an eight-month term m Lompoc prison after being convicted in federal court of criminal charges related to the embezzlement or more than $4 million from two Orange County hospitals controlled by Cella as St.'<'retary·lreasurer. Cella. who masterminded the siphoning of hos p1lal funds thal were In part devoted to financ· ing the campaigns of polit.ical candidates fa vored by him. 1s serving a fi ve-year sentence at Lompoc. WITH THEM IS FORMER business manager Theodore "Ted" Schiffman. He is serving an eight-month prison term after pleading guilty in fedt•ral court and superior court. Cella and Schiffman pleaded guilty to reduced t'ha1 ~es in local superior court action. But Evans has thus tar refused to offer any kind of plea despite protracted negotiations. La wyers explained Friday that J udge Speirs was the first Superior Court judge assigned to the Cella case and studied the issue for several months bef ore removing h im self from a ll further participation. Capizzi denied that J udge Speirs' intervention could mean a guilty plea from Evans. "It just might help us to resolve a few things," he said. 173 Homeowners Suing Developer Damages totaling more than $1 million are be· ing demanded from the Huntington Har bour Corp. by 173 condominium owners who attach a long list of structural defects to their Orange County Super ior Court. lawsuit. I Na med as co·defendants in the lawsuit iled by the Sea Harbour Homeowners Association is the Christiana Corp., also involved in the development of the Sea Harbour community .. lt is alleged in the action that the defendants have promised to comply with the plainlif(s' de· mands for remedial action but have so far failed to meet those commitments. Among the structural defects listed in the la ws uit are the alleged failure of the developers to conform the landscaping with the artist's render- ing, failure to adjust the televis ion cable so that re· sidents can get satisfactory reception and the fallure to soundproof walls. A'so. roofing defects. leakp and cracks in the tennis courts, and the allegv<J failure to provide more than one therapy pool. Three UCI Profs Win Fellowships T hree UC Jrvin e professors have been awarded Rockefe ller Foundation Humanities Fellowships to further their ~arch. Recipients are Dr. MUJTay Krieger or Laguna Beach . University Professor or EngUs h baaed at UC l and d irector or UCl 's national School of Criticism and Theory; Dr. Anton Kaes of Costa Mesa. associate professor or German and com· parative literature. and Dr. J onathan Wiener of Pacific Palisades. associate professor of history. IN WINNING THREE OF the 34 Rockefeller Foundation Fellows hips awarded this year, UCJ heads the list of institutions so honored. The Rockefeller Foundation Fellowships are presented each year to scholars working in fields of interest to the foundation. The a wards are fo. tended to enhance research and teaching or public service. Dr. Krieger, a mem ber or the UCI faculty since 1966, is researching present-day anU-elillsm in literature and art criticism. He is probing the effects or the move toward egalitarianism in the arts on esta blished modes of crtticism. His re · searc h will be compiled into lectures that he will deliver as the John C. Hodge Memorial Lecturer in English Llterature at the University of Tennessee in the fall of next year. DR. KAES, WHO JOINED the UC I faculty in 1973, is studying the impact of Ameri can popular culture on German literature. He plans a book on the s ubject. Dr. Wiener, who joined the UCI faculty in 1973, is writing a book titled "The Modernization Pa r adigm: A Critique." The work deals with theories of economic development and social change in developing countries. Pool Ouster Eyed Directors of the Broadmoor San Clemente Community Association have gooe to court fn 1 bid to force a member couple to remove the swim· ming pool they recently lnst.a.Ued In lhelr home. It is alleged in the Orange County S\lperlor Court lawsuit that George T. and Catherine Davis, 203 Calle DeUcada, lnst.alled the pool in defiance or as~clation regulaUons ln October, 19'17. Command Assumed Ma rine Lt. Col. R. Richard Thrasher . son of Ethelyn R. Thrasher of Capistrano Be ach. bu a11uttM!d command or Wlna TransPortatJon Squadron 37 at El Toro Marine Corps A.it Sta· tloa, Santa Ana. Aa ~niqiandlng of . tlcer , Tb ruh e r h reaponat ble for a c- compllsbment o( bla s quadron 'a u staned m l11ions, operation of lt.s equipment and over· all aupervlalon of aa· 1l11Hd ofllura and enlisted~. H la ~uadron provides cround t ran.portetlon support lor squdn>n1 and aircraft ll'OUPI of lb 3rd Marine Alrerat\ Wing at El Toro. I REE t1 EG 1 I I I I e I L I TET j 1 I I I' ( J I T H I 8 A I "' What can y0u roelly aay S I I I I' -; about the tc0nomy? Any • "' WOl'M tn<J II could Qualify for ... , -ti-I _B_R_O_N_ .... , 4 --. I ~ J I' I I G C°"'t>'•'• I'll• chv<kl" o,-.d • -• -• ~ foll•flQ '" ........ , ... 0 -d ~-A--.._-A-_.._-A-__, v<>w o...ioo I•°"'~ No l t>-low e ;::~~p~~~Qt~.(S I' r r ,. r I' I' ,. I I i I I I I AfllM!d A °'"9tv. Htl ~Art,_ 8ooiltvMd, ........,, 8Hcll c;.flfqrft/e .,... Jahn E ... Im. 1"2 Cl C.m1110 Aul, C.rl ....... (atlfoml• flOOI l(en-111 s 81Klw...,_ Jr,. 4SS1 t•• '''"'· SM! llH<ll, Golllllom4• 90140 M ,,,, .. , e 8u<fl•11•11. 1101 :::..'f''°" Cll'Cte, Or111>9f, C:.lllort>l• Nel-CNINI~ Astoel•te•, In( . 1•ta Mt<Af111Uf 8ollte1t.,<I. NtWl'W •-..c11, c.tfllor'ni. 92'NO f llh b11t.l11eu '' ~Ol>d\Kt.cl •Y • O•"-rtl perWr1111D Af'Pld A. oitllltv. l>ltf1~ Tiii• •tei-t "'"" lllM with tlw Ca1111ty C-Of Or...iot Gounlv °" Mey .. ""· JOMM a. Ml,~lltNAJll. et HOWH•. OCltTNllt & .. OWN •*c..t-o.t .. liltw,.n9Ndl,Cll.'21M.1 P11b11lMO ()r_,. CO.lt 0.lly Pilot May•. ''· u , JO, "'' 1m.1• a10 DMolw 11 oo o cto..' • m ot tht 1111 oav of .>..,.., t•re Pt•<• ot 1110 R.C-4111 ter Plolt•ntl• Stt•I, c.tta ~. C•lllOff'lf• ••11 Pro1t<I IOentiflt•llon Hem•• SECUA1 TV FENCi NC. 4' T PLACIN· TIA STAIE ET Pl•ct l'latlt. ere on Ill• II)/ Pf.oten II• S1rte1, ~le Mna, c;.11torn1e .,.,, c.tllfclrlll• .,.. NOTICI! IS HEllljtY GIVl!N ..... Ille tbov•~ S<hOOI Dlltrlct ol °'•"Ot ~Y. CAlllQrftle. •ctll'Q O'f •nd tl\IOuQll II• Govern1110 Bo•r d, ll t rt1n•lltr rtltr•td 10 e \ "OISTAIC'T'", wlll rec.ti.t uo lo, bul "°' ltttt ~ 111e tbcw.Mtalecr time, 'ul.O bid\ l0t lllt -•rd OI e COf\lt« I tor '"" ·-prOjKI 810\ \NII t. rectt~.cl '" the Pl.Kt lclenlltlld •bow ..,a 11>•11 be -...0 al\CI OUb41CI¥ rHd AIOllCI •t lllo9 -·· \l•ledtlma-Oi.tU E.cll bid m"'I <011torm •nd be re,,_11 .. 10 lllt <Oftt•.CI OO<U•'n<WI" E•cll Did \NII be «<om!Ml"le<I l>'I Ille -ulltv ~.rted to •II Ille C.,.,lr«I ocxu"'""'' -b\t ,,,. 11\1 of ~-ed fllb<Olllra<IOf'\ Newport Steen. CA. ltoom 10' IS.t6"4 ,.._I to<~ tllt actlOn lelton l)w lllt 8oM<1 OI ~'"''°'' Of Ota"°" <;ounlvonW~v Mo•• IUt. ••Ill •ffCIO(t lo h/\l•tlv• fract .. 10, ~ VIII-II. IO<tlell '°""' of L•ll• F0tf'R Oflw In Ille U.,,,. Hiii\ ere• Tiie All"Dot"I """'° Uw C....m•-., II\ lf>Mlll'Q on l'hw\Otlw. Mew It , 1u1. delerl'ftllltd INtt ""'.CtlOtl bit ttre 8o.ro of $uplrrv1~ 1, tr'Con•l,...,,t wllll tho A1roon L;1ftd u .. CM<\• Ml"I°"'' All'llOrl E,,vlt'Of'' U "ll U~ Pion lor Merine CorPll 4'1t s...tio.., E• Toro encl twt • pub41t: ,,. •• 1119 lie llefd to°*'~'"'',,._,.,.. 0r not 111e pro-~\ed a<llCll' " In 11\9 tiff! 11\te•Kh Of Illa •lroorf !MCA'-EI Tot 01 end Ille tn•"O<I• Of Ille ..cllacent lan<I •rt• II l\ rao11Hted th•t •"• W"llef'I ft\-\e to tllt\ jlUClllC NlllU Co WI> mt1h1d to lllt Alr'POrt l..tNI lJ~ <Om• Mt\\'411 IOt Or ... CDu"lv ptlO< 10 '"" fle.ttl"9 ,., .. -------------1 lllt OISJRtCT ,_,Ye\ Ille •IQlll to ~Or turlfler dol•ll• '"1Hrdl"O Ille \tftfdvl H "••f•f\q, ttll •n••r•,tf'O ,,..11.,. •re tmtllecl lo uh Or wttll Ille Olli« o1 ow Atr'POf'I L.aNI ui.. eo-n m1u1on lit» 8>r<h Slr•I. ,.._, e.ac11. Room •02, T"-l'ff>. 111., l3J 150S PVBLIC NOTICE , l't'T ITOU$ IWSI HHS N.udSTATV.UfT <rn• 101i,w1119 oonon1 er• CIOlllQ llVillWUI S A ~SOCt/4 11'0 MIOICAL SERVICES, 2~ PIM!• lt••I '222, MIUIOfl VtejO. CA 02t7S Mr "'-'•Id 8ret11t0<k. M 0 • StrQtl lKl.¥efl, M.O , 21'15t Puer't• Rt•I, MIUIOrt Vltjo, CA ffl1J Mllrr•Y "'6tQOllt.. M D .. w 1111..., SclltPH(lt. M 0. U~ Plltrl• RNI, MlnlO<I Viejo. CA '2•rS ~rl A T•u l1lro. MO . w1111 .... Smith, M 0 , 111S6 Puerl• A .. I, MO. >IOI! Viejo, CA 9»7S Rltllttd J.cOb. M .O • Ro11e1cr S<tlrt lt..r, M.D , 7115' Pwrld A•el, Mission VlojO, CA91•1S T Ill\ 1>u11neu " conou< led t>v d QeMr •• oartMr\tl•P S.roel l..D(IUH'ell, M o. flH\ \lel-t .... flied Wllll Ille Counlr Cl•r~ ol OranQt County°'' Mo • ... ,. ...... ,. Pul>li\h«I Or~ C.0.11 Doily Pllol Mev t. i., 2J, JO, 1978 182S /8 re1ect any or •II btd5 or to ... , ... ,..,, ltreQ<1lollrtt~ Of 1nlormehhes lft •llV bids or '" ffle btdtlll'Q Tiit DISTRICT ,.... ot>tamed from Ille 01r.c1or OI ''-O.-tment Of •11· OUStrlel A•l•UOf'I\ the -If pre1to111I 1nQ ralt Of JI« Oltrn ·-• •n Ille •ou lltv '" wNcll ow, _." •• 10 tie O« for m.o for •«II c r If I or I vi>e of PuOh\lltd 0. ... C:O...n 0..ly ~llOI Mtor 7J. lO. lt1' ZOJZ rt PUBUC NOTICE wor1tmo1111MedtO10 uttlll• Ille cont------------- l•KI TMM rat~ .... .,,, lllt "' '"' •. ,.,,. OrSrA•CT olllto •outed •I 11\1 NOTIUTOC1tEOITOllS Pl•<•""" Sltetl CO\U MtU MO.A..,.1' CAlllorft1• ei.21 Coote\ m•v be oO SV~•lllOlt COURT 0~ THE •••r>ed on r.ciunt "tOO't Of IM\e UAfa Of'CALl~NIAPOll rate\ \NII be l'O'led •I Ille 10b "'' TN€ OOUNT'I' O~ OUHOE Tiie tore901nq ..c:"-<lu•e Of ~r Cl•otm rn •h• Meller ot the E•t•I~ ot ••oe• ,, -upon .. -kll'Q do 01 RALPH p EOWAROS ..... RALPH ••on• 111 llOUI'\ Tlltr•ltlor llOll<lav-PEL TON EOWAROS, OtcaMtel ov•r1tmewortc_,..ll~•llN1l1or1)1•ncl Nollet 1, ,,.,.et>y Olveft 10 ttedffor\ ~·h•U ~·v•nq t••iM\ •Qdtl\\t .,.. \41CI 11 \11•11 be ~IO<~ llOOt' '""CON oec.Oent 10 Ille ~•d c•••m• on lllf TRl<CTOA to -m Ille tonlrKI ,, olllct ol ,,.. tler'll Of file .OIOfl!Wld 1tward•O • ...a IJOOn .onv Wb<Of\tt<t<tor courl or to pr<uenl lllem 10 lllt un~r "'"'· lo IMY "°' leu lllen ,,,. ull<lef\IQned ti Ille otll« Of Sfl<HlfY satd \OtClllfld ••IH IO ~II ""°"-"' l HA H H Ht. H N 1. H A H ~ employed l>v 111em •II Ille ~•acuu.,,, ol I'\ 1 AH LEY l HAHN 1 ~01 i: Ille con tr.cl C.Olor.clo 81.0., S..llt '°°· P•-· No l>"ldt< may w1lhduw "'' bid •or C..lllorlll• tllOI -IOI ••ti., offl" •• • oer10<1 ot fll•rtv l•ve USI O..V\ •lltr Ill• pl•t• or l>u\tfteU ol fllt' IM Cleft .at tor tllt ooen•no ol b•O\ -•\IOl\90 '" •II INltK\ "*'1•111•"9 A p.oymen1 bOlld ...,., • ~formenct 10 w•d Ulalt SU<h <l••ms ""'" 111t l>OnO •Ill be """""'° "''°' to ••tCU M<HWrv vcvc,.,, """' bl II~ or PUBUC NOTICE 1'°" 01 lllt <Of'ltract '""' pay~t Dono Dtt\lnted •• •tOr•Uld w1tll1n •our •-------------i '"•II ~ '" lllt •orrn Mt '°''" '" 1r,. ~tll> .,..,. 1,,. ""' DUOll<•llon 01 '9CTITIOU$ 8USIHESS HAMe ST~EMEHT con1reclCIO<u,._I\ this riotlco Go"tm•no Boero 0 led Me"/ 11 ,.,. Tiie loll-•n<1 Pt"rM>fl• •r<' d01nq PVBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE 11ut1~, •1 ~~:""llV H-y Fo\Mr • M•lltt1°D. EOW•td\ Pu<t~•t>Q 01tt<tor ... Adi.II -------------·!-------------! LIVll'jC. IMAGES. 304S Jtlft[Y Drlrt, '"II'', QMt.o Ma .. , C..h1otn1• HOTtca °" SALAE o~ ~ICTITIOUS 8USIHH S ~•lt$0tfAL ~UY NAME $lATEMEHT CS.c. •t c.tlf. QvU c:Mel Tlli! lollowlno person• are oolno Nollet k rwret>y QIWfl tllet unOt< ~•nn•1•. a...i~to o.i.wm.--~o-HOLLAND AMERICA TRADES ., IO•d, tho uftdetSIQfted Eu,.fce IH A T I. 2~1 AUQU•lln, Ml'>IO'I Dullll•urler, •t 3SS c~. i...o<ina v1e10. C..lllom<•92'7\ Be.ell, Clllloml• t:Z.Sl, will vii et Hondri~u• EHeh11\. 24361 oub4k eu<llon •I Wld ~ •• •t • AUQU\llft MIUIOll VlelO. c.tlllor,, .. O'tlocll A.M. on Ille list ... ., OI Mey. 91t7S 1'1t, tM IOllO#lno dft<rl...O °"''°""'' Benar<IV\ S<11r.ave, WllltlMn IS. property or 10 much tlltreol as m•11>t 8Hrn, Nt~rl.,l(js necenuy to '4111•1V • llffl -tllt 1111-Joi\-Oel<ker l'<OOrO.rwtQ U, O.r\IONd IOr rent M>d incldent•ll In SOett, N"lfle•l•ncb curred al tllt •bOYe·menllOf'led •d l'(tcld•e Van Otr VHt. 811C10rp 67 orau, ,.,_,,... with -Is ol aClvertlS· AmSlelveen, Helf>trlends lno •noe•~Of .. i. Tt1•• Duslnen '' <011duc1e0 ov .. Oncrlpllon IMds, cll<'sts, tables, o-~r•I pertne"lup \lovt, ml\C. 11ems. 0-ner Jonn ~. Hflldr•ltlli Erlltlen\ AMOUlll Oue· $210.00 Tiiis \fAl-t WI\ llled *llft l"'r •ovtrlls1119 Co\t•· US.00 E •pm•e• ol o~::d ~\°?11~0~·cr~.~· 1919 EU'll«t OuM11u11e< Pul>it•lled Oranot CD.1st 0.tlly Piiot, May 16. 23, 1•1• PUBUC NOTICE ~ICTIT10US 8USINESS H.llMa STATIM«NT Tiit fotl-lng persons •re Clo1ng 11u.ineu o · MOC PA0PERTt£S, 26Sn P•rtso Ori .... IW"61on VlefO. CA ~s R*rt E. MA~. 1'G1 .iu.o.1~1a Cir< le, MIJsiofl Viejo, CA mJS Robert 1 . <>soorne. 1'sn P1r1to Ori ... Ml-Vtero. CA m.JS Ge,.fd P Orrren, 241'1 C.1a111ne Clr<I•, Ml"lorl Vle,O. 0 9167S Tiii\ bu•l ... u .. COIMIU<tt<I l>y .. ~Mt•l oartnen111p R_.E.fo\e..,,.r ''"' tl•l-1 was lllecl w1t11 lfte Covnty Cl•"" of Oranoe County on Mey II, 1'79 DVll'l'EA,MALCOM, OAL'l'&VITTI ""-'fl-'U• 4lt'I Mee.II~ 8'111eYM'f .... , Offka ... Jl'lt ,....,_. a..a., CA 9'MJ PubllllleO Or~ Coast 0.tllY PllOI May "· lJ, lO ~ •. "11 11111·'>'• P UBUC NOTICE P UBUC NOTICE ~ICTIT10US 8USINIU MAMIE STATEMaNT The IOI~ penon Is CIOl"9 Ml· ......... FRONTERA PE TRO CO .. a C.llto<ftl• ll!N"" l>ollrtllenlllp, 31161 Holl'f or1w, Sou111 ~. CA '2•n C, Nell R...._op, 0......11 PartMt', 31161 HOiiy Orlvt, Solltll YOUN, CA '2•11 r111s binlnen I\ <onduc Itel by • llml ltd Pettrer\/llp. c. Nell A.N.op o.nwei Ptnnet Thi• , .. \ement Wti liltld Wiii\ 11111 Countt Cltn Df Or..,os County °" April 2', "7t C. HllL. 1t•Htc0f> S4tlteO.•~ uetH!• llNCll, CA n.11 P..-SS Pul>llilled OrMI09 CNSI 0.lly Piiot, ,,.., 2, •. "· n. m1 1101·11 PVBUC NOTICE "ICTIT10U$ 811111fEH H&Ma ITAT•IMN'T The 101towt119 *'°"'' •re OO•nt vilMU•: INTERHATIOHAI. 'IESU.RCH &. UEVlilOPMENT, .. , Etlllet SI, COii• IMta, CA t»D L. H .. t Tll'lff, 4> £sllwr SI , C.ost. MtMI, CA ftlD L•rr H, Tiner. 2t1'1 S•lmmtr Utllt, """'~ ~"· "'" .... Tr1ls lt\ISl""t Is <~lfd by • ..... , •• ~p L "-II Tiner fllll SW"'"'911t we 111«1 wltll lilt Co<Mtt Ci.tit ot Or.,... Countr 0wt Allfll Je, 1911 ~tntt f'UOll"*I Ortntt CM•I O.llv PllOl. AMy t. t. tt.. n, "" . ' uoi.r• PVBUC NOl'ICE Cou,,ty Cttf1' Of Or•"91 Coll"tY on M•y ''· "71, ,"412, Put>ll\lled Oranoe Coast O•llY Piiot. May 23. lO ...O JUM 6, IJ, 1'71 PUBUC NOTICE •·14114 NOTICE TO CltEDITOltS HO.A~ SUl'Eltl~ C:OUllT 0' THI ST I< TE M CALI FOaNtA FOii TMI COUltTY ~ OllAHO( 111 tll~ Mitter ot tll• E•l•te ol MARGARET ANN ENLOW •l\o kllOwll a• MARGARET A ENLOW, Oec••* Noti<t I\ lwrft!Y 01ven to cre01tor\ """'"9 cl••ms -'"" tlle w1cr Gt<• dent to me wld <la!"" '" Ille ott•cc ot tllt clertr OI "" .. Or~ld <0<>rl or lo P'~t them l10 Ille uneler>IQntd •I 11141 otllce of CHAIS CONWAY. GRISHAM. VANDENBERG, NOn CONWAY I. CANNON. 120 E Oc~._, Bl..O , IOlll FIOOt, ~ a..JI, CAllforn<• ._, wlllCll l•ltw otlk~ 11 Ille platt ol 1><111 N\l ol llw ~i9Md Ill •II Mollltt" psrl•tn•"9 to tafd nt.t• Such <l•lm\ wtltl Ille net-y vouclle"' "''"' be lllecl DI" ~led ., .. Of'tt.<110 w11f\1n tour montlls alter the llrst P<1b4luh011 Of tllls notice. Oetl'd Mey ta, t'78 JKltF Enlow E aecutOf Of Ille lftlll Of MIO 0Kedfr\t OltllHAM, VANDEH8EllG, NOTT, COflWAY &CMINOH &ftHWews et uw 120 !!". Oc_.,_.,, ,.., , ..... ~~~·--Pul>ll.,,.., Or11n99 Cout O.lly Piiot Mey U, 30 ..0 J-6, ll, 1'71 '2621• O•nny Bry...,1 c;u,,,,. JOO .Htt•rv 0rl"9, 'A', Cost• MeHI, C<llltorm• 9761• 0..l>orall Ml<llHI Gu•""· JOO J•I ltfV Ori•t A (O\t<I MtU C.hlorn•• m:i. Oenr>1\ R..,.,.11 £ooe" 1101 s F•lrv1ew. Apl O \. S•nl• An• CAhfOrtlloll '2104 No rmt """ EQOP•\ 1101 S F•or••t.,. Apl D \ !'>enl• An4 C.lllorn .. 91104 T Ill\ l>l"illt\\ I\ <CMICIUt lrd Dy d 01Mr•l 1>o11rt1re""'•P· Norma Ann EOQe•\ Tru• >1•teme<1I wd\ 101e<1 ... ,m lht C.Ounly Clerk ol Or...,91 County on May 11, 1•11. FO...., Published Or•l\QIP eo .. t D-lly P1lol MtV 16, 23, 30 .ino Jun~ o t•l3 1430·18 P UBUC NOTICE NOTlc:a: TO C1'•0ITOllS SU .. lltta.1 C:OUllT OF TMl STAT•~ CAU~ltHIA ~Olt Tl•a COUNTY 01' OltAGE ... A-HDJ E\telt OI HOWARO 8 HOLDEN •U HOWAAO BOOAEAM HOLDEN •U HOWARD HOLDEN, ""• H 8 HOLOEH, 0.C.- NOTICE IS HERE8V GIVEN to IM cr~llOf'I ol ttw _,..named dt<-1 IMl •II penOll\ """'"O tl••ms .. g.,,,,. Ille w oo clKAdMt «• requ<reci to Ille 111em. "''"'Ille nect$wry VOU<llen. 1n Ille oltlce of Ille Cl«IC °' llM •tiove e<1 tilted CO<>rt, tK to P•"Heftt ltle!n. wllll tlle neceu~~y "°"'"""· to the un· ll*ntOMCI ' .. Ille office of Ille Puotk .\CltllflttatrftDI' flt Or'otnoe Collnfv. '* So1111t Orelld ••• ,,,... Stftt• ,.,,., C..lllornl" '7m . .tllcll Is tilt llf<t<• Of butlnen 411 the ~OM<I In ell m•I· ten per1e1nrno to Ille e11•t• 01 wf(J • cadent. #1111111 lour ..-1111 •lier trie tint ,,..t>llcatton ol 1111\ notice Otted Apn1 21. 1'11. J Afil!'S &. HEIM, Pullik Admlnl\lr•IOf •• Admfn1ttr.ior ot the estatt OI Ille •!>Ow MIMd CM(.-nl AOltlAN KUY,.elt, COUNTY COU!ittll. •N 8 aNJAMIH,. 01 MAYO. o•f'UTV f'.O ... x lU• hllft ...... Cltlff9nlj• tl7ft ......... ,, ........ llbln. PllC>ll>lltd Ora.toe Coall Da11y Pilot Mtr t , t , '"· 2J, i.n 111s-11 Put>ll\MO Or-Co.I\! Dt•I• Piiot ~u<ut~Wlll Moy 13 lO 1~7& "AHN I. "-::N 1010 II STAHLf.Y L. H/lHH PUBLIC NOTICE An-Mn •u• ,., l Cater-IM"'9 $yjl•"9 .......... ~·•11t1 P111>11tl!Od Orat\Qe Coe\I D.tllv Piiot, Mo 1l. lO -J ...... •. 13 IQ18 101• II PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF 5 .. ECIAl JOINT MEE'TIHOS 01' THE CITY COUNCIL AHO TMIE ~OUHTAIH VAUl'I' AOIHCY 1'011 CO-UHITY OIVILOl'MENT NOTICE I~ HERE8'1'.GIVEN llWI 11\e City Council """ lllt fou,.te1n V•fl•~ .AQf'nt., tor (ommvtu Iv Oe•llOPm•M wllf llofd ,. SOtC•,.I Meelll'Q "" T-y June 6 t•TI, •I 1 )() p m '" tile Co11nc: .1 Olemt>tr 8UHCllnQ 10100 Slele1 AvtftW, tor ll>t !Mlrt>Ote Of C.°"'k)or\119 ..., •O<.......,I belwM" 08 ~rtlM. WYanCIOtte Corooro11t1on 18ASFI -IN f'OUlll••" V•lltf Aqencor fOr Comm11n11v o .. etopmeftl ,.,. .,, .. ,.,.11, will 11<ovldt •or Ille purc:lle5e and wie of re •• prooertv. lot •t ller wllll the con\t "" 110" •"d 11\• ol ti ••ro• lrldllstrl•I tac1llly to be •llLWtted °"tile PtOOOrly bout'ld*d oener•ly l>TTtlbert AV'tn.,. °" tllt roortll, tile t'IOocf Control °'4nne1 on 111e ent, the s.... Dleoo "'""'•Y Of'I Ille \Culh, end WarO Sir eel on the west OAT ED May 18, '911 E vetrn McClmcto" CltyCt.rti Publllhed Or~ C.0..\1 Oaily PllOI, />Ny 2l, 1971 20l0 IS Just a few wonh in the r ight place ... Dally Piiot Cla11ifled Ads Dfal the direct llne 642-5678 PVBUC NO'l'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE llfOTICtl 0, NU"1 .. NOTtC.IE IS Mt •EIY GIVEN "* '"' 9o.tfoll ef ~r'VI'°'• Of tM c-.ty Of Of ..... $1$ d C..U-•, 11.s 1>V Ret0t1Alen Oolli.tl IM JSl!ll day of .-11. 1t7', ~l..W Ill lntentloro 10 _.... tlle i..rttlrlrY clttcrlMcl betow to Orene- CMMty ,,,.... Uonflno MefnltNll<t Dllh'l(.I Ho. ''·Md -,, • ., YW~. "" Jl\t GIY fll May, 1'1l, .. "" ltOllt of • 30 O'tloo •• ,.,. Of MKS "'" "' .. Cllatl\Otn flt IN llotnl Of Sulle<Vf-• Of !tie Ctlifllf oc Or.,.. In ti. o.-...,. (6wlty Adftllntlllttlon l lllldillf. )U Norlll 5'1<.tme>r9 SlrMI, '"' ,,,. C1ty of Stft. It Alla, Oolltorftjjl, at tl!e ll'!le •llCI Pf.Kt IOI llw MM11'Q upl)ll t1w qwttlGn f/f tald -utlOll lftd .e11 •1.c11on, llltrtto. .i •a.. 11-eno 111-.. , ff'lt-tt· ., .. ,__.,......,_.,........, .111 •llY tkM ll'tof •IM tlfM 11 ... '°' t1e•nne. ltry lntw•Md "'"-mer 11 .. •1111 .. ~at"" INr• .. Sueeno1eon ot llw ~" ot Or.,.. wr"1111'1 -..ctlOlt~ to .... ,.,...... -.. tlell, wt'IK" .0.11<1'°"6 •Ill 1-~ _, ... ...,.. .. ~!Ml'\ 4lt"" '""*.,.., ,._ "*"" ...,.,.. A ..... MtCllltl«I of MMI WYttwy ~ ,.,,......,. 111 1'-laft IN.. n.-. d.tltd """ n. tfn, °' .... '°'""' .. ~'°";111 ...... .,. .... o..tl Clf .. ...,.. .. ....,.,,...,,. .,,. t•l'HClry k ..,Wall~ dtfc,.., •• ,.. __ , Slld ........ ~mw ..,....,""""" t.., «"" -.... ... -.. llllt •f '•Ille A-.,,.,, Nn11 fl# Vl<lllr ... Sl'1Nt, In ti. _,at CMle -.. -·· . OATIO· TllllMl .. f/f.lt "7' av OlllQalt ()fl THI aoi"IO o;i SU~•~'°"~ OflAHOIH:lOUtt1'Y. ~ll'OltHIA. tMAl.t ' . \ t " • NATIONAL . . '" . Duties Reduced For Liason WASIUNOTON <A P ) -Midge Costanza is moving from her preaUlious office just down the hall Crom President Carter to new quarters and re· duced responalbilitiea. T~. May 23, 1978 DAIL y PILOT At 1n1urance . ~ TWO ADDITIONAL YEARS OF GUARANTEED "NO INCREASE IN PREMIUMS11 Business Packages, Commercial Fire. Condominiums and Apartment Packages Ma. Costanza, the administration's con- troversial liaison with minorities and women. said she will head a new inter-departmental ta.sk !orce on women. "WREN THE PRESIDENT CAU.ED me into bis office, he said I was bein1 a read too thin ... said Ms . Costanza, whose BOB p A.LEY MOl'IH oc. 546-3205 formal title is assist.ant to the & ASSOC, INC. sountoc-642-6500 . ·' ' ~ president for public liaison. She quoted Carter as saying he bad to respond to demands for more emphasis on women's issues. ·~ . '"'~~····· ' .• ~. . !.: :,; .. ~. ... ·, ., t .. She said her start of nine would move with her out o( the ~ White House. but that she would " maintain a small office and a secretary in the White House. She said she ·•negotiated" with COSTANZA '!!,~' •• 't:.,:;, .. J Carter and his chief aide, Hamilton Jordan, on where she would be located . . ,..,.......... WILLIAM 'DIGGER' YOUNG JR. LOVES Pt.A YINOA CLOWN Lori Eyster, 3, of Pittsburgh, Get• His Attention "I was more concerned with ~ symbolic placement of the issues l represent." she said. She said she hoped to move to an as yet un· determined federal agency by June 1. Makes 'em Laugh Until recenUy. her job included meeting with a variety o( groups. including blacks, homosexuals, Hispanics and others. as well as women. Undertaker Digs Plajing a Clown • SHE SAID CARTER ALSO asked ber to con· tinue handling domestic human rights issues and to continue her heavy speaking schedule as an ad· mioisbtion spokeswoman. By JULES LOH "" ~ .. , c;er,.._..,,, BUTLER. Pa . -Digger Young, the undertakJ!r. loves nothing more than making people laugh. Alter a hard day at the graveyard. or at the But)#r County Coroner's of- fice, he willfgo home, take off his black suit and black tie, put on his clown costume and head for a hospital. .. THERE AREN'T maoy children's wards or nursing homes in Penns ylvania. Ohio and West Virginia that I've missed." he said. "l get about 20 requests a month and it's hard to fit them all in." Digger has this routine. you see. He puts on a silly wig and gets on roller skates and his baggy clown pants fall down and in pulling them up he teeters and scrambles and almost falls agam and again but never does and if you can watch him without laughing you are a candidate for Digger's back room. [ __ AM_ERl_C4_) Yankees of making it. He didn't, though. and decided, all right, he would go to undertaker's school. A family tradition endured. Meanwhile, just for the run o( it, The White House bad announced earlier that Anne Wexler would become an assistant to the president and take over some of Ms . Costanza's duties. Ms. Wexler, who served as d eputy un· dersecretary of commerce before joining the White House staff three weeks ago. will be a liaison with Interest groups in the !ormaUon of domestic policy. Digger had taken up roller skating 1~~~~~~~=1~~~~fi!!~~[ ing tricks, clowning around BJlRL'S Pianos E: <' and became accomplished at it, do--ft~ aldwl "A FRIEND OF mine, a judge . ";~~~':.G and r : .. il: here In town who was a Shriner, t'~><ccr.,~~' Organs l · -, t ~ · asked 1£ l would consider being a ~,.,,. 1 omr !>l•h •• You< 0ooo 1 , ''"""ci"9 clown in a Shrine parade. I decided •C•11SU>r•-K1 Your••••• ec: °" · CA>HAMl:t.A642·17S3 LESSONS· INSTRUMENTS to give it a try. 1u. .....,_, ........ MUSIC "My grandmother m ade me a MISSIONv•uo495-0401 CENTER clown costume and from that mo-, .. Jtm~::r'"-,......_ 1..._ MCMOZO ment I was hooked. IM*.H• ,.., · "l have about JO costumes now. l try to find the brightest, gaudiest material I can find. Whenever I see some I like, I buy it. I clown every chance J get, and, no, I never charge a dime. We ore pleased to announce we ore now open for business Visit Newport Beoch' s newest fLKnittxe stOf'e with 25 years of Oonge County tradition behind it. We feot\xe ~edon. Boker ond Thomasville in°" beautiful, new showroom. 0.. experienced decorators ore ready to assist you. ot no extro chaqe. in f161'1shinq yots home 01 office. Watch for 04.I Grand Opening approximately ..lufie 20 _ DICK METTEER Fine Furnishings 1727 We<.tcfiff Onve. Newport Beoct. • b40-lb78 Open 9.5 JO • Tlvldoy 11 9 • Closed Surdoy "I REALIZE THAT some find it in- congruous for a funeral director to be a clown, but I never think of it," Dig- ger said. "Some or my colleagues re- gard it as undignified. I don't." Digger is a third-generation un dertaker. He doesn 't mind being called Digger, either, although his rather, who named him William F. Young Jr., objected to the nickname strenuously. "I LOVE TO clown at parades, at conventions. anywhere. When I go to children's hospitals they love me as a clown. At nursing homes, they love me as a visitor. They don't have many visitors. "Something else about clowning might surprise you. • ave .. It's inevitable. Some people are going to get a chuckle out of calling an undertaker 'Digger.' They're go- ing to do it anyhow. so why not relax about it? The world needs more chuckles. "I 'VE BEEN IN business with my name on the door for more than 20 years. I've been coroner since 1970, yet I doubt if many people in town know my name. To them, I'm Dig- ger. It ·s okay by me." William F . Young Jr. did not aspire to be an undertaker even though he was raised from boyhood in the rooms over the funeral parlor his grandfather established in 1896 in nearby West Sunbury. He and his wife and three children still live there. What Digger aspired to be was a professional baseball player. and came within a spring tryout with the "Put on a c lown costume and you're immediately accepted. That's important. Today everybody seems s uspicious of everybody else and we've accepted t hat aloofness, that distance, even ii there is no basis for it. "DID YOU EVER see a child you just wanted to walk up to and hug? You wouldn't dare. It might terrify him "Put on a clown costume and it's okay. The child will love you. Put on a clown costume and walk into a crowded room. You will be accepted without question. You will even be appreciated. "I deal with sadness and tragedy and sorrow every day. That 1s a hea\'y burden. and I accept it, and I give it my best. "Then I become a clown. and I'm laughing again." IF IT'S A QUESTION OF PROBLEM SKIN ... Let's Clear it Presenting the Family Skin Care Center. What a great new all·natural, NON-SURGICAL way to clear the way tor a lovelier you. We speclallze In face lifts, and the treatment of acne, dry akin, oily akin, wrinkles, and more. Come In today to a Family, Skin Care Center near you for a FREE SKIN ANAL vsas. gamay, SKIN CARE CENTERS . . . Clearing The Way CALL FOR lHFORMATK>N TODAYI AnaMlm Garden Clrov• &n-»1S 121·llOO Fountain Valley 884-75"\2 M'"'Of=' Toro Newport IMOtt 841-1755 8:.2~0 Santa Ana A7.o320 Tu.t~ .....,. Upl an Most people are surpr:sed to find how little It costs to insulate their home. Even when they have.an expert do the tnsulattng for them . Properly insulated. your house needs less heat tn winter. And In summer youratrcondttlonerdoesn't have to work nearly as hard. Which means you save on your an heading higher and higher. Insula ting now will save you more and more in the future. Get a free estimate by calling an Jn- su1atlon contractor. (You can ~et fils number from the Yellow !'8ges.) Or call the Gas Company. Our" toll·f ree Demand Is heavy. so caJl soon. energy bills. Every month. Fbr as long as you own your home. And wlth the cost of all ener~ 6 number ts 1-800-252·9090. (From area code 209. calJ 213·689-3334 collect.) gTHE as The sooner you call. the sooner (;OllPNj"( you can start saving. DoDt wait~ Insulate. • AJecw.v PtlOT_ T---. ._as. 1'71 • l AMONG RICHEST 1 Ted Kennedy H. John Heinz Ill t 15 Senators I 1 Millionaires WASHINGTON CAP> -The easiest way to become a rich senator is to have rich parents, newly released financial documents indicate. If that's out of the question, you might try finding a wealthy wile. The Senate financial disclosure documents show that 15 sena~s have assets of at least $1 million. A good number of the richest -such as Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.; H. John Heinz Ill. R-Pa.; and John C. Danforth. R-Mo. -are the recipients of family fortuf)e~. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO deter mine who is the rjchest senator. The forms require only that members tell in which broad category -one category, for example, goes from $1 million to $2 million -each financial holding falls. Several members -Kennedy. for one -also have some of their holdings in blind trusts and , since they do not know the value of those holdings, cannot list them. And still others r eport that they have no knowledge of their wife's holdings. J UDGING FROM THE DATA, Danforth and Heinz probably are the richest. Danforth. whose family has large holdings in Ralston Purina, with products ranging from breakfast cereal to dog food. listed his assets at between $7.33 milli on and SH. 75 mllhon. He listed no liabilities. Hei1.o., whose family has made a fortune in such items as ketchup, soups and pickles, listed asset~ nu,gin~ from $10.25 million to $17.85 million. Ills habilitJes totaled between $1.13 million and $2 36 million. Kennedy listed assets ranging from $2.24 mill ion to $5.26 million with liabilities of $1.8 million to $3.61 million. Sen. S.I. Hayakawa, the former college pr t'Sident, listed total assets of $1.4 million to $3.2 million -but noted that bet.ween ~,000 and S2 -million of that was in bis wife s name. The California Republican shewed liabilities of $335,000 to $815,000 for himself and liabilities of $.5,000 to ~15,000 for bis wife. , t Color like you've never seen before is waiting for you at Roger's Gardens. We have over 4,000 of our internationally famous hanging baskets in full bloom and ready for your selection. Nobody has mastered this colorful natural art form the way Roger's has. Decorate your home for the longer days and warmer nights of summer with spectacular Roger's Gardens Hanging Baskets. SUN For sunny areas. Roger's has brilliantly colorful Marigold baskets or Marigold and Begonia combinations. You can also select Geranium baskets in several varieties . Geraniums come in a mu~titude of colors and are often combined with ivy. Add brilliant outdoor color to your home. SHADE Roger's has over 68 different varieties of Fuchsia baskets to select from. They come in almost endless color combinations and bloom throug~ fall . lmpatien baskets can also add color to your home. They bloom in red, pink, orange. white and variegated colors. OPEN MEMORIAL DAY . '.. . FOR BEST RESULTS ON AU YOUR ROWERS USE ROGER,S FLOWER FOOD EVERY 2 WEEKS. Roger's Florist• 640-6774 San Joaquin H1Ds Rd. at MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach (714) 64().5800 •Open dally 9 am to 6 pm. Paid Political Advertising -.... •. NATIONAL €HOOSE THE BE B ND A record of achievement as Mayor of Laguna Beach · lowered the Property Tax Rate 25% in four years~ Hefoedlead the battle to keep high rise off our beac'hes. Worked to prevent the needless killing of cats and dogs in shehers. Oopos e S-th_e_L_N_G-fa_c...,.ili-ty-lo_c_at_ion near San Cl8mente. Wiii Supoorl those in Huntington Beach trying to save Bolsa thica. "As a professor of geography at Orange Coast College and as mayor of Laguna Beach, I have been working with people and solving problems. We need a state senator who can work with the newly elected city councils from San aemente to Newport Beach to Huntington Beach and together solve the many problems Orange County faces." -~ Jon Brand I an effective mayor I will . be a great state senator Has NeY•r Abandoned the Republican Parl;y. I 1 i • ,, • 1N•s•1•o•e• .• ·.·T.·.•.•v.'.''.°" .. ·.s.y1•v••• .. Port ... •r ............................................... ~ .... f!OrU~ •Stock$ •Entertainment lu.cs.y, May 2.3, 1978 DAILY PILOT .. . .. . • .. r ... ·. Jay Boros <left>. son of golf pro Julius Boros . and Jack • Nicklaus Jr.. Cright > hit out of trouble in a U.S. Open qualifying tourney Monday at Ft. Lauderhill. Fla. They failed to qualify. but since both are only 16 years old. they figure to be back next year. Jay 's brother. Gary, 18. did qualify for a sec- tional tourney Ryan Duels Wood, White SOx Nolan Ryan will oppose ~ kunckleball hurler Wilbur Wood 1 tonight (7 :30> when the ~California Angels hos t the • Chicago White Sox an the first • game or a short homestand at ! Anaheim Stadium. . Three members of the Angels · sought medical advice today in· eluding Brian Downing, Joe Rudi and Rick Miller. Downing's right elbow gave • out Thursday while Rudi rein- j ured his cal£ in pre-game warmups Wednesday. Miller re- ( injured his right knee sliding !Drysdale, ' ~Wx Spark . . Oranges 'n>e Oranges· doubles team or ·Cliff Drysdale and Mark Cox · beai Seattle's Sherwood Stewart ·and Tom Gorma!l.6·1 in Monday · n~t 's final match to give ,. Anaheim a 27·26 World Team Tennis victory over the 'Caseades al Anaheim Conven· · lion Center. The come -from ·behind ·triumph put Anaheim at 6-11 . Gorman won his singles , match. downing Anand AmritraJ ;<6·~. and Seattle also .won women's doubles. as Betty Stove ' aad Brigitte Cuypers defeated Aoaheim·s Rosie Casals and • Francoise Durr 7-5. But Amritraj and Durr took the mixed doubles match with a 7·6· victory over Stewart and Stove. and Casals won a 7 -6 de· · ctsion over Marita Redondo in • wotnen 's singles. Meanwhile, the San Diego • Friars. with Rod Laver and Kerry Reid talcing part in two 'winning sets apiece, came from behind to down the Phoenix Rae- • quets 31 -24 Monday night in ~ -Kansas City, Kan. San Diego was down 7·6 after the first set but won the final • four to solidify Its first.place "position ln the Western Division. Syd Ball and Kristien Shaw ' gave the Racquets an early lead • with a 7·6 mlXed doubles win ',bver San Diego's Cue and Mona ,,. Guerran\. but Laver brought the ;: Frnars back with a 6-3 triumph l, <>VeT Butch WaJG. home Friday. All three were ex· amined by Dr. Robert Kerlan earlier today. The Angels are still two games A•gebSlate All O.,_ 9ft l<M~ ltMle Intl Ton19M O>tc.vc> at C..ltornl• Weclft•w•r o-c-.oc C.. ltornl• T""nday OllU90 .ti C..lto<l>la 1 2Sp m 1 Upm. 1 2Spm behind Oakland's amazing A'a in the American League while the White Sox are In the cellar. Despite a 4.7 record on a recent Lnp to the mldwest. the Angels d1dn 't lose any ground in their bid to overhaul the A ·s. However . Man ager Dave Garcia's job may be on the hoe despite the improved position of the Angels this s eason. His strategy has been questioned in some recent losses but he has gained backing from .General Manager Buu1e Bavasi. Bavasi has stated that Garcia is.not responsible.for the team's .247 batting average. second on· ly to Seattle as the worst In the league. The GM is seeking a left· h anded rel 1<'f pitcher and perhaps another right·handed hitter. But 1f Rudi' and Lyman Boc;tock come around. 1t could chan~e things considerably Bostock has a .318 average over the last three campaigns and 1s hitting only .209 this year. Rudi 1s hitting only 182, 92 points below his life time average. Des pite his inJured arm, Downing. a catch"er. will be avaUable as a designated Jl1tter. if needed. He 1s hitting 264 and has received 17 walks Take Two Laughs and ••. Spo~ Psyclwlogist Mixes Advice, Hunwr By ERNIE CASTILLO Oft• Delly ~ ... Stefl A s tand·up comic who dis· guises ed'!Cation as entertain· ment, Dr. Tom Tutko looked Jike a cross between a nervous Woody Allen and a philosophical George Allen when he spoke at Orange Coast College last week before curious students and serious athletes alike. From ttis first wild arm wav- ing to his last distorted facial ex· pression. Tutko delivered a light lecture to a rather heavy topic- sports psyching-in a way that was easily accessible to the pre· dominantly young crowd in at· tendance. Lau~hing was not on· ly tolerated. it was encouraged. BUT THROUGH his zany im· itations of Mark Fidrych and an unnamed neurotic golfer. Tutko portrayed the mental psyche· ups aod psyche-outs that all too often spell the difference between winning and Josing. Jt was a refreshing presentation of themes that are often repeated in both locker room pep talks and psychology textbooks. I One of the country·s leading sports psychologists and the author of several books on the subject. Tutko polished his lec- turing skills both as a professor of clinical psychology at San Jose State and as a four·time guest on the Johnny Carson show. His reputahQn was enough to lead Dodge Parker. head coach of the Orange County Stars pro volleyball team. lo require his players to attend the lecture But mostly. the audience was comprised of weekend athletes who. if nothing else. enjoyed some fantasies and realities or a self.proclaimed Walter Mitty TUTKO T001( a poke at baseball myths I "During a no- hitter. the dugout ls so quiet it's almost like a confess1onal "L coaches' cliches !"Momentum . . . that's a nebUlous commodi- ty") and pressure < .. We get so light. we're not even aware we're tight'' I. SOME OF HIS heller com- ments during the hour·long pro- gram : Concentration: "It takes practice to narrow your mind to one thing ... When you're concen- trating on not making errors so much. you make errors. You ~hould concentrate on the way it should be done .. ' -Adversity during competi- tion: "You can be destroyed over what just happened. You can't do anything about your last shot or the next one. All you can control 1s what is happening now ·· -THE MIND: "We're busy programming what we an- llcipate ... We're not all pawns of our unconscious.·· -Winning. "The process is where it's at. not \he product or final score It 's hbw we get 1t done that counts ·' -Second guessing: "What ifs kill us ... He also orrered tips on mental Goff D Cha ed rehearsal ("See yourseJ( doing it ate ng the right way: tbe head pro. A date change in the staging of grams the tn~scles to do the the worhen's Kemper Open job") and' poilited out the peMls Ladies Professional Golf Assn. of ne~at..ive l anxieties <"We tournament at Mesa Verde c~4afo in OW'• fitl)d tJh;lt .will take Country Club in Costa Mesa has :-prd~ .. ll~ai>i>efis ~d lt\en we·~e been brought about because of t reU~ved ).· · 1 ,.. • switches in the men's PGA tour · Y&!t O\i-Q\13h A.H:or Tulko's ari· schedule for 1979. .. ti.cs-. and.,p•ntomirtj'es. the The first Kemper open at ~~uAee .'Wa~ crystal JC-lear. Mesa Verde was originally • 1• ~Ppl&f~6~ftf.~laut}on and , scheduled for Jan. 8· 14 next .~1 -toilc4;'fltrjall0b.,ai'efj\lst:~itnpol'·: '.year . The date ha&. been •I· tarit:,..;... ~ h<>~ 1mo~ so;!.... lhart switched to Feb. 5· 11 in C}rder to •; taJent:siUan~lb~k.' •• . avoid conflicts. • • ' , • ' • ' f • ! i I .' • Mota Closing In On Burgess' Pinch Hit Mark SAN DIEGO <AP1 By all rrgh.ts. Manny Mota and Vic Davahllo should be rocking in hammocks and swilling beers in retirement instead of pounding baseh1ts off kids young enough to be thetr cltlldren. But 1t was the 40·year·old Mola and Davalillo. who turns 39 in July. who came orr the bench Monday night to le'lia the Los Angeles Dodgers to an 8·1 th um pang of the San Diego Padres in a nationally televised baseball game. Every time Mota comes off Dodger• Slaie AllGMM>OftltAICC1 .. I lon191\1 LO\A"O"IH•IS...01tQO •Up m Wl!C)n~\day Lo\ AnQt'le\ di S.n 01eoo 6 Hp m rn-.,, i.CJ•v •di~ the bench and raps another hit. he takes a step closer toward Smokey Burgess· crown as the grC'atcst pinch hitter in major league history He did at agam Monday night With the (25th pinch htt Of hlS career. 19 short of Burgess· mark. And it was a l·l tie· breaking. three.run double that sparked a seven·run eighth ID· nmg to pace the Dodgers past San Diego and into a l.hare of first place in the National League West with San Francisco and Cincinnati .. [t f~ls r1ne to have the 125th pinch h1t . but J'm. morr happy about my team winning." said Mota "If I tie Smokey. that'!' OK . But I want to win for my team .. Dodge rs' M ana~er Tommy Lasorda I!-glad to huve Mota and Oavahllo around .. They got hve RBI between them. and to~ether I guess they've got Safe at Se~ond about 90 years experience:· he exaggerated ... But 1 ·11 tell you one thing. when I call them orr the bench, l don't think ~bout how old they are .. That Mota 's amazing.". Lasorda continued. "He's an outstanding man to have on the team." Mota says ht> ii; nowhere near retirement. "I feel fine and I'd like to play u n til I catch Burgess But when I get up the r e, I don't think about anything but trying to hit the ball." The contest f ea tured a pitching duel between the Padre!-· Bob Owchinko and Dodger veteran Don Sutton through seven innings. Before taking the loss, the 23·year-old San Diego southpaw checked the Dodgers on just three hit.5 and an unearned run before stepping out in favor of reliever Mark Lee m the eighth. That ·s when the Dodgers loaded the bases with 9ne out and up came Mota to drill his third pinch hit of the year. · • J started out Uie year in • slump ... the veteran bench man said. ..I was O-for-4, O-for·2 in April and O·fOr·2· in May. Since then I've gone 3-lor·8." ··n was a good game for a while." moaned Padres· skip· per Roge r Craig ... and Owchinko pitched very well. We had chances to get him some more runs early and we didn't do it. Maybe ;r he 'd been given s ome more br ea thin g room .... Dave Winfield a nd Derrel Thom a s paced the Padres· e1ght·hit auack with two each. See DODGE~. Page 82 Jerry Remy of the Boston Red Sox jumps over the head· first s lide of Toronto·s Rick Cerone. who steals second base. The Red Sox stopped Toronta. 5.4 in the American League game Monday. • Guerrant and Reid then ' teamed to knock off Barker and r Shaw for a 19-16 San Diego lead : after three sets. fteid defeated Sue Barker M • ln the fourth set and the Cale- r Laver duo wrapped up tbe ~triumph wtt.b an ldenUcal vie· :., tory over Ban and Walts in UM ~fifth. :·:>Mbttient11m on Bnrlns' Side ~ . .. . .,........,,.....,.. &. W_,..11 -~IAI_. ....... , .. ;~ t °"""" ...... ~°"" 1·l. ~ ji•l'I -Gorm1111 ISi .. ,. A111rltr•I •·t: Of' td41'-0a f.-ldM.-...n.oer-.. 1. • ~ ~ -Oul't..Mlf't!te) IAI wt, .._..,.s... 1 1~r. ~-·--.. l)M9'jt, ,._.., H • ,._. _ w.t CSOl dlf. Wetta. w. y...,.C- ·~6t:.-4 .......... k "• ~ -_.... Mt .... --~. M ; OllH> r9flt-1tea. ISOldlf. larW>Sllew, 7... A-- Mfl!M .,. .......... <,.> Rf, ~---­,.., ,, 'l-1~1•1CAMMCIW1 r MONTREAL <APl -First. there was uncertainty for the Boston Bruins, who entered the Nttlonal Hockey League's final playoff series with an ll·1ame w\nless streak agalnat the Mon· treal Canadiens. Then there waa diamay and doubt. when the Bruin• lost the first two games in the btlt-of·teven set. That ii all in Uw pest. thoup . Botton ha pulled even ln the • 1eri1is, an4 a ... e QI conncteoce aad ncltement lxtlb wberl In the p•lt tMre bad bffn awe and d.NM. ( . t' ·we had a five percent chance or winnina it after losing the first two games," said BOiton renter Pete M~Nab "Then. O.Tt'Toalpt OMuallel 22 ,., 5 after we won the third. our chfloces went up lo 25 percent Now. they're 50-50 " Regardless of how .McNab came to that conclusion. that's a lot better tban the odda that teams usuaJJy race 11atn.st tbo Canadlenl. 'Tm Just so excited 1oina back to Montreal tied 2·2," said Brad Park. Boston's defensive stalwart throuahout the 1eSson i!nd the playoffs ··1 can't believe It I'm so wound up, I can't even talk ·· He spoke SUnd~y nltht titer the Bruins ll•d acored a 4.3 overtime victory over the Cana· . di na. tytnf the series. \ ' I ··Now, momentum Is on our side," said McNab. "We watk tnto their bulldina knowlni that 1f we win there Tueadey nlabl. we could come back to our build· ~ng and maybe wilt the Stanley Cup.·· But McNab's lf was a big one The Bruins haven't won in Mon· treat since Oct. 30. 1976, wt\11~ tho Canadlens have only lost rout ttrnos there this season. Stilt, lltar Montrea• forward Ouy Lafleur Insists there wlll have to be some Improvement in his l'eam' play It It ls to wtn " third conseeutlve title "We'~ not workln1 enouih." he •aid ldonctav. ,, . I I I Resistance Mounting For Garnes LQS ANGELES <AP> City Council resistance bas cooUnu¢ to mount despite Mayor Tom Bradley's repeated inslsi.nce that Los Angeles can host the 1984 Olympics at no cost to tax· pa)'ers. •• CouqcU President John Fer· raro moved Monday to withdraw ~. the city's bid for the Summer Games if the International Olympic Committee will not give Los Angeles solid prolec· lion against possible financial loss. The lOC has provisionally granted Los Angeles the Qlym- pics, but stipulated it would not protect the city against loss. Bradley , who faced an hour·long barrage of generally •.. hostile questions from the City '· Council Monday, said the city . will not accept financial responsibillty and claimed Los . Angeles can find an insurance ·. policy, performance bond or som e other means to protect _ itself against loss. .·~ Bradley, reporting on the re· :;; cent meeting of the Los Angeles • • .. delegation with the 10C in ~!{Greece. agreed. however, that ;, ·:;'the city would not host the Olym. ~ • . pies if it could not secure some • ·• ~ ! . form or rmandal protection. ,; . . ;~· Ferraro suggested that the -C... council pass a motlop to ' withdraw its offer to hos( the Games if the city and the IOC fail to reach an agreement which absolves and protects the people of Los Angeles from any financiaJ liability. The motion wJll go to a council committee. Los An'eles orticials are con- cerned wtth the IOC's Rule 4. which states that the host city and the U.S. Olympic Commit· tee shoulders complete finsnciaJ responsibility for the organiza· tion or the Games. Los Angeles' delegaUon to Greece informally agreed to the rule, but Bradley insisted that it did not change the city•s original position set down in a contract drawn up by the city guarantee- ing it against financiaJ Joss. However, Councilwoman Joy Picus criticired Bradley. "My interpretation is that the contract that we sent which pro· tected the taxpayers of Los Angeles was unacceptable to the 10C," she said. "We've been taken OVeT' and over again. l thought Athens was it, and now we hne witil July 31 <tbe IOC'a deadllpe for Los Angeles· de- cision land then we will have un- til Oct. l. It may go on forever and ever." Dolphins Place 7th In CIF Goff Final8 SANTA BARBARA-Dana Hills High's Doug Thompson fired a 74 Monday to pace his Dolphins teammates to a seventh place finish in the CIF golf championships al Sandpiper Country Club. Paul Dilley or champion Thousand Oaks was the In· dlvldual Je~~er:~t!-b_a_~·-.. , • • -- T.-lii.rtlll I. TlloVMn:I Olkt m : l. Seft ~ •: I. Oo& Pve010S Jl1; '-"°"'Ill Hiiis .. , S. SC. JoMpl> no: •· ""'~ m : r. o... "'"' *' • ltlwnkllt ~ 9'141 OWMMflt "1; 10. La ~ 3'9; II. ~llo 111\d 11\tlMte att; U. '°°4tllll 401; 1'. $UMyHlll1*; IS.~ .,.,_cllllo~. 178 ZEPHYR LIASIFOI T...my. tb)' 23, l978 VIC MARTIN Player of the Year DON TEARANOV£ Coach of th• Year Terranove Lauded MD Star Heads All-area Nine Mater Dei High pitcher Vic Martin is the Orange Coast area 's player of the year for 1978 baseball as chosen by the Daily Pilot. while coach of the year laurels go to Hunt· ington Beach High 's Don Terranove. Martin. in leading his Mater Dei teammates to a run· nerup spot to Servile in the Angelus League and to the CJF 4·A quarterfinals with a no-hitter. had a -sterling season . Going Into the playofls the Mater Del standout was the Ange lus League's co·mdst valuable player with Servite's Mike Witt after batting .443 and putting together a 6·1 pitching record. He had 18 RBI. including two doubles, three triples and two homers. As a pitcher he had an 0.58 ERA and 45 strikeouts in 48 innings. On one other occasion Martin had a no·hitter going through six innings, but hurt bis arm and could not complete the masterpiece. Terranove molded a young and inexperienced squad into a Sunset League tri·champion. The Oilers or Hunt· ington Beach were not expected to be serious contenders ror the championship or the playoffs prior to the cam· paign, but by mid·season it was the Oilers that others were chasing. It was the first time since the 1950s that Huntington Beach qualified for the playoffs and the first championship for the Oilers since 1938. First Team Pos. Player. School P -Vic Martin. Mater Dei P-W ayne Jusll, Edison C -Shawn Gill, Huntington Beach 18-Rico Thompson, Huntington Beach Inf-Mark Depello. Marina Inf-Bob Meacham. Mater De1 lnf-Jim Thomas. Huntington Beach OF-Kevin Romine, Fountain Valley OF-Pete Changala. El Toro OF-Steve Wyche, San Clemente DH-Steve Sauerbrey. Newport Harbor Ut-Joe Mutt, University Second Team P -Dale Boucher, Costa Mesa P-Scott Gudmundson, Huntington Beach C-Mlke Empting, Fountain Valley lB-Stuart Miles, Fountain Valley Inf-Doug Mittendorf. Edison Inf-Jeff Piaskowski, Newport Harbor Inf-Dave Gentile, University OF-Tom Stokke. Edison OF-Shawn Cisco, Huntington Beach OF-Rich Mielke, Marina DH-Andy Murashko, University Ut-Ed McCann, Mission VieJo Mark Cl. 7-1 Sr. 5·1 Jr. .388 Sr. .378 Jr. 415 Sr. .388 Sr. .393 Sr. .438 Jr. .347 Sr. .349 Sr. .425 Sr. .289 Sr. 6·2 Sr. 7·2 Sr. .487 Sr. . 328 Jr. .333 Sr. 458 Sr. 270 Sr. .290 Sr. .327 Jr_ .313 Sr.· .378 Sr. 425 Sr. UCPs Morse to D efend Temii8 Title Lindsay Morse of UC Irvine will try to defend her title when the national women's col1egiat.e tennis championships get under way in CoJJeae Park, Maryland, next week. ?rtorse earned the berth tn the natlonfl)S by reaching the quarterfinaJs of the AIA W west regionals at Berkeley Jast weekend. Stacy Margolin of USC woo the regionaJ title by defeat· ing teammate Barbara Hall· qulsl. 6·2. 6·1. Sunday. Other west regional qualifiers for the national tourney were Le a Antonopolls of USC : Barbara Jordan. Kathy Jordan a nd Diane Morrison ot Stanford; Jean Duvan of UCLA. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East DiYblon NATIONAL LEAGUE East Divialon W L Prt. OB $8999 Mo+ Tu&Uc Detroit Boston New York Milwaukee Cleveland Baltimore Toronto W L Pct. GB 23 12 ,675 1h 26 14 .650 23 14 .622 t 1'2 18 19 .486 6"'1 18 19 .486 6th 16 21 .432 8112 14 24 .368 11 Philadelphia 19 16 .543 Chicago 19 17 .528 11'.t Montreal 19 19 .500 11.r.i Pittsburgh 17 20 .459 3 New York 18 22 .450 3v, St. Louis 14 2S .359 7 West Division West. Dhlslon San Francisco 23 14 .622 UQ.99 mo. + tax & lloenM & 98c tor 3e rnoe. CIC> COit "284. Tot• of monthty peyments •3271. Retktuel •2142. 3e mo9. OAC. Stk. tro46. Oakland 24 15 .615 Dodgers 24 15 .615 AUTO LIASIMG TMIWAYlt AUTOll! Aagels 21 16 .568 2 Kansas City 19 18 .514 4 Texas 19 18 .514 4 Minnesota 16 24 .400 81h Seattle 15 27 .357 10~ Chicago 12 23 .343 10 ,.....,,_k_ 8"to11 S. Toron\o • "''"""°'•'· Tuaso S.1Ult 10, KlllSM CUy I Ol\ly 99"* K1*Mtd TeMtM'•O-.. 80S1011 cw~ 1-01 at Torllfl(o 1Jt11~ 1 )I Oelrolt lllllll11911em • 11 11 ••lttmore 11<1 .......... 31 Cl.WI-IHOod HI et..._ Y-IOI/~ Ml T•••• 1um1>••1., a 21 .ti ,.",,,..•ol• IT!lor~l-41 K1nHt Oty IMltMIM u -O.,,.a 2·1) ac s..c , .. IPoleM-R-tYl_.12 Mlt..aullM ~tint Ul .at 0.kl-oc-... Ml Cltkloc> !Woocl"41et c.llfonlle (fty.., Ml ....... , .• o.- 0.trolt et lllllitftOrt, 7 Mllw...,..._ el C)elil4111d. 11 llotllll!I et T°"'"41, II Ch~-.O a c.lli'lltNa, 11 Ckwlefld a Htw Yer1', II Keft .. t City a lfftt ... 11 Ttu• et w-., 11 Cinctnnati 2.5 16 .610 Hous ton 18 18 .500 4112 San Diego 17 22 .436 7 Atlanta 14 23 .378 9 _, .. ~" MOftl .... I S, Pl~ 2 Cln<lllNll IO, Alle<K.a 0 Lot AllQ91et e, Sell Oi990 I 0111y ... ,,,.. J<i.dvted TeftllM't 0..l'llH PIUlldelpt,iHI CN<eoo, Pll(I •• ••In How YOfll (hplnot.a J.21 11 PlllSllvroti 1~1 Ml Al11nt.a (.._ 7-01 11 Onc:W-11 (....,_ UI MolllrNI I.May HI II St Lov<s ll'O<tcll .. ,, Loi Afl9tfet WDIWl,,_ll 1t Sen 011911 (J-J.JI HCMISlon ID1J1011MI •I S.n Fr<tnelt(O llhlt.,11 ~··o.­Atlefll•llt ClncWIMIJ 1'1111-lllt>la at Oll<- HCMIJIOll at Sen Fren<iKO Hew yon, •I Plll~rQll, n Montr .. I el S.. LOlllS, n L.01 Anotl•&I SM\ 01990, 11 LEASIN& ..... ALL MAKES AtLMODILS MIW 6" W. COAR _!tWY. • MIWPOIT MACH • MMHZ OR USED • Mandell Ouillenges '~ Court Order SAN DIEGO tAP> -Dr Arnold J . Mandell wants the Superior Court to set aside a state order placing him on pro· batlon for prescribing drugs to members or the San Dlego Cb~gers football team. Attorney Robert Baxley filed a peUUon Monday on ltjandell's behalf seeking a court order vacating the decision by the Division of Medical Quality of the Board of Medical Quality At.· surance. The decision last Nov. l placed the controversial psychiatrist on medical probation for five years and severely limited his authori· ty to prescribe drugs. Mandell became an unpaid consultant to the profess ional football team in 19'72 at the re· ques t or then·head coach Harland Svare in an attempt to first e>u\ why 1'~ team's play wa. .. erratic. Durmg his tenure with the Charger s. Mandell iss ued several prescriptions tor am· pbetamines to several players. And the NFL. in reviewing drug use by Chargers players. was critical of the practice. Baxley's court challenge claims the key evidence against Mandell was provided in the physician's own articles and his book. "The Nigh~mare Season.·· The pellliOJl also contends er· rors were made by the hearing officer. administrative law judge Marguerite Geftakys. and that the decision will ir- reparably harm Mandell In his medical practice. Mandell is with the University or California al San Diego medical school. From Page BJ DODGERS. • but they resulted in just one run. And a handful of San Diego er- rors didn't make things easy for !hvchlnko. The Dodgers settled for eight hits. too. but two of them by the old guys, Mota and DavaJillo. drove across five runs. "We've been hitting the ball well aJI year." said Lasorda. whose team came into the game leading the league with a .284 batting average . "And now it looks like the pitching has started to come around. We lost three 10·7 games on our last home stand and that s houldn't happen with our staff." he said. "When we score six runs we should wm. · · LOSANOELaS Nortn tl RYtsell \\ R.Sm11n rf Cey 3b ... _ftp Ge<¥4!Y 11> &.lier If Oave lllloll LKyJb VeAQer < Sutton p Mole 1)11 LC>PH pr T.~rtl,,.lll> ....... \ I I 0 • ' ' 1 • ' 1 0 • 0 0 0 0000 )000 t I I 0 I 0 I 1 ) 1' 0 , 1 0 0 2000 I 0 I l 0 l 0 0 I 0 0 0 SAMOlEOO RICl\ard\ If 0 Smith \\ c 81••• ... Htndrlcll cl Wlnlleld f'f Tenau tb 0 TllOmM 21> "I""°" )b S-t< Ochnko p L.Hp Splllner p .. , " .. 4 000 4 010 0000 4 0 I 0 4 I 1 0 •000 4 0 7 I 4 0 I 0 7000 ) 0 I 0 0000 0000 Totall 3' I I• lol•I\ ll 1 I I LOS A1>9elM 001 000 010-4 S.n Oil90 O 10 000 000-1 E-R. sm!Ut. 0. Tllomft 1, Alll'IOll J, Lee. OP- LOS "110tlet J, Sert Dl990 1 LOll-t..os 1'11991ft 13, S.ft DllQO .. H~ 1, R11tsall, Moe.a. se- HOrtll, W ll'llelCI S-S..C Ion. R11tse11. I~ H II ell 88 IO LOSAMOaLH I I I I I 7 I 0 0 0 SANDll'.00 Ow<lllnko IL,).JI 1'> . ) , 1 . \ I Q I I Lee Solll11er T-7 SJ --11,9SI ., ,. .. 0 0 0 BASEBALL I MISGELLANV Soeeer Buff Fan Names Son Afier 14 Players From AP Dt1pa&ebea LINCOLN. England -It didn't make any difference to soccer fan Michael Hayes that his favorlt~ team. Liverpool. has two Raymonds and two Phillips amon.a t.h8 14 pl~ers. Hayes. delighted with the European Cup victory by the team. decided to name his newborn ton after each team member Herewith. the chlld wUJ be known as · -r'homas Smith James Case Emlyn Hughes David Fairclough Raymond Kennedy ~Terence McDermott Phillip ~eal Kenneth OalgJish Stephen Helghway Alan Hansen Phillip Thompson Graeme Souness Raymond Clemence Robert Paisley. the manager Hayes. lilldsafl tea .. , Tl' Spore• 8Jto., NEW YORK -John V. Lindsay, whose previous big connec • t1on with professional sports was to throw out the first ball at Yankee and Shea stadiums when he was mayor of New York City. has been signed to do a sports television show. Lindsay. who once did social and political com· mentary on ABC's "Good Morning America," will be the host on a 26·segment show called "That Year In Sports." The producers say they are trying to sell it to the Public Broadcasting system for next season. The show will present the outstanding sport· in& events of each year and put them in the con· text or historical events . Lindsay. 56, is in private law prnct1ce in New Yoric. The pilot s h o w . to b e made 1 n P h 1 I a d e I p h I a w i I I d e a I w i t h "°"" L1"°'"" the year 1941. Other years will be selected at random. Bert Rotfeld i~ the executive producer ------Qlete of Cite Dafl ------ Pro golfer J .C. Sned. playing a C1l'actice round before the start of a recent event. hit his approach into a bunker. He asked his caddy for another ball. dropped it in the fairway and prepared to hit it. "Are you bitting a Mulligan'>" asked a spectator. "Naw," drawled J .C .. "it's a Wilson They stopped making Mulligans a long lime ago." ~l11Sports ••• GOLF -Deray Simon of Costa Mesa gained a spot in the U .S Open sectional qualifying tournament at San Francisco Golf Cluh June 6 with a 69-76-146 score Monday in local quaJifying play al Stardust Country Club in San Diego Kansas City Chief!> quarterback Mike Llvlngs&on earned a sectional berth with rounds of 72-76 at two different Kansas City courses Monday . . In Northern California, Bobby Clampett or Carmel was the leader with a fi•e-under-par 129. Among the non-qualifiers wert- Natbaniel Crosby, son of the late Bing Crosby, and former pro fool baller John Brodie Tom Watson remains on top in the PGA money standings with $188.364 earned this year. J ack Nicklaus 1!:> s econd with $182,324 with Gary Player third at $153, 143. BASEBALL -Matt Keough, a graduate of Corona del Mar High, will be on the mound tonight when the Oakland A's host the Milwaukee l3rewers A pair of former Dodgers. Geoff Za.bn and Mike Marshall combined for a 2·0 shutout as the Minnesota Twins defeated the Texa~ Rangers. 2·0. Monday night for their sixth v1c Lory in the last seven games . The Twins · Rod Carew had one hit m four at-bats as his everaf{e slipped to .403. still tops in the majors . . The Toronto Blue Jays purchased veteran pitcher Joe Coleman in a cash deal with the Oakland A's... Cleveland Indian pitcher Jim Kern will be s idelined for three weeks with a muscular strain in his right shoulder San Diego rookie s hortstop Onie Smith suJ oEo"n""" fered a hyperextended elbow in Monday·._ 8·1 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers and could be out for the season_ COLLEGE BASEBALL -UCLA <39·19 1 and Washington State 140·15 > m et today in a one· game playoff at neutral Stanford to de- termine the Pacific 8 ConJerence·s second berth in the NCAA baseball tournament. The winner will face Arizona State 149-91 in the Rocky Mountain re~1onal which s tarts Friday a t USC, Dedeaux Field. Other match-ups USC 146-9 1 vs Anzona <40-11 1. Cal State Fullerton 143·1 l J vs Santa Clara 140·21 1: Gonzaga 129.14 1 vs. Nevada Las Vegas C43· 18 • FOOTBALL -Bob Jobnsoo will begin his 11th year in pro football at the Cincinnati Bengals camp lhJs summer. "They're shortening camP. and they're aJmost letting us hold. I might hang around. It's getting better," he said ... The Los Angeles Rams have signed three players Including Elvis Pearoclc, their top draft choice. Others include Frank Corral, a kicker from UCLA, and Ron HCMlte&Jer, a linebacker from Penn State ... Pete Woods, a fourth-round pick out or the Uruversily of Missouri by the Kansas City Chiefs. underwent surgery Monday for knee damage. He is a quarterback . . . The Chicago Bears signed free-agents Mike Morgan of Wisconsin. and Mark Balley of Northwestern Monday. Spori• 011 Radle~ T~kri•io• 'RADIO: Baseball -Chicago at California. 7 30. KM PC <7101 . Los Angeles at San Diego. 1. KABC (7901 TV: Ice Hockey -Boston at Montreal, s. Channel 22 You don't have to buy a new car ta have a 111w looki 11 car. Area Sports Calendar ......_, VOlltYNll-CIF •·" hNll IL.agun• Butn "'' SM\la 8ertle<'<1 I / p,., Te1111tt-4.IC lrvl,,. et OtvltlOft IN• lion.I\ 11 Altwflt, GeorQll Girl\ \W'""""'9-<IP prellms •1 East l.O\ ""9tlft Co11999 tl pm I. G"'' .altD•1t-1rv1ne "''" •I A°"" IJ ISi. The gloss level of ywr car'a paint can be restored to factory original °' better with the Ming MlrrOf Finish. Ming's unique process chemically rejWenates oxidized paint without the use of cutting oompoundS. increasing signfficantty the beauty and value of your cer And Ming guarantees the MirrOf Fi1Wt1 In wnting fqr 3 fu" yeira! The Ming MirrOf Finish produces a gleaming smoo'th toogtmess that even newty painted cars can't R\lt:tl because no method Of application lays down a petfectlV flat coat of auto paint. Get a beautiful mlrr0t·Nke shine that'*"' hU to be waxed again and protect your car's paint againat deterioration. Stop by and we Wiii process • test area on your car at no en.roe. -> Want that new car feeling? OriVe to yow MUig Auto Beauty Center today. Minta Auto .. auty Center FREE -.O ot Coeta ..... lDT 'ATOH 1aao Ponliteroaa Ave. .. Coatll Me .. , CA. 92 714·7M-M04 """*' Ten11 .. -uc 1rv1n• "' NCA" Dtvt,ton t N•Uon••to e t ""'*""· Geor91• Glrh soltball-S.n c .. ,,,.nl• •I UlllVer\111' ~nlon Vleto .. '°''"' -w. f t Toro .i eor-a.1 Mar. J.001n111 •I ESl~le, C.a•Ptttrano Valley •I _,,..,. 0..1111.,.., """I· u•alO" Vetto CMlsllan •t Cal L11t!MIM 1•11.tl) nl G•rl• 9Y-lk•-<t" llnalt Gtrll -l'llon-CIJ. Mfl'Hllrllll 0 ....,_ WIDE AREA COVERAGE ~00.-1..A. ••••• ;;~ ~drr GOLF I VOLLEYBALL I MISCELLANY EX--Dodger Heads New Goll Plan By HOWARD L. HANDY Of •• IMih ,., ... ~ Wes Parker, the former Mr. Niceguy first baseman of the Los Angeles Dodgers <he preceded Steve Garvey and wns in turn preceded by another of the sam e mold, GU Hodges>. is moving into golf as com- missioner of the World Golf Associa- tion. WGA 1s forming its owp assoc1a· ~ lion and 1s planning a $3 million t ournament for non· professional golfers. KIP ENGEN . .. ... With some 12 to 14 million golfers 1n America. the majority of them not belonging to private country clubs. WGA figures to receive a very warm reception Artists Seek QFCrown . ~ .... . :: ·: . . '" One of the aims of the group is to provide a wide range of ser vices to non-professional golfers that are not c urrently handled by a ny other • group LB Pune I 11cref .. ed The purse for the seventh annual Long Beach Queen Mary Open goU tournament has been increased to S32.500, some $2,500 over last year. The 72-hole championship will be played a t El Dor a do Municipal Course Sept. 28-0ct. 1 with Doug hes serving as chairman while Monty Blodgett 1s recovering from surgery. Bftlefit Tountq S e t Irvine-based lnternational GoU and Promotion, headed by President J oe Caraway , has announced plans to stage the first San Diego Aerospace Museum pro-am-celebrity goU invita· t.ional Nov. 15-17. "The tournament will feature 125 professional golfers paired with 375 amateurs and celebrities." Caraway !>ays The tournament will be held on three different courses in the San Diego area with all players having a round<>n each of the layouts. The purse is $30,000 The Aerospace Museum was total- ly destroyed by fire in February and a n attempt to replace it is being made. Proceeds Crom the golf tourna- ment will h e lp get the project started • • • CHIP SHOTS -The Western Amateur Golf Association will play at Mission VieJO Country Club Aug. 7 an its only ap· pearance this season in the Orange Coast area The Touma· m ent of Cham· p1ons will be held at San \-.ente, St•pt. 14 -17 .. Souther n California PGA professionals are again sponsoring the National Golf Day competition. ll is a beat the pro rormal_ with Cha ko Higuchi and HoUls Stacy playing•ounds for the ladies tq beat. For the men it will be Llfnny WadWDs and Hubert Green. FOR E -P al Swift, a member of the Corona def Mar junior varsity golf team. scored a hole·in·one on the 154-yard 13th hole at Irvine Coast Country Club with a J -1ron re<:ently. ll was his second in eight months, the other coming on the 13th hole at Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course. Thirteen has to be his lucky number. The Huntington Beach High dis· tnct golf tournament will be held at Huntington SeacltH Thursday and Friday over 36 holes Oterkfng A ~a Cltdn NEWPORT BEACH MEN'S CLUB -held a low gross. low net touma· ment with Jack Arsenault winning gross with a 60. Merle Qulvey won nel with 48. Flight winners included: A -Dick Hilliard, so. B -Barney McClure, 52; C -Marv Fisher, SO; RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN -Jae· qu1e Galbraith captured the women's golf championship r ecently with a score of239. Other winners included : Cham- pionship flight c gross l Kalhy Perry, 255 ; <net> Ginny Stasko. 214. .. first fli ght c gross) Kay May. 282; <net> Marion M c G rat h , 2 1 9 . JAQ»Ut• ~uunH Second flight <gross > Marge Gibbs. 297: Cnetl Carolyn Walbridge, 219. Third flight (gross) Tina E lmore, 311; (net l Mag· gie Borda. 232. Better ball of foursome wiMers: Carolyn Walbridge, Marvel Bright, 'nitl E lmore, Sybll Foster, 61. Criers tournament: 'A -Lois Howell. 68 : B -Peg Smith, 58: C - Maggie Borda, 62. D -Tlna Elmore, 63 . BlG CAN'YON -Criu crou lo1tfnament; A -Jean Mallory, 28. Per (ours tournament: A -Betty Cteler, R B -Mbae1rl~ Martin. 38. C -Ema Cowan. 41 t;\ Low net of th~ month Carol wu .... GS. .. Wednesday SANTA BARBARA -Laguna Beach High 's ~rlists , the defendjng CIF 4-A champions, are at the final hurdle Wednesday night wh1n they travel to Santa Barbara City College to duel the No. 1 seeded Santa Barbara High Dons in the cham- pionship rinals. ll 's billed for a 7 o'clock start and for Coach Mike Duncan's Artists. although able to claim the 1977 CIF crown and the South Coast League championship, it 's the third tnp an these playoffs this year to the Santa Barbara area as an unseeded entry. Earlier the Artists traveled to San Marcos <Santa Barbara) and won in 01~-~ ~·City CM .... Entering s.ni. 8¥1Mw• °"' P..:111< to.M HIQhwn (101 l, turn i.tt •I St.t• St •• PfoGH<l 10 the ~II ...o turn riQhl. Sc'-' on rlQlll, •PC>rOlll,...t~ty "-mile five sets, then to Dos Pueblos High <Goleta>. where Duncan's crew stag- gered the hosts in three sets So for Santa Barbara's No. 1 seeded Dons. unbeaten in 17 starts and boac;ting Karch Kiraly in the lineup. the Artists are not exactly strangers to the area. It was Lag una B each which knocked off the Dons in the 1977 semifinals. but this year's Santa Barbara crew is an all-senior lineup. led by the 6-1. 170-pound Kiraly, an All-CIF first team choice as a junior and considered by Santa Barbara ob· ser,vers as the No. 1 player in the United States. He is headed for UCLA on the only Bruin scholarship a vailable. Only twice has Santa Barbara been forced to play four sets this season- and but once in the playoffs (against North Torrance in the semiflnals). Laguna Beach has struggled (com· paratively > at times during the cam - paign, with the loss of All·CIF star Jamie Plummer (broken ankle> cut· ting the Artists· edge late in the season. But with South Coast League player of the year Kip Engen and Randy Smith lea6ing the way. Laguna Beach has improved at a rapid pace. Also instrumental in Laguna's 18·2 ca mpaign have been s ophomore Kevin Norick, junior Andrew Dodds. senior Scott Frank and freshman Eric Clark. Duncan acknowledges the threat of Kiraly, but adds, "Santa Barbara h11s no apparent weaknesses. It has the passing, hitting, two excellent setters and is extremely balanced." Gottfried, Solo1non Nab Net Victories ROME (A P l -Third-seeded Brian Gottfried and eightt>-ranked Harold Solomon won first-round matches to· day in the. Italian Open tennis cham· pionships. Gottfried downed Belus Prajoux of Chile 6·2. S-7. 6·2, while Solomon rout· ed Jan Kodes of Czechoslovakia 6-~. 6·1. Arthur Ashe, the 14th seed over- came Italian Vincenzo Franchitti 3·6, 6-1. 6-3. In opening day a,.tlon Monday. Wimbledon champion Bjorn Borg disposed of unheralded but spirited Ecuadorian Ricardo Ycaia 4-6, 6·0. 6·2. Tueeday. May 23, 1978 DAILY PILOT 0 3 ,Artists' Technieian Engen: Player of Many Dime1uions ~ By JlQGER CARLSON' OI Ille Deity ~I ... sutt. Santa Barbara faithful have been boasting of volleyboall sensation Karch Kiraly as the Dons have ac- cumulated a 17·0 record going lnto the CIF 4-A championship !inals, but Laguna Beach High's Artists may be one-up on the Dons in a sneaky sort of way. That's because the Artists can pro· duce setter Kip Engen on the court. a superior athlete at 5·7, 140 pounds, who like teammate Randy Smith, is headed for Stanford. While Smith and Kevin Norick are the 4aguna Beach players who stand out with their lethal hitting <as does Kiraly for Santa Barbara). it ts Engen who is the technician. the player who turns tough situations In· to an explosive offense with his ablli· ty to put the ball in the right spot re · gardless of the quality of pass. His a bilities did not go un· recdgnized as a junior. being chosen player of the year in Cl F 4-A and Southern California circles as the Artists s wept to th~ ClF crown. Kip's dad, Rolf, is also a tedwJcian in Ute Laguna Beach arsenal as an assistant to Coach Mike Duncan. place team and a couple of San Marcos transfers, would be tough. •'Kip has been hoping he a nd Laguna Beach would be agamst San· ta Barbara in the finals.·• That goal has been reached wath Wednesday's CIF 4-A decider with Santa Barbara billed for 7 o'clock at Santa Barbara City Collese. While it is the hitting that gets a lot of the raves. at amounts to only about 25 percent of winning volleyball. ac cording to Engen <and pro coach Dodge Parker>. • "To be a great setter you have to be able to lake whatever pass ydU get and turn at into a setup for the hit· te r ." says Rolf "Passing 1s so critical an-winn.ing volleyball and if you have an outstanding setter. he can compensate for the passes that are not JUSt perfect He can become the equalizer .. Kip's forte ls volleyball. but he's a lso active m basketball. ten.rus and skiing. A rounded s tudent. Kip will major an econom1ca-business at Stan· Cord. Santa Barbara is the solid favorite according to most volleyball ob- servers. but Engen makes this com- ment that may be a key to the out· come TV Football Slate Includes Bruins1 Trojans Southland collegiate football rans will get d look at USC and UCLA in Stfptember as the Trc· jans a nd Bruins will be featured with nat1on~l television coverage The Brwns' game at Washington Sept ~ will be shown on a nation11 I basis. as will the Southern Cal tiff at Alabama Sept. 23 The television season begms on ABC telev1s1or. Sept. 2 with Nebraska at AlabamEi Here '!> the schedule for September with tht- balance of the season 'i; telecast to be released at o later date Sept. 2-Nebraska at Alabama <national~. Sept. 9-UCLA at Washington <national 1 Sept. 16-Penn State at Ohio State. Baylor <1t Georgia: San Jose State at Stanford; Syracuse al North Carolina State; Idaho State at Northern Arizona <aJI regional 1 Sept 23-Machagan at Notre Dame. Yale al Brown. Florida State at M 1am1. Colorado St ate at Brigham Young <all regional 1. USC at Alabamd (national> Sept. 30 -North Carolina at Pittsburgh . Nebraska at Indiana : T e nn esse._. dl Auburn: Washington at Oregon State: Alcorn Statt- al South Carolina State : Boise State at Montana State <all regional 1. A form er player with national credentials as a setter. Rolf Engen says Kip's greatest assets are his quickness. peripheral vision and ability Lo make the offense-defense- oHense-defense transition. "We started preparing for this game on the very firs t day of the season -the ch a mp 1onsh1 p game )iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil The importa nt thing 1s when you WALTS 714 957-0662 ''K ip was very successful last year." says Rolf. "This year the goal has been to be consistent. And we knew Santa Barbara. with just about everyone back from last year's third peak and we know what we've been working for " As for Kip Engen. he's been peak· mg fo~ two years and Wednesday night figures to be th~ culmination o( a season ·s efforts. Se;;;c~ PC) R SCHE Ntw lvcol•on To ~~•t Yow lktt,. 2956 Randolph St., Costa M'!'a Get 50< a quart for your old oil just for tr 1ng gasoline-sa~ing iflO.* And you ccUd also get 16 extra miles per tn of gasoline. To introduce you to gasolin&-savlfl Uniflo motor Oii, your partlcipat.ilg Exxon dealer wi1 pay you 504 for each quart of Oii he drails out when you get thtS Uniflo Spmg Changeowf. And Uniflo could saw you much more by cutting your gasoline oosts. After condibonng with Uniflo, a fleet of cars averaged 16 extra miles per tri of gasoline-16 extra miles this same fleet of cars dldn 't get with a conveotJOnal multtgrade od l#<e most people use. Unlfto isn't a synthetic. Ifs a golden, natural Otl-Exxoo's best engine protection ever- with special friction-f9ducers developed by Exxon research. By cutting friction between mowig parts in the engine, Uniflo saves gasoline. And money. The Spmg oik:hange ollef at participating El()(on dealers gives you a chance to save even more money. wtry not try Uniflo n<M. Every day you wait could be costing you money. *With this UniflOSpring et.geoveryou get: 5 quar1s Untflo. flfter. cha NI• tubrlcMk>n Regular suggested pnce .. ~2 Less 50' a quart tor your old Oii ~250 =~~.s1392 Plus 1u0e fitting!> ol nee4'eO Suggested pnoe is less rf your car r~ires les:, than 5 quaits of UndlO. more 11 yOl.ll' car tak~ morelhan5quarts ~·· ~o "--n Change over to radal tres and get exba gasolile savilgs. Property inflated, radial tires give better gasoline,mileage than non-radials. Suggested Price Suggested Price s3s95 ~~ ~~§:~S SAt95 haYB 1 or2 body plies terply. • £ SIZE AA78-1~,pl\JsS1 BJF.E.T SIZE AA7'8-13. plus$1 .84 FE.T. TireSbit ~ ~ ~ (WltNdMI) ER78-14 $43.95 FR78·14 45.95 GR78-14 48.95 HA78-14 51.95 GR78-15 51.95 HA78-15 53.95 =r 1U $236 2.51 2.65 2.82 2.75 2.94 ::=:. 5'1C"° =' 1\.ee6Na (wtth tndHI) ~ EA78·14 $51 .95 $240 FR78-14 54.95 2 58 OA78-14 51.95 2 76 HR78•14 63.95 2.96 0078-15 81.95 . 283 HR78· 15 84.95 3 03 Qlldlouroo11'P91.,..lowprtoeeon Olfwe!W. ,,,. .... mounUng. . . . .. . --· .. . . I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC N<n'ICE PVBUC NOTICE PtCITIOUS IUSINI" .. ..,,... STATIMINT Tiie lollowtno penon •~ 1101110 ""''"-•• . ., DEL MAA AOV£RTISI NG, 14211 81rk 51•9fl. El Toro. C.tllornll •~ Detmer ~· 8¥111 Jr , 14211 Buk St El Toto. CA11torr11• mJO T 111 S O;nlnt-H I\ CONlllC1t0 t>y Ill rnoavfdull. O.lme< 8 Berth Jr. "''' 11et.......i was llltd t•ntll nw c.ountv c1-o1 Or-County on ~v U , Hit. ,...,1 P"°lllNd Or ... C:O.tt 0.lly ptl9(, IMV 21. 20 erlll J-6, U. m t 202t-7t PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS HANIE STATl!:MEHT The tollowlng Pt•\On ll doing Du\INUt\ HOME -BREW HEAOOUAATEllS, Ulll C.monllo B.nlltO, l~ Hiii>. c..tlf~n••92•" JoHptl E Qrroll. Ulll c.rn1n1to Bd•lho, ~t+tll•.C.lllomlat2:6Sl Tho• blAIMtl It cond\1<1-4 llY •n 1nc:11vldv1I. JOMllll E. c.rrou Tllo\ \Ill-WIS tiled w ith IN County CleB OI Or-Goun!V oft Mity ''· t•lt ~-m Put>ll•""' ()'11199 C:O.st 0.111' P110I, Mo ll lO .tnCI June•· u . lt11 102 .. 11 PUBUC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE • f '*"'"'Y. May 23. I 971 PUBUC NOTICE P\JBLIC NOTICE fllc;TITIOU. ~NUS NAM& SfAfaM&lllT Tl\e 191-lflt .. ,._, a•t CI01"9 -. ... o ... A L PHA OIS ION ' 1' .. 0 TOGltA .... V. 22611 LaMOetl SI Ste 10t. l 1 Toro. CA ttUO O.wll I Slllnteli, 1in1 Y_.N ltt • .. n••A .... c:Anm T11on\at J Sllll••. ltO' C.llt r tY,•004, ,..II J.,.n CephlrMlo, CA .,.,. Tiit\ l>Utl ... U It Uftelll<tt'd 11'1' a 9tMfel l*•-""'P o.w11 a. Slllllt•k Tlllt ,,........,, ""llltd "'"" ~ CoUl'lty c;,.,. ttl o.._ (.ounty on •1121. "" PUBUC NOTICE flltTITIOUI IU,INIU HAM& IUT&MIHT Tiit tollOwll'Q .. ,M>M are 00•"9 O<l\•l\fUM ,..OJICT NINI!:, l TO . l H IO Mar .... , ... ,.., ..... y MIUlooo Vl•lo. CA tt•I\ '•foul< 1 KubO• U<t' ~na PIH• Leo-Hllh CA mu M•rry E W•hOI\, ttl•l 11"1• Pl••• O.lw, u~ Hl-t CA 'Mil Mt•I> J Ber.-.OH, .._. $ 8ra"4 t t>'ll , am~ ~''*'°'·CA t1S40 I "" t>u\lnet\ I\ <onOV(lff l>Y • llMl .. d !*INf'\l\lp. H•HY £. W•hon fhl\ •••~ .., .. filed wtllt l!w toUflty c;i.n ol Or ... <;-4y Ofl ~II JO. ltJt ,...., PUllll~llM OrallOI Cont o.lly Pllol, ~ Pll&U.-0.-c;.oe,1 O.lly Piiot. l!Qt 19 M•Y J, t. I•. 2l. ltll N\411' l. '· , .. 11. lfll PlJBUC NOTICE PIC'TtTIOUS IUSINIH NAME STATIM•NT ,.,. toOowlf\9 --It CIOlllO t>u•I· ntu '' CHUCl(Ell SPECIAL TIU, '612·( RH .. fCll Or • MUl'lll~CHI llH<ll, CA '2M• Oon1td w tllem, l'Mt·D P11<iftc Wey, An-m, CA .,.. Thi\ C>Wneu " ,_..., l>Y 1111 In dfwlelu•t. 0-ldW Blem Ttlf\ s11i.n-1 ••• tlleo with ,,,. COunly ,,_of Or-County on MIY .. '"' ~ PuClllsNd tlrano-CM\I Oellv l"tlot MIY '· 4', U, JO. 197t 1U6o71 PUBUC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IU51NIU NAME S1'ATaMUtT Tiit lollowtno oenon• are dolr-o llUll"ftlM QSC 4UDIO PRODUCTS 1')• Pl1un111. ~··Me"· CA.,.,, Pet•ltk 0u<11ar, "' E-.a1<1 B•v L41Qune ll•e<ll.U.'21jt Berry An<lre,..., 11St• Mar Villa, Soulll l •QMM. c.Antll Thi\ 1>11\IM\S ., (onducltO bY • llmllta pat1ne~1p. 9.,,.,-...... Gtne•el P11rt- Th1s •Ill-I w~ Ill.a "'"" lllt CoUl'lt v Cten ot Ot onQll County Of' N\41 y "· "" ~· PutllllMO Or-C:0.'4 0.lly PllOi Mey 4', U, JO, June •• 4'1'1 fUBUC NOTICE fllCTITIOUS IU51NESS NAME STATEMl!HT Tht IOllOWlllQ s-ti.on I> OOl"Q llu\1 neu ., BOB BREWER BODY SHOP 7..0 H•rllor 81..,, ~ti ~..-. C.lltornl• .,.,. RoDerr 0.vod 8•-•. 6022 Jede Clrctt, HYl>tll'lglon e.ech, Calll«nl• fl'4T Tiii\ bu\IMU Is c.Ctn0uc'4;:1 by Ill In· dlvld1111 RQOert D 6nwet Tllll \ltl-t was llted wttt'I lllot CoUftlV Cieri. ol Or.,,Qt ,_.., on A11<1t lO, 4'71. ""' .. P"l>ll•llt<I Or.,_ C:O.tl D61ly Piiot, N141v I•. H,JO-J-•, lttl ,~,. PUBUC NOTICE ~1Cfrn0Ui I U51NEU HAM« ITATEMENT T ... IOllOWf!IQ "'\Ofl' .,. dolno bu> I NU IS; THE 0.t.KS, OS Dehll• Ave .. Coron• a.1 ~" CA nus t!l11allelll Allen Otllmer, Oj Oelllle Aw+ • eor-"-' N141• CA thU John Richard Cl••k•. OS 0•1111• ... .,. • CorON 0.1 Mer. CA nus Tho\ l>u••nHS " co1>duclod t>y " Cl•Mrel .,.rtnonhlp Jol'ln .... CJMllt Thi• ·~-wn llled •olh IM Countr Ct••-ot 0r1noe eo..n1r on Aprlt 11, 1t1'- ""»4' Publl\l'ttd Orange CO.ti D••ly Pilol, M31' 1, 9, 16, 1J, 197& 1111-1t BUSINESS I AT YOUR SERVICE Ge Business Al. &'ts W@lY11? Firms Promote Fil• ~@((\YJ!1@@ "Got 0 problvn~ 'fh~ wnlt co Pol Dunn. Pel'°"' Ton Emnloves ci£t ttd lQfX. 9tltrn{l lh.e Onawer• mid OChon ~ rlftd r r J to 1ol~ iMqUttrts m gouen&ment o.ttd bufiMn. Moil ~"' q~•tiona to Pot ~nn. At YO&Ar Servkt. ~ Cocut Doa~ PUot. P.O. Bo.: 1360. Coato M11t1. CA 92626. Al mon~ lelttn 01 poutble will btr ~ed. btJt phontd. mqumu or U!Una not mcludMQ IM r1ader'1 /till DOmt. oddreH oDd tiunn.11 hour•' phoM ""m ber cannot be con.a1dered. Thtt column oppt'Orl dot· 111 except Saturdays " , DEAR PAT: I live in an apartment. so I can't have a regular vegetable garden. Can you nnct out what tomato plants arow best 1n contaJners? The price of tomatoes ls frightening, and J'd like to grow some of my own on my balcony. P. E .• Newport S.acb Reaearch at U.C. Rlvenlde niiesta tH two followlnc vartettet wUI produce 1ucee11f.al, coo· talner·arown tomatoes: "Patlo ll)tbrld," t.r Peu·oseed Co., and "Plde Hybrid," by W. AUee Burpee Co. Tr1A1plants. ftve to 1llr weet. eM, plaa&ed la early April at VCR, are ex:peete4 to pre. duce somtfTUJt la early June. Aaka C. Flemla1. Newport Beach. haa been n•med regtonal manager or U.S. IJle 8Ht1111 aod Lou Auodat6oa. She will use the Huntington Beach omce as head· quarters. • aobert P. Vlven. Newport Beach, has been named maaaaer of employee benefit.a at Toral· Valley and Aasoclates, Santa Ana. He previously managed group ln11urance olfifffi for Prudentlal lnsuranct> Co. • Jlkbael Neal. Irvine. has been appointed Orange County -San Diego coordinator In the So\lthem division Of the Amertcu Etedroltlu A•· 1oclatlon. He is rormer Oranae County Director Of San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson ·, gubernatorial camaplgn and lormerualstanttoSen. Dennis E. Carpenter. R· Newport Beach. • Pnl R. a.y a.ad Co .• an executive recru.ltlng firm. has named Pld.W,. Eastman Jr .• Irvine. u a vltt president ln It.I Loa Angeles office. He is a rormeT general management coo.aultant for £x~tive Action, Inc. • Lawre.ce 8. Bu&oa. Irvine. has jolned tM en· vtroomenlal research and planning firm of PWlllps ,,._,_ p_." •1 tultle BralMkaeddkk.lDc .• NewportBeach.Hewillaerve ----zr •• ......... -.J••1'0 u dire(:tor 0( water resources planning ~th prime DEAR PAT: My friend and I are Llcea.aed teaPon&ibilitieft being management of environmen- Vocational Nurses. We applied for our at.ate tat Impart Teport preparalaon , waler aad licenses on March 20. before moving here. We wastewater resources planning studies and general have jobs available. but can't take them until our martetingact.lvities. licenses are issued. Two phone calls to the Ucena· He ts former environmental services manaaer Ing board in Sacramento brought only the dla· for Don Owen and Associates •. Irvine. His couraging news that our fingerpr1n~ have Just respon.sibUities included planning functions f9r the been submitted lo the Justi~ Department for AU10 Water Management Agency. the Ne..tpon. clearance and it will lake al least 30 days for pro-Irvine Waste Management Planning Agency, the cessing Isn't there any way to s~ up this pro· Santa Ana Watershed Planning Agency, t.be Big cess? • Bear Municipal Wat.er District aod other public and D.V.A., Huntington Beach prJvateentiUes. A VS contacted the Vocadollal NarH aad "' Psychiatric Technician Examiners Board. IC.. Tllot:nu L. Corbla, San Juan Capistrano. has representative reports lbat your ft.D1erprtMI ... bftl\ appointed managing vice president of the no& accompany your appUcaUou, aad illey Wtf'e Newport Be~h office of Alexuder ud AlexalHler not received until April 14 aDd 28. Yoa wlU be eM· lac., Insurance broken. consultants and actuaries. tacted •• eoon aa the rtn1erprtat elearaHa are 1 He joined the company ln tm through the obtained for fee pay meat aad laaaaltff ot ,oer mer1er of Incentive Industries. Inc. He hu been ln Uceuea. charae ot lite insurance sales and involved ln the The Justice Department does not atcept · sales andserv\cing of group insurance programs. fingerprint processing laqalrles *aue Of &Ille • volame handled. The board reporta &bat It sab•IU Southern California Business Communicators. up to 500 per week, and 37 other repla&ory a1ee· k>(el chapter of the International Association of des alto use the department for na1ef1trlM pro. Business Communicators has awarded Doea cesslng. The attorney geaeral•s olltce of •M 8Uvt1 lts Communkat.or of the Year Award for Justice Department can be contacted by pltoahl1 "outstanding contribution's to the field of pro· lts public inquiry unit at <880> t52·52Z6. fesstonal communJcations." He Is the editor of Money Tree. internal pubHcaUon of Avco Finan- cial Services. Newport Beach. Betin-•~are ol •~' 8fc~ DEAR PAT: Do brigbtly·colored clothes at· tract bees~ I've heard this, a nd would like to know 1r it's true before I choose a ne w bathing suit lhll year. There are a lot of nowers and blooming shrubs near my apartment's awimmlne pooa, so bees are always nearby. I like colorful bathing suits. but I'll pass jf it means I'll get a bee aUng. H.K., Newport Beach Experts say bright colon. suede. llalr apraf•• cosmeUcs, sblny metal objeda aad modoe aU at· tnct atlaglng lnsects. If • bee boven arwad >'"• stay aa stlU a1 possible until It goes away. Aid Tolen Sting Pal11 Aae•• DEAR READERS: Tbe Health lnsuraace Institute bas of(ered some "promp& ans.•• tlpa to help reUeve painful Insect stlags. Aa aooa as you've been stug. look for a stinger. Use a magnlfylog glau U 11etta1aey. Remove It by uslng a flngernaU to scrape It away. The boaey bee Is the only lneeet wlroM .U.1er, wbich la barbed, remains lo the 1"NUld. Do Ml ,.U lt oat because It bas a venoe sac wblcll, If ....... releases more venom. If yoQ're stung by a "1ca¥ea1er" laaed (wai p, yellow Jacket or boraet>, lmmedJacely wash tbe area wUb soap and water. SU.p by these Insects can compUcate a local 1wellbl1 reac· tfon by inledion. To reduce swelling, apply ~ compreue1. He has served in numerous upacilies ror the association and the Chapter and is founder of the Orange County IABC. SlJvls teaches adult educa· lion courses in graphic arts and journalism at the coUeg~ level. Institute Dinner Set The Orange County chaplet or the Construction Specification Institute has scheduled ill' lnstallatk>n and awards dinner on June 6. ActivitJes will begin at 6 :30 p .m . in the Alrporter IM, Irvine. R~ervation1 may be Made by calUng Henry Mulr at 714·83~9123. Dtnoer tickets are $13.50 per person or $27 per couple; checks are payable to CSI. P.O. Box 10022. Santa Ana 92711. • ••fer WIDE AREA COVERAGE ~00.-U •1 ••• s~ NO~l1'0N APPROVED CREDIT Elevattag or keeping the afrttted area level can--------------------help. For a swollen leg. however. l)'IDI dowa la be1t. A aeneralbed reac&lon. such ., .. ves Hd au- lety or a hackblg cough, wbeedng. u.chlDI eyes, 1nee1lag and construction about the tbrM&, la serious and should be medlcally &reated I•· medJately. Death can oecar in It to 15 mlnmes when an extremely severe reaction ocun, ewen t.bougb only eight la 1,000 inaed stlop rwalt '9 fatalities. ~ Dfaplap StCJeet T .. c. DEAll PAT: lf we are wbat we eat. Americans 'must be "sweet" because of all the sugar we consume. r can't belive how many tclnds of soft drinks are available in supermarket.. We must down a lot of soda to warrant all thlt. J .J .• Newport Beach FIDdlags ol the U.S. Senate Sded tomeMtee oa NatdUoo tbow that comomptJoa of soft thtw baa more than doubled slllee IMO -dllplatlat mllk aa die aecond-mo1t comumed '"erace. IA lt'75 Amerlcans drank aa He...,e of !II IZ·oa.ee cana of toda per penon. If we are wbat we eat. Amertca .. an fat ... .. 1ty 11 well as aweet. Eacb ladlvlctaal C09M•ed about 121 poands of fat and 100 poUDdl ol ••ltr la lt'l6. In the early 1'"9, almost 41 percM& ol Americans' caloric hUake came Ito• fralt, vegetab&et atld gralD predad& OlalJ It "reetl& now come11 from these aoarttt. What wkll be the impact of The Jarvis-Gann Initiative on your Municipal Bonds? We believe 1he JARVIS-CANN lniti.11lve. if passed, will hJve .i !oignific.ml impact on lhe creditworthiness of certain CJlifornia ta1<-free bond issues. T~x-excmpt bond invt"Srors should h.ive • thorough understanding of how Jarvis-Gann ef- fects your bond holdings and how the market value of your portfolio could change. Kidder, Peabody. a le.ding underwriter and market-maker of tax-ellempt issues, offers • special rq>«t to intert'Sled investors .tt no charge. Further. for t'Oncemed investors we will ev.ilu1te your munlcipaJ portfolio and discuss your risks before the Junt 6th tlection. Stnd a list of your current muniC1pal holdings ot telephone .lt your convenience. n Kidder, Peabody------- 9 Co .... cououuo I '-"''* -.... , ... -' _ .. ·-b<Mq_tt I n• NcwJOft C:C.VT Orlw. N-.ot' leldl. CA tJ660 ~' C114) u.-~ • J.t IM.lllout•ca woM..W. Pltatcwndnwyour~tal Jarvis-C•nn ttpc>C1. MUiti~~~~~~~~~~~~~ AM.tt.-~~~~~~~~~~~ Oty·-----S.,tt·-----2tP1--- I T ..... i llaldttlcr·-----• 8u1lllftt1----- L .............. _.._..,.._......,..._ • .-... .... ~....-.---.... --~-.... _....,_,. .. ., Business ., DAILY PILOT ·~ -• U.S. Still 'Best Deal' for Foreign Investors By JOHN CUNNIFF 11# ........ ~ JI you belleve. as some do. that the United Slates has lost some GI it.s attractiveness as a place to ln~t. you should con- sid er these recent Items. From the Conference Board, a non-profit educational and re· search orgamzat1on &upportl'd maJnly by business: "TRE UNITED states was the slt.e of nearly half the 214 worldwide manufacturing ln· vestments in the first quarter of this year. ·'While the latest count Is Windmill 'Forest' Collector's Goal STOCKTON IAP) -Some day there will be a forest or windmills in front of Frank Medina's country home here. When his collection of 60 windmills reaches the 100 mark and his name appears in the "Guinness Book of World Records." Medina says, he'll call the land in front or his home "The Windmill Forest." "There'll be so many of them. it 'ti look like a forest," he says. THE 71-YEAR-OLD former hay rancher started collecting windmills seven years ago when he retired. "I worked for 47 years In the hay business and I always had to • work so damn hard and so damn long that I never had time to do what I w.anted." he says. Now Medina is doing what he wants -collecting windmills from all over the country. Even then, they often belong to "old folks who won't give them up," he says. Medi~a concedes his hobby is expensive. "!1"1 the old days I could have got the things for a little song. but the last three 1 bought cost $500 apiece. and the ones from back East run from $250 to $600." down from the 235 investments announcod lo the rourtb quarter of 1977. th.ls was more than otf- set by the genel"ally larger size of first-quarter projects. f'rom Sak>mon Brothers. the securities tlrm : "Forel111 Investors' purchases of U.S. Treasury securities ac celerated 1n th~ first quarter of this year .. IN THE FIRST three month.s of 1978 alone. foreign holdings In custodial accounts al the New York Federal Reserve Bank swelled to S88.3 billion. an un· precedented increase of $12.S .. , .. ,....... ff lS F ASCI NATION with windmills dates to his boyhood when he was growing up on a ranch near Livermore to the melody of a windmill pumping water. I F IT WE R EN'T for the money. Medina says he would have a lot more windmills on his ranch. FRANK MEDINA. 71 , COLLECTS WINDMILLS His Goal la to Acquire 100 tor HI• 'forest' "It m ade a clanging type of sound that was like music," he recalls. Price Guide Deceptive? Most of them on his 20-acre ranch are the metal Aeromotor type made in Chiacgo from 1914 to 1930. He calls them the "Cadillacs of windmills." Analyst Assails Mead Industry's 'Bible' MOST OF Medina's wmdmills range in size from 6 to 12 feet in diameter, but he has a few small. decorative types that •·aren't worth talking about." Medina is always on the lookout for additions to his ''forest." which he cuts down in height and mounts on platforms. He even advertises for them and has friends back East scouting for him He says the bigger windmills, ranging from 16 to 20 feet wide. can be found in the East. HE SAYS THE RE are a few good ones left In California, but they are hard to get and it can take days to learn who owns windmills spotted on deserted ranches WASHINGTON (AP ) -A con· gressional investigator says a price guide used by up to 90 per· c·ent of lhe meal industry is de- ceptive and can capriciously hike retail meat prices. Nick Wultich. hired by the House Small Business Commit· tee to do the analysis, said Mon· day the price guide called "The Yellow Sheet" once changed meal prices 569 times during a 25-day period without reason. VET. THE YELLOW Sheet serves as the bible of the meat industry, he said, and Is used by up to 90 percent or buyers and s ellers for price quotations. Another witness did a 1-cent up- ward variation in the quoted prices could cost New York con· s omers alone as much as $800,000 a week. The Yellow Sheet is published daily for subscribers by an or· ganliation called the National Provisioner Daily Markel Service in Chicago. It is promot· ed by the service as a gathering of "actual reports of prices" compiled by "our own team of market reporters." But the Yellow Sheet often lists prices although it has no re- ports of trades. Wult1ch said. and varies its prices without reason. I N CHI CAGO, Lester I Norton, president of the firm. called Wultich 's allegations "the most singularly stupid stuff I ever heard." Norton said he has a s taff of 12 reporters daily on the telephone getting cWTent prices. He said the congressional investigator was in his office only once. and .. He has no idea of the total fWld . Has Your Good Uncle Left Anything For YOU?? fl -~ Abour this nme of the year. many of us feel the impact of inflation with the realization fhor everything c~rs more 1ndudin<] our Govemmerir We woo~ for you too ... Ar HEf\ITAGE HOME LOANS we handle all of rhe derails of information available · · But Rep. Neal Smith. D·lowa. the committee's chairman. said Wultich's findings were appall· ing. billion tor Just three months. Foreign investors. mostly or· facial institutions. are now the lareest single ractor in the u.s governmenL<; securities market. "These holdings. which totalled $107 8 billion on Dec 31. 1977. exceed both the holdJng.s ot all U.S. commercial banks and those of the Federal Reserve." F ROM THE HEAD of North American operations for an Italian manufacturing com- pany: ·'There 1s only one country tn which to Invest today. Because of political and social problems. 1t 1lU,Do nsky lo put money into some developed countries. The United States Is the only safe in· vestment" From the National Association of Realtors: "Just how extensive are foreign investments 1n US. ra rm lands? The answer 1s elusive. "ACCOR DING TO Milton Berger. director of the Com· merce Department's office or foreign investment in the United States. we really don't know. 'What we are seeing may only be the tip of the iceberg. You can't hide the purchase of a fac- tory. but little 1s known about sales of farmland.· said Berger ··As of the end of 1974, accord· ing to the survey by the Com· merce and Treasury Depart· ments for the Foreign Invest· ment Study Act of 1974. foreign interests owned just over 1 million acres of agricultural land in the United States ... T HE R EALT ORS believe (armers are unduly worried about foreign investments. and feel the growing apprehension may be unwarranted . But legislators aren't waiting. Missouri's Legislature. in response to fears that foreign in· vestors were inflating farmland prices. recently prohibited all further foreign investment in O ver T h e C ounte r NASOU~ ( BVSIN~ ANALYSIS J rarm l and to be used for agricultural purposes In lowa, landholders must re. gist~r by nationality because or an amendment to a 1975 tor· pora I e farmi n g law. T hat amendment. passed last year. also limits foreign corporations to 640 acres. PART OF WHAT makes the Unlted Stales attractive to foreigners is the lower value of the dollar in relation to foreign currencies. which makes American goods and services that much less expensive to buy. You might try to explain the phenomenon by saying it is simply the long-anticipated re- turn or all those dollars we left abroad because of our repealed international payments deficits. But such an explanation is simple to the point of not being one at all. A belt.er explanation is that foreigners are simply act· mg like all prudent investors. They are concerned foremost with the security and high yield of their investment. and l.laey feel that relative to many other countries the United States still offers the best deal available. Paint Removal Vnits Recalled WASHINGTON <AP> -The Consumer Product Safely Com· mission has announced that two • brands of elect ric paint re- movers that may pose a polen· · · lial shock hazard are being re- called. About 9.200 of the paint re· movers were dis tributed nationwide by Sears Roebuck and Co .• and by Rt:d Devil Inc . between May 1 and Oct. 21. 1977. 11,, .... ,, •• .,.. DOWNS. ~81TW LHI SolidPft ... CeM80H ,"' ~·:~~to"" ]l,J ·~· :is:~ ·~ Aut-m 8ry11N1wr MoOI~ Mor~~ f~ •• ... (.onF•llr , . Mon II lb 1'• AC~ In<! '"' ~.,.0.1 ,..,, •vcom , .. 8rQl\m "" ) Hem.,..• • :: .. ~~i l )'• Mexo<\ ... ..... .,ll~ ••• lr~O " PM;FE\l )•. ~MOCM • r tetM I °'4 I '• .. t•, -... ., '. .. '• " -., .. .. .. .. .,. '" . , '· .. . .. ., ••• .. -·~ .,, P<I Up , ... UP 2t 7 Up 2t J ~ :f~ UP 1)• I.IP IS • UP U ) Up 14 J UP U.J Up IJI UP Ill> ~ a ~ Uo U l VO IJ J Up I] 1 Up IJ 0 Uo 110 IJO 11 \ uo ,, ) IJO 11 \ Up 17 \ Up 11' Uo ,, ) \JU 17 \ P<t ()fl t>. 011 I)) ()ti ,, ) 8H ., ' II• It I 011 11 t &:: ti I 11 t g:: II I 10¥ Oft 10\ Oii IO U g:: 11 '·' Oii 9J ()It , , Ott 1 I Oii , t ()It , , Olf ... g:: •• 08 ()tt ., Off \.• Oii \.• ... . ' HOW 15 IT POSSIDLE TO STAY AHEAD? Oy Investing your h<Yd earned money, and mokin<J if ~ hard fOf you Any loon presented for your consider· orion. hos undergone careful SCT\Jriny wirh your .secunry in mind. \Vhile your money rs worl<ing. (during rhe penod of me loon). yeu will recerve o computertzed staremem occoonflng for all pnncipol ond interest you have re- cerved each and f!"le<Y month. MUTUAL FUNDS .. DllT WHEP.E TO INVEST?f In 5~% Po5.sbook ro 7Jh% Long Term Cemflcates of Oeposit?...Hordty .. me rovoges of Inflation writ render rhis veh1· cle as a break ~ proposition Of best. Stocks Of Oonds? ... Let's suffice ro say rhor rhes~ areas con be less rhon predk:toble. 'When you trf'.leSf with HENTAGE HOME LOANS. we will pur your money to wor1~ In SAf'E. SECUT\E HIGH YIELD TRUST DEED INVESTMENTS which will ecm 10%to 12%* (OR MORE) If o loon PCJY' off poor ro maurily. yoo recet-..e o txn.is~ up ro6monthsuneomed lnfeft>SI on~ of ~ \.-.pold bo4once -ltius lncreoslng '(OU! ~ In addition. monyof our looos poy·off before their maruriry. In this evenr. (unlike many companies) you will re- ceive rhe ENTIRE pre-poymenr bonus allowed by IO'N. • Yoo pay no commissions fOf these seNICes. So -After you've mode your oonuol rox conrrlbu11on. and somehow you monoged to retain $5.000.00 or more. clip rhe coupon below and drop Ir in rhe mod rodOy, or coll one of OlK pm· fesslonol Investment Counselors for more deroiled lnfoonorlon. We're re<xty ro help yoo pur your had ecrned moneyroWOC'k ... FOi\ YOU .. And we're ~ or 1tf I H.WL -------------ADOOUS. ~~~--~~~~-.. ~ .. ~ .. ~ .. ~ ...... ~~ .. ~ ..... ~-~--HM. ....... -.. ;:.:.::~::::~;;;;.~~~~~~~~..- ' • l N T uesda y' C losinR Prfoe ~. - NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ... (•-u STOCKS I BUSINESS Home Addition Aid May Be Cot By SYLVIA PORTER ~ ......... The White House lax package would knock out the. medical expense deduction for home 1mprovement.a, start.: Ing in 1979 -eliminating deductions for ill or disabled tu payers whose doctors specify Improvements. , So, people who need, say, central a1r·condilionJng to alleviate a medical condition should consider inst.ailing 1U this year For tax purposes, next year would be too late it the administration's proposals become law. THE COST OF A MEDICALLY pres cnbed home im provement is deductible to the extent it exceeds the in· crease in the value.of the home. Over the years, courts have approved S\lch items a~ chair-seat elevators for cardiac victims. home elevators to mitigate an elderly person's arthriUc condition, speciM beds. attached garages. People planrung to install medically relat ed home improvement soon should: Get a written re· commendation from the physician. Money's Worth Get a written opi- nion from a competent real estate appraiser stating thei amount, if any, the improvement adds to value of the home. Keep a detailed record of expenses. A REMINDER : PEOPLE WHO already have a deduc; tible home improvement or who put one in this year should remen1ber the tax break. What is spent in 1978 for opera. tion and maintenance is deductible on the 1978 return to bd filed next spring It might even pay to borrow money In order to pay foe the improvement in 1978. Here are more reminders on 1978 medical expense de· ductions : -Non-prescription drugs, Incl uding aspirin. de, congeslants. antihistamines. cough syrup and antacids. qualify as deductible medicines But before drugs become a "medical expense." they must exceed 1 percent of in· come. After that. t hey are· lumped together with otber medical expenses for the 3 percent noor. -NURSING CARE 19' A MEDIC~L uct1on that doesn't hinge on who provides the care, ev if it is a fami- ly member. -_Medical tra~sportation can be deducted. 1f the fami- ly car 1s ~ed for visits to the physician or dentist, dedu.ct 7 cents a mile plus parking fees and tolls. 1978 may be the last chance to take these deductions. so crowd as many of your medical expenses as you can in· to this year. Ne:ct Protecting dependency ctecJuchons Inflation Forecast Pulls Market Down NEW YORK <AP> -A government official's forecast or more bad inflation news dealt the stock market a new setback today. The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials closed down 10.13 at845.29. The market was confronted w1lh a rorecast from Barry Bosworth, director or the c.ounctl on Wage and P rice St.ability. that consumer price index readings for both April and May are likely to look "pretty bad." The April figure is due to be released a week from Wednesday, to be followed two days later by lbe May wholesale price index In contr~t to the over-all downtrend, gaming stocks extended their recent ;;harp advance with the first caslno expected to open late~his week in Atlantic City, N.J . SttH'ktl 111 TM Spoiff gllt Do..,,011nA rf!rGfl'• NY Stou Ml.S l)j)Q,000 .. !:1'::= SS.t00.000 • 10,0jO,OOO 11,770,000 t.•)l,.IOt,~ ~.m:~:\I: WIC•U AME.IC 010 HEW Y0fll( IAPI HEW YORK IAl'I -Tiie ,.._ Y0tk Stock Eacrwt~ ~ -odd tot trenM(. lion• by IKI"'_. O.~ on Monc141't' • Pure II•~ of U1,S2t >ner .. , HIH of :»1,,_ "*'-, lntJW!fto IM INrM Hid "'°"'· •• t TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS Television T~y. ~y 23. 1978 DAILY PILOT 8 7 I I I "'" \ ' EVOINO ... , I :.HIWI EMINllNCY OHEI The~•• toult uo eno petarn.dlc Gage ge11 a c11ec-for lllouunda 1n1...0 of tor hutldr.Oa G OUNIMOKI Mart ii COl'-ed by I/Ir .. Sloua lndlatlt U lie goes 10 lln() l\elp IOf Ille lr.-ZlflO pa&Nngera ol • lrappeel train !Part 21 8) ,...IAAOY~ Bobby """ Pete<' l•om betng hit by a felling lad<:Hw end "' return me o4oer Bredy pronuses to 1>9Come Botlby's Sieve • ADAM-t2 Melloy and Reed help a Ctl- izetl wl'IO .. Desieged by ~ 1 ltiendly Me11ean Clllldren fD Et.ECTRIC COMPANY ~ PERSOHAI. FINANCE "Otf\ef investment 0opot. turu1ies· ®J A.BCNEWS f.'308 MOVIE • • • • Charade tParl O ( 196'11 Caty Grant. AuOrey Hep1>u1n A woman t>ecomes 11>e rar~t ol her mu•dereo husband s er 001e1. wno t>etltlV• Sll(J 11,nows tile whefeebouta or a vut llid<IOn IOftuoe f 1 llr , 30m1n I A Great One .John Wayne is in familiar atllre as ht• discusses his Oscar and the work of othe r western stars in Oscar's Best Ac tors. a tribute to film greatnei,s, tonight at 10 on ABC. Channel 7 CD 8EWITCH&.O Oeffkl find• out that 1111 son Adam " a warlock Gues11 Tony Curtis Ooek V11n Oylce al) HOME GAAOENER Propagation I aJ A()()t(IES 1:00 8 N8C NEWS I JOt<ER'S WILD The Ludlow prtJConCI tnSh· tutes a Poltce Caoet P1ogram 6l) OVEREASY i LIARSCLUB ABC NEWS 80WUNOFOA OOUAR8 7:30 CANDID CAME.RA NSWLYWEOGAME (W HOLL YWOOO SQUARES Senator Frank Church. aging and 11111 brain IMIOtO< I &CQu1<1ng CC>lhlge credots (RI m I LOVE LUCY 0 JOt<ER'S WILD ~ THE GAOWINO YEARS Rocky Miits hts car and '"e Merizes 1h1nk they are being slr11ndeo on Calllor- noa IJ> THE BRADY BUNCH Greq Wl\ntS 10 be treated like a man now 111a1 he oa on riogh school ana oomands 111sownroom (!) AOAM-t2 "AdOlescenr Mentel Dovel· OPrrK!ftl Cl) AMERICA 2NIGHT Guest Ma<k Hamill Reed ar>d M8lloy rnvestr· gata the brzar•e tlleU ol l'I la ..... Cl) AMERICA 2NIGHT Gue.I M111k Hamill fII 28TOHIOHT [OJ MERV GRIFFlN 6l) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPOflT A IOok ar rile problem• Iac- ono women u11ng and ilbuSIOQ alc()l'IOI IS pre~nt ed Claa11nt»l (,bf Ing• • KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles G KNBC !NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA 11nd ) Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind ) Los Angeles 0 KCST IABCI San Diego 8) KTTV f Ind I Los Angeles ID KCOP-TV (Ind) Los Angeles &'> KCET· TV I PBS! Los Angeles G KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach ~ NE'NSCWECl< An 1nto1ma11vo co11~11on ol Or.ange Coumy f\8w:. gove<nmenl &n<S consum11r aflaorr. oeop1e :ino sport~ (IJ THE GONG SHOW 8:00 f) FAMILY FILM CLA881CS ·Tne Yearlong Penny (Greoo-v Peck) ar>O Ml (Jane Wyman) Butor s 1111es a10 complic111ed wlltln Penny 1s b1t111n by a ra111asnake ana lhorr son No BusiQess Like It L:.iverne and Shirley and thei r pals Lenny and Squiggy show off their dancing talents tonight at 8:30 on ABC , Channel 7. From left ure P enny Marshall, David Lander. Cindy Williams and Michael McKean. ABC News Promising 'Aggressive Spirit' LOS ANGELES IAP > lnnovaltvt' news coverage and a new spint of aggressiveness will make ABC as competitive in news as it Is in enter- tainment, ABC news executives have promised network affiliate stations. "We will not be beaten to a story," Av Weston, producer of the "ABC E vening News," said Monday at the opening session of the amliates meet- ing at the Century Plaza Hotel. A BC pushed lo the forefront in prime time, entertainment ratings nearly two years ago, but still lags behind CBS and NBC in news rat-ings FRANK· REYNOLDS, who will be the network's new chief anchorman. 8aid: "I have a CeeJlng that this time we're going to succeed. There Is a new spirit of aggressiveness at ABC News. We are going to take..._ our viewers to where the news is hap~n­ lng' The remodeling or the "ABC Even- ing News" was outlined by Roone Arledge, president of ABC News and Sports, to more than t ,000 broadcast executives. The turnout was the largest ever for any network's af. Ciliate convention '"°"' Fash ion hl:ind Newport Beach ABC's new format will use a system of r egional anchormen Harry Reasoner is leaving ABC in June and Barbara Walters will con- centrate on interviews and special coverage. ::> WESTON SAID THE new system will ~rnphasize more on·the·spot cov- erage from the scenes~~ news events. "Pet.er Jennings recently r&ported Crom outside the room where Middle East negotiations were taking place." he said. "He was a ble to con- vey the tension and tie together all t h e rep ort s fr o m the field . Meanwhile, the other networks were handling the story from New York." Reynolds will be chief anchorman in Washington and Max Robinson will ~n lhe domestic desk from Chica o. Other anchormen will be statio d overseas and at other strategic locations. "The New York.Washington access established with Huntley-Brinkley will be broken," Weston said. uwe wiJI expect our regJonal anchormen to push lor stories Crom their region. Our guide is: We wtn not be beaten to a story." MPO«T Jo<ly IClauoe Jerman Jr ~ edop\a a lawn tPa<t IOI 21 0 'fHE MAHY LOVES OF AATH"" TUBE TOPPERS t t*I • (() CM lA Tl MOV11 • •'• "'Columbo I.adv In WeltinQ'" I 19721 Pe19t Falk Suaah Ciart! A t.m11y QUatrel ovet '°1\trol ol tl\W COfPO'lllOn INd• to fTIUfder An 111rac11ve stewardess (Carollne McWiJllamsl causes 1 young vetetmarl- an tRichard Maaurl to re· evaluate tus leehnga at>Ovt IO.,. CBS f) 8 :00 Family Film 8 WOVIE Classics. This new series highlighting family movies of the past opens with "The Yearling'' starring Gregory Peck. Jane Wym an and Claude Jarman Jr. IJ TOHIGHT Holl Jollnny Caraon 0-1-= eun ~·· Johnny Mllhll. Monte • • •, "N0<1h Country" ( t9691 Oocwnentary Two men, IMng in 1he remote Alaskan wlldernasa. encounter p1oblem1 wNln 11'1ey attempt to wrvive without tt\e benellrs ot modem tecMology (2 hrl I KCET@ 9:00 --TV on Trial. The celebrated case of Ronny Zamora. who claimed television led him to murder. is aired tonight. c See review below >. Venton. 8 L.OV!. AWPICAH ITYU "'Love And TIMI Haunted HOON" 0.\lel'Jy end Wallet take lhaller In • hlunted l\ou... "Love And The Athlete" Oeol'i>e 11aa been told by hit boaa 10 tell • women th1t ahe 11 ~ men D ®J HAPPY DAYS "Rulet To Date By" A roman11e vreellend turn1 •nto dl&eater when a lum- beriack de<:lcle9 1he1 he hkea R.chle a gul1rle(ld KOCE 9 10:30 The Silent Minori- ty. The problems of li group of deaf adults are examined. • QJl A8C lfltCIAL "TM 131h Annual Acada· my 01 Counlry Mu11e Aw11d1" Donna F11go, 811b11a MenOtell and l(enny Aogwa .,. C:O-hOell tor ttlll ewards anew trom Sl'lrrne AudnOfoum In Loa Angele• Featuttd per- fOfmett ate C"arlle RICf'I and S1ella P11ton D MOVIE • • • • "A Men Called Gannon" (19691 Tony FranclOla. Michael Safta- zin An ex~ienced COW· boy sela about leachlng an Easte<'n OIJde the ways ol 1118 range 12 hrs I CD CAAOl 8URNETT ANOFMNOS Guests. John Byner. M.en- ne1h Mats G) WOVIE *' * * "Not With My Wife You Don t" t 1968) Tony Curlis. Vltna L•s• An Air F0<ce ma1or Sl.lddenly real- oz~ 111a1 one 01 h1s lnends Ja paying more atten1101110 "Is wile lllan he os 12 hrs ) fl:) ONCE UPOH A CLASSIC 'A Connactocut Yankae In Kong Arthur 's Court Hank Morgan !Paul Rudd). a 19th cen11Jry factory bosS. 11 somehow ttansported to 6th century England. Cam- elot and Ille cou•I ot King Arthur QB TURNABOUT "What's Happening To Otck Ancf Jane? Sexual stereotyping •s doscussea wrth a female soccer pjayer and a male 1>a11e1 dancet Matilda Butler descrot>es ways to 011010 se•ual ste<'eolypong on ttutbOOl<s (I) THE MAGIC OF ROXY 8:30 fJ !!}) LAVERNE & SHIRLEY "T"8 Dance Stu<loo II s Laverne and Sllotley to the raacue wllen Carmine need• money to s1art • dance '"'°'°· CD ~WITS a!) OVEREA8Y --.10rs acQulrlng college credits (RI 9-00 9 (I) THE DAIN COME Nasll en11111 11\e lid ot Owen f"ttz.ateQhan (Juon Miiiet) to dllPIOYe Ille IN- O<y that Gabtoelle Leggett (Nancy AO<lltonl •S alllle1- eo Wt1h Iha Dain CurM and 11 retj)On11ble fOf the murdeta (Patr 2 ol 3) 8 COUNTRY NIGHT OF 8TAR8 CharlHI Pflde and Tennes- see Ernie F0td Ste Ille 11oata l0t • cel6t:>r1hon ot country music Guea11 1nc1uo11 f redoie Feodor, Anne Mutrey. Conway T willy and Bill Andenon (Part 10121 fJ ®J THREE'S OOMPANY · Alone Togelhe• Whot evrl IUrka rn the 11<1ar1 01 man? Ctmny hnOs oul When •he and Jock spend an une1pected evening aione 10Qell\8f I Al • MPV ORIFAN 0118111 Tony Curltt. O!ck Van Dyke fD TV OH n.tAL Tile televoMd tn1t OI 15 yaar-otd Ronny ZOmOfl, ..no mo1n1a1n5 that 1111 adOIC110n to .. ,Olent crime programs on 1etev11o0n 1nftuenc.d him to mu•det htS 82-yea•-<>IO ne.g11b0< Et.nor Hagger I Qt!) MAITE~ECE THEATM · Our Mutual Frtend Eugene wrayt>urn ..,,. tour mean1 "' l'lltl sea1cll IOf Lime. tile SChoolm .... ,., Head1tone has ™' own Idell (Part 6 ot 7) AO'f and ()eouty Baket ha..,. MC>&r ately IPPlied for ii poltca Chlflf'I jqb ill lll'Olhef town t>ecauM r1 pays mOfe money (R) 10:00 1 • NEWS 9 08CAR'8 BEIT ACTORS Tiie ram1n11cence• or A~ Award wtnnong actors er• coml>tfle<I wrlh llltn Clips ol memorable perlorm1noes on a salute to ,,.,. "<>ec.1' and 111 """'*' II) LET'I MAKE A DIAL '9 NEWICHECK An 1nl0<m1111 .. e colleciton of 011nge County news go .. etnmant and consumer atla1rs. people and sports t~308)GJ NEWS G 8nc!AL "The Siient Minority" A group 01 deal adult$ e•a- mlne tllelr own protaa11on- a1. social. religoou~ and perso11ll concern• t1:00 8 8 8 Cl)@) Ntw8 LOVE. AMERICAN 8lYU A COllple agree thll '"ey can ·1 stand each o11'14W. but neither W81111 IO ...... G MOVIE * * "The VIOient Pr<>fes- llO!lal · t 1969) Luc MO<"en· da Richard Conte An 1t11- 1an pOllCe officet utes Ills own methOd.a 10 accom- P"-"' hit lob (2 hra.1 • THE 000 COUPLE Olcar must go to the h<>S· pltal for an oper111on • MONTY PYTHOH'8 B, YING Ct9'CU8 CD THATOA "'TlleBeald" g) GETIMART Eli) CAPTK>NEl> ABC NEW& MORNING 12:00 g TWIUGffT ZOHE Proteuor Fowla• .i well· liked teache• at • boy ~ 5ChOOI. II atkad by tl>e 11uat-to end 1111 teach· i cereer HIGHHOPE8 HONEYMOONERS In $8&rch ot d ta&t buck. AalPl'I and Ed appear on .i televlao0n show 6l) DICK CAVETT Guest mystery wrotet Fredenek Oannay (Etiery 0-1 tN08 MOVIE * • e "FOf Whom The Sell TOiie" (19431 ~rid Berg- man Gary C0()9er CD MOVIE * • ••-. ·A" Throug.h The Niottl'• ( 1~21 Hump!'lfey Bogart. Cclnt.O \.1111(11 (!)MOVIE • • •, Tllat lady t 19551 OIMa de Havtllancl, Gllt>efl Rolan a fl) MACH£1L I LtHRlR MPORT 1:00 D TOMOAAOW Roget COfman. o1 him pro. dU<l81 and <1orect0< will O!SCU.11 hi.I careor. Senator Frank Church, aging and the t>raon, 8:30 G l!JJ CAATEA COUNTRY ··eye. Bye Biiker" c11 .. 1 '°' • MICHML JACfC80H G-11· Fted 81enlman Ateh Haenet. Ind Howard I< raya, aolar enttrgy eapei-11 'It:) MACNEIL I LEHRER 8~ Trial \liewed Toniglat Did TV Prompt Murder? By BICK SPRATLING M JAMI CAP> -The following murder trial has been edited for television. The result is a smoother-than-life slice lrom the courtroom where the State or Florida set out to prove Ronny Zamora was a murderer . and television set out to prove it could operate without turning a trial into a circus. Both succeeded. "TV on Trial" at 9 p.m. on KCET. Channel 28, is a two-hour distillation o{ Zamora's trial and conviction last fall on charges of robblne and murdering an 83-year-old neighbor woman In Miami Beach. THE CASE ESCALATED to national attention when television became a dual issue. Attorney E llis Rubin announced that he would defend Zamora, then 15, as a vlcUm of "involuntary television lntoxicatlon." And under a one-year Florida experiment, still and TV cameras were allowed in to record aJl 38 hours of the trial. "TV on Trial" attempts to deal with both issues. although each has been altered by eventa since the trial The cameras-court debate was muted when the Florida Supreme Court decided May 11 not to continue the exper\ment. But the court said it wlll listen to arguments later in the summer on a petition by the Post-Newsweek stations of Florida to change the sta~ judicial conduct code and allow camera access lo courts. AND THOUG H THE "TELEVISlON intoxication'' defense did not keep Zamora from being convicted and sentenced to life in prison, that issue appears headed for an airing In the Cederal oourts. Zamora and his parents re~ntly filed a $25 million civil suit against the three commercial networks, claiming TV programming "showed the impressionable teen-ager, Ron'ny Zamora, how to kill.'· 27 hours carried locally by WPBT. but add a few new wrinkJes. Some are discon~rting. Zamora's mother is testifying one mooent in a print dress. the next in a plain suit <she had returned t.o the stand for a second day of testimony). Inexplicably. the jury suddenly is switched Crom camer.--r1ght to camera-left Cthe trial was moved to a dirlerent courtroom. l An 11-minute gap in the original tape is handled by havina attorney Rubin return to a studio to re-create what he said during the actual trial. The staging is an awkward sldetrip from reality. and ts the only clearly visible fumble by the producers. FOR MOST OF THE program, though. the real-life participants do their own talking in court -the prosecution methodically building lt.s case as Rubin's "TV Lnt.oxication" defense c~mbles. Morgan is bothered by what had to be trimmed u an extended trial was compacted, but finds the compromise acceptable. For one thing, consider the competition. "Look." Mo rgan says. "We're on PBS in prime time. We're competing against CBS. NBC and A BC." The public television people are not fo r getting tha t the original local Zamora broadcast outdrew Johnny Carson on some nights. But, says Morgan. while the producers did go for the most eUecUve television production they could, they avoided cheap shots that might have spiced the show . THE EDITORS CUT OUT dozens of emotional clashes between delense attorney Rubin and pro1ecutor Tom Headley, even though they gave drama to the trial. "We couJd have pandered to that very, very easily," sa~ Morgan. "But It seem ed to us that of all the issues in the case, that was the least important." '8tack0u1 t , tS 9 Cl) tto.w< "'Ho lm-ry FOi Muldet ~ J. BI preea.ir• K()jAk 10 lllY 8WIY lrQn\ .. INIO 1Aobet1 Alda) und« 1n- 11ga11on IOI murdef (Al a:ooz~ • • "TM Pirates Of Tiie' M1111111ppl' ( 1118'1 H•n•torg f'elmy. HOISi. Frink t-.21 1 NEW8 l:*O MOVll. ...... "P\lallovet" 119541 Fred M•cMurray. t<lm Novak 1:aal N1W8 3.'00 M0\'11 • • '" "8u1let For ~ Badman 1111641 Audi .. Mwrplly. O.uen MoOav1n: 8M<>W • • •., "Tobacco Road : ( 1114 11 0-Tletney. Oant( Andt- •:OOG MOVIE * * "l,,. lnYllll>l8 T•r0t C t983l Hanno SChlTlldhuasar. Hana V BOtotOdy 4:281 HEW8 4:*1 MOV1a *' • "Hor"'Ol 1118'1d 1194 I) DiCk FOfllll Leo Catruio 8) MOVIE • • 'The Man Tiiey Cou10 Not Ha119" ( 193111 Botis, Karlott. Roget P•yOt lt'edne•da11'• . Da11•••• Mo.,tt»• ~RNINO 11:30 G> • • • · The Seven1" Cron t 19~41 Soencer Tracy. Hume Cronyn A Q'OUP ot eteal>ftl,Jtom 4 ptoaorMH ~a1 camp d/8 r8Uf'lted alt8' $011tt1ng up IOllOWlnQ llletr departure. (2M ,20Mll\) AFTERNOON 12.-000 ••'h"A T1meF0t l<illlnQ" ( 19671 Glenn Ford. lnget Stewna A UNon Olf IC*• I MM II hetgl'lltlf'led Whet! Ille Conledetarn kldnlO h11 grttfrlend I 1 hf • 30mtn I 3.-00 0 ••. ~ '" l'hct Ot"8< Men" f 19701 Roy Thinnes. Joan Heckett A weattl\v. t>eeutolul woman has an atta11 woth a mya1enous ex- cononcl 11 h< . 30 m10 1 3:30 • * • • . ., The Omega Men t 19711 C11ar11on ~ll011. AothOfly Zett>e Tiie IOn1I SYrv•V()I OI a germ w11t atlempts 10 1><e· pat8 a Cuti 111 order ro wva 11uman11y I I hr . 30 mint C...,~d Ric hard Masur and Caroline McWilliams sta r in the TV movie ·'The Many Loves of Arthur .. tonight at 8 on NBC. Channel 4. Issues aside, "TV on Trial" ls probably the first opportunity for many viewers to glimpse a real murder trial from top to bottom. "We've gone beyond Perry Mason," says the show's executive producer. Shep Morgan ot WPBT. the Miami public TV s tation that taped and broadcast most of the original trial. With financl~ from lhe Corporgtion for Public BroadcuUna. the station produ~ lhe network special, brin1in1 in New York freelancer Don Fouser as producer and Esquire naUbnal editor Richard Reeves u bolt. MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND wrm MOKE THAN 1,080 vtdeoupe edits, Florida va. Zamora is telescoped from nine daya Into two hours, often ending up as more television than trial. "But warned." says host-Reeves, "you're 101n1 to be manipulated to meet the needs of televlaton. It's not a trial; it's a joumalisUc representation of a trial." Skllllul edit.a eliminate naws fro'm lhe ori&lnal a~ &IA~ TO THE FABULOUS BIG BAND SOUND STARRING LHl3UMN AND HIS ~am~ A SPECIAL FINAL APPEARANCE IN THIS AREA BY f¥\LLA KELLY & Tt-E ~S ALSO FOR YOUR DANCING ENJOYMENT TH£~ SHOOP SOCETY c:wJ£ST1\A <X)<) SAT. 8t SUN. MAY 27 ll 28• 8 PM FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 84().4000 EXT 8100 a Ba DAIL V PU.OT T....my, Mey~. tt11!1 ENTERTAINMENT/ INTERMISSION/HY GARDNER \ SINGING BOONES, PAT AND DEBBY Lighting Up Her Daddy's Life f)ebby Lights :Up Pat's Li/ e Q : Deep down doesn't Pat Boone really resent daughter Debby's s udden rise to stardom? -Delia Turley, Pittsburgh. A: No way. Debby Boone really lights up her daddy's life with her well-earned success. Which, incidentally, pumped adrenalin into pop's already · l<'ng and fabulous career. Singly they're super T..>gether they'll write showbiz history. A TV series starring the entire Boone family is Topic No. 1. It will probably combine skits and songs -old and 'Glod You Asked That' by Marilyn Clftd Hy Garct.er new -sort of a musical family affair. Getting- heads-together sessions are now going on to rule out any chance of the Boone boom winding up in the boondocks. Q: How dJd Dan Rather of "60 Minutes" gel to be known as "the man the While House hates"? - Mrs. P. DownJng, Youngstown, Ohio. A · It happened on March 19, 1974, during a brief verbal joust on a televised Nixon press con- ference Here is the official government transcript of the exchange that shocked so many viewers: '"'hank you, Mr. President. Dan Rather of CBS News. Mr. President .. " (Applause mixed with jeers.) Nixon: "Are you running for something'!" Rather: "No. sir, Mr. President, are you?" Q : ls EUzabelb Taylor as llappy wttb new husband, John Wamer, as she looks? -Mrs. L. Woodruff, Long Beach, Callr. A : Apparently Liz Taylor finally found what she's been looking for in a marriage all these years -peace. content· ment and an utter disregard for what people have to think or say ::about her. She didn't even mind being described as "a fat and happy politician's wife." With a comfortable candor she TAYLO" mused on what people who stare at her are looking for -"Wrinkles and pimples. And I don't disappoint them, do J?" Liz told Us magazine. "'This face has been around a Jot of years. People want to see if my eyes are re· etlly violet or bloodshot or both. Once they check me out, they can go home and say, 'I saw Liz Taylor and you know what? She ain't so hot!' And you know what" They're right! She ain't!" Times eerlainly have changed. Years ago if anyone else expressed their opinion of Elizabeth, there would have been a long line of lawyers. armed w.ith ">Ubpoenas, demanding a retraction or a bounty of beautiful bucks' Q: Did thJs saylng come from the Greek: "When you've got your mother you're still a kid?" -M Tl!>. D. Coulouras, Minneapolis. A. We: don't know the derivation. but we first heard 1l from a sentimental Greek named Telly Sava las Send your quenions to Hy Gardner. "Glad You Asked That." care of th13 newspaper. P.O Boz 11748, Chicago, JU. 606/l. ManLyn and Hy Gardner will an.noer as many question& a.& they can in their column, but the volume of mml makes personal replies impossib~. ~~i DIHHE:I P'LA YHOUSI Howrtap.g Woo.t,A.Uen't DOM1TDRIMK THE WATER .... 11SMALL CHANGE" IGJ After her dlvor~e, rla got to know some pretty Interesting people •• ~ Including herself. ~' D--a•a, Musical 3 Shows Lift Curtains Something ror every body -a comedy, a drama and a musical -is the situation on Orange Coast stages thls week as two colleges and a community theater group raise the curtains on t,heir latest productions. The first ol the trio, opemng Wednesday for a four-evening run. is Orange Coast College's production of Arthur Miller's last play, "The Creation of the World .and Oth~r Business." UC Ir vine 's Mus i c Theat e r Workshop follows on Thursday with a •hree-performance e ngagement or the musical "She L oves M e," while the Saddleback Valley Community Theater follows with the local premiere of "The Busy Body" on Friday. "C REATION ," BEING directed by OCC drama instructor Tom Bradac. presents biblical characters In human terms. Dean Nichols and Kelly Ann McGillis are cast as Adam and Eve, with Kushka Fehring playing God and Darren Bordier in the role of Lucifer. C urtain tim e is 8 p .m . HOWEN TO SIAR IN· 'OMEN II' LOS ANGELES (AP > William Holden and Lee Grant star in "Dantien--Omen II," a seq uel to the box office hit "The Omen." Jonathan Scott-Taylor plays the Antichrist child in the film. which opens June 9. His de· moniac nature continues to in· •voke an aura of evil. Intermission Tom Titus Wednesday through Saturday in the college's Drama Lab Theater. Admission Is rree. "She Loves Me,·• recently staged by the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse, focuses on two shop clerks carrying on a lonely hearts correspondence with t!ach other. Irvin Kimber is direcUng with Linda Page handling the choreography. Tbe show will be staged at 8 p .m . Thursda y through Saturday in the Fine Arts Little Theater. Reservations are being taken at 833~17 or 833-6614. THE SADDLEBACK Valley Commwlity Theater winds up its third season with the comedy mystery "Busy Body" under lbe direction of Mike Bie litz. Leading rotes will be played by Noreen Farley as a suspicious c leaning woman and Fred Knight a s a detectiv e superintendent. Others in the Saddleback cast are Ben Jutzi, Joanne Applegett. Dan Nelson. Lajuana Blanco, Cynth ia Logan a nd Doug Hartman. Performances will be given Fridays and Saturdays at 8 o·ctock for two weekends, with Sunday matinees at 6 :30 May 28 and 2:30 June 4 at the Mission Viejo High School theate r . Reservations 586-8342. C ONTIN U I NG th ei r respective engagements along the coast are: THUTMl-OMNOI CO SENIOR CITIZENS 12.00 • ... DtHwwt Shry" ... "A.Irie• Hot Wu" J!A . 'ftlTTY IAIY" Ill 'q.I' "W orid'a Gretitnt Lo .. r .. " ... A CHARISMATIC. LJF&LOVJNG ZORBA THE GREEK ••• •· -K,.., ,,__ lM~ ,,,_ • I SO COAST PLAZA Mltlrl9tlll1t.•n111111,_. ''MHAMOllHOSIS" IPCiJ .....,_...., .. ,.,.. .,..,,,,__.,,~:H .,, .. ,.,.. SO. COAST PLAZA ,.,_.. ....... HAU .. ... ,.,. IN> .,.,_,~__,.,. ...... "Sl4 ~YPSIES" .,..., ........ , .. ,. l.\f-4....,._.,..., ... ....._ ........ ,. CINEMALANO "The Imaginary Invalid" at the San Clemente Community Theater, 202 Avertida Cabrillo. San C l enfente . Final performances Thursday through Saturday at 8:30. Reservations 492·046~. -"Comedians" at. South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Per formances Tuesdays through Sundays at 8 o'clock, weekend matinees at 3. Reservations 646· l.363. -"FUNNY YOU Should Ask " with Morey Ams terdam at Se bas t1an 's West Dinner Playhouse. 140 Avenida Pico. San Cle mente. Performances nightly except Monday at varying c urt ai n times . Reservations 492-9950. -"Don't Drink the Water" at th e Ha rlequin Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., just north of Costa Mesa. Final performances tonight through Sunday with dinner at 7 and cu rtain at 8. Reservations 979-5501. -"Any Number Can Die" at the Westminster Community Th e ate r , 7272 Maple St., Westmins ter. Performances Fridays and Saturdays at 8 :30 through June 3. Reservations 893-8626. * CALLBOARD Final auditions will be held tonight at 1·30 for the children's musical "Babes in Toyland" by the Fountain Valley Community Thea ter .. director Jay Conklin will hold tryouts at the Fountain Valley Community Center. Slater and Brookhurst, for the summer production . . . ~ 'ONOA .,, ........ llaKIAAft "JUUA""' ~·-·· "'',__ .. ,_, .... , .. ,,.,,,. It ..... ......... ..,.,.... POfMr" ,,., ~IM:JI A UNwnal R.cleuc • T~1tKol~ ..... WMl'W ... (•h 1-fVOIOt ~ •l ............. 10 NOW PLAYING IWllOlll """ C<lsll ~~I) llA 1:111£...S •• Wt\_i..., 193 ~ IA·W&t :It '*"Hit V.t\,.,...,,,.. ~)' f>.'I~ CINEMALANO MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY '"CLOSE ENCOUNTE:RS OF THE THIRD KIND'" (PG' ~"CJO,Al-7·»10:11 IAT,.,.._2'«>'4c ... 7:»10:1J "HOUSE CALLS" (PG) ~ft!-1.1)0 8ATl8UH-41J0.7.le "FM " (PG) "PHANTOM OF THE PARADISE" I 10 SAT /8U-I 'OCM 36 I» I()'()() IAT ,.,.._... lllM.IC>-1°'°° 8"EM l'flfVIEW-'"'°"Y,e:ail'M.-"CAPRICORN r· ''IF EVER I SEE YOU AGAIN" ~I -t:OH·C.IO:OO MT.-uN-UO.~~ HBOYS IN COMPANY C" (R) "THE LAST DETAIL ft ''THE LAST WAL TZM "f'tiANTOM OF PARADISE" ··SA nJAOAV NIGHT FEVER" (RJ "LIFEGUARD" "HOUSE CALLS" "ANNIE HALL" (PG) "00008YE GIRL" (PO) "AA881T TEST" •M·1S1• ... ,,__,,,~ .. ... , .. ,. "FREE RIDE" Of911 .... 'fl ,~ ..,. ....... _IW" THI MANffOU !"9l , "'W """""''"' .__,~ ... AUCI, IWln AUQ 1•1 J'lUf THI NTH' •I ,..,..,,.... .. 'Three's Company Elliott Gould and Karen Carl!>or. sr.uggJe 1.1p to Matilda. their co !.tar m &n upcorr.1r.g mo\·ie about a kangaroo who fights tor tht- hea vywe1ght championship INSIDE: •Erm• Bombeck •HoroscoPe •Ann Landers •Comics Tlmdlf, ~ 23. 117t OAl\.Y "LOT Bappeni11gs By Marcia Forsberg It ii an that make• Ufe, ~. bdnest, ""4b1 irnpoTtonce, /qr ovr ~and·~ of theu tldngl, tJllll.l "'1tovJ.of no wbetUute wltalewr"for IM Jorce and beauty of its proceu. -HmTJI Jo?M1 Art in many forms provided a multi-course feast for 700 culture seekers Wednesday at a benefit for the newly established Newport Beach Theatre/ Arts Center. The event held at Robinson's in Fashion Island, was hosted by the Friends of The Newport Belch Theatre/Arts c~nter as a preview of the Newport Beach ~ity Arts Festival '78. . · <The festival was co-sponsored by the ltewport Beach City Arts Commission. Coutllne Community College and the Fashion r.1a .. d Merchant's Association. Junior Ebell Club of Newport Beach supplied volunteers for the week-long festival activities.> Chairman of Wednesdal-evening's benefit cocktail party was Mrs. Eugene MeUnkoff. Proceeds will be used for the center, located at 2501 Cliff Dr .• Newport Beach. "We really and truly want the community to be aware of this building <the center> so they will be sure to use it." said Mrs. Mellnkorr. Activities at the center will encompass art forms similar to those at the benefit. The party, sponsored by Robinson's, was liUed 'Orange County: Three Generations of Artists," and featured the works of Florence Arnold, Leooanl Kaplan, William Moua, Tom Holste, Jean St. Pierre and Barbara Nelson. The exhibition was presented by Tbomu H. Ganer, director of the Newport Harbor Art Museum, and was designed and supervised by WUUam Scblnsky. .. In addition, the evening included the art of music -Keith Edwards with flute, Carl Darell with guitar. Da nce a s art was protrayed in an unconventional fashion presenta tio n by ballerinas from the Phyllis Cyr Dance Academy in Huntington Beach. Design as art was represented with an exhibit of an elegant furniture collection by fashion designer Giorgio Sant' Angelo. Entertainment as art was displayed as table settings by Mrs. Joey Bl.shop, Mn. Claire Trevor Bren, Jeanne Cagney, Mrs. Baddy Ebsea and PUar Wayne. Mingling among the guests were Paal Mrs. Buddy Ebsen describes her table setting for Phil Kelly, left, and Supervisor Thomas Riley, right. Ryckoff, Mayor of Newport Beach : Phil Kelly, chairman or Robinson's; Sqpervlsor Tbomas Rlley; Mrs. Buddy Ebsen and Mn. Eugene Mellnkoff. Other guests were Marlon Knott, Tony Montepert, Mr. and Mrs. George Sbab, Mrs. Edward Schumacher, Mr. and Mrs. George Davidson. Col. and Mrs. A. King, James Wood, Newport Beach Councilwoman Evelyn Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Driver and Mr. aad Mrs. Hllly Hanrirk. Also, Dr. and Mrs. Joel Muchester, Mrs. JeH Tandowskl, Mrs. Richard Barreu, Mrs. Denala Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Cabin S&ewart. Dr. and Mn. Milton Lorens, Pilar Wayne, Tnldl Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Edwards and Mr. and Mrs.RayOeMOU,justtonameaCew. Touch of Norway Norwegian flags. banners and needlework decorated the Newport Beach home of Mr. and Mrs. Eric Curtis last week when they hosted a buffet dinner party for 40 guests in celebration of Norwegian Independence Day. Mrs Curtis. a native Norwegian. teaches the language for Coastline COminunity College. Many of her students. as well as other guests. tasted a. variety of Norwegian foods, including meatballs and lefse. Authentic. hand embroidered Norwegian (See HAPPENINGS, Page CZ> Artists who displayed their worlcs include, from left, Tom Holste, Florence Amold, Bill Motta, Barbara Nelsbn imd Jean St. Pierre. Deily ...... ,......,~~ Dance as art: One of the ballerinas in unusual fashion show.· Trike -Blde..S 1 , Locals used to call it · 'the d"1!lk of the. year" back in the d~s wbeft the 8,1.R.D,. <Balboa Island Rounders and Doers> bel-1 its yearly tricycle races tn the parking lot"' of the old Villa Marina Restaurant at the entrance to the island. It was B.Y.O.B. and standing room only to see the sometimes tipsy drivers pop wheelies and do 360's on their homemade trikes on what Is now the Shark Island Yacht Club. This weekend it was obvious that things have changed. The Tricycle Grand Pr~x and Bed Races, replete with entry rees, professional sponsors, vendots, televisiOh cameras and trikes that cost· up to $1,000 ·each. drew a disappointing turnout and sponsors are worried about breakllli even on tbe costs. Former B.l.R.D. tlubbers Dick Suess of Corona del Mar and Phil Parsons of San· ta Ana, who promoted the event whose pro. ceeds were designated for the Muscular Dystrophy Association, said beach area people were apparently turned off by the drive into Costa Mesa. And perhaps also by the ticket prices of $4 per person, or $3 with a discount coupon. Although the 8 .1.R.D. Club died a natural death a couple of years ago, Suess said he and Panons have kept the event going each year by holding lt at The Dunes ln Newport Beach . At left, Newport Beach Mayor Paul Ryckoff and Mrs. Eugene Melinkoff relax among hlnished environ· ment. She was chairman of benefit for the Newport Beach Theatre/Arts Center. .. We'll be back at The Dunei with the ~aces tn October," said a dlscourated °'uess. Maybe next Um~ lt'U be B.Y.O.B. SIMn CoMtructJon CCJn1pa,,Y. ently tlei tOrtard •fhfrcl ~ flnWI at the and standlna room only agaln. ~ t11QYCifJ..tace1 held~to beneJlt.Muat:Ulat Oya ' ----~----_ ·Cheryl Romo t ' I ERMA BOMBECK /HOROSCOPE ••• Happenings Defending Walter Cronkite <,...._Pace cu oullitl wue worn by some of the party·coen. Officers Named Lyae L 6&Uley bu ~ lnllalled as president of Ute Lawyers Wives of ,Oranae C~unty . . . Mn. OotlllH Geors• Of Mlaaloo Viejo bu been elected prealdent of Saddleback-Capistrano Valley Alumnae Club ot Kappa Kappa Gamma ... Mta. Beatrice Mania has been named reient for the Col William Cabell Chapter Daughters of America~ Revolution of Newport Beach . . . New ' Pretlcfent for Newport Harbor Panhellenic is •"· DoQI., Rarllae • . . The 1\tetday Club ol Newport harbor hu lnstaUed Jin. BU..a.y Le Ltevre N pre&Adent . . . Mn. Leon.rd Slaa ... l• prealdeot for the Newport Beaeh Cbapt.er of Haduaah ... The Coeta Meu Womtn.a Club baa wtalled lln. ..... UUlefteW .. president . . • Spy&lua Hills Phllharsnonlc Commtuee of the Oranae County Phllhannonlc Society bu named 11.ra. lolla Sebmlt.a u president. DEAR READERS . been catching heat from R e m e m b e r t h e Crookit.e rans. They are Japanese soldier who angry, unrelenting and hld In a cave on lwo the numben are stae· Jlma tor 25 years and no gerlng. one could f igure out The w oman w b o why? Well. I think 1 signed herself know tbe reason. He "February Freak" had probablf. said aomethiog written to Mr. Cronkite uncomplimentary about about bis "sloppy pro. Walter Cronkite. nunclaUon." She re- Ever since I printed ceived no reply and cou ld do with my you think the first pro. the letter from the asked me to try to get typewriter when I got nunclation ts 'preferred' woman who criticized through to him . .1 said 1 there, I finally hJt on a and second or third is If I/OU haVf an Uem for Happrntngs, mid u· to Walter's pronounclallon would. U, too, sbudder letter I could print. It merely ·accepted'? Moreta Forabno. ~ Coo4' DaUg Pilot. Sor Uf<J, ot February <he said when I bear someone came from Elaine p . .. . Co1'4 Mao, 9216218. Or coll U2'431l. Feb-yoo-ary >, 1 have say "Feb-yoo-ary·• -Paden, Ph.D., Associate . The ftrst pronuncia· and I bad heard Walter Professor of Phonetics hon .shown is generally ~1 • N G say lt. > a 0 d p h 0 n 0 l 0 1 Y • considered the one used -~--r-_. _ t apng ame ame Mr. Cronkite is a dear University of Illinois at most frequently, but lhe .. O--rO_S __ ~o-pe~~---, · -_ _ g. uy .and a good friend of Urbana-Champaign. She ~econd atnd tdhl_rd are not .. ~ ._, --·P-• -··-----·-·· ---·~ H-. .pb~ .JUs.._ wrote, "Your reply to mcorrec an Just as ac- response which was as ·• F'eb'flra1'Y"""F"re1rlc""f.~1~,_S~tteJLYJl'!f...BU ·_ -· Christopher Andersen follows : "The dlc· perpetuates a common tenc~Thatl'l bOUi .pro-. has just written a book tionarles are divided as misconception that the nuncuilion~ are in a WEDNESDAY, MAY%4 By SYDNEY OMARR . ~RIES <March 21·AprU 19): Take lead, in· 1tlallve; create and originate. Do not be shy in afrairs of heart. Leo, Aquarius figure in scenario. Make new starts, emphasize civic du· ty, career, prestige, opening dialogue with ~s. professional superiors. You will be offered new exciting opportunity. ' TAURUS <April 20-May 20): You seem able now to project, perceive trends, cycles· you glimpse outline of your own future. Sh~rpen s~nse of interpretation. You're getUng valid signals. Aquarius, C~ncer, Leo persons figure prominently. Spotlight on travel written material. spiritual values. ' . GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Money picture brighter: expansion, a better understanding of potential, a signed agreement all rould figure In . scenario. Another Gemini -and a Sagittarlan -play key roles. What seems a setback will boomerang. You'll profit. CANCER <June 21-J uly 22 l: Scrutinize agreements, legal documents, contracts partnership arrangements. Don 't sell yourseli short. Be specific, thorough, patient enough to become familiar with details, fine points, basic material. Accent on public, cooperative efforts -and marital status. L.EO CJuJy 23-Aug. 22>: You get answers to questions. Written material is involved. Accent on work. change, travel, variety, your own style. Gemini, Virgo and Sagittarius figure pro- minently -so does the number S. Member or opposite sex lends spice to your life. VlllGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Open lines Of C?~munication with young persons, family. Jn. d1v1dual who really cares for you would like commitment -from you. It may seem s illy to reaffirm, repeat, reassure -but do so, anyway. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio could figure prominent· ly. LIBRA <Se pt. 23-0ct. 22): Obstacles, blocks are removed once you take a realistic look at s ituation. Land, p roperty, abode claim spo~light. Pisces. Virgo ·figure prominently. Define terms -take care with quotations. Shortcuts now can prove costly. Know it, see people, places as they are; avoid sell-deception. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on short trips, relatives, correspondence, gaining most from assets. Yo u get results - responsibility leads to advancement toward ~~al. Capricorn, Cancer persona figure pro- minently -so does the number 8. SAGITTARIUS CNov. 22-Dec. 21>: Accent wider appeal, get pulse of public, reach beyond current expectations. You finish project assign . l'!lent and g~in added recognition. Aries, Libra figure prommently .. Good news indicated where valuables, personal possessions, finances con· cerned. CAPRICORN <Dec . 22-Jan. 19): Now is time for independence, originality, creativity, new starts -and love. Express yourself im· ~rint your own, unique style. What was opposi- t10!' becomes asset. You couJd win major legal po.mt. Leo, Cancer, Aquarius persons figure pro· minenUy. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18 ): You can utilize-"handicaps" to advantage. You need some rest -this will give you time for second emotional wind. Meditate, bring prlortlles into focu.s .. Accent on hospitals, organizations. spec1al mterest clubs, groups. . PJSC~. <Feb. 19·Mar. 20): Social activity, friends. desires spotlighted. Forces tend to be scattered: be versatile and maintain sense of humor. Gemini, Sagittarius and number 3 11gure prominently. Someone "important" comes into your life. advancing a theory I've to the pronunciation or pronunciaUon or a word modtern dictionary, always believed -your Erma the word. 1 happen to appearing rust in a die-grea -go with them. ·name can make you a prefer Feb-yoo-ary." tionary is 'preferred' or At"d ~~t dear Walter winn er or a loser. Be111fleelc l then began to check 'best.• A second place 8 one. Jt's true. J never knew various dictionaries -variant is not to be re-So·oooo. there you a ''Ginger" who wasn't World Book, Merriam garded as less desirable have It. What's more. born with pompom W ebste r· s New than the one given first . you can be sure that hands, a "Ruth" who Collegiate, Funk and Thus Walter Cronkue·s from now on anything didn't iron tennis shoe legendary one-word names. They could have Wagnall's, American Feb-yoo-ary ls neither ttlat Watter Cronkite tongues, or an "Elvira" name>. called me ... surely Heritage and Random 'sloppy' nor inferior to says is all right with me. who didn't smile without l always felt Erma they would have thought House . Feb-roo-ary." Better l should criticize a piece of s pinach was a fat name and rat· of something better Nol one gave Feb-yoo. The second printable Motherhood, jlpple pie wrapped around her ed In popularity right than what 1 got -''The ary as first choice. In l ette r came from or the United States fronttooth. under Popeye and Mound." fact. one gave it as Virginia McDavid , Marines. Sure enough, ln An· I odin e . It probably It w4s with some re-third. l politely suggest-Pr.oressor of English. or dersen's book, "The s hap ed my destiny luctance that I turned to ed that Mr. Cronkite ·Ilhnols Schools Journal Name Game." Glnger because wllh a name find what connotation clean up his act. And <Chicago state Unlversi- m eans "cute," Ruth like Erma, you have to my name really had in that's when the feathers ty1. She wrote: "Before means "earth mother" laueh f\rat and loudest. Andersen's book. On hit the fan. you tell Walter Cronkite and Elvira translates to Given a choice, I would page 151. there it was: After several hundre<t. or anyone else anything "drab and slow." ha~e preferred to be Erma: sexy, but listless. letters in defense o( about pronunciation. Most people bate their named Astrid I 'm not sure, but I Walter, telling me youshouJdlearnt~usea RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY ---.v .. w .. ....... names. They're always <Luscious>. But I didn't think one cancels out the where to go and what l dictionary. What makes pronouncing them, spell· have the thighs for it -other. 1922 ...... llvci C....MIM-548-025' Ing tbem, defending not even al birth. -~~~~~~~~~ them. or changing them. How different things When you think of it, it might have been lf I had makes good sense. Can been named Astrid. t you imagtne a man tall would never have dated in the saddle w1th a Ellis <lackluster), patch over one eye hold· Melvin <wilted>. Rollo ing reins 1n bis teeth and <mama's boy) or Lou guns bluing from both <yawn>. hands by the name or I wouJd have hung out Marlon Morrison? with Bart <very Which is probably why macho!), Kent <a big Marion Morri so n win ner > and Hank b e c a m e J o h n <virile and active>. <trustworthy, very man-J would never have ly> Wayne. been intimidated by And there has to be eve~ne else in my som ething catchier than neighborhood with a Salvatore Bono and nickname. Names like Cherilyn La Piere who Wheelie, Bunny, Ducky. op ted for Son ny Happy and all those <a thletic} and Cher <a other cute dwarf's Club Colendar nnu each WtdlvldoJI in the Doily Pilot and contclm notice1 o/ ~·•and 1nvlce club meetings and ewnt1 for the Jol.lowino ~ek -Thur•· day through Wtdneaday. Send noticea to Club Colen· dor. Doily Pilot. P.O. Bor 1560, Coda Meaa, CA 92626. Be fflre to tncll.ltU 11our name and phqM numbe-r. Notices muat ~in our hands two wetka in odvonce. To reque1t o pictu re, write or coll the Features [Hpartment, 642.-4321. Picture• ore limited to flmd· raa.sers open to the publk. ----Wedding and engagement announcementl nm on Sunday in the Doily Pilot. Fcmna are avafJob~ at all Daily Pilot of/k:e• or 1'y calling the Feature• IHpart· ment, 642-4321. To ovoid dl.aappointment, proaptttive brl<k• are remind«I to ho~ their wedding 1tone1.1Dith o black· and-white glouy o/ the b~ or oJ the ~. to the Feoture1 Department one week ~fore the wedding. Engagemmit onnouncement1. wtth black-and- whfte gio.111 of the future b1'fde or the cOVT>le, muat be r~ceived by the Fea11Are1 Depcrtmnt m weeka before the wedding date. WdtdlThe e1asser '78 Give them time ... for the lady, c1 stunning l OK gold-filled mesh bracelet watch, $195; for the man, a handsome 1 OK gold·filled, self·winding calendar watch with a sweep-second han'd, $245. Both from the retowned precision of Girard J>erregaux. B.D. HOWES and SON FINE JEWELERS FOR FOUR CENERATIONS NEWPORT BEACH 1412 via Lldch67S-2731 lO' AN(;lllS/PAJA00~4/SANTA •All.t.4h rALM ~lllNCOS/MOlfOl..lll.U t StartBelng The~lbu Want to Bel ADVANCE REGISTRATION HOW onN. Now 1~ lhe time to sign up tor ice skating lessons at the fer• Capac1e5 Chalel. 'Nhether you've ice skdlt'd bela<e Cl! nr-ver ice skated Kl your hie. one al these clJSSes IS lor you Classes tin up tasl so call toclay tor all lhe tnformatl()(I IOI lhe whale tanrly SKATING SCHOOL HOTLINE 979-6351 M~ke 1978 your turnor19 00tnt• CJll ()f Comt 1n 10Clay tor d compl1ment.iry an~ly~•s dnd p109ram O•SCIJS!>l()O ASK FOR MISS SANDY BEGINNERS WE.COME ICE CAA\DESOIALET Jolln Robert Powers Costa Mesa 2701 ffar.bor Blvd. Harbor & Ad8Dl8 979-8880 Costa Mesa Bristol & Paularino 979-1750 P£115°"Al OEVElOPMf .. I & MOOWi.G SCHOOLS ORANGE 3 Town f, Country (714) 547-8228 fteon anJ @AMoeiafel) 3723 Birch Street, Newport Beach, CA. 92660 (714) 557-7883 LEON'S Has Gone DiScollll:! . After 28 years as an Interior Designer, I have decided to go with the trends of today. In other words, Leon's is going <j.iscount. \ A. We will still use the same fine craftsman that we have been using for the past 17 years in the Newport Beach area. B. All fabrics will now be sold at 30% off that retail for $25.00 or less, and 35% on all fabrics over $25.00. C. All wall cov~rings will be sold at 25% and 30% off, all books will be marked as to the discount. D. All c'arpet will be sold at prices even the small Designer can not buy. E. F. G. H. ~ll fllf':liture ~hat we handle will be sold at 25% off, including freight and deli very. All nationa~ly adve!1ised .mattress and box springs at a 25% dtsco~t including freight, but a $15.00 charge for delivery. All levolors and woven wood blinds will be at a 25% discount. We will not make any house calls, but my staff will be here to assist you If you bring in your present colora. or go through our books and be your own Designer. ITHROUGHZ • PLEAS£ 8HOP BE'FOAE YOU COMI IN 80 YOU CAN 1'RUL Y SI!! THE SAVINGS. HOURS Monday through Friday 1():00 A.M. to 6 :00 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. Or by appointment t ..... I . . . COMlCS t CROSSWORD MARMADUKE "I hope Marmaduke doesn't upset the board like he did the last time I was winning I" FUNKY WINKERBEAN CASEY MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX I'LL ~KNOW~ JOHN~P10 GEST J:=OUIZ CHl~N THfZOLJGH a:M..66E .. ! ~INK UE't> t>O aurre WEl..L IN ~ N681AU ... by Tom Batluk by Charles Rodrigues by Ferd and Tom Johnson GORDO NANCY oH,'/ES~ AND DoN'T PICKN# FIGHTS W11H f )OUR FRIENDS. ANSWER THIS ONE ··· WHAT ARE THE LAST TWO WORDS OF' THE STAR SPANGLED , 6ANNER? by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson •. ~2£AKF"A?1', 1..U"Cl-I, 04' DINN~'2 I by Mell DftOP HIM 1.1KE A HOT Pc;:,:::::;!_ - DOOLEY'S WORLD 1H•S IS AWfUL L l GOITA WRITE A ~RJRr Of.J ~ ! DR. SMOCK w e Jus 1"' CAM5 FROM 1"HE: M.Ar? r?OC1"'0R'S L..Ae ... ,, ·. = " •' M~ LA~ • • l,. WE!'Re HIS L.A""r551"' CRE!A1"'10N ... T.my, Mey ZJ. 1978 PEANUTS 00 VOU REALIZE '(OU JUST SlEPT THROO~ iHE ENTl~ LE~ SIR? MO Wf.tEN l{OlJ swreo iOSNORE,E~ ™ou~n tr (.iji\S A Ftrlf ~ILL AAO RAN OOT51DE ! e>RACES YOLJRSf!!.-F FOR "THIS ONfi;. ••• DAILY DILOT CJ by Charles M. Schulz ............ by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont by Templeton and Forman LUCKY FOR YOU >A'llC8M 1~ ~ 'THE 61.lNK. TODAY'S GIGSSIDID PUIZLI by Harold Le Ooux SURE YOO 00 ! WHAT'S THf 50M'S NAME ••• JULIAN KlN65TON, ~? 50f'P05E I GIVE HIM A CAU AHO AAVE A 'l'"']l"'--..-i LrTlLf TALK WTTl4 HIM I ~Y Emle Bushmlfler '' PLAY BALL" BASEBALL PARK ) ACROSS 1 O<C> 5 European 10 Potato: Slang 14 Blood. Pre· fix IS Mahfrt 18 Noc mnced 17 Not boned 19 Wild perty 20 Sl<ating entho~t: 2wds 21 R~lles 23 Yearns 25 Furrow 26 -.... Forest Londoo park 29 Told all 2 was. 34 Shoppers' mecc.i JS Hang laxly 31 Persona : ACClel)llble oerson 38 A ftv. when repeeted 39 Salesmen 41 Singer ··· Damone ~ John Ot Maureen 44 Ouole 45 Funeitl l)Vfe 46 Ollt hevlng e~ ngtlt 48 lnYllidated 50 "AJasl" 51 T NJ iJPil't: AtctlllC SJ Not hVPO- critical 67Came 11'1(0 -61 Orug ~ 62 Laud too hlgNy 64 Olmonunve \t.lffla 66 Mountall'I home 66 Endlnq f Of rele Or radoo ,,, Path 68 Out on d ""° 69 Needle case DOWN 1 T0ots .... NY restaura· teur 2 Sonof Jacob 3 Prognosll· catlOf'I 4 Kind ol "'11 5 Smothef 6 Ptoduced esvvs 7 •• de Col· ogne UNITED Feature Syndicate ~ PllaleSo!Wed c l A , ,lllAIYll "'i't:'i~ H'i 'lo Pl'llll!O ~~ ... ' " ( . 0 I Ill I 1•10 ~~~- " A O r .. 0-01£ • I 0 l ."l "·' .... s •• I II .. ' ": c •• 0 ( • l 5 71 ll•tSl •S ( ' !~ I l l• . u ••••• ' " .. S A ll 1 llf t -M A • l 7 0 .. f • ,. c: 111£ r 0 .. " ( . ( Y• " (111 0 " ... c: .. 0 i•-f • 0 0 f s ro " u s 'fO(P!t(C 0. ( -5 I f r ( ffl{ • 01' ' ..... ~:!~:! 01<·~· ris @:'7 r; s --~ 8 fOfct? \oeed g Ufldo;qo 36 FOfmerty 10 M1h1arv 39 Sleurh Pholo ~out It K11'1d of .t() Patched VP sti1ch 43 Responded 12 lmpetling to siomuh ~ 45Wh.lrf f('f• 13 Tunrsian 4 7 Otgestovc nilfn lr3CI 18 Show plea l)OrtlOn sure 49 Done 22 Chair l)SftS 52 Srraoge 24 (ii 53 One bnng 26 Preclude '"9 SUit 27 TuBISh t1lle 54 P<epo1thon 28Gam1eflt !16 <;.ti'~ n6ml' feature 56 At anv rime ll Socm plan 58 E1!Cwelod . 31 WaleS' pa-59 °8(otllef or . non"'"' Jecob 32 SeMcellble llO .... lasst' J:) Se! tlltftv 63 ~evious ro l•I . " . . \ Cf CWlY ... LOT I ...... For w. Hout.1 Fews-. ...... Por ~ ..... , For Sde ...... ,.... Sde ..................................................................... ••••••··········•··••·· ·····················~· · "-'"For W. ..._., ,.._ W. Home• .... S4t Ho.sft '-' W. C.eMrel 1 I 00? G....,.el IOOJ ~-100.Z Geeerel I 001 C.-.det Mer I OU •••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • _,.. tOOJ ., .. ,.. 100 G...,... IOOJ CHwrot 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CclM COTT AGI CHAllSMATIC Contemporary mountain home in Blg Bear with sw~ping mOWltain & lake views Two years old. 3 BR. mllm1:tte den & ramily room w1th gourmet·~ _ kit~hcn. Only'195.000 0 / WESTCUPF-4 I '5,000 FH Immaculate 4 BR & family rm home with 2 fireplaces. 100% Redecorated for luxurious comfort. For someone who appreciates the T.L.C. given & convenience to shopping & schools . Bring the children. they will love at. Owner moving out of state. ~COATS & WALLACE . CLP REAL lSTATF., INC. · I\ lO l'tlllY OVOHU l'OMl'AHY SIMVING IHt SOUIH CUASI ~Hf/\ SINCE 1961 I WIPI SAYS SEU. -The wife says lake any reasonable offer on has exceptional 3 BR home near South Coast Plaza. Asking S92.500. Call 6404161 A beau~ upd.al.ed 4 bdrm ot&••• w 1lt1 gleami at h.udwood IJoon and finlpl1ce Oak t.iiblD~lll ID k1tdH-n. Room to add 2nd wut lor ooJ)t ll3S.OOO SOUTH of H .. HWAY 11111 ......, ..... 11 • ct.rm... 2 • ..,, • l ........... ~ ,,...,.Staler,,_, • I ..... :"ia!~~ --Balboa Island Realty AND IN\'E....';TMeNT ~(lMAANV 673-8700 WESUY M. l'AYLOR CO •• UALTOlS 2111 S.J~HM11lMd NEWPORT CEHTH. M.I. 644-4910 J IDIMS TO FfYE -This one story N Costa Mesa home has 3 Bdrms, w /other 2 used for a den and game room. Nice neighborhood. EZ walk to schools and shopping. Just $17.900. Call 546-4141 yw'llL .......... to,, 2 cer t•r+Herly llOO 14' ft ....... .,_..o.1y Slll.000. CA&.&.~ OITAK.S 644-721 I ,.... ....... Motke: AU real estate ad vert!Sed • in this newspaper is sub- Jert to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it IUegal to advertise "any pre- ference, llmilalioo, or ~~~~~~~~ 'd.LscnminaUoo based on ..: race. color. reli11on, sex, or national origin, or an mtention to make any such preference, lim1ta- lloo, or discriminauon." 'Ibis newspaper will nol knowingly accept any adverti11ng ror real estate which is Ill v10Ja. tloo of the law. U~l(.)UI: li()MI:§ REAL TORS~. 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar also in M£'sa VPrcle • .ir 546 5990 UDO ISLE IOOZ ..... ..._. 1006 ~~~~~~ Newly remodeled 3 bdrm .. family, 21h ••••• ••••• .............. , •••••••• baths! 1-story home with attractive Y~ATHIAn DUPllX So. patio. $238,000. LAGUNA llACH Fiiia ...,_ IACI •A Y Wdh an eye to future 2 Vt blk to beach. 2 houses. CHARMING Jbr. 2ba +cuest house. P'rpl. z pat.JOI, R·2 lot. Pnn only. Sl57.000. Owner. 640-7030. Fine 4 bdrm .• 21h bath family home on BR z Ba dream collage asking only 1154,500. CostoM.sa · t J d 0 · d high oo a bill. Nearly Owner flnanced. •••••••••••••••.__........_ _ _,) l024 quae cu e sac. vers1ze pool. new. tugb beam ceillnga Realooonuca/675-6700 GeMrol 1002 GeMral 1002 playhouse. extra storage. Reduced to witbviewoCCatalina. .....,,, h.to 1007 RB>UCID ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $179,000. 400l'.,.~ Ma••• 4 Br.2ba. formalduung. COUMTaY !STATE MESA VBDE " ~ ""'""'-••••••••••••••••••••••• bnck frplc. comer lot. 2 LAMD +POOL Attractive 4 bdrm .. 2 ba home ·1·n C.M ..... ~MUS 3BR.2ba ...... ,blk.tobay. car gar. 900 Dogwood. LANO LAND R ....-;;r; ~ Now Sl79.~. 173.500. Phone 751·07i4 3Br-an ch kitchen. immac. condition. $99.000 . . Manball Rlty 67s-4800 ~es. aJUNITSI!! formal dining room. 1-------- UHITS!! UNITS!! family room +20' game IA YFROMT IY OWM& Mesa Verde J BR. 2 ba. Just shy of one acre w /an old house. Plans tor 19 units lo preliminary study•.~ room. Wall or glua over Several fine bayfronHaomes Two stry single dwelllna ram rm. 2 frp1c·s. 3082 loolung free-torro pool & with pier & slips * VETS * W/ll*t rm w/lukh " Samo11 . Qui ck s11 le park-like grounda. Easy bath. 8 lou from bay 177.900. Ownr. 540-7998 hnaocing ..... 900 Call ODOWN·OCLOSlNG today-ee.3-.,s&' · Hom•lnaUareasof ~ 1arage. 673-1800 2Story House. by owner. OIH• ,,, v.,, \ 1111, '<'~' ,,,. 1 ORANGE COUNTY or53&-8215 x l r a Ir g I ot . Ev eii VIEW,A.ICB. te 11~~·11 ~· Vlf AGT. Clfltllwlffdl 1011 542-8953.542-8661 6 95 ; d • _! \ Ctl541-GIOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• vely 5Br. 2300 sq n scra~~~sco:p:~ed~ ___ ------~--G11Mr.. 1002 Ge•r• 1002~~~~~~~~~1 IYOWMll Mesa Venie pool bome. <>-net ranaoclJlg w /good ••• • • •• •• • ••••• •••••••• •••••••• • • ••••••••••••• r-2 new custom homes in w I s t u d y S 12 9. ~ o o terms $59.500 ________ , )) Woo6ridCJI MINI prime Capistrano Bch 54S-3U2 Palisades loc:ation. both•-------- 4" . ""-.J.-u_.._r Vi.. W/OCJJ views 00 le comer By Owner. 4 bdrm. ~.R . ... 1 acn!S lD uv.,....,r Ca· Rel UU ""' Townhouse D c bolce I 0 l. l . a B r. 2 ~ B a . pool. Fresh paJnt lD & ~g°$i~ Terms: Ask· Homes ~a~v~~ac::S RANCH Jl38,500. Ready now. out. &.900. 751-22.83 Absolutely fantastic --f:Lio. Bu;yers' choice ol 4.Br. 2~S.. W/l4x20 hob· BELIEVE IT OR NOT 3.38 ac~-~th beautiful Portofano. 3 Lrg. BR's, JASMIHECREEI( ender. A great buy at ...,_ __ ~-... · •. n-k ~~ar!!;.k~;.~· PANORAMlCOCEAN view. v .. ucr will carry 2"'1 BA. huge family First re-sale of "PLAN 171.000. •~ ... ""' .. ...,.~ s U9C • ..-uvy· Where else can you find atagoodpriceof$36,500. room.sep.dln.ing&sun-ill" SINGLE LEVEL-Ti .. wllNlsL.me Bay! Commercial~ piai.GS-2190or~I tulltop 2 sty, 4Br. 38a. ken UvlJlg oo /f I Lo I f h -acre! No qualirylng! ,._.,....,_ 1022 fam rm. form din. sun- M·l ioned 13.41 acres Beautiful :ood~: ,,r:C:e three bedroom, family ea;~t. ~:1r +o~:~~ Owner will finance! Call =-=••••=•••••••• ken llv rm w /frpl & with R .R access Ex· room off the swimming :dmuJ~';~I. Pj~t~~~d d.Jning room. country _:.R::E::D:..:C:.:AR.=:P:...;ET:;..:...:.::75'-;.:..::1202:::::.._i•--------vaulted ceiling. Guest cbangeposslble. Sf76•000 pool. $167.~. and tennis courts. kitchen, wetbar In living u~IT quarters w /bll Hugi.' Prestige area in lbe room. Price only "5..,.,...-V , JASJlll£ mstr retreat w/ba level 3.31 acres with a mce 1 heart of Corona del Mar. Sl7S,OOO. Fee land, you HSGHTS sundeck balcony v1ewm~ ___ RIAL ______ , ~w~=·p~=lb~::; Gated community with own It. 8 UNITS CREEi s~~.: :~~t ~n TOI at $1.59,900 secutritlyU guatbrda. • ··~~ F&ut u __ .. .u•,OOO DOMIU All plana. aat 640-9025 this one. S»crHice in orRealtorAaaoclate. W"'•• "'CE&CO grea . ve ere too. ll"M ~ '"" ··-------•1SALI000 H --• (Jean Cole) 9'W Eight unita totally re-•· lvv. · urry · CJll ....................... :::::~~~.good ac· RW.TOltS C.tsbad 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiii~ COUOFMEWPOIT Wutiu BU,. furbished an like-new Sl'Y~HIU 63l·ZM6. Bkr. G-•• 100.Z •-McCardle 1476-4171 640-6600 REALTORS condition. Full price Delightful Por-umouth Open Sat/Sun 12 s. 24b ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,, 1-729·5966 675-5511 BAY 1200.000 seb.000 Down on corner lot Two Joann Collt-ge Pk HANOYMAM4S lllOMewpot'tat.d I•--------------------------& payment. Owner will fireplaces. Or1g1nal 646·11223, 213·374·83111 CostaMe..541-77291-------1/J ACUESTATE 2 ON A LOT trade. BEST UNIT BUY __....... ....a 500 3Br 2Ba r 1 DREAM ·--c•.._.y,,...... BEACH INAREA.Calf962-7788. .._.street.-. . . . am rm. poo G full •--_.. -~ "'" + POOi. Ceil 640.S I I Z 117~. arage y ~ulatcu. ---.---------i Magnificent "front row·· 2 Story @DRM h Back Bay Area! Bnng • K€Y 1-------- LarBui It ilnotw~rthkRbevnch . EXCLUSIVE golr course view of Secluded on rambt::ie& yourborses!Liveinone c D~ALT"8s• Z.4-1 ge Wl ac· COMDO $56,900 ponds , fairways & grounds. Large family for comfDrt! Rent lhe 4 N WPORTCTR. OR. "~"' ''-"' -SiM b) s ide dupll·'< cess. Newly pamted. F1or th .. descrimlnaung greens. Exqu1s1le room _ ..... r-•-.....a us-"' Olber for mcome! Large ttona11 I paneling and wallpaper. ... wiui a&.:K:U "" 3 BR w/fple in front! ____ ,_.,.,.. _____ ~ ~DOUS w /townhome 5ty 1n i.: Four Bedroom tlome in couple. Large muter Augusta Plan. 2 bdrm. & brick fireplace. Walls of Coiy 3 BR colt.age in located on qwet i.treel "' Mesa North. Truly a suite. formal dining. den. 2,000 sq. ft. of un-alaaa overlioc*ing park· back!H•u•elotaot'deep! WATIRRONT START& IYOWti82U superarea.Grea110ves1 G t 8 f r76 000 guest bedroom. Gourmet compromised elegance. I.Ute yard " pool. Act ""' Beautifully decorated 2 BR beach house 111 ran So 1 ... -7c:n n..aot.a menl al S87 .500. Ca II ... !e23a 13 uy or •• · · lnt.cben. Xtra large liv-Lavishly appointed. Not· now! Call963-6767 Termatosuit. Hurry! · 5 ...., . .,...,,._ _.. i E I d ed .. -1 ' I ff oPfN 111u •• •,•11•1 •0"''"'' bBALBOome.AECNOTVESER2T-sAt.orylN tast1c loc. or. the•-OC-.-..... -y-11-0-~--a-' now'Agt.~. '11'1Ntll9•11\•1•""'µ"1-<1• ng room . nc ose ...,,.gnerstota e ort. Newport Harbor Yacht ~ _ '""" [ ~ --a 1 pallo Secl..ied ~ ..... Aboolui.Jy .... an1 win [ e Ulitl i:t~:.:~~ ~ l-;: Club. RedU<ed $14.000 ~~'.~~~.;.!!~=: EMIRIHHCY · lfllU\L ~~;-~:'.'.'.:~::~.'.'.~~' ~~:::ir;O:· '~~\ ··---... ~~,:;:· =s'~~~~;mme< ~i'.~ .. 1!4~n ·:~~ ~.gFj~£~~~ [ e lfilHi\I = t~::7 ~:; ·~·:·r·e·~·~·r,·;·~·~s·r·~·~·J·~·~i Ne~~~~ach __ ._ .. _7~-7-0-'-0-*--li•J•••c•'•':'-~.'.~.7•0-Lniiiiiiii•l --,.-YM--r-a_•_-A_c_E_ ~~~1~~~,~~y~~':1, SELL ITEMS UNDER $50 Wint A PENNY PINCHER AD ONLY $2 for more Inf or ma lion and t.o pl11re your ad ,'1' call a Cluslfaed Advuer 642-5678 lvl)i 3 bdrm+ lge bonus formal d1nang. game Exclusive Eastbluff! LOVEIT & C I ~ AaTHEPAU By ownr 3 BR l'r'z ba UDOISLI rm University Prk room.maidaquarters.A ForcedsaJe!ExecuUvel UAVllTIZllUIJ..~ Charming 3 bdrm. 2'1't xltr.Jlrg.lot.S7•C.500.30z:i Just reduced t.o $199.50011 townhouse. Popular Ox· gorgeous Cape Cod in le v e 1 Tw n h me -You doo'l have to .bang :0~R.:,!'b ~e~~~~ bat.b bome w/dilUnrtave Kallybrooke Ln. C1tll Stunningcouplehomeon ford model. Motivated Cdll school district. Spectacular view! Big around your Blufls Remodeled with ~a.odgreenhouse. ~5683 for appt. Open cl101ce East end 35' lot. seller bas drastically re-$3Si.500. savings!! Hurry! townhouse-the garden ban:twood floors. laundry maculate and newly bse Sat & Sun. Call duced ~.050 to $109,950. &poolaremalnt.ainedby room, and xlra bath. ca rpeted -vacant . KEN BR1n1NGHAM HF Al TUH ~9491 yourcommWlity a.uoc:ia· Near Newport S.ck Bay. Sl65,000. Ready to go. 3 bdrm 2 ba. Uon. So, travel ft do what Owner moving out ol 642.-5200 Mesa del Mar Slll.500 ~~ I I '~ Iii I' I \I I '1 FOREST E OLSON :>'O"' WAlll.10'11' home will state. Priced to sell at ~7-M?O ": 1 oi~· "•• "': 0'1 a, ..-~ -. ._ .. • •c--c-be wait.tot for you when '81.450. Call 548-5880 EASTSIDE S48-Q33 _________ ,---------·you return. And. what a 3 br. 2 ba, hoWM!, lrg cor SUNSHINE & 119 llDAM + POOL CMAMT z STOIY BucED $4400 value! 2100 c:3 ft, wttb 4 lot. huge brick rrp1c. 15 · The rains are gone & it's + llACH TOwa..aiLU'UutE Owner being transferred =hti:ntbel!,~~·500 vaulted open beam ce1I· Calirornl ' En' .,...._..._ •· '· v•rv ---•~·-to •all ., logs. Nt'W carpet & a agam. JOY Beautiful pool home Lovely townbome In .,. "' _, ~ ""' arapes, new-Congoleum it in this beautiful 3 localed near the beach. Tustin. Huge l1vlna thla4bedroomiaooaq.ll. b bed.room. 2 bath home Private back yard wtth r 0 0 m . w 1 re. , a v e ~ beauty located in Meaa 1be futeet draw in the Sell with EASE 1 firs, rick planters, 300 with a bookshelf lined covered patio lor enter· kitchen. King sized del Mar for $87,500. West ••. a Daily Pilot ll'saBREEZE 23rdSt.SB2,500631~16 study• country kitchen " tainment. Boat access. suit.es. Great. for newly CALL 556-211180. Classified Ad. 642-5678. Clasaitied Ads 642·5678 Lowest pnced. newer. sgl sparkling swimming Priced at oo.ly $75,900. married or singles. Cah .SELECT J. fam 111 CM 3 BR 2 ba pool. Priced under 983-6767 now5'6-2ll3 81Mr.. 1002 GtM'¥ 1002 · • · · SJ.00 ooo CALL 1s1 JUI! PROPERTIES •••••••••··~··••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2\l'J yrs old. nr CoUege !p;~~:~~ID·IE~ [i'ilii [i'iill Prl=:!~<b l-1•1a•r•bo2A•rOM•?•~~.!:.··i.~LO.'~.~.T~•tc•·o.... ~ =~;g~Mwm-~ location. Near acboola, ~ ~ fOlt EXECUTIVE ITS POOi. parb, abopptne center" Reduced to $12T,500. 2 dow fronts this huge LIVING TIMIU IN Artlsfa Reh eat golf coune. Sl5.500 t.otal Bdrm. house plus a 110111 1•:11•s 110 ~~:1~fas~o:OecierE~~~~ This beautifully up-MESA VB.DI Shroudf ed In .a fantasy ~~~all~~ ::::_ioi'°"aJ!n~f!nJr II 11 11 1 skylight. Relax in your graded Buccola Home! Splash, cool-off & swim or est sett1n c w Ith finance. Take adv&JSt.aae 673-a&3 ea.ma Evea OVER 50 YliAR's OF SERVICE famJ{)' room in front of" Spacious Living Room ln the backyard of your dnunaUc use of windows DOW. Callt63-4'767 massive used brick with big Fireplace. modesUy priced lvly 3 and vaulted celllnca. Ol'IN••r 9 .,,\,vh'<l"'""''' fireplace. 3 Spacious Large Master Bedroom. bdrm Ir lrnJy rm home. About ~ acre with your GOLF COURSE YIEW bedrooms too. AU this for highly upgraded wilb Submltyouroffertoday. own avocado grove % 111"111~1·11·~1 only 189,950. Call today' private entrance to Only18S,800.~N&l ~Bdrma 3,':d~J .... baBy.,t!1tbe_retrecbSe~~.t.'allof •.:... ~ ~ 1 ', BIG CANYON. Spacious Custom 64&-7171 garden area. Slump ( ... .,.. _. .... .' .--. :. Ol'fN111q·••\•11Nro111 .. 1C1 stooe planters higbligbtOJJ'ID11rn1t1uu11 e~~~~~~~~I Built Home. Five Bedrooms. Study. It& I ~!i.r~~~;-~!~~y:tr1~8 '--_. ... ae 1111 a*1llllii& .. t .. ate• ... • w~~~~o. -"-'-A·CH-·PEA--c·H-COIOMAD&MAI ~re~fr~~ ~r:ch~~ :eai~tfrutr'~~~~lffftll';~ ::_~i.,'129 •000· cau•-...,-W-'POl--IT--... -.-HT-s-1~~(~71~4~t~l9'~7M~~·7~1~ Strolltolbebeacb,Juat1 DUPl.U/ Landscaped. On An Oversized View · -=-==••1•m:;.r 0<1Nr119·"''l1Nr,,~1 Me1 $7f,-o short walk away. Smell Corona del Mat'Duplex Lot Overlooking Big Canyon Golf HO.COSTAMUA ! .,.v the salty sea air from Jlllt reduced to 1175,000. 3 Course $4ru:. 000 Be '8 ,!111-.... ·• 3 BR. l~ ba, 2-car ear. $6SOOTOASSUME thla 2 BR OCEANSIDE Bedroom+ 2bedroom Ii · ~~. . aut 2 sty Buccola Find what you want 1 ~.DIJJjjf ~7 ~n~':1~.ac~". ~~· =~~ ~~o-~r.J.e;e~ :! <;!ll~.~ ~i &311800 ~°: :i.~!::. C:1::: Da11yPUotClass1fleds. --= ==-•=·:=1~ 646-9210. 751t·5"9. By *7. Clll 962-7788 BKR, cnty. forappt.873-l550 111 OOYa DRIVE \ • 2\AJ ba. vaulted hv rm _ownr _______ -. uklorMack. WA&LACl&CO. ' Ol'f.N,119•11s•LJt<•oti1Nl(1 rm.ceiling. frplc ~inlrdog !•r.! .~~~~:'! .......... !~~. ~~ .......... !~!. Gt•NI IOOZ '"""'• 1002 17°1 ... ,•,~7T~171 ' &i G,_,.. 1002jti•Mral 1002 ~~~~ !_~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••M•••••••r---·"'-·-----1~\~ ••••••••••••••· ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• thla an xlnt buy •t ~ .... --~1!!!111-1 ..._ $115.000. Auumable loan SMALL ESTAn .............. ofS-.A.•-.ot ... ..... ...... ....... 2..tory .._ .... Iota of ............. ~ 3 .... flilllr,. .... ,...... ,.. ...... ft.US •• , .... 2 ..... J 1.... ...... ..... .,,... .., •• ,.,. oo • rw w. ,,_.,,..,.. _. 9"0•ds. w., tpeel.. ,........ ... ......, ...,. hlla""'....,..,.. wl•-'l•9 · it.free... o.. of a · lll•-'f 1294,000. SALISIUIY REALTY "'.,...,. ..... 631-1405 .. ,.. -... . .. .. ' .. ' . . .. .. macn~b/lf'VIRB G....,.e 1002 GHtraf fi~~~~f& By ownr. ' I 12 LOT ... r88 ty D-..1. LA•UMA MGU11. GATID COt•1lNTY l houM with plana for ':l.~*~'N&il ~r .,_._ ••Mlfliti"' fWt ...,_. .._ 2nd 1101&1• ln ctud~d . ON THE IAY Rambling, single-story bayfronl designed for prlvacr. A beautiful setting for entertaining ... lg. living rm w/fplc & itccess to deck for viewing the Bey: formaJ dining surrounded by gardens: cheery brkfst rm: informal fa mily rm/den + 4 B~s . Private community, $460.000. Beverly Morphy 6'2·8235. <A· 116) M2·12l5 644-6200 901 OoYer Drlv. HertMW View CMlltf I rvlne •t Ca~ Valle~ C.nt., - 71>1414 RfSlaNllAI. BRO<£~ CCJttlllN.tf ................ ""'".._.. lrt.. =.:G:r.'°:1Tt~~ ll9NT DOWN THI -.. ... two ......._ la •· MClft ....... 2nd. •.Ml\a.11 ce MIDDU OP ntl PAllWAY ~':.~t= ~~r..!.•:::: ls the view trom tbls well located , •• ,.. TtM.li, chlb ..... , .-..._. Big Canyon to\Vnhouse. 2 bedrooms ~ ._...... 11i1r an<I a den, security gated. cathedral oww ,nw.h......._ ~~weltt. ':}:'. cellin~s and ready to move in . Next ••Hlll•I •••••· cell tod•' fer to poo and Jacuzzi. $239,500. •••••• t ~toe,100 tiatedro•t a .... 2633 W. Coast Hwy. Newpcxt 8-dl 'U•l400 ~MESA VERDE 4 ........ adO.!VA ~~lltual MD CARPP.:T T54· Utll2 "'-"'-Wt ...................... C:....._ Ill ...................... * *MEW LISTINGS** IACk IA Y IEAUTY 2 Enclosed Patios. Front & Rear Quiet Cul-de-Sac 3 Br. 2 ba. family rm. dbl gar Owner Motivated $19,950 DOLL HOUSE ..... ,._ Eastside Gardener's Oeltghl -.... -OOu~a'tt"'SO-'by 130'" 3 Br. frplc . dbl gar. lmmac $82,500 645-9161 , 7&3 Or11rio~ Costa Mt!'sa ~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS ~HERITAGE . • REALTORS FAHTASTfC GOLFCOUISE VIEW lr you entertain a lot or JUSt want your fmly to enjoy this My 3 bdrm, ftn)y rm, frml din rm. 2 story home right oo 8lh hole, call today fOf' an a~ for an adventure! ~9'91 . (;UBtllOOI( sncw. JUST lEDUCB> Near So. Coast shopping renter. Lvly 4 bdrm sgle story. fmly rm home. Abundance of xtra WOOOUJDGE HIDEAWAY Don't miss thl8 ! So close to the pooJ that you can hear your phone ring while you're swimming your laps! EQ)oy all or Woodbridge's recrea· tioo. Lovely atrium and redwood deck enhance this 28r. 2 ba home with lining "L " plus ldtcben brelltast area. All this and much mott! Qnly sas.soo FOR INFORMATION CAU644-7ZI I /Jn NIGU GAILEY i;.. ASSOCIATES ......., TOWNHOUSE Drastically reduced! Owner bas bought another" is offenng rua high\)' upgraded Plan 3, for thousands under market value! 3 Bdrms .• 2~ balba; community pool. walking distance to schools, color coordinat· ed earth tones; nice paUo. dbl garage. Can be YOW'S for $81,950 red hill~ 552-7500 Ci Coldwell Bon1<er Two 2 Bdrm Houses on 1 'al. 1 bath each w /encl garage. Fireplace In f1'0l)t unit. Xlnt locaUon ror acbools & shopping. Private. JIM.900. Owner Wiii com1der 2nd T.D. Make olr 752-66811. Agt. Cl.OSI TO OCIAN New3 br, 2~ ba 1&2 br, 2 ba c:ondoe. Pool, Jacuzzi, dbl pr, open beam ceH- inp. Cboole your carpet. $550 Is $t.50. WH tblurt Villqe. Victoria & Ca- nyoa. 631·2090 f"'•Chi• CIRCLETIDS S2SO clean 2br w /gar . Refrig, dswh, Rd area Sm fee. ()pen 9-6 7 days. 645-4900 •C m •r's W• 1 Br. stove It refrig. beam cetl's, c.arpel.ed. no pets. matu r e adlts . MEWT'llft.U ._.. S240/Mo+$100 sec dep RIY IUILDER ......... •• • •••••••• ••. 645-5527 ....................... l-48 .~gl stry&2·3~R ; u--~fwwit11ed •---------3 bt" 2 ba. beautiful new all spacious deluxe wuts . .._. MESA VERDE coodo M U ~ ooo Bike to bcb from here. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quietst,3Br. • ••ESJ HOME J MooarcbBayPtua _________ __. su~ wstse . • . s1 9s.oo o f . p . 24 u ......_ 3t44 S430 ~1 I.Ma Laguna Niguel BAY VIEW Delaware. HB. 536-1718 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------- storage added. Mot.ivat·i·--------i ed seller has bought a1 _________ 1 new borne Ir has reduced1•--------i I.hi.' great fmly bome to only $99,500. Don't hestiate ! Act now ' • 496-7222 131..0136 .__-. ZOOO Elegant new 3Br, $750. 1 bdrm, small yard. ~!M91 THI AHSWB FOi SPACE & STUITS Th.is well located Chan· cellor H o me, the dramatic Plan JV ls the answer! Featuring 4 BR, 21!2 BA and a redwood bot II Lovely home. separate $3 000 -rroperty month to moolh. S2SO. apartment plus great • ••••••••••••••••••••••• St0-7558. 6'5-0l18 THE COLONY Mh1iollVJtio 1067 bay view. All this 11 in· REDUCTION 7UHITSC.M This hard to find 5 ....................... cludedinooesuperbp~ That's right! Thia ex-BeauUM brand n;w 4.1 .....,..,...... 1169 0-Poillt 3226 ._...._oom home fcl"• a 3 BR 2 Ba Cond o, air perty on the Newport ecutive home Is now b loft ( ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,.., .... d p-•--w Tb h . r, • /p. 3-2 br, 1~ ba ,.. __ .. _ Fu . bed 38 -------• tub. From the CUJStom den, is Ideally ocated cond. • c rpts. rapes. "'w"' a. e ome 15 priced below market. 4 townhouse, all bltns. lwUQUU. nu5 · r, Unique 1 bdrm duplex. across from the pool, pool, sgl story. SS&,750. 3Br. ram rm, 3Ba and a BR. Family Rm, w/pool crpta, dqls. Hurry, buy 3~ ba~ w/frplc. DOCK around flr, 1rg priv )'l"d. park and t.erutls. On a 714~5085 sun n Y Pali o . The 4ized yard. now. Tom Lee, Rltr. for 3S boat. $7~/mo. frpL Avail. June 1. $300 Id I . spacious apartment is 642.V""". !,a_ 1 t!!front Homes incl.util.5"4 ·.oc-1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IYOWHB 48r. SllS.000. 67~1Y702 F-l•V~ 1034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gracious mansion. SBr. spiral strcase. hg mstr suite w /Roman tub . Maureen or Volle. 962·8847, 963 SS20. 9&U908. Agt.s. ......... IHQ f040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• brick entry to the private seclus100 of tbe rear patio, Uus reflects care and class. Compare value at $116,500 red hill ~·, 552-7500 cu · e-~~c ~cation . Hewport•_. 1069 1Br, lBa & terrace .• REOCARPET· ,...... """' ....,., .._. ~~·~· Thia beauty ....................... lMl>.soo. JUSTREDUCED IWUl•leedl lZ40 H.I. COHOO ~ 645•3474 . 1biJ home plus duplex is Ho.es Ullfwwillltd ..................... .. llDUCID TO now $141.000. Sharp three ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPEN HOUSE $81,900 Wftt•ster 1091 bedroom home w ith G1M1at 3202 :m-sUlBt.bSt. 3 bdrm, 2~ ba, new crpt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• separate yard. Two very ••••••••••••••••••••••• New·elegaot·2 bedroom parquet rtoors. Sur· 00 RE.Ai.TY JUST USTB>! nice two bedroom apart Bike to beach. Luxurious CSSSOJ or 2 bedroom + rounded by utended Cute Wesu:runster home ment.s in rear. Call now' adult l.lving 40+. Two den (~S>. Cedar & WU\· parks & pool. Newport 7J.7300 752·1920 bedroom condo in Hunt· dow home. S Bloclts to ...__ on R-4 lot. Lot.9 or Pot.en· mat oo Landmark ... IV\ beach. Private 2-car r-J qui livinlatits~t! 7S!H501 ~o..--,,..,,-.... tial "6000 Agt 840-5060 •• -"" M-..1 ... 1 0 T A lease. M1lhon dollar t.aiDed yard. Adult.a. No ~ oa ft --------·--·-·--· -·---d nu .. IL permonlb; waJlcons1der garage. Fully main- ~ IAMCHUALTY WNH Otlllrlaatlltoh PLACE recreation cent.er. Call pets. <TI096CMl331 2 Bdrms .• 2 ba. + den 551·2000 WILL t&P •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Mik e Sullivan for ap· 8 U N T 1 N G T 0 N t.owbbomelnllancboSan•---------•---------That's riebtl Thia beaut Mobl9"-• -tO,.Tll:JIP.M.t polntmentat?S2·2.809 HARBOUR brand new ________ ,Joaquin. Immaculate TADOYB Ne~rt 3 BR, 2 BA forS. 1100 ,._ .. throughout. 3 Patios, OPTION (a rm home ls Just ..... •••••••••••••••••• SAN C1EMBfTE -W.-3222 end l story 3 bdrm, 2 ba. great fo r relaxing tu ... e:v ••••••-••••••••••••••• allbuiltiJl,jac,pool.et.c. Bouabl another and mu.st what you're looking for! Nr Dana Pt marina, 12x60 IAll""~ DUPLEX 2-S BR. av.II. Privacy. &'MIO. IMS UGI. BRAND NEW 2Br, 2Ba over-40. Upgr. end unit. ,.bttm. wet bar. 2 patios. aar. 1uard sec. aotr. eym, pool, etc. Ownr mu4t Lee opt. $78,500. HARBOR ffl'S CONDO Opea&n u.s.~ lll0.000. 2 BR, l .,_, pool, lNG CalOino Canad. Off Hell betwn Bo1u Qiu •Allooquln llSTIUY ,.._ADlllAMD 3 Ba. formal dinta1 area. Corner locatloa mar~ ncanl. Huny I ()peo Sal/&ao 1-5 1lal WUdtln Cr. ~ ~ ,. J ' t ' l .... : .,., '"'=·~, ~,.- Pl.ciAI a a-:itled Id a. • tMY u cUaJinl ~t Dl!me. Give ua • call \1Je'U do Ibo rest. eo.w1t anytime! sell or 1eue/optioo oa Owner w l 11 he Ip 2 br 1~ .,., encl. porch. 116.900 Open views, deck, jac . .,._ _ _.. _, .. ____._ 3 _ 2 larae 4BR University ---------• w/ftn.ancing, carry 2nd, $18,000.483-5834,498-al _,~ ?S2.o61T .DI>'.-.. ......... ...,....,..,, "'"· par It v 1 ll age I JI IYOW"• -•cH l e a a e /opt Ion, o r Sparldiag l BR WJits, · ba, upended cptl, bltm. Townhouse wllb Bon111'1 •-whatever you need. Call Adult, pet l)_ark: 10X52 wit~ secluded garden :J Br, 2 ba •/beaut. yard. yr I Y l a e S 5 2 5 • Room. S3,000 plus lease la Juat 200 ate'pa away. .,. now for more del.aUa. Panorama with t,rtple ex-patio. PLUS separate 1 Im. mo. annual lse. 601 ( 7 14 ) 8 4 5. 1 2 1 9 or will c~ UJ Jan .• 79. 2~ SBr, 28a. frplc, 2 car ear Hurry• pando. 1-Lge. ID.llr BR. iuest apt. 1.ooecl C·l. for Narclaaua S44 0614 or (213)G-OZBJ b ... _ . 1 d 2 in a Carmel-like aetUn1 5· 4"3666 I & e . u t I I. rm .• addedpotenUal. _......., · · a""", irep ace 80 on a pvt st. in Lido Saqds • w s b r Id rye r . k0I t ch. llACH TllPLIX -Executive rental. wa.lJc: to ~~Prty 551•1716 $138,500 645-\!82 w/dishwtbr; lge. fenced SI 60 OOO ..... Gtilore•! beach, frpl. gardener yd. w /sprinkler system; , • We bave 1000•1 of ~uses furniabed, 2 sty. 4 bdrm 3 SIOlletowM ..... r BIG CANYON cornttlot. ~p. util. a~ Walk to beach or Del dplxs. apts now. ali ba. '11 family rm . ts25. lf523CAMPU5Dl·IRV1,.E Steal a Woodbridge Townhouae.S.137.500. ~=t patio. nz.500 Mar 1~lh0PP!ng. ~u~eRt areas. all prices Sm ~yallraseJ °r'~~mo pet.a. ---------• dramatic "EASTON" ~90L9 area wi great F~ Use our r~ phone nv une · -· 2.148 sq ft. total\)' UP· ---------.... .-.A..1&.-....__ ._...__ owner's unit. Upper 2 BR service ~ 1 rad e d . o 0 I y Mwat~__.c_., S.Cle•• 1076 -.--_..... unit.awithoceaa v1ews. , s bdrm II,\ ba, stove &. ~111111 K 4 BA., ~ool/~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OwoerdeepP/rate.double BERntAKENl\V •C-r1G111• refna .. poola Is tennis Y-..--u e:es. ~:aou:~nB:a> 7 Mio -t•edt Wide BendlX, (pie, dbl REALTORS MM900' C'OW't. $395. 1114-2832 or ~ Now on YrlY ~· $140.000 -_. awnina and many .iru. 215 Del lillar •9'l·4J21 -mo . .,...1u . 2 BR 2 Ba, IM&-7782 Clearwater. $40-7658, Prioooly,~M0-1751 You Loved 10\'raAio Priced for qutck sale. _. J•"T •--------- ' Patrick.Act. HIWPOIT.......,., ~,a.p:a"c:ra:f~ :::i:n" <14-481X>114-148S. COY ... TOM ~.~U:~/°Ch: *:f . .!.~ ~ !Jd1''!~~ 2 story ecu •• poo, 1_.._. I041 ~ .... .v ... ,.... , -boloe, wttb ' bedroocu. .....--C2uradnl cou.ce w /kJU Vtfta avail fCI' •ale from n. ......_ "-stor. rvvwu-.-A SalDed a.ls •. paUO.. rP. Sdl ree. Open M 1 ..,... formal dlnln1, family -•••••••••0 ••••••••• ofwood,oewuaketOOf. tza.OOO. You m\19t ... owner trauferred, Abea~l'DBbrtained ~Tev.;67$-3291 te.s-aoo room and fir.ptu.. 2 s, , t M-• a. carpet.a, 1....uoue th• quality of tlt•H beaullful double wide ·~. lot.tted 1D Br .Cl n .... l)lllioa. $171.tOO. BllKR, coovtrtadtountU, oteu ...,._CallteNUJ boaaet. AD earV visit .. 81aeaJne THAT HAS lT a p eq u a 11 y f I a e Z~ betb. a.araie. New•------~- ta.ll5ML17JD -'-•--tu -1·.-.a NC:Ommended.. •·0200 ALL 11' .. rr =bborhood of ..... pro· -. .... ~1No .... ~1,,_fftll/j/tJJ4. "mmer·s beret fZ40. .,.-... _ .,. ... y._ .. ...,, or 111·9122. Suos•l <-....:..)'"~_:!~•r. 1111 u;u _ _. ---llllSt-.JCML~t Aci.aicl $1JS,OOO. a-_.._......__ ...... , .. ~ ,.,._ '"--. Prtce: SI ,ooo. ......... Ill ci. .. f ,_ .. _,. __ ""_.. __ a_111 ....... __ ._MOBJL& HOME AS· call752-19Z<l Bl•ut~&JaqHlU~vlew ui:u. ore ...... •· MillltWMow -------t8an Clemente Cuatm 5 u MAB l. 8 8 , ,. c . d ftllAll. bocne. BR, ram rm, '!~~·~ O..Y-0 Apt. " ~ to O c S A N F 1l 0 N bJU.lde bome nearibl pau•llane.. buJ nn&.a.ta. i:~CE = occup. MO mo. 1----------------r llaiD ••ch. 2 Bdnu. • DUPLJCX S13:J,OOO. B ~-2.000 IQ.ft. 3 reet \.oown. la!omaUoG. ...-~ IMS apee. aw -ak. Whlt'aVa..l''lndef 2 bKlll.Cleanfi.~. 09V· Prtnc Oftlt, 411 BR 2 B.t, P•m Rm. ....... ..... Slwe -eo,.n .. P.N.t 281\lBAbome, N1ee .,.._yd• .Uo. '3-.GperO., ~..... S•r>:n. NB, •ma. bTe 1~htt •ook , __. "50pe:rmo. Smfee.OpenMT~, 1111&'•UUS.!0pay ~~llAl.TY ~ ~wet bar, 1un· 'l'Wobouiiic.onekll.es:. ..... -..» ror mad tn the DallY PUot * 4t .. •017 ct.ct. '"' car ,.,.,. te&ltat area, sas.ooo. •C n .... Senkle Dlred.orJ UWcan ,.. · * CadillacitoGo-Clrta Prine. oel). n..._..,4 hopliewhotwea Pf'Oll&e lllultMll MMOIM New 28t, 28a, a car 1ar.1--------...,.-.. .-~ If!!',..,. 1..,.1_ lte-· -u .. • ~U1eFed or'U~. "tbal•wh•llbo trc•U~blckpatb,adlt.t Newdt •adl ~· 3 ,_ .. _. ~ _.. ......... -w Boll 'emott~arket OAU..Y'PILOT DUPLEX.~ to tile odl). DO pect. 975/mo. bib tram oca. ret ldtotttt. For mote in· Dall1PUotet..UledAd. W1LbaC\-'fiedAd SELL ktlt ·~ ... ~ a SERVlCE DlRECTORY a.tll.oa)J ..... Scott 911 ~ teM70I nQll(nid. .. mo. S.l· foraaUoa t-alll0-5871. tcNl'l1. C&JINow!~I p.lllPtlot"w.uAd. ltalllbOUl~ 1.•m:t or4N-Jrllor••L )1-- .. . . ' . . . g OMI. Y PILOT ,Afat .. attu.fww. Af•l••h.,.,..._ s ,._.. 420010ff1ct._... 4400 w..ytoLom 5025 Lod&'-d 5300 ....................................................................................................................................... , .. It .... '0 • 0 --U.fa 0 t • e-f c..e.w.. lli4 ---... 3*40 UMCL••m DOY'l!'~Ef ~ASH~ Found. JRl&li SE'M"ER. ii:.;7;;~;-·1li ;;;;.:·;;:;·-;;; ::.~.!!! .. ~ .... !~! ....................... _..._ .... -........ =~~C::-· OIAM81CO. ~~~ ~~~~.M::l~.t:i ·-·-•-• ............ --·•••••••12111 P'lowtr Street 2.t_c-C'er~i:; LIVENeart'beBeacbl Bl:RTHAHENR'Y .-011' .AlllA Bo arr~~· 000 Found 2 blk wb ""'data.e frollt 1 bdna fl .,.._._,. ___ ._.,.. .o.c• ' C.. .. W REALTO!\S Pnme lfacA.Rbur Blvd. rrow Sl • oo. : mi• "'-•II ba. ~ i. ~•.-v.a& ,..._ • Gardea Grove. Lare• W .~Till a..auW··• ...... _.. ...... .. • ..._1 ... __ ...,,.. .............. Lo-,_,. ft •• flextbl• terma. paat ~. ap1 $mo oW doled ........ ~ Pit. I Ir, 2\411 ba ~ V'4rw. aa. bedroom iowaa.o.., ~ ..,.__ ,._ ..., u. .._ -~~.. --· uwtq ·ten .. · ad oo pt'ObMm. CllU Nwrit Hila area. ~9120 :::"~ lia-Wl .. ":.:,=:,...,. ~~~.~."";:". 't:!'•~~.":.~: Z:::~Hn .... _,1u1 ... 1101 ';.~ro..sva< .... cblJdreo· no peta Call iliuuJ. Aduata only. f6J.Ull 2 ~..!':>~. n4~181o <bkr> Found:lnoktpuppy,St z bdrm~ .run.. J ~JT1s~~ ctydeat(n•>•l-lOu .MHOlO. 2Br ddkbwl~m~ no •-Pdol with forever ~IT :rn mi&. btn·blll, beit!aAnll .. l ·1aWallltll ~·C ape c·o d ~1Br1~Ba,2 --~al$M$.Do. v{zw . Decorator ~"'"" QWD(znds. Makeorbu.y unlyPk.'82·~7 !>.!~.PIO. /mo Call Cbarmer". Goreeou1 D5'1• .. ...,.. 1600 yn akt, fpk. rt patio, -..en turalabtd. .Pool. Jacuui, ,.., .. _1~1 .......... ~ :!~0~lY~,;,_f;1~· Fouod: Yna tan-•bt. pan __________ __, ..,P'•. Near by ~ 6 -·••••••••••••••••• .. • pr,oewp.iDt,&dulta,no tennis '350/wk '-""""" ..,._ • ._ ..._... Afl. ' Siamne, Female cat, Slper' loratMm a br, a ba twU. Avail. C/l. .. Z Br. l ba. new cpg It -. ... mo. N-7027 MIAa llACH uuna. _·_ · ll'Oll 5ahq I\. Avail J · 830-9885 w/dllrwbr fDcd )'d. Xldl llo. A(I.. M>&eO dr11a. mature adult.I. no 1 Br apt. Adult.a only No & CIYtC CINJ9t ON THE BEACH 1. $'1:./mo. 1•w1 Mwy ••••11 ,I.LOST ___ : -Rln-,-. _2_e_m_er-aJd-. • pet oti. Only '"5. .....___ peta. OOO + · eu peta. LRG KIT cfuu.ac BRAND NEW. Soacklua 4 Bdrm home with Prime olfc apace. Cd.Iii. For home loam. W~ do hke stones. Reward ~ -.=-Allt.nofee. ....._ Y•...., Sbalbmr. SlM-1055. .... 1' 1887 delwr.e364 Rt. AlJ bltna. -v•""· .. 000'-lr for 1se u .... to 3000 .... ft at oot check your credit or 71~1-1.-. ~··-2Br,2Ba.deD.. .aG/mo •re• -p oo • . -.... , .... ·-vd. c-.... ~, .. ,_ .. v... ' ... t .. -"'"' '-""~ Slaper· .. ·-3br "---llanrO\'ta 8230 541-111ZC .... ......, .. •• , -WATERP.RONTHOMES 7k ~er aq fl, Good emp oyment . r •• 1---------ihaJ-r w,-vy inc:prd.MMIWI. tf ........... ,t1d · · · Y~·JUltWellol Calllll-1400 parka. many atraa. service,bkr.831·1850. FOUND : c u ~-20, ~ .... ~b~=~~~ New Jumry home, 2 br, •••-••• .. •• .. -• .. •• .. IZIO. Ip 2 br, bNm ceU, Buell Blvd. 95ZZ11 or 875-7611 ~ caa.b fut'! Use your ~~le&~!;~ rm w/frplc. squeaky den, jacu11l, 2~ ba, ..... ..._.. J706 P•,U0• ':01• :tovT • Stf.11ll Belboa lat.nd 00 bay, eq1.1t1 m your bome. 2nd CM~ clean. ... -. N7·11Z2 or frple, beam ceu, 2 car .. ••••••••••••••••••••• re rte. r. • opp '!!'.:. L&rce a br z ba w Jfrplc. ..._ ..... _... .. .. _ .... _ 3 1 , .............. ••so TD. Call Dooa 5"·3UZ, 1--· -------. -...._._... au laland. Becbelor. l·rm. Prtv. Ad&&lts. DO pet.I. 313 l•w • H I _ .. , --· ~ ......... • ··-.. ... ......_, ~--;ri;,' 81Mtl2 or bath. etttra.o~: Reing, Place.AptL.M2·2'M ~~~a~.l. br.lbl.frpJc.17S.195S ...... ;;_., ........... FarWestMortgage. FOUND: lriabSetterpu.p· 3 bclr 2 ba, carpeta • ewsf75.5201. oo eooting. Quiet adult. z BR. 2 ba, retrt1. stove, Balboa Bay Club studk> 4 -.UXI OfC"S M.ty W..e.d SOJO ~. ':!;1:ie:.~~~d!i! drapes,IDcdJ'l'd,2m.ito Pmo.GC-32ZJ pool, adults, oo pet1. N!!WZ638R,adultapta, av..ll. last week in June ~~ nn., ._at 25. all••••-••··~··••••••••••• 1 ua., -''~·llJ.Q.~.Al.J. bdl. M$0.jll3-laD Newport Terrac., 3 bdr ____ _ • ·--........ _1 ---~-.....,, ..... ~ .... lr>'v~-... .,.,....,. ----aw. ....... tlr'l'tf. -....~ :;;-.. .uy-=~ 1o ~u- t lillililitiiiiiiilililliiiil•mil ~be;-~~,-...... , COili'MIM -3124 ~·--security.•'\ up. 1102 1 ;""'...., A,':t.-1 ar. l or 2 yr. Jeue. Lake -K~d T'Dio::' on 1----------"'nle lellCllMe.'" frpl., + view. $S75. ••-••••••••••••••••••• Married cpll 6 aml f1orldaatA4ama. Forest area. K e nt Newport Beacb property Found: Female Colden All new 2 Bdrm. 2 bath [n 814-2812 or Mfr'T112 dlildreD '\IP to 2 yrs old CJOO/SZ75 1 br 1 blk Crom Juoe ltSept 10. BeauUtul· Haltim. p atlK. ml. Owner's equi· Rtvr. !:utblul f area. HB •t *2 Haml.ltGD.St. .__._._ .... _. ,1 ••"WIK & IW accepted. '2JS. 2 BR. 208• 1 .. lb St ty 1::f*.:1 •complete. n4-511·9383 ty $U.SK. Ail ~ .M4-__ mc _____ _ -• aDN. ~ C1Pt tbruout • drps, + oce • n. .. . ly 2-llY 5 bdrm aD.JtiJDe . ·-: ::-"isP~124. WebavelOOO'solbouses, Studio,lbedroom pr. S11 Wallace Ave, -..e7aat. 3 bath Mesa del llar 750Sq.ft.C·2onNewport . Found : ll•latnut ~ ---------i dplu,allapripts noSmw, ,all z:i-A~'i'i'C'M CM._ New 2 BR• der> w/fplc home. Cuatom pool Ir Blvd. Leue. Call W.l;q) "TNlit ~~~~od•Y eve, IP M <• area. ces. .ee. 548-~~. near Civic Cent.er. aei jac. w /wat.erhJI. 6t.S-85l2 Deidi SOJS ''°"-~.dMSCM ' .. a.• ..... U1e 011r free phone 5p 11 847 2323 . afl s Gardener iocluded. '900. __, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •I w ..... aervlce. SUSCASITAS LA CASABLANCA • . • • 54l-«I07 Approa. no aq. ft. Zoo..... ,_.,nrlr 5350 ___ ................ •Ca nGtrl• Nlce\y furniJ.bed 1 bdrm. Bacb/ZBr&VailDOW 98C>-lMl C.2. Wtr. IU pd. SM(). LOWEST ..................... .. w., • .,..-~ M:S-ttOO All util pd. Cpta, drps, ..... 3144 tum 2 BR Condo, C.111. mo. 130 E. 171.h St. C.M. Spin ........ , ~•~..,.., Cloaed 1ar. $230. up. pool, lDdry facU. Ad.ltl ,_ ................... Avail June 18 to Sept 1. St.e.S.Doyle548-1188 .. .,~..... llUSo.. EJCamiooReal WIOATSPACl~!Buylibreot.•Br, Adults. 00 pets. 2110 over 35, no pet• or wwa•HM!l.a 5SGl8e.SWJ:751...w>l ,._..~RY'"'' "GEon lltT.D.s.~ SanClemente.P\JUylic. a be. Jacum, etc. 1712 Newport Blvd. bild c II s "~ '-'M""'"' •u...a..n ~ ..... •-3BB.2~~~mo. Hitblud. $325,000. c ren. a ue "'llS .a...,. B&Jfroot condo avail. 31at St. 870 sq fl -, .... ___, l"orappt.8·7296 _ lane --0800 558·7107 or Henry r-w-.....-1• 111.ay 20th to Sept 15th. wtcustomer prkg. AN· FalreetTenoaaiottlNt 1110 11¥4. .A.ll .• f;Jl ...... __ 1Hdt l740 "2-9137 Now )'OU OH live lo l2000 mo 2 br '2 ba TI Q ti E. G ' FT . Wtllr ...... Co. RELAXING MASSAGE C:O. .... "9-n2' ON WATER, fantastic .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Woodbridp too. Enjoy beaut. tum. Adutis oal.Y'. MARINE. CLOTHING MZ..2171 545-061 I ft>bJames.Uc Jluaeur ------!!!!!!!!!!t view, 2 Bdrm, den, 3 STUDIO W:S mo. 3 BR 2 Ba fplc l'trimmlnc. •alllnt. bilr· Relereacee ~5 BOt.rrJQUE. Lease by OutcaU 9-8, 49f·5111 ~ ..... .,br •ba ba~. frpJc. $1200/mo. "W..WVI...... amaUyard,availS/3M ding&voUeyf ~after• br · . 1 owner. 87S·6909 orR.diredeouplebumooey .._. ... 5 .. #Lll. •tPk:;;r:,,::"11 ~ce'. Walerf r o ot Ho m es F\allldtcbeo~1V "'amily pref'd. 8 moe Old •Y o wor.. • as • Lee 3 ocean view. 64>8180 tolmd. i.t6:2bdTD·s ~ "'_.. Pool~ boat slip. 831·1400 LineoaA:UWitiea pnJIM!rtY. member of tbe Village bousefrombeacll.Newl.y Agent.l-137·37'4 FIGUllMOD&S Lse $850. 837·0888, 2 Br. frplc, 1~ bib to MILETOOCEAN &ml.Ownr/All ~~~~1~·! ~~'ft~el::isffl12~h~e~ LLkhll ...... 4500 Private party will pay ESCOITS 7Sll31 beach. $425 mo. yrly. RoydS.ltesMohl ZOii,._. l.u1h poplar • pine week. ••••••••••••••••••••••• more for your 2Dd T.D. OUTCAU.OMLY ....._.__ 3 •• 4 675-617Sore7s.a>ll 727Yontown Blvd _ _... .._be ut 2 b landscape. 6154T7SOC'675-8011 IUILDTOSUIT FutlrVc."2-3.573 •ll·llll ~ -BeacbBlvdatYon<bwn ........ new. a r , FROMSMO. s,000.20.000 Sq. It . =~:.~-dg··~=:!;!•j SIAYllW 536-0411 2 b&. oobpets. XlDt &oc~ (71')5S2-0400 P'&Dtutic Apt. ovedook· PlacentiaAve.C.M. NOWAVAJL. nuuuun e &uw...., "'• Unobltructed view of llon, two Bay • Cor CulYerltBarranc& lac bay, codlt avail.. WESLEYTAYLORCO. SeuonedTDa bdrm 2 ba. •ml pet OK. ocean and Newport Bcb. 1'wo bedroom, one mile to HamtttCJG $135. Allr for · pool. fplc. Sept only REALTORS t'4-4tl0 11rlt~yieid. Outc.11 Massage :f.irz:o· 833·8714 or 3Br, 2Ba, New. Full the beach. Manager, ph: Barbara 873·2058 or 1br Oraqe Tree condo, tu.50.875-981'7 Btolier 963"'587 973-0329 ---------1 security, l.emlla, jacuzzi, 981).S.129. m4l5Z. or Elfi ~ pool. t.eonil, Jake seWDc. Prime Newport Meaa 1--------- Ulliversiiy l't, 3BR,2 ba, awimming. tllOO/mocoo· SMALLBEACBHOTEL z BR l ba quiet nr Avail June l. '3U. Yec .... l-1Wt 4250 bwiwapark.qualilyof. • I •n•.t1/ •SHERI LEE• S5()0mo. aiderlleopt.~/owner __.. Harbor/Wlison. A·vall m.a22I •••• .. ••••• ............ tice•w&ftbouaespace. r~.''a'd CertifiedMuaeuae ~ 75Hl371 ukfor Gary ROOMS $32.50 w~ &lm "'11 .ecurtty carpels -Houle Calla · By appl. AIJtS150/mo.5JS.70Se 6/5nt. AdJta, DO pet.a, IDdiridualbousew/CIOOdo p Sprinp Vaalion drapes, w'e tbars: ---··•-•••••••••••• 838-41838 llMf'ALS Great3Br,famrm~dio· a-1Hdt 3741 $ZllOmo.66-7171eves. advaota1ea. Zero y~rd Coado °Ci~sac>Hllla 70CM.OOOaqf\.M2--M83. M:w=t• 51251-------- 2Ba,2a-...... ,. ..... nn.s;rirloc•tiooat-,..... 1 Br " •-pd maint. Pool. teonas, Couatr7 . --•••••••••••••••••• FQ,VV •.._DY Ulj ........... _. -• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • gu wa_. · sawa. ID'ID etc. '2 Br. :t ._.. .. .....__ •Joo .... W.e.d 4600 A• ~ 3BR.,2Ba ....... 9500/StO the end Perunaula, 1 BEACH ~ Adults no pets no ..... --...... ~ .. BILL ~-Ma. .. .. 3 Ba z•L. Ba ... , .... -... b J Ir from be a ch . LAGUNA -a""· • • ba. mirrored Wanu""'""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• -ux•1991 • .., ..,. ..,.,., INN It & Maid cblldn:n.. tz25 ~ I vt l dbl ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• M/C 7JI 35 4BR.,2~Ba ..••. llS25/S7S $725/month,yearly. . '65/w up. led · · r1 P pa . gar AVOIDINCOlllPATIBLE Elderly, Witty, & Wise PROBLEMS? • 61 SBR,2~Be ....... tflOO aerv. color TV, bea CLEAN, Qulet2 BR, l ba, w/elec door. $4$0 mo. BOOllllATES" Llld.Y•aotatosb&reyour IP pool. (714) 494·5294, 985 12181> mo. No peta. 1981 m.8131ear1Alf/eves. ~es 832_.4j 34 home. exp. II meals. c.l ....... Cl•wv. ~=~;~~1~::;!.'!g& !J N.CoastHwy. Maple.m -l268,5f9.1438 ........... 3141 TakesTbe'Gueuworlt West.cliff.Newport Hts. Let)zlCWc: • <.«" £ J-. -....1 Me~ ta.adt 37 69 Townbouae 2 br, 2 ba, ....................... Outol Ftoding area ~3&25 tfs.ot Io ~~~~00• adop. l/~:...,"f~ ....................... pool. Quiet an.a. S32$. SUPEROCEANFRONT 'IHATRIGHTPERSON , AVOIDBANKRUP'n::Y APCARE 547 2563 ~>'¥ ';_'REALIY IAYAIOMT mo.~ Yrtyl.e,utilincl. S...SSbrSh-'8cj .afilaajl....t/ C-oalolidate a.nd reduce 833 8600--~ Delux coodo P\Jmlabed od 1_ .. N f)'omSf75•MIMJ505 ...... ~!~ ............. payments tbru U.S. ....A•Vtat • • r~ ' --·---' ... ~.?'°° Pool, security auard. 2 Br, rem e ICU. ew Ml ~letrdt 3169 2BrCondo. 2carpr.Sool I I Court Plan ribout. bor· O:llc.ilt4••• _ u.~ f ~ ~-~ c:ompprtvacyiDcluutU cpt.s, enc. rear yd. Kids "1MIF Pal, Cdlil. Qmet., pvt. • • IM row Io g . STOP Forftler..of It' rr , .• ._ l---------1 YISTADB.UDO ok. No do&•. 02s. ·--.................. 77"°2'.:M, early mcm or 0,,1 . ..., 5005 Forcl01ures, carnlsb· • tt523C.utPU5~IR'lbfE Pluab 3br, 3ba w/boat "1$/mo673-l020 64>22'7• PAllMIWPOIT lmeeves. • ...................... meats, auits, 6 re· Servin&~~eCo --------•.Up. lblktobeacb.. $100. SpedoulZllll.endpa.Uo )lacbelora. 1 or 2 OHIC9...... 4400 TIAV&AG&tCY pcmeuions. 1--------- UDivenityParlr3Br2Ba 15i51M151M.64tM91i 3 BR, 2 ba., patio: p.r.,CbUdOK.$350.Aft ~~ ... -................. ~.a...ui-.. SI LL4lcyHM11-. PALM&CAID condo, end unit. Green· ~bay&oceao. _... ,.. • ..,... _, ~ ,,_ belL Between adult & S-a...• 3276 dfl.121116 646-4871 5; Spedacular •P•. total PIOflSSfOMAI. 'nle new way to own a IEADIMGS family pool, Jacuu:i, ten· ....................... MISA PIMIS recreation program, llEDlCAL/DENTAL travel •1ency. Travel lrllW ca ,,..._ SpeciaJ I,\ price with this nia.~,.t:"61s. $$75 Sweeping water view Al! twllh ,•.8!~~-:Poolpets' ===~;}~ ~-=· ~·0~:::r::;~ ....:=:.. :fJ:.Pi~c,':w~:: mo. I · from plush near new 3 U..fulll-Md "....... , . ,_, _ __. Jamboree fl San _,,,1 _ _._ r -i ...... support It i.... .. ._ _ _::;..._....;_____ ...... , .,.. 11 l...ove!ynew4bdrm,2~ba BR.2ba.bse.Goodarea .... •••••••••••••••••••• 26SO Harl• Ave, CM. ~Hillaao.d-J.JW.~eo ~ce provid;d. Loat•'-d 5300 ;;n,:~air'Pr:'!7.•& home A/C, microwave ~l550.f82.7TLS 8-cal llOZ =~>~:..roll (7141644-1900 4f9.rUJ1 <fflo0660 Call Kr. Cbarlea ••-................ F\Jture .Ii advise you on oven $595. 544.5579 S.. ~ ........ ••••••••••••••• n~ Lost Of' FOUDd • pet" CaU Love. Marriate • Bua•· C111fefrw 327112621 F.lower Street, 2Br • .tultl/nopeta.1'1m Bachelor U_nita. l Block THllFFICBCT Colfee shop, located in Animal Assistance neu. Avail. for private TH£ UNCH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden Grove. Large "' tmfura. 22S5 Canyoo from beacfi. All utU paid. .a.• ......... ...v, -· blAH, s day........ a· Leque5S7·22'13, DO ree. lfOUPI. Beautiful 2Br Condo , ooe bedroom townhouse Dr.~ No Ptlb. IZ50/mo. 201 E. ~••••vun ..-----· m w. WbitUerBlvd. Sharp executive 4 br many xtru pool 2 kids cklee to sboppt.na. Laun· Balboa Blvd. Call Sue Mo. to mo. rent lad: tion. 7:30-3. B\lY dire« LOST:. Vic Rancho San La Habra 213/687·9272 family room, frplc, ai; OK.s.nomo'.~ d~y facilities. No StumringlrglBRaarden ~no7 Recept. se rv ., hunownr.588-Nl9 JoaqWt,amallloogbair d N t i children; no peta. Call apt, POOi, rec area. $U.S. penonatiaed phone cov· ~ _..,.. CLEMD.l'W't F cal, tortoise shell, DllcrtMf OlrfC..-con · ear eon 8 'Twoccodoa,lsly3BR 2 Clydeat<n•>89H013. noW.lltbSt. Stepatobe&cb.Lrg2BR, eraie. cont. rm, mail ....,........,., .. blk /brwn /red . I SS75-mo. Purcbase-lse Ba w/fo..IA pools &-ft...1. beam ceUinl, (Jpk, gar ._..._ _ ... "'"' 991M ayM REWARD' SS7 9906 or •551-327 * option avail. _: .. toi:':'.:..... ... , .... ~s'oo.... ..-.. ..-.... -* TwnbM 3 BR 3 Ba, no ...__-.Ref req'd. serv"~~-.,. .. 1 •IUI • ..--. · · •e 1•• •• ~ ........ IKUU'1Ut mQJ 1 ..,..._,_..,.. peta S350 F milies ref ;'50 ~4651 -... ui Ladles exerci.H!. ,_--___ ,_____ • 111• '1 9 Alloew,nopets.$'50mb. Cherry Creek Adull seutiukinDr 545-i'1z · yr · 'nlE · E massage ar outriti ~o IL<lsT: Red Doberman, 7 714-342-393$ ApU. l ft2 BR, fpk's, we • · B A Y V l E W . SVJTE.M0-5CTO center. All equipment lD· mo. old, vie Beach "' o.fa1 U••-21 ~ ..__ 3210 have lakes, sauna, L A R G E 2 B R E.MTBLUl"F atUDD.i.DC eluded. Great potatttal. W·-H.B. Reward no -s---Jac:uul & pool Localed n-...i Pool adul DPAlelta 71? •-•---•642-5654• ~ rv ••••••••••••••••••••••• t 2701 S F~ew Just Stove/nan&. ' t Zbr,211e. fti>lc. Lee pat.lo, Fully serv. ofc space ww ... ....,. ques.Uou. 848·3156 •ft 1.Ei: .. L~ _J I • •• GO SEE nns1 3 br 2 ba s of w . N oi s D aver 21. No peta. 423 w. pool. Mature adult.a. No I\ iD the BERTIIA HENRY 4Pll .... ,.,.,.. Mlwportc..hr W/Crpts, 2 cu 1arage: Fwy.~~'. N~pets: . Ba)t,MHSll. sno. pds.$175. mo.M0-0348 :::--~~ ~.~ airport 215Der=TO~l2l Loll: Fem Siamese. IW/F with Charisma to 640-5157 • focd yard. Only $39S. 2 N 1 d St t S.cbelor apt, utll pd, $150 PARK LIDO Twnbse, ~. aru. Spet-e avail: "Burrita" Vic: Fairview meet male 47 + Pouible 675-7133 96f.2566Agt,nofee. 1374 ew &D ree • mo. No pet.a. 308 lloot.e 2Br, deo. 2~Be. frplc, D-11,000tqftftwarebae LMM amall beacb hotel, Ave. Cll. Aft 7: 957~. marria&e Reply to: Ad LOOKATTIUS! ~!~J. nt~ ~ Vasta.se311S3 elecprdr, pool, mature ap: 32t aq ft. ProJ. Mc:r little money maker. UM;~770J no 13f. Daily Pilot P.O ~IHdt 3241 s:m lge 2br, must fee· tDwnbouses in excellent Forlease.Brandnew2Br, adJt.N15mo.66-1* Judy Clark, m.l8J.3 or $10,000.536-7056 -Box lSCIO, Cost.a Mesa, •••••• ................. Gar, fpk. rdrig, ml>re. neigbborbood. Private 2ba townhouse. Frplc, 2 BR Bl g ca 0 y 0 n =~c:mmerc:e Park, Expa~g buainesl: .OJ>-~~ ~.e~.·,:is::! ._CA __ 92626 ______ _ Ja)Omo. 2 Br2 Ba. c:oodo .. ~ ~Open 7 days 9-6. i-Uo view from lovely huge pr, many extras. towDbocne, $500/'per mo. por1Untty for amibiliOUI Viejo area. Rewar•J. ALL SESSIONS on lhe oce&'D al Bluel.,..,..._,., lrilc be n ; enclosed AvallJunel.Nopetsor Act.C&J1873-40l2 aecU.olcs,pyteoLappros persontosupplemeotm· 831-&'187 Lagoon VWa. Tennis, 2 •Ci r's W• garages ; Po o I ; smokers.8'75-8194 lx33'. $350/mo. 1827 come. CaJlllM-9047 for ln· •---------HALF PRICE w-ad. ~~2,!.~P v l b c b . •-·••u 3 Br, 2 .. _, B-d· $320/moo.tb.. Call Clyde ON WATER, dock for 30' Westcllff,NBl31.-00 t.ervft. Loat: S /U . Sml wht Dance of run bu alwa)'S ~·---UIY~ Ult •.. <Manager, Apartment &sMle twobse, 3 BR. 2 ba, boaL 2 Bdrm. l bath Apt. neutered Iii. doc. Poodle ---------• ford Place Condo. $385. '30) •HOU. bnDd new. Children OK, cable T v. $8SO /mo. fl& 18n'! INTERESTED lN mi.JC, aoq ears • Wl. reu it's cu.stomen de· '-rHEWHALETOWER'' PbMS..aooe.~. ......_._.... ~•o• no peta, ~.eves; WaterfrooL Home• We'ftCotsprinsfevuat SELLING YOUR Nwprt Hats area , servethebestlnrapand A landmark bome.1-..a... 3.---~ 831·1400 Lido Ilario& Villaae. COIN LAUNDRY? 15th/Orange Ave. Ans. to dance1e1aiona&Ddwe've STANDING ABOVE I•-&Yv •••••••• .. ••• .. •••••••• Wblleitl&atawe'reolfer· CALLNOW! Goa. Needs medicatioo. giveo it. Next week will 'nlE CR.ASHING SURF .... ••••••••••••••••••• 1.Br, lBa Dpbt, frplc, lg Braod new. 4-2 BR, 2 ba, BAYFBONT Zbr, 2bl. Yr ln&freerentoobeaut.ol· WllNC. Reward. 6'S-«M2 after beinanewlocaUootoor. AT VICTORIA BEACH. 1285 2br kid ok-Really patio, all utll pd, M2$ mo. wubrm elf kit.ch. 1-1 BR. lite. Sec. bid&. Slip avail. flee space overk>okini ,. ...... la._... .... _ 1._...., ...... 6PM. fer IDOf'e room and lw:· Towe~ 3 BDRll. le Dice, gar, good area +. yrty~ lba.Adlts,nopeta.Cloee C&lJEvelynt131-3682. thee., Spa 1 2!ilO '-AAl1 uuu.n-111---ury.Tbia~price11pec1al DEN FLOOR PLAN, ~~Open M 7 d&ya • ........_, 1 Ai •• 07 ~~,!!-1• Hamilton. N•-port Hts 3 BR io J..270ici. ft.~c~rpta, C714J 547.5934 ffl9All I~ is to let you visit the old b\Alt oo 3 levela. Located .,_._..., -Y' • • • -,,,,,,,_ ... .. • d A I C S d a ~~I~ place, wbere you've had FEW HUNDRED FT •C r's W• ....................... dup)ell, av&ll 6/lf18. M25 ~al •A all ~ III•• I .t so much run. one more }aoM THE SAND· LovelJlBR szas Walk to 'MED~. Nice lBr, mo,,~ le last + dep. Jpd. ..._ .. ~ .... ot O,.• l::zl) 5015 ANSWrrK time. Mon t..bru Sat. 10 W /OUTSTANDING,;; . 3291 bay or ~ach: 21i E. frpJc, ad~. no pet.a. 381 Cbuaren fl pets OK. a-e ...... ao-.e ••-•••••••-••••••••• rua~ AM to 3 AM. 625 North OCEAN VIEW. wu1 ••••••••• .. ••• ......... Balboa Blvd, 496-*0, ::-= $260. 6'2·S25l 551.9111 ~~:/~;if~'::: 0 range County ~n:-e In~= Euclid, Anaheim. Ph lease for S900 per mo.11265 spac. 2br, ldda ok. 861-2333 ... Llsalh .. '.trd bablycometoourMDSeS PUbffshing Co needs iD· TELETIION 1_sz.. __ S383 ______ _ Good rd. nqulred. For ::;:;:eF ll~ou~! OCEANPATIO BacbeJor, good Eaataide orU..fMd1tJd 3900 b)'eummer CaUoratop vflltOl'forPZnewl °'jange Wbat canyou really say ;:-_ ___;s.,..tc.nsl60 further info, call · ee. • 2 br l ba E Balbo k>caUOa. $240mo. •••-••••• .. •••••••••• by any weadat bwtn County ub I cat ons. about the economy! Any ..... •••••••••••••••••• lliaaklaReallY 4M-073l 7~·~ ..... Blvcl"25.nly.iacl.uul 751131 THEEXCITING 8:30116:30. ~':.'~~: worse and it could JULIE'SllASSAGE 2 bdrm1ba,oceaovdeck, Adultl.nopetl.6'1a.G72 . Immediate Oceup.acy, PALM..sAAPTS. UdoliluiDaVWaie V91tlJWlt <TI•> 88l2-4Z17 q u aJJ f Y Io r a 'nnld? Uptight" Reio• frpl. pr, •tor rm. $52$. ......lluell C.Wdll.... Jill sputllq ultra 3 BR 2 llINUTBS'l'ONPI' 3C7SVla0porto MkfOl'llr Beat. TELETHON. G«immed. relief. Appts -.iaaevea.21~21182 Web .. elOOO'aolbouaea -•••••••• .. ••••••• Ba,D/W,fple,paUo.eacl BCB. (at~~~vd) · Laet·SbeWe(To)'CoUieJ an1Ume. Call btwo wlaldL dplu, apll DOW, all pr. Wu OWMI"• UDll, S.cb.WBB. i::=~ty;or'i:: sabieatwbt. Vlc: Ellis" "10Pll53&-0381 . ..._..... 1212 ar.a.allpricea.Smfee. dlWl1 xtraa. $195 mo. 1rocn-.'J,: ~ 11q. ft. deluu of. ~foe &lie famil.y Bushard, FV. Nlte of ~a.M 5400 ••n•nn••••-"•••••• U1e oaar free pbone n;-0 ~ .--: .\11111&.-.32:55 ~=Dr. ftce. W. ~ Sl C.111. cuatcm bome Ready to s I J 8 , S 1 o o r w d . -••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~·--<.._· ~C ,..,... 'n ii y 0-W 3126 t5BlbEutolNewport ~o. mo. Tom, !did wtlll ~commit· n•:S18H0&2 SIMGLl1 ~~> ... "'::'r, ~ h~r~t1 ---·••••••••••••• Blvd.> IDIDt6permlts.SoUdln· Lost: 5 /18. blk Irish 2 yrs a10 lntrovlew _ _.....,. ... __ ii., ~ 10r2bdrm,allnewapta. ._ ...... mYIC~I VeaUDeclt w/Xlnt return. Set/SpanJel mill. Fem CJl)eDeCI tta doors to pro· ~~a"!!71ts bdrm J be. fireplace, GARDENAPTS dr]l9, ......-. S17S-$125. --4000 DIUIXIOMCIS Call: WQDe P.liluUenft pup, e mo old, N.8 . vlduneffedlveway ror ·--·-· ..... __. um I OORONADELllAR Ref1 " dtpo1 req'd. -Aaoc. ..... lin&)epeopletomeet. We in Uvbal l'OCllQ, clole to •-area. owa. 2 Br Townbome, frplc. -.. -••••-•••••••-•••••• .,.._... Lelepbone/ (T14HM5·9104 bave overcome this beaeb, park, counlrJ "25.B)'appt.-.su'l. POol temU Someocean RoomwtldldmM!Ue ,;eptloniat, secret • Loet; Blk male Cocker atiplaattachedtotradl· dub.Owner. 110-2317 -.. _frtulw •-c..'..•-"-a ·Yi-. Close 1Brw/diabwub«ll1ar, lllO~up. ~ereoc:e room, ee ...., .. ..._ IOZ5 SouW. 5/11. '2:2 E. 11tb Uonal dating services & •L..• -• L d 3300 • ........, ·-0 new crpt Im med oc _.,..,_ II hoapitaUty Hrvic.t. -.. •••••••••••••••••• ft. CM. IG-9187 aft s. are drawing attractive, ..... ....., JUI ==-• to Faa.bioo llland • ftne t2ss.ao.U25 · ~a aocaUon, near '-'lllCK C •SH . 11rell-educa ted people .................. , .... IN•.................... beadl.. 644-XU cupency. · Atn.....,_ loq ba c.o.t.a ,,....,... TV " lAllt: 5/21, sml wbt Male wbo are tired of bars lit OD U. lake. I bdrm 2 bl• bdna 2 ba + den, ill 2 BR. ocean vtew. bltm, Mela, 2277 ffa.rbOr, Oen· IAIBtCINT8 Poodle/Terrier. Ans. t.o games Read about peo. towoboue, air eond. Guden<;,:v.:s:5°· Lux 3 BR 2~ Ba front refria, eQcl Pf, till5 mo. tnlly located, 21S rooma. ('JU)~2lll lit • 2nd Truat o.ed But.tons. Wataoo Ave, Pie.~ at pboCoaraphs, pdn&e .... dub•lab dapla Ne.,e!pta.'patao. ~ MA.NY Wltb kitchen, '°9m anaqed tor anJ CIUTt-1*or54t.lt8S fs wat c h tnform•I __,,._ tMS. m.-._ --· .Dn --~• .... • .. I ,.. ___.... -40 pbaM • TV. Swilnadq AIRPORT OFnCEB IUIOD. CNdit oo pro-19 _ ..... ~taped •-trovle-s ...... _ ••.a &lb .. i • •4•• pr, -.. , ..... ,._ .... P• ---pool, jacuai. alld rec. l 11 2 room 111lt., all b1am. lotTOW oa UM in· 1~: Blk/Wbt t mo old ... """1WI ur de -· • ....,.,. .._. ~ -• ;.;;._ ... :..~ 2 BB. 2 ba dUDlilL CloM __ , ... _......... J'OOlll. IMltr Ar w.Ub' 111n1cim. No teue ~·d. erwec1 .alu. of YoUr Mill C.OW. IDh, male. ~ ~ ;ouS:: bed~· .............. .-.. to ...._ ' ... MMllO. SllAJll>. beach. 2 61 BB, ne. ~ fralD .. a ftan-mo.-S. E. bome. CalltodaJ for fut. fqw&J'd. ~ I dJd l . NOPSl:t......_~ OCIAMYllW !Ml;m.-frpl, dhla•naber, ..._ t anat.ol. 8ab 200, N.B. eoan.ouabdwmatkln. ltat· Reward 2 ,_ =~w 752-5411 d•••····· aeatai a.a..-it-19'.G17md ,.........._....__ ....... Pldal..... .. .. r7M$·"10. =· 1-.11 ..... 1~ ~ftMmar. ..._..,._. aar,.a~ --3124 ~ ......... 1~-:-0 ~ 5410 bl,,ncr.dlltill. Waato ........... -... -... -ANJIBSTYLI! llDll9 t , .. r• 4IOO Offlc• 11&1\e, M.V. at ' ~ .,.:!::: ....::-1'00 m ...................... . ,... .. ca.r.IBl',2Ba ..._. 6 lNI. taS mo. LAMAMCHAAPT'S _. IBowW'•unlt ...... -............. A..,PlrwJ,dtlue.750 "-"lU1Alf~ ....,.., n•. 7--·••c. MemarialDay. Twalaome, btfl 1olf 77Nlr/OWMr/aat. == l,2'1J bedroom ~~ NtlU' Spr-CbarmtDI Ba11hore :.:&.:1: A. Prater Uetoaed Home Loan t.oat: 5/S-"Peerleu AlrUn9 Pilot llyin1 • mr~· r.to~: Joa t I s n &pt.. Dalnrbr, lasdale 6 Warner boml, OOCDpl fllnl, 2 Br, Brohn 11rvlnt So. lbe Clamp" off fire place. Tako to abate ex· -.am .,.. .. I h d JIB enelp.r,1u~. ,.,., Al t at .._pado.avall.lune\, CGIOMA*MM Qa.Uf.forl7frt.Callour en&loe. Vic. 11th 6 pesw. Le•vo s/26, n-· --------..... _ .. _, ........... Pool Gal N. TJIScott 1111 1110 ·caJ1 18 t from JJ50, 2 weekOfRCI fteare1t oHlce, Nwprt. Call CMP'D tum &/30.133-9191 Norm BOATOWND'SSP:c. I.ITU Ntwlaod St.net Pl.eculm :em.°' OW'IMll" a =:.in· MJ.l1M or TwoMBWp~ol· 71A4rl.s7'4 JMt.WI 1-Driaeol:;._._I ____ _ ~~ ~ Garden°"°'"· Beautilii.i Larttl8rtown.bo111upt.. fkiuwt.aw!Cdilcl&Arm Found: J$b&«t.er: male,,_ • • • ..._ .. .-rib IDd. l'lrob1•aa•townbc•• 2~rr,&or.-Uo.1ara ... · . Blllboa talaDd '411-n to Ir 1111.nd pello. So OI tit, JDd •3rd T.D:a. mature.cballt6iiac:ol· -• -· tl2S -.. ...... or l n •• e. 11 e D' Qma& ~-. Adv.It.a, wrtsho· w~~ ~or~ a.y, A•ail .Jul.v lit to o:ii.ia Bw7. M011q ft la CNditDOJ>roblem. ltr. Vtc ·All&nta • --~; .............. . ........... lllJ ~~· Private llO,.... Pfl ..... 1 or 0 OJ)Jh.uJ. I l • ----.~ .... Nta. -.. IDO. 71S-lt0l Nntud. HB. Ownr Ott i. • • • .. .tew tNm liovet, m-. your nnaerlJr-tvtl'J·1 Mut H• to t»tll•n A:n__,b1 iood bolQ.e pl• call 4 .._'l'llliuw, -1 Ue .. u · euloud day Dally Pilot Oft•ATER f7NSll • · eo.tllomel.o&a.e •MIO. l-1.w.... 100S g 1 ~:-=' .. -fl' a •I • p t • I Br. l'flM ~. Clwlned Ads.otrr.1ee . I Jdrm I MU.~ _ ~·••••••••••••••••• ·.,.,.:. ~ ~u ~· ..... ,.. frp6e .el. ~ad, eaU Md &nLtrl v.... ~ ...... 8-' .... ••Illa .. !lat .. L t. ... fall, Fou.ad: YOVGI ' (•IQ.ale • 0 a.ASUS btf, u...a.. •an •••••r Apart· ... ,......,rm.iili Jetaa..irMdAd-V~mo. Wal ro•t Ill Tal 'llM&l ..._ ba ,.,....111u>a._. OoldmRm.&o......_ •AA .. U. 1a-1•. or,,.,.. ••>· fiM>1tHOll. ,...._ M>U.. bQ,...~ lll·.19¥' .. ~ 1Aalllil9tm . port.1•-. • 'VJur• .. 111...,. Dillrtodll .... llNOlO. ...i. . • -- T~. May %9, tt71 •SANDY'S* - . . DAILY PILOT 1be rastest draw in th(' West. . .• Dally Pilot 642·5678 Claaaified Ad. M2·S6'18 . .W..W..tM, 707SHtlpW..ted 7100 HllpWmhd 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 HlfpW..etd 7100 HllpW..._. 7100 HelpW.ted 7100 HllpW-""I 7100 .W,Wcmhcl 7100 .......................................................................................................................................... ········•··•··········· .•••••.•.....•..........................•..... Rouseaitting, male Ambit.l.oua couples desir· Babyaltter needed. IOOll(_. ~TYPIST y teacher will provide int to supplement the Auembty mature woman. 20bn a ""·llc .. ·--e Clerical p DATA BfR .eenaity. Rick. ~zm family income. 10.u Hrs ftlllllT wt, CdM area 758-0lf65 .... -!:".n.. O:ro• CO. p & DJ.TIME < /time) SS.50-$6 hr. 1 Yr 4c c 1 ""ta.tr .. wkly. Call for appt llUllnt.l. · iannuu .. m ~ aper ID record keeping Full time poaWoo open .ature youna woman 875-0230 Jlabysltter wanted for Cll. 714-645-717'1 FUe Cl«t-Approx J.5.20 & geo'l olc worit. Ability aa a video dlaplayr---------wanta child care· ASSEm.£IS eves. Muat bave o.m bnperweek.Noexper. totypeaccurat.e~at'5 ta'm.loa.loperatorfoca ESK Clerk, Night boUlec&eanma poa. daily Appllcall~n Program· tnnap.111..a721 r~~11W1 BF/C Sn~·-A_pply •• ~?!!t8lol.n:oabl ~wpm()f .. ,·t=ty' 8~: Basic /Four mini · ~~.· ~~--~ orb)' the hr. 2 Yf'I exper mer. Auiat desip, de· & P'IMEI$ or m""" ca ore, will P'_ .... Corp -· ...,. ... ......... comp te s ....... rvu • p,........,, ~n m SWiM cblldrea's home. velop fr lmplement real· ,..... BlbJlltter needed few 2 t r a i n m e d ; c a J St. N.B. (Nr. OC Airport) ticn District, 10M4 Ellis pert~: d~":,~ ~ CI em e o le Inn. 125 XlDtdriver. Rets497-3'15' time. Au&oinaunmcerat· NEEDED YDI boya, my home, tenninolotD'· Good peo. Equal Opportunity Ave, Fountain Valley. will ln.i.D J.odMduaJ ~ Elplandi.aD,SanClem . .....,.W-..S 7100 l n I pro 1 rams . IIOlEDlATELY!! cl.I.ya, Ptr. CaU roe in· pje akilla. Salary open. Employer ~o demomtrated lypina ac ~ :=r.•••••••••••tt••••• K.now&eqe ol b.IP speed TOPPAYll! tervlew. *-1510 after RepJy to t281, c/o Tbe ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ,,.~w~-~and speed. wort ~ evening, front data communication AU shifta, day, awing" 8:30Pll. Dally Pilot, P.O. Box1 _________ 1 --ID pjelaant enviroo.mellt desk supervisor. F(T AAAOPPORTUNlTY I l n e • • modems • rraveyard lo eludes BABYSITI'ER for 27th tk ~ Costa Mesa, C.. CL•ICAL S... wltb 1ood company /br ~~~~=r in ~P.!!.,~._~ wknds. Lone " s hort 2ltb May for 7 wit old -F.am up to $300 per wt. benefits lncludinc 2 Fall.$.UO ,586--0860. 1~ ~ ·---UUIMll• term :1 ... --•· Holl b b 1 BOO""'EEPER O ••BAL Low tuition. Placement -~· vac·••1-·'""r".... N+•11a..-, F·J.a-. • rut,,,_._;". buslneas ........ , ..... BS -·-rt"al --· . a y, l :30 lo 5:30. AA • rangE A I l r ., ...,.,... ......... an .. """' -··--1·-... --~.. ---""-~ .. day I& acalloo pay ...... £. ....u c A var e Y o gen auist. 751·91M. year. company paid "'-·•-1A .... "·11 "'-·7418 lnvat •few spare bra a comput« sciences A 6 · _...._ ouoty ccounlin1 clerical poalttqna are ·--------~·-..,. .no wk to bulld financal ln· mm to l year exper re-H:.v.ltalllatioo plan Finn, immed opeo.1og DOW avail. 11 )'OU have group tnaurance, credit aakforMaurice dependence. ca 11 quired. Salary $1266.86 a · Babyatuer Meded for 2 yr salary commensurah good typlnc sltilla 45-SS COLLECTOR uoioa. etc. Apply at 788-S020. per mo. Take ad to old ~~bter. 5 days wt, w/exper. <714) 549-2S72 per min 6 aptitude ror ~I COAST =~ecoupper 1~ ~~!·:if· employment develop· w. pay. In my mathoraccountincorln· Salaried position in DAILY PILOT ,,.. .• n. • ...tvman. WiU OC· ---------i ment dept, paid by home. Santa Ana area. Bookkeeper, p /tlme, : b k d Coat.a Mesa olc. Min 11r ~-,~ Acctna Bk.kim• employer.D00'020lS7 ··=~ ~.ext.918.Dla.ne. Sdays wit. Hra flexible ~-~~epp,~aa~·arouo • aper. helpful. Call BW betw330W.Bathey~-~ll..1 ~~~11pritv~teligbu1es.l T....-QUIY vnft 8@r>kinl Sal open. 751·9580 Var _. v · Watkins, 714/549·4200. eeo ...,.,..,..,. ......... us ...,re a ew RegiaterTodaytoworitAPT MANAGER . 5 741 n-.--...CID Matrelna.Aaency lii\PACIACmuTUAL Eqllal Opportunity 8:00AM-5:00PM have excellent r e · ari .,A •-11.ature "'"""'le 18 adult (A-· -_...._... \81 s--... '--er. Call for ferences. C.11 for ap oov ouaacwun .... g. ~--· ~-nv-TllLLBS BOOKKEEPERF/C -~ Appointmeolpleue polnt.ment.631·5584. bookkeeping a11111n· uoita.543-5330 OranceCo.AirlJC)rt) Mature reliable penoo 700NewportCent.erDr 64M321,ntZ77 r;:~';'·h-::re~ ci~eu!;) AIUAIJIX Equal()pporEmployer sountCOAST ;::i:Cne~~:~fri:i ~=:9r!;~er cc:i::~~:n t=1:d":.~ F.q~=~~ty =~ Ap~ J:'i: Clerk.a to Sr. Accoun· MATIOMALIAMIC balance. Full lime. bra twice weekly tor---------17LbSt.C.ll. tan ta needed tbruout needs &lrvey People. No ATTIMTIOM AD lDdeD8Ddent Bank Capable ol be4>inl aet·up eemi·invalid aenUemao. DILIVllY MAH , _______ _ <>raq~Halt for;:-~~ llOllOVIR -~St.C.JI. new company ID Huot Clerical . Allothree&-brdayaeod F..art11DOC"Din1LATlme. Drafl.....-M/F Aceow>•-m.:! A.RCIUTECnJRAL E.O.& .Bcb.213/830-!ilOlext.220 *•· G.Ell ol June wblle wile ii ln route, CM, fftg Bcb. Beg:tnnerforamall H'uot· ..., rv t.-N+.1.,.... ....... 11·--... d.--..•bl inaton Beacb civil 500S. lla.ia,Ste~1 D .... __,,.. .. ,.. H ..,,., are aew to Cocta ----•---t -....-. ,_.,,,_ -Good .... ve ..,,__ e AIU'oll~IM.. 1 -ar pa ~1 ~I flnn. Am-No. ToWer, Union S.nk From .I r . t o in -Mesa, temporarily dJ.a.. •Mina BOOKKEEPING *SI. G.Ell Cool! ....._. c . y. bitloul penon with draft. ID'JbeatyolOraqe termedlate. Top pay, continuln1 your eclt1ea· Ta.La Several yn exper .ti •c· Exper'd only. Good pay Delivery P/Ume for LA log potential for misc 71•113Ml03 bmdlta fl 'W'Cfting con· tioa. receat1Y d1-dsarged F/tlme poa avail at our <tag educaUoa ID 1ea'I *ClrMl'AI. •~SJ. •benefits, App17, Jolly nmea dellv. So. H.B. drafting, errands. etc. ---------• ditiam. S.t.iafied where from the service, or for So. Cout P1asa olc. Ex· ledger posting. Gen'l en· URI IU Roger, as. Cout Hwy, Good sa.t Is worklag con· Must have driver's lk any reuon seekinl t.em· per pref'd. Pleaae call tries, trial balance fr l..apnaBeach. da Pboo §4-8307 t\ (714>.-.0lZZ --------•I you are? FCll'let tL Call poruyorcareeremplo1· Renee Blackburn, at fi.....W reports. Wort Varied Joba wttb le ....;.. ~bef7 a --------Accouatant Orance County'a fut.est meat, comider thia uni· 540·•011. California for small dynamic pro. wit.bout exper. ID IOOd ,,.,_,_ -._.or am. T ... w 1rowto1 deslca firm. ..... 1.-.... Xln olcllDTOUDdiop.C.llto-----'TJi'llDl!lr"Y .... ----"--CGntact Len Nobel aft que oppor. Tbewomeo • Federal Sariop fr Lou, perty vcve""V"'n. t dQ', 1 Country Club Conv. Delivery Evelling autou.. WOIUOOlll ~ SNCIA&JST aPM A.n-at Red lloltz mea we are lookial for 113SBriatol,Coaallesa. benems. rrtendly at· .. a.AA-Home.S4f.3061 rou&e. Must be depeoda· ~ women (/time. Wtthempbaalsl.Dtax. We ......, may be tired ol typtni, Equal()pporEmployer mospbere. C.11 Donna ""'~ bl~ • reUabJe person. Cal.l7S1·61.3HOam·1Pm. are ~ an b>div. to &Aaoc. m-1631 f o Id l n 1 . l> a p • r 1 • &«Ma) for appt. ~Q~ office • Coot. putry • fdlcben Sl50 mo. u you are that .__/W •• 1 uswne rull -·-e for ... ~SIM• •s warebouse JotJt • wort· d beiper. Will train. Pbooe --caU 5'0-3006. .,.,......,.. • 5 • • federal•mwil";i;t.etu -lniforalimi&edtncome. ---------iBoatkeeper'.fUllcbl,lbru 0 overloa 499·2271 bewlweea r--To won in automot.ive/ . ll -We will train. Apply Wort W/Y""~le. 8'Minl trial balance, N.8 . &l'Q. 3-UPll. AU Cort:ilcheo. Deliveryman for early martne warebouae. C.U in comp ance repo, ~ 7 am, II a c Gr ea or D • ...u -~ --le U For int.erYW. call Bud 557-4>06 I am. LA Times bome de· S.0-1063 preparation (or Paci.fie y-~-.... Pia-~•-• .._. auv. b . EXECUTIVE ..,._ ..... --u t'VVUl'C ..__1.1 _ _. l ... " "'~' Mutual payroll hmcti.ooa ........ ~ ..._. .... , you are 11 or over fl ........ .._,.,.,.--on· 1123 Blrcb St, NB ~ ... ~•.a•n un"" uvery route. ~cat•-------- &subsidiary co. opera· _CH ________ , 1'0Uld be avail to at.art Fri, Salary open. F.qual()pporEmployer fr dinner. Ma Barker's, car required, adlta only. Dri,ver. ~I Tra_ctor & tioDs ~udtng a multi ~Sit .. S wort lm.med. call betwn SECRETARY ~.sec'y, aper!~~~~~~~~ _212_E._17tb_St._C11___ 2~ hrs per day. No col· 40 trailer, expenenced ,...,......._ ----•··-.Sue· ... -.....-._2pm lectlog. $370/mo net bousebold goods. At least ,_,.,,. ,,, .. -.;...,.,. •. _... cational •--••----COOKS l _.. .. ..-6 ~ . ... -~ful "andidale will .a...-R .a.514 take-home. W~tmr/H.B. yr .... ,.., nnerences "' ""D ... lmmedopeninaa forpeo. --equivalent. 20 br wit , a.reaa.638-012J8 good driving record. have 2 college w/an plew/experiDPCboarda SAMTIA60 flexible. Call Kalby Cl.EllS Saute' .-Pantry & Local & some dist, ~m ln accounltng, & wiring. Growing co ........ _.,..._ ..... ,F-,over ~140 dessert cooka. Ex· Delivery LA Times 8C'7·7278 plua2ynworkingexper ~ bena A 1 .. Sci ....__,.__ 1 • IA.MK UJOJEM perieoce ln French COD· home d~llvery aut~•---------u 8 full charge ledger JUUL • PPv en· 11. Must have Calif Booltkeeper/Gen'l Ofc. Unent.al Cuialne esaen· route 00 coUectJig. CM Driver/Yard man. Hard ............... ..._r w/p -11 •-Ufic DriWne Controls, drlv•"s llc .ti gd drivlnl P a·r t or F I t 1 me . r......1--·N A ail bl tial Sa1ari ' de ' _ __._ i-... '"-·-· build ....,..,. ... ....,,._ •Y•v .. 4040CampuaDr,N.8.or record. M.V. area. Excellent opportunity ...,..,......,. °" " • e · esopenaor · &HB&fta.54S-0170. ......,_.....,... .. m · payroUturepeponalbili· calJ S57905l Ir a.U for for an Executive Manufacturing bus.Jn forfullocp/Umecleru dicaled.trainedpenons ing material yard. ty. Deal.re an lndiv w /frl.· · 831·3'80. C.M. 549-31M2 on 2Dd & 3rd abifta. Na at Ulla aduaive diJmer Dem.al Aaa't Perm. /position, must per. ln the prepara&a of _Ra_y_G_il_ma_n_. _____ ,AtrrollOTIVE =~~c!~ •--C-Al--W-AS--H-...,---ex per necessary -we establishment. App!)' ln Ne'frport Beach practi~ have valid C.lif. driver's federallc1taleeorpe>rale Alaemblen pFUU.· ... -=' ferred.. Must have .. ..-tralo. Advancement op. peraon wkdya. Am· oeeda eaperieneed D.A. llceme.493-3552.SJC. tu reb&rna. We olfer an -· ....,.. f\llUrpart·time portunjtles to tboee wbo broaia. Rm. 211, 505 30lb 631.a.eo attractive compensaUoo Uftl~ sbortband and typing lllrOver ql&&lify. For lDCormaUon St. NB •---------Dedroaic lnltaller. Ap· J>kl le growth potent. llUUKllllW--Hilb School grada look· UW.. Youwtllllkewon-lletroCarWub goto our nearest market ' Dem.al receptiooist. C.M. plicatiom for mstaller &. Salary fromSllSdepend· llEBI ElllA io&fcraeaner? Notjust iDI in our coqeaial at· 2950Barbor Bl.CM ar CCJIUd the ptnonnel COPY STOP area. Exper, pref. 4 day tedwrlctan. exper ln the iDg OD exper. & back· anatber'U Job ll ~.;s::: =Ca --... -'el"-·_N_unery _____ aftlceat Full Ume podioo won· wk,40bn.~7580 marine faeld req'd. lator ~Contact Person· v•"AJIOll )'OU are yean or exciellentbeneftta. ~· time. Apply 13M2L&mPIOOSt io&IDbmypbotocopJinl DENT·· 2nd class FCC Uc ~e· ...,...,.._ "" ~...:...~.~00al ,,._,111_, -Nn........,, ......... ,. GardeaGrove537"'840 buslneu. If you're * ,,_.. lllJ'eable. Call for an an· Iii\ llftMrVf -.. --• ...,. ....... -"' ·-"' --1 ._,_ F.qual()ppcll' Employer bright, friendly andbave Periodontist needs t.eniew, ~3".1. aat Cor \81 PAClAC muTUAL 9IUlll.I. establlabing a career T ..... Lec..._ Br 0 o k bu r s t • a good personality and pltimeaaattoworUroot._Lany_""'·------ Medical manufacturer path, Ai have \be need, PleueCoDtact: Wwmio•.er. ----------1 c.an learn quickly, apply as back. Exper. pref'd. ..__. __. Ti:--.. 700 Ne'W'llOrt Center Dr Newport Beach Equal Oppor Employer located near Orange nol ju.al the waot to CAStlaS in person, Monday· Xray cert req'd. Sal wa1-c ._ CowltyAirportneedud· }Mrn,bef'e'aallittakea: W.-'9re • Clerb Friday. open.H.B.IMUQI lmmed opeoinp & OP· ..... , __ , ··--bl-fo~ a ·IDPIChoolcllploma ...,._.._ofn.....;.... ___ , F/time.GoodPay VOL TbeCopyS•--portunitie.s ln an estab. ~r';';Js.6'0weelt ·Wellpoomed (714i13J."5ii0° · ~:O~c!~= * J * Gn.Birch,s't;s 0.WIHlptlualat co. ID Onqe Co. airprt --------•I period, atartl.og rlgbt .PodJveaWtude llETROCARW~H NewportBeacb Exper'd oaty.~ Beoeflta. area. Applicants to now! We are NOT ao -Oooddrivmcrecord u ......... n1c11 751-1050. H.B.183-5032,84&-3540 troubleshoot, repair & A«ounttng rAYROLLa. .. Aulst I.ft preparation of co. ~. Must have prior work exper in i-yrolJ dept. Pleue coo· tact penoonel dept. @ PAOAC flllTUAL N rt ·Andmo.lolall,bavet.be ~IUTIAGO 211150~ ..... -. 75 CLEllS test electJ'onic SY$lems. ~ ~ "J: = dMire to sraw rib an '1M 11 CAS,_ · . Counter help'"' rut rooct DINT AL Reemt anatoc 4c dictta1 you. '3 bour/aod aareutve • 1ucceutul a2Hnperwt.S.t/SUna ~./ •omv. ~-~~Jl~;i; GlrlFriday.Ortbooffice, ~wt~·~;;::= pleannt won.tni condi· carpol'&~ToDAY BANI lllUlt. Start min wqe. • at 2808 W. OceanlJ'CIGt NBFaattyplat.l42·M'7 fora.cA ~all>erieeLaba ROBERTPIUCE Goodbenefila. NEBJfl Blvd,N.B.673-1553. Dental Aut, eeell:ln1 -------- mt-llAlqlortLoopDr. 979•2500 1311. lltSt --==Nlu•Bl'll~Cllwww-e Counter Help, Moo·Frl, !11!,,~1';.~ l rr!t8 C:.,~l-•a.l.0--•Y•MIMT--• Caltallesa 558-1805 • .._.___ ........ ,.~ 11am·2pm. Slax -foe""--'"• N.8 . c--saoa --~ · C L E ft I C A L , a.--W ...... St, ---.. -... -_... ASS8 .. S 29511.arborBlvd. il'.qul()ppBmpbl'm/f Telepromct:ler of c;-·· . ......... pnctlce.831-1133 If bllide aalel tuns oo 100 Newport Cent.er Dr Fol' uiJ parq, 1tart $S COSTA lllSA ~~~~~~~~' N Be ..,. W JOQr' bot button 6 iC JOU Newport Beach hr. -..SU "Or.ae County'• -ftport a -1 . COUNTER HELP Dental us •t wanted, wm better than av• In· Equal()pporEIDploJer ---------tlBalctl>Mler~ _. JahSt.MZ-3280 .Neer=Coa.lrport. s barp, eotbuslutic come, then consider •---------m•• .. _ .... _ person for 1rowlo1 ~inl a pro(essic:Gal ~ Fulltlmepoidtjon alla Clarical Karda. po9tiDI -.au wn1 11:30-5:30. general practice. C.11 1oT ADt•ISTIATIVI nSEMmOS •AUTOLv1 ........ bl 8 tl .. av8 b. clerk• m al at al o 11111 Stypartr; Bl, Irv. &G-7ooa ;..~f1f~tai~OU!laeyou t~ f\all.or put.time. Buy, e, \lll n •• on c . parpetu.a1 11\veotory re-Call-.orro. •---------ASSISTANT ~Aaeemb&en pluaanl won a .. laUDI =='=:m.N pref'cl cotdl.11\ait bave lelible WfALASSIST. become part of the for property man•1•· r -... ~teb' tbe Mg. Good 1191 and ---. band'Wrttiol " simple Colmleraty ,..~~ topLa"'!!!'.· EQer'd. happy. JMture ewortdmplo'symlarseoeat tseprirvrc•et~ rneot divtakla ol expand· ,....... ---~ ~erm benefit.a. Opportlllltty for _...... matb capabilities. fin "--D• •-indlv. few people ortented me real eltat.e ~ A-ipmenta advancement. See llr. SAMWAIAMI U.llcmtbnafri. Xbrttr-l~~~~~~~~~I Beadl.-.1539. pnvmtatlveolc ln Hunt. For appt call Ellie In Oranae County. Typ. JShiftaAvailable. Belanger. HOWARD '-IODDCI~ iDle beoafttt. Apply at ---ST Couplewaatedtomanaae Bcb. Xlot 11lary. O'Brftm. 640-500!. SoelJ· m,.smoqerlala~lo Mu.atb .... eowntnmap. Oievrolet,DoveAQua.11 lCmOP&ramoemtll!Yd. AYIM!t Elertranica, ~ rnnrn small bulinw. P/Ume. •"5' in& ll Snelling of :fi:=~ =~..,~~!~ S&a.,NewportBaacb. ~ s.o~-...0 •lltOlnDMS.---•C•.11•.--I =~-coamr 111'.BalltGllM. -D-_.-11'-~--llC9'--I-. -=:r:.a:.tfa'· for totrfetlc career .....,.ll "I •r Bl.,,..._---. l1ftl ...-., ..,_.... .MMll.I COUPLStomanqelane Pl'opaaive Sa.ti Clem.---------~~~ .. ::::,~~ ., .... , =:==--~ ""~ -tor..,., G.f'llCll. ~~-1~':$.:. \;:;:~•.J: ~°"wt.''""' s=:,:;1,:.·~~!:,; wtt.11 8-d,_.. J)l~-=--ll~Co ached. aeo/bt': operat!!J Uetlllt t•· AU lklflt UlltDtl7 dlftfar eoia time, man pa.rt tJme. required. lloa.f'rl. to:Mt•ctoTllleDal· a.10 N.wpartlcadl ontrw.maa. .,__.. . ._ oeedtd. LollS • sbort N.8. Good t:n*la utP. Ooo4 Alar7 +a bdrm .,... .. ....._, M :llUG·13'3 b' P0o&. P.O. Boa U., (Olncraf an.tolll ~ p,. I U ...., ..-ID CM Medi .. eeipmem Boll· = to -Good oo -Noeblldr9. Ml-aM •.,. .a.. .... O.C.11'....,c...... C&mpasbcldDd -• 'L~ ..., ..... _,. ccm-dar 6 wacatlo• pa1. -~ m.-..o. ,_ .... ________ ~ ~J.. ......... -=.-· "-, I•....... :~ie.·.::~11UoD plaa1--------i DATAINl'IY Ptfr::--:•• MeUSSIYIMij. ----. ··-.__ -..,..__.,.._.,. ---n ,...,,,,._. Q_... ....,...,.. .... r_..._ _... ·-...,. 1-• --'•n BM IJnt ti n ta F'or Wo: Pac. Dental As ... .,.,I old, QI.,., On &nu. for~ 1". Co. U. SetklD& lod. ••· w/sl11t _ ti_ oppor. or • .,_._ __ p 0 ........ -w. n t. d . 8 b 0. ORllv.tnR/B+aalar)'. t11l•1 r•q'd. CaU tJplqakWa, 5MOwp.m ,,__, Clert. Elq)er. oa ~n.·,crr~ 11IMper100. run or t«>W ISTHlnMI ~. • nra. ...,._ 111.cnrr. &nriaulolcapsbucu'. ::aoc_:a=-d. cwwW 1~<nl~)l!~IOOO=~· ;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;.f p/tJme. &Qr or wlll ,_.)ob ...an to cheek 1_11n_._ .. __,, _____ ,•~~-------••-W 1 Drtft ln1 phone a fr 1ood 11., .adA. ~· 1; traJn. Ben,flta 6 the D•~UAlol Help rre• hace boat , -t4M'741 did~· C.t.act w.rat.e•a,pu Xbai =•~•~A~~.;~~ W-.cl c.atioa.11 Lllt811111 mecJ»ulc to rebwld <AoawfNll Pa .....-...,..bwlJtpi,. Ult job )'Oii want .. DOt 0-"W ~.... ...... carnw fl-1 ...... Co. Airport) /9\ FWJFIC rTIJTUAl. ~t ,..,::,......... .... .... cmalder aa.u ,._.to~· """" ..... • ..... ~ SmploJ9I' ...., .,,.._......,Cl( ottwto1 JOQr Mntca ~~~~~I =.:-..r~U: ~~~~~~~ MNwportOnl&lrDr 515£.Jat8l,Tauda ~~~~~~~::..,:,.:.:.,~ ;;-..--~ '1Mlf4lftlrt: a::::,.:;u '='~ .,::w,' ........ mwi. m-.IOs W•M.... eo.tal au:J:"...,., W•NJa CtlllOllTI ~Ms. -- (I DNLYPtLOf 1100 w..-... 7100 Melp W•ted 71 00 Hetp Waated 71 00 Help Wanted 71 00 Hefp W..t.d 7 t 00 .................................................................... ···~··················· ..........•..................•.. , .............. . tw.W--4 .1111 W..W 1100 HelpW_.ted 7100 ,__.S.Coh:s111 llde&l auist.a.ol. Ftr. ~;-.-;••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••• ••-••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ne.;;:;:::t Ctr. Mu.at "bave tniot otc wit yr mlo o-.-llCaOW SlCllT MY 8llp wanc..d Ill tlllllU ~ 1DOCf typtq sJllli.. Eaper per So-De back ofc ~ 1m.med __.., for an o...I t.u'emnl bom9 Pteue ac ah pterd. but not oec. Por ram prac dr. Pleue RETA L CASHIER SALES CLERK uperieaced pnsoa Opf:~· & callltlraPIJ4,.-.56» ..,_.. seod resume to. Mu Salary opa. C.IJ J. An· ~.-llte4 It • w .... Saldaka, 13&20 Newport drew at 1rvlDe S.viop_ To8-p. v\dwlll tt-MI c Noa 1moter only. IBM Ave, Tustin. 926,,o 'J'S&.8». E.O. E Lo Our Nnpon P' /Ume posiliotlt avail MUIJ preler. Ml·l400 Hetail munne hardware ston• $eeks c<.1sh1er Bca<·h loc<.it1on. xlnt working t•ondb N:itionul co " c.11 m \lJOr bcuefiL'i Some wknd work C ull H Morrison. 645 1711 llclull marinl' hardware :-tore seek:. ~a l c:,1.wr~on for 'ra1n1ng pob1l1 or. w i t•xpcr. Reath IM it rinu loc<at1on NatH>n4il tV w ,.-11 ml.IJOr llenefit:- Somt• wknd work Knowledge of marine h ~1rdw are prt-f'd. but ('<.111 lnun C<.11lB Morr1son645·1711 tJ 'Um aboud Tbe ~ubeo E. llh d 1 c • I Ass 11 t a n t Executive S•c 'y ltl~W d !Aw. Xlllt Summer Job. lA&al aecretary. heavy Hunt.Sch Physician Cballeoc•o& po11Uoo We u lrnmedan ~Y ID penoa 2-5pm corporate. slot skllls. Write 8c)J' • 290 care of w/C.M firm or O.C. inpf ve opeo Tues t.hna Thun. t51 £ ability to work un· DUly PUOl PO Box Ui60. A.ui>ort. Good Siii Ii typ •• or.~.....,.__ PacllieCout Hwy. NB aupervised. Maa 1l exper eo.ia Mesa. Ca ea ing. Math aptitude. Buay • ... .._.... prefer Small ore. phones. Call Edltb at Socnebeavyliflin.l••r· HOSTISS/C ....... Air port area. NB . MedlcaJ Asst or RN for Avotl Electronlca. raodl. lcnmed opeolo1 for 833-M3. alerglst ofc. Salary ™-1 •B9AL a... p/timo boetet.a cuh.ler. nerottable. Will train. An Equal Opportun1ly Employe r An Equal Oppor Employer Factory help. Small manulacturer needs lulJ ume help. Meo pre- ferred. Cuny Tool Co. 1387 Locan Ave. CM. stl).Gl9 FACTOltY 1'l.U8 lmmed openio& w/C.111. manuf. co. Xlot benerrts. Will t.nl.n rl&hl peraoa. 54S-4M03. Fiberglass Assembler, rttime. $:1 & up. Call 631·246' . ~~man wanted for pa.rt time afternoon posiUoo m ficure aaloo. Ute mxac 6 ftlina DQs Ii nit. Apply dally iACa1 teeret.a.ry. Newport J...yno, 530-5e90. AOt •• Q.Rl 10.AM C4mter attor ney off<!& a.w.. MlCaulle.taura.nt MCntary witb excellent Medical Assistant. HlfpW~ 7100 ._,.W..t.d 7100 tWpW..e.d 7100 W.-4 7100 AcctnabactcroundbelP UIS MaiDSt Balboa 1ltlll1 ,\ mouvahon. fn;int/back, Ftr tor al· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• f\&1,lltetyptna. NopbQDecaUip» 1 Legalexperlesscehelpful le:ife ofc. Exper only. PAYIOUClBtlC REALESTATESALF.S Reat.auraotruahtclean·up SALISSICRITAIY a.ateAL ue but not esseouaJ. Salary Ca1 131--0134. penoo. s-10pm. 675-l&32. Secure your future. Top 2bdsh.lll.5pm-1:30am HOSTISS/C•llil•r open.6"-lNO Sh a r p P erson MnW callBudorJane. -... PJ·~ .. ot,.. Llt•typln" AcctagbM:qround,10 MEN & WOMEN ages w/1toowled1e of com """ ..., ...,., " " .. key,\typiJllakllls. lmmed opeoloc fo LaALSICllTARY 17-34 needed to fill cur· put.er payroll. account· R5taurant & phones. To S725. ~II Eudlmt workl.ng conda pltime bostesa/casbler. Ch a 11 e o g Inc I e g a I rent p/Ume vauncies in Ing, 1() key touch, a typ IS THE .u.at.t Mqr Michele Kuhn 540-5001. lico.benefrt.aotfen:d. Days. Apply daily at ll secretarial position for e I e ctr o o 1 cs . Ing req'd. Estab Exper n~ess. Call Bob Snelling & Soellln, or AUTOMATIC DATA AMMt Casa Restaurant raatiJ'()WinC R.!. lnves.t teletype /lelepb<> oe engi..Deering, Planning & TIME Mos& at The Bia Yc:Uow Newport Beach Agenc) PIOCISS.-IMC 2956 E. 17th St, Costa menl firm. Eitper io s YI t ems re P.a 1 r & coosultini firm ID major To Jom House Restaurant for '340Campus Or ' • UU&atioo a mu.al. Ability weather forecasUng. No Orange Co area Xlnt co app't ~-0310. CootactShlrley,644-4360 ~~!No phone calls to won w/lots or activi· exper nee. Xlnt free benefits & el{ceptional 'Tlw~ SALIS -~--------• ty. Beau\ ofc in Npl Ctr. trainina w/pay. Medical wo.-k.ing conds Cootact •t GBBAL OFC HOUSECLEANCNG. Full Call Mn. Garo. 759-Ull coverage & travel For Personnel. 714/751 2510 WALIEI. LEE Restaurant $25.000.$50,000 Growing electroaics co. or p/llme. owo trans. forappt. more info on quaUf1ca· E.O.E. M/F/H BOB'S Wilhul ~yN inyou.r F T I .. 73 12•6 tions & benefita call your own lnaurance BUb . . Vly area needs ~ ary. v • v • LEGAL TIAJHH Air National Guard PBX In l977.,we. al WALKER ,.._ OfTM •Part-Umeto stan mature, dependable for Npt lkb Law Firm, Representative, 979.73SJ Answering service &t LEE. broke our own ·~Ucomm11s1oru. woman w /gen 'I ofc Housek~. live·ln, pvt xlnt skilJa w/itroog bit· orV19-LM3 operator fuU & Ptr. Call record by do111g over 12 lig loyl •Freetra.uung prottram Uil1s. Good typi.at (50-80 room bath & TV Noo· kp'g background nee. &lS-3561 billioniosa.les&servlce. l.mmechate openings 111 -<>rangeCountyoff1cei; --AU------11---1 wpm), 10 Key adder by smolttt E:nillah speak· CallLauraat'IW-0234 MeS1eo1er/stock clerk. PIXorst.AToaS ourfam.ilyrestaurantsat EveAppta Call Now --~.~~:e A~ffl ~· 5 days, $125 wk. Cal~ Neat appearance, P tr. U you are interested in a nearby locations. We re-hi wn .... ~ 63UM4. ~""'.""~:',!:f ~J:~ poetinc. Xlnt working :tzy~t0-0840, eves. U.CllldMc-~~~1~ ~ ~~~ays & eves fu:1~ ~-=r~ ~o':!Pfn:et!~i:. JOECONNERS ing conds. Oppor for cooda le co benef"rts. Sal · ......,. Obispo St. San Juan . day license train.Ing pro· Come see us today betwn Laguna Niguel S3H&U tram.iog & adv. 37~ hr opeo.979-0f33 Housekee-p for 2 busy ... it cou.ldn't hurt to call Capistrano. E.O.E . Pharmacy looking for 2--tpm. , __ Ceo __ tr_al_OC_W7_0._Tl_40 __ work wtc _..;;..________ ....... M.r. Paul about a reward· mature person to work gram. Coal& T..-...S start. catf'~rio m. oe~ prole.uionals. 5 Days per ing career in real estate. MGMT PEOPLE 12·8PM. Knowledge or If you bave a real est.ate SANDWICH SHOP wk. l&-18 hrs per wk. $4 Free trarniog 1f you PERSON cosmetics helpful. App•u ~AveJUdadela Lacuna Hills. P ftime 219 l'nlflAL hr. Must speak English q\&&lify ~ license. you'll be in· Carlotta. Laguna Hills llam·2pm. Counter a. aut fl uently. Non smoker. . Businessman seeks in person. 9:J0.2 ·00PM. terest.ed in our nationally 4501 Campus Dr. lrvme Casluer belp. Over 18 &. ll&Mrff Exper req'd. Call J.CMASHlt1.TaS p/tlme associate in Mon.Fri. Mesa Verde recognized Head Start M4.2Adams.Hunt.Bch exper pref·d. C1t ll art FIMAMCE Large Resid'l/Comm'I Builders/Developer re- quires mctividual to bead finance div. Strong con- ta<U to develop commtt· .menta for project loans & ~ty captial. Track re· cord & ref's a must. Write Vaco Developers. Inc. P.O. Box 29ti, Laguna Hilla.92653 FOREVER Good job. 2 days/week. car , prefer r etired person. no drinkers, rd's. 673-2289. UIDUllUhl 9'1S-Ol2l CALL 768-7700 wholesa le retail busl· Pharmacy, 2971 Harbor Sales Tram.in& Program Equal Opp Emplyr mtl 2pm, 581.3634 U=nUy Needed!!! neu. ~lly cap1tallz.ed. Blvd, CM l-='--~------ War • Housekeeper, live-in. FV Liq I k Ptr l 2 557-0215 WALKER •-LEE ·• •x r.-RET"'RY • RA•L "•-'-Cler'::.-area, 4 children. Nice uor cer • · or ---------Plumbers. plumbers "' 1" .. · ~ "' -~~ Shi~..:, .. g .. --:,-.. ei·vLD· g home. Salary open. Call 01gbls/wk Modtb&Eacorts helpers. drain men panding, our 12 new of· RN Nolegalexper reqwred rr-· ca nc~ Amy, 7.,., _ M-lhru 642·M3'7 ..,. w/own truck, will train fices will bnng us up lO 41 ~ Conv. Hospital Nwprt Ctr ocean vu law Must have phooe & relia· _......,.,.. .,.. nllll'IW'H ,__ tr p ~offices an the So. Cahf Cal1S49·3061 . office. Must have excell ble tramp. Long & short Fri, 9-5. UQUOR STORE CLERK, Female. Top money. Dlspatc""'rs. F & tr. area slu1ls & supenor intell ·-"Hi-menls. Holi· Ftr" Ptr. aftnooo &ev· Must have car. 631·3811 Wllltraln. 751-69-(2. • ..... D r a....:..a .., .... ....., •-Housekeeper wanted few "" fllf ~ Salary comm. w/exper day & vacat ion pay. bra a day for elderty Ing~ apply 1802 Pac OTOlllOUTE PWMIERS Call today for an an -Challenging pos for re-664-7600 Hospitalization plan woman&son. Mu.atbave Cst Hwy, Lag Bcb. M Fully qualified service tp"view & find out why babonentedoune. Must•---------avail. .,_.c: .c:c:., 494-1533. 1be Dally Pilot bas a 1 you sbou.ld jom the pro-be dedicated to good pa· SECRETARY ror small · car . ....,........ lar~ route ln Mission piumben needed now. feulonal team al Uent ca.re. Coot.act Mn. fast growing mfg co 1 DE I.. P Tl ME LotAttc rd... Vie . Mon thru Fri al· Test req'd <oral or writ· WALKER .. LEE 0 •-rtin I $1000 A · • ten) Percentage pay. .. · R.iddell642·2UO. .;;K« I sa mo housewives & college Must be 18. Full It Part· ternoons. Sat & Sun Can earn 12S·S30.000 per Must have xlnt sldlls, SH girla w/cars. Over 21. _u_me_._Ca_ll_SS7_.()62() __ . __ 1 morninp. Mu.al have de-yr. Apply Mon·Fri 8.5. A.skforSaocU IM's 11·7 & typ10g, able to work 9:30AM-12:30. Mon-Fri. u•CHINIST peodable car. ~ caah The Earl 's Plumbing (714> 772-3'10 Stlpel'VJ.SOf • 3-ll Relief under pressure. Want ll•C--Drf•• Eam SBO to$lOOweetJy. -... depoisitreq.Gooddriving 1213)589-7382 Supervisor. LVN 3·11 careernundedCallJ1m 54M741 <Guarantee $75.) Must GtneraJ. Small shop. record. Call 642·4321 Jnc .. 1533 W. Lincoln. med1cat1ons . Mesa Raymond (714) 642·7840 VOLT 'i r,~f•tJ'tAU~ '•• UVM I" <ACl'OSI From ... FG T •-aJ w Your call will be re· ,642-__ 1_15.1_e_xt_1_1____ ,,.__ ._.. be neat, ~son able & Full or p/tlme. MAUL Leave name & phone An ah e Im or Pb o o e W .a.• "·ER. Ll!!.I! Verde Conv H06p. 661 Aft 6pm (7141 640-934~. =Co. Airport) eoeraet.lc. ·a Kltchen .. .1129 ermUJ ay. ·-........ II!-&-"-CenterSl. CM S48·558S Sec .......... for l gtrl ID· ---...---Eq porEmployer m.<!147 all lOAM for ap Unit l. r-.sta Mesa. turned. n-acti"al nurse •-litft .,..... ... ....,.. ·~--, .,.._vn-· · MfHiOOl ---------n " "" "' AnEqualOpporturuty SALES CLERK . dustrtal & commerc1Jt .......,...._. polotment. MUltSES bousekeepiog, ror Fri Employer established slalionery real estate office. Mw.t Familiar w/process1og 1---------1 lndustrlal spray painter, MACHIMIST RN I $1263/Mooth RN II Swi. Uve-ln 1144-0807 ---__.....;'---'-----~ store Needs ins1dt> havf.> '-'ood telephonl' UlSUr8.Dce forms, recep. GBBAJ. OFRCE experience requ1 red. N.8. co. needs. Class A St 3 5 2 I M o L V N 's Pnnted ctrcwt board mfr salesgirl. Office supply personality & t ypint: t100 etc. to work 10 1'ype50-60wpm.Top Mon-Frl.8-4:30.6'2·7343 Machl.nialforBridgeport $823/mo. Apply at hiring trainees S3.2S pr 11 _ _.~.__._ exper helpful but nol sklll-s. with ~tabt .. pleasant ofc ui S.A. Call pay. No fee. Some jobs Mill & Hardinge Lathe. Person nel 0 fr ice. hr to start. 40 hr work .......-. ..,... neeess Fringe benefits employ menl rel·ord & for appt. Ask For are long term. lmmed. INSURAHCE Clo&etoleranceprecision Fairview State Hosp .. week. 3002 s. Oak Sl, Career orien person Group Medical. paid ab1llly to handle all of Margaret640-0140 Costa Mesa Agency orn work. Exper req'd. Top 2501 Harbor Blvd, Costa Santa Ana. with management poten· vacallOn. s hobdays For f1 ce detail. Ca 11 Mr ---,. __ ---•• ---• ast~=t.'lwa. Applyl~C excel opportunity for gas bells. E.O.E. M?-11051 ask _.M_es_a_. ______ •---------tiaJ needed by The Red a pp t <'a 11 8 e t l y . Meyn at the Seeley Co. __...~ ~ • " • w/exp Pay & working forRonAdams. PllUTING Balloon Ltd . Fin e 714·751-1732 833-2212 Yard worlt & counter 448W.19lhSt,C.M. coodiUons the best (714> ---------NUISESAIDES ftll Children's & Jr's Ap· -------- personnel, Apply H.B. Harbor/19th Street 642·6500 Maid, bve-in. lovely N.B. 7.3 Approved certifica· LAYOUT & pare!. Knowledge of 10-Sales Cleric. pl-time. Equipment Rental, 7614 6'S-20f3 borne w/pnvate room. 5 tioo training program. rllOOFDIPT. key and accuracy a Prefer exper m beauty Sec:retarY. no exper nee: Warner Ave. H.B. EquaJ()ppor Employer INSURANCE AGENCY days, wlmds orf. Eng. Mesa Verde Coov. Hosp. mmt. Qill Matthew at rield. Laguna Kills Beau· bl.It gd typing a mu.st _:....__.......:_;.;~---1-llillll_._ ___ .__, opening for lnsurance speaking preferred. 661c.enterSt,CM Business forms manuf. (71f)Sf6.:ioo.. lySupply.581·0700. Unique opport for the GenenJOlfice secretary w /li ghl u -.. --... eeping, .. ~ .. in,---------1needssomeooew/aper. nn"t ..... rson 7"-~027" n~.. . 1--------•I I 11 nuuDCJL ~""" ,.._SIS "'IDES l BM C <>-•-.... --'w•-Apply tn 6» ,,.. • "". 4. ovo.-aeeptnge:K"Peneoce, A.111&.--•v persona nes exper need own trans. No ,_"' "" oo om poser. Receptiooist Wanted for ._..,,. n&Iu -~ anytime typing, le some boating -. ~"" • West m 1 o st er are a . smkr. 644-0."i85 & OIDBJJIS pasteUp & ruling, strip· beauty salon. Fashion P e r s o n . C r o w n 1-...;... __ • ----- knowledge. Apply al Witb good secretarial 891·1970 ---------ping & plate malting. hlle 7»-0IMl Hardware. 3107 E Coast SECalTilY·SL Pacific Rigging Co, slllll1. Sb pref'd . Sao ---------•MAIDS Ii LAUNDRY Needed to give TLC to Will cou1der someone --·-------Rwy CdM X1nt leCJ'etariaJ skills + 631-2161 Juan Capistrano area. --..... -r-... -• .....,..-•1--1 HELP wanted. Apply in t.beelderlypaUents. App.. w1pri0Un1 background Recept:joo.lst & Md5eilM! ' statistical typing. & Call 661-1211 ask for Mrs ~~ person only, Ali Baba ly. l"5 Superior Ave. for tralDlJlg. Call M·F, for top clau legit Salesperson, ex per. 3 figure aptitude recfd. for fiBBALOFRCI ~r. Tbe Roy Mar com Motel,2250NewportBI. N.B. 10-3.S4o-8027 manage spa. Sal+ days a wk. children's accounungdept.Mustbe Heavy phones & lyping. 1•--------1 ll18uraoce Agency is cur· CM MUISES AIDES bonus. We wall tram. stor~ Npt Bch fl rv. self motivated & have 10 Key adder. Good renUy interviewing for . 631-4838 S52-360l ........ bli 1 l. pboQe maADer essential. GUARDS an exper'd Underwriter MaJCis, Surf & Sand Hotel. 7-3& 11·7. Exper'd. Coun· PrinUng •-----------------• I>""" PU c re a wru; al Small manld'. Sal com· Perm. Full c\ p/time. Secretary w/ratlog & Ask for Joanna in try Club Conv. Hosp. NINTSHOP RECEPTIONIST. typ15t SALESPERSON lrtude. Xlnt co. benefits. Da .. , .. _ M h k · 1555 S 549-3061 chance for advance-Irvine area. Send salary mensurate w /ex per. Y s.......... ature pre· sales exper. Start al $850 ouse eep1ng. · · FOllMAH Mature. expenen<'ed in history & resume to ~1916 f'd. Car & pbooe req'd. mole up. 714/497-3393. Coast Hwy. Laguna NUaSISAIDES 4.5 Yrs exper. in offset ~~lf:,ta Ba~:,~(~!~ men's & women. s Classafied ad no. 219, cto ---------• Facility in lrv 1ne --------· Beach F (time 7 .3 . 30 &/or production operation s portwear & fashion DaJ.ly Pdot, PO Box l!i60. General Office, PBX Complex. Call 833-3000, ---------t "'-pe · l""'" '>GU\ & ~7840. Jeans. So. Coast Plaza r-M Ca .....,..., Answer. Serv. Op rs ext lit Tues lhru Fri. ..._...,.At. Maids; top wages paid. ~11.30. Exper pre 'd or LA r 1n ~. '°""' i---------Store ......,la esa. . """""'° 1mmed operungs ror ex· Equal Opportunity C.--fsor Apply : The I on at will tralo. Flagship Apollo operations. Co. .iclPTG.OFC salarY ~l:~~:!;g n<>P'd or qu.allfied peopl.. c---•-yer. ....,...... • . Laguna, 211 No. Coast C.OOv. Hollp, 466 f1ag.stup sponaored insurance Ty p1 o g ex per n pc. Call 0 M ttl'l£TAIY Rate of pay depend& u;: ........,.., Mature person req d to Hwy .• Laguna Beach. Rd, N.B.642-8044 education refund pro Newport Ctr. Prop;rty ~ ana or ano "'-" On e wper. Apply 1.0 ,._ ________ asswnerespofourgrow· --'--~--------------gram&more. Mgmt Perm Beoefi'' ~prestige co build..'> ... ,. lng me dept. Prior exper Maid wanted. Full lime or .._,...__.,-..,w:r-~ llHOERY · . · ... gorgeous bomes & lives person 1 Mon -Fri. 9am-GUARDS m f!Jes or su""rvision "'·time, Seaclilf Motel, Ole M"r/Manuf lo S12K Pbooe&M-0603. SAW REPS '" a .... MuWul co.....,.rak 4pm, l.SS Rochester St. ...~ "" " Person needed to run 1---------To all de db ... .,.,. .,..., CM SECURITY helpful. but not nee. No 1661 So. Coast Hwy, Lag Recepl/PBX toS700 rot.ary collator & as:sist lECIPTIOHIST c oorea ra ust· ofc. The man himself typing req 'd . Xlnt Bch,49M892 CoostrSecretary SSOO l b" d r t •-•maJ hos ness acdll for advertis· need.-; .-rsonal pvt se~:y benefits . Sal com-SecretaryAIA to$860 ° in ery unc ions. n.w pita!, 2 yrs log. Hrs Moo·Fri 9-5 ,.,_ MATUREMEN Main•------r'-er e ContactPenonnelDept _.,..._.. heavypbooes& Base ~~omm . Co w/potSe, lad & a plea!> General Office, (ulJ lime. Interstate trucking 1 .. <1> helpful. $750 mo. Costa Mesa Area. 549-1982. Mn. Snyder &WOMEN mensurate w /ex per. ........n;..., .. o • · x· Irvine Personnel Agency -... ..,. -.-• inl personality. You'll T-ft..l••• ... ••y EOE. Call 549-4700 ext perieoced lo building 488E17tbCost.aMesa liit\ public contact. Ftr or beoefits. Wllltrlllll. App· receive a good sal. xlnt _.---r-"" 219. ' maintenance, electrical. SulteZiM 642-l47o \@} PACIFIC muTUAl P/l'inc. wltnd.s.6'4-~ ly. Penoysaver. 1660 beos & career adv. Call EVERY'THlNG plumbing, palnt101 & ~--"'-'100Ne~Cent.erDr PlacentiaAve.CM 5•0·6055. ALL JOBS FURNISHED carpentry. Apply In ..,_....... h llC8'T10HIST Sal-"~~--. good at FREE. Coast.al Person· Gentral office. perma-Imurance peraoo: Surf It Sand OFFICE WORK. P IT , ...... .,...~ ac Tbe J ... n~ ID ""'"""''"' ... , nel Agency Z790 Harbor. neat, entry level, typing Apply 9am-5pm, Monday GlOUP CLAIMS ffotel.1555 S. Coast Hwy. flexible mom hn, of c Equal ()ppor Employer . VUJ Roter, ~· is phone work. 60wpm lyp. CM •nvnM Hr Friday· RV ... ~.... 1 ----Beach s·--"ea .-n.r ..-r. not look1n1 for a f /Ume ing. Shorthand or1 ________ _ ... "..-• accur. 5 8-5. · --" --a-· ~oao~ben°'Sis.7856 perm. recept . .MUil be speedwrillng. Tusl1ni---------Msp, filing, errands, re· WBJ.S Muathave1Ylto2yrsex-Malntenaoce Boy Wanted ProdlctlaaT,... personable, attractive & area. E.O.E. employer liable car. Salary oPeJl. F·•RGO per. paying croup for outside &. inside ()pen1nga for 3 adlts lO Rubber hose products. exper'd. Position re· Excellent company 5't0-7'1tt.CMforapp•t. ~ medical claims. Req's work. Part or f/llme. earn $20()..~ mo. Ptr. l.rviDe area. Must pass Q\.ires typing Ii 10 key benefits. Call 832·7330 Geoera!Office GUAID SBYICIS koowledae of CRVS. Seacli!fMotel 4!M-4892. approx 10bra/wk . Call co. physical includ ing adder by touch. SS7S to Mn. Witwer. ZJOWWarne.r, RM 217 Background in dental ' aftoatorappt.M2-6B96 baclt uays. Call for tllOOtoltart.Apply, 1700 Ptr penoo. good typing Sa.ntaAna claims helpful. Cootact Maintenance Mechanic, ---_.;._;'------1 appl.~7639. E.O.E. Gil.letteAve, lrvtne. 1---------skills & telepbooe ex· penoooel dept. must have min 5 m ex· Opercrhwr. ... peraence. Variabl e '® per in aen'I plant maint. C~incalhflNty PsycltllllrfcTedl hola'S.6'2-7860 Hairdresser. 111/aome PACIAC muTUAL Contact Ron Chower, start. H.S Sloat/Month. Apply 3 SUMMER clientele, in bcb area, gd SS7·3770eXlS8. E.O.E g;o:try~r~~·exPe~ Personnel Off1 ce. nc8'T10MST SALES •Secy's/G. Ofc Accounting_ to Sl 7 .500 Employers Pay All Fees Liz Reinders Agency 4020 811-cb St. Ste 104 Newport Beach 83U190 call ror appt/estab '&4 MUD HEU'7 parking. nice shop 700NewportCeoter Dr Fa.irvlew State Hospital. Ute 1en'I ofc. Some jobs llelpyourselftoa 673-5342. Th ur-Sat. NewportBeach MATalAL w/chemlcals helpful. 2501 Harbor Blvd. Costa req. typing. Good pay CASH SICURrTYG-UAIDS Heaplngselect1onof 4'7·2610.Moo·Wed EquaJOppor Employer COMTIOLCLEIK 7AM·3:30PM. 549·3281 Mesa. No fee. lmmed. usign F/Ume pos avail. Above Qualified Hopefuls Exper la mat'I & produc· E.O.E. meats. Lona • short Right aboul now you average wage!> Paid in the DAILY Pl LOT Have something to sell? J ANITOR tloo coct.rol helpful. Must o.t-tric .A11t ~{ow~ t!!,~e~ term. Appl)'. may be wondering where weekly. Uruform & eqwp HELPWANTEDADS Classlfledadsdoitwell. P/l'ime,Lauodramal ~;,e = s:il:e~I t~f~ Will £rain. Geo I ore ex· niteperwk7·lOpm.C.M. ~WR.INC. ~m~e':1~~~fd~~o~ ~/:•d~M~~d .... W..ted 71 HfipWClftt.d 7100 873-1890 duties. Good benefits. per.belpful.83'1-52&0 -~---------• :8.%o:=St~ areenerget1c,art1culate, Interviewing 5/23 /7!1 ' •••••••••••••-••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••Janitor . exper mao or E.O.E. Call for appt. Pu1dba attet>daota, part a...r Ad 6'S-20f3 eolhus1asUc & really en· betwn 10&m·~· at 920 :k, I couple to clean offic-es 557-9051 uk (or Keilchi Ume. MUil be available SALES REP to take a F.qual Oppor Employer joy talkintl to people/we S.E OMEalnCaSt.11 u .. !8LNT Ai:» - DRIVERS "l! -Stevena cansbow vou bow toearn · · · .,.,_, .or eves, 1P'Opm. _. mo.1 ____ • ______ week ends. Neat & lnOW"ofcMoo&Sal9-2,_________ ' ppt Men or Women. 25 Years Or "Ider. lluatfurnequip.131).3820 Ma t ur e experien ced peraoneaabllle.;._F!:.!ibrle TUesr,thrur ~I 11:»2:ao.1--------• ~ ~~.b~:t'~~:·-•...;;...;.S_"'·'"-.-"-,-.. .,-.,lST--........ -- ., Jaaitorial wort woman to train show boura. .,..,.._ or or ... vancement. Reliable penoo to ban· the tit Ti w ~ • rt>h> IM~• Know the coast cities. Net $180 a PartU-IL full time. horse1, q uarters + =Please do not call .ca.in. Ap~. A9Q dle p hone. "0Unter. BookbeSeau ... u1 'me-be Newport Adv. fll'Dl ... k k. ( Yell ,,.... • 5,.,.,""' 1...,,. p . ~ .-.es over l e , ... •or ... per. •fficl-t •-wee or more wor mg or ow 546-1330 salary . 2U·2218 or 1-1 •0 • nysaV«, _, aceu m~ ID. typing etc. phone from our Jrvtne .......... h, 1 "0 .. Cab. •1----------1 a 1011 _A_ve._CM _______ 1 Full time work. Coit ore. Our guaranteed mature~ y -person 25 DRIVERS Men or Women NEEDED FOR WESTMINSTER EASY RIDER SERVICE. Job starts June 12th, 1978. Class II lie. Will assist in securing license. GOOD DRIVING RECORD REQUIRED . Applications being taken NOW. 20 DRIVERS Men or Worn en needed for SADDLEBACK VALLEY DIAL A RIDE SERVICE. Job starts June St.h . 1978. Good driving record req ·d. AppllcaUons accepted NOW. llSPATCHERS & OID£R TAIEIS Needed for SAODLEBACK VALLEY DIAL A RI DE SERVICE. Job starts June 5th , 1978. Applications accepted NOW. Good entry position into transportation OIMIE COAST YWOW CAB . t 7JIO Mt. Hier -· fdlat• Ytlt¥ CKonh al Slater bet"'°"' Newhooe Ir £\tc1ld, PART TIME n....-ct ......, h 1 olc. Requirements; S{H. LAIOl9S MATUR E WO M AN RealEl~t:.__1l __ ,,. eaners. i .. ,.. our Y wage + com· typid&j.Sw-pm min,sharp p/tlme t o w e lcom e """"'-Newport Blvd.' Clll mission + bonuses aJ. w/flrures 4r ability to be (20) Needed Now!!! •-t ct EYENINGS ~ftl...-a IOGl'70 \owl OW' best~ earn v .. r • a t I I .. . S e I I Temporary A11icn· newcomera •'coo a "~ I~~~~~~~~~ r .... _. P W "' 0 "' _ .. __ ta Fle•ibl• h... rom -er r. e ....... ,vision essential, ment.a. No reea.~st ............... • " " •0 • to complete •WI ol •c· even bave three ~ve-"'"i""' kln have car•=· A Need car. lite lyplog. AdWtl _.. ... outstaoding, tlve Is p ro1 r H1lve R. E Sale-. nlent p /time s hllt'I. x nt wor i environ 5C'l-.3085 ..,.,"" 0 C R 1 ...... _ 1.._..._._ ment, salary open. Send MAM'() • •---·------attractive personalities ranae ounay ea • ,,__,_ -· Mornlna. arternoo" & f9Utne mcl salary hli. 4eW.11tb St,C.M. 1i..--------who eoJoy WOl'tdal1 with Estate ofc. Ener1et1c VA Specialist. Also 2 eveninp avah. lO!Y to T.W. Schmitti l.1I Harbol'/Ut.bStreet ~AL .kidl. Start at SI.SO per saleswoll\eJ\ needed to potlUcnl in ext!IUng ac APolena Ave, Balboa Isle Equal 0ppor Employer ASS•. a hr. Pbcme M2>4321 t250. limited poeltlont. Newly exP&Odini c.eotury 21 Of SNMO YOUI ~ •--------·• ... ·-" ---b'I muulac-betweel.la:oo.s:OOP.lll. Uc:enaed o.-e:1p'd. locen· flee! 01n for appoint SUIMttW AT ~":.ived,coat:f'Ob AlllfwSMrw ~~ommlaelon plan, ment&odayA:d.laco'fer AJOIT'HAT"S 'y/Reeept.ionjst as den LU&upply Manuf. DMdl penca • t1ood dexterity to-.. m production. No aper. nee:. SdtMe batk1round belpful, M :IO.. Moa-f'rl Pbone 75 1·C9ZO ••k fo r ~. L AU ND R O llA T - Womao C« CO\&Dter a: •uJl 6 told. P /Ume. 113-UllO for W.t .r h and llar Equa l Opporlunlty ·money Protr•m +Whfwearebetter! tal asst tor N B or w;._..-,_ in on lbe Job tr•lnina +"111-. arecl'O"#in•' fUM. CHAI' &•tNCi tbodonist. Salary open. systema la lD netd Of as· _,,.,.,,,_,_. ----"'------w I f ull Um e •om an +O. Y<*f llctlbH rut• • ,AYS waL! ~12 ~ '°c~::!v: 't'~ Whoo you need expert ma.uaer. Uolque OP· +How t o earn bit c..l•fw modttat. IA complUl-.ervtce or repairs. tum portunlli• tor women. IDOPe11 M ltlltrnf A,.t s.ct A.l/IO S... ~). ~ • pectapg. '° th~ serv.lce Dil'tctory =t Daolela tod"Y at Be a1IMl .,i.~~alled ! Ml9 ... ~ baa 2 la:noedlate ac>en U7G'l'Nwtllblt lolearo In Cla11lf1ed to 1olve Cenlury2lSu.rf1lealty aJ~ eo95 ~v~o:.~~~ the ValH bullMM, have your problem. ~ at pleaa.-Wlllln1 to =\Ja:~4::"~i -------1 n-1s:._•-•-8J;Er:'~anewUouaft TIME-LIFE \eem u,. car bW!Pft.1, d ....,. u -Ulll 1_ lie Homa Plan, pain vaca bud tools 6 t H o ---------w o wao t1 both a ..... lions. profit ibuiotc. .,..., tuUq n woukl t.. a.a l.t&a.. __ .._ ___ I J)erWOD8llaed •tmolpbe.re --.... ........_ •/f ,...,,._._., ............. llMtotaUt •/YGU-ri M RM•ll -·•TOI Uld uae .......,... ol • oa ......-.......,. ......,..._,. UUIQ-~. -~-AllP(yla~ W.ot.t.fo&IJDtco-...-. l'a.. I or B.ultor A.Hoclate. tianaJ11 ~com. JOtM ,..._ CeU or 1pply hm·12 .... Hm1 .... ror 1 fOOd ac-p a__o 1 . YI E A RE .$TOP!! SILICT ll'f MOD lily Pllt OW=~=.. INTEJl£ST£0 lN YOU! Take Wn@ lo relax and ... walllCut • ~~-we~a10bour ''Red • 122lN.Hatbor -kiTu~ M II I 0 .._... ~·· ~ PC'OIRJll lhOP at home. It a almp~ Anabefm-m..io 1n'1M --·-....-.. eoup h d •Ith la • Ct~fl!:.8!~! ~~JOJi-...;..;l,;_t,;_e..;.8.;.t.;.a_tl_o_n_A_tt-e-n .......-..i()pjOt. Sm.,... Cellit.._. ... nn dlVlduallacd "lo tbe ...,., have __ _. ........ lo 0 Mk I~~~~~~ 1!~2U11 n.\d"~ ,~ ___ ..... "._.,,. dant, eitper'd _," .:m:.:.:=~~.,.PPIA1!t:: • Vt ••f s'h..a. ,..,T rrou .,.. tell. Cllf a friendly S... lf\a~p/t!me ~ bY -Dalv ktJe i.-~ "... .. ...,..,.... • Cd\ Ctusifled Ad·Vlaor at pey, srt-.. .._ , .... •-"* · Mt WantAd JltiP! o.u,,PUotCi::lnts'Ad• _R.£J> __ c.uP __ BT __ m._ID_1 &42-5678 ~8 -... " .. • T~. May 23. 1918 DAILY PllOT *'· W..t.d 1 1 w-... 71H t tt; I 1001 ,_ .. , 1050 ••ulr .. IOIO "'""CL_ 1091 . ..................... ...................... ....................... •••••••...••........... ........................ ~ 5-Tkoe 8'.a AUeedaat. l dCDJJ.Bl'J'Oll w AlCTED ..... ••••••••o••••o.h IMh. '°'"" 9040 t... ~ t5f0 ~·.d;_~'t,.~~l...... an(l .. Tlf~·J n.-!~~ctub ~ coZ:~~~I:~~!!~ TOP CASH DOLLAR 8.f~d NePhl•:, .. saoTuaul •••••••••••••••••••••••s;:;c t l 50 •••••••••••••••••••••...., 'Vl'Y IV'-"¥-•w .... _ CCllldstiaa~.833-9211& PAlD J'OR YO''R ~ver. !UIS-ro 13 ' Whaler, 40 ff P ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'ISio.tcm'IPtJ Sbor'tbO~. •Jntoe.Cll • Antlq-:::t>Cral\ ._,.. JEW!:LRY WATCHEs tdle. TtdW>eet Qi...U Evlorude, 12 cir e ••I 1971 BSA Motorcycle lfttapoktwb!s. Ira koob Suvlct Stauoo AlteD ~for a leut J ~JlllM\I 7' ..... a11.11. ART OBJECTS COLD' dulc. Quadrale:1 t&Db.trlr,catmlnlxtra SOOcc Victor 11100 b1es . 4 <'YI ~n~ Olr daa&-~eaced. P\aU CDOatblrCll'U..Cl&Milled SuUAu""'"-• caav 1Jees-r SILVER SERVICE' apeahra Beat ofrer boou.s. SHOO 496·~922. oriliDalauJee.ISOO.&ood m-OUl:3or754.-0146 lime. SmttQs Uabl 78 ~Of* l>aU.1 c..... D-~.!..-'1S m.Mll FINE FtJRN. Ir AN : en..mt ~~a.ft 7PM. CODdl.Uoo. 875-1»7 even· ., ·-.... o _ _. ·--"' .... ful -u.-a.--81,,.... ..,.,_.. I ~-per ""'·y ._ce -"'ll......_ Kl lt , __ 7'"" "'"'1'" .... .,.. -· v• ,..,..., .. -.a• ~oar-'-• M':"day '";br; Frid:;,. •sou na ma ren 1pnn11 TIQUES fKS.2:200 STOll .. XTUl.IS. 12' Alwn fiah.ln1 boat, 10 ........... .., ...... ys ly :\tll contaaned lO"" Se~lce 8taUoa Alteo· Type Uwpm eledrk, fl'fW eolleeton. AaUque ~· ~1 ' eod la· W¥;A•'-1T•a.5 TI.me clock. 7' I>eU cue. HP Evinrude. aood cond Honda~. wyl. cherry. cabover camper Sipe Ii . .. __._ (2) = .... f '"t----.a ..a.-.. ....J ,._,.... """ --~ ,_..,,.., ,.., M I I It d ls~ ens In 1 + car rack · $400 · len than 1.000 ma 's. MaQY xt.rar. Good cond. -• -, ........ , --VYtce. ~ CODIOl• &bl. B urled . --b .. _. ____ _, -5922 ____ .. 1 -(714)84'1 """"t tipa-'d. pl~ C&rey ~tum lAt.o full walnut veuer Ealllab Maboc d1nl.nl rm rum. s,;;i:: c:;r: ~'::b macbloe. lalnless • -•n pm Slllred. 975.673-7123. -· ....... Cbevroa. 1Dt ~. Coul timdob.. br'Mld&lt tbl, coif .. a.bJ tbl,lchrt buffet,aerver, .... 1 w kitchen alnk. Sllcin& '87 Chris Crall 28 ' Hooda 350• 4.cyl, Jdnt. '81f'Z5o,CAmperapecial. Hwy, La&uu Baaeb t~ aPPObltmeot belahL EqJlab butlw'a ch.Ina cabnt. Xlra lnl -Pus ooe spare. e macbiDe. Food acale. i.111t.rake sea acllr. twin ... __... -cJ\ or t rade for very clean, A/C. 2 lllnka Sen S&a Help needed lm· roriiit.ervtew tray • .:::~• platter, two bod. (box aprin1· ~0.S:.~tv~n~n1tlL Bt1t otn. K·MART 2:200 engines, lots of equip· U.~~673-1123. •en,. $Ul86. 551.asi. m•d. Mutt be 11 . CUIMM.1Zl.vtm aMc. . m.tll·frame). Aft Spm. atrap, meetiag airline Harbor Blvd . C M meot. ready ror fishing. af\lpmorwkeDda. ~/-''""t ah1ft.a a vail. ~~Y ......... _. ,,._ .. Din Tbl, • 145·7851 LD ....... ul,,,mentl. Pre· IMS--700l sldiq, & summer. lll50Q. Hooda CR12S race rdy , • ....... -np)oyer ... -vaA v ._, 8'2-1393afters .. 75. 3 bllte trlr, Ira• seml·nat, 57 lntema· or P/l.. Apply llO E. chain, aerver, butfec vent ~• theft! For• OE Stereo, very IDod.em. · wbeela 1175. Hoocla toOF tionaJ tractor. 3 m to s ~Hwy.NB 1::·c1.~ =;e~: =-~~~~-G. ... W. IOSS =::~ ir:b~f!W:~ ~h~ a2ms':e1::!: aca9tofr552·9073 ~~v'::Av~~~. 176~ Service Sta. Atte.odantl GIJW 'I'owinl, lOOOlrviae dodle....f'7J.7'17 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Day Glo" paper & we Ja00 55Z-ao:218 '73 Hood 3:50-4 &o f --- (<&) Pltlme QOW to run A~ NBIQ.1252 CWt.om blk oaut IOla 2 will back ck lrlm your . . Wlndab~ld, c;esh:!r!: '64 EJ C.mino, 6·cyl, •· ti!M in Summer. WiU ' · ..... ru IOI 0 lalnpa, 1ame tbi. 4 blk \ap. Or try two cudl '1' & M9rlM r a c 11, 2 he 1mf't1 . 1pd, $11186. t r ain. Apply 2$90 Tra1Deea ••••••••••••••••••••••• na• ... chn,roUawaybed, bacltt.oback. · 41 .. o-crin -"" ....-.• ,.,,,,. 979--0513 ~ n • CK •-.a·~•-' l U-'" C -PRICES •• -=--==..:.:.:.:ce::.·:..:::-==.:.:· --:.::...::~-:::..:·-1·----~---·-----. ......._,...a .... orm o FRGHT D AM AGED rerrt1. book case, : ... •••••••••••••••••••• will train worbn for U · ·H<n'POINT SALE. 3309 waaber, elec dryer. $2eaot3/t5 Cl .. to 10 "r7 K.awuakU50 c\.L1tom. Ul62 'II Ton Chevy Pltup. ServSt.aAAt M,r. l!xpel" aembly of 1•1'met;tta. W. WIU'Der nr Harbor, SlO·SlOO. 873·2873, 4/Slap $1.eoea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. froot" rear disc ltlot reatorable cond. req'd. »•1 abUt. PQllin1 orders, tapmg, SanlaAna.m.mi ~ 6/9tqa $1.!50ea. brakes. 2.000ml. $1750. nms&IOObg~ . .ZSor Um.form. iruur, vac. 3 atod:., etc. At.o need IL&.-.-lOor more $1.<&0 ea. 18W c.uoe. car rack " 494-186.S best otter. 673·367S Arch Bay S bell, So. qualified 1e1ren. Apply CASHPAID ~ 1060 SaJeaTaxlncluded ~ $.100. Aft 6pm; La&una. Stand a rd lnduatrial Wahr /Dryu / Refr l I ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO CARD? ~ 1974 Suzulca GT sso . v-9 570 Serv Sta At1end. F/time tJnilorm.s. 17712 Crabb wortiqorootSll57-8133 lftffl Draw your own or~ ~w.M frame, mount, fanng, ••••••••••••••••••••••• EaP.r'd, Ute mecb'i Lane. HB. vie ot Llberty Mil ~· addreu, pbone" ... , .t 9010 ~1 Juu rack &: removable Dodie '76 Tradesman 300 knowled&e. Apply 2580 Ir Beadl. 7am-3pm. Refri~, clean, ~ clabber bloodline. we U make one cud per -••••••••••••••••••••• coat ba1. Very clean, map, headers, too many NewportBl,C. M. TTUClt Driver A Yard w~. Recia~ 8 yean old. tag. Add2.S<each. Mercury2QHP low bou.n IMh.lat/ _,. 832-3Z20X2SO emu to llst. Absolutely c:-nR .. n.-Maintenance, chemical Make o ffer. (714) SendcbecllormGDeyor. aJnt.115iSOorU:adeownl3: Q 1.. 9050 't.IHOMDA stunning interior '. ~;6c.~~=~=· t.oiletco.M&-2'100 GUlaon copper retrl1. 11 m~.after6PM. der,i[OTNIMT'JMG. 1.odiac. m-71Z3. ~·;;.·~···~;· CB350M00.846-720I 'T1U629 br.6'2-3C72dept7 cu ft $2SO. Kenmore lhnu~ah1Goockl06S PO Bo Powtt-9040 S&llinC Sloop. Me~~ Malwt"-s.S. '67 Fon! Step Van. Reblt TYPIST ==~teed ....................... CastaMe...~~821121 ....................... Day.3daY1foroa.JySSOO. a..t Sl•4Dfl tl60 q,oewautotrana.Ofr. SIUPPING Ir Thiokol Corp needa a Extra fU"ID Kl H Sim· Y boat. 18• Lapetrake Bare boat. 675~15 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-«t111. RECEIVING t.YPilt (50 wpm) for an Uke New Mont Ward mocu Beautyreat bed, Desipen Leftovers Uv. "'·--a·c·, Gray l /B. "'-t. ~2075 n-t a 1""'7 Ex•cutiv•i-·--..---v-.-V-.. -.-.uto-.-m-~-h-.1 Hard wor k IDI )'OUDI enUy level otc poalUon. Refrt1/Fner "/icmkr llbnew, sns. 546-9089 nn Brkfrnt $400/olr Sofa ~ AUi ""'u • ' ... ... -'-UC .... ""'" penoawantedtodoabip. we atrer mt benefit.a " 21 1 _.,5 • tble -.s Lg Ant chair ~/'trade75&-02JSO .-........ W 9060 Motorbome or Minim· perf. '78 tags, many pint & odd jobs, in C.M. •tarting wage. Oppor for c. • ~· · Jew•• 1070 $3()0. &km furn ~$400. , Seacraft twin Volvo ::::::................. motorbome'from Herb xtru. ll47S. 548·m1 alt automotive warehouse. adv 6t new facilities in •rdff 1020 ••••••o••••• .......... Antiques $20 up Hdbrd " l70HP, I /O's. Cuddy FUJI • YAMAHA FnedJander. Call any of1_5Pm...;...._. ______ _ Call SS&-8340 Aalc for tbe I r vine l ndust'l ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED spread S225.Sleeperaofa cabbl,outrl&1en.davilll, DIALllS theaenumbera W..e.d 9590 Johll. Complex. U you're in· m& & MOPmS $125. Sat &i Sun 9-5 332 tandem trlr. Trade OK. HM777 ..... •••••••••••••••••• SIUPS CARPENTERS" =8~1e~::~ (~1:~ ::e.·Cy~·.bWo-. ~ ~~~Dc1~RD~LJ-~: ~Ding Canyon Rd. 213-83&-7393. r!~=:.r:=~~ :rJ~~~ WIWIU.IUY MARINE MECHANICS PH!lnnJM!l. Ne wport Blvd, C.M. JEWELRY, WATCHES, Sol!Awe .... ,. YOURDATSUN to start Immediately. ·-.--6'2-1'910 ART OBJECTS, GOLD, FOls.11 Y9dltSales RENT 23· Fireball. sell PAlDFORORNOT =~~d:'!!: F.qualOppEmplyrM/F S ILVER. SERVICE , HEY& 1975 at' ReineU Se1dan 261 NewportBlvd. contained. Lotsofxtras. TOPDOLLAlt ..iv,_.........,..., Lldo Shirp Do9t 1040 F INE FURN & AN · .u ... ...,.. .. TOR Brid&e. OMC 225, xtra ewportBeach 66-2283 FOaTOPCilS YV UJ .....--1---------1 ....................... TIQUES.6'$-2200 .,.,....~.. 1 d"-' ta••-VHF 92 Yanl 900 lJdo Part Dr ..,"" Mod•l 70 complet... c ean, .,.. • ......... • <714) 673-11 °--27• p .. __ NewPort Bch. ., TYPIST Golden Retr_iever pup-Beautiful l.29K VVSI ~rebuilt~ used 1 tltn;: depth finder, baJt ......... new ace tu rvw pies. AKC Fiekl "•bow round diamood mounted Includes chemical 4' l1WJY xtras. Priced ~ ~n~;~. ~· c~~: Daily.wt~ Slps6. rn p~l. Shots, wormed, in white gold Tiffany set· paper. Call l ·73'1-&M9 move. raised w(l'LC. Xlntdisp. ting. Appraised $1.5,000, $12.750. SU.950. m.~ "T.J TRAVOY 21r. Sips 6. Jd.co Pro ilcurh {213)C.ts6l. Bestolr. 675-5418 For Sale. 4 Bob Dylan "12 Veotutt Cat, is·. fully au glass. 4S5 enc. front S,..ft.+a'-basanimmed.late~·AKCRegia1ttedmaleLab U ... 1071 tickets forJune2, Fri· HAllUSOH•S equipped w/trlr. Must whl dri ve. J airs. Setwk.Dapatw .. ~"!~ --~r~typat puppy, 6 weeks old.:!..!?.!!? ............. day.CallSJ6..S74. SIAIAYIOATS seU. t950. Call all 7pm. generator Many extras ......,...,... ~n~ wpm Father ch.amp, mother Le Blond Engine Lathe KINGTUTTICKETS(4) ~1719. $15,500.536-0l.33 ...,..,_ 'mpo ... --t ..,,,. ,_ accurately, .dlctaphooe &over. Call873-72S2. l7x .. ~". tan.r turnm· g J .. ~9, 6 PM. 3101 Co.ut Hwy, N.B. 1978 p A d I ....... • ,....., ...,.. "" expr. reqwred. Xlnt ~ .. -~~ 631·2547 CAL 27. full cruise/race. ace· rrow x our customer service company benefits and Pure Bred IODI haired $2,750. Colchester 17x54'' $IS/ea. 644-0550 T 0 p c 0 0 d . N e w motor home for rent ~~ui=t~~~~ woRiJlacoaditions. Dacbsbuod. 3 aio. old, ::=.·(~~~-~11. 4' ... We~-, CHRIS CONNIE .67. ~~ude . $13.SOO . ~~i fully seU·conl ........ val··..... c"•lom .. -. APPLY IN PERSON w /papers Ir sbota, $175. --IOI I .,... ucu .... .... .. 561 259t FB, twin screws. caovaa .. T .t 9 70 We oeed a well orgaoiud IJT · Mhc1I••-8010 ....................... rm, surveyed May 2. ••Coronado 25. 3 sails. rrallan. raY I dynamic. yet palien Golden Ret riever , •••••••••••••••••••••••Wanted small reaaoaable Bristol, owor (714) a.Ul, jib, l50% Genoa ••••••••••••••••••••••• SlCUTAIY BARWICK DATSUN "-.I' lq 1!11 ljli'!j ,IJi•I 8 3 1·137S 493-3375 WE BUY a.EAMCAIS &TIUCICS CONN Ell CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 546-1200 person wit h excelleo .ltitMco Pra.-Ch w/papen, 4 mos, $100. Mesa Verde Country Club utility trailer for truh 436-4054 7~ Hooda eng. Cockpit 3.5' F1amin10 Expando communication •kllla as 75131218 M be b.i full ui etc.Call489-102'1 •---------controls. Super clean. Take 1t away Cor SJ.SOO.i--------- 11 goodtYJ>•-1 .tr fll l485DALE WAY ' em n p. .eq ty 18' So Cat Classic Bay w1"th slip.· must sell Calls.56-4175NOW' WEPAYTOPOOLLAR ~ as .,. 1 • COSTA MESA,92626 LbaaaApso, fem.1 yrokt, membership. Outatand· Office ......... •. Boat r econd Gray au ""49,645·2659 FOR TOP USED CARS ~~b~~~1trt~ et;!oy (714) 545-8251 p apers & ahots S22S. lng Investment. Save 1,1, at 1011 M arl~e 615·9016 eve _......,.., __ , ______ ·ee Prowler. 19· SIC. EZ FOREIGN, DOMF.STIC variety ol 1.aaka ts prtd Equal()pp. Employer 94671 $3,000thru Pvt Pty. Ask· •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• SC7·5812dys • Newport 20. 3 sails. 6 lift hitch. S199S P .P . orCLASSICS ll the Ing $1.S,OOO. 968--4507 eves New wood desks 11119..95.1---------hp/ob. Loaded. Must _646-_7_811_2 _______ 1 U your car is extra clean youne oo accurac Frw to Yw 1045 aft 7PM Wood files tsO. Heavy du· 1--------• sell. 499-2820 see ua fint. al your work. please coo Waitress, ll·3 or 5·9 shift ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------t.act ua now. opening~. ,Apply in Two beautlfw loo"ha'" 7 LlfeUme family mem· ty typing tbls MS. Lg. Kl gv BOATS HOBIECATU' WoaforSal. IAUBIUICIC person Tl.DOS Pina & wit old k lttens~th benbip Undborg Rae· Blacltboan:la $1S.Stora1e .Aft ii Blue.S700w/trlr. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 2112!\HarborBlvd Call Mrs. White Deli, mu Crown Valley female. Free to good quet Club. ~o below cabinets. used desks .._ n..n &62-2073 .wi .. u Cost.a Mtaa 979 2SOO forlnterviewappt. Par kway, Lagu n a home. Call 559_5387, club ralea. Wkends & $3:5-SBS. (wood Ir met.al). ""'upv ---------eac..lcs 9520 Niguel. eveni.op. eves aft 6pm. 846-31.83. T y p e w r i t e r s & IJntil IPM '77 CATALINA 30. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE BUY calculat.ora. Xlnlcood. S29.900. '58 Studebaker Silver WillHOUSE Free Baby Rabblla 5 Corning Cou~terange C.E. WHOLESALE 7 Dlys a week 968-l396weekdayeves Hawk. Gd cood S800 /bst USED CARS Paul Dosier AalOd .... r.c. COSTA.MISA. (7149156-7075 W_.,_ ' with aell-clearuog oven. OFF1CE FURNITURE ~ week;a old, "' Lop ear, avocado, works ~rea t 20HPlacenllaC.M. 3C'Trimar an. incl. 751·2575·552·0732 CALL GARTH Looking for mature, multi color.~ Sl50. Or Best offer Gll-2777 631-2:570 WEEKEND trailer Sl600. lt.tawaHDMll Used Car Mgr Equal ()ppor Emp&oyer alert i.odlvidual. willing 1050 Packard Bell console . 897-8JS4 Yeflkln 9530 540-5630 to learn & accept ateree>·contemporary. Thermo-fax. copier ~· lfNl\SO\' ,~SO.\ • 1 INCOLN M ERCURY res p on 1 l b I Ii t y i n ••••••••••••••••••••••• beaut.ltul coaditJoo, the IBM eleclric typewnter SPECIALS SEASPRA Y 1S Cat. S650 ••••••••••••• •• •••••••• --------•established N.8. fu:m in **I BUY** sound la peat $100. Or $250.67>9137 w/racing sails. Days Tn-sport desert b'!fgy· 5~~-~: !~; ::. ~·~=~i~ Good used PUrniture • ~~~-.__... L IBM older Executive m.3'19'1.eves 0>493-52.62 ~:::~. !,d!!:tewhlt~!~ 262e HARBOR BLVD. S3 br to .iart.. Must have future for fr•M -. Appllancea--OR I wW """"6 ,.._water u.ou-...ara typewriter SlOO. Call Stock 155", ac· Cuddy 14' fiberglass sailboat, I-road he.. ll/or trlr COSTA MESA ..-..---ai:llOl'SELLforYO\l. pine wtth beadboard & .. __ ails _..,.. 1,,,........... -car.788-87'9 Filling of orders & · _.... drawers 00 both sides. n~-78'0 Clibbl,Merc228,trlr wu.:rvus ·-· - general warehouse MAS'TlaSAUCTI""" -•--in lud h 1 manyxtru. 673-1440 '""' Ford :1.r. •-. w/lO'.... WllUY STIM04HAPHB duties. 37~ br wk, call ...._.616&133-9625 :i '2oo~8~fe.(t Smith Corona elec $14,4ll+T•L --..51.._. ':star ca~m.:;, Lo m~ USB>CilS! Forbuayaircraftdealer. ""'"'1066 typwrt'r,lS"carr.Offer. -or-""' .., W .... _ Cb I ._.. · 5· 30 P .. ....., .........., .....__._ 9070 many -r••. 751·...,l l e re uoc: new evro et OC Mrport. No sh, but SIS refrig w/ice It wtr in · .... v•.roo>o>U st 0 ck 1s4 J. 2 2 ' -___ ... _ ..... ___ ..., ___ , deaJershlp in cbe lrvt.at! must be able lo u&e dic· WoWd JOU lilte a bualness dr, -=so. Liv rm rum, Newport Beacb Tennis r.ts 1017 Overni&bttt ••••••••··~··••••·~··•• "12 ~ ton Ford truck. low Aulo Center. We need t.aphooe. Front ofc Po81• ol your own! You don't tbll,Wn rm, 2Br's king & Club. Limked number of ••••••••••••••••••••••• Merc228, trlr, loaded W~: Slip for 36 oew mJ. with 9"'' camper. yourUS«i car! lion w /aome phone & need an office lo start. full,MCM3812 tennis & swim mem· Moving! 2 4mon•h old Sll,t•O + T&L 111lboat. Newport Lota ol extraa. $591115. 179 JOE customer coot.act duties. Begin at home, full or . benbi all 644-0050 ...., Harbor area. Will pay re-E 1Bth s CM Sabry open based on ex-part/lime. Ideal for Movine Sale! Rl~aera pa av . puppies. Both AKC ! ward/bonus. 832·3410, . t.. . MAC PHERSON per. Apply S.S. Mission husband ck wlfe team. couch, 2 cbiaa cabmet.s. Doris Females. Lb.ua Apao & Stadt H73, 3C' Sedan lm-4930 4 wt.el Drhn 9550 CffmVBOLET Beechcralt, 18741 No. 646-"533 dinblc rmaet.deek,sew· Sklnn y·ml n 1 Frig. lrishsetter.6'2-8619. Cr\i.lef',OMC240,trlr ••••••••••••••••••••••• '""" Airport Way, S .A . ingmach,h!·fi,TV,chris. wshr /dryr 1 yr S2SO. Cw*&mnGoods 1094 $16,SOO+TlrL Couplein40'•.nocbildreo COST•MES• S40-Z720 YACHT SALES fish aquanum, refng, China hutch $250. Din lbl ...,.... • ..., need slip for 33' sailboat. ,. ,. Positloo open. Estb Nwpt misc. 642-8619. & 4 chrs $'75. 731·7830, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stock t570, 20' Open, M r . C I o n k e y , AMC.JEEP 21 Aulo Center On ve IRVINE 761-7222 %~= brollerage.548·5556 Redecorating! Btful 7-pc M2-8610 =c 81:. ~:!: =: M~oY&KER !! 1·714·997420. #1 INCAUF. Ma • • 8 pineapple twin bed aet, lOllJ' fiberglda Canoe, 1 wfud scrns fmt & bk. $IO,OIO + T•L WANTED: 30' aliporside WEOUTSELL Allloe. ... arW $6.07 ~hr ofprescribed ••••••••••••••••••••••• blood mabog, 110lid wood, tent 9 X l2", Coleman cooler chest. very few tie, NB area. $500 te· ALL JEEP DEALERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9701 abcte lvlit8y+, fi.u.llc"a lpl/t.( M71U:)t ...... .. aoos $4a). 2 green Occasional stove. lantern & 4 cols. mi, $2,000. 630-7172 st 0 c le 'e 3 2 • 3 0 • ward. 714·752· 1400 ext WHY??? .. chrs, $65 ea. Quality o•<>an..tt 320. • • 846-8154or871·2SOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....,...,... 1932 Brunswick pocket ~brid&e ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ERICANO"" rurn, all xlnt cond. ---------• 1 ••-V 11 . ·-e LARGEST 67 •-11 naa non 5'9-1086. 2287 Waterman, K& a& water ltecl $90. Ear. pool table, 4x8 •ate, Mett 2S5'a. -..r•A A..A-INVENTORY ,...,g •· Larint!._~ .. s.te,.~ CM. Am couch Ir chr SSS. oak.$1000.642_.141. FJSHERllANS YACNewport~l GREATERSAVlNGS 6Ruru7.,~!~~~ SUPaVlSOR Mature person w /pa· .., ...... ....,........,. ~--•--'---.,0 DELIGHT HUGE ACC.::'C>"ARY ............,, ,.._........., taence to uaiat in train· Stewart RoUa Antiques !':..~1· • IOU"'""" •• . Hobie Hawk RC Glider. nrd $31,110 + Tlrl. Mooring betw:a,Lido Isle & 1:.....-:>V ;,,d • rebabilltaUn~ de-750 E. Dyer Rd. S.A.. ~ new cond, inckl's N1ca Peninsula, tF.trade for CENTER A.-97o7 -oe --b t •-b s175 EXCELLENTSERVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• velopmeot.ally c:bsa led. (at Nwpt .. w1) '151-..... ~eerr Dalsy sofa, "8" a .,. c ar1er • D8leO IY '41'f'J. same betwn Balboa Isle COURTEOUS PEOPLE Xlnt fringe benefits &·-----... --1---------patio set , ele c &,5922,499-3660aft7pm &Penin.67s.9063 · '72 AUDI IOOl..S. 4 dr. ~ cooda. For appt typwewnter. 44" rnd aut.omatlc,sunroof Call714/56'7"316 ~::::~~es! g_~:ntbl, dressers. TYir5'no 1091 HAlllSOM-S '°;t'SpHd& tolO C'!~A~IEIPESA Ph644-SS96 TelepboaeSoUcitation Clocb! ---------!••••••••••••••••••••••• SIA RAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ IMW XlntopportunityforPtr HUGESELECTION PYGLASS Brown & TwonrTTIVK!:TS May 3101Coutllwy,N.B. 16' Caravelle--120 Mere 25.acHarborBlvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 97'2 work w/Ftr pay paten. "-ricm Jordan 11.ke patio t.able & 30 1 PM S20 each B U S l N E S S 631·2147 OD. full storage cover. COSTA MESA '74 IMW tial. 848-9"27. e.t __ ~ <& chairs, 42" round, 96iass6 · ' UQUIDATION 1--------1 114 hra on boat &i motor 714 549-1023 Less than 32,000 m1 Buy ucwnHa hooeycolor,excell.cond. Calcul ators, video .; Xlolcood.l3300 Uus u Telephone Croas Bar OpenWed.tbruSat $180.MH201 HONDA EXPRESS. Best games,colorTVa intire '7.J 28' CC Cat alina .s.9·2708 '76 Cherokee Chief, 401, we eqwppedluxury .-.1r .... aa0R • Irv -..0ftah-n ..... d car for ootlu.ng down and.. PABXTecbnician +key ~ll'U...._ .... , • orr. ALSO Coo'lerted in•entory at or below .....,.w_ W/ Yun ge, SUPER FASf, '77 Mere. loaded. 22,000 mi's. balance 00 48 monthll . system. Good benefits. ·--<•71•4•)•754--t•m--•I= ~r:rred.4t~ School BUS, Dodge. Nd.a cost. Vldeo entertain· outriger, dual cootroll. 85JlS bp (under 3'1lrs> on S6750.64S-2396. <9:111LK.L> lrvineComplex.~1066 "'asatoptbls,131M.530 someengwork. Make of· ment center 3811 E.17th Ill I H HJ, 21Sbp, clauic G·3. Custm de· '73 CJ 5 Jeep w..-.. V-8 a.-rer. Desperate! ~1-17Tf St. CM 541Ma51 C.S.000. ~. U M O:Z7, atgn lna1de & out. 11001b · ,_. • TR IR'{;!... Beaut. ant.lq. pump or-,..__....,.. .... _....,.. .... _....-111111_..._...__..._.1111111111.,._.._....,,,..__....,_..__...__ _ta__________ Wt lrlr, tons oC extras. roU cage, new tires • Good 2°! Pt .,. __ in •--· 1111 .-+ inveated, *"'"""'. shocks. 492·7 111; ana · gan. rw1au le P~ine A S da 'Tl 2'' Searll)', loaded, ::::""-~ 492-6172. Type wpm, work 20 cood.-'l8'75 or bet ofr. nswers to un y trir,$1.$.000/olfer . -·--1---------hra w k ly. Call <t> 541W2T7. '7$-'7T4 ur n--enuer . .<&MOlds,Tl'llCb 9160 8116-«JeO, m iee for appt, ---------1 ~ lCV\E May 21st ~-.. M rec. real •harp, Iota of ••••••••••••••••••••••• s:AI • Sell with EASE! '73CallfOl'Olan, •• ...,...._,, ld1'U988-1270 lt'a a BREEZE twin dieMI, &o hn, full '13 Chevy 1,A.t Ton. AIC. Sellldleite.ma 6'2·567& ctassiliedAda642·56'78 C d p I I electroa.lca. radar. ready PIS. P/8, Arr. AK /FM. rosswor Uzz e. for A Ib a core . Tlia .. 11Wlw 56M.l2950.642·2073 Help W.ted 7100 Help W.ted 7100 •fllXJtoln. Call Robb, ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• .... •••• • ••• • •• • • • • • • ••• • ••••••• 64$4800. C , .. s. '77 DODGI D 150 • .... 9 t 20 VB. auto .• pwr 1teertng, lliEPHONE SALES SEARS ROEBUCK & CO. Has immediate openings for : Tel•,._. Sain 1.,...A .. athes Full or part·lime. Excellent company benefits. Paid vacation. holidays, employee discounts. E nter a c hallengi ng world or telepbooe sales. 3t Hacker lwln Chevy -••••••••••••••••••••• pwr brakes, radio, ••· ~brdj. 1lj1a e, trs WAM'rm special paint, ski-top. coda*. $tOC)O/blt otre.r. sunroof. tonneau covtr, m-U81alt3PM. C.mJl!r· aelf·cootained mag wheels. & wide for I bed OD ~ toe ptck· ,;_ (~) 14' Yellowjacltet O/B. 30 up. llUlt be less than 3 ... ~ .............. b.p Jolin.Ion. Gd coad. yrs old.~ eves • •S.. ltTodoy '500. Pbf44-0M2eYeS. "*days. 540-5630 ~~~~-----13' .8o1ion Whaler. Ub '51CHEV~T.tcylwpd, oew. aobp. trlr, sauo. opel) road eabover bolt· m.mo on. 1leep1 '· S1800. 2128 HARBOR BLVO. ...._ ._. .. ., IJ*J• _a._-0_t11______ COSTA MESA 8llper clean w{bow r.U.. t .. I 184.... f 14.01-------- 20 bp mere. xlnt concl. "••••••••••••••••••••• "73LlNCoodcood. aa Pb-..sJ 5 Sc>d ScbWlDQ Tandem $1800or t.totf'er . ...UD ~. x.lnl CCJlldtUoo. Call C.11 7Q.-5. JIW wood ho.It ._,_ .. •t..aia --------Jobuoo motor • trlr. '71 Toyota H.llUJl mlnl- '2SOIOf(er . 844·1• or VESPA tnrll van, aood comU· $00MI. llOl'ORSCOOTER lion. 12200/beat ofr. MMOM Beat Otfer ..._.. um RleaeU 211· cabin --------- House of lmport'S ·•·1 ·····•ti., ••. , ........ . , • f I f I I I '• \0 1978BMW's HERE NOW! COMIUTI IOOYSHOP MOWOPIH IXC&UMT SILICTIOM Of- IMW llSALH w~ may have your next car tn oar inventory. C.11 uat.oday' ll f ·ZCMO 4'M•4• cruiMr. Twln 115 HP llGpadCimeW,JNatcoo• 19'73 Oat.Aun P.l1. wtth OMC outAht..~ Lo bn. dlllon.. fs.25. S5Mt7t campet, lo&a ol extna. S&Ma~Leaallll Loeded. sis.ooo. P.P. eves. SU00.50451 low~llll:. _... lllld JOec a.rt.I Cy-cat. J '7' Da&aun, 113». D /P Rolls Ao,ce ' BlfW Jr.T,..._Cnhr tpd. ttreetleeateel. $125. maaUo•d. Mlthellna. l.StOJa.mbo#M = wlM!I akilq-Orq~ taDO/t.t~.tllM411 NewpaltBaach ~ =-· c.1.:..--~ lm1 OT mo,ad 'TT. On.t Trado ~ old atdf tor "12 BMW .. red. 4 Spd. _ ......... 009ll. MOO. or t.t oh. "ew aoocltu wlth ..,. M.lcbt, Aliltnl/ll, l ·~-· MM111 a .. iiledad.te-5'71 0wnr-ttH4l1.~• .;f:;,;J;.;. __ DM. __ v _Pt_l_Ol ________ r_·.-o._...il-.• ..., __ 2'_._,_e1 .... e ......... ttW ........ U..ct .... UMd .... UMd ..... UMd ..... UMd J ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ................................................................... . ~ ..,wW IAillhl. .... , W ......_' p•W v-. tnJ C:.01• t9l2 .... 9t4 U.. H41..... 9911 ft61 ....................... ;········ ........ w:~· ... · .. ;;i·~ ....................... ·-··················· ...................... ···-·················· ............................................. . ~-.......... !?.'.~ .. _ ......... -.!?.~~ _, ............... '10 Volvo, 4-41'. 1taudatd COIVii id ~l 74 c.,,..,,.._. 76,..llD 741MW .. vw.. 'TO XU Ooav. WbUe •t DEALER IN US A tnu, •·cyl, AM /FM. 71-..,p_.c.r ONG hdary air, 1\1.ll power. '72 Ruaabout, a .ooo ml'a, va. AW). a1..r ecmd. pw 4 ......_... Qaarool ••-SUP« ct.u, ao ruat. IOY · · · aD/80.MM831,evee. Au&omede:<Stk"f·•>· power H•U. leather. Xlot. yellow, auto tram •teeriaa: P1f1' br~ke•~ A ·;c:--Trad id-;;-; AllJPlll 1 tn1S. • ~ ~ O All 111 1tereo. vhsyJ w JOllOcc motor. ta-11123 radio. <MlNY'I'>. llettedet. tlSJ"UF> .._,.,_ 95500.-.... CARVIil .._,....., 77C.. ""' roof. <eesKJC>. '72 Runabout. I.lot eocid, •112'1 .,,. .--f'7JJ ROU.S·ROYCE ....................... CnUe CODtrol, auto. T· •SJttS on1 OWDI', under 34,000 540-5830 ........... ,........... :-..==-.-:,. I I 11 .. t90 I Top. <8T1SVY> 540-5630 mi's. $121115. 552-78111. f HOus.e of Import-; "14 Jwen a..i,, blklblk ...... • ............... ••••••• •61c.-.-ette 74PtNTO lD\, $ ~ xlD\ coad. OSlD SUNDAYS 74...... T·Tol>. '13.000 ort1ln1l. ~I.. hpeed, factory air 1011\~0\' '~ ,.,, • l 1111( ()I N Ml f<1 \ Hv -....... . .,..._ · scm '63. w.bite AIC X1Dt Hatchback. VI, auto. ('1IJILL). 2126 HARBOR BLVD CC!Dd., C053LWA>. 2828 HARBOR BLVD ..._. 9731 --..· ..._.._... '-...i•'p p PIS. alr coad .• bucket u. •• -, .. -o.ee~-.. •$2495 COSTA MESA ..-..-n .. ~a.o-.. .--... (s~.r .nn> H••....,, 76,.=viMN .... __ '-,..... rnSTAME~a . . . CREVIER ---···-••••••• ru~ -· ~ · -·., · ----....Y. ~ 540-5630 11mooewtlltoquickl Au&.o .. T-Top. (~RV). '71 Tort.oo _ ............. Mllil!WW ttSO '78 Grand Prlx. wader &I Sf 'UOAOWAY SAMfA AMA 835'3171 1 '!J UUIMA Ta OlllVIHO ilMCHIHI •USIDIMW1• "7120Q2hpd (75314) '72 2002 411p. (5"1.JA) "'13 210QUapd BK.BV '14 2002A..A/C I (588LPO) '1Sm Auto. (9l6MTV). "15 2002 411p,a.lr(8'SM oc) '71~30i ;LUll C606PIDI) '76 3 .0slA (mPQS> "n SIU 411p. ,stereo( 0998) CloMd 0. Snap ,740 ...................... lt11Ml%210 SEDAN. Tobacco brown " io i.cnmaculate condi-Uoa ! (22911FWJ. Jlust eee t.o appreciN ! Buy or ....... lt14 M1% 41051 Complete wi\b atereo. pwr. windows and with .,.._ 9720 only 34,050 Jow miles. ••••••••••••••••••. •••• (1"21.JW). Buy or lease. *DllYEA• •LITTLL.* SAVE A LOT SHOP A COMPARE 1975MUZIOC ~reo. cndee control, pwr. windows le locb- tnll1 a fine automobile! <11211111T). ~or lease. ,.,... 9761 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IWOllYOU SIUYOUI TOYOJA. SEE US! MAIOUISTOYOTA MISslON VIP.JO ll 1.JllO 4tS.' 210 SZttt -.. ...., ·--, S,000 mi'1, 1Ull WKler IOOd. 9llOO. •••••••••••• •• • •••• •• • • 9li«IO. 71c.llllf VI. •uto. tram., P /S, air coad .• vinyl top. A Beaut.llul car . <mMOM.) P4ft Gro"' Chenol"t I 8211 ... oo ai.cs. H11nh..ql°" l<'ac h 847-6087 549-333 I 72C:ornth 48M1%lorD1-21211 08.ANGECOUNTY'S wa.rr?M. !Mk 00 blk • 4 Speed. T ·To P • .-WUT 2828 HARBOR BLVD r-----·----- <Stttm:z>. 1985 Falrlane, 1ood LINCOLN-llERCUllY CO.STA MESA 11nrm111lll1111rttllrllnld H70 tnnlporalioa car. Make Dealenbip ii DOW OPEN --------...................... . :e:.n NCM012, ~ IAY R.ADllOI 7Z ,_..,.... UNCOLN·llERCURY '100. -..01'14 aft 5. 1? ~~: !~. ':;;; ~V:,~,.:P:Xit "16. 2D,OOO ml'1, ll avocado Urea. $1200 tt•l ofr. IRVINE am. Xlnt cood. $2500 or -.1.. IJ0.7000 btstotr. -..0111 7Jnuc.lmD Aucoma~. pwr. steerio1 • bralree. new tires. AM I'll aereo. Pri. pty. Call 992·1132· before e '71LTDBr'OQlbam,auper 76 IOICAT ''13 Pinto ruaabout,1_P_._m_. _____ _ clean, tl5(). Call att\r ~c. 4 IPd. 88,000 ml, 72n.m1,,..... --------1 Spm, 497.2951 a•k for VILLAGER WAGON. low boot $1500. utiq '71 Corolla, nma peat. Must eell 1 ol s ·can; '68 G ~J.. 4 epd., factory air aaoo.«·lSeO Auto .. All l'JI •tereo . New int, mull sell-QevlmpalaSS, '65Cbev ConeU.6-Bida DOW belDI _rec. ________ , eond., radio. beat.er. lug· . -1 power wlndow9' vinyl owner joined Air Forc:e. Impala or '74 Pin\o labn oo lady 500 pace 74 LTD SIDAM paerack. (1.38PCD). ~Pinto Sl!iOO or bat,,.. root, Wt wheel. cnue S 'fi ' 644 6488 Wagon.SS-~ car lo stock. F1etcber va $2995 1er eontrol. <BPFM> acn ce. . or Jonee Chevrolet 6633 ,..., auto., factory air. • . CaJlM'1.f231 •S .... 6"-75:11. 77 A , .. .._.... eond.. pwr lteerin&. pwr ICAI\ IC.ll30 A 1"1"1" •&au Westminster Ave , brakes, radJo, heater, _..,.., 71 Pinto. while w Gtd lo· 540-5630 76 Coroll9 Wogoa 4 cyl, auto, radio, beater. (5Z7PJA). •$2777 540-5630 ~~;':\~~·~:-:'~: We at mi as le r. C a · vizlylroof. (7ISKYJ). ter. Make offer, will we (OllTKIJ. Exceptional •&-4444~~~~~~~ •12195 price betwn hi&h Ii low bu)'atool)': -540-5a30 26-uaneoR BLVD book. ' Cyl, auto. Still $63'9 'M v~ black, mlllt 'v ~ baa 1SOO ml 's left on war- ____, m• ... t·-"' COSTA MESA rauty. BoUlht oew van. ~. -GlCU• s:M-'1533 evee wknds 77 PWo tll500 8'6-4005 76 ~4111-" c,. 1011,~0\ & SU\ • L1NCOLN ·MER< URY 2626 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA RUNABOUT. vt, 4 spd., 1978 Silver Anoivenary 2828 HARBOR BLVD. VB. auto air COftd pwr v ff 4 We have a good selec.-tlon alt eond., AM /FM radio. EdWoo Corvette, lmmed COST A MESA 1leertai' pwr b;~.kes Plywlllll '''° •• 7 olot.berrme MBZslnour (191SWW)Hu.rrythiaone delivery, buy or lse. AM r•dio, wilh tape: ••11••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1011\SO\ ,\SO\ • llNCOLN ·Ml:llCUllY 8.1.RWICI< DATSUN ,d, I ,,1, I Jl'l '' IH• inventory. Call us today! 2626 HARBOR BLVD ftll'tlutl (408-t64) 75 LTD VinYI root 4 moon roof. 1.974 Ply. Satellite St.a. 1975 VEGA COSTA MESA Sl4H AmrfcmC.,._ 4 door., V8, factory air, <820PCD>. Wag. 9 pass., PS. P 11. Hlit=ltt:u:U:-.. u31-137S 493.3375 pu mv imports reverse logo ..,.. CELICA GT. Coun., 751-1910 ndio, be.It«, vtnyl root. •$4444 Air, Gd. llres, trans. AutomaUc, rtgbt rear ~ 11 ..-(8621..XZ) ic"" 30 Cooler. air shoclta, panel bru.ise Ir only A-C, AM/FM stereo, 8 1964 Corvette SUogray • .r.,666 _..56 trailer hitch, CB Radio $1,000milee. <934UKY). track, deck raclr pin Fastback-A gleaming, .., lncl Good Cood. $1.,800. otil.Y $175 '48 280SE, air. AM !FM. stripes, wire wbls. while red, ortg bea\l\y. Muat 540-5630 921 S. Oruae. S.A. ~· •1pd. excellent condi· w-\an int. lo mllee. aell quickly. Any re· Pl · b S Nupalwl,.~ -~~'!'P.ll'!W'IP!!lllMIH tion.CallaAer6,645-9899 ~9300.962-983t,Aakfot uonable oiler accepted 2626 HAABORBLVD 1969 ymout portlt9Jbl'W ~ ~~~Mlii ... ~llit\iol~ 'ftt ZJO, new engine, mint Rick. AMC 9905 ~-2742 CQSTA MESA . ~?~!!n i!f~r. ~;~ _ . '4Ml:ts ~ caod. must see! Vola;wGIJllt 9770 ....................... '78 Indy pace 2626 HARBOR BLVD. t"8t-HSZ tires. Best otter. a.:mn 1974 Veta. k> miles, new 5Sl-«>77.P.P. ••••••••••H••••••••••• 1913 AMC Sportabout C::.~ every optioa COSTAMESA ..... -;;:••••••••••••••• aft5Pllorweellends. t i res. battery " '75 "-'" . '10 800, S-pass Limo. Navy WE IUY & saL Wap. air. power, &·l available. Zero mileage, MUST SELL "75 Granada ..... 3-cp, AM nr cua. '12 D\ster va. Low ml. l altem&&or. Perfect cood. ~ air, map, 4-sp, w/c:rm hhr. 49,000 mi's, YOLISWAC.845 cood. $ll50. 9ll&80l4 auto tram. $.10,000/best SUper clean snso INt fact air. Xlnt coad. owner. Xlnt cood.. $1.l50. UndM priced. $1750. 10 mi 1• i.mmac. '6850. SZ6.500. 821-1781, 10650 • 6 _ _..,_,ect..._ .. dr HIO olr. Nfter ti11ed. P .O.P. otr.CallMS-281. 845-lJOI. CallMs-5816 e73-G77. ~. BeacbBlvd,Stantoa ..... 6''''"'._. ....... 71'~ 1-------- lnTbeArea!! ! ....................... '70 Ford Torino, ort1. '88 Mu.st.t.nc 289 V8, auto, PC1111111e tt65 '73Vega~rum. aeeda be.id fB Datsun 510, Z dr, runs good, but body ls tern· ble.$t00.~ *'74 710• AJr, AM /FM , m ag wheels. 673-3550. • 4.50SL, 11.000 mi, priced to sell, buy or Lse. 19'18 • "50SLC. new. im· med deli very, buy or lse. ._,.c-. c.. ,._ 751-1910 '76 280Z, A/C, whla, 4-ep, '73 M BZ 280C Coupe . many xtra.s, xlnt cond. 50,000 mi. tan, camel in· S6500/B.0 . 559-7'64. t.r. S8700. Eves aft 6, 581-5547 '76610 wagon, 4-sp, mags,1--------- AM/FM ster, wht w/blk MG 9742 int. Gd shape. 5'8-5038, ••••••••••••••••••••••• aak for Mike. A1klng 'e8Midlet, $1.000. $3500. 64Z..OllZ 'IBDatSJOStn Wp. Good Meil 9744 OODd. AM/Fii casa, lat ••••••••••••••••••••••• MO takea it. 845-llOIS '74 216QZ, lo miles, lllot <.'ODd.. A/C. Best Offer l S:.73113 '72 Dataun PU, low mi, good cond. IUdl. $1750. Call SS7-0l2S. 280Z, '78, auto. A/C, 8000 mi's. 494-0536•~1219 1910GTDill Sl2.SOO CllYDINO> ~.,.Dealer . CREVIER WEST ~&MAM Won oa tame show $.'501S Ca•• 9913 owner. ooty 23,000 mi, P S. xlnt coad.. $1150. Pb ....................... 1uket. cbrome rims. IWOITS Wck purchase power .••••••••••••••••••••••• tmmac .. ooe or a klnd. M&-9021 '71 Firebird Esprit, xlnt puges. "50 afT.G3-346'7 1985 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. :"1 ~ ror $_4i600 cub. '68 ~ w!:iew ~l. " $1295 firm. 6'75-3741 0..•ble 9'55 ~· man trans, 6614 i4 Veca GT Xlnt cood. 645-6120 ~u s e tmmed. ~.548-3332..Xln cond. 71Pblto,whitew~tn-••••••••••••••••••••••• mi a.$1600.837·5'47. S1900. V Coronado ier. Bought new van Ir '76 CutlaA SUpreme. T· '72 Grandville, 9rig 957-SOOO 8:30·4:30 wk VOLKSWAGENc • c '7S XR7, loaded. Air, mustsell.WWll.ll.eprice top,tltwhl.AM VMcas. owner. I.lo\ cood, fully days S...._1 ~·--9915 cruise. tilt, AM /FM somewberebelwnbigb• P !i, P B. air cond. equipped, new radlals,1·.,-.-V-.... -a -G_T_H_l_"_-... -•• -pd------~...-..._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• _._ ~ 831 ...u7 '-......., • Cyl SU c-w IWJ/1.1 .. ~ u..:-a • .., • • ...,..,.., _,.,.,. ""'" ....... ........... • , auto. ver . .....,........ . S8116. 49'7·3'at xlnt $1200 '70 Sedan De Ville, lo ml, Still bas 1500 mi's left on , · ..,,, Top Dollar very lood eng, bes\ olr DodcJt ''l5 warranty. Good car. All PWo '957 72 Grand Prnc. mint 548·.-1 PaidforUsedVW's 963-0lllll,963-6864 ....................... glassbatcbbaclr.S:W-7533 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. A~. P '*\ad, '72Ve,aGTSUUonWgn COMM-.-.. -.. iS Dodge Monaco 4-dr, eves wlmds. '73Squi~Wgn,4-spd,air, metallic silver, blk voyl 41P odsnewtires lowr. """--.'" '72 Cad sedan deVllle, new engine, immac. luggage rack. $1900. top. $2000. P .P. ~ SHOO !tat ofr. •Run~ MOTORS leatber,atereo,Ut.excell Sacrifice.$2150.581-6'11M WaatAda C.11642·5678 751-.5611 eves. peat.75&-UUor'131-484!0 SIMCE 1'51 cond. P.P. 547·56'74 or 1442 So. Brtatol S40-1367 Alltos. Mew HOO ...... Hew 980 Alltot. Mew 9100 Mtot. Hew '800 Aatot, Mew 9100 San•· Ana •---------••• • • • • • • • •••••••• ••••• ••••••••• • • ••••••••••• ••••• • • • • • ••••••••••••• ••• • •• • • • • • ••••••••••• • ••••• • ••• •• •••••••••••• .. um Cad Cpe de Ville, • 546-0220 l.olded. k> ml. 99200. Approx. 2 mi. No. of,_ ___ S"t_s-_n_l.9 __ _ Soulb Coast Pl.ua. • .. c--•• 9tl7 ....................... G rotfl Che•rolet 1821 1 ~CKh ll•ri HunhnqlOIO llf'och 847 ·6087 549-3331 '' '' Did You Forget Mom? It's Still Not Too Late NEW NEW '78 ZEPHYR Z-7 StARTSAT '78 COUGAR XR7 If.ts at •3995 •5493 NIW 171 LINCOLN VERSAILLES IHI MOW CAI flOlt IMI MOW W~ WE LEAU ALL MAKES ALLMODEJ..I • I ' ' ' .. I ' l J ,", '~ \_,\PRI 2626 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • WE LUSE ALlMAK!S ALL MODELS 540-5630 t l ' • l 7 Huntington Beach Fountain Valley. EDITION Aftern oon N.Y. Stoeks . f VOL 71, NO. 1~3. 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1978 TEN CENT~ J Preparing for Chap&n Left in Car Play Money Tricks Extortion Suspect By IOANNE R EYNOLDS Of ... o.I" l'tlet SUH Newport Beach police used $250.000 in play money Monday night to capture a suspect they allege was trying to extort a . quarter of a million dollars from Newport homebuilder Randall Presley. Undercover otricers identified the s uspect as Michael Edward Dempsey. 26, of Paramount. A second suspect is still sought. Police charge that the pair had threatened Presley's life if he didn't deliver the $250,000. company bears his name and that he is listed in the telephone directory. Presley. a resident of Lido lsle. first went to police on May 15. He told investigators that the preceding mgbt he had received a vaguely threatening phone call. Hamilton sa'id1hal during the in vestigat1on of the case, Presley received more threaten- ing calls and a threatening let· ter. At one point, last Wednesday, fours shots from a .45-caliber ~un were fired into Prei.ley's waterfront home. Hamilton said no one was inj ured. Workers construct a concrete vault in <' cemetery at Vevey. Switzerland. where the body of Charlie Chaplin was reburied today. The vault is des igned to ins ure against his body being kidnapped again. Dempsey was captured near Disneyland after a policeman. posing as Presley, left a brief- case stuffed with the phony cash an the back seat of Dempsey's car. ' The dozen officers who had staked out the parking lot where the car was left for delivery of the cash said they ch ased Dempsey about one mile. He was cornered after a minor col- li sion involving a Garden Grove patrol car. Detectives are convinced there are at least two men in- volved m the scheme. he said, "because we heard two separate voices in the phone calls." Comedian Durante .. T aking Treatment HOSPITALIZED Jimmy Durante Bovan Slaying SANTA MONICA <APl Comedian Jimmy Durante, 85, has been admitted to St. John's Hospital where he is undergoing treatment for an upper respiratory infection, a spokeswoman said today The famed "Schnozzola" was reported in satisfactory condi· tion. Spokeswoman Peggy Frank Shaff said Durante was admitted Saturday and was ex- pected to be hospitalized "for about a week." Durante's wife Marjorie. reached by telephone in the couple's Beverly Hills home, said she expected to know later today how long her husband would be hospitalized. She said Durante was "in for some tests.·· Def enJants Argue Pretrial Motions Lawyers for seven defendants allegedly involved in the murder· of Stephen John Bovan of Foun- tain Valley continued today to a rgue pretrial motions that arc expected to take several weeks 10 Orange County Superior Court JudRe Robert P. Kneeland is pres iding over pretrial action which includes a defense motion that murder indictments re- turned by the grand jury a re de- f ecli ve and should be dismissed. Defense lawyers argued Mon· day that evidence favorable to their clients was omitted from Jirand Jury presentations and that the murder charges are based on evidence heavily weighted in favor or the prosecu- tion. Other motions to be argued in- clude motions for dismissal. m~ lions for separate trials and a motion for a court order that wou Id compel a key prosecution witness to take a lie . detector test All seven defendants are ac· cused of involvement in the kill- ing of Bovan, 36, who was shot nine times outside the El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Mild Quake Hits Oxnard OXNARD (AP>·-A minor earthquake awakened residents ln tbJ11 Ventura CowUr ell)' early todey. No damage wH reported. Caltocb aelsmolo«lsta In Pasadena aaJCl the ltmblor. 'Which restatered 3.9 on the Rkbter acale, w aa centored '" the Paclflc Ocean about 20 milH l()Uth of Oxnard. " I Beach on Oct. 22, 1977. Jerry Peter Fiori. 41 . of Hunt ington Beach is charf(ed with the actual kilhng and races the possibility of a death penalty sentence. D e fense attorney Roge r Rosen. representing Fiori. told Judge Kneeland Monday that his client is not being allowed to ex- ercise in the county Jail and is being held for 24 hours a day in a three-fool by nine-foot cell. Fiori is one of three defen- dants. who, the prosecution claims, were imported her e from the East Coast when a con- tract was put out for the murder of Bovan. It is alleged that the contract was authorized when Bovan and others who are expected to a~ pear as prosecution witnesses arranged for the kidnapping of Alexander Kulik, 28, of Newport Beach, who is one of the seven defendants. Police claim the murder o( Bovan brought Into focus a mulU-mlJlion doUar drug smug- gling rlbg which concealed its re\'enues in the assets pr out- wardly respectable business operadons in Orange County. It is alleged t.bat partners in Prasadam Distributing Inc. of Newport Beacb ordered the kill· <See BOVAN, Pa&eAZ> 'lhreat Disliked WASHINGTON (AP) -A key com mfltee chairman wants Leon Jaworskl to soften hi• re-quest lhAt the House threaten to cut off South Kol'ea 's economic aid Ir tNt country reru ... &o cooperate In hi• Influence- boy In• Jnvest11•tlon. Tb• chairman ol the House Intern•· tlonal Relatfon• Committee, Rep. CJemeat Zablocki. pNCUct· ed hla panel would vote today 11ain1t tM proposed reeolutlon maldnc the thr at -unleu lt la rewntten. Teen Tells Of Co<l$t Sex Plot Today. detective commander Richard Hamilton said a second man 1s bemg sought in connec- tion with the case which ap· parently had its roots in a finan- Injuries SHglat EXTORTION TARGET Newport's Presley cial news story listing Presley's Newport Beach-based Cirm as one ·of the top 100 in Southern California. · Hamilton not.ed that Presley's A 16-year-old Huntington Beach youth testified Monday in Orange County Superior Court that defendant Sheldon David Diamond took him to a Laguna Hills hotel last Feb. 27 where he was to have homosexual rela- tions with a wealthy busi· nessmanfromNew York. The student testified shortly after the non-jury trial opened in Judge J a mes K . Turner's courtroom that Diamond told him he would receive half or the $200 fee they would receive Crom Diamond's client. 2 Suspects Held In BB Shooting The young witness told Judge Turner that h e agreed t o participate with the New York businessman in sex acts in re· turn for the $100 fee. And the witness testified that he had performed similar sexual acts on prior occasions during the eight months he had known Diamond who often visited him at his Huntington Beach home. Sheriff's officers booked Diamond. 31 , of Los Angeles on charges of pimping and pander- ing after an investigator who posed as the wealthy busi- nessman from New York arrest- ed Diamond in a room at the Holiday Inn before any sex acts could take place. The investigator, who will ap- pear as a prosecution witness. said he paid Diamond $200 with the understanding that the Hunt- ington Beach youth brought to the hotel would receive $100. It is alleged by the prosecution that Diamond had a number of boys, rangmg in age from 11 to 16, on his books. All were readily available for male clients seek- ing homosexual relationships. officers said. Diamond is being held in the county jail with bail set at $50,000. A dispute over parking rights at a Huntington Beach comer tire shop Monday night left two men wounded when a car cruised past shortly afterward a nd its occupants fired a shotgun blast into the shop. The auto was pursued by a policeman who had been parked just around the comer writing a report and two suspects were ar- rested a short distance from the shooting scene. Don Waite. 30. of the May Tire Service. 8021 Warner Ave .. and Abraham Camez, 19, both of Huntington Beach. were only slightly injured. police said. They were treated al Hunt· ington lntercommunity Hospital following initial attention by par a m edics but weren 't hospitalized. investigators said. Booked for investigation of as- s a u It with intent to commit murder were Scott A. J erden, Red Hideout Found ROME <AP> -A terrorist hideout, possibly used by the Red Brigades. was discovered in the nearby beach town of Ostia during a widespread search for the killers of former Premier Aldo Moro. police said today. Police first reported the apart- ment was used by the Red Brigades, the group that kid· napped Moro March 16 and killed him SS days later. but they later said they couldn't be sure. Almost Equal Poll Shows Hopeftds Close SAN FRANCISCO <AP) --Attorney general can- didates of both parties still are locked in an extreme· Jy close battle for the nomination, according to the California Poll, which found large numbers of voters still undecided or uninformed on the race. Pollster Mervin Field said today that U.S. Rep. Yvonnt> Burke and Los Angeles city attorney 'Burt Pines continue to divide aJmost evenly the votes of the 63 percent of Democrats polled who committed themselves to a candidate. Meanwhile, state Sen. George Oeukmejian and former U.S. Attorney James Browning split the votes of the 49 percent of Republic.ans who have an opinion in the r.ace. Field said. The candidates have been nosc·to·nose during Field's last three ,P.OIJS. The Jateat. poll o! 1.224 Cali!omiens shows Pines sllghtly ahead with 32 percent over Ms. Burke's 31 percent. whUe 37 percent ot Democrats polled had no preference. On the GOP side. I>eukmejian won 25 percent or the preference vote and Brownma it per· cent. with Sl percent undeclded. The fntcrvtcws for thP ooll were conducted May 1·8. 19, or 6522 Shelly Drive, Hunt- ington Beach, and a 17·year-old juveniJe passenger in his car. Jerden was held at Orange County Jail in lieu or $25.000 bail on the felony charge today, while his companion was lodged at Orange County Juvenile Hall without bail. Korean Cash Taken by Congressmen? WASHINGTON <AP> -In- vestigators have circums tantial evidence that some present House members might have taken e nvelopes s tuffed with SlOO bills from a former South Korean ambassador. sources said today. But the House ethics commit- tee sources said none or the evidence is strong enough to pursu e without former Am· ba ssador Kim Dong J o's testimony. The sources. asking not to be identified. said the evidence 1s so circumstantial and vague that it is hard even to say how many current congressmen might have taken the money, but something like 10 Is more ac· curate than any higher range. "You really shouldn't play the numbers game." one in- vestigator said. "It ts hard to de- fine who you include and who you don't." The possibility that the House ethics committee bas any sus- pecta at all was leaked for the first time on the eve of a com- mittee vote on whether the House should threaten to cut South Korea's economic aid in an effort to get t he am- bassador's testimony. The House Intern ational Rela· tlons Committee had planned to vote on a resolution softening the threat this morning but put off action until later ln \he day, lC then. Leon Jaworakl. the House el!'lc:s commlttee'i s pecial ~ou osel, and House leaders worked out a reeoluUon that would state that no further U.S. economJc aid thou.Jd be voted for Seoul until the ambaasador anawen quntiona under oath. Committee Jeaders we~ try- ing to work out a com9romise to Hy only that South Korea 's cooperation abould be con- sidered by Conareas when It votes on aid for Seoul. Th• former ambauador wa accused at pubJlc hearlnp ol tryln1 to 1lvo the envelopes atuffea wUh money to as many u 24 Hout4I members. Hamilton said Dempsey has had little to say other than to tell police. "I 'm afraid for my hfe. I'll just go back to prison." Hamilton declined to comment on the location or Ptesley or his family other than to note that they a re being protected by bodyguards Dempsey is being held in city jail in heu of $10.000 bail. Cruise Ship Bomb Threat Being Probed LONDON <APl --The Ministry of Defense announced that a three-man bomb·disposal team left a British &ase late to- day to parachute onto the cruise liner Oriana oft the Azores after a bomb threat was received. The ship has 2.400 people aboard. The announcem ent said the team left the Royal Air Force transport base at Lyneham in a Hercules plane. The bomb threat was con· tained in a letter delivered earlier in the day to the London office of P & 0 Steam Naviga- tion Co .• owners of the 43,340-ton liner. P & 0 said the threat was turned over to Scotland Yard, which alerted the Ministry of Defense. Capt. Philip J ackson, master of the Oriana, was also advised by r adio. a P & O spokesman said. The company said J ackson or- dered a search of his ship, which is carrying l,600 passengers and 800 crew. P & 0 would give no details of the threat or who made 1t. But it was obvious that the company. Scotland Yard and the Ministry of Defense were treating 1t seriously. Probe Rule d O ut SAN FRANclSCO (AP> -No grand jury probe will be sought on former supervisor Robert M e ndel sohn 's ca mpa i gn finances, District A1torney Joseph Freitas has announced. apparently ending a long dispute over Mendelsohn's handling of funds ror an unsuccessful 1974 campaign. Orange Coas t Weathe r Considerable low cloudi· ness through Wednesday. becoming mostly sunny Wednesday afternoon. Lows tonight ~2 to 58. Highs Wednesday 64 to 68. INSIDE TODA 'W William "Digger" Young Jr.. an under1aker. love$ clowning around. See !tory Page A9. l•lle x f I . .\Z OA1LV PU.Of H:~ T U9!d!): M!,X 23 191fS Carter Accepts War Jet Plan W ASlUNGTON (J\P) -Presi· dent Carter, reversing his earlier decision. has approved Pentagon plans for two more uJ. trasophisticated flying war rooms. which the nation's leaders could use to command U.S. forces in a nuclear war. The additional Airborne Emergency Command Posts. at about $126 million each, would be th.is country's most costly airer~ .. Tbree of the jumbo jets are alread y operating. The fouct.ll . with more advanced equipment. 1s being readied for service next year . Shortly after he became pres1 · dent last year, Carte r was briefed aboard one of the E4A command planes by members of Way Clear On Latest Gas Plan WASHINGTON <AP) -House c•nergy conferees turned back to- day a last-minute attempt to de· rail a proposed naturaJ gas pric· ing compromise. The action cleared the way for expected approval of the plan that would free natural gas from federal price controls in 1985. Conference leaders predicted the proposal would be approved later today and then r atified by Senate negotiators. House negotiators rejected, 17 to 8, an attempt by Rep. Toby Moffett. 0.Conn . who opposes deregulation. to get the panel to sidestep the gas issue and send to the floor three relatively minor parts of Pres ident Carter 's f1ve-sect1on energy bill on which tentative agreement had already been reached. Moffett claimed the gas pnc· 1ng compromise would be a 'burden to consumers" and should be rejected. .. The menta lity that has g uided us has b een to do anything to get a bill and at any cost,·· Moffett, who favors con- -tinued price controls, said. But conference chairman Harley M. Staggers, D-W. Va .. clai~ the compromise, which resulted from &be months of in- tensive negotiations, "is the best hope we have to resolution of this issue" Bad 'Shine' Fatal to Foilr ATLANTA <AP) -Four peo. pie are dead in west-central Georgia because a moonshiner may have tossed an old car bat· lery into his mash, poisoning the home brew with lead, says Dr. James Collins. But relatives of those victims and seven others who have become ill will not help him find the still, Collins said Monday. The doctor said he first noticed the symptoms about eight months ago. and the first victim died about two months later . The most recent death was three weeks ago. Injured Tot Found LOS ANGELES CAP) -Eigh- teen hours after a 41h-month-old boy was believed kidnapped from his crib while hls father grappled with an armed In- truder. officers found the chiJd tn an Inglewood aJJey. A police ~spokesman said Monday that 'Terence James was taken to the ounty -USC Medical Center here he was listed in critical conditfon with a head injury . lht: military battle staff who would run the aircraft's t.'laborate equipment in time of w3r. The planes would provide a haven for the president and top civilian and milttary leaders in the event a nuclear attack threatened ,dest ruction of the capital. Art.er that flight. Carter. re· portedly dismayed at the cost of the added planes. told Defense Secretary Harold Brown in ef re~t not to buy the planned firth and sixth mode1s. The SIX plane neet had been originally planned by the Ford administration. Carter's change of mind was indicated in a speech Monday by Assistant Defense Secretary Gerald P. Dinneen at Hanscomb Air Force base. Mass. "The Defense Department bas r ecently received from the White House approval to pro- ceed with the acquisition or a n eet of six . . . E4 aircraft." Dinneen said. .. He said the two aircraft would be purchased in 1980 and 1981. Pentagon officials confirmed that the president approved a go-ahead for the two planes after Brown. in a review Carter ordered, reaffirmed the value of the program. In peacetime, the aerial com· m and posts are assigned to the Strategic Air Command, which always has one or the planes aloft. One E4 is kept ready for possi· ble presidential use at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., outside Washington. The others are sta- tioned et SAC headquarters at Offutt Afr Force Base, Neb. F romPage AJ BOVAN ... mg of Bovan and brought Flori and two compa ni ons to California for that purpose. Police claim that members of the Hare Krishna movement played a major role in the opera- tions of Prasadam. Forme r defendant Ro y Christopher Richard. 28, at one time a high ranking devotee in the Hare Krishna movement In ~aguna. Beach, has been granted 1 mm urut}' from prosecution m retu rn for his promised testimony as a prosecution wit· ness. Defense attorneys tried Mon- day to remove Judge Kneeland from the case by filing an af· fidavit or prejudice against him. suc:h documents allege that the Judge named is biased against the defendant and is not capable of ruling fairly in any pretrial or trial action. Judge Kneeland rejected the affidavit and told defense at· torneys they had waited far too long to file such a document. Quake Hazard Measure Due DENVER CAP > -A federal earthquake hazard act passed last year still hasn't shaken the masses or Congress, says Cle- ment Shearer. administrative assistant lo Rep. George E. Brown Jr , D-Calif. The Earthquake H aza rd Reduction Act. Sherarer said , was designed to expand earth- quake research activities in the United States and trv to co- ordinate them with emergency preparedness measures Shearer told an earthquake hazard information workshop Monday that President Carter's advisory office on science and technology has worked on an Im· plementation plan since October and should publish It any day. Dellyl"t .............. MRS. MILAN MILLEA (LEFT), MRS. ARNOLD KEARNS ADMIRE THE GREENERY Laguna Garden Clubber• Were Among Those Who Got Rare View of Smith Estate Monday Gardens Showcased Sime Conventioneen Tour Laguna Eatate By STEVE MITCHELL Of tt. o.lly l'llM St.ff The woman with the floppy hat put her hand over her mouth and gasped. "How on earth do you keep the caler.P.illers off of your pelargoniums, 'she asked. A lice Bechthold beamed and said. ''It's a lot or work for three of us, believe me ." Mrs. Bechthold led more than 200 members of the California Garden Clubs Inc. around the Lon V. Smith estate Monday during a day-long tour of south Orange County homes. The garden ladies are attend· ing their organization's 47lh con- vention In Costa Mesa this week. a nd a tour o r the 11 -acre S mithcllff estate in Laguna Beach provided the women an opportunity to visit a home seldom seen by outsiders. Alice Bechfhold m et each of the five tour buses as they pulled up in front Of the walled CO· trance to the Smith estate. "Welcome to Smlthcliffs." she sa id. "My name is Allee Bechthold and I live here. rm the gardener's wife " As the camera-toting women climbed out of the buses and walked the 300 yards from the iron gates to the blufrtop, they viewed a variety of trees and plants some had never seen out· side a garden book. "Is that a Melaleuca tree." one woman asked. reaching up lo stroke a twisted. wbite..bark giant. "The wind shapes the limbs.·· another responded. "That's why 1t 's twisted around lik~ that.·· A forest of junipers greeted the women next to the three· story weeke nd house of Lon Smith and his wife. Marguerite. And a real garden club pleaser were pots full of cymbidium or· chids on the front porch or the six-bedroom home. Schoolgirl Vietim Viejo Man Nabbed In Rape, Beating By PIDLIP ROSMARIN Of IN o.lll' Plie. Staff A Mission Viejo m an who police said had been confined until recently for sex crimes was arrested Monday and charged with the rape and brutal beating of an El Toro schoolgirl. Booked at Orange County Jail early today on a charge of at- tempted murder was Warren Dale Clewell. 28, a short-order cook. He was held on $250,000 bail. Irvine police Lt J erry Boyd said additional charges of kid· napP.ing with intent to commit bodily harm, and rape, would be sought today. Boyd said investigation con· firmed a report that Clewell was Suicide Victim Found in Field The body of an Orange County man who a pparently committed suicide was found in a field in the Costa Mesa-Santa Ana area early today, Santa Ana officers reported. The man's identity and details about the case were not Im· m ediat ely available, officers said. The man apparently lived on Sunflower A venue and his ~Y was found nearby, police said. released two months ago from Atascadero State Hospital for the criminally disturbed. Clewell had been under treat· ment for rape and kidnap or. fenses for an undisclosed period oftime, according to police. He was arrested just after 4 p.m. Monday in Santa Ana by Irvine detectives acting on in- formation from an anonymous informant. The victim of the crime with which Clewell is charged. a 13· year -old girl. remained an serious but stable condition to- day at a hospital. She was kidnapped last Thurs· day as she walked home from Serrano Intermediate School. Her abductor forced her Into what she said was a dirty white Cadsllac. She told police he drove her to a dirt road in Irvine-little-used Barranca Parkway-raped her and beat her over the head, then dumped her out of the car. "Is it true you're not supposed to touch the leaves of cym- bidiums.'' a woman asked the gardener's wife. "Oh . I touch them all the time." Mrs Bechthold laughed. running her fingers along a long green st.em. "l never heard that before." The women moved past tbe 50-year-old gues t house to a lookout point overlooking the beach al Emerald Bay. "I don·t see how you keep this place up," a woman wearing a blue beret said. . Mrs . Bechthold, her husband Art. and groundskeeper Mike Newman work fulltime al the estate. mowing lawns. pull\ng weeds and trimming trees. "We lost about 10 trees dunng this year 's storms.·· Mrs Bechthold recalled "I bet Art made 300 trips to the dump with the clippings and leaves." The Bechtholds have worked for Lon Smith for nearly 23 years. the l ast seven at Smithcliffs . Before that they stayed on a 210.acre ranch the 86-year-old oilman owned an Bakersfield. Mike Newman has worked at Smilhcliffs for lbe past seven years. The 78-year-old Irish gardener said the Smiths come down from their Beverly Hills home nearly every weekend. "And they always bring guests during the summer months," the gardener said. Newman said Smith m ade his money in the oil fie lds of Bakersfield. after beginning his career "selling everything from shoestrings to neckties. to the gandy dancers on the railroad ... Lo n Smith still goes lo his Beverly Hills offi ce during the week, and Mrs. Bechthold said he can't wait to get to work on Mondays That leaves five days for the two gardeners and Mrs. Bechthold to get the L1tguna Beach estate in order. The grounds are crowded with pines. olive trees. citrus trees and acres of lawns and gardens. "It's a chore aJI right." Mike said as he helped a garden club member aboard the tour bus. "But the Smiths are the nicest people I ever met in my life.·· And the Smith estate is one of the nicest the garden clubbers had seen, said slate garden club president Mrs. Eugene Woesner. ® liEM WISE ORANGE COAST "'" DAILY PILOT Aid Delayed A few years ago General Electric creacea a lew gem· size. fme quality dlemonds as an experiment. These stones were given to the Smithsonian. They were extremely expensive to produce. much more ex· pensive than !along diamonds out of the ground. Neverth&- l8$s. the resultant put>llc1ty of GE s one-lime experiment has led many people to be deceived Into believing that Imitation diamonds made from colorless synthetic material are actually synthetic diamonds. To com· pouno the problem. some manufacturers and sellers 01 this material have given 1f names irnit suggest diamond· like material =:'l:.~~;."f.'::,:.:::::~~ CM" Pul>l;"'"'O'--'4owMt"1t...,,.,.. -c=:-':'.::.:~~IN=l~::,.I~ l•ln V•tl~f. 1,.¥,nf', $4d4f.0.Cll Vallt• .. M .._ ...... \o .. tftC.0 .. 1 4•111CJ1t"9Qj0"41•~· "°" 1, PUbll~ S.turo1.,, ..-id: Suftd.t'f\. ,,.. c;~N~~t.~1lt~~~'~.:~1tl)O Wt~ IM• __ .. _ P..-•\to.flll•f'CI Pvtlllt\l'W'f' J-.•11 C'to<ln V1 ,. P'""''°'"' •"tf GfN'f"I Mt._ ...... "'-"'•tt<9"ll Ecttto-t-• A .. ..,..... .._,....,..e .... CM• ... M I.Mt ........... """ ""'"'""' ... _, ... , ...... . ----.... ,, °'-'-· fa<tOf H11ntlnaton h~ Office t'1lf&t<t< .. 9evlt-¥ttr(I ~·"~ 'ldctl"fl• ,. o eo. roo . ._ OffltH L~=·~~=~~ .. t .....,.._.v,11., >"'1u"••.._ ., .... o._,._ T~cn·•~ ctlM6fted ~•ttt.tno ..a>a11 ,,__tllOr•-~•C-11 ... ~tno --,;: "" °':.. ~.::..~'""":..::::. ~r.., ... !"Z' .. ~ .. -....... ~ft .... , .. ...... J .. ..ti-• _,., ... , ... , .... .. ..,., __ ..... ~ .... -·-..... "' Ct\!• ...... tl .. Ntl• .... te•lllt141" .. (at,,.. ",. -~ 11\t f!l••I ... te _,,IMY, "'4111M' I ~IMl>INf , . Second Call Gives Location Costa Mesa poHce and firemen spent an anxious half hour today a fter a n e lderly woman telephoned for help but, unable to hear the dispatcher, she hung up before making clear her ad· dress. For more than 30 minutea, un- til the woman called baclc al about 8:30 a.m., two palro1 cars aped to possible locatlons and communicaUons officert ~eyed and replayed a U.pe recor of the conversation wh le 1earchin1 map booka. The problem was that only the atreet number, not the atreet name. were dlatinguishoble on the tape ill whlcb the woman pleaded for help, uyln1 her dau1hw 1uffered a stroke and that she bene1I waa UI. Commwitcatlona worke.ni also p)eced tdephooe calls to popl· bte adctr.MI but taUed to locate. t the woman. Minutes before she called back, police Lt. J ohn Moquin said, "It worries the hell out of me because I know somewhere out there there's a little old lady wondering where the police and firemen are." When the woman c.alled back, paramedtc units' were dls· patched even before the can was completed. They reached the woman's north Costa Mesa home w1thln minutes and reported that ~ daughter was in stable cond1Uoo but droW1y. ParamMl01 Wttf! 1tlll at U\it scene alm<>1t an !tour later but said the woman would probably be tranaported to Coeta Me.a Memortal Hospital . "l UUnk when a person calla ror help they're entitled to 1et It," Lt. MoqUin aaid. "No ex- cu.sea." No m •l •rfal 11 really diamond-Ilka, no matter wh•t 1i II called. No oen-~roactles dlamona 1n hardness, 1n its 1b1llty to !'Mist scratching and. thus. its ability to r1tam Its brllll,nce. When a c amp•lon was leunched to mafklt 'f A G a couple of years ago. the state- ment was often made that not even a jOMler could tell tl'I• ... al from tf'8 fake Now we hive CHARLES H. BARR Acoci ........ Liii• .. # ' Mobster Colombo Succumbs NEWBURGH. N.Y. lAP> -former underworld chieftain• Joseph Cok>mbo Sr .• left a1Dl06t lolallr, paralyzed by an as- sa111ln s bullet seven yean qo. died at St. Luke Hoapltal here. botpllaJ officials aald today. He was SS. Cot0«nbo. gunned down in um at an ltatlan·American Day raJ. ty In Columbus Circle in mJd- Manhattan, d1ed Monday night. the hospital aald. He had been admitted ln a semlcomatose state on May 6. Dr. John C. Bivona Jr .• who was attending Colombo, said death resuJted from long-term • • complications stemming from his injuries. The immediate cause of death was cardiac at· rest. he said. A hospital spokesman sald the former mob leader ••passed away very quietly." Colombo had been unable to lead an active llfe as a busi· nessman, an Italian-American civic leader and, according to authorities. one of the nation's most powerful underwor ld leaders since he was shot in the head at close range three times during the rally. He required round·the·clock nursing care. He could not talk nor write, and, except for the thumb and forefinger on his right band, be could not move For much of the time since the Italian Unity Day rally shooting. he was semicomatose. A co-founder of the Italian. American Civil Rights ~ague. Colombo was shot by J erome Johnson on J une 28, 1971 Johnson, 24. was fatally shot on the s pot. Johnson was not a known member or the un der world, but the shooting was considered by authorities lo be part of a reud with the Gallo crime family. l m mediately afterward s. power-hungry mobsters seized whatever Colombo's associates could oot protect in the Colombo crime empire. ln 1969 Colombo was identified ln tbe Congressional Record as a com missioner of t he Cosa Nostra, as it was then caned. and as a boss of the former Joseph Profaci crime family. Quake Shakes Japan; Tidal Wave Feared TOKYO (A'P> -An earth· quake in the East China Sea rat· tied southern and weslem Japan today and authoties warned res· idents to brace for a possible "moderate" tidal wave in its wake. Police said there were no im· mediate reports or casualties or damage on the southern islands nearest the quake, Yaku Jima and Kyushu. Jn Tokyo, the meteorological agency officials targeted the quake's center ~bout 22 miles off the Japanese coast and said 1t registered four on a Japanese scale of seven. The Uppsala Seismological Institute in Stockholm. Sweden. said the tremor measured 7.3 on the Richter Scale and was cen- tered 135 miles below the earth's sudace. U.S. seismological monitors said the quake reg- istered 6.7 Richter on their equipment at Golden, Colo. an even better 11nltat1°" being sold as a diamond sub9utute. II Is called "cubic ztrcon1a" tZr02). A nicely faoeted CZ ap- pears to be mUCh more con· vlnc1ng tf\MI ""Y of the other diamond 1m1tations and can poN a definite ldentll1eatlon prot>lem to the unwary. Well. this jewekW can always tell. Gemologleal tra1rung and years of experience g1vea me this conf i dence. •nd my customers benefit trom my knowledge. Diamond Imitation• have their plaoe . • . they •r• cos· tume l•welry .• as~ to line t•welry. ThQse large. lluny stones are good 10< COC*ta11 peny chatter: they heote a lot or shock tlPPMl and~ l>e fun. Untortunately. t'1eae 11onu 1eratch and abr•de com· peratl~ ... ly and tMlr gltt• ter tum• to gtoom. Then every- bOdy. t'<>t only yoYr jewelef. w111 know'°' wre. . It you'd like to ... a CZ, come In. we have one on h•nd to thow you. It la 1¥r In M<d· n ... (dllmOnd la 10) end la ap- pro111mately t. 7 tins he•vtor than dlM'Ol\d • 7 \ Irvine ~ I r EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 1'3, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES an T29brr-.sll Contract Revealed Irvine Company President Peter Kremer announced today that the Taubman Company Inc. will assume manageme nt of Fashion Island. the Irvine Company's regional s hopping center in Newport Beach. K erma n made the an · nounce m ent al a morning meeting of the cente r 's merchant association The Taubman Compa ny 1s owned by A. Alfred Taubman. one of the new owners of the lrivine Company and chairman of the land development firm's board or directors. No details were released about the terms or the management agreement. Irvine Company spokesman Martin Brower said the length or the management contract and the money involved would be announced later Such a move ha s been expected since Taubman and a consortium of investors bought the land company last summer for $337.4 million. Taubman Company Inc. is one of the nation's biggest regional shopping center developers. The firm, which is based in Troy, Mich .. owns and operates 16 major s hopping centers across the country. Fashion Island. located in the middle or the Newport Center. includes six major department sto res -Neima n·Marcus, Bullock's Wilshire. Robinson's, BuHum's, The Broadway and J. C. Penney -as well as 80 other retail businesses. Kremer told the merchants that the Irvine Company would retain ownership or Fashion l!.land. Reagan Raps 'Scare Talk' SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Former California Gov. Ronald R eagan says the hotly controversial Proposition 13 would "not only be beneficial t o the business chmate. but also to the people of California." At an impromptu news C'onference here Mond ay, Reagan labeled as "scare talk" arguments that the t ax r eduction 1nit1at1ve would cripple schools and municipal services Tanker Crippled LONDON <AP) The chief engineer of the ill fated US · owned s upertanker Amoco Cadiz said Monday five bolts in the steering gear broke during a storm that hurled the disabled vessel onto the French coast and set off the world's worst oil spill. The four·year-old 263,000·ton tanker. owned by Amoco Jn. ternational and registered in Liberia. spewed its 65·million· gal lon cargo last March. blanketing the scenic Brittany coast in a residue that's still be· ing cleaned two months afler the accident. Eighl, BUJJes lmretivaJed Eight Orange County Transit District buses were out or commission to· day after somebody stole the Inside handles that al· low drivers to open and close the doors, Irvine police reported. The buses were parked overnight in a main· tenance yard at 14736 Sand Canyon Ave. In Irvine. A district official said he bad no Idea why an1one would steal the handles, worth about " apiece, other than ror spite. He wu more concerned about the $6,000 district service truck In which the lhief c~ them olf. . - EXTORTION TARGET Newport's Presley Extortion Suspect Arrested By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tM D•llY Piiot St.ff Newport Beach police used $250,000 in play money Monday night to capture a suspect they allege was trying to extort a quarter or a million dollars from Newport homebuHder Randall Presley. Undercover officers identified the suspect as Michael Edward Dempsey, 26, or Paramount. A second suspect is still sought. Police charge that the pair had threatened Presley's li(e if he didn't deliver the $250,000. Dempsey was captured near Disneyland after a policeman, posmg as Presley, left a brief- case stuffed with the phony cash in the back seat of Dempsey's ('ar. The dozen officers who had staked out the parking lot where the car was left for delivery of the cash said they chased Dempsey about one mile. lie was cornered after a minor col· lision involving a Garden Grove patrol car. Today, detective commander Richard Hamilton said a second man is being sought in connec· lion with the case which ap· parently had its roots in a finan· cial news story listing Presley's Newport Beach·based firm as one of the top 100 in Southern California. Hamilton noted that Presley's company bears his name and that he is listed in the telephone d1re<'tory. Presley. a resident or Lido Is le. first went to police on May 15. He told investigators that the preceding night he had received a vaguely threatening phone cal I. llamilton said that during the invesligalion or the case. Presley received more threaten· in~ <'alls and a threatening let· ler. At one point, last Wednesday. fours shots from a .45-callber gun were fired into Presley's waterfront home. Hamilton said no one was injured. Detectives are convinced there are at least two men In· volved in the scheme, he said, "because we heard two separate voices in the phone calls." HamUton said Dempsey has had little to say other than to tell police. "I'm afraid for my life. I 'JI just &o back to prison.'' Hamilton declined lo comment on the location of Presley or his ramUy other thatl to note that they are being protected by bodyguards. Demps.et is being. held In city jail in Heu of $10.000 )>ail. Threat Oi41iked WASRINGTON (AP) ,. key committee chalrma wants Leon Jaworski to soften his re· quest that the House threaten to cut off South Korea's economic aid if that country refuses to l'ooperate In hie tnflueoce· buying Investigation . The chairman of the House lntema· Uonal Relations Committee, Rep. Clement Zablocki, predJct· ed bis panel would vote t4day a11lnst the proposed resolution maldn, lhe threat -unleu It ts rewritten. Today·s Clo~iog N. Y. Stoe!k!!t ORANGE COUNTY1 CALIFORNIA TUESDAY1 MAY 23, 1978 TEN CENTS I • ID .Airpor; Combine Studied By JACKIE HYMAN OI l1lie O.lly ~lit S\41ff Orange County Airport Manager Robe rt Bresnahan testified today that he believes it is possible to combine military and civilian use of an airport. Bresnahan was questioned by Newport Beach City Attorney Dennis O'Neil during a hearing at the county courthouse on a s tate noise variance being sought by county officials for Orange County Airport. The latest noise variance granted by the California Department of Transportation expired in December. Because the noise generat ed by the airport exceeds normally permitted levels in the adjacent residential area. such variances must be applied for annually. Questioned by O'Neil. Bresnahan said he has looked {lt a variety of possible alternative airport sites in Orange County, including Los Alamitos Naval Air Station and El Toro Marine Air Station but declined to recommend any or the sites. ·'The Southern California Association of Governments <SCAG l is about to undertake a new area study to determine where best to meet the air traffic needs of Orange County," Bresnahan said. The subject of airport noise h as been 8 matter or controversy as the area around Oranae County Airport has become more densely populated. ~artlcipat.inl lD the current hearing• are the cities of Newport Beach and Tustin. the Santa Ana Heights Homeowners Association and the Community Airport Council. The hearings are expected to wind up Thursday, at w'lich time the hearing officer will review the evidence and make a recommendation to CalTrans. During a break in the hearings today. O'Neil said that, if the variance isn't granted. the airport would have to cut its scheduled jet flights from about 40 a day to about four a day. "Realistically speaking. the variance is probably going to be granted." O'Neil said. He said his city's purpose in participating in the hearings is to ens ure that the variance includes strict provisions against any expansion of the airport. HEW Plans Party WASHINGTON <AP) -The Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare. which spends money al the rate of $500 million a day. 1s throwing a low budget birthday party to celebrate its 25th year in existence. Cost of the two.day party will be "no more than $15,000." said HEW spok esman John Blamphin. "That's less than the depart- ment spends in three seconds." e o.lly l"llM S\41ff ....... ARRESTEE IN RAPE CASE LED OFF TO JAIL Irvine Reserve Officer John Burns Guides Suspect 85,000 Asked Irvine Mulls Plea To Aid Festival The Irvine City Council will be asked by city administrators tonight to resist a plea for partial public financing of the annual Harvest Fes tival. Peter Walker, this year's president of the Irvine Harvest Festival. citing cash problems, 1s asking councilmen to appropriate ~.o_oo. The money. he said. is needed to cover pre.festival <'osts of ID· s urance. electrical contracting. restroom facilities. rental of a cirC'us big lop. fencing and on· s ite security However. Paul Brady. ass1s· tant city manager. suggests that these and other funds should be raised from the volunteer com· munity -not the government. The city's past Harvest Festivals. staged in 1975. 1976 and 1977. were accomplished without any direct financial as· sistance from the C'lty, which provided s taffing assistance worth. in man-hours. an estimat· ed Sl,000 to $1.800 per year. Brady recommends the same kind of assistance tlHs year . Previous festivals. he said, made profits which e nabled directors of the next year's festivals to pay ror preliminary expenses. The 1975 festival turned over $6,000. the 1976 festival pro· duced a $7,000 to $8,000 profit for use in 1977. The 1977 festival. however, made no profit. Brady said. Walker said today that if the council turns down the money request. "We'll muddle along sorrrehow." He added. "lt would <'ertainly help, but it wouldn't make or break us." Walker said last year the festival board operated with a budget or SS0.000. Bills from last year. he said. only this month will finally be paid m full Partly because of the need last year to stnng out payments, he said, this year's festival budget was C'Ut to S35.000 The money is raised through contributions by residents. service clubs. merchants and m dustry. The festival is scheduled Oct. 20. 21 and 22. al Culver Dnve and Barranca Road tn Wood · bridge. Hughes Will Trial Ending Comedian Durante Taking Treatment LAS VEGAS <API --No rorger would expect anyone to believe that Howard Hughes would leave a will on c heap yellow paper. filled with mis- spelled words, so the so·caJled "Mormon Will" mus t be legitimate. attorney H arold Rhoden said Monday. SANTA MON ICA CAPI - Comedian Jimmy Durante, 85, has been admitted to St. John's Hospital where he Is undergoing treatment (or an upper respiratory infection. a spokeswornan said today. The famed "Schnoisola" was reported ln satisfattory condl· Uoh. SpokHwoman Pe gay Frank Shalt said Durante was admitted Saturday 4nd was ex· pecied to be hospltalh:ed "for about a )'t'eek." Durante's wHe M•rJorle. reacthed by t~Jephone in the couple's Beverly Hills home. said abe expfftM to know later today how Joni her husband tk()uld be boeplt.llied. She aaid Durante was ••tn for 1ome \ teltl.0 Final arguments began in the trial to determine ir the docu· ment is the last will and testa· ment of the late industrialist. "Hughes wrote it I think you know that. r think you know that now." Rhoden told the eight· member Jury a11 he began his closing argument. Red Hideout Found ROME <API -A terrorist hideout, possibly used by the Red Brigades, was discovered in tht nearby beach town or OsUa during • widespread sear~h for the ktllers of former Premier Aldo Moro. police said today Police first ~ported the apart· m ont waa used by the Red Brt1ades. the aroup lbat kid· napped Morq March 18 and kUled h1m 5S d4ys later, but they lat.er aald they cowdn 't be aura. ape .EI -Toro· Girl, 13, Victim By PIDUP ROSMARIN Of the Delly ...... SUlff A Mission Viejo man who police said had been confined until recently for sex crimes wa:-. arrested Monday and charged with the rape and brutal beating <>f an El Toro schoolgirl. Booked at Or<.ange County J<.111 early today on a charge of at templed murder was Warren Dale Clewell. 28. a short ·order cook He was held on $250,000 bail Irvine poll<'<' Lt Jerry Boyd said additional ,...charges of kid napP.ing with intent to commit bodily harm. and rape, would• be sought today. Boyd said invest1gat1on con· r1rmed a report that Clewell wa:-. released two months ago rrom Atascadero State Hospital ror the C'r1mmally disturbed Clewell had been under treat menl for rape and kidnap of fenses for an undisclosed period ofli me. accordin~ to poll<'e . He was arrested just after .t pm. Monday in Santa Ana by Irvine detectives acting on in formation from an anonymou~ informant. The victim of the crime with .which Clewell 1s charged. a 13· year·old girl. r e mained in serious but stable condition to· day at a hospital. She was kidnapped last Thur.., day as she walked home from Serrano Intermediate Sc}lool _ Her abductor forced her into what she said was a dirtv whih' Cadillac. · She told police he drove her to a dirt road in lrvine-little·used Barranca Parkway-raped her and beat her over the head, then dumped her out of the car. Poli<'e, who at first thought the man had used a lire iron to split her face and fracture her skull in numerous places. now beliew he may have used a la rgl• wrench. The wrench 1:-. one or several objects sought today as pohcP !.earched Clewell"s home. where he was living with hi!> elderl~ <See SUSPECT. Page A21 MADDY WANTS TAX DEBATE LOS ANGELES 11\P I - Republican gubernatorial can d1date Ken Maddy challengecl primary opponents Ed Davi~ and Evelle Youn~er today to dt-· bate him on the merits of lhl' Jarvis tax initiative "The public 1s incensed." hl' told a news conference. "Th1!> 1..., wh at we s hould be talkint! about." Maddy, an assemblyman from f''reSOO, IS the Only One Of the three candidates who opposes Propos1t1on 13. which I <•'< C'rusader Howard J arvi ~ co iiuthored. Fellow GOP hopeful Pete Wilson, San Diego'c; mayor, also opposes Proposition 13. Coast ll'eath e r Considerable low cloud1· ness through Wednesday. becoming mostly sunny Wc dnC'sday afternoon. Lows tonight 52 to 58. Highs Wednesday 64 to 68. INSIDE TODA 't' William "Digger·· Young Jr.. an undertaker, loves clowntng around. See story Page A9. lade"' .. 0 • ., M M .. .. .., .. ., .. .... M •• ' .4.2 DAIL Y Pll 0 r Almost Equal Poll Showa Hopefula Cloae SAN FRANCISCO r..\P J -Attorney &eneral can· d1date.s of both parltes ~till are locked rn an extreme· ly c lose battle for the nomination, according ,c.e thl' ('ahforrua Poll, which found large numbers of ~oters .still undecided or uninformed on the race. Pollster Mervin Field said today that U.S. Rep. Yvonne Burke and Los Angeles city attorney Burt Pines continue to divide almost evenly the votes of the 63 percent of Democrats polled who committed themselves to a candidate. Meanwhile. state Sen. George Deukmejian and former U.S. Attorney .James Browning s plit the votes of the 49 pcrc·cnt of Republicans who have an opinion m th(• race. Field.said. The candidates have been nose-to.nose during Field's !ast three polls. The latest poll of 1.22'1 Californians shows Pines !->lightly ahead with 32 percent over Ms. Burke's 31 percent. while 37 percent of Democrats polled had no preference On the GOP side. Deukmejian won 25 percent of the preference votes and Browning 24 per· cent. with 51 percent undecided. T~e int<.·n·1ews for th" polJ were conducted May 1 R. Swit~he• Stand Carter Approves Nuke War Rooms WASHINGTON CA P> -Presi- dent Carter, reversing his earlier decision. has approved Pentagon plans for two m ore uJ . trasophislicated fl y ing wa r room s, whic h the nation's leaders could use to command U S. forces in a nuclear war. Th e additional Airborne Emergency Command Posts, at B..,niauz~d APWI .......... Violinist Efrem Zambalist Sr .. 89. was listed an good t•o nd ition today at ·St. !Vtary's Hospital in Re no. wher e he was undergoing t rcatmcnt for pneumonia. Ile was hospitalized F'riday. Teen Admits Slaying Mom PITTSBURGH CA P > -A 14- year-old boy, who demanded at gunpoint that he be arrested, has been charged with murder for a llegedly beating his mother to d eath wilh a pipe, police said Edward Bathgate turned himself in lo police Monday morning after driving his mother's car nearly 15 miles from the ir Beaver County mobile home. "I want to be arrested," the boy was quoted as te lling Officer Alex Maxwe ll at the city's Public Safety Building. The boy reportedly had a silver-colored .25-caliber automatic weapon aimed al Maxwell, but later sur- rendered the gun. 0,_ANOI COAST DAILY PILOT ·-·-""'"'°"'' ..... ,.,.,_ Joo• c: .. in l/tt r Prf'\tdltf'lt aNtC..MfMM4~ .-.. ......... ... , .. , ................... IN""9111f•al• Ci>tf ... M L-11-P IUll """'""' MalftOOl"9 fflten Offlc•• f.O"I• ,._.,,. now"'-' &lt'Wt'Ht l•OUNS.Mft 11 .. 0~r,PSfr"" Huint1no10f\&..•tl't t11r\&e-«hftbu•11" .. '" '-'•'*• ...... _, !l)Oll..4"'11"-•t\...-Ot•to'r ..... ., Tetephoft• (114) ~1 CiHtltlecl Advert!V!IQ l'a-M1t s.ctcH1ti.c:w V•IM., ,.......Qfff(f' 1114110 ,,_...,(,._..., 4....eDO ~'C =. °:.=. <::.::,.~~ :-;~-::.r..-:r..:.::r:;:,~, ~~~. ::.:. ~ <-"tlll-. S.C9ftf <l•U ..... r. HNI al Cttte MtN C.lll•rflt• SW••u 111•" Irr Uftlt r U )o :::"O:f1..'& :'~ "'"""' lfltlllary I about S1.2J6 million each, would be this country's most costly aircraft. Three or the jumbo jets are already operating. The fourth, with more advanced equipment, is being readied for service next year. Shortly after he became presi- dent last year, Carter was briefed aboard one of the E4A command planes by members of the miJitary battle staff who wou ld run the aircraft's elaborate equipment in lime or war. The planes would provide a haven for lhe president and top civilian and military leaders in the event a nuclear attack threatened destruction of the caoital. After that night, Carter. re- portedly dismayed at the cost of 1 the added planes, told Defense Secretary Harold Brown in ef- fect not to buy the planned fifth and sixth models. The six ·plane Oeet had been origin ally planned by the Ford administration. Carters change of mind was indicated m a speech Monday by Assistant Defense Secretary Gerald P. Dinneen at Hanscomb Air Force base. Mass. "The DefenSe Department has r ecently received fro m the While House a pproval to pro- ceed with the acquisition or a fleet of six . . . E4 aircraft," Dinneen said. He said the two aircraft wouJd be purchased in 1980 and 1981. Pentagon officials confirmed that the president approved a go-ahead for the two planes after Brown, in a review Carter ordered, reaffirmed the value or the program. ln peacetime, the aerial com· mand J>(l5ts are assigned to the Strategic Air Comma nd, which always has one or the planes aloft. One E4 is kept ready ror J>C5Si· ble presidential use al Andrews Air Force Base. Md .. outside Was hington. The others are s ta. tioned at SAC headquarters at Offutt Air Force Base. Neb. E',.._P~AJ SUSPECT. • • parents . The child was round by a motorist who saw the little girl stumbling along the street, cov- ered wilh blood. Hos pital surgeons patched her skull and face wounds, which re- quired hundreds of stitches, police s aid. The child's description of her attacker. which was published in news papers, prompted dozens of calls from as far away as Santa Barbara, police said . The girl's description included her recollection of a tattoo above the man's left elbow: "T .C. Triumph." Boyd said today an old tattoo on Clewell 's arm. covered by a new tattoo police believe lo be only days old, showed lhe letters "T.C." with a folJowint word ob- scured. Boyd said the fresh tattoo wu obtained at a Los Angeles tattoo ishop. Police also reported they believe Clewell s haved off a mustache and cut his hair, tn a <'rude Job with a razor blade, to further change his appearance. He saJd preliminary aearchJna of Clewell'• houae laat n11ht and early this mornJn1 uncovered sandals, a shirt and 1tu1cs tha1 were described by the chUd. Police also said the7 found a scuba wetault ln CleweJJ '• bedroom. 1be pl 1\td aatd IM aaw a weuuttiD tbe badt Mat ol tho Cadillac. ,. Trial Set In Hire Kill Plot By WIU.IAM HODGE Of tllf o.lly ,.. ... St.ff A Mission Viejo res ident and his business associate were or- dered Monday t-0 race triai in what police aJlege was a bizarre murder-for-hire plot again.st a Seattle attorney. Ordered to trial in Orange County S uperior Court o n charges or conspiracy to commit murder and murder solicitation are J oseph W. Serino, 49, of Mis· sion Viejo and Joseph Bogg+62. of Beverly Hills. Prosecutors allege the two men tried to hire a Newport Beach undercover police officer to kill Roger Leed.of SeatUe. Serino will stand trial on two solicitation counts and one con- spiracy count while Bogg faces only two counts, one conspiracy and one solicitation. A second solicitation count against Bogg, involving an al· leged plot to murder of bis wife, was dis missed following pre- liminary hearing in Municipal Court Judge Michael Naughton's south Orange County courtroom. During the hearing, Newport Beach investigator John Simon sat coolly on lhe witness stand and testified that be negotiated a murder contract last April in a Laguna Hills MaJI restaurant. "He (Serino) didn't care if I s hoved him (Leed) in front of a train as long as he came up dead," Simon testified. "He said he wanted to make it look like a situation that would attract the newspapers so he could verify Leed was dead." Simon said Serino gave him a plane ticket to Seattle and a description ol Leed while they dined at the Laguna Hills eatery. The Newport Beach officer was brought into lhe case after the man Serino allegedly initial- ly hired for the murder went to police. That man, Roger Hofer, a La Habra carpenter. testified that he went to the Fullerton Police trying to protect the murder target -initially Bogg's wife. "He (Serino) told me it would be done in a fashion where it would look like a robbery." Hofe r said or a conversation with Serina at a Buena Park restaurant. Bovan Case Pretrial Set Into Motion I Lawyers for seven defendants allegedly involved in the murder or Stephen John Bovan of Foun- tain Valley continued today to a rgue pretrial motions that are expected to take several weeks in Orange County S uperior Court. Judge Robert P. Kneeland is presiding over pretrial action which includes a defense motion that murde r indictments re· turned by the grand jury are de- fective and should be dismissed. Defense lawyers argued Mon- day that evidence favorable to their clients was omitted from grand jury presentations and that the murder charges are based on evide nce h eavily weighted in favor of the prosecu· tion. Other motions to be argued in· elude motions for dismissaJ, mo- tions for separate trials and a motion for a court order that would compel a key prosecution witness to take a lie detector test. All seven defendants are ac- cused or involvement in the kill· Ing or Bovan, 96. who was shot nine limes outsid e t he El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Beach on Oct. 22, 1977. J e rry Peter Fiori, 41. of Hunt- ington Beach is charged with the acttJal killing and faces the possibility of a death penaJty sentence. Defense attorney Roger Rosen. representing Fiori, told Judge Kneeland Monday that his client is not being allowed to ex- ercise in the county jail and is being held for 24 hours a day in a three-foot by nine-root cell. Fiori is one of three defen. dents, who, the prosecution claims, were imported here from the Eut Coast when a con· tract waa put out for the murder of Bovan. It is alleged that the contract was authortied when Bovan and others who are expected to ap- pear as prosecution witnesses arranged for the ktdnapptne of Alexander KuJUr, 28. of Newport Beach. who I~ one of the aevtn defendants. Home's Bar Stolen A wet bar and frencb doon worth a tataJ of '750 were stolen from an lrvtnl bouae lmder C!Clm· 1trucUon at Weatwood a nd Beyan • ......., U.. ownera, ll and W Development ColQDUJ. told pot1ce MODISQ. t Mobster Colombo Succumbs NEWBURGH. NY. (AP I - Form er underworld ch1ettaln • Joseph Colombo Sr .• left aJmost total)~ paralyzed by an as· s ass\n s bullet seven years ago, died at St. Luke Hospital here. hospital officials said today. He WU 55. • • Colombo, 1unned down in 1971 at an Italian-American Day ral- ly m Columbus Circle in m1d- Manhattan, died Monday night. the hospital said. He had been athrrtttett-in-a-~e1Tlic.ttr.nrtos~ state on May 6. ,.~_.,..... OLDEST MEDAL OF HONOR WINNER NOW 101 YEARS OLD WUll•m Seac:h Vial~ With VA Chief Max Cletand Bero IOI Ohlest Living Medalist .. BROCKTqN. Mass. IAP> -Wmlam Seach. oldest Jiving re· c1p1ent of the Congressional Medal of Honor, celebrates hjs tOlst birthday today almost 78 years after the Boxer Rebellion in which he performed his valorous military service. Seach. a career Navy man, is a patient at the Veterans Ad- ministration Hospital in Brockton. HE WAS CITED "FOR action with the relier expedition of the Allied forces in China during the batUes-.of 13 20 21 22 June 1900." ~ • • . Seach was part or a Naval landing party that was on a re- connaissance mission. At the time, he was an ordinary seaman aboard the Us.5 Newark. He also served in the Spanish-American War and World War I before retiring as a lieutenant. SEACH HAS BEEN A PATIENT in the hospital's nursing home for three years. His wife. Caroline. 86, lives m South Weymouth. "This guy is sharp." said a hospital s pokes man. "He's a lit- tle hard or hearing, but mentally he's very alert." 2,400 People A.board Cruise Vessel Hit By Bombing Scare LONDON (AP> -The Ministry or Defense announced that a three-man bomb-disposal team left a British base late to- day to parachute onto the cruise liner Oriana o(( the Azores after a bomb threat was received. The s hip has 2,400 people aboard. The announcement s aid the team left the Royal Air Force transport base at Lyneham in a Hercules plane. The bomb threat was con- tained in a letter de livered earlier in the day to the London office of P & 0 Steam Naviga- tion Co .. owners of the 43,340-ton liner. P & 0 said the threat was turned over to Scotland Yard, which alerted the Ministry or Defense. Capt. Philip Jackson, master of the Oriana, was also advised by radio, a P & 0 spokes man said. The company said Jackson or- dered a search or his ship, which is carrying 1,600 passengers and 800 crew. P & 0 would give no de tails of the threat or who made it. But it was obvious that the company, Scotland Yard and the Ministry or D e fense were treating it seriously. The Oriana left Southampton A few years ago General Electnc created a few gem- sl.ze. line quallly diamonds as an experiment These stones were given to the Smithsonian Ttiey were extremely expensive to produce. much more ex- pensive than lalcrng diamonds out ol the ground. Neverthe• leas. the resultant publicity of oe·s on.time experiment has led many people to be deceived into behevrng lhll lm1tft1on diamonds made from colorl ... synthetic material are ectu11ty synthettc dlwnonds. To com-' pound th• problem, 1ome m•nutact1.nn1 and .. ii.re or thl1 materlll have given 11 names thl\ 1UQ091t diamond· Ilk• materiel. No matertal la really dl•mon6-llke, no '"'tter w•at jl II Cllled. No gem ippfOlehtt diamond In hardn.... In ltt 1b1tlty to rellat tetatctilng end , thu1. II• llblllty to retaln lti" brllllan~. When a campa1on WH launched to mwtcet V.A,<l. 1 couple of Y"" "00· tl\e ttelf) mtnt WM ~ made that not eY9"I a ,..,..,. ~Id tell the r• aJ from the raq_ Now we have Saturday for a 20-day Caribbean cruise. The vessel was reported to be SO miles north or Gracaosa Island in the Azores. "We are not s ure yet whether passengers will be evacuated," the P & 0 spokesman said. Quake Shakes Japan; Tidal Wave Feared TOKYO <A P> -An earth- quake in the East China Sea rat- tled southern and western J apan today and authoties warned res- idents to brace for a possible "moderate" tidal wave in Its wake. Police said there were oo Im- mediate reports or casualties or damage on the southern islands nearest the quake, Yaku Jlma and Kyushu. In Tokyo, the meteorological agency officials targeted lhe quake's center about 22 miles orr the Japanese coast and said it registered four on a Japanese scale or seven. • Dr. Jobn C. Bivona Jr .. who was attending Colombo. said death resulted from long-term complications stemming from has injuries The immediate cause of death was cardiac ar- rest. he said. A hosp1tai spokesman said lhe form e r mob leader "passed a way very quietly." Colombo had been unable to lead an active life a s a busi- nessman. an Italian-American civic leader and, according to authorities, ·one of the nation's mos t powe rful underworld leaders since he was shot in the head al close range three times during the rally. He required round-the-clock nursing care. He could not talk nor write, and, except for the thumb and forefinger on his right hand, he could not move. For much of the time since the Italian Unity Day rally shooting, he was semicomat-Ose. A co-rounder or the Italian- American Civil Rights League. Colombo was shot by Jerome Johnson on June 28, 1971. Johnson, 24, was fatally s hot on the spot. Johnson was not a known member Of the Un • derworld. but the shooting was conside red by authorities to be part of a feud with lhe Gallo crime family. Immediately afterwards. power-hungry mobsters seized whatever Colombo's associates could not protect in the Colombo crime empire. In 1969 Colombo was identified in the Congressional Record ¥ a com missioner of the Cosa Nostra, as it was then called. and as a boss of the former Joseph Proraci crime family. Boy Burned By High Wire Recuperating A Huntington Beach boy who plunged 20 feet while trying to retrieve a baseball from an electric power facility and brushed a 66,000·volt wire as he re l I , remained hos pitalized today. Gar y Weaver . 11. or 215 Os w ego Ave .. was listed in satisfactory condition a t UC Irvine Me dical Center in Orange. whe re he is under treatment for second degree burns over his chest and torso. The youngster was injured Friday night when he slipped while scaling the Southern Californta Edison Company transfer station near Lake Street a nd Acacia Avenue. He only touched the high voltage line for a fraction of a second. causing a flas h or electrical fire that flared around him like a halo, incinerating his T·shirt Instantly, police said. an even better Imitation being SOid I S a diamond substitute. It Is called •·cubic z1rcon1a " (2r02). A nicely laoeted CZ ap. pears to be much more con· v1nclng than any of the other e11amond 1m11a11ons and can pose a def1mte 1den111tcat1on problem 10 the unwary Well. this Jewttler can always tell Gemotogtcal 1ra1n1ng and years of expeoenoe gives me this confidence. and my customers benefit trom my knowledge. Diamond imitations have their place . . . they are cos· tume JeW91'Y ... as opposed to llne jewelry. Thoee large, flashy ston.. ate good tor cocktail party chatter: they have a lot of shock appeal and can be tun. Untortunetely. these stones scratch and abrade com- per1t1vely eeelly and their glll· ter turns to gloom. Ttien every· body. not only your joweier, ¥tlll know for sure. If you'd like to Me a CZ, come in, we have one on hand to show you. II la 8~ In herd· nHt (dlarnono la tO) and 11 •P. Pf'OJCl~ty 1. 7 t11Te11 he1vter iii.a cHarnond , Laguna/South Coast After noon . N.Y . Stoe k~ EDI TION VOL. 71, NO. 143, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES O RANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA TUES DAY, MAY 23, 1978 TEN CENTS1 Viejo Man Faces Trial in Murder Plot By WILLIAM HODGE are Joseph W. Serino. 49. or M1s- 01•• o.1t-, " ... s1.tt1 s1on VieJo and Joseph Bogg, 62, •. ·~ -A .M~-Yit>J~Lt~l<tent aq9 _Pt B~'l~~ ~lls,_ his business associate were or-Prosecutors a'ITefe rilrtwo dered Monday to face trial in m en tried to hire a Newport what pohce allege was a bizarre Beach undercover police officer murder-for-hire plot against a to kill Roger Leed of Seattle. . Seattle attorney. Serino will stand trial on two Ordered to trial in Orange solicitation counts and one con· Co unty Superior Court on spiracy ~t while Bogg faces charges of conspiracy to commit only two counts, one conspiracy murder and murder solicitation a nd one solicitation. ape Builder Vietim Suspect Held In Extortion EXTORTION TARGET Newport's Presley O em e nte Man Killed When Car Hits Tree Kc\'in Scott Ruller, 25, of 505 Montl•l"cy Lane, Apt C. San Clemente. was killed early today when the auto he was driving l'rashed into a tree in Laguna II ills According lo a California l11~hway Patrol report, Butler · v. a" driving north on Crown Valley Parkway near Pacific 1-;land Drive when hi s la)thtwe1ghl station wagon struck the roadside tree Investigators said they do not vet know what caused the vie. tam 's auto to leave the roadway a frw minutes before 3 a m. The same investigators said Ruller was dead at the scene of the accident. There were no passen~crs an his auto. By JOANNE REY~OLDS OI tlW Dally Pllol Slaff Newport Beach police used $250,000 in play money Monday night to capture a suspect they allege was trying to extort a quarter of a million dollars from Newport homebuilder Randall Presley Undercover officers identified the sus pect as Michael Edward Dempsey. 26. of Paramount. A second suspect as sta ll sought. Police charge that the pair had threatened Presley's life if he didn't deliver the $250,000. Dempsey was captured near Disneyland after a policeman. posing as Presley, left a brief· case stuffed with the phony cash in the batk seat of Dempsey's car. The doien officers who had staked out the parking lot where the car was left for deltvery of the cash said they c hased Dempsey about one mile. He was cornered after a minor col· lision involving a Garden Grove patrol car. Today. detective commander Richard Hamilton said a second man is being sought in connec tion with the case which ap- pare ntly had its roots in a finan- cial news story listing Presley's Newport Beach-based firm as one of the top 100 m Southern California . Hamilton noted that Presley's company bears has name and that he is lasted in the telephone directory. Presley, a resident of Lido Isle, first went to police on May 15. He told investigators that the preceding night he had received a vaguely threatening phone call Hamilton said that during the inves tigation of the cas e. Presley received more threaten· mg calls and a threatening let- lt'r /\t one point. last Wednesday. fours shots from a .45-caliber J!UO were fired into Presley's waterfront home. Hamilton said no one was inJured. <See PRESLEY, Page A2) City Must P ay r--1\ropositions S/\N DIEGO <AP> -The Du Airin• Fourth District Court of Appeal e g has ruled that the City of San Diego must pay San Diego Gas Proponents and opponents or & Electric Co. more than $4 Prop. 8 and 13 on the June 6 million for property the city in· ballot will address San Clemente eluded an its open-space plan. residents Thursday night on the controversial t ax r e form Eight Bmes Inactivated Eight Orange County Transit Dis tric t buses were out of commission to· day arter somebody stole the inside handJes that al· low drivers lo open and measures. The meeting, sponsored by the South Orange County Board of Realtors, will be held at San Clemente High School, 700 Avenida Pico. beginning at 7:30 p.m. Speakers include state Senate candidate John Schmitz, Laguna Beach businessman Ron Stein· ~rg. and reaJtors Al Dibrell and Bill Cranham. close the doors, Irvine police reported. laguna'& Trustees The buses were parked ove rnight In a main · Rear School GoaJa tenance yard at 14736 Sand Canyon Ave. in lrvine. Laguna..Bc.ach Unified School A d1slrlct official aaid he Dlittrict trust~ wlll meet. with had no idea why anyone principals of the dlltrtct's five would steal the }tandles, 8chools Thursday night to hear worth about $5 apiece, goals and priorlllcs for next other than for spite. year. He was more conct.rned T he board wlll al110 take a look about the '6,000 district at the dlatrict'a $7 mllllon pre-~ervlc~Lntck. ln whJc .... h,,_lh....,..e_t-.MU~~-.!t.l~gn_when It meets thief carted them off. at 7:30 p.m. iftOTMr c Olricea al 505 81umont St 1,: ..... A second solicitation count against Bogg, involving an al- leged plot to murder of his wife. Wmf"'tttsn~$::. ... ~~inr -~~ liminary hearing in Municipal Court Judge Michael Naughl<>n's south Orange County courtroom. During the hearing, Newport Beach investigator John Simon sat coolly on the witness stand and testified that he negotiated a murder contract last April in a Laguna Hills Mall restaurant. dine d at the Laguna Hills "He <Serino> told me 1t would "He <Serino> didn't care if I eatery. be done in a rash1on where at shoved him <Leed> in front of a The Newport Beach officer would look like a robbery ... t'nrin'-li:Qf~6 ~tt-·l':~ ~~· ~~ ~~~i~~ .. «&CM :f"~ -1i.of.e~-jijip,_o,f _~QAVC~fW.cUl dead," Simon testified. "He said the man Serino allegedly initial· with Serina ilt a Buena "Park he wanted to make lt look like a )y hired for the murder went to res taurant. situaUon that would attract the police. "After it was done there would newspapers so he could verify That man. Roger Hofer . a La be window broken to make at Leed was dead." Habra carpenter. testified that look like forcible entry," Hofer Simon said Serino gave him a he went to the Fullerton Police said. plane ticket to Seattle and a trying to protect the murder Following that conversation. description of Leed while they target -initially Bogg's wire. <See TltlAL. Page A21 uspect arge Oillty ...... ,..,, ...... MAS. MILAN MILLEA (LEFT), MAS. ARNOLD KEARNS ADMIRE THE GREENERY Laguna Garden Clubbers Were Among Thoae Who Got Rare View of Smith Estate Monday Gardens Showcased .State Con:ventioneers Tour Laguna Estate By STEVE MITCHELL °' , .. O.lly .. , ... , ..... The woman with Che floppy hat put her hand over her mouth and gasped. "How on earth do .vou keep the caterp,illers off of your pelargoniums, 'she asked. Alice Bechthold beamed and said, "It's a lot of work for three or us. believe me " Mrs. Bechthold led more than 200 members of the Caliromia Garden Clubs Inc. around the Lon V. Smith estate Monday during a day-long tour or south Orange County homes. The garden ladies are attend· ing their organization's 47lh con- vention in Costa Mesa this week, and a tour of the 11 -acre S m it he Ii ff estate in Laguna Beach provided ~e women an opportunity to visit a home seldom seen by outsiders. Alice Bechthold met each or the five tour buses as they pulled up in front of the walled en- trance to the Smith estate. "Welcome lo Smilhcliffs." she said . "My name i s Allee Bechthold and I live here. I'm the gardener's wife " As the camera-toting women climbed out of the buses and walked the 300 yards from the iron gates to the blurrtop, they viewed a variety of trees and plants some had never seen out- side a garden book. "Is that a Melaleuca tree," one woman asked. reaching up to stroke a twiSted, white bark giant. "The wind shapes the limbs ... another responded. "That's why it's twisted around like that." A forest of jumpers greeted the women next to the three· story weekend house of L<>n Smith and his wire. Marguerite. And a real garden club pleaser were pots full or cymb1dium or- chids on the front porch of the six-bedroom home. "Is it true you're not supposed to touch the leaves of cym· bidiums," a woman asked the gardener's wife. "Oh . I touch them all the time," Mrs. Bechthold laughed. running her ringers along a long green stem. "l never heard that before." The women moved past the SO·year·old guest house lo a lookout point overlooking the beach at Emerald Bay. "I don't see how you kee~ this place up." a woman wearing a Comedian Durante Taking Treatment ~. SANTA MON ICA <AP> - Comedian Jimmy Durante, 85. has been admitted to St. John's Hospital where be Is undergoing t reatment for a n upper respiratory inrectlon, a spokeswoman said today. Tbe famed "Schnouola" was reported ln satisfactory condl· Uon. Spoke.awom a n Peggy Frank Shaff said Durante wu admitted Saturday and was ex· peeled to be boepltallzed "for •bout a week." Durante's wife Marjorie, r eached by telephone In the couple1a s.tverly Hilla home. Hid ahe expect«! to know lat~ today how tona her husband would be bolpltallzed. She l&ld for-Ol'llt blue beret said. Mrs. Bechthold. her husband Art. and groundskecpcr Make Newman work fullt1me at the estate. mowing lawns, pulling weeds and trimming trees "We lost about 10 trees during this year's s torm c;," Mrs Bechthold recalled. "( bet Art made 300 trips to the dump with the clippings and leaves " The Bechtholds have worked for Lon Smith for nearly 23 yea r s. the last seven at Smithcliffs. Before that the.v stayed on a 210-acre ranch the 86·year·old otlman owned in Bakersfield. Mike Newman has worked at Smithcliffs ror the past seven year s . The 78-year·old Irish ~ardener said the Smiths come down from their Beverly Hills home nearly every weekend. "And they always bring guesL'> during the summer months." the gardener said. Newman said Smith made his money in the oil fie lds of Baker sfield , a fter beginning his career "selling <See GA RDENS, P age A:?> Laguna Holds Off in Taxi Rate Increase Laguna Beach city coun- cilmen are going to wait until a taxi firm s hows them financial records before approving rate hikes sought by the company. And they want the Checker Cab Company to look into re. duced rates for senior citizens before tbey'll consider hikes up to 50 percent for the Laguna firm. Checker Cab manager Rick Scott ls s~king a 29 percent. per mile increase in rates, from 70 cents to 90 cents. He ls also ask· ins the City Council to approve a flag drop rate rrom 60 cents to 90 cent.I. and a raise from S8 per hour to $9 per hour. The council agreed to wait un· til Juno 6 when the manqcr said ho couJd provlde reasons tor UJo lncreascs. Counc-Um•n Waynf! Battin said be M>Ufd feeJ uncomtorta· b l e 1ppro\tln1 rau httes "w•u.ou&.-Ju.tlfic•Uoo or a....cou. anaJ)'lis," I El Toro Girl, 13, Victim By PHILIP ROSMARll'I Of IN D-'IY Pilot $1~11 I\ Mi ssion Viejo man who police said had be~n confined until recently for sex crimes was arrested Monday and charged with the rape and brutal beating or an El Toro schoolgirl Booked at Orange County Jail early today on a charge or at· tempted murder was Wu ren Dale Clewell, 28. a short·order cook. He was held on $250.000 baa I Irvine pohcc Lt. J erry Boyd said add1llonal charges or kid- napping with intent to commit bodily harm. and ra pe, would be sought today. Boyd said investigation con· firmed a report that Clewell was - released two months ago from Atascadero State Hospital for the c riminally disturbed. Clewell had been under treat· ment for rape and kidnap of fenses for an undisclosed period of time. accordingtopolice. He was arres ted JUSl after 4 p.m . Monday m Santa Ana by Irvine detectives acting on in- form ation from an anonymou:-. informant. The v1ct1m of the crime with which Clewell 1s charJ?Cd. a 13· year -old girl . r emained in serious but stable rond1t1on lo· day at a hospital. She was kidnapped last Thur.-; . day as she walked home from Serrano Intermediate School CSeE' SUSPECT. Page A2) Thieves Get Jewels in SC A San Clemente woman re- lurned home from work Mondav to discover more than $9,200 worth or valuables missing from her home. Police said Ruby Creech left ho m e about 1 :30 p.m. to do catering work and returned at 4 Pm. M re;. Creech told pol1re someone broke into her home and took jewelry, cash and camera equipment while she was gone. Among the missinJt a rticles were a ladies' watch valued ut $3,500 and a ladies ring va lued al $2.500 Coas t We athe r Considerable low eloudi· ness through Wednesday. beroming mostly s unny Wednesd ay afternoon. Low-. tonight 52 to 58. Highs Wednesday 64 to 68. INSIDE TODA '1 William "Digger·· Young Jr .. on undertaker. loves clowning around. See slOT'IJ Page A9. ladex .. CJ .. •• M = .,., ' .. . , .. ,.. M Driverless Collision Laguna Beach police said this unmanned Pontiac was parked on Anita Street Mon- day afternoon when it was struck by a dri vcrless van Cbe hind it> that rolled into rt. Both vehicles then rumbled <.1cross busy Glenncyre Strc:ct. with the automobile crashing into a garage. Owners of the two vehicles could not be fo und at the scene. but the van is reJ?istered to Vincent Laverto of El Toro. The automobile is reg- istered to Marco Forster of 589 Monterey Drive. Laguna Beach. No one was hurt in the block-long incident, police said . San Clemente OKs Industrial Park The S~ Clemente City Coun· c il has amended the c ity's General Plan to allow for de· velopment of an industrial park on about 380 acres or land that was zoned for open space. In action last week, coun· cilmen approved a general plan amendment for the land, located a t the intersection o r the Forster. Reeves and Visbeek ranches, about a half-mile east of the San Diego Freeway and north of Avenida Pico. Planning commissioners last m onth approved the general plan change on a 4-0 vote. with commissioner James Chase ab- staining. The unanimous vote by the Ci- ty CouncH last week paves the way for a so-called planned con- trolled industrial park on the 380·acre site. The majority of the parcel is owned by operators of the Forster and Visbeek ranches, with about 60 acres belonging to Reeves. The amendment would allow fo r light industrial use or the land, with electronics firms, and Jight manufacturing allowed. The builder would need city ap- prov a I for architectural design and would be restricted to clean uses for the companies in the p ark , according to the city's planning staff. l'romP~A J 'IRIAL ORDERED. • • Hofer approached police who suggested he try to get a second man involved in the murder con- tract -undercover investigator Simon. Hofer agreed "I mentioned to him (Serino> I had a friend from New York who ha d done this kmd of work before." Hofer testified. Hofer then arranged a meet· ing between himself, Simon - who became New York jewel thief Tony DeMarco -and Serino at an El Toro bank. When the meeting took place. S1 mon testified, Serino asked ham if he knew what the deal was. "I told him I heard about killing some woman in L .A. and r could steal all the jewelry in this house," Simon said. "He said that will have to wait, we have another deal for you. "He mentioned a lawyer in the Seattle area." Authorities allege Serino and Bogg were actinR as jn. termediaries for a third man who has not been indicted thus far . Police believe Leed was or· dered murdered because he suc- cessfully flied a $1 million lawsuit against a Beverly Hills hind firm for fraudulently sell - 1.Dg land in California's Moj ave Pesert. vestigator Les Leber traveled lo Seattle and got Leed to play dead for photographs and dlsap· p ear for 10 days to convince Serino and Bogg that the murder had been carried out. Following Simon's return, he and Hofer again met Serino two more times during which Simon was given $5,000 for the Leed murder, he testified. Then, Sim on said , he and Hofer went to see Bogg al his Anaheim business address to get the remaining $10,000 ree for the murder. 'Tm only the middle man," Simon testified he was told by Bogg. "He said his man or his people had to have verification before they would pay more money out." Defense attorney Howard Weitzman successfully argued for dismissal of one solicitation count against Bogg. Judge Naughton agreed that tht! pros ecution had not established a link between Bogg a nd SeMno's efforts to secure a murder contract on Bogg's wife. ·'Serino may have come up with the idea on his own," Naughton said. Naughton set June 6 for pre- trial motions in Superior Court. Botb men remain free on bail pending the Superior Court trial. E',....Page AJ GARDENS. • everything from shoestrings to neckties, to the gandy dancers on the railroad.'' Lon Smith still goes to his Beverly HiHs office during the week, and Mrs. Bechthold said he can't wait to get to work on Mondays. That Jeaves five days for the two gardeners and Mrs. Bechthold to get the Laguna Beach estate in order. The grounds are crowded with pines, olive trees, citrus trees and acres of lawns and gardens. "It's a chore all right," Mike said as he helped a garden club m ember aboard the tour bus. "But the Smiths are the nicest people I ever met in my life." And the Smith estate ts one of the nicest the garden clubbers had seen, said state garden club president Mrs. Eugene Woesner. Mild Quake Hibl Oxnard OXNARD IA P > -A minor earthquake awakened residents 1n this Ventura County city early today. No damage was reported. Caltech seismologists in P asa dena said the temblor, which registered 3.9 on the Richter scale. was cente red in the Pacific Ocean about 20 miles south of Oxnard. Reagan Raps 'Scare Talk' SAN FRANCISCO CAP > Former California Gov. RonaJd Reagan says th e holly controversial Proposition 13 would "not only be beneficial to the business climate, but also to the people of California." At a n impromptu news co nference here Monda y, Reagan labeled as "scare talk" arguments that the tax reduction i nitiative would cripple schools and municlpaJ services. Several hundred Seattle resi· dents purchased the land. Simon testified that he and Orange County Sheriff's in-Did Howe Memben 01\ANGE COAST l SC DAILY PILOT =::.~~~11r,:.i:.::::.:~z; Co.nt ~l\ftl1"9 Como•,,., S.O.W-~ fd1r,,.,,,.. tAr• ~~~-~~~"':.=u::-:..:;. ~ 161911 Va11•Y I r'll'if'I•. S.OllS•ebM:l V•ltity eno ~ .. M'-fSotitf't Co.it A llftc1'irt'f"OlONI fd1 tJon I\ out»ll~ '-•t11ro1n ~ ~"'-TM =~~:=~,=~~~ 1lO ....,,, k• ._ .. _ Pr-Mtdeftt •'-' P\IOf1W' Jooll Cw1rt \'t<• Preildrf\f •ftd a.~.,""-,...,,., "-••lll-!dl10f T..._'"'·~ M.IM01"9£11il0> CO..rletM.'--t -· -4U•H~t MilMOfnt (drl'f«\ l..Ht'"a 8Hch Oftlce f1t. 0 .. N'tieYr't \tf"Wt .......... ·-·· p 0 Ila• .... .,.,, Otnc .. CO\l•Mo" now .. 1e..v~·"' H..,,,..,. ... 11 .. <~ 1117J.,._~eo.ii..-f • ~-·"'•'•" 1s.n.,..,._ •• le'I Oleto ~·­ 'ralapt.DM (714)MMa21 Cl••• .... ~~ UiFN .. llCll •• °"*""8Ma: , ... ,"° ........ "--~ 4IMIOO ::. ~" 't.r-!!t.~~r; ·~ •• ,.;rTI.;t,,..."" M,.i,; ,,.., .. •••'-I -1•1 .... .,. ....... ~- Get Korean Cash? WASHJNGTON CAP> -In· vestlgators have circumstantial evidence that some present House members might have taken envelopes stuffed with SlOO bills from a former South Korean a mbassador, sources said today. But the House ethics commit· tee sources said none of the evidence is strong enough to pur sue without rormer Am- bassad or Kim Dong Jo 's testimony. The sources, asking not to be identified, saJd the evidence is so cir cumstantial and vague that it Is bard even to say how many c urrent congreumen mighl hove taken the mone.y. but something like 10 11 more ac- curate thu'any hiaher ranae. "You really shouldn't play the numbers game." one In· veattgator said. "It. ta hard to de· rtne who YOU include and who you don't.'l first time on the eve of a com- mittee vote on whether lbe House should threaten lo cut South Korea 's economic aid in an effort to get the am- bassador's testimony. The House lntemationaJ Rela·· lions Committee had planned to vote on a resolution softening the threat this morning but put off action untiJ later in the day, if then. Leon Jaworski, the House ethics committee's special counsel, and House leaders worked out a resolution that would state that no furtber U.S. economic aid should be voted for Seoul until the ambHHdor an•wers questlocs under oath. Defense CIUI Set San Clemente CitlPM Alalnat Rape are acc:epttq appllcaUona for new 1tlr daf en1e c laaaee btlllnnln• Thuraday. Sl1nupe t---f...-...~~~~~....,..L<&AAlr...-..._.._ --rrT-..rhe l!!.JISlbllll.>: that the se cs comm ee bu any aus- pecta al all wu leaked for tbe wm be btld from ·~· al "'!JITA WdlD 0.-b"' fbr" more ln!ormaUoa, uJt 02-UM. Mobste r Colombo Succumbs NEWBURGH. N.Y. CA P> - Former underworld chieftain' Joseph Colombo Sr .• left almost totaJlr. paralyzed by an as- sassin s bullet seven years aao, died at St. Luke Hospital here, hospital officials said today. He was 55. Colombo, gunned down in 1971 at an Italian-American Day raJ- ly in Columbus Ctrcle in mid· Manhattan, <lied Monday night, "tire lb'PtUli"Jmu:-'fie 1tatt-~ • · admitted In a semlcomatose state on May 6. Dr. John C. Bivona Jr .. who was attending Colombo, said death resulted from long-term complications stemming from his injuries. The immediate cause of death was cardiac ar· rest, he said. A hospital spokesman said the former mob leader "passed away very quietly." Colombo had been unable to lead an active life as a busi- nessman. an Italian.American civic leader and, according to authorities, one of the nation's most powerful underworld leaders since he was shot in the head at close range three limes during the rally. He required round-the-cloek nursing care. He could not talk nor write, and, except for the thumb and forefinger on his right hand, be could not move. For mU<:h of the t ime since the Italian Unity Day rally shooting, he was semicomatose. A co-founder of the Italian· American Civil Rights League. Colombo was shot by Jerome Johnson on June 28, 1971. Johnson, 24, was fatally shot on the spot. Johnson was not a known member of the un- derworld, but the shooting was considered by authorities to be part of a feud with the Gallo crime family. . Im mediately afterwards. power-hungry mobsters seized whatever Colombo's associates could not protect in the Colombo crime empire. In 1969 Colombo was identified in the Congressional Record as a com missioner or the Cosa Nostra, as it was then called, and as a boss of the former Joseph Profaci crime family. E'roaaPage A J PRESLEY ••. Detectives ar e convinced there are at lea.st two men in- volved in the scheme. he said, "because we heard two separate voices in the phone calls." Hamilton said Dempsey has had litlle to say other than to tell police, "l'm afraid for my life. I 'JI just go back to prison." Hamilton declined to comment on the location of P resley or his family other than to note that they are being P.rotected by bodyguards. Dempsey Is being held in city jail in lieu of $10.000 bail. 300 Arrested TACOMA. Wash. CAP> -Hun- dreds of antl·nuclear weapon protesters arrested for crossing into the Navy's submarine base at Bangor vowed to keep return- ing until they are jailed. Nearly 300 demonstrators were arrested and later released Monday after they climbed a 6-foot barbed wire fence at the base being built for mitsile-riring Trident submarines. ~.., .... SUit ...... ARRESTEE IN RAPE CASE LEO OFF TO JAIL Irvine Reserve Officer John Burns GufdH Suspect Dana Pointers f;et a Night, Not a Day What was going lo be the Orange County Planning Com- miss1on 's Dana Point Day May 24 has been moved to June 13 and renamed Dana Point Night. The commission also agreed to hold the planning review session at a Dana Point localJon instead of in Santa Ana. Supervisor Thomas Riley had asked the comm1ss1on to change the time and place of the meet- ing, saying an evening session in Dana Point would attract wider citizen participation. The meeting was arranged by commissioners to give local res•· dents a chance to discuss pl an- ning issues affecting their com- munity. Com missioner · Richard Footner said s imilar local sessions might be arranged later over planning issues in the Sunset Beach and Bolsa Chica areas Candidate t o Air Issues in Laguna Thomas Rogers, candidate for the Fifth District seat on the Orange Co unty Board of Supervisors. will discuss county issues at a meeting of the Top of the World Neighborhood As - sociation in Laguna Beach Thursday. The meeting begins at 1·30 p m . at Top of the World Elementary School. For more information. call Mary Wright at 494-3397. Sex Law Rej ected SAN DIEGO <AP) -A state appeals court has thrown out San Diego's ordinance bannjng "explicit sexual displays" on newsstands. ® E',....Poge A I SUSPECT .•. Her abductor forced her into what she said was a dirty white Cadillac. She told police he drove her to a dirt road m lrvine-Httle-used Barranca Parkway-raped her and beat her over the head, then dumped her out of the car. Police. who at first thought the man bad used a tire iron to split her face and fracture her skull in numerous places, now believe he may have used a large wrench. The wrench is one of several objects sought today as police searched Clewell 's home, where he was Jiving wit.h bis elderly parents. The child ..vas found by a motorist who saw the little girl stumbling along the street, cov ered with blood. Hos pital surgeons patched her skull and face wounds, which re- quired hundreds or stitches. police said. The child's description of her attacker, which was published in newspaper.i, prompted dozens of calls from as far away as Santa Barbara. police said. The girl's description included her recollection of a tattoo above the m an's left elbow : "T.C. Triumph.·· Boyd said today an old tattoo on Clewell 's arm. covered by a new tattoo police believe to be only days old, showed the letters "T C." with a following word ob- scured. Boyd said the fresh tattoo was obtained at a Los Angeles tattoo shop. Pol ice also reported they believe Clewell shaved off a mustache and cut bis hair, in a crude job with a razor blade, to further change his appearance. He said preliminary searching of Clewell's house last night and early this morning uncovered sandals, a shirt and glasses that were described by the child. Police aJso said they found a scuba wetsuit m Clewell's bedroom. The girl had said she saw a wetsuit in the back seat of the Cadillac. A few years ago General Electric create<! a few gam· size. fine quality diamonds as an experiment. These stones were given to the Smithsonian. They were extremely expens111e to produce. much more ex- pena111e than talung diamonds out of the ground. ~rthe· less. the retultant publicity of GE's one-time experiment has le<! many peopltt to be deceive<! Into bellevlng that lml:l1on dlamondS rr'9de from col esa aynthetlc met8'1al are actually aynthetic dlamonct.. To com· pound th• problem. tome manuf~ and Miiera ot tl'lla matarlat hava given It namea th9t suggest diamond· like mater1al. CiEM WISE an even belier 1m1tahon being sold as a diamond substitute. It tS called "Cubic z1rcon1a" (Zr02). A nicely laceled CZ ap· pears to be much more oon· vtnclng than any of the other d iamond 1m1tat1ont>o and can pose a deflntle idenhf1cahon problem to the unwary. No materi al la really dlamono·fll<•. no mttter what it Is called. No oem epproache• diamond In harctnua, In Its ability to Nllat ecratchlng and, thua. lta ab1llty to retein It• Mlllane& When a campaign waa launched to metMt Y.A.O. a couplt ~ ~ tQO. the ..... ment w• often made that not M'tn • ,... ooc.tld blfl the ,.. al from ttit fl!M. Now we h~ Mary e.rr. Coett1l1t0 Oemo1og1st .,.._, ....... W.-etff1'ae .....,..,. ..... Well. ttl19 1ewe18' can always tell Gemotog1cal tratrung and years ol experience g111es me 1t11s conl1dence. and my customers benefit from my knowledge. Diamond imitation' have their place . , they are cos- tume 1ewe1ry ... as opposed to line 1ewelry Those large. flahy atones are good lor cocktail party ch11tter; they have a lot ol shook appeal and can be fun. Unfortunately. lheae stonet scratch and abrade com- paratlvely easily and their ght· tar turns to gloom. Then every· body. not only your 1ewe1er. will know for sure. If you'd like to aee 1 CZ. come in. we hav. one on hand to show you It 11 8Yt In hard· MM (diamond II 10) and It .,,. PfOXJ,,.."-'Y 1. 7 time• hetv18t' than diamond ..... .-....-------- ,, Orange Coast EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 143, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1978 Tod uy·s Clo!iinlf N.Y. Stoek& I N TEN CENTS Another Noise Break for Airport? By JACKJE HYMAN ing a break in hearings held at °' '119 0.11, Pltet si.tt the Orange County Courthouse .. --Ne~..»t.acti .C!U'. AUgrn~ on the C?unty's application for a Dennis O'Neil sala'tooay.fle ex· -new-'Vm?an~ to rep)aee the OM peC'ts the State Department of that expired in December. Transportation to grant another variance from stale noise stan- dards to the Orange County Airport. O'Neil made his remark dur- During that break, O'Neil said that. if the variance isn't grant· ed, the airport would have to cut its scheduled jet flights from about 40 a day to about four a day. .. Realistically speaking, the variance is probably going to be granted," he added. The morrurig's proceedings in· eluded O'NeiJ's questioning of Airport Manager Robert Bresnahan about alternative sites for the commercial jets that use the Orange CountY. ., Airport Bresnahan said he has looked al a variety or posstble alternative a\rport sites 1n Orange County, including Lo~ Alamitos Naval Air Station and El Toro Marine Corps Air StJ· tion. but declined to recommend any of the sites. He conceded that he bP11.-vec; Play Money Used in Capture 7 Suspect Held • m NB Firemen, Lifeguards Mandated Pay Not Extended Top pay packaReS won't be mandated for Newport Beach"s firefighters and lifeguards as they are for th e city 's policemen. Monday night city councilmen Taubman To Manage NB Center lrvinc Company President Peter Kremer announced todity that the Taubman Company Inc. "ill a~sume management of Fashion Island. the Irvine Company's regional shopping center in Newport Beach. K erman made the an· nouncement at a morning meeting of the center's merchant association The Taubman Company is owned by A. Alfred Taubman, one of the new o" ners of the Irivine Company and chairman of the land development firm's boa rd of directors. No details were released about the terms of the management agr eement. Irvine Company s pokes man Martin Brower said the length of the management contract and the money involved would be announced later. Such a move has been expected since Taubman and a consortium of investors bought· the land company last s ummer for S.137 4 million Taubman Company Inc 1s one of the nation's bi~gest region a I shoppin~ center developers . The firm, which is based in Troy, Mich . owns and operate!! 16 major s hopping centers across the country. Fashion Island. located m the middle of the Newport Center, includes six maJor department stores Neiman · Marcus, Bullock's Wilshire. Robinson's, Buffum·s, The Broadway and J . C. Penney -as well as 80 other retail businesses. voted 5·2 with council members Jackie Heather and Don Mcin- nis dissenting. against extending the c ity's pohce pay policy to the two other public safety groups. Fire men. who had lobbied hurd for inclusion m the pay policy upproved in February, were obviously disappointed at lht· failure of the measure spon~ored by Mcinnis. It was Mcinnis who brought up the police pay measure earlier this year and was sue· cessful in getting the City Coun- cil to approve a policy statement that policemen would receive pay and fringe benefit packages comparable to those paid by the top three of the county's 25 law enforcement agencies. Monday, Mc inni s said hreguards and firemen should be included in the policy. Firemen had based their case on the fact that a city s urvey ~hows them ranked 14th of 17 fire fighting agencies in the county. They s aid the low pay and benefits is resulting in the de· parture of experienced men and in the difficulty in hiring quahhed firemen. Mcinnis agreed with them and told councilmen "If my house 1s on fire, I want the best firemen there arc to come help me, not some mar~inally qualified guys. "If I'm out in the ocean drowning, I want the best there is, not someone who can barely save themselves." Ills views were shared by all council members, but the five who voted down the proposal i.aid they"d prcrer to maintain flex1b1hty in bargammg with employees by not putting a pay policy m writing. All five said they support the concept of top pa y packages for CJll c ity employees. The police measure passed prior to the recent e lection which brought four-new mem· bers to the council. Three of the four new members. Evelyn Hart, Don Strauss and Paul Hummel voted against the fire and lifeguard policy. as did Mayor Paul Ryckoff who had op· (See NB PAV, Page AZ> Comedian Durante Taking Treatment . . HOSPITAUZED Jimmy Dur•nt• SANTA MONICA <A P l - Comedian Jimmy Durante, 85. has been admitted to St. John's Hospital where he is undergoing treatment for an upper respiratory Infection, a spokeswoman said today. The famed "Schnouo11f' was reported in saUsfactOry condi· lion . Spokeswoman Peggy Frank Shaff aald Durante was admitted Saturday and waa ex· pected to be hospltaUzed "for about a week." Ourante's wHe Marjorie, reached by telephone In the couple's Beverly HUis home. satd she ex~ted to know later today how Iona he..r husband wouJd be h<>!!pltallzM. She l aid JJurante was "In for some tests ... ........... OLDEST MEDAL OF HONOR WINNER NOW 101 YEARS OLD Wiiiiam Seach Visits With VA Chief Max Cleland Bero IOI OIJest Living Medalist BROCKTON. Mass. <API -William Seach. oldest living re· cipicnt of the Congressional Medal of Honor, celebrates his lOlst birthday today almost 78 years after the Boxer Rebellion in which he performed his valorous military service. Seach, a career Navy. man. 1s a patient at the Veterans Ad· ministration Hospital in Brockton HE WAS CITED "FOR action with the relief expedition of the Allied forces in China dunng the battles or 13. 20. 21, 22 June 1900." Seach was part of a Naval landing party that was on a re connaissance mission. Al the time. he was an ordinary seaman aboard the USS Newark. He also served in the Spanish-American War and World War I before retiring as a lieutenant. SEACH HAS BEEN A PATIENT in the hospital"s nursing home for three years. His wife, Caroline, 86, lives in South Weymouth. "This guy is sharp," s aid a hos pital spokesman. '"He's a lit· tie hard of,hearing, but mentally he's very alert ·· Newport Nixes Plea By Ebsen for Pier Newport Beach city coun· cilmen have turned down a re· ques t by actor Buddy Ebsen to build a pier in front of his Balboa Island home. Councilmen further affirmed Monday that the pier that exists near the property line Ebsen shares with his neighbor, Carroll Beek. belongs lo Mrs. Beek. The two neighbors got into a dispute over the existing dock, built by Mrs. Beek and her late husband 54 years ago, because Ebsen claimed he was given un· limited rights lo use it In 1964. In a letter to c ity councilmen, Ebsen said Mr$. Beek has re· fused to honor that claim and he asked permission to build hJs own dock But councilmen noted that there Is a city policy prohibiting coostc-uclion or non-commercial piers on the Island because those structures would interfere with the beaches. The council memben' obJec· OtyMmt Pay SAN DIEGO <AP> -The Fourth District Court or Afpeal h11 ruJtd that the City o San DIC!l(o mutt pay San 01t10 Oas &t Electric Co. moro than S4 million tor property the city ln· eluded in tu open..spac pJan. lions were similar to a pos1t1on take n last month by members of the Joint Harbor Committee. a group that advises both the City Council and the county's Harbor Com mission. The committee's vote in op· position to Ebsen ·s application was incorrectly reported in Saturday's Daily Pilot as being in favor of the actor's bid by the county Harbor Commission. The Harbor Commission didn't vote on the matter. Monday's council vote was taken under the threat of legal action. The actor said he likely wl11 take the matter to court. Ebsen said he believes the ex· lsting pier ls on his side of the property line and belongs to him. 'Ihreat Disliked WASIUNGTON <API -A key committee chairman wants Leon Jaworski to sorten his re quest that the House threaten lo cut off South Korea •s economic atd ii that country refuses to cooptr•tt tn hi& Jnflut.nce· buying lnvestlotlon. The chairman ot the House lntema· tlonal Relations Committee. Rep. Clement Zablocki. predict· ed hl1 panel would vote today 111in1l the proposed resolution ma~ln1 the threat -unless lt ls rewritten. 1t is possible to combine military and c1vihan uses al an airport "The Southern California A!r soc 1 at ion of"' {;overnments <SCAG I 1s about to undertakl' a new arc<t study to determine where best to m eet the air tnif fie needs of Orange County."" Bresnah1m said. Participating m the week long ht:ar1ng are thl' c1ttt·'> of Newport Beach und Tu~t1n. the Santu Ana Heights Homeowner~ Asso('1at1on and tht' Communny Auport Council. The hearings are expl'Ctl'd to wind up Thursday, after which th(' state heC1ring ofl1cl'r 1n charge will review the evidence and testimony and make u rl'c· ommendat1ontoCalTran~ Extortion Builder Tells of Threats By J OANNE REYNOLDS OI IN O&llY f'llot Sl•lf Newport Beach police used $250.000 in play money Monday night lo capture a suspect they a llege was tryinA to extort a quarter of a million dollars from Newport homebuilder Randall Presley Undercover offlecrs identified the ~uspect as Michael Edward Dempsey, 26. of Paramount A second suspect is still soughf Pohce charge that the pair had threatened Prcsley·s hfl' 1f he didn't deliver the $250.000. Dempsey was captured near Disneyland after a policeman . posing as Presley, left a brief· case stuffed with the phony cash in the back seat of Oempsey·s car. The dozen officers who had staked out the parking lot where the car was left ror delivery or the cash said they chased Dempsey about one mile He was cornered after a minor col· lision involving a Garden Grove patrol car Today, detective commander Richard Hamilton said <t second man Is bemg sought in conncc· tion with the case which aP· parently had its roots in a fman· c1al news story listing Presley·,, Newport Bcach·based firm a~ o ne of the top 100 in Southern California Hamilton noted that Pres ley·s company bears his name and that he 1s listed in the telephone directory. Presley. a resident or Lido Isle. f1r~t went to police on M<ty 15. He told investigators that the preceding night he had received a vaguely threatening phonl' call Hamilton said thal durinA the inves t1gat1on of the caM·. Presley received more threaten· ing calls and a threatening let· ter. At one point. las t Wednesday, fours shots from u .45-cahber gun were fired into Presley ·~ waterfront home llamillon said no one was injured Detectives arc convinced there are al least two men in volved m the scheme. he said. "because we heard two separate voices in the phone calls." Hamilton said Dempsey ha~ had little to say other than to tell police ... I'm afraid for my hfe I'll just go back lo prison.·· Hamilton declined to comment on the location of Presley or his family other than to note that they are being prote<'ted by bodyl'uards. Dempsey is being held in city jail in heu or Sl0.000 bail. Teen Admits Slaying Mom PITTSBURGH <AP1 -A 14· year·old boy. who demanded at gunpoint that he be arrested. has been charged with murder for allegedly beating his mother to death with a pipe. police said. Edward Bath~ate turned hlmselr In to police Monduy morning after driving his mother's car nearly I~ m1le!i from their Beaver County mobl1e hOme. "I want to ~ arrested," the boy was quoted as telllna Off\cer Alex Maxwell at tht caty'R Public Safety Buitdlna. The boy rtportodJy had a 111 ver·colored .2:t·callber automatic weopon aimed at Maxwell. but later sur· rendered the gWL EXTORTION TAR GET Newport's P resley Pair Nanwd For Newport Plan Board Allan Beek and David Shores were nominated Monduy night for appointment to the Newport Beach Planning Commission. The two men arc slated to be ron£1rmed by councilmen Jt their .June 12 meeting. If their appointments arc con· farmed. they will be -;worn in at the Jun<' 22 Planning Com- m1ss1on meeting Beek. or 2121 16th St ' JS an en~inccr for Rockwell lntcrn<i· t1onal He is the son of pioneer Balboa Is land res ident Carroll Beek. His lalC father. Joseph Beek. was one of the island·._ de· velopcrs and founded the Balboa Island Ferry Short's, an t.•mployc1:· of Amaljtamalcd Graph1<' Sc:>rv1ces and Pubhs hmg Company. 1.., a resident or Newport Crest. lie live~ at 12 Tribute Court. The two men were nominated to flit the commis!>ion vacanc1cc; created when former com - m 1 s s 1 o n c h a 1 r m a n .J a c k 1 l' Heather and commissioner Paul Hummel were elected to the City Council. Beck and Shores were selected by the City Council's Appoint- ments Committee -Mayor Paul Ryckoff. Hummel and Coull· cilwoman Evelyn Hart. Coast We athe r Considerable low cloud•· ness through Wednesday. becoming mostly.,. sunny W~dnesday afternoon Lows tonight 52 to 5~ Hifth:-. Wednesday 64 to 68 INSIDE TODA l' Wilham ··D1gge1 · Younq J ~ , on undertaker, love' clowmng Offltlnd. Sff story Page A9. .. ~ ., M M .. .,., > .. ,, .. •• M - ' . A..z CAA. Y Pl"OT N 1 1871 NB Sets Hearing Public to View Traffic P.haai.,,g Newport Beach city coun· cilmen have set June 12 for the first of two publi c hearings needed to transform their newly , enacted traffic phasing policy into city law. Meanwhile, councilmen are ironing out the wrinkles in that policy. They gave the go.ahead to one building project Monday and said they'd consider doing the same for three others June 12 The project given the excep· tion is a 13,000 square foot office buildinj{ t.o ~o up al 3700 Campus Drive. Councilmen did not take formal action. but agreed to put It on a lilst of projects excepted from the poJicy because con· struction alr~dy has begun. The other three, all proposed for Irvine Company land, are to be considered for similar excep· lions The exceptions were discussed at the afternoon session, when councilmen were given a report from city staff members who wanted council concurrence on the definition of what is and what is not a project covered by the traffic phasing policy Council Action In action Monday night. the Newport Beach City Coun· cil : PAY POUCY: Refused to adopt a pay policy ror firemen similar to the one already adopted for policemen. TRAFFIC: Set a June 12 hearing on the proposed traf· he phasing ordinance. ISLAND: Put off proposed changes in the street syste m on Balboa Island until after a June 12 hearing on the matter. STATION: Approved a $62.000 contract to expand the yard at the Mariners Fire Station and to build handball courts on the side of the yard wall that faces the park. Rites Slated For Newport's Mr. Aitchison Funeral services wiJI be held Thursday for Newport Beach resident John Aitchison. father- in -1 aw of Coast Community College District Chancellor Norman Watson. Mr. Aitchison died Monday at the age of 85. A native of Scotl and, Mr Aitchison came to California in 1933 a nd Jived in Northern California where he worked as plant manager for Western Chemical for 40 years. Following his retirement, he moved to the Harbor Area. He leaves his d aughter , Gwen· da Watson. three grandchildren and one great-grandson. Services will be conducted at 2 p.m. al the Chapel of O 'Connor Laguna Hills Mortuary, 25301 Alicia Parkway, Laguna Hills. Burial will follow in As cension Cemetery, El Toro. M.4DDY WANTS TAX DER4.TE f'ro91 Page AJ NB PAY ••• posed the original police pay policy. Mayor Pro Tem Ray Williams supported the police policy in February. but voted against ex- tending it to fire and lifeguards. Eight BU8es Inactivated Eight Orange County Transit District buses were out of commission to- day after somebody stole the inside handles that al- low drivers lo open and close the doors, Irvine police reported. The buses were parked overni ght in a main · tenance yard at 14736 Sand Canyon Ave. in Irvine: A district official said he had no idea why a nyone would steal the ha ndles. worth about $5 apiece, other than for spite. He was more concerned about the $6,000 district ser vice truck in which the thief c~rted them off. llovan Slaying Dick Hogan. the city's director of Community Development said that definition and the point at which councilmen decide con· struction has begun on a rroject are the key to figurine ou whlcb pending building projects will have to Jive up lo the terms ot the policy and which won 'l. The policy states that no build· ing or grading permits may be issued for any project of t.en or more residential units, or 10,000 square feet of commercial or in- dustrial space. . Exceptions to that policy may be granted lf construction has begun. if the developer can prove that his project won't add to existing traffic congestion. or if ciCy councilmen decide the pro- ject 's benefits outweigh its ad· verse impacts . According lo the report pre- sented by Hogan, a project is de· fined by state law to include not just single lots, but any parcel that carries a planned communi· ty designation, a zoning device used in residential and com- mercial tracts. Hogan 's report listed nine such projects that he said should be excepted because substantial grading, utilities installation or construction on individual Jots already have occurred. The list includes Koll Center Newport. Emkay Newport Place. Harbor Ridge, Versailles. and Newport Terrace among those projects. Councilmen agreed to the def- initions and also agreed t.o add the Campus Drive building because grading had taken place on that parcel. although a build- ing permit had not been issued. Developer Wally Geer, who wants to build a 33,000 square foot office building on Irvine Company land al the corner of Bayside Drive and Marine A venue. asked to be Included on the list because he has a "sub- stantial investment in terms of time and finances" in the proj- ect on which he has worked for nearly three years. His project does not yet have a coastal commission permit, nor a grading or building permit. David Neish, representing the Irvine Company, asked coun- cilmen to include Civic Plata, the area of Newport Center where the Newport Harbor Art Museum is locate d . and Westcliff Grove on the list of ex· ceptions. H~ said Civic Plata is in a s ituation similar to the Koll and Emkay projects. He asked for the exception of Westcliff Grove because, he s aid , the 29-lot development located near Dover Drive and Westcliff 1:>rive will not produce enough traffic t.o adversely im· pact the city streets. Councilmen said they'd see about the three exception re· quests June 12. LOS ANGELES <AP ) Republican gubernatorial can- di~ate Ken Maddy challenged primary opponents Ed Davis and Evelle Younger today to de· bate him on the merits of the Jarvis tax initiative. "The public is incensed." he told a news conference. "This is wha t we should be talking about." Maddy. an assemblyman from Defendants Argue Pretrial Motions Fresno. is the only one of the three candidates who opposes Proposition 13, which tax c rusader Howard Jarvis co- authored. Fellow GOP hopeful Pete Wilson, San Diego's mayor. also opposes Proposition 13. Injured Tot Found . LOS ANGELES <AP> -Eigh· teen hours after a 4Y.i-month-old ,.boy was believed kidnapped from his crib while his father grappled with an armed in· t ruder. officers found the child Jn an lllJ(lewood alley. ORANGE COAST tt DAILY PILOT ·-·-.... ___ I_ IM•• ClortPf V1U ..... 1.,...1 •""O.-•W- f-•11C .. •ll 10•1 .. l-··~ M.t_..,.~ .... Owlt1HM .._. _ ..... " .... ., . ..,. ~-.... .. ..... T1l1,etoM (TH)MMat'I C11111ned Aftet'tlllllfMWTI C..yrl9M "11 Or~~ =INN~ ..,. ... --hlvtlf .......... •.... r • ., n ... #r.,. "" ~,. "1 "'st .. rt prq.,t .. Wll-1 tjlllClel """ Hllil .. <t•l>ritllll-. \«-tlHI .. ,,, .... 10 ti CK4t Iliff~, c.i ...... ,. ~ .. , i.11 .... , Utt... u. .. !Mflllltp • .., .... 11 t• M _I#, .... m .. , .....-u•- • • Lawyers for seven derendants allegedly involved in the murder of Stephen John Bovan or Foun· lain Valley continued today lo argue pretriaJ motions that are expected to lake several weeks in Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland is presiding over pretrial action which includes a defense motion that murder indictments re· turned by the grand jury are de· feclive and should be dismissed. Defense lawyers argued Mon- day that evidence favorable to their clients was omitted from grand jury presentations aod that the murder charges are based on e vidence heavily weighted in favor of the prosecu· lion. Other motions to be argued in- clude motions for dismissal. mo· tions for separate trials and a motion for a court order that would compel a key prosecullon wltne&a to take a He detector test. All seven defendants are ac· cused of involvement ln the kill- ing of Bovan. 36, who was shot nine times outside t he El Ranchito restaurant In Newport Beach on Oct. 22, 1977. J erry P~r Fiori, 41, of Hunt· inaton Beach SJ charied wttb the actual kUhn1 and races tbe po11lblllty of a death penalty sentence. Defense 1ttorney Roser Roaen. repraentl~ Fiori. told Judie Kneeland Monday that hlJ client ls not beinl allowed to ex: erclae ln the county JaU and la beinl beld for 2' boun a day In 1 three-foot by nlne·foot c911. Flori la one of three dtfen· dent.a, who. the pn>tecutJon claims. were Imported hero from th• Ea.t Coast when a con· lract wa put out for the mW'der of Dovan. It is all eged that the contract was authorized when Bovan and others who are expected lo ap- pear as prosecution witnesses arranged .for the kidnapping of Alexander Kulik, 28. of Newport Beach. who is one of the seven defendants. Police claim the murder of Bovan brought into focus a multi-million dollar drug smug- gling ring which concealed its revenues In the assets of out· wardly respectable business operations in Orange County. It is alleged that partners in Prasadam Distributing Inc. of Newport Beach ordered the klll· ing of Bovan and brought Flori and two companions t o California for that purpose. Police claim that members of the Hare Krishna movement played a major role in the opera· tions of Pruadam. Former defendant Roy Christopher Richard, 28, at one time a high rankin& devotee in the Hare Krishna movement in Laauna Beach, has been eranted immunity from prosecution ln return for bls proml1ed testimony as a pl'Olecutlon wit· ness. Defense attorneys lried Mon· day to remove Judge Kneeland from tho cNe by fllln& an af. rldavlt of.prejudice against hlm . BEW Plam Party WASHINGTON <AP> -The Department ol Health. Educ•· tlon and Wolf are, wbJcb 1pends money at the rate ol '500 million a day, la Uv-owbta 1 low budlet blrtbda.1 pa"rtJ to ceJ1bT1t. lta l$th year ln emtence. C.t ol the l wo-4aJ part1 wm be UDO more thu 115,000," aald REW 1poke1men John Blampbln. "Tb1t'1 I• \hill th1 cWoart· ment .-pends lD three MCODC!I. '' ' o.11r l"li.c M:llfl ,..._ ARRESTEE IN RAPE CASE LED OFF TO JAIL lrvlne Reserve Officer John Burns Guides Suspect Viejo Man Nabbed In Rape, Beating By PIULIP ROSMARIN Ol ... O.llyf'llee, .... A Mission Viejo man who police said bad bee n confined until recently for sex crimes was arrested Monday and charged with the rape and brutal beating of an El Toro schoolgirl. Booked at Orange County Jail early today on a charge or at· tempted murder was Warren Dale Clewell. 28. a short-order cook. He was held on $250,000 bail. Irvine police Lt. J err? Boyd said additional charges of kid· napP.ing with intent to commit bodily harm. and rape, would be sought today. Boyd said investigation con· firmed a report that Clewell was released two months ago from Atascadero Stale Hospital for the criminally disturbed. Clewell had been under treat· ment for rape and kidnap of- fenses for an undisclosed period of time. according to police. He was arrested just after 4 p.m. Monday in Santa Ana by Irvine detectives acting on in- formation from an anonymous Swim Signups Set at YMCA Registration for YMCA swim· ming lessons will be held Satur- day at the Orange Coast Y. 2300 University Drive. Newport Beach. Registration for the firs t session of lessons, which opens June 19. will be taken from 9 a .m . to 4 p.m . Lessons are available for swimmers from the age of three months up. Classes will meet for 30 minutes in mornings and af- ternoon sessions twice a week. For addition.al information, call 642-9990. informant. The victim of the crime with .which Clewell is charged, a 13· year -old girl, r e m a ined in serious but stable condition to· day at a hospital. She was kidnapped last Thurs· day as she walked home from Serrano Intermediate School. Her abductor forced her into what she said was a dirty white Cadillac. She told police he drove her to a dirt road in lrvine-litlle·us~ Barranca Parkway-raped her and beat her over the head. then dumped her out of the car. Police. who at first thought the man had used a tire iron to split her face and fracture her skull in numerous places. now believe he m ay have used a la rge wrench. The wrench is one of several objects sought today as police searc hed Clewell's home . wher~ he was Jiving with his elderly parents. The child was found by a motorist who saw the little girl stumbling along the street. cov· ered with blood. Hospital surgeons patched her skull a nd race wounds, which re· quired hundreds of stitches. police said. The child's description of her attacker . which was published in newspapers. prompted dotens of calls from as far away as Santa Barbara. police said . The girl's description included her recollection of a tattoo above the man's left elbow: "T.C. Triumph." Boyd said today an old tattoo on Clewell's arm. covered by a new tattoo police believe to be only days old, showed the letters "TC." with a following word ob- scured. Boyd said the fresh tattoo was obtained at a Los Angeles tattoo shop. ~ Pentagon Proposal Approved WASHINGTON (AP> -Preai· dent Cart er. r ever sing his earlier decision, has approved Pentagon plans for two more ul trasophishcated fly ing war rooms, which the natio n's leaders could use to command U.S. forces in a nuclear war. The add1t 1o na l Airborne Emergency Command Posts. at about Sl.26 million each, would be this country's most costly aircrafL Three of the jumbo jets are already operating. The fourth. with mort1 advanced equipment. is being readied for service next year Shortly after he became presi· dent last yea r . Carter was briefed aboard one of the E4A command planes by members of the military battle staff who wo uld run the a ircraft'!' e laborate equipment in time or war. The planes would provide a haven for the president and top civilian and military leaders in the event a nuclear • attack threatened destruction of the capital After that flight, Carter. r.e- portedly dismayed at the cost or the added planes. told Defense Secretary Harold Brown in ef· feet not t.o buy the planned flft.h and sixth models. The six-plane fl eet had been originally planoed by the Ford administration. Carter's change of mind was indicated in a speech Monday by Assistant Defense Secretary Gerald P. Dinneen at Hanscomb Air Force base. Mass. "The Defense Department has r ecently received rrom th~ White House approval to pro· ceed with the acquisition or a fleet of six . . . E4 aircraft ... Oinn~en said. He said the two aircraft would be purchased in 1980 and 1981. Pentagon officials conftrmed that the president approved a go a head for the two planes after Brown. in a review Carter ordered. reaffirmed the value of the program, Library Talk Slated in NB Louise Du1ch. president of the Friends of the Library for • California, will be guest speaker at the June 8 meeting or the Newport Beach Friends of the Library. Mrs. Duich will speak on rare books and book collecting at the meeting at 11 :30 a.m . at St Michael and All Angels Church. 3233 Pacific View Drive. Corona del Mar. Reservations for the luncheon must be sent to Mrs. Joseph J ohnson. 1053 Dover Drive. Newport Beach by June S. Dona· lion is $4.5-0 per person and payable to the Newport Beach Friends of the L1brary. Women's Sessions Planned at YMCA An informal rap program for wom e n 1s being held every Thursday m orning at the Orange Coast YMCA. under the sponsorship of the Y-Knots. the Y's women's division. Sessions begin at 11 :30 a.m. at the Y. 2300 University Drive. Newport Beach. For further in· formation call 642·9990. A few years ago General Electric crealed a few gem· size. l ine quality diamonds as en experiment These stones were given to the Sm1thson11n They wero extremely expensive to produce. much more ex· pen11ve than taking diamonds out of the ground. Neverthe- less. the resultent publlc1ty of GE ·s on.time oxperlment ha1 led many people to be deceived Into believing that lm1tat1on dlamondS made from colorless synthetic material ere actually aynthetlc diamonds. To com· pound the problem. some manufaciurers 9tld senors of thla matorlal have given 1t n11mes that suggest diamond· Hke mete<lal. 6EM WISiE an even belle< 1m1tat1on oein9 sold as a diamond subslltute It 1s called "cubic z1rcon1a · (Zr02). A nicely faceted CZ ap. pears to be much moro con· v1nc1ng than any of the ottter diamond 1m1ta1tons and can pose d definite 1dent1llca11on problem to lhe unwary No material ,, really dlamond·hke, no matter whal It •• called No oom •PPf08Che1 diamond in hardnou. In 1ta ablllty to reelat scratching and thus. Its ablllty to rotaln It• brllllance. When a campaign wu launcl)ed to merket V A G a coup'41 of years ago. the stat• ment wat often made that not even a ~or could ''" the ,.. at from the lake. Now we have - Mary Barr Cert1fled Gemotoo1s1 CHARLES II. BARR Well. this jeweler can always tell Gemological trs1n1no and years ol experience gives me this confidence. dnd my c ustomers benefit from my knowledge. Diamond 1m1t1tlons have their place ... thoy are co.- tum• Jewelry ... u oppoMd to flhe l•w04ry. Those large. flany stonet are good IOf coektatl party chattM: they heve a lot of shook appeal and can ta tun. Unlortunatory. theH 11onH 1cratch and 1br11do com· parallvoly eatily and their gltt- tor turn1 to gloom T~ 9'19ty· bOdy. not only your )twerer, will know 10< sure. If you'd Ilk• to ... a CZ. com• in. WI hlY8 ono on hand to thow you. n 11 ~ In harO-n..a (dlalnond It 10) and 11 8'>' proxlrNttlY t. 7 tlmH Mavler t"*1 diamond, ' 7 ' I r I Saddleback EDITION VOL. 71 , NO. 143, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1978 . Afteroooli .Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS ' Viejo Man Faces Trial in Murder Plot By WILLIAM HODGE Oii ti. Dltllr Pol• St.lff A Mission Viejo resident and his business associate were or· de red Monday to face trial in what police allege was a bizarre murder·for·hire plot against a Seattle attorney. Ordered lo trial m Orange County Superior Cou rt on charges of conspiracy to commit murder and murder solicitation are Joseph W. Serino, 49. or Mis· sion Viejo and Joseph Bogg, 62. or Beverly Hills. Prosecutors allege the two men tried to hire a Newport Beach undercover police officer to kill Roger Leed of Seattle. Serino will stand trial on two solicitation counts and one con· spiracy count while Bogg faces only two counts, one conspiracy and one solicitation. A second solicitation count against• Bogg, involving an aJ. leged plot to murder or his wife. was dismissed following pre· liminary hearing in Municipal Court Judge Michael Naughton's south Orange County courtroom. During the hearing, Newport Beach investigator John Simon sat coolly on the witness stand and testified that he negotiated a murder contract last April in a Laguna Hills MaJJ restaurant. "He <Serino) didn't care if I shoved him <Leed> in front or a train as long as he came up dead." Simon testified. "He said he wanted to make it look like a situation that would attract the newspapers so he could verify Leed was dead." Simon said Serino gave him a plane ticket to Seattle and a description or Leed while they dine d al the Laguna H1ll.s eatery. The Newport Beach officer was brought into the case after the man Serino allegedly Initial· ly hared for the murder went to police That man, Roger Hofer . a La Habra carpenter. testified that he went to the Fullerton Police trying to protect the murder tar~et -inittally Bogg's wife ape uspect Schools Council Formed C 1t1ng "a new s piral of cooperation" in the Saddleback Valley UnHted School District, a group o f administrators, teachers and a trustee have formed a Combined Association Council to speak out on iss ues affecting schools. Saddleback Valley Educators Association <S VEA> President Bill Mecham said today. Mecham said the council would contain the presidents fro m four dis trict employee or ganazalaons. Board President George He nry and Act in g Superintendent Donald Ames. "The re has bee n so much turmoil in the district we wanted to do something to bring some -stability," Mecham said. He denied that the move was related to dis trict problems stem ming from the suspension of S upe rintendent Richard Welte "I don't think there was any political context at all <to the council's formation)," he said "We're just trying lo bring about so m e better comm uni cation in the district," he continued. Mecham said the ~roup would take stands on issues affecting education where they could agree on an opinion. "The re are som e issues evolvin~ right now that we could deal with," he said. "We're drafting a release right now on Proposition 13 " M ec h am also lis ted an upcoming bond election, school financing, pending federal or state legislation a nd school d1sc1pline as areas the council might address. Council members also include Sad dl e back Valley Adm 1n1strators Association President Barry Elle rbroek, Californi a State Employees Association Local President Sharran Grimes and Saddleback Valley Pupil Services Association Pres ident Tim Stone. HEW Plans Party WASHINGTON <AP> -The Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare, which spends money at the rate of $500 million a da>. is throwing a low budget birthday party to c~lebrate its 25th year in existence. Cost of the two-day party will be "no more than SlS,000," said HEW spokesman John Blamphin. "That's less than the depart ment spends in three seconds." Eight Buses Inactivated Eight Orange County Transit District buses were out of commission to- day after somebody stole the inside bandies that a l· low drivers to open and close the doors. Irvine police reported. The buns were parked overnight in e main· tenance yard at 14736 Sand Canyon Ave. ln Irvine. A dlatr1ct offlelaJ aaJd be bad no ldea why anyone would akaJ the handles, worth about IS apiece. other than for sptte. He wa.a more concerned about the $6,000 district aen1ce truck In -which the thief carted them ort. J EXTORTION TARGET Newport's Presley Extortion Suspect Arrested By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of the O•llY l'llot Staff Newport Beach police used $250,000 in play money Monday night to capture a suspect they allege was trying to extort a quarter of a million dollars from Newport homebuilder Randall Presley. Undercover officers identified the s uspect as Michael Edward Dempsey, 26. of Para mount. A second suspect is still sought. Police charge that the pair had threatened Presley's life if he didn't deliver the S250.000. Dempsey was captured near Disneyland after a policeman. posing as Presley. left a bnef. case stuffed with the phony cash m the back seal of Dempsey's car. The dozen officers who had staked out the parking lot where the car was left for delivery or the cash said they c h ased Dempsey about one mile. He was cornered after a minor col· lision involving a Garden Grove patrol car. Today, detective commander Richard Hamilton said a second man is being sought in connec- tion with the case which ap· parently had its roots in a finan- cial news story listing Presley's Newport Beach-based firm as one or the top 100 in Southern • California. Hamilton noted that Presley's company bears his name and that he is listed in the telephone directory. Presley, a resident of Lido Isle, first went to police on May 15. Hughes Will Trial Ending LAS VEGAS <AP> -No forger would expect anyone to believe that Howard Hu:1bea would leave a will on cheap yellow paper, tilted with mls· apelled words, so the so-caJted ••Monnon W'tlt'' must be legitimate, attorney Harold Rhoden said Monday. Final araumMta beaan In t.bo trial to determJne Ir the doc'u> ment Is the lut will and test&· ment of the late lndustrtall1t. "H\!lhes wrote it. I think you know -t:hat. t think you knDw Uult now,·· Rhoden told the tllht· mero ber Jury u be betan hi.I cloitna •raumtnt. t Airport Combine Studied By JACKIE HYMAN Ol IM Oellr l'llet Staff Orange County Airport Manager Robe rt Bresnahan tes tified today that he bt>lieves it is possible to combine military and civahan use of an airport. Bresnahan was questioned by Newport Beach City Attorney Dennis O'Neil during a hearing at the county courthouse on a s tate noise variance being sought by county officials for Orange County Airport. The late!)l noise variance granted by the California Department of Transportation expired in December. Because the noise generated by the a 1 rport exceeds norm ally permitted levels in the adjacent residential area. such variances must be apphed for annually. Questioned by O 'Neil, Bresnahan said he has looked at a variety of possible alternative airport sites in Orange County, including Los Alamitos Naval Aar Station and El Toro Marine Aar Station but declined to recommend any or the sites. "The Southern California Association of Governments ISCAG > is about lo undertake a new area study to determine where best to meet the air traffic needs of Orange County." Bresnahan said. The s ubject of airport noise ha s been a matt er of controversy as the area around Orange County Airport has become more densely populated. Participating in the current h earings are the cities of Newport Beach and Tustin. the Santa Ana Heights Homeowners Association and the Community Airport Council. The hearings are expected to wind up Thursday, at which ti me the hearing officer will review the evidence and make a recommendation to CalTrans. During a break in the hearings today, O'Neil said that, if the variance is n't granted, the airport would have to cut its scheduled jet flights from about 40 a day to about four a day. ·Realistically speaking, the variance is probably going to be granted," O'Neil said. r ... oaiay ,.n .. Staff ...... ARRE:'TEE IN RAPE CASE LED OFF TO JAIL lrvlne Reserve Officer John Burns Guides Suspect Evidence 'V.ague' Did House Members Get Korean Cash? WASHINGTON <APl -In· vesligators have circumstantial evidence that some present House members might have taken envelopes s tuffed with $100 bills from a former South Korean ambassador, sources said today. , But the House ethics commit· tee sources said none of the evidence is strong enough to pursue without former Am· bassador Kim Dong J o's testimony. The sources. asking not to be identified. said the evidence is so circumstantial and vague that it is hard even to say how m any current congressmen might have taken the money. but something like 10 as more ac· curate than any higher range '"You really shouldn't play the n.imbers ga m e," one an · vestigator said. '"It is hard to de· fine who you include and who you don't." Comedian Durante The possibility that the House ethics committee has any sus - pects al all was leaked for the first lime on the eve of a com· mittee vote on whether the House should threaten to cut South Korea's economic aid in an e ffort to get the am· bassador·s testimony. The House International Rela· lions Committee had planned to vote on a resolution softening the threat this morning but put off action until later in the day, 1( then. • Taking Treatment •• SANTA MONICA <API - Comedian Jimmy Durante. ~. has been admitted to St. John's Hospital where he ls undergoing treatment for an upper respiratory infection, a spokeswoman said today. The famed "Schnozzola" was reported in satisfactory condl· tlon . Spokeswoman Peg,gy Frank Shaff said Durante was admitted Saturday and was eit· pected to be hospitalized "for about a week." Durante'• wlft MarJorle, reacht1d by teJeptlon.e In Ui couple's Beverly Hlll1 bomo, aald she expected lo k.oow later today bow Iona her husband would be boepitaHzed. She aaid Durante w11 ·•tn for some lelta ••• ,.. . Bad'Shine' FauU to Four ATLANTA (APl -Four peo. pie are dead in west-central Georgia because a moonshiner may have tossed an old car bat· tery Into his maah, poisoning the home brew with lead, says Dr. James Collins. But relatives of those victims anll seven others who have become UI will not help him ttnd the stlll. Collins said Monday. The do(tOr uld he lint noticed the symptom• about eiJht months aio. und Lho first vlclfm died abOut two months later. The most r cent dtath 'Wll three Wffks &IO· 'i "fie <Serino> told me al would be done tn a fash100 where 1t would look like a robbery,·· Hofe r ~aad of a conver~at1on walh Senna at ct Buena Park res lauranl "After 1t was done there would be window broken to make 1t look like forcible entrv ... Hofer s aid. Fol lowing that conver:.ataon. <Stt TRIAL, Page AZ> El Toro Girl, 13, Victi01 By PtuLIP ROSMARIN Of ti-. o.llr Pllet Sl•H A Mi ssion Viejo man who poli ce said had been confined until recently for sex crimes was arrested Monday and charged with the rape and brutal beating of an El Toro schoolgirl. Booked at Orange County Jail early today on a charge of at· te rn pted murder was Warren Dale Clewell , 28, a short-order cook. He was held on $250,000 bail Irvine police Lt. Jerry Boyd said additional charges of kid· napping with intent to commit bodily harm.! and rape. would be sought today. Boyd said investigation con firmed a report that Clewell was released two months ago from Atascadero State Hos pital for the criminally disturbed. Clewell had been under treat· ment for rape and kidnap of· fenses ror an undisclosed period of tame, according to police lie was arrested Just after I pm. Monday in Santa Ana by Irvine detectives acting on in· formation from an anonymous informant. The victim of the crime with which Clewell 1s charged. a 13· ye;.ar-old girl, remained in serious but stable condition to· day at a hospital. She was kidnapped last Thuro;. day as she walked home from Serrano Intermediate School. Her ubductor forced her into what she said was a dirty whitt' Cadillac. She told pol ace he drove her tr1 a dirt road in Irvine-little-used Barranca Parkway-raped her and beat her over the head , then dumped her out of the car. Police. who al firs t thought the man had used a tire iron to split her face and fracture her skull m numerous places, now bellevl' hC' may have used a l ar ~l' wrench. The wrench as one of several objects sought today as polict' searched Clcwell's home, where he was living with his elderly parents. The child was found by a motorist who saw the little girl s tumbling along the street. cov- ered with blood. Hospital s urgeons patched her s kull and face wounds, which re· <See SUSPECT, Page A2) Coast Weather Considerable low cloudi· ness through Wednesday. becomin(l mostly sunny Wednesd ay afte rnoon. Lows tonight 52 to 58. Highs Wednesday 64 to 68 INSIDE TODAY WHLlom ··Dtgger" Young Jr .. an undertaker, loves clowning around.1 See ston; Pagt A9 latlex .. a .. ., ,,. ,.. .. eM .. ., .. .. M A.I DAILY PILOT 58 Mild Qua/re Hib Oxnard OXNAJ\O CAP> -A minor earlhquake awakened res1d~nts tn tb>s Ventura County city early today. No damage was reported. Caltech seismologists In Pasadena said the temblor, which registered 3.9 on the Richter scale, was centered 1n the Pacific Ocean about 20 miles south ot Oxnard. ,,,... Page A J 1RIAL .•. Hofer approached poltce who suggested he try to get a second man involved in the murder con· tract -undercover investigator Simon. Hofer agreed. "I mentioned to him CSerinoJ T had a friend from New York who had done this kind of work before." Hofer testified. Hofer then arranged a meet· iog between himself, Simon - who became New York jewel thief Tony DeMarco -and Serino at an El Toro bank. When the meeting took place. Simon testified. Serino asked him if he knew what the deal was . "I told him I heard about killing some woman in L.A. and I could steal all the jewelry in this house," Simon said. "He said that will have to wait, we have another deal for you. "He mentioned a lawyer in the Seattle area." Authorities allege Serino and Bogg were actin~ a s in- termediaries for a third man who has not been indicted thus far. Police believe Leed was or. dered murdered because he suc· cessfull y filed a $1 million lawsuit against a Beverly Hills land firm for fraodulently sell- ing land in California's Mojave Desert. Several hundred Seattle resi- dents purchased the land. Simon testified that he and Orange County Sheriff's in- vestigator Les Leber traveled to Seattle and got Leed to play dead for photographs and disap- pear for 10 days to convince Serino and Bogg that the murder had been carried out. Following Simon's return, he and Hofer again met Serino two more times during which Simon was given $5,000 for the Leed murder, he testified. Then, Simon said, he and Hofer went to see Bogg at his Anaheim business address to get the remaining $10,000 fee for the murder. ''I'm only the middle man." Simon testified he was told by Bogg. "He said his man or his people had to have verification before they would pay more money out." Derense attorney Howard Weitzman successfully argued for dismissal of one solicitation count against Bogg. Judge Naughton agreed that the prosecution had not established a link between Bogg and Serino's efforts to secure a murder contract on Bogg's wile. "Serino may have come up with the idea on his own," Naughton said. Naughtoo set June 6 for pre trial motions in Superior Court. Both men remain free on bail pending the Superior Court trial. Reagan Rapa 'Scare Talk' SAN FRANCISCO <AP I Former Caljfomia Gov. Ronald Reagan says the hotly controversial Proposition 13 would "not only be beneficial to the business climate, but also to the people of California." At an impromptu news confer e nce here Monday. Reagan labeled as "scare talk" arguments that the tax reduction inili ati ve would cripple schools and municipal services. DAILY PILOT ·-...... p--PvW<-,.o •. ~ v .. ,,..n•~••ftfOc,...o111M- "'-••lt""'4 IEOltOf ":::.~ "':'J::- 0-tn M. L-. ltl<MrW,. .... ,. "'""'fllll IMMttl'Q II.Olton ladchbM:lc Y•lev Office n101 u ""'Ro .. •• s... or-.o .. .._ .. Of&•• " ... ,f:;.~~:~":'1~'==·•'<1 ,.._ .... ft,,..._.,._, T~~('M4)~ °' ......... ~~ .... ~ ~-Vo•lfv ....,..Oflic• 111.a10 r,_•c-1o 4-.-o ~=-°'~~,=-.~ cr.,.=.::-Mft .;.r. "-ttt" "'" !!! ••,.: .. ,_ -··· .. , ....... ti --· '"'-Cl-_,_ •If •I C:.11 ~ t.llfN111•, ketc•l,C .... "" ·--u .. • -,.; l9r -M,. ~I .... m.-, ___ .,...........,. l r-.,. W.,23, 1'71 Murder Trial . Delayed Lawyers for seven defendants allegedly involved In the murder of Stephen John Bovan of Foun. tain Valley continued today to argue pretrial motions that are expected to tak"e several weeks in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Robert P . Kneeland is presiding over pretrial action which includes a defense motion that murder indictments re- turned by the grand jury are de- fective and should be dismissed. Defense lawyers argued Mon- day thal eVidence favorable to their clients was omitted from grand jury presentations and that the murder charges are based on evidence heavily weighted in favor of the prosecu-tion. Other motions lo be argued in· elude motions for dis missal. mo- tions for separate trials and a motion for a caprt order that would compel a key prosecution witness to take a lie detector test. DellY,..lllCMatt ...... . MRS. MILAN MILLER (LEFT), MRS. ARNOLD KEARNS ADMIRE THE GREENERY Laguna Garden Clubbers Were Among Thoee Who Got Rere View of Smith Estate Monday All seven defendants are ac- cused of involvement in the kill- ing of Bovan, 36, who was shot nine times outside the El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Beach on Oct. 22. 1977. Gardens Showeased State Con:ventioneers Tour Laguna Estate Jerry Peter Fiori, 41 , of Hunt- ington Beach is charged with the actual killing and races the possibility of a death penalty sentence. Defense attorney Roger Rosen, representing Fiori. told Judge Kneeland Monday that his client is not being allowed to ex- ercise in the county jail and is being held for 24 hours a day in a three-foot by nine· foot cell. Fiori is one of three defen· dants, who, the prosecution claims. were imported here from the East Coast when a con· tract was put out for the murder of Bovan. It is alleged that the contract was authorized when Bovan and others who are expected lo ap- pear as prosecution witnesses arranged for the kidnapping of Alexander Kulik, 28, of Newport Beach, who is one of the seven defenaants. Police claim the murder of Bovan brought into focus a multi-million dollar drug smug- gling ring which concealed its revenues in the assets of out· wardly respectable business operations in Orange County. By STEVE MITCHELL Of ... o.41., l>li.4 St.ti The woman with the floppy hat put her hand over her mouth and gasped. "How on earth do you keep the cate~illers off of your pelargoniums, she asked. Alice Bechthold beamed and said, "It's a Jot or work for three Of US, believe me." Mrs. Bechthold led more than 200 members of the California Garden Clubs Inc. around the Lon V. Smith estate Monday during a day-long tour or south Orange County homes. The garden ladies are attend· ing their organization's 47th con- vention in Costa Mesa this week, and a tour of the ll·acre Smithclif( estate in Laguna Beach provided the women an opportunity lo visit a home seldom seen by outsiders. Alice Bechthold met each of the five tour buses as they pulled up In front of the walled en- trahce to the Smith estate. "Welcome to Smithcliffs," she said. "My name is Alice Bechthold and I Jive here. I'm the gardener's wife." As the camera-toting women c Ii m bed out or the buses and walked the 300 yards from the iron gates to the blufftop, they viewed a variety or trees and plants some had never seen out- side a garden book. "ls that a Melaleuca tree:· one woman asked, reaching up to stroke a twisted, white bark giant. "The wind shapes the limbs.'' another responded. ·'That's why it's twisted around like that." A forest of junipers greeted the women next to the lhree- s to ry weekend house of Lon Smith and his wire. Marguerite. And a real garden club pleaser were pots full or cymbidium or- chids on the front porch of the six-bedroom home. "Js it true you're not supposed to touch the leaves or cym- bidiums. •· a woman asked the gardener's wife. "Oh. I touch them all the time:" Mrs. Bechthold laughed, running her fingers along a long green stem. "I never heard that before.•· The women moved past the 50-year·old guest house to a lookout point overlooking the beach at Emerald Bay. "l don't see how you keep this place up." a woman wearing a blue beret said. Mrs. Bechthold, her husband Art. and groundskeJ;!per Mike Newman work fulltbbe at the estate, mowing lawns, pulling weeds and trimming trees. "We lost about 10 trees during this year's storms," Mrs . Bechthold recalled. "I bet Art made 300 trips to the dump with the clippings and leaves." The Bechtholds have worked for Lon Smith for nearly 23 yea r s. the last seven al Smilhcliffs. Before that thev stayed on a 210.acre ranch the 86·year-old oilman owned in Bakersfield. Mike Newman has worked at Smithcflffs for the past seven years. The 78-year-old Irish gardener said the Smiths come down from their Beverly Hills home nearly every weekend. "And they always ~ring guests during the summer months." the gardener said. Newman said Smith made his money in the ml fields of Bakersfield. afte r beginning his career "selling everything from shoestrings to neckties. to the gandy dancers on the railroad." It is alleged that partners in Prasadam Distributing Inc. of Newport Beach ordered the kill· ing or Bovan and brought Fiori and two companions to California for that purpose. Police claim that members of the Hare Krishna movement played a major role in the opera. lions of Prasadam. Former defendant Roy Christopher Richard, 28, at one time a high ranking devotee 1n the Hare Krishna movement 10 Laguna Beach, has been granted immunity from prosecution in return for his promis ed testimony as a prosecution wit· ness. HB Teen Testifies To Sexual Abuses Lon Smith still goes to has Beverly Hills office during the W<'ek. and Mrs. Bechthold said he can't wait to get to work on Mondays. That leaves five days for the two gardeners and Mrs Bechthold to get the Laguna Beach estate in order The grounds are crowded with pines. olive trees. citrus trees and acres of lawns and gardens. Defense attorneys tried Mon · day to remove Judge Kneeland from the case by filing an af- fidavit of prejudice against him. A 16-year·old Huntington Beach youth testified Monday in Orange County Superior Court that defendant Sheldon David Diamond took him to a Laguna Hills hotel last Feb. 27 where he was to have homosexual rela- tions with a wealthy busi- nessmanfromNewYork. Such documents aJlege that the judge named is biased against the defendant and is not capable of ruUng fairly in any pretrial or trial action. Judge Kneeland rejected the aHidav1t and told defense at· torneys they had waited far too long to file such a document. The student testified shortly after the non.jury trial opened in Judge James K . Turner's courtroom that Diamond told him he would receive half of the $200 fee they would receive from Diamond's client. Suit Limit Upped The younR witness told Judge Turner that h e agreed to participate with the New York businessman in sex acts in re- turn for the $100 fee. SACRAMENTO CAP l - Anyone suing ror up to $15,000 will be able to go to Municipal Court instead or the heavily backlogged Superior Court, un- der a bill signed into Jaw by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. And the witness testified that he had performed similar sexual acts on prior occasions during the eight months he had known Diamond who often visited him at his Huntington Beach home. The measure, AB 2192 by As· semblyman Fred Chel, D-Long Beach, was signed Monday. Sheriff's officers booked Diamond, 31. of Los Angeles on c harges of pimping and pander- ing after an investigator who Almost Equal Poll Shows Hopefuls Cloae . SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Attorney general can- didates of both parties still are locked in an extreme- ly close battle for the nomination. according to the California Poll, which found large numbers of voters s till undecided or uninformed on the race. Pollster Mervin Field said today that U.S. Rep. Yvonne Burke and Los Angeles city attorney Burt Pines continue to divide almost evenly the votes of the 63 percent of Democrats polled who committed themselves to a candidate. Meanwhile, state Sen. Oeorge Oeukmejian and former U.S. Attorney James Browning split the votes of the 49 percent of Republicans who have an opinion in the race, Field said. The candidates have been nose.to-nose during FlcJd 's last three poJls. The latest poll of 1,224 Californians s hows Pines slightly ahead with 32 pc1·cent over Ms. Burke's 31 percent, whJJe 37 percent of Democrats polled had no preference. On the GOP r;ide. Deukmejian won 2S percent oL the pref enmco votes and Brownlni 24 per· cent, With 51 percent undecided. The Interviews for thr ~JJ were conducted May 1.S. - l posed as the wealthy bust· nessman from New York arrest· ed Diamond in a room at the Holiday Inn before any sex acts could take place. The investigator. who will ap- pear as a prosecution witness, said he paid Diamond $200 with the understanding that the Hunt. ington Beach youth brought to the hotel wouJd receive $100. ll is alleged by the prosecution that Diamond had a number or boys, ranging in age from 11 to 16, on his books. All were readily available for male clients seek· ing homosexual relationships, officers sa1d. Diamond is being held In the county jail with bail set al $50,000. A few years ago General Electric created a tew gem- s1ze. tine quality diamonds as an exR1trlmen1 These stones were g!Yen to the Smlthson1an. They were extremely expensive to produce. much more ex - pensive than taking d1amdflds out or lhe ground Neverthe- less. the resullent publlcfty of GE's on.time experiment hat led many people to be deee1vecl 1n10 belleY1ng that 1m1ta1ton dl"1ionds made from colorless aynthellc meterlal are ~tually synthetic di~. To com· pound the problem. aome manufactUf91'1 and tetlera ot thla material have given It name• that tu0oeet dlamond· Ilk• material. No material It rtally dlamond·llke, no mttter what It I• celled No gem approac:hea dlemond In harctneta, in lta abllfiy to l'Mltt ecratchlng •nd. thua. It• ablllty to r1t11n 111 brllll•nce. When • campaign wu launchfd to m.er'* 'i',A,Q. a couple ot ....,._ ego, tM •tat• ment wu Often made that not awn • ~ could ttll the r• •I from the r.ic. Now M have "It's a chore all right." Mike said as he helped a garden club member aboard the tour bus .. But the Smiths are the nicest people I ever met in my life.·• And the Smith estate is one of the nicest the garden clubbers had seen. said state garden club president Mrs. Eugene Woesner Injured Tot Found LOS ANGELES <APl -Eigh· teen hours after a 41h·month-old boy was believed kidnapped from his crib while his father grappled with an armed in· truder. officers found the child in a n JngJewood alley. A police spokesman said Monday that Terence James was taken to the County-USC Medical Center. @ &EM WISE CHARLES ff. HARR • uAll4e-ht1 ... , Mobster Colnmbo Succumbs NEWBURGH. N.Y. (AP> -Former underworld chieftain• Joseph Colombo Sr .. left almost tota.Jl~ paralyted by an as-sa11111n s bullet seven years ago, ~ied at St. Luke Hospital here. hospital officials said today. He was 55. Colombo. gunned down in 1971 at an Italian-American Day ral· Jy in Columbus Ctrcle in mid· Manhattan. died Monday night the hospital said. He had bee~ admitted in a semicomatose state on May 6. Dr. John C. Bivona Jr .. who was attending Colombo. said death resulted from Jong-term complications stemming from his injuriec: The immediate cause of death was cardiac ar· rest, he said. A hospital spokesman said the former mob leader "passed away very quietly." Colombo had been unable to lead an active life as a busi- nessman, an Italian-American ciyic leader and, according to authorities. one of the nation's most powerful underworld leaders since he was shot in the head at close range three times during the rally. He required round·lhe·clock nursing care He could not talk nor write. and, except for the thumb and forefinger on his right hand, he could not move. For much of the time since the Italian Uruty Day rally shooting. he was semicomatose. /\ co-founder or the Italian- A m erican Civil Rights League, Colombo was shot by Jerome Johnson on June 28, 1971 . Johnson, 24, was fatally shot on lhe spot. Johnson was not a known member or the un- derworld, but the shooting was considered by authorities to be part of a feud with the Gallo crime family. Immediately a fte rwards. power-hungry mobsters seized whatever Colombo's associates could not protect in the Colombo crime empire. I',.... Page Al SUSPECT ••• quired hundreds of stitches. police said. The child's description of her attacker. which was published in newspapers, prompted dotens of calls from as far away as Santa Barbara, police said. The girl's description included her recollection or a tattoo above the man's left elbow: "T.C. Triumph." Boyd said today an old tattoo on Clewell's arm, covered by a new tattoo police believe to be only days old, showed the letters "TC." with a following word ob· scured. Boyd said the fresh tattoo was obtamed at a Los Angeles tattoo shop. Police also reported they believe Clewell shaved off a mustache and cut his hair, in a crude job with a razor blade, to further change hjs appearance. He said preliminary searching of Clewell's house last night and early this morning uncovered sandals. a shirt and glasses that were described by the child. Police also said they found a scuba wetsuit in Clewell 's bedroom. The girl had said she saw a wetsuit in the back seat of the Cadillac an even better 1milal1on being sold as a diamond sut>smute. It 1s called "cubic z1rcon1a " 1Zr02). A nicely f~ed CZ ap. peers to be much more con· v1ncmg then any of the other diamond 1mltahons and can pose a definite 1dent1fica1ion problem to the unwary. Well. this )8'-Neler can always tell Gemo1og1ca1 training and years of e11per•ence gives me th1 ' confidence. and my customers benet11 trom my knowled09. Diamond 1m1ta1tons have thejr place ... they are cos· tume jewetry .. aa opposed to tint jewelry. Those large. Flashy alonn are good for coctrta11 party chatter; they have a IOI ot Shock appeal and can be tun. Unfonunately, lhe•e 11one1 1cra1ch ano abrade com· par11t1vely easily and their gllt• tar turns 10 gloom. Then every· body. not only your jeweler, wlll know lor 1uro II you'd ltke 10 tee • CZ. come In. M have one on hand to ahow you. It 11 8Yt In httd· OW. (diamond 11 10) and la ap. prox1m11•1y t. 7 time• hdvlef' then diamond. Tuellday. May 23. 1978 s OAIL y PILOT A3 ,,..----------Second Murd er Trial Ordered ---------. Dictionary Defined as 'Evidence' 6y TOM BARLEV OI 4lllt O..ty pti.t kMlt It ros t taxpayers about SlS.000 for the Orange County Superior Court trial that ended with Da vi d Louis Dom inick of Huntington Beach being found guilty of second degree murder. BUT NOW IT has to be done a ll over again with the s econd trial set for June 12. • And a ll because of a $9.95 dictionary. Judge Robert A. Banyard, who presided over the first trial of Dominick. 23. orde red the second tria l when Deputy Public Defender J ohn Barnett told him a bout the copy or Webster's Mode rn Reference D1c- t1on a ry that found its way into the Jury room during deliberations. BARNETI' SUCCESSFULL V arg ued tha t the use of the dictionary by jury me mbers a mounted to the m ta kmg additiona l evidence 1nto the JUry room . Judge Banyard said he had to agree. Juries are not allowed to take e vidence into de· li berations with the m and they must draw any guidance they need from the ins tructions given by the j udge at the e nd of the tria l Deputy District Attorney Bryan Brown. cle arly irked a l the setting aside of a tria l tha t had quic kly produced a guilty verdict. argued that the jury had only wa nted lo look up the meanings of four words : .. base." "pro\location ·· "malice" and "bra n dis hmg .. HE EXPLAINED that two wom e n Jurors had "'orried about the e xact meaning of thP words to the point that a male juror brought the dictionary with him for lhe fina l day of deliberations and looked up the words they questioned. Brown unsuccessfully a rgued tha t the dictiona ry h a d an no way influenced the jurors when they voted on a verdict of second degree murder . And to prove it. he produced affidavit~ m which the j urors declared tha t they would have reached their verdict with or without the d1ctlon ary. TO NO AVAIL, JUDGE Banyard. commenting that the law was clear in such case~. ordered a se cond tria l for Dominick. The r uling m e ans that Brown. for the second time. wtll a ttempt to convince a j ury that Dominick shot and killed Edmoun P a ul Neal. 19. in the v1 c tam ·s home at 1093 l T a lbert Ave . Founta in Valley. BROWN BELIEVES a second Jury will gave htrr. the same verdict of second degree murder lie said he will only do one thing differe ntly frorr. his format in Lhe first trial · Tll watch what they take mto the Jury roorr. ·· he said grimly O~ange .County Jail 'Improved' l i ,. ... , ....... OLDEST MEDAL OF HONOR WINNER NOW 101 YEARS OLD William Seach Visits With VA Chief Max Cleland Bero IOI O/Jest Living Medalist BROCKTON. Mass. <AP > -William Seach. oldest living re-c1pu~nt of the Congressiona l Medal of Honor, celebrates his JOlst birthday today almost 78 years after the Boxer Rebellion in which he performed his valorous military service Seach. a career Na vy man, is a putient at the Veterans Ad· mm1strallon llospital in Brockton llE WAS'CITED "FOR action with the relief expedition of the A lhed forces 1n China during the battJes of 13. 20, 21 22 June 1900 .. • Seach was part of a Naval landing party that was on a re- connaissance mission. At the time. he was an ordinary seaman aboard the USS Newark. He also served in the Spanish-American War and World War I before retiring as a li eutenant. SE/\CH HAS BEEN A PATIENT in the hospital's nursing home for three years. His wife. Caroline. 86, hves m South Weymouth. '"This guy 1s s harp." said a hospital s pokesman. "He's a ht· tie hard of hearing. but mentally he's very alert ... Ga rde n Grove S l aying Heroin Addict, 21, Guilty of Murder i\ heroin addict who shot and killed an elderly widow who took ham into her home and tried to break him of the habit was fO\llld guilty of second degree murder Monday in an Orange County Superior Court non· jury trial. Judge PhiJip E. Schwab set June 25 as the date he will ~entence Joseph Frederick Gill. 2J. or Corona. He additionally found Gill guilty of robbery. Teen Admits Slaying Mom PITTSBURGH <AP> - A l~· year-old boy, wbo demanded at gunpoint that he be arrested, has been charged with murder for allegedJy beating his Dlothet' to death with a pipe, police said. Edward Bathgate turned himself lo to police Mon1'ay m or,n i ng after drlvine hls motfier·s car nearly ts miles from their rteaur County mobile ho~. "I want lo be arrHted." the boy w 8$ quoitld 8$ ttltlng om~r Alex MaxweU at the city's Public Safety Bulldlns. The boy reportedly had a stlver-coJored 25-caltber eutomatlc weapoo aimed ot Maxwt>ll, but latar aul' renderf'd the &\Ill. 7' Gill was arrested by Garden Grove police Oct. 24. 1977, after he inflicted on Mrs . He len Maxine Reams. 67, what was described in his trial as ''a wild. uncontrollable, savage attack ... a very savage beating during a wild rage to get his drugs back." GilJ admitted to omcers during questioning that he lost his temper and attacked his benefactor because sbe bid bis heroin from him in a bid'to help him cont.rol the habit. Arreitting oUicers testified that GUI told them he wanted to die ln the gas chamber for what he bad done to Mrs. Reams. The prosecution did not seek the death penalty. Judge Schwab was asked, however, to find Olli guilty of first degree mmder. a conv\ctlon that wouJd have meant life in prison w1tbout P<*lbJUity or parole. The Judie found him guUty of second aegree murder, a convfclfon that wm rt~e GUI not leas than four years ln state prison. GUI toJd Judge Schwab during the trial: "l'd rather ao lo the gas chamber. I can't 10 Ulroufh 1\fe oow with her on my mlnd • It was tesUfied that drugs uaed by GUI ln addition to heroin lnctuded barbiturates, LSD, PCP Canaet dus.t ), amphatemlnca. dexedline and cocdn@. f t Training Program Helpful By GARY GRANVLLLE Ot Ille CMlly P'llot Sletf The Orange County Grand Jury said Monday thal condi- tions in the county jail have im· proved over the past two years but that more improvement is needed. On the plus :-.1de. the Jury said jail administrators have carried out most of the rccommenda tions for improvements made by recent grand juries The improvements cited in· elude what the Jury called effort ··to incre ase communications between all levels of Jail staff" and start of a new training pro· gram for jail di!puties. Those efforts at improvin g jail condi tions notwithstand ing. the Grand J ury's report said "in· mates are sometimes treated in a thoughtless or inhumane man· ner." '"And.·· the JUry added. '"in· mate rights occasiona lly a re violated." Some of the bl ame for those shortcomings in the treatment of inmates was blamed on the practice of assigning sheriff's deputies to jail duly for what the jury call an excessive amount of time ··E very de puty inte rviewed . has expressed resentment and frustration about the long term of service in the jail ." the jury·s report said. It acknowledged that the same deputies vouched for the value of jail duty experience and em- phasized that il is the deputy's Jengthy assignment in Jail that causes problems. "Hi s <the depty's I attitude soon turns to boredom . resent- m ent and hostility as the months and years roll by," the Grand Jury said To correct th al system . the jur y recomme nded that the SheriH's Department: -Limit the Ume a deputy can b e a ss igned uninte rrupted Jail duty to one year. -Rotate deputies assigned a second tour of Jail duty a mong the branch j ails as well as the main Jail. -Abandon the practice of re· quiring added Jail service as a condition of promotion. -Consider adopting a lO·hour, four·day week for Jail deputies. The Grand Jury also suggest· ed that the Sheriff's Office con· sider us ing full-time correc· tional officer s rather than deputies tostaffthe jail. The jury's report went on to recomm e nd that annual psychological tests be given jail deputies and that the booking area be monitored by videotape. Other recommendations made by the Grand Jury included in- staJUng more telephones In the jail and that the sheriff begln making the adjustments tn jail operations dictated early this m onth by a U.S. District Court judge As far as the women's jail is concerned. the Grand Jury criticized what it called the ex· cessive time It takes to book and release woman prisoners. The jury also said understarr- ing or the women's jail ls a pro~ l e m and that women are sometimes held tor up to 16 hours In the booking cell without belna fed. Cruh Kills Baby IMPERIAL BEACH <At'' The drivtr or a car that collided wlth an ambulance ·carrying firemen trylns to revive a baby whose breathing bad stopped may not have beard the sJren. police aay. The 8-month-old tot wu hurled from a stretcher in the crash Monday, fireman Jerry Webb sald later. The baby was dead on arrtval at Bay OeneraJ Hospital. ' • 11..,,uaUzed APWI,.,.... Vio linist Efrem Zimbalis t Sr .. 89. was listed m gooci co nditi o n t o d a ~ a t St. Mary·s Hos pital an Reno. wh ere he wa~ unde r going t re atme nt for pneumonia . lie was hospitalized Friday. Boy Burned By High Wire Recuperating A Huntington Beach boy who plunged 20 feet while trying to retrieve a baseball from an e lec tric power fa cility and brushed a 66.000-volt wire as he fell . remaine d hospita lized today. Gary We ave r , 11. of 21 5 Osw ego Ave .. was listed in s atisfactory condition a t UC Irvi ne Me d ical Ce nte r in Ora nge , where he is unde r treatment for second d egree burns over lus chest and torso The youngster was injured Friday night when he s lipped while scaling the Southern California Edison Company transfer station near Lake Street and Acacia Avenue. H e only touched the high voltage line for a fraction of a seco nd. caus ing a flas h of electrical fire that Oared around him like a halo, incinerating his T-s hirt instantly, police said. 8995,JOO Ashed Transit Budget Grows By 14% A $995.100 budget proposal for 1978·79, up 14 percent from this year . was presented Monday to me mbers of the 17 -month-old Orange County Transportation Com mission The commission. created by st ate leg1slallon to review local transit and road·building pro grams. Wiii conduct a June 12 public h~aring on the :-.pend. 1n g prop os a l be fore con· sidering its adoption. The commission is one of few local government agencies not affected by potentia l passage next month of the Jarvis proper ly tax limitation initiative. Rather than property taxes. i t s a ctivities are financed through a share of state sales laxes. federal grants and plan- ning funds from the six-county Southern California Association of Governments. Thomas Jenkins, commission executive director. s aid roughJy half of this y ear's $871,000 budget will be left unspent al the end or the fiscal year. The bulk of that carryover - $355.000 -came in funds for a countywide transportation study that won 't be s pent until the com ing fi scal year. Jenkins said. Tha t study is being carried out by county employes the next two years under a contract with the commission. In his budge t propos al, J enkins s uggested three possible levels of staffing for the com- mission's planning and review work. By hiring up to three new e mployes , he said. the com· mi ssion could r e duce the amount of work given to hired cons ultants by about $70.000 from a proposed $542,500 worth to $472,SOO. Jenkins' proposed budget aJso includes a contingency fund of from $216.970 to $237 .940. In addition to the countywide transportation s tudy. pro1ects planned for the coming year in· elude studies aimed at increru.· ing the use or carpools and public transit, setting highway needs priorities. analyzing good!> movement and studies on air quality * * * Corridor Purchase Proposed Orange County transportation commissioners hope the stat~ Legislature will buy two miles of a bandoned railroad right-of-way in Huntington Beach for a future transit corridor. But even as they shipped their Sl.2 million runding request off to Sacramento Monday. com· - missioners noted that with just S3 million available for such prOJ· eds statewide, the Huntington Beach proposal stands little chance of success The acquisition was proposed by the Huntington Beach Cuy Council and officia ls of the Orange County Transit District. They said the stretch. between Atlanta and Garfield Avenue~. could be developed as a bikeway for the present and later used for rapid transit. OCTD officials also are pro· <'eeding with efforts to lh~t federal funds to purchase seven miles of abandoned railroad right-of-way between Santa An;, and Stanton. at a cost of between $7 million and $10 million. A report to lhe commission noted the state Legislature ba!'> m ade S3 million availa ble for the public purchase of aban· doned railroad right-or-way. Seven projects, totaling $11 R million. have been proposed for that fund by city and county agencies And while commissioners said the SlO million Santa Ana to Stanton right-of-way is the most cruc1al now. there may be other sources or money to purchase that land. e1lE.AM CHEESE with pepper IT'S NEW AND YUMMY 3.59 lb. cut Buy the whole 2~ lb. package for 7.75 SAVE 32¢ F-ASHION ISLAND .....,.,. ............ ,. flickot7 rearms OF ON/IJ8 M1a.-M. .,.. • w..,..' s.. • a.s WESTCLIFF PLAZA t7" l .,.._ ......_.._. MWtn ......,...,.. ..... .,.. ..... .,... MARINER'S VILLAGE, DANA POINT A4 OA&L '( P\LOT Jos t .,:··~ Coas ting .. ~ with ~ Tom'\~~\' M arphlae The Wild Blue Yonder CRYSTAL BALL DEPT. -Hearings are currently under way up in Santa Ana to w<>be jet aircraft nolae out at Orange County Airport. Therefore, even before ~IJ the tumult and shouting dies, your correspondent Is gotng to chance a fearless prediction. I predict that the airport noise hearings are going lo come out JUSl like a friend of mine's directions for stuffing a turkey. A culinary expert or sorts, my acquaintan.ce goes into some detail when explaining how to put together all the ingredients for turkey dressing. Then comes his advice on how you should insert the dressing into the bird . "Stuff the turkey full. Not too full. Pretty full, though ... •· AND THAT SHOULD be just about the way the jet noise hearings will turn out. NOIS£ ~•o•u It will be concluded that the big passenger Jets at our county a1rdrome are noL<iY; maybe not too noisy, but pretty noisy, though ... Out of all this might come some new rules aimed toward quiet flights. But don't hold your breath. You are, l\owever. allowed to hold your ears. Anyway. somebody is always making rules for aviation. l have, for example. just been passed a set of rules that were alleged lo be United States Air Service Operations Regulations. In this document, aviators are instructed. -DON'T TAKE THE MACIONE into the air unless you are satisfied it will fiy. Never leave the ground with the motor leaking. -Never gel out of the machine with the motor running until the pilot relieving you can reach the engine controls. -Riding on the steps, wings or tail of the machine 1s proh1b1led. Do not trust altitude instruments. No machine must taxi faster than a man can walk. -If you see another machine near you. get oul or its way. Before you begin a landing glide. see that no machines are under you. AND TIIEN THERE WAS this added rule which must have been eno-mously popular with pilots: -In case the engine fails on takeoff: land straight ahead regardless of obstacles. These aviation dictums were allegedly the rules handed down to pilots in 1920. I don't think they will help mucb in the current OranJi?e County jet noise hearinf(s. The only ooe of these rules they probably paid any attention to in 1920 was the last one. which decreed, "If an emergency oceurs while flying, land as soon as possible." Under these circumstances. some of those early blrdmen landed sooner than possible. Court UplwltU Nazi Right to March CHICAGO <AP> -Nazis have a right lo demonstrate in heavi· ly Jewish Skokie even though they "resort to hatred and vilifica· lion of fellow human beings." a federal appeals court ruled. The ruling, issued with "regret" and "repugnance" Monday by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal. upheld a district court rul- ing that three Skokie ordinances barring the Nazi demonstration were unconstitutional. VILLAGE OFFICIALS SAID THEY would appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. The village also planned to ask for a stay lo pre- vent the National Socialist Party of America from staging a planned "white power" rally June 25. The ordinances barred marches in parliamentary uniforms and the distribution of hl\te literature and required a $350.000 in· surance bond for public demonstrations . SKOKIE MAYOR ALB ERT SMITH announced the planned ap· peals and said. "We will work to thwart the Nazi march until all legal avenues are exhausted." The Legislature is considering measures to block a Nazi march in Skokie Nazi leader Frank Collin, meanwhile, said he wouJd consider not marching in Skokie If the courts clearly established that his or· ganlzation had a right to demonstrate "any place In Illinois." NATIONAL I WORLD Inflation Big U.S. Worry W ASIDNGTON c AP> -The the council said in its quarterly government 1s handing out more mflation report. worrisome economic news. say. The council also cautioned the Ing meat prices for the first postal workers' union and three months of the year jumped raiJroad emptoyees that too 41 percent at an annual rate. large an increase of wages in Other agencies were announcing contract settlements being a 2"':·year high for subsidized negotiated this year could ag- mortgage interest rates. gravale inflation. In other economic devetop-The council noted that postal ments Monday: workers' wages already have in- -HEW Secretary Joseph creased to 45 percent above the Califano Jr. blasted doctors and average for urban workers. The hospitals for not restraining ris· council said any settlement ing costs. between the railroad workers . -ROBERT STR AUSS, and the ra~I industry woul~ have Carter 's chief adviser on infla-le~s inflationary impact if the lion. said the business communi· rail workers agreed to com- ly now knows it must accept promise on wort rules that are smaller price increases before adding to labor costs. labor cooperates by demanding BOTH THE FEDERAL Hous. smaller wage boosts. ing Administration and the Federal Reserve Board Veterans Administration said member Henry Walllch said. Monday their subsidized "Unless we do more than the mortgages would hat a 2'h·year president proposed, I fear we'll high of 9 percent. find inflation will accelerate." The la.st lime the FHA and VA Wallich suggested that a $19 4 rates reached that figure was billion tax cut figure accepted the period Crom September 1975 by Carter be reduced lo $5 to January 1976. billion to SJO biJJion. The secretary of housing and The President's Council on urban development, Patricia Wage and Price Stability said Roberts Harris. said the mterest Monday that short supplies and increases were needed "lo bring strong increases in consumer FHA rates in line with other demand drove up meat prices in competitive rates In both the the first quarter. mortgage and financial BUT MUCH of the rise com- pensated for depressed beef prices over the last two year:.. Zaire Rebels markets. ' "THlS CHANGE is expected to increase the availability of New Massacre Site Reported by French KINSHASA. Zaire CAP> -French authorities said today they had reports that paratroopers sweeping through Kolwezl had found ~ new massacre site with the bodies of about 20 whites apparently slam by rebels. A French Foreign Ministry spokesman said in Paris it was believed that the number of foreigners massacred by the re· bels in the southern Zaire city may exceed 200, although no precise esllmate could yet be made. The previous official estimate had been 170. The spokesman said the ministry had received "unof· flcial information" about the re· ported discovery Monday of 20 more bodies. He offered no other details ABOUT 600 Belgian paratroopers took up station to· day io Kamina. 130 miles north of Kolwez.i. as 800 French legion- na1 res patrolled this copper· mining city to keep order after a rebel invasion in which hun· dreds died. Belgian Premier Leo Tin· demans said in Brussels the mis· sion or the remaining paratroop b~ttalion would be "to guarantee the safety" of the Belgina staying in Zaire's mineral·rich Shaba Province. Several thousand Europeans are still in the province, many living in Likasi, lo the east, and Lum- bumbashi, to the southeast. from invading rebel forces who had crossed into Zaire May 12 from their base in An gola through a small strip of Zambia. Officials in Paris reported at least 170 whites were killed by the rebels after they captured Kolwezi. Some sur vivors estimated the figure al 200. The officials said 50 French civilians and six French soldiers who served as advisers to Zairean army units were missing and might have been taken hostage by the rebels. French officers here esUmat· ed the rebels also killed 150 Zaireans, both civilians and gov- ernment soldiers FHA financing for moderate in- come home buyers and sellers who are the major beneficiaries or FHA-insured mortgage financing." she said. The Carter administration views the d1scourag1ng economic picture as temporary. Critirs Protest a factor or the bad winter and ~mgular market condition.!. Cnl1fano said the cost of gov- ~rnment-financed health care this year would hit 12 7 cent~ or ev~ry dollar. up Crom 12 cents last year Angry gun owners protesting proposed changes in gun laws made their criticisms known by sending the Bureau or Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms more th•.in 150.000 letters. Sitting on the blizzard of mail is Richard Masalo. a bureau official. Critics assert the chan~e would be the first step towards federal firearms registration. Ties 'Stronger' TOKYO <AP>-Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Carter'c; na· tional security adviser. told Japanese Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda today the United Stales "intends to strengthen its ties and pursue normalization of relations with China within the framework of the Shanghai communique." Brzezinski conferred with Fukuda after a three-day v1s1t to Peking. In the Shanghai com munique. signed by President Nixon and the late Premier Chou En·lai in 1972. the United Slates and Chma agreed lo establish full diplomatic relallons. The United States said it recognized that .he future of the na- tionalist Chinese on Taiwan was for the Chinese to settle themselves and promised to withdraw all Its troops from the island. a process now nearly completed. China's condition for an exchange of ambassadors was that lhe United States not only withdraw its forces but break diplomatic and secw:tty ties. About 1,200 Belgians pulled out of Kolwezi, which normally h as a population of about 100,000, and headed for the gov- ernment air base at Kamina on Monday after completing the evacuation of about 2.soo foreigners, leaving the city in the hands of French and Zairean troops. . enterta\n'ngoA\L 'I p \L01 . ntorrnat'"~ ... ur saturdaV ROUGHLY HALF the Belgian paratroopers stayed in Kamina and the rest new to Brussels. The Belgians and French parachuted into Kolweii Friday and Saturday and recaptured it ' d on\V '"yo an . . . Rains D11mp on Plains Kansas Hit by Tornadoes, W amed of Floods Tftft~ra11ere• Atl•lll• l•lllmore llrm ll'QIWlm lloiton arown•vlll• Clll<•90 Colu,.,bli• O.llet l'Ofl -·" ~ver O.troll HM-If ore -•Ion ~lM>l'tvll .. ICAflWt City Us Ve99> Lllll•Roo LOUl•vllle A!WmOllh Ml•n.I MllW-. .... Ml-•IOOll• SC Pa.I ..... Or,_ ..... vott• Olll•llom• CJtv Ofl-Ptllledelpfli. ...... 111. ~ll•bvr9'1 Rkltl\'lollcl St. I.Out• SC. ,_.,e<._o T~ S.11 ....... ... 111. Ml U ~<P .... I) 50 ti &S .41 . ,. ., 1J " " .ot 71 SI IS 70 .. " 10 .. n SI .. n '° .. .. " .v '4 •• ., .. 11 &S p 11 •• n to ., " 51 " .. .. .s.. IJ .. " •1 ,, S4 100 .. ,, " 1'I so .. U CM . .. u"' " ., 0) W1t11lno• 11 • CAUl"'llMtNIA a.11en11e+o 11 J7 9•rslow 90 ~ 91ytlle .. 10 C.tellN 11 59 f.U<•i• u .. f're\ftO U » ~.,....,.... " .. ..... _... tJ "° NIWPOr19Mtft .. Je ()eil•nd ... Sl ... , ... SptlflO' " • ....... ~ 11 4J "-" ia lee:••••• ,, ., S.nD'"9 n ~ s.ft P'tlftelteo " '° .......... ,, . SMll 1111*1 M il ....... 1't • t•11111 .... IJ.S.S1•••"9 T"•11 .. f'llefl'llt .. ,. •11111.iitt ltrfl ~10.• ret11 IWf •lldll• ..... ''"'"" --~ ~°"" WIY IW't W fl ... llOOd •"'4~ .... --.., ,.,.. "Mr\Metwfl ICM»t, l9• otH"'I ........ lllrH ........... -111~ ... -IA~-~-_..,. deHrt lreM 1111111 e low Pf'fttlltt '"lem n.oves Into Southern C.l llomle IDtlletlme W9c1Mtdey. A lrew1..,• ecMIOl'y wlfl .,. 111 ef feel IM Mllld -cant stonns If! Ille Oeserll lonltM. WI"* toule -P uo lo lJ 1"911 el "'""' °"'''•re •Ito••· P9<1tel In IN~ PHtH-'tool., 0.'fl 1te In llDnt IM !fie Lot Ario•IM ..... l?>rovgll WednnCl•Y. •Uh hllltls 111., 70. Mondey't ,._ temperMIH'e et N CIVI< GenlW w•' 1J, •lld liONy'I top INt1I WM •.,.Cl• tel 10 Ill _.,..., '-" • Tllo l0<etl fire ... ...., olll< .. lty MO•n Mq!frOlry Ill Ille Moe... Ho tlontl ,0,.11. ,west Supervisor Wllll1m T. Or-werned <•"1119" tll•I, unUI l11rthtr notice, 110 <•,.,pflres wtll Ill .,..,_ """* ., IOllfO¥e<I C~ Co111le11relll1 low clouell11tu 1~11 ... ,...,, llt(.onl1no "'"'· IY wn11y WtOIWIOOY .. .,,_. l.ltfll YOtlebM wl!IClt nltllt Md -lfleMl.n.Hltlll~ .. .. ... tMttel '-etwrtt will ,.,.. lletwHfl S6 aflCI .. l11lt11CI IHll peretllf'•• 1111111 '""" ett-u M4 71. TIWl•eMr ...... ret-wllltletA. Business Tl.mday May 23. 1978 DAILY PILOT 85 U.S. Still 'Best Deal' for Foreign Investors 8)' JOHN CUNNIFF -~---. ....,,.. Jr you believe, as some do. that the United States has Jost some ol Its attractiveness as a place to Invest, you should con· sider these recent items. From t.M Conference Board, a non.profit educational and re- eerch oraanizahon :,upported mainly by business: "THE UNITED states WH the site of nearly hair the 214 worldwide manufacturing in· vestments in the first quarter of this year. "While the latest count 1s Windmill 'Forest' Collector's Goal STOCKTON <AP> -Some day there will be a forest of windmills in Cront of Frank Medina's country home here. When his collection of 60 windmills reaches the 100 mark and his name appears in the "Guinness Book or World Records." Medina says, he'll call the land in front of his home "The Windmill Forest." "There'll be so many of them, it 'II look like a forest,•' he says. THE 1l·YEAR·OJ.QAormer hay rancher started collecting windmills seven years ago when he retired. "I worked for 47 years ln the hay business and I always had to work so damn hard and so damn long that I never had time to do what I wanted, "he says. Now Medina is doing what he wants -collecting windmills Crom all over the country Even then, they olten belong to "old folks who won't give them up," he says. Medina concedes his hobby is expensive. ''!11 the old days I could have got the things for a little song. but the last three l bought cost SSOO apiece, and the ones Crom back East run from $250 to S600." down from lhe 23:5 tnve11tments announced in the fourth quarter of 1977. this was more than off- set by the genel"ally laraer size of first.quarter projects. From Salomon Brothers. the securities firm: "Foreign Investors' purch1l5es of U.S. Treasury securities ac celerated m the first quarter of thia yeMr ''IN THE FIRST three months of 1978 alone. foreign holdings in custodial accounts at the New York Federal Reserve Bank swelled to S88.3 billion. an un· precedented Increase of $12 5 Al"WI,..._ HIS FASCINATION wtth windmills dates to his boyhood when he was growing up on a ranch near Livermore to the melody or a windmill pumping water. IF IT WER EN'T for the money. Medina says he would have a lot more windmills on his ranch. FRANK MEDINA, 71 , COLLECTS WINDMILLS Hl1 Goel 11 to Acquire 100 for His 'Forest' "It made a clanging type or sound that was like music," he recalls. Price Guide Deceptive? Most of them on his 20·acrc ranch are the metal Aeromotor type made in Chiacgo from 1914 to 1930. He calls them the "Cadillacs of windmills." Analyst A.ssaih Mead Industry's 'Bible' MOST OF Medina's windmills range tn size rrom 6 to 12 feet in diameter . but he has a few small, decorative types that "aren't worth talking about." Medina is always on the lookout for additions to his "forest." which he cuts down in height and mounts on platforms He even advertises for them and has friends back East scouting for him He says the bigger windmills. r anging from 16 to 20 feet wide, can be found in the East. HE SA.VS THERE are a few good ones left in California, but they are hard to get and it can take days to learn who owns windmills s potted on deserted ranchc-s WASHINGTON <API A con· gressional investigator says a price guide used by up to 90 per· cent of the meat industry is de· ceptive and can capriciously hike retail meat prices. Nick Wultich, hired by the House Small Business Commil· tee to do the analysis. said Mon· day the price guide called "The Yellow Sheet" once changed meat prices 569 times durmg a 25·day period without reason. YET, THE YELLOW Sheet serves as the bible of the meat industry. he said. and is used by up to 90 percent of buyers and seller9 for price quotations. Another witness said a 1-cenl up· ward variation in the quoted prices could cost New York con· s um~rs alone as much as $800,000 a week. The Yellow Sheet 1s published daily for subscribers by an or- ganization called the National Provisioner Daily Mark el Service in Chicago IL Is promot· ed by the service as a gathering of ... actual reports of prices" compiled by "our own team of market reporters." But the Yellow Sheet often lists prices although it has no re· ports of trades. Wulllch said. and varies its prices without reason. I N CH ICAGO. Lester I. Norton. president of the firm. called Wultich's allegations .. the most singularly s tupid stuCf I ever heard." Norton said he has a staff of 12 reporters daily on the telephone getting current prices. He said the congressional investigator was in his office only once. and "He has no idea or the total fund Has Your Good Uncle Left Anything For YOU?? ,,()~,1 . ~ About rhl~ ttme of the year. many of us feel !he Impact of 1nflot1on wirh !he reollzofion rhor evef)'thing cosrs mOfe Including our Govemmenr We woo< fOf you roo . At HEl\ITAGE HOME LOANS we handle all of rhe details of information available.·· But Rep. Neal Smith, D·lowa. the committee's chairman. said Wultich's findings were appall· ing. btlllon for Just three months. Foreign investors. mos tly or ficial institutions, are now the largest single ractor in the U.S. governments securities market ·'These holdirtgs. which totalled $107.8 billion on Dec 31. 1977. exceed both the holdings of all U .S commercial banks and those of the Federal Reserve " FROM THE HEAD of North American operatfons for an ltttllan manufacturing com pany : ·'There 1s only one country in which to invest today. Because of poht1oal and social problems. it is too Msky to put money into some developed countries. The United States is the only safe In· vestment." From the National Assoc1allon of Realtors .. J usl how extensive are foreign investments In U.S farmlands? The answer 1s elusive. "ACCORDING TO Milton Berger. director of the Com· m e1·ce Department's office of foreign investment in the United States. we really don't know. 'What we are seeing may only be the tip of the Iceberg. You can 't hide the purchase of a fac· tory. but little is known about sales of farmland.· said Berger. .. As or tbe end of 1974. accord· 1ng to the survey by the Com· m erce and Treasury Depart ments for the Foreign Invest· menl Study Act of 1974, foreign interests owned just over l million acres or agricultural land in the United States." THE REALTORS believe farmers are unduly worried about foreign investments. and reel the ~rowing apprehension may be unwarranted. But lc~1slators aren't waiting M 1ssouri ·s Leg1slaturt>. in response to fears that foreign in- vestors were inflating farmland pT1ces. recently prohibited all further foreign investment in O"·e r 1"he Counter NASO UStilMJS I BUSINESS J l_AN._fAL_l'Sl_S _ farmland to be us ed for agricultural purposes ln Iowa. landholders must re· gister by nationality because of an amendment to a 1975 cor porate farming law. Thist amendment. passed last year. also limits foreign corporatioru. to 640 acres PART OF WHAT makes the United Slates attractive to foreigners is the lower value of the dollar in relation to foreign curren cies. which make:. American goods and services that much less expensive to buy. You might try to explain the phenomenon by saying it 1:- simply the long.anticipated re turn or all those dollars we 1eft abroad because of our repeated mternational payments deficits But such an explanation b simple to the point of not being one at all. A better explanation 1s that foreigners are simply act· ing like all prudent investors. They are concerned foremost with the security and high yield of their investment. and they reel that relative to many other countries the United States still offers the best deal available. Painl Removal Unit,s Recalled WASHINGTON <AP> -The Consumer Product Safely Com· mission has announced that two brands of electric paint re· movers that may pose a poten· llal shock hazard are being re· called. A bout 9,200 or the paint re movers were di s tributed nationwide by Sears Roebuck and Co .. and by Red Devil Inc . between Mayland Oct 21. 19'17 oow•n Ne me Ul\I C"9 Ptt SolldPll ••• ' Oii ., . C...redH 1•• ... g:: 12 \ :~:r1o"" i" ' 11 \ I .. ,, > ()fl 111 P .. QIFd ... '• g:: II ~ ABK CO • ., II I Aul_,,, 1 .. ()ff II I BrynM-1 . ~; II I Mobt(Om 1 .. II ' ~%1:~ 1 '· II I .... .,, Fi •g 11 onFIDr 1'. .. I S MonllU> 1•. '• 100 ~~~b':i l"o '• II , .. -.. I.I Rocom , .. .. 8J BrQl\M vn J .. g:: I ,/ HaM'"'46 • •• 11 ~~~~'b , -.. p:, 11 )'. .. I• Muon .~. .. g:: •• An4'dll<' •'• .,, ·~ lrMOcO II -... Off •• :fM~ I') "· 8li •' • -.. \• O.rietM I ,, ~· HOW IS IT P0551DLE TO STAY AHEAD? Oy investing your hard eomed money. and making it work hard fof yau Any loon presenred fof yaur consldef· anon. hos undergone careful scrutiny w1rh your secunry In mind. While your money Is working. (during rhe peood of rhe loon). you w111 receive o computef'lzed storemenr occounrlng tor all principal and interest you hove re- ceived eoch and e-ve<y monrh. MUTUAL FUNDS OUT WHEP.E TO INVEST?? In 5%% Passbook to 7.l/.s% Long Term CerTiflcates of Deposir :> ••• Hardly.. rhe ravages of inflation will render this vehi· cle as o breok even propos11100 or besr. Stocks Of Oonds' .. Ler ~ suffice ro soy rhor rhese areas con be less than predietoble. When you tnvesrwtth HENTAGE HOM.£ LOANS. we wlll put your money to WOf1< In SAFE. SECURE HIGH YIELD TRUST DEED INVESTMENTS which will ecr-n 10% to 12%* (OR MORE) If 0 loon~ off pr!ot !O ~·rv yolJ r~ 0 borM ol up ro6monrh\ uneotnf'd lnr~ on~ of !he unpotd bolonce -~ onaeosng Yol.K yleldl In addition. many of our loons poy·otf before their maturiry. In rhis event. ( unhke mony companies) you w ill re· cerve rhe ENTIRE pre-payment bOnus allowed by low.• You pay no commissions fOf rhese services. 5o -Afre< you've mode your onnuol rox conrrlburion. and somehow you managed ta retain $5,CX)().00 Of mofe. clip the coupon below and drop Ir 1n rhe moll rodoy, or coll one of our pro- fessional lnvestmenr Counselors for more detailed informorlan We're reedy to ~Ip you pur your had earned money to work . FOr\ YOU . And we're good or irl r------------~~---------~----------, I @ Herita?!~~:m Loans ~ 206 South Ptoatnrio AWi. 1~00 Pk>nHr OJvd .. Sult• C Ploc.nrto. Colff. 92670 Mello. Cotlf. 90701 (71') 993-2660 (21 ~) 92~ (213) 691~24' (71') 99$-2$2, PLEA5E SEND W. /ilOP£. INForwAllON ON 1NJST DEED lflM.STMENTS ~~~,~-==-_.=;.-------·---=-__ ..__Ptii~.~~~-----.....:. 1 Open ro co11fom10 r\esldenn Onty ,. -:; .. I I ' . . ... ., . . .. .. • ... .. I • •• • •.-.: .. . ' . " ... • ,, ' •' •' .. ... . --=· ... ... .,. ~ , -OAIL Y PILOT s 'ueeo.y, May 23. t978 Tuesday's NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 2 p.m. (EDT) Prices °"°~"°"'""'''*"-'°"ttw ... wvor'-,M'->1 • .-.c111<. Pew. Bolt .... 0e1..i1.-.c1o""'"""u'1ocll ~-,_....,ltyU..lillltlOfMtlA.UOCl..iltlltolS«1ttlti..0te..,.__,,,1,.tel ... t ..... ..... •.JI) "'~--\'1,l -a-.. -C:.l>O c I ••I ,.~ .... Ovmo • ,. ,IH Ull'' ' HOnd• .JI• IS ) ,., ' M .. plA 1 IO 1 u$9 +' Polllcll , t ll JI 14 T9'W pr • )Cl t 1'\l'J-.... ACF l tO t 1• lot'''• ~ Cao. 1 t , 1 10 Oyl\An) 10 e HI .~ + ~ Honwil I 90 9 UO SI'-"' -.... • .,, .H 14 '13 Mlll-4 P.etmEI I ~ • l" 14V. + 14 fall8rd t.Jt t ' 4l~ A.MF I, •• ~ ,.... '• GM,:,: 11n..11211~.11• ·--u • Hoo•U , It I '°' ,.., IMClnco ,tO 9 :M 1Wt , PvlEI pl MO '00 ~ "-T•lcolt • 9 ,~ APL I I u ,, ..... ~ C:.1111 -IS , >"-EG~G '4U J;-,..,.,. '• MOf'llOf'I l!A j•, Mfftm -• ~ ~-111 Premier .S.10 , " Tello I J ... 13" ~~ f •:IO ~ g .. • .. ~~~ .0. 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So. people who need. say. central a1r-cond1tionmg to alleviate a medic~I condition should constder mstalllng It this year. For lax purposes. next year would be too late U the admlolstraµoo's propos~ become law THE COST OF A MEDICALLY prescnbed home 1m· provemeot is deductible to the extent it exceeds the in· crease ln the value of the home. Over the years, courts have approved such items as chair-seat elevators for cardiac victims. home elevators to mitigate an elderly person's arthritic condition, special beds, attached garages. People planning to install medically relat· ed home improvement soon should: Gel a written re commendation from the physician. Get a written opt Money's Worth nion from a competent r~aJ estate appraiser stating the amount, If any. the improvement adds to value of the home. Keep a detailed record of expenses, A REMINDER: PEOPLE WHO already have a deduc· tible home improvement or who put one in this year should remember the tax break. What 1s spent m 1978 for opera· tion and m aintenance is deductible on the 1978 return to be filed next spring. Tt might even pay to borrow money In order to pay for the improvement in 1978, Here are more reminders on 1978 medical expense de- duction.c;: -Non-prescription drugs, including aspirin. de · congestants. antihistamines. cough syrup and antacids. qualiry as deductible medicines. But before drugs become a "medical expense.·· they must exceed 1 percent of in come. After that. they are lumped together with other medical expenses ror the 3 percent floor -NURSING CARE IS A MEDICAL deduction that doesn't hmge on who provides the care. even 1f it 1s a ram1- ly member. -Medical transportation can be deducted, If the fam1 · ly car is used for visits to the physician or dentist . deduct 7 cents a mile plus parking fees and tolls. 1978 may be the last chance to take these deductions. so crowd as many of your medical expenses as you can tn · to this year Nert Protecting dependency deductwn:i Woman Tums Hog-raiser GWlNNER. N.D. CA Pl -Donna Hois was looking around for a Job she thought would turn most females off She found one. The 110-pound college graduate is in charge of a hog-raising operation on a North Dakota rarm. •·1 dig pigs," is printed on the front of her often gnmy T -shirt. "I just love my joh." says the brown,haired Miss Ho1s. 27. A GRADUf\TE OF SOUTHERN Illinois University. where she earned a degree in animal industry. her working attire includes blue jeans tucked into muddy rubber boots "I wanted to do something that women don't do." sayc; Miss flois, 5 feet tall and single. "Raising pigs sounded pretty Jtood ... But she had trouble finding a herdsman's Job after graduating in December 1976 "PEOPLE WOULDN'T IORE me Some excuses were that I was too short. or was female. or tacked experience They'd offer a job as an assistant, or pay only $400 a month. I got propositioned a couple of times, "North Dakota was the only place to give m e the JOb wanted." Don Hartness. who farms near Gwinner. hired Mis~ Hois at a beginning salary of $10.800 a year . Now she'!' earning Sl2,000 "l told them I 'd ( J improve their breeding ON 'I'Li£' JOB stock and help lht:m •~ m a k e m o n e )' . I accomplishert ------------ever ything t said f wa~ going to But the pay is n 't high enough and I can't start my own farm. The money ls in sales. so I'm leaving in June to sell hog confinement buildin~s out of Peoria, Ill" Miss Hois. whose father is a photographer in Oak Lawn, Ul .• puts In a 60·hour week. She Is on the job daily and has two male assistants, 'Tm responsible for these pigs, I reel each one is my little pet," s he says. "l 'VE HANDLED ABOUT 5,000. The major part of the job is selective breeding, Farmers from Minnesota and North Dakota buy replacem ent gilts I young females I from us.'' Miss Hois is involved in the entire operation, from the farrowing and finishlng houses to the nursery. She repairs fences. performs castrations and helps sows give birth. "I try to wear makeup and keep my weight down." she says. "If you work a hog farm, you can start looking sloppy. I try to take pride in myself." THE MOST DIFFICULT WORK, s he sayci, is slaughterin& pigs that are dy1n.g. And the reward comes "when I sell t.he gilts and the buyers are really happy " Mlss Hois has other pets: lour dogs, two cats, two squirrels and a horse. "We're all going to Illinois," she says. "I wouldn't leave them behlnd." Grove FirDl Net Down $112,000 Swedlow Inc .• Oanlen Grove. bu reported net Income of '392.000. or 45 ~&a a share, tor the year ended March 26, compillftd with net tncome of 5504.000. or 54 ceou, In tho priot year. Net lncome for n1cal 1m lnchlded $217 ,000, or 23 cents • Iha.re, Crom dlseontJnued openUont. &a._ were $11.1 mUUoa, up from $14.7 mlWon a ~ar earlier. Fcw tn. fourth quart.r, net Income was *187.000. or 21 cent.I a lhare. ciomp&Nd with $13.000."' t ttr1( a share, In U.• prior year pertod wb.ldl lncJud.ocl $15.000, or t cent. from dlacoat.llnaod opentlom. t