HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-03-01 - Orange Coast Pilott
. . ..
lr~n Squee~ing
'
No /tlalt Liquor?
De puty J ack Dwyer !front l and two umde nt1f1ed
helpers were among those 'chasing a n escaped bull
in a Salt Lake City suburb when the quarry turned
a nd chased them. The three-hour saga ended when
the animal was captured following s hots from a
tranquilizer gun.
Volleyball Team Gets
~ ... .__~..._~
In Coast Cafe BraWI
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 1, 1979
VOL. 72, NO .... J SECTIOfn, M ~AGES
IO ·--m
•
Gas· Statio.ns Close
Major Co1npanies Begin Cutbacks
NEW YORK <AP) -Several
of the nation's major oil com-
panies began reacting today to
the Iranian petroleum squeeze
as they limited supplies of
gasoline and h eating oil lo
dealers. Texaco also announced
Oearing Due
that about 2,200 filling stations
will close in four Northern stales.
The moves by Texaco, Stand·
a rd Oil of Indiana <Amoco),
Cities Service and Sun Co. to
deal with the cutoff of Iranian oU
followed similar announcements
March Makes · Bow
With Rain, Wind
A mild winter storm front
gave March a IOdden introduc-
tion today but forecasters said
Southern California skies should
clear by Friday. Gusty winds
from the northwest were expect-
ed late this afternoon.
A spokesman for the National
Weather Service in Los Angeles
said the storm blew in from the
northwest early this morning
Coast
Weather
Tlwfr /He ,_.,, ht Pot
Bomw'• ,_, .....,.,. "-f1C
Oft clanl:9I' from °"' end 0/ F"1doa ,,,_,, lo U.. otlwr.
Tlt•JI INN CM locotiott ift
N"'POft B«xlt /or U.. /ilm· a., of ..,,._.. o/ • Eut.,-
t t•l•of1tott •P•ctal See
1 ,..,.,.,.,,, 1'0flC Cl.
WlltETe•.-~
0 .. 1"1terb wtadl 15
to 21 mpb tont1bt with
ebanoe of ralD -~ to • Plftllll. Same eloadi but moetly fair Friday
wltb ldlbl near eo. Lows toalPt. to •. •••••
and would continue moving through the area the remainder
of the day. He said up to a ball-
inch of rain could fall before the
storm front moved eastward in-
to the desert regions.
Winds from lS to 25 mph were
forecast beginning in the after -
noon, decreaaing fn fore, by Fri·
day morning, the spo~esinan
said. Surfing conditions were
poor off the Oraoae Coast with
small, choppy surf.
The Harbor Patrol office in
Newport Beach reported small
'craft advisories were in effect
from Point Conception to the
Mexican border. Winds up to 30
knots were expected off the
cout b)' tonight. a spokesman
said, with the l\lltl dec:reulq
to 15 to 25 knots by Friday. Vil-
i blllty was reported at et1ht
miles.·
Travelers adviloriel were in
effect allo for peps drivlnl in
the mountains,
Jlainf all filW'ft tbroa1bout
Ortnse County wen fractional
bJ WI lllOftllq. ID Colt.a ....
about .10 ~an lncb bad fallen,
brin1tn1 tbe HHon total to
12.11. ID Bw:atlutoa Beacb, rain~
fall totafed .11, brta1ta1 the
MUGD tGtal t.ber'9 to 11.at. ID &be'
elt' ol Ol'mle. ,_., a ~ of ra1B W ..._ reoorded ud ID s.ta AM die lllDMtan eame to ••• • Tia• i.a,..a Beaela Poltee Detart ... t tal4 tlae la ... t
1tor• ••• ••••l•I • .. . • ·•••t• ~··· •• • ... I ...... =· ...... .............. _ .... _
lr'JU-. . ·
Tia• Callloral• Blt•••r hlnllllllt ... nlllW....t ODIJ ........ ljlllMI OD•
............ Al)
-.
by Mobil , Atlaetic Richfield,
Phillips and Continental Oil. ""Texaco. the nation's tbird-
largest oil company. said it ls
closing gasoline stations "lm-
m ed late 1 y" in portions of
Wlaconsin. Indiana, Ohio and up-
state New York to bring its sales
"more closely. jn line" with its
refining capacity.
Texaco said it p.,vides "only
about 5 percent" of the gasoline
sold in the affected areas.
Texaco also said it is provid-
ing customers with 90 percent of
the gasoline they bought in
MaRh 1978. Amoco said dealers
will receive 100 percent of their
March 1978 deliveries, but no
more despite increased demand,
while Cities Service said it is
providing 80 percent of the
gasoline and 85 percent of the jet
fuel it shipped a year ago.
Sun said it is cutting ship-
ments of home healing oil,
ke rosene and diesel fuel in the
six New En"land states'..!. and
New York, New Jersey, .t'enn-
s y l v ani a. De laware and
<See GAS, Page AZ>
·u.s. Ships
ShtiwForce
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Three U.S. Navy warships
steamed through the Suez
Canal to the Indian Ocean
today in an apparent U :s.
mllit•ry gesture of re-
auurance to friendly.
countries In the region
concerned about pcillUcal
u.plten• la Inn. Del-Department of.
flclal1 aald &be. friaatea
Richard L . Page and
Don•ld 8. Beary and the de1tro,er Davl1 will
replaee three P•clfic
FIMt wanbl.-which have
hen operatlna maialy lD a;,:-Sea-J»eniaa
,...... oftldall, who re-
q a e 1 ted aataymlty,
1tr1111ll U. UDIWd ltatea
11 aot laerea1ta1 tb•
alftDblr Of uval veuelt lD U.. ..... batllreUev·
......... tbat .... .,... oa ttaUoa aemrl)' two ....... .
•• erom
Police
'Sweep'
Mesa
Five men and five woMen. all
' Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
r es ident s. we r e a rrested
Wednesday night by Costa Mesa
· police on charges of selling
heroin.
Peek a Boo
The only view this dog has of the world passing by is
this hole in the bottom of the fence surrounding hrs
owne r 's home in the Laurel Canyon section of Los
Angeles.
. .
Two Jailed in Br.awl .
In San Clemente
•
A battle that broke out
between memben of a conege
volleyball team and employees
of a CbiDele restaurant in San
Clemence Wednesday ended in
the arreat of two restaurant
worken.
Police jailed Saroraroje
Saelao, JO, ol 2123 S. El Camino
Rnl, anct Vlteq Lee, 21, ol SMa
Calle La Quinta, followlnc the brawl that at one polat invol~ • more than a doMft penona, wit·
neues_aaid . ' omcen aaid memben ol the
Saa Dlefo State volleyball team stoDPed a ClubbouM Liquor, a
de8ea.__ ta Luck)' Plua, for
a bite to ...
B• .... ODI ol the coll•1• pla,ere welll outa1de to answer a
caU tf llllluN, be WU allfl9dt1· ......... bJ an •lDl>loJM at ad·
jacent Chang's Restaurant, 620
Camino de Las Mares.
The bruised player returned to
the delicatessen where other
players asked him what . hap·
pened. 'Ibey rushed outside and
confronted employees at the
Chinese restaurant, and a scuf·
fie broke °';rt·
Police who broke up the balUe
said they recovered a chrome
bayonet and wltneuet observed
several ~ the partlclpanta u -
1\lmlDC martial arts poses dur-
lnl the scuffle. .
Sae._, and Lee were arrested
OD varioul 11Nult cbar1ea. with
Saelao releuiCI oa bll promise
to appev in C!CMlrt and Lee de-
tained OD '5,000 boDd. Tbe YOUeyball playen were en
route to Loac 8Heb fOI' a came
at tbe time of U. confrontation,
poUeeaid .
•
Sgt Gary Webster said no
si gnificant amounts or drugs
were seized Wednesday. Arrests
were made on warrants resuJt-
ing from all egations of about 2C
previous undercover na rcotics
buys over a three·week period.
he said
The a r rests were unusual
because all but one of the al·
leged heroin purchases either
took place or began in Costa
Mesa. Webster said.
The drugs involved were $25
"balloons" of heroin weighing
about one-half gr am, he said.
"We'll continue to target the
heroin dealers and users in Uus
town." Webster said. "We let it
be known that if they 're going to
be dealing m Costa Mesa. we're
going to be on them.·•
He said all of the male SUS·
peels were in Costa Mesa Jail lo·
day and the female suspects in
Orange County Jail.
The male suspects were iden·
tified as :
-Rieb Christopher O'Coo.nor,
27. of 2621 Harbor Boulevard
#D ·l,Costa Mesa. $10,000 bail on
suspicion of four counts of sales
of heroin. ..
-Beary Wat&enbarg Cbavar-
rta, 30. 207 E. 16th Place, 14.
Costa Mesa. $10,000 bail on sus·
picion of two counts of sales of
heroin. <See HEROIN, Pa1e A!)
llOitg:TOWN A.ID
FOR TAXPAYERS
WASHINGTON <Ai» -To
anyone w,ho thinks Jimmy .-
Carter's Georgians h aven 't.
taken over in Washlngton, take
note: ·
In the Executive Office Build-
ing, where many White House
employees work, some helpf\d
soul bu set up a table with in-.
come tax forms available to
tboae who need them .
There you ean nnd federal tax
forms and forms from the Dis-
trict ot Columbia and nei&hbor-
lnt Maryland and Virtinia.
~nd 0eor11a.
-···
·;
•
A2 DAILY PILOT S
Mideast
Parley
Tonight
WASHJNOTON tAP I Pral
dent Cal"k•r , truatrated. •mpa
taenl and alrt'ady eupport.Lna h 1
EtcYPll•n demands, opens
M ldeast pt>ace talka toru-cht with
ll'rael& rr&mt! M lnisler
Menacht-m ~-an The outlook for wrapplna up a
t rt.>aty dJd not •Ps>e•r brlcbt as
l'urh•r rrepured for wb•t ht'
'"Y8 wtl be "a frank dltC'W ton
uf the i.&lues "
Bdore rt yini hi-rt. Bt"tlln
l'rttk1Led the llnlttd Sta(~ for
~upporllni Egypltan proposals
he said "were totally unac~pt.a
hie te lsra~l "
,..,.., lie also l'Uttt-d on the UrulN
) Sta lei. to work to ehtrnKe Egypt'~
11os 1t1oru, on the remu1rung Is
'ues
"The American delegation
· hould thtnk al(ttin and "Change
thejr attitude," he said before
hoarding an El Al Otght to Lon·
don und New York "I believe al
IS the duty or the United Stales
to convince the Egyptians to
change their altitudes."
H e added that Is r ael had
already made "great sucrtfices"
for the cause of peace.
Began was to a rrive at An·
drews Air Force Base io sub·
urban Maryland an tale after·
noon. a nd 1mmed1ately begin
talks with Carter and Secretary
or State Cyrus R Vance al the
White House Further talks with
both men were scheduled Frt·
da}'
Bt>gin dtd not elaborate on the
--~-a -·~.!H.·s . he round unacceptable.
blll d1plomat1c sources in
Washington told The Associated
Press thl· spec1f1cs of U S. sup·
port for Egypt ·s stand on lhe
three maJOr unresolved issues .
Th e s o urces insisted on
anonymity. ·
First. the sources said, the ad·
m anistration a~rees <J one · year
tame.l <Jb lc for e~t a bla s hing
Palest1rua.n autonomy an Israeli ·
held territory should be included
in the Egyptian lstacll treaty.
Second. the sourc~s sui.d, lhe
adm1rustrat1on backs the Egyp-
tian position that the treaty not
take priority over Egypt's
military ties with other Arab
countn es.
On a third key point. the
:.ources said. the administration
as backing Sadat's position of
withholding a n exchange of am·
bassadors with Israel until all of
the Sana• Penjnsula is returned
to Egypt and steps are taken
toward Palestinian a utonomy.
AnUn Attacked
By Tanzaniam
NAIROBI , Kenya CAP >
Tanzanian President Julius K.
N,Yerere made peace demands
• on Ugandan P resident ldl Amin,
but did not demand Amin's
resigftation.
Nyerere said in a broadcast
Wednesday tbe four·month-old
wa r between the neighboring
East African nations "could end
tomorrow" if Uganda and the
Organization of African States
agreed to an OAS conde mnation
of Amin for invading TAnzania.
Tanza n ia's gove rnme n t
newspaper, the Daily News, said
today that Tanzanians "do not
hide the fact that we do not like
the fascist idiot Idi Amin, we
would be happy to see him go."
Amin's name is "synonymous
with death." ...
F,.._PageAJ
RAIN •••
freeways. No roadway flooding
was reported.
The weather service sa id skies
should tum blue by the weekend
with highs into the 708 forecast
through Monday.
DAILY PILOT
1.,. 0.-~ 0.0.., 'lltl. wit" Wiiie" i• ~OIM<l IM __ ..,..., IOullll-t'/"'90. .....
(6'1\1-•"""''-s--···--·-... l)Ublll ... _, ·-,., • ..., ... ""'•
IN"' H.._, e.-"""'~ ... ,.,~ lfll\llAlln l......,.,......,..._ll/1tutll( .. il A ........ ...-...i .............. .-.......... -"""°"'' 1lw P<tt't-' P\11111.,_if't ,....,, It .. U0
Wt\I ltY $4 ..... , ( .. It MtM, Ctl-t n.2'. ·-... -l'rnldtnl •"" f'WI..,..
, .... Colrtt'I
• Yo<tP,~ldtfllt'lf0.-M~
~"·-" ... ,., T-•A.,,._.. Mt"f9!11t ll<llllt
CIMlr .. t 11. "-~ ...... H Atmlflll .......... ._,
,,,., ... ,.. ,.,.,.,......,
a. ...... ""' ..... -.-11 --c..... ---
•.
,,
Chin·a Wants Talks
' ' on Viet ·conmct 4
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP> -
Vietnamese troops 1'4=.PUlsed
Chinese forces near Lang Son, a
key provincial capital. but the
Chinese battled back successful·
ly at some points, intelligence
In tbe righting, the Viet·
na mes~ pushed back Chin••~
troops near the c ity of Lang Son..
80 miles northeast of Hanoi, and
al nearby Loe Binh. the sources
said.
Analysts believe the m ajor
battle of the war will occur around 'Lang Son, situated on an
important transportation rQute
10 miles south of the Chinese
border .
. sources in Bangkok reported to-
day.
They said lank-led Chinese
counterattacks later scored
some successes against the Viet ·
namese in both a reas, but still
bad not taken the city.
The sources said both sides re·
cently reinforced troops in the
Lang Son area with infantry.
tanks and artillery, but il ap·
peared that neither s ide bad
gained a signlficant advantage
in the area
Bodg Re~overed .............
Authont1es puU the body of 18·year·old James Ma rtin
fror:n a ca_ve on the Pequonnock River in Butler; N.J .
Pohce beheve the teen·ager committed suicide in the
cave. the same place his brother killed himseU two
years ago.
Capistrano Y o~ths
Seized in Slaying
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR.
Of tM 0.lly ~let Sutt
P o li ce arre s t e d tw o
Capistrano Beach youths and an
El Toro teen.ager Wednesday on
suspicion or murder m the Dec lJ
stabbtng death or Rodney James
Gil bert, 32, in his Laguna Beach ·
ho me. ~
Lagun• Beach police Lt. Al
Olsen said today It Is believed
drugs were involvt,id in the kill·
ing of Gilbert. a skateboard
equipment salesma n . Olsen
would not amplify the drugs
theory.
after the stabbing occurred.
Police said Gilbert's home bad
been ransacked but indicated
that nothing of value appeared
to be taken.
Clad onl y in a blue.striped
nightshirt. Gilbert was found ly·
ing facJ:..UP between the kitchen
a nd hv"l'!rg room.
P olice believe Gilbert was
beaten after be was s tabbed
Furniture in the home had been
pus hed around and blood was
found on the walls • ..police said.
Laguna Be ach police in -
vestigator Gene Brooks arrested
. _ .Az:t:eJ5~d . a_rt: Robert Eugene
Rowe. 20, 39454 Vi lfa Verde, an
unnamed 17-year-old boy, and
Craig Leland Bighorse. 18, of
21812 Northwood Lane , El Toro.
. Rowe at the home of the eldest
s us pect 's girlfriend in Lake
Forest after a warrant had
been issued late Wednesday.
Gilbe rt 's former girlfriend,
Myra Hight, found the dead man
in his beach-t ype cottage at
4391 :: Hill St.. with a single knife
wound in his heart the morning
F,....PageAJ
HEROIN ..•
-Mlk~ Hollenbeck, Z1. 1375
Baker Sl .. #6, Costa Mesa.
$20.000 bail on suspicion of two
counts of sales of heroin, one
count or p ossession o f a
billy club.
-Harold Eugene Harmoa, 29,
2152Jh Puente Ave., Cos ta Mesa.
$10,000 bail on one count of sale"S
of heroin.
-Raymond Adolpla Drozd, 36,
7204 W. Coast Highway, Space
#21, Newport Beach. $20,000 bail
on suspicion of two counts of
sales o( heroin. •
Tbe female suspects were list·
ed as:
-Patrice M. UUner, 22. 7204
W. Coast Highway, Space #21,
.Newport Beach. $20,000 bail on
sus pkfoo of four counts of sales
or heroin.
-Jeri Agnes Phipps, 30 ,
21S21h Puente Ave., Costa Mesa ..
$20,000 bail on sus picion of three
counts of sales of heroin.
--Nancy Anne Cbelgreo, 24,
145 E . 18th St., #C, Costa Mesa.
$13,500 bail on suspicion of ·two
counts of sales of heroin. • ·
-Gall Suan.De ~elaon, 33, 598
Joann St., Costa Mesa. $35,000
ball on suspicion or two counts of
sales of heroin and one count of
accessory to armed robbery.
• The latter charge was In connec·
lion with the knif epoint robbery
of a Newport Beach home two
we'eu aao, Webeter aald.
-Cody Sae Jordan, 24, 'lJYT
E. 16th Piac., 14. Cost.a Mesa.
$10,000 bail on eusplclon of two
count.a of sales of heroin.
Webeter said all of the sus·
pec\s were arrested at their
homes.
· Bighorse was served with his
a rrest warrant at Orange Coun·
ty Jail where he was in custody
for alleged traffic violations.
Rowe and Bighorse remained
in Orange County Jail tottay.
Bail was not set pending the
pair's arraignment in court
later. The 17-_year·old Capistrano
Beach youttt, arrested in his
home, was lodged in Orange
County Juvenile Hall.
Police said today they still
believed lhe Gilbert death is un-
related to lhe Nov. 20 fatal stab-
bing of Art Colofly architect
Brent S. Tobey.
Tobey's bloody, nude bQdy
was found stabbed 15 times un·
der some bedding in a bungalow
at 1320 Carmelita St., by a
neighbor.
Police said they have not
found a murder weapon in either
case.
,.,.._ P.,,e A J
GAS ••.
Maryland to 80 percent of March
1978 levels.
A coogressional study made
public today in Washington con·
eluded, meanwhile, that New
England, heavily dependent on
heatinf' oil, could produce from
10 percent lo 45 percent of its
energy from native sources like
wood, water, wind and sun
power, The report by the New
England .congressional caucus
said 10 percent of Uie region's
total energy needs could be met
from alternate energy sources
by 1985.
Mobile, the nation's No. 2 oil
co mpany .· also announced
Wednesday it Is limiting the
amount of crude oil it sells to re·
fineries. Mobil said it would cut
sales by 9 percent, retroactive t.o
Jan. l , and did not say when the
limit.a would be lifted. Exxon earlier said it ls cutting
crude oU shipment.a by 10 per· cent durin1 .tbia year's first
quarter.
In Washington , Energy
Secretary James Scblesin1er
predicted $1·•·1allon unleaded
gasoline ''within a year or so."
'Dake' Better
Actor;'s Progress Said Good
I
NelWpOl't Beach'• Jobn Wayne NH, and be bu fabied a lltt1e
la bestanina to pt a.roUDd town wel1bt. wblcb la IQOCI."
qalD after ·underlGlne 1urpry for 1tomaeb eueer, but be'•-' Tb• 71-year-old ~aya• baa
made little beadw!{."ln leWnl been IWldDI ~t bom. • for nearly t.brouCI& a.. b • ~ of 1etter1 lb .... .-.. ncuperatlnl from
from ..a...._.. dellftNCI dal· t.be Jaa. 11 IUl'a-7 at UCLA 11 to Ida..,............ lledleal c.aa.-for felDO\'al of
0 a.•1 --~= • a bit, btt cue-ttomacb. for ' ,.. .... .. .. .., Mid be bu ....
ad eard9,'' said ~a Ila.le of Ide mall,_~ ..,, •1(e 0 II to Uftft lD aup
......... ftae.TMdoc!tlor1· Mp. tMn'• DO .. , we can an ..., plHHd wtlb Illa ...... WWW. 1111. ..
In Pelung, the Chinese govern·
ment sent a note to the Viel·
nam• Embassy today propos-
ing talks "as soon as possible"
to end their two·w~k bordef
conflict , Peking's official
Hs inhua news agency reported.
Vietnam claimed its forces
killed or wounded Z1 ,000 Chinese
in 12.days of fighting. Tbe Hanoa
report said Vietna mese -n wps
also destroyed ~ tanks and 30
military vehicles.
These claims could not be in-
dependently verified Analysts
say they believe Vietn am's
cas\lalty claims are exaggerated
and the Vietnamese have suf
fe red greater losses than the
Chinese. ·~ Japan's Kyodo news service
r e ported that Chine se Vi ce
Premier Ll Hsien-nien told re.
porters in Peking today that the
Chinese invasion force had
c r itically damaged "two or
three" re~l a r Vietnamese divisions. · · ·
Many an ts believe thlS has
been the objective of the Chinese
invasion, to "teach a lesson" to
Vietnam by crippling some of its
main.force military untls' Li's
claim could not be confirmed. It
had appeared that Hanoi. was
not committing many regular
troopstotheborderwar ,
·'We will pull out once our bojec-
tive is achieved." L1 wa~ quoted
as telling the reporters
A TIP ,. ••.
SAU mlS
MARCii 21
b:
IOCXIMG
Earlier today. Kyodo quoted
sources in Hanoi a s saying
fierce fighting was going on in
the La ng Son area, and the
Chinese were launching human·
wave assaults urged on by
bugles.
Financial markets in lhe Far
East and the United Slates were
swept today witb rumors of im·
pending Soviet action againi.t
China .
Kids Sound Off
Slayer;'s Parole Opposed
EL CAJON <AP> -An eighth-grade teacher who
read about a parole hearing due Joseph Morse, con·
vicled of three killings, says 11 of her pupils have
written letters asking Morse be kept in prison.
The youngsters "felt so strongly about his possi·
ble parole that I fe lt it was lime for the m to exercise
their rig~ts as citizens ," wrote the teacher, Lynda
Elmore, m another letter to District Attorney Ed
Miller.
An assistant to Miller said he would reply to the
letters.
Morse. 34, will be given a routine parole hearing
next month. He has been con victed of beating his
mother and l2·year ·old sister to death in their Chula
Yi.s~ home in 1962 and later of strangling al)other
JaLl mmate.
wam·s· ·LA-z 10Y
··SENIOR ·
CIOZEllS'
en5'ationa
PROVE YOU'RE A
SEllOI GTIZEll
SAVE
UPTO
Oii AllY LA·Z IOY • STOCK
~
l.OUllOlteG ·=========
~
TV Y!l'WlllO
~
,uu_•o~
.. ... ......
HUNDREDS OF
LA·Z·BOYS
IMMEDIATE
FREE DEUYERY
whitesla.Z-lo
COITAMllA
169 L 17th IT.
(Acfoll fl'Om ~ '*'to Malle CCllelldarl)
Ml-1617
Mor\. M-10-6
lat. lo.I ~-~·....,
MllllON VllJO
21192 .........
"'~ (Comer of Marguerite
and Via llCdor)
4H-l902
Maf\.ftl 10..
.. i 10-6
-Clcmd ....
,
I
.•
\
-
\
O:rang e Coast ' Your Honaetow-il
Dally N w~paper1
)
\'. ..
j
t. r
'
VOL. n , NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES
,
Ne ltlalt Liquor?
Deputy Jack Dwyer c front> and two unidentified
helpers were among those .chasing an escaped bull
in a Salt Lake City suburb when the quarry turned
and chased them . The three-hour saga ended when
the animal was captured following shots from a
tranquilizer gun
·i Firemen Take Heat
f
r For House . BBut ",.t _mas a pnivngate a-~a-
BOZElfAN, Mont. CAP>-A ... ~·
stream of profanity blistered the lion -not the city fire depart-
ear of Bozeman Fire Chief Bud ment -involved, Geako,polnted
Simpson. when be answered the out, and the home was seven l telephone. miles outstde city limits, where
"It was two people talking, the city's authority ends.
and they called him everything The city fire department was
· they could, with a lot of profani-not summoned and "was in no i.11 ty," City Manager Sam Gesko way involved in this unfortunate
said Wednesda) "As near as we fire nor in attempting or ref us·
coutd tell, they were calling ing 'to extinguish it," Gesko said
from New York or New Jersey." in a st&tement aimed at dis·
The call was the worst in a asa~· g the city .from the
series of critical telephone calls ""• .. ..c... . I al r lln frQID around the country -and Not. y omc s are ee g
s o m e from Can ad a and the t. A Bozeman firefighter
Australia -which city officials said, ·•1be general consensus of
have received since a rural fire the guys is to lay low and not tell
association allowed a house to aoy.J>ody who you are right
bum because the owner hadn't now."
paid b1I ~embership fee. <See &OASTED, Page AZ>
Spyglass Resident$
Oppose Crypt Plan
BJIOANNEREYNOLDS
Of t11e D.tlly ...... StMf
Plana by the owners of Pacific
View Memorial Park to built a
, series of crypts near some homes have been brought to a
• ball by a group of unhappy
homeowners.
The Spyglass Hill residents
live in tbe 30 hoJJ»?S that share a
property line wtth the Newport
Beach cemetery. ·
One, Tom Hoover, says they
don 'l mind sharing the space
with the . cemetery. it's the
thought of having "dead bodies,
funerals and weeping widows 12
feet from our homes and patios"
to which the homeowners object.
At the moment, that's not like·
ty to happen.
Grading for the crypt sites
began in September, but the 30
neighboring homeowners all
donated to a fund and hired al-,
t.orney Dennis Harwood w~ was
successful in getting a restraining
order. That order will remain in effect
while Harwood negotiates with
the cemetery's attorney or until a
bearing can be held in Orange
County Superior Court.
Harwood sa)'8 be and the op-
posing attorney are discussing
the problem.
Meanwhile, the homeowners
are trying to interest their
homeowners association in join·
ing the fight.
Hoover says he fi"ures the in·
<See CSYPT, Page AZ>
ED IT IO N
O~ANGE"COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ---. ' =THURSOA¥; MARCH 1, 1979 N
.• .
10 Face H~roin Raps~:·!
_Polict;! Seize Suspects in Mesa, ~ewport :
Fiv~ men and five women. all
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
r e• Iden lii . we re arreste d
Wednesday night by Costa Mesa
police on charges rof .selling
heroin.
Sgt Gary Webster said no
signlflcfnt amounts or drugs
were seized Wednesday. Arrests
were made on warrants resu!t-
lng from allegations or about 20
previous undercover narcotic..s
buys ovet a three-week period.
he said.
The arres ts were unusual
because all but one of the al·
leged heroin purchases either
took place or began in Costa
Mesa. Webster said.
'Mesa Asks
Study for
New Marina
Costa Mesa city officials told
the Army Corps of Engineers
Wednesday it should study the
reasiblllty or building a boat
marina at the mouth of the San-
ta Ana River .
Supporters of the marina proj-
ect from Newport Beach were
also beard from as the corps
held a public hearing in Garden
Grove.
Purpose of the hearin~ was to
discuss plans for a $1 billion,
three-county flood control proj·
ed tbaLJnclude~ developing a
concrete channel.J!lo~g the San·
ta Ana River.
While corps spokesmen spoke
ol U.. ...,._. 11D1le conatructioa project involving Orange
County, the marina wat on the
minds of most the 75 people in
the Garden Grove city council
cllambers.
. .Among those in the audience
were ·Costa Mesa Mayor Ed
McFarland as well as City Coun·
cllmen Dominic Raciti and Don
Hall.
Bat the city spokesman was
consultant Ken Samps on.
former chief executive of the
Orange County Harbors,
Beaches and Parks District'
_Sampson told the corps the ci·
ty believes pla.bs for the flood
c0ntrol project should include a
feasibility study or a small boat
harbor that would give Costa
Meaa access to the sea.
He said the city wants to work
with the Corps while it is de·
velopi.ng precl.se plans for the
river's mouth and pledged the
city's support in the project.
Sampson's words were echoed
by Mesa Verde area residents as
well as a s pokes woman for
homeowners in the Newport
Shores area.
But the Army engineers were
noncommittal about the proposed
marina as they discussed the
massive flood control project in-
, volving Orange, Riverside and
San Bernardino counties.
They see the project as an es·
sential saf~~:rd to life and property wt · a 3,2()0:square-
mile areaof tbe three counties.
Orange County supervisors
agreed with that assessment at
their meeting Wednesday.
Tbe board adopted a resolu-
tion reiterating county govern·
menl's support of the $1 billion
fiood control plan.
The federal office bas recom·
mended a change in cost sharing
that would lncrease the county's
Portion to $250 million.
The drugs involved were $25
"balloons" of heroin weighing
about one-hall gtam. he said.
suspicion or four counts of sales of heroin
of heroin.
.. We'll continue lo target the
heroin dealers and users in this
town." Webster said. "We let jt
be known that if they're gojng Lo
be dealing in Costa· Mesa, we're
goij'lg to be on them.'·
He said all of the male sus·
peels were in Costa Mesa Jail lo·
day and the female suspects in
Or ange County Jail.
The male suspects were 1den·
tiried as :
-Henry Watteaburg Chavar-
ria, 30, 'llJ7 E. 16th Place. #4.
Costa Mesa. $10,000 ball on sus·
picion or two counts or sales of
heroin.
-Mike Hollenbeck, 27. 1375
Baker St .. #8, Cost a Mesa.
$20,000 bail on suspicion of two
counts of sales of heroin. one
count of possess ion o r a
billy club.
-Raymond Adolph Drozd, 36.
7204 W. Coast Highway, Spac<'
#21. Newport Beach $20,000 bail
on s uspicion of two counL" or
sales or heroin.
The female s uspects were list-
ed as:
-Patric,. M. Zeltner. 22. 7204
W. Coast Highway, Space #21,
Newport. Beach. $20,000 ball on
suspicion -or four counts of salcl>
of heroin.
-Rieb Cbris&opber O'Connor.
27. of 2621 Harbor Boulevard
#D·l.Costa Mesa. $10,000 bail on
-Harold Eugene Harmon, 29. -Jeri Ag nes Phipps, 30,
2152 'h Pue11te Ave .. Costa Mesa. 2152 1::? Puente Ave . Costa Mesa.
$10,000 bail on one count of sales <See HEROIN, Page A2 > •
-Best 'Tour Guides
Members of the Newport Beat:h chapter of the Daughers of
the American Revolution honored these youngsters Wednes·
day as the first place winners in their respective grade
levels for their essays on "Touring the 13 Colonies."
Selected from the 235 writers who submitted entries were
(from left ) Robert Vandervort, 8th grade, Ensign MJd~le
School: Mark Simmons, 7th grade. St. JobP the Baptist
School; Billy Guzik, 6th grade Newport Element~ry
School, and Carolyn Blake, 5th grade, Harbor View
Elementary School.
County De lays OK
Of 3 Airline Leases
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of tM DAilf "''"" St.atf County supervisors agreed
Baby Said
Near Death
At Birth
By KATHY CLANCY
OI -D•llY Pl .. 1 S\4111
The infant Dr. Wilham Wad·
dill is accused of s trangling
· "was lamp as a rag doll" and
had no hope for life when it was
born after a saline a bortion
nearly two years ago, the doc ·
tor's attorney told an Orange
County Supei:ior Court Jury to·
day.
D efense attorney Charles
Weedman said movements seen
in the infant by some hospital
personnel' were no more than
"'s pasms '-'. and the "whining,
m e wing" SO,Und heard was
merely a noise made by a neac-
dead premature baby.
He described the sound~ and
motions "as the last few signs or
something which, for all prac·
tical purposes. wa s already
dead." Waddill is accused of slran-
gling the two·pound, 15-ounce m·
fant after she was born to an 18·
year-old unwed mother following
a saline abort10n attempt by the
43-year-old physician.
Waddill 's first trial ended last
May in a mistrial when juror~
said they were deadlocked 7 to 5
in favor or acquittal.
Weedma n . in his opening
statement to the jury today. ad
milled Waddill told hospital
personnel "don't do~a ~od~amn thing fo r that baby except give 1t
oxygen ··
Wednesday to delay signing new
five-year leases with the three
c ommercial airlines that
operate from Orange County
Airport.
ment is discriminating against
othe r airlines that want to
operate from the airport
lo addition to foregoing new·
leases. 's upervisors gave Coun·
t y Counsel Adrian Kuyper
authority to hire outside at·
The obstetrician did not want
any "heroic" efforts ~o revive
the baby, Weddman conle(lded.
saying Waddill fear ed inex·
pe rienced hospital personnel
"might in some tragic and tern ·
ble way seek to resuscitate this
thing and give it some im·
aginary hope of life when they
would have absolutely nothing
there except some great to-do
over an abortus ..
The defense attorney attempt
ed to refute prosecutor Robert
Chatterton ·s con ten lion that. h1!>
client faced bankruptcy and
fe ared a malpractice suit if "he
baby had lived a nd been bra in
damaged.
Consequently, Air California,
Hughes Ajrwest and Golden
West Airlines will continue their
operations ~t the airpoct under
r estricted month-to-month
leases.
The decision to delay new
leases with the three air carriers
c ame as part of an overall
strategy aimed at contending
with a Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration investigation that
will get under way this month.
That investigation is aimed at
delermini~g if county govern·
(See ~EASES. Page AZ >
Oil Companies
Cut Sta tions,
l..imit Su p plies
He admitted Waddill had
made some unsuccessful busi-
ness investments but described
his client as "very prosperous."
Coast.1•
Weather -i
Gann Plan ·on Ballot?
NEW YORK <AP) -Several
of the nation's major oil com·
panies began reacting today to
the Iranian petroleum squeeze
as they limited supplies or
g asoline and heating oil to
dealers. Texaco al~ announced
that about 2,200 filling stations
will close in four Northern slates.
The moves by Texaco, &and·
ard Oil of Indiana <Amoco>.
Their feet lturt. but Pot l
Boone's four daughters kept •
on doncm' from one end of\\"
Fathilm l•lond to the other
They ~e on location in ,
'-eurporl. Beach for the film-,
ing of portions of on Easter •
tel evi1ion special. See I
Featuring, PQfle Cl .
tory," be said. .. Anytb.in& less
tban that and I would want to
wall for the Secretary of State to
determine." He aakl tbe reuon beblnd b1I
CJUUoll ln settlina ror the
mlAlmum number of registered
voter • ._natures needed l1
became .-certain percen&all o1
tbaH CGlleded will be foad to
bl tnHllcl for various realOlll.
GUil waa lD Santa Ana today
to apeak" tO county real ton at a
brealdMt meetlftl at the Elka
Club dmtDc which be recelftd additWaM petlUoaa. ·
Wit fall. -a trip ~ 0r....-Cou•tJ. Om aald bla volun-
&een expeee.d to collect tlM
........ ....... lD a liDlle
du OD •ctt• .. •1· ' · _ Oa11 •• .,.... colledell. •llOw-•tWI---~ .... report.id. a.. ......... , ..... olld•
Cities Service and Sun Co. to
workers to .succeed in thelr one-by Mobil, Atlantic Richfield,
day drive on a mishmash of or-1 P~illips and Contine~tal. OU.
gaoizational problems, including rexaco, the nation s"' thlr~
failu.re &o have an adequate·sup-largeet oil company, sa6'. it ls
ply of petition forms on band. closing gasoline si.tloaa 1'lm·
Gann predicted success for mediately" _in po-r~lons of
what be called the Spirit of 13 in· Wiaconsi.o, Indiana, <?hio. a~ up-
lUaUve drive. · !~ate New York.to bn~f its sat.es
He said the volume lncreues more closely 1n line wltb 1ts
dally on the number 'Of refiolngcapacity.
1l1naiurea collected and, if the Texaco said I~. provlde11 "onlY,.
present J)fte bolds up, the ln· about S percent of t6e gasoline
1Ualive will be on next year's sold in the affected areas. .
ballot Texaco aleo said it la provtd·
At the same tlme, he was lnl cUltomera with 90 percent of
abarply critical of aovern.ment th• 1aaollne tbey bouabt lo apend"'8 Matth 11"11. Amoco said dealers • • w a~te and fraud run will reetive 100 pereeat of tbeir
ablolutely wUd l.n thla country," March ma deliveries, but no
be uW mbn desptte lncreased demand.
Prop0aUon .13 put California wbll• ClUel Service said tt ii
ta tW forefront u a leader In provldi•I 10 percent of the uua coaa&ry the ta.x reformer 1uollae abd 1$ pereent of the Jet
ctalmect. ' fuel It abipped a 1ear a10. •
••
INSIDE T ODAY
I Gusty westerly winds 15 •
to 25 mph tonight with •
chance of rain dec:,reasing 1 to 30 percent. Some clouds
but mostly fair Friday
with highs near 60. Lows
tonight 46 to 52.
l •tlex
-
..
I •
•
l
I
' ~• _ ... ' tO"TD .P61t..V PILOT Al
•
JU DAIL V PILOT N Thur!d!X1 Man:h l 1910 \ .....
F.....P~AJ .
\ . CRYPT ••• •
'lll!>TlN6 MA~UM
!itRUC TURC
Battle• Rage
ChiDese 'Offei;
1.
\allatton of the crypts will
lhean tM loss, not only of reel·
denu' prtvtc)', but ai.o abcM.lt
$50.000 on lb \laJue of th
homes
"I just can't Im atine Pat ine
View putting bodies that cloee w
Uae homH and conducllnc..
funerals. tt's not conducive Id'
their bwdne s in addition to tbc
problcmlf It c.·rtute» lo ttrms of
9 ur ntcht.s to uau our Pf'OPt"rty,"
he ukl
I' 1>0~'0 MAU~LLUM
STIWCfURI !.
·peace Talks
ing talks "as soon as possible"
to , end their two-week border confli~t .· Peking 's o fficial
Hainhua news agency reported.
J
Hoover. who bouahl hls home
when the dovelopmenl ~
s ix yean qo, uld he earfluU>
r e ISl'OH t.' h l' d p I ft n s t o r t h ,.
n·tnt'h.'ry bcfor,• "pe nding ~ ...
m ont>)'
o.lty ........... M-. 18 SPYGLASS Hill-PACIFIC VIEW SLOPE A CEMETERY OR A BUFFER?
BANGKOJ{, ThuUand (AP> -
Vietnamese troopa repulsed
Cbinke forces near Lang Soo, a
key provincial capital. but the
Chinese battled back s uccessful·
ly at some points, Intelligence
sources in Bangkok reported to·
day.
Vietnam claimed its forces
kUled or wounded 27 ,000 Chinese
in 12 d~ of fidlting. The Hanoi report said Vietnamese troops
also destroyed 200 tanks and 30
mUitary vehicles.
M•uaofeum bpanak>n Brtnga Court Action To Hett Conatructlon Of Crypt• ----In Peking, the Chinese JM)vern·
meot sent a '1ote to the Viet-
namese F.Jnbassy today propos-Clearing Foret.-a t ----
Al thtl t1m , Pacllk Vi\}W w~
owned by Jack Vibert who tuu,
~int•c ~old 1t to P ll'ree Brothers.
.11lh o~h V1bt>1 t bltll work!\
I hcrt~
llOO\ er i.utd prov 1~1on~ t•on
tamed m the sale agreement
w h.e n t he Ir vine Company
bought the Spyglltss liill proper
t y from Vibert mdicaled to him
that the JO.root slope behind the
exis~ln_g mausoleum would be
maintained as a sort of buffer
zoqe and that it wouldn't be used
as b4rial ground.
March: In Like ,._Duck U.S. Ships
Show Force
These claims could not be in-
depe ndently ve'ri!ied. Analysts
say they believe Vietnam's
casualty claitns are exaggerated
and the Vietnamese have suf·
fered greater losses than the
Chinese.
Japan's KyodO news service
reported that Chinese Vi ce
Premier Li Hsien-nie,n told re·
porters in Peking today that the
Chinese invasion fore.e had
c r itically damaged "two or
three" regula r Vie tnamese
divisions. Another resident. Wl)llam
Burke. sought assura~e on that
s core rrom Vibert in 197~. In re·
ply Vibert sent him a letter stat·
iog "I wish to reassure you that
we. have no mtenlion of uWi.Jing
tbe property next to your home, or
next to any other home in
Spyglass Hill for buria l purposes .
As I have told you several times
previously it is very poor
cemetery practice to buy bodies
on property lines .·•
Vibert sa id today he's a little
surprised at the a ction of the
homeowners. "We're concerned
a bout our rights to use our
property,•• he said.
Vibert said the plans to build
the crypts have been part of the
ce metery's mas t er p lan fo r
y e a rs. but a lso added that
P acific View has offered to sell
the property in question to the
residents so they can maintain il
as a buffer zone.
"We 've tried to be good
neighbors. We've moved trees
that got in the way of views and
cut down weeds and done what
we. could, but that land really
1sn 'l a buffer zone. it's part of
· t he·cemetery," Vibe rt-said.
U!lla Faces
Medicare
FramlStlit
LOS ANGELES CAP} -A Sl.4
million civil Medicare fraud suit
has been filed in U.S. District
Court here against Dr. Louis
Cella 6f Santa Ana.
The 48-count suit, filed Wednes-
day. alleges that Cella, while
controlling two Orange County
hospitals , conspired with three
associates to make $700,000 in
false claims against the federal
Health Insurance frogram.--
A mild winter btorm front
gave Mar<'h a soddt n lntrodul'
hon today but Coi ccw;terb blllt.I
Southern Cahrorma 1ik1e ... should
clear by J<'nduy Gusty wandb
from the northwt:st we re expect
ed late this afternoon.
A spokesman for the Nationt.11
WeJl~her Service in Los Angele-;
s aid the storm blew in from U1t•
northwest early this morning
and would continue moving through the area the rem amd~r
of J.he day. He satd up to a half
inch or rain could fall bdort' lh('
storm front mov('d eastward in
to t be d~rt regions.
Wands from 15 to 25 mph were
for ecast beAPnnin& in the alter·
noon, decreasing in force by Fri·
day morning, the spokesman
:.a 1d Surfing conditions were
. poor off the Orange -Coast with
s mall. choppy surf.
The Harbor Patrol office in
Nt>wPort Beach repQrted small
t·r<1ft advisories were in effect
from Point Conception to the
Mexican borde r. Wands up to 30
kno ts were expected ore the
coas t by tonight, a spokesman
:.aid. with the gusts decreasing
Tiiree Face Court
(
In Man's Slaying
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. -' Police believe Gilbert was °'"" O.ll'fl"liotSutt beaten after he was stabbed.
Po 1 ice a r r•e s t e d tw o Furniture in the home h.ild been
Capistrano Beach suspects and pushed around and blood was
an El Toro teen-ager Wednesday found on the walls. police said
on sus picion of murde r in the Dec. lstabbingdeathofRodneyJames Laguna Beach p olice in·
Gilbert, 32, in his Laguna Beach vesttgator Gene Brooks arre'SCed
home. Rowe at the home of the eldest
Laguna Beach police Lt. Al -sus pect 's girlfriend in Lake
Olsen said today it is believed F or est after a warrant ·bad
drugs were involved in the kill· been issued late Wednesday.
. ing. .oL Gilbert. a skate board Bighorse .was ~erved ~itfa his
equipment salesman. Ol sen a rrest warrant al Orange Coun-
would not amplify the drugs ty Jail where he was in custody
theory. for alleged traffic violations Arrested are Robert Eugene
Rowe, 20, 39454 Villa'Verde, an
unnamed 17-year-old boy. and
• Craig Leland Bighorse. 18, of
21812 Northwood Lane, El Toro.
Gilbert's fo r m er girlfriend.
Myra Hight, found the dead man
in tits beach-iype cottage at
439'h Hill Sl., with a single knife
wound in his heart the morning
after the stabbing occurred.
. Police said Gilbert's ho!Tle had,.,.
been ransacked but indicatea
that nothing· or value appeared
to be taken.
Clad only in a blue-striped
nightshirt, Gilbert was Collf.ld l!t·
ing race up between the kitchen
and living room .
Rowe and Bighorse remained
in Orange County Jail today.
Bail was not set pending the
pair's arraignment in court.
The 17-year-old Capistrano
Bea{}h youth, arrested in his
home. was lodged in Oran
County Juvenile Hall. .
Police said today they still
believed the Gilbert death is un·
related Lo the Nov. 20 fatal stab·
bing of Art Colony architect
Bre!lt S. Tobey.
Tobey 's bloody, n ude body
was found stabbed 15 times un-
der some bedding in a bungalow
at '1320 Carmelita St.. by a
~ t'ieighbor.
The suit a sks double the ""\ F p A J
amount or the false claims under l"Olll age P olice said they have not
fou nd a murder weapon in either
case. provisions of the False Claims HERO N Act of the · United States Civil }
Code • • •
Also named in the suit were
Cella 's associates, Theodore
Schiffman. Stephen Evans and
George Ollendorf.
In the suit, asslstant U.S. At·
torney Roger E. West alleges
that between 1972 and 1876 the fals~ claims were made through
Mercy General Hospital in Santa
Ana and Mission Community
Hospital in Mission Viejo.
Tb~ money obtained through
the false claims was used for
'politi clll ca mpaigns a nd
personal expenses including
mortgage payments, the· suit al·
leg es
Cella was one of the largest
political campaign contributors·
in California untu be waa con·
victed In June 1876 on 22 counts
of income lax e vasion and
Medicare fraud. He ls aervlnl a ~ve-year sentence at a federal
minimum security prieo• in
Lompoc and is scheduled to be
released July 1, 1911.
DAILY PILOT
, ... Ot-c-t o.lly~ ••ttlwllk llle u .... _._,,,._,,_, .. ~..., .... °'_
GMtl l"llblt~~. ,...,_"'1'-.,•
11<1•lltllt0 _..,., lloAutll l'rl<Yy "" C.u /IAne, -~. _., ... "" ... .., .. ...,.. 1.i .. v.11..,,l~~t.<K,..,.....C-A ....... ,..........._,,,....l_l<MWllr(I __
-··· ,_,.....,..~ ....... 1 .. 1• w. •••• , "'""" c.111-. c.tlfOr-n.it.
-Pr.=.!i=-
.1.c1111.c.rtn Vka~ ... ---.......
~ ........ .~ ...
(
$20,000 bail on suspicion of three
counts of sales of heroin.
-Nancy Anne Cbelgren, 24,
145' E . 18th St., #C, Costa Mesa.
$13,500 bail on suspicion of lwQ
counli of sales or heroin.
-Gall Suuane Nelson, 33, 598
Joann Sl, Costa Mesa. $35,000
bail on suspicion or two counts of
sales of heroin and one count of
a~cessory to-armed robbery.
The latter charge·was in connec-
tion with the kniJepoint robbery
or a Newport Beach home two·
weeks ago, Webster said.
--cucty_ Sue Jordan •. 24, 207
E . 16th Place, #4, Cos ta Mesa.
$10,000 bail on suspieion or two
counb of sales of heroin.
Webster said all of the sus·
peels were arrested at their
homes.
John Wayne ·
Recuperati-,ig
From Surgery
Newport Beach's John Wa1ne
ll ltelinni.nl to get around town
a1atn after undergoing surgery
for 1tomath cancer, but he's
made little tlf•<lway in' airttlnl
t hroqb tbe lilmdreds of letters
from Well wlabeta delivered dal·
11 to bfa BQwhoNll home.
"Re'• been getti~ oui • blt, 1otaa for a net. •. playma. t0me b.e~pmmon and cai:d&, • Aid
aide Pat 8taey.
"He'1 dolDa nn.. Tb• doctors
• are VflrJ pleased wtth bll prog-
nu, and be bu 1a1ned a little
welabt. wtdeb ll tOoct." Tfl• ·n -tear.Old WayDt bu
1tMD ,...... et lilome for Marl)'
tllNe wiU, ,_.,.,auq from F='t:'~ · -.aacb. ,.
~Midbebu1tla nadllll a -. ti Im 111.U blti
''It eA•'n IT tb anift lo:~ ............ ., ••1 ... Ha
aaawertlaD.''
•• . .
I',.... Page Al
LEASES •••
torneys to represent county gov-
ernment during the FAA probe.
Kuype r indicate d the San
Di ego-base d firm of Luce,
Forward, Hamilton and Scripps
will be hired .
Kuyper also indieated the firm
will represent the county in any
appeals that migbl be launched
as a result of FAA findings.
As Kuyper prepared for the
airport legal b¥lle he said
·'could h ave. nationwide
significance." be stressed the
seriousness of the latest airport
crisis.
"In simplil)ed terms, the coun·
ty counsel told supervi~rs the
FAA probe t e nds to bring
federal, state and local regula-
tions into direct coaflict.
And, Kuyper warned, the ma·
jor issue lo be decided is
wh ether a local airport pro-
prietor like the county must
yield operating policy to the
federal agency. ·
He suggested that the two
airlines thal touched off lbe In
FAA investigation with their
complaints be told in · writing
. their requesi fpr apace at the
· airport can11ot be considered
now ..
$upervisor Ralpl ·Dtedrl"'
said the two airlines, Continen·
W and .Frontier, should be told
more. ~
• Dledrlcb said notices aenl
thedr"whoald lnetude .statement.a
about noise comtralnta placed
on the airport N -.ell aa other
1 ho1'tcomtn11. tncludtn1
terminal and pattlnt coqes·
tion.
But after a ~rtef debate,
tupervilOn agreed to 10 alone
•Ith X~r·1 more limited pro-. ..-ai. .
Coatlnentel and Froadlr eoD· ... theJ ........ dllodmlllat·
ed ••alnlt .,, DDt ..... a11oftd to ,,... ... rrom ~ c.at1
Airport .
to 15 to 25 knots by Friday. Vis·
ibility was reported al eight
miles.
Travelers advisories were in
effect also for persons driving in
the mountains.
Rainfall fi gures throughout
Orange County were fractional
by this morning. In Costa Mesa.
about .10 or an inch had fallen,
bringing the season total to
12.18. ln Huntington Beach, rain-
fall totaled .12. bringing the
season total there to 13.54. ln the
city of Orange, only a trace of
rain had been reco rded and m
Santa Ana the moisture came to
.09.
The Laguna Beach Police
Department s aid t he latest
s torm was c aus ing no im·
mediate probl e m s in th e
Blue~rd Canyon area, where
homes had been endange red by
landsliding.
The California Highwa y
Patrol said the ram had caused
only som e minor spinouts on
freeways. No roadw~y flooding
was reported. -
A TIP .
FROM
........
SALE mM
MARCii 3.1
~
IOC1U*-
WASlllNGTON <AP) -
Three U.S. Navy warships
steamed through the Suez
Cfnal to the lndlan ·ocean
today in an apparent U .S.
' military gesture of re-
assurance to frie ndly
countries in the r egion
concerned about political
upheavals in Iran.
Defense Department of-
ficials said the frigates
Richard L . P age and
Donald 8 . Beary and the
destroyer Davis will
replace three Pacific
Fleet warships which have
been operating mainly in
the Arabian Sea-Persian
Gulf area. . .... These officials, who re -
quested anonymity,
stressed the United States
is n ot inc reasing the
number of naval vessels in
those waters but is reliev-
ing ships that have ~n
on s tation nea rly two
months.
Fl'o'ia Page A J
ROASTED.·····
Members of the Rae Fire
Department began fighting the
fire Saturday at the home of the
Harry Petroff family. wbich had
begun .moving in 10 hours
earlier.
An hour l ater , when f~rdi&hters discovered Petroff
baclh 't paJC! t!\e '$40 fee to join the
rural fire district, they quit.
1 "They bad the fire almost
smothered. Then they just shut
their hoses off and watched it
burn," Petroff said.
Frank Trunk. president of the
Rae Fire Departme nt , offered
no apologies Wednesday for the
incident.
wam·s lA-z.aoy
~~s1•01
anZENS'
ensationa
PIOYE YOU'RE A smoa anZEll
5 100
Oii AllY LA·Z·IOY • STOCK
·======== ~
UMIGf..O
~
._
~
AIUMDl9CI -
HUllDIEDS OF
LA·Z·•YS
IMMEDIATE
FREE DELIVERY
LA·Z-IOYS
PlllCD .... 5 199
MllllON VllJO
21192 ........... Plrwr.
(Comer of Marguerite
ond Vto lloolor)
•ffalt02
Mon.·M 1~ tat. 1().4 Ooled"--
I ,.
.I
'
. • • • ,
.
• J
• ,. ··-BACKWARD ST.EElllNG MOTOllCYCLE 'HONOllED' WITH GOLDEN FLEECE AWARD
'Th• Bure•uc,.t9 Gave ttt. Taxpayera • Bum Steer on Thia One'
Baekward Thinking?
• R everse Cycle Wins '.Fleece' A.ward
. W ASHJNGTON tA~ J -The Transporta-
tion Department says it was justified in
spending ,$120,126 to develop an experimen-
tal, backward-steering.Q)otorcycle.
Depa~ment spokesm~n Hal Paris says the expenment was designed to examine
problems "inherent in motorcycle design "
sue_h as braking and maneuverability. '"We
bel1evethestudf is justified,·· he said .
SEN . W ILL I AM P R OXMIRE
disagrees. Wednesday , he awarded the
department his mOntbly "Golden Fleece"
award for wasteful federal spending.
The· Wi sconsin Democrat said the· •
Tra'nspc)rtation Department awarded the con-
tract despite a report from the National
Highwiy Safety Administration that the
motorcycle "would be di(ficult if not impossi-
ble lo steer.·•
H E SA.ID THAT AFTER 19 months of
testing, the contractor was able to produce a
motorcycle whose record run ~as 2.5 seconds
~and with training wheels at that.
PrOxmire said govern.ment ofricials In-
sisted the testing continue despite objections
rrom the contractor. He-said the final results
or the "'Advanced Concept Motorcycle" will
be submitted in the near future .
· 1,200 Acr es Judici al
District
Proposed
. Nigue l Land Seils
For $17.5. Million
A Dutch rirm has paid Avco
Community Developers Inc .
"S17.i million for nearly l ,200
acres of land adjacent to the El
Niguel Golf Course in Laguna
.Niguel
But officials at Avco, who
made the announcement, said
they still-will be involved in
management, development,
sales and planning ror a pro-
po:1ed 2.300 dwelling units on the
parcel
·: The parcel, located j ust east or
tbe El Niguel Golr Coune, was
purc hased from Avco by
:Sredero Niguel, a subsidiary of
·Bredero Vast Goed, B.V., a
· Nelh~rlan¢; corporation.
The Dutcli firm purchased the
•property and then contribGted
the land lo a joint venture in
which Bredero and Avco each
own a 50 percent interest.
.. Avco will be providing the
building and ma nagement ex·
pertise to the joint venture and
the Dutch rirm is providing. the
land," a Niguel-based Avco
spokesman said,
The parcel is located al the
end of Niguel Road in the center
of Laguna Niguel.
Plans call for extension of that
road to the Coast Highway,
where it would ,connect with a
second Niguel Road already in
existence. ,
The ne.;. road would cross the
new development and another
a rea not owned by Avco, the
spokesman.said , and end up on
Coast Highway in the Shores
area
The property is currently
zoned row2.300 residential units
and the ..,irst 141 units at the
terminus of 'Niguel Road near
the golf course will be under
construction this year.
Bredern Niguel is a member
oC the Bredero group, wi\.h head-
quarters in Utrecht, Holland.
The firm engages in" gene ral
conStruction. develops ''new
towns" and commercial build-
ings. and is involved in real
estate consulting and manage·
ment and finance.
Avco Communilf Developers
is a s ubsidiary of•Avco Corpora·
tion of San Diego. with planned
communities in San Diego and
Laguna NigueJ .
The two firms a nnounced the
land purchase and joint venture
Wednesday
·Rights ·Unit Backs
•
· Fi refighting Mom
IOWA CITY, Iow'l (AP ) -
The Iowa City Fire Department
discriminated against 11 woman
-when officials refused to let her
nurse her infant son during duty
. hours. the Iowa Civil Rights
Commission bas said.
"I think this is a positive
step,"·hind• Eaton saidJ>f the
report iMued Wednesday. "I'm
really glM tbat tbey (the com·
mission> see the problem and
didn't just dismiss it.
"But whether tbe city will see .ae Ugbt or apptal it and ao on
l!"e offmlive. I Just don't know,"
she added.
The COlllllaint w,,u filed by
Jo"a Attorney Genera!. Tom
llWer.
11i.. ·Eaton, "'· • nren.,,...., drew ••ttontl ·••el\,\ton in
Janu ery wbea she tried to
.... bre•1t.·te8 her •~·moatb-old
son cturinc: •m••"_,d Ume in·
eluded .. •-ablft. Fin Cblef Robert Ke•tlae Olld
tlie city reftaaed her request,
1ayln1 \he tWlce·•·lbJfl feedl•p
would 'l.lolate an unwritten
polJc7 forbld dlnc ••replarly
ocbedllled family visits." 01 Ille , · nre otolloa. "°"' at Ule !Ire llolloll, lliU lll11 Eaton. 1u1pended for &atQa ukt: "It'' been kind of
l1jtce 'rial....., orden Olld feed.. ~';.: .. ~ ban-' ilia ber •• ......... to wort •• • ., ~ been after ,,_,._ Coullt:J Dlltrtet -~ ,....... ' from , .... -.,,_ .. llaued. ........ . .
The ffiove lo bring· federal ..
courts to Orange County was re-
newed W e dnesday in
Washington D. C. when Rep.
Jerry Patterson, D:,?anta Ana.
int'foduced legislation aimed at
creating a new judicial district.
As things stand now, Orange
.County is withiii a ·seven·county
district and federal cases are
heard in Los Angeles .
Patterson's proposed legisla-
tion seeks lo spin off Orange,
Riverside and San Berr:,iarctmo
counties into a new judicial dis-
trict headquartered in Santa Ana. ·
Earlier legislative efforts to
bring federal courts into Orange
County simply called for court
sessions to be held in the county
as part or the existing judicial
district.
Patterson explained that his
legislation creating the new dis-
trict "is an all-out e ffort to
satisfy, once and for all, what is
a pressing problem for the
federal. judicial system in our
part of the country.''
The three-term Democratic -
congressman -pointed out that
the new district being proposed
contains a population or 3.5
millio~people.
That is a greater population
than 68 or the 93 existing judicial
districts. Patterson said.
His legislation marks the third
time he has made a move in
Congress to bring federal courts
to Orange County.
Before Patterson became the
leader in tbe movement. former
Orange County congressnten
Charles Wiggins-and Andrew
Hinshaw. both Republicans, had
sought legislation that would
force the federal court to move
into Orange County .
Miss Francis
Says Rape
' R11ined Life
WASHINGTON IAP) -Sinaer
Connie Francil has spoken out
publicly for the first time OD her
1974 rape, saying it destroyed
both her m•rrlage and her
sa~eer.
Miss Francis, appearing
before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, said Wednesd_ay
that ber huaband~left her in tm
bee.I.use of the depression she
suffered aft.er the attack. She
said they Will soon be divorced.
The committee ta conslderins
•"bill to funnel federal funds to 'local police atKl prosecutors to
assist rape Vl'Clims .
~-_porot'J' ·-· . --11111 boln& """'&ht t-H~~-WJll9-_.._._. la-odor.
"The right• of victims of
violent crime 1bould be at least
equal in importance to the rtptl
of tbe crimlaela wbo commit
thole actl," Miu Francis said.
'
'
• I . -' • ..
rl!ur!d!y. Man;:h 1, 1979
• '
•
' DAIL V PILOT 'f 3
300 Birds D o o med t
·Newcastle Disease
'
Hits Garden-Grove
By JACKIE UV MAN OI°"! o.I" f'li.t ''41"
A second flock or exotic birds.
thl1 one in Orange Counfy, has
been found Infected with deadly
Newcastle disease and will have
to be destroyed, a U .s. Depart·
menl of Agriculture spokesman
said today.
Spokesman Dave Goodman of
the Newcastle Task ·Force in
Santa Ana said about 300 birds
at Parrot World 1n Garden
Grove Will be humanely dis-
posed of as soon as arrange .
ments are completed ror their
purchase by the USDA
Another flock, 541 birds trom
an aviary near Riverside, were
disposed of earUer this week for
the same reason, he said. ·
Newcastle disease, which
could devastate the caged bird
and poultry industries if it
spreads, was riht diagnosed last
week in a Stanton" pet bird
purchased from Parrot World.
The tas k force wa s im -
mediately set up and also found
a n infected bird from Para-
mount and one in Riverside that
were traced to the two infected
flocks.
Goodman s aid a fourth
pri'(alely owned bird, .a parrot in
Mission Viejo, has also died or
the iiise a se . It wa s also
purchased at Parrot World.
Both the pet shop and the
aviary had purchased birds
from the same wholesaler in Los
Angeles County. Goodman said.
Anyone having such a bi1'1
should contact the task force at
972·9602. Goodman said. The .
birds can be tested without in -
juring them and, if infect.ion is
found while the bird is still 'alive,
the USDA will purc hase the
bird, he said.
Anyone e lse whose bird
becomes iU should contact the
task force or a private
veterinarian, Goodman said
Volley·hrawl
Two Held in Clemente Fight
A battle that broke out'
between members of a college
volle)'ball team and employees
of a ·Chinese restaurant in San
Clemente Wednesday ended in
the arrest_or .two restaurant
workers.
Police jailed Saroraroje
S.aelao, 30. of 2323 S. El Camino
Real, and f .iseo,g Lee. 2s, of 3S43
Calle La Quinta. rollowing the
brawl that~at one point involved
more than a dozen persons.-wit·
nesses said.
Officers said members of the
San Diego Stale volleyball team
stopped at Clubhouse Liquor. a
delica.tessen in Lucky Plaza, ror
a bite to eat.
But when one or the college
ptayers went outside lo answer a
call or nature, he was allegedly
assaulted by an e mployee at ad-
jacent Chang's Re:s taurant, 630
Ca mino de Las Mftres.
The bruised player returned to
the delicatessen where other
players asked him what hap-
pened. They rushed outside and
confronted employees at th~
Chinese restaurant, and a scuf-
fle broke out.
Police who broke up the batUe
said they recovered a chrome
bayonet and witnesses observed
several of the participants as·
suming martial arts poses dur-
ing th·e scuffle .
Saelao and Lee we re arrested
on various assault charges. with
Saelao released on his promise
lo appear in court and Lee de-
tained on $.5,000 bond. ·
The volleyball players were en
, route to Long Beach for a game
at the time of the confrontation.
police said.
The Task Force. which in-Thi 1. F _ .J -G 0 (:~~~g~~ew~o1~~1:1~i~.~r:~~A~. e OUllU uilty
to find out where the birds -
originated and _to see if any
other inCected birds mii?hl have
been Purchased by other s}tops.
Goodman said. As a result of the outbreak, the
pet bird industry in California is
at a standstill, he said. -
No one is buying. selUng or
moving birds, and Hawaii has
placed an embargo on pet birds
from-California.
So Car. GOQdman noted, other
than the two flocks, the only in·
feeted birds have ~en found in
private homes where tfi."ey· pOsM ·
no danger to other birds.
He said some 400 birds have
been sold since the first or the
year at Parrot World a nd that
researchers are trying to locate
them.
Of Partner's Death
A man whose armed robbery
partner was shot to death last
August during a n attempted
holdup in Anaheim was round
guilty of second degree murder
by an :orange County Superior
CQ_urt Jury Wednesday.
The jury's verdict means John
B. LUpien. 25, of Garden Grove,
was guilty or ll)uf<le r even though
the victim, his partner iD·cnme:
was shot by tbe store proprietor.
In· addition to the murder con·
viction, the jury found Lupien
guilty of conspiracy to r9b and
uting a gun during commission
or a felony. The guilty verdicts
came aft.er five hours" of jury de·
liberation.
Judge William . Thomsog.'set
sentencing for April 13.
Lupien, of Garden Grove, was
convicted in connection with lb~
shooting death of Joseph Allen
Harris, 29, also of Garden
Grove. _
Harris was shot by Interna-
tional Housewares owner Carlos
Paradinha last Aug. l25. The
businessman. also shot and
wounded Lupien during the at·
tempted robbery.
Annf}uncing 3 Day
FLOOR SAMPLE SALE
FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY
On Sofas, Chairs & Sofa Beds
Save Up,"to 30%
/-.' .~
,,
SOFAS 5499. Sale Priced From
CHAIRS $
Sale Priced From ... 199.
Vou11Fr;on1e Designer Will Be H•PPY To Assisi You. #'
. .
H.J.GARRETf .fU~~fllJRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTEfHOA DESIGNERS
I
t
•
0,... ~·· n..,. I M. l•••· 221 S HARIOR ILVD.
COSTA MESA 646·0Z7S
•
•
;l
.. _
-
-.
\.
A4 DAil y PtLOT \\ORLD I NATION
,
-·bj Khomeini Sharp Plunge
. ~·
....... I
Tom '
Marplala~
Spare That. Tree
' VISWlNQ TB• oa&SH MAClllN&: ObHnla1 tnodl ak1G1 Wa W\ of all PGUIW. couta tbMe dan,.
aomllimle '°" ••l*l U..t tlM ~.a... Tree Huf::d• aad peeudHavVoomeetali.tta are OYWPlAYlnl lbe1r •
We may I« an upbalt ba~klaab.
You a1IO MSl)eC't that• aot ol them may come to the
Jove ol the bucolfc late ln the 1ame. They want to aave all
· U.. trMDerY in 1l1bt after t.be lot for t.betr owa home baa
been ba•'Mc.d dean. S-vsy time eome project la pro-
poeed, you baa.r them eruptlq in lrvlne;
natteri.nc in Newport or Upplns otf ln Lapu:.
JUST THE OTBEa DAY, fore.am·
pie, ooe citben wu obMrved uprootln1
some, wblte cro11ea that bed been
placed a1oal deadly Lacuna CaQ)'oo
Road to mark tbe places where
motorilta bad loet thelr lives. Hil explanation was that be didn't 11Auv .. 1•
Back • in
Holy City
QOM, lnD <AP> -Ayatollah
Rullollab Kbomelnl, aph1tual
leader ot the lalamlc revolution
that drove the abah from power,'
vowed on b1I ut~phut return
to hla native bol)' city here today
to create a naUon1!alter tbe lm· •se ot MobamDMCS'· ud wipe
out all ve1t11• of Watem ln·
IJuence ln Iran.
lr•n'1 culture. "destroyed by
colOG.lalllm, m\lat be turned up-
s ide down," be stated.
"The remainlnl one or two
yean ot my We I will deV«M to
you to keep thla movement
alive," be told wildly cheering
1upporten. He returned to Qom
eucUy a moath after coming
back to Iran and ending 14 years
of exile. (Photo, Page Al4.)
want to tee the rural nature of the canyon changed by an
improved roadway.
In other words, we should 1lmply ignore tbe loas of human llfe. What we don't know can't hurt us ..
AIDD SAID be will live her
permanently but "be has no ln-
teotJon of retiring.•' Tiley aald be
wo"1d actively keep control and
maintain the ~on of the re-voluUon.
, "Hla move to m wW in no
But let'• face lt; many efforll to turn tb1a couUine
green 1n byfOM yean turned sour in later Um~. A lot of
eucalyptus trees <I love 'em> were planted ip Lal\lll&
Beach aua Irvine .. And ~eucalyptus is a dirty tree.
way affect bis exiating role,"
· sald Ayatollah Shariat Jladari .•
Tena of thousands of jubilant
Shiite Moslems braved the
morning cold to get a glimpse of
the 78-year-old ·rellglous
patriarch. 1be crowds lined the
route 30 to 40 deep behind
makeshift barriers.
Trees that were plan'8d along .Oc~an· Boulevard in
C"°rooa del Mar ut~ aklewalU when they cot big.
Hu.ntmetoo Beach been forced into ·· ·tree replanting
I prorram became many of rts reaTclenUaJ street trees were
ori&lnalJy ol the WJ'ODI type. . --. .
' Bur TBB G•EENIES amoag"Us will scream foul any
time t0mebody 1Qggest11qme f0Ua1e may have to go.
All ot which mates lhe tb1nk about Jaabel Pease of
Newport Beacb. A Jone-time resident and for many years
a Parks, Beaches and Recreation commissioner, Mrs.
Pease launched a campaign to tum Newport Beach g~n
many decades a10.
Often abe campalped alone before the commission or
City Cou.ncll, many yean before tree-hu1gin1 became ln
vogue
SHE WHEEDLED. She coaxed. She pound~ podiums
when oeceslU')' in a lime when Developmel?t was King.
More often than not, sbe got her way.
Tear QUt one tree, she'd say, okay. Theo replant two.
To beck with asphalt dividers. Put ln a low-maintenance
type of greenery. •
Sure, she knew that behliit1ier-bsck they called her
"Big Trees Pease." But she kept plugging away.
And much of the green. and oth~r colon too, that
citizens enjoy iri' Newj>Ort BeacfJ today can be attributed to
her efforts. . .• ,.,...
Some of the rabid-tree-buggers who prnau· along our
coastline today could take some lessons ~m.habel Pease,
' Brown Says C.arter
'Sort ,of_ Strange'
N E W Y O R K < A P > -those a.re big questions."
California Gov. Edmund G. · -He-·criUcized Carter's efforts
Brown Jr. saying he is COD· at reorganizing the federal
templating' a run for the pref· bureaucracy instead or "provid·
idency, baa openly attacked iog leadership and direction:•
President Carter'a 1eadenhlp u •'Reorganization isn't an is·
"snulll-minded. sue," Brown said. "Efficiency
"I didn't think Carter was pres· isn't important."
idential material," Brown told AJked if be could do better,
"reporters Wednesday, recalling Brown replied: ••That I have no
the 1976 campaign. doubt about."
He said nothing bas changed But be quickly added, "Well,
)lis mind sloce. maybe some doubt. Describing Carter as "too or-.. bl. I 'd .._.._ derly" and "amall-miDded" and l have no dou "'""~r "sort ot ttrange " Brown aald know what should be done.
the president is• overl)'I preoc· Whether t could get it done I'm
cupied with "small things,." like less sure.
White "House tennis court Brown also met bere Wed.Des· reservations. day wltb NAACP Executive
"Tennis reservationa are Director Benjamin Hooks and
small. questions," Brown uid. Vernoa JOnbm. dtnctor of the
"All these bombs around -Natlonal Urban League.
T H E A YA T 0 L LAB'S
motorcade took four houn to
make the 100-mlle trip from
Tebrin. It moved slowly throuab
the banner-festooned streets
following a single line of plastic
flowers in the center of the
roadway to the stui.oe of Hun
Mas~b. siaer of a Shiite re-
ligious leader who died 1.300
years ago.
Turbaned Moslem priests and
many of the 10,000 students at
local theology schools. led the
crowds ln a constant thunderous
refrain of "Allah Akbbar!" -
"God is Great!"
Khomeini announced he had
ordered the property of "the hat-
ed Pahlavi dynasty and the peo-
ple attached to them to be COD·
fiscated for the benefit of bouS-ing the poor." .. ·
He said the wealth of the
shah's family "is enough to de-
velop the whole. country. We will
take action, we do not talk." He
promised free water, electricity
and bus service.
Earlier. officials of the revolu· I
tionary government said the
shah and his family toot $21
billion with them when they fled
the country Jan. 16.
Priest Sent
T :!w'!::!f.!~":!.P> -A
Roman Catholic priest was sent
to a mental i.mtitution Wednea-. day IU'ter police charged he was
the "Gentleman Bandit" who
had stolen $1,185 in eight armed
holdups.
'The Rev. Bernard T. Pagano,
53, an &¥istant pastor at St.
Mary's Refuge o( Sinners in
Cambridge, Md., was arrested
at bl.a home in Middl~town Tues-
day night. He was arraigned
here Wednnday on seven
charges of armed robbery and
one count of attempted robbery.
New Castle Magistrate John
Wilding committed Pagano to
Delaware State Hospital here·
for psychiatric observation until
a ball hearing on Satu.rday. -
WASHJNOTON (AP) -At., IOv..nJDeDt in·
cileator ol tucun 9CODOmlc trendl Plunied by the
a.bar'pS 1DU'l1D lD four yean in JUIUaJ'1, pl'OVldlnc
a •troaa lien ol an economic alowdown, It wu d.11· clOMd todaJ. . '· . .
A lteep deellne In bulld1nc ~ta and the avera,. work w~k caused the x of leadlnc
economic lndlcatora to drop 1. percent ln January, the Commerce Department Nld.
Tbe dropoff followed deell.Del of OA percent in'
November and 0.1 percent ln December. .
lo aummer of l.t7'1, however. the 1lndu al.lo
decUned for three conaecut.lve moat.bl but the
economy kept on 1oln1.
This time the 1overnment wanta economic
growth to •low somewhat u it tries to dampen ln·
1t'lao, Me?
OaUoaary ~.It wu DOtdear trem tbelat.t
report whether tbe naUon faeH aa orderly <1M>w~ or a reHNlon. u aa~ bJ aome
private ecooom.lata.
Belidea bWld1Da pennJU and tbe won week.
there were abarp deCUDee in tbe IDODe1 1U9'b.
wblcb ll con1id.ered bad for ecoDOIDle srowtb but
an encouraatnl 1tp 1D n~r· . Five a( the lDdlcaton iDcreued, in·
cludiq stock price-, faet.ory • plaDt &Del
equipment 1pend1D1, veDdor clellverl" and •
smaller layoff rate. Tbe Jaaual'1 decllne was the
bicgest slnce a 3 percent drop lD January tm.
The fiprea are adjusted for Huonal nria·
Uona. The lndex bu dediDed in five ot·the Jut six
moot.blot January.
Oil Fin11s
Buy Rights
In Atlantic
NEW YORK <AP> _:Oil com-•
panies went bargain bunting
Wednesday, buying rights to 44
more drilling sites in the
Baltimore Canyon off New
Jersey for a total of $.§1.7
million, 1l fraction of. what they
paid ln the area's fint le~ saJe
21,A, years aao.
, It took Just 20 minutes for gov.
ernment officials to open the sealed bids ln Madison Square
Garden's Felt Forum. The
crowd of several hundred oil
company officials was quiet as
the bicll were read. ln marked
contrast to the circus-like at·
mospbere that accompanied the
first lease sale in August 1176.
The bids were lower tbll time
because the tracts pun::b&Md ln
1976 have not measured up to
their prom.lse.
THE BALTIMORE Canyon
area of the Atlantic has been
estimated to contain J.3.5 trlWoo
cubic feet of natural gas ~
about 8 months worth of U.S.
supply at present consumption
levels -and a lesser amount of
crude oil.
Woscar, a wombat at the Oosmo Zoo in St. Paul.
. Minn., wears a look of innocence after biting City
Councilman Victor Tedesco in the arm during
ground-breaking ceremonies Wednesday for a. ren·
ovation project. After all, does Woscar look like a
fierce creature who would bite the hand that feeds
The lack of success so far in
the area has led many oU com-
J)all y • elploratton· officials· to
worry that the gas may be too
expensive to locate and extract.
The 87 tracts leased in 1976
brought a total of $1.1 billion.
hi ., m .
FREE Travel
Planning Help
For You ...
.. . '
The companies cildn"t bother
bidding on SS of tbe tracts
available Wednesday. Most of
those bought were located near
the edge of the continental abell.
Registry Hotel, Irvine
5-9p.m. ~nesday,April4
. . .
•
"' CAl!IFORNIA
. ""
'
( .
..
Thunday, March t. 1979 DAILY PILOT A lJ'
.Jupiter Bemilders NAS4
PA ADENA (AP) -Excited
•clenlilll are Jun.kine thear once·
Udy lheorl about Jupller as
Voy11er l 'IJ television cameras
reveal a d.anhngly complex
world of restless and colorful
<'louds.
"For the most part,"
Univenlly or Ar1~na scientist
Brad~ord Smith said Wednes·
day. 'the exlstinl( atmospheric
d rruh1t1on models have all
bc-t-o ~hot to h ell by
Voyager. . .Bewildered 1s
.
probably the best way to
describe the way we reel righ~
now "
TUE NEW PICl'URE or the
Jovian-ttmoapbere, once
-thought to have "a nice, uniform
flow." shows roUtn& and churn·
ing motions that the old theories
cannot explain, Smith s.Ud al a
news conferebce.
Smith beads the imaging leam
for the $500 million National
Aen>nal.liics a nd Space Ad ·
ministration mission.
.
He oaid the pictures,
tranarnitled across more than
400 million m.iles of space, will
be studied ror months 88 sc1en·
tiata try to undentaod the new
findings.
THE UN MANNED
spacecraft.. after a journey or 18
mooth.8, is some 3 million mUes
from Jupiter a nd closing
rapidly.
lts cameras already reveal
richer detail than scientists bad
\ seen aod NASA says the pictures
should be 10 Umea better *" Voyager 1 sails put tbe ip·
tic planet early Monday. ~._,_
The ship Is to swing w~
i73.000 miles or Jupiter bllore
flying on to rendezvous ~1th
Saturn a nd its ring s 10
November 1980. '
VOYAGER 2, fQur mt>nths
behind its sister s h ip. is
-scheduled to ny past Jupiter in
July aod reach Saturn in 1981
Student's Jobless J.>ay Upheld
DfJd Greets Family
Paul Jones hugged one of his eight children as ·' the~
w~re reunited Wednesday at Los AnJi?eles International Airport. They had been separated for four years after
.. !ones left Vietnam.: Flights from Saigon were cut off
JUSt before the family was to leave. His wile, recovering
from appendicitis, remained in Saigon but plans to move to California. ·
· SAN FRANCISCO (APl -The
California Supre·me Court bas
ruled that a student 1s eligible
for up.,mploymeot benefits.i..even
tbougH school work curtaus the
student's availability for
e mployment.
The 6·1 decision Wednesday
upheld a Lqs Angeles County
Superior Court decision involv·
ing Enid Ballantyne, who
restricted her employment to
part-time and Intermittent work
at a department store because
she was carin( for her three
small children.
She held various jobs but lost her last job through no fault of
her own in March 1975 and
began receiving unemployment
benefits. according to court
documents. In September 1975
she entered law school at UCLA.
Chav~z Targets Arizona
. . ---r.---c:--~--'---lJy 'fR ~18&ea'rreS -'touety 0-;;--~~l;U~ Sr--:""Dd!NT --JU~ en 1 v ;;-~u"fi'"'~~
With the wi nter lettuce Relations Board requests for in-representatives to go into two
season nearly over in the Im· j unctions limiting UFW picket· major growers' fields to talk to
perial Valley, United Farm ing at two struck farms and strike-breaking workers.
Workers leader Cesar Chavez is placing rest~aints on use or The preliminary injunction, is-
seeking support for the six-guards and firearms at one or s ued by Monterey County
,· week-old lettuce strike in other the two farms. Superior Court Judge Richard ~areas, includiog his Arizona THE UFW WON a major. Silver, was expected to be ap.
birthplace. a lthough limited. vic~ory pealed by tbe two grow~rs,
Meanwhile, two court bear· Wednesday when a Sahnas California Co88ta1 Farms and
ings were scbe<TuJed in El Centro j udge signed a temporary in· Sun.-Harvest Inc.
•
B«tlng t'ote Nlzed'
SACRAMENTO CAP > -An in·
itiative to legalize orr-trac:k bet·
ting-and Nevada.style gambling
has failed to make the California
ballot for the 10th time in five
years, says the secretary of
state's office.
The office reported Wednes·
day that the proposed conslitu·
tional amendment by Robert
Wilson or Sherman Oaks failed
lo get the 553,790 signatures
needed by Feb . .t6 to qualify for
the June 1980 ballot.
•-·~ Oauted Again NATIONAL CITY <APl -The
City Council has asked City Manager Harry Gill for his res·
ignation after voting to replace
him with his assistant, Tom
McCabe.
Gill. who left Tustin under
s imilar circumstances four
years ago, said Wednesday he
has no immediate plans: He was
manager or Tustin for 10 years.
and manager in Lawndale
before that.
BotA Clt~t Tntille•
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)
Banko{ America President A.W.
Clausen spent almost an hour
Wednesday testifying before a
federal grand jury investigating
the resignation la~t August of
the bank's vice chairman or the
board.
The investigation concerns the
·utilities
lnse State
... . . "' ... -... .. . . .. ... -. . . .. -:
.Ruling
SAN FRANCISCO
'<AP) -The California
Supreme Court, in ·a
b low t6 the state's
utilities. has ruled that
the state Public Utilities
: Commission correctly
: reduced the allowable
profits of Southern
California Gas Co.
I I
The court upheld two
PUC orders Wednesday.
THEY LOWERED the
authorized rate or return
for the gas company
'from 8.5 percent to 8.25
per cenUn a dispute over
bow the utility account·
ed for savings resulting
from federal income tax
credits.
The complicated rul·
ing stems from a gas
utility application for an
$80.2 million annual rate
increase to orrset the
higher cost of natural gas. . · I It involves accounting
J practices used by l utilities to save part or l their income taxes when
they invest in new I plant.a.
THE 5-% decision writ· I ten by Chie r Justice
Rose Bird endorsed
the PUC's treatQlerft of
tax savings from invest-
ment tu ci:edits and ac·
celerated depreciation
in setting rates of
utlllties.
It aJ.ao declared the
PUC correctly ruled
that the gas company
would remain eligible for I federal tax credit uoder
, it.aorders.
f
! Owner Fined ! LOS ANGELES (AP> I -The pres1dent of a Los
2 Aneelea te x tile
reproceaal.al company,
wblcb wu bit by two
major are. lut year ,
bas been ftnecl $13, 780 ~~cf°~
state nre Code. a.raid
ltauap. Pl •ldeat ol G
6 IC lhmll ........... Iae., •u put OD • rnontb•
probadoD.
Anthon'!·)
SHOE SEll'VICE I ..
for Handbags
LugCJage & Zipper Repair
............ c-ht-for
SPIRY'· TOPSIDER
0-'t ttrow flWfll'I yow
,CMWfort ... old ..... shoes
We repair· CIRd,.... .............
SPECIAL ORDER
'MAMMOUTH .
CHEDDAR
A&ED 60DAYS
LI :1tec1 A•llala.., $ 35!
ff iclceJJ f•rmsr ,.
Wfftdlff · Fashion
Plaza 111...t
111aa~....., "6;-::;*
....... -
Add To Yow S~opplag
......... by Vhltlltg Ow
SEAFOOD & SERVICE
DRI
WEHAVEUVE
MAINE LOISTER!
MARKET BASKET
WESTCUFF~
17tla. tr¥tH
Contact Lenses Eyewear Styling
Refracting
Prescribing
Dr. Lou Rou Elder
OPTOMETRISi:-~
642-0720
1124 Irvine Ave.
Newport Beach
,•
------.......,---·.-, oPEN THURSDAY NITES TIL 9
( STATE )
resignation of Alvin Rice, re-
ported to be tbe heir apparent to
Clausen's job at the world's
largest bank.
~ldUer Bunted
WHITIJER <AP > /\ SS.000
reward is being offered for in·
formation leading to the arrest
and conviction or a bandit who
shot an all-night stor~ clerk ·w
death early Wednesday, st.ore of-
fi cials said.
Southland Corp. of Dallas.
Tex., which operates the • 1 ·
Eleven st.ore chain, posted the
reward following the shooting
death of Albert Lewis Owens, 26.
al the 7-Eleven store on Whittier
Boulevard.
E~angelist Faces
Sex-Withrmirwr Rap
EL CAJON (A P > -Television evangelist Dennis Goodell has
been arrested for investigation of sex charges Involving a 17-year·
old female member or his church, police said.
The 34-year-0ld Goodell is pastor of the Ev angel Center in El Ca·
jon.
l'f HAS ABOUT 700 parishioners and features faith healmg
services videotaped each Sunday for broadcast on cable television
in Southern California. Gooden was a rrested Tuesday for investigation or sex acts \n ·
volving a minor girl he was counseling, police said.
Goodell was released from county jail on his own .recognizance
tale Wednesday, according to Sheriff's Deputy Ralph C-OOdrich.
Arraignment wa~ scheduled today in El Cajon Municipal
Court. / The girl told her rather of the alleged incidents, which purported·
lyoccurredfrom summer 1978through lastJanuary,andGoodell wa..'\
arrested shortly after they went to police, according to Police Lt. Bob Standring. ~ -
CCJNCEi>T
CJNE'"
POWERDRll'E
SQU118
Thrift Pack
100'1 .. 30
Fm
1HERAGRAH
5.49
~;u.u Place To Sliopl
1· DAYS A WEEK
~ .._._IOIO lnW. Wtdclff ~
,
orangoCoaSI oa1 1v P1101 Editorial Page ........................................................ _ .l8 N
Thuf'9day, MltOh 1. 1919
Robert N. Weed/Publlsnar Thomas Kee~/EdltOt
Btrt>Ma KrelblCh/Edltorlel Page Editor
Traffic Phasing
Not the Solution
City C'ounciltn n Don Melnnis apUy described the
Nt'" port Rcorh c ralrlc phasing ordlnance Monday nJ1eht
wtwn he ~uld, "It 's a bad law " He had evcrw valid
obJtttions to the Jaw and the neweNt odmmh1trstlve prot~trodun-thut 's suppo ed to make it work.
It's QUl•shonablo wh~thc.-r that law is goins to wurk ln
nny way t'xccpt to hall most building
ll upplh.•-. to nil bu1l1.hnn proJtt<·ts or more.· th~n 10
• t'l'.>&dcntlul umt,s or more thun .. 10.000 ~quart' fet·t or
,andustrtol ot 1.·o mmcrc1al spuce
The builder ot lnr~e project has Uf show tbal tt
won't add to the city 's trafftc congestton If it does the
lit>vdopc.•r mu~t make road improvements that wlll
oHM•t th~ trnrtar his pruJl'Ct adds. Jn some cMSes.
n>ud improvement" q 1n he demanded to correct
l'Onge t1on thnt wns already tht·r~
to:vcn the developer ~h o a ccepts the traffic
n •st r~l't1ons und stands rendy to fmance improvements
hJMl ,t bt·~un to cross the last bridge.
1 hut ~ because the l'Ounc1~ ma1or1ty Mayor Paul
Ryckorr. Mayor Pro Tern Ray Wil1iams, Paul HummeJ
and Don Str.auss have perfected a game of Change the Hules.
The late.st switch m procedures has been a review of
the ,city's c1rculut1on e lement, in plainer language the
t1ly s roadway masterplan. By squeezing down tbe size of
t ht• road sysicm .. the couhci~ ap~ars to be blocking off
any hope of meeting the traffic criter ia.
Clea.rly, the .goal of the council majority is a building
moratonum whic h they haven't the stomach to enact
openly. Such action might expose them to the wratn of ~oters. Even if unopposed, a moratorium has a limited
hfe span of two years .
N~wpo~t ·~ t~xpaye~s ought to be enraged. The
council maJonty is exposing the whole city to legal action
that. could prove costly. This law of theirs is additionally
costmg the taxpayers in city staff time consumed in
either writing or trying to clarify the handiwork of the
non -e lected counc·il members in LEAF (Legal
Environme ntal Analys is Fund) a nd SPON CStop Polluting
Our Newport) whb h ave written the measure.
As Mcinnis observed, it's a bad law that isn't going to
get ~etter until it's scrapped. There are ways to go about sol ~mg Ne.~rt·s tr~ffl<: problems. The traffic phasing
ordinance m its mult1tudmous forms isn't the solution -
nor even the start of one.
l\farin~ Qllest io ns
Harbor area boat owners shouldn't start asking when
reservations will be accepted for slips at a new marina
proposed for the mouth of the Santa Ana River .
' Costa Mes a's push for a 3,000-boat faciHty on its side
o~ t~e ri_':'e~ sqll ~as a.lqr:ig }Yay t.o 20. .. • ·. .. .
But 1t 1s time for marina supporters (and opponents)
to prepare to give their views on the p~ject to the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers. That's the ency that must
alter its present fl ood control channel pla s if the marina is
lo ever become a reality.
· Mayors Ron Pattinso~ of Huntington Beach and a11l
Ryckoff or Newp-0rt Beach have lent support t Uie·
m anna which would soly~ a shortage of boat. cKin g ·
facilities m the area. 1 '· •
Ryckoff did air some concern over traffic i ·acts
from the marina. '
And a county biological consultant is worried t at a
marina will have a negative impact on least terns, n en-
dangered species of sea bird that makes its horn near
lhe river mouth.
Obviously, questions of this kind will come up as the
m arina plan moves along before the Army Corps. The
lime lo ask them is now.
School Closure Options
Newport-Mesa school trustees continue to face some
tough decisions as a r esult of three factors: Proposition
13, declining enrollme nts and recent court decisions that
siphon off funds to poorer districtS'.
The trustees didn't seek their offices because they en-
joy laying off teachers and closiniz schools. Their own
kids are, or were. s tudents in the districl.
And they don't look forward to cutting costs by re-
turning sixth graders to ele mentary s chools, where the
students will have less opportunity for specialized study.
But these are some of the options they had to con-
sider at a special m eeting last week at which they beard
discouraging enrollment projections through 1982·83.
It is to the c r edit of the trustees and the school dis-
trict staff members that they took great care to ex.amine
many aspects of the situation, trying to keep uppermost
their conce rn for the quality of education in juggling op-
tions and restraints.
While no one is likely' to be completely happy with
whatever course of action is chosen, parents can take
some comfort from the fact that the elected officials guid-
ing their children's education really do seem to care. • 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 I\ invited. Addreta The Oally Piiot. P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321.
Boy d/Beds
ByL. M .. BOYD
Benjamin~ Franklln used
two beds, . getting up tn the
middle of lbe night •to move
from one to the other ... his re-
POrted theory belnl lhat his
Dear
.Gloom y
Gus
l:veJle Yoanpnll 1uln1
u ta~,.... for ••JOOO a year more to Ada to
.... to. ...... Tbla can be tummed up la.
oae wmd -ORICBD,
a&cm1 ,.Stb a total d11·
n1ard fort.be aver.,. tu,..,..
• E.P.B.
'{, ,. f
body would become over-
heated unless be moved to
cooler quarters. England's
Prime Minis ter Disraeli
dldn 't settle for two. He had
fqur beds. He put out the same story Franklin did.
Neither were a match for
Klna LGuil XIV ot France. thoup. The king made use of
412 beds. He altertaaled by
wlllm. All these men 'a beds
'fiere j n different rooms,
pl,aae note. Queation i1
whether they really believed·
that body-beat notion or Just
wanted te create a 1ltuaUon
wberem n0bod1 could be
1ure e,udlJ where UM)' we~
slHpins oa any If ven nJghl
Tbe eledroalca boys are
worklq oa a d1&1tal bffper r:.~er tit.al wm cllaplay tM
lepboae number to be called. Pretty many.
Bear ln mtod, people wbo 1 are tota11J deal doa 'l nl
Ha&lc:ll,, aeeordlA1 to iM
medleo1.
,..
NieJlOlas Von Hoffman I
Oil Could · Cost-Carter His, Joh
Altbouch only four prealdenta
1n the lut l.20 years have boon
defeatfd runn~ ror a second
term t an event. aU1htly les8
ru" than a cotnet plunklt•IC
clown oo the Lincoln Memorl1tl
Jimmy Carter's re-election
<'hancea have been a dJacuaslon
topic here almost since the hour
tbat lhl1 poor. plodding, pre·
aldenUal person was sworn lnt.o
office
M ulllng over remote cont
ineencaes ts how we wrttcrs
make a liv-
ing, so thut
s uch chatter
o ught to be.. .
e njoyed for
whatever en·
tertalnment
value it may
have and ig-
nored.
But oow for
the first time
Jimmy may be coming up
against something that can cost
him his job: oil. Not the revolu-
tion in Iran. Practical-minded
peoi>le will untierstand that a
'; different course of action by the
American president in that
country would not have yielded
a different result.
. , THE MOST you can say is
that if Carter had distanced
himself somewhat more rapidJy
from the Shah, the new people
might have been more friendJ y
and might, ~bufOnry might, be
more willing to resume oil pro-
duction.
But the judgment rendered on
the way scarce oil and gas sup-
plies a.re allocated will be bruis-
iogly concrete. J immy won 't be
held account.able for what hap·
pens thousands of miles a way in
I ran but if the lines at lbe gas
pumps gel maddeningly long, if
there are blackmarket scandals,
if rationing comes a nd it 's
botched, if there are rumors of
corruption in the allocations, or
/avoritism, if the distribution or
Mailbox
IH and-or home heattng oil lsn't ~) paratus for taking c!are or
1enerally ro1arded a" talr and emergencies such as um was
efficient, old Tall Tooth wUI be supposed to have been set up
'" Hrlou.e lroubln. with the passage or Carter's
In no ulher ur~a of aovem· · · c o m pre h e n s i v e en e rg y rnc•r1t .,ctlvlly will J immy get package."
thti blnmc pcrM>n•lly and direct· In fact what was passed by
ly lh•• WA)' he• wlll on this on~. Congress and mistakenly staned
l'coJ>le will '"me mber, and If by Carter wasn't comprehensive
they don't. tbe oppoaltlon Is $Ure and wasn't a package, but a
to ramlnd them tha t the ap-mishmash that bas been of oo
help in reducing energy usaee or
.making our use of it aigniflcant-
ly more etricient. Nevertheless
Carter said the mishmash was
his mishmash , j ust the rlgtit
mishmash to get the job done. At
the White House they called the
passage or the energy package a
victory for the Georgia plodder.
AN0111ER victory for Carter
was the creation of the Depart-
ment of Energy. Around town.
howe ver, the Department of
Energy already has a reputation
for being outstandingly ineffi -
cient, a title to which there are
many claimants. not a few of
whom are aged and encrusted
agencies like the Interstate
Commerf"P Commission, an out-
fit which has had 95 years to
reach its s>e9 ofineffectua:t;feck-
less initclion. And here comes
Jimmy Carter's new Department
of Energy, not yet two years old
a nd already a challenger
Regular telephone callers to
DOE count it a good day when
somebody picks up a receiver to
tell the inquirer that no, he can't
talk to the person in charge of
this-or-that because the position
hasn 't been filled y~t or if It has
been filled the person isn't really \
in charge of lhis·or·that and no,
I'm sorry we wouldn"t know who
IS.
While they let their phones
ring they worry about getting
their offices decorated a nd ob-
servers who have to watch this
charade ~onder how these peo-
ple are ever going to hand.le a
national gas rationing program
if it comes to that.
A GAS shortage is only slightly
less ae rious t h a n a food
~ortage. It hits everyone and
everyone will want to hit back.
They'll want to hit back yet
harder when it dawns on them
how little has been done to pre-
pare the country for a nasty
bump like this one.
mmunists Reap Harvest .o f. P.~s e~~i,Q:Q
••••••••• •• •••••• ••1 •t••••••111t f• .. 1•I It ........... •• ••••• .... •••'i.•<>• ' I
T o ttie'Effilor: mon sense and common legal We cootinue our efforts only
The Com munist government practice makes nonsense of thls because Mr. England would
or Cambodia felt it must punish. criticism. First, all the informa-want this.
a lot .or citizens. How do you tlon from which the AFT Mr. Eng.land's suS'pensaon has
punish someone when they have analysis draws conclusions is also destroyed the uruty wtMch·
no freedom? You kill them, of owned by the Coast Community has always been a part or our or·
course. College District. They have only ganization, For the first time the
The Communist Vietnam, to look at their own information frustration of some students has
backed by Russia. decided that to defend themselves. Secondly, round its outlet in lack or
they should punish the Cambo-it · is the distrfct adminislrati6n cooperation and attendan<'e
dian Communists, so they killed that is being questioned. It simp-Others have simply lost faith an
them. • · ly does not make sense to give a school system whlch shows no
China decided that the Viet-the evidence to the accused and concern for our problems.
nam government s hould .be allow that body to investigate The media bas reported that
punished, so they are k'illing the itself. Mr. England was offe red a
Viets. A full public hearing is the on-transfer lo another school.
No w Russia says that China ly way to clarify whether the Doesn't this show that Mr.
must be punished. I wonder who district is indeed grossly mis-England is fit for teaching and
will punish Russia. l spending public educational tax therefore the problem lies
It seems the old adage pr money. A grand jury investiga. elsewhere?
valls: What you sow, that sba lion, in fact, should be called for Those res p o n s i b I e ad.
you reap. by the district itself if these ministrators who place the stu-
The Communists have been most serious questions are not dents' needs as their top priority
sowing war.and dissension for a justified. The district, in fact, will return Mr. England to the
long time. They should have a and tbe Pilot itself should call classroom immediately.
good crop to reap. for this investigation. CLAJRE FLETCHER
JAMES BOLDING We challenge the district to President
•dflet Q11atleited
To tbe Editor:
Your editorial entitled "Ques-
tionable Tactics" CFeb. 15)
totally ignores the real issue.
The Coast Community College
District is reporting nearly SJ
million as educational costs
when tn reality that money is be-
ing uled for other purposes. The
Am e rican Fede ration of
Teachers, Lckal 1911, is attempt-
ing to bring to the public's atten-
tion tb1a serious misuse of tax
'money.
This illegal use of nearly SJ
million is only a small part or a
larger issue. The AFT-sponsoced
budget analysis bas exposed
other scandalous misuses of
educational funds by1 the dis·
trlct. KOCE TV, for instance.
baa from its inception in 1972
c~al the taxpayers over $20 milU0n. In figures more easily
understood, this means that for
every Sl,000 spent over the last
seven years, the district has re-
ceived an approximate $78 re-
turn. And KOCE TV will con-
tinue broadcasting this summer,
wblle summer school is
scheduled to be cut to pe
quarter of Its usual size.
COASTLINE College is touted
by the district public relations
otfice aa the moet coat ellectlve
COIJlmunity colle1• ln the state.
Our budl.t analyat1 prov• It to
be preelaely tbe opposJte. ft
services a mlntmal number of
studnu compared to the two
campus cou ..... GWC and OOC, at ftft tlm• tbe coat per stu·
dent.
These are ju.t a few of the surtUDc cooclutiou -drawn by
our aaal11t. Dr. Jobn Cac·
cavale, h'om data supplied by
I.be &trict ltaelf.
Your edltodal mall• ma ti,
.... fed tbM ....... -flllr dlleloled tM npart • ..161 ClllD•
disprove the conclusions of the Newport Harbor Sailor Band
AFT budget analysis lP a public
hearing. And we chaftenge the
Pilot to publish the results.
MICHAEL FINNEGAN
Instructor of English. OCC
KRISTINE KIRVEN
President
Newport Harbor Orchestra
Vice-President, AFT. Local 1911 Ce-di llet~t• t'etr
SitNlerat r l'iete
To the Editor:
We are writing lo inform the
students of Newport Harbor
High School and the public of the
unfair disruption of the Newport
Harbor High School 's in-
strumental program.
At' most of you know, band
· director •Rtcbard England was
place d on Indefinite "ad-
ministrative leave.'' or sus-
pension from teaching, unW a
hearing of his charges could be
completed. This is unreasonable
because the charges against Mr.
England are of a noncriminal
oatur~.
The March 12 hearing report-
ed by lbe news media is only a
preliminary legal procedure for
setting a bearing date which ·ts
scheduled now as late aa July.
. Chang.Ing band directors ta dif.
ferent trom having a substitute
teacher with leaaon plan.a in
academic clauea. Our sub-
stitute has to adjust to pre-
established routines, involving
mu.slcal and cla11room pro·
cedure as well a.a rehearsal and
performance 1chedules. It .la an
unnecessary in~nvenlence to
the atudenta and the 1ubatitute.
....
To the Editor :
In your lead editorial of Feb.
22 you ask a question. "Who's
Running Newport Beach '!'~ 1 am
happy to anawer. It is not the
editol"' o f the Daily Pilot
although it appears from his
continuous objection to the way
our (not bis) city is being run,
that he abould be. The City or
Newport Beach is being run
properly by a' dedicated majority
of the City Council duly e lected by
the majority of the voters of
Newport Beach to do just what
they are doing.
When you criticize the City
Council you are in effect criticiz·
ing tbe majority of the elec-
torate. Certainly the majority
• should have their city run the
way lbey want it.
IN YOUS 5e_GC)nd magnificent
opus, YoU laud Costa Mesa for
their· forward-looking stance at
the same lime castigating
Newport Be;Jch for not doing
what Costa Mesa is now do~g.
Wlcla
Why not let Costa Mesa City
Council pursue its goals 1f in-
deed that is the way the citizens
want to.. no an<;i .. ltl N.e.wporL Beach dO what it wa nts to do?
Certainly different cities must
have varying needs, demands,
aim s and etc. Take Laguna
Beach for example They have
taken a very firm stance against
commercialism . overcrowding.
heavy traffi c a nd the whol e
ga m ut. Wh y not applaud
Newport Beach for emulating
Laguna.
You lose sight of the fact that
the present mess Newport
Beach is now stewing in was
created by previous city coun-
cils dominated by those who
would let developers run wild
wilh no thought for the citizens
nor the future.
Certainly 14 or 15 years ago il
was recognized by the 'Voters
that we were on the road to con-
fusion when they turned down
the opportunity of being further
co ngested by a Coastal
Freeway. It makes one wonder
what benefit the council mem-
bers received by and for giving
our serenity "away. It m akes me
wonder also why you continually
attack our present council ma-
jority when for the first time in a
.very, very long time we have a
group that is responsive to the
desires of the community and
selflessly give of themselves to
achieve that end.
ALAN L. BLUM
c .. ~. 1,,..rec11
To the Editor:
The members of the Board of
Education or the Newport-Mesa
Unified Schoool District say that
they will not be swayed by the
public's opinion in the case or
Richard A. England.
They must remember they are
serving only at the sufferance
of the people who elect them,
that they were voted into office
and can be removed by i:ecaJI
unless they honestly strive
diligently to do the public's bUsi-
nesa and are tmfficiently mature
to seek compTOmises of dlr·
terences which might othenvtse
stifle education.
How Ulla board can ignore the
hundreds·of responses from
reacbers, students, professional
people, parents ·and lay people
alike makes us wonder w~re
they are comlna from . Who are they serving?
CALM. FULLER
ELEANOR A. FULLER
• l.Aftir. from~ ore ~lcoN.
T/,.,..,,., to~ wtura to /ft ._. or etimbiat~ bbtl u ,...,..,
lAtNn of .IJO 100tdl or '"' soiU fw
gfon ,....,,""'*· AU lftt~• mlDI • ... ,.,,.,..,. ad ~ Gd-.... '*'.,,.."'°'be~ on
,....,, ., 19/fW:fnl "'°'°" " • pamd. IWfrr""" not,,.~.
l
.,,
•
• ;-MORE OPINION -.
...
-Snow R eveals Attitude~
WASHINGTON -How
futlnaUoa to obaer"e bow
1now. peat quanUtJ• ot it, can
evoke aaaer, rear. depreuioQ,
bumor\.eamaradute -even leadennap. or the lack Of lt.
Certatnly tbue bum11n
quaUtS.9 wer. amply eapJ"eUed
acrou much
of tbt re ·
public lhil
wlater, u ~
cord IDOW·
h 111 piled
up ln 1ome precloeta and
tbe deU.tbt of
the flnt atibt
Of SDOW 100D
turned lo struggle, strain and
even rancor.
In Chicago, the record snow
accumulation of 87.4 Inches
became a lively laaue in tbe
mayoralty primary. Defeated
Mayor Michael 8lland1c wiµ ac·
-euaed al bolch1ng the-snow re-
moval e>perat.ion 8Jld, with it,
garbaae collection.
The Lord can hardly fault
Bilaodio because Chicago was·
visited by s uch o utrageous
weather. Still, some souls
whisper that if M'ayor Daley
we~e alive, those blitzards never
would have happened -so
strong were bis connections.
IN WA8111NGTON, we bad the
worst snowfall in SO years last
week. People here generally
can't cope with soow. They run
from it as though it were fallout
from a nuclear bomb. A storm
that, say, Peoria or S~ Falls
would take in stride par~
Wuhinlton.
So when 19 inches fell in two
-days, bri.njiD&:tbe: accumUiilion
of the divine aubetaoce to two
feet, it caused most souls to act
aa though they were in Siberia.
The subways stopped running,
~e 400,000 federal ·and local
employees l.i;tened anxiously lo
snow reports, hopeful that
••Jiberal'leave policy" would be
~nnounced The mail was UD·
dell vend one day. Schoola were
cloted nearly au week. .
TBE SNOW be,.. w11 modnt
comp-.Nd to urban areu lo the
mldweat a nd elaewhete, )ut w~ 1urely wa1 In crtat.a.
The only citlieo in the Otatrfot of
• Columbla who denied It wu a
cri•ll wu llayc>r Marton Berry. Thouab 0 C. had already been
uuulted by, rain, aleet and
snow. mak.lna dr1v1A1 difficult,
the mayor lt tt town Feb. 16 for a
short holiday an Florida. On
'Feb. 18, tht' bllnard struck. The
mayor returned ln early after·
noon of Feb. 2IO alter traffic bad
come to a s tands lall , and
W ashlngton looked like M iDfk.
Berry yawned at the algbt. An
enterprisin1 reporter named
Malton Cotema'n j oined the
mayor in bia limouatne u be re·
aumed bis schedule Feb. 21.
Mayor Berry was quoted as say.
ing, "What's to 'lead? It'• not a
.crisll. That's why you've got .it
these staff people around."
THE MAYOR said it was
more important for him ta
wor';y. about the supplemental
budgel, and noted that II people
got as excited aboqt housing and
unemployment as they did snow,
"maybe we'd ge t something
done."
The snow would eventually to
away, he said, and gruffly sug.
gested that il people couldn't get
their cars out, they could take
buses, an!i if the buses wer~
stuck, tbeY: could walk. Dem's
disinterest in snow changed a
bit on a local TV program when
be grabbed an opportunity to
claim that anow removal here
was proof that bis admlnistra·
tion had improved tity services.
Most viewers weren't that sure.
Meanwhile, somflhing curious
was going on lo the
bureaucracy. The feds pro·
c laimed •.that ••essential ''
employees should make their
way to work. This caused an
identity crisis for s ome,
BOUGHT THIS DAZZLER IN THE 1930s
eapeclally Nnior souls who won·
dered lt after aJI thole years,
they meant anything to the 1ov·
ernment. One senior -woman
secretary atru11led on foot
lbrou&fl ab miles of snow and
Ice to get lo her desk at HUD
be(ause ahe tllougbt s he was wanted. . ' SOMEHOW, barte nders.·
malda. Janitors, fry.cooks and
newspaper people, Including
carrier boys, got· through when,
alaa, Cabinet secretaries Robert
· Bergland, Brock Adams and
Patricia Harris didn't. ;.Atl ,
however. reported working bard
at home.
Snow .wasn 't m uc h on the
tnayor 's mind.
Berry bad no problem meeting
with Di.strict Rep. Walter Faunt
leroy to diac:uss new strategy on
bow to persuade fres hwater
states to a_pprove D.C. becoming
a virtual state and acquiring two
votini U.S. senators. He met
with black newspaper editors,
spoke at How·ard University and
be amed at a Smithsonian
luncheon where. he depogited bis
1978 campaign materials for
posterity.
• BERRY ENJOYS nostalgia.
He recently welcomed H. Rap
Brown. one Ume advocate or
violent black rebellion, for a
"chat about old times and the
movemenL" .
O ur •mayor has time for
memorabilia and H. Rap Brown,
as well as substantive matters,•
but not for snow. But theo be
doesn't have lo answer to much
of the electorate as "Garbage
Strike" Lindsay d id in New
York, or "Pot Hole Pete Flaber·
ty" in Pittsburgh, or "79
Blizzard Bi·landic • • d id in
Ch le ago.
Though Berry won bis election ~asily, only I'& percent of eligible
D.C. citizens voted for him.
Maybe the other 86 percent ex·
peel leadership from tbe mayor
in a snow crisis, but be can bank
on only 14 percent or so voting.
BUT TODAY IT BUYS: .. GOLD!
Today It's chains and mae
chains! Wear charms Ofl' a
single chain or group them
on a cham holder for _.. etegstt statement ln gold.,
Now: complete ycx, 14 KT.
charms 'n' chain wadlobe
at ttw fabulous prices!
Aoattng Hats from IUD T~S..115.00
Fax Sta.GD Woad*M:k 111.GO
11 lt&.CIO
Scrtpt lnttlll 110.00
,..,.. fOOdtltloflflt .. ,.
• I J.'1 • Un.J
SALE STARTS
4KT. MARcH 1
CHARM I HOl.OEAS
S 13.88 10 S35 00
All ot elegant
styles 30% off
l'hUr9dlly, Men:h 1. 1m DAil Y PILOT-4 f
..
TAKEllF350/o
Plan ahead and save. Fly for 35% off our regular fare
whe n reservations are confirmed and tickets purchased 7
days in advance. Good on every flight with limited
number of seats. '
AskforourECONOMY FARE.
• llf ».550/o
. .
Families or frie nds (3 to 9 peoplEtl traveling together fly
for less. We'll take 200/o off our regular fare for adults and
55% off for children, when reservation$ are confirmed and
tickets purchased 7 days in advance. Good on e very flight
and at least one adult must be in group.
Ask for our VACATION FARE.
_llF .. 508/o
Childrenlly for half fare on every flight. They must be
from 2 to 11 years old and accompanied by an adult.
Ask for our CHILDREN'S FARE .
•
TAKE llf· 200/o
Buy a Sunjet Tour package and get 200~ off our r891:11ar
roundtrip fare. Reservations must be confirmed and tickets
purchased 7 days in advance. Good on every flight.
Ask for our SUNJET TOUR FARE .
TAKE llF 15o/o
Ski clubs church groups, sports teams. Any group of ten
ot more d:xn take off 15% when reservations ore confirmed
and ttcketS purchased 7 days in advance.
· Gocxi on evecy flight.
Ask for our GROUP FARE. ·
111 e CU011111
Call your TraVel Agent or Air California for reservations
and complete dtso:::>unt fare information. Afl fares on sale •
now for flights effective March 15, 1979.
T
..
I
..
,.
. • I •
t
,
QUEENIE
"And here's your afternoon wuther report, Scattered
t>howers ahead .. •
For the Record
LAS VEGAS -~'-lie-IS-CAS"·l':IOM -Frtnle J. Jr., 41. and
14*1 ~r-. l11<lvcltr Betty Jo. 5', tlolnot ~Buell. ~t. "" LEWTCIH-HARPER -R"9<1 LM, #OATIMOAE·POWLEV -J~ 41, of la~. anct Maf91;erlte
Oe 111en, 41, anct P9nny E .. lS. botll ot A lk e. "· Of HeW'POf1 h.cl.
Hu11111191on 8Mcfl. ....,_,, M, "" RUll·BAOWN -Jeson M•-1, It, Z ICCAROl·TAYLOR -.101111
and Oawne 0.Y. 11. botllot El T0<0. Je-. !It, Of IE"-YIUe. lftd .. afld OOL<";IH·SM l!IMA~ Hor"'a" SaMraR•.•.otEI Toro, Ak llard. ~. Of U19UM Bea<ll. eM ~ 11, tf1t
Glorl• ~. 44, Of LH v~s 81SHOP·PltlCI! -Jr, Albert. "·Of
Nn west ... IMW . and "'-I• E••• ... 11. TAAFFOAO.LEWIS -A"l-y P . Of ,..,,I~
.... and SNl"Ofl Alk e 36. boll\ Of FLA"EATY·CHAISTIAH -.lolln
lrtlM •Leo. 60, -Mary RkMrdM>ll, 60, TUBIOLA·llOYO -l'tlllllp JoM. botllOf Hufltlll9t0n ha<:tl. a . and P_.rlcla V-. lt. botll of BELCHER·SAMPSOH -AOMn E .•
1,..1,.. JJ. •"4 J-o·Arc. » t>o111 of
~ tt. "" C.OS1• Mesa. LOVEWELL·FISHEA o......, Aay n . Of Hurt1'"9tOI\ 8Nc1\ aNI Ol-
E 11..,, 111, 0f "'-etllla. Me
BURC'H·MALLOH .._ Tllo11.,.t 'nwJry
· E~ It. and OeN\a L """-i.. tlOCll Of Westmlnttir
LACY-8ATTERSON -Ak ...... L. U>urse •1 •net ~ ~lddoll. ». llotll Of
Wetlfnl""" • ILLIHGWORTK-LJXLAR -OoNld
Hlllofl. 30, -Joni '-"""· 2:1, botll of Slated MunllflQ1on lle«ll
W000!>-8AIZ G«y ,R11uelt lS.
•nd Debra OorrMft, 30 bot11 Of IEI
~0~ ""'"""·l<QCM _ w1111.,.. Oran&e Coast· College
Frederlo. 36. of {I Toro. •nd BlrQlt Wi ll be ~~::;~~ng A o . n. of 111Q!~ • "Memory " lee· LOM BAAD·OXl l!Y -Roberi
Mlle"•"· n . ef"C'.I suwn v1v1en. 11. ture aeries Saturday rc;~~~~u~~1~11"°"' e. ,., of mornings beginning
Cott• Me\41. ano Louis. F., 34. of March 10 from 9 a.m. to
:.:~~~RALSToH u,,.;· ()th\ .. ,, noon. -
and Juli• 0 • 10. boll! of S•ll The series will be
c1""'"'" taught by Art.bur Born·
MC C.LOTHLEH-LITTLEFIELD -stein,_ .... -will cover such Sieve P...i. n. ol Wlllttlff. encl Lori wuu
•""· 21.of 1rv1,.. topics u tedmiques for
....,_., ''·"" f -..--.r.-WAL TEAS.WOAl(MAN -~... aat ICloCUUVU, remem·
" . ». ano o...1se L.ou1se. J0.11e1t1 Of bertng names, faces and
E1 Toro facta. s1NcL•1R·PE•1tMA1N -Mk llMI Fee •or .... _ .....,,_ • ...an L •• 32.-PMf'ldeE!alM,27,boltlof I' YR: ...v..u~ .ua ~O~~llAILl!Y -ltoY H_,., be $50. ftelistJ'atioe wilJ
.,; fllld 01•11• LH 3•. "'" Of be CODdueted in the com· "~a.-munlty senice office ia J(\"I F .·REPPE -I...., H•rwY. "· the ad-; .. ;•tratioo bruild· '•"" S.lldf• M. AO. bol" Of F-Ulfft ............... ~~:~'EH-CURRAN -5'ott MICNel' l.ng 00 the occ campus
tt. 01 L-H~. ano J -Mary in Costa Ilea. from 8 n.CJ1M•n;.::;.,~.'im a.m. to 7-p.m. Monday
ooAHAU!>-STENDEA -""',.." "· t b rough Friday or '°· o1 e1 Mon ... ano Alk• v1r91nia. "Saturdays from 8 a.m. to •S. of HuntlllQlon Bea<ll DOOD ~U.lf7' • • e11s 1<1He..w.11ou1s-Tt11Y• .. 64 For additional an-
•nd Mar~le Ca<'ol, 41• bot11 f1f Saft f 0 f m at i 0 n p b 0 n e c1eme11.. ' . YATE!>-EOCElt~ -Oen!>ll RH. 556-5880 33, •nd Ro.emery, tt boll! of
N-pof'I 8Nc;l'I.
MELLO.SCHIL08EAG -Pietro.... Medicare Jt. •net Pamela Joa11, 24, botll of HUft
111191on BM<ll ·
DeatJa Netlces Talk Set
a111bOM·
OOllOTHY LOGAN HNSOH. m l· A discussion OD
..,, o1 '"-' 9Mcll, c.. Pas$flcl surance pro•rams to -•Y on F""-Y 17. Im. SU.VI"°" • t>v ""' d•111111er M••t•••t e. supplement Medicare ~r~~~="•~t!:'! payment.a will be bekl
OsW990. °"90ft. l .. ancklll*"'.,.. for San Clemente senior
• brOtfler JoM o l...ll9M °' ,...,.., cl"---~ ... -b 7 ()reeofl. "-•1 llHVKH Witt .. at ~ --'°' • eat0We11 ClD6oNat ,,_,_..,, ~. Vance Simonds of •
Or•OOfl. Pacltk v1ew Mortuwy "' fmandal advllory clinic
<twt,,.. o11«a1..-r.,.."*•t1. w1·11 tli II di u0ts ou ne e care c!!,.~r!: .::r.·~~~=.·=,:: tbesupplemeot programs at ,._,..,., n."" eo... _,,., 2A, ~ 10:30 a.m. teaioo at
Svrvlftd °' tilt wife Opel, 2 ..... the San Clemente Com· ::.:,':: =..:c:,.-:-K~ t:!, munity Center, fOO Calle
--~Iller I. M. .,.. of LAM Arrwwtlead Se•We. '
l lld M••P••I•. Ca •• •Ito , Tb· -•m ls open •n1"4Ctll'°'9ft. F-al te~ wlH "' r• -·, r ..... a1 12 -°" SatvNay, ~" to all lellior ctthens and
• "1' •1 P'a<1t1< view Mortwerv more information ia <:N"I wlttl Ml. Un"f HOUCllell Of. tktat'-"'"*''°'"'"'at Paclfk. vi.w available by ~I the ~cmerlal Park. Pa<lfl< View center at -3112 Ailortuary, ......,., 8M<tl d"9dcn •
McCODICI( MOllTVAlllS
Laguna Beech
494-9415
~'· San Jwln Cec>lstrano 4~1778
IALTZ•l•oie NmM.teoe.
848-2424
CoetaMela
873-M50 -·
fmnpU.es .
Talk.Due
·-.
.NATION I OBITUARIES I LOC~L
~axpftYer -'Notice Eyed Anniver~ary SOie ·
-ARCH A• 11:9-.ll,. • .. DA~S Chief ·to Adviae Beneficiary Benefits? 3. 7 I rorAL{:fN's ~'
• ANNIVERSARY ONLY I WA.sHJNGTON I.AP) The lion and welfare. Joseph A. Soc I a 1 Sec u r It y is not
Soelal Seewit.y Adraln1alraUon Calltano Jr... are planning a sacrosanct." ll 'looaa:in1 lnto the poaalbWty of aeries of town meetings around MOdlDI eYef'Y taa"payttr 1 ootlce the nation to canvass public
each year of h1I pro Jetted retire· opinion on Social Security's treat·
meat beneflta and wbat he would ment of women and other tssues.
draw ll he.became dltabled. Tbedatesand times have not been
Sodal S«urlty C<>mmlsaloner s~
• StanfQrd O . Rou uld the
DOtlcea would be patterned alter THE COMMISSIONER said
yearly report.a aent ~o policy be does not e xpect the ad·
holders by aome pr\ vale In· ministration's proposed $600
1urance-plana. million cuts in a few Social
a0fl8 MlD lN ID lntehiew
hla atatt ls worlllnc on the Idea,
and he lsn 't lure bow much it
would eo1t or ll it la reasible.
But Roa, who took otnce four
month• a10, said, "I really
would like every taxpayer ln the
country who'a a potential
beneficiary to underitand what
they're buying witb their tax
dollars. 1 'm a consumer ad-
vocate." .
Rosa also revealed that be and
the secretary or health, educa·
Security pfOgrams to be ap.
proved by Congress tbls year in
lime for the fiscal 1980 budget.
But be expreued confidence
. Congress will consider cuts next
year as part of a major Social
Security bill that also will ad-
dress the big payroll lax in-
creases scheduled for 1981.
Ross said that even if the
budget cut proposals did not
generate immedjate action, "it
was important that President
Carter was willing to say that
THE ADMINIST&ATION'8
goal ls to keep both the taxes
and benefit.a ln Urie, ·and to sub-
~ect Social Security to the same
'disclpllne" as an.y other govern·
. mentprovam,besaid.
The cut.a would involve less
than 1 percent of the $113 billion
In benefits Social Security will
pay to nearly 36 milJion
Americans next year. They
would include an end to lbe $255
lump suin death benefit, phasing
out dependents' ~nefits for col·
lege students and cutting ore a
widow's stipend ,when her
youngest child turns 16 lnsteacl
or 18.
Ross sharply criticized the
huge "Save Our Security" coali-
tion organized by former HEW
Secretary WU bur ·eohen, former
Commisaioner Robert M. Ball
and other leaders of labor, social
well are and retirees' groups.
COME CELEBRATE OUR I
OOMPllMENTl '3£ X!.,~R MM 3. MAit 7
SPECIAL SAVINGS> ~.. All IZOD Shirts 'I.ff
,.....-All IZOD Shorts '10.H
"fENNISWEAR ANBA. BOGNER.' ADOLFO
~~· DRESS SEPARATES by BOGNER, 50%
,_ · ANBA. ADOLFO and MORE OFF
WARM-UPS
.. t~~()11\\.'· $ELECTED SHOES 30% OFF ~~ SELECTED RACQUETS 30" OFF
: CHILDREN'S SEPARATES 50" OFF a• ~nzA• a nr•••••aaz race ··ca
n 488 e .111h st. n
TOTAL Costa Mesa, CA TOTAL · ~ (714) 646~0514 ~
2·FT VINYL FLOORll8 RUSTIC RED I'~·"· CTil
• w10TI. ms MOST 'IRIK' WALL TILE
ROOMS SEAMLESS!
• STUINllll DEll8111!
• CUSllOllUI
WESTMINSTER
11191 Be8Ch
..
\
AT YOUR SERVICE ~.March 1, 1919 DAILY PllOT
-
Fe.% Ottrn "''~ S•t~i. r.,,.
DJ:Aa agAot:a : IUtf'·tlyli.1 HHOD ••
alaotlt Mre, u4 &Mnt'• a "1c*• ·~ year
"'ffa.l.1 .~·· "**' *'t hu" "IH tu Mok. Safe. b ,.l.!f UPI • ma.kill• ktw.1 U. lacllldM la Ute book.le&. wit.tell la be .. • •IYea &o ,,.._,, .,.,...._. tM 8oll*'tte C\Ufon1la Ed190a senke
•~a. .
Tiie kt'y aaff'ly nle fffO••eaded by Edho. ,
11 llaal llJWa Qoeld not IMi O.wa mear eltthie r:•f'f IJDH, nor alilould .... ,., '"' rHrhYM If t'Hgltt
power Uaa. TM-r~ault may be aeven or fatal eledrte ~ll.
•:cUtM ud ·~ t 'ou" olftr Uaeae adcllttonal
waralq . DDn 't Oy klttoa In Ute rala or d•rla&
a&ormy weaUM-r. Don't Oy kJ'" wttlt metal ta &H
frame or taU aad ne,·u ue ~l. wire or twl9e
wt&ll ~ In H. Nf'\'er crou street.a or •t11tway1
wlllle nytq kJtea. AJao avoid nytaa ldtea ~ver TV,
CB or radio u&euaa or near elfftrtc power Uaes.
A1 ''Tiie Pou" would say. "If you ••DD• be
brl<t, U yoa ••-a be rtgb&, follow tbeH lllata
wltea you go Oy yoor kite!"
. DEAR PAT: Last" Dec. 8 1 ordered a deluxe
frutt cake from Collin Street Bakery in Corsicana
Texas. The cake never arrived. but my $6.95 check
has beeh cashed. I've written twice, and don't get
any answer. I'd still like to get the cake if you can manage lo contact them
, L.F.,CoronadelMar Tills firm's records show that your cake was
shipped, but slnte It looks like it was lost in the
mail, another Is being seat lo you. A spokesman
apologlzes for not answering your letters, and says
correapondence ls ruooJog beblad due lo a holiday mall backlog.
Pat Dunn Is A Regular
Feature of the Daily P1/ol
Soc Days a Week
Got problom? OuUllons can be directed to Pat
Dunn Al Your Service Orangtt Coast Daily Pilot.
P 0 Box 1560 Co~ta Moaa 92626
DEAR PAT I have a bet with my wife that
moi'_, women than men see paycb.latrlsts. I'm bas· 1na • my opinion on people I know. but she dis·
11re . Cam you find some authority on thts?
• K . E .• Huntington Beach
Yoe wla. A aaUoaal Atvey of olftce vtal&a &o
paycWatrllt. lltowed U.at vtstu ave ra1ed 8.5 for
every '" women co•pared &o 1,1 for I" men. Dr.
Doeald W. llammeraley, deputy director of tbe
Amrrl an Pocblatrk AsiOClaUon, says "It I•
do"bUuJ U.at women llne more mental disorden tlaaa mea." ¥e attributes role cbaaglnc stress eaperlenced
by some women betweea ages Z5 and 44 as one
re Hon for frequeat vblta to psycblatrista, alone wltb
men IMtvtag IHI acceaa lo psycbJatrista durlag tbe
day aDd ltudlea ahowtag that men &end lo sappresa
tHlr problem• more than women do. SWJ aaotlter
fac&or, be aays, "b tlaat mea / may be avold.illg
lllerapy becaue or so.me aeue Of 'depe~cy de·
alal' t.llat women may aot be so reluctut to aeltDOwledge.
fleit•r Rlfldll ii.re B~ad9
DEAR PAT: I'm tailing a college consumer
class and need some help finding information for a
project I'm planning lo do. I would like to locate
materials on previous research done about the
qyality or automobile repair service. I{ I could see
bow others have researched this subjeet. I'd be
able. to get a line on how to do my own. I've looked.
but can't locate any m aterial on this. Do you know
of any consumer studies of this topic?
J .G .. Irvine
· The Washington Center for the Study of
Consumer Services may have what you want. This
private, non·prortt consumer organization sur·
veyed consumers on tbe quality a nd costs of the
-..._caLrepair Ml'Vlcea ~Y received, looked at the
complaint reeords of the Better Business Bareaa
and the local conaumer offices, and aarveyed re-
pair fadllties on t.flelr equ.ipmeat and penonael.
Tiie survey resuJls and tbe center's reeommeada·
tloll1 bave been pabUalted in a book tlaat's avalla·
ble for $3. Wri&e to tlae eeater at 1518 K St. N.W.,
Salte 411, Wasblagtoa, D.C. ~
MA TOTO -Means "my little car" in
French says owner Dr.Jacques Poletti.
Commandment
llzde Opposed
CONCORD, N .H . <AP > -The New
Hampshire Civil Liberties Union says it opposes a
proposed state law that would require the posting
or the Ten Commandments in school rooms.
A bill introduced in the state Senate
stipulates that the Ten Commandments would be
posted for moral, not religious reasons.
Jon~lhan Meyer, president of the NHCLU,
said that using the commandments for a setular
purpose does not negate the issue or. church and
state
·•Court decisions in this area make it clear
that it's not what you call a thing, but what it is,"
Meyer said
~Fin~ Do tM S crapping
DEAR PAT: Would YoU find put for me if
there is a business In {his locality that buys scrap brass? '
J.H~. Costa Mesa
Yoa can take your pick from those listed under
"Scrap Metal " lo the Yellow Pages. Although this
Isn't an ad for Ma Bell, a n amazing number or
question.a directed lo this column can be answered
quJckly by a qu.lck reference lo tbe Yellow Pages
&elepboae dlttc!lory. Check the index If you can't
loca&e the •bJect Us&lag J or tbe gooda or service
yoawaa&.
-
Ask us about our
Epicure -& -Free·ze
Open Stoc~
Regular
Dinner Plate-1 O" ...................... 1.95
Salad Plate-7" ................ · ........ 1.35
r
So .. up Bowl-20 oz . . ........... : ....... 1.35
Cereal Bowl-12 oz ...................... 95
Stack Mug-1 O oz ........................ 99
Super
Sale .
1.49
.99
.99
·.69
.69 .
Epicure Colors: Poppy, White. lime. Lemon, Chocalate.
Don't forcJef to ask for the Super Sale Advertising
Specials .
STORE HOURS:
PLUS
Mon. thru Fri. 9-9
Sat. 9·6, S&a I 0-4
I •;~iw'iil
WHOLESALE NO PAYMENTS Till MAY
PlllCES
•••••••L
175-13 •... 1 ..... 46.ff
176-1' ........ r. 49.ff
185-14 •.•....... SJ.ff
195-14" •......... "·"
205-14 ......... "·"
215-14 ....•.....• "·"
206-15 •........ ''""
215-15 . • . • . . . . "·" 22&-15 •.•• .• . 71.ff
5 ....
155-12 ......••.. $J2.ff 145-13 •......... 2'.ff
155:13 •......... U .ff
'165-13 .......... 17.ff
175-13 .............. ff! 165-14 .......... 41.ff
175-14 .....•.. ,. 4J.ff
185-14 ...•....•. 46.ff
175-70-13 ••••.• 41.ff
185-70-13 ..• ·~ 46.ff f'LT. IAI
• OOMPUANcl WITH 8ECTtON Ml OF THE •1'Mrnf IN LINDWG ACT OF~. 1174, THI
l'OUOWING ITATllllNT MUST IE IN-
G -DIN oUR AD: "COIT°' CllllDIT •
;;;
D IN ,IUCI S QUOTID POlt
MG lllNCD' ••• HOWPl9. INCW.-IAU AllOWTILY
MO INTlltllT Oft OTHI" O"llRT E Wll.L> ..... 9Y,... C"6-
flOWGMIWNL Tlll•ANHONllT .........
WISTMIMSTll
111• IUCH ILYD.
...... ~•fth1P P'
tlJ
PAYMENTS
TlL MAY
USEYIUI
.._TAX
RERlll!
·~~-_ .......................... _. --...............
HJ.7146
During Carpet Town's Spectacular Annual Spring Sale... • EXAMPLE
• We will provide normal tnstallallon absolutely EREE when you
purthise carpet and paddlnt dunng this sale.
Amount ol;P\Jrchase S•OO
Qo.tln Payment al 111\"e al Onlet at ~ S 100
$300
A PA Rale & F1113nce Charges -O-f <>1a1 of Payments $300 • And ... during this special sale. on all orders-over $290 wllh 25°~
down al time ol order or lnstattatlon. and your goo.cl credit -ONE YEAR INTEREST FREE CREOtf. ••. SAME AS CASH •. I 2 OQUaf ~'('flents ol 525 eacfl
WITH NO PAYMENTS Till MAYI F ~i.I payment nol CIOO "" M.h.
LIMITED TIME ONLY!
.hlat • few of Ute catpeta In our ...... lnventery .... Nat-4 In ttda IHI ••• h leot
ffom hundred• of luxurlou• style• end terftptin1 ooaont )
AND ••• during thfa llmHIHI ••e, we wtn prevlde nOf'INll lna•l .. tJott 8baotutear
FRI• when '°"· pu rchll .. carpet end INtddlntll SorrY, thl• .,..ct.I offer doe• not ~ to remnant•, cto .. -oute, cleat'llftee Item• or (oem beok cerpet.
NYLONHl·LO
Long Marf(1g nyton plle,
Ideal for heavy traffic
....... ~from~
•net tofld. s499
ICI "°
. .
NYLON Hl-LOTWWID Hl·LO LOOP SAXONY PLUSH
Sol hiding, u cepttorwtly Contlnuoue fll•~•nt A ~ pNCtk:at, heet Mt
long wearing qualltlH nyton pile In•...,....._ nyton ptte peu.r, carpet In
!Mk• ttMs cefl)edng P9f> petttm. QtoOM hm ftw beeuttfUI muttMone cot-
::u~ .. :,~~$5aii ~--selM•ia oreU~ se!I!
IO fO 80.'IO
CUT&\.OOP
100% nylon hHt H t ,.,. ---tong .... ......... .,.'°""'. ChooH frent I Mufti·
~ sa11
CUT&l.OOP
t colotatloM In lo..ty ..... ..u..--.One _,.. IMt' ..... for""'
decor, mod9rn « tradl-
ttoMt. Ht99
...... IOYO.
SAMTAAMA
2t 11 SO. lllSTOL
I • _... ... ~ C.-,._ ... 11•; n•'"www• • ......,.., ...... ,.1..: ••.• ------1wnt-
..,,_ . ...... 'I
Tl\uredey, MlllOh 1, 1171 ORANGE COUNTY
.. / .
/ HarWood Gets
Trustee Post • N~rt Beach altoJ"My Den.n1J W. Harwood
baa been elected prmlden~ ol tbe Orao1e County Law Ubrary bo&nt ol t.ruatee.r
Harwood, wbo npreHata U.. Oran1e Cou.nty
Bar Aalocladon oa tb.• board. la a member of the
Jaw fln:n ol Harwood &aid Adtimoo. '
8£ llA8 ISaYED AS A Fountain Valley city
countllman and .. a local bar UIOclaUoo dl~· tor • •
ti~ ~ put &>l'f'tlMnl of the Newport Harbor
Area· Cbam~r of Commer~ and is on lbe board of
the Newport llarbor Boy's t,ub.
Other law board offk~n. ant Munlclpal Court
Judgt> Richard Parslow Jr . v'lce pre ldenl and
Superior Court Judie Willia m S ~. sec~ui-y
TM boa.rd of, trust~s -1so includes Superior
Court Judge Lloyd E Blanpled Jr., Municipal
Court Judge James Smith, Juvealle Court Pl'ald·
inl Jud&e WllUam L. l(urray aod Orange County
Superviaors Chairman Philip L. Anthony.
Plaque Recalls
Olinda Historjr
I
•A plaque naming the one-time Brea-area oil
town of Olinda as a state historical landmark bas
been dedicated in a ceremony by Orange County
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich.
Tbe plaque bas been installed in Carbon
la January
. Airport· Use ·
Increases
Oranae Cowit)' Airport, wbicb served oeacly
2.4 mllllon passengers dwinl um, was used by
181,W aniviQI and departJ.na travelers duri.na the first month of 1979.
Tbe January aJrport ngw-es sbowed 12 percent
more paqeqera either arrived at or depart from
the airport than during rainy January 1978, wben
BOAAO 'Pft!Si0£.;T storms curtailed some airport activity.
Oeftftf• Harwood
TRIOGET
POSFIJONS
Fred H Melalnger of
Lag una Be a c h aod
Alfred C Booney or
Laguna Hills have been
re-elected to the Orangl!
County Goodwill In ·
duatries Board of Direc-tors.
K e ith S wayne of
Laguna Beach was
elected to his first term
on the board. All three
terms expire in 1982.
THE STATISTICS ALSO reflect a 10.3 percent
increase in commerctat aircraft nights for
January 1979 over with the same period a year
t!arller.
Io all. 2~ commercial nights uHd Orange
County in January. up from 2.273 a year earlier.
Take-offs and landlogs by private aircraft also
showed an increase lo January, from 39,311 last
year to 42, 937 this year.
THE JANUARY nGURES. however, showed
a -drop in the tonage of air cargo handled at the
airport, from 228.9 tons in January 1978 to 199.8
torus this year.
Airport parking lots handled 24,836 autos in
January this year. up 2 percent from the 24.350
cars parked in January a year earlier, lbe figures indicated.
, Yj ®
MELANIX Monte-Carlo
FUNCTIONALLY ~GANT YACHT TABLEWARE
This unique tableware Is perfect for boadng. poolstde or
patio use. It is available In a variety of colon and
patterns. Dishwasher safe. Melania• res1s1s craddng,
retains heat. conveniently stacks to conserve space,
and is available In complete services.
•• I. EXC.USJVEL y ----ATROGERS
Canyon Regional Park, 17002 Carbon Canyon Road, .-----------------'----------,-----------------------------
Brea
01.JNDA WAS A SMALL town in 1897 wbe11
Edward L. Doheny struck oiJ with a well that
eventually produced 50 barrels a day.
By 1911 the town bad 142 wells from nine oil
c6mparues, county officials said. The community
also was the boyhood bome of baseball great Walter Johnson. ,
The Olinda oil field was the site of numerous
early oil industry improvements, officials said.
IT WAS THE FIRST OIL field in California
where steel cable rather than Ahanila rope WfS
"""' used in drilling and where various techniques were
refined enabling workers.to drill deeper wells.
State officials named the' oil 'town as a his-
torical site on request from the Orange County
Historical Commission.
$1 Million in Gifts
Help Sea Sco~ts
The Orange County Council of Boy Scouts baa
received abOut $1 million in cootributioos to up-gradetbe Newport BeacbSeaScout Base. ·
The base at 1931 W Pacific Coast Highway LI
"physically worn out," said Phil Bevins, support
service director for the Boy Scouts.
BY BEFURBISBING THE BASE, tbe scout·
ing organization will be eUSible to replace the cur-
rent day-to-day leasiq a1T&D1ement and eoaclude
a long-term agreement.
One slat.P. agency and two other major sources
gave ~.000 for tbe project. Other tunda came 4.5 eq. tt.
from private parties. Reg. 6..49
The state Landa Commlulon contributed
4 8 8 $422,000 while the Harry G·. Stelle f'OuDdation save I ..,._. ....... /.
·$250,000. Tbe, Ford Aerospace Commun.icatlon'a
Aeronutronlc 'Div14lon granted SS,000 to tbe aeouta • for the project. · , .
The work wu expected to bem ln Aprll and ' take aboutninemonths, Bevins said: I
. ' Luncheon Horw~ I
Tallman Memory
The tale Oran1e County aviator Frank
TaJlman will be honored at a Marcb 8 lunebeon bJ
members of the Association of Naval Aviation,
The noon event will be held at the Re,Utry
Hotel in Irvine. Tickets cost $10 per person.
ASSOCIATION MEMBEllS WILL present a
plaque lD Tallman'a memory to hi.a widow and to
Oran1e County Supervisor Thomas Riley for even·
tual placement at the Orange County Airport
terminal.
Tallman, a member'of the association's local
Grampaw Pettlbone Squadron ln Irvine, wu killed
last Apl"111.S 1n a plane crash.
Ttcketa for tlae luncheon ma)' be obtaiDed from
Duke Stoddard, P.O. Box 6, Balboa Island, or by
pboninl Art Davia at 521-19 or Chuck Rumbold
al 675-48Za.
UC Irvine Sets
A eoalereaee for eommun1t1 coUese at8deDtl
plamdnl to tramfer &o UC lntDe wlU 'be beld
Marda i from 11:30 a .m. &o S p.m. ID room llO bl
tbe Sodal SeMIDcl TOWet'.
Tbe eoefereace ia DrilDUU1 deltped to
hllbllPt academic ana eameu Ufe. and ta·
......... .,,. ... ~adcmal OpportllDit1 Pro-
sram.
RUFF-IT
2 g8llon.
Reg. 14.99
11.88
··ABITJBI BLEACHED
CYPRESS PANEL
J<•x4'd '.
Reg.10.99
8.88
Cedar °' Pine.
Reg. 15.99
12.88
LAlTICE PANEL
PINE
4'x8'.
Reg. 29.~
22.88
ABmBI GASLIGHT
BRICK PANEL
l4"'X4''x8'.
Reg. 19.99
14.8.8
l'or fartlllr lnlorm.U.. ·e.n tbe UCI Sduca· ..... OWDltmdtJ Prolram t&• .... . . '¥lard & Harrington
....... *UlNESmR HomeC.. c... . r
CENTURY CEDAR
23 SQ. ft.
·Reg. 22.99
17.88
CENTURY PINE
23 sq. ft.
Reg. 26.99
21.88
ABmBI TAWNEY
ELM PANEL
4.0mmx4'x8'.
Reg. 7.99
6.48
•
• I I
conA ~ 1275 8rttto1 556-1500 • Open Mon. thru Frt 9 to Q. Sat. 9 to 7 Sun. 9'to 6
.,.. .... 77Q7 Garden OroY8 Btvd. 537 ~95~l~-8623h F ·, 9()p9!'t N Mons.t' t9hruto 7Fn. z:~n '°, to9 6 Sal 9 to 7 Pl• ' •TOii 301 So. State College 87<>-0060 • .... ....,.. , '""" •. t ru r . o ~ . o'1U •
Sun. 9 toe
13
I
I
's
1e
Id
l · ,,
e
). • lf
s
t
l
2
e
r
-? I
!
I
CALIFORNIA
·~-~ 00£8 TO BAT
St. Jacquet
TRIAL SET
'Bubbll' May
,
Thureday. March t , 1979 DAIL y PILOT A J J
Actor Launche d Drive Crusade For Spri ng ...
Custom Decorating To Free Boy Convict
~
BEYERL\' HIU.S <AP> Actor
R1ymond St. Jacques 1uys two got In
volvfd In the cau of "Hubba" M11y
hf>uuse It rf'mtnd~ ,him or tho pll1ht
of annther 14-year·otd hoy. who was
lynched In teM for "lookJna 1t tt whltt> woman."
"Whnt hapl)('ned lo thMt hoy madl'
me t1kt paust," St Jacque11 uld ..
ST. JACQUES. WHO ba~ appt>ur-.-d
In such ftlrm •a "Thl• Pawnbroker ·
and "Tbe Comedians," held a news
t'onferent"e at his Beverly Hilla homt4
to discuss his -role 1n helpln& obt&.ln
tht1 releau from prison or Robf'rt
l!:arl May Jr
The Brookhaven. Miss , youth. who
1s 4-loot 7 and weighs 75 pounds, last
month began servtng a 48-year prison
term with no chance or parole after
pleading guilty to armed robbery
He and four men rangrng in, agt!
from 17 to 24 pleaded gu1l{y to
cha r ges or holding up three
firecracker stands and a convenience
store in Brookhaven last December.
MAV WAS R E L E A SED from
prison Friday, allowed to withdraw
his guilty pleas and orde red to stand
trial Sept. 6 on the robbery charges.
The case drew nationwide attention
when the Natio~al Association for the,.
Advancement or Colored People
criticiied ·the lengthy sentence, say.
ing it feared for bis safety in prison.
St. J acques said t hat after his
mother phoned to tell him' about
May, he thought or Emmt!tt Till, the
lyn ching victim. St. J acques a nd
May are black, as was Till.
llllOlht>r 14 year·Old boy , who had
hfl•n accused of looking ul a while
woman," anid the 50-year-old actor,
"and l feured for the safety of this
youn.c man."
Till wu hanged In Money, Miss. on
Aue 28, l~ arter being kidnapped
from fus homt• in Chicago HJs body
wu pulled from the Tallahatchie
lllvl'r three days la.ter Two men.
wt>re later acqwtted of T1JJ 's murder
News reporu from lht> time say the
youth had allegedly "whistled at,
em braced lllfd obscenely insulted"
a wh1lewoman
ST. JACQ UES l.A NCHED a
press campaign to get publicity Cor
May and finally won a meetmg with
M 11mss1ppi Gov . Cliff French.
"I tried to cause enough embar·
rassment to the state of Mississippi
to fore~ them <the governor and
other officials) lo meet with me," St.
Jacques said.
Out of th at meeting, he said, came
the hearing at which state Circuit
Court Judge Joo Piggott ~lowed the
boy to withdraw his f?ur guilty pleas.
ST. JACQUES SAID he did not con·
done .May's actions which led lo the
charges. He said he told the boy.
"By no means are you anyone's hero.
What you d id was s tupid a nd
dangerous."
Hits at
Alie~
SAN DJ EGO CAP I
An aerospace executive
w h"o 0 n c (' r a n r 0 r
Con gress i;ays he has
r aised $77,106 s ince
mid-1976 in a personal
c ampaign lo · stem the
tide of illegal aliens.
The donations are
from 7,000 people-c<in·
cerned abotJl the human
tide rrom Mexico, Wes
Marden l1a1d in an in· terv1ew.
B Y TELEPHONE,
people are told the
money will be used in a
nationwide advertising
drive 1n behalf of
tougher border entry
laws.
Mard e n 's No n -
Partisan Action Com·
mittee is registered with
the California secretary
of state as a campaign
committee.
IN A NEW petition, he
calls for "immediate
securing of our borders
to illegal ·entr y by
whatever means i s
Let our designers create
your own uniQue ·
environment-whether
home or office. at no charge.
We feature l:ienredon. Baker.
and Thomasville in our
beautiful showroom
Custom Interiors by
Dick Metteer
Polly Dodds
Hatchcock Mrogan A S.1.0
Henrecton Pan·As1an
Cock1a11 Table
NOW $732
DICK METTEER
Fine Furnishings & lnterior Design
1727 Westclrff Drive. Newport Beach • 646-1678
Open 9-5:30 • Closed Sunday
Evenings By Aooo1n1men1
necessary." ,
Ma rden told a re ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ porter: ''I'm talkin g
about the use of federal
troops 1r that ·s what it
takes."
The r estruct u r ·
ing or bilingual pro·
grams "to emphasize
English as the primary
language" a lso 1s sought
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642 -5678 ____ -=-:::-_:_,~-~=:::::=:==-;: __ -;-'_ .... "I STOPPED AND thought about
st.. J acques said he offered to take
custody or May, who was freed on
$20.000 bail. and take hiQt lo New
Haven, Conn .• to Hve with the actor's
sister. However, May chose to.stay in
Brookhaven with his mother, Betty
Jean May, despite threat6 against his
life, St. Jacques said. in the petitions.
< . ----.! . ..a..~----~~~~~~~~~~~~--:.-.~~~~~~~-
;..
Silverwoods helps you beat inflation -
select your Spring wardrobe now
and take $70.10 off the total!
Here's a gre~t opportunity to lower the cost of dressing
up. From our just-arrived Spring fashions, you select an
an-occasion wardrobe in one shopping trip ... a suit, a
sport coat plus a pair of coordinated slacks. And for a
limited time only, Silverwoods lets you deduct 70.10 ott
the total. Here's how it wor1<s:
YOUR CHOICE OF
Any 2, 3 or 4-piece suit at
Any sport coat at . .
Any pair o f slacks at .
. 185.00
.. 11 0 .00
.. 35.00 ~
TOT AL PRIC E 330.00
WE TAKE OFF 70.10
( YOU PAY ONLY 259.90
~· --·-----::;::::---~-~-------..-
silverwoods .
~5 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH
I
..
;
. .
.income tax:
nowork,-
noworry,
no· math,
no charge.
Join the Los Angeles Federal Family
of Savers and turn the job over to a
Tax Specialist.
This year, spare yourself the drudgery of
filling out personal income tax forms. Do
as thousands of Los Angeles Federal
Savers do: let a specialist figure your de-
ductions. do the math. fill out the forms for
both Federal and California State regular
personal income tax returns. There's no
charge for this service with a deposi t of
$5,000 or more in a high-interest Savings
Account. or $10.000 in a higher-interest
Investment Certificate.
This also entitles you to a safe deposit box.
Travelers Checks. Money Orders. docu-
ment duplicbtion and more. And you'll ~e
ceive higher interest than any commercial
bank pays. compounded daily. Your sav-
ings are insured by a Federal Agency.
So make an appointment now to have your
income tax returns prepared at a time con-
venient for you. The sooner you file, the
faster your refund can be mailed.
SJv1nqs insured 10 540 000
LOS ANGELES
FED.ERAL
SAVlNGS
NEWPORT BEACH
3201 Newport 81vd. • across from Clly Hall • 67s.isoo
OPEN Mon. Ow0U9h Thurt. 9 AM·S PM; Fri. 9 AM·fi PM
Premature!~ withdrawn Ccrt1f1ca11> Accounts
earn interest tll the P.i•>sbook rate> tor
the term o f invcstmcn1 ll,'iS 90 days
Head Olftct.' o& Ang~rcs ff'<lt'r:il Sov1nri" .ind Lo.in Associ:lllon
One Wilshire Los AnQeli·S 90011 • Otti1·r. ,11.c •"• 1nrou11hou1111e area
•
..
,4JJ M LY PILOT Thurad1y, M11c11 I, 1979
MARMADUKE by Bnd And.In.on
.... _, ...... ·--· ~j.Q J
"There's a special meeting at s~hool
tonight. Dad. The prlnc1pof,
Marmaduke ond you 1 "
SUPERHEROES
FUNKV WINKERBEAN
TO PUr If IN Tff<M'j
)OIJll 6.'AALt MIND
CAN 6.eA6P, 1'M
INCllEA61N6 'THE
PULL OF GllAVITY
MAKING YOU Tr)() HEAVY
Tt:JMCJVe ll 1Hf Ef-ff;CT iVILL
WEAllOFF ~TlY--61.JT WE WON'T 8E HE'Rt BY
UNOE/1 )C)U .•
THEN'
A.rTHtAJ', WHO
l-40&..0§ THE
KEY TO t.rFe?
by T-om Batiuk
If t,00 lroc:. CUY£L$.)
ter!CE I~ AOOEO A fElt) ·~ING6!
i
r
I
J
,.,
by Mell
' W!&..1., LANTIL W!. MAl('E
THE OOWN PAYMSNT, t
6UE~~ r'f'~ THE
f 'ja(JW COMP.ANY ...
AGATHA CRUMM
OR . SMOCK SHOE by Jeff MacNelly
xes. indeed..
MOON MULLINS
THE f AM IL Y CIRCUS~. By Bil Keane
"If March comes in like a lion it goes out like a
light. Right, Mommy?"
DENNIS THE MENACE
~··-> 3·1
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
NANCY.
WOW-WHAT A
HEADACHE--·
MAVeE A NAP
WILL CURE IT
ANP NOW, -rHe FAs-res-r
SCAt..Pt:L. IN -rHe wes-r.'
MOTLEY'S CREW
A860l.Uf~LY' MY GKEAl-~~A~I< G0r Ii ~R'O\o\ PRESIDENT T~F"f,
~ 60r rr FK'CM °PJ(ESIDeNT
M'k:INL.€)'. 'NH() bOf If ~~OV.
~g510£:NT Ge.\Nf. ..
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom K. Ryan
'tt>U SHOOL.P "THANK
GOP YOU roN'TPLAY
iHETUIM.
'J;Q.---------------.J~~ ~ Ernie Bushmllftr
~
COMICS I CROSSWORD
PEANUTS by CMrlts M. Schulz
. 'THE BLUE JAl{S ARE "' QJ r 4:s tl1! AFTEI{ '100 ?
le0 lt:1
" '
Tl-IEN ~OU NEED ONE THERE! NOW THE't'tL.
OF Mlf FAMOUS TMINK ~OO'RE A
QUICK Dl56U15E5 ... RACCOON!
by Bill Hoest
by George Lemon\
by Templeton & Form:ln
TODAY'S -CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Chums
5 Chan anew
10 Crustacean
14 Coll. subf.
15 Call forth
16 Verse unit
17 Stream
le nee
18 Capttal
lemale Fr
20 Grain stalks
22Lair
23 -and
Ale
i 4 Calls
26 Fate
27 Taste taker
'8 Unfold Po-
etic
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Wednesday's Puzzle Solved:
~9-Starr
50 Sl)l(:e
53 Malay coin I .,. I• I• rl• ,,. .. IA 1-ft I " 0 0
54 Artist's I
stand
58 Tourist lodo-;
1ngs:
2 words
61 Large book
S2 Fatse god
63 Near
64 Redact
65 Binds
66 A11zona city
67 Rooent~
"lo .. In • • l " u ( I ' I (
I• In ',. I , ... I ( " ' I ' II l ,. . ( . f II 0. . " . ( . -l A II II -, A ' I • s
l.•falo ( II r I , l "c; l ·-, A I • y -•tl " s ' • s ". '"''"' -111(1• D s-11 I II f
II I ' 'o • rs•• 0" I ( _, IH A-0 l ( s ' ltlt II I 1·1 " 'IC ' , . ••
C l I 11 • I A A 1• c;" A l
II A N • & • l f y $ u 0 A II
•• c; ( l I A s• ( l 0 , ( , ( ( ' ( ( " s• ' ( N f I
30 Mr Churchill DOWN 21 Barrier 44 M 34 Bay win· 1 Mauls an, e.g.
dows 2 0111 25 Token 46 Some books
35 Shillings: 3 Bear's home 26 Canadian 47 Get togeth·
Slang 4 Belled pohllcian er: 2 words
36 Mineral sul· 5 Cofded lab-27 Glldes high 49 Heather
h.11 ,. rte 28 Irish excta--50 Memo
37 Jack-in·the-6 Dodger mahon 51 llallan c11y
pulpit 7 Customs ~ Dixie city 52 Siou.11
38 Old pronoun 8 Relale<I 30 Was first 53 "--or
40 Theater gp. 9 Footllke part 31 Trace not..."
41 Zodiac sign 10 GOll·shoe l2 Fur bearer 55 Beverage
42 Wrecll feature 33 Approaches 56 Give olf
43 Horseshoe 11 Curling team 35 Coal holder S7 Tennis
score 12 Girl's name 39 Pronoun terms
45 Black-eyes 13 Wasps 40 Aardvark S9 Rodent
47 T&a experts 19 Symbo1:. 42 Fight off 60 Holy fig
.
I
•' ' • •
' ' ' 1,
~ I ~l I t. t ...
""' tl t . i
A
A A A t • • • ' ' j
' ' ' ' ' I ~
I I '
Hangups Bobby
~SWOOPS OFF THE BlUFFS TOWARD TH! OCEAN AT· NIGUEL ISEACH PARK
.. E CATCHE$ ,.N uoop•" '-?~ TltE SEA AND ASCENDS INTO THE SKY.
.... ··: .. ,,
FREE SOUL IN NIGUEL -J eff Magnan, a
20-year-old Laguna Niguel hang glider en·
thwsiast soars over the ocean at Niguel
Beach Park where a steep blufftop and
ocean breezes create ideal conditions for
~ ...... ~.., SW...M*"911
t he sport. The bluff is popular for hang
glider and remote-control plarie buffs who
frequently send their aerodynamic toys in-
to the clear air off the beach.
Freeway' Lo·gos Sought
Clemente Woman Campaigm for Ramp Sigm
San Clemente's aesthetic ad-
viler to CalTrans is illatigating a
letter-writ1n1 campaign to
Sacramento to get diaUnctive
bulineu Jocoe affixed to freeway
offrampsigna.
Janet Radford, appointed more
than a year a10 to oversee
aeatbetic development of a $3S
milUon freeway widening proje(t
t.hroqsb the town, says she bas a
lot of support for beraign project.
So sbe'a pushing a letter-
writlng campaign to CalTrana
director Adriana Glanturco and
Governor Brown.
SBE BAS THE support of the
1ocal chamber of commerce,
whose board will be meeting
next weekend to discuss the pro-
posal.
"We think it's a great idea."
said chamber executive
mana1er Alex Goodman, "Tbey
would identify what buslnesaes TBE BUSINESS logo signs, we have near t.be freeway in San
ficlala to take another look at
San Clemente.
"The procram benefits local
mercbuta and it brtabtena up the freeway," abe said.
Sbe auggeata i;nercbant,s and
citiseDI write to Brown at the
State Capitol. Sacramento,
California, 95614, or Ms. Gian·
turco, care of the State Depart·
ment of Transportation, 1120
North street, Sacramento, 9:5814.
f • •
'Thutrld9y, Merch 1, 1979 c DAIL V PILOT §j S
·Spending ~aw OK'4
)
Newport Limits Funds for Initiative
87 .JOANNE &EYNOLD8
Ot•O.itw .......... Newport Beach elty coun-
cilmen have enacted an or-
dinance to restrict the kinds of
campalp.s that generated COO·
troveny in November when the
~uff initiative waa defeated.
If the meuure, adopted this
week, bad been in effect in Nov-
ember, it would have cut by hall
tbe more than $21 ,000 spent by
the two IJ"OUP8 thaL successfully
opposed the initiative.
THAT CUT WOVLD have
come by restricting the $8,000 in
loans and $2,500 of the S3,100 in
contributions lo the Newport
Beach Citi%ens Political Action
Council.
However. the more than
$10,000 spent by the Irvine Co.
would not have been affected by
the restrictions.
That money was· a direct ex·
penditure by the development
firm and City Attorney DeMts
O'Neil says the new law doesn't
address the subject or direct ex-
penditures.
THE CAMPAIGN restrictions
on finance were sought by mem-
Irvine Backs
Shelter Plan
For Animals
The Irvine City Council ap-
proved what member La r ry
Agran called "the Animal House
proposal" on Tuesday, permit·
ling the sub-lease of a house on
property next to the city animal
s helter.
The shelter; off Laguna Can-
yon Road in Laguna Beach, is
lea sed from an Art Colony
veterinarian.
An Irvine animal services of·
ficer, Carl Pagano, will live in and
maintain the home, to provide
security after business hours at
the animal care center.
In exchange for~is 24 -hour
watchdog duty, Pagano gets free
rent. The city already leases the
house as part of the arrange-
ment with the veterinarian. Or.
Rose Eke.ber~.
Irvine Nixes
State Measure
On ·Insurance
The Irvine City Council voted..
4·1 to oppose proposed slate
legJalation to tbolls h territorial
rating s ys tems u sed b y
·automobile ins urance com -
panies.
Currently. Insurance com-
panies lake into account, when
establishing insurance premium
rates, the location where a
driver lives.
SOME LOCALES, such as Los
Angeles County, have higher
base rates than othe rs, like
Orange County, with a history of
fewer traffic accidents.
The proposed legislation
would forbid rating by territory
and establish a single statewide
base.
Statistics provided by the
Automobile Club of Southern,
California, an auto insurer, show
the effect or that would be to in·
crease p temiums in Irvine,
Costa Mesa and Ne'!J)Ort Beach
by about 20 percent. on average.
THE COUNCU. resolution ~
poain1 the abolishment of ter-
ritorial ratings is to be sent to
tbe State Department of
Inaurance, which la conducting
heartnp on the subject, and to
atate Aaaemblywoman Mman
Ber1eaoa and state Senator John
Schmitz.
Councilman Larry Agran
alone voted against the resolu·
lion. Av.an said be believes the
only cnterion for establishing in·
surance rates should be driving
bistoryoflqdividual motoriata.
bera of the Commlttee to Proted
Bluffs and Bay. which raised on·
ly SI.SU to support the meuure.
It wu defeated by a 4,000-vote
marlin .
Contributions of $750 to that
group's campaian war cheat
would have been affected lt the
law bad been in effect Jut fall.
Tbe law. which goes into efl'e(t
next month, will restrict in-
dividual campaign contributlooa
and loans to $200 on ballot
measures, as la the case for
council candidates. It will also
prohibit anonymous contribu-
tions, will limit cash contrlbu·
lions to $35, Will require the re·
· porting of all contributions to
both candidates or ballot pro-
position committees and will re·
quire Consent of anyone whose
name is used in campaign
literature.
THE PROVISIONS relating to
finance were suggested by the
proponents of the bluff measure.
The group -Jean Walt, Plan-
ning Commissioner Allan Beek,
his mother Carroll Beek. John
Kings le y , the Friends or
Newport Bay, Barry Allen.
Richard Simpson, and Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Robinson -com·
plainPd about the free-spending
of opponents.
The provision regarding use of
names in campaign literature
was sought by opponents of the
measure, who objected to use of
the city 1radlng engineer's
name in an endorsement of it.
The engineer said he was quot-
ed out·of context ln appearing, to
support the bluff restrictions
proposed .•
CONT&IBUTO&S TO t)\e
Committee to Protect Bluffs~
Bay who would have been affect·
ed by the new law were Mh.
Beek; who gave $250 andi: Friends, which donated .
Most of the contributors to
support group ar-e memben,of
the Friends as well as mem~
of Stop PoUuting Our Newpprt
and Legal Environmenlal
Analysis Fund.
On the other side, five of the 12
contributors to the political ac-
tion group -· most of whom are
members of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce
board of directors -who would
have been affected are the law
firm of Virtue and Scheck; the
architectural firm of Ficker and
Ruffing ; the McLain Deve~
ment Co.. a subsidiary of Hol-
stein Industries; Hans Loteo~
and the Pacific Mutual Life
Jnsuranc~ Co. Each gave $500.
The $8,000 in loans given the
council also would have been af-
fected by the $200 limit.
Those loans came from :
Willia m Langs ton. Sl.000 ;
Glen Stillwell. $500 : Richard
Spooner. council o r ganizer,
$6 ,000 and the Holstein In·
duslrtes subsidiary, $500.
Tax ClarHied -
computer Goof Admitted
SACRAMENTO CAP) -They first told Mabel Pas ley, a
Southern California school teacher, that computers never make
mistakes.
Finally. they had to admit that Mrs. Pasley, of Cypress,
didn't owe $15.486 in state taxes for 1976 after all. It was really
$39.02.
THE U.S. INTERNAL REVENUE Service apparently in-
formed the state Board of Equalization -erroneously -that
Mrs. Pasley bad agreed to pay $40,000 in back federal laxes for
1976. Mrs. P asley, who earps about $22,000 a year, said that a fter
an IRS audit, she agreed to pay $113. ;
But the sute board's computer, using the erroneous IRS in·
formation and a tax or $13.54 that she bad paid, produced •
$135,440 income figure for her. , ~
. l MKS. PASLEY TRIED TO complain lo the bOard but was
told the computer never lied and the claim was legitimate.
Then the Long Beach Independent, Press-Telegram told her
story, and \he board rec becked its figures and found they were
wrong. ·
Mrs. Pasley says she'll pay the $39.02.
Irvine, County Flap
Fire Station Pitct
Flayed by CounCil
A~n arrange ment whereby
the City of ·Irvine woul<1 lease
the Woodbridge fire station to
the county of Orange, because
the county can't afford to build
one. drew fire lrom city coun·
cilmen. The building, to be built by the
city for about $179,000 at Barran-
ca and East Yale Loop, on park
land. originally was to have
been a park building.
THE COUNTY informed the
city last year that because of
Proposition 13 revenue losses, it
couldn't pay for a fire station
planned for the Woodbridge
area.
The city reluctantly agreed to
build the station and lea~ it to
the coWlty for $900 a month.
At that rate, the city won't re·
cover its inves tment for 16
years. .
Councilman Arthur Anthony
Tuesday express.ed irritation
and regret that he and the rest
of the council bad agreed to the
arrangement.
THE CITY OF Irvine, too, An-
thony complainea. is affected by
revenue losses under Proposi-
tion 13
"l will never again," he
steamed. "vole to approve the
use of city funds for that which
is in another jurisdiction."
He said Irvine taxpayers now
not only have to pay county taxes
for fire protection <Irvine has oo
fire service of it.sown I but have to
pay to house t.be firemen as well.
Mayo r Bill Vardoulls
grumbled that the arrangement
seemed to him "maybe another
flimflam," since city pla'1s
showed the new fire~tation aa a
prospective park building.
'tBE AGREEMENT calls ft)r
the county to pay for utilities
small round padanta containing c 1 t d t 11 trademar'" de1l1n1 of ham-e me 0 e a 0 I v e a • merchants the same chance to bpr1er ltaDda, aervlce stat.Iona draw motorists off tbe in-aDd botela. ~ tell motoriJta teratate ... ex:J~ wbat ~ervic:ea are Goodlnan said the larse Pole
av rilbt off tbe freeway· 1igna tbat attract motoriltl are
ID addltloa to aervln1 tbe ••not very attractive,•• auueat·
motortsta. lln. BadfoJ'd aald. lq tbe rcMmd 1oso ltlcttr1. at·
tbe lo1ot would provfde a tacbed to exlst1n1 offramp•
Irvine · Patrolman
Cidled City's Best
. and day-to-day maintenance of
the building, though the city ls
held responsible for any m~qr
repairs.
The current agreement calls
for use of the building as a fiN
station through June of 1982, ~t
city officials expect the statklp '111 be needed for much longer.
=-~~~===: woulcl1ervedualpurpoMS. are DOt allowed to eoumact LAST PALL TBB state
ball a-:., humera adverUI· le1talature approftcl Senate BW 1111 •W• II lb •· · 1'110 allowla1 the 10101 on "1.-,-tlme merclaanta In San freeway oft.ramp tlpa la rural
CleaatDte a!NMy bav• lars• areu. •
'1i1a1 advel1l1ln1 Uaelr bual-But Kn. Radford ,Hid tbe
ae1ae1 to motorl1t1 of tbe stat. COlllldera Saa Clemente a
trMway, .. 111"1. Radford 1Jld. porttoa_ al a laqe Ora,nce Coun·
• ty/i. ~ utbaD area. ud
alfW. ftR CITY'I ••:r:or-. tberefan la lneH1lble for ~ dliail DDW lllllht new 1 to new ltpl. tlM mmumeat mam. wbic can-' A pllot project ln nortbern
. Dlt Ill MID flee UM San Dtqo Caltlonla II to be ll.llUatecllGOD,
l'INW&f. , 1be aaid. but beld out Utt.le hope
.
Aa Irvtne peb'GUnan wbo re· PGrtedb la toup OD hoodlums
but a.me u a tabby wlth tboee
wbo 10 just llilbtlJ aatray al the
law bu been named officer of
Ut • ye •r b 1 b i 1 f e II ow pollc.111111.
Jimmy Paul Potts was
honored for b1a worts lD 1978.
Potte. 25, &u been u Irvine policeman for l~ fears. Before tba~1 be wu a policeman in Soum Gate for ftve years. •
Tb• S.cbaaa• Club. wblcb bolta tbe ....... ta eoaJunc·.
den ta.
During a recognition
ceremony later Tuetday before
the Irvine City Cou.ncU, Police
Chief Leo Peart aa1d Pott.a WU
involved in more than 2,too
pollce. actions ln 11711 an
averase.ofbetterthan 10 a aay.
Jachlded were ~ fe)OQy ar· StlMlftlt Ocetl
r•u, • ml8demeaaor arreat.i, Lisa Larwood, 20, of Dana ~~_amctr:m!'!:'pa1,n;l= Point, bu been selected u
for 111 IDOYinl trattle violadom, Orange County's Communi· a fteld tn.eU,atlonl uct tho ty College Student Engineer
wrltlqofl'Jlpollcereporta. _of the Yeas:-n •4
<Alrbs Placed ~
On Donations:
A twtber retlrlction on cam~
pai1n contrlbutlon1 was a~
proved u.nanimou1ly by tb•
Irvine City Council. ,
The council aet a $2~ Umlt oq
any lndlvidua.l contributinf to ~ touncll campaign, whether tq
the lndlvldual ca\\dldate. t
\
..... -...... will ..... to ...... Clemeate, ··un1eu ft ~---~.,.t-~11111.0J.=-,MW ......... .... ... ~ tlOdllltb.11
• .,_.,, ... lua9lted more -• AD90CATING a llt·'
tiOD .... ··~ .......... =--· elted ,_. tar bla
•rtJ, : ==-=~::::
Peart Aid PGttl wrote MrO dleback College aoDbomore
bicycle dtat.ioM, but made ~ has been accepted at Cal
for It with "• lot ot wanWlp... Poly San Lu.la Obispo and
Peart ealled Po&ta. ··a po11ce wiU belka clusea there in
potltk-1 Cj>mJllltttt.s, .or Lll.Al:Ulll4----~
blniUOn.
Pre.toualy, a contributor wu
able to donate up to S250 to a
candldate, Md u mutb to com·
mlti.et ID 1upport of the can·
did ate .
..__.;~ti'& tiM tM .._ •·••f"wrj •mpetp to Brown
W :.... llttaeMd to ... ud ll'a. OIUtUHo, a p(a lbe ... ._..._ · aaja mlpt promp\ 1tate of.
J
tempt.Id wdlK a arnet.,... a
lll1b·ll*d. cbue and otlaer Ind· omcer•1 police oftleer... the tall.
~.
•
AJ4 D 'IL v PILOT Thur.day, Match 1, 1979 ! Business . .
R~bots 'f ackle 'Ugly' Jobs
..... , ..... "'
No ConsortiUlll
Iran's new oil minister, Hassan Nazih, has announct!d
that h~s country's oil no longe r will flow through an in-
ternational (•onsortium, but will be sold to indivjdual
companies. Nazih seems almost to be holding the hand
of Ayatollah RuhoJlah Khomeini. represented in <-1
portrait behind him: <R~lated story, Page A4 >.
01'.TR011 t l\t~ 1 Tbey don't
l•kt• 1.-ofrt't'. breaks or demand
\i .ir.•tlOllb They generully don't
i:d t1H'k And lbt.'y urc not an·
«ll111•ct to tile uruon 1erit.'v110Ct-'S
Tht•y don't even see the prob·
lt•1t111 thut most workers do in
lhl'lr Jobs evt:n though these
un· lhl' dtrtJest, most boring and
h·u"'t 4'ltnt1.•Uv~ In factories
hut mort' und more th~y do
.. , c~e'" lln(h•vcn "rct•I '
TlllS •:v•:tt MOltt: popular
l1arhn1tt of Amt•rtcan manulac-
lurcr~ ts the industrial robot, a
mr\ hun11.•<1l marvel closer to
Hi 1>2 o t ·Star Wars · thtrn most
pt<op lt• 1mat;1ne
lit' numbt-rs about 3.000 m'"the
l'n1t~d States, some 1,000 in
Wc~tl'm Europe, and perhaps
10 000 in Japan, according to the
lll•t1 Oil bast!d Robot Institute of
Atnt!rH'a
What be lacks an the personali·
lv or hJs movie cousin. however,
tw more than makes up in work
from bts whirring and clicking
tubes, hosPs and (mgers
"WHAT COMES OUT is or
consistent qua Illy.··• says Al
Williams. Midwest regiona l
manager for Unimation Inc. of
Danbury. Conn .. the nation's
largest maker of industrial.
robots
"If a guy leaves out a couple
Silent, Tireless Mechanical
Workers Don't Upset Unions
or welds, someone gels a car
wltb rattles. With the robot, you
get an improved product."
''It doesn't get tired," adds
C)onald E . Hart. head of the
Computer Science Department
at General rotors Research
laboratories.
AUTOMAKERS ARE among
the leaders in developm..enl of
robots. Ford Motor Co., for ex·
ample. has used robots since
1958, when a device was in·
troduced in one planf to transfer
hot parts .
"It's a ¥ad1y, ugly. dirty
business there." says Ford
spokes man Ed Snyder. "The
robot was accepted by the
workers and there was no objec-
tion."
Ford bas 236 robots employed
10 s uch jobs as stamping, spray
paij)ting. die casting: "areas of
worker discontent.'' Ford says.
GM, MEANWHILE, has about
150 robots, including 32 pioneer·
ing body welding machines in·
stalled in 1970 at its Lordstown.
Ohio. assembly plant. Those are
known in the Industry as "pick
and.place" repetitive action
robots.. carrying price tags start-.
ing at $10.000, says Don VJncenl.
manager of the Robot Institute.
But research, be 'lays, is
aimed at $100,000 sophisticated
programmable robots that have
t he a bility to know what they are
touching and "see" what they
a r e doing through use or
cam eras.
"We think the idea or eqwp·
ping roboL'I with caft'l eras and
computers to give them vision is
going to open many new avenues
to increased product1vity," said
Frank Daley, GM's director of
manufacturing development.
GM WAS THE first U.S. firm
' to use comput~r vision. install·
ing a system at i~ Delco plant in
Kokomo, Ind .. nearly two years
ago. There, the SIGHT·l system
inspects circuits. and positions
e lectrical test probes. Its
s econd-generation brother.
CONSIGHT. relies on com·
puterized vision to control all six
joints of a robot's hand
"Our ultimate objective 1s to
be able to pick parts out of
jumbled heaps m binis," saya
G•'s Hart.
Tbe world's largest carmaker
also points to the new technology
as improvjng erficiency and thus
generating money for •t un·
precedented multibillion dollar
outlays for new product pro-
grams." say11 Alex C. Mair, vice
president uf GM 's tec hnical
staff.
GM TOUTS ITS PUMA (Pro-
grammable Universal Machine
for Assem bly l robot as "the
latest and probably the most ad-
vanced robot on the world scene
today."
Recently unveiled at the GM
TechnicaJ Center m s uburban
Warren, PUMA also is capable
of "seeing." although its first u~e wiil be sightless work at a
Delco plant in Rochester, N.Y.
PUMA will assist in assembly
or s mall electnc motors by pick·
mg up a hot part, positioning it.
adding a component and then
placing the part on a conveyor
belt for further work.
,,
Sears Wants Loans From Customers
A Sl~R proj.ect is being
developed by Westinghouse
Electric Corp. and the National
Science Foundation . The new
twist an the $1.8 mUl ion experi·
ment will enable the robot to •
change and assemble different
product styles or adjust to varia·
tions an parts. according to
Rich ard Abraham of West
mg house
The reliability or the devices
se.ems remarkable, considering
daily absenteeism 1n an auto
operation of up Lo 10 percent
Ford officials say robots rune·
lion 98 percent or t,.he lime By MILTON MOSKOWITl
Sears. Roebucl. and Co., wb.icb
has been having its problems
lately, bas come up with a dan·
dy idea: Why not borrow money
from the people who shop in its
stores?
Sales have been sluggish at
Sears over the past year but it's
still the nation's la rgest retruler.
with a customer base second to
none . Some 26 million people
carry Sears credit cards -and
those folks are accustomed to
borrowing money from Sears to
fi nance their purchases.
NEXT YEAR Sears plans to
turn the tables It will ask its
customers and other mem·
bers or the public to lend it
some money S500 million, to be
exact.
There's notrung unusuaJ about
la rge cor porations borrowing
s uch huge chunks of money.
They do it all the lime. Sears
alreddy has some $2 billion of
long -term debt on its books.
However. it IS unheard or for a
company lo go directly to the
public for these funds.
The standard ploy is to call up
Morgan Stanley and Co . or Mer
rill Lynch or another major Wall
Street investment banker a nd
have them raise the money for
you. They tur n to their big
customers -fat cats like an
surance companies and pension
trusts -and sell the notes, tak-
ing a juicy commission for their
efforts.
THEN THEY MIGHT run a
discreet but self.serving notice
in the Wall Street. Journal that
they have managed once again
to float a big issue for a client.
Most members of the public
never get to hear about such of
ferings. The underwriters the
investment banking houses
are looking for mUlion dollar
commitments .
We ll. Sears has decided to
bypass this well-establis hed
route . It's going to offer notes
directly to the public in de·
nominations as little as $1 ,000
You will be able to order them
by calling a toll-free telephone
number.
WHAT KIND OF interest will
you be getting on the money you
lend to Sears? That's not set yet.
Money
Tree
but you can be sure that ·it will
be more than you are getting on
the money lodged in your friend·
ly local bank.
Sears wi ll be going a fter peo·
pie who put their money in
certificates of deposit. At the
same time. i1 expects to save
monev from what it would have
to pay 1f 1t put this offering in
thC' hands of an investment
banker
The result will be lo give the
little guy a shot at an investment
normally restricted to giant in·
st1tullons A
YOU AN D I MIGHT applaud
this move, but you can easily
1magme the reception it's gel·
ting in banking and Wall Street
circles. The banks see il as com·
petition for the savings monies
they wan t. The investment
Coast Firms Report
Didsfo• Upgraded
Ever ett/Charles. Inc ., Pomon~. has an·
nounced the· incorporation or its Electronic
Manufacturers Services division, Irvine, as a wholly
owned subsidiary.
EMS was formed as a division after acquisi·
tion of Contact System 's California wire· wrapping
operation in June 1977. Services were primarily
semi-automatic wire·wrapping and data process-
ing. Since then .. the subs idiary bas grown thr<?~gb
the broadening of the customer base and addition
of services, inch.\ding electro-mechanical ~s~
sembly, circuit board testing, backplane testing
and distribution or wire in bulk cut and stripped
form. •
John Sandberg, former division manager, has
been named president of EMS
MFITTltE
DUQIUll'TION YOU
HAVE A91CU> R)ftl
'L!m:
R. Ph.
PREPARATION OF .
TAX RETURNS
Year Round
Tax PSannlng
,MARTIN I. SCHNEYER
Attorney At Law
CJ.othi119 Store to Open
Wallah and Gretchen Clarke plan to open their
25th store at South Coast Plaza shopping center,
Costa Mesa. They have stores in Dallas, tbe South
Pacific and elsewhere. -,
The Wallah Clarke resort shop will nta*'re
yacht, s port. swim and leisure wear for bo~men
a nd women.
The Clarkes opened their fi rst shops in Palm
Springs and Newport Beach in 1952
Flww Fo..-.. Sub•ldlartf
Fluor Corp .. Irvine bas announced the forma-
tion of a subsidiary, Fluor Constructors Interns·
tional, Inc .. to support its worldwide construction
activities.
President of the new coau>any is William 1.
McKay, member of Fluor's board of directors and
former group vice president of Operations of Fluor
Engineers and Constructors, lnc.
C. Patrick Bedford bas joined Fluor Construe·
tors International as vice president. He bas more
than Z1 years' experlence'in the international con-
struction industry and most U<:ently held tbe posi·
lion of vice president construction for a leading
West Coast firm.
.._ /tlo.,e• Office
Regis Homes, Inc .• has moved its office to 5120
Campus Drive, Newport Beach.
Regts bas divisions in Northern and Southern
CaUfomia and Colorado
Authentic 1715 Gold Fin«er Bar\
1 <over•~ ounces pure 1old1 .
Recovered from tlae
wreckage of a SpanJsb
Galleon off the coast of
Florida.
•.
ComJ>lete with
Certlflcate or Hlatoric Artifacts
17500 Value hr Sale or Trade
,•
,
bankers· are irritated at being
left out or the action.
Typical was the reaction of
William Hummer, a partner in
the Chicago broker age house.
Wayne Hummer and Co. He
said :
"If enough money nows mto
these jnstruments. it may be dif·
ficult to gain control o r the
monetary aggregates and.
therefore. to conduct monetary
policy." ' ,.
If you can figure out what
Hummer is saying here. let me
in on the secret. But that's the
way investment bankers like to
talk : to themselves. They 're
sputtering incobe renlly now th at
mighty Sears, Roebuck bas told
them " "'We can raise $500
million without your help "
.0\-·t·r l 'lu· Counl•·r
NASO Listinqs
The United Auto Workers un·
ion has no objcection to their
use. but the union's skilled
trades department, readying for
contract negotiations later this
year . recently approved resolu·
tions for a cont.ractural ban on
layoffs "if the introduction of a
technological advance or change
r esults in r eduction of the
workforce."
Nd""' GIM IOW Ad•Pat,,1
G•nov" !.tJ~ Blllyl(1<1 Cbm!l'Y Slo.tnfH Strrnlt F1F""'1 Form1ot1 tntr<Ent
M•lllAD' AH-In c,,_10v
S<llHtf
S.ff'Cr(I e .. y ly(o
VOCHrt A!r(MQO 80N11no
Cf!JGlllP HamlOo NA 81oi SwB•V•\
I'• ~·· ,.
\
\ . } .. 7•· \•,
17 •
11
'" }' ••• l'> 31 ~
I I
Pct Up JOI
Up 16 1
Uo HO
'• Up 100 Up 1qo uo lS l Up 14 ~
Up 14 l Up u ) Up 11 Q
Up 11 \ Up 11 I
Up fl' Up 11,~ Uo 10) Uo 101
Up 104' Up 100
Up ~ •
Up A8
Up e \
Up 8 7 UP 11 Up 11
Up I 1
MUTUAL FUNDS
..
,.#.
J
STOCKS I BUSINESS
'fhur.,day,
t]o ins Pril·•'"K
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
America• Offer EsDlres NEW YORK CAP> -The offer by
American Jl!xpreu Co. to acquire
publJab.lnl llant llcOnw·HlU Inc. ex""'4 toWaY wftb 110 badle•Uoa that
Amerltan ~..... wtll ren•w the
flabt.
"We ~ the director. ol llC!Gra•·.
HW ha¥9 bad full aad ........ op-
portunity to conalder ou.r J110P09al ,"
American ~ l&ld ID a brief
ltatfmlbt..
.. ~ .... ,. .. .._. ...
Thuf'tdey, March 1. 197g N 0A11. v P11.or A ia
IRA Benefits
Made Liberal
By SYLVIA PORTEil
SI lftll Of 11 <.Olumnt
The urr8 Revenue Act provided a series or tax breaks
for th~ mtlllons who have run into lax compUcationa and
penaltt~ while trying to oblain the advertised tax benefit s
or setting up an individual retirement account. Listed
below are the chanees.
. Cl ) You have until April 16. 1979, to set up and make a
tai-deducUblc contribution to an IRA for 1978. The rorm~r
cutorr dale was Feb. 14. . . .
(2) IT'S EASIER TO AVOID TH£ penalties that
otherwise applied to "excess" contributions made td an
IRA account. You are still subject to cert ain penalties on
a ny portion of your c·ontribution that exceeds the amount
you are allowed to deduct. You can eliminate your excess
contribution. and the reby avoid pe nalties by eithe r
withdrawing the excess or contributing less to the IRA in a
later year. But 411der the 1978 laws, most of the previously
unfavorable limitations on using either method have been
removed or li~ralized. beginning with 1978 and a'l>plying
lo 1976 and 1977.
This may save you from paying an unnecessary tax.
Also. if you were penalized on excess contributions for 1976
or 1977. the cluln es made by the 1978 act may entitle you
to a rerund : fil e a efund claim on Form 1040X.
<3 l Elderly le
may have overlook"
the requirement t hat
they had to start m ak
ing withdrawals from
their IRA at age 701 2 or
be subject to a 50 per
cent penalty on the un
Money's
Worth
derwithdra"n amount The 1978 law eliminated this rule
by allow!ng IRS to waive the 50 percent penalty if there
was reasonable cause for delaying the withdrawals. This
change is retroactive lo 1976 and 1977 People who were
penalized for failure to start withdrawing m those year5.
and had reasonable cause for the mistake. may file refund
claims . <4) You previously had to file a Form 5329 with your
income tax return if you made a deductible contribution to
your fRA for the particular year. lf you didn 't make a con·
tribution that year. you had to file FormSJ29 if you had
made contnbutions to your IRA in previous years . These
requirements have been knocked out. A Form 5329 is re-
required for onl y hmated reasons: If you made only your
regular ~nlribution in 1978. mdicate al on Form 1040 and
forget Form5329
<S> AN IRA CAN BE AN ATTRACTlVl: vehicle for de-
ferring tax on lump-sum distributions from qualilied
pension and profit-sharing· plans If the sum is transferred
to a n IRA , no lax is due until you withdraw from thf! tRA.
Before the 1978 law. you couldn't take advantage of this
technique unless you had been a participant in the pension
or profit-sharing pl an for five years ~fore the distribu-
tion: the 1978 Jaw re moved the five-year limitation.
A provision that had limited rollover from one IRA to
a second I RA to once every three years has been
liberahzed to once a year by the 1978 act
C6 ) Also liberalized has been the use of the rollover
procedure available to the spouse of a deceased employee
who had been a part1c1panl in a quali fied employee benefit
plan. Formerly. only the employee could elect to rollover a
lump-sum distribution into an IRA. But now if the spouse
receives a· lump-sum distribution from such a plan after
1978 because of the employee's death. the spouse is al·
lowed transfer of the lump sum into the s pouse·s JRA
Next: Soles Taz Tables
Markei Gets Back
Some of the Selloff
NEW YORK (APl -Stock· prices rose in moderate
trading today in a continued recovery from a sharp selloff
eat lier in the week
T~e ~w J ones average of 30 industrials advanced
steadily, if undramatically throughout the day\ posting a
7 .02-pointgainto815.84on the New York Stock Exchange.
,.,_fo~ks In Tiu>
.-.po11f9h1
NEW YORK IAPI· S•let , 4 om D<•<• •r><I ,.tt <"-',. Oi H1t lllltt,. most ..:11w New York Stock Esch&~ ln~t. lr•d•~ natt0n.tlly •I morr lh•n St
Am Motors SJI SOO &~ • ""' Howrd JQl\n 4 1~.100 12 •''•
Tes Utll 36•,IOO '''• • •.., Rorerc;p 316,:IOO ti'• , •,
FordMot 11&.400 ""• • "' Card Oenv 711.'°° "''• -1>, T ••num a> 1J9.700 ''"" , •, Gen MOlorS 11&.floCIO ~· .....
Tuaco In< 110.SOO ?•' •• " PolarolO lO 000 ~·~ -. R•hlnPur 1U.700 11'> -1, GaP•<•' 'tl JOO 11"• • 1..,, ~::"f10 ~.li: ~:; . ':':
E U C>fl "' .700 ..... • ..
N EW YORI( CAP). S••n • D m prtcr
•nd nel Cf\M9 ot ti.. It" motl •ctl..-Amt rt<•" Stock EotNf>ile •two lr.t<ll"9 ,..tlofwllly •I more IP,.,. SI · 8rucan A 110,JOO 11·~ •, ResrHnl A .... 167.800 ,.,,,, 1 1
Oome "-'" • • • • 10,100 "', • 2'• Syn tu tori>. . . . . 6',ICIO :ne. , •tt Amdahl . • . • •• ~'°° ~ t\4
Presley Co...... 60.:IOO 11'• ''"' Polychrm . . •• . ~· '°° 141,. , • 1 HouOllM . . .• s•,tOO 11•,. • • (;eftl E•c*)t... ... SI ,too ''°' , ,._ PepComlftd • • S4.400 10"' -•,
Pct
''"'"" .fiilfWk# Did N E W YORK IAPI
I
Aov .. nc~
Oe<lll'td
Unch•"91'G ro1a1 .. s~ New ruo~
He .. 10...,,
NV Stoctr ~·n
13,llJ0.000 n .O'IO.ooo 1&.l'0,000
27.9'0,000 10,280,000
17,S60.000 1.11S.tl1,W
831.030,000 us 110.000
SHVf'"r
NEW VQAI( CAPI H•ndV & H•rmotfl soot t•l\111r " 100, 9010 Uri OS E11QelMrd Mlver '7 700. l•t>rlceled \I·~ UP l3 3 Up U t 1------------------
Up II•
UP 107 Up 10.4
Up 10.3 VD IOI UP .. Up 1,4 Up I 4
UP 12 Up II
Up Lt
UD 7.1 Up 7.7 Ut> 1.1
UP 1A
UJI> n
~: ~:~
Up 70
\jp "' Up ._7 UP 6.7 Up 6..1 Up 61
~"\.
§E IU 10 4
'' .,
71 u u u ,.
tl S.I so a .... 4.S u u t1
Gold ·Quo• af io11s
., Tiie ,._..,_ ~,. ..
Seleclecl -Id OOld prl<e~ IOCl•Y
Le..--: .._..1"9 11a1119 n ... lO. 011 u oo.
•tte.-fhrl119 U• IO, Off iuo ~•rls· .,,...,.H•t>te -10 • •lrll<fl •t ,,. Perls E""*'IJJ
Pr....-.:c*IUft...JO•otf U 1' z.,lcll· '741 SO bid. Ofl U SO. U et 7j •Siied.
IMw 'rft: H...oy & H•rm•ft .,.~ pr~
S24i.fl; oft u '°
New Ytnl EftOllhltd Hlllft9 Ptl<it U4'. IO: Giff U.JO
Ne:; Ywtl: EftQel!Wt'CI lebrlc.led OOIC! t2SS.i! : ""p S1
•
....
..
. .
AJ• DAILY PtLOT Thu,...,, Mwch 1, 1911 .. BUSIN&IS
llank, S&L ]Jame ChWfs . ...
Other Coutaf Bminee1e1 Promote Workers
. BlSINESS
WASHINGTON CAP>
-The week of May 13
baa been designated
"Small Business Week''
FAMILY .
AFFAIR
SINCE
1894
ttlef'e'a no substitute for 9'Coerienc:el
. DEN'S hMrte I.,..,...,, Newpon Beach, bas bffn
a9poln~ presid nt or N..,..n ....._ wta11
_, LNa .\Neel•.._. which la in or1anlaatk>n. He
WM pl'e.vioualy •mployed by American Savtn11
ettac... • Duk-I l •• Thomas, Lake Forest, bas been
by President Carter. .. '' • • '" • .... '"j,J • · .,. · .. • ·
He said the nation ·s · ca1'~•1e4 · lnsta 11t1on • custom dr•p11r11s
s m a 11 b u s i n e as e s ' ~~~ Lii:,_I linoleun • wood floor
..oen••
and Loan. mo.l recently •• vlc:e
pret deot and a11lstanl to the
president and earller as vl~
prealdenl. loan admlnlatraUoo. Before ;olnlna American bet was vlc:e prnident, loan ,.1 ..
and pl"O('tSlln1. for Rhfonl N•·
tlonal Corp.. • mortaqe bank lnc COmpan)'.
Vnlll recently . h e
•H board chalrman of tho
Ko me Loan <>W\MllQI C nU,r.
Loa Ansel•. a corporaUon h lnitaated and whkb la owned by 31 California aav·
logs and loan a880ChaUona lie conUnu on the n ·
eeuUve committee. • I.Utt C. Bhae, Mia.ton Vtejo. ha11 been named
president of Commer~e Baak, a nt•w financial 1n
sUtutioo an the Newport Bt'ach·
Irvine industrial area
He as a 17·year veteran of
the banking business and ls
former vice president and
manager or Imperial Bank 1~
Santa Ana and.manager of~I·
oeas development for the Union
Bank regional office in Newport
Beach
The bank is operating ln
temporary quarters at 4640
Birch; Newport Beach. •Lur
Other bank officers are Jolln Peacock, chief
executive officer, and George Ochmer, exttutive
vice president ·
I • . James L. Conkey, Laguna Beach, bas been
named vice president of administr ation for
Preale, of Southern Callforala, a homebuilding
subsidiary of The Presley Companies, Newport
Beach.
He is a former senior deputy city attorney
with the city of Santa Ana and bas taught real
property and business law courses at Sadd.leback
College. • David E. Sharpe, El Toro. bas been named
vice president of State Matual Savings and Loan
Aaloclation, based in Newport Beach.
He joined the association in 1976 as an itlternal
audit manager. He will continue to monitor and
appraise the operational activities.
• Manuel J . Armendariz, Irvine,, has been ap-
pointed vice president or finance for Diverslfteit
Sbopplng Centers, Costa Mesa.
based developer of shopping
centers.
He will oversee the or·
ganization's fi nancial activities
in accounting, banking .and
growth. .
A certified public accoun-
tant, be is former vice president
of finance at Amel 1)evelop-
ment Co .• Santa Ana. He has 22
UMHouiz years of experience in fmaocial
and accounting management and has held fmao-
cial posts with the Irvine Co .. Calprop Corp. and
Coopers & Lybrand. • Gerald B. MeQaan1e, executive vice president
and chief executive officer of Downey Savings and
Loan Association, Costa Mesa, .bas been appointed
to the 1979 Advisory Committee on State Legisla·
tion of the United States Leagve of Savings Aa·
soclations. ' .
The league is the principal trade organization
for the savings and loan business and represents
more than 4,400 associations . •
Donald C. Berman, Newport Beach, chairman
and president. and Daniel C. Baller, Costa Mesa,
officer and director, of Quall Place Properties,
lac., Newport Beach, have qualified as financial
orincioals. according to National Asaociation of
Securities Dealers, the testing agency.
The distinction qualifies them to engage in
marketing limited partnerships involving a $3
million public offering. Seven Quall Place Com·
panies are involved in sales, brokerage, manage-
ment, conslruction, development, engineering,
syndication, securities and other services in real
Pre-Inventory Reduction
SALE
1/2 OFF
This ls Sell'Cted Merdlandise From Our
Own Stock -Regularly Sold In Our Own Stott
• Oaab'5 • Watches • RiJ9 • 8factJas
• PenclmU . • Nedc!acrs
• Pim • a..-
• Mnoaic: Jtwtiry • Mountings
•~Of ADKinds .
Sale Ends Saturday
March 3
0,... Tbanday Evenlq UntJU:30
l P'riday • Saturday l~
l'.c \'our Uank,\nu:rlt:iarcl/\'hua Ol")IH lcrc:harirc
X11 1l11n11<: C"hor11ci.
All Sal~1t Final
HARLES ff; BARR·
named IN •tiant vice preeldenl and commercial
loan ottlet\r at flank of Newport'• Dover office ln NewPort Beach
More jolnln1 tt-e bank, be worked wlth Bank
of Am ric1 H a llalaon between the bank's ln·
lernatlonal offke and lta domestic branches.
prim'arll,y lhoMl In Or•n1e County branches. He la
a former vice pr tdont Mod regional loan advilor
ror U .S. NaUoruaJ Bank.
"he lped c r eate the ~ m u l t l t u d e o f 0 p . '''J "-c....._ A¥ ... • COth c•. tHJ7
portunllles." ,.._. 646-41JI • 646. I
.. Gibraltar Savings
26-Week Certificates
MINIMUM' $10,000
Exceptionally high in terest. Short term. Safety
and conve nie nce. Everything you want in ti
sound savings investment is combined in this one
Gibraltar account.
The anna:sal effective yield results from daily
compounding of interest and assumes that all
funds remain for the full year at the same rate.
The annual rate is determined by adding .25%
to the discount rate announced each week for
26-week U.S. Treasury bills. Therefore, the rate
is supiect to change at renewal.
from date of i$Sue your certificate earns the
same high interest for the full 26-week term.
If you have a T:biJI or certificate maturing
soon, we can handle all details to transfer the '
account automatically at the appropriate time.
No fees. No extra charges.
By Federal law, eorly withdrawal on certificate account la subject
to sub1tantial interest penalty.
payyoumore
than anY bank
~.with insured
~af ety.
%
ANNUAL EFFECTIVE YIELD
%
ANNUAL RATE
For certificates Issued March 1 thrv March 7, 1979
' .. .... ' FSJJC ........ ..,, __ ..... ... ._._._
EXTENDED HOURS:
SATURDAYSz pli offices open 9:.30 to 4:00 • WEEKDAYSz most offices open Mon.-Thurs. 9:00 to 5:30; Fri . to 6:00 .
*SUNDAYS and WEEKNIGHTSz many shopping mall offices open Sun.days 11 :00 to 4:00; weeknights till 9:00:
Hours may vary. PleaH check with your local office.
fOUNOID 1116 • AlllTI N llUION • OfflCll ifATIWIDI
OFFICES SERVING ORANGE COUNTY • flULLlln'OM HI W. Ofangethorpe Ave. 111-e101
....,....,,. llACM ,., HuntlngtOn Cen• 118-9M8
~ lllACM '100 W. Coeet Hwy. IS1~2811
O.•tJWGO 119'f Dll ebt9po 8t -IO
IMTA MAI009TA---. 38215 8. Brletot at. 9~7580
IMTA MA._ lefieli Mi f'eahton &quart l:M-0117
Plue ofttoee ~ &cMMm, Central and NorthJ<J\ C.llfot'nla
' ..
.. ,
I ,~
.
}
. • I
1 • •
l
I
I • I
OAlt.'( PIL9T 83
•• '.N·s•1•o•e·:~-·T•e•1e•v•is•1•on ..... ·.M·o•v•1•e•s ................................................. ~ .... l!O'rtS • E ntertalnment
011Jr110(ly Ma1rh I 1919 DAILY PILOT BJ
Uq. Will Be Sky~high
Anteaters Duel Pacific Tonight in Tourney
By li':RNIE CASTILLO pion Puclf1r tonight 2.u o'clock > ut th~ every other tea~ in the conference, that
When practiC:-b:'• ...... •-0 L 16 Ti Anaheim Convl'nllon Ct<nter in the PCAA would seem like a distinct possibility. The
aan on c . m tournament Anteaters either beat or went down to the
Tift 8~ OM lme and modt~t goal for UC UCI , the hord lut·k turn during the re· wire with Long Beach State, Utah State, l~vtne s tHlaket II team Be tht' ~~t t{ular Pacific Coai;t Athletic ~sn cam-Cal State FulJerton. F resno State, UC $an-
te.am w~ on poMlbly be aJ th~ end or the pal.en. has • lll'W goal now. Become the ta Barbara and San J ose State.
taison Rol'lcy" le m of thti tournament
Well, that lime has unv<-d amd 'Ill 1t "Wl·'re t rying to prl.'purc ourst>lves with
Ht-l'm11, have lhl.' Anteall'r~ that ln mind," !>lt)'S 1'1tt "We know we're
wolng tc> Ix-decidi'd underdogs but our
main thll\I now lb to extend the season to "TIU T£AM HAS COME it long wuy
Wlth<>"!t any. <~ut·~t1on, we're almost •s
good as w• could po:,slbly be." hys Ttft,
whose team takes On regular :,eason cham-
l''rlduy "
TttE WAV THEY PLAYED against
But it was a different matter against
Pacific. which beat UCI by ·10 and 20
points en route to the conference crown
and an 11-3 record.
.. Obviously, we're going to have to do
things differently," says Tift. "We're go·
See UCI, •age BZ
Greenwood,
Bird Get
Honors
NEW YORK (AP l At In·
diana State. the fans say that
"Bird 1s the word" and Red
Auerbach or the Boston Celtics
agrees. In fact. he feels that
Larry Bird is the LAST word.
•'When he gets anywhere near
the ball. it belongs to him."
notes the general manager of
the Celtics about Indiana State's
forward_ "He has a great con-
cept or the game or basketball,
and a great feel of what's going
-on brtween the fottt-H~· --+----~::::
U"-YC "l\VC:n\.Crf
Corona del Mar
TRUIETT HATI'ON
Marina
FOR ALL THESE reasons.
a nd m any mo r e. Bird wa s
among those named Thursday to
The Associated Press 1978·79 All·
Am erica college basketball
team. The Sycamore superstar
was joined for the second
straight year by UCLA forward
Tardie Top Coach
2 Vikes Head .
David Greenwood, along with
San Francisco ce nte r Bill
Cartwright and guards Sidney
M o n cr~ef of Ark a nsas and
Earvin J ohns on of Mi c higan
State.
.,. ... ,,.,....
AMY ALCOTT -AN LPGA ST AR OF THE FUTURE.
All-Coast Area The A P 's second team
featured Duke centE!r Mike ·
Gminski. flanked by Calvin Natt
Amy's Drive
She Simply Wants to. Win
By HOWARD L. HANDV
f'
By ROGER CARLSON
Of , ... 0611y ,.,,.. Su tt
Six teams have picked up two AU-Orange Coast area
choices in the Daily Pilot's selections. r~ecting the balance
of power in high school area basketball. ·
Marina,. Orange County's No. 1 rated team, was the
only school to garner two first team selections, while Mater
Dei lligh's Jerry Tardie was chosen as Coach of the Year
AMONG THE FIRST TEAM are Marina's 6-7 Randy
Heidenreich and guard Truiett Hatton, along with 6·4 junior
Steve Van Horn of Estancia, Corona del Mar guard David
Koehler and Huntington ·Beach guard Rico Thompson.
Tardie, who guided his team to the Angelus League
championship after en~ering the race as underdog to Bishop
Montgomery and Serv1te in the league race, completed his
11th straight season with a winning record.
The Monarchs have accumulated a 187-99 record over
that span, including seven appearances in the CIF playoffs
and the last four straight. Tardie's 1979 outfit raced to a 19·5
record.
HEIDENREICH AND HATl'ON were the inside-outside
punch of the Vikings in their drive to the Sunset League
championship, while Van Horn was the key to Estancia's
annexation of the Sea View League title.
Thompson, although he ave~ged only 9.2 points a game
as the Oilers' backcourt ace, showed more versatility and
value than most players with a 20-point average.
IN LEADING MARINA High to the Sunset League
championship, Heidenreich and Hatton share Player of the
Year honors .
The Vikings, tabbed to win the league championship,
did just that, winning by a three-game margin.
of Northeast Louisiana at
forwards a nd Baylor's Vinnie
Johnson and lo wa-·s Ronnie
Lester at the guard positions.
T h e third team included
Purdue's J oe Barry Carroll at
center, Gr ego r y Keiser of
Mic higan State a nd Notre
Dame's Kelly Trfpucka at the
forwa rd pos itions and Sly
Williams of Rhode Island and
Roy Hamilton of UCLA at
guards.
The 6-9, 220-pound Bird was a
player with one of the highest
profiles this season. leading the
Sycamores from rela tive ob· scurity to the No. 1 ranking.
With Bird averaging about 29
points and 15 rebounds, the
Sycamores finished the regular
season with a 26-0 record and the
Mi ssour i Valley Conference
championship.
UCLA COACH Gary Cun-
nin g h am calls th e 6 -9
Gr eenwood "an outstanding
basketball player in a ll aspects
of the game -defense, rebound·
ing, offense and teamwork.
What makes him great is that
he's highly motivated to ex_cel
a nd has a lot of God-given
talent."
Greenwood was the tower of
s trength on a strong UCLA
team , averaging near ly 19 points
and 11 rebounds a game.
And although Marina presented a solid and balanced at-
tack, it was Heidenreich and Hatton who were the two the
opposition had to place most of its emphasis.
RICO THOMPSON
Huntington Beech
The 7 -1 Cartwright, who
turned down big pro money last
year to remain in college for his
senior year, had his best season
for the Dons -averaging 24
points a nd 16 r e b o und s .
Cartwright's number has been ' Six of Marina's nine victories in league were by an
average of 22.6 points. retired. putting him in select
company with Bill Rusvll and
K.C. Jones. * * * * All·Orange Coast Area
First Team
Player, School
Randy Heidenreich, Marina
David Koehler, Corona del Mar
Steve Van Horn, Estancia
Rico 1bompson, Huntington Beach
Truiett Hatton, Marina
Second Team
Sal Gaytan, Mater Dei
Mike Samuels, Dana Hills
Chris Beasley, Costa M~a
Brian Freeman, Newport Harbor
John Saunders, Mater Dei
Till.rd Team
Jon Sweek, Newport Harbor
Jeff Andrade, Ocean View
Dan Maddock, Estancia
Wayne Carlander, Ocean View
Shawn Abeam. Corona del Mar
* *
Ht. Cl.
6-7 Sr.
6-0 Sr.
6-4 J r .
S-11 Sr.
6·1 Sr.
6-0 Sr.
6-4 Sr.
6-2 Sr.
6·1' Sr.
6·3 Sr.
6-3 Sr.
5·11 Jr.
6.() Sr.
6-6 So.
6-5 Jr.
Avg.
12.7
16.3
21.S
9.2
12.9
19.1
15.0
19.5
15.6
19.3
18.2
20.0
12.0
18.7
12.5
JER"Y TARDIE
Mater Del
~lltSTTIAM
Center -8111 C:.r""rlo111. S.n Francl1Ko. 1.1
Sr ; Fo,...•ros -L•rry 81rcl, 1ncllarw Stet• .....
Sr Incl 04\llcl G.....,wood, UCLA.• Y, Sr . Guard\
-Slcl,,.y Moncriei, Arllens ... •·4. Sr Incl Earvin
JoMson. MlclllQMI Stele ..... So
"' Sl!CotlO Tl!AM Center -Mlh GmonOI, Ou-e. •·II Jr
Forw4rc11 -Re9111e l<lno. Alabam•. w . Sr •n<I
Calvin Nett. NortllHSI Loul\la l\1 •·j. Sr
Guerd1 -Vinni. JOflnson. 8010r ... , Sr • ...,
Ronn•• lnter low• ... , Sr
YHl!tOTEAM
Center -Joe S.rry C:.trOll, Puro... I 1 Jr
Fo .... arcl\ G"9 l(etwr M IClllOll\ 51•1• .. , 5r.
ancl l(elly TrlpU(WI. N04,. o-• 1.-611 GUI"'\
Sly Wllll...,1, R,_ tllancl • I Jr .tncl Roy
Hamlllon UCLA •.. 1 Sr
Honor-MtftOon lnclUOtt
Ml-• 0 teoren, Not'lll C•rolln• Oerrtll Gfol·
11\11. loulsvlll•: H•wkeye Wllllno. North
Carolin• S..M, Albert ltklQ. Mlry11nc1: GMw
B•n-\. Oulle; lerry GJl>soft. M1ry11nc1; Jim
terlven, T••as. l(elll\ M<Ooneld. Utlll Slit..
MltllHI Gray. Nevedl·R•no: Londa .. n.,,,
Sine.. Clara; Ome Mahon. P9pperc11,,.; IClll'!Wr·
ly 9ellon, S11ntorc1: M iile H iiu, Cal State
Ful .. rto!>; S..... ..._..,,, Ott90f\ 54-; Clltt
llot>l11son, s.itNm c.t; "k ll ll1Mo • ...,,,_:
Lerrr Oetnlc, Ari-Sta•; Tff'en<• C...y,
Pac:lfl<; ~ICI Hollencl. UCt.A; Kim ao.ct. 514'
Ole90 Stal•; Bernard TOol\e. M1rQuelle: L••-tulle•. lelello Stal•; O•rNll v....,11,,.,
te11\lH; Jim ~"•rkl1; Ouk•. ltyl• Mac:v. tC•ntucky.
. Ciaptf Get ·Chewed Olit, Then Tl~ LA
LOS ANGELES CAP> Wublaalon
Capltall Ooecll DaUJ Belille deeiMcf bit
team needed a Uttle talklq to, and be did ... andtllefllltaled,
••After .. .,.... down bJ two aoaJa ID the
Oral ~ I ~· IUtle weal aad WO-. liim .. f• Uiiill 111:_ 8illlJe Nli'Wel"-IHleday ldtli!l after tile w,.... llrated to a
S·S Nadalial ~ Le ... tie wD U.
Lot A .... IODll.
PLATSal juat uemed to
. -
rapond to tbe situation," he added. "Y(e
Cot P'aMed around" a Uttle bit in the first
period and that's not customary for us ."
Spottina the Kinp two flnt petiod goals,
the Cape eeored twice ln the aec~od tbfb
-tiH tt ,.. pd OD Demril 'llvult's •
footer with 8:31 left In the 1ame.
"The -polnt 11 what we deserve." Hid Bdala. "I'm happy with lhe lie on the
road.t llP8dalb' since we haven't been 10· llll tnat loc)d thl1 month.' 1
•
' I • •
W111\lllffOll 0 1 l-l
Los Allflllft I 9 t-l
"'"' PwlOCI t Los A11911H. Tarter J4 !Sim..,.., 01o11N1. 4 .. t l ot A119tlft, • ., ...... , IA9"1, 1•41 "'"'-"•• -HOft.
LA. major. t·S.S, Wett•r, W.V.. "'•!Of. I fJ. Oelclup, L.A. "'elOf, mlftOr, 1•1t; "-'111, W••• ft\ol!Of, t tti Glrlf'll, ..._,..,...
m 11<onowct, t 12, It-, WIKll, J "· Holt. LA. l'llli-t, Ii., ....... ,. w ..... ,,..,.,. • .... •
Sec~ ""10d -I Wetll~. Sl1'91\ 1-fl.YMll. CNrnllJ,
I SI •· W~. lt-14 IL.yncll, 0-1, 11·U ~" ... -
HOii, LA, 1:45, 9 Wth61\, LA 1111 ..,, $ •: L. ...... W<Mll, ll'NllOf
i JO; P•"-· L.A. U·tl: '--· W11llf""9fl ... .
T"rr'd llWIOCI S. 1.M At19ti.t. llfn-I l ........... A#tl,
1 50 6 W~. Mlrvll 1• It U ~ 0.lflt, LA. 19
SltOtUlltMI WOlllll\ltofl ).lt .. -JI '-"AfltlflK 1M-U
0..U.. -W_f,._, lllMt\. LM A ... IH. U111tt. A 1.t1..t.
' Ot IM Dally "1'411 Sutt
There's a drwmg urge behind the golf game of.Amy Alcott
and if she wins seven or eight tournaments in one year, she has
the urge to win lO more
Neither of these s1tuat1ons has occurred yet but the persona-
ble 23-year-old from Santa Monica will be among the leading
contenders to win the Kemper Open at Mesa Verde Country
Club March 28-April 1
"I KNOW WHAT MY capabibttes are and as a professional,
I just have to go out and prove il. .. Alcott said this week. .
rd'Things are better than they have ever been for me n gbt
now and there is more incentive to go out and wi n. I believe the
best years are still ahead for the LPGA <Ladies Professional
Golf Assn.> · .. People come up to me all the time and say they can't re-
late to Jack Nicklaus but they feel they can relate to Jane
Blalock and othfrs on the LPGA tour.··· '
ALCOTT STARTED THE 1979 SEASON in impressive
fashion by winning the Elizabeth Arden Classic in Miami on the
third hole of a playo ff with Sandra Post two weeks ago.
.. When I started at 18 right out of high school. I wanted to be
the best. .. She said. "I wanted to set the world on fi re. To
become the leading money winner right away
"( have mellowed a lot smce then and play the game for
myseU. I take the eame very senously but r know there is more
to life than swinging a golf club
"Last year I started to play for my onginal feeling -the
love of the gaml' It has given me so much, I will continue lo
play for that reason · ·
HAS SHE REACH ED hert>Olential while winning al Teast
one tournament each or the four years she has been on the tour?
"I don't feel hke I have touched my potential." she said.
"There are no bars lo my game . but I can do better. The
physical aspect. natural strength and groWth as a person along
witb the other things that go into golf are important. If 1 can
store that all up here I pointing to her head 1. I can be the best
golfer on the tour ··
Last year. Nancy Lopez was the sensation of the LPGAi
tour, winning nine tournaments and pocketing $189.813. She ha<\
been on the tour for only a year and a half a nd with such sue·
See ALCOTT. Page 83
Can CdM Finally
Do the Unexpected?
By ROGER CARLSON
Ol tM 010y ftl ... Sutt
Corona de l Mar High 's Sea.
Kings have rolled to a 21-3 over·
a ll record in basketball this
season. yet they really haven't
impressed themselves with their
efforts-they have yet to do
anything not expected or them
Billed to win the Sea View
League champions hip in a
breeze, the Sea Kings finished
No. 2 to Estancia.
p1onstup and an overall 22·3 re ·
cord
IT'S THE THIRD straight
year Corona del Mar and Los
Amigos have clashed in the
playoffs with Los Amigos.falling
m the wake of CdM's CIF cha.Gl·
pionstup year of 1977, then ouat·
'ing Corona del Mar from the '78
playoffs.
While ,Olivier Is the obvious
key to Los Amigos' game with a
26 .7 scoring average and
A TEAM WITH FOUR all· tr e m e ndo u s rebounding
league players, a returning All-capabilities. Errion says hi!\
ClF gulll"d, and a veteran coach team can't zero in on him.
ln Jack Errioo. the Sea Kings "Olivier was on the bench
have yet to e,q,lode and Errfon wlth foul trouble most or the
agrees u'his team prepares for Ume Tuesday (in a 71 .59 wtn
Friday nig-bt-'s C l F 3 -A over Troy ) yet Los Amigo,
quarterfinals game with Los didn't seem to be slowed down et
Amigos at Huntington Beach all. Other people are not getUn,g
Hl1b. their due recognition because 4f
"We've bad some fine games J)llvter's stature .
from indMduals." says Errfon.
"but ~e haven't reached our "AND IT IS .NoT a question ar
peak at all. This is a chance to having one other 1ood playet,
gobe)ond-whaunight haft'----·-1•ttinay~IJ a-ad trnepm-
expected, this is the point to im· ty good siie. Even ii we had t.be
prove oo expectations." time. I don't lhlnk it would be
Los Amlgos futures $· 10 wise to try to design somethlnl
Junior Clayton Olivier and a Just for Olivier."
s qu ad which s wept to the Los Amigos presents a solid
Garden Grove Leaiue cbam· See SEA.tKJNO , Pase BZ
. '
' : l
!
• fl2 DAILY PILOT Thu,..day. March 1, 1111 •
.... -.-..
DODGERS WHOOP IT UP IN TRAINING CAMP.
Fairly Trades Bat, Glove
For Announcer's Booth
From AP Dispatches
Ron Fairly, the 40-year-old veteran deposed ii
from first base with the California Angels by
batting champion Rod Carew, announced his
retirement from baseball Wednesday.
Fairly will stay in baseball as a commentator for
television station KTLA ..
The University of Southern CaUfornia product thus
wound up 21 seasons in the major leagues, 12 of them with
the Los Angeles Dodgers, from 1958·69.
He then played with Montreal, St..
Louis, Oakland, Toronto and the Angels.
His lifetime batting average Is .266.
At 40, Fairly was the regular fi rst
bas eman for the Angels in 1978 but
when the club ot>tained Carew from
Mi n nesota for 1979, it was apparent the
veteran would, at best be a utilityman.
Switching to the television booth.
Fairly sta ys with Gene Autry who owns
both KTLA and the Angels . """'L., But he m isses a goal of spending
part or four decades as an active player. It would take him
one more season and a game to do that since he started in
1958.
A veteran of four World Series, with a batting ave rage
or .300, Fairly said, "All my life I've liked nothing better
than playing baseball. In what other way could you m ake
moner having as much fun ?"
~ Can11elu Bra..,I to a Drate
J .P.. Bordeleau's second ~oat of the game , ~
with one second re m aining in the second period, ,
gave the Chicago Black Hawks a brawl-marred
4.4 tie with the Vancouver Canucks in a Na·
tional Hockey League game Wednesday night. There were
eight fights in the g ame and 132 minutes in penalties ...
Briata Sut.&er scored the tying goal with 5: 12 to play and set
up Bob Murdoch's winner 'With 1:06 left as the St . Louis
Blues offset' Vadav Nedoman.sky's second straight three-
goal ga me and beat Detroit, 6-5 ... Greg Maloae tipped in
Randy Carlyle's shot to lilt the Pittsburgh Penguins out of
a 3.3 tie on the way to a 5-3 victory over the Colorado
Ro<.'kies ... Bob ~acMlllao scored ~wo goals and collect-
From Page BJ
UCI READY •••
ing lo have to make some adjust-
ments.··
ONE OF THOSE adjustments
was devoting nearly the entire
week lo preparing mentally for
the Tigers, who shoot extremely
well aod, as Tift says, "have a
great ability to find a team's
we akness and then exploit it "
To that end, Tift has been pumping up the t e am with
everything from the "Rocky''
movie sound track to readings
from Vince Lombardi.
It is, he says, anything but a
{immick.
"We're serious . We're taking
a real strong approach on lbe
emotions of the play~rs right up
until game time," says Tift who
bad the entire week's schedule
mapped out.
TODA\"S SCHEDULE. for ex·
ample, had a 1 o'clock shooting
·session at the convention center,
-a few hours of relaxation and a
4:30 pre-game team meal.
"We'll ·have covered every
aspect or( the noor and try to
lltart · building our emotional
pitch then," says Tift.
There is alwa ys a drawback to
(00\ ~.~ ... ~
INSURANCE
MOWIM
HIWPORT llACH
AUTO ·HOMI ""' . .,,...
1700 W. C.-Hwy.
SlllleJll · ................
645-8220 .. '
such a plan, however, and that is
the chance that the team will be
too high for the game.
"YEAH, WE'RE CON·
cerned about g e tting too
up," Tift says. "We try to talk in
terms of being confident, having
fun and playing hard because it
is going to be an exciting and
fun game. 1 hope we don't go out
and try too hard and start put·
ting up bad shots or throwing the
ball away."
Tift 's strategy, as it has been
all season long, is just the op-
posite~ontrol the tempo, work
the ball around for the open
shots and above all, be patient.
It almost worked last Satur-
day against Long Beach State, a
team UCI had lost to by 25 points
in tbe season opener. In the
finale, the Anteaters shot 82 per-
cent in the .second half of a see·
saw batUe only to fall ln the
closing moments, 64-63.
If nothing else, the closeness
of the game reaffirmed the
players' belief ·1n Tift's system,
not an easy one lo cope with in
the first place, and punctuated
the coach's belief that the team
has made giant s trides
throuJthout the year
•
\
\ l'd t~o ualal.I and llnema~ Gay CHUDard cootrlbuled a
l'" l t' nr «Oals to l'H d .tl\d • AUahta F1~lfi~~ to~ ~c 't.1rr O\t~l"' • • ,
tht-Toronto Moplc Leafs . Krtl MIDery'a second goal of
thf' game with 6 25 to play earned the Mlnoeeola North
Stems a 4·4 Ue with the N~w York Rangers.
• fl-t~ of tlNt Da·-.
Oincl:nnaU Reds catcher Joblly~ad1, addln1
another footnote to the $3.2 million contract Pele
Rose got from the Philadelphia Phillies: "There's no
wt1y Pete would be worth S800,000 t• lbe Reds. Whal
he'a worth lo the Phillie• Is lhelr affai~. The problem
In ClnciMati Is that if Roae ~ worth J800,000 to the
Reds .· there would be too many other players who
would have to be put into that category."
Y•s ~rt• to E••P
Bobby Mlttb.ell..JQl'mer USC atar. s ingled ii
homt! two runs off veteran knuckleball pitcher
Cbarl&e Hou•b Wednesday as two Los Angeles
Oudli'er squads battled to a 2-2 tie in Vero Beach
. Veteran slugge r Carl Yutnemskl, who threatened to
'>It out the 1979 se ason because of a contract dis pute, re.
port~d lo the Boston Red Sox' training camp one day
•1head of !C.hedule _ •. All·sJ.ar third baseman Geor1e
Brett will undergo surgery on his rlttbt thumb Friday, but
a K arusa.s City spokesman says be will be ready for tbe season
o p~n er oh April 5 ... The Seibu Lion s of the
Japctnese Pacific League defeated the Chicago White Sox,
3·2, in an exhibition. game at Sarasota . . . First baseman
Chris CbambUu of the New York Yankees says be does
not e xpect the SJ?r ained ligament In bis right wrist lo burt
h is spring training conditioning ... Infieldet· BUI
Madlock and outfielder "m Dwyer were the only players
massing as the San Francisco Giants practiced lo Casa
G rande, Ariiona , and both players were expected to arrive
today ... Pilcher Geoff Zahn, who was 14·14 for the Min-
ne~ota Twins last season, was admitted to a Florida
hospital for treatment of a du~enal ulcer ... Michiga n
State two-sport star Kirk Glbaon. who became the Detroit
T icers' biggest bonus baby ever, reported t9 the American
Leu~u~ clu.b's camp in Lakeland W~esday.
s •• , la'• l-pn-C'Up• " ....
Randy Smllb's 10-foot jumper with one m
second ~emaining in the game Wednesday night
gave the San Diego Clippers their seventh con·
secuti ve National Basketball Assn. victory, a
122·120 triumph over Kansas City ... Gas WUllams scored
28 points and Dennb J oboson added 19 as the um-d e m an n ed Seattle Supersonic s . defeated the
Philadelphia 76ers, 97-93 ... Houston guard Mike
. Dunleavy, who s igned a multiyear con-
tract earlier in the day, came off the
beocb to score 21 points as the Rockets
powered to a 122-97 win over the Denver
Nuggets . . . Alvin Soott cashed in on
two free throws with three seconds to go
and beat a determined Indiana Pacers
fourth-qua rter rush as the Ph0enix Suns
won, 103-102 ... George Gervin
pumped in 33 points, 18 of them in the
third quarter. and five other San An ·
tonio Spurs hit in double figures as the
sM1TH Spurs thrashed the New York Knicks,
135-112 ... Marques Johnson scored 19 points before in·
termission while the Milwaukee Bucks, 90nverted 71 per·
cent from the floor in the first half to set up a 139-117 vic-
tory .over Cleveland ...... Elvln Hayes and Phil
Chenier rallied Washington in the closing minutes, after
the Chicago Bulls had pulled to within three points, and re·
vived the Bullets for a 124-113 victory . " . Veteran Bob
McAdoo scored 25 points and led the Boston Celtics to a
122-112 victory over New Orleans.
. T~~Radlo
TV: Horse Racing -Today at Santa Anita, 7:30 p.m ..
Channel 52. Basketball -California at UCLA, 10 p.m.,
Channel 5, taped. Stanford at USC, 11 p.m ., Channel 9,
taped.
RADIO: Basketball -Kentucky vs. Alabama in the SEC
tournament, 3:25 p.m ., KFOX (93.5 FM >. PCAA Tourna·
ment, Cal State Fullerton vs. Long Beach .Stat~7 p.m ..
KWRM (1370> and KFOX (93.5 FM >. California at CLA,'8
p.m .,KMPC C710 );StanfordatUSC,8p.m.,KFI (640 .
From Pag~ BI
SEA KINGS· ••
2one defense with Olivier in the
middle and Errion agrees it pre-
sents a problem ~specially in
getting the se<:ond shot.
"Actually," continues the Sea
Kings' third-year coach, the key •
for us is how well we do with our
offense. If we're able to bandJe
our own plans offensively ·it will
be a lot more important than
any special defense for them.
"We have to play our game to
slay in it.'·
" CORONA DEL MAR features
David Koehler and Shawn
Ahearn at guards, and Chris
Johnston, Rick Ki.odorf and 6-6
sophomore Mark Spinn up front.
Los Amigos, in addition to
Olivier, has 6-2 Dave Adkins, 6-5
Larry Cook, 6·2 Phil Day and 6-2
Jeff Ludes. That combination
has produced a 14-game winning
streak.
"We lost a couple along the
way that bas taken away from a
fine season," says Errion.
"I don't feel we've played our
best game yet, but I hope it de-
velops Friday. Collectively I
think we can do the job. . . but
it wilt take about• a seven-man
job to do it."
.
BASKETBALL
Sereening Out
The Kings' Murray Wilson 19 1 attempts to screen out
Was hington goaltender Gar~ Innes as the puck flies
toward the goal during first period action Wednesda y at
. the Forum Mu rr ay· ... efforts d idn't work as Innes gloved
t he sht>t T h(' King~ <1nd Caps settled fo r a 3·3 tie.
SCC Faees BiOla
Vanguards in Playoff Game
LOS ANGELES It will be
Southern California College's
run-and-gun offense agains t
Biola CoUege's slow down game
when the two basket ball teams
square off tonight 16 30 > m a n
NAIA Division 3 playoff game al
Occidental College.
Th e Vang ua r d s o f So Ca I
College. ranked 10th nationally
in N AIA le.a m scor ing. are
averaging 86.9 points a ~ame
while hitting on 51.8 percent of
their field goal attempts The
team boasts the first and second
leading Ora nge County col-
legiate scorers in Paul Anderson
(23.4 points per ga m e > and Ran·
,,
dy Adams 09.4 ).
On the other hand, Biola relies
on balan<.'e and a delay game .
The Eagles' leading s<.'or er.
Greg Berglund, is averaging 14
points an outing.
SCC Coach Ed Moriarty would
like to see his team dictate a fast
tem po but won't pan ic if Biola
tries to tum it into a slow one .
The winner of tonig ht's game
wall retu~ Saturday for an 8
p.m. game against No. l seeded
P o int Loma . T he C rus ade rs
drew a first round bye after win·
n1ng the NAIA Dis tri ct J
Sout hern Division, by beating sec last week, 117-82.
Orange County•s oldest Lincoln-1\lercur)' Dealership
" JCHNSCN l SCN
THE FA'k11LY LINCOLN-MERCl'RY .. TORE
2626 Harbor Blvd. Costa Me~a 540-5630
l
\
==='---UoJlle--Of the. Golden Iouch -------~f---... t
\ ..
.. -· .
1. I
. I
r
i I I
I
I •
BASKETBALL/BASEBALL Thuraday. Match 1, 1979 DAILY PILOT •3
,.,.._r-.e•i
ALCOTT ••• '
Tars, Oilers, £dM, Liberty . Girls · Win
eeaa. it would be 4U••Y for the other
players to l"ftent her preHnce
Newp<>rt llurbo1 k.aock('(J ort
No 2 rankt."<l Matl'r 011, 48 44\, to
highllf'!'t ucUon 1n t.' cdncl!ldJty
nai hl I Clf' Ktrll.' HAokctbull
playort1
us the buntr sound('(! But 1he
m 1111ed the flrat halt or a ono-
pl u• one free throw altuaUon.
1rnJ the game was over
d .__ · ~ ... ,,,_.,.,.,4k..,.¥ .. •• , Scen.,,,0..11en c a I OlOtuenng defense Otu " 111.,. Llebtrted 11 • .,.., •• " 11. P1_, • " " "'-'' In lhe 3·A bracket, Corona del ""••tUl'lo' s1ewe11 '· Otwn •. "IOdl•• J s. .. c .. ~•• • • • 1• t-»
I d COf'on• .... ,,.., Torrtt IJ, "-•II IJ, ~· Tot•l loull s.n 0."*'1•. P'-..-1. ,..,..., M ar exp ode t n l he fl rs l "· £\""'° i.. su"" • out .._, -recMI<••• s.." c .. m.,.1ecoec11. quarter. Jumping out to an 1&-4 ~WOMn9" "_........ ... c.,n.'•1111mw•M
"That tan't true," Alcott
uy1. "Nancy created a lot of in
terHl in our tour. And she 's Ju.&t
a1 f h~ a person aa she ts •
1oJfer."
Alao advanrtntt w•rt· tlunt
lngton B~ach . w11i1 a 82 511
triumph ot Alh1m1br• ll1~h . anti
C'orona del Mar. witch bllt&t'Ct
vt11tmg Ot't'an Vjl'w ..... 11
reaa . •nd the Sea King girts Cktt" vi.w • • .. ,. • Mlll\llnqlewl 8"<11 Krom •• Dotie 1\. Clllllleft Cerofte del Me• 1a 11 •• II...., bH,. 11, ,.......,_ U, A...Wn It. ANGELUS Lt:AG \) E cham· ne~r looked back. .. tot•llOUI, C.-del Mer •. Ot••" View 20,. AllMMbrl-Ander'°" 2, hlltV "· (;oolul9t.
pion M~ter Otl nte red the ·Although Ocean View played "ou•ect<l'4• _,. lec""'01' none C:.rc1011130.•~~~.,· ..... &,....,.. . I ho LI...., OlrifllM ... ~ ....... ....., ., .,._.,,. -~umt' wtth a 21 3 record whlle its opponent even y throug ut P•se'*'-"'°'• 0 0.,~ '· LIOf'•1'DN s. M11nt1r101°" a.Kii u • n 11 •1
N t ti bo th d the Second half that lnltl.al de Ollmo•• ,,, F't-), Otrole '· Sr'r!All, AINMOt• 11 10 " 11 ,. l'Wpor 8r f , e SeCOO • . • • llbe'1Y Olri~'tie,.-loOetl>i. 2 ModQllft ... lotel f9411e: HUlllll\Qlon l'leac:ll U. All\emt>le I), 1>l1H·~ t1nl11he r b hind Sunset fie it was too large to make up Arn<ll 1• Ollt1et1 1 ~ren<tu 0 , • ..,., 11 F'oUIHO<ll ,_., TecMIC•'5 none ALCO'IT SAY THE beat
t rowdJ are at the eatabll hed
evantl au~b •• th on In St
Petenbura. Fla. hut w~k
Ltberty C'hrl11t1•n t>d it>rt
r asudt'na Polf. 43 41 ,lo advanc1·
t o lbC' . mall rhuol-.
quarlt'trfinal Shnn.J\ Mod.;1111
and Hntht•r l>n·ycr :.1wrkNI
l.Nttiue king Huntington Beach. Corona del Mar. like Hunt· k.,..,,,°i,.,.. · ......,."..._..,Mm•D•• ..
wa2' 17 6 ington Beach, got double-figure LP1~,,w":~~.~&ft ,,. ~ ~! 11• ! "°, ~~ M•••• 0t<~ie1 •s. &euman •. ~ 1,
i ( ( r • ""' • .... ~"' -· .,. Urel\ICll 3. AA'"''' U, Stl"br" '· 0•..e• 3 · J~aruw Wolfe spearheaded the scor ng rom our 0 Its starters TO!al IOul\ llb9rfy Cllrhllel\" Pe.-n. Pe>-Ht•PG'1 Herl>Or Parktr J , E t htern.Cll I Nt.<w""rt Harbor effort, loaglng Linda Goeggel tallied le and '• '" l"ouled o.i• Lo0 •"'-tLii.rn c1v 1• 11ui11•. -.. •• c.t~.., 1, wolf• 2•. s~nvw '
'Tho LPOA ls ln a fr at
grow In• bl<X'k right now.. she
said "It Is fabulou for mt' to
bt< • part of 1t t 've lways
played golf in my hurt and to
be aucct"SSful In onythln&. you
have to be In lovt> with It
1"' d "' C I Or•v•r 1u11env Cit< 1 o 0111..--e IP•-t ken llY oi..n..-. 26 poinht, Riel ocore 15 and aro Esposito scored 16. while ...__.1.~11 c .. ,,_,.,. ,,.,,.,o.1 ., " ,o \1 ... Libert)' • FAl.J,J~f n JJluyuH"
Wt'r .tstam·rn. •• 48 I() loi;1•r itl
Rig hetti; C~tu Mtu' which ftll
al Viii P rk, til st und ~an
Clt mC'nt.,, which boYed to v1i.1l
Horhara Minear contributed 13. Robbie Torres and Kristie .. ,o,.ff•-L_, •. P•t11 1. o flp11w11• l,j .. ~_..M••t>or ' 1. 11 u ..
11 · B b eded 11 Rowell each finis hed with 13 0•«1• 1•. "'1',..,.. 10 Loe,.,...•. -rot••'°"'' Me1 ... Oe• 11 "'•"'"""' H•rbO<" UntJnglon eaC ne 10UT St n Clemel\le ·JOl\1\\0" 17 C••n I 0 Fo11leCIOVI U•..,,.(11 IMOI, Wolle IHHl SNllllt" ~lutrh ~~throws 1nthecJ~lng ~po~i_n_~-·~~~~~~~~~~~-R~M~h•_m~P_•_.•_~_a_w•_1_c~·-A_M_u_m_P_,_.w_._11e_._'~~-'N_H_1·_,_«_"_"K_•_~_·~~~~~~~~ minut~a two each by Kathy •
Raus in and Jenny Townsend o
knock orr Alhambra.
"In Miami the t rowds were
bette r th a n e ve r -be fore.
especially the las t day. But th~
galleries have grown a lot in the
last twoorlhree years allover "
tn& Pioneer. 41 36 •
Kelly Cardona scored 30 points
for the losers. getting hot m the
Ne wport Hurbor's t·A d1v101011
battle with Mater Ot'I w.as a
cllHhanger from stu>t to finu.h ,
w1lh the v1s1tm~ Mm archi. get
ting an opporturuty lf i.end it into
overtime after the ooek hetd ex
p1red.
fourth quarter and pouring in 17.
Whether the same will hold
true· for .the new events on the
~our-sur h as the Kemper Open
in Costa Mesa remains to be
seen.
BUT BALANCE was tbe key
for Huntington Beach. as four
players notched double figures.
led by Rausin's 19 polnts. She
a lso pulled down 15 rebounds.
Clanging to a lwc·potnl lead.
Newport Harbor f1uled Mater
Oe1 's leading i.corer Kathy Riel,
All-CIFer Kathy Doyle scored
15 points. Townsend finished
with 13 ~d Cindy Clinkenbeard
had 11. Cfiris Hensley conlribut·
l
Edison Nine Rolls;
Uni , DH Stumble
Edison High got five innings of no-hit pitching
from Wayne Justl and w~nt on to blank Kennedy,
3-0, in a Troy Tournament baseball game
Wednesday, but Dana Hills and Uruversity weren't
so fortunate. -·
OFF
P laying in the Tustin Tournament, Dana
Hills was turned back by El Modena, 4-2. and
University got slugged by Santiago, 7-2.
Although Jusll was breezing along with 13
strikeouts and had a no-hitter intact through fi ve
innings, Edison Coach Ron LaRuffa lifted him for
a reliever in order to save his valuable arm for a
doubleheader Saturday.
B.A SEl . .ALL
SOFTB.At L
SOCCER
SHOES RecJ. $12.95-$38.95
hMa, Mftn. Shes: 2 to 12
B.A SKETBALL
OFF "We've got one pitcher hurt and it's so earJy In
the season that we decided ahead of time that all
three of our pitchers would get some work in to-
day," LaRuffa said. "Justl was really s mokin', but
our other pitchers did a good job, too."
SHOES R~ $17.95
Convent> Canvas Sh~s. Lo & H1 Tops. l1lte or
Greg Donald picked up for Justl in the sixth
and Wayne Pal1ca rapped it by striking out the
side in the seventh.
'fhite. Si1HJS.l 1~
JOHN T'S BIG FOOT In all the Edison pitchers not ched 17
strikeouts out of a possible 21 outs. A'thelttc Footwear Sizes 2·17
• lacquetball Equipment and Apparel * * * * * *· en Bristol at Bed Hill
sc-w ,,...,..., !.llwlMkl !Sanllaool, Hancllef 15.,n Costa Mes. (714) 957-2991
!oe11th190 JU 000 o 1 s o 111901
Ul\1vers1ly 010 001 0-1 S 7 Sc-l>ylMlfl<J• llein to Ward/Harr1ng4ef'I EdlW" 011 000 I J • 1
SllwlnHI and Orltr. Jack1on,
z1 aaals 131 •"" Aol>lnso" 'I"·· Sl1w ll\Sk l L-J•tkson. HA-
ICennP.dV 000 000 O O 1 3
Jusu. Donald 161 Pa•I<• 171 .. ,.d
Jones, Troll~. St'"'"· Polln9., UI and J-s W-JU111 l -Sn .. 111
~ 7 Mon thru F11 10·5 Sat 12:30·5 Sun
We Go To Great Lengths To Serve You"
•
( \
I I
I llOPI I
I TO THE SUJPIS I
[. fOllGHTii :
I Ski Lovers Night Package. I . .
Two evening lift tickets and a corcrle of wine. For a mere $14. ~ I Offer good Wednesdoy-Sotutdoy 5 p.m.-10 p.m. ,. r~ -
"-
Ah. the night the snow. ttie California. Followed with
wine and tboU. The Ski LCJv'ers_ a.carafe of wine as.a night·.
q ,,,. Night Pa:kage at Holiday Hill. ·cap. ,For the easv-to·love
A romantic rendezvous t hat price of just S14.
won't break\1pvour bank account. Do It In the srx:JN with some-
NOW'S THE TIME
TO SAV£ ON
STEEL BEL Tf D
RADJALS
From OM of lo. Clfftomll'1
oldeet Md*'-' Mk:Mlln ,....
TlreD11l1r•
MICHELIN
zXand XzX SAL.a"'1CI
' 25.88 42.88 : 145-10 XZXT 165-14 XZXT REG 27 88 REG 44 88 ADO 1.03 lo 2.11 f.E.T.
175-13 XWWT
REG 51 88
185-1• XWWT
REG 5888
195-14 XWNT.
REG. 63 88
205-14 XWWT
REG 68 88
215-14. XWWT
2'* 15 XWWT OR
GR78-15 xWNr
REG. 73 88
185-15 RED LINET T
REG.60.88
48.88
55.88
59.88
64.88
68.88
56.88
165-13 XZXT 38.88 165-15 XZXT 44.88 REG. 4088 REG 48 88
185-7G-13 ZXT 48.88 175-15 ZXTWN 62.88 REG 5388 REG 6588
MICHELIN
'X' WW ...
215-t5 XWWT OA
HR78-15 XWWT
REG. 71 88
225· 1 S xwwf OR
JR78-1 S XWWT
REG 79 88
.
23G-15 XWWT
REG 89 88
~DD 1.7t to 3.33 F.E.T.
.. ns
72.88
75.88
83.88
FREE INSTALLATION a ROTATION. HO
TRADE·IN NEEDED!
MANY OTHIR !
SIZIS AT
TllllllllDOUS SAYINGS
AUTO PART8, TIRll8 AND 8ERVICE AT THESE LOCATION:
Open: Dalty_9-Q; Saturday 9-8 ; Sunday 9-5
llUINA PAM ANAHelM ----•1111111..e UION.•YOlld .......... _ .... .._.. ••••11 ~,.. ~
ORANGE . 110011.Tuettn ............ Olll9t
771-aaao
.... VIC.ONLY AT THma• LOCAT10N8:
Bring us this coupon and you one vou love one evening this
and your favorite loved one can week. Elope to the slopes at
~ape for an evening of moonlight Holidc:tv Hiii Where the night
~ttl~--+-------..::s:::kl:.ln~g~o::..n:..:th::..::e.:..:lo:..:.00$.:.:.: runs in Southern belongs to ski lovers. •
~~-----------~--__..:---H~---:~-M~~~
IAN CLl•N'rE IANTA ANA 1t1a.mc...-....., ..... ...
••f ~ ..... - -.. ~ ....... lf!t ........ !
' \
t • I
I
I
L 1• • • t • • • ... -"' . ' . '
---A,.W...._.O LOOSE B~LL -Alabama and Florida players go after the
ball dunng the SEC basketball tournament in Bir·
mingham Wednesday.
UaderdOgs Win
Aubu~ Georgia Steal, Slww
From AP Dispatches
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -A cool hand
with national championship experience
and two underdog teams expected to be
sidelined early stole the show Wed.Des·
day when the Southeast.em Conference
launched its first postsea.soo basketball
tournament in 27 years. Kyle Macy, steadying influence on a
young Kentucky team, contributed key
plays time and again as the defending
national champions struggled to an
82·77 victory over stubborn Mississippi.
Walt.er Daniels hit 13 straight points
during one stretch to overcome a 10.
point deficit and fres hman Eric
Marbury accounted for the deciding
points in the final minute as Georgia up·
set Mississippi State 75·72.
* Col~
~AS1'
c.w.~n.0ow11"°" 1~0'19. Alfr.O 1•
SL Mk -rs 16. St A .. ~1m·~ 11
SOUTI4
HC~ .. Ceo<9'• Sout~rn
11
5. Al.i..rna •1. NW lout\"""' •1 s. MIW~Pl>I 78. S..mlorO 63
Ml OWE ST
64
e.11 St 6•. E Mk 1>19•n •I
Cent ~ 12, BowhnQ Crr.n
~roll a . Xev~r. Onlo •• K~t St. .a. M ••ml, OnH> 62
l oy0le, 111 '16, V&lc>MtllloOIO
SE M1uourl St. "· fo\lnourl·St
Louis IS
Tol.00 7S, Ohio U 70
TOUllNAMElnS
SEC
Flntll°"nO
Alebem• 91. Flo<ldjl ~
Aubum S'. V-rbllt S)
G9oroi. 7S, Miu. St 1?
lCentuov 112. M IUl\\•PPI II
\
A r e a
T e nnis
R esults
-~ uc1-1,•k•• ~ ~10.~l(W\ IUCll M l Allr8Nm• 1 J. M ; A,_.
111(11 dllf llNIM• H , ~1 ~ IUCll -· h vlOf W ... 1 SUe1' CUCI ~ Ott k tett W ... ,
Anll*IY IUCll 0.1 8la<k~rn .. I. W . Nll!Oft
tU(tl dlff Colll"9' .. 1,U
~
Armel 'toO.IOfl IUCll Melal~fay~ W , .. 2;
C'uwn HI-IUCl)oef S<Of1 CoUlftQt .. 1,M ;
,t.0tellam• lltaf\ OU ""' An!Nnv-Morrow .... 6 I •
flf rt1
~··~.L..ACClh
'1119 .... .... ~,, ~I l)ol M.ollle~ .. , 6 1 ... v .. .,_. ISi °"' ttrr-t < 6 o•, .,_. '"'°"'•' ILAI -!Ju.on •I 01 •~. Mo"" 1s1 o.t McEw.,, .. ,
61 buH~ISI -ROl-"61.•-4 Vet1«ISIOt1
WIO\IMO) •I
O...Met OIMtf>-AllM ISi '41111 «Ith __ .. _I.
o1 .. ,. TllofnasMcE•.,. ILAI Clef.~
V•ll• • > ... , Morrlw-~ CSI def. llOIHo· Wt<tcll11e .. t,'M
l ........ MllllM ..... ~11 ....
~ Ja"ta" Ul lcKt to H-• 2•. Iott to AQlllt"re .. ,. del ltKk-. .. l,Ot1. llan"" .. 2; T...,..._ Ill
lo\t '-4. J-4, 1-4, Cle! -M ; .._ Ill -11, .. ,. l~t u. -.. ,; Miller (I) lo$l 04, .... k .
2 ... o ......
Giil"•"" l • It I CM! 5"'1t,,_l<tmeltd9r M . W .
Clef Miller H.ue»" & 3. f>.t. PNm.Maad Cl) won
• 4 6 I >Phi S-4, ...
Ulll¥9fVh Utl C~alft v m...
S111tle• O•v IUI ..... O••Ol•n •·1; .,.,, KeMa,,_ "'· cHI. Spur,.,.;, f>.I. Gel YarClumlan ... 1; Simkin
(U) IO\t f>.1, wonf>.3,1 ... M . A••mUSMI\ (\JI IOSt
O.o; won .. 3. lost O..; won 6-t. Nelr.on CUI lost S.7.
won 1>-1. tost4-6. "°""' ~
St(obl·Wllkott CUI dtl Neuma ... oat>edw 6-1,
6-1, d•I Rein lloVM 04., "°· M•v-r-NlcUll (UI •Piii 6-4, .... Wiii ._., 6·1 •
~-Ill VII~ 1', LMt IHCll Wa-t
St~ ~ Hem Ill IF\ lost to IYH , ... def. ~"°·def ~CC.De .. I. Clef. Cole"""n .. l ; H•mltton CF) won
6-4 lo>I ••.won ... l. won .. 2. Jollniol' (Fl IOot 1-4,
1 ... :H.won .. 1;U.1Fltost t ... -W ... 1 ... I
o.wte9
Tan9-SuouUan !Fl Clef C....S.tl-9~ .. ,.
.. I, split Wltll -~Bla<k 1-4. M ; Guyot·A-
<FlwolltM ,U ,wonW,M.
!MW o.t 2', El ow•t
SMtllft
J ICllne CM) ..... Yee .. ,. def. M-... 1. o.t.
Mo"I'°" M . Clef. llol>lln M ; H•ll (Ml won ... ,,
.. , ... ,. M . Zer•te CMI lost ).-6, l-4. won ....... 2.
luevano CM I tost 0-4, u . S.7. ""°" 6-0.
~
Wllllem\o-Gonzalfl IMI 14>111 wft1' S--V8ft
Spreckctn 4-4, .. ,_ "'411 with W111141f"WHMel\ 2 ...
6 2, A l(llne-M. Kline CM I ""°" ... 3 ... l. ""°" M . •-1 ~.,.. Meftlu !tJV.,-N"'"'1Ma.-1iv.
~
Plroumlan CHI lost to J•vne U , def. Gr...,.
6 3, lost to Fonunai. ..... cMf. Battt .. , ; Grev (NI
won .. l. ~ .. 1. k , H>, Blel~er INI won .. l, .. 1,
1 \,._., ~rei CNl .,.,., .. 2.1os12 ... u.u. . ~ l(oflf'le-Butnm•n IN I sp llt with Nlssl•Y·
Offerman Hi. 1-4; def. Steere·l.af>9en 4-' ... I ;
Munn·He;tl(lrlchon (N ) lost4-6, 2 .. ; .. 1.i..1.
Y (NIN 16, ............. 9Hcll U I
Sifllles JOflttSOfl CH I IOSt to S<llutt2 2-4. def. 8 . Pl9IOfl
.. 2. Clef. SIMM .. l . def. Halk .. 7; F9Clde<'ly IHI
lcntJ-4,3-6,won .. t.•-2; F ref'ICI> IH lwonf>..0, .. 1,"1,
6.0, BOl\lalost t .. ,won .. 3 ... t.
0.-..S
Wooten-Htttman CH I lost lo Wltter·Brow U ,
7 6. 10$1 to Joc""""R. Pl9e0f\ 3-6. 0-6; Le~
Andrt~ IHI lost 1 .. ,3-6, 0.-0,H .
1984 Olympic
Pact Inked
LAUSANNE, S witzerland
(AP) -Los Angeles was of-
ficially awarded the 1984 Olym-
p ic Games today when tbe 1n-
tematiooal Olympic Committee
signed a final, formal contract
with the organizers, ending
almost a year of tough negotia-
tions . "We have ;usl achieved a
gr eat success, ' Count Jean de
Beaumont, pres ident of the
JOC's fmance commission, said
Auburn, getting three layups in the
closing mlnute&'off its seldom used de-
lay olfense, knocked the 'SEC's Cin·
derella team out of the tournament
when the Tigers trimmed Vanderbilt
58-SJ.
ECAc u,d .. t• M.Y. a rterthesigtlalure. .
OM tlon "It needed 8 ~reat deal Of pa-
In the other opening round game,
~labama sent Florida reeling to its
ninth straight defeat 81-64 when the
Gators shot a paltry 29 percent to fall lS
points behind at ba1ftlme.
Spacme, U-71
ROCHESTER, N.Y. -A sticky zone
defenae and a balanced team 1corillg
led by Rooseve lt Boule carried
Syracuse to an 83·71 victory over St.
Bonaventure ln the Upstate New York
title game of the Eastern College
Athletic Conference tournament.
Syracuse ran Its wl.nnlng streak to 19
straight in a 25-2 seuon while qualify.
isl• to meet Georgetown on Saturday for
the Upstate-Southern crown and an
NCAA berth. ;
A 1&-point perform ance by tbe 6-
loot·ll Bouie tied Earl Belcher of St.
.-aventure for 1ame b.onors. But lbe
vietory wu a team effort all the way.
Guard Eddie Moaa scored 15 points
for tbe Orance and backcourt team·
mates llarty Headd and Hal Cohen bad
14 and 11 points, respectively, wblle re. ..,Ye Da Scbayes collected 11 points
ud Louil Orr scored 10.
etwmt>loflsi.I p ' Syrec~ 93. SI 8ona•entu•• 11 tience from bot sides . But ef·
EC•C fOrtS have finally paid o(f," Said
Eau Coe'1 eom..-e ~ ........
BuOMlt IS, West Cl'lttt~r 6 t
L•loette 'IO. O..aware 11
St Jowt)h's, P• 61. laS.lle 63, OT
Temple •1. Dredi SI
Junior College
s..81 C..lt ~e
Ctmtos IS, 0r*'911 CO.st 63
Fuller1oft .a, Mt ~ AntOf'llo Ml
Sanl• AN ... GrollmOl!t eo
Wtttenl St.ate~•
WHt LA"· E " Cot I Compton 107. v lure"
Tr-TechM, ~SO
Glendale 46, s.<>te B••bora 43
0•n•nU9, Hal'COC~ &1
Pro Sco res
" ........ lftll.tNU Aun.
lloston 122. New OrlHM 111
Waslllnvtoft 12A, 011<"90113
Sall AlllOMI 115, Hew YOrlt 112
Mllwaulc .. IJ', CleWlancl 111
Houston 122, o.n-•1 Plloellltl 10>, lndleN 102
Sall oieoo 122. K-• c11y no
Saatt .. '7, "'"laelelpl\I• '3
N ........ M«treyLA..,... LOt ... !es 3, WUlll11910f'l 3 11 .. l
St. Loub 6, o.trolt S
Pltwluf'O'I S, eotorallO 3
Atta11ta 6, TorontO 4
NY Ranoen•.Ml,_...• ltlel
Cllt<ago4,V--•(tMJ
\
de Beaumont after a brief
ceremony at IOC headquarters
here.
In the absence of JOC Presi-
dent Lord KlUanln, the contract
was signed by Count de Beau·
mont and IOC Director Monique'
Berlioux.
Swimming
WOMU•' °" ..... ~.,.~.,
200 IMdleY t'llley-1. CW~ Coe~ t :ot.O; 200
lnd0-1. Half><ock 101 2:n .o: 50 lrH-t. Sullo
IOI 21.0; too ba<k-1. Bia In 10 1 ':11 •: too
bru i t-I. Mello y 10 1 t :H .O: 200 tree-t. W~ COi 2:0S.O; 50 fly-t. 5Nt1» (0 1 31.1;
01v1no-1. SlouM 10 1 '5.6J: too trM-1. Sabo
IOI 1.01.t; 100 fty-1. Pattlton CCI 1:a 1; 50
blck-t. 81•1n IOI 3U; 100 tnc»-t. 8'lmlUllht
CCI l :tJ.O; ~ free-I. Wlep>d <01 S:34.1: 50
bf'tHt-1. Olt.,. 10 ) 11.t; 200 fl'ff retay-t. OWi·
tevl:5'-t. ~Weltt•,LAV ...... lt
100 medltY re4•v-t. Goldtft w.st 2: °" •. 20D '"" do-I. C""""8fl CGWl 2:33.S; SO ,,.__,_ Wahl\
IGWI 21..J; tOO lll<k-1. Fe« IGWl l :t0.4; tot
t>rull-1. Clark CGWI t :20.0; 200 frH -1.
Clltflm.,. CGWI t :t0.2; 50 tty-1. Walth COWl
2'.I; Dlwifl0-1. Kt llY Cl.Al '4.lS; ttO ,,__I. Lester !GWI 1:02.0: IOOfty-t. Face (GWI t:tU;
50 ba<ll-1. Wabfl IGWI au; 1to .__,., ~-IGWI t :OU; SCIO ffft-1. ~ IGWl S:4U ; SO IWMlt-1 • ....,_ IGW) 11.6; ,_ frw ,..
lay-1.~Westl·SOM.
I ..
•• t .,-. ' t . .:: ... ·:· .~. ,... ... ,,
' .
' BASKETBALL I TENNIS I BASEBALL
Bucs End With WJiimper
. .
Oronge Co(JJjt Toys With Lineup, Lo8es
CERRITOS-Coach Tandy
CUlla toyed wtth bia lineup Wed-
nesday night and ended up with
a 75 . .Q k>ta at the bands or boel
Cerritos Colleae. but be pro·
bably doesn't mind too much.
C lllis, with the South Coast
Coif'ference cbamplons.hlp
already in the bag, decl~ to
start hia second team and go
with those players for most of
the game.
The i i me meant nothln& ln
the stanliogs to Orange Coast.
and the Pirates responded to
that situttioo by playing without
intensityand 'offertne only token
resistan$ on defenae.
Oran.gt Coa.at •hot. a poor 32
percent from tb4' noor in the
opening ~alf and fell behind by as mant as 1' points before
finally qlmb.lng back lnto tbe
game.
Gilli9 userted his first unit for
a s pell and it managed to cut the
lead lo five points, 68-63. with
1: 29 left lo tbe game.
But the desire wasn't there in
sufCiclent amount. and Orange
Coast winds up with a 10-2 con·
ference record and a 23·5 slate
overall.
Ray Orgill managed to score
18 points i n his p art-lime
perfonnadce, 6-5 forward Pete
Neumann contributed 11 and
Gary Wills chipped in with 10
points.
UCI Nine Romps
The most notable statistic
Orange Coast could produce
wa s a seaso n high f o r
turnovers-25. In the Pirates'
last game they committed seven
turnovers, which shows how
drastically their level of play
changed against Cerritos.
Pete Bethea knocked in five
runs with a pair of doubles and a
single, leading UC Irvine to a
9-3 victory over visiting Cal Poly
Pomona in oon-conrereoce
baseball Wednesday, while
Southern Cal College <Costa
Mesa) was over come on its
home field by Chapman College,
12·7.
Bethea, a 6·0, 180· pound
catcher from La Jolla, unloaded
bis first double in the opening in·
ning, chasing home a pair or
runs to give the Anteaters a 2-0
lead. They never looked back.
Don Kerce contributed a lPiple
during UCI's four.run rally ln
the .fourth inning, and Bob
Frishelte picked up the victory
on the mound to un his record to
2·1.
Southern Cal College led 2·1
and again at 3·2, but Chapman
Run Slated
At Edison
A lO·kilometer op en
race is scheduled for
Sunday morning start-
ing al 8:30 at Edison
High School.
R egistration will
begin al 7.
cul looseCor six runs in the ninth
inning tobumble the Vanguards.
The gane·winn.l.Dg rally was
capped br JeffSmith·s three-run
·,homer.
* * * S<ett ty I l!"ift9t Cat Po4v "°'"°'9 'ooo 100 21»-J 11 1
UC I rvlne ,00 420 tOll -4 10 1
Scl'lauef', B<.1,.r_.1 l"'nwlllu ISi. z.11..., 161
end Miiier. FriM tte, Bela1>99r lll and !lathe•
w -Frl•Mtte L• Scl>aUl!r.
Jc-bylnnl~
a..c>man 010 llOt 13& 17 13 1
SoC.ICoU~ 020 100 101 I ' 1
A•el9•rO, Mc'-'1th~ (81 and Pelmet, C°'lelloe,
Mn" 111. N"9fl 181 6nd TnomM. W-aelQarcl
l -MY•" HR.....,,.ill> !Chapman I.
Volleyball
Eollll>/t ....
•thletu on J<lio,,. Clef Eot lo\ AnQel•\
Cou~e 1s.• 111-1. 1 .. ,.. , .. ,.
J....-Cel ....
El Camino elf Got-Wttl t).15. IS j, tS.ll,
10. IS, I S.10
Hltfl~ EI Ton> Ott U Ouon!A IS. l(f.SH IS. 1'-11. ta. 16.
IW
Ora-CMst IU I Can1tM (1)) ...... """" Orqlll •
Gerrity
T tmMOt'I\
• 6 11 Gllllam • • t&
I 1 ' 8••-r \ I It
• 1 • WtJtlems 2 t 6 Po••••• B•ll
Wiii\
1 o • r .. 1.,. 1 o •
' 0 1 f 09"'• 2 • 10 s 0 10 J..-. 7 7 •
,t.kl" 1 7 • SH r\ 2 I S
Neum.,,,, "-1 tt WrlQhl l O 4
McCormick o 1 1 !>oft«>••I 1 o • S•ule~Deny 3 I I
rocat< 7S ll &3 lo~••• 79 11 1s
H•llll,..,. Cerrtlcr., 1/-7&
Tolel foul\ Oran~ Coa\I 7J, Cerrito$ 11;
f ouleCI O<ll none l •c nn1c .ti\ none.
* * * SOVTM COAST CONl'l!llENCE
Fina I
L•"'llM w l.
Olin~ (Ol\I 10 ?
Fullerton • 3 (~tr1tO\ I \
Sao••.... i "
!>en oi.oo """"' • s Grcn\mont ). ot
Mt San Antonio l 9
~,·,s~
C•"''°' 1S. OrM>Qe CC>Mt 63
Fulltrlon 1111. Mt San AntOf'llO 00
!Mint• A,,,. IA, Gros~..-.1 17
°"""'" W L
t3 \
?I 1
18 ,,
J7 lS
lS 14
11 ••
•S II>
There will be 12 age
groups, divided by age .
Trophi es will be
a warded to the top three
in each. The course, 6.2
miles in length, will be
relatively flat and fast.
OR
Entry fee will be $2
with proceeds going to
the Edi.son High soccer
booster club.
Softball
Sc_..,,~
L• Serna 000 000 o o • 1
lr•1nt 111 100 • • 4 0
C•~Y. Con-II ISi eno Curren
Lo<h ef'CI L V••9"
eak
S INCE 1924
SUPER
SPORTS SHOPS
I SKIS I
'78 • '79 MODELS
OLIN -HEAD
ROSSIGNOL -MOLNAR
HEXCEL -DYNASTAR _
SAVE 25°'~-----\
I
&ALE (
I BINDINGS I
BURTll SAVE LOOK GT •
LOOl< N57 25 8/o
-~ -:;:::::;: -=E: ~
I BOOTS I
NORDICA --;--HANSON
-SCOTI
KASTINGER ,.._
KOFLACH
SAVE 250/o st<,.
SA'-£
~ -~ -~-------~ ----~ ---:::· ~ -· ~ p----------------fl j , I CLOTHING I
~ §ff ROFFE -HEAD -
~ :;::: SKYER --::::: ::::: :=: ;:::: SPORTCASTER -gg INNSBRUCK -~ BECONTA
ALL THE TOP NAMES
25o/OIH
I
Sale Limited to Stock on
Hand -Not all Models in
All Sizes
·111AL'l lllORDllG GOODI -Since 1924
SANTAANA
219 E. 4th ST.
(714 ) 547 ... 5723
..
• I
' NEWPORT BEACI
127 FASHION ISLAtt:>
( 714) 644-212J
l
CERRITOS
163 LO~ CERRITOS MALL
(213) 924-1625
..... ~.'
•
' ' J
•
•
' ' . . .. r •
SKIING I TENNIS I HORSE RACING ~.Match 1, 1919 OAILV PILOT
•
rob I em Minor
Whole New Look
·For Holiday Hill
8y DAVt; CUNNINGHAM CM-.o_, ...... .-..
Ski J'l'lllOrta •re learning lbat l! you want to keep draw-
ing lh aame akh:rs back year after year., you bave to Im·
prove.
Y.vt!ry ski area In Southern c a.urornJa made an effort
tu beef up I~ rac1UUes 1ast summer, with improvements
ran(Clng from shop1c repainting to multi-million dollar ex-
pan11lon
Goldmant: 11 ,>t>nt $1 mtlUon on a renovation whicb in·
<'ludt-d fCJ)lan•ment Of the veteran pomallft tbal bad "erv~ lbt-41rea for 20 yean.. · '
MT. BALDY ALSO REPLACED an old lift, installing
u 2,:;oo.root double chair and carving two new runs. Snow
Sumrrut expanded lls snowmak.lng capabi.ijly by 50 per-
cent. , ' A .
Spring S~iing
Grac;es SoCal
Resort Areas
Wanner weather aod a lack of
new soow bu produced spring
condltlooa at Southern
California alU resorta, and aa
long aa the coverage remains
deep, ski.ing la bound lo be good.
DesJ)lte daily grooming, some
areas are experteo cloe slick,
wet-snow coodiUooa. Tbe ma-
jority report a bard pack sur-
r aee and nearly all li!ta are
operating.
Tbf snow in the Sierras has
fina ly caught and passed
Southern Calllornla, with some
resorta report.log as much u 180
inches of coverage.
Conditions as of Wednesday
night: •
'"" ....... " .... -a-, ..... lf\cflet, -!*k •nd -SClf'lnQ ~llnQ, two llfts-••llfto.
Mel!Ny Hiii -8-.... lft<llH, Nn:I pec:tt -
•El s1m1e ~~,~~~
Jf/lfK .Yttl IMY 1Hf' MU dN1HE R/SE -M'P ~ ~ llJl'J'flN-
lfXI ~AY HAre Tl) mL
.IWR f/)lf1Sr 5l.1611'rtt
IA' Ol!PC/l 17J PVT
"5 TlJP ePdt tJr ~ RAa:er
:>UGHn'/
RJl/.4/A£ O.
. .
SPeAIP ;9 tOT OF
T/IHF P~llCT'CllkJ>
771/S S/l(ff 8ff{)K£'
;{ !TE'lllPTIVu IT tA.J
/fWCH Pt.Ar.'
Mammoth Mounhrita ~ed better trail signs, ~(iaint-
ed the lodges and expand ~shuttle service. June Moun-
tain installed hghts fo · so-""""'"''lnV·•-11ttt-•al"'9-Pro Tennis s-1 s-tw -a.,. l1-41 1nc:11H • ...,.., 11«k.
lt1rM Hits -et•rwt
Mt. a.Ny a-4'-60 lnclles. l\an:I pec:tt ..,., 01gbl akling and bought SKJJ.~G ·
an elaborate snowmaking 1-.1
apparatus.
And Holiday Hill, under new ownership, built ·a
$195,000 s ummit chalet to replace the old Heidi House, put
In a new beginner's area complete with lift, modenmed
the chairlift machinery all around, paved the parking•a rea
aod refurbished lbe lower building.
some sprtnq s1111nv. lou• tttu -•llrwa. Aslw u. Kreth ..... -Bew 7M09 lncllff. sprlnQ Mil· ses lllQ, OM lltl-.. 11>9.
Mt. .,...,_ -Bew 12· IOI lnctws. llerd 11«•
and \ptlnc;f\kllftv. two lifts -r•li"ll
Crt•t.I ..... -8ew )...0 Incites, l\erd peck
•nd ~c•ed POW<)er, llVH 11ru-•et1nv. Agi
s-w s-tt -e-,._n .. w:11e1. --t Wi• "'"",....,. ,_. ~·"' ~ ."° 11.t<d CWG•. ~ 0 in ". 1111 \ _.. .. lnq .:::::;.
SMw Yellrf -Base n~ lnc"9s, herd peel(
and peoed ~ llw lilts -r<Hlnq
'Dae /ti essiola
Pete Rose, the Phillies' $3.2 million baby re~axes with newsmen and photographer~
prior to spring workouts with the club in
Florida. Rose 1s expected to lead hts-team
~o its first National League Championship
m alm06t three decades.
Basketball
.Scores, Sites
w & A.iysOln.Surt•
6-A
8 uena "4. SI Josetift 46
Hunll"910n 9H<ll "· Al,...,.,b<• ~ ventur&41, Al""""Y •l
San Gabrlel llJ, Newberry Par" SI>
Arc.Ole ll. Pec:lfk 46 Dos P\letllo5 61, L 8 Poly $1 cornp1on53,So. T°"'~"'s
NHr~ H~ ... Meter 0.1 '6 -Alt• LotnA .a..,fooUllll SS
Col'OM del Ma~ean View 46
LOS Al~ 46. ~Marl• <IO
Nortll IAtv I ... Moml"QSIO. S7
RIV Poly IO, s.n LUIS ObhPO 33 \lllll'Perti •1. C~I• Mes. S. c;...-,43, T...-ln.O
A19Mttl •. E~enc:i. 30
Z.A
~rS1.91S'-Dle9030
PIOnffr 4 IC Sen Cle""'"~ 36
Artltlle 53. Ctnlrel .a
C..pbtr-ve1i..y 43. ES41erenu 36
C.fltomla '3. Mission Vi.jo SI
Sonot'e 11. hllf-S7
8•••"'Y'2. ~urr "4 1-A
\I e l ley Olrlll i..> 16, Seni. Cler• ..
TwentynlN Pelms •I. U c-e<I•
0 Le Slen"e M, Penn, SO
Cul,,., Oty 5', 9onl1.t 32
C..lebeusj(), At.sc.edet'o )7
Im~. Notre Oeme Riv. 19
OftterlO (Jw1sti.., 62, Alm ol ,,,.
World 40
S-'!Sctleeb
MenNll 33, Wlllttlef Olrbtlen XI
90YS
Cl" ......... OUrtl'l'tlMtt ,....., f1:•1 SltH ....
\lerbum Del vs. Cresume \/alley
•I Com pion Co4 lf9t
Compton vs Mornlnvslde •t
A~H~
San Men:os vs. Lii Poly et Loft!I
8H<llSia. ·
SI. Btn\WCI vs. Pe~ et s.tni.
Monk . (Alltegl
~A "°"" IAlv ) vs. .,..,.,.ly Hiiis •I Rlft~lde Qty Olllleoe
Low.II vs. Sunny Hiiis .i Cyprus coneoe Los A,,., It$. Cor'CIN "-' M.tlr et
Huntl"91on a..cr.
Berstow v~. Oowney at Apple
Valley
2·A
Canyon v~ Moreno \lelley al
S.ll!llls HIV"
Sierra vs. Per-•I Alo Hondo
Collf!99
Minion \llelo vs. El Monie et
~ll1irr HIQI\
Nortllvltw "' Cebrlllo et
E~H1911
t-A
Seftf• 0•• vs. \lelley O!rlstlef\ •l
Orr ltO\ H 1Vti Mont~r Prt9 et SL Monk•
8ennlftg vs. 11"'-Oie9o .t S...te
Berber• Oty Oo41f1Qt •
St. JOW«lfl et BoKO Tech
CUYUITWI Valley '1, Meloctylend 31 S-41 ScMeh
Slier"*" lndlen '°•Marie-•S C"9dwl<tl et Sllet'men lndl•n
Llllffty OWlstleft '1. P-Po-CrourNds vs. Mer-IN et e slle
ly41 lo"-det.,n1loed
<>wens Vellev '9, UI Vt1'M LuUI. 77 Alvtrslde O!rhtllttl et Pnedene
8u< 11 lrt SS. Oelrwood 34 Poly
Tefllllle OW!stlen ¥$. Of"enge Lutll. Melod'(Wld vs. Ot'M9 Lutller.n al
ltonl!IM. 7:301 ~ COlleVe
HOUDAY IDLL'S proud owners played host to the Ski
Writers Assn. of Southern California Saturday in an effort
to s howcase their lmprovements·and their skiing.
The area was holding its annual Wmter l''esuval lbat
weekend, so the writers presumably saw Holiday Hill at its.
best. Four inches or rresb SDOW didn't hurt. eilber.
The only problem was one that all Southern California
resorts experience.on weekends-long Wt liues.
AFTER A RUN THAT ~ only nine minutes. it's
discouraging to get in a 15· or 20·m1nute line and sit in lbe
chair for another 12·15 minutes before you can get another
run in.
At some Southern California areas. the wait is even
looger. One resort insists on taking reservations through
Ticketrooduring weekends.
Tbere are only about 800 skiable-acres in Soulbern
California, and we can't always jet to Colorado or drive to
tbe Sierras every time we want to ski.
But until the U.S. Forest Service gives up a Ultle more
or its precious land, skiers will have to be satisfied with
whatever improvements can be made to the existing
ar~as
AND HOLIDAY HILL bas endeavored to make itself
. an ideal one-0\)' trip. The facilities aren't big enough for
more Ulan that. But the runs are nice and lbe new chalet,
while small, is a welcome stop at the top. .
This writer, however, didn't have a wo.oderful time at
Holiday Hill. Skiing down the Olympio run, I look a fall
that easily ranks as the all-time worst.
Actually, it was only bad if you were standing inside
my boots. To onlookers. it was simply spectacular.
"'That was the greatest fall I've ever seen except for
the one on the beginning of Wide World of Sports,"
chuckled my brother-in-law Gary Coleman. • "
OL VMPIC IS STEEP ENOUGH that if you fall and
your bindings give out, you're iiable to rail au the wa-y
down the mountain. I did. My bead still hurts. '
Which brings me to a common saying you're likely to
bear any time you ski: If you don't fall, you're not trying
anything new, and you're not imptoving.
It's probably true. M intermediate skier can lapse in-
to a comfortab1e, basic style and never venture beyond.
But after my gut-wrenching crash Saturd~y, I'm tempted
lo answer, "So what?"
The answer, of course, is to stay within your limita-
tions and Improve gradually. Trying to ski down Olympic
in icy conditions aft.er a big lunch was not staying within
my limitations.
GoN ....... -Bew,..._.. IMMS llarcl ~k, lllr ..
""'-etlnQ. ' Mam~ Meet!Ult• -8ue IOS 1n<Ms. lreces
tit MW ~w. P<Kked pOWder. 71 11th opetalinq II
wullltr permits
Jufle MMHoUl11 -B•IAl '-' lll<MS P<O<hd
PO•O.• """ 1race of ~w "'°"'· five ""' oper ...
"'0
OCC, Rustlers
In the Swim
Riding on the crest or two
first-place finishes from Steve
Lacey, the Orange Coast College
men's swim team breezed past
Chaffey, 81-20, in the Pirates'
bome pool Wednesday.
Golden West College was also
vic!orious, logging a decisive
60-36 win over Los Angeles
Valley College.
Or-CNtt 11, Clloetf9y Je
•OO medley rel•v-1 Or~ Qwsl • O'I 0 1,000 t,... 1 8rll\lr> (01 IO·S60.,PI~• tOl
U ·CM 4: f~wi!VIC>U~:rt-1 •
100 lr1t I Smltll 101 I Sl 9, 1 ~ 101
1·ss.o; 1. ~ 1c1 1·S6.2 .
50 Ire.-I i...<ey IOI 22 0, ) 8•1,,.,...... ICI
ll.). l. S1stler (01 lS 1
200 lllOO-I Cot'Mtt 101 ) ISO. Llt"'1!tt (01
) 116; 3. O'AntonlO !Cl ?·20.t;.
Olvlnq-1 IC....U 101 S7 l; 7. ~,,_,_ 101
S2 .6. l "° 1111rd 200 lly-1 8t'eun IOI ?·QI.I · 1 ~ ICl
1·oe s; 3. no'"""· · 100 tt'ft I Swtitwn 101 U I. 1 Smit!\ IOt
5).6, l . BrlftQfnan ICI S3 ...
200 be<•-• O'Antonlo ICI 1·211: 2. 8erttt (01
2·JO 1; l . MMvuell 101 l 3' I soo ,,_,, '--"Y (QI s·u .1; l . Sltt!W (QI
S·31 I ; 3. ~r ICI S·JS 2.
200 bfWt-1. Moo"90414ry (QI 2:33.0 ; 1. 8¥1t\
101):17.1;).~ ICIJ·53J
4001,..reley-1 Of'-. COH1 l'l3.4.
~~ ... LAY ... ..,J6
400 ml!dlrt relev I l)Otll dlsqu.&llfled
/ t,000 l'"...!t :•wotWll lt!A~ 10 • 10 t . 7 • .P...U
fow no·2c.s. J.~ten<1tGw>10,SJ 1.
200 t._t. Wl\llt IGWI t ·41.). 7 kodt;IP's IGWI
1 S3.l ; ). ROM IU'l l.Je.S.
50 lt'ft-1. Emslmeyer ILAl 7'U. 2 Peri.tt
<LAlUO;l ~"lln (GWIU.•
200 lndo-1. P'lnl•id IGWI 1 OS 6; ), IC-IGWI
)·Olo.4, 3. Nen:IOni II.Al 1 11.S. ' Olvlft9-1. 51\i.IOS ll.A I 1' U ; 1 Hoffm.iln ILA I
... ss. J. "° ttW"' 100 Uy-I. llln~h"9 IGWI 1 S• 8; 1 Arw-
<LA I )·OI •; l. 8owet\ IGW 11· 19.•
100 ,,__, White IGWl f'I I; ). EmstmtYet
ILA I ••.s. l He<•lfn IGWI SI •
100 IM<" 1 Flntal<I IGW I ) 01 J: 1 lkltler
!GW I 1 11O;3. Melby ILA l 1 ,. 7
500 lr'M I ~ ILAI S 00 1 Pull IGWl
S 00 S. 3. ICiesshnQ IGWI S en 0 100 bf'Ntl-1. Amf'Nf' IGWI 1 20.6; ). 8utt.f _ i.MGWI ,,,. 7; l Narctonl ILAI, ,. I
400 lrff rel•y-1 ~ Wts1 l 7' 0
Horse Race Results
Loa Alamlto• H-. mllef~~I
First r•<e-lndelallgeble
~lerl 16.20, •.«>, l 20, Edge-
Arrnlte f\lell-~I 6.XI, •.OO:
smotty Vk IOoYell1l • 00. '2 .. eci.
lM l ~Id $123.00
Second rece-Ntrvts ot $Itel
(5'1rlg9sl 4.00, l .<IO. 7.to; O.vllsll
llrel CBeylHsl S.60, UO; SNttnon JoM IWllllelMI 3,60.
Tl\lrd rece-+iowdy Mon !Su<·
<-.ttel uo. 1.IO. 2.IO; Andy's Idol
IGo<.tlertel SAO, 1.IO; 810od Houf>d
tlleYleUI •.ao.
<Ou•rtero1o1 n oo. t .IO, 10 20; Adlos
Oout;1 IVellenclln<)tleml 4 to. • 10;
Nonfl Western (Toddl 1.00. U txe<te
U-41paid1114 00.
Seventll ••ce-Speed\ RIQlll
IAckermanl S.20, 3.•0. ).40;
Hermony Tllll 1,,_.ttnv> 3 eo. 2.ao;
Jttt's Pride (Benonel l .00.
El!llllh rece-Arrnbro AllY111 m N
IPelllnQI S.10, 3.60, 3.20; Kiwi J-
IOuerl•t'OIOI 11.70, • to. Miister
18eyltt\I :UO. l7 ea.KU <•11 ~Id
llt.00. • Nlnlll rece-0.y SI~ IToddl
•<IO, 4 00. l.40· Sisco ISte,....rmen I'
6.00. 6.00; RGv•I Sl>lmar tPe1111191
4.AO. l2 tlUIC!a 14-ll P&ld ~ 60.
ISl\ocmellttl 1.)0, S.10, l 60, P•t
Lebel IP!ef'cel S.IO. 4.00. Slste• Julie
ICesl•Md•I i..20. l.S necta u.n ~Id l lOl.00
$1a lll r.ece-,.romlssory Nole
ICrvt I 200.IO. SUO, 1•.IO: 51\ewnM
Trouble lea.rtfleml 1.40, S.00; Clliel
kelley l~I UO.
Sevenlll r•ce-Llllt• Joktr
I Pl., eel 10.)0, 4 •O, 3 00; 8 W.
Turner IRodrlvuul 10 i.o, s •o;
"""•hyourpleesur• <Sr.oemeker I
3 10 U e•ec:t. IUttte Jotltt •nd 8 W.
Turner) peld SUt,00.
A ttenclenCle-4.'90. Prep W ti Fourtll rece-Tru SI•• IPerryl res ers ·u .20, 1.eo. 6 oo; Howdy Guv S•nta •ntt• (llkllmondl ISAO. 11.60; Oecll Hend ft
IAekMordl 1.00. '2 uacte CHI peod TIMM .......
El911111 rec:e-Palmistry IM<C••·
ronl 1'.60, '·'°· 1.00. Sh•Q 8.ck <Moreno! 10.40, 6.00; Prflslnq Oele
IOllvere.I I 00. Nl nlll rece-8erlo,,der Belly
ICorderol 1.IO, 4.20. •.20, Bitty Bird
ICnp•detl •.XI. 7 10; Ceprlclous
Ortem (Plnutyl J.60. l.Seaecte 18 111
peldU",oo
Altenci.KA-.,,•t. Co 1127.20. 1-.iet1~y-lfttl
t F e d P:Hlll rece-Tllrtt Steo CCrenel Flril rece-Touvll AllbNll Olpe e _ n ay SA0,4.2Q.2.IO; Holli~ (R-1 UO. l~mel<ffl UO. 4M ,4 00, HM Aon -l..il; Owl ~I ).10. CTorol tO.OO, 1.tO; c.r.-v (Pln-
uyl •.oo. S • • Slwt" rete-T rue Trlc k r-·o.-tr~--.. 8 ITorol 18."" wi---1na SAN JOSE-L.ed by CIF Southern Section I:;: UO; ~ uri. 15-;; ...... " champion Frank Curry of Edison High. a small G 9.ie. 3.60; SM«v'• aov 1Haw1ey1 01•u· swtMM1No
band ol Onqe Cout area wrestlers will be com-ym.D88tiC8 :i~·.on d•llv double <•-11 P•ld '°° =~~'2.0110:
bere at Independence : ln the state Ol•U Thi rd rece-Fllck Your 111<11 200 free !Mt.'tlt !Fl 2:>1."-200 ln-
---N-at.&..,.. ...u1.. a a•-.-..t-I Fri• IHewleyl 6.?0, 3.10, l .00; 0011• do-RIOeth Ill 2:21.IO; so tt'ff-'IOUA&U..--u<-WHO wuuu «W-..C:..WIA.IElc-tllettJS Ysldre CShoemeUrl l . .0. 2.IO; 8-n (I) f7.11; Olvfn9-tlllll• Ill; day andeondudlnl Saturday. . ve111111 .. .-Tomll11son IOI 7.t ; ~ofR-ICDnMfoll60. 100 fly-S..r Ill MU; 100 ,,..._
Tbe t .... fi I l .,.__ CJ UM,,.n Hr•llel blln-l.lm1>41r11•• Fourttt recie-111Sl! Yelefttlnt (Pjn. Hermo11 i..1 1 os '· soO free-_,. ve p acera • 1.11119 F SS flnala . !El 1.9; ..._ llffm-Tomllnton <•YI 7.60, •.OQ, l.20; Sc>e<l•I Uri< Rlclletts !JI S'JJ.10; IOOback-0'0.I( quallfted fOI' the State meet, Finl round bouta 10) 1.0S ; F'-eaerclM-ltlel-IMcCer,_l UO, l 20; KINI Hffrted 111 MU~ 100 l>rust~enftOI\ (Fl be•'• Ill 3 ~.a-_., __ __.,_ • Sa ... _.. Tomi'"-IOI Md Rowtionom IOI IOllveresl l.20 1 "·'; 400 tree retey-P:ullerton
...... &'&RMt)', ·~YUiii 11.vuwu\lea nuu8Y morn-Lt; AIM'Oulllt-TomllMon 10121.95. F I t t 11 re c e -<:em e r e do 4 42 • lDI with tbe finals at& p.m . .---------------~-----··-·-------
Curry eoten with a 36-2 record ln the 130-l>OUDd diYlaioa. Other area atua entered lnclude hUlltinltOD Beach•• Mike ProYenA.llO, Col'Ol18 del
llar•a Adam Elias and Ocean Vlew•1 Dan
Clearwater. Blia la entered ln the ta.pound cateeory and
~---eaten with a 33-1 record ln the lot-~ cll1'lakln. Clearwater 1ril1 Yie at J.M.
Baseball sCores
\ -
From AP Dtlpatcbes
MEMPms, Tenn. -Arthur Ashe used ex-
perience and ~uile to beal ninth-seeded Tim
GuJlikson 1~. 7-6, 6-1 In the second round of the
U.S. National Indoor Tennis Championship Wednes-
day.
Later. defending champion Jimmy Connors
advanced easily to lbe quarter-finals with a 6:4, 6-1
viclory over Stan Smith.
Earlier in the day. No. 3 Vitas Gerulaitis beat
South African Bernie Millon 7-5, 6-3; No. 5 Brian
Gottfried got by Tom Okker of lbe Nelberlands U.
6·1. 7~ and No. 7 Roscoe Tanner beat Poland's Wojtek Fibalc6·3, 7-5.
Jn the most dramatic match yet in the 48·man
tournament, the sixth-seeded Ashe had to rally
powerfully twice. After dropping the first set, Ashe
built a 5-0 lead. breaking Gulllkson's serve three
t.imes.
But Guillikson staged a comeback or his own,
winning the next Six games. Ashe had a set point
in the 10th game of that set but hit a hard, flat
forehand wide on the next point to squander his
chance ..
• But Ashe hekl serve...in the 12th ea01e, saving
match point twice on passing shots. He made lwo
service winners in a row to force the tiebreaker.
He broke service three limes in the tiebreaker
and won ll 7-3 w,ith anolber service winner.
Ncmratilo1'~ E1'ert Ad1'GIM"~
DALLAS -Top-seeded Martina Navntil~va
and sjlCC)Dd-seed Chris Evert bowled over second round opponents Wednesday night in lbe women's
professional cbampioosbips.
Navratilova took just 35 minutes to t&ut rookie
Kay McDaniel 6-1. 6-1 in the shortest match io
three days or towuament play.
"t thlnk my game is getting to. where it shoul<r·
be," said Navratilova, who added sbe adopted a
more aggressive style against McDaniel than she
presented in her opening match win over Belay
Nagelun.
Meanwhile, Evert recovered from a shaky
start to defeat unheralded "Leslie Allen 6-4 , 6-1.
In olber matches Wednesday. Marise Kruger
or South Africa. defeated Jeanne OuVall 4-6, 6-2.
6-3; Tracy Austin defeated Rayni Fox 6-1, 6-2 and
Stacy Margolin ousted veteran Francoise Durr of
F rance 6-2, 6· l.
SUPER SAVINGS OM
OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY!
%
TO
%
OFF
' . ~ .. ;......-c; ..... " . . ' ---
DAILY PILOT
\; ' Television ThurMay, Mat0h 1 t979 TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS •.
I ' • ' • • • , • • ~ • • • • • • •
# : • ., • • • .. ,.
.-.....
t •. .: ... · " ,. ., ... • .. • • I
l " • • .. • '
•
EVI NINQ t.'00···..,. lMIWNCY ONll n.. COt'nQUI• maM •
I'll .. ,.... ~ ci-<~lt
Otoe •dinner c.o.lt 1842
-~ ti Oll..0• .. .cclOMll•llv
1ippec1 to .,, o.~llnn
•11•1 I• lllllg•llV IUIJOIYlng M<e~I<*! cton•tlGa lo u S
tam II ...
• THI MADY 9UNC'M
Alinoy;NS II ~ 10 ·~ l'OCICIY .. _ .... ~ 10
....... IWmMI .....
• ltAUTI °' IAM """NCllOO Murc1tW ..._ .. pl..:• IOI a
mu tel
~~y
Cauei.1 11nger Helly
u ... r.11
G'i) OOIOHIHO HOM
1NTf.Al()jq
M~l10ut
ti) CUNIWS
Olt AeCNEWS
UO '11) I LOV£ LUCY
1 u.;v 1• tom l>tli-.... ni
Ing 10 ~a IO• l>\lnling
weekend and her IMi<NeY ~Bloo•s
e;=:a.~
G.-1 Gor"°'\._'l'~ '11) HOME~A
··o~ Vegttat11es
(j) CROSS-WfTS
Ben Wa lton l Eric Scott 1 brings his new
bride <Leslie Winton ) to Walton's Moun·
tain on "The Walton~" tonight at 8 on
CBS, Channel 2
l1J MERV OAlmH
Guests Potricic Duffy L•r·
ry tiogman, Chariea frank
Larry Mahon. Ol0<1a Swan·
n n, Ted Knight, Chip
TalbOI 7:001 ce8NEW8 N8CHEW8
NEWL YWEO GAME
ABC NEWS
belnencted him
9) SANFORD ANO SON
Fred re-Oecorote5o h1b t1v
tng room for ht5 luturu
deughler..Jn.la'I' fJ3 MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
'11) HUMAN1TIE8
THAOUGH THE ARTS
··Orama: An 1m11a11on di
life"
8 CJ) JOKfA'8 WILD CD 8tX MILLION DOLLAR
MAN
s ieve. sulfet1ng trcnn
amnesl• following an itccl-
oent, ll~s himself de1end-
1ng a women woo has
7:30 B DISCO MAGIC
IN SEARCH OF ...
"BtainP-··
8 DATING GAME D THE OONO SHOW
C'lta•nt-1 Lisf ing•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC(NBC! Los Angeles
I) KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles
D KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(JJ KFMB (CBS) San Diego 8 KHJ· TV (Ind) Los Angeles
@) KCST (ABC) San Diego
G) KTTV (Ind I Los Angeles
Ill KCOP·TV (Ind) Los ('ngetes l!B KC~ TV tpBS) l:Os AA9~5-
~ KOCE TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
U TIC T'-CDOUOH
ti) ADAM-12
Malloy 1s assigned deak
duly t>eoau!W or a brOken
wr15t but sttll llndl plonty
of action
f1l) JUPITERWATCH
'Upda111" m N£WSCHECt<
(J) S 1.91 BEAUTY SHOW
@) MATCH GAME P.M.
7;35 8l) 29 TONIGHT
.. Tadble vou··
1:00 f) CJ) THE WALTON$
Ben a now wife (Lethe
w 1111tonl. whO wu ooted
tor leading a last Ille, «•
ates turmoil In the Walton
lloroe D LEOPARD OF THE
WILD
David Niven rs tr.e narratOf
of thlt true story of a ieop-
ard who was raised In cap·
llVlty and returned to her
nalural wild hal>llal
U MOVIE
• • • ··Pe1u11a·· ( 19681
Julie Ct1na11e. Georg~ C
Scotl.)6 f1"18rrted woman
falls 1n love with another
man. but decides to pelch
~ h4N m111rlt09 12 htt I
W di r.t0N< 6-...0Y
Mofl. ~ 10 r__. twm..,r .. .., _...., to w•n
U&.000 lo"r Mindy •
eclueat 1011 I RI
0 MOVll • • • * .. Car-·· ( 105111
Sh•n.y MllGLlllM,.,Anthonjt
fraMl(l.O An ICIO< atul>•
b•rnly a1o1rmoun11 the
m•ny Ol>•l•CIH WhlOh
11and bel¥OMO 111m and aucci.u (2 hr a ) CD OAAOL BVAHETT
AHof'MNDe J
Oues11 Steve Lawre~.
TlmeonWay
g) MOW .
'1 •'' The Vl&ll .. ( 1964)
Ingrid Be<gman Anlhony
Quinn A wealthy woman
~rees to give an endow·
ltWlt\I 10 he< h~IO'Wn 11
'"-rvaadents agree 10
rn1irde< het IOfme< lover (2
lira I
f1l) NOVA
The Eno 01 The
Ra1nt>ow The p<om1~
a"d prol>lerns of nuelear
IUSIOn as a 1ut1He ene<gy
50Urc>e is examined
'11) ANYONE FOR
Tt'HNYSON?
..Poerry Ot Tiie Occult"
The flr51 Poetry Quartet
ttx0<c:oses an evil 6Pffll
throogll the power Of poel·
ry. Selec1ions .!!)'Walter de
ta Mare. Kingsley Am11.
Edgar Allan Poe, Rol>eft
Sleget all<! J..R R. Tolkien
ore Included
8:30 D @) ANGIE
Angie and Brod break the
news ot tll&ir elopement ro
Angie's mom end Brad's
slater CD THE 000 COUPLE
Fellll's amateur opera
company laces a problem
wnen the guest batltone
rakes umb(age at Oscar
'11) TUAHABOUT
"'Tlllte And Jessica ..
AutllOts Tiiiie Olsen and
Jess>Ca Mltl<><d talk abou1
their &ppf'~ to hie
and writing. (R)
9:00 8 Cl) HAWAII FTVE-0
McGarrett euspects an ex·
C09 (Roben Loggia)· of
murdering several Honofu·
lupomps
• QUINCY
Oulncy·s decision to
remarry forces him to
question his obsession
with work U @) BARNEY MIUER
An air traffic controller
goos bersef'lf an<l mes lo
··tend.. passengers ·single
TUBE TOPPERS
NBC 8 8:00 -Leopard of the Wild.
The story of a leopard raised in captivity
and returned to its natural habitat is
n arrated by David Niven.
KHJ f) 8:00 -"Career ." Anthony
Franciosa portrays an act.or struggling
for success in this 1959 movie with
Shirley MacLaine.
KTLA II 10:00 -UCLA Basketball.
The Bruins e ndeavor l o hold their
Pacific 10 lead as they invade California .
(tape delay>.
hie from the c11y'1 S<.tbwily
~tern 4U MEAV OAIFFlN
Guetls Patrick DuHy, Lat·
ry Hagman, Cllar~frank
Larry Mallon Olofla Swan.
son, Ted Knight Chip
Ttlbot
&;I WORLD
.. Cllach&fl My Poor
Reta11on·· Tne 1>11nd lndollll
wrner 1akea a personal tnp
to hos narlve land, refleel·
Ing on concern• more
"tndtan" than 11an11tory
po1111Qtan1 or regimes (RI
8!) THE A80ENT OF
MAH
"The Grain 111 The Stone·
Man'a tellh '"d fancy as
arch1t11ct has 1>een
expreued 1n 11veryth1ng
rrom Oreek temples 10
Goll)lc coth&Orels, from
primitive wolls 10 skys·
crapers
11:30 D @) SOAP
Corinne sets our to brtng
Tom out of l'lta cave. aoo
Burt has a11-eneoun1er with
a UFO
10:00 f) CJ) BARNABY JONES
Betty•s young oOUSln (Cas-
sie Vates) unknowingly
becOmeS 1he t.,gel OI 8
'!!Y'lt!<IOUS klller gang.
U MAS. COLUMBO
Kate Columbo llllSQeets a
retired Scotland Yard
inspector (Oo11ald
P~) ol mllfdetlllg a
fellow British e11-patrlete
8 COUEGE ~~UCLA U llJ FAMILY
Buddy becomes romanll·
e11lly involved With • young
cal!Qef portent Miu moot5
wtllle wor\ting as a candy
Striper .
8 NEWS
Q) NIGHT GALLERY
"Wllh This Ring I Thee
Ktff' A man fears for h11
daughtllf and he< lor1h·
c;omlng mamege fD PENNtES FROM
HEAVEN
.. Tlltnk Belter Twice '
Eileen cornN peon11e$$ to
London and reun1111S with
Arthllr .
'11) NEWSCHECK
10:30 CD • NEWS
'1i) FOOTSTEPS
"Spare The Rod'" A no.
nonsense 019e1p1<na11an
realizes that threatening,
yelling and sc.ring ere not
tne most ettect1"9 ways to
deal wlltl his children
11:00 0 II D CJ) ®) NEWS 8 COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
S1anlord vs. US CD THEOOO
Fei .. ·s son' pnze pel
1umping frog lost 1t1e oay
oefore a 1g 1ump1ng
contest
Q) TH~ES
Graeme t>e<:omes a dog
1>reeoer and c;reares
Frankenhdo the Wonde<
Q9g
11: 15 fli) TO BE ANNOUNCED
11:30 8 ()) M•A•S•H
Hawkeye rerurns lrorn
leilYe to find th•t Trapl)et
John has f\ISI le4l for Ille
States aoo his reolece-
rnent Is corning 1n CR) 8 TONIGHT
Host Johnny Carson.
Guest Roi.ny Graham.
D ®l 8TAASKY A
MUTCH
Starsky and Hulet> unwit·
11ng1y help a long-lost pal.
who Mg-t>eGOrne"a llf'Ofe5-. •
s1onal hll man locate l'lts
lnHl.;:t"~ 8HOW
GITIMART
IV.OS bvlfde Ille world'
11narteat robot lo kldnec> a
IClenhtt
• CAPT'IOHE.D MC
NEWS
t1:419 TWILIGHT ZONI!
"The Wl!Ole Truth'' UMd
car dealtlf H~ Hunnl·
QUI buy• I Qlr trom •n Old
!'*It. only to h•Y41 Ille c11
IUIUM him.
MOR NINO
12:00 8t AlJlMD HITCHCOCK
PM8ENT8
"Th• Mall Wllh Two
Facea" A women flnda a
lemlllar ltMle wt*1 loolung
through police Illes attet
having lier purae anatclled
(I) GET SMART
Ma. and 119 pole as army
personnel to trap a ptyclll-
atr111 worlung for ICAOS
&;I OC<CAVETT
O'*t Jacques Cousteau
(Par1 t of 21
12:15 8 MOVIE • • •'it .. Blue Denim '
119591 eranoon de w1ioe .
CarOI Lynley Two leen&g·
ere l\ave nowtwwe to turn
w1W1 they find lhOy'WIU be
the parenll ol an unwant·
ed child I 1 hr , 55 min I
12:30 G) MOVlE * 11t ''UFO" (1115&) Tom
Pow«I Tiie Alf fore. '8
conlronted with reports of
flying aaooers of unk11ow11
o_r.tg1n (2 hrs )
m '"M<>v1E
• • ~ "Body A11d Soul"'
11947) John Garheld, Ltlll
Pa•mer A boxer lollows o
crooked line from the
slums to the rop ot the
1tght1ng rBCkfll only .to
•e1tct his Old ways 1i nrs I
12:37 0 ®) MANNIX
Man111x is h11ed lo find a
college basketball 61ar
wno mysret1ou11y d1s.p·
pea red
12:40 0 CJ) CBS LATE MOVlE
• • • • Cotuml>O Negahve
Reacuon· (197•1 Peter
Falk. Otctl Van Oyl<e A
pnotogrepher murde<s 1111
w1te and rnen pins Ille
cume on an e1-con
1:00 0 TOMORROW
Guesis Tlleo10Q1an ""°
pn1109QPller Russell Mein
tyre. n-spaper editor Wit-
hem H.OO•d 8 LOVE EXPERTS
1·308 WAMTm:OEADOR
ALIVE
Boun1y
1:48 0 HEWS
2·()() B NEWS
0 MOVIE •• ._. "Tiie $un .......
8el1" ( 19391 a.II Rath-
l)One, Oouolu Fllifbanka
Jr In tlle name of the
Gtown. two 8tl111h brothet•
do tlletr diplom•Uc t>ett to
aven a war In Afr'"-12
Jlr•)
2:101 NEWS
2:19 MOVIE
• • • "The Bou .. ( 1956)
JOl\ll P~. Doe Aveclon.,,
A rutl'l141N and· ambitious
polltk:Mtn join• torcea with
racketeers to gain 0011\fol
ot St. LOull. ( t ht • 65 min.) 2:201 HEWS 2:30 MOVIE • •'it "On Dangerous
Ground .. ( t9S 1) Ida Lupi·
no. Ward Bond. A delec·
ttve d1.covet1 a murderer
to be Ille brother ol the girl
he IOvet. (2 hrs )
(I) H£W8
2:641 f) MOVIE ••'it '"Mrs Mike .. C 19•9)
Dick Powell. Evelyn Keyes
A mounoe. assigned to the
Canadian .. 11derness.
bf1ngs his Clty·bred Wife
along (2 lfl'S I
$teveEdwards
4:000 MOVIE
• •111 "lake One False
Step.. ( 19•9) William
Powelt. Shelley W1nl8'S. A
prolessor. l>itlen by a
rel>td dog, tnes to prove
himself fnnocent of a m'ur-
der charge. (2 hrs.I
4:t00 NEWS
4:15 0 MOVlE
• • .,., "Cross Exem1na11on ..
(1932) H B Warner, Sally
Blane An attorney is hired
10 delend a boy accused or
murdenng his lather. ( t
hr. 1Sm1n I
4:30 CD MOVIE • *'" •The Gallant
Legion · f 19481 w1111am
EllK>ll Bruce Cabot
t 'ridoy·s
Day• ilfte .ff ot•ie•
AFTERNOON
12:00 8 * * * .. Toy T IOtl<~-+-.....,._..
( 19561 Jell Chandler.
Laraine Dav CD • • • Woman Ot l~
Vear ' ( t942) Kathartne
Hei>burn. Spencer T<
3:00 @) • '' · The Big Bouoce
(1969) Ryan O'Nea1. Le.gh
laylor· Young
3:30 D • • "The Revenge Of
Fr an.ILeoslw.D:. U.958).P.eJJU
Cushing, Francis Mathews
l Networks Take Note; We're Watching TV Less
WASHJNGTON <AP> -For
the first time since television
• settled into almost e very home,
; a majonty of Americans report
m a nationwide poll that they
r-watch television less than they
used to.
The Washington Post. which
• conducted the poll in October
~ and published the results today,
• said 53 percent of those sur-
• veyed said they spend less time
• before the tube than they did
fi ve years ago. The poll, con-
• ducted by telephone, solicited
the opinions or 1,693 people over
age 18.
From the mid-1950s until the
mid-19705, Americans responded
to every similar poll by saying
the~r. w,ere wa t c hjng more.
television than ever.
IN 1919, a poll found that 40
percent of those asked were
watching more television than
they had and 31 percent were
w;ttcbing less. Last fall brought
some evidence that viewing was
leveling off.
Although the decline in view-
ing was reported among most
segments of society -black and
while, young and old, women
and men -it was sha rpest
among weallbie r . and bette r
educated viewers. those who felt
programs had gotten worse, and
~ong those who disliked com·
mercials. .
The Post said it showed the re-
sults of its poll to some network
executives, who disputed the
conclusion that viewing had ac-
tually declined.
DESPITE ITS major findings.
the poll produced fresh evidence
that television consistently holds
the biggest audience in the his·
tory of entertainment or com·
til unication:
-Thirty-two percent -ot those
over 18 said they had increased
their time watching television
during the past fi ve years. 'l'he
rest said they had not changed
or had no answer.
-The survey indicated t he
average adult watches television
for three hours each weekday
and three hours and 25 minute~
on Saturdays and Sundays
--ONLY ONE American Ul 100
said h e h ad no worki n g
television set at hOme A maJOn ty bad at least two sets .
Other answers were s ure to be
worns<>me to the telev1s1on in
dustry
Thirty.six percent said they
would be willing to .. pay a small
amount yearly .. to have
televis i o n with out com·
merciais."
i\~ked to nCime their favont(•
pro~ram. 30 pcrrcnt couldn't
come up with the name of a
show.
Forty percent of the rcspon·
den ts s.aid teJe.v1st0n w'as.. bcUer ~· .
than 1t was five years ago. and
41 percent said it was worse:
Talevision executives told the
Post that Nielsen surveys and
other industry-s ponsored au-
dience meas urements showed
telev1s1on watching wa s not
declining.
'"REMARKABLE.''-.... ,. ,., • ••
.. SPLENDID."" ........... , •• .. , •
4 ... I • I • ~ • ai• '" Mrs. Columbo -Fits Into Falk.'s Shoes JEAN·LOUISBERTUCELLl'S
By PETE R J . BOYER bo," which premiered Monday night
LOS ANGELES <AP) -U you and debuts in Its regular time slot
were a fan of NBC's "Columbo" tonight at 9 on Channel 4, has a cer· ~eries, you might remember the good tain built·in audience. Folks might
•• lieutenant's fond and frequent ref-quietly pass on a new series called ~ erences to his wife. You never saw "Mrs. Bloforth," but many fans or
:.... he r, but Mrs. Columbo was very the old "Columbo" show will tune in ! much a part of the series. at least once to see what Columbo's ! . The unseen Mrs. Columbo, you wife looks like.
. thought, must be some lady. Her A NlfTY BIT of instant promotion,
'. b r i 1 1 i a UV , deftly exercised by a network scarce
somewhat eccen· in strong lead-in shows.
tric detec tive-"Mrs. Columbo" is Kate Mulgrew,
hus band deftly a 23-year-old Irish lass who will
handled the most make you wonder why the lieutenant
d a s t a r d 1 Y spends so much time away from
c riminals. Yet home. She play~ 81\ intelligent sub· always seemed· a urban housewife (which, remember,
little reverential. she is) who keeps busy by taking J '/J,, when speaking of French lessons and writing PT A
t ua? bi~~ifel.i t t stories for the local throwaway ... e eu enan newspaper.
" • MULORH• would foil .a ch-;~s _ Her activities lead her into the
c h a m P • on s paths of sundry crimes. wblch, ~rfect m~rder, but worr_y about get-naturally, she solves. Some of the'
ting bis wife to her cooking class on storylines figure to be a little
time. "Colum~" was a cerebr~ en· farfetthed, of course, as not many
tertalnment, Wllh all of Falk I ln· housewives run into unsolved
tricat.e cigar-smoke deduclnp, and
the often-evoked image of tiia wife
served u nice counterpolnt. It made
1be rumpled genius just plain folk.
FALK EVENTUALLY got a little
too expensive for NBC, and the
' network lost the popular series after
Holdup on TV
Played for Re~
" last season. But it struck someooe at . CALDWELL, Idaho (AP)-Tbeplot
· NBC that tbe lma1inary Mn. Colum· of a 11etnPa" t.elevialon protram aired
· bo might be much more seasonable. ' two weeks ago wu re-enacted recently
Sbe didn't even have a aaeat. And wben a man robbed the Bank ol ldabo
ebe wu available. brucb bank at Caldwell, authorities
Thi• was fertile aoll for TV's say. •
• favorite substitute for cre.Uvfty, th Chief ot Police Charles W. Astleford
splnoff -extracUn1 a character said an undiacJOled amount of money ~ from a popular Mow and balldinc a wu Ukln. He aaid a man Jn a small
new aeries aroad that ebaraeter. dirty blue car drove to the bank's
With ••Jin. Colu.-," NBC took the clrtve·up window, puaed the teller a
• ~plnotr (Or rlpotf,.u It'• alto Down)1 note1811Dcbebadaboxwlthaboqabln
!" a 1tep further. ereaUnc • ..t• It ud. dlrectLq ber to put money 1n a
around a popular 1bow cbareeter aacfs.Sbedld.
: \bat.,.... nllted. AatWord 1ald be aaw the teltvlslon
Tbe network tbould be eaGll'atulat· proll'am and tbout)l.toUt U IOOD u be
ed for lta lnaemal\J. ••Mn. Colum· learDtcloftberobbery. •
f I
mysteries every Thursday. But this
is TV.
viewers expect. And the show has
Kate Mulgrew.
THE FOLKS BEHIND "Mrs.
Miss Mulgrew succeeds m II\ ing
up to the image created on the
"Columbo" series. Her Kate Colum
bo is a pretty. independent, interest·
ing lady of strong cha racter . Funny,
but l'IOt wacko.
Columbo" are the ones who made
"Columbo," and though Mrs. Colum·
bo's adventures will lean more
toward suspense than puzzle ~olving
(her husband's forte), the stories
promise to carry the Columbo quality
Just the kind of woman the J1eute-
nant said she was.
SOUTH COAST
ACTO«S Co.<>P
BHll ,.,. "'O" COOi of •cll•O wor1<a!IOPI lnCtuOtnO I» ~
ballet. otnOiftg ' -°''* lype ~
~17141957-0212
A RALPH BAKSHI FILM
IJl(;I .,.,, ·-···t-...... liiii'!.
UCIRVINE
ldeMelActureHeH
, .......... 1.. ...... ,,
7:00. -=• , ... .
U.C. ltudents 11.00
Qeft ......... 1.IO
An
THEATRES
C WffEIM AREA )
CINEMALAND 11•16J\ 1b()1
1414 Maroor 111•0 '•tt P"""0
FAMILY NIGHT
Mon-TuH
AllSHtsS1.00
CINEMALAND OHL YI
·~s· ....
'R••"910fTilePWI,_.._'
6:41-10:20 INJ
"AHeMAL HOUSF' ..,.
............ Of ..........
nt:I t;Jt!ll
"OUTLAW JOSIYWAUS .. .,., .. ,.
"U' 1M SMOtCr Cat .... c COSTA MESI )
So. COHI m -.•~ ,,"
)410111\IOI I 'f' Pfn•~O
.~ .. ,,......,.,.... '"SUNIMAM" ,,.,
, ........ JI ....... ,........., ....
THE WARRIORS . --
1:ao-e130-10:30 (ft)
I~
'
t\O TIMt~ 6 J?\
tDQ ~'.I
t)QI 'AKt'NS"I' .; .... : ... :. ' ....... ~-·"91.l
,.;
~ _...,..,,_ •• 00" taAIHU "~o4t9't•1
JtUti.HCO\•t•"t• .ll•fll~R•I •o•
4
1 J
I
I . '
! ' • ' I
I ' ' I ,
I !
I
ENTERTAINMENT/ l~ITERMISSION
l'ARIS IAP> Tho
l'ari8 Opera 'a world prt·
m1f'r of °'" complf'tt-d
vt•rsloo of Alban Bt'rl'•
upocalypllt' ope ra
"Lulu" bu ~o &rttted
by l-'1 f'nch mul!IC' t'rltln
ui. a n "unquf'1Hloned
triumph" and one or lha
.irt'al mu l<>ttl evel\U of
r t•rt•nt )'t'8r'i
Tht• rart' unanimity or
pralitt• dlmuitl'd 30
v.-urs of efforts hy the
Paris <>1"'ra':1 German
born direc t or Nolf
Liebermann to C'Omplete
the thrtt act o~ra. left
unfinished wheo Bt'rg
died in 1935
The first two ac ts of
··Lulu" were performed
for the firs t lame in
Zurich, Switzerland in
1937, two years after the
co mposer 's death
"Lulu" is the story of
..............
CHARGE DROPPED
Und• Blelr
Blair Rap
Dismissed
NO RWALK , Coon
CAP> -A drug charge
h as been dismissed
against actress Linda ·
Blair, who played a giPI
possessed by the devil in
the _movie.. "The Ex·
orc1st."
a fem ale monster creat· Superior Court Judge
e d hy male vice and Scott Melville said Jan.
avarice. She goes from 30 he would drop the
one lover to a nother· charge under the ac·
bringing death, but the celerated rehabilitation
more s h e s preads a program if Miss Blair:s
sense of doom. the more attorney could document
m e n desir e her She a claim that a m a ri·
ends as a prostitute and juana possession charge
is murdered by her last against her in Canada
client. Jack the Ripper. had been dis missed. •
WAl•M •am • M• C1111Sfll HIAYIN CAN WAIT IHJ
MCHIGI c. scon
NAIDCOU ll l .,,., . , ......... ,,., • ••••a 10:0
Mltwl U'IAN
--,AST UIXK <'°I "us 0 .. ON ONI f'°l
MAN CONlelT e DlO*lO lll'*llA,_
TII .UY YUIN IOllllT <'01
lrOO e i 111 • l :U • 1:00 & 10..11
,,..,., OAMlll U'LAN
-'-FAST IUAK('Ol lll/~31·9~10 12:M • 2>M • l 1M • l :M & 19'M
• c .... " ~., .... ,.
494·1S14
e.oe• c. scon
No\IOCOll (II)
ltolS • 1:0 • •:U • l:U •••••a 1•••
,. .. , --'°"" '"" ... DAYS Of HIAVINC"> -· .,, •• ,,,. • •:11. -...... ,_
C\Mn LUMOO.
IW1T WMIQI WAY lllT LOOll l'°l KUI
M ovnAW JOSll WAW f"l
AU STAR CAST
"CALIFORNIA SUfTE" (PO
~1':19«11
... ., _, "1M:IM:tM:1~1 ..... I
J.l.I. TOUCllH'S
"LOU OF Titt llMGS" Cf'GJ
P\11$
"'UHM.AHIED WOMAM"
"AH llOE" , ........ IOIS'f llO , •• ..,
........ -llS e fn lfl lit 1• I $111ot llM •IO IM,ORTAMT NOTICE! CHILDREN UNDER tZ FRUI
l .. ~ ............... c....-.. ... 1 Mc·~•J....-
1•.~:1
ALAN ALM • IWN Miit""'
SAMI ~~XT YUltPOl
....... "' OUNflOMlfl ('PO)
----...... -··-· ----., ...• -... ---·
. ~ ' . . .. .. • • • J _..-....; \:.'"'I • • ... -""--~ -~ ..
•
erloeomle Saga
'Yaniti,es' at Lagunf!·
P l •c•· •n 1nllmMte, three·
chlt ro c t er p la y »u c h aa
"Vunlht•11" on u h!!j11tae\' auch
u thl' o ne flt th Laauna
Moult<ln l'layhoust' d It tenda
to rat ti,• 'l.lrt>und a bl
Th111 con\paet,' ser1ocomlc
st ud y Ill thr<'e smp ll town
l'l1eerlt'adt"r-s und lht!~ comLng
.Qf a1e In lhe turbul~n\> Slxtjes
t'u llit fOf" aa'at'ttin.c of lo wered ell·
pt•ctattoo• ln•tead, director·
dt11ign.-r Jacquie Moffett has
cnlarg..O thc Sl'Ope of the !>how
·valf1•1as
fil•J ~ , ... Hellner dhKte(I end deol_.t
br -NIOff"' 11<00..C•d "' 1>ov91"' llowe 11..,..t 1rt q,,,ld Cl\ell" <l>O•-•PllY DY 0....
"• ""'"''• jjf.-1.0 l ... wNY\ '"'°"911 ~IU«MY\ •t I )0 -~. M•«" tt •I t JO lllf°"91' M•"" 11 •I tiw l-Mo..rton P•••'-',. .a. I e\lvl\4 («lyUI\ Ao.od L.a9VM 8tec .. R....,,..
11Qn\4 .. 416,)
TMa CAST
Su~ Nl<C...,....,
8•r1Wr•lla1~ S.r-•Edlv..,
by ut1L1Z1ng gigantic transparent
mirrors in place or dressing
I.ables and added so me
:.u perfluo us c ho reographic
touches in an apparent attempt
to fit the play to the theater.
IT DOESN'T quite work.
Although the three actresses in·
volved acquit themselves nicely.
the technical aspects of the pro·
ductlo.n lend to dominate when
they would be more strategical·
ly em ployed as background er.
feels.
The show itself bas a neat,
fresh appearance, and a ll three
performe rs ar e making their
L ag una d ebut s -S u san
Intermission
Tom Titus
McCartney as the righteous
save·il·for-m a rriage, old·
fashioned girl: Barbara Bein·
dorf a.s the campus organiier
who can plan everything except
her own future, and Barbara
Edivan as the coed stifled by
parental repression who sets out
to make up for lost time.
Of the trio, Miss McCartney
emerges as the standout in the
long run, a lthou g h s he is,
s trange l y, the m ost lnex·
perieoced on stage. Her natural
Texas accent gives he r an
autbepticity the others lack, and
s he develops he r c harac ter
be'utifully over the passage of
year!.•
MISS BE\NDORF is clearly
the .atroogesl in the first two
scenes, bringing a note "of iden·
tifiable clarity to her assign·
ment as the take-cbarfe gal. Yet
he r (irst moment o personal
c risis is muted by awkward
blocking (facing 'upstage in a
crucial second act scene) and
her Act Three sequence gives
her little opportunity to flesh out
her cha racterization, a n inherent
flaw in playwright J ack Heil·
ner 's script.
The least effective. in the
showiest role, is Miss Ed1van,
who never quite s ucceeds in
elevating her part from its "wiJd
kid" caricature. Shaky in the
o pening sce ne, s he gains
m omentum as the play P.rO·
gresses, but fails to reveal much
mner justification for her chosen
direction.
DIRECTOR MOFFE1T, mak·
ing her debut in this category,
shows much verve aod imaglna·
ti on, although some of it is in
cross purposes with the script.
She scores highest in moments
of conflict. particularly between
Miss McCartney and Miss
Edivan (wbo are poles apart
from the outset>. but her use of
dance effects after the first and
second scene tableaux virtually
negates the effect of the preced·
ing action.
"Vanities" continues through
March 17, playing Tuesdays
through Saturdays at 8:30 and
Sunday, March 11, at 2:30 at the
Moulton Playhoyse. 606 Laguna
Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. • . THE FOUNTAIN Valley Com·
munity Theater production of
"Oliver Twist," directed by Phil
de Barros, d]>ens Friday at the
Fountain Valley Community
Center, Brookhurst Street at
Slater Avenue.
Kathryn Munsee. Jim Sterling
and Leonora Phillips play the
major r oles in the Charles
Dic kens play, which will be
staged Fridays at 7 . 30 and
Saturdays and Sundays at 2:30
through March 18. Call 839-0173
or 968·3509 for reservations.
ICIBJY 1w11111•uno1
lllTUTlmCTm 91CUEMY IWI•
_ llOMllllTIOIS
NOW PLAYING
--·-COTH M~llAI _,Alla lllm.• c .... ....., ~ 3101 w .. -.... 6:1 Cbl6 a-,.. !ll·.0010
4 ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
Including:
BEST ACTRESS
Ellen Alan
Burstyn Alda
~'lime. 'Next~"
NOW PLAYING
~E EDWlllDI' NEWPOllT ANAHEIM DfllfE·IM
Orange 634:2553 Newport Beach 6-44·0760 Anaheim 879·9850
c:1nename c scAeen
63U 2553 Cl comPLEX
Cllapm an A,.. I. ~nta Ana
f'rHW&Y
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY . . ...
"HARD CORE",(R)
WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS
"NORTH AVENUE IRREGULARS" (G)
"S~M~ TIME NEXT YEAR" (PG)-
"ICE CASTLES"
"INVASION OF THE
BODY SNATCHERS" (PG)
"FAST BREAK" (PG)
"HEAVEN CAN W~IT"
"THE ONE AND ONLY" LPG)
~ ... , ..... ., ..........
ALL o•t,,._...,o ....... ::r'""'' c .... UfMMf ,, .,,.. ""..... ...,.,_!Ml
.. A .FILM OF GREAT COURAGE
AND OVERWHELMING EMOTION Al.
POWER. A FIERCELY LOV1NG
EMBRACE OF un.:."
• ·;;~;;;~ADE,;~i=RD ~
NOMINATIONS
PRESENTED IN 70 M.M. DOLBY 6
TRACK STEREOPHONIC SOUND
Mon.·Thura.
2:00, 8:00
Fri. 2:00, 1:30
SAT/&ln.
1 :00, 4:30, 1:30
8 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTRESS
Jane Fond•
BEST DIRECTC>ft
Hal Aahby
BEST SUPP. ACTRESS
Penelope Miiford
BEST ACTOR
Jon Voight
BEST SUPP. ACTOR
Bruce Dem
BEST SCREENPLAY
"Jerome Hellman ~~"
A Hal Ashby1 ....
JaAef=D)t//a,
...ZA¥&ee~
~~H
~Waldo Salt.':, Robert C. Jones t.eo.yby Nancy Dowd
ai.:tord~ Haskel Wexler Allodllt Pn.Mt< Bruce Gilbert
~~Jerome Hellman l:.Dd-.,Hal Mb;
IRJ..flW~I
DCLUIWE ORANGE CO. l!NGAGEMl!NT
~HOVlf
1~~ HOV!f
Plu1
R1cherd Oreytu11
THE BIG FIX
DAILY PILOT 87
_,_,,,,,,.
••11u.t u .11•s *"'-······ .,. ....... ...
GABE KAPLAN (P.G.)
"FAST BREAK'
MON· THU AS 7:15, 9:30
FRI. 7:1S.t:30-11:30
-SAT. 1:00,-3:00 • ..S:OO. 7:'5 ....~ ...... ~~Ml 9:30, 11:30
M411l0"1 .. HOO
C:fH( M&C"M.UI
nueoo1onu
1Af'4Jfil 11 » .) U •• I 6t. , .... U
., .. .._ •• •C4DI•• ••.ad"'
-••UIOOft lHCL MST~ ~lli-" HEAVEN ~ CAN WAIT PLUS ...
WINNER 4 ACADEMY
AWARD NOMINATIONS
"THE WIZ"
SVN. 1:00. 3:00, 5:00, 7:15
9:30
(P.G.)
THURS. 7:30. 9:30
ON·f"'-"'S 7 ''· 9.:.11 nu J tt.•11. ,, tt •
SATSUN \00.JU tlO
ROBllY
7 65
IO
00~1• SIM><>~ IC:I: • ES~5T L55
Se•n Connery
"THE GREAT
TRAIN
ROBBERY"
ii~·-=~~ lX(JO ~<ll k:J
ue )'(; •
"Revenge of the.--
Pink Panther"
PnlNftnMn Bibi AndafMft
Fern•ndo Aey
Vlttofto a.-"
"QUINTET"
f
.. . ... . ..
{ ..,
.. ... ........ . . .
• -DAILY PILOT fhut&d•y t.4arch 1. 1819
,
CALIFORNIA I NATION
, Gas P.inCh to Hurt SD
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Otflclah
of San Dlego'a S92•·million·a
Y••r tOOrlst industry fear a cnp
plln1 effect from Prtaldcnt
CU'ter's request for .uthorily to
r.a,aon 1a8dlln and lmpl m nl
t'llf.rn cons rvaUon me11u!'fl
T he prealdent 11 aakln1 C~1rtsa for standby power to o r eou~n type 1u raUonlna
a other less strin1~Qt man
would dramaltcall~ t1ffoct an
Die-go tourism bcc"uu1u~ th In
duatry lA baaed on t1 heavy lnnux
of motorlai.. •ccordlna to a
spokesman for the Conv nUon
and Vlaiton Bureau
"IT 'WOULD HA.Vt-: a very
slsnl(acant effect bore," lht.i
l'pokesman said "No doubt
•bouttt,we'dbehurt "
Zoo ftll by as much as 30 per.
ct>nl u did attendance al olher
nu1Jor ultructlons atnd hotels
B T AT. T HE SAM E time,
Veollow Cub Co general
manag~r lilll Hilton speculates
taxi service wlll be unaffected
by the proposals.
MARIMEKKO
ON SAlE 0~~~v~v
5 100° per
yard
Shopf:r=J
d atory mt'a~urH tor use In
sc.yeire ~r\C'rty ~meraenrle ..
Jl ATION I NG AND
W&EKEND ga:s sU.tion <'l~1n1r1
Dlll'iq the klst eneru crlblii
in the wi nter o( 197~ 74, tourl11t
revenues plu~eted. Atte11·
danre at the.> famous Sar\ 01ego
"I bellevtl the taxicab industry
will once 1tgaln be designated
part or the central transporta-
tion network and my informa·
lion 111 the Industry will get the gas we need "
S•acflff VIHage • HuitHIMJlon leach
Maht Clftd Yortrtown • phoM 53M5t t
Hows: I 0.6 Daily & Sundcry
'· . At 'c::r::==J·
KALEVALA
·~"" ....... F~nu Questio~? _
First Lady Rosalynn Carter places her
finger on the bridge of her nose during a
session with reporters in Washington, D.C.
Mrs. Carter answered questions on a varie·
t-y of subjects . • - -
f..op Chief Faces
34 Sex Charges
WOOSTER. Ohio (AP> James Shane Jr.:
chief of police in the village or Sb/eve for five
years, bas been jailed following a gl'aod jury in·
dictment on 34 .eex·related cb•raes involving 1----Four-youngsters aged 11 t~J"M:--·---·-···
The indictments in~Jude eight counts or r ape, lfl counts of compeJllng prosUtuUon, seven c~unls
of corruption or a m inor, two counts or sexual 1m·
position and one count of gross sexual im position.
THE INDICTMENTS ALL INVOLVE minors.
including the 16 counts of compelling prostitution,
s aid Wayne County prosecuting attorney Keith
Shearer.
Shane, 49, who is married and has three grown
<.'hildren. was suspended Monday night after the
indictments were served and Is being held in lhe
county jail in Ueu o r $25,000 bond. He will be' ar ·
ralgned March 5 in Wayne County Common Pleas
Court, said county Sheriff J a mes Frost.
Frost said the charges stem from an investiga"'
lion into allegations of sexual acts with an ll·year-
old boy and with three girls aged 11, 13 and 14 -·
a ll Shreve residents.
THE INVESTIGATION OP SHANE was in-
itiated by com plaints from parents or several
children involved. Shearer said.
Shreve Mayor James Carmichael said he was
s hocked by lhe charges.
··He bas been a fi ne officer without a blemish
on his record." the mayor said of Shane.
Shane had succeeded the mayor's father ,
Floyd Carmichael, as police chief of the three-man
police department in the Wayne County com·
munity.
Veterans Doe
High~r ~enSion
WAS HING TO N <AP) -The Ve terans
Administration says that about 150,000 World War
I vete rans may qualify for higher .pensions,
including an extra $800 a year in payments under a
• re vised pension plan approved by Congress last
year .
The. VA noted that the special add-on pension
increase wu d esignated specifically for certain •
needy, elderly veter an s of wartime service for
whom veterans education assistance and IQan
guaranty benefita ha ve not been m ade available.
There are nearly 300,000 World War I veterans 4 penaion rolls, bul because of cban1ed income
eligibility criteria under the improved program,
the VA aald it belle'Ves some 150,000 will qualify,
for tbe special $800 increase.
MERCURY SAVINGS
"rttl '"'"' nNC11ri11I ion
.. UU Nltll aooo THAU MYCN 7, 1171
M "-.... .,W.. ~II. Cl.rictl ... ........ '"'" .,. ~· .. c-.. -.
• All W. ,._ -S"tt<f 1e ,~ .....
for no-worry
hot water
Dependable, efficient gaa
water heetlhg. Gia.as tined tankt, hot water recovery tystem , and high-
temperature thut-.off.
19~ .................
-.. ....... HM.•
............ 114.15
. fry It all anyway!
Hamllton e .. ch't 'Fry·All'
deep cootuw and fryer.
Hive Oiflcloua frencn
frlH or lritt•nt meala
without h•HIHI Large
cepactty. Reg. 17."
., ..
finish-up
with a flourish . ,
Black & Decker'" finishing sander with large surface for el·
liclency. lightweight,
double Insulated. #7<404.
Reg. 19.99
1688
go to any
lengths
Random length pieces
of quality ho•• to
fashion your own
hOMI and exteMlon. 10 to 15-foot lengths.
Reg. 2.99
c 1!!
lock your
mail In!
Lock allows you to receive mall but only you can get
It out! #919-921. Reg. 69•
49°
un-common ·
leveler
Sturdy, long-ha.ndled leveling rake with strong
•teal tlnot . Hardwood handle. True-Tamper.
#PL-14. R99. 7,89
.. 4''
meat the maker
coffee's best!
Coffeemaker .Jeluxe
by Sunbeam 10·
cup brewing system
Use any grind of coffee
for perfeci cup every
time lasll Attractive
styling #15·291 or #15·
213 Reg 36 99 ~(;iiiiiiiiili
..
zig-zag and ~II
you can cut it!
Black & Decker· Jib saw cuts curv~s. scrolls or
straight in woods. metals. plastics and more. Double
insulated. UL approved #7504. Reg 15 99
99
...
...---' ~ite-nli°k! '-~--~/;d~-
' I
If••••
take toil out
of clean tile
Oxtord• 'Brite-n· Tl~' con·
centrate. Safe .. easy,
economic.I tile cleaner.
For all Ille, vitreous china.
llberglaas. chrome, more
32-o:i:. size. Reg. 4 49
-A//~ -·-·-······ .. _.. ,.4 •r•.P'Alif_ r
....... A14f
•4 =-~·~
slide-all
lubricant
Dry spray lubricant with
Teflon • gives you more
slip than silicone Easy lo
use, no oily residue.
#E450 Reg. 1.89 '
98° ----+-----:~-"'>~ \.\.------
spray away
pests Ir disease
Great ·garden 11pr•Y9r by
Servess. 3-gallon com~
presset air type with
adjustable nozzle j\nd
eaav-10-handle hose.
16130TT. Reg. 23.95 17•.•
get In there
It mix It upr
Hamlllon Beach Mh1e1-1e hand style mixer
with full alze beaters
and powerful motor
Handy speed telec· tlon #970 Reg 10 gq
..ulMIL10N
BEACH
719
original ~
flapper
Easy-working, quiet, ~leaklng toilet tank fl•pper.
Replace that notay.
wa9'aful ooe now! Aeg. 1.99
121
•
). • .
.
i
f t
I
• .
'
•
>
I _!
' I
' • I
' t
I
-INSIDE: • Erma Bomtiiell • Ann Linders
• Morose'-" • Classlfled
...
The whole town's
. talking about
the Boone girls.
Above, Debby·
gives a
salute. At
right, DebQy,
Lorry, Lindy
and Cherry. Director Jack-Regas. above right, goes .over shot .
BoOnt! ·fte _BoOne Girls ~:~.~
There's a Boone boom on, and it exploded at Fashion Island last ~! ~~~;1
week when Pat Boone's four attractive daughters, Debby, Lorry,
Linpy and Cherry, danced;-and prB.nced during the filming of an
Easter television $peqial.
Helrdresaer makes SUte coiffure is just so.
By JUDITH OLSON
Oltlle DMIY "*' M8tt "Okay, let's do it again."
Sheila Stewart, stage manager for the
Boone Family Easter television special be·
ing falmed at Faabk>n laland, repeatedly
voiced that phrase recenUy throughout a
lengbty rehearsal and performance session.
Pat Boone's four daugblen, Debby,
Lorry' Lindy and Cherry' danced all day
in segments to be interspersed with the
rest of the special which bad already been
filmed at The Music Center. The program
will beabown April 7 on KABC.
Tbe motto of the day was "hurry up and
wait," just like the Army. 1be two dozen
technicians and support personnel made
numerous adjustments to the cameras and
costumes while the slaters stood patiently
ln lhe--briK weather. Work began ·at 7 a .m., and was once
threatened by rain. But the sun shone by
late IDOl'1UDI and the sbow was on.
As tbe lbopkeepen began to ~ve, the
crowd of obeerven. started to a well. A shoe
store proprietor smiled and Aid; "It looks
.. if my store La going to 1et all the
pu~clty."
THE MANAGER of a nearby clothing
store exclaimed, "Thia La rea1lx excltina!"
There were six costume changes, but by
10:45 a.m. the girls were still in the second
outfit. It looked like it would be a long day.
The theme of the Fashion Island show is
a shopping spree, according to the Boones'
family manager, Don Henley. 1be fOW'
girls sing "The Easter Parade" then segue
into, "U my friends could see me now,"
dancing all the while.
Two choreographers, several makeup
arlista, hairliresser s and wardrobe
managers were on duty, constantly check·
lng the stars and helping them wilh dance
5teps.
The director, Jack Regas, and the two
producers, Jac k Wohl and Be rnie
Rothman, b,overed about, giving direc·
Uona.
There alao were runners to get iced tea,
stage bands to plant and pluck the-plastic
nowen which transformed Fashion Island
into a spring garden and guards watching
over tbe entire scene.
THE CBO&EOGRAPBEKS, Dee Dee
Wood aad Maria Galva Henley, the
manaaer'a wife, were the buaiesl They
(SeeBOONEGlaLS,PateC2>
4 When the sun
came out
late in the
morning,
cameraman above
used a jacket
as a sun
shield during
filming.
Daily Pilo't
Photos by
.Gary Ambrose
l .
' l
t ~--~~-----------~----------------------------------t .
•••oeenee of Youth, Or Teen-age .Boy Ploy? f
iDere...S .....,_ ID boJ8 a felt relief wbeD
-UMy llloMld ...a lllJ IO~ lD Mt. Tllll
W--J lmew lt WU .U OtW.
lat"=-':f •bt, I ca9111t a plnt·1l1ed • ''BolMlt If 8Dd a lldm1 ''Al P.elao'' erawlillo.w tbefftce tllto oarnrd. 111 lllWal •• t1aat·~t1MJ wen ~ -.u:::: ... lbltal•dl rulbed _, .......... ,__ aa.,an lD lw dlaeel••••a...._ ~· . .... at1 .... , tbe fakteMad ID ......... .., ..... .... .... ....... -........ ellml» ....... ,.. to .. It. ,_
'\
Sbert UUI..._. tile ''Paeiao'' cbanNr u her
bo~ oltbe moment.
ID • bunt ol -do JOU rallJ tblDk I 8ID tb8t
1taptd? r U1er, I Hatt.be boya out the front
door wlb tlat, wU'Dlq I woald c.U tbe police if (
folllld .._•our yud q81D.
' llomeata later I cliHcmnd wbr tM little
CbuoY• ............... VOUDd bl tbs lint
· plaoe. UDbowD to me Sberl ud blr two
&lrlfrteada bad lpeDt u-.; dQ CODYertiDI 8
iilleta1 ..... .w bebtDd the .... iDto •
''clab.''
-........ ftl'll~ ID 1111 DOW abdJ hwt, ' opeMd tbe clDor lb. abed 8Dd saw wb•t bad
OllH ..... ...,. .. to It.ore °""'°" Junk from elle5£ bad been trwfolmed lDto• cU'IMMd 1W81 11*1Cb, eoah._ GD 1111 ftaar and Ila•
Ille c_..oatt.. .
Tlla .. lao.1 ...a Md •portable All/nl , ............ u.e ......
S.. tbau111 I nllttlDbeNd balkttq 1D7
OW8 '1Drt" .. tM larAl9 M a eldld (Cboulb DO boJ1 nw crawled a ftDCe to ... It>. I ....._. Mlt•"!• ad udentaDdlna utde, fOl'C!lDI .
myaelf &o remember that u a m•ture parent It
ii my l'fllpoaalbWty to act u a strict dis-
dplinarlu. EvolYiDI teen-asen need ftrm and clear
pldaace -aot .Jello mothers. ' Tllierefwe, ia tbe uan-t t.-. t could
muat.w. I told tM IJ.m they cou14 camp out for
tbe n1cbt bl die eluJ.boaie ODly ...... two c:ondl·
Uom: DO eacl'-.... DO bop.
, I eould Me bJ tbe wq tbeJ lialed and
asreed, I Md m8de • --. lmpnulon and '
tbey knew I wu DC_Jt a ,_,.. to be t.m~.
with. lb bulbeDIJ. tboUlb. Md bis on Idea: bl.a · motoreJde ni bebll mo'9d beft into tbe
......... die DUt 01.
ta tllll .......... I nnl M to pt t.Ms.dlUf-----1 ....... wt dlecovered ........... h'ont
Jud ud 1111 C81' wen COYenCI wttll ... abiplof
wblteWletpeper. '
Set'08d coeonte alp IOmMM in your
boaMbold hM arrived at teea ltat.. We bad
been roy.U, T.P. 'd. .
I CM oaJ, IUlnat!t. it WM ·~ R.tdfard" ud ''Al.hdao'•'r;,a, ol A1iDI IQOd ......,,
:. .. ..
\ ' ....
I
J •
• I
~ • I • • ' .
I
' I I j
I
J I
.,,.
Durlnglhli19
olE..., ,.. . .,,,
specie/, on.
ol thct crew
technlcJans
checks the
Hght while
Pat Boone's
daughters
go through
dance routine.
l,
• • .. . . . . . . . . • " • ,. • ;Jio • ,. I• • '-
-
•• .Boone Girls
"1 ... -
. . ..
...
!'
• 1·
1·
(Pnla .... Cl)
kept warm in the nippy air by abowing the
Boone girl.I bow to eet the SleP6 just right.
"When in doubt keep lt lnoving," Mrs.
Henley advised. ·
The sisters mouthed the words to the
sound track and at one point Lorry formed
two plaintive sylla bles: "My feet!"
Despite the long morning (lunch was at
Lp.m. ).,..l..bu~ wasn.'La murmer from the
sisters They can't comp.lain because the
pay ls good, Henley indicated, and Lindy
concurred over lunch. "We like having the
extra money," she said. ,
Lindy, the only one of the four with
cbHdren, lives ln Palos Verdes with her
family. Cherry lives in Hawaii where her
husband is art director for Youth With a
Mission. Debby and Lorry, the r_oungest,
still live in Beverly Hills with their
parents. ·
Debby plans to' marry her fiaoce ,
Gabriel Ferrar, on Sept~ l,. ff\er •lllrJi be
wW help her with her career.
THE E"8TE• program is the third
special for the family. One more is
planned for Christmas.
They have been singing together as a
group for many years, Lorry said. ..The
first time we performed was when be
(Pat) was on the road so much. He wanted
to lake us along to Japan. Jt just worked
out that it was fairly successful."
The alstera ortk1J1ally started singing.
songs like "Red, Red Robln" and "Side by
Side" as small children and their
mother taught them harmony t Lorry said.
They were on the road oy the time
Lorry, now 21, waa 11. Cherry, the oldest,
is 24.
The sisters agreed, as they lunched in
the vacated Pesmond's store with. the
crew. tbat there are distinct disad ·
· vantages to belng the daughters of a
celebrity
"WE AllE representing an image," LOrry said. "We have to live ur, to t,Jlat_.
But that's probably s elf·inflicted. '
The advantages of being a Boone, she
added, are travel and meeting interesting
people.
Cherry and Lindy said their husbands
have had to make an adjustment to "deal
"Hrthe' publi~" ,
The sisters noted they like to do specials
becatise it gives them an excuse to see
each other . . .
"We have a lot of fun together," Ll:ndy
said. "We are each other's best friend. We
never fight. We've appreciated the
friend.ship.''
She added that their father bas been
''like an older brother. He's young and
he's a lot of(u.o." 800NE AND HIS wife,.Shlrley worry
about tbelr daughters and prefe~that they
aot work alone, although they have sup-
ported Debby in her first solo ventures.
Lindy aid, "He enjoys worki.o~ with. us. _
so be doesn't have to go out alone". ' ·
Boone worries about the possible bad in·
nuences "on the road" as well as the wear
and tear It entails, Lindy· noted. "It's
physically e xhausting. He's concerned
that we'll areet the wrong kind of people."
Debby, the most recognized and sought
for autographs during the filming at
Fashion island, said her plans are "to j\lst
keep on working " · She said she would like to do films if she
••can flnd the right one."
She noted tbat 1t~r father and mother
would have preferred that their daughters
not pursue a career except homemllking.
· But Debby Boone found, with the hit
song "You Light Up My Lile," that the
public doesn't agree. There's a Boone
boom oo and it looks as if It's going to last.
Help . Stamp Out Cftbin Fever
(
I
. • • • t • • • . .. • '
ANN LANDERS J ERMA 80.-S~K /.HOROSCOPE
'-_B_o_r_o_•_~_o_p_e_~J f_·_s_· 1.,,_·_1es_~_._· ~ __ c1a_~_J
FRIDAY, MAaCB 1
81 SYDNEY OQU
AaJES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Accent on earp·
Inga, valuables, ability to fmd what had been
mlaslng or lost. Gemini, Virao. Saaittartus
figure prom.l.QenUy. Timln& ls on target. Be
ready for a~tra.n.sactiorut: · •
TA(Javs (Apr. 2().May 20):, Cycle high -
look out, stand back -there's a lot more com·
In&. from th.la kid! Major domestic adjustment,
more money -these ftJUre prominently E~
phaaize personality. initiative.
GEMINI (May 21-J,une 20): What occurs is
quiet. behind the scenes , the opposite of ob·
vious. See as is -as c;ontrasted to wishful
thinking. Steer clear of self-deoeplion. Get clear
definition of terms
CANCE& (June 2\-July 22>: Accent on
friends. ability to make wishes become re·
•all ties. Spotlight also on success in business -
and romance. You make contact which can ac·
tually lead to a successful business enterprtse.
LF.o (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Emphasis on get·
Ung down to business. direct participation and
confrontation. Finish what you start, be ag-
ireasive in defending beliefs.
VRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 >: You find bow to
overcome distance, language barriers. Leo.
· Aquarius figure prominently. 'New contact
proves Important. exciting and col).)d lead to ad·
venture. . LIBllA CSept. 23-0 ct. 22 ): Delve beneath
awf~ce.. indical1ons. Accent on the occult or
what ls hidden from view. Financial matters af·
fectlng partner or mate command attention.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21 l : Av.aid un·
necessary conflicts -steer clear of direct con·
frontations. Make concessions to partner or
spouse. Collect inlormaUoo and file for future
W;e . If patient, you improve public image.
SAGITTARWS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21>: Obtain
hint rrom Scorpio message. Maintain low pro-
file. Stick to basic Issues. Refu~ to be
sidetracked by one whose motives are in-
trinsically selfish.
CAPRICO&N mec. 22·Jao. 19>: Me mber of
·opposite sex aids in making wish come true.
Gemini, Virgo, Scorpio figure promlnenUy. Be
receplive to s uggestions involving tr-.vd.
AQVAalt)S (Jan. 20..Feb. 18): -Home,
M!curity, reeling of contentment. the. storm bu
been survived -this can ~ a major patt of
your personal Henario. Taurus. Scorpio persons
figure prominently. . .
PISCES <Feb. 19·M8l'. 20 >: You ~atn
greatet opportunity for freedom of choice.
Message results inrdetour. You gel word from
relative iQ transl~. A letter or .telegra~. ~st
baste , rould prevent complications. avoid mts·
u_nderstandi ngs.
ORANGE COAST SINGLES: A card party
will beg.in at a p.m . Saturday, March 3, at the
Costa Mesa home of Mary Ar10. For Jolorma·
Uon , call Mary at 54f.M82. ·
PAaBNTS wrniOU'f PAllTNEU: 1Jouth
Coast Chapter #30$, bat plqfted a St. P9trtek •s
Day Dance on Frida.y, II arc& t. Call 541-$788 for
information.
WOKEN ALONE: Worbhopl are currently
belnc formed and tbe flrat erovp·wut meet Mon·
day, March 5. For partlculara, call the UCI
Womel!'s Opportunitlea Center. 833-7128.
CHRISTIAN SINGLES: Clinical
psychok>giat Terry Argast. Ph.D., will present a
proaram on "Hypnoaia and Boli.stic Ch.riatiabi·
ty•• at 7:30 p.m . Friday, March 2, at the Laguna
Beacb Community Presbyterian Cbuttb. Call
494-7~ for reaervaUons.
SINGLES EXPO: Tbe convention will begin
at 8:30 p.m. Friday, March 9, at the Pacifica
Hotel. CUlver City. Admisaion to all exhibits is free. Hours are 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturilay· and
Sunday, March 10 at.HI 11: Call: (213) -..s5
81NGLE·EXPE9llENCE: "Developing New
RelaUonabips" will be the topic of a program at'
8 p.m. friday, March 2. For information, call
997-9600.
GAY SINGLE.S: "Hap .ness is Being Single
-and Gay'' will be the topic of a progra m at 7
p.m. Mond ay, March 5. Call 99'7·9600 for in·
formation.
NEWPOllT JEWISH SINGLES: "Let's Dis·
cuss Sex and the J ewish Single Person" will be
the topic of a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Saturday,
March 3. Call Norma at 968-0837 for informa-
tion.
SINGLES LIB£8ATION, Robert Davidson.
Ph.D., will conduct a workshop at UCl on
Thursday, March 10 For further information,
ca 11 833-1128.
BALBOA SID CLUB: For inlormaUon about
upcoming trips and activities. call Wayne
Hoover at 645-7979
-I / you have an item fo r the Singles Calendar . send 1t
to Cheryl R.omo. r eal unng Qepartment, Orange Coast
Daily Ptlot. PO. Box 1560. Cosra Mesa . Ca. 92626 Please
include your name. address and phone number
He Likes the Variety
D E A R A N N find a woman no Will ed t.o phone the hospitals
LANDERS: So many slfep wltll lalm -if be a nd police because I
wives write to you and sets hll s&aadard.a low didn't want to embar· sa~. "My husband Is a enoagb. rass my husband. He
WQO'lan chaser. I'm at· D E A R A N N wasn't embarrassed. He
tractive. I've kept my LANDERS: Here's an was dead.
figure, and I'm a good o pen l e tter: to our It's been a year since
bed-partner. Wh y does d au g b t e r and our that night and my pro-~ be rttn af'OUDd?U daughter-in-law. I must. b.l em s J.u:.e now or
A nn • '~an'Clei-s
As a woman. you can't confess I don't have the another nature. It seems
possibly provide a n ne rve to tell them to I bave become a dump· month and while there.
a nswer. As a man who their faces: ing ground for everyone he wants Uncle Bill to
bas been happily mar· DEAR GIRLS : We I know. They telephone give me a complete
ried rer 17 years, I CAN. apologize for being in and come to my home to fe male examination'.
My wife ls 'beautiful, our early 50s -young pour out thei r troubles. I Dad is concerned that I
·cbarmibg, and extreme-enough to .enjoy going guess the message is. might develop cancer of
lycompetent -aladyin away weekends. 1'.his .. You aren 't the only t h e ce r v ix whi c h
the drawing i:oom and a means we aren 't "on one ... " claimed my mother last
tiger lo the bedroom. call" to take car:e of Do lhe$e people think year. Yet I've bad at least 15 your children so you can they will make me feel I can understand the
affairs in the las t 10 take off. better by telling me how need for me to have an
years. Why ? Becau se When youweregrow· terrible their lives are? e xamin a t i on ev en
there are only two kinds ing up we didn't push I have all I can do to though I'm only 16. but I
of husbands -those you off on OUR parents. keep going. Listening to don 't w.ant a man I havl'
who cheat and those who Your dad and I stayed their troubles doesn't known so. well to ex-
would like to but are home. t.ooR you with us, h e lp m e . I find it amine me. I 've told Dad
afraid of getting caught. or saved our money so depressi~g. -STAY I'd be very embarrassed
Meo cheat because it we could hire s0meone HOME IF YOU CAN'T not only during the ex-
ls normal to want a new for a few days -and we BE CHEERFUL a m i n a ti on but a.f ·
conquest. The desire for couldp't afford it vety DEAll S.R.: Year terwards.
variety is as old as man often, algoatare ts my advlH. Dad thinks l should be
himself. So please get Now it's our tum to go Tllaab for pn"ridlag It. more at ·ease because
with it, Ann, and tell It and your tum to stay DEAR·.ANN : One of the doctor would not be
like it is. -NO NAME, home or make other ar· my dad's best friends is a complete s tranger ...
OFCOURSE rangements.Wbenyour his old college room -I'm s ure h e w-0n 'f
DEAll N.N.: Since cbUdreo are grown, you mate who J bave known change his mind unless I
'yoa polM oat &lllat I," a will waiit your freedom as "Uncle Bill" all my can s bow him lour
woman. cauot speak and you w i ll have life . This m a n has a nswer. wtlich I hop~
for men, bow cu yoa. earned it. :Vou can th~n · alwayS been very good will be in my favor.
•• admltled bedroom· tell THEM what I am to me and never fails tq JILliOFCHl\PEL ~LL
bop p e r a a d a e I f · telling you. Raise yout bring 8 s mall gift when
proclaimed tomcat, own. We ~d. -MAMA he visits with us about DEAR JILL: "'ell
speak for the decent, ANO ·PAPA four um.es a year. yoar dad be bas never
matnre bubanda of tile DEA& MAMA AND My problem is that been a lf.year-olct girl
worldf PAPA: Well said. I en· u n c .I e 8 ,i l I i 5 , a and la not qualllled lo ~
A man wtlo clesc:rlbea doree every word. gynecologist in another make &bla Jadgrneat. I
bl.-wtfe a. "beaatlfal, DEAR . ANN : About state. Dad plans for us have -add rm ·wltb ell•=· estremely that letter from the man ·to 80 visit him ne xt yo..
com , and 1 /reat who wu .mad because =::=;;::::==:::;~:=;=:;Liiiii~~--!iiiiiii!!!!!!~ bed·p artaer" •• ad· bis wile embarrassed •r--RU--f-fE---,S--~
mlh to u affaln lJI tlle .bim. by phoning friends, ~~ Belbe
last lt ,eara .-id take relatives, the hospitals WIHOl.ITHY · ·
a , ... leN at lllmself. and the police because\ WllMIY•W• \\tJlnan'6Y•
Be doaJd ateo take a he wasn 'l home by 3 Wt..., u....~ to' """'Bel
look at wlaat Ille Is "con· a.m .: I, too, waited until' 1122 ....._ etvd. na1a
qHrlJl«i." AAy man can 3 a.m . before I start· ... Me• _141-11H
lio.~iiiiiim--------;.;.;;,...a
ftnl! .'ihm•1 Since 1903 --------..
~ ... ()pent Spring
With a dressv Sllno.
Bla'k Patent or Nevv Kid.
Slmlfar styles In White
I ti
" 4 ..
'
PlJIU.J -l'ICTITIOUS eutilflH
llAMeftATIMllfT
'"• ._.. 99fl0f'• at!I 90-lldl::~ H l"TINO. 116) ... __, ..... c.. ..... u.....,
.IOAL. INC. C. ~'• ~e Ue111t UttW ~ "9ftleAIUl,CA .,..
JOA.I.. IN( ....... ,.. ..
ffl4\ \I-We\ fli.tl Wiii\ ...
C-IY ( .. A, OI Ot ~ (-1'1' ...
.....,_,~ " .. ,.., ··-"'1Ml•N9 °'" ..... ('ehl o.l"I' ...... ~·• n ..... ~ t • '" ••" -.>-n
p BUC' NOTtC .
-l'tCTl'*i&ew-.~
.. ...,,.. ITA 11111• llfT , .. ~ ,.._ "~ ....,,, n._,, ••
., tM \ ,. LOWI II\ •n Sovl"
(~\I H-'°"'" I .,,..... <•tlfo"'•• t1\l1
f lmotlly "' .llh "••n•on 11,01 Oto•" VIM•. Apl I \outf' I ll)wru C.•lltonlt• ..,.,,
'"'' 0-..•IW'\\ ·~(~tr• ..... •"'" ll••lO..•I '""°l"'' ........ r.-, ... , \1 ... f'ntoftt ... , fi-.ct with •N
(011n•'I> ci.n ot O••noe Cownlt ""
f ollf wer• IJ lt/'t ,,_
ttwl>'•tllM Orenoo ,,..,, O••tv ,., .. 1
~el> H tl...aM<tr 1 I ltl• SG n
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'tCTinoua •UM .. US MAM«HATUd .. T , ... ~--"-'""" ... " .. CINNAMOfol SOUND, ltS S. C9 .. 1
Hw' • l.,.._ a.ac11. (alltor,.I• .,Ut
L-d ,. Sano Jr ?tel AIH
"nclet, l~ ~a<ft, C1otlt0<n•••Uil
lllh ~·I> uw•<111<1~0 b~ •non 01VIOOlll
l .._rd P !o.nto Jr
Tiii• llal1>rnenl Wa) lllt"O w llll ltw
(Out\!., Cler• Of o .. onoe Counh 01'
'°•l>•ua•Y t3 '""
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTIT1~8USINaSS
NAMI! STATEMENT
.i ... IOOOOOll"9 penon It clo1nQ l>u•l-
neu :~SION CARE CENTER, 333l
tl•i>IOI Sl'MI. Cmla Me>• (elltornla .,,.,.
8ernero SI...-0 0. 117~ T anaoer
Or Ive. (CKla Mew. C•lllornl•t262•
Tiii> tiu51neu fl rO<\Ouelf'd bY an In·
dlv•Ou•I
~'""'OSI"'°" 0 D
T111' 'tat-I w•• llle<I wlUI '"" co .... tv Cle•• "' Or•noe (OUl\h on Fe~uor" b. ttl•
1'1"'41
.. u1>111r.eo Or~ Coa11 Dally Pllol Ff'I> I H.22el'Cl~r t. te1' ~1t
PUBLIC NOTICE -------------l'ICTITIOUt eUSINHI
NANlt ITAT'UHfCT
Tiie follo•lnv POfW>l>l ••• ctoln•
IMlllnenH
J .R MAftttETINC,, TIU Mvlt>·
mlfl9blrd Or .. cost• Mew. CA mu
J olln P, RelllJ Jr .. Ill' """'' mlntblrd Or., C0$1e Me .. , CA '1t1'
JOllfl P. Relll'I' Sr .. '"* H11m m11191Mrd Qr .. Ciotte l'NU, CA 926'6
Tiiis 1111111\ttj It conductto bf oenoral _,,.,.,..,p,
' JoHNP.REILLY Sr.
Tlllt at..._.,. ••• fllecl 'wl111 tlle
Cou111, CW11 ot O••nCM County 011
"-"'"''"' n. m• "" Publll Md Oranoe COHI D•ll, Pilot,
¥ercll 1. •. u. tt. ,.,, •••·'' ----------
P\JBUC NOTICE
.-·
P\J8UC NOTIC £
I' ICTl TI°"9• eU,1 If I H .. -.n•n_. .. ,
f lla ..... ~ ........ e ry .......
~ ....... .
$1 .. c;tr TON ''°'UL>TIOH (
ll'AHY tlOI ' 0.1 "-· U•ll 0 2
"-... lh C..lllom4• ft6\) 6 • C IHSUV tt()N (Ofoj HI AC 1o•s. INC .. c .. .._ ........... ....
l •U 0..1. .... \lftl1 01. l ........ Miii• CAl ..... Me 9llil
Tllt) ..,._. •l ·--at • <OO ........
O &C IN$Ul.Al~ ~· C-.t ~
IM\,.,._ •M fl ... will> I ... c-"' ~ .,. °".,.. c-•• ... l'~fYtll~ ,,..., towi•·-I> ... (N\I 0.lly ..... , , .. ''-1't--I ..... ~ '-"
p llUC NOTI E
"ICTIT'loql e \/St" IH
fllAMI &fATIMINl , .............. --" °"''"• ..... "-" .,
PAlM \l'ltlNO~ PllHUMl 4H(I (.0~Mt I I( f'OMl'AHV Ot i "C•ll"A ICAC •t lM f OrO\I ,.,_,..,~ •lo
I •own• ... «II Uhlo<no• .,t\I
0.-all T •YIO< l Illy )HO 0-.. w .. l .............. , ........... ,."
Ttrr.t\ "'°'',....' t\ t~19G &y •" tn .... d .....
°"'°'all I •Y"'4 loll•
l "" s._.,. ··~ 111.11 .,,,. ,,.. ~nh Ci." Of O.•"Ot (uu"h U,. ......... ) ''" ,.1 .. ,.
...... 1"'911 ()r ...... (~I O•llY PllOt F.o H. n-M<tr t.e. ltrt ~~1•
PUBUC NOTICE
fllCTITlOUI aUSINHS
.. AMI HAfllfMIE .. T
t "* 1t11-1no ""''°" ~ cio.nv ...,,, MSlA'l
8£lVf 0£RE PElADlf UM ~ l 0 _ Swtlf' D-l60 <i••nn•YF• $.I.
L•ouna S.ac11. C• <nut
~ Neot R"l'll<OC>, ~r•I partner J
Gtenn .. yre St Ste O l•<1un• hu 1 h C•~i•SI
PUBUC NOTICE
. . . . .
p BL NOTIC'F.
NO~ICI INV"INO 1 101
lo•loU h 11•• .. Y ti .. ,. \llel Ill• l.Ut• .. '"-.. -... .. .... ,..,,,.,
Uflllle• \(~I Ol•lrt't 111 Or•,. ..
(-It Cltll!Wfll<t Wiii toO I ........
............... ,.. ... , .... ll•flib•(~
!tit •t -·" "-u•• MO• wllt i.
-kly - -r ......... . " ........... ,_.,, 'lki..t ........ .
, ...... ~ ......... 11111 ·-.. -· • ..., '" \lrwtlt•"' -Did IA"''' ,.,.., lllo ea I••-..... 1111 .... '" .... , ..... ,~,, '-'~•te\ ,... Ai\Oft t&w ttw UVllUli
(•ltfll•llo• ,,,. "°'"'" .. l-·•-.. ,,, ... , ""' ,,.,. to ••lt«t • .,, 0t •" •le• or .. ..i.., e#f't ••"'1fli!Wltle\ or
tnto""•tlllft II\ e/ly 11111 "' jn 11\i Ole
Cllf•t ,,,, .... u .......... _, tll1lrld
C.....H••lt-A\rt~lfM A{jtlll
""9111-()r-(MU tl•llv .. UOI
, .. It -""I ltl't ... "
PllBLIC' NOTl('E
fllOTICI OP INTINTIOl't
TO l .. OAOI IN TNI ••l l O• ALCOttOLIC ... V tllAQU
lt• ,.
f4' WI''"'' 11 M•Y ,.,,...,,.
\\.10t•t t hJ •uw.N: • ot uw h •nw •o
Oh•O '"" ,... ••• , het•bv Vi'f'•n th41
Ou ""O•tt•t"tU 0'0PO\•"\ to \•II
•tcofHWM: ... ~.,~ .. •• the-Ot•rna•'
Of:M.tt__. tt\ MIO•\ ft\ tl\iit ~\t 010
.oo.q --•1 t~C.•fttf'f
Co.1•-.. <.•
Pw1 WM"t to 'Ml( ft .nt...,tlOft tfW' ""
.. ,,,,...., I\ -IV"'O 10 I,,. 0.perl
""'"' ol Alt-41t IM"•''9e (allltOI tor ouuM>C.• DI ..., ~-'1< llev••-llt•"~ lot ll<•llM> I tor tlle\e Pr•
mlH>t•tol~
• 41" °" s. .. c;.,.. •••
180M Fide Pvbll< f ellnq Pl .. el
lrwln MllMan
Publl\NO ()r-CO.\t O•llY Piiot •
M•r<ll t I, Ii. 1'7• JOI "
PUBLIC N~TICE
t'ICTl110 US I USINESS
NAMI. STATEMENT
PtJBUC NOTICE PUBLJC NOTICE ----- --··----------l'ICTITt®i •u 11 .. u s NOTICI .,. ..... ,,.,, ...... , ,,.. ........ 1 r..., ........... ,., •
Tl\e. ......... --,. ...,_. Of 00-.Al.OA ¥ Aalllfl~lt l'OVN• "°" o OATIOH, INC , I\ nellllllk IOt Ill._ IM~ lotUllD C0 ¥1>4HY. ti H.,. •I'°' Oovor ~1"9 WIW '90.
C.•MIMIJ 0. ~ lff<ll CA.,.._ He•wt IM<ll C .. llWNe. -1119 ••
•rt,,._ 0<_11 .. M\/rO 1 .. t Via tvter llUllll•U llOl#'t 11¥ •llY lituef'
l otr• "•* V••On t •l•I•• tt11• Wl\9 M '-'" wltllt1t tto oen frelfl
r "'' w11~• " l-..C 1o0 "' an j11 Ml• Of -•otlclol O'I IN• no11ce ...14 .. •I WIUIAM.A &c.H¥101
AltfMUlt O. MUltO ~ln(INI ~'
"flll• •••t.--••• !Hod w111> ,.. 1'111111•-Or.._ C..tt Delly Piiot ("""" r~ Of O<•n99 Cau111y Me•lll r. ltJ' ,.._,, t'•1>r11er,,. tm
I "" ~!>II~ 0r-'9t Coail o.llY .. 1!04,
.,.."" 1 'n, n. "" 11~1
P BUC.NOTICE
fltCTITtCMll eUttNtH
•· .. _. UA11Ml .. T
,,.. ,....... --I• OOlno 111111• neno NOUVEAU O\Jl(Hf ) I"'• LO.
Lt Ne•-1 &t~ll C•lllornt• 91MJ
M••IOI' c. si. ... n-. ~ 1,.,. lH Cl •
Howpotl -"· (AlllO""• .,~
'l\t\ OU\tfllie'\-. f'\ (Oftdu( ttM:I b• iltl' "'
Ot••Ov•• M<lfton (i Sttwen>
f "" '~ht,,..,,, w•' filed wltf\ ~ Count• C.ttr• o• OrOllQe '°""h on
J tl>•v•tY 11 •<n• ....... ""°"',_, ot.,...,. c ou1 O•llV Piiot
l'tO I~ 2t •flO M4t I 9. tt7' UI ,.
p BUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
~.Match 1. 1979
. .. .
DAILY PILOT
, .. "
A cecord i ng t o
C1lltoml1 Bueln••• and
ProfeHlon• COde (Sec.
11900 to 17930) all
~raona ~9 bualne11
und•r a flc:tltlOua neme
muat me ' 1tetement wit" the ~ounty Clerll
and have It pubtlahed
tour times In •
n•••P•P9' Uf"6ng th•
area In WhlCtl the
bueln .. 1 la loc•lM.
The statement l e
requited by Jaw end I•
neceaHty In pt'ot.ctln9
your butln••• name.
Moet b•n"• r•qulre proof of filing to op•n
oommerclet ~coun11.
Th• DAILY PILOT
ptevfdH bo4h ftllnt end
pubtk:etton .., .... We
hne aft the nKHHry
tonnt and ftMtlnt .. n • dally tervlce to th• , Otano• coun ty
Cff~. EJthef ••ott by one of our
conv•n .. nt ottlc•• or
phone the LIGA&.
Olf•AR~ Ma--021. I
lat. U2 tor mon :
lntor"'•'*'~ fDfma.
...J ,_
DAILY PILOT ·--
-' ( . '
.
Thu!!day. March t, tt~
..
t
...
I . I
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast
DAllY. PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You Can Sell It , Find ·11,
Trade It With a Want Ad [ 642-5678) . One Call Service
Fast Credit Approval ---··· ·----i' HMMtForS. th""..,.S.. ..._.,Pews. ....._forSale Ho.tesforSale HousesforSde HcMtHsforS. tors.le ················-· ....••••.•...•........••.....•...... .... . ................................................................................................................ ~··········· !!~!:'! .......... ~~~ ~~:~~ .......... !~~ !!::!~ .......... !~!~ !!:":!:'! .......... !~.~~ !:!'!:~:'! .......... !~!~ ~:::~ .......... !~~ ~::::~ .......... !!4!~ ................. ~!~!~
EQUAL HOUStNG
OPPORTUNITY
,.. ........ Motk•:
All n>aJ nuite adwr1111('d
m Ou~ f'lt'Wllf,...~·r 1i. aub Jt"ct to u~ fo't'dt•ral to'1ur
lluu~1ng Ad u( I \ltlll
wtut'h nwke11 1t Lllt't!li•I lo
advl!rl1&e ' an~ pr.-
fC'ren<"t', hm1la11on, or
dl.acnnunauoo ba~ on
11&t't'. t·olor. rehg1on. Be.l,
or naoonaJ ongin, or an
1.ntenuoo to make any
soch prefere11ce, hm1ta
Ll<ID. ot ~nmmauoo."
·nus newspaper will not
know1n~ly &ccepl any
advertis ing for r l'al
estate which 1s an viola
uonofthe law.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Gceaual 1002 ., .............•.......
COUM111YSETTIMG
Here is a hne alternative
to small lots & CODJ?eSt.ed
tract livmg. Located 10 a
foothill area. but close to
shopping & top ritted
\\ I :--I ! '1 ', .I ~YLOR CO.
I\ I· t\ i . I I ) I\:--. I ' ' I • ' 'Ii
PIMMSULA .-OIMT AHAi
TWO ......., AP.AITMIMT aDGS.
$371.000 IACH ll.Ml
Quuhty·bu1ll. beautifully maintained
4 Units in each b\jilding with lge
re nt ra l courtyd filled with
mugn1ficent matured s pecimen
plants. 1'hese two 4·unit bldgs are in
the best location, right at the entrance
to Peninsula Point. just steps from the
beach. Each 4·plex has two 2·bdrm,
2 b"th a nd two 2-bdrm, l·bath units .
(i;ach front unit has a wood·burning
fireplace. 2 Apts. have great ocean
view! For qualified buyer, ownel' w111
carry 1st T .D. with 29% down.
WESLEY M. TAYLOI CO., REALTORS
2 I 11 S-JHqllht Hila RCMld
MEWPOIT CEMTIElt, H.I . 644-4910
EASTSIDE
3 Bedroom. I bath home in Costa
Mesa. $89,900. As k for Robert
Milliken. 631·1266
schools. 3 Bedroom. 2 ~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ bath, family room, pool = & it's top quahty. fo\J II
price. $124 ,950. Ca II
751·3191.
DECORATOR'S WATERFRONT
OWN HOME LIVING!
SDfCTl.Y ADULT, SO FAit!
Only adults have lived in this 3
bedroo111 Baycrest home -but there's
room for a family. It's immaculate, on
a large lQt with parking for 3 cars.
open beamed huge living r oom .
formal dining and it is professionally
landscaped. Beautiful at $195.000,
U,._lf)UI: li()Ml:S
REAL TORS ', 675·6000
2443 Etist Coast Highway, Corona dr>l Mar
..ilso in Mt•S•J V.-rd1~ ,;, !Au otl8U
Eech office lnc:t.pe~ntly
owned end operaled.
5-PLEX -ORANGE
Two 3 bedroom . 2 bath -Three 2
bedroom. 2 bath. Zero vacancies. Just
5 years old. Excellent investment
o pportunity. Flexible in terms.
$265,000.
R.C. TAYLOR CO.
640·5112
lt1ltfl~ptmh"1!etltr81 A~ -----------,-.SELECT Nothing spared to make tt-...l.·--...1
PROPERTIES shade crpts. Rough sawn $3400 ceda r paneling . Oreauan raradiw Dramatic atrium entry. lmmacwat.e· single story Huge bv rm. Dual . IO'J beach & wate rfront Sharp, lrg. 3 BR. 2 ba f l oo r to ceillngi towohome on Wood·
fam hm Jo'rplc. Gas BBQ slumP1Stone frplc. Cov'd bridge Lake. Watch the
m k1l, FR/DR. Lrg. well palso lact!d w/artistic sunset over the bridge lndscpd lot. Prestigious · l t f n g h b r h d • a re 0 1 treatment of laUce work. Jus s eps rom your Call today for appt Open beach side patios. Lovely sweetheart.you will love E • oak walled fireplace.
1t. Owner will he lp ves.54.$-S4Sl Convenience kitc hen· =~~· Call today . (~1Wn!i1§1$14il ~~v~~n!:e;:U1:J
A LLstj1 TE Real Estate formal dining room. 2 Patios. Steps to spa.
GREAT INCOME! beach & lake! Pnce ;ust
REALTORS a~••"-.._ 1ir1 !!. reduced, $3400. for Cast ~...-T~s--sale! Call oow 752,noo
MOQUAUFYIMG Res1deotlal + 2 c'om· UoH•'''o'""""'c"'"' ,. ~~~:~ ~~~ $e'~€~:~ Ira INllMI
home+ small rental unit IL Fireplace. Super for 1.;·~~~', ~-~-~-~-~=W!!=!l••!!!!!!!i:!'~ 10 rear. Asking price summer/winter rates. ~ _ •es , DO
$72.500. but make an of· 673-8S50 --Y COM
fer.W11l carrylt.self.Call Ol'l"'"'o'""tft';'Oturi1C1• Xtra lg. 3br condo. ¥2660. .. 1• ~ · 1 Fal)ulous throughout.
· t;: SELECT ·~ill~l'li'f ~ :rrp!;~1{!~u!~li
T'PROPERTIES. · --·-•11.,:i:!!!i:!' f1~ce. No loan fees, low interest rate. Call
4BR +den REAL CHARMER m.5370.
TRIPLEX
Greotl~!!
Single story owner unit
with 2 townhouse design
rear units . A}I with
private patio. W ID hook
up & mdlVldual enclosed gar~ge s . Cal l n o w
b~ t."'"' fi1 "J• f. f '·. u f't ((' ...
l•dftllil ---.. -
8%%
TRIPLEX
ASSUMAILE
Owne,. will carry 2nd
papers. Only $135.000. CaJ 645-9161
::. OPEN HOUSE
. REALTY
X '
**U.S.**
*YET~~*
Recent changes In V .A
regs may enable you to qualify for $100,000 home
loans with absolutely NO
DOWN PAYMENT.
Wortd Real Estate
UDO ISLE
Bay view from 2 patio qecks enhances
custom spacious 5 'bdrm .. 4 bath
traditional home: like new. Ideal fot
.entertaining. Corner lot. $500,000
OCEANFRONT
Quality craftsmanship in mahog. trim
& oak noors sets orr this landmark ; 4
BR. 3 ba. home in finest location.
Established trees & lawns. $48.5,000.
IACK IAY
1o-Fine 4 bdrm .. 21~ bath family home on
quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool.
playhouse. s torage $169.000. Terms.
IAYFROHT
Several fine bayfront homes
with pier & s lip
AVALOM-
Wcll constructed. 3 BR. 1 ba. oak
floor . partial basement.· concrete
foundation. Flats area. $120,000-Fee.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
)41 8ny\1de 011v .. NB 675 6161
~COATS & WALLACE
~REAL ESTATE, INC.
A LOCALLY OWNED COMPANY SERVING
THE SOUTH COAST AREA SINCE 1963
SPECIAL IUY This 4 Bdrm 3 bath
split level pool home has a la.r~e
family room w/wetbar. New carpets.
new paint and secluded back yard.
Priced under market for fast sale.
$1 18.000. Don't delay! Call t oday
546-4141
St:111ing Costa M c:;a lr'!inc
Huntington Beach·Newport Beach
JCiJ:[fJ..TJC'tu.jJ..1l1tJ:L.TD.:YJCl.iC't:TD.t:
DRUXE 4.PLEXES
(ORiy 2 A •allaWet
Luxurious 3 bedroom & three 2
bedroom 2 bath apartments with
enclosed garage -Super location
near beach & Hoag Hospital. 2oc;;.
down. Priced below market at
$265,000 EA.
EO '810M, balhw
645-6233 642-0596 ••ff-
COIOMA DEL MAR
Spacious view home on v. acre fee simple lot; 4
bdrms. + family rm.
Priced by out of town owner ror qwck sale at
~'1.500 .
671-4400
HARBOR
IT'SHOT
IT'S A STEAL!!
It's only $130 .500 .
Pre s ti g i o u s ~ighborhood. large en·
try w /sl'ep-up la ving
room & crac kli ng
fireplace. Formal din·
ing. sun·shiny kitchen
w/breakfast room . 4
The Fiscal Yea-r 1979 Military
Construction Authorization Act
includes a rroject for construction of
216 Units o Navy Family Houslng for
the Marine Corps Air Station. El Toro .
California. A provision or that Act will
authorize the Secretary or Defense, as
a n option to new :construction. to
acquire by purchase. a n equal or
lesser number or _ existing housing
units. Pursuant to that authority. the
Navy will con sid er purc hase of
housing facilities, together with
underlying land, which are free and
clear of all obligations. Such facilities
must be comple te for occupancy.
vacant, free of leaseholds or tenancy
agr eements at the time or offering.
and must meet require ments set forth
he r ein and. other applicable Navy
criteria and Department of Housing
and Urban Deve lopment minimum
property standards.
Offers must be total complexes of not
less than 50 nor more than 216 units
comprising a s ingle real estate entity
located within a n hour commute
(which is cons trued to be 25 miles
from the Main Gate of the Marine
Corps Air Station. E l Toro.
Cali fornia.) The dwelling units
composition and noor areas sha ll be
as follows: .
Unit 1ftvpe 28 Number
216
Min. NET S.F. Max. NET S.F.
930 950
Buildings shall not. be over three
stories in height. A maxirhum cost of
$8.540.000 is ta r geted fo r the
acquisition of the complete project.
Maximum cos t for properties
<'-Omprising less than the total project
s h a ll be proportionate. Offers in
excess of this amount m ay be
ellm.fnafed from competitlOTT. ----· ---
If you desire to submit an offer to sell.
contact Mr. Allan W. Blair, Contract
Division. Western Division. Naval
Facilities EnJ!ineering Command, P.
0 . Box 727. San Bruno. California
94066. telephone (415 > 877·7257 no later
than 4:30 P.M. on 14 March 1979 in
order to obtain further information
regarding Navy and HUD criteria
which must be met and data which
will be reQuired lo be provided with
vou r proposa I. A pre·propos.al
conference will be convened in ~he
Public Works Office. Building 368,
Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro,
Califo rnia, commencing at 1:30 P .M.
on 20 March . 1979. Offers, including all
required data. will be received until
3:00 P.M .. on 20 March. 1979. Offers.
including all required data. will be
received yntil 3:00 P .M. on 28 March.
1979. Any offer which does not meet
the above conditions will not be
considered. FOROMLY A $69,SOO! ~ ~1.1.~~! paint LLSTATE
Sunken living room. airy. REALTORS OHTHEIAY
Sophisticated living at
It's best. Delightful four
bedroom condominium.
Step out oo a spacious
an Orange County firm
specializing in VA home
loans. We're tbe VETS
that help the VETS.
ma st.er bdrms. ca I h ed r a I !!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 tellings. a joy to see.
Bn k f . 1 All inside & out. Lge add mi --------c irep ace. re· fmly rm for your fmlyls wsno..A'--· modeled kitchen Ex-"9 r"" cellenl location. l m· e~o)'Dlent. Quiet. tree SAL.ESPIASOM lined street. New roof a
For more info. call:
Iii Motto.. Agt.
541.0800
,, l>I\ "'°" Ill llarhor lrl\t"•lml'lll ('n
Hurry! Call 645-0303
FORESTE
OLSON macuJate bargam! Call year ago. Betier see this If YoU Uke the real est.ate fast to take advantage' f 1 C ll , Ope business, you wt.U &ove It 752-1700 ~ ast. 8 now' 0 here; commission split bnck terrace and onto ~~~ Sell things fast with Daily
your boat. Plans under Pilot Want Ads •·~-c-.-
~... ... ... . ..
,...,,.,,9 .,,~,ur·rvi-1., • es.545-4M9l to 90%. Call Smilio'
l a 1111~d!·LI l~•wm54•atJii Melvyn.646-4463 way• to enlarge e~isting IM¥ESTORS ··--··----------.... boat slip Lo 65 footer. Alll!..Au ....
Walk to Lido Village ~ fll "" ~ii0f;~ ___ ae_a_1 Es_ta_te __ _ Mariner's Cove
R.E.A.LTY
fabWous restaurants and Present tenant will sign 2 Coldwell Banke Shops. $525,000 yr lease w /purchaser. 2 . r
COLIOFMEWrORT mstr bdrm swtes & 8 ~fSlr!INI Al BROKERAG{ COMPANY • 1-AcNLots 3 IEDROOM Sub.division, r eady to
$70, 950 bui~T ..... ~.,...IT People who oeed people 3 br starter home. lge ce· '"'~ "I:""'"" . _..._,, .. aJ h kth
REALTORS world of blt·ins. Dble
671:55 I 1 frplc. lge fmJy rm, 4 xtra ~ lge bdrms plus 3 baths. Newly offer ed al
ment patio, sprinkler 2 Bdrm beach cottage. 1 ~cem::i~ry'1otb!
system, separate laun· b&ock bay & beach. DAILY PILOT w•-~HT
dl')' room. Eartbtone up· PALM DISEltT ~•larft"
$110,900. Open Sun
l.SPM. 758-1501 -<>
grades coming. Fast ap 64 UNIT APT • Pier/float; duplex on c;'J Walker & Lee preciat.iogarea.646-'1711 COMPLEX legal R-2 lot; close to
W/adjol nlng land. s sbope,LidoVUlage :are-aealfAtat.e
S!.aJ0.000. al value foe .fUi,500! --------
RA!al Estate · KllNG 1a1boa lay ...-op. WOOOSTREAM D ........ $94,950 l •ROOM ..., ______ _. * 675-7060 * Bike to beach. or enjoy
c:= Walker 1; Lee
+HIST Bt;V 'El\I ~~~~~~~~I relaxing around pool.
, J bdnns, gourmet kitchen.
CORONA DEL MAR
Duplex 3·3. Walk 2 blocks to Big
Corona Beach. Private setting with
view of the hills. Spacious. nearly
new and only $259.000.
A COl.DWILL ..... CO.
644·9060
21111.ANJOAOUINHILLIRD.
IN NIEWPOAT CENTER
MARVELOUS VALUE-POOL c ...... Newport hecll loc-"-.wfffll
0 Ito.-..... d for .... •io11M••· Wel:•••d l ~ .... ~,..... .ct .ra wHlt fir•pl~ ..... A11MJ
IOOM. ~ beck y.rd wH1t tp IA t ,...a. gresy ..... -loh of .. fw
wafer frolcs. Decor.tor COOi ..... d ..
flM tede. Sllt.500
INVESTOR'S BRIGHT!
W .. to tM llACH fro. tMs l _, Z
~ DUPUX. T.....tt c• _,., ...
potlo or prl•ecy °" • t.ge deck.
S.etDMd m:ahlr/wlllhr tr.yd. Offered
..., ..... cl. $2 I o.ooo ....
GIAMTVALUE!. ~,,, -SELi 'EM Luxurytwobm.3klng.sz
Giant btlck bl)""bargain! -TR "DE 'F~M 4-f'LEX cozy brick fireP.lace. Over 3600 ft ot peaceful -·" " be b bvlng. ' BCdrms + 3 Ba.lboa l!.laftd Rtaky RF.NT • F.M Costa Mesa. nr ac • private patio. Don l wail. .::::::::::::::::~
batb.·OR·l Bedrm + A'""'.,. .. ,.,,,."_""'" cool. quiet. Four 2Bd. .,.,..7171 673 1700 2ba uoit.s, 1 yr old. 1967 oP11V 111Q •"''""''o111><<t·
separate 1ueat/mald's -To place your ad In Anaheim Ave. lncome [9 I cae:
WATERFRONT
HOMES Inc.
2430 w (OdSI HighWdV
N1wport Bt•Mh
~~~ ~;l':/'. Jo~: More families are geWni this column call $16.800. price $1951000. By ,;1•~1a;;.1U h~.~dc--1>!:~· p:~~i ~.:~ra!o~.,.,~~~~ 642·5678 owner.£>rinonly t>73-8327 --!?!!!!11!~ 1 .. 10111 BLllNS UO. 631-1400
more at• ...,.aln price! c.aJ11*thal'1not1ettlDI
CallDOWtotee,'78-8$50. uaed, tell il DOW wit.b a ' Ol'flW "' 9 •II \ ".,.. ION NII.I I aa.ifted Ad.
~ ' TH£ REAi.
ESTATERS 1
macnab I Irvine
realty
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
SllK & flND. COMPUTER HISTORY
C l E 0 K 8 A E H R H J R 0 R W N T G
S S M 0 N 0 R 0 8 0 T P A U 0 R l N J
A T S T A G H 8 0 R I A T C R W I A Z
CAPISTltAMO IEACH H w A R w E 8 H A 0 R s T R Q F R E E
Delightful Duplex On The Most 8 E E N E A 0 N c A E R c u I u l G T .... IOMHMHTS AllA111ACU
Bealltflal executive ' bdrm, I ba bomt. Meredltb 'but It.
AIM •••·•nu
-\~.tlkt!I !; lt!I!
. I,
UDO ISi.i MIW A CM.:AMOIOUSI
OPEN FRI. 1·5 P .M. 115 VIA
WAZIERS. Spectacular 2-story
Mediterranean.style residence.
Custom built! Exquisitely detailed
It decorated! 4 BRs (muter 1ulte>.
3 baths, family rm & formal d1nlng.
Wet bar -2 fplcs -bricked entry
patio w /fountain -observation d~k. on roof. $489,000 lncl. land.
(V-..99)
Beautiful Sandy !!each In The 'R 0 H s B w s R s 0 l E T H E B A L I
E ntire Area. Each Unit Has 3 BR A 0 s E u l 0 l E I L G G R c 8 c R R
& F .R. W/F.P . Winter/Summer L w AO S ~O P KEO N E C 8 R Q H 0
Rentals . Price. $650,000. 0 I E T T H A R I 0 H I I A u T u B s
MEW ILUFFS IEAUTY . c E 0 A A s A B R p p F B I u M A p c
In Great Location In Newport Bch G R N H c M H s A A L I E H 0 R R E A
·Bturrs. Fabulous E nd Unit On s I T A E 1 " t N l c N I E A I 0 p A
Huge Greenbelt. 3 BR w /2 Ba. Lrg 0 A L s T u N T R D y v 0 M T K 0 I p
Master Bdrm Suite. Putting Green u R 0 z H s H N I H A + Largest Pool In Bluffs. Better N s u A 0 p G I T c 0 E
Hurry On This Listing. Only ' ,,.tNctklM: Hiddtll WOf'dl 1111ow llPP"t fo""'91d. •· •
$15S,000. A "Joy or Newport·" wwd, ~. dooMI Of dletONl'Y· "nd Ndl INS boa It Ill.~
Listing. F'"'91t .11cquen1 en1ec J
MllcM&. &lbbo. Ulll'a..v~•-~~-~-t
tit Oowr Orlw ~~n•r ~ 131·1• = = .-J= lrvlMM~v.tleyetfttlr ·i=.i ... 90,...... UlbnlU lllllrtl \ T ..... on 7~M14 !!!!!!!!!!!~~.!!!!!~!!!!~!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!ll::=i=:::::==TOM~~=''Olf~·=·=·R~ll:n:•:•:""9d=:=:::::::::;:l_
' .
~ . -. . . . . . . .. .
,
• j
, -I • .
! .
\
. . . . . --, .... . ......
~-~~•••••••• ~~~•••••• ~.':1:'..~•••••••·r~·PiW• • S. t .... • ...... ••••••,.,.•••~W.••••••-••• HCMllft ;..S. Thur!dey. Man:h 1, 1979 DAILY PfLOT Cl. • •••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.~~ .......... !!~. ~~~.~!.!~ .. !!!? ~~ .... ~ ... !!.~~ ~!.~ ........ !~~~ ~!~ ........... !!.~~ ~ ............ !!.~~ ~.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~-~~ ...... . ,,....,y.-....-Houle +1<"«taie t.blnd • 0y Owner''°"' a1tuma· MIWDOf'flNdt 106' ... ...,........ 106' MlwpottlHdt 106' ~· VV9'L oceeo ron& 000111 ~ b6eVAoption Ntwl}'l'e aMftftftDDIM£ ••••'•••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••,.••••• --~.a.a.~~r.a.•••• TAXIS ~=~"c.t' n )' . ~ dec<ll-atect. a BR. z BA. ftWUDlll• WAn.rtlv•n • 'i
W\th Lh1I .... n ... t r.a hm. Rm. rr.,ic stUu. SPECI ••s cOMoo depreclatlon dup u . c.w...... 1012 NeAtaboppUlc•1cboola. N. * urw IN NrtllllftllT ... lbr2ba View/alip Btll ol archltf't'tural ~ ....................... Low•'•· Aft •• 711-4447 o.lrou ol Uvlrl1 In the .,, LI rr-u1u " Ule/opt. $1.Si,.500.
sian 1r1''2 8dnn uruta beautltul tueekle com. &.g•t ...... Tedlf C1nd1 J•lu ~3638
2 ba&ha eat'h. Eaay up P1 tac Y6y I OJ4 munlty ol Woodbridfe? ly hceMtter .._. ...
k,fep. bulll •• condos SHORfCUf fS -··•-••••••••••••••• We baYe ~. ava1la· SH-..., _ •c1. a..a-a.. 1.:.:,•d .t"6 SICLUDID au.oao YAMODOWM b&e la the ranre from ..,......_ r----Y -llACHHOUSI 40ltJr" fmArl VIEW Come aad au tbla mJIOO&oSl45.000. Mht• ... featwes. Jiil wltti pri•.te ~t='::e°!; ~CJl~~!!l!!~Mtli~. THISI HO beaudt\11
3
bec1rm bQme ,..,_, ,._
2112
......_ o.., 14
•• ... It. loYely patio. 2 t>&ocu to ... ~ lmpo&1q alooe facadtt MIS AIE FAIUl.OUS! :.•~r::~:.::,i:~i~ All Uu 1 ........... o,. 1 lsdtr ocean. 0 w . ...,-w 111 • •~--'-cav. way to llnpr't!MlYe Lit. Priced to Mii at 0,.. Sat,/Smfrom 10-T ..... & 16tt: finaot'e on cod&"Rt with
entry hall futurln11 ILUflP PIOf•n -A ........ ..._., SH.000. Call P .B.I. For .. polntwww•teS. low down payment •
spual at.alttaH ludintc opp•::• \wltls twe M,.,. hi;• I 9M-2'31/W-02ll P•1er CoMect J .. lddy si:e,soo.
-·POOl--•NOP\11-----t to rna~ftttnt m astu HCtt -·llf4 _, twe....., J IM•a•• ltW. Durf11WTowlJ:1• Maad9y'tlsnlFricMyW.llOI ~CENTIR
N("W U.t.lft.l ln W..tt-llff, :J':W., ~~ =~ d•,a•Ha onrloolal.. ttM D•• ,.... V£TERHll' Omirable end uni\ m pvt or Wu dcry mid S • it.y .t 631 .oo94 fltt" rf 2
1-;xtrcmdy nlcr 3 + l'UQ'Oa V'"'9 Larw.-loi MorlH. S•ll•r fl•e11el•9 •••llebl•. ~ loc. Sgt atty 2Br. den. 2
bdrm.11. beated/fallnt'd room for pool ll\t'Tedabl4' $641,000 No dowo coodo. Rare ba. frplc, A/C, 2 car gar. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! s-a...fth 1076
pool. e~tr• piarlllnt: "' fa m 1 I y h o m., • lo' u r WOOO AND GLASS CUSTOM tfe>MI _ Tlbw'oo. M~ extras. ~~!b1~81~J,~~~de ~·:::: ........ leoch I 04I ••••••-•••••••••••••••
udYtomovt!l.n ll7!t000 ~vateabowins <'•ll 11..aM 4 IM•aa-. 2 1/2 ~ retld111ee w5~~;2~ent d.rps, wallpr. Walk lo ....................... 1•.-MEWPOR---•T•DU-,•L•EX-• VIEWAtOMTHETOP .............. .e.w. of ttse OC... ... IM botr pre. elem le middle scbl.s. Breatht.aldq ocean vaew
......... ~ •~-·--... 1040 By owner S81,SOO. dys 'IJOFAMAcaE Sllt,500 trombJP&nPrdldential ~ --roo.. Qulltr f.aluta ...,,. -"""'""""'ext 11. ev/wkod n-..11!.a.·y Ste"" to beach. This is a Heights. N•w lislln•>, -~--, ....................... ·~•o.& ~'"""" ..., ~ ~ _.... dry'ly.11" •~ ......... ~ 561-5029 Rustle pnvacy among Newport Class1catanaf· oearnew2BRCoodo,oo· PETEBIRRETI
REii.TY
eM ~ Mapttflc"'f U)t;soo DEERFIELD PA oK the pines in Lag uoa fo,.dable price._ Good ty'97BE~A HENRY ~~ B h c 3 summer /Wint.er income ", n HOME e a c . u s lo m Ual I bet REAL"""RS
OCEAN VIEW
Moaattb Bay Terrace
Elt'g.ant fr Provmc1al
Offered at: $325,000
Call for appl ~
cl/ldtJ<
R E At;{ TY .
2 IDIM COTTAGE ....... &Wt
~ hlltdwood noors,
beamed <."t!Uinga. 2 bnck -rarei>lacea and ruce coun
b')' kitchen
493-1112 Lingo a..ai.-
On the Orange Coast-1()()1( to L•noo first
1024 CostaMna 1024
2 Bdrm, ~L~-income --------1 F.astslde By Owner. 3 bd. NEW HACH HOME unit with pnvate paUo LOOI( HME! 1~ ba Z'pauos.t!_ P Xlnt By builde r. block {o
..............................................
and yard. Nice upgraded 3 Bdrm rood. S&L.500 vpeo Daily beach, ocean view, 5 BR,
************** Red to SllS,000 home. features family 12·4.548-74.54 ~co~e:'°°ioiqilti\ ~f INVESTMENT FORINFOR..l\4ATION room, with fireplace. 3 __ M_ES_lr._V_E_R_D_E __ $195.000. Also 4 BR, 2'h ~ITU In Ccll 644-721 I . car garage aod 11 large PRESTIGE HOME ba at 60117th St. $129.000. vr-r-v N lot. HWTY on thas one! 38r, liv rm/din rm. frplc. 531H718.
2 hou;!es in C.M. on lelal Call 546·5880. Ask iog lgscreeoed Lnok in fam----------
bedroom home with Poten · nvestors · av 4bdrm,2ba.bvlngrm. •-·--.. 1 id •-hWTY'CallS40-1151 .,.,c:.n-..1 Mar ......,H .. dining rm. Tiled bll·ln s~ g ass w o ows "'"' · ~ u... -""l.M'
kitchen w /w ood and J car garage. BAYCLIFFVILLAGE
cab i o et s . Fam rm sz:K>.OOO lbr 2ba home in pleasaot
w/frplc. Covered patio adult c:Ommunity Single
and Redwood retreat off sly home, full m aint.
mstr bdrm. Walk lo J Monarcb Bay Plaza frpk. kitchen bas all ap-
scbools, pools & park. Lag_una Niguel 0tia. Y $40,000 pie $m.SOO. Call to see
Owner will a rrange 49•7222 831-0836 take over 91h% loan al Realtor21J/001·54i63.
finaDcing. Principals on· --------SlOOl mo. 4 B~ ba & SaMaAlllG 1080 ly.$12f,S00.55l·l57'1. pool. Hurry~ /agt, •••••••••••••••••••••••
COLLEGEPARK LcllJI-..... 1052 _S5£-0T77_______ $59 900
Smashing Coroell plao: 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIOK BELOW MARKET! '
+bonus; prime loc. L Ni I BIG CANYON. 2 br codo Now your ........ Sl.13.ooo aguna gue isso· -s15s . 100. ALSO· Secrch Is Over ~ elegant 3 br home. 20x40 ... Realty ~ pool & Jacuzzi. lge yrd. Super starter with huge. i!i.t!•ltt11_\!1 .'\: l!:11 ..
i!~ t\tl Ii 11· !i
nonq 1,4 0 55b0 Anytime
f .1~tblull Prof Bldq
~-Sl29.900 ~ 673-4311. 'ush yard complete with
f n.o t trees! Z bed room V ACAHT LOT DOVER SHORES homt?.Wlth dllling. eating 3 unit, 9000 s q rt lot. .. $73.500. rm, auto gar age. 101•--------
Priced to sell quickly at maint yd, lots of shut-211.KS TO ~~.O . B y ow or, . .~ ters. immed occupancy. IEACH ---------
-$1.l.2.000. By owner La Salle ************** --------•I ()penSat/Sunl-5 4 Bdrm, Newport WesL
Located in 'pr,est1gious Gorgeous house-best a re a, firepla ce a nd
"La Veta", this is the vil!W 4 Br. 4 Ba. ram rm, builtrns T r ee l ined
least expensive lot for A/C. 3 car . $450.000. s treet .BKR. C,all
sale ih the eoure area. Owner. 646-4700 eves. ~1m
--------•l[)uplex, 717 Fernleal. 1 Br 1866 Rhoades with $66,000 al9~% loan. Model ~ ... ·OT 1 Ba each, cute & clean L _.VISH 919-7605 171.SOO. On wide gr eenbe lt. " ... "' + r oom to build. A ... 963-1377 Spaci bd b BIOOt.akes overex.ist1ng $162,500. By Owner. Pool &Jacuui,rambling R.V.DBJGHT ~; a:ro!~2~
V. A. 3 b r . I ~ b •-i· :;.;;64().:;::;:1840:::--------·I overs ize one story 1o 4br 2ba Mesa Verde .__._ I 044 ft of li · ,..., ....,.... sq. . ving space. ~-~ ~••.rr..r OT Mesa Verde. Hurry , home. oo tge comer lot Lots of upgrades. Pallo5. 754-7800 ~nuu~onL won't last at $135,000. w/separate driveway & -••••••··~··•••••••••• lush l a o~sca pi ng .
•• '!! 2 Bdnns each. $185.000 968-3371 stcrage area. 13ft x 60ft. WOODIRIDGE Generous guest parking. M--byowner.640-m& for all your R.V. needs. M0•1Mu100R Let us show you this one Conveniently located · ~ · IYOWHER workshop W1240 .& 120 "Largest lot in Wood-tOOayl $139,950
~ RfSIDBfTIAL volts ouUets avail. Close bcidge". Lvty upgraded !° IHVIROHMEHT to country club & golf BmlMlrnoor patio home. 4
$122 5C>O B bdrm. hnly rtn w /lvty Two large bedrooms. two course. • . Y atrium. Walk to pools. ---------c baths. huge entertain· This =~~r .. active ::::,r~~-7620. pan; & schools. Brand MESA VERDE ment-deck. Vieworhyls, Mesa Verde hom e -_... 1026 new.~
Bdrm b lbs private beach access. features ·a heated pool, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~arpe:s'.2~r:pe;i~e7, $176•500· l·77l·C>455 or covered pallo le gas Magni(icentocean view.
wallpaper; profesL..,.de-1-549-_9515 __ . ------1 BBQ. 3 Bdrms, 2 baths New 3 bd, lge rms. (3rd
corated Call for app'i s.B 0Cf:AM¥U and. .m.alU'. other added bd sep. suite). Agt
Sl:IJ soo GUARDED ENTRY extra features. AsltTu ~ 844-S742:-67J.:ir& 67S.4m E onl y $112,600. Call · vcs Jasmine Creek, plan 5. 54&5880formoredetalls Luxurious ocean view
•poo1/teno/jac. 1295,000. single family hom-.a nr
O.W.C. Prine. Only. Call the harbor. 2012 to 3206
for appl. Owner /Agt. sq. fl. coming soon!
641). llZT or 568-3974 549-Slll associated
BR <)~Ei.s IH fq T(Jll S
~HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
.l1•;-, W lioltnQ,.. •' l;../, I
-coMYl!!MtBtT
location nr San Diego
Frwy, Irvine Ind. com·
plex. schools 6 shopping.
Nices br, 21,4,a ba home.
Park Place.Inc 842· 74&
Pvt Party wishes to lease ---------option or purchase on I ..... _. .... ._ ....... _. ................ .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j sales contract. Ocean COLLEGE PARK
LIDO ISLE vi e w c d M h o u s e . * a.EAM * 644-81. Newly decoreted, ---------• 3 Bdrm,den.Greatloca· French country home. 2 Finest duplex in COM lioo. Owner transferred.
B<lnns den. Charmmg Bldr. just completing CALL 754-7800
patio entry. $2$5,000 5'8 Marguerite. $325.000. II-VIM£ Submit terms-Poss.
Lovely Deerfield patio _trade __ ? _______ ,
home. Lrg lot. Near ..------schools & s hopping . <R~.;:::;:-• .;:-S-
C us t o m s hutters. ~rr
$104,500.
LAGUNA CH.ARMY
Spectacular ocean view.
2 decks. 4 Bdrma & den.
Open house Sat & Sun
1-5; 730 Bluebird Canyon
Or.
D.M. MARSHALL
& ASSOC IA TES
250-Newport.CenterDr. ~
St.lite~! Newport Beach CoslaMna 1024 644-9990 ...................... .
raflCTHOME
. for the HOBBYIST! In
a dditio n to the Im·
preesive 3 bdrm., family
nn. le formal dlnln~ rm.
h o me, the r e 1s a
beautiful gara1e with
almost 1,000 sq. ft.: you
have ample room for 2
cars PLUS workshop
area for numerous bob·
1bys • ALSO, there's off.
'st.reel parkinl{ for the
boat or t r ailer (In
Newport. Be ach). Jl7U>O
UAMDHEW
TOWMHOMES
.... Hwy Woods ..
<East.side Costa Mesa)
2t32Santa Ana Ave.
English Tudor 2&3 Br
s plit level, 2&3 car garage, frpl c s ,
microwaves, greenhouse
windows, pool. spa. TENNIS court. From $89.950
646-0061 or 955-1920
Developed by
Woodtree Dev. Co.
2 Brand new 3 bdrm, 2 ba. homes, formal dining rm. .-p. fm rm, 2 frplca,
deep, lot. 2 car garage.
211118 fl 2(8) Or8llle Ave.
'13 5,000 eecb . Owrwr/,..._, 642·2164 or
873-0782.
MESA
VERDE
3 bedroom home with a
large pool and jacuzzi!
No 9ualifyjng! Owner
will f uiance ! Call now I
Tall to Red Carpet
We Utt.! 754-I Z02
I STTIMI OFFBB>
IMSSYURS
1f )'OU've been wailing
far t.hla one, here It is!
R-2 lot (2 Bdrm house in·
eluded Cree). Room for
duplex Plos. (8173 sq.rt.)
Great Eastside location.
Askaog S65,000. Call
540-USl
~»-HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
ELEGANT but comforta·
b&e. 'Ibis 2, atory 5 bdrm. Sblf. bome bas been fully
•y OMAaM decorated la warm earth "" t.ooes1by Coet.a Mesa's 2 OQ lot in Npt Hta. Con· fl-at furniture store. tndot'• home. Front:3 .... ..._..._. t006 BR. 2 ba, F /P, patio. Amo ac the many --••••••••••••••••••• n---2 Bt 2 b 'd ameoWes are over W .-: ' a. cov rollao/wallpaper, teak Ii ao.ooomow a>•Uo. Pvt Coed )'ard. tile rloors. lavish ~ Two 2car1araaes. Move fieducecl for action. 8r· lo cood. Owner may dnl*ies 6 much more.
'A" your cash or trade ftnance. 548-GOl Meaap i cltlOMtar. 0$129.000. ii:iboalal3at.clf'Y duplex: r oc. n y. wner I
QwnerM().8755 Have you read today'1 _.._ ---------1 Oaaslfied Ada? U not, ·DREAM HOUSE unJque
Have eometbiog to sell? )'OU're miaslrll the beat deal1n. Priced below
ci .. ifiedadsdoitweU. bergaimlntownl market value. SUJ,500.
6G-'1117
VA F1IA TERMS
COSTA MESA
Clean 3Br. 1 ~Ba. lg lot,
quiet at. l~ mi from bch. $74.500. PrtD only pleue.
Owntl'/!f!. ll!l-272:5
SIZES
9103 a.20
In, 1Tf"":-1Tf4'\T-
.
The ~ or a deeQ annllolt.
tt11 SNAP of 1 stllldllp collat,
tM ZtP of a lip front-this is t . dtm fof ,. seasons. Sew •l
LC11J111m -.ocJt ' I 048 .......................
•DUPLEX*·
Ocean side of hwy. level
lot, easy access to beach.
Needf. paint. minor re-
pairs; ideal for home & Income.· Hurry, o nly
$145,900
M.l.laioo Realty 494-i)731
a..EAN Spanish Charm
house, w/guest apt.,
walk to beach & shops.
L1e yard. $178,SOO.
752-9000 &831-0345
•DESIRAILE
Neighborhood in Temple
Hills area Ls setting for 3
bdrm. family home. Low
maintenance yard
· w/secJuded patio. Large
·11v . rtn . $162,000 .
<OXISDP>
•HIDDEH
In woodsy setting is 3
bdrm. home. Extra room
can be converted .Jnto
large den. Home backs
up to quie t canyon .
Sl.89.000. < C.Q50 DP>
900 Gh-p• St. ...... ~.ct·
lAguoa "stiack-plex" 2
units needing T .L.C .
;;.jlf~'1~ily terms"
Causey
~ deck, wooa paoernlM.
$1Jl,500.
Wood• 11 ... ~ vktw
coado. 2 BR. J~ batha. family roodl. dining
room. llreplace. pool.
"41,500.
Wll tte water oceu vtew
WJclabae lot. S7UOO.
Large enough for tennis 9AABB ~L court le pool. Priced lo West.cliff. 4br +pool. cor· I~
seU at $78,SOO. ner lot. 963-0914/631-0471. -·
493-9494 495-5220 _Pn_n_. onl__;.y_. -----I---------
49•24 I 3 830-5050 IY OWNER Get Ready
3br l:i..ba. rm. rm. patios. no assoc. fees. $85,900 .
4.%-4779.
9UIET & PRIVATE
OleerfuJ. airy, 3 bd. 2 ba
house backing on perma·
neat greenbelt 1-'nc'd
front & back yards, cov-
ered pal.lo Nestled in the
hills oC Laguna Niguel
Sea Country Compare
this value By owner .
193.IXX>. Ph 831 ·9627
MIGELSHOllf S _
llfDROOM
in the lovely private community of Nigue l ~ belund guarded
gates, a s pa c ious
beauti fully k e pt 3
Newport Shores 3 BR. For Those 2ba. Clubhouse. pool &
rec faCLI avail. S98.000 Sin•HeriftC)
646-8402 Hot Davs
•BEST BUY• Sparkling poo1 1& lovely
Ea.slbluff Condo Views. yard, just 10 ume for
well kept. many custOm summer ! 3 bedroom
features. family home with dininR.
S16S,000 eaung area, Jamily room
Fmanc1a1Coosultant a rea and fire place
Broker 645-2509 Pauo. S84,000. BKR. Call
54().l'ra> • ~~EST TAABl\L.
Plan 3. 3 br 2'h ba. gd -·
J(lCjlt,_ upgraded. wet bar. lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"
ll'UITOi-edwarorblfcom - -
pool, Jacuz..z1, tenrus crts. . CUTE $63,000-
$135.IXX> • 2 Bdrm starter, huge lot.
PCM Realty 833-8430 No down to vets. Call im·
mediately.
541-0425 Irk.
uhucba:tw 1098
bedroom home with hu~e BEACH 'vaulted wood beamed
celling.s lJl the hv1og rm. ... .•.......•.••.•..... Formal dtning rm. fam1-"FIXER ,, Jy rm and breakfas t YOU CAM
nook. All with lar~e Cute 3 br beach hse. buy th.is neat 4 bedrm, 2
yard,customstooework Wood beam ceilings . bacashtoloan.Noquah·
frootand rear Bnck frplc. Needs work r..iA .. ,,_.•d. Full price PLUS -''"6 ·~ ... fabulous recreation but you Save. $135.000. $72,950. facilities with feat11re:. Hurry, caJJ now! 645-7221 Park Platt.lric842-7461
too numerous to mention ~ HARD TO IEAT! AND -access. to pnvate beach 21 4 BR. 2'h ba, w /lae Cami ly rm & formal dine rm. ONLY$167.SOO Assumable 8 1h% VA
CALL 644-7211 "" loan.
"1n NIGEL
(31\ILE~ &
ASSUCIAHS
Meowpori IHch I 069 •••••••••••••••••••••••
COHD08YOWMER
3br 2""ba. $99.500
Near Hoag S4S.3639
~m!qb~~~ .
w/pool. Jae. ram rm ,
completely remodeled.
Big lot-much more .
Owner will ftoance. No
credit needed. $155,000
balance. Ask for Ed
Cllemow 964-2455
DUPLEX
By owner. reduced to Sl'~.000. Both 2 BR unit!!.
1 blk to ·ocean. Good an
come area. 67~75
IG & IEAUTIFUL
&EAGaTOGO
5 BR . 3 B a.
Somerset. kltche
no o k . fami l y
wr wetbar. d ining
rm. 2 fpk''s. view o
Newport Center . A
pottln iz s h e d .
privacy & a price
vo u <'a n 't b eat .
Owner has bought
anot h er h o me
Submit a ll orre rs .
$211,500.
1801 Port Carlow
Wntdff Rfflffy Park Place.Loe 842· 7461
NICEST Portofino on the Olm-Red Estate market. Harbor Vaew •••••:•••••••••••••••••
homes largest model w/3 MoDe.Hofms
br, Jt., ba . fam rm. din· ForS./ 1100 iOI! rm. bonus rm. sleep-•••••••••••••••••••••••
111g loll 10 2600 sq.rt . Best I ACRE
family community 1n FOR YOUR MOBILE or,
Newport. Fee land. by HOMESITE. Room for
owne r . courtesy lo pool, barn, corrals and
brokers. 644-0413 animals. Xlnl terms
UDO ISLE Broker. By owner, 3 bedrm, 2 , __ rn_-SOO!l __ &_Em-_2823 __ _
bath, large family rm.
c or ner lot . 100 Via
Cordova. S28S.OOO. Call to
see. 7 14 :675-1782
213: 888-7962
HEW EXQ.USIVE
LISTING
$16.900
ST8'S TO IEACH
Dbl Wlde '61 trailerama
<DN51B6) 3 pvt bch &
pier. Sub letting allowed.
Located In Treasure ls.
:Dl>l Pacific Coa8t Hwy.
Lag. Bch. Offe red by
Renaissance M . P UOO AT ITS BEST 714~~16. s bedrooms. 4 baths. 1-----·----
large country kitchen 2 112 ACRES
with ftreplace. Fabulous Start your own ranch.
for entertaining. Com· Ple nty of r oom for
fortable home for large mobile or. home a nd fanuly. Call now, at won't barn . XI n l t e rm s .
last! $475.000. Broker.
IURR WHITE
. REAL TOR. IMC.
67§..4630
677 ·5609 & Em-2823
Walt to beach, 12' Ex~an· do. priced to sell. 1 BR . l ba. lrg porch. 3'202 Del
<l>ispo, m . Dana Pt.
OlllGINAI. BAY FRONT Balboa Island beach Luxurious mobile home
house w1tb 2 bdrms. living with spaciou s
+newer 2 bdrm. apt. cabana. lbr with den. ce-
over <lbl. garage, with menl paUo. stooe f~lc.
frpl. + guest apt. with plush new carpetin g
frpl. Clear. Seller iwill throughout. 2 levels.
finance. $249,000 open beamed ceilings.
l*WPORT HACH idnl. cond Home in· REALTY 675-1642 eludes stove and refng.
LIDO tSLE at unbebevably low price ol $49.500. 673-7890.
Exceptional 4 BR 2 Ba on widesl tosllot.Fr.doors EL TORO FAMILY
& beam ceili ng s PARK throughout. Hardwood Converts to adult 4-1.5-79.
floors, la So. paUo. used SWJ Ume to purchase a
brick rlreplace, com· 3Br, 2Ba + booua rm pletel)I remodeled. By A.IC coach. $33.000. Call
owner. $480,000. 67U423 0/A~767 -------~--.....__ n-.a.x Mobile Home lmprove· r-""'9' ~ m e o t S p e c i • II s l Pa lal oc•an view . Jleel•~-.31UI = ~~e':."'2 ......... w. 1200
beth e•eh. By owner. ·--·•••••-••••••• sno.ooo. m-l45t INV!STll!:NT
PROPERTY
ASSUllS VA tWJ. LOAN 115.• D.P, ()pea bOUIC a.a u.a_ ot eaQ UT-0107.
JG11111&ea.r..3br,2 be. ta hDl1 rm. eewaJ lllrtum W/jKUllS. Total
Me 11atem + mucb, ........ ,,,°'"*'·
DUPLEX-NEWPOR1
HO'l'SIU18e+l81J
8A. ... ~"'-'ta\J*'
..,,..,.,... TRl·PLEX·Jft lovely
O.:.aa • caayoo vlew ~ conaer loc:aUon. Nwpt Hats 1804 Clay. bWtoplot.~.ooo. edJacenttopui&area.6 Open S'1t/Suo 1·4 .
uo.s. Oout Hiway ~a bet.ha with many -.ma eves.
JO Aaeoa, can be 1plit to 2'°" KN ~Js. Shows dot return. Investor
ten:na. BroMr. ~"":!'1b ~-x~ ~IMlllaat•av...,. ii'U.000 . :1 owner
In VUlate Fair txtru. Top cooditlon.1 _______ _
LAGUNA BEACH Sdl.SOO. 8 A Y S H 0 R ES U 7 o 497•2457 ..,~77-· Rttr Waverly Dr. 3 BR, 3 BA. I"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! __. • ..,. derf. ~tl\ll cotta1e 1: 1~~~~~~~~~1 11\tertor. lllhster up. Ler.. La. Oak noon. brick patio. Serious ~mwi .... OPEN
SATtSUN. l ·S or call ....,
...
\ .
, m.seoe • ma23
16ACllS
B EL AIRE or
FALLBROOK PRIM E AVOCADO LANO IN
PRESTIGIO US
HP'J..EAff l:STATE CAN
U SPlJT ~ balance
do•o owe. 111&..1~· PriDc. OntJ. Mih wink,
1157--0554,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . ,
H1t11"Utwfw•iiiii -.......u. ..... 1•111 ................ ..... ........................ ···········~··········· ...................... . ., ............... u.tW..
............... ......... JU6 Maw-.11Hdt l2" ttl.,...._.. 376' • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
....................................................................................... ····'·················· ...................... . n;JI..,..,.....,.,. UO ..._,,,,,1h JOff •-.._. l141 Ntw "°"ff :s llr. 2 b1. llACHU~ .................. ?!~~ ~~ •...... ~.~~ ~~~ ... ~.~
••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••~'••••••• ....,..... ,......_ •--""rm , •• ,v.... .a-••111 .....__, INVISTll F.NT ............ ~.. ••• ••• • • .._. ....... ., • '#..... .._.... -.._
PftOPDTY 4W-.ao,lr lBlt .mt Nm tto e. YMl'W Im 4"-1.l.Aa. Wkteft. L.R .• fem rm. ~~can be •Pbt t S IBR l 18.t wtlh room M'rill Dr A1$ Ph 81'eN JZJZ dln. deck, p1t, frplc'a.
1'4 ane pattela Sbow. ...,..._ • y ..... Ona& m llttor~ -" ......... ·--••••• •lff 1~r.ope.Mr. Both
idol return Joveato ~too.Uon.•OOQ .....__.. Jt6t 2 ~ 4 br a ba dlal•I pnlftt11ooally decoul·
&sms. Brokc-r down Ow-.u will Carr./ -..:... ... :... ...:. t•~ ed. '600 • $'700 Call m :lflll Am m:I <"OD&I" rt $320 000 • ··-............... • •• nn. '"""'' ..... w." · l• .... Marlene at 131·3"4 or
---• . Db llayfroM a ...... Con ~ )d. ·~' Kt MIN• pela ~.
PA&.MNSMT A P~HIG€ do ln Bl"'• m+~n ...... aw."'~ 0 '"· -------
t.AMANCHA Al'TS
IMse ~ bd r•rd•ri 1pta. Adult.a. Osbwhr.
bltnt. eoct. aar. aaa bbq
Pool. Ou Pd. 778 Scolt
Pl. 6c.5013; 6'5-5611 . ::-:r .. ~rAP:5: '-h ~ KOME:S =:::.~ m-:~o ;:·:..r' lll4 =~J..0:0 •~ All uUl I YaU 333:3W t:ol.st n.y,)fB ••••-• .. •-••••••••••• ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• P'or te&M; avail. now. 3 • lecNtlNI 11in9i.. W..W. V,..
8'1ttt froo&.qn. Prit' ..._. .. , ~"°'*for reo"-uUl »Cl ac.. to eile1Matary .chi. Bdrm.a., 3 b1lha. with l & 2 a.droom Beautiful brand new
Apanm.nt8.
~rtaintMnt.
Rec:reatioo •••
Yowa -38S
dgya G year!
t~~O · Ow• 0 l~EN'r nk-. yll'd, cb1Jdl'fn OK: 18r 28a w/lf dea. frpk. ~ Uv. area. Lovtt· l\amilMd& ldullapts.. Nopet.s. Pool,
---f'ROP ltlTV no Pttf, ~ MM 8300. dlahwaaher. covered ~~ It eotry area. Unlwnlahed jacuui.<>Pendally.
meatiBJIU
New beautiful 1arden •pla. pool• spa.
1216 E. 1ltb Street &4M&l6
2 bedroom. 1 b1th $340
rMIC HIWrOIT
81cbelor 1, l or 2
Bedrooms trrow'Dlrouses
From$S4950
Spectacular apa, tot.al
recreatloo pro1ram.
IJOdal progr1m. '1 POOJs. 8 temua courta. Al Fa.abion
111and, J1mboree le San
161 E 18th Strfft JOIC)Wo H.11.l.s Ro•d.
Bacbelor842-0856 • $260 r--l77_ 'I _4J_6_4_4-_l_tO_O_
IACHILOI UHITS ?Z!JOV:;f~ W11 $Z2S+.,.aff.
1 bedroom sat! 20 I E. l .. 11 e. Ml.
2 Bedroom. 1 bath $300 Cal It....._ 55 .. 7707
I 4Cll to t\m'!I, <'all ~ ~pllt to eva,--7 PIUo w IBBQ, klds OK -~HclUO. a~er Apm1m«1ts 96S W .1.9UI si.
lt()R YOUR MOl\ll.11: or, 2'-' •~ patttla.. Bhuw~ No=·~ rno. Ast no ~ _.,... • All Utilitlee Paid Bach. 1255-SZM Adults. no pets. Near Lido. 2BR, 2ba)ux·
tt0M£SITV.. Hoom for ~Int retaro lovutor ..._..U..,.wl.a.d Z54!6.9'13291l ltlALToa 644-0322 •NolAGMR.qult9Ct ~g~== Bachelor apt. Senior aZa:.a\,~'j~~~.l f:ti~:
pool, barn. t'OC'ral& •ad Wln9 Broktr. •••••-•••••••••••••••• NO FE£! ApL Ir Condo 'lSLMgmt 00-8122 Cilium only $170 mo. in· S'r.iOuno.559·1802 wumala. Xlol lum1 m$Gtltm.a:a:J ...... ...., J206 Mdl .......... SZ40 reotala, Rental Pavilion ·=~T-i.. cl util. Mobile Home Pk Droll.,.!!~ ... -.~ ••••-••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.12 Bkr. Tues-Sal. Beaut. brand new adult 646-tl..Sl OCEAN FRONT, upper
""' .......,. • '""' _ _ ~ 8a)'frorlt 4 br. 3 ba. t1mlly New ••nt 2 bedroom • :.:~ ~ apt.s. Spac. t & 2 br Lar 2 bdrm upper S28S wut. Very ruce. Large 2
SWISSCHALIT El ldeC0&t.aMna 20~ rm,pw,nopet.a St200 ~.or2bedtoc>m+den 3T~ou'!e·. ie~ull~ufly •HMlthCNbe..Jat..a. :'~111tyle.edFrplc. Qutl building with ~iiiJa,r . s700 /m o
HJdde-n In Ow ptllt'tl with OOw1'. ~ flNne'lJia no Leac-. 87~ ~75 ~ar 4' window deeora,ted, boat sh P ~3 rm. mm . OC· beautiful landscaping
ao oettan view 11 lb111 p~unta, fut ucrow. C••-a..e. JJll ho:w ll'ivev bloelts to avail. $850 per mo. PLOSMUCHMOREI 1 K:·tBa ~$335 Jdeal for adults over 35. All aduJt. no pcl.s. 2 br. 2
du1rm111iAfr11mt•onl .... Own/Btr.842740'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ch Prl ale 2-car mf310or525-f895 Oakwood 2er· 2 Ba $395-$425 No pets . LEEWARD ba. from $330. Jaruzz1.
a<"l"ll6 w111u frwtb 1tlffa. Mod 3 BR 2 BA. frplr. garaeey.-~u. IAldyul~.•INno· "-de,-·~ .. n•· TSL.. APTS. 2020 Fullerton pool. rec. bldg. Localed (J>art p •nt11 ~tu lNVtSI'MF.N"f «lt'l.)'ard.ocnnvu ~ ~l.nQ~':eatsZflSth Bl"fs 1oraeows 2br 2b'-UUI"' ~n_.. .. _... Mgmt 642·9412 Ave.(lblkeastNewport at'ross from Newport
1vtX'ldoL 2 alaU barn. PROPER mo a1450 sereet.. C'fl4> 960-633l. YleW, custom ~t. wet Newport !.ach/Nor1h Cam!ls f Setthlg Ave 6 l blk south or Beat'h Golf Course. buolL hout1e Bkr , TV ' bar.gardener.pool.SS.SO 880 lrnn• 180E.21.stStreel Bay> 631-0397 Shown by appl. only. 11~6"STI7, l/S22 2080 5 ACT"eS, can be •i>IJt to C... .. W. l222 ~dale 4 br. 2 ~6259, 557·4700 ext. 1a116th) E.utside 2 br" den split -r~ Jl26 ~ l~ aa:re patttla. Shows ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... Kids 2312 dya. 640·2426 (714164:H>:,5Q - ---------~ 2 1/1 AQIS xlnt rthlrn Investor Oreana!deol llwy Sharp ...., Y ,garage. · /Wlmds level. Frplc. dec k . •••••••••••••••••••••••St.epstobeach.2br.gar. ... h terms Broker •pets oil. $i&45. Agt. No _eYeS ____ .____ Newpon B.ach/South slcybght, all extras.~ new pamt & rpt. Unrurn
-art your own ranc m-'"""" & .;.,.,. -2 ~ Super pauo. 2 fee ~; m.2971 u .. D Dl'\R VIEW l700 16th St mo. No C'b.ildren or pets. ...00 MOVE lN or rum. \'rly. $425 w I utl. Plenty o r room for ,,_.. q,.,..__, c a r ~I r a g e . •VUU>V <Oov•r 01 l6thl D 646 4262 .. mobile or. hom~ and wu"'-/ er hookU""' Adams/Ma~a 4 br. 2 PORTOFINO ays · ; eves · ALLOWAJlilCE 89&-1362.213-670·7933
•!CI ..... .. bdrm 3u..ba FR 2 (7141642-8170 &f5.954.3 br . b b 2 b barn X Int l nm 11 4 PLIX M5() yrly. 640-4137 ba. hl>lc. shwbr 1.patio. • • "" • · · · 2 • 1 a s.w> 2 r. a OCEAN FltOMT Brok~r· H .... t1 ...... 00 Beach Toed yd, garage. l\lds & story bonus rm. pool & Aduli. only. no peta .East.side 2 br. blt.ns. no + den $4 00. Enc I. ..~ 1 bTl 5609& 679-28Z3 20% ~~ huncing. 3 BR. ntm. rm ., Jasmloe pets<*.. EdisooH.S. $46.S. _Spe..:.....,·~tlll>0_._98G-__ 1326 __ . __ 1'==M=od=•='•=op.=n=da=11::v ='o.=1=:' I pets, Adults. S310. garage. pvt. rnrd grass ~:;;·~~Year Y· Frpk.
Creek; on 11reeob~ll .. Agt. no fee. 964·2S66, JBRaBA.fplc,pallo.dbl1-~tz18·552-4201evesart yard. 33411 Cheltam TSLMgmt 642.1603 IOACIES N~n/lSBkr,f8!~;-s7~r,_o7w ..somev1ew.SUOO. 9T.J..2971 gar, ~-Yrly. Agent PllOMOKTOltY 5. Way:49&-l00'1-0r496-S275. --------
South ol Oraogl' County vwu • ..._. -2 BR. 2 ba .• canyon vu. .. ,....,... ._I....,.. ~~~~~~~~~~!UDO ele0 • ~pac 2 br. 2 adl •• K '>CC ....... 673 .... ,.,. New ""--'o 2br 2ba. Incl 67.,....,..... . . ~"' "I 2 -Br l ba a OJ e•-..... Brand ... Good for lot split. In I.he ---------.. .-. "6• • .....,.. \.NIAi • ·... ""'· ba. den. rrplt', h1 ce1bntts.
fath or growth Bkr 1 •~ ".M V W utiJ. Tennl.s~l/jac. rec CUTE 2 Bdrm w/rrplc, View Villa. CoRmplet.c,ly new. lB7 E . 1.81.h St. $350. _________ , lge bnck garden S9!XJ
. • """'I -• MIMI IAY II rom *""" l""" ~ k alt.~ lr ti & rurnl.shed 1 B & Lo l. mo A ... u1 Cl\'>'J $100 FREE RENT . . 161" "'717 J /".,.., "'62 · ..-.. · """' c w....... g pa o T nl · n&•· -.......... "-'uJ• s 67~ ""c" """ · ...,..,, .... Beoul. new building. 2 bdrm spacious mulU Available now. en s. 2br.1 ba ... Cl\, Sundeck & '~ " ,,.u.i>JJ FlttPI I lJ · &l od 4 BR2 yard. $485/mo Ph I & D ....,., AP.ca"'*nh iLlrattS,x n ocallort. levt!HncanyonpaTksel· ~=re'ft ~ .. " 6342 &15-6625 poo spa.U ~n o~ 2br.,2ba,allelec .. grnd end. garage Lots of3br2banearL1doVillaiw
1• for Sale 1300 TSL nvmts 642-1603 tmg.' Lg. dtil garg. + eit· • c to a · _....,. ~~~in g • n t e .. noor. cov: park. no pets. grass. 496-9230 . 33~52 $550 514 Club House
••••••••••••••••••••••• HEAJllREAIC!VEH traparlting.2700Bayside RQyalOak.968-93()0 2 bed. 1 bath, Lido Isle 675-5624 $350. 310 Victoria . BlueLantern. •5868or526-1928
By Owner 2 4 Ple"es I 5 11 .... OW •Dr. $675 mo. For appt. 11""--'fi" 3 br, 2 ba, paUo. home. mo to mo $650 642-2164/673-0782/552·4894 --------• ----. · . ~o v H ......... r, 67"·~s. r""nc<1'" rd K t"' & Children and ""'ts o k ---------• ------------------2 8 ache Io r a pl s . $2QS.OOO each. Pnnc. On· 4-Plex. Assume . Seller ..,........ .,...,.,, e Y • gar. iuS 64.s-OKl/640-l~ves.· · 1 br, steps to beat'h, pool. 2 Bdrm 1 Bath. $350 mo. t....._CM1hoch 31JO w/lutchen. $175 util paid.
· ly494-~or54Q.l219 will carry paper. Harbor Vlew Mont1ego pets O.K . S-44S·S455. lndry&enclgar 2189Pacific.nopets.Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• Community bathrm. •i , .. ....._..Prop«ty 1400 Management ava ii. 4 l>1" 2ba lam rm ~~;~~~ fee · Baysbores. pvt comm. SZ6S 640-5078 MS-S8llO, Pam SHARP beach t .2 & a BR. blJdrm bch 673·1451.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Agent. Gary D. Bosler wallpaper, garg. opnr ~ 2 sty. lg patios _________ , 1 BR. slall shower. patio. frpk. dJshwshr. 11arage Npt Hgts 2 Br 1 Ba. frplc.
:• Rentiog 1320 sq rt In· 900-4388or536-2498 Ukemodel.$800.640-073S Beauutul new home or ~~or~~s. S~TOllACH 1ndry rm. \o; bllt lo E. ~~<~•os No peti. adult~. no pets. S375
dustnal space. Santa ___ Pri_n_ci...;..p_als_onJ_Y __ Lovely 2 Br 1 Ba house bch. 3br. 21hba + deo ---------2 BR. l ba. yrly. $400 17th St. shopping & bus. _,~ 642-0551
Ana. xlnl location. FOUR·~·-· . .M •. w/frplc, fron~yard, walk w 1frplc · sS!'9n0declt • BRAND NEW 38r, 2-.,Ba 48R.2ba .. yrly. $750 New crpt. drks. tile, Seawind Y'lla ----------
Park.g. Also660sq rt or. Near new"':i-U~-;:; . 7~':.:.~+.oliilla ... ~mo . c-~...!!!m''/:~!;,; 2 BR.lba,yrly.$435 :ru1e • ...,&-Ulp"'-a-'i""'nlLL.~MC.aU.t-'urUle"+-s= I ge ~p2b~;;~~~ylO:~hi!.~r ~~1 o~ds Pest Cont. ··-..._, .. ba. frpl, -".-ar --.. $4:~00~:;:5'8-~54~L~---~~-~l~~ ~ coaoMA-D&rMU _ , l ,, ~ ~,~ wu1. " " ... _ • mo 6'2 5062 b .-i ""'"· $295 gss.1178 ew &.z bdrm uxury 67S-l706. 64S·22ZI ,. __ ,_. gar ,3-28r.2bll.umts. Slk!:5 mo. 6 mo lse. 2Br. LOVELY 3Br. 2~ Ba. --·--·------38R,2 a,, •• y.$1200 .... ~ adult apts m 14 plans --.-----~ TSL lnvstma&U-1603 1 ~. L/R, F 1R, ta gar. bltns, mlcrowive oven. 2 BR. S500 mo yrly lse. 1st Dup&ex 2 BR l Ba. encl from $3LS. + pools. ten 3 br. 2 ba & 4 br. ~ ba. Property 1600 lg fncd yd pvt hen ac encl gar. yd $600 mo & last + secur . d_e p. gar. Mature adults. no rus. waterfall:.. ponds' Upstairs apt's Newly re ••••••••••••••••••••••• * * * * * cess.644--0164 • bl/last + S300 sec. 516 Older c pl, no pets peta.,$3100'\0.964·1055 From San D1egp 1-'rwy furo1shed. Avail now ;..,.1E.ACH C-t Geoeva846-9088,842-4466 _54S-_97_67 _____ __.. dnve North on Beat'h lo 673-1.305
9 £.-.-~ S37S. ~r new 2 br. 2 ba. Mt'Fadden I.hen We:.t on ---------
81X retad stores ror sale I rw xes CottaMfto 3224 2br. lb• ~o. Surf:ide. 2Br.$300mo .. needswork gar. rrp1c, bak. Close to Mcl-'adde.n to Seaw1nd ITEPSTOOCEAN View
m>.OOOw/tcrms. RI By owner. rices -ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ...... ..!.. •. c Dbl · 6'2·9601 days. all. Village 1714 1893·5198 3 Br. 2 ba. 2 car gar. ~· Tn·Co ly. tremely low. Seller will ""'""'"""'stores. car 67S-0144eves. TSLMgmt 642·1603 --blllm. $6.50/mo 675-190fi ~1 carry all finaocing at 4 Br At den. 2r,; ba, ..., blk ~i SJSO + lsl & last & .__ lw ..ts ~. lovely. spal· 1---------
91,,%. · -from ~wpt Back Bay. it. Call 498-1078 af OOAT-SbiP.·4 bdrm. 2 ~~ 2 BR 1 BA. carport. ka.ds &. home·llke 2 br with S.Cemtnte 3876
OLD LAGUNA I -eo-L Row Olympic size pool, tenms 6P . bath. lpwer unit Wi th OK. no dogs. Cpts. drps. pvt. aated entrance + 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• b I --r an j I •-••••••••••••••••••••••• 908 ., Downtown us ness Lo Do p _. cts. acuzz "' sauna. 1..1o.r .... t.&.rf rireplace. $750 /mo . ........___1•1__. 3806 $295mo.831· 1 patios. Some with all Bearh apb. 2 RR l'•i Ba.
prop. rorner toe. in the w Wft ayMfm-$560.Call646-92Sl. ,._H~.,.on Wa terfron t Hom es ---8 garagl:'. Sw1mm1ng pool $295 2 6R I Ba. frple. best retail area, approx. Wll1IOW' 3242 631·1400 ....................... Imm a c Q u 1 et 2 r Jacuzzi Tennis rourti> I $295 1 ll'R I BA $245.
2800 s q~ ft . As king lier. 714/542·367~ New 2&3 bdrm condos. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---"-'------lbr. spacious, new. quali· townhouse. Patio. pool. blJ< ttf Hunlml(ton ~hop 49&7151
$290.000. Rcalonomics CALL FOR SETUP frplc, bJt.ns,2car garage. 3 br townhse, lx>at slip. Sana.-.te 3276 ty, car port. Yrly. $425. adults. $325. 646·9507 755 ,..,,,, tftr m 11 Adult . 1---------*-'CA .. un 1M6 r o. w 18thSt ... n " a !'> BR ? Ba ··ondo. unnl '---~oo-__,,,,._,.._..-...J~nyon pool, t.enni£._ Agt. Dian.a. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-i857. · · pn•• "-om li.,.. -• • • * * 1t *-ii Dr. 645-5637. 840-40'l7. Beaut. Towhs. 2br 20a I---'~:.:;______ .a..-. JJ ....... gar. s:i:!O -mo:-"33·4'i2&-
MURSERY SCHOOL Retreat. Den. golf Beautiful panoramic view ~!~~~a:~:~~~~~~~~~ (714_> ______ _ Llr'd for 44 duldren + 3 Neal 2 br. 2'r'l ba condo. HEW LUXURIOUS course. pool/jac 1 blk to lal»a PeniMUla 3807 twnhse 3 maste rs 1za ,,.., ...
bedrm. 2 ba home on S4CIUFICE w /2 frplces pool. •r.•CHCft....aDOS bch. $S25. 661 ·1295. ••••••••••••••••••••••• bd.rms, 2'.-'J ba. bakony. H B '7141898·9961. l..1!3BR.2 ba S375 l BR I
b rl I dshwhr. washcr/dr)er -"'" ba"' 2 B 2 8 rrpl. tras h co mp. ba.ocean v1ew,$22S.Call at'ko arge ol. Two duplexes on adjoin· Sorry, no kids or pets 1 2.3 Bedrooms. Tenn1s. .m-4727 Lg ..,,.ront r a. dshwshr. 2 car gar with •Walk lO the beach • 498-1299 Cl~~~~'cnei.•1:11842-/To7:1 ~I!~~ near ~ ok. ~ Agt. no ~.;:J',::~~perties Nice 2 Br. cri)ts, drps. ~~.' -!rT:aa:e~· A~~:~ =~~J Mar I S.S75 C:!!:u~ Fa_n_l_i1_S_l1_c_o_c __ e_a_n_v_u
;:'tor;. 170 OWNER'ifurrSBLL ee.964-2.S66; 29?1. 271134~~ ~:~~f!· gar only. no pe t s . $850. AdultApL'> Charming 2BR. 2 ba.
••••••••••••••••••••. f\haot\llJ~ultant $400, Sbr lba. non ,.,,,..,..,..._ _m. __ 21_62 _______ Easts1de 2 BR 1•,,. Ba. 21661 8rookhurM.llB adlts. no vet.s S325 Ph ·~· 645-2509 smokers Rer~s . 989 ._._i. • _ 32,.4 5-laAllO -3280 y,...., clean Bach . .., blk. fplc. encl patio. pool. no 962-6653 4925Ql9 •G"'SSAYER * Arbor 548-1605/S48~ ....._ , -~ nots . Kids OK. $350 ---------~ . • d, New .Dplx 's 164·168 . . . • ....... ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••~••••••• to beach. S26S per mo. S'i-oot6 Ready ror you ' 2 bd. dt'o. 5-ta Ana 3880
-Near everythmg 7er s . Magnolia Costa Mesa. English hunting lodge Sharp Huge (2200 sq ft.) Lg 2 Br Tudor. No. S.A. util. incl. 675-3029 wkod frplc. gar s.w> 962 7788 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2br. $58,500. Agnt. (714) Sl7S.SOO. Owner Agent. type 31>r, deo, 2ba. 3 4br condo 2'r'Jba lam handsomely restored• or eves. 1 Br duplex w/yard, good ask for Mark I br + den. Condo. new
Ml-07S7.963-90Tieves. ~fM79 frplc brick c rty rd 2 , I ' dbl ' · many extras. $495 . ---------location. Call after 4. ~.pool.3 blksS.Coa:;l . ~.* XH/
180
$650 mo SS 1·221S or ~ ~tcs'p ~ar:s..~n ~eves/wknds. 2 br, frplc, yrd, gar, near 548-4.589 3 81'. new condo. I mile lo Pl aza I yr lsc $375 • .UnitsScH Cc:IMTRIPLEX 4971744 · ruversi Y ar · · ferry&sbopping. beach . Total re c avaJIMart.675·9226.
{' • . Th-2 B .. -m o:nits. . . 551·1549or551-5'190 s..•-3286 $400.. 536-V617 2 Br. l ~ Ba townhouse. ~e L "I tenn1 -•••••••••••••••••••••• ..... '" .. .....,..... pac a. . n.. . :;. 11:..--:~ l BR. stall shower, paUo. 1--••5 ••r .... •••••••••••••••• garage. patio, pool. Im . occupy. Avail ._..__.,._rwnw EASTSIDE $1.95.000.67J.l41.8.eves or lndry rm.~ blk to E ...,.,_ Faritastic View-Monarch $230 'Bac h lncd. util. Jacuzzi.ft.replace.Adults (2l3J91.9-5541 ~u;;_.,.shed 900
<..'ustom uruts on lge. lot; wknds. 17th Sl. shopping & bus 38R. 2 ba ....... $475/625 Sum mil, adll comm . l~blks to beach. 673-6279 only. s:BS 631-4984. •••••••••••••••••••••••
real teak wood i.nt.erior; 6SHARPUNITS New crpt, drps. tile. 4BR.~'Zabci~!·nte'$1000 2BR1rde
1
a . $SSO /mo
1
. _alt_._6w_kd _____ ..,..... Beach / Slat.er brand new
huge frplc .. new plumb· East Side CM. OWC. stove & paint. Mature 28R 2 b .... l<A/•""" Comm. c isbhouse, ~. Clean 1 br. uUI Incl. $320.· IEASTSIDE dlx units . 1·3bd 21-:ba
mg & roor. Only $88, '$238.000. 11.6 X gross adlts, nocbildren or pets. • a ._,., _,., jacuzzi, etc. Teal & Bab· 67$-7876 eves; 547.4200 Quiel 2Br Unit in small Owne rs studio. 3 2bd.
Owner 646-0917 crwt'/agt 673-4457 S295i.~1178. cock Realty Jnc. 499-4797 "'··-complex features ne w 2ba. wood burrung frplcs :---~=---~--::-:::-:-:::1...::.;;..:...:..:::::..:...:.,;.,:_.:...:..::..:..___ uo..r0 • cpts. new drps. freshly qwet. res ne1Jo?h RN·
Income f>roperty 200 Loh for Sde 2200 Beautifully upgraded 3 Br eo.da1 .. ni•1 CoroM def M.-3822 painted, bltn range & dis· area. lm1 bt'h Adult.' No
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Ba . ramily rm . Unfw'ftllhecl 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hwas h er. ga ra ge . pets 960-4145
THE EXCITING
PALM MESA 4PTS
MINUTES TON PT BCll
Bach. 1&2 BR
from S255 & up
/\dulls No pets.
1561 Mesa Dr. '' UNITS UNITS UHITS See• 1:1d. heading PALM rrplc.AvaU. March 1. ~o ••••••••••••••••••••••• NlCE 2 br upper dplx. Adlts/no pets. S33S mo.
" 24-plexe~/L.B. $79,900ea D~ERT. 56 condos un· pets.$515.646-3627 2 bro;2 ba cond~, country F.mpl'd sgl or married 549-~ Hunt. Harbor share !>Un. IS Blks East of Newport
1 4-plex $108. derrlass 1200 OCEAN & setting, pvt childs p~rk. cpl. No smokers or pets . ., C.M.Triplex S13S. CANYONVIEW picnlcBBQ,3pools.JaC. S395.64(M999
H ·plexes /HB $145M ea OORONA DEL MAR LOT Newl red 2b lb clbhs'e, gar storage. nr U>Uruls ' $160 Ready to bulld . .Ap· Y ecor. r a Cat Plaza. Child OK. no NEWLY REMODELED 2
lOUrut.s 5225' proved PI a n s . +study. ~uge rorr· .. 523C.AM11t1eft....lnvt"'E: p e l s . $ 3 9 0 . bedroom rront house t6Units $385: SlS0,000/bstofr. 646-3627 Panoramic vu o t.es. rv;11....: "" "' 642-1008/67J.S781. with fireplace. 600 block ""''I now ror deta'1ls o· Frplc. stove, rerg. W/d, JMarl old ... i<A/mo
'-"I.I f . tm Olo1ce view of harbor loL F/r gardnr. Avail. 3-1. WOOOBllOGE New2br2ba incl util Ten· "' _ 11 67· ~ir35· any 0 our i~ves en Z!a) Pacific Dr, CDM. $SOOmO. Dys~ ask nis, pool/Jae.· rec. rm __ ..,,_n __ ,,._ .... ___ 1
property.540-36A6 ''Owner build to suit or CorRickeve.687-086Saft. MOVE IN TODAY ! ll§00.972-loell. Largel~bt,frplc,So.or
D
seU szoo.ooo. 543·6148 6. Brand new Woodbridge br. ba bl lbwy, 2 blks lO oeean, eves --Glen "3 bedl'oori'f bome Condo, 2 · . l~ • tn clo6e to parlt. Avail 411. ~!~!!!!!!!~ · 2br 2ba View. Horses OK. with central air, up· ~/C, .saun a. Pool & $31S mo + util. Days ,......._./ Gar. new w /W crpta. Is l. grades. good IO<!alion JaCUZZJ. New cpl. Nr S. (2l3)6SS-6012' eves <2131 " Trtrrrtt. 2300 last & sec. $450 mo and mty $475 per month Csl PWa.. $425. ·559-8420 im.2189 ' I TRl-Pc:.EX·E. Side C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-4928 Includes r ecrealional aft.6pm ---·------1
sand & savmg in brand Blvd I
l BR. nr Fairview/Baker.
stove & refrjg. 1260 mo.
Dys 642·6500, eves
673-7489
new 3br 3ba duplex 9am-5pmS4&-9860
w I pvt. pa l1 o , b It 1 n s. l:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; crp/drps & w alk tor-
bearh Days 536-6663,
~105 eve 840-5049
Almost new condo 2 BR 2 ---------
MOllLEHOME
INFORM4 TIOM
Repog~ss1ons. buy OP· uons. takt> over payment
1nrormat1on . Ea sy
rmaoc1ng 01\C. Trad!!
~valuable.
Ba. complete kitchen 81.81 San Angelo. 2 br. 2
(bit-ins, dishwas her. ba. pvt dttk, new cpts &
trash compactor) gas pa.int. Perfect ror couple
BBQ. frplc. W/W carpets, or singles Call arter 7
drapes 2 car gar .. electr. pm Collect 213/ 289-2426.
door opener. Nr Or.
Coast CoU . $425 mo + $200 clea n -depos it
557-6f73
2Br .r 1 YlBa Condo. new
cpts. pamt. pool. carport. adlts only. S335 m o
~7
Santa Ana 5S-i· 7070 Weslmmster IWS-8895
C. Anaheim 956-1011
E. Anaht.-1m 956-4500
·y r1 y in come $9806. DeAnza Bay Side Village. New extradlx townhouse facjlllies and main· 3 br 2 b 1 · · Lg lbr Ocean Front apt ---------
br Mobile H N 1 • •-. a , poo. Jacuzzi. CdM. St'ngle proress1onal E ·s1de 2 br. patio & .. _ .. 000 "'SlZ7.500. 833·2330 . 3 ome. ew Y unit. 3 br. 2 ba, $650/mo ..,..., .... .,., Newport Terrace. $495. 3 BR. 2 bat.h. studio with -"' • 675-879o deoorated.127.SOOterms. OR2br,2baforSSSO/mo. No pels Call Rhett. person prefe rred. $400 garage.$350.mo. patio & fq>,1c... Nl'W •••••••••••••••••••••••
Boat Doc~. Pvt Be~· Porthole. skylight WIQ· 962-8847. mo. 644-Sm/675-1°'9. 548-8204 or 646-2316 tnplex. Call 3521
OUlt Clt84TS Po o I J a cu z z 1 . dows. open staircase. SPYGLASS HtU. Bach. Encl. pat.lo. Ulil. 8 8 •ARlbassodor INI•
LOVE IHR.4TIOH g1ubhousea .• Brok e~ I nraster bdrm sulte. Call Spacious 3 brt...2 ba condo. 4 6 famJty, dlnialg r m. pd. $250. mo. 3T~ Ap~. ~~~~ Lovely l(ardens·Brooks
)
There LS many a man wner. 631 ·492 I Linda Hart a4$.'1171 or Nr. So Cst t'laza. Pool, ocean view, gardener" 548-8204or646-2316 wt.r.fall
who'd happily sell bis ~ &f.5.7307 sauna. jacuzzi. Sorry no witer Included. $l650 Ba 1 E SS!O/mo. 964·1507 •K.ttchen Fac1I. avail. stockormutualfunds for Oltef~ · Spac. 3 Bdrm, a v.a ba pets.557-4872 cheor. new, great · ~ 3844 •Jacuu1.healedpool ~tbe~!_!idafgoro lWheoumld4 Property 2550 ~:{ ~:~~e3 ~a~~:· Twnbse. w/frml dining, NiwroaTCIHTEI ~ll3~ae~·S:~o ........................ :.re-~phor~l!v~~~iT!v or ,, .... . I ·--•••••••••••••n••• no pets eau' 175-1094 w rlmi.ly rmC 2 ftplca, wet ¥ hwah ,_.shed ••••ty 3br 2~ba Brand New .,..., M "OUt home or n· vi-LOT ... h . bar •. Al ... -a• ... on .......... 11•••········· . -' ....... BD 1 BA. pvt patio. ... ........ ridoe. .,,..,..mo. 2 Low OI $72.50 Wk come ~rty for what _.,..... • ~mmo~ mum ~t w/vf:;"1nunl; ecn.clllMar 3722 640-1112 ~hk~.gar.$315mo. ;';g'arg.2131~1 zmHarbor
'°"paid for It 4 or s l.Altes,1~~ U,, Y &slde3br 2b le l>ark. NoJ!t.s. $515/mo •••••••••••••••.•••••••• ,.__..._..........._ ~•2 .. 54M298;SS7--0848 Costall&esa 645-4840 .-.. aco?•Our clieota owner. . . • a.garage :r........ w Call ----, $290. 1 ea, l"e(' facilities.•--------. , ~1• to b pauo. $450. mo. ..""' ove ay. 2 .Br, abort or Joog term. ••-••••••••••••••••••• _ 1 .. _ ,__ ......, m •I• "'1UO D'lt! • prosper Y c:-.-... or64fr2318 '11411·287·2604 San at d f ... .,. --1 rm -· o avail. Orangetree. adlts. _. -~. aeWng, and ex-......_ ~ waiber rye..-urn .. "111EVIcrORlAN" +$100.de_p.Move m3·4. Nrrrwy.644-\.523 . Roomw/k1tchenette 1.:~c:NnPnsrealestate. .. ..................... 2br lba hardwt>od fir. l)ieto. ~9880758-l.367afts. 2Brttudio, l~baw/~ar. 7112Sbalimar. 548·7546 or ---------$60weekckup.
'hldng the fint step ls ..................... beamed c~Wng, reni:. NEW 2 BR condo. up· CostaW.. 3724 ldlta, cpta, new drps. 982-9962. New upgraded lbr apt. S48·9755
\. oft.en the hardest one. II •••••"• .. ••••••••••••• )'l'd. bltlns. Sm child Olt. graded, lighted tennis, ••••••••••••••••••••••• range, r~ yd w /patio. t' on do . Be a u t 1 r u I Ile llf I L l'tt t I
I -··n-....lutomoveup ........... 3106 No pets ~-... 198Z·B pool.a,jacM.15.960-3521 susc•.r.11•.r. wtrpd.$305.661Vlctoria. 11/JMOHTHS landacape w /completl' au u aguna oe i--·~ ...,, ~ --636-4120 1 5 ._,.REI! rec. racil. $350. Call Kenn apt.s Uy week or month
i1t1 Ol"'8tart~inve1tm nl •• ... •••••••••••••••••• MeyerPl.~34Mwkbd. ~leoch J241 Lar&e & reg. l·bdrm. ---·---·----~· Dennis 834·5092 o r 494.3494 = , but have 2 Br furn. wtr pd, gar. oraft.5:30. ....................... encl. gar. $255. & up M15A. _.,.._ MOWRBfTIMG ...,1 _.... 1---------. coo!Usedwithall ldlq oo....t• ~.227~ ' d 1 l 2110 ""~-..-... EW ....., ._,,., nny fashion I s uite f the aspects of today's Diamonct~S:SS..0.-3Br28a1 _1rplc,garate. Lg 2 OR hf'use . nr A uts. nope s . 1 Br $305. Frp&c, po<>1J 11.ANDn Or .. noet.reeCoodo.2 br.l w/ba & patio. Mature
f,. market., then come to the 4\AJ yrs OIO, lOC'lted near h 1 8 h s c ;loo I • P v t . Newport 81· 548•4968· jlc\w.I au bbq, clO&eO 2 BR. 2 ba apts. Perfect ba~Mis. pool. adults empl'd genlleman 1265
expttta al Quail Place "811&1 So.CoulPtua . .-Smo. S4a>/ioo.~173 ~R te ~Adwt.a.nopet.a.2650 for 2. Great C.M. loca· M&-31196. 640_·6594 _____ _
• Properties for sobd~ •br charming, older, Evea 558·794'1 Daya Ocunfront coUage. 2 W G 5 la Ave, 548-2441. tiool Available March Room h & I d
.. m, .;feasloul counae1 01. rum. home on Bllboa 6t4-4450 bdrm bath ri 1 1 Spadoua udJos It "'--""decorated 3 b~ 2 ba LSdl. $375 It $395. Call ror ...... leech 3141 . kite en aun ry vour a11uitJea •-•--' Pier 11.sUp'-c'"" .____. rd ·• 2 • t eve · ln-.a~-""itea ,_..,.v 1 detail• while selection ••••••••••••••••••••••• pr1 v. San Clemente 1 _,_ ........... • W' ..... t Br Z S. ~~ 1• Yearly '850/month .....,...,.,....-townhouse. Spa ou1 • excbance i.bd./at al SlAQO,lllO (at 2 yn, pr .. fer fntll1. 4'10 ' • Com~teKilcbens flnlpllce fr pool. Quiet Jaata. ()ceao view, patio, COY• pioreb~..,,~UJ. ... n eye 0...-..WOUS for cat· ••l•Oll • 8t. $US. M Service:'£! area. AdaLLa, 00 pet.a. erect parkl.ng. 1 2 BR, 2 1 .----------tawtrdl ...... ...i.~udlreldn· ~fl_lelaanta . Call 111 .-0-to.Um~. _ -·-• .,.__ -BR._. .. ,.. Wik. 10 turm IOI'" Jvur 10 en ~Hull, t75-8000, ·-freewa)'landlrvine -·---; · bch.~551·5870 ~O .... T 5 AN 'tllliimaa,....lac. 2 lrt:=.1>006 NewportBeachareaa. So.OoMtPlaaaarea,dlx3 "'"~Dir:iia-W•-•§,t!.':o JIU •• . ._ ...__ . JZ50 ~fel lrZlla ....... _..~· ·~~sm.S:i CUl.-·•moll•r .. ~ ,.. ..--11oaa .,.. fOf" ....... ;;e'h;; •• _ ... , ...... • Bl•d ;r..;;rJ-w'1t ' LC,. TATLOllCO. MCutltJ depoalt <ff> shue 4 bdrm house
ft • Ml••ed profeU-.11 I llt. Oarac•, IC '1 &$H. lbr ..,_. 3 ~ ~ b . · 611 w . '4CMll2 M.1-W (W)'SM-e541 for Muat be runt No drugs! Cl•,.. wwlil llM • af• paU• .. MU• •i••· ~· -,0 ~·~ .9•Uo.fbrd ' 1414100 S BR.ZIA.~. fenc. QllticatSoo $140 mo. 548-8300:
•• l rm ... , .. , .. Ora111e ~MM!! .... • Kkle'-. ~ok ~=··ldulta.nr Eaatald• 2 br, encl. ... \1iblk from ere.cent SS-Olr7
·ftl ==•...._.=Gt.-~ J114 fl26 4J : ·A1t~ Ne fie: ~~ 1741 Cl'8b. tm. 1ara10. W11her1dryer 811 bdl. Be~t. ocean""v-.-.. -... -.-.............. ---42-· 5-0 .,. Re Bltat4 -~ -.. ..... ••••••• 311111. 9'71-»11 • ·-•••• ••••••••••• 1111111·1111 boolt--.p. patlo. $350 ... ...:-... J..... remodel•d ... , ...,... • · • Uoa. We laav -..,.--•• ' LAOUNA BEACH MTR 541-71S7 ... """" _.. " · •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• • q ' ower IO lacom• pro· JdMl • UIW', iau-... 011iii"" C n•u 81JO. New• BR, 2"' batha INN. '71,..ll a up. Maki ..WWI · · *11!>· ...,.lf Home toe rent, e11 Bear Ml1lee avallable 9"· laf.~_.JIC!!il.a.lllOmo. ml• I ,1 8clrm1, "Sb1dow Run". 714 / a.Y., (Glor' TV. bea&ed Zbl',Z~eftl"Y&ll'leal· ... Vtrdearea2bdrm., OtMntrcmt2brtrplc.~. Qt.y atS11 f ; linens furn .
• rl' Cal1DmD. . M-.llr:U9 .,...... 19Ct. T ... ...-ar•'1511 poGI. 1JW, (714) 414-5114. t)'. t.-o ••· ft, Obie O~be. blt·U.. frpJc, ~ar. utU lncl4. Alto studio AS Di{ely pr (pl. Call
ftll•·11 ' ~•:;Bdrm. ~FromttOO. 38r. •1w Co•de. ree ~.eptffwy. l•"I•· Bu .. 11td. comp.~. •vail. m· llll. t:tSO. utll lAcld. No after3p.m.~-1B. ~Ill • H ~ • .. -w/room for trlr. etc. med .. SlfS/mo No pet.a ht.l/KJdl5a-03Zl Jl c: • vy \'I. o ctlllel'. pool, "25 mo. Ml....... l16' ... 17M111;142'1888 MMIClh~IPM On\laebucbl 2br.2008W. . ~ •ru7;a:=· -=ec ...... .,.,..... ... 1.1111 •• .; ................ -. a.,-... ,.,, Ocetnf..-.. """'•ual.
MlllD••••-~~ lllllalt .• _..__. J2'J 8bc111 term ....., 2 • s \ ALLAIULT Al'TS So. eo.t Plua. · 1area. 2 ....... ·--·-•••••-• a.1117;Gi.oeot -~ ;g ~~ 11 ...... 1141 . ...U ....,............,-BR.Jrom13TSUP Aten&. .............. 8L l Ba. bu ll·IH, •AL.· WGrld Lie SUper .............. L~ -·-.. ••-•• .... •• 9''41'70 . .:!".::. Peol •• JKUlli • Hf1Mb~apea, locl. ~., ..,._ w. zbr, Zba, U ._ • ...:not -8din.I. ... _
-aci ...... '!!,"\t'tllirlladaaA t M. dto. I ... fPla . • ·~..., _., 1 .................... __..,.,,_ New,Adult.a~ mill. ~· in1C1Uafn;'
CJL • ... • •· ~,_ ...._ pool, ....., r.'; atrium, J car M II l prrs· ltlir blUila. crp/Q.,. No 11 ol blll. ontectto 1111're ~a kit OI
191 dDM at =1i Cd.: ~le, peo~ ~:;:.:.;:g~ MDST. ..ta. suomo. 11> ~1:1•· ts . Ownt ~·1 IAfptmaUoa •• ·~ · •wm -·· · ... a ct's'Aia a...-...w ... _ . ...,1111. tm1.a?•. _ .... ..--. .
• • I •• • 1
I
....
. . .
PROFESS I ON Al. '=-~~'S!f!~~ .. ,,, .• ' 'nPll10 SDVlC£ Ex· taolatery Worll flllr,
p • r I • n c • d • TNeJi a>ounl UAll Ft Prompl•Pro1'ri ~nl• 94.l'NI ra\n fSU.lfl6 ----c em•ra ready
R • a u m e a I t o r m 1 Let '-do the bl& Jobe like
Sl/paa••Sut reports carpet,a, l\ooh, wlndowa •
U .U /pau•Typlna t>u~cb Maln tuanc e
.......... ...•.......
Jlll.aure lidf for Y8UUOO ..._ ..,..u. ttlc. rm
Nn•mkr. Ori••• -.oin
ll /pa1e•Su~uc rl p. m .iu.
Uam Zi' ea. Ca.JI l::veb'o ' TUROAY l>AV pp;
al TI41'11W'711 Ht -Get 1()W C~IA lle&ll'l
BABYSITrEk. Llc'd My ck~~ Sat at lilUI•
bomc. Ho• l~bff. Lov c.,.... ~~~· C.11 t0t ~~r . CM ar a .... ••••••••••••••••••f __ --~ .,....ee DL Any CoNl Cuatodlao Scr vltt
Uc'd malur" woman. 11b111 jobe C.U Allan or U d lnduat.ry ur rt Id <'Ill
mcwinl to llMa Verd•. Tony M6-l&d clunlng Sa lis iuar
ch1Actfto 1 • up 6'1 3'~ J ,.. _,. CJ 11 Dav Id e .n Ith> rd "V.:> I v M tl3.1 311• lnt.erior~ntn -
by Jl)' .•• Mi.-. ~/c.o.cr.t. ----························
,, .. ~ ......................
()(VORCE from rtlina
r
U1111•111 1· 1 'cm' u ....._ ....................... .. ............................ ~ .............. ~-;, ................ .
Home l~ovecaeota , 8aodY1Pn Servict. Wt HotlMclea.Uol Service Don't be foo.led wltb llovtai • haulia1.~•-~.pa.r.won. docU • Uou Ru.. do ill kiDda · ot npalr. hu oPeO}n11 for new ...-. AoyUme ll t.bf ~ bids mat.eriar1. lat of refs. reas.
,....... Uc'd coot.ractor. Pree8Umates. MZ·tMZ C\lltomen. a yn. np In per te c-t tt me f or 1111*1 IOI* e&e. Lowest .Jaeaf7WS31.
Reftlla•anr'e O.velop-I' , 1 Onn1e Co . Pree ll)rialden, Md 6 haul· ntH lo, town. John. ~
meot. -.au1 ............... !.••••••• ..Umate. lneured. Aft. In&. Dlt·lt·LaDd1cape. __. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• -----SPM. Call /wJ. C-"22. e..'1070 I ----'-~ OOCStudent. l Toot.ruck. Lorlm.7461. --------• *' f--·-" NMtpMcbel•textul'fi ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tralb. tree trirn. Dan•---------European Landscaper ........ ••••••••••••••• ... IST. Hl-14lt eo..JZ:M, Ron8f.2..5703. "JUS't US" bouMelell\· T.oD work. F&l.r price. Pvt. Duty
1
Nuned. Aval. D..EC11UC1AN·Prleed
11"1l free estimate oa
larp or 1mall ~. lJ~ ti73-03:19 ...... .......................
K4lB Feoclft' Oa~ ft ftoce repair.
~4000. &44-0958
G.•rJn1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ma. We't. boottt fl effi. Rels.••••ndys/eves. homed. or ay tm.
Lite baullnc·movloa. deot.Call~1'3 •• Home Care. Cal.
PA104 PLASTERING All types . Fre e
estimates. Call~ nu Garite· Yard cleaning. • ·••..,! l,kietllecL Mt-1•13 .. RI tn 642.()705 Houlecleaoen. 5 yn ex· ••••••• ••••••••••••••• _;,.--------·1---------aa. ra · pr.J.Ocalttf1. Freeests. Brickwork. Small jobs.~.. P l aster Pa t c h i n&: ....... a Ca1UM2~7 or 964-'345 Newport. Costa Meaa Is -•••• ... •••••••••••••• Pl a ate r . s t u c co & .....a... lrvine.m.317Seves. PETERSPA1NTlll(G drywall. lnt./Ext . Free
••••••••••••••••••••••• Houledeanl.nl. Exp. lady , Ellpr•d. Reaa Rates. est.$4S-1&U Headache/Mlorane" w/ref.s. From $18.SO wk. Custom K~. Pat.ios. Free Eat. c.-11 Genet----,-.----'----c:~·ali , . • · ~atUPM . Walls. Fireplaces. Re· S-0658 .,_.. ~· i.inl JD prompt , tal.ninl Walls. 100·1 of ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ier. P one Gene I riltls4 locaf r e rerencu . Pref pelodq. Ext Ir lnl. t .. baths, comp. room ...-1916 .... ••••••••••••••••••• ~12. Low rat.es. Rers. Free adds. Carl)entry, elect.
GardelWll. cleao·ups 4r H:u rde J 1 Mind Your Manners Joe. est.saM780.~ B&C Coos tructlon • ., l~c~~ George h••••,e••••••••••••••• =~~b=~ C=t~ab~gr\la~~~ P\ae Emr. Painliog by s.-0512 • r
• rmal. 980, Actloo Leaal CAJlPENTR Y. -Olocftte btt~ Ir haw
REPAIRS, C'ONCRP.'TE lot Fast • elhc•ont
* ROBIN'S H OUSE· pets .179-5701 Extremely r e as . R.Slnor. St. Uc .. Ins. Try Kitcheo & Bath. Finest in YARD REJUVENATION O.EANJNG SERVICE, 668721. me.836-SS552Ahn. cabinetry desir . Free
•.
~~~r;:;:':J.:upr~ =.:.=hlx clean MOUSEaPetSitti9g Profesaioaal Brick Bk>ck WM.LPAPBIHG .est. Heritage itchens. ~£_!'lo&-plu1llni1• Bob. Want 8 REALLY CLEAN AllYtime. Reliable local Ir all Masonry. Ball Relsotfered. Eves. 66l-OUS Bob.
Call anytirM ~5820 Re . ~12
MAfUNAMONEV MORS ---Bkk:Pf budeellnl bill Carpenter • cabin et Foundataoos retatn1n1
Typ&oa,~l~ I
~-SmJ t>ua'. • WCI'\, lmall Jobs Ir ~ w11ll1, blocks. pa taos.
&.DdiY1d&.Wa.173-7831 pain Free esl. 645-2003. ~e'd SS-5013, 548'4309
_.9288 rel&n-lOSZ.832-8834 5Sl·SN6. Free Est. 63J~.675-1.2e6 ..... ---------HOtJSE? Call Gl.ogbam · •••••••••••••••••••••••
BANKRUPTCY Wu'• ~Dlr)' • 30 yn O;cnplet.e COD(rete JOb OR G11•r•Senlcn Girl.Freeest.6'S-Sl23 -.-T.. Block,slu:Ctooe.walls. QUAlJTVPAJNTING epalr & Reroof. All
••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Janlce's Raggedy ......... •••••••••••••• bridt pl n expertly Int/Ext. Neat. Reason•· l Y P e s . a; h l n g I e s . ~.riled. complet n~. Ooon. windows. set your forms. save
ed. MIO. Action Legal P11b08 etc. 5'51·2054 money. Ross. 645-9926 •MR. FtYlf e • .. __ •5 .. -··~•-.... ; .. o for n.tl'V\MIPTAX RETURNS inltalled. ~ priced. ble. Wayne (lXOY El rockshakes·compo-tar. ~ ,..... ~911'.......... u~-..:. Lie/Bonded. Bob . M&822l6 ""30 ""'-Carpenter, p.aiotin¥· thorough, reliable & Prompt.reuonable. 6'D-OlM,S36-9806 Free est. 541-.... .. ....
TypiQI.. ~s.tD C4rptt Senke Ca t ec:tur
Typtq Serv1ce. Prof. typ. •••••••••••••••••••••.-• •••••••••••••••••••••••
i o I · Bu sl n e s s or Sbampoo fr •team clean. Remodel, repair, gen.
personal. Ask for Vickie. Color b"!ghteoers; wht carpentry . old lim e
'r.;e.1520 cpts 10 mm bleach. Clean craft.smanstup. 16 yrs in
Reas. rat.es. 1S yrs 10 courteous 1ervice. NewportBcb.833-8199 G & M Pa1ntmg. Int &1-A_vaiJ_. ______ _
aru. 54S-17~ 645-1800 LINDA'S Mo¥llilJ . Ext. Cabinet fiolshing. Ir
-------• liv, din rm, ball $15. Avg area. Lic'd . Mr Palom· P R 0 F E SS ' 0 N A L rm $'7.50, couch $10, chr bo. 962.&114 WRITING : New r e -SS. Guar elim pet odor.•---------leases, broc hure s, Cpl repair, 15 yrs expr. Bent's' Coostr. Remodel· Hau.ltiaEski loader. dump
grants, resumes, educa-Do work myself. Refs. ing, pati06, & landi;cap. detrlc, ••~ ~'tc~-~~· 6onal media materials. Sll-0101 Ing. 5.51·2054. 551'1090 ...,...,
~5270 --------~ Classified Ads are the
amwer to a successful
ga.r1lge or yard sale! ll's a better way lo teU more
people!
SEIL idle Items with a
Dally Pilot Classlfied Ad.
642-5678.
Gel GREEN casb
for WHITE elephants
with a Classified Ad
Call 642·5678
Selling anything with a
Deily Pilot Classified Ad
is a aimple OlMtter ••.
just call 642-5678.
V.:••lt .... 42S 6-ws Offlu...._. 4400 ..... W..t.4 4600
...................... farlt...t 4350 ....... ~··············· •• .,. •••••••••••••••• ~.
BIG BEAR Cabin sips 14 •••••o•••••••••••••••• Office si>11ce-Newport Attention UDO. HOME pc>bl Lable .c:oloi-lV . Cost.a Mesuln&le _ce.nLeL_Laue office OWNERS or near prox-
frplcs ~16 ' garage$35mo. w /view, r ece.pl. lmltY. .Do-you-bav~ a
· • .642-8052 secretarial • day ume potentially beautiful
PALM SPRINGS 2 br, 2 pbooe at¥Weriog. Call home? Is labor too costly ba. luxUJ')', pool/tennis Wanted to rent garage on ~ r or r e m o de 11 o g ?
condo. Weekday special Bal,lsleorN.8 .for small Carpenter , married $35. per day. Moo-Fri. car6'1>92S3 Prime Office. 24 11 E. w/baby desires low rent
494-2197 Coast Hwy" MacArthur bowie In exchange for 1st Single enclosed garage $400/mo~67s.-0166 • class carpentry. All refs SKI CAllM for storage or car. Mesa from Udo Isle, 4"-1910 deJ Mar area. $35. mo. Prestige Mariner's Mile aft 7pm. FOR RENT Leave message 151-9905. office ror rent. 300 sq. rt.•--"--------s~ 8. oo Big Be ,.... __ .__._. 4400 $250. 548-5556. '
Lake. Last 2 weeks ~ __.. .. ._.../IW¥Ht/ Marth. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~R..tal 44SO At.IC•
Call eves: Deluxe «Qedical s uite. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
714-963·7792 ground fir., ~rooa del Newport Mariner's Mile ..........
S300 per week Mar. Realonomics Corp Modern 502 sq ft store. Oppue twtlty SOOS
Also available Appl 6l5-6700 2630(C) AvOn. Low real. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Kona Hawaii Coodo, sine 250.500 5q. ft. offices. 213-477-7001 BEER & WINE tavern, "" -Sl4S 1 l util 779 Npt Bch. Nets $3000 mo. 4. avail J.15 lhru 4·13, l'IVUI • DC . • Terms. Agt. 751-1400
$250wk. 979-1276 W.19tbSt.S40-2200. MMIHB"S MILE
Downtown Huntington PRlMELOCATION FA5T FOOD Npt Bch. ..... toSllcre 4300 Beach. 210"' Maio SL oo WATER. Available Divor ce. $13,000 mo.
One 2-rm office avail. fer retail or prolessiooal Terms. Agt. 751-1400
Cut Living Expensesl
Share a """"' °' apt 1 Houle-Mates Unlim.'ted
-
SUO. 900-1558. dfices. Total. of 3000 sq ROLLER SKATE renta.l
It. Can be di vide_d into nets to $6500 monthly. No
smaller uoll.s. Dtive by trouble w/city. cty e tc. 2633 W. Coast Hwy. NB, Priced to sell Agt ON THE
WATER!
._PLUSH sunu
350lo1300 sq. ft.
FmlmlkViews
Wet Bars
U.McsiM . v-. Newport 87s.8662
theocall · · WuhN f1oattt-s _7S_l_·I_400 _____ _
631-1400 lo oetd or 3 key people for ~~~~~~~~~I my rapidly expanding -bll&iness. Call to setup in· Fcrstorelsotfice space al t.erview. 675-Dl
reasonable rates. ---------500 to SOOO S. Ft. HEA&.1HFORCES
MESA VERDE bR qutCIC SAU
PLAZA High profit money
1S25MesaVerdeE,C.M. maker. Custom trophy ' 545-4123 8hop In Sao Clemente.
SS.S,000.
AA BEACH REALTORS
492-2100
The Moppets lo buslness
since 1974. Honest, de·
pend.able, efficient. or. lit:eS1 tlomes. vacancies.
TAXSERVlCE -·-••• .. ••••••••••••• stucco repair. 751·3448/ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Pers/Bus lo come Tu Morris Moving: Lic'd " ~1 · ramie tile Installed: Insured. Tll5886. bs 2639 CaUM2-6439Corappt. Professional ser vice . EXCELLENTPAJNT · flrs,shwrs,tu ·.547·
Lic'a. M&-2393 ••••••••••••••••••• •••.
MC/Vin accept. 962-4242 EXa..NT PAINTING dys, ~ 7W1 eve.
CALL 548·2706 ,_ Senlce
Reliable refs. Call Linda. Speclalizlog ln auto &
Wmdows & ovens. etc. homeowner coverages. Xlni work. 848~ ........
IM.Auoc..IK. People who need people 67S-0562
"Moving Out " About?" "Don't Delay. Call To-
day" Local & state·wide
serv. 24 hrs. 7 days.
540-4844
••••••••••••••••••••••• Save On Wallpaper Save On Paperhanging NOW IS THE TIME
Prof. • Reason. Call ExperiencedTrimming 75l·9171 Removals and Cleanups
UC. Ir INS. 645-8285
shouldalwayscbeckthe Make your shopping Uastom Wallpapenng Service Directory in the FUld what you want In eask!r by using the Daily All Wort Guar. Free Esl. things fast with Dally
. DAILY PlLOT Deily Pilot Ctassllieds. PUolClassified Ads. 673-4158 Pilot Want Ads.
MiiillMts. Tnnt • -••llh 5100 a..t&ro-1 5300
Dticli' 5035 ················'······ .................... ~·· '91J_. S3SO HtlpW..ted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• nfEATRICAL Lost: .f'emale Akita MICHBJ.R'S Mod1l ... Actnsws <Japanese, husky look· '" LOWESJ GlftsU .. ICkh log dog-L 'Titi~k fur. *Olltcal• ......... ~
lstT.D.'s. .. so
hd T .D. LoaM.
Fain.st Terms siJlce 1949
Sattler Mk). Co.
642-Z 171 S45-061 I
LOAN PACXAGIHG
•PLACEMEHT•
Equity Loans
Venture Capital
Minimum $50,000
F\naocial Consultant BKR. 6'.S-2509
Exciting New York· black ma~k. redd(.,h col· UAM-2AM 835-3749
Hollywood ty~penooaJ or w/wh1le ch~st and
mgml Ir deve ment co feel. Cur.l~y . tail. Last UMDA & VICKI
DIYll avail in . Only ~ in VlCIDJly of TOW o.tcal Ma~
thoee wishing a pro· ..,c h ool. Laguna . ForTiwfaoflt! ressiooal career In th"e REWARD· for return or Or C modeling actlog or TV known wher eabouts . Servl.ngall ange o. commercial fiefd should Needs Medical attention. ____ 83S-_73_13 __ _
awly. Call (7141828-0583 Owner heart.broken. Physical mass age by
eit629. 494-!l&iS/-..3317. 1ic'd. masseur l echn1-
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
lost or Found a pet? Call
Animal Assistan ce
League. 53'7·2273. no ftt.
c i an . 4·8PM Appl.
5411-2817
•S~UIM•
System -Maker-
PRIVATEPARTY Wbine-Groucb-
Found. German Shepherd
female. About 6 mos old.
Reddish/brown. Warner
nr Huot Harbour, HB.
~5054
Models It Escorts
Male· Female
Ann. Destiny, Sonny,
Erica. Marsha, Cissy
2A hJ'I serving O.C.
will pay mor:e for your CEMENT
2nd TD's. 642-3573 'A bagel ls a doughnut
CA5H·ANY AMOUNT gi~eo soaked in
On your home paid for or & ~ S300 not. For any purpose I Lost ..-
Newport Pacific •• .. •••••••••••••• • ••••
Funding
Oa95S-1055 Ev. 67S.S535
2nd. Trust Deed yielding
13+~ at maturity . fl.JOO.~
$.11 REWARD for the in·
formation leading lo the
return or a 78 Blue
Peugot mo-Ped with a
buddy seat that dlSap-
peared from Estancia
FOUND ADS ~~~~?8'3· No
· AR£ fRE£ Fouod 2-male pugs purebred vicinity Foun·
.._a•c••Rts/ Cal~ tal.oValley,call962-7198.
Ask about spec. rat.es
752-8708
1N~uw·1Dg Clerk /Phone
operator needed full
time. lmmedlaU! open--
ang. Full co. benefits . 5419-9671 ror appt. Balboa
Marine Hardwa r e .
E.O.E. M/F/H. ----
ACCOUHTIHG CLERK
<ACCT. PAY .l
Major Real E s t ate Developer is seeking a
bnght individual as ac·
counts payable c lerk.
Must be able lo use 10
key touch system "-lhu
ability lo type 40 wpm.
Ideal candidate will have
1·2 years accounts paya.
ble exper. with construe· tion exposure desired.
We otrer xlnt. working
SWTOUDdings & an oul· standio&. compensation-
beoe<il lfackage. For im·
med . conside ratio n
please apply in person al
...... OICltto..S
20IZBwlinessCtr. Or.
Suite 223 Irvine 92715
Alfumative Action
Employer
'*I a n~1/ '42-5671 I.mt woman's bracelet on Lost&Foilld Diamood Ave. Bal. Isle. f"REE room " board in BOOKKEEPING
CLERK
.......... ••••••••••••• Bl u e enamel w / return for compa · • au c1•ilts 51001~~~~~~~~~ diamonds Reward! ruoostup. f1exible hrs.
••••••••••••••••••••••• LOST: 2 blk cockapoos. ~. Any race. age. Lafuna
PENNY Vic. Goldenwes l Ir LoltMaJeRimalayancat, Beach sculptor. Cal Ed·
. McFadden . M & F . Spyglass area muodat4!M~ -PINCHER _892_·:rT_68_. _______ 644-059 __ 1 __ SocW CMK
ADS L~,:s .. touod: N oMr w1 e g3i an FOUND: I yr old med size ;:~:;·;:;;;;~;;~;:·;;;
•5400
ONLYR
Sell any Item or com· bin.aUon ol items few $7S · or less with a Penny
Pincher Ad. 3 lines for 2
consecutive days. Each
add.iUooal line la 60' (or
the 2 days. Charge it!
No commercial ads.
For more Information
and to place your ad call
642-5678
.,.....,. • a e. yr. sm dog, tao/goLd w/red blk /gry, looks like coU.ar, NB area. 2803 w. over 30. Confidential
Huskle. REWARD . .:!:.~ B 842-0272 ~ Baluvo,N.. 1---------
REWARD! Keys lost 2/8
near Glendale F ed.
Banlt. Wilson/Harbor.
Call 751-0168.
Lost: Cocbpoo type. 12 lb
fem. "Poob". Bloodbh
tan. Sprlngdale/ Ed·
lager. HB. Reward.
~ms
Fcund: Iriab Setter 1 yr
old male. Nr Bushard Ir
Hamilton. 212$/79 al 9 AM. 963-5305
Found: Fem bloode mixd • ~~ breed. Sal 2/24. ..... 54f>...62SS •••••••••••••••••••••••
-------JolMW..e.d. 7075 Found beige Pekiogoese. •-••••••••••••••••••••
Very n Ice dog . Experienced Praellcal ~1S08/644-3656 Nurse w Ith xlnl. ref.
Found Shepherd Collie
m ix . M e d . size
beige/golden. w / blk
back.~ 1508/644-3656
Wl&bes to provide TLC
for elderly. Cook. shop.
clean, companion.
Reuooable 646-7526 aft.
7pm.
LOST: Ladies rin~ Opal·3 rubies. Gift ror wife. 2·28. Want to sturf envelopes or
E . 1 7t b st .. c . M . write addresses at home.
REWARD! 642.()307 1"ina~9793
Your fri e nds and Just moved into town? M.A.t.W..t.cl 7100 ....igtai...-use Classi(1'ed 'lben "el arn.ualnled with FOUND: F. tao puppy, .. _.... ..... "'"" .. ~.. blk '""*"'. wht. paws. Vie. ••••••••••••••••••••••• when they have tbe Classified Ads. ~ something lo sell. They'll 'Ibl!Y're the easiest way N r . H . 8 . 11 bra r Y • Attounliog tell you how well lt toftoltJualtbe items and _964-_1225 __ . _____ _
Trainee
Excellent opportunity to
start your career in the
rapidJy growing field of
accounting. We seek an
Ind ividual with some
general office and /or
educational experience
with ability to operate
lC>-(U!y with speed and ac·
CWU'at'y.
Successful candidate wall
j oin a progress ive
Orange County corpora-t.iQn with room for career
growth and develop·
meot.
Comprehensive com·
pany paid benefits in·
di.ding medical and den·
lal coverage. Please call
or apply in person: 3952
campus Drive. Newport
Beach. CA (71') 540-6080.
Equal Opportunit y
Employer m/f /h.
;:worit==ed=for=tbe=m=! ==:J.:·~;:;:::::::::::y=ou=oeed==! ::::::::;] Found: English Sheep-dog. Wbt/gray fem . Ap· prox 1·2 yrs o ld .
Turtlerock. Irvine . Found approx Feb 12th.
im.3705
ACCOUNTING =..=;s TRANSMASK
~co .. ty h CORP.
#5010
The Dail.Y Pilot now has a new "BUSINESS TO
BUSINE.55" classification to
provide a convenient method ·of buying or disposing of
Business items ..
Sell yo ur s urplus ,
\ overstocked or .110 longer
needed Items ort iupplies o(
an.y~.
Whether buytn1 or selling
tee our··~ to BUiia•'' cla11(ftcatloo 15010. For mare ldfonnatlon and to'}>lace your
ad, call
FOUND small white
1 baggy dog . V ic
Wrookhunl Is Adams.
962.m2
........... _______ ,____ ... ~
W ~ ACC'TS PAY ABLE Wert with top notch Npt
Found MBZ Keys. Vic. Bcb flnD in plush ofc le
• IJdolsle. llOll•RT......,. very promolable posi·
,. ... ~~ suo acco111leli'5 ~~ru.~~'\1:~y .......................
RELAXING MASSAGE
BobJames·Lic Muaeur Out.call 9-9, 4N·Sl 11
There are many new ~~ ""'""'-. • .-..642-~70
firms movint lnlo the --~
OranJe County area A D o L E s c E N T
briq1q about an In· RUNAWAYS : Doctoral
creasiaC demand for e.x· student desires to in· perienced Account~ng cervieW recent teen qe
aDd Data Proce111og ruoawaya at their parents
pealOl*I. (2 perent lamUy ooly)
fer study. 875-6125
AllftlTISlllli
SALES
'lbe D91lY Pilot bu an ,..,,.,... openiq ror a
••I•• person wilb oaw1paper display ad·
vertf1iq aa"rleoee. Good 11lary, com·
m61tkm aad uc*Jent
frlDI• 1Noeflt1. Ex·
eelleot arowtb OP• ~rora penon With caner amblUooa. cau tor a1D06Dtment. 111-at1,ni.m
.OIU•ICOAST
DAILYPILOT ..... , .. 0.. .....
--~
•
' J
1 -, •
I
I
I i
11
• J
' • . ,
.. . . . .... . ' -. . .
a lWlVPtL.or Thutia'ii,llitelit,1m ~'W.hd 110~ Htt;W..tict 1-100 MllpW..tect i11ootwpw..t.ct 11oaHlllpW-.ct 1100 HlfpW~ noo -...., ~ OCI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••~;; ••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ •••••••••••••• ~?.~;.~ ..... ?!.~! ~?.'!':.~ ..... ?!~ .................. ?~ ..• DrWM o ck1111ner Pff Olrt •<riday to ald1bu,•I· IMSPICTOI MICHA.MIC p~iwerln& auvlce 1.1.SICalfAIY _________ , __________ moralaa or arteronon ••:nmnwbotrne• re· Expettencedw/aircood. at«CulUsP/1' c.11 Coldwell Baaker . ~" lodepeaduc 8ulDlll a..&JlU " Saal• Ana Rel.Ired O.K. queaUy P/1' aecrelarial l"IAIMH tune .up • Ii 1 h t :ra56.l · lAC1.&Da Niau.I omc~
baa&. u au~Q& p 141 eoa. w ~ "' 1.,!!!-1009 duUn + houae11tUn1. To learn all DbaMt of In· medwlJcal. Good salary UC'f!me preferred. For
nJen Qall D Kritlollta 1" I 85 IOI a :mpa':r':.h:~. Hel Loe I S4B·7S20 S1 n11e. no ~~~t\on llluat paaa It bendUs. Cloodyear N)(OP9ATOI IJllormaUoa eaU Ul..oe.3G
for9'111t ... ..., MIW :artt abolal )Oil 'lm • v • co ~":ptr rn chlldrio. r..~tcaJ 'E~c~ ·c°li 1\reS&ote ~nt baok eeck· or-.12'23.AakfOt'Uodl&
hdfte0t£:ok mediaa wen pay l&Sll Proo\K'er .._,.tOAY ~J:· · · · • IMMll4 ln( exper1nced PBX Beard. r.q.aaa Oppor pk>ytt ACCOUNTS ~I ror ea apoolnlmenl tlll. -.ot73 PMT-TIMI . Medicll f'roftt Of rice. ex-Operat« for Sat. only. ~~~~~~~ ••• ~"'""OanNO... 117..0061 • ~---·.ua•-ope-•-1 Contact L . 01tvl11, .. _ ... ,, .... _t,.-·-•arffelp IVA """·-•• ••• • . DllYll,.ALU Mornln1 • afte roooo lnturan~. Property • • ~""' ..... · ... ~. ._..._ ... """"'""' ·
Hut 01 urvlceman, Need • .,.... .. w. ~8~ of flee • o, vao cl, .. oPPOrtuol· shlftt, lronl de.k tor Qlaualty8ec'y,aiency p~lfklCJty8aAk l.f:i~~: ~01:::.00~ '*' J 1" up rnid ~1 T ad N~• Ac · l d ... MuitbavevaUd~CHC buly tu omce. Plea1e C.11Maw1ae7~-ot90 Medical Secretar y / EqualOpporEmployer -•-i.1-.. ~.a I I t • CO m m er C' ta peni09, 81.... OV9 r 0 a :'1.. ..... d ...,., ' write 11.aUQf quaUflca· £ 0 E ~t E•""'r In pey, .uul wor.._. .. vuu. 11fltG'la UJ.... _ a Lo&a eJlDtftH~·· Pl'f• ~:.&:,um re-tiooa to !JS.a Hamood. · . . lna. bUlinc ar ooOkkeep-PBX OPERATOR Will w/ full club privlleae15.
APTMANAOER f~ J\alJ tJcne ,POii . CPA. 3041 Bu1lne11 1D1urance tni' Salary ss-te per hr. train. Pan lime. Fri & ~SML•Sun.be~7500
hr IS u.nlta In Coela Uon1 naUab~ Pleaa.e C1 11 ~t 1 8outh Centu.:._Dr . Ste 103, Fount.alo Valley br,aoeh Commensurate wl\h ex· Sal nlf!hf Upm·7am . J ...... bper'd roupl• rtl1 ~· P 1 0 ' 40 h DllVllS Irv~,\.A.t27LS of lat .. auto lnauranc:e per 9'1IM652 Mui\ ype . Contact
lluJ baod muat luvt' ~ •rtort 1 l't lilen ex womeo 2$ yn or produclog ;agency has • Maurine. Newportcr In'!~ Restaurant Int 7a.a..1600 prw. ~ml.)'J>itlf lll' olcNr. know the coast ColfCoune eLUterapply the Collowln1 lmmed. MODELS•1'"ASH ION um Jamboree Rd . N.u FOOOHAMDLR
ma ••r Wife bUPI -~~Illy vt:Jn .. ~~1·~' .. •'~-. "'-t ••-aw .... '-or 9am·2pm. Weekdays. .......,, .. ,.11. Coordinators. Resumes ~1700. E.O. E. •XP Cal 14Z ~07J or _,,_ .. IV~ rw,, .• .., ..... _ "'~ ... -........ Ne wport Be ach Golf .,,.......... WRITER t Cuitomer orient ed
(213)-..Sl u..-sa '°AM - -more. Or anae Cout Course. 3100 lrvlne Ave. UNDER o. Permanent Prr Accounts person, over 18, we train r...&~ty Cler\ Typbt lmmC'dl•t.e Ydlow Cab. 11300 Mt. NB TRAINEES PO Box lTIF. NB. 92663 Payable with General Apply direct 9am-Spm. -Af~~~f;CmEPT101k0!18.!.,1 f!mpk>)'etlll/I' opentn1 Oeneral Ole Her rmanD. l''ounta1n · · No experience necea· Models CootnK1or In N.8. Hra. T-ACO BEL . 2900
.., ..,..., "~ ru dutMl8, aood lYSMOl l liiUa Valltiy (NO of Sh1ler #'!!.. D ~A T sary. ---..I ........ __ Oexlb&e. 631-0210. f'alrview, Cost.a Mesa. time. f Olt' bi·ncflta ne<-MHry P~rm.n••nt b tt lwn Newhope Cs v-ft•..-• ACCOUH'TQ.HK "1 -.v...,.._..s:
Newport Hoth anA poslllon. Appl y 10 l!:uclid) SALIS JOI MOW Experience helpful but Modeta-MaJe&lFc male PESTCOMTaOL
l t•&6S-1040 DANK pmooo or91 notnecessary If y o ur fa ce h aa Study Job fo r rq~hl SAILBOATSALESMAN ----•TB.LER• ... ....._UQ4.'1' ..... • "000 PAY GOOD Salary commensurate character , Is high t I or t Experieoce preferr ed ASSIMllllS -1.........,..W .,u_&'""'l'~om., 8 A ~c ~bolcau\1~11 u • th ri "-b I fasbkln OI' loob like lhe pert00. ra nu . pr • KonaMarine67S-l403 rwcW IOI' •wlnit bltts. PART Tl.M E E-0 ... ._ -.. • u " or P/f Knowled1ab1e Ill HOURS. GOOD CON· wi expe ence,. a t t· girl next door. C.11 for an shartn«. group health. -~~rf.~'h: ~I~~~· ::= ~1~1:en ~w ....... :Jr ~ ~:·~~oJ:!nt ~~~GotgfN":;~~l. ~ii!f~·~ ~~~8fs~l~~ ~~\:'t!r'!.~e~~Y~ ~~~~~il<rr:~: 5:1~tt.er. full lime. will
t'l1ttri642-m4 S.vtn111 and l.uan nr .. ___. Will teal " evaluate. FASr GROWING OM· come17_,.n~~ otrSflice,2al8t could be mQdehoa as Rd.S.A, 6311842. --~ Is prodUl'Uon PAN y PR 0 M 0 TES ..,.. ~W'S • earl,y as next week' So ~MBLV WAREHOUSE ~ tg~en~~=J~: Earo: to QlO per wk maaoetic components. FROM WlTIUN. TRAJN Fountain Valley don't hesitate, call now. PHAIMACY ClEAK
Small e~ron.at partt, wortil'I coOcliUons and ~ uoo. Placement Call Valor Electronics ~A ON AR G E TM ~ N ~ ~vector)' Control & pric· w for Hazel ~dde(~;.o~ h~~ Sales. Customer Servicl'
Rep pos1Uon open for
Ptr emp . tiexlble hrs.
store dlscouot. XJnl opp.
C,o!\la M e s a .
Montgomery Ward.
Forum los. Co. Call Mr.
Be Id.in S4.S-824 3
Lst ahlft, oo expertentoe bemlilAI. CaU or apply at asmt. ~l·9lt4 54().9264 S T A R T S • • 1 M . mg, slupplO& . le recelv· 631·5800 per wt. Mon thru f'rlday.
Dl!CftSIU"Y Euclleot fr. bnoch: Q> looktJltforpartOt'full Engineer . design. Pfl' MED 1 ATE LY •.. mg, eome lypma. maay NewYork West l2·:1> pm t.o 6 pm Rcfa . ~e beoefiu. Apply AMERICAN hmo bookket:per 10 electro -. .hy,d.raulic coo-K-E y B o A R D details N.8 . a r e a ModelingAgency req Plea11e call Mrs M~o::::~t:~~k~. ::0 Newport area. Call Cln· lrol systems. Relired EXP E R 1 EN C E 64>'70t0. ' MOONLIGHTING ·~*ll YOWlg 644 7S7~ for ·1n ~l SAVINGS dyforappt.864·11810. O.K.~1006 HELPFUL. WE HAV E J .6.lli..llTOR time pay Part l e ,&etvlew btwn 9.30 and 12
:MOISElToroRd COMPANlON Id t OUR OWN TRAINJN9 11V"'111 work. Call for ap am LagwiaHills to e er Y Eqwpmenl rental yard PROGRAM PUT ON BT l'UU lime Moo-Fri. Ex· 968-4237 1....:...----------Sales clerk·
DRUGSTORE. Assembly Ms. Goldblatt lady, 2 days & nights-per needs man for 1eneral 11fE COUNTRY'S TOP ceUenl benel1ts. Bayview ---------week. Non smolu!r , llte duties. 2075 Harbor 81, ORGAN SALES Coo u-"""'"'Th MOTHER'S HELPER. Pnnung F\aU time. Mon-Fri. 179-2816 dul1es, 557·9891 o r CM PEOPLE. CALL AT v. ~p."""'"' unn, live IJl. rm & brd + sm
EquaJOppty 64&-6565otS48·26?A 0 N C E b 0 R C.M.642·3506 I t TRAINEES EmployerMJF ESCROW..,.,............ s a a r y , expectan 1---------Construc tion Pr oject fOUU""~•-lNTERVIEW. RGAN motherOK. TIG-2551
<OR EXPERIENCED>
Micro
• Electronics
BAR GIRL-Neighborhood
bar . .-UU or part Ume.
Olst.a Mesa. 646-5544
BarmaJCls-Port 17, C.M.
Top pay +. MJlture pref.
646-3666.
We are seeking in• Bellman.Applyinperson.
cbviduals ror first shift See Judy. Surf & Saod
poaibOoS lo our Produc. Hotel. 497 4477
~.~nt. WewlU Boat Hardware Sales
traJO the r ight In· Person P/T2=a awk dividuab in the m icro ScbOcltH are ·
elect.rooics ind Witry 2900 La!~~ te.
Newport Beach We have 1mmed1ate 675-3324.
Manaaer .Growthorient· Elscrow company seek· EXCHANGE. STAN LAIOllBS
ed Tustin bued builder Ing quallrted exper'd NUNN714JS86-7302. General L aborer s ..... ,...ulin woridog manaaer to lake needed immediately for ~-. g, aovernmen· charge. Outstanding OPP· GUARDS l• lal Pf'O('eMing, deaign & lY for fi.oaoclaJ & pro-lrvtDe compaoJ.\i bui ding
budget responsibilities. fes•lonal growth. Our l'UU & pJUme. All areas. trades dept. U time. s a lary nego tiable . " Unifor ms rurnlshed. Apply: Forward r e au mes to empk>yees are aware J>( Ages 21 Ot' over. Retired THE IRVINE CO
Karen. Akins Develop-this ad. Send resume & welcome No experteoce 1071 Camel back
MOVERS. locat Orange
Co Cum moving co. needs exper'd , dependable.
driver. Knldgol in all
aspects ol business. over
2.5. Call Dl-4926.
menl Co. 310 West lal St., salary requirements to: nee. Apply Univeru l Newport Beach 644-9010
Tu.<JUn. Ca. 92680. ~i~ ~ ~: ~~~ Protectioo Service. 1226 F.quaJ Oppt,y Employer MOVIE EXTR~
COOK·CookB helper for Mesa, ca. 92626 :~~~t;_~n~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ soughl by Holly wood
retirement Presid'ence . Experienced shoe re~air 1-tMootbruFri. LEGAL ~llETillES da;~u:i·~~ ro~ Hrs. 12-9pm. erm. posl· •-f' S'd' For growing Newnnrl Id Uoo. Excell. waces & ~n ... att.er . 1 5 oe Hairdresser wanted. • r:: out.going 18--70 yr o s benefits. Call for appl. Shop, 494-lEln. male preferred. F\rm. 1 exper civ · lil, 1 wanting lo break into c:orporale; good skills .• movie&. (llil 761.,J244. 581-5140 All 0.HK 494-567'1; Laguna Be"llch. SH. lJeauUlul offices. oen y 1 DE o c As T 1 N G
COOK·Oays . Apply 1n Ir vine bas ed h o me H*Stvlst view. congenial group, SERVICE: <now in 4lh
BINDERY
Port Pharmacy
2727 Newport Rlvd. N 8
HB.P SALESLADY
Experienced. full time Experience or r()f'better women'sready
Trai11ee M/F to wear. So. Coast Plaza.
•S•. Presa Opr-,_Cal_l _!>4_~-----
Dcnlchoft. Mtlltl, Al ~Duk Dfdl. etc. Expanding electr oo1r to. ~~~!_lock pacts d1 s l r . Good _.,,_Foldown base+mcenuve. Bkgmd ,..,.,,. in elect com""""nl APPty: ~~les, ~urch. or~·~~st
~H .... IC ..,1 serv Hi-Rel Distributor
1 ~ " ,..., Sales, 714J638-4S41. A~lc
PUIUSHIMG· ror Anne.
SYSTEMS
2230S. Duponl'Dnve
Anaheim. CA 92806
openings in the followmg ---------
areas: IOOIOCHPB F /C person between 3 & 5. builde r Is seek.log a Large Salon. looking ror med ins. Open salary· year)
Mon.·Sat. Ancient briJht enthusiastic in· hall' stylist WJtb follow-Call Sturley or Peggy ~~~·~~~~~~~I EQualOpportunaty
ISales pu.sons. wanted.
1be Bay, 303 Mam St .
Balboa. Meos & Women"
Sportswear Jm med1a1~
Part time operuogs for
week-ends. Ca It 673'5650 Pas. w/prom. F.I. R.E .
Invest. firm. Xlot opply
for exp. le matu re
person. Call 64().-0123
u_ arioer, 646-0201 diVJdual for ao excellent i .... HB a-a Call SUsle _~ __ 7035_______ "-""~IC IUSl .... ESS .. ___ tmlip•lo•y•e•r•M•/•F--t:' eotrY level position. The ....,.,. ... "' · ' ER _,;;J/I "
Cook· Experienced Cry ideal candidate should 963-07l7 -UMO DRIV Penoo lo work 1n LA . lsALES RETAIL. office
cook foe breakfast & d in· possess alleaal 6 mo. of· Hospital NURSES.Aides. Prv. Ply. Newport Bch. music bwsmess. job ln· Product ion Wor~ers : supplies & stationary .
ner. Top pay, good ficeexper.with40wpm. All shifts. LVN or RN . professional, exper. ·eludes driv10g owner ~~RCS5~~L~~~S0 Fulltlme p.os. avail
lk>okkeeper-FJC for one benefits. Bob' s Family typing. We offer ex· J.11. Newport Convales· nature driver. 24 to 55 from Laguna Beach to · 0 · · Phone for appt. 557·9212.
o( our clients in So. Restaurant. 1409 S. El cellenlworkingsurroun· cent Center'. 1555 yrs.$17S-S200perweek. LA&back.494-7430 TOOL GR1NDEJ!S:S3.93 .ask for M r . We:st. Compr eheos1 ve c om Orange County. Mini C.amino Real. 492.~ dings & a chance to ex· Su . A e N 8 References. 64.5-6156 br · · l o S 4 8 0 · EL EC · Newport Stat.Joners Inc paoy benefits ancluding comput.cr & credll exper press your talents with a penor v · · · 213-822-061l ext. 284. Need dependable Aide for TROSTATIC PAINTER . 1...:....:._:...,_ ___ ~-
ma}or medjcal 1md den· desir able. Rayden & COOKS f ast growing h ome Hostess Malure woman .-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-,;-.-.-~.-,;-. elderly man ID Laguna $4.47 to $5.51. PRODRUSC· ~~ms\!:iss, f"W'~ sail lal Call or apply •I Narey CP A's, 110 E . builder, For immediate ooly. Ideal for PIT 10. HlllsConvalesceotHosp T ION WORKE : ot. P· u 1mf'. persoo to 3952 Campi.I Paliiada Suite 201, Sao Houlihan's Old Place Is consideration please ap· come. 11 :30-3, Mon·Fri. MACHIMIST upmto7am.496-4226 Male/Fe male. Furniture _t>J._1_·1842 __ . ____ _
Drive, Newport Bearh Clcment.e.492·s:.r7 now bir ing: Sautee, plylopersonal Apply in person al 6 MllLHAND 1..11mrE~ '"IDES lacers. Furn1l ure /\s · SECRETARY / GI RL <n4>540-«l80 We are an Broiler & Pantry Cooks . Ch I o-k h · "~ ~ s e m b I e · P a c k 1 n g e qual o pportunity CABINET MA.KER·2 .Yrs ~ly io ~rson. 2·4&m r~satfolMs p.m.: ares ac ens For prot.o-lype mac tne n.....rat.ors. S3.67 to$4.40. FRIDAY. wanted by m-
ood •-f <'t" N """"'BWl'--·sCtrDr. Restaura nt: 3344 S . .,hiv\ lo the instrument 3-11. Good salary. Coun· Vt""'IRO~JOftDO ..... dependent oil co S,alary employer M/F/H cxpw .,. ormaca, y,4880ampus. . -. ~ Coas H C M ~. fth ·1 1· trYClub Co Home "" " salaryopen,apply260 E. Suite223lrvine9271S l wy, . . diV\SIOOO eo1 too m· 20362 Saota n~~a Ave S..,...,....,. ......... ~.~~}1'.abl e. p h ont' TRANSMASK Dyer Rd. Suite M. Santa COOKS-Private Club Affirmative Action dW1lry . Working from """"'~ "'"~ .,...,.""" Ana seeks qualified sauce & Employer HOSTESS blueprints. sketches & C.M.~~l 2SnS HaUadaySt.
. broiler cooks, 1·2 yrs. ex· Inte rviewing between verbal designs. directly Office help wJbookkeep· Manufactures or high SECRET A.RY
National Mortgage In~
Co has challenging pos
avail as Secy to VP of Ml<tg & secondary Mkl
CORP CARRlERS. L.A. Times. per. a must. Call for Foam cult.er. no exper. 3::D-Spm. Moo thru Fri. wilb engineering, to as· iog ex pe r . m·ature qualJly aluminum out·
• early A.M. hours. Irvine appl.64.5-S000x520. necessary. Full time or Apply Rusty Peli can, sist ln new product de· person . Late typing door furniture Call ~~~~~~~--~I area. saD0-$400/rrio, no Ptr.642·5702 273.SW.CoastKwy, NB. yelopment for world Telepbooes. pt·llme. Call _979-0 __ 1_J_1 1_:_~ ..... u~l_l _4p'-m __ -= collections '44-0SSl / COUNTER GIRL for dry wlde well bore nav1ga---------•1 ~. cleaner in CM . ~f exp, Front desk help. Apply in HC7TEL-Asat. Housekeep. tlon equipmeot. Lathe lris6'2-6506&S57-4393. ASSIMILlltS but will traiA. Mst be person. See Judy. Surf & ing Manager for private experience helpful for P'tllCtSIOM CASHIER neat. 546-9"3 Paul. Sand Hotel. 497-4471 , c Ju b . Fu 11 t I m e . more variety of projects.
Production Worker. Hot Mg:r. Good secy skills re· OFACE MB.PEA /\Jr Balloons Layout. qd. Mortgage Jending
,,.. ___ , of'" duu·es. ID· culling. seam1nfi, rig· bkgd desirable . Send
Open •n o• available a·n Restaul'aol ex""'rience ---------7 : 3 0 · 4 Pm 1. f U o I o o = O""'n, excellent _.. ..._,_ bl A 1'~2 5PM CUSTOOIAHS Gardener in exchange for benefits. Cal or appL ,... .. .. E 0 E
\n:UQcu " gmg. F\aUt1me w1I train. pt I lud cld'g, fJhog, e rrands, Call S42·3S45 com ete resume nc
ausc. can 54(). 7622. ·---------a.ng salary htst.ory to p 0 P recision in.strumenl UC>Ua e. PPY · · T a pt r e nt. S pacious tspac .... ~. · · · n--n-..-•s3U06 Coast P /T 7·3 :30 PM , F / 64.S-SOOO x520. Sd-•1"1c Dril " g Coo· shop. Applicants must ""'u uou.... grounds fOI' 55 unll com· au.ui enjoy the challenge of1_Hwy-'-._So_.La_guna __ . ·--3-U::I> PM. Ex~rience, plex in Costa Mesa . trol. Corporate Head· Office Manager-Sales
t ro u blesbooti na &1--------· ref. req. San lemenle 642-S073or (21.3)866-38Sl. Hotel ' quarters. Newport Good opportunity for ad· c u atom f l lli n 1 o f General Hosp. 496-11.22, Beach. Call (714) 557·9051 vancement. Will tram/no
mechanical assemblies. C~HIERS ext.23t FRONT DESK w ror Mr. Moll or Mr experience necessary.
Good maoualdext.enty& GARDENER Adams. MWll be 25 )'TS old or
mechallical apUtude ex· CUSTODIA.MS CLERK olde r & be avail. on t Min' 6 mos UJQJEM M•DK£TS ()peniu curreotly nisLs . Saturdays . 557·0824 or per a mus · · ·t · M Needed immediately for for reliable Individual. Posilloo Immediately Maida. apply The Ion at , q 14.6o90 . 1525 Me s a
exper req. E.O. · RCall Irvine company apart· Knowledge of plants & ir· available .. Outstanding Laguna , 211 N .. Coast Verde #206 Cost.a Mesa
p R O D U C T I 0 N 2910, Newport Beach, Ca
WORKERS Hood Sails, ~..;__ ______ _
cut-out " second lay out Sec'y.P it 20 hrs per wk worker s . f'u II time. (flexible) gd typrng.
se-3464 t e le pho n e ski l l s,
PllODUCT10H/ Aslist. shorthnd & ins. exp. prt!C
H.B are a. Part time. N.B. area. Workin g with Jo?lass. Cal1Judy752·5131
IB3-7321 ask for Tom E.O. E. M IF 557.tosl, ask for ay Openinp now a~ailable ment complex-. l'Ull & rigaUon helpful. Enjoy opportunity exists· for Hwy, Latuna Beach ----·-----
•G•il•ma-n··------i for full 'and parl·t ime part tim e. Excelle'nt xlnl company benefits. people.oriented person to ---------OfACEPOSITIOM p R o p E R T Y ---------•Cashiers 00 2nd" 3rd benefitatorfulltime.Ap. Apply 9am -12 Noon, workflex.lbleday&nighl Mail Informal environment, MANAGEMENT. Ex·
EXECUTIVE SECY
Exec secy to the pres1
dent or major homl'
builder. Liberal benefits .
Send Resume & salary
history lo:
AssOC. Rep tramee New shifts, No experience Pb'~ IRYl .... I CO Moo/Fri Persoooel. shifts. Enjoy xinlnt1 cd~m· TR ..,.MEE job security. advance· per'd individual. Xlnt
Co. In O.C. area n~s necessary , we train . '"~ " M A R R I 0 T T pany benefits, c u mg ,,_.. menl. first class medical compensation & poten· men & womep or couples Start al S3 per hour. ad.· 1071 Camelback HOTB. free meals. Apply 9am·l2 Some heavy Uflinf to & dent.al plan. Bring us t.ial. Must have license.
for P /T work. Many vancement opportunity Newport Beach 644-9010 Noon. Moo/Fri Person· stock shelves. Wil be basic typing skill. au.en· BaJbo'a Island Realty.
benefits for right people. for managemew posiUoo 900NewportCenter Dr nel. • trai n ed lo 0 per ate tion'to detail. ability to 673-8700. Dick The Presley Companies
PO. Box2200. N.8 . 92663 Callforappt.541-0863. to SS.SO per bou.r j f _ 1'1.-.. ---'· Ptr fem. Newport.Beach MARIJOTTMOTB. v a rl 0 u 5 m 8 i 1
1
1
1° g show up on Ume. and we ...:....:....:..._;__ ____ _ qualified. For interview ueo......,. ~ Equal ()ppot Etnply m /C 900Newport Center Or machinery. Exce e nt will train for a variety or Pt-thne Cleri cal. pleasant
Asst. Manager. Fabricu go to at.ore 36, Monday helper. Moo-Fri, 4 hrs pr Newport Beach benefit.a. lncludlog den· aclivilles . We a re a appearan c e. good SECRET ARY
per needed Colla Meat! 9am·lpm: • d.aY. $l.OO hr. ~3 aft --------• Equal 0ppoc Empl m/f t.al pjan. A&>PlY between strong, est.ablished and w/detall work. nr Fash Xlnl oppty for efficient 646-4040 185Glenneyre 5PM. 8am-Uam • ·1pm.Jpm. gJ"OW1Di small company Is. NB. Good lyping nee. gal w/lop secretarial • BdL, 494.9235 G••AL OfftCI National F.ducalion, 4401 Ca 11 Ju I 1 e Griem, skills to work In ra:.t AUTOPMTS ()ppoc'Employer Delivery p/tlme AM , LA Electroftic distributor, Hotel-Motel Bircl1. Newport Beach. sellingh . hto mtbuslc st.orelds 644-1230 9-Spm. Mon.Fri. paced Npt Bch R.E. ore DBJVERY I~~~~~~~~~ nmea deliv. $100 per located io Irvine, needs Management position. (Near O.C . Airport> t ~ul e wor · E o E MJF Well groomed femalel=Q.EANUP week. Laauna Beach. &irl for ofCke duUea. Immedlat.e opening for Equal Opportunity ~days.&gouplo$67S · · ·• C&llU.la.83J.2900. __
over 18. Gd drivmg re· · persoo want· _4M:;..;.,8496~:__-----Oood opportuolllet plus ambitious, enthusiastic ·Employer~.~~~·~~~~~ Thenit'sup to/ou! I.E. SALES Secretary, Prr.insuran<'e cord Must live in C.M. ed part Ume Cor bakery DELIVERY 11 you od a excellent company front office manager . = PAYABLES. ()peOllllS now avail. in expe rien ce . Type
&Tea. Call s:;g.z:ioo rortn· in Cos t a M es a . decnt pay Ptr job St-$6 benerlta. Contact: Bots .Musl be responsible & MAMA.Ga for YMCA COMPUTER. our attractive. we ll 6Swpm. $5.00 pr hr.
t.ervtewappt. Ph:548·:1>31. hr + Evs ~9pm, Ms l Tracy, 8am·Spm, Moo exper ien ced . Sala ry SUMMER RESIDENT BlUJ.NG. fumished Laguna Beach !HPM.lrvine.957-1337
,.... .,.RICAL haveownlmllpSSl-0842. tbruFrt.PhooeS4i-0954. open.~ply Roy Fraser c •up l""'at-" ID San "'""""""ORY. o{f1ce, ror exper. or new·""'--Ptr 3d
AUTO PARTS ......
ALTllMATOI
STAITBS
£leper permanent top
pay+ bolpilal, med lo.a.
pension/profit sh aring
.plan.
aal W. l.STST.
SANTAANA
"""""' or J •~ P-sley Sao l".a "'" ""' u .. ,,.,...' ly li"""osed. enthusiastic """''"'Lary ays per Deputy Clerk Wanted. f ...., '"' ' ee--....t•--M•-·. Hous· in"""" l:'VnERlENCE ~"' k I 8 M D 11 0 Or Cle nt.e Inn 125 Ave nli!Uu.wv ...., .,.."-"'. ~ sales....,..ple. Xlnt com· wk. Must now . 1 Oerical position availa· • very pen n General Office. Expr'd . me · · log at employment for canboostsla.rtingpay. -1 •• 1~schedule &at.ru· Me mory t ype.wnter
ble immedlalely. Rt>· flower~.9P11T72• reception.tY'Pinf,bkkpg, CEsl pelmaendnilaen •. ~~~ oUiermembersoffam1ly MS-6630inNewporl. jy'._,......,.allocationonCoast Small congenial ofc
quires 1 yr. clerical ex·, ____ ..,..,_____ High aotituoe ro.. figure avalJable. Summer posi· tt:).~ 2 blks. from the Send resume & salary to =eoce. 40 wpm~Y. ing. DEMONSTRATORS work. Muat live lo vfc of n4/492-6l03 for appt. ti on ooly. Call 2131 One airl officet mature. beaci. wi'th ample off· PO Box 188. CdM. 92625.
l El · l -.. .. c li ti neat. good on pnooe. lYP· •a. to • art. 11, Fri fl SaH~ aear your OC airport. ectnca Housecleanen needed. 489-1-.. or app ca on Ing, lite bookkeeping. st.reel parld og.
ext.2J80f.orappt.Orange home. food.a A am ap-Cootractoc.540-7990. Musthavecar . MANAGER /Nlght 8 Const.ruc:Uooexper. pre· SIAUOMREALTY
C o u n t 'Y B a r b o r pliaoces. (714) 768·$573 General Office 549-9372 (llpm·7am> No exp nee. (erred. Perm. poelllon. 4'7·13'1
Municipal Court. £.O.E. or714-.a Ne wport Be a c h Mature lodlv up to $3.15 Call btwn 9am·l0:30am. --------
DENTAL ~ST·Croot 1s mortgage ban1t1a1 firm HOUSIKEEPEA 1 ln 1 yr. Co benefits, ins. S40-7454 D-.-1 Esta&..; ,.. ..... al .;;.........11 -•-No. La1u.na Camily D I .. I Cit ftC'UI TC ....,.,c back ofc duUet, X•tay has lmuJeU&ate O()eUAU~I pyt. beaCb communlty. 5 V.C, I Ca eave, pro ,.... •oll«a& Sall-ft ...,..WllTBS eert~. Would pnf exft for the followlnl po•· Clay week, live i n . ~ ~bat: ~ to perform akWed level We have al) opeoing in
ADJUSl'ftiM, !!>~Sal opeo. Ca 1 tionaREcEPTlONIST ._... .. nice quarters. ~~NGoM°!r~:~ work lo preparation & our ResidenUal Div. for
S SECRET ARIES S
COMPANY -· I b rd P6aWonavall now. Refa. .....1 .. ti.og of' varied ex-an experienced man or
G.O~~R.E./Acctg
.OO-Sl.200 Ranie Employers Pay All Fees lb Reinders Agency
4020 Birch St. Ste 104
Newport Beach, 833-8190
Call For Appl/ FA lab '64 AUTOPAITI HIWPORT• 'CH DENTAL ASSISTANT. ~.::: z:farv~lce pref driver'• lie. S.Ja:ri W.Jt,'cfar•. Anaheim t;rior • lntertor aur-woman poaae,sioa en· 'Mtnl~J.:· ~ t ••:i--.t11 temp. Mar 11-llaJ 18. lctn&DialdlTY...,qPULr Ulred. " bbard. 49'7·18H Cal races. 4 yrs. exper. aa thuslaam and int.eerily. U CL•~ Exp,546-aMl,'UU:ao. -t'LERK lfPIST Sat/Sun. MANDARIN CHINESE p ainter des i r~. U you are lot.ereat.ed In• !service Station Allen·
n:periwe. "'l be we Excellent posltlon for HSKPR·Cblldcare. Ens COOK. w/at leul2 Y1' ex· W-SlU' per mo. Apply beautUul office In the dant, exper'd . Day & oGamld • Dbr'IOUble. nPI Dllal.Aai,Oruturttl'Y rtpl fel'llOO. Musl type per.f7(0mo.40brwk.W In person, Fountain fa.nest locaUon. workin& Eves. l'UU&p/Ume. Ap· Bani wort' lood pay uedlrwriten =llDI c:d1.N.8.1Dq\lldetcoa· ~-spealdoa preC, matun9, H. J'a Golden Dragon, Valley S ch ool Dlsl. with con1en lal as -ply,SbellStatioo.17tb& wttb l1'0wlDI coa>paft1. ~v la ate a 6dee&Ull.6M-tlll. TYPIST own tranap, Mon-Fri. Inc. 2023 Harbor Blvd .. Corner Newl a nd • aodatel, we are interest· lmne,tJB. Call "1H·25~ for lD· ., t l t to N.B. Ref. '4oMl887 C.M. (714) 642-7US2 Talbert. Ftn. Vly. Fillo& ed In meetia.g you lo·•--_.... ____ _ svtewappt.. r ~ •itb ~ DelalAll'tRDA~l Accura e tyt• deadHne U-79.E .O.E. tervtewby appoinlment. ServStaHelpoeededlm
_Ba_bJllttler __ ...-:...need-led--. .:.-C_D_M-t m> wbo <!': tJpe ~1f:'wn'=1to°'°~~l =~1111~~ 1h~:;:w~ve~ ',,T ~~e~e Maat.erCarpenter.shlc · T W-.YM T.ytorCo med . .-UU oc pit. Apply
--.roarbome,11 yrold from writte11 reporu. ~ DdlJ Pilot PO Box »-Pm accuratalY. E•· lirls w/u rt. Over 21. =~= ~:f..11: P~~Jt~ n?ghtLw°ork Realtors • 644-.Sto !JOOE.CslHw)'.N.B. boY.--a:-;:bUtdee will in-= CO.ta Meta, Ca. penance detlrable bul 9:JOAM·l2:30PM Mon· uoo. UH eoirlneerin& frwtmds. Ovrl5. s. al~ n~ ... :-i.l ServSt.a Attnd. Will lrain ....;.;.:o--------t cl __ ..... a ~le· wUltralo. -.. . .,.._ -. .. oo week· h k II ~....,.,....... ~1 o + Call Carl .... --n ..... _ ..._ .• ._ v r11 _ .. -~ drswinp·wtches. ave per w to start. a A ... IM •L ••vv m · · -·-u•n.. m--·· tapbone and auwmn& 1be above poslllona are l y . Mutt be n e at, own hand lools, u se ~ ~"' A 4116-0WSJC. ~:r.J•b~!: =..111!!'..:.!f..~.~a;. =AL~~~: =r'~t:.~t!•!:i~ ~~.:.,~oesJ:1#:1 :!':::~·.:~~PARTS DEPT. PERSON HOSP. St•P•
SL. .1114W btO:• ~-~rk en· tlctlllN ... , snatoppty, open ...... We otter • llUOAllFORA.PPT. .aw .. dilt ta.oder llM IOOd arowtb poteoUal. Recept/Aaal. N.B. F-Tor WAllHOUS84AM
NllClll ~ wtlb aa ex· _,.. .........,, DOD• ,,~:,"t .unAw/lttx~i!:t' _ mWiDI eq\8~baod Send~~Jme ~.PO ~x P-T. loci. Wknda/Eves. STAIT •40 MOMTH ri'AiM---.,.. e ulary ad __.,...,_ ~· ltl-~u; ..... A ... ,A .... er, Its uan .,..po, ..... ~ Job--'•v ...... -..-~ bllil8ll ..... t ."Thla ,~ ~., COIDl»llY paid beoeflll. Pdm11 --= .... ...,
J•lllL •. ..,. ., .. to jtAI }=-·-.. IDied lm· n.-~-1i • "" If 1*rwted pleMe call ....oYM8« ~belt ::t:" tl~ • RECEPTIONIST ~ta~ :::-i:r 4:• can lot lalaot. •L--: Plllle replJ &11 •U -~ ~ otnce aL -MNCJ.tll£NTE ::ml·e':pute'::ed PAIT TIME -~lDcN~ \JW.5•'1... lt09C!tto.... .•llf-tl.~_oa1t ,,_DAILY PILOT la n · 4 1ean ex· ~~ TYPIST: acc\lrate, SHlP.PlNGfsTRUCKdls· •-.....lie~· ml>"'"111f ll*t. -GENSRAL orr1cs tzmoll~ • 111bttaD· •"1!' .. pArppb1r.; t.fU."9'1 abarp1 neat, brt1ht. ~ ..... , .... -e wlll train ~ .... ~ 1 . .,...&....._ .... T Jpllt~. accaartt• 1111 l*t ol ltl dlalrlbu· ._.. " _..... ..-..... r l a l ta n bl• ... ._, "" · .., __ • • or ~ __ K -cill•IMI. alnto-ft:rroutes,.· Emplocg;nt Develop· Adolllwau1ouw...--.. r •0 'I re • • ac:G~Yacb\l, 1631 ,_~, ~· ._..._.. " -d -......... 14 ...., aunetlve penonaUU., Heavy tetepboMI. ADDl.1 PlaceG&ia. CM .... K • ..-ea.u 1~¥; ~ --. ... :. I>' ~uirta. a terooon e -.._ · • ,_ _. vi • enJoJ WortlDI with ln penon. Trail Rliht •
fli'! ........ ~-. -· -~ --~ to't::r •• -.-uornc• lr~~otorlstd ~· ldda. Ov« 21. Start at 1nllerlllOOW.CentraJ.5HIPPI NC DEPT .
....: • ~ l .. 1 • illll ..... u ,... -1 l l • ~.150 per bour. Pbooe SA ~lnl • pec.ka1tng -u.•we • ~ ......._ ....... f Dtn~~~· •IJbera ncome a . , ~, -•2.u21 E•t. uo. an_ .... mutt be fut .
• ~,, J .• ,, .. , ,., Ca •Ci ._.11 ,....._ .._ uper .-..,,or' ODe .,....,.,,.bonutplo --------BETWEEN 4 :00-5:00 IWlable, Cood natured. acru'r~te • food
lt t1r1d llt ,, aJ&M~..f.," ..,, !!*~_,..I t!. 4ftce ct .e.t-~ boun <7 PM. mature uamatrul e=lht.. F emale ~re • . ~ .. n ~.~s-r1J:Jr• h ·~ t-11=:-. ---~· ........ ~r: .-i:I*.=. ... -~.... ,..~ ::~,.!~ w:r::-. 'gr. cc!:=.:med :e.:m!·
-
.. .., 1>9"""" ·llJF... 1 1~~ • .Jill !l:IU.; tr• =-CUI A..,I ~ come ... ":J':.C" """~nw Scpall '1 --.. preferNd. laqWtt ,_......... .. 1--. :": ~ ..!!t...'L:~-.., ...... ~ -~ ... ,_-:',.-:-= -~ ' . n=:,t•U• contact .,.,., m .._ 0'75l -unor;n -UfU ,~~t ... ::::::: f I Ouellet .... ..,. Plitt . Ada to •t n•·m· . Terry. M5-0tOI
.. '• _ l ':....,,~:.~ri.:I'=•~~ !EQ.;c •·f'. t :JOAll·?P•. =A: Onaae Cout =~:.='af. ~-~Foot Lo So
Y ·-• llr -MNl79 ..,..... w1D .... JOW' OoMtPlua. 1u .. .,. ~JOU want 11 I~.._.:~.,,,....._.,.,...""'.~"•... ~~N. .~= ~ WAMTACl"ION T .---.i. v upto&Mfilll&peo-1W WUt '°" wuL m to.UTClwifted ... do .. u..-Jm ll:~~"f.ltt'! ... '6:,::' 11111. __ _._ ~-"r:._ ., _ ,,CalJllNlll ..,.. ~ a-'blAdlttl.a?I ·Dle.CaD'roda1t MNf71. ~PUotCluall\ede. ll..U.IO-WTL •
' '
....
• I •
Tfll •~H 10 IO ....... ; IOIO Mlle It .... &•t ...... Sill tt•o ....................................................................................... ~·····················' Thuredly, Maroh 1. 1879 OAll. Y PtLOT
SHOllALIS TVPIST . .,.,t UMe, fw Admlrial Refr11er'•tor, MATTllSSIS Collec t ion Fenwick Z:S'O*'Oftado W•nt quick +• ... •/ ~W.-4 tltO AlllM.l.,1rted ,
Pl\ime. raaD or womu chiropractor ofc, wlll ~·Wt')' cle1n. lT S cu. Twin or full mittrcllt cuetom fl1hlo1 pole1 l&Ae. Unde.r market •l c:lilMM:a tl20 ••-••••-.. ••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
..._..dlafe.Uy-ahoel treln CaJI lor appt. SliO -....0 IM1A ~ w/.._la,COup.~·983:l '6,500. Owner : ~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE IUY fMW t712 ·
will tn.la racht peraoa cn.«no. WHhtr, dryer ••I• Caalut Pale 'old dr•s>•• or'JS,5'1.S '57 Chevy wa1on, nds ...................... . ~AA f \1Ullt.y Penoft f'Ull time Comptewly nrbwll, ,... Mo4M ..._ "9nt 108''1t84 • w/woven wood SaNaoa 20. full race, nu work . M •1'• orrer. Cl.UM CAii
HDIPHJLLSHO£S ~C:~:::=.W:: g:~~~::· ~~![.,,c\~f;. 14'-JOn ~atch'~ wovea =,ouO/Ben~ &4IH278 &TIUCIS BMW 750
Nhlhion&aland,NB ,..rail dean up ol tfl, $149 ucb. Salf' end• lilhiermCir:-X41~..I llOO.RooJac '57 Ford custom PU. ...._.,,,
, ,
___ MMDI_ ne. • maouf•ct•rtac St1/'19 So Coeat l\p *•I IUY * * etlOI" 61=" sio e.'. Santana 20: Ready t o chrome whls, shell. ex· DMlfl' "n., SCJlSEM • ..._, .. 0 ..... aoa. mtnor rt• ~ ui~ . Gd. coed. M0-031f race. U4·4lt1 Eves lra.s. 541·98a2Sherel. f~~-ooadJ. -~~~~· •aBdlkdil~I ...... -...,....... Good uKd f\arnltlJre • 9'7·3181Eves. . ...__ "....,... ~ .... • produt~:. PAUL OOllf;I ... a~ • G• l>t'yer 1\11 hut Apfilla!K'ea-OR I will 'NI Hoocla Trtala 2:i0 •• 4 M Ford Falcon Coovert!· 8000 mlles. Sf100 firm. --·pr I yn mm u .-avv • ....ttt ... Movu••• ... l l ors ... 'forV-· piece D•van "Orner 23' Columbia. traUer. ble. ~restored. Xlnl I PvtP\yAskforMr.Falk per w/lilaa4 pnaUa INC -.-... -.. "'m'* ..,._. -~ o _ ........ _ rood. Hua ' $3595 a.c.Ln.M&-.., ,_._ablit\oJWOPle, -Re661~¥9.C.ll. ..,., ~4 MASTllSAUCTIOH ftarc:f·Llh new SlOO. lB. ---·· exlraaa1I, tee. . ________ ._--. __ ....;_ ____ _
bl __.\acUOn minded lUJR.'IVrS AllNt ••.,.,.._. .. air• .. ,. '4M61•Hfl t'2t aaw. Xlnt cond. boom~. other ulru. 640-U36 WE IUY '76 BMW 2002: Stere o C....t~-0 ., 0., n ._,.. " r • SlZS. ~ ('114)41M-21J12 • llcrt .. 11•11 ···----1 ~7u -._1 opea. M»U r. .. 22 cu ft 11de/bl 111de tSJO WIJe, .--vw ... ~ ...... ~
611..& 8CREl"..N. co 9"Jk Waorur. P IT Day • :.::'!.....~ !.!:,t Bal olr .. ......... eos• ~!..~ =e·.·:hto-'gy" n.-, .. ~~ztwhl VHF •• '!.~............ USED CARS '!._dfer. 541-71'7 Morn·
be1pera tralne.-t Som ftltht thifu Pv& club ~--·-" ,..... " "' ~ ....... _,, • • CALI.PAPPY i----=-·-------helplwbtltno4 81lboaPfan fn·""30 Au&om90c __ .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ buod ... 231 CabriUo hlng. mut, many xtras "10DodeeCamperVan. ~ UaedCarMgr ''DVJ·S30I. White, auto. :io rM'C ---•-:•tt ••a• Sal1&in Mar a M . 11 4 Crear) CM. Muet see. Will h elp Im.a.ink.stove: lt.refrig, 540-5630 sunrf u
-----WAITH~OAWAITER ~,~ ccmd SlOO Old l(IW111wr. drti. sewtn~ OHlaFwwllae& W/allp.MO-mS.992·'561 eAec• gas, lg DeQ" tbl, k>mi.'oo:..~J~reo. ---------i A1>DlY&11psnooSt..vroa, - _ Ma<'h& more' 9Ul6 La l .. p wt 1015 CaJHiDielelwhlaJJrac-cabinets$2800.S40-1063 ~&iUt Goods . 3lli30Coasi .,_)', N B As.... 1015 Lu n M • Jo' V N t.' u r ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAa ..__,._,.,a ~ear, have 4 w...I Driffl 9550 c:.t t7 I 5 ~IT-:'"! ••slat m •·oar ............... , .. !Sla•-r ...... \;•w.--. ••••••••••••••••••••••• :-r.unee 41 •IM> Prf ••le: WOR o PROC'P:SSOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.,..,_ • "" Xl.nt new" used Ofc furn. nu boat. mstse 548·1288 ! ... ••••••'!_••••••••••••• 2129 HARBOR BLVD ,74 Capri. V6. AM /FM 8 """"''"',..-fc:rai.'~morn Part lllTM' ev .. run~ aod/ non"'C""''RNl.TUR• &tu v lna Sal.-M11>c planESU!ilResP.LwUSk 63be1n2777cbe1 -......... a1-/ COSTA MESA track.2.800c<'.0oodcond .
.-.-· ... ~ UV Allt weektnd W«k ·~It .-u-.... r u c. ~l SlOO 1100 i.how t c. . . ~"':""9 ngs lnqu.tre at i''rOD C • _ 9070 , -. IUY S2100/b8lofr. M2·1337 •-·ft-1000 B-'-•-• St P"i~nce on R1' bai.ed * nnw* mnvle LP album a '"""'"-avyolfi'-desk,drk ""''" .. _.."'rs ....... ..-qwpment pr .. rerrl·d un 50 SJ 1500 books U>' sso -valnutne n-•-.. ..... ••••••-••••••••··~·••• US1D CARS! W-9720
N Npl Heh A11ok (o NcwpOrt Ccnt\'r LiiW -fl'R.lOAY7·30PW 1747SMlUIA.oa,CMf133 w ......... ngbthaod SUPSAVAILAILI we·~ ... -.... wCbevrolet •••••••••••••••••••••••
Joey. 'F\rm. Call R.uth Draat'r ID1llsi1Wtk ... I .~2621 secretarl4l throw VACNewport&46-05Sl .... u..,._ 53900 CONSIGNMENTS S275/oew Must sell $75. ____ ,;;,_____ dealenbip in the Irvine
STOCll••L& CAS .. MMllDID
ltl ... ATILYlll
For retail sbop i
Fasldoa laland. Must
knowledgeable In tb
fietd ot rash.Ion & be abl
to work a 5 day week On
ly exp'd need apply. Cal °' stt Manager at
Fashion Island, N. B
6"-21662
srooc UQUlDATIONS ~-OSaaty 9?~~~MEs~~ 831·3634 aft 6pm ' NEE36D~,Bfboforatoew Auto.~n~r. We need x ray lt'1'h, r rr. 6 10 hr& ........ .-.... "'"'·....-_.,., 1lltee • al ._... your~ar! pr wk. ortbc>Pedic orr1l't', -T•S AUCTIOH Raver Ave. N.8 . Quabty 60' w · dsks. one Dick · 675-1393 JOE Fub.lol l I NB 2ia1SY'I Newport Blvd CM bousehoW items. 411" wal. d&k, 4 swivel
_.;__;,,:.:.• 11 • ~ a.Hszs 64• 1886 arm chairs w /pl<h. 4 Boat Dock in Npt Bcb. 30· MAC PHERSON
Maw i• •'9• f\lrruture sale all tbts armed side chairs. $12SO. maximum pwr boat. CHEVROLET
••• .. •••••••••••••••••• .,_....... 1020 week! Dinette sets $45 & value for $615. Call Holly SlSO/mo. lse. 673·3531 2lAutoCenter Dnve Allll IOOS r-• fTS. Le sofa $35. Rattan 966-2275. eva. 6'5-81'6days . lRVINE .... ... ....... ••••••••"!0 • bar stOols $20 ea. Ruge --.. e--t • 7L•7222 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Men or Woman's 3 spd solid Oak table $150. Minolta 101 electro· ~ ...--• -ao .,.. Stbwinn bike sso. Ceo· Sinale day bed $25. graphic copy machine .-. 6 Yu
AnbqUe Music Boxt's! tunan LeMan's woman's Chairs Sl0.$35. Coffee ta· purchased 10/76 serviee •••••••••••n•••••••••• 1---------WANTED!
SlotMachines!Clocks! lOspd,$75.675·9688 ble.$20.Lotsofm1sc 120 contract paid thru '18Kooa20'day crwser. L od IT
HlJGESELECTION ,.~ IOlS E 23rd St #22, CM. 11.s 1/20/80. $1200. Newport 460 Ford-Panther Jet. Tnldls 9560 ate m e oyotas. .,_ric• -. da.tly 640-9S23altS F1oorCovering. 675·1636 Swim'-lstep, bow r ail. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Volvoe. Pickups fit Vans. TIACHa lllNt•Ho.al ....................... · · lights. cover . tandom ·74 GM c El Cimino Callustoda)'!
Exp. Eng. Major for lg ........... Rea. Himalayan Kittens. Householdgoodl: Jrefng, 2desltsw/chrs . trlr Xtra s harp w/Gem top, spoke whle.
parochial hlgtlschool Open Wed. thru Sat. Blue & Seals. $200 avocado grn. very gd Vanous other furruture. Sll200/ofr. C.11963-2963. cellter console. bkt seats, Callf!~:S~· ~:~a l802Ketlering, Irv. Call644·2828 cond F /F ~s. Kog sz 960-2604 Tr•uportaffoft x1nL cood. Other xlras.
(714.-754-1777 n.w.J 8040 bed. spn!ad & headbrd ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• $3.195.5'8·~ . . 754-ml. , .....,. $32S,gametbl&chrs~5. "-otlr()rgaM 1090 e ......... ;:~:=::.;-;;:;~:-;;;;-:-:=-l~~~~~~~~~l ·••••11••¥••••••••••••• gold vinyl armchrs (2) ...... •••••••••••••••••• Cw:~rs. -I
Teacher. Ptrfor P .E. A An . 0 k S Wanted : Eng. Bull Dog SlO ea, wood end & side UPRJGHT pianos $49S lo Rent
ply Hawthorne Chris ~?ue a reverse pup. Good home. lbls SLS ea. Much more. $1,950. Grands from Sehl. l683S Brookhurst.. $950. 642·2164 or 556-2947 AnuH-.... Capo Beach. R l Ftnvty 673-0782 ......,........ $2 ,250. eb d 'g, re·
'Tl fWd 100. Xlnt cond.
Many extras. Lo m l.
$&!00.~eves. I..!~======~
Mlos. ... ow"fM
•DATSUNS*
'-" S.llctloft Of A1Model1
SALES·LEASI NG PARTS-SERVICE
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
· . . Small miniature aprl'Col _6'>1..;.,_·1_63_1______ fuWlb'gs, tuolngs.
Technician electr An&iqueDlningLa~can male poodle. AKC reg. GARAGE SALE · HcnyO.n-.;st
Older camper 4-sale, w I
rtuck $150. S tove
-rig. 640-2700
'64 Dodge Pickup. Rblt tram, new rear end. Xlnl
running eng. $1500/bst
ofr 646·3511, work
... ••••••••••••••••••••11M~t)tC
__...... __ ., al b seat 12. $150. 6 Rep· ..,,. ..... ,,,_.,. c ~., -..-Cabo 11 """"-....... c ydraulics. plewhite chairs. SlSO. • .... irn pty ..,. . .,7._ Antiques. Simmons bide-8600Hamlltoo Ave, HB ver cm pr. ea e
PtrreUredO.K.5'5-1006 Otberantiquea.540-0303 AKCTeacup Poodle pup-a .bed, oil paintings, ~---S3U77 __ 5 ___ dinette, sips four
TELEPH,...,_.E pi.es. M/F al8o Teacup 12xl4 brwn braided rug. s,ortillgeioock 1094 _54.5-_S8_J0 _____ --1 •12Ford'\4Tw/shell&hvy
"'" Stud service 714/992-2178 + much more. Sat l0-4 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motorb11ct lillel 914 duty susp. Runs great, Laguna Beach · 2946 Maul Pl. C .M. SALES Museum ol Art AKC Toy & M lnlature _55_7_·9922_______ ~&!~!~~.pads. rnE MO.PEDDLER • ~· 491-397$
Newspaper subs. Your 7th ANNUAL Poodles Puppies & 557-7279 New PEUGEOT MO· 77..,,. too, 18,000 ml. P .S ,
phone, 4 to 5 hrs a day. *Mrique Show & Sole• adults. ~1l•1CM11 IOIO PEOS Reg S4S9 No P.B .. AM/FM 8·lrack.
$200 & up comm. wk. Admi.ssion$2.50 714/761·'265 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1Y Rocio. $299.G3l·:E30 ' !'!!'!!_sell $4.300 /oUr ~&!~r~~~~~: M~hci,&3~:sat Sliver Toy Poodles. LU&GACiETACiS tifi,Shno IOtl _..""'7.>
1 to. 3PM Only. : to 1 Sassafrass tine. 957..s390 from your b\uiness card. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ 1~137E:,'b~s~r~~~ '71 Olevy Pickup, 350 cu Marcb4,Sun 12lo6PM orSJS.88:M Send one card for each 25" Color TV console 549-4 • · in New everythin g . PreviewParty4'Bu!fet tag plus ooe spare. We RCA. gd cond. $125. 774,551-0668eves. Custom shell. $2300,
549-3'00
MfallOIMO •••••••••••••••••••••••
··we need to buy clean
Datsun used cars" S Will Pay Top Dollar $
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
2845HARBOR BLVD
54M4 I 0 540.0213
r
{
Tow Truck Drivers ex· per'd. Top pay. Apply
G4'W Towing, 7408
<JI.ms Way., C.M. 6'2·1252
Thur, Marl,6::.>-lOPM Britlaoy Spaniel M. pups return permanently 548-7'95laf\er 5 77 Peugeot moped Xln 673-4499 Dona~,J25ffperapet rson AKCrett.,,f~6356· sealed attractive ta~ 41: Fisher soo·c. 65 watt. cond, must i;ell $25 ---------A.ti t707 New?9280ZX. Atr. P/S 4
oJOI• ... u Dr ...., tr m u· g 1 · 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pass. silver Lie. pd No.Coastffwy • s ap, ee n • r toe am/rm receiver. Mmt 962·7898 v-
' ..... _ .. 0 _.. n~/""'~ .. ~ .. 1 l.O. requirements. Pre· cood. Sl!iOCall 759-9367 ~-----1----••••••••••••••••••••••• Al.lfi '71 Super 90. Sta. $11.347_530-6400 _____ _ ~-""'" .. ...,.._ .......... toy 1 vent kl6$ & theft! For a Wgn. Clean. $775.
TYPISTS 1~~~~~~~~1~ • 045 persooalized tag enclose loots&M.-iM 644-0355 $181.82 PER MO Con>e work temporary S Fr . S 1 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wallpaper. fabric or Eqill,..nt ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Ford Van conversion· ---------1 .
with a company who ~ =-•s~ ~c :d . Cat. long bait. Fem. "Day Glo" paper & we "••••••••••••••••••••• Must Sac. '79 Yamaha 750 Has pwr. steering & 'iO Audi l~. Rblt eng & '77 2IOX 2 + 2 car~s about you. Im · drsr .,,,rm:ror, J:;.n~n-Goodshorlha1~~ .. !'!,~~!~-cal. will back & Uim your lo!lh.. McmiM ~ .. 1800 mi. Sells for brakes. all' cood., radial brakes. Michelin radials. 6 c y 1. au tom at i 1:
mediate work-top pay. usual pc. S200/bat ofr w ......... ~ tags. Or try two cards Eqili,....t 9010 $3185 Will sell for $2900. ~';:~·F ~ui3set ;:~~o~ ~ 1:1 !::fo . VN1l! All/FM-8 track steruo.
Call for an appointment. fiTh-9688 Collie/Germ Shep mix back to back. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64&85'M · custom interior wtucb in· transmission. Xlnt car rmts (Cap. cost S8SOO 557-006 I 2 h ts t PRICES KW V C D M --------1 Cap. RedU<'llOO $1500 . ....men IOIO ::fbo:i mos, s o&h o $2 eaor3/SS 3 • uo A , yna ote ,1972 HONDA Elslno~. eludes icebox, table. for automotive stude nt Residual $4000. 36 mo at ~Q~ off ice • ••••••••••••••••••••••• I e .631·3684 5. 4/5 tags$1.80ea. Gener ating Plant Entire Bike Recen.tly carpels, 'Swivel chair&· or mecb. $600/bst ofr. ILBl.82 incl. tax on HP· Complete $895. Call Rebuilt. Excellent cond. Uke NEW' Pn pty A 552-8375 d d l
0 overload FREIGHT DAMAGED 6/9tags$1.~ea. 758-9367 $1,000 . Call eves samfice at .SS. Call ---------prov.e c r e i I HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 ~Hllue 1050 ,10ormore$UOea. 494-4 S (714) 537.<A<a or (714) '12 lbOLS '4r, au\o, good <016TWP). ---------1 W. Warner or Harbor. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale$ Tax lacl\Aded lo.ts. Poww 9040 747• or see at 462 t 63'7·:&4. .......,. condition. $1500-offer. RACH LEASIMGt "--•-•-· ...,.._.,1 QUEEN MATRESS BOX NOCARD" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ann 's Or., Laguna ---------""•A-.: 11!..u\NV>I\ Mnow....,terly Su1·ite ''03'" TYPIST to $I 000 ~ ,...,... . .,,....._ SET • / Draw your own Or send '78 Scatab-330 TS o\)t. _Be_acb. _______ 1 ~Ford Van,.,. Ton. very ._.._....,....,........., ...,..., Ne';port Beach ..
lfyoueQJOy typing, your w CA.SHPAlD ·ee~ta~; ~e~ilo':e name. address. phone & drives,ssl)ow's.Loaded! '78 BMW RJOORS, uoder clean iaside & out. Call ._... t709 133-tlSO skills will bring you an sb~/Dryrs /Refrigs. ~m549-:m7 ~·u make one card per 6S mph plus. Stored on 8000 mi. Best olfer. eves.831-2.828 ••••••••••••••••••••••••---
xlntsalary In a gorgeous worici»eoroot9.S7·8133 tag. Add25teach. trailer. Must sell/best of· 545-912&5 • 1965 Al&Stin HealY Spnte '76 280Z 2+2. auto, air.
ofctnNptBcharea.Hvy n•nGAJ..NS.Used r . CA.SHPAlD Seodcbeckormooeyor· fer even.toas. '72 Dodge Wlodow Van. New eng .• trans., rear. AM /FM, $7200/offt:r
clienlcontact,soodfroot onn re ngs, For gd used rum. anlJ· derto: ·731-12161-.0..) '68 Honda CB350, Exe 8200. xlnl. $2700. New palot aod brakes. a.51163afl5:30.
ore personality, call wsbrs, dryrs. garur. best ques&clrTV's957-8l33 PILOTPltlM1'n'4G cood. Elec starter. must 847.Q42. Partially reupbobtered. 540-80i55. Coastal Person· buys, wese.rv. appl. Best 0 546-1200(.,.-tr) *'""" ,.... 1 ---------This car is road ready. 74 Dat;suo 8210. gree n. neJAgency,2790Rarbor, Appl.S3S--0911,5364330 SOP'A & LOVESEAT or P .. BoxlS60 Aslt forJerryPerlli.As sac.~· 6Jl· ... r77 at '6800DGE ~ goodtires,AC,43.000mi.
,...,,. sleeper S179. Century Cost.aYesa.Ca.9262ti 4PM. WlNOOWVAN sum 9&M448
"111 Help W ..tec1 71 F '78 Mako 30' ctr conaole, • $1500 94W . f 712 . AI.LJOBS FREE Model Home urn O'Neill Supersuit. Taped •"" •. 7 "' Mer'" e"'"ne ~~~extra motor ,,..,.. ..... n... n 210 H b k =::::-=:=::=::=::=::m=i::li•;;;;•;;•;;•;••;;•;;;•;;•;••;•;;•;;•;_;••;;•;;•;.;••;;;•;_;• .. -...,,,... U d .,...., • .... .. .,.. '00 n... . 2SO Bulla"" 5'9·....... ._ .. •••••••••••••••••• ,,. .,.tsun o-le c r. _._,, seams . se once Roadrunner dlx trlr. ~ .,... w Xlnt shape. $2,200. Call
DESK & CHAIR Com· doesn'tfilSllO. 548-0256 equipped for all fishing. frame ar-..mlsc parts. GMC '78. By appt Ol11y. 7 1' / 5 5 2 · 8 0 2 9 or
TECHNICIANS
ELECTRONIC
TECHNICIANS
'I
We design, develop, build, test and
deliver the best in high-technology
systems and missiles. Our con-
tracts and work are long-range -
lasting well into the 1980's. We un-
derstand personal development,
c,areer goals and challenging work.
At General Dynamics we're looking
for Electronic Technicians at all
levels, whether you 're just starting
out on a career or you're an ex-
perienced pro.
CAUllATIOM SPECIALISTS
ILICTIOMIC CIRCUITIY
ILICTROMIC LAIOIAToaY
MICROWAVE
MllSILI TICHMICIAMS
l&IAllUTY
llSIAICH Ir DffB.OPI tBIT
I
TIST OPRATOIS
U ,YOU want to work where you can
team from the best engineers ln the bua'*9. UM &be latelt eq=, arow ud take prtde ln ac 1
techDOlollcal challen1•, 1et in
tGucla wUfa • rilbt aWQ. Call mt,
loeSlelmala
(TU) • 1111, B1d;; au
iiid Ill'• talk ......... Or, come ID to ~ ... ...,,ma omc.. 110Dda1 tin FrtclQ, IAll~~IOPlf. U JOU ~ttr•f•r.1.. ..'!'Id 1our re1um1 to: ~SlfBKAL DYNAMICS Pomona Ylllaa. tm w. lfluloa m..s.,
..-.,CAll'NI.
000 .,. """" Makeolr.675·7494. Van bas 27 ractory on. 213""""".,,,...., binaUon for sale Like Carpet Mill Clo.eouts $10, . 7___, .. ,_.,...._ new sieo 5'4-0773 loop 1971HONDACT90 . lions. Eves. 645·7673. SA~FI~EContentsors -~-Y __ 11_~_5906_.,._·00_"_u_p. ·~2J~. ~~.b~~~!a;: New=.~$250. PXM>. ·~~~:s1~f:Z
bdrm house Century For Sale: Tiffany's or many extras. mint cond. '77 GMC Van: 1 Too, Callafler4552·7138.
Model Home Furn N .8 . Corporat e SlOOO TOP of $171 mo. Motwtto..1.Sale/ LWB. Fully e'luip'd .
Sf.9.:m7 Mmbrsbp. Call Debby e. ~9401. ReM/S.... f 160 Clean ins ide out. 644-9030 ---------1 ....................... _!la). __ 1828 ______ _
Handsome octagonal -W-,..,---_-O_W_SH--....... -ES-RENT: Lwt!lfY '78 Motor 'TlFordWindowVan. xlnt
game table+ 4 hi-back -USED Dn-•rs Home-22' Sleeps 6 , running cond .• nu saddle arm chairs. Near Wood en shutte r s , DUft W int /.Sum rates . radials upe •am ._,.,.. new. S500finn. 6'&-4594 miniblinds. woven woods Select Crom over 100 6t().858S. -.. .,.,.,,: • ..-..vv
Kgubed. brand newt Box 4'window tinting. 20-403 ·"TION BOAT ......._ " tt l I olfaUitema. "" For Rent : 20· Moto 73 Ford Van Camper 1 1~!r:::· .m~oo·k:h:Tr ~PEN 645-8981 17141 SJWltl Home. com r•.etel y Im, loog wheel base 'au
bdbrd. $175/best oHer. ---------equipped. Aval Easter extras $5.995. 754--0832 or 5&-7349 CHIMIM DI NA 673-51.33 Eve. SS7-6167. ·~Jeans 26' Edycrall Sportfaber.
Everything must eo. The spring clothes ar· slip avail. Call Harvey
Couch sets. d esks, rived. Adult" children 642-4644 bookcases, lots of misc mes. 633-7319, 997.1986,
Call 67S-l900 aft. 6. . ---------TISHIBA Copy Machine. DUW.i t..ble6cbalrs Med. also makes offset
Perfect cood. 2 leaves. masters. 714/962·7033 fSlSJotfer 968-7076
Eetant &Jus dining tbl,
wf m1r ror pedestal.
42X72. g upholstered
chn. New. Coat over
GOOO. Sacrifice. 96Mlt20.
0 ........ ,.. ......
Coataa1r1
DOW for sale. 20' " 40' leactbs avail. Call Rob.
213/830-0370
•n 340'L Extras.
$3.21115./besl offer
631·3625
..
• ' ' I .
I I
I • • I
•
1977 COROLLA
2 DOOtt SID.AM
"43,579 miles· A
little high f()( a n
but priced nght and a
good 9ood car t
(253SPM)
1977TOYOTA
CO.cu.A
5 spe_9d . 2 door
sedan Pretty s1l11er
with stefe<> tape and
only 22.-437 m11es
1555SOAl
Beautiful clean cer!
Fully equipped Take
adlfanh1\19 of the g•
scare (738UKX)
1973 VOLVO
IA5W.AGOM
4 spee d . air
cond1tlon1ng. radio.
Pirelh radials & white
w1fh blue interior
!222PCSl
978 FORD
FtfSTA 2 DOOi
22.263 miles. Pretty
white with custom
upgraded interior
(787UZVl '
1976 TOYOTA
C~IC.A 6TCOUPI 5 speed. air
conditioning. steceo.
vlnyt roof. (748PCN)
Good buy at
lt73 YOl.¥0
llMIS Thi• hae got to be
one of the c:teenest. prettieat 1eoo·s for
••le I n Orange
County! (009118~
55919.
...
..
'71 flOID WMOM ..,... ants.Ire ..
VI, automatic, pwr.
1teerinf• factory air
eood.. II/FM steie~J
luggage ndr 6: ONLT .-.~:::;::::
8,000Dlllesl U07VOZ>. $5771
SALIS. SBVICE
~LIASl-~DELJVERY EXPERTS
IAILl•E .VOLVO
18 Harbor Blvd. COSTAM~A
646-9303 540-9467
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
JOt,O :t.\RBOR BlVO
co~rA Mt SA ei-n 0010
ii El Dorado: retired '74 LTD. A/C, P.S/PB. G.M. Ex~utive. Owner New 1U blted radials.
driven only. Prime cood. Mialcood. S*O. 496-1097
SU.400 483-7893 '74 Galaxy Z-dr Hrdlop,
excdl. cood. $1700
Clll:•r•t 9920 ___ 644-_s:_see __ _
-·-•-••••••••••••••• '70 Ford Sta. W&D •. good -------•I oooditioo $$50. s.52-9260 aft6Pll.
'75 LTD Brougham.
loaded, whl. lo mi.
~ 1186 after 6PM. OIMGI COUMTY
'76'1\1RBO, S eqine. '77 fOLYO ·=clean·~cbero. int. (7tm.JRB0) $17,500. EXCLUSIVEJ..Y VOLVO 900 So.C:O.tHwy. oewpa.JDt.
863-&371 Larlett Volvo Dealer ...... IHcJt 56-2575
•'7'POtlSCHI iDOr...eeCountyl 494-1 IJI '78 Ford Fiesta. Decor
914 BUYorLE~E GP. orange, louvers.
2.0, 5 spd, i:.~:&unkt DIRECT 1971OMM!lleSS4-spd, 350 s~reo/cass. xlot cood =~~~£ ftmlfl:] 'fi~: ~7:'~: ~~"· ...
nicest aQYWberel (Llc --• - -ILA ............. ... 840-6217
e.NQQ) 2025 s. Manchester ---ClllYB MOTOIS Anaheim 750-2011 WAGOM Mwcay ff50 11t• Broadway Nels. TLC. Runs 1ood. •••••••••••••••••••••••
SANTAANA 'Tl Volvo 2MGL. aU ex· Power. $999 c a s h . ORANGECOUNTY'S
THEODORE 135-3171 tras. l«mi muat see. 642-Hlt/646·5201 aft . NEWEST
ROBINS
FORD
20b0 HARBOR Bl VD
CO'>TA Mf~A b42 0010
AU.NEW 1979
MAZDA GLC Calf.
5plcW Hatdlbocl&
$100DOWN
•n '24 POtlSCHE
4 speed, air cond ..
AM/Pll stereo, rallye
wheels. Suoroof. Black
00 m.ct. (95.SRKJl)
Sltf 5
Mca..C1M1c
z.l&MAIM
SAHTAAMA
543-9421 -plus tax & license
$119.98 per mOQlh for 48 ........ 9755 piob~bs on approved -·•••••••••••••••••••• credit. APR·12 .98%. --vio•-Deferred pa y m e nt •-• _. -
price-$5205.04. Equip-"LE CAI
meat includes 4 speed OF THE yir.••" traosmissioa 4'1old down l5Aft
rear seal (008500). The Good inventory lo stock.
cash price is only Hurry while ~ last!
$3820 MAD~~UC.T ptus tax If licenae 2l:i0 Harbor Blvd.
Mlrace. · CCJ6TA MESA • ~ '45-5700 21S0a.,-bor Blvd., C.M
645-1700 .... ~ 9756
1-------~-.......... ••v ••••••••••
'76RX4 Xlot cood . •t DEALEM IN U.S.A.
AM/FM casa. ster1!<>. lm· ROY =~·Lo mi. S3700. lffi CARVEi
Mllce•• ._ 9740 ROUS-ROYCE ....................... ~
·=S~ cc:;~~~~ ~-===ao11==-D-SUN_DA_YS __
offer. S31·0210 dJ1. '
m.1832eves • wkndl. '51Sllwr Cloud·l
'78 :llC) Coupe diesel. Perf = Sor '(,---~--------
P.P. 751·5106 SPM LINCOLN·lllERCURY
'frl Volvo 122$, runs good, Oiev '75 1.mpaJa 2dr. New DEAL£RSIDP
MOO or best offer . tires,sbocks,Oneowoer. UYR.ADEIOE
751HG Full pwr . L o m l. LINCOLN-MERCURY
Absolutely Xlnt cood. 1&18AutoCeotuDr".. "JI 4 dr. Sedan, auto, alr, S2 8 o O. Pvt Pt y . SDF'wy·Lake Forest exit 10,000 ml. Xlnt cond. 71~. lRVINE
540-1893Mustsell. 1-. '71 El Cam1oo SS4M. JC.Jot 1 30.7000
·~~olvo wagon, new .cond. very lo mi, A/C, '72Col Pm 9 pass. wag.
gd. 103.000 mi. Pvt r 1a1 PJS .• AM/FM 8-trk White, fully loaded ! pty, $2900. 642-8450 8-S & an aasb, calm body & Xlot' S2 ooo ~161 9:»3ooSa.L paint. 2 sets of wheels. · · ·
High perf. suaperulon. '78 Zephyr Villager ......., Used Must see to appreciate. Wagon: Loaded. Low mi.
....... •••••••••••••••• MSOO. Call 536-278$, $ri895/M.akeof(er962·Ul86
lllidl 99 I 0 5S8405 78 Monarch Silver ESS,
.... -•••••••••••••••• li'18 Moote Carlo Loaded Owner anxious to sell
'Tl Electra, all ext.ras, AJC. all power :good Wholesale 493-247S Aft
IOOd, clean cood. $-5,.995! cood. $7400731-8970 7PM
Call Art --------6'r.i-10ID 613-91B7 '72VegaGT:. .-Slug ,952
Xtra Clean. air. • ....... •••••••••••••••
is Qt.ate Wgn, 9 pass, Ml).2728/~5028. '77 Mustang V-8 lo/mi air, AM /FM, loade d oodcoad $4.SOO w/every acceasory possi· "13 Bluer: 70,000 ml. air C 6's.2l72 ·
ble. lownr 644-5361 eoad. new tires 4' shocks . --------•n emnn • • ., Nice int.. $5000 or best otr. '88 Must. 219, runs gl>Qd. ~·~ mC'1 new paint 4' brakes. Ji\&ll power, recent eog. ,..,_._ Slim . 847-0731 wort. ou tires, vinyl top.
BLDs gOOd 4' a nice b~
81 $1115/oh. 483-8087
'76 Brougham. 2 dr.
Leather. One owner.
•Cant. '79 MK V .
LOADED. 1845 mi. P /P .
$13 ,950 best offer .
714*4-8217.
'66 Mwst.a.og-Cleao. Must see!
482-5920aft6
'72 "442" 2 d.r bdtp. ruu
power. x.Jnt orig cood.
$1350. 673-2515 S484967
O ld s 1978 C utless
Supreme Broug ham .
Xlnt cood. Loaded $5850.
833-0887
'720lds Royale88,
$1000
Call 613-2585
'77 Merit v. midnight 'Tl Delta 81Royale,2.8..000 blue, Desl.per's Series mi, Xlot cond. S5SOO. to.cled tocf. mooaroof,; Elaine M4·7020 or
tac1e9. 33,000 miles. $9495. -~--------• ar 18895 w/car pbooe. · u Pvt part.)' 540-5506. eves Qmpaoy President se . ~.· ' ~~~~
9f J2 Toronado. Well cared
••••••••••••••••••••••• far. Power everything· 77 CC)aYITTE IAeded-Hatcbrool. Days
29,000 mlles. fully 714/ ~ Eves 714/ equipped. Full power, ....;:m_.aJ& ______ _
cassette s tereo, tilt PWo ff57
wheel, cruise control, ••••••-••••••••••••••• ~t.Ya~tem. (G895S) ·'15 Pinto Wagoa V-6, autq
$10,500 tram, 20mpg, low miles.
Mcca.-C1•1c $2900/offer. (714) W& MAiit ~ aftel" s p.m. 6: ~AAMA weekend• or (714) •J.OOO. est._, wkdays.
-1919 COLT
''TWllSHIFT''
10-SPEED
?????????
I FOlWAID. 2 llYBSl-SPllDS
CALIFORNIA'S
.GAS MILEAGE
CHAMPION!!!!!
43 H~;:y 26 ~:;;
£PA ~ Yovr """"-M..,V.,.,
5117"°_5111-N
For 80 months On approved credit APR
18 68%. Deferred price $713700 1nci. doc. fee.
tax. he. (Ser. 1200173).
CASH PRICE $4295 ;~l:?
SEE THESE DODGE
ECONOMY CARS TODAY!
•0-24 •CHALLENGER
•OMNI •D-50 PICKUP
'74 DODGE
1100 ,.... ....
Bl ue . 6 cy l ..
automatic. high back
sea ts. mags .
(037818)
·1 FOR FLEET & LEA SING
, CALL PETE RYAN "'°
SE HABLA ESPANO L
' I
l
I
I
17
I
BuntbagtoD ,Beaeh
· Fountahl Vf!J!~Y
VOL. 71, NO. 60. 3 SECTIONS. ~ PAGES
-..
.... . ~-f. 7 I 1
Your Hometown
Daily Newspaper
I
Iran Squeezing_
·Gas StatiOns· Clos~
A.s Supplies Fall
I
Jf
No Malt Liquor?
NEW YORK <AP> -Several
of the nation's major oil com·
panies began reacting today to
the Iranian petroleum squeeze
as they limited s upplies of
gasoline and heating oil t o
dealers. Texaco also announced
that ai:x>ut 2,200 filling stations
will close in four Northern states.
The moves by Texaco, Stand·
ard Oil of Indiana <Amoco >.
Cities Service and Sun Co. to
deal with the cutoff of Iranian oil
followed similar announcements
that about 2,200 filling stations
will close in four Northern
states. ,
The moves by Texaco. Stan·
dard Oil of Indiana <Amoco >.
Cities Service and Sun Co. to de-
al with the cutoff of Iranian oil by· Mobil, Atlantic Richfield,
Phillips and Continental Oil.
Texaco, the nation's third·
largest oil company. said it is
closing gasoline stations "im-
mediate I y' · in portions of
Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio and up·
state New York to bring its sales
"more closely in line" with its
refining capacity. ·
Texaco said it provide§ .. only
about 5 percent" of the gasoline
sold in the affected a reas.
Texaco also said it is 'provid·
ing customers with 00 percent of
the gasoline they bought in
March 1978. Amoco said dealers
will receive 100 percent of their
March 1978 dcliverie&, but no
more despite increased demand.
while Cities Service said it is
providing 80 percent of the
gasoline and 85 percent of the jet
fuel it shipped a year a,o. .
Deputy Jack Dwyer <front) and two un-
identified helpers were among those chas·
ing an escaped bull in a Salt Lake City
suburb when the quarry turned and
chased them. The three·hour saga ended
when the animal was captured following
shots from a tranquilizer gun.
Sun sa1d it is euttang ship.
ments of home beating oil,
kerosene and diesel fuel in the
six New EnJtland states, and
New York, ·New Jersey, Pe~
s y I van i a . De I a w a r1' a o d
(See GAS, Page AZ)
John Wayne
Recuperating
From Surgery
Newport Beach 's John Wayne
is beginning to get around town
again after undergoing surgery
for stomach cancer, but he's
made little headway in getting
through the hundreds or letters
f'rom well wishers delivered dai-
ly to bis Bayshores home.
"He's been getting out a bit,
90ing for a ride, playing some
backgammon and .cards," said
aide Pat Stacy.
"He's doing fine. The doctors
are very pleased with his prog-
ress, and he has gained a little
weight, which is good • ·
'
The 71-year-old Wayne has
been resting at home for nearly
three weeb, recuperating from
the Jan. 12 surgery at UCLA
Medical Center for removal of
his cancerous stomach.
Miss SUlcy said he bas been
reading a little of his mail, but,
"it continues to arrive in large
bags, there's no way we can
• answer it all."
March Makes Bow
With Rain, Wind
A mild winter storm front .
gave March a sodden inlroduc·
tion today but forecasters said
Southern California skies should
clear by Friday Gusty winds
from the northwest were expect·
ed late this afternoon.
A spokesman for the National
Weather Service in Los Angeles
said the storm blew in from the
northwest early this morning
and would continue moving
through the area the remainder
of the day. He said up to a half·
inch of rain could fall before the
storm front moved eastward in-
to the desert regions.
Winds from 15 to 25 mph were
forecast beginning in the after-
noon, ~reasing in force by Fri·
day morning, the spokesman
said. Surfing conditions were
poor off the Orange Coast with
small, choppy surf.
The Harbor Patrol office in
Newport Beach reported small
craft advisories were in effect
from Point Conception to the
Mexican border. Winds up to 30
knots were expected off the
coast by tonight, a spokesD)an
said~ with the gqsts decreaslng
to 15 to 25 knots by Friday. Vis·
ibility was reported at eight
miles.
Travelers advisories were in
effect also for persons driving in
the mountains.
Rainfall figures throughout
Orange County were fractional
by this morning. In Costa Mesa,
about .10 of an inch had fallen,
bringing the season total to
12.18. In Huntington Beach, rain-
fall totaled .12, bringing the
season total there to 13.54. In the
city of Orange, only a tra~ of
rain had been recorded and in
Santa Ana the moisture came to
.09.
The Laguna Beach Police
Department said the latest
storm was causing no im-
mediate problems in the
Bluebird Canyon area, where
homes had been-endangered by
landsliding.
The California Highway
Patrol said the rain bad caused
only some minor spinouts on
freeways. No roadway flooding
was reported .
Valley Staff
Hikes Average
7.1% Friday
Fountain Valley's 216 city
employees will get their
paychecks sweetened by an
average of 7.1 percent Friday.
The approved pay raises were
set to go into effect on Nov. 25,
1978, but were held up because
o f a now-defunct statewide
salary freeze, city Comptroller
Howard Stephens said today.
The freeze was recently
declared unconstitutional by the
California Supreme Court, thus
allowing Founwn Valley city of-
ficials to release the pay raises. 1 In addition to the raises on this
week's pay checks , city
employees will receive raises
retroactive to Nov. 25. This pay
hike will come in a lump sum
March 16. • ·
The raises will cost taxpayers
SUW,012 for the Nov. 25, 1978, to
June 30, 1979, contract period.
City employees currently are
working under a three-year con~
tract that expires in Nov. 1980,
said $tephena.
He eXJ>lained that the raises
were held up because Fountain
Valley was among cities that a~
cepted co-called "ball out"
funds from the state in the wake
of Proposition 13.
Gann Plan on Ballo.t?
BJ SEBECCA BELM °' • .,..., ........... tory," be said ... Anything 1ela worken to succeed in their one-
than that and I would want to day drive cin a mishmash of or·
wait for the Secretary of State to pnisatioGal problems, Including
determine." failure to have an adequate sup-
He aald tbe reason behind bis ply ol petition forms on band.
caution ln settljng for the Gann predicted success for
mlnimum number of ritbtered wbat be called tbe Spirit of 13 in-
voter signatures neede~ ttiatlve drive.
became a eerta1n percentqe of He said tbe volume Increases
tboee collected will be found to d a 11 y b a t be n u m be r of ·be invalid for various reasom. 1lpatunl collected and, if the
Gana•• In Santa Ana today praeat pace bolds up, the ·ln· to speak to eoanty realton at a ilialive wW be on next year's
breakflllt meeUns at tbe Elb ballot.
Club durtq wbleb he received At tbe same time, he was
addiUonal petttlom. 1barplJ attkal of 10¥ernment Lat fall, OD 8 trip to Onnie tpeadial.
Count1, Oum 18id hl1 YOlUD• ••waste "llnd fraud run
Nert ••,..... to collect tba -tbwhDb wild Ill tlUa country,··
•111atur. aeeded in • •inlh b.e 1akl da1 on eJectlon da,r. -. . ~ 1J put California
Only I00,000 •ere colleettd, la tbe lllDeefNot aa a ...... In bow•,., Ille r9'Ql'tlld. tlala eGmltl'J, tbe tax refonner
Gem blamed die failure el bit claimed.
...... -....
.
' .t
OR. WADDILL (LEFT}, ATTORNEY WEEDMAN CONFER
Defense Statement Schedule<rln Court Today
Waddill -Financial
Defense Expected
By KATHY CLANCY
OI U. Dally l'llet St.1tt
Or. William WaddiWs at-
torney was expected today to re·
but the prosecution's contention
that his client faced bankruptcy
and feared a malpractice suit if
the infant abortion survivor he is
accused of murderiog had lived.
Defense lawyer Charles Weed·
man said he would offer an
opening statement of his own to
an Orange County superior court
jury today after he had listened
to pr~c utor Robert Chat-
terton s day.long statement
Wednesday.
Waddill is accused of stran-
gling tbe two-pound. 15-0unce in-
fant known as Baby Girl Weaver
after she was born to p n 18·year-
old unwed mother following a
saline abortion auempt by the
43-year-old physician.
Waddill's first murder trial
ended last May in a mistrial
when jurors said they were
hopelessly deadlocked 7·5 in
favor of acquittal.
Chatterton, during his opening
statement to the jury Wedne5·
day. said be would prodbce wit·
nesses who "saw Dr. Waddill
choking the baby and complain-
ing that the baby would not stop
breathing." .
Chatterton also contended
Waddill was without malprac-
tice insurance al the time and
that he was racing bankruptcy
because of personal invest-
Market Hit
ByG11nman
A husky gunman escaped with
about $200 from a Huntington
Beach market Wednesday night
after tbreatenin& to shoot a
clerk, police said. '
The 10 p.m . armed robbery oc-
curred at the Alpha Beta matket
at au Warner Ave. There were
no injuries.
lnv.U,aton said the robber
approached a cashier and de-
manded money from tbe reg-
tster. He lifted bis sllirt to re· •eal a italnleas steel handgun In •
bit waistband and threatened to
shoot the cashier lf she did not
~r•~ -....... _ _...
l •
/If '-
ments.
Weedman told r eporte rs ,
however. that Waddill's accoun·
tant would testify that the doctor
was not in financial straits and
w :ls clearing at least $200.000 a }'~!!r from his medical practice.
Chatterton told jurors the ob-
stetrician also knew of a case at
Johns Hopkins Hospital in
Baltimore where a doctor was
sued when a brain-damaged in-
fant survived a saline abortion.
He said that doctor was forced
to pay ror the child's support in an
institution for life. ,
The prosecutor a lso contended
Waddill "would be concerned
about lawsuits and thousands
and thousands of dollars ...
since he bad no insurance com·
pany that would 'protect him in a
lawsuit had Baby Girl Weaver.-
lived and been mentally re·
larded."
Among those expected to
(See WADDILL, Page A2)
C:oast
Weather
Their feet hurt, tnit Pat
Boone's four dmlghUrs lceyt
on dancin' from OM end of
F'cuhion laland to the other.
The11 ~re on location in
Newport Beach for the film·
ing of porlioM of an £0$ter
television apecial. See
F'eaturinQ, Page Cl.
INSIDE TODAY
Gusty westerly winds 15 .' I
lo 25 mph tonight with j
chance of rain decreasing
to 30 percent. Some clouds
but mostly fair Friday
with highs near 60. Lows
tonight 46 to 52.
l•tlex
........
•
A.I • DAILY PfLOT HIF
( Pllol L.og~·~
Iran .Disaster
Of Another Kind
•
By J aaY Cl.AtJ SN Of ... ~,..... .....
When I rud or the farce and dlsaater tb1t la lran to·
day. l blush with enOlht\r fuce lbal W&t. r·raonal dl&aa~r
when I hrst met Mohummed R~i• Pahlev
IT WAS THE StJMMEa o/ 1957 or w1:s ll 1968 Th·
rog of tlm~ dot.1a1 Lrlc~ th1np ti> tho memory
Floyd KaJb4.-r . lhen neww director ror KMTV 10 Omaha,
hurried U.'i oul of lht' Nf\C afOllate·~ newsroom with tn·
:.trucllons to 1nterv1~w lht-1h of Iran
Th~r"' wt•re thrt>e of us Jerry Hansen. now a new:i pro
ducer aat KNBC ' 1n Loi. Ange.le¥, myi.elt,
a rlrtt year tt>lt>v1s1on newsmen. and
someone else. That (og or time blun hta
·name.
AS WE PACKED THE station's on·
ly sound on him n e w1> camera 10
Ham.en'1> car, the conve r1>alion went
sum elhaog lake ttus
HANSEN. '"Who the bell 1& the
Shah of Iran'>"
CLAUSEN : "I don't know. He's got
C&.Ausu. to be a king or somethlng."
tlANSEN. '"What do we ask tum?"
THIRD NEWSMAN. "Gee, I don't know."
CLAUSEN :· "Where's lran?"
HANSEN: "I think it used to be called Persia or
something. Lots of oil and sturr like that, I guess."
CLAUSEN: "Hey, the shah is that «iuy who is talldn1t
about divorcing that doll-what's her name? Queen
Soraya. Wow, he's got to be out or bis skull!"
HANSEN: "Yeah! I remember. This princess what's.
her-name hasn't produced a male heir in the five or six
years they've been m arried."
CLAUSEN : "And I think Iran is close to Russia.
Mohammed what's-his-name bas got to be concerned.
Maybe that's why he's inspecting the underground
Strategic Air Command headquarters out at Offutt."
HANSEN: "You've. got ·it, Clausen. You do the in·
tcrview."
AT LAST. AFTER months or pointing the camera at
Hansen, I would see myself on the tube come the 10 o'clock
news.
A cold sweat beaded my forehead. What should I ask
.Mohammed-Whatever.
· A military band played and a crack squad of Air Force
riflen:ten stood in review as the sbab emer ged from his
aircraft at Offutt Air Force Base.
General Curtis LeMay was hovering about chewing on
a tfme-rotted cigar.
THE SLENDER SHAH was ramrod stiff in his blue-
gray Iranian Air For ce leader's uniform. His chest was
. filled with ribbons and decorations. ~
"What the heck war did he fight in?" I asked of no
on,.
Flashbulbs popped, cameras ground a way. The sober,
39-year-old king was imposing in his stiff, no-nonsense
dignity.
MY MOMENT CAME AS I punched a microphone
beneath the nose of the Emperor of Iran. I asked
something about the possible threat of Russia and all that
oil to be had for the taking.
Even as the shah opened his mouth to answer , I was
grasping frantically in the comer or my numbed mind for.
a second question. .
The shah spoke: "I'm sorry. I don't understand your
question."
"Cut!" I yelled at Hansen who was smiling in the
secure knowledge that he was safe behind the camera.
SOMEHOW. I llEPHRASED the question and added
another.
We had a take.
I sat before the television set at 10 p.m. and waited for
my moment.
I heard my shaky voice as the camera zoomed in on
the shah.
The shah answered, brilliantly.
1 heard my quivering voice ask another question, and,
yes, by gosh, there was my band wrapped around the
microphone beneath Mohammed's nose.
That's all of me that ma.de television that night.
Three fingers and a thumb.
Somehow I survived for other interviews and other
failures.
But I never dreamed in my wildest dreams that confi·
dent, dignified Mohammed Reza Pahl&vi, Emperor of Iran
and husband or the beautiful Queen Soraya, could ever
face a d.isast.er worse than mine on the plains of Nebraska
back in 1.957.
Or w~ it 1958?
C#iinese ...
Prepare
To Talk
BANGKOK, Thailand (AJ>) -
Vlt>lnameae troops repulsed
Chaneae foreea near Lang Son, a
key provaMaal capllaJ, but the
Cblntae batUed back IUC~d
ly at M>me points, intelligence
~c.mrces an Bangkok reported to·'
duy
In P~ktng , the Chinese covern·
ment St!ot a note to the Viet·
namese Embassy today propos-
m& talks "aa soon as possible"
lo end their two-week border
l'O ofhc l , Peking's official
lls inbua news agency reported.
Vietnaatn claimed its forces
k a lied or wounded 27 ,000 Chinese
m 12 days oC Chlhtlnc. The Hanoi
report said V'ret.namese troops
also desttoyed 200 tanks and 30
m 1litary vehicles.
These claims could not be in·
dependently verified. Analysts
say they believe Vietnam 's .
casualty claims are exaggerated
and the Vietnamese have suf-
fered greater losses than the
Chinese.
· Japan's l(yodo news service
reported tha t Chinese Vice
Premier Ll Hsien-n.ien told re-·
porters in Peking today that the
C hinese invasion force bad
critically damaged "t wo or
three" regula r Vietnamese
divisions.
Many analysts believe this bas
been the objective of the Chinese
invasion, lo "teach a lesson" to
Vietnam by crippling some or its
ma in-force military units. Li 's
claim could not be confirmed. It
had appeared that Hanoi was
not committing many regular
troopstotheborderwar.
·'We will pull out once our bojec-
tive~is achieved," Li was.quo(_.ed
as telling th~ reporters.
,; In the fighting. t he Viel·
namese pus hed back Chinese
troops near the city of Lang Son,·
80 m Ues northeast of Hanoi, and
at nearby Loe Binh, the sources
said.
E',....PageAJ
WADDILL • •
testify ror the prosecution, Chat-
terton continued, is Dr. Ronald
Cornelseo, t h e n chief of
pediatrics at Westminster Com-
munity Hospital.
Chatterton said Comelsen wm
testify he saw t he doctor
strangle the newborn girl short·
ly after her birth two years ago.
"This baby cannot live or it
will be a big mesa," Chatterton
quot ed Wa ddi ll telling
Cornelsen. ''The re will be
lawsuits a nd it will cost
thousands a nd thousands or
dollars and the baby probably
will be brain damaged," the
prosecutor continued in his re-
counting of Waddill's purported
conversation with Cornelsen.
Later the prosecutor argued
Waddill began choking the baby
··and he is complaining that he
cann ot find the g'oddamn
trachea."
Cornelaen later phoned Wad-
dill at the behest or law enforce-
ment investigators and taped
the conversation.
Reading from that tape
transcript, Chatterton quoted
Waddill as saying, "This baby,
Ron, I give you rpy word or
honor, would not have lived UD·
der a ny circumstances. I think,
and God strike me dead if I was
wrong, I did the right thing for
the mother and the baby."
E',....PageAJ
GAS •••
Maryland to 80 percent of March
1978 levels.
A coogresaional study made
public today in Washington con·
eluded, meanwhile, that New
England, heavily dependent on
heatin~ oil, could produce from
10 percent to 45 percent or its
energy from native ..sources like
wood, water , wind and sun
J>OWer.
Huntington Clinic
Seeking New Site
DAILY PILOT
""°'-'-' o.lly Pllqt .......... ._,_ ~"", ......... PA$._ l,_l_lty L .. Or-co .. 1 P111101111fto ~·· ..,,.,_....,.,...,..,,
oulllll,..d -Y llwOUtl\ ~rlcleY Jor c..t•
MfM. Ii~ 8f.d>. 1411111"'91°" INCll/f.-
1•111 Y•lln. Irv ..... L-8ffCll/loutll (M\I, A
\l"11ler .. -tedll1on1&publl-S.l_"ft_
S....O.yt. The prt«ltNf P<lb!IMll"I pllMlt ll •I DI w .. 1 ••• ....... c.i.Mtu.ui1~ttta. . ..., ... -PfHIOttll ~ ...,.,.,_
,,. ••. c.wt •
Y1u PrnlOt<lt-~11-..... ,_. ....... ··-,_, .. _,....
MeMtlfll•--°'"'""·"-........ ~ .....
"'"""' MllMfllll .... .......... .... Or .... ~ Miter ..... ,,.,.::=-.°""'9
Mell,..,...._: ~.o. ... ,.., ...
OllllM """""tM(ll, ,,..~ .. ~ c.11-.e1•._... .....
The Huntington Beach Com·
munity Clinic i$ looking for a
new place to put down its foun·
dations bul it ian't likely it will •
ever find a bettet deal than it's
beengeW.ni.
The clinic pays $1 rent annual·
ly to the city for lts present site
at 506 Orange Avenue on the
crounda for the former Civic
Cent.er.
But tbe clinic, wblcb a.d ·
mlnilters to health, le1al and
p1ycbolq1lcal needs of about
l~ penon1 each mon~1 is aoout ~be aqueeaed out or its
quarters by a proposed senior
citizen residential and recrea-
tional center.
It will bave to find a place to
relocate by the eod ol tbe year.
"We've contacted the City of
Huntlqton Beacb, tbe Dant·
lo1ton Beacb Company, tbe
cbamber of commerce and
acbool afftclala tor empty ICbool
1ltes, aecutive dlnctor Dou& Elloe..,..
"So far tt bun't been h· COW'AllM.'' Slain lS Jootln1 for Yacut lud_.dowlllowaHw",._ Beacb tbat will prowtde _...... room for tM l.M-141 ... llMll ............. abGut ,. ,...... -...... &a.. Mid plul oaU b IM
buUdill to .. -la laalf -..... 11 .......... _ .. .......... n.re wm be addlu.al oaiU
.................. _,NGNIWHC>m
.. Clnla'• .....
for plumble1, tlMtrtclty aacl
atreet lmprovementa u well u ~lllllrmt.
T1W ellalc 1eta moet of-ttr
operatms ""°"' from ltata
1
. S mdllderal ........ ...... ,.... ....... ,..,. ...... ....naa.s .....
bftawof...,... ... 1••
..
Blaze C'ause Souglat
Gayle Wayne of Huntington Beach 's
Ocean View School District, inspects
damage at Rancho View School after a
blaze that damaged the a udit orium.
Insurance investigators are seeking the
exact cause of the fire discovered Tues-
day about two hours after custodians fired
up a furnace. Fire Department officiclls
estimate damage at $100,000 and ruled out
arson as a cause. School officials plan to
move district headquarters into the school
complex in three weeks despite the fire.
Newcastle Hits Garden Grove
By JACKIE HYMAN
0t t11e o.itv "..,. s~
A second flock or exotic birds,
this one in Orange County, has
been found infected with deadly
Newcastle disease and will have
to be destroyed, a U.S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture spokesman
said today.
Spokesman Dave Goodman or
the Newcastle Task Force in
ADP. ....
.........
SAU mDS
11.AICll 3.1
~
IOCUIG
Santa Ana said about 300 birds
at Parrot World in Garden
Grove will be humanely dis-
posed or as soon as arrange-
ments are completed for their
purchase by the USDA. _
Another flock, 541 birds from
a n aviary nea r Riverside, were
disposed or earlier this week for
the same reason, be s"&id.
Newcastle disease, which
could devastate the caged bird
and poultry industrie s 1f 11
s preads, was first diagnosed last
week in a Stanton pet bird
purchased from Parrot World.
~"~-~sk .,~or.r.~ was ,_,,~!J\: ..__
m eruatefy Sil up ana~louiid
an infected bird from Para·
mount and one in Riverside that
were traced to the two infected
flocks .
wam•s LA-I IOY
SENIOR
CIDZENS'
enS'ationa ·
PROVE YOU'RE A
SEllOll anza
SAYE
ll'TO
5100
.. AllY LA·Z-IOY • STOCK ~
~ ·=========
~
lVY!fWI ...
HUllDREDS •
LA·Z·•YS
IMMEDIATE ~
ML-leQ. •11 FREE EIYERY
LA·Z-IOYS . ,
PllCll .... 5 199
COITAMllA
Ht L 11lh IT.
(Acfoel from AalpN, '*" to Marte Ca11ncb1) 6a .... 7 Mon.-~ ICM sat. lo.a
Ooeedbdav
MllllON VllJO
11191 ........... "'..,. (Comer of Marguerite
and Via &cobr) •••1t02 ·Mon.-M 1~
Sat. 10-6 ~bdav
,
•
.
' I I
I . • '" I
CALIFORNIA Thut9day, March 1, 1979 OAtLY PJLOT AS'
~-.Jupiter Be..,ilders NASA
PASADENA <AP> -Excited
1clenU.1t.a art junklna lhelr once·
tidy thoorlc1 about Jupiter as
Voyaaer t 'a ttilevls1on cameru
reveal • d anllngly complex
world of· re1Ues:s and colorful
clouds
"For the most part,"
llnlverslty of l\rlzona scientist
.Bru.dlord -SmUh --aald Wednes·
duy. "the exlstlru~ atmospheric
r 1rr ulution models have all
bt•e n l!l b o t to h t:ll by
Voyager . Bewildered 1s
probubly the beat way to
describe the way we fffl right
now."
TOE NEW PICl'V&E of the
Jovian atmosphere, once
thought to have "a nice. un11onn
n ow." shows rolling and churn-
ing motiona that the old theories
cannot explain, Smith said.at a
news conference .
Smith beads the imaging team
for the S500 million National
Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration mission.
He s aid th e pi c tures,
transmitted ai::ross more than
400 million mnes of space. will
be studied for months as scien·
lists try to understand the new
findings.
T HE UNMANNE D
spacecraft, after a journey or 18
months, is some 3 million miles
from Jupite r and c losl n&
rapidly.
Its cameras already reveal
richer detail than scientists bad
seen and NASA says the plctw-e~
should be 10 limes better •en
Voyager 1 sails past the gigan·
tic planet early Monday.
The shi&? is to swing within
173,000 mtles of Jupite r before
flying on lo rendezvous ..rlth
Saturn and its rings 1n
November 1980. 1
VOYAGEll 2, four months
be h ind Its sist e r s hip. 1s
schedule<Uo fly past Jupiter' m
July and reach Salum in 1981~
Student's Jobless Pay Upheld
.... ~
SAN FRANCISCO <API -The
<.:ohfocrua Supreme Court has
ruled that a student 1s eligibl e
for unemployment benefits even
though school work curtails the
atudent 's availability for
employment.
Dad Greets F a•ilfl
The 6-1 decision Wednesday
upheld a Los Angeles County
Superior Court decision a.nvolv-
i n g Enid Ballanlyne , who
restricted her employment to
part-time and intermittent work
at a department store because
she was earing for her three
small children. Paul Jone~ hugged one of his eight children as they w~re reunited Wednesday at Los AnaeJes International
Airport. They had been separated. for four years after
._Jo,nes left Vi etnam_: Flights from Saigon were cut off
.1ust before t~e. r.am1ly w~s to. leave. His wife, recovering
from append.icalls, r emained 10 Saigon but plans to move to California. ·
She held Ta.rious "jObs but lost
her last job through no fault of
her own in March 1975 and
began receiving unemployment
benefits. according to court
documents. In Sept.ember 1975
she entered law school at UCLA .
Chavez -Targets Arizona
By Tbe Aasoda&ed Press
With the winter lettuce
season nearly over in the lm·
peria.l Valley, United Farm
Workers leader Cesar Chavez is seeking support for the s1x-
week-0ld lettuce strik,,e in other
areas, including his Arizona
birthplace.
Meanwhile, lw() court bear-
ings were scheduled in El Centro
...
Utilities
lnse S tate
Riiling
S AN FRANC ISCO
<AP> -The California Supreme Court. in a
blow t o the s tale 's
utilities, has ruled that
the state Public Utilities
Commission correctly
reduced the allowable
profits of Southei:n
California Gas Co.
The court upheld two
PUC order's Wednesday.
THEY LOWERED the
authorized rate or return
for the gas company
from 8.5 percent to 8.25
percent in a dispute over
how the utility account-
ed for savings resulting
from federal income tax
credits.
The complicated rul·
ing stems from a gas
utility application for an
$80.2.million annual rate
increase to offset the
higher cost of natural
gas.
J,l involves accounting
practices u sed by
utilities to save part of
their income taxes when
they inves t in n e w
plants.
today on Agricultural Labor
Relatlons "Board requests fpr in-
junctions limitiqg UFW picket·
ing at two struck. far ms and
placing restraints on use of
guards and firearms at one or
the two farms.
-THE UFW WON a major ,
although limite d , vi c tory
Wednesday whe n a Salinas
judge signed a temporary in-
jun c tio n allowing union
representatives to go into two
m ajor growers' fields to talk to
{
trike-breaking workers.
The preliminary injunction, is·
ued by Monterey County
Superior 1Court Judge Richard
Silver . .,as expected to be ap-
pealed by the two growers.
California Coastal Farms and
Sun-Harvest Inc.
-4nl~ong ~
SHOE SERVICE
for Handbags 1.ucJcJage & Zipper Repair
Rec;o..al Repair C....... few
SPEHY • TOPSIDER
D•'t ttwow flWfl'f yow
~OMfortabh old hMis -.S w.,....ct,......
al ........... •
Bft.tbag \'ote Nlzed
SACRAMENTO <AP> -An in·
lt1ative to legalize off-track bet·
ting and Nevada-style gambling
has failed to make the California
ballot for the 10th lime in five
years, says the secretary of
state's office.
The office reported Wed.Des·
day that the proposed constitu-
tional a mendment by Robert
Wilson of Sherman Oaks failed
to gel the 553,790 signatures
needed by Feb. 16 to qualify for
the June 1980 ballot.
/tlamager O•ted Agafa
NATIONAL CITY <AP > -The
City Council has asked City
Manager Harry Gm for rus res-
1gnat1on after voting to replace
him with his assistant, Tom
McCabe.
Gill, who left Tustin under
si milar circumstances four
years ago, said Wednesday he
has no immediate plans. He was
manager of Tustin for 10 years.
and manage r in Lawndale
before that.
BolA Cldel Tntflle•
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
Bank of America President A. W.
Clausen spent almost an bour
Wednesday testifying before a
federal grand jury investigating
the resignation last August of
the bank's vice chairman or the
board.
The investigation concerns the
Add To Yo.r Slla,.r.9
.... _... .., Yhittllg 0...
SEAFOO~ & SERVICE
DB.I
lar-8-9 CMQ.,. -Fried Cllldi ...
A...WS•:lwkl9tt
WEHAYIUYI
MAINE LOISTEI!
THE s-z decision writ·
ten by Chief Justice
Rose Bird endorsed
the PUC's treatment of
tax savings from invest·
ment tax credits and ac·
celerated depreciation
in setting rates or
utilities.
MARKET BASKET
•
It also declared the
P UC correctly ruled
that the gas company
· would remain eligible for
federal tu credft under
itaorders.
OWnerFined
. I tiOS ANGELES (AP>
: -The president of a Los ! A n ge l es tex t ile t reprocessing company.
1 which wu hit by two I major fires last year ,
\ b as been fined $13, 790
; after be pleaded guilty
J to 22 vlolattona ol the
• I
1
state J'lre Code. Gerald Kau~klent ot 0 • g lietmtlC IDc.,
wa1 put OD • IDOd&ba
probetiOD.
SPECIAL ORDER
MAMMOUTH .
CHEDDAR
AGED60DAYS
s3s.?
· ff ickorJ fGmt$:z,.
Westclff
Plam ,,..."""....,... ....
MNtn
FashlOll·
lslcild
":a-:.'ir
WISTC~ PL4%A
17tltlr'"*
Contact Lenses
Eyewear Styling
Dr. Lou Rou Elder
OPTOMETRIST
642-0720
1124 Irvine Ave.
· Newport Beach
( STATE -J
resignation of Al vin Rice. re-
ported to be the heir apparent to
Clausen's job at the world's
largest bank.
OerfHdUer Hunted
WHI1TIER <AP I -A $5,000
r eward is being offered for In·
for~at.ion leading to the arrest
and col\\)lction of a bandit ..tho
s hot an all-night store cler" to
death early Wednesday. store of -
fi cials said.
Southland Co rp. of Dallas.
T ex.. which ope r a tes the 7 ·
Eleven store cham, posted the
reward following the s hooting
death of Albert Lewis Owens, 26,
at the 7·F.;leven store on Wlull•er
Boulevard.
Evangelist Faces
Sex-with,.miTWr Rap
EL CAJON <AP > -Television evangelist Dennis Goodell h.a~
been arrested for 10vestigatioo of sex charges involving a 17·year.
old female member of his church, police said.
The J4.year-old Goodell is putor of the Evangel Center 1n El Ca
jon.
IT HAS ABOUT 7M parishioners and features faith healtnR
services videotaped each Sunday for broadcast on cable televtsjon
in Southern California. ·
I
Goodell was arrested Tuesdaf for investigation of sex acts Jn
volving a minor girl he was counseling, police s aid.
Goodell was released from county Jail on his own recognizanc-e
late Wednesday. according to Sbenlfs Deputy Ralph Goodrich. 1
Arraignment was scheduled today in El Cajon Municipal
Court.
The girl told he r father of the alleged Incidents. wb1ch purporte<l
ly occurred from sum mer 1978 through last January, and Goodell wa!\
arrested shortly after they went. to police, according to Police Lt. Boh
Standring.
SQlm
Thrift Pack
100'1wttlt30
FIU
11DAGRAH
,
• 5.49
,
I
l
I
..
'
o range eoast oiu1y p ,10• EditOriftl Page· ................................................................
.. ,6 ff/f '
..
Robert N. Weed /Publlsher Tnomas Keeval /EdlN
Barblr• Krelblch/Edltor1ar PaQe Editor
· Wa~er Recovery
Cost Needs Study -
T ht• Ornng<' County Weter District , which la resporuu·
hit' Cot 1na1ntamlnfl and pumping water from the und r
~ruurHJ btt1'tO thnt serves mo~t rounty communllles.
hopes to l'Onstruet o $27 million system to reclaim irrlg .
lion wult•r from ~cwugt.•.
Mo~t or the syst~m a punf1cat1on plant, water
pumps smtl p1pt•s would tx> ftnunrecl by the federal ~ov
t•r111nt·nt Ttw :.tuh> a nd lht> local district would pll'k UIJ
tht.• r '!.I
Oran~t· and Anuheam water ofrlc•als qu_,~tlon the pro-
po:-t•d ~xpc.>nditurC' even thou1h the local share of the
t.·o::..h \\Ould tw m tnamol ·
·rht'~ \\Olldt.•1 1f th1l) as n'l a c()!,tly manne1 •
<>< ·wu off1t>1als nott> that the system would provide
't'ht•up" wuh•r fot the co a.stnl l1rt>~ But the two northern
('tlws· ufrat·rnls t>hum the real Cobt would be as much a~
$400 un arrt• foot 1( ro ts picked up by the federal and
'\lull' ~uvernuwnts a rt-indudt>d .
They l'untc 11d thut 1rn~at1on water at $400 a foot is
t•\pens1ve. e en 1( 1t d~s r ut do wn on the amount of
\ a luable drankang water drawn from underground.
Perhaps water from the lrvme Ranch Water District
might be made available for 1rngation at less cost, they
tontend Thl'y urge more consideration before OCWD
directors seek m ore tha n $23 million in gr ant funds .
Their urging~ ~huuld not be ignored.
Though the local cost might be less than $4 million,
the $23 million comes out of another of our pockets as tax-
payers.
Marina Questions
Harbor a rea boat owners shouldn't start asking when
reservations will be accepted for slips at a new marina
proposed for the mouth of the Santa Ana R iver.
Costa Mesa ·s push fo r a 3,000·boat facility on its side
of the river still has a lon~ wav to go. .
But it 1s time fo r marina s upporters <and opponents)
to prepare to give the ir views on the project to the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers. That's the agency that must
a lter its present flood control chann el plans if the marina is
to ever become a rea lity.
Mayors Ron Pattinson of Huntington Beach and Paul
RyckoH of Newport Beach have lent s upport to the
marina which would solve a shortag·e of boat docking
facilities in the area.
Ryckoff did air some concern over traffic im;>acts
from the marina.
And a county biological consultant is worri~d that a
marina will have a negative impact on least terns, an en·
dan gered species of sea bird that makes its home near
the river moutJl.
Obviously, quest ions of this kind will come up as the
m a rina plan moves a long before the Army Corps. The
time to ask them is now.
Preserve Lake Street
Pl a ns to expand Lake Street into a major
thoroughfare into downtown Huntington Beach have sur-
faced sporadically over the years.
Each time city omcials bring up the proposal it
m eets with fi e rce resistance from homeowners in the
a rea that st r etche s from the Civic Center to Pacific Coast
Highway.
Reside nts c la im that a four-la ne highway (it is now
t wo lanes> would dis rupt the ir tranquility and increase
safety hazards for their c hildren.
., They a lso say that any widening would des troy about
50 eucalyptus trees that have lent grace a nd beauty to
their neighborhood.
Residents won at least half their battle recently when
the Planning Commission refused to extend Lake Street
from its present dead-end near Civic Center to Garfield
Avenue to the north.
They say they now have more reason to hope that the
s treet wen't be widened because it wasn't extended.
City officials have studied the extension of Lake
Street as o ne of the ways to r elieve traffic snarls on Main
Street. ·
But t he Planning Commission eventually chose to
study othe r alternatives to solve Main Street congestion
and l~ave Lake Street as a residential street.
The reasoning appears to be sound.
Reside nts seem to be firmly opposed to any ex-
pans ion and the city planners s hould have accepted their
wishes by now. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
,Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment ts invited~ A~ress The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phon&(714) 642-.:321.
Boyd/Beth
ByL.M •• BOYD
Benjamin Franklin used
two beds, getting up 1n the
middle or the night to move
from one to the other, his re-
ported theory being that hia
body would become over·
heated unles~ he moved to
cooler quarters. England's
Prime Minister Disraeli
didn't settle for two. He had
four beds. He put out the
ume story Franklin did.
Neither were a match for
King Louis XIV of France,
-
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
EveUe v.....,, it Aina ua~forlM.000
a 1ear more to add to
bla fovr """°"'· Tbla ean be ...,,._.., up la
OINt ward -ORBSD, •Jon• ..... total dia-re1ard tDr tbe av.rap
tnpa"'. g.P.B.
'
though. The king made use of
412 beds. lie alternated by
whim. All ~hese men's beds
were in· different rooms,
please note. Question is
whether they really believed
that body-heat notion or just
wanted to create a situation
wherein nobody could be
sure exactly where they were
sleeping on any given night.
Client inquires as to
whether the Canadian nag
can be flown above the Unit·
ed Stat.ea nag. No. slr, not
unless Canada and this coun-
\ry are at war, it can't. ln·
ternatlon1l tr1dltlon pro·
hlbtta tbe dllplay ol one na-
tion 'a fl.a& over that of
another in peacetime. The
exceptlton 11 the nag of the
UnJted Nationl wblcb can be
ral.Md above tbe na11 of its
member Dlltioal.
Tb• TUrul aaa tenda to
be pnielkal, IGlld, rnened,
matter-Gf ·fMt, determlDed,
-P•tleat ud rellable. He'• earet:~ bJs 1peecb. He don wen when put In
eba:.,o:.::•s· Or IO say ... .
XDcilliirmeGliirm11tery
la _.., tUn are mon m ...
carri.qel •IDODI P"llWI· ...................... ...... -......... ..
....
i ·hol88 Von Hoffman
Oil Cou-d Cost Carter His Joh
Althouah only rour presidents
an the la11t l'Jl) yeans hive been
d feat.ed runruna for 11 aeoond
term •n event Kllghtly less
r are than a comet plunking
d<>wo on the Llncoln Memorial
Jtmmy Ci.rter 's re-eltttion
('hancea have been a dlsc"55ioo
topic Mre almost since the hour
that lhla poor, plodding, pre·
aidenUal person wu s sworn into
orrtce.
Mulling over remote cont ·
ingenc1Cli 1s how we writers
make a liv·
1ng. so that
aucb chatter
ought to be
e njoyed for
whatever en·
tertainmeot
value it may
have and ig-
nored.
But oow for
the first time
Jimmy may be coming up
against something that can cost
him his job: oil. Not the revolu·
Uon in Iran. Practical-minded
people will understand that a
difrerenl course or action by the
. American pres ident in that
country would not have yielded
a dirferent result.
THE MOST you can say is
tha t if Carter had distanced
himself somewhat more rapidly
from the Shah, the new people
O)ight have been more friendly
and might, but only might. be
more wiJ.1i.wz lo resume oil pro-duction .. ~
But the judgment rendered on
the way scarce oil and gas sup-
plies are allocated will be bruis·
ingly concrete. Jimmy won't be
held accountable for what hap-
pens thousands of miles away in
Iran but if the lines at the gas
pumps get maddeningly long, if
there are blackmarket scandals.
if rationing comes and it's
botched, if there are rumors of
corruption in th~ allocations, or
favoritism. if the distribution of
Mailbox
iU and-0r home heating oil isn't
1eneraUy re&arded as fair Jlnd
efficient. old Tall Tooth will be
In serious trouble.
Jn no other area or govern·
ment activity will Jimmy eet
the blame personally and direct·
ly the way he will on this one.
People will reme mber, and if
' they don't, the opposition ls sure
to remind them that the ap·
'
paratus for taki ng c are or
emergem~ies such as this was
supposed to have been set up
with the pa11sage of Carter's "comprehe n s ive e ne rgy
package."
In fact what was passed by
Congress and mistaken,ly signed
by Carter wasn't comprehensive
and wasn't a package, but a
mishmash that has been or no
help in reducing energy usage or
m•king our uae of it aignificanl·
ly more efficient. Nevertheless
Carter said the ml$hmash was
his mishmash, just the right
rniattmash to get the job done. At
the White House they called the
pa99age of the energy package a
victory for the Georgia plodder.
AN011fEK victory for Carter
was the creation or the Depart·
ment of Energy. Around town,
however, the Department of
Energy already has a reputation
fo r being outstandingly ineffi-
cient. a title to which there are
m any claim ants, not a few of
whom are aged and encrusted
ag~ncies Jike the Inte rstate
Colhmer",. Commission, an out-
fit which ha9'. bad 95 years to
reach its peak ol1heffectual, feck ·
less inaction. And here comes
Jimmy Carter's new Department
or Energy. not yet two years old
and.~lready a challenger .
Regular telephone callers to
~OE count it a good day when somebody picks up a receiver to
tell the inquirer that no. he can't
talk to the person in charge of
this-or-that because the position
hasn't been filled yet or if it has
been filled the person isn't really
in charge of this-Or·that and no.
I'm sorry we wouldn't know who
IS.
While they let their phones
ring they worry about getting
their o(fices decorated and ob-
servers who have to watch this
charade wonder how these peo.
pie are ever going to b&{ldle a
national gas rationing program
1f it comes to that.
A GAS shortage is only slightly
less serio us than a food
shortage. It hits everyone and
everyone will want to bit back.
They'll want to hit back yet
harder when it <fawns on them
how Little has been done to pre·
pare the c,puntry for a nasty
bump like this one.
Communists Reap Harvest of Dissension
To the Editor:
The Communist government
of Cambodia felt it must punish.
a lot or citizens. How do you
punish someone when they have
no freedom? You kill them. of
course.
The Comm unis t Vietnam,
backed by Russia, decided that
they should punish the Cambo·
dian Communists, so they killed
them.
China decid~ that the, Viet-
n a m government s hould be
punished, so they are killing the
Viets.
Now Russia says that China
must be punished. I wonder who
will punish Russia.
It seems the old adage p~
vails: W}tat you sow, that .shall
you reap.
The Communists have been
sowing war and dissension for a
long time. They should have a
good crop to reap.
JAMES BOLDING
~ Prttttle•I Belp
To the Editor:
lo regard to the article about
changing the name of the senior citizens, I have something to say.
I don't care what name you give
them, and I hope they all keep
weU and active for a long time,
but there are things the general
public doesn't know about
seniors.
I am a volunteer for the
Senion' Outreach program. The
program provides transporta·
tlon, meals-to·the-home, visita·
Council on Aging Seniors·
Outreach Program. Tbe number
is 536-53S2. Or better yet, send
donations to tbe Council on
Agi ng Sen•ors' Outreach
Program, 1706 Orange Ave ..
Huntington Beach 92648.
MERRY LENT
••fl,,et fl11ntloaefl
To the F.ditor:
Your editorial entitled "Ques·
tionable Tactics" (Feb. 15 )
totally ignores the real issue.
The Coast Community College
District is reporting nearly S3
million as educational costs
when in reality that money is be·
ing used for other purposes. The
Ame.rican F e d e r ation o f
Teachers, Local 1911, is attempt·
ing to bring to the public'• atten·
lion this serious misuse or tax
money.
This illegal use or nearly $3
million is only a small part of a •
larger lasue. The AFT-sponsored
budget analysis has exposed
other scandalous mis uses of
educational funds by the dis·
trict. KOCE TV, for instance,
has from its inception in 1972
cost the taxpayers over S20
million. In figures more easily
understood, this means that for
every •$1,000 spent over the last
seven years, the district has re-
ceived an approximate $78 re-
turn. And KOCE TV will con-
tinue broadcasting this summer,
while summer s chool i s
scheduled to be cul to one
quarter of its usual size.
lion, information and rererral, a COASTLINE College is touted
monthly newsletter and a home by the district public relations
maintenanceservice. · office as the most cost effective
There are many aen.iors alone community college ln the state.
-with no ram l Ii es. no Our budget analysis proves it to
tranaporta.Uon, hardly any be precisely tbe opposite. It
'
""" __ ...._ 1be ld Ured ... services a minimal number of ·--· y are o , , sic11., d ed th buntry and poor. They deserve stu ents compar to e two
a lot more than they are getting campus colleces. GWC and OCC, from our society. at five times the cost per stu -
dent.
TBEaE IS something people These are just a few of the
out there could do to help. The startling conclusions drawn by
Outreach volunteers deliver· our analyst, Dr. John Cac-
meala to the homes or these cavale, from data aupplled by
senlon. Usually they are just the dlatrict itaelf.
out of the hospital, and Your ed.ltorial makes much of
sometimes they Just need meals the fact that we have not fully
for a lhort Ume. There are some diack>sed the report. But com·
who can't afford these meals, moo sense. ud common legal .......... the t i _.._t. practice m1k" nonHMe ol this even .......... cot s m~ criUolam. Fint all the lnforma·
U JOU could MDd a tax fne tlon from wbtch the AFT
doe•Uan, even a few dollant to a11aJ1all draws conclusions Is
tbe CouDdl on Aahur. we could owned by the Coast Community
at.art a SunHtne fincl" tbat would Co= Dlatrict. They have Ollly
help to pay for meals, purchue to at tbelr own informaUon
1u pplle1 for th e home to defend themselves. Secondly,
malaMaaace pro1ram. and lt ll the diltrtct admlnlatraUoo
1>9nonaJ Item a for the senior tb t la t-1.... uestlo ed It l wbo a:qht be 1ol.n1 into tbe. · a ........ q n · 1 mp-.__p•ta1. w does DOt make sense to llve -~ t'he evidence to the acc\IMd and
money. A grand jury investiga-
tion. in fact. should be called for
b)I the <listrict itself if these
most serious questions are not
justified. The district. in fa c,t,
and the Pilot itself should call
for Utis investigation.
We challenge the distnct to
disprove the conclusions of the
AFT budget analysis in a public
hearing. And we challenge the
Pilot to publish the re~ults.
MICHAEL FINNEGAN
Instructor of English. OCC
Vice-President, AFT, Local 1911
Counril'• .Job
To the F.ditor: . On Tuesday. Feb.'20 the Hunt·
ington Beach City Council
showed all of us why there is
such dissatisfaction with local
government officials and why
most of them are being recalled.
With one stroke, they ap·
prove d a housing projec t.
(Seacliff IV>. for 535 homes and
2.000 people without adequate
sewers. traffic circulation and
drainage.
Without due consideration.
this council agreed to make
every taxpayer of Huntington
Beach pay for traffic signals for
this project, $160,000, pay for 'd·
ditional sewers. parks and
streets to accommodate these
facilities. Over the objections ot the
police and fire chiefs, these seven
people, (six elected, one appoint·
ed) felt tha~th 'satisfaction and greed of t untington Beach
Company more important.
The council decided that a long,
long dead-end street was enough ;
that the need for adequate fire and
police protection by having
another entrance and exit to th.is
project was not necessary.
Thia City Council completely
disregarded the concerns of the
people who questioned this proj·
eel before a local coastal pro-
gram is developect' for this city;
who wondered if this project is
going to cost every resident of
Huntington Beach increased tax
dollus ; who think that the
drainage problem frl>m these
homes into the Bolsa Chica
Marsh bas not been aufficienUy
answered; and who would like to
see affordable bousln1. •
These representatives, sup·
poaectly ot all the people, were so
involved ·1n beratlnc others on
the panel, .. pbtloaophillng"
about people'• needs, and
''featherine thelr own netta"
that tber ove.rlooked their
primary .lOb. making the best
detlsiont for all the citJaeoa and
tax-payen of HuntJJlClOn Beach.
STANLEY J.COREN
TIM~n~DM"""li~~--l•· ... ll. 1t11t boctf to ntewttpte -.,..,._ N__,. ll•rttl•7' wbo ea drop by and vlall tbe ~ ,,., ~
lOMIJ, leU1al tbtm know Lbat A hall public bearin' la lbe on-To tbe Editor: u..r. II ...._. •. "bD cw.. So lJ WQ to .::J wbetblr tbt IA tbe 14 yean that I have 11,_ Mft a 'llllle U.. ,aa'd dl.IUid la INUlJ mi. llv.4 •IM W..,ntde ol eo.t.a
De to Jiil tD __. w eaD tlle ,,...,..., publle edacllloDal w 11 ... , I llawe ... tM namor of a
• t I
marina come and go several
times. It was happening before I
moved here. l ·have seeo what
these rumors do. The land prices
rise even faster than the infla·
Lion. The land is sold t o
speculators who do not live here
and the quality of life goes do~.
Then the rumor goes away only
lo rise again with a new group or
real estate salesmen who come
to make their money.
Now there is a push again for
a marina and I expect the same
thing will happen (as predicted
by the editorial in the Pilot of
2/22/79 "Dream Revived").
Now Just suppose that the well
researched plans of tbe Army
Corps of Engineers are changed.
What would we have if we did
get a marina? Who would really
benefit? I am a home owner on
Pacific Avenue. t would surely
make sC>me money if I sold my
home. But, I don't want to move.
Unlike others who don't like the
city of Costa Mesa or who don't
even live here. I am concerned
a bout the quality of life in this
fair city. And since they are my
neighbors across the way I am
concerned about the quality of
life in Huntington Beach.
BOW MANY people of these
two cities will really benefit by a
crowded piece of water with ex-
pensive out-of-town cars parked
by its edge while even more ex·
pensive boats start their noisy
smoky engines and head out to
sea through a channel that will
disrupt the traffic circulation
plan for the area?
How many of the votjng
citizens of these two now fine
cities are boat dealers and/or
real estate brokers? And wb<J
a nd bow many will make their
fortunes off t.bls fairy land proj-
ect? Howmanyofthoselivehere?
There is an editorial in the
Pilot ol 2/'Jl)/79 bemoaning the
ract that the beautiful back bay,
"a 1lft or nature," is in danger.
What do you think the Santa Ana
River bed and surrounding open
a rea is? It is beautiful and
natural. It needs nowhere near
S80 mlllloo to keep it that way
and its use as a nood control
facility is unquestionable. You
can 10 down and look at it and
ride along the bike trail now.
What t. 1oing on? CiUzem of
Costa Mesa and Hunlin1to.n
Beach, are you IOiDI to alt there
•anct let tbla happen? Whole
dream la thil? And wboae
ni8hlmare will It be?
WILLIAM GILBERT
' .
IAtfna from ,...,.. CIT'W totlconw.
Tlw tWd to ~ i.ttna Co /if
,,,_. t1r ·~ ,..,., ",...,,.... ~of .W '°°'*or i. .. '°'11 .. •• ~ mt•••••· AU i.u.r.. -.r .... .....,.,. Cllld MdMlf ad-................. .,. .... , ... .
......~~,..... .. ..
....... ,......, dllllOf br pw.bl1'1ed.
I
r
... tlW.'• tltlak .. ,... ••• Uiat •...-.&.a ·--·----, ... , ..
Conm~i•on Reversed
SLA's Little
Eyes Paro)~
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The reversal of
Russell Little's murder conviction marks a new
chapter in tbe history of the Symbionese Libera·
tion Army -the seU-styled revolutionary group
that kidnapped Patricia Hearst.
Little, 31, a self-described SLA "soldier," was
convicted of the 1973 cyanide-bullet murder of
Oakland schools chief Marcus Foster and the at-
tempted murder o( his aide -the crime that
marked the public emergence or the SLA.
BIS CONVICTION WAS OVERTURNED
Tuesday by the state's 3rd District Court of Appeal
because of a faulty jury instruc-
tion. The state plans to appeal
to the state Supreme Court.
The court upheld the con-
viction of Little's co-defendant
Joseph Remiro, 28.
Little could become the
first or four SLA members to
get ~ut of prison on bail or
parole, if the reversal stands,
prison officials said Wednes-
day. MIEARST •
STAILEY
Z4"
LIGHTWEIGHT
MAGNESIUM LEVEL
477 lt'a ~ •82.S with
t..tn riaa an4 Uoht
but strong mA91'aium.
It'• on the squue.
DEWALT 10"
POWERSBOP
WITH I.EC STAND .
Some kind of a aaw,
radial to cut d .. p, rip,
croNCut, 1llld do a lot of
other thino• (all of them
naughty).
2298! ..
DOUGLAS
FIR
SCANT SRIPLAP
Wha t is it w ith all this "scant.
scant?" Dressed lumber is always
nominal, but it is nice to be
a b solutely honest.
, • 19
SIX FOOT
3/4 "x8"
lxl2x6'
PECIY CEDAR
Great fenci ng. Got 80 ·
many indentatiorus no
one wants to h i t it
lxl2x6'
KNOTTY PINE
An ywhere else it's
"Knotty P ine." Around
here it will probably be
111~ "Nutty" 1;~
THE JlUUNG DOES NOT FREE Little, who
is serving six months to life at San Quentin for a
1975 conviction of attempted escape and aggravat-
ed assault That crime usually carries a range of
three to five years in prison under current law.
Deputy Attorney General Brian Taugbe r,
Ja•yer for the Community Release Board, said
that if the conviction is wiped out, LitUe would be
eligible for a parole bearing.
BOWARD 12 PC.
SABRE SAW
BLADE KIT
HOWARD 13 PC. ARMSTRONG SOLARIAN
DRILL BIT SET . NO-WAX FLOOR
WITH 2 MASONRY BITS llili-a ...... ~ TILE
I)'
However, Taugber said the board would try to
bold an ext.ended term hearing that could add qne
to three years to Little's sentence. "· 34.~90 5 ~!r46 66 ~2"zl2" Tll.E'
~ Swell patterns, choice of " For metal, pl.utic, rough cutting, fine Howard does it again (once Lockaley Hall. Marve.st FOSTE& WAS KILLED AND IDS top aide, t.. l ood Th . h blad f more and let him fia it). Home, U..z Fair and Robert Blackburn, was wounded as the two left wor ... P yw • • ng t saw • or Lucky 13. others .
• Oakland school headquarters .__t_h_•_jo_b_. ___________ _, ________________ ----t~Loc:l--*'-tut_•--------------t
the night of Nov. 6, 1973.
Two days later. the SLA ls·
sued its first public communi·
que, claiming responsibility for
the shootings and accusing
Fost e r of planning to put
shotgun-wielding officers in
schools, ·an accusation denied
by officials.
Three months later , the
Maa1us SLA kidnapped Miss Hearst.
Little and Remiro, who already had been ar-
rested al the time of Miss Hearst's abduction,
were convicted· in June 1975 and s,ntenced to life
in prison.
THE PROSECUT101' DID NOT contend the
two bad fired the fatal shots, but accused them of conspiring with other SLA members who died in
May 1974 in a police shootout and fue in Los
Angeles.
Where are the other SLA members now?
-Miss Hearst, the most famous, was re-
leased Feb. l from the Federal Correctional
lnatitut.ion at Pleasanton, where sh~ serv~
months of a seven-year sentence for joining lrer
SLA kidnappers in a San Francisco bank robbery. .
She and policeman Bernard Shaw plan to be married April 1.
-SIA ARCHITECTS WILLIAM AND Emily
Harrii pleaded guilty last year to abducting Miu
Heant in 1974. The Harrises are expected to be re-
leased lo 1983.
Harris. 33, is a fellow inmate of LitUe's at San
Quentin. Mrs. Harris, 31, ls serving her sentence
at the Calif omia Institute for Women, in Frontera,
near Loi Angeles.
-Six memben -including founder Donald
DeFreeze, an escaped convict who took tbe name
"Cinque" -died In the Los Angeles shootout.
Otben killed were Patrlclt Soltyaik, WUllam
Wolfe, Camilla Hall, Angela Atwood and Nancy L1D1Perry.
Reporter Fights
I ail Senterree
,
PUROLATOR
XSV AIR FILTER
STAILEY
RAMM EIS
1•J
YOUR CHOICE m 01 Cl.AW
For five bucb and change
you have t o be friendly with
the price and the Stanley
name, well.
5 99
EA. •101 ~A OR 1101 ~
4" TOMATO 01
PEPPER PLOT
One bu.ah will proride
an &991'"99 family with
p*'ty of f....h ftCNi•· ..--·-......
Get two eo you can give
80m• to the ne1ghbors.
YOUR .. ~. CHOICE ~
TOMATO IASDT
1•!
Keepinv tomato. off the
CP'OW\d uecl to he • i....i..
!0P9, ~ t,U,O. etc. HIN'• the -.y ,..y.
-
LJQUID WRENCH.
4 OZ. SQUIRT
SPOUT 23c
12 OZ. AEROSOL 77c SPRAY
GARRITY
LIFE LITE
BICB INTEISITY
DISPOUILE FWBLICBT
97~36
This i. N&ily hrilJht. com• m U90l't.d
body colon, .Ude nritoh. Good night,
good light.
RUllEIMAID
IOUmECI
TWBCAI
9 97 •2979
300AL.
New 30 oallon job, rtet.anaular ln ahape
foe greet. ca~ty. RouohNcJa •.J'8 it all
( yU. 1alL) With eteel loeldnq lid riftlL
'
I I
'
AJ4 D"LV PtLOT Business ti
Robots Tackle 'Ugly~ Jobs
N o Consort ium
Iran's new 011 muuster, Hassan Naiih, ha& announced
that his country's oil no tonger will now through an m-
lernationai consortium, but will be sold to individual
companies. Nazih seems almost to be holding the hand
of Ayatollah Ruholl a h Kh omeini, represented in a
portrait behind him. (Related story, Page A4 )
l>t:TR011' 1Ar\ 'They don't
lake rottL~ breaks or demand
'acotton. They gen rally don't
icc.·t tuck And they ore not in
cllnt'd lo file uJUOn grievaoet!S
Thl'Y don't cv~n ~· the prob·
lt>m11 thut moist workers do In
tht>tr }Obfl l'ven though these
ar\> the dlrUc."at, most boring and
lusl nltracllvti m tactori~
bul more and more they do
-'-' · aod ('vt>n "re~l ·
THIS EVER MO& t.: popular
Jiu ltn~ of Amer1ean ma nufac
lur\lr:; ils th~ industrial robot, a
mt•t·hoinl cdl marv~l closer lo
R2 02 of "Star Wars " than most
t•t>ople 1maA:tne
lit> numbt·r11 about 3,000 in the
l ln1tcd Sl<•lt•s , some t ,000 in
Wt"1tt!rn Europe, and perhaps
:lO 1100 m Japan. according lo the
Detroit based Robot Institute of
\mencd
What he lacks tn the personaU-
1 v or tus movie cousin. however,
he more than makes up in work
from tus wh1rnog a nd clicking
tubes. hoses and fingers.
"WHAT COMES OUT is of
l'Ons1stent quality,·' s ays Al
Williams. Midwest regional
manager for Unimatlon Inc. of
Danbury, Conn., the nation's
largest maker or industrial
robots
"If a guy leaves out a couple
Silent, Tireless Mechanical
• Workers Don't Upset Unions
of welds. someone gets · a car
with ratUC8 With the robot, you
get an improved product."
"lt doesn't get tired," adds
Donald E. Hart, head of the
Computer Scienci! Department
at General Motors Research
laboratories.
AUTOMAKERS ARE amonJt
the leaders in development or
robots. Ford Motor Co., for ex-
a mple, has used robots since
1958, when a device was in
troduced in one plant to transfer
hot parts.
"It's a deadly, ugly. dirty
business the re.·· says Ford
spokesman Ed Snyder . "The
robot was accepted by the
workers and there was no objec·
lion.··
Ford has 236 robots employed
in such jobs as stamping, spray
· painting, die casting: ··areas or
worker discontent.'· Ford says
GM, MEANWHILE, has about
150 robots. including 32 pioneer·
ing body welding machines in·
stalled in 1970 at its Lordstown.
Ohio. assembly plant Those are
known in the industry as .. pick·
a nd-place'' repetitive action
robots, carrying price tags start·
ing at $10,000. says Don Vincent.
manager or the Robo.t Institute.
But research. he c;ays. as
aimed at Sl00.000 sophisticated
programmable robots that have
the ability to know what they are
touching and "see" what they
are doing through use of
cameras.
.. We think the idea of equip·
ping robots with cameras and
computers to give them vision is
going to open many new ·avenues
to increased productivity." said
Frank Daley. GM's director of
manufacturing development.
GM WAS THE first U.S. firm
to use computer vision, install·
Ing a system at it~ Delco plant in
Kokomo. Ind .. nearly two years
ago. There, the SIGHT-I system
inspects circuits and positions
e lectrical test probes . Its
second ·gene r at1on brother .
CONSIG HT. r e lies on com -
puterized vision to control all six
joints or a robot's hand.
.. O.ur ultimate objective 1s to
be able to pick parts out of
jumbled heaps in bins," says
GM's Hart.
The world's largest carmaker
also points to the new technology
us improving efficiency and thui.
generating m oney for "un
precedented multibillion dollar
outlays for new product pro
grams." says Alex C. Mair. vict>·
president or GM 's technical
staff
GM TOUTS ITS PUMA f Pro
gra mmable Universal Machine
for Assembly l robot as "the
latest and probably the most ad
vanced robot on the world scenf'
today."
Recently unve iled at the GM
Technical Cente r in suburban
Warren, PUMA also is rapable
or "seeing, .. although its first
use wiiJ be sightless work at a
De lco plant in Rochester , N Y
PUMA will assist in assembly
of s mall electric motors by pick
ing up a hot part. positioning it.
adding a component and ttlen
placing the part on a conw yor
belt ror further work.
I
Sears Wants Loans From CustQmers
~ A SIMILAR project I!> bern~
develope d by Westinghou::.t>
Electric Corp. a nd the National
Science Foundation The nev.
twis t m the $1 .8 m ilhon exf)E!n
ment will enable the robot to
change and assemble differen1
product s tyles or adjust lo vana
tions in p arts . according to
Ric h a rd Abraham or We st
inghouse.
The reliab1hty or Lhe dev1c~i.
seems remarkable , cons1derin~
datly absenteeism in an auto
operation of up to IO percent
Ford officials say robots fum.:
hon 98 percent qf the time
By MIL TON MOSKO Wm
Sears. Roebuck and Co .. which
-'ia s been having its problems
lately. has come up with a dan-
Jy idea: Why not borrow money
from the people who shop m its
.;tores?
Sales have been sluggish at
;ears over the past year but it ·s
;till the nation's largest retailer,
with a customer base second to
none. Some 26 million people
:arry Sears credit c-ards and
.hose folks are accustomed to
oorrowing money from Sears to
11nance their purchases.
NEXT YEAR Sears plans to
urn the tables. It will ask its
customers -and other mem-
t>ers of the public -to lend it
;ome money. $500 million, to be
!X3Ct .
There's nothing unusual about
· arge corporati_ons borrowing
;ucn huge chunks of monsy.
Chey do it all the time. Sears
dready has some $2 billion of
oog·term debt on its books.
-lowever, it is unheard of for a
-ompany to go directly to the
luhlic for these funds.
The standard ploy is to call up
Morgan Stanley and Co. or Mer·
rill Lynch or another major Wall
Street investment banker and
have them raise the mone)' for
you . They turn lo thcit b ig
customers fat cats fike in
surance companies and pension
trusts -and sell the notes, tak
ing a juicy commission for theift'
efforts.
T HEN ·THEY MIGHT run a
discreet but self-serving notice
in the W~I Street Journal that
they have managed once again
to float a big issue for a client.
Most members of the public
never get to hear about such of-
ferings. The underwriters -the
investment banking houses
are looking for million-dollar
commitments.
Well. Sears h as decided to
bypass this well-established
route. It's going to offer notes
directly to the public in de·
nominations as little as $1,000.
You will be able to order them
by calling a toll-free telephone
number.
WHAT KIND OF interest will
you be getting on the money you
le nd to Sears? That's n<?l set yet.
Money
Tr ee
but you can be sure that it will
be more than you are getting on
the money lodged in your friend-
ly local bank
Sears ~1ll be going after peo-
ple who put their money in
certificates of deposit. At the
same time, it expects to save
l'l'Oney from what it would have
to pay if it put this offering in
the hands of a n investment
t1anker.
The result will be to give the
little guy a shot al an investment
normally restricted to giant in·
stilulions.
YOU AND I MIGHT applaud
t his move. but you can easily
imagine the re~eplion it's get-
ting in banking and Wall Street
circles. The banks see it as com·
petition for the sa vings monies
they want. The investment
Coast Firms Report
Diridon llpgrad~d
li£verett/Charles. Inc ., Pomona. has an-
nounced the incorporation of its Electronic
Manufacturers Services div1sion, Irvine. as a wholly
owned subsidiary.
EMS was formed as a division af\er acquisi
tion of Contact System's California wire· wrapping
operation in June 1977. Services were primarily
semi-automatic wire-wrapping and data pr<M:ess·
ing. Since then, the subsidiary bas grown t.hro~gh
the broadening or the customer base and .addition
of services, including electro-mechanical ~s
sembly, circuit board testing, backplane ~ting
and distribution of wire in bulk cut and stripped
rorm.
John Sandberg. former division manager, bas
been named president of EMS
WEmTHE
OESCRtPTlON YOU
HAYE ASKED FORf
By Terry
Cirant,
R.Ph.
Wbat does a patient ex-
pect from t heir
pharmacist? According
to a great many surveys
you eiped quite a bit.
Altbougb naturally con-
cerned wltb a lair price,
tbe emphasis seems to be
on good pharmacy servi~ and we make an extra effort to oner the
service YoU want.
PREPARATION
OF
TAX RETURNS
Year Round
Tax Planning
,MARTIN I. SCHNEYER
Attorney At Law
o......~. ~ .... ~ MeAff....,_I
.,._efUWl<T....,_I ~efTU'-~..-.U.S..Tnc-t .-u.s.....-~
11GODOYE ST. SUrT!400
NEWPOflT BEACH
For ~ment C•ll
133-9252 We keep a cattful Te-
cord of all .YOW' prescrip-•-----..... ----tiona and try to take the
Oodd ng S tore to Open
Wallah and Gretchen Clarke plan to open their
25th store at South Coast Plaza shopping center.
Costa Mesa. They have stores in Dallas. the South
Pacific and elsewhere.
The Waltah Clarke resort shop will feature
yacht, sport, swim and leisure wear for both men
and women.
The Clarkes opened their first shops in Palm
Springs and Newport Beach in 1952.
Huor Fo,...• Sufln d fa,,,
Fluor Corp .. Irvine has announced the forma-
tion of a subsidiary. Fluor Constructors Interna-
tional. Inc., to support its worldwide.construction
activities.
President or the new company is William I.
McKay, member or Fluor's board of directors a nd
former group vice president of Operations of Fluor
Engineers and Constructors, Inc.
C. Patrick Bedford has joined Fluor Construc-
tors International as vice president. He has more
than 27 years' experience in the international con·
struction industry and most recently held the posi-
tion of vice president construction for a leading
West Coast firm.
.... ltlol'>n Oft~
Regis Homes. Inc .• bas moved its office to 5120
Campus Drive, Newport Beach .
Regis bas divisions in Northern and Southern
Calilornia and Colorado.
Ad A~ /tloee•
Bozell & Jacobs Advertising bas moved to a
new office at 4590 MacArthur Blvd., in Newport
Beach.
Ume to penonally ex,
pJaln bow to take the
medJc:Mioa. Oft.en we dJa. c uas your prescripUoo
wilb 1our doctor. or co.anie. prompt. friendly ~ o'n v en le n c e a nd
C091't4111 are ~ of our
••• ,., YOCllbulU')'.
Authentic 1715 Gold Finier Bar\ <over 4'1'.I ounces pure gold)
YOUR DOCTOR CAN
PHONe US •b•n you ....s a IDldidne. Pin up
,.... p;wcvtpdcm " ... ·=--·or we will -~:~A-== ...,;;;.:·~ u
.... llilb' ~.
MeJ •• ~ompoa1d =
" Beeovered from the
wreeka1e of a Spanish
Gane. off tbe eout of
Florida. ' ~··with y C4'rttftcate In.torte ArWac:ll
17500 Value i0r Sale or Trade
bankers are irritated at being
left out of the action
Typical was the reaction or
William Hummer. a partner in
the Chicago brokerage house.
Wayne Hummer and Co He
said·
.. H enough money flows into
these instruments, it may be dif-ficult to gain control of the
monetary aggregates and,
therefore. lo conduct monetary
policy ··
If you can figure out what
Hummer is saying here. let me
m on the secret. But that's the
way investment bankers like to
talk . to themselves. They·re
sputtering incoherently now that
mighty Sears, Roet>uck has told
them .. "We can raise $500
million without your help."
O vt·r T iu· Counlf•r
NASO Listir.qs
The United Auto Workers un~
ion has no obJcection to their
use. but the union·s s killed
trades de pa rtment, readying for
contract negotiations later this
year. recently approved resolu
t1ons for a contractural ban on
layoffs .. if tht.> introducllort of a
technolog1cal advance or changt>
results rn reduction of thr
workforce ··
t"' 01f"u t ()II 17 ~
Ott ". 2 I 0 fl IJ &
"' Off 11 1 l 011 11 I
'• 0 11 11 I Ort 10 ~ 1'• 011 10.) • Otf q.
()II q I
OU 8 1
•• Off "J ', Olf 8.l • Off ~II I l)tf I I
I Off I • 011 11 •• Oft & ,
""' Ott 6 1 t,. Off 6,.
L. Off • I
' OU Id I~ Oft 6 ,
MUT UAL FUN DS
• ' ~ • • '
I
lrvble Your Hometown '
t" Dally Newspaper-
VOL. n, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1979 2 a a a a
Baby N ~arly Dead?\
No Hope for Life, Waddill Lawyer Says
' 1
' ' l
By KATHY CLANCY
oui. Oalh Pli.t sutt
The infant Dr Wilham Wad·
dlll u1 accused ot strangling
"was limp as a rag doll" and
had no hope for IJfe when 1t was
born after a saline abortion
nearly two years ago. the doc-
tor's attorney told an Orange
County Superior Court jury lo·
day
Defense attorney Charles
Weedman said movements seen
in the infant by some hospital
personnel were no more than
"spasms" and the "whining.
mewing" sound he ard was
merely a noise m ade by a near-
1RWBuyer ·
C:Ould Get
A .. ~.. 20 Years
Na. --..1-.. : ... ----·· ~ ---~--...,.....,..~~ ... .__-----~rW~--t -......... ~-• ' A senior buyer for TRW Inc. of
Deputy Jack Dwyer <front) and two unidentified
helpers were among those chasing an escaped bull
in a Salt Lake City suburb when the quarry turned
and chased them. The three-hour saga ended when
the anim8.l was captured following shots from a
tranquilizer gun.
r:Wayne 'Improving';
Mail Still Piles Up
Newport Beach's John Wayne
is beginniq to get around town
• again aft.er undergoing surgery ~ for stomach cancer, bul he's
i made little headway in getting tbrouth. the hundreds of letters
from well wishers delivered deli:
. ly to bis Baysbores home 17 · "He's been gett.lng out a bit,
going for a. ride, playing some
· backgammon and cards," said
aide Pat Stacy.
"He's doiIUt Cine. The doctors
a.re very pleased with his prog·
ress, and be bas gained a UtUe
weight, which iS good."
The 71-year-old Wayne has
been resting at home for nearly
three weeks, reeuperating from
the Jan. 12 surgery at UCLA
MedjcaJ Center for removal of
his cancerous stomach.
Miss Stacy said be has been
reading a little of his mail, but,
"it continues to arrive in large
bags, there's no way we can
answer it all."
Countian Burned;
Fire Ruins Home
A Tustin area man was
critically burned early today
when fire destroyed his $300,000
bome in the Red Hill community,
Orange County firemen reported.
ported.
Fire spokesmen said Gordon
Haag, who is in his mid-50's, suf·
fered burns over his face, arms,
1houlden and hands when be
dashed back into the home at
1416 La Loma Drive to call the
fire department.
He was reported in critical
' condition this morning at UCI
Medical Center's burn unit with
first and second degree bums.
Firemen called it a "miracle"
that Haag, his wife Alice, three
children and another relative .
were able to esc•pe tbe· 3:~
a.m. blue.
Forty-tlve firefighters battled
tbe flames for 35 mlnutel before
brtn1llll tbe fire under control.
~ said Haa1's IOD,
Gordon Jr., was awakened by
tbe 8CRl9d of crackU.111 names,
spotted fire coming from a den
area and called to other family
members to awaken them.
Once the family was safely
outside, ftremen continued, the
senior Haag ran back inside to
phone firefighters and suffered
his injuries.
'
Heavy Snow
Hits Sierra
By Tbe Aaocla&ed Presa
A foot of snow fell in the
,Sierra overnight forcing
. northern California drivers to
use chains and snow tires as the
National Weather Service laaued
travelers advisories for today
and forecast more heavy snow.
Heavy snows were reported in
Norden in Nevada County and ln
Placerville In El Dorado Coun~y.
Redondo Beach, who admitted
in federal court Wednesday that
he tried to extort a SS.000
kicktiack .from an Irvine firm,
faces 20 years in prison.
Pierre La Monte Jackson, 32,
of Altadena, is scheduled to be
sentenced on a single count or
extortion on April 9. The charge
carries a maximum penalty of
20 years and/or a $10.000 fine.
Jackson was arreste d last
Nov. 30 by an undercover agent
of the FBI posing as an official
of the Charles E. Smith com-
pany, 16872 Milliken Ave.,
Irvine. The arrest came immediately
a fter Jackson accepted $5,000
from the bogus executive in the
parking lot of a M~nhattan
Beach restaurant.
Ttie Smith Company was at
the time bidding on a $110,000
U.S . Army subcontract with
TRW. Officials or the engineer-
ing firm went to the FBI after
they were solicited by Jackson
for the bribe, according to court
records.
Jackson had been employed
wUb TRW only a few months
before his arrest.
Three Held
In Death of
Laguna Man
By llAYMOND ESTRADA JR. Of ttle O.lly 1'1'-' Swtf
Police arrested two
Capistrano Beach suspects and
an El Toro teen-aser Wednesday
on suspicion or murder in the Dec.
1 stabbing death or Rodney James
Gilbert, 32, in his Laguna Beach
home. Laguna Beach police Lt. Al
Olsen said today it is believed
drugs were involved in the kill-
ing or Gilbert, a skateboard
equipment salesman. Olsea
would not amplify the drugs
theory
Arrested are Robert Eugene
Rowe, 20, 39454 Villa Verde, an
unnamed 17-year-old boy. and
CTaig Leland Bigborse, '18, of
21812 Northwood Lene, El Toro.
Gilbert's former girlfriend,
Myra Hight, foun<ftbe dead man.
in bis beach-type cottage at
439J,.ia Hill St., with a single knife
wound ln his heart the morning
<See lluaDEll, Page AZ>
dead premature baby
He described the 5'Kunds and
motions "as the last few sicns or
something whlch, for all prac-
tical purposes, was already
dead." . Waddill is accused of stran·
gling the two-pound, 15-ounc~ in-
fant after she was born to an l8-
year-old unwed mother following
a salme abortion attempt by the
43.year-old phys1c1an.
Waddill·s first trial ended last
May in a mistrial when jurors
s aid they were deadlocked 7 lo 5
in favor of acquittal
Weedman, in hi s openrng
statement to the jury today, ad·
milted Waddill told hospital
personnel ''don't do a ~oddamn
thing !or that baby except &ive it
OJ.ygen."
The obstetrician did not want
any .. heroic" efforts to revive
the baby, Weddman contended,
saying Waddill feared inex-
perienced hospital personnel
.. might in some tragic and terri-
ble way seek to resuscitate th.is
thing and give it some im-
aginary hope of life when they
would have absolutely nothing
there except some great to-do
over an abort.us."
The defense attorney attempt-
ed to refute prosecutor Robert
Pottering A round
Karen Flynn, an eighth grade Venado Middle School stu-
dent in Irvine, concentrates on building an unusual look·
ing sculpture in ceramics class. called a coil pot. It's
made by rolling clay into long round coils and placing
them atop one another.
Wunty Delays OK .
Of 3 Airline Leases
By GARY G RANVILLE Of,.,. O•llY Pti.t SI.Ill!
County s upe rvisors agreed
Wednesday to delay signing new
rive-year leases with the three
commercial airlines that
operate from Orange County
Airport.
Consequently, Air California,
Hughes Airwest and Golden
West Airlines will continue their
operatJoM .at the airport Wlder
restricted month-to.month
leases.
The decision to delay new
leases with the three air carriers
came as part of an overall
strategy aimed at contending
with a Federal Aviation Ad-
ministration investigation that
will get under wa't this month.·
That rnvesthtat1on is aimed at
determining if county govern·
ment is discriminating against
other airlines that want to
operate from \he airport
Chatterton's contention that his
c lient faced bankruptcy and
reared a malpractice suit if the
baby had lived and been brain
damaged.
He admitted Waddill had
made some unsuccessful basi·
ness investments but described
his client as "very prosperous."
Chatterton, during his opening
statement to the jury Wednes-
day. said he would produce wit·
nesses. who "saw Dr. Waddill
choking the baby and complain·
Ing that the baby would not stop
breathing.''
Chatterton also contended
<See WADDILL; Page AZ>
IO Arrested
On Heroin
Sales Raps
Five men and five women. all
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
re s idents. we r e arres t ed
Wednesday night by Costa Mesa
police on charges or selling
heroin. Sgt. Gary Webster said no
s ignificant amounts or drugs
were seized Wednesday. Arrests
were made on warrants result-
ing Crom allegations of about 20
previous undercover narcotics
buys over a three.week period.
he said. The arrests were unus ual
because all but one or the al·
leged heroin purchases either
took place or began in Costa
M.esa. Webster said. The drugs involved were $2!>
"balloons" of heroin weighing
about one-half gram, he s aid.
"We'll continue Lo target the
heroin dealers and users in this town.·· Webster said. ··we let it
be known that if they·re going to
be dealing in Costa Mesa, we're
going to be on them."
He said an of the male sus-
pects were in Costa Mesa Jail to-
day and the female suspects in
Orange County J ail. The male suspects were :den-
tified as:
-Rich Christopher O'Connor,
27, of 2621 Harbor Boulevard
<See HEROIN, Page A2)
Boy, 6 , Hit
By Car, Hurt
An Irvine boy was in satisfac-
tory condition today at Tustin
Commuruty Hospital. after be· ing struck by a car Wednesday
near the intersection of Reid and
Claremont streets.
Police said Stephan Lee. 6, or
3671' Claremont. had just alight-
ed from a car with several other
children.
He apparently ran into the
street and was hit by a ca~
driven by an Irvine woman. She
was not held, police said.
The child suffered a broken
right thighbone and a con·
cussion. according to police re-
ports.
Coast
Weather i
. . .Gann Plilfl on BillfDt·?
In addition to fore"oin" new leases, supervisors gave Coun·
ty .Counsel Adrian Kuyper
authority to hire outside al·
torneys to represent county gov-
el"oment during the FAA probe.
Kuyper indicated the San
Diego·based firm of Luce,
Forwar«i. Hamilton and Scripps
will be hired.
Kuyper also indicated the firm
will represent the county iD any
appeals that might be lau.nebed
1 as a result of FAA findings.
Thetr feet hurt, but Pot 1
Boorte'• fOV'T daughter• kept ·,
on dancin' /rom OM end o/ t;
f'otPnon lslmtd to the other. ~l
The fl were on location in . ';
Newport Beoch for tlw film· "'" inO of portionl o/ an Eoater t
teleo••ion apecial. See :
f'eoturmg, Page CJ.
B1 aDBCCA BICLll °' • .,.., ......... workers to succeed ln their one·
day drive on a misbmasb of or·
ganlaaUonal problems, including
failure lo have an adequate sup-
ply of petition forms on hand.
Gann predicted success rot
what he called the Spirit of 13 in·
iUaUve drive.
He said the volume increases
daily on the number of
al&natures collected and, ii \he
present pace holds up, the ln·
lt.laUve will be on ne"t year's
ballot. •
At lite same tlme, he was
sharply c:rttlcai of government
Jpendlnl. · ·wuu and fraud t\tP abMlu&l'tJ wtld fD thlt COUJIUy,"
,beMAd. -Pr.,.Mkla 13 put California ..... rw.troat u • leader ln
Qaia ....... ;.~.u.e lH reformer
.fli9GMW'ft:Pate AU
As -Kuyper prepared for the
airport legal battle be said
•'could have nationwide
significance," be streaaed the
seriousness of the latest airport
crisis.
· In simplified terms, the coun·
ty counsel told superv6ora the
FAA probe tends to bring federal~ state and local naula·
tiona into direct conflict.
And, KllJP8r wanted, tbe ma·
jor,.,..sue lo be decided is
whether a local airport pro·
prietor like tbr county must
yield operalln1 policy to the
rederal .,..,,
ue 1u~r'" that tbe two airUnea touched off tbe In
FAA lD•etdtaUon wltb &Mlr
complainQ be told ln wrtUq <1ee••u• ••fl Al)
\
INSIDE TODAY " Gusty westerly winds 15
to 25 mph tonight with •
chance ol rain decreasing
to 30 percent. Some clouds
but ·mos tly fair Friday
with 'b.lgha near 60. Lows
tonlabt 46 to 52.
latlex
' I
1
'
,.
A.I ONLY PILOl
·Mideast ...
~arley
Tonight
~
W A.SHlNGTON \AP > Preai·
dent Cartt!r. frustrated, lmpa
Uent and already supporllf\I key
EtY pUan d e mand•, opens
alldeast l)t'at'et lalk11 tonlaht wllb
Jsr1tti Prime Mlnhtet
Menactwm &artn. The outlook for wrapptn1 up•
treaty did nol appear br\ght u
C~1rtt1r rrepared ·fur whal he
aays wll bf> "a frnnk dis('uulon
of the WUC$ · · Before flylna ht-re. 8e1in
criticlied lht> United Stnles for
supporting E,;yptlan proposals
he satd •·were totatlly unaccepta.
ble to Israel "
He a1BO caU~ on the Unlted
States to work to cbaoae E&ypt'a
positions on the rt!malruna is-
s\.les.
·'The Ame rtcan deleaallon
sttould thank again aod chanae
their attitude," he s aid before
b(>arding an El AJ maht to Lon-
don and New York "I belleve it
'ls the duty of the United States
to convince the Egyptians to
change their attitudes."
He added' that Israel had
alrea~y made "great sacrifices"
for the cause of peace.
Begin was· to arrive at An ·
drews Air Force Base in sub-
urban Maryland in late after·
noon, and immediately begin
talks with Carter and Secretary
of State Cyrus R. Vance at the
White House. Further talks with
both men were schedulM Fri·
day.
Begin did not elaborate on the
issues he found unacceptable,
but diplomatic sources in
Washington told The Associated
Press the specifi cs of U.S. sup-
port ror Egypt's stand on the
three major unresolved issues.
f'ro91PflfleAJ
MUR DER •••
after the stabbiQg occurred. ~
Police said Gilbert's home had
been ransacked but indicated
that nothing of value appeared
to be taken.
Clad only in a blue-striped
nightshirt, Gilbert was found ly-
ing face up between the kitchen
and living room.
Police believe Gilbert was
beaten after he was stabbed.
Furniture in the home bad been
ptlshed around and blood was
found on the walls, police said.
Laguna Beach po1ice in·
vestigator Gene Brooks arrested
Rowe at the home of the eldest
suspect 's girlfriend in Lake
Forest after a warrant had
been lssued late Wednesday.
Bighorse was served with bis
arrest warrant at Orange Coun·
ty Jail where he was in custody
for alleged traffic violations.
Rowe and Bighorse remained
in Orange County Jail today.
Bail was not· set pending the
pair's arraignment in court
Youth Injured
hi Irvine
Cycle Crash
A Costa Mesa teen-ager is re-
cuperatioa at UC Irvine Medical Center toaay aft.er breaking his
l eg when he crashed the
motorcycle he was riding into a
tree near an Irvine intersection
tWednesday. • Mark Howard Kishneff, 17, of
2345 Newport Ave., lost control
'of his cycle while riding north
along Jordon East. near Forut,
,in Unlversity Park.
The cycle jumped over the'
curb anct he was catapulted in·
to a tree, breaking bis left leg.
Kishneff said he was riding a
friend's motorcycle, w~ ub·
familiar with its driving c!\arac·
teristics, and apparently
rounded a corner too fast and
sltJdded over the curb.
i•1!1itlQl(tJI
ri.tOt-QNOCO.Olf 1'1101.,.!t1'""'1tltll\s-_ ..... _,,_,t.• .... -9'tNO. .... c .. .....,..~~ . ....., ...... ._ .. -''"'" -""°""',.,._.'°'ca~ -· IN-1 a.-.-"-°" h«IV'--i.lfl Ve1i.y, 1"""9. '"-llN<ll/-~. A ....... ......,..._ .... ltllUbll"'9dSel_Yt_ -•Yt TM,,_._,.. ..... 1\111 ... .._,. la tt a. _ .. 111..-...c-w_,.,c.11....,,..,.. .............. .....,..... __ _
H&Ut.C...., YIU~l-O.•tl--
"'-•11...it . lidll ..
Tll1ph••• <n•J..., ""•'r_,........_
... 1
Balancing Act
It's nQ treat to beat your feet in the Sully Miller mud so
contractor . laid down narrow bridge for Irvine High
School students, like Karen Gundrey, a 10th grader, to
cross. The muddy mess is the result of work to widen
Walnut Avenue nearby the school, at Culver Drive.
China Seeks End
T o Border Fight
BANGKOK. Thailand <AP) -
Vietnamese troops re pulsed
Chinese forces near Lang Son. a
key provincial capital, but lhe
Chinese battled back successful·
ly at some points, intelligence
sources in Bangkok reported to·
day.
In Peking. the Chinese govern-
ment sent a note to the Viet·
namese Embassy today propos·
ing talks "as soon as possible"
to end their two-week border
conf lict, Peking's official
Hsinbua news agency reported.
Vietnam claimed its forces
kijled or wounded 27 ,000 Chinese
Fro.a Page A I
HER.OIN ...
•D-1, Costa Mesa. $10,000 bail on
suspicion or-tour counts or sales
of heroin.
-Henry Wattenburg Cbavar·
ria, 30, ?111 E. 16th Place. J4,
Costa Mesa. $10,000 bail on sus-
picion of two counts of sales or
heroin.
-Mike Hollenbeck. 27. 1375
Baker St .. #B. Costa Mesa.
$20.000 bail on suspicion of two
counts of sales o( heroin, one
count of possession o r a
billy club.
-Harold Eugene Harmon, 29,
21521h Puente Ave., Costa Mesa.
$10,000 bail on one count of sales
or heroin.
-Ra)'IDOIMI Adolph Drozd, 36,
7204 W. Coast Highway, Space
#21, Newport Beach. $20,000 bail
on suspicion of two counts of
sales of heroin. ,
The female suspects were list-
ed as:
-Patrke M. Ze&&Der, 22, 7204
W. Coast .Highway, Space #21,
New~ Beach. $20,000 bail on
suspicion of four c&unt.a of sales
of heroin.
-Jeri A•ae• P'9pp1. 30,
2152~ Puente Ave., Costa Mesa.
$20,000 ball on suspicion of three
counta of sales of beroJn .
-Nue1 Aue CllelCre•, 24,
145 E. 18th St .• #C. Costa Mesa.
$13,500 ball qn auapic1bD of two coullta of 1alea of heroin.
-Gall 8an•• Neltoa. aa, a Joann St., Cotta Me11. '35,000
ball oo IUlpldon of two counts of
1alea of beroln and o6e count of
acce11or1 to armed robbery.
Tbe 1.U. ebaqe WU in CODDeC·
tioD wttb tlie Qlfepcdat robbery
.Gf a Newport. Beach bome two·
,,_kl._, Webltet Mid.
~ ... ~M,J0'1
.E. lllJa ~ N; COl&a .....
•·• bell _....,.etoe of two eoa&lel ..... Glbdobi. ...._ uld all'GI tbe ,... m:wn arneted at ~Ir
in 12 days of fighting. The Hanoi
report said Vietnamese troops
also destroyed 200 tanks and 30
military vehicles.
These claims could not be in·
dependently verified. Analysts
say they believe Vietnam's
casualty claims are exaggerated
and the Vietnamese have suf-
fered greater losses than tbe
Chinese.
Japan's Kyodo news service
reported that Chinese Vice
Premier Li Hsien-nlen told re-
porters in Peking today that the
Chinese invasion force had
c ritically damaged "two or
three" regula r Vietnamese
divisions.
Many analysts believe this has
been lhe objective of the Chinese
Invasion, to "teach a lesson" to
Vietnam by crippling some of its
main-force military units. Li's
claim could not be confirmed. It
had apl)eared that 11anoi was
not committing many regular
troopstotheborderwar.
"We will pulloutonceourobje<!·
live 1s actueved," L1 was quoted
as telling the reporters.
Irvine O ffice r
Promoted
To Sergeant
One of the initial members of
~he Irvine Police Department
was promoted to sergeant today.
Patrick A. Rodgers, 37, an
Irvine officer for
Irvine officer for 3'h years and a
Costa Mesa officer for eight years
before that, became lbe depart-
ment's ninth sergeant.
He beads the department's
crime prevention and advanced
physical planning programs. lle'
has worked patrol, traffic en·
forcemenl, accident Investiga-
tion, bicycle safely, narcoUcs,
vice and intelligence.
Rodeers bolds a ma1ter '1
degree ln publlc communication,
is president of the Irvine Junior
All American Football program,
and lives in Costa Mesa with his
wile, Jan, and three children.
The department administra-
tion alao has five Ueuteoan&a. a
captain and a chief.
.. ......... 111
GANN ••• ·
claimed.
·•People are now looldna we1t," be said.
He admonlabed tbe rea1ton
prHent to continue wol'kln1
bard/ for the Spirit of 1a ln·
lUatlft. ·
Several years aao, Gana warned, a 0 aneak t.bi.r• ltole
thll eouMly'a bald M1 ll1d ..... and ~aced tt wttla a.,.....
''lprtas .. eomllll *' ......
be .... "So let'• pt rtd "' .... .............. ,... .......
JOU ., to tile t*(."
•
•
F ..... P..,eAJ
#
More Oil Finns WADDILL. •
Waddlll was without malprac-
tice tmu.rance at the time aod
tUt Ille wu faclna bankruptcy
beeauae of eerson•l lnvest-
mentl. Curb Supplies Weedman told reporters.
however, that Waddill's accoun·
tent would testily that the doctor
w11 not tn ftnanclat straits and
was clearing at least $200.000 a
year fromhll medical practice. NEW YORK <AP) -se'vcul
of the l)aUon's major oU com
panles be1an reacUn1 todl)' t.o
lhe Iranian petroleum equ..ae
as they limlled auppUH of
guoUne and beattn1 oll lo
dealen. Texaco alto 1nnouJ\e@d
that about 2,200 mlln11 8tatlomJ
wlll close In four Northern slate11
The movea by Teuco, St8rnJ
ard OU of Indiana <Amo<"• 1.
ClUes Service and Sun <:<1 to
F,....r~AI
LEASES ••.
their requet1\ for sp•n •t lhe
airport cannot b ! ('vn•ldered
now. Supervisor Ra&lph Olf!drlr h
said the two airllnu. Contlncn
tal and Frontier. should bt told
more.
Diedrich said nollcea ecol
them should Include statemcmu
about noise conslralnl3 plMccd
on the airport as well ""' olhcr
s hortcomiQ&S. l ncludl ntc
terminal and parking congti&
tion.
But after a brier debate.
supervisors agreed lo ao alonf(
with Kuyper's more limited pro·
posal. Continental and F.ronticr con
tend they are being discnminal·
ed against by not being allowed
to operate from Orange County
Airport.
Under airline deregulation
laws enacted last year. the FAA
was empowered to investigate
such complaints and to impose
fines on airport operators found
to be practicing discrimination
against carriers.
A TIP ,. ..
...........
•
SAU •IS
llAICll 3.1
br
IOClllN
by Mobil. Atlantl~ Rlchfleld,
Phl1Up1 and CooUdenlal OU. Texaco. the nation's third·
Jar1nt oil company, Hid lt is
ch11l n1 gatollf)e 1tatlon1 "lm·
tnedl1tely" In portions of
Wisconsin, lndlana Ohio and up·
lltate New York to bnn1 lt.s salea
"more cloHI)' In llne" with It.a
reflnln«i upaclty.
Teuco uld It provides "only
111w>ut 5 percent" of the 1aaoUne
"nld In UMt aff ecied areaa.
'ff'uco atlM> Hid It Is provid·
in• cu~tomers with 80 percent of
lhfl ~Holine thf'y bought In
M9rch 1"8. Amoco nld dealer11
wlll re<>etve JOO JH'rcent of their
M f!lrt h lV7" tkUvttrln. but no
more ~pti. lnueucd demand,
whll• Cltl.,. Bervlce uld It la
~rovlflln( "4'> percanl of the
"'""'ltne ffnd "-'• petctJnt r;f the Jol
tuf!I II .tl1PPf'd • yHr al(o
Hun uld It lJt c-uttlnic i hlp
m~nl• of h(Jm,. hti•tlnc ntt
k!"rmuroo 1t11d tll~I fu,.I In th~
. '" • N"'• f;nl(lsrnft •l•~•. 1rnd ~f'w Vork . Nirw Jerltf'y, P1:1in
11y l v•nla . D el11 w 1t rt: 11rad
l'thryJand to 80 perctnt of M1trch
I U78 ltivelJI.
A congre11lonal atudy rriade
public today in Wathlng\1111 con
eluded. meanwhile, th11l New
England. heavily dependent on
heatinJt oil. could produce from
10 percent to 45 percent of au
energy from native sources hke
wood . water. wind and sun
power. The report by the New
England congressional caucus
said 10 percent of the region's
total energy needs could be met
from alternate energy sources
by 1985.
Cbattert.ora told jurors the ob-
atetrician aJto knew of a case at
Johna Hopkins Hospital in
Baltimore where a doctor was
aued when a brain-damaged in·
fant survived a saline abortion.
He aaid that doctor was forced
to pay for the child's support in an
lnatitution for lite.
The proMCUtor also contended
Waddill "would be concerned
about lawsuits and thousands
and thouaanda of dolJars ...
since he had no insurance com·
pany that would protect him in a
lawsuit had. Baby Girl Weaver
lived and been me ntally re-
tarded."
Among. those expected to
testify for lhe proset:ution, Chat-
terton continued, is Dr Ronald
Co rnel8en . the n c hie f or
pedlatrica at Westminster Com
munlty Hospital.
Chatterton said Cornelsen will
tutlfy he saw lhe doctor
11trangle the newborn girl sbort·
ly aft.er her birth two years ago
"This baby cannot lave or at
1will be a big mess:· Chatterton
quoted Waddill telling
Cornelsen. "There wtll b~
law1ull11 and 1t wall cos t
thousands and thousands or
dollara and the baby probably
will be brain damaged, .. the
prosecutor contmued in his re-
counting of Wadd11l 's purported
conversation with Cornelsen
Later the prosecutor argued
Waddill began choking tbe baby
··and he as complaimng that he
ca nnot find the goddamn
trachea."
wam·s LA-z.aot
·511101
CITIZEIS'
ensationa
PIOYE YOU'RE A
SBIDll anZEll
SAYE .,.
• AllY LA·Z IOY • STOCK ~
~ ·========
~
TVvtlWI•
~
ML•D.-&. ••
HUllDREIS OF
LA·Z·MYS
IMMEDIATE FREE DEUYERY
LA·Z-IOYS
.. ... .... $·199
·COITAMllA
Mf L 171h IT •
(Acal"'°"' lafpN, ,.~~~·>
-.ri~.
lat. ICM
ao.d ....
l
MllllON Yll JO
llltl .......... "'•,. (Comer of Marvuente
and VIG floalar)
4tl"Ol-
Man.-M 10..
Sat. 10-6
Claled ....
I
f
.
' ,
' I
l
t
{ • • ' 1
-
Thurlday, March 1, 1979 DAIL y PILOT A 5 .
e I \ ·Jupiter Bewilders NASA·
PASADENA <AP I Ex.cited
cl'ntl•b are JunJdnai lbeir once Udy lht>orlc about JuplleT as
Voya1er 1·~ te levision cameru
r~veal u dazzlingly complex
world of rct1lleas and colorful
clouds
· · l-'or t h e most part.··
.,. fl.Jn6vt>ndty of. Arizona scientist
Urudford Smith sa1d ~es
day, "th~ exlattntt 1tlmospheric
cir<-ulat1on models have all
bl'~n llho t to hell b y
Voyag~r . B~wildered is
probably the best way to
describe the way we feel right
now"
THE NEW PICl'Va E ol lhe
Jovian atmosphere, once
thought to have "a nice, uniform
now." shows rolUng and cburn-
m1 motions that the old theories
cannot explain. Smith said at a
news conference.
Smith beads the fmaglng team
for tbe SSOO million National
Aeronautics a nd Space Ad·
ministration mi.sslon.
He said the pi c tures,
transmitted across more than
400 mlllloo miles of space, will
be studied ror months as scien-
tist.a try to undentand the new
findlngs. /
TUE UNMANNED
spacecraft, after a Journey or 18
months. is some 3 million miles
from Jupiter and closing
rapidly. -
Its cameras already reveal
richer detail than scientists bad
. aeen and NASA says the plctlS'ea
should be 10 limes better wben Voyager 1 sails past the gipn-
lic planet early Monday. •
The ship ls to swing withm
173,000 miles or Jupiter 'before
fl ying on to rendezvous "''th
Saturn and its rings 1n
NovembeT Ul80.
VOYAGE& %, four months
behind its sister s hip, 1s
scheduled to Oy past Jupiter in
July and reach Saturn in 1981.
Student's Jobless Pay· Upheld
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> The
Callforrua Supreme Court has
ruled that a student ts eligible
for UDe.n>PlQYment benefits even
though school work curtails the
s tude nt's avallability for
employment.
llfttiltg l'ote Nfzed u J SACRAMENTO (AP) -An in· ~ .4Tr'
ilialive to legalize oil-track t· ~I.. /t.1.. Cj.
ting and Nevada-style ganibli.n _ _
bas failed to make the California -. --.------.--
ballot ror the lOt.h time in five resignation of Alv1n Race. re-
years says the secretary of ported to be the hear apparent to state'~ office. Clausen's job at the world's
The office reported Wednes-largestbank.
formation leading to the arrest
and conviction of a bandit "'ho
shot an all-night store clerk Lo
death earfy Wednesday, store of-
ficials said.
Southland Corp. of Dallas.
. Dad Gre ets Fa•ilfl
..... ,,,..... •
The 6·1 decision Wednesday
upheld a Los Angeles County
Superior Court decision involv-
i ng Enid Ballantyne. who
restricted her employment to
part-time and inlermittept work
at a department store because
she was caring for her three
small children.
day that tbe proposed coostitu·
tional amendment by Robert
Wilson of Sherman Oaks failed
to get the 553,790 signatures
needed by Feb. 16 to qualify for
an..ldller Hunted
WHITTIER MP I A SS.000
rewa rd is being offered for LO·
T ex .. which operates the 7-
Eleven store chain. posted the
reward following the s hooting
death of Albert Lewis Owens, 26,
at the 7-EJeven store on ,Wbitllcr
Boulevard.
Paul Jones hugged one of his eight children as they
were reunited Wednesday at Los An~eles International
Airport. They had been separated for four years after
~ones left Vietnam.: Flights from Saigon were cut off
Just before t~e. ~am1ly w~s to_ leave. His wife, recovering
from append1c1lls, remained m Saigon but plans to move
to California.
She held various jobs but lost
I'ier last job through no fault of
het> own i11 March 1975 and
began receiving unemployment
benefits. according lo court
documents. In September 1975
she entered law school at UCLA.
::;,:;:~ed Ag•b• Evangelist Faces
NATIONAL CJTY CAP> -The ~
City Council has asked City Se • hr • R
Manager Harry Gill for his res· 1~-w .. t m--nor ap ignalion after voting to replace ~ &I &I
him with his assistant, Tom
McCabe.
Gill, who left Tustin under
Ch T• A • . similar circumstances four .
t years ago, said Wednesdlly he avez arge S nzona has no immediate plans. He was
. -::1na3a~~~~J::urnro£~!~~~1se
EL CAJON CAP > -Television evangelist Dennis Goodell hal'
been arrested for investigation of sex ctiarges involving a 17-year-
old female member of his church, police said ..
The 34-year-Old Goodell is pastor of the Ev angel Center in El Ca-
jon.
By 1'be Associated P ress
..:-. _..;. .--"' -=-__ __ _ __ ,Peillelb!ll.._ _
today on Agric ultural Labor jun c tion allo win g union
Relations Board requests for in· representatives to go into two
junctions limifing UFW picket-majoc growers' fields to talk to
With the winte r lettuce
season nearly over in the Jm-
perial Valley, United Farm
Workers leader Cesar Chavez is seeking support for the s ax-
week-old -letluce strike in other
areas, incfuding his Arizona
birthplace.
Meanwhile, two court bear-
ings were scheduled in El Centro
Utilities
l.DSe S tate
· B111ing
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP) -The ~alifornia
Supreme Cou'l"t. in a
·blow to the stat e's
utilities, has ruled that
the state Public Utilities
Com mission correctly
reduced the allowable
profits of Southern
California Gas Co.
The court upheld two
PUC orders Wednesday.
THEY LOWERED the
authorized ra te of return
ror the gas company
from 8.5 percent to 8.25
• percent in a dispute over
how the utility account-
ed for savings resulting
from federal income tax
credits.
The complicated rul-
ing stems from a gas
utility application for an
$80.2 million annual rate
increase to offset the
higher cost of natural
gas.
It involves accounting
prac tices used by
utilities to save part of
their income .taxes when
they inves t in n e w
plants.
THE 5-Z decision writ-
ten by Chief Justice
Rose Bird endorsed
the PUC's treatment of
1 tax savings from invest-
' ment tax credits and ac-
celerated depreciation
in setting rates of
1 utilities.
It also declared the
PUC correctly r uled
that the gas company
would remain eligible for.
federal tax credit under
its orders.
Owner Fined
LOS U GELES (AP)
-The president of a 1'"
A n 1eles. tex t ile
reprocessing company,
wbleb was bit by two t major flrel. Ju t year ,
I bu been ftDecl $13, 7IO
aftet be Dlellded 1uUt1
to 22 ftolatloal of Ute state l"lre Code.,GeraJd
Kauap, pr•ld1nt of G
• I: Manufeeturlna tne,.
1'U put OD • lllCl8tbs
pl"ObMiGIL
ing at two struck farms and s trike-breaking workers.
placing restraints on use of · The preliminary injunction, is-
guards and firearms at one of s ued by Monterey County
the two farms. Superior Court Judge Richard
T HE UFW WON a major, Silver, was expected to be ap-
alth ough limited, vi ctory pealed by the .two growers,
Wednesday when a Salinas California Coastal-Farms and
judge signed a tempora~ in-Sun-Harvest Inc.
Anl~on'I-6
SHOE SERVICE
for Handbags -
lugCJage & Zipper Repair
RtgiORal a.,-. c..t..-for
SPEHY • TOflSIDBt
O.'t ft.row flWfl'f YOllr '""°' ..... old ..... ...,
We...,..... md f'ftOle
allHfor ......
BolA Chief Test itle•
SAN FRANCISCO CAP >
Bank of America President A. W
Clausen spent almost an hour
Wednesday testifying before a
federal grand jury investigating
the resignation last August or
the bank's vice chairman of the
board.
The investigation concerns the
Add To Yaw Sltopplllg
........ by Yhltlllg 0..
SEAFOOD & SERVICE
DELI
1 ... 1-9 Chick• -Med CMcMti .___. S..twfclln
WEHAVEUYE
MAINE LOISTER!
MARKET BASKET
SPECIAL ORDER
MAMMOUTH .
CHEDDAR
A&ED60DAYS
$35!
fl iclcOJ7 farm.iz,o
Westclff
Pima ,,. • '14';.;Jr" ....
WESTCUFF Pl.AU
17tll&lrYiH
Contact l enses
Eyeweer Styling
,
Refracting
Prescribing
Dr. Lou Rou Elder
OPTOMETRIST
"'
642-0720
1124 Irvine Ave.
Newport Beach
IT HAS ABOUT 180~arishioners and features faith healmt<
services Vldt!Otaped eacti Sunday for broadcast on cable television
an Southern Califorruar Goodell was arrested Tuesday for investigation of sex acts In
volving a minor girl he was counseling, police said.
Goodell was released from county jail <1n his own recognizanc\!
late Wednesday. according to Sheriff's Deputy Ralph Goodrich. Arraignment was scheduled today in El Cajon Municipal
Court.
The girl told her rather of the alleged incidents. which purported
lyoccurredfroms ummer 1978through last January, and Goodell wa'\
arrested shortly after they went to police. according to Police Lt. Bob
Standring.
•
CONCEPT
CINE'"
POWERDRH'E
SQl8I
Thrift Pack
100'1 .. 30
FIU
T1IRAGRAH
• ''
5.49
. , '
•
•
,,·
' I I
' I
I
•
•
' Robert N Weedl'Publls.ntr Thomas Keevll/Edltor
oranoecoa., oa11v P1101 Editorial Page ................................................................ -. .. Thursday, Marohl, 1979 Barbara Krelblch/EdltOf'lll P~ EdltOf'
Sharing the Cost
Of Smnmer School
Tht-tmuglnotave brain of Stanley Corey. Irvine
n1fwd School Dtstrlcl supcrlniendent ol schools. 11gaan
hu product.'Cl a melhod to carrJ on a fun ac hool program
v.tlb ( •wer funds Uu1n be/ore
lhs orag1nahty, s purred by pc>st·Propos1Uon 13 tight
uudtiwts. hus h1rnt·d toward ummer rhool, which Wllb
(' :rn<.·l•kd 111:.t ) l•ur bccuust' then• wusn l mon .. y tu tSup
port ll
Thi:. .)'t•ur Corey proposes that ennchment cl~sset>.
phystt'ul t>ducollon and other ·ummertJme taple tor
wharh tht' t>tatc no Jon.aer will provide money c:on be
hnum·E,'d through • partnershtp amonR the district,
part.•nts an<l lucul busm4.'s
1 lutr tht• c~t of thes classel:I would ~paid out or th~ di~tr1N gent>rnl fund. and half through public subscrlp
lions
Hatht•r than be a fee to asa.ure entry of a cnUd into ~u n1 mt•r sdwol. u subscripuon is an Investment in the
:,y~lem. patyang equally toward the attendance of all
children. As Corey said. 1t will keep open summer school
"to every man's chpct whether he rem pay a fee or not."
In the 8c rambhng lo cut school costs without impair-
rng t·ducauon. his plan seems an amiable one.
Toward Fair Pay .
Taxpayers in the Irvine Unified School District
oughtn't to be too dismayed to see that teachers are ask-
ing for what amounts to a 17 percent pay increase in their
1979-80 contracts.
The teache rs can 't mean it. The figure, which in-
cludes 12 percent to match the cost-of-living Ilise as
m easured by the Cons umer Price Index has to be taken
as a n initia l benchmark, a reference point to determine
less lofty al ti tu.des for teacher pay. ·
Rarely does a bargaining group hold fast to-or even
intend to hold fast to-the first set of numbers it pro-
motes.
The next step in the process is for the school board to
make its initial offer: it's a steady bet the board will
quote a figure below that for wruch it eventually )Vill set·
lie with teachers.
.. During t he ups and downs of negotiations, these may
b.e kept in mind:
Tr\>ine teachers, paid now $11,318 to s tart and to a
maximum of $22,890 for nine-month contracts, also re·
cei ve yearly pay boosts, separate from contractual in·
creases. for experience and education credits.
Last year's pay raise of 5.5 percent did not come
close to matching the cost-of.Jiving burden.
In s hort, several factors contril5"ute to the fairness of
., salary contract, a nd not simply bald figures of 17 per-
cent, 3 percent or 5.5 percent.
<:able TV Rates
When the Irvine City Council shortly convenes to dis-
c uss a proposed rate increase for cable television service
in that city, it would do well to look beyond the rate s tudy
performed by the accounting firm, Ernst and Ernst.
Certainly not in question here is the integrity of that
company. which is expert in regulatory aspects of cable
television operations.,. ,
Still, the report sh'ould be viewed with the caveat that
the company was hired by the Irvine Company. which
owns the local cable television service; the report was
written from the perspective of the needs of tbe owner.
One of the chie f conclusions of the study is that a $10
monthly subscriber fee <tbe regular rate now is $6 > is fair
because that is what is being charged , on average, by
other Southern California cable compa nies.
The logic doesn't take into account the possibility
that all the other rates already may be unjustifiably high.
The Irvine Company s ubsidiary, Community
Cablevision. cites expansion of channel capacities and
new progi"ams under eonsideration.
A rate increase might be tied in part to a firm com·
mitment to some of those programs .
• Opinions expressed tn the space above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comm ent is invited. Addresa The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560; Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642""'321
•
Boyd/Beds
By L. M •. BOYD
Be njamin Franklin used
two beds. getting up in the
middle of the night to move
from one to the other, his re·
ported theory being that his
body would become over·
heated unless he moved to
cooler quarters. England's
Prime Minister Disraeli
dldn 't settle for two. He had
four beds. He put out the
same story Franklin did.
Neither were a match for
King Louis XIV or France,
thouCds The king made use ot
412 . He alternated by
wbJm. All these men's beds
were ln different rooms.
please note. Question ls
whether they really believed
that bod)'·beat notion or just
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Evelle Youqer ll •ulac
ua taapQW11 for .-..ooo
a year man to add '° .... roar penaloal. Tb1t
can be twnmed ap '8 one~ -ORDD.
aloq wttb • tot.I dll~
nprdillr1111nwqe
taaPQ9f.
wanted to create a situation
whe r ein nobody could be
sure exactly where they were
sleeping on any given night.
The eleclronics boys a
working on a digital beeper
pager that will diaplay the
t elephone number to be
called. Pretty snazzy
Bear in mind, people who
are totally deaf don't get
seasick, according tq the
medicos.
The word "porcupine" was
put COiet.her out of a couple
of Latin words that meant
"pig" and "tbom."
If you were to eat as much
food as does the typical hum·
mlntblrd, you'd put away
155,000 calories a day.
·Am lnfortlled that up to a
couple ol years ago Stanford
UnJver&h.y didD-& srade any
o{ ill ttudllatl lower than a c. COQJd that be true?
TM T....,. mu tends to
be pradJcal, IOlld, reterved,
matt•r··of.fact, determined,
patleat and nUable. He'•
nreful Jn bla apeecb. He
... ~ wll .... &Mil ta
......... al tblnp, 0r 10 h)'
the ........
Nicholas Von Hoffman
Oil Could Cost Carter His ·Joh
Althouah only four prealdenu
In the lqt l20 years have been
defeated running for a second
term an event al11htly leas
rare tban aa comet plunking
down on UM! Lincoln Memortal
Jimmy Carter ·~ re-election
cbaancWt huvu ~en M di11cussion
topic here almo1t since the hour
that this poor, ploddine. pre-
tildentlal person was sworn into office.
M ulhnit over remote cont·
1ngenciel' 1s bow we writers
make a hv-
ina . so that
such chatter
ouf ht t o be en oyed for
whatever en-
tertainment
value it may
have and ig.
no red.
But now for
the first time
J l mmy may be coming up
against something that can cost
him his job: oil. Not the revolu·
lion in Iran. Practical-minded
.pepple will understand that a
different course of action by the
Ame rican president in that
country would not have yielded
a different result.
THE MOST you can say is
that If Carter had distanced
bimaelf somewhat more rapidly
Crom the Shah, the new people
might have been more friendly
and might, but only might, be
more willing to resume oil pro-
duction.
But the judgment rendered on
the way scarce oil and gas sup·
plies are allocated will be bruis·
ingly concrete. Jimmy won't be
held accountable for what hap-
pens thousands or miles away in
Iran· but if the lines at the gas
pumps get maddeningly long, if
there are blackmarket scandals.
if r a tioning comes a nd it's
botched, if there are rumors of
corruption in the allocations, or
favoritism, if the distribution of
Mailbox
gas and-or home heating oll ian't
generally resarded a• fair and
efncient. old Tall Tooth wUl be
In serious trouble.
Jn no other area or govern.
ment activity will Jimmy get
the blame personally and direct·
ly the way he wiJI on this one.
People wiU remember, and if
they don't, the opposition is sure
lo remind them that the ap·
paratua for taking care of
emergencies such as this was
suppe>aed to have -been set up
with the pasaage or Carter's
··comprehensive energy
package."
In fact what was passed by
Congress and mistakel)ly aigned
by Carter wasn't comprehensive
and wasn't a package, but a
mishmash that l\aa been or no
'
he•p in reducl.ng energy usa•e or
makiDI our uae of it aianlficant·
ly more efficient. Neverthelees
Carter said Ufe mt.hmaah wu
his m lsbmaah, just the right
mishmash to get the job done. At
the While House they called the
paasage or the energy package a
victory for the Georgia plodder.
ANOTHER victory for Carter
was the creation or the J>epart-
ment or Energy. Around town.
however, the Department of
Energy already has a reputation
for being outstandingly ineffi-
cient, a title to which there are
many claimants, not a few or
whom are aged and encruated
agencies like the Interstate
Commer,.,. Commission, an out-
fit which has had 95 years to
r eac.h its peak of ineffectual, fe<:k·
less inaction. And here comes
Jim my Carter 's new Department
of Energy, not yet two years old
and already a challenger.
Regular telephone callers to
DOE count it a good day when
somebody picks up.a receiver to
tell the inquirer that no, be can't
talk to the person in charge of
this-or-that because the position
hasn't been filled yet or if It has
been filled the person isn't really
in charge or th.is-or-that and no.
I'm sorry we wouldn't know who
is.
_While they let their phones
ring they worry about getting
their omces decorated and ob-
ser vers who have lo watch \his
cha rade wonder how these peo-
ple are ever going to handle a
national gas rationing program
if it comes to that.
A GAS sh~r:tage is only slightly
less serio us than a food
shortage. It hits everyone and
everyone will want lo hit back.
They'll want to hit back yet
harder when it dawns on them
how little has been done to pre
pare the country for a nasty
bump li~e this one.
Communists Reap Harvest of Dissension
To the Editor:
The Communist government
of Cambodia felt it must punish.
a lot of citizens. How do you
punish someone when they have
no freedom? You kill them, of
course.
The Communist Vietnam,
backed by Russia, decided that
they should punish the Cambo·
dian Communists , so they killed
them.
China decided that the Yiet-
n a m government should be
punished, so they are killing the ·
Viets.
Now Russia says that Chlna
must be punished. I wonder who
will punl.ah Russia.
It seems the old adage pre-
vails: Whal you sow, that shall
you reap.
The Communists have been
sowing war and dissension for a
long time. They should have a
good crop to reap.
JAMES BOLDING
• ., ......... Wem
To the Editor:
I want to express my opinion
about the Laguna Canyon Road
issue.
Earl Waters
The problem is not the road!
everybody thinks that~ the
problem and as long as everyone
lays responsibility on something-
other than themselves, you 'II
always have Wt"ecks.
If you put eight-foot high walls
down the center or the road
somebody wo,uld still find a way
to have a wreck or get killed.
The problem is that there are
people who go through the mo-
tions of driving a car but their
attention is on something else.
Drive-instead or wor rying,
arguing, drinking, kids in a,
group all having fun ana the
driver not watching the road,
angry because you 're late,
speeding around curves to see
what the car will do, etc.
THE PROBLEM on the can·
yon road li es i n the re -
education of individuals so that
their awareness is focused on
driving an automobile and all
the laws that encompass that
task. ·
One could even post a big sign
at each end of the canyon say.
ing, "Danger -Be Alert When
Driving 1bis Road.''
That's cheaper than a fo ur-
lane road. Thal won't wipe out
all the trees. The money saved
might pay for overhead lighting
on all the curves in the canyon.
If au the accidents in this can·
yon were investigated beyond
the point of "Wh at happened
here?" you would find every one of those people were not aware
or driving when those accidents
occurred.
The driver 's license system
s tresses laws a nd proper
mechanical functions or driving
It does not test to ·See if a person
stays aware. It does not stress
what could happen when driving
any other way. The law officers
who investigate accidents see
this all the time. It has a sober-
ing effect.
It is a possibility that if people
could be re-educated in the area
or awareness, accidents could be
reduced, insurance premiums
would go down and we could
spend all that money on fun
things.
LES BUMANN
.n• ••~"'•" To the F.ditor:
Could the concern or citizens
To LaWIDakers It's 'Us' and 'Them'
By a slip of the tong .. e Senate
President Pro Tempore James
Mills bas l et drop the
fundamental d ifference which
now separates the elected
representatives Crom the people.
It has become a s ituation
wherein the lawmakers no
lon«er think of themselves as
being an inseparable part of the
people who elected them.
This shocking revelation of
how legislators have gradually
become
insulated, no
long er
sharing the
hopea and
fears of the
rank and file
citizen s.
came with
the intro-
duction by
llllla of a
-
pay meature wbleb would
provide I percat lnc,..... ln
each of the next two yeant for
t.be tolool. 'lbe end result would
be a 1alar1 of ue,110 at compared to the $23,232 ree.lved
by tbem lut year.
IN n.nnJNG Ute meMUN •ma caref\1111 poin*' out that wbU. tbe ccimumer price lDdu
lDcre&Md •· 7 percent alnee t• ................... aT ,.1111 lmt • eanNJJ MUii foraot to mention tbat ' . ' •
legislative salaries ln 1965 were
only $6,000 and the current
$25.555 represents an increase of
m~re than 400 percent!
But it was bia assertion, ln
explaining that recent increases
amounting to 5 percent a year
are less than the 7 percent
average ;mnual boosts given
state employees, which shines
the light on the attitude of the
lawmakers towards the
cithenry. Said Mills, "The
peofle out there don 't realize tha . " In one short sentence
Milla put the legislators in a
separate catefo(y from the rest
of the folks. U bas become "us"
and "them." 1be "people out
there" are "tbern."
SUCH THINUNG explains
why the legislatol"I, nu.ab *1th a
10 percent salary rabt, are
re•dJ to push throu1h yet
anotMr lntteue. One aft~ fault
the JOlons for their rauura to
1olve major problems of
property tax r•ll•f. acbool ftnan~ing, unacceptable crime
ratea and welfu. reforma, but
noDe can say tbty •te derelict :J!..9:' lt com .. to looklna Ol&t Jor J*'IDDal weltUt.
If the salary was all the
propee mt.lkt fl•d •om• :::.:.t:Sol peft&PI Jlilla'
•.. lid .... .., part
ol tbe peekap. It ta a.pant.I
'
from the tax free "living
allowance" which is now $46 a
day, having just been upped 15
percent. nus is collected 7 days
a week throughout the entire
session as we ll a s when
membao,rs are o n "official
buaineu" between sessions.
· The extra ·stipend ls tax free
by virtue o f speci al
Congressional action sponsored
by U.S. Senator Alan Cranston
which gives state legislators an
income tax exemption not
granted to others.
WREN, to the salary and per
diem. la added tbe fringe
benefits such as an automobile
and an unlimited supply of
gaaollne. both alao tax free,
alon1 with penalon benefits far
more 1enerous tban those
ll'lnted 1tate employees, the
total compensation for
California te1l1lators ls the
equivalent ol a salary of more
than SS0.000 a year. This places
thetn amo"ft-a· the elite top_5
percent income brackets.
a bout the preoccupa tion by •
television, motion pictures and
newspapers with violence-
dominated scripts. plots and
headlines be answered
ec onomically ? And ,
academically?
An article describing the
publis hing pol icy or th e
Australian newspaper magnate
Rupert Murdoc h st ates he
publishes a newspaper "for the
lowest common denominator
element ... one In which ex·
plicit s tories about sex and
crime and racy pictures are the
foc us."
This appea l to the low -
intelligence and the production
or news for its "enterta inment"
value builds an e normous
readership that the publisher can
use profitably In soliciting and
securing top-price advertising.
· THE SAME principle obtains
for televis ion a nd mo t ion· pictures which accounts for the
.. competitive" sales-price or
newspapers and "free" TV ...
the advertisers are picking up
the production tab and, for the
most part, pay the distribution
costs which s ubscribers a nd
coin-box purchasers or the print..
ed media contribute to com·
parablymodestrevenue.
Th e Chris tia n Science
Monitor, with a very s mall ad·
vertising income, must rely up-
on other sources of income and
its ,.eaders, who purchase that
newspaper for 25 cents. prob·
ably represent a well-above·
average intelligence which the
Monitor publishing poii-cy
responds to by employing the
very best ne wspaper editors,
journalists and photographers.
Perhaps, rather than agoniz·
ing in what appears to be a na-
tiona l concern for wh at one car-
toonist describes as a losing bat-
Ue against network s abotage of
creative and quality program·
ming, responsible citizens of aU
ages might begin to consider
their obligation t o react to
·mediocrity in the teaching pro-
fess lons, don't-rock -the -boat
school admlnJstrators and their
intimidation of educators wort.by
of th1t title lncludlng parents
and the ones wbo must suffer for
it all . . . the students.
For. as Dewey observed,
''What we do for and with youth
will determine tn l~r yean
what they do with Ud lO the in·
stltuttou in which they find
tbemHlve1.''
BRUCE S. HOPPING
•
IAtt..,. from~ ore~
TIN riflhl eo ~ lettn• to fit
~.,..,,,,, ..... Mbrf tr,. .. ......
Ltacn of • '°°""' Of ..... fJt tee:.."'= :.. ':!::.,'": ...... _ ........ ,_..., ...
,..,... fl •ffldfttl NUOll .... JIClNlll. PMrv .U ftOC bt p1&bUtied.
I
... LOCAL Thurlday, Marc" 1, 1979 use DAIL If PILOT A J 3 -f"RilinSTurn (;reek lntO Torrent
The Coast lbghway bridge spanmng Aliso
Creek forms background for turbulent
waters rushing down creek to ocean at
.\liso Park. Recent rains pr9Jllpted heavy
runoff which spills out the river mouth at
base of beach. Bolling water drew atten-
tion otbeach-goers Tuesday who came to
bask under warm skies at popular South
Laguna strand.
Surf er at Aliso Beach Park attempts to
wade across river mouth to get to better
wav~s on north end. His efforts were
doomed to failure, however, and he quick-
ly r etreated to safety of south beach.
Runoff from recent rains made normally
placid Ali59 Creek a boiling current or
bone-chilling water near the South Laguna
beach. '
Freeway Views Sought Pancakes
Benefit Due
Travel Club Sets
. I
Viewing ~f Slides Route 55.Extension Plans ~under Study · A pancake breakfast and
track meet to raise funds for the
Laguna Beach High School
Booster's Club will be held
March 31 at the school.
The Cruise Buffs travel club will meet Sunday to view slides taken
by t.be late photographer-journalist Pele Fulmer . The meeting is
scheduJed at the Laguna Beach Women's Club from 2 to s p.m. A state transportation official
said that h1s agency would bank
heavily on public participation i• a study of the proposed ex
tension or the Costa Mesa Freeway (Route 5S)
Vincent Paul, deputy director
of District 1 for CalTrans, also
told local officials at Costa Mesa
City Hall that the two-year time
period of the environmental
study "is a tight schedule."
THE STUDY, which shouJd be
complfted io late 1980, will focus
· oo various alternatives to ex-
tending the freeway. Also to be
considered are nine alternate
routes for the proposed freeway
extension from about Mesa
Drive into ctownlown Costa
Mesa.
Paul ~aid he hopes numerous
worksbOps will be held over the
s tudy period to seek citizen
participation, which be hopes
will be extensive.
PauJ said a policy advisory
committee, a group consisting of
local officials from Orange County cities and agencies,
would meet March 15 at 8 p.m.
With 'Regrets'
al Costa Mesa City Hall to dis·
cuss the study and set policy
re c ommeoaalions and
guidelines.
REACTING TO criticism by
some that two years is too long
to spend studying a freeway
route originally adopted in 1944,
Paul said that span or time
would just be sufficient to study
the matter.
"Two years for the study is a
tight schedule based on ex-
perience," he said.
The transportation official
said the study would take a look
at various alternatives to
freeway extension, including
construction of a viaduct or tun·
nel along ~ewport Boulevard,
the widening of the roadway to
Bay Street, added lanes, malting
Newport a one-way street, con-
struction of an expressway and
a possible bypass of downtown
Costa Mesa, possibly along
Orange Avenue.
CONSTRUCTION OF a
freeway extension· is estimated
England Tram/ ers
To -Sclwol in CdM
Music teacher Richard England, whose suspension from Nev(port
Harbor High School bas stirred tempers to the boiling point, said
that be bas decided, although with regrets, to accept a transfer to
Corona del Mar High for the rest of this school year.
Newport-Mesa Unified School Distdct officials announced the
transfer Tuesday. Superinten·
dent John Nicoll said England
will be added to the existing
Corona del Mar music staff and
wUI not replace any current
teachers.
BE SAID temporary music
teacher Don Anderson will con-
tinue to teach England's former
classes at Harbor High this
Y"ar. "I'm very very disappointed
because we'd been led to believe
we were golng to have the op-
. port\ll:dty to sit down with the
principal aod wort this out,"
England said before Tuesday's
meeting. "Now it's turning out
everybody's going to lose."
However, England said be ex·
pected to assume h1a duties at
Corona del Mar ltiab today.
"'l'VE ALWAYS been pro-
fessional, regardleaa of the silly
charges a1ainst me," be said. "I
will do whatever they ult me to
do temporarily untll l 'm re-
ioatated at Harbor Hlah."
The announcement of the
tranafer was a~n1ly opposed
by most of the more than 100
people attending Tuesday
night's school board meeting.
ABOUT • persona spoke at
the end or the meeting. ·
England wa.a placed on ad-
minlmative leave earlier th1a
year efter new Harbor lligb
Principal Tom Jacobeon brought
cbar1ea of unprofealonal con.
duet qainlt the band dlrector .
. Store. Looted
'
hi Clemente
8u,..aan wbo walked off with
more Ulan 11,000 In camera
eqalPIDlll& fNm tile K·lhrt 4e-~: lD San Clemente =-~ .. IOdUJ'.
Police tald tllere wen no ..... ., fofted .....,, into tbe
....... Qmtno de 8atn0a, .......................... •••I• •aa•n were t•'n ............... , ... ~.
C&.rb ....... ,..... Ute
94alPIDlll& •• val~t '1.-.
to cost $80 million, Paul said.
Other improvements could be
considerably cheaper.
Sponsored by Nolan Real
E s tate and The 'Cottage
restaurant, the breakfast pro-
ceeds will go to support high
school athletic events.
A display of historic photographs taken by Fulmer before his death
will be on display. Cruise Buffs members are i.n'vtled to select those
they may want to keep.
1980.
The proposed freeway route
has been a controversial matter
since CalTrans director Adri·
ana Gianturco last May an·
nounced plans to erase the
freeway extens ion proposal
from state plans.
Cost of the meal. comprised or
pancakes, eggs, sausage, coffee.
milk or orange juice, is $2 per
person.
Upcoming plans for c,ruises to
the Me diterranean and· the
Caribbean seas will be oullinl!d.
as well as an .around the world
c ruise, and China trip slated for
For more information, call
Flora Bass al 494-7575 or
494-1345
Local officials pushed for the
environmental study to focus at-
tention on traffic problems on
heavily traveled Newport
Boulevard.
PAINT
SALE
CONTINUES:
Palnt-ltlt cr11llvtw1y
loffcorllt,
llldltlbtst
prices. more ec011omlc11 t111n ever. D!tr 600 ll11utlf1lly dlfftmt colors.
THE ORIGINAL
EASY PAINT
It ~oes on smooth and easy and
• does In mlnut~s to a truly beau-
tiful flat finish. It's scrub brush
tough, but $ ti5s"~~~~it. 7 9 9
water OUR REG.
'11.'9 .
THE EASY EN~MEL
( THE BOOKMAN )
OPEi
7 DAYS
•••
REVIEWS in the DAILY PILOT
240 BROADWAY
LAGUIA BEACH
497-4403
SEASON'S
CLEARANC -E
aoooooaoaa
PORTABLE ELECTRIC
. HEATERS
20%o~F
REG. '21.99·'43.99
. •10••
~ OURR-eG.
24" St,.I
Wood Grate
'lf.'9
ALL FIREPLACE
ACCESSORIES
---ViOFF----
77~ ~,OUR REG.11.59
Floor& Wall
Air Deflector
WATERPROOFING
UGL & HENRY
ROOF CEMENTS
PRICIS SUIJICT TO SUPPLY ON HAND THRU l/ll/7'
.,
4
\
...
.414 D\ILY PILOl lhul'9day. M.,ch '· ,_i _19 __
Robots Tackle 'Ugly' Jobs
No Co nsorl.iunt
Iran's new 011 minister, Hassan Nazih. ha~ announced
that his country's oil no longer will flow through an in
ternauonal consortium. but will be sold · to individual
companies. Nazih seems almost to be holding the h and
of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, r epresented in a
portrait behind him. <Relatedstory, PageA4)
r>t:TROIT tAPI Tbey don't
t1•kl' roffl~ breaks or demand
v1u·auo~ They Cl·nerally don't
gl't swlt And they are not ln·
l'ltncd to file union grievances.
They don't even see the prob·
lt'm11 that m011t workers do in
their J~ evtin I.bough these
am the dJrtie11t. mos t boring and
least attractive In factories
but rnorc and more tbby do
··~t>e" 1md even "feel ·
THIS t:VEll MORE popular
durllng or American manufac·
turers L'i the industrial robot, a
mt>rhanical marvel closer to
R2,D2 of "Star Wars" thap most
pcoJtlc imagine.
tf e numbers about 3,000 in the
Un•Led Slates. some 1,000 in
Western Europe, and perhaps
30,000 in Japan, according to the
Detroit-based Robot Institute of
America
Whal be lacks in the personali-
ty of his movie cousin, however.
be more than makes up in work
from his whirring and clicking
tubes, hoses and fingers.
"WHAT COMES OUT is or
consisten\ quality." s ays Al
Williams. Midwes t regional
manager for Unimalion Inc. of
Danbury, Conn., the nation's
largest maker o f industrial
robots.
"rf a guy leaves out a couple
Silent, Tire less Me chanical
Worke r s Don't Upset Unions
or welds, someone gets a car
with rattles. With the robot, you
get an improved product.··
"It ·doesn't get tired." adds
Donald E. Hart, head of the
Computer Science Department
al General Motors Research··
laboratories
AUTOMAKERS ARE among
t he leaders in development or
robo~s. Ford Motor Co., for ex·
ample. bas used robots since
19.58. when l,l device was in·
troduced in one plant to transfer
hot parts. ·
"It's a deadTy. ugly. dirty
business there." says Ford
spokes man Ed Snyder . "The
robot was accepted by the
workers and there was no objec-
tion."
Ford has 236 robots employed
in such job5 as stamping. spray
painting, die casting. "areas or
worker discontent." Ford says
GM. MEA.NWHJLE, has about
150 robots, including 32 pioneer·
ing body welding machines in·
stalled in 1970 at its Lordstown,
Ohio, assembly plant Those are
known in the industry as "pick-
and-place" repetitive action
robots. carrying price tags start·
ing at Sl0.000, says Don Vincent,
manager of the Robot Institute.
But research, he c;ays, is
aimed at $100,000 sophisticated
programmable robots that have
the ability to know what they are
touching and "see" what they
afe doing through use or
cameras.
"We think the idea of equip-
ping robots with cameras and
computers to give them vision is
going to open many new avenues
to increased productivity." said
Frank Daley. GM's director or
manufacturing development.
GM WAS THE first U.S. firm
to use computer vision, install·
ing a system at it.$ Delco pl~~.in
Kokomo. Ind .• nearly two years
ago. There. the SIGHT-I system
inspects circuits and positions
e lectrical test probes Its
second-generation brothe r .
CONSIGHT, r e lies on com
pulefized vision to control all s;x
joints of a robot's hand.
"Our uJt.imate objective is w
be able to pick parts out of
;
Jumbled heaps in bins." says
GM's Hart.
The world's largest carmaker
also points to the new technology
as improving efflcl~ncy and thus
generating money for "un-
precedented multibiWon dollar
outlays for new product pro-
grams," sayc AJex C. Mair, vice
president of GM 's technical
staff.
GM TOUTS ITS PUMA (Pro
grammable Uruversal Machine
for Assembly> ro bot as "the
lates t and probably the most ad-
vanced robot on the world scene
today "
Recently unveiled at the GM
Technical Center in suburbarl
Warren. PUMA also is capable
of "seeing,.. allt\ough its first
use wiil be sightless work at a
De lco plant in Rochester, N.Y.
PUMA will assist in assembly
of small electric motors by pick-
ing up a hot part, positioning it,
adding a component and then
placing the part on a conveyor
belt for further work.
Sears Wants Loans From Customers
A SIMILAR project 1s bemg
developed by Wes tinghouse
Electric Corp. and the National
Scie nce Foundation. The new
twist in the $1.8 million experi-
ment will enable the robot to
change and assemble different
product styles or adjust to varia
tions in parts . according to
Richard Abraham of West
inghouse
The reliability of the devices
:.eems remarkable. considering
daily absenteeis m in an auto
operation of up to 10 percent
Ford officials say robots func
lJOn 98 percent or the time
By MILTON MOSKOWITl
Sears. Roebud and Co., which
has been having its problems
lately. has come up with a dan-
dy idea: Why not borrow money
from the people who shop in its
stores? '
Sales have been sluggish at
Sears over the past year but it's
still the nation's largest retailer.
with a customer base second to
none. Some 26 million people
carry Sears credit cards -and
those folks are accustomed to
borrowing money from Sears to
finance their purchases.
NEXT VEAR Sears plans to
turn the tables. lt will ask its
customers and other mem·
bers of the public to lend it
some money SSOO million. to be
exact.
·There's nothing unusual about
large corporations borrowing •
such huge chonks of money.
They do it all lhe time. Sears
already has some $2 billion or
long-term debt on its books .
However, it is unheard of for a
company to go directly to the
public for these funds.
The standard ploy is to call up
Morgan Stanley and Co. or Mer-
rill Lynch or another major Wall
Street investment banker and
have them raise the money for
you. They turn to their big
customers -rat cats like in
surance companies and pension
trusts -and sell the notes, tak·
ing a juicy commission for their
efforts.
THEN THEY MIGHT run a
discreet but self-serving notice
in the Wall Street Journal that
they have managed once again
to float a big issue for a client.
Most members of the public
never gel to hear about such of-
ferings. The underwriters -the
investment banking houses
are looking for million-dollar
com mitnients.
Well. Sears has dt:c1dcd to
bypass this well-established
route. It's going to offer notes
directly to the public in de-
nominations as little as $1,000.
You Will be able lo order them
by calling a toll ·free telephone
number.
WHAT KIND OF interest will
you be getting on the money you
lend to Sears? That's not set yet,
Money
Tree
but you can be sure that it will
be more than you are getting on
the money lodged in your friend-
ly local bank.
Sears will be going after peo-
ple who put th«::1r money in
certificates of deposit. At the
same time. it expects to save
money from what it would have
to pay if it put this offering in
the hands of an investment
banker.
The result will be to give the
little guy a shot at an investment
normally restricted to giant in-
stilutiQns.
VOU AND I MIGHT applaud
this move, but you . can easily
imagine the reception it's get-
ting in banking and Wall Street
circles. The banks see it as com·
petition for the savings monies
they want. The investment
Coast Firms Report
Diebion Upgraded
Everett/Charles, Inc.. Pomona. bas an-
nounced the incorporation of its Electronic
Manufacturers Services division, Irvine, as a wholly
owned subsidi a.ry.
EMS was formed as a division after acquisi·
tion of Contact System's California wire-wrapping
operation in June 1977. Services were primarily
semi·automatic wire-wrapping and data process·
ing. Since then. the subsidiary has grown through
the broadening of the customer base and addition
of services, including electro-mechanical as·
sembly, circuit board testing, backplane l«:sting
and distribution of wire in bulk cut and stnpped
form. John Sandberg, for mer division manager, has
been named president of EMS
WEFITT'HE
DESCRIPTION YOU
HAVE ASKED FOAi
By Terry
Grant,
R.Ph.
PREPARATION
OF
TAX RETURNS
Year Round.
Tax Planning
.MARTIN I. SCHNEYER
Attorney At Law
Oot hfag S tore to Ope n .
Wallah and Gretchen Clarke plan to open their
25th store at South Coast Plaza shopping center,
Costa Mesa. They have stores in Dallas, the South
Pacific and elsewhere.
The Walt~ Clarke resort shop will feature
yacht, sport, swim and leisure wear for both men
and women.
The Clarkes opened their first shops in Palm
Springs and Newport Beach in 1952.
n...,. Fo""• S ubndla,.,,
Fluor Corp., Irvine has announced the forma·
lion of a sub5id.iary. Fluor Constructors Interna·
tional, Inc., to support its worldwide construction
activities.
President of the new company is William I.
McKay, member of Fluor's board of directors and
former group vice president of Operations of Fluor
Engineers and Constructors, Inc.
C. Patrick Bedford bas joined Fluor Construe·
tors International as vice president. He has more
than Z7 years' experience in the international con-
struction industry and most recently held tbe posi·
lion of vice president construction for a leading
West Coast firm.
llegl. Mew!• Ottl~~
Regis Homes, Inc., bas moved its office to Sl.20
Campus Drive, Newport Beach.
Regis bas divisions in NortMm and Southern
California and Colorado.
Authentic 1715 Gold FinJ(er Bar\
Cover 4'1i ounces pure goJd)
Beeovered f r om the
wreekage of a Spanish
Galleon off the coast of
Florida. .
Complete with
Certiftcate ot Hlatorlc Artif'acts
S7500 Value tar Sale or ~ade
bankers are irritated at bemg
left out of the action.
Typical was the reaction or
William Hummer. a partner m
the Chicago brokerage house.
Wayne Hummer and Co. He
said :
"I( enough money flows into
these instruments. it may be dif
ficult .lo gain control of the
monetary aggregates and.
therefore. to conduct monetary policy ...
IC you can figure out what
Hummer is saying here. let me
in on the secret. But that's the
way investment bankers like to
talk : to themselves They're
sputtering incoherently now that
mighty Sears. Roebuck has told
the m .. "We can r a ise $500
million without your help "
O"·..-r 1'1u · Co un tt~r
NASD Ustil'IC}s
The United Auto Workers un
ion has no ObJCCcl1on lo thei r
use . but the union's skilled
trades department. readying.for
contract negotiations later this
year. recently approved resolu-
tions for a contractural ban on
layoffs "if the introduction of a
technological advance or change
results in re duc tion o r the
workforce "
N"mt GtMl<IW AdYl>atl'I Gr nova SIJ...,. 8111ylC•d Com(Kv Slo.nT~
Sl~mlt FtF._1 Form19h ll'lr<El'r MathAol
AH""''" Che.rov S<llaakE S..fecn:I eo1yq, Voq.trt AlrOtr-oo ~Incl ClttGUIP HamlDQ NA 8io( S Bl<VI$
1'. •.. ,. ' ~ )'. 7<, , " s•. u1 •
17'
6'> )' .~.
3' J ' 1 I
Prl
811 Off 1' OH
'" Off I Off
'• 011 '• Ott 1'• Off
''• Ott •, Ott
11 Oft
'• Off '• Of1 11 Off 1 OH
I Off •• , Of1
t .. OH
... Off .. Ott
'• Off ••• Off
'> OH
10
11 s II 8 "~ II I
11 I 111 10 s
10 J
'' q I
8.7 83
8 J 1 0 7S 1 4 1 I .. ,
'' 6.1 &1 &1 u
MUTUAL FUND S
INVESTING C.ivln 8ullotll· FNerated FUf'dl HolOO Tr 1.00 NI... MHs.<,ft.-lf Co ~~! ,..~ I 1~ I •1 So~n In 11 IS 11.lO COMPANIES Bull<k 11.32 13 .. Am l dr 1 '1 11• Hor Men I• n IS.JI F,_..,, 7.13 I S6 ~,..,.. ._..... 1 14 I S1 Sw ll'V\ 7 «I 1.00 MEW VOfUC CAPI C.ndn 1 $7 &11 Einoh 11 !A • IMAFCI 11 W 12.31 tl>Ck9 I.•? • 41 ~I n Fd I • ., 'I• Swln Gt S.2' \.4• TM IOl-..g quo. Olvld 7.66 7" ~our E 11 44 ISi Group Mau 10 .. II~ P lgr.m Gri>; Sover In 11.31 12.fl latiOM, ~I.cl 11'1 MOl'lll IJ.13 14.JS Hllcm lJ 6' U... Grwttl 6 C13 S 50 Fdlnc 14 00 IS Pllq Fd 11.4111.17 Stale 8ond0<" Ille Ha1!onel As50Cl· HtWS 9 IS 10 00 MonM I 00 Nl tfl('.om 3 ., l.~ Mau Fl-.cl Mag c 3.50 l " Com F 4.20 ··~ allol\ of 5Kur11'-' NYVn 13.1$14.31 MMM 1.00 " Tttl.,, Wl.1• 11 74 MIT '" 1031> .M~ In .... ..... Orv F'd •57 ... Ot1ltr\, Inc., an CGl"und 10.75 II OI Opln n ti U.74 TrPaSll '·" • MIG 1.ss 9 2'2 P lonttr Furci Pr09 F 4 50 •.'7 Ille prlcH ., ""'kh CGlncm 1.11 8 34 hFre 11.01 Nl 1nou,1r, 3.7S MIO 13.SI 1•.SJ Fu"" 14 St IS .. SIFrm Gt •. s• NL ll•es• wcurltlH CsllAs.M 1.00 Nl u s Gvt 9,Cl:I NL lntcap 1.00 NI.. .MCO 9.07 • 711 II 9,01 9 IS SFrm Ba 10.:!9 Nl
could Nw been CepPrH 1.00 NL Fldellly G<-ouo Int lnnt fl.SI 12.se MFO 13'1 14.U PIAI' Inv 12.0I 13.13 Statlt St 4S.SS '"·" solo (Net a$""1 Cent cc 1.00,-.Nl Agres ..... Nl lllV GulO '·id NI. MFB u 3' u ~ Pllortll 10.18 1119 SIHdm&n Funds . vel,,.I or IJOUOl!t CentShT IO.SS·1131 Bol>d I 05 NL Inv ll>dle t 20 NL MMB • 26 • 11 Pllfr"d 10 ... 11 '2 Am ll>d l.24 Nl lvllut plus wles CMrtFd 11.74 is.en Caou ''5 1.6' Inv Bos '" 10 27 MSH 7 39 7 '1 Prlc• Funas· As..., F 96 Nl charoel w.ct. Chaw Gr Sos· Conltd • " Nl lnv1htors G<-ouo CSI> Mo I 00 Nl Grwll> 10.~ N ll'VOI I 12 Nl s.tl 9VY Fun4 6 J2 6 ti Delly I I 00 Nl I OS Bc1 S 44 S.M Melher§ 14 76 Nl ll'<o.., 9.59 Nl Oc••" S.67 NI AGEFd 4 .• .ol 67 Front 4.31 4 18 O\lny • 4' IOS Gn 6 74 1 ;n M•rrlll lvn<ll N Era 11.51 NL Sleln AoP Fch AcornF 17 IO NI.. Sh•re 1.02 7.67 EQ Ill( .. 14 Ml IOS lldl s 71 s ~ BHI< ' .. IO CM N Hot1~ .. •S Nl Bal•" "71 NL AdVnlnv -vall SPl<I 6 Ot •.. Ma911I )4 4S Mull t., 9 JJ Caplt tl.17 14 4S PrltM 10.00 Nl Cap () 10.16 NL Atutu~ 11.t• Hl ClleapO 11.17 Nl Mun Bcl • SI Nl """ 210 ,.... eoul8 'SS • •s T1<Fr~ •.•7 Nl StoO 12 " Nl Allttete 1_82 Hl C'lllmFd 1 12 1 78 Fide! 15 Cl:I 16 4J Tu Ea 4 M 4.13 HI llK 9 .. 10.04 Pro Fune! I> 84 Nl Slr&IGlll 17.JO Nl Al~F 11.41 l'jL CHA MCJI ~ HI Yid 14.76 Nl Sto<k 1147 1199 Mu"I "IS • )4 Proll'C 9 IS Hl . Survey F 9.9f 10.13 Afllr111T Ul 10.J.3 llt>tty 4.14 U1 l tM11n US Hl Sei.<t I 10 9.,. RdA$I 1.00 Nl Pru SIP 9,49 10.37 T111<MQcl 10.06 21.'2
American Fundt< Mal'lllt Purlt" •.96 10-" Var Py 6,5' 117 SpVal I.II t H Puln•m Futld'J Tempr Gt ".Jl 17.13
ABtl 7.'1 1.11 1.56 Nl s.,..,, 4.'8 S.44 I"" Red> H .S 5'6 Mid AM S.1> U 4 Conv 11.15 11.9 Tempi w 12. 19 13.n Amcp 1.21 t .OI 5Cllys •.n 10... Thrill 9.80 NL stel 21.'9 t3.0I MONY f 1.13 t .ll Equll 12.AO 13.SS Ttmp Inv 1.0 Nl AMull 9.l:S 10,74 Colonial Funds: Trend 12.14 U.tt VY 6.0I NL MSB Fd IU 3 Nl Geor9 l:Z.7S IUl Trns Cap 1,49 1.14
A11Gtll '·" 7.Jt kn S« t.n 9.5' Fll'Anclel Pt-oo: JP Grtll 9.tS 10.71 Mui 8M e T7 t.SJ Grwth 10.33 11. frns lnvs l.'3 • 71 80lld 11.&t IS.11 Fund .... t .M DYi'• S.4 Nl Janus F 11.27 Nl MIF Fd 7 5' 1.17 HIY ld 11 ... 19 IS Trav Eq 11 4.5 17.St ClllMO 1.00 Hl G,_ttl "-" S.01 lndust •QI Hl Jo/Ill Hencoo · Mii" Gtl1 4 IS 4.'9 lncom 7.:14 I T~ Hd 1173 Nl 1"Cll11v 6.60 7 21 1ncom 1.17 I t:J 1ncom 6 '2 Nl 8-17 • ti.It Mutualol 0........ lnvesl I.at 1.1 fwnC Gt s •7 Nl Gnrtll 7.IO 7.76 ()pin 10 .. "14 l"tl lnVftton .Gnrttl S.11 ... A..... '°" IUI ()pin ltti 14.I Tw"c llK 7 S7 Nl ll!<ClfTI 7.11 I.SO Tel< Mo 13.9'1SIS Bn4Ap1.4.U 1s.-8a1an I.IS IM (i"'1tl J.13 •.I& hE•t 11.97 730 USAA GI 7$7 NL ICA 14.$7 15..'2 Co4u Giii IS" Nl Ol~o .... 7 ll Ta•E• !Mom .... '.. Yl.i• 11.97 lJ. USAA Inc 10.U Nl N ..... s 6.00 6,,. CWl!f> A8 .. 1.02 Ci"""' 1,., I.It IJ 13 Utt Tl!Fr1' 14 13 IS.Ji Yoya9 11.47 17 Uni Actu :UJ Nl WtllMt • 61 7.1' CWUll C 1 » 1.'1 llKom 1.Cl:I I 7' Joflnrtn 10 41 Nl Mui Sii" M 7' Nl Aell't>w 2.U N Ul'lf Mut 1,lJ Nl
"""'" ~ .. , Cofnp 8d 1.14 I.IS SlOtll. '·" I.St K•mper ,_ Nall 1"4 11" Hl Re~··· t.00 H U"I Ca\!\ 1.00 Nl 8c1 1..26 t ,o:I Comp l"d 1.M 7 7' F1tMJ1 A J.)4 NL lnc:m 9 ... 10 SJ Hat S«ur s.r Ren" S.U N Urilon sw Ori> "' 4.U ..... 2 concord 1U1 Nl FtMllOI ... Nl Grow .. " us Balan '07 t.7J Sare< Ecrt 1.17 u 8ro.d 10 76 11 O& rp s.tS •.SO C11111 Inv t.» us F\t Vat 10.QO NL HI YIO \t.:13 lt.U Bond • ~ .... S.fec Gth 11.lll 12. Nat Inv .:°' .:sr HI Yid 11:77 IU7 ~Sltl G 7.2' Hl 44 Wall fUt NL MOllM 1.00 "IL Olvld 4,07 "" StPCap -t10 f , U C•P tU3 13.13 lftC'd 6,01 6.57 t Ml/I S... Nl l"nd 0111 UO •.IS Mun8 10 11 10.61 Cirwlh S.42 S.~ StPGwl . ,t.n •· Un lr><m M11111 23.64 2oU2 •Yid $1 11.H 12.03 l"ounde" Group• ODtl' 1,,., l:t . .S Pl Stll. •.90 1..44 S<udcMf" ~' 1116 tl.03
T•t " I.JI 7.11 ~,..., Ceo 10.'7 11.1J Gnrtfl •• ,. S.tO Summ 17 11 lUt 1ncom S.4' s... Com St .... N Ulllted F-v~ It.JI 11.tO y Casll t,tQ Nl IMom 11.tS lJ,OS Tt<ll I II 1.9' Stoel! 7 71 I.JI Inc-om tJ.10 N Accm 6 " 611 ~-1.1$ ... , lncm ••• Ml """'" •.• J.74 Totlt • 4J 10.)) M£llte Filftd: 11111 FO 1S 41 Nl 8ond .... }Jt 4ttGtll 7.JSLCl3 were~: 5"<1 ICl.JI II l(•ys-'""°': EQVlt 16.15 11.n Mal' R 10.00 H Con Gr .... •.n 4Am .... 7.lt E'' 11.Jl'f!.SI Ftallkllft ~ Lkii Tr 1 eo NL ~ tO.•S "·" MM8 '10 H con Inc t.13 ••s H"11r l.'5 t 61 law I0.5' 11.Jl Brown · I '4 3.11 Cus 81 16JI 11 n 111<.om 12.n IJ I> 5"<1 lD.04 Nl 1ncom '20 to os
l"e<• IU3 i..11 1<11 a.n 'St ONTC 1 ~ ·~ Cu, 8J lL» ,.21 AelECI 14.IO 1u1 Security """"' Munl •'.ii .:n Prov'41 l,70 l . ., hf'" •.ot • .ol5 G,...ttl Ul •.J:I i 84 a.tt .tS '"'*'""" 9«m: I 8-• 1' l k"1t uo ...,, ·~,.. a.n .. n 0.1141 Ut UI Ullls ... ,, s. us Ii:! 1.1. .IJ Enr91 ll, .. Nl l"qut., 4.31 .11 V•"ll .. .,.. 6.67 A llO 1.10.... Dir f:£ ut Ul ln<on> 1.• t.'4 · s IU UI S.47 ~•rd 25.at NL unv1Ht 1.IS 1 Unit Slits t.tt NL 11111~ llH 4.S, 4 t4 E(lt 1\.01 "'-VS Gov IAS t .S4 us SI 11 n 1a.11 Perlt\ llAO Hl II re 10.tO 11. Val11t LIM Fd·
Alll'lttf 'j Nl C11 I IS.• HL Cfflt UO J,. s S3 7.65 t.• Ntw Wld !O.t7 HI.. S.te<..-0 ""'111\; Val LI ........ Al!IVlllC 11. NL It evr 10.• NL fQult ).73 •.O'J ~· M 4.70 s.14 HilwtGI 1U7 NL Asot"'SSllM •, .. " N ln(om S.4.J 5.$1 ANtOlll ·' us reyt11, On»; u-.... Pol•• l n ).S4 "••' Inc ' 01 Hl s t • H LtvGI 1• u ".,
'
II' 7 I 11 P,..rf -11 .. IU4 UIO NL "a""°" 1· "KlllFd 21 • NL, S.11tlntl 0.-: $p1Slt 5_4, S:ta Eq ~Ill levtt 16.1117,... l"undD!t S. .. 6.02 · Ldr. It IU) Nom11r1 t0,1110.tS ApH l.$1 J Vanc:e s.-n· '
A ~. L141 "'' ''9 NL l"cllftll0 IM M: \.h Go-1) , ... "6reHt II... Ml 811114\ 7.0ll 1 Ill<-U.Ai 1,,.,
ftd • -Hij 1" HHIM 1 I Hl c.m111 as Hl L .. 1n t. '°·" ,..,,_ •" •.M o°"'" s io.• rt. 1n••ett .,n 1..o •-ut ~ Inc a. NL I~ ·" 1. "" It 1w t4,. ~ 10.ss rwtt1 a.ss • c-m ._., ,_..
"9<11 s. J:4' J:.€111 \.4 NL . :r ... Tr 'j 10. .!-1!9 t: ti:" • .,. "' 14.)1 N ~ .... ~~-" n'\ S,.CI 11 ... 11.74 ~~ 'l H'e ,.;:: c 't~ .~ r~ ~ C"t ~,, ~ HL u:d •. ~"'°" F. . . v"C:" ,: .. ... '"" i] NL e.-~Fi! rt u. H (Mft ,t.a NL r. Viet tl.01 kl• A"'9 •• "·' '"•• i .. ... 01fl . NL I.... l , 1 ... ea&·s H c MUI IOI .. L "'... t..tl ... , IMom ''·'l 'u f" NL Miii . , N\, ti Nl ';.< '1 L ~r.:-~l~ 1Y71 If.~I I= .. ~ Ii~ 't.~ 11N ttrt I • =Lt \I, Tl'f -,f• IM A 1 ,!J I !tit It. 0 tt1' N tirM 1 H ... •Pi I J, ~li\.i\: 0.. 01 1 , \ , 11 ,. ·~ lilt. I' 1'""""'.i.. W !ir If.JI ,.L ~t.• 1·' ;·· ,_,. ,. H°" .. , 4.41 IMMI I IM ,. ~ Plttj! t .. ,.17 Wtl '' I .• at f.. • Ht .. ~L Onrtfl 6. M \.lftMfMI lfll• Tl"11 ' --, 1 Wei Ill J.71 1i: · "" , ... :# N~ ~Tlfl ;: !f r.=. ''J: 1; 1 ~~ \:i 1 vit. · TI i~·~ M Ht J:..1 Ii; I' ;-:: 9' $vU" n. '' ~ -f:i I • ~ ~., f:: ct fl ,.°' !Ul n· c .. 1.'s 7~re' I#
J7
Laguna/South Coast .. I
our Hometown Ji
Dally New paper'.:'.~
t
' • ).
'. • ' l' j
~ t f
' , No Malt LU,uor?
• ,
I
. {
~
" .
Oeput)' Jack Dwyer (front} and two unidentified
helpers were among those chasing an escaped bull
in a Salt Lake City suburb when the quarry turned
and ch~ them. The three-hour saga ended when
the anunaJ was captured folloWing shots from a tranquilizer gun.
f 10 Coast Resi~nts
Face Heroin ·Raps
FiYe men a.ad five women, all
• Costa lie.a and Newport Beacb
residents , were arrested
Wectne.day night by Costa Mesa
police on charges of selling
heroin.
Sgt. Gary Webster said no
significant amounts of drugs
were seized Wednesday. Arrests
were made on warrants result·
ing from allegations of about 20
previous undercover narcotics
buys over a three-week period,
be said.
The arrests were unusual
because afi but one or the al·
leged heroin purchases ~ilber
( took place or began in Costa
I ,Mesa, Webster said.
, The drugs involved were $25
''balloons" of heroin weighing l about one-half gram, be said. ·,1 ·'We'll continue to target the
~ heroin dealers and users in this
-IUdt Clart9a.opher O~r,
27, of 2621 Harbor Boulevard
#D·l ,Costa Mesa. $10,000 bail on
suspicion of four counts of sales
of heroin.
-Reary Wattenbarg Claavar-
rla, 30, '8Y1 E. 16th Place, #4,
Costa Mesa. $10,000 bail OD SUS·
pici~n of two counts of sales of
berom.
-Mike BoUeabeck, 27, 1375
Baker St., tB, Costa Mesa
$20,000 bail on suspicion or two
counts of sales of heroin, oile
count of possession or a
billy club.
-Harold Eageae Harmon, 29,
2152Yl Puiente Ave., Costa Mesa.
$10,000 bail on one count of sales
of heroin.
' -Raymood Adolph Drosd, 36,
7204 W. Coast Highway. Space
(See HEROIN, Page A2)
COIT I O N
:·~
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1979 TEN CENT~
Three Held in MurdeJ
Laguna Slaying May l)e Tied to Drugs
By llAVMONO ESTRADA IR.
01""" O..Uy l'li.c St.If
Po 11 c e a r r e s t e d l w...a
Capistrano Beach suspects and
an El Toro teen-ager Wednesday
on suspicion of murder in the De~
1 stabbing death of Rodney James
Gilbert, 32. in ~ Laguna Beach
home.
Laguna Beach police Lt. Al
Olsen said toduy it is believed
drugs were involved in the kill·
Ing or Gilbert.. a skateboard
equipment sal esm a n . Olsen
would not amplify the drugs
theory.
Arrested are Robert Eugene
Rowe, 20, 39454 Villa Verde. an
unnamed 17-year-old boy, and
Craig Leland Bighorse, 18, or
21812 Northwood Lane, El Toro.
G 1 lbert 's former girlfriend ,
Myra Hight. round the dead man
in his beach·lype cottage at
43912 Hill St . with a single knj(e
wound .in his heart the mornini;t
after the stabbing occur red.
Police said Gilbert 's home had
been ransacked but indicated
that nothing or value appeared
to be taken.
Clad only in a blue.striped
nightshirt, Gilbert was found ly
ing face up between the kitchen
and living room
Police believe Gi lbert was
beaten after be was slabbed.
Furniture in the home ha<H>een
pushed around and blood was
found on the walls, police said.
Laguna Beach p-0Hce in-
vestigator Gene Brooks arrested
Rowe at the home or the eldest
sus pect 's girlfriend in Lake
F or est after a warrant had
been issued late Wednesday.
Bighorse was served with his
arrest warrant at Orange Coun-
ty Jail where he was in custody
for alleged traffic violations.
Rowe and Bighorse remained
in Orange County Jail today.
Bail was not set pending the
pair 's arraignment in court
~·· Dutch Firill
Buys.I.and
Volley· hraWI
• Tiro Held in Clemente Fight
1~•.,,1e-1 ~~}~---1r-oat tl e that broke out . ,-e_ between members of a aoUege
volleyball team and employees
A Dutch firm has paid Avco o~ a Chinese resta urant m S~n
Community Developers Inc C e mente _Wednesday ended m
Sl7 .5 million fo·r nearly 1,200 ~e a rrest of l wo restaurant
acres of land adjacent to the El orkers.
Niguel Golf Course in Laguna Police jailed Sar oraroje
Niguel. Saelao, 30, of 2323 S El Camino
But officials at Avco, who Real, and Viseng Lee, 25, of 3S43
made the announcement. said Calle La Quinta. following the
they stiU will be involved in brawl that at one pomt invol\ied
management, ~evelopmenl , more than a dozen persons, wit·
sales and planmog for a pro-nesses said.
posed 2,300 dwelling units on the Off' ·d ,,.._ c th parcel. 1cers sa1 memu.;rs o e
The parcel, located just east of San Diego State volleyb~ll team
the El Niguel Golf Course. was stopped at c.tubhouse L1quor, a
purchased from Av co by del~catessen an Lucky Plaza, for
Bredero Niguel, a subsidiary or a bite to eat.
Bredero Vast Goed. 8 . V., a But when one of the college
Netllerlands corporation. players went outside to answer a
Tbe Dutch firm purchased the call of nature, he was allegedly
'property and then contr:ibuted assaulted by an employee at ad· lbe land to a joint venture in
which Bredero and Avco each
own a SO percent interest.
jacent Chang's Restaurant. 620
Camino de Las Mares.
The bruised player returned to
the delicatessen where other
players asked him what hap.
pened. They rushed outside antl
confronted employees at th&
Chinese restaurant, and a scuf-
n e broke out.
Police who broke up the battle
~a1d they recovered a chrome
bayonet and witnesses observed
several of the participants as-
suming martial arts poses dur·
ing the scuffle.
Saelao and Lee were arrested
on various assault charges, with
Saelao released on his promise
to appear in court and Lee de·
tained on $5,000 bond.
The volleyball players were en
route to Long Beach for a game
at the time of lbe confroota.tioo,
police said.
"Avco will be providing the
building and management ex·
pert.ise to the joint venture and
the Dutch firm is providing the
land," a Niguel-based Avco
spokesman said.
The parcel is located at the
end of Niguel Road lo the center
of Laguna Niguel.
China Seeks End
To Border Fight
Plans call for extension or that
road to the Coast Highway,
where it would connect with a
second Niguel Road already in
existence.
The new road would cross the
new development and another
area not owned by Avco, the
SPokesman said, and end up on
Coast Highway in the Shores
area. ·
The properly is currently
zoned for 2,300 residential units
(See DUTCH, Page A2 >
BANGKOK, Thailand <AP) -
Vietnamese troops r epulsed
Chinese forces near Lang Son, a
key provincial capital, but the
Chinese battled back successful ·
ly al some points, intelligence
sources in Bangkok reported to·
day.
S Peking, the Chinese govern·
m t sent a note to the Viet·
na ese Embassy today propos-
ing talks "as soon as possible"
to end their two·week border
conflict, Peking's o Cfic ial
Hsinbua news agency reported.
Vietnam claimed its forces
killed or wounded 27,000 Chinese
in 12 days or fiShling. The Hanoi report saJd Vietnamese troops
alsd destroyed 200 tanks and 30
military vehicles.
Tbe~e claims could not be in·
dependently verified. Analysts
say they believe Vietnam's
casualty claims are exagger~
and the Vietnamese have suf ·
fered greater losses than the
Chinese.
later.
The 17-year-oJd Capistrano
Beach yo.uth, a rrested in his
home, was lodged in Orange
County Jt(venile Hall.
Police said today they still
believed the Gilbert death is un·
related to the Nov. 20 fatal slab·
bing of Art Colony architect
Brent S. Tobey.
Tobey's bloody, nude body
was found stabbed 15 times un·
der some bedding in a bungalow
at 1320 Carmelita St.. by a
neighbor.
Police said they have not
found a murder weapon in either
case.
Oil FirDIS
_Reacting
To Squeeze
NEW YORK (AP l Several
of the nation's major ojl com·
panies began reacting today to
the Iranian petrole um squeeze
as they limited s upplies of
gasoline and beating oil to
dealers. Texaco also a nnounced
that about 2,200 filling stations
will close in four Northern states
The moves by Texaco, Stand·
ard Oil of Indiana <Amoco >.
Cities Service and Sun Co. to
deal with the cutoff of Iranian 01\
followed similar announcements
that about 2,200 filling stations
will close in four Northern
states.
The moves by Texaco, Stan·
dard Oil of Indiana (Amoco >.
Cities Service and Sun Co. to de-
al with the cutoff of J ranian uil
by Mobil. Atlantic Richfield.
Phillips and Continental Oil.
Te xaco. the nation's lhird-
largest oil company. said it is
<See GAS, Page A2>
HEW Probing
Jewish HoTTW
Complaint
RESEDA CAP> A complajnt
that the Jewish Home for the
Aged discriminates against gen·
tiles is under investigation by
the federal Department of
Health. Education and Welfare.
a HEW spokesman says. town," Webster said. "We let it t be known that if they're going to
t be dealing in Costa Mesa, we're
going to be on them.••
He said au of the male sus·
pecta were )n Costa Mesa Jail to-
-day and the female suspects in
Clearing Foreeast ~ Japan's K'.'yodo news service
reported that Chinese Vice
Premier Li Hsien-nien told re·
porters in Peking today that the
Chinese invasion force bad
c ritically damaged "two or
three" regular Vietnamese
divisions.
But Sheldon Blumenthal, ex·
ecutive director of the home.
said Wednesday that "to my
knowledge we have not had a
gentile applicant so how can it
be said we discriminate?"
i. Orange County Jail.
Tbe male suspects were iden·
tified as:
; Oemente Thieves
' . Get 810,000 Loot
A San Clem~nte woman re-
ported the theft of jewelry and
other Items from lier home for a
total IOle of more Uian $10,000.
Belen Evans. 149 A venida Palhada. told omcen jewelry,
two tt.ereo., two cameras and a
'Pair of biaoculan were taken
from tbe bome by Udevea who en·
tend tbrwSla • lli4inl ..... door mtbekltchn
March: In Like a Duck
A mild winter storm front
gave March a sodden introduc-
tion today but forecasters said
Southern California skies should
clear by Friday. Gusty Winds
trom lbe nortbwest we~ expect.
ed late this .ttemoon.
A spokesman for the National
Weather Service in Loa Anceles
sald the atorD\ blew in from the
northwest early this morning
and would continue moving tbrouP the area the remUacler
of the day. He said up to a halr-
ineb of rain could fall before the
storm front moved eastward in·
to the desert regions.
Wind5 from 15 to 25 mph were
forecast beginning in the after·
noon, decreasing in force by Fri·
da)' m~iog, the spokesmfn
saia. Surfing conditions were
poor off the Orange Coast with
small, choppy surf.
The Harbor Patrol office in
Newport Beach reported small.
craft advisories were in efl~t
from Point Conception to the
Mexican.bordel'. Winds up to 30
koots were expected off the
coast by tonight, a SPokesman
said, with the guats decreasing
tory," be said. "Anything leu
than that and 1 would want to wait for tJle Secretary of State to
detetml.M."
He uid the reuon beblDd hie
caution in settling for the
millim.un number or registered
voter signatures needed la
beu ... a cerlaln. ,Percentqe ot u.o.. eo1liNd wm be found '° M invalid for variout reasons.
Gann was ln Santa Ana tod1y
to ape._ to COUDlJ realtora at a
lnaldllt meettDI at tbe ab
Clab durtil wldcla IM received ~~· w. -·-to~ Couat), 'uN Illa vohaa· t.-n upeded to eollecl \be
~--••dM bl a llnd9 --~11-~:~:.., .... ,... .... --0a1, •.• were .colledet. ..,.a...,., .. , ... r. be -~. o_.._...._,......".._
to 15.to 25 knots by Friday. Vis·
ibility was reported al eight
miles.
Travelers advisories were in
effect also for persons driving in
the mountains.
Rainfall figures throughout
Orange County were fractional
by th.ls morning. In Costa Mesa.
about .10 of an inch had faJJen.
bringing the season total to
12.18. ln Huntington Beach, rain·
fall totaled .12, bringing the
season total there to 13.S4. In the
city of Orange, only a trace of
<See llAIN, Page A%)
workers to succeed ln their one·
day drive oo a mishmash of or ·
ganizational problems, including
failure to have an adequate sup·
ply of petition forms on band.
Gann predicted success for
what be cat.led the Spirit of 13 in·
iUative drive. Ile said the volume lncre~
daily oo the number of
si1naturea collectfJd and, if the
prea4!nt pate bolds up, the in·
itiatJve will be on next year's
ballot. At UM aame,tlme, be wu
ab1rply criUcal of 1ove.rnmeat
•P9ndtnl· .. Waste end fraud run
abeolutely wild In Ulla cO\&Dtl'y,"
H•akl P..,...._ 13 put Calilonla
ln tll• forefront u a lta4'er 1n tb._ COUllU'v. \he tu ~~r (lie GANN, Pa•e A.J)
. -
Many analysts believe this bas
been the objective or the Chinese
invasion, to "teach a lesson" to
Vietnam by crippling some of its
main-force military units. Li's
claim could not be confirmed. It
had appeared that Hanoi was
not committing many regular
troops to the border war.
'·We will pull out once our bojec-
ti ve is achieved," Li was quoted
as tellinglhereporters.
Fumes Fell
Trucker on
~a Hill
A 31-year-old truck driver was
overcome by toxic fumes
Wednesday mornin1 wben
.chemicals be was baulin1 spilled as he wu driving up a steep
Laguna Beach bill.
Myron Coe of Canyon Country
was rushed to South Coast Com·
munily Medical Center lntenslve
care unit for observaUon after
inbaJin1 muriatic acid and
chlorine fumes at t a .m .
Coe, who worts for Hau
Chemical IDc .• wu rele.-d to·
day from the bolpitaJ.
The chemlell 1plll ~curred
uar CUdinal Drive and South
Cout fflsbwa1 wtMre CQe 1'U
dellvertnc 1,oat 1•Dona of the
ellemtffll to a anr1)1 fWllD·
m1n1 pool lupp)y l\ore.
A nr.man bad tq cklll apedll
protecUve gear to ril~ tll• -...1a1cwe.-......tftlll
dotra tbl tnlck't floo,.,.,.,.:-No
OM elle WU .ir«Wd bJ U.•·
tc: fumes.
Manuel de Santiago of HEW's
San Francisco office said his or.
fice is investigating a complaint
by the California Hospital
Monitoring Association that the
4t9·bed Jewish Home r~fuses to
admit gentiles.
The facility is the only volun-
tary non-profit nursing home in
Southern California with a
kosher kitchen for Orthodox
Jewish patients and where Yid·
dish is. the main language-,
Blumenthal said.
Coast
Weather
Their feet hurt, but Pat
BOOM'• fOtAr daughJers kept
on doncin. from one end of
Fcuhion Island to the other.
TheJ •re on locatiott in
N"'flOrl Beach fur the film·
ing of port;0n. of an EO$ttt
teleui1fo11 1pecial. Su
F eohlriftQ. Page CI.
INSIBE TODAY
Gusty westerly winds ts
to 25 mph tonight with
ehance ol rain decreasing
to 30 percent. Some clo\lds
but mostly fair Friday
with bllhs near 60. Lowa
tonlgbt46 to 52.
... x
DR. WADDILL· (LEFT), ATTORNEY WEEDMAN CONFER
Defense Statement Scheduled In Court Today
Waddill Financial
Defeme Expected
By KATHY CLANCY
Of ti. O•llY f'llet Sl•tf
Dr. William Waddill's at
tomey was expected today to re·
but the prosecution's contention
that bis client faced bankruptcy
and feared a malpractice su.it lf
the infant abortion survivor be is
accused of murdering had lived.
Defense lawyer Charles Weed·
man said he would offer an
opening statement of his own to
an Orange County superior ~urt
Jury today after he had listened
to prosecutor Robert Chat·
terton's day-long statement
Wednesday.
· W add.ill is accused of stran·
gling the two-pound. 15-ouoce in·
fant known as Baby Girl Weaver
after she was born to an 18-year-
oJd unwed mother following a
saline abortion attenwt by the
43-year-old physician.
Waddill 's first murder trial
ended last May in a mistrial
when j urors said they were
hopelessly deadloc ked 7-5 in
favor of acquittal.
Chatterton, during his opening
statement lo the jury Wednes·
day, said be would produce wit·
nesses who ''saw Dr. Waddill
choking the baby and complain·
ing that the baby would not stop
breathing."
Chatterton also contended
Waddill was without malprac-
tice insurance at the time and
that he was facing bankruptcy
because of personal invest·
ments.
Weedman told reporters,
however, that Waddill's accoun-
tant would testily that the doctor
F,...Pa.,eAJ
GANN •••
claimed.
"People are now looking
west," be said.
He admonished the realtors
present to continue working
hard for tbe Spirit of 13 in·
itiative.
Several years ago, Gann
warned, a "sneak thief'' stole
this country's bald-headed eagle
and replaced it with a pigeon.
·'Spring is coming very soon,"
be said, "So let's get rid ol the
pigeon or wear your bat. when
you go tot.he park."
DAILY PILOT
TlleQr-C:O.IOllllyl'llM.~lllt~
bl""4•-"'-1APlll>lf-l"\M()(~
c•tt ,.,,.,,"""'~· ~·""""'°"'" .. 1111t11l11Mf _.,. ~ ,,...,. '°' c..u
Me ... H--' IHcll, HIM>l'"91011 llff<!V'-lllft v111ey, 1,,_.,,., t.-lluchf5ovt~O...t,A \i"9i.r~edi ... IU" .. l-s.tU!'lky\-SW.0.yt TN prlocl!NI _.JN ... P4tnl IS~*'O
_,, .. , ~. c.i. """'C:.••-•t>la ·-....... Prnkltftt-Pw1111...,
JMltll.cwtty VH.eP>ft..,_._.0.-.. ~
l'lletl!a• ·-'"''°' .,.._, ... __... . ~11t•••
ca. ....... .._ ·-"·*" "'".---~~
LMMMhHtlOMoe --,,.o-.,,.-..
Olttellllt .. ~=--MYMi..-ee. .. owt ......
TtllJlllO (71 .. __,
a111•1•.w..-mr1--.
~ .... Mt11a1a• ,. .. ,, 11..-.
"'-""
was not in financial straits and
was clearing at least $200,000 a
year from his medical practice.
Chatterton told Jurors the ob-
stetrician also knew of a case at
Johns Hopkins Hos pital in
Baltimore where a doctor was
sued when a brain.damaged in·
Cant s urvived a s aline abortion.
He said that doctor was forced
to pay rorthe child's support in an
institution for lire
The prosecut-0r also contended
Waddill "would be concerned
about lawsuits and thousands
and thousands of dollars ...
since he had no insurance com-
pany that would protect him in a
lawsuit bad Baby Girl Weaver
lived and been me nta lly re-
tarded "
Among those expected to
testify for the prosecution, Chat·
terton continued, is Dr. Ronald
Cornelsen , then c hief of
pediatrics al Westminster Com·
munity Hospital.
Chatterton said Cornelsen will
t estify be saw the doctor
strangle 1.be newborn girl short·
ly after her birth two years ago.
"This baby cannot live or it
wjll be a big mess," Chatterton
quoted Waddill tellin g
Cornelsen. "Ttrere will be
lawsuits and it will cost
thousands and thousands of
dollars and the baby probably
will be brain damaged," the
prosecutor continued in bis re-
counting or Wadc:till's purported
conversation with Comelsen.
Later tbe prosecutor argued
WaddilJ began choking the baby
"and he is complaining that he
cannot find the goddamn
trachea."
Cornebeo lat.er phoned Wad·
dill at the be beat of law enforce-
m erit investigators and taped
the conversation.
R ~ading from that tape
traol'cript, Chatterton quoted
Waddill as saying, "This baby,
Ron, I give you my word of
honor, wou1d not have lived un-
der any circumstances. I think,
and God strike me dead if I was
wrong, I did the right thing for
the mother and the baby."
Oiorale Sets
3Concerts
OnS. Coast
A "Winter Chorale," featuring""
studenta from 21 Capistrano
Unified School District schools,
will be presented lbree nights in
MarclaJnjtee concerti.
Cbolrs ftom the elementary,
Junior bilh and high schools will
perform MPAl'lltefy. ~· well as combine for a 300-voice finale.
Concerti be8iD at 7:30 JS.m.
and will be beld at the district's t~ ldlb ecbool amnasiwm.
Tbe ftnt performaaee wt11 be
tonlc'ht at Dana Hilla ffitb , the
seeoacl Ilardi f et C1pbtruo
Valley Hiib a nd lbe final
performance wU1 ·be Marcb 8 at
SU Clemeate ffiCb .
,
•
~ought
Patterson Renews County Efforts
Suspect
Admits
Kickback The move to brln1 federal
courts to Ornnae Count)' was re·
n e w t'd Wtdncsday In
W a hin11ton O. C. wben Rep.
J erry rauersoo. D-Santa Ana,
mtroduet.>d legl.slation aimed at
crealln~ ~ new Judicial district.
A1 things atand now. Ora.nae
County la within a seven-county
dhUnct u.nd federal cases are
hl·•rd in Los Angeles
Patten.on 's proposed legisla·
t1on a~ks to spin off OranJe.
R1vers1de and San Bernardino
rounlle::. mto a new Judicial dis-
t n ct headquartered in Santa
l\n ..t
f~rot11 Pflfle A J
GAS •••
closing gasoline stations "im·
mediately " an portions of
Wisconsin, Indiana. Ohlo and up-
state New York to bring its sales
.. more closely in line" with its
refining capacity.
Texaco said it provides "only
about S percent" of the gasoline
sold m the affected areas.
Texaco also said it is provid·
ing customers with 90 percent of
the gasollne they bought in
March 1978. Amoco said dealers
will receive 100 percent or their
March 1978 deliveries, but no
more despite increased demand,
while Cities Service said it is
providing 80 percent of the
gasoline and 85 percent of the jet
fuel it shipped a year ago.
Sun said it is cutting ship-
m en ts of home healing oil.
kerosene and diesel fuel in the
six New Entlland states. and
Ne w York.· New Jersey, Penn·
sylv a nia , Delaware a n d
Ma ryland to 80 percent of March
1978 levels. .
A congressional study made
public today in Washingtoo con-
cluded. meanwhile. that New
England, heavily dependent on
heatin~ oU, could produce from
10 percent lo 45 percent of its
energy from native sources like
wood. water, wtnd and s un
power. The report by the New
England congressional caucus
said 10 percent of the region's
total energy needs could be met
from alternate energy sources
by 1985.
Mobile; the nation's No. 2 oil
com pany, also announced
Wednesday it is limiting the·
amount of crude oil it sells to re-
fineries. Mobil said it would cut
sales by 9 percent. retroactive to
Jan. t , and did not say when the
limits would be lifted.
Exxon earlier said it is cutting
crude oil shipments by 10 per·
cent during this year's first
quarter.
l n Washin gton, Energy
Secretary James Schlesinger
predicted $1-a -galJon unleaded
gasoline ''within a year or so."
Meanwhile, the United States .
is about lo ask the International
Energy Agency for worldwide
voluntary cutbacks in oil use of 5
to 7 percent, according lo in·
dustry sour:ces in New York.
The IEA, an organization of 19
industrial nations, •is meeting in
Paris to discuss the Iranian
situation.
F,.._PflfleAJ
RAIN •••
rain had been recorded and in
Santa Ana the· moisture came to
.09.
The Laguna Beach Police
Department said the latest
storm was causing no im·
mediate problems in the
Bluebird Canyon area, where
homes had been endangered by
landsliding.
,,,..... Pflfle tlJ
HEROIN •••
121. Newport Beach. $20,000 bail
on suspicion of two counts of
sales of heroin.
The female suspects were llal·
ed as:
-Patrtce M. %ether, 22, 7206
W. Coast Highway, Space t21,
Newport Beach. $20,000 bail on
suspicion of four counJ.a of ulel
of heroin.
-Jert Aleet P•lllpl, 30, 2152~ Puente Ave., Coata Mesa.
$2(),000 bail on suspicion of three
counts of sales of heroin.
-Noey U. CW,... at,
145 E. 18th St., IC, Cotta Mesa.
$13,500 ball OD 1uaplcion of two
counts of sales of heroin.
-Gall Seinze Neleea, II, -Joann 9t., Costa Meu. $15,000
b1U oa ·1uapiclon of two c:OUDU ol
1aJea of herolll and one c:Olllll ol
acce1aory to armed robbery.
Tbt latter cbarte WU ID tolmee• tlon with tbe knl!epotnt robbll y
of • Newport Beacb botne two
WMU lfO, W .... Nfd.
~-~.., .. s ..... Pfac., 4M, c.. ....
$10,000 ball oa .. Pldoe fll two eoumot ..... ., .......
W.W. ..Wal of U.-. C:::..•ere UTelted at tbelr
Earller lelh. laUve effort.a to
bring federaf court.a lolo Orange County almpty called for court
seaslom to be held ln the county
as part of the existing judJcial
district.
Patterson explained that bis
legillaUon creaun,. th~ new di.Ir·
trict "Is an all-out effort to
aallsfy, once and for all, wbal is
a preaalng problem· for the
federal judicial system in our
part of the country.''
The three-term Democratic
congressman pointed out that
the new district being proposed
contains a population or 3.5
San Clemente
Hospital
Aide Named
Diane A. Wallace, former as-
sistant administrator to the St.
Louis director or health, has
been appointed lo a similar post ·
at San Cl emente General
Hospital.
Hos pital adminis trator
Malcolm L. Johnson said Miss
Wallace reeeived her masters
degree in health care ad-
ministration from the medical
school of Washington University
in St. Louis.
She aJso bolds a bachelors
degree in journalism from the
University of Tulsa in Oklahoma
and became assistant ad-
ministrator for the Dire£lor of
Health and Hospitals in St. Lou.is
prior to he r recent appointment.
She plans to Jive in the San
Clemente area.
A TIP
FIOM
SAU alS
MARCii 31
-bt-
lfoau•
million persona.
That is a greater population
than 68 of the 93 exlating judicial
district&, Patteraoo 1.-ld.
Hls teglalaUon marks the third
time be baa made a move in
Concress to briDc federal courl5 to Orange County.
Before Pattersoo ~ame the
leader in the movement. former
Orange County congressmen
Charles Wiggins and Andrew
Hinshaw. both Republicans, had
sought legislation that would
force the federal court to move
into Orange County.
F~PflfleAJ
DUTCH •••
and the first 141 units at the
terminus of Niguel Road near
the golf course will be under
construction th.is year.
Bredero Niguel is a member
or the Bredero group, with head·
quarters in Utrecht .. Holland.
The firm engages in general
construction. develops "new
towns'' and commercial build·
ings, and is involved in real
estate consulting and manage·.
ment and fmance.
Avco Community Developers
is a subsidiary of Avco Corpora-
tion of San Diego, with planned
communities in San Diego and
Laguna Niguel.
Tbe two firms announced the
land purchase and joint venture
Wednesday.
More Coverage
Other south Orange County
coverage appears today o~
Page All
A senior buyer for TRW Inc. of
Redondo Beach. who admitted
in federal court Wednesday that
be tried to extort a $5,000
kickback from an Irvine firm,
faces 20 years in prison.
Pierre La Monte Jackson, 32,
o( Altadena, is scheduled to bt:
sentenced on a single count of
utortion on April 9. The charge
carries a maximum penalty of
20 years and/or a $10,000 fine.
Jackson was arrested last
Nov. 30 by an undercover agent
of the FBI posing as an official
of the Charles E . Smith Com·
paoy, 168'l2 Milliken Ave .•
Irvine.
The arrest came immediately
after Jackson accepted SS.000
from the bogus executive in the
parking lot of a Manhattan
Beach restaurant.
The Smith Company was al
.the time bidding on a $110.000
U.S. Army subcontra ct with
TRW. Official'S of the engin~r
ing firm went to the FBI after
they were solicited by Jackson
for the bribe, according to ·court
records.
Jackson had been employed
with TRW only a few months
before his arrest.
Mexico Aid Told
MEXICO CITY CAP >
Fren c h President Valery
Giscard d'Estaing opened a
four-day state visit to Mexico
with an offer nf a $200-milhon
package of e quipm en t.
technology and loans to aid ~he
d e velopment of Mexi co 's
nuclear and s olar e ne r gy,
offshore fishing and oil industry,
informedsoqrces said.
wam·s LA·Z IOY
SENI•
CIDZENS'
ensationa
~100
M AllY LA·z.IOY • STOCK
·========= ~
LOUllOIM
' ·~-HUllDREDS OF
TV~ LA·Z-•YS
~ ....... Im. IMMEDIATE
FREE EIYERY
·.
I
. ~
I
'
' ~ .
. . . .. • • "..'
,,, 1 -~~~~~~--------------------llliiiiiii------~---------------------:-------~ \ . 1, \ .. Bandit ~NI
BACKWARD STEERING MOTORCYCLE 'HONORED' WITH GOLDEN FLEECE AWARD
'Th• BureaucratS' Gave the Tupa ye rs a Bum Steer on Thia One'
Baekwai-d Thinking?
Reverse Cycle Wim 'Fleec~' Award
WASHINGTON <AP > The Transporta-
tion Department says it was justified m
spending $120,126 to develop an experimen-
tal, backward-steering motorcycle. ·
Del>flrtment spokesman Hal Paris says
the experiment was designed to examine
problems "inherent in motorcycle design ...
such as braking and maneuverability. "We
believe the study is justified.·· he said.
Transportation Department awarded the con-
tract despite a report from the National
Highway Safety Administration that the
motorcycle "would be difficult if not impossi-
ble to steer... ·
SEN. WILLIAM PROXMIRE
disagrees. Wednesday, he awarded the
department his monthly "Golden Fleece"
award for wasteful federal spending.
HE SAID THAT AFTER 19 months of
testing, the contract-Or was able to produce a
mot-0rcycle whose record r\.ln was 2.S seconds
and with training wheels at that.
Proxmire said government officials in-
sisted the testing continue despite objections
from the conlractor. He said the final results
of the "Advanced Concept Motorcycle" will
be submitted in the near future. The Wisconsin Democrat said the
P~As Flay School Split
Say CVSD Size Doesn/t Hurt Local Control
Parent-teacher associations at
11 schools in the Capistrano
Unified School District have
Miss F r ancis
Sa ys Rape
R11ine d Life
WASlilNGTON CAP) -Singer
Connie Francis has spoken out
publicly for the first time on her
1974 rape, saying it destroyed
both her marriage and her
career.
Miss Francis, appearing
before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, said Wednesday
that her husband left her in 1911..
because or tbe depression she
suffered after the attack. She
said they will soon be divorced:
The commit.Lff is considering
a bill to funnel federal funda to
local police and prosecutors to
assist rape victims. •
·'The rights of victim s o(
violent crime should be at least
equal in importance to the rights
of the criminals who commit
those acts, .. Miss Francis said.
come out against a proposed
split of the district.
Members of the Capistrano
Unified Council of Parent·
Teacher-Student Associations
authored a resolution opposing
the creation of a smaller San
Clemente School District, saying
size of a district holds no rela-
tionship to services provided.
The ll-school council asks lhe
Orange County Committff on
School District Organization to
take no action on a proposed
s plit suggested in a 300·
signature petition to that county
agency last spring.
Representatives or PTSAs in
the 11 schools, including all the
schools involved in the proposed
new school district. claim com-
munity involvement is realized
through the neighborh.ood
schools -not through a total
school district, whatever its size
The) say the geographic size
or the Capistrano District, which
encompasses one-fifth of the
county's land area and includes
22 schools. does not "diminish
local control nor deter close
communication between
parents. teachers and the ad-
ministration."
Their combined resolution
also warns of financial con-
straints that would be placed on
Ri,glits Unit Backs
Firefighting Mom
each of the districts in the form
of duplicate administrative and
support services.
Supporters of the split claim a
new San Clemente School Dis-
trict would need to be comprised
of only three o r four ad·
ministrators, who could be
transferred from the larger dis -
trict.
Members of the school council
say they will attend a meeting
Ma rch 14 or the Orange County
committee to speak against the
split.
That meeting will be held in
Triton Center at San Clemente
High School, 700 Avenida Pico.
beginning ~t 7: 30 p. m.
Hotline'* Set
To Assist
Rape Victims
A 2~-hour hotline has been
establ.tsbed at UC Irvine to aid
Orange County women who are
raped or otherwise sexually as·
saulted.
The number is 830-6111 . where
a staff of 22 counselors especial-
ly trained in such matters is
avallable.
The holline, called Irvine
Community Against Rape
Everywhere (I CA RE > is
sponsored by the UCI Women's
Programs Board.
Rosa Della Casa, a graduate
student in the UCI Program in
Comparative Culture and
special programs director of the
UCI Women's Resource Center,
is founder and director of l
CA RE.
Sbe said its counselors each
have 40 hours of training to han-
dle sexual assault and rape
crisis incidents.
Counselors can lend not only
emotional support to victims,
she said, but can help them get
medical and legal assistance.
There are counselors who
speak SpanJ.sb.
The ll'OUJ> la also developing a
speakers bureau to talk in the
community about rape and its
traumas.
Body Search
Contin11ing
CWCAGO <AP)-DiHinawlll
~eauaae at tbe home of Jobn
Gae1 Jr., wbere the bodies of J7
)'OUftl ~ b.ave been found In
erawl 1pacea and under the
1ara1e, oftlclals aay. Two other bocU~ have been found in the
0.. Plalnll River. Juda• 1Auis Gartppo of Circuit Oourt....., a..,_.. motion to
_, tbe dllll.. nallq Wedw•
cla1 that ...-Cb warrants ob-
tained b)' a~u .. still were
Yalld.
01c1, •· bas been chuted wttla ............. ,...
Guilty in
Slaying
A man whose armed robbery
partner was shot to death last
August during an attempted
holdup ln Anahei m was found
guilty of second degree murder
by a.n Orange County Superior
Court Jury Wednesday.
The jury's verdict means J ohn
B. Lupien, 25, of Garden Grove.
was guilty or murder even though
the victim, his partner in crime.
was shot by the store proprietor
Jn addition to the murder con-
viction, the jury found Lupien
guilty or conspiracy lo rob and
using a gun during comm1ss1on
of a felony The guilty verdicts
c:!ame after five houra of Jury de·
liberation.
Judge Wilham Thomson set
sentencing for April 13
Lupien. of Garden Grove. wa~ ~-
convicted 1n connection with the .. •w••9S Go B ett e r shooting death of Joseph Allen
Harris. 29 . also of Garden
Grove.
Harris was shot by Jnterna·
tional Housewares owner Carlos
Paradinha last Aug. 2S 'I'he
businessman also s hot and·
wounded Lupien during the at
tempted robbery.
Both robbers were armed and
had taken two store employes
hostage. according to testimony
in Lupien's one.week trial.
Chinese who witnessed formal establishment of the U.S.
Em b~ssy in Peking drink Coca-Cola served as a refresh-
ment afterward. They probably were embassy staff
members. since no official Chinese attended tbe
ceremony.
Saddle back Board
Approves Building Prosec utor P a ul Meye r
argued the unus ual murde r
charge against Lupien. explain
ing that, under state law. anyone
arrested for an armed robbery · h. h It .lied Despite a g loomy budget out-to convince them to include the m w ic someone 1s 1 can . S S 1 b k .11. b ·id· · h · be charged with murder look m acramento. add e ac $7 2 m1 ion u1 mg m t e1r
Lupien_'" tiPCP~e attorney. ~..£?.!l~~~t~s-J:tue1 CW~Yt<l..~o~f.t)l~ .19~.:~§!l. ~tiUe.... .... _ "'· Ramon ~Ort1r.""'t'imt"esCed fh e ~ pre~'fy fteSfgn pans for a oudget ,
murder charge' He claimed his $7 2 million cla~sroom building C.:~vemor Edmund G. Bro~
crent knew his gun was mopera on the Mission V1eJo campus. Jr s version of the budget did bl~ College officic,ls a~e lobbying not include funds for the bulld-
Ortiz contended Lupien agreed for . s.tate funds Lo build the r:iew tn~
to take part in the robbery with rac1h!Y· but t~us far the. project "The level or funding would
the understanding that no ont! has n. l been included 1n. next have to get to the $20 million
would be hurt. year s budget. St:.ite r~ndang of range before our building would
Hut Meyer msisted that Lu-so-calle~. capital pro1ects has be included," the spokesman
pien was responsible· for his role been ~~ma! smce passage or said "We·re a top priority in
in the <?rime that ended in the Proposthon 13. . new construction but new con-
d ea tb of his partner. even Nevertheless. o(hc1als went struction 1s not a high priority thou~h . .he may not have foreseen ·~~~~~I t~·-;iae:s arce. s~~~r~.~fi st~~~~f~~ funds for building
the killmg square feet of classrooms. fa cul-construction a 75 percent local.
Bombing Charged
fNDIANAPOLlS <AP > A
federal grand jury indicted an
Indianapolis businessman
Wednesday for six bombings that
terrorized the city's Speedway
area and injured two persons last .
September. The 34-count indict-
ment wes returned against Brett
C. Kimberlin. 24. forme r owner of
a health food store on the city's
north side. ·
ty offices. laboratories. con-25 percent s tate funds split
ference rooms a nd work rooms were included in the original
"We're going to have to r;ety Brown-supported 1978· 79 sta!_t-
on the augmentation process to budget. But tbose runds were
get money for the building since knocked out when voters ap-
the governor only included $4.8 proved Proposition 13 lasl June.
million £or capital projects Approval of the tax reduction
statew1dt!." a college s pokesman 1n1t1ahve e liminated the col-
said Wednesday. lege's ability to raise building
Such an augmentation process funds through local property
would be initiated b> the state taxes
community college chanceUor Such a dec1s1on will come
He would present a case fo r from Sacramento s ometime
funding to the State Legislature before June 30 -------
Announcing 3 Day
FLOOR SAMPLE SALE
FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MOND~Y
On Sofas, Chairs & Sofa Beds
Save Up to 30%
\1..
..
,:
SO FAS
Sal. Priced From .......... . '499.
CHAIRS
Sale Priced From
Your Fevonte Designer Will Be Htppy To AMiii You.
11.J.. GA l\~El}-f URN l
PROFESSIONAL
l .. TERl<>f' OE.SIGNERS
I.
221 S HAlloa IL YD.
COST A MtsA '46.0275 ..
..: ..
..
-'
.44 dAlt. V PtlOT
~ ~ ..•. ~ Te•~~\·.'
M11rpltl•e
Spare That Tree
. VlSWJNG ,... o•••N MAClllNS: ObHnlDI
tNDda aio., lbla •t of all poulble eout.a lbue daya.
aomtU.lml yCM& 1upect u..t tbe o.....uea. T~ H"'uen and .,...._vll'ODIMntalilta an ovvpla.:Ylnl lbelr baDd.
We may pt an upbalt backluh.
You allo 1uaped that • lot ol them may come to t.be
love ol tbe bucolic late ln U.. 1ame. Tbty want to 1ave au
• t.be ,.........., .ln t&lbl after U.. aot ror t.belr own bomt bas
been bWJdollld CMaft.
Every tlme aome project is pro-
poeed, you bear them eruptlnl lit lrvtoe:
nat.terlna lo Newport or lipplna otr lo
La•uoa. tf;,,-·~ \'I.· ... I~-.. If
JUST THE OTBEa DAY, for exam·
ple. one caUzeo was observed uprooti.Qa
som e white crosses that bad been
placed aJone deadly Lacuna Canyon
Road to mark tbe ~laces where
motorists bad lost their lives.
\f. . '
~-~-
His expla.nalioo was t.bat be didn't •IAHL ~uu
want to see the Nral nature or the canyon changed by an
improved roadway.
In other words, we should simply ignore lbe loss or
human We. What we don't know can"t hurt us.
But let's face it;.m&Jl>'.~fforU to tura this coastline
green in bygone years turned sour in later times. A lot of
eucalyptus trees <I love 'em> were planted 1n Lagwia
Beach and Irvine. And lbe eucalyptus la a dirty tree.
Trees lbat were planted along Ocean Boulevard in
Corona del Mar uprooted sidewalks when lbey got big.
HuoUngtoo Beach bu been forced into a tree replanUna
pro1ram because many of its reaidentiai street trees were I originally of the wrong type.
Btrr THE GaEENIES among us will scream foul any
time 90Dlebody suggests some foliage may have to go.
All of which makes me tbin.k about Isabel Pease of
Newport Beach. A long-time resident and for many years
a Parb1 Beaches and Recreation commissioner, Mrs.
Peue launched a campaign to turn Newport Beach green
many decades 830.
Often she campaigned alone before the commission or
City Council, many years before tree-bugging became in
·vogue
SHE WHEEDLED. She coaxed. Sbe pounded podiums
when necessary in a time when ~velopment wu King.
lloreoftenlbannot,sbegotberway.
Tear out one tree, she'd say. okay. Tben replant two.
To beck wilb asphalt dividers. Put in a low-maintenance
type of greenery.
Sure, she knew that behind her back they called ber
''Big Trees Pease." But she kept plugging away.
And much of the green, and other colors too, that
citizens enjoy io Newport Beach today can be attributed to
her efforts.
Some of the rabid·lree-buggen who prevail along our
coastline today could take some lessons from Isabel Peaae. • I
. Brown Says Carter
''Sort of Strange'
NEW YORK <AP ) -
Callforo.ia Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr., s aying be is con·
templating a run for lbe pres·
idency, bas openly attacked
_ President Carter's leadership as
• 'smjlll·minded.
. "I didn't think Carter was pres·
iclential material," Brown told
• reporters Wednesday, recalling
the 1976 campaign.
He said nothing bas changed
his mind aince.
Describing Carter as "too or·
derly" and "small-minded" and
"sort of strange," Brown said
lbe president is overly preoc·
cupied with "small things," like
White 'House tennis court
reservations. "Tennis reservations are
small questions," Brown ~aid.
"All these bombs ar..ound -
those are big questions."
He criticized Carter's efforts
at reorganizing the federal
bureaucracy instead of "provid·
ing leadership and direction."
"Reorganization isn't an is·
sue," Brown said. "Efficiency
isn't important."
Asked if be could do better,
Brown replied: "That I bave no
doubt about."
But be qUickly added, "Well,
maybe some doubt.
"I have no doubt I'd better
know what should be done.
Whether I could get lt done I'm
less sure."
Brown also met here Wednes·
day wltb NAACP Executive
Director Benjamin Hook.I and
Vernon Jordan, director of the
National UrbaD League.
• in
Holy City
QOM, Iran <AP> -Ayatollah
R\llaollah Kbomelnl. aplrltuaJ
le1de-r of the lalamJc revolutlon
that drove t.be abab from power, vowed on b1I triumphant return
lo hi• ruiUve boly city bere today
to crette a nation "aft.er tbe lm·
a1e of Mohammed" and wipe
out au vntlaes of Weatem In· n"'enee ln lra'fi. Iran'• culture, "destroyect by
~loniall.am, must be turned up-
alde down," be atat.ed.
"The remainlnC one or tw.o
yeara pt my life I will devote to
you to keep tbia movement
alive," be told wildly cbeeriac
1upporters. He Teturned;.o-Qofn
exacUy a month after com.mg
back to Iran and endiJlg 14 years
of exile. <Photo. Page A14.)
AIDES SAID he will live her
permanenUy but "he baa no in·
tention of retiring." THey said be
would actively keep control and
malQtain lbe direction of ~Te·
volutloo.
"His move to Qom will in no
way affect bis existing role,"
said Ayatollah Shariat Madarl.
· Tel:\s of thousands of 'jubilant
Shiite Moslems braved the
morning cold to get a glim~ of
the 78-year-old religious
patriarch. 'Ale crowds lined lbe
route 30 to 40 deep behind
makeshift barriers.
THE AYATOLLAB'S
motorcade took four hours to
make the 100-mile trip from
Tehran. It moved slowlyl..brougb
the banner-festooned streets
following a single line ol plastic
flowers in the center of the
roadway to the shrine of Hazrat
M assoumeb, sister of a Shiite re-
ligious leader who died 1,300
years ago.
Turbaned Moslem priests and
many of lbe 10,000 students at
local theology schools led ·lbe
crowds in a constant thunderous
refrain of •.'Allah Akbbar!" -
"(lod la Great!"
Khomeini announced be had
ordered 'the property of "the bat·
ed Pahlavi dynasty and the peo-
ple attached to them to be con·
(lscated for the benefit of bous·
ing the poor."
He said the wealth of the
shah's family "is enough to de·
velop the whole country. We will
take action, we do not talk." He
proml.aed free water, electricity
and bus service.
Earlier. officials of the revolu-
tionary government said the
shah and bis family took $21
blllion wilb them when they fled
lbe country Jan. 16.
Priest Sent
To Hospital
NEW CASTLE, Del. <AP> -A
Roman Catholic priest was sent
to a mental institution Wednes·
day after police charged be was
the "Gentleman Bandit" who
bad stolen $1,185 in eight armed
holdups.
The Rev. Bernard T. Pagano,
53, an assistant pastor at St.
Mary's Refuge of Sinners in
Cambridge, Md., was arrested
at bla home 1n Middletown Tues-
day night. He wu arraigned
bete Wednesday on seven
charges of armed robbery and
one count of attempted robbery.
New Castle Magistrate John
Wilding committed Pagano -to
Delaware Stale Hospital here
for psychiatric observation wiW
a ball hearing oo Saturday.
Ohio River Nears Crest
AINftY Alllu'-
All•"'-.. ltlmorw .,,.,. '""*" ••-•ru 9olM
8MtOll
8vff•IO CN<-.o
Clft<IMMIU c~ 0.1 l"t..,,,
~
DHMoilwl
DttAlt Oulvtll h.,.,...
Hef'1flnl ....... ......... ......
ltffl'•t"Y LMV.,..
' Lime.__
• Lee ......... ..... .......... ........ ~ . ......,.... ... °'" ... .,.._
Oll ... Clty ........
=~~ ........ _
Trends
WASHINGTON (AP) -A key eovemment lo·
dicator ol future economlc trends pluqed by the
abarpelt marlin lD four ye an in January. rrovtd.lng • •ll'oeC alp of an economic slowdown, l wu dis·
clOHdtoday.
A lteep decline in buJJdinc permits and the
averaae wort wefjk cauaed the lode~ of leadin&
economic Indicators to drop 1.2 percent in
January, the Commerce Department said. Tbe dropoft followed declines of 0.4 percent in
November and 0.1 pel'Cent in December. Iii 1ummer of 1977, however, lbe index also
declined for three conaec:utive months but the
economy kept on IOlna·
Thia time -the government wants ·ece:lOmic
growth to 1low somewhat u it tries to dampen ~
1tlw, /tie?
\\ORLD I NATION
fiaUonary pressures. It was not clear from tbe lat.ell
report whether the nation faces an orderly
11owaown or a recession, aa anticipated by some
private ec:onomiata. Besides building permits and the work week.
there were sharp declines lo the money supply.
which la considered bad for economic powt.b but
an encourastng sign in fighting inflation.
Five of lbe indicaton actually lncreued, lD·
eluding stock prices, factory orders, plut and
equipment spending, vendor deliveries and a
smaller layoff rate. The Jan&aary deellne was the
biggest since a 3 percent drop in January 11'15.
The figures are adjusted for seasonal varia·
lions. 1be index baa declined lo five of tbe lut slx
months of January.
.... ,,.....,.
Oil Firms
Buy Rights
In Atlantic
NEW YORK <AP> -Oil com-
panies went bargain hdllUng
Wednesday. buying rights to 44
more drilling s ites in the
Baltimore Can,Yon off fJew
Jersey for a total of $41.7
million, a fraction or what they
paid in lbe area's first lease sale
2 ~ years ago.
It took just 20 minutes for gov-
ernment officials to open the
sealed bids in Madison Square
Garden's Felt Forum. The
crowd of several hundred oil
company officials was quiet aa
lbe bids were read, in marked
contrast to the circus-like at·
mospbere lbat accompa·nied the
fi~t lease sale in August 1976.
• The bids were lower"\b.is time
because lbe tracts purchased in
1976 have oot measured up to
their promise.
THE BALTIMORE Canyon
area of the Atlantic bas been
estimated to contain 13.S trillion
cubic feet of natural gas -
about 8 months worth of U.S.
supply at present consumption
le vels -and a lesser amount of
crude oil.
Wo~car, a wombat at the Cosmo Zoo in St. Paul,
Minn., wears a look of innocence after biting City
Councilman Victor Tedesco in the arm during
ground-breaking ceremonies Wednesday for a. ren·
ovation project. After all, does Woscar look like a
fierce creature who would bite the band that feeds
him?
The lack of success so far in
the area has led many oil com·
pany exploration officials to
worry that the gas may be too
expensive to locale and extract.
The 87 tracts leased in 1916
brought a total of $1.1 billion.
The companies didn't bother
bidding on 65 of the tracts
available Wednesday. Most or
tboae bought were located near
the edge of the continental shelf.
FREE Travel
Planning Help
For You ...
Registry Hotel, Irvine
5-9p.m. \ftkdnesday, April 4
Travel Today· will interest anyone planning
a business or pleasure trip.
Exhibits by airlines, steamship companies,
travel agents and tour operators will be
featured at Travel Today -a Daily Pilot
travel show set for April 4.
The free show is open to the public from 5
p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday, April 4, at the
Registry Hotel, 18800 MacArthur Blvd. in
Irvine .
There will be drawings for a free trip and
world ,globes and a complete array of travel
literature .
For the latest travel and tour information,
see Travel Today -a travel show sponsored
by the
DAILY PILOT
642-4321
l
PASADENA <AP> -Excited
1c1entuta are junking their ooce·
Udy theories about Jupiter as
Voyaaer 1 ·a televt.lon cameras
reveal a d1nlln1ly complex
world or rnUeas and colorful
clouds • · 1'~or the most p_art-y-' •
Unlveralty of Arizona scientist
Bradford Smith said Wednes·
day, ''UM; extallng atmospheric
c irculation models have all
bet>n Bh o t. to hell b y
Voyaaer. . . Bewildered is
probably the beat Ttay to
describe the way we feel right
now."
THE NEW PICl'UaE or the
Jovian atmosphere, once
thought to have "a nlce, uniform
flow," shows rolling and churn·
i ng motions that the old theories
cannot explain, Smith said at a
news conference.
Smith beads the Imaging team
tor the S500 million National A~ronautics and Space Ad·
ministration misalon.
•
'Thutlday, March 1, t979 DAILY PILOT AS'
He said the pictures,
transmitted across more than
400 mlllion miles or space. will
be studied ror months as acien·
lists try to underat.and the new
findings.
THE UNMANNED
spacecraft, after a journey or 18
months, ls some 3 million miles
from Jupiter and closing
rapidly. 1
Its cameras already reveel
richer detail than scientists had
seen and NASA says the pictures
should be 10 times better When
Voyager 1 sails past the &ilf1·
tic planet early Monday.
The ship ls to swing within
173,000 miles of Jupiter before
flying on to rendezvous with
Saturn and ils ring s 1n
November 1980.
VOYAGER 2, four months
b e hind its sister s bip, u
scheduled to fly past Jupiter in
July and reach Saturn in 1981.
Student's Jobless Pay Upheld
Dad Greets Familtf
Paul Jone~ hugged one of his eight children as they
weTe reumted Wednesday at Los Anaeles International Alrport. They had been separated for four years after
.. Jones left Vietnam: Flights from Saigon were cut off
Just before the f amity was to leave. His wife, recovering
frol'Q appendicitis, remained in ·saigon but plans to move
to California.
~
SAN FRANCISCO !AP> -The
Callfonua Supreme Court bas
ruled that a student is eligible
for unemployment benefits even
though ~cbool work curtails the
1tudenl 's availability for
employment.
The 6-1 decision Wednesday
upheld a Los Angeles County
Superior Court decision involv·
log Enid Ballantyne, who
restricted her employment to
part-time and intermittent work
at. a department store because
she was caring for her three
small childten.
She held various jobs but lost
her 1ast. job through no fault of
her own in March 1975 and
began receiving unemployment
benefits, according to court
documents. In September 1975
she entered law school at UCLA.
Chavez Targets ~ona
By Tbe Associated P ress
With the winter lettuce
season nearly over in the Im-
perial Valley, United Farm
Workers leader Cesar Chavez is seeking support for the six·
week-old Jettu~.strike in other
areas, including his Arizona
birthplace.
Meanwhile, two court bear· ings were &<:beduled In E l Centro
Utilities
• Lose State
Ruling
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP) -The catifornia
Supreme Court, in a
blow to the stat e's
·utilities, has ruled that
the state Public Utilities
Commission correctly
reduced the allowable
profits of South ern
California Gas Co.
The court upheld two
PUC orders Wednesday.
TUEY LOWERED the
authorised rate of return
• for the gas company
from 8.5 percent to 8.25
per..cent in a dispute over
ho'-' the utility account·
ed for savings resulting
rrom federal income tax
credits.
The complicated rw·
ing stems from a gas
· utility application for an
$80.2 million annual rate
, increase to offset the
higher cost. of natural
gas.
It involves accounting
practices u s ed by
utilities l(> save part of
their income taxes wliea
they invest in new
plants.
today on Agricultural Labor
Relations Board requests for in·
juoctiom limiting UFW picket·
ing at two struck· farms and
placing restraints on use of
guards and firearms at one of
the two farms.
THE VFW WON a major,
although limited, victory
, Wednesday when a Salinas
judge signed a -temporary ·in·
j unction allowing union
represent.aUves to go into two
major grOWers' fields to talk to
strike-breaking workers.
The preliminary injunction, is·
s ued by Monterey County
Superior Court Judge Rkhard
Silver, was expected to be ap-
pealed by the two growers.·
California Coastal Farms and
Sun·Ha.rvest Inc.
-4-nl~ong~
SHOE SERVICE
........ ..,. c..tft' for
SPEBlY • TOPSU>Elt
O.'t tWow .,,., YOlllr
~ .. fo; ..... old ...... -.s w.,..,.... .... ,... .. ...... .......
fleetiag \tote Nlzed
SACRAMENTO <AP> -An ln·
illative to legalize off-track bel·
ting and Nevada-style gambling
bas failed to maJce the Callrornia
ballot for the 10th time in five
years, says the secretary of
state's office.
The office reported Wednes·
day that the proposed constitu·
tional amendment by Robert
Wilson of Sherman Oaks failed
lo get. the 553.790 signatures
needed by Feb. 16 to qualiry ror
the June 1980 ballot.
Mmaagf!r O•ted Again
NATIONAL CITY <AP> -The
City Council ~as asked City ·
Manager Harry Gill for bis res·
ignallon after voting to replace
him with his assistant, Tom
McCabe.
Gill, who left Tustin under
similar circumstances four
years ago, said' Wednesday be
has no immediate plans. He was
manager or Tustin for 10 years.
aod manager in Lawndale
before that.
BolA Chief Tntl lie•
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
Bank of America President A.W.
Clausen spent almost an hour
Wednesday testifying before a
federal grand jury investigatJ.ng
the resignation last. Au.gust of
the bank's vice chairman of the
board.
The investigation concerns the
Add To Yo.-S•opp•1
........ by Vltltll9g 0...
SEAFOOD & SERVICE
DELI
hr-1-Q CWc.li• -'"'4 c:Mdia
A...+MS•lwkMs
WEHAYEUVE
MAINE LOISTER!
THE 5-Z decision writ·
ten by Chief Justice
Rose Bird endorsed
the PUC's treatment of
tax savings from invest·
ment tax credits and ac·
celerated deprecitllion
in setting rates or
utilities.
MARKET BASKET
I
I ! f It also declared the I PUC correctly ruled
I that the gas company
would remalo elilible for
federal tax cred.It under
I ita OfdefS.
, Owner Fined
LOS ANGELES <AP)
-Tbe preaident of • Loi
An1ele1 textlle nproeeutaa company,
wlaJcb was bit by two major ftrn Jut 19ar,
baa been fined tu, 1•
after ... pleaded l\dl\J
to 22 Yiolattc. ol tbe
lt8te FIN .COM. Gerald Kauap, prllldeftt ol 0 6SK..,.._...Jae., ••pat cm• moatu probatkm.
SPECIAL ORDER
MAMMOUTH I
CHEDDAR
A&ED 60DAYS
u " ......... .., s3s!
ff iCkoJJ re1rm :z,o.
WESTCUFF PL4%A
17th • lnlH . Mtwpori leodt.
Contact Lenses Refrlctfnv
Eyewear Stytlno Pretcribfnv
Dr. Lou Rou Elder
OPTOMETRIST
642-0720
11 ~4 Irvine Ave.
Newp0rt Beach
( STATE J
resignation of Alvin Rice. re-
ported to be the heir apparent to
Clausen's job at the world ·s
largestbank. -
~ldlln-BU11ted
WHfITIER <AP> -A SS,000
reward is being offered for in·
formation leading to the arrest
and conviction of a bandit who
shot an all-night store clerk to
death early Wednesday'. store of·
Cic1als said.
Southland Corp. of Dallas.
Tex .. which operates the 7·
Eleven store chain, posted the
reward following the sboot,,,g
death of AJbert Lewis Owens, 26.
at the 7-Eleven store on Wbittjer
Boulevard.
Evangelist F ~es
Sex-with-minor R~p
EL CAJON <AP > -·Television evangelist Dennis Goodell ha!\
been arrested for investigation or sex charges involving a 17-year·
ol4 female member of his church. police said.
The 34-year-old Goodell ls pastor of the Ev angel Center in El Ca·
j,m.
'('
IT' '"8 ABOUT 7IO parishioners and features faith healmg
services videotaped each Sunday ror broadcast on cable television
in Southern California.
Goodell was arrested Tuesday for investigation of sex acts in
volving a minor girl he was counseling. police said.
Goodell was released from county jail on his own recognizance
late Wednesday. according to Sheriff's Deputy Ralph Goodrich
Arraignment was scheduled today in El Cajon Municipal
·Court.
The girl told her father of the alleged incidents. which purported·
ly occurred from summer 1978 through last January. and Goodell Wfl5
aJl'eSt.ed shortly after they went to police. according to Police Lt. Bob
Sf..andring-.
cartCEPT
CJrtE"'
POWERDRH'E
......
Thrift Pack
l00'1wltlt30
FIR
1llRMiRIH
5.49
r
Orange Coast Oa1ly Pilot Eilltorial .Page ..........................................................
. ..\8 L /SC
Thurlday, Mwch t, t979
Robert N Wee-d/Put>llsr.,r ThOmas 1Ceevl1/Edlt r
. ' Barbera Kreiblch/Edltorlal P~ Editor
i
Air Your Views
On School Split
R~d~nts m the • ptstnno Unlfled ~hool Diatrtct
boundaril'::. will hav~ an opportunity March t• to air their
\'1t-w'> on a propos I pllttlng the district Into lwo
separatP cnhtil's.
Mt-mbl'rs of the Orang<' County Comm1tlee on School
llistract Orgomiotlon will hear rguments at San
l'leml·ntt' Ht~h Schoot. 700 AHmda Pko beginning at 7'30
pm
Mure thtul 300 n.\Mdents m lh dastr1ct s11ned pell
lions lust spring scckma a separ tc San Clemente school
dtstrlct. They argue the district composed of 22
:.ehool~ on one f1tth or the county's land ls too large for
unt> udrnm1strat1on to handle
And they 8UY the)' ~mit u bmaller d1strtl't that would
µro\•tdt> more local control.
Rut opponents say two separate districts, with two
s(•parate udministra t ions. would be more costly
Opponents or tht' pUt contend the trend In California
1::. for lar~er dlstr1ct~. not s maller ones
And, they say. larger districts tend to be more effi·
dent than smalJer dtstncts. They also cite problems of
district boundaries that would be created by the split.
The proposal has been opposed by the City Council of
San Juan Capistrano. the CUSO School Board and the
Capistrano Unified Council of Parents-Teacher-Students
Assoe1at1on ·
If tht' two-distract plan can produce good students,
It 's likely a good idea. But home rule and local control,
however laudable they may be as goals, shouldn't be .em-
phasized at the expense of the education program.
Rent Control Risks .
San Juan Capistrano councilmen are scheduled to
vote Wednesday on a measure introouced as an urgency
ordinance that would control mobile home park space
rental rates in the city.
, Because1 of its urgency tag, the measure would
become law immediately if it is approved.
The ordinance provides a five-member committee
composed of two mobile home owners, two trailer park
owners and one impartial member to conduct hearings
into proposed space rent increases that exceed cost-of.
living in~exes for a 12-month period.
After the hearings, the committee would recommend
that the City Council approve or deny the sought-after
rent increase. Proposed increases that do not exceed
cost-of-living increases will not be required to go through
the process.
Rut only one rent hike per year is allowed under the
ordinance. _
While it may be apparent that people living on fixed
incomes are endangered by unreasonable rent increases.
the proposed ordinance deserves a thorough examination
by city off\cials and councilmen. . ·
Spirited eHorts to protect people and preserve their
right to a comfortable retirement sometimes lead gov-
ernmental officials to make snap judgments that may not
prove right in the long term.
Will controlling one thing-space rental fees-truly
protect residents from cost-of-living increases that affect
their Hves? And what about the park owner who faces in-
creases in m'aintenance and upkeep costs?
Certainly. retired people should not be forced from
their homes by rent gouging. But such measures that a(·
f ect specific aspects of tpe local economy should be treat-
ed with Cafe.
Open Govenunent
lssues not listed on Laguna Beach's City Council
agenda won 't come up for discussion anymore in the wee
hours of the morning when residents have desefted the
council chambers.
That's ~cause Councilman Wayne Baglin spoke up
last week.pS.'tien his fellow council members brought up
several items for discussion at the end of their regular
meeting. ·
"When I ran for this office I told people I wanted
things conducted in the open," he told Councilwoman Sal·
ly Bellerue in response to a question about why he was
abstaining on the so-called off.agenda items.
Baglin 's point seemed to make his colleagues a bit
uncomfortable in the presence of the handful of residents
remaining in the room.
Councilmen voted to discuss such non-agenda issues
much earlier in the meeting-before public bearings,
which is what draws most residents to the meetings.
It would be easy to wage a war of attrition with resi·
dents' attention spans during often long meetings.
Sensitive questions that might upset people could be left
until the crowd is gone.
But, as Baglin accurately saw, such action subverts
the idea of open, responsive government.
Baglin should be commended lor raising the point
and refusing to participate in su.ch discussions by ab·
staining to vote on the items.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those ot the Daily Pilot. Ot~ views expressed on this page are those Qf their authors and
artists. Reader comment la invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626: Phone (71.t) 6"2·"321.
Boyd/Beds
-By L. M .• 'BOYD
Benjamin Frankltn ·used
hfO beds, gettlpf ~p in the
middle of the .u,bt Co move
from ooe to tbe other, bis ~-
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
ported theory beln• that bia
body wodld become over.,
he.t.d Wlleu be moved to
cooler quarters. England's
Prime Minister Disraeli
didn't Mttle for two. He bad
four beds. H• put out the same 1tory Franklin did.
Neither were a match for Kint l.clull XIV of France,
thouab. Tbe t1na made UM of
412 &eds. He alteruted by
whim. All UMee men's beds were la dlffereat room1,
pl•aH DcKe. Qa.,Uon 11 wbetblr-., really believed
lbat bodJ·beat MtloG or J\lll walUd to cre,t. • altuatioa
wbeHlD aob0d1 could be
"'"eudlJ wbere tMy were
..... .. 8117 ...... nllbt-
n. 'han. .... &eDdl to
be ::=1.· ...aw. neened, ma ~ut. det.rmlaed,
paU•Dl and reJlablt. Ht'• urtfal ill Ida apeech. Ha
................... lD
-:.. ti .._ Or IO ur
... I " t
Nichol&H Von Hoffman
Oil Could Cost ~arter His Job
Althoutb only lour president$ tn tht lut 120 years have *n
defeated runnin& for a second
term .n event allshUy lea1 rar" than a comet plunking
down on t.M l.lncoln Memorial
J lmmy Carter' is re·e lectlon
chancH t-ave been a discussion
topic be~ almott since the hour
that tbl• poor, plodding, pre-
atdenlial pert0n was sworn into
orttce.
Mulling over re mote cont-
1naenclH ilJ how we writers
make u hv·
In# so thDt
such chatter our ht to be en oyed for
whatever en-
te rtainment
value 1t ma):
have and ig-
nored.
But now for
the first time
Jimmy may be comlng up
against something that can cost
him his job: oil. Not the revolu-
tion In Iran. Practical-minded
people will understand that a
different course of action by the
American president in that
country wouJd not have yielded
a different result.
THE. MOST you can say is
that if Carter had distanced
himself somewhat more rapidly
from t.he Shah. the new people
might have been more friendly
and might, but only might, be
more willing to resume oil pro·
duclion.
But the judgment rendered on
the way scarce oil and gas sup·
plies are allocated will be bruis-
ingly concrete. Jimmy won't be
held accountable for what hap-
pens thousands of miles away in
Iran but if the lines at the gas
pumps get maddeningly long, if
there are blackmarket scandals,
if rationing comes and it's
botched, if there are rumors or
corruption ln the allocations, or
favoritism. if the distribulion or
Mailb9x
1•• •nd~r home beatJnc oU lao't
generally reaarded at lair and
efficient, old Tall Tooth wlU be
ln serious trouble.
In no other area Q( 1ovem·
ment aCUvily will Jimmy get
the blame personally and direct·
ly the way he will on this one
People will remember, and i(
they don't, the opposition is sure
to remind them that the ap-
paratua for laking care of
emersenctea such aa this waa
~P to have been tet up
the paaaa1e of Carter's · ·c mpre h e naive energy
package."
In (act what was paned by
Conereu and mlatakenJy 1lgned
by Carter wasn't comprehenalvc
and watJn 't a packa1e. but a
mlshmq h that has been of no
..
help ln reducing energy usage or
making our uae of it aignilicant-
ly more efficient. Nevertheless
Carter said the mlahmash was
his mishmash, just the right
misbmaah to get the job done. At
the White Howse they called the
passage of tbe energy package a
victory for the Georgia plodder.
ANOTHER victory for Carter
waa the creation or the Depart·
ment of Energy. Around town,
however, the Department of
Energy already has a reputation
for being outstandingly ineffi -
cient, a title lo which there are
many claimants, not a few of
whom are aged and encrusted
agencies like the Interstate
CommerrP Commissioo, an out·
fit which has bad 95 years to
reach its peak of ine(fectual, feck·
less inaction. And here comes
Jimmy Carter's new Department
of Energy, not yet two year'> nld
and already a challenger .
Regular telephone callers to
DOE count it a good day when
somebody picks llP a receiver to
tell the inquirer that no, he can't
talk to the person ln charge of
this-or·that because the posit1o·n
hasn't been filled yet or 1f al h<Js
been filled the person isn't really
in charge of this-or-that and no.
I'm sorry we wouldn't know ~ho
is.
While they let their phones
ring they worry about getting
their offices decorated and oh-
servers who have lo watch th1-,
charade wonder how these J>t'fl -•·
pie are ever ·going to handle ;1
national gas rationing program
if it comes lo that
A GAS shortage is only slJghUy
less serious tha n a food
shortage. It hits everyone and
everyone will want lo hit bark.
They'll want Lo hit back yel
harder when it dawns on them
bow little has been done lo pre·
pare ttie country for a nasty
bump like this one.
Corilmnnists Reap Harvest· of Dissension
To the Editor:
The Communist government
of Cambodia fell it must punish.
a Jot of citizens. How do you
punish someone when they have
no freedom? You kill them, of
course.
The Communist Vietnam,
backed by Russia.'decided that
they should punish the Cambo·
dian Communists, so they killed
them.
China decided that the Viel·
nam government should be
punished, so they are killing the
Viets.
Now Russia says that China
must be punished. I wonder who
wiU punish Russia.
It seems the old adage pre-
vails: What you sow. that shall
you reap.
The Communists have been
sowing war and djssension for a
long lime. They should have a
good crop to reap.
JAMES BOLDING
Real Read Prelllela
To the Editor:
1 want to express my opinion
about the Laguna Canyon Road
issue.
Earl Waters
The problem is not the road!
everybody thinks that's the
problem and as long as everyone
lays responsibility on something
other than themselves, you'll
always have wrecks
If you put eight-foot high walls
down the center of the road
somebody would stiH find a way
to have a wreck or get killed.
The problem is that there are
people who go through the mo-
tions of driving a car but their
attention ls on something else.
Drive-instead of worrying,
a rguing, drinking. kids in a
group all having fun and the
driver not watching the road,
angry because you 're late,
speeding around curves to see
what the car will do. etc.
THE PROBLEM on the can-
yon road li es in the r e·
education or individuals so that
their awareness is focused on
driving an automobile and all
the laws that encompass that task.·
One could even post a big sign
at each end of the canyon say-
ing, "Danger Be Alert When
Driving This Road.··
That's cheaper than a four-
Jane road. That won"t wipe out
all the trees. The money saved
might pay for overhead~
on all the curves in the canyon.
If all the accidents m this can·
yon were investigated beyond
the poinl of "What happened
here?" you would find every one
of those people were ngt aware
of driving when those accidents
occurred.
The driver's license system
s tresses I a ws and proper
mechanical functions or driving.
It does not test lo see if a person
stays aware·. It does not stress
what couJd happen when driving
any other way. The law officers
who investigate accidents see
this all the time. ll has a sober·
ing effect. ·
It is a possibility that if people
could be re-educated in the area
o r awareness, accidents couJd be
reduced. insurance premiums
would go down and we could
spend all that money on fun
things.
LES BUMANN
1t'la• Mecllocrit91
To the Editor :
Could the concern of citizens
ToLawniakerslt's 'Us' and 'Theni'
By a slip of the tongue Senate
President Pro Tempore James
Milla ba s l et drop the
fundamental difference which
now separates the e lected
repreaentatives from the people.
It has become a situation
whereln the lawmakers no
lon.er think of themselves IS be1n• an inseparable part ol the
people who elected them.
Tbla shocking revelation of
how leflalators have gradually
become
insulated, no
longer
1barin1 t he
hopes and
feara of tbe
• rank and Ole
citizens.
came with
legislative salaries in 1965 were
only $6,000 and the current
$25,SSS represents an increase of
more than 400 percent!
But it was his assertion, in
explaining that recent increases
amounting to S percent a year
are less than the 7 percent
average annual boosts given
state employees, whkh shines
the Ugbt on tbe attitude of the
lawmakers t owards the
clthenry. Said Milla, "The
people out there .don't realbe
that." In one short sentence
Mill• put the leatslaton Jp. a .
aep.1rate cateeory from the rest
of the folks. lt has become "us"
and "them." Tbe "people out
there" are "them."
SUCH THINKING uplalns
why tJae lelialaton, nu1h with • 'the intro-
duction by 111 Ua 0 ,-8 10 percent salary ralae, are
pay meuure which would ready lo puab tbrou•b yet
Provide 5 -rceat lncreues ln another lntteaae. One may laull
b .~ the IOloaa for their f allures to eac of~ nest two Ytan for solve major problem• of tbe IOlonl. The end result would • 11 r 1 be a ealary ot tH 110 .,-. property tax re . e , achoo
"'8 _ __. to tbe ... ~ !..-.&Wld llauclq, unacceptable crime
b .r-.-.~ •"l'o..... ratee. .na welfare nforms, but 1 ... em lut year. none can HY they are der.Uct
IN a.nn1NG the • .....,. wMD it eom• to looltln' out for
MW. onfu11r patMed out tUt u.elr penonal welfare.
wJdJe tile CIOllllU...., wtc. ...._ II lbe talary waa all tbe
bJ,cnlMd arpseHt.._ &m law.-.. 10t-perbape MIU.'
lolaa PQ Ml biim ,...._ _, propotal •~1 llad aome .. , ,,,.., ,.. • ......., ........ tt ... '*' llllli~ ...... :te,;...._ tbt ol tlie rsdre ... It a. .. ....
from the tax free "Ii ving
allowance" which is now S46 a
day, having just been upped 15
percent. This is collected 7 days
a week throughout the entire
session a s well as when
members are on "official
business'' between sessions.
't
The extra stipend is tax free
by virtue of special
Congressional action sponsored
by U.S. Senator Alan Cranston
which gives state legislators an
income tax exemption not
granted to others.
WHEN, to the salary and per
diem , is added the fringe
benefit.a aucb aa an automobile
and an unlimited supply of
guollne, both also· tax free,
alont with pension benefits far
more •eneroua than those
1ranted .Ute employees, the
total compensatlon tor
C•llfornfa legislators Is the
equivalent of a salary of more
than '50;000 l year. Thlt places
them among the elite top 5
percent tncome brackets .
1 I• bec•u•• of thht that
today's lawmuen, walike the
1vera1e citizen, fail to be •bocked by tbe exce11lve
aalartea.. p.ald n:U.Aor locaJ ~·nameat and ~bool olftcla1t. ,..., , tDO. ............ ta.. popalMle .......... .
about Uie preoccupation h)
television. motion pictures and
newspapers with violence -
dominated scripts, plots and
h eadlin es be answer e d
eco nomi ca lly ? And .
ac.ademically?
An -jlrticle describing the
publishing policy of the
Australian newspaper magnate
Rupert Murdoch states he
publishes a newspaper "for the
lo west com mon denominator
elem ent ... one in which ex-
plicit stories about sex and
crime and racy pictures are the
focus.''
This appeal to the low-
intelligence and the production
or news for its "entertainment ..
value builds an e normous
readership that the publisher can
use profitably in soliciting and
securing top-price advertising.
THE SAME principle obtains
for television and motion-pictures which accounts for the
.. competitive'' sales-price of
newspapers and ·'free·· TV ..
the advertisers are picking up
the production lab and. for the
most part, pay the distribution
costs which subscribers and
coin-box purchasers of the print-
ed media contribute to com-
parably modest revenue.
The C h ristian Science
Monitor, with a very small ad·
vertising income, must rely up.
on other sources or income and
its readers, who purchase that
ne wspaper for 25 cents. prob-
ably represent ~ well-above·
average intelligence which the
Monitor publish ing policy
responds to by employing the
very best newspaper editors.
journalists and photographers.
Perhaps, rather than agonii-
ing-in what appears to be a na·
tional concern for what one car-
toonist describes as a losing bat·
tle against network sabotage of
creative and quality program·
ming, responsible citizens of all
ages might be~in to consider
their obligation to react to
mediocrity in the teachln1 pro-
f es slons. don'l·rock-tbe-boat
school administrators and their
intimidation of educat.<Sn worthy
or that titJe including paruta
and the ones who must suffer for
it all ... the studenta.
For. as Dewey observed.
"What we do for and wttb youth
witl detenn1ne in later years
what tbey do witb and to the ia-
atituttons in wbicb they find
themMlves."
BRUCZ S. HOPPING
ln
ire
lth
Jn
I
' t:
in !
't IO
" I·
)
'· J.
e
g
I,
r
.•
" I • .. , ~~~;.._~~ ...... ~~~--~~------~~~....:.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:-~~~~~~~-=-~-----
. '
r
•
Orange~ Goast
LOI T l O N
\ Today's Closing'(;1 I
N. Y. Stoeks '
J t
E
-t . ,
I
VOL. 72, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES
No Malt Liquor?
Deputy Jack Dwyer (front) and two unidentified
helpers were among those chasing an escaped bull
in a Salt Lake City suburb when the quarry turned
and ch~sed them. The three-hour saga ended when
the arumal was captured following shots from a
tranquilizer gun.
I Firemen Take Heat
17
J ~~~N~~~~ ~~~~~la· ri stream of profanity blistered the lion -not the city fire depart-
. ear of Bozeman Fire Chief Bud ment -involved, Gesko pointed
Simpson when he answered the out, and the home was seven
telephone. miles outside city limits, where
"It was two people talking, the city's authority ends.
and they called him eve~ng The city fire department was
they could, with a lot or profani-not summoned ind "was in no
ty," City Manager Sam Gesko way involved in this unMrtunate
said Wednesday. "As near as we fire, nor in attempting or refus·
could tell, tbey we re calling ing to extinguish it," Gesko saJd
from New York or New Jersey." in a statement aimed at dis·
The call was the worst in a associating the city from the
series of critical telephone calls fire
from around the country -and Not only officials are feeling
so me fro m Ca n a d a and the heat. A Bozeman firefighter
Australia -which city officials said. "The general consensus of
have received since a rural fire the guys is to lay low and not tell
l association allowed a house to anybody who you ar'e right t burn because the owner hadn't now." f paid his members hip fee. (See ROASTED, Page .U>
I yl · 'Iliree Face <3ourt f . .
In Man's Slaying
i
t By RAYMOND ESTRADA Jll.
Of "'9 o.lty '1111t Sutt
Police arrested two
Capistrano Beach suspects and
an El Toro teen-ager Wednesday • on suspicion or murder in the Dec.
l stabbing death of Rodney James
• Gilbert. 32, in his Laguna Beach
home.
Laguna Beach Police Lt. Al i Olsen said today it ia believed
(
drugs were involved in the kill-
ing of Gilbert, a skateboard
equipment salesman . Olsen f would not ·amplify the drugs
theory.
• Arrested are Robert Eu«ene
I Rowe, 20, 3M5t VWa Verde, an
unnamed 17-year-okl boy, and
Craig Lelmd BiabofM, 18, of
21112 Nonbwood Lane, El Toro.
Gilbert's former girlfriend,
Myra Hight, found the dead man
in bis' beach-type . cottage at
439~ Hill St., "Ith a single knife
wound in his heart the morning
after the stabbini occurred.
Police said Gilbert's bome had
been ransacked but indicated
that nothing of value appeared
to betaken.
Clad only in a blue-striped
nightshirt, Gilbert was found IY·
ing face up between the kitchen
and livirig room .
Police believe Gilbert was
beaten after be was stabbed.
Furniture in the bome had been
pushed around and blood was
found on the walls, police said.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1979 c
'
10 Face Herolli' Rapsl'.
Police Seize Suspects in Mesa, Newport · • Flve men and five women, all
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
residents , were arrested
Wednesday night by Costa Mesa
police on charges of selling
heroin
Sgt. Gary Webster said no
significant amounts of drugs
were seized Wednesday. Arrests
were made on warrants result-
ing from allegat.ions of· about 20
previous undercover narcotics
buys over a lhr~-week period,
he said.
The arrest s were unusua l
because all but one of the aJ.
leged heroin purchases either
took place or began in Costa
f!.t esa. Webster said.
The drugs involved were $2S
"balloons" of heroin weighing
about one-half gram. he said.
"We'll continue to target the
heroin dealers and users in this
town," Webster said . "We let it
be known that if they're going lo
be dealing in Costa Mesa. we're
going to be on them · ·
He said all of the male sus-
pects were in Costa Mesa Jail to·
day and the female suspects in
Orange County Jail.
The male suspects were iden-
tified as:
-Rieb Christopher O'Connor,
27. of 2621 Ha rbor Boulevard
#D-1. Costa Mesa. $10,000 bail on
suspidon of four counts of sales of heroin.
of heroin.
-Henry Wa«enbarg Cllavsr-
rta, 30. 207 £. 16th Place, #4,
Costa Mesa. $10.000 bail on sus-
picion of two counts or sales of
heroin.
-Milte Hollenbeck. 27, 1375
Baker St.. tB. Costa Mesa.
S20.000 bail 011..suspicion of two
counts of sales of heroin, one
co u nt o r possession o f a
billy club.
_,_ Raymond Adolph Drozd, 36.
7204 W Coast Highway. Space
#21 . Newport Beach. $20,000 bail
on susp1c1on of two counts of
sales of heroin.
The female suspects were hst·
ed as ·
-Patrice M. Zeltner, 22, 7204
W. Coast Highway. Space #21,
Newport Beach. $20,000 bail on
suspicion of four counts of sales
or heroin. ..
-Harold Eugene Harmon, 29, -Jeri Agnes Phipps, 30,
21521h Puente Ave., Costa M~sa. 2152112 Puente Ave .. Costa Mesa.
$10.000 bail on one count of sales (See HEROIN, Page A2>
Mesa Asks
Study for -
·-·.... ~:--~~!""""~~
Baby Said
Near Death
At Birth New Marina
Costa Mesa city officials told
the Army Corps of Engineers
Wednesday it should study the
feasibility or building a boat
marina at the mouth of the San-
ta Ana River. _
Supporters or the marina proj-
ect from Newport Beach were.
also heard from as the corps
held a public hearing in Garden
Grove.
Purpose· or the hearing was to
discuss plans for a $1 billion,
three-county flood control proj-
ect that includes developing a
concrete channel along the San-
ta Ana River.
WbUe corps 1p01tesmeta spoke
of the largest single construetioo
project involving Orange
Co)lllt,y, the marina was on the
mlnds of most the 75 people in
the Garden Grove city council
chambers.
Among those in the audi~ce
were Costa Mesa Mayor Ed
McFarland as well as City Coun-
cilmen Dominic Raciti and Don-
Hall.
But the city spokesman was
consultant Ken Sampson .
former chief executive or the
Orange Count y Harbors,
Beaches and Parks District.
Sampson told the corps the ci-
ty believes plans for the flood
control project should include a
feasibility study of a small boat
harbor that would give Costa
Mesa access to the sea.
He said the city wants to work
with the Corps while il is de·
veloping precise plans for the
river's mouth and pledged the
city's support in the project.
Sampson's words were echoed
by Mesa Verde area residents as
well as a spokes woman for
homeowners in the Newport
Shores area.
But the Army engineers were
noncommittal about the proposed
marina as they discussed the
massive nood control project in-
volving Orange, Riverside and
San Bernardino counties .
They see the project as an es-
sential safeguard to life and
property within a 3,200-square-
mile areaoftbe-threeco\Jnties.
Orange County supervisors
agreed with that assessment at
their meeting Wednesday.
The board adopted a resolu·
lion reiterating county govern·
ment's support of the $1 billion
flood control plan.
The federal office bas recpm·
mended a change in cost sharinc
that w:puld increase the county's
Portion to $250 million.
...,
·~-1 ......... Tfaings Go Better
Chinese who witnessed formal establishment of the U.S.
Embassy in Peking drink Coca-Cola served as a refresh·
ment afterw~rd . They probably were embassy staff
me mbe rs . since no official Chinese attended the ceremony.
County Delays OK
·OJ-3 Airline Leases
By GARY GRANVILLE
OI ttlt D•llY ~I ... St.ff
County s upe rvisors agreed
Wednesday to delay signing new
five-year leases with the three
com m e r c ial airline s that
operate from Orange Co unty
Airport.
Consequently. Air California,
Hughes Airwest and Golden
West Airlines will continue their
oper ations at the airport under
restricted m onth-lo-month
leases.
T he decisiol! to delay new
leases with the @ee air carriers
came a s part of a n overall
slralegy aimed at contending
with a Federal Aviation Ad-
ministration Investigation that
will gel under war this month.
That investi"ation is aimed at
determining if county govern-
ment is discriminating against
other airlines that want to
operate rrom the airport
In addition to foreioinf' new
leases, s upervisors gave Coun-
ty Counsel Adri a n Kuy per
a uthority to hire outside at-
torneys to represent county gov-
ernment during tbe FAA probe.
Kuyper indit:ated the San
Diego-based firm o r Luce,
Forward. Hamilton a nd Scripps
will be hired.
Kuyper also indicated the firm
will represent•the county in any
<See £.EASES, Page A2 >
Oil Companies
Cut Stations,
limit Supplies
~EW YORK <A4-Several
of the nation's major oil com·
panies began reacting today to
the Iranian petroleum squeeze
as they limited s upplfes of
gasoline and heating oil to
dealers. Texaco also announced
that about 2.200 fiJling stations
will close in four Northern states.
By KATHY CLANCY
OI tfle 0•11• Pll•1 Slatt
The mfant Or W1ll1am Wad-
dill is accused of strangling
"was limp as a rag doll"' and
ha~ no hope for hfe when 1t was
born after a s aline abortiorr
nearly two years ago. the doc·
tor·s attorney told an Orange
County Superior Court jury to-
day.
Defe nse attorney Cha rles
Weedman said movements seen
1n the infant by some hospital
personnel were no more than
"spasms " and the "'whining.
m e wing" sound heard was
merely a noise made by a near-
dead 'premature baby.
He described the sounds and
motions "as the last few signs of
something which. fo r '111 prac-
t1ca I purposes. Wifl> alread)'
dead ..
WaddJll \s accused of stran·
ghng the two-pound . 15-ounce in·
fant after she was born to an 18·
year-old unwed mother following
a saline abortion attempt by the
43-year-old physician.
Waddill 's first trial ended last
May m a mistrial when Jurors
s aid they were deadlocked 7 to 5
in favor of acquittal.
Weedman. in h is opening
statement to the 1ury today, ad-
mitted Waddill told hospital
personnel ·'don 't do a J?oddamn
thing for that baby except give il
oxygen."
The obstetrician did not want
any "'heroic" efforts to revive
the baby, Weddman contended.
saying Waddill feared in ex-
perienced hos pital personnel
··might m some tragic and terri-
ble way seek lo res uscitate this
thing and give it som e im -
aginary hope of life when they
would have absolutely nothing
there except some great to·do
9ver an abortus "
The defense attorney attempt-
ed to refute prosecutor Robert
Chatterton 's contention that his
client raced bankruptcy and
feared a malpractice suit if the
baby had hved a nd been brain
damaged.
He admitted 'Waddill had
made some unsuccessful busi-
ness investments but described
his client as "very prosperous.•·
Coast
Weather
Gann Pkiia on Ballot? The moves by Texaco. Stand-
ard Oil of Indiana <Amoco ),
Cities Service and Sun Co. to
by Mobil, Atlantic Richfield,
PbJlllps and Continental OU.
Their feet hurt. but Pat
Boone's four daughters kept
on dancm' from one end of
Fa.ahion Island to the other.
The11 were on location in
Newporl Beach for the film-
lng of portaona of an E:cuter
t eleui11on sp6c1al. See
Featurmg, Page Cl .
tor)' I" be Said• tt Anything leu
t.bu that and I would want to
watt for tbe Secretary of State to
determ1De.'' Re laid the realOll behind b1s
caution In aettlln' for the
mlnlmum number of registerfld
voter 1l1naturel~ needed la
........ certaba percatqe. of
thole eolleded will be fouDd to be invalid for,varioul reaaom. Gaaa wu in San1' Ana todaJ tQ spelll to _., .-.ton at a
bnakfMl •1'1n1 •t the Ea. Clab ctartq wblcb IM recetY9CI
........ Jltll,loal.
IAlt t.IL ... trtp to °'91119
CouMJ, o-IUI Ilia vol•-~
... ,. a,.,W to collect * ilpalWel Hided In a lhalle ., ... siren.•~
,._OalJ ··-... t0llected.
...... "-·····~· uaa lllimld tlll falJan ol ldl
.\
worltens to succeed In their one-
day drive on a mishmash or or-
ganizational problems, including
(allure to have an adequate sup-
ply of petition forms on band.
Gann predicted success for
what he cflled the Spirit of 13 ln-
itiaUve drive. ,
He Hid the volume lncreuea
daily on the number of
stanatW"el collected and, lf the
present pace bokla up, the tn·
ltlatlve will be on next yeer'a
ballot.
At the tau.• time, he was -1t•l'Pl1 critical of aovenunent . ,. .......
"Waite and fraud run abeolutel)o wUd ln Ulla eouatry,•• ....... .
Pra•nltloa II p.t ~a ID tlM b..tlont at a .. ..._. in
Uala ~, tbe tax reformer
clalmed .
Texaco, the nation's third-
largest oil company, said it is
clol!ng gasoline stations "im-
mediately" in portlons of
Wisconstn. Indiana, Ohio and up-
state New York to bring its sales
"more cloeely in line" with its
refinln& capacity.
Texaco said it provldes~:Y about 5 percent" of the 1 e
sold in the affected areaa. .
Tex• mo aaJd tt 11 provid·
ln1 customen wttb to percent ol
the 1aeoltne they bouslat tn
Marclt mlr-A-1H Hid .......
will ,_..,. 100 l*ftltl ot Uaelr
March 11'11 dellveriel, but ao
more..,.._ IMnMed ctemad,
wbUe atlil S..... laid tt la
provldlq IO perHat of the
1aeollne ud • pereeet of UM Jet
fuel it •lpped a,_,. qo.
INSIDE TODAY
Gusty westerly winds 15
to 25 mrh tonight with
chance o rain decreasing
t.o 30 percent. Some clouds
but mostly fair Friday
wlth highs near eo. Lows
tonight 46 to 52. ··-·
AJ DAILY Ptl.OT C
i March
Anives
Soddenly
A mild winter slorm front
.iave Mart'b a sodden lntroduc
tlon today but fon.-caaten M.ld
Southern CaUtomJa Illes thou.Id dear by Friday. Ou1ty wine&
from the nortbwt"St -.tt ~
t!d late tbla alleraoon.
A spokesman for the National
W\!~thttr Service in Los Ana lea
:said tbe &lorm blew in from the
uorthwest eurly thla morruna
und would continue movlna throJJgh the area tb• rcmalnder
of the day. lie sald up to a half·
IOl'h of nun rould fall befo~ lb
:.torm front moved eastward ln
LO the desert rt>&JOl\S 1
Wmda from 15 to 25 mpb were
forecast beginrung an the after
noon. decreasfog In force btt...Fri
day mormng, the spokesman
said. Surfing conditions were
poor off lhe Orange Coast wath
small, choppy surf
The Harbor Patrol offace 1n
Newport Beach reported small
. ~~ft advisories were ln e.ffect ~m Point Concepllon to the Mexican border. Winds up to 30
knots were expecte d off the
coast by tonight, a spokesman
said, with the gust.s ·d ecreasing
to 15 to 2S knots by Friday. Vis·
ibility was reported at eight
miles.
Travelers advisories were m
effect also for persons driving ir
the mount.alas.
Rainfall figures throughout
Orange County were fractional
by this morning. In Costa Mesa,
about .10 of an inch bad fallen,
bringing the season total to
12.18. In Huntington Beach, rain·
fa II totaled 12, bringing the
season total there to 13.54. In the
city or Orange, only a trace of
rain bad been recorded and in
Santa Ana the moisture came to
.09.
The Laguna Beach Police
Department said the latest
storm wa~ causing no im~
mediate problems in the
Bluebird Canyon area, where
homes had been endangered by
landsliding.
The California Hig hway
Patrol said the rain had caused
only some mmor sphiouts on
freeways. No roadway nooding
was reported.
.
LEASES ••.
appeals that might be launched
aka resuit of FAA findings.
As Kuyper prepared for the
ai rporl legal battle he said
"could have nationwide
significance," he stressed the
seriousness of the latest airport
crisis.
ln simplified terms, the coun·
ty counsel told supervisors the
FA A probe tends to bring
federal, state and local regula·
.tions into direct" conflict.
And, Kuyper warned, the ma·
jor issue to be .decided is
whether a local airport pro·
prietor like the county must
yield operating policy to the federal agency.
He suggested that the two
airlines that touched off the in
FAA investigation with their
complaints be told in wriUng
their request for space at the
airport cannot be considered now '
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
said the two airlines, Conlinen·
tat and Frontier, should be told
more.
Diedrich said notices sent
them should include statements
about noise coostralots placed
on the airport as well as other
shortcomings, including
terminal and parking conges-
tion.
But after a brief debate,·
supervisors agreed to ~o along
with Kuyper's more limited pro.·
posal
Continental and Frontier l'On-
tend they are being discriminat·
ed against by not ~log allowed
to operate from Orange County
Airport.
DAILY PILOT
1,,.0,_CDQl _ty 1•11• ... wNc1'1tc .... 111-l!W_......._, ............ Or_ , ...... ~~.,._ .......... . ...-ii.-_...., tlWWtll Yr'*'t '9r c.t. ,,,.. .. ,..,._, ....,,, ~ '"'"'"-" tet,,...lleY. tm-.U,....IMtll~CM&A
.i..,,.,...,_...,n"'*'-~-Y• The.,,W ... ~,._l•etat Wtt1 .. ,51 ..... c:..-...c .......... .._ .............. ..... ----H<••-~ v .... l'rtt-1~0.-.. ~ ,...... ..... , ......
China Wants Talks
• .
On Viet Conflict~ I
BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> -
Vietnamese troops repulsed
Chloeee forces near Lane Son. a
key provincial capital, but the
Chineee battled back successful·
ly at aome • Points, intelU1ence
sources lo Baqkok reported to-·
day. In Peking, the Chinese govern·
ment sent a note to the Viel·
namese Embauy today propos.
ing talb "u soon as possible"
to end their two-week border
conflict, Peking 's official
Hsinhua news agency reported.
Vietnam claimed Its forces
killed or wounded 27 ,000 Chinese
They said tank-led Cblne1e
counterattacks later scored
some successes agatnat the Viet·
namese in both areas, but sUU
had not taken the city.
Earlier today. Kyodo quoted
sources in Hanoi as sayjng
fierce fighting was going on in
the Lang Son area. a nd tbe
Chinese were launcb.lng human·
wave assaults urged on by
bugles.
Analysts believe the major
battle of the war will occur
around Lang Son, situated on an
important transportation route
10 miles eo\atb or the Chinese
border.
,...., P11,,e AJ
ROASTED. •
I in 12 days or figbtlog. The Hanoi
r eport said Vietnamese troops
also destroyed 200 tanks aQd 30
military vehicles.
These claims could not be in-
dependently verified. Analysts
say they believe Vietnam's
casualty claims are exaggerated
U.S. Ships
Show Force
WASHINGTON <AP> -Three U.S. Navy wanhips
steamed through the Suez
Canal to the Indian Ocean
today in an apparent U.S.
mi)ilary gesture of re-
assurance to friendly
countries in the region
concerned about political
upheavals in Iran.
Members of ihe Rae Fire Department began fighting the
fire Saturday at the home of the
Harry Petroff family, which had
begun moving in 10 hours
earlier.
Bodt1 Rerovered
Authorities pull the body of 18-year·old James Martin
from a cave on the Pequannock River in Butler, N.J .
Police believe the t een-ager committed suicide in the
cave, the same place his brother ~illed himself two
years ago. '
Dr. Cella Facing
Medicare 'Fraud'
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A $1.4
million civil Medicare fraud suit
bas been filed in U.S. Oistrict
Court here against Dr. Louis
Cella of Santa Ana.
Tbe48-countsuil. filed Wechles·
F,.._PageAJ
HEROIN •••
$20,000 bail on suspicion of three
counts of sales or heroin.
-Nancy Anne Chelgren, 24,
145 E . J.8th St., #C. Costa Mesa.
$13,500 bail on suspicion of lwo
counts of sales of heroin.
-Gall Suanne Nelson, 33, 598
Joann St .. Costa Mesa. $35,000
bail on stl@icion of.two counts or sale~ of beroln and one count of ·
accessory to armed robbery.
The latter charge was in connec·
lion with tbe knifepoint robbery
of a Newport Beach home two .
weeks ago, Webster said.
-Candy Sue Jordan, 24, 207
E. 16th Piace, #4, Costa Mesa.
$10,000 bail on suspicion or two
counts of sales of heroin.
Webster said all of the sus·
peels were arrested at their
homes.
Four Holdups\
In County
Said I ,inked
Costa Mesa police said today
the rifle-point robbery or a city
bar Monday night is believed to
be linked to three similar rob·
beries in other parts of the coun-
ty in the past three weeks.
In the Costa Mesa incident,
two stocking-masked men en-
tered the King's Inn at 720 Ran·
dolpb Ave. at 9:20 p.m . when
about a doze n people were
present.
The robbers escaped with $350
from the till and $11 5 from
.customers, police said. They
took a hostage briefly but re·
leased film unharmed in the
parkina lot.
Costa Mesa poli ce said
Anaheim polfoe described a
similar bar robbery Sunday and
Santa Ana police report two
possibly related cases within the
put two weeks.
Jewelry Missing
HOUSTON (AP) -Actress
Sopbia Loren baa reported some
mf11taa jewelry to Hou1ton
police. but they say the jewelry
may have been stolen in another
city. "
day. allege$ that Cella, wbile
..controlllng two Orange County
hospitals, conspired with three
associates to make $700,000 in
false claims against the fedeAI .
Health Insurance Program.
The s uit asks double the
amount of the false claims under
provisions of the False Claims
Act or the United States Civil
Code.
Also named ln the suit were
Cella's associates, Theodore
Schiffman, Stephen Evans and
George Ollendorf.
ln the suit, assistant U.S. Al·
lorney Roger E. West alleges
that between 1972 and 1976 the
false claims were made through
Mercy General Hospital in Santa
Ana and Mission Community
Hospital in Mission Viejo .
The money obtained through
the false claims was used ·for
political campaigns and
personal expe nses including
mortgage payments, the suil al·
leg es.
Cella was one of the largest
political campaign contributors
in California until he was con-
victed in June 1976 on 22 counts
of income tax evasion and
Medicare fraud. He is serving a
five-year sentence at a federal
minimum security prison in
Lompoc and is scheduled to be
released JUiy 1,_l~.!: _
Schiffman, Celia's business
manager, and Evans, former as·
sistant administrator at Mercy
General Hospital, also were con·
victed in connection with the
Medicare fraud.
Ol lendorr. former ad-
ministrator at Mission Com· munily Hospital, pleaded guilty
to related grand theft and Medi·
Cal fraud charges.
Funeral Set
Friday ~or
Bracamonte
A mass of Christian burial will
be held at 10 a.m. Friday for
Ray C. Bracamonte of Costa
Mesa, hus band of the last
descendent of one of Orange
County's pioneer families. He
died Saturday at the age of 79.
Mr. Bracamonte, who was a
retired Newport Beach city
employee, leaves bis wife, Bel·
ly, a de1cendent of the Yorba
family, former holders of
Spanish land grants lo Oranae
County.
Mr. Bracamonte also leaves
two brothers, Anise and Fabian
Bracamonte, both of Santa Ana,
and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at St.
Joachim Catholic Church ln
Costa Mesa.
Wayne 'Jiinproving';
Mail Still Piles Up
Newport Beacb'a Jobn Weyne la .,.,..... to •• aNUDd town
•1atn after andersotnc •uraery fo' ..,.._b eancer, t.t be'•
.............. .,., la = ... ,... ... b ,, ... of
,,_ Wll ntra •·--did· . , ................ . "Be'•.._,._.. out a lilt,
........ PIQtac ....
..... IP wt _.,"aid ..... ..,. . ................ ,.... ....
an..-, phrn• wtlll ldli PNI· ' .
re11, Ind be h• 1alned a UUle
wel1bt, ..tilth ii 10od."
Tbe '11-year-old Wa1ne bas
been netln8 at home for nearly
three~. reeuperatlnc from
tbe Jan. 0 1arpry at UCLA
11ed.lcal Cemer for temoval ol
Ilia CAllOlt"OUI stomacb.
... 8lacy Mid be baa ..... !;:J a lttle of Illa mail bu&.
···-to .m.-la ia"ii9 '-•• u..~1 ., _., " eu amww!tall.''
and the Vietnamese have suf·
fered greater losses than the
Chinese.
Japan's Kyodo ne ws service
r e ported that Chinese Vice
Premier Li Hsien-nien 'told re·
porters in Peking today that the
Chinese iqvaslon force had
c ritically aa maged "two or
three" regular Vietnamese
divisions.
Many analysts believe thjs has
been the objective of the Chinese
invasion. to "teach a lesson" to
Vietnam by crippling some of its
main-force military units. Li 's
claim could not be confirmed. It
had appeared that Hanoi was
not comm.iltlng many regular
troopstotheborderwar .
··we will pull out once ourobjec.
tJve 1s actueve<I," L1 was quoted
as telling the reporters.
A ilP
fl OM
... ........
SAU..S
llAICll 3.1
~
llOatMIG
~
~
Defense Department of-
ficials said the frigates
Richard L. Page and
Oonald 8 . Beary and the
destroyer Da vis will
r~place three Pacific
Fleet warships which have
been operating mainly in
the Arabian Sea-Persian
Gulf area.
These officials, who re·
qu ested anonymity,
stressed the United States
is not increasing the
number of naval vessels in
those waters but is reliev·
ing ships that have been
on station nearly two
months.
An hour late r , when
firefighters discovered Petroff
hadn't paid the $40 fee to join the
rural fire district, they quit.
"They had the fire almost
smothered. Then they just shut
their hoses off and watched it
burn," Petrorr said.
Frank Trunk, president of the
Rae Fire Department, offered
no apologies Wednesday for the
incident. He said his men bad no
choice.
" ... Our responsibOity li es
with the membership and our
volunteer firemen," Trunk said.
. •'The insurance coverage we
have for the protection of our
volunteer firemen covers them
only when lbey fight a member
fire ....
"I think it's real unfair for the
public to expect Uiese people to
go out on a non-member fire,
risk being hurt or killed and
h ave no protection for
themselves or their families.··
wam•s LA-Z-IOY
SE•IOR anz1•s·
ensat.iona
PROYEYM'llA
... .. Cl1IZEll
SAYE
ll'IO
5100
• AllY LA-Z IOY • SIOGI
~
lV~
HlllDREDS OF
LA·Z·MYS
~
ML•OIC Ill
-IMMEDIATE
FREE DEUYERY
LA·Z IOYS ·
PllCD .... 5 199
llllllON VllJO
llffl ..........
Pkwri.
(Comer of Marguerite
andvto~ •
4ff-M02
Mon.-M 10..
tat.106
ao.d~
,
•
.
CALIFORNIA r • ~.M~h 1.1979 OAILY PILOT A5
lupiter Bewilders NASA,
PASADENA lAP > -E xcited
sci nU.ta are Junkint their once.
Udy lbeorfes about Jupller u
Voyacttr 1 · television cameras
rttveal a dazzlingly complex
world of rest~ ~nd colorful
<'loud8 ·',.·or th~ mos t part.·'
Univt!nuty of Anzona scientist
6rodford Smltb said Wednes·
duy, "the ~xisUng atmospheric
clrculallon models have all
b ee n 1>h ot t o h e ll b y
Voya.ier. . .Bewildered is
probably the best way to
describe the way we feel ri&bt
now."
THE NEW PICl'URE or the
J ovian a tmosphere. one!e
thought t.o have "a nice. uniform
now.•• shows rolling, and churn·
mg motions that the old theories
cannot explain, Smith said at a
news conference.
Smlth beads the imaging team
for the $500 million National
Aeronautics and Space Ad·
minislr1tt100 mission.
He sai d th e pictures , transmitted across more than
400 million miles of space. will
be studied for months as scien·
tists try t.o understand the new
findings.
• TB-E UNMANNED
spacecraft. after a journey or 18
months, is some 3 million miles
from Jupiter and c losing
rapidly.
Its cameras already reveal
ricber'det.ail than scientists bad
't seen and NASA aaya the plclt.pa
should be 10 times better wllfn Voyager 1 sails past the g114n·
tic planet early Monday. •
The ship is to awing widain
173,000 miles or Jupiter before
flying on t.o rendezvous with
Saturn and its rings in
November 1980. 1
l
VOYAGER 2. •four months
b e hind Its s is t er s hip, h
scheduled to fly past Jupiter in
July and reach Saturn in 1981.
Student's Jobless Pay Uplield·
...............
SAN FRANCisCO CAP > -The Betthtg Vote Nfzed
Califorrua Supreme Court has s CRAMENTO AP ruled that a student is eligible A C > -An in· ror unemployment benefits even itiative to legalize off.track bet·
though school work curtails the ting and Nevada·style gambling bas failed t.o make the California student's availability for ballot for the 10th time in five
e mployment. th t r The 6-1 decision Wednesday years. says e secre ary o state's office. upheld a Los Angeles County Tbe office reported Wednes·
Dad Greets Fa•il!I
Superior Court decision involv· day that the proposed constitu-
i n g Enid Ballantyne, who tional amendment by Robert
restricted her employment to Wil&<>n of Sherman Oaks failed
part-lime and intermittent work to get the 553,790 sig natures
at a department store. because needed by Feb. l6 to qualify for she was caring for her three the June 1980 ballot.
small children. • Paul Jon~ hugged one of hls eight children as they
were reuruted Wednesday at Los Anaeles International
Airport. They had been separated for four years after
.Jones left Vietnam : Flights from Saigon were cut off
Just before the family was to leave. His wife. recovering
from appendicitis. remained in Saigon but plans to move
Lo California.
he~hfas'f~~bv~~~~o:~ ~~~~0~} • Managet-Oui~ Again
her own in March 1975 and NATIONAL CITY CAP ) -The
began receiving unemployment City Council ha~ asked. City
benefits, according to court !"tanager Harry G.ill for bis res·
documents. lo September 1975 1~oallon afte~ votm.g to replace
she entered law school at UCLA. him with b1s assistant, Tom · McCabe.
Chavez Targets Arizona_
GiJI, who left Tustin under
similar circumstances four
')'ears ago, said Wednesday he
has no immediate plans. He was
manager of Tustin for 10 years,
and manager in Lawndale
before that. ...,
By The Associated Preas
With the winter lettuce
season nearly ov~r in ure Im·
pe r ial Va lley. United Farm
Workers leade.r Cesar Chavez is
: seeking s upport for the six·
week-old lettuce strike tn other
areas. including bis A~na birthplace.
Meanwhile, two court bear-
. ings were scheduled in El Centro
Utilities
·Inse State
~1lirig
S AN FRANCISCO
<AP\ -The CalifoT'Dia
Supreme Court , in a
blow to the s tate's
utilities, bas ruled that
today on Agricultural Labor junction allowing union
Relatloos Board requests for in· representatives to go into two
junctions limiting UFW picket· m ajor growers' fields to talk to
ing at two struck fa rms and i trike-brealdng workers.
placing restraints on use of The preliminary injunction, is·
guards and firearms at one of sued by Monte r ey County
the two farms. Superior Court Judge Ricba.rd
'NIE UF-W WON a majar. Silver: was expected, to be ap-
althougb limited, victory pealed by the two growers
Wednesda'y when a Salinas California Coastal Farms and
judge signed a temporary in· · Sun-Harvest Inc.
BotA Chief Tn,l/Je•
S AN FRANCISCO <AP >
Bank of America President A.W.
Clausen spent almost an hour
Wednesday testifying before a
federal grand jury-investigating
the resignation last August of
lbe bank's vice chairman of the
board .
Tbe investigation concerns the
• the state Public Utilities
Commission correctly
~ reduced the allowable
pro fits or Southern
Callfomfa Gas Co.
The court upheld two
PUC orders Wednesday.
THEY WWERED the
authorized rate of return
for the gas company
from 8.5 percent to 8.25
percent in a dispute over
bow the utility ·account·
ed for savings resulting
, from federal income tax
'1 credits. ! The complicated rul·
ing st.ems from a gas
utility application for an
$80.2 million annual rate
increase to offset the
highe r cost of natural
gas.
It involves accounting
practices u s ed by
utilities to save part of
their income taxes when I they invest in new
) plants.
I i
THE 5-! d~ision writ·
ten by Chief Justice
Rose Bird endorsed
the PUC's treatment of
tax savings from invest-
ment tax credits and ac-
celerated depreciation
i n setting rates of
uUllties.
It also' declared the
PUC correctly ruled
that the 1u comp~
would remain eliaihle for
federal tu credft under
ill orders.
-4itfiong-~
SHOE SERVICE
tor Handbags
LuggGge & Zipper Repair
0-'t ttrow fllWflf ,...-
~tllil1 old._.. .-S w.,..,. .... ,.... ..............
~ ................. leedl
•le. C...t Ylllp • Weltctff ,._. ................. ,..... ls.t. • ...,
SPECIAL ORDER
MAMMOUTH .
CHEDDAR
AGED60DAYS
s3s_?
ff ickoJJ farm:~,D
Add To Yo. st.applla9
~byVllffllllJO..
SEAFOOD & SERVICE
DELI ..
~9 CWdi•-Fried ~ ....ws ......
WEHAVEUYE
MAINE LOISTB!
MARKET BASKET
WESTCUFF PLAZA
Contact Lenses
Eyewear Styling
Refracting
Pretcttblng
Dr. Lou Rou Elder
OPTOMETRIST
642-0720
1124' lrvfne Ave.
Newport Beach
( J forma* leading to the arr~t
and conviction of a bandit who ST ATE shot an aJl-night store clerk to
death early Wednesday, st.ore •f·
ficials said. I resignation of Alvln Rice, re·
ported Lo be the heir apparent to
Clausen's job at the world's
largest bank.
tlerk-ldllfte B1111ted
WHITI1ER CAP > -A $5.000
re ward is bemg offered for in·
Southland Corp. of Dallas.
Tex .. which operates the T·
Eleven store chain. posted the
reward following the s hootibg
death of Albert Lewis Owens, it.
al the 7-Eleven st.ore on Whittier
Boulevard .
Evangelist Faces
Sex,.with-minor "l(ajl
.EL CAJON <AP) -Television evangelist. Dennis GoodeU·bis
been arrested for investigation of sex charges involving a 17-yea't·
old female member of his church, J)blice said. ....;
The 34-year-old Goodell ls pastor of the Ev angel Center in El C;l·
jon.
fT HAS ABOUT 7M parishioners and features faith healing
services videotaped each Sunday for broadcast on cable television
in Soutbem California.
Goodell was arrested Tuesday for investigation of sex acts iJ>·
volving a minor gJrl be was counseling, police said.
Goodell was released from county jail on bis own recognizance
late Wednesday. according to Sheriff's Deputy Ralph Goodrich.
Arraignment was scheduled today in El Cajon Municipal
Court. -.
Tbegir1 told her fatherofthealleged incidents, which purported•
ly occurred from sum mer 1978 through last J aouary. aod Goodell was
arrested shortly alter they went to police, according to Police Lt. Bob
Standring.
CClf'tCEPT
OrtE'"
POWERDRll'E
.....
Thrift Pack
100'1 wlttt 30
Flt£
1llRAGRH ..
5.49
•
Edi.torial Page Robert N. Weed/Publls,,., Thotn•s l<NVll /Ed•tor
Thur'MS•y, Mwoh 1. 1179 ~~1111 .. 11111111111111 .... 111 .. 111111111.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill.iililiiiiiiiiiiim.~a.;;rtM;:r;•~K~1:•:1~:'~h~1:E:d:ltorl::~::.:P~eoe;:.:e:cm:or:. ...
. 48 c
Oranoe Coast Oa1lv P1tor
School Closure
Options Varied
Newport Mesa chool trustff continue' to face eom tou~h dc-<'l loru. O:J a ri ult of three factors. ~roposltion
13. de<.'11nm1t tm rollmcnts and ttcent court dectston11 lhat
s1vhon otr funds lo puorer districts. • The trustees didn't eek their office• bccauac they en
JOY la,·an~ off teachers and clQ m.z schools Their own
kids art'. or were, students in the district
And .thl' • don't look forward to cutllng cosltl by re· turntn~ ~1xth l(t Udt>rS to elt•mt>ntary schools. wh~r~ the
:-.tudt>nts wtll huvc le s opportunlty for specialized :study
But the e utt ome of the opUon1 they had lO 4'QR· ~1de•r at u spec-1al meeting last week at whlch they heard lh:,('ouru~1ntt tt nrollment pro;ectlons through 1982·83. .
It 1s to Uu.~ credit or the trustee~ and the school dis·
trl('t ~tsJf members t.bGt lh~y took great care to examine
rrurn)' aspe<·ts or lht> situation. trying to keep uppermo:>t
tht>tr ~oncem for the quality of educallon in juggling op·
t10n~ and restraints Wh\k no one 1s hkcly to be <'Ompletely happy with
whatever course of action 1s chosen. parents can take ~omc cornf ort from the fact that the elected officials gu1c1·
ing their children's education really do seem to care.
Marina Questions
I larbor area boat owners shouldn 't start asking when
reservataons will be accepted for slips at a new marina
proposed for the mouth of the Santa Ana River.
Costa Mesa 's push for a 3,000·boat facility on its side
of the river still has a Ion~ way to ji!O. But it is time for marina supporters <and opponents)
to prepare to give their views on the project to the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers. That's lhe agency that must
alter its present flood control channel plans if the marina is
to ever become a realit y. -~,_..!.>-~a:r-ors 1lorrPat~~:tti2g•oo B4<>c~...a.ad...P~ •
Ryckoff of Newport Beach have lent support to the
ma nna which would solve a shortage of boat docking
facilities in the area. Ryckoff did air some concern over traffic impacts
from the marina. And a county biological consultant is worried that a
marina will have a negative impact on least te rns, an en·
dangered species of sea bird that makes its home near
the river mouth. Obviously. questions of this kiruLwill come up as the
marina plan moves along before the Army Corps. The
ti me to ask them is now. ·
Water Recovery Costs
The Orange County Water District. which is responsi-
ble for maintaining and pumping water from the under·
ground basin t hat serves most county communities,
hopes to construct a $27 million system to reclaim irriga.
lion water from sewage.
Most of the system a purification plant, water
pumps and pipes would be financed by the federal gov·
ernment. The ~tale and the local district would pick up
the rest. ,
Orange and Anaheim water officials question the pro·
posed expenditure even though the local share of the
costs would be minimal. '
They wonder if this isn't a costly manner.
OCWD offi cials note that the system would provide
"cheap" water for the coastal area. But the two northern
cities' officials claim t he real cost would be as much as
$400 an acre foot if costs picked up·by the federal and
state governments are included.
They contend that Irrigation water at $400 a foot is
4
expe~,vc. even if ;t does cut down on the amount of
valuable drinking water drawn from underground.
. Perhaps water ~rom the Irvine Ranch Water District
might be made available for irrigation at less cost they c~ntend. They urge more consideration before OCWD
d1rector:s see~ more than $23 million in grant funds.
Their urgings should not be ignored.
Though the local cost might be less than $4 million
the $2a million comes out of another of our.pockets as tax:
payers.
• ~~nions expressed in the s pace above are those or the Dally Pilot
er views expressed on· this page are those of thefr authors and ~1sts Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot po
ll 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . · ·
Boyd/Beth
8)' L . M .• BOYD
Benjamin Franklin used
two beds, getting UP' ln the
middle of the rugbt to move
from one to the other, his re-
ported theory beine that hla
body would become over-
heated unles1 be moved to c~ler quarters. England's
Prime Mini1ter DlaraeU
didn't settle for two. He had
four beds. He put out the
ume story Franklin did
Neither were a match fo~
King Louis XIV of France
tbougb. The kins made uae oi
412. beds. He aJternaJed by
whim. All these men'• beds
were in different rooms
please note QuetUon 1~
whether they really believed
tbat body-beat nocJon or Just
If\
wanted to create a situation
wherein nobody couJd be
sure exactly where they were
sleeping on any given night.
Tbe electronics boys are
working on a digital beeper
p11er that will cllaplay the
telepbone number lo be
called. Pretty soauy.
Bear ln mind, people who
are lotalJy deaf don 'l gel
seasick, according to the
mediCOI.
Tbe word "porcupine" wu
put topther out of a couple
of Lat.lo words that meant
"Pll" and ''thorn."
If YOU were to eat aa much
food at d6ea the typical hum-
mla1blrd J 1ou'd put away
US,000 caaariM a d ay.
Am lafonned that up to a
couple ol ,_... qo Stanford
Ualvenltr dlda'l srade any
Col tu •'-• low• Ulan a .Oollll ...... tne?
" .,.. ,,..= .... tad.t to ·~ iolct netned, let, cleWrmtMd,
• ... nU•Me. H•'• .. ,.,.. la ldl 1peeeb. H•
.. ..., ...... patln
~1'19 ,fl ........ Or IO &ay ----·
Nicholaa Von Hoff man
Oil Could Cost Carte His Joh
Altbouab only four prea!dent.5 -1aa and-or home heating oU lan·t
ln the lut l20 years have been 1eneraJly regarded as fair and
deteated running for a second efficient, old Tall Tooth wilt be
terin an event slightly lesli in sertoua trouble ur~ than o comet plunking In no other a~ea of 0 down on tho Lincoln Memorial m ent actlvlty will Jlm:i vernt
Jimmy C.rter 's re-e leetion the blame personally and Jlr g~
<'harices h11ve been a discussion ly the way he will on th· ec ·
topic bere almost since the hour People will remember ~ ~n~;
that tbla poor, plodding. 1;>t e· they don't, the oppositio~ isn 1
.
sldenttal penioo was sworn mto to remind them th .. t th s ure omce. ,. e ap.
Mulling over r emote c.-ont·
inaencles 1s how we writers
malt_, a liv.
In&, so that
such chatter
oucht lo be
enjoyed for
whatever en·
te rta1n me nt
value it may
have and ig·
no r ed.
But now for
the first ti me
Jimmy may be coming up
against something that can cost
him his job: oil. Not the revolu·
tion in Iran. Practical·minded
people will understand that a
different course of action by the
American preside nt in that
country would not have yielded
a different result.
TH~ MOST you can say is
that 1f Carter had distanced
himself somewhat more rapidly
frc;>m the Shah, the new people "nrrC~e-been-mt>Te-·frfendly
and m1~h~. but only might. be
more wtlling to ~sume oil pro-
duction.
But the judgment rendered on
the way scarce 011 and gas sup-
plies are allocated will .be btuis-
mgly concrete. Jimmy won't be
held accountable for what hap-
pens thousands of miles away in
Iran but if the lines at the gas
pumps get maddeningly long, if
there are blackmarket scandals
if rationing comes and it ·~
botched, if there are rumors of
corruption in the allocations, or
favor itism , if the distribution of
Mailbox
-
paratus _for tailng care of
emergencies such as th.la wu
suppoeed to have been set. up ~Ith the pauag~ of Carter's
c o rn pre h e.nu v e e n er o .Y
package." •
In fact what was passed by
Congress and m lalakenly signed
by Carter wasn't comprehenalve a~d wasn't a package, but 8 mishmash that bas been of no
help ln reducing energy uaap or
making our ~e of it significant·
ly more efficient. Nevertheless
C!lrter. aald the mishmash was
hll mishmash, just the right misbm~h to get the job done. At
the White House they caUed the
P~saage or the energy package a
victory for the Georgia plodder.
ANO'l'pER victory for Carter
was the creation or the Depart-_
ment of Energy. Around town
ho wever, the De partment of
Energ>'. already has a reputation
for bean~ outstandingly ioeffi·
cient, a title to which there are
many claimants, not a few or
whom are aged and encrusted
agen cies like th e Interstate ~ommerrP Commission, an out fit w~ich has had 195 years to
reac~ 1t.s ~akofineffectual, feck·
lt;ss inaction. And here comes
Jim my Carter's new Department of Energy. not yet two years old
a_nd already a challenger.
Regular telephone callers to
DOE count it a good day when
somebody picks up a receiver to
tell the inquirer that no. he can 'l ta~k to the person in charge of
lh1s-<?r·that ~cause the position
hasn t been filled yet or if it has
~en filled the person isn't reall y
in charge of this-0r-that and no ~·m sorry we wouldn't know wh~
IS.
. While they let their phone's
ring they worry about gelling
.their offices decorated and ob·
servers who have to watch this
charade wonder how these peo
pie are ever going to handle a
na.tional gas rationing program
tC 1t comes to that.
A GAS shortage is only slightly
less seriou s th a n a foo d
shortage. ft hits everyone and
everyone will want to hit back.
They'll want to hit back Y4ll
harder when it dawns on them
how little has ~n done to pre·
pare the country ror a nasty
bump like this one.
Communists Reap Harvest of Dissension
To the Editor:
The Communist government
of Cambodia felt it must punish.
a lot of citizens. How do you
punish someone when they have
no freedom ? You kill them, or
course.
Th e Communist Vietnam,
backed by Russia. decided that
they should punish the Cambo-
dian Communists. so they killed
them.
China decided that the Viet·
na m governme nt s hould be
punished, so they are killing the
Viets.
Now Russia says that China
must be punished. I wonder who
will punish Russia.
It seems the old adage pre·
vails: What you sow. that shall
you reap.
The Communists have been
sowing war and dissension for a
long time. They should have a
good crop to reap.
JAMES BOLDING
•tMlgei Q11nde•ed
To the FAitor :
Your editorial entitled "Ques·
lion able Tactics" C Feb. 15 l ,
totally lgnores the real issue.
The Coast Community College
District is reporting nearly $3
million a s educational costs
when in reaUty that money is be-
ing used for other purposes. The
Am e ri ca n F eder ation of
Teachet9, Local 1911 , is attempt-
ing to bring to the public's atten:
lion this serious misuse or tax
money.
This illegal use or nearly $3
million ls only a small part of a
larger lsaue. The AFT.sponsored
budael anal)'als bas exposed
other scandalous m isuses of
educational runds by the dls·
trict. KOCE TV, • for Instance.
baa from Its incepllon ln 1972
coat the taxpayer s over s2o
mllllon. In rlguru more eully
understood. this means thal for
every $1,000 spent over the last
seven yean. the dlslrlct haa re·
celved an approximate $78 re·
turn. And KOCE TV will con·
Unue broadusuna l!'I• 1ummer. while aummet f;itc hool is'
sch eduled l o be t ul to one
quarter ot ita uaual alae.
COAM'U.N& Cot1e1e la touted
by .. the diltrlct pubUc rel1U0n•
olhce u the m01t COil effeellve
Oucommwdty coll11• lD the 1tate .
r budlC't anal11l1 prov• lt to
be pr~lHly tbe oppo1ttt. It
MrYlce1 a mlftlmal , number' of met... eompared to u.. t" cam,. eol.Jet9, owe ind occ .
at "" Uma lb4t C'Oll per 1tu· dent.
TIMM an Jut a f tw ol the ~ _._._ dran by
Oaf Ual11t, Dt. Jolan OH· ... ,... ... •UNUed b)' ... . .......... ~ ...... ~-411·•=·=
mon sense and common legal
practice makes nonsense or this
criticism. First. all the inform&·
lion Crom which the A FT
analysis draws conclusions is
owned by the Coast Community
College District. They have only
to look at their own information
~o ~erend t.he~selves. Secondly.
it 1s the district administration
that is being questioned. It simp·
ly does not make sense to give
the evidence to the, accused and
a llow that body to investigate
itself.
A full public hearing is the on·
ly way lo clarify whether the
district is indeed grossly mis·
spending public educational tax
money. A grand jury investiga-
tion, in fact. should be called for
by the district itself 1f these
most serious questions are rtot
j ustified. The district. in fact.
and tbe Pilot itself should call
for this investigation.
We challenge the district to
disprove the conclusions of the
AFT budget a nalysis in a pub"1
heari~ And we challenge the
Pilot (o publish the results .
MICHAEL FINNEGAN
Instructor of English. OCC
Vice-President, AFT. Local 1911
8ttUffttl•' t'ffte
To the Editor:
We are writing to inform the
stude nts of Newport Harbor
Hlgh School and the public of the
unfair disruption of the Newport
Harbor High Schoo l 's in·
strumentai program.
As m~t of you know, band
director Richard England was
placed on Inde finite "ad ·
mlnistratlve leave," or sus·
pension from teaching. unUl a
hearlnk or his charges could be
completed. This is unreasonable
because the charges against Mr.
England are of a noncriminal
nature.
The March 12 t\earlng report·
cd b)' t.M news media Is only a
preliminary legal procedure for
setUn1 a hearing date which t.
scheduled now as late 11 July.
Cbaneinl band directors ls dll·
Cerenl from having a substitute
teacher with lesson plans in
academic clauea. Our sub·
1Utute h•• to adJuat to pre·
e1t1bllahed rouUnea, lnvolvinl
mualcal •nd cla11room pro·
cedun u well u nbean&l and
performance 1chedule1. It I.I an
unnee1uary lnconvenlence to
tbe atudeftt.a and the 1ub1tltule.
n1 vcxas ot the Feb. •
eoncert and t.b• S.Uor Band's prtae• trom tbe Feb. 17 parade
aN due to tM followtna: 1. Moel ol Ole prepar1tloa tor ,,......=m&Dcet ,,u ._. by Ill r. ud abeacl of time.
I. fte maJorit1 ol t tudeatl aN t••• .. .._ ,..,_.,~w: °' ,.eww ,._.._ ... ,..,, -"' .,., .· llt. ...,_, bu trabled ua. •.
We continue our efforts only
because Mr. England would
want this.
Mr. England's suspension has
also destroyed the unity which
has always been a part of our or·
ganization. For the first time the
frustration of some students has
found its outlet in I ack or
cooperation and attendance
Others have simply lost faith in
a school system which shows no
concern for our problems.
The media has reported that
Mr . England was offe red a
transfer to a nother school.
Doesn't this show t hat Mr.
England is fit for teaching and
th erefore the problem lies
elsewhere?
T h ose r espon s ible ad ·
ministrators who place the stu·
dents' needs as their top priority
will return Mr. England to the
classroom immediately.
CLAJRE FLETCHER
President
Newport Harbor Sailor Band
KRISTINE KIRVEN
President
Newport Harbor Orchestra
c .. rerrt•lpored1
To the Editor:
The members of the Board or
Education of the Newport-Mesa
Unified Schoool District say that
they will not be s wayed by the
public's opinion in the case oC
Richard A. England ..
They must remember they are
serving only at the sufferance
of the people who elect them.
that they were vo~ into office
and can be removed by recall
unless they honestly s trive
diligently to do the public's busi·
neas and are sufficiently mature
to seek compromises or dlf·
ferences which mi&bt otherwise
stifle education.
How this board can ignore the
hundreds of responses from
teachers. students. professional
people. parents and lay people
alike makes us wonder whe re
they are coming from. Who are
tbey serving? , CALM. FULLER
ELEANOR A. FULLER
tt'11e Neefb lll•rf••1
To tbe Editor: ID tbe W yean that l have
lived on tbe We1ulde ot Colla,
Mesa, I have seen the rumor of a
marlu com• and 10 stvtral
Quotes
times. It was h appening before 1
moved here. I have seen what
these rumors do. The \and prices
rise even raster than the infl a·
t i on . T he I and i s sold to
speculators who do not live here
and the quality or life goes down.
Then the rumor goes away only
to rise again with a new group of
real estate salesmen who come
to make their money.
Now there is a push again for
a marina and I expect the same
thing will happen (as predicted
by the editorial in the Pilot of
2/22/79 .. Dream Revived .. ).
Now just suppose that the well·
researched plans of the Army
Corps oC Engineers are changed.
What would we have if we did
gel a marina? Who would really
benefit'! J am a home owner on
Pacific Avenue. I would surely
make some money if I sold my
home. But. J don't want to move .
Unlike others who don't ljke the
city of Costa Mesa or who don't
even live here. I am concerned
about the quality of life in this
fair city. And since they are my
neighbors across the way l am
concerned about the quality of
life in Huntington Beach.
HOW MANY people of these
two cities will really benefit by•
crowded piece of water with elt'
pensive out-0f-town cars park~
by lts edge while even more ex-
pensive boats start their noisy
smoky engines and head out to
sea through a channel that will
d isrupt the tra ffi c cir culatioc:»
plan for the area?
How many of the volins
citizens Of these lWO DOW fine
cities are boat dealers and/or
real estate brokers? And wh4
and how many will make tbeit
fortunes off this fairyland proj~
eel? Howmanyofthosellvehere?
There is an editorial in the
Pilot or 2/20179 bemoaning the
fact that the beautiful back·bay,
"a gift of nature," is in daneer.
What do you think the Santa Ana
River bed and surrounding opec
area is? It is beautiful and
n1tur~I. It needs nowhere oeaf
S80 million to keep It that war
and Its use as a flood control
factllty is unquestionable. You
can 10 down and look at it and
ride aloq the bike trail now.
What la 80ln« on 't CltJzem of
Cotta M•sa and kuntin1ton
Beach, are you 1otn1 to sit there
a nd let tbia bappen? Wbose dream 11 this 't And whoso
nl•btaw'e will it be?
WILLIAM GILBERT
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Thur day' NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
2 p,m. (E T) Price8 _ °""'.,..,.~·---M"-"-• "-'-.. *"""~u1c .............. ..Lo.1ro11...,oric11u1••"'0Cll •• ...,...-, .... Md.,lllt IYt-.1 "4-.Clallefl .. ietwlt .. ,.,. • ...._ •!Id llUUNI
American Offer Expires
NEW YORK <AP> -'the offer by
American Express Co. to acquire
publishing giant McGraw-mu Inc.
expired today with no indication tbat
American Express will renew the
fight.
"We feel the directors of McGraw·
Hill have bad full and ample op-
portunity to consider our proposal,"
American Express said in a brief
statement. Ameri~an Exi>TeSs, best known tor
Its travelen cbecka and credit cards,
first offered $34 a share and th.rt S40
a share -1 total of $976 rn1Won
for McGraw.Hill stxx:k.
s DAILY PILOT .4~
Ta.rThne • • 1
IRA Benefits
Made Liberal
By SYLVIA POllT£R
Sll<tt\ vt o rOl-
The 1978' Revenue Act provided a series of tax breaks
for the millions who have run into tax complicatlona and
penaJUes while trying to obtain the advertised tax benefits
of setting up an individual retirement account. Usted
below are the cbangee.
(1 > You have untll April 16, 1979, to set up and make a
tax-deductible cootrlbutloo to an IRA for 1978. The former
cutoff date was Feb. 14.
(2) IT'S EASIE R TO AVOID THE penalties that
otherwise appUed to "excess" contributions made to an
IRA account. You are still subject to certain penalties on
any portJon of your contribution that exceeds the amount
you are allowed to deduct. You can eliminate your excess
contribution, and thereby avoid penalties by either
withdrawing the excess or contributing less to the IRA in a
later year. But under the 1978 laws, most of the previously
unfavorable limitations on using either method have been
removed or liberalized, beginning with 1978 and applying
to 1976 and 1977.
This may save you from paying an unnecessary tax.
Also, if you were penalized on excess contributions for 1976
or 1977, the changes made by the 1978 act may entitle you
to a refund: file a refund claim on Form 1040X.
Money's
Worth
(3 I Elderly people
may have overlooked
the requirement that
they had to start mak-
ing withdrawals from
their IRA at age 70~ or
be subject to a 50 per·
cent penalty on the un ·
derwithdrawn amount The 1978 law elimirfated Ulis rule
by allowing IRS to waive the 50 percent penalty if there
was reasonable cause for delaying the withdrawals. This
change 1s retroactive to 1976 and 1977 People who were
penalized ror failure to start withdrawing in those years.
and had reasonable cause for the mistake. may file refund
claims.
14) You previously had to file a Form 5329 with your
Income tax return if you made a deductible contribution to
your IRA for the particular year. H you d1dn•t make a con-
tribution that year, you had to file Form 5329 if you bad
made coptributions to your IRA in previous years . These
requirements have been knO<.'ked out. A Form 5329 is re-
required for only limited reasons: Ir you made only your
regular contribution an 1978, indicate it on Form 1040 and
forget Form 5329.
(5) AN IRA CAN BE AN ATTRACTIVE vehicle f~r de·
rerring tax on lump-sum distributions from ,qu~lif1ed
pension and profit-sharing plans lf the sum is transferred
to an IRA. no tax 1s due until you withdraw from the IRA.
Before the 1978 law. you couldn't take advantage of this
technique unless you had been a participant in tbe pension
or profit-sharing plan for five years before the distribu·
tion; the 1978 law removed the five-year limitation.
A provision that had limited rollover from one IRA to
a second IRA to once every three years has been
liberalized to once a year by the 1978 act.
V (61 Also Liberalized bas been the use of the rollover
prO<.'edure available to the spouse or a deceased e mployee
who had been a participant in a qualified employee benefit
plan: Formerly, only the employee could elect lo rollover a
lump-sum distribution into an I RA. But now if the spouse
receives a lump-sum distribution from such a plan after
1978 because or the employee's death, the s pouse is al-
lowed transfer of the lump sum into the spouse's IRA.
Nnt Sales Taz Tables
Mercury to Pay
Cash in April
Directors of Mercury Savings and Loan Association
have declared a regular quarterly 121.7-cents a share cash
dividend, payable to stockholders of record April 2. Pay-
ment date will be April 17, or as soon t.hereafter as prac-
ticable. a spokesman said.
The assoeiation, based in Huntington Beach, changed
its dividend paying policy from semi-annual to quarterly
and increased the regular cash dividends payable in 1979
last November.
Al that time, the
board authorized the
payment or 25 cents a
share in January 1979.
Mercury paid a regular
se mi ·annual cash
dividend of 15 cents in
January 1978, plus S
C TAKING )
__ S_TO_CK_
cents extra, and a reguJar 20-cent dividend in July 1978.
Mercury operates 11 offices in Orange, Los Angeles
and Santa Clara counties, with an office scheduled to open
in Camarillo this year. An application for a branch in Tor·
ranee is pending before the California Savings and Loan
Com missioner .
...... es. Selllf•ar• s~Jtedtlled
A series of seminars on starting a new business will be
offered in March and April at Saddleb"actr College.
Tbe first mini-class, "Pre.business Seminar," will be
held March 10 from 9 a .m . to 4 : 15 p.m . in room 313 of the
Math/Science building. Fee is $10 in advance or $J2 at the
door if space is available.
A seminar entitled "Start Your Own Business" wiH
take place March 17 from 9 a.m. to 4: 15 p.m . in room 313 of
the-Math/Science building. Fee is $19.50 in advance or
$22.50 at the door. Special rates are available for couples.
More information on these and other business
seminars Is available at 831-7532 and 495-4950, ext. 266. ~
Marina Federal Savings was to open a branch at 411
Main St., Huntington Beach, today
Open-house activities were to con·
linue through March 10.
The new office is the association's
third in Huntington Beach and 11th in
coastal communJties in Los Angeles and
Oran1e countJes.
Joe Treadwell. a veteran in the
Huntington Be.ch savings industry, is
branch coord.Jnator.
A braneh ln Ute Huntington Harbou.r •~• ol Huntinitoo Beach is planned to open June 1.
r.u,s,,.. •• •r E~ • racta about •pas and bot tubl wUJ be discussed lo •
lecture a.GoJdeD West Colle1e, ffun_tillcton Beadl, at 7:80 p.m. Friday, MmlulOD to tbe lecture is•· -SDMkn w U be John Lond.eUus, president of the •
Amerlta Rot Tub lndust.rin, Irvine. He ls a dtrector of
N•Uonlll Swlmmioa Pool lnsi.ltute and a member of the
board of Ule StattiUcal Comnd.Mloa ol Spu and Hot Tubt.
-He wUl dilcUli plcklns the rtsM u.nU for ooe·1 Ml"IOMl
uae, aJcia1 .,-friet!!I, operall.q ccAI, .U.. and life a~
peetaner of tM ""'* produda .
...
..
A •• DAil y PILOT • Thu,.._,, Mateh 1, 1171 BUSIN&8S
. rS'
nk,_S&L Name Clikf~ . BLSINESS
HONORED
WASIQNG'l"ON <AP >
-The week of May 13
baa been designated
"Small Bualneas Week"
FAMILY .
AFFAIR
SINCE
1894
there'• no auti.tltute tor exoerienoel
DEN'S
I
Other Coutaf' Bmineue& Promote Workers
•I
~ I . ........,! Newport Beacb, hu been
appoiMed P"S dent ot Naapw1t ...... ... .... ._. a..u ~ .wblcb .. tn oraantaaUon. He
WU pNYioualy employM by American Saviap
and i.o.n. mott rec olly u vlCf'
pre1ldent and ualstant to the
pre1lcleat and earUer aa vice
pr•tldeftt. loan adminlalraUoo.
Before JOintn• American be
WH vice president, loan sales
and p~Jn1. for Rexford Na·
llonal Corp • a mort1a1e ~nk Ina compan,y.
Until recently . be
wat board chairman or the
"'OtltTH Home Loan Counkliq Center,
· Lot Anael•. a corPe>raUoa be lAitJaJ.ed and which ls owned by Sl Californl• aav-~ ... lnel and'loan associaUona. He continues on Ule u ·
ecuUve oommJttee.
. .
. • . .
• . • ,.
• " . •
• La.ee C. Bl.e, M1ss100 VieJo, has been named
p resident of Commerce Balak. a new financial 10
stiluUoo in the Newport Beach·
lrvlne industrial area
He is a 17-year veteran ol
the banking business. and is
former vice president and
manager of Imperial BanJt in
Santa Ana and manager or busi·
De&S' development for the Union
Bank regional office in Newport
Beach
The bank is operating in
temporary quarters al 4640
Birch, Newport Beach. •LUE
Other bank officers are Jolla Peacock, chief
executive officer, an~ George Ocbsner, executive
vice president.
• James L. Conkey, Laguna Beach, bas been
named vice president or administration for
Presley of Soa&IH!ra CalllomJa, a . hotp~building
subsidiary of The Presley Companies, Newport Beach.
He is a former senior deputy city attorney
with the city or Santa Ana and bas taught real
property and business Jaw COUl'S4!S at SaddJeback College. • David E. Sharpe, El Toro, bas been na med
vice president or State Matual Savings and Lou
Auodatioa., based in Newport Beach.
Re joined lhe association iri 1976 as an internal
audit manager. He will continue to monitor and
appraise the operational activities.
• •• ..,.. J . ArmeDdarl&, Irvine, has been ap·
pointed vice president or finance for Diversified
Shopping Centers. Costa Mesa·
based developer or shopping
centers.
He will oversee the or·
ganiiation's financial activities
in' accounting, banking and growth.
A certified public accoun-
tant, be is former vice president
of finance al ArneJ Develop-
ment Co., Santa Ana. He has 22
years of experie~ce in fmancial
and accounting management and bas held finan-
dal posts with the Irvine Co., Calprop Corp. and Coopers & Lybrand.
• Gerald R. McQaarrie, executive vice president ao<t chief executive officer or Downey Savings and
Loan Association, Costa Mesa, bas been appointed
to the 1979 Advisory Committee on State Legisla-
tion of the Ulli&ed States Leape of Savtnp-Aa·
led.a lions. (.
The league is the principal trade organization
for the savings and Joan business and represents
more than 4,400 associations . •
Donald C. Berman, Newport Beach, chairman
and president, and Daniel C. Batter, Costa Mesa,
officer and director, or Quall Place Properties,
lac., Newport Beach, have qualified as financial
orincioals. according to National Association of Securities Dealers, the testing agency.
Tbe distinction qualifies them to engage in
marketing limjted partnerships involving a $3
million public offering. Seven Quall Place Com·
panies are involved in sales, brokerage, manage-
m ent, construction, de elopment, engineering,
1yndication, securities and other services in real
Pre-Inve ntory R eduction
SAL.E
1/2 OFF
This Is Selected Merrllandise From Our
--Own Stock -Regularly Sold In Our Own St<n
• CMblS • Watches • Ril9 • Bnmets
• Pmdants • NeckMas
• Pim • a....-
• M.onk }ewary • Mountings
• &nu. Of Al Kiacll
Sale Ends Saturday
March 3
Open Tbunday E¥enlq UoW a:ao
f'rlday. S.turdQ 1N
l'l'IC '\'o"r UankAmcrlcur<1/\'IKU or Mulcrch•r$fc
:\o llou..c ("hu~it
All Salc11 Fina!
AKLES H. BARR
esta&e. by President Carter. • · • • • • ~· • • • .. · • • · i/. · · .. .. .. . He said the nation's · 1rpet•~ ·lnsta at/on· custom draf#fll$
1mall bus i ne sses ·~;,.~~ linoleum•woodfloor •·helped ,create the m u J ti t u/d e of o p . I Hl "-c....._ ....... • c .... ...., c•. flH7 portunllie~. ·· ..._ ____ ...._ __ .. _ ... _•_>•_· ..._ __ n_1_1 _____ ..
(
Gibraltar Savings
26-Weekcer
pay -yo~ more
than bny bank
..with insured
safety. ..
MINIMUM $10,000
ExceP.tionally_high interest. Short term. Safety
ond convenience. Everything you want in a
sound savings investment is combined in this one
Gibraltar account.
%
The annual effective yield results from daily
compounding of interest and assumes that all
funds remain for the full year at the same rate.
The annual rote is determined by adding .25~
to the discount rate announced each week for
26-week U.S. Treasury bills. Therefore, the rate
is subject to change at renewal.
ANNUAL EFFECTIVE YIELD
%
ANNUAL RATE
D
From date of issue your certificate earns the
sam e high interest for the full 26·-we.ek term.
If you hove a T-bill or certificate maturing
soon, we can handle all details to transfer the
account automatically at the apprc:>priate time.
No fees. No extra charges.
For certificates issued March 1 thru March 7 , 1979
By Federal low, ear~ withdrawal on certificate o«ount ia subject
to 1ub1tontiol inteteat penalty.
EXTENDED HOURS:
FSi'ic ..... .....,. ___ hot ---·-
SATURDAYSr all offices open 9:30 to 4 :00 • WEIKDAYSr most offices open Mon.-ThtJrs. 9:00 to 5 :30; Fri. to 6 :00 .
•SUNDAYS and WEEKNIGHTS: many shopping moll offices open Sundays 11 :00 tO 4:00; weeknights till 9:00 .
• Hours moy vory. Pleo1e che<k with your locol office .
•
POUNDID 1116 • AlllTI ~ lfUION • OfflCU STATIWIOI
OFFICES SERVING ORANGE COUNTY
llULL.8nON iel W. Oraooetho.pe Awe. 871.f(Ot
*tUn11G'T091 IMCff 111 Huntington Center -..eeee
,..,.., IUCH 2100 W. eo.t Hwy. l31~a11 -·
.. ,
r--~-.WCWllS'llWI0"8"17Dlt~lt. 41M01i.. ·==---~----'•
IAllTA MA/COSTA_. .... BrtllOl 8t. 911-1180
IMTA AllA •• 1Mta Ane '-'ttOn lqu8'9 IM-0717
---~-""'.,,,..~ SOuttlem, Centr8f 8"d No"'9m Celtfomle
..
•
,
I
t