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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-02-26 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • _uunt1an -..ras es ane I , -----· ---~---:· -------.~ Firemen Watela House MONDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 26, 1979 Burn on Teelaniealitg ~ n . ..o ., uccnowt. • ,..... • • i . • • . .. • Search for 3 Sea Victims Ends Still Resistanre Chinese Drive Last Wonder of Century Toward Hanoi? . . BANGKOK, Thailand <AP) - Chinese infantrymen striking 1 -from three directions attacked > the strategic Red River transportation corridor that leads to Hanoi but were meeting stiff resistance today from Viet- namese forces. Hanoi radio said, ''In Peking, Vice Premier J Teng Hsiao-Ping said the China- ' Vietnam war might end in about 10 days Standby Plan: Gas Llmited To 2 Gallons The Soviet news a'ency Tass, clling "reports reaching Hanoi," asserted that Chinese troops were preparing to invade Viel· namese-dominated Laos. In a speech in the west Russian city of Minsk, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko today reiterated the Kremlin's warnings to the Chinese to puJl out or Soviet- allied Vietnam. "The Soviet Union resolutely demands that the Peking leadership end before it is too late the aggression against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and immediately withdraw Chinese tr-00ps from its ler· rttory." he said. DETROIT <AP> -Motorists would be limited to two gallons of gasoline a day under a White House standby rationing plan to be submitted to Congress, the Detroit News said today. The Vietnamese broadcast claimed that in weekend fighting counter-attacking troops bad Jn· flicted 1,400 casualties on the tank· and artillery-backed Chinese invaders around Cam Duong, south of Lao Cai in the Red River valley. Lao Cai, a provincial capital, was reported captured by the r Chinese last 0L YMPIA, WASH. RESIDENTS OET ClEAR VIEW OF TOTAL ECLIPSE Clouda Broke Through fOf A Few lecond9 LoH •t C.leatt•I Wonder The two-gallon limit wouJd ap- ply lo all private and com- mercial vehkles. Motorists needing more would U.S. FORCES TO PROTECT PERSIAN GULF OIL ?-M GASOLINE PRICES BEING MANIPULATED? week. J The area is about 150 miles northwest of Hanoi. But Chinese Vice Premier Wang Ohen was quoted as telling British re · porters that the invasion force would not try to advance down the valley toward Hanoi. Tene was interviewed by Takeji Watanabe, cbief of Japan's Kyodo news service. 1V Aids Viewing Of Total Eclipse Edltoriet, Page AS have to buy them from those needing less and il could then • cost S2 a gallon or whatever the market wod'ld bear, the newspaper said in a dispatch from its Wasbineton bureau. "We want to emphasize over { and over that this is a last-ditch , plan." said an unidentified Department of Energy analysL The White House is expected ~ to submit two proposals, the one • on rationing and the other pro- viding standby authority for: Stopping weekend gasoline • sales. limiting weekday hours (See llATION, Pase A2> ~ l . The Chinese leader compared" the war with the 33-day China· India war of 1962 and said the fighting might end ln about 10 days "or a few days more because Vietnam is stronger than India." He said his "o~ er nment ~ (See VIET, Page A2> C.arter to Speak W ASIDNGTON <AP > -Presl· dent Carter will hold a news con· ference at 1 p.m. PST Tuesday, the White House press office an· nounced today. I SEA'M'LE <AP) -A wide swath of the ~cific Northwest was plunged briefly into dark· ness today, as tbe last total eclipse of the sun in North America this century moved lo· land over cloud-covered skies at Agate Beach, Ore. In Portland, <Ke., residents whooped and gasped in amaze. ment aa the sky began to darken and temperatures dropped about 7:45 a .m. Complete darkness covered the largest city in the eclipse's path by 8: 13 a .m. It began to get light again at 8: 16 Jl.m . Residents bad to rely for a ~ood view on television pictures I ~2?.1~!~.~e~ ~I~~ ~'!h. ~~~~! ' Fullerton, wu recuperallnl to-trip to the state of Wutuncton in tbe airport and crashed in the t day from facial injuries suffered a Piper Comanche when the airport lnfield, the fire depart· ' when ~ •lncle eniine plane he crasb occurred about 1 p.m. He ment apobaman said. r waaflyblssu..dayl09tpoweron wasalonelntbeplane. There was no nre the I an ·~ to Oran1e County As Roten' plane Iott power, It spokesman uld, posiibly Airport, ecraped a bulldlDI near scraped t.be top of a one-story becauee there wu little fuel tn the airport. t.ben crashed. bulldin1 bou1tn1 Allied In· the plane at the time. Rosen waa l~ "very duatriea Inc. at 3111-E Airway Ro1en. 13ll s. ru.bland Ave., good condttloll" today at Tustin Ave., Costa Mesa. The plane's Fullerton, wu abfe to cUmb community ffolpltal. wbeela were torn off when It bit from the cockpit by himself and the bulldin1. but the buUdln1 waa tltttnc on the wine when An Oran1e County Fire ilae If apparently wasn 't emergency crewa arrived at the Department. spokesman _said dama1ed,. craab al&e, it wu reported. ... I taken from planes flying above the thick cloud cover. ABC·TV carried the event live nationally. East of the Cascades. broken clouds provided some view of the sun as, the moon started its west-to-east march across the sky, arcing as far east as North Dakota belore swinging north in· to Canada. At Olympia, the Washington state capital, the cloud cover broke 10 minutes before totality. The lawn on the Capitol Cam· pus was crowded with slate workers and children with makeshift viewers and more sophisticated equipment. TM clouds stayed away dur· in1 totality, and the sun's corona was viaible for about 44 SffOftds. Tbe campus toot on a carnival atmosphere aa state offices emptied and UloM with viewers shared with otben. Ligbta on UM campus, con· trolled by HDIOts. Oickered dur· iDI the period of totality. -Under dear Ui9I at Williston, N.D., Du Wleble, 2'7, a meat cutter from lllnneapolll, com· mented, "Tbl• ls a helluva deal." • ~Upee ntcben and 1roup6es 1atbered In 1now1ult1 and parkas in l5 ·de1~e tem· peratlll"M under a cleiir 1k1 at Wtlll1ton. U.S. IS extendln1 DOrtb WU lined wttb V8DI, can, , ... llt'LIPIS, Pal• AJ) ., ... Firemen Allow Home to Bum: '/:~lit'}' BOZEMAN. Mont. (APl Harry Petrorf's new home was allowed to be destroyed by fire with firefighte r s watc hing because be had not joined the fire protection association. "They had the fire almost s1pothered out," Petrorr said. "Then they just shJll their hoses off and watched it burn." Petroff and his family had just moved into the house from Mis- soula last week and he said be did not know he had lo join the association to receive fire pro· tection. A few tools and sporting goods stored in the garage are the only items the Petroffs still have. "We found be (Petroff) was not a member," said Kenny Gllberteon, chief ol the Rae Fire Department. The naral fire association then stopped ftgbUnc the weekend fire. Petr6ff said his houie was already ablan when be learned be needed to be t member of the aat0elation te 1et fire protec. Uon. "That was the first I had known I needed to be covered," beaakt. Divers Give Up Off Baja A team of U.S. Navy divers was flown back to San Diego from Baja California Su r Sun· day night after an unsuccessruJ. three-day search for three bodies spotted near Isla de Natividad by an abalone diver. Navy U . Sharon Chidoni said today that the 16 divers aban· doned their search with the de· cision that the three bodies, re- portedly tied together , are not now in the vicinity or the island. The o rficer directing the search told Navy colleagues after the C·130 carrying his divers landed at North Island that the bodies may have been washed out to sea. Authorities believe that the booies may be those or Dennis, 22. and Debbie Vowell. 21, and Gary Newton. 22, a ll or San Diego. The trio was last seen alive Jan. 24 when they were two days out from San Diego in Vowell's 45-foot craft, the "Armistice." Shortly after a fishing vessel s aw them fi shi ng near San Clemente Island. a storm hit lht! area. Vowell a nd Newton went lo high school together in Costa Mesa. where their families live. Mrs. Vowell is the daughter of Mrs . Bunny Scott o f San Clemente. Lt. Chidoni s aid the divers thoroughly searched the area despite the ract that they were hampered by heavy seas. strong underwater c urre nts a n d massive kelp beds. She said the Americans were helped by local villagers who re· peatedly dived Into the water des pite their lac k of the <See SEARCH, Page A2> . Coast Weather Vari able c loudiness through Tuesday and a lit· tie cooler. Lows tonight mid 40s through low sos. Highs Tuesday in mid 60s. INSIDE TODA~ TM umld it nmnfftQ out of fimoood and aw fmpHcotioM ore orrainoul. Sft stor]I. Poge Al. 0 ., A4 AM .. •t4 .. .. ., • A4 A! A.1 DAii. Y Pl!.OT s Mondft· '!bowx at. 1111 C..t ltl NlfllWl Ff re A weary fireman ·un ~ys the aftermath of a blDZl' Sunday morning that caused dumagt.• estm\ated at ~.000 on three of· f u.·t· swtl's In the Crown Valley Business Park. Camino Capis trano, Laguna Niguel. lo'1remen said th~ blaze gutted the prem· 1ses of Type It <.i raplucs and spread to two neighboring s uites before it was con- trolled. They believe a faulty electrical appliance in the print s hop sparked the fire l',...r~AI VIET .•• welcomed proposals an the U N. Security Council calling for withdrawal of Chinese troops from Vietnam a nd of Viel namese troops from Cambodia, and added. "We would not make that a bargaining condition." ap· parentJy meaning China would pull out without a reciprocal Vietnamese withdra wal from Cambodia Teng was a sked why China feels it mui.t "punish" Vietnam. "Our obJect1ve is a limited one." he said. "That is, to teach them they could not run about as much as they desired "They controlled Laos. in· vadcd Cambodia, signed a peace treaty with the Soviet Union that 1s 3 miHtary alliance in nature. a nd encroached on Chinese soil at will " China has said its invasion was aimed at "teaching Viet nam a lesson" after months or bo rder provocations Peking said it wanted no Vietnamese territory but would occupy about 38 square miles or disputed ter r1tory that Vietnam has been holding for years. A Tru,s report. from Hanoi to· day said China "is preparing the g round for s preading its ag gression also to the Laotian People's Democratic Republic For this aim Chinese troops are being massed at the point where the borders of China. Laos a nd Vietnam join " The Tass report. could not be confirmed immediately. Sources in Peking predict a bi g Chinese offensive in Vietnam in u few days. Kyodo reported. Some analysts in Bangkok say it may come in the Lang Son area, 80 miles northeast of Hanoi. Kyodo s aid sources in the Chinese capital told it the goal or the intensified "punUive action" against Vietnam would be to de:,troy at least one Vietnamese a rmy division and military bases a nd artillery emplace· ments near the border f"rma P Clfle A J RATIO N ••• for gasoline stations, restrict.mg downtown parking to encourage use of public transportation, re· quiring commercial and public buildings to cut down on energy use. and limiting use or lighted advertising signs. The proposals are part or an over all strategy to deal with shortages of imported oil. Some of the measures might be ap- plied by June. Under the rationing plan, the government would allocate equal amounts or gasoline to the owner of each registered vehi· cle. Coupons would be needed to buy gasoline. - DAILY PILOT •~ n,ttn0t-ro.t 10.t••vP+ro1 w•thwtt•'"•\tOf"I O•,...Ott'wtff-W" Pr..-i •'~'""'°'"'"'"°'.,,,,,,. ( t·t P\t~• .. ......,~V t}if.09t•ff'f(t1t!Oft\~r• l>VOh• '",, Mq"'44fy tf'wOUQft r' •d•v IOf (O'\fft Mt A Nr~ RfiM" Muttt~on &.MP!! r out" I~'" Vqll('V tr¥tN>, l~ fk'•(f\ -.OUtPl!(C'\ft"lt A •~ulr rt~ Mt•~ l\~l\ftc'O Si.dt1.1f'O-'Y\•t\iJ ittWtAt\ f...,. 0rt"l'614 CMlbtt\Nt'llQ ,,._.f\t t ~t )'C) V.I OH.,.,,.,,,..., Co-.t•Mlt"-... C..HtOtl'\ot•·~ • ._. .. __ ~, r\tdtft' •1'0 P\lblt\Nl't' , .. , .. c .... ..., v,c. t Pre._ ldtftl •"4 Gt,.,..., Mt~r , ......... , ...... Cctolor fl•-I A M-M<t-•"9l4111or (li.,lnH L"' Ilk-I' Nolt M 1111t111 MaMq4flO l OllOt\ TelttphOM (7H)W..t321 Cl .. a111ed Ad11ettllll119142-5'71 '·-~~~-41MtOO ''°"'Hon~Ot-CO.......C.0-llW. M0-1220 Mesan Surrenders On Heist ·charge A Costa Mesa man who, police allege. beat his employers in a fruitless robbery attempt sur· rendered to Newport Beach police early today. Kirk Lawrence Attebery, 20. was booked in to city jail on rob· bery charges in connection with the assault t hat occurred at 12 :30 a.m. today. Police said Attebery is an employee o r Coco's, 2131 Westcliff Drive. According to in· vestigators. he hid in a loft in the restaurant until it closed at midnight Sunday. o mcers allege he covered his face with a ski mask and armed himself with a blunt instrument, then ass aulted the relief Robbe r y Out manager. Richard Riso. 27, and his wife, Margaret, 20. Police said Mrs. Riso was ap. parently knocked unconscious by a blow to her head. But Riso struggled with the assailant and pulled off the skj mask in the process. He told officers that Attebery begged him not to call police and fled the restaurant. The couple was treated by paramedics and taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital, where they were treated and released. Police set up a stake out on Al· tebery's home in the 700 block of 18th Street, but the suspect showed up at the police station at about 8 a:m. and surrendered. Westminster Cops Seek Death Motive We st minster police in· vestigators continued today to seek a motive for the killing of a man who was shot to death Sun- l',...Page A J SEARCH •.. sophisticated equipment used by the Navy team. Vice Consul Bart Flaherty or the U.S. Consulate in Tljuana said today that authorities at the scene are now on a "wait and see" basis. "If the bodies are seen again, then we will immediately return to the area," F1aherty said. "Of course. we belie ve that the bodies are those of the occu- pants or the 'Armistice' but we will never know for s ure until they are recovered. '·our thoughts today are with the relatives of the three miss· ing persons ." Flaherty said "Our hearts go out to them and we want to do all we can to help them " Dal,las Sees X-rated Film DALLAS <A P > -l\,(ter some judicious editing and a Judicial injunction, ''Debbie Does Dallas," the X-rated film, was finally able to complete its first performance here. "Debbie" played to a not· nearly packed house at the Guild Adult Theater just hours after U.S . District Judge Robert Porter issued a preliminary in· junction indefinitely banning the film's ads. , Port.er agreed wit~attorneys for the genuine Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders that the film's ads portraying Debbie -played by Bambi Wood -were just a UtUe too close to the real thing ror comfort. Officers seized the film three weeks ago under com- mercial obscenity statutes. OUna Asks H e lp . PEKlNG (AP> -China's finance minlater uked Treasury Sec:ret.ary W. MJcbael Blumen· tbal for help tod•Y lD removtna Taiwan f\-om four tni.mationa1 fin•ncial or1an lutiona as 8lumenthaJ opened talks on a.et- Uln1 sm mllUoa lD U.S. claims for property eelaed by Chlnele Communl&ta. day as be was walkine through Sigler Parlt near his home. Officers said the unknown killer used a shotgun at close range to inflict fatal injuries on Steven Alan Buus, 24, of 6832 Hazard Ave. Robbery was ruled out as the motive when police found that the victim's wallet and cash were still in bis possession and that bis watch and other jewelry had not been taken. Westminster Police Explorer Scouts helped officers search the park for clues Sunday, but found nothing that would aid the in- vestigation, police said. Officers tound Bu us· body near a recreation building in the park. Rhodesians Raid Angola SALISBURY, Rhodesia <AP> -The Rhodesian air force made its first raid on Angolan ter· ritory today, bombing a "very large" training base for Joshua Nkomo 's guerrilla s , the Rhodesian military command announced. A communique said the 1950s· vintage Rhodesian Canberra bombers and Hawker-Hunter fighters flew across Zambia to make the attack and all re- turned safely. Th ere was no indication whether they were challenged by the Angolan air force's more advanced Soviet MiG·21 jets or by anti-aircraft fire from some of the 20,000 Cuban troops estimated to be in Angola. Nor was there any assessment or damage done. BOAT SOW F.4ST Jff7Jl WANT .4D . "l ,received t hree call11 the first day my Dal ly Pilot classified ad published. "t bad a S* deposit the next day, and the boat ts now sold with all cub to me." That's tbe advertising auccesa story ol the Newport 84!ach man wbo placed thJs Id ln tbe Daily Pilot: • 28' Calltorntan. new motor, recent survey, Dock available to new owner XJUl·lUlllX If you want a cub d~t on your boat or other item, try the friendly Dally Pilot •d·V\Mn It ; 142·1811. r Stortn Hiis Midwest Snow, Floods Wreak Wide Havoc Br ne A.teoela&ff P'"' A nuty winter storm ·dumped more crippllftc anow on the reel· Inc Midwest today and pushed •treama aQd rivers to flood st.a1e acroas tbe eaat. Snow. Ice and floods cl06ed 1chool11. stranded motorists and knoeked out power as the storm puabed eutward. Illinola Gov . James R. Tbompeon declared 30 cou.nties in t he aoutbern part of tbe state enow emergency areas and mobilized National Guard unita, mainly to aid an estimated 2.000 motorlsta stranded on highways. Armories in Salem and Cairo were converted to emergency shelters. At least six deaths were bhtmed on the storms. Evacua- U..dn s were unde r way in Maryland and Virginia, and rescue crews were on alert along the Atlantic Coast. Snow and ice forced schools to close in many areas · from C lev e land lo B o s t o n . Massachusetts authorities set up ev acuatioo centers lo prepare for flooding in coastal com- m unities but morning high tides came and went without serious damage. National Guard units were standing by in Atlantic City, N.J ., and Long Branch, N.J., where abnormally hig)J tides also were expected. NationaJ Guardsmen earlier in the morn- ing evacuated 75 residents from a mobile home park in Vineland, N.J ., flooded under 31".I feet or water. In New York state, hundreds or schools were closed as ice· heavy limbs crashed onto power lines. In an area south or Buffalo and Rochester, snow was reported up to 2 feet deep. Authorities evacuated the resi· dents of tiny Bremo Bluff in cen· tral Virginia a s the J a mes. Shenandoah. Roanoke and Dan Rivers rose. Some residents of GreeMboro. Md., were asked lo leave homes when the Choplank River over· ran its banks , while in Feder alsbu rg Police Chier Joseph Koski imposed a 10-hour curfew Sunday night. Anaheim Man Injured in Oiff Fall An Anabein\ man was report· ed in stable condition ~ at South Coast Commu"1ty Hospital after be was injured in a fall from t h e c liff at Scotchman's Cove Sunday. According to county fire de· partment p ara med ic s. Ray mond Peterson , 38, of Anaheim, bis wife and another couple began climbing down the ·cliff lace at about 5 p.m. Peterson told the medics he and his wife started down an in- cline that was too steep for them · and fell about 30 feet. Mrs. Peterson apparently was cushioned. by her bush.and and sufrered no Injuries, the paramedics saJd. Peterson suffered several cuts and bruises and a fractured left wrist, they reported. The paramedics were dis· patched from the South Laguna fire station and were aided by Newpor t Beach lifeguards . Laguna Beach lifeguards, were also sent to the scene. but they were involved in a traffic acci· dent en route. 'Ne Recommend: ~FIA because it's the best. "I'm coocerned about people tr1v•lln1 around looklDJ," Koski laid. ··u the water did come up rast, I want to be able to 1et police into tbe area to move atutf withou t in· terf erence." Tbe Allegheny River flooded the bualneN dlttrict of OU CJty In oorthwat Peonaylvwa. l•n· In• stores and restauranta UDder' fbur reet of water. The National Weather s.rvtce a.•id the Monongahela and tbe upper Ohio rivers from Pitts· bu rgh to WheeUng, W. Va .• would continue to rise todar with matt l'aln. Angleton ProltedT Soviet Spy Inside CIA Story l)enied WASHINGTON <AP > -A published report says CIA of- ficials once developed a case that the agency's counterin· tell igence chief. J a mes Angleton, mighl be a Soviet agent. But William Colby, the CIA director who pressured Angleton into retirement, says he never had any doubts about his loyalty. Ne wsweek magazine reported Sunday that a special CIA wtit searching for a "mole." or high· level Soviet agent within the CIA 's ranks. at one time de· veloped a case against Angleton, but that top agency officials dis· miss ed it in 1974 a s too circumstantial and speculative. Ne""sweek's report follows a year or printed and private speculation about the possibility or a Soviet mole inside the CIA. ECLIPSE .•• motor homes and people from across the country Annette Case. her daughter. Pan. and a friend, Charles Clayton, drove 1.121 miles from Columbia. Mo .. to W1lh ston to view the eclipse "If I don't see 1l now. I 'll be exactly 100 years old when the next one comes around," Mrs . Case said. In Can a d a. meanwhile, thousands of persons in southern Manitoba and northwestern On· tario got a good look at tbe eclipse. The cloud cover thal had dimmed hopes for gcound· leve l observation largely dis· sipated overnight, and the eclipse was visible from most parts of the region. The skies were saturated with air traffic as observers went aloft to beat the clouds with a view from above. Other scientists. amateur astronomers and the curious gathered on parking lots. porches. decks and gras s y knolls. with their t elescopes. homemade pinhole projectors and commerciaJ viewers. For many. the thick cloud· cover turned the eclipse into the greatest cosmic disappointment since the Comet Kohoutek disap· peared into the heavens five years ago without living up to its ballyhooed brilliance. Repeated admonitions not to look at the sun during the period of the eclipse seemed academic as the gray slties drew a leaden s heet between the viewers and the solar spectacle. Most or the h ome made viewers were certain to be rel· egated to the attic as curiosity pieces. s ince the next total eclipse of the sun in North America won't come until tbe year 2017. Fueled by the case of a low·level former CIA employee convicted recently or givin~ the Soviets a secret U.S. spy satellite m anual, interest in the agency's decade- lon g search for a mole has gen e rated news paper a nd magazine stories and even been treated ma book. Colby hims elf has begun public speeches by denying be is the mole. . The mole search was conduct- ed largely by Angleton, and Newsweek repor t s that, although nothing was ever proved. a score of CIA officers came under suspicion or being moles during the 1960s and the ca reers of several suffe red as a result. Although Angleton and three top aides were forced into retire- ment in 1974 while Colby was s till CIA director, Colby said in a telephone interview Sunday night, "Any s uch allegation wasn't a factor in Angleton's de· parture." Colby said, "I never had any doubt about his loyalty at all. We had differences professional- ly but not on that subject." Asked about the case that was developed, Colby replied, "I frankly have forgotten the de· tails or the matter and really can't comment ... In his book , "Honorable Men." Colby said he decided to remove Angleton because ''I looked in vain for some tangible resul.ts from t he counterin · telligence field and found little or none " He complained about Angleton's "tortuous theories" about Soviet agents in Western intelligence agencies. The magazine said the case against Angleton was the result of an extensive two-year in- vestigation of his career. That case stressed ~ngleton's Mavy reliance on a defector from So- viet intelligence na med Anatoly Golitsin and instances in which CIA mes s howed no action by Angleton on important leads , Newsweek said. "I don't believe it." said Angleton in a telephone in- terview Sunday night. "lt 's a lot of garbage. There may have been individuals or an indlvtdual who did something but to my certain knowledge no organized group did such a study or had such suspicions." Death Probed FORT WAYNE, Ind. <AP) - Health officials are investigat- ing the death of a 14-year-old Fort Wayne girl who contracted a form of meningitis bacteria. The girl, who was not identified, died in Parkvlew Me morial Hospital of meningiococceJYlia, a bacteriaJ infection, which "ls not thought to be a highly con- ta~ious dlsease." AL S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (7 14) 644-7030 l ,. l l J ' \ J 7 Your Hometown ~ Dally Newspaper VOL. 72, NO. 57. 3 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1979 N TEN CENTS BOZEMAN. Mont. fAP l Harry Pelrofr and hia ftunlly were watctuQI farertahtcrs bat tlt a blu ln lh 1r nt.w SS0,000 hom~ &add nly, tb (il"f'f1ght ni switched off lh~lr ho and let tht dw U1ng burn "They bad tht nreo olmo t smothered ... Petroff saJd "Then the.y Just shut lht>lr hose off ltlnd watched it burn It "'H the darnd t thlne I ever saw .. Pell'otr and hls famlly, who hid moved l••t Wf'Clt from Mis soula to a ubd1 v1S1on outb1de Uus city of ~.000. bud ra1lt>d lo Join tM Ro fo'ire O partment. • prtvale rural uoclauon which fights flrea an unincorporated area. M mberah1p earrles 8 $2S 1nlttaUon fee •nd $U onnual re~ "We round he <Petroff> wa not a membf>r." said Rae fire chief Kenny Gilbertson "Theo we cbetked wJlh our secretary and found lhe house was not re¥,lstered. 'We pulled our men off the ftre and watched it bum." be 8tlld. Petroff, tus wtfe, Rosalie, and th.-1r children, Sam and Lorie, had beeo in the home about 10 hour'$ when the flre broke out at 1 a .m. Saturday. They were a wakened by a s moke alarm ,i. OLYMPIA, WASH. RESIDENTS GET CLE.AR VIEW OF TOTAL ECLIPSE Cloud• Broke Through For A Few Second• Look •t Celeatt•I Wonder ....... ~ .. Eclipse· Darkens North ~Bbf' J/iewing Aided by Telerision SEAITLE <AP> -A wide swath of the Pacific Northwest t was plunged briefly into dark- ness today. as the last total eclipse of the s un in North America this century moved in- land over cloud-covered skies at Agate Beach, Ore. In Portland, Ore., residents whooped and gasped in amaze- m ent as the sky began to darken and temperatures dropped about 7: 45 a .m . Complete darkness covered the largest city in the eclipse's path by 8: 13 a.m. It began to gel light again al 8: 16 a.m Residents had to rely for a jtOOd view on television pictures ·Newport Vote • .Due on Law f i On Expenses Newpo rt Beach city coun- cilmen tonight are expected to ~ take final action on a campaign spe nding ordinance that grew out of the controversy over last November's unsuccessful bluff preservation initiative. The measure councilmen are considering expands existing stale statutes covering both ballot propositions and city council campaigns. \ City Attorney Denni~ O'Neil • explained that the ordinance ap- plies restrictions now enforced on city coundl candidates to t committess lh'at support and op- • pose ballot propositions. j If approved, that will mean <See EXPENSES, Page 1\2) i ' t l l Coast Weather Variable c loudiness through Tuesday and a Jil. lie cooler. Lows tonight mid 40s through low SOs. Highs Tuesday in mid 60s. INSIDE TODAY TM ioorld t. nmning out of firewood and tla. implicottona ore ominoul. Sn ttortl. Page · AS. a ., .... ... ,. IM .,., 114 .. ., M .... taken from planes flying above the thick cloud cover. ABC-TV carried the event live nationally. East of the Cascades, broken clouds provided some v1et.r of the sun as the moon s tarted its west-to-east march across the sky, arcing as far east as North Dakota before swinging north in- to Canada. At Olympia, the Washington state capital, the cloud cover broke 10 minutes before totality. Tbe lawn on the Capitol Cam· pus was crowded with state workers and children with mak.eshirt viewers and more sophisticated equipment. The clouds stayed away dur· iog totality, and the sun's corona was visible for about 44 seconds The campus took on a carnival atmosphere as state offices emptied and those with viewers shared with others. Lights on the campus, con- trolled by sensors, flickered dur- ing the period or totality. Under clear skies at Williston. N.D., Dan Wiehle, 27, a meat cutter from Minneapolis, com- mented, "This is a helluva deal." Eclipse watchers and groupies gathered in s nows uits and parkas jn 15-degree te m - peratures under a clear sky al Williston. U.S. 85 extending north was lined with vans, cars. motor homes and people from across the country. Annette Case, her daughter, Pan. and a friend. Charles Clayton, drove 1,121 miles from Columbia. Mo.. to Williston to view the eclipse. "U I don't see it DOW , I'll be exactly 100 years old when the next one comes around," Mrs. , Case said .• In Canada, m e anwhile . thousands of persons in southern Manitoba and northwestern On- tario got a good look al the eclipse. The cloud cover that had dimmed hopes for ground- level observation largely dis· s ipa te d overnight. a nd the eclipse was visible from most parts of the region. BOAT SOLD FAST Wf1H WANT AD "I received three calls the f i r s t d ay my Daily Pilot classified ad published. "I had a $500 deposit the next day. and the boat is now sold with all cash to me " Thal 's the advertising success story of the Newport Beach man who placed this ad in the Daily Pilot: 28' Cal1rorn1an . nc" motor. recent sun e:t Dock av:ulable to nc\\ owner XXX·XXXX If you want a cash deposit oo your boat or other item. try the friendly Daily Pilot ad·visers at 642-5678 . COunty Air Crash Victim Recovering James E . Rogers. 46. Fullerton, was recuperating to· day from facial injuries suffer-ed when the single engine plane be was flytng Sunday lost power on a n a pproach to Orange County Airport, scraped a building near the airport, then crashed. Rogers was listed In "very good condition" toclay at Tustin Community Hospital. An Orange County Fire Department spokesman said Ro1ers was returning from a trip to 11* state of Washington in a Piper Comanche when the · C'Nter to Speak · WASIDNGTON CAP> -Prffj. dent Ca.rt.er will hold a news con- ference all p.m . PST Tuesday, the White House press omce an- nounced today. crash occurred about l p.m. H was alone in the plane. As Rogers' plane lost power. it scraped the top or a one-story building housing Allied In- dustries Inc. al 3186-E Airway Ave .. Costa Mesa. The plane's wheels were torn off when It bit tbe building, but the building itself apparently wasn't damaged. The plane continued toward the airport and crashed In the airport infield, the fire depart· ment SPokesman safd. T h ere was no rt re. t he spokesman said, possibly because there was llttle fuel in lhe plane at tbe time . RogerS, 131J..S. Highland Ave., Fullerton, was able to climb from the cockpit by himself and was sitting on the wing ytben emergency crews arrived at 'the cra~b site, it was rep()rted. ··llous~ Bu""s and got out safely after calling the sheriff, who dispatched the private department. The fire is thought to have started in the chimney. Petroff said it was not until the men arrived that he learned he needed to be a member of the association to get fire protee- tion. • "That was the first J had known J needed to be covered," he said. Petroff sa id the forme r owners told him there was a rural fire district, but said he dido 't know he had to sign up. Petroff. a railroad employee, said be had $50,000 insurance on the home and $23,000 insurance on his belongings. Only the beds were set up in the house when the fire broke out · with most possessions still ' ' . l packed ln boxes inside the home. A rew tools and sporting goods were stored in the garage. Those are the only items the Petroffs still have. "I can see the problems, but it is our policy," Gilbertson said. "We can't get money from some people and then fight fires of people who didn't pay." Pat McCrO!ISOD. one or tw.ol CSee BURN, Page AZ> Rationing Eyed ' 2 Gallons Gas Per Day Mulled DETROIT <AP> -Motorists would be limited to two gallons or gasoline a day under a White House standby rationing plan to oe submitted to Congress. the Detroit News said today. The two-gallon limit would ap- ply to all private and com- mercial vehicles. However. a Department of Energy s pok esman in Washington denied that the pro- posal contained such a limita- tion. Motorists needin~ more would have to buy them from those needing less and it could then cost S2 a gallon or whatever the market would bear . the newspaper said in a dispatch from its Washington bureau "We want to emphasize over and over that this is a last-ditch U.S. FORCES TO PROTECT PERSIAN GULF OIL ?-M GASOLINE PRICES BEING MANIPULATED? Editorial, Page A6 pl a n." said an unidentified De partment of Energy analyst. The White flouse is expected to submit two proposals. the one on rationing and the other pro- viding s tandby authority for Stoppin~ weekend gasoline s ales, limiting weekday hours for gasoline stations. restricting downtown parking to encourage use of public transportation. re· quiring commercial and public buildings to cut down on energy use, and limiting use of lighted advertising signs . The Energy De partment spokesman. J ames Bishop Jr . s aid the reports or limits on weekday gasoline station hours and downtown parking, were un· true. The other proposals had been made public previously. The proposals are part of an overall strategy to deal with <See RATION, Page A2> Vietnamese 3 Birds Die- Hold Own In Attacks BANGKOK, Thailand CAP )- Vietname.e troops defending the Red River Valley.. corridor to Hanoi held their ground today agam.&.+&ONe-pronged Chinese armored and infantry attack. Hanoi radio said. It claimed Peking's soldiers were being killed at a rate of 800 a day all along the border front lines. China's Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-ping said today the 10.day conflict might e nd in about another 10 days, but analysts in Bangkok and elsewhere expect the Chinese invasion force to first mount an all-out assault against Hanoi's troops. The official Soviet news media charged that China also was massing troops near its border with Laos for an invasion of that Vietnamese-dominated country. The report could not confirmed.· In a speech in the western Russian city of Minsk, Soviet Foreign Minis ter Andrei A Gromyko reiterated the Kre mlin warning to China to pull out of Soviet-allied Vi etnam "before 1t is too late." He said the invasion was "doomed to failure." A Soviet airlift of military sup- plies to Hanoi appeared to be continuing today. Airport sources in Calcutta, India, said three ca rgo planes -o n e Bulgarian and two Soviet -re· fueled there Sunday and today on their way to the Vietnamese capital. Soviet reconnaissance planes were a~ain s potted fl ying (See VIET. Page A2 ) Killer Disease Probe Broadens By JACKIE HYMAN Ol "'9 O~lly ~llet SUIN A Lask force investigallng an outbreak of a deadly bird dis- ease in Orange County has s welled to in c lud e 30 . veterinarians and should double in size by the week 's end. a spokesman said today. Spokesman Da ve Goodman of Jogger Death <:ause Sought By Coroner Orange County coroner 's de· pulies said today they have not est a bli s h ~d th e ca use or death of Robert Duran. whose body was found Saturday in the Upper Newport Bay . Duran's body was discovered al about 10 :30 a m . by an equeslri'-.n who found him lying face down in a marsh area at the head of the bay The dead man. a Tustin resi- den l , was ide ntified Sunday after he was reported missing Saturday night. Al the time he was found. Duran appeared to be dressed for jogging and carried no iden· tification. Coroner's investigators said today the case is still pending, although they said there are no indications that foul play was in· volved. > th e U .S . De partm e nt of . Agriculture said the task force. housed -in a Santa Ana office building. ls looking into the deaths of three pet birds from NewcasUe Disease. The us ually fatal affliction poses a threat to lhe caged bird industry and could devastate the poultry industry as well should it spread, he said. The investigation began last week when a $1,000 pet cockatoo in Stanton was diagnosed with the disease. A second cockatoo came down with the disease in Pa r a mount and an infected parakeet was f o und in Riverside. The two cockatoos were both purchased at the same Garden Grove pet s hop, which is being checked out for a ny infection. Goodman said. He said anyone who purchased a bird there since Christmas is being con- tacted Goodman saict there are two r easo n s wh y so many veterinarians are needed. ' One is because a "dirty" vet one who may have been in contact with the infection can't VlSit any place where there is a possibly uncontaminated bird. ·we take extreme precau· lions.·· Goodman said • Also. he said, tracking down the dozens o r bird contacts throughout Southern California is extremely time consuming. ''Anybody who's got a bird tha t eveh sneezed within the last <See DISEASE, Paae J\2) . , .., DAtLY PILOT N Mo11df!y. F~n11rv 20i ,,,. Despite Eleetio•• Bluffs Dues Issue Unclear Wh~lher or not dues menls ln th Blurra ru ot Newport Bf'acb wHl drop re- m1uned an opt•n qu Uoa today de ptte iwo rival elttllon.a on the ubj ct ltit w • Onf' wu called by th • BJulfl Homeo~'Ders Auociat on, ~tu~b levlt-a the at.a am o • Ud the other by UM.; Ad Hot Commlllef'. wblch ls lt"•d.lng w. hat it t.ernu a · Proposatlon 13" revolt al\t'r dues wcf'tc• tukt"d from • to St30 u month ln J anuary Both 4'id II huve clalmtd t.l:wtr cl~clion would be lbe Jt-g .. ooti llowev~r. the a socaation's ~ lion last Tuesday nl11ht turned into u das('~iuon because tht'rt' was no quorum. Thursday's Ad tloc Commlltt't' l'lectlon did havt• u quorum. but • Anaheim Man Injure d in Cliff Fall An Anaheim man was report- ed in stabl e condition today at South Coas t Community Hospital after he was injured in a fa ll f rom the c liff at Scotchman's Cove Sunday. According to county fire de· partm e nt p ara m e di cs . Raymond P eterson , 38, of Anaheim, his wife and another couple began climbing down the cliff face at about 5 p.m. Peterson told the medics he and his wife started down an in· cUne that was too steep for them and fell about 30 feet. Mrs. Peterson apparently was cushioned by her husband and s uffe r ed no injuries, the paramedics said. Peterson suffered severaJ cuts and bruises and a fractured left wrist, they reported. fell 30 votes ahorl of amendln.t the b)'·law1. accordlna to spokesman RUd.Y Oellwylt't He Ujd 75 p rcent of the Bluffs mtmMt-a, who number about ao .. ~ \0 .. 1n amendment hmlUn bud1tt irov. th lO 'I ~r<'f'nt • year rx t pt by • nH•J~r1ty vote of lho memben Dt'ltYf)'lt>r Hid tbt' Ad lloc Committet> h•d 'll percent of tb votes ln le. favor Ht' uld th mt'rtlnM was acl,Joumed ror one month to 1llow 30 1ddllional votes to be southt J t'k Edmundaon. pret'lldent or the usoelolion, said hia group 111 continuing duicuss1ons about the budatt that bt'Ron Tuesduy, when ~ l36 mall 1n proxies and 102 persons 1n the audience foll short of lht> needt..'d 309 votes to make a quorum . Edmundson said those present who were not polled as to which way they bad planned to vote discussed a reconsidera tlon of the Sl m1lhon 1979 budget He said the assoc1at1on board, at its regularly scheduJed meet- ing Wednesday night, agreed to began a review process that could result in reductions. Mother Slain, Son Arrested A 24-year-oJd Anaheim man faces municipal court arraign- m ent Tuesday on charges of sta bbing his mother to death Saturday, Anaheim police re- ported today Dennis Branstatter. of 2252 W. Lincoln Ave., Apt. D-4, was ar- rested Saturday alter the body of his mother , 53-year-old Mary L. Knisley. was found in the apa rtment the two s hared, police said. Officers said Mrs. Knisley was s tabbed numerous limes. In- vestigation an the case was con· tinuing today. · Four Little La•IJ• T hese lambs haven't lost their way. They're right at home on the Orange Coast College farm in Costa Mesa, where they were born within the past week. And the lambs are in good hands, loo the bands of OCC agriculture students (from left\ John Ledwith, Mark WJ?iting , Nadga Clark and Linda Beach. . Mesan lSurrenders On Heist Charge A Costa Mesa man who. police allege, beat his employers in a fruitless robbery attempt sur- rendered to Newport Beach police early today. Kirk Lawrence Attebery. 20, was booked into city jail on rob· bery charges in connection with the assault that occurred at 12:30 a.m. today. 1 P olice said Attebery is an e mployee of Coco's, 2131 Westcliff Drive. According to in· vesligators. he hid in a loft in the restaurant until it closed at midnight Sunday. Officers allege he covered his face with a ski mask and armed himself with a blunt instrument, t hellJSSault ed t h e relief l. manager, Richard Riso, 27. and bis wife, Margaret. 20. Police said Mrs. Riso was ap- parently knocked unconscious by a blow to her head. But Riso s truggled with the assailant and pulled off the ski mask in the process. He told officers that Attebery begged him not to call p(>lice and fled the restaurant. The couple was treated by paramedics and taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital, where they were treated and released. Police set up a stake out on At- tebery's home in the 700 block of 18th Street, but the s uspect showed up at the police station at about 8 a .m. and surrendered. f',....Page·AJ VIET •.• toward Vietnam; where they are believed to be surveying the China-Viel.Dam front. And a So- viet destroyer was spotted beaded south past Japan. possibly toward waters off Vietnam where several Soviet warships have been cruising. A Voice of Vietnam radio broadcast monitored here claimed Hanoi's troops killed more than 2.300 Chinese in three days of fighting beginning Fri- day at scattered battlefields along the front. The broadcast said tank·led Chinese infantrymen attacked Vietnamese forces from three directions in the Cam Duong area, south of the provincial capital of Lao Cai and about 150 miles oortbwest of Hanoi. The paramedics were dis- patched from the South Laguna fire station and were aided by Ne wport Beach lifeguards Laguna Beach lifeguards, were a lso sent to the scene, but they were involved in a traffic acci- dent en routP 4 Fluor Employees UFW Rallies In Texas Cam Duong and Lao Cai. which was reported captured by the Chinese last week, lie in the Red River Valley. a strategic water, rail and highway corridor leading to Hanoi. Chinese of- ficials have been quoted as say- mg, however, they have no plans to try to seize the Vietnamese capital. Computer Unit To Be Dissolved A non-profit computer data processing corporation set up by th e Newport-Mesa Unified School District will be formally dissolved Tuesday at a public meeting. The meeting will be held at 6·45 p.m. at the Harper Com- munity Center. 18th Street at Tustin Avenue, Costa Mesa. The Newport-Mesa Instruc- tional Research Institute was formed by school trustees last :,pring to market computer pro- grams developed by the district. However. the legality of the district's competing with private industry was questioned by the county Board of Education. Newport-Mesa trustees de- t•1ded last fall to dissolve the or- ~anization and return to the dis- trict ·s former in-house data processing system l'ro• Page AJ DISEASE ..• l'AO months is calling, and of •·ou rse they have to be checked out.'' Good man said. He said .1nyone who suspects a bird or .11hng should contact a private 'clt·rmarian, who in turn can Mn tact the task force. DAILY PILOT ,,. .. O••""ll"'COHt Otily Pno•.wftftwftt<Pth<OM ... _,, ... N•-Prft\,iS-1.,,..,..,INOr- (O••I Pu ... 1>1101>9'-"t ~e1Udil!Oftl¥• NM••••o -.. t!lrOU9ft Frl!Ulr tor Coot• ...... Nowj)of1 0.41<11, Huftflnoton llH<IVFOlb littfllVAlltf trvlne.~8..c"ISOu1ftCOl\t A , .. 1•• ,, ........ f'Oitloo> ••-l<M<ls.tvnllys-.......... '"' .............. -·Vlfft9 "'""' ,, "'lJO ,.,. t 8•1 \t....-t-t (MY Mett. C•tft0f"fti•n.1t ''"'' •·c.ttf .. '"'"'""''--"'-- ,_,.,.......... "'°"'9"''c.i1or a.,,..,, ""' •1<-1' .... tl ""'"""'"""""'""[dft.., • Arrested in' Iran SAN J UAN, Texas <AP > - Cesar Chavez, whose United • Farm Workers Union has stalled in previous efforts to organize Texas farm workers, used a day-long pep rally to launch a drive in the state. TEHRAN, Iran <AP)-lran's Islamic revolutionaries arrested an American, a Belgian and two British employees of the Floor Corp. of Irvine today on charges of "plundering the wealth of Iran by charging exorbitant prices." a spokesman for the company said. T be four are construction supervisors at a gas turboex- pander plant near Paianan, jn southern Iran, whlcb the Fluor Corp. recently finished building. The men were attempting to board an airplane at Pazanan Airport to fly to Tehran for evacuation from the country when they were arrested. After questioning, a Fluor spokesman sald, they. were returned to the job site at Pazanan and held there for further investigation. The American was identified as John Cassibas. 49. Cassibas, a long-time overseas construc- tion worker, joined Fluor three years ago He has no known United States address. The bead of the Iranian na· tional oil industry, munwblle, announced that Iranian oU ex- ports will resume next week. He did not specify a date. The cut-off of Iranian oil has been blamed by many in the world petroleum industry for re- cent price hikes and reductions in refinery production. In other developments, the ex- ecution of another official of Sha h Moh a mm ed Reza Pahlavi's secret police a nd public floggings for violators of Islamic law were reported lo· day. The newspaper Andegan re- ported that Mohammed Hossein Naderi, the secret police's torture expert in the central city of Isfahan, was b rought tQ Tehran and executed by a firing squad Sunday night . Meanwhile, aides .to the Ayatollah Rubollab Khomeini said the Moslem holy man will leave bis te mporary head- quarters in Tehran on Thursday Bloodmobile DueinCdM Tbe Corona del Mar HJgb Sebool AllOClated Student Body l• 1J>C)DllOrinl a vislt to e1mpu1 of tbe American Red Crou Bloodmobile March 8. Tbe f1cWty will be open lrom l :"5 1.m. to 1:30 p.m. and local rnldentl are invited to dol.Ulte blood. -·-DoDOr'I muat be 1'7 or """"r, and thoee tbat art 11 must. have perental content in a aiptd note. A crowd that swelled upwards of 1,000 here Sund~ offered en- thusiastic rhythmic applause to a lineup of union leaders and clergymen who told them that a solid union offers the quickest route to a better life. "I can assure you it will be ... much easier for you than it was in 1962," Chavez said, referring to tbe beginning of the U FW. ·'The people were scared then. Nobody should be afraid here.'' Af'W~ FLEES IRAN Shahpour Bakhtiar. the last premier of Iran under the Shah's re- gime, has fled Iran with his family. the Ayatollah Kho- m eini said Sunday. lo return to the holy city of Qum, 75 miles southwes t of the capital. Hundreds of thousands of Iranians are expected to con· verge on the city to bid him welcome. The aides said Khomeini wiU visit the holy shrine of Asrat M aasoum a nd speak at an Islamic theological school, c losed down 10 year s ago because of anti-shah activities. The ayatollah was arrested in Qum for his opposition to the shah, whlcb resulted in bis 14· year exile. Qum is the traditional seat of Iran's Shiite Moslem leadership and Khomeini is expected to m a ke bis pe rmanent home there, although aides say he will still play a major role as spiritual leader of the revolu- tion. Heating Oil Prices Soar NEW YORK (AP ) -The prtce of the fuel oil un d to beat some apartments and bulldlqs and to pawer f actortee and elec· trlcal generators may rtae st.ill turtber aa a result of a reported lncreue in the price of the fuel by a key ex~rter. The world'• fourtb·l1r1est oU producer decided over lbe weekend to raise the price or t0me ol ltl oil by 11 pel'cent, ac· cordl.Da to l.nduatry sources. f',....PageAJ RATION ••• shortages of imported oil. Some of the measures might be ap- plied by June. Under the rationing plan, the government would a llocate equal amounts of gasoline to the owner of each registered vehi- cle. Coupons would be needed lo buy gasoline. We Recommend: l!JFl.A because it's the best. • The Hanoi broadcast claimed counter .attacking Vietnamese troops killed l ,400 Chinese around Cam Duong, but that fighting was continuing in the area today. Rhodesiam Raid Angola SALISBURY, Rhodesia <AP > Tbe Rhodesian air force made its first raid on Angolan ter- ritory today, bombing a "very large" training base for J oshua Nkomo 's guerril las. the Rhodesian military command announced. A communique said the 1950s· vintage Rhodesian Canberra bombers and Hawker-Hunter fighters flew across Zambia to make the attack and all r e· turned safely. There. was no indication whether they were challenged by the Angolan air force's more advanced Soviet MiG-21 jets or by anti-aircraft fire from some of the 20 ,000 Cuban troops estimated to be in Angola. Mes an Held in Heists Newport Beach police have jailed a Cotta Mesa man they said was burglarizing boats In an effort to raise cash to cover some bum cbecu. Timothy K. Crosland. 3\, of 2033 Paloro• Drive, was arrest- ed early Sundav al the Balboa Bay Club along with bis compan- ion . Mary E. Bradley. 29, of 1612 Hiehland St., Newport Beach. Both were held on suspi- cion of burglary. A Bay Cl ub security guard summoned poUce. He said he found the couple about 1 a.m. near a boat that bad just been burglarized. Police said Crosland is employed in the boat main- tenance field in Newport Beach. Investigators said he told them he was trying to raise money to make restitution of funds in con- nection with a bad check case also being Investigated by Newport police. The deadline for restitution was today. Police believe Crosland is r es ponsible fo r six boat burglaries as weJI as 10 attempt- ed boat break-ins during recent months. f',....PageAJ EXPENSES. • there will be a $200 limit on in· dividual campaign contributions a nd a requirement for the re· porting of an contributors to ballot proposition campaigns. Tbe new city law also pro- hibits anonymous contributions and sets a limit of S3S on cash contributions. State law current· ly prohibits anonymous con- tributions or more than $100 and sets the same limit on the size or cash contributions. Finally, the proposed city or· dinaoce requires the consent of a person whose name is used in campaign literature of any kind. State law only requires consent for ba llot arguments. One provision suggested by Mayor Pro Tem Ray Williams would have meant that cam- paign committees file an addi- tional spending and contribution report 10 days after an election. Al present state Jaw requires the filing 40 days prior to the election, 12 days prior and 65 days after balloting. However. councilmen have in-• dicated they believe the existing state Jaw is sufficient and wUI delete the 10-day filing provision from the proposed law. If approved at tonight's coun- cil meeting, the law wouJd go in- to effect ifl 30 days. f'...,_Pa,,eAJ BURN~ •• Gallatin County fire marshals. explained that there is no coun· tywide tax for firefighting so dis- tricts have to be set up indepen- dently. "I guess like every body e lse. people feel it never happens lo me," McCrosson said. "People do not join. l don't know why they feel the fees don 't warrant their membership." M cCrosson said bis truck came to the scene, but he is authorized only to cover un- populated areas not covered by private associations. "If there had been any life hazard involved we would have done what we could," be said.< ALS GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 t ,,. 11g AD in as lg or ;. id is 'i· IS· :h ll• ~­ ?S 1g td >r l S 's b -e " a d n 0 ll t, I 112 z •• .: ) l ... l' II. A •• \ \ • • • J ' • ( '- Mood!y. Febryt'Y 26, 1879 PAIL y PILOT A3 Storm Hits Midwest, Heads East; T11nlng Bu1•ts Too Laie lo Be a Bandit Chrihtoph~r S tumprs timing wit,l) ort Satur· duy S MPF. !7. wbo l betn h Id lD Orange Coun ty Joll as un uU.empted robber)' uspect. allegedly told the c s hi r at fi~ountam Veil y' Chris and Pill rchtaurunt · "Thi a o robbery " When the woman cashier lOOkt!d :.lunnt!d. h~ rt> pealed the pronouncement , she 1d • The woman told officers 1 ter that Stumpf showed no \\<eupon. I llb hands wen-on a lable S HE OA_RTEO into the k1tchen to report the inc1 dent ut 4 p m Policewoman Andrea Morrill 1m mediatl'ly urre~'ted the amazed Stumpf Om ccr Morrill had been taking a report from the mannger or the restaurant at 15975 Harbor Blvd Thf' rt?sluurant had been held up Just 50 minutes carher by a bandit toting a revolver That man had grabbed $203 from another cashier and fled out the front door to a waiting white Mer cedes. poUce said /tlflfla%ine Clai• Soviet Spy Plot Developed by CIA WASHINGTON (AP > A published report says CIA of. rtcials once developed a case that the agency's counterln· telligence chief, J ames Angleton, might be a Soviet agent. But William Colby. the CI A director who pressured Angleton into retirement, says he never had any doubts about his loyalty Newsweek magazine reported Sunday that a speciaJ CIA unit searching for a .. mole." or high- level Soviet agent within the CIA 's ranJcs , at one time de· velo'Ped a case against Angleton, but that top agency officials dis· mis s ed it in 1974 a s too circumstantial and speculative. Newsweek's report follows a year of printed a nd private speculation about the possibility of a Soviet mole inside the CIA. Fueled by the case of a )ow-level former CIA employee convicted recently of giving the Soviets a secret U.S. spy satellite manual. interest in the a~ency's decade- Man Wounded In Attempted Robbery Try A 30-year·old Santa Ana man was reported in critical condi- tion today after he allegedly was shot in the arm and neck by a would-be robber Sunday. police r eported. Joaquin Rivas. of 1130 S. Poplar St.. staggered outside his apartment after the 1: 30 a.m. at- tack and called for help. police reported. Officers said details of the rob- bery a ttempt are s ketch y because or the condition of Rivas, who underwent emergen- cy surgery early Sunday. No description of the attempt- ed murder s uspect was availa· ble, police said, and the location of the hospital where Rivas is being treated was withhe ld because the attacker is still at large. long sear c h for a mole has generated news pa pe r and magazine stories and even been trea led in a book. Colby himself has begun public speeches by denying he is the mole. The mole search was conduct- ed largely by Angleton, and Newsweek reports t hat . although nothing was ever proved. a score of CIA offi cers cam e under suspicion of being moles during the 1960s and the careers or several suffered as a result Although Angleton and three top aides were forced into retire- ment in 1974 whiJe Colby was still CIA director. Colby said in a telephone interview Sunday nig ht. "Any s uch allegation wasn't a factor in Angleton's de- parture.·· Colby said. "l never had any doubt about his loyalty at all. We had differences professional· ly but not on that s ubject." Asked about the case that was developed, Colby r e plied. "I frankly have forgotten the de- tails or the matter a nd really can't comment." In his book, •·Honorable Men," Colby said he decided to r emove Angleton because "I looked in vain for some tangible results from the counte rin- telligence field and found little or none." He complained about Angleton 's "tortuous theories .. about Soviet agents in Western intelligence agencies The magazine said the case against Angleton was the result or an extensive two-year in- vestigation of his career That case stressed Angleton's heavy reliance on a defector from So- viet intelligence named Anatoly Golitsin and instances in which CIA files showed no action by Angleton on important leads, News week said. · ·1 don't believe it," said Angleton in a telephone in· terview SUnday night. "It's a lot of garbage. There may have been individuals or an individual who did something but to my certain knowledge no organized group did such a study or had such suspicions." Olt anfl Running Schools, Utilities Affected B1 "l"W Assodaied Pt~ss A nasty wtnwr storm dumped more crippling snow on the reel· 1ng Midwe t today and pushed streams and rivers to flood stage acl"06s the east Snow, lce and floods closed schools, stranded motorists and knocked out power as the storm pushed eastward. Illinois Gov. James R . Thompson declared 30 counties to the southern part of the state s now e mergency areas and mobilized National Guard units. mainly to aid an estimated 2,000 motorists stranded on highways . Armories in Salem and Cairo were converted to e mergency shelters. At least six death s wer e blamed on the storms . Evacua- li on s were unde r way in Maryland and Virginia. and rescue crews were on alert along the Atlantic Coast. Snow and ice forced schools to clos·e in many a r eas from C l e veland to Bo s ton . Massachusetts authorities set up evacuation centers to prepare for flooding in coastal com- munities but morning high tides came and went without serious damage. National Guard units were sta nding by in Atlantic Cit y. N.J ., and Long Branch. N.J , where abnormally high tides a lso were expected. National Guardsmen earlier in the morn- ing eva~uated 75 residents from a mobile home park in Vineland, N.J., flooded under 31h feet of water. Jn New York state. hundreds of schools were closed as ice· heavy limbs c ras hed onto power lines. In an area south of Buffalo and Rochester, snow was reported up to 2 feet deep. Authorities evacuated the resi- dents of tiny Bremo Bluff in cen- tral Virgini a as the James, Shenandoah, Roanoke and Dan Rivers rose. Some res1dents of Greensboro. Md., were asked to leave homes when the Choptank River over- ran its banks , while in Federalsburg Police Chief Joseph Koski imposed a 10-hour curfew Sunday night. ''I'm concerned about people t ra veling around looking," 'Koski said. "If the water did come up fast, l want to be able to get police into the area lo move s tuff without in - terference ... The Allegheny River flooded the business district of Oil City in northwest Pennsylvania. leav- in~ stores and restaurants under four feet of water. The National Weather Service said the Monongab'ela and the upper Ohio rivers from Pitts - burgh to Wheeling. W. Va ., would continue to rise today with more rain. China Asks H e lp PEKING <AP > China 's finance minister asked Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumen- tha l for help today in removing Taiwan from four international financial o r gan izations as Blumenthal opened talks on set· tling $197 million in U.S. claims for property seized by Chinese Communists More than 600 runners participated in aturday•s 6.5 mile race along Avenida Pico in San Clemente, where only 25 per· cent or the route is on level around. Win· ner in· the men's division, with a new rec· ord time, was Lewls Patterson. 27, of Anaheim with a time of 32 minutes, 51 seconds. Women's division winner was Lisa Gonzales, 20, of Newport Beach, who finished with a 42· minutes, 54 seconds Ume. .. I ... \. OIL CITY, PA. PARKING LOT WASTELAND OF ICE WATER, DEBRIS Ar••• of Ctty Under Four Feet of Water •• 011 Creek Overflowed Bodies Vanished Traffic In Pot Dwindles Divers Abandon Search for Trio A team or U.S. Navy divers was flown back lo San Diego from Baja California Sur Sun· day night after an unsuccessful, three·d ay search for three bodies spotted near Isla de Natividad by an abalone diver . Navy Lt. Sharon Chidoni said today that the 16 divers aban· doned their sear ch with the de- cision that the three bodies. re· portedly tied together. are not now in the vicinity or the island. The o fficer directing the search told Navy colleagues a fter the C-130 carrying his divers landed at North Island that the bodies may have been washed out to sea. Authorities believe that the bodies may be those of Dennis, 22, and Debbie Vowe ll, 21, and Gary Newton, 22 all of San Diego. The trio was last seen alive Jan. 24 when they were two days out from San Diego in Vowell's 45-foot craft, the "Armistice." Shortly after a fi shing vessel saw them fis hi ng near San Clemente Island, a storm hit the area. Vowell and Ne wton went to high school together in Costa Mesa. where their families live. Mrs. Vowell is the daughter of Mrs. B~n y Scott of San Clemente. Lt. Chidoni said the divers thoroughly searched the area despite the fact that they were hampered by heavy seas, strong und erwater c urrents and massive kelp beds. She said the Americans were helped by local villagers who re- peatedly dived into the water des pite their l ack of the sophisticated equipment used by the Navy team. Vi ce Consul Bart Flaherty of the U.S. Consulate in Tijuana said today that authorities at the scene are now on a "wait and see" basis. "If the bodies are seen again, then we will immediatelt return to the area." Flaherty said. "Of course , we believe that the bodies are those of the occu- pants of the 'Armistice' but we will never know for sure until they are recovered. "Our thoughts today are with the relatives of the three miss- ing persons ,.. Flaherty said. "Our hearts go out to them and we want to do all we can to help them.'· Mardi Gras Throng Ready NEW ORLE~S <APl -Con-tract negotlab switched from striking poli e to r estive firefighters tod y as the hours counted down Mar~ Gras. A third labor front cooled Sun- day as garbage collectors de - cided to obey a court order and cross police pickets at city Sa nitat io n D epartment Jacillties. Garbage had collected on New Orleans streets and sidewalks since Thursday. Meanwhile, the e xube rant throng in the French Quarter showed little interest in obeying the request of Mayor Ernest MoriaJ to stay off the narrow streets Tuesday. Man Assaults Teen-age Girl A 17-year-old girl was raped at knife.point late Saturday near the Seal Beach city pier as a second man stood ove r her boyfriend with a club, police said. The two teen-agers, both of Paramount, also were robbed of their watches and ~ in cash, police said. before they were left bound on the Fifth Street beach with strips from their own blanket. SAN YSID,RO <AP> -Govern- ment officials say t he drug s muggling bus iness in San Ysidro, once a major conduit in the marijuana pipeline . has dwindled to almost nothing because of a reduced market for Mexican-grown pot Ten years ago, more mari- juana was bein g s muggled across the U.S. border at this port of entry across from Ti. juana than at any other cross- ing, customs officials say, with l ,OOO·pound seizures of the lugtl- priced illegal weed common Now, the combination or drug. sniffing dogs, men and machines is lucky to crack "a kid carrying a small baggie full" now and then, said Bob Perkins, direetor of inspections for U.S. Customs In San Diego. "We'd all like to think that's because we've done a good job here." said Perkins. "but there are other factors." A major reason is the U.S.- backed herbicidal des truction of most major Mexican m arijuana fields that has all but decimated t he U.S. market for Mexican marijuana. Up lDltil two years ago, 60 to 70 percent or the pot smoked in the United States was Mexican. Then came the paraquat scare with s moke rs fear ing Jung damage from the air-sprayed poison flocking to more potent. but theoretically safer, Colom bian varieties. U.S. CUsloms says almo~t half the marijuana in the United Stales today is Colombian smug. gled through Florida and other East Coast ports . Much or the rest is being cultivated in fields, for ests and backyards as the art of "growing your own" gains momentum. "The most popular mariJa,ana being smoked now is home· grown." said Gordon Brownell of San Francisco. West Coast coordinator for the National Organization fo r the Reform of Marijuana Laws. our 1CO% ceme.1 ha1r coat . thcz, pz.rf<zct basic to compl~mcz,nt your bU.sincz,ss or wuk<ind wardro~. fu11y linad ,and raisczd ro909 on all S<Zams . hend craft<Zd. by tbe, {\n<ist nq.w <Zn9la.nd tailors @J~o@@)~@ 44 Rl.81Uon Island.• Newport Bead\•7141644·6070 JOOl "bewood Blvd.•l\atwood VUlage•213/479-7721 • ii DAILY PILOT Mondey, FabruafY 21. tt1' Ju ( t ing wUla Te• M arplahle Happy' But BrOk BUI •ONOAY 0 r.I'. -lAt'a JO Lake 1 tour of eome Orana Cout 1&10Une a&.aUou &oday and check the pump prt W mlOl rtnd 72 eettita a 1anoo Or 74.4. Or horrors, look ovtrr t.b~ni al 81 2 p.r lbb In &.be lank. lt'a rl rly f'nOU.lb to st~• JOU a 81&M Monday Station o(K'raton • m to be cbanctlll &.be prices so fall ln tboH bttJ purep prite wtndowa that you be1lo to ' It a l Int U.S. Military . To Back Oil? W ASHTNOTON <AP) -Tbe United State1 la prtpart!d to uae its mllUary (Otte to protect the now of oil from the Middle Eut, 11y two memben of Presld nt Carter's Cabinet. Ot'ftnk &icretary Harold Brown saJd Sunday the United States would .. t1.ke any action that'• appropriate" to protect the Mldeut oll now , which he nld ''is clearly part ot our vii.al lntereaL" "The U.S. ls prepared to counter In a separate Int erview, s uch a threat from a major Eneray Secretary J ames R. power with what.ever means are Scbleaaqer said the admlnlstra· neceaaary. Again, let me say, NATION ,WEATHER • think )'VU'rt' loolina at a IAI Vetu alOl mat'hln T~y spin the numbers ~ the 1u pump and you loee. brother tloo 11 conslderiot the "lssue of the United States t. prepared to a u s muu ..... y presence .. Ul the defend ill vital lntereall with ( Ptral&&n Cull area w b a lever mean1 are •P· GASOUNE Pal HAVE bffn escalaUna at 1uch an larmtna rat" that almost everybody la awalUn1 the "THAT WOULD Involve propriate, Including mll),tary llt I .. b id force where necessary ... m1 ary per11onoe · e 18 · Schlesinger questioned on ''Wh etb r it would involve a NBC·TV 'a "Meet the Presa," deployment of troops · • · com· declined to apeclfy what ac:t.ioo bat atm1 of ~e g~~und forces. is might be taken. another question. "I think that the polnt I made Only days ago. Vace President . . . Is that the United states bas Walter F. Mondale said the ad· a vital interest in the <Persian mlnistraUon bad abut the door Gulf) area, that we have been on using American troops prepared to d!scuaa the question abroad "except under the most of a military presence in the e x t r e m e • c o m P e 1 l I n I area with the states involved circumstances." and that would have to be Brow.~, questloned ~n CB~: worked out ln response to their T V s Face the Nation, desir es and with some flex-descMbed the Middle East oil • now as "clearly part of our vital iblllty. Interests." 'Binds. •• tlae Spirit' Soviet defector Mikhail Baryshnikov, whom President Carter called "perhaps the finest dancer in our lifetime," performed at the White House Sunday and la~er chatted with Rosalynn Cart.er. The president said the dancer "bjnds together the human .spirit ... throughout the world." "IN PROTECTION of these vital interests. we'U take any ac· lion that's appropriate, lnclud Ing the use or mllltary force, but military force is not necd6sarily appropriate in every instance," be said. Begin Asked to Summit magic day when the little window on the pump announces one dollar per gallon. Already, we· re being prepared for tbat day. Why only today, I noticed OD!! of the brainwashing pu~ces that was dispatched across the wire services. It was telling us how well off we're going to be when it starts costing you a buck per gallon to fill up the old family heap. Brown, who recently returned from a Middle East trip, said countries in that area are con· cerned about possible threats from outside the region and from nearby "more radical states." Of the Soviet Union, be said. "It's well known that the Soviets are not responsible for all the problems in the area, but they clearly a.re willing to -in fact, eager -to fish in muddy waters by aiding one country against another." OF A SOVIET threat, be said: Door Open to Sadat; l1raeli Cabinet Meets WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Carter wants Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to go to Camp David by the end of the week to try to complete peace treaty terms with Egypt. The presidential announce- ment Sunday put Begin in t.be spotlight because it would be up to him to either approve or re· ject a combin ation of un· disclosed U.S. and Egyptian pro- posa ls for dealing with the Palestinian issue. THE DOOR WAS left open for Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to join the swnmit session in the Maryland mountains if the negotiations succeed. In the meantime. Egypt would be represented by Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil. Begin's response is expected after a special Cabinet meeting Tuesday. A government source in Israel said Begin was not like· ly to attend without Sadat. Jn Jerusalem today, however. the Palestinian dispute reported- ly were submitted by Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance at Camp David last week in talks with Kham and Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan. The idea is to link the treaty to civil self-rule for the 1.1 million Palestinian Arabs living on the Israeli-held west bank of the Jordan River and in tbe Gaza district. The wi re dispatch quotes gasoline prices from elsewhere. Did you know, for examfle, that gas costs $2.50 a gallon in Paris, France? And fue is up to $2.30 a gallon in Belgium and it ·s a bargain at just $2.28 in Denmark. AFTER READING ALL this, you're going to feel so grateful that you'll hire a brass band and march in streets for joy when they boost a United States gallon to just a lit· Ue old one dollar bill. Think of what a bargain you'll be getting! If you weren't living here. you could really be getting gouged in places like Paris, or Belgium or Denmark. Informer Says Hoff a Wanted Rival Dead Begin told a group of Dutch re · porters: "It's up to President Sadat to come or not to come . . . . It's not a question of anyone's personal participation. .. OUK COUNTRY IS a de· mocracy and the government and the Knesset <Parliament> take the decisions," be added. "In Egypt. President Sadat is the man who takes most of the decisions. The issue is between the tllt'O countries, and not two individuals." THE BEGIN government does not want peace with Egypt to be dependent on future negotiations over th e Palestinians, particularly because no Palestin· ian leader' bas indicated be is willing to participate in those talks . Dayan flew to Israel after Carter's announcement, which was drawn up with the approval or Dayan and Khalil. As a result, reports ol surprise in Israel that a summit was being arranged with Begin but without Sadat were discounted by U.S. of· ficials. Only the Wrong Thinkers amongst us would turn all this around and suggest that your old family heap bolds 2S gallons And so, when the old pump price escalates to one buck a gallon. that's going to be $25, friend, to fill the old family bus. PHlLADELPlDA CAP> -A government informer reportedly bas told invesUgators that shortly before Jimmy Hoffa disappeared ln 1975, be batched a plot to kill Teamsters rival Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano. Charles Allen. an informer and a professed hired killer, says the plot fizzled when one of two New U.S. ideas for resolving hired guns told Provenzano of it, AND I F YOU FILL'ER UP four times during the month. you have just been separated from a Century Note. the Philadelphia Bulletin report· ed today, quoting unidentified sources. T hus when we compare gasoline prices with elsewhere. you should feel like the guy wbo the robber just hit over the head with a brick. Investigators questioning Al· ten believed the tale could pro- vide a strong motive for killing Hoffa, the newsapaper s aid. The former Teamsters' president was last seen at a suburban Detroit restaurant July 30, 1975, and efforts to find him or bis body have been fruitless. He tells you to be grateful to him. He could have used a baseball bat, you know. Carter 'Trusted' NEW YORK lAP > --Presi dent Carter is the most trusted politician and former President Nixon the least trusted, accord· ing to a poll conducted for Peo- ple m agazine. T h ey favor. i nstead , Sen. Edward Kennedy, D·Mass. PROVENZANO, II, is serving a life sentence for the 1961 murder or Anthony Castellito, a potential Teamsters corruption witness. However, those participating in the poll, conducted by Audits and Surveys Inc., don't think Carter should be re·elected. The magazine also reported that ABC's Howard Cosell was voted the most boring man on television. while 1''arrab Faw- cett-Majors was chosen the most boring woman on TV. The magazine d!d not say bow many people we re polled. At tht> time of bis disap-' pearance, Hoffa reportedly bad been wrangling wi,tb factions aligned against him while angling to regain Teamsters re· ins . Storm Hits Missouri Snow, Wind Swirh Strand Motorists T~•perat ur~· heaviest ralnfell centered lh Honll Carolina. Fl~ Inches ot rain dem· ~ned Iha OlarlOH~ area In two days and mlno< lloOdlt'Q was rtPOr'I~. Albany Albu'Qllt Amarillo Allant• BalllrN>f'~ Bl""nqf>am Bl'lotnaro Boise 80iton 8utlel0 Olk"90 Cln<lllflall Clnel...O Col um°"' Dal Ft. Wiii Den.,.• OH-ll'IH Detroit Oulutll F•lrllflkS 14el- "-1ulu Htll L~& ".~~ ................... Ii.iii .. "°"''°" 1nc1·..,.11s K•n'1Clly LHV ... , Liit .. 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Sl .?S Sacramento t i ,. .11 T~ll 71 .. .. "'°"' .. 0 ..... M .JS 7J El Cefl4,. 7• • L.llA~ uao ....... 8"c:fl 7l •S ~...... ..., ~t.,lo 7J '4 11"-'M~ ., ,. s-..,_..."° · 10 a S...JOM .. JO S.ntaAllot 7J '4 Saflla Maria '3 42 TMICMVell9y 44 \ v.s.s .... .,, A wtthnd snowstOf'm belltr.cl SNrl\ of MIJtoUl'I, llllnols, lnctlena •noArtllfllH. 14erdest 1111 Wll soulMHI Mil• sourl, •sPKllllY c.pe Girardeau, wllere up to 1 f"t Of-· twlrlecl l>y 50 m!lfl winds. .trendld llundrecl1 Of motOf'llts ~ llnoOtcl out eleetrk power !fl wfloM IO<al resklM'lt~ celled Ill• wom 1t0f'm '" mol'9 t11an 60 years.. Gov, .IOMPll T .. IClele celled out UO _....,.. ~ ro petrol tl>t1re1. "11'1 111141elltvallle. Wt'ft Mftf -fl ~ lllle II In 11111 SNl't Of tile stet•, -:· Mid J im O.t•t. • JaOIOll, Mo" rMl!o ""'1er. In Ar'-' 1' ln<"o ot 1now IMHIH MINI, Ill 1M Wftl·Onlr•I M<· ti.., .. tN MMe Md PCHkl ntpOf"IH _,., lll#ICll"td ""°"' str•""9d on U.S. 11 wlWf't -e1r1n1 tot>119C1 J feet. Tiie """'"""" 9Ct'Mt tl>t Mis• tlulfltll A•-lfl!O Southern 1111no11 Mid lfldl-wNf'9 lntentata u end S7 "" <..,_ llNtr ,. ln<llls OI 11\0W Md Orllb ot Ill' lo S fffl lfld~lt WilCJH !Cw I lnt ... I 01 "'°" AM ltt •""'1 <._. tllflee Slofl. •• ., •• °"'" • ~ .. """"° _. ..._ .. \Me 9". A Otttl l• L"'" Two perwns were Injured when a tornado hit • t railer par-In Salisbury. H C .. end c1e11royec1 fl~ tralltrs. Ttm!>*ratures plunged over th• wtehnd In northern Alabama and G«>rol• -.... rudlnqs In the 70. Saturday oew way to 110111 -.. and frffrlno rein Sunday. CalfforRia Verlellle 111911 clouln -... e•oe<led to sl••Wll °""' Sout""'" C.lllornl1 today Wfllle ~rllures e•se Into ,,,. 10l. But lonc.es"9r\ 11rcl ovstY wlnd1 wo111d •-P Ille mountelns and l'O•tller11molt dewns OI 50\ltMrn c.111on11e 111roug1> ton;qM ~y'S lllof\ fOr IM llale WH 11 •t Montebello, fUSI HSI Of LOS ·-·-Tiie Soutll Coast Air Ouallty Mane~t Dlstrl<t llkl et• quality would lie qooc1 t"'°"9flOllt the tou111 coast llMlfl todey with 1 pollutent standal'CI lflde• of 42 Pf'Ol«lltd for 111 ...... c ......... eaa-.er v1rl•01e clOudtNu lllroutf\ Tue\. dly. Llollt .,.,,..,.. winds t1t9llt en• morn1no llOuf'I. HIQflS Tllltllley In t11e Inlet.ck. Cont•• ttt'llCM!r•t11rH •Ill ranoe Dtl•ttn 46 •nO '7. lnl•llct tem• pet'l tUl"et Wiii reno-~ ... Md M. TM Wiiler te""'8f at11,.. Wtll l>e 17, s-, ,,, .. .., Tffle• MONDAY Sec-tow J·tso.,,., •U Sec-.,..,. •·37 ...... u TUHOAY P'lrtt IOw ' lh.lft. u Flrtl 1119" •·tA ...... • t Sec--,........ .. .. SeceM ..... 19 11 •·"'· u $11n r1,._ •• ,.. m • Mb S:fl o "'· M09fl fltM•.tJa m,, ""9•·•• m DC ... .,._ 1111ddM eff 911 l<\I r-•f 11Vt IU twe -~ .... ,.._ff H1111t1119t..,, ..._...,, lltnflet five wen"" lflluttd Wlflds" .,. le '°,.._IN .. fw ,.,.._ •1ln ~ ttlt -If\ !Ntl fY Mtt""71_ .. _telW9fMt. ••tenl ... MUUltf'll *"' •ltll , .. ~tlf#M .... I \ Morality and Mortality in Modern Society What ethical dilemmas are raised by such issues as euthanasia, organ transplantation and the death-with-dignity move- ment? Suicide In Society Historically, what meanings has suicide had for mankind? The Death System How does . society handle death through an integr ated system and how can this change the modern way of death? Wat ch for These Interesting Course by Newspaper Articles only in the DAILY PILOT 642-4321 '. I ;/. 2 It . , h I' ti. I 5 )4 •• bl . JIC, d nc IK1 CALIFORNIA 4Kille~ l lnjured In Crash BISHOP <AP) Four YOUl\I m~n horn the amarillo arc'• were killed Swidl.)' and a fil\.h w11 lAjur&d •b o tb.,lr e•r atruek a lna('t u lbey ~ h'om a llammotb llow.uto lU trip, au&honU• uld. Tbe a«ldMt OCCIU'nid about l& mllee IOULb ol Bit Plne on H t1bway 3915 wbu the ' · Cb vy Bluer att mpted lo pua • camper on the c ro"'d~ l "'°" lane pav~m"ot. said Calllorrua Hlsbway Patrol o mcer Alu Komaolfike. . Tbe Injured man, J obo Buih or Camarillo. suffered a bro.kM leg and aeveral lateratlons btJ1 waa ln 11ood condll100 at Northern Inyo Hospital, accord lng t.o Corooer Leon Brunf'! Thl' dead were identified as Mark Montcomery of Som1s and An tbony Undqu.ist. Stt>ve L\ndQul•l and Brian Church1ll.•a11 of Camarillo. Brune said .. _._Ga• .. •efJl•• LOS ANGELES <AP> -Call ing it just lbe start of a declared war against "bard-core gang members." Los Angeles police arrested seven persons over the ckend ;~;;·· ""'j" from intimidation to attempted murder. The seven. all from the Los Angeles area and between the ages of 20 and 30, were arrested after an eigbt-montb investiga- tion, police said. Purle Cos' to Soar SACRAMENTO CAP) -The addition to Redwood National Park in Northern California may wind up costing rar more than the original $359 million estimate, says The Sacramento Bee. The Sunday story quoted in· vestigators for the U.S. General ACCOW'lting office as slying the U.S. National Park Service's original estimate was made without ruiting the land to de- termine lbe value or the timber. Staaday 'ogger Sen . Herm a n Talmadge, Georgia Democrat. jogs on a track near Long Beach Naval Hos pital where he has undergone a month-long seclusion for treatment of alcohol a buse. He said to- day he feels s tre ngthened "spiritually, mentally and physically" a nd "ready to report for duty in the U.S. Senate" promising to be a candidate f~r re-election next year. S400,000 Mercedes 'Used Cars' Set Auction Records ' LOS ANGELES <AP) -Amid gasps and cheers from the crowd. two ",used cars" were auctioned off Sunday for $320,000 and $400,000, setting world records. A 37-year-old San Francisco realtor started the record- breaking bidding wh en he purchased a white 1929 Mercedes-Benz sport roadster for $320,000. FIVE MINUTES LATER, an unidentified buyer from the prin- cipality of Monaco -bidding by long distance -went to $400,000 for the red 1936 Mercedes-Benz roadste r. According to a spokesman for Christie's, the famed London auction house that staged the sale, the previous record was $235,000. paid several ~ears ago for an antique Dusenberg. However, the Guinness Book of Records lists the highest price paid for a car as $280,000 -a Rolls-Royce Phantom purchased in 1974 by a Kentucky coal merchant. Con ention Pia• Brown Wooing Fellow Chiefs WASIUNGTON <APl -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., saying politl· CUUIS underestJml"' the aerlousneSS O( the nation's problems, is aim· 101 blJ c•mpal&n for a conatitulional amendment to balance the federal budaet at fellow state chief executives. Brown m l other aoveroors Sunday at the winter meeUn1 of the National Oov rnor~· Aasoelation ing for the constitutional conven- ln preparation for •r mally pre-Uon lstheimportantthing .. wenun.c bUJ areuments for a con-. . · stltuUonal convent on to pass a Despite uncerta1oty about bahmced bu<l(Celmeasure what a stand the governors The Drmoer•Uc govern~r may wo uld take. Brown's backing for not ctually ask ror a resolution the amendment and a conven- backina the amendment or a con-lion were as strong as ever Sun- stllutional convention, m the light day of rule. makiog such-a resoluUon I "TOO MANY PEOPLE in this difficu_lt to pass. The governors' political establishment are un-grou~1 already on record as sup-1 derestimating the very d el- porhng a ba lanced federal eterious consequences or the fis- budaiet. cal excess or the last decade. l "I DON'T TIDNK a resolution I don't think they are taking it from the governors' conference t seriously enough," Brown said will decide the issue." Brown told I oo ABC's "Issues and Answers." reporters. "llbink key states vot· .. And that is why I have en-. dorsed the rather serious in- l ran Stutknts Need Tuitions SACRAMENTO <AP > -The de monstrations a~aanst the Shah are over, but many of the SOO Iranian students around Sacramento are having trouble paying their tuition. says The Sacramento Union. But s pokesmen for the University or California campus at nearby Davis. Sacramento State University, and Sacramen- to City College say few have dropped out and gone home. The schools have arranged de- ferred or installment payment plans for the Iranian students 28 Suspe cte d Of Fraud Try SACRAMENTO <AP > Twenty-eight persons who left San Francisco for the Peoples Temple colony in Guyana are suspected of illegally receiving state welfare, says a state of- ficial. But the direct.or or the state Department of Social Services, Marion Woods, was quoted by The Sacramento Bee Sunday as saying he doesn't believe bis employees or those or the county welfare systems were involved in the suspected fraud, although they might have been taken in by ll. Table Tennis Tourney Due Table tennis enthusiasts are being sought for the March 3 tournament sponsored as a fund- r aising activity by the Harbor Area Boys Club. Deadline for entries in the an· nual t.ournamerlt is March 1 at the Boys Club:· 2555 Vista del Oro, Newport Beach. The tournament consists of open divisions for all age groups a s well as divisions for singles Boys Club members. itiative of a constitutional con- vention." "It is an idea whose time bas come." he added later to re- porters. Brown repeatedly refused to reveal whether he intends to challenge President Carter ror the De mocratic presidential nomination in 1980. saying it is too early for such a decision. BROWN C HANG E D HIS schedule Sunday to attend a con- ference committee meeting and bear Carter discuss world trade. Brown said little about Carter's talk, other than to issue mild criticism of lbe administration's policy toward Mexico. In addition to meeting with other governors. Brown met with two economists Sunday to talk about his economic ideas. He talked with Joseph Pechman of the Brookings Institute. a private think tank, and Edward Den- nison, a private economist BROWN'S DEFENSES or a balanc~d budget amendment were laced with e conomic descriptions. "The present course of fiscal e xcess ... 1s leading to economic stagnation, .. he said on the ABC show. "If we are not a ble to rejuvenate our own pro- ducti ve mi g ht. our own technological dominance in the world. then we will begin to take on the characteristics that we see in the othe r countries or the world wh ere inflation combines with low levels or productivity to lead to class warfare. I' BROWN OUTLINED what he called the central issues or a campaign: "The declining Am erican power abroad, the widespread loss or confidence at home, the inability to rejuvenate the pro- ductive capacity of America. the declining rates or productivity and investment and the general drift across our whole political establishment. "Ir I had something signifi- cant to say on those issues, r might well offer myself. But I have· not at t his point. in February 1.979. come to any final conclusion. • he said. BID PRICES DO NOT INCL\JDE a 10 percent additional ADVERTISEMENT -· Monde-f, Februwy 26. 1979 OAILV PILOT AS ..... .,..,..... A COUPLE OF 'WILD AND CRAZY GUYS' IN HOLLYWOOD Comedian Steve Martin and Look·allke Mark Phllllpa Wmic Steals Act From Look-alikes HOLLYWOOD <AP> -It was billed as a Steve Martin look- a nd sound-alike contest, but from lbe moment America's wildest and craztesl guy walked iot.o the club the imitators never bad a chance. · It certainly wasn't for lack of trying on the part or six white- suited. silver·haired finalists. They had one of the nation's leading standup comics down pat. rrom the contorted face and frenzied at- tacks of happy feet to the mock Czechoslovakian accent and ob· ligatory bellows or "excu-u-u-use me! .. Btrr IN THE END TREY WEllE merely foils for lbe real Steve Martin, who got the lion's share of the laughs Saturday night at the showcase nig htspot. The Comedy Store. Martm, exc hang ing hi:S customary whites for a suit or ~ primrose pi.Dk. sat in the audience most of the time but just couldn't be kept quiet. With Carl Reiner, he got the show started wilb "scenes" from his forthcoming movie, "The Jerk." "Here's the hitchhiking scene,'' Reiner said. Martin lifted a thumb. The audience la ughed. THEN MA&TIN INTRODUCED the contestants: ''We've got six people here whose wives and friends hale them ~ause they go around acting like me." More laughs. Between -and sometimes during -acts, be broke up the au- dience with shouted comments from bis booth. "This is a· disaster'" he exclaimed at one point. "This Is un- believable . I'm glad I set my tape machine for 'Roots,'" referring to t he miru-series televised over the past week. LATER, TO ONE CONTESTANT who forgot bis lines midway, .. Is there anything I can do?" At the end. be mounted the stage again. "I've never been so humiliated in my lire." he declared huffily as the judges conferred. He stepped down to help the panel of Warner Brothers' of· ficials and other entertainment figures reach a decision, and re- turned lo declare Mark Phillips, a diabetes researcher from Nashville, Tenn .. the winner. TllEN. IN TUE VISUAL IDGR point of the evening, Martin and all six contestants broke into Martin-esque shJ mmies as the audience roared its approval. The conteslants -Paul Tapie or Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Jon Dorr of OkJahoma City; Ted Myers of Hartford, Conn.: Mike Berger of Los Ala mitos, Calif.; Ur ban "Curley" Weber or Brookfield. Wis . and Phillips -were all winners of regional com- petitions sponsored by radio stations. Phillips, a scaled -down Martin look-alike who says his goal 1s to be a professional musician. is to a ppear on a n as-yet unan- nounced national television show with Martin. He also got a golden trophy with a fish on top. Martin signs his autographs "Best Fishes." cha rge Christie's receives rrom successful buyers. Houseun'/e sells Skip Berg, the Northern California realtor, called the '29 roadster "a work or art and I'm glad it will stay in this country." 'glass plate' Berg also participated in the record bid on the '36 Mercedes. for $40 ,· worth A Christie's agent declined to comment on speculation lhat the $400,000 mystery bid came from Prince Rainier or Princess Grace $1. 700 of Monaco. NILES, nt. -The story THE TOP-PRICED CAR, a Mercedes SOOK, was from the late of a small fortune, lost because a housewife bad M .L. "Bud" Cohn 's famous collection. Cohn's entire 13-car collec· no idea her glass plate lion was sold, bringing more than Sl million, a Christie's was 8 collect.or's item. DINNERS WORTH A WHOLE LOT MORE spokeswoman said. Held at the Convention Center, the auction first of its kind in recently came to light. In a letter to J . R. California and only the second staged in the United States -drew MacArthur, chairman of 1,800 prospective buys from throughout the world. T b e B r a d f 0 r d Singer Barbra Streisand admitted afterwards that she Exchange, world's _P_a_rti_c_ipa_ted __ in_lb_e_c_a_r_b_i_d_din_g_a_n_d_'_'g_o_t_fo_ur_o_f_tb_em_.'_' --------Jargeat trading center in collector's plates a Madison, Wisc., wo~an The ring is hers. Her happiness is yours. \ .. SLAVIC K 'S fUl<:j~lm IMC 11}11 18 F.uh1on bland • 644-1 ~80 Ncwporr fk1eh L.ai;urw Hilb • Westminster , ... ~~· .............. ~ ...... -"_' _ _,,__.,.,_°"'"' ,. O ur satisfaction is 1-nowing that when we're making her hapl?Y, we're maxing you happy. And that naepens most with our fine large diamonct collection. These diamond solitaires are just three of the ways we can make people happy two at a rune. ~· wrote: "I bad a Lalique 1965 plate . . . which I sold to a friend for $40. l bad not beard or you at that time." T be plate she 10lcl is • actually valued at more · than $1, 700. Although MacArthur point s out that this price ls exceptionally high , be said, "I'm afraid olbers may be losing hundreds or thousands of dollars by not knowing what their plat.es are worth.·• To aid in identifying valuable plates, the Exch a nge Issues a report that Includes current prices on more than 900 p l ates, guidelines on what to loot for and •hen to buy, and t he plate evaluation checklia t used by I.be Exchange. To obtain a copy without co s t or obligation, send your name, addresa and dp code by Saturday of next week to: 'lbe Br adford Eitchange, Dept. 19709, 9301 Milwaukee Aven ue, Niles, Illinois 80$48. (Not available to Canadian resident.a.) .. Spires Dinner Specials dinners at prices which don't provide more than just ~~....-..: ,.,,..-._ __ bust the budget. See for good food. They supply solid yourself this evening at dining values. Complete ~~~~~ one of the 20 convenient Spires. Spir~~.~}~~e.r,~~-~ials 1/2 Chicken Fish & Chips Spencer Steak Monday soup and salad. chOICe or potato or nee pt lat . roll and butter. INCLUDES BEVERAGE ...•.•. Tuesday ....... $2.35 soup and salad. ch01Ce of potato or rice pilaf. $2 35 roll and butler INCLUDES BEVERAGE • • • . . • • • • . . • • • . . • Wednesday soup and salad, chotce of po1a10 or nee pilaf, $2 35 roll and butter. INCLUDES BEVERAGE. . • . • . . . • • • • • • • • • • • Thursday soup and salad. chooe of potato or rice pilaf. $3 25 roll and butter. INCLUDES BEVERAGE. . . . . • . • • . • • • • • • • • • . -.. '· I :J. 2 .. ) l'- 14 l'. IS. •Y l3l hi . llt•, t>d nc · no Orang Coast Oa11v Pilot Editorial Pafl~ ........................................ R.o~•r•t •N•W•e•ed•'•Pu•b•h•\h•er .. •T•ho•m•••'•K•~•v•11•1E•d•1t•or Mondi~. Februiry 28. 197'8 Barba ra Krt•b•chlEdltortat P-oe Editor 1-ll Time to Cancel 727 Noise Tests H w •r • high Jul Dinmber-wb~n th county Board of SU~rvlson approved a Boeln1 m j t aJrliDe t l at Oran" ou.nty Airp(>rt. 11K'' m i capa ble of carrytng SO pucenl more passengers them the comm rc:lal Jets now \aed by th two a1r bncs lhat operate from the airport. Jt hopt>d the m would provo to be no noiller, if noL I noisy, thon the J now used by Alr aliromJa ond Hught"tl A1rwe:>l. Eurly t t pro rom ulls mdlcated lh laraer 727 a1rhnt1r w at le t no no t r that than th amaller jel aircraft. But midwt•Y throu.ih the t t proaram t h Feder al v1atJon Admaru!>lratJon ol"dered a c ha nge In th tak eoff procedur~ t Or nge County Airport. T~t results mce the lak~lf n>uline was changed bhow that under t he n w oper tina autdeUn th 727 makt>5 mort.• notst.• than th smaller alrcran With tho e lest results m hand, the Board of Supervisor this \\.l'ek \\ill consider cancetuna the tetjt program. It would huvc been an asset to operations at the county airport had it been found jets capable of carrying more passenger~ make l noise. Thal wasn't the case , however. t n fairness to the noise·plugued res1dential commurulles surrounding the airport, supervisors s hould cancel the test program 1n JCcordance with th e atreemenl that was part of the test pact with Hughes Airwest Who's in Charge? The sudden rise in gasoline p rices along the Orange Coast -10 cents a gallon over the last 90 days -along with dire warnings of rationing, allocation, etc .. gives· rise once more to the uncomfortable fee'ling that we're being manipulated into another oil panic. The strikes that Jed to the shutdown of oil production in Iran only started on Dec. 26. Although Ira n has been s upplying only 5 percent on this country's totaLoiL imports, it was bla med for triggering this huge escalation in U.S. prices. President Carter has said there is no oil c risis at present. But Energy Secretary J a mes Schlesinger warns t hat gasoline allocations a nd even rationing are almost me vita ble Oil company executives gloo mily agree a nd some already have s tarted c utting back supplies to retailers - raising prices sim u ltaneously, of course. But at the same time they blame the upped prices on increased production and labor costs. ll 's probably im possible to cut through to the truth in this murky situation. But the suspicion remains that SJ -a.gallon gasoline m ay be the real goal, and one that probably can be a tta ined if the panic pattern continues. Jf that's so. s houJd the government step in right now with rationing or allocations? Hardly a popula r idea . But neither is the notion t hat the oil companies seem to be in t•om plete control of the situation at this point. Bingo Curbs Due Bingo can be a n efficient and enjoyable way for charities. churches and other worthwhile nonprofit organizations to raise money. Bingo can a lso be, and sometimes is, a one·sided high.rolling game of chance that rewards opportunistic operators with big profits. Unfortunate ly. the re is some ot both kinds -o"t operations unde r the local option bingo initiative approved by California voters in 1976. County gove rnment has the chance this week to keep pseudo-charity bingo parlor operators on a leash in unincorporated areas by strengthening its bingo ordinan<'e One proposed change in the ordinance would limit bingo operators to two-rather than five-nigbt-a~week play. thus eliminating excess profits from the games. Another proposed change supported by Sheriff Brad Gates and other Ja w enforcement officials would require bingo operators to keep full, complete and traceable fi na ncial records. County supervisors would be wise to let Anaheim go on its merry way as the center of big-time bingo in Orange County. They can do tha t simply by voting to approve the proposed cha nges in the ordinance, changes designed to keep the spirit or the 1976 ballot initiative while eliminating a buses. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd/D.C. Dating By L.M. BOYD Notion was years ago that a single girl had a better chance of meeting ad eligible bachelor in Washington, D.C .• than anywhere else. Particularly, 1l she were a secretary in a senator's or representative's office. Men from out or town drop into those offices constanUy. And said men usually are looking Dear Gloomy Gu8 Wiab aomeone would tell those business firms wtth busy phone lines that a lot of us would rather wail in allence than Usten to that dumb music. B.C.D. for an entertaining nigbl out after bus iness hours . Lately, though, the report is · that the competition among unattached women ls too great there. Also, many of them are required to work long hours, leaving Utile time for the social scene. The capital bas lost it.s reputation as the dati ng mecca , evidently. Q. "Which university fool· ball team baa appeared on television the most?" A. Notre Dame, 52 Umes. Then: Tex.as, 48. University of Southern Callfornla, '3. Oklahoma, 42. Ohlo State, 41.· Army, 41. University of Callfomia at Los Angeles, 40. Those were the figures over 27 ytara golng lnt.o the 1978 season. The only known pigments in goldfish are yellow. oranre and black. But the comblnaUons are so various. you wouldn't guess It. To that lengthening Ust of wordl with ffve e'a and no other vowels , add 1trfftaweeper. p1'8M. Any otben? \ ' ,. U.S. Eyes Alaska Lalld Ripoff WASHINGTON -Hollywood lo tbe l"Ofttrary, trarklnt down K udala lD Wublogton ii not. Juat a cue of toe:ldnc an ear at lhe rt•hl party. meeting an ln formant to an apartment 1arace or tak!Nt a ohone call from a dt1crunll e d 1 o vernme 1H empaoy.e. We recea1b' uaiped ov.r U · IOClate Hal Bemtoo to a month· Jo n a ao vnU1alion or what m ay prove to be lbe bl11ea1t a tt e mpted pub llc·land~ 1wlndJe U. the 20th century He crossed A (O J(O ak I s l a nd , Al u ka, ln a tiny CeesH . b!s bu1h pilot awoopinc down for cloae-up loob al phantom naUv \flllaces -settlements that «ix· isled ooJy oo paper and were lbe Earl Waters bHta for the suspected land fraud. THE EVIDENCE Beroton eathered coovinced us -u in· vc1t11atora for the Justice and Interior Departments bad also concluded -that not only the federal government, but native Am e rican corpor atlons in Alaska are being ripped orr lD a la nd·grab scheme tha t could dwarr Teapot Dome lo acreage and potential profit. To make matters worse. ln- te r n a I Inte r io r De partment docume nts reve,1 that the Bureau of Indian Affairs <BIA ) ianored the fraud scheme. A f4"deral grand Jury indictment came to nothing when a strange artldavlt by an lndJan Affairs lawyer "knocked the bottom out of the Cl.lie," according to Justice Depanmenlllources. T he backicroun<S of the great Alaska land grab goes back to 1971, whoo Congress passed lhe AJutu NAUve Clalms SelUe· meat Act. Under lts w rms, I.be state•a Eskimos. Indians and Aleuts wlll eventually receive eome S88a mllUon In federal and stale funds and lake title to some .to million acra ol federal land in Alaska. investigation Into Koruag's af. fairs led to the grand Jury UK!Jct. meol that wa e ventually abot down by the BIA alfidavll. Kon.iag•s $Cheme. as ouUined by govemment investigators, is fa irly s imple. It coo1i1ta of creallng phantom villages and setting up village corporatio& TITLE TO the land is deeded to claim land undel' the 1971 act. over to a dozen regional native Congress explicitly stated that corporalions and more than 200 a village must have bad at least village corporations. Individual 13 permanent native American natives are stockholders in the residents in 19'70 to qualify for a corporations and share in the land grant. But seven out ol the profits from sale or exploitation 16 villages sponsored by Koniag or the land. clearly failed to meet eveo this Most of the native ~orpora· modest requirement. according lions are doing a good job with · to federal iovest..igators. heavy responsibilities laid on tnterior Department sourceS' them by the claims act. But report that viJlage enrollments, federal investigators a re con· now in the possession of the vinced that one of these corpora· Bureau or Indian Affairs, are lions. Koniag Inc., with head· filled wilh names of natives who quarters in Kodiak, has attempt· had never even visited the sit.es ed fraudulently to obtain more of their supposed villages. than 600,000 acres or valuable r • land it is not entitled to. An FBI ONE KONIAG "village" called Litnik was inspected from the air by our r e porter . He circl~ tbe area several times and photogr aphed the oniy exist· ing structure -four big red buokhouses used as a s ummer retreat by military personnel. He found no evidence that t3 natives had ever occupied tbt site. Yet Lilnik's village cor- poration was certified by the BIA as eligible for 69,l.20 acres of land. The FBI investigated another Konia~ village. Port Wllllams. The only signs of life were a small fish cannery operated by W asbingt.on Fish and Oyster Co , olus a handful or residences con- nected with the cannery. The native Americans claimed as re· sidents were scattered all across the United St a tes, and FBI sources told us that 90 percent or the residence a ffidavits wer0 phony. Yet Port Williams. too. was certified by tt1e BIA as ehgi- ble for 69,120 acres. In fact, all of Koniag's villages were initially okayed for land by Lhe Bureau or Indian Affairs. Ac· cording to a former BIA al· torney, now wi th the Interior Department, it was fell that re· asooable doubts s hould be re- solved ID favor O( the claimants. Bottle Bill Sidesteps Real W aSte Problem The reintroduction of a man· datory container deposit bill as well as simila r purported "anti· Utter" meas ures proposed by local entities in recent weeks not only bas been disturbing to the bottling industry but is proving most aggravating to Senator John Nejedly of Walnut Creek. and with good reason. N ejedly. a former county counsel and district attorney. has served in th e Legis - lature for the past ten y e ars. His s trong in terest in en· vlronmenta l problems and in the better· ment o f California's outdoors has led him to the t'bairmansbip of the Senate's Natural Resources a nd WUdlife committee wbkh. among other things, has devoted considerable Charles McCabe study to recycung and other refuse problems. EVEN BEFORE that Nejedly exhibited a concern for the litter proble m and. as a neophyte legislator, sponsored what was probably the first "mandatory deposit·· bill way back in 1970 pre dating lhe ado ption of sim Uar legislation by tbe Stale or Oregon which is now being hailed as the "pioneer " in the fi eld. But. as Nejedly s lates. "In bear in gs o n the subject it became obvious that legislation relating to beverage containers only was not a comprehensive r esponse to the• essenti al problems of waste and energy conservation that. was required.·· Thereafter NejedJy redirected his efforts with the result lhat stale has now enacted a Solid W as t e M a n agem e nt and R esou rce R ecov e r y Act. Through lbls measure every re· t a lie r , m a nufac ture r and wholesaler contnbutes to a fund which is used lo stimulate the establishment or community re· cyc ling center s . Additional funds are realized through sur· charges imposed on solid waste dumped at all Landfill disposal facilities. NEIEDLY therefore sees the recent legislative proposal res· urrecting the bottle deposit is- ~ue. as w-eu as similar focal or· d inaoces, as running counter productive to the established progra m and possibly destruc- tive to it. ··A sensible waste recovery program should relate not only to glass. aluminum. tin. steel and other containers. but to the entirf! waste stream and should provid<' the processes for effective utiliza ti on ." be said. "Isolating .bever age cont ai n e r s f or particular treatment a bsent the integration of that portion of the w ast e s tream into a com· pre hens ive program. while s uperficially attractive, is not a .. esponsible action at this lime · WHILE BE did not enumerate, the objections to the botUe bill legislation, Nejedly·s alluded to evidence that the highly touted .. Oregon Law .. bas not been lhc success claimed stating, "A con tamer deposit system modeled after the Oregon Law may well c reate a disincentive to litter those articles subject to the de· posit but it does not provide an incentive for the reduction of those other items that now enter the waste stream. It also doe:,. not provide an incentive for rf!· ducing residue which must even tually be disposed o r in <J landfill." . Pointing out the state's new waste program was the result of ten years· intensive study, he urged that local entities "take the time to hear evidence availa ble on the issue" and "allow a short period or time to estabHsh the effects or the new program before suggesting other rem· t•dies." 1\fah-Jong Obsession Boosts Morale in Hong Kong Aboard M /S Hupeb, OU Sl8gapore The sound, more exacUy the noise, followed us from Hong Kong. Since tltls ship is of Hong Kong registry it is not surprising that tbe crew is Hong Kong Chinese. Nor is it surprising that they a.re tile-bangers of I.be ut· most ferocity and enthusiasm, rather like the bar dice oolse- makers of San Francisco. The noise is the sound of mah· jong tiles landing on hard wood e n tables. In a sense mah· jong is Hong Kong and vlce·vena. It is estimated that 70 per· cent of Hong K o n I( dwellers play · the gam e •lmost conUnuously and a baU· million dollara cbange hands each day. It ls fitting that Cblneae sailors abould be addicted to tbe 1ame, u It bu dl1Unct maritime anoclationa. Legend has it that a nshermao named Sae bad a •trtnc ot excellent luck unUl the 1DOG100n1 and typboons lald bla crews down 10 bedlY lbeJ blid to return to ebore. The resourceful Sze set out to devise a game so absorbing that it would take the minds of his s ailors off the rumbling and charging sea. This was mab· jong, which reportedly numbed the minds o( the players to the rolling and pitching of the ship. To this day. Chinese doctors claim mah-jong ts. a mong other things, an almost eovereign rem· edy ror bol'edom and actuailJI keeps people out oC the Hong Kong bins. TUE GAME ls so absurdly slmple that I Utlok even I could play it, and I have almost no facility for games. I persuade myself they are engaged in only by people wbo wish to escape Ure. Actually, I'm Juat rotten at them. I am looking at tbe print· ed lnstr\tCUona for the game: "A mab·jong set has 144 tiles, divided ioto several suits that bear engraved palntings or bam· boo, clrclea and CbJoese cbarac· ten. Four people play. At the bellnniDI of the ga me. each peraon plckJ up t3 tlles. The rest are at.eked into four walb. one in front of each player. "T~ the players take turns. plclclnf a tile from the walls and dl1cardln1 an unwanted tlle from their own bands. The ob- ject ol the aame : to obtain a complete mab·JOng hand. com- posed of four sets or three t'On· secutive numbers or the same suJt , plus one matching p&J r or tiles.·· NO ONE. Inc lud ing the players, can explain the Ob· sesslooal attraction of the game. Men die or excitement in the middle o! a game. Wives are d ivorced because they are lied to the game and neglect home and children. Hui Wai Yiu, probably the top mah-jong player in Hong Kong, says there's a mystery to the game, that there are immense Wlela r \r~ .11~ "Don't Jct «he Ayatol.lah cacclt you wea.Mg Upsddcl " variations to the game, that it is impossible to Judge your oppo. nent ·s strength~. But it's like what makes the rains come and go. Nobody really knows. Jls usefulness for the morale of those who live in Hong Kong is indisputable. When you are not 'active ly involved in t he chase for the dolla r, Yankee or Hong Kong, there is damned lit· tie to do here, and much to be bored with tn this dreadfully c ro wded place. DR. WONG Shau Lam, dtian or social sciences at Chinese Unlvers1ty, confirms that mah· jong Is an important factor in preserving Hong Kone'• menlM.I health. Tbe Sha Lam peycbiatric prison fOl" the criminally Insane. convicted murderers and rapist.a uses mah~Jong ln group therapy. A round of mab·JODJi is al~ considered an accurate litmus tt'st fo r choosing a son·in·law, says Journalist Veronica Huang. ''When a )l'OUDg Chioese woman ls being seriously courted,•• sa.ys Huana. "bar parent.a will invite the suitor over for a night of mnh·Jong. They llaure that at c:ritlcaJ momenta In the eamo, he'll be so cauaht up lo the com· pettUon that he'll roraet his com· pany manners and reveal b1I LrUe lell.'' 1 I ., .... i .. •• ) h ... ' & 14 •• l31 hi. j\C. cd tK. 00 ! ... .. NATION I WORLD Sharks Snooze Caribbean Prove• Tranquilizi1ig 81 H1JGB A. MULUGAN A•llllKIMOlo;;1•1 I I lSLA de llUJ R S, Mnko Thia la tbe place wM1tJ1wa ano In •toot dffp Carib~an uvea off the Y~atan coast m•n eatinj Re· qulem lbart anci-oOMr fiDn.Y I~ "llose a docUe u touri u on a (baJ lou1t1e or the naUv at s esta bin. 1D lbe aha ol a .ombrero. Macho Mexkan div fl With NUDU llke El %orTo -th k>x -and El Canon the UnnQo -wim up alon11lde tbe 1lcepln1 t8 foot moosten to nu<tac lb mud even try to Utt tbftn. . OCCASIONALLY A tOUalST wltb diviq ex~rience wlll strap oo an O:Q'leo ta.nil and take the plunge to eyeball the baskln1 camivo~. wbo eyeball them right back, since a abark aleepa with Its baletul eyes open. Most visitors to the Yucatan, however, content themselves with tbe puttbue of a T-shirt with the caricature of abark logging l·l ·&·l·z's or hang around the dlvmg shacks waiting for the professionals to re· turn in their little lobster boats from the shark caves. The snoozing sharks have brought a mlnitourlst boom to Isla de Mu· 'jerea, which means Island of women, and now plays host to a ownber of pregnant sharks. MAUNE BIOLOGISTS ARE NOT quite sure why the sharks choose the ocean caves off the Yucatan for their slumbers, although pregnancy may be a factor. It was previously thought that the shark was nature's No 1 imomnlac, that be was fated to swim unceasingly with bis mouth open and bis powerful fms and t.aH conatanUy churning in order to keep the oJcygen·ricb water flowing over bis gills. Now it appears lbe sharks come to Mexico for the same reasons as the winter tourists: to get away from it all, catch a little rest and maybe like the marijuana crowd zonked out on reefers enter a torpid narcoticlzed state induced by the natural condi· lions found in the caves beneath the reefs Sdentists have found that the seas off the peninsula have a strange tran· quiUzing effect on these man-eating monsters. Jaws down here becomes slack·jawed and would just as soon be patted on the snout by a passing tourist as graze on his double knits. FOR ONE THING_. THE QUAUTY of the sea is different and soothing to the shark. Fresh water seeping from the mainland's water table lowers the aalinity, the salt content, of the BUT THE SHARK R&R AREA also is vbited by lemon sharks, blue sharks and reel sharks, any of which ca,.uld fricassee a basking tourist at oo~ gnoeb of its double row jaws. Alt.bougb a hibernating shark gathers no gringos, at least !$0 far, visitors to the Yucatan would be well advised to let sleeping sharks snore and concentrate their underwater sightseeing on eyeballing the schools of angel fish and other colorful species the size of sardines passing over nearby Garrafon reef. Jaws, when disturbed, could turn out to be as testy as a grizzly awakened from his winter cave. And a buadred times &1 quick. IA~T 3 DA\7S! llll11l~S IN(:!IU~~~I~ llllll(:!ll I. .. ~. Februrf 29, 1979 DAILY PILOT , . AJ Flights Reduced By Fuel Cosmonauts Prepare to Dock MOSCOW (AP) -Two Soviet COS· monauts circled the Earth today mak· ing preparations to dock with the Salyut 6 space station. Tass, the Soviet news agency, report· ed that the flight by Vladimir Lyakbov and Vl'lery Ryumln aboard the Soyuz 32 spaceship was proceeding oonnally in its second day. There was no indication when they would link up with the space station, which has been in orbit is months and bas been host to a number of space crews. THE SOVIET TELEVISION service interrupted a program Sunday to show the slim white Soyuz rocket blasting orr with a plume of red·and-orange name into bright blue skies over ~ aaikoaur ' Space Center in central Alaska. It is the first manned space mission in nearly four months, since V!adimir Kovalenok and Alexander lvaocheokov set a space endurance record of 139 days, l4 hours and 49 minutes and re· turned to Earth on Nov . 2. The last U.S. manned space flight was ApoUo 18 in 1975 and the longest was the 84·day m1ss 1on or three astronauts aboard Skylab 4 m 1973-4. TASS SAID SOYUZ 32 is circling the Earth every 89.6 minutes at heights ranging from 150 to 175 miles. It sliid Lt. Col. Ly akbov, the 37·year· old night commander, joined the space progr.am in 1967 and is the son of a · Ukrainian miner who was killed in World War II It 1s the second s pace flight for Ryu mm, the 39·year-old night engineer. He was aboard the unsuccessful Soyuz 25. which went into orbit in October 1977 but failed lo dock with Salyut 6 and was brought back prematurely. PREVIOUS CREWS ABOARD Salyut 6 have inc luded cosmonauts from Czechoslovakia. East Germany and Poland. They were all part of the Soviet Bloc 's Intercosmos program. Tass did not say when the next In· tercosmos night was scheduled. But Coreign observers expect a Soviet night commander and a non·Soviel partner, possibly a Bulgarian or a Mongolian. may be launched within a week. Tile exercise Of the future Is here now at Holldav Spa Health ClubS. And now'S the time to trv this exercise Of the future before rates Increase Mardl 1. start·worklng on a shape that could be out Of this wor1d with one Of the wor1d'S fastest. most effective forms Of exer· else. Progressive Physical conditioning. In as little as 90 minutes a week, this exercise Of the Mure can trim, shape, firm, reproportlon ... even build card I er vascular endurance. <Which Is WhV we call ProgresslVe Physical Conditioning the exer· else Of the Mure ... because It will probably be one Of the fastest ways to shape up tor centuries to come.> · Anet besides the exercise Of the Mure, you'll also find swtmmlng and Jogging at kev locations. Plus, Jazz· nastlcs-unlQue group exercises dOne to up tempo music. And steam, sauna. whirlpools and fulHlme pro- gram directors at all clubS to put you In Mure shape ... now. Let your bOdV explore the future with the exercise Of the future ... Progressive Phvslcal conditioning, before rates Increase March 1. ·cause the shape Of tomorrow starts tOdaV at Holiday Spa Health ClubS. THE SHAPE OF TOMORROW STARTS IWY BEFORE RATES INCREASE MARCH L .. '4oliday Spa Health Clubs .......... L11 .. 1M LAee.e, Or1111~ Ni•IM• 4020 Mac:tlaontat Ar1lngton) ~714J 887.1315 Ct11t1 ~ 9143 DeSoto Ave.at NordhOff (2 \3J 882"6912 llueNi PM 510 South Beach B~th of Lincoln Ave. a. -••dloo 333 N. H. Street(oppoeite Central City Mell) 714 S.1381 ._.. 17031 Venturi BNd., West of Ba1bo1 (2 f3 9ee-e330 Colla .._ 2300 Harbor Blvd .. H Center llilol IDlllr 6S60 OliYe Street (at Central Ave. 714 62&-3593 HollWwoocl 7080 Hoftywood BIW .. Comet LIBtN Ave. (2 13 4elM307 ""'"'""" lleedt 1868!5 Main Street (Milo St at Beach Blw.) oPPOtit• Montgomery Ward) a.ta Medic9I Center Orlftlll 822 Eat Katella Ave., Wnt of Tustin Ave. Long leeott 4101 Atlantlo BIYd .. Comer of c.non (213! 42&-8874 ......... ..., 6767 Westminster Ave .. Westminster Center w.a LoeAngllll 1914 So. B"ndY(f'MNlf'Olymplc Blvd.) (213 P20-7&71 lllt"'°"Vlefo 2~1 Alicia Pkwv. at s.o. Fwv. • (714) 826-0381 1 714! &49-3388 714 8'42•1451 714 639-24-41 714 894-3387 (714) no-ont I , I z l •• "· ) ' !> • •• hl. ·'~! ~u nc n<l I • DAILY PILOT WORLD/ AT YOUR SERVIC.E /OBITUARIES F irewood Sh~rtage World Problelll Wood, Not Oil, Mari' Basic Energy Source , a,.~ ~latd Prea ll'• the fire~ood monas,. not the tbtt1t n~ 011 bortaaei ortht> lale&t 11 prier r1 ". th 1 i5 •-'OnllJDI tlU.b' .i UUrd of th peo {*'Ont•11rth ln dt \' loping 1:ounlnu b tr polltirlan und lhe am u nl i.orry about 0 11 for pov.u plilnlJi ond a uo.IJnt fur ·u~. lbc poor are harder put th n \'\'t'r to hod wood ,for "rookm& and heaun1 1'bts hn bt~o 11\tlt> nollct>d 1n America Ol'1'P•ll' tht• Uu:-.t Rowl's biarsb lesson aagamr:.t d• ... tro) •Ill d re 1ou's ve~l'l tson "FOa TII GK E T£R part of mankmd, wood I~ th\' cncrK)' sourt'e wtucb 11at1sl1e1> the h tc needs of cooking iand '4armth. ·•a United Nations l';n\'lro nmt'ol J,rogram titudy suyi. Villagcnt ln many landllo, who require u ton or more of wood apiece each year. have been go Ing farther afi eld for t rees and brush. banng the earth Since reforestation 1s inadequate or none xistent, the d enuded land t?rodes. blocking dams with silt and causing floods Desperate peasants m Africa and the hills of Himalayas .and the Andes burn dr ied dung, depriving the soil of fertilizer. In South Korea. they have even burned leaves and forest debni. that should be allowed to rot A GOVERNM ENT com m ission an India , where 400 million tons of manure is burned a year, says that its use as fuel "1s virtually a crime." In some West African areas, writes Howard S. Ayensu. direc· tor of the Smithsonian's Offi ce of Biol o gic al Conservation , a villager must walk 15 miles to find wood. £DITOft'S HOT8 A"110M wdll o /1rtpi.o.cr hof wotclwd thf prict o/ uood JMmp *>~w. but '"" mWa tl'lal '" "'°"~ port• o/ Ow world J•r•U>OOd u U.. m&lfl ""°JI to hcol o ltomt or cook o fMG.I And it u ~tfi"ll "4~r fo /md Thot hos k od to "'°'"'"' '""'ronmf'ltcl problems ond mDr.t I~• rn thr otrftU.111 Mrd llYf• oj "'°"JI .,.opl( a I rtlbl)' aymboh• guarW.'d by ta~ WOOD OM ETlM £8 to l• 01o re than th~ rood It cooka Some vtllagers l_n Ecu»dor bovc bc4tn n.>ductd to one bot m al • day. say Oestc r Brown. d1rec tor ol the Worldw•lcb Institute, a non.,erofit r~ earth aroup in Wastu~"U>n Some Afrit an rumth~ll 11pcnd u rourtb ot their income on wood. • ay El"lk P Eckholm of the ln11 tttut<-Wood price11 have tr ipled In two yt1ars in lndiu, Central Am~rtc and the West lndu~s. he says La ndlords who once winked at people taJung branches from their woodlots now sell thf'm Deep in th~ once re mote and heavily forested foothills of * * * N~pal, obUllning firewood and fodde r t.kes on ramlly member lht' wboJ~ day A generation aao it touk only un hour or two A GREA'tER THREAT to humun w •II be tng t han in d us lria l pollution, Eckholm isays. 1s "the undermining of the productivity or the land itself through soil ero •on. increasing- ly severe Oood.ng, creeping de· 21..-rts and declining fertility. All tht..•sc problcmi. are accentuated hy deforestation " One ray of hope hs that new t rl'cs can be planted ·rhe United Nat ions reports that China, its woods wiped out by the '405. has replanted huge a reas. Successful reforestation has also been reported in South Kore a. In many la nds, however. * * * Forest Land Loss Poses Fire Peril WAStaNGTON <AP> The world 's fo rests are disappearing at a n alarming rate a loss that poses potentially dlre economic and environmental problems for most of humanity, a study con- cludes. "Risin(t wood prices are contributing to innation in rich and poor countries a like, while land denudation in less developed na- tions is reducing the capacity of the environment to support human life,·• s aid Eric Eckholm or the Worldwatch Institute. "The loss of forest la nds 1s accelerating erosion of crop lands and siltallon of streams and rivers, causing deserts lo expand .and Oooding problems to worsen," he said. It aJso is reducing crop yields "Soaring lumber prices are dn ving up the cost of building hom es, even in the forest-n ch United States.·· he said. auch program• have fo undered or been dwarfed by tht! enormity of the problem. EVEN IF VILLAGERS are dlaclpllMd oouab to keep from chopping down youna plant•· lions to~ immediate needi, nomadk tdbtamen may do IL Or more Ukely. out·•lze herds or cattle, goats and sheep that ro11m some regJons may chew t he saplings to pieces. One estimate Is that a lO hec· t11re (2S acre > planting or fast· growing trees in India could sup- ply a thousand villagers with wood. Establishin g such planta lions would, howeve r. be dll ficull. , Another possibilltl is better use of available fue . Firewood 111 not as efficient as oil or gas OU can be transported profitably around the worfd . wood for onl y a few hundred miles at most And how it is used, s uch as cooking over a n ope n fire , makes it less efficient EVEN WITH A TYPICAL Ktove, investigators in Indonesia ha ve found. 94 percent or the wood's heat value is wasted. Im- provements In stove design can cut the loss by 20 percent. Dry· ing t he wood for a few weeks will save another 10 percent, and a new type of cooking pot , sunk p artly into the stove. saves another 30 percent. Sola r heater s an d s mall bac ky ard plants t h a t use m a nure and other vegetable m atter to produce gas and rich com post would help, a nd a few thousand or the latter actually arc on stream in Jndia. But they cost money which most peasants lack. T he untapped hydroelectric resources of t he Himalayans would seem to be a good pros- pect , too, but again capital out lays beyond the reach of the poor would be required. FAMILY TRIES TO STAY WARM AT DUNG FIRE India's Poor Lack Wood for Fuel wi ped out by skyrocketing oiJ prices. although it has been re- ported that in places firewood has risen faste r in price than ke rosene. Cutting back on populations would be a basic step towa rd a solution but no one has fi gur ed out h o w l o d o t ha t o n a worldwide scale. Birth control is being pushed with spotty suc- cess. but populations ar e grow· mg fastest m the areas with the worst firewood shortages . I ~OOMING OIL AND gas. prices have, howeve r, created ne w interest in cooking and heating with wood stoves. Foun- dries can hardly keep up with the demand for old fashioned and new fangled stoves. Chain sa w manufacturers are doing Te· cord business. Sometimes natives poach on forest preserves. steal each others' hedges or filch scaffold- ing from building sites. Baobab tre es." centuries o r even t housands of year s old, are · stripped and mutil ated, although they have always been regarded "A simple board costs twice as much in Pakistan as in the United States, though tbe income of the average American is 46 times that of the average Pakistani, .. he added. THE OPTION OF substituting kerosene for fi rewood has been Not even the United States ts immune to the problem. As re- cently as 1850 Americans de· pended on wood for 90 percent of their fuel. Then coal. oil a nd gas took over. "Treenappers" have gone into isolated groves on Long Isla nd and , no doubt. other places. too. And the price of seasoned cord wood bas shot up as high as $120 a cord in the New York City. for insta nce. At that rate, who can afford to do much cook- ing , let alone healing, with wood? ' Plate of the Day =·CALIFORNIA~ MANX CAT 1..-. • • MANX CAT -This beautiful breed of ca ts originated on the Isle or Man. off the coas t of Britain. Melissa Wilson owns a Manx cat. f'1formcttton tor,,_, Pt,IJt• Of the OdV t\ )UC>PheG by Mit.,t' F•r~fY •ulllor ot lne 101• ecl•toon ot lM Who > Who ol PtrM)nalue<I c.at1torn1e L tceni; Pliltf~\ • It vou "'""~an 1ntetf'Sting plat•. wnd dt' taol\ 10 Mt•~ F.ir1tv, 9/01 Wll>hort lil•d , Solltt ll07. 8evtrly Holl> 00212 Deatlt Notic~• MEYElt JOEL MEYER rt">OO.nt ot Founlaon Valley. C4 P••>t>O ""'•Yon February 1•. 1'1'1 $urv1vt'd by Ills w•I• Marlene, son> Cll•rlt\ ""d SMne. deu1111ter Lynn. all Of Fountain V"lley, CAI. 11n<1 1 brothers Rlctwlrd dnd Bruet Mf!yer S..rvlCt'S Wiii be on T""1day fl ,,00 PM at tnt Hartior lawn ~morTel Cllapel woth Pntor Thomas J Richter, Lullltran Cl>Urch of Ille Cross. Offl<••l 1119 MITCHELL BETTY L MITCHELL. rMtdtnl ol "''"~·°" V~tO, C• P~Hs.f'd .&w•y on Feb'IMfY 2', lt/tJ B•lovt'd wolt ol Wllllam P Mitchell, motMr of Tracv llnnt Mllclltll end Mar .. l<"ennetn Mllc~ll Friend> art lnvlled 10 •ltt..a funeral sen1o<~on Tut'~av February '1. 1919 at St Kllll&n Cethotlc Cllurcn wntre Mau ow1,111n Burial will be celebrated at • 00 AM Interment 11scens1ot1 Cl'fneltrv. El Toro, Ca Rowrv ~rvicn Manday 1 00 PM at O"Conn« L~ >illl• Mor1uarv ' McCO«Mee• MOITUAltlES Laguna Beach 494-941 5 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 141.n.lllGHOH Rlt&ALHOMI 646-2•24 Costa Mesa 673-9450 lti lltOADW 4 T MOITUAU 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 6"2·9150 SMITH & TUTHtLL MOllTV41T WISTC~ CH4Pll Crel1lltOtY • Flower Shop 427 E 17th S t Costa Mesa 6"M888 P9CI llOlMHS SW1H'S MOITUAIT 627 Main St Hun11ngton Beach 536-6539 ,.,.....,, CO&.OHIAl PUMaAL HOMI ~ 7801 Bolsa Ave • Westrntnster 893-3526 ,AClftC YllW ..-..ottAl PA•• Cemetety Monuary Chaoel 3500 Pactfrc Vtew Drive Newpott Beecf\ &44-2700 0 Deaths Elsewhere LOS ANGEL ES <AP > Photographer Toyo Mi y atake, 83, bes t known for his pict ures of life in the World War 11 Japanese internment camp of Manzanar, died Thursday of heart and r espiratory com plica · lions K ELOWNA , British Columbia <A P l W.A.C. Beo.neU, 78, the form e r pre m i e r of Br itish Columbia who dominated politics in the province for 20 yea rs. died Friday BOSTON <AP > Sldaey R. Cooperbaad, 47, a specialist in tumor im munology and direc- tor of the Hubert H. Hum phrey C a n cer R esearch Center at Boston University since its founding in 1974, died Saturday. FORT MYERS, Fla. c AP ) -Karl R. Bopp. 73, former president of the F ede ral Reserve Ba nk in Philadelphia from 1958 to 1970, died Saturday. C HICAGO CAP) 'Mlaw•• BUandJc, 83, m o th e r of Mayor Michae l A. Bilandlc . died Saturday night after being bospltallzed s i nee Dec . 26, for a urinary tract illness. JERSEY CITY, N.J CAP > -.loaep• "New1boy" Moriarty. 68, who authorities say was once czar of a $10 million-a.year gambling op r ation, died Satur- d1y My Stars! Horos<-ope's 1.,ate DEAR PAT: After I ordered and received a personal natal horoscope from the American Astrological Association, I sent a check for $10.50 to get my 365-day horoscope forecast. Thal was early last October. and I still haven't received it. I think there m ay be some confusion over my change of address, but when I wrote about this, all I got in return was another horoscope ad. J .M., Chula Vi st a American As&rologkal A~tatlon's cas&omer service represe n&ative is sendin« a horoscope forecast to you immediately. The address dlan1e may bne caused the problem, but the firm will prepare a new forecast in view or the lencth of time yoa•ve already waited to find oat what the stars have ln store for you. lleolc Out.Une• No,..prolit Statu DEAR READERS: Noto Press CP.O. Box 544, Occidental, Calif. 95C65) has aanoanced the pabllcatlon of a new book ln its "do yoar own law" series. •711e CalJfornla Non·Profil Corporation Handbook," by attorney Anthony Mancasco, ls written for the broad range of groaps who qaallfy for non-profit status-from boslptals, schools and social service agencies to cburcbes and arts groups. ,,,--_, This 248-page book guides people step-by-step through the process of incorporation In CalilonJa: how to choose a name, draft articles and bylaws, attain favorable tax statu, turn an exlstblg ea· terpriae into a non.profit corporation; and dtrec· tlons for getting a non-profit corp0ratloa off the ground. As with aJI Nolo Press books, il comes complete wilh all required forms. Several chapters are devot- Pat Dunn Is A Regul~r.. Feature of the Daily Pilot Six Days a Week Got a problem? Questions can be directed to Pat Dunn. At Your Service. Orange Coast Daily P1101. P 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~ l'ICTITIOUS llUSINESS FICTITIOUS llUSINESS NAME STATEMENT NAM£ STATEMENT Thi" folt-lnq 1>trson 1> 00•"9 Du~I· Tn .. tot1ow1na I>"''°" ,, 001"0 '""'" nes.s •s "P'' a" THE H•REl'D Mill, 71010 Be•ch QUTHV .. COU NTQV <;TO Rf Blvd . '4unt1"91on Elncn C11flfornfa 18601 N•wlMd <;1r..,.t :: "'I Hunt •noto<> 921>~ B•"c 11 Ca111om1" "1NI> JUd•I" L-,-t<lrc~•. ""31 Jatm AuUI Ottv~ _._ llllOI .,.w~no Orlv~ Huntlncitoft BH<n Cllllfcwnl6 c;.,.,.,, :u Hunlfngton Beacn. .,.., C11llforn,,. ct?!>ll> M 1Chffl St&ntev IClrCf\Mf •• ,, .,..,,\ ~,,_\," (OfiiOu(f(iiO Cy dn .,. J•tm Ori••· Hu"11"9ton B••cll. 0, • ..,.. .. , Clllltotnle 91,..1 Rutt> o Hi1<1iln Tiii\ business is conOu<to<l II• an in-Tnos \loll~""'"I w~\ lll•d w1tn '"" dovlou•I County c1~r• ot Or11noP C.Ou!HV on ed to an in-depth discussion of applying for and Ob· Tllis ~~!~1t<!;~0i;o<1 ... 1111 '111e FPnruary'I m• tainlag the necessary federal tax exemption under cauntv cier11 01 Or•"9l' eouncv on Pull"""° 0,,,r>Qj> co.1sr 0,,,1~1;,i.t• SedloaSOl(c)oftbelnte rnalReveaueCode. Thistax Februo11rvn,tt7' ,11..,, F•D 1110.1t.-M•• s .. ,. sl'l 10 exemption is a crucial step in obtalnlng non-pront Pub11SfW!d Or•-CMst o.11v Pltot, PUBLIC NOTJCE--stataa ln all ststates. FeD U aftdMa• s.11.1•.••" m- A9--Ald• Wf.fll Subsf"ripti01t• PUBLIC NOTICE 1<•CT•T•ouseus1Nus ""'••-ur NAME STATEMENT DEAR P AT : I've misplaced the address you 1Hun Hit tattow•na e>e''°'" ar" do1nu published for readers seeking help with magazine "~C:~~~!:~!':::S 1>us·~~s"•~···s LOU NGE , 1101 , subscriptions. My sister has not been able to re· '"" lottowtno l)t'rsons, .,,~ dofnQ Newpon BlVO., Cos•• Mt'sa. CA 92&71 Solve a problem involving $18. so I hope you will busln•sus Jot>" Ouiroi, 3017 Harainq wa. LAGUNA CANYON OFFICE .llND Costa MMa. CA 9767& repeat Utis information. STORAGE "11,..,11.c11..,nne•""'"· 1'"0 e>erott>r Mar Outror. J011 Haro•"'! P. B. Huntington Beach South '""'~ H1q11way. U9una B"ac" "' cost• MH<i. CA t?t.2• ' h cat 1ornl•'l16St Tiits buit""s• ts <00>duC1td bv .t Wrtte to Magazine Action lJ.ne, PubUB en 'Qon•td T w.11 •• ,,,. tGtMr•• tll<!r•t 1>M1ner'\111p Clearing Bouse , 38Z Channel Drive. Port Pa'":'' ?'<;"~·Drive l aqun.a Thos ~c::::::: .. ~-:::1!<1 wllh 1,,.. WashJngtoa. N. y . 11050. Tbls ls • free consumer Bn<J~;~:o-; \~s~ .• , tG tnt'r .. 1 ounlY Cltrlo Of Ot•nll<! County on service with no strings attached. Publishers Clear-Partner 1, 110 MM1an1t• Laqun• et>ruarv 71• m4 ,.1102" ing Home does nhol ad1d MAL namTesh to Its maWn1g B•:;~· ~!~·:~6~'onduct~d D• 3 Published or.tnQt' COllst 0,,11, Pltot. list or promote t em n any way. e consumer s llmltM PM1""rsnlp •D 26 and Marc11 s. 11. •4. 1414 asked to try to settle tbe problem directly wilb the Ronald T. Wiiiiam• lOl·I• in 1 ed If th t doe 'l k MAL 01 Tiiis ltlllHnenl was fifed "'''" Ille COmpany VO V • a SD WOr • W County Clerk ol Oranw County on take over. A YS sabscription complaints are Jt,.uary 11 197'1 forwarded to this service. RepUes are prompt and Publlsllf!d 0r-.ie co.st oa;~1~1:: all problems have been s uccessfully solved. F~11 s u. tt. "· 1'79 q1.1• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •USINESS H.llME STATEMENT Tll" fOll0•""9 ~rso .. ~ ••• dOtno bu\tn@S\ 11\ ZllC'S. 1SS77 Le Mirada Stre"I Lequn11 Hiii•. Cllliforn1a 47&S3 . hDEAbR hPA1T : fJ 'm fan . Oldal hand at 1r;novintg f'tCTITIOUS8USINl!SS ,0,~,:::;:~,~s~&'°~ir~:'~~:::,~ wit out t e e p o pro ess1on movers. m ge · NAME STATEMENT. Laouna Hiits a.11iorni11 'IMSJ ting ready for another MOVe, but there's One thing ThP IOll-tr>q t:»r>OI\ "dotnq buSI• Thi\ !Ngll<!u t\ Condu<lt!<I by a cor I'm not sure bow to pack · and that's record '""\a;Ec1 .11LTY ENT.EAPQISES OF par•1"'"j. w.omn & com"""' albums. Should they be slacked on top of each .11MERtCA, ,., Et A111 Cttctl', ~1• .Jonwan1n h · d ? Mtta. Cellfon'tl• 91616 Prttiden< Ot e r Or SI eways Slt~n Main s No•U, 1161 Et This slate,,_! w•• ltled .,11,. '"" D. 8 . Costa Mesa Alo Clrcte. C05te Meu. Cafffom•• eo..ity c,.,.. ot Oranoe Ct>unty °"Feb Records sbouJd be separated b'y sheets of '~7:0, l>Wneu is conoucie0 by '" In· 21. '"'· ,,,,°'°" clean wltl&e paper, wrapped ln groups of ei1ht or dtv1dua1 Pubto$ntd Oranor> CoHt °""Y P11o1 10 then stored uprfdbt ln cartons accordln• to Stephl!n Matyas No .. k Feb.,. and Ml!r s. 12. 1'. 1974 1os 1• • " ' "' Thi• \lal-t W<lS fifed wit~ Ille _ Aero Mayflower Transit Co. county Clerk ot Or11~ County on --Febru•rv71 ,.,,.. PUBLIC NOTICE Wisconsin Law A.ids T axpayer l'lln71 Pullllt'*' Orange Coeit Oattv Pilot. FeD U end Mar S. 12, ltJ, 107' IM·1' P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 8USINESS NAMI! STATEMENT Tiie tollow1119 CMtr<ons art doonq bUilneuas TH E EXECU TIVE OF MADISON, Wis. <AP ) -John Q. Smith, a typicaJ Wisconsin resident, is paying less money these days to help run his state's government. The Wisconsin Legislature recently enacted a law that will save taxpayers $942 million over the next 2~ years in deducations and reduced proper- ty, sales and income taxes. A K.EY FEATURE OF THE LAW is an eight· week moratorium on income-tax collections that alone will save the taxpayers $230 million. "(ho~ the working people enjoy two months or vacati;;;rfrom state taxation," said Republican Gov. Lee Dreyfus, as he signed the measure. Tbe law actually won't take effect unW it is published, and that Is expected within the next few weeka. 11 Smith ls m aking $20,000, be'U find 1bout $'75 a month more In bis paychecks in May and June. THEaE ALSO IS A ONE·TIME 10 percent cut lb property taxes. Thls means if Smith owns a $40,000 home, he would get a check for $100 -the maximum rebate allowed -on or about July 1. A renter wlll get a flat S40 under the tem- porary property tax relief feature. Jn all, Smith's total income tax and property tax llabWty In the firat year wUI drop $372, ll the standard deduction is claimed. Dreyfus, a 52·year-old former educator, won the 1overnorabip by a landslide last fall on bi• pro· mtse to diltrlbute the state 1urplua1 which . was built up under his Democratic preGffftlOn, to Wisconsin's taxpayera. The aurplus ls esUmated at about $1 billion. • lt-417• Ft CE !NEWPORT, 110 N-r1 Cenl~r DREYFUS SOUGHT AN ll·WEEK income tax SUl'U110ttcou1nol'THI! ~66o Suite m New-1 80 '"· c• ho h Id th aj i STATl!Ol'CALll'OllNIAl'Oll I moratorium, but D~mocrats, ~ o e m o~ · TH• COUNTY o" 011a,.01 ieat1::..'i!r' 11~ ';.'.~::. ~~i.,' g~ t~ in both houses of the Legislature, won out m .... ,...,,., suite 200, Ne..i-. eelldl, CA.•™<> t eir demands for some kind of property tax relief "0 T1c1 0 " "1 •"' "0 0 " n 1s ~1ness '-' condu<ted bY • ,o, • l'l!TITION l'Oll l'.0.ATI! 01' WILL paralloll The measure also calls for widening income ANO "0" Ll!TTl!1ts TUT•M•N· WMn• Enttt'llrises •11< TAllY ANO l'Oll AUTMOlllZATION I( tllt"YI" M Weta!' tax brackets to counteract infJation, lowering of in-To aoM11usTu u1to1E• THIE ..:..,_, · come tax rates, eliminating the 4 percent sales tax •NOl!l'IENOl!:NT AOMIN•ST•AT•oN Tiits 11~ ... , 111.0 .. 1111 ,,,. on home beating fuels, and increasing standard de-0~~1!~:!t•!!~L 01t1NaNe LIT ~=:..:=~~~ O<'•noe c_,tv Of\ ductions to $2,300 for a single person and to $3,400 T'NEo'r~ce"~HEAEeY GIVEN '""' _ 1 "".," r "ed ril b }980 Publla._ 0reft99 C.OHl OellY Piiot Or a mam COUy e Y • HELEN M, LITTLE Ms llled l>t!rtln II P'eb. 2' af1C1M.,cll~11, It, 1•,. The current standard tax deduction is $2,000 :!~~':':; ~=eT~s:=!:'r~°".:.!; 10H • for both single persons and married couples. tor Au111onat1o11 io AC1mlt11t1er under • • lllt tndtPtftdtflt Adftllnl1trallon ol The nearly $1 b11l1on in tax cuts r"Cpresent.s Eslatu 1>c1, ~tertt>ee 10 ""'"' 1, PUBLIC NOTICE about 20 percent Of ~be $5. ~ billion in general =~:r .:!,.":::.n.=~ 1:' .!:: l'ICTITIOUS 8USINHS purpose revenues pro1ected tn the 1979·81 bien-,,., llMn ... tor Marc:" "ii. 1m, •• T,,. .::.:. '::!!."1::!.,.g tit••• niUm 10 00 a,"I., In IM <Wl1,_.. of ~I, ness H ' mtnl Ho J Of Mid cwrt. el 100 Clvk T Af'E•Bl!A Tl , 41'7 It to r J...-. (efti.t" Oflw Wff1, In Ille CllJ et "'nt• New-' llM<cll, C.tllomla ~ .. WE'VE TAKEN AeuVT $1 BILLION and re-AM, Cellfornla. Tlle'"41 Ellyn s...1111 • .,, Alwr moved It from the treasury.'' said Rep. John oat" [~l11'!·~;:. ~~.:" ~8:!'• ~~::,".:::::Y an in Shabai, tbe Assembly's Republican minorit CM!tY C._. dlv1011 .. 1 leader and a fllcal conservative. !\', ..... ..., .. M.~'f!'--'.'•'", ""° "111> ,,,.._ e Sf!\1111 ,. .-. ~ Tillt ltlllW-w~ Iii.cl wttll '"" "That me&m there Will be Sl billion less fO TllMHl,CA... Co11ntv < .. f k Of 0<'11-(O<inty on -...a...a "h -'d Tth lrt•l -.MM F•lltWrytJ, tt1't unn~. unnecessary programs, e a.. . ......,.., .......,._ """' Senate Majority Leader Wllllam BabUtcb, w ~•""" °'.,. a." o..i, .,,... l'ubll•toM Ot.,. c .. Jt o.11v Piiot belpedJteslgn the compromlse tax packqe. 1 , ... ,.,u.Mw.~tm "+" "'"·"·"·"-Mtf"s.,,~ us-~· the at.ale was 1blc to enact the tax cut.a without re ducing state services. tn fact. Democrats con«lnd I.bat Dreyfus' P poeed $12.2' bUUon budget for 19'71Ml would be u more than 20 percent from soending ln the curren biennium. The $12.2 billion tl1ure Includes reder1 aa weU as state funds and money from such aourcee aa tuitions. '-'.------------.................. DAILY PILOT .... '· I .:.!. •• .: ' ... ' 6 •• LOCAL I NATION Monday, February 26, 1979 DAILY PILOT A• Drink Law to Change? Some States Say Lowering Age Was a Mistake BOSTON <AP) -Tbe Vietnam era saw 18 states accept the argument "old enough to fight, old enough to be an adult" -and, ln the process, drop the drinking age to 18. Now, after years of rising teen·age alcoholism, lawmaken in several stat.ea have changed thelr minds. MASSACHUSETTS, WHER E THE SENATE has a~ted lo raise the age to 19 and the House wants to raise it to 21, will likely become the sixth 8tate to reverse Itself after lowering tbe drinking age in the early 1970s. Maine and ft1ichlgan have already restored former age Umit.S of 20 and 21, respectively. Min· nesota, Montana and Iowa compromised at 19. Throughout the nation, advocates of a lower drinking age say teen-age drinking can't be con- trolled by law. But m4ny feel differently. fatalities increased. but also it bas created a very serious increase in vandalism and crimes associal· ed with street gangs." Donovan said vandalism grew to ''epidemic proportlqns" by last summer. Spec ial patrols were created to break up gangs of young rowdies hang· ing out -and drinking -on street comers and parks "If you talk to people who live across the street from parks, they'll tell you the quality of Ufe definitely went down since tbe drinking age was lowered." Donovan said. MANY PEOPLE BETWEEN THE AGES of 18 and 21 had been drinking long before the lowered age went into effect -often, for example, when college seniors would buy liquor for Un· derctassmen. o.ll't "-..... ,.... OFFICIALS PONDEA WHAT DO TO WITH OLD SCHOOL DISTRICT HEAOOUARTEAS .. THERE ARE PEOPLE WITHIN THE field who feel the restriction will lessen abuse of alcohol," said Paul Garner, a National lnstitul~ of Alcohol Abuse spokesman. "But no agreement flas been reached." But now. high school officials say. there has been a "trickle (town effect" in which the !.eniors bu~g for friends have been seniors in high school -and their fnends have be.en as young as 14. Oce•n Vlew Bulldlng M•y a. Sold Or Le•Md; Cttlana Panel Prefer• Sele "You could almost pinpoint drinking problems in the younger kids to the tjme they lowered the dranking age," said Carmen Rinaldi, headmaster at Brookline High School. "Monday mornings became very difficult for students who spent tbe weekend getting bombed." White Elephant Puzzles The debate in Massachusetts illustrates the kind of dialogue going on in other states where. when federal law lowered the voting age to 18, state legislatures followed suit. Massachusetts was one of 18 tbat lumped lhe right to drink with the right to vote. Old hool District Qumters Cause Woe But soon after it took effect March 1, 1973, the new limit became a favorite target of police. the Registry of Motor Vehicles, and high school prin· cipals. They blamed it for aggravating problems related to teen drinking -problems already there, but to a lesser degree. ONE ARGUMENT USED BY THOSE who want to raise the age is that there has been a JUmp in fatal traffic accidents tied to teen-age drinking. Nobody dis putes that there bas been an increase. but opponents say the jump has not been as dramatic as the other side paints it 8y JERRY CLAUSEN · Of Ille Dall, ~II_, St•tt Ocean View School District of f1cials are Mym1ed about what to do with the ir o ldest white elephant Trust N•s determined last week tht>y really don 'l know bow to dispose of the 8 2-acre district headquarter s complex at BeaC'h Boulevard and Warner Avenue m Huntington Beach THE PROBLEM. SAID a dis lri c t s pokesm a n . has been turned over to the d1str1ct staff members fo r further research The property, purchased near the tum of the cent ury. origmal ly was OC'ean View School, once the distnct 'sonly school Trustees believe they have lwo basic options : sell the pro· perty and buildings or lease them, either to private. business or a n other governme nt a l agency A CITIZENS MASTER Plan Com m ittee has suggested a sale would be the best soluUon. But. the spokesman said, the state Department of Education has indicated proceeds of such a move would revert to the state general fund, not to the district to spend as required or to dis· trict taxpayers who paid for lhe site. And there apparently would be s trings attached to funds garnered by leasing the proper- ty. she added. if trustees decide to go into •'the real estate busi- ness " "WE HAVE. LOTS of unof-ficial opinions," sbe said. "noth· ing is in writing Newport Couneil Bluffs Development Hearings Slated A proposed ordina nce to regulate development on bluff sites will come before the Newport Beach City Council today. The ordmanre will be discussed at both the afternoon study session and the 7 .30 pm. m eeting. both in council chambers at City Hall. Council memhers are expected to set a public hearing on tbe issue for March 12. · THE ORDINANCE, aimed at preventing erosion and preserv· ing the natural a nd scenic qualities of bluffs, concerns only area s zoned as planned com- mun1t1es However . these in- clude most of the la r ge un- developed bluffs in the city. The blufftop ordinance,-wh.ich has been revised at the request of the Cit )' Counc il, n ow specifies that the city isn't re· quired to accept bluff faces for dedication. That provision was added to protect the city from liability IN ADDITION, THE proposed ordinance now specifics U~at the Planrung Commission must ap- prove landscaping plans and plant selection. The aim is to en· courage low-maintenance plants that will reduce watering and, therefore, erosion. The main areas of tbe city that will be affected are the un- developed Irvine Company sites along Upper Newport Bay, in· eluding Castaways along Dover Drive and Westbay along Irvine Avenue. The Irvine Coast a rea between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach would also be affected if il were annexed by Newport Bea ch. District of(ices are to be m ove d across the street to Rancho View School, the dis· trict 's second oldest property. That school was c losed two years ago because of declining enrollment and is being re- vamped for offices. The eleme ntary district's enrollment is 12,084. At the peak of the area's housing boom in 1973·74. enrollment topped out at 13,965. STILL ANOTHER s chool, Robinwood. is to be shut down in June 1980 for lack of students, raising the question of what will be done with that facility Formed in 1884, the district was a one-facility operation until 1959 when Huntington Beach's building boom took off. That year. Rancho View School was added. By 1974, 25 elementary s chools dotted the community. lo 1967, administrative offices were moved from a condemned wing of the old Ocean View School built in 1927 into the rest of the school plant as s tudents were transferred out THEN, THE FACILJTY in· eluded eight classrooms. a cafeteria and a newe r ad- ministrative section. all built in 1949 for little more than $4 a s quare foot. aod thr ee classrooms and .a garage added in 1953. Adding to the trustees' "dis· posal" problem is the site's cur· rent zoning, CE, res tricting usage to schooling. A new owner or leasee would have to go before the city's council for ap- proval o f other uses, the spokesman sald. Reagan Ey~s Race CHICAGO <AP> -Former California Gov. Ronald Reagan says be plans to appoint an ad· v\sory commlltee in March to decide whe1her be should seek the Republican pres idential nomination in 1980. "WE FEEL IT WAS A DISASTER," said Mike Donovan, an assistant to Boston's police com· missioner. "Not only have auto accidents and * * * States Drink Ages Listed Here are the drinking ages today in the 50 s tates and the District of Columbia, as listed by the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse. ... 11 Ark-. Qllfoml•, Indiana KenttK~Y. Mt<h1911n "'''"°"" H•"•""· New Me•ko. Nortll O.l<ot•. Oklahom• Or~n Penn$ylvanla Ulall, Wa$111nvton. .. .. "wtttl ""' ........ •llCI .............. u... -11 Col«.to, 01\trlel Of Coh1mb1•. llllnoh, l(aftY,1.M•rvl•ncl MoU•H•-· NOf111 c-tlne, Olllo, South C.rollna. Sovlll Oal<Ola, vorginoa .. ... Oelaw¥9. M.lofte tr-:b':m a . Al.t'lka, .t.ro1on" Hebrask•, Wy0m1119 .... " Connectkul, Florida, ~r91a, Haw•oo Louman.o Ma,wcllus.ttl Hew H•mpSlllnt, Nl>W Jersey New Yor' R-Isla,,.,, re ..... -. Tnas, y_,. mont, WHI Vi1'9lnl•, Wl'KM"'" WE4PONRY FIEW HIT AUCKLAND. New Zealand (AP) -A U.S. nut r ition expert says more than h alf th e world's scientists are e mployed in "the realms of weaponry and armory" and this is "lunatic and irresponsi- ble." Prof . Gerg Borgstrom. chairman of Mi c h iga n State Univer sity 's Food Science and Human Nutrition Department, told a scientific congress they must work for "a restructuring of the pro· cedural framework for scientific endeavors." The Registry of Motor Ve hicles' figures are the ones most often cited by those who want the age lowered· Last year, 105 drivers under 21 bad been drinking when involved in fatal a ccidents, as compared wjth 38 in 1971. Meanwhile, the total of under-21 drivers in fatal accidents rose from 232 to 301. The total of all highway deaths dropped. Those who want to raise the age say the figures sbow a 150 percent increase in deaths of teen-agers who drank and drove. Opponents cite the increase in all teen fatalities a less dramatic 30 percent rise. AND ONE OPPONENT, STATE Sen. John W Olver. says the registry has been "lying" by allow· ing investigators to use personal judgment to de· cide whether drinking was involved. FAMILY AFFAIR SINCE 1894 theres no substitute for experience• . DEN'S ca·,;,;e'i~71: iiisiaiiatian: ·,us tom draperies ' ~~ linoleum • wood floor I HJ "-c1191ffct A•-• Cotto MeM. c.-f. 92627 .._. •~n•. 646-2355 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Humphrey, <AP ) Mam ie Eisenhower and the late Sen. Hube rt H. Hum- phrey are among 28 re- c i pi enls of princ ipal award s from th e Freedoms Foundation. Other recipients in· e lude form e r Tex a s Congr ess woman Barbara Jordan; busi- nessman John Willa rd Marriott Sr.; J oseph Maxwe ll Cle land, a d· ministrator of Veterans Affairs ; and former "Ha noi Hilton'' POW, Navy Ca pt. Eugene McDaruel. The awards jury said it was "thankfu1 for the opportunity to turn the spotlight on some of thos e who have con· tributed s trongly to makJng America a bet· ter place." l Come see the Julio Spring Collection, presented by a special representative, in South Coast Plaza on Monday and Tuesday. February 26 and 27. Informal mode1tn'g fro m 11 :30 to 3:30. Sensuous soft parts, dresses afloat in luxury silks, matte jerseys and sheer chiffons. Late· , day body-baling: cascading curves, slashes and slits in white rayon matte jersey. Top 200.00, skirt 140.00. Inner Circle 1.magmn South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa • It's revolutionary! It's new. Our surprisingly easy way to lose weight .•• for good. CALL(714.)'975-0700 NOW. 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Call Advanced Health Center today! Call (714) 975-0700 now for a free. no-<>bli· gation interview. It's import.lint! Free ch lid care is ovoilable wh1 h• you participate in uny of our program,.. Ask about our~ for smoking, aloohOI, aDd ~ Advanced Health Center 1300 Bristol Stre t. North, N()wport Beach, CA 92660 - I I 2 2 .. J .: •• I f> l4 •• hi. lie. cd IK . n<l =--- AJe DAILY PILOT Monday, Februaiy 29 1919 ORANGE COUNTY QUEENIE Balaaf!ed B..,,g i MOW IN COSTA MESA ,.,, ..... -_.,._ .. "'"'"'-- · Ont~ nnl• l)O\ u.,lt't t' r-.u IH.'~:. 11ul ul \\ J h111.:t1111 111ct11\ "· Car Ins urance Rate Hike To Hurt OC? Orange County residents are gouig to be the losers if the state r evises the way in which automobile ins urance premiums are calculated, says one Orange County Politician Not at all, says Los Angeles County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn. the man pushing for those'cbanges. "The simple fact is the 15,447,979 motorists or California are being ripped off -whether they live in Los Angeles, Orange County. San Francisco or Eureka." Hahn declared tn a recent press release. THAT STATEMENT HASN'T impressed San· ta Ana City Councilman John Brandt, a member of Ora nge County 's TransPortation Commission. Brandt. who is urging local governmental agencies to oppose Hahn's move, says the changes the Los Angeles supervisor proPoses a re going to mea n car insurance r ate increases of six to 31 per· cent for Orange County r esidents. With the initial state Insurance Commission hearings on the subject scheduled for next month, Brandt is trying to Line up more groups to oppos e Hahn. THE FIVE·MEMBER TransPortatioo Com· mission will discuss the s ubject today. Brandt indicated at last week's commission meeting be will also as k the Orange County Board of Supervisors to take a stand against the change. Hahn's campaign is based on the current prac- tice b)' automobile insura nce companies or basing premiums on relatively small geographical areas . Because of this. Hahn says. reside nts o{ central Los Angeles County are paying excessively hlgb premiums He says the premiums could be dropped if the rates were based on a s tatewide average. BUT BRANDT SA VS THAT Orange County motonsts,.who are among the safest drivers in tbe state. are going to suffer Ry applying a statewide average premium, rates m Orange County are going to go up, Brandt sa ys He said his contention is based on a .s urvey he conducted or 19 of the major auto insurance companies that sell policies in Orange County. Hahn labels such contentions "outrageous scare tactics." He says "all motorists of California are being gouged by high ins urance premiums ." ••• U.S. SENATOR S.I. Hayakawa ts the ranking m inority member of the African Affairs Subcom· m ittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The California Repubhcan serves on two other subcommittees or tbe Foreign Relations unit - E a s t Asian and Pacific Affairs and Western Hemisphe re Affa irs. Jn addilton, Hayakawa serves on tbe Senate Agriculture Committee and the Select Committee on Sm all Business * • • 'T e rror' Event Briggs Seeks Explanation By The Assodated Prell Stale Sen. J ohn Briggs says he will "demand a n explanation for being terrorized" by two In· t ernal Revenue Service agents who so frightened him that he fled into a Fullerton police station. ··1 guess I 'm o n s ome enemies li s t somewhere." the Republican legislator said Salur· day. "l was terrified, you bet your lire I was." ACCOR DING TO BRIGGS, the incident Fri· day began wh('n he pulled into the parking lot al his Fullerton office. He noticed two men sitting in a parked auto and when he stopped, lbey pulled in beside him Briggs said he then started to back out. "One of them hollered at me in a dictatorial, military manner, 'Senator Briggs , park it right there.' I didn't know wbo they ~ere so I drove off" to a nearby police s tation, 'Briggs said. T he men followed Briggs in, Identified themselves as IRS agents.' and s poke with Briggs for 10 minutes "about somebody else's taxes," the senator said COAST ANIMAL HOSPITAL Announces That DR. ARTHUR EVAN BASS Has Joined The Staff MIDICAL~SUIUMCAL r.ACTICI POI SMALL AMIMAU AMO DOTICI l lJl I. c...e......., c ....... .... Acreu.,_ .... c,..... ............ ,. ..... wH ....... 111 ,..,... '7J.IOIO ..... , ly ....... .. Bad.ham Pushes Plans By O.C. ft STINGS Ot-0.Mly,_ .... Onnae Co¥ t Con1rc11man Robert Badham uy1 t:M.>'1 1UU pu hlng tbe notion or requirin& the lt d t raJ aovernment lO balance its bud1et. And don't tw mlalud lnto thln.ldna. auaaests the GOP con mun, that Cov Jerry Drown waa th~ ft rat ~ to tb1nk up th~ Id • l>Hcribinte Druwn •11 "th11t areat new convert to t'Onffrva llvt thou1ht." Ut dham pomta out that, wht n M (1rat W('nt lO Conar in une. he CO· apo naor d I 11i1lallon that would maodate a ba lan<'C'd U S bud.:et. except In umes of war or to olhc-r dirt.' nullona l m r11cocy 8£ 111AT M IT MAY, Bad.ham now count.s 21 ta tH Lba\ h uve •1ndicated they would lllte Conart'Ss to call a conv nt on for the express purpoiw or a pprovtmc a constitutional amendment requiring a balunced federal budget . IU own requirement ror a balanced federal bud1el and send it oul to tM states for ratificaUon. A1aln. the mag1c number for approval would be 38. Either way through Conareas or a constltu· tlonal convention -says Baciluunt he's for ll. . . ~ THE ORANGE COVNTY Parents Council of the California Association for the Gilled plans a rally March 1 in Anaheim a1ainat Gov. Brown's plan to cut tbe mentally gift.eel minor <MGM> Pro· gram from the state budget.. The rally will be al Stoddard Elementary School. 1841 S. 9th St., Anaheim. It Is to start at 7:30 p.m. ••• THE STATE FAIR PoliUcal Practices Com· mission has fined former Assembly candidate Jesse M. Davis , a Democrat. for failing to rePort loans to bis 1976 campaign in Orange County's 7lst District. GUADALAJARA RESTAURANT HOMIMADE MEXICAN FOOD OPEN DAILY 11:00 A.M. to 11:00 P.M. 665 PAUi.ARiMO C.....of ..... ., ........... IMnt .. k • c.,-. Cw.ti COSTA MESA 540..2392 II takt•a 34 gtate is (two thirds I lo force ConRrt' to call a cons lltutlonal convention and 1t would tnke 38 stalctt <lhrt.-e·lourlhs I to ratify any amt-ndmcnt tiuch a convenlton proposed Davis. an unsuccessCul candidate. was fined -::;;::;;;:;:;:;;;;;:;::;;;;;;;;::::;:=;;;;;;;::;::~::;;::===;:;=::;­ $300 for not reporting three loans totaling $5,500, the commission said. He told the commission that lhe failure to report the loans was due to 8ADHAM POINTS OUT thitt there hasn't been a coru1lttut1ona l convention smce the firs t one at whic h the U S Coru1lJlut1on was written negligence. llt> also now& that, Lf Congress should get nervous h e .. feel enough pressure >. at could pass The 7lst Distnct takes in the Buena Park· Garden Grove.Westmins ter area . Save money while you shop Home Federal now has two 9~es conveniently located in H~tington Beach shopping centers. To serve you even better, our offices in the Seacliff Shopping Center and the Village Shopping Center are open on Saturdays! So, when you're out running errands or doing your shopping, we're in. Our specially trained staff will make sure you get fast , courteous service. Even during busy lunch hours, you won't have to wait in long lines. We have more time for you No matter how busy you are, you can conduct your financial transactions quickly and efficiently at Home Federal. 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' \ • : INSIDE: •Stocks •Comics s ts ~ ........ ·.M•o•v•ies .. ·•T•e•le•v~is•io•nlillll._ ................................................ ~~~ DAILY PILOT BJ 1 Press or No Factor ·For Bird t~m AP DU-pa&«' 8111 llodg Ju t dM n'l w•ot to KO to the NCAA b.sk~t~ll ' pla off htt wants to ao rant dn111 "We'd hit,• to ~an our t on tercn <'~ l ourn menl title bee au.~ or tht• byt' we would t•iuo m the hr t rvund," nolt the ceuch or the I ndianu State Sycamort' By wmn ng the regular se son champ1onsh1p of the Mu;~ourl Valley Conference, th e Sycamores have virtually as ured themselves or a bid to the prestigious post.season tourntiy ' THE NATI ON 'S -..e cond t 1 runked team wall tto Into the MVC playoffs ttus w~ck with a sparkling 26·0 record after put ting the flrushang touches on the regular season Sunday with a 109-84 beating of Wichita State .. We don't feel any pressure:· 1 said Hodges, alluding to his team ·s perfect record .. And therefore we don't need a loss to take any pressure orr us .. The Sycamores will ride into the MVC playoffs against West Texas State Tuesday night on the wings of Larry Bird's finest s coring perform a nce of his career lndiana State's fabulous forward registered 49 points and collectPd 19 rebounds "WE CAME OUT and played with so much emotion early that we played to a peak and after that. we hit a valley and decided to call a timeout," said Hodges. who watched his team build a big early lead, then lost most of it Hodges straightened out hill tea m's problem after a while. though. "I told our guys to get tough on defense, and from there on out 1t helped us on both ends." he said IT TOOK BIRD nearly seven minutes to score his first pomt. then he made up for lost lime. The Indiana Slate star scored 27 AP WI,.,._.. SLIPPING ONE BV Indiana's Len Elmore. (right> ge~s past Laker Dave Robisch <40 ) to score during Sundays NBA game. Kenny Carr 12) looks on. Lakers Romp Carr Puts LA Slow LA Golf PlayA Can't Slow · Lanny ~ 1 • • 1 By HOWARD L. HANDY ··Fuzzy is nice and cool and he's run to play with. At least he's that way outside. Maybe in· side he is eaten up. I would like to be like him ... ' seventh hole when his tee shot Ol ttoe o.11r ,., ... Sl•tt LOS ANGELES Lanny Wadkins will have his name etched alongside those of Ben Hogan . Lawson Little, Sam went out of-bounds. The two· stroke penalty is the margin he finished behind Wadkins, tied with Andy Bean for third place at 278. Hinkle was second at 277. Snead. Bvron Nelson. Lloyd ZOELLER, ONE OF .the more Mangrum and Arnold Palmer as refreshing young players on the WADKINS PICKED up S45.000 a winner o( the Los Angeles tour today, doesn't appear to for bis victory with Hinkle gel· Open golf tournament. hold anything inside of him. ting $27.000. Wadkins fired a ··Just winning here excites Asked about bis four putts on the final round 69 for a 276 which is me ... Wadkins said following his 17th hole the day before , he eight under par one-stroke victory over Lon said : Low round of the final day was Hinkle with a 10-foot par putt on ··1 forgot about it right after it a 66 by Japan's Masash i Ozaki the 18th hole al Riviera Country happened. I just mis-read the and Rod Curl. Grier Jones and Club Sunday before 26,700 sun· first two and the third one spun two Irvine Coast Country Club drenched fans and a nationwide out. Wildthings h-appenoutthere Hawaiian Open qualifiers. ' television audience. and 1 can't blame it on anything Frank Conner and Mark Lye, all "To sit in the locker room .and But it didn't affect me today and I had 68s on the final round. look at those names of previous can't use slow play by others or Wad.kins was so fast Sunday1 winners inclu~g Hoga.~. Snead • anything else as a crutch... he hit his second shot eight feel and Nelson, excites me. . Zarley. hoping to win this one rrom the pin on the. 12th bole · WADKINS, THE FIRST round leader who entered the final round tied with Hinkle and Kermit Zarley for the lead. hadn't woo a tournament since 1977. That year he captured the PGA champions hip and the World Series of Golf The LA Open is his sixth tour title since he turned pro in 1971 after win- ning the U.S. amateur crown in Portland in 1970 . Despite the handicap of slow play which he criticized. Wadkins battled Hinkle, Zarley and Andy Bean most of the day with the lead fluctuating among them throughout the round Wad.kins was never far off the pace but Zarley and Hinkle were in the top spot most of the time until the winner birdied the 17th with the aid of a driver off the rairway and a two-foot putt. HE HAD BOGEYED the 18th hole in each of his three previous rounds and It appeared be would do the same thing and force a playoff Sunday when his .second shot went into the rough on a side hill. But a chip shot rolled 10 feet past the cup and he sank the return for the victory. fo r a friend who died Thursday ... while the foursome rn front or night. saw his chances go on the See LANNY, Page 82 of his points in the second half as the Sycamores pulled away ... from a tenuous two-point lead to In First Gear now what the coach wants me to and that's helping me and the team." A fast player himself with one of the quickest backswings on the tour. Wadkins said: "Play has gotten atrociously s low and I don't know what the problem is . I'm a fast player and it was getting to me. When I stand around, I tend to lose my train of thought. I think the PGA ought i.o look into it and perhaps levy a few fines again. 30 deep into the game. Carl Nicks added 25 points for the winners "Rankings don't mean much to me. but they me~n a lot to the fans, .. said Hodges. who was disappointed when UCLA replaced the Sycamores as No. l last week. even though Indiana State held a considerable edge in firs t-place votes by s.ports writers and broadcasters an The Associated Press poll. "IT' HARD lO find a valid way to rate the teams. but the polls are good for the schools and fans involved ," s aid I lodges INGLEWOOD <AP > Kenny C arr believe s he's finally learned what it takes to play in the National Basketball Assn. His recent performances cer- tainly back up that feeling . Carr. a second-year performer who left North Carolina State prior to graduation to join the Lakers. scored 13 points and pulled down fpu.r rebounds in 21 minutes of action Sunday night. helping Los Angeles to a 118-108 victory over the Indiana Pacers. Nobody has ever doubted Carr's physical capabilities. but a tendency to play out of control and inconsistentcy have con· tributed to his sporadic playing time since he joined the Lakers. "Kenny Cart is playing much beUer for us:· said Los Angeles Coach Jerry West. "W ·need hi s size and rebollnding m there He's beginning to realize what it takes to play in this league." CARR, WHO MADE alJ SIX or KAREEM ABDUL-JABBAR his field goal attempts, has bad 23 points and 11 rebounds to earned increased playing time lead the Lakers. Adrian Dantley with performances like the one a lso scored 23 points: Lou Sunday night. Hudson added 18, Jamaal Wilkes "l'VE ALWAYS playe fast and I can think of a number of guys I wish would speed ut>. ..I didn't even look at the putt on the 18th hole until it was my turn. Everybody's makeup is different and I don't find fault with them as long as they are ready when it is their turn to hit the ball." APWlrellNlo UCLA's Bruins, who earned the top ranking with a victory over Notre Dame. lost on Thurs d:iy, g1vmg the Sycamores .a clear shot for the No. 1 spot m this week's poll -assuming they looked impressive in .sun day's nationally televised game. On Feb. 18, for example. he tallied 14 and Norm Nixon had s cored 17 points against the 11 points and 12 assists . Pacers .. Not long ~for~ that, he West wasn't altogether happ:, He praised Rod Funseth and Fuzzy Zoeller as two or the faster players on the tour and said LANNY WADKINS STROKES TOWARDS LA OPEN TITLE. One of the most impressed ob· servers was Wichita State Coach Gene Smithson. who said Bird "is outstanding He does so many things to hurt you. Besides a II the points . he had 19 re- bounds. and he passes the ball so well .. ~bs .seeing very h~tle if any ac· djspile the victory. lion mall but one-side~ games. ~ "We're scoring a lot of points "l gue~s my attitude }\as now, but I ~uess a coach in this changed in recent weeks and league is never happy " said that's helped me,". said Carr ... I . West. "We could have' had a thought I was going to be .the very big offensive night tonight next superstar when I came mto if we had been a little more pa- the. league two years ago. I was tienl. We sometim~s take 20-foot trying too hard. jumpers when we have three-on- Estancia, CdM Favored Both Sea Jliew Teams Travel Tuesday "l 'M R EADY NOW when 1 go into the game. r think I'm doing UCI to Meet Pacific UC lrvme meets the Universi· ty of Pacifi<' Thursday nighl al 9 o'clock at Anaheim Convention Center in the nightcap of a four· game first-round salv~ in the Pacific Coast Athletic Assn basketball tournament. Other first·round games Thursday, which continues Fri· day and Saturday in the elimina· uons for an NCAA playoff berth, include F"resno State and UC Santa Barbara at 3; Utah State and San Jose State at 5; and Cal State Fullerton and Long Beach State at 7 Pacific won the regular season PCAA title with an 11-3 record and is 15-11 overall Fullerton finished third during ' the re~ular season in 1978. won the post-season tournament and advanced to the finals r or the Western Regionals, upsetting New Mexico and San Francisco before falling to Arkansas. UC Irvine, which fini shed with a 3· 11 record and in the PCAA cellar. lost twice to Pacific dur· Ing the regular season, a 10· point decision at ~ome <64-~ l and a 2().point verdict at Pac1f1c 173-53). .. CAA STANDINGS FIMI Pnlll' Co11 .. r ... <• W L 11 J Ulall Stalt f res11<1 St•t~ Cal Stalt F'uller10l'I LCM\9 BH<ll State UC !>ant• a-r• 581'1 JOH Stalt UC lrvlrw S-IY'tk.,• Pac•llC ... !MlnJos• Sl•I• .. ' s • s 1 I ' 1 • • • 10 3 11 0 ..... 11 W L IS 11 17 • 15 11 " 10 u 11 ,, u 1 " I II one fast breaks. "1 TIUNK TIUS homestand will indicate whether or not we belong in first place." added West. "We must win e ver:, game on this homestand if we hope to finish first." The. Lakers are 2-1 with four ga m es r emaining on the homestand , which continues Tuesday night when they face Kansas City. Los Angeles moved into first place in the Pacific Division with the victory. 1114111eN (IOI) Lo A1199 .. s 11111 Bantom l!'nQtl lll Edwards J Davia Sot.. rs 1(1119111 Call\Oul'I Ctmort 8 . Oavl1 Radford Grffl'I Totals 19 ft ., U 1-<1 U . ,,, ,. • 1·2 u • ,_, 10 s ,., ,, • 0-0 8 l 1-2 1 ' 1-2 s I 1·2 • 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0 O•nU~y WllkH ADOUI· Jat>~r Hud\on N r•on AobiK ll BOOM Ford C•rr Prlc~ Carter ·~ , .. ,, 108 Tot.als k-Dy 0....rt•n f9 II lP S U·IS U 1 CMI 1' 11 I 1 U • ,., 18 S I.) II 1 00 • I 0 0 t 0 00 0 • ,., ll , o"° • I .... .. 2'·21 111 lndral'la 1' U JI 2S IOI Los A119411n 31 H '1 ,. 111 fot•I fouls tl'ldl•n• 12, Los An11•les 1• Foultll Olll' Mo<l\01'1 Clos An11e1esl, All•l'l<I· an<e 10,JOI. Sea View League powers E stancia and Corona del Mar are on the road Tuesday in the second round of the CJ F 3-A basketball playoffs. but each looms as a favorite to advance to the quarterfinals of the 32- team eliminations. Coach Larry Sunderman's Est a ncia Eagles (20·5 l. Sea View League kingpins. tangle with Freeway League representative Sunny Hills at a s ite to be determined. And the Sea Kings of Cd'M Coach Jack Errion, 20-3 for the year, battle Orange League representative El Dorado 05.Sl at Cal Stale Fullerton. A Sunny Hills High official said late this morning they were working on the possibility of a double-header at Cal State Fullerton. SUNNY IDLl..S is 16-7 overall and boasts 6-2~ Rich Cottrell , 6-3'h Glenn Burman and 6·1 Eltltl()N SUNOEllMAN Raul SuJle in a scra mbling at- tack. Cottrell is a first team all- league selection and Burman was a second team choice. "We have to shut off Cottrell and Burman,'' says Sunderman . The Eagles counter the Sunny Hills attack with 6-4 junior Steve Van Hom and 6·1 Dan Maddock. the latter coming off a spec· tacular effort. Friday. Also. Tony Camp will be back in uniform after missi ng the last four games with an ankle injury. Sunny Hills will try to slow the Tall, Talented Verbu1n Del Next for OV played about half the game Cor the last few week$." says Hawthorne. By ROGER CARLSON Of tM Dall' I'll .. SU.ft Verbum Del HJgh's Eagles, a Los Angeles-based Parochial school with a national reputation for' basketball ex- pertise despite the lack of a CJF cbam- plonshlp the past four years, invades tbe Orange Coast area Tuesday night to battle seniorless Ocean View in the second round or the CIF 4-A playoffs. THE O'MJ: WILL BE at Fountain Valley High •t 1:30 and the Eaglee of Coach Eli Hawthorn~ bring wttb them a starting lineup consisting of players 6-8, • l 6-8, 6·5, 6·S and 6·0 quarterback Carmel Stevens, in addition to 6-8 I<enny Austin off the bench. Those fi1ure1 have propelled the Eagles to a 24·1 overall record and the No. 1 seed In the playoffs with 6-8.Cllff Pruitt the leading scorer with a 19.0 average. E DDIE GORDON <•-•>and 6.S Kenny Fields average 14.0 a nd 12.0, wblle Carmel avera1et 10 aulata and five steals a 1ame .• ~ "I would pul this team amona the top I ' three to ever compete at Verbum Del." says Hawthorne. "But we are not taking anything ror granted a1ainst Ocean View. "Any team that beats Compton High, you bave to give a team like that a lot or reapect." HAMllOBNE ADMITS his team has at times fell the pre•sure that accom· (>Boies a tradition such as Verbum Del's. "Our lea1ue ia not as stron1 as we'd llke and moet of our 1tarten have only I ' l ·'The pressure Is on us because Ocean View has nothing to lose in losing to Verbum Del and everything to gain. They can be more relaxed." Tile Eagles, who draw their talent rrom a school enrollment or 300 boys. have scored over 100 points slx times this season, capped by a 120-67 rout or West Covina. Against Salesian, a 117· point burst represented a 79.polnt spread over the vanquished. Verbum Dei's only loss was to Morn· lncaide, 75-72. , Estancia Express with a trap and half court press IT FIGUR ES to b e Sunny• Hills' only effective weapon to stop the inside game of Van Horn-because if the Eagles break the press. Van Horn ap· pear s to have a bi~ advantage inside. Corona del Mar will be going with 6·5 Shawn Ahearn and All· CIF Dave Koehler in the backcourt again. allowing the in· sertion of 6·5 sophomore Mark Spinn in the front line to go with 6·4 Rich Kindorr and 6-3 t hns J ohnston. The CdM-El Dorado game is a rematch of a tournament game in December. which was taken by the Sea Kings, thanks to an · 18·7 spurt in the last 5:56 .to • break open what had been a rup- PY 45-41 affair. 'WE WON," s ays Errion, 'but it was very early in the year and I notice El Dorado has \ made a couple of changes. • "Stlll. it has lo be on our mind 1 that we've already beaten them l and that could be to El Dorado's l advantage." , Errion has not forgotten a 46-45 defeat at Costa Mesa which denied his team a share of the · Sea View League championship with Estancia. Earlier the Sea · Kings bad ripped Costa Mesa by 35 points. 1 El Dorado's guns Include all· ltague aces Randy Wulff (6-4) and Ron Tagney <S-11 >. along with 6-5 Chris Dressel. 6·7 Dave Stipe and 5-10 Randy Frami, * * * ~-c.• ..... '""'"'"' Norlll °" Sflllt• Ana ''""".. UI to 0r"'91 ''"""t°t lJll, '""" Oii S7, to Nvl'<IOMd A,,. tvrMlt fur" i.t1 '" Nutweoo, '""" -. sui. Cotl9"81¥d I. I :1. . ... I ~ 14 •• hi. 1lr 1 l'O ti{ no 112 DAIL V PILOl Monday. February 26 1979 A C oaule Report From the World of Spo'1• Bill Martin' Futur #p ~•td on lnno From P Dbp•Lcliltt f'ORT l l OF.RO f,f., f1• UUJy Mart.tn m will u•turo as man ger of th• Nt~· York \ an~_.,., m I onh tf ht• •• found 1nnoc-Utt or t'hl q(t. Uuat h punch~ 11 t\ no 1port.t wriler and la on hi ~ I bt>hav10r tn tho ruh1~. arcordln1 In owner Crorjlt' Slt'anbrenner '"tr" ~ut uncl t1r1t~." ·1einbrenntr uid Sunday 11t lht> ~orld c:hompMn • prln1 tnomn" <amp ht•rt• • If he 'a 1nno 1·.-rll h•• II b4' b.u-k IC hl• m111k~ M -.t-lllt- mt•nt lhat " no tiood Jr ht 'lt•ttlc-ll out llf C'ourl that'\ the !l.ame <is be 1na t:Ullt · ' Stt-inbrt'nner !\howtid up fill tht: 'I tlnkN.'i> camp for the hrst time three do)'t aftt'I Murtln '-i 11 urprl6t' up p('Bt•nt't' 1n whu·h Lht> fornwr manager s Id ht> ~ antNl to tron out details of htll \'hl!duled return for the 19KO Hl t'ct OR.'I Martin haio. no1 signed i1 rormid con MAim" l r a c t • a I t h o u g h S t e t n b r e n n e r dramulJcwly announced his return last July 30, five days aflf'r ht tearful reslgna llon m a Kansas City hotel. tembrenn~r has 1m1,1hed !>everal times that Martin's future behavior will play ,. large part in whether he comes back However. Martin has been accused of punching s ports writer Ray Hager dunng an interview last No· vembt'r According to Steinbrenner , there 1s a "very strict clause" in Martin's c urrent contract with the Yankees, which expires at the end of the 1979 season, regarding his conduct. -----Quo•~ of llw DoPI----.... Missouri University basketball coach Norm Stewart on sta r Curtis Berry's injured ankle: H's like playing marbles with a hangnail." Bobby Bone& to Pla11 O•t Option Cl~eland Indians President Ga~ Paul • said Sunday it appears that Bobby Bonda will play out his option this season under terms of his 1978 contracl ... Veteran righl·hander Al Fl&zmorrts, a 16-game winner with the Kansas City Royals in 1975, has been signed by the San Diego Padres to a minor league contract. Fitzmorris was used sparingly by the Angels last year before being released ... Wayne Twitchell, a pitcher recently released by the Montreal Ex· pos. was invited to the New York Mets' camp Sunday ... Ne w York Mets Manager Joe Torre'• home was burglarized over the weekend. The intruder reportedly stole a color TV and stereo equipment. llfn&ong ~ead• KC Past Sonles Otis Blrdson,; scored_ 34 points as the m Kansas City Kings jumped to an early lead and coasted to a 114-106 National Basketball Assn. victory. lheir 15th straight at home, over the Seattle Supersonics Sunday ... Lionel HelHna scored six of his 29 points in overtime as Portland took a 126-119 victory over Detroit . . . Jllllas Erving and Daft'JI Dawklu keyed a I ' - :;;.a. ... :. ~ . ·~ ~ fourth period r ally as the Philadelphia 76ers stormed from IS points behind wi th 10 minutes to play to shock Denver, 119-111 ... Guards Uoyd Frtt a nd Randy Smith combined for 70 points as the San Diego Clippers scored their fifth straight win. a 131-116 victory over Boston ... George Gervin hit 32 points and Billy PaaJtz added 24 as San Antonio routed Houston, 127-107. to pad their lead to three games over the Rockets in the NBA Central Division uv,,..o . . . Mike MJtcltell scored 24 points and Bingo Smith con .-ibuted 22 lo lead Cleveland lo a 117·108 victory over Chicago ... Elvin Hayes poured in 31 points as Washington beat a n injury·riddled Golden State team. 99·89 ... New J e rsey's backcourt combination of John Wiiiiamson and Eddie Jordan combined for 58 points to push the Nets to a 116·102 win over the New York Knicks. Bo••fl'• S~orlng Streak Sftapped The New York Ranger s snapped Mike &ii.11 Bossy's record-tying 10.game goal scoring , streak. held the New York Islanders without a shot an the second period, and got a tie·breaklng goal from Dean Talafoas early in the middle stanza for a 3·2 National Hoc key League victory Sunday ... Vaclav Nedomaosky and Andre S&. Laurent scored three goals each to lead Detroit to an 8· 1 win over Colorado ... Third· period goals by veteran Pete Mabovllcb and 22·year-old Dancy Carlyle lifted Pittsburgh to a 2·2 deadlock with the Chicago alack Hawks. giving the Penguins sole possession of second place in the NHL Norris Division . . . Brian Engblom, Bob Gainey and Larry Roblnsoe scored goals for Montreal during a 3 ~·minute span early in the thlrd period. leading the Canadiens to an 8-5 victory over Washington . . Ulf Nilsson, the New York Rangers' lead- ing scorer. suffered a fractured right ankle and probably will be lost for the remainder of the regular season ... Washington called up 6-4 left wing Paul Mulvey from their Hershey farm club. l.otu·.,Hfe No Matrh tor R1Uda•• Ana&oU Mishkin scored 18 points to lead a m b~l ~~ced . Russian national team to a 91·76 ex-, h1b1t1on victory over 13th ranked Louis ville Sun· day in a naltonally·televised basketball same .. '. Vlaltlng Pacific canned 42 of Sl free throws, including 13 of 18 by Biily Bryant, as the Tigers finished their championship sea son In the Pacific Cdasl Athletic Assn. by beating Son Jose State. 96·84 .. J acksonville earned an NCAA berth by winning the Sun Belt Conference with a 68-54 victory over Soulh Carolina . . . Cal Stale Northridae was picked to m eet host Puget Sound in the West Regional NCAA Divls~on ti tournament to be held Saturday and Sunday. UC R1 vers1de and UC San Diego were also selected for the tournament at Puget Sound ... In lht Dlvl1lon 111 playoffs. Whittier College will host the Wett Realon1l1 thls w.eek.end. meeting Humboldt Friday. Chamlnadc <Hawaii) will confront William Penn <Oskaloosa Iowa) In the other West Regional game. The winners play Satur· 'day. ~·-•o . Followlng are the maJor sports eventci on ttlevltlon tonight. Ratings are: .t ' ' 'excellent· {'''worth watchlno · ./ ./ fair ; " forget It. ' • I p.m., Ch•nnet 5 { COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Oregon State at Sttnforct. Announcers: M ike Walden and Pete Newell. Oreoon State's Beavers and the Stanford c1rdlna11 wlll close out tM season In this televised game txJt neither tHm 11 In contention for a PIOVoff berth. Oregon State Is paced by Ste1r• JOhnson whO rs 1vtr11lng 18 3 points a ottme. Stenford's leader Is Wolfe Perry 1t 17 .• Hoctcev (1110). I RADIO Vancouver 11t the Kings, 7:50 p.m., kAl.A ...... _ LANNY ... him wu'l s till there I thnuathl lht y wert' throuJ.:h," h t:xplalned. "I saw them put the nag back In the cup and "'alk off the 1rct'n so I nr~ llt'•n bud putlt'd out but Ed Sncatd had u chip shot and I dtdn 't know it " ~ITll THE \'lCTOllV. W"dkiDI btu; now won $61,677 th1" )'1..1ur and moved loto third placl' on the mone)' list behind lllnkh• 1tnd Zoell~r ··u ""'•n:s u lot to ml' to win here and this l.s the best start I 'vc ever had on the Wes t {'oa t." Wudkins said "I just love NMt-ra and r wish I could pl.ty t'very tournament here "l don't think I would feel any better wmnlng a major than I do "'mntnl( thtt Loi; Angeles Open " "'' :si:ud he ma~ a slight <'h ang\' an hus ·etup al the end of tut a.ua.-.on , won the Canadian PGA und another tournament in Au. traha It has also helped Mm lo a fast start this season. "I ~quared m y shoulders ' and changed m y g r ip and setup slightly." he said His track record in the LA Open has been good. He finished second in 1977. tied ror fourth in 1976 and tied for eighth lasl year. LUOlnQ \CO•~•""" 'l"n<t•y's llMI round ol tr .. lo\ An~ .. < Ol>l>n (;<)11 1ourn•m•1>t pleye<I O" th,o 1,0tt yard, pa. 11 Rl•l~r• rovntry (IUl><ourw LAMy W,Hllltni, "°S,000 66·11·•• 69 116 lon Hink le, S11,000 61 .. 'l-11-10 111 And• Been, 11000 11·6,....10-771 Kermit l•rtey, 114,!JOO &&·ll-6f.11 711 Ed SnHCI n !JOO /t. ,,..._.,. -77' Funy lo.ti.,-, s•. soo 10-61 n .10 -719 Tommy Aaron Sl.191 13 1~-790 Jim Co111en , v.rn 11 61-11 .. 9 ?80 Rod Curt, l1.1t7 IJ.1)....,._ ?80 Arll• M<NIOte," IV) 11 .... n... 281 H&I• Irwin SS,)00 61-1).10 7t 717 c;.,, McCord, SS.500 ,. 11~•-m Tom Purtt•r U.!JOO IU'-1°'10-1'1 Ml•e Reid. U .500 6"-17·17_.t 711 M<l\<\\ni 0Hk•. "°·SOO 1...e-1~ ?8J NIArk Ly•. SA 17S lt.1).11~ 780 Ml•• McCuHouo11."' 17\ nn 6'J.11 ,.. Fr en• Con-.r » 760" 1 .. 10-11..a-m CllerlH C~. ll,7!>0 6'-11-73-?tS 0•1• Oo\IQIUl.. ll.liO n-n 69-17-79S c; ... , -· » 7.0 11·11-11-61-n.s Rik MH-le, ll,160 1•·12·64-70-m BlllCtllM' U ,JOO 17-1~10 n. Antonio Cercs.t, U JOO U-12*71-186 O•ve £1<~l~~r U.JOO 71-1316-7• 186 Allen Mlt~r. U JOO 7°'1S-1°'11 186 R .. Cel-11 SUOO 6t-7).1Ml-797 B•n Cr•n\Mw, 11,100 13 71.71.11 7'1 Jay Ha•u. \1,100 1'·12·11·10 181 J eO R•nMr, St,100 1S-7"7HO 787 Cr••o St«llH, Sl,100 ••• ,..,~. 797 Tom WalSOll, \1,700 ,._6'J.IJ·11 797 J C Sn•ed. '1.100 17·69·1•·17 787 Keith Ferqu•, Sl,J19 11·6'1-l°'ll 281 Pllll H•ncoo, lt,319 11).IHJ.I• 788 Pel Mf<iow&n, l l,319 11·11>-11·10 ?88 Greo P~n. '1,319 73.n.17-71-71111 Bob C'illd•r, Sl,OSO IO·IS-M·IS 78'1 oan H•ll~. si,oso 1s.11-11.n m J~ Inman, s1,oso 11·1'-14-10-28'1 Don Jenuary, \1,050 1•·13-.,.13 m C••ar Sanudo, Sl,OSO IJ.17 11-73-299 Tom W•l!oloOPf. ll.050 7'-11-77-13 -18'1 :Monarchs To Invade Compton COMPTON-Mater Dei High's Monarchs. Angelus League champions. invade Compton College Tuesday night for a second-round CIF 4·A basketball playoff game with Moo r e League representative Compton with tipoff set for 7: 30. Coach Jerry T a rdi e 's Monarchs, 19-4 on the year. are led by guard Sal Gaytan and 6-3 J ohn Saunde rs, a pair who average in the 19s scoring. Gaytan scored 23 a nd Saunders 20 in Mater Dei 's 79·67 victory over Murphy Hig h in the first round. Compton banks on the play of All·CIF guard Melvin Herndon and 6·4 Ter ry J ones. The Tarbabes, who are coached by Eddie Thomas (bis eighth season), m et Mater Dei in the first round of the playoffs in 1976 and dropped a 50·46 decision. Compton advanced to the second round with a 66·65 vie· tory over Huntington Beach Fri- day. Others ln the Compton attack inc lude 6-3 Tim Watson, 6-3 Gary Davis and 6·0 guard Ron· nie Calhoun. Most notable in Compton's season Is a split with Long Bench Poly in leaf(ue play on the positive side, while Ocean View a nd Villa Park handled the 1'arbnbes in tournament play. Tho Monarchs have won 11 of their last 12 outings . Herndon i s a SS percent 11hootcr from the Cield and holds un 18.7 scorlna average going in- to the playoff11. The Monarchs r ely on a running offense, quurtcrbacked by Gaytan and fhrurc to battle Compton on its trrms with a pre2's and run· nlng 11tyle. Gymnastics WOMllf o ...... -... nu.,&.•"•'"' .a.u ,,_ ~' COi I•: Vaull -T'"°"""' IOI • u . n .. m "••d••IChOrl COi 1 •• llart-fllOm•• COI U.t, All·fOUllO ThOMe• IC'il lJ JO TRACK /BASKETBALL /BASEBALL .... ir..M .. RITE OF SPRING Los Angeles Dodger pitcher Bob We lc h limbers up with Manager Tom Lasorda using a new ex· ercise tool at the club's Vero Beach spring training camp. The arm strengthener con- sists of a buoy sus pended on two ropes. The buoy is forced back and forth between the participants Sea View League Tr ack Outlook: An Open Race By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Of Ille D•llY "llc1 Slaff There are no powerhouses to blast everybody else out of the league. so it appears the Sea Vi ew track and fi eld race will be wide open this season. El Toro comes into the first- year circuit with a South Coast League crown on its head, but wheth er the Char gers can duplicate that feat in the Sea View League is a different ques- tion. J oining the loop is Estancia, an unknown to the former South Coast League schools a nd always a strong competitor in track. Corona del Mar is singled out by most coaches as a strong coo- t e nder, with El Toro a nd University. grouped in the same category. Irvine High is a ne wcomer which could catch so me o f the o lder. more established programs napping. Following is a brief rundown on the Orange Coast area entries in the Sea View League race C'orona def Mar Doehring in the shot put <Sl·ll 1 and Todd Kausen in lhe discus tl68·111. Cost a Mesa Coach J oe Fisher reports he has a few good individuals. but the team is young and inex- perienced. That's the same song he sang during cross country. and he turned that young, inex· perienced crew into a CIF con- tender . ·Senior Mike Moiso figures to b e one of the Mus tangs· top performers. with top marks of 15.7 in the 120 hurdles and 41.J in the 330 low hurdles Fisher will also be relying on a crop of juniors led by Chris Ches ney <sprints. hurdles and jumps) and Mark Mathieson <s hot put>. From the sophomore level Costa Mesa boasts a pair of top distance runne r s -Scott Lacrosse and Victor Herrera. Lacrosse is a potential sub-10 00 man in the two-mile and Her· rera has clocked 2:02.0 in the 880 and 4:34 for the mile. Jon Crackel is another distance run-" We have no s printers to ner with potential. spea k of, but we're pretty soUd Senior Mike Scarlett wiU han- everywhere else," s ays coach die the weight events, owning Jim Tomlin. "We don't have a marks of 140-0 in the discus a nd lot of d e pth in some area s 46·7 in the shot put. because injuries have hurt us." ··w e lack numbers a nd speed Specifically. Tomlin is s peak· • in the sprints ." says Fisher in g of dist a nce s tar. Andy "And. of course. we're young Gerken and hurdJer-long Jumper But we've got some quality in- Chris Santas, last year's co-dividuals. captains. Neither Is expected lo compete in 1979. Ge rken has knee and back problems while Sanlas had knee cartilage removed and is still re· cuperating. That puts a larger burden on Jack Fabregas. the other return- ing tri-captain, who runs the 100, 220 and competes in the long jump. The Sea Kings could get help from Dana Hills High transfer Mike Bruggeman, a 4:23.0 miler and a capable 880 man (1 :59.4 ). Dave Dunier will run the mid- dle distances and Dao Smith Is penciled In for the hurdles. Tom Willig will run the low hurdles (40.7 ) and 100 00.6>. Corona del Mar has two re- turning league champs Jim Earthquakes Erupt To Bury Surf, 2-0 S AN J OSE Using mos tly younger players. Coach John Sewell watched his California Surf drop a 2-0 game to the host San Jose Earthquakes in a North American Soccer League exhibition Sunday. Sam Bick scor ed on a header In the first hair, and Paul Childs iced it with a goal ln the closing minutes ol the game. The ~urf outshot San Jose. 16·9, but the Anaheim-based team saw its .ex· hlbilion record drop to O·M . lrefn~ "It's going to be rough on us." admits Irvine Coach Jeff Swigart. "We'll be s trong in the s prints and distlnces and we have a scattering of good in- dividuals in the field events. but our capability is probably only second place, and that's if ev· erytbing goes right " Swigart figures that Universi· ty High has the inside lane for the league crown, while Corona del Mar and El Toro wilJ be challenging. Re turning letterm an J im Rudy anchors the team. having experience in the 100, 220, 440. relay and tong jump. He's a 10.3 sprinter and clears 20 feet in the long jump. Andre Robinson is anothe r sprinter. having run 23.0 in the 220, and he will also compete in the 440 and relay. Mark Sward adds depth in the s prints. Chris Ingram is a returning letterman in the middle dis· lances. He's a 2:00 half·mHer. Brad Guiso is picked by Swigart as a potential 9:30 two-miler. Irvine also bas a potential blue-chip pole vaulter in Dennis Shannon. who has cleared 13·6. (J1d.,erdt9 ··our main problem each meet will be lo decide whjcb events Harry BUlups will run," says University H igh Coach Don See SEA VIEW, Page 83 Forster Says He'll Be Ready VERO BEACH. Fla. <APl - Reliever Terry Forster. wbo UO· derwent surgery on his pitching elbow last November, says he 'll be ready for the Los Angeles Dodgers· baseball season.opener on April S. Forster. the National Leagut: cha mpions· top reliever las t season with 22 saves. is current- ly throwing at only about 50 per· cent efficiency. "I 'll be 100 percent by the start of the season." said the 27 -ycar-old left.ha nde r afte r Su nda y 's rain·s horte n ed workout at the Dodgers' spring training camp. "When I had the operation I did it with the idea that I'd be ready by the time the season started. I still feel that way. · · P.ight now r 'm throwing about 15 minutes every day against a wall," added Forster. · • 1 · m not going to cut loose for a while. The adhes ions are still tight m my arm. Once I break those I'll be fine ." Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda has indicated that he 'll open the season with a nine-man pitching staff and a five-man starting rotation. He also sairl there remains' a chance of the club making another trade. but until a decision is made on Forster any dea ls must wait. "We don't know how far along Forster is now," said Lasorda. ··All he's done so far is lob the ball . lie certainly made a big difference on our club last year and we don't want him to rush himself.·· Derrel Thomas. who missed the flight from Los An geles on Friday, arrived in camp Sunday and took part in the abbreviated workout. Steve Garvey. who had permission to check in late, checked in Sunday night. Incke, 61, Convicted J OHANNESB URG. South Africa <AP> -Bobby Locke. one of South Africa's greatest golfers, has been convicted of shooting a black laborer in the back. He faces a $140 fine or 60 days In jail. The 6l·year-old golfer. who pleaded innocent to the charge. was found guHty Friday and sen· lenced In the Johannesburg t'e· gional court. Ac cording to court testimony. Locke got into a heated argu. ment with the labot'er, who had done work on ao apartment complex the golfer owns. In the course of the dispute. Locke f l red a s hot and s lightly wounded the laborer in the back. Locke won the British Open in 1949. 1950, 1952 and 1957. He also won the South African open nine limes. Dolphins Duel Mystery Cowboys Can)'OO HJ1h of Saugus basketball Coach Tom Akehurtl lJ reluctant to reveal much About hla tum as ll prepares for Tuesday nlaht'1 CIF 2·A encounter with Dana H.llls ut Ran Clemente Hl•h. but It ap]>eart evl· dcmt how lha Cowboys have made It to the lfltOnd round Of lbe 32-team eliminations. With • tall front "Hne (6·6, ~-6, 6-4 ' 1uard1 who are 111llt-oriented, six aenlon 1mon1 the top aeven playen and four av raatna tn double ll1ure1 scorin1. Can· ynn la • aolld ouUlt. The Cowbo711lart t-4 Jeff IUdctnou.r, t..e Ter7 KaJdhutdaJ and M Frid Cornwell ; up front, and each averages in double figures. / And the guards are Butch Stevenson (5-10) and Bob Lyon Cl-0), but Akehunl aa.yt Golden Leacue rulea prohibit revela· lion of all-league players. And he says his team'• defense ls a secret, too ... We don't want to let the cat out o( the bq," says the flrst-yur coach. Kaldbuaal and Cornwell are started as Juniors, accordln1 to thelr coach, who says hia team'• olfenae ls predicated on moUon. Coach Art Jenkins' Daoa Hllll Dolphins. meanwbile, wbo shot the ltlhts out at • .. Charter Oak Friday. counter with All· South Coast League stars Mlke Samuels (6-4 ), Doug Andrews t6·6> and guard Ian O'Donnell. Additional rebounding strenath ls pro. vlded by 6-5 Chris Mathieu. In droppiDJt the No. 1 seed Friday, Can· yon got a big_ boost bY. the rebounding of Cornwt'.ll, who Ht a school record with 19 rebounds lllJlln t RJghetU. Al for uslsts, Lyon wu credlted with nlne in a 1ame •1aln1l Ant.elos>e Valley and tevemon bad elthl lwite durin1 the aeaaon. '· I .2 2 •• l4 •• hi. lie . I'd )l(.' no I BASKETBALL I TENNIS Marina Gears Forv· Inn t(•lltW ~ htl·h n1•tt'hl·~ aa pa1r UC b I u l' 3 n d ll o hi· t' I ad \ 1 li.anss. Mann IU.ih \lueh. St H\'rourd Tu\'.,dJ)' rllalhl an Ui econcl round ur the ('t Y • A bD kt>t bull pl ) uff: S1h' or th .. • 11.imr I ~•ntM MonH'IA l'ol1'.•t:•· '4 llh tipoff at 7 30, and 11lthou~h the n.1m~ und l'Olo~ .Arl' tht• .intt• lhir 11-.tures of lhl' ll"am~ d(Hl·r~ drast1l'ully T. H ·a ARO lhmt!.. .. ~hind the tndt\ ldUlll play or Loy ol111 Olr«t-1• Miii• -lu Cet ... NOtth C""' \lllf\ t'~ ,.,.,,...., ,_,, to !\,fftl• Mon•«• .-, .. ,. •• to """~'""' 111 to IOI• \l•f14't •utftOft """turn 4rft 10 'Ot'99f to •tW •t :0.f "'°' Pi(O HOvl•v•tO II 1 g b t r a n ( e r I. a n 1· l' Washington. d r. 3 senior guard with oulStundmg hooting ab11t ty, whether outsufe or on a drive 1s consistently in the 20s 10 scoring Also. M1cha('I Gerren. a &-4 JU~ior. 1s tough on the boards and a threat to score up to 18 feet Marina. meanwhile. relies on the balance that produced a Sunset League champ1onsh1p and four playe rs on the alt league selections. "WE HAVE a m atchup prob· le.m with Washington ... says • War M ar1no C'..o 1•b Sl1 vc Vo110v1ch ••\\ c ma)' Lan I\~ v1n oi .. oo on h i m a nd ar ho~ we d o W ahington '" v ry quick, 1.1 ~ o o d Jump e r n n 1l 11 JI rt• at shootN • SI Oe rn"'rd may t1) to 11rnl•t*" thetr <1u1r kness. give ~ u h1ngton hu1 11hots tu1cJ i;cnd t'\('r)<>oe el ~to tbr boardi " St fkrnard n)adc al to the ~t·cond round with o doublt• uvtir ttfr\t victory ttt Kutella. ~n uc t'Om pll. hment thut llurprised \.'t'rbu m l>t•I Coac h Eli llawthomt llAwrtlO&Nl': 'AV on addl ttonal surprise to him would be another St Bernard victory. although Notre Dame High C:ooach Greg Nixon disagrees .. The k ey ror us." s ays Popovich. "is to get the early lead like we did with Notre Dame St Bernard plays a lot of four corners offense. but it is bard to do if you're behind." Others in the St. Bernard lmeup, which has produced a 20·5 record, are 6·4 sophomore Billy Kn ox. 6·3 junior Butch Hayes and 5·11 guard Vernet Dieudonne. Marina counters with Truiet:t Hatton and Keith Dawson at guards. Olson and Dave Tiezzi at forward and 6-7 Rand y Heidenreich at center F ro• Page 82 SEA VIEW TRACK. • • Christensen. "And that's a mce problem lo have." Billups is a one-man show. with the ability to win in the 100, 220. 440. long jump, triple jump and relays. He was a state finalist in the 100 last season in Virginia. and arrived with 9 5 credentiaJs. although that time was clocked on an artificial track. Billups recently s uffered a l'Ulled muscle, howe ver In the distances University has another potential star in Sam Walling. the ei~hth-place finisher Uus season 1n the Cl F 4·A cross C'Ountry finals The Trojans are also boos ted by a transfe r from Thacher High. Ken MHls. who has put the shot over 50 feel Luis Beckford. a JUntor from the cross country team, will fill the gaps in the middle distances and Suki Thomas will compete 1n the high jump and long jump miler) and Kevin Hagan <the school's best -ever low hurdler). Taking up the slack will be d i s ta n c e r u n n.e r K e v i n McCanhy, a senior with bests of 4:44 in the mile and 9:45 in the two mile. Coach Don Burns says McCarthy is a vastly improved runner. Greg Pearce. coming off knee surgery, is a 13-fool·plus pole vaulter who could make some noise in the league, while George Pinckney is a rapidly- im proving 12-6 pole vaulter who also runs the high hurdles and competes in the high jump. Alan Osborn has a best of 23.2 in the 220 and will also run the 100 and relay if be can recover sufficiently from a knee injury hampering hi s workouts presently. -. Fibak Tames Amaya From P Dlspatebu DENV .. ~H Sixth·sceded WoJ Ht k !''lbak . solving Victor Anaya'a blb1kring serve, rolled to an cosy 6 4. 6 l victory Sun· day 1n the singles final of a mt>n 's tenm!f tournament here. Fibak, 26, utlUzed a solid re· I urn or service game and pan poiot passing s hots to claim the $25,000 hnt-place prize. The un• ~eeded Amaya collected $12,500 The towering Amaya. who stands 6•7, had knocked ocr third-seeded Arthur As he in the emlfinals with 17 aces But he managed only five aces against Fibak all in the first set. Both players held service until the 10th game or the first set when Fibak, casrung in on key passing shots. broke Amaya's serve to 'win the set Three more well-placed pass· ang shots gave Fibak another break f>arly in the second set. and the Polish player then broke again to go ahead 5-1 in the set. Fibak then held serve in the next game to close out the match. C...nors Rolb DORADO. Puerto Rico -Top- seeded Jimmy Connors beat Vitas Gerulaitis 6-5. 6-0. 6-4 in the finals of a week-long World Championship Tennis Tourna· ment Sunday. Connors, who was defeated in the round robin tourney. won $100.000. Gerulaitis earned S40.000. The first set was exciting with Connors winning the tiebreaker 1 ·6 when Gerulaitis hit a return into the net. TurttfluH Win• DETROIT Wendy Turnbull survived 12 double faults lo cap- ture her first top prize this year on the women's professional circuit Sunday, defeating Virginia Ruzici, 7-5. 1·6, 7-6. in the singles final of a Detroit tournament. The title was worth $30,000. After splitting sets. a 6·6 dead· lock in the third set was set· tied by a 12-poiot tie-breaker which Turnbull won 7-4. The 26-year -old Australian, seeded No. 5, reached the final with an upset Saturday night over top .seeded Marti na Navratilova. It was the first tournament this year in which Navratilova did not reach the singles final. "It Wlll take us some time lo j'ell, ·· says Christensen. "I'm looking for us to hit our peak In May Last year it was the other way around.'' Vanguards to Play Biola Estancia Three athletes who set school records in the ir individual t•vents last season have gradual· ed. so Estancia could be charac· terized as in the midst or re- building. LOS ANGELES -Southern California College's Vanguards open up play in the first round of the NAJA Distr ict 3 Southern and Northern Division basket- ball playoffs Thursday eve- ning with a game against Biota 16: 30) at Occidental College. Gone are Mike Camp (who set marks in the shot put and discus •hrow1. Mike McCaa la 4:208 An 8 :30 matc h i nvolves Re dlands and Cal State Do· minguez Hills with the winners Santa Anita Results F<K S..n<lay 10111 OI 1-y T~9110rtd MHI· '""' F.,~, '•< .. Ledy J tc.t fM ,.nat 7• 70 10 00 b 00 Villa V ITorol S 80, • 00. II' Olly """ COllvMr \ 11 00 St'"cond rttcf' 8 M,Ch> fMcCarron\ '70 • 70 l 70 Fon<I Aff.rl •on JHAw tttyt l •0 1 •O l\ht 0•"" ,,,.~,.,. l 70 u OA•IV oouO•• ",, PdtO '176 70 Th•rct r'K-f l<htllmnrt IMcCnrrOf"• lb 40 8 00 S 80 l •"utPnanl\ tm"<l" IHawt~• I • 10 • .O ICl'v Account Cautn~nl t ..0 F 01.Hlf\ '-'Cf' Grt1tnd'il~nd Wtn 1(,.ul01·nl 78 ?0. 1110 I 40, Wll~ E 1~9.-ncr IP•nColV l 1.•0 s 10 Mttolc"t Nol•v• <Coro~rol 10 00 F•tt" r.te.,. Lono h \tW tOl•v•rt \ l 1 80 IJ 10, I 80 Mtlli\~ ~ Pet ~H•#''"•• .t 70 l 60 Frencn Mount I Pirre• I I 20. $5 ... u ,. f4·S I pa10 U rt 00 S••lh racf' ~'''"9 Proftl\ IHbwl~•I 10 .0 • bO • 00 Iron Min •Cb\la~111 • 10. J •O Em•n•lor IS!><'ncN ' 10 llO ( - S• """"' ••et Ste111 • Marc 11 ISnoemaker I I~ 80, 1 to. ~ 00 AO· <I•'<>" •C..•l•M<l•I SI>() l 80, fleet Rul•• IMo<MOI • 80 u exact• 11·11 Od•O U,. SO Elo111r. ••<• S~n•<l tk l fC,ttoiomaker) 6 .0 S 70 S •O Surer• ICot•ne<!.'11 •100 14 00. t<I• Oeh• ICautr.•nl S llO Ntntn rau Shackle\ tPinc11v> 10 00. S 20 3 40 .-nceho;or !Mc C.r ran I • 00, 1 60 Drop •nd W19ol• "'O"'M<l t l Ml SS oac1 .. ;e •I pa1<1 \/4 so 'ltt•,.O&nce SI 07 BasebaJI C«.LEGE C•t Poly ISLOI 1·10, Cal Stale Haywu<I G-4 JUHIOlt COLLEGE•' Cerritos"· s.nta Monlu 2 O•n•rO 4. Et C.,...lno J flO tnnon9• I San B~r...,rotno 11. PaS&Oena O advancing to the semifinals Saturday. Guard Paul Anderson and ce n ter Randy Adams o f Southern California College were chosen by coaches to the N AIA District 3 all-star basket· ball team Sunday. Anderson is a 6-3 junior while Adams, a senior. stands 6· 11 Monday. February 26, 1979 OAIL Y PILOT 8 3 ROCKET SHOTS{; ~~?,~,,~9-'?~ L!Y!A J.OO'XN /JP 1 REALLY 6ET IT VP HltiN / ,+ f)I/ •, r ~pr '~ (\J 11., , ''f.• l..l'LUT '/IJ_'J.)_,,!'f vk Y,/"I :-"' J Jt /1•1 ;Jf;/ T i..~lr 'f;;l1,1t t--... ~"1 111..,11 lD A.'~ l (}f' llf{ Wt'' I-llC TldA/ THAf' 611/fS ~t S-VAP ,'() 'Id;;~· lf/1)$"1llff 0 tXt AY (IACtL(;f.k Yt)!/1( ft/l?FT m 711~ L,,t!;r l>f~,l/t~ I I "' Pro Hockey, Basketball Hockey NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE (a...,..I C.lllel'fllO P•lrk~ Olwisloll W L T Ph Cll' GA Ny 1\1-r\ )I 11 10 116 161 151 N Y R•nge" l4 .. b ,. 1"8 101 Atlonld 33 11 • n 10 101 Plllla<ltlllf'•• 11 1• ll 61 14' 113 Sm'(IM Olvlslon Cll1c •oo 13 1• II SI 111 710 vao<ou•tt ,. 31 • •1 tlT 111 SI LOU" t3 40 8 J..I 11• 110 Color•clo U •t I l7 IU 1•1 W•I .. Contereft<t A<Wms Olvlslon Bo•ton )4 16 10 1e 731 Ill Bulf•lo 7• 1l 11 s• t'IO l'IO Toronto 14 1• 11 s• l'IO 111 Minne'°t• 1l 11 • SS 1'6 1'1 Hffris 01vhlon MoMrut P11uburo" Lo• Anqele. w.,.n1n91on O<!troll •1 10 I ., 7U 1"8 H H • s• 704 215 H 71 8 ~ 713 11b 11 3" • •S 70Cl~S ,. 37 1• ., 14? .,,, s_.,., S<orH O~tro1t9 Cot0<-1 NY ll~f\Qf'r\ 1, N V 1\land~r\ 1 Mont"'•' 8. Wa\hl"l!tor> \ PlllSD<i•OI> 7 Cho<•QO 1 llv TOft1411rt's G•m .. Joronto al Bult~•o V•ncou.,.,r at LO\ Aft9el" T-,·sc;amn c 01on•<lo at Boston Montr4'al a• Nf'w Yort., t\t6ndt r\ Ntw York R•l>Oe""t St Lou" Pole Breaks Vault Record VIENNA CAP> Pole va ulter Wlad yslav Kozakiewicz of Poland set the only record at the 1979 European track and field indoor t'ham- P i o n s b i ps o v e r t h e weekend . . _ and barely missed a world best. Although he failed to clear the bar at 18·6 - one-quarter inch above the world indoor stand· ard set ·by Dan Ripley of t he United Stales - Kozakiewi cz cleared 18-33~ and bettered his own European mark of 18·31f:z I reland's Eam o nn Coghlan took the 1,500 meters in 3.41.0. Coghlan recently set a world in- door standard or 3. 52.6 for the mile. .r WORLO "OCKEY' ASSN W L T Pl• Gii' GA E Omont'ln lJ 71 0 66 n• 11• Now Enql•l>CI 18 7? I ol 131 110 W1nn1~ 19 1o o o7 11" 7lt °""~' ,. 1) ' • I 101 ... c '"' '""•" l• 1t 0 \• 1(17 708 ll"m'nQ""m 1' lO • •R 704 U~ Suncl•Y'• Scott• Edmonton\ 8irmt""Qh-•f"I • W1nn11>"<1 T N~ Enql11nc:I \ C•n<•nrwt1 t OuEbP' t •01 • tHc• , .. ..,.,Y'• G'"'•' R irm1nqr\6M .tt W1n(t1()ftQ N tw E not•n<I •t E Omonton Basketball NATIONAL 8ASICET8ALL ASSN E•tte,-" Conferef'ct At11nllc OM •lon W •\l"llnq·tOf'\ PrHt•ftlDh•d Nfl'w Jpr-~v Ntw 'York. Bo•lon w L H IQ )4 ,. )1 ,. lb ~ Pct. GB 04J 1• l6 C...lr•I Otvl'"'" 546 .. SIT 10 40& ,, •00 '' ~•n Anion"' JJ 7< \U Hou'1on )J 11 \SO l • 11 .. ntd l1 ,. Sl7 • ( lf'Vt"lttnO '"" ~ 414 It O"tro1t /J Jjj Jll I)' Npw Ort .. .,,,. J t •l l?e ti Wt'itttn CMter-~t Midwest 0•-.1,10ft ec dn,11\ (llY ~ 11 t>AS Q .. nVPt )4 )0 \)1 , Indiana 1~ l6 414 11 "'"""""... 1\ 11 41 ) .. Cn•c .. oo n l" JM " , P~1h< Ot"'"'Of'I Lo' .ono~•..., l~ 7• 01 1 S"atfl~ )I 1• b()T Pt\Ol'"n1:. )6 I• S,Sl '> ~M D••QO 17 JI soP .. Porttano JO JO 500 • C.ot<ltn St•IP 78 )) AU 10 Su"°"'" Scort~ l O'I. An<Jif"ll·'\ 118 lnc:tl<!.ln,-toe ( ff'1'Pland I U Chtf l'lOt: •Cl Pf'ltlaOf"I~· ,,. C>fi.n.,_., tt1 Nfw JH'#y t i& Nf"w Y'M lli 101 .-,a.n Aritontn 111 HOV\tOf'I tOJ WoHlltnqton 'l'I Gol<!<'n C,IA!P @Q Porital'<I 1~ OP1ro1t 1 IO OT l(.on\"" C•tv 1 u ..,..,.,.,P '°" S•n D•POD IJt &o<.1on • •• TOIW411tt'\ G•me• No 06""'\ \CM<IUl<'O T.....,•Y'•G•mu K •n\~ (th'"'' Lo-s .AnQfllft\ Gn•o~n St•tt "' Nfl"• von H OU,tOtl tll .4tt.9nt"' Ottrotf di Cll1t~ '!>tMttlf' at O,.,nv~r tnO••"" di S#tn O•flOO Ph1l•~•on111t "' Pon•ttnd Baske tball WIEST Pa< 111< <It> ~ JO\P SI 8• EAST P~nn c;t ~ OuQ\W'n• ~ 1 SOUT'4 < 1.-rn4r.0n -.1 OuffAIC'I '' d F •ond• St Q()_ Mf'fTIO"•' 4)t 8, l(enux:"v ~ S CArohnct I • Mt OWE ST lnO•dna 51 10' W•c r'Hlfl St ;u TOUAHAMIEHTS Swn a.ti C"a"'-~'" J dC .-\Of'Ntll,. 61, S rlOrtdd ~· EXHt8tTtOH Sov11it Union q;, l Ou1\v1llJ\ /ft Tomson Top Surfer South African Shaun Tomson was honored ~t the BaJboa Pavilion re cently as the world's lop male surfer from the re· suits or a readers' poll t oken b y Surfer Magazine editors. Marg o Oberg . a former Southern Cahfor nlnn now living in Hawaal, was named top female wave rider. OPEN AHD CLOSED EHD PLANHEO TO RT YOUR MEEDS CARS • TRUCKS ,_If LOA ... CARS DUii~ SUVICE THEODORE ROBINS LEASING CO. 2060 Harbor II.~ 642-00 I 0 Costa Mesa ~ 540-1211 LEASING? IF YOU DON'T HAVE OUR (i)UOTE. YOU ARE PROIABL Y PA YIMG TOO MUCH! Hew and Used Cars & Trvcb AA Makes & Modefs Cloulc1 Clltd b otlc Can Our Speclatty 8 EACH 40'' WESTBLY. Ntwf'bn H ACH LEASING 833-9850 SAVE MORE MONEY ON A NEW CAR IllAN YOlJ EVERlHOUGHT POSSIBLE •ACQUIRI: AND ORI f:: ;\BRAND l\E\\-AIJTOl\10BILE, VAN OR TRUCK [\llRY YE.AR I-OR A MT CO T Of ABO T $500 TO '!>l.000. MO~l MAKI-'-. AVAILABI t. •El IMINA Tl Tl ti "'1AJOH Dl~AO\ ANT r\l,f '::> 01 CONVf.:.Nl 101\AL PURC.11.Ab ll'C.. Al'O I l AblNC.. •ELIMINA 1 l THl HIC..H COb l 0 1 MAl="TLl'AM. l •OBlAI!'. .. ULI DI C.LObLRl PrR I 1\11\l"'L 10 ALI PRIClb AND MARK-UPS Of \!LHICLb /\NU ACCl:.SSORIEb •CALL M4·2526 FOR A I RE£ CQfl,SUL TA TIOf'll THC.RE lb NO OBLIGATION AUTO FUNDING CONSULTANTS. INC. 220 Newp<1n Centu D~i,e. •.ll Ne, .. pon Se.ach._ CaUlorn1a 92660 ~~n j l~~N .fat JJ;~~MJliJ ~#ti~ ~nniJ '1l1t~ The Harbor Racquet Club is a club for people who want to play lots of tennis and have lots of fun doing it. HRC has the most cen tralized location in the Harbor-Mesa area and more court availability than any other local private club The costs of Memberships are but a fraction of those at comparable clubs. Regular Memberships: Single Member~h ip: $100 per year, $25 monthly dues Family Membership: Sl 50 per year, $35 monthly dues 11 Permanent MemberShips Available Il l. Special January and February 1979 Introductory membership for com· panies or groups of friends who want to get into the fun of tennis. ••Three (or more)party membership · $120 por year ($40 per party), $60 per month duos ($20 per sin111le party) Note. add SS to lho monthlydue5 1f J family 1s one of th parties. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 642·2000 .tt~ReOA ,AACQUIT CLUB _,.0 W.• Wll10t1 • Cotti ~ CA OZt?l '· I :I. •• " ), \~ "· I 6 , 14 •• .. DAILY PILOT N Monoay, re-t>1uaJY 2e ttra STOCKS I BUSINESS NYSE loodoy·~ .. lo intc Prict• CQMPOSfl 'E TRANSACTIONS °"91•1-\lnil .... ll_t..,11'9 ..... YOt• ~"7-'1. li'.Clll< t;IW llotl"'..1 0.lfeOa MCl"fl""•ll•tO\• .. ,~ .,..,_ •• ,,.. HA1-•l •\tee l•t'-'Of ~v•ll ... D9•'-" •flll •n•lltWI • l . I ~ it. .. 4 .... • ·~ fw• .... -~ •• I • I ~ I II I ..., ' , , I I ., " ( ~ ( I ' I 11•1 (.... (I I I I .... {J ,.. 1 I ••. ~I,,_ 1 :J "I~ n• & ~l tt ~ .. :--r •,:: .. 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By SYLVIA PO&TEB T1Hn1•11 ~ Tbelong pttiodol r l1ln1rate:sone1pita l1ainscametoan end o n Oct. 31, 1978 and was r~vened as tbe 1978 Revenue Act cut the tax on long-term cap ital galna. If. alter Oct. 31, 1978, you sold any capital a saet that you owned for more than one y e ar, you g e nerally wUJ pay leu tax on p rofit than on aim.liar a ales made berore. BEFOaE THAT DATE, 5t PERCENT or the gain w as taxed; after tbat date. 40 percent ls taxed. This provides a powe rful incentive to seek Investments that can produce a lo n g -t e rm capit al gain, notjustincome. Jr you took several lo n g -term capital gains in 1978, use c are in completing Scb~ule D (F o rm 1040) Capital Gains and LossetJ. warns Leon Gold, chief tax counsel to the Research Institute or America. You mus t report sep a rately your gain s and losses from s ales aft er Oct. 31 and tho se before Nov. 1. Show the run year's gain or lo ss on e ach Item. Follow the instructions on lhe Money's Worth form to get the benefit of the tax c ut. The IRS schedule:: i s c omplicated. . If y ou are in a h igh e r In com e bracket. the change may give you an even greater t ax reduc tio n on long-term capital gains by eliminating certain hi gher taxes that were cau sed by long-term capital gains . If your e arned inFJ ls s o high that part would be taxed a t a rate hig h e r than percent, the law lets you Umll your top tax on the ea i ncome to SO percent. But it you realized a lone-term cap ital gain before Nov. 1, 1978, e ach dollar of lbe untaxed portion of net long -term capital gain reduced doUar fo r dollar the amount o f earned in com e eligible for the so per- cent limit. IN BRJEF, IT SWFl'ED YOUR earned income from a SO percent tax to a r a t e that could be a s high a s 70 percent. But for s ales m a d e a fte r Oct. 31, 1978, this does not apply . The 15 percent minimum tax can still hit lbe untaxed portion o f long-term c apital gain for 1978. But in 1979. the 15 percent minimum tax no longe r applie s to long-te rm capital gain and is r e placed by an alt e rnative minimum tax that will affect re w e r indiv iduals . Before the 1978 Revenue Act, a hig h -b rac ket earner c ould pay taxes t otaling about SO percent of the long-term g am because o f the capital gains tax plus the minimum tax a nd the r e duction of incom e eligible for the so percent ceilin g r ate. IN tm, TUE RATE THAT EVEN t h e highest brack e t individuals will pay o n long -term galn is 28 percent . A fmal bit of good news for those who sold stock between Oct. 25 and Nov. 1. 1978: While lbe law provide s that you get the new tax breaks on long-term capital gains o nly fo r sales afte r Oct. 31, 1978, the IRS bas uncharac- teristically interpreted the law in your f avor . A combina· lio n of stock exchange rules and tax rules gives you the benefit of the n e w 40 percent rate on cap ital gains from • s a les made on or a fte r Oct. 2S. Ne.rt: M edlcal DemM:ttO?U Ma1ket 's Pace Led By Ga~bling Stocks NEW Y O RK CAPI -Gambling s tocks jumped a h ead today while lhe r est o f the market continued to languis h in slow trading. The Dow Jones aver age of 30 indus trials was off 2.16 points to 821.12. Losers held a 6·5 edge on gainers in lbe over·aU tally o C New York Stock E xchange-lis ted issues . The s urge in the gambling s tocks cam e a s New J ersey authorities voted to grant R esorts Inte rnational a penna· o e nt license for its casin o in Atlantic City. 8oll1GE J 111 B ltl'I 7~ "'-Co•8Cl<I 17 11 33 S9V., 14 ~dllf;~~ :~ ! :n7 14'~ ...., l.ll>tlyl.n • 2 ,.,. PNBMI .ne ' 12 10\lo. • • IG I ... I 1'02 11'1•-~ Wechov .It I 111 '"'" • 8M0AQ SO I 31 17.... 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I 4 ••• • OUPonl • • 700 IJ? -~ ~IClllY S6 e 10t I~+ ~ Mt 1.20 S • 2' -l't p;j'-~ 1' 4J 'til't·;, I>' 4.-.. ~ "*"-\lo .11 .... ~ t 4010 ..... SJ~ =:~ l.i ~ '~t ~'t! ~ dg':.~~"'~·= ., ...: m:= ~ HllelyA 1.IOI .. 1 , • ...,. ~ Ntc. EAi 1.ao • 104 H-.,_ .... "°"OE ·r;o,, 143 j ~ ~ Tm:.ci ·'° 1 'l to~-w .JIT""' I.CM J II JI -\'t ::::~2:::: t! ~=; .... ~~::a::··1~ft"'.+." ="''·'o :: am:::.~ ·~.:1:~~,., :i-=,-~crr.'l:: .. o:tt1v.: ~ f .. ..., ,·; u t ·.:·" w:l. ·~ ~ "'j ::=!. BllmdY ... • ,. ,,._. ~ O""Br I.AO,, IO l11't ... :. HOl'nllk 1.10. " 101 14.._ "" MCll'llJ" .j "S: \QI I.ti. ~ P0tll1t( l,1t 'j 43 """. l't r:i"·~ '* J ,:~ .\.; t•lfffjA ,ID i' u""'-"" WM"'-.20 .. 111 3'4.... O~l.I I,, 11 .m ,,,,. "' Horclol .37• 13 IJ 1~-\lo ~ ... • ,. = "' Polm t ,_,. • ~ lll't-11, fE . 111 21114-"' ... , ••• ' 1*""• "' t.~n .~1: "1 ~tV. 8::::0 \JL ::&~~! :z =:'J U~ :'m; i,"':.:·~ :Oj• 11' m:~·~ ~m:a=:·:1M0:1-..~.~ ,.ll ':: t~ ~ :xr;'l ,,~ Jt ::""~ 1e IMtn •· 114 e\io-\lo OIHI pt H I .. Y,100071 -\lot ~ ·'°it 60 t Jllll-~ Mild 1 l. t fi 7' , 1.-. Prr,"'m'ltf .M2111 .. " \IMl't++ YI r ;60 t U 11~::::. 11r11IM ..IO t a IJ ..... ,-.oc,<~ SI~-Ill r.~C.:! .1-J! •• 1.: i~:. '\.; m'1 ·'° ' n 112:· "' =:-..::r~ u 11 D" ..... rnKIOcm ,11: 111 ;r.__ tt ~. '°"·~ ~t 1i .: ~ r o &o "Ao,ijr_ ""· ... ='~'~ 'n J,~:. ~ ~ :2,' J: 1 ,,.!,l: =" · rr 1i 2!~.:.:· · Oil Production Rises 8.~ 1~1t 'tt ~, .. ._i. ~';~, ;'!!" n ,!"'• ..... =~i::t.~ '1=~·~5$:.1:40 i 1~ 22t;;:Z i~oi~:#~'"f Ult:'.~ TULSA, Okla. <AP) -Worldwid e ~~;" 1.10 J I~ m;.:. ~ ~:~r ,·ti! ·~ ~~·.~ tiOllllll t~:: 1~3 m!:.:•y, ~T 1t 21 r,'A ... (ti 1:::..::: •:i:o1_-"' CrudeolJ prodUCtioft lDC~ued slitht• Al 1-. · U "''-"" l•'r,1' J 'i: 1~ · · ~ • .!I U t=.~.~ ~II IA::,, 7~~ ~ :r.r.,rn :~1}f.M m;::.:~ ly to a record 80.3 million barrels a 110 • ~ ~ i ,,. §l"'t .. if '" u11.-~ HUeOnl '·" ; ~· ~~ • • "• " ,. ~~,,. '" t 4 ,.... da d\11'1q 1-... e O''l --~ Gu I .. : 4 •••" " etl H~ .. · • • HldtiTI '2 t •11 ---.... t I• · ...... • •• Y lrfG' \U a, aDU 10 '" ...... "' ••• ", ,, """ •• ~ ·,)IS ... 2'14~ .. i~ ......-,~, ~ ... ~ "ast:~o .. ~:1"'·1··~!t'~-. Jou-·•.....-.. ..... c , • 1 jl) is • .... "'"' i •a ttt t!l't .... IMN "",., 11 ~ l.1i ... ,_ ~ ... ~ llYY .w_u •. : ,:.1! m~:.~ :mi" ~I ii;;~·::=~ Ao ~~ 1'j : .. ~·~ I l-71. =~ S!~;,,::W ~·1:: The weekly bu1lneH m..,1.11ne ""'•'° '1'' Sf 1 •::: ~ 1!$"•1 • '1'' ~::: ='" '! i tl 1 .... llft,i ., 1 :;• "R ~'3S .. ~·•ffF-u.; HY• lo lbe eclitloa dated T\aesday L -~" 1 ,. ft,.t-:_ ~ '""""11J ; a*! W'.:.:: " -1-1 1 -' .._ lio •J.i .• 4 ,:~· • R ~~.Al ::' ,,,.:,YI that production lncreaHd In tbe ' '° .. ~ as n le 1..., 1 • ' ~ 14~ " .T'\.• ' " 11"• ~ •• .,...., • ., fh'>.... N ..... Sea A' .. ,., North en-and I ~ ~·" ji I •••• C!ft!lf ,,.,. 41~ At • • \It ~II ' ft ........ ,. 01'8 I,....... _.,.... "1.'T: t " • ~ l:;t""' .14 T ;: '~ ~ OI 'i .t: .... ·• • 1 -" 4 ...... "' In Mea:k!o It B.'° 1w; ~-4 .S 4". ' • • 7 1~ ..... 1117 .,.... ~ 11 • , 1 • -1.-. • , • n •" . I..,."' "' .. ~ =.'1:: g ~..... c , " al • '"-Europe. ,irt1ere output roM & l per- 1 '.l ·~" ~~.~ :'~1.l~ :i 1S rr:! ~ :Ft!'t l U"~:~ -~:a ~ ..:;:h """'11 u IF~·~ c..-to l.T mlWoD ....... ctQ. ~ IJp• and Do"'n• ' M'ha t Sfo~b D id NEW VORI( CAPI p~~ TOO•V )77 -1S9 '7t .. , 438 1177 1171 19 11 u 11 Due to late transmission today's listing will not appear in the Daily Pilot. WHA T AME• 010 NEW VOlllC IAP) -- I .. I 2 z • I ~ 14 •• COMICS J CROSSWORD MARMADUKE by Brid Andtrwn FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk ..----....... ,......-...... -....-~ <nn 'l\IE rtE. 'THRT , eMKETBAU.. lb PL.AC.>£[) ~J ..... _,_ "You'll never gueu what Marmaduke brought home today•" SUPERHEROES SHOE MOON MULLINS OH~( HOW Q)yC'J KNOW? 'THEY'il~ ,ALt. INTMESAME H.ANt>WRITING- HOW Do )blJ ACcolJNTFOR :THAT? THE FAMILY CIRCUS~ By Bil Keane '--n.t....,..,.,,..., _ .. "It doesn't look like o button to me." DENNIS THE MENACE 'L 6UESS a: RlJFF TAKES AFTER ~Dl SIOECJ1ME FM11LY!• ~ llE>T tViAKING eoaem ! MI SS PEACH 11\A~U A L.f t"f ~ J1E( 0,. ntf A'1 f . •F' COHVfUA'tiot--) -~ t J I j fiQ ·~ by Mell by Pasko, Tuska & Colletta AGATHA CRUMM by Jeff MacNet~ DR . SMOCK POESS YOUR POC HAPrA RePO RT e>LJL..L..EST WOUNPS -ro -rHe POt...ICE: y I OON'"f l<NOW Ye"r, GRAN' MA. 6UflWN4T mBE" WRY CAllFUL by Ferd and Tom Johnson GORDO TUMBLEWEEDS ~RJ: Wf CHARGt ~E:M AG-AIN, MAY I Sl)66f:Sli 10 WHO- ~ SCReAMING-IT, NANCY WASH THE L.UNCHEON DISHES, NANCY HIRE:~~·-WE N~DQUICI< iHINl<'r:RS A~ot.JND HE:RG · TMEY Wl~O MliGAVIN ANO HE JUS"r LffT THE LA& IN THE UMOUSIME I OVRMEM ARE FOLLOWING IH TtiE l.AUNDRY TRUCK! by Gus Arriola by Tom K. Ryan by Ernie Bushmiller 5HE START~D THEM---BUT 5H~ 5 EEM5 TO .._ _________ .. ""_, __ .... HAVE STOPPED Mondly, Ftbruart 28. 1~ PE ANU TS DAILY P..llOT ·~ by Charles M. Schulz by BUI Hoest •MT°Ml6 16 M'( ~NTIRE" AOJUSTID GllOSS llCOME'! so WHf!Re's THf! NE!ARE!S"T" RAPIAi"OR RE:PAIR SHOP f TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Eyes 5 Peep show tOPllfall 14 Shed 15 Afncan an· I elope 16 City on the Truckee 17 Stale 18 Seasonings 20 Fragrant 22 Most doclle 23 Mislay 24 Catnip, e.g. 25 Trances 28 Glamor ca- reer 32 Winnlpeg·s nickname 33 Perm11 entry 2 words 35 Finch 36 Bakery em- ployee 38 BIOOd - .0 Facts 4t Con1a1ne1s 43 Bucolic 45 Saigon holi- day ~Implores '8 Adders SO Lubricates St Cab user 52 Nap 55 Shrewdness 59 Meeting 61 Body joint 62 AC1ton: Sul· fj)( 63 Tester 64 European volcano 650boe 66 Paving blocli:s 67 Ac11ve one OOWN 1-Khayyam 2Roam 3 Extorted 4 Walk 5 Set back &Sole 7 Rave 8 Complete 9 .Amended copy 10 Shook 11-Des· canes UNITED Feature Syndicate Saturday's Puule Solved. 0 • I L L S T 0 P • [ [ ' 1---1----.• iO 0 [ 0 'fl l L l "ill A IL.LIU • "i 'io'i a r'°io~ Q ll if . s l I M • ( l A II 0 • --" ll I" T . ( ~-c • H I 0 " [ 5 [ II f lS Al• AM IU l ( f I ' I . ' .. 0 A ' < n -. 1-•• .. ' l II o I Q .. A t • 1 A ~ ll I I • l ( ' [. . ' . ,, . I " I -· II I • • s ( l l ( ~ I M I . J. < < C: • I 111 S 0 11 l 0 • 1 0 v ( ... ~ ... ;c l A G~ 11011( T I 0 ( ! 'i"l5"i 'ii $ ' u .. $ , .... ~-i..-- horses '2 Grab 21 Lounge '4 llalian 2• Fame money 25 Pungent 47 Watns odOr •9 Nibbled 2S Nut s1 Phase 27 01scharue 5' Catlace 28 Less S3 Nary 29 Enraged SA Formerly JO Sa11peter SS Ttu~ 31 Insects S6 Prepcs1hon 3A C1v1I wrongs 57 R1bb0n 37 Replaced Comb. lorm 12 Insects 13-olflce 19 Female • shingles 58 Time period 39 Pillagers 60 Before I. 1 z ,. I . ~" •• I & 1411 •• l..Y 131 hi. tc. ~d ' .. ' 81 DAILY PILOl ~onday. Februery 28 1919 Television .t ....- a.-001~ A IC\lll)lf.U 19 l#\llble 1\.1 ....... '*' °'"' .. ~o Med modtl hom M nlOl<J G "'°"'IOI llO"alCI• "•• i:•u-• 10 ••• , KCAIC)l"'IJ • ., ....... ''°" 10 1111 t11on ~ Cl&U f*11\o.)I\ • TWlllW>Y~ ill() l't1nun -ltie a.a a,,. ronwno cvt ol .... ~. merk .. !Ind ~ tn.·r .,. Ill-' '"' .... l<wm.wi.,..i • ll'METI OI' tAN ,.MHCtlCO A r~ P. • ott.._l!f "'""' •• ......._ '" ,., .... "'1 .,, .. , loo I><...-"' ill 1111co1 ... a 90Jt'"" • i.no""' 11a1C:Oh<.•~ fll 0Vl" IEMY Ou•HI com...11,111 ''"'"" YOuhQfnit.11 ll) AMERICAN ~AHMENT , ... IJt(X;eh ) C6SHEWS UC-HEWS t "'o11fasy l "ife I lOVELUCV Tile R"••Oos •1'<1 i.1,.. '""' ••• Udl/\g IOf ~urope t>ul Lucy 11111h on•~ ooc~ ~ MICHAEL JACKSON Gue~I 0. D.avl(l 8' ....... ~ PROJECT UNIVERSE -,lt•\'l' Cutttc•nhc1 g :-,tar~ a:, a }OUnf!C man \.\ho 1magu1l·~ him:,lef a~ many different 1umJnt1l' her<>t>~ rn .. Bill y." a new com t•d y :-.t•rics prem1l'rtng tonight at 8 on CBS. Channel 2 lunar Geology ~reOeroc.i.11, T astl• Tnomu~ (I) CA()SS..WITS ®) MERV ORIFFIN Gueals Cnarlle Calin Lynn Swann. Arthur Ml.II 1ay Dancers, Ctrllon 100 0 CBS NEWS D MBC NEWS 0 MEWL YWEO OAME fl ABCNEWS Chann~I Lbfings f) KNXT tCBSJ Los Angl•h D KNBC INBCI Los Anqe1tif> " KTLA flno ) LOS Ang .. 1w; fl KABC-TVtABC) Los A1H11 It •, Cl) l'.FMB tCBSJ San Diego G KKJ-TV (Ind) Los Anqllh"• ®) KCST (ABC) San 01PQO CD KTTV {Ina ) Los Angele•, g) KCOP·TV (Ind ) Los Anql•1e., fl) KCET-TV (PBS) Los Anq1'1H5 ~ KOCE -TV (PBS) Huntington 6cJCh 0 (JJ JOKER'S WILD CD SIX MILLION DOLLAR ~1~001 whom Steve believed 10 nave gbne tnlo space wllh aliens, goes on a rampaoe rn UMI w110er- ~u W SANFORD ANO SON Freel comes nome anO 1h1nlts 111s rum11ure was Slolen fL) MACNEIL / LafRER REPORT ~INTRODUCING BIOLOGY Plant Nulrtllon · 7:30 f) THE MUPPETS Gu1t.i Sylv•>te• St•llonl' (St• P"°IO belOWI CJ LIVING IN THE FAST LANE 4 1<'4)1& •t WO< lt.nolttrn a <l••trucu... yet lllQhly 1••1109<1 20th cenlury aOO"llOfl I OAT1HOOAMI THArl HOU.YWOOO TlCTACOOUOH ~12 lhe omc.t• mutt up1ur• .. tn11)41r ~ a1o0 a ,,,.. .... bUlldtng • J\n'ITEAWATCH llr11Mnt1no ue> 10-1n.m111- ul• rllj)Ofll on lhe prog r•H ot 1n. voyaoor • apae11c:r1tt on na m1U10f1 toJul)lt9f ., m J0UA CHILO AHO COMPANY °''".., r or rn. so.a S 100,000 NAMi ntA T fUH( THE PRICE IS RIGHT 7 35 2S TOHtOl4l T111al>l9 Vt>4J 1001) BILLY (Prem1t11e1 A nin•1een-Y'"" old 1s1eve Gullen bolg) Wtlh "Waller Milly • lhgh11 01 to,ncy finds t11m- Hll con11anlly ceug111 1>41tw-. hit tantallff and 1119 h~rO realloes ot hie G LITTLE HOUSE ON THEPAAIRIE Mary s husband Adam fatl5 into a Oeee> dec>res- ~ When he learns the<• 11 a QOSS1b4l1ty of Mary r41ga1n1ng he< sight 0 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Or~n Slate vs S1onlord fl Q!1J SALVAOE 1 Alter Harry purchases 'a femous naunted mansion. alrange lh1ngs begin to happen et tne nouse 0 MOVIE • • • "Donovan's Reef { t963) Jonn Wayne lee Mervin An ex-Navy man l1111ng 1n lhe Sbu1n Pac1t" with Ills new tamrly, hnds n1s patao1ae 01srup1eo by 1ne arrival of ll•s oauohler lrom • prevtOUs marriage {2 llrs} CD CAROL BU~ETT ANOFRIENOS Guest11: Steve Lawrence. LllyTomltn. G) MOVIE • • • "None But Tne T U BE TOPPERS KllJ IJ 8:00 "Donovan's Reef." John Wayne and Lee Marvm mix it up in this 1963 adventure movie set in the South Pacific. CBS U 8:30 -Flatbush. The pre· micrc episode of a new comedy series in· volving a quintet or Brooklyn youths . NBC Q 9:00 -Mrs. Columbo. Kate Mulgrew plays the wife or the famous rumpled detective in this new series. pre miering tonight. featuring Robert Culp <See story. photo below > Brav•' 119651 Frank S1ne- 1ra. Clint Walker American ano JapeNJse men streno- ed on 1 South Paclltc: 111an<1 o.C1ar• a ''UCfl th11 lasts until reOIO conlact 11 resumed (2 h11.) fD ~ BIU. MOYERS' JOlJ~AL 1:30 8 (l) Fl.AT8USH 1Pr•mlere1 Ftve young Brooktynllea known u "the Fungos" concoct • mao scheme to recover their Chet llhed auto the ·•fungomot>lle;· from a 1!!"11 or car lhieves QJ TME 000 COUPLE Wnen Felt• learns thll h11 high tc:hOOI •-theart rs now • grandmother. "- beQlna to 1h1nk tha1 h11 own Ille Is nearly over fJD THE ARTISTRY OF SUNOJULEE Korean·t>orn VIOllntSI Sun Ju LM pet'1orms selec:1tons from Hlln<lel ano Btlhms «!) MARK RU88EU Maril Ruaaett taunls QOlll•· cal bigwlol and polces tun 11 t major ISSU8S ano news 11011es of tne day 9:008 CJ) M'A.S'H Hawkeye end B"J fec:e COi. Poller'• Olspleasure when they dlacover a new way lo e.scape from the 09')ress1ng war a1mos1 phere D MOVIE "Mra Columt>O (Pretn· lete} Kate Mulgrew, Rot>er1 Culp • U 9 HOW THE WEST WAS WON Luke, wllh a prtoe on n1~ head, Mii OUI 10 hnd lhe gun111nger whO can ctear him of murder Charges CD MERV ORIFFIN GU9111 Ch11lle CaJIH lynn Swann Arthur Mur- ray Danc.,s. Carlton Fr.O.,oeks. Tuna Thornes at ACADEMY LEADERS «!) OREAT ' P£RFONU.NCES 9:30 I) (I) Wl<RP IN CINCINNATI Juat when Andy has finally f~nd • MW Olae IOCl<•Y to replace 0. Johnny Fever Jonnny lhOwl up in Cn- c1nne1t ao11n I P1n 2 of 2) 10:00 8 (I) LOU ORAHT 81lhe I nd Lou t>eOOme deeply 1nv01veO 1n an 8KQOM of tlf>OOOy nursing nome Pf'ICllC4IS •0 NEWS NIOHT GAU.ERV "Can .A ONO Man Stnke From The Greve?" A wom- an ts temhed wheri her husbonO begin• to '--see VlllOfll 8D NANA "The 0-" Alter beot'!) Now Gumsh oe's on the Other Foot By JERRY BUCK HOLLYWOOD IAPl During the six years or "Columbo," the rumpled detective's wife was sort of like the 6-foot rabbit in "Harvey" fre - quently talked about, but never seen Peter Falk as Lt. Columbo told us that his wife was a fan of detective s tories. read lrish poetry, loved old movies. devoured the newspapers, attended night school and couldn't cook Now the shoe 1s on the other foot. Here comes "Mrs. Columbo." pre- miering tonight at 9 on Channel 4 in a two-hour movie. ''Mrs . Columbo" re- turns Thursday night, to begin a weekly hour-long series. MRS. COLUMBO TURNS out to be a mother. free-lance detective, part- t1me student, writer for a weekly newspaper. and wife of a policeman who is never at home. Strange that ColU'fubo never talked about his daughter, who's now 7 Whatever image you may have had of Mrs Columbo, forget it Kate Mulgrew plays h\!r, and she's a knockout. "We originally cons idered every- body --young. old . known, and un- known." said J ohn J . McMahon, N BC 's senior vice president for pro- grams and talent "In lhe end. we de- cided a fresh. new face was needed to brmg 'Mrs Columbo' to life." ~lcMAHON AND NBC'S president, F r ed Silverman. s potted Miss Mul grew 1n "a s mashing performance" on "Dallas" as an aspiring country .western singer. She also played David Janssen's mistress in "The Word.•· "To go with the obvious is so bor- ing." said Mi ss Mulgrew of her cbaracten zation of Mrs . Columbo. "And it's so understandable I would be bis type. Opposites attract. I am in many ways a homebody, but I am not a female Columbo, thank God. We can't have two eccentrics in the same household . "The whole thing's still in the em- bryonic sta ge ... Miss Mulgrew said tn an interview while the first show was in production. "She wiU not be ecce ntric , but I think many peculiarities will evolve. I rehearse a play four or five weeks, but not until I'm on stage does the character real-ly ta ke shape "I'M I N FRONT or the cameras now, but I think only in the future will I find her true character. Right now. I'm striving for simplicity and clarity. It's not as easy as it sounds." Miss Mulgrew is only 23, but is able to play older women. Mrs. Columbo obviously would be a woman in her early 30s. Miss Mulgrew. also is a rel- ative newcomer to prime·time television. after several years in the soap opera "Ryan's Hope," and ex- tensive stage work. She is in "Jennifer: A Woman's Story ." star rin g Elizabeth Montgomery, which airs on NBC March 5, and in April. she goes to • I reland to film "Tris tram and Isolde" with Richard Burton. KATE MULGREW was born and raised in Dubuque, Iowa, one of eight children. By the lime s he was 12. she knew she wanted to be an actress, and worked deliberately toward that goal. "I left al 17 to become an actress ... she said, "but I had to allay my father's fears by going to college. I went to New York University, wbicb was a joke. I couldn't have cared less. But 1 studied with Stella Adler, who was an inspiration ... She dropped out of college in her junior year. waited on tables, and haunted producers' waiting rooms. She was lucky enough to get an agent and made her stage and TV debuts simultaneously. She was 19. "I got a role in 'Ryan's Hope' and taped that a ll day. then raced up to Stratford, Conn .. to the American Shakespeare Theater al night. It was heaven." TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS r-iec:t.O by Fontan, Nan• conv~ Mullet 10 Q41t :c:::1"-i r ~,,_ = MAKE Ml LAUGH • MOVll * * 'Tn. L00111ng Glau Wet" { 111701 CllfllloO"-' JOfl ... PIA O.Oeimark • THE 000 COUPl.E °"*' o•t• the break ne'a ~ w11t1ng tor When lie 091t to e>la1r himself In a Holty...000 movie. • THEooootU T'ht 0000 ... ION tl'l•r light •n a tog. •t11ile Oii 1" • oai.. Ugbt a match and oo 1ntoorb1t SI OICt( CAVETT Gueat lllll911 G1gn (P8r1 2 of 2) 11:80 I) CJ) ROCl<FOAO FILES An e•-convoe1 trv1ng 10 mak• II 1n the reataurenl bu11neaa llrids h1mse11 1hreateneo by loan sha1k11 eager to take over G TONIOHT GU911 ho11 Mellin Mull Guetta Suaan Anion Rot> Reiner. Dennis Weaver. Bo01ne Betuco G TWIUOHT ZONE fl al P0UC£ STORY OfflCers ot the nlQht pairOI WhO hve tn an Old haumed nouse con1r1t>ute 10 11M1 breakup of a mator ¥tee nng CD THE OONO SHOW 41) OETSMART fll) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS 12:00 G TWIUOHT ZONE "Four O'Clock" Ollver Cr111Qt• Oec!Oel to take revenge on 1111 the evil peo- ple tn the world CD AlFMD HITCHCOCK PRESENTS g) OETSMAAT When a Merel weapon is sloten lrom CONTROL he.Oquarteis. Sma1t ano 99 -pec1 KAOS nas tnlll- trllled CONTROL 12:30 8 ORAONET ··The Big Dog • CD AlnED HITCHCOCK PMSE.NT8 "Revenge" Whefl a man• wile ta 11ackttd, he takes 1he llW mlO hit e»on llanOS ., MOVIE • • ''Th• YtllO'N Mounta111" t t955J H0wtrd Dutt l.it Balk .. 12:.378 HEWS Ill A.DAM-12 Mltlloy ano R..o netp • e11- ll1W1 wflO ii l>Ml4lg4ld by 5 I tr~ MaJltcall cMOren 12:.-0 0 CJ) cas LATI: MOVIE ••• ,., "McMiiian AnO Wlf•• Seer eta FOi 611•" ( 1975) Rock HudlOll Susan S111n1 JamH 1:00 G TOMORROW Tom Snydet v1llts the "Spruc:a Oooff. ' HqwaifO Hugl!U' mBMIVt M6j)lane, With RI)' Hop1>9r, CO- dMignw ol lhe pl•oe. eo lune. its co-pilot ano Oav• Grant, ftlQhl engl- ~ 0 OICI< V~ DYKE Rob recalls tne 11me he w11 oul ol we><k and Laura was expect1no Ritchie i LOVE EX,PERTS ll07 CHEAP SHOW 1:80 NEWS 2:00 0 NEWS Cl) OET SMART Smarl 1s •"'Onlld lo pro- 1ec1 • Scand1nav1an pr1n-c.ss from kidnapping 2~301 NEWS 2:35 NEWS 3:06 MOVIE ••'• "The btra Day { t957) Rictiero Basenart Simone Simon 4:50 tJ NEWSMAKEAS Ttw,,day·,, Daya i•e 1tfoeie• AFTERNOON 12:00 6 • • • "Tammy And Ttte Becllelor 119571 Det>- 1>1e Reyno•os lesire N,..Mn CD • • • ·.. T11e Sea 01 Grau· {Part t} 119•71 Spencer Trecy K11thartne H1>pburn 3:00 tml • • • • The Public Eye" ( 19721 Mta Farrow. TC)C)OI 3:30 fl * • "The Blob I 1958) Steve McOueen. Aneta Corwaut MRS. COLUMBO AND FRIEND, WHITE FANG Kate Mulgrew Plays Sleuth'• Other Half 'No~els' Give NBC a Little Class She Con See Melissa Sue Anderson announces to Dr. Fromm <Nathan Adler> that she can dist- inguish between light and dark on "Little House on the Prairie" tonight at 8 on NBC, Channel 4. Ge orge Putnam Back George Putnam has returned to Metromedia Televis ion 's KTTV Channel 11. His ·'One Reporter's Opinion" commentaries will become il segment of the weekend editions of MetroNews. MetroNews is seen seven nights a week on KTTV at 10:30 p.m . rnoM Fash ion hland Newport Beach By PETER J. BOYER LOS ANGELES CAP> -There 1s at least one happy consequence of NBC's entrenchment in third place -the network is occasionally willing to try a novel idea. Like "From ' Here to Eternity." "Studs --------------------- Lonigan." "Brave New World" and "Shogun," popular classics on which NBC has based a series called "Novels for Television." "What we're hoping lo do 1s get people to do what they used lo do -read a book," says Deanne Barkley, vice president in charge or miniseries and movies-for-TV. "Only we're letting them read a book by watching television." I NOW THAT SOUNDS TYPICALLY television, anti-intellectual and all that. But, consider -.. television is going to do a bunch of miniseries and TV movies anyway: it might as well be stuff based on quality material. And, curiously. some or these classics seem perfectly s uited for TV, such as the "Novels for Television" opener, James Jones' "From Here to Eternity." Had there been no James Jones, had a TV hack written the thing for a Wednesday Night Movie, il would have been called trashy TV -lots or sex, brutality and a brewing war. Then ltfere's Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World," a project Hollywood hasn't been eaeer to tackle. tr you remember sophomore literature, you'll recall this as a metaphorical satire on the ~--GI d loss or seU, or something like that, heavy with ~t ft deep meaning. How do you get folks to watch someUung like that? EASY. "THER E'S ALSO a struight story there. loo," says Miss Barkley, "a story about a future world and test tube babies. And what have The dancing gladiator and the lion seem to have put aside their djfferences for at least a while. Gladiator Sylvester Stallone appears tonight on the Muppet Show. Channel 2 at 7:30. STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR the same foundations thal make a smash TV show "I think lhat these books. the stones that stand out forever. have to do with human relat1onsh1ps, and human relat1onsh1ps are based on life and death. sex and violence. love and hate.·· Miss Barke· ly says. "Whal makes a successful book can make s uccessful television · · · ONE OF THE PROBLEMS facing "Novels for Television'' is that the stones and characters arc forever changing. and the series can't ride on the strength of familiarity One of TV 's favorite theories is that after a s how has been on for a while. it's easier to slip in a rew turkeys Viewers watch the character , not the show But with "Novels For Television," NBC 1s not as likely to get a series type of audience loyalty Viewers who loved "From Here to Eternity" may hate "Studs Lonjgao. ·· and may be lo t forever to "Novels." Each nove l has to stand strong on its own I hope "Novels " makes it There1s the nice prospect of new races every couple or weeks. and those are pretty fine stories NBC is doi ng. It pro· mises a pleasant alte rnative to ordinary TV mov- ies l 've s een enough of kille r bees and cheerleaders Well. enough of killer bees. anyway. llCES STAl1$1 AS LOW AS • •••195 • LA-1-IOYS FREE DELIVERY COtfA flftlA ..... .,.. ... ----·-'-Mt-... 7 -flll t04 ... io. ~- '· ' 2 2 ,. R J :. ... ' i •· I 5 , .. •• •• )' ti ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC Herbk Hancock D~cos By Y RD N ARAR HOt.I VWOOO \Al' 1 Tht' un auap '<'lrna J•u buff who vlop:. lt.rble U nrork n1..·w album on hill lutnt.ble LA 1n tor D surprt\e lnstud or lht funk)' kt1yboard crraUon ~h1ch tlancoclt 'a most re· nnt r.rordinJl ~uld h "d a l11t ner to u~t. th • baplt-u fan ts 101n tn be b.-ann 11hod<> of Saturday Nl,hl •·t•\<c-r duu•t> h album. "t'ccts Don't t•au M Now." LI dut> for tt•lu .... thl month. but )OU ran ulmosl bl!or the acr •ma of lh pun1u. ACltr all. lh1~ '' thl· ~•me ma.a '*'ho " dault-d )all lovtr:s partu.•ul rly thost" of thl· l'lt'ctroruc peniun'llOn w1lh nN1.rly two doien ulbum of has own 'Jtnc-t> \961 , not to mt>nllon wdl over a hundred MS u ... wi,....... Jerrys Bark Conwd1 an Jt•rr~ Ll'" tl> mugs for tht! ca nwta dunn,:: thl· filming of his lll'Y. me>\ 1e "Hardly Work in~ " L l'\\ 1:-. 1s shown as u d1sco d l't'J••) By The Associated Press The following a re Billboard's hot record hits for the week ending March 3 as they appear in this week's issue or Billboa rd magazine HOT SINGLES l. ·'Do You Think l"m Sexy" Rod Stewart <Warner Bros .> 2. ''Fire·· Pointer Sister s <Planet> 3 "I Will Survive" Gloria Gaynor < Polydor l 4. "Tragedy" Bee Gees 1RS01 5. "A Little More Love" Olivia Newton-John IMCA> 6. "Heaven Knows" Donna Sum- mer & Br oo kl y n Dr ea m I Casablanca > 7. "Le Freak " Chic <Atlantic l 8. "Y.M.C.A." Village People I Casablanca > 1<frrnun The lh•rblt• ll••Ol'Ot•k who's pho ed 1n ht1ndb with !IUCh J&U: artist5 .i. 'uonald Ryrd. Fr~thh\' llubbord nd Uw le~wndar) Mtl1•:> l>uv 111 The c~>m~cr of · Wah•rmdon M11.n" and ·~ta1den Voyui(t' Wf:l.l., IT WON'T be lh~ first time II il ncO<.'k has changed has mus1ct1I 1>rtt'ntat1on to lhl' wails of -some un prepared fans ant! lo the delight or t'ountles!I new ont'b Diamond <Columbia 1 4. "Somewhere In The Night" Barry Manilow <Aris ta l 5. "No Tell Love r " Chicago (Columbia> SOUI;SINGLES 1. "Bustin' Loose" Chuck Brown & The Soul Searchers (Source> 2 "Aqua Boogie" .. P arliam ent <Casablanca l 3 "I'm So Into You" P eabo Bryson <Capat.oH 4. "Shake Your Groove Thing" Peaches And He rb C Polydor l 5. "Never Had A Love Llke This Before" Travares <Capitol> COUNTRY SINGLES I 1. "Golden Tears" Dave & Sugar <RCA> 2. "Send Me Down To Tucson- .,. .. ,...,.... JAZZ TO DISCO Pfanlat Herbie Hencock Has 1973 "Headhunters" album. in which he turned from hjs iocreasio~­ ly complex works of lhe '60s and early '70s to a more accessible Jazz-rock sound . also prompted some com- plaints ll also became the only one of his albums as lead artist to eam a gold record. and is credited with helping t-0 establish jazz in the mass market. ''I ORIGINALLY established myself as a 1azz musician. and un· fortunately people are accustomed to pigeonholing," says Hancock. well· prepared for questions on bis various fields of musical endeavor. An THEATRES c W!llM AIU ) CINEMALAND 11•1~3\ 1&01 u 1• H111to1 Br•o I •et P11••no ANIMAL HOUSE us ••t Rem11ke of Be•u Gest .,...,,,,.(!!) UP IN SMOKE .... OUT\.AW JOSEY WALES _,.,,. lti 10. "What A Fool Believes" Doobie Brothers <Warner Bros.> Charlle 's Angels .. Mell Tillis <MCA > ou~~rer 3. ''l'U Wake You Up When I Get DAMNATION ALLEY TOP LPs 1 ''Spirits Having Flown" Bee Gees <RSO > 2. "Blondes Have More Fun" Rod Stewart <Wa rner 3. "Cruis in"STH Vi llage People I Casablanca > Home"Cbarlie Rich <Elektra I 1_1 .. »1111 4. "U I Could Write A Song As ( COStA MESA ) Beautiful As You" Billy "Cras h " "'__::..:;;:..:.:;.;;..-;.;;.;.;..;-....-" Craddock !Capitol 1 So. Coast '" ,." ''" 5. "I Just Fall In Love Again" 1110 B"\101 '"' P1••1"0 Anne Murray ICapilol> ••c.t.-T••AD-•-"sunllMAH"lf'GI · "I wasn't the one that stuck me with the label •jazz musician.· Not that lhe label Isn't applicable, but It may not always be applicable. I con· sider myself a musician, and that might express itself in many dif Ce rent ways." There was a lso a rather refreshing element or perversity involved In Hancock's decision to go disco. "I kept hearing from interviewers a nd rev1ewers things like, 'Well, you wouldn't get into doing that disco s tuff. would you ?' I even had somebody say t.o me. 'We wouldn't wa nt t.o see Picasso do cartoons.' "I SURE WOULD: That would be great. And he did! It really points up our dlnespect for people's tastes. We feel Uke human be ings in general don't have a ;• tas te. and only lhe elite. intelligent viewers or Listeners have proper tas t e. and that 's backwards." Hancock also notes that lrl'the past he ·s written music for television commercials of such major concerns as Standard Oil. General Mot.ors and Pillsbury. He's also done scores for films -"Blow Up " a nd "Death Wish." for example -and television shows such as Bill Cosby's "Hey, Hey. Hey, It's Fat Albert." .. All of that wasn't jazz." he says. "Jazz isn't the only kind of music I like ''l'M A HUMAN being fi rst of all, even before being a musician, and I live in California in 1979 so I'm a product or the times loo, i.tke every- body else that goes out and buys records ... ftt""'' "'--1U1Sl1·9'.)IO to_....._...,. HIAVIN CAN WAIT (N) hM e a11S e S14S e '"°A 10111 4. "Dire Straits" Dire Str a its I Warner Bros. I Anne Archer Cast "'"'"11'"'--90UTJ'9IO l'Pr.ml':r.T':'l---:"1'.'.",...,-::-""'l -n. ................... YWll 1-... ·~-DAY1 OP HIAVIN1N1 «;. "Brief Case Full Of Blues" Blues Brothers <Atlantic > HOLLYWOOD <AP > -Anne Archer will star as John Ritter's THE WARRIORS 1:30-8:30-10:30 (R) EASY LISTENING romantic interest in the MGM com-•-----------. 1. "I Just Fall In Love Again" Anne Murray <Capitol 1 edy-adventure movie "Capt ain )~·-... --'"THI IOYS fltOM IRA%1L" Avenger ." 2. "Crazy Love" Poco IABC 1 3. "Forever In Blue Jeans" Neil Martin Davidson will direct the film on location in New York. -·-"OUVltl'S STORY" ...... "REMARKABLE."-··'•"'•wus .. .,.o ~"'' r. "SPLENDID.", .... , •• ,.,.,,_..,,."' JEAN·LOOIS BEATUCELLl'S NOTIME h n rOQ 'SJ! Rf\I," A II i< ... A :;:-r ..... , ... ,, LJkL1 \l\l 1 D "l'"M .. •t.l(.t ~aNtV•R&"'L STUDIOe TOUR ...,,,MCA '"*""' ,_, '"' 1 'Du"-JlQ•v ACADEMY IWllll IOMllllTIOI am m ot•cno• NOW PLAYING OWMN' ClllUH CUUI Iii C.ii&S C:O.u "'°"' .,. 110~ "'"'"""'It! t9S ~ "A I ll.M Of <.RH\ I (OU RAGE ANO OVERWHELMING EMOTIONAL POWI R . A FIERt:El.V l.OVlNG • MORACE or I.ff[."' . ;;·~=;;~ADE,;~=RD ~ NOMINATIONS PRESENTED IN 70 M.M. DOLBY 6 TRACK STEREOPHONIC SOUND edwards NEWPORT MUICOAIT HWY.&M.AC.unMl HWIOill •omma 644-076 91CIDEMY IWID IOMlllTIOIS lllOOllll4IAI ' ........ 111 ~&6 MfUCKI• M""' &46 'l01~ fOUIUlll UllO fOWlAlll fAllU ,,,...,., ,,..., Ofllft~ &JQ 1S(JO F OtJn~ft V; ff ft, ~&tit OllAllCll MAU auo1u• OlllY(.JN 0<1"1)• hll Ol'O °'•"Of 6l~ ~ ·' CltlOIA WUT t.tt·~o ... K11·44'1J SAOOLEHtll 1 '"' •11 •ev MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "HARD CORE" (R) WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS "NORTH AVENUE IRREGULARS" (G) "SAME TIME NEXT YEAR'' (PG> .. ICE CASTLES" .. INVASION OF THE BODY SN~TCHERS'"(PG) "FAST BREAK" (PG) "CALIFORNIA SUITE" "MOMENT BY MOMENT" (R) STADIUm e;scREEn 639 7R~il OAIVE -1n Stact111"' ''THE GREAT TR~IN ROBBERY" (PG) "OUIN'TET" (R) "MIDNIGHT EXPRESS" "TAXI DRIVER" (R) .. NATIONAL LAMPOON'S ANIMAL HOUSE" "MONTY PYTHON" (R "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" "THE ONE ANO ONLY" (PG) "UP IN SMOKE" 'A BOY & HIS DOG"(R) "CALIFORNIA SUITE" "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" (PG) ALI. 0,_1.., •• ,.,.,0 ..... 6:lt•.M .... HT\.T C'"lld Un•t r I a "'" Unleu • K .. dlt P't•n•e1111e1 . -. 1u1~31-9$80 ,,,,. • :a:ao • ,,,, ''" • ''" • 10100 aMT utlWOCle .. c:=.. nm WMIOI ~ wr LOOSI (N I 2131~31-t~IO T'NI OUTUW JOll1' WAWfN I l ( .. h " ......... 494 1514 ALL STAR CAST "CALIFORNIA SUITE " (PG) ~,,,_,, I ll .... lillll• 1:1M :1M :IM:l .. 10:11 u.a. '°""""" "LOU OP nu R..-s" INI ,_____,_,. ,., __ .....oM-_7_.,Jt "NH llOF' 1 .... .,.. ~YMOPAHH T.1 .1. TOUCllN'S LORO Of THI llNOS IH I l'WI llY. ,. ... NNTHll111 Nlll •&LI e NM .OYU M NINIC'S JOI (l'OI l'WI .. IOll1N1 t otUI NOMINlllTIONS ..oeea c. Kem MUD COllaw1 PlUI L0010N9 IOI Ml. OOOOIAI Ill ..... ltc.U\AM PAI TUIAK '"9 Nit AYALANCMI IHI , .. _~-THI WAMIOltlaw1 C!•=~·.!..1!.!.'l.!t1~l!U~J·~ .UN PUMC :-'cun TONY 111 t Of CAI NOWHAnote NIAVIN CAN WAITC"I KW MOUA CALUC"1 ............ '°"' THI ...... IOa !NI ~ THI CMOIUOY1 I'll ... . /~ 19~ ()/JRLqq~. llON-#•t, JO.,... _......._ S•f ti .. ) •• 1• I •t '' tt •uw1t1 •4' 1• ••• M.U lOIO ••uoo GU•( MACAM.A• MOIO·T-a,_. ttll FltttOO 10 ti 1\ S.Af'S4.IH tJM J ti •to e 0 ... 11 tt W1••flltl ACA.0€Wt AWAl!IO -°"'flOIOa i-. M fT "1CT\IM ·~llJ.." HEAVEN ~ CAN WAJT PLUS ... WINNER 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS "THE WIZ" .... """ {/ rgRO ~~~- "Revenge of the.-- Pink P•nther' · DAILY PILOT ROBB' 8l'SO°"~'. IC[ 6>5T LE!S ~.... ' MOtt·fNUkS,,. • ,. f'•t I tl.t 11 11 1t .. , ....... , ... .. .. , .... ,. GABE KAPLAN (P.G.I "FAST BREAK' MON· THURS 7:15, 9:30 FRI 7 15-9:30-11:30 SAT 1.00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:15 9:30. 11 :30 SUN. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00. 7:15 9:30 MON-FRI 7:30, 9·30 SAT /SUN 2:00, 4·00, 6:00 1.15, 10:15 N~ •rtlttt "Ill , " •••. " " .. ,-.... , ... ,. ltORBY 1 u, •tto~4• 81:1'"JO'-~ .. ICf: ."Yl ~oTLG5 Seen Connery "THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY" _u,_.,. ....... __ ' HEAVEN CANWAIT ~~°'~~ "Afif UMMAflf'11ED .. LUI {R) WOMAN" OAK KA~ IN ll'eul N....,.,..11 llbl Andert011 Fem1noo l'ley .. FAST HEAVEN BREAK " CAN WAIT ''°' ~w.: C~lf -tr•, ---"ICE CAITU!I" ....,," 7:30, t: ATllUN 2r00. •: 1:00, 1:11, 10:11 \llttotlO 0Hllft811 "QUINTET" {Ill Ph11 • Neff llmo11 ·1 'CALIFOftNIA IUITI"' ... I :t J I• It ... •• -~ I~ •• l.'I. ~ UI hi. tc. td IK.' 00 - I • } -DAILY PILOT Monday. F •bru•ry , 1971> San.Juan eries Big Kahuna Cla Winn r ... 8111 ~uhuna . sk•Pr<'rPd by Mark Townlltnd. Dan11 Point Yocht < lub. wus the-oHral and Cla s A winner Sunday In th at•tond rare of Cu1>lstruno Huy Yacht Club l\ San Ju•n Serl •1 tot Pt>rformunc~ Jlundlcup Kacina t'lfft yachts. TM "lul> uh10 included a cla of ultra ll&hl dl81Jl•t~mt.'nt YIH'hu amd thf' \\lnrwr wa Gnn . Hll~ by Davt" Jo'ranch, OPVr THE llAtE WAS SAU.£U O\er a 1~m Je '«>urn off Dano Pornl Uurbl>r Ill \\ IOlllli that rancf'd from l~ 20 knot Summ11t)' or I t•,ult:-. lJl.OU l, l;rmi.. 2, M •~ Rapido, Hnllywood/Surdonl' Of'H 3. Brt!ul.. W it), Gur) \lll•n, DJ>' C CLASS A t 0111 ~.ihunu 2, Muclunac, We11 Thomp!lon (.'11po DYC , 3, Thum1wr II , Jim l:uccheM·. Capo BYC CLASS ll I. A\l>t~. Tam t-uller, CaJ)() BYC 2, tl#d Moon fht1an , Mtkl' t ·r.1~ford . Co po OYC 3. Funny Fet-hn Pt-lt< Mt:lldl' Capo RY<' CLASS (' I Hold Fort~·~ Ed Cummanas . ('JJ>O UYC 2 Elslrovavu. lla11' ~llrJl(Ut• l\11vy \'C 3, Nasty. llowunJ 'I rucl>" Capo BY(' OVEHAl.I. t , lhte t\<ihUn~ 2 1\\-0Cll 3 Mack1nar Carihb 811 ,. Sail Part Of Class A marine act1\'1l1e~ class that features 13 days of sailing in th1: Caribbean \\>tll be o f fered by Orange Coa:-.t College th1s summer The tnp ts set for July I 30 through Aug I 1 A meeting, de~1gned t o o ffer inform <1t1on about the course. will be held Saturday al 7 (.I m in Room tOJ of the OCC Music Building• The public is invited to at tend COURSE instructor isl Walt Glecklt>r , l'OOrdi nalor of OCC '~ Marine Act1v1t1es pro gram . An avid sailor for m a ny years. Gleckler spent the 1974· 75 school year sailing throughout the South Pflc ific on his so.foot ferro-cement ga ff.ri~ged cutter Embarking from !load Town. Tortola in the Br1t1sh V1qpn Islands. the OCC stu dents will spend JO day~ this s ummer exploring and crwsing the V1q~111 Islands I nslruct ton wll I be g iven in scaman ~h1p, na\ 1gat1on and safe boating practtcc:-. At· li\'1t1es will also tn<'ludc sw1 mmrng, !>norkehng and hikJng "THE B EAUTff L and proh•('ted trop1t·al watt>rs of the V1rg1n Islands have earned a wcll·deserved reputation as the finest cru1s rng ground in all the Carib bt'an," GIN•klcr said "The 1slund~ have re m atncd virtually un · spoi led and Un · crowdc.>d ." Cost of tht' two-unit cour~e 1s $850. The fee includes airfare lo and from Tortola, food , and boat charter For information about the courst'. contact OCC's Field Studies Of f1ce at 556-5693 Racing Records Eyed lnte m allonally known industrialist, s portsman a nd powe r boat race c hamoi on. Bob Nordskog of Van Nuys, ha~ set his sights on breakin$C the six world diesel e ndurance rec· ords, which he set al last year's Parker, Ariz., Endurance Race Nordskog, in the Sun· day race, will once again be driving his 20. root inboard tunnel hull, which carried him to the s ix world ma rks. The boat has undergone ex· tensive modlncation since last year's run, in· eluding a major change in power plants. Las t year's records were set usin g a turbocharged Renault marine diesel, which was 337 cubic Inches. The new edition will be propelled by a 504 cubic inch turbocharged Cummins diesel power plant. The new power plant is the result of over a year's planning and de· velopmenl of a diesel motor whic h w o uld ge nerat e e n o ugh horsepower to carry Nordlkog's boat pas t the 100 meh mark. BOATING Radio Gear Urged The U S <.:oast Guar d recom· mt>nd thJl recreational boaters who crw11c more than 20 miles ofr1:1hort.> carry an emergency position mdtcallng radio beacon on board lhear boats The device 1EPIR81 can save mariners houro or even days of waiting for rescue s hould the ir craft become disabled The preparation of the latest in a long Jine of world record selling race boat.II was done nt the Nordskog Compau. tlon Center in Van Nuys Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigareue Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ' BOATING Enterprise Takes First Newport Sailor Whitney Series Wir:uwr The flnt race or Los Angeles Yacht Club's Whitney. Lot Angeles Times, LltUe Whitney and l<oolman aeries -a 68·mUe circuit of Catalina Island -turned out to be a pleasant weekend cruise for the 76 yachts which finished the race Sunday. , Breezin1 home ahead of lhe fleet was Richard Ettinger's 2·ton s loop Free Enterprise from Newport Harbor Yacht Club with an elapsed time ol l6.6888 hours tb pick up Class A honors in the In- ternatk>nal Offshore Rule <JOR > class. THE WHITNEY SERIES IS for IOR ratings. the Los Angeles Tim~s Trophy Is for yachts rated under the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet I PHRF> rule, the ,Little Whitney goes to yachts un· der 30 feet sailing under tb.e Midget Ocean Racing Association <MORA> measure ment rule. and the Koolman Trophy is for yachts under 30 feet sailing under the Midget Ocean Racing Fleet system. Largest turnout was in the PHRF group with 26 e ntries in Class A and 22 in Class B The IOR ratings bad 11 in Class A. 10 in Class 8 and four in Class C. MORA had six entries in Class A and 13 in Class B. MORF had onlv three starters. Summary of results: IOR·A -l, Free Enlerprise: 2, Zig-Zag. John Zlnsmeyer. LJYC: 3, Whippet, Dick P ennington, LBYC. IOR·B l , Bingo, Bert Gardner. LBYC~ 2. Sunjammer . Orale/Kerr, LSF; 3, Warrior, David Steiner. LBYC. JGR·C -t. Tonka, Harry Hibbs, VenYC; 2. Pendngon. John MacLauren, cYC~ 3, Ouikee, Hugh Lamson. LBYC. PHRF·A -l . Victoria: 2. Sundancer. Brian BehJer. CBYC; 3. Ricochet, Theodore Fasy, Navy YC : 4, Typhoon. John Olson, LBYC. PHRF·B -l. Tomara; 2, Sunshine. Denn.is Humphrey, CBYC. 3, Happy Time, Ev Comings, CBYC: 4, HanaJci, Don Vickers, LAVC. MORA·A -l, Inflection; 2. Winsome, Richard Brown. CBYC: 3, El Tigre 11. Ke n Green, CBYC. MORA·B 1. Mad Mama; 2, North Star, Tom a nd John Shadden, LBYC: 3, Coeo Loco, Chip Whalen. LBYC MOR F I. Bronco, 2, Bad News. Stan Sorenson. ABYC 5 mg. "tar". 0.5 mg. nicoune av per c1gare11e by FTC method. I I REGULAR AND MENTHOL ONIYSMGTAR Get what you never had before: SatisfactiQn with ultra-low tar. • I J I I I • l I l •• •z •• • - le ll it n' al )fl ' !e • is :a I • d !O •f d 0 f. ~ 3 .. 1• ·r l • e 4 II I & u JI 11 I • I, k ., 3 I • • • I 2 -1 ll I :-. •• I ~ 14 •• II\. lY 131 t'· e. td IK. llCJ ! f I J .. •Ann Landers •Horoscope INSIDE: •Classified aturing_._._. ___ €, Mondly, February 2e. 1111 DAILY Ptl.OT Above. from left, violinists Kathy McMillan and Louise 'Griffin at Orange County Youth Symphony rehearsal. At right, music director and conductor John Koshak leads the group. David Hunter The 31-year-old paraplegic Vietnam war veteran died alone nearly nine years after his helicopter crel:shed into a Vietnamese mountainside. By DE!'llNIS McLELLAN Of IM Dally Pllet Slaff The war in Vietnam -a war that cut short the lives of 57,000 young Americans-bas, belatedly, claimed yet another victim. Nearly nine year., after his helicopter crashed into a Vietnamese mountainside and left him paralyzed from the waist down, former Army Capt. David Hunter is dead. The 31-year-old paraplegic veteran died alone Feb. 6 in his one-room San Clemente apartment overlooking the sea. Thus ended years or frequent pain, occasional humiliation and growing dependency on the powerful pain· killing drugs that increasingly failed to ease bis suffering. "I think my son had just given up a nd was tired of the situation he was in." says his mother, Vivian Kline. "He just didn't want lo live anymore." Mrs. Kline, who now lives in Park, Kan., was in Costa Mesa last week to tie up the loose ends of her son's life. <Hunter's father, Rupert Kline, is de· ceased.) "l'MSURETBEREareveteransall over the world who are sufrering pro- blems similar to David's and some even worse," she says. "I think it 'sim- portant for society to realize these men have given up a lot for the country that issoeasytoturatheirbackson." During the years after bis dls· charge from the Army in 1971, David Hunter did what he could l<> help the plight of disabled veterans. "In the VA hospitals," says Mrs. Kline, "if someone was in need of help, he helped them. He helped many disabled veterans get their pensions increased. This is the thing he was always doin1 for people." While in one hospital Hunter spoke to Sen. Georce McGovern on na· l}pnwide TV about the problems or wsabled veterans. 1 "He wanted to publicize the need of the disabled people or the United States -to make it known so people '. ...... wouldn't just ignore the fact," says Mrs. Kline. THE STORY OF David Hunter is, perhaps, representative of the thousands of disabled veterans in the United States. It also is symbolic of the millions of post World War II babies who came of age in the 1960s. He was born July 22, 1947, in Jackson, Mich. At the age of 10, his family moved to a house on Willow Lane in Costa Mesa. Hunter was active in football and wrestling before graduating from Corona del Mar High School in 1965. After a year al Orange Coast College. where be stud.led art, be quit school to enlist in the Army. ·'He knew h e'd have to go anyway," says Mrs . Kline. "He wanted to go in so he could get il over with and later finish college." Once in, however. Hunter dis· covered that be loved the military life. He decided to make it bis career. He went to Officer Candidate School and commanded an infantry platoon at Fort Lewis, Wash. Then be took helicopter pUot train· ing and volunteered to go to Vietnam. BASED AT LZ ENGLISH, Hunter flew for Gen. H.S. Cunningham and visiting dignitaries. He earned a Dis· Unguished Flyine Cross and the Bronze Star. ln the fall of 1970 bis step-brother. Sgt. William Hunter, was killed in ac· lion. Hunter came home for the funeral. He returned to Vietnam and eight days later he lay paralyzed on tbe aide of a 2,200.foot mountain. Mn. Kline says that the helicopter bad suddenly losl power shortly after take-off. It was, she says, one or eight helicopters that had been sabotaged -by a GI, who now is servinl time in Leavenworth. All four on board the aircraft were injured, Hunter the moat seriously. After he was evacuated to a hospital in Vietnam be was sent to a bo1pltal in Okinawa and, ultimately, lo an army hospital in Denver. But that WU Just the beginning of a IUC· . ... cession of stays in stateside VA hospitals. MBS. KLINE SAYS her son's paralysis was caused by an in· complete lesion of the spine. "He es- sentially was left with pain 24 hours a day. seven days a week." Hunter was told he would never walk again. But be did walk, al first with the aid of long leg braces. then short leg braces and a cane. And be learned to drive a car with band con- trols. "They told him he'd never walk, but he willed himself to walk, I guess," says Mrs. Kline. Then the pin lo bis thigh bone became infected. There was a bloodclot. Gangrene set in. In 1976 both legs were amputated. "The hardest thing for him was to know be could never have cbildren," says Mrs. Kline. ·'The second was the toss of bis legs . These two things, I think, were what crushed tum the most. "The most embarrassing thing for him was tbe accidents wltb his bowels and bladder in public. This made him keep withdrawing ... STILL, DESPITE BIS in- firmities and increasing withdrawal from the public, Hunter traveled to Korea in 1977 to visit Oen. Cun· nlngbam. He also made a trip lo Europe. At one point, Mrs. Kline recalls, her son told her that it would have been better if be had been kllled in Vietnam rather than go through the pain be did when he came back. Mrs. Kline says her son was never bitter that be had been hurt in Viel· nam. If there was any bitterness, she says, It was that the military was not allowed to do the Job it had been sent to do in Vietnam. In the end, according to Mrs. Kline, ber son bad a dependency on the powerful pain-killing drugs he bad to take every three hours. "He built up a tolerance," she say1, ''He bad been on this medica- tion four yean." Youth Musie The Orange County Youth Symphony offers top high school musicians the chance to play better 11lJSiC. By JUDITH OLSON Of tM Dally ~let Staff Heidi Ruby. a Costa Mesa flutist, likes it because she meets new friends whlle playing good music. · Julie Hazelhurst. a Seal Beach violinist, thinks the music is "very. very challenging." David Diiorio. a bass player rrom Laguna Beach, enjoys it because the conductor is "very good." And John Koshak, the music director and conductor. likes the Orange County Youth Sym- phony because be has lbe opportunity to work with 96 of the best music students in Orange County. He has the chance lo help many of them prepare ror careers as symphony performers or teachers and watch as they blossom over the years. The Orange County Youth Symphony, formed in L970 by the Orange County Depart- m ent of Education. Fullerton College and a group or music instructors. is intended to be "an extension or the high school program, .. Koshak said. IT OFFERS TOP high school musicians the chance to play better music than they would normally have in their school orchestras and learn more about the rigors or playing in a pro- ressional symphony. Most of the members. who come from all over the county. plan to become professional musicians, Koshak said. Most are studying privately and all a re expected to stay in their own sahool greups once they get into the youth symphony Auditions are held yearly for interested stu· dents from eighth grade up. The tryouts lake place over a two-evening period and winners are usually notified by the weekend Three concerts are presented each year along with a m a t c hing s et of youth performances. Most of the financial support comes from on auxiliary group, Las Campanas. and the county board of education gives a s mall stipend each year. according to Roe Lane, head of a new Friends group. THE COUNTY contribution is "barely enough to buy Literature," she noted, while the i <See VOlJTH, PageC2> J Dally ~llee ~Illy L .. ~•YM Devid Hunter in 1971 Mrs. Kline paused, remembering her son's final visit to Kansas at Christmas. "He told me he would never put me through having lo watch hlm die. This is why he came back here." David Hunter returned to San Clemente Jan. 8. Four weeks tater he was dead. Former Anny Capt. David Hunter was burled Feb. 14 with full military bonora al Fort Riley, Kanaaa. His flnal Valentine's gift to bla mother WU the American fia& that. had been draped over bis comn. j •• •• - ~ I 1 ., i , ) - le 1t Ill n ' nl on ,·s ee a us en I - •d 21) ll f id loJ ''· ~ 13 - n 1·r U· :ft• I 111 o I '" 111 !H J - n & ow I -- - • I I 2 2 •• ft I, .... •• l 14 •• I • IY 131 "'· •~. td iK' no I I J l I (2 DAIL V PILOT Monday February 2e 1819 ANN LANDERS /HOROSCOPE Treatment Center f o r Child Prostitutes • DEAR ANN LANDERS I am a mother who lb puyln{l lor ht'r 211ru. Whrn I wab H. I ;ot pre1 nunt out of "'t'dl()('k und hud u wonderful baby namt"d Anna Lutt-r I muned a man <not h«-r rutbrrl who moll'stc.-d ht•r when . h~ was l1 I '11dn 't throw him out. but kept hopm1 be "'ouM look for bt'lp H«> 1tartt-d to dnnk, and Anna ran away from homl' I ha\l' lt•unt•d from frt('nd!\ that Annu ta n(1w u 1)«>$tUut.e on "6th Sir l in Nttw \ ork S bt• ts onl~ 1-t Cun you dvilll' mt on how to ht'lp her• I am too llShlUlWd to ,,n my name TH BRONX 0 a t'aJ ND: J coa&.aclH Dr. JudJaou l>tniM'll (~rt,.r •ho I• a ~y~hlalrbt aod a lawyf'r, and tk pr..llld«>nC ol Od awy In U&utf' In •• \'ortt. I UH!w aatt' •oukl hu~ ... •U•M and dtd. ( fforos<•ope J fl t-:."0 l . f 'EB. %1 H> !'I\ l>Nt'\' OMAKK Rat~ 1 \1 ur ')I \pr HI 1 l't't'nl on getting .,l'l'llfld "111cl, ~\an 1•) 111.i 111luttt1on, getting t1m~ for '011~1·1f <'..inll•r, C" pracorn J)t•rl\ons fi~un• 1n i>t'\'ll•trlo Conf11a·ment 1s h•mporary You 'rt' on hnnk o ( 11u~rtunl iliscovt•ry Be dis l'rt't't. pla l'ttt th t'lotw to .-hesl TAl'Rll~ 11\pr 20 ~1.l> 20 ) Accent on get ting your wtt) "htlt• "mnlttg allies. Be gracious , rlt•),thle. st>t '<ll(hts on goal as you expand horuons Gt•r111nl. Sug1tc urius fi gure prominent ly M 111..t" de1·1~1on to d1vt'rs1fy Refuse lo be ,,,untt>d tnto l'Ol nl'r UF.MINI 1M ll)' 21 June 20 1. Test. challenge 1s on tht' lint' Thror1e:. are put to work You gain 1r thorouJ?h Chet'k details, including .... ,urr~ n,:hti. und pt•rm1si.1ons Unorthodox as- S0<'13lt' ''r fnt>nd off<'rs counsel, but adhere to )OUr own ronvtcllons C-\!\CFR tJunt" :!I July 221 Key is com mun1ca11on E\.prt-ss. project. get ideas on markt>t pl.let> Publish, d1stnbute, advertise and promote t'·ome off s1debnes. out or shell Gem1ru. \"1rgo. ag1ttanus figure prominently ,\ct1ve. vital 1nd1ndual could become ally. LEO 1Jul) 23-Aug 22 I~ Adjustment indicat· l.'d 1n lifestyle Beautify s urroundings Ehminate safety hazards at domicile. Taurus, Libra. Scorpio persons figure in scenario Financial questions are resolved by discussing them with one close to you You do not have complete story VIRGO IAug 23-Sept. 22>: Accent on legal affairs. learning who is on your side -or · otherwise. Accept facts as they exist . A void self-deception. Defer to judgment, deci~ion of partner, malt' Gather data, listen and observe. Obtain hint from Leo message. .. LIBRA ISept. 23-0 ct . 22): Emphasis on basic issues. ser vices. Dependents. pets are spotlighted. Check priorities. Means don't at· tcm pt to skip essentials· Relative confides plan of a t'llon. Be interested without becoming inex· tricably involved. SCORPIO tOct-23-Nov 211 · Roadblock is removed creative action can be taken with s uccess Be willing to m ake necessary changes. to deal with young persons and to finish long- s tandtng task, assig nment. Get rid of burden not rightly your own. You can streamUne distribu- tion, other procedures. SAGl'M'ARIUS <Nov 22-Dec . 21>: Em phasize practit'al methods. Leave experimenta · tion for another time. Stress independence, new s tarts. willingness to corret'l past errors Grand opportunity exists to improve living conditions. Leo, Aquarius individuals figure prominently. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ): Emphasis on short journey, special notes, the framework of format, creative plan. One who. recently harassed you with red tape will become an ally. Relative has significant message. Cancer in· dividual fi gures prominently. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18 ): Accent OD money, how to earn more of it, investment, sav- ings plans, contact s m ade through social gathering. Gemini, another Aquarian and Sagil· tarius fi gure in busy scenario. Element of luck or timing -rides with you. Know it, be confi· dent. exhibit your sense of humor. PISCES IFeb. 19-Mar. 20 ): Your position is stronger than might be anticipated. Cycle re- mains high -know it, imprint style, insist on cred it due. Wear "standout" colors, make personal appearances. You could win .. special contest." \ Wt'ddmg and engagement announcement.s run on Sunday m the Dally Pilot ,..orms ore oooilable at oil Dally Pilot offices or by calling l hP f"eatures bepart· ment. fi42·4.121 To avoid d1sappomlment. prospective bndes are reminded to hove their wedding stones. with a black- and·wl11te gloss11 of the bnde or o/ the couple. to the 1''eah.ires Deportment one week before the wedding f;nqogement announcements. with black-and· white glossy of the /uture bnde or the couple. must be recew<>d by the Features Dl!pOrtment su weeks before the wedding date Ah, the comfo of home de live Y/ A•• L,a~ Tltere la now a treat•eat eea&er for c.talkl pro Utuaa th flrat -and It'• about dsne. I& 111 .. •thHk-d U.ac nf"ulr a millloa dalldren from •b to tlh&ee• years of a1e art ..ow pracUd•• proaUWUoa. Tii.. dlret'tor ol UM! &ft!atm~nc pro&ram la Onhl llroedtl. U ll called MJdtowu Aaoles· ~•t llaoearce Cea&er aacl ta.e pbooe oumber la 141 ·MM Carea Nde Ul). Aayone wbo waa&a ID· for•aUo«t oo ltow to lllelp a clllld proat1t11~ gel "' of tk butlJM>u <lulucl.ln& tbe proalttate > lilould call Ulla number. DEAR ANN LANDERS· J am enclosing a cllpplna from a Salt Lake City paper. It la a pie· lure of three aona of superstar Kirk Douglas . The captJon read.a. "Michael Douglas and bi.a two atep.brothera, Erle and Peter." Evidently these young men did not have the aame mother, which makes the m HALF· BROTHERS. When a woman with cblldren marriea a mao wlth children, her children and bis become STEP·BROTHERS or STEP· SISTERS. You'd be surprised at how many well· educated people do not know the dllference. Kindly lnfonn them. -ONE WHO LIKES TO SET THINGS STRAIGHT DEA& ONE: You educa&ed a lot of people &oclay -IDeladln& me . Pe&er and Eric are tbe aoas of Aue aad Klrk Doa&lH. Tiler are HALF-BROTHERS, not STEP=BROTBEas to Michael, wbo la tile aon of K.JJt Dou1la1 aad DIHa DW Doa1la1. Different mot.hen ba_l Ute aame fatber. Gotcha. DEAR ANN : Our son bas a good job, a checking account. a savings account, a nice car. a motorcycle, plenty or clothes, spends mone} on girls and has three expensive babit.s - cigarettes, boo~e aod Pot. He eats three meals a day, lives in our spare room, gets maid service. including Jaun dry . u aea our linens. ba th room tissue. toothpaste, deodorant. and all other toilet articles. He makes long distance calls on our phone. The boy never pays us a penny. We don 't think It's right. Do many parents bave Uus problem?-ASHAMED DEAR ASHAMED: Only tbe ones who are foolish ~ to put up wltb such shameless freeloadln«. CONFIDENTIAL to How do You Ezpltln It?: Tllere la no esplanaUoo -at least I don't lmow of oae. But I& might be of help ll I quote Uta& dellcloua wit Pe~r Laurence's often-prov'°d principle: "Most discoveries are made by m1s· take, 8Dd tile bl&«e,. the funding, the lo•ger ll takea to make the mistake." Laurence also added, "Ignorance ls no excuse -It's the real tllJDg ... Consciousn Raising Sessions Set By CHERYL ROMO Of tile O•llY l"llol Si.ti In the last decade a new phrase has arisen out o.r the stru~gle for women's liberation consciousness ra1stng Wha~ is consciousness raastng and what do women dO when they attend one of tfle sessions ., According to Betsy Martin of the North Or a nge Count y Chapter of the National Organization for Women INOW 1, the process 1~ different from ma ny group encounter session:-. because confrontation between the part1c1pants is not allowed. The South Coast Chapter and the North County Chapter of NOW are co sponsoring a series of consciousne<.,s raising sesl>1uns with demonstTations being offered Tuesday. Feb 27, in Orange and on Thursday. March 8, m Mission Viejo Open to all women. tht.' sessions are fret.• and child care will be provided The lO·week series ts totally conf1de nt1 al "Anything a woman has to say as long as it's not conlrontive is valid. She know:. she can speak her mind." says Ms Martin, a former high school teacher who now works for the Orange County Water District She and three other women will act as group leaders. Friends and relatives may not participate an the same group and women who attend are a sked to commit themselves to completing all 10 sessions . The reason behmd the strict attendance re- quirement. says Ms M artan, 1s berause or ganizers feel it 1s an important part of building trust and commitment among the women "Man.i times this 1s the first tame a woman has said to her fa mily. "Look, 1 am not gotng to be home for to Tuesdays in a row · "And often it is the first time a woman has done something for herself.·· she .,ays Maria Lane is a member of the Orange County Youth Symphony. Part of the process or coru.c1ousness ra1sm~ is to get indiVlduals to set goals for themselves and to decide what 1s important to them ••• Youth ( Fro111 Page Cl ) Las Campanas money pays the director 's salary. Whal 1s not covered arc the incidentals that could make th<' symphony a little more special. such as a party after the last concert and a weekend retreat away from the area. "We have no backlog, no money to do a fu nd-raising campaign," Mrs. Lane said Koshak, who h as been director for eight years, said the orchestra has improved each year and the current group 1s "the best or- chestra we have ever had. We have bujlt lo a higher standard each year " He srud he feels that the "best qualified and most interested" students are being reached for the orches tra and that t he youth symphony works because of parental support and the help or music teachers who "belJeve strongly in hav- ing an orchestra program tn Orange County." KOSHAK, WHO IS assisted by Carmen Al- len, Irene Ima mura and Steven Smith. said be believes the orchestra Is essential for motivat· ing the talented players. "It's the only opportunity in Orange County to participate In a large symphony orchestra for young people. The average high school or- chestra has 25 to 35 students in it. "It's a chance to perform literature or a professional. advanced nature. To work with other students who have the kind of commit· ment they have to have is broadening. "It helps them decide 1r they want to be a professional musician lt teaches them the responsibililtes of a professional · · Koshak. who started playmg clarinet in eighth grade. had decided by the time he was a sophomore in high school in Portage. Pa .. that he wanted lo be a teacher and conductor. "(just knew that's what I wanted to do"' he said. "But I had no opl)Ortunity like the youth symphony. "I DID NOT even hear a hve performance or an orchestra unJ:K, my senior year or high school." His parents didn't play but he was en· couraged by them. he said "My mother tried to get me to learn piano · · Betsy Martin, who has undergone the proc- ess and has led several ~roups . 111s1sls every woman 1s changed by the experience In what way 1 "Often 1t brings a closenes::. to other women when before there was only ap prehens1on and compel1t1on with other women. she explains. For more information about NOW's con sciousness raising demonstrations. call Jant' Poole of the South Coaht Chapter at 645·5058 or Ginny Kent of the North County Chapter al 998-7930 I 000 QUALITY LAMPSHADES Harbor Lites I 0·6 bf'FY Day Incl. Sunday I 12211, ~wporl ll•d. Costa Mesq 64S.7l01 Koshak s aid h e be lieves there a r e philosophical benefits to music and performing. which is another reason he wants to see Lbe pro- gram continue . "It gives students discipline, which prepares them for any fi eld they want to go into. It is a building in of a concept of personal standards. To get ther e they have to be disciplined. Cluh Calendar run.~ eath I~ edne"1a11 m the Daill/ Pilot and contains notwP!. ol wom£'11 ' and ~t'n 1n· club met>lmgs and ''t'ents for the tollnu mq Wt'PI. - Thursda11 through \\ i•dnes day Send notices to Cluh Calendar Da1/11 Pilot I' (J IJOI 156(/ Costa Ml'SO r A 92626 BP .-.urf' lo md ude your nomP and ph1nu• number ,\nt1t•es must he m our hands twn week.\ in oduanct' START LOSING WEIGHT TODAY "It gives the m a g reater a ppreciation or life and the real menmng of hfe. They learn to ap· prcciate the stars. the trees. museums "And. there's almos t nothing like the feel· ing a large group can have of making something special in a performance." The next performance is scheduled for 4 p.m. Sunday, April 29. in the Chapman College auditorium. Me mbership rnformation for Friends of the Orange County Youth Symphony Orchestra is availa ble from the Chapman College Music Department, 333 N. Glassell. Ora nge, 92666. To requt'~I a p1ctu11 wntt' or l'all the f'l!alurt'' Deporlmt'nl fi4'l 4321 /'11 lures ore lm11IPd In fund raisers OJ>t'n lo the public Skiing classified ads are the best place to buy or sell ski wear and equipment in the O.aily Pilot. 642-5678 Hf)'( " 1 I r\fl; 'Af rJM .t~ ~l l1 Ir tit1 H,._ Ptdfl lilfl1 t!l't 'IH)~f"ll '''r.fl1tf 1h SUPER OO~lllU P<'i!v 1rQ Plan ''"" •n<10,. f•lu 1. lov pool!Cl, '"° >n<J!I'\ ... 1tmu• r,"'"'~ ~f<YftU' lo I~ wa!"! bla;>! ~"'1Dllfl otS\ OU•·•l<l 11!1' oit mtnShu'' (Vlil' !•v OOAlllll A ~IW'41 W~'tf P.1 8ol/I ., 1~ N II monP't b.ict qu.. lllle\' ··~°""'~' -------------, , Th er•·· no plae9 Ilk• home to enjoy •II th• comfort• of a tubscriptlon to the Dally Piiot. After all, wh•t c ould b• cozier than the convenience and Hvlngs over buying It at th• newaatand? For aa tittle at S3.SO a month, you c.n have th• Dally Piiot right at your dooratep Heh dey. And what'• even better Is that the Dally Piiot arrtvH tu•t when you have time to r .. d -WHkday evenlnga, weekend mornings. So go ahe•d. l!ntoy all the comfOftl of ham• delivery of the Dally Piiot. To begin Immediate home delivery, call 142-4321. Of juat tlll In the coupon and mall to: Orange Coalt Dally Piiot, Clrculatton Dept., P.O. lox 1MO, Cott• Meaa, CA. 92929. 642-4321 DAILY PILOT >-ftl ftl,, -~ 0 41 Ill> t: ! 0 0 e if 0 >o u_ 41 "i £0 ~ '2 ·-.... c ., Cl > o = -~ .: ti = e ,, 0 :.. s: : ti • E .... ,, • "C z c G> c: 0 f ?: G 41 .... ~ • c en u; • :; 0 cc u ·c l9 i5 j I i _____ .. f I • -4 • '• 1 I I PUBUC NOTI t; PIC'TlnOUI eutUNU • MAMW JTA'-MINT , ...... _,,,. .. r-~ ere .. ,,.. ---ICOU ·~INf~ CCHT(lt\ OltANGf fW!l O.W Stt•I NewJlllrt ._,.CM...,_.,_. 0-....~ ll•t ... V .. L1419.._.. ......,..,. ....... C...iM<l'I• ..... 0 flt "1M, ,... 11 M•H Mei9ft =:.°"""'cw-0o1 Met c .... ~ .. ,...,...,, O.•••· 111 Jiff ""'n• ~ .. *'-_, ••.c" c .. m,.,,.,. "-"' " )l••O.•, llJM .. fl !::"'• .__, ltfff" Ce•ll.,,.,. $! ...... , ... '-Ntt, \ ,..,.,., \IH ~·· ...... , •... ,. , ......... . "-A lft-.,t IWI! ' inn .. _ _, ..... C-4 11"""'• .,... ... ,., .. ••••• n ••• •••-,,.., ... GoillllOtl'i.etlU 0...111 w_ a.--., ... l -"-1411~ C:.11...._ \.I "I ~in.,.,. c~ •~,.,.. I, .. ·-~· ,.,_, •••' I U• .. '""'I-~1 ........ 1 Oow Cln c ... ._ "-"• .....,_ ,_,,,.,. 0.14' '"" ~''"'" ... -....... , . ............. _"""' ,,_,, '"-..... ,....,...... .,.._ '""' .,," "'-c ....... ( ···~ •• ci ...... ('"""'• c.1-.,...., • ...,.....,n .. ,... ... ,_ p_._ °'-( M\I 1 .. 111 l"ll(lt ~ .. ~--· \ ,, " .... , .. ~ P BUC N<rrl E ClfY OP (04l6 M&'A 11'0 .. Al-C,..1-·•--L«GAL NOTICI. NOTICC IS HfACev ylV( .. llW\ '"" ... l_nq "~-... -· "' ••-' ~t'ly ~ -~IO '" llW f'Oho o.p.,,.._ Of llW C1ly Of ,.,..,. M•W lo. • -lof "' t•c.-.. Of .. ,,,.,,. '"'°' 00\ ky \ ()f11'19r \4.tlwtnn V•r"•h 10 SoCI 81c-,c .. , Ito¥'\ Wllll• AMF 8t<V Cle, lloV \ 0. ..... ltutty 10 ~ B•t y ,, •. eo,·, 8rOWft 10 Spcl 8 1(¥< •• 8oV'\ Blue S.eo Tod Wllll•'"' 10 SOcl 8ky< ... &o\l'l Brown Rov<'• Unton !O Sod 8kKle, Gt•t's 81u. e.co s •• , 81(YCle. eov·s o..,. ~"'"''"" V.,\I ly 81<V<I•, Bov' Grun Schw1n" V<tttl!J 10 5f)d lll<V<le 8oy • Sliver Tee" l 5911 Bt<vct• aov·s c;r...,. S<ltwl"" 10 Scit:I Bl<ycle Boy'' Sllv•r Mo10<c'°" 8kvc ... Money' AMJFM Ceswtt.Reconlott HOTICE IS FUR THE A GIVEN lhitl II l'O O'<t,_r _.,.. -PfOVet hli -...rlfllCI M l1'e "'-"' wllhln YV•~ <71 Cl~ lol'-lf'Q tile PVt>ll<ellon ol !Ills Ne41c», -Ill .. ther<'IO 51\ell VHI In Ille f lftClff, It f!lere be one Of' on 1 ... City M Gb1• Mesa In •llkll C<IS# the .,,._rty -II 1111 SOid •I P<lbllC •UCl lOfl •t • ll"'t ...0 CMle lo 1111 .,,_,."<l'CI DATED "-wr, 20, Im A E NETH 041EF OF POLICE Put>ll~ Or .... Co.tst Delly POOi FtilN«y 2', lffl 103-1' PUBLIC NOTICE c~ P'·1'1'22S FICTITIOUS BUSINESS. NAMI! STATEMENT rr.e tollowlnq lie"-! II CIOl!H1 l><m· ftfUU M J.M. OlD FASHION OONU T HOUSE II I, l:S?Sol C.bot lloed, L.t9une Hiiis, CtllfOf',.le "'53 M~ J. M01tt1>erre1. nu C.nvon OrMr, Co$1• Mew Ctllfornl• 91tt17 Tiiis l>U\1-lb ConOUCll'CI l)y "" ln-CllVICluet Mol>ummlld J Molt'ih-fre• 'Tiiis statement ... , lltlMJ w1111 ,,,. County Cl•rll of Or.-nqe Counly on Ftl>r,..ry 20, 191"1. PROFl!SSIONAL l!SCAOW Sl! .. VICES 1nt "..,.. Tft1i11 ,..,. s-.~c•mt1 I! K'9W Ne. 191Jl 1°'M F PubllsNd Ortn91 Co.ts! O.llv Pilot Feo it, -s. u . 1t .,,, 102-1'1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE F!CltU Publlshed Or<tnOI' c°"'' Dallv Pllol. F"b 17 !9, 16 end Mar. S. 1'7'1 Sl4·7~ PUBLIC NOTICE 6 4 2 • s 6 7 8 D A I L y p DAILY PIL01 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678 ] One Cati Service Fast Credit Approval • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• G11•tal 1002 fieM1al IOOZ Ge-al IOOZ EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY w•r·•MoHcr. All real estate advertlsed to this oewapape'I' la sub· ject to the Federal Fair Hou11og Act of 1968 wbicb makes 1t 1Uegal to advertise "any pre- ference. hm1tat1on. or dlscnaunauoo based on race. _<;<>lor1 religion. sex • Of' DaLI008.I ongm, or an tntenuon to make any such preference, llm1ta Uon. or chscn mmatJon." • •••••••••••••••••••••• EASTS I DE ICHOCKOUTt You can punch lhe6e features mt.o your com· put.er & couw out a wm· oer. New .tppllaoccs, copper plumbing , lakben gardco wan00w. ~kylaght 10 fmly rm makes this I vly home bright & <'heerfu I Sparusb frplt Tiled front court yard entry Cull now for appt. Open Ewi. ~9Ull Cl.ASSYCOMDO XLra lg. 3br condo Fabulous throughout ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESJ.1-:Y N TAYLOR C HEALTOH.S ~111cc lH· llG CAMYOM TOWHHOME $166,300 Great golf t•ourse view lookinJ:: straight up the fairway! Beautiful .. Olt kcr<'Sl " 2 bdrm 2 bath model t·on\ «>nt<'nlly located and a very popular plan. Upgraded carpeting & drapes. Sunken 11v1n g rm with fireplace adJoins outdoor vtew dt!ck. WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS 211 I Saa Jooquht Hll1 Rood MEW'°9tT CENTER, M.I. 644-4910 'Jlus newspaper Will not know1nJiy accept any adver t1s1ng f or real estate which IS m v1ola· tJooofthelaw. Cozy frplc, pool. JaCUlll One yr new. Seller will 3 BEDROOM finance. No loan fee-.. LUSTIMGFOR SALESPERSON low interest rate Cdll $70,950 !J79.5..170. 3 br starter homt.-, lgt> cc- A meot patio. 11pnnkler LLS TA TE system, separate lc1un· __...RS "'_. ......1.1 I'°' dry room. Earthtone uv -: AU'fW"l'"TIMrS grad~ comtoA Jo'a st ap ..._.. chKk thlr ads A EAL TORS prec1abng area. 646-771 1 ....., -,.,.,,.. ..... -· ______ , ,--....,,..,,._,..._ nn 1-clatefy. TM NEWPORT HEIGHTS DAILY PILOT••-• 41G-tn. $94,950. lllbilty for the first ht· Perfect l ocation for cornctlwrtto. Oftty. future family Close to schools. excellent yard for eolarg1nR home Ha..nforSde EVERYBODY'S OOlNG ••••••••••••••••••••••• IT• fieMh.. IOOZ OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5 337 RAMONA ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUTESTARTat $67,000 R-2 lot. beam ceilings and pabo are some or the ameo1t1es tb1s 2 bedroom. l bath home has to offer. IL also features a garage. smaJI den & good Costa Mesa locaboo Just listed call now. 556-2660. c;::sELECT T' PROPERTIES 4BR +den i~w·~:~ 4~ BEACH FRONT MANSION **U.S.** *VETERANS* Recent changei. 1n V A regs may enable you to qualify for Sl00.000 homt> loans with absolutely NO DOWN PAYMENT. Worid RMI Estoh an Orange County firm spec1a.llung 1n VA home loans. we·re the VETh lb.atbelp tbe VETS For more lllfo. call : Iii Horton. Aft. 541-0800 "MOVE IN PERFECT'" 1f )OU like the real estak busine:.s. you will love 1t here. commu.s1on spilt to 90%. Call Sm1l1n' Melvyn, 646-4463 -· REAL CHARMER FOROMLY $77,800 rtesh & 311")' New paint IJ\S1de & out Lge add on fmly rm for your fmly"s el\joyment. Qwet. tree lined street. New roof a year ago. Beller see th~ one fast' Call now! Open E"~-~9491 I Sunke~,~~~! room Bnck fa.replace. All re A magn1f 1cent cx -penence o( ocean hvsng' Pnvale road. gudrded entry' Secludel1 ltandy beach! ~ spac1uult wood deck ~! Secludl•d gardens• A tru t:' maslerp1ece tor lu>e unous UVIDR' Don l wait. there 1s nolhm~ hkeo tt anywhere'' t-'or details '~filn <.:ha rming <'Ondo 1n "Ba<'k Bay' Profess1onally decorated in popular carthtont>i. l•••------- L modeled kitche n. Ex cellent location Im maculate bargain' Call Cast t.o take advantage! ,.c-.-~ 0 ti'M T Red Estate Sales Seeking progressive m dependent R E Broker acuvely selling. with dc sire to earn haght>r com missions. Reply ~1th bnef qua.llf1cauoru. and expenence to Ad No 466. Datly Pilot, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 COUHTRY sm1HG Here IS a Cine aJtemallve to small lots & congeste<t tract llVtDg. Located m a foothill area, but c lose to shopping & top rated scl>ools. 3 Bedroom. 2 bath, Caouly room, eo<>I & it's top quality. Full price. $124,950. <.:all m -3191. «=:SELECT T' PROPERTIES To place your message before the read.mg public. phone Owly PLlot Classlfie<t. 642-5678 Ollly the Delly Piiot ... 111 t•lf• you wMt'WMW In~' local C°""9111nltr ... _,r o.y Hliilijj(.)I *** Mrs. P. A. Fra,. 1043Granvllle Dnve Newport Beach You are the Wlllller of Two Free Tickets to CIRCUS VARGAS Feb. 2601 or 28th 4 ~PM Performanct> TheC1ty Shopping Center Oraogt' To cllllm your tickets call 642·5678, ext. 272 •.• * JIB>ROOM +GUEST GIA.MTV ALUE! Ga.ant back bay bar.ia in' Ovef' 2400 ft. of peat'eful llvmg. 4 Bedrm::. + 3 batbs-OR-3 Bedrm ~ separate guest/maid's qt.rs. Formal lJ vmg rm Family rm. 2 Fpks Cov ered bnck patio. Potting house--and much tJXYe at a bargaan pnce! Call now to see. 673-8550. ~•I •J 111 "I • ' t. ,_, r" I ,, I [~- Lookinx for a home of your own? You'll IJnd many homes advertised for sale 1n Class1hed everyday. CE 110111 ILllffS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE DANA POINT Overlooking Dana Point Harbor & M ari n a. Thi s Exceptional Con t e mp o r ar y Offers A Breathtaking 180° View. 2 Story Entry Leads To A Dramatic Liv . Rm. W /Rou gh Hewn Wood F . P. Sep. Din. Rm. Gourmet Kitchen. Master Ste. + 3 Fam. Bedrooms. Beautiful Grounds W /40' Pool. Sauna. Jacuzzi. $600.000. SUPERI DUPLEX On Capistrano Beach. Each Unit Has 3 BR + F . P . Wonderfu l Location W /Seclusion & Leisure On The Sand Midway Btwn L.A. & San Diego. Come Inspect This Gor~eous Smog.free & Temperate Locale. $750,000 ® --........... ' I 631-1800 llt DOYB DllVI Wet bar, plush t•rptaniz & rrurrored wall!> Cloiw to pool Only SI 16.~00 756-UOI TRIPLEX Great lrKOMe! ! Sl.oglt> story owner unit wtlh 2 townbouSt· des11Zn rear uotts. All with pnvate patJo. W ID hook up & 1.ndw1dual enclosed garages. Call now 673-8.SSO rtf f I t11 '>•It , • •,, ' 1H ,, I [~-] 2EASTSIDE SPECIALS! TAKE YOUR PICK!! Botll have alley <1cce:.s for campers & boats. W-0-W!! ONLY $69,900! Very pnvate sharp t'on do. Perfect for a starter home or ror a retired cou- ple New neutral shadf' crpts Two pat10s. Onl\. I yrs new Near shopi. & "I schools. We've h .1 1 numerous anqu1 rll'' & Uus one I!> about read) t u selJ Don t he31lale Call now! Open Eves. 545-94!11 Q.IFfHAVEH 2 Bdrrru. • 2 baths, den frplc Close to schools & churches. Short esrrow possible. $149,500 1)73.3663 &t2 2253 associated BROkERS-REAl TORS 202'> W Bolboo 071-3661 Both are m pn me a re a . '1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. •., blk from New port. 11 One has a pool & lge fmly rm'w /huge frplc. Each needs some tender loving care One hai. ao ado on mstr bdrm bWte. Phont today for details Open Eves MS 9491 for Ad Action Call a Daily PiJot AD-VISOR 642-5678 WOODIRIDGIE LAURElWOOD The largest of the patio home~. 4 Bd. 3 Ba .. walk to l<ikc and new s_he;>PPl~I! center. Enjoy cle~ant hvmg m this fomlly c·ommunitv Only $134.900 . A COlDWIU INCH CO. 644·9060 21tt SANJOAOUINHILLSRO. IN~TCENTE .. SIEK & FINlf QUICKEN C T E E L U E R E J G D A H E 0 0 0 R s T 0 DIN E K c 1 u OIE c w G 0 1 H N D E X 0 R A N H R E E T E 0 R E H E A A M M 0 Z A U M T T A 0 A A G F A A 8 R N P A V N W P A P N M W A 0 0 S C 0 R M E 0 W T E R S R V 0 U E 0 R T S R I A A P Y X E I 0 0 A R E R E W E S T E 0 £ K 8 L 0 R 0 F G P E V V T N N O L K V E E R D T N E S H R E I H R R G V I R C A H 0 N 0 R T S ~ 0 R R I P U E E C 0 T U A N 0 R U C E T D V 0 A Y E A 0 l A R A S U Q I P H R E T T A E R R I H T A U F T X X E R 0 P R C V R C H S A S Y 0 U T E S E N T U E H P S H C A A S R N R T T E D N E H £ U P R ·. I 2. % a. ) 6 14 •• hi. ~c. td IK. no (?I Pel v PIL.Of Monday, Febru•rx N , tl?t ~!.~.~ ....... ...._..For S. ......._Hr-W. He.u Few-S. ......_Poe W. fl Her.. tOOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••-.. tooz .... ,.. too ....... 1002 •••r., 1002 1 •·A.c.NLoh •••••••••• ••• •••••••••• •••••••• ••• ••••••••••• ••• •• ••• • •• •••••• •••••• •••• ••• ••• ••••••••••••• Sub dlva1loa1 ready le Wld. UDO ISLE Bay view from 2 patio d c enh nc ru torn pocluu :'i bdrm., 4 b th tr dttional hom • Uke J\ • Jdeal fot entertnlnhta. Corner lot ~.000 IAC• IAY \.'inc 4 bdrm • 2\t ~th·r mnv home on quu.•t l'UI dl' b c. Over ·1i d pool, pin~ hol.l!)l\ ~h~•R • $169. Term IAYFIOHT St·~·t.·r.tl rmc ba> rront horn "1th pwr & shJt AVALON Well ronstrucloo. 3 BR l il . oak floor. purlrnl h semcnt ~oncrele fo undation Jo"lals ur a $120.000 BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR J.l 1 t\11y\•d1 D1 ·v•· N R o 7') olbl raell offlee ltldependenttv owned end operated. IUILD YOUR DREAM HOUSE or choose from 3 plans included with either /or both of these 2 contiguous R·l lots in the village of Northwood in Irvine. Ideal location to shopping & freeways. Asking $45.000 each. I llOCK J MACH, I ILOCK 2 ~ ldcal locat1on in quaint Old Corona del Mnr. one bl~k t.o Blg Corona. one block to ahops, restaurants and rvlrc. Thl.S 3 b droom home has 3 b lhs. a d n, remodeled kitchen ond a li~ht. briAht. chc •ry atmosphere. It is a Corunu dtl Mor rlnsslc ut ~.000. ~I Ii M Rf.Al TORS'. 6/b 6000 2443 East Coht H111hw1v . Co1om1 del Mar dl'.O 111 M1 .. 1 V1·rcf1• .11 !>1tJ 5990 LOVE AT FllST SIGMT -You'll have Cun in this well planned clean spacious 4 Bdrm 2 bath home in rantastic area of Costa Mesa. The warmth or the Cireplace is enjoyed from living. family and dining room~. Island kitchen with eating a rea. 1Patio has wood deck with builtin BBQ. RV area. Close to shopping and freeways, just listed. $94,500. Cal 54Ml4t Serving Costa M esa·lrvine Huntington Beach-N ewport Beach WIST MIWPO'T 2 Bdrm beach totta1e. l block bay• beach PALMDIS•T f.4UN1TAPT COMPL£X W/adJoln1n1 land. S?,Q.000. Home + coUage behind oceanfro nt · only SU0.000. Prine. Only Br\ 536-84 c:.... ........ 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHORECLIFFS VIEW fmPoSing atone Cacade gives way to impressive entr y ball featuring spiral staircase leading to magnificent master suite. Fabulous country kilcbeo shares ocean & canyon views. Large l.ot room foc pool. Incredible family h o m e . For private showing call ~21. Newport c.-.. 640.5357 ... s ~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS Aff<>aDAIU AXB! It's a mess. but afford•· ble, act now! 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths. $79,900. Owner wants t'lJt ! f'.a.ll 546-2313 ~~N Ill 9•H\ llJN IO iq N~' IJtlfillttl Luxurious ocean vi\! w si.ogle family homes nr the harbor. 2012 to 3206 sq. rt. coming soon ! 549-5W LA&UMA IEACH FOlt UNDH $200,000 COZY LAGUNA CANYON NOMI - Cller••t two ltedroo• wl" owHr ••= ............ st1.110. NOITH LAfMIMA NOPaTY zot• W ,, .. ,.., .... two ...... ceetep .. ~,..., ..... , fw •;c• 1149.MO. UMuwAL Ci>UAUTY H -l1JM1 dec...e.d l 1tc•11• ....... c ........ wttlt,•uaelc oc._ •lew. SIH.IH OUTSTANDING FAMILY NOMI - P•a ... c oc... .... 4 b1•u•ltw• ..... Clll • lllC. s I tl,100. a lingo 497-3331 ~lliitlb .... PROBATE SALE OCEANFRONT ••Clff UIO deg view. Privacy. Z Bdrm. 2 ba, ma In floor. Plus 3 rm guest apt w/batb, 2 decu. O.W.C w /29"lo do, 9lWi % int. Only $259,000. Owner Bkr. 833·1355 or 499·1731. Broten Welcome. 2 Bdrm .• 2 ba. Windsor. Farmer model home in 1be Tenace. Fully air cood. Prime location on major greenbelt, just steps t.o pool & J8CUZZI. I-------- lf.C. TAYLOR CO. 640-5112 2 IDIM COTT AGE ... ,_~u.ft Pegged hardwood noon. beamed eel.lings. 2 brick fi:reolaces and Dice coun- try kitchen •lrllSSIVE Fe lulaV.., 1034 .,.5.,3,. • .,.111111 .. "-·lfhl..,£ Catalina It N. coastliDe ••••••••••••••••••••••• -"'-"-'""_ .. _rv_~-""--"-"1"_, Vlst.11 fl'OID 2-st«y beam VA MO DOWM &....-llHda I 041 CleWn& home. 3 Decks It Come and see this ••••••••••••••••••••••• laf'8ebackyard.$111.50C>. beautiful 3 bedrm home <BOOtDP> WA TERFROMT POOL& JACUZZJ -PLUS- 2 Bdrm. 2 bath income unit with private patio and yard. MAHDHEW TOvn.tOMES "°'""-' wooch·· (EutaideCosta Mesa) witb gorgeous family MOMAICH •WOODS COYE room. Has assumable .SUMMIT t New 2 BR few quality LIVIMGI. Owner must sell , 2 Bdrm. couot.ry kitchen. -Reduced oversu:ed lot. Close to (wys, schools and shop-$ 3400 ping. Walk lo maJor EASTSIDE 3 Bedroom, 1 bath home in Costa M csa. $89,900. As k lor Robert Milliken, 631·1266 Redto $185,000 FOR INFORMATION Cal 644-7211 au2Santa Ana Ave. Lst. Priced to sell at Beaut. B·Plan unit 2 conadousbuyer.Cloeeto $98,000. Ca II P . 8 . I. bdrm. & den. 2 baths, beach but bas outatand· 964-2431/835-0211 pagec. panoramic ocean & mtn lng ocean view. Spacious. #9515. views. Enjoy sunsets or rooms. elegant muter. IM690fl leada I 040 Catalina Island. Comm. SUl8,500 (80l6DP) Immaculate slngle story P8T..,k,.,. m_._500,.,.._. -~-­ beach & wate rfront lJ . • · '·. . · English Tudor 2&3 Br spilt level. 2&3 car ga r age. frpl cs , miCJ'OWaves, greenhouse windows, pool, spa. TENNlS court. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool,u!!tcuzzi & clbbse. HEW IUCH HOME *134,.,.,., townhome on Wood • • bndge Lake. Watch the 962·44n r.:. 546·8103 sunset over the bridge ----------------JUSt steps Crom your £'SIDE-I 0% DH! R8fT 'TIL YOURS ENJOY beach side patioi.. Lovely GlANT mast.er suite, 3 3 Bedroom. 1~ bath. .. the ocean breezes in oak walled hreplaCI! ba. den GREAT patio, famtly home. Covered this very attractive. By builder, block to beach. ocean view. S BR. 4112 ba. 3000 sq fl, lrg balconies. 208 15th St. Sl.95,000. Also 4 BR. 2'h ba at00117thSt. $129.000. C§s Coldwe~l l!onkcr 3 Monarch Bay Pina Laguna Niguel 496.7222 131..0836 900 Gii_,... St. U,..IHdt Convenience kitche n · · $71 000 u sinale level 3 bdrm .. ~ IDICTOWave & breakfast tennis, pool, jac+more! patio. ' a terms. bath home; 2 frplcs. & nook too. Mirror walled GRAND VALUE $82,500. 7;4-7800 Cf1/.Y ranuly rm .. 3 car Duplex. 717 Feroleaf, t Br 1 Ba each. cute & clean + room to build . $162,500. By Owner. 640-1840 From $89,950 646-0061orSSS·1920 Developed by Woodt.ree Dev. Co. 536-1711. --------1~-------- rormaJ dirung room. 2 Bruce.9B6~8377 --·."!! garage. off-street park-Pat1os. Steps to spa, ,.,. M Ing (or boat or trailer. beacb&laJ<e! PnceJui.t ---------S172.500. reduced $.)400 for fast ~ ~ -~ ~ ~ sale! c;!1 oow152.1100 **VETS * * r 1 ~'7%: :t:,·7 ~=l~n~~ttu:~ ~~~~~· .. ~~~~ BAY & "" lt~ftilJ1f ff~f!.:~:041! DO -------BEACH DECORAToR·s veteounse1or ~ 4so NEfs8¥1rR· oR. ~~!0!4!ake &~~~Too 4/1) at blfl New plush neutral Be a u t i f u 1 h 0 m e .,...IVERSITY p ARK IAYCREST shade crpls. Rough sawn w/secluded yard in IRVIHE NEWPORT BEACH cedar Pane I i n g . DOVER SHORES. Lrg Spacious 3 bdrm., 3 .()ramaUc alnum entry Truly lovely. spacious baths, family rm. + Hugi! liv rm. Dual 10' pool. Jacuzzi, separate and sparkllog home with bridst. rm. home in de· f 1 o or t o c e 11 i n g family rm, formal dining two mast.er suites and a 11 g h l f u I are a of slumpstone frplc. Cov'd rm. bllns including dis· TV room. Skyligbted en-BAYCREST! 2 Fplcs .. patio laced w /artistic hwruiher. $299,000. . try, sunny kitchen with paUo, sprinklers. Priced treatment of latice work. JAC607!S6R6E7AL0 TY breakfast hareba . W1o,od1 t.osell al$205,000! Call todayforappt.Open '1-de.:ks wit eaut u lalM>aloyPtop. Eves 545-9'91 --------plants for privacy and R~ . CLOSE TO great entertaining. walk .,..._.... E O ... LY to shopping a reas. A • 675-7060 • LAI< • " "mustsee"al$103,000. -------$85, 950 COLE OF MEWPORT Shows hke brand new · REAL TORS decorated in lvly 675-5511 eartbtones.Tilischann------------mg 2 bdrm. 2 ba condo w/ror.y brick frplc is a W\Mel'. 759-lSOl PANORAMIC VIEW-ON WATER LUXURY FOR YOURDOUAR You must see th is gorgeous 4 Bdrm. 4 bath, formal dl.ni.ng rm, family rm. breakfast nook. 290C sq. ft. of luxury. Super Costa Mesa location Close to everything & waiting just for YOiJ. Call ~3666. TRIPLEX Refurbished townhouse units ln excellent rent.al area--North Costa Mesa, nea r (reeways . Fireplaces and pnvate patl06. $155,000. PETE BARRETT REALTY 642-5200 "FIXER" 2 HOUSES ott LOT 2 Bdrms each. $850,000 byowner.~ms t024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Atrium. Jacuni & Tropical Setti~ Master suite wiUi sauna; romantic interior wit.b 4 bedrooms, family room. den, 2 fireplaces and patio. Lots more, anx· lous! $122,900. BKR. Call 541).173> . TAAmL -· . I STTIMI OFHllED IHSS YEA.RS U you've been wailing for tbia one. be.re it is! R·2 Jot (2 Bdrm house in· eluded free). Room for duplex Plus. (8173 sq.ft.) Great Ea.stslde local.Ion. $51,500 super nice 1 Bdrm Condo oo l floor. Owner will consider FHA or VA fioandn«. SUNSETR.E. 557-3623 Asking $65,000. Call ---------~ll51 ·~• HERITAGE . • REALTORS flltESTIGE TRACT Owner transferred. ~ost beautiful 4 Bdrm. 2 story on market. Tastefully de- corated. huge redwood guebo for plants or sum ELEGANT but comforta-mer retreat. Price re · ble. Thia 2 story 5 bdrm. duced to $103.000 3 ba. home bu been fully SUNSET R.E. decorated in warm earth 557-3623 tooea by Cost.a Mesa's ~~~~~~~~~I fioeat furniture store. ~ ro .. .. Among the many ......-.. .. amenities are over 125 ••••••••••••••••••••••• roUsofwaUpaper, teak & GUARANl'EED tile noors. l avish Owner draperies & much more. SALE Mesa del Mar. $129,000. Btflly customized S & S MoVl•llCJ. Prine. Only. Owner I built 4 bdrm, fmly home 1 Ageot556-85 w/added on fmly rm. Must Sell! ~-----•r Jacuzzi "' mllCh, much Newl y c arpe led 3 more! Tb.is is a W & L bedroom home with dln· PICK UP purchased home w /in· ing, entry and outside dependent appraisal. fireplace. Lush yard and M>-7711 2 patios. Don't wait! & DELIVERY $104,900. BKR. Call C!J Walker & Lee ~1m Won't be oeceasary from Tll.~L this home. Walk t o ___ Re_al_Es __ ta_te __ _ ~ schools <pri mary thru COMYBUIHT -· community college), and locatiOll nr San Diego lhopping. Quiet cul.de-Frwy, Irvine lod. com- HOW SOOM sac. &>lex. scbool5 & shopping. CAHYOUMOVE7 ~ Nice5br.2~ba home. Joto this super re-21 ParkPlac:e,1nc8'2·7461 modeled 3 Bdrm. 2 bath Mesa Verde home . WOODBRIDGE Features a oew roof. new Mag111flce11t 2 bedroom co11do I• unrlty bultdl11g with nfl11emt11t beflttiftg a perlKtloN1t! Cal for dttoHt Oft this MW tl1HIMJI loot sllp cnaffdM. $199,500. kitchen. new bath, new Hewport C..ter SPECIALS carpets and oew added 640-HS7 IACIC IAY SJ 9 on family r oom and ·---------•I Desirous of living ln the IARGAIH J 00 master bdrm. Aak.ing on· 1' beautiful lakeside com· Luxurious Woodstream ~ f 1y $87,500. Call 546-5880 DREAM HOUSE unique munity of Woodbridge? FOREVER VIEW OF CATALINA .hist steps to Oct-CMfrOftt beach .ct Mrfl Lwge 4 & 2 beclrocMI dliplex t. active rewtal ..... $197,500. WATERFRONT HOMES 2436 W Coa~t High\' tl1. Newpor1 Beach 631·1400 .,.,_,,,, .,_ l.Jf .... .. °""""' .,..,., .... .. """'' .,. __ MC.,•Pvltif -~ ..... 10-ttw., 71-TJJIQ.••tta , ..... "'-,._ ,, ...... ,.._ .... ·~ '"" .,,_ a1te .... ..... ·--.,,.,,. . ·-..... ·-.,, Nnlr-1 bedroo 2 •Lory Walle Qrte2 Br wffrplc. Owner formoredet.aUs. deaion·. Prl"ed' below We have homes avalla· m, " · will finance. No loan " .... ble in the range from to pool. Y.M.C.A., shop f / 1 f . market value. $119,500. ....,llOOto*'•"ooo ping, $92,000. 10% Down eea n o qua.' Y 'n g 642-7817 •·~ --· . Hurry,cal1646--4477. Hurry I Wo nt l ast! • KEY 64$-7221 2 Braod oew 3 bdrm. 2 ba. ()ntu iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllllli•--homes, formal dlnlnr c P.€ALTOP.sh t:; rm, aep. rm rm. 2 frplcs. EASTSIDE R·2 deep kit. 2 car aarage. Jr W< ><JDRRIDGE REAL T'I' CJassUied Ada are the fii 21 Freshly painted 2 BR 20'16 • 211*1 Oranre Ave. answer to a successful ~ cottage on bulldable R·2 $ 1 3 5 • O O O e a c h . _::======- garage or yard sale! lt'1 ,.......__..___ • lot. $74,900. A1eot. OWnter/A&\, 842·2184 or BEAIJTlfUL 551-3000 a better way to tell more W"klff R.afty 552·7367 6'J3..a182. people! ~~=;;;;:;=~~~:;;:::::=-1 & VACANT ~II. macnab I Irvine ?-realty IAYSHOllS! Spacious fa mily home in one of Newport's fine s t b eac h communities w /prlvacy & 2 beautiful beaches. Sunny & bright ; newly painted inside & out + new cpt. 5 BRs (4+omce> w/2 BR suites upstairs (perfect for teenagers!). An ideal environment for Camlly living. $320,000. Beverly Morphy 642·82M. (V.96) "'2·8235 901 Oovtr Orlw 644·61" Harbor View Center lrvlM at C•mpus V•lley Center 752·1'14 • ' Cl<a\l ~)A-4i-~S• San Mt1ue1 i n the p Cit.I fabul o u s R anch . That /nfri911in9 W onJ Gome witli a Cli11d:le Feaun. include • large -----.....,. .., GAT 1. l'OUNt bedrooms, 3 baths, ceo· O~ .....,. e1 .._ tral air, tdeal locaUon '°"' "'°......, _. i. with DO ueociaUon dues 1ow '° '°"" '-....,. _.., and ln walkina dlatance " E L p y T I of Ule temdl cow1.I. Aak· • 1nlll17,900. I I r I r ~-~ l\.\NLlf I: I n I l Y ')I') ,'()()() • "f~~.~$ LJTlUS IN r r 1• r r r 1 i) IJiliscWliU •eovt uftUs J TO GlT AN$Wfl I I I I I I SCl+M-LITS ...._. .. Ct.cHlc ..... It 00 iwwwtC IHTUITUIOCll LoYel7 eectuded 2 •l0r7 -..... 4 bedroom. raml· IY room, formal dinlnt, lar1e cn aater sulte, fabuloul b\I Y•rd w1lh beaut1ftd 1.aodscapioa • 119Uo. Bnt prie9 for this model at llM.IOO. ~CIMTH llAl.n 640-1112 Fastionable Wrap! I J , .. 9277 $1ZESU-4 > "" 11f ,,,.i_ 11f~ .... The Best Vest! 7244 The vest is toP$ m fasll1on-wu1 owtt shirts, Of alone. Rows of ables acid crunchy texture to the front ol this smart vest with mock P«llet'S. po'"ted honts. Knrt of synthetic wonted -lASVI Patten1 12«: Siles 10-12: 14-16 included. $1.50 b eec11 pettM11. Add .ac each pelt~ b fwst<11$$ w• mfll end h'1!dh111-SeM ts .... Neeorecratt Dept. 10s Dally Pltot .. JU, ON CWill St.; .. '°"' ., l•u.,.. .._, ....Zif.,..... ..... NEW/HOW' Ou1 1979 NClOU· CAAfl CATALOO.... 200 ~ ,., des!ans. J "" PlttWll pnnted rn11dt. Send 7SC ln.cllllcl/t.f T ....... JUI 121.,*hell 0.. .... SUI 121.-..-·11Dlllla ••. UI 12"flftr ..... . . . . . JJI 1rs.r.-~ ........ UI llMiftl '• ......... UI Pattern Dept. 442 l1J.Hklt ·~,.... P"llf&<~~ Dally PllOt ltt.s..tt ·~Pd .. UI Ul.P... • .... .. Wllllllllt=._~ 117-(lwln'1 ........ lM 1•11. ,.. llHlftr Mr Qllfta .... lM •.sm.. -., 1...,..Cledllt ...... •• All tflt MW tlotlleS 10ll llflld lot • ·~ .... • ••• SIM !OU' bl/llJ hfe ere 1n ow $!'RING-l = ... . . . .... nt SUMMER PATTERN CATALOG• l , 'blt ....... H Orts-. tG9S. s~ l*'fS. •ts. I 9-... . ~ PM II 50 "9e pettlfn 1~ "1llila ••... C011po11. Stlld m I.._ Cllldlitl.. ••• M 1»S11••••w.su1 • ....._. -..: .... 12MM1'-, ....... $1.50 ,.,.., ... ~~-· •• "' Jn.I...-Qllllll .... $1.50 lOZ .............. ,,_ m ...... ·w ....... SUI l014'11Clllilll .•..... 75' -, \ HIW ILDG. FOi SAU GET INVOLVED OUR CLIENTS LOVE lNFLA TIOH 1'ht•rc ls ma ny a man who'd happily sell hls stock or mutuot funds for what he paid for them 4 or S years ago. Would you i;ell your home or income property for what you paid for It 4 or 5 years ago? Our clients continue to pros per by buying. selling. and exchanging real estate. FF.fo; OWNERSHJP LAND&: BLOC JRVINE JNOUSTTtlAL COMPLEX FllEEWAV LOCATION. 17 706 SQ. fo.,. APPROX l l ~(!!!q .q~~. pool, ,H. f•m rm romplrl«' ) 1'1.'modt lt<d Ut• IOI m1.H h mor Ownc-r -.111 f1n1nrt• No eMJ1t nt..-dl·d St~s.ooo b.ilanu A 'k •o r t:d lh•mmr. 1'~ DUPLEX SPlCIA.L HOMIS Ul!:AUTI Fl'L WOOD~ ('()Vl: AIU~;\ 3 Bedroom Hy u~n ·r. n-du«1.•d to , ll'W t\QlTu.· l>ini~ room SJTS., t\>th i RR unit famil\ ruom l t r Q l btl. tu oc.·e~o ,.9,·~I 1n room.-. tle;N. \JOO ronw • .,,.11 ., , ) ""' ... HAID TO UAT! • UR. 2' ha w l•W l•n11 l y rm &. formul din rrn .i\u um•b lto fl •""\'\ I04lll Pdflf Pl•Cr,ln~s.12 711il ••.•................... 1100 0Uf'L£X (o! 11111~· C<tita Mt"S.l 20'~ do\4-o. 80'1 fmuncin.x. oo point , fa;i.t ~s<'row Own1Hkr ~ 740? O (' F. o\ N S I V lo: 0 lo' Sl'At'IOl.S :!BR. dt'n UH . IUGHwi\Y. IN NC>ttTH LR. H ... W+ l OR upt UVl'r • &ilr H1 c.'llll prk I 21~ ~l 1'.:ND. 2 lic.>droomi." cJrn Andrew RcJ '::.t'l· b\ 'horl w11lk to bt'ar h 1,1ppt •\In Ctan<• >'U OWK to'llK'st quaht)' $220,000 '°'"'· o.le• • •••••• •• •• • • •• •• • •• • •• Nu-e Duplex on f arge lot $16, too i::xceu location Pu:tur... StatS TO llACH i11.·rfeli 2 BR I BA wt al IJUlET IUL.LTOt> With ~ l'lltr a lot 3 Bedroom hom~ No"" vac ant owner anxious. subm it offers. 1100.500 EA~U'SNEST ThelMfs DbJ wld'° '61 1r1uleramt1 tlll'hed guru11e l .. ull (0.NSl.861 3 pvt bt·h & pn<'l' Sl:xl.000 pl('r Sub lcltlng aJlowl•cl RAJU.: OPPORT1. "lllTY TO ACQUIRt: Jo'ROM ..STATE OF Ottl(;INAI. OWNl':ft. T IJIS "UN COMMON" & Sl'AHCF. :i SR P.ND U N I T . U NEQ U I.LED PRI ACY. COM MAN DING BAY VIF.WS & UNLIMITJ..:O POTF:N Localed tn Traea~un.• I& ~ f R€HIGE ~· r11c1f1c Coast llwy HOM€~ Lag Reh Offered by _ l\04So Coast H1wa) in Village Fair l4'\GUNA BEACH Rt.'nal s:s once M P 3333W Co.ist llwy,NB 714499 :.116. 645-6646 497-2457 --------•I TIAL VALU lo: Agcn1 OCEAHFROHT _oo._~--­ Information HOT LINE! Span. charm. No Lag.1--------• 48R/3BA 494·9588 IUCH DUPLEX Exclusive! l·Blk tn ocean. newly t..,... ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1052 renovated. $155,000 BANK HEWPORT IEACH LagunaNiguel R£ALTY 61s-1642 REPOSSESSIONS Realty ~.,-----~-W•~:~MT NO DOWN 4Rcre Oppof"tunity lbr 2 ba View /sl1 p . PAYMENT toacqwre avacanl lolin Lse/opt $159,500 , Pxclusive Monarch Buy. 545-3639 4PLEX Huntington Beach 20': Dn, 80<'{ finanemg No pomlS. faltt esc·row. Own/Bkr. 842-7407 Eastsict. Triplex Three l Br urulS on nag Joi Good Easts1de loca uon $750 mo 1ocome fo\JU pnce $110,000 /(" rR €HIG€ HOMES 333.1 W. Coast Hwy, NB 64S-6646 Lrg co rner lot s ur-----•FREE BUS* 7 UMtTS-C.M rounded by cxpeni.1ve •$5000 * Beaut new building custm hnml's Bwld your 3 Br. pool Npt H·~ A-.. *TOURS DAJLY * Ftreplacei;. xJnl (()('ation own dre am home " 1~L lnvmts f>t.2-ltiO:i Sl75,000. sumes baJ. of SlS0.000. l 2 J BEDROOM 493-9494 495-5220 $1200/mo. Approx 10'' •• int No credit needed 496-2413 830-5050 Owner will car ry. vu HOMES UY OWNER H1~hly up ~ Call 6"5-S.'199 .:raded home o n AOH IN PARKS <'(JUJ'St' w1lbm 11 bl<x•k or EASTILUFF lenrus club. $275.WO O:ioice corne r location, All AREAS ~~ ., 4~l5-~9S9 adjacent to park area. 5 CALL MOW 3hr l3•ba. rm rm pat1<>s. Bdrm 3 baths with many 011• ""HOME extra Top cond1t1on M 1.11; 3HOUSES l!:a..,ts1de C.M. 3 separalt' hous~h on corne r lot SU per local.Jon $159,960 ~ PR€HIG€ I HOMES ;wJW Coastllw). NB 64S..6646 110 ~. reei. S85.000. S192 500 STORES <1!b4779 R~y McCardl~. Rltr E Anaheim 956-4500 NEAR BREAK EVEN li)' Owner "'00U11ll Patau 548-7729 Westmm-;U•r 848-8895 15% DOWN home. 3 Br, 21 , Ra . din <.: Anaheim 956 1011 1 Plex. Assum... Se lle r nn. 11\-m~ rm. frplc-. dbl Santa Ana 554 7070 w al I carry pap c r ~urage, A1C. 11iew. :is-4 Bdrm, 4 bath on pvt onapprov:ilorerc<llt Manageme nt a11a ll um loanat9% 495.i;:~17 Cht>rry Lake Sunny -----Agcnl.Gar-y O Bosler ~ decks & boat dock Uni Walle to beach. 12' Ex pun 9C'i0-4388 or 53fr 2498 9'JIET & PRIV A 1 E que $268,000 Pnn only do. pnC('d tn sell. l RR. I Pnnc1pali. only Cheerful, airy, 3 bd. 2 ba 642·1121 dyi. or 675-0Slti ba. lrg porch 34202 Del - house back mg on iwrma· ev/wknds OblS~. F27, Dana Pt 4 Houses & Dplx nl'nl greenbelt. F nl''d ---lOX4S Mobile Home with 5 2RR I 1 BR with r-1 & back yards. COii Harbor View Knolls Caj)(! garage" •. yar.I., Gr0 a• "'" BR B 10x31 add on room & ' -' "' us. " • cred pat.Jo Nei.llcd m the Cod condo, 2 21 2 A . East.side locallon $f.O 000 hills or Laauna N1auel S153.000 640 9990 porch. El Morro Beach in down 0wn"r ~111 ca'r.-v " "' Laguna Ocean view · " -.. , Sea Country Compare1 759 1367 aft. !I Partially fumJshed Xlnt contract $320,000 Lhis value Uy owner . 1 ________ _ ~.<KM>.Ph831 ·9627 HEWf'ORTDUPLEX ~~~I~~~ p:_ £ PR€HIMG€~ EQ.IPSE $139.500 -I HO l 1lus Monar<.'h Bay Ter-S t be h. Th 10x44 with add on.Liv Rm. r., ..... 48., horn~ wl"""'an Ntepi; 0 Clac . is 15 fa lo rent park. CM Sll.000 3333 W Coast Hwy, NB ,,., n ~ ~" ewport ass1c al an a 751 '"""' 645-6646 'u wiU ecljpse all others forda ble price. Good ....,.,., 1l any pnce & aml'01t1es summer/winter 1ncoml' ·78 Skylme. 2 BR 2 Ba FOUR UNITS-C.M. For mfo call t;40-6259 potenllal. ln11estors bet· $40.000 4 star park. P<>OI. Near O(:w, 3 Br owners ~ terhurry! Call 540·1151 clubhouse, l'-2 blk to bch. unil, 2 ba, frpl. 2-car '~ /T t:JA I~ Kntg Bch. 960-~22 gar . 3-2 Br. 2 ba, units R r~~ ·(~ Uix~~~F!~1! home TI>~;~s;:~~~1003 -----hvin~ w1lh SPJLCIOUS Mewport leach I 069 cabana. lbr wilh den. ee All 2 BR townhouse type, ••••••••••••••••••••••• -...1y $40,000 ~nt pallo. s tone frplc ownpr's unit w/frpk DO ~ Great location Don 'I CON IY OWNER take over 9i.,•,, loan al plush ne w carpeting mil>S th1sone $205.000 3br 2L-.zba.S99.!>00 SlOOl mo 4 BR. 1•1• ba & lhroughout 2 levels. Near Hoa_g _ M5-3639 pool H , 0 / t open beami>d ce1hn!(s. · urry · wnr ag • xlnl cond. Home in· Newport H~i9hts 55&0'm___ eludes stove and refr1g. IARGA.IM! OCEANFRONT DPLX al unbelievably low pnce Chonmng Newport cot· 2 BR. I bath e:tcb 2 Cl.Jr oU49,SOO. 673-7890 t~e t:nhanl'ed by used gar 136.5.000 Owner will Acreocp for Sale 1200 bnek walkways. 2 cozy helpfmance. 675·1906 ••••••••••••••••••••••• f1reph1l·es & a 2nd s tor)' $10K BELOW MARKET! 16 ACRES t\lde-11way master suite BIG CANYON. 2 br c·odo O E L A I R E 0 f' Cal},now._G46;?1_71. . , 1550'·$158. 700 ALSO· FALL BROOK PRIME MEWPORT CREST CONDO elegant 3 br home. 20x40 AVOCADO LAND IN pool & Jacuzzi. lge yrd. p R EST I G I 0 US S12!l,900 Agt673·43ll. HE.LEAH ESTATE CAN DOVER SHOR.ES :~w~P1cJ~rs3~~1.m~e Gorl(eous house-bel:>t Prine Only Mike Wink. view 4 Br. 4 Ba. ram r m . 957-0554. Agnl. MC. 3 car $450.00U Pl tin 3. 3 br 2' 2 ba. gd Owtwr 646-47W e\ es p ALM DESERT llX·at. up){radcd. wet b,1r. ---• mirrored w1trdrbs romm Westchrr. 4br + pool. cor Zone for approx. 56 coo pool, J1JCuu1. tenms rrts. ncr lot 963-0914 /631 -0471 dos or aplS., App~oK 5 S135 ooo Pnn only n<.'res. AU ut1I avail 4 f>CM ReaJty 83.1-8430 street front.ages Price BY OWNER s 3 1 5 • o o o . o w n e r Open Sunda)' 1·5 27tIB Newport Shores 3 BR. _n_4_-328-__ :rr_20_. ---- Hillview Or. Charmmg 2ba. Clubhouse, pool & ET C 11 p e Cod co n d o . rec racil avail $98.000. SWISS CHA.L f11bulous view! See to· 64&3402 Hidden In the pines with da) ! Agt. l>iS-818_1 ___ 1 an ocean view is this cbarming A-frame on I If• acres w/10 rrwl trees, STEAL IT! !part plantublc to ~ rR€STIG€ HOME:S 645-6646 ***** I 9 FourDlexes Uy owner f>n ccs C'( tremely tow Seller will carr)' all financing al 911t'7. LGl"CJf Cash Row Low Down Payment Bkr. 714/542·3676 <.:ALL FOR SETUI' ***** FOURPLEX i\11 3 Br 2 B.i units Owner will <.'arry 2nd T 0 . 9 2 X J?ross at $1SS,OOO. /(" f R€HIGE:' HOME:S 3333W Coast Hwy. NB 645-6646 Takin l{ the first step is often the hardest one. If you're ready to move up or s tart. your investment program. but have be<.'Ome confused with all the aspects or today's ma rkel. then com e to the experts at Quail Place Properties fo r solid. professional counseling. Pyramid your equities with an exchange and/or purchase with an eye towards high future returns for your golden years. AGINTS CMd lltOKEttS -We ha ve a few positions open for hccnscd professionals who would like to affiliate with Orange Couoty's fas test growing professional Real r-;state organization. We now have available ... • $79,000 DUPLEX - Orange County -Patios :rnd gar ages. * RALBOA I SLAND DUPLEX. Trade down only. S230.000. • COSTA MESA DUPLEX -Each unit 2.000 SQ. ft. $159.500. • 3 BDRM. + 2 BDRM. - Costa Mesa. $163.900. • H 0 U S E duplex-Ontario. $86,500 + * ORANGE TRIPLEXES ' Got two! $114.500 a nd $115,500. • COVINGTON 4-plex - Pride of o wn e r s h ip. $200.000 . • 4 HOUSES/ONE LOT - yard, $170,000. * 4-PLEX pride of ownership 3 bdrm. 2 bath owne r 's unit with fireplace. $225.000. * COSTA MESA PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP 4-plex on s pice streets. $215,000. • 4 -PLEX . rece ntl y refurbis hed . Bea utiful golf course view. $155.500 * 4 HOUS ES/LARGE LOT -Costa M esa . $242.000 . • 4 UNITS -Costa Mesa. $180.000. * 2 DUPLEXES. 4 units, $135,000. Costa Mesa. * 2 DUPLEXES, 4 units each with fireplace - Hun t in g t o n B eac h . $175.000. • COSTA MESA 4-PLEX -two 3bdrm, two 2bdrm. $154.000. * 4 SPACIOUS UNITS - $169.000. • 6 ORANGE COUNTY UN JTS. $210.000. • 8 ORANGE COUNTY UNITS. $195.000. * 8 ORANGE COUNTY UNITS. $205,000. • 8 UNITS. 2 4-plexes. pride o f o wners hip, Hun tington B eac h . $450.000. • 12 UNITS. 3 4-plexes. Orange County, pride of ow"lership, 3 bdrm . ow n e r 's unit w i th fireplace. 5675.000. • 14 UNITS -Orange County -One year old . $597.000. • 15 UNITS -San ta Monica -Close to beach. $775 .000. • 16 UNITS (4 4-ple xes > Orange County. $650,000. • 16 UNlTS -Orange County. $400,000. • 16 UNITS -P ride of ownership -Huntington Beach. S000.000. • 17 UNITS on ocean . $760,000. * 19 UNITS -O ra nge Co unt y -Spa ni s h architecture. S410.000. * 20 HARD TO FIND pride of owne rship units Costa Mesa. $850.000. • 20 PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP UNITS - Huntington Beach - townhouse st yle owner's unit. $1 .125.000. • 20 UN IT S RIVERSIDE -2 story ~arden style. $382,000. • 22 UN I TS ANAHEIM. $535.000. • 23 UNITS -SANTA MONICA. Subterranean parking . $1.590,000. • 23 UNITS -SANTA MONICA -Balconies. $1,650,000. • 23 UNITS -SANTA MONICA -Elevator a nd s ubte rranean parking . $1,800.000. • 24 UNITS -ORANGE COUNTY. All units have fireplaces and e nclosed ga r ages. $1,350,000. * 24 UNITS -ORANGE COUNTY. $605,000. • 25 UN I TS RIVERSIDE -Close to college. $550,000. • 26 UNITS HOLLYWOOD -pool and air conditioned. $880,000. • 2 7 UN I TS HOLLYW OOD s ubte rra nean parking . $1.430.000. * 28 PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP UNITS - Huntington Beach -J 112 miles to beach. Sl.575.000. • 29 UNITS -balconies & wet bars in each unit Hollywood. $1,070.000. • 32 ORANGE COUNTY pride of ownership units. O wn e r 's unit with l'e rami c ti l e & wood-burnin ~ fireplace. $1.800,000. • 34 UN I TS HUNTINGTON BEACH - fireplaces & p at ios. Sl.300.000. • 35 UNITS HOLLYWOOD -pool. $1,650,000. • 36 UNITS HUNTINGTON BEACH - Own your own street' Pride of ownership -3 bdrms . 2 bath owner's unit with fire place . $2,025.000 • 40 UN T TS HOL LYWOOD subterranean parking and sec urity f eat ur es . $2,800,000. • 85 + UNITS -W. HOLLYWOOD-10 s ec u rity guar d s, $2,000,000. • 112 UNITS -exchange. $2,800,000. • 112 UNITS -Hollywood n ear fr ee way . $3.400,000. • 125 UNITS -4 112 years old . $2,375.000. No driveby's please. In deference to the wis hes of our property owners. please do not ask for addresses. If you are a s incere buyer. seller, or exchanger please call for . an a ppointment or visit our office. Open daily and weekends for your convenience. · • 114 UNIT. DISNEYLAND area motel, now under construction. Turnkey at $4,275,000 * Major hotel with room to build in Orange County. •RETIREMENT HOME to be built. $4,418,000. • SHOPPING CENTER site package next to regional Rare sing le slory. 2 a11ocudo>. 2 stall barn. Bdrm, 2 bath, for mal bunk h o u si> Bk r . DR. double garage. elec 1_11_1r7_6-S_7_17_• _11_522_·2080 __ _ IUCH DUPLEX cente r. $4.450.000. llG & llAUTIRIL I EAGaTOGO 5 BR 3 li a. opeoor Only Sl15,000. c.-645·9161 IOACllES South of Or1&nge County Good for lot split. In the patb of growth Bk r. 1/616-5717. l/523-4462 Pnce reduced to onl)' • SHOPPING CENTER -Orange County. $640,000. $lj6,050. Must S(lll. * OFFICE BUILDING -Ora nge County. $1 ,700.000. SC01T REAL TY $ Sl6-7531 * R. V. PARK -283 sites. 1,500.000. •MOBILE HOME PARK. $2,800,000. Hffba ...... THE A.UHUI TU .. CO. 951-$232 lllcGm9 ProfMrty 2000 Ho.es U•f•.W..d •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• _______ ic;..,..•defMar-' lZZZ IHOUSTlllA.L ILDG. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14,720 Sq ft aocludes :! BR 1 BA, back unit, 3 3200 sq. fl or offices; blU lo ocean. M2S +lBl. completely a1r -c.onit , last&dep.64IMOllO wilb beav)' duly 1.000 OiM Otarmer Isl ltme amp power Leased to • d smgJe te nant. Xlnt. re· offered. 2 BR + ~o. wnu S480 ooo fplc, dbJ gar, Jge pauo. · tmmed poss. Sharon or 6 7~400 Launne, 613-3550 agent . HARBOR ~amide o1 Hwy. Sharp 2 bdrm. Super palio. 2 c a r g a r a g e , washer/dryer hookups $450 yrly. 64()..4137 Sbr 3ba Harbor Vu Rms --------• Fam. rm. 2 frplc . triple gar. wet bar. & many ex· "=4 tras. SOOO/mo. 644-8140. 2100 Deluxe 3br 2ba rrplc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harbor Vu . H o m e:. PRIME INDUSTRIAL $6S()m0. No pets. 644·2405 BUILDlNGS { . "4919 sq Ct ofc /ind 'l Costa MHo 3224 •6390 sq fl 24c g ross, ••••••••••••••••••••••• macb shop New 2&r3 bdrm condos. oQXX) SQ rt 23• gross, 91 Crpk, bllns, 2 car garage Fwy $450 & up. 1076 canyon •5500 sq ft, Tus t in Dr.645-5637. $254,700 --------- •3949 sq ft. Tustin br lba hardwood fir. SUU.500 beamed ceiling, renc. CA.LL C7r4) 838-5970 yrd. Bit-ins. S m child cty. OK. No Pets. $390. 1982· B (714) 511-S7871-M_e_yc_rP_l_.M_~_J484 __ ·~- ••es/wtmds Neal 2 br. 2'h ba condo. w/2 frp lces , pool, 1 -A-......._.,,_._ 2200 dshwhr. washer /d ryer. .._. ......-_. Sorry, no lud.'5 or peb.. ••••••-••••••••••••••• Singles ok. $435. Agt, oo See. ad. t\eadmg PALM rec 964·2566; 973-2971. DESERT. 56 coodos uo· --derclass 1200 Mesa Verde 4br, 2ba. New drapes/carpels. $550 Mobil...,_/ Call Roy, 898-2641, or TrtrMs 2300 968-9332 ....................... -------- OeAma Bay Side Village. 38r,2Ba, W.S1de 3 br Mobile Home. Newly lods OK, $400 mo. de<.'orated. $27,500 t.ermi.. ____ 548-8382 Boat Dock. Pvt Och. $400 3br 1 ba non Po o I J 3 <' u z z 1 smo'keri..' Rer ·~-98~ Clubbous e s Brokt.'r/ Arbor 548-lOOS/548--0358 O wner 631 ·4 920 / --·------ 67S-8458. Enghsh huoling lodg._. Outofeo-ty___ type Jbr, den , 2ba. a Property 2550 ~~~c~:.ri~5k1-~:~t~r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 497 1744 f •oofl A.Cr'ff¥ I 12 acres. Sl2.000 pr acre Jbr 2 ·2ba new duplex. Owner will financ e d1s hw . patio. gar g wf25"',..dowo Children OK . $475mo 2laJ MtnerSl. 557·4579 ___,-.;P~€HIG€ 2 Bdrm. lge renced yard. , _ _._ _ ___,..,_HOM€~ rompletcly redt.>t' Use ol pool & 1ac $425/m o 3333W. Coast Hwy, NB &12--4758 645-6646 ---------1 BR. i.U.11 i.howt'r. µtil1 u. A5SUME 7~% no qualJfy. lndry rm. •2 blk to E iog ~000 Condo. 2Br, 17th St shopp1n'( & till'> 2Ba, frplc. Pool, Jae, nr New crpt. drp~. tlll• golf <.'ou rse Owor. stove & paint Maturt· Oceanside. 1-7574035 adlts. no children or pets CM of State S29S 955-1178 Pr .... ty 2600 E~TSIOE 2 RR NO ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOGS. $375. 268 I U I Beautiful tugb desert, 5 Cos ta Me s a Strc cl acres, mobil & view. 645-9341 Good well. Low taxes. --*** Extras. 25 m1 to Carson LT ,.._. __ __._ Cl~ $47 000 702.QS.-0171 • _ _...amp · ' · 305 F1owcr < ed.) Costa Mesu ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corom def Mer 3122 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEAN 2 BR. Garage. patio & ocean view. $550/mo. Ml·6727 ......... Oftleach 3140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• You are lhe winner ut Two Ft-ff Tickets to CIRCUS VARGAS Feb. 26th or 28th 4 30PM Pe:rformancc The City Shopping Center Orange To claim your 11e•kc1i,, cal1642·5678. ext :!72 .... Beachwalk, 2 BR + guest BeauWuJ.ly upgracJl!<.I J u; room, pool, 1acuzz1, <'IO!le 2 Ba • (a m 1 I 'Y r m . to bch. Great loc., SS50 frplc.AvaJI. Mim ·h I Nu mo. S3l>-3.'i07 __ pets s.5l5 646-3627 a...,..tleodt 3148 S375 2 br, gar. )rrl. new ••••••••••••••••••••••• rpl , t1 le , ptJ1nt , 2BR semi furo. 190 Ca· wshr/dryr hookup. 356 !\YOO Acres Or S395. Ph Rochester 645-472.'I 2l3/&-250tor645-8W9 - Mlwport •---&.. 3169 New. extra dlx townhous(' __... urul. 3 br. 2 ba. StlSOl mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• OR2br,2baforS.'>50trno BOAT SUP 58drm. 4 ba. Avail 3/1 to 6/30 $000/mo. OCEANFRONT HOME. 2 Bdrm w/charm. encl pabo & decks Yrly lse 9)0/mo.w Wat .. f1 Oflt HCMM s 631-1400 Dix Bayfronl R plan Con· do In BluHs. 28r-t-deo, 2Y!ba.Nrpool 675-337 1 Porthole. skyhJlht ""'" dows. open stu1rcas~ mast.er bdrm i.u11e.• CaU Lmda llart &rn 1111 or 645-ttrl -3226 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely 2 BR 2 BA. oc.·eao vu • frplc. gar, $450 mo incl util. Eves830 l!IUJ Oc.-View Cowdos Dix 2 & 3 Bdrm !>. Washet'/dryer incl. T('n rus. pool, Jae. From $400 WaU!rfronl 2 br bome. _49&-_5!8> ___ _ w/pvt boat dock. Yrly 4Br 388 spa nr Ol'W lease req. Mature adults c1o6e to Dana Hiiis lhl(h. only. $750 mo complete. 33101 Buccaoeer 493·821~ $600 mo hou se only. · 673·3531 eves. 64W 146 llToro 3232 days ••••••••••••••••••••••• Somerset. kit<'ht" nook . f11mtly w "'c t bur . dlninll rm. 2 rpk'is. view o NewJ>()rt Center pottlni: ~ht'd privacy &. a prlc you con't bea\.. Owner hH bou•h •noth('r h ome. Su bmll oil orrers OPEN HOUSE REALTY / ~"=' 1100 7 BEACH UNITS * 4 INDUSTRIAL buildings for $2,000,000. J YEARSOl.D. *INDUSTRIAL buildings. $280,000. $312,500,.$1.925.000. S....,._ 3110 aStorY. 4 br, 2 ba, dlnmR scorr RLTY. 536-7533 * INDUSTRIAL sites in Riverside. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm. (rplc, dllhwl'lr, putio ~ll.500. 11101 Port Ctrlow ---------...................... . •llSTIUY• F.astblulf Condo View11, well kep\, many custom reaturea. $1651000 FiDaDClal Coni ullaol Broker 645-~ s.a.-• 1076 ••••••••••••••••••••••• V1IW AtOM THI TOP Breat.hlaltlna oceon view h'om ttlab in Ptttldenllal Helahu. New I st1n1. newoew2 BR Coodo, on b' '"J.500. B.r.R'l\IA HEN RS REALTORS 115 Dtt .. at 492~ 12 By Owner 2 4·P lexes. $205,000 each. Prine. On· ly ~or 540-l219 1600 IUHDMIW l&OO I Q n c:ommerclal profeaslon1l building • NW corner Euclld Ii Talbert, Founta in Valle)'. $U2,400. 848·2655 dy s , $38 ·48 73 wlalcb/evea. Prtn onl)'. People who n«d peopl~ 6houJd always check thu s.vlce Oi~ory tn t.he DA.ll. Y PILOT 0 C t R · · d & S D · &,ii house ror rent uUJ pd food yd. gar· KidA & vcb SACRIFICE • LOTS in range oun y, avers1 e an 1ego nice yard. ctutciren OK: ok. ~-Agt. No f\•e 1Wo duplexes on adjoin Counties. 00, pets. szso. ~-3300. 966-2566. 973-2971 ing la rAe Iota near Call one of our professional staff of over 40. Large enough evs,SS&-Oal7 Onto for lae. 2Dr 2 bu. ~R ~fr~sELL to serve. smaJI enough to care. A•IMTS .... •OlllS s wimmlng pool. Im FiDllOClaJConsuJtanl W.a hnve a few positions open for licensed professionals ...... Ulituwl•cl maculale. Avail 3/lS Broker 645·2509 " " ••••••••••••••••••••• • • S37S. ~ who would Uke to affiliate with Orange County;s fastest c•• le ,. 1211 22 UNITS growin~ professional Real Estate Organization. Call for .. :::.~ ... ~ ....... !':';:~I~•.!~ ... ?~.~~ Super potcnUal, mon ''I • Jbr 2bl f"'IC: w/encld maklna units l.-Otalt>d ·,. · Bulll&IW Tlburoo Twnhs near fw)'s & shopping QUAil pt_•1Q ~-Ocean v •· S52S .-.. 2ba, nr pools at play Cross st5 M•gnoll11 tc j_ " 1~ ground. $450 mo. m oo:u Madlson.ln FUvenldc PROPERTIES INC C... .. M9r l2Z2 .uroratenry. H w pt A•• r l c • 11 ' • ••••••••••••••••••••••• OOlliC to elementary sch\, Properiln (714) 752 1920 3 BR. fun. rm .• Ju~ aar, 28a w/1& den. trptc, Mewport...,..c• • CrHk1 on areeobclt, dishwasher. covered '957-ltoO )~~!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IOf'.Oevaew.Sllo&. patio w/BBQ, kldl OK. a BR. 2 ba , taO)'OO vu, No pet.I. W mo. Agt na Pra' '"""" ts 7-1 too lldlta ss:zs. A,i m.~ teet84-25el; man ~~...L==========L:======:::::=:::::. I • 4bl', :.!IM, fri•ll•, l>IW. Vt•ry rli-an N H huol1 bd1. SH5 lll3 IO»t!v 4br 21,-fba Uc Vu r• tcU'lt G~n1n1 tC'r n• ~/l" ~·~~T· ~ 3Br. 1g ma. frpic. 11ual aBr. Plltio S475 lttl' l(dnr, no pelli. 1&\lail 3 11 llt&6419. llARllOR \ lF.W P\lRfOFl o 4 bdrm. :S\9b1&, a.· R 2 I.I«)' bonu,a rm. p()U! & Spa 1326 BLUt~f 'lu\t>ly 2 Br. SSSO 3 Br Si(JO Grffnbll, pool, BKR 644-0134 ----- Sr.5 TO MACH 4 Ilk; 3 bl • wncr ll1ltl ll RR I ba, wnlr •• !\ a nn. 1 ll•. rtlr ND CoaottA DIL MAI l UR, l I.la )'tly fJOOO Mo associated llt ...._I"'• It I \ I, if'" ~ "' . ' .. ' . ' . TOTAL LIVING Aportmonta. En1•r1alnmonl, Roaoot1on ••• Your -365 da'{ll a yoor! •' .,.,._....U...... .,,_,,... .... ~ .,..._...._Uilhn. ......... s._.. 4300 t '11t l .. 'rn• • ••• •• • •• •• • •u ••• •• ••• u u • • •• • • • • • ••• •• n••• • •••• • ••• • • ••••• •••••• ••••••••• •••• ••••• ••• • • °x. I W~ 5005 C::Qllll••••1ftl .... mllflwf 5005 c......... JIJ4 C-.W... llJ4 tkJ!I ... .._,. 3140 Roommate wanted ror ... ~t ..................... -i ............... .. •••• •• • •• • • • • • • • • • •. • • • •• •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••• • • • •• • • • •• • • • • • •• • I.le. 4.br hae Fem pre-•• n rn Vil:'! llU N" J UH, -' Hi\, rrpk. fonc WATERFRONT ferred S144mo. shr. ul.ll II Iii i.tuJ111, H h• ~' r. )nl l'nd ••r , oduJts. nr 40• dock ;avail 2 br w/all m.4136 IUY NOW" llllh qita, n•• drV' 5 Ar t.'.wntry Club ~ altaa Quiel pvt hug •• ' • • frn •I ii w llftlln l1tJ 11\ 111.l l UU6 drck IS7~ · 673 G3JU' RM. RA. ~. Hse use. CONSIGN MOW "ts t•t w1\1rtu1111 ~ · uw pd. N 8 . sno mo . 1 , 1 1 ~ llh. ~Hr. ll 01t. In 4 pl("ll, matvniwoman&43.2732 nr & <: t PIHll qwtl OCEANJo'RONT, uppl'r MISAPIMU I ltr f pk. l'O'•I. Ja1 uu1 1&•11 ht)(,, rlu~••I Jlllr Adwl.MI\ rw IX'Ui 26:jjJ flvl• A"•· W :.&47 Ni. ~ly dtcvul.ed. J br. ~ ba lownhou v ~11adou11 lln·pl.ilt-. ' puol Uw l IUH Adulb no ~·· WUIJ ij4!> , l , tJ7~ ~WI ATIM •OOMMATIS NOWl&n'IHG IUHDMIW 2 Ult l h.t ttpb Pt•rf\'cl for 2 G"" t l' M hw11 uun ' Av1uh1bh• Mareh 1,1 SJ7) & UJ~ t'11ll for lktulll> wh1I" !<t'lt<cllon h&."lJI I .. MUNlllS llt-;N f t-·1u:e• ~ r ul dr o1c , blt 1n11, UNt Very ruce Ulrge 2 Need roommate Park 14ar111111 no ~l• S!l3.S UR. 11ar. $700/m o ~ ~~ u~:~~:.t:T &al li'7) 1006 al\ 3 ~ 3124 Ste111 lo beach. 2 br sar. -~...:..;,.. ____ _ •••••••••••••••• •••• ••• oow palnt & cpt. unrurn f e m for 2 8 d r m . ... _ • • .. h ,A I er futn Vrlv ~ w/ utJ Penlniula. S192 50+ utU. lbrl11wt117 .w,a1..-veoven 896-L'162,!U..6T0·?9:13 • Eugeni:a 842·75l t / "llr •m yrd. $a00. /w,,11. 548·l.923eves. 3 1 ~l l.orge 3br 2bit lower ----.-----du p l ~x N .. ;ir Lido Share quiet. furn. apt Vtliage. ~ yrly Open near bch w/neat. prof. t 5 Sit/Sun 514 Club male.~. SUlOMOV£lN ALLOWANCE :l br, l ba S3& 2 br. 2 bo + d1•n $425. Enc l aarage, pvt. fncd grass yard 33411 Cbeltam Way, 4$6-1097 or 496-5275 lbr dlsbwab. stove/oven lndry rm. gar Ocean \'1"-w $250mo 498·2361 H~use Dr. 993·5868 or Non ·s mler, working 826-1101 woman, to shr condo AU aduJL no peu, 2 br. 2 S1T5 mo. must have ba. Crom S330 Jacu:m . refs 6'4·1585 pool, rcc bldg. Located Fem rmmat.e wanted tor acrosa from Newport b e a u t c 0 n <J 0 Beach Golf Course. w/backyard. pool & ten Shown by uppt. only. ru.s Very reas. Call John ~ al 5.5Ul32 or 4.98-31168 or 2 Bdrm 1 bluck from ~u M/F'8-5 ocean. Garage, all ulll 1n° Roommate wanted to sbr cl 1425/yrly, adults lg CM house S175 Mar· 67$-285S or 540-4917 ty 631 5824 eve•. rn~a .......,lgtOft koc.h 3840 28r. 2ba, ...., blk to bch ••••••••••••••••••••••• S475 Yrly No pets SHARP. beach 1,2 & 3 BR. 675-l'106: 6'$-22Zl dys. frplc. dtshwsbr, garage OCEAN FttOMT & patios. No pe ts 3br.2 ba Yearly. Frplc, 900-2358 gar. SIOOO 4350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Net $140·$200 pr wk. We have 2.1 milhon contracturul reservation back.Jog on "fiy ·dravcs" wlth Pan Am and National. al s o exclusi ve ly pu blis hcd by over 60 U .$. & Inte rnational wholesalers in cluding but not limited to Triple AAA . A mtrak. CP Ai r , Traveman <Au s tralia), RACV, NurGut <Germany) TCS <Switzerland). •10% investment tax credit + double the declining depreciation. •Current fleet is at 210RV's r'equlre 350 by April 30 <overbooked in certain s izes). • Purchastt a t factory net invoice 4 Star Mini 's & class A ·s. •100% financing of invoace. sales tax & llcc.:nse through major banks at 13.0 APR-7 year note. In vestmen t Seminars h eld on Saturdays JOAM·lPM on March 17th, 24th & 31st on IOC<tllOn. 0-..IVl_...lllC. 2 BR l BA Y rd, kids 3BR1. BA. Cplt, pallo. dbl petOK.~IOth St 110 gar ~ Vrly, Ageol • lleatAUhAI Single 16 2 Bedroom fwru&h«I & Unhinuabecl Apartm•uta R.C. TAYLOR CO. 640.5 I 12 XJnt ('Olld 2 HR 1 Ho. p11l10, no pct~. 33111 Haker. Apt U $350 Ml 4.~363ti Townhouset lovely. spac & bome·Wte. 2 br with pvt. gated entrance + 2 pallos. Some with all. garage. Sw1mmmg pool. Jacuzzi. Tennis courts . 1 bJk to Huntington shop· ping center mall. Adults . No pets. Fr om $435. Sea wind Village, 15555 flunungton Village Lane, H B. (714)898-9961 TSL Mgmt 642 1603 Eaata1de C M . s1ncle garage. $37 .50. M2..Q>l e\IH alt 5 I 50t2 H.Y.-d An, '"· Co. 714/559-444' o.t.w. e .. 1.aoo.eM-Om ,,.., o•·s 111N 49.2371. Computcnzed reservation system Locations also in San Francisco & Denver. l-way fly-drive. • All U11li11"" P<lld • No L-R~11ed hlka ocn ~ mo S4 673-9060 dep. l>i2-5717, 536-1857 --- Park Newport sub lease. 2 bdrm 2 ba, pool. s pa, ten· Offlco........ 4400 nis . S425 m o. Smo+. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---Mewporl Crest Condo Cl~an 2bdr. dlb gar. 5 3 Br 2~ .. ba Some O<'Un blks. bch. No Pets. Avall vi~~ 56001 mo. A~l . Feb.24. S375. 964·2283 aft 64S-0296 • Swtmnunv .. T •nn&.1. lhllloub New 3 u R •' r1t. sou. Childrun well'oine. no ))('loll 000 W llumilton, 8.'lf.2917 64().9612 523 SQ fl office 1>pac1: to ~--~-----suh.lease 1n Laguna !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! • Act1 .. u .. O!iecto' t ••• SW>day lln.nclleo Hills, La Paz Rd. Just 3876 ••••••••••••••••••••••• south of the San Diego Bench apts. 2 BR 11;\ Ba. Freeway. S308 month. Offlcea..... W..ted 4600 4. ~------•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Lg 2 Br, 2 ~, ba cond C\J'.l'E 2 Bdrm w/frplc, w/Crplc . full rec Nr bch brick walks, lrg patio & S47S Call ~8224. Avail yar.d. S485 mo Ph • Hoalth Cl..ba. Joel.LUia PLUS MUCH MOREi Avail. now 83(Hl030 12915. 2 BR I Ba, frplc. ---------1 12915 l BR I BA S245 Deluxe medical s uite, 496-1151 ~md nr . Corona del •MEWILDG• e11pons1ble. working 1200fl. Isl noor. beaut. writer see k s on ~ decor Seachrf Office bedroom cottage 1n Prk. 2120 Main. Hunt Corooa del Mar or Costa Bch. 7~ per rt Herman Mesa. Quietness essen· 411 64S-6625 Oakwood Garden Apartments 2br, lba. 2ti1 "D" E 16th Pl l.dry fac" r pb. drps No pet:, $280 li44 ().~ Luxury condo 3hr 2ba ntt 2 bed. I bath, Lido Isle car gar, knnls/ pool/ Jae home. mo to mo $650 Close to beach S500 lse Ouldren and pets o.k Newport Beach/North 880 lfV1n• Sh.irp, clean 2 BR a.pt 1 yr old We~t.s1de 4·plex No pets, S32S 645· 7479 •Walk to the beach* Casadei Sol Beautiful AdullApts 2 BR 2 Ba condo. encl gar. $350 mo. 633-1720 (714) Mar. Realooom1cs Corp. 675-6700 or Henry 960 m7 Ua!. Wnte Classified Ad 250 500 sq . ft. orflces #206, Daily Pilot, P .0 ~ 645-6441/ 640-1645eves From Sl4S Incl. ulll. 779 Prof Office S..lhs Box 1560. Cosla Mesa BR 2 ba ....... S HUNTINGTON BEACH 921626. (al l61h) 21661 Brookhurst, HR Cbarmtng 2 New Condo 2br 2bn, incl uuJ Tenru.'I, pooltjac, rec rom. ssoo. 972-Jom LIDO ISLE m.4> M!> o.;~ Newport 8-ch/South 1700 lbth St NEW DUPLEX 962·6653 great ocean vie~. $325° _w_~ __ l_. S40-__ 2200_. ___ 1 Centra I loc Just oft l--------- Beach Blvd at Main St. 1lfE MAJN OFFICE 847·5338 Super new remod. 4 BR 2 Ba. cloe;e to all $525. 6342 RoyaJ Oak 968-9300 3 Bdrm, 2 baths. Freshly paUlled. new cpt. frplc. dis hwas her, r e rrig, washer/drye r. Gardnr inclS850 {Dover al 161hl 1714) 642·8170 Adwla only no P' 11 Mod•I• open doily 10 7 2 br, 2t2 ba, every amt'ni· ---------492·5689 BEAUTIFUL ty, 1650 s q . ft. Obie NEW 2 BR 2 BA, encl ---------SUm5 guraite. Huge yard garaglf. close to beach s.taAna 3880 wtroom for trlr. e l l' $300per mo.964·2937 ••••••••••••••••••••••J9 400to2600Sq. Fl. $495. 673-6330, 642·9606 • B b C 1 NEW APAR'l'M ENTS CTpts, drp6, serviced 2 °' 3 r. 2 a, rp • patio. NR so. COAST PLAZA Ca ru Part& ALL ADULT APTS s m Y rd· n o do J: '" 2 BR P.• Ba. air cond. Newport 833-8813 Newport Manner's Mile. Temf1c 3 br, 2 ba, patio. Short term rentals. 2 & 3 NOWAVAH.AILE $450/mo, 752·74711 , O/W, pool , sa una . Modem 502 sq rt store lencd yrd, gar. Kids & BR. from $375 up. Agent, 2 br apt Pool. Jacuzzi & _900-__ 537_6._____ JSCUZZ1, + many xtras. Downtown Huoliogt on 2163>CCl Avon. Low re nt Pt.UMllMG pets O.K. $445·$455 67s.8170 I OnJyS32S Beach. 210~ Maio St 213-477 7001 repair & dram servict' BURR WHITE REALTOR. INC. 67~4630 /\gen l . n o fee . ==-======= -~---~-----BBQ area. Enc garage. Ready for you! 2 bd. den. J. D PROPERTY One 2·rm ofCice avail ---· ------buss.oess. Excelleni IOCa· 964-2566:973-2971 Ba""hores, pvt comm. -W:-L.L.:.:...:~_... SORRY NO PETS frpk, gar $350. 962·77811 MGMT $110 900-1558 uon. Complete fac1hty. ~~ \ftJTWTII~ 177 E 22N DST ask for Mack •£"CH STO --charming2sty, lg pallos "·-ta M"". 3 64.~.24oa. 751·2787 -RE Gnl6S-S250.000 yr . Wnte •Tia.IV COTT .._GE• frnlc, JBr, 2Ba. $875. ••••••••••••••••••••••• """ '" " "0 Ollio..I THE to Bo 337 I D I "' "' · ,, ~ PtftiltSUllo 3807 3 Br, new condo, t mile to 1""111 °" Mewport lhd. x • c o a1 Y lroomhouse.3 blkl>LO 642·55680r645·~ ....................... 2 br .. 2 ha,:Jllelcc.,grnd beach . T o tal r et• lbr +dco.Condo,new w·TER' OverZ0001qft. Pilot, P .0 Box l560. ocean, near buses '& old ir._ ,.,_ 32 C noor. cov. park, no pets, package. Incl tennis. cptg. pool. J blks S. Coast A • Costa Mesa. 92627. town Child OK Very ~--="'Snte 76 Lg bay root 2 Br 2 Ba, $350. 310 Vi ct o ri a lmmed. occupy. Avail. Plazo 1 yr lse 1375 PLUSH SUITES Pnvate. wat"r pa.id .... ,.I •••••••••••••••••• ••••• frp lc, g ur age, p r1' ,,,.., 2164/"73·0782/"'52·4894 2 3) 9 9 .,,.,,. avail Mar I. 675 9226 BEER & WINE tavern, " "' ..,. h YI I AJ It .,_ " " (l .t -...,.,l 350to1300sq.fl N"'Bch.Ne•5 •""""mo. DOGS. $250 per mo S3SO Beaut. Towhs. 2br 2ba <A·llC · r Y sc 1 u s 9 "' "' ~ mo\l('tn.Call9fj() 3989 Re tre at Oe n , golr o nly, no pe,ts $850 2 Bdrm 1 Bath, $350 mo, Bench/ Slater brand new Wft ....... fer 38 8 fantattic Vl~ws Term,.Agt.. 751-1400 C'Ollrse, pool/ Jac. 1 blk to _673-_2_1_62_,,______ 2189 Pacif1t•, no pets. Call dlx units . 1 ·Jbd 2' 2ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wet Bars llEAlIT. 2 s ty 48r, 1 •.:1l>1t bch. $525. 661·1295, B ... A l 2 bd 2 ~51B>. Pam Owners studio. 3-2bd, ~. Dlx 2 Br 2 Ba condo Udo Marina A V...-..gRte. Twnhse. Pool, tennis, 492.4727 Y uR: wa er rm 2ba. wood burruog frplcs type, encl. gar & pauo. Viloge Own & operate your own $450, 2 1J l 870 !880, ---------ba washer/drye r . Condo.nrbarkbay.ldeal · h R infant OK. 7211 Tras k vending routes. 4·10 brl> 714/96441SS San.Non garage, pallo, Crplc. S440 2 s ingles. 2 bdrm e.l qwet. res. neig · ct• 894 2585 891 2144 Newport 675-8662 MARINER'S MILE weekJy. Complete com- Copistrano 3278 per mo Vrly 213·374·7486 w/ba Bltns. cpts, drps, area. Jmi bl'h. Adults. No , ' . PRIME LOCATION pwzy traUWJg & location .... ~. ....................... dbl garS400mo.9964761 pets900-4l45· ~nhhrnislMd 1o~·~~~~Ya0u:ip~ on WATER. Available setuped. Cash mvestmenl ~ 3242 Nt>w 3 bdrm.+ den. Rec. Very c,lean Bach. ,., blk bef 5pm. 646·1812 afl Hunt. Harbor share sun, orUnfwwlshed 3900 tal/paramedic. 3 exa~ for retail or rrofess1onal neec:IE •••••••• .. •••••• .. ••••• faablles. Close to Dana lO beach. S265 per mo 7pm/wknds Ad Its, no sand & saving in brand 0 •••••••••••u••u•u• rooms, pvt office. lab. ()(fices Tota of 3000 sq Plan I $2,080.00 Ccndo 2br 2babltm. pool. Pl.8.12-0264 ~°!·v~cl. 675-3029 wknd pets new 3br Jba duplex TIIEEXCITING darkroom Groundnoor. Ct. Can be d1v1ded mto PlanllS4.980.00 tenrus, beach. $600mo SOlllltl 1 _ 328"' ___ . -----w/pvt. patio, bit-m s. P.41..M MESA APTS No. Costa Mesa Prof. smaJler wuts. Dnve by Plan Ill SS.710.00 Lstl' ~t Dock xtr d ---r--v STEPS to '--h 2 b t 2br Iba S275mo crp/d rps & walk tu MJN\JTES TO NP't' BCH Bldg. $344/mo F1exwle 21633 W Coast Hwy, NB. Plan IVS14,190.00 ~ ay ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'' r. pa IO, AdulL'I no PeLs ,...._call C I I T I I F 714 /894 1717 eve. F 1 u· v· ,... h carport. w1o. fum/un • · beach Days 536·6663. Bach,t&r2BR leaseTom~2200. u."'w'" .._..rf __... .... __ a o r e e 213/5922977 _ _ S~masmict, aiedw11·mcoonmarmc . furn.S500yrly 675·7758 G4S-OJ<l3 5J6.870Seve840-5949. from$25.S&up. awrrowv.--• 1·800·237-2806 or BR t BR. slall ::.hower, patio, ( Adults No pets SW> Up. Office-store. 480 631 ·1400 1~237-0704, Sun lOAM· 3 bl' lOWnhse. boat slip, 2 &den . 1550 I m o . 2 br. frplc, yrd, ~;,r, near lndry rm, 12 blk lo E 2 Br. nr beach, re n g, gas 1561 Mesa Dr. ft , A/C, 17:.11 Beach Bl.1·--------•I 6PM, M·W9AM-8PM pool, wnrus. Agt. Diana Comm. clubhouse. pool. ferry&shoppmg 17th St shopping & bus & waler furn. $300 Call (5 81.kst:astofNewport H B.LEASE842·2834 ~ ~k :f:..alettcy.1Teca4J99& ,!17a9b7· $400 536-6617 New c rpl. drks. ltle, !I00-?272,eves 492·9482 Blvd) Office space avail. 400 sq. For sretoreason&olabfl1eceras~~asce al •~ *H~ I • 324'" "'"" nc: 0 · .... · stove & paml Mature s l 9am·Spm546-9860 u:: ---.n-"Oft ~ ,. • $230 Bach Jncd. u lll. 8181 an Ange o. 2 br. 2 fl., pvt r estroom & 500.1-. 5000 StFt. -:r •••••••••••u••u•••••• Houses ,_,.shed or l'r:blks to beach 673-6279 aduJts. oo children or ba. P"1 deck, new cpts & ---------storage rm . Crpts & "' 6S41 Abbott Drive Sharp Hu,l{e 12200 11q rt. 1 Unfsftislwd 3300 aCt.6wkd pets. $295. 955-ll78 pawl. Perfect for coup I<' TAICE OVER ~. elec. & waler pd MESAp'f.lliE R Huntington Be1ch 4br condo. 2"'1ba, fam ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3822 Duplex 2 BR 1 Ba. encl or singles. Call after 7 PAYMENT Years lease. S2QO mo. l!i25MesaVerdeE.C M vT.::;...:;.=f rm. 2 frplc:s, dbl garg. in Corona de4 Mor gar. Mature adults. no pmCollect2131289·2426 INFORMATION OAC 518-3r18 545--4 I 23 Uruversity Park. Ss.45. MOllLEHOME ••••••••u••••••••••••• pets.S310mo.964·10S5 lrvint 3844 R&fTOPTIOHS PllL'\h offices, up to 750 sq ---------to 5.51·1549or551·5790. INFORMATIOH NlCE 2 br upper dplx. $375. Nr. new 2 br, 2 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOIUY 400HOMES rt ID xlnt bldg. 18th & •...w'PORTIEACH• CIRCUS VARGAS A new 2br lownh~·~.·c S390 Repossessions, buy OP· Empl'd sgl or marned 3b 2u.b B d N "'' ••E"ir. New Por t BI v d . Pnme retai·I spac"' /3100 Feb.26th or 28th ""'" uons, take over payment cpl. No smokers or pets. gar, frplc, bale. Close to r ""' a ran ew -.. --""" 211116411-6303 " 4 .~PM Performance mo. 759.0721, 1-496·1206 ...,.,.,, ""n •999 all. Woodbridae, $700mo. 2 MOllLEHOME ,...,. · sq ft. Prest. toe. Fash 1111. Th information . Easy ...,.,.,,.,_.... " ---------1 rl eCity alllO:~AM . fl . OAC T d TSLMgmt 642-1603 cargar~.213/46.5-4841 STORES 900 sq fl 3 rm swte. Nr Pe rornonst. intdecor, c"""'~na"-n•-r nancmg · ra e Lf!e 1 Bdrm apt w/mini vu 0 C designer. art gallery . ...""' .. "'"' ..., Deerfield 2 br & den anytlung valuable. oC ocean. Steps to China Mes a Verde -2 bdrm. $290. 1 BR. rec fac11it1es. Santa Ana 554·7070 · · Alport. NB. Avail al1l.sans, gilt boutique or ange home, fncd yrd. frplc. Santa Ana 554·7070 C.Ove. Pvt deck. $450/mo. q u 1 e t c u I · d e.sac. avail. Orangetree, odlls. E Anaheim 956-4500 Mar I. Contact 752-8263 sandwich shop. Linda To claim your tickets. will accept pets & We5tnunst.er 848-8895 References. $300/mo. Nrfrwy. &&4-1523. C.Anaheam 956-1011 PRJMEMWPT ICH 833-3581. call642·S678.ext.2'12 children $485/mo. Ai:t C. Anaheim 956-1011 Newly remod 2 Bdrm 491H936 ~ leoch 3848 Westminster 848-3895 LOCATION * * * biS-6160. E.Anaheim 956-4500 front house w /frplc BR B ds ••••••••••••••••••••••• ICHCITYSH"'9S p l 1 1 r· · h . 600 block Marigold 2 I A. carport, ki ---------Office space avail. with ..,.. a1n ·me a 101s 1ng RENTALS M.50/mo. OK,nod~s.Cpts,drps, Ocean view. patio. cov-ROOMS 4000 u se of secreta ria l 4uruqueooeofa kind shop.Pamtbooth,spray 38a.2ba ...... 14751625 On the beach! 2br . 2006 W Eves'.475_2535 S295mo.979 0136 ered parking. 12 UR, 2 t ••••••••u•u•••••••••• services & all business shops • food services . equapmeot. compresser, 48R.2~ba. NB ... SlOOO Oceanfront, Furn or un! BR. $350-1475. Wik. to ---------1 oCfice eqwpmenl. CALL Qua.mt SeaJ Beach Mall, vapor degreaser. clean· San Clemente 75&-1677: 631-0900 ,.........._ u~-3824 I lge Br apt. No pets. lx'h. 549-1188557-5870 •AIMNlltador' I•* _ANYTl ___ IM_E_~ __ 337_o_. __ 1 3.u Mam St. Agt/Owner ing tanks, hoist, etc. 2 BR. 2 b ·~""/•cJ\n -."' .._._ AduJts only Pool & patio Lov 1 rd B ... Rent $225. Located In a.~ ..,..,.., Coftdoftlini-1 ....................... 1887 Monrovia. S260. 2 bdrm, 2 ~pie max e Y ga ens· roo"" Dana Point. deluxe office 2l3-598-77l7 Costa Mesa. 646-1234 Unfsftished 3425 Nice 2Br, lba, cpts, drps, ~~. 3961, 3rd t. $475 plus •Kilchen~a·!1al1.1avail. space, 56< sq.ft., across ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·---------••••••••••••••••••••••• patio $285. S385 deposits. security deposit <H I " from BofA 495 4975 · CllWkn c b Manne Maintenance Co. 2 br2 b cood 00-5717 5361857 752 BeauufuJpanora.mlcview 543-3265 (W) 634~ for •JnCUU1,heatedpool ~5 • . • -..... t. store Y ocean. for sale in Newp or t • a o. country or . twnbs"'. 3 m asters1ze a-i•cau·on •Wkly or daily maid srv. Npt pier & bus stop. .... ..... E II seu:n .. , pvt chi.Ids park, (8) Shalimar. "' ...,.. $550 I I ""'a"~'· xce enl pot.eo-....,'fi bdnns, 2~ .. ba, balcony. •1V&phoneavallable DECORATORS • desk mo se. avai · •·-• f gh ind' picruc BBQ, 3 pools, jac, 675-2B55540-49l7 ...... or n l 1viduaJ. clbhse, gar storage, or LA MANCHA APTS Cr p I , tra s h c omp, 2 br. xtra lge rms. Canyon Low Gi S72.50 Wk space. samples. delivery Wat.effront location. Call Csl Plaza. Child OK , no Large 1,2&3 bd ~arden dshwshr. 2 c:ir gar with View, deck, uU pd. 1st. 2277 Harbor area Npl Bcb. 551-1572. HARIOR IL VD. M.r. Faris, 9-3 Monday P e l S S 3 9 0 apls. Adults. Dshwhr nnoner. Avail Mar 1 $575 last & sec. Avail Mar 1. Costa Mesa 64S·4840 ... _. Fri'day 67"' -~ · · ~..-$375.Call494·""32. ·--------•12nnsmt.e 390sq Ct. ample Store20x60 +office. 1450 wuu • ,,.,lr.70. 6'2-l~/673-5781. bltns, encl. gar, gas bbq mo 963-9784 "" f ·-·-• •cAC. p park. utl incl A/C adja· sq t. ........ .,_, er mo. F~T FOOD Npt Bch. u.c_..,3 "·""'. PUS"-·.f~l"'E . New2br2ba Incl. uUl Teo· Pool. Gas Pd. 778 Scott OCEAN & 2br 1".lblk from Crescent Room w/kltchenette cent to Sec. Pacific Bltr. 67$-6700 Divorce. Sl3,000 m o. 'T.J' '-""' "" """ nis, pool/jac, rec, rm _P_l_.642_·_507_3_:_645-_56_1_1 __ CANYON VIEW Bay bch. Beaut. ocean $00week&up. Bank. Near E . 17th & lndmtriallftlhll 4500 Terms.Ag\. 751-1400 ....,._.._,. 3248 $500.972-ll>m. Wntlal&o VIII~ Newly redecor. 2br Jha view. Just remodeled. 548·9755 ~~~ge. C.M. 642·4210 ......... •••••••••••••• ROLLER SKATE rental ••••••••• .. ••••••• .. •••Condo, 2 br, p,i4 ba. bltn Beautiful brand new t:::!m:~ugv~ '~('1~~: S400/mo.4S4·S8l6 Rm. pvt bath. mature ---------PRIMElNDUSTRIAL netslOS6500monthly.No 3 RR. 1 ba. fncd yard, A/C, s auna. Pool & adult apts. No pets. Pool. "'"pie stove, refn, w/d, LacJiina Hills 3850 .:mpld lady, hl priv. ref. CdM dlx swtes. util pd. BUILDINGS trouble w/cily. cty e tc . .. __ k 1 ..... -.A •1:£1\ ·acuz. · Ope d 'l r-• ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• h £./\ La B h 4"' 7346 ~19 rt f /t d'I P I d 1 u..-..: • aec """"• ......, mo, jncuz:zi. New cpl. Nr s. J :r:1. n a1 y. Jo'rf gardn~. Avail. 3.1 .,..,,., +. 'g c • .... AC, ampl pk~. Fr $195. sq o c n r ce to sel . Agl. I yr tease. 1-.481-7532. ~tt6~~za, $425. 559-8420 ~~ ~~k $600mo. Dys 87U·t!SJ9 ask ~rde~~~u~s;br~~ra~ Sunny Jo~ashion I. suite :m· No lse reqd. 675·WOO = 5~~P ft 24< gross, 1_75_1_·1_400 ______ _ U.,..Hlls 3250 ----------1 Br$290·$30S for Rick eve. 687-0865 art. New. Adults 52 yrs min w/ba & patio. Mature Laguna Beach. S00.1200sq om> sq rt 23• gross, 91 lnneedof 3key people for ••••••••••0 .. ••••••••• Beautlfullydecor3brcon· 2 Br$335·$350 6· Top or bill. Mootec1to .empl'd gentleman S26S ft , air cond. new cpt, Fwy my rapidly expanding Sllper 3 bedroom. 2 ba do, pool, pvt 15 acre 'ISLMgmt 645-8122 STUNNING large2br2ba Village. $500. Owna: ~. parking, hwy visibility. •500 •5SOO sq fl. Tustin busines.c;.Call tosetupio· frplc, dshwhr, p1lio, fncd park.Newport Terrace. n.. t. b and d I + den 11arden apt. Pool. 714-640-ll27 / 568 3974 Room, lutchen & laundry 549-ll86, 499·3922. $i1M,700 terview. 67$-3083 yd. gar. Kida le pets ok. $5.25.496-7737 uo:au r new a u t $345 710W. l8thSl. •3949 sq ft, Tus tin ,.._ _______ _ $435. Agl. No f ee. apls. Spac. l & 2 br Mewporileoch 3869 priv. San Cleme nte Confu:leotial private of-$191.SOO •• 1164-2588;973-2971 ._.__nhFwwl.a..d w/townhse style. Prplc. Eastside 2 nR t t,<, Ba. ••••••••••••u••••••u• 1175/mo. '98·222'7 aft 4 fices, 2 compl furn. Sell Call ,7141 831•5970 ReaU~tat,.eFranchise .....-._ Llldry rm. Jmmed. oc· fplc, encl patio, pool, no pAIU( ... EWPORT pm. contained. New bldg. Ex· NATIONS LEADING ~....... 3252 •••••0 •••••••••••••••• c'py. " cepOooaJ value MO sq.fl. dys FLAT FEE Bt'Okerage ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...._,...... 3704 lBr,lBa 1325-'335 :1~~11J<1ds OK. S375. Ba<'hl"lors, l or 2 Attractive rm, V,mi to C.M.754·7744 C71415tl·S7t7 Excl~1veTenitory Ocean view Towfthse. 3 ••••••u•u•••••••••••• 2Br.,2Ba $395-1425 ---------Bedrooms&Townhouses buch,$30wkanH.B. ------------------• SAV..OOM 7H~288J BR. 2 ba. rec facll, pvt Mature married cpl only. TSLMgml 642·9'12 3 br, 2 ba upper, Mesa del Spect~~~~!? total 9f».3:)3J, ~ahfront Office, Lido lndustnaJ 800to1600 sq fl bch, 485-1651 &5S8-3987 Lf!, well furnished. airy. -Mar. $350. No pets. Vocalloft lftlhllt 4250 age .,. .. ..,..,.,. wt th offices. Newport.•---------Vo blk from s. Bay p1·er. Ca.sh., s .. ua-..... 6036 recreation program, ,,.......,_,., 645-2111.646-6303 •II 116 BR, d Ba f WllHl";f ..,...V"' ·a1 7 Is 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..---------~ 5010 4 co, 2 • fplc. Fronts flowered patio, 180 E. 2Lsl Stttet SOCl program. poo · tD -.s bltns. pvt atrium. 3 car mum East.side 2 br & den split 1 bl' Moblle Hom'" porch, tennis courts. At Fashion House ror rent, 8jg Bear 3 Rm office, carpeted. StlM... 4550 ...................... . gar . Tennis, pool & level. Frplc. dec k , dollhouse ' Adults, 00 Island. Jamboree & San City sips 6, lmeos fum rurcood Skypark C1rcle. ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. Pvt. comm. S800. CostaMna 3724 slcylJghL all extras. 1420 pet.'1.$325.673·7787 Joa9wnHiJls Road S25 rutely pr cpl. Call lrvine.549--503.1 Self ·s torage, 17601 759-1465 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo.Noch>ldrenorpcts. 1714>444-ltOO alterlp m.548-1989 Im.,,, ft. 2 blks to O.C. Moraan Ln .. 11.8., off SUS C •ir1r"ir J B r b a c h . :1 pt. .... Bch&Slater,848·9998 . .... ,..IMdt 3249 --Days 646·4262. ('Vf.'S stove/re(rig, uul •race. IACHB.OllUHITS BIG BEAR CABIN Alrl>Ort. ~mo. Sharp ••••••••••••••••••••••• Large & a mall 1 bdrm, 64$-.9543 see Hamilton. Aval 311. 2 Br. frplc, cpts: sleeps 8. upstairs front w /lge llACHUVIHG encl. gar. S245. & up.•---------$2'75 5.'11 1255 WS+.,.,sit. Weekorwknd.640-5565 balcony,pvtba,A/C4321 ........... •••••••••••• a.&-••)Mu-Adults. no pets. 2110 EastsideA2dbr1• bltns$. no --·-·-----201E.lc6oe.HI. 1 8&rchSt,Su1te200,N.B. UCl p-1eg..,,.. no kt·•· ,_,.,&• .--1 NewportBl.548-4968. pets u ts. 316 1 Brdupltx w/yard, good CGll ...... 556-7707 BJG8EARCabln,s1ps 14, Avail April 1. K· ... "" ...,., "" Widen. L.R .. ram rm, 640-1Z78: M2·4201 eves aft location. Call after 4, pool table, color TV. !! Investments 754·7900. or pet.'!, net'<b furnlsht'd din. deck Pfll frplc'• $255. 1 Br. nr shops, bus, 5. S48-4589 b 1 frplcs 545-41116 apt. April I-J une 15th. elec gar.'.o~ner Both ocean, carpets, drapes 1------------------Near ~0• 2~8• 2 a ux-· · Small olflce suite. 1 lrg .. 2 Call C. Lave. 833-6800, -.I I I d . stove fri.g.645-1223 • 2Br,lba,allelec. Brand ,_3 .... ,2 ba,u~gr1d-A, Oury aterl ron\fiapt . ......._ .. ,._.. 4300 Kmall offices. Approx. ~s. .,. ... es. ooa 'Y ccorat· ' new 187 E 18th St ... "" ~"' "' ""' arqc bo cony rplc --------ed. $600 & $700. Call ......... o.t.och3740 mo.Ait.Ml·5032. ,.....,.,. newly decor, r OC. $750/m0.559-l802' ........................ ~Us66q. fl. Xlot loc. ~plew/3chUdrenwanl Mlll'lene at &31·3"4 or ....................... eou~ie. F:ncl aar. $400. ROOMM •res ,_.,.,.________ to L~ SBt. E l Toro. Lake 644-.all8. W:'XR ,..,._,,_,Able new 2 br. 2 751·990!1 Cell & leave Deluxe48R 28A ~ar no A F h / -&..-"""'""'.. A UM 1 pets s+A...,· •o b;. i .. 7. 6=HN So-• STAINEDGLASSCLUB orcsl ome w pool unrS ba. kids ok, no pets. mcssar.e. va ar · .,,...,·1se"'6'4 tt03" · .,, ~ F;:t;.,.... " Work Area+ Lockt'rs _58l_·_l789 ______ _ Spaci tudi05 4' 5SHJlllSS3&. mo 2 Br, 11.'t Rt&• townhouse, 1 • v · • 'Y mor Pay ten! ;";;Stor;;a~g~e;. J;a;ne;;. 548;;-8532;;;! Alltnllon LIOO HOM c. •UDOISLI• tBedroomSultea f:ar aac patio pool ST~TOOCEAN. View Aaea&Llfellyles. "' 3 BR. 2 .... Lra. Sunnv Complete Kitchens .......__liB' ny ,.,..,.:,, r1•-pl"C"'.'. Adul•~ 3~•c» b ? Weefieck References OWNERS' or near prox· .,. • .., Be p u Pool ~ !'9 '""-... u.-.. ... "" nr, 2 •• "' car icar, "-1 .. ~ '"282 ,. ....... sum lmily. Do "OU h•Vf' a ~it ~fu~ea'ri ~~k ,.:~~~l~·TV New beaullful f•rden only.$3§.631484. bltms.te'75/mo.675·1~ -..,_ _....... potcnllallf buullful Kart. (213) SSS. 7900. I MUe to Ocean =nta, pool •~;,,,. Llu1ed 3b"21Mt-•pt .. n wly Ne.Ar Hoat. •llrllct 2 BR Cut Living Expenses I ~~h~e~ ftof~~~ homef o r ?rise ml•boro d ~0011*n !ly al Suites l 8r m ecor, w /e ncl aar. twnh.!e. 2 BA, cpU, drps, SnArfl ll nom Of Pl tJve new wallp1~r 1nd C l '"' i" d 2Br S380 S375/moNopeta. 75MIS6 W/O hkup. Adlt11. no H~Mettt Unllmlted white shutlUt . Must see arp n e r , marr Get GREEN cash =·~,.t AduJL•. nopct.6 Zbr 2ba Vltw. Hor.et OK. pee.a S37Smo. 548·269S P:_~~~".~:n;;w· to~~l~te. SZ'75/mo. =bfu=1~r;or~~~ forWHJTEelel>htnta •J•LA4f I ~Ya.quard Way Oar aew w/w crpta. lat. Well""-........ 3 br 2 rN1urtcJ °"TV"'°"' llOG>ll$ UALTY clua r• .... n•-. All rel widlaClaalffedAd •• -er C•lNe-portBlvd) las\ 6 sec. $450 mo ''"'--· l"J ,..,., .. n uP•n Timemaguine ,-'2JI I -~ .. ~ Calll42-M71 14).2000 .._16orU0.982S 6'1M82I b•. fplc, U steps to '"'".(b,,1111! ,_ ftorn Udo Isle. 493-ltlO beldl. Call fM2.zse5. 7'141132 .... 13' I aft 1 pm, ..... w..w 4600 ' A MARKETPLACE for Pluchlllllnl A«enu and New Bul.ineMes . Th IA t9 1 new DAJL Y Pit.OT C'la.'U!lnr•tlon to 11ttt buyC'r end H iler 1ou 1her. Sell your 1urplu11, ovf!tSt()(ked or no '°""~ ntfded Items or auOt>fl~ of any ltlnd • Fur mcft lnformatJon or '°place 10ll' ad, call 64J.1671 belWHll tAll llld & IOPM, Monday lhN Fndu tor= to •I>' .... ti.a f di)' OI' t'lll IMtwttll ud 12 nooo on Saturday ror .....,.., public.00., --... -~ - I •: I I I I I •, I I' ,1 r: ,, r'1 ·~ I ' I r '- M t r s \ ( E .. .... ' ...... l•J-11.s c:.,...,, C • wtot •••• .. 5--'flces ....................... ...••...........•...... ...•..............•..•• ····••···········•····· "6e llloney• CUSTOM RA!mod•I. rt,'palr, IH, IMMEOlA't ERVICE Drhewap•P&rktn1 lot lnU:s1or~ntry c•r]Motry, old ti mo Irv aru All maJM appl •!Wpetn •S.alc0»llnf by Jay • ~ <Tal\al'.1111~1p 1& )1'11 14 .\ 0 60 Appl. Repr ~t ~l.N •e CA.RI'ENTRV, ~ ":,: Mr Pelom· 111 _ --· Al.R8,CUN 'BET! ----R.n<ivahon, a51pra•Hr CaU&t\)tun~.m5e> Homo 1m.,rov1tment1 tuc1.1i-. teft»ttl moveouu, ~··•';•••••••••••• · dKu 6 adchuona Rt.'•111 cleanup». re_p•tra, /'lilllblnl led¥ for vac•t1oca Carputry • ~eyw U r U 'd cuolnc\~ plumbln1, pal0Un1. lnl panuiu. ~C'. refi or ttfla!r woutlL. Any 1 , Rco.launc.'-1>.r~elop haullo1, loalallalloo. N n a II\ k r , t> r 1 v • a . .o..i.'loh 6U 7m. Ml I r mttll :If 1., MS OM" ~ -OlT5 -, --..tut Gr-Int Raby1tlttt"r, •·••nlo1t1 C.,.tltrfta ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Relpona.lblc 2J r uld ••••••••••••••••••••••• P'l.Jl'rt"RIClAN J...-ict!d llau.I, aklploodcr, dump t-p af\1 •IC wt-Shampot> " •U!•m d an nch\ frf"f! ~1unat.i on l.r1', IJ'adloft, tree writ. UA.8VS ·n , -C.iikir br1&hlt' , wht l&rflHW tm•JI f*, demolJUool. flC 831-1257 J Ut U c:d ) C1J1al0m.1.Dblucll.Oun Uc.'t!S'IW!d 6T303S9 t' I ~ Hut lu~ Lo u"• 1bn rm, hall $1~ A\ tl -2LI 1n1 car • M 11 re a "" ST 5i0 <'OUC'b tlO. C'hr l..amp "'pair " d~a1an . ••••••••••••••••••••••• IG-S!ll Cuu rllm Jll't odC\r lllltallat.aon. onllquH OCCSlllOOnt. l Ton truck t 1 M Senk, -()it nopair, 15 yrw c-apr & raw ~ '!";a..h, \l'OU lnm Dan ............... ~ ...... • SJl..O~t;? m):\f'lf llcf11, F ,... 1>42-3224. Ron 6'2·5703. 1 t«ldl\~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.ll" haul1n6: mov1n1 ttws bll.nknAPIC')' ~ 'At ..:at'l' l~t CtC'luk ni K., e fl'~nc1na Garaee· Yard cleaniQi A<i'lO~ SU-am <'lun Ala.o up, G~6 f oc rt•palr ~A!t.rat.et &420705 l.JOOAL'r'I PlNU b I l W .. u I")' or. IUH ~>.IM OO~ I.OW COST STUDENTS Ml9.~.'1MEI l'nid~ mount un1l Pr ~....--~-1 a..NUP TRASH TREE A.DI"-' Q , : ell. NU, !•lh ~ 3'71 -"'"' ' M~ .. AM Nt;Y MGRS ••••••••••••••••••••••• M.50'187 BIU.~; ~"t'""", bill t.n us du tht-b1a JOb~ hkl' GMdt>runa. cl an UP6 It HAUUNG &.CLEANUP .!.':!r :1' ~~I bu:. k ra~. noor , wuidowa hand~cap1 n~ Gl'Ot61~ Comm'I &residential ........ \ u<a.,, 073 7131 Dutc h M 1t1nt~nan ct lbu.stu ~7072 6.'Jl..st81/962·l462 !171 11)4 IY1l'n& ~l"VI«:, Pl"O( typ F.xpcr ai:.nt •ncr Cll':in Hoa•1de•ag ~-A~ u s 1 nf l' , 0 r C..wt/~te UP6 Free est Reason -·•••••••••••••••••••• .-c• ~-Mk or V1rk1e ••••••••••••••••••••• • • CM area. ~-491 7$&-t£A> C'oocrctcbreaJun,lshaul· ----Call Janice's Raggedy ... f' --~ _, •• Ann's housecleaning for TYPING ·AJI pt1'"""~ pro 1njl. r a11t & e 1C1l'nt -~ C b • 1-A'b'O·'k . ..., Reas64.Sll.Sl2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l orough, r eliable & ' ......u-• courteous s ervice. ~·3531 Foundations reta1n1ng •MR.. FtXIT• ~lllOO c.-atea -walls. blocks, patios. Corpenler. pointmg. ..-u"'d """ <l>lJ c:•o • .,,.,,, !Was. raCAls. 15 yrs in ~··•••••••••••••:•••••• ~ ~<tlU ,..rwo~ area 548-17!»2 <.:.arpenwr. Free &l. Any CompleteconcreteJobOR -------11uc jobs. Call Allan or set your forms save I DO IT ALL TOQY. 64tHl649 money. Ross. 64$-9926 548-4909 The Moppets ln business since 1974. Honest. de· pendable, effk1ent. Of-fices, homes. vacancies. Uc'd. 546-2393 Mandi¥. fletKuery a . 1979 OAlt. V Ptl..OT C7 I I I • '4 , thmdt••1 a.-Tu ....... ,. U ;/P.,.n"t " Olag ·······~··············· ........................................................................................... . • R081 N'S HOUSE· INCOME TAX KETURNS Movtq 6 Hauhor. St.arv· EXCELLENT PAlNT. Any plumbing. water Q.EANlNG SERVICE , Prompt, reasonable. Ing CcUefe i ludents. Ex £Xa.NT PAlNTlNG serv. h!aka, baUlrm eo.<-1, for a t.horouahb' clean Nt!wl)Ortlkh 833-4tl99 perieoced 75\.7799. Seve CALLS48·2700 c ramie tile . Reu. boulic.:wo-0857 thbnumber! ----------11 s:e3&flt lwm: we · 1----------1 Wallpaper Hana1ng 1--------- Want a REALLY CLt;AN •••••••••••••••••••••nMov1ng & b11ul1n g . BuzMarUnhmlted PLUM81NG .LOWCOST. HOUSE! Call Cln11ham Spocaall11ni 1n auto " f'tti&bl. blda matenels, Free flJumata 7$1·9111 A C RY LI C W A LL Girl 1-)-ee est.~ 5123 bomeowner covera.ie•. Mhld ·~ ell'. Lowest . PATCIUNO 545-0787 • .. catea ut tow~ J,o bn. lnt. ext._se.cvina area for 7 Have your home t paarkl U\I. lneured domc1t1c1. EVERY NOOK &CRAN NV. 00·1.1138. 008 2810 HOUlltlt hauunti Service has opeoina• for new NStomers 8 yrs. exp In Orange Co Jo'ree estimate, insured. Art 5PM Call Ann. 49'l·4422 Lon 979-7461 Housecleaning . llonesl Dependable. Ho mu. Ap(.s. Alt. s . S36·6193 "JUST US" houseclean· iJl&. We're honest & effi· cteot Call 673-0163 lb.L<seeleaners. ~ yr/ ex· pr. Local refs Free ests. call 842-0547 or 964 ·"345 ,1sartiMM yn. Prof. qual. work. 111• .. It ...... 1111.Aasoc., lac. 1~11M--__ 2flM ________ 1 Res ld/ Apts/Comm . ••••••••••••;:-.~-~•••••• 675-0562 .._.,111g Senk:es Reas. Dave. 586-&425 Ku .. bltba. comp. room ..._...Serric ••••••••••••••••••••••• Q.wrtom W 11 . add&. Carpentry, 41luet. ••••••••••••~•••••••••• ~·mr:d~Y f~~~e~/~~·. AUWork G~ef.~~n~t. ~12Constr u ctlon . Mlnl Maid Service. F.uro-Home Car c . C a l • 673-4158 pean t.raloed personnel • Ueensed. 6"-141.3. • loofllllJ s. 7899 Conscieruous, f'Uar . work. -••••••••••••••••••••• · ""'4tMg./PaperilMJ lnt/ext. lols ot refs. reaa. Repair " Reroof. All ~ ... •••••••••••••••••••• Jade 675-8336. t y p ea . s h i n g 1 e s · ••••••••••••••••••••••• PETERS PAINTING Pcilltlag/$9 rockshakea-compo-tar. Bnckwork. Small Jobs. Expr'd. Reas Rates . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free est. 5'1·5930 Fin. Newport. Costa Mesa & Free Est. Call Gene Wall Graphics. Murals . Avail. •-R-~ """'3175eves ssi-0458 Add a touch of class. •--------b-l - u •u...., vr.r TomNiebur 114/891·1479 Roofs don~ rea.sona e. Custom MISOJll')'. Pauos. Prof pain~. Ext & lot. · Ask for Jam. 636-8284 or Walls, Fireplaces. Re· Law rates. Refs. Free ....... /l.,.w 1_893-5 __ 105 ______ _ lalJllfll Walls lOO's of est. 536-4780. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. Io c a J r e fere n ces . Fine Exter. PalDlmg by Neat patches & textures ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~12. R. Smor. St. lie .• ins. Try FREE EST. 193-143' Ceramic tile installed. ~ lO Illness an Camtly, me. 83&-SSSS24 hrs. PATCH PLASTERING Ors. sbwrs, tubs. 547·263!* Oln.sllan bncldayer nds w·· I ..... -.... G A 11 l y p e s . Free dys, 545-70&7 eve. Ho.etittt.MJ extra work now. Ex· _..-_.-llatL" "All -••••••••••••••••••••••• tremely reas. &fS..8728. Refs offered. Eves. esllmat.es.""" 5...,.7113 Mind Your Manners loc. __ 631_-as __ ._6_75-_1266 ___ Plaster Patchi n g :!.~.~••••••••••• Bonded reliable people Movlftg QUALITYPAlNTING Plas te r. s tu cco & NOWtSntETIME will care for your home & .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Int/Ext. Neat. Reasona· drywall. Int./ Ext. Free Expenenced Trimmiog peLs .879-S70l Morris MOVUlf'. Llc'd & ble. Wayne UXOYE> est.546-l&4l RemovalsandCleanups lncoftw Tax J n s u r ed . T 11 5 8 8 6 . 646-8226 ,......, __ u_c_._&_l_N_S_. _6'5_-8aS __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• P rofessional s er vice. ---------•··••••••••••••••••••••• LINDA'S MC/Visa acce.pt. 962·4.242 G & M Paintin~. Int & Pl b S • --..... , l I Ext. cabinet firushing, & um mg repair. pee. in 1..--::SOM.:uung va 41b e'? TAX SERVICE "Mo"'ft .. Out & Abouif... t . 751 GHQ/ remodi~efi & copper re· Place an ad in our Lost P /B I T '"'6 s ucco repair. ........., fia·pe. pn'ces. Top d F d l ers u.s ncome ax "Don't Delay, Call 0• 673-8457 an oun co umns . Cell 842-6439 for appt. day" Local & staw·wide · iat Plumbing. 53'1 ·3194 1bat's where people 1901c SEI.L idJe items with a serv. 24 hrs. 7 days. Have something to sell? Have somethlng to seu·~ when they've found an Daily Pilot Classified Ad. ~ Oassi!'&ed ads do it well. Oasstfied ads do it well. item of value . ... ...u....... 5100 Arm•c:........ 5100 Lod&Fo..d 5300 tWpW..twd 7100 HelpW•t~ 7100 HetpW•ted 7100 HetpW..ted 11oo'HefpW..ted 7100HefpW.t.ct 7100 .........•.•........... ··················~!··· .....................•..••.•.•..•...•.•......•......•....•...............•..•....................•.............•.......••.......••.......................••...... SENIOR CITIZENS LOST: 2 blk cockapoos. •~·-•l .. n Vic Oolde nwes l & """°......,....,. Aggressive independent bao.k 1s seeking Pay Filers. Call 0 . Kristofka for appt. 894-8887. ASSEMBLERS needed for swing shifts. flX' Mfg Plant m Costa Mesa. $3.30 hr. Call Mr. Clifford, 642.~ 'SPECIAL (25°/o DISCOUNTJ McFadden. M & F . 892·3768. Lost: Bag old black Cat from Thalia St. Lag Bch. May have returned to old home in slide area 49710 FOU ND : Keeshond 2·21-79. Santa Ana 835-7972 ROBERT HALF& account~ Proudly Announces Our Move to Larger Offices. V1s1t Us Al Our New Location. Pacific City Bank F.qua1 ()ppor Employer APT MANAGER ,-----------For SS uoits ln Costa Assembly I Mesa. Exper'd couple. EXPERIENCE I Hu~band must have ELECTRO .... ICS I maint. exp. Wife bkkpg " I ·exp. Call 642·5073 or ASSEMILERS t COLDWELL BANKER BUlLOfNG SU1TE200 Found: Male Dobermun. 2333 N BROADWAY c ro.ppe d . Blk collar SANTAANA l.213)86S-38Sl. NEEDED I APT. MANAGER. 1S un· IMMEDIATELY I OunnR the munth of F'ebruarv. Senior C:ilatens receive 25'il off on their pnvate party ads for merchandise for :.ale in the Class1(1ed Section of the Daily Pilol. (Reul Estate is not included). Bring your ad into one of our offices listed below between 8 AM & 5 PM any day during the week and we will start your ad the next day wJsilver studs onl y. Scar We have an increas ing on rib. Brookhurs t 1 NJemand througho ut Adams, HB962·0898 Orange County for ex· its, San Clemente. Pref I cpl. Cell Kurt 835-3700 Long & s hort term I N RRECEPTIONIST assig nments. Work I when you want. Paid I 40l050~m.10key.FUll vacation . Bonus 1 time, fnnge benerits. program. Not an Newport Beach ar ea. a~ency, never a fee. I FOUND Brindle & whl perienced accounting & young male dol(. Vic S bookkeeping persQnnel. , Bnstol , S.A. Hts. Call Callorvisltustoday-we 714-64.5-7040 I 540-2679. are looking forward lo IEL~•ki·: Costa Mesa -330 W . lay Strfft LCICJl9NI leoch -1186 GlettMyre Pen.o..i.s 5350 F:::t::!. you in our new Assemblers t t.11i:qt0ft IHCh -17175 hoclt II. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1714• 835-4103 RELAXING MASSAGE s e "'"" c e s I Bob James-Lie Masseur FREE PARKlNG MECHANICS PRECISION Call or come m today f 5010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Store F1xtur.es. girt warei, clothes 50~ off Gift Shop Clos1nl( 12 Fashion Island Newport. call 838·2643 or 644 ·0031. 4 matched display cases with a back bar. all bgbt· ed. Mod. glass & metal. 6' 64.>J744 ..... .,. .. , ...... Dffdj 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOWEST lllterfftRates I stT.D:s. also 2llld T.D. Loans. Fairest Ter ms slnce 1949 Sattler Mtq. Co. 642-2171 5"'45-061' MONEY AV AILAILE 2nd TD LOANS SWING WANS EQUIPMENT CONSTRUCTION OR ANY PURPOSE David P Carey & Assoc. RE Broker. 960-1957 NEWPORT PACIFIC f'tINOlNG SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS Plenty -Gnpe - Begun-Dahlia - PAYING My doctor refuses to tre:it me be<:ause of a strange malady l have. l am allergic to PAY1NG doctor bills. PENNY PINCHER ADS Outcall 9-9. 494 SI ll PREGNANT? Caring, conf1dentJal counseling & referral. Abortion. adop boo & kei?ping. APCARE Spirifuclll Reader 1815So. El Camino Real San Clemente: FUiiy lie. For appt. 492·7296 MICHELLE•s •0.tcall• llAM ·2AM 835-:rT 49 UHDA & 'llCIU ~McnSOCJe For n.. ,.... of ltt Serving all Orange Co. 835-7313 Physical massage by Sell any 1lem or com · u~·d. masseur techni burnl1onof1lems f0f'$7S ·~n. 4·8PM Appl or less with a Penny __ 28_17 _____ _ ONLY S2 Pincher Ad. 3 lines for 2 ' SUFFERING f bo C'OOSt'Cullve days Each . rom se r addil1onal line 1s 60' ror rhea, psonasl'S. or dan lhe2days Charge 1t ' dru!f? Ask about Perla No commercial ads de J ojoba Hair & Scalf Treatments. Pb LaC01 For more infor mation feur, 842-4244 and lo place your ad call 642-5678 •S~UIN* Any amt lsl. 2nd. 3rd, Lost & F'CMMd TD's. Oayi> 955-1055 e" 5300 Models & F.scorts Male-Female Ann, Destiny, Sonny, ~ca, Marsha, Cissy 67>S535 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOAM PA.a<AGIHG •PLACEMENT• Equity Loans Venture Cepital Mlrumum SS0,000 Financial Conaultant BKR. 645-2590 FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 642-5678 PRIVATE PARTY will pay more for a 2oc TD'R. 642.3573 I•-------- ' 24 hrs serving O.C. Ask about spec. rates 752-8708 DRIVE A HEW AUTOMOllLE every year for about $500 • $1000 Most Makes 644-2526 l.Dst or Found a pet? Call MASSAGE ~, _ ___.11nts/ Animal Ass istance ~--••ieMODELS ..--League. 537·2273, no fee. nwvwu; Lost & FCMMI . ESCORTS •••••••••••••••••••••••Lost M. Sib. Hus ky ""'.....,. ,.110 ... LY A .-.Cl•ah 51 OO wbl/slv/grey, blue eyes. vv •"'-" ··=•••••••••••••••••••• black collar, Reward! Dcrys. e•es. hr • • * ~Pecan . H .B 631·2140 J. J. l~all-Los--t :_U_ru_·-ve_rs_i-ty_P_a_r -k, GOLDEN GIRL 13000utrig~er Or. Irvine; Longhair Calico Y~tben:i!1!';.0r c,at, female, 3 yrs old. •ESCORTS• Wearing bm suede colla.r 972-11 ll TwofreeTickeh w/yeUow stones. Please --------- to call552-0816. Reward. MODELS/ESCORTS CIRCUS V AllGAS Ever ordered "Beauty" LOST : N o rw eg la o &-"Beast?" Then try Feb. 2601or28th E1kbouod male Mesa a~ 4:30PM Perf~mance Verde H~rbort'Baker m. Or. Cty's most e:it· 1lw! City .. ... Budd R rd 1 clmlve. 773-0801 Shopping Center n.» lO y. ewa · · Oraqe _55&&m________ Misty's O.tc• To claim )'OUr tlckela, LOST: Turq breasted •NOS~RVJCE FEE• call642·56'18.txt.272 wbte parakeet.. friendly ____ 99_1_·77 __ se __ _ Admin. Mgr. lrvrne 833-1441 ' I Executive s ecr etary. The Akins Co. Ass 't to president res & comm. real est.ate development co. Admin. of corporate legal, profit sharing pro· gram, office manage· ment, ins. prog ram, persoonel. career orient· ed w/good growth poten· llal. Must have excell. skills, legal exper. pre· ferred. Tustin location . Salary SHOO + benefits. Call Karen 832-2881 Advanced Controls of- fers an unus ual op· portunity for people with good, basic mechanic or machine shop sltills. This is your chance to move from routine work into diversified, perclslon as· semblers. 2102 Business Ctr. Or . Swte208 Huntington Beach 847·3498 8907 Warner Ave #215 I I I I I I 15 *PEOPLE* Needed 1.mmediately $5.89 N~~:.C:oa~~- peneoce nee. Company willing lo train. Part time or full time. call Mrs. Collins834-1377 Ad'¥ertlling Aast. LaJ?una Niguel I 831-0542 I 27957 Cabot Road I EquaJ opportunity : Employer M t F You wlU u..-re you.r taleni.s _______ .;_ __ J to butld an entire com· puter ·controll ed Assoc. Rep trainee. New machine tool. You must Co. in 0 .C. area needs be able to use precision men & women or couples measuring instruments for P /T work. Ma ny flX' close tolerance fitting benefits for right people. &alignment. Call foe appt. 541-0863. Asst. Manager. Fabric ex- y o u w i 11 r ec e i v e per. needed Costa Mesa minimum supervision _6'6-4040 ________ _ whale working in our ASSTMGR/HOSTESS clean shop in Irvine. We S Eves, call 548-7418 oiler competitive wages between7am·l2Noon. wilb your first review after 30 days on the job. AtJTOM<YnVE •PARTS Apply in person or call COUNTERMEN! 714·556-9300 ADVANCED TROLS CON· UEOlJamboree E.O.E. ASSEMILER fOf' ligllting fixture co. 2031S.E. Main. Irvine . Busy Chevrolet dealer near Orange County Airport needs parts counte rmen with GM parts expenence. Good pay, environ ment. Permanent. Opp. for ·a d· vancement. See Bob Cook. HOW ARD Che.,olet Dove &. Quall Sts. NEWPORT BEACH Need sharp pers who can assist 10 our prod dept. & perform secretarial duties. Must type 60wpm & be able to do paste up work. Sal to com· mensurate w /ab1lity. Send res, Ad #425, Daily --------AtJTOM<Yl'tVE Pilot. PO Box 1560, Costa •C!SEMILERS •LOT DETAIL Mesa, ca. 92626. Aia Part·Ume. 8 AM to 1 PM Local Ml.sslon Viejo Co. Mon. thru Fri. at one of ADVERTISING needs assemblers. Some Orange County's leading e!'per. preferred. Can· new car agencies located SALES didat.es must havt good In Costa Mesa . Must man~aJ dexterity• be have valid Calif. drivers 1be Daily Pilot has an neat ID ~ppearance & de· b C811 f lmmedlate opening for a pendable. Work ls in life ceme. Co or appt. to s ales person with s upport MEDICAL Chuck . zart or Pa ul newspaper display ad· ELECTRONICS. Ooly DeFabbs. vertlsing experience. respomlbe persons seek· 54()..9640 Good salar y , com. tng permanent employ-UNIVERSITY mlsaloos aod excellent menl need apply. Call SALES&SERVICE fringe beoefits. Ex-&.lsan581·3830 AUTOPARTS celle nt growth op----------COUMTaMAM portunitles for a pe~ wtth career ambitions. ---------Minimum 3 yrs. Jobbe-, Call for appointment. ASSEMBLY experience. Must be well 6'2-4.l!l,ext.277 See o ur Jobs under ll'OOCDed • personable. ~·~1co•5y Warehouse for Im · Rani wort" good pay ~ A mediateopmlnas . with growing COOlpany. DAILY PILOT VICTOR Call 556·2500 ror in· D)W. Bay St. T • .__,, ., s....au. t.erviewappl, Cost.a Mesa Equal Opportunity Emptoyer BabyslUtt.EJ Toro ~•. ---------Matl.a'e woma4, start.lng * • • HB. (SUe) 96().1700 ......... S....lcn 5360 -------· Jan 2nd. wk. days 7 am to ASSB•lltS 4:30. Care for 1nrant. PUCISIOM Rel. req. 768-7446 ----------ILOST gold bracelet. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TIRED? SORE? $1.11 per DAY 1bat'1ALLyoupay for a 30dey ud lntbe Initals M.1.L. Vic ol I rvine o n or about 2·10·19. REWARD. 833-9«90. Come It get a sootblng, relaxing, full-body maaeage. Feel better lmm. For men as women LOST: Female Collie, wht Call belw 1Gam·l0pm ror body w/brwn head, Irv. appt.$36-882$ Blvd. CM 646-1842 I--'_;.._ _____ _ •t::i=-:! ....................... .W.W...._ 7071 AdvertlalQI ,,... ............ • .... ....... Muat have ex.perieoce in \)'pe apeclQI fl Pf'Od,uc lJll cleao, well·desl1oed fioiabed art. Apply In peraon between 8&m· spm, or lend retume to: . .......... .. 17042 .... Aff Opeol.n11 evallable In Bilek ofc medlt'al ataltt. precision Instrument wanted. PT, FT for shop. Applkenta must )"OWll Pf'Oll'eUlve irow· enjoy tbe challenge or lnl apeclaJl)' In N.B. Call troubluhootln1 & for eppt le interview, cuatom tlttlog o f mechaaieal aasemblles. _M6-_l!_619_. _____ _ Good maoual dellterity fl BllMina mechanical apt.ltudt H · TIU.a Employment VETERANS JolK&JobT~ ........ For UM1,.aapc1 .,.._. UYilM) ill 0,... C..ty MocWtw s...., Oper .. Of $4.50PerHow ROllte Sdfl/Wflt«' Softener $4.00PerHow Sec:trCMliu Tec:.lllllclmt Sl.50 Per How Eledro-Mechaalcal ASM,...,..._ $4.00 Per How Grinder o,.. alCM $3.50PerHow Bech oMfOS At.M ..... $4.50 Per How Pmt.-Up Arfid Sl.50 Per How Strwclw al s-... Worbr $4.50 ,.,. How Medimdcal Auu...,. $3.50 Shfft Metal F*kotor $4.00 Per How SWpplncJ & •ecmiacJ $4.00PerHow w ........... $3.50 Per How .,,., .t Es1 .. o,_11t & T ...... ...Wttrwtto. ef Hwllqlw IMclt, 531 MeM s ....... I ..,ilNft• IHc9'. C .. -C714J 5J6-2U6 « 6J11 .. H4. l• _. w-. DD-214. ' Banking Aggressive independent bank is seeking ex· peraenced C r e dit Oleclter. Call Ms. OaVLs, 848-1234. Pacific City Bank F.quaJ Oppor Employer BarMcjog TB.LERS NEW ACCOUNTS Need sharp, personable Tellers and New Ac· counts persons. Savings & Loan experience pre· ferred. Full·tlme posi· tions available. Please call: 752-2600 llV1HE SAVINGS & LOAM F.wal ()pportu.ruty £mployer M /t' ~llman. Apply in penon. See Judy.~ surr & Saod Hotel. 497-4477 Boat Hardware Sales Penon. Prr 2days a wk. Schock Hardware 2900 Lafayette N~Beach 675-3324. axly·Man. Harbor Body Wortts, 20'76 Placeolia, Costa Mesa. BOOKKEEPER / AC· COUNTANT Huntington Beach CPA firm offers a career opportunity for a Full Cha r ge Book· keeper I Accountant. Brood experie nce & background i s necessary. Work directly with clients. CPA firm experience preferred. 992~1. IOOD911tF/C Pos. w/prom. F.I. R.E. lovest. firm. Xlnl oppty for exp. & m ature penoo. C&ll 640-0123 --------CABINET MAKER·2 Yrs Cashiers <Food) P art Lune. £xper. preferred. Vaned shifts. Newporter Inn, 644-1700 x 525. Mackey Zemek. E.0 .E. CASHIER Restaurant experience desirable. Apply 2·SPM Ben Brown's 31106 Coast Hwy, So. Laguna. Chiropractic office manager ex per. req Newport area. X-Ray ex· per. desired. 548-1166 Q.EANER·2 responsible mature adlt.5, 7 dys wk, 4AM to 7:30AM. Pvt club, call for appt. 644--0050 Q.ERICAL P.O. Receivers, 8·5. Good fnnge benef. Busy desk matching invoices, respoo fOf' discou.ots on invoices. Apply Avnet EJed.rooics, The Largest Eledl"Ofllcs Distributor. 1n the w o rld, 3SO Mt'Cormi ck, C .M . 7S4-.m63 or 6064. Q.BICAL Z Z Gtri, heavy adding macb. filing in busy elec- tronics ofc. Good fringe benefits. Hrs 9-4>. Must be fast & accurate. Avnet Ele c troni cs, 350 McCormi c k, C .M . 754-aJ6.1or6064. CLERJCAL Deputy Clerk wanted. Clencal position avaLla· hie immediately . Re · quires 1 yr. clerical ex- penence. 40 wpm typing~ $705 to start. 833-0411. ext. 200 for appt. Orange C ounty Harbor Municipal Court. E .O.E. Oerical lmmediate opening for dependa ble jndivjdual w /R ea l E s tate Oevloper /Prope rty Mgmnt Dept. Position calls for various clerical dubeS & reqs acctg bkgd & 10-key & type to 60wpm. Irvine ar ea. Please call Lydia Schaf· rer at (714) 955-1313 for urterv1ew. QencaJ cuaJCALJO£S The following jobs ere available immediately in the Orange & Irvine areas. TYPISTS (4Swpm) KEYPUNCH SECRETARY (w /or wit.bout SH) 10.KEY GENERALOFFICF. You cao choose your own t)ours & days to wor k. Top pay & excellent boousplan. Call or stop in today. 'llCTOR T1 .. ow _,. S....ices 4341 Birch St. Ste 213 Newport Beach 556-1520 ms. Main Orange 135-2622 Baoldng exp wood " formica, salary open, epply 260 E.1im-------• Dyer Rd, Suite M, Sant.a a.aJCAL PART TIME l&J.llS Sao Juan Cap istrano brancb We have Immediate opeoi.np for 2 Part-Time Tel.lets. Mu.st be able to work Saturdty . Ex· perience ls prererred, but .tll train. Excellent be n erlts, tateer apparel la pro. vtded. Please contat'l Terri Gulmmayen at (n.41 -.oeo1 for an aJ>· J)Olftt:ment. HOMIMIRAL SAVINGS Is LOAN Aoa. ---------•to work for financial ex-Ca.r Wash Mangr. growth ec. of outstanding corp. OJ. Good pay. Bonus & Lt fig lY'Ptn«. exper. pre· profit 1bar1ng plan. ferred. Varfe.t,y pos w/x· MetroCarWuhSystems lnl Cringe beos. St.art sal 2950Harbor Blvd. C.M. $1000. Call Jean. 540-6055. C~HIEIS UTOTEM MARKETS Coutal Personnel Agen· cy, 2790 Harbor, CM ALLJO~FREE Clerk·Typiat for South Q)ut Repertory 40 hni pr wk. 45wpm typing AC· tWately. $3.SO·$C.OO i>r ODeoinll now avaUable hr. Call W)'Jlfte. 957.2902 rc>r ruil and part-lime .._ _______ _ a.mcSIOO Tn>lnl earns you great benefits plu.1 dentil ln h lrance Call Lisa, M>-l470. DAILY PILOT SERVICE 11£CTORY .. Loat : t mos . o ld Siamese/Tabby fem. 2 /15. The WlllOWI, Irvine. Reward' 551-4023 aft epm, 945-5333 d~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• am..C.'2714 Primary acbool teaeber 1714) 146-0lJ I per • muat. Mln. 8 moa. Newport Cen&er branch :f.;,5~~.~·0;!: ~~ see1t11 per1ontble In· GUmaa.' divktual w/8 moa Teller exp. to do peylng 4'r re· Ewal...a~eru/.,.t.¥ celvlai fl Nl&tecf opera· £mrv,, • r CaslUcn oo 2od • 3rd •· . hlflt. No experience necc111ry. we train. St.art at P . per hour, ad· vancemeot opportunity for menaa.UMot Po1it1on to $5.~ p er hour . U CNelilJed, For more to· (ormatlo_!';. ult the l'WloDnel urn~: Arnerie •o Caree r Agency 110 Newport ~nltt Dr Newpott Beach NOFEE1'0YOU 00 JT NOW I 64~1611 $100 REW ARD experimced W/dilldren. ~~~~~~~~ 8ladl Toy Poodle Male, Rd1. Looklq for eblld - loat In vie Florida/ car1n8, u1Ume. Cto Baveeomethln1 :rou want Mama oa Feb 12. Call llllo do weir\ lo fl around to 1eU? ClMllfied adt do ~ctayorolte. tbeboule.Pbmtm ltftil.80Sl78. Get GREEN nab for WHJTE tlephanta wttb a Cluaifled Ad C&UMZ-5178 lloftl wortc. Stl com· --------· nm:llW"lte w lt•P· OOn· tact. c. Bruton. Frent'h Mette your 11\opph'I Ber* of California. 500 aaier by ualu lbe D.U, NewpartCent« Dr, N.B. PUotC1M81faeCI Ads. lJ4iZZ Lampeon SCteet Gardto Groft, 5ST 440 1tqual ()ppor Employer r- Q DAILY PILOT Mol\dt y. ffSlCMIN 21. !ltti ~'r.~.":'.~ ..... !!.~~ ~~!!~.~ ..... !!!~ ~~.~ ..... ?!!~ ~~~ ..... !!~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~·:.~ ..... ?!~~ ~W..tH 71 0G HeflJtW.eM 11oe'twpW..e.4 7100 tWr 5twltt UXJ AJ P'.CRF:TAf\Y N EW PO RT 6 EA<.:tt Pll.SOt••a isr.cnt rARV GIRL ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l..ar.. on l0t.llln1 fOI' Fulltl~e. eitp~r. 11 n MOln 'CACE RANKIN(.; OlllCTOR ~~~ rtw.lty f'RJOf\Y, wunu-d h)' In Cert Full Umt' blllina. 10 Orh r , LA TitnH, So. twit t)IJ t with follow Juan Cape> 831 1121 Jl1 RM HAS IMM F.D H11hly mott vat~d 10 _......,.~po dlpcndt'nt 0tl ~ Su1ary t.y by touch, Marine Ill.int ~ah Mulil ha\I~ •••ALOfftehl Ind tm aru C.'allbu•I , OP ENlNGSfOR dl\lldual 15 ~1111 OUl(ht Fmd out about tht' rttal nl'futl..iblll. ph0'1t' kDt«t, hf'lpt'ul. App ckpendablt' r ar. Good Jolly R r In<' at lftH17'1 UMO DllVIR 'llU.:fi"OlJ.,OWING POS 10 assume thr diri·c est.ill' i1all"1 ('llr('('r op f.4l,~ ly In perso n l.1do 1&11.t') .. <'Omm.81M-l307. ""~·run1rora O oral l'rv l'l" Ncw""'rt O('h 1.0 AN S fo! R V I C F. ton.hip ol tht· per110nn 1 partun 1t1t' with Tht 1r.~aET_A_l_Y __ w.ip~·U'd. al() Lldo 11ark. Oftlc Cltrli. In UUI lka&at11l , ..... <.:OUNSELOH P r ior d t' p I w I l h r u I I Rt-al &t.1tt-ra L.ictin.'iln• - Dr.N.R. Ori\"tt'i I. H ll)t'tli Local rutth.a.tiin f. 1>11.tnbu LYNOllN ~~~ti~~~:~· ~'fc,"" luo.nM•rv1cm~t'xJ)t•r dt> noiponslbllll)' for the cbooJ fft"'-"umpl('l I> N.iuorwl MorttioiJ:e lni. C'e.:::&.:a...:! W -ta.......-mov1n1 <"0. Apply In lion Ot-pt Ttlt i-1llu11 ., 11 . lift NurMt-• iltdt• ~ •11$.-s:?OO~·r wcwk 111rable. prC?ftr ably 10 rttruilmt'nl at onenta rcfwaduble to •<'hool ol Co h11" dtaJlt11"u1g po., -..,,.._, e·N 1~11 Prud\K'er t·i.aU. for .. ~ II nt t)'l ln" • ""''""'"•j(I! bank in~ or rt.• ··-ol -w "mploy .... ~ ,,_ your choice t t"Xh lllilV4' llVUll ru. S\•<')' lo VP ol --·d. '"'·ll ,.,. pltim• -... HO --1· . .. 11 1 full llmt' NtwPoll tttntt ~ Ol$6 or •• ..,. ... j uun .... ' "'""'"... ~n•~ ....... "-~AA Mkl = .. ~ru ..:::.. I •• ,._,.,... 11k1ll• & • plt>a11nft Con\•lt fC'nl &~:it 213-12208U eJCl 284 lolt'dfled lhe cootmu d devt'lop ........,. tr•tnm~ pro14n 1m ,.,.,.. ""M'\vo ... ary .......... ....... Dr ' l)l'l"IUWJly hulk W I c. I\ • N II --CLERK T \'rlST f.x mcol & dn11nu11nt100 or att.!r htt"Nll.nf( lO a .... ure 1~r GO()ff M"C'/ 'fkllllS re ~ Ceno-. Ur, Y l: uni111 count• r ulau an,·lutll'! hllo '1 ~or H • I.gt m110 General help cellent ntry levt>I po 1 personnel POhcie,; pro I.ht· h1ght'lll OPPortuoltwi. QI.I Mort1111aie lond1n1t l'J Toro "-'t F\111 •Part Um• ~t'al utfl~ w••<k Int fbcl·Mottl Mw.& 00 18 VaUd Ucl'nse ll()n Mu11ttype 45 wptn cedures. wage & benefit for 5UCC(.' Jom and i.u(' bki:d dt·:-1 r ubh· St'nd louktl'llS fOf'part ~full M lOll t. -.urkin n.m M1uii1•mnl po111tton 84'T l141/14112A2 CLE RK T V P I b 1' programs & labor rrlo ~ with ttw moi.t out C'ompl<'tt' resume tnchJd 11m 1• bookk.h• pc c 10 I ct r\ll l>Jaal nfi-dl wt.Iona w1tb " 11mwrn1 ln'llllll'i.lJaw Oll«IMflll for <r tl'llOl\OOU Tem porary . tsons. A degree fnl)('nson ~tundtnH le11 m of 11ut 11\(( 11">1lary h111tory to-P O. ~ .... l)Ort ~a C•U Cln comblHtloD pn,. eor <'t1tl'IJ1• n,. A !'fl I)' in .imbillou•. t>nth11111 lllll' LUNCH St:RVI Ct; help upprox 4 1no rnay lt•ud nel ma naaement • 1n <'t'!\Sful Pt'OleSiionah an 2VlO. Newport lkach, Ca. d)' far lpp(.t;<&4 10 1.: t 1-.'Tll(lfl ~t .• frunt olf u• m11 n11.i"r for pvt llll'n '• club. Mon 1111D pc-rm. •~~1t1on with dustrlal rclaUoiu or busi thf' bu~•nt'~ll l-'01 1 n lt2600. TM Jol'y lopr Inc Mu1<il bi· l"CIPQntlblt" & thru P r I 12 2 30 f\ltUl'C! nt':l)I udmarustration & 0 formau.un l'llll Monduy --------- Con 11truet1on l•r uJl.'('1 u.F£TR0Nlt.: SY ,, 1706atlllll'llt•i\w l'XPt'rH'Jl l't•d Sulnry $360/hr 1~1903. Salary for all lh<• ti bove f1llJ) ol 2 yrs l'1'pcr 16 thru for tdlty. IUik '°'1---------M~t' Onn•th l.lt'l1•nt Mo •• ,,, ll") '* ~w1n1e Intl\! l'A <itlt•n Apply Uoy t'rai;.-r po111 tH1n11 wtll <'Um perllOnnCI or industrial Darlene Coo l'11\a.\l10 baa.ed bu04t r JJ\il\.a Nu I .oc .. 1 P-'> 1110 ~1 l~1:lt 11r JlltillJl.ll Prl.'•h•y, ~1111 ........ CH~IST mcnBunte w1lh exper relations Is preferrtid TM Real Esto~ ~lubn11. l(U\"C"runwn Paul w ••"J> ln In\' c n~·nh• lnn w Avi: -'" exc\:ll~rll 1·1> bencfHi. Salary will b<' com 71 4 640.2500 uUPf'O<'\•'W>al\I. d 111n &. arn ~ 1-11 p 1uodiall , San MILLHAND Please contact Perxon meos urate w /educ a bUll~t " ""° ib1lnw... Norrell t I ,. m ,. n l ,. . c A For pni«>-type m achan4!' nel Cor further inrorma-tJonal & professional ex '" '• ~Y nc-Iii"' 1 oh It' • ·ral 7141tWJ hlO:I for appl &bop ID Lb~ uutr umeol lJoo. 640-4580 E 0 1-; per Ple8S4? forward re· l•--------"'otw•rd roumt• tu ft>mpural')!w-n1<"t r AYTHOSI div1.!il0t1oltheoil lool t0· sume. s tating salary REAL~TATESALES K~n. Akuu l)\ \ tor ~llWI t: O t: CHRJSTMAS llU S lt.iw lnrw" to v.ork for dui1try Working from ..1111 rt htswy. 1n complelt" con u cell54.'d or we wall tram mt'O.lVo 310 \\1· .. t h•tSI." WO Rh. Wflt"N YOU J.i.1111·.-'1 tl IC¥t.'t1)' Ano bluepnnl3. skclches & ~ newpo fidencelothe PerSQnnel you for 'lute eum •Secretaries* G Ofr t8kkpr/Recept Employet11 Pay All ,.._...i; L.11 Reanderi. At:ency 4000 Btrch St. Ste 104 Newpor1 Beach, 83J.8190 Call Jo•or Appl/FA tab '64 1\i.;tJn.C'il c l.nt·t'I <k•O!n 1•1T WANl ·n 1'-Y-1.113 I~ ii;oo wrl>W designs. d.Lrectly ~ ~. personnel Dept. San Clemente L1m11 C"d o HH Cull ~ rk<rtro h\'draulle con· h d wtlh cngu-,eenng. lo aN =::•i • -General Hospital. 654 Caul;('y &Co 494-8057 1---------Cuok t'"CPt'rll"IH' iJ fr) tr I •>,.lrm1> Rrl1rr1t Ope~11 in v..i"' uui.1•, Hou cclt>aner• n l' ed ~I IJl new produ<"l dl' -.,,1 . agency Camino De Los Marl'!>, tOt' brrultfa"l" din 0 h. ~ lllOb f, 1 111') 4to0ar. Call l'I UM: i·11ll 11flC'r ~PM velopment for world _.::::;-:t. -752·0331 Sanelemente, Ca 92672 !~~~~~'!!~~~ SECRETARY ner Top p.i \ wootl • vtCToa _ t."'15 2IJJ9 •-·--v.1de well bore nav1ga. -t:qualoppl.yem ployer RECEPTIOl"lIST bl'od1~ ~b 11> t" mil~ f'qu1pnwn1 re"nllil \atd Te .. oir•y S..-.lce• HOUStutR.-.-t1on eqwpment Lathe 2191'Z Marun. lrv1D(· lmmeo operunJ? tor a l Re6t.aur11nt llO'J :'i 1'.I 'da m11n lur •cnirr•I Qtl Ott"<'h st. Mt :!1:1 ---IP' eitpenence helpful for C&!J For Appa1ntme nt • PLUMIBlS & l.r<K'tlVf' re<'t'pt.Jon1!it for Q,mmo Re.I. 4tr.? IJlJ dUUt'!. s 11.&rbm' RI. t~J)Ort llt•111·h No l • .il(UOll fomaly 1n more vanely or pro1ect5 -........ MEa.t. -..-CM SSMSlO pvt bt'11rh ('()mmunity 5 Salary open. excellent onuu" Q"" YOWl~ dynum1c d('velop ---------t !lit)' v.t't-k . llvl" In benefits package EOE. Office Manager Sales Top pay. Medical 1n rorp lYPlll~ SOW wpm. COOi( ----------~ And 11dd > uu r nl.'w ~·pgrutt• Oil'(' qu•rteri. Sc1eouf1c Onlllog Con· Good opportunity for ad· SW"ance. paid var11t1ons ~.,.,~ J mo lo .,tart Expaod1n"'"'l'li'4'Uraot h11'lun I paycht-<"k• 10 •H• 1 Pus1uont1\1tll227 Refs. trol. Corporate Head· vancement.W11l tram100 &musthaveowntruck ---""""------- duun with O\<!r 50 untti. BLUE JEAN I IDO(iUl"!>bud~~t pr.-f dnv1·r·, hr S1slur) quar ters. Newpor t experience necessa ry Will tram Call RECEPTIONIST lor pvt fo'allllly ownt!d or.i11mia I ·-& bo.urd 497 1636 Beach Call (714> 557·9051 Must be 25 yrs old or 751 6942 llX'n's club on Mon only, 11on offora pleas•nt JOBS ask for Mr. Moll or Mr older & be avail on • 6 30am 2pm. sa soi hr work1Di t·und1t100• I OENBHALOfo't' PIT Uoust~kl~Jlt!r. f(•m ' hvl' Adams. Saturdays. 557-0824 or POLISHER 752-7905 Good r Ur--' a..a __ _. I t ln.eook&drlvetorlad.)'. 774 -6090 1S2S ~Jc.s et opportun1t1e,, ur .,...... .. ""IC'C'U I Ty~ 50 wpm 1110~. Pvt rm.'bu Npt Heh. V _,,, ., 206 C t M Di-GREASIER -.tdvanccment 1-:it«rlknt WOMEN & MEN J u•lcpho1w,,, c·tr F11sh1on 642·W33/64fH~ Ma.ads. apply The Inn at e ..... :" . os a l'MI Degr ease r hel P"' r t'Ortlpuny twnef•b ~' ' lslund l<1<•:itt0n Cull Mr Laguna. 211 N. Coast OFFICE POSITION wisome pohshlDg exp RECEPTIONIST ::::s: ~t's1n•d Appl) TRAINEES II Arm~tronjl. &H ~ for lh~u~eAwl(ve; ~T ~ti~eEg~ ~ Hwy. Laguna Bt>ach Inform al cnv1ronmt'nl, 2031S E. Mam. Irv tnter vacw Job secun ty, udvancc· 1--------- 2100 H..t»or llvd Costa M~?>11 ASSEMILERS PACKAGERS GENERAL LAIOR COOt</&..ctt.on INJ MOLDERS s Days, call 548·7418 . betwt.>en7am 12 Noon_ fD:t v \\ ei•l.-M?nlh o ~ COOi( ~O n j?t-r 11 s vour I AVCO :·~~AM~~:r~or~vcM ;~: ~~~es;~cepe';13~0.fut~ meot. first class medical 7i~~ ~~~~'.a~;s~~:n I FinanclalS...-.lces 1')-1. EurnSllOSIOOweek· slart. N. Orange Co. &dlmtal plan Bnng us V1eJo Salar y rungf' I Equal Oppot l!:mpluyc·r I y Mus l b c 0 eat. 752 2573 basic typtng skill, alten S895-Sll27 per mo Cull I pcrsonablf' & cncri:et1c. llon lo deUul. ab1hty to 831-!ri'OO x 302-303 blwn II I Loo's Kitchen 979·0747 MANAGER fcw YMCA show up on lime. and we &5 I Gt.rl Friday, full time ror ufL lOAM FOR APPT. SUMMER RESIDENT will train for a vam~ly of -- de<:orallng :.ture Will act 1v111 e:. We are a ·--------• ·--------• ' open & c los e !>l ore, CAM P IO<!ated ID San u•~11, establ"•hed and TYl'IST at•t•1,1r .llf!, s harp nt•Jt. brq~hl. friendly & r el1abl1• Heavy tt!lepholle!. ApSJI) in person Trail R11lhl Trailers 3100 W Ct'nlral. SA I h 11. h Ip IMMEDIATE Bernardino Mtns. Hous· ,,..,,,.,.. -..., answer p one!. "' e I E growing smaJI company customers In salesman'!. P.ARTI M mg & employment for M!llJ~ to m usic slorei. absence Will ll•11rn lo EMPLOYMENT other members of family throughout the world cons truc t & d esi g n ·SANC,1..EMENTfo: available.Summer ~i· St.art$650&go upto$675 s hadt's & do ?>O rn e The DAJ LY PILOT is lion o nly Call 2 13/ tn:.ldays PRINTING lmmed.tale operung ex· ists for· PUSS OPERATOR Restaur:lnt BOB'S HOME OF THE llGIOY Lt'IH S t<•1t ler-t-:ne r i:> ProdueL., D1v1s1on ha" an 1mmed1ale opemng for a S.-rr.-111 r )' tn the Purchas ing Departm~nt Typtng OOwpm, ~eneral office 1<k11ls required Som~ expe rie n ce 1n rurchasinj( ti. d t:s1 recJ but oot r(.•qwn-d Wf' ofter an ('1'celle111 'ialaJY w1lh u l'Omplt!le and <'omprehens 1vto <·om pun)I p a 1ct 1Jcn1>f1b pill'ka1w For 1mmt'd1ate l'OOhldu,111011, 1>le:JSl' clill or ;1p1>IY •n person lO LEAR SIEGLER 84SlCiY PRODUCTS DIVISION 2().1() E Dver Rd :de1·1.,1on \II -.tu ft<; Muture atiult for con Ii) \ a 1 I a b I e p a i d \all-scent hospital Full 1\acat•on" You don'tl time PQ81tion ava1labl~ I I Apply Flagship Con· pay us. °"c puv you valescent Center. 466 1LL["·~1y1ur.c;wr I specialty sewing Call consolldntmg a substan· 489-7043 for appliculion Then 11 ·8 up Lo you• 673·7830 or come by t1al part or 1ls d1slnbu· PAYABL""'. C t S h d & Mat:ure woman lO com pJ u.:> u s o m a e tJon tnlo paper routes re-C0'1 PUTE u . Sh E ruon &1t wk:nds. eves°" 1th " " Drapery op 3535 qwring afternoon de well, older grandmother BILLING. Coast Hwy, COM livery by m otorize d INVENTOKY. Experien ced pr ei.s person lo operate mull1 · lathe 12SO. 1850 presse:. Salar y will co m mens urate with 1•x peneoce. Cont.act lmmed operungs ill uur fdmtl> resldurunl .1 1 nearb) locltt1oru. We r(· qwre no prev1~ l.'Xper J0tn our fn eodly tlJm Comt· '>t't' u.., t odd y 1 Klod Hall & Dyer Rd 1 Sanlj Anj, CA mos 17\41 540 32 lU flagship Rd.NB _ ~ .~ ~ COUNTER HELP !:O E ""v I c E .. Part tJme C'all or l'ome In today eau~~fll or afl2 pm Custodrn.n Wrap a round i;oc1al i.ec Part Lime 30 hrs per wt-ek Met.a Verde area Call 847-9006 Moo·f'r'1 9-12. 1 5 CUSTODIANS I l'tT 1·330 PM , "'/T f 3-lJ ·:Kl PM Ex penenre. I n.1 req. San Cle mentt' I General Ho.-.p. 496-1122, I ~~ -I lntnt· ~i.11441 2102 Bustnt'!.!> Ctr Or '-uttl• 2011 11 unt ms::ton BN1l'1) 1147-:14!18 8907 \\ umt'r Avl• #21S Liil!Una , llW••I li.'11 0542 :ti!l~7 < "ab<•t R11ud Customer Service fo'a'!t I 1-·11uul 0111111rt111111" JU"OWUlg St John K nit!-t t-:mplmer M 1-· need!> a competent :,elf I sl41rter Ul th(' order depl I '\ot an ui:enl'' Servacmg our l'O:J~l 10 l l'l\t•\ er., ft·c coast accounts 1nvolvci. ---------- heavy phone contat•I 1''a...t Food Mature Help 3 OUISWcey 540 :11l _ hr:. mid da~ Appl y Delivery p/LJme AM. LA ~ynnc;. Buri.te r s. C M Times dell\ $100 per 6<1&-~ for pro(. daughter . N.B tramportaUon 64()..8222 10.KEY EXPERIENCE G·R-E-A-T · •Liberal income a l· age;, · canboosts tartang pa.\ LynnStansf1eld I I bo I t714) 759.7853 S "'L.,,S JOB ... OW owancepus nus pan MECHANIC ~inNcwporl ,._ '" " '""'-~ k h 7 Belwetin8am·llam O,'EH •;,nun wor ang ours ( Elcpenenced w/aar cond daysperweeka tune .up . Ii g h l ---------1 _Af7.AVCO GOOD PAY . t;OUD ·~cellent paru1me 1n mL>Charucal.Good s alary Opt.mu L../U~~L HOURS. GOOD CON coml' & benefits Good year D I TIONS MANY 1-·or de tails contact TireSt.ore 620NewportCenter Dr r·RINGE Bfo:N fo:FITS i''Oliter Ouellet 49till800 VACUUM Newport Beach FAST GROWING COM between 9·30AM·7PM. 646-48l4 f.quaJ OpporEmployer PANY PROM OT ES M·fo' MECHAN IC Foreign FROM WITHIN TRAIN --C a r I D 1 l' :. e I SYSTEM I'' 0 R T O I' R e p a ir / o v e r h a u I. MA N AG EM ENT INSPECTOR Mercedes Benz autos OPERATOR S T A R T S .. I M TRAINEE Elect. ma nual & auto M E D I ,\ T f; L Y ' ' Tu learn all phases of m transl brakes. ett• Reud K E Y 8 0 A It 0 s pect1on Mus t pass JOb order. detcrmint' E X P E It I E N C I'.: physical & back x-ray. malfunction, plan work HELPFUL WE HAVE Irvine E O E Call procedures. do valve OUR OWN TRAINING 540-7639 JObs. calibrat ions. PROGRAM PL'T ON BY replace igrul1ons. repair 1llE COUNTRY'~ TOPlns --.ur-u~· Clerk 'f ypist. fuel tOJ sys to CA !.!Jn 0 R G A N S A L t-: S ........ dards. weld 1 use e lN't P EOP LE CALL ,\T J>i!rsonal lines e xper. equip & band tonls O I'll C E F O R helpful Jay & Renfro. Diesel mech tra101nl{. 5 INTERVI EW ORGAN 645-9000 yrsexp.$10per hr Takt• GUARDS EXC HA NGE. STA INSURANCE Ftn Vly ad lo ,Employ m e n t NUNN71415867302 branch or lrg aolo ms D v IP m n l D e Pl producing aj?eocy has oor-620.261.010. Ad paid We are seeking an m d.Jv1duuJ expencnced in vacuum system opera t1ons Salary com - m e ns u rate:' with 1·x pen enc<' Pnnl.ln!! PRESS OPERATOR Small m·hoose shop has posit.Jon avrulabJe Some press experience re qwred PAPER cunER F;qual Opportun1t) _ l':mployer MI F /If betwt"en2~pm l~·--~--------MaftocJet Traiiteer. Coshie-rs 73111-Ain~er Avt' H H 2:B52Avcntdd dl• lj Carloll.:1 La~ lillb Waiters Wa1lre!.M~., CJ shier., 4501 Cllmpu:i Ur Irv Equal Oppor f::mplyr '111-' SECRETARY Se<'rcla.r) for lhe Equw mt!lll & Des11(n U1v1s11111 of a rj ptdly grow1ri.: ~taurant l'hain Typini.: & Shor1hand !.k11ls n· qw~ Exccllt>nt work IN! t'Ondll100.'< & b<•nd1l:.. °"h1ch rnc-lude~ var1ou~ i.tnJUP tnMlrllnCI' & prqftt ~ann~ Apply in pcri.on be1ween 8am-5pm al SAi LBOAT SALF-'iM AN Experience prefe rred , Kooa Manne 675·140:1 Orange County RA'<>taurant St!rv •Cc!> 2Wl Daimler SlrP1•1 -------Sall cutter full llml• will tram 63l 1~2 Scu11 .. An:i S4t; o~ S<ile<. Customer S<•n 1r•· !St'rv1ce S1a11on Allen lkp posrlloo open 1or danl. rxper'd Uay & PIT emp f1ex1bll hr' t:H•., i'"\Jll & p Lime ,\µ ston> dlsrounl Xlnt opp pl\, Shell Swl1on, 17th & C n ., I ._1 M t' ., .1 irvllli.'. ... M on1~om1•q W.1rd. ,----- Forum lru-c o CJll Mr ~n1cf' S1a11on Allnd '4eek Laguna Beach i''emult-factory pkg;?>-1-\JU & p/11mt• All area., ~ S200 hr lo start . .,1enl Uniforms furn1:.ht'rl Ages 21 or over Rt'l1n•d DELIVERY If vou nd u rai:,e:. 1537 Monrovia welcome No expen e nn· the follo wing 1mmed byemployer. operungs. Underwriter Trainee M ED I C AL ASST . Urology. Genl of<" & medical exp reqd. Others need nol apply. Call ~-22A1. Npt Dch Compr ehen:.I\ e l'Offi pany bcl'M!f1t:, mclud 1og maJor medical and den ta l Call or appl) in person lo 3952 <.:ampu:. Dnve. Newport Ue ach. 1714> 540-ti(MJ(} Equal op por tun1l) l'mPl<>>C r m1f1h Compulttlzed m achLOel experienet.> preferred Four day work week. ex rellent benefits mcludmi.? dental plan Apply !lam llam &: lpm-3pm. Na t1onal Educau on. -1401 Birch Street. Newpart Beach I Near 0 C Airport l Equal Op portwuty Employer HeldJ :;4S-824'' M~·ch I t"<P prefcrrt.>d 11 .. _ Ch1•vro11 S1a11on. :muo Sales Clerk Re!>ponMble Jo'a1rv1t'"' C M decnl pay PIT .Job $4 $6 o\ve NB 548·5125 nee. Apply U111ver!>al hr + Evs 5-9pm, Mst 1-'r'ont desk help. Apply ID Protection Service. 1226 have own trnsp !>Jl-~ person See Judy Surf&: W. SlhSlr~l. Santa An.i DEMON~'TRATORS Sandllotel 497-4477 !~l~~~~h~~1ri. 9·12 & 1')-1 & Sat 10-6, near your Garderwr m exch11nge for --------- horoo. foods & sm ap. upt rent. Spacious ---------1 pllances. (714 I 'fsg.5573 groun<h tor 55 urut eom· GUARDS or774-96lU plex Ill Costa Mesa . Dental Reeep~iomsl. full OO·SCY13or 12_1_:nll65_·_-38S~ tJmf' Expcr Cr & llrGENERAL OFFlCE practice. Xlnt benef1l1i. Ty p 1s t s. a<' c ura t e NB. 644-9211 40wpm. caJI :>49-3942. ---------DENTAL ASST-rronl & General Office. Fus t back ore duties, ~ ra} growrni: St John Knits cert nee. Would pref exp needJ, a competent self RDA Sal open Call star1er in the order dept. 642-6880 Servicing our coast to Dental Asl.t. Oral i.urger} only. N ~ lnqwnes con hdentJal. 644-6161 Dial A Ride Dri•~ Operate modern equip ment & door lo door lransp. Calaf dnvers he rt>q'd. No prior cxper nee. Good dn ving rec a musL No Sunday work. Orange Coast Yellow Cab, 17300 M l. H e r - rmann, F. Vly coast accounts involves heavy phone contact. CalJ SUlcey 540. 7171 GEHERAL O~ICE Electronic d1slnbulor. located m Irvine. needs girl for office duties. Good opporturut1es plus excellent company beJK'f1t.s Contact· Bob Tracy, 8am-~pm, Mon lhru f'r1 Phone M9-0954. GENERAL OFFICE DISPATCHER Phones, type so+ wpm, Neede d for full time bilhng. filing, rQa ture shifts including evening, person. for furn. mfg. graveynd & weekend _54().-8894 ___ • ------ hours to operate com l•--------munlcations center ror secunty & maintenance stufl operations. Some radio, te lephone & clerical experie nce pre rerre d . Exce lle n t benefit.s. Apply TM tm. Co.pony 1071 Camelback lrvtne 644.9()10 Draftsman · designer P /T morrung or alleronon Sant.a Ana. Reh.re<! O.K. ~1006 DllVas General Office JR. SECRET ARY Vanety or dultes in our collections department Duti es i nc lu de shorthand, typing and filing. Good figure ap. lltude helpful. ExcelJenl wcrking conditions and benefits l.nch.ld1ng dental insu r a n ce . Apply Dryman. 200 McCormick Avenue, Cost a Meso. Equal Opportunity Employer. Men or women 25 yrs or General Office older . Know the coast HCllOPRATOI cities. Ne lSl80 a wet>k or (Proof Machine) SECURITY Due lo our recent ex pansioo program. Wells Fargo Guard Ser vices l!i hlnng Security Guards for. lnine/ ... ewporl Beac h S..ta liilta/ Anaheim ~'-naParlc Costa M.ICI & The Whittier Ana IMMEDIA T E OPENINGS f or super•ltory l e•el s.c.;ty Officers who ...tTOP PAY, with o ~COfRPCl"Y· EAJlH $3.00 TO S3.85 PER HOUR PROMOTION CAN PAY TO $4.25 PER HOUR Apply in person Montluy lo Friday, SAM to Sf'M at: WELLS FARGO GUARD SERVICES 1532W C--oew..tth fulerton, CA OR Monday, Tuesday. Wed n ~sduy , T hu rsday . 10AM-4l'M. CLOSED Friday al 230 w w fJlf'Mf' ht217 ......... CA State Lie. No C·6036 No ex per nee Acct Clflicr. TRANSMASK per.<on nl'edcd lo lea rn Se St-Hel ~t'd 101 oHtc-v supply businC'!> ~ f\tll " pit Applv. Bu..,y & plea!ian1 wor k '"''"'. , or Beach StallOnl'r'>, 1020 9!XI B (!.l tlwv. N n. t:xphelpful, but not nee Sal comme n s ur a t e w1e xp & ab1ll tr . Call •• Kathy Schmidt a t S.1941161 or come into our olc. al 17400 Brookhurs t. Ste 218. Fln Vly. Me<l1cal Transcn pt1001st CORP. P roduc tion Worker~. Campu.c; Dr N B _ SHIPPER W AJt940USEMAN ST ART S840 MOM TH ~~~~~~~~ HELIARC WELDE RS· SAL~ --$4.80 to $5.96 HAND HICKORY FARMS JlhdaywHlc Legal psychiatric ore 1'ype 60wpm. One girl. lite billing, type OOwpm, phone & scheduling. 8.'11-8585. PANTRY WORKF.R·Sdy!' TOOL GRINDERS. S3 93 Discove r l hu wondt•rful wor ld ot t•h et"H' & ~ourmet food-. wh1I~· r arruni: extr:i monf'y Job scc·unty ».tabhslwd company l'"ret> mrd1calfdental ti45-~ m Newport wk. approx 32 hr:. Pvt to S4 80 . t:: LE C · club (·all for a p pt TROSTATIC PAJNTE R IMurance FI LE CL l~RK Ca II 645-9000 &140050 $4.47 to $.5.51. P RODUC INSU RANCE Expr'c commercial laab1hty ano property person lo han die accounts and market their m.suran<"e Salary open Call 644 1530 lNSRNCE F1LECLf:RK Begmners spot for bn ghl person. Pleasant wor k· 11\1( cond1t1ons ~neral offtce experience pre ferred Opportunity for tr::urung & advancement 37•"11 hr week. S500 per mo to s ta rt Call 5494700. usk for Andrea E.OE. lnlen or Design ass1slan1 for des1~n company. Ex Jl('n enced. knowledge 01 furniture styles, sources. h l(ht1ng. pla nts. a<· CC11SOnes etc requlr<.'<I Some schooling pre f(•r red Mu st rt>ad blveprints. Ask for Tony Mo-31137 JANITOR Pantry person for pr1v:ite country club. Part time MODEL& FASHION now, could be full u me tn Coordinator. Resumes _s_um_me_r_. 4_96-_'_57_&1_· __ too. p A R K I N G L 0 T PO Box lTlF. NB. 92663 SWEEPER. night w(lrk Models. Fem Shar p figure only. $15 per hr &&Z-6282. &'5--5122 Bob Models We Med new focer.: Models· Male & Fem all' If )'OUr face h a i, r hara<"ler. 1!. high fashion or looks like the girt next door. 'Ca II for an appo1ntme rit for a personal interview. You could be modelml( as early as next week ' So don't hesitate. call now. ask for Hazel 631-5600 New York We:;t Modeling Agency & wknds. Ovr 2S Sal $15Q per wk to :.tart Call 645-5052 Part tune home care. er rands & shopping llr:.. & pay lo be discussed 645-6700 PART TIME EVENINGS Adults with ouutand mg. attractive personahlleR who enjoy workmit w1lh kids. Over 21. Slart at S3.SO per hour . Phone 642 4321 Ext 250 . BETWEEN " 00 5 00 PM MOM, kids in school? AtkforAndreja Tho mpson Blue print EquaJOpportumty need s oper ator. w ill Employer lrBJJl. 632 Baker. C.M PASTE-UP ARTIST. P /T. 549-92.33 & F.T. Exper 'd, Apply MOONLIGHTING? Pe n n ysa v er. 1660 l'Ull tam Mon-Fri. Ex 963-7225 PlacenlJa, C.M ceJJenl benefits. Bayview --------- Coov. Hoep. 2055 Thunn. Motel Housekeeper. 5 dys PBX Ans !>ervice, Im med C.M.642·3505 ~r wk 9-2 :30. Jncxp. openmgs,lo work vaned 3 00 ' $3 25 hrs le wkeods. Pd vac. JEWUY SAL.ES MS.94it u p e r · med ms & pd tralotng N. 8. fine Jewelry de (714) 64S 2.s:iO &,ipM?r offers challenging MOTEL MAIDS. Pgr\ or perm. p/l. poslllon. W I f ~li m e Apply l o ~ p~we r l n ser vice future lo res ponsible Kirkwood Motel, 4030 E A tor rwlg& prr Call mature woman w l salci. CstHwy. Cdm 673-4520 ~1 · cxper. Gem knwldg. de M<Yt'EL NIGHT Cl~P.RK sirable 673-4734 3 Days per wk. Moot PIX OPBATOI Jewelry • alesperson for TueJSat. 6Pm·l :30am. $3 lndepeodenl bank seek high fashion gallery in or $3.25 ex p. Cal l m g experienced P BX LaJtuna Bearh. FW.L or 545-9471. Operator for Sal only P/'t', salary ~~m · MOTHER'S HE LP'ER Cont lH't L . D av11 •. T ION W O RK ERS - Male/Female. Furniture lacers. Fur niture As se mbl e -Pa c kin g Operators, $3 67 to $4.40. IROWN JORDON SANTA.AHA 2m7 S Halladay St Manufactures of high quallty alumrnum out door ruro1ture . Call P IT sale:.. Ta kml? :ip Sh1pp1nJ? & Rece1v1n.: phcallons al Hickory Cll'rk, full time Cal l Farm!>. Westchff Plaza. Ivan lor appt, s.IU·3280 ~-O!n2, F'ash1on Is land SHIPPING & TRUCK d1!>: 640-&l:JJ pau:hmg. We will tru111. SALESLADY MacGre!!or Yacht:.. ttl31 for e~clusaw ch1ldre ns Pla~nll3, CM s-toreSo Coasl Pia.ta, L<' ----- M3'?&slD Exp 't:M>t-nt1al. SHOE SALES Plume, man or woman Call 549-&585 Expr'd in family !ihOt'!> or !!19-0l31 7:30tJll4pm SALES & Nt.:RSF.RY Productaon Worker. Hol MALNTENANCI-~. F ULL Air Balloons . Layout. TIME. CAL!.546 3257 will tram rtRhl pcr!.On Apply ID person Ask for Mr Cannon cutting. sea ming. n g. ging FUIJ llrDe wLll tram ~Der.le Ca.1164.>3545 Ex~and10g t•lcclroni<'.., llE~PHILLSHOES :;.i 1-·a~h1on li1land, NU 644-4223 PR O D UCT I ON parts d1 s 1r . GPO<i ----.-.-. base+incent.Jve. Bkt:rnd WORKERS Hood Sails. req. in elect. component ..__ JakMIMix cul-OUl & second lay out sales. pur<'h or l'U.,t ti21 W. Wi lson worke rs . Full ti me, serv Hi-Rel Oistnbutor Costaft1e'>1t 548·3464 Sales. 7141638-4:>41 Ask You art' lhe winnt•r of Real Estaff Sales for Anne Two FrH Ticllets Select Properties offers. SALESPERS0/'11 fll•t.'Clc d CIRCUSl(lv .a.RG .a.s .1 top. progressive co m 1mmed Gift Shop. Will "' "' m ission schedu l<>. An lrrun 494 1211 Feb 26thor 28lh outstanding traming pro-1---------•I ~PM Performam•1• gram w/Tom Hopkin.c;. Sales persons wantt'<.I TheClty Fast Start, Professional The Bay. 303 Mam St · Shopping Center offices on major streets Balboa. Meru. & Women~ orunRe & the best staff in town Sportswear lmmedtilLC 1'o cl111m ~our t1rkcl!.. lt"s your future <'a ll Part lime opcruniS lor call642 5678,cxt.272 751·3191. · week-ends . Call 673 ~ • * * SEL ECT Sandwich & Salad As· --------«;: sembters. full lime. Sum· Sporttn~ GOOds . need T"PROPERTIES lpm.Muslbeneal.elean F IT a sl11t . man"r & dexterou!t S3 25 p/hr .. ll SALES 979-074'7 for appt aft lralnee & also Prr sal£'i. Openings ...,.... avail. 10 tOam Lon'" KJtchen pet'liOll, preferably morn· '"'.. 101('1 l nqwrc at Fton our attractive, well SEAMSTRESS trunners 1000 8nittol St furnishoo Laguna Beach Alterallon ~llt helpful N Npt.. Bch. Ask for oifice. for exper or new ..... ly llceosed. enlhusiasltc ww lra.in ng t person Joi•y salespeople Xlnt eom· 1-~---•-ft_B_r_M~--- rruss1onscheduJe & a tru Seamstress. s ni311 u 11 StrltJoncry ato.-e need In lygreatlocauooon Coast loft Exp f'ull lime ,xi<' salesperson. Of'ftcc Hwy . 2 blks. from lhe 631-1842 MtPplY t•xp. helpful but beath. wilh 3mple off not neces,a ry Ftln11e llU'eet parking SECRET AIY P /T benefit11. Group medical. mor e . O ra n ce Coast AAemooo sh.if\, flexible Ye.Uow Cab, 17300 Mt. houril no oii;p erie ncc He rrma n n. F ounla h1 necessary. Must be able Valley. <No ot Slater lo work independenUy. betwn N e who p e ' Oood b e nefits . I m · mission49'7·2ll5 • 848-W.. live In, rm & brd ~ sm Pacific City Bank ~r:~~~~,'jl.ly LIGAL SECltET AltY ~~~~~~~~~ Growing dynamic Llllaa· -lion Firm In New1><>rt sa I a r y. e xpect a n t EquaJOppor E mployer mother OK. 1'70.2551 SEA.LION llALTY s mu 11, p I l' 11 i. a n 1 1• 11 1 d vu,. at 1 on & 4'7·33'1 engmeenn.~ office Mon holidays For appt call Fri. l ·Spm. Must be good l~ll)I. 7~1 113:!. Ali.o Euc:Ud) mediate opening. In ma · ----------~~~~~~~~~ J9" Newport Beach firm. ---------. Contact: DllVB P /T Lynn Stumilteld rrom N e wport l o (714)759185.1 West.wood . R ttu 11 lrtween 8Am·tlam clot.hinJc 3tore1 recelvmll dept. Good anvlns rt cord It rt'fs rt'qulrcd A~AICC> Muat ~ 21. Hours arc 'FNAl'OAL.· 8 :30·l C11ll NIDC), SERVCES WantAdH Ip' ~SO'ro &ilO N wpon Center Dr Newport Be1cl'l Equal Oppor Employer 6'2·5v~,n •. ~ ................. .. For Ad Action Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 Center has pef'm. part lime o p e n ing r o r enetgt llc Uicienl & ex· per. legal tH!c r etar y . Mu !l t h •ve x l n t shortlland. typtnJ( & d ie taphone upcr Coll Sharon 640-8960 PIXOPB. MOVIE EXT.I~ Oper't for t eleph one Ital aneweri.n1 service. Must H II d be able to work om<' sought by o ywoo weekends Ty p ln11 35 movle tlrm. $20-$200 pe.r d r. day pOts. Looklna for wp m requi r e .x outaolna 18.70 yr oldiJ pene nce preJerred or wanting to break Into Will lr•ln Many com· movies. (710 161 t:?.44 J*lY ~•fill fo\lll lime VI DE 0 CAS T I N G or pearl Ume. day Ii even S'-' .. VJCE 4... &Gllbiftl a valla bh• Yo u r f r 1 ~ n d a n d """ · lDOW In .... lntne Airport 1re1 call ne'lghbol'S u e Cl&.'l•U1ed tiyear-•>------·1 641-D:Dorl.33-3333 w h e n t h ~ y h a v c f"all»08 ltlaod 1re1 call IOIOOthln,r to sell T hty'll Tht' r_,teet draw In the MO-lllO tell you how we ll ll w l 1 Oally Pilol Co.ta Meo oru r a il WOfl(.ed for lhem 1 Qaaalfled Ad &42~ m.11•. E .O. £. RMI Estate ...... s-. ...... We h8~ 9n opeoma in our Kes1dent11~1 Ow for 1U1 el!penl'rlced m an or woman P<>li~e11~1ng (•n tJ't1.151asm and iottan ty tr )'OU .e"' lnt.ertsl4.'<i In :i beautiful ortice an the ftne1-i lo.a.Lion.. working w ith conacna a l as· $0C1at.et, wt-att interest f!ld lo meel1.n• you In ltt'Vlew by a ppoiolment W-.Y M. T.ytor Co. Rra1ton 644 "910 l)'f>JS\. 549 S234 dr1 ver·1>taUonery 01' Sct'retary. l mmed1ut<' opening for r hu rc h secretuy Ol'n o f c dutJe.s ur~ 9,.. m~ da)lll, 545 t450 aft di' M ........--~-----5£cR'.t.w v Work In plu.eh OI <' for 2 live win' people Must hive SH Ir som ... bkkpic bqd lrviOP Penonnel All ncy 418 E 11th, Co.ta Mt . it ~te:z:M 64.2 1470 ~~ llvcrlc & soml' office fumltutt. Good driY1og rocord -------STOCICGIRL& CASHICA NEEDED IMMEDtA TB. Yl!l f'or ret ail ahop in Fosllaon &.land Must bt> knowl :d table-1n lht• held of flt! blM ll ht ablt• to work 1 5 day we On ly exp d need appl) Coll or ~ Mana er at 29 t'uh1on Jaland. N.B. IM21m I I t . \ I t i ... -f• ~Nllw w IOSO ~1eale:1oe1 IOIO TY..J.:9°5.:...__ .•.........•..••....... .........•...••.•...••. ,...,. ..,...., '°'' Monday• Febru!ty 26. 1979 DAILY PILOT lWIM otl Ml O'Nc!UI Supeniwt Tu~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• M•tttta or bo' aprlna u1em1 U1od o n ce 23 " Sylvan11e con olr ..._..._. .. s•1 Motwtt..a.s.a.1 v-9510 a...t/S....... t I •o ..... /$..... f 160 •••••••••••••••••••• ••• • • H eb P<' ( ta onl)') t n'tfttSUO ~ 0256 low quality cht-rrywood Qutofon u • KJni 1ei1 Cllblntt • s t One $W0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • TB.EPHONE N•w NI~~!~ Yowr WARIHOUSIMAM iJOOI•• • to ' hre • d•.>-""u U&J\oe ~mt .-ai:rr blO ' up romm '*k req PK k11141 •PP1n1 " 1-)(p i>ttl 0\l'r 21. I I> "" 'UJ\I N1•v.1'pal)t·r Ent ~ o4~ llhnnu1 Ra t• Co I to3PM Onl) "' I Ontn rthoq~· Pl ('l-.N lA l'fo'l..E AL S w • p, ttl-4100 .Jwop. (U.Uantt'I• NOWI ---- M Hample• mu l b * * * lforS18$ 640·1•31 .aid tmm~c1'alf'IY from S. L.ffw+J Ollor ZLnlth CUl'\llc>lc uur wu hou Olal'n ml> F\illerton Av~ SW "1t I llolll(' lo\lrnltur'' Cosla Men c PM <all 3077 We'd lhru YouureUlew1nnct of _ 75H8~a l.!_ 1 l'm.111 An1l IAhm TwoFn.TidlAth loah&w.rifttt avail . ""IOI rm bdrm, to a.a ...... w •cuo, 11.1mp,, l'nd CIRCUS y AIGAS •••••••••••••••••••···• Allllqu. kl"bet Chi', 111ood tblt, cite > Fcb. ltilh or 2lth G•••• to Io w porc't!latn, r <'hrnnH cl 1---------4 l>PM Performance ••••••••••••••••••••• • • ·~-.c> ~1 :II I ThtCily . • . *•I IUY * * Sl\ot>pmg C.•nler It IC.tlMrr Good u«'d t'\tmlturo " Orange l~Slatw """ Ap~ll1mc:n OR l will To claJm your Ucket11, f'ount•in Valht1> ~·I urSDJ.rotYuu calltW2·S6'78,1:1Ct.272 MAST BS AUC TIOM * * '* vlw:P.: TIM'' '4"-'"' & Ul-tUS lo cacus v ARGAS c A.'\11 PA10 P't'h 26th ur t.h Pur Id ~ furn, aoll • PM l't>rlOl'm11nu • queoa l cit 'l'V'• 957 3133 TheCily ShoppiJ\M Center Oranc .. ro t'llinl your I H'kf'I 11 rail fl42..$618. u t 272 ••• •OAI SALE• for Sale . AIR COM PRl!~R. s HP. a phase motor 2 cyl Ingersol Rand pump 60 gal. laok $750 or b est offe r 642-4339 9" Rot'kwell tbl saw, con tractors model $300/best olr 548-9490 pltup •d ut pa11tt'up, l col • l\lt.. wit.b headl~ ur boaUntt "run ti & rs to oo Onit &d U\ UH! column lhlU\lcA .. • * Johll Mm-shall 314 Linda Ave. BaJboa You are the wll'lMr or Two"" Tlckeb to CIRCUS VARGAS l'o m m a3l »Ul, ---------1 ~ Wa.rdlou:M• JAMI'S Nf'fl9U!S W.U940USE JOIS Sale on Mltrted 1h:m11 l1'li 111!\lt in tht• fullmuni: Wit tAzy ~ll Ir t11kr mo an·u Jub:. ••t-A\11111< aia:nmen~ Open Mon I~ ~1clc chn ~ 9~ & uv Oak P•rque1t coftce & wnd tbla i.t'l $299 95 Suluon chn1, rockers foull n mau fl box s pr l~ ~ 8&.J M attre~s 838 !-.: l» t St , S A ~156.W llX> sq. n ~ .. tng pegged oak noonng. Sl 75 sq . fl Anllque school de k. $30 Antique Coca Cola ice chest, $35' Push mower. $10 26" 10 spd. bike, $30. Feb. 26th or 28th •·:.>PM Performance The City Shopping Center Orange bll' 101nk"d1•ll•ly Jo'ri t°"4• Sat ll S Cl06t>d 546-04W aft 7PM. · To clwm your ! tickets, call 642·5678. ext 272 ••• BUY NOW!! CONSIGN NOW •N<'t $140·$200 pr wk. We have 2.1 million contrac tual reservation backlog on "fly-drives" with Pan Am u nd Nat ional. als o exc lus ively publis hed by over 60 U .S & International wholesalers including but not limited to Triple AAA, Arntrak . C P Air . Tr a vema n <Australia), RACV . NurGut <Germany >. TCS <Switzerla nd). •10% investment tax credit + double the declining depreciation. •Current fleet 1s at 210RV's require 350 by April 30 (overbooked in certain sizes). •Purch.ase at fac tory net invoice 4-Star Mini 's & class A's. •100%-financing of invoice. sales tax & license t hrough m ajor banks at 13.0 APR-7 year note. low l'rut·k [)n''''' C':l 1Jirr d fop .. o, \ppl <i&W r uw1n •• HO (ltun., W11\, (' \f 64" 125.:! f'RA I N~t.o; •'tn VI)' brOJlC'h of Ira autu lru. 4'CllCY Pr'Oduchi• u~t'n cy. has Lbti rollo"'llJ: 1m med operu111s \\ '\IU.Ht\lS,.; Sun I' \l l\ \lilNG 2721 East Coast Hw y O~K &c CHAIR Com htNltJon ror sale Like Ot!W 1160 $44 0773 Autumn haze mink s tole, loah, Power 9040 xlnt rood.IUon ••••••••••••••••••••••• In vestment Semin a r s held o n Saturdays lOAM ·lPM on March 17th. 24th & 31st on location. 0.'slYl_...e.c. 15092 .............. '"·CL 7 I 4/SSt-444' Ouhl• Ca. t.a00-154-0ltt CW.xJ DcH's lllM 69-2371. 4.98 1396 lT Bayluler Mui.my '78 Jlwetry 1070 Mlltlcal 130 Volvo eng, unde r .. 'OOUM"tlV.-KS 673 57S2 nR~~,7,.~fo'I'. ......:" 1010 u..det wri..,. TrahtH No Exper Nt.oe. ~ r<xi< Cl.J-:RK~ ••••••••••••••••• •• • • ... •• l,Qrflted 10 lrnne Sllnlit F RF.IGHT OAMACH.D "°"· Orlill~t'. Rm:"1dt· HCYI'PQJNT SALE 3:IOtl Work u~n du}i> & huurs W Warnt!r or lh1rbor. Call or ,lop 1n tt>du) Santa Ana 979 2921 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lns'"-nh 1013 warr Inclds trlr. bnstol 14.K Cold rharm bracelet ••••••••••••••••••••••• cood. Must sell 645-1271 AcdCMrtl1 with gold jade char m . Oarinet: Like ne w. S175. $350/bst orr 640-2202 dys, Call after 6. 67S-4788tl ves. 640-9034 Exp helptul but oot Ot'c Sal com m t•n surat e w/exp & ability c1111 Kathy Schmidt. ~9-8161 or come into our ori: a1 17400 Brookhurst Ste 218, fo't..o vty. ~'\;t-rybcldy ai; welcoml' CASH Pi\lD N<'v<'r 11fee Wshr/Oryr s/Re fri gfi , VICTOR workingornot957 8133 Office Fwniture & ~~::~ ........ !~?.~ ....... 8085 T~S..-vicH IAIYGOATS 4341 81.1'ch St.Ste213 Maytag Dryer, s upe r Nannie• •·BIL'·as N Be h cond Avocado SSS Eves ""' ""' tiwport ac 64.'>-0221Days 548·0757 l-637 ·OOOO SS6-1520 Ask tor Kns m S Mam BARGAINS·Used rerngs. TYPISTS Orange wshrs, dryrs, garur, besl Misc ..... CMtS 8080 l'ome wor k temporary 83S.2622 t>uys, we serv appl Besl ••••••••••••••••••••••• with a comparny who --------1 Appl.536-0911,536-4330 LUGGAGE TAGS cares a bout you Im· ·--------•I Crom your business card. -~•-.. Gas or elec dryer $S0 ca ......... ate wora-top pav Warehouse Kenmore washer su5 Send one card for each tall ror an appointment ORDER FIUER Speed Queen Washer ss5 tag plus one s pare. We 557-006-1 Guaranteed !>'&-8672 return p erm a ne ntly 0 ff · PAO<ER • ---------1 sealed attractive tag & ~ ~ 0 1 Ce • OUT Santa Ana distnbu· Refrig, 22', side by side, strap, meeting a irlloe 0 OVe rlo ad lJOO center has an open· gold. textured firusb 6 I D reqwre ments Pre· ang for an 1nd1vidual with mo old. xlnl cond. $425 vent loss & tbert ! For a eJCpenence an shipping. 751-8624 personalized tag enclose r----------re<'t?1ving. or warehous· ~ 1040 wallpaper , fabric or I,._, i>isl I mg Dulles include some ,,._,.. "Day Glo" paper & we forkhrt and some dnv· ••••••••••••••••••••••• will back &: tnm your I I in~. Valid California AFGHANS. Show kennel tags Or try two cards I TYPISTS I drivers hcen.-.e required. Emergency reduction back t.oback I SECRET"'RIES I Apply between Sam-Must sell. Super reas to PRICES. I "' I llam, & lpm·Jpm. An· n gbt home . 646·9609. $2eaor3/$S I I thony Schools. 4401 Birch 54.5-8993 4/StagsSl 60 ea. Wh h Street. Newport Beach ---------1 6/9t.ags$1.50ea I et er \.OU tvp<' IO?j <Near o.c. Airpo rt) Old English Sheepdog lOormoreS1.40ea l"pm, or 40 wpm. wel E qual O ppo r t u ntty Puppies. Champ Imes. Salei1 Tax lncluded 1havt' Joni! & short term1 Employer Blk/Wbite, laking de NOCARD., I ai;s1.:nments ror Clerk posits now Ready J/9179 Draw yollr own or send I Typist. Senior Typist.I CromS250/up. 957·2897 name, address, phone & Sta t T :--p lst , WordlMlrchandlse tr-.. y 80'"5 we'Umakeonecardpe r I P r o c t• s s o r s . &I ••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • rnno to OU "" Add """ h Is S T ......... 8005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tag. <-I' eac · · <'C'rt>tanes wt H OPI -.-• Scod check or money or f P:"' pnld vacations. ••••••••••••••••••••••• M. Cal, long b81r. Fem . derto. bonuses Nevt>r a ree Antique Oak reverse S sbortbair spayed cat. PILOT PRIMTING ILL[" lJ!r ... r. desk $950 642·2164 or Goodw/kids 646-Stim p O. Box 1560 r" .~ · ~111· 673-0782. Funiifwe 8050 Costa Mess , Ca 92626 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • !::ot=Rvir.e~ SEU. idle items with a SAC RIFIC E -p e r fect For Sale Tartany's of lluntininon Beat·h Datly Pilot Class1f1ed Ad. cond. contents of 5 br N 8 . Co rp o r a t e 847·3498 boase. Lee Model Home Mmbrshp. Call Debby 8 , 11907 \\arner Ave •215 Furn. 549-3077, Wed.Sun _6'4_·_!il:ll ______ _ Inst credit avail. Ask for Elec typewriter. xtra long Farrah. car rr a g e N 1 a g a r a ·················-····· Xlnt oew & used ore furn, plan CiJes, wk benches C. E. SURPLUS 631 ·2777 Lg exec des k $325. secretary L desk $300, exec chair $75. secretary chair S50, 5.ofc chairs S40 ea. Like new cond1t1on Walnut. 640-5563 Used office furniture . desks . tables, sof a 644-838.5 Glass display cases. like new $225 ea. Call eves. 492-9482 collect. Pianos & °'91M 8090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Steinway Grand 7'. Ex- cept 1on11 I quality 8 Model. New 1964. Blk Ebony A beautiful piano. $7800/bs t orr. 642-7387. UPRIGHT pianos S495 to $1,950. Gra nds Cro m $2.250. R ebld 'g, r e · firush'gs, tunings. Hany D. Oquist llOOOHamilton Ave, HD 53&8775 Lowrey Lincolnwood con. sole organ. Loaded Xlnt cood. 493-5943 Skiing 8093 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Scarab-330 TS out drives. 8Shollrs. Loaded ' 65 mph plus. Stored lln trailer Must selJ/best of· fer. Computerized reser vation syste m Locations also in San Francisco & Denver. 1-way fly-drive. 73 l.e2 I 6Cho•» 546-I 200Cwortd Ask for Jerry Perkins 9120 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 4W.....Dri•ff 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1956 25' Twm eng10e Chns Older camper ._saJe. w/o · Cr aft s p eed boat truck. $1 50 . Stove & <classic> Xlnt f>73·7771 refng. 640-2700 S9Cab1n Crwser. 2S' long. aut.o head. xtras +, Eng nds work <On trailer > Bstoffr 1·688-4359 17' Cahf 1/0 . $1800 ·70 Dodge Camper Van.~ too. sink. stove, lg refrig. elec, & gas, lg bed & tbl. CabLOets $2600. 540-1053 Motorized libs 9 140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-Q0.1/646-2316 THE MO.PEDDLER ZJ' Baylaner N1ss-q-uaJ_l_y-1. New PEl{GEOT MO· W/ nyaog brdg Loaded PEDS Reg $4S9, Now with xtras SlU,500 Call _S299 __ .6J_l-_383> ____ _ 548-1156 day:., 675·2213 eves Will sell ,.., interest 18' L y m an w /doc k 1 0 respons ible per s o n Perfect t.'Ond. 640; 1136 "18 Honda Express. only 15 ma. $375/bst offer 549-•n•. 551-0668 eves. For Sale :Peugeot Moped wtsurf rack. 370 mi. pert cood. $375. "94-45M '71 lnt.emauonal Scout 11, 15.000 m1·s. must sell, all xtras, S500CI 499· 1998 or 499-4958. "78 Mako 20' ctr console. 11115 & 7.5 Mere eni.:inc Roadrunner dlx trlr , ~:f!':'/ ·15 Jeep Cherokee Chier· 9150 32,000 nu. XJnt cond. new ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires.631-3327 eqwpped for a ll rtshmg Must Sac '79 Yamaha 750 $10,000. 754-0368 Spec , 1800 ma. Sells for . 7 8 2 4 , .I" I Y b r ' d g e . $3185 Will sell for $2900. .22SOMC Full canvas. _645-8594 ________ _ many extras. mint cond 1972 HONDA Elsinore $1000 TOP or $171 mo Enlare Bike Recently 642-9401 Rebwll Exc:elleot cond. USED BOATS Over lOO's ID stock ACTION BOAT 1714) 536-1191 Sl.000. C all e ves "94-4747, or see al 462 St. Ann's Dr., Laguna Beach 75 H o nda MR17 5 , Elsanore, Xlnl cond. New piston & rings. S300. 752-62:32 YOUR CHOICE $6950 '7t JEEP CJ-S's One 1s Pe wter gr ey , eqwpped with V-8, 3 s p eed , l ilt wheel , tachom eter . console. Warn h ub:., a l o w mileage beauty The other has V-8. 3 speed, Wee oew ''Levi's" ed1. bOn (0689) (0542) lnml' MJJ.1441 2102 RusmN<-; C'tr Dr Sl.77 per DAY That's ALL you pay rora * ** recliner w /m assa ger . 26• Edycrafl Sportlisher. 1976 M o t o Gu zzi Carto1 L. RorH _548_·_107_•·------slip avad. Call Harvey Automatic needs front MOIETO CHOOSENOM! 'luuficwJfOll IHc:h AMC.JEEP Suite 208 Lai:tuna Ni~uel 831-0542 27957 Cabot Road E(Jual Opportunity F.mployer 1\1/F 30da.> ad 1nthe 5722K1ngsford Terr TISHlBA Copy Machine , ---------642-4644 end. 11000 or best. Call Irvine a lso m a k es offset Skisforsalel95S120. mornmgs fro m 8 t o Youarethe w1nner of masters. n4/962:7033 Ask for Ken SkipJack 24' flybr1ditc. 9:30AM As k for Bill Two FrH Tick•.... 675-5S82. twn 6 cyl 170 Volvo, VH ,... 673-3462 n 0. FniC)ht tnm labs. s umlog + --------- CtRCUSlVARGAS Co:°wners ~~.~~ ... ~~!! ~ xint cooo. John 1!:i=. S./160 .. :;;~;e·:,;;;;:~;:~·7 16751 Beacll 81/847·9551 TnlCb 9560 '-'----------' DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY Feb. 26th or 281.h oow for sale. 20' & 40' For Sale: CaJypso rv re · Slo k 20, ••••••••••••••••••••••• V8. autoroetac, PP. 4::.>PM Performance lengths avail. Call Rob. "''1ator and misc. dive pjac • 1975• · open. RENT· Luxury '78 Motor 556-0181 The City 213/&»-0370 :Quipment. 751·8967 lo hrs. xtras S8900/ofrer Home 22' Steeps 6, --------- • DO IT NOW • 642-5678 ShoPping Center 494-6671 or 837 M 74 W 1 n t / S u m r a l e s . '74 Mazda Rotary truck Orange Bat.Uecreek treadmill jog. Slds, new K2·710. $145. K2 28• Bayllncr Bounty, twn 64()..8SS.5. :a_~~rt~~e~I~ g~e:0~~· To claim your tickets, ger·wolkc r $i5o. E x· Comp poles, S20. Tyrolla 200 Volvo, dual controls. _F_o_r _R_e_n_t-·.-2-0'_M_o_t_o_r $1799. S36-8(ll6 wkdys a rt call 6"2·56'78. ext. 272 ercL..e horse Sl5. Floor 350 R. $75. M4· 12 $45. hol"'· t k p / h Ma ke th ose good household items you're nol using nvaalablc to some other family by ad vertising them for sale m Class_l_fied_Ca ll 642 5678 ========= 1 ____ *_*_* __ _ ran $15. Scott s preader Lange XL 1000 $125 ~ng an · wine · Home, co mpl e tely 6:3>PM S20 640-5563 962.9759 radio, clc. $31,000. Call eqwpped Avail Easter. -.7-.-G-:M-.C-.-E-1_C_a_m_1_n_o 540-5139 673-5133 w/Gem top, spoke whle, FIND YOUR NAME Tickets Worth s 11 A return to the rich tradition of the circus a~ it once was in America FEB. 26th to MARCH 1st THE CITY ' SHOPPING CENTER ORANGE City Drive Exit of the Santa Ana Frwy. ~/ 90 so ' _73_F_tre_b_a11_19_'h_'.-S-l-p-s -6, center console, bkt seats, nu ures. ball's, 33,000 m1• xlnt. cood. Other xtras. very gd gas mileage. Gd $3,195.548·~ . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 01arter Luxury 60' or 75' motor yacht. Reasooa· cood. S6.SOOJij5· 7836· 19'10 G MC Deluxe. AJr, ble. Hr. daily, weekly .,._ .,.....__. 9170 C 2172or 675-32S6. n-~ 1.-v,,,,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• loah. Sail 9060 TENT Trailer. sleeps, 6, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $700. After6PM. FREE TO YOU 968--4262 12 ft. Outrigger which J!tllflo SerYfu, P..ts needs glasswork. You &Acuuorin 9400 must pack up at 8811 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coa st Hwy • Laguna 6 mag nms, rour bole for Beach. Call &-71.22. Capn or MG Midget. '76 16' Hobie Ready to _646-4064 ________ _ race 6•5·7353 Eves IWll.,H/ 53)..2703days . CIGuies 9520 Lado 14 #3805, rar ing gear, t.ralle r & cover. 561-0045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '46 FORD WOODIE Ji\J.l.ly restored! $13,000 675-6161 Lido 14 #48 Good Cood. ---------Trailer & cushions lncld. Garage for storage. Can· $900. 644 -70 8 5 or nery VIilage, Newport l~. Beach. 675-4912 Tues.Sat. Take over pay m ents Dawson 26'. Diesel 2 yrs old. 493-4341. '37 Ford 2·dr. 351 eng, P/S. P/B, A/C, stock look ex ce pt (or mags/radials. Sl•.500. 2 boat owner must sell ~1932 1976 30' Islan der.--------- 549-3598/548--4292 Mercedes Benz 1950. 17QS Conver t. Must se e Hobte Cal 16 Urn ruJJ ng-$15.000 or ofr. Aft 5. ~ w/lratler $1,300. or 673-6372 6esi. olfer. 960-1339 aft ---------epm '60 MGA: Good cood. Moot&omery 17, Teak lnl. custom mast. 5 bags saU , 2 ancbon. Seagull 08, $3600. ~-8S28 Loads ot bacll up parts. 0!00/Best offer. SeriOl.lS tnq oob'. Mllte Perkins 714,SSl-515 PIS. W/SbelJ. S3750 Call 83S-SS86 (8·5) '6• Ford 'l'J T P U w/sadeboards . Asking S.00 or bes t. John ~aft5. 'Tl Ford \00 Xlnl cond Many extras . Lo m1 SSM>O 496-4452 eves 076fOltD S borl W h ee l b ase Steps1de with cus tom paint. V-8, automatic, mags, power steering & brakes. stereo. Sliver in color. Mus t S e e ! (LF.56527) CALL MOW FOR EXACT EQUIPMENT Hathqo.leoch AMC.J• 16751 Beach Bl/847-9551 v.. 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Ford Van, ~ Ton. very dean Inside Ir out. Call eves 831-2828 "12 Ford Van: New eng. & trans. Custom lot. Many xtras. Best ofter. Call Tony eves. '96-8197 When you call Classllied to place an ad, you're as· s ured o( a frie ndly welcome and he lp an CAL 2·29. BALBOA DOCK. Dlesel·wheel· auto pilot ·furU01 Jib· PLUS. 673-6372 a fter 5. 1980STUDEBAKER wording your ad for bes t Hawk. Blac:lt with tan response. Call Now' lnt. Muat part with th1S 1_642-_5678 _____ _ well ~ tor car. V-8, automatic. Pvt PlY Ask Mtos.Mew '78 Ford Vall convel'ti10n Has pwr ich•t•rini & brakel. &IJ' cond .. radial lire111, cr u1bt! C'ontr-01 AM /FM 8 trac k. & cu.tom interior which m cludei. icebox. t ablt.>. earpets, SWIVt'I chum. ukt' NEW' Pn pty A sacnfice st SdJ5 Call C7l•l 537·5659 or (7141 637·»4 1971 DODGE VAH tlPASSIEHGB Vff, a utomatic. pwr stcerinlJ. alr cond. & low rrule:;t {lMSSAX) CALL FOR OUlt &.OW PllCEll! COHMRL CHEVROLET :~ ll.11 l~·r Ill\ o1 t •t-1 \ "~-" \ 541>-1200 '700odgeCamper Van,~. too. atnk, stove. lg re rng. ejec & gas, lg bed & lbl. cabinets $2600. S40· 10S3 WoU.i.g 9580 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUSE OF IMPORTS ® 300CD LEASE 36 MOS. 48 MOS. Of' 60 MOS AVAILA8U NOW 1-lio-llMo<e I ... A•IH c,., U1• CALL f OR OUOTE ()'i All Other 79 Models Available for IROIATE DELIVERY HOOSE (J IMPORTS, INC L.A. 213/921-8588 O.C. 714/523-7250 or 714/750·7201 &3m .,. __ 81¥<1 a.-. Peri. Ort IM s..ta Ana fw., 01 S.ecn 'ectort ~ ...... _Oe•>t• MERCEDES BENZ 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEWl&.LIUY YOUR DATSUN PAID FOR OR NOT TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP CARS BARWICK DATSUN ....... 1n ltJ.111 t .1pa,tt l11111 8 3 1-1375 493-3375 WE P1\YTOP DOLLAR ror top used cars-fore1~n domestics or classics 11 your l'ar 1s e~lra cll'Jn see us FIRST! ~ #1 ... 0....,. C-.ty 292SHarbor Blvd. COOTA MESA 979-2500 WE BUY CLEAN CARS &TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET .':IQ)l llarhor HI' ti I ·1 lST .\ M ~:SA 546-1200 WE BUY USED CARS CALL PAP PY Used Car Mgr 540·5630 IOll~SO~ & SOX • LINCOLN· MERCURY 2626 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA WEIUY USEOCARS! We're Lhe new Chl!vrolt•I clcalersh 1 p in th 1• I rv 1111' Auto Center Wt· nt•t•il your Wied car! JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 21 Auto Center Dn Vl' IRVINE 761-7222 WANTED! Late model Toyot;i:- Volvos, Pickups & Va ns ~uatoda,y! 9100 at 4:30 and 8 p.m. Wa easy. Look for your name and addreaa In today's claaalfled ••ctlon. Call 842·5878, ext. 272 and we11 arrange for you to pick IMh.SliP'/ Docllt for Mr. Falk 955·0235. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALL 937-0547 for info. ISO ANIMALS BEARS 3 HERDS of ELEPHANTS CW MPS WILD ANIMAL ACTS up your tickets at the neareat otftce of the 9070 ...., ....................... --------- SI.ft AV AM.AILI V AC Newport &M-0551 NEED SUP ror new 36' Sailboat 875·1393 WANTED : Mooring Avalon for aeuon. Dys. 7l4/S0·2l20 EHi . 714/al.-.. • MOfOR OR SAILBOAT Stip Up to JO'. 885/mo. 233 ltth St, Apt C, NB 875.o:DI ~·-·· ... , f 540 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Bricklin Shawl loving care, a rare wbite perro rm tan ce automobile unquea· tiooabQ' a nne invest· meat. Eq\tlpped With air doors, atereo system. more. Best Otrer above $l2K Pvt Pl1 Mk tor llr. Falk ~.~ • t ~ ( :; ·~ I I I i ('Jf DAILY PILOT ~·············~········ A .Un th•al) !oil'"'" "9t t72S ~ f fll • lrana • ~.,. •• •••• •• • •• •• • • • •• • •• • • Nt-w paint 11.nd brak~ Partially rruphvl ttN'd nu. r•.r 11 road rod)' ~ ..w 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAST CHANCE FOi "" SlOl'1 SAVI! IUY Ott LUSE NOW! 79•, HOW AIRIVIHGI Also hm1led number ur 1.978 320s 's 1:s sl11l uva1la ble. Call us toda)!' 831-2040 495.4949 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST a a Do fant tJrCIUM-uul l lCl t ~odcls tl1l'll M odt' Is ··~ UTl\rlnjt Ml ST ~f I.I Ull-,.. M II.I t R MOTC>R.'i l:ll 'W 'W .irbi'r ~ A ~1 nr ......•...•.........•.. ~Mew'79 HONDA Cars MANY To ChooM mM! UNIVERSITY Okk11DbiS. HOftda Can • GMC Tnacks 2&50Harbor Blvd. CoslJI Mesa 540·9640 '7S Civic, clean, radials. $1775. 67~6401 Sales·Servl~·Leasing "18 Accord LX AIJ op Rov C.-.er,lnc. uons 2000 m1 S&tOO Ph Kolls f\oyce BMW _642_-8683 ______ _ l~Jamboree ....-9730 Ne~ Beach 64-0-6444 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . CREVIER &I ST 6 HOADWAY SA1HA ""'" 835·3171 lltC OlltMAll DlllVINO MACHIN( Hew 1978 & 1979 JAGUARS XJ6Ls. XJ12Ls &XJSCoupes M06t colors available for 1mmed1ate delivery. TEST DRIVE OHETODAY!!! BAUER MOTORS 2925Harbor Blvd. HOUSE OF IMPORTS EXCLUSIVF Inventory of MBZs • Sls ~.J,4~,,... t 10r•'t'ft4w• II •~ «-11111'1 "'~"' "•'!O!ll--·~ t• •'>05l -07flt ,,; •I"" u~~--1a.t­,~~ ia.lCTtl'l•h""' ,., ~l 'Ol\lt M ~'""' • OllSHS 11 )00()""""" )1.V,IWh ~. 14 1'00 .. 81,.tB•t 1 W 'IOOO ts.. .ol\)I 'Ii .. .., • SlCs 1~ '"°"'r cs.< 15411<>•....0tu• 711•~sicts.t00141 S••worl01•"'' • COOPlS 1\ 7toc rs..t i.e6 II fied ?~ 2eoc IS4KA8ll01 ei.. 7$ 180C rs.. dtt 4 °'"" 76 2llOC '""" G81'1 s ....... -0 .... n •SEDANS 1~ :>ea rs ... 708!!t '-"' 16 1110 r; .. Ol~l PM!OI 81y 7 t 780<;f ~ ~218tu~ 117llO!<E rs.. M07llltu• 14 M 74 •'IOSf ,.._,9J!ISIR"" 1' •50Sf ,..;... 0'5218tu 7• •'!O'lfl f'S-.68(\0llltu 71 450'\fl 1S4w 81541 A•, Tl! •'>IKH ts-5•31118•-• Ali e • r~t4t ....,...t0n of otn. f"nOOM t() C.f"lt'Olift h~O 213/921-8588 714/523-7250 714/750· 7201 HOOSE Of l~TS INC. ~"'--8 .. ,, 9,_,.p.,.. Of' fM~•Anar,,.,..,, MERCEDES BENZ lt71a .. >.ULT 6T\.D&UXI SIOODOWN pl~ uax & hcclllf' tl<M 4J per month tor 48 montb11 on a pprovt'd c rt'd1t APR 12 tit•.; Udure d pa y m~nt ~Ct' ~ 00 (3025895) OWlpncell $3972 l.8711 ~:u-h Bl vd HUNTINGTON 8F:AC11 142-2000 ----·w Gtu11 Sac M u."lt S4!11 4'7.000 Xlnt rond Nt'w ~t AM/FM ltlrk $UOO 6'2·3'52 ---------plU) l&X & License ·73 VW Su~r Beetle. low ~ mileage. good cood Mada/I..... blue. $2150 Ml-9436 '76 Eldo. ruce. full pwr. 81klgrey. Must sell $5000/bst olr 968-0290. '76 Eldo CONVERTIBLE. Showrm cond. $1995. 529-8423. l. .... .,...1_ ...... ~,,..... •• ........ -'-,_ 71 FORD WAGON "FairwD..t s.Jr• .. V8, a uto matic, pwr steering, t actory :i ir cood .. AM /FM stereo. luggage rack & ONLY 8,000 miles! 007VOZ> SS778 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1060 HARBOR lllVO COSTA MESA 642 · 0010 21.50Harbor Blvd .. C M. '!llCabf Bug Custom l.ied. '7S Fleetwood Brt:>Ug_ham. '69 Ford Sta hon Wgn 645-5700 """'pletely over hauled Hard t.o flnd mdl. Quall· Auto. AIC. Great 429 eng. '"""' ty, comfort, safety tn C-6 trans. minor body Rolt loyce 9756 Comes w/many extras beaut cood. S8M . Asking work $250. 631-2408 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _S2500 __ fir_m_. 55_1_-024_4__ $5000. 673-5004 ---------" l DEALER IN U.S.A. _;,___;,.. _____ '74 LTD. AIC, PS/PB. Vcho 9772 Cw:u o 9917 New s tl blted r adials IRR ~~~VER ·······vOi.vo······· ·····cAMARO~····· .::=~=~:9:~: ROLLS·ROYCl all power, tape deck. nu =~:':,',. SALES.SERVICE Cholceof12.lnallcolors tires, below book. \"----M0-'444 AND LEASING & all have a utomatic 673-0006 OVERSE .. ., DELIVERY trans .. air cond .• pwr. CLOSED SUNDAYS ~ steering & ALL have '77 LTD II '59StlverCloud 1 EXPERTS LOW m.tles. U62VAU>. 4 door. Air. power steer· S19,000 EARLE ll<E SAVE SSS 1ng & brakes. radio. 98S-4l44 VOLVO (5.'llO) OMLY$l795 l.9b"l Rolls Royce Sedan, 1966Harbor Blvd. Hi.ti_.__ lleoch ftne cood Elegant white COSTA MESA AM""'E-JEEP $20,500. 64()...4999. 646-9303 540-9467 16751 Beach Bl/847-9551 ·11 Shadow, white. low m1. ORANGE COUNTY sunrool. vnyl lop Extra VOLVO '73 IRONCO sharp $25,000. 631·1266 Chffrolet 9920 Low miles . Excellent days 675-4840 eves. EX<l..USIV ELY VOL VO ••••••••••••••• •••••••• co n d i t t o n ! F u I I y ~ 9762 Largest Volvo Dealer equipped See it -Drive 1 inOraogeCounty! 1t! {OWQQ> ••••••••••••••••••••••• BUY or LEASE $4195 71 Su bar u . AM I F M DIRECT H.:tillqton Beach T~:;~ ;:~ .,,,!~·~•:•~""'.~~r.:-•,.., ... ,,,.~-...,~.,..~-.,:~~=~::::. ••••••••• •••••••••• •• • • 2025 S. Manchester 9oo So. Coast Hwy. excell. cond. sn oo Anaheim 750-2011. L:,~f" 644·5S98 IEFOREYOU SELL YOUR TOYOTA. SEE US! '77 Volvo 264GL. all ex MaYerick ••••••••••••••••••••••• tras, 14Kmi must see. P.P. 751-5106 9947 MOVAs 1979 COLI ''IWllSHIFI'' · 10-SPEED ????????? I FOIW ARD. Z IEVBSI SPllDS CALIFORNIA'S GAS MILEAGE CHAMPION! •USEDIMWs• '73:Ml024 spci (384JSP> '732002T11 087JJL> '7620025/R (497PHJ) '775.'l>;4 spS/R (0179 ) ·11~si4 sp <T~J '78633csiS/R (0045) '78320, S/R <910UKU > COSTA MESA 979-2500 '75 M BZ 240 01t>!>e l. elegant economy <2" m1 >. AM /FM ca ~:sc ll e . .76 XJS 27K - -yellow/tan. s nr(. xlnt • m1. excep· con d $10.500. PP . IJonal car, drk blu w/tan 7525740 ml $11,500 Evesbl5·02SS ---- MAR9UIS TOY OT A MISSION VIEJO 831-2880 495-1210 '67 Volvo l.22S, runs good, $400 o r b est offer. 759-1439 '72 Conna: Brand new Alllos. Used Oloice of 10. All colors, 2 doors & 4 doors. All with automatic trans.. pwr. steenng. radios & most have air cond. An exam· pie: (281RSD> Now only "10 Mavenck 2-dr, P /S, air, radio, good tares Goodcond. $850. 644·9583 1 ..... -.~E~P;A.~Elf1; ....... ~m'l-;Mi--~~"'~ ... ~v~ ..... ~~-·-.. Mercury 9950 ··o;;;;;;;;~~:;.. .. '14£ lt\\Nl oua LIN~~~l~~RY \Q-SP££0 tO\.!~~l\JJt Closed S.ndcry$ '67 Jag XKE cpe. good MG 9742 condit1on. $4200/best of ••••••••••••••••••••••• fer 551·5050 BREEZV $3996 tran s Good cond ••••••••••••••••••••••• $700/Best ofr. 640-3567 AMC 9905 days, 492-8498 eves. •••••••••••••• •••. ••. •. 1976 MG Midget. 15.000 IOIMcLAREH's JeMen 9732 mi's o n r e bll i:ng. '11 TOYOTA 1976 AMC MATA.DOR 2 DR. COHHRL CHEVROLET RAYR.ADEIOE -r :;~l"~U LINCOLN-MERCURY ...uc .aos. yc.AR~.~ .. a10u~Dl 16-18 Auto Cepter Dr In~ A\ ~ 1' _ ~N. Beach Blvd La Habra 1At Beach & Wh1tller > '7141 522°5333 Closed Sundays '77 530i. 4 spd snrf, AM /F M cass. AC . Burgundy. Sll,900 or as· s ume l se. $27J mo. biJ.3707 res. 833-0433 or c '74 2002. AM/FM, cass. 45,000 mi. Good cond . 494-0018. ••• WHllam Ne•ins 2191Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa You are the winner or Two,,.... Tickets lO CIRCUS VARGAS Feb 26th or 28th 4.:.!PM Performance The City Shopping Center Orange To chum your tickets. call 642·5678, ext. 272 ••• '76 5-'l> I. 4 spd, sienna brwn, tan inter . srr. P·W, ale. am/fm cass. Sl0,000. 8411-2580 '720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *l's* DISCOUNTED I OPl<COMPARE -•DATSUHS• a.-.s ... ct1ott Of AIModefs SAUS-LEA.51NG PARTSSERVlCE COSTA MESA DATSUN 2845 HARBOR BLVD • 540.,410 540.02' 3 ··we need to buy clean O.tau.n used cars'• SWlll Pay Top Dollars COSTA MESA DATSUN l 2lMSHARBOR BLVD . 540-6410140.0Z I J ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM /FM. lonneau, lug •741, JENSEN HEALY gage rack. BRG w/gold LO MIL ES . XL NT det.aJ.I. S3SSO See 1n CdM COND $6800 CALL or San C l ement e . 675-7829 673-4400 work, -'l(3}3 8325 IJNlx:RUISER ThJ.s one's got 1l 'all! C.B .. AM/FM stereo. pm stnp· mg, much more! Like New (149TJB) Hardtop. Automatic, fac tory air cond . pw r . steering & brakes, radio. ~fl.1rl•1I fll'ol ' ' i:-.·1 ·\ \1 ~ _ ... \ 541>-1200 SDFw)'·f:~~restex1t rt""NOt.\1 830.7000 ~ aft6pm. Jensen Healey '74, yellow, --------- AM t FM . mus t sell. '77 MIDGET AM /FM 33,000 mi 's , $3200 cass. 20M, $3800 or best 400-1998 or 499-4958 640-1552 ---------'74Wtutew/blktop.Conv. '76 MG Midget. AM/F M. XJnt cond l<l,000 mi lugg rack. xlnl cond. $7 500 673 ·2906 21.000 m1 . 831·1801· 213-MJ.8236. Porsdw 9750 Jensen Healy '74 White ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/blk lop. Convertible. 1978 924 Sale Priced beater & ONLY 32.000 •--------- Dllles on Uus gas Saver · 1971CheveUeSS4-spd, 350 '72 Col Park 9 pass. wag (500NIG>.r~978 eng. A/C. P/S. AM/FM , White. fully loaded ! -Vin roof, $2000/0r best. Xlnt! $2,000 675-6161 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BlVD. COSTA MESA 642·0010 9910 ~2L97 '77 Chevy lmpaJa Wgn, loaded, xlnl cond. Cull serv, book $6700, asking ~ 494-0580 '75 Monza,2+2 Hatch, MERC Monarch '76 Ghia, 4-dr, V-8, A/C, P/S. P /8 , P/W, AM /FM stereo. lgt trlr pkg incl. trans. cooler. shift kit. hvy dly shocks, xlnt cood. $4200 ~ A/C, auto, AM /F M & 8 --------- track. Only 38,700 mi. Mlliahing 9952 Xlnt cond 14 .000 m1. With air cood., 8 lrack $7 500. 673-2906 or stereo removable sun· 21.3/SSJ-8236 roof. 'custom wheels ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt cood. $2300/offr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l87U Beach Blvd. 552 5817 HUNTINGTON BEACH '77 Electra, all extras, 1 __ • ______ _ '75 Ghia Il V·6. AC. PS, PB. $400 under bluebook. Must Sell by Sun. 968-0689. Kcrmann Ghia 9 73 5 PL1:JS more! (821 TZW >. 84~2000 good, clean cond $5,995! '76 Monte Carlo, 24,000 Call Art mi 's, clean . Creme ••••••••••••••••••••••• Priced way under '73 Toyota Corona Dix Sta 675-7000 673-9187 w/brown landau top. . '74 KARMANN GHIA Sharp, xlnl cond. S3. 700 49!H224 market value ror a Porsche! SAVES$$ :/ Wgn, AT. low Blue Bk •72 Buick E61Jile Wagon Sl250. SllOO/besl ofr. Orig owner. A/C. etc. needs work. 645-7953 Runs like new. PP $1895 AM /FM s tereo. A/C. $4100. P.P . 494-8611 '7S MalJbu Classic 4 Dr. Only 13,000 orig ma. '77 Mustang V ·8 good cood. $4,500. 64.5-2372 lo/mi "66KARMANNGH1A. Runs xlnl. rbll eng. SUX>. Ph 67H297 9738 ••••••••••••••••••••••• miracle mazda COMHRL CHEVROLET ~ llarhor 111"1 ('«~TA \1~:..., \ 546-1200 '69 Coron'a , rbll eng. Great transportalion. Must Sell $700. 675-8407. T~ 9767 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 914 2 0 Xlnl. cond ·~~PNaJ'!'s~6M~S~ $4,900/bes l offer Dy SELL JMED Make Of. ~7741 Eve/Sun SS9·6442 fer. (421SQI ) ( 714 > '61~per90, excel!. cond 631·5823. Any Time. 21 SO Hsbor ll•d. Top dollar. Call bet •76 TR7 Costa~ 645-5700 &&PM. 963-5516 Factory air, mags, AM· AU.HEW 1979 '74 914 2.0, blk w/blk ml FM 8 lrack. low mUes. A 11 o y w h e e I s , f I m (23UL) MAZDA GLC Calif. cassette 26.000 mi. $5700 $4995 Special H•hback 631-9560 days. 675·8638 t•:HllCJl0to leach $I 00 DOWN eves. AMC~EEP plus tax & license '78 004 . Xlnt cond. sun-16751 Beach Bl/847·9551 $99.98 per month ror 48 roof. am/fm stereo. $1000 Valkswogett 9770 months on approved under market. 752-0888 ••••••••••••••••••••••• c redit. APR ·l2.98~ · '72 9U.. lo/ml, xlnl. cond. '72 VW Bus . Curtains. Deferred pay m e.nt $8,500. 494 3672 or carpel, fold out bed, price·$520S.04. Equi P· 661-1161 ask for Darlene sodium valves. $2000. menl Includes 4 speed · · lransm1ss1on&folddown '78Targa,mel copper, all Doug. 957-8444 ofc ., rear seal. (008590) · The extras l2K mi still un· 67S-2402eves. 646-6789 or 646-67 10 '75 Estate Wgn, 9 pass. _675-_7258 ______ _ air, AM /FM, loaded 'QIBelAlrSlallonWagon: w/everyaccessory pass1· New brakes, Needs ble. I ownr644·5248 paint. Good transp. Cocllac 991 s $250/080 968-3329 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Orange Co.nfy'• Bdot ado C....ter • *** St.1ey Ola.-a 10553 ciunook Ave. Founlaln Valley YOU are the winner of Two Fl-ff Tickeb lo CIRCUS VARGAS 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Toronado. Bristol cond. Cruxz C. & all ex- tras $4400. 962-7033. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Pmto Wagon V-6. auto trans. 20mpg, low miles. $2 90 0 I o ff er. C 7 14 ) S48-862S after 5 p.m . & weekends. or (714) 491HOOO. ext. 307 wk days. '74 Pinto Wagon. AM /FM stereo. 8 lrack. etc. $1600. Pb900-3724 ....,._... ,,,0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PURCHASE OR LEASE YOUR MEW 1979 CADILLAC Feb. 26th or 281.h 4.l>PM.Performance The City Shopping Center Orange '742dr Duster. Xlnt cond. To claim your tickets. Pvt Ply. Best Offer. NOW! • call 642-5678, ext. 272 548-3215 *** -----------!~ ......... 9965 ·ncAPRICE STATION W>.GOH l.ood<-'Ci ! Brown in color . (5.246) • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1975 POMTIAC FllHIRD cashpriceisonly der ~arr. M~s l sell. 1976 7-pass bus, lo mi, $3820 $24,000. 754-63113/552·3816 good condition. musi NABERS plus lax & llcense sell. $4500. 675-3148 eves. Mlrod. Black on Black '64 vw s quareback. ~ $4995 .......... 11eoc .. AMC·JHP The s harpest one In town! V8. automatic. air cond., pwr. s teering . stereo, Vlll)'l top & rallye wheels. (689UXG). Mcada/RftlCllllt '78 "924" S'r.i0/b6t olr. '97-3984 all • 2150Harbor Blvd .. C.M. 4::.>PM. •68 IMPALA 16751 Beach 81/847·9551 READY MOW!!! 645-5700 SUNROOF "" ;4 vw Bu.<;, needs body 2000 H.lrbot BM.1 W >.GOH 97 ... 0 Excellent car equipped work. rblt eng, call Costd~ 54(}.9100 Nds TLC Runs good. COMM ELL CHEVROLET ~te. .. wilhaircoodltiomngand 642-7151.$2800 ~~~~~~~~~ Power $999 cash . ••••••••••••••••••••••• more! (409USD) ---------..:: 1976 BJ)()R "'DO 5 64P2M·9489/646·5201 art. 'K,.11.<rt••r Ill"\ I ' " I \ \1 ~ ... \ 546-1200 '73 VW 412 wagon. Good ... '72 MBZ Priced to Sel cond . Mu s l Se 11 . ONLY 30,500 males on ------------------" $1850/bst ofr. 494·2521. this sl Iver beauty . Chrysler 9925 '73 Grand Prlx: J type, 280 Sf '71 VW 411 Square Back Moonrool. 8 track stereo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• One Owner. A·l cood. S•...,.ROOF Runs great. Auto Trans.. all power equipment, '67CROWN 6t0-82l65 v" FMradio,Sl700.S52·356S leather. etc. One of a IMPERIAL --------- kiod car for lbe dts· $4264 '70 Catalina: 4 dr. good Porsche 9ll·T 1970. Mint cood. 1 owner. $10.000. or beat olfer. 675-7737 aft. '7p.m. '60 Porsche. Roads ter Oonven. Mint. 98500/otr. Ph 642.fMiBa '64VW.sunrf,rebullteng, cri m l nat1ng buyer! al 9910 transp. Needs paint. new radials, 2nd owner. l783PQS) Col..._xl S.'S00/080968-8329 714/847·7078 SALE PllCI ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1--------- $739, 1967 Uncoln ConUnental "TTSk.ybird~ Stereo. T-top, COM HELL CHEVROLET 641000mlles. xlnt cond. 28,000 mi 646-4064 $6100/or b8tofr. 754-8941 Dealer will sell bis loaded IDmdilltlird 9970 Mark V for below 'X."><11.irl••t 111,.i ""1\\1~'.'-\ SU-1200 whole .. le Bluebook. '74 T·Bil'd, 80,000 lmi'11, -.o. 646-7$13 new tires, '500 under lo booll. e.6-7201. ---------'8' Claaic. Great for col·~-------­"11 El Dorado: retired lector who likes to • 9974 G.M. Execuuve. <>wner reatore. $500 01t best of. • .. •••••••••••••••••••• driwo only. Prtme coad. ter. B-I08Utl. 4:30 Hatchback. 4SM ml. -'75 VW ca mp er • SEE THESE DODGE ' ECONOMY CARS TODAY! •0-24 •CHALLENGER •OMNI •D-50 PICKUP '73 DODGE· ,200 s.,.,. .... Yellow . v-8 . automatic. air. high back seats. mags. (51539P) '74 DODGE 1100 s ......... B t ue . 6 cyl .. automatic. high back se ats. mags . (037618) 54195 53995 FOR FLEET & LEA SING CALL PETE RY AH SE HAllLA ESPANOL 187ll Beach Bl\ld. •77 911 S, air, llerao, Wetitpbalia, la1t of Its f'iDd what you want In HUNTINGTON BEACH alarm.1o mllea, kind, fully equipped, xlnl Dally Pilot CIA.Ulfieds. 14~2000 Call 673-3255 cond. $5000 fll'm. 751HG SU.Ga. 7m • c 0 D t . • 7 t II K v . Radio • beat.er. uklq "JO M!dan Oe Ville. Good LOADED. 184.5 ml. P /P. SlOOO.CallSSl-4587. cond. SlSOO Pvt Pty. SU.HO bHl offer. Seilthl.ngsfastwhbDaily 54NW. 714/644-lb7. PUot Want Ada. ' '• l Huntingt on Beach Fountain Val ley EDITION ' I Y our Home tow n t Da lly wsp a p eJ VOL 72. NO. S7, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1919 P~obe of Newcastle . Disease Widens purchased al the same Garden -one who may have been In is extremely lime consumln~. ·J 81 JACKI HYMAN • Ol .. 0.-.. ..... ._.. A t.a forttl m•nliaalina an outbreak ot a adly bird dis u• In Oran1 CouDt)' bas swelled lo ln~lud 30 v t•rinariarw and should double ln • ae by tM •ttk' f'od, a ispollnman Hid today. SP.OMsmn Dave Goodman ol the \J S D partment or Agr1cwlute aa d the tuk fore • bouud in a Santa Ana omce buHdlna. ls lookln1 Jnto the df'alha ol \.hnoe pt't bJrds from Newc..Uf' Ollf'Uf'. · Tbe u.sually fatal arthcuon pott"t a threat to lhe caaid bird industry atld could devastate lhe poullJ'Y lndullr)-a 1o11 ll should ll •prHd. he said. The lnve1U1allon began lut wHk wbeo a $1 .000 pet .cockatoo n Stanton wu diagnosed wit.b' th diaeue. A aecond cockatoo came down wit.b the di1Jeaae lo Paramount and ao infected parakeet wal round io Riverside. The two ~katoos were both AP Wire-- Grove pet shop, which ia being contact with the infection - checked out for any infecUon. can 'l vi.ail any place where there "Anybody who's got a bir Goodman said. He said anyooe is a possibly uncontaminated that even sneezed within the las who purchased a bird there ·bird. two months is calling, and o~ since Christmas Is being con-course they have to be checked laded. "We take extreme precau-out .. Goodman said. He said Goodman said there are two lions," Goodman said. • anyone who suspects a bird of r e a I 0 n s w b y s 0 m a D y -· Also. be said, tracking down ailing should contact a private veterinarians are needed. the dozens of bird contacts veterinarian, who in turn can One is because a ''dirty" vet throughout Southern California contactthetask force. Rationing Eyed 2 Gallons Gas Per Day Mulled DETROIT CAP) -Motorists would be limited to two gallons of gasoline a day under a White House standby rationing plan to t>e submitted to Congress. the Detroit News said today. The two-gallon limit would ap· ply to all private and com- mercial vehicles. However. a Department of Energy spo k es man in Washington denied that the pro- posal contained such a limila· lion. Motorists needing more would 1 have to buy them from those needing less and it could then cost S2 a gallon or whatever the market would bear. the newspaper said in a dispatch from its Washington bureau. "We want to emphasize over and over that this is a last·dilch plan." said an unidenlifled Department of Energy analyst. The While House is expected to submit two proposals. the one on rationing and the other pro- viding standby authority for: Stopping weekend gasoline sales. limiting weekday hours U.S. FORCES TO PROTECT PERSIAN GULF OIL ?-A• GASOLINE PRICES BEING MANIPULATED? Edltortel, Pege AS for gasoline stations. restricting down\own parking to encourage use of public transportation. re· quiring commercial and public buildings to cut down on energy use. and limiting use of lighted advertising signs. The Energy Department spokesman. James Bishop Jr .. said the reports of limits on weekday gasoline station hours and downtown parking. were un- true. The other proposals had been made public previously. The proposals are part of an overall strategy lo deal witb shortages of imported oil. Some or the measures might be ap· plied by June. Under the rationing plan. the government would a llocate equal amounts of gasoline to the owner of each registered vehi· cle. Coupons would be needed to buy gasoline. OLYMPIA, WASH. RESIDENTS GET CLEAR VIEW OF TOTAL ECLIPSE Cloud• Broke Through For A Few Seconds Look et Celeatlel Wonder Oiirlallits Stiff Foes In Vietruun Timing Hurts Eelipse Darkens North . -· Residen/Jf ' Viewing Aided by Television SEATILE CAP> -A wide swath or the Pacific Northwest waa plunged briefly into dark· ness today, as the last total ecHpse of the sun in North America this century moved 'in- land over cloud-covered skies al Agate Beach, Ore. In Portland, Ore., residents whooped and gasped in amaze· ment as the sky began to darken and temperatures dropped about 7:45 a .m. Complete darkness covered the largest city in the eclipse's path by 8: 13 a .m. It began to get light again at 8: 16 a.m Residents had to rely for a ~ood view on television oictures taken from planes flying above the thick cloud cover . ABC-TV carried the event live nationally. East oC the Cascades, broken clouds provided some view of the sun aa the moon started Its west-to-east march across the sky, arcing as far ea st as North Dakota before swinging north in· \o Canada. At Olympia, the Washington state capital, the cloud cover broke 10 minutes before totality. The lawn on the Capitol Cam- pus was crowded with stale workers a nd children with makeshift viewers and more sophisticated equipment. The clouds stayed away dur· Snow, Floods Spread Crippling Storm Buff els MidlVest By The .Usoclaled Press A nasty winter storm dumped more crippling snow on the reel- ing Midwest today and pushed slreams and rivers lo flood stage across the east. Snow. ice a nd floods closed schools, stranded motorists and knocked out power as the s\orm pushed eastward. ·Illinois Gov James R . • Thompson declared 30 counties in the southern part of the state s now emergency areas and • mobilized National Guard units, mainly \o aid an esttmated 2,000 mo\oriats stranded on highways . Armories in Salem and Cairo 1 were converted to emergency · shelters. Al least six deaths we re blamed on the storms. Evacua- li on s were under way in BOA.T SOLD FAST JfJ'IJI WANT AD "I received three calls the Ii rst day my Daily Pilot classified ad published. "I bad a $500 deposit the oext da)', and the boat ls now sold wilb an cub to me." That's the advertlsln& aucceu story oC the Newport Beach man who placed thla ad ln the Dally Pilot: 28' C1llfornl1n , new motor, recent survey . Dock 1vall1ble t.o new owner lUUMUUUt If you want a cub deposit on your boat or other Item, trY the rrtencDy Dally Pilot ad·vilen at 8'2·5871. Maryland and Virginia, and rescue crews were on alert along the Atlantic Coast. Snow and ice forced schools to close in many areas from C leveland to Bo sto n . Massachusetts authorities set up evacuation centers to prepare ror flooding in coastal com· munities but morning high tides came and went without serious damage. National Guard units were standing by in Atlantic City, N.J ., and Long Branch, N.J ., where abnormally high tides alao were expected. Na lion al Guardsmen earlier in the mom· iog evacuated 75 residents from a mobile home park In Vineland, N .J ., Oooded under 31h feet of waler. In New York state, hundreds of acbools were closed as ice- he av y limbs crashed onto power lines. In an area south or Buffalo and Rochester, anow waa reported up \o 2 reet deep. Authorities evacuated the resi· dents oC tiny Bremo Bluff lo cen· tral Vi rginia as the James, Shenandoah, Roanoke and Dan Rivers rose. Some residents of Greenaboro, Md., were asked to leave homes when the Cbopt.ank River over· r ~n Ha b anks, w h ile in F ederal1bur1 Pollce Cb ter Josepb KoMi lmpoeed a 10.bour curfew Sunday ni&bt. "I'm concerned about people travelln1 around lookln1," Koski said. "II the water did come up rut, I want lo be able t.o set poUce lnto the area to move stuft wlthout ln · lerf erence." I \ins totality, and the sun's corona wfls visible for about 44 seconds. The campus took on a carnival atmosphere as state offices emptied and those with viewers shared with others. Lights on the campus. con- trolled by sensors. flickered dur· ing the period or \otality. Under clear skies at Williston. N.D .. Dan Wiehle, 27. a meal cutter from Minneapolis, com- mented, "This is a helluva deal." Eclipse watchers and groupies gathe re.d in s nowsuits and parkas in 15-degree tem- peratures under a clear sky al <See ECLIPSE, Page A2> Firemen A llow Home to Burn: Technicality BOZEMAN, Mont. <AP> Harry Petroff's new home was allowed to be destroyed by fire with firefighters watching because he had not joined the fire protection association. "They had the fire almost smothered out." Petroff said. "Then they just shut their hoses off and watched it burn.'' Petroff and his family had just moved into the house from Mis- soula last week and he sajd he did not know he had to join the association to receive fire pro· tection. A few tools and sporting goods stored lo the garage are the only items the Petroffs still have. "We found he <Petroff) was not a member," said Kenny Gilbertson, chief of the Rae Fire Department. The rural fire association then stopped fighting the weekend ... fire. Petroff said his house was already ablaze when he learned he needed to be a member of the association to get fire protec· lion. "That was the first I had known l needed to be covered," be said. ffB,PONDERS COMPLEX FATE Ocean View School District of. ficlal1 are 1tymied about what to do wltb t~elr oldest "white elephant."· Trustees have determined they really don't know bow lo diapoee ol the 1.2.acre dlatrict headquarters compln at Beach Boulevard and Warner Avenue In Huntinlt.on Beach. <See story Pate A9>. • • ...... .,, • :t •••• BANGKOK, Thailand CAP> - Chinese infantrymen striking from three directions attacked the 1trate1ic. Red River transportation corridor that leads to Hanoi but were meeting stiff resistance today from Viel· namese forces. Hanoi radio said, "In Peking, Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-Ping said the China- Vietnam war might end in about 10 days. The Soviet news agency Tass, citing "reports reaching Hanoi," asserted that Chinese troops were preparing to invade Viel· namese-dominaled Laos. In a s peech In the west Russian city of Minsk. Soyiet Foreign Minister Andrei · A. Gromyko today reiterated the Kremlin's warnings to the Chinese to pwl out or Soviet· allied Vietnam. "The Soviet Union resolutely d e mands that the Peking leadership end before il Is too late the aggression against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam a nd immediately withdraw Chinese troops Crom its ter- ritory." he said. The Vietnamese broadcast claimed that in weekend fighting counter-attacking troops had in· flicled 1,400 casualties on the tank-and artillery-backed Chinese invaders around Cam Duong, south of Lao Cai tn the Red River valley. La~ai, a provincial capital, was captured by the Chine last week. The area is about 150 miles ·northwest of Hanoi. But Chinese Vice Premier Wang Chen was quoted as telling British re· porten that the Invasion force would not try to advance down the valley toward Hanoi. Teng was Interviewed by Takeji Watanabe. chief of Japan's Kyodo news service. The Chinese leader compared the war with the 33-day China· India war of 1982 and said the fighting might end lo about 10 days "or a few days more because Vietnam is stronger than India." He said bis J(Overnment welcomed proposals lo the \J.N. Security Council calling ror withdrawal of Chinese troops , from Vietnam a nd or Viet· namese troops rrom Cambodia, and added, "We would not make that a barlainllll condition,'• ap- parently meamnc China would pull out without a reciprocal Vletnameae withdrawal rrom Cambodia. tenc wu aakecl why China f eela lt must "punlab' • Vietnam. "Our olajectlve la a limited oae," be Mid. "That la, to teach them tbeJ eould not run about u mucb • tbey deelred . . . ·'They controlled Laos, ln· vaMd cambodla. •lined • peace treaty wldl tbl Sovlet Unioa that la a mWtar>' alliance in nature, (let VIET, Pa .. Al) ~ ··--'. ---=--· Too Late to Be a Bandit Christopher S. Stumpf's timing was off Satur- day. STUMPF , 21, who is being held in Orange Coun- ty Jail as an attempted robbery s.uspec~. allege~y told the cashier at Fountain Valley s Chns a nd Pitts restaurant: ··This is a robbery." When the woma n cashier looked stunned. he re· pealed the pronouncement. she said. The woman told officers later that Stumpf showed no weapon. His hands were on a table. --SHE DARTED into the kitchen to report the inci· dent at 4 p.m . Policewoman Andrea Morrill im· mediately arrested the amazed Stumpf. Officer Morrill had been taking a report from the manager of the restaurant at 15975 Harbor Blvd. The restaurant had been held up just 50 minutes earlier by a bandit toting a revolver . That man had grabbed $203 from another cashier and fled out the front door to a waiting white Mercedes. police said. c Huntington Spares Eucalyptus Trees About 50 eucalyptus trees have had a hard time of surviv· ing in rapidly growing Hunt· ington Beach, but they don't ap- pear to be down for the count yet. study or alternative ways to re- lieve congestion on Main Street. And while the eucalpyptus trees may be the biggest beneficiary of the comm ission's decision, it doesn't mean that they are out of the woods yet. Daryl Smith. the city's Street a nd landscaping supervisor. says the old trees are alive but The trees. which have graced the east side of Lake Street for about a half century, apparently received a new lease on life when the Planning .commission abandoned efforts to extend Lake Street. in poor condition. . He said they have suffered ' stress over the years because or ( the lac k of irrigation and because they a re sever e ly- pruned to fit under Southern 1 Res idents, who live in the neighborhood that stretches from the Civic Center to Pacific Coast Highway, say that, because the street will not be ex· tended. it is unlikely that it will be widened in t.be near future. If the ·street were to be ex· panded to a four -lane thoroughfare. the stately eucalyptus globulus and eucalyptus viminalis would have \o be pulled out. Residents have protested city errorts to extend or wlden the street. They have argued that a ma· jor tborou&bfare would des\fOy tbe tranquility of their homes and pose a safety hazard ror their children. They also aay they would suf· fer from the loss of the trees wblcb they have come to love over the years. Their street waa studied ror npamion Wednesday nl1bt by Ute Plannina Commlulon u a wa1 to ease heavy trarrtc volume oa Main Stnet to the beach aad downtown area. Commluiolllen were ttucbinc the exua.ion ol Lake Street to Garfield AYenue u a poulble .olutioa. Instead of exteocllnc Lake 8'1Mt, they optM far a j (See TKEES, Page AZ> • ., t Co ast l Weather Variable cloudiness through Tuesday and a lit· tle cooler . Lows tonight mid 408 through low 50s. Highs Tuesday in m id 60s. 1 I NSIDE J;ODA Y TM to0rid ._ nmninO <>Mt oJ fir'1000d and tM implicotiofta are ominoul. Sff atorJI, Page .u. a IJ M ... .. .,., .. .. 11 M ·~ I i I l I i I \ -• ' .. "' DA'LV PILOT H/f Moncftx,,tbqtt!Y "· ti?'! Aagleto• £lea~• Sovi.et 'MOie' r Hunt Continues WASHING TON CAP • A pubU Md report ~ lA of. flt"t•l• on dt-\' 1oped 1 ea 'hat the •1.ncy's co-.nterln· telll1eo~4-' <'hid. Jamu Ansleton, mlcbt ~ a Sovuit 1gtnt But Wi1li1m Co1b • the ClA director wbo pres uf'ff Anal ton into urem nt, u.ys be never had any doubts 1bout bb loyalty. Newsweek ma~tu.tnt ~ported Sunday that a ~1al CIA wut aearchlna for "mole,·• or h.i&b level Soviet &gent witbm th.- CIA 'a ranks. at one ume d vt1loped a uae aaauut An1leton. but that lop aaency offirlals dis massed it in 1974 a too e1rcumstanua1 11nd spcculauve Newsweek's report follows a year of printed and prtvate •peculation about the po&Slbility of a Soviet mole inside the CIA. Fueled by the case of a low-level former CIA employee convlct.ed recently of giving the Soviet.s a secret U.S. spy satellite manual. interest m the agency's decade· long search for a mole bas generated news pape r and magazine stories and even been treated io a book Colby himself b as begun public speeches by denying he is the mole. The mole search was conduct· ed largely by Angleton, and Newsweek r e ports that , although nothing was ever proved, a score or CIA officers came under suspicion of being moles during the 1960s and the careers of several suffered as a result. Although Angleton and three top aides were forced into retire· ment in 1974 while Colby was still ClA director, Colby said in a telephone interview Sunday night. "Any such allegation wasn·t a factor in Angleton's de· parture." Cr · "I never had any Police Pay Settlement Near in HB? Negotiators were reported to be "very close" today to the set· tlement of a lengthy dispute in· volving police pay demands. Spokesmen for both tbe city of Huntington Beach a nd t he 233-member police officers as· sociation said a proposal will be handed to the City Council for approval next Monday night. It has been learned that both sides were working toward a two-year contract in a two·bour negotiation session Friday. Spokesmen decli ned to go Into essentials or the proposed agree. ment but a city official said terms may include a 5 percent pay increase this year and a 7 percent boost starting in July. Police are believed to be ask· ing for a 7 percent pay boost in addition to a clause linking in· creases to cost or living figures. Six Unhurt • In Boat Fire A HWltington Beach skipper a nd five children escaped injury during a sailing outing Sunday when an electrical short touched off a fire on their 38·foot craft, sberi!f's Harbor Patrol depuUes said William Hutchens, 40, of 16150 Tortola Circle, and five children aged four to 11, were about six miles from tbe Sunset Beach shoreline when the fire broke out at 9 p.m., deputies said. They managed to contain the fire before rescue craft arrived, and were able to stay on board when the sailing vessel was towed back to port. DAILY PILOT f M Orit~(M\t .,.., .. Ptktf,wlt.,Wht(h l\(°"' ... ...., .... _....,..._ ''""°''"'"b', ... °'_ (M'\t Pvtlt~~v S.0..f'At•~it~t•r• oubh \"td ""°""""' ttw-_,.. ,-,._, • ., to. CO'lt• .-.,. H...._, -II """'-""-II r-l•tnY4ftf"Y. trVV11t.l~tkaM" Soufft(Oill\t A 1~~ '~'°""" .. _. t\owibtl""'° S•t~O•y\ ttnd .... ,,.,.,.~ ""'.,. ......... ""°'""'"" ,.,..., " •. JJO Wt•\t 8111W~n-t't (Olf.t~.C•t1totn1A•1•,. ._.. ... _ Pr ... Klltnt itftd Pwbt•tfW'r Jkllt c.1oy YKePt•\--°"""' .. __ ~ ....... £cit ... T.,._•A~ lllWMOl ... £clitor a. ....... ....., ._..,. ... " M M\l""'Mol_( .. tor'\ _... ...... wt\! 0.-Ceu<ll• E- Mlfll .. ,.Ofl ... Oftlol "" ...... ~. ~ ........ _... ,.0_1'111,_ otttc.t .. ~~w" ~~M~- T••••• (tH)~ CtNllfled Acf¥ertt .... ...,. t.--1110.-c--..~­.... ,220 ee-i: ~°'.!2'~ ~'=~ I =::f,,, ., .-,.;;Ti;;..,..,u 11trt•fl _, -= ~==:=..:.•-• , .. cltt "'fll'tn• M<oftd cteu H ll•o. ,... ... .+ C.O.•• •~i Cftll~fll• •vlU(fftllOfl ""'UHIH U M _.,,.,,, bv maot M JO _...,t ""llt .. w Ot\t•...i-"M-Nr doubt about tUa loyalty •t all We h~ dlff rl'n(" proft 1on11 '1 but oot on that 1ubJ t." Asktd •boot ... UM that WH d~vtolo~d. ColbJ replled, "I franlcly h1v foreotten the de· tails of the m1ttu and really t'an•t commf'nt " In hia boo It . "Honorable: Men." Colby Rtd be decided to r~move Analeton beeauu "I looked ln vain for M>me tanclblc results from tht counlerln ltlllaen<'e fttld aod found Utlle or noew " He complained aboul Analetoft ·a "tortuou1 thtories" about Soviet a1enta an Weatl'm entellJgeoce •1enclH The ma_gaime said thti case nga1rust Angleton was the result o f an utenslve two.year in· vestagatlon of hls carter. Thal case slre6sed An&Jetoo's beavy reliance on a defector from So- viet l.otelligence named Anatoly Golitsin and Instances In which CIA files showed no action by Angleton on important leads, Newsweek said. "I don't believe it," said Angleton in a telephone in· terview Sunday night. "It's a lot of garbage. There may have been individuals or an individual who did something but to my certain knowledge no orgaruzed group did such a study or bad such suspicions." ECLIPSE ••• Williston. U.S. 85 extending nortb was lined with vans, cars. motor homes and people from across the country. Ann~ Case. her daughter, Pan, and a friend, Charles Clayton, drove 1.121 miles from Columbia. Mo.. to Williston to view the eclipse. "If I don't see it now, I'll be exactly 100 years old when the next one comes around," Mrs. Case said. Jn Canada. meanwhile , thousands of persons in southern Manitoba and northwestern On· tario got a good look at the eclipse. The cloud cover that had dimmed hopes for ground· level observation largely dis· s ipated overnight, and the eclipse was visible from most parts of the region. The sides were saturated with air traffic as observers went aloft to beat the clouds with a vlew from above. Other scientists, amateur astronomers and the curious gathe red on parking lots , porches. decks and grassy knolls. with their telescopes, homemade pinhole projectors and commercial viewers For many, the thick cloud· cover turned the eclipse into the greatest cosmic disappointment since the Comet Kohoutek disap. peared into the heavens five years ago without living up to its ballyhooed brilliance Repeated admonitions oot to look at the sun during the period of the eclipse seemed academic as the gray slties drew a leaden sheet between the viewers and the solar spectacle. Mos t o f the h omemade viewers were certain to be rel· egated to the attic as curiosity pieces. since the next total eclipse of the s un in North America won't co~ until the year 2017. '- Huntington School Holds Surplus Sale Need a keypunch machine, cash register or used band uni· form ? How about a 66· passenger sehool bus? These items are among 270 "surplus or obsolete" goods be· ing put up for sealed bid sale by t be Huntington Beach Union High School District. The sale is open to the .,Ublic. A complete list of equipment to be sold is available al the dis· trict 's education center pure has· ln1 office, 5201 Bolsa Ave., Hunt· ingt:on Beach. List.a allo are available at the business office at any district bl1h school, where items may be inspected during regular school hours. Written bids must be received at the maln purchasing office by l :JO p.m. on Monday, March 12, at whlcb time bids will be opened. For more information on the sale. contact d istr ict a d · mlnistnUve Ulistant Lyn Hen· derson at 898-6711 • Conference Set SAN rRANCISCO (AP> Avlt.al SbcbaraMb scbeduled a new1 conference outside t he •at. rA the 9oriet Consulate to- day concernlq the fate ol her buabaDd, AnatolJ Sbelllruaky, a humu rilhta adYOCate Im· prt....t in tile Soviet Unloa. OelfY ...... S.... COUNTY AIRPORT Of'FlCIAL, F1R!MAN CHECK PLANE AFTE" CRASH SUNDAY Fullerton '91ot Etcepn lcNpe With Bulldlng, Oumpa Craft In Airport lnfteld Motive Sought Killing • ID Westmins ter police in· vestigators continued today to seek a motive for the killing or a q>an who was shot to death Sun·· day as he was· walking through Sigler Park near his home. Officers said the unknown killer used a shotgun at close range to inflict fatal injµrles on Steven Alan Buus, 24, of 6832 Hazard Ave. Robbery was ruled out as the -gpotive when police found that fhe victim's wallet and cash were still in bis possession and that his watch and other jewelry bad not been taken. Westminster Police Explorer Scouts helped officers search the park for clues Sunday, but found nothing that would aid the in· vestigaUon, police said. OHicers found Buus' body near a recreation building in the park. TREES ••• California Edison Co. power lines. "We've bad to take out some dead trees in the past and we have found others to be infested with termites and other pests," he said today. Smith said the trees were planted about 50 to 80 years ago by the Huntington Beach Com· pany and could live to be about 100 years old under ideal condi· tions . Rhodesians Rai,d Angola SALISBURY, Rho<lesia CAP)• -The Rhodesian air force m1de its first raid on Angolan ter· ritory today, bombing a "very large" training base for Joshua Nkomo 's gue rrillas, t h e Rhodesian military command announced. A communique said the 19S>s· vintage Rhodesian Canberra bombers a nd Hawker-Hunter fighters new across Zambia lo make the attack and all re· turned safely. There was no indication whether they were cha llen1td by the Angolan air forcc'J more :i<Jvanred Soviet MIG·21 jets or by anU-alrcraft fire from some of the 20,000 Cuban troops e!itim1ted to be in Angola. Nor was there any assessment or damage done. Mother Slain, Son Arrested A 24·year-old Anaheim man races municipal court arraign- ment Tuesday on char1es or stabbing his mother to death Saturday, Anaheim police re· ported today. Dennis Branatatt.er. of 22S2 W. Lincoln Ave., Apt. D·4, waa ar· rested Saturday after the body of bis mother. SJ-year-old Mary L. Knisley. was found in the apartment tbe two shared, police said. Officen aald Mrs. Knisley was stabbed numeroua times. In· veaUgalion ln tbe case was con· Unuina today. Death P..obed FORT WAYNE, Ind. <AP) - Healtb otnciaJJ are inveatlJ•t· lnt the death of a H·ye&Hld Fort Wayne girl who contracted a form of menlqltit bacteria . The tirl, who WU not ldeatifted, dted lo Parhtew Memorial Hotpltal tA meninclococeemJa, a bacterial lnfectloa, wbich "la not thousht to be a hl1bt1 con· taiOOUI dlMUe. '' County Air Crash Victim Recovering James E . Rog e r s. 46 , Fullerton, was recuperating to· day from facial injuries s uffered when the single engine plane he was flying Sunday lost power on an -approach to Orange County Airport, scraped a building near the airport, then crashed. Rogers was listed in "very good condition•• today at Tustin Community Hospital. An Orange County Fire Department spokesman said Rogers was returning from a trip to the state of W asbington in a Piper Comanche when the crash occurred about 1 p.m. He was alone in the plane. As Rogers' plane lost power, it scraped the top of a one-story building housing Allied In· dus tries Inc: at 3186· E Airway Ave .. Costa Mesa. The plane's f',....Page A J VIET ••• and encroached on Chinese soil at will." China has said its invasion was aimed at •·teaching Viel· nam a lesson" after months or border provocations. Peking said it wanted no Vietnamese territory but would occupy about 38 square miles of disputed ter· ritory that Vietnam bas been holding for years. A Tass report from Hanoi lo· day said China "is preparing the ground for s preading its ag. gression also to the Laotian People's Democratic Republic. For th.is aim Chinese troops are being massed at the point where the borders of China, Laos and Vietnam join." The Tass report could not be confirmed immediate ly. Sources in Peking predict a big Chinese offensive in Vietnam in a few days, Kyodo reported. Some analysts in Bangkok say it may come in the Lang Son area. 80 miles DOrtheast or Hanoi. Kyodo said sources in the Chinese capital told It the goal of the intensified "punitive action" against Vietnam would be to destroy al least one Vietnamese army division and military bases and artillery emplace· menls near the border. \. We Recommend: l!JFaA because it's the best. wheels were torn off when it bit the building, but the building i t self apparently was n 't damaged. The plane continued toward the airport and crashed in the airport infield, th.e fire depart· ment spokesman said. There was no fire . the s pokesman said. possibly becauae there was little f\ael in the plane at the time. Rogers, 1311 S. Highland Ave., Fullerton. was able to climb from the cockpit by himself and was sitting on the wing when emergency crews arrived at the crash site. it was reported. , StJDJmer Class In Huntington To Get Study Slaff recommendations that could restore at least a portion of the summer school program in the Huntington Beach Union Hi gh School District will be brought before school trustees -Tuesday night. The regular public meeting be gins at 6 p .m . in the Wes tminster High Sch ool Cafeteria, 14325 Golden West Ave., Westminster. District officials are seeking tentative approval or a summer school program that includes both re medial and supplemen· tary class offerings. The full scope or the potential summer session will be revealed at Tuesday's meeting. All summer courses in the dis· trict were canceled last year following the pass age of Proposition 13. 'IV Set, J ewelry Taken in Valley Burglars entered a Fountain Valley home through a window Saturday and made off with a television set . jewelry and $200 in cash. police reported. R oss E . Skiver. of 18106 Lemon St.. listed his total loss at just over Sl,000, police said. Sea Hunt Given Up For Trio A team of U.S. Navy divers was flown back to Sao Dlego from Baja CalJfornia Sur Sun· day Dig.hf after an unaucc.eful, three-day search tor three bodie• SJ>OUed near Isla de Natividad by an abalone diver. Navy U . Sharon Cbldonl said today that the 16 divers aban· doned their search with the de· cision that the three bodies, re· portedly tied together. are not now In the vicinity of the Island. T he officer direcllnt the search told Navy collea1ues after !he C-130 carrying hls divers landed at North Jsland that the bodies may have been washed out to sea . Authorities believe that the bodies may be those of Dennis. 22. and Debbie Vowell, 21, and Gary Newton, 22, all of S.n Diego. The trio waa last seen alive Jan. 24 when they were two days out from San Dtego in Vowell's 45-foot craft. the "Armistice." Shortly alt.er a fishing vessel saw them fish ing near San Clemente Island, a storm hit the area. Vowell and Newton weot to high school together In Costa Mesa, where their families live. Mrs. Vowell is the daughter or Mrs . Bunny Scott of San Clemente. Lt. Chidoni said the divers thoroughly searched the area despite the fact that they were hampered by heavy seas. strong underwater cur rents a n d massive kelp beds. She said the Americans were helped by local villagers who re· peatedly dived into the water d espite their l ack of t he sophisticated equipenent used by the Navy team. Vice Consul Bart Flaherty of the U.S. Consulate in Tijuana said today that authorities at the scene are now on a "wait and see" basis. "If the bodies are seen again, then we will immediately return to the area ." Flaherty said. "Of course, we believe that the bodies are those of the occu· pants of the 'Armistj_ce' but w~ will never know for sure until they are recovered. ''Our lboughls today are with the relatives of the three miss· , ing persons.·· Flaherty said. "Our hearts go out to them and we want to do all we can to help them." School Helps Blood Drive Blood donations will be taken Wednesday at Marina High School in Huntington Beach as part of a ~ ·cross drive co· sponsored by two school service groups and the local Kiwasus Club. Donations will be taken between 9 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. m the student cafeteria at Marina High. 15871 Springdale St., Hunt· ington Beach. The school's Key Club aod Polaris Club are co·sponsoring the drive. More information is available from school nurse Beverly Bradley at 893·6571. Duchess Improves PARIS <AP > -The Duchess of Windsor, 82. is in "absolutely satisfactory" condition following surgical removal of an intestinal blockage. the American Hospital reported today. AL SGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 • • ' ., ' •' ' ~ • .. 1 l '· p I l • J 7 ~ " t 7 I :; . ~ I ~ ' ' 1 \ 1 c a 1ill n • B • F G K • c al d · 4 . 1 ! , ? ~ ~ f /l I a A .... .... f LM .. CM!! (let c-c... Dee .... ..... ..... • • If • Y.,,... Boaaetowa .j Dally Ne'Wspaper VOL. 71., NO. S1; 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ,ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF:ORNIA MONDAY"' FEBRUARY 26, 1979 • • ) Pro he of Newcastle Disease Widens· ay JA("KJ H\'llAN Of .. o.11.~ ..... A Luk force! anve lJa•ll"-an outbr ak of u d adly bird dls· eaaC" In Orange County haa. s wtll.,d t o Include 30 veterinarians and should double in size by tht w t'k's e-nd. a 3pokesman sold today SPOkesman Dave Goodman of t b l" US D~p art m _,nt o r A1r1MJ.lture qld the t11 k forco. hou td ln a Sanu. Ana offac<' buildin~. l a looltinM Into tho death• of thrf.'t' pt•l birds from Ne wcutle Dl!M."ue The usually fatal arn1ct1on poses a threat to the caged bard 1nduatry and could devastate the POUitry lnduat.ry as well should al spread. h_, said The lnvestasation began last week when a Sl,000 pet cockatoo In Stanton was diagnosed with the disease. A second cockatoo came down w th the disease in Paramount and an infected parakee t wa s found in Riverside. The two cockatoos were both ,. ( ) I OLYMPIA, WASH. RESIDENTS GET CLEAR VIEW OF TOTAL ECLIPSE Cloud• Broke Through For A Few Seconds Loo~k et Celeatlel Wonder Eclipse Darkens North llesidents' Viewing Aided by Television SEATTLE CAP> -A wide swath of the Pacific Northwest was plunged briefly into dark· ness today, as the last total eclipse of the sun in North America this century moved in· land over cloud-covered skies al Agate Beach. Ore. In Portland, Ore., residents whooped and gasped in a maze· ment as the sky began to darken and temperatures dropped about 7: 45 a . m. Complete darkness cove red the largest city in the eclipse's path by 8: 13 a.m. It began to gel light again al 8: 16 a.m. Residents had lo rely for a good view on television pictures taken from planes flying above the thick cloud cover. ABC-TV carried the event live nation ally. East of the Cascades, broken clouds provided some view of the sun as the moon started its west-to-east march across lhe Irvine Teachers Ask I 7% Increase The Irvine Teachers Associa· tion has presented a contract proposal for 1979-80 that includes a 17 percent salary increase. Rick Gale, pres ident of the IT A. which presented the pro- posal to distri ct trustees last • week without public comment, said that 12 percent of the in· crease is a cost-of-living boost as reflected by an identical rise in the Consumer Price Index. ' ~ ,. . \ ~ •• l • \ . r I \ "Whal we're trying lo do," Gale said today, '"is bring ourselves in line with the cost of living in Orange County, so we can affo rd lo Ii v e i n th is county." There also are provisions in the ITA proposal th at seek periodic upward adjustments as t he price index climbs during t he contract school year. "We're trying to keep up with t he local cost of living," Gale ex· plained. "Ir the cost of living Coas t Weather Variable c loudi ness through Tuesday and a lit· tie cooler. Lows tonight mid 40s through low 50s. Highs Tuesday in mid &Os. INSIDE 'JODA Y The s.oorld it nommg Otd of f ir~wood and the impUcotiona ar~ ominoul. Sn ltorfl, Page. Al . l•Hs AtY_..,..... .UAMIU~ Cl ....... ......... •1 L.M ... ,. ................. M ...._, .. Or ... ~ ... c.tlfenlla "' ,,.., .. ,.,_ .. ~ C>tt = ., .. C-tc• es .,..,..... .. c ......... esT....,..._ .. D9etll ..... .... .,.....,, •1 . ....,..,~ .. -...... A4 ·~ .,~ .... "! ,.....,.... C1.J goes up, our salary does loo," according to the initial proposal. The average teacher salary now is $16,470. T h e ITA r e presen ts 390 school teachers in the Irvine Unified School District. The group is the teachers' sole bargaining agent. In a ll, there a·r e a bout 500 c 1 a ss room teachers and 162 other certifical· ed e mployees who would be af. fected. The contract also seeks bind- ing arbitration grievances d isputes relating-to the negotiat· ed contract. An arbitrator m utua lly accept· able lo the teachers and the school board would be selected. If none were found mutually ac- ceptable, one would be selected (rom a panel of fi ve names pro- vided by the California State <See TEACHERS, Page AZ> C.Ommission To Consider Traffic Items A proposed set of speed limits for Michelson Drive in Irvine, and parking requirements for a new Irvine Co. recreation cent.er, are scheduled for consideration tonight by the Tra nsportation Commission . The commission meets at 7: 30 al City Hall, 17200 Jamboree Blvd . Miche lson Drive, between Culver Drive and MacArthur Boulevard in an industrial area, curnnlly baa no speed limit, other than the sta te 55 mJles per hour maximum . Cit y t raffi c en gineer C. Lapinski recommen d~ t hat s p eed limits b e posted as follows: -45 m~twcen MacA~ur <See Fnc, Pa1e .u sky, arcing as far east as North Dakota before swinging north in· to Canada. At Olympia, the Washington state capital, the cloud cover broke 10 minutes before totality. The lawn on the Capitol Cam· pus was crowded with state workers and children with makeshift viewers and more sophisticated equipment. The clouds stayed away dur- ing totality. and the sun's corona was visible for about 44 seconds. The campus look on a carnival atmosphere as stale offices emptied and those with viewers s hared with others. Lights on the campus, con· trolled by sensors, nickered dur- ing the period or totality. Under clear skies at Williston, N.D., Dan Wiehle, 27, a meal cutte r from Minneapolis, com- mented. "This is a helluva deal." Eclipse watchers and groupies g ath e r ed in s now s uits and parkas in 15-degree tem- peratures under a clear sky at Williston. U.S. 85 extending north was lined with vans. cars, motor homes and people from across the country Annette Case. her daughter. Pan, and a friend. Charles Clayton. drove 1.lZl miles from Columbia. Mo.. lo Williston to view the eclipse "'Ir I don't see it now, I'll be exactly 100 years old when the next one comes around." Mrs. Case said. I n Canada . me a nwh ile, thousands or persons in southern Ma nitoba and northwestern On· t ario got a good look at the eclipse. The cloud cover that had dimmed hopes for ground· level observation largely dis· s ipated ove rnight, and the eclipse was visible . from most parts or the region. BOAT SOLD FAST Wl11l WANT AD "I received t hree calls the f irst day my Daily Pit·ot classified ad published. "I had a $500 deposit the next day, and the boat is now sold with an cash to me." That's the advertising success story of the Newport Beach man who placed this ad In the Daily Pilot: 28' Ca lifornian. new motor, recent survey Dock available lo new owner xxx·xxxx JI you want a cash deposit on your boat or other item. try the friendly Dally Pilot ad ·vlsers at &42·5678 . ' .. ' ........ . purchased at the same Garden Grove pet shop, which ls being checked out for any infection. Goodman said. He said anyone who purchased a bird there since Christmas is being con· tacted. Goodman said there are two rea s on s why so ma n y veterinarians are needed. One is because a ''dirty" vet -one who may have been in contact with the infection - can't visit any place where there is a possibly uncont aminated ·bird. '"We take extreme precau· lions." Goodman said. Also. be said, tracking down the dozens of. bird cont acts throughout Southern California is extremely time consumirut. "Anybody who's got a -bir that even sneezed within the las two months is calling, and of course they have to be checked out " Goodman said. He said a nyone who suspects a .bird of ailing should contact a private veterinarian, 'who in turD can contact the task force. Rationing Eyed 2 Gallons Gas Per Day Mulled DETROIT IAP> -Motorists would be limited to two gallons of gasoline a day under a White House standby rationing plan to ~e submitted to Congress, the Detroit News said today. T he two·gaJlon limit would ap- ply to all private and com· mercial vehicles. Howe ve r . a Department of Energy s pokes m an in Washington denied that the pro· • posal contained such a limita· lion. Motorists needing more would have to buy them from those needing Jess and it could then cost $2 a gallon or whatever the market would bear. the Oiina Hits Stiff Foes In Vietnam BANGKOK, Thailand <AP) -Chinese infantrymen striking from three directions attacked the strategic R ed River t ransportation cor ridor that leads to Hanoi but were meeting stiff resistance today from Viel· namese forces, Hanoi radio said, "In Peking, Vice Premier Teng Hsiao·Ping said the China· Vietnam war might end in about 10 days. The Soviet news agency Tass, citing "reports reaching Hanoi." asserted t hat Chinese troops were preparing lo invade Viet- namese-dominated Laos. In a s peech in the west Russian city of Minsk , Soviet Foreign Minis te r Andrei A . Gromyko today reiterated the Kremlin 's warnings to the Chi nese to pull out or Soviet· allied Vietnam. <See VIET , Page AZ) newspaper said in a dispatch rrom its Washington bureau. ''We want to emphasize over and over that this is a last-ditch U.S. FORCES TO PROTECT PERSIAN GULF OIL ?-A4 GASOLINE PRICES BEING MANIPULATED? Edttorfal, Pege A6 plan ... s aid a n unidentified Department of Energy analyst. The White House is expected lo submit two proposals, the one on rationing and the other pro· viding standby authority for ; Stopping weekend gasoline sales, limiting weekday hours fo r gasoline stations. restricting downtown parking to encourage use or public transportation, re- quiring commercial and public buildings to cul down on energy use. and limiting use of lighted advertising signs. The E ne r gy Departme nt spokesman, James Bishop Jr., said the reports of limits on weekday gasoline station hours .and downtown parking, were un- true. The other proposals had been made public previously . The proposals are part of an overall strategy lo deal with <See RATION, Page AZ) 4 Fluor Employees Arrested in Iran TEHRAN. Iran CAP>-Iran's Islamic revolutionaries ar rested an American, a Belgian and two British employees or the Fluor Cor p. of Irvine today on charges of "plundering t he weaJth of Ira n by charging exorbitant prices," a spokesman for the company said. The four a re construction supervisors al a gas turboex· pander plant near Pazanan, in southern Iran. which the Fluor Cor p. recently finished building. The men were attempting to board an airplane at Pazanan Airport to fly to Tehran for evacuation from the country when they were arrested. After questioning, a Fluor spokesman said, they were returned to the job site at Pazanan and held there ror further investigation. THe American was identified as John Cassibas, 49. Cassibas. a long-lime overseas construe· lion worker. ioined Fluor three years ago. He has no known United States address. The head of the Iranian na· Uonal oil industry, meanwhile, announced that Iranian oil ex-. ports will resume next week. He did not specify a date. The cut-Off of Iranian oil has been blamed by many in the world petroleum industry for re· cent price hi.kes and reductions in refinery production. In other developments, t he ex· eculion of another official of S h a h Mo h a m med R eza Pah lavi's secret police and public floggings for violators ol Islamic law were reported to- day. The newspaper Andegan re· ported that .Moha mmed Hossein Naderi. the secret police·s torture expert in the central city or Isfahan. was brought. to Tehran and executed by a firing squad Sunday ni~hl <See FLUOR. Page A2l Countian ·Hurt in Crash James E . Rogers. 46 . Fullerton. was recuperating lo· day from facial injuries surfered when the single engine plane he was flying Sunday lost power on an approach to Orange County Airport. scraped a building near the airport, then crashed. Rogers was listed in "very good condition" today at Tustin Community Hospital. An Orange County Fi re Depart ment spokesman s aid Rogers was returning from a trip to the slate of Washington in a Piper Comanche when the crash occurred about 1 p.m. He was atone in the plane. As Rogers' plane lost power, it scraped the top of a one·story building housing Allied In- dustries Inc. at 3186·E Airway Ave .• Costa Mesa. The plane's wheels were torn off when il bit the building, but lhe building itse tr apparently wa~o 't damaged. The plane continued toward the airport and crashed in the airport infield, the fire depart- me nt spokesman said. There wa s no firt , the s pokes man said . possi bly because there was little fuel in the plane at the time. Rogers. 1311 S. Highland Ave., Fullerton. was a bl e to climb from the cockpit by himself and was sitting on the wing when e mergency cr ews arr ived at the crash site. it was reported. oelly ......... COUNTY AlftPOtlT Ofl'ICIA&., PIMMAN a.cK PL.AMI AFTQ CMIH SUNDAY Fulerton Nol I...,_ larape ""' lulhlP1, Du .... Craft In Airport lnftekl _._ • I . I#._, . ·'- ' ' t Al DAILY PILOT MO!!dtY· Ftbrvwy n. tm 'Wateh It Bu• .. •' Firemen Shut Off Hoses., View Fire BOZEMAN. Mont. <AP> Harry Petroff Hd h11 fam11y • re watchin& flmi.Chlera bat lie a blu lo their n w $50,000 home. Suddtnly, lht-n~ncb._.,,. swlttbed off their ho ~ and let t.bei dweUin, burn. ''They had the fir alma t amolhered." J>drOlf aid. • "lllea Utey just lbut lbflr i.o... off llliid w tcht'd It burn It wa th darndest Uuna 1 ev r saw " PPtMft ttlld blJ (&mil • vrho bad movf'd lw.t from Mis· toul• to a aubdJvtsion ouuade this d ty of 25,000, had failed to JOfn the R~e t'ire Department. 1 privat~ rur~•l U30ClaUon wtticb n a hts flres ln unincorporated area. Membership Carnes a 12.$ \nltlatlon f~ Mnd $15 annual r~ "W~ found he < Pt'trotr> was not a mem~r '' ·aid Ra' fare Robbe r y Out cbl*' "-Y OUbwtaoQ. '"Tbecl w ~eel' wttb our aecret.ry end fOuad the ho wu nol r ~i1tem We l)WJoo our men otr the nre and Wtatr ht'd tt bum, .. he Hid Pttroff, baa Wtfe, RoeaUc.-. •ad lbttir chlldten, Sam •Del IArle, had bl-en n lbo home about 10 hours when lht fire broke out al l 1 m Stuurda.v They were aw1ktlM'd by a 1moke a larm and &ot out aaftly after C'alhna th sheriff. •ho dtspatrhed th pnv1Le dcpanmtnt The ftrt I~ thouaht to hav •tarted 1n l~ l'htmney Pt'troff .. Id ·it waJ not until th•• men arrlvt.-d that he 1.,11mt.-d he nttdtd to ~ n m~mber of tht- 1SSCX'111tlon to &f't fire protec tton Westminster Cops Seek Death Motive Westmins ter poli t e 1n vestigators continued today to seek a motive for the killing of a man wbo was shot lo death Sun- day as he was walking through Sigler Park near his home. Officers said the unknown killer used a shotgun at close range to inflict fatal injuries on Steven Alan Buus, 24, or 6832 Hazard Ave. Robbery was ruled out as the motive when police found that the victim's wallet and cash were sWJ lo bis possess ion and that bia watch and other jewelry had not been taken. Jogger Death ;Cause Sought By Coroner Orange County coroner 's dep- uties said today they will have not e s tablis hed the cause of death of Robert Duran, whose body was found Saturday in the Upper Newport Bay Duran's body was discovered at a bout 10:30 a .m . by an equestrian who fo\ind bim lying face down in a marsh area at the head ol lhe bay. T he dead man, a Tustin resi· dent, was identified Sunday after he was reported missing Saturday night. At the lime he wa s found, Duran appeared to be dressed for jogging and carried no Iden· tificalion. C~rooer's investigators said today the case is still pending, although they said there are no indications that foul play was in· volved. ~las Sees X-rated Film DALLAS <AP> -After some Judicious editing and a judicial injunction, "Debbie Does Dallas," lbe X-rated film was finally able to complete it~ first performance here. "Debbie" played to a not- • nea rly packed house at tbe Guild Adult Theater just hours after U .S. District Judge Robert rortt:r i~sued. a. preliminary In· Junction 10def1rutely banning lbe fil m 's ads. Porter agreed with attorney~ for the genuine Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders that the film 's ads portraying Debbie -played by Bambi Wood -were just a lltue too close to the rea l thing for comfort. Officers seized the film three weeks ago under com· mercial obscenity statutes. OftANOE COAST DAILY PILOT T"" Ora"Ot C-t Detty Pllol, •ilftwftl<h IH°"' n•...a "'"-Pr•"·'' -1-lly ,,,. °'-Coast PuOtl'!NflOC-St11ot••••.o.1 ......... ouolls!M<I _.., ,,,.°""' ~•kl•t '°' c .. ,. MfM, N-llM<ft, ....,,...,..,,., .,...,.,,,,_ lelftV ........ tr-.~ &tokhl\ovtftCo°'t A l•"t'C ·~-·ton "-1-~ .. ,,,. .. _ )Vft<too n.e P'lfttll»t -l&hl"9 pl6ftl I\ •I lJO W•\I Bo St,...., CC>lt• NIH<!, Cellf°""'t .,.,_ ·-........ "'°''""'II-"'*'-Jae-•. Qjf1ey V•UPYttkleftlel\CIO.-.. ,..._ 1-11(-I Edi tot ~ ... _......, _,...,.,.Edito< a... ..... "'"' -~ ..... , .. , .. ,..,, -""''"' Edoton T~ ('714)14M321 Q...iftMAcMf1t ... MN911 ...__,.._ ....... ~'C:.::. °'.:.l:., ~=..~= ;';I' .. , ....... 11 .. -"ll ... ,.,,. ..... ':S ~=-~=-=.·--··· "'"'"" ... t~1::. .. w·•::~~~n. 1:"'..;' (~;::, ~~ :.::,r.;...11(; :~~:o -ftly, "'"''•rt W estmmsler Police Explorer Scouts helped officers search the park for clues Sunday. but found nothing that would aid the to· vestlgatlon, police said . Ofrlcers found Buus ' body near a recreation building in the park. F ,....P-.e A J FLURR ••• Meanwhile, aides to the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini said the Moslem holy man will leave his temporary bead · quarters in Tehran on Thursday to..-eturn to the holy city of Qum. 75 miles s o uthwes t o r the capital. Hundreds of ttfousands or Iranians are expected to con- verge on the city t.o bid him welcome. The aides said Khomeini will visit the holy shrine of Asrat M aasoum and s peak at an I s lamic theolog ic al s chool . closed d o wn 10 year s ago because of anti-shah activities. The ayatollah was arrested in Qum for bis opposition to lhe shah. which resulted in his 14- year exile. Qum is the traditional seat or Iran's Shiite Moslem leadership and Khomeini is expected to make his permanent home there, although aides say he will s till play a major role a s spiritual leader or the revolu· lion. F ,....Page A J RATION .•. shortages or imported oil. Some or the measures might be ap· plied by June. Under lhe rationing plan, the government would a llocate equal amounts or gasoline to the owner or each registered vehi· cle. Coupons would be needed to buy gasoline. Police Pay Settlement Near in HB? Negotiators were reported to be "very close" today to the set- tlement of a lengthy dispute In· volving police pay demands. Spokesmen for both the city of R untington Beac h and the 233-member police om cers as· sociation s aid a proposal will be handed to the Cit y Council for a pproval next Monday night. It has been learned that both sides were working toward a two-year contract in a two·hour negotiation session Friday. Spokesmen declined to go Into essentials of the proposed agree- ment bul a cit y ofllclal said terms may Include a 5 percent • ~ay increase this year and a 7 percent boost starting in J uly. Police are believed to be uk- iog for a 7 percent pay boost In addtuon to a clause linking lo· cr~7 to cosl ol living figures. Heating-Oil Prices Soar NEW YORK <AP) -Tbe price of the fuel oil used to be•t some apartment.a and· bulldlnas and t.o power fact.Grin and elec· tncal seneraton may rite 1U11 rurther u a result of a reported lnereue In the price of tbe fuel by a key exporter. Tbe world's fourth.Jar.-oU prodacer decided OYer tbe weekend to ralM tbe prtee ot some Of lte oll by 15 percent, ac- cording to industry aources. There was no official con- ftrmaUoo of a price lncreue. · 'Tbat waa tbe fl rat I bad knowa r needed to be covered," h H d Petron aaid tho forme r ownert told him there wa • rural fire diatrlct. but said ho dldn 'l know he had to s&an up. Pet.rolf. a railroad employee, 11ld tHI had ta0.000 huuraoce on th home and ns.ooo lnauranc:e on hie belona'ln1Ja. Only I.he becb were set up In the hO\.UM! when tho fire broke out. with moat possesslons sUll packed in boxes inside the home. A few tool.a aod sporting goods were tored lo the aarage. Those are the only items the Petrorts 11\lll .have "t can set: the problems, bul il 15 our pohcy," Gilbertson said. ·w., can't gel money from some people and then fight fires or people who didn't pay."·· Put McCrosson. one or two G~lhatJn County fire marshals, explatned thut there is no coun· tywlde tax for fireflghting so dis· tricts have to be set up indepen· dently. "l guess hke everybody else. people feel il never happens to me,'' McCrosson said. "People do not join. I don't know why they reel the fees don't warrant their membership." M cCrosson said his truck came to the scene, but he is authorized only to cover un- populated areas not covered by private associations. "If there had been any life hazard involved we would have done what we could," he said. "But we didn't want the people to think the county Is going lo provide fire protection." Poteer ol a R'OMan Kathy Wages <foreground) and her com- panions from the women 's En~ineering Department at UC Irvine pull their way to victory over the women of the UCI Com· puter Scie nce Department during Eng ineering Week festivities at the un- iversity. Mesan Held in Robbery A Costa Mesa man who, police allege, beat hjs employers in a fruitless robbery attempt sur- rendered to Newport Beach police early today. Kirk Lawrence Attebery. 20, was booked into city jail on rob- bery charges in connection with the assault that occurred al 12:30 a.m. today. Police said Attebe ry is an e m;>loyee or Coco's , 2131 Westclifr Drive. According to in· vestigators. he hid in a loft in the restaurant until il closed at m1dmghl Sunday. Officers allege he covered his face with a ski mask and armed himself with a blunt instrument. then assaulted the r e li e f manager, Richard Riso, 27, and his wife. Margaret, 20. F,.... Pflfle AJ ER4Debate Set Tonight Police said Mrs . Riso was ap- parently knocked unconscious by a blow to ber head. But Riso struggled with the a ssailant and pulled off the ski mask in lhe process. VIET ATIACKED. • • ·'The Soviet Union resolutely demands that t he Peking leadership end before il is too late the aggression against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam a nd immediately withdraw Chinese troops from its ler· rilory," be said. The Vietnamese broadcast claimed that in weekend fighting counter-attacking troops had in· meted 1.400 casualties on the tank-and artillery-backe d Chinese invaders around Cam Duong, south or Lao Cai in the Red River valley. Lao Cai, a provincial capital, was reported captured by the Chinese last week. The area is about 150 miles northwest or Hanoi. But Chinese Vice Premier Wang Chen was quoted as telling British re- porters lhat the invasion force would not try to advance down the valley toward Hanoi. Teng was interviewed by T a keji Watanabe, chief of Japan's Kyodo news service. The Chinese leader compared the war with the 33-day China- India war or 1962 and said the fighting might end in about 10 days "or a few days more because Vietnam is stronger than India." He said his government welcomed proposals in the U.N. Security Council calling for withdrawal or Chinese troops from Vietnam and of Viet - namese troops from Cambodia, a nd added, "We would not make that a bargaining condition," ap- parently meaning China wou ld pull out without a reciprocal Vietnamese withdrawal from Cambodia. Teng was asked why China feels it must "punish" Vietnam. "Our objective is a limited one," he said. "Thal is, to leach them they could not run about as much as they desired ... ·'They controlled Laos, in· vaded Cambodia, signed a peace treaty with the Soviet Union that is a military alliance in nature, and encroached on Chinese soil at wlll." China has said its invasion fi',....PageAJ 'IRAFFIC •.. and Jamboree boulevards. -50 mph be t ween Culver Drive and Fluor Drive East. -55 mph between Jamboree Boulevard and Fluor Drive East. La pinski 's recommendations are b~sed on an e nf ineering and traffic survey o prevailing speeds along Michelson, a re- view or accident records and ro1d1ide conditions. Commi11k>ners a lso will re- view a parking _.cbeme for the I rvine Co. 's proposed Rancho San Joaquin Recreation Center al Michelson Drive and Harvard Avenue. P lana for the cent.er loclude a .O·alley bowling cent.er, a roller 1katln8 center, an arcade, a lift 1lore1. a ful rood restaurant, nine •tt.lnc cages, 31 bolel of miniature golf, a caroutel, a band shell, bumper c.r s, • haunted bouae, bumper boat.a and otber aqu1Uc amuaemeat rides. Tbere are alao plHt for a rac- q uetball and healt h club, a 1wlmmlq pool, •Del basketball court.a. was aimed at "teaching Viet- nam a lesson" after months of border provocations . Peking said it wanted no Vietnamese territory but would occupy about 38 square miles of disputed ter· ritory that Vietnam h as been holding for years. A Tass 1~ from Hanoi lo· day said China "is preparing the ground for spreading its ag- gressiQn also to the Laotian People"s Democratic Republic. For this aim Chinese troops are being massed at the point where the borders or China, Laos and Vietnam join." The Tass report could not be confirmed immediate ly. Sources in Peking predict a big Chinese orfensive in Vietnam in a few days, Kyodo reported. Some analysts in Bangkok say it may come in the Lang Son area, 80 miles northeast or Hanoi. Kyodo said sources in the Chinese capital told it the goal of the intensified "punitive action" against Vietnam would be to destroy at least one Vietnamese army divis ion and military bases and a rtillery emplace- ments near the borde r. Death Probed FORT WAYNE, Ind. CAP> Health omcials are investigat- ing the death of a 14·year·old Fort Wayne girl who contracted a form of menjngilis bacteria . The girl. who was not identified , died in Parkview Me morial Hos pital or meningiococcemia. a bacterial infection. which "is not t hought to be a highly con- tagious disease.·· We Recommend : ~Fl.A beeause it's the best. • ) Two women on opposing ends of the Equal Rights Amendment that would forbid statutory sex- ual discrimination will debate lhe issue tonight at Saddleback College. T he confrontation will take place at 7 p.m. in room 101 of the campus's Fine Arts Complex. Representing lhe pro side will be Susanne Tepper, founder. or- ganizer and chairwoman of ERA Orange County. Speaking against the conslitu· tional amendment will be Mary Schmitz. a member of the Orange County Republican Cen· tral Committee and wife of State Senator J o hn Schmitz, R - Newport Beach. Marine Tells Iran Attack NEW YORK <AP > -Marine Sgt. Kenneth Kraus. back in the United States after being re· leas ed by Ira nian r e volu- tionaires. said today that some Marines fired shots at those at· tacking the American Embassy in Iran on Feb. 14. "There were shots fired in front of the embassy Some Marines had to s hoot back in the positions that they were. But I couldn't say who il was nor did I see anybody shoot in the position that I was in," he said. Kraus, 22, of Lansdale, Pa • interviewed on the ABC "Good· Morning America" program. maintained he had not fired bullets during the attack, but did fire tear gas, which he called harmless. ( • He told officers that Attebery begged him not to call police and fled the restaurant. The couple was treated by paramedics and taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital, where they were treated and released Police set up a sta ke out on At lebery's home in the 700 block of 18th Street . but the s uspect showed up at the police station at about 8 a.m. and surrendered fi'ro• P age A I T EACHERS Conclliation Service . Class size is another issue. The teachers seek maximum class sizes of 25 students per teacher. In addition. at the levels kindergarten through sixth grade. teachers want the equivalent or two extra teachers per school. The money could be used to hire two teachers, or a teac her and a ides . or go for othe r support staff. Negotiations are scheduled to begin Thursday. The school board tentatively has scheduled Mar ch 14 for the presentation of lls view or what lhe teacher contract s hould be A public hearing lo debate both plans IS scheduled for March 28. Carter to Speak WASHINGTON <APl Pres1· dent Carter will hold a news con- ference at 1 p.m. PST Tuesday, the White' House press office an- nounced today. l ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND Nf WPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 l I I j i \ I "oar Hometown l Dally Newspaper 1 VOL:.. 72, NO. 51, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~I! ohe of Newcastle • • -l t'. I A tut fotte inv st•••Ul\I an outbreak ol a deadly bard di eaH In Oran1_. County ha s w e ll e d t o lnclud~ 30 Vl'teranartans and hould doubl~ tn lze by tht we k 'a .-od. a spokeeman said today SPOkeeman Oave Gc.Jdman of the US Deparlm~nt or A1r1culture aa.id lM hHk force, hou ed In a Santa Ana ofll ct1 bu1ldln1. 11 lookln1 into the dut,ba ol thrtt Pt't birds from NewcuUeo otRue The u ually latal a rfhctlon po es • lhttat to the used bird indu try and could devastate the Poultry industry as well should il aprud. M aald The invetttlf •Uon began last week wbeo • 1.000 pet cockatoo In Stanton was diagnosed with the disease A second cockatoo came down with the diisease an Par a mount a nd a n infected parakee t wa s round in Ri verside. The two cockatoos were both .... ,..._.... OLYMPIA, WASH. RESIDENTS GET CLEAR VIEW OF TOTAL ECLIPSE Cloud• Broke Through For A Few Second• ~ et Celeatlal Wonder --· i Eclipse Darkens N•rth ResUlenllf' Viewing Aitkd by'Television SEATTLE (AP) -A wide · swath of the Pacific Northwest ~ was plunged briefly into dark r ness today, as the last total eclipse of t he s un in North America this century moved in- land over cloud-covered skies at Agate Beach, Ore. In Portland, Ore., residents whooped and gasped in amaze- ment as the sky began to darken and temperatures dropped about 7:45 a.m. Complete darkness covered the largest city in the eclipse's path by 8: 13 a.m. It began to get light again at 8: 16 a .m. Residents had to rely for a good view on television pictures taken from planes flying above the thick cloud cover. ABC-TV carried the event live nationally. East of the Cascades. broken clouds provided some view of the sun as the moon started its west-to-eut march across the Chinese Troops Hit AWng Hanoi Route BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> - Chinese infantry men striking 1 from three directions attacked ~ the s trategic R e d Rive r transportation corridor that ~ leads lo Hanoi but were meet.ing ' stiff resistance today from Viet- • namese forces, Hanoi radio said, "In Peking, Vice Pre mier Teng Hsiao-Ping said the China- • Vietnam war might end in about 10 days. The Soviet news agency Tass, citing "reports reaching Hanoi," asserted that Chinese troops were preparing to invade Viet· , nam ese.-dominated Laos. I In a speech in the west • ·Russian city of Minsk, Soviet : Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko today reiterated the Kre mlin's warnings to the Chinese to pull out of Soviet- amed Vietnam. 1 "The Soviet Union resolutely t demands that the Peking Coast J • ! Weather ! Variable cloudiness through Tuesday and a lit-• lie cooler. Lows tonight I mid 40s through low 50s. Highs Tuesday in mid 609. INSIDE TODAY l The aoortd ii ,,...... Old of r /ir~wood and ,,.. ifnpUcotbaa • or• omiftoua. SH "°'fl, Page I A8. .... At Y-lefVb M AmL.-.n a ........ M ...... ., I L.M.99" ............... M ........ .. ~~ A1t c .......... Al.,..,......._ .. c ........ • C).tl = .,., c-k• .. ........ .. c,....... .. , ......... .. ON91 "9lkwl M "-'-" ., ............. ,......., A4 . ......._ ., ._...._ ~ ......... C14 leadership end before it is too late the aggression against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and immediately withdraw Chanese troops from its ter· rltory," he said. T he Vietnamese broadcast claimed that in weekend fighting counter-attacking troops had in- flicted l,400 casualties on the tank-a nd artillery-backed Chinese invaders around Cam Duong, south of Lao Cai in the Red River valley. Lao Cai. a provincial capital, was reported captured by the Chinese last week. The area Is about 150 miles northwest or Hanoi. But Chinese Vice Premier Wang· Chen was quoted as telling British re- porters that the invasion for ce would not try to advance down the valley toward Hanoi. Teng was interviewed bi Takeji Watanabe, chief o( Japan's Kyodo news service. The Chinese leader compared the war with the 33-day China- (Stt VIET. Pase A2) lifeguards' Jeep Crashes Two Laguna Beach lifeguards and a motorist escaped serious injuey &mdaJ afternoon when their vehicles collided while the guanta were en route to a reported emer1ency at Scotchman's Cove. Ufepardl Tom Redwit.a and Mark Klosterman were ridins in a clt1 jeep at 5:20 ~&en the1 NW tbeJ were klecl by an auto driven by Larinda K. Baille, 32, no addreas listed, near lbe corner of Catalina Street and Mou.Dtaln Road. Tbe Ufquanb were headed toward the cove wbe:re a man bad been reported fallina over a bluff. Newport Beach Ufe,uarda bandied the lnddenl. sky. arcing as far east as North Dakota before swinging north in- to Canada. At Olympia, the Washington state capital, the cloud cover broke 10 minutes before totality. The lawn on the Capitol Cam- pus was crowded with state wo rkers and children with makeshift viewe rs a nd more sophisticated equipment. The clouds stayed away dur- <See ECLlPSE, Page A2) Bandit Robs San Clemente Man of $2,000 A San Clemente man shopping for a used car was robbed at gunpoint of more than $2,000 out- side his home Sunday. Police said J erome Schauer, of 230 Ave. Cabrillo was ap- proached at his apartment early Sunday morning by a man who Schauer believed was selling a car Schauer accompanied the sus· peel to the street where the poten- ti a I sales m a n s uddenly whirle d around a nd forced Schauer to put his hands up against the garage. The suspect pressed a pistol against Schauer's back and al- legedly said, "Turn around before I blow your bead off." An accomplice took Scbauer's wallet containing $2,125, and the pair fled westbound on Cabrillo where the victim said he later heard a car engine start up and the sound of its departure. Schauer said he contacted the suspect after hearing the recent- ly released serviceman was seJl· ing bis car. , Police s aid they a r e in· vestlgating the robbery . BOAT SOLD FAST Wl1H WANT AD "I received three calls the first day my Dally Pilot classified ad published. "I had a $500 deposit the next day, and the boat is now sold with all caah to me." Tbat 's the advertising success 1tory ol the Newport Beach man who placed this ad In the Dally Pilot: 28' Californian . new motor, recent survey Dock available to new owner xxx-xxiuc If you want a cash depo1Jt on your boat or other Item, try t.be friendly Dally Pilot ad-visen al 642-S6'78 . purchased at the same Garden Grove pet shop, which is being ·checked out for any infection, Goodman said. He said anyone who purchased a bird there since Christmas ls being con- tacted. • Goodman said there a~wo reason s why so many vete rinarians are needed. One is because a ·'dirty" vet -one who may have been in contact with the infection - can't visit any place where there is a possibly uncontaminated ·bird. "We iake extreme precau- tions," Goodman s aid. • Also, he said, tracking down the dozens or bird contacts throughout Southern California tbal even sneezed wittin the tut two months is calling, and of 1 course they have l-0 be checked out," Goodman said. He said 1 anyone who suspects a bird of 1 ailing should contact a private , veterinarian. who in tum can contact the task force. • Rationing Eyed 2 Gallons Gas Per Day Mulled DETROIT CAP> -Motorists would be limited to two gallons of gasoline a day under a White House standby rationing plan lo 0e submitted to Congress. the Detroit News said today. The two-gallon limit would ap- ply to all private and com- mercial vehicles. However. a Department of Energ y s pok es man in Washington denied that the pro- posal contained such a limita-tion. Motorists needing more would have to buy them from those needing less and It could then cost S2 a gallon or whatever the market would bear . the newspaper seid in a dispatch from its Washington bureau. Sea Search For Bodies Abandoned A team of U.S. Navy divers was flown back to San Diego from Baja California Sur Sun- day night after an unsuccessful. three-day search for three bodies spotted near Is la de Natividad by an abalone diver. Navy Lt. Sharon Chidoni said today that the 16 divers aban- doned their search with the de- cision that the three bodies, re- portedly tied together, are not now in the vicinity of the island. The offi cer directing the search told Navy colleagues a fter the C-130 carrying his divers landed at North Island that the bodies may have been washed oul to sea. Authorities believe that the bod ies may be those of Dennis, 22, and Debbie Vowell. 21, and Gary Newton, 22, all of San Diego. The trio was last seen alive Jan. 24 when they were two days out from San Diego in Vowell 's 45-foot craft, the "Armistice." Shortly after a fishing vessel saw the m fishing near San Clemente Island, a storm hit the area. Vowell and Newton went l(j • hig.h school together in Costa ·Mesa, where their families live. Mrs. Vowell is the daullhler of <See SEARCH, Page AZ> "We want to emphasize over and over that this is a last-ditch plan." said a n unidentified Department of Energy analyst. The White House is expected to submit two proposals. the one on rationing and the other pro- viding standby authority for : Stopping weekend gasoline sales, limlting weekday hours U.S. FORCES TO PROTECT PERSIAN GULF OIL ?--A4 GASOLINE PRICES BEING MANIPULATED? Editorial, Pege A& for gasoline stations. restricting downtown parking to encourage use of public transportation. re- quiring commercial and public Polkg Clash buildings to cut down on energy use. and limiting use or lighted advertising signs. The Energy De partme nt ~pokesman, James Bishop Jr .. said the reports of limits ·on weekday gasoline station hours and downtown parking, were un- true. The other proposals had been made public previously. I The proposals are part of an overall strategy to deal with shortages of imported oil. Some of the measures might be ap· plied by June. Under the rationing plan. the government would allocate equal amounts of gasoline to the owner of each registered vehi- cle. Coupons would be needed to buy gasoline . Medical Center Cltief Resigns Clttna policy differences between hlmself and hospital trustees, South Coast Communi- ty Medical Center Administrator Louis C. Petrie. Jr. resigned Friday. Petrie, 44. has held the posi- tion for s lightly more than a year. He was appointed in December, 1977. Medical center trustee John Downer. who was given Petrie's r esignation. said today "ap- parently his administration was not providing the level of service we desired." H(i indicated there were policy diffe~ences between Petrie's operation of the hospital and the kind desired by trustees. ·'There were po licy dif- ferences in methods or ap- proac hes to oper ating the hospital," Downer, a Laguna Beach attorney, said. "He was not in entire agreement with the board." Downer did not elaborate. He said, however. that Petrie also indicated he had a better offer from another hospital and did not like the commute to South Laguna from his Monrovia home. The hos pita l 's board of trustees appointed assistimt ad- D•llY .. lltot S!Mf ....... HOSPITAL AIDE QUITS AdmlnletretorcPetrte ministrator Marie Cook to take over Pelrie's responsibilities un- til the board can hi re a new ad- (Sff RESIGNS. Page A2l Oii ••d ...... . ord time. was Lewis Patterson, 27, of Anaheim with a time of 32 minutes, 51 seconds. Women's division winner was Lisa Gonzales, 20, of Newport Beach, who finished with a 42 minutes, 54 seconds time. More than 600 runnen participated ln Saturday's 6.5 mile race alone A ven.ida Pico in San Clemente, where only 25 "°" cen\ of the route is on level .•round. Wln· ner ln the men's division, with a new rec- ' .. ~•··· ,,, ..... ' -·· •• t .••• .. l ... 111 DAILY PILOT LISC Storm Hits Midwest. Snow, Floods Wreak Wide Havoc Cost'lfl Nig~I Fire o ... , ...... -..., lllc:Mfof ........ 9 1 ~ A.NHta&ed Preti A nuty winter storm dumped more crtpplln1 snow on the reel- in1 Midwest today and pushed 1tream1 and rivers to flood stage acroaJJ the east. Snow, I~ and nooda cio.ed school•. at.randed motorl1ts and knocked out power u Lbe storm pu1hed eastward. lllinollJ. Gov . James R . Thompson declared 30 counties In the southern part of the stale 1now emergency areas and moblllled National Guard units, mainly to ald an esUmated 2,000 motoriAI stranded on highways. Armories In Salem and Cairo were converted to emergency s helters. A weary fireman surveyb Ute aftermath of a blaze Sund y morning that caused d..amugc estimated a t $250,000 on three of- h ce suites in the rown Valley Business Park, Camino Capistrano. Laguna Niguel. Fire men said the blaze gutted the prem· is s or Typt? It Graphics and· spread to two neighboring suites before it was con- t rolled. Th y believe a faulty electrical appliance 1n the print shop s parked the fire. Al least six deaths were blamed on the storms. Evacua· lions were under way in Maryland and Virginia, and rescue crews were on alert along the Atlantic Coast. Snow and ice forced schools to close in m a ny areas from C l eveland to Boston . Massachusetts authorities set up evacuation centers to prepare for flooding in coastal com· muniUes but morning high tides came and went w.ithoul serious damage. Countian Hurt in Crash National Guard units were standing by in Atlantic City, N.J .. and Long Branch, N.J .• where abnormally high tides a lso were expected. National Guardsmen earlier in the mom· ing evacua~ 75 residents from a mobile home park in Vineland, N.J .• flooded under 3\12 feet or J a m e s E Roge r s, 46 . Fullerton, was recuperating to· day from facial inJuries suffered when the single engine plane he was flying Sunday lost power on an approach to Orange County Airport. scraped a building near the airport, then crashed. Rogers was hsted in ·'very good ooodition" today al Tuslln Community Hospital. An Orang e County Fire Departme nt s pokes maQ said Rogers was returning from a trip to the state or Washington m a Piper Comanche when the crash occurred about 1 p.m He was alone in the plane. ·As Rogers' plane lost power, it scraped the top of a one-story building housing Allied Jn dustries Inc. at 3186-E Airway Ave .. Costa Mesa. T he plane's wheels were tom off when it hit the building, but the building itself appar ently wasn't damaged. The plane continued toward the airport and crashed in the airport infield, the fire depart- ment spokesman said. The re was no fire , the s pokesman said , poss ibly because there was Little fuel in Fro• Page A J ECLIPSE VIEWED. • • mg totality, and the s un's corona was visible for about 44 seconds. The campus took on a carnival atmosphere as slate offices emptied and those with viewers shared with others Lights on the campus , con- trolled by senso=-s, flickered dur· ing the period of totality. l.J nder clear sides al Williston. N.D .. Dan Wiehle, 27, a meat cutter from Minneapolis. com- mented, "This is a helluva deal." Eclipse watchers and groupies gathe red in s no wsuit s and parkas in JS -deg r ee tem- peratures under a clear sky at Williston. U.S. 85 extending north was lined with vans, cars, motor homes and people from across the country. Annette Case, her daughter, Pan, and a friend, Charles Clayton. drove 1.121 miles from Columbia. Mo .. to Willjston to view the eclipse. "If I don't see it now, I'IJ be exactly 100 years old when the next one comes around," Mrs. Case said. In Canada, m e a nwhile, thousands or persons in southern Manitoba and northwestern On· Lario got a good look at the eclipse. The cloud cover that had dimmed hopes for ground- level observation largely dis · sipated overn ight, and the E'clipse was visible from most parts of the region. The skies were saturated with air traffic as observers went aloft to beat the clouds with a view from above. Other scientists. amateur astronome rs and the curious gafhered on parking lots, porches. decks and gr as sy knolls, with their telescopes, homemade pinhole projectors a nd commercial viewers For many, the thick cloud- cover turned the eclipse into the g.reatest cosmic disappointment since the Comet Kohoutek disap- OAANOE COAST L sc DAILY PILOT fN Ot•~c.o.tt O.Oy POoc •tt"•"<'-•\COM' °'---· ,.. ..... _ ........ ,,.,.°'_ (N\I l'OIDl•~ ... C-Se-•l•OOll-.. • """"" .. " -·· 1"""'911 ,,..,., "'' , .... IHW. N._, -ft."""""" ....... ft J-t•i" V•ll~ trvw . t...,,.. &t.c,. $ou1P\(Ohl A ,,,..,. ,..,_ ..,,,,,,,.,,_,_s.!11tHn- Svft<l•o Tiit .,.,...,_.. -·"''"' olM!I ''., JJO "'"' a .. S•rwl Cott•"""w C•llf-•tloJ!o ._,, .. _ "'0 "'111-Pullll- JK~I o.n.y VI(•..,_,_,.~, • ...ro.-.. Mo-,,_., It_ lldllOt ~•aM ......... Mt-•"'E"'IOt CIWlti.tM wtt ,__ ........ " A•-'•IMll IM,..tlflOIEAll\Ot\ oneo.. "'""f;;.';.':~11~im==--~ Talept1011e ('714)tooQl1 Qeeelfled AdwertteMt ..,....,. Letvne .. Mii All ~nts: Telepflone4 ....... ''""*0.-...... :ric ~ °'=-~,=-:"~ 111.r,., ., .......... ,,,. ....... ,. ...... y .. t•-•NIK .. ..,,_ -••t ,..,,.., .. -M (_, __ ~r,:.,:,~·'s::~~!r. .. :··.:· f~~:. ~':. =~~?, ;:w~!° _,ft,, "''"' .. ' peared into the heavens fi ve years ago without living up to its ballyhooed brilliance. Repeated admonitions not to look at the sun during the period of the eclipse seemed academic as the gray skies drew a leaden s heet between the viewers and the solar spectacle. Most _or the homemade viewers were certain to be rel- egated to the attic as curiosity pieces. si nce t he next total eclipse of the s un in North Amen ca won't come until the year 2017. F,.._P~AJ VIET ..• India war of 1962 and said the fighting might end in about 10 days "or a few days more because Vietnam is stronger than India." He said his "overnment welcomed proposals in the U.N. Security Council calling for withdrawal of Chinese troops from Vietnam a nd of Viet· namese troops from Cambodia, and added. "We would not make that a bargaining condition," ap- parently meaning China would pull out without a reciprocal Vietnamese withdrawal from Cambodia Teng was asked why China (eels it must "punish" Vietnam. "Our objective is a limited one," he said. "That is, to teach them they could not run about as much as they desired ... "They controlled Laos, in· vaded Cambodia, signed a peace treaty with the Soviet Union that is a military alliance in nature, and encroached on Chinese soil at will ..... China bas said its invasion was aimed at "leaching Viel· nam a lesson" after months or bord er provocations . Peking said it wanted no Vietnamese territory but would occupy about 38 square miles of disputed ter· rilory that Vietnam has been holding for years. A Tass report from Hanoi to· day said China .. is preparing the ground (or spreading its ag- gression also to the Laotian People's Democratic Republic. For this aim Chinese troops are being mused at the point where the borders or China. Laos and Vietnam join." _ The Tass report could not be confirmed immediately. Sources in PekJq predict a big Cb.ineee offensive in Vietnam in a few days, Kyodo repbrt.ed. ,,.._P.,,eAJ RESIGNS ••• mlnlstrator. Downer said the group would be organising a committee s bortly to screen applications tor the Job. Petrie succeeded Bernard Carr u boeptlal admlnlstntor. Carr bad beaded the hotpltal's admlnlltratlon for flve yeara before be reaiJM(I tn 1m la '{ ' lbe plane at the time. Rogers, 1311 S. Highland Ave .•. Fullerton, was able to climb from the cockpit by himself and was silting on the wing when emergency crews arrived at the crash site, it was reported. Canyon l'irti111 Aided Christi Lee McClelland, 28, of 26465 Calle San Antonio San Juan Capistrano, is gently lifted from her crushed sedan after the woman collided with the rear of a car driven by Loretta Vivian Kotlin, 31, of 31386 West Nine Drive, Laguna Niguel, Sunday afternoon. The collision which occurred on Laguna Canyon Road, backed up northbound traffic for more than a mile. The woman was treated and later released from the hospital following the 5 p.m. crash. ~· Laguna Cops Probe School Bomb Call PoUce searched two Laguna Beach schools this morning after a telephone call that a born b would go off sometime to- day al both campuses. Laguna Beach High School students were told to leave their classes for 20 minutes at 8:30 a.m. Police could find no bomb. Thurston Intermediate School classes had not started when police arrived lo search. Classes went on as usual when no ex- plosive device was found. In both Incidents, a caller told the schools' sw i tchboard operators that the bomb would eitplode today and then hung up. Three such pranks were report- ed last week, police said. F,....P,,.eAJ SEARCH. • • Mrs. Bunny Scott of San Clemente. Lt. Chldoni said the divers thoroughly searcbed the area deeplte the fact that they were hampered by heavy seas, strong underwater currents and mauive kelp beds. She aald t.be Americana were helped by local vUJagera wbo re- peatedly dived into the water despite their lack of the sopbiltlcat.ed equipment Uled by the Navy team. Vice Consul Bart Flaherty or tbe U.S. Consulate in T,ijuana sald today that authorities at the tcene are now on a "wait and ~"bula. ··u tbe bodies are seeia .,ain . then we wUl immediately return to the area," Flaherty sal/I. ••or course, we believe tb•' the bodi" are t.boM or the occu· pants ol lbe 'Armlllice' but n will nev... kDow for 1ure untH they are recovel'ed. ,, ) • The penalty for telephone bomb threats is up to three years in prison. according to the California Penal Code. We Recommend : l!JFIA because it's the best. • water. In New York state, hundreds of sc~la were closed u ice· heavy limbs crashed onto power lioes, In an area south or Buffalo and Rochester. snow waa reported up to 2 feel deep. 'Tm concerned about people t r aveling around looking," Koski said. "If the water did come up rut. I want to be able to get police into th• area to move stuff without in · lerference." Authorities evacuated the resi- dents or Uny Bremo Bluff ln cen-The Allegheny River flooded tral Virginia as the James, the business district of OU City Shenandoah, Roanoke and Dan in northwest Pennsylvania, leav· Rivera rose. ini •tores a'.nd restaurants under Some residents of Greensboro, four feet of water. Md., were asked lo leave homes The NationaJ Weather Service when the Cboptank River over· said the Monongahela and the r an its banks, while in upper Ohio riven from Pitts· Federalsbur g Police Ch ie f '• burgh to Wheeling, w. Va .. Joseph Koski imposed a 10-hour would continue to rise today curfew Sunday night. with more rain. Angleton Cleared Soviet Spy lmide CIA Story Probed WASHINGTON (AP> -A published report says CIA of· ficials once developed a case that the agency's counterin· tellige nce c h ie f , James Angleton, might be a Soviet agent. But William COiby, the CIA director who pressuied Angleton into retirement. says be never bad any doubts about bis loyally. Newsweek magazine reported Sunday that a sP.!cial CIA unit searching for a • mole," or bigb- level Soviet agent within the CIA 's ranks, at one time de- veloped a case against Angleton, but that lop agency officiaJs dis- missed it in 1974 as too circumstantial and speculative. Newsweek's report follows a year or printed a nd private speculation about tbe possibility of a Soviet mole inside the ClA. Fueled by the case or a low-level former CIA employee convicted Firemen·Allow Home to Bum: ~~~tzlit')' -· BOZEMAN . Mont. (AP5 Harry Petroft's new home was allowed to be destroyed by fire with f irefighters watching because he bad not joined the fire protection association. "They bad the fire almost smothered out." Petroff said. "Then they just shut their hoses off and watched it burn." Petroff and bis family had just moved into the house from Mis- soula last week and he said he did not know he had to join the association lo receive fire pro- tection. A few tools and sporting goods stored in the garage are the only items the Petroffs still have. "We found he <Petroff) was not a member," s aid Kenny Gilbertson, chief of the Rae Fire Department. The ruraJ fire association then stopped fighting the weekend fire. Petroff said his house was already ablaze when he learned he needed to be a member of the association lo get fire protec· Lion. "That was the first I had known I needed to be covered." he said. recenUy of giving the Sovi«s a secret U.S. spy satellite manual, interest in the agency's decade- long search for a mole has gener ated newspaper and magazine stories and even been treated in a book. Colby hims elf has begun public speeches by denying he is the mole. The mole search was conduct· ed largely by Angleton. and Newsweek rep orts tbat . although nothing was ever proved, a score or CIA officers came tmder suspicion of being moles during the 1960s and the careen of several swfered as a result. · . Although Angleton and three top aides were forced into retire- ment in 1974 while Colby was still CIA director, Colby said in a telephone interview Sunday night, "Any such a llegation wasn't a factor in Angletof\'S de· parture." Colby said , "I never had any doubt about his loyalty at all. We had d.iUerences professional· ly but not on that subject." Asked about .the case that was developed, Colby replied. "I frankly have forgotten the de· tails of the matter and really can't comment." In bis book, .. Honorable Men." Colby s aid be decided to remove Angleton because "l looked tn vain for some tangible res u lts from the counte rin· telligence fi eld and found little or none." He complained about Angleton's '"tortuous theories" about Soviet agents in Western intelligence agencies. The magazine said the case against Angleton was the result of a n extensive two.year in· vestigation of his career. That case stressed Angleton 's heavy reliance on a defector from So- viet intelligence named Anatoly Golitsin and instances in which Cl A files showed no action by Angleton on important leads. Newsweek said. Death Probed FORT WAYNE. Ind. <APl - Health officiaJs are investigat· ing the death or a 14·year-old Fort Wayne girl who contracted a form or meningitis bacteria. The girl. who was not identified. die d in Parkview Memorial HospitaJ of meoingiococcemia. a bacteria) infection. which "'is not thought to be a highly con· taRious disease." ALS GAAAGE ... 56 FASHION ISLAND . NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 I , I I f 1 ~ , l i I l B b a p r I r I e "'' ... &..N ... c.tf Cles c.., 09t .,... .... .... ~ Poteer of a Woman Traffic In Pot Dwindles SAN YSIDRO (AP> -Govern- ment otflclals say the drug smuegllng business in San Ysidro. once a major conduit in the marijuana pipeline, bas dwindled to a lmost nothing because of a reduced market ror.. Mexican-grown pot. Ten years ago, more mari- juana was being smuggled across the U.S. border at this port of entry across from Ti· juana than at any other cross· ing, customs officials say, with 1,000-pound seizures of the high· priced illegal weed common. Now, the combination of drug· sniffing dogs, men and machines is lucky to crack "a kid carrying a small baggie full" now and then, said Bob Perkins. director of inspections for U.S. Customs in San Diego. Kathy Wages <foreground l and her com· panions from the women's Engineering Department a t UC Irvine pull their way to victP.ry over the women of the UCI Com· p ute r Sc ie nc e De partment during Engineering Week festivities at the un· 1versaty. "We'd all like to think that's because we've done a good job here." said Perkins. "but there are other factors." A major reason is the U.S. backed herbicidal destruction of most major Mexican marijuana fields that has all but decim ated the U.S. market for Mexican - Fluor Employees Held marijuana. Up until two years ago, 00 to 70 percent of the pot smoked in the United States was Mexican. Then came the paraquat scare with smokers fearing lung damage from the air-sprayed poison flocking to more potent. but theoretically safer, Colom- bian varieties. Sources Claim They Tried to Flee Iran TEHRAN7 -lran (APJ-lran's Islamic revolutionaries arrested an American. a Belgian and two British employees of the Fluor Corp. or Irvine today on charges or "plundering the wealth of Iran by charging exorbit a nt prices." a spokesman for the company said. The four ar e construction supervisors at a gas turboex· pander plant near Pazanan, in so11them Iran, which the Fluor Corp. recently finished building. The men were attempting to board an airplane at Pazanan Airporl to fl y to Tehran for evacuation from the country when they were arrested. After questioning, a Fluor spokesman s aid, they were returned to the job site at Pazanan and held there for further investigation. The American was identified as John Cassibas, 49. Cassibas, a long-time overseas construc- tion. worker. joined Fluor three years ago. He has no known United Stales address. The head of the Iranian na- tional oil industry, meanwhile, announced that Iranian oil ex- Man Wounde d In Atte mpte d Robbe r y T r y A 30-year-old Santa Ana man ·. was reported in critical condi- tion today after he a llegedly was s hot m the arm and neck by a would-be robber Sunday, police reported. Joaquin R ivas, of 1130 S. Poplar St.. staggered outside his apartment after the 1:30 a.m. at- tack and called for help, police r eported. Officers said details or the rob· bery atte mpt are s ke tch y because of the conditio n of Rivas. who underwent emergen- cy surgery early Sunday. No description of the attempt· ed murder sus pect was avail a- ble, police said, and the location of the hospital where Rivas is being treated was withheld because the attacker is still at large. AP WlretiMto FLEES IRAN Sha hpour Bakhtiar, the last premier of· J ran under the Shah's re· gime. has fl ed Iran with his fa mily, the Ayatollah Kho- meini said Sunday ports will resume next week. He did not specify a date The cut-off of Iranian oil has been blamed by many in the world petroleum industry for re- cent price hikes and reductions in refinery production. In other developments, the ex u .S. Customs says almost half ec ution or another official of the marijuana in the United S hah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi •s secret police and States today is Colombian smug- public floggings for violators of gled through Florida and other I I · East Coast ports. Much of the s am1c law were reported to-rest is being cultivated in fields. d8.f iie newspaper Andegan re· forests and backyards as the art ported that Mohammed Hossein of "growing your own" gains d mome~um. Na eri, the secret police's "The most popular marijuana torture expert in the central city being s moked now is home· of Isfahan, was brought to Tehran and executed by a firing grown," said Gordon Brownell squad Sunday night. of San Francisc~. Wes t Coast Me anwhile , aides to the coordinator for the National Ay atollah Ruhollah Khomeini Organization for the Reform of · d th Marijuana Laws. sa1 e Moslem holy man will Drug enforcement officials in le ave his t e mporary head· Washington aren't ready to say quarters in Tehran on Thursday all Mexican marijuana has been to return to the holy city of ~um. eliminated. 75 miles s outhwest of the capital. Hundreds of thousands ''Who luiows whe n a large ot Iraniant are expected to con· load will pop up again," said the verge on the city to bid him Drug Enforcemeht Administra- welcome. tlon 's Ted Swift. The aides said Khomeini will 11 h h'1· h visit the holy shrine of Asrat ' Browne agrees t at w ''"e t e Maasoum and speak at an major Mexican fields have I l "pretty much been eaten up by s a mic theological s c hool, paraquat," some farmers are clos ed down 10 years ago · aJJ · l because of anti-shah activities. growmg sm er crops m ess The ayatollah was arrested in conspicuous places away from Qum for his opposition to the the low-flying herbicide planes. s hah, which resulted in his 14· With the apparent demise of year exile. the Mexican marijuana smug- Qum is the traditional seat of gling, government officials say Iran's Shiite Moslem leadership they are focusing their gaze on a nd Khomeini is expected to the rising trade in fashionable co· make his permane nt home caine flooding almost every U.S. there, although aides say be will port of entry. s till play a m a jor rol e as s piritual leader or the revolu· tion. Center Dedicates Man Assaults Teen-age Girl 'Tender Transport' A specially equipped van. de· signed to transport infirm pa. tients to Sout~ Coast Medical Center for outpatient t reatment was dedicat ed r ec ently in ceremonies at the Sout h Laguna fac ility. Called' "Tender Trans port." the custom van was donated to the community hospita l by the facility's auxiliary The van is equipped with a wheelchair Lift, and is large enough to accom· modate patients with walkers. canes or crutches. The transportation service, ma nned by a certified emergen- cy medical technician, is avails· ble to reside nts of Laguna Beach, South Laguna, Laguna N iguel. San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point, Capistrano Beach and San Clemente For appointments. call the hospital at 499-1311 , ext. 200. A 17-year-old girl was raped at knife-point late Saturday near the Seal Beach city pier as a second man s tood over he r boyfriend with a club, police said. The two teen-agers, both of Paramount, also were robbed of their watches and $8 in cash. police said. before they were left bound on the Fifth Street beach with strips from their own blanket. Fo11r Little ~a•fl• These lambs haven't lost their way. They're right at home on the Orange Coast College f arl!) in Costa Mesa, where they were born within the past week. And ~ the lambs are in good hands, too -the hands of OCC agriculture students (from left > John Ledwith, Mark Whitlna, Nadga Clark and Linda Beach. I • .,.. ....... , .. ",_ ANYBODY WANT TO BUY A NICE, FRIENDLY BOA? Berry Curtla S•y• Monty'• Too Hungry to Keep Boa for Sale Monty Ne~ds Hand That Fe em By JERRY CLAUSEN Of Ii. O•llf Piiot Stall Barry Curtis will sell Monty for $60. He'lJ toss in the aquarium for $30more. Monty lives an the four-foot-six by 18-inch aquarium. But he 's not a fish. r Monty Boa a takeoff on Monty Python -1s a five-fool· six Columbian red -tailed boa constrictor. Barry, a 14-year-old Hunt· ington Be ach High Sc hool freshman. says Monty is lovea- ble. clean and a great live-in companion for anyone allergic to pets with fur. Barry sneezes a lot if cats. dogs, guinea pigs or hamsters invad e his second story bedroom. That's why he bought Monty two years ago no s neezes· from this wrap-around pet. But Monty is getting too big and too hungry. The boa was about 18 inches long when Barry bought him from the pet store two years ago. Since then. the gray, black and brown snake with a red and white tail has shed 10 skins. Barry has each of the 10. graduated in size. hung on a bulletin board in his room "He bit me only once." says Barry as Monty coils a round his chest and then slides gracefully. with bead weaving from side to side, over a shoulder. "It didn't hurt. Boas have no fangs, just little grippers to hold their Clive> food." &lonty's aquarium 1s lined with aluminum foil and heated by a 40-watt light bulb. Ideal living temperature, Barry says, 1s 80 degreesfortbesnake. Once. when Monty was young. he esca ped from a s maller aquarium with a loose lid. Barry's mother, Gerry. was con- cerned. With help from brother Brad, 11, they scoured the house. Mon- ty finally was found curled up and sleeping in a notebook. G e rry cons ide rs Monty a "nice" pet. She rubs him on OC· casion and even carries him to school to display for pupils when she serves as a Westminster dis- tr ict substitute. . The only problem is that Mon· ty often scares friends and rel- atives. Barry advertised Monty for sale recently but got only one call -from a man who sa id he'd come take a look but never showed up. If he sells Monty. Ba rry says. he 'U buy a new. smaller boa one thatdoesn't eatso much. Inflation plays heck with a family food budget UFW Rallies In T e xas SAN J UAN. Texas <AP l Cesar Chavez. whose United F arm Workers Union has stalled in previous efforts to organize Texas farm worker s. used ... day-long pep rally to launch a drive in the state. A crowd that swelled upwards . of 1,000 here Sunday offered en- thusiastic rhythmic applause to a lineup of union leaders and clergymen who told them that a solid uruon offers the quickest route to a better life . "I can assure you it will be much easier for you than it was in 1962," Cha vez said. referring to the beginning of the UFW "Tbe people were scared then Nobody should be afraid here · · our 1CXJ% camel hair coat ... .. ;~. thci. pe,rfcict bas ic to complcimcz.nt your bU.s1ncz.ss or wukcind wardrobe.. fu11y 1inad, and raiscid czd~s on al 1 e<z..ame. hend craf'tcz.d by the, r1ncist nciw <ZnSla.nd tailors. @)~~@)§~ 44 Jltuhfon Island· Newport &ach·714/644·5070 1001 MalWood Blvd.• ~sQ.uood Village•213/419-7727 l .. I ·s .. . : I ! .... • s . el s J /., I /&f DAM. Y ptl.OT Mond1y. F.OrUMV 29, 1111 .. ~. ·~:· ·. 4'ad .:·::.~oa ting •••• T•• Marp•l•e Happy, But Broke aL llONDAY DEn. -Le:l'a 10 t.Ha a tour oJ aom• Orante Coat caaoll.M at•Uona today aod t bttli. lhe pump priCH. W mllhl nod 12 cenll a aalloa. Or T• 4 Or borron, looll over there at 11 2 per aloab ln the c..nk. lt'a clearly eooutb lo aive ~a Blue Mooday StaUoa optr1tor1 1ttm to bo t'bualoe lbe prices ao feat In thole Ultle pump pric-o wtndowt that you be1ln to , thlnk you're looliq at a Laa Ve1u slot macbJne 1'bey apto the num bus oo the 1aa pumit and you lot , brolht'r GASOUN.E PRIC l.IAV been escal1Un11t 1ucb an ala rmlna rate tha t aJmoct everybody 11 awaitlns the magic day when the little window on the pump announces one dollar per gallon. Already, we're being prepared for that day. Why only today, I noticed one or the brainwashing pieces that was d ispatched across the wire ser vices. It was telling us how well ofr we're going to be when it starts costing you a buck per gallon to rm up the old ramily heap. The wire d ispatch quotes gasoline prices from elsewhere. Did you know, for examrle, that gas costs $2.50 a gallon in Parts. France? And fue is up to $2.30 a gallon in Belgium and it's a bargain at just $2.28 ln Denmark. AFTER READING ALL this, you're going to reel so graterul that you'll hire a brass band and march in streets for JOY when they boost a Uruted States aallon to just a lit- tle old one dollar bill. Think of what a bargain you'll be getUng! tr you weren't. livina here, you could reaily be aettina gouged in places like Paris, or Belglwn or Denmark. Only the Wrong Thinkers amongst us would turn &11 this aJ'OWld and suggest that your old ramUy heap bolds 2S gallons And so, when the old pump price escalates to one buck a gallon, that's going to be $25, friend. to rm the old ramUy bus AND IF YOlJ FILL'ER VP four times during the month, you have just been separated from a Century Note. T hus when we compare gasoline prices with elsewhere, you should feel like the guy who the robber just hit over the head with a brick. lie tells you to be grateful to him. lie could have used a baseball bat, you know. Carte r 'Trusted' NEW YORK <AP) -Presi dent Cart.er is the most trusted politician and former President Nixon the least trusted, accord· Ing to a poll conducted ror Peo- ple magazine. However, those participating m the poll, conducted by Audits and Surveys Inc., don't think Ca rt er should b~ re -elected. T hey fa vor , Instead , Sen. Edward Kennedy, D·Mass. , The magazine also reported tl'\al ABC's Howard Cosell was voted the most boring man on te levision, while Jo'trrah Faw- cett-Majors was chosen the most boring woman on TV. The magazine did not say bow many people we re polled. Vital lat re8&' U.S. Military \ To Back Oil? WASHING TON <AP) -The United States la .,.......,.. to UN lta military rone LO protect the now of oU from the lliddl• Eat, HY two members ol PNl&dent Carter'• Cabl.Mt. DefenM s.cretaTY Harold Brown taid luDday the UDW State. would "take any ad lon that'• apJ>l"CJPl1•t." to pro!!d tbe M&deut oil now. which h• said • 'l• clearly part or our vttel Interest." ''Tb• U.S. la prepared to eounter In a aeparate interview, aucb a threat from a major Entr1y Secreta ry J a mes R. power wttb what.ever mnnt are Sehl tnaer Hid the admlnfllr•· neceuary. Acatn. let me ••>'· Uon 11 conalct.rtng the "l11ue of the United States la prepared to a Us. mllltary presence" in the defend Ill vttal lDtereata wttb Persian Gulf area. whatever means are. ap- .. T HAT WOVLD In volve proprlate, lncludln1 mi~~tary mllltary penoonel " he said. force where neceuary ..• "Whether It wo"ld Involve a Scblesln1er, q uestioned on '" NBC-TV'a "Meet tbe Preu " deployme_nt or tJ'OOpa . . . com· decllned to specify wbat act.lcMt bat arms or the 1round forces, ls mlsht be taken another question." .. • .. ,_ ... th · ... _ t d Only days aao. Vice President I uuua at \QC point ma e Walter F. Mondale said the ad· •.. la that tbe United States bu mlnlst.raUoo bad shut the door a vital interest in the <Penian on us ing American troops GulO area. lbat we have been abroad "except under the most prepared to diacuss the quesUon l or a military presence ln the c x t r e m e • c 0 m P e l i n 8 area with the states Involved circumstances." d b Id h b Brown questioned on CBS· an t at wou a ve t o e T V 's "F a ce the Nation .. worked out In retponte to their described lbe Middle East ~II ~eslre~ and with some rlex· now as "clearly part or our vttal ability. Interests." NATION /WEATHER 'BU.els. •• the Spirit' Soviet defector Mikhail Baryshnikov, whom President Carter ca lled "perhaps the finest dancer lo our lif elime,.. performed at the White House Sunday and later chatted with Rosalynn Carter. The president said the dancer "binds together the human spir it. .. throughout the world." .. IN PBOTECl'ION of these vital Interests, we'll take any a c- tion that's appropriate, inchld· Ing the use or military force, but military force is not neceaaarily appropriate in every instance," he said. Begin Asked to Summit Brown, who recently returned from a Middle Eaat trip, aaJd countries ln that area are con· cerned about poaalble threats rr om outside the re1lon and from near by "more radical states." Door Open to Sadat; laraeli Cabinet Meeu Or the Soviet Union, he said, "It's well known that the Soviets are not responsible for all the problems ln the area, but they clearly are willing to -in (act, eager -to rish in muddy waters by aidi ng one country against another." OF A SOVIET threat, be said: WASID.NGTON <AP) -Prell· dent Carter wanll Israeli Prime Mlnlater Menacbem Be1ln to so to Camp Davtd by the end ot the week to try to complete peace treaty terms with Egypt. Tbe presidential announce· ment Sunday put Begin in the spotlight because it would be up to him to either approve or re· ject a combination of un· dlaclOled U.S. and Egyptian pro- posals for dealing with the · PaleaUnian iaaue. Informer Says Hoffa Wanted Rival Dead PHILADELPHIA (AP> -A government informer reportedly bu told Investigators that shortly before Jimmy Hoffa diaappeared in 1975, be batched a plot to kill Teamaten rival Anthony "Tony Pro" P rovenzano. Charles Allen, an Informer and a professed bired killer, aaya the plot rlzzled when one or two hired guns told Provenzano or it, the Philadelphia Bulletin report- ed today, quoting unidentified sources. Investigators questioning Al· Jen believed the tale could pro- vide a strong motive ror killing HoHa, the newsapaper said. The former Teams ters' president was last seen at a s uburban Detroit restaurant July 30, 1975, and erforta to find him t or bis body have been fruitless. P&OVENZANO. t i, Ja serving a lire sentence for the 1961 murder of Anthony Castelllto, a potential Teamsten corruption witness. At the time or his dlsap-' pearance;-Hofra reportedly bad been wrangling with racttons a ligned a 1alnst him while a ngling LO regain Teamaten re- ins. TRI: oooa WAS left open for E1yptlan P reside nt Anwar Sadat to join the 1ummlt lellion ID tbe Maryland mou.ntalna If the oe1otlatlo o1 succeed. In tbe meantime, Esypt would be repretented by Prime Mlniater M uatafa Khalil. Beain'• response ta expected after a special Cabinet meeting Tuesday. A 1ovemment source in Israel aald Belin waa not like· ly to attend wtlbout Sadat. · 10 Jeruaalem today, however, Belin told a 1roup of Dutch re- porters; "lt'a up to Presideot Sadat to come or not' to come . . . . It'• not a question or anyone's penonal participation. uo ua COlJNTaY 18 a de· mocracy and the government and the Kneuet <Parliament> take the cleciaiooa," be added. "ID Egypt. President Sadat ls the man wllo takes moat of the decialona. The iaaue ia between the two countries, ud not two ind.i viduala. '' New U.S. ideas for resolving the Palestinian dJapute reported- ly were submitted by Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance at Camp David last week In talks with Khalil and Israeli Foreign Mlnlater Moabe Dayan. The Idea is to link the treaty to civil sell-rule for the 1.1 million Palestinian Arabs living on the Israeli-held west bank or the Jordan River and In the Gua district. THE BEGIN government does not want peace with Egypt LO be dependent on ruture negotiations o ve r the P al e s ti n ians , particularly because no Palestin- ian leader bas indicated be is willing to participate in those talu. Dayan new to Israel arter Carter'• announcement. which waa drawn up with the approval or Oa1an Ind Khalil. As a result, reports or surprise in Israel that a summit was being arn.nged with Begin but without Sadal were d iscounted by U.S. or. riclala. Storm Hits Missouri Morality and Mortality in Modern Society What ethical di lemmas are ra ise d by s uch is s u es a s euthanasia , 1Jrgan transplantation and the death-with-digni ty move - ment? Snow, Wind Swirls Stra nd Motoriats Te.~rai u r e• Mavl••t r•lnf .. I c.m-In Noni> Carollna. Fl,.. Inc,_ of r•ln Oam· peneCI IM 0Nlr1ott• •re• In ,_ CS.ya a net m I nor lloodl"O wu , • .,.,.eel All!all'f All>U'Q ... Am•rlllo Atlanta ea111.....-e 8 lm\ft91\all'I 8 1M'llarCk 8olM 8oUOft 8vffal0 Cll~ Cln<""'all Cle,,.l•ncl Col11mll\n 0.1 "·Wit! Denwr Dei ~M\ 0.lrell Oukltl> F•I"'"'~ Mel .... Ht1191ulu Houston IM'~lt l(an't Cll'I la•V~ 1.111 .. Aoo l.Ol A11991et Loutavllle -mtlft" ""'-' Nlll••v•• Ni111•St. P N•llwllla N-~IM HewY..- 0.la City Hl31 L~ .... ~~ ...... ~,._.. ................... ~ " ~ ,. ., Jl .. l1 • •S u JJ 01 ,. s ~· :It ,, Jl 68 u 1l ,, " " Jr 24 U>? u ,. ... :S. 27 I.II u a.J )) ,, J I IS ,. n ll • II ·21 .. 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N c., -oettntY"ed llw Ire lie" T•mperaluret plyn~ owr t"41 •M•and In nortr.ern Alati.ma and Georol• wt.ere ....Oln0$ lfl the 70t Saturday oaw wa., to llQM anow and frMr•ne rain S<lnday Calllor'flfa Vaf'IHM 1119'1 cloud\...,. t 1pe<t"'9 lo 1tret<tl ....,. Soutr.ern C.lltonlla IOdtY -le ttmciaratur" HM 111141 tlle1tL l llt ftrKMt." Mid Oll'IY wi-would •-P Ille mountain• and nor1"4lrnmo11 Cle.en• of Sou111tr11 Callfonlla ttw'OUOll ton!OM, Sullcl.ty'1 """ ~"" , ....... ,, at Ma11t111tllo, lust east ot I.•• Al\99 ..... Tiie Soutll Cout Air 011t tlt., MIMftl\'*'lt Olttrk t said •Ir Qll•llty would lie tMd I~ !tit *"" t N ll IMMift tollay with • POfllll4111t tlallOant llldl1 ot '1 pro~ • all .,.. .. c ..... r wea•Jwr V•t ..... CIOW!lleH '""""" T_. Clay. L ltflt Waf'lallla wllldt lll9flt ...-i _...... "°""" H'911t T......, ltt 9lle lftld*- CH Ual ~•hH'ff wlll ,..,_. M IWHll 4' and .,, l11l•IMI t•lft· ....-.._. Wiii 'aftt9 ~ ... .., ... Tiie -""'"".._ wlll .... . s..,,, .. ..,n-. MONDAY s.c-... 1111 f .l'll. •1 ' s.<Olld 111911 • · n -."'. st TUHOAT ''"' lew • ........ • • ""'II~ • tA •.M. U s.<-low , .. ""'· .... S.C-111911 ,. " '·"'· u ""·•-•:». ""· .... l t4J ''"'' IMtllri.t• fta lft., .... 11•'·"'· Suicide In Society Historically, what meanings has suicide had for mankind? The Death -system How does society handle death through an int~rated system and how can this change the modern way of death? Watch for These lnteftsting Course by Newspaper Articles DAILY PILOT 642-4321 .. • Orange Coast ED ITI O N Your Home town Dally Newspaper t VOL. 72, NO. 57, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MO NDAY, F EBRUARY 26, 1979 c TEN CENTS He Didn't l!ag, So Bouse Burns BOZEMAN. Mont <AP> Harry Petroff and bls family were watchina OttflJbten bat Ue a blaa. tn their nf!w $50,000 home. ~y. the nr ,,,~ 1wit('hed off the-Ir hose and a t th• dwt-IUna bum "They had th<' fir~ •Imo l smolbe~." Petf'Off u 1d 'Then they juat shut their hos off and watcbed tt burn. lt was the darlMkwt t.hlD& t ever s w " Ptlroff and h a ramaly, who had moved tut wttk rro m Ml11 soula to a 1ubchvl1uon outside Una ctty ot ~.000. had failed lo jOm the Ra«1 "'fro Otp.,.tment, u private rural a sociafion wh1rh fl1ht1 fir 1 an unancorporuled ilrH Memberahlp carries a $25 Initiation fee and $1$ annual fee "We fo\lnd h <Petroff> was not a member." said Rae fire chtef K~y Gilbertson. "Then wt checked with our secretary and found the house was not re,.18tered. rir~w:Ju~~c:e'!f 1':'eb~r~~~. t~! uid. Pt!troff. bis ·wUe. Rosalie. and thelt children, Sam and Lorie, had been in the home about 10 hours wheo the fire broke out at 1 a.m. Saturday. They were awakened by a smoke alarm OLYMPIA, WASH. RESIDENTS GET CLEAR VIEW OF TOTAL ECLIPSE aoud• Broke Through For A Few Seconda ~k at Celeatlal Wonder Eelipse Darkens North Reside~' Viewi11g Aided by Television SEATTLE <AP> -A wide swath of the Pacific Northwest I wa·s plunged briefly into dark· ness today. a s the last total eclipse of the sun in North America this century moved in· land over cloud-covered skies at Agate Beach. Ore. In Portland, Ore., residents whooped and gasped in amaze· ment as the sky began to darken a nd temperatures dropped about 7 :45 a .m. Complete darkness covered the largest city in the eclipse's path by 8:13 a.m. It began to gel light again at 8: 16 a .m. Residents had to rely ror a ~ood view on television pictures r Condominium · Project Due For Airing A proposed 108-unit con- dominium project in north Costa Mesa will be the subject or a public hearing tonight before the city Planning Commission. The meeting will begin at 6:30 p.m . in council chambers. 77 Fair Drive. Comrrussioners will consider a request by M.D. Janes Co., lnc. to put 108 condominiums al 740 to 780 Baker St., between the Corona del Mar Freeway and 1 Bristol Street. I p I l ' ' t ~ l A zone exception is required because some garages are not adjacent to the units served. Planning staff members have recommended ,approval of the project. Coas t We athe r Variable cloudiness through Tuesday and a lit- tie cooler. Lows tonight mid 40s through low SOs. Highs Tuesday in mid 60s. INSIDE TODAY TM IOOrfd ii ~ Old o/ firNOOd and the tmpticatfona art omiftoul. SH "°'1/. Pofle· ..... •••• At't-~ ,,. I Allll '-'-" CJ ....... .-. ..... ., L.M.lleyf ................ M ....... ..,=ci-tr AM ~ AJ •• .... ... C'"'*-C>M = •» c:-ka .. , ....... ... Cntt-.n! et T ........ .. ~~ .. ~ ., .............. M .. .._ ... ........ , -· .,,...,... ..... ~ ~ CH ' taken from planes flying above the thick cloud cover. ABC·TV carried the event live nationally. East or the Cascades, broken clouds provided some view of the sun as the moon started its west-to-east march across the sky, arcing as far east as North Da kota before swinging north in- to Canada. Al Olympia, the Washington state capital, the cloud cover broke 10 minutes before totality. The lawn on the Capitol Cam- pus was crowded with state workers and children with makeshift viewers and more sophisticated equipment. The clouds stayed away dur- ing totality, and the sun's corona was visible for about 44 seconds. The campus took on a carnival atmosphere as stale offices emptied and those with viewers shared with others. Lights on the campus, con· trolled by sensors, flickered dur· ing the period of totality. Under clear skies at Williston. N.D., Dan Wieble, 27, a meat cutter from Minneapolis, com· mented, ·'This Is a he lluva deal." Eclipse watchers and groupi es gathered in snowsuits and parkas in lS·d egree tern· peratures under a clear sky at Williston. U.S. 85 exte nding north was lined with vans, cars, motor homes and people from across the country. Annette Case, her daughter, Pao. and a friend, Charles Clayton, drove 1.121 miles frnm Columbia, Mo .. to Williston to view the eclipse. "If I don't see it now, I'll be exactly 100 years old when the next one comes around," Mrs. Case said. In Canada, m ea nwhile, thousands of persons in southern Manitoba and northwestern On- tario got a good look at the eclipse. The cloud cover that had dimme<t hopes for ground· level observation largel). dis· s ipated overnight. and the eclipse was visible from most parts of the region. BOAT SOLD FAST Wini WANT AD "I received three calls the firs t day my Dail y P ilot classified ad published. "I had a $500 deposit the next day. and the boat is now sold with all cash to me." That's the advertising success story of the Newport Beach man who placed this ad in the Daily Pilot : 28 ' Californian, n c\\ motor, recent s urvey Dock available to new owner XXX·XXXX If you want a cash deposit on your boat or other item . try the friendly Daily Pilot ad-visers at 642·5678. County Air Crash Victim Recovering James E . Rogers , 46 , crash occurred about 1 p.m. He Fullerton, was recuperating lo· was alone in the plane. day rrom facial injuries suffered As Rogers' plane lost po~r. it when the single en~ioe plane he scraped the top of a one-story was flying Sunday ost power on building housing Allied In- an approach to Oranfie County duslries Inc. at 3186-E Airway Airport, scraped a bui dlng near Ave .. Costa Mesa. The plane's the airport, then crashed. wheels were torn off when it hit the building, but the buJldJ ng Rogers was listed in "very itself appa r e ntly was n 't good condition" today at Tustin damaged. Community Hoepital. The plane continued toward An Orange County Fire the airport and crashed in the airport infield, the fire depart· Department spokesman said ment spokesman said. Roaen wu returning from a trip to the atate of Waah.inetoo in T h ere was no fire, the a Piper Comanche when the spokesman said, possibly because there was little fuel In the plane at the time. Carter to Speak Rogers, 1311 S. Hiftbland Ave., WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-Fullerton, was ab e to cllmb dent Carter will bold a news COD· from the cockpit by himself and ference at 1 p.m. PST Tuesday, was sittina on the wing when the White House press office an-emergency crews arrived at tbe oounced today. crash site, lt was reported. ( and got out safely alter calling the sheriff, who dispatched the private department. The fire is thought to have started in the chimney. Petroff said it was not until the men arrived that he learned he needed to be a member of the association to get fire protec· lion. "That was the first I had known I needed to be covered." he said. Petroff said the former owners lold him there was a rural fire district, but said he . dido 't know be had to sign up. Petroff, a railroad employee, said he bad $50,000 insurance on the home and $23,000 insurance on his belongings. Only the beds were set up in the house when the fire broke out, with most possessions still packed in boxes inside the home.~ A few tools and sporting goods . were stored in the garage. Those I are the only items the Petroffs stm have. "I can see the problems, but It is our policy." Gilbertson said. "We can't get money from some people and then fight fires of people who didn't pay.·' Pat McCrosson. one of two <See BURN, Page A2) Rationing Eyed . 2 Gallons Gas Per Day Mulled DETROIT CAP> -Motorists would be limited to two gallons of gasoline a day under a White House standby rationing plan to be submitted lo Congress, the Detroit News said today. The two-gallon limit would ap- ply to all private and com- mercial vehicles. However. a Department of Energy s poke s man in Washington denied that the pro· posal contained such a limita· lion. Motorists needing more would have lo buy them from those needing less and it could tben cost $2 a gallon or whatever the m arket would bear , the Vietnrunese Hold Own In Attack BANGKOK. Thailand <AP) - Vietnamese troops defending the Red· River Valley corridor to Hanoi held the1r ground today against a three-pronged Cblnese armored and infantry attack, Hanoi radio saJd. It claimed Peking's soldiers were being killed at a rate of 800 a day all along the border froot lines. China's Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-ping said today the 10-day conflict might end in about another 10 days, but analysts in Bangkok and elsewhere expect the Chinese invasion force to first mount an all-out assault against Hanoi's troops. The official Soviet news media charged that China also was massing troops near its border with Laos for an invasion of that Vietnamese-dominated country. The report could not confirmed. In a speech in the western Russian city of Minsk, Soviet Foreign Minis ter Andrei A. Gromyko reitepated the Kremlin warning to Cblna tp pull out of Soviet·aJlied Vietnam "before it is too late." He said the invasion was "doomed to failure." A Soviet airlift of military sup. plies to Hanoi appeared to be continuing today. Airport sources in Calcutta, India, said three cargo planes -one Bulgarian and two Soviet -re- fueled -tAere Sunday-and today- on their way to the Vietnamese capital. Soviet reconnaissance planes were aRain spotted flying <See VIET, Page AZ> . , newspaper said in a dispatch from its Washington bureau. "We want to emphasize over and over that this is a last-ditch U.S. FORCES TO PROTECT PERSIAN GULF OIL ?-M GASOLINE PRICES BEING MANIPULATED? Editorial, Page A6 plan," said an unidentified Department of Energy analyst. The White House i5 expected to submit two proposals, the one on r ationing and the other pro· viding standby authority for: 3Birds Die Stopping weekend gasoline sales, limiting weekday hours for gasoline stations, restricting downtown par king to encourage use of public transportation. re- quiring commercial and public buildings to cut down on energy use, and limiting use of lighted advertising signs. The Ene r gy Department spokesman, J a mes Bishop Jr .. said the reports of limits on weekday gasoline station hours and downtown parking, were un· true. The other proposals had been made public previously. The proposals are part of an overall strategy to deal with <See RATION, Page A2> Killer Disease Probe Broadens By JACKIE HYM AN °' .. .,.... ...... , ..... A task rorce investigating an outbreak of a deadly bird dis- ease in Orange County has s welled to inc lude 30 veterinarians and should double in size by the wee k's end, a spokesman said today. Sp0kesman Dave Goodman of Jngger Death C':ause Sought By Coroner Orange County coroner's dep· ulies said today they wlll have not est a blis hed the ca use of death of Robert Duran, whose body was found Saturday in the Upper Newport Bay. Duran's body was discovered at about 10 :30 a .m . by an equestrian who found him lying face down in a marsh a rea at the head of the bay. The dead man, a Tustin resi- d e nl, was identified Sunday after he was reported missing Saturday night. Al the time he was found, Duran appeared to be dressed for ioegine and carried .no iden- tification. Coroner's investigators said today the case is still pending, although they said there are no indications that foul play was In- volved. the U .S . De partm e nt of Agriculture said the task force .. _ housed in a Santa Ana offi ce building, is looking into the deaths or three pet birds from Newcastle Disease. The usually fatal affliction poses a threat to the caged bird industry and could devastate the poultry industry as well should it spread. he said. The investigation began last week when a $1,000 pet cockatoo in Stanton was diagnosed with the disease. A second cockatoo came down with the disease in Paramount and an infected parakeet wa s fo und in Riverside. The two cockatoos were both purchased at the same Garden Grove pet shop, which is being checked out for any infection, Goodman said. He said anyone who purchased a bird there since Christmas is being con· tacted. Goodman said there are two reason s why so m a n y veterinarians are needed. One is because a "dirty" vet -one who may have been in contact with the infection can't visit any place where there is a possibly uncontaminated bird. "We take extreme precau· lions," Goodman said. Also, he said, tracking down the dozens of bi rd contacts throughout Southern California is extremely time consuming. "Anybody who's got a blrd that even sneezed within the last (See DISEASE, Page AZ> \- t\I DAil V PtLOT c Mes an ·Held in Heists Ne~rt B ch poU~ tun Jailed a Costa M a man 1 y sald wa b\Jralartt.Lna boau tn un ertort to l"alM' u 1h to cover :some bum the<' Timothy K. Cro&land"' ll.• ol 2033 Paloma Dnv~. was &n.l• cd tllrly Sundav 1t lhf' Balboa Bay Club along with his rompan· ion, Muy ~. Bradley, • of 1612 Hi1hla.nd St.i Nnt por1 Be.ch. Both wero be d on •~pl· l"ion of ~luy. A Bay Club . l'curlty r uard ~ummooed poJ1ce. Ht> said ti<" round Uw eoupl about 1 am. near a bo l th•t had ju~t hffn 'b uralanted. Police blUd Croaland I employed in the boat m11n · tenance field in Newport &-ach Investigators said he told them he was trying to ran.~ money to make restitution Q/ runds m con nect1on with a bad check cas also bein g rnvesll& te.d by Newport pohce. The deadline ror restitution was today. Police believe Crosland is res pons ibl e for s i x boat burglaries as well as 10 attempt· ed boat break ms d uring recent months. Robbery Out Moncitx, Ffb!l!try l!1 1tJ'l. hwmP ... AJ VIET ••• lbWU'd Vietnam. where a~ are belltn d to be 1uneyln1 tbe Cblu-Vtltnam front And • So- viet destroyer wq 1potttd M•ded 1outb pHt Jap .. ,J po11lbl1 toward water1 oh Vl1tn1m •b.trt M\'eraJ Sovi.t WlnblPI bl\' been cnu&&Aa---- A Votce of Vtetna m r•d o broadcu a m unllored here claimed lfanot's troops killed more than 2.300 Chin tt In u.,... d•1• ol flsnuni b.11...in1 l'li· day at •cattered battlellelcla Iona lh~ front Tbe broadca•t aaad Lank.led Chlne~e inrantrymen attacked Vietnamnt" fo~ • · from lhr~ dlrect10W1 an the Cam D'-'Ona y-ea. .autb or th 1rovanclal capital or Lao Cal an lilbout 1~ m1lta. oorthwKl of Hanol. Cam Ouona find Lao Cal. which was reported u ptured by tht Cl'uM last w~k. Uo ln tho Red River Valley. a atrat~ic w tu , rail and highway corridor l~1idang lo llsoo1 Chtnese of fk 1ab have been quoted as say· mg. how~ver. they heve no plans to tr) to seize the Vietnamese capital. Tbe Hanoi broadcast claimed counter-attack ing Vietnamese troops k illed 1,400 Chinese around Cam Duong, but that fighting was continuing an the area today. Westminster Cops Seek Death Motive Wes tminster p o lice in- vestigators continued today to seek a motive for the killing of a man who was shot to death Sun· day as be was walking through Si gler Parle near his home. Officers said the unknown killer used a shotgun al close range to inflict fatal injuries on Steven Alan Buus, 24, or 6832 Mother Slain, Son Arrested A 24-year-old Anaheim man faces municipal court arraign· ment Tuesday on charges of sta bbing his mother lo death Saturday, Anaheim police re- ported today. Dennis Branstetter, or 2252 W. Lincoln Ave., Apt. D-4, was ar. r ested Saturday after the body or bis mother , 53-year-old Mary L. Knisley, was found in the apartment the two s hare d, police said. omcers said Mrs . Knisley was <1tabbed nume rous times. Jn. vestigation in the case was con-tinuing today. Hazard Ave. Robbery was ruled out as the motive when police found that the victim's wallet and cash were still in his possession and that his watch and other jewelry bad not been taken. Westminster Police Explorer Scouts helped officers search the park for clues Sunday, but found nothing that would aid the in· vestigation, police said. Officer s found Buus' body near a recreation building in the park. Heating Oil Prices Soar NEW YORK <AP> -The price of the fuel oiJ used to beat some apartments and buildings and to power factories and elec- trical generators may rise still further as a result or a reported increase in the price of the ruel by a key exporter. The world's fourtb·lar,est oil producer decide d over the weekend to raise the price of some or its oil by 15 percent, ac· cording to industry sc>urces. Four Little~·••• These la mbs ha ven 't lost their way. They're right a t home on the Orange C-Oast College farm in Costa Mesa, where they wer e born within .the past week. And the lambs are in good hands, too -the bands of OCC agriculture students <from left) John Ledwith, Mark Whitillg, Nadga Clark and Linda B~ach. Mesan Surrenders On Heist Charge A Costa Mesa man wbo. police allege, beat his employers in a fruitless robbery attempt sur- r e nde red to Newport Beach police early today. Kirk Lawrence Attebery, 20, was booked inlo city jail 011 rob· bery charges in connection wilh the assault that occurred at Mesa Verde School Future Hearing Set Residenf,J of Mesa Verde in Costa Mesa will have a chance tonight to say what they'd like to see done with Mesa Verde School after it closes this June. The Citizens Advisory Com· mittee or the Newport-Mesa school board will bold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the multipurpose room at the school, 2990 N. Mesa Verde Drive. Represen~tiyes or orgaruza. lions wanting to use the facility, including the Coastline Regional Occupational Program, also will be present. Public meetings ror the same purpose will be held next month at lwo other schools scheduled to be c losed : Monte Vis ta on March 12 and Victoria on March 26. 12:30 a.m. today. Police s aid Attebery is an employee or Coco's, 2131 Westcliff Drive. According to in· vestigatora, be bid in a loft ln the restaurant until it· closed at midnight Sunday. omcera allege be covered his face with a ski mask and armed himself with a blunt Instrument, then a ssaulted the reli e r manager, Richard Rlso, Z'l, and bis wire. Margaret, 20. Police said Mrs. Riso was ap- parently knocked unconscious by a blow to her bead. But Riso struggled with the assaiJant and pulled off the ski m ask in the process. He told officers that Attebery begged him not to call police a nd fled the restaurant. The couple was tre ated by paramedics and taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital, where they were treated and released. Police set up a stake out on At· lebery's home in the 700 block or 18th Street, bul the suspect showed up at the police station at about 8 a.m. and surrendered. F,....PageAJ BURN ••• Mesa Police Probe ldnks In RGhberies Costa Mesa police today were probing the link between an armed robbery Sunday at a city grocery store and a s imilar holdup Saturday night in La Palma. lo both cases, police said, the s uspect was described as 6 feet 3 or 4 inches tall with dark brown hair, and in bis late 20s. Police said the man bought some rruit at about 2 a.m. Suo· day at Alpha Beta. 241 E. 17lh St .. Costa Mesa , then waited un· til other custome rs le lt the checkout area at the 24·hour facility. -1'ihe ma n then opened his jacket to revea l a re volver in.his waistband. ordered the male clerk to put the money in the grocery sack with bis Cruit and ned on root, police said. He got away with about $350, according to police reports. Sound Wall BiJs Slated Construction or a sound bar· rier along a short stretch of lhe Corona de l Mar Freeway io Costa Mesa is one of 13 highway projects the California Depart· ment of Transportation will put out to bid in the n e xt two months. Mesa Woman Assaulted Twice by Man A Costa Mesa woman was as- saulted twice Sunday morning by t he same man after s he believed him when he said be was sorry the fint lime, police said. 4 Fluor Employees Arrested in Iran Gallatin County fire marshals, explained that there Is no coun- tywlde tax for firefighting so dis- tricts have to be set up indepen· dently. "I guess like everybody else. people feel it never happens to me," McCrosson said. "People do not join. I don't know why they feel the rees don't warrant their membership." The sound wa ll is scheduled to be built from north of Bear Street to s outh of the 405 Freeway. at a n approximate cost of $556,000. Bids will be opened March 22. F,....PageAJ They said the 36·year·old woman accepted a ride at about 2:40 a.m. from a man she had talked to in a bar Instead or drlvina her home, police said, the man assaulted the woman and tried to rape her. She managed to nee and began to walk home, they said. -Howe~. the -man f'Otlowea her in his car and apologized, after which the woman agreed to let him drive her home, police said. instead, he attacked her again, but she managed to nee and report the incident to police, they said. The woman reportedly wasn't Injured. c DAILY PILOT r,,.o,_c-to.it•Plie.,.1111-11nc-.,. .... ,,,. ,._"'" ...... _,_.,.,,,,.°'_ (Ntl Pillllt"""OC-S.-.t•Mlt-~t ""'"'"'"" _,,,, ""°""' ,,..,., t0t Coti. ....... "_,..__ ............ ..,_ ,.,.,v.11n. 1m-.'"-euc111$owt11"""4" •"'9l•r..-ec111 ...... _,_s.two.n-~ .. ...,.., f,.. orlftc--1"'"'9 IH..-1 .... lJt ....... •••"'""·'°'"-c.illorft•••iti. ·~11 ..... "'•tlftfl•-l'W•- '" •• CWtty v ... .., .. ___ ,..,.,._ ,_.,"'_ .... ,_ .•. ..._ M•-1"9EditOt a. ........ ~ Ille ..... ,"-" ... , ..... , 1N,...i119 tfl!Wt ,,,,,,..,. C7'H)MM.111 a ... ....,.,..,.., • ...,. • TEHRAN. Iran CAP)-lran's Islamic revolutionaries arrested an American, a Belgian and two British employees of the Fluor Corp. of Irvine today on charges of "plundering the wealth of Iran by charging exorbitant prices," a spokesman for the company said. The four are construction supervisors at a gas turboex- pander plant near Pazanan, in southern Iran, which the Fluor Corp. recently finished bullding. The men were attemptlng to board an airplane al Pazanan Airport to fly to Tehran for evacuation from the country when they were arrested. After questioning, a Fluor spokesman said, they were returned to the job site at Pazanan and held there for further investigation. The American was idenWled as John Cassibas, 49. Casslbaa, a long-time overseas conatruc· lion worker, joined Fluor three Jl.ear1 ago. He bas no known ~lted Slates address. Tbe bead of the Iranian na- tional oil industry. meanwhile, announced that Iranian oU ex· ports will resume next week. He did not specify a date. The cut-off of lranJan oU bas been blamed by many in the world petroleum industry for re- cent price hikes and reductions In refinery production. In other developments, the ex- ecution of another official of Sbab Mohammed R eza Pablavt•a secret poltce and pobllc floggings for violators of lalamlc Jaw were reported to· day. The newtpaper Andesan re-ported that Mohammed Houeln NaaerJ, the secret poltce'1 torture ex,pert in tbe central clty of llf aban, was broucbt to Tehran and executed by • flrtnc equad 8unda1 Dllht. Meanwblle. atd11 to tbe AJatollab RuboJlab Kbomelnl said tbe lfoelem holy man wm leave bt1 temporar_y head· qauwn in Tebraa OD Tbund&J \·, ,. ........... FLEES IAAN -Shabpour Bakbtiar, the last premier of Iran under the Shah's re- gime, has fled Iran with his family. the Ayatollah Kh~ meini said Sunday. to return lb the holy city of Qum, 7~ miles southwest of the capita!. Hundreds of thousands of lranlana are expected to con· verae on the city to bid him welcome. Tbe aides said Kbomelnl will visit the holy sbrlne of Aarat Maaaoum and speak at an hlamtc tbeoloaical school. closed down 10 years •10 because of antl-shab activttl•. Tbe ayatollah wu arreltect In Qum for bis oppoelUon lb the 1h1b, wblcb nsult.ct ln bis H-year exile. Qum ii the tradltJODaJ Hal of Iran's Sbllte llCJ1lem leadenbip and ltbomeinl 11 expect.ct to make 1111 permaneat bome tbtre, altboucb aidee HJ IM will 1Ull play a major role as :--IMder o/tbe ~U· M cCrosson said his truck came to the scene, but he is authorized only to cover un- populated areas not covered by private associations . ··rr there had been any life hazard involved we would have done what we couJd," be said. "But we didn't want the people to think the county is going to provide fire protection." We Recommend: ~FIA because it's the best. RATION ••• s hortages of imported oil. Some or the measures might be ap. plied by June. UndeT the rationing plan, lhe gove rnme nt would allo cate equal amounts of gasoline lo lhe owner of each registered veh1· cle. Coupons would be needed to buy gasoline. Fre.. Page AJ DISEASE ••• two moolhs is calling, and ol course they have lb be checked out," Goodman said. He said anyone who suapecta a bird of ailing should contact a private veterinarian, who in turn can eon tact~ w k force. C.Omputer Unit To Be Dissolved A non-profit computer data processing corporation set up by the Newport-Me sa U niried School District will be formally dissolved Tuesday at a public meeting. The meeting will be held at 6:45 p.m. at the Harper Com· munity Center, 18th Street at TusUn Avenue. Costa Mesa. The Newport-Mesa lnstruc· ' tional Research Institute was formed by school trustees last spring to market computer pro- gnms developed by the district. However, the legality or the district's competing with private industry was q,uestioned by the county Board of Education. Newport-Mesa trustees de- cided last fall to dissolve the or· ganization and return to the dis· trict 's former in-house data processing system. Rhodesian& Raid Angola SALISBURY, Rhodesia (A P l -The Rhodesian air force made its first raid on Angolan ter· ritory today, bombing a "very large" training base ror Joshua Nkomo's gu e rrillas, the RhodHian military command announced. A communique said the 1950s· vintage Rhodesian Canberra bombers and Hawke r-Hunter ri~hters n ew across Zambia to m ake the attack and all re- turned safely. T he r e w as no indicat ion whether they we re challenged by the Angolan air force's more advanced Soviet MiG -21 jets or by anti-aircraft fire from some of the 20,000 Cuba n troops estimated to be in Angola. Nor was there any assessment of damage done. UFW Rallies In Texas SAN JUAN, Texas <APl - Cesar Chavez, whose United Farm Workers Union has stalled in previous efforts to organize Texas far m workers, used a day-long pep r ally to launch a drive m the state. A crowd that swelled upwards or 1.000 here Sunday offered en· thusiastic rhythmic a pplause to a lineup of union leaders and clergymen who told them that a solid union offers the quickest route to a better life. "I can assure you it will be muc:h easier for you than it was 10 1962." Cha vu said, referring to the beginning of the UFW. "The people were scared then. Nobody should be afraid here." Gas Costs $2.35 TEL AVIV, Jsrael CAP ) -The price or gasoUne went up in Isr ael today rrom $1.70 a gallon to $2.35. Price increases on gas and otMr fuels were the first step in a government plan to lower energy subsidies. ALSGAAAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 1 • I t • l ' al DAILV PILOT s Mond•j, Februery 29. 1979 fooday' NYSE COMPOSITE 2 p.m. (E T) Pri P. TRANSACTIONS STOCKS I BUSINESS TasTi•e _J I By SYt.VIA PORTEa ~-··~ Tbeloog period or rising ralesoo capllalgalns came to an end on Oct. 31. 1978 and was reversed as the 1978 Revenue Act cutthetaxonlong-term capitaltalna. It1 after Oct. 31, 1978, you sold any capital asaet that you ow nee ror more than one year, you generally wlU pay leu t.ax on profit than on similar sales made before. 8EF08 E THAT DATE. st PERCENT or the gain was taxed; after that date. 40 percent is taxed. This provides a powerful incentive to seek Investments that can produce a long-term capital gain, not just Income. lf you took several long-term capital gains In 1978, use care In completing Schedule 0 <Form 1040 ) Capital Gatos and Losses, warns Leon Gold, chief tax counsel lo \be Research Institute or America. You must r eport ------------------...... separately your gains and losses from sales after Oct. 31 and those before Nov. 1. Show the full year's gain or loss on each item. Follow the instruct.ions on the Money's Worth form to get the benefit of the tax cut. The IRS schedule is complicated. If you are in a higher income bracket, the change may give you an even greater tax reduction on long-term capital gains by eliminating certain higher taxes that were caused by long-term capital gains. If your earned income Is so high that part would be taxed at a rate higher than 50' percent. the law lets you limit your top tax on the earned income to 50 percent. But if you realized a long-term capital gain before Nov. l , 1978, each dollar of the untaxed portion of net Jong-term capital gain reduced dollar ror dollar the amount of earned income eligible for the 50 per-cent limit. IN BRIEF. IT SHIFTED YOUR earned income from a 50 percent tax to a rate that could be as hlgh as 70 percent. But for sales made after Oct. 31, 1978, this does not apply. The lS percent minimum tax can still hit the untaxed portion of loag-term capital gain for 1978. But In 1979, the 15 percent minimum tax no longer applies to long-term capit.al gain and is replaced by an alternative minimum tax that will affect fewer individuals. Before the 1978 Revenue Act, a high-bracket earner could pay taxes totaling about 50 percent of the long-term gam because of the capitaJ gains tax plus the minimum tax and the reduction of income eligible for the 50 percent ceillng rate. IN 1979, THE RATE THAT EVEN the highest bracket Individuals will pay on long-term gain is 28 percent. A final bit of good news for lhos~ who sold stock between Oct. 25 and Nov. 1, 1978: While the law provides that you get the new tax breaks on long-term capital gains only for sales after Oct. 31, 1978, the IRS bas uncharac- teristically interpreted the law in your favor. A combina- tion of stock exchange rules and tax rules gi\ies you the be~efit of lbe new 40 percent tale-on capital galns from sales made on or after Oct. 25. Next Medical Deductsons Stripes Reflected A quality control technician checks a clear flat glass sample from the manufacturing line at PPG Industries' Fresno plant. The position of the glass catches the reflection of a striped test pattern. The plant produces float glass and tempered safety glass for win- dows and doors. 30 State Wineries Enter French Market BASKETBALL I TENNIS ~.February 2$, 1919 DAIL V PILOT •3 Marina Gears Forv· ln a IC 1n'1'wturh m atche:ii. •pair of blu,• ~nd ~old clad \'l k1na•. Muln Httitl\ du t S\ 8t'rnar'1 TUf':Sda.)' nl11\l 1n the l'C01'4d round or tbt' en· • A baalu-tt>..11 pla)'orr Sitt of tht 11•me ls . ant• Monica toll.-xf with tapotf at 7 30, and althou•h thf' namf' and t-olors art' lht' ame lht naturt' · of the tum d(ffeh drHU~ally 'T. BEllN llD lh1l\h ~hind the 1ndtvtdual plu)' or Loyola Din(-. .. ~·-· c.i•-Nc"'" ""'-> ~ f•-•• 1.n1 .. V"l• M<H>IO ,, _ _. lltt W.\I.., 10 to 1'11111 \tr .. I hlt,.Oft •l'CI ,....., "'" IOCOll-0-IO<•IH •t 10!" ~"" Po(O 8w ... .,. lli g h tran s f er Lance Was hington. a 6 3 senior guurd with outstanding shooting abll1 · ty. whether outside or on a dnve and 1s consistently in the 20s 10 scoring. Also. Michael Gerren. a 6·4 )Unaor. is tough on the boards and a threat to score up to 18 feet Marina, meanwhile. relies on the balance that produced a Sunset League championship and four players on the all league selections. "WE RAVE a matchup prob· lem "Ith Washington," says • War Mar\na Coach Steve Popovich 'Wf'. may tart. K«>vin Olson on '" m and sea h ow w do Wa1blo1ton t vtor qutck. 11 ~ood j umpflr tnd u arnal 6hoot~r 'St Bernard may try lo l aolat~ their qu1ckneu. tive W uhi~ bis •bolt» and liemJ tvnyoM elle to th<-board " t ~rnard made 1\ to the i. cood round with 11 double over l•me victory al Ki.tt>lla, lln ac tomphsbmcnt thul surprnscd Verbum De l Coarh t;lt Ha-.thornt HAWTHORNE AY an addl taonal t»urpnse to hlrn would be a not her St.. Bernard vtctor y. although Notre Dame High Coach Greg Nlion disagrees ·'The key tor us ," says Popovich, "is lo get the early lead like we did with Notre Dame. St. Bernard plays a lot of four·corners offense. but It is hard to do if you're behind." Others in the St. Bernard lineup, which has produced a 20·5 record, are 6·4 sophomore Billy Knox, 6·3 Junior Butch, Hayes and 5· 11 guard Vernet DleudoM.e. Marina counters with Truictt Hatton and Keith Dawson at guards. Olson and Dave Tiezzi at forward and 6-7 Randy Heidenreich at center ,,.. f'ro• Pagf! 82 •• SEA VIEW TRACK. • • Christensen. "And that's a nice problem to have ... Billups is a one-man show, with the ability to wln ln the 100. 220. 440, long jump, triple jump and relays. He was a state finahst in the 100 last season in Virginia. and arrived with 9.5 credentials, although that time was clocked on an artificial track. Billups recently suffered a pulled muscle, however. In the distances University has another potential star in Sam Walling, the eighth-place finishe r this season in the Cl F 4·A cross country finals. miler> and Kevin Hagan Cthe school's best-ever low hurdler>. Taking up the slack will be distance ru n ner Kevin McCarthy, a senior with bests of 4 : 44 in the mile and 9 : 45 in the two mile . Coach Don Burns says McCarthy is a vastly improved runner. Greg Pearce, coming off knee surgery, is a 13-foot-plus pole. vaulter who could make some nois e in t he league , while George Pinckney is a rapidly. improving 12-6 pole vaulter who also runs the high hurdles and competes in the high jump. Fibak Tames Amaya ••rom AP Oh1palcbei Ot:Nv...;n Sixth seeded Woj· t<'k l<'lbnk, 'lolvinfl Victor An ya',; blistering serve, rolled to an easy 6 4. 6 l victory Sun- day In th~ 'llnglt>. final of a men's tt-M.ls tournament here. F1b11k, 26. utlllzed a solid re· \Urn or frv1ce game and pin• point passing shols lo claim the $25,000 first-place prize. The un· ceded Amaya collected $12,500. The towering Amaya. who s tands 6 7, had knocked ocr third-seeded Arthur Ashe in lhe :femifmals with 17 aces. But he managed onJy five aces against Fibak all in the first set. Both players held service until the 10th game of the first set when Fibak, cashing In on key passing shots, broke Amaya's serve to win the set. Three more well-placed pass· ing shots gave Fibak another break early in the second set. and the Polish player then broke again to go ahead 5·1 in the set. Flbak then held serve in the next game to close out the match. C...110rs Rolb DORADO. Puerto Rico -Top· seeded Jimmy Connors beat Vilas Gerulaitis 6-5. 6-0. 6-4 in the finals of a week-long World Championship Tennis Tourna· ment Sunday. Connors. who was defeated in the round robin tourney. won $100,000. Gerula1tis earned $40,000. The first set was exciting with Connors winning the tiebreaker 7-6 when Gerulaitis hit a return into the net. Tuntbull Win• DETROIT Wendy TurnbuU survived 12 double faults to cap· ture her first top prize t his year on the women's proressional ci r e v it Sunday. defeati n g Vlrgif\ia Ruzici, 7·5. 1·6, 7-6. in the singles final of a Detroit tournament . The title ~s worth $30,000. After splitting sets. a 6·6 dead· lock in the third set was set· tied by a 12-poiot tie-breaker which Turnbull won 7-4. ROCKET SHOTS ll'j FROM ROD LAVER ~ IUCJ:>IRAlfO 0V '1•f IQNSON tOOSCN !IP I REALLY GET IT l/P /f/6H/ t+ r v •· r -irr " tJ ·iJ& nit ktt..t.er 111L~lf .,A 1,;;i ·; J iJ{ yJtJ /11.157' ~tJ YOt1k t. .. fi~..J lll>Jlf 70 Al~IJ I 01'' rife ;Vlff P //CT/().(} 71MT 8 ltlt ~ f/'IF S'f/;(P Tb YJJ!' /JIPVEl .. fAIT ~I AY VIK.a..t:.M;. Yr)(/1..' ~Rr1T '"m 711e /.~ /1/()~UfTI Pro Hockey, BaSketball Hockey N•TtONAll40CKEY 1.EAOUE C.m!IClell C.Onl-llCe Pll'trl<-Olvhlol' W l T Pit OF O• N Y l\lanclfr\ :If II 10 86 1'1 IS/ N Y R.t"91'r\ 34 1• 6 1' 1 .. 101 Att•"'• n n • n 10 101 Pl11l•O.IP111• 7' " 13 ~I 144 113 Smyt,.. Olvhlol' (lllC •OO 13 7• II SI Ill )10 vancouv~• t• Jl • '1 111 111 St lOUI\ 13 '° • 3' ,,. 110 coioraoo n o I n ••S l•l Wa~ Cefll•r.n<• A4Am10lvlllott Boston :M 1• to II 1:11 Ill 8uflelo 14 13 II S• Ill() Ill() T0<on10 l • 1• 11 s• lllO 111 Mlnnesol• ll 11 • H 19' "' WOlllD HOCKEY ASSN W l T P\> OF OA Eomont"" ll 71 o M> 72• II• New E ngl•r>O la 11 ' '1 lll 110 W1nnlPflO ll 7& 6 &1 1,. 731 Oue~c 18 1' \ 01 101 1a. • Ctn<1nMh l• 18 II ~ 101 106 e""'"'9""'" n :io • '8 10. t16 SU!lday'\ S<O<tt EdMOfttCW'I \ 81rm1nqn•"' • W tMtPfl'O I N,.1/11 fnQt.tno S ( •n< •nNh ' Oufbf< t 1QT l•• • f"'"4ay'1 O~me-' ~ 0ir""•ft01'\M" •t W1f"nl~Q Nt., Enql-al Ed"'<>"lon Basketball N•TtONAl IASKETl•ll A~SN IEHi.n. Coftle"11<• All•nti< 01•lllaft w l Nonu OtYltlOf' wa'"'""'°" • t 10 Mont re•' PiUSl>U•Qfl lO\ ... nQl'IM W•\IHnqtO!I Ot!lroll •1 10 I ., lU 1'8 Plltl•O.lontd 3• l• n n • so 104 1U Nf'W J.,..,.. )I ,. 1S 11 I SI llJ 11& Ntw Vor~ lo 311 11 J4 t 4S 10'I 1&S l+O\fOn l• 36 I• J? " '1 1'1 111 Camr•I Dlvmon S-•y \ StOfe~ '>•n AnlOlllO JI 1' 5q 7 Oetrott I ColorAdO 1 Hou~fo" JJ 11 SSO l NV A11<9" l NY l\lanOtt\ l Allonla ll 70 SJ? • Montr••l t. w,,.111n111on \ C•ofl~nd l• Jo "" 11 Plflsburqt\ l , (111< ~oo 1 111• °"''"'' 13 38 lll IJ' • Tonlellt'\ G•m•• Ntw Ori~""' 11 0 l?8 " Toronto~• 8ultalo Wnl•rn Coftl••et10 VantOUVN' dl LO\ Anqt'lt" Mld-w.~t D6Yi11on T\tffd41y•$ G•me\ K dnti1J\ C1h •t 11 64~ Colora<IO df Soi.ton O•nv•r 3' lO \31 I Montrt"al At N~w Vork "'""O""' lnOtclntt h lO 'l~ u New YOf"9' R~f'Ge''' itl St lout\ Mllwdu~~ 1~ 31 All h 1 Pole Bre aks · Vault Record VIENNA CAPl Pole (hlCl!Qo 11 J'I ]01 t7 P.-thc OtYttton l O\ AnQf'ft'\ 18 ?• oil ~~atll" ll 1• bOI PlllM'n" lt. 7o ~I 1 S•n O••oo J7 JI ~ ' Po•11•nd lO lC ..OC 1 c.01o~n 'il•lf 11 n '" •o Sunday•, Storn l 0' ·~·f'\ .,. ln.cl•M\,. 108 Cltv•l~nd l1 r Cntc ""° IOOi Ph,l•O@t~c.t '1' 0..-"lfi'r l '' Nf'W .HrY.lf ltf) NPW YO"' 102 \dn Antont0 •71 MO-J\lc.tt '0' W•'"•noton'" c.o10-,. ~""'" n Tomson Top Surfer South African Shaun Tomson was honored ul tbe Balboa Pavilion re cently as the world's top male surfer from the re- &Ulls of a ~aders' poll taken by Surfer Magaune editors. Margo Oberg . 11 former Southern Califor- n ia n now living 10 HawaH. was named t,01t rem ale wavt-rider. OHH A.HO CLOSED EMO PUMMID TO FIT YOUR MHOS CARS • TRUCKS .. THEODORE ROBINS LEASING CO. 2060 Hcri>or II.~ 642-00 I 0 Costo Meso ~ 540-121 t LEASING?· If YOU DON~ -HAVE OUR QUOTE, 'YOU ARE PROIAIL Y PA YING TOO MUCH! Mew and Us~ Cors & Trucks All Makes & Models Closliu .ct hoHc c.,.. Otr S,.Cl.tty BEACH 401t WlSTHLY,MfWPOITllACH LEAS1MG 833-9850 SAVE MORE MONEY ON A NEW CAR THAN YOU EVERTI-IOUGHT POSSIBLE •ACQUIRf; AND DRIVl f\ BRAND NEW AUlOMOBILE, VAN OR TRUCK LVlRY Yb\R I-OR A NH COST OF ABOUT 5500 l 0 $1.000. MOST MAKlS AVAILABLE. •EUMINATL THL Mi\JOR DI 'AD ANTACiE or CONVENTIONAL Pl.JROiA!:>ING AND llA~INC,. •LLIMIN1\ TL l ttl HIGH ( 0 r 0 1 MAINTENA~CI: The Trojans are a lso boosted by a transfer from Thacher High. Ken MHls. who has put the shot over 50 feet Alan Osborn has a best or 23.2 in the 220 and will also run the 100 and. relay if he can re.cover sufficiently from a knee injury hampering h is w orkout s presently. The 26-year·old Australian. seeded No. 5, reached the final with an upset Saturday njght over top-seeded Martina Navratilova. va ulter Wlad ys lav Kozakiewicz of Poland set the only record at the 1979 European track and field indoor cham pionships over the weekend and barely missed a world best ~~~·~=~:.~.~~~11111~~1 ·- •OIHt\IN H..;ILL Ol~CL ~URt Pl R l AIMNG ~O ALL PRICE~ AND MARK·lJP~ 0 1 \ lHIClb AND ACCC.SSORIU:> -Luts Seekford. a junior from the cross country team. will nu the gaps an the middle distances and Suki Thomas will compete 10 the 'high Jump and long jump. It was the first tournament this year in which Navratilova did not reach the singles final. <;1n 011'QO 1]1 !lo-IOI\ llO T "''""1·1 C•mtt NOQd""''\<.-lt-<I ,_.,.,o ...... .. •l\'-A' cnv "' l ~ .. ~, .. C,olOtn St•'• •t N_.w v o,.• HOU\10"! dt Atll'lf'IA Otlro1t at O•IC-"It will take us some time to jell ... says Christe nsen. "I'm looking for us to hit our peak in May Last year it was the other way around." Vanguards to' Play Bio la Although he failed to clear the bar at 18·6 one-quart.er inch above the world indoor stand· ard set by Dan Ripley or the United States Kozakiewicz cleared 18-331• and bettered his own Euro~an mark of 18·31h StdtllP ~f °""""' tno1ttntt •• 5-n D14fQt" Pn1l-IP111a al Portl•nd E•tancla Three athletes who set school recor ds in their individual events last season have gradual· ed. so Estancia could be charac- terized as in the midst or re- building. Gone are Mike Camp <who set marks in the shot put and discus •hrow 1. Mike McCaa Ca 4:20.8 LOS ANGELES -Southern California College's Vanguards open up play in the first round of the NAIA District 3 Southern and Northern Division basket· ball p layoffs Thursday eve· niog with a game against Biola 16 :30) at Occidental College. An 8 :30 match involve s Redlands and Cal State Do· mioguez H.iUs with the winners Santa Anita Results F .. 5-ea, 147111 of 7-V T"°r-11"94 AAHI· ,.,., '''" r.ttt lady J•'' IMen•I " 10 10 00 0 00 VIII• v ITorol s 80, '00 Folly ~ IOUva ... \11 60 S•••nlll rac•-Sl•At II llllf<ll fSlloem•k•rl 16.IO, 1.IO, S.00. Ad· OISO" IC.SIM!ed•l UO. !1.90, FINI Ruler flllo<et>Ol l .IO. SS uacta 11·71 oald S1:19 so. advancing to the semifinals Saturday. Guard Paul Anderson a nd center Ran dy Ad ams o f Southern Califor nia College were chosen by coaches lo the NAIA District 3 all-star basket- ball team Sunday. Anderson is a 6-:1 junior while Adams , a senior. stands 6·11. Ireland 's Eamo nn Coghlan took the 1.500 meters in 3:41.0. Coghlan recently set a world in door standard of 3 52.6 for the mile. Baske tball WEST Par rll< '16. $.In JO># Sf I• EAST PPnl' SI SI. Ouq!H'V'• SI SOUT14 { 1•,,.•on !I 8ul1Mo ~, " J. IO,td(t C)t QO. MPml)l\t'I. "'' er •rr'l1uctr.y t• ~ CMOhntt 1• t M IDWEST I"""'"~ 'if 100 Woe Md ~I 84 TOUANAME HTS ~""' 8eU Cfrt•mptonitup Jitt._\.Ol"IVtltf'bl \ t-toru)a,~t EJ(HlllTION \QYl(•f UrttOf' 41 l%1\v1flfl' It; Secono r11<f' Banou IM< Carron I ~ 10. • 10. l 70 Fond Alltt llon IHaw ftyl l •O, 7 60 t•lt Oa re '""""" 1 J 20. n o.11v double C7 11 PAICI \IU 'IO Tlll•d r~e ICMlmart IMcCarront lo 40 I 00, S 80 lil'Ul.,,.anh !magi' <H1wl~v I • 10. • 60, Ko Account <C•ulM!n I 4 40 £1911111 r•ce Saneol -• ISl!oem•~erl o 40, S 10, S 40. S..rera ICUl•-1 '2 00, U 00, fda o.lla IC•ur11..,1 S 80 Nlntll rece -Sll•Hklu t Plncavl 10 00. S 10. l -0. A'~<•IOW< I Mt Ca•· ron I • 00. 7 60; Or op and W1g9fe •Howard I 160 U """''• 18-41 paid When minutes count, fourtll ratf' <;rand,l&r•d Win 1cau111enl 1110. ti 80. 8 •O. w 1111 E 1eoance I Pinc av I 1 •O. s 70 MA!llC411 Nallve •CorO<lrOl 10 00 Ftft11 raco Lonq h\U<P fOllvare•I l1 10, 13 80, 8 ftO. Mf'll•\a \ Pel 1Hawlrv I •.?O. J,60 FrMcll Mouue IPll'rttl 1.20. U •ncfa f'·Sl Pa•d \Sil 00 S••tll race Rl•lno Prot1t1 !Hawley I 10.«I 4 60, • 00, l•on Man ICoteneda• • 70. 3 •O. Emanator l'>Dt!n<e• I 10 90 "' so All•ndan<e St,•11 Baseball COU.l!OIE Cal Poly fSLOI I 10. C6f State Heyward().' JVNt~ COLlaGIE Cerritos t•. Santa Monica 7 Oanard •.El Camino 3 110 lnnlnQ51 San Bernardino t 1, Pa"""na o de~nd-on KMPC ••• • ~·· t~afftc repotts! •CAU 644-2526 1 OR A I Rll CON~UUATION THERE I~ NO OBLIGATION AUTO FUNDING CONSULTANTS. INC. 220 Newporr Cenler Drn.e. •21 Ne"p0r1 Beach, Califomlil 92MIO ~~n j i~~N .faJ jJ;~ .NMJ iii ~JtJ ~/JIJiJ {i/;t; Under New Management The Harbor Racquet Club is a club for people who want to play lots of tennis and have lots of fun doing it. HRC has the most centralized location in the Harbor-Mesa area and more court ava1lab1lity than any other local private club ... The costs of Memberships are but a fraction of those at comparable clubs. I Regular Memberships: Single Membership: Sl 00 per year, $25 monthly dues Family Membership: Sl 50 per year, $35 monthly dues 11 Per manent Memberships Available Ill. Special January and February 1979 Introductory membership for com- panies or groups of friends who want to get into the fun of tennis. 0 ThrH (or more)penv membtrship -$120 per veer ($40 per party I. $60 per month dues ($20 per single perlyl No.te: odd $5 10 tllo moml'llv.dues if a fam ily is one of the pames. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL. 642-2000 -