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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-03-06 - Orange Coast PilotI • , • -ate um -------------------~1 Ba"IJg 'Brain ~d&rnaged,' Waddill Told Nurse I I TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 6, 1979 "°'-. 71. llO. ... naCT~ •f'ANI ...... --------------------------------~! .. • • •• • • Algeria Threatens Oil Price Hike I Q•artet Exeeated * * * * * * Gas Shutdowns Panic Feared I By Closings Increase largest Of All , i NEW YORK tAP) -Weekend service station closings would create long lines al other times and could prove the "psychological trigger needed to send prices into orbit," warns an oil expert. Dan Lundberg, in bis weekly newsletter, said dealers could raise profit margins beyond federally-mandated -ceilings if sales were curtailed by the government. They would have to get more return on Jess gasoline to make the same amount of money, be said. · • LUNDBERG IS AMONG MANY EXPERTS pessimistic about gasoline prices, which have risen about two cents a gallon since Jan.1. He and other analysts predicted Monday that the increase will grow even sharper in coming months, but just how sharp is uncer- tain due to continued questions about world crude oil supply. "The key variables to me are the OPEC ,price, which bas yet to be determined, and the marketplace," said Eugene Nowak, an oil industry analyst at the Wall Street firm of Blyth Eastman Dillon. The price increases since Jan. 1 vary by area. Regular-grade leaded gasoline bought at a full-service station costs an average 76.8 cents per gallon in Chicago, up from 74.8 cents two months ago, the Lundberg Letter said. The average price in Newark, N.J ., rose from 65.6 cents per gallon to 67.4 cents. THE PRICE RISE FOil UNLEADED gas is even more pro- nounced. Motorists in Omaha pay an average 80.5 cents a gallon, up from 77.3centsinJanuary. Lundberg said the impact of OPEC crude oil price increase, ef- fective Jan. 1, is only now being fell. He also said prices will rise as much as a nickel in the next few weeks because the Depart- menlof Energy loosened price controls last week. This move, known as the "lilt," allows refiners to pass more or their costs to consumers. It is designed to encourage companies to build refineries, but it also will raise gasoline prices 5.1 cents in the next two years, the DOE estimate,. _ Prices also will rise soon due to the supply squeeze created by the Iranian revolution. Several OPEC members have raised oil prices on their own to cash in on the tight supply. OPEC COULD DECIDE WHEN IT meets later this month to raise cnade prices even more than the 3.9 percent scheduled Aprll 1. Nowak predicts a 10-cent-a-gallon rise in the price of gasoline by the end of 1979, but said, "If the OPEC price goes higher, that would be a bit conservative." Energy Secretary James Schlesinger said last week that prices of unluded gasoline could top $1 a gallon in a year or so, with leaded regularupto75centa. Hape, Holdup Suspects Held BANNING (AP> -Two Escondido men who allegedly poled .. police to rob moeorista and rape women alon1 75 miles of rural Southern California bi1bwa19 t1i1e put tw~ weeks ba•e been arrested for in· v..U,atioa of robbery and at· tempted marder. sheriff'• dep- uties said today Edward Lee Schoebel, 28, and William Milburn Brown, 32, were arrelted u they drove on H11bway 74 between the nloun·: taln commuDltlea of Idyllwild and '9aradiae Valley, said RiYeraide Couat1 sheriff's deputies. Four men convicted of raping a male stu- dent were executed by a firing squad in Tehran early today. It was the first execu- .,..,,.,... .. lion reported for an immoral act since the Khomeini regime took power. Diver s Locate SIDlken Ship tANAMA CITY, Panama (A ) -Divers from a British scientific expedition, working in s hark-infested Caribbean waters, have found the remains of the Scottish ship Olive Branch that sank in 1699. "We know there was no gold or silver aboard but the ship contains archaeological treasures," said Sara Evertt, spokeswoman for the expedition. She said the ship sank after arriving with a load of pro· visions for the m-rated Scottish colony of Fort Saint Andrew, in Caledonia Bay~ 20 miles from tbe present Cotombian border. Amonc tbe cargo, a manifest showed, were 30,000 clay smok· lnl pipes, and one was found on an early dive, she said. Won't Talk Huntington Man Held in Slashings By MICHAEL PASKEVICB Of .. o.lty l"ti.t Sutt A Huntington Beach man who allegedly went on a hatcbet- slashinc rampage that left three men iltjured, one seriously. bas told police notb.inc about what set off bis Monday morning out· burst, lnvesUgators said today. Robert Dale Martin, 35, ol 8211 San An1elo Drive, bas been booked into Orange County Jail on suspicion of attempted murder. Ball for Martin, who lS employed u a mechanic in Irvine, bu been set at $215,000. Martin was interviewed by in- vestigators Monday afternoon. They described him as un- cooperative in shedding any Ugbl on what drove him to al- legedly chop up the clubhouse, and tbe men who tried to stop him. The most severely injured or tbe ~ men Martin alle1edly attacked ln the clubhouse of the Huntington Creek Apartments, 35-year-old Joel Dupree, was lilted in suanSed condltlo• today at VHstminster Community HotpJtal. Nurse Told of B&hy's Defect AutboriUet said he underwent sur1ery Monday afternoon to re- lieve prwure on bis brain, the result of a single blow to his rltbt telQPle b)' the batcbet as· Hrtediy wielded by llartin. -Apartment mana1er Harold Tbomaa Strom, 11, also un- derwent 1ur1ery for a deep lacerat.lon..-aad fractured rtabt arm. Be wu lilted iD satldac- tory coodlUon today at H111Dt· la1ton latereommunlty Hotpital. .. ADd be said I bad to reallle tbat tbe bah)' w• severely hraia dam.,.. end it bad not died ID • tbe UWW u It WU aupPQMCI to, .. ..,., JlolM.oD continued W~ II aeeuted of 1tran-11lu~tlie Want bown u baby • lk'l lf ..... two yean aco after IM dlledlY tunlved a saline .._._.an 18-year-old unwed ......... D•fnl• · attorn•1 ~barl•• Weedman baa eonteftded the ln· rant ttfor all pnetleal purpoaes wa1......., ....... Proeecutor Robert Chau.rt.on baa auerted the doctor choked tlae two-pound. u.eunee lldant feartn1 tbe cblld woald be ae.erely bralD dama•ed and tbat be cCMlld race a malpraetlce ault . lln. Holtton teetlfled today CS. WADDILL. Pa1e Al) A third man wbo said be at- tempted to halt llart.tn•a window end door sm~1bln1 rampa1e about l a.m. ln the clubbouee, (lee IL\Talrl', Pap Al) NEW YORK CAP> -Industry sources said today that Algeria. -one or OPEC's smallest mem- bers -is threatening a 25 per- cent boost in oil prices. The in- crease would be the largest of all the hikes announced by mem- bers of the oil cartel. Libya, meanwhile, said that it was doubling -from 5 percent to 10 percent -the size of the ln- creae it announced last week, and Venezuela increased prices on several petroleum products it exports to the United States. There was no immediate in- dication as to what such in- c rea ses -s h ou ld they materialize -might mean to American service station prices. The Organi za tion of Petroleum Exporting Countries had scheduled total 1979 price hikes in its base price for oil of 14 .5 percent. But several nations have taken advantage or the supply squeeze caused by the Ira nian revolution to impose ad· ditional increases. Most of the ri ses hav e b ee n i n the neighborhood of 9 percent. The oil price increases and the cutback in supply already have caused problems for American con s ume rs . The price of gasoline has gone up by about two cents a gallon since Jan. l and new government pricing regulations are expected to add 10 cents at the pump over the next two years. Prices for regular. leaded gasoline at full-service stations average about 70 cents a talion although the price varies <See OIL, Page A?> Coast Weather Sunny and quite warm Wednesday but coole r near the coast. Highs Wednesday 65 to 69 at beaches, 75 to 85 inland. Lows tonight in sos. INSIDE T ODA V Elected officials are relJJOnding to the public de- .tre o/ Uw Mil-control move· ment bid tnonta mwt out- vote their /Ma. Stof'JI Page CJ. AlY_..,.. .......... ~~ ~ ca.-. =-0•• •• ........... ............ ·-·· . ......... .... '°"' •••• I 1 A.2 DAILY PILOT $ TuHdax. Maren Cl 19ft Viets to Negotiate But China Must Withdraw· All Troops BANGKOK. Thullund IAP 1 Vll'lnuna n11<>u11cl'd today ll 111 wHling to n •.:otu1te with· <.:tuna once all Pelun1'11 lroop1 havt' h•(t V1etnamt' soll and endfld I mort• than two wetk frunllt'r W lU Hut u V1Nnilml''•' 1''orf'11<n M ' n 1 "> u· :r "' u tr m t• n t ~ a 1 d 1 f Chmt'll~ ll'ntlc•1-. wt•rt• t rvlnl( u 800 lain In .Africa Massacre·! N 'DJ AM ENA, Chad tl\P> More than 800 people. most of them Moslems. were l~laeved killed an southern Chad over lbe weekend in one of Africa's worst communal mubsarres tn recent }l'ar!-., d1plomat1<· sourn·s re portt'd today The Chad authoritws. loch-d m a virtual civil war and struK gling for control of the capital. made no official comment on the killings in and around Moundou, 300 miles south of N'Djamena . Diplomats and witnesses re- turning from Moundou said the town was gripped In a surge of uncontrolled violence for three days. leaving tocai police and troops powcrlesb or unwilling lo intervene De tails of the Moundou rioting we re still comtnl! in from the re- mote and almost isolated area. but 1t appeared that the local Mos lem minority, mos tly tradt•rs and their families, was virtually w1JK.'<i out. The killings sharply increased the threat that the land-Jocked nation. a forme r French colony nearly twice the sate of Texas may disinteg·ri.te an a bloody confrontation between Moslems and thl' Chribtian or anim1M populution The sources said lhe Moundou k1!1inJ(S were sparked by rumors umong the Chrl!>l1an and animist populatwn of a Moslc•m con· -;p1rac)' to seize the entire nation .ind impose an Arabic-Islamic n·g1mc. Gangs of black youths -.urg(•d through Moundou and 11t·1~hbonng settlements Friday, Saturday and Sunday. seeking out <1nd k11l1ng Moslem inhabi- tunts, the sources said. The French army evacuated the women a nd chlldren of the 250-strong European population of Moundou. The refugees ar· rived an N'DJamena Monday un· dcr arm> escort and gave re- porters harrowing accounts or the massacre The latest killings raised the apparent toll of racial and re liglous rioting around Moundou since early February to more than 1.000 dead. Several hundred more have died in the flghUng further north between the rival forces of Christian President Felix. MaJloum a nd Moslem Prime Minister Hassen Habre. Chad's 4.S million inhabitants are divided almost equally inlo Arable-speaking, llght·sklnned Moslems in the north and black ChristJans and animists in the south who speak French a nd tribal dialects but no Arabic. The Moslems form a small but privileged minority in southern Chad. where they control much or the retail trade ,.,....raeeAJ HATCHET. • 28-year-old Richard Douelas Butters, was slashed once under his right eye, police said. He was treated tor hls Injury at Huntington l nlercommunlty Hospital and released early Monday A fourth apartment dweller Terry Joe Mitchell, and an un· identified security guard helped the injured trio subdue Martin, police said. OflANQI COAST DAILY PILOT I,,. O. -~I Qtllr ~191. W•lll """IC" I\,_ 1>ollltdt .... -....... ,."""',...,.,,., ... 0o_ tff~I P'*ltl ..... OW-~ ...... ,_.,. 11111111,.,.d MM4fr ""°""' ''IO•r ..,.. '"''• /\MW N._ 9-.cll, """'"'-" k.o<lt/,._ l•lft \lallfor, I,,,,,..,~ ..... '°""'C..M A \ll>Qltr•OIOll.lltollkwlh"'*'I-'-'"'*"-.,_.,, ,. ... """".., ......, ........ .,.,., ,, .. "' W.>l I••.,.,....,'"'" •w. C4'ltt.111a tlllll ..... ""'_ ,. .. _,_.....,,_ '"''. ,..,., ., ... .,., ..... ",_o._•~ ,..._It_ t .. ltf ni--.11 ............ ._.,...,,,.u1.., Cllffttt .. ~ .......,P,•11 liul•I_,. ~-k!IUIN'l , .......... (1,4)~ a...-... ....... ...,. ,,_ ... o.-. --"""'~°";;.t.;'~ "":!!!Tr~"!!; !Fi 9'"1•1 ;t.'fii'IMHll . =~';_':'ar.l' .. (MU ..... 1·::11.; ... ,.·~~.:.cr,, .. w1thdruw11I tnclc " to t•auh1tc• lht• war then Vh:tnum would flJChl on Ill lhf' aplrat of 'ltlOf'rll moblllaallon " Th 1tatC"rn nl aid Chlnaat trooP& had to withdraw "rom plNely nnd l.mrnndlt1onolly from \ 1t•lnt1m<'M' trrr 1lon before 1.trly nrJ:oltntwn.'I tnlu• 11lon· ' It UIMl 'Utd (·tu nit Wllh f111 tt'tt Saudi Arabia "Key' to Oil WASHING'l'ON tl\1' > Qucatloni. about Wh t'tht<r Suudl Arabia c~n conttnut· to µrodut·e enough 011 to meet the nt>l•ds ofth~ llnat ed Stal.eh art• expected tu b e ra1 t.ed 1n a t•on gre11&Jonul report Sourc·t>s In the l.ld mmistruuon and Congre:.:. s<1y the Senate Forl'1gn Rt'latwns Comm1 tt~c 1c port will ~late that the Saudis' production cupac1· ty is severely limited Accordmg to one report, by The New York Times. the study concludes that if Saudi Arabia produced 14 million to 16 million bar- rels or oil a day, it would take only six to 10 years for the country's supply to peak ActnrSues Santa Ana Plnstic Surgeon Embattled Santa Ana plastic s urgeon Or. Ralph Small races a new legal entanglement today in a lawciuit filed by a former pa- l1t'nl Actor Patrick Keane contends m the Orange County Superior Court suit he has been unable to work since Smull oper ated on him to remove a scar on his face. The actor 1s seeking an un specified amount of damage in the civil complaint. Small was barred by a Superior Court order last_ month from practicing medicine in the wake of c h arges of "gross negligence and massive imcom· petence." Judge William S. Lee issued thtt temporary restraining order that slopped Small's practice based on the c harges by the state Board of Medical Quality Assurance. The aJlegations followed an in- vestigation Into \he death last November of a 33-year·old woman who we n t Into· •respiratory arrest while un- dergoing breast implant surgery at Small's offices at 3620 S. Bristol St., Santa Ana. Lee's order is to remain in ti· feet until hearings on Small 'a license revocation or suspension can be held by the state medical board Indians Upset SALT LAKE CITY CAP> The Ute Jndians s&) they are canceling all water agreements with non-Jndians, ranging from participation in a huge federal project to a contract to supply drinking waler to Roosevelt, pop. 2,000. Ruby Black , chairwoman of the Ute Indian Tribal Council, told reporters Monday the Ules were upset that a proposed compact outlin· ing the tribe's hunling, fisbiog. taxation a nd water rights has been tied up in a legislative committee. Ltndaay Wainer, 29 , television'• Bloriic Woman, hae been aued for divorce by her buaband of two years. Michael BraDdoa., 33. They have beeD eeparated al.nee July. i lo llOOOUn('l' It WUh w\thdruwinf( Mondu)' b<•l'aust· 1l found Itself In "d Hicull r1rcwn1uu\ce-." mlhtar1 IOPeit, 11upport Ru:J~saa and othfora w.,r., aavln11 Vlt-ln!'m. alfd nn objections to lhe war 111 China It is1ud uny nt-ac()llatlom; would ldkc• vl..ic·c ul the vice fort•1g11 m1ml'll'n> h·vcl .tl u lime and pluct• to tw ugrccd on tater II u nol rudlo rt' ported fl&htin~ w.t11 1•ont1nurn" In Lang Son provrn<. .. north ot the Vietnamese C'up1 t 11l 1rnd ch11m l•d Hanoi 's troop11 k1ll1-0 or wounded more thtrn '/IW) Ch111ci.t~ 1n fighting Mon day )n Houng Lien Son province in lht• northv.l'hl Nhun Uan. the V1ctname1>e Com mun111l Party newspaper, :-.<1id Pekin~·s announcement that \tunes~ troops ~gan pull· ing out Monday, l6 d<1y!-. after the invasion slarte>d , was "con· lrary to the real s ituation m the hatllefaelds." Chana .. 111 stepping up its ag· gresslon. and its troops are Cran· t1cally destroying Vietna mese vi llages." s111d the· paper Bangkok intelliRence sourct·~ said they had no evidence of a Chinese pullout, but intelligence repo,rts frequently lag behind battlefield events Some of these sources s1ud China might be following a scorched ·earth policy in withdrawtng and that this could be the s tepped-up aggression Vietnam referred lo. Other intelligence sources said 1t was likely lhe fi ghting would not end abruptly but would wind down to s mall-scale border skirmishing. Chinese troops crossed the Vietnamese border f''eb 11 with the "declared aim or punishini:: Vietnam for alleged borde r provocations. and Peking'!'> Xinbua <Jlsinhua l news agency s~id in a nn ouncing th e withdrawal that the Chinese had achieved their goal of "dealing devastating blows lo Vietnamese armed forces." It also said China reserves the right "lo strike back ugam tn self-defense" 1f the Vielnamest- r esumed provoculions along the 450-mile border and called for talks "lo discuss w<i ys or ensur ing peace and tranquility .. <1nd then proceed lo settle the boun· dary and territorial disputes.'' pules." Earlier reports from Peking indicated the Chinese might try to hold on to a bout as square miJes of territory claimed by both countries. E'rowa Page A J OIL ••• widely with lpcation. A fed eral judge has been aq ed to halt implementation of the new rules until the govern- m ent determine whether they would encourage motorists to use chaper , leaded gasoline which could increase pollution. Industry sources, who as ked not to be identified by name, said that Algeria -which ac· counts for about 3 percent of tota l OPEC oil production - wants to raise its price April l. Algeria gets about $14.80 a bar· rel for Its oil, higher than the SCHLESINGER HINTS AT NEW MOV£S-A3 PACT COMPROMISES DET AILED-A4 JAPANESE SPLIT OVER OIL THR£AT--e4 OP EC base price of $13.35 because of the qu'allty or Algerian c rude and Its con· venienceto major markets. The Algerians reportedly want lo push the price to about $18.50 a barrel. Sources said Algeria also wants to cut production by 10 percent to 15 percent, ap parenlly because of technical problems In its oil fields. Iran resumed exports Mon- day. stupplng Its first load of oil since December. But Energy $e(:retary Jame.'l R . Schlesinger sald in Wu hlngton today that it 'is "qulte poulble" that other OPEC members "will cul back production -ifr adually as Iran comes back on stream ." Iran la 11elllng Ila on at auc· "lion, wttb bidding starting at $18 a barrel. The Loa Angeles Times said today that several . major U.S. oil companies have decided t.o boycott this week's auction because I\ would force price boost.a. Th~ newspaper quoted a n un· named 1pok•man for Standard • OU ot Califomla u 1ayln1: "We b4'11eve tb .. e price1 are ex- c.l&lve. '' It Mid Oulf. AUantJc 1Ucbfteld and odMr' oU companlee which ll dtcl DOl ~ bad 1lmllar nt· MUoal. AM!aad otl, wbleb tut w"k purebaMd tom• Iranian crude, ..W,1 taow.ver, Ut•t It. ..ad -. ou at audioa. ' . /tl119ging the Camera Prime Ministe r Pierre Elliot Trude au's three boY.S Michael, 3 <front 1. Sacha. 5. and JU!itin. 7 ham al up with a photog- rap her in Ottawa. Natural showmen, lht:y kept opening and closing the door and making runny faces. Huntington Brawl Suspects Sought f'Nnft Pag~ A I WADDILL. • that nur!'>c Pat Olvera tol<1 ht!r lht' baby had cried and wa~ <tllV(' Huntington Reach poli ce con· tlnued lhe1r search today for two men who turned a Friday night party into a street brawl b<'forc one of tht' men fared a shotgun bl ast int() :rn an~ry crowd O( partygOcrS, IOJUrang thrN• One of the v1ct1m:-.. 19 y(·ar old Mi chat>I Robert Conw:iy of Hunt 1n gton Be a c h . remained hospitalized in .:;at1s factory con d1t1on today at lluntangton In tcrc·ommumty I lo'iptlal He, ltkc his two companions. was hit in the legs hy s hotgun pellets fired by one of the escaped suspects. The two men. described by police as b1ker·types. apparently slipped out of their home at 420 11th St. before the police SWAT team surrounded the home for nearly three hours Fr iday night Sgt. Luis Ochoa said police found a handgun. s hotgun and about a pound of marijuana in the home However. he said lhe recovered weapons were not the ones the suspects u sed in the shooting. The melee at about 11 p.m. ap parently was s parked by the su!> peels' attempt to crash a nearby party on 11th Str~t. Fighting broke out before the outnumbered trio of biker~ was chased from the house and into the street. Sgt. Ochoa said the angry partygoers continued the chase and caught one of the bikers. As thev were beating him up, the suspects returned from their home armed wilh a shotgun and handgun, police said. Both reportedly fired several rounds into the air before one or the me n lo we r ed h is aim towards the legs of lhc crowd lnJured along with Conway were Daryl Dan McKown. 20 and Jerry Meyling, 23, both or Huntington &!ach They weren't hos patahzed Poltrt' wen· d1 reeled to tht· homt' at 420 1 llh Street. but the t~o SU!'>f>t'Cls had already Ot-d. a ppart·ntly in 41 four wheel drtvt· veh1cl<' Sgt Ochoa .,<11d the 1dcntll1t~ of the two men remain unknov,.n Oe:,criptton!> from partygoer!> have pohn• '('arch1n ~ for u heavily f<Jttoo<•d man who may be <' J lll'd .. Bua a rd " He sports a full -beard and da rk brown shouldc·r length hair A man tn h1 i. mid 20i.. ··Buzzard" 1s about six feet tall <1nd weighs about 190 pounds However. she said. that. while she believed Mrs. Olvera, she detected no movement in the in· font except for one suckmg mo · t ion in the· face and the clo!>ing of the tnfant ·~ cyci. Waddill 's first murder trial ended last May when Juror:-. i.a1d t ht>y w1.·n· dt-adlockcd 7 .. 5 in fo"or or acquittal Testimony an the rctrwl hai. t•ntt:•red its !\t'<'Ond week Tht· trial 1s expected lo 1<.t~l threl' to four month!> Cookie Caper Theater Dro_ps All Charges NORFOLK. Va. <AP 1 The rookie caper has rrumbled. and w ith 1t d1~orderl y condurt l'harge~ agains t cookie con · noisseur Kenneth Harsh. Faced with d(.'fending its ban on off-premises food or drink, a local theater dropped the charge during a lO·minute court hearing Monday. The theater also offered Harsh and his wife one night's free ad· mission Hars h. who showed up at General 01slnct Court still car - rying his chocolate chip cookies 1n a soggy paper bag, vowed af. l<'rward "I'm never going to take food tnlo a theater again I d1dn 't even do 1l on purpose this time." Harsh and his wife entered the Military Circle theater Saturday night arter a quick slop at a nearby bake shop, where he bought two cookies. An usher. bent on following a posted rule against off.premises food or drink in the theater. asked him to hand 1t over or leave. Harsh left. accompanied by a police escort after he refused lo surrender the cookie. He was rt· leabed on $100 bond Later. Harsh said he agreed with the theater's rule . "But f nevf'r intended to eut the cookie there So J refused to give 1t up " After thl• hearing. Harsh. cookie in hand, said he bad talked with the lhe:iter's district manager. Pete Gloriod. Sunday night and "we aplolog1zed to each other•· Judge Joseph J ordan Jr or- dered the theater lo pay court costs . , As for Harsh. he lost the $10 he patd to a bail bonds man And the cookie'> "I'm going to freeze it and save 1l for aJI time," he said. Tho namo Aoll•·Aoyce, tile Aoll•·Royce r1d1111or grOle, , and lhe Spirll of Ec11a1y hood ornamenl <Ii"" ere all Rolls·Rovce rrademerlce. ueod with lhe appr01111I of Rolla-Royce Motors. ti The most famous motor radiator grille in the world, supcr"bly ftproduccd a.s a wrist waccb. Eighteen karat gold. Exclusive &om C.orum. lS 'AjHION ISi.ANO • NEWPORT IEACH, CALIFORNIA 92660 ,l I .., 17 . I Orange Eoast Today's Closing 4 .Y. Stoek CO ITION N TEN CEN ~ VOL. 72, N0.6S,3SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ! Panic Feared in Weekend Gasilrought I \ I NEW YORK <AP> Weck<>nd lier v1cc stallon cloalnas woult1 create long lines at other ume:s und could provl' th "psycholo1kal lr•fU?Cr needtd to~ end prtces Into orbtl, · warn& an oil expN1 Dan Lundbtlqt. in t\u, weekly newsletter, u ld dealers could rnlse profit m1:t1·gins beyond foderaUy mandated ce1tln111 If aalt .. , were curtaJll·d by lhc govN·nmcnt Thf)' would have to it'l mor<• return on less gasolloo to m•kt" the same 1tmount of money. hc ~aid . LUNDBERG IS AMONG MANV €XPERT pe sarntsltc about gasoliJle pricus. which hav~ r1w n about two cents a gallon :smce Jan. 1. He and other analygts predtl•led Monday that the increase wall grow even sburper an comm& months. but JUllt how harp is unct r tam due to continued que:moru. about world crude 011 supply. ''The key variables lo me are the OPEC price. which has yet WJO Die In Chad Warfare? , N'DJAMENA, Chad IAP) I' More than 800 people, most of lhern Moslems. were believed killed in southern Chad over the weekend in one or Africa's worst communal massacres in recent years, diplomatic sources re· ported today. The Chad authorities, locked in a virtual civil war and strug- gling ror control or the capital, ma de no official comment on the killings in and around Moundou, 300 miles south of N'Djamena. Diplomats and witnesses re· turning from Moundou said the town was gripped in a surge of uncontrolled violence for three days, leaving local police and troops powerless or unwiJling to intervene. Details of the Moundou rioting were still coming in from the re· mote and almost isolated area, but it appeared that the local ' Mos le m minority , mostly traders and their families, was virtually wiped out. The killings sharply inereased the threat that the land-locked nation, a former French colony nearly twice the size of Texas. may disintegrate in a bloody confrontation between Moslems and the Christian or anJmist population! 111.ossona Ti•e to ~ dcl~rmined, 1md the marketplace," said Eugene Nowak, an oll lndwitry onulyst at the Wall Street firm of Blyth Eastman l>lllon The pri<'c increases since Jan. l vary by area. Regular-grade lc-d ansolrne bought at a ruJl-service station costs an average 76 a cenli per gttllon in Chi cago, up from 74.8 cents two months ago, the Lundberg Letter said. The average price in Newark, N.J ., ro11\' from 65.6 cents peT gallon lo 61 4 cents. THE PRICE RlSE FOil UNLEADED gas is even more pro- nounced Motorists an Omaha pay an average 80.5 cents a gallon, up from 77 .3 cent11 in January Lundberg said the impact o( OPEC crude oil pric:e increase, ef· fechve Jan. l. ts onJy now being felt. He also said prices will rise as much as a nickel an the next few weeks because the Depart- ment of Energy loosened pri<'e controls last week. This move, known as the "tilt," aUows refiners to pass more of their C!Ollta to consumers . It is desi&ned to encourage companies to build refineries. but it also will raise gasoline prices 5.1 cents in the next two years, the DOE estimates. Prices also will rise soon due to the supply squeeze created by the Iranian revolution. Several OPEC members have raised oil prices on their own to cash in on the tight supply. OPEC COULD DECIDE WHEN IT meets later this month to raise crude prices even more than the 3.9 percent scheduled April 1. Nowak predicts a lO·cent-a-gallon ri~e in the price of gasoline by the end of 1919, but said, "If the OPEC price goes higher. that would be a bit conservative." Energy Secretary James Schlesinger said last week that prices of unleaded gasoline could top $1 a gallon in a year or so, with leaded regular up to 75 cents. * * * * * * * * * · N eW Oil Hikes? Algeria Threatens 25% Ri.se NEW YORK <AP> Industry sources said today that Algeria one of OPEC's smallest mem- bers -is threatening a 25 per- cent boost in oil prices . The in· crease would be the largest of all the hikes announced by mem· bers of the oil cartel. .Libya, meanwhile. said that it was doubling -from 5 percent to 10 percent -the size of the in· c rease it announced last week, and Venezuela increased prices on several petroleum products it exports to the United States. There was no immediate in· dication as to what s uch in- Newport Land Eyed As Access The latest salvo in the long· running battle over the price of state-owned land in Newport Beach was fired by CaJTrans which put two of those parcels into consideration as freeway access. c r eases s h ou ld they materialize might mean to American service station prices. T h e Organ1zat1on o f Petroleum Exporting Countries had scheduled total 1979 price hikes in its base price for oil of 14.5 per<'ent. But several nations have taken advantaRe of the supply squeeze caused by the Iranian revolution to impose ad· ditional increases. Most of the ri ses hav e b een in th e neighborhood of 9 percent The oil price increases and thf' cutback in supply already have caused problems for Amencan con s ume r s Th e price of gasoline has gone up by about two cents a gallon since Jan. I and new government pricing regulations are expected to add 10 cents at the pump over the next two years. Prices for regular, lea ded gasoline at full service stations average about 70 cents a talion although the price varies widely with location. A federa-1 judge has been asked to bait implementation or the new rules until the govern ment determine whether they would encourage motorists to UM.' <See OIL, Page A2 t Marcuse Explains Art to Students By l'lllUP ROSMARIN OI -~Uy "1191 Si.ti Herbert Marc u se, oc- togenarian professor of poJitical philosophy who is called the father of the mode rn youth revolution, addressed a jam packed room of UC Irvine stu· dents Monday. some of them literally gathered at his feet. The sources said the Moundou killings were sparked by rumors among the Christian and animist population of a Moslem con· spiracy to seize the e ntire nation and ilnpose an Arabic-Islamic regime. Gangs of black youths surged through Moundou and neighboring settlements Friday, Saturday and Sunday, seeking out and killing Moslem inhabi· tants; the sources said. J oni Galt, 18, clearly bas the coming of spring on her mind as she is framed in the lush blossoms on a flower- ing plum tree. The humanities major couldn't resist a closer look at the springtime splendor as she made her way across the UC Irvihe campus. CalTrans' attorney, David Simmes, said the land located on West Coast Highway on either side of Superior Avenue is being included in the Route 55 Cor· ridor Study. That means the property won't be sold ror at least two years while the study is being made, in case the state decides to use the land for ac- cess to that freeway. His topic, the relation of art <meaning literature > with politics. was abstruse to the point that Marcuse had some trouble understanding the ques- tions of students, and students appeared to have difficulty un· derstanding the old professor. The French army evacuated the women and children or the ~ 250-strong European population or Moundou. State S&u !-:Gainers In Mixed Market NEW YORK <AP> -Shares of , California savings and loans 1 'surged ahead in an othel"Wise mixed session in the stock market today. The Dow Jones average of 30 t industrials, which jumped 11.61 1 points Monday, pulled back 3.30 to 824.06 after five hours of trading today. GaineTS held a 7-6 advantage over losers in the over-all tally of New York Stock Exchange- listed .tssues. The wave of buying in the sav- ings and loans was touched oCC when National Steel said it agreed to buy one company in the industry, Unit.ed Financial of California, for $42 a share. United Financial stock jumped initially 12% to 36 after a delayed opening. AmoqotberprominentS&Lls- suea, Golden West Financial was up l~at12%; Far West FinaneiaJ gained 1\4to14\4; Great Western Financial climbed 1 ~ to 28, and Imperial Corp. ol America added 1% to3mafterfivebounoftrad~ . log. · I Joaath•n E . Gra1t. a Wall Street analyst wbo fouo1'1 \be IDdutr7 for Sanford c. Bern- tteln 6 Co., aakl tbe Natioul StHl·UaJted rtnaaelal •II'"· meDt .,.,.,.,..._, the fact that maa1 publlelJ·held 86LI are "extremely vulnerable to tak~.·· ID 1...-t 79an the Jtoeb lD tbe ~ baft ~allr treded • • ,..,.,..,. low '""' Ila • t_,. f6 •to• Pll'ffDt GI tbl6r bOok •ilue, or..l.~eal liq· ....... ...ua. UnJ ..... Mesa Woniitn Struck By J\uto Succumbs A Costa Mesa woman who was critically injured early SaW.rday morning when struck by a car while trying to help an injured motorist died Monday at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. A coroner's report identified the victim as 22-year·old Jac- queline Sullivan who lived at 1026 W. Ward St., Costa Mesa. According to a California Highway PatroJ spokesman, Miss Sullivan was attempting t.o aid the driver or a car invoJved in a two-car collision when a third auto plowed into the wreckage. A few minutes earlier, the woman bad been a passenger in one of the two autos that slamm~ together al 2:30 ·a.m. on Superior Avenue north of Hospital Road in the NewJ>Qrt Gay Officers Due in SF SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Police Chief Charles Gain 1aya the department plant ti> hire homosexuals am0ft8 ha minority can- didatea duriq the next tbreeyean. ''We waat tbe police de· p1rtmeat to be a reflection of U.. community, and ob- vioaly, SID f'raneiaco baa a tubltanUal fay pop11la· tloa." be tald. •fter a DOltee eoftbell 1e1uad was aefeat.ed 8unda1 by a l•Y team.»t. Over tbe nut three yean, Gahl Hid, U.. dt· partmtal wm tdN •boat '50 ...., oftlcen from u.. eH&lMlit.J Ult. 1111 loal. be • ....... 10 e.•roeet mlnorttlte, lacludbll ••>'•· ud • pere.t woaaea. Beach-Costa Mesa area. Apparently uninjured in the initial collision, Miss Sullivan reportedly went to help the in- jured female driver of the other car. That is when the third auto slammed into the wreckage strewn along Superior Avenue, a ccording lo th e C HP spokesman. He said witnesses reported the crash sent the car that had been traveling at an estimated 50 mph bouncing off the wreckage and Into Miss Sullivan. In addition to the Costa Mesa woman 's death. the two separate crashes left five people injured and two women facing drunken driving charges. The CHP spokesman iden- tified the two drunken d riving suspects as: -Brenda Powers, 36. or Newport Beach, lhe injured driver Miss Sullivan was at- tempting to help. -Katlay Mayer, 20, of Anaheim, the driver of the auto that crashed into the wreckage of the first accident. The CHP spokesman said Mrs. Powers was driving north on Superior Avenue and attempted to make a left turn ·when her auto colllded with a southbound car driv~ by Dean Sbler, 2', of Cotta Mesa. The accident report U.ted SIUer' u blameless in the tza1te1y. He wu oot cit~. 'IUr car reportedly apun aroiad and · wq alttlnc ln the middle of tbe roadway when .-truck by 111111 Mayer'• auto. A pr•srr 1D Ml• Mayer's _ auto re~rttdlr auffered a bn*• WM ID tM .... col· Ulloa _. a PMMl'b1 wllo, lik• Mlll 811111vaD, bad ,one to aid •n. 1'8wr1 a1lo waa npoc1.ed ~ ... .,ured . • In the meantime, he said, the state will continue to fight the city's efforts lo lower the value or some CalTrans parcels by changing the zoning. The two parcels just taken off the market, along with a third in West Newport, once were declared excess by CalTrans and offered for sale. City officials l.ried to buy the parcel in West Newport, next lo the West Newport Park for par kland, but that sale ran into trouble in a dispute over what the land could be used for. The use makes a big difference in the price, both CalTrans and Ci· ty officials agree. Simmes says the planning commission's recent recommen- dation lo zone the west Newport parcel from residential to open <See ZONING, Page AZ> Frot11 AA(] Marcuse h as criticized societies. both capitalist a nd Communist. that put emphasis on the performance or produc- tivity of an individual as a measure ot worth, rather than the intrinsic worth M arcuse believes human beings have. His best known books were "One -Dimensional Man." a best-selling paperback published in 1964; and his magnum opus, "Eros and Civilization," a 1955 work that was a s ynthesis oC. Marx and Freud, and was credited with contributing to the philosophy of the hippie move· menl of the 1960s. The Berlin·born Marcuse has been both an intelligence agent and a scholar. He came to the United Slates in 1934, and worked (or the Offi ce or Strategic Services, this coun- try's first organized espionage agency, and the State Depart- ment, from 194.1-50. Irvine Pool Gets Olympic Approval 87 PRIUP 80SJIA81N down to 42 Inches deep. 0t1MCM111y1"1e1otMf The contractor. the Ruane The Amateur Athletic Union Corp. of San Gabriel, iniUaJly has at last certified the City of tried lo stretch the pool by boll· lrv1ne's Heritage Park 50-meter ing back the ·aJumlnum struc- pool ror Olympic qualifying ture lo supporting struts. events. Tbe tac.Uc worked, but only lo Paul Brady, assistant city qualify the pool to a depth ot mana~er, said an AAU official about two feet. c o n f 1 r m e d II on d a y , by Last month a second ertort telephone, that work done to was made, spurred by the fact stretch the aluminum eool. aald that the city had withheld a rinal to be too abort oriclDaUy by a payment ol $125,000 on the ap- half-tnch, WM aatillaetory. -proximate}¥ MS0,000 contract. Worlr on tbe pool bad been ex• Thia tlr:ne RuaM made cuts in tact.cl an utra etabt. montba tbe at.nad\lr-1 s"'pport material, wbn It waa determlned ~J! 64 pu1bed back the en.di of the wun 't of unifonn leqth and ..., • • .-... ... _ nd A.AV wtt~catloa. .' ~ f'~J. rewe._ '°"'m • recon· Wit.boat aUoD any rec netted &be llruetural 1upporq. ordl tit ID u. --a 'wou1c1 .,; Alfred Buxton, Ruane Col'p. ~ president, malntai* that the dilcndlted and DO wntial meetl pool never was too abort, but co;i:. ~d ~uires that· the that the AAU was enforcing a pool be u.nlformly 50 meten, <See POOL, Pace AJ> .~ !»It~ Piiot SUit Pfloto SPEAKS AT UCI Herbert Marcuse A hero to s ome stude nts . Ma rcuse's political teachings sc andalized many in con- servatCve San Diego County when he was teaching at the University of California al San Diego. He was then in his seven- ties. In 1968, at the height of the student turmoil. the citizens of conservative La Jolla demanded that the university let his year· to-year contract lapse. though the university stood firm . In July or that year. Marcuse went into hiding for a month <See MARCUSE. Page A2> C:oast Weather Sunny and quite warm Wednesday but cooler near the coas t. Highs Wednesday 65 to 69 al t beaches, 75 to 85 inland. Lows tonight in 50s . INSIDE TODA'1 Elected oflictals ore responding to tM public de· nre of the rent-control move· ment blit tenonla muat out- vote their foes. Story Page C3. I ••••• .. Ct 17 .. 14 .... ... C1 .,., ., ., ., .. .... M - ' i 1 ... 'Daat's (urp) Tasty Britain's Prmcc Ch<.trles takes a btte of snake meat curry ut a j ung le survival school in Hong Kong. Before tasting the deli cacy, the prince remarked, "Boy, the t hings I do for Engla nd." Disneyland Open Despite Strike A spokesman for Disneyland said today that the amusement park in Anaheim will remain open despite a non.s anctioned strike by about 530 maintenance workers that began at midnight. T h e strikers r epresent 14 of about JO unions involved in the Dis neyland opcr.at1on thCtt Ctl this 11mt> or the year employs 4,600 wo rkers. Ironically. the first major ~lrikc in the amusement park's i3-year history came Ctfler the union leCtdership approved a new contract for the 14 unions. l t was the membership on a 457 to 45 vole that rejected th~ Pact. IJ Impacted by the strike are o perations involving main· tenance of facilities, including such crafts· as plumbers. electri· cians and sheet metal workers. The Disneyland spokesman said the park will 'be able to operate with some management personnel providing so~ of those services. -.......) Today, as is customary, the Anaheim amusement center ·is c losed but when it reopens Wednesday ther e will be pickets in front of the entrance should a settlement with the dissident wor kers not be reached by that time. Wrllngling Erupts At Marvin Trial LOS ANGELES <AP > Michelle Triola Marvin left the witness stand today after her testimony brought an angry con· frontation between lawyers and the judge scolded them for -"emotionally wrangling." M ls& 'Marvin, who testified Friday as a hostile witness in Lee Marvin's defense case, was questioned only bneny today by her attorney, who attempted to introduce evidence that Marvin had once been arrested. Miss Marvin told of a day in 1965 when she was wa iting for the actor to pick her up at her manager's apartment. "I was waiting for him and J turned on the television set and there was Lee sitting on the curb." Miu Marvin said. "He was being arrested." At that point, Marvin's lawyer. A. David Kagon, leaped to his feet and shouted, "I ob· ject." ·'What does he object to, put· ling on the other side of the case?" shouted Miss Marvin's attorney, Marvin Mitchelson. The judge then interrupted and threatened to recess the case "until counsel recover their tempers.'' He ordered the testimony about an arrest stricken from the record and said Mitcbelson - ORANG! COAST H DAILY PILOT l lW O•-CO.S.Oelty l'tlol. wlthwh"h"<-a;...., u.. _,.,,,.. '' .,..1.11.iwo •v ,._ o.- CM•t Publt"""9C:.-V s.Mrltt•ldltl_ ... pUOll"""9 -.. IN""4fl f rl<ley '°" c .. ,. ~. H-e..cll, -tlnflon luch1-. l•lft V•li., 1 ... w..~IMC"-s...tllCou1 A 11"4i. .......... Htll9ft ,,...,.,.,_s.l"'IHVS•nd 5'Mcl•n TM tl'ifttlHI -ltlll."9 llllftf " .. SlO WolJI•• 54,_, Cao .. -. C.llto<<ll• ._,. ·~·-­Pr_, __ could raise it during the rebuttal portion of the case. Mitchelson explained that Marvin had been in a traffic ac· cident on the same street where Miss Marvin's manager lived. He said the a rrest was coMect· ed to the accident. FrowaPageAJ MARClJSE. • because of an anonymous death threat. He has been a man of seeming contradiction, a gentle man who inspired student riota; who loved music and held a n honorary degree from the New England Conservatory of Music; who smoked cigars; who drove an old Peugeot , ent ertained al small parties and h ad a cat named Freddie. Today Marcuse is stooped. but still tall1• white·halred, ruddy· faced. n e s peaks In a full baritone, with a slight German accent. He taJked Monday about the Utopi a n world of art in literature and said that art is a direct factor in the political struggJe. The relation between art and politics in the 60s, Marcuse said. was best illustrated at that time by a photograph of banicades on the streets of Paris. In front of the barricades was a man playing a piano. Marcuse said art, in many respects, is "more real than the real. or given, reality." "Art as ideology," be said, .. teara the Ideological veil from tb~ e1tablished · r eaHty_ by recreattnt reality. Art sees re· ality in the light ol ill easential negativity and promise." Marcuae said that "the work or art that is not beautltuJ ia not a work of art." He said the recent rnotiol\ p\c. ture, titled "Rolocauat," was succeasfUI because It dared to be aenthnental and tell tbe tale ol the Holocaust tbrou1h the ltory of (amiliet, and made no at~ tefnpt at "art ... Afterward, after bit apeefb, a atudent atle mpted to a1k Marcute a qUllUon. "ProfftlOr," be NIU, .. , didn't~ OM part of your talk." MareuM lea.Md toward blm; hla eyea went wide. "Oaly OM?" bea1ked. Fell .. ~...,.====-~ Saudi Ambia 'Key' to Oil ¥ietnam- Willing FloodS Damage WASKINGTON <A P> - Queationa about whether Saudi Arabta can continue to produce enough oil to meet the needs of the Unit ed States are expected to b e raised i n a co n · greasional report. Midwest, East To Talk By Tbe A8AC>Clated Preas Flood bom 1n o March thaw and fed by heavy rains spread Into new t~rritory In the Eaat to· d11 y Ind JlUnola offlclala were worried lhat the Rock River m •)' go on 1u1 wor ·t rampase ln history Ice jam• mov\ng downstream r u uattd flooding that forced cvacuataon is 1n ~om e com· muoatlt'V ncMr Buffulo, N Y. At Sun11et Bay. wbcr~ Oood damage was estimated at rnore than $1 m1 lllon, helicopters bombarded U .. Funds Sought for OC Transit A propos al to seek federal funds for a $19.5 million shop· ping list containing 200 new buses and other equipment was endorsed Monday by Orange County Transit District direc· tors . The board asked district ad· ministrators to prepare a gr ant application for federal funds to help pay for 105 large coaches, 95 vans. four service trucks, 13 supervisors· autos and other bus equipment. The grant would cover 80 per· cent of the $19.5 million while state and local funds would pro· vlde the remainder. The district now has about 400 buses, including 65 new coache· just being delivered. Seventy of the 105 new large buses would be used to expand district service while 35 would replace older coaches. Twenty.eight o f th& vans wbuld be used t o incr ease service while 67 would replace older minibuses. according to a re port to directors. Dis trict offi cials ex peel the la rge buses to cost S133,000 each while the vans would cost from $25, 100 lo $28,000 apiece. The gran~ application also would include the purchase of 62 two-way radios at a total cost of $221.402 ; 86 f are boxes for $247 ,915 ; 302 bus benches, $68,554 ; 420 bus information signs. $30,880 ; 1,490 bus stop signs and posts, $97,180. to addition it would include the purchase of $93, 700 worth of furniture and equipment for OCTD administrative offices. Won't Talk 11 troublesome J&m with dynamite in hopes of breakini it looae. More than 20,000 commuters were atr~ted bf Oooding in Con· nectlcut that dlarupted signals on Conrail's Ne w Haven Llne, delaying trains to Ne w York by an hour or more. Streams a lso were r unnlnit brim fuJl in much of Misslssipp. and elsewhere. Erie Jones. director of the state emergency services de· partment in tllinois, sald Mon· day the Army Cor ps o r Engineers believes the Rock River, Ln the northern part of the state, may experience the worst flooding in Its history. Under the worst conditions, engineers said, some residential and busi ness distric t s of Rockford. Ill. -the state ·~ second largest city with 160,000 population -could soon be un· der 10 feet of water. The Rock River nows through the heart of the city. Some businesses, especially those located on or near the 'river. have already moved ex· pensive equipment out of base· ment storerooms. Fl"09IPageAJ POOL ... rigorous requirement that is met by probably only a handful of pools in the country, if that Sources in the 'Bd · ministration and Congreaa s ay the Senate f'oreign Relations Committee re· port will state that the Saudts• production capaci· ty is severely limited. According lo one report. by The·New York Times. the study concludes that If Saudi Arabia produced 14 million to 16 million bar· re ls of oil a day. il would take only six to 10 years for the country's supply to peak. * * * Froae Page A 1 OIL ... cheaper. leaded gasoline wluch could increase pollution., Industry sources, who asked not to be identified by name. said that Algeria -which ac counts for about 3 percent or total OPEC oil production wants lo raise its price April t Algeria gets about $14.80 a bar rel for its oil. higher than the SCHLESINGER HINTS AT NEW MOVES-A3 PACT COMPROMISES DETAILEO-A4 JAPANESE SPLIT OVER OIL THREAT-84 many. - .. The measurements we final· OPEC base price or $13.35 ly were talking about got down because of the quality of to about 1/16 of an inch," Buxton Alger ian crude and its con. said. "It's almost impossible l<l veniencetomajormarkets. be that precise with any The Algerians reportedly want material." to push the price to about $18.50 Buxton emphasized that the a barrel. Sources said Algeria pool never had to be torn up. the also wants to cut production by possibility Of which was report. 10 percent to 15 percent, Sp· ed~arlier. parently because of technical Brady agreed and said none or problems in its oil fields. the tile surface around the pool Iran resumed exports Mon was disturbed for the work. day. shipping its first load of oil since December . Neither Brady nor Buxton could supply an estimate of the But Energy Secretary James R . Schl es inge r s ai d an cost of the repair work, which w asbington today that it 1s Buxton said ''We're swallow· "quite poss ible'' tha t other ing." OPEC members "will cut bark Brady previously had estimat· ed t he cost at up to SS0,000. After repainting. refinishing and refiJling , Brady said, thf pool wUJ be reopened. The grand opening is scheduJed for April Fool's Day. production gradually as Iran comes back on stream." (ran is selling its oil at auc tion, with bidding starting at Sl8 a barrel. The Los Angeles Times said today that several major U.S. oil companies have decided to boycott this week's auction because it would force price boosts. The newspaper quoted an un named spokesman for Standard Oil of California as saying. "We believe these prices are e x BANGKOK, Thailand CAP> Vtetnam a'lnounced today it is willing to negotiate with China once all Peking's troops have left Vietnamese soil and ended a more than two·week frontier war. But a Vietnamese Foreign Ministry s tatement s a.id if Chinese leaders were trym~ a "withdrawal trick" to escalate the war then Vietnam would fight on "in the spirit or general mobilization." The statement said Chinese troops had lo withdraw .. com· pletely and uncondit1onally from Vietnamese territory before any negotiations take place.·· It a lso said China was forced to announce it was withdrawing Monday because it found itself in "difficult circumstances" military losses. support Russia and others were giving Vietnam. and even objections to the war in China. U s aid any negotiations would take place at the vire foreign ministers' level at a time and place to be agreed on later Hanoa radio reported fighting was cont inuing in La ng Son province north of the Vietnamese capital and claimed Hanoi's troops killed or wounded more than 700 Chinese in fighting Mon· day in Hoang Lien Son province in the northwest. Nhan Dan. the Vietna mese Communist Party newspaper , sa id Peking ·s announce m ent that Ch.inese troops began pull· mg out Monday, 16 days aftf!r the invasion started, was ··con· trary to the real situation in the battlefields.·· China "1s stepping up its ag. gression, and its troops are fran. lically destroying Vietnamese villages." said the paper. Bangkok intelligence sources said they had no evidence of a Chinese pullout, but intelligence re ports frequently lag behind battlefield events. Some of these ~sources said China might be following a scorc h e d -earth policy 1n withdra wing and that this could be the stepped.up aggr ession Vietnam referred lo. Other intelligence sources said 1t was likely the fi ghting would not end abruptly but would wind d own to small·scale border skirmishim~ ,..,.... Page A J WNING ... space and lo change the 17·acrt parcel on the wes t s ide o f Superior from unclassified to o pen s pace would give the property .. a ne~at1 ve value." Huntington Man cessive." Heights Home Group Meets The commissioned recom· mended the third parcel 1 the 23 acres on the east of Superior, re· main zoned unclassified. I Held in Slashings Members of the Santa An a Heights Homeowners Associa· tion will host a meeting tonight to discuss the potential use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station by commer cial airlines. Councilmen are expected to act Monday on the pla nning com mission recomme ndations. By MICllAEL PASkEVICR Of Ille Dall't ...... Si.ff A Huntingten Beach man who allegedly went on a hatchet. slashing rampage that left three men injured, one seriously, bas told police nothing about what set oft his Monday morning out· burst. investigators said today. Robert Dale Martin, 35, of 8211 San Angelo Drive. has been booked into Orange County Jail on a uapicion of attempted murder. Bail for Martin, who is em ployed as a mechanic in Irvine, haa been set at $25,000. Martin was interviewed by in· veaUgators Monday afternoon. Movie Seller On Probation LOS ANGELES <AP > -John Bloom, once a British washing machine tycoon was given two years' probation and no jail time Monday for conspiring to sell copyrighted motion pictures, in· eluding "Star Wars" and "Pat· ton." U.S. District Judge William P. Gray said he was inclined to "let the jail door clang shut" on Bloom but decided not to jail h.im because another man con· vicled of a similar offense was placed on probation without jail. In addition to the probation period, Gray imposed a one-year suspended Jail term and ordered Bloom to perform six hours of publlc service per week for one year . SO WEUJ;S IN A NAME? CLEVELAND <AP >-The Plttlbur*1t Conference la meet· Inf ln O.V.lnd .,ain thi1 year. Tbe ldentlftc conference on anal,Ueal ebemlltl'J and •P· piled epeelroaeop7 out1rew Pitt.I._.,,., feeWd• aod bu met a...e lnltead llDce lt left tu bome ckJ ID 119. • They described him as un· cooperative in shedding any light on what drove him to al· legedly chop up the clubhouse, and the men who tried to stop him. The most severely injured of the three men Martin allegedly attacked In the clubhouse of the Huntington Creek Apartments, 35 ·year -old Joel Dupree, was listed in guarded condition today at Westmins ter Community Hospital. • Representatives of Orange County's two jet airlines a re ex· peeled to attend the meeting that gets under way at 7:30 p.m. at the Registry Hotel. Also expected to altend are representatives of the Marine Corps, t he City of Newport Beach and the county Board of Supervisors. Simmes declined to discuss the possibility that CalTrans would sue the city over the zone changes. He s imply noted that CalTrans will "exhaust all its adm1nistrat1ve remedies" in blocking the zone chan~es. ··what we really want i<; to get our money out of this." he said. "This isn't an age when people give things away ·'There should be a way of reaching a compromise. Litiga- tion should be a last resort." The name Rolls·Royce. tno Rolls-Royce 111d1ator gr•lle. and 111u Sp1111 of Ecstasy hood ornamenl ere JU Rolls·ROfCe trademdrks, used wilh the approval ol Roll&·Royca Mo1ors 11 ,. The most famous motor radiator grille in the world, · superbly reproduced as a wrist wacch. Eig.htccn karat gold . .Exclusive from Cocum. 35 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH, CAllfORNIA 92660 ·. T~, MeA:h 8, 117'0 DAILY.PILOT Ener y Chief Warns of Oil Shortage WASHINGTON (AP • 'werto under eon1der1Uon by Ener1y Secrolary Jar:nH R Carter's ttalf, Schlealnger. warnln1 or pro The IOU1"t"eS. 'wbo dec1lMd lo longed worldwtde oil ahortq be adeoti!aed. uJd t.bere wr~ "poCeaUalb more aeri.o"* than teot.auve ptw for Carter co ad· the oll embarao of 1'73~74," Qld dreaa the oaUoe Moaday to urae today tbBt Prt-sldt-nt Carter will 1 oil conservation. Ho•evtr, thl 5oon announce measure to \timetable may have been .set 1chlevf' the 5 percent'" l·aavlng back by C.,ter '1 audden de requlrtd by a recent lnlerna <'••ton to n,. to the Mlddle East Uonal •1rttment hi• weett, teekiq a peace tr.•· Admin1 trutlon w urces aad y between lsrael and Eaypl proposed m~aaur 1 . labeled cbluln••r, addtu1in1 a "'Th Iran.um Re pon& :· 'Wef'e tr!ttt.inc ol UM National Loaaue sent to the While H1Xtu and ff Cities, •mllhaailed a Med for Government Destroys Birds MEMORY TO BE HONOED The Ute Frank Tallm., Aviation Unit To Honor No~Flier The late Frank Tatm a n, Orange County's famed stunt aviator, will be )lonored ty the Grampaw Peltik>ne Squadron at a noon luncheon at the Reliatry Hotel lo ·rrvtne 1burs· day. The squadron u a local af· filiate or the A$ocialion of Naval Aviation. Tillman was a mJ!lmbei'. A me rial plaque wUl be presented i bis honor to County Superv\ r Thomas Riley, for instaU lion at tbe Orange County Ai rt terminal building. Tallman perish April lS when his Piper Az e slammed into the side or Sant go Peale. He was famous r his ability to rl y every kno n kind of aircraft. He restor historical craft and was frequ Uy called upon to do stunt fly g for mo- tion pictures. He ·founded Tallmantz Aviation h the late Paul Mantz. W ASlilNGTON <A -Most of the capital •s pu c school teachers went on slr e today, defying a court order arrlng a walkout. By JACIOE BYMAN °'-o.lty ...... ·~ Between l,300 and 1.400 exotic W'ds have been destroyed dur· ug the past two weeks because of an outbreak of Newcastle dis· ease, a U.S. De partment of A'riculture spokesman said to· day. Dave Goodman said the de· partmenl will pay about $12A>.OOO for the birds and for contaminat- ed feed and supplies that also are being destroyed. The birds are valued at up to $3,000 eacb, Goodman said. The d'estroyed birds were primarily in four flocks, Good· man said. He said .550 birds were destroyed Feb. 27 at an aviary in Woodcrest, near Riverside, and 330 more birds on March 2 at Parrot World in Garden Grove. Birds infected with the dis· ease, which could devastate the caged bird and poultry jo. dus tries if it spreads, were traced e firm called For Birds in Be ens, vvvuiwan said. He said 44 birds 1n that facility -one of several run by the same company -bad to be done away with Saturday, along with 375 from a related facility in Bell Gardens called Barry's Burl Several individual birds in private homes, purchased from tbe infec:ted nocu, have died of tbe diaease, Goodman said. Ail· Ing birds have been located in Paramount, Stanton, Riverside and Mission Viejo. In ad<litioo, he said, a Costa Mesa man's bird. purchased from Parrot World, has been diagnosed as having the diseas~ but is showing no signs of ill-ness. "ll is a perfectly healthy car· rier," Goodman said. He said the bird's owner has chosen lo keep the bird in in- definite quarantine rather than have it destroyed. So far, Goodman said, re· searchers have been u.nable to trace the For the Birds ship- ments to a primary source. He said it is also not yet known if birds from that infected Dock were aold to otbeT pet shops. Since most of tbe N ewcasUe afflicted birds have bffn sold lo individuals, there is no indica- tion that poultry might have been contaminated, Goodman said. volUJ\lat)' ruc1.1avlna. but pre dieted an oll cutback or 1 11ifl and duration whlch. by previous admlnt&tratlon ~tlmatea. mlrcht well f'f'Clulrc 1mpo11lUon of mun· datory eooaervaUon He uld the a1reoment by rntmber n1Uons of lhe lntema- ll<m.al Ell('rn Aaency to cut oil consumption by S percent may requirfl a roductlon as great a.a u m1lllon bar~ls n day 1n U.S. de· mand Th•l figure •ll s ub tanllally tuaber lban the :500.000 to eoo.ooo Blaze a t Sea barl'ela a day that the Depart· ment of Energy h.s estimated l"Ould be saved through relative. ly painless voluntary cooserva- hon. And. MltbOuCh Iran has begun to rnume Otl production, inter- rupted ln December In the rev- olution which overthrew the gov· eroment or Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, Schlesinger held out little-hope that the oil shortage it caused would soon be that Iran's production wiU ever aaatn approach G million barrels a day,'' its pre-revolutionary level. Instead, he estimated tbat Ira- nian oil production may peak at about half that level, leavin1 a cbronk shortage in world pro- duction that would have lo be made up by increases to other countries. relieved. "Unless production rises to Schlesinger2!ld._"We doubt _that le"el~e will be in dlfficul· Smoke and flames rise from an offshore gas well in the Gulf of Mexico 45 miles southwest of Morgan City. La .. following an explosion Monday. Two men were killed and six are missing, while another 27 escaped in a s urvival capsule. The blade of a Coast Guard helicopter is seen at upper right. Actor Sues SantaAna P lastic Surgeo n Em battled Santa Ana plastic surgeon Dr. Ralph Small races a new legal entanglement today in a lawsuit filed by a former pa· lient Actor Patrick Keane contends in the Orange County Superior Court suit be has been unable to work since Small operated on him to remove a scar on bis race. The actor is seeking an un· specified amount of damage in the civil complaint. Small was barred by a Superior Court order last month from practicing medicine in the wake of charges of "gross negligence and massive imcom· _petence." Judge William S. Lee issued tbe temporary restraining order that stopped Small's practice based on the charges by the state Board of Medkal Quality Asaurance. Anti-busing Bill Pushed by County SACRAMENTO <AP> -An Orange County anti~busing group has Stale permission to circulate an initiative to slop mandatory school busing for in- tegration in Los Angeles and limit future busing programs. Secretary or State March Fong Eu said Monday the backers have until July 27 to col· lect 553,790 signatures of reg· istered voters and qualify the proposed constitutional amend· menl for the June 1980 ballot. The measure is sponsored by Doris Enderle of Huntington Sale Friendly? WASIUNGTON (AP> -The Pentagon says a $100 million fighter plane sale to Thailand "will be viewed by friendly states In the region as evidence of continued U.S. support for the independence and territorial in· tegrity of Thailand." The Pen· tagon told Congress Monday that it plans to sell 18 F ·SE and F -SF fighters to lhe Asian na- tion. Beach and Doris Allen of Westminster. It would require state courts to follow the federal Constitution in school desegregation orders. Backers say this would limit busing lo cases of deliberate segregation by school districts. The state Supreme Court bas ordered districta to take)lll "rea· sooable and reasible" steps to end segregation. regardless or cause. The initiative is aimed specifically at ending the busing that started in Los Angeles last fall, and in heading off the possibility that it will spread to outlying suburbs because of declining white enrollment in Los Angeles County. But it is uncertain whether lbe measure would affect Los Angeles because al least one judge bas ruled that segregation in the district was deliberate. Sen. Alan Robbins. D·Van Nuys, tried unsuccessfully last year to qualify a virtually iden· ticaJ measure for the ballot, and bas a similar proposal pending this year. ty next wintel'." Schlesinger aald. In recent day&, be noted, Iran baa restored oU production lo about 1.7 million barrels a day and beCan Joadi.ag Monday th4' first tanker to receive export oil since lbe abut.down began. But Schlesinger said Iran's new government does not ap- pear stroGg, and "it is not clear that central authority can be re· established over the entire coun· try." Infant's Brain Harmed? By KATHY CLANCY Clt .. DeffY,,_SUff The nursing supervisor on du- ly the night Dr. Williaira Waddill allegedly strangled a newborn abortion survivor testified today that the doctor told her the in- fant "was seve r ely brain damaged at birth." Jean Holston. then nursing supervisor at Westminster Com· munity Hospital. testified at the 43-year-old Huntington Harbour physician's murder retrial in Orange County Superior Court. that Waddill suggested that she move on to duties elsewhere after be arrived at the hospital nursery. "He put his hand on my arm and said he was sure J had duties elsewhere:· Mrs. Holston told the rive-man. seven.woman jury. "And he said l had to realm~ that the baby was severely bram damaged and it had not died in the uterus as 1t was supposed lo," Mrs. Holston continued. W add.ill is accused of stran- gling the infant known as baby girl Weaver two years ago after she allegedly survived a saline a bortion on an 18·year·old unwed mother. _ Defense attorney Charles Weedman has contended the in· fant ''for all practical purposes was already dead." Pro&eeutor Robert Chatterton bas asserted the doctor choked the two-pound, 15-ounce infant feariDI the cbild would be severely braln damaged and that be could face • malpractice SUit. Mrs. Holston testified today that nurae Pat Olvera told her the bab)' had cried and was alive. However, sbe said. that, whHe she believed Mrs. Olvera, she detected no movement in the in- f ant except for ooe s ucking mo- tion in the face and the closmg of the infant's ey~. Waddill's first murder trial ended last May when Jurors said they were deadlocked 7-5 in favor of acqu.ittaJ. Testimony in the retrial has entered its second week. The trial is expected to last three to four months. Quadruplets Born PARK RIDGE, Ill. CAP> - Quadruplets -three boys and a girl all weighing under three pounds -were reported in sta- ble condition after being de- livered by Caesarean section. doctors al Lutheran General Hospital said. Their mother, Cherie Tenoeyson, 25, was re. ported doing fin e. ls 'Was~' of Comnwter Program ~ '® BJ &EBECCA BE M Of"'90etty .. 1 ... I Members of the Oran Couo- ty Transportation Co ission aren't sure that givi Com- muter Computer $185, a year to match people with ars is mucb of a bargain. As a matter of tac com- missioners wonder ii the ,000 already spent pairing riders with c8J'POO).a throu"h Los Angeles based firm bas t been something of a waste. One commlaaioner, ounty Supervilor Ralph Diedri bad tbil to say about fbe c g compa.QY; ''Have I lost aith in Com- muter Computer No, J did bave aQY fai in them • But Commu r Com uter President Artb Scbret U.. silta bis compa y ia do tbe best paulble · or the m~y. And Schrei r blame• the poor marka Ii bis firm on bureaucra a• lust for "paperworll.'' Tbe eam-ll'f f enae ecutt•e SoutMnl l'.alllM-Bla of O·OYeram-. Udtweeltto OUlW'UlOMDa&lllel' all aboal. . n. tom .. • llOll·Pldlt eorfOI' .. roeaea tn me. It emp&o,181 ln a ftvt·county area, till llUl a ol tbem ln LolAJllel• Commuter Computer funding in the current fisc1l year is $1.56 million, most of it federal grant money funneled through· local jurisdictions such u the Orange County Transportation Com· mission. Jn addition to operating chief- ly with public dollars, Com- muter Computer u1e1 Los Angeles city computers. If oreover, tbe company urpoollng signs affixed aJoac Southern California freeways are a contribution of the state tranaportation aaency, CalTrana. What the firm attempts to do le match freeway commuten to form carJ)OOla. And the difft~ult it encoun· ten ceaten bow etfec- Uvel)' it doel tlaat job. That wu tbe ilaue raised last month when members of the Oranae County ·Tramportatton Comm.lllioa talked about 1peod- to1 $580,000 over the next three yean to cover Commuter Com· aeton to •pend tbe ~~1.op~eratlona lo Oran1e federal 1un money, com· JDluloDen tMy waDled to now how efJ " tbe Mn'ice .......... oraq. CoUDtJ. I Aceorcltq to a commlASoll· 1taff report, here waa lb• auw•: ''Tbe tint rw110•• to ltaft'• requttt (tor nalaaUon > wn t.bat Commuter Com.put.er had .j • established an Orange County office in 1976 with one marketing person and one clerical person, and that a number of signs had been posted along freeways.'' The report also said tbe firm's marketing representative had contacted "a number of Orange County firms soliciting their employees to complete car pool questionnaires." Tbe ti:ansportation com- miaalon tbougbt those answers were too vague. Commuter Computer was asked for more detafied information. Tbl1 time the staff report aat~: "It became clear ... that Commuter Computer was failing ln ita reapoaalbillty to account lor ill performance in Oran.se County relative to the invest· ment Orange County bu made in tbit organization." The third time around, com- mluionen asked Schreiber bow 'much it costs to put a rider in a carpool. . Schreiber said the data needed to amwer 1ucb a 1peelflc q'4ft· Uoll lan't avaU1ble. Rowner, be continued, Com· muter =t•r't results ln Oranp can be meu~ in other w971, In tenn~ot money saved b)' lller'I ol the Mnice and environment.al conce.rna. One of the servi ces frequently requested m our store la jewelry appraisal. Many wi&tl to h8Ye tn.lr expensive jewelry pieces Insured against Iota. theft or damage. The other major reason tor requesting an appraisal is estate settlement. These ate two "9'Y different procedures. and the value pieced on an Item will VfllY for each. These appratsals are luued for exclualve purpoees and cannot be uNd lnt9'Changeebly. EiEMWllB An llPPf'lllal fot Insurance putpOell It UIUafty performed at the time of .. ,. and the purpoee ts to eetablltn the cost of replteement Of recreation of the article. An appraiHI for estate purposes wllt differ bec•u .. It la an .....-ment of the price an Item will bring from a wllllng buyer and eeller without a forced ..... Since thl9 type of appr.iMI doe• not lnYolve replacement of the article. the 1111 ... ci value ts usually lower than that tor lnsuranc:. f9f)faoement value. A wefJ.detalled appral1al will lncluctt a ~ d9acrlptlon of the )twelfY Item and the ~ttonee UNd: the gu•llty of outtlng. color end clarity Of , dlemondt with eY«lu•tlon • Mery BarT. OerM1ed Gemo1091s1 c'uARLES H. BARR 1yatem1 eJCplalned; special -' ldentlfyjne...cnarectet19tl0t Of ......., the afon.. and mounting: ._..._ ._ 5-itty AcaAlls•._ '1111 .. , ·' comments on the workmanship and type of fabrication; and finally the estimated replacement cdst as. of the appraisal date. We provide the customer with the orlg1nal and one copy ot the appraisal signed by one o f the three Certified Gemoliglsts on our staff. A second copy is kept in our file The customer is given a full eet of photographs of the items Included In the appraisal. There is a tee charged for this appr11Sal teN1oe and it ls based on the amount of time required for the work. Items for appraisal must be left at the store tor the period needed to make the appraisal. Our backlog of •ppralaal work usually runs et>out ten days to two weetcs but of course can vary according to our work toad. Sometimes whctn 1t la very heavy we have to suspend takelns on appreisal work for ahort pertoda. • A new Insurance repl~t apprelul ahould be considered ftv«Y two or three )'Mt'I ti~ the COS1s Of m•terlal and labor change. Also It Is a oooc:f opportunity to hav. your jewetry cleaned end thoroughly checked. So. If you've neglected your Jewelry, you might Wint to bring It In tor a MW eppra!Nl. ·- A4 DAil y PILOT ~· Ju91t ''1 "" •• 't ·. "oa .. ao g ... ~ ..... ~ T o • ~Vf'l'''·' Marplalae T~Secrets HllSll, QtJIET 6 SBIJT\JP DIPT. Wh•n tht doora atart cloeJA1 ror lffrel mMt.lnc• In ~ hall• of our loeal aovemmeni. around here. t0metlro a.be rtaht or the tax· P•Y~l'll to know whit '1 ioln1 on i.u 1erved any-way The word Ink out Secrecy 1et.a punctured. And lben you un soy aood enouaih for It 1'~ vexotlon for the •O<'recy advoeate1 II lbal by aol ly. 11ome peopl JUIH won't ahul up. They juat 10 uhead and tell the pc!Ople what'• 101"-on OUR COASTAL METaOPOU of Irvine la curr ntly a rttsc m point City M1na1u Biil Woollett baa ,Iv n up°" uny noUon of 6etttl lnterviewa to aelecl a new rvlne com· munlty developnwnt dlrertor Woollell as anterv1ewmg th ~ref' final111ts for the JOb Coat of Arma /or CiJy Covncil.t With Secret1 tomorrow and the citizenry is Invited to sit in if they want to At present, or course, the identity of the three flnaUsts remains secret. You might assume this will get divulged when WooUeU opens the interviews. You have to doubt they will wear masks and be referred to as Mr. X, Vs. Y or Brother Z. Jrvine's open approach to the job selection comes not out or an enlightened policy of keeping the taxpayers in- formed. Woollett says he's been forced to go public because he can't get the City Council sworn to secrecy. TIOS BECAME CLEAR when word oozed out or earlier secret sessions when the lrvine council was girding to tie the can to its community services director. Eddie Peabody, son of the famed banjo player of yesteryear. Lat.er, the council voled 3 to 2, supposedly in secret, to give Peabody time to find another job and then quietly re· sign his Irvine post. All of this got divulged in this sterling journal because ~ome people in Irvine clty government just won't take the oath of secreey. THUS YOU MIGHT CONCLUDE that the only times we may be in trouble with secrecy by our school boards or city councils is when they all are of like clandestine mind. They join hands and swear together, "We Shall Not Tell ... We Won't Be Blabbermouths ... " 'Phen, unless you have a backslider among them who kicu over his vow of silence, the taxpayers may be in trouble. Clearly, lhe record suggests that government tones most likely to strike tour not.es are those that were secret- ly fashioned and then secretly hummed. Idi Amin ·Pledges 'Fight to Last Man' NAIROBI. Kenya <AP > - President ldi Amin of Uganda exhorted his army Monday to "Clgbt to the last man" in a new drive against Tanzanian in- vaders, Uganda radio reported. Libyan troops were reported airlilled lo the Ugandan capital of Kampala to aid in Its defense. I n Washington, a Stale Department spokesman said Ub- yan troops "recently" bad been airllfted to Kampala. The spokesman, wbo refused w be named, would not say bow many troops were involved. The spokesman said he bad no evidence to indicate Moroccan troops were assisting Amin, as reported by a Nairobi newspaper. The spokesman said Am In has been receiving mlJitary aid from Libya for several years, but this ls the first tlme troops have been pro- vided "WORLD I r~ATION Middle East Issue Paet Conipronrlses Told J ERUSAL£M <AP) -Pre1ldent Carter's propotal1 to break thn Impute on an larael·E1ypt ~ace treaty lnvolvea two com· proml on th llnka10 luu. and watered·down lan1uaee ln the trut~' priority clause. Janell ofriclala aald today. U Eayp& •1r to the lbree chances. which Israel accepted on Monday, C11rtf'r will still face an unresolved problem on hl11 visit• to Eaypt and Jsra~I tb1s week : the question of when the two coun- trlca c.-xchana" amba.aaadon after algntna the treaty. D£TAJLS OF CARTla'S Ideas, which have not been made publk, were given to 1he Associated Presa by officials who saw lht• r~cornnic.-ndatlonis that were forwarded to the Cabinet by Pr1m1~ Mltti11lcr Meofachem Began. The officials asked not to be ldcntlfitld AR · reportl"d from Washington that one proposal suggest.a the • Africa Battles Guerrillas JOHANNESBURG, South Africa tAP> Soutb African troops, aided by war planes, struck early today at black na- tion al isl guerrilla bases In Marxist-ruled Angola, the chief of the defense force, Gen. Magnus Malan, announced. Prime Minister Pieter W. Botha told Parliament in Cape Town that be had ordered "lilnited and reactive" strikes against black guer rillas who operate from bases in Angola against South African troops in the adjacent territory of South· West Africa, also known as Namibia. There were no immediate re- ports on casualUes or damage. MARXI ST-R ULED Angola borders on South·West Africa on the north and bas been a haven for guerrillas operating both in South ·West Africa and Rhodesia. although Angola does not border on Rhodesia. Early last week Rhodesian war planes new more than 400 miles across Zambia to bomb a guerrilla base in Angola. In fighting inside South.West Africa. South African security forces reported killing one guer· rilla and wounding two others. Maj.· Gen. Jannie Geldenhuys, who commands the security forces. also said today guerrillas had abducted five civilians. United States take over Israeli ahbases in the Sinai Penlrusula and alan a mutual defense treaty wt' Israel. The report, quotln1 ln· formed sources. could not be veriJed. A major conce11ion on laratla part. the offlcialt tokl The Al· soclat.ed Press, waa in agreeint D a non-bindi~e tarset date on the neeotlaUons to set U.P Paleatini11 autonomy in the West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gau Srlp. A almJlar compromise ta (fered for a clause in the treaty whlch now says the pact atandi "lndepe,ndently of any Instrument external to this treaty." This, _,urces said, will be modtried with language saying that phrase &es not contradict the Camp David framework for a general Mdeast peace. Again, this adds a measure of "linkage" without setting deadlines or penalties for non-compliance. ................ Hospitals Warned On Cos t s WASIDNGTON CAP>_. Presi- dent Carter asked Congress lo· day for legislation that would give hospitals until 1980 to con- trol their own rising costs or race a mandatory federal ceiling now estimated at 9.7 percent -- considerably below what the in- dustry says is reasonable. But the adminis tration estimates tbal more than half the nation's 6,000 community h>spitals would be exempt from Ue measure, and tbe Jimit on rte increases could ~ relaxed if itJlation in the health-care in- dutry eiceeds expectations. The nfW bill is the latest move in a twt-year campaign by the W~lte House to bring spiraling heeltb-<:are costs under control, bu\ this year Carter has prom- ised to give it top priority as the centerpiece of bis antl- inflali011 drive. T~ .. : PRES I DENT had planJed to announce the legisla· tion ,Monday, but developments in ~iddle East peace negot1a · lionf prompted postponement unti,loday Ul\like Carter s earlier pro- pos~. the new proposed legisla · tion ,..ould set a "national volun tary limit" for hospitals to meet on tle1r own and would invoke mantatory controls only if the induuy fails to achieve lht• pre set gtal. Meanwhile, the United Na- tions peace-keeping plan for the independence of South West Africa. which has been ad- ministered by South Africa since 1920, hit another snag today. Policeman Weeps T HE NEW m easure al so would be nex.ble enough to al- low for unforeseen inOation in the "bospitaf market basket," the cost of (OOds and services purchased tv hospitals com· parable to thi cost or li ving for consumers. South Africa says the U.N. plan originally called for its forces to keep the peace and monitor guerrilla activity in Angola. South Africa says the United Nations now has dropped its plans for monitoring guer- rilla activity 'in Angola and also plans to allow guerriJlas to set up bases inside South West Africa before a cease.fire lakes pl,ce. SOUTH AFRICA reportedly informed U. N. Secretary· General Kurt Waldheim late Monday night that it s till ac· cepts the U.N. peace plan, as It was, written last December, but rejects any new interpretaUons regarding its implementation. South Africa has administered the arid but mineral ricb ter- ritory or South·West Africa un- der a mandate from the old League or Nations. But the Unlt- e d Nations resci nded the mandate in 1966. A Cincinnati policeman weeps after learning that two fellow officers we re slain this morning when they stopped a man wanted for questioning in a 1978 street 'robbery. The suspect, Gregory Daniels. 28, died when his car crashed into a utility pole as he attempted to fl ee the scene of the shootings. The slain cops were iden- tified as LL Col. Howard Rogers and officer Robert Sief- f ert. In a mess1ge accompanying the legislat1<». Carter 5aid the measure w01ld be a test of Congress' seiousness in dealing with inflatiot. THISCOUPOI GOOD FOR IO% to 143* INllREST OI YOUR SAVINGS. Northwest Gets Rain N£WPORT EQUITY FUM>S PM..0 I INAN<"IAl l"T NTl R t..?flMWl'ORT CINTl HOOM · '>l•TI 'II M 'M'OKf BV.Oi CAIJIOKMll •t.'OOll If you're not ecrning at least 10% interest on you· money. you should send for ourfree broch ure. It sho\.VS you hw individual investors, credit unons, and pension fund s hav£ always made money by making nvestments through Newport [quity Funds. Albu'QU. Allaflt• fl•ltlfl'IOft llolM 8otton 811ff•IO C:lllc-Ch1c;IM•ll Clt ... t.ll!CI Otl Ft.Win Dtn"tr o .. Mo111t' Dtttoll Dvlvtll Htllflt Htf!Ollllll ttwtton lt1tt1'• City ltJV~ LIOle •odl L-. ...... Ml-I 11111 .... -.. ~···"· .. ..,,.,11 .. HtwOr• HtwYon. 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In tll• mlO-SOl. lorecMMn Utd Motlllltlnt wltt be ••""•' wltll "'''" In tllt to., 11411111\111 wll!Cls •'"'<I· 1119 '""'°' » k> JS m9fl •t 11,.,., will cOfltlnue to boCller ,,_..,.,, tAw• tonlt+.t wlll lllP ~to >S. Tiie dtwrb, tlto ,_lnlno •-Y. Wiii rtntt 1111 IO U. IOll followlnt ovtm'-'l 10Wt Ill me 40t t<ICI '°'· C• .. f al tt'e•llter 54/lll'lr *""' w~ lnltnd w....,... OtY. CeolW llfff lilt eettt. Llfltl ¥trl._.t w!Mt 11ltM 111111 l'llOntl"f llOW• ... ,..,. WMrMl4ty " .... •I lllHctlff, ,. lo'N lnl.IN. Cotst•I ~ttllftt wlfl ftft99 llttwee11 • tllO 70. lnlt1!4 ltm- -•._ w!ll rMOit ~ SI •fNf I). Tiit Wttff '-tttllrt Wiii l!f Sj, M11ntl~t11, HtwlMfl MMM• ""'""' .... wttll -~· "''¥ -.. "" .... ITllM"' ... Mflllt-....... I .... lftl..-..1ltt1-.....,. _ ibwt II""',.....,.,_ C11190rtunH ..... vi...., tK'nd '"",..,.., ,,.... lnformatMI buKhuHt. One of the re4Sons is because we specialize in irvestments secured VJith safe aid sound short- term trust deeds ol prime resi· dential property. Our free brcxhure will give you all the facts aid figures - including the fact that you never have to pay brokera~ commissions of any kind on your investments. So for our free brochure (available to California :esidents only), just VJrite or call Newport Equity Funds, Inc., 620 Nwport Center Drive, Newport Beach, California 92660, (714) 759-~CXH . t Newport Equity 'Funds· Inc .............. , ....... 111aperty. Offtc:a tn Newport 8-dl. Fountain "'-I~ . .....,,__ Hllft. Palm Splt"1J' and San Dtgo. Q M'lf t<l!WOHf l(Jl4rYll~ C)oiW\MllmA1Mdll""'"'""'""'ll' IHI ""'IOW«..lkl H:J/'11 L l'ltl> I . ' I .. • ------------------~~------~~-------------.;..._ __________________ _.:. ______ ~---------~:·•=:!11¥~,:Mw:c:h~t.~19~~:._ __ ___ DAILYPILOT AS -- Hou~ton-Hohhy Airport. Daily. 50% off. Den Ver. 2 flights daily. Milwaukee. 2 flights daily. Des Moines.· 2 flights daily. ------ .. " i ,J 't I Houston Denver Milwaukee Des Moines 50% off through June 30 when you fly Leave Arrive Leave Arrive round-trip on the flights listed Orange County Den'Vel' Orange County Milwaukee below. To the close-in oonvenience of 7:40a.m. 1 l :57 a.m. one·stop 10:00a.m. 4:33 p.m. one-stop Hobby Airport, just minutes 4:25p.m. 8:40 p.m. one·stop 3:00p.m. 9:37 p.m. one-stop from downtown. Closer to your hotel. Leave Denver Arrive Orange County Leave Arrive Closer to your business. Closer to your fun. 7!J3a.m. 9:29 a.m. one-stop Milwaukee Orange County 2:15p.m. 4:39 p.m. one·stop 8:00a.m. 11 :32 a.m. one-atop lAa'fe . Anne Houston (until 3/31) 5:10p.m. 8:31 p.m. one-stop Orange County (Hobb, Aiiport) 3:23p.m. 5:49 p.m. one·stop 8:40a.m. 2:32 p.m. one"fltop (beginning 4/1) . t.....Howlton Anne ft (Hobb, Airport) Orange CoW\ty • 7:30a.m. 10:52 a.m. two·stop 300p.m. sm p.m. one-stop FlJ Buainem Coech0 for onlJ SlOmore than the undi8oounted ot'8 .. , coach fare! • Separate, quiet aection up-front. Just call a ']}ave} AgentyourCorporate 'IT4vei Arra.ngez; or Hughes Airwest at (714) 540-0060. • Room to work. Two-abreast tint-class seating. • Complimentary cocktails and stationery. Compare our Business Coach with anyone's first-class price and .me.. We think °'ill $10 fee will make you say Y• to Bu.me. Coach. Bminell Co.ch oHc.d on all DC·9 fliohts. SlO surcharge good only wttbin the U. $. acept 1ntr1.Californi&. •°*"1.at Huot. AUw.-1918. l Schedules effective March 16. j Leave Arrive Orange County Des Moines 12:45p.m. 6:44 p.m. one-Stop i ' 5:40p.m. 11 :34 p.m. one-stop Leave Arrive Dee Moines Orange County 9:50a.m. 12: 14 p.m. one-stop 7:15p.m. 9:39 p.m. one-stop .~ I . .. ' orang 0>a..o..•1y1"~ Editorial ~age .......................................................... TUMd1y M1rcl'I e. 1e11 Robert N WMd Pubhiher . S~me in Co~nty Earn Their Pay Jn addition to themselv~. Or nae County supervlson n!CenUy pa~sed over 3S lop county administr ators. In cludlng six «.>lttll'd offi<.'1al&. •hen p ln1 out pay ratse Supervisors ha\• now appomte-d a two.mun romnut lee to fifitUTe out whul to do about s Ian 1Dcrt'use ror those 1dmm1~trator-. .,nd ~ ecull\e -Atm h v~ ~on without r iM• me~ m id 1971 That comnuttet.-1s l.tlonfl on a t cky JOb On re on for lhut 1s tht• 1>ubh t· Jitt'nerall) 1~ It-\.'\ th n sympath tac with lht• ph~ht or h1~h pu1d ~o' ernmt>nt ofric1ul& who sport rnn~e bt•nt>'1t pnckawt' "'h1ch frt.-quently outsl.r1p those round m pr1n1lt> ind~try Wlule Lht>rt' rni~ht be somethan~ to l'I > for thttt '1e"' pornt, lht.•r<' 1:, uho sornt'thm~ to tw ~aid for uttr8cltng and holdin.i .:ood pt.•opl,, to opt·rute the romphrited muchmt>ry of go' ernnwnt ruhtll'., I M'a ndab or ft'c.'t'nt ~ l'dr!) not\\ 1th~larJdtn.: county .:ovt.•nHl\t.•nt in Oran.:" Count y tti . IJy all o vallablt.• ml'asun.·~. wt•ll run That mif(ht not bl' lht• l'~\ t.' 1f tho~.-,It the <·ontrols men hkt• Cou11ty Adm1n1strut1ve O ffwt•r Robert T homus. Ois tnt'l Attornt•y Cec.'11 lbt•ks nnd Auditor Controller Vic Heim. as examµlt•i-. Jre left out in tht.• <·olct on pu) l"'c.llSt'l'I lt 1s propt-r that s upE'n •~ors i>hould do ,i i-. lh€') are do ing and co11~1der ra •~es for count ~ ttovernment 's top ba nd s Out an)' :-.a lary 1m·rc~!>E'i> gl\ l'n s hould be based on job performan('e and not on a pre determined cost-o f Ii mg mcrec.1~e. a de\ ice on gmally intended to he lp non executive private and public workers kee p pace with ris· ing living costs And the publlr bhould keep 10 mind that in Oranae County there are some dedicated government executives whose good work should be r~warded. Worth· Heeding His detractors call him Professo r Little. as in Chicken Llttle . UC Irvine c hemistry professor F . Sherwood Rowland has com e literally close to warning that the s ky is falling, but he has produced the evidence needed to get politl· cians and bureaucrats to do something to s hore it up. Rowland a nd his colleague Ma rio Molina earlier in this decad e warned about the use of fluorocarbons in aerosol sprays and refriger a nLs . Chlorine atoms escapin~ from t he compounds, he dis· c ove.red. were doing inj ury to the stratosphe r e . specifically, they were breaking down the ozone layer that protects man and his environment from the harmful ultra viole t rays of the s un. Without an adequate ozone s hield. the re would be potential epidem ics of skin cance r. climatological revolu· tion a nd biological ch aos to plant a nd animal life. . Many dispu~~.<J the early findings. but worldwide re· search s ince has supported them to an indisputable degree. Fluorocarbons have been banned in this country. Rowland has turped his inquiries to othe r compound.a and te&tlfied last week in Washington that a commerclai cleaning solvent. m ethylchlorofnrm, also preaef\ts hazards to the ozone layer. We should give the compound the serious scrutiny h e urged . ._ The sky may not be falling, but with our own technology we may be pulling it down o n our hea~. LawMisfir~ A new state law that places strict legal limits on the release of pe ace officers' personnel records threatens to backfire on the officers it was designed to protect. Last week the Los Angeles c ity attorney's office d eclared the law m eans tha t results of police de partment investigations into s hootings involving officers cannot be made public. As interprete d, it also would seal the records of any department investigations into charges of police brutality or other misconduct. past or present. · Los Ange les Mayor Tom Bradley, a former police of. fi cer. called the ruling "an intolerable developm ent for us .'' Clearly, it would put a cloud over a ny officer in· volved in a shooting incident, whether or not an investiga- tion found him at fa ult. The secrecy law is due to be challenged in a court test and Bradley has urged that steps be taken in Sacramento to clarify and ir necessary modify its restric· lions . The original inte nt of the legislation was to limit pu}?lication of confidential personnel records Apparently its strict inte rpretation can go far beyond this. In the in· ter~st of J?Ublic confidence, as well as the reputations of pohce officers who come under investigation, the law should be modified. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other 111ews expressed on th is page are those of their authors and .artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O Bd'x 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd/ Spare a Trime? By L. M. BOYD Jn contrast to the utterly familiar names for U.S. coins -penny. nickel, dime -was the U.S. coin called the trtme. Never heard of It? A three-cent piece minted between 1851 and 1873. It seems odd that such a com· moo thing as a coin in Dear Gloomy Gus Wltb comnnanllu utlDC our abandoned arm1 baaH, air fields aid porta an>und tbe world to wa1e their wUI It look• like Um• to ara. ounelWI. SCAltSD widespread circulation could drop out of our national his· tory within a generation or two not even to be remem· bered by the eldest of us. Collectors and scholars, these are. all. Nobody else bas ever beard of a trime. No one who knew Teddy Roosevelt Intimately ever dared address him u "Ted· dy." Footnote: He was the first President to ride in a submarine and airplane, and the first, too, to publish a book. It'• said an elephant's trunk can bold lix quart.a ol water. Or peanut butter, cranberry juice, Pepto Bl1mol, wbatev1r. A lot, .. ,... r That clt1 wtth the most un· lilted t.el .. t ine numben per capita II MulaYllle. Q. ''Wbat rdo.&:.tnonalit.J laallal..... .,, .. A. lllllDblhalBanq. Wltlll •• ••tlmated fhe mUUoa UateDen. Rowland E''an /Robert Novak The Crucial Saudi Connection \\' AS ll I NO TON -Sovirt betltancy l() bull Into the hot war bri~ttn Ch na and Vietnam both Upl&ina and JU llflta Prt'.ti· d nl Cart..r'a tffurta to tt1hten th.-U S Saudi connection and ~mOfUlrate how t•r1UcaJly danaemut U l thal tho. e effort:s are miaftring Barrtna a ma1or esulation In Chto1'1 .. bloody nos~" war a1atut Viet nam. f'artn'a men bellt>ve t h e So v 1 <.'ts will not al tacll C'h lna w h )' ' 8l'CllUH• tO iiet boicg<·c1 down 1n China could J l' 0 p J r d I I l• Moa('ow'11 rn.klei.s lntttlc to l'nd Washington an(luence in lhe Persian Gulf. the hrehne ror oil to the West and Japan .. The gulf. is where the Soviets get tbeir hand on th e Wes tern throat." one cabinet m ember told us That analys is supports the w 1sdom o f the pre s ident ·a strenuo•"; efforts to reass ure Saudi Arabia. the oil kingpm in Paul Harvey the> JUlt IUa message: collaPM and wltbdrawa.t of US. power In Iran la no harbinacr for Saucll Ariab1a Unfortunately , ho wever. ident1fyinl( th e probltm has not prod uced a i:ood solution Carter's commendable efforts have failed to tl1bteo the s~udt connecuon. The Bdversc ~udj reacUon to this railutt will encourage anti-Arab, pro-Israel senators <including Sen. Frank Church. Senate Yorelgn Rela· tons Committee chairman) to 1u11t1t llanb moves by the U.S. aaalnat the Saudis Al the aame Ume. Moscow will be en· ~uraged to redouble 1ls Persian Gull penf>tration efforts . TRE IM!tlEDIATE adverH Saudl reacUon was the abrupt o nctllatJon -for reasons hav· ina no vtalble connection witll health -of the scheduled state visit to Washinlton by Prince Fahd. t.ht-S.udi atrongman and heir apparent. P'ahd canco!i.d purely for political reasons, the heart of which WH growing worry in Riyadh that Carter does not understand the subtle signals from the Saudis. The mos t important ~u ch alpa.I '°" _,_ 80r9 than a yeu. •h•• 8 1udl policy awlkbed troe a bo9t.Ue ~ toward the ra41ca1 sewer-•• or Iraq, anoUwt 1&.a&.e d.ll Im· me&H otl ,...,...._ Tbe Saudi• lben --ar,tn1 to ct.tacb lr14 frotn tfie extremllt a...U·lsrael bloc led bf LU>r•. THE SAUDI game. played ob- liquely In the tradition of desert Arabs. waa ready to reaume diplomatic relations with tbe U .S and s upport a "com prehens1ve" Mideast settlement with Israel based on the pre-1967 borders. But what •H perceived In the .-\rib world afler the Camp David summit at U .S approval or a "separate" p .. ce betWi.'<'n 'Enpt and JsrNl. undercut the Saudi mov• ta Iraq. This SUK· s eated '° ..... Saudis lhal their Amerifu friends did not really WICMrstand the game in the Mid· die East CARTER NEXT betrayed lack of knoWl('<fge or Saud.J :lt· titudes by nominating Egypt ror the pro-West security role in the Persian Gulf -the role filled by the toppled shah of Iran . This lg· aored • pm.iMint fact ol bJl&ory warJ waced ln Yemea U ,.a" a10 by Ecypt •• Pnatdut Na11er t.trrifted .. udl Arabua wiU. U. ,,.ena or :.Ix F.gyp Ue• dlvlalona oo thl' Arabian pealalula OD bu otherwlar ~u,·ct.>si.ful vt.at to th Mid H t two Wffh aao. S ec reta ry o f Oden~ .. Harold Brown talked ol E"yp- tlan·supplled military sccunty. unaw8N or sens1t1ve lnkr·Arub polltlcs. Th Saud1t-hst«-ned un easily, without vigorous ohJN' Uon but lhrnkm~ Ion~ thoughh. That wa:s ('()mpoundcd by .1 ~y mbo ll c c.rror unw1lt1nl(ty made by Brown In defton<l111.: the U S record or i-.tandm.: ur for fnend.s and alh''~" Brown re· ferred spe<-1r1cally tc Pr(':o,tdent Hurry Truman and.th'· Truman Doctrine Truman 1~ rt•mt·m bercd an th< Arnh world for only one 3('t rt'<'Ognat1on or IHll('I a~ a sovere1jitn :,tah~ To non An1b1 Brow n ·~ ( .1 u "< p ,, ... ., ,. 1• m lud1 rrou11 1y irrt·lt.•11.1nt 1 Riyadh, 1l wa:. a pum·h in t ht· nm.Q. BROWN'~ uninl<'nllonal ::-1 followed unhapp)' pred1ct1on~ olh<'r cabtnel mt•mbt-r' 1t ear her v1s1L-. to H1) adh Co me rce Se<'retan Jua n1t.1 Kr angered the Saudis b> pred1 ing that their otl helds ~ould pumped at rates the U S wa ed Treas ur)' Stcrt-l<H) Michael B lu mln lh &I ;,!:- generated Saudi wr&tt: by p dieting the Saudis would protec the U.S. on 011 pnces Against Uus record. Mosco"' .~ offe ring Saudi Ara bi& tuli d1plomat1c rec:ogruuon pl~ ... ' l>ec r f:t gi.;&rdOll'l' to · ne utralize .. Sov1e~·tnfluf:nced Marxist South Yemen Pnnce Fahd wtll have none of that -at least. not for the rorese-eabll' future. But the Saudis, as well tht U S Central lntelhgencf' AJaen <'Y. know that MOSC0'4 Wiii n~ Mideast oil b} the earl) I~ They also know the battle to 1r. nuence the Arab 011 ~tale'-1~ on m dead earnest The overwhelm1n~ Saudi pre ferenee 1s to contmuf the h1~ loric alli ance with tht L ~ which Mos('ow 1s bent on break in~ Thus. the sudden ranee!!;, lion of Pnnce Fahd'" Vll>ll •~ .1 portent or trouble ste mm1nj! not from Carter's good mtcnllom but from the poor way they are being carried out Earth Can Be Frustrating for Spacemen Most familiar of America's ex. astronauts because he is most conspicuous in his C'ompany's television commercials Is Frank Borm an. Certainly he a ppears lo be do· Ing well. But what of the other~., R ecentl y the Wall S l r e c t Journal did a roll call of our n ation 's 41 now earth· b o u n d spacemen and found many of them frustrated. Tbelr flattop haircuts are no more. Most, indeed. have con· 1picuously lea,s hair than from when you remember them Most remain in good physical condi· lion. AND SOME of these charac· teristlcaJly adventuresome In· Charles McCabe dlv1duals still seek thrills 1n their hobbies race car driv· ing. scuba diving. Jim Lovell, vckra n of the first moon llight. now 49 and pres1· de nt of Fisk Telephone Systems . says, "Emotionally any JOb on earth is a bit of a comedown so you havC' to set new goals alld make a comeback ·· J ohn Glenn and H a rrison Schmitt arc now U S. Senators. For many a!>lronauts the ad· Justment following retirement was not easy. There were a lot or unwise in· vestments. GENERALLY, however, they are doing all right now -most In es(ablished concerns, building nuclear power plants. making garbage trucks. selling jetliners. planning amusement park rides. operating beer distributorships or hosting local TV shows. Decause or some inner-ear problems suffered by John Glenn shortly after his first space night the re was conJeC· ture in medical circles that man might be permanently damagrrl by weightlessness or by e x· posure to upper-altitude radw· tion BUZZ ALDRIN wrote a book called .. Return to Earth" re· counting his emotion a I prob- lems a nd seve re de pression after leaving the s p ace pro- gram. He remams somewhat un· settled. But there is no indication that the spacemen . because they were In s pace. s uffered a ny per man e nt ph y s 1c 1:1I o r psychologieaJ damage. The most popular home for former astronauts as Texas. second choice California. The "Undbergh of space." our first man to make rootprint.s on the moon. Neil Armstrong. pre· rers a low public profile and yet as a professor at the University of ClnciMati and a director of two aviation corporution:-('On t1nue:-; to make ~ubstant:H· coo tribut1ons MOST VISl01'ARY <:I nur fo rmer a ... tr c r..!ct--, .. E d Mitchell His 1:-ar. 1n•clln·t which delights 1n probtnJ! rron tiers beyond the bt )'Ond Wh1lt-he make~ ~ h ing m Palm Spnngs, Flu . prc;..,1d1n~ pe r sonnel .erv•('<:'" 1cr lar"w comparues . his personal ca~cm.i t1on continue~ l <' t'xtend tt• tht> unexplored re i:!lm~ cl tnnl·r s pace". th<.' ><.·t ur.dl•Vf'iOpC'd potential of the humar. bra1r Ther e art> no bcm ~ in tht• bunch. that !--good Re cause the:,-"NP ~l·i ected pa rtly on their abll !•~ '" gl:'l a long w1lh other ptcp:<.'. they hHv e developed ar. ad11an1ag~· which many earth peopit• of re· cent generations hlJ \le been in cllned to ne~tect )( they are not "supermen ... m ost still are. 1r. s1)!n1f1cant ways. "superior It's Good to Know Antericans Still Read Books Finl the bad news: A recent study said nearly half the adults in this country don't read books at all. The good news, accordJng to the Book Industry Study Group. One American in four reads at least 20 books a year. We gaffers who write for a liv· tng a~e glad to know that there are eyes out there for us. We news · papers know only too well the fleeting nature of our mortality. "That was a areal col· umn you wrote tbia momlnt about .. " Then the bruised look, the apolo1et.1c note in voice, and the final admt11ion from your deare.t .ctmlrer that be or abe• hadn't the 1U1ht.st damned no- Uon of wh,.t you bad been ex· cocltatifti upon that mornln1. THE wan'.Ell8 of hardcover book• bave it better; but not 1'1\ tbat better. Librarians at Harvard rttently repor\ed, ac· eordJAC Co the AP, "Wltb abud· dering regularity students pull books from Harvard ·s vast library s tacks and find nothing between the covers but dust." This is because the paper that books are printed upon nowadays is so rotten. We are now in what some librarians call "the era or bad paper.'' Since about 1850, It appears. the quali· ty of paper has bee n going downhill. Too. we have to face the fact that most of the s turr committed to print and read by large num- bers or people is 18 ·karat garbage. The public fancy now seems wedded to those peculiar historical er'btica written by elderly maidens in Devon. V. bard to take. STD..L AND all. it's Dice to know that somebody out there still reads and that books are not as yet extinct. I wouldn't cue to lmagine a world without them. lf the only book available on a desert 1$larul was the latest Harold Robbins I would read It. and read It, and read It. I mi1ht even write one myaetl so that I could read lt. ( WU llad to learn, HCOrdJl\f • lo the above mentioned survey, that pleasure was the most fre· quent motive for reading books That makes me reel not at au singular. I read a book these days until it ceases to please me. Then I throw It against a wall. and take up another. WHEN I was young I read books to get smarts. I had heard some ruffian in a schoolroom saying that knowledge is power. and I believed hJm. I read St. Augustine and Sigmund Freud, AristoUe and Joeiah Royce. San· tayana and the Stunmo Tl&Hlogfco. All this was to help roe on my way up the creasy pole. No mat· ter that f eecbewed the rreasy pole and IMcame a typewriter jockey. The Idea was still the"'. I •aa a better man than the l\lY on the next barstool beuUle t had waded throu1h Th• Dark Ntghl o/ llw Soul. Somewher. Uonl the line I found that this courae waa' a dead end. Unless you we~ a •~bolar. which I w11 not. lbere waa Juat 80 much of thla wetthty stuff that the mtnd could atomacb, lf you don't mind my mixing Uungs a bit There remained reading ror pleasure. which divides itself into· two classes. The re 1s the pleasure to bt' galr.ed from re reading the book~ th al have given you pleasure earlier Montaigne. John5on. Horare Walpole. 0 W Holmes JUn1or and his &eruor. th~ sonnets of Sha kespeare. Thi s kind of pleasure is enduring and will last as long as your eyes will THEN 111ERE 1~ the les~er. but no less real pieasure. or a new book that is a deligh' The kind of book that you de liberate• ly read 5lowl)'. the better anJ : he longer to rehsh '' A recent such book •~ Laune Colwin's Hom AU IM Time Ttui. book is just what U says at is . .- novel about rour people two highly arresting young women and two rather bormg young men who lhe Ille up lo the h1lt and enjoy e\'ery blessed moment of it I put It down with genu1.11c re1ret. aod picked up rrom my blanket th dogeared Boswell I have had through three mar rlagei. and s undry oth er vkiaaltud . A~WI ......... RIDEOUTS WITHDRAW AFTER WHIRLWIND OF INTERVIEWS John •nd Greta Rideout With Daughter Jenny, 3 Problems IJnger All ls Not 'Peachy' for Rideouls SALEM, Ore. tAP > -Tacked on the wall or John and Greta Rideout's sparsely furnished apartment is a hand-lettered sign: "Love can en- dure all things." But the Rideouts, who captured na· tional attention when wife accused husband of rape then stunned every- one by kissing and making up, are still having problems. GRETA RIDEOUT SAYS the cou pie have yet to visit a marriage counselor. "We should," she said. "Things aren't peachy keen a round here." The couple ha ve other loose ends untied. After the trial. Mrs. Rideout said she wanted to do volunteer work at the Women's Crisis Center. ,the hotline for battered women which counseled her after the alleged rape. She has yet to report. Wheo they reconciled, the Rideouts spoke or a new religious interest. Mrs. Rideout said they haven't joined any church, although they read the Bible together at home. IT WAS ALMOST rive months ago that Mrs. Rideout called police and accused her husband of beating and raping her. The youn g couple testified against each other at what was believed to be the nation's first trial of a husband charged with rap- ing his wife. Rideout was acquitted. The n. within two weeks of the trial's end on Dec. 27, the Rideouts announced they had rediscovered tbelr love. Mrs. Rideout. 23, said when she first got back with her husband, "It was a good feeling to know there wasn't any hatred, considering what happened. "BUT IT'S HARD when the subject comes up about the trial," she added. "We've talked about it quite a bit, but we end up disagreeing and argu- mg .... "There are a whole lot of things l would have done dHferently if I had it to do over again, but pressing charges isn't one of them. I don't regret that. That's a definite." Mrs. Rideout spoke nervously to a .reporter, with h er 21-year-old husband asleep in a bedroom alter an all-night shift. She said he doesn't want them to talk with reporters anymore. SHE RECALLED THE whirl of television appearances a nd magazine interviews that followed the recon- ciliation. The Rideouts were seen gazing lovingly at each other in restaurants and were photographed .. cuddling at home with their 3-year- old daughter, Jenny. Then they withdrew. moving to a secluded apartment on the outskirts of town. They got an unlis ted telephone number. "We were emotionally exhausted," she said. "We wanted to get away from it all, to find a place that is out of the way." MRS. RIDEOUT SAID they made about $800 from t e levision ap- ' pearances and a magazine article. But now. she said, she is out of work a nd t hey are ha ving trouble stretching Rideout 's part-time salary. "It would be nice to be settled a nd financially secure like everyone else," she said, s moking a cigarette and looking around the $300-a-month apartment she says they no longer can afford. "When we signed the six- month lease we thought John would be working full-time.'' Death Notice• Death Noffces Death Notic~• COllREIA SUU..IVAN SCAGLIONE HE AMAN CORREIA. n•llve ol JACQUELYN I< SULLIVAN rHo Cil ... COMIMA SCAGLIONE. rHid•nt MnH<hu•etts, r.sld•nt of Costa dent of Coi la M.sa. Ce Paned of MiniOn V19jo, C.. Pas.WO •w•v on Mt'MI, CA. Pas~ .. wav on M•rch 3, awey on M<trch s, 197', bom Nov· March 4, 1'79, mot"« of Mr"' Mlldrfd ••1' at 111s -at 11\e •<If' of IJ vu". emoer 1S, 1916 In All!tln, Minnesota. Jullan, Mn. Barbera L.tr•ll•, Mrs. 8elov•d hCbband of M<lr-, Coat.11 of Survived by her mother anct fallwr Mr. Ro'e Lamencu$ol, Mrs. Beth Fabry Costa Mt,ja, C. lovlng broll>t'r ol and Mr$. John A SUlllvat1 of Mank•to. •"d Thero• 8audlle. sons Gu•, All:l@rt Co<rela of Oakl•n<I. C.. and Minnesota, bf'O!Nr Gary A Sulllv•n of Jowpl\, ""9flo •""OW.rift Scaoll-. C.wrl,.. Mlrtlns of WestmtMter, Ca AOChuter, Mlnnuola, end Stalers Jr , sun1l....i by 27 grendehllclr.n. 4 Mr. Correoe Wa\ a pnumaclSI for l(eren Trent Of Wor1nonQtOn, Min· or•at-oranclchlldren, and I oreal· Thrifty 0ruo Storn for SS YHrs. He 1'HOlll, Patricia A. Sulllvan, Nt WllOf't Qreat11ranckhllcl. Frlenm art lnvlltd wn also • member of lht Masonic Beach, C.. llftd Tamara J . Sulllven of to attend fU!leral H"'lce on Wedr>e•· lodo•. Footnlll Lodge :r S4.t. Eiits NewP0<1 Bffc<h, ea. AOMrv "'"' oe re-day, Marcll 7, 1'7• at St. NlchOlas leOIOf\ Post •S37 ~W>nlc fllfttlral cited Of\ ~ay, M.trcll 7, tHt at Call\ollc Cllurtll, L~una Hiiis, Ca. services will I» held on Wednesday. 7 00 PM .ti Pacific Voew Mortu•rv where M.usof Qlflstlan Burial wlll oe Maren 7, 197'at J·OO PM •I Tiie Cll•pel c 11eoe1. MaSs of Owisll•n euri•I ••II celebrated •" tO·OO AM. Aosarv of Tne ~ In 0.klanct. Ca. E,... be et Our L•dv ol Mount Carmel services on Wtdnesoay, Merell•. 197• tombmtnt to follow at Tiie Chapel of Catnollc Cllvrcn, '"" w Balboa Blvd., at 7:30 PM et St. Nicnotas C.thollc The Chimes Mausoleum. Smltll & Newoort ~ll.C..ell·OOPM Tllurs-Church. Interment All Souls Tu1nill Mot'luMy dlrtc:to".'427 l'. 17111 dav. Maren • ttlt. lnlerm~nt •I Cemetery, LonQ Beach, C. O'Connor SI., Costa~. Ca......... Pac Ille Vb~,., Parll, NewPOrt L99una Hiiis Mof1U¥Y dlrKIOn. -----------8ff<h, ca. VlslUltlon from S:OO PM lo t 00 PMon~,Man:ll 7, lt79. ,----------P&elllc v-Mortuarv dlrectorf. Death Elsewhere · ' ~ IALTJ.lllGllOH FUHllA1. HOMl 646-2424 Costa Mesa 673-9450 l&LUOAOWAY MOttTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 SMTH a TU1MLL MOITUAH WISTCL.lff CHAPIL CtemltOtY • Flower Shop <427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 64~ ...ct llOTM•S SMITM'S MCMITUAIY 627 Main St Hunhngtoo Beech 536-6539 ,_....,., COLOMAL ..... L NOMI 7801 Bolll Ave. Westmtnstef 893-3525 PAC911C YllW t • 1C111Al ,._ ~Moftuery . 01..,.i 3eoe> fl9cefto Y'9w Dnve NnDott a.acn 844-2700 W.CCl• ICI MOlnlAW ~~ ~ .. ~ ~ C., ltrll'IO .. 1779 I ff'INCNAM HERBERT WILLIAM ff'INCHAM, resldeflt of o..,., Ca. PasMd •••Y on M•rcn s, 1•7' In Ille city of Anel>t'lm, C. Ht was • lrvdl Ori.,.., for Ille CMUI WM Sc'-! Olslrkl tor 4 ye.rs. • member of tlle Senfor Clllitns Club of ANhelm and of St. Mlc:NMll's EplKooel Of AnaMlm. He 11 survlwd by 1111 -J-w. ff'l11et1am ot MOSCOW <AP) -oranee. o... s orencldltldren _, t Yeygeny Karpov, 61, the :~;1;:=·:i ~·~ ~~11_: father of world chess ~r:'w.~~~·=•o1·~':'. champion Anatoly Mtc11 .. 1•1 l!pl1cope1 church ot Karpov, died after a An1111IM, ott1c1at1no. antotn~t Jong illness, an official ;::.:,~·:~~~~0C::4:.':!:! of the Soviet Chess ww~Mount °''~ Mon-y et eosta Federation announced ._ .. _._~--------• today. He had been an PVBUC NOTICE en1lneerinLenin1rad. =· '=' ·===' 0 of f o ~M .. AM/FM/PHON0/8· TRACK RECORD/PLAY SYSTEM Clarlnettev -95 by Reallatlca: 95 Reg. 29995 Complete home stereo entertainment center! Record your own tapes from phono. off-the- a1r. or use the mike 1acks o r aux input. Dual VU meters. tuning meter. tape output. headphone 1ack. 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SAN JUAN CAftlSTltANO Jl•I C..-c.i-- CQS'f A MESA ··= ...... v• .._ AHIO ShlCll Deller• l.o<* fOf thll ••en 1n yCMi r n.,ghbOrhood PfltCES MAY YAAY AT INOIYIOUAl STOA£S \ M DAILY PILOT K if l ... t"UWlll CAt~tl()H ll'Al'Cl •-.o '~'<>" VOYAGER CALIFORNIA Jup lt r P •oto Amazlnte' Voyage r Heads for Satu17i PASAl>ENA cAr'I The Voya1er J •P•c:t•hlp 11 11llln1 away from Ila dram•Ur me ling with Juplt.cr while happily t1h~u1 led 1c:l~nlJ1l1 today a,.Jln Unk r1n1 with their wellllh or new toformauon Tb Voyaaur, wh ch eoarecJ 172,475 nrtm tTom Ju~ir 11W1rl1n1J . multlcolorf'd clouda Mond•y morning, h11 turn~ It.I lei vlalon cyea oo th • Iara mootU1 that circle the plan t Ilk•· <'OlorfuJ , co•mlc Jewt!la. ScleotJ1l9 uw th uncxped«t almost immediately ··1T'8 B~EN AN overwbelmlnJI)' IUC r.11fw t'oe<>unt.cr," aald Edward Stone. cbl r eel ntllt tor Voyaaer "We ac C'Omplllhed evt>rythlni we Intended t.o accompll•h and we hi.vt1 obaervtd thin&•~ didn't expect to ace " Haymond Heacock, Voyaser 1y1t.em1 mana1er. uld the trip tbroucb Jupltt!r'• h..rah radiation field cauled a few Jlr<>blema. hut notbln1 that 1hould endanger the re11t or the minion. "Tiit: lfPACECaAn has ~rlormed lla Job odmirabTy 11nd we expect It to be In t•xccllent 1hnpu for our cruise lo Sttturn." 1&ld Heacock. Today, u ll 1pcd uway from Jupiter. the ship panned al.a cameras, searcblna for undlseovcred moons that ml1ht be circling very near the gigantic planet. And It wu examining the two laraeat of tht' 13 moona. Oaymede and CaJU1to. Th" plonel·11ized bodies, which affm to be ubout hulf wa te r and Ice. were duulbed by 1cienllal1 u unlak • anything they've seen bcfort1 freckled w1th couoUeaa dotl ol vartoua abadea. A 1peclal tr at Monday w., the 1ur· prl1ln1 1urrace of to, M dry, ru1ty: colored 9'1000 with hl&hlllhta of white and pale yellow Ph<>toanphed from leas thi.n 13.000 intlet away, lo 1howed flat, o-pen ptfiM and featurc11 lhMl looked UJte rucaed cllff1, mounl1dru1, m eaaa and vt1JJey1. "IL «Jvca the 11ppHrance ol belnt con· tlnually ~tchcd and ea~n away ... br, som e varlelx of e rosion pcoceaaea. · u Id plan t1hry g eoloctat L•rry Sodt!rblom. T ho U11mannL-d atup. mcanwhJle, wu l'I 0 ., ... ,..... pronounced healthy us 1t begins lbc ARTIST'S R NDITION Ot' COMPON~NT PARTS OP VOYAOER 1 ,.t·~ond lee of 1l~ m11uoon. a 2C).monlh WITH NEW MVSTEalES to be ex· plored. lhe 11clentl11ta wlll have special tar1el11 when Juplt.er a nd It.I moon• are t•xamlned again In July, th.la UJTI*' by Voyager 2. which la lralUnc lla 1Jla· tcrah1 p through apace. GANVM~OE LOOKS like a brilU•nt, "The most remarkable lhing about 11parklln1 Chrlalmaa ornament with lo." Soderblom said. "111 tM ab&enc:e of Spececra(t ... Ina 2G-month Yoy ... to Golden Saturn voya1w to ~olden :-,uturn und Ill brllllonl ring• bright apota aod u aplderweb ol light numerom impact crat.era," like tho&c m nrkrngs . Olm. uraylah Calli_•_lo_1" __ ...:;w:...:.h:.:..lc::.;:h.:....m=ar:;..:k,;.,.ot=h.;:;;er;...r:;..:oc;..;;.;.;k,y..;;11..p.:;;..ac~e;...,;ob;;;:..&.Jec=ta .. J t N o ise Dama.Ce AwardN Airport Commission Appea& Case FAMILY AF FAIR SINCE 1894 LOS ANOEl.F,,S (AP 1 -T he Airport Com ml111lon hol'I voted lo usk a n appellate court l<1 rf' C'On11der o eu!'lc uw11rd JOI( di.ma1<e1t for )Cl alr cn/l noise The dttunon luat week by lhc> 2nd Dtstrict Court of Appeal affirmed a lower eourt.'11 rullnJ( tha t the city ol Los Angelva wn" hublti for more thun $100,000 In damaf(c~ and rn t<'r e a l to u hom eowne r s ' group bt>cau1u~ of nol5C al lr1 tnnationul Airport The 11u1t waa filed In 1967 by more thun 600 r •iil de nll'I, bul only 41 plalnllffa were still part of the ll<'Uon by the lJmc or the trial '" 1975. II.tr to CoNrf SAN f<·RANCISCO <AP ) ttemwn t''ord Jr • fuclnR e horaea of p oa•eulna 11 Hmall s mount or coculnc and hH hlah. hu uppUed to the court for l>('rm l1111lon to enter a spe<'lal drug dlveralon proerum. The heir to part or the f·ord Motor Co. fortuno 01 PRIME RIB DINNER Special Offt>r u plrt11 Marcb 31, lt71 Oft--the·Mall at South C.oaat Plaza Near the CarcM.aMJ Oft tbe f'lnt Level. For reeervalloM call: 540-1822 l11sch~oduledtoappcar 1n ( ) Church m e mbers ure rh0ro <t nnoub&tltute tore11D9ftflnoo' court M11y 4 to hear the .4>TA1't' upset over lhe remarks DEN'S judge'IJ decl!'llon _ . mude by both mert." Ford 29 nephew or llU Id a ne wH re teaae ca;:,;e·i·~·: . I :iiiiiiilation : ·cu•tom.dt•pt1titJS · ' II . f ro m c hurch h ead · ,... .. · Ford chairman enry Rader ha11 riled a Sl3 quarters in Pas adt1na. 13041~ • linoleum• wood floor Ford II and heir to $7.6 million lawault ugalns l m I lllo n In company Deputy All or n e y Speclfic11 or the re marks tHJ "-"..,... ... _ • c ........... C411f.tJU7 11 to c k . a 11 k e d l o General Lawrence Tap· were not detailed ..__ ____ ,.... __ •_4M_•_>_a_._.,..._z_J1.;..I _____ ~ partlclpa~ m ~ecourt· per a~ a private al ~-------------------------~­a upe rvlaed . o ne -ye11r torney, alleglngdcfumu· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ p r ogram , 1t was daa· lion ofcharactcr closed Monday. The Superior Court Laemtdt Fl~ 11uil med Mond'l)' et.ems "from r emark.a made to the media and pre1111 over the Wo rldwid e Church or Cod iuuc LOS ANGELES <AP 1 Worldwide Church of Ood Treasurer Stanley fnlDltian Nruned Hughes Execu t o r LOS ANC F:Lr+:S <AP > Hlchard T . Cano Jr . or Anaheim. u flr11t cou11in of Howard llughell, WUN named udmlnlslrator or the Ci.hfomlu asael9 of Hughes' estate In u rulinJ( by Lem AnKoleH SuJ)4:rlor Court Judge Jack W. Swink Thi• Judge turntd down Monday a <'ompclln!l hid by the acting public odmlnls lrator for Los AngclCfl County, Gordon W. Treharne. Trehurne had hoped to gain m1lllons of dollars in eslute handlln.c fees for the county, und other m1lllon11 or Inheritance wxcs fo r lhe 11tate or Callrom la Annette Gano Lumm111. an aunt In Tex.as who ls Hughes· firsl legal heir, Is not t•llglhle to s c?rv<• a ll adm1rustrator of the Cahfomaa aaset11 Sht• signed a dl11clalmer allowing Gano to serve as ad ministrnt.or in Catlrornla, where lhe cslltte '8 assets were estlmalt.'<I al JUHt $1 2 million dollars The acting eounty administrator had said lhal If he were named udm lna.atraLor he would l'lcek u legal dcUlrminollon whether Culifornlu was th1· l&11t legal domicile or Jlugheti, who died In April 1976 The total value or the llughc.s estate run11 Into the hundrcd1t of millions or doll ars. ff Cullforniu were lhslt.'d us Hughe"· lusl 1€!gal domlcllo the s ti.t.c could levy lnherituncc taxes on the total tislulc, and LOO county would collect one fH.Jrccnt of the total (.'llate for udminlHlrator und couruw l fcoH 1n1urance I TWO ADDITIONAL YEARS ~':nt~1/=' GUARANTEED "NO INCREASE IM PREMIUMS Business. Commercial Fire. Condos and Apartments BOB PALEY & ASSOC, INC . HORTH OC -546·3205 SOUTH OC -642-6500 Authentic 1715 Gold Finl!er Bar1 lover 41.-'.I ounces pure goldl R ecove r e d from the wreckage or a Spanis h Ga II eon orr the coast of Florida. Complete with Ccrt1r1cate of Historic Artlf...ch1 $7500 Value ft'or Sale or Trade TRUST DEEDS, R F.AL ESTAT•~. COI NS Call 645-J 744 or write P .O. Box 2506, N.8 ., Ca. 926413 ~~~-----.....-====~,__,,.~~~~~~~_,13 DE4D SAVERS flexible, multi-purpose passbook accounts • EASY TO OPEN with 11 little H $5.00 d•Po•lt . .. ALWAYS ~AVAILABLE ... No P9N11ty tor withdrawal•. at any time In any amount. • HIGH EARNING 5~% lnternt,comp0undod dally. Annual yletd, 5.39%. • EASY BUILD-UP towards minimum needed for hlgher ... mlng certlflcatet. Consult our friendly uvlnga counMlors •bold the m•ny beneflta Of paubook 8CCOUnta and term certlflCatel. OFDRlJCS ISLAMAB AD Paklatan <AP> -Tblr teen opium MddJcta have died thr o u t&hou l Pakistan aln<:e the eov· ernment. cloaed alore11 whe re tho <trua could be bou1bt1 hosplUI i.nd police Officlala said. The addle-t s purchued opium from 1hop1 licensed by the aovernmcnl. However, the 1hope were closed Feb. 10 when President Mohammed Zia ul·ffaq ordered otficlala lo en· force the lalamlc ban on liquor and narcotic• . ALL MAICISI 833-0555 ..... Our U.UllUT at HGW•Chlw*t r..r-fll °"'9 .... ~ ... N.f.WPOft1 RACH ....,Sport Storckccpcrs Kevin and Brad are ~earing shirts that look great in the game or on the sideline. 11leSe shirts are made with short cotton twill collars, multi-stripe knit cuff and waistband and muff pockets. If you like, match them with coordJnating shorts. 1011' ln111w, N. wpt-.1 8.·.M h ( •hll•rn111 M""' C'-ll 7~1 • ORANGE COUNTY I POLITICS Carpenter to Consult Craruton Flays Revenue Sharirig to tales By 0 . C. HlJ TINGS Of U. o.+ty l"IW SUft Retared atate senator Oenn11s Carpenter and Stuart K Spencer. pruldent of S~cer Roberta & Anociatca. the PQJJUc1l c1mpaisn 1trate«lst5, have announcf'd the formation or Carpenter & S~ncer. Con.ul tant8 In Oovernm nt The r1rm will ~ b1 ed In Ne wport &.•nch Carpflntrr the rormt'r Republkan 11tul\• 14CnMtOr rrom the OranKl' <.:01a11t, !.aad h1:. nt>~ partnen.hlp with Spenct'r 1 based on lh.,1r muluul conc..irn over the brt'ach or undt-r~tand Ing and rommuntl·ataon betwt't>ll the pnvate and government stt tors Re said he hopes the :.en tl't':. they orrer wall take somr of the mystery out of the poht1cul pro- Cl'SS "We don't wunt to lobby, nor do we want to chase all O\ er the slates attending agency meet- ings," Spencer added "What we want to do 1s help buslnei.s educate their people to work with the system " * * * U.S. SENA TOR Al a n Cranston. D Calif . s ays he wants to eliminate rederal re venue shann~ to ~tale govern- ments Cranston says he would maintain revenue sharing with county and city governments. "which don't have the tax1ng power or the slates and do have serious financial difficulties at present " r••~un1• <•••HTOfll Cranston alil co.apcnsortn1 • bill "1th ~nlltor Lloyd Bcnlbcn. I> Tt•x that would ehminatf' the $2 3 t11lhon 1n Reneral revenut1 h u r1n~ 'lutl"d ror 11Ulfl gonrra m('nt~ 1n 1980. lnC'ludin" $237 m1lhon for Culifornt1:1 It wouldn 't atrort the $4 6 b11l1on in Pre111dt'nl Carte r :. budgt>t fo1 r<'venuc ~huring with l'lt) and l'Ounty gove rnmenlb * • * ORANGE COUNT Y Supen,sor Rulph D1edrt('h has been elected pres1de.ot of the Southern Cahfornia Association or Governments <SCAG l * • • RESIDENTS OF THE 74lb As· sembly District are invited .to meet and visit with their As- s e m b I y w o man , Marian Bergeson, at a series of com- munity forums on consecutive weeken4s in March. The informal forums will get under way March 17 in the Com- munity Room or Peoples Sav- ings, Saddleback Valley Plaza. 23688 El Toro Road, El Toro. Residents or the Saddleback Valley. lncludlna Mission Viejo und ian Juun Capl truno. arc an· v llcd to attend bet ween the houl'1 o/9 30 and 11 am That attt•rnoon , anotneor rorum will be held In lhe Community Room or Lincoln Savings and Loan. 238C>1 Moulton ParilltVAY. l.UiU08 11111• Residents or J.elaure World and Laguna Bl.lath are Invited tn participate from 2 30 unld 4 pm. TH•~ •'OU.OWING weekend h1u1 been aiet aalde ror the South Orungl' County and North San Diego ureas On March 23 As· :t€•mblyman Bcq;eson will be uvu1labh.• begannang al 7 30 p m in the Auditorium ot San Diego Gus and Electric. 101 W. Portal, Sun Clemente On the next day. Saturday, she wall ~ in the Chamber room of the Oceanside City Council, 321 N. Nevada Street. from 10 until 11 30 a.m The fina l weekend of the month wall rand the as - semblywoman visiting with resi- dents rrom Newport Beach and Costa Mesa on March 31 in Newport City Council Chambers al 3300 Newport Blvd. from 10 until 11.30a.m. The afternoon session 1s slated from 1:30 until 3 pm. in the Irvine City Council Chambers at 17200 Jamboree Blvd. For further Information re- garding any of the community forums contact the 74th As- sembly Distract office al 631 -3174. 525 FACTORY A308 WASH·ER REFUND Save $25 with Factory SavinCJS Certificate Maytag Heavy Duty Washers Rare Opportunity For Savings On Maytag •Dependable heavy duty d>n- strudion •All fabric cycle selec- tions• Energy-saving• Long life quad coat steel cabinet •Fabric softener~• Tough poly pump •Underwater lint filler • · Self-cleaning porcelain enamel wash basket . Save Now on Maytag Dependability Dependability! Hurry! SAVE NOW! 525 FACTORY DISHWASHER REFUND Save $25 With Factory Savings Certificate SAYE ON MAYIAI DRYERS ••• , • 26%. lnOte up«lty • k ht· 1lve low-temp, stream-of· he.e drying •Mu.ltkyde _.. lection • fatt, efficlmt ener- gy·tavlng operation • Effi· 'cient drum slu • Unique air-ride dlytna .,... trs Maytags tum to do your dishes Check out the savings Now when you buy a Dependable Maytag from DA VIS-BROWN DAILY P1LOT AT TAKE IRS. TAKEllF350/o Plan ahead and save. Fly for 35% off our regular fare when reservations a re confirmed and tickets purchased 7 days in advance. Good on every flight with limited number of seats. Ask for our ECONO MY FARE . • TAKE llF 20-550/o Families or friends (3 to 9 peopl~))raveling together fly for less. We'll take 20% off our regular fare for adults and 55% off for children, when reservations are confirmed and tickets purchased 7 days in advance. Good on every flight and at least one adult must be in group. Ask for our VACATION FARE. TAKE llF 500/o Children fly for hall 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 Sun jet Tour package and get 20% off our regular roundtrip fare. Reservations must be confirmed and tickets purchased 7 days in advance. Good on every flight. Ask for our SUNJET TOUR FARE. TAKEllF150/o Ski clubs, church groups, sports teams. Any group of ten or more can take off 15% when reservations are confirmed and tickets purchased 7 days in advance. Good on every flight. Ask for our GROUP FA.RE. Call y our Travel Agent or Air California for resel'Vations and complete discount fare information. All fares on sale now for flights effective March 15, 1979. Call A1r Callfomia Reeervatlons in Orange County. (714) 752-ICOO; Downey. (213) 924-3313; Laguna, (714) 496-6000; l.osAn,9eles. (213) 627-5401 ; Son cremente, (714) 496-6000; Rlverslde{San Bemard.ino. (714) 825-&.n>. C FARfJSNA-120 AJ• CWLYPtLOT TUMday, Match I , 1879 ,. CALIFORNIA (AT YOUR SERVICE QUEENIE "Lt·t'~ fal'l' 11 Ttwn"s a l'ertam JlllOOnl 111 b.1tll )..ltibbing' tHllllllg lht• fr111111t' t'"l'l'Ull\lt'b 100 ' "Got a problem' Then wnte to Pal Dunn Pol Will cut red tape. gettmg the answers and action you need to aolve mequ111es m government and btumess. Nall your questions to Pal Dunn, At Your ~e. Orange Coast Dally PW>t. P 0 . Boz l!Nl, C<»ta Me14, CA 92626 As many letters as passable will be answeTed. but phoned mquines or letters not including the reader'! full name. address and busmess hour11' phone number cannot beconsuJ.ered. Thiscolumnoppearsdai· ly except Saturdays " SC~ 011~ Tel,._ t:e•t DEAR PAT: I have found another source for getting a of?'w Teflon s urface put on pots and pans. California Electric, 451 J E . Paciffc Coast Highway, Long Beach, provides this ser:vice. I took an old electric frying pan there for a new han- dle, and had the surface recoated at the same ti me I'm very satisfied with the result and wanted to let you and your readers know. l.H., Newport Beach Thanks for s bariag this information. California Electric (phone: (!13) 517-4301> Hys.aU pots and pans with removable bandies can be re· surfaced. Condo-co-op €onfaufora €teared DEAR PAT: What's the difference between a -condominium and a cooperative, and what s hould a .person watch out for when buying this kind of real estate., D.H., Irvine Coodomhlium owners get their owa deed. financing and tax bllb. Members of a ceoperaUve o•a s&oclt or membership ln the eooperatlve which entitles them to live in a unit, but Ute cooperaUve· corporation actually o1'U tlae apartment. 8o&ll condo and co-Gp owners receive die same tax benefits as coaveoUonal bomeownen. If you purchase a nnr condo, check tbe ballder's repulatk>n, look at o&lter project• baltt by the company and ask what auarances yoa bave that tbe project will be completed oa time. If you get Involved in a CODdomlnlam COD· version (an older bolJdlng being changed froa rf!alal to condo apartmenta), l:asped tlae coMltiea certificates, which are deta~ repona made by independent engineering Orms CMIWalag tH eeedl· tioa of the overall projects. tead ud aclers&aad tbe mas&erdeed (alsocalledtltedeclara&Joa) aadtlte by'lawa. 'nlae-give tM stnctare ud opuat· iDg rules llDder wblch tbe condo wW be managed. FlDd out If a profeas'°9al manager wW be 1D daarge or If the developer ls tarn1n1 &Ille project over to o"Wnen without diredioD. Also aee If OWHfll lla•e &Ille rigllt to cancel or reoew tlae maaagemeat coatradoa a periodic basis. Cllleck halo restrlcUou aDd ue of eo•m• faclUliet. Insist OD cettlal a bad1et delalllac montlll,y fees for malnt.ainla« Ute premllff, ud wakll •for arUflclally low fees _.at coelcl rise shrply afteryoa move ID. Tlda badl~•MDI bep,. pared by an oet&lde accematiag or proleuiMal maaagementfirm. I DEAR PAT: ls it federal or just state law that : wines must be botUed in metric sises? I thought this requirement was federal. but on a recent trio to the East I noticed that wines are sWl botUecJ I according t.o English measurement. D.V .• Costa Mesa It's carrent federal law, bat la eerta.l.D ata&es metric size botllea are not approved UMI are, tllerefore. Illegal, according to Sebastlaal Vineyards. Other ata&es tell &lie Wlael'J i&'a all rlgllt to seDd tltem metrle dzel provided labeUag ls caverted back to EngUlb <whlclil a ... mat be dffe, for tile federal govel1llDellt la aplte of Ute •• l1w ). Sebastlaal notes that tlalt lnvolYea a mathematical exercise e:ateadac five place• beyoad Ute decimal polat, aad wryly oblenes &Mt tllese days " winemaker'• Ufe c....-be de.-. entirely to waklliag 1reat wtDes tleeplaa ID oakea caau. llWAMIS IEY • CWIOF MEWPC>n HAllOI M1eHSCHOOL Anet COfoft8I Del Mer High SchOol PRESENTS TIM TIMMONS MAXIMUM UflSTYU , .... .,.. 1&.-.tt,N -..-...11.·1 .. ..., ......... ............. c.a .... ,,,.. .. Growing. Parrotniania Sparks Black Market By Tiie A.uoda~cl Pntu Tb• rec nl outbreak ot dreaded Newcutl cllMue 1mon1 exotk bird floclu In Southern Callfornlu ts 11eotUihUnt: a ~rowlna national dl' mand Coraurh bfrd1 by Pf'\ loven1 An lncrt•aslng number or .\mertcant ar lradina in t~lr home ly llllfo ~tityblrds for these more n~nslvt>, trendl r model• uaually lar1e. muJU <.'Olorfld mumbers or the parrot family ' 80•E DO IT roa •latua ; others are rftpoodln1 to a 1rowtnc reluc· lance by landlords to permit doe-or cata on thelr premltes. ThiR parrotmanla bas pJ"Ompted a new breed or pet s hop that sells nothing but Jlotic birds -sort of parrot supermarkets -and the stores are1lying blgh on the profits. LAST AUGUST. 553 blrda valued at tn.1&:» were confiscated at a U.S. Cu1tom1 c heckpoint north of tbe Mexican border near San Diego in the largest known haul of smu,gled birds Blrd amua1llng la profitable and the risk ia small, explained Customs lnveaUgat.or BW Meglen, and he says parrots conUnue to be smuflled across the border in trunks, car door panels and purses. But the s quawking can be a giveaway. "I 've been told that smugglers sometimes feed the birds a mas b wltb tequila in it to keep them quiet," Meglen said. THE SVSTJCE Department recent- ly a nnounced a concentrated effort to stop illegal importation or wildllle. But the bird black market continues to thrive. largely be~ause "there's not too strong a penalty for smug- gling these birds." said Dr. Granville Richey of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. "It ranges from a slap NOTICE TO VETERANS If you are an Honorable Discharged Veteran of the Armed Forces of ~United States, 1n good health, you are entitled to a Double Inter· ment Space (for you and your' Spouse) In our Dedicated Veteran's Section at the cost, to you, of only a Single Interment Space plus the Endowment Care Fund Deposit requirF.td by State Law. Harbor Lawn. long known for Its Special Considerations to Veterans. is making this Program available to the Veterans of this area Space 1s limited and it will be assigned on a first cof'Qj, first served basis. To assure your space, MAIL THE COUPON TODAY! -----------------~----~---------, Harbor Lawn Memorial Park & Mortuary 1825 Glaler Ave., Coate MeH, CA 92626 (edf11eent to the San Diego Fwy 1405) •t Herbor Bl~d. So.I I am an Honorable Dtscharged Vetefan 1n g OOd heall h . • • • • .. . . . • Serial No .• 01scharge Date . . .. Address ...................••.. ZIP .. ~~~!~~~o __ . __ .;._;_·..;.~.;..·:_ _______ ~-------~-' So Is a thriving new black market An Afncan gray parrot valued al $1,000 was stolen recently in sub· urban Arcadia, and a $3,SOO cockatoo named Cookie was kidnapped from her Or&l\ge County home. on the band t.o a small fine.·• _________________________ _. Save money while you shop Home Federal now has two offices conveniently located in Huntington Beach shopping centers. To serve you even better, our offices in the Seacliff Shopping Center and the Village Shopping Center are open on Saturdays! So, when you're out running errands or doing your shopping, we're in. Our specially trained staff will make sure you get fast, courteous service. Even during busy lunch h ours, you won't have to wait in long lines. We have more ~e for you No matt.er how busy you are, you can conduct your financial transactions quickly and efficiently at Home Federal. We'll promptly respond to your questions on financial planning with good, solid advice. As an added convenience, our Main St. office has walk-upAND drive-up stations. They open early on weekday mornings, and they stay open late Friday evenings. You can cat.ch us coming or going! Double your money with ·Home Federal We offer you many exciting opportunities t.o increase your savings dollars. Like our 8% investment accounts. They can literally double your money-in less ~ 9 years. (See chart below) OOUBU:. YO R MONEY IN ft YEARS 8 MONTHS WITH OUR ~INVESTMENT CUtTit ICATES BALANCE IN ~ INITIAL fi YfAR~ Annu .. 1 lntl'rest ' 01:.f'O!>IT 8 MONTHS' >..1!"1 Annu~I y,,.1<11 s 1,000 s .!,001 >I 10 ~1·" 1o•rm s 5.000 $10.006 $1.000 minimum lulanct' SI0,000 Sl0.01 I .,"'6f't1I ttaulllt0n• ff"(tU''" -' ""~"tulll 1nt"~t 11"'1•·• '"'' f()f P-oli'h v.1,ftltt.&• 11 o' '""" .llC'fOunt• IM~ f'I ( ~ndrQ\i.UI\' •'d -pt.lf"llJOn t -.,'ld.a• t .. ~ '\''"""v ,.._,.,,mi-t 1t rfHH'f"'f •• u-u •n ... t '-"'"' f~ot • ·n \f·.ar lh1• •""•I.I ... *' N<iit'J ,.,.. 6f-AO.""'f tfw p.rUktp.• t1..,t£1tn"tW Ut thof .U.\.U~ '"' ''-'" .. h•f..,.. High interest = high yield , Why not consider investing in one of Home Federal's T-certificates? A minimum depositof$10,000 is required and the term is only si:c months. You'll earn a higher interest from our T-certificates than you would on a similar account at a commercial bank. Check the current interest rate at your nearby Hom~ Federal Office. Six months from now, you will be very glad you inquired. Let us tell you more The next time you're out shopping, _or simply in the neighborhood, stop in to see us. Reserve a few minutes of your time to find out all about investing with Home Federal. You'll qui.ckly see why so many Huntington Beach residents have become Home Federal Savers. HOME F'F.DERAL ~VINGS • of Sin Diego • Bunthurton Beach Ofllee: 2111 Main St. • 118-8111 OtBc. Houn: Mon·'nwn l :OOAM-4:00PM/Frl 9:00AM..S:OOPM18at tool $:(!0AM·l:OOPM Walk-up Houn: Mon-Tban8:30.e:OOAMl•:OCM:80PM/Fri 8:80-9:00AM Dri~ Houn: Moa-Tbun 8:80AM-4:aoPM/Pri 8:80AM-6:00PM . Weetmin•ter Oftlee: 11n1 Golden Wen St. • 898-0914 011ce HOAn: Mon·Thun 9:00AM-4:00PM/Prt l:OOAliM:OOPM/lat tool 9:00AM·l:OOPM _,........_ ...... t't' ., ...... t I • •Stocks •Comics •Movies •Televlslon DAii. Y PILOT •J , ( Tarkanian: Man With a Double Image l NCAA Thinks He' the B iggest Bandit Since John Dillinger ' r ~'lral o/ a TllN~·porf Sema By FaED &OTH NB &G ·~~--I.AS VEGAS CAPl Tht" Stnp Nc:on lltthta and hlab x~ctatlons 24 hours • dity 3~ daya ll yeor The Jinalt" jangle of alot rnuchlnea and the gin.tu and atl•mour of thl' city i11 tht' dNler1 But there's Mnotht'r aide to LH Ve1as one the tourists never see Surprlatnaly. Vegas as a very rellaious, family-oriented town with more churches per cllplto than uny (•1ty in America And like has adopted city. Jl·rry TurkH nian also has a double 1maae EVERYONE AGREES on one thtni;: he's a wirmer. As a matter of fact he 's got the best winning percentage of any active major college basketball coach 10 the country Most of his fellow coaches and most of his players at the University of Nevada·Lu:. Vegas are crazy about the man. They say he's 100 percent basketball. an excellent technical coach and a warm. friendly guy fiercely ded1catee1 to hls players and to winning. They also say he'll give his players lhe shirt off hjs back illegal as that might be but that he 's more honest than many coaches. They say it's blatantly unfair that Tarkanian has fell more heat from NCAA in· vestigators than anybod y else. The National Collegiate Athletic Assn a nd much of the media portray a different Jerry Tarkanian. To them. he is "Tark the Shark, .. the biggest bandit since John Dill· anger THEY PAINT A PICTURE of Tarkanjan buying players like they were S5 chips at the casino tables. browbeating professors to get special favors for his athletes and harassing and threatening any or his players who al· tempt lo blow the whistle on him. fo'tw of the allC'&1t1llona could be Lr•ced back tu Turkamun. yet Tark aot the headlines and the.• notoriety 1'hl' school aol n three year probation. which 1>c1um aflt1r Turkanlan left Cor UNLV m 1973 Ht' soya he uccepltd a better ofter btfon· the Lonti Ueuch charges surfaced, but the NCAA und l.Qng Oeach President Stephen Horn contend he knt:w what was coming and k1p~-d town TIU; NCAA THEN FOUND numerous \ wlat1ons against Las Vegas, slapping the ~thool with u two yeur probation in 1977 and n·fommending a two-year suspension for A wa11 fro• 'Jee ~••rt ,. Tarkanian •~e•• a lt•e1tf• "'h1d.-d a-nd pr~•cc11pfrd .. ltardlfl a ••ootla o prra,o r. So111r sar1. ltr ~ulfi1'a'n f llat , ...... Tarkontan . one err the worst penalties against a coach ever. Tarkanlan. insisting that he never got a fair hearing from the NCAA. won a court injunction against the suspension but could still lose his Job when the appeal is scheduled to be heard this December The team is surrering, too. since it is banned from the NCAA tournament that begins Friday. Most of the UNLV evidence implicated· John Bayer, Tarkanian's predecessor, who was fired by the university. "I can't believe Bayer didn't protect his ass." Tarkaman said when he arrived. He then stopped weekl.) payments to the players. YET TARK GOT the notoriety again • ... 1 ........ Al Long Beach State. where Tarkanian turned a low-budget, basketball program into a national power. the NCAA found numerous violations agaJnst football and basketball. .. It was a frame·up. They're trying to destroy me." Tarkanian said . Away from the court. Tarkanian seems absent-rninded. and preoccupied. hardly a See TARKANIAN, Page 82 TARKANIANS AT HOME -Away from the lights and noise of the Las Vegas strip, Coach Jerry Tarkanina poses with his wife Lois and oldest son Dannv in their spac1ou~ homl' · ' From AP Dtspatcbes ~ PALM SPRINGS Jim Fregosi is convinced If he works l Dave LaRoche ha rde r In the l spring the California Angels re· lief pitcher 's work will be better in the summer . T he Angels' manager has named the leflhal)der as one of the four pitchers who will work in Wednesday's Cactus League ~ opener against San Diego. f LaRoche worked only nine in· nings a ll last spring under ~ former manager David Garcia, t then went on lo set a club record ~ with 25 saves with 10 victories. l He lost out on the American : League Fireman of the Year ; Award when New York's Rick ! Gossage picked up a save ; against Boston in the American League East title playoff game. f LaRoche appeared in 59 • games last season, finishing I. with a 10-9 record and a 2.81 ERA. "I won't have to work as long as this season now that we have Jim Barr," La Roche says. l "He's been a starter in the past i so he is capable of going rour or five innings if necessary. I'm better if I work frequently, but not for long." The Angels signed righthander Barr as a free agent after he played out his option with San Francisco. In another move lo bolster their bullpen, the Angels took Barr's advice and signed a second pitcher from San Fran· cisco, right-bander Charlie Williams. That gives Fregosi two capa· ble relievers from each side - La Roche and Ken Brett from the left, aod Barr and Williams from the right. A...,.,_,,rnsi"~ VERO BEACH -Andy Me11eramlth, whom the Lo's • Angeles Dodgers hope will fill the void left by the depart~ • Tom1111 John, was impresaive Monday ln bia first appearance of the aprtng. .. Tbe 33-ye~-old Messersmith, , ai1ned u a free a1eQI by the Dod1ers following hii release ,: after an lQJury filled season with the New York Yankees, gave up ' one bit in two innln11 while • strikinl out three during an In· • ter·ICIUd 1ame at Dod11rtown. f "He was very impressive,'' said lbiaa1er Tom La1orda. , "He tbrew bard and be tbnw some very aood breakln1 pltca..." TIM Dodier' reo1an did -fare eowll. Tbe1 bt to a team of r~~· U ·I . Rookle Bill s 11t1N,. for &be 1'.91· •tan ... ,. ........ 11181 Ill ..... llft.lalDllllll. . v ..... Dail ...... WOitlill cr,=rz.'"a.r~.: dO.bW ..... .,..... ,.... for .... ,., ....... , ... .,, ..... No Budging Umpires Ready . To Begin Strike Attorney Richie Phillips. try· ing to negotiate separate new in· dividual contracts for 51 ma1or league umpires. s ays that league presidents Lee MacPhail and Chub Feeney r e ruse lo budge io talks. Basketball Assoc1alion official. who 1s guaranteed S4S.OOO after 10 years STEVE VAN HORN DAVID KOEHLER J ERRY TARDIE "These a re individual con· tracts we're negot1altog but their feeling seems to be if they give in to one umpire. they'll have to give in to all or them ... Phillips said Monday "And remember. an NBA of· f1 ciul 1s \\<Orktng only 82 games over 200 days, giving him plenty of time at home." Phillips said "In baseball, umpires work 162 games within 180 days which means they are working or traveling every day for six months " Two Area Stars Lauded The resuJt. lhe attorney said. has been a rigid stance by both league presidents "OF ALL THE SI umpires. since we started talki ng. they of· fered one a S500 increase over what they offer ed before." Phillips said "Thal 's all " PHILLIPS SAID that aJmost all umpires make no more than S2.000 over the minimum set for their experience level. He said the three highest paid umpires. 8111 Haller of the AL and Ed Vargo and Doug Harvey of the NL. all earned S38,000 la~t year St.500 over their minimum and that all three were offered con tracts for 1979 between S2.000 and $2.700 a bove the 539.000 minimum Van Hom, Koelder Earn First Team A ll-county . By ROGER CARLSON Among the 20 selections are five juniors . Because of the stalemate. 1t appears that local umpires will be pressed into ser vice for spring training ga me~ which begin Wednesday All m a1or league clubs have been told lo ar range backup crews. much as they djd last August when the umpires staged a one·day strike. Of IN O•llY f'llel $taff The Orange Coast area captured 10 of 20 berths on the Daily Pilot's All-Orange County team for 1979, lopped by Coach of the Year Jerry Tardie of Mater Dei High. Olivier. who has led Los Amigos lo the CIF 3·A semifinals. is joined by Van Horn on the 'first team, while El Toro's Ron Holmes is a second team choice. The attorney also cited Na· t1onal Football League officials who. he said. earn S800 per game after 10 years ... For 22 Sundays. they earn almost St8.000." he said "We have some u mpires who don't make $18.000 for a Cull season" Among the first team picks are Estancia High's Steve Van Horn and Corona del Mar's David Koehler, while Mater Dei's Sal Gaytan and Randy Heidenreich of Marina we r e granted second team spots. The DaUy Piiot's All·Orange County First Team Player, School Ht. Cl. Avg. Clayton Olivier . Los Amigos 6·10 Jr. 27.6 Clark Guest, Troy 6-3 Sr. 20.9 Gary Heil, Lowell 6·2 Sr. 23.1 Steve Van Hom, Estancia 6·4 Jr. 21.2 Dave Koehler, Corona del Mar 6·0 Sr . 16.0 TAJlDIE'S MONARCHS upset the dope sheet in the Angelus League to take that circuit cbam· pionship and Mater Dei went to the CIF playoffs for the seventh time in 11 years, including thr ·asl four straight. Second Team "They can do whatever they want." Phillips said. "If we're still apart. our guys won't s ign contracts. I don't lhfok they <the leagues l care right now. 1 'm dis· appointed in MacPhatl a nd Feeney for not supporting guys who have served them ." The umpiri n g minimum salary is $17,500. Mater Dei has cha lked up a 187·99 record un· der Tardie in bis 11-year tour. Sal Gaytan. Mater Dei Ron Holmes, El Toro .Rieb Cottrell, Sunny Hills Randy Heidenreich, Marina Steve Buechele, Servile 6-0 6·5 6·2 6-7 6·3 Sr. Jr. Sr . Sr. Sr . 19.5 21.l 15.7 13. 1 20.5 Phillips met with MacPha1l a nd Feeney several times last week. He sees little light in the standoff. Van Hom averaged 21.9 points ~ game and scored in double figures in 25 of 26 outings with a high of 31 and 30 points. At season's start he scored in the 20s eight straight times. Third Team THE CURRENT problem is unrelated to last year's strike. Phillips said. "This is a matter of individual contracts," he said. ·'That was a question of the un- 10 n 's collective bargaining agreement ... "MacPhail says that he agrees with much or what I say but wants the umpires to wait," said Ptlllllps. "He says they'll make it up in the future. Feeney says baseball has always been fair with the umpires and believes U1ey are being treated more t han generously right now." Andre Smith, Buena Park 6·3 Jr. 24.4 Pete DeCasas, Mission Viejo 6·2 Sr. 20.3 Truiett Hatton, Marina 6-1 Sr. 12.9 Koehler, an AJl-ClF guard for the Sea Kings as a junior, led the Sea Kings to a flossy 21-3 record goin1 into Friday's CIF 3-A quarterfinals game with Loe Amigos-the last Orange Coast area sur· vivor in the eliminations. Rico Thompson, Huntington Beach 5·11 Sr. 9.2 Phillips said the umpires want to reach parity with officials in other sports. He cited the $12.500 d ifference between an umpire with 10 years of major league experience whose m inimum salary is $32.500 and a National Player of the year is Clayton Olivier, the 6-10 junior who led the Loa Amigos Lobos lo the Garden Grove Leaaue cbampionshlp. John Saunders, Mater Dei Fourth Team Brian Freeman, Newport Harbor Mike Samuels, Dana Hills Jell Andrade, Ocean View Mark Baker , Garden Grove Herman Brown, Santa Ana 6·3 6·1 6·4 5-11 6·S 6·7 Sr. 19. l Sr . 15.6 Sr. 14.6 Jr. 19.8 Sr. 25.8 Sr. 20.2 And what does Phillips say'! "I say neither league is even in the ball park." .Livsey Co•blnes Athletes, literature By J ACKIE HYMAN ~ Ot ... D41'1Y f't ... ltllff Race and sex discrimination in athletics. Success~ does it have to mean winning? Corruption in sports. Vtolence on the play· lnf field. 'l'bole aren 'l t.opici you 're likely to come ucro11 oflen in a community college physical education course, and certeinly no& ia a fnsbman composition clu1. At OrUle Cout Oolle1e, they pop up In both. At tbe aame time. In "Sport ln American Sod.t.y," for lnltance <that's En•llab 100 and P.E. 283 >. And "Tbe Paycboloa of Sport." TBOIS CIAllD were created because of aa Enlliab teacher with an unusual at· tribute: Jle•a ai.o 1 basketball coach. Tbe man II Oraqe Oout Colle1e'a Herb Lhtef, who coached lb• OCC bHketblll team from J.M.76 and now teacb• lnlbman composition • Livsey. concerned that many a thletes are turned off by composition, literature and theater. decided to draw on his un· usual background to turn them on. And so. ln 1975, was born a class called "Sport In American Society." Students sign up for both English 100 and P.E. 283. "THIS IS NOT a bas kel ·weaving course," Livsey saya. "I'm serious about teacbln1 En1llab literature and I'm serious about the s ubject matter. • "The atuchmt came tn beeause or the subject matter and he's eotna to be lo· troduced to writing. Tbe subject matter makea it palatable.'' Tbe clata texlbook ls "Winnln1 la Evel')'tblnc, and Other American Mylba." A 1r1mmar and compoeltion book ta alto uaed. A. TYPICAL E88AY assianment might involve detla;a.lng the terms "athlete" and "participant" and discussing the dif· ference. Uvsey said. ~ The course is closely linked with a second class. organized three years later with psychology professor Betty Inman. Called "The Psychology of Sport," It's list· ed as both En1Ush 140 and Psychology 110 Topics that could come up in either class include psychological motivation. sex roles in sport, exploltatlon of athletes and the ex-athlete in society. ONE OF TBE REQVlaED texts lo the p1ycbol<>1Y clan is the Pulltser Prise· wlnn lna olav .. That Cbampionabip Seaaon." which is acted out in claaa as reader's theater. Students t.h1s 1prtn1 'Will also attend a performance of the play in Lohg Beach. "I had a number or people in the class laat year wbo bad never seen a play," See UVSEY, Page BZ I -DAIL V PILOT * T~ly, MIWCI'\ 8. 1111 SHE'S NOW MRS. JIMMY CONNORS. Conno rs D o esn't Surface For W edd.ing C o mment From AP ot.patcbes ST. LOUIS -The secret wedding of tennis • s tar Jimmy Conno r s to former Playboy ~ • Playmate Patti McGuire was confirmed by sneral sources Monday, but the usually out· spoken Connors was not available tor direct comment on it. Connors, whose on·court comments and gestures often get him int-0 trouble, was "away for a rest" after his Na· tional Indoor Tennis Championship victory over Arthur Ashe Sunday in Memphis, a spokesman said. Gloria Connors, the 26-year-0ld S\Jlr's mother, told Memphis radio station WHBO her son had married Miss McGuire "some time ago." The Memphis Press Scimitar said in Monday's editions that the two were wed Oct. 2 n~a r Tokyo. The story also said the couple was expecting a child I.his summer. Joe Rountree of St . Louis, who handles Connors' busi- ness affairs, also confirmed the marriage Monday but said he was reluctant to make too much or it. He said he agreed with Gloria Connors' attitude on the subject. "His mother's attitude has always been, 'If you're go- ing to get married. do it and don't make a symphony out of 1t'." Rountree told The Associated Press. "She's very hap- py about jt." -----Quofe of the Da 11------. New Angels' acquisJUon Rod Carew, when asked ii his age (33) mjght be slowing him down: "There's no reason l can't go another five years at top effi cien- cy, maybe more. J take good care of myself.'' India na State Top• Col~ge Pell The Top Twenty teams In The Associated Press col- lege basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses and season records. t Indiana St. (55) 2. UCLA <3) 3. North Carolina 4. Michigan St. 5 Notre Dame 6. Duke 7. Arkansas 8. DePaul 9. Louisiana St 10 Syracuse 29-0 23-4 23-5 21-6 22·5 22-7 23-4 22-4 22·5 25-3 11. Georgetown, D.C. 12. M arqµelle 13. Temple 14. Iowa 15. Texas 18. Purdue 17. Detroit 18. Louisville 19. San Francisco 20. Tennessee Coneelhu /Wa •efl Ml'P 24-.f 21·6 25·3 20·7 21·7 23·7 22-5 23-7 21-6 20·11 Former Santa Ana Valley High basketball m star Ron Cornelius was named Most Valuable Pl~yer in the Pacific Coast Athletic Assn. by con- ference coaches Monday. The 6-9 sophomore led Pacific to the reg\)lar season championship and the PCAA tournament Utle with a 15. 7 scoring average and 9.6 rebounds a game. Other first team players include Art Williams of Fresno Slate, Fullerton's Calvin Roberts, Long Beach's Rickey Williams, Pacific's Terrence Carney and Dean Hunger of Utah State. The second team consists of Utah State's Keith McDonald and Brian Jackson. Michael Wiley a nd Francois Wise of Long Beach and Wally Rank of San Jose State. Coach of the Year is Stan Morrison of Pacific. •rd 1t'W Pla11 Despite Th .. fJ OTHER SPORTS -A broken left thumb won't keep All-American Lury Bird of top.ranked Indiana State out of the lineup when the unbeaten Sycamores play Sunday in the NCAA Midwest Regional Tournament in Atlanta . . . Loui•iana State Universitl. ls busy revamping its starting lineup for the NCAA Midwest Regionals to compensate ror the loss or star forward DeWa1ae Scales, who bas been suspended by Coach Dale Browll for repeated contacts with a profesaional player agent. and then lying about it ... Shortstop Bucky Dent of the New York Yankees may play out his option this season, according to his attorney T..,._.o.., Radio Follow ing are the major sports events on television tonight. Ratings are· 1 ' I .t excellent; 11 1 worth watching; " 1 fair; 1 forget It. • I p.m., Channel 5 ./ ./ COl.LEGE BASKETBALL: Colorado St. •• Nh1d1 Clas veoas>. AMOUneen: Chick Hearn and Dennis Hodges. A regular SNson finale for both teams and neither Is headed for post.season play. A down year for Coach Jerry Tark1nl•n's Nevada Runnln' Rebels who toppled 10th-rank•d Merqu.tte Sunday. • Kentucky Play r Arrested l.EXINOTON, Ky Elgh'\ University ot Kentucky football ptay~u wore arrested o n t•haraes of rapt' and rlrst-<learrce todomy Mond•Y nlthl and N · lHHd this mornlna from the Fayette County Detenti on C•nt.r. Tom Padgett, unlverally public 11fety director, identified the playen1 aa defensive back Venue Meaux, Harrodsburg ; fullbaclc Randy Brooks. Loul1ville. fullback Charles Jackson, Georgetown; halfback Norman Green, Martlnsburg, W Va • quarterback Larry McCr1mmon, Ta mpa, Fla . hfllfbuck Henry Parka, Har- rodsburg. defensive tackle Earl Wtlson, Atlantic City. and of· tensive tackle Robert Cobb, Sheflleld, Ala. It was not clear whether the players posted bond or were re· leased from jail on their own re· cogniunce. Carlos Leigh, a watch com· mal'\der 41l th~jail, refused to give det,_ua of the players· release. Padgett said the arrests by university police "came out of warrants by lbe complainant," but wouldglvenofurtherdetails. The complainant's identity was not a matter o f publ ic record, he said. "The university police will be Investigating the case for the commonwealth's attorney and. in the interest of bis case, we won't release any more informa- tion," Padgett said. UVSEY .•. Livsey said. He said he also shows sPOrts· related fiJms. Some focus on the struggles or individual athletes, including blacks and women. Among the other films he shows is "Visions of Eight,'' documen- taries by eight different film makers of the 1972 Munich Olympics. IN ADDmON to improving the students' writing and read· ing habits, the course also opens their eyes to many aspects or sports, Livsey said. "Sports are a microcosm of our country," he said. .. Almost to a student, their eyes are opened to all the things that are happening." But although learning about current topics s uch as equal funding for girls' physical education is valuable, Livsey noted. some other aspects of the course may have a more direct personal effect on students. One is an examination of society's emphasis on winning, coupled with a look at the Protestant ethic .. HALF OF mE P EOPLE in the class, because of the Protes- tant ethic and the definition or success, think of themselves as failures," Livsey said. Despite the unusual subject matter in the classes. he noted, the composition and grammar teaching is really quite or- thodox. "One young man said. 'I wish I was taught English this way ln high school .'" Livsey said. "Well, he was taught English tbia way in high school. He just wasn't Interested int.he poem he was writing about. "All I've tried to do is take my shovel and dig it into what they are interested in and bring it ln· to the classroom." Cypress Stops Rustle r s, 2-0. J eff Heathcock scattered seven hits and allowed nothing more than a pair of runs in the bottom of the seventh, but he got no s upport from his Golden West College t ea mmates, and Heathcock absorbed a 2·0 loss in Southern Cal Conference baseball Monday on the winner's diamond at Cypress College. The game wu a make·up for one previously rained out. Golden West, ln dropping to 2·1 conference and 5-7 overall, could mallace only four hits behind Heathcock. His record now falls to 3·2. lc-."'""Mtt Golden Wttt 000 000 000~ 4 I CYtH'•" 000 000 '00-t 1 I HutllCOCll fl.cl 0111. i..11 ... ,. encl ~CMll'lr WP-ukra. LP-t4u01Co<k. . Frlsliette Spins Shutout POMONA -Bob Frbbeta. -6tclaed a ftft.hlt lbutout fw UC lnlM at tM Anteaten nlpped llolt cal Poly PollJOU · 1.0 ln • MD•eGlifennte bueball 1ame MODClay. Frllblt&e upped bil penonal 1ea1on reeord to l ·l •• be ftai1bed wtUt four ltl'Jkeout.1 ud one walk. The only run In th• iame came train Jnine ln the el1btb lnnlJMI. With one qut, Mike Natle •lntled and waa moved to MCODd on • fltlder'• choice hit bJ Eric Frolander . .Jack. Jeral1an then 1ln1led to rtaht 1eortnc Na11e for the wlnnfn1 run. Thl1 wu the aeeoacl wla over Pomon• W1 season for f rvine as the Anteaters won 9 -3 In ·Thunday'1 game. Allll), it WH l"rlshette who ptcked up the vtc· tor)'. On the 1ea10n, the Anteaten record now 1tand1at5·12. ._.., ....... \JC'"""" tOO -llt-t t 0 ClfP9ly ......... • ... OW ..... t I Itri...,. llM K-... Mt•-· '91v!1Wf!• 141 Mii v....-. W~""""'' LP-fl~ " TRACK /TENNlS Waslai ngt o w Rough Stuff The Capitals' Jack Lynch <center ) takes the puck away from Montreal Canadien Doug Jar vis during t heir National Hockey League game in Landover, Md. Jarvis was setting up for a shot at the net when he was hit by Lynch, giving goalie Jim Bedard a chance to deflect the puck with his stick. The game ended in a 2-2 tie in the only NHL action Monday . Dotterer Triples Edison to Victory For the second week In a row. Edison High sprinter Mike Dot· terer has clocked 9.9 in the 100 and led the Chargers lo a track and field victory. On Monday his 9.9 easily won the 100 and he added a pair of other victories, winning the 220 in 22.4 and capturing the long jump with an effort or 19·11. The triple victory sent Edison on lts way to an 86-50 win over Saddleback High. Dotterer. an ~II-CI F selection as a running back for Edison's football team. has signed a let· ter of intent to attend Stanford University next year. A teammate of Dotterer's on the football fi eld, Tim Frink. Shollin's Home Run Paces 2-1 CdM Win Corona del Me,r High, behind a solo home run by Jim Shollin in the se<:<>nd inning and the five- hit pitching of Steve Leslie and C h ris Johns ton, a ealt host Capistrano Valley a 2-1 non· league baseball loss Monday in non-league baseball. Greg Cole went 2-for-3 at the plate. S<-.llr lllfllltl• Co•oft4 0.1 Mer 010 000 1-7 I l C.tPlflr-Valley ooo 100 0-1 s o . LHlle, JohnJlon UI end Hell. Cullrov and Ounlvln HR-<:orona .,.1 ,.,.., SfW>llft WP - JoflnSIOt\. LP-CUkrov won the discus with a toss of 132·9. Edison also dominated the dis· lance events, with J on Butler winning the mile (4:36.8) and Michael Lansdon taking the two- m1le (9:35:4 >. Bulfe r finished second in the two-mile. l..,_M, S..•Ncti St 100-1. Oott~~ CE I tt; ?. Z• .. m ll<M IEI: J St1nduen IS I 170-1. Ovt~rff CE > 2?.•: 7, s1 ......... ISi; 3 hle1nlll.tt IEI U0-1. Relmtt IEI H .l ; 2. Romeru lSI. 3 Herrere (SI U0-1. HillO IE> 1 0.. 1. 1 Br..,I CE I; 3 Crow• ISl Milf -1 8ut"'r"IEI A l6.I . 7. S.-t IE I. J S1ew•r1 ISi 7 Mile 1 Lensdon IE I 9;3S •; 2. Butler IE I, l !Mtnol!rs IE I 170t<H 1 Ham\ IE I IS•. , E\l•<ld• ISi ' fu•n ISi JJOLH I Tul" (SI '7 0, 1 H1rrll IE I. J E\lreda IS I Mllf rtl.t• I Edlt.0t1 J:36 0 LJ 1 Doll-IEI 19.11. 1 81«1< ISi J N1<110ls IE I f J 1 A 81ec;I< ISi Al S, 7 R Bl«I< CSI. 3 Oqers IE I HJ-' R Bla<k CSI 6 , 7 Wlllllml IE I J C..rt• CSI PV 1 GI .. ...., re' 12·6. , KnO• IE1, l Meclu CSI SP -I. 1(8'ftlll0 151 19 I; 1 8 Fr.,,1<1111 ISi, J M1<1< IEI OT -1 f'rlnk IE I 13? ... 7. K""lllo ($1; > S... OOv•I CE) Aztecs' V e zie Fir ed SAN DIEGO <AP I -San Diego State University basket- ball coach Tim Vezie, whose Aztecs finished the season with a 15· 12 record. was fired Monday a fter fi ve seasons, school of- ficials said. F ro• Pag~ B I Area Tennis Swnmaries For Monday Men JUICIO" COLLIEG£ Crou_... •.~-C~•• l " .... " Feoc>ertv 10 1 Clel. B•rom•(tl T•. 3 •.I• Tomer 101 °"'' V.trel.t µ, '6-I. Martin IGI .,.., McOonAIO ~I 1 s .... N ... ...., IG• ,,.., Sm1I""' I> 1 p.,,., (GI Off ~l•t•r I> 1, 6 2 C ... WCI 10 c1 .. 1 El>trr .. ,. U . f S o..111 .. B•rm1c,,.Vere~ IGI Of!I. F•Oderlv·f-1 '•· 1 S. M•rtl(>./fff_. IGI <HI Sfnlll'I MldlM I• • •. El\IK Simpson IG1 Of1 McDonald C,..•>l~r 1 •• •·• •• HIGH SCHOOL H_I,,.._ .. ICll 11, Oo•MY 0 ,.,,.... FreN;l'I IHI ""'· Mey...., l>-1 . .,., fl\tlm.tn f>O. oet M•r ..0, °"''· Hott0< 6·3: Boni" I~ t •<><'I> 1 •o ..... H """'-' IH I won .. J. 0 '· •·3 • I l~IHl -l•~ ... ?,f>-7 6J O.Ubtn Woolf'I\ '*llm MI IHI °"' SctlW•oo.i<h H •vl"V 6-A 6-1, «lei .A~r\On·N•k 6pen1 I> 1 6 4 I ro oerly J()l'ln\(lfi IHI"'°" •.O.• 1 won & 1 6 I Marww n..,, °""' MIM s•, Su•~tn Foy /Ml IOSI 10 le<MllY 2-6. IHI P•n1111 •·7 O«I Wolle 1>7, ,,..i Rlc"4rown 1> O. PIQf'On IM 1 "~" •• won .. ,, f>.I T• Will 1w.1 •on,_. •1 •·1 UM! H PIM! IMI lo\I 1• wor> .. 7. IOtl J-6 "'°" •·l Oo11DI•• CllHOll·EftO'M!Y IMI Of'I Melk01>1•1,_H.,,JOn .. 1 .... d•I Hevward-AQUN H 6 1 Perr, Q\di>•n IMI won 1 ... 1-S. SCM•l 6 I 10'1 by d•l•un. Unl~ty 71, lhvtnll P•IY 1 s.,,.1 .. 0..y IUIMf WltH~ .. t,clel Hdnl4..., •. 7 "'°' ,. .. \UU\ .. ,. dPf. Bui"°· Ne•-cu I -........ ..0, .. ,; C1¥1t IUI IO\t 6-1, ?•.I> 1, "°" .. , M•..,..lh IUI-.. ), 1·6, I0\1 .. , won t J 0...ltlft Mfl'tr·Nk Ull IU I Ofl. Z..S1n•k•·DeOfr 6. 1 S, del ~'lon-~1\Ctl 6-1 I> 1 Sim kin Wdlcoll IUl wonH ... 7,lostJ-6, ... Women JUNIOlt C0ll£GIE 5.NdkN<• I. Cltnta I s .... ~ wanl ISi df'f !ll!vllocquA &·0. l>·I, Felder 1~1 d•I furlW'r H . b· I G<nlenllOfer IS I IO>I lo Ool'lerty 4-6, W . 7-6 Mll<flell ISi .,.f ~ .-0 'J, Shu CSI def ()qdrn 6 t . 6 0 Ste.cl IS• cl<tl Hot11ndH,H. °" ..... Walll·"-lde• ISi fHI 8ev1locqu .. Totow • 1 H . SIMI St-.d ISi Of'f TurMr•OoMrtv l-6 .. J 6-4 M•1<""11·L .... ISi Gel 09et1·Holl1nO .. J. •·1 T ARKANIAN'S DOUBLE IMAGE. • • smooth operator. Some say he cultivates that image. "He protects himself," said one coach. "He turns his head when other people do the dirty work. I like Tark but believe me, he knows everything that goes on.•· JERRY TARKANIAN, hls wife, Lois. a nd thelr four children live at 2905 Justice Lane in a beautiful $100,000 two-story Spanish-style home in the residential out· skirts of Las Vegas. The Tarkanians got the house -which has a huge backyard pool - for cost, courtesy of a local builder. Tarkanian is a squat, slope-shouldered Armenian who has the constant sad-eyed look of a lost beagle. He is 48 but looks several years older. He says his problems with tbe NCAA hound him all the time. "It's been bard on our family and ex- tremely bard on me," said Tarkanian, who doesn't smoke but has a raspy voice - particularly during the basketball aeaaon. When he talks, he often sounds like the world rs on his stooped shoulders. "The most amaz- lng thing lat don't have an ulcer. Sometimes I sleep and sometimes I don't. "WHENEVER THE TEAM travels, I gel it from the fans. They're always on my back, shoullng things like 'Hey Jerry, where's your parole officer?' Of coune It hurt.a me." His very supportive wlle. Lola, can articulate his defense acalnal the NCAA, sup- plyln1 ::/one Interested wltb reams or p•pert atat.ementa t.bat 1upport Tarka· nlan 's poettfcm. Taken to bouta ot cryin1,· Lola rails at the havoc the NCAA baa C!aused Mr loved ones. "Friends who haven't secin us for • while HY he's qed a lot," she said. PEOPLE WHO KNOW Tarkanlan beat --HY b1I only lntere1\a ar basketball and bla . 1 f family. He loves watching hi s son. Danny, play basketball for local Gorman High. Dan· ny, a junior. is one or the top guards in the stale, and Tarkanian turned down the Los Angeles Lalcers' coaching job three years ago. partly because pro travel would keep hlm away from hls son's games. Tarkanian has no bobbies. He had a mild heart attack before the first game of the 1976 season and jogged for one month. But then he stopped. The family used to take August vacations In co.njunction with a coaching clinic somewhere. But they haven't taken a trip like that in three or four years. TARKANJAN DOESN'T dress in three· piece suits like many of hJs coachlng col· leasues. He used to have his hair styled to cover up bald spots but he doesn't bother anymore. "He had a hairdresser who had .him bn.shioi It a certain way." said Lois. "But it kept getUng messed up. so he said it wasn't worth it and he got a crew cut. It's terrible but be really doesn't care about his hair." "Jerry is one of the most down·to-earth people I've ever met," said Dave Pearl, bead ot the Las Vegas Booster Club that wooed Tukanlan away from Long Beach. "He's not impreaed with the glamor of the strip. He'll call fC'I at 3 in the morning to talk basket- ball. Tlat'1 all that's on hls mlnd." "He'a a Naismlth-type person,'' said former Marquette Coach Al McGuire. "lf you want to .1et Tark to leave the room, talk about anything besides basketball." TA&KANl.\N SELDOM SITS still in his small olftce-ln the athletic department He's conatantly ln mo\lon, chattin1 with pauenby. dla1rammtn1 plays on lb• See TA&KANIAN, P ase m .... -" . ' '"' .. I 4 • :e, ,,, ., •n· J,,. BASKETBALL I GOLF ~ ........ • .. 'l' ,. • ..J(;IOI) l T'I "1SJ(lJ} TU ~'1~ ~T'ltAiWI( <CtO ~;tJl(J /IJIW VP 'Fl THe 81lt ~ ~Al, ,,'( ~' '!If! {)1.l£crJV! :., '1([ IJ.lvr'f r t'r mt M..'J t()(} /{,J, E .lr"l • ,., ... ~v :I Ii Fl.41> .?Hr ~"'1.-r .aJ Ph){JJfilJ't Ht41ft4'.'; 'T ·'M Rf el'~. /:Ull . f)((", ,,;, ~--( l'•i' ~ :>it.J~ f 1(-fT >lf..tl 1fJ lk' lJl-f/) '"' ·~ /(,~- TARKANIAN. • • blackboard or lalktni: on the phone "ls he a good JOck·P• Tarkaman 1nqulrh of a friend who knows the man being con- sidered for the open president's position at Las Vegas. "Is that right'> He's al every ballgame!" There are dozens of pictures on the wall, Including 8xl0s of Tarkanian's players who have made it to the pros; family shots with the emphasis on Danny, and one portrait of Tarkanian being embrac(•d by UNLV sup porter Frank Sinatra. "YOU WON 'T SEE HIM with the glad· handers. He'd much rather talk basketball than sit with Sinatra ." said Bill Bray, public relations head at the MGM Grand Hotel. Bray tells the story of Tarkanian as.king him for a job for one of his daughters. Bray asked the coach what she could do. "Gee, I dunno," Tarkanian answered meekly, his shoulders moving closer to his ears than usual. The story is told that Tarkanian was once asked what insulation he used in his spacious house. the onJy two-story home on the block. "What's insulation? .. he asked. "The boosters at Long Beach used to kid me that J didn't know that there was a war in Vietnam," said Tarkanian, who was voted professor of the year by the students at Long Beach for his interest in their activities. HE CAN REMEMBER who went back door for a basket but be has trouble re mem· bering faces and appointments. His secretary, Carol Forsythe, will call him at 5 In the morning to remind rum of an early ap- A .. iwr ~•ell •• ,,.: "ff~• Ult# Colu•f)o. Du•f) Ille~ a f03e." poinlmenl or a plane trip Except for basket- ball, he seems somewhat scatterbrained. "I'd walk in a blizzard before I'd get in a car with him," said Forsythe. "Lois remem- bers how he used to gel lost trying to get home when they lived in Long Beach." "Does Jerry look like the kind of guy who can cover up crimes like the NCAA says'!" asked Lois "l wish he'd be more 'sharky.' He's really LOO naive. He trusts everybody. I t hi nk that's why he's so strong with black players He never judges them. WHEN HE'S WALKING in the street. Jerry will often pass by friends without say- ing hello. "I'm the wors t guy al recognizing faces," Tarkanian said. "I can't follow a movie from one scene to the next. It's gotten so bad that Lois won't go to a movie with me anymore ·· But a coach who requested anonymity s ays that Tarkanlan is not naive about basketball and recruiting "He'd lifle you to think he's naive. that he's just off the boat," the man said. "But there's only one thing on his mind. He's gonna win. And he'll do whatever it lakes to get there." Another coach says: "He's like Columbo. Dumb like a fox ." Because be does n 'l put basketball in normal perspective, losing seems tike the end or the world to him "AFTER A LOSS, he's In agony." his wife said. "He would come home and lie in bed groaning all night.·· .. Losing just eats a t me," Tarkanian :said. ··1 have a hard time shaking a loss. The last two years I have had more losses than usual. l tell my players there Is no disgrace to losing, but it is bard for me lo Jive with it." Tarkanian's obsession with basketball carries over to his players, who come to Las Vegas lo learn to be pros. Soil Isn't surpris· ing that his players have a reputation for be· lng able to hit _ the jump shot but not the school books. That reputation nows from lbe top. ••TAU SAVS THIS ls it here," said senior forward Eddie McLeod, point.log w the court. "The most Important thing is the hardwood. They expect you w go lo class, but lt's bard. Tark told me if l didn't keep my eligibility, I'm throu1h." Tarkan.lan ia a basketball coach, not an educ.tor. 1be emphasil ii on ellgiblUty, not education. and kids be gets into school are generally interested In basketball, not books. "A large proportion of hil playeta aren't beneflt.ine.'* said II ike Whaley, a for mer UNLV player. ''Tark'a system i• perpetual· ing a pbUoeopby and a way of life tbal ls a.oil· educaUon." W£188. A KAN who made bla fortune in car dealenblps, watches wtt.b amusement as bit fn.d from an etlulie nellbborbood In Euclid. Oldo1 .. 1ettinl It on wttll 10me of the tc'»ool'• weaitb.lest booeten. •'When we were at 'PaHdena City Coll•. we wen eouldered two of I.be mott mallkelJ to IUCCMCI," aald Welu. "Now I'm a mlW•••re ud he'• UM whuUQplt baaket· bell c:oeeb bl America." ADii Ute mOlt ...,W.bed. STiil tbouah be .. ,. tbe NCAA cb~IM are untrue ad Ullf air and the rdal Neyada ~~ ca&lld them ··111 perelll& liNnay... aatan IWI car· ...... crlildUI nputatloD. W1t111fN': Tarl•c.ft . ~---r Tiaedlly, March 8. 1979 OAJLV PU.OT D ------- PUB.UC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE -------------------·----••CTtnout eutt•eU •te:n110Ut 9Ulf••H LPGA Swings West ...,.. STAT•MeflT MMe IT4T•Mtt"T Tll• fOllOwlllt per.oftt •r• fOl"f Tiie ~ ..._ It ..... ~ ~.iMu~· MUU~ HOVK Tl!NOl!•S, lt'U 01-' 0 V T H W I! S T E • M UM • .._. tlffd>, CA""'° "'"" "O"MANCI! OISTftl au TOI"· Afldlw J llftQle, 10i4 OIMe ~. mt.JI!, W.-•d , Metlelm, C.. Ne'*"rt lelldt, CA '2MO '2to6 tv•l'fll C M<'"-111'. "J11 Telllll Jerry lo11-. $1\umwey, l lSt 81 HOWAaD L HANDY Ot•O•ll,,....tUiff While tJcket 11ule arc lagging at the present tame. overaU chairman Jim Poteet says he ls ex· peeling 40 lo ~.000 tans to witness the event. Cir , Hull4lnQIOft llMC". CA.,,.... M4Hltlef' O.., H\lllClllgton 9"<11. C. cerrol f etro. 201 Mont• Vilt•, tl"'4 It '1 count down Um for lht Women's Kemper Open at M a Verde Country Club ln Coet• Men l March 28 April l > wtth the l.PGA tour mo vine lo utbcrn CalllornJ1i1 lh • week. "We 'll have plenty or Uckel booths available at the course all week," Poteet and his sub· chairmen promised. Cotle Mew, CA '7tf1 T Ill\ lluAI,_\ " Gonclueled lrt e11 W. Thia~ I\~ bot en 111t-4'1Y'-I l~eted •-letlon on-r -• .,.,.,.., l..Mt Sllwmwn PMlMr\l\lc> Tllli 1tet-t wet fl .... W11t\ t1>tt ,.,.,,.. .. J L1"91• Cov11ty C1fftl of Orenot C-ty .,. Tl\I\ Jie'--f-Wltll lfte Mef~f. tm . Ftnt e\'ent on the drcuit on \he Wetl Coaat is lhe Sunstar Claulc at Rancho Park Golt Co\lrse tn Lot An«tl , • four day. 72·hole event starting Thursday ~••••Are• C••na CO<ifttv Cf.H11 ot °"-eovm., on ~''"'·""· ~1-..Z Pybl1"'9d Or .... (iNM Delly PllOf .,,_ Mll•.•.u.J0.21,1m a1-1• Pvbll.,,.., Or...,_ c.Nt1 Oelly Pl'°' ------------Nlllt. •· 11.10. v , 1m 1•rt BIG CANYON -Medal Play Tournament: A PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Aftf>r thnt It's the Honda CMc 1t Rancho ~mardo In San Dle10 March 1.5-UI folJowed by the S.hara NaUonal Pro am event In Las Veaa:s and lht thtt Womf'n'a Kemper Open. Fliiht-Carolyn Gray. 10 ; B Flight-Helen _ l'1CT111ounuso•Hs Tegeler, 73. T 1i1nd F : A Fli0 ht-Virginia O'Brien, ----------•~sTATl!Ml!NT D NOTICI! 01' INTl!NTION TO T,,. foll-l"'J perwnl •r• 001110 32, B Flight-Mary Thompson. 31 : C Flight-Sallie uOAGir1 .. ntuA1.iro, b Al.CIOMOUC••Vl!•Aoas ~":~·.~=AL LAVENE lH s ... W rig t , JO. ,_1_,. • OoMo C'•ponl Young, ~mbarktng on ber 1Sth Guest Day Tournament: A Flight CGross)-row11om11Maveonce,11. ~~ .. Suitell»,..._..,,&M< .. . $f'HOn on lh\' LPOA tour ftnd wtnnt•r or 15 ~vent s, compare~ today' younl{ pli.yer~ with hf'r atnrt In 1965 "Wht•n ( slMrted pl11yl~ .at a~c 19, w~ hud to leitm while play 1ng thl' tour . We hud verr little prior ex per enN· bt>cau ~l' "' those day8, tht•y were not g1vtn~ out colkge S<'holarshap~ for women golfers. "H ECK, WH EN I. tried to pla y on the boys team at Granada YOUNG Halls HJgh, tht! officials t~ned me down because they said the boys cur:.ed while playing. Big deal They swore. "These college golfers play in many tourna· menls all over the country on fine golf courses. They already have the necessary experience lo wan when they get on the LPGA lour. COMMITJ'Et: CHAIRMEN for the Women's Kt!mper Open ar'e on a virtual full-time basis this month. The many details of staging such a tourna· ment, especially the fi rs t tame. are slowly being put into place . Virginia O'Brien. Jane Lutz, Betty Woodford, Bob-s..oi.ctioi-.of1Nt1<•1119 •11-• 1ntercomm11nl<•lloM, In< .. .. N J d Billi N bl olltd for. notice It her'9lrf 111...., thet c.11 .. me ~•llOft, ;i,. s... Miquel bie Kuhn. 167 ; < et>-ane Boan • e o e, '"• unde"•Ol'•d oroootu 10 , ... ~ s..tte 1~ N _ _, Ike<" c. Toni Oliphant. Julie Bescos, 132, B Flight •1~1k --oH •' ,,,. ptef\'llttt, .,..o · · CGross)-Helen Tegeler. Helen Wilson, Helen An-ee~·=: loj~ In,,,._ .. pro-~::!o..IMniM'H I\ C.onelu<ted by. tor· derson. Chris Winton, 175; CNet)-Gloria DuBoise, nu..-.,.c.os,.-.. •nt-n1u110M inc M '1ll1e Johnso"". Vern We ...... r, Gwen Williams. Ponu..,, 10 """intention. ,,,. u,. _,,.,LIIV-· '" • u v ""'"0ntd It ~yinq to '"" 0-rl· PT'e\IOent ' IT'el'I of AK-I< ee-~ Coftlr'OI Tllk ~I-... , filed w.tn II-.. IRVINE COAST Mary K . Browne for onu•nct 01.., •1<-1c .,..,.r-ot Cou,.ty cie.-of orenQe eou .. tv 011 Memorial Tournament (2 days, low net): A 11unw •or llc.eMnl '°' u.ew Pf" .. M11rc112.1m. Flight-Marie Bosomworth and Shirley Perry deL mimuto11oM .. 11.. ,.,_, B II h. rd h 1 f On Sale ~r & WI~ Publl"'9CI 0r-. co.ut O.lly Pllol Shirley Overstein and etty A en on l. 1 o e o teor.. "Ide Publoc Mer.•. u. 20. 21. m' .,,.,. playoff. 138. B Flight Pal Clarkson and Dottie Eallno Pl"'•' Fright def. Irish Davison and Eleanor Smith on =.a";"·o..."'ua. third playoff hole, 138 Low gross-Betty Kraus PUBLIC NOTICE and Betty Riley, 191. M:~,0~·:~,.°'M9 eo.si o~.i., Pilot. ,.CT•T•ous evs••ns NAME S.TATl:ME NT NEWPORT BEACH Low Net, Low Gross: -"''~ T~ 1o11ow"'9 .,.,..-. 1$ Ooino bu\1- 0verall <Net)-Jim Grant, 46 ; <Gross >-John PUBLIC NOTICE ,... .. ~~Tiux svsTEMs, 1111 BOlil Paulsen, 65. Flight A-1. Paul Doolittle, SO: 2. 0>1ceAd.1150.Hunt1nQ!Of\&e«".cA Don Wulf. 52. B Flight-1. Jim Freeman, 52; 2. "~e;;:m:~~·:::s tt.A~rut• Au.n 811,,, mn 80 ... Wayne West. 52. c Fligbt-1 Jim Hughes, 48; 2. Tht lollowlftQ perwn\ are dOlllQ Chi<• Ad .• 50. Huntl11910118Nt.I\. (.A Carl Larrabee, 50. Paulsen had an eagle on the °"~~~~REITER oevELOPMENT ~~' ~' 1, u•Muct.o o., ... In· 17th hole. Low Net Tournament. 1. Dick Hilliard, co . 31• 1>u11men Strff1. eo.1• Mew. d+v14>i•1 48 , 2. Wayne West, 49; 3. Tom Ginger. 50. c..11~o;~~~1 ..... r nn.stee 0 _ T"'' $=.:::"" ... ~~.1"' .,"' ~ LAGUNA BEACH -Low Net at Green RiveT Oecl•r•llon Of Tnnt .S.led July ll. Counly Clt'11 ol Or•noe County on .. 1•1, 1).0 ~W 0.1~. $Mii• Ana, Feb ll. 1'79 Golf Course: A Flight-I. <tie ) Harv.ey Miller, Roy c.1110,,,1 • .,10, ,.,.,,., Potts, 69; 3. <tic) Frank Rossi. Ernest Jacobi. c.,: .. ~:-~ .. ~~.:~1.' ~.~·~:: "..';,"~~~. ~1~7~1Y Pt101• 74 . B Flight l. Ernes t Schopfer, 64 : 2. Fred ""° u"''" Stark. 69: 3. Jerry Brown, 70. C Flight-Alford T1101bu\oneu•s°"'9 c-1"""'" ---------__ Peterson, 69; 2. Phil Brown, 70. D Flight-1. Dex-~'-•1.!'!';.,~~;::;..,_ ter Strawther, 72 : 2 Gordon Rayburn. 74. E Gerw-<•1 Part,.... ----------Flight-Deane Dodson, 73·, 2. Andy Umsted, 74 . Th•' stat-• .... , fiiec1 *''" '~ "1CT1nous •vs1NEss County Clt'11 ot OrenQ(' CollftlY on .. AME STATl:MlfNT PUBLIC NOTICE Febfuarv t•. 1'7' The tollowi119 pe"on\ •rt do•n9 .. ,..., bull"«\\"' Publl\ll@d Or~ Coast 0.1ly Polot llANOEAGAAPHICS, 3i'1 S<1n Pi 0 '1tl H , -•. u. 20. ,.,. 1l0·7' Miquel or., Suite !OS.~ Bee<"· ---C• ·~ PUBLIC NOTICE Abert, ,._If & 8urrl0raft9t! Softball MV Plays Tonight Victory ForGWC • Covnty, • cemornl• corooutton. Jtt LONG BEACH -Mission Viejo High's Diablos. p80er suPu10f'cov•ro"THE . ~~'~1~.,!Z,· Su11• ios, Ntwport South Coast League basketball champions, meet STATE o" CA1.11•0•••• "o• T"'' ~mess 1s c.-•"' oy" <o• CabriUo High tonight at Long Beach Arena in a THEC:OVNTYOl'O•ANGE oore•-WIDE AREA Ne A~ Abe<1 Ne-& CIF 2-A serrufanats game at 8:45 , the nightcap of a NOTICE o" HEA11 1No oF Bum0r~c.oun1y doubleheader which features Moreno Valley (21-6 ) COVERAGE ::~,~~~:S~~~~TEEN~::;LL =::.:;~v-andSierra 123-4lat7 ES l•le ot MAR GARET M Tl\I\ ste1trnenl was l1led wtlh lht Mission VaeJ·o <24·4 > met and defeated Cabrallo ORANGE CO L.A FALLGAEN ·-· MARGARET 1t cou"'' c1enr. of a. • ...,. c°""tv on .-. FALLGREN. OKe.secl. M.,t .. 2 ... .,. Julie Anderson hurled in the Brea-Olinda tournament finals in NOTICE 1s HEREBY G•VEN 1.,.1 ,.11.,. December takl·ng a 53 51 decls1·on w"1'le hold1'ng •17 •• VIVIAN BUSNEA ""~ tll<!cl ""rein.. Publ•Shtcl ~Coast 0.1111 Ptlot a four-hitter and led the · · •l • ~u~~1on •• !O: ~~T~t~1~ry"""to 1~ Mer.•. u. zo.11. '"' au.1" G Id W C II high-scoring York Gross to 19 points. •L , ~~ .... -~· •• -·~... ·~ o en est o ege G 6 5 r d h d 35 . . a,._._ ~111-.r~towtwt'h is m.-, softball team to a 5-1 ross. a · orwar • as average pomls m ....a _. '°" ,.,,,,_ pan1<u••"--,..,.., .,,. PUBLIC NOTICE victory over visiting bisteam'slastlwogames. tifM •nd P44K•'" ,,. .. 1ng ,,,. ,..,.,. ------------.... , been Mt tor Merci\ 10. lt1', •t "CTlTIOUS •USINEU Ventura Monday, while * * * * * * SOOEPOSITON 10 00.m..1 .. w..counroomofo.o.rt· MAMESTAHMl"T across town at Orange APPROVED CREDIT ,,..., No 3 of MMC!""""·~ 100 ci .. 1c T11e ~ ....._. '' 00i"9 0us1-c I h Cl"SEMll'INALS Or.t"9P Lvthtr•n 111-ll di C.tnyon ~tOr1 ... ~lntneCltyof5-nt.. MUM' c 0 a s t 0 I e g e. t e TONIGHT Hl9h l7 301 A .... c...-. IHTEltto!ATIONAL ORAPERIB . Pirates l06t in 11 innings ,.,, . IAI LO"O BU<h Aren<1 I WEOMl:SOAY Oetecl FeO. 21, ,.,. 201'2 PrlllCelon c:;1rc1e. Hu .. 11~ to Rio Hondo. 4-2. Moreno Veti.v m•1 ... si.rr• 11l-41. ' A I At Lo,.o Bue" Aren• 1 LEE A. 8RAHO<. a..c ... ea . ._ -- ' • Minion Vl•IO 12'"'") vt C•brlllo v~rt>um Oel n.ll V\ MomlnqtlO.• c;,,.,nty~ Kell" JofW\ -. zom ..,..,,._ On the prep front, 12•-o11.a·..s. '1'""'' , LOf'Q Be~h Po•• C7l-•1vs l!DWA•oM.STOMI ~ c.1rc1e. Hunllft910n Be6Gll. c. I · H' h d th 1 A· SI Monica 174 11 vs Vall~• 61t H•--1 ~ Dn•e '16'6 rv1ne 1g ma c e Chr"llan IU-31 el Cerrito' H•Qh St B~rnara 171·SI 8 Ai ,..,,,._ Tllll blltllleU ,, c.onclVCltQ Dy an'" mO Sl Of fi ve hits and 17301.St.J~pll,llHl v\ 8anrHnq THURSOAY New"r1~.CA'16't d1Y1dlial _. ~ h l H t' l ttS·41 •I Yucaipa H•9n 11·301 l A IAI Long 8Mch Arrnit t Lo-. Ttt ~ I( J Nf'Wm<I" uOWll~ OS Un 1ng On ~IT'all Set-is C.....,w10 11• 11 "' Am100< 11> 31 '" Oowrwv '74 71. I A"-Y fer -tieM-r Th1t stot-.. ,., loll'd wolll '"" Beach, 10-3. in an Estan-Cronro~ l~Sl<ll S;Jnt:a Morr~.. NMlh •R .. ust04tl V) Sunny Htll\ PuDllshecl Or ... Co.t>I Oaoly P•IOI, County , ..... ol Or.an91t Coun1y on ciaTo~name~game. __ H_~_h_11_~_1·_P_ .. _~_N_~_~_,_~_1_•_• __ 11_•_1_•._•_•_5 ______ · ______________ ~.~~L1~"" F~~,,~ Orange Coast got three ruts from Hillary McDonald but Rio Hon- do got a two-run homer in the top of the 11th to break a 2-2 deadlock and win it. For Ir.vi n e High Shelley Ovesen set the pace with a firsl-inning homer as the Vaqueros upped their record to 3·0. JVNIOll COLI.EGE St«etY l""I~ A10 Honoo 000 101 000 O? "' •O occ 101 000 000 00 2 6 511111 •ncl le<>t"" All"' ""° Her- Stcwe.., 1 .... ;~, Venlurd 000 000 1 t -4 l eoiaen ~t 011 OlO • s s 1 Powell .-,., Most>r "-'""" •"" 0...en HIGN !IC.HOOL Stcwe ty I ""'"t> ""'"' no ?OO s-10 s o Hu,.18ch 000 001 1 l a 7 · Loctt~ •nd L Veio .. Pucnel. Chn-~noe..o IJI P•~hel 111 and L f::1nn AJamitos Results l'erMetMl•Y 11 '1111 et Jl.lli9M lllerflftt mHll F "'' ••<e · Ou•tter Byra IGoUOrHlll ICUO, ' 00. 3 80. Senoe Lule IOesomtrl t 80 1 tlO Cllow •Ounnebeo l S IO i? e••Cle 16 11 P•ld 1'I 60 !.KOftd fKt Ju•lly Joe IC.all'OOI 1• 20, 2•.40. 10.ao , L•ncotM G•le lll•ll•l'clll'IQl\em (I to. 4 101 JohMY Rove1 N • Rotcnle I & IO. T hlrd rece-Rlgl\t AIHll" IS!>f'IOQSI •.to. 3.40, 3.00. W•nt•wi11 Cllr1t IL011ool '·'°· S.00. Chinese Apple IWllll•ms I 3 to Fourtll rMe -Tnt Puntt IAublnl l .o, 1.•o. 1.10 . Howdy Gu'I IGoudre..,1 l 00. 180; Andy, Carol ISucceroUel •IO; 12 Hect• 14·11 peld 10 40. Flflll reo-M1Ql\ty ~ 1Auo1nl 3 10. 2,.0, l .00; Jer-11 e1 ... orn1 (Goll(lrHV) '00, 3 20: Ntll¥t Time Tetllt 10.nnlsl •.20. Slxtll rec.e-<ernedtro IGollclreeu I 1.10, J.MI, 2.80; Ru51y River ICr•11eJ 3 20, 1 .. : LefllQll Pl' .. ti IRl<llmolldl ~tel: tt .. ecte IHI peld2',60. SevtmA rece~ronie H-,;er A (5orl110\ I S.00, ).00. 1 .0; Mlltl•r IGollClrUlll 4.00, > '°; VOll"Q Nt'" Cf odd) S.40. 1El9lllll rece -Rtlohs Mir.cl• lltetcllfwdl n .... n.o, 11 IO; a.ti Gle11ve1e 10em111 ,,20, 7.10; Andv't Deen llUO>. n uecle IS II o•ld •10.40. Hl1111\ reu-He11m IR_,,t 1' oo. •.40, • 40; Jim The her CGoudn•ul 3 00, l 00, IMltr 1(1119 IRetcMorol uo: u uec:te IJ-tl IM! id" .eo. Altt'*"'tt-S,170. ie.c111wcw CMt>-. •• -...i. 41At. left AMlftl9•,,.........' " .... ~ Habit bustin' made easy .•. Maybe you started smoking because you liked whot o cigorerte did for your self lmoge. Mode you feel more sophisticated. Or more virile. Now you·re not so sure. You smoke mostly because it's too difficult to get off cigarettes. You don't know where your habit's toking you ond you'd like to get It under control. WHY CAN'T I QUIT of rhe problem rhe ~ubconmou~ ON MY OWN? memory Sch1~ hos 1n11es1ed ~6 m1lhon in re· seorch on hobir rormouon and conrrol. The results or rtus research 1nc:hcore rhot oddlcuve hob11s. such os smoking. 01e entrenched 1n rhe subconscious where your ro11onol mind hos little con- trol Yoo moy wo111 ro siop smoking bur yeors or stored-up memories work ogolnsi you This subconscious force Is much srronger thon you ore oble to perceive once you occepr rh1s concepr you will reollze rhot 11 Is no rertealon on your 1ntellf- gence or sirengrh or w ill Ir YoU decide to osk for help tr you need help. odmlt It The mo)Onry or U!> do \ WHY DO OTHEk STOP SMOKING ~OGMMS FAIL? Other srop smoking programs hove o MISSING INGl\EDIENT thot rhe Sch~ Pro· grom provides Schick hos the only merhod which works on the source FOi\ A fl\EE NO-OOUGATION INTEIWIEW CAU 520-8000 toSonDt~ Jn Or~ Counry C114) 299· 7&00 (714) 558-6404 Schick is so conhdenr of rhe etteo1venes.s or llS program lhOr 1f you hoven t become o comronoble ex-smoker oh er rhe 1n111ol five doys on the program you get your money boc:k · There is on odd1- tionol follow -up piogrom ond then we bock you for o whole year We re always there w1rh permonenr lull-rime cenrers. QUIT WHILE YOU'RE AHEAD The moment you become on ex- smoker you've eliminated mosi of rhe fn9hten1ng rtsks you face os o smoker You ore no 1c>n9er port of rhose ugly stotis11cs. That's rhe besr reason rhe<e 1s f0< not purring off qu1mn9 Schiek makes 11 eosy ond po1nfes.s ond FAST ond EFFECTIVE Join the millions of ex-smokers ~'--' 1 DMN.Y Htl.LS PASADENA ...... COLTON 11200 tw Vefnon Ave C""9t, ,_.. oeu ~ N lo CM!ne90 Olvo ?7 :3 ~ lokE' Av .. lllS I C•r-.. , Me• t. c:.111t1reiw OMNG£ ENCINO TOAMNCE • ~-' Town or1d Courury Ce>l\llt' I ~7 JO V~1u10 Olvd J61Q Poc1f< Coo\I Mwv • .....,. lelcltWl'-1 ....... °' ..... '--------------------------------...... • ............. II! ---------- PUBLIC NOTICE n~n ~UtHI PuOU\ftld Or~ C.0.>I o.Mly Piiot Ftb. 21. MM. 6, ll. 20, '"' 1ll i. Jlt1M1t PllbllSllllCI ~""91 eo.st Oeilv Pli.t Ftb 71, Mer.'· IJ, 10. "" •11·1' PUBLIC NOTICE -· It& DAILY PILOT T~,. March t , 1119 Business , · F.luctuations Pay Off pecWative Posture Can Mean Int rest Profits By SB alY L Pardon the pun, but I( UK-l"t'' on lhlnt of uni versa I lnlettttt~ c d 1y1, I\ '1Hnl~~lr al Aod Jn lh lul deud . lnl•tt•l ,. ••• have nuc t.ual d moro wJdt-ly Utan m alme>1t an)' olher ~rlod in hi tory. or obvious f"fuons, t nu<' lu•tlo"' can met~t pt"Oplt-p~lty n.ttVOW9 But thlJI need oot bf' un.r.etlliJll. U actually pro v1dea the inJw1du1tl with l)l-('ul1llv" lncUnauon• and 1utr1c1ent c.·&&pllal. •n uc1~ and profitablt• tradlna <>PIKlrtunlty . Stnct' late 1m. wbtn tutures tradln.JC for Ginnie Ma pau·lhl"OUlbs WH •P proVt.-d on lhti Cluc11ao Board ()( TredC', u hu bttn Vollblblc lo .,~\'.uJ•t~ on thl' tn·nd lo Iona term In l4'rt•11t raw SINCE TUEN. S£\'£RAL Nt:W 1ntert11l rt•latt'd rutun-~ cootruct: havt' ~n added. lhl't(' month 1'n.-Ubury hill». long krm ·rreai.ury bond~ ~ lhrt'l' month com mt'n·u;I paper. one )l'tiar Trt'ui;ury b1Jb und two nt•w Gtnnlt: M•t.-contr11('l1' All tutve mt:l with sud\ sut'ce , u host of oth~r Cuturcc'Ontracts U't\'U1l 11p1;rovul lo fa\'l, s1m.·e nud ·l9'76, volume 1n Ginn1e Mae~. balls and bondi. h»:. ulmoM doublt!d every nin~· nwnthb, reut·hmg nearly one mUhon contra ch, in 197lfs fourth quarter. Trl*<im& in interest rate .futu res bas risen from 11 r"1n_E_IW_.:>_'R_~-1u-moddt ~percent of tohtl r • w ,. . ..,,.,,. eom mod.tty futures con THE crro~r;vr tracts to a'bout 6 perc~nt ... Ji 6'.CiL'..1.1 .~ The sate of our credit 'mark~t · ond th P scns1l1vtty of borrowers. ll·nders and nnanrlal ID· lermed1ant>s lo rute chan.:es \'irtually assures a good respons<-to th<>se new market futures They ha\'t> one great .idvanlage for many speculator:., who ma)' be familiar with the market uu1uences. In an upcommg artkle. wt' will go into greate r tletaal about commodity future!> trading, but lhl· basic economic justif1 catfon for ult of them. 10 terest rate fut ures included. 1s the need of selJeni 1 producers > a nd buyers !user!>> of the com modalies an the cash market to reduce the risk!> of price nuctuat1ons S PECULATORS COME INTO THE market to as:.ume those risks jn hopes of reaping the gains that hedgers a re willing to forego to minimize their n sks THE DIES~ ABE HERE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. ~~~!l8 2600!!~~ ~ CoJto Me:so,540-9100 We make a markt:t i11 lntt-rnt ralt1 futurt s•rovldo u unique op portunlly tor people wllh the ncrt•saary rlak upllaJ and <'YleOv lft<'lln1Uon who htv" nf'ver u I'd th c<>mmodlllo. future111 market~ Why " 8 UUIC" ~ l f:"'C'Ul•lt>rli prob•bly already have dtflnUe optnJona ol wht'rt' thl.' c<inomy 11 head :ct and t-JCpttt•t1on1 as to th dir ·Uon of lntereiit ratr SUth f"JCpectaUon• can tk" u t-d to &peculate In lnlcrestr attfutu,..,.K Furtbclrmore. lbt• t11ah lc\'.-1 •10 "vallable lrl futurn tradl"-<t.1 ncc m1&r110 ~qulremcnt1 ure 2 pttrnmt or I ... , or thf> valUl' or tht rontrat'I& purcho cd or 1old > mnlwi. It po '\Ible to tAke advuntal(t' or opportun\lies tn lntt're11t rail' moVC'rT)t•n h wUhout tylflR up u lot nr capitjl or borrowu1a cw1t1y f1.1nd11 lt(>rc arti sonll' example~ of how t10mt1 futures trodt:!oo m1ght hllvt• workt•d out LUCA\ A NP•:<'U l..l\TOK WHO correctly for1•cai.t11 tl11• rlsl• 111 short.term m tert-."lt rat .. ~ from lhl• bPummnJ( ot August to the end or NO\l•mlwr llH8 c·ou)d huvc bOld December 1978 Trcuurv ball'4 ,hort und nclle<t ubout $5,000 1n profata on l• marum lnvcRtroenl or $1,250. Anothl·r Investor v. ho a('cepled Merrill Lynch ecanomks' July fol't't'U!lt of n marked slowdown 10 C<'Onoml<' ul'll\'lty early In 1979 could have taken adv:rntnR•' of lhllt forecutit lly uslrig a Treas ury bill spr<'11d .Slnt·t• thfll fort•<'a11t called for short-term mtt•rt•st rutt•t. to pe•uk t'i•rly In 1979 and decline later on, In curly Aut(ust tht1 investor could huvt' s imultnrtt'flUAly &olct tht' Murch 1979 Tre1tsury b'll and boul'ht the Murch 1980 bil l. Ovt•r U1t• Au.cusl Novem ber period. such a ~tral«'flY t•ould huvt• netted more than S3.000 profit Ort II ffifirJ(ln lrWCStffil•nl Of $000. Of COUrSe if those proJl·ctions had proven inaccurate. the 'position could have resulted m a Joss. T HE LATTE R EXAMPLE POINTS UP the fol·t that interest rate futures also may allow for i.om e more sophisticated trading strategies. Such trading strategies may reduce trading ris ks and allow the trader to express more accurately a sense or liming of economic developments as well as the general direction for the economy . The futures market has an important ad van- tage over the cash market for these secu1 ities, because jn the futures market, it 1s just as easy to sell short as it is lo buy or take a Jong position. Sherry Luc<l3 1s an account e.recuhve m the Santa Ana office of Merrill Lynch. P1erce. ,..ttnner and Smith Fluor Reports Record Earnings Fluor Corp. Irvine. has reported record net earnings for the first quarter ended Jan. 31 of $23,807,000, or $VU a s hare. up 28 percent from net earnings or $18.618,000. or $1 .10, for the like period last year. TAK l ~t; STO<:K Re venues for the first quarter o( 1979 were $763,991.000. compared with $627,075,000 for the previous year , the com pany said Monday. Cofff>e Cuc New orders were $1 .2 billion, a first quarter record. compared with $611 million in \he like quarter l ast yea r . Backlog was $11.6 billion. compared with $12.7 billion at the end or the first quarte r last year. "Mos t ol our s ub· sidiaries came m with s trong performances to produce record firsl· quarter earnings," said c h airman J . Robert Fluor. "Subsequent to Jan. 31. lbe company received a contract worth m ore than $2 billion to expand coa I-lo-liquids facilities in South Africa. Thia brings backlog to another record al this tlme - about $13.5 billion.'' lyTMA•-l•l-4Preu Several major coffee companies ha ve an· nounced c uts of s cents a pound in the wholesale prices or lbeir ground coffee brands in the second round of price cuts or the past three weeks. Procter & Gamble Co .. the nalion·s second· largest coffee roaster. said "declines in Import ed green coffee prices" led to the wholesale re · ductions in Its Folger's brands. Hills Brothers. the lhird-rapked roaster . gave a similar reason in announcing Its prlce re- ductions on Monday. General Foods Corp .. t h e No. !·rank ed roas ter. did not 1 m - m e diate ly follow the moves by Procter & Gambl e and Hil l s Brothers, but "obviou.'I· ly. if Hill's has done at. we 're going to have a look al il." sa id s pokesman Jack Whiteman. Westerq ·Digital Corporation 0 Piifer WIDE AREA COVERAGE ~00.-L.A. • Com mon Stock for current quotatlons, Tcltphone: Guth Flint n Kklclea; Peabody ~c:o.INCO RPORATEO "-"' NfJ ~ ,.., ""'"" ....,rlo•~ swt fhh•• tJO~Ctil•Ddw.~._.,CAf~ TtltphoM t'114) Mf.10t0 ••••• ;.:r: NO DEPOSIT ON APPIOVED CREDIT ~----~ tt• DIRECTOR AT DOWNEY Donne Nlel1en Dou:neyS&L AcUB Nielsen As Director Dlreclors o( Downey Savings and Loan Association. based in Costa Mesa. have appointed Donna Naclsen a director of the us soc 1at1on. Mrs Nielsen . 35, has been af· f1hated with t he association since 1962. For a number of years she was m anager or the association's loan ser vice opera tton. Before he r appointment. she was assisting in the loan ser vice department in various capacities MRS. NIE i.SEN •'ILLS a vacancy on the associat ion's board as a result or the death last fall of Case Bradford. a founding board member Assets of Downey Savings are an excess of SI billion und the firm operates statewide with 29 approved offices. Japan Views Split Over Oil Shortage TOKYO CAP> The Japanese eovcrnment and 11omc petroleum Industry oltlctals are al odds over the seriousness or th\· cu1Teot 011 situation in ihelr nation. whkh am ports 99. 7 percent of 1(s energy needs. The eovernmenl Cs optimilttc: industry 1s not "We see the situation as it la aQd at 's not as serious as some peoph· might claim." said a For.elan Mlniatry official. who declined ~ use of hi• name. "Of course. we will have to use up some of our oil stockpile. bul that 's what emergency sup. plies are there for." JAPAN WAS ONE of the na tions that had a bag slake m Iran's oil. supplies or which have been drastically cut because of the upheavals that led to the ouster o< the s hah of I ran and the installation or an lsletmJt• revolutionary regime Petroleum indust ry source:. clatm the Japanese government 1s overly opt1m1sta c and ~ay serious shortages might not bt: far off If the government does not come to grips with the sltua · ti on Yosh1haru F'uJiya . finant'e chief or Nippon Petroleum. said "l 'm very scared because I fear another oil s hock. The signs are there." HE ADDED THAT Japan ha!> supplies to last untiJ next fall a nd that by next winter. when domesllc demand 1s at ats peak. s~rious shortages could an sl' ':!:J can see a nother 01\ cn s1:. coming." Fujlya said ... J apan 1s havlng to look for alternative sources of supply and s hipments are being delayed by one month and sometimes more. Coupled with that . prace~ wall skyrocket ''THE GOVER N M EN T 1 s pr e p aring lt )>tl f for the wor :.t po:.s1b l t e m e rgency, JUSt rn case." he said. "Those coupons wall never be used, though. The publi c wouldn't know what to do with the m . The last time. we ex persenced rut ionin~ was an Q,·c.·r Tiu· <.:ount.-r NASO ListiftC)S World War JI and I doubt 1f rt 'II ever happen a1:arn · H ~ van~ p(\r "l •ll·nlly l>l.ited t-arher there would bt· no need tu dip into the r.a t1on·., H5 day emc rgency stockp1lc.·. 1 h1· gov crnment now ~ay~ 1t w1I! h" ... c to use up about 10 d1:1y-. worth tu gel thrOURh March Se11ch1 Kond r, Gf "·'IJdf• , Natural Resourct·~ anc!' Er.erg-. A~cncy said lhen 1~ n<> c<1u~1· for alarm but "tt ·..., goin)? to bl· 4 very l1J:tht winter " JAPAN. WlUCH GOT 20 !)t'r cent or its petroleum nc~dl-lrom Iran before !>lnfo tht:re hailed exports. has managed to mak1· up the d1fferenc«.>. moi.lly with increased purchases from Saudi Ara bia. Kuwait and thl' {jnJted Arab Em1r;Jll'1>. all 1n t ho· Persian Gulf areh f n ,q has pn1 v1ded about 4 l)t!rCt'n t J<.1pan·, total crudc-0 11 import~ for this year ' far ... t quartl'r ?Co percent of which ('Omes 1 mm Uu· M addle· East and t ht-re:.t fron. lndont:'!>ICI, will IOI.ii 45b :i .• m1lhon barrels. -.ho rt or lh\• target of' 460 25 mil hon barrels But a de c1s 1o n by th.- Orgaruz.allon of Pttroleum r-:, portrng Countnes tr, allow 1t-. men.* countne), to anc.:n:cis• the .t)HC'e of 011 separately c.:ou lc! af!t!l the Japancst- JAPA N '~ O IL 1ndu~t1 1. already has pa:.sed It. tht> (•cir :-.um er J 14 .S ~r<'cnt pnc•· in creaife by OPEC thcit took t:ffer 1 Jan I Th<' fourpha:.t-pnC'' 1r. crease will ra1s" tht bcisP pr~r·•· of 01 I to $14 54 .; bc.rrel by Ot•t I NIJ,.,.ft I MAwlli(P\ N•I'"°"" P•n•tfb Ml'q0 IJf' Alll"'CD M~lf"f•t ... v PY,.,. f rovGIO ~~~,~ .. f..trmFo 1n1tcM<K Gr!N•I• runo5v' ICIOolG F!Af1n "'""'9'' ... ,_ ruwe~!" G411WVSD1 \ '''Oyn • \ 1~ 't '"' ,. ~·· I "· ,, . I ~·. n• •o· J• )' 10.1. .. I.._ ,. '"'" O ft ., O•· II . ~ Ct• •1 • Ot• :I 1 O•• 01• 01• '1-. Ot• " f '" O•• "• '• ()tt I ' Ot• '" O•• '' Ott I . Ot• , • ... Off I. ''• O tt "'· ... Ott •• , or• •' •• 0111 ~, • .. Ot1 & ·, •. On •' ... Ott flt' MUTUAL FUNDS Slt>CKS I BUSINESS ·Tu day' Clo inf( P ri .. es NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OU.t•lihl ,..,.,, •• ""''._lffwVt•• 1141-u "-Kill( l"•W ........ o.1r.i1 •MCIM1n~t1t19<• ... ~·-·-•oO llv 'IW llf4'1•0fl•I A•..e<••l'-1 .... u•IUH 0..alen .... ''""IW' Ti.mday, March 5. 1979 N CAii. V PILOT •• Tax Time Only a Few Face Audit By SYLVIA. PORTER ""''""""~ Most people wonder. as they mail tbeir returns, "Whal are tbe odds on my return being audited'>" The reas urlng answer: statistically, v4try small. According to latest IRS figures, your chances of bav· Ing a field or of'fice audit depends oo the type or return and t-0tal Income. Speclrically: If you do dot have bus1ness incorne. tor every 100 re· turns ftled, the odds on an audit are as follows : Forrn 1040, using standard deductJon, o.es percent. under Sl0,000, Itemizing deductions. 3.(5 percent : Sl0,000 lo "°,000. 2.40 percent: $50,000 and over. 11.35 percent IF YOtJ HAVE BUSJN~ INOOME, your odds· un. der $10,000, 3.12 percent: $10,000 to $30,000, 2.07 percent: SJ0,000 and over. 7 36 percent. Chances of being audited also depend on where you llve. In Manhattan. according to the Research Inslllute of America. 3.85 percent of returns are audited; in San Fran· cisco. the proportion drops to 2.52 percent; in New Orleans. 1.64 percent. Eut even if your re lurn is chosen for ex amination. thal doe:. not mean you have to pay more tax. rr you have fil ed a rully sup ported ret urn . you Money's Worth generally will have only the annoyance and aggravation of having to back up your figures. If you disagree with an IRS agent. you no longer have a two-step appeaJ procedure. Previously, you could appeal lhe added tax assessment to a djstrict conference. in an in- formal get.together to try to' settle the dispute. Then you could appeal to the appellate division of IRS for a second opportunJty to argue your case NOW YOU HAVE ONLY ONE chance to argue your case. an appeal to the appellate division lt 1s less informal than the district conference The IRS contends this eliminates duplication and permits the first hearing before an agent with Cull settlement authority. You might feel. though, t hat a one-shot chance lo argue is rarely as good as a two-shot J ust what determines why the IRS computer picks re· turns for audits is a closely guarded secret, but a major factor undoubtedly 1s what IRS considers to be an ex- ~C$$ivut.emiied deduction in various categories m ay be a valuable guideline FOR INCOMES OF S9.090 TO $10,000, the average r~· turn in 1.976 showed S896 in medical deductions, $958 in tax. es. $441 incontributions and $1,268 in interest !including mortgage1. For incomes of SI0.000 to SLS.000: $655 in medical expenses. Sl.129 m laxes. $414 in contributions. Sl.378 interest. For incomes of S15.000 lo S20,000: $586 in medical expenses. Sl.503 in taxes. S472 in contributions and SI.690 interest For incomes or $20,000 to $25.000 : $487 in medical expenses. Sl .869 in taxes. SS42 m contribution&. Sl.836 interest For incomes of S25,000 to $30,000: $442 m medical h · penses, $2,262 in tues. $646 in contributions. $1,977 in iD· terest. For incomes of $30,000 to $50,000 : $.523 in·mediql expenses. $3,0SO in taxes. S939 in contTibutions. $2,366 in lj. ~rest. For incomes of SS0.000 to $100,000: $700 in medical expenses. S5.383 in taxes, $2,015 In contributions, $3,95Hh interest. For incomes of $100.000 and up: $1,095 in medical expenses. Sl3,296 in taxes. S9,902 in contributions at*id $9,249 in interest. .. • State S&Ls Buck Decline by Market NEW YORK <AP) -Most of the stock market turned downward after Monday's rally. The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials. which jumped 11.61 poants Monday, dropped back 0.78 lo 826.58 to· day Losers took a sli ght lead over gamers m the over·all tally of New York Stock Exchange·listed issues. A wave of buying in the savings and loans o,yas touched off when National Steel said it agreed to buy one company in the industry, United Financial of California, for $42 ~ share. United Financial stock 1umped. 12~ to 36\4 alter a de· layedopening. . .. ... .. _ .. -. NEW VO~K IAP• Appro• liMI Pn•IOvs <Ny Wfflr ~ Montll _.,., • Vear ll90 • Two vors <'IQO _ Jen I 10 d8re 1 t1' to cs.1~ 1•11 ro oace WHAT AMEX 010 NEW VORlt IAPI Alfv•"<M Ot!cllned Onc:Mnoed Tolel IH!ro New lllQh\ New IO..,, Prtv roes., .,.., 169 JU ,.) '°' 7S. , .. 118 131 •• •O ' . ... . -- • B lWl't'N.OT . I l * TueedlJ, Metef\ I, tt7t MARMADUKE by Bract Aadenon "Could you hold off dinner? I hate to woke him." SUPERHEROES SHOE MOON MULLINS MY SQUAD FllJ5KE() )()(.JR ENl/RE f>TAFF •• 8UT WE COUL.DN'T FINO ANYTHING. By Bil Keane "You're wrong. I just hav. o slight case of the flu. I om NOT dying of old age." FUNkY WINKERBEAN MISS PEACH by Pasko, Tuska & CoUetta J W.AS AFRAIO OF THAT THEN THE THING IW.6T1'E SEEN Pl.ANTED ON tOl5 LANE Ofl. aAltl< K6N1'-I by Jeff MacNelly by Ferd & Tom Johnson GORDO • JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS Ii \'.OOU' Sa:M HIL.~Afftl HAMHOCf<fff.S sr11 .. t..1~R~'1 IN i1JMJL.EWEE"5. NANCY AUNT FR ITZI·-· I'M G!TTING KtNM A9,eNT· MINOfO s a u 1HE ~K I& €Cl$). DRABBLE 1' 45.Ufoo\i-\A~\Z(, !LAS"i. it\' IM!t-l CA~ ~ ~ ~\f{'N ~ll.S' WMt lill6 "™~ ~'4 ~~ c~·~ -.m:~ 1b !'f.FAl..10 ~~ ft>IA.>t:R . DR. SMOCK MOTLEY'S CREW SO }OU AAVE~'f Sl;&N A D~NT15i l N 1eN YEA~5 ? 6eE:. VOO HAVE SUCH AN UNCANNY GRASP OF 1'He OIJl/IOUS. weL.L.···I WA~ PReTTV CLOS!··· .. ,. ... byMeH by Gus Arriola by·Harold Le Doux .. COMICS I C,.OSSWOAD PEANUTS ~00 SAID, IF I TOOK PAAT IN THE 5PEU..IN6 BEE, A1.L l'D MAVE 'TO 00 15 SPCU. WOROS ... 1i>~"1 ~'4 ~AA\(0 ~E ~ti? • \olOll.) Pl 0 'f'M t '4 IC~ t'T" llJOVl..V U 'ST. 1'~1(.\~ -«-.tt~ "? NU~,HOl,O At.I.. MY CALI,..$, C~l.AU. MY APPOIN'fMENrS ... l>Y CMrlts M. Schulz ~oo '!1N'T 5A"f I HAO TO ~LL 'EM Rl6HT ! by Ktvin Fagan by George Lemont p LZ RO by Tem~eton & Forman .. ANO 1at. MY Wl~E TO GO AMEADAHD~R ~~M~~~. TODAY9S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1-~tt 50gled 9 Speeds 14 Crtppled 15 cab 16Act 11 Death notice 18-and Ct'lf1S 19 PM>lal 20 Asian mam- mal n Hlgtl degree 24 Amasses 29 Free 11 Matsh bird 29 AppllUtlon 30 "Balder· dalhl" 33Cholcel 37 Beluty: Pre- lilc 38 Incident 39 Kind of fruit «> Lotto kin 41 Hair dye 42 Formal 4-4 Map abbr. 45 Seed ~•sel 48 Hamlet, 10< one 47 Netner11nda vintge ~He.a part ~ Conline- rnent 57 CNllenQed 58 Swedish is· land 59 Instrument 61 C1ocil 12 Paraonaoe 63 Slave 64 Picture 65~rldge 86Sow 17100-yetr perioda: Abbr. DOWN 1 eonoeats 2 Practice 3 Friend: Sp. 'Inhibiting thing 5 Greet letter 6 Fabric unit 7 Prliae 8 Rebeted 9 Peace 10 Lo¥e: It 11 Kind of pop 12Coopd'- 13 Withered 21 Retpond 23 Fling 25 Pole UNITED Feature Syndlctte Monday's Puule Solwxl. l , . .. ' I A • l -' ,. • p 0 L I V A UIP 0 • •• 0 l l 0 ~ I ( ' • • l I ,. I U l ( I ' A ., .... ,11 0 l l l • -at Ol I l A 1 l I I N ( 0 ti 4 0 l I ··-ti 0 I 1-0 • l 0 • c • s 0 P I C AIU ··~ 0 J I 0 U $ I CO OA1C _, .,. •• ,ll •l• ... l • I c• I l ti I ·-0 Atl•llll .SI T1 1 110 ota"i l Tl 4 • T U IT ,Oltl 'i 0 0 'jj l l I 4 l • A T iO 'i'i1'if O o tlN till•• ---- 28 Baseball hits: 2 WOfdS 30 Hindu prln- eeaa 31 Ruuian glr1'a name 32 tmplemen\ 33 Bnatte 3' Harmlul 35 Penitence aeuon 36 Pouessive WOfd 37 Of movies 40 Fiiieted 42 Duck 43 Pad '5 Conalder 47 Thick- headed 48 Hubbub 60 Charge 51 Fruit 52 Parldlaea 53~pOll 5' Hlgtt notes 55 Fluid con- tainer 58 Nol any eo Headed I lONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS TelevisiOn DAILY PILOT •7 .r...,,1e Intrigue Bo Sven.son plays an explorer who seeks a clue to jungle treasure from Amazon queen Anita Ekberg in "Gold of the Amazon Women" tonight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4. C'Jaa1111,I Ll•tlllfl• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles G KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles I KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) ~FMB ICBS) San Diego 0 KHJ. TV I Ind ) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) 5an Diego 8J KT1V (Ind) Los Angeles G> KCOP·TV jlnd I Los Angeles 8l) l<CET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles 6ti> KOCE·TV(PBS) Hun!lngton Beach 80UAM8 I TIC T/IC DOUGH ADAM-t2 Reed can·t ullderatand wtly 1119 "11\aggy Clog" AIO- ry ltn'I gettl"G • hllarloo• relC)Onll l ~WATCH NEW9CHIQ( TMIQONGIHOW 7:1t •T'OtlQKT MO. (I) ~ MJIORTS .. lnelde Tiie Union .. Anctlormln Oeorgt ...,. l'nlf1 tallal "' unconven--llonll lodl et local 1010 of 1he United Steel Worlllfl to -..mine the myth of "big~." .. CUf'FHANGEN ~ Wllllam1 ta trapped In • Motl ptt; Jim DorWI« II eHaclced by I fanged mi.- lure, and Count Oreoola plOll 10 poleon Kurt Von Helllog. • cou.ME Mlk.ET8AU. Colorwdo Stat• va. Unlver· ~Of~IMVtQM •9 HAWYOAYI Molil .....,_ """ r..111- .,. ,.. • IMldftO '*" or• "' end .,,,,. to fONlil. ... Ind "" OlflQ for ;'MCMI ** ... "A Wiiii In TN ltWtne "9111" (tt10) lngr1d llerQmen. A~ Quinn. A NlldY rnerrled WOll'Mll'I llndl herMlt llillnG In IOV9 ""'"' • mourtteltl """ .... ~ II vacetlOnlnQ wttti lier ~.(21'1fl.) • CAIO. IUIWITT /IMIJ.....,. ""-' "letblty al\d Ben ... ''Alncld~·· • WCWIE • ·~ ''Clalll UgMnlng" (IMO) Humphrey Bogat1. ~ Petit., Greed .,.. OOIU I )llt pllot hie ... ~~ 00¥-.V '"Time Bomb At Fifty Fethorntl"' Coust-.. and 1111 er_,_ d~-°"' tOIOC CW0o lrom • lrelgh1M fmoot\led In • coll- llon )ult IOUttl Of the ..... "'It~ a;JOe9 UVERH!& 8HllllEY l.8¥efne deddel she wen11 • mo<'e "feminine" lmege 10 attract men end turn• to 8fllrley for help. en.oooCOUPLE OICM reveal• a 11111• known roman11c ei>llOde In F«lx'• put. t:OO. Cl}.. MCMI 1 • "Coectl" t t9Ul c_attiy_ LH Cro1by. MICllHI 8lttln. An ltl11C11Ye "'7llle athlete II hired by • oorn- puter error to ~ • ~ Ngtl lc:flOOI bll'cel· bell teem. G HKMOW: "Gold Of The Amazon Women" (Premlent) Bo Sventon. AnlUI EJl~g. Two~~ '°' tr..... In the Jw1Qllea Of South Amllrb etumble upon • primitive eoc:lety ol ·~women. e o THME'I C!Ot#Nf'f • JO trfel to l)fove to Clw*Y ttlat lie cen give up W01Mt1 longer than Ille cen give up food. (R) • fllEWGM'AN Oueet9: Nini Blenchard, Shelley Smith, Mld!MI TUBE TOPPERS KOCE 9 and KCET 9 8:00 - Cousteau Odyssey. Dangerous toxic cargo is recovered from a sunken freighter by Captain Cousteau and his crew. CBS 9 9:00 -"Coach," Cathy Lee Crosby plays an attractive athlete hired through a computer to coach a boys' hJgh sohool basketball team in this 1978 TV movie. KCET @ 9: 15 -National Geo- graphic Special. The s tory of the great whales, oldest Uving mammals on earth, is examined . Edwlrdl, £'ta, lob Pittard, Paolo~ -~ n«ATJW ··~ ~ ... TheSuf. 11n1 Slstert" A gawlly 'Mll40tr beoomel ll<J9e-1111ly end comlcally ~wltll·~~~ po1lml1trH1 and her ~-·· 1:1t• MAT10NAL ~8P(aAL ·'The Great Whalee" The Ille of the awth'• l¥Qlat Ind oldelt llvlng memmal1 11 c:tocumented. e:aoe a rAXJ Aft« being ltlot at In 1 hOldup attempt, Ala quite hi• cabbl• Job and beoomel • wait• In • 1n<>l>bllh ..-1aurant. 10;tO 11 :.., , H'1roH ,.,.. Hugg(• fl1end volun- ..... lnlomMltlon to Star· airy *'° Hutcll In e.n ~t dnig ceM, he .. ltJll9d befclfe being able t<> t.ilfy and the two offlolre '-"'" In MOii'· (Part I of .. NIGHTCWJ.BW "~ 111 The Winer· A young glt1 end ,,., boy- triend -vllltlng In .,, ooeenfront town -'*" Ille beglne to lllY9 ltflll'Q9 vlllonl. ID THME MIN IN A BOAT Mic:hMI Pllln. Tim Curry and Steptian Moen boil up Iha Tllamel. from Hen- ~ to ())(ford. 10'.IO • OR 'PMTION OIF lnw.I Wiii lcMlkO'tlky condUc:ta the Vienna ~ monlO OrcNltrl In the mulie of Iha Sir-twnlty. 10:S01 • M1W1 • 11:00 • (I) 9 MEWi MAKE ME lA'*4 MOVE ••1t ··Carry On AQl!n. Doctor" ( tt70) KenMUI Wllllerna. &dney J-. A young doc:lor ftnds hlmM4f Iha Object of jallousy and ~oealng -""" he dtecicNerl I ,_ birth COO. lrol aenirn.12 tin.) • THE OOOCOUPU OIClr don•••• F•lh1'1 band • P9YfT*ll of • [ bllng debt. nteGOOOIE8 11:20 TO IE ANNOUNCED 11:30 (I) 8ANWJV JONIS A~~ • ....._"ulty defended • jeWll thief murden 1111 dllnt to get the game IOt himMlt. (R) D TONOHT G4*lt tio.t: FUc:l'I Utt». Guelt: Cher. • lWIJGHT ZONE ''A Thing Al>out ~·· Blld·ternpered BartteCI AncNey ~ to --ttm rMCl*lel don't ... him. •@ MCMOYIE • *. "CilllfonU S9111"' (1974) Elllott Gould, George Segal. Two COl'l\- pulllve glll'lblerl, WfN> become ptlls 9'1• ttley ere mugged together, bet end brl'M their Wfrf from Loa Atlgl6al to Alno. (R) I THEOOHO SHOW GETIMART Mu lftd'"' -tlle ~ -~-~by• KA08 llgllnt on I Cerit>- ~ ~ • CAl'TlOHB> MC HIWt MOANING 1UO. nftJGHT Z<M "Nlgtlt Of The Mel*" Hen· ry ConMn le • dll(>lttment •tore Sant• ca.u1 wtlti • true flMlltlQ I« U. Ctlflet· INllCllflt. • MIMD tmlHOOOI< l'MtlHT8 ··Apeiii" A "*' end IWl lov· ., decide 10 get rid of ,, .. W-. IO Chet ~ can be tr=:IMART Mu, 99 end Feng 00 to I pee etor• wtlim ~ -. pec111 •Iron! fOt KAOS. • OCKCAWTT 0.-t: Kltl\Wlnl Hepbum . (Pwt 2 of 5) 12::30 e MOYE * *'"' "Belle 01 The Nlnllfll" ( 1934) MH Wut, Roger Pryor. Romence blo11om1 between • nlgtlldub lillQ9r Ind • prlzilflgllwr dul1ng the Gay Nlnlltlel. ( t hr .• 25 min.) 8) MOYIE * *'"' "Born To Be Biid" ( 11150) Joell Fonlllne. Rob- .,, Ryen. A ~Illy Innocent women le l9d 10 dMlrvctlon when her true MllKI la rMalld. (2 hrt.) • MOYIE * • "Pleyglrt" ( 11>5-') Shel- ley Wlntere. Bafry Sullivan. A pretty oountry girl loolca lor lo"9 end udt-t in !ti. blgc:'JY. {I fir., 30 min.) 12:'AO 8 (I) C8I UTE MOW • • • 'h "Notorious .. C 1946) Ingrid e.rgm1n, City Gnlnt. M American unci..'00¥« egent SW· IU9del the deugl'll• of a Nazi -crlmlnel 10 lnfll· trete I gen; of NC. ~ In Sou1h A.metiC1. I RI 1:008 TOMOMOW G'*t: T1ny Boyles. one of only tlVM bOunty hunters left In the UnlMd Stet• I LOVE IXP£RT8 1:IO NEWS WAHTB>: DfAO ~ AlM 1:111 NEWS too NEWS MOYIE • • "Hld11w1y Glrr' ( 1937) Mlrttll R.ye, Stlir· ley Rola. A young gill on IN lln'I from poltot t\11\1 1n16 a Prince ~ Olayt>Oy. (t tw., 2f min.I -~ • • \4 "Honeycomb" J 1912) Glfl6dlne CMplln, Par a-won. A conven• ttonet married coup141· tndutga In 111pen11v• 9!':'* Of 11111eay. (2 tltt.) •<MTIMMT CONTROL pita thlit ~. Hymie. ...... KA08'1 notonoue 1c..,, OcttNta . .... MOYla * • "'Mtln In TM Saddle" (1961) Randolph Scott, ~lAlle.Af'flll'l...U revenge upon hit wtf1'1 2-M lloYar=· 30 min) S:ta MOVIE • • '.4 .. Bombardier" ( 18'3) Pat O'Brien. RM- dolph Scott. Mtrt trlinlng for~ foftrMI ~ llgflt for ~ during Wond W111 II. (2 tn.I =1~.u:.o. dO MOVIE + • "Bond Of Fear" (19581 Dermot Waltll. J- Barrett. An ~ killer llOld• .,, Engllltl lwnlly .. tiostegee and -their trailer 10 get to Dover. (t hr.,30mln ) G MOVIE • * "Moving Target" (1971) Ty Hardin, MldlMI Rennie. Spiel and coun- terac>lea clUtl In effort• t<l IOC11e I valuable piece ot mlcrofllm containing ma ~ of aecret agen11. (.2 ,,, .. , • MOVte -••* "Or!Y9 A~ Road" ( 1954) Mickey Rooney, Ollnne Foster. Wedne•da11'• • Daytilfte Mo,,ie• AFTERNOON 11:GO CiJ ••• "ln1-no" ( 1953) Roberl Ryan. Rhonda Fleming. A mttllonae is left to die In the ~ by ,, ...... end ._ lc>Yw. (f hr • 30 min.) e • • •,4 "JOumey Into Light" (195 t I VNec:a Lind-- fora, Stlf1ing Hayden. A mlnlSIW who tlal IOSt hit perapectlve mMll and , .... In to\11 with • blind gkl who ~ him !Ind hit faith (t ht., 50 min.) Now It'S Third Season Time at NBC· By PETER J . BOYER LOS ANGELES IAP I -Gee, bow time rues. Seems like onJy a few weeks since NBC proudly in· troduced Its new fleet or shows for TV's second season. Wait a minute. That WAS only a few weeks ago Poor ratings make for short seuon.s. NBC bu already &tarted scrappln1 some of ill second seaaoo shows, and is preparing to introduce yet another lot. Some people ln Hollywood are se<:retly happy about NBC'• ratings won and the network's several sea.sons lt's sort ol llke war· -plenty of work around \'OU MIGHT RECALL that the network can· celed alJ the shows It introduced last fall, and that it introduced nine new shows in the new February season. Four, posslbly six, new shows are oow be· ing readied for NBC's newest new -season, to \ J Datager "'•rla Susan Anton <below> is trapped in a lion pit; Geoffry Scott (left) is attacked by monster, and lllcbael Nouri plays "Fangs for the Memory'' with Carol Baxter on "Cliff. banaen,'' debuting tonight. at 8 on NBC, Cbannel4.. replace the shows that didn't make it in the old new season. Got it? It's easy to invent new seasons these days because it·s easy to cancel shows. A network can order a series in increments of six episodes, in· stead of 13. which used to be the standard order. And now when a network wants to dump one of its awful• in the earbage pail, it can iust "decline to exercise its option on future eplaodes." And into the garbage pall it goes. NBC'S FBJDAY NIGln' at the funnies expert· meot apparently ls the network's worst fizzle. The network that had only one comedy on its fail schedule tried to launch four new comedies back· to·back, behind the almost·new comedy "Diff'rent Strokes." "Diff'rent Strokes" is quite healthy, but "Hello Larry," "Brothers and Sisters," "Turnabout" and "Sweepstakes" are quite ill. To * * * * * * Fred 'Futile' NBC Fighting Ratings MINNEAPOLIS <AP> -NBC president Fred Silverman says that much of his network's prime- Ume television scheduling this season bas been "an exercise in fuWity ." Silverman also said that the present ratings system is "a disservice to the show and to the au· dience." Btrr BE ACKNOWLEDGED that "unW the system ii chanaed, we're forced to become part of tbe system." Silverman apoke at a news conference here. He wu 1n town to help celebrate WTCN's new af. flliation with NBC. . Silverman, who took over at NBC this season after leadine ABC to ratinp domination, canceled all the new NBC programs during the fall and has introduced several new series since the start of the year "IN oaou roa NEW abowl to have any op. portuntty to 1ucceed In mldleuon, tbey have to go on the air ln late November or December," said Silverman. use the network's own euphemism, the options for more episodes has not been exercised for the latter three shows. They've been axed, and will soon dis· appear from your screen. "HeUo Larry" bas run poorly in the ratings, but ts getting another chance ~ause the network thinks the show just bas to work. It has McLean Stevenson in a fairly standard situation <the single parent formula > and, according to network spokesmaa Gene Walsh, "It's testing well." THAT MEANS WHEN THE thing is played before special test audiences, it's been well re- ceived, a . sign that its poor ratings mi~bt be blamed on its spot in the schedule. NBC bas moved ' "Hello Larry" behind "Diff'rent Strokes," a I stronger lead·in show. . NBC had contracted for 10 episodes of "LltUe Women," and bas stopped Its order there. "BJ and • the Bear" appears safe for the time being, as is ibe super-expensive "Supertrain," which is un· \ dergoing drastic changes. "Mrs. Columbo" and "Cliffhangers" just made their debuts last week, and their fates are not yet sealed. So, of NBC's nine new sbows, four are already scuttled and two "Hello Larry" and "Supertrain" Mork Returns are in ratings trouble. THE SHOWS THAT NBC is set to go with: Robin Williams as s paceman Mork from the planet Ork pays a return visit to Milwaukee and Ron Howard on "Happy Days" tonight at 8 on ABC. Cha nnel 7. "Harris & Co.," a black.family drama star· ring former footballer Bernie Casey; "The Duke," starring Robert Conrad late of "Tbe Black Sheep Squadron" as a wasbed·up boxer who turns-------------------- private eye in Chicago: "Hizzoner," starring David Huddleston as a small·town mayor; and something called "Real People," which Walsh says ls meant to give "the eccentrics of the world their place in show business.'· The network hasn •t oCficialJy announced the new schedule, nor bas it finally decided on the two pllota it la C008idering for the schedule, "HighcWf MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY Manor, .. a comedy llbout a group of scienUsts in a ,. _________________ "'- spooky old bou.se, and "Wbodunnit?" a mystery show. . "HARD CORE" CR) So, there it is, yet another television innova· >•----------..... ------... ~ lion -the miniseason. WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS IOUl'M COAST ACTOIS Co.of' .. ~ tOe--..ltll'lllollll -·-~..._ ...... °'"-,.. ......... ~ ..... ,,,., .. , .. 2•2 An THEATRES <llllMMQ) "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I CINHIAUND 11•163S·160t '= 1414 K11•t1 IW• !ut Paowit ..-----------------..... AU. am .,, •,.,... Mcaiw M llM. CIP lMl MOTDe P!CTUM CCllM °' _, lllCWLATIOM. 'I "NdRTH AVENUE IRREGULARS" (G) "ICE CASTLES-PG) "SAME TIME NEXT YEAR" {PG> "CALIFORNI SUITE" "INVASION OF THE SOOY SNATCHERS~(PG) "FAST BREAK" (PG) "AGATHA" (PG) "ICE CASTLES" (PG) THANK GOO IT'S FRIDAY." "MIDNIGHT EXPRESS" "THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY" (R) " ATIONAL LAMPOON'S ANIMAL HOUSE" "MONTY ''CALIFORNIA SUITE" "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" (PG) "UP IN SMC*!" "A BOY & HIS DOO" (R) "TAKE DOWN" .. ONE ON ONE': (PG) At..L. D•IVt.•tNl'ONN 6:MP .... tMMft.T Clll .. U~' 11 .. ,... U"lnt e K1-die "91'tfellfHt II \ • '\ (. -DAILY PILOT ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIE REVIEW / INTERMISSION 'Ryder' Weaker in Movi.e V-e rs io n ByARTH ltK IGlll' T ... ~11~ i A favored device of playwr11hll IS trap a 1roup of dh1p1ralc charac: t 1 in a room, then aubjcct them to the abuse of an all out p yrhopath Jt worked m "Tht' P t1'1Cled •·o~ t" and "Key Larao." I'm not at all tu re that It will work ~ain ln "Wh n You Comin' Back, Red Ryder " ( MOJllE REJllEW J Tit~ A&E THE Pt:OPLE that f<'at cand writer Medoff> bu con· vok<'d for n ualy confronlatlon wlth Gortner and ultimately, with themllclvt.• Cortner play:., with ex rtaalve lc4d, an overripe blpple, a coll 1£ dropout who h as been kind who puts on » great show of u maraderle to mask (only sUgbUy > his Innate ho1llllUe1. After asaertlns his mental superiority <which, under. the circumstances, ls no vast ac· compliAhment>. he turns to physical btifore tht"y arrive ot lhal diner Un fortunatt'ly. thf')' 11r w rather 1orry lot ....... You ®Mt,.. ••c__K, 1110 •voeu ·~"'"'1111•1 · aggreaaion. bolstered with knives and a pistol, to goad his victims to total debasement, What I'm really aaylng lit that I'm not at all sure that Mnrj~ Oortner, who both productd and 11lars in "Red Ryder." ha!\ the rharlamu or either Humphrey, Boeart or l!:dwurd O Robln"On. lh.e stun of those ~arht'r es sayi; In Uu1' snmC" domain llal l.t.ndcn. married lo concert \ iollnlst Ue Grunt. 11 bt.•11annm11 ly doubt his \•lrillly P.al llmgll'. who owns the adJnc •11t Mu• 11ll.1llon . il'I u cripple given to makln(I tentutlvt• pas l'll ot lhti dlner'r. plump und ptiu brntned wa1tr4.15I, ~C~phan10 "'»racy The girl, meitnwhllt!, moon ovt.ir adolesc~nt rt>ter fo'lrth , nl.Chf ttUt•n danl at tht• diner. who dr.-amit only of e~ca()(" to the m!frv<•loui1 world thut must he bt•yond thol tlny lruc~tOJ> 111 Texu The ff>w gllmvst•:iJ we •n· \()Uch fed or the town'R social amenltlt-itr~ no more im.plr»llonul 11tCHllHet r .. <11ll••llf~•r \oaenpl•Y ~, ... ~.''""' Meri.09f'IM• Nl•MnSU.- • Merli MeclcKf I t\I M••lot Wll\llf Hal t 1t1ei.1" 1'91er f'lrlh I•• f1r!lflf Pel Mlno'9. 0111 McKI,,,...., "'"°'• l l,.<ll•y )l,l>Nftl• I,, .. v. Cffl4Y Cl•rl\. Stier,... """•' llllMl1t9 tllM 111111111 Ml'AAltall"f.lt Perhaps a Bogart could make this work. an actor with the power to sug. g~at that there Is a side to him that we don't know or understand. With Gortner , however, It's all up front. He's a bully from the moment he walks in the door; and what weakens the film dra matically is that we already know there Is no one in lhe room who can stand up to hJm either physically or mentally. much less match him in ruthlessness . THEOllETl("AL.LV. PROO CEil Gorlner wu11 altogclht•r cor~t in ~n cour41gana ~·rllt.-r M.ark Medoft to eJL tend his oll Dro•dway play, lo open lt up by 1ntrodur1ng his principals "'''"ONO -a w-.· TAU DOWNtN I ............. ,., ..... .. 9IOl.a c. aeon HAID tolll 191 l11lt ...... . ............. "'7:~r.t':tl---:---:--,. ... ,_ -~ o ._ .......... WI sc,.. .... ......... , 494 1!>14 I t M•.tf •llJ ..... , 494,1!>14 -AMntAi... , ... a... .. ... ,, ........ "'°' ...... ,~ .. •AST lllAKCMI ,,,. e llM e.4:at a.ae e •111 a,.,. eeoeer c. "°" MAID COUcw1 u .... ,,., ••••• a:•s a,.,., CUNT IAS'IW009 MIT WllOf WAT IMIT LOOll tN I PUIS M OUIUW IOll"f WAUS !NI ALL STAR CAST "CALIFORNIA SUITE" (PG) T\ll.WlllH:t M:lt ... ., Me~ 1:1M:IH:IM:lf.t"11 J.1.1. TOLKIEM'S , "LOU OF TMI llMGS" IP'GI PLUS "UHMAltllfD WOMAH" t ACA191T AWA .. -ATIOt4S "HUvtM CAW WAIT'" '"HOUSE CAUS" IP'GI IAUT ••w •ION U-N ~NW tNI '"" IT'UtOHT TIMI ta> CUNT IASTWOOe MIT WMIOt WAT M LOOll c'°1 P\UI GAUNnlfllll •'111 fAUl e ""911 IOTU THI ....... JOI CNt ~ nll ... fl.X !NI 9'0l9 c. KOn HAID COii Cll ,.. lOOIM fClll & OOOllAI Il l ... l ... ,.,... •Alf lllAK"> '"" nll NOUIMAN 1H> •ROM Fashion Island Newport Beach lhro1.11h Vietnam and now roams the free . open spaces 1n his Vol ks n1 m per. accompanied by Candy <'lurk, his deflowered nower girl. lie'!. a blustering loudmouth, the Fox Laughs, But Softly The mystery melodrama or ··whodunit," which enJOYed a mea!>ure of popularity in the Thirties and Forties, seem!. to be a theatrical genre whose lime has come and gone. To exhume a 1931 vintage thriller today, and play it in deadly earnest, requires a bit more than lhe usual willing suspension of disbelief on the part of an audience. It also calls for a highly skilled cast capable of breathing believability into what invariably is musty dialogue assigned to -e&rdboard characters. This latter factor, unfortunately, ls not present a t the San Clemente Community Theater where "The Fox Laughs." a SO-year-old play by local ••TNE ll'OX LAUGHS~ A mnterv dre,,.. by Oliver P•rker directed by tM •UU>Or elld 01•ft<1 Oala-fk. >leQt ,,,...aQer (Ollffn Goeol\.tr1 M>Ul'ld encl hQlll• •"9 bY Paul Gotdhart. "' det'9n llY Btny 8MnH •ftd "'nne L••••us • ,.._nle<I Tllund.t~ Ill~ Seh,,cUn •I. lO """' M•r<h 14.by IN S... Clt,..nte COMmUnlly Tlleeter •I Ille Ceormo Ple'ffloo;W, ~ Avenc11ac.t1t1110.S...Clemen1• ll•w•••lloM4't~$. CllarlH Hemllton JulleH-llon OotoLlly Hemlllon "-·J-Geor99H1tnlllon AnneW•..S •• Br-s ..... ,..,,,, .. lnw.tctorHarrl> Pro1euor ~ant The Sir- THE CAST Lull\' cw~•.nct Lovette Matey .• ,...,,.1Pkkerel ....... •• , • • • • . D<tni.iHtlton .. • , . , . .. . Stwe C~'11utll • c:Mol Martin • JtrryTlll"HS ,, . ,, ...... , , .. .. .. .. . Carl-Ouelsnttr • • , , ,. • • • • • • Tom Stnl111, • • • Oevid Nlffr ,,,,,,. .. ~ resident Oliver Parker. currenUy is being disjn. terred. Were it played tongue ln cheek as a spoof on su ch contrivances in general <as was Westminster's very funny "Any Number Can Die" last season >. it might enjoy a greater degree of success. PAR-'ER, WHO ALSO co-directs with Diane DalawraK, has cluttered his script with enough red herrings and stage gimmicks to thoroughly con· fu se an audience it o ften appears thal his a ctors are equaJly perplexed. There is, in fact, no real standout performer in lhe cast until Charles Ashbaugh arrives for a cameo appearance in the Intermission Tom Titus final act, a welcome breath of fresh air. Eternal exposition weighs down the opening acr ot this opus, in which a govetnor <Leslie Cleveland) is threatened with death uAless he balls a scheduled midnight execution. His wife <Loyette Hafey), daughter <Angel Pickard> and assistant (l}aniel Nelson) talre turns attempting to persuade-- him to change bis mind. Later his son <Steve Czigutb) and his fiancee (Carol Martin> arrive to bolster bis position. A slate police inspector (Tom Smith> arrives lo take charge, but always seems to be elsewhere when foul deeds are done. Also caught up in the maelstrom are the governor's servants <Jerry Thress and Carlene Queisner > a nd a suspicious professor <David Merz ) . OF TIDS UNEUP, Smith and Nelson probably are the strongest, Miss Pickard the most colorful. Miss Queisner the most overcharacterized and Cziguth the least effective. Cleveland shows poten· lial, but bis British accent handicaps a strong stage presence. Betty Barnes' library setting is one of the group's better offerings. a nd Paul Goedhart's technical effects are nicely executed. The practice of introducing the backstage corps at lhe curtain call. however . seem s a bit much. They don't write plays like "1'he Fox Laughs" anymore · -and you can see why Thursdays through Saturdays for the next three weekends at tbe Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente. Broadway Biog Boring By JAY SHARBU'M' NE W YORK <AP ) ··stra nger s·· theor etically should be good. It has first-rate acting talent -Bruce ·'Coming Home" Dem. back here after 20 years in HoJJywood, and the very gifted Lois Nettleton. He's und aunted that his divorce from his first wife stilt awaits and his ne w love is fres hl y di vo r ced from a womanizing Hungarian poet. And after an amusing visit to a Berlin caba ret, where he cases th e joint a nd mocking l y declares, "This is Sodom." they fly off to Vienna. Moscow and married life in short order. The play, set lo 1927 and 1948. concerns the gentle courtship and turbulent marriage, careers and divorce of Nobel·winning novelist Sinclair Le wis and famed columnist-commentator Dorothy Thompson. Okay, a good ca!fl, a poteoUaJ- ly powerful drama. Now, the bad news. "Strangers," which premiered here Sunday, is dis- appointing, oddly fl at despite some very funny lines, predicla· ble, offers few lnsights and ends with a cliche uttefed by Miss T. (Nettleton ) about Lewis:"America will never be the same without him -and neither will I." OH, MERCY, and it started so well, with Dern, as the author of "Elmer Gantry" a nd other classics, popping from the bathroom of her Berlin apart· ment aft.er a party to propose marriage. OF COURSE, SUE can quote from his novels. He, of course, can reveal his vulnerability by softly saying, "Woman, I don't want to be quoted. I wanl to be loved." lo fact. be does say lhlr$1 PlAYBOY JAU FIS11V AL SET HOLLYWOOD CAP) -As part of its 25th anniversary celebration, Playboy Magazine will present a lwo·day jazz festival at the Hollywood Bowl June 15 and 16. The festival will be produced by George Wein of the Newport and White Jaiz festivals, and will feature such jazz greats as C hick Corea, Maynard Ferguson, Stan Getz, Dlzzie Gillespie, Herbie llancock, and -for the first time ever on the same program -Benny Good· man, Count Basie and Sara Vaughn. "REMARKABLE.".-.,._., __ _."' "SPLENIMD."--.,."'°"'°'4'"' o.•u_,,_.....,. • .ocOOO¥ - JEAN· LOUIS BElm>CELLl'S ~TIME r~ fOQ 'Ml P...f"')fi" A Vli'A .. Q..'J1 ... ,,,_. ~U\11~1 JM D .C. Oh. sure, s he's warned him she may be no good, t.bat she's arrogant and vicious. loves mingling with the famous and even ts bisexual on occasion, proving it discreetly with a lady friend in Act Two. IT DOESN'T bother him. Things settle down to a study of what happens when a fiercely ambitious, beautiful, moderate. ty famous news service reporter falls in love with a famous, ugly, insecure novelist. Miss Nettleton is excellf:llt. So is Dern, although he occasional- ly slips out of the nasal Lewis twane with which he began the play. Alas, with Arvin Brown 's direction, the pace drags, even the oext·to-closiog scene or Lewis in a slraightjacket. It's odd, because this £s one moment that should have been good and powerful. It wasn't. Sadly, not much of "Strangers" is, either. ._19 .... ~=- nca.m u Ct"''° "" DEER HUNTER l" MOH.·THURI. 2·00. a:oo FRI. 2:00, 1:30 SAT • .9UH. 1:00, 4:30, l iM •AlllOtl 8RA.llOO ' C:OOCMACllMM _,_, ...... ............. SA~ IUl.J II. t•. • 41 II II --.. ·---~-_,_ ~*"HEAVEN t. l~t CAN,~~ .•.. ,,,. WINNER • ACADEMY AWAAD NOMINATIONS "THEW1Z" GABE l<APlAN IP G.) ''FAST BREAK' MON·THURS 7.15, 9:30 FRI 7 15-9:30-11:30 SAT 1 00, 3:00, S:OO, 7;15 9·30 11.30 SUN. 1 00, 3.00. 5:00, 7.15 9 ·30 FAST BREAK Plue {PG) Winner of I Acaelem~ Award Nomination• "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" -••s.er11 ~ ... ,, ...... ,, ,, .,.,_ ,, .. ~ .. ·--, ... ..... I ROBB~ fg • BE.-.SO'll IC£ • @5TLEJS Sean ConnefJ "THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY" MON.-THURS. 7:30, 1:45 SAT.,SUH 1:15, 3:30. 5:45, 1:00, 10:15 .. , . INSIDE: •Erma Bombeck •Horoscope • • •Ann Landers •Class1fled ~. Mwch e. tt19 DAILY~OT t I .. 1 ' ' Fat Tuesday A Mardi Gras reveler reminisces about New Orleans' bigge~t party. By DENNIS McLEUAN Of ttle Dally l'llet Staff Outside on Bourbon Street, thousands of costumed M-ardi Gras Tevelers paraded raucously under the midday sun. Inside the dimly lit bar, a five-man Dix· ieland band wailed in that foot-stomping, heart· pounding way that is New Orleans. That's when I saw her. She was sitting at the far end of the polished mahogany bar. She wore the skin-tight red and blue costume of Wonder Woman. She had long, c horus girl legs and long, silky hair as black as the clarinet now crying plaintively on stage. Even from afar, she was gorgeous. If ever there was a Wonder Woman dream come true, this was it. . Theo this Amazonian vision of the good life took a final sip of her drink. She stood, kissed the waiter goOdbye and turned to go. THAT'S WHEN MY MIDDAY illusion shat-t~red like so many mint julep glasses in a bur-ncane. Below that lustrous mane of raven hair, below tho5e come-hither eyes -was s o'clock shadow. I had been duped, as it had been so easy to be on Fat Tuesday 1979. Wonder Woman was a man. Mardi Gras is perhaps tlte only oc- casion in the nation where a man can dress hke a woman in broad daylight and gel away with it; or the only time five men can dress as chorus girls and do an impromptu dance routine for camera-toting touriata. It's also a time where you can get your face pajnted, dress like a creature from outer space or masquerade as the Flying Nun. Mardi Gras is whatever you make of it. It's Halloween, New Year's Eve, the 4th of July, VE Day JlJXI~ office. party -: after the third drink -all rolled into one . -·- IN OTHER WORDS, IT 18 one whale of a good time, despite a police strike that threatened to stifle the merrymaking. Thousands of visitors ignored the New Or- leanll mayor's recommendation.to avoid 1be his· toric French Quarter on Mardi Gras Day, Fat Tuesday. His official warning and dire predictions of [ Conanaent ) an out-of-control mob proved unwarranted. The throng was boisterous, but peaceful, the peace being enforced by blue-shirted state police and olive drab-uniformed National Guardsmen, who obligingly posed for pictures with wives and girlfriends bold enough to aak. Local residents t a lked about smaller crowds this year, but you'd never know it from the human waves passing through Bourbon Street around the clock. Although the traditional parades down Canal Street were canceled , hundreds of thousands of people spilled into the nearby sub- . urbs to watch the re-routed glittery floats. • o.lly ...... Sbtt ,._. Union woes and striking policemen were of little concern to those who damned the strike and plunged ahead to the river town where on Mardi Gras, the day before Ash Wednesday, the annual two weeks of frenzy turns to fever pitch. Tourists observe Bourbon Street activity during Mardi Gras. EVEN A WEEK LATER. for this Orange countian in King Rex's Court, Mardi Gras re· mains a tapestry of vivid scenes and vignettes that if stretched together would run the length or the muddy Mississippi: • An impromptu street band playing . "When the Saints Go Marching In" as several hundred mas que-raders snake through the nar- row, jammed street. • An old black man playing a tin can drum set not far from a bearded young white man playing an electric fiddle. • A boy with long blond hair and a T-shirt with CALIFORNIA on front, juggling machetes, flaming batons and even bowling balls. His piece de resistance? Juggling balls while riding a six-foot-tall unicycle -blindfolded. • The mad scramble for plastic beads and Mardi Gras doubloons tossed into the street by revelers lucky enough to have a street·side hotel balcony. Pipes fo .. Women Many pipe-smoking women start out by sampl- ing their husband's tobac- co. The really daring go on to their own .Pipe blend. f\ • Three black teenagers earning tossed coins by tap dancing in the street . • A long-haired kid walki.nl past a young couple and giving the girl a big s mile and a string of Mardi Gras beads . "Do you know that guy?" deadpans the boyfriend. • A middle-aged woman in a candle-lit restaurant talking ta the ~ stranger at the next table: "I've never been here before. I'm sorry I (See TVF.SD.AY, Pa1e CZ> Jeanne Grimes, Janice Dennen and Margaret Mary Malanca discuss new Delta Delta Delta chapter at UC Irvine. t l j Chapter (~ ___ _...) .. Happenings Formed A round of social activities marked the recent installation of the new Beta Upsilon Chapter of Delta Delta Delta Sorority at the University ol California at Irvine <UCI). Beta Upeilon, Tri Delt's lllth col- legiate chapter+ was welcomed by •n. Jeaue l.Ut&e9' Grl•ea of Dallu. national prealdent, durin1 a banquet Saturday at tbe Babla Corin- thian Yacht Club. · Tbe feltivttiel be1a.n Frtday night with illltallatioa of the cbapter at St. lllcbael and All An1el1 Cburcb, Corona del Kar, followed b)' a recep. Uon for initiates, alumnae aad tlile lD- 1talllnl team. The cbarter wu present.eel S.tur· daJ Dilbt by •n. lob ...,.... of New Orleana, coUe1iate Ylc:e preat. dent. laltlateil were pn1ented to the Na· Uonal PaU.llealc Conference, eorortty and fraternit~ colle1lates -.... -1-.. --... _ _.. -... plus alumni, parents and friends Sun- day afternoon during a reception at the Babla Corinthian Yacht Club. Honor initiates were Mn. lolln Bllllop of Newport Beach aod Mn. aottert 8'1edlel•, Santa Ana. They each have two Tri Dell daughters and have been active lD Mother's Club. Named chapter adviaon are the ll•ea. llqll •eDollald, llllke Ball, , a...u KNider,,... ao&1awe11, Teny , ::~ William Baker, Pe&er \ ... .... laekle....,.. New Offlcers South Coast Cbapter of Parents Wltbout Partnen bave named new o(ftcenfor um. They are Wanw Ills, president; Le1al Cutea, Tiee pnsi· de•tJ_ Judy Kujawa, aeeretaey and ... •• s.aer. treuanr. cae.BAPP~GS, .... Q) • ' . ~-,, ...... .-.. ... .. ~ .. --·--·- \ t C2 DAIL v PILOT Tunoay, Marone, 1t11 ••• (li're• P11e CU waate-0 IO k>na. I'm 1olnc tot U m) kJdl not to wait eo tona." h conlldt!d • Th Desir Oy•ler Bar, a century old e t-ablllhment with wh1te-Uled nooni and wtur rane c~illnt fan& Two coolu with hash white chef. hau fry 1n1 he~ of raUasb, crab. ahrtmp and oy len The beer. ~too and cbam~gn fiowlfllt u frff ly as lt\t-outdoor mt'rrymakc rs • A yuunR man tandtl\41 hf'o"' • wrouicht aron b1Mo0y ·houllna&. "StPlha, Stell•. 1 know you 're up ttwl'\' " • 1'lw 500 C'lub. wh<"~ lhl' reututed allrac· t1on 111 42-24 t2 1mdru St·~ton . bttter k.nown, •<' cordin& to the ~rnt•I \'Oat·ed tC, 1 "1'tlt' Super Bowl Stn>altt'r. • "We have lal nt he re, t~ MC rroab to hi:. uudicnce, "That's what make~ th•'-C'lub d1f rcrl'nt rrom tht• QlbCNi down lh \rN•t " • t..e~endary Preaer vauon th11J , whNt.• "Swe t t;mmt•" B&rrett and hE"r band ha"" ~n makin;,i 1>1·m•land mut1I<' for more lbao 1 half tt•ntur) It'~ a dark. t1mcle!t11 ~lac«'. bathed \n arnht!r light, wherl' liP<>nlaneoui. hand rlapplnR •nd foot t apptn~ Mt'('om paf\ll'., the patented N,e>4 Orlt'Ul'b bent "It look~ hk.:o a t·ouph.• of tho:.t• ~uyi. arcn t going to hl't muc·h longtir · :..ty:. a woman Ul th~ ba<'k ''They·H: gol " lol of :.ong10 left in them ) ct." sayb the man nl'xl lo her • Le Paree French Style Entertainment "Featuring the Orgy." ' "Oh, they've got an orgy," exclaims a gray- ing woman lo her husbun<t as she peers insade .. Are you kidding me" She's as fat as I am " . • A bespedacled young man dispensing re· hg1ous leanets to revelers . "God loves you," he says to a man who ig- nores h.lm. "Y~u·re here tonigbt, my frtend. You may not be here tomorrow." ••• Happenings (From Pa1e Cl) Girl Scouts Adult volunteers were honored by the Girl Scout Council of Orange Q>unty during a dinner last week in the Disneyland Hot.el. Entertainment was provided by the Los Alamitos High School Stage Band and members of various Scout troops. "Thanks" badges were presented to Mrs. Merritt Ragins, Mrs. E. R. Foor and Bea Whit·. Uesey. Appreciation certificates were awarded to Mrs. Donald Cawthon and Mrs. Steve Bosbonls. An adult appreciation pin was given to Mrs. Wayne Olsen. Boros rope W~DN~~OAV ,MAa ·H1 81 YON V OMA&& A.al <Mar U ·Apr 19l You no looser are cimllned. JMilnted Into ('Omer. Leo alda In loottna cape hatch. galninl creater freedom of t.bouaht, acUoh Gain hulihu to property values l arn mor ftbout your po1ae11ionJ, In cludlna anUqu TA auR <Apr a>·M y 20l Recaln aenae of dtrettlon RefuH lo atalttr your forces Brothtt. slat r or rloae nol8bbor ma&y be !iJ\. cere, but ahw m111infornwd He d your own coun• I Alie qU(lltlon11 Give full play to In· t<'lletluol curlottty Intuitive Oa11h could lead to jl.ICkl)Ot. CEMINI !May 21 June 201 Study Taurus mt>I aeo. You urc on putb kadJoa to greater ln· fom r-pott·ntlttl Your natural talents, c 11pabllllle11 io.urae lo forefront C'ANCt:ll <June 21.July 22>: Fight to main· tum 1ndt't.ie1Hl"nftl Refuse lo sacrifice intearlty fur a "ca.n ol bean& " Means transitory rew1trd <'••nnot mukr up tor IObb of prmc1ples. l.EO (J uly 23 Aug 22 l You get access to prlvll~aed 1nformat1on You could represent ~roup, dub. oric nlLatwn before the media. You'll ht> un,w..r1n.: tlUt!Stion11 Member of op- pos1tfi 1wx "tll f111d you fascinating, could become an all~ VIRGO 1Aug 23 Sept 22 1 Gentle , d1plomatu.• upproa<'h ga1ru. obJect1ve Taurus, L1bru, S<.-orp10 ind1v1ducili. figure prominently. A wash comes true romantic inter1ude is highlighted LIBRA <Sept. 23-0cl. 22): You learn more about authority, pressure, responsibility. There it• room for you al lop. Civic duty, honor, re putation combine to ele vate personal presUge . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Good lunar aspect coincides now with communication, language, educational pursuits. Capricorn, Cancer persons figure in scenario. Not.hing. .is apt to occur halfway -it is all or nothing, hot or cold. SAGITTAJUUS !Nov. 22-Dec. 21>: Accent on what is hidden, lost or "occult." You learn more about financial status of one close to you. Budget, investment, unique relationship - these command attention. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emotional involvement gels ·'serious." Accent on close ties, marital status. Defer to Judgment, wishes of those who show enthusiasm. Gather data for (utureuse. AQUAJUUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): What seemed obvious now becomes obscured -draw bead on ultimate goal. Leo, Aquarius persons figure in scenario. Accent on work methods, basic issues and aiding those willing to help themselves. PISCES CFeb. 19-Mar. 20 ): Flilrry of excite· ment accompanies green light for creative en· deavor. Expand horizons -the sky can be the limit. Member of opposite sex is attracted to you and m akes nosecret1tbout1t ·. ••• Pipes ERMA BOMBECK I ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE Do-it-yourself Boom· l read somethln1 prett}' rrl&htenlna the other day. A story In• ma1azlne aald Lbe cost<ol bulldlnl bad become 10 exorbitant that we would eoon ent~r Into a do-lt..younell boom . It made my neah crawl. l didn't raise sons to send them off lo another do·lt·youraelf boom. Why does It have.to be thla way" Are we never to have a period ln ~ history where the re Is no wounding or maim· ana? No blood or no pain" I remember when their rather served on the do·ll-yourselt boom of 1949. How my eyes glistened with pride when I saw hjs coveralls. How courafeous he looked standing there with his new too box under his arm ... ready to de· fend our home against warps, drafts, peeling palot, leaks and deterioration. If I knew then what I know now. I would never have let him enlist. Do-il-yourselfers are naive. They believe the pamphlets that s~art off, "You can irultall a new ceiling for pennies" or the pictorial teaser that shows a man digging a hole In hls yard at 10 a.m. and 15 people splashing in a 35-fool pool when the sun is setting. The b,asic tralnJog of most men in home chores is a simple exercise called banging ~ pie· ture. Many men consider th.is a sexual violation of a wall. They do not want to make a mistake . They meas ure the width 15 limes, depth eight times, make a s mall mark with a pencil. E,.... ••••lleelc recheck the measurements one more ume, put the wrong bit on the drill and discover withln two minutes that they have missed the stud by three inches. The memory or that hole In the wall haunta them the rest of their lives. From there on In , It's just one confro'ltatlon after anothe r . I watched my husband go through lbe Dragging Door Campaign where a door had to be shaved when we got a shag car-pet, the ~atlle of Running Toilet Skirmish. not to mention the Grape Wallpaper in the Kitchen Encounter where there was talk of a trial separation until he could figure out that grapes grew down. I saw a young couple the other day examin- ing a tile kit for the bathroom. He was so young He didn't know yet about the long hours. trips to the emergency room for treatment, the costh· ness of a mistake. I whispered in his ear, "A do· it·yourself boom only seems glamorous. Trust me, wa.itun.lll you 'redrafted!" Cool it With Cigarettes, Pot DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 sent for your book.let "Straight Dope on Drufs" and I learned a lot rom it. It also settled my head about some s tuff I thought was harmless. But I 'm still unclear about a f.ew things I hope you will help me On pages 17 and 18, you listed some ques· lions a person should ask him se lf to de· termine whether or not pot will gel him Into trouble. He re are my answeMi to those ques· tlons. Please read them and teU me if pot will hurt me. 1. Do you feel left out by the kids you would like to go with ? Answer: Yes. 2. Are you lonely a lot of the time? -Answer: Yes. 3 . Do you get problems that the doctor cannot find a reason ror? -Answer: No. And then. Ann, y-ot1 s aid that if a person ans wers yes lo eight of the twelvt! questions, he should stop and think twice about fooling around with anything Aaa Laa~ that might alter his would Improve your Ille, mental machinery Ac but 1 do know It kUls r:;;;;:;;;;;::;:;;;:;;;;;;;:==:==:::; cording lo you.. r should motlvatJoo, wastes time, RUffELL'S not go near . any kind alters visual perception, ofalcobolordrugs. and bu been the cause UPHOLSTERY Now I have moved to 0 r m a n y s e r I 0 u s ~ Y• W..t anoth~r p~rt of town and automobJle accldents.1 IMlttt m y hfe ts completely My advice l!ll to slay t92:2HarborBlvd. changed. l_am no longer away from cigareUea selr-co~sc1ous. I h ave for health reasons and __ c,_o ... .,_•_Me_aa_-_S48_-_11_s_6~ more tnends than I used pass up the pot because r---------~ t o h a v e . a n d m Y wbat you stand t.o galn Is answers t.o so~e of nothing comparMI with these quest1~ns will be what you might lose. different 1n a few months. Do you think at Mn. Esther Friedman received a silver cup and Mrs. Joseph Fry was given a pewter plate. Plaques were. presented to Ralph Klassen and 01'. Todd Bailey. --------------------depressed and wonder if would be saJe for me to s moke cigarettes a nd use a little pot ? TRYING TO GROW UP DECENT DEAR TRYING : f:ngagt>mt'nl anMunc1· rnt>nls 1L1th black and u'h1tt' glv~·'IJ o/ th1• /uluri• bride or tM cm~pie mu.st he rPce1 ut>d htJ the ,..eature,<r Di!parlment su weeks before tht> wedding date The Good Guy of the Year .award , designed to honor men who support Girl Scouting, was given to Dick Keat of Irvine, "as a symbol of all those other good guys out there." Dinner chairman was Ann Miiier. On her com millee were Diane "Rosales, -Vlrgflifa Pecrell.s, Jackie Morgan, Eleanor Mccowen, _ Lydia Sharp and Lilian Crawford. Angels on Wheels The Orange County Umt of the Ameri can Cancer Society recognized volunteer drivers during a recent luncheon . The "Angels on Wheels," as they're caJled, were given jeweled pins, key rings, paperweights, charms, pins and certificates for their efforts. Honorees were Margaret Backlund, Nina Cadwell, Mary McClure, Pnady Permentler. Vlrgtala Walder, Jun Goodmau and Velma Begg, aJJ of Huntington Beach; Laura Hova~r. Jan Mowbray , Marian Schulte , Susan S .. agarmaa, Mary B9.tckle and Saaaa Leu.a1. all of Costa Mesa. Also, Fay Greene, Laguna Hills; Alplla Uabn and Helene Watkins, Irvine; Dutch Lon1.aecker, Barbara Andenon and Edltb Bird, Newport Beach; Anne Cook, Seal Beach; Anae Campbell. South Laguna, and Ruda Yleldlag, San Clemente. SA TCH-Belles Members of the SATCH-Belles of Santa Ana-Tustin Q>mmunity Hospital were honored for their efforts in raising $225,000 for the hospital ln 1978. Among those cited were Mrs. George aasmllllell of Irvine and Mn. Jolul Watts, Newport Beach. They received gold bell charms from SATCH Executive Director Wayne Sell.reeder and Board of Directors President Ooa CllrWeton. Golden Anniversary Mr. a.Del Mrs. Ercell Harrtao• celebrated their SOth weddlng anniversary with a cocktail party in thelr Newport Be1tch home. The affair was hosted by Harrison's cousin and his wife, Mr. alMI Mra. MaUlalaa Hernao• Crane of Newport Beach. The couple's hom, was decorated with yellow and red roses, and they cut a golden yellow cake. A bilh.li«ht of tbe party was the singing of a aonc, especially written for the occasion by •ar1aret JlodCee. Accompaniment was pro· vided by Biii IW&ee and Wa.hef' Bell. The HaniJona, aJ~ naUves or New Jersey, were married ln tbe Paaadena Preabrterlan Church. Tb•Y bave llved In Newport Beach for 17 yean. Oraregt Cot1ll Colltgt prntnls TOTAL LIVING with Kathy Alli e Gtt Wh11f You Want 0Jff of LJftl esn Go.11 onJ Achlnt Tlrnn l • l..tant Horo lo Allr11cl Prosptrity SATURDAY, MARCH 10 FINE ARTS 119 -9 a.m. -12 noon i10I ~ Rt#. CM•~. u. REGJSTRATION FEE: S5.00 F.r ~."" 55&·5110 ...................... ) <From Page Cl> surge of women turning from cigarettes to pipes, Bamber said. Bamber claimed his is the only shop on Orange Coast whicb has pipes specifically de· signed for women, Other stor.es recommend that fema les buy smaller versions of men's pipes or use regular-sized pipes, he said. Jean Bain, proprietor of the Tinder Box in Costa Mesa and a pipe smoker herself, recom· mends. however. that a larger pipe be smoked instead of a so-called ladies' model. "If you truly wanl to s moke a pipe, you should smoke a regular standard pipe," she said "They're going to be a better smoke. They'll smoke cooler. A pipe smoker doesn't want a hot smoke." A larger pipe enables "carbon cake" to build up and carbon cake facilitates a cooler smoke, she explained. Nyri Wheeler of the Tobacconist in Newport Beach. said she recommends "feminine look· ing" pipes to her female customers. Few women admit they smoke pipes, she said . "It's embarassing. You gotta be bold. "l decided, when I went to work in the shop, that J ought to try some of the blends myself so I would know what I was talking about," she said •'Most people love it when they see me smoking." One man, who refused to give his name. said hi.a wife used to smoke a plpe but gave it up because or Jack of "social acceptability." Many women get the habit when their husbands ask them to light their pipes for ttiem. Jean Bain, who has won several pipe smoking contests, said that's how she started. Unlike many pipe-smoking women, Mrs. Bain never smoked cigarettes before she turned to her pipe. Although she owns and works in a tobacco shop, Mn. Bain said she is reluctant to smoke her pipe ln public. "1 don't want lo be a center ol attraction," she said. "It's Just not an accept· ed thing ln our society yet." A random poll on how men feel about pipe- smoking women turned up a mixed bag. Some men thlnk lt's JW.feminine, some don't Uke to see anyone smcJIJng a nything and others don't object to a woman with a pipe. something is terribly wrong with you? - Answer: Yes. 4. Are you a disap· pointmenl to your parents'! Do you feel they eon&id@r you a loser?-- Answer: No. 5. Do your folks bug you so much and give you such a hard time that you have con- sidered smoking pot to gel even? -Ans wer . Yes. 6. Do you get uptight ln s ituations which other kids your age seem lo be handling with no pro- blem? -Answer: Yes 7. Do you cry for no reason ? -Answer: SomeUmes. 8. Do you hassle with friends over unimpor· tant matters, behave badly and regret it later? -Answer: Yes. 9. Do you shoplift or steal from school ? - Answer: Not really. 10. Are you over· weight but don't have the wiUpower to stay on a diet? -Answer: No, but l always thought I was loo skinny. 11 . Do you lie a lot" - Answer: Yes. 12. Are you sick with headaches and s tomach aches or other physicKI -~Belbe \\blnanlbu want CO Bel ...... -............. , ...... ~COUllTY I TOWN & OOUNTIW OMMI (7M)IO..._ Clgare~ smoking Is nol safe for anybody. W e kaow for certain tbat cigarettes can cause lan g ca nce r . em · p.byaem.a. .and..Jle.art pro· blems. There's been a great deal written about tbla subject and unless you•ve been Uvlng ln a u ve for the last ten years, I can't Imagine bow you missed it. I don't believe pot If you ha1>t' on item for the Srnglt':> Calt'ru:far ~t>nd 11 to Cheryl Rnmo f'eotur rng Deporlmc•nt Orange COa$t Daily Pilot p () Bor 15W. f()SIO \fr.so Co 92626 Please tnclude 11our name address und phun1• number Free Tickets Orcus Varaus The Big Top h'tre al Hun1ing1on Cenler March 8 tllfu 13 Get free gen admission llckels now for kids 11 and under from all Huntington Center Merchants Musi be eSOOf'ted by adult Beach Blvd & 405 Fwy .. NEW SEASON! NEW IMAGE! NEW YOU! Louise Wyatt age 74 lost 21 1nc~s 15~ paunds SHAPE UP FOR SPRING This can be your most constructive month and the perfect occasion to ... TAii STOCK OF YOUISll.Pi Wai stline slim? Curves In proportion? Weight ideal? Thighs. arms slim and shapely? Tummy firm? Posture correct? If NOT ... Lillian Ballard will take care of the difficult part. Today, It's easier than ever, just devote a few happy visits to our salon. We promise to make this your healthiest. happiest. most attractive spring to date. You'll gain the assistance of the finest. most congenial figure consultants. who not only guide you but determine and chart a taller-made program Just for you SAVE 20% • Supervised Bv Experts • Nutrltlonal Guidance • lndlvldual Pr~rams • Fun Oancerclze Sessions •No Shots or Piiis •No St,.enuoos Exercises HOU,.: otter expn• 3111"9 Mon,·Frl 8 am-8 pm S.t .. D-3 om .. " . . . . . . . ANALYSIS I CAREERS /'"NATION Tu.dly, Match e. 19'79 DAILY PILOT C3 ----~---- PVBUC NOTICE P BUC NOTICE P\J81J NOTI E f'IC?IT1out IMl,11 .. 11 Pl~lt'lout IWllNHS fll(TITIOU' IUIUllH ....... ITA"ftMSWl NAM•tTATIMaNl ..... aO.UIMINT Tiie ,. .... 119 ~-' •r• OOollt ,,_. 101 .. WfnQ OH-• .,. .I... ,,.. 191-... _ _, I• $0!ftf Chit• lllW\IM" M l>v,IMH •• l'tO e\ IAll!'' re•.-s STYLE CHILI 01ico ,OR • NIOl<T •• 41 Ol.UOH MAINT NAN([ COM DOGS, U.HMW ltwcl, (Dote~ "Y~• °' ~llOGIAlft ...... c.-•ANV H lretr O• t•"• M .. • Ce • ..,. ~I C.11.,..nla*» .... ~ .... ,, •• , " lft-111 ~ M<Clllklm ... 1 ... ". 0 °''-· ,, ... , Cl• ....... WM81..-. l<lltl, (.f tl)M Ny61\H 0t l<vnll""°" ... e(h Clo MtMI, ( .. ~. t>)tM Al*-L ...._,, 61$) f .. U Q# , 9h41 ff\I• Mft" I\ t-IHI ... , •" '" Ille-. Ca 9Ull l'a,..•I• Al\I\ MOO•••re, •UI Ol•l41Vat L••re110 I •h1f,..r, JUU No11u Or Hvnttllfl*\ .... ,,, CA Peiot C. ()11-....... ......__ HIH (fl t1• ,,._., T .. lt \16tit_. _, lllM •1111 llW •tt-.. ·-· ~ (........ Tiii\ IMl\IMU '' (Oft_t ... .., e C-ty ( ...... ti Of ... O" f-h ... ....,..,,....,c.. .. ., ,.,_,..,.,,.... '•Muer.i "1' Tiii\ .......... I\ t-, .. I>• • I( M MtClll"-l'l .. lll teM~•I ~-._ T"'' •i.W<Nftl •~ 111e411 .. 1111 ,,,. l'Vltll""° OP-. CM'I a.ti•• ,.1104 -~ ( ... My (1110 ti 0.•11 ... CPYlll't Oft '•I> t> -.t. !J.10 '"' IJ4 r• '"'" .......... -lllH ..... ,... .,. ... ,..,,. ..,... C-ly G-. .t 0.4"\0e C...,.IY Ofl """' l':wu.e•• as.''" ~1,_ Or-C••• ~"" "•'• ,._, ,. •• ,, Miii • " JO 1•1't ,,, 1• ,........., 0r.,., CM\! o.+ty ...... ,.. ''· """" ' u, JG, lt>t .~,. P BU NOTl(.'t: ,.CTI nout IUSUIHi WMIWI HATIMllfT ,,.. tottowlflo IHlf'611\ .,.,. 11011'0 P BLIC NOTICE IN\llWH •• I UA'rllolllfTO# T .. ( M()t(l#[T It (()Ml'A,.Y AIANoo-Mll 10 0' UH 0, II I <# 1111• \llffi. ~II• H ( 0\1• PUBLIC' NOTICt; NOTICe ~ IWf'llf'tlOM I' l(TlTIOUS IUlllllU 11-1 -.. CA.,._ TOMU..ltUL~·~·•T'f T.,. lol-"41 --,...,. e-...... lp M !Wfll•-• 10011 ... f'.¥ "OllC'I! I\ HlflllY OIVfN tl\lol -'"" vW ~ '"" f1tlfll011• ftw\I c._,, Cata~.(A•lt11 Oft l'~y IJ ,.,. , ...... ,. "'4 MUN•,.._ lol6"'1n 0 .... hmfll •'1\ (atmo•ftl l fll<oUon 01 '"• "••••" Mu• \ANYt\IA •Hllf\TMf ,., COM Clr<i.. ,_...,,. V•11•• ("' .,.., Untll•d S<-t 01\ltl(t 01 Otell(iO' l'AN'I' •i.t• Mot.,..., lllo•fll t••nw Thi\ ""''"-'' " '°"dutl•O "' • ,~,& <..A UIU .. ,..,., N '1"'""1i> """'""'· c,,.i ..... NA, ........ ,....... Tht 'Kiii~ flv\·IW\\ N•"'f ,. ll'NllpM fkfll\-f I-Clf lftMfllJon le ~II• ... c.i ol •NI , .. ,~ ~ ·-.,,., hi ... '" ,,.,._ flou\ ual-1 ,.., 11..0 ••I" lho .,...,,., Of ...... ,,_.., I «1 6Cf0\ ~ ~ "'' C... • "'· r • O••" le<tloll ... IM Cit• ol Co•I• (Ovf\I• °" )_., •••• ,. nt, ~1•0 ., ..,..,,. ...... ,, "" MH•, Ou~ C•v•llY (•lll••ft•• o. ... (l P<l••>Oft Jll•I ()< .......... '•llfw•1• n '"' COM~ .... ,.,.•• t ... M<lllall• 0.1,,. 0....""'"' CA•1t,. "1ltJf' Hloll k-" -MO<• H•ll<wtarly 0.•IO ' """'"'">II It ... < .,.,.,. , ~u~1;'::"' °'-::O-... c":~ D•tl" .~~~ d"'trlllied 111 IMCI R•Ml\llton L-l!!I T-...... tt•lO 1 • ei • • "' I T"t lt~lon t1-ll'llt l'l'llWmlift' A...,._,.._.,,.... •1• S.ftO<•• e<cepttlll• bid •t Jllttt MHllOft llt~t ... C~-dlOIM•f CA91U\ llJ,000,000001 Ooliol• 104•1 1'6••* f!llt ~,,.,, wti <ond11C lecl l>y • Ill <Olh ~··---1\;o PUBLIC NOTICE AllQW\I 16-tt1t, t i 1 JO o c i.<\ p m 0.-0 0.•IWlll (....,.. l\u -fl-ti tlw 11-QI • p.oi>IW" Tiii\ ,141..-1 w~ ftltO •1111 ,.,. lfOTICe TO CltlfDITOIU 11 .. •lf\9 ~ wtll .... Id"' -911\1 (011nty C't•H <>I O••nu-tOUnh "" SUl'lf•to• couaTOI' THli llHS Offketil "'1 ~ ·-Mertl\ t "" ITATlf Ol'CAl.U•o•NtA l'Olt Cost•~ c.lllot'lllt, ~ tlle n>e;t101 , 1-1 TH( COUNTY 01' OltANG&! oe>enlnv ~ OK1¥•11°" ot wrlttel\ oro fl111111.-0.61\0e Co.<\I 0..11¥ 1>1101 NO . ._,.._s _.,,._ Ot'et ~I\ will ti~ t>e ·~ M••'• 6, IS 20.11 lt,. 111-1' E'1•1~ Of IDA f4ElEN Fl1£(1\ E Uh•td at INl llme. 0.cre•-Copltt ol llW "•"""'"°" \<Olllno fonn NOTICE IS HERE6Y GIYElll 10 lllf ,,.. l•rm\ •ftd ~lllOfti 01 ,,.. '•I• PUBLIC NOTICE c1edttouottllf'aboven•me<11kct!IMI •rt ••••lae..t •I Ille !kNntt\ Off Kt Of 111•1 •11 PHiOn~ h••lftQ <teim~ &Qdll\SI tne Scllool 01i1r1<t 1e~1 Plot<•""• tn. ~kl o.c..,.,.,1 •re reoui.oo to ftt• Aon .... ~I• MeW, C.tltornl• SU"'11tlott COUaT 01' T"I lhem wllh Ille MCt"ary vouc...-r\, •n D•led Feotu6ry U , It" STAT&! 01' c.-Lll'OaNIA l'Olt Ille olll<t ol 11\f< clerk ot th<' •t>ov• en JOHN W. lftCOll THE ~T'f MOaANG&! ltllt<I t1MH1 °'lo Pfl'~I ,,,._..., wll" Se<ret•rV ol tfle Mej A-"9t1t "" l\t< t\S<ll"'( •OU<llf'" 10 l"t UI\ eo.ro of Eduuhon N 0 YI CE 0'" HE A It IN 0 0 I' ctef\iQllt'd attn~ iaw ottlct of J"m'' E l'll!TITION l'O• l'•O•ATE 01' WILL Wllne"" ot ICINnEl ~ Alll OFRSOH. ~Dlstrkt D LlltTUts 'TTST-ll!N'TA .... ~o H0'11'-8-~. s.tftt• A ... PWOllSMll Or~ CMS! D•llY Piiot l'Oa AUTHO"IZATI ON TO AO· (atlforn1e 91101, wllf<" I\ tllf' pl"c~ ol l'tll 2l #M • I), ,.,. ,,, ,. M I .. I s T E It u N 0 E • T H II! bU\ln~\\ o• '"" U-\10,,.., in"" mat . • . INDEl'ENC>ENT ADMINIST"ATIOlf I•·~ penalnonq 10 lllf' hlal~of ••Ill II• --------__ Ol'lfSTATlfSACT <td""I w11l1•n tour monlM .tlt~r 111o1 PlJBUC NOTICE EJlat• Of DEFOREST H HOUGH, 11"1 pul>ll<llli()(IOl I"" not•t~ O.cu..o D•ted Ft!C><u.tty 1. 1•1• NOTICE IS HERESY (iolllEN '""'' P11tr1<1& E ~1111 CP-&JGS MARTHA C.E PTllUDF HOUCiH n,n E•1•<1llrlu1f111f'WlllOI NOTIC&! TO C"&!DITORS ftled n.rt1n • petll •on lor Proo.le of t!W abo_,. namoo De<Mtnt SUl'E•toa COUltTOI' THE Wiil Aftll iSweft<OOI l f'lltr'S Tttlemtft KINDEL ••NDEltSOlf STATE 01' CAlll'ORNIA FOR 16r'f to '"" Ptt11<oner ano lor Jamu 11!. Wll ... lm THE COUNTY OF 011 A"GE .outl\orlriulon to Cldmlnt\ler uftller ti.. 1010 N•rtll Brudway NO, A.....n 1-pe-t edmln4Slf•lloft of E\l•IH S.nt• AM, CA tt10l E\lAle Ill LA llOV A TURNEii, A<I reteren<e to -•ell " m•llf' tor f1141 S,._11TI De<e•HC. tunr.er penl<utan. aftll ll'ktt 1r.a time AttorMy\ tor EH<Vlrh NOTICE IS HER~BV CilYfN to,,, .. and otao OI """'1"9 ""' ume ,,., Pul>llU..OO<'•ncit Co•"' Da11v Pilot crt"OllOf\ Of tllf' aoow "amt"O Of'CPO•n• ~•n WI tor Marer. 11. 1'19. at 10 00 F•b 13.10 7/aftllM•r.6. lt/9 ~SO.ft 11\at •II ~ navono claim\ "q'""'' a m . In lrte courtroom Of Oepertm~"' 11\e ••id O.C-t •r• 'Nlutr~d 10 111• No 3 01 "'Id court, al 100 Cl••c Centtr ,.....,, with -._.,_.,.. vouc•••"' In Drive WMI. 1n IM Cllv of Santa Ana ll•t ottl<e ot ""'tlfork Of '"" <\llO•e "" C.ttlto•n•a l1llt"ll cOUft. or to pr~wnt 11\f'm, w11n Oaltd Mercn ?. 1919 Ille "f'Ce\\My VOU<ftf'rs to IM un lEE A BRANCH ~rsKlfttll at llW t-oHKe Of J•~ E Coumy Cltr• Wllhel"' ot KINDEL t. ANOE llSON EUG&!NE I . WATSON 1010 Nortll Bro.away. SM ta •toa l1171 C•mlM c.l•lr•no C•htorn1a 111101 wnlch '' lllf' ptacf' of Slltt f10 Du\lltU\ ot ti\(' ..-s1-•n all mal S.t1 Jw•n C.Jbfr-. CA tt•7S le" 1>er1aln1no 10 '"" f'~atf' ol •aid Ov· Att•rft•Y fer: ,...Hlofter cf'<lf'nl wllll•n lour rnontl\s alter tM Publls1'ed Ot'-Coast Da11v Piiot ''"1 Olll>IKallon of'"''"°"'" M•r • 1 13, it79 82>19 Dated F-~ry 1, 1970 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE --------ORANGE COUNYV SUPE•IOtt COURT 700 Cl•k Cettt.• Drift Well S.llta An•. C•. '1701 SUMMONS C-N-· 70304 PLAINTIFF ~08ERT SCOTT MAY. Ond CLARA MICKEY JINES DEFENDA NT · R08£R'f DONA LD Ci06Ell. """ OOFS I 11\•0U9ft SO. lh<l~tv~ , NOTICE I 'fou Ila•• l>een '""· Tiie <'"'rt mo lh<IN •9alMI yow wit"""' Tommie l . Turner Ill r,,....~ Etleft Turner Ce>-£)Kut0f'\ of Ille Wtll ot 11141 atxwe namt"O 0•<"'1MI 81 D "7).;; yovr Mifwa _,,. YllleH ''"" ••-41 h o ' · 8 a iry Chest Blocks Test MLUll CAP> Firefighter Jerry Saalow saya a flabt over shaving his hairy cheat haa become a macho baWc. Ht says now he won't take tbe heart test that prompted the feud with bla chief. Saslow. a 33-year·old bu helor. part·tlme model and phy$l~al fitness enthusiast. w as as· a.Ian d to desk work by the Miami Fire Depart·. ment in hate February after refusing for four months to take a strt1ss test THE OEPA.aTMENT SAYS A.LL r1reflghters muat bf> uamlned to sec if they can wit.bstand the r i gors of the J<\l>. Eight small patches of chest hair lire shavl'd for the c:urdlogram. The lest monitors heart function and respira- tion lo se-ek If there are weaknesses in the heart that are not observable in ordinary physical ex· aminatioru; ·'It',; wt the point where I 'II never take the test." h e said in a telephone inter view from the house h e 's building on Key Largo. 'Tm going to be a thorn in their side for 20 years until they find a way to fire m e." Saslow said he de· cided to refuse the test altogether after talking with Deputy Fire Chief Edward Poli. who or dered him to take the test immediately even if it mean shaving. "JERRY, IF YOU SASLOW e ver want to be a fir efighter again. you have to take the test." Saslow says Poli told him~ "We can't make a pro- vision just for you." "It's a macho lest now," Saslow said . "He's making it a macho test. He wants to bust me. to see me walking around with bald spots on my chest.Ljust for his own ego.·· Saslow originally refusec:I only the shave, not t he test. H e said he wasn't afraid of f ailing because he lifts weights. doesn't smoke or drink and runs 20 miles a week. HIS REASON FOR REFUSING was a friendship. Saslow said a 27-year-old stewardess told him. "Your chest hair really turns me on ... I 've never dated a m an with a hairy chest before." "How could I sh ave m y chest alter that?" he asked. Saslow has hired Miami attorney Ellis Rubin to fight for him . and Rubin told the city to let Sas low take the test hair and all -or prepare to go to court. KINDEL a ANDERSON Jemes E. Wlhlm LEG.-L NOTICE ;~:::. JO d.oy1. ltucl IMi lnformatio" N .. l<etw S.teal AVISO• U>led l\a •HI• lkm•nclaclo. ------- S..fJ>lwJ ,.,_,,, Et Trlllu,..t ,..._ Cle<ldW contr• Ud. PUBLIC NOTICE Official Spelling Adopted Int Nettll -.-Waf SNleAN,CAtt10'2 1714 I 51"7717 "tt-ytfirC•FaK\ITO" Pu1>11""° 0.•nc;JP Co.'!Jt Oittl• P1101 kb 1'. 70. 21 MICI Mar 6, '"' ~•·1• P UBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS MEllEBY GtYEN !"~' 1 ucl' i. Ud '"e 6oll•d 01 E'Oucallo" 01 lnr ~: ;.n;::Cde ~~=.·~=ta i:~=--·---------N1twpor1MeHUnified 5<-1 01s1nct. <iot>q ... \19W. NOTICE INVITING BIDS of Or•nqe County," olfrrlng tor Yle t TO THE OEFEHOAN T A <•VII Notice lnvltlftq 81d•for slgnlllluUon •urptu\ ><'-1 SWOOlle• ano eoulpment comptalftl ,.., bMn lllNI by tllf' otaln· ot ll'lt! Elll• Avenue t. SAn Otec;io ~h•rdef, MM'<tl N. ltn, fAfft •:• till •Qe•MI vou. ISet tootnol~· I Frtew•v on/Off ramps aftd Euclld A.M ... 4:• l'.M., et 1'9'1 tttll Smet, a II •ou wish to oetr"d '"" Streec & Saft ~ "'""'"" on Ofl CHI• -..e, C..llfenlle, t 2U7. t&w•u•t you must. ,,.11,.1., 30 d••• alt~r r•mPJ Prol. 4170. A fill of Item\ --tor Ute Qlv1n9 '"'' w......-I• Mnrt'll on \IOU rll# Publllhell Ot'•n9f Co.•• Cally Pi IOI ,....,.. Ille clescr"oOCloft ot 1fte Item -IM with '"'' c-1 • wrttten plMdt,'..g In lllUrcll •· 1m ltOTICE TOC•IDITO•S minimum ecceplAltlle ~ moY l>A ob-ra•oonae to '"• comotei l\I. 111 • 121·,. SUl'C~tJ•T'OTT~ -'""' -tht-Ol.i.;ci.. ~~ Jw•tic__.C-.yow ~ 1114-wlttLibe. STATe~CAlll"Oft"f" l'Olt Offl<t. l0<•le<f •t tU7 Ptecentte co.;rt • wr1nM ~..Oll\O or cau~ ..,.1------------ f"NECOUWTVOl'ORAlfGE Str1Hl,Co\1'1~.C•lilorl\•• .,617 orel pl .. d•"'I to 1>e ~ntereo 1n 1tw PUBLIC NOTICE NEW YORK <AP I -"o A-...n Blade" may lnloeet eouiomMt O<Kktl In,_" to ""' cornot11lnt, ------------Th d hi_ .. l'•ANIC L .. NICOLL .... "· lltm• Cl" wtucll '"•Y ere l>IOd•no. wltll1n 30 II.on •lier,,,,. sum"'Of'S i\ .. ICTITIOUS •UStlfESS e A ssociate Press .... NICOLL. Ok• FRANK \.ll!SLIE S.lur<Uoy. Mero>, •• 1m. lrom •·oo w ..... dOft'tO\I I lfAMESTATlfM&!NT bas begun to use the lflCO\.L, ~. A,M, 10 • 00 P.M. "' 1901 ''"" SlrHt b u ........ vou,., ,.,_.., "°"'.,.. The loflowl119 perfOfts ., d re· . I p k . NOTICE IS HEllE6Y Gt11 £H to lftr (O\la Mew. C..litorfllA, .,6'7 te011 wlll l>e efttered UPOft lloollnlill" l>u•lness.s: • oino ne W . 0 IC t a e Ing · cncllt~Of tllt-eMmfOllKPGenl PeyrMflt tnws.1 be m-u-acup. ol ti.. otalntlH aftll 1111\ court may A T 0 UC H 0 F Cl ASS government Spelling Of IMI all IPff\OM ha••ftQ ct11im• .. Q,.lft\I la"o ot Yf!rbat bod l>etor~ ,,.. fltlU•P. eftlU a '"°""""'"' -i..sl vou for the PHOTO(;AAPHY STUDIO 18Sl7 M 1 t Ch' d l"e sokl decPOenl M4' reoul,...O to Ult menl item\ 0" be removeo from the r,tirf 04'••>t•n<led ,,. l"t compt•lnl, SI., Huntington Stactl C.. • • n m OS tnese names an ,,...,.,, wllT> -N'Ce....,-y VOU(t>er~. In Oi\lrtCI Per"""'I <f'le\kS ""II °"' •< wlllCll <OUIO rewll In Q•rnl!illmenl OI CllllO<O Wllll•m 'Harlow 3146 W pJaceS along with the Old 11'4' offkt ot Ille ctff11 Of I"" above Ho C9flted C•11torn1a Stelt ~~lo of •6 w-• t•••nq Of rN>nt• or pr-rtv or Glen Holly Or AMMlm C.e 'onll04 . f 0 r m r a m i I i a r t 0 ltll~d court, or to 1>rrwnt In~""· with l•i• oercel\l I m"'I ~ collecl,.., on 01toer · r~lttl reouesieo 1n '"" CllfT" Slllr1ty A:· Harlow, l146 w. Gltft '"" ne<M\ll•V \'OW<l\tr~. lo 11'14! un· u cn '"'e plaint. HottyOr.,Anallelm,CA '1904 Americans. der•1on•ll •• tr.• taw 0111ce ot Succ•ulut ~'tor f'outpment °' c 11.,... "''"'to...-"'• Hvk • •I Tl\ls t>wtll'leu 1, conou<l•O ov • The change follows a w ILL I AM y SCHM I Ol. 366 !'tllft S\IPOh•• must rerno ... t ... prooerty •• • ... .,.,.,.., Ill ""'-· Y°" ,_ general Oll<1NrSl\1p M1que1 Orlv•. Sulit JOO. Newpor1 1t1•lr own e1pense voon acuptanc.e ot do ,. """"'"' ,. ltlet yevr wrttt<t" Cttttoro w Harlow decision by the Chinese eeac11. c.•Hirn.a tt660. -·<~is ,,.. 111e1>1c1 "''~•••tinet. ,...,... ... 11any,mav11e111ec1 .... t1tne. Tl\11 •••temtnt .wu llled "'"" 1,,.. to adopt Pinyin, a new Ola<t of Dus<nenof Ille ~\IQnecl 1n Tiie Ol\Cnct reiarv.s 1r.. rl9flt to re-Oat.d ""-"" ,._ H1._ Counly Cle<' 01 O.•n CO\lflt 1111 matter-. oertelnlno lo "'41 •~t.ir 01 ject •l'Y °' &11 l>ICIUftll to waive 6"Y Ir· WILLlolM E. St JOHN ,,,_.rel\ 1 ltn ge y on method Of transliteral· •••II oeooen1, within four montl\• r99ul1H"i1y or lntormallty In ti.c bid· Oen • l'tltt>7• ing its written charac· .oll•r Ill~ ""I publlcatlOft ol ..... dino 6• J-W H•"""""s Pulltl~ Ore..qe CO.\I 0.lly Pltot ter s to Roman letters notlct. All 1ltfl'$ 10 .,.. SOIO on an .. H is·• Oeool!Y Mer ' tl 10 17 1m 8,._,. Da1edFtetuerv6. '~" binl\ •SIOAL 1 • • • • • that more closely ap· JOHN w. N1cou NEWPORT·MFSA uN1FtED euRT cHA1tN1No proxJ'm ate C '-:nese pro· E•e<u'l<H'of l~W•llol SCHOOLDtSTRICT An-yeti.a• p B C CE •u '"" •bo..e Mme<t DfKe<it"' ot o....,. co....tv no ••1'0t'~ •-un1 V LI NOTI nunciation, according Co Wl\.LIAM V. SCHMIDT C.llle><nia sul1e st! A p · M S.11 M19ue40t1w By L•iA.,......,c. t0t1s 1'1CTmous eus1NEu Executive Editor s.1tot• DorOfnrHerttvF"'"'' T••· nn>,...>m NAM&!STATEME"T Louis D. Doccardi N••JOrt llffcll, CA ttMO CPM. A11.,..,.., tor Pt•iflllfls n.. 1ooow1no oe•~ is ooln9 tNs•-1114' '4f.Cm Pu•tt•.nino DlfettOt • Tl'tr word "comp1111n1·· lnc•udts nesus: TRADITIONAL spell· A"-Y terE•t<81e• Tel· 1710 SS.311' crou·comotaint 'pl•intlll'' 11\tlUOP\ DANIEL C.. OiRISTENSEN, do. · r • ..:tl be Publl-0..onQl' Coast 01111~ Pilot. Pu1>11slleel O.anqr Coast D•••• P1tor cro-.-comolatftAnl, "oele'ldant•• In· 0 & J SERVICES. tOIJll1 LA Fond• c... ings wu retained in a Ftb tl, 20U11ftllMMcll 191' S•8·1' Mer •, 1).1•,. 81&-79 cludf\ crl>\~ettnoant, Slnqutar 111. <le, FounlainVelley, CA'n708 effort tO m aJce the new PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE ctuOt' t,,.. plural 11nc1 maS<utl~ in. Denlel Gonion Olrlslet'IUI\, IOll? 11 · ct~ ttm<nine eft11 ne.iter A wrllltn L• Fondo O~lt. F®nltin V•lley, CA Sp e 1 n g S m 0 S l Un· pludlftQ, lnclllllln<) on 11n,wer. Oem-t2708 d e r s t a n d a b 1 e t 0 -• cp.ae1 ---• NOTlc.:Ol'SALEo'F--•tr • .ic..mvst1>eln1Mtormreouirec1 d1!.:11~""u>Mucteabvan in. American readers. he NOTIC1!'TOCIU!OIT'OaS l'tfalOMAL l'a~ttTY by llWI <Allfom.4• Rultsof Coun Your OenlelG C add d SUNltlOlt COURT 01' THE IS.C 1161 Cllllf Clvlt c ... I orlolnat plHdlfto "'ust l>e lllt"O In tnls llrl,lf'nsen e . STATEOl"C.-LIF'OltllllA l'O• . · ' court wit" 11t11per llltno '"'Ind e>root Tiiis stalernilnt wu tried wltn Irie A u1 d f lNE ClDUttTY OI' oaAwGE Hot1ct Is ..... l!C1J g1....., lhal Uftder 1 ... 1eC.oPY1t1enOf was $tnltd on •«" County Cler-ol Or•nge Counly on S a res t , rea er S 0 NO """™ •1'111 pursuent to llte law maelt end -plel\llff's ttttOr,..,, -on ff(ll plalft· Ftbfuary 23. "" A p dispatches now see U!N .. MAR'f \.AME OIAMONO vldecl. tne unlltnlgntel All Spece "" "°' ~pre~ttd by •n <tt10fl'•Y 1'110S14 h r C'-: I • Mt MK MUte«llT D Ol-OND Sloreoe ot II~ Tran. Gorden Grow. The llmt wt.en 1 .ummoM" de<!mt"ll P111>lls11ee1 0.11~ CoHI Delly Piiot t e name 0 1una 5 \/ICC ... : MAlllY LAME MOUSS DIAMOND Qlllornl• will Wll •I llUC!lk tut•-•1 served on. PMf'f ""'' YttY lle1»ftlllnti Ftl>. 17, Mar .•. ll.20 ..,, premier, who visited the allo LAltltV DIAMONO aM H MltS. MHlt" AwcttOft, ?OIS..., Ne'!°'~on on 1"9 metllOCI of seNlca. For uam· n•7'' U nited $lat e S 1 a St 1to•e•T STA"LllY &!TIENH&!. Blvd .. (Ml• "'9H, al 1•30 0 c oO pie,'" CCP 413 101,,fOUQll'1S •O ----0«....e. P.M Oft "" ''"' ot Merell .. ,. .... Publlslleel Or-C:O.Jt D.tllv Piiot PUBU m 0 n t h I i n p i n y i n NOTICE IS HER£8V GIVEN lo"'• tollowlfllj OH<rilll<I perso, .... ll"oPtny Ftb U.70.?7.fMrct16. ,.,. m.,. c NOTICE f 0 I I 0 wed b y l h e or 10 mucn l"•r•o •s m•y b• ---- creelltGr$ of--· 11•"'4!11 dK-nl llfK•UatY lo wtlsly. lien .... Ille un· PUBLIC NOTICE "'CTITIOUS •us1"1ss Am e r i c: an s p e 1.1 in g : tNI •II """°"'NY~ <l•ltm llOflnsl derslone<f tor rent -1nc1.,...l•I\ In· HA.Mil STolTEMElfT T '""wk!~"'" nlOlllreel to 111~ cur,..d •• ,,.. allOY•rnentiOMcl 6ddrus ---------Tiit tonowin9 persons .,. ootnv D eng Xiaoping ( en g tllem. with"" MUS,_,,, vouct.ers '" toeetllAr "'""costs Of ac1ver1111no •ftll a111n Duslnuus: Hsiao·ping). the otlke ot -Cieri< ot lfle llbo'lll P"" e1tpenwsot sete· NOTIU 01' SALllOI' 5PA-TROL. t66t N"wl>Or1 Bl•d.. Pl I ill lllltd ~. °' to pretet1t Tham. with Oescrill'lon: i color fYs lamPS 2 aUL ~~·TY AT C ace names a SO W 111• ~<•SSMv ve>u<Mrs. 10 ,,,. 1111-c ... irs • o--11>0• .:. & M ·, •••v•leSALll ost•MflA.c. m 1T h ave dual spellt"ngs · derslQllttl •t tllt' ••w olfl<e 01 ......... • ·~-· 1· -· • ·• ..._..,.,.. Lloyd H•rvev Buctc. ta.u Aneflelm · · Ul't .... A "'anf M1111~r Sen. Ernest F. Holl· ings. D·S.C .. has been selected reci · pienl of the National Parent-Teachers As· sociation president ·s awa rd for dist · inguished .servi ce. Ban Seen O n So me Tire Rims W ASlllNGTON <AP l The government is asking for ad vice on whether to ban tire rims made in two or three pieces after reports that accidents i n vol vi n g multi-piece rims ha ve killed at least 71 people. T he National Highway Traffic Safety Ad · m inistration said tire rims made in sever al parts can explode. hurl· ing l ethal pieces or metal into v1ct1ms standing nearby. THE AGENCY could ban the rims outright or formul ate r egulations aimed at making them safer Multi-piece rims ··are needl essly killing and in· ju r ing countles s Americans every year ... the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety said in asking for the rederal in vestitzation. SINGLE P I ECE rims are used on all automobiles and pose no hazard. ofticials said . But the two and three· piece rims are common· ly used on trucks. buses and camper.s..... Rims m ad e or m ore than one piece include a heavy. detachable m etal locking ring that clamps over the tire and holds it in place. Such explosions have occ:ured at l east 439 times since 1957, with i1 causing one or more deaths. said Joan C la yb rook . ad · ministrator or the highway safety agency . Suit Settled MARTINEZ CAP! -A Ric hmond man whose wife died after a ro utine gall bladder operation will get $400.000 from Cont,ra C-OSta Colmty in an out-of-court settle· ment or his negligence suit. Strengtlt l/nlaa0tc11 Rent-control Advocates Up By THOMAS D. ELIAS How atroog ls the rent·control movement'! That is one o f the major unknowns in Calttomla politics. It's clear that rent ·control advocates bave their opponents on tbe run today. But no one ls pre· dieting they will be able lo continue the advances. In lftnns of sheer numbers, few politicians doubt that rent-control advocates outnumber foes in the state's major c:iti~. That is why Gov. Brown, several state l egiSlators and many c:lt.y councilmen around the state have suddenly jumped on the bandwagon . MOST WERE SILENT LAST June, when only one of four major local rent-control Initiatives passed In California cities. The three defeats came in cities where ren- ter s outnumber property owners by ratios as high as 4· 1. The r enter s lost because they didn't vote. That bas been their traditional weakness. Their hist ory as non-voters makes the rent - control advocates questionable as a political force. For elected officials almost always listen hardest lo those inter est groups that can turn out voters. r SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS But the rombinat1on o r ( 1 ) ren t increalle" which followed Proposi· lion 13 and 121 rage at the defeat or many local rent.control proPOsitionl> the past five years may have galvanized tenants into a more potent for ce. THAT. CERTAINLY. IS THE prevailing op1 nion in both the state Legislature and in city halb ln Los Angeles. for instance. a council dominated by r ent -control opponents has allowed a rent moratorium to stand for nine months while 1t con· sider s a follow-up rent-control measure allowin~ only limited increases This happened only because of grass-rootl> political organizing. mostly by the Campaign for Economic Democr acy. led by activist Tom H ayden and his actress wife.Jane Fonda At the sam e time. the governor for the first time has com e out for proposed legislation to ban evictions without "Just cause" nonpaym,.nt or rent. disturbing others or d amaging propert) BROWN SAID NOTHING WHEN similar b1lb were easily voted down last year . Now their fate •~ far less certain. "The considerabl e growth or the tenant move m ent and the increased commitment of the gov ernor's office will m ake a big difference th1!> time." says Ca.ry Lowe. director of the Center for Public Policy. research arm of Hayden's orgaoiza lion. The movement's g rowth is obvi ous. In prt' vious years, tenants turned out at city balls only by the threes and f o urs to stump for rent controls. But i n the last four months. c r owdS of 300 to 400 have not been unusual when Los Angeles councilmen eonsidel'ed-<:hang.es in.th~ rent m oratonum . Other cities also saw much larger turnouts . And politicians operate on the assumptjon tbat for each complainer who appears in """'o'" p e r son . many m o r e with similar feelings st ay home -but eventually vote. That assumption has struck fear in former rent-control foes. They clearly believe that the large citizen turnouts at meetings will be echoed by larger -than-normal tenant voting turnouts in local elections this spring and next year. FOR THE MOMENT, THEIR (ear lends great strength lo the rent-control movement. as elected officials respond to what they suddenly perceive to be a new public desire. But that strength will ebb quickly if tenants don't actually vote in large numbers. For rent-control opponents like l abor unionll and realtors are vital sources of campaign dollars. Unless tenants can prove they outvote their foes by a lar ge margjn. their new clout will certainly be short-lived. Part-time Work Enumerators Needed Dear Joyce: I have cblldren at home and can only wor k part tlme. Can you suggest joba? -M.G.C .. HJckory, N.C. ( CAREERS J NIE SERVE MUMl'tElt • HU<»41!$ ........ llOlcl tJllOdS. . SI .. Coste """'8. c.. "626 z he J' i a n g pr 0 vi n c e s ... m .i.wo v I( A . Owner: 'P•dllle, .,,, Mlr•c;ie. In the~ c:-t of -Sl•te 0' Cll•rtu Romono Lile lfO A rull-time but short·term possibili· Nu•••on' ... , .. ~ca~=• ;r" .. ":: o.;o.n'1°0:·wooo ~~~In_,'°' CM c-1., of A1M111e1msc.,c.o.t•1Msa,ce.'76,. <CbekiangProvinc:e>. ty is census enumerator. The U.S. tendants. guards. building cleaners and hotel bellhops. ~~'~I ol ~, ot1 t1f'le 0::::111snln0o.;othl> m• rln t~e Metter 01 Ille Estele of ~!!1=:~~ <Oftelucled lly • C B I a.: • bout 35 000 ;;t; 7"st;l'e ';. ·~ "'::~,,. :;..~ M .. ..,..., ,_,1on MELEN LOUISE SHANKS, de<~t. LIO>rd lkKtc . T B E FA M I L I A ll ens us ureau s iunng a • ,_ mont11s •ttt• "'-11m outiu~otlon vi te~es. SfJ<rt111ry Hotk• is....., o•-1N1 the un-n 11 s!Aii.mtnt wu "'" wit" 1._. forms will be retained temporary enumerators across the ol fl\lsnollce Pw1>11SMC10r.,. eo.11 0.11,, Piiot, cler$'9Md "'111 "''et.,,,.,,,. ui•. to ·O\lnly c1eo 01 Or•-county on for a few w ell-known country. These worker s will compile 0.tect FellrWrY 7 "" Marcl'I •. l'7' lllt I\~ _, l>ts1 ~. $110jtct to elwwtry I 1'7' li f ddr lo be used i th HER&fRTo 01.-""°"'o ,, .. ,. '""1rme11on of N1<1 ~* c:-t. · """' place names because sts 0 a esses n e E11tC..-ot1h.w111 on or of~ tllt ""' d•'r of M•'<"· 197t Publll!Wod Oreft91 CMst o.11, o11ot they are deeply rooted 1980 census. Oftt•HllOvtNn*SO.C.deftt PUBLIC NOTICE •t fllt afflc• °' JAMES T. FOJC, • l'el>. '"Mt<.•· ti, 20. mt nJ.n J b all I ted ts'd MEltHltW MUMNlt •NUC»tn Profeulenel Corporellon, ?!SU in American usage __ 0 S USU y are OCa OU l e .... ._ • .,.;._._ H•wt11orM llvd., Sult• 1on. Tor-1-----------China, Peking. Canton. m e tropolitan areas where ...... ' •ove~ "0" l::t;·~~:i.!~br~. 54 • .; P UBUC NOTICE enumerators will drive or walk ask ....,....__,u...., SUll'--.., CAlftdMfeM Pf'"Ctllltd I>" .. ee•lfwmlt ".Ti';~..-. iiti:" _,kl· ---,...------~--Shanghai Tibet. Inner . . · • · a .. ,--,.... r ·71 .,,." .. 1_T1_ ....... , ... ,. Mongolia.' tnd fob9r a correct malling address at .. --==.-.-.. tile UllOllt ............. -lnvl'" ttl'ttt of _fa< ....... In IMICI lo All tN r "" vv• v • • D ·--··-_.._ torltlt----· ~•n.i.. .... -tllutl•ll'ltl'lt CI· MAMalTAlEM•MT T h lli r II . each usebold "'*......, Orenoe Coes1 Dolt~ PllOI, .. (;;;;;; ... , .. 1 .. s19 11 nd tv of c..1_....M;""~: eovnt• of L.. Tiit flDllowlllt ....-11 C101119 INJI· e spe ngs o we · · Fe«w ..... v1>.20.211M1C1Mlltrc11i.,1'n 0 ,....,l«SYllel'I" """•'"·st•••. of ce111or111e, _.,: know n , decea se d ENUM' E•aroas _..LL be hi_,., 547·" u111vtn1ty et c.i~. ,, .. 1,,., ""'1c111.n., dela"-' •• tolttwt. to-""" Ol!NN•s onioNs. ''" persons -Mao Tse· an "• J~ _, •• •~ NO'l'ICE llfltltk .. ~ wtt: s.ecrnt orh ... coro"• ••• Mar. tung, Sun Vat-sen and in about 80 pe_ rc:ent of the nations .... "_." Or ... ~.,... Tiit ......... .......,to ...... tllt Ctllfl>Nllo,.,S I 11 f tb lo fi ._ _____ ...,..._....,.---1 -SEflVtCH •&ou11't&O: com. ~out11euter1y u.s tt1t o• tlM "Ill\ M. 0. .. 111,, Ut1 sucrut Chou En·lal _ will nol count es, typ1ca Y or. ree ve '80fta1'0Ctt90f'TMS prallttlllhotSltll'lellCIOraotlluSy11.... ...,,,. ..... ,,, t!S'"' .. "°' IOI .. O(lvt, ~ dtl ,,. ... C•lllot'nl• change weeks or work. Tbey ll be paid 20 hN. .... CllUllTOltTMll SCO•E 011' WOR K TO eE Tred Ne...a. ea.JllOwl'I Oii -~ , .. _, • dd h n an..,uu ... •••N• 1Nnuo.oi .........,..1or•w• ~111.,..t~ ..... 11-uot 'Tlll,IMl!tril,,~tw by e11111-cents per a ress ; t e average TN CIOUlln .. ...,.., 1"' • •'-'MCI~ avstem wt.left Mleuti-~ Y•'41rft °' OrM11 dl•IClllOI worker can earn $27 lo $30 for an .... ...... •• dindM .._. -flllf1kul•r ... CMMY. lilWI M DtMI• ROI ... n T.Q1D . ht bour d .,, .... 111 a11111Lv e. '"""'"· llVl,..,.,tt elf -.aM• .. ,... "' _,.~'-"· TIM~•" 111«1 •1111 ,,. 'l'f.l.l .11 u e1g • ay. o.e...-••• _, Y1t11on -.. • Mat11co1 n1 s.. , .... tte c_,, ~ ot 0r""' '°""'' on Deaplte the Carter admioistra- NOT1c11t N«Ra1v 0tvw.H tt -C1Mtr ... ,... •• ...., _. .... 1<. Cot1•---.c.i1tor111t"'17 llltftllt,"". SUTElJ Uoo·s announced Intention to in· UWl""'fll•..,._,.OK.-.M--. 9'111~-·~•ltlt Terr11• of ..... I" U\11 ltt l•Wlut Pt,... """ ... ..-Motlllt<IMt....,._. 1tte w111.,. ....,....., ~1~ m•Jor "'-' .... Unlttd , ... ., Oil cOfl• •111111""° 0reno-c..s1 o.uy Poot crease the use or part-timer t11e --~ -'""""to tti. -...c.i ~ lfltttlfketlttl ·~· tlr"'M"" • ..... ., ,.,. , • .., _, *'·•· 11·'°·"· "" 134·" SAN FRANCISCO tbroudhoul the federal ~vemmen IMfll, ....... _.....,.., ~ In .......... lfelttltleMlttl, ~m•tloll ..._ • ..,..... i.y,... --•Y • - - -9 .,,,..,,, .. ~ .............. fl,~-4N.mu 1.,.111c .. ,_......,r,...o-ion11e,...,. P UBLIC NOTICE (APl _ An--"lneering enumerator applicants w can wor i "'* ~ • • ,,_. "'""· "'"" 1"" ......_ s,ec._. ......_._ lfllllM-. "• -.. ""..,""'., .._.111c1 ...... el1ht ........ days wtll have t.be edge· • M<-. ._,.., •"" -,.,,.,, .. '"'•NP'"' 111111u1111tu•1 .... __....,..~ -. .. ...... -project h as been ap. .,.,.,,. • u r ~".:,• a t 1. • o .. u . ". utwt • .. .,... c...r. ,_,,.. •'* ., ""'" • .,. 111 _,.Int _, P=.nc:::::MHT proved to replace ror t.be nevertbel eH, sbort·hour workers HH J""""°"""""'· 1tte ... ""'._._. .. , '° *''* wtt•11tNUIW!dMW1e.._.....ome. ,. wi" first. time the Gold en may ~ hired when eno,u1h full· M. • ...., o""' ....,. " .,. "• " .... ...._ "*' ,....._. '""" ...... ,..,. "'* .. ""' .--.~ ....!!" to1'-'11t ,.,_, • ti •t allab•e It a wo .... a ................. .... .... .... ....,,,................... _...... Gate Bridle'• stMl·and· men area IV ~ • no .n ........ ,.................... Tiit t9t•I ff"ltH lfl•ll N H O•tM Wt tttc .. , .. '""'-Y. H i:Z-:lt ~':.C:":'.:t.,''11 d try '* ~.,.. ._ ~ ....... ""· ...... -' con crete roa way. F detaill ta t 1 1 bll eftff • ""' ,____ "''' ,. ""-'-°' ..... ,.-,_,.... Ltut.. ........ • we111t "::.,o'l,. .. :.,:" .,..,.,... opened in 1t3'7. or , con c a oca pu c ...... • ~..-..,....... oe "* , 1-... ... "" ..... · 11 • • w ... • ... _ 1 1-.1 t job servt-.Jn-..,..-.. .. ""' HTNLID ~ ... ? ·~-........... .......,L-,M0.." ... 11HetMe or"°" UKI • .,.,-00 "w"" .. ~. •aw•l' . ..-.r .,.... ,...... -.-•• Offk• • ...... • ...... , ..... -.,.ca...., roadway la expected to ....,...,..... .._..,_...11,.u•.-. w.~;,.. T111u1111wa •u••uc1'0••"'· bt1la ID two years and NEA&LY ALL occupatJoos and ln· ::..----.,..'""*4.oww;re: ~""· :.':':: • !':. ..,__.o.,..,,o.Mtlt wlll take about 30 dutn. bavt some part-tlmen. The - n 1 •111. n.1t1eewn~TM• .._._,_, .. ,.. '""....,... ... ""' •1"'"" moatMtoeomplete. It la be.Ip.wanted at,n ls almoat alwa.ys up ' UN1w...,TVofl ,.._,,o_ e-ty ~ .. °'.tllft t-" .... tlm ... _. to -t m111me lor bartenders. walters or CM.Jf'CMtMA T•• (Im.... MMtl'IJ,"" Pt""9 -~-'"" -...., ._ ,;:::--~ °""' o.it' ~,r:;r c-ii o.u, .. 1... .,,......,. °' .. CM'* 0911.., ,.. ... MO mlllloa. waltre11ea, tut d t lven. clerical ............... -..... :!.;• •·" ""' ,...,. ,,., ... ,, •• 2,,.,,. • • ·----=~=========--wo~ rbn. 1u ttaUGD or parklne at· J Ch eck n ewspape r c lassified employment ads daily . Som e types of est ablishments which welcome extra hands are those o pen long hours. such as hotels. hospita l s. stor es. r estaurants . garages. theaters and recreational facilities. Small busm esses. such as dryclean ers and other local merchants. are good bets too . OFFICE BUILDINGS populated by small firms and proressiooals are logical places lo canvas for leads . Many temporary hel p firms o(fer bruib·UP assistance to individuals whose clerical skills are rusty. 1f you're looking for a professional job appropriate to your credentials. y u may want to put forth tbe con· derable effort required lo convince employer lo hire you for short hou r s. A booklet which provides am· muoiUon for persuadi ng reluctant employers ls "Employing. Profeuionals Part Time." It's available for $1.2S from: Focus on Part-Time CareersM-509 Tenth A~e . East, Seattle, Watb. wl02. RtAOER SBRVICE: RfPri"'' o/ "ffomt ~ B"ffM ... " o tt00-~ ortit~ on hoto to nart oftd opmite tlril kiftd o/ vnhn't. ON oooUobW. FM a COJ>ll, tnelote o •amped, tfl/~reued. loftg whit• nvdopt V1Uh pr ~If to JOfJCt UJfn K'"1Wd11 al Boz 1580, Cotto M fla '2112S. DAILY PILOT he 8IQ01$1 M4trk•lpl•ce On The Or•noe Coast\.~-. .... DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 0--QllW.tn 642-5678 ~ ... , ..... ..,. ... ......... EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY W1•1r"t"-"ce: All rffl Ntat.fl Mlve IJl tbia newapa~r la aub Jed to the F~ral Fal Housin1 Ael o f It M\k h mu~· II Ull'tc•I t adverl11t• "any prl' feren«-. 1Jm1t11tlun, u <NmmloaUon ba d t11tt. roklr. ttUtUon. H• or n.11uonaJ on11n. or a ln~Uon lo mall• •ll.) b Jnf.n04'9. bmlta tlOO. ordJ.1erimln1tUoo " Thill oewspaper will oo lu>ow1of ly •t'<'ePl an 11dvert 1in1 fur r.-a estate wbk h la In viola Uonol the law ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... • .. 1001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~SHAaP .OWMAUIT lllpb QPfr•dt!d 4 br •/t"f'f'ltraJ a1roe pool ab• kit call QOllr IM..o&ll **U.S.** * VETEIANS * ~ chanc.-ln V A rttS rna.y t'nablc you lo qualify tor IJ00,000 home loaN Wllh a~ul ly NO UOWNPAYMEN'T w...w1.-1s .... AD Or~• County flrm apeocta.1.1~ In VA home loana Wt' re ~ v~ that be!p the VETS For~ anlo call .............. 541-0100 - GI I 4 I 002 ____ ___. ___ _, IUCHHOUSE ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. gclktSfwttt'Ho._ 2 Be droo m . bri c k 3 Bedroom. 2 balh with fireplace & garage. Take forced aJr heat. lnv1llng over loan. Tremendous brick fireplace. spacious location. Sl.22,SOO. yard with fruit trees & JACOIS REAL TY block wall pri vacy. 675-6670 Pnced to sell rasl a t -------- SS.SOC>. Call 751-3191 NOTICE lfied ads display their • SELECT how Daily Pilot Class- PROPERTIES messages with legibility and impact? Our ads. we llB>ROOM +GUEST GIANT VALUE! Giant back bay bar"ain! Over 2'00 ft. of peaceful living. 4 Bedrms + 3 baths ·OR-3 Bedrm + separate guest/maid's qi.rs. Formal Li vln" rm. Family rm. 2 Fplcs. Cov· ered brick patio. Potung house--and mu c h more at a bargain price! Call DOW to see, 673-8550. MNl1t<1·ll~l11N IOlll NKI• l•Hi$1 Get 0 REEN cash ror WHITE elephants with a CJuslfied Ad Call 642·5678 Sl. 77 P,er DAY That'a ALLyou pay for a 30 day ad i.n the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY DO IT NOW~ 642-5671 macnab I Irvine realtg IOHrTA MOO& 3 BR. 2 bath condominium all on one· level! Attractive entrance - good greenbe lt view. $139,750 leasehold. Barbara Aune 642·8235 CW-104) . JUST USTID End -~nH condom inium or exceptional value! Located on very Jg. greenbelt w /view of mtns & Upper Bay from BRs of this lovely 3 BR, 2 ~ bath h ome w I o .ff· w h i t e d e c o r . N e w apphances! Air-cond ! Lovely encl!>~ed patio! Immaculate cond1hon! $167,900. Jean Dales 642-8235. (W-105) FAMTAmc UPPR •• y YllW Front row, 3 bdrms., 2 ~ ba. townhome. Contemporary decor Plan~ation shutters & parquet floor.m g. Private patios w ith massive overhang &r ftre ring. An outstanding value at S220 000 on fee land. Sandie Fix 6 .... ;;200 <W·l05a) POULTRY CSPMHSINROCANRPARCA HSAWOINMORNENWDIYNO l S M I N L I I E 0 W R Y H L S W H N W U I A 0 N Q Q C H E A E le Y U O P C LNTNOANNAINDRONL GLC R K L R A 1 A " A 01r o ¥ c , 1 n v " ARCNKPPKOIHN HMAHMO VAIRUSSTRGSWOIOD!OA E R 0 0 H C T K E P H U M D N N A U N AOCIOECLCHDALEVtLTT IERCOAkRlAPAIATNPHA OEHRO E RDNALSIEOOHRI DtlAHNMATNAIORMNIOO "LVSCISOOISETTOD ACA YHIESHPDMTtLSkCANKN : .......... -~ ..... . ....... ...._ ...... ,..,,. ,..., ............ " ..... ~ ~ ...... :S" -I 'ft'" (J .. = .............. t ~ : .. llllllJ~ = ,...,. ......... .. NOMI $11111 Th~s 2 horn ii are tho laat ones left. Offered are 2 conUguOUI R·l lots in the village of Northwood, m Irvine Build your own c ustom ho me or t·hooso from 3 benuUful plans included with lh e lot". Uuy <'lther or both att $4S.OOO ('ttr h . l deol IO<·n tion t o :thoppinJt & frcttwoys. Cull tor dt!tu1ls. R.C. TAYLOR CO. 640-5112 \\ I ~ I I . '1 '\' TAY LOR C IU<Al.T<>H~ ·.i111 1· l ~J · ILU~S "?LAU .. SPICl•L Only "W" model available! Sha rp & ne wly decorated! 3 Bdrms <including lge master BR w /sittin~ area ). 21h baths. "Swedish" firepl in Ii ving rm. Spanish tile in family area & kitchen, mirrored wall in dining area, fabric & flocked wallpapers. wood paneling + other extras. $122,950. WESUY N. TAYLOR CO .. IULTOIS 2111 S-J~Hlhlood NEWPO«r CIEHTH, H.I . 644-49 I 0 .. CE 110111 ILlllS ao. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE OM THE SAMD Be~utifully Decorated 3 BR. 2 Ba. Unit With 180" View From Liv. Rm Di~. Rm .. Kitchen & Master BR: Built On The Beach Nr Huntington Bch Pier. Amenities Include Pool Rec . Rm., Sauna. Plus Private Guarded Entrance. Price, $369,000. ILUFFS SPECIAL The Rare Single Level Paula Plan. This ls The Largest Single Level 3 BR Condo Plus F.amily Room ln The Bluffs. ExceJ. F loor Plan. Courtyard Entrance. Tiled Entry. Lge Liv Rm W/Cus F .P. Cathedr al Ceilings. All E lec. Kitchen. Huge Master BR Suite. 2 Patios. Fee Land. Only $199,500. A "Joy Of Newport" Listing. ·ti) ~ 631·1• Ill DOYmt DllYI ------- .. ..... .. .... . -- IDIA: YOU SH SIA YllW .and in Seaview see this 4 bedroom view home with 2365 aq . rt .. 2~ baths. a Jacunl and over $30,000 In landscapi ng, patios and exterior improvements. Don't forget the community pool and tennis courts are Just a jog away. The price Is S289,000. U~l()UI: fi()Ml:S REAL TORS"'. 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Me1r Jlsu en MP'>J Verdi', .it 546 5990 IRVIME SALE OR LEASE OPTION Gorgeous 4 bedroom tri·level Yale model. $109,900. As k Cor Roy Siemens 631-1266 IE/MAX of c:odtt--. lnlM, •-•-.-t ..... lbHdl. IK. 234E.17MtSfr..t,Cott.Met.631·126' Nationwide Network of Individually Owned and Opt>ruted Real Estate Otnces 111 •caE + VIEWS & the views take Jn Ca- nyon & ocean. A dream home w/Sbdrm, Jba, & professionally lodscpd w/several patios. Frml DR. Fam rm. w/blt·in bar, separate laundry nn. A Real Buy! C aU Now979-S3TO. ALLSTATE· REAL.TORS FREE •V!TS • Homes lo Or ange & Riverside Cou.oUes. Up to $100,000. NO OOWN-00 IT NOWI ! Jq.547·2909 vetca .... 1or 8%% TTJplca , a ssumable . OwnerwW can-y 2od TO. Only $1.35,000. Call: 6'5-9161 J OPEN HOUSE REALTY ~> ... list of VA homes. lO<>"s to <'hoose from. Some with NO DOWN /NO ~~~~~~~~ COSTS. No obli~allon, call for your list at 645-7221. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 4 BDRM, $94,950 Owne r leavin g for 21 Oregon. Leaving temfic Real Fstat.e pot.entJal m Ous Immaculate 4 Bdrm, WHfdff Rfflfty 2 bath home on large lot. TRIPUX 1;i~~~.E.~11"~~1• ·1·~· ~FOR~MW~All.; lblockoUHarbor Blvd., Js".--. . • lei Costa Mesa. Keef as • • r:_ -i;, oT ere.ate va ue. srx200· lot with alley in rear.$1~.ooo. 1--------Q.lffH•VEH TRIPLEX Refurbished townhouse umts in excellent renlal area-No rth Costa Mesa. near freeways. Fireplaces. privat e patios. siss.ooo. ( . 642-5200 ~.11 -~ 2 Bdrms .• 2 baths. den. Crplc. Close to schools & churebes. Short escrow possible. $149,SOO 673-3663 642·2253 Eves MESAVEllDE S Bdrms., 2~ baths; new carpets. drape ries, wallpaper; profess. de· cerated. Call for app't. Sl.39,500 673-3663 675-4777 Eves UDO ISU Bay view from 2 patio decks enhance• c ustom spacious 5 bdrm.. 4 bath tradlUonat home: like new. Ideal for cntert.alnlng Comer lot. $500,000 OCIAMFttOMT Quality craftsmanship in mahog. trim & oak noors sets off this landmark: 4 BR. 3 ba. home in fmest location Established trees & la wns. $485.000. · IACI IAY Fine 4 bdrm .. 21h bath family home on quiet cul de sac. Overslied pool, playhouse. storage $169.000 .. Terms. IAYFIOMT Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slip AVALOM Well.constructed. 3 BR.1 ba, oak floor, partial basement. concrete foundation. Flats area. Sl20.~Fee. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ).1 1 f\o y·."I' Or •• "i B 1 ", ,, · 'l ' ~COATS & WALLACE ~REAL ESTATE . INC. I\ LOCAL I Y OWN ED COMPA NY St RVINC IHl SOIJI H COASI ARl l\ SINU 1%! Liii HEW IH LAKE FOnST -Move right in this vacant a Bdrm, 21h bath home. Formal dinin~. mountain view, fire place . micro wave, builtins, custom built with oversized bdrms. Priced below market for fa st sale at $102.000. CGl 546-4' 41 Ser v ing Co..,ta M e s :i ·~"i.1n1· Hun t ing ton Beac h -N e w p1~tt B1 .. 1c h WATBFllOHT Pier /float; duplex on legal R·2 lot; close lo sbop8, Lido Village · a re· al value foe $249.SOO' Wboo lay Prop. R..ttors *** J.T...,. 1211 Bays ide Dnve Corona Del Mar You ~ the winner of Two Free Tickets to QRCUSVARGAS ••·Acnl.eh Sub-dlvltloo, "ady to tukl. WISTMIWPOIT a 8*m beac:b couqe. 1 bkdl bay• beach . PAl.M DISllT IC UNIT APT COMPLEX W/adJolnlo1 laod . ta,lll0,000 • lnHOT IT'SASTIAL!! It'• 0111{ u u .soo . Pre • itious net&bborhood. larte en· try w/atep·UP Jlvlog room & crac k ling finplace. Formal dln- 1111. 1un·1hloy lllltcben w/breakfaat room, 4 muter bdrms, cathedral erili.nga. • joy to we. HWTY !Call~ F O~E:ST E OLSON THUIHOMIS UHOIRS70.000 AU in Costa Mesa . 2 Bdrm. 3 Bdrm. we had 9. 6 are gone. Don't waJt, or these will be goae too! Call DOW! 540-3668 • ••••••••••••• IHVISTMINT OPPOnUMITY 2 houlles Jn C.lf on legal 3 uni t. 9000 sq ft lot Priced to sen quickly al su.soo. By owor . ~7. •••••••••••••• Read,y to Move In. As· IUJDable loan. 4 BR, H• BA. dbl earaae. frpk. 1g lot. Nice area in Orange. SU,950 By Owne r ~ • 675-7060 . Marcb8lb t---------8:00PM Performance laOttaSIAllM MOUSWOUUSS JOU\ R.E. Professionals Bia Assoc. Locations in HB&NB. 60exibleplans to choose from. The Huntmgtoo Center Huntingt.On Beach To <'laim your tickets. call 642-5678. ext. 272 • •• IEACHHOME $137,200 963-8377 FSIDICM. INCOMEUMns TRl·PLEX ib PRIME LOCATION! Almost New! Muat sell im· 5 .DIMS. mediately, cood tttms. Two2 Bdrm, One 3 Bdrm Rare beach home on fee land. Steps to the beach. poob & tennl$. Absolute· ly immaculate & highly upgraded tbruout. Great star1er"' summer home. Sellen ~ UquidaUng It are motJvat.ed. 64&-Tl ll Located among more ex· units with shady mature pensive homes in the trees s urroundina pro-Westd iff -arer.---a-great per1,)'. _ home for a growing fam1· Real tatate llOGllS u.LTY ly with all new carpets & 67ii::2l 11 new p&ot. Listed al an 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; !·---·-----• old-fashioned price of $179.300 673-4.400 HARBOR DUPUX-CdM S.. of Hlciiltw11Y A ll1v1~111n or Attentioo lnvesf.ors: Call ........... 1006 • •••••••••••••••••••••• SZ0.000 IB.OW MAU ET Reduced foe action. Br· ing your cub Of' trade. Balboa l &l 3 story duplex. Owner 64()..875S eor... .. MW 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llarhor ln\'t"llmt·nt Co for IDlormauon on these SlX UNITS located Just one block rrom Big Tll"-EX Corona Beach. Custom I•-------· Gncrtl8C0119!! built-four 2 bedroom 2IDIMCOTT•tiE UP THE HILL Single story owner unit wuts. two one bedroom ~I~ Ullft ... from fwung & boating with 2 townhouse design uoils: bwJt in kitchens, Pegged hardwood noors. associated 011 0~111 '. llf ll 1 T(JRS l • J W 9,,1r, , t' l #o.#11 activities . ON THE rear units. All with fll'eplaces, decks and/or beamed ceilings. 2 brick BAY; ideal 3 bdrm., 21---------private patio, W/D hook private patios; seve n fireplaces and nice coun-batb home for the WOMTLAST up & individual enclosed garages. loterestlogly trylutchen SFORTSMAN;oversized Beautiful super clean 3 garaRes. Ca ll now pncedat$400,000. -PLUS- 3 CAR GARAGE P,LUS BR. Townhoo$e. 2 pooh m.aMO COUOfHEWPOIT 2 Bdrm. 2 balh income off-street ~arki11t for •dac Oo.lY $67900 A OP1N1t1<1••1srUNroe1N«r• IEAl.TOIS unit with private patio ~~~ ~~ l-~-1-~-ta-·:"'_bl-=-~-:"'-d-:m-~-. ·-:-•• [. Billld wa~7w~:: .... ,.,. :~~i~~nogN home which has a frplc & new copper plumbing, roof, kitc hen. & both ba's. Great area. close to schJs & sboop1ng. A real dollhouse. Only 184.900. BAY& BEACH _4_50_N_E._O_R_,~_TR_. _OR.__ A~;;.~·rE GREAT IMCOMI! IALIOAISLE Residential + 2 com· mercial rentable spaces. 5 Car parkina, 1 block to water, 3 bedrm 3 bath un· It. Fi.ttplace. Super for summer/winter rates. m856iO O#'fN Ill 9 ••I\ IUN ION N<I • [W;llll REALTORS JllDllOOM S70,t50 3 brat.rt.er home. lge ce· ment patio, s prinkler ayat.em, separate laun· dry room. Eartbtone up· IJ'fdea coming. Fut ap-predatlng area. 946-7711 ~ Walker t: ler. Real FAtat.e INDlllllAUTY & CHAUCTEI Tr••••• 1 a.tt ...... f-, "-• ............. ., .... ....., J ~ ..... Ito•• with l•rt• ltrlcli flre,lece, WtlwMd floors ......... ,... .... ,,_to •Jlf•• Tw.c• ...... ..... ............ .....,szH.000. FllEYO VIEW Of CATALINA ............ 0a ................ ~ W.,. 4-·&J•e•H• ............ . ................ ~ .... •J.soo. I ' WATERFRONT HOMES lac. a.36 W Coa~t Hlghw,w Newport Beach 611·1400 A CO&DWIU. IAMlll CO. 844·9060 scc\\Jl~-a£~s· Tliat /ntfigulng Word Game wltlt o C""dl• ....... ..., CUT t. fOUAN----- •............... °'the ,_~_... .. lowtOforM ......... _.. I BERKUE I rr111. c: L_.N__..I _R.._E_L.__.l 't _ 1 r r 1 . , /Jn '-4 1(,f [ IJAll t 1 ti. A~SULI/\ f E 5 DuPex, 717 Fernleaf. J Br l Ba each, cute " clean + room to build. $162.SOO. By Owner. ~1.840 2 HOUSIS o. LOT 2 Bdrma eacb. 1185,000 by owner. 640-7189 Pvt Party wishes to leue option or punbaae on sales contract. Ocean view Cd M hou se 6'4-81. Finest duplex lo COM. Bldr. Just com~Uoa. Q Ma.raueri t.e. ,000. Submit terms·Poss. tnde? acular Ocean Vu. pvt yard, lmmac 4 R. workable terms . mo.ooo. MM011 IYOWI• CORONAlUOHLAND MUST SELL THIS WEEKEND BEST OF· FER OVER Sl75,000. 'm-o4M °' $49 ... dW'· ln1 week . 4175 -HU wQda. 111•te<>c... By Owner a bdrm. a ba. ram. rm. dla. rm. 2 lrplc'a .... 500. f15.7al5 CDMCHAIM• Dutch coklftlal, MM:· ~1 ram rm. cUa rm.,. t'8UMCI 11 .. It IO mucn IDClft. .,.,000. tl3 Ac.eta Ave . lf15.1'1M -J . ' • 0 ' 4 0 •• r ll 1t. l. D t. l.O o . .... .._.... '°" S. "-'et F'W S-. "-"PW Sili ..._.,,_We ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C..M.e. 1014 C:..Mne 1014 It d , ....... 1040 ........... 1041 ....... ,.We . , ........................................... . ~.Merohl, t971 ................................................... , ..•••..•..........••...•...•••..•••....• Olii'le.I ...... °""' ......... .. .•••..............•..........•....••........ ·····················4· -=t."-• I I 0 ~!'!r.!!f .. !~.~~ ....... ~ ... ?!!. .................. 106' ............. ~ 106' ····'·················· ....••................ •AMDMIW fOWNNOMIS ,,.ttimww ..... <T.aa1.110. COit• M .. , ~!2 Santa Ana Avt> &ulll:iih Tudor Ut3 or sptlr fc:vel, !!63 ca araaf'. frplc rnlCl"OWll\I •• ~ohou wledowa. pooJ, apa 1'ENNIS C!Wrt Frocn tlt9.9~ ~l or 9~ uuo Dev~by W~Dev Co I ST TIMI OfNUD IMSSYl.US I( Yo'l've bttn waiUnlC fer thla one, hl·nt 1l la! R 210( <2 Bdrm houst In eluded fl'H> Room rut duplex plw. (81'13 •q.fl > Great ltt•Utd<-loulmn A•k1e1 • ~.ooo Call l40--lLSl ., ~ .... HERITAGE REALTORS MISA YHDI Presffc)e! ~1"f k~Db'!: lhu. M eH~1~p ho r t btOlY addf.ct un bume C't dbk-f11>lc, taci frnl)' rm N f' w I y p 1 n '·• J 3, at.ta l1tc bdrlrul, 3 bJrm11 bedroom lwme for Lht' 2 bll oo Otlr wing bu,~ C''~t'ull\~ C'ompltlf' nllllr bdrm It ba on C)lhtl Wllh rluutljl 1•.iuni:i bar. WUllJl 01)(•n !iul\day l lamil) room, (1rrplar11 PM '7S> J.:iOl 111\d aourmtl k ltch.-n 2 Brand new;, bdrm. a !Ma. ho~es, formal d1n1c rm. sep rm rrn,? frplc-, ft'atur1na m1rrowavtt Polio 11nd M Ofl~· ll:ll,11)0 HKK C'bll 541) l'TlU TM8B1. -· , deep lot. 2 co.tr aar.i.i .. 21176 & 2<81 Orun~l· A~(· HOW SOOM S I 3 s . o O o ~ 11 c• h CAiif YOU MOVI? Owlwrt l\gt, cM2 211>4 o loto th1" -.upcr rt• b'73-0'182 _ modeled 3 Bdrrn 2 b11th ELEGANT but cum1ort.1 Ml!u Vt!rde h u mc-ble TbJ:. 2 :.Lor} 5 bdrm t-~ealurei. a nt•w roof. new J ba home he:. been rullt lot<"hen. new bath. new c:arpet.i, and new added dl'<'OraU.>d in warm t'urt on family room and tones by CObta Mt>~a·i; ma.,lt'r bdrm. Aakin.: un flliest f';"'niture :.tore 1) $87,500. Call S46 ~ Am ong t h e m a n y ror ~ dctiuli; amerut.ies are over 12 All\lmabl•8 VA SlUOO O P • no cau•I Yorktoltfn Villu. ! br t '-t bl rondo Eotl 111r. lnu11 di) rm. ltvu 536 8011 Hyowntt ........ 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COMYIMl .. T >ouuoo l\t San o._110 frw)i, lrvloe Ind com plo, M'hooll • ahopp111" Nk'1e ~ l>t. a on b• bomf' rarll Pl•Ni.IM 142 '14el Spar1u..131 ,. UR 3 UA honhJ 1n \\oodbnda•. pro/ dr roralN 6 land•c•l)t!J, frpk. ud~d br1ck plan· tf'O, auto 11prl nkler h1hl11 -.pl••hlo1 fuuo lalo 1tnum Lclw ma111 1 n111o<'e yard 3 min walk w pool, hiMI• crt.,, !•<'uni sun.ooo By ~ ~-4932 Pr ownM Onn"ctrll"° rondo Adult. only Ten nli. 1w1mm1011. Jal'UUI, ht•allh "P-' elr r lan 3 I br SM ,000 640 llll8 WOODBRIDGE SPECIALS Ot.>bll'O\h. or II Vtn& m tht' beauufuJ Lnkf.'i.1de <·um mwut,y ur Woodbndae" Wr huve homes aolla bit' tn the pnce range from 172,900 to 1145,000. Pleai.e caU for de la 1Js Jr WO< •llBRIOGE AlcAlT Y 551 -3000 •DIAMATIC lnlcnar ln a bdrm. re· ~ .O' Uvin1 rm 1ract!d by a •l•&.11nt at1irway1, cathear;il cdilAI ft m&UIVO fplc Well dealancd k ltch m>.000 (<X»$0PJ .0.0 811 1p1t St. Let-t .. •d1 •DUPLIX * Ocean •Ide of hwy, level lot. 1ea11y •C-C\.• w beach Nt.'t'<b patnl, m1oor re p.IW'a, ideal for home & Income• Hurry, only S14S,OOO ~IOfl R~11lly 494 0731 PERFECT 1.ST HOUSE Sm 2 BR cotla(!e, nr. t.en· n111. hll((e backyard. »II wood, lrpl, sep l BR ren· Ui.I. /Usume loan. SIOK dn. pll.)'ments $750/mo By owner Prine only. 6'&2~1 EMERALD IA Y LOT 673-6634 i...,-...u,..t 1052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:1rit~2:~~~8~: mli!J.~J:~I Mesa del Mar. $129,000 =========I • BR + bonus Cornell Prine Only. Owne r / ---------Pl Col P Laguna Niguel Realty • Ag~nt~ DREAM HOUSE. unique design. Priced below market value. $119,500 &12·7817 VA FHA T ERMS COSTAME.5A Oean 3Br. 1lnBa, lg lot, qwet st, I!;? ms from bch. $74,500. Pnn only please. Owner/agl. 556-2725 ASSUME VA 9•,o/c LOAN SlS.000 O.P. Open house Sun lJ.S, or call 557·0707 Must Sell Owner Motivated L ove l y EZ c are townhomc wit h 2 bedrooms . perlert for the 2 of you' Complete with dsrung, e ating bar. fireplace and patio. Comm pool & jacuzzi. $88,000. BKR. Cal l 540-1720 mRBEU. art 9 p.m . 3424 s~rnta -& Clara. 3 br, 2 ba. lg fmly --------- rm, central alri um MESA VERDE w/Jacuu.1. Total sec . !>yst.em + much, much more' Byowncr MESA VERDE Dana Poitlt I 026 3 bedroom home with a •••••••••••••••••. ••. •• large pool and jacuizi ! Fc.tmHc Sea Y• No qualifying! Owner will fmance! Call now! 4'e Jbr, 2'Arba <total sep. TcA to led ~t suite) + oversiz.e 2 car w. • • ........._. .,., .. 0 gar. Dana Point's best ~ ,.,.,._ ocean vu buy al-S185.000... 1 y DalGHT Jensen & Co Wkdys 4br ib~ Mesa Verde 833-l864;evesS44·5742 - home, on lge corner lot "-'laitt Vai.y I 034 w/separate driveway & ••••••••••••••••••••••• storage area, l3rt x 60ft. for all your R.V. needs. Conveniently located workshop w /240 le 120 volts outlets avail. Close to country club & JlOlf cuuri.t~. S122. 500 By Owner. 962-7620 EASTSIDE R·2 Freshly painted 2 BR cottage oo buildable R-2 lot. $74,900 Agent. 552-7367 VETERANS No down Townhouse. Rare Tiburon. Many ex· lras. Pnnciples only World Vet Agent 559°9270 GOOD AREA Near best schools, shop· ping, & freeway. 4 BR, 2 BA home. Park Place.Inc-842· 7461 i!i,1 ~•I m1_\ ., :\: ~ 11 .. ~~1'.ilt1:r··, Rmq h41J·~~60 Anytime E.1·.thlulf Prol Bldq DtluxTow._ Featunng 3 Bdrms. 21,; baths, close to schools. new Crown Valley Park & Lagu n a Niguel Regional Park . Com- mu111ty pool & s pa. $&5,000. 493-9494 495-5220 496-2413 830.5050 COUNTRY STYLE LIVING in Northwood's beaullful 3 Br l~ Ba , lrplc, patios. Ambe rwood deve lop· no assoc1at1o n fees. me n l. 2 stories. 4 $85,900. 49S-4779 ~~.0~~~al& af r~ °f ~J; .,._wporl leach I 069 landscaped. cul-de-sac & ••••••••••••••••••••••• outstanding value. Prire $10K BELOW MARKET! $lll,950. BIG CANYON, 2 br codo .. . e-HANCH RE ALTY 55 1 2000 LIKE MEW New : dishwa s h e r carpets· drapes · paint. 3 Bdrm., 2"'2 ba. + BONUS RM. Oxford Model in Vill~e Ill. Good location on wide greenbelt. This ls-e musf iee-helot.e_de· cidlng on anything else. 1550'-S158, 700. ALSO- elegant 3 br home, 20x40 pool & jacuzzi. lge yrd. Sl.29,900. Agt 673·4311: BYOWMER Newport Shores 3 BR. 2ba, Clubhoose. pool & rec racl.l avail. $98,000 646-8402 HEWPOIT CREST COM DO Plan 3, 3 br 2~ ba, gd locat. upgraded, wet bar, mirrored wardrbs comm pool, Jacuui, tennis crt.s, $135,000 PCM Realty 833-84~ WATE:IFllOMT COM DO lbr2ba View/slip Ue/ oPt . $159.500. 545·3639 SECLUDED IEACHHOUSE 3bedroom& bonus room. tight, bright living area, IN THE RANCH . lovely patio. 2 blocks to ocean . Owner w i ll Beautiful Sorre nto! finance on contract with lowdown paymenl. Large executive home MEWPOIT CENTER with 4 bedrooms. 3 car BY OWNER garage. and ideally REALTY Beaut Green Valley. located on cul-de-sac 640.18 I 2 EASTSIDE CORHElt 3 bi,& bedrooms, l ll-• baths, new roor, new paint in/out, new cpl thruoul Offered at $107,500. Queea's Park 3 BR + street m the beaullful formal dining. Custom Ranch area of desirable ORIGINAL thruoul. Huge brick Irvine. No association Balboa Island bea ch cov'd pat10• redwood hot fees, Irvine schools, and house with 2 bdrms . tub, boat storage area, you own the land. Priced +newer 2 bdrm. apt. FULLER REAL TY 546-0814 fantastic k1lcheo w/sobd to sell at only 1114.900. over dbl. gar age, with maple but cher block frpl. + guest apl. with ----------1 counter. Buy b efore frpl. Clear. Seller will lnvest~r must sell April & save s7ooo . f1lla0Ce .$249,000 homesmCostaMesa.No SlOB,000. 10638 El HEWPOITIEACH brokerage. Adel 133 :n; Amhurst $82 500 ante. 963-4 · UAL TY 6 7 S-1642 2332 Fordham w: ~leach I 040 2385Notre Dame $82,$00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,.. leoch I 048 MEWL~~~IVE 225 Wakeforest $84.500 MEW IEACH HOME ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~s:ri;:.wnay :·~ By bui Ider. ,block lo •CHOICE • IJOO AT ITS BEST Olli ~ f: of ' beach, ocean view. 5 BR. Oc nl l ti 5 bedrooms, 4 baths , tion.&1l· 1 or 1 orma-~~C:~e:':'°°ioiq1:th ~f Peg~e~Fr0~~-::78 large country kitchen with fireplace. Fabulous EASTSIDE ~~t':i ;~I~s:. $~~.~ ---------1 for entertaining. Com · $82.00~ MOHAil CH IA Y rortable home ror large &arming 3 bedrm, huge.,._sa&_·-1-718-·------taaACE family. Call now, it won't pool sized lo t . i rn · Large 4 bdrm .. 3 bath last!$475,000. naculate thruout. Call llST POOL VALUE home oo a lovely cul-de· 646-7171 IMHHTG llACH sac. Outstanding pool & CJl'fN 111o·">"""10~ N<I • outdoor e ntertainment Sharp 3 Bdrm 2 bath, ad· BURR WHITE REALTOR. IMC. 675-4630 CD Coldwell Bonker I .IJil&'l! lJI jacent to park, huge area. Light " airy . > ~J\iQ)!) :;:;~ i:l:~.:~~ --only $85.950. Call 546- llABINAHIGBLANDS °"'.,_ borne, cuaiom JatuU11 2 1ears new. SbowD oy ~-Jo AM DUlu Ac\ 7SMm ~ .. HERITAGE . • REALTORS DICUTIYI CONDOMINIUM LIVING IM MEWPo.y llACH IACHB.OIS PAIADISI IN llG CANYON -... •11•1 2 .,. ............ 1111 perftct fw ....... 111t...talat.1 ~ c...., ...... lahrior ............. by,,_. M•.- IHJbe,.-dietedHyo.cle*9. SI 59,100 PRISTIGIOUS IA YSIDI COVE 'CONDO -All WMly loc.ted c ...... ..-ct.~ = *'.tzi~ .,.,J.c=-' :n. i: -.o•:,..Cco•....._ $229,500 Lingo ... 11 ...... 497.3331 On~ Orange Coast-look to L•noo f1~. --- •••••••••••••••••••••• OUR CL94TS Bayfroot R plan Con- PRlC£ J>ROPP ED t7,000 LOYllNflLATIOM do lD Bluffa. 2Br+deo. 2Bri' JBa. dbl w tde n.en fa many 1 man 2Ylba.Nrpool '76-3371 MaoltOD, s min r'rom who'd happily IH!ll hil! bcb. 1m peU welcome . atolSOt mUtua.I hands for ..... ucn..m what M pa.Id for Ll\em 4 ,... ..._Store or 6 ~ean aao. Would .. 495 you aell your home or in· NO DOWN PAYMENT 38r. dbl WlCle MadJIK>ll. 4 ton AC. priced to 1ell Caal 122.900. ( UNla\J.71). OAC. ..... ..._store 841..-S come property fot what you paid for It 4 or 5 )'MI'S qo? Our cUents cootimie ID prosper by •---------~. Mlllna. and ex· Bdrm. fireplace, paUo chaAling reaJ estate. New paint. No peta. $475 Taldna the first step 111 yrly. 875-9229 ---------• often the hardest one. If 1..;..~------- BAYFRONT you're ready tn move up Luxunous mobile home or et.art your inveistmenl ba. Apnl 1-JuJy l, $450 Uv1na with spacious program, but have rno 675-6710. 8B7·6050 cabana. Jbr with den, ce· ~confused with au ,_xm __ . -------~':hp~~'!;. 8~~!IT~ci :::,_aspe~s of toda~s CCIP•tr.D e.ocll 32 II throucout. 2 hev els, et. n come to e ••••••••••••••••••••••• experts al Quail Place open amed ceilings, Properties for solid. pro-Mod. 3 BR 2 BA. frplt>. xlnl. cond . Home in . ressional rounselin g. encl. yard, ocean vu. S52S eludes stove and rerng. J>r.!amld your equities mo. 496-7450 at unbelievably low pnce with an exchange and/or eoro..a .. M• 3222 rl$t9,500. 673-7890. purchase with an eye ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Bearh tbr I blk to ocean. SU.500. 646-5678 Mobile Home l mprove- m e n l S pe c i a li s t RenaUUlari'ce .. 3816 towards high future re· Harbor View Monllegu = for your golden 4 b r 2 b a fa m . r m . A G E N T S A N D waJlpaper, garg. opnr. BROKERS -We have a Uke model. $800. 640-07J5 few positions open for P RJCED RIGHT lic-ensed professiona ls Dnvl' by then call: who would like lo af-Avai l. 1mmed . 1501 f1hale w11l h Orange Serenade Terrace. S750 County's fastest frowmg mo. 4 br. 2 ba. professional Rea. Estate DUNG ER & A.5SOC. orgaruzat1on. We have 957-0701 968·SS65 Mlwport leodt I 069 leach I 069 over 50 income pro· • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• perties available now. 3 BR. fam. rm., J~m1nc Call 752-1920, Creek, o• greenbelt, COHOOIYOWNEI saLERWAHTS ' QUAIL someVlew.s1100Mo 3br 2"4.tba, $99,500 "ACTION'' Agent 673-5354 Near Hoag 545·3639 ----"------i lmmac Easlbluff family PLACE sr·YGL ... rSHIU 2 BR d home. 3 Br, 2 ba, family ~ + en rm.Justreduced$10,000. --.TIES'-4 & famLly, d1 rung rm. ..-"_._ ocean view, gardener & +POOL ~·says "submit all co,. Tll l:JO ,_.,..., water inc luded, $1650 ... mo Newport Cent~r Sl 68,000! Newport67,. !0 1e5r8R1ty kl "9t for S-. 1200 7 IEACH UNITS Realtyi 640-1812 '" ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 3 VEA RS OLD - Harbor Vie w homes·, bdrm 4 bath on pvl t6ACRES MUST SELLFAST! CostaMHa 3224 • . E ••••••••••••••••••••••• beaMootif~co pla n hos t s Cherr y Lake. Sunny BFALLLBRAOOI KR EPRIOMEF SCOTTIEALTY New2bdrm condos.frplc. _u ul l8X40 pool + decks & boat dock. Uns-536-7533 pabo. 2 Bedrms + d~n. que. S26S,OOO. Prin. only. AVOCADO LAND IN bllns. 2 car garage. $450 Excellenllocation.Qwel 2215 Heather Lane. N.B. P R EST I G I 0 US 2 houses + 2 barns 80 & up 1076 Canyon Or street and easy g-reenbel n.....n Sun 1·4 Pnn only HELEAH E.5TATE CAN acres Zoned for .RV _64S-_5637 _______ _ ncteSS. Owner will carry v..., d · 0 6 BE SPLIT ~ balanc~ p k 5 II & large 2nd trus t deed .I 642,1121 )'S or 675· 51 down o w e S368 000 ar . we :. cross Neal 2 br. 2"'2 ba condo f knds 0 · . ' fence. Sl70,000. 646-834!> w /2 frplres. p ool. ~~ .• W,~}~;J109, 1 _e_ves __ w __ . _____ ~~-~intMike Wink. aft !>.Agl dshwhr. washer /dryer [~ 1111111 :WBre•••o?.--th.~g•oc;=.te•aE•ntv~i·e~w~ -l.ooe--,-:;'-M-ap-~-~-o-xER-. -~-co_n_· ~~~~~u~fy ~~-~~:i~~~ _ ~ --·-••:11'11:!!!. dos or arts· Approx 5 maintained Each 4-plex 1 BR. stall shower . patio. from high In Presidential acres. Al uu l avail. <I ~two 2-bdrm .. 2 ba. & !Jx1ry rm. ir.i blk to E 000 ON Heights. New li sting. st.reel frontages. Price two 2·bdrm .. l ba. uruls. 17th St. shopping & bus. nearnew2BRCondo.on· S375 .000 . Owner Eafronturulhas wood· New cr pl, drps, ltlf.'. ly'97.500. 714-328-3720. burni n g fire place . stove & paint. Mature G 4 Bdrm, 2 bath ho~e BERTifA HENRY 365 ACRES $375.000 Each bldg. adllS. no children or pets w/pool, jac. fam rm, 2•c 0elRMEarALT0~...,·4121 n°'!ai't.or.,s'f M. Toylor644~9o1.0 S295 95.5-1178. completely remodeled. ~ --. You won't believe this no:: ... * * * Big lot-:-m~ch more. Beaut. Pres. Hgts ocean serene valley loaded C.M. 4 PLEX. 28 r 2ba un· R~ -.._ Owner wlll fmance. No vu condo, 2 Br 2 Ba. with oak trees that you ~ credJt needed. Sl!>5,000 frplc, pool. Open Hse wtll waJk investors lhru its. lnc:Sl6,800. Price 20432 1tetreeC1r balance. Ask ror Ed 'Sal/Sun l2·S. 83J.Jt54 Soafte~ lOrhe sub-division. ~1~·~~~~~d ~~~f YHunltngttbon Beach f Olernow 964-2455 r-.._ . "' ang~ County 10 ou are e win.ner o .-.-the path ol growth In· TwofneTick•k DUPLEX C:..-ttraao 1071 vestor's te rms . Bkr. 4Honn& Dplx to By owner, reduced to ••••••••••••••••••••••• lf67&~ni.1/523-4462 5 2BR I IBR with aRCUSVA.RGAS S.175,000. Both 2 BR units. Beaut. tnse, 3 br. 2 ba, rm 700 •CIES garages & yards. Great March 8th 1 b1k lo ocean. Good in· nn, elec gar. els to pool. ~ EaslSsde locauon. S60.000 PMP rf come a rea. 675-0475. lake, schls& bch. 172,000. Riverside County al a down. Owner will carry 8:00 e ormance Open house Sun 1·5. 130 Buy now bef price up main freeway offramp. contract . Full price 'The Hunungtoo O'dSt. ..,,_,_ ... Own. 495-2151. Some xlnt commercial $320,000. Center .............. ....... t' I R di d Huntington Beach 1(9 & IEAUTIFUL Ir EAGa TO (90 S BR . 3 Ba . Som er set. kilc he n o o.k . fa m i I y w/we tbar. dining rm. 2 fplc's. view o Newport Center. polling s hed . p rivacy & a prire you can't beat. Owner has bought a no t her home. S ubmit all oHers. 1~11.soo. 1801 Port Carlow EASTILUff Oxlioe comer locaUon, adjacent to park area. 5 Bdrm 3 baths with many extras. Top condition. $192,500. ltoy Mee.ch, lltr 541-7729 --0 18 · api Y e -€'TIG€ To c I a I m y o u r S.... .,,_ I 010 ve&opi.ng area & 2 m iles 1 ot f~ay rroni.ge. In· HOM€~ tickets.call 642-5678. ext. ....................... INVESTORS SPECIAL Assume 9%. $464 mo 4.Br, -2Ba. 2 yra .old. or Harbor/Edinger. S79,900 FP Owner557-6199 AISTA TIME! Cinco de Mayo is just around the corne r . Celebrate by giving a fiesta l.o your own home. This lovely 3 bedrm. l'r• bath home has a family rm. not to mention the perfect back ard for en · t.ertaining! Has a huge pool with dressing rooms. And large bll·m bar. Affordable at S76.400. Call P .8 .1. 964·2431 835-0211 pager ~- 1090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• veatortenns. ......-·-+---+-272 FARGO R.E. 3333W Coast Hwy, NB ••• l/~·5ml or l /522-2080 645-6646 E"SIOE 2 Br. NO DOGS $37-5. 268-R -Costa Me:;a Streel 64.5·9341. 1300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• By Owne r 2 4-Plexes . s:IOS.000 each. Pnnc-. On· ly 4M-O.S36 or 540-1219 7UMm.C.M. Beaut. new building Fireplaces. xlnt locallon. Easts 1 d c $32 5 . J b r TSLlnvmts 642-1603 mob1lehome. Adlts, no .-..aEAICEYEH pets. Qwet. 67J. 7787 15%DOWM Mesa Verde 3 br, 1~ ba. llllilless Property 1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4-Plex Assume. Seller new crJ)ts & drps. 2 frples wi l l c ar r y paper & family rm. Qulet cul Renting 1320 sq rt in· Ma nagement avail. de-sac. $S2S mo. 549-2744 dustnal s pace. Santa Agent Gary 0 Bosler ordays. 557·0276eves. Ana. xlnt locatio n 960-4388orSJ6.2498 1 BR. small house. Al Parkg. Also 600 sq fl of· Pnnc1pals only fire. Lloyds Pest Cont. ---------1 cond. Eastsidc S29$. 979-00'll FOUR UHrTS.c .M. Adults. no pets. 546-3937 Cosascrcial P'ropariy 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MURSEIY SCHOOL Near new. 3 Br owners Super clean. Eastside 3 urut, 2 ba. frpl. 2-car BR.. 2'r.i BA. Fam. Din gar . J.2 Br. 2 ba. units Rm. & ga rdener Bob TSL lnvslmls 642· 1603 RasmUSS-On 9$·2455 Uc'd for 44 children + 3 Loh for S. 2~00 Back Bay area house for bedcm. 2 ba home oo ••••••••••••••••••••••• le~. 4 br. 3 ba. 2 car backortarge lot. ~ ad, he'ading PALM gar. Tenrus cts, Jacuw . Park Place.Int> 842·7461 DESERT, S6 condos UD· pool. $525. mo No pets. Cottdo.llM•:Tow• derclass 1200· ~~~r ~~;1 ~ttys ...... for 1700 Cliotce VleW Of harbor lot. pm & Wk ends. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2220 Pacific Or COM Deluxe penthou.'le. View. Owner bwld ID , suit o~ Sharp Jbr 2ba pool home or bch. Long Beach. 2br sell S200,000. 543-6148 Mesadel7~1~SQ5mo +den. Jacuzzi. Secured eves. prkng garage. Sl25,000. ---------2 BR. lrg duplex. yard & Owner t rans ferre d . Moblet...../ garage. Good area. Pet Agent213-439-t539. TrtrMt 2300 OK S.100 mo. Ask for Lyn 1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~26Q) ~--------3BR. 2ba, dbl gar. Lge RV accebs. Xlnt cond $S2S/mo. Furnished or unlurrushed. 631-0954 0... Poiftt 3226 .. Afa ....... , ....... ~= hM•I• ~ Aft-t•• .. ......._ ....... .._. 4100 It 1!1•...... 4411 '0t tw ... t IOOI ........................ -:;.................... ...................... ..•....••.•............ ....................... ~· ~W... •t4 U d __ .._ .. ll4 ca..• ll7' l'ama&a roomDMlte want· ..... ; ............... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• ed for 2 bdrm. apt In NAM•"S MILi LA MANCHA APTS 'VIAA.P, beach 1.2 Is 3 en. I BK 2 Ba coodo, encl Oftfta~l-fllar.t1M376 PIWU!LOCATION LAr1e UW bd 1arden "1*. diahwlhl', uraae I•·· s.l50 mo. 4SM'120 ~ B Un trai ht ot c-. WATER. Available •vt• Adulta, 0 hw,,r, •patio&. No pcla (7141 ·.a ·• I pr .or forre&aU«PfOf ... k>oal blU.. ,.nc-1 ,.r.&' bbq -.nra bul. penoa. Share 11. amc.. To&.al ol 3000 aq n.~ .. 0 d "--tt s.tll"-3110 lux. fW'D. home. Pool. ft ,,.._ be di i~ l ·~ u · -v ••••••••••••••••••••••• prtv. enl. tin$/ mo. Oar. · -0 v-nt.o t---------- Pl.IMWm: aa.Mll ~~!~v:'\·r •e1~ ~·· 2br, 2ba, dbl 1ar. avall. M4-0tt4 • .....u.r LUiita. Dnv• by 1911 ...... P OK HCA XD W. Cout Hwy, NB. W ..... Vlliift pvt, plfd ~otrance + 2 eta · -mo. Share aer Condo. Wlfurn. .tbcocal.I _ _. .. IOIO l ledioam F\&mlahed Apcrrtmenta O.awllhtl braod new paUot Soml' with ell mt864ev !rvine caJl W•fw ... .._t ..................... .. daltapta Nopet&I. Pool. 1ar11 Swjm1n1n~ poul 'a ...... ,.,.~ ~..Q5lt • Hl·f400 8o&u/SorlftldaS. 4 br j.r\IW 0-ndally. JecuU1 Tenrua <'ourt.s l "' u.fwllltM41 3'00 eu w 19'.b St bUl t.o Hu.ntinl(too •hop •• !'!:•••••••••••••••••• Butiotsll Mao w1U share Barh ~Ila P101 !!"tter prnall. A~~l3'! nn: EXCinNO pvt/ 4BR1 Ld N11aduel hNou!ic HJIUOR a VD. lh·•··· Ta e.. tftC'<l yd, 1ara~KJ •PIUok $44$ . N fee IN 25el. tn.• I • Plue 9-W\Al 1-.i..'' le4twn1 ( r\ml. & DAtwlt ) a Br• SD No .... •· rom ... " p•• u MIS ... .._.,.S w emp y a r· on· &an20xeo + otnce, 14$0 Utr tus P!W> Suwlod Vlllatte. 1~5~$ -,.. --I smokers pis. v maa 'ltil.Marrll IU-il.12 llwlUQICton VIJl111c L.uoe. MINtfl'ES TONPT BCH ~5806 tq. ft. total. S9S Per mo. ~/MUDOIU1 4 br, bL ~. ihbwbr, paU01 flM'd yd. 1ar•1• Klda Ir pct.a ok . Edlaoo II 8 '4M Atn. no lu OGt 1~8, m.JWJ1 tt.B ('114>•8161 Bach, W BR --------_8b'_._m_W100 _____ _ lh•win•• • AU \hUlti.. PWI •HoW..~11-.4 3 ........... ..w 4500 4 50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Walk t.olhebeach• i':~ts~o"i:~·. e.._.-r;.. c ..... Sol 1$61 Mesa Or A MARKETPLACI!! for Piirto~ Alco" aod New BualMieaei. .... .......,.r_ ..,. BeauUful ($ 8Uca .East of Newport Adult Apl.ll Blvd> 21001 Brookhurst. ti a 9am-5pm ~6-9860 t6J..6653 Wanted t.o rent garage on Bal lile or N .B. for small car 67S-9263 PRIME INDUSTRIAi, 8 U1LOING8 "491lhq ft otc/lnd'l ~, ........ , NO F'&f!' Apt 6 Condo inn le S br, 2 ha. JllUo, ivntall Rt-nt•l Pavilion ftn('d yrd. &ar K1d11 Ir -... nL -~ peta <> K S44$ S'5$, _v_• .. 48'!,2"!....,!__""'~ J\jl~Dl. 00 fee .s bdrm I~ be • o\thf'IOM Dir- rt-lltwMMy ""'"'11 ........ ~..,._ ,...__ 3 Or, new condo. 1 mile to l>each . Total r e c package. lnrl lenoas, lmtood. occupy. Avail. 121.3) 91i-M41 MOii.i HOMI Slogl~e closed garage •llo.M!ftlM ... TIO... for s ge or car. Mesa """' "" " del ar area. $35. mo. -6390 sq ft 24~ 1ro111, rmehahol> -«>00 sq ft ZJt groes, 91 Fwy This ts 1 new DAILY PILOT t'luslfinllon to get buyer ind seller toaether. Sfll your 1urplu.s. OYer&tocked or no longt'r nHded Items or auol>lll'S of any klrnl ~.97S-21nl TowMoue BoauUtltll)' deroralt•d, b1>•t alip avail SUO per mo 1$ lOor~ Qlll UlVF.l.Y 3Rr, ;'?'., Mu , batns, m1t•row11vi.l U\'t'n, encl aar, yd HOO mo Pt.U1 MUCH M0fl£1 Oakwood Cord.n Apartment• RepogseasloM. buy op. Leave message 751·9905. tions, take over payment information. Easy Sgt garage, workshop financina OAC. Trade area, loads of c loset Al\Ything valuable. st.orage, Bal Pen. $100 .-500 •5.500 sq fl, TusUn SZ:W.100 •3949 sq fl , Tust10 $191.500 Far more Informal.loo or to place l'OUr ad, ca II lbt/liut + U00 !><!C" $lb Bl"f' lfllf'SC"OUS ZM 2ba (ifont'vaMd OOtlll ~ 44bd \~, cu.him ~. v.t•t Newport hadl/NocO• Mlll lrnM Nc'•ly dc<'Ol"a~ 3 br. 2 bi 1uw11hou.., Spadou11 nr ·JillK't! • pool Qw~t ait•• Adult•. no peu NX> ~ Dll. 67$ ~ Huot. H&rbor share sun land & saving an brand new 3br 3ba duplex w/pvt. patio. bll·ins, c rp/drps & walk lo beach. Days ~6-6663, ~eveM0-5949 Sant.a AD.a 554-7070 _mo_. _67_$-43112 _____ _ We9lmiMter 84841895 (7141131·5'70 dy1 C714t 511·5717 '4~5'71 between KAN ind 5 JOP M_. Monday thru Friday ror your ad ta ap- pear Ule following day or call between 8AM and 12 noon on Saturday for Sunday's publicaUon. (ul lllthl 17Ul 64~)1J bar. aardeoer. pool, ~ .. • I'• tUO tma, WI 410Q ut Mirta w )242 l!JU dy1t , 640 2426 C Anaheim 956-1011 E. Anaheim 956-4.500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t"'~JWkndl MEW LUXualOUS llACHCOHDOS llAROOR VIEW Newpoct loeada/Soutb 1700 f'4h St (Dov•"' l ~h) 11141i.o1110 So l'uut l'l11aa area, dhi 3 nr I Ra' plex. end. ~ar. dr , raarpea... bit-ms. D5 '781·733hft:IPM 8181 San Angelo 2 br. 2 ._ 4000 ba. new cpts & pa1ot ••••••••••••••••••••••• l 2 3 Be<lroomli T~flni>. pool, some ab'* Waterfront Propt<rlJt•i. 213/~ 2813 7141846 t.Ql8 PORTOFINO 4 bdrm, :l''iba. F R 2 story booWi rrn JJOOI & Spa tlOO 9ff0. l:E26 Adulta uolr °" i-e•• Modelo Open dally 10 1 Perfect for couple or ... ~ _ _......__ 1 singles. $325. Call after 7 •-.--•* NIWDUf'lD pm Collect 2131289-2426 Lovely gardens-Brooks 2 br. 2~~ ba, every amenl· 38R2BA,rplc,pid10,dbl BALBOA BAY CLUB 2 ty, 1650 8Q ft. Obie gar, SMo Yrly Agent 8drm.2ba,dlxfurn,11ub a•n&f. Huge yard 324 673-!iOeO rent Now avaH to 6/30, w/room for trlr, etc ,...,.,.E 2 8d /f 1 18> per dllY min 2 mo $41115. 673-6336; 642·9666 •••••••••••••••••••••• ... u , rm w rp c, fH2.Q7 1 32.a 3328 WOOOBRIO<.a; bl"lrk walks. lrg patio & • . . AU.ADULT APT$ CrMlulde A.,-• y1ud. $485/ mo Ph MOW AVAILAIU 3 Br. 2 ba Pallo home. 00.6&'> ~-2 br apt. Pool, jacuui & Dtt in earth tones 1n 2 bed, 1 bath, Lidu 11rle 88Qarea. E.ncl.iJarag~. planned com mun1ty home, mo to mo $650 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• SORRY NO PETS 2Br. ll;t8a Condo. new cpts, palol. pool, carport. adlts only. $335 mo. ~ . 3 BR, 2 bath, ~udio with patio & f rplc . New triplex. Call 900·3521 3B r. 2 Ba , 2 s t o r y Townhooae-Apt.8-; $450 l ~/mo. 964-1507 w/lake. pools & tennis ChUdn-n and pets o.lt. a.6oa t"-d 3106 177 E. 22NDST. crts Frplc, sir ovens. 6'5-&641/ 64CM645 eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa 645-2498 .,._ 3844 lge dressrng rm w1m1r 2 BR 2 BA condo -frplc Beams & glass. fplc., lf(e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• raredclosets.elt><'l•rdr "'----Terrace' $•175: dlxe 2br 2ba. $475. 2br.,2 ba,allelec.,grnd Jbr 2'hba Brand New ,..,...r 2 ""'U""' tue yard ·~-..... • .,.,. """3 floor, cov. park, no pet.a, Woodb 'd $650 2 ...--· ,... -... .. ~ _ .. ..,.... $350. 310 Victoria . n ge, mo. ~-r.:or~~~ Call s.t.AM 3280 1 Br, beaullful, roomy, 642·2164/673-0782/552·4894 cargarg.213/465-4841 -----••••••••••••••••••••••• new, quallly. Carport. 2 Bdrm 1 Balh, $350 mo, New upgraded lbr apt N;~ ~~h~~d:!:n:a~· ~ 3br 1"2ba Condo. Yrly.$425.67S-4857 21119Paclfic,nopets.Call condo . Beautiful wtr. fall •K.tlchen Facal. avail. •Jacuu.a, heated pool •Wlcly or daily maid sr v •1V & phone available Low 01 $72.50 Wk 2277 Harbor Costa Mcsu 645·4840 Room w/kl~he~ $60 Wt'Ck & up. siuJ 97~ Room. k1tchco & laundry pr1v Sun Clt'mcntc $175/roo. ~22'l7 ufl 4 pm Lige SWU\Y room, lite kit & lndry pnvgs Ref reqd Empl'd 548-1372 ----pools Jac~ 9tJO.~l · U9Smo. Dbl. all. gar ...... P•••ll• 3107 ~.Pam landsc~pe w/complete · earlhtone crpls. pool. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• rec. facil. $350. Call Oen· Elegant f'a1>hion I. P vt • 3 8.R. a huge bonus rm, 2 club hse. Pam Agt.No Very clean Bach. 1" blk. 1 BR, st.all shower, pallo, ois834-S092or 551-4823. Mature employed. $275 bL new rrpl Great lot'&· fee. 7Sl·2060 t.o beach. $Z65 per mo. lnclry rm. ~ blk lo E. Turtlerock 2br Condo -~-------- lJoo University Park,~. I J q'sr 3298 util. incl. 675-3029 wkod l7th St. shopping & bus. New. Highly upgrad. Local exec needs ruce rm, ~ N t c t RJ "' .. • "'" New crpt, drks, tile, t '"" ~~12 en er ••• ;••••••••••••••••••• oreves. st.ove & paint. Mature Frplc, view. Indy, rm. noo-smoter or dnoker, y. ~-M· .... le •--ti 5 h Id dbl, encl. gar w/opnr quiel 831·'7260 --""' ase or~ op on 2 br, frplc, yrd, gar, near adults, no c 1 reo or deck pool $600 __ ._....._ ____ _ UNTALS BR , pool. Jac, 2-sty ferry&shopplng. pets.$295.955-1178 an 6iwknc:l. · 9ss-33ll6 VocatioftRetlfal1 4250 San Clemente $650/mo. 8891 Pebble $400. 536-6617 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 8R.2u .. ...u.,500 Beach Randy . Agl $375. Nr. new 2 br, 2 ba, .__h 3848 u-·--" e· Be .,.. · ..._ 997 3191 Cle 1 br uUI incl $320 gar, frplc. bale. Close to Lagllllll _._ ......,,., .or rent, 1g ar J BR.:? ba . $475/ · 80 • · · all. ••••••••••••••••••••••• City sips 6; linens furn . .t BR. 2~ .. ba ..... S7 eo..do11tl J-1 ~7876 eves; 547·4200 TSLMgmt 642-1603 2 bdrm, •2 people max. $25 mtely pr cpl. Call 'lliR.21'J ba.SlOOONB u.fwWllNd 3425 · 3!16"'2 3rd St. $475 plus aft.er3p.m.S48·1989. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• CorOMdelM• 3822 2 BR 1 BA, carport, kids security depos it (H ) .BIG BEAR Cabin sips 14 Condo, 2 br, t~ ba, bltn ••••••••••••••••••••••• OK. no dogs. Cpt.s, drps, M3-326S .<W' 634-6548 Jor pool table, color TV, i AIC. sauna, Pool & NICE ,2 br upper dplx. S295mo.64S-?522 application frplcs.S4S-&U6. J&CIW'J. New ept. Nr S. Empl d sgl or marncd 2 Br. I"'· 8" townhouse, BD b h ' cpl No smokers or pets "'" .. 3 • .., 2 a., w rte water 4rul C ........ C'>l Plaza, $400 559-8420 · · ~ara"e. patio, pool, b'"~ \be h ~ A " at 6 $31.S 64().4999 " views, 2 ....... to ac . t pm · acuul, fireplace. Adults New appliances, new FOR RENT 3 br, 2 ba. pool, Jacuzzi. 2 BR.. So. of Hwy. No only. GS. 631-4984. tiled kitchens & baths; Sleeps 8, on Bag Bear Newport Terrace. $49~. pelS. MSC> Mo. Agent Almost oew condo 2 BR 2 French doors & wlodows. Lake. La.sl 2 weeks of No pets. Call Rhett, 67J.S354 644·2212 Ba, complete kitchen hdwd. firs .. open beams, March. 't523 C'" .. "''• n,_ ,.,., 962-1841 (bit I di h h brick frplc ., drapes & Call eves. ""'rv.,""· ... .,,lffE , · C:O.Mela 3124 · os, s was e r , shutters; dbl. gar. & 714.963.7792 ~--: To.,•anae ....................... trasb compactor > gas yard. North Laguna. Woodbridge. new 2 BR. UNfvwi•d 3525 BBQ. frplc, w/w carpets, $7SO.HillieG4·7551 $300perweek 1 •,, ba., frpl. No pets. ••••••"';•••••••••••••••• me8liBJIU drapes 2 car gar., electr. Also available Apnl S450/Yearly. 640-8$86 door o~ oer. Nr Or. Small l Br ~t all wood Pmia ucic View New beautiful garden ,. ___ , l. ··-mo .L • • Kana Hawaii Condo, s ips 0 "" G ,,..T R E ..,. ~· ~T& ~ _... .... newly 1"e ett-t • d . It: 4. avail 3-lS thru 4· 13, -"RAn r. r. 2br,2ba.den,new ...,....,.....,.. spa. S200 c leaodeposil . bclcyrd. &deck,$280/mo ..,.,,..wk."""'l276 •Spacious I BR condo toWnhouae rn Turtlerock. 557-6473 ... ,. --' IJ•7 · w/palJo on stream Ten· 1585. After 4: !JM-2154 126 E. 18tb Stn!et uu. toe. IJ42..9401. pool j d I 6'1Hi816 I''/ w~s . Condo on 1k1 slope an 1115, , ac A u ls on· J """1" Large Studio 'h block to Snowmass, Colo. Wkly ly, no peb. SXW>. 5S2·341S *' .._ ... ,_..*4 2bedroom. l balh $340 UMTFIH! beach.. loci. aU uW. 1245. thru March -Apr1 I t>Ves --••••••••••••••••••••••• 161 E. lBthSt.reel NOW RBilTIMG 41!M-Z197; 493-7137. 557·3!02 Woodbridge condo ...._,, J •'• 1707 642.095& ........ D ... EW Vi A 1 BR --------~ " .ew pt. . sun rm, ltGIE.Aa • lmmed. occupancy. 2br ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8achelOC' $260. deck. Mature Adults, No de 31 Woodl nd D w kl I thl 2 BR. 2 ba apts. Perfect Cabtn for rent, fpk. , + o. a r ee y mon y ocean· for 2. Great C.M. loca· pets. References. $325 Wldylmnly 548.2596 s.'iOOmo 544-«125 front comp!. rum 2 br, lS1 E.2htStiee' Uon! Available March per mo.~ frpl. balcony, gar. ~-2Mlll 150\.$315"$395.Callror ....... leoch 3241 640-4784 2 bedroom, l bath SMS details while aeleclloo ... wpMtlNdl 3169 . .. . . . ... . ..................... . • ••••••• • ••• ••• Bachelor $190 yrly. Adult 2Z50VanauardWay lasts. r·-N~IT Duch, l'ool, Tennis, only, no pet.a. 675.7816 ~9626 -5 ... .-v-· Secunly. S~ort term, eves. ~l" ~ Bachelors, 1 o r 2 ,. long term. $600 per mo. -lbedroom "" ~ Bedrooms&.Townhouses • 4.%31.93 Cose. MeM 3724 2 bedroom, 1 bal.h , _ From $349.50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......,..~ Spectacular spa, total LtiiJ-1Hi11 121 SUS CASITAS Adult.a, oopets. recreation program , :_•.:::••••bedr••••••••••••b• Large " reg. l ~rm, i. .. ~chelorN nrb.lr&da1rvlew l.C. TAYLOI CO. =~a~;}~0~ ....,...,. 3 oom, 2 a, end. gar. '255. • up. &b.aer. oc ren, oo 640.5111 ~ & San frplc,dilhwnr, patio. me AdulUI, no pets. 2110 peta.MS-Ull2. ~ d yd. gar Kids & pets ok. Newport.Bt.54M968 KJDSOK Bache lor apt, Senior J __ (jf4f~~:i.Oo ~~~· No fee. 964-~; ttiDllctlJ'CNI leadt 17 40 3 br, 2 ba, pool. $325. mo. ~~~ rJi1!1~~::·~~: Sea r Vocdoft . &Y...tvR...Ws Available Now Yrly 3 Br. lBr. II Bach. JONES REALTY INC ESt*6 (TM) &73·&210 ....................... ~ 10.m·7pm _ &t&-4151 ~Oil Uti41TS ~h~d~: ~~n2·'? b~~/ WHldv Rates PRJCEDWOHT·E.S. Large 1 "2 bdrm upper S22l+clepollt. ~!:-.?~.~ .. ~~-~~ 9624125or892-7530 SpaclOOlstudios" Drive by I.hen call. from~. Quiet building 201 L •• H Ml. I Bedroom Suit.ea Avail. 3/15. 2458 Elden 1 wtl.h beautUul landacap· eel ...... 156-7707 ROOMMATES LEISURE WORLD Complet.eKltc.heru. br,Qmo. lna. Jdoelll for adulta over Sii .... S Brand oew Beaut 2Br ' Deaul. PaUo/Pool Avail. lmmed. 229 Co.La 35. No peUI. LEEWARD OCIAM ROM'T4Cr ..... • CIYe baA/C C004k>.Equlpped MaldServlce-TV MesaSt.2brt:zt5.mo. APTS, 2020 Jo'ullerton 3br~2ba.w/olfice.Year. ErUoymore.Payless! lotcben. Couple must l Mllet.oOcun DUNOER' ASSOC. Ave, (l blk eul Newport ly, fl le, car, $1060. Alf Ales& Lifestyles. 52+yrs. Im med. oc Roval Suilel 967-0701 "8·~ Av• " 1 blk aouth of 1'SL imt 6'2-UIG3 WeCfleckReferencea ~;U~~:0· Cal · 721Yontowoal VUlaPomonaapt,6'2·2015 Bay> 631-0387 UDO eleg., •pac. 2 br. 2 C.-S4M2ll Be-.... BJvd •IAvely, quh1C 1111 ad1.1lt Ba<'h Encl. pauo. Ulll. ba.1 ~fk1rpk,rdbl ce~150a, Cut Living E:icpensesl LtiiJ-1...... 3252 --.. bldi. 1ac .... c ga eo -. Sha11J ,. home 0t ep1 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1!~·2000" or :s:iclUll • •2 8lt pd. ::'~00, 646-2316 Adulta. 87M3:'18 HOUM .. Ma ... Unllmffed • BR, den, 2 Ba, fplc, _.,... • t•dr1pa1 -· L d Vilt P1one111• 1n Roomm111e I "-BDI'\ E1td .... l>r patio., ar-oear I 0 age ma1rnino •111t11 1'l71 bltns, pvt atrium, 3 ca t..,...._. 3741 • • ·-· v • • $550. 514 Club Houae 1881u .. ·o on l\/ ahoW>J gar. Teo oil, pool • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Pr1\llte • .,.,.. aarawt. 11350 mo. --or 52fi..1928. Wlltlefl up Ill I 1m11 fl\nOAJ•M beach. Pvt comm S800 •Priv./.,.UO,baleooy Ml~orl40-23l6 '"~''i'"''"' · • · LAGUNA BEACH MTR •Nr t•"'al u -.Jl&l, ahop· t• 2 8 °-f I •• •1 ... Office l...W 4400 Industrial 800 to 1600 aq ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• with ofricea. Newport. Deluxe medical suite, 645-2lll, e46-6303 ground flr., Corona del Mar. Realonomlcs Corp. •MISSIOH VIEJO* 67s-6700 Prime location swtable fer comm'I or iod'I use. For Sale: Wood &, plasuc 250·$00 sq. fl. off aces. 1850 t.o2050 sq. fl. A/C of. oentury oak stam, 9.50 From $145. Incl. util. 779 nee. 100 amp power. Call gaJ drums " 18·5 gar: W.l.9thSl.S40-22.oo. (714)522-4254 days btrket.sSl.OOper 1taJ.lS • £ ... 1 .... FUL <n4>67~3534 eves. ' SKlney Engm Lathe head ~ 11 Sl.000. 646-a>36 SUITES 400 t.o 2600 Sq. Ft. Crpt.s, drps, serviced C-rceP..tl Newport 833-8813 WANTED 2 metal exec des lts, 36X'10; conference t.ablt., Lndustrial space with 4 2 • • x 9 6 • • ; I o M elec. & water 20 x 40 an Costa Mesa or Jrv1ne. lypewnt.er, 2 punch 1" Call J im 494.2407 Eves & clocks, lot.II of misc. oh: Downtown Huntington Wknds. equipllcbatrs. Mat.chani; Beach, 110"7. Maln._S . ---------walnut desk & crederu11 . One 2·rm office avail Sial111p 4550 _'l'MGIOO ___ l640-_589_l_. __ _ suo. 96().1S58. •••••• •• •• •• • •• • • • • • • • • .... • .. ON THE WATER! PLUSH sums 350t.o 1300sq. n. Fwlwtic Views Wet Bars UdoM..tlMI Vlloge Newport 675-a662 Self -storage, 17601 0,pllAlwitJ 5015 Morgan Lo .. H.B., off ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bcb&Slat.er, 848 9998. Developer needs In vestol'a for exclwuv~ & ....... W..ted 4600 very profitable develop. ••••••••••••••••••••••• meota. V ar1ou11 I oc 1a Respons ible,. w_orking llom.5&2~. 752·6M9 writer seek s on e llllwa , .. bedroom cottage an W..li9d 5020 Corona del Mar or C08ta ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa. Qwetness essen· bal. Wnt.e Classified Ad Wam t.o buy beer bar with d>6. Dalty Pilot. P 0 . IDt.cben. $180 Up. Office-store. 480 Box 1560. Costa Me!.a t21.3) 37~2922 ~B~CE~~~~-Bl. 92626. MaMytoL09l 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plush offices, up t.o 750 sq Yrly uni. rental, adults, 3 ft m xlnt bldg. lBth & or 4 BR home an Harbor ../NEED N e w p 0 r t B I v d . V-.ew Homes. Npt llgti. . 645-2lll/64&6:ro. ~r;; M . 6 7 5 · 4 3 I 9 , 900 sq fl 3 rm suite. t-ir O.C. Alport. NB. Avail ~l11Yest/ Mar 1. Contact 752-8263 ~· ../MONEY Dana Polnt, deluxe office space, 5&' sq.fl., across from BofA, 495·4975; 495-42.45 DECORATORS · desk space, samples, delivery area. Npt Sch. 551·1572. 2nnsuit.e. 390 sq ft. ample park, uU incl A/C adJa· cent lo Sec. Pacifi c Bank. Near E. 17th & Orange, C.M. 6'2·'210 Roiue _,,. ...................... 5005 • CIB>ITHO PIOaEM * * * 2Rd & lnl TD loa1" R. G. ~ 547.54 02 1985Sbeno Pl. Arranged by Newport ach ,. _ _,,, .... _ • --- You are the winner of _. ,,_ - Two,.,...Tlcbts KEATE YOUR OWN to LOAN! CIRCUS y AllGAS We have • variety of M atth ..... f'lexlbte loan programs tu OU.I fi l your pef"SOllll.I or bu l> I CdM dlx suit.es, uul pd. 8:00PM Pmormaoce oess needs. All loan:. AC, amp( pkg. Fr Sl95. 1beHuoungtoo owrSl0,000. :Dl' No 1se reqd. 67s-moD Cent.er LFC (714) !>49-7220 HUDUagtoo Beach fn> sq ft. 2 blu t.o 0 C. To cl&Jm your t1ck~ts. IMllf'tll:..an. Tnnt Airport. $46.5 mo. Sharp caD00.5678.exl.272 5035 upstairs front w /lge • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• bakoo,y, pvt ba. A/C 4321 -------- Bu'Ch St. Suite. 200. N B. ROlJ..ER SKAT~. Ren Av a 1 I. A p ra I 1. K · lals & sales. Best buy 00 lovestment.s 754-1900 roast. Htgb oet profit Low investment. Agl. TIME. 7Sl·HOO Approx. 400 sq. ft. C-2. 1.30 £: 17th St. Suite "L". SUI>. mo. Doyle 548· 1168 --00-AL--$1-000--M-0-.-- :K» sq. n. Waterfront of· 8uUd a busJOeS.'I. Spare flee avail. Cannery time. lovest $75. 640-6594 V I I I a g e a r e a . or642-3223. TI4/673-I003 1_B_E_Y_OU __ R_O_WN--BOSS-- Prime Office. 2.411 E. Coast Hwy & MacArthur $400/mo. 675-0166 Faat.uUc bus. oppty. No 1oveat. Call eves for appt. ~Jrna. LOWEST .............. ldT.D:1.•llo 2..t T .0. &.o.K. Fain!st Terms s111ce 1949 Safi« Mtg.Co. '4Z.J t 7 t US.061 t MONEY AV AIUIU 2nd TU LOANS SWING LOANS f;QUJPMENT CO~'TRUC1'10N OR ANY runPOSF: Prestige Mariner's Male Love t.o sew? Learn how Devad p l'arey & ASS()(' officefOC'rent.300sq.fl. to be A "Fab·U·les R.KHrdwr900-195J l250.54&-S556. · Qinaullaot" It's fun, It's --' - easy, at 's profitable. PRIVATt:l'ARTY 523 sq. rt. otfice La Pai Operate a bUJ11ne411 from wtll pay mort' for your Rd. South ot Sao Diego your own home. Selling 2nd TD'11. 60 ~73 Fwy, $308 month. Avail (abnr, nouons &t pal· oow.642-4321,ext.276. terns. l nterv1ew1 at CASll ANY AMOUNT ioam " 2 pm Wed. fr On your home paid '°"or 'lburs. Matth 7 Is 8. at D0t. Jo\Jr any purpose! l0437 Slater Ave.,Apt. lOI N~ Pac1f1c 3 Rm otfice, carpeted, air cood. Skypark C1rele, Irvine. S250 mo 549--5033 !,!.~ 23, Yly . Vly. DetM-lOM oc::~S7S.SMS ~~oot Office, Lido -:-;:::::========..!!,_ _______ _ e .$246mo. 1 548-5033 OJnfideoUal priva~offlce c;ompl furn. Self ron· t.al.ned. New bldg. Exeep· tklnAl value. 120 sq. lt. C.M.7M·7744. 758-l46S INN. '751lrk I& up. Maki -0 r"".,. .,_,; h Eaal.llde I br, natural Npt ilJlla r 1 ..... rp c, 71 .... ~ -• 3 Bdrm, 2 ba with new eerv., color TV, heated ••amt '°"' •11r•c · w()Od beam ccillln11 • •dului no pet•. •375· Yem rO\rn&te wanted for Grouod floor office, •l carpel 00 quiet atteet. pool. UW. (n4) 494-UIM. ... Be•\I. a Bd, a HA ceblneu. Sl60. 135-IM4 or 60-055 b e a u t c o n d o 3u-Jrd St .• HB S145 mo. NieeladecDs.'IOOmo.Rer. teN.CoatHwy l>llook• S.A. Co Club. m.eoo1 2br2bawblkt.obch2aar w/backyard, pool• ten· Scoti.JUty,536-'1533 req . .-. • .. .,..,..... 37" Bale.lear1ar.8Jl·lil6. Newdelu•Sbtlbatwnhae :fo-1:_6~~0 Pct•. ~~~32,..,!'4~~ Sub/lie 400sq ft. Office ~Sbonl ~hnae. 3br ....................... I Bdrm •.Pt. uotun, faml· '*· IUPtr ldwtMsn.Deck ee4ll M/1"11·5. dpaee. Prime C.M. area. 12tia, comm. pool, tea •Stat term renuls, 1 •3 lyciomplex,oo-.'300. ~OC••n vi.w. Oara1e1. OCEANFRONT Upper $175.mo 548·5977,,o r bch.S550.4N•l BR.from'375up.Apnt, =a, Cofbt1• Ava, Paelflo.,, Victoria ...&t.Very n.lce.LadlJr, Maw.re roonunalb want· _646-_ml __ . ____ _ .,.67 m.e110 ll40.rno.Call 71!1•ktllor 1ar. '875/mo, yrly . ect.20t.o00)'t8.t.oabare ,,,fl f t A .a IMU'm lllt. e pm/wl&ndt . mllOt b' howle In ~c. St.50 + "' ce •Pact °" nm . P· E 4Br, 2Ba, lam rm. ... cond. vlew' ssas mo. •wa PIOMQMTOIY IBdrm,l~ba,p1Uo,1ml · ~ utll. Call a(l 7PM prox4S2sq.lt.New cpb, POINT dot-*, nodalldne. '325. 1 br up~r. Multi, no STEPSTOOCEA.N. Vlew. TlA-493-12.90. ~" Ughting ayatem. Vin VWa ComD&etel .-mo ..... &eo. ,..., 11111/lat Is lu l. f75 S Bt, 2 ba, 2 car 1.ar. Near beech. Nice. 0 uW. S250/mo. 64.5-25$0 f\niebecl, i BA Ir~ •• aaaJba,tanort.No Clap . l:Ullldt C.M. blUM.ta>/mo.1176-1908 bath.$150.M/F. wn _or_83NU4 ______ _ ---t Avallabae1 now. Teu.11, ..... ~OK. 1011 NOIQ. Beautiful S Br, 2~ ba. N2-4379eve1. X1a& olftce ~ uioo.q. poo • tpa. Denne V...,......... 1 ., u. tpU/• eMI (rplc paUo, pool Xlnl ft.Loc*JACOY#l.uuoa. associaf1:rl - -.I S oderlln1, United ... ·~.._.,'ca... ~ womo. No pet.a. Prdmalewentatoabr3 Uoder1rouDd p.•1arilo1. Br'Obn. 1........alf to.-., II•• Verde MMOitor...... Bt, San Juan Capo condo New c:arpeta, dr•.Pe• • 67WU6 AP~ --~Mttal•pall w/ooe·•mkr. '225 Inc patnu. A/C ft llUST .:,:.~~':!;. m•C.:1J1 .. u1 . · a~: 1e~1 ,~~k!; ~:.::~~11 ; •n·•IS5 :.'ia,..1111, 55H870, ttM~• . -W 1116 ~·•· Mll·tlOI or Roomma\ewant.ecltolook Will 1hre oft. •pace -llwd -....... •••••••••••• · lor aptlh141 lo LB SLB· w/coun1elor or pro· CGl&a ... '110raJtlaDT ,... Udo. 18r. Iba lux· U.PO&nt.121·3'7MHIDA (-1onalper'IOD6'5-77l8 ••• a.ut•llf I""'" ba ecu&o. Pvt ury waterfront apt. •• ,_.,_, ~£= CJtr111t balcoa.Y, frplc Romine .. wua.d to •hr I ' 111...... 4410 == •1 ~: LIM ft.... . '71D1m0. -.1.IOll . ta CM bouM. '1'1~j ...................... . b9 -.it•:.. V•;i&ed :::..~..-,.. ' IAYNONT ~~.._.tvff. JW•t.ort•omeeapacaat ...... ~ •fll1ll••·· ..... ...... ... , ...... 1Wnee.18r aa,raai& -~ • -... M I ... INllt M40 Sip naU. Spat. 1 -· rem rmmate wanl*', t IOO .. IOOOS.Pt. .,, -.... i.uo. DOCll, Di1119 IMJil !!!,£!. .......... ,.. ~ a..::, •r.=:1-: BR, ~ Bl ,.._ tn CM. Nr MDA VERO& bR -........... 1a1 ••· £Z ... 1 ••ubt' · -a••I••-IO.J ~':!.'l.!... .. : Adt&IU -no ~. btachahandball ll PLAZA .... -.... , . .,..... ~,,....,. ....,. 1 · • tennt1 crls, l'IO Pt l • 1115 .... VerdeE C ll 111"6dnil. I lr'fl!'I. Da. -• .... -· l!llra rJA 111-. ._.. m ...._ ... *"ell• peu. uu. mo. ,.. ... Rtot *180 -t "' MMIH1 • • ~-~ ildlli Mlilll.••· dtJ fie Ulltt. Ample ... llr, .,_ 6 I Ir. I~ <'IM)ITNiU. ut.U. Avall no.. Clll l.lta =-=" ,..._ TO~lllr,1 1 •• rln~ bl w/~•• .. r . crPetrtt11.MMm Stortlcrle .... PrimeVI• -. ... JDOI. .....,,, ..t ~I =:' 61Ne1a. **·Nearbeacll. ~ OAY Dl'Ol"'loeal Udo loeallon. Awox. ............. ' • .. •.mo. 1bart plu1la Newport 1D1q.ft.f'11.lt10 -TOllACM ~....,...,,._, Tow ........ cPrv. ••·> ~ 11.nw·• MU.. -II& .... •• .... ..ua. • •· I lllii. ,......,. apt. Nr. r....,_ ltl. 1111 mo. ...,_ • •4 Jt aton. 11&1 c.aa ,._., .... ,..... ,....,,.,.,.......,111. Daa. sua Int ume -.c A¥OL LOW not. --•~•ue.. M 1111m -•1 The Daily Pilot now has a n e w "BUSINESS T O BUSINESS" classification to provide a convenient method or buying or dispos ing of Business items. Se ll your s urplu s, overstocked or no longer needed items or supplies of any kind. Whether buying or selllnf. seo our "Business to Buslneaa • claasiftcation #5010. For more lnformaUon and to place your ad, call 642-5678 DAILY PILOT . . .. ...... ......... ':. . . ........... . ' Ii , t I I - ··r:-r:T. ~.~.~ ...... !?~~ ~~!!~ ..... ?!!~ ~.~~~ ..... !~~~ ~!!~ ..... ?!~~ tWttW-.4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• T~. MM:h 8. t979 7 100 ------•ltWttW..W 7100 twpW..tM 71 00 W-'94 7100 Found White Samoyed, ~Untr Cl rk/Phone 8aby1ltter · h1ekeeper tem H 8 . nr Heil/Buch operator nHdc d full M SIMa •s llv1n rm+brd Rtf•. N Clorteal ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... caAlhambra "2·&$14 ume lmnJeet at• upon ~llOM 1mobr. Infant. D Pt. 1310 \GI. Full co bell! Ill• Ope.Uni• avallabl• In area. 411!H587, 831·82.U 5ttMl lot appt Balbo1 prccl•lol\ lnatrurJ\tnt evee CLERK/TYPIST OOOK·Cookl he lper for £ R R A N D B 0 Y 6 "-al ~"-retirement realdeH•· DIUVU. to dr1ve ~r ~ ~u ... , POlllY Pltllll ADS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marin• Rardwar 1.1 ---------Rfl..AXJNG MAS fAGE EOE Mlr/H bop Appllunll must 8aby11lttr Worlt1n 1 We've •ot what you've Hrs. JJ.tpmE u· Perrn. pol~: man•wlfeoo abort t.ripe a. sa<:alTARY beta led.I"• r I UOft. xct · waaca • ft ND .,,-ands. Frff rm Variety ol dut.iet In our .... °' beldlta. Cell fOI' appl. ft board + am salary <"OUect1ons department. B>bJa~ Uc M u_r rr\JO)' ~ chaJlenae 01 molher aeed1 mature OutcalJB 9, f.M $111 ACOOUNTlNU CLEKK troubluboot In I 11 woman live-In bab)'sltter Combine the atablllty !ilU140 &11·2108. Du t i •a I n c I u d e a nd a r owt h o f t h e Coat U 3 yn ol ru.U lime ISCIOWMAMACiB ahorthaod. tlt'!iog and lnaurance l'leld wilh experience u a cook In Elacrow com pany seek· ~~ ~ul l~'!:1~~t beauUful 1urroundi~s In ooe or a combination ol 10• qualified exper 'd ...-&.;A .. conditions and 11 l l I 6 f 11 8 c u I lo m r It tin I of 1-.. xchan&'" for room ' ............. -~ • YP n1 1 n • mecha.n.lcaJ aacrnbllc:t •n .. "' -_.... 1encral lt'dtet•r , •tr Goodmanualdexterity• boud.ZJl...430.7921. ONLY S2 LIU F:ICammoReal l'boo9 for appt Jurto oiedla.nic&I ~Utude U · Sanek'mtntt t-'11ly Uc Inc 54S 7422 _r • _""l . In ,. m""' Bide ofdc medp lul assist L ""'t ...... _..., ,_.. ... _ .. ""' wante . T . FT ror Newport Beach. R11ht the fol&owiQI. Preparing • ...,..,...... now we are looklna ror food for al least 250 work1ni manaaer to take beneftla Including dental experien oed C lerk/ ,,_...,_.a meal Wllh 0 dlarp.Outslandmaopp· ins ura n ce . Appl y ....._..t Ith In WPM ..--ty for financial & pro· Dryman. 200 McCormick ror a.,.. ~ '""" uper req E 0 E. Call young prosreulve 11row· MICHILLl"S AmlunUna M't IOSl. aak for Ray 11\i•Pedalt,y in N.O. Call ·~...-w m · 40 per. at Ow various st.a· tess1onal growth. Our Avenue, Costa ./ Mesa. S.11 any llem or tom tlll\llUOl'I Of llttn» fOI' IU or IHI •1111 • l't'IUI) l'\nftlt' Ad i 11m ro.-2 \'UNl«utl~• d•)'IO MAI" llldd1hon11l hut' 11 f,(~ tor LM 2 d•Yll t •narv. 1\ • -........_.. OUrNn for appl 6 interview, HAM~ ~n ACCOUMTIMG ::;;;;:=~:;;;;;;; N-t6t$. t,ypu:ai1lr.llls. UOns.ootlesa than6 mo. employee• are aware ol Equ a l Op por t unlly al wtuch shall have been ad nd •· W offer excellent lo charge of the work or thls . Se resume .. Employer. 'ra.c>IAAY -----------LMA & VICKI ASSIGMMIMTS A»¥mbty Dilnkin& benefllll In a modern and kitchen helpers or others salary reqwrement.s lO: ~~~~~~~~~ progrcu1ve ~nvlton doing similar or related C1assilled Ad 11415. Dully No 1'0f'llmt'tt11&I ad., o.tc•M•:t: TB.LERS ~llll~~=C'~o OrHt• CoHt y h TRAINEES MEW menl. work. Contact Mr . :~~~S60.Costa Gen. Offc. he.avy phone11. Belgar de. Fair view · · t y p ing. riling. sm Stat.e Hosp. 2SOt Harbor ISCl.OW SECRET ARY manufacturer . Salary for 11ppointment call! t'ur muH• 111rorn111t11111 .itd w pla«' uur ~u u II __ W T11J ~ ., , .... IO ... ACCOUNTS MASSAGE w.·"· COi DP._.CIDJ C714t 97S.7724 l714tt7S.7700•1tl 38 Blvd C M ......,..6 a commensurate w/ex.p. . . · --• rea TRAINEE. Corona del Call! t 642·1916 code TI4-967-5321 Mar. Must type SOwpm . OC' app · · All benefits. Bay Escrow---------642·5671 • *. ..... Gem., 2188 Plll'irl<' AHl l'o.l• Mt·~ AG=~~a.s ---T ........... Micro ~.~' accounlen'5 EJectronics 6]1·2140 1'hm~ are rn 1rny new :~,d~~ :;e~~~lgis~?rl Need sharp, personable Tellers a nd New Ac <.'OWllS persons. Savings Ir Loan experience pre ftrred. Full·tlme pos1 \Joos avadable. Please call: or •pply in person COOi( Co. 547·562S ask for Bon· Mature adult for con· valescent hospital. Full _ru_e _______ _ dme position available. FACTORY ~SV. Whse Apply Flagship Con· UtUe or no exper. work valescent Cente r. 466 day or night. No fee F1agship Rd, NB. Weekly pay Start now. General We can offer you a change. I m m ediate openings for STAT TYPISTS R ECEP'l'IONIST \G-K EY CLERK CLERK TYPIST Yw at't!the w1not·r or T'WO Frff Tlc lleh lo GOlDa. GllL fllll\l> movmg Into lhe poii1~ ID our Produc Otanllt' County 1arr., uoo ~p11Ttment We will 752-2600 UtVIMI SAVIMGS & LOAM Equal Opporturuty Employer M/F 41 4 t MocArthw ltfd Mewportleoch Equal Opporturuly Employer MI F COOKS nowaiung. tOver 181 Norrell ' Salary depended upon experience. permanent & temporary jobs. CIRCUS V .UG A S *ESCORTS • lmng101e uboul an 1n trt1in thl' righl in 'll crou1ru: demand lor t:\ '7• 1111 .• A d1v1du&lb 1n lhc micro Le Biarritz Restaunnl in Newport seeking qual dinner cook. Must have saut.e exp. Ask for chef bef ll or aft 3. 645-6700. Temporary Services ~llO'll F. 0 E Matthtl~h ...,. ~rien<'eu Cl·ou nt1ns ... nl nd and Datu Prcu·c~'ll 11ll¢ C"""<'lru cs 1 uslr)' · PACIAC P'ena••I Senice 1370 E Edinger , S.A 558·7016 II OOPM Ptirformault! Tht.-Huntmlon Center lluntmgton 8e ac h COUNTRY GIRL ~MiOf\.Ot>I We h ave 1mmed1ate Fast Food·Maturc help 3 hrs mid day Apply Counter-Sandwich, ex· Lynns Burgers. CM •ESCORTS * Cl'A'S :!::!~~Ill the following ~Hr.. 95HM74 ... tori Bank *TB.LER• Oeri<'aJ a.aacAL Joas The follow1ng Jobs are av&J.lable Immediately 1n peraenced . Apply in 64&3586 penon. Gary's, 3309 E -------610 Newport Ctr Or , N K To claim your l1ckcl1>, call 642 5678, ext 272 *** TALENT S HOW LON<: Bf:ACll ••MEW•• PRIME TIME ACTION The way to meet nt·w pooplc Place your 1ul. answer ads. subscribe. Box875C.M. 92627 /\prtl 28th . audllloni. Apnl 9th lndtv1dual & group l6 & older. non umon. 1st place S75 & audition on the Gong ShOW & The Ice Pala1:c fo'or information. 2·4pm, Needed· 3 atlrac11vc Mon-Fri. 213/596·4411 female companions 121 to~) for crwse lo Cabo Lost & Fo.d 5300 San Lucas. on a new ••••••••••••••••••••••• boal Departing latter ---------i part of March/arriving FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 642-5678 end of March.· Food and transPorlallon pd for Ph· 646-3370 arl s· 30 PM Hunl Bch lady sks man SO's as fnend. t.nps & fun Box ll23, Npl Sch. MOM. Thanks for ever· y th1n g Yo u 're a ________ _. Beauuful Person. l Love _________ 1_v_ou._N_1n_a_. ____ _ Lost N o rw e g 1 a n P9"CMIClll Services 5360 Elkhound. Male. 3 yr,••••••••••••••••••••••• blk /f!ry, looki. ltkc Responsible teacher on ~us k 1 e R E W /I. R D sabbalJcal wtll houbc sit • '56-6200 _ while completing book $.:l) REWARU for lhc ID 008-~ ------rormalJOll leudlD~ Lu the Wl\NT MAJL PRIV /I.C Y ? relurn of a 78 liluc RcntaprivateP.0 .Box. Peugol mo-Ped with a 1548 •Adams C.M. For buddy seal lha~ d1sap-appt. call 739:4585. peared from 1..stancia H.S. Call 545·7863 No Pnvate Aerobic fitness questions asked classes. Ladies special. T• Accaunt•b CostAcc ....... ts Sr.Acca•t.t1 lookku pers AccCMltitlg Clerks Datalntry K/P Operators lf you are not aware or the benefits of working t.emporary -give us a call or vis1l us &lour new location. We will be hap· py to discuss 1l with you We are localed in the · COLDWELL BANKER BUlLDING Suite #200 2333 No Broadway Santa Arul l714t 8 35-4 103 Free Parking ACCI'S/PAY -Job cosllng. N.B. Developer needs sharp person w/res1den- lial construcllon exp Good benefits, 1mmed ope n ing . Call (714)540-5505 . "ACTORS· ACftESSES" "MODELS" "MEEDED MOW!" Those wish ing a prof career in movies. tv & lv commercials, call 633-2233 ext 95 now. •ADVERTISING• t..arr: Ladies rin~ Opal·3 _f>i_3-03 __ 14 ______ _ rubies Gift for wife. 2-28. Social Ca..b 5400 ~~~~~~~~~ E . 17lh St C .M . S REWARD! 642·0307 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------IOVER 30 SOCIAL IN· Last Blue All-Pro 10 spd. T RODUCTION . Con· 91c He11/Bolsa Chica. fidential. Ad 1484, c/o Reward! Call840-«96 Oass1I1ed 330 W.-Bay . Lost dog large red/brown Cost.a Mesa CaJif. 92627 · Colden /Collie mix ~ ....... & Scraped nose. (Tabalhal oytmtn 964-1741or968-9818 ~tion ---------1•••···················· Last Gold Topaz bracelet Jabs W..ted. 7075 Cano's Rest. 3-2·79 Even· ••••••••••••••••••••••• mg.637-4325 Exper ienced P r actic al LOST: long haired blk N~se with xl.nt. ref. female cal. Vic Tuslm & Wishes lo provide TLC 2 o th . RE w A R D for elderly. Cook. ~hop. 548-28711557-0211 clean. co mpanion . -------· ---1 Reasonable 646-7526 afl. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Rebuke -Liner Madly -Mucous - 7pm. Nurse. Practical. exper'd. c apable . neat np· pearnnce. Xlnl ref's. Complete care. Avail 5 dys a week. Call 752·1818 YOU BEEN As Lady Godi va · s Exp. Mech. Tech. 17 years husband said, "The exp. on a variety or pro· horse has been home for ducts,. Can do prototy~. two hours. But where the service work and tf de vi I hav e y Ou necessary production BEEN'?" runs. Small parts a Found Irish Setler. well kept. littry L..Y.e s .. Publisher reqs young, am_biti._®S pers desiring to learn advertising · publishing. Mus t b e sharp, mouvated & re· ady for rapid advance· menl. <Girl Fridal pos to phase into d1s p ay ad sales) Salary . TI4/497-4464. AdwertlsiRg Asst. Need sharp pers who ('an ~st in our prod dept. & perform secretarial duties. Must type 60wpm & be able to do paste up work. Sa l to com - mensurate w /abiltly. Send res. Ad !J425. Daily Pilot, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626. AIR CONDITJONJNG & Healing serviceman, min. 3 yrs exp resid. & l ite commercial systems. 837·5928 ALTERATIONS Finisher. e'lcp on ly . Womens specialty shop. Fashion Island. Full or P /T . 759-1.201. 645-1508 or 644·3656 specialty. Write Class. Ads #458 Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa. Ca.92626 APT MANAGER Found Dalmatian type Help W ..ted 7100 For SS units in Costa dog, liver & white, lge ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa. Exper'd couple male.645-1508 ; 644·3565 ACCOUNTING CLERK Hus band m ust have N e w po r t B e a c h ma.int. exf. Wlfe bkkpg Mortgage Banking Firm exp. Cal 642·5073 or has imined. opening ror (213)865-~l. Found very lar~e golden relrvr mix. Possible yellow lab. Male . MS-1508; 644-3565 Accounting Clerk. EnlrY 1--------- level J>05iUon. Prior ac· AIR Recep tiomst. Ex· Found counting exper. desira· perieoce required. 40.50 basaetthound ble but will train. Must wpm, 10 key by touch, 645-1508 or 644·3656 have ability to oper ate 10 f u 11 t i m e . F r 1 n g e ---------1 keyaddingmach. be nerits . Ne wport FOUND: Black Cat, male SENIOR ACCOUNTS Bea<'h. 64!>-7040 approx. 6 mo. lovable. PAYABLE CLERK lonesome. Vic. Universl· Qualified candidate will ASSEMBLE RS. we will ty &lrvlne,CM 548·4908. have minimum 1·2 yrs. train . App l y 7am . Found : While medium female, pointed ears. Sheoberd mix. black col· tar.Vic. Springdale/Ed· tnaer. Me-7128 exper . ln accounts paya-MacGregor Vachu, 1631 ble, ability to type & Placentia, C.M. opera~e 10 key adding ASMBLYWAREHOUSE ma~h1ne by tO!JC h It Small electronic parts, ablhty to exercise in· bl. llhift, no experience depe ndent jud_gem enl necessary. Excellent fr. FOUND FrleodlY Pigeon, w I th . m l n ' m u m Inge be nefits. Apply vie Irvine. Call lo iden· supervision. Avnet Electronics, SSO _w_· ;:;..Y';....552_-8624 __ • _____ 1 Salary for above posi· =rm I ck' C . M • SeWDI anyUtlng with a lions w 111 be com · 1--------- •Toohg •TM.AIM Evaporatiott •Photo-a•-'•• Comprehensive com-l>Wli>' benefits including ma.JOI' medical and den- tal. CaH or .applx in. person to 3952 Campus Dnve. Newport Beach. (714) 540-0080. We are an e qua I opporl u n i l y employer MI F /H. TRANSMASK CORP ASSEMILY See our jobs under CLERICAL for 1m mechale operun(S. VICTOR Tauzr.e fll'f Servic es Assoc. Rep trafoee. New Co. In O.C. area needs men & women or couples for P /T work. Many benefils for right people call for appt. 541-0863. ASST MGR. 2 days per week, It bks & m aint. F'or appl. 7141979-0150. PART TIM E Immediate opening in our Laguna Hills ofrtce Savings and Loan or bank exper ience re· quired. Excellent sa lary. working conditions and benefits. Call or apply Monday. February 26. 1:30to4:00PM. AMERICAN SAVINGS ~ EJ Toro Road Laguna Hills Ms Goldb1all 779·2816 Equal Opporturuly Employer M /F Coast Hwy.C<iM . Female factory pkgrs 12.90 hr to start Merit•-------- 64().l.970 raises. \537 Monrovia Ave. N B. 548 S\25 the Orange & Irvine Counter Help: 11·3. Mon. areas. Fri. Apply Delaney's Sal· Gill FftlDA Y TYPISTS (45wpml ty Sams. 280 S Coast wanted for small mfg KEYPUNCH Hwy. Laguna. ---------co Musl be sel.f·st.art.er SECR ETAR Y (w /or DELI HELP. 10 .30 to t'OOOSALES wtlh knowledge of at·· WlthoulSH) 2:~. Mon lhru Fri. Will GRAND cou n ting thru tr1 11l 10 KEY b a l a n c e . C o n l a c l GENERAL OFFICE train, call aft 6, 675·9324 OPENING Maunnc: Youcan chooseyour own DELIVERY I R EPAI R ORANGE CO Aero Design Products . hou.rs&daysto work. person. ror e14u1pment OFC 845 W 16thSl. NB Top pay & excellent rent& store. Must have. EVE:RYOHE 642-2478 bonus plan. meeh ability. 40-45 hrs Call or st.op In today wk-must work Sat. Call IUYS FOOD G-R-E·A· T VICTOR 645-0700.UrutedRentAll. CUIREHT STAFF S ALES JOI HOW TMpCM fll'f SenlcH DB.IVERY EARN UP TO & OPEN 4.141 Birch St, Ste213 PeopJe needed for lem· OVIEA $600/$800 GOO o p A y. GOO o NewportBeach poraryllghtc1ty delivery Comm1ss1onWeeklySell HOURS. GOOD CON· 556-8520 work for Sheraton in~ H11th ~ua l ity . DITIONS M ANY BEAUTJCIANw/foll. for 7'7:al1M:in Newpor t Beach Hotel ~e:~~i~ulJ~ .fr~~dge: F'RING E Bt-:N ~FITS. Newporter Inn Must be neal 1n a p FAST GROWING COM 644-066l0l'S4(>.3582 835-2 22 pearance have car and Gourmet 1''<>00 products PANY PROMOTES know c1ly slreelS well lo n l' w & re Pc a l FROM WlTHlN. TRAJN GUARDS IOOKJCEEPE:R F/C Apply in person Please customers F o R T o p do not phone . Ask for EXP MOT NEC M A N A G E M E N T Pos. w/prom. F.l. R.E. CLERKS M.ts.s Layton fronl desk ST A R T S ' ' I M Invest. firm. Xlnl opply Come work temporary 454.5 MacArthur Blvd. at MEW ORANGE M E O I A T E L Y · · . for ex& & mature with a com pany who Bu-ch COUHTYOFC K E Y B 0 A R D person. Jl 640--0l23 cares aboul you. Im· ---· ------MOW OPENING EXP ER I ENC 1': BOOKKEEPER mediate work-top pay Del. men over 18 for LA HELPFUL. WE HAVE SlMlO START.<:xper ac-Callforanapoointmeol. Times in NB & CM rotlAP"CALL: OUR OWN TRAINING counts payable. payroll 557-0061 Perm/p·l. $350/$400/mo 121 31329-2625 PROGRAM PUT ON BY & general office. Costa ~Q~ office • _~_5844 _______ ~~~~~~~~~111.jE couNTRv·s TOP Mesa area. 549·2238. DEMONST1tA TORS Gardener in exchange for 0 R G /I. N S A L 1-: s 0 ove rload ., PEOPLE CALL AT Bookkeeper-F/C for one Your areacar nec. Fri& apt rent ... pacious O ,N c E F o R of my clients in Nwprt ---------1 Sat. $3.45 hr lo start grounds for 55 uml com INTERVI EW. ORGAN area. Retail exp deslrea-541-0718or892-3800 ple x in Coi1la M esa EX CHANGE. ST AN ble. Evan M. Gr uber ---------1 &12-5073 or <2lll86S·385t. NUNN7l4/S86-7~2. CPA. 714·964·2714. 17400 Q,ERKS OenlaJ Assistant, for a un· G~ STATION Brookhurst Suite 205, TYPIST$ 1que employment exp. F V 92708 SECRETARIES J oi n our team ! Flexible Attendant SECURITY · · · hrs. as a chairside ass1s· FUii & p/ttme $3.SOlhr to AnEHTION Bookkeeper·F/C Cor one KEYPUNCH tant ror a female USC st.art 644·SOM llorO .. r of our clients in So. ACCOUNTING g r a d uate de'n t 1s t . No&perN.cen. Orange Counly. Mini 642·1050. If you are new to Costa computer & credit ex per . BE1W££H JOBS? Mesa. t.emporarily djs. desira ble. Hayden & • DenlaJ Ass't RDA ortho. t cont:muing-your educa--Nar~A's-, 110 E . MU'T WORRYI yr exper .• full or PIT tJon. recently dischar ged Palizada Suite 201. San uun . ~ry w~~~x :~ from the service. or for Clemente. 4.92·5307 1560• Costa Mesa. ca any reason seeking Lem-·-Ker-. WE CAN KEEP YOU porary or career employ-~ ~ BUSY _92&'Ji ________ _ ment. consider this u ni-ACCOUNTANT 8-40 HOURSl\WEEK DiaJA Ride queopportunily. Huntington Bea<'h CPA w Dri•en Y0ttC..Eol'ft Firm offers a career op-~ j l~ Operat.e modern eqwp-S216PerWk. por tunily for a full e -meot & door to door Based on your produc -charge bookkeeper /ac· transp. Call!. dnvers he \JVlly. commission. plus counla nt. Broad e x . .,.. req'd. No prior uper incentives & exlra profit perience & background T.....,.-fll'f ServicH nee. Good dn vmg re<' a shari ng bonus. The is necesi a ry · Wo rk must. No Sunday work women & men we are dir ectly with c lients. Has good paying tem· Oran ge Coast Yellow loolung for may be tired CPA Firm experience porary positions thal will Cab. 17300 Mt He r· of typing, folding papers. preferred. 992-4561 take away your wornes rmann, F. Vly. h · b d until the right job comes ware ouse JO s a n CAFETERll\-lndustr lal al Do . 1 """'"n Room Bu" person lei f ·1· ··ftd · ong. n l wait.. A1>P y uu"'"' ~ wor ng 'or a 1m1 ... tn· weekends only. Costa now! Days 7·2pm. No ex· come. Work with young Mesa area. Oay·swing. perieoce nee. Opportum· people. Rapid advance· grave. Grill, cashiering& Newport 549.8071 ly ror advancement For ment possible. If you are serving. Exper . helpful. 4~.1 Bi rch #202 appl. call 581·5140 18 or over and would be 994-2331 ""' av&J.lable to start work Santa Ana 558·9021 DRI VER .Week d y s, immedi. tel all Car W h H I f LI •-rt lSOl·A No. Tustin a y, c ..... as e P u "'pa El Toro Sui·\n2()() needed iu med1ately . 64S.6514 time. 18 & over. Metro ~ 833-1.887 · Car Wash. 2950 Harbor 23491 El Toro Rd -------- Al.Tl'O/LOT Boy F IT for dean-up & delivery. Ap· ply in person. 140 In· duslrial Way. C.M. Al.Tl'OMOTIVE MATVIE ADULT Needed lo manage our lot boys. Oon'l call·apply in pe r so n lo Mr . Romano. Blvd. CM (Tues-Wed 9:30·3pm > Onver wilh car to dehver EOE M 1F L.A. Times 3:30 lo 6 AM. CASHIER Interviewing between CLERK TYPIST-Small 3:»5pm. Mon thru Fri. Electronics Service Co Apply Rusty Pelican. needs cheerful respons1 273.S W. Coast Hwy, NB ble person for heavy ID· C~HJER v0tc1ng. Speed nol 1m Crown Hardware. Apply ~l, accuracy esscn· ~07 E. Coast Hwy. E.S.S Inc 549-8172 Cocktail W aitf"eH CASHIERS F.arn up ~=· per wk. Low tuition. Placement 7 days $325/mo+ bonus. Hunt Bch. 892-8422 DRIVERS Men or women 2S yrs or older . Know lhe coast cities. Net Sl.80 a week or more. Or ange Coasl YeUow cab, 17300 Ml Herrmann . Fountain Valley. (No of Slater betwn Newh ope & Euclid> G88.AL OfftCl Electronic distributor . located 10 lrvme .. needs ~f'I for oHtce duties Good opporluruttel> plui. exce l lent compan y benefits Contact Bob Tracy. 8am-5pm. Mon tbnJ Fri. Phone 549-0954 General oU.ce. accounu. payable. accurate typ. iog. some filing. non s moker preferred Alrport area 549 2400 General Of1f1ce 1 girl p it. A P . A R. payroll. Bkkpg, Ille type Constructn exp nCcl'SS Cal I S4.'>· 9281 ( 8 l2 > GENERAL OFFICE Due to our recent ex· pans1on program. Wells Fargo Guard Services 1~ tunng Secuffiy Guardi. for ....._/l'Wwport leoch $.ta Aao/ AM1Mi111 r•stw/..._,_. Costa~&The WhitfferAr'H I MMEDIATE OPENINGS for Hp•r•hory l••el s.c.;ty Officers who , ...tTOP PAY, with a t"etpKt.cf COlftPCl"Y. EARN $3.00 TO $1.8 5 PE:RHOUR PROMOTION CAHPAY TO $4.25 PER HOUR Apply m person Monday lD Friday, SAM to 5PM at The Orange Coasl Dally Pilot has an 1mmed1ate Qperung ID our Class1f1ed Departme nt for u full ume person Duties m elude 10 key addl!r. flhnf! WELLS and Ille typlDf! Somt' bookkeeping experience FARGO h !!lprul but nol necessary Salary com GUARD mensur alc with ex penence Exccllcnl com SERVICES pany benefit!. 1-·or ID 1532 W tcrv1ew, please call ,. ___ _.th Personnel Off1ct• ---~-642-4321. ext 277 f'ullrkMI. CA ORANGE COAST OR DAILY PILOT Monday. Tuesday. Wed· 330W BuySt nesday , T h u r s day. TRl>CK DRIVER Cosla Mei.a 10AM·4PM. CLOSED Bottom Dump. must be Equal Opportunity Fnday at IJIOTEM MARKETS i-a.ss_is_t. 7_51_9UM-.....--1 AUTO PARTS COUHTIRMAM Minimum 3 yrs. jobber experience. Must be well .iuoomed It personable. R.ard work & good pay with growing company. Call 556·2500 for In· tervlew appt. Babyslll.e.r fOC' 6 mos old baby, 8:3().5:30 Mon-Fri. East.bl IJ!r. 640-003'1 an s. ~ now a'vailable COLLECTOR The G reat e r Irvine for l and parl·tlme Credit Union has lm-Casbiers on 2nd & 3rd shifts . No expe rience medlat.e opening for col· lect«s. Temporary posi· necessary. we train . tlon wtll last 2·3 mo. Can· Start al $3 per hour. ad· didat.esbould be famiUar vancement opportunity with sldp tracing. Please for management position M · B to $5.50 p er hour if contact tke yrne al eicp. uu Trans: 536-0074 1 ___ E_m__:...p_lo..:..y_cr___ 230 W w__,. or 846-9070. Yo ur r r i e n d s a n d RM 2 I 7 EAIH UP TO $250 AWB·P_...._ No expr. necessary. We wi.U train you. SAIL U SCHOOL Ctl 67S.41to neighbors use Class1f1ed S..ta AINI. CA whe n t hey h av e StateLlc. NoC-6036 something to sell . They' II Equal Opportunity tell you how we II 1 t 1.._ __ £mlip•lo111y11e•r•M•/•F-- worlced for them! 1• ln1ur•nce qualified. For lnt.erview 1-1-566-_l_«_. ------1 go to st.ore 36, Monday 1--------·1 ·-------• ~ The Continental ·Insurance Comp.tnaes . ~ 9am-lpm: ...... Cl mensurate wllh exper. Dllil.Y fi-asslfied Ad Xlnt co. beneflu. Call SELL Idle lt.ems ~Ith a ls a sample matter .. •. peraonoel ror appt. Daily PUotClaaalfted Ad. Find what Y9U w.aot Lo JustcaUM2~. ~. E .O.E. ecz,56'11. Daily PUol Claulfieda. 88S G lenneyre Lac. Bch. .... 9235 ~ ()ppor Employer COLUCTOtt Experienced <'Ollector needed by na tional credit fu-m. Strong collection background necessary. tlOO per month starting EJectrooi<' technician. full or PIT. Knowledgable in use of oc:cllliscopes & general test equipment. Will test & evaluate . Prototype • production magnetic components. Call Valor Electronics 540-92164 lnsmance Balers s=.._ 1001 ~..::::C\. 1001 s=:.._ 1005 s=:._ 1001 ...................... ....................... ....................... . ..................... . a..EAN·UP penoo wanl· salary + excelle n t ed part Ume rortbakery employee benefits 6 den · i n Co s \ a .. es a . tal ftla n. Coata Mesa Pb:s..Dl. f~cl it . Call Monday Friday, 549-4200. CLERICAL Gall cbarda Of Mike WORK ON FLEX-TIME Throw out teneion. find peace of mind while you build a more healttiy. beautiful body1 The rema1Mble ~ of Yoga as taught et Yoga Center It famous for tts wtlolebOdY appn)eCh to a FULLFILLEO YOU. Taught by Avara & Sri Devi. two expert a chatming Western women. Yoga slims. tones. calms the mind & aattaf1es ttirouoh & through. Learn deep relaxation. nvtntlon secrets. meditation. how to brNthe better for v1t&lity1 For eges12·72 Varied 1eu olfc duties, 1...:Sliiii11iiiimiiivliianii .... ____ ., DIUlt have 1ood lyplq 1• llldlla ft pbooe uianner. WUl train. XlDt benefit.I. Or•DI• area. Contact New Yon W e; llra. Lu· dano 547-7'51 for appt. E.O.E. COOIC E~pandln• re1tauranl chain. Over 50 uSllll. Famil)'-owoed Clf'lan.ba· lion offera pleaunt workl•I condlllons. Good ~ty for ad· vaateJDeOt . Ea.celle nl compallY benellta. Ex· ~ dellnd. Apply CHECKER Resllom1blliUes will incl lnlUal review of draw· mp..,,. moderate draft· kw 6 deaia'I workload. WDl consider a year or two al P'aetical exp. ~ 2 ,n co11eae. Kaowledt• of fa•tenera helpful. Room f• .tva.ocement for the aerloua can· dictate. If you have e11pe11enee " a commerc1,1 ltne5 rater. The Con11ncintel Insurance Comp•ntei has an OulSIOndtng OPQ<>rtunoty to work •n a modern and progressive enY1ronm~n1 . Our Company offers llt• time hours ~ere vou can select lull 11me work1nq hours most con· """'en1 IOf you. Eacellenl loca1i0n, comPrn· ttansove company benelots and growth oppor- 1un1tv. For appoint,,,.,nt call: (71CI 975-7724 Ot (7141975-noo. Ext. 338 or •pplv In person. YOGA CENTER OfC ...... (A ... ft .. 11 •• , t. 4411. IJlllt. ~ Tu.tin I lfW'e S. I Cillll ..... ~ ... 1111 ' Oertcll ..__,,... ...._die aciUDI 1t1al prof. IHI awwk>UI oP-P'1· Nl.1 wW tr ... ,.,.. wt1ood lypln1. SR a DI•, but mandatory. 91.rtul-W/.ralM ID J mo. Xlal~wery Ilk.le a • ofc't. ~I ;:_.. ital I ' Afln/e1 • l'M ...... Cll • ALLJO•RBE penoato; •Jallg Rpgtr: mD Lake FONtt Or El Tero IOSAMIMC. ~Beath 7.U..SSIJ ~=r'ly I . _j!_ DAlLY PILO:.;if ____ __, __ ..;.r.-u.-.e.csa__.y.,._M_ate_h_I...,, _11_10 - l•••t'f' ' ......•. , ............. . &uropean Landacape r Top work F air pnce. Rel1.e.8-417ld)'l/ev~1 BEACHCITJES Landacepe • malnt 1'.M.rrell 841 30'2 evea. Ocanlni can r u1n day L•nd1cap1n1. ~arden Save On Wallpa per Plwnbina repair. Spec. an Save On Papema1111ng remodeJina.cop~r re Prof. • Reason . Call pipe Free eat. Top Hat 7Sl·t l71 Prumblna. 53'7·3.llM Orlghten oora. w e do it awnten1mce. spnnkler Lit\" haullna mov1nM alJ ~-0105 lyllem1. 83 1 3716 / O•r••~ Yard rlun1na. ~N26 alt.3. Liit UI do the bit Jobti I 1 k 9 • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • c~. Oocn w1ndow1 KUX'TRJCIAN t'nrt•d Cuat.om WaUpapen nJ Al.I Work Guar. Free Eat. 6'1Ml.58 HOMESAVERS. P lumb· in11 & hcaUng . to•reti esUmates. SJ.$ hr. Honc1t II rell able ser vice . BA/MC OK. 919,8005 'ho ma1 P arks. l.1<· ·~. roof repair & coatana. Ma rch Sper 1100 otr on llnlffd oil treating, 1hln1lee & l!Mke., u pha lt fl acryht• coatlnM for co m po lltl)nglet & blt·uJ) roofing. 20 yrs esp. Free e11l Me mber Cha mber of Comm. No w aiting G Wl.3 TYPING Arrurete ra•t, neat 20 )'l"I exp Mane. s:n«J¥1 Ou tt'h Malntenanl'(' Mjthl rr tt Hllmatfl on ml~ lAl"1t1or mall job• .... ..,KRUl"""''V c-.1/Cwre .. ~'~~ 1··~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prt!parfd, fllftd, romplet ~ rofK'1"f't Joh OR '~'Ci MO Art Ion 1·•l•I ~t't your lorm11 UH _!)'lltnM· MO )41f moft(•y RON 945 Mil PR OF~SS I ONAL -WIU T~K N .. w• rt' CMMC.,.. le•11e11 , bro r hurt• •. ••••••••••••••••••••••• iiranta, rc11un\4.'11, t'tluc:ia t'hlld c:are, m)' homt' uona! n'tltll• m•h•nul• W d_,.. OI' ~Hkl>nd'\ 641).52'1\1 M2 ,.., C.,.•u l'hlld Utt, aood hnmr ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'Uftlp•ruoo.blp, f ored Cwpco~r • ..,....., ~t An)' ylU"d ... nl.ll'M ~ ... ~~ Jot. Call All•n Ol' l..lr~ru.~d Pr~ School fl 1\.wl.)' ..... Day Cart' My home --CUS'l'OM lttb • Harbur ( 0ttt11 lnt.enur Cur~olry ~ ~ by Jay • 64.2 8*19 l,.1(Y'f1Nd 6'73 00~ ,.,, ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• K6 B~or1n1 01 'ff'nr~ n•palr 64Mal0. 6+1 Wtwl h•J I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gardfoinln& ('h·an upi. & l1nd1ciapin1t Gt.tut !it• 1buzih1 ~ wn fo!l!Jl'•r NrdC'Mr t 'lt•un \Alli. fo'l-t't' t••I tt\-,m HI CM ..re• )411 489 l VA.RD Rfo:J lJV fo.:NAT ION 1'rt:t1 trimming • rn rnoval, yard r lt·•nup & """n" 1.1l11nt1111C Hub tl46 lmlll R.d rat.N &a 0705 Xlm ~I •anlof>edon ..... a.y tl1111I, •klplo11dl•r. dump by lad,y W/CXJ>tt . pen ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnt/e.xt. One or Or. Cty's ..... ~r11tlln", lrt-t' wr k, d • b I e . ow n tr ll n a One.. It S JI j b better painte r11 . Re rs. "" • IH'13G37 .wor . ma o a. Gfta Riley. 846-~1 <kl 1llooa 11lc _¥3~ 1257 _ • ---Newport. Coeta Meaa le 1-_.;;•'----"------ Honnlttl.g Irvine, 175-3115e ve.11. painting. Ext & lot. llaullna a Ck•nup. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ______ .....;.__ Low r ates. Refs . Free Action Pool Serv1c~ rca · ~omm'I Mud Your MunJWr!I Inc. Br1ckwork. Small jobs est.~. S36-438J Pool 11erv1ce nail. 962 1462, 631 ~I Bonded rellllbl pet1pl~ Newport, Cost.a Mesa & ...._ __ .....;._____ Satisfaction guar U>W COST, STUDKNTS wUlcareroryourhome& lrvlne.675-317Seves EXCELLENT PA I N · Orq"Fruk 640-5i77 Rain or Shine Roorin.: Shake, lihingle. com p . recover . Shingle s ld<' wail roe your ext. John U,t-;AN UP. TRi\Sll 4' peta 819-5701 MovMig TING !""'941111 & 1.,..r 1'K.EE ~4nl7 .__ T ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reas. rates. Free est. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ____ m_ .11_79_. _ -u ''M . Out & Abo ., .. 548-2706 Expr'd 8-5. ••••••••••••••••••••••• llto1Ad11c bu/ M111ranc"' ~1u.ltth111 1n p rompt r r ltd Phone c;l'llt' M& 1918 ...... d••"MJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OVll\f uL. •---------'--Kit.. baths. comp. room r.!lllWllllfllJ AJtet etiotlt "Don't Delay, Call To-,..../It.,-. adds. Carpentry, d ecl. LNCOMETAX RETU RNS Prompt, rellbOnable Newport Bcb 833 81.99 UNDA'S TAX SERVICE Pers/ Bos Income Tax Call 842·6'39 for appt ••••••••••••••••••••••• day" Local & sl.4lW·wlde ••••••••••••••••••••••• B&C Con1lr uct1on . serv 24 hrs. 7 days. Neatpatches &textures ~12 540-4844 fill£ EST. 19J.14lt l-1<.1-tcbe--n-&-B-ath_f_m_e_i.t-m Moving & hauling l'reliht. bldg matenals, mhld goods etc Lowest rates in town .. J ohn . 9M-26M PaWMlq/PoperiMJ PATCH PLASTERING cabmeu-y de111gn 1-'ree A 11 t Y P e 5 . F r e e est Hentage lutchens. estimates Call 538-7113 66l-0428 Bob P l a ster Pa t chin g : Lou's Oirpt!nLry lO ) r exp. Doon. w1oduw1:>, palloll etc Ml ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ROIHN'S HOUSE CLEANING St;RVICE , Mow1n1 . t•d111ing, tri 111 (or • thoroughly clean nuug, clean upi. & haiht hwR MO tm7 Spec1allllog 10 auto & bomeowoer cover agei.. ltobertsoft ••••••••••••••••••••••• PETERS PAJNTING Plaster . s tucco & drywall. lnt./Ext. t'ree est. 546-1641 George c.,.t Senk• ····~·················· We Care t;al'J)t't Cl~11114•ri. ~am rlean Ali.o up holstt'ry Work l(Uar Truck mount umt Yr est. reas rates 645 :n 16 twmodel, r_.pa1r , at·o carJ>eotry, uld lune (Tof\a~lp lb )'O In haulin~ Rt"il•on.ibll• r11~ 67~11 Ml'l'll Lil•'d Mr Pcdom ,.____.. S-le,•a be> »&! 8314 ~ ... • • N<-w l'Onlt, apt & rl'111den t.aJ bath & kit remodeli., :.m concrew A plasler pat.clung, be. 64G-8946_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •MR.FIXIT• Carpenter, v111n t in.i Reas. role& I~ yrs in area. 548 17S2 Want .i HFAl,LY CL!';AN llOUSE? Cull G111gh11m Gll'I. Fret! est 645 5123 The MopJ>l:t.'> in bus1m:s:; :;i1x•c l974. Honch!, de· pi>ndable, ef(1<·1ent. or fires, homes. vacancies. Uc'd. 548 2:i93 Ins. Assoc., Inc. 675-0562 Expr 'd. Rea:. Hales ffo m es. Add1l1ons. fo'ree ~sl. Call Ge ne R es l u cc o . 0 v e r Repair & Reroof /\II "9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ SSZ.1>158 _ =alls. Low r ates. l y p e s . !I h 1 n .: I e s . t-.t.&.........al Pamlll\g. Extr/Jntr. Ex 1----·------rocksha kes compo tur. -"'" 'd h t lit ea Free est. Ml 5930 f 'in . ••••••••••••••••••••••• e: , · ones • ne • r s. You doo.'.t Deed a gun lo Av&JI. Office. 1o d u stri a I , ~9&a·lOO D~e-"draw Cast" whe n you 1--------- r ei>taurant & h ome Floe Ext.er. Pamllog by place an ad in the Daily Se1Jw1th E~E! cleaomg, Rt>rs. L1c/bon R Sinor. St. Hr .. ins. Try Pilot Want Ada! Call now It's a BREEZE ded/ULS. 552-5166 me.~S55524 hrs. -642·56'78. Classified Ads 642 5678 soCa $18.95 gua ran- lePd . Qua lity wor k . l:;conomy pru:e Me::.a Service Co. 548·9490 Selling anything with a Dally Pilot Classified Ad IS a 11mple matter . j~l call 642°·5678 HllpW.t.ct 7100 ..... W..e.d 71 HllpWllllhd 71 00 twpW.t.d 710 HefpW..ted 7100 ...•.......•...••......•..••••...•.............•.........••..•....... ······················~ .•••..•••...•.•.•....•. H .. W...W 710 HefpW..ted 7100 tWpW..e.d 7100 W..e.d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• GUARDS Laundry Worker ne{'ded l..e41d person waott.>d Skin Wantro. Manager couple, MedJcal Fron t orr :.ec One gtrl olrice, mature, fUU & p/t.une All area:; Ptr. 5 days per Wt'Ck for ny Haven Relit Lit l'u 90+ umts apt. complx. in w/all required s kills neat, good oo phone, typ PEST CONTROL Steady j ob for right person. trainee, profit sh.an.ng & group health. AwlY Fn . 9-12, Lloyd ':; Pest C.ontrol, 566 E Dyer Rd.,S.A. Uniforms furn is h e d Coov. Hosp. Apply Rd.Lag.Htllli.5818440 OC.Beach area.Woman Someback 0Hicedes1ra-'""· hte bookkeeping. .& ...... 21 or over Retired Beverly Manor, 340 Vic · to rent & proces:; ppr ble. 646-8836 Construcuoo exper pre· Sales ~~ No expeneore tona, C.M. work, an~ keep proper· ferred. Perm. l)OS1t100 nee. Apply Univer sal Legal LOAN '> Mamt d & repaired. Medical Recepllomst. Pl· CaJI btwn 9am-10 30am CAREER OPPORTUNITY WITH TOP GROWTH COMPANY PHOTOGRAPHY MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY ProtectJon Service PROCESSOR S.md resume. :;a lary req t.une. 30 hrs per wk. Lile ~'7454 W 5th Street. Sana;,; Ana. Advertising W/Secrelanal skills for & ref LO: Class~f1ed ~467. book.keeping, typing, ms _P_artrlng __ a_ue_od_an_ts_N_e_a-t , uurvlews hours 9.12 & Clerk-Typist Mortgage Broker Loan :'{'!18~ay S t. Costa _645-_~ __ ._____ well groomed. good ag- l-4 Moo lhru Fri Po&Jtioo now availabl Co Loans or escrow gress1ve fo'/M young pco- ted r ' -al rt.I . background preferred Mamcurn!l w anted for Modtts-Adre-.S P I e f o r f o s s • b I e tt.a.u"Ctrl'ssrwan · or .,.,g Adve Slng A:;-Near Fashion Island maoager1 a pos 1t1on . male prererred s1sl ant General offic Call 644-8824 super Newport bay nail Girts-Mt .... ich Part & fuJI time. Good IN.I MOU> OPERS c3rdswru Team up with a winner 10 the mfr or dispos able medlcaJ supplies. EQJoy a pleasant & cln work1og environment w/xlnt bt:nf mcld major med & den tal tM + profit shannl'( Apply 1n person Elt'c tronic Medical ln:.tru ments 1Su bs1d1ar y or t.1 MCO>. 200 Bnggs Ave . Costa Mesa. 4!M 56n Laguna ~arh expenence and hght typ · shop. Must have follow Exritmg New York· pay 831.9030 tbi,. stylist & Ma;;-;c-;;;; Ing slull'i rt;'<!uired •35-4 ·--------• IOfl. Call between 10 3. Hollywood type personal ....:_..::_ ______ _ WNING POTENTlAL: $15,000 TO $22,000 have :.talion to renl wpm I Typing t~t ~ill 67~------mgmt & develoscienl co Part Time: full char ge BeauUfuJ Salon in H.B be adm1rustered to all ap. MACHINIST Marketing now avatl m . Only book.keeper. real e state call Sue at 963-0717 phcants MJLL HAND MOW HIRING those wish ing a prof. experienl·e prefer red. For proto-tYPt' m11ch1n• career in the modehog, Approx. 16 hrs pr wk. ti&r Stylist needed 1m Expo:.ure t o and or mt!d1ateopening With o general understanding of without cl1entele Apply rourt syslems and l<'i:al in person St>e J.'afar. fllln,I( prO<'edures de-;1rl'3· Jte.g1s South Coast Plaza. ble but not neressary 540-8888 ~ m th<' m:.Lrumt•nl SALES actmg or TV fi eld should Send rei.ume 1600 Dove dJv1sion of the 01l tool 1n apply. 714/828·0S83 e xt St. lllOO, Npl Beh 92660 dustry. WorkanR from TRAINEES 629. blueprints. :.ketches & o..t....i.t---1 .r •• = verbal dt•s1~ni.. d1rel·ll~ ,_....... ~ tr with t.'llJClnt't!nng. to as lirn $200.$ 0 wk. Models Male Or Female PART TIME W11rht '-, l;.in'•">l promot1on;.il 11hn111~•r3phv 1 omp;.iny ha:-. w vN al pt1'tt1on" 111 fill rl1w I•• 1•1qrnns1on COMPANY OffHS: Hft'TEI CLERK Auto~ob1le nccci>:.ar,v for -• ~ . occasional local drn IOI!. s1st 1n new product de Call 957-1150. velopmen t for world wide well bore navl.:a tJon eqwpmenL Latht expen ence helpful for more vanety or projects Salary open. excellenl benefits package E 0 E ~Ufic Dnlbog Con trol, Cor porate Head quarte r s. New porl Beach Call (714> SS7-9051 a:;Jt for Mr. Moll or .Mr We nNd new faces: EVENINGS We a re a professional Adults with outslandmA. PRINT E R WANT ED BEST I N O R ANGE COUNTY . A.8 . Dick Ter ms open 1nclud1ng percent.age . Call 644-8233 •Above 'aver age mcomc Must have expr . NCR Ex ct>llent 'compan v 4200. Apply to David benefits · McNeil, Hotel La~una For int en·iew please 425 S . Coas t Jl wy, call· ' MECHANIC modeling agency lookmg attractive personaht1e::. Expenenced 'rlair cond foe exp or potential. JI who el\joy wor king with l u n e u P ' I i g h t you are serious about k1ds. Over 21. Start at mechanical. Good salary modeb.ng, please call ror $3.50 per hou r. Phone •All equipment furnished •Excellent fringe be nefits package i n cludin~ paid v acation program . paid training progra m LaRuna it94-ll51 Personnel Office 642-4321, ext. m & benefits. Goodyear appt. 642 4321 Ext. 250. lll-eSt.ore New63J~est BETWEEN 4 :00 5 :00 640-481" Modeling Agency PM. PltODUCT10t4/ Atsist. H.B area. P ar t tame . Wo rk in g with g lass. a. '7321 ask for Tom. • ExcelJent advancement potential •No door to door soliciting Hot.c:t ORANGE COAST M E D 1 C A L A S S T . 875 W 16th St Npt Bch Ask for~ FRONT DESK DAILY PILOT ClERll 330 W. Bay St Urology· Gen I ofr & Equal Opporturuty Pt·bme Clen cal. pleasant IEqU1118i11NrS: . ft Go!il1t Met111 l'osltlon lmmc•tlint•·ly t;quul 01>porton11y AtLtrru. ........i. aJ qd Othe MOONLIGHT ING-Full Employer """"c exp re r:s _ a n_n_a_a r.~-n-e.e-. o~ d t Ply Call ttme-........ ..P11 rt lime ..... ~ " nee lTO api · work.'c -;.11 for appt PBX Ans serva~. 1mmcd w/detatJ work. nr t'ash •Pos itive attitude & proJe.s.slDn aJ appearance a re essential. •Ability to deal Wlth general public. •Limited o ver ni g h t t r ave l 1n Southe r n Cahfom1a . •At least 2 years colleg · or ~xperien<'f' a rea I plus. •No photogra phJc experience necessary. ~2247, Npt lk'h 968-4237 operungs, to work vaned Is, NB. Good ty ping ll4'C. MIWU'/\I. A."iSISTANT· ------hn>-&wkeods Pd vac. Call Julie Grie m . 11v1ul •hie Oul !II and 10.c ~ ........... F:n.m:El:::oy;:.,;e;..:r,,_,..,.,.,=:1 opportunity t!Xlllh• for I ·-·9-.. -"""·, Mwtl:.. upply Tlw I 1111 ut fo\Jll t1mt', rc•ha!Jlt·, ex MOVERS, local Orange med ins & pd trairung 644 LZj() 9·5ipm Mon·Pri. J)l'r oot 111!1• JI R ff47 t~51 Co furn moving co ne<!d:. (714) 615-2550 E 0 E . Ml F 1•wlu orwntt'tl JX•r .. oo tu Do ng u1lne11 ! Lli~una. 211 N l'oui;t ~ork nc· 1bl11 tluy & lll~hl Under A ; lfwy, l.ul(UllU •~1wh )J\lll, t-Jijuy xlnl <·om ~ Flct1Uou1 j M111aagl'r tru11\tt tWnt.il l*'\Y bv1it'f1l!I, 1rwlud1nu Na m e? l 1>t.ore,. an I.al( Heh ha" """"m.•1tl'I Appl.)'tl8nl 12 Oi>t'lllOg for munu11cr, Nooe\. Moo/fo"r1 Pt)MJOO 1 -~ wiU tiiun Min 2 yrs col ~ legc Mcc:han upld. App MAltltlOnHOTa ~.J / ',•,i 1 l.Y 11os So Coa•l llwy, llWNcwport Cenk•r Or ,. •. I IAg Brh ...xper 'd, dependable. Mt1d iral St>c-rel a r y / dn ver KnJdgb'I 10 all PBX Ptr. Walk & get patd for 11.t.>cepuonl!lt Ex per. in Wlpects of business. over Ao s we ri n g s e r v 1 re rt. Need outgmn.g people Ill.'; b1lhng & hookkl't'P· 2S. CaJl 8JIM.926. operator full & P .T . Gall for t.eam project t.o tn uij( Salary ~ $6 per hr. 835-3561 troduce ne w banking Cotnmcnsur11w with ex-------------------1 service to local res1 "'lf" "79 ~ --MOVIE EXra·~ -PBX OPERATOR Wall dents. No selhng. we ""' ~ . IN . trlllll. Part tune. f'r1 & tram. 13 ~N'. 4-&..tu·-i. ;;o for-lflpDL lww..t, ul Sere Moll ... Fri, ... ,,. ; 17 141540-1171 Nt'wport Oo ch ~ Oppor ~m~l lll/t MAN An to: R I N 11( h I b All n•w IMMlnHMI ... 1n11•1 tllpm-711m) No uicp n1•c 11c1111ou1 111-. "''"' 11y 1 1 Malurt! 111d1v up lo $3.11!1 lew be ,...i8"f•d wllh th• In 1 yr. Cu ooncfllll, hlK, Cown•w Qerll. fhe DAILY J YIU'. 111rk INtV41, profit Medical soug ht b y lloll)'wood Sat night llpm-7am day. Up to 6 wb. Apply E---AOffl movie firm. $20 $200 per Mus t type. Contacl 10 person oo1y. 9:00 to rTVm' Ce day poss. Looking for Maurine. Newport.er Inn. 1:00. Wed March 7th. U~ HOUSE WORK Sat/Sun ~aeot. Must h 1&Vl' uwn car. Call ~..OOW -------~eeperSlttt'r afler aJQOS., some t6Vcninic11 IC!-Z82l d ays, ¥48 0107 cws ....... Tl 'AITTIMI IMPLOYMIMT SAN Q.EMENTE ·~ OAJLV PIWT 111 4'0lwolldatln1 a 11ub11hm· tial put ol ita dl1t.rlbu bOn lnto PAJl'lr rou&et1 l'tl qwrta1 a fternoon de livery b)' moto rised .......... &Jon. •1.tberal Income •I· Aowuce plllj boftua plan 4hurt worklQI houra ( '1 d•1t1.,... week) •lxt'ttlllnl parttlm• In· . ~ P'or d elall1 c onlut ro.~r 01.1tllol •H 4ll(M) btt~Hn l l lOAM TPM; ... , anii.r anceJ •. ~ropert-Y-­~ty ,...,.,, q•nc . CaU M"ai.nH HI &o.a ,_.....,. Al:.':.& nur o.c. A1nW\ ...... " lnH•l ao wpm. Oood m ....... ~. °*" ...... lo Newport Bc1&c h . outgoing 18·70 yr olds 110'7 Jamboree Rd.NB UFE Savings. 2606 S Minimum 5 yu. l!X wanting to break Into 644·1'100. E .O.E. Bn.stol (nr Mercy Hosp.I PCA INTERNATIONAL, INC l'llOT P'O"'WI lhe lo•no• "''wt Ap I t • 4M~ •110 1111119 -~· IOI 0111 I .. Ill(. I> y u . ' IJl'nt'n<'c. Pc•g hoard & movies. (714 ) 7tll 1244 rax--. S.A.SeeMrs Clark. l l\'I, a mW1t. Needed Im V 1 O EO c.; AS T l N 0 _,.._ ' I' • Coaat Hwv, N n or m1u11 out omert. you •• • 1.11, S'·>~TN (;11 Murk IJI, nll.'ld, l1111111lrlcd Ad#!lll.2, Slo:RVJCE. (now In 4th Oper's tor t ele phone Publk IJwl.Y Pilot, :13() W n uy yuar) isrll\weriog service. Must &lat.tons W1• promot1· fr11m within Uiu1d Opportunll y t;mployer M / Jo' St Chua Mcu, txlil •--------• bo able to work aome -. up To $200 wuolrnnd1. Typln1 35 J>tr week part tunt!. For 11.,11119 a 11ew bv1lneH I " .. cell '"• DAit.V PILOT 101 715 N ru. Ant1h<1lm. lnlo1noellOll llfld '°'"'' '774-111:110 lt.V\l 110muU11na1 you want ll•ve 110mt1thln1£ to 1mll 'I to .ell T ('h111lflod Mdli do Clu.Uif'd 1111• tlo II Wl!ll IL -11 til&:ol titi11f M isrhln~I POMONA EMPLOYMENT BULLETIN At G mmtl Dyruunlt•H wtt'rtt hard ut work on 1inlu1 t·on tracts that ttr>t'll J>lenty of work ror yea.rs to oornit-ftl oht now we're rllJ•ldly expunclln g and wo nt!url the hu't ptiopla In Southern Callfornlu Jr you're good ttl whut you tfo, 1.mct promt or ti Pomona tcum NOW. jnh\ t h~ !LICTRICIAM-IHDllSTRIAL GINIRAL. MACHINISTS JIG IORIR MACHINISTS LA THI MACHINISTS MILLING MACHINI MACHINISTS MACHINI TOOL MAIMTIHAHCI TOOL a Dll MAllll N/C MAIMTINANCI MICHANICI R .. l.IRA nOM MICHANICS MAIMTINAMCI PLUMIB GRIND•-ULTIA PllClllON Apply In penon at our l'Jmplorment ortttt, 11111 W, alon Blvd., Potnon1, CA IAM • 4:JOPM MCMICtay lliii .. lcliy •IMllAt DYNAMICS , •••• 11 ...... • lq11al 0.-._, lm•r• NI' U a. Cltt...e.&; .... ._. Ml•· NC.JP. ho part llfnti Job wpm r e qui r e d. E x· publjc relation.a work in 1111tuli1)i11 t:.:anl 1111 111 ltl ptiriun('O preferre d or the Real FA late todUlltry. •••------1---------l"'r hr C'ill t1Jj\ l"14" will train M•ny com Noexpcrieoce ~c .. mole REAJ. f:s'fATt:8AJ.Ji'..'i 114:tiwurant \.I! :tprouoty PQJIY l1Uncf1u FUii time 1>r femalv. 4 hra /day U<.-.:~'<I ur w .. will tn 11n BOB'S Ill &•14fl llmo, day Ir aflur t m No Ileen.IC' requ1n•d r ou fur •l ll ttl t!X II m NUHtll!! AI U l!!li "4 11 11110" riv .. nln" 11hHt1 ,.,,..,,,"'tit futurti '"""lt•n r ' " ,..,. I I " " " -.. '"',... ...., lm llud u tte r C ull UA.t...oo•-.THI lR ..... i• •ii M\' ~v111l111lu Pl uu Cllll u.i (;all i to~ p rn for ~ ........ f'111111t ry dutJ t'ut1h 1I Mu{I thru f"'rl MS 4230 •VPt Cti~y .,<.:o _. ~7 llG IOY llonld 3U3d3 81111111 A111t h: o .,,: c:-.y & Co. lmln<'d operun111 in our l\Vti,& I\ Mb dl.1111 494-1059 I .I.. SALIS fa mily rt1at 11uranl 1.11 Nllhbb: AW I I \1 r IN N X M •ATC>a Openina• now 11v111l In ... art1y lnnlloruc. w~ r1· Odtlded floO ~r 1n nth D--1 E &-.&..-uur •ltractiv • w~ll qt•rc nn prcv10W111xpo•r M1J11 Liu u 611, "°t:tik ml• ti1•11t upl111rtu1uty Ulll• "... llUJW flunlllhed Laotun• llt•ul'l1 Juen uur fnendly tt'am 1111 <'11ro fur 4 111111 lui 1 lli.ilo ll<ll M>O with .....,.. .. StM._.. Cuiou 11e1• UK todJy I I I I 1Jo.,.t111l pt111'\tl ul11111wr cJllll"tl, for llxpur or fk•w· bctwt'l!n2 4pm, • um.u11 11111 01 i.111 IO 1'I ,\hlu '"""" Xlnt <'fl Wt1 havu an Ol>''nlna 10 ly hreilllOd, ct1tJ\W1lu111111· ,,..._. l.c1jt1tllc6 lkiiuih hu11111 I 1 A I our ltAl111dtl11U•I Olv rm-a.alc11J>t-'<>plcs. Xlnt N im ......... Trel 1 R IS f v r .. fl\).. 0 " t lhllllldll~ M!lkl llb •Jtl' r a.n t11peri111K·ttd m•o or nll.lilllOtt llCtlt'dUlu ,, II Lru c:e.w.r. 0 P JOU l'i H E Al I' It \t'j'M~U,:iuon, Mon/fir ' wom an poueulna un ly Ml'e•l lunuon oo t;oaHI 2~11162 Avcs ntd u d1· I u t' I\ ft .,. b ~fl l ('ti; b • M .a. I R I O T T tbuiil1111m and lo!Al1Jr11. II llwy .. 2 blka. from llw Carlott11. 0 E (114) lfla l*'6.! "" you 11rn lnt.en-i1t.ed 10 11 b111ch, with amplu oil 1~11u11a ll11l1> HOTB. hu uuful ortlce I" lht• lltnM!t par~lnJI HUii At DI$ tW Nawport l 'ontflr Or flnt'lll loe•Uoo. wCH'k inll SIA UOH •IAL TY :t ll OMll •rtla1y l'o11111 Ncswiiot l Ue t1t1h with ronice n l a l u 4f7-3lll II Y C'foh CUnv. tfomu &tulll Optior l!:mpty mtl 10Cl11t.9I, w• aro lnt.ere111t· Wltti.ll 8il,Qlit All--!\~cs , •• • l'!d In mcMttl n1 you. In ~l c• M IWlf l>i\1 i.nw.':-;r.•.~nC .. not.. _...._.IM •L l\u 11111111.llll l'/'J' A1•tounlll M Ttl'I llU"'llll A H~..... Puy11hh1 with 0 1wurul Re Jc.on 644 •lilO HOSP ti~ ttN 111 J,VN for I •1tr111'1or In N U tin . a . • tl l'1' 1110 1hifl In 1ti bcstl n.,.11w 113Mtll0 RelLI ~tate Rt-ct•t)I/ Miit N Ii ... ·r o r 1 ·011~ H111111 Wtt 111f11r 1-.--------YOUNG, P T Incl Wllnd•/~vti•. .,_(11rv , 1 1\~ fl u th wr 1• 6"644l3 U•111rT,..._. 7311 r:dloiur Ave, H.B. c.1111 .... 4.'IOI Campua Or. lrvlnl' w ........ w .......... c..Men, 154 f, 17&.h St., C M. J.o:,qual OJ1ly 1-:mpl M to• he!Wlf\~~· t•t1.1•10_ !'L.111lv rtllOHHIL AGGllSSIVI & -----ltilyw~.r.a.ww, MO VI rAYlOLL C&.MIC HUMGIY ~rfilro1~~~TK , ______ _ 1"1•1 · U1 v~r111f1ed Individual Nt!w rommluion •pllll f'or'74 ~ conv hotp, Ap· Raltauran,,!,,.111 for. OffMJIPO ITIOM n.tdtotl with .i•perhmrti Would {OU llkt' w !>ti • ply 1t l)M Sus»rior Ave, Me "F R~ • lnfurm•I env ironment, In inu 1t 1 U •I• com· wlAocr Our •cent.a .. ,o N.B. bt.wn lOAM "3PM Pf.ASCW~o~EJLCW>~'i Joll w 11r11w, 1oto1wu pi.tert1.1.id payroll•. R• <Nflr twice tM lnduatry Men.Fri 1'*fll,ftn,1dau med1 al =-~;==~~~.'f'::o~ :~·~~pow~ ____ t ____ ~.,~l! ... fl ,..,...t f'IAn PnnM Ull dotall 6 mll4lllt1C weekly '11 ' lrnmldlaw ~nJn1 for twi.lo lYPlfll •klllt allen· dliadllnea. lnrlud4luomu ent ry level. tlO wpm. '"-' ~I lt.t11ll, ab1llty to pertonoel dutlta. Ex-Youni d.)'namlc ctevclop ahtfW m flt\ &llN, •"41 Wit t9Jt.nl work In& tondl· Real r..i.&e meot mrp. Mi-IM2 Daily wW tr n 'oo variety ol UOM6 beftefit.a lneludlna --------• •iiaoday . aaJty lh•ll W• •n 11 d • 1 plan Apply _.....;.__,...._____ N-..... acb ..._., 111ahU1hH Hd a.!t"v::.n a.m:ll•m ., 1--------• &.Uable. 11ood natured.1~~~::r;;~~~ .... ~~~ ~ftl•mall totnPlll)' Jpm·3pm, National m at uro •c •m11 1re111 1~ RI to mu1le1 •lore• F.duullon, 440l Birch wantlld ror mono.ir•m· a1lrtlll, over t l, for Col t1rnu1tM1tt 1h11 world . titNlet . Newport Boarh. lltf rrr 6 81t morn11. f• abop. 11\111 or P IT »ft~" •o up to t7U UN O C Airport> r ... I_.&. l'.lq)'d preferrtd. Inquire call for fl\!. Oallef Cafe nlll~• 11 f>lq0u8!t Op.por~ult y r• M ,., .. n •t '114·'111·0761. Ter ry. '11-0lO, ult fOC' Ed OC' 'I l'U,°"' ""' ••· ~ I ~·~ Fttd In S.1-M .... Y111t __ . ---- )lit l!R, o.tPlu a. IAIL80ATSALESMAN HOll.Y IWIM &II.at l xperleooe purerred -1 l"R Kona Martnef'J&-140.1 ~K maJZ'Mc& rorc1 ... llMic1 Ad aaU..AI 1.1.llCllTAlY tM ~~1· ACTION RrlNU Cold well l •olu r , --~ Call • 1.llUH Nl~i.•I offlrtt. 1t.t..... ·~ .. ~ ~~": 142·5&78 =::c~·1.~ ·~neJ~~w~; ld·om r.:.,.· Ml for uAd• 1 _________ _ ...... l + ~~~ ..... !!~ ~~!1!·~.~ ..... ?!!! !~!!~ ..... ?!.~! ~~~ ..... !!.~~ SALD . SICalTAltY SO . EAST ASIAN 1*ber P/T forP.F. Ar.· ~OllY FAIN ctrt Priday. full lime. r°" ~fRC: '\ r:,_o .:l ~ ~"'~r~~~~t" DilcO¥w the woodetf'Q real e.ut.t nl•mt omce ~ nn V1 ' world of chuo MUllt have aood bPlni • rHd Is write Thal a, Y •' aou.rm~t fooda whll phonultJUa. ChlneH, acquainted feachor Pu School earnina Hlra moaty 'tSLMamt 64-UiO.'l w/So.F.itlA.tllaMarkct Certi fic ate.o r•• Prr •alel Ta.ktn° ap 8l1Aty PJ.000 yrly t l"t oeri Hr 8 ""lo I ~lll"lllOM •• Hl1ttor SECllTAIY off ~UH A= a.m~. c!u (; ap: Fvms. Wl'stcbff Piasa Xlnt oppQ' foe rUlctent '° F air ('714) IG· M>.m> ~72. Fuh1oo l11la 111 w/top aecretu•al 'J\ae.Weid Tb\lr 1 8PM --------~ kills to work In fut Ttacbtr oeeded. Pre TEACHER·ACOITNG SM.IS&.ADY p{K'(ld Npt lkh R to; t>f•· 1ch90I, lclnder11rtf'n A South Cout bu111ne111 t:.'l:rieuced. fuJl tlm Oaltl..Ua.8»2900 ExJKor « crodentlalcd colleae hu an 1m Kl.AOIO 1nrdl1t. opcntna for an (or ·U~r,womtn'sreact). n-tary,PIT.tnsutanrf' acct'& It but math toWIL'ar So Coast Pla.aa t x per I e t1 c" T > P ~ TIACH•S warhtr for mornln11 Olli~ ~wpm U 00 pr hr K.lndertarten teathera, OtJl $.)6-lllllO for an tm SM.~MAN •H'M lrvloo 1 1!3'7 PltnM. 6 PIT f<H' Mon mediate Interview re Mt-n'I bouU(lue Sil't·M.ary PIT 3 days pt'r i....or1 claurm S40 •1~, aardlna thla irlnl OP· Lq~l\c'•<'h41k!MA..\ wk Mu•t llnow 18.M portunlly Al110 Hl -Mt'mory t y prwn trr 1'Nt futetl draw It\ the terv1ow1n1 other future Salesperson wantt>d fo Small con&''"'"' of(' WHt a Dally Pilot bwllne1111 t..achl.bi potl· ' mtertor lllUf"lo ~Id O.ualfied Ad. M2 5871 UOO&. ~oud at dl.'cora11na ~ tf'!l.UR'W' & u tary 10 Guaranlec ., 6'i> 2100 _Do•*· CdM ~ SALES REP. Tt11ln •l $368 Wt'~lcl with UO yr old. h1&b res~ed hna.nc1al In 51.ltul.loo. TomBndley ~ SAL~ Unlque Career Opporturuly '1tO FISSIOMAL SALIS • foX:R~ARV t.horUwt .. l) PM ~Q Pll'uant pr r1on1lll)'. idnt bentfll•, Oran.if! an'• Coaled Nt'lw York Life, Mr1 Luciano ~11'1! ror appt E o E ~t•r'f Mt'dNI CnlU Ttlrht'r" '" or Mus t have wood a.kills S71M $llll Tt•mporarr (>Oil to J unc 30th F. 0 fl. C•ll Mr Kopin at 83t 1105 S SECRET ARIES S G.O /RE /A"('C'tg s.l0-$1300 Raofe Employers Pay Al Fees Lu Remden. Agency 4020 Birch St. Ste 104 Newport Beach. 833·8190 Call For Appt/Estab '64 AAA 1 ro mpany , leader m the hghttng In dustry for 30 years superior products sold t eommercial and in dustnal users Must be non pressure 1nd1v1dua looking for Cor tbe1 LAST JOB an a local Cully.protected t.e.rrllory High t•omm1ss1on an bonus paid weekly, ex ceJJent company beneri~--~;iiiiiiiii;;iiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I 1nclud1ng majo meaicaJ. CALL MR GUGGENHEIM 12 13)435-71 52 Equal Opportunity Employer M/F SALES WINTHRU GETI'IHG PAID Sales pros needed Direct saJes $30-$50,000 No rughts, no weekends Easy sale, easy close IOO'ff advanced comm. SECIETAIY Npt Bcb Branch ofc. nds good Secy for 2 busy Mktg Execs. Lt bkkpg nee. gd loc. & benefits. lrvme Personnel Agency 488E17th, Costa Mesa Suite224 642·1470 Service Station Allen· dant, exper'd. Day & Eves. F\JU & p/time. Ap- ply. Shell Station, 17th & lrvine, NB. Serv Sta Help needed 1m- med. F\JU or p/t . Apply 990 E.CstHwy, N.B. ADVENT COMP AMY Serv Sta Attnd. Will train. 557.5527 $700/mo.+. Call Carl . 49&-0121 SJC. Screen pnnUng produc· ---------• lion manager wanted. Shipping & Rece1v1ng Must have exp. 54fJ..9110. Clerk, full time. Cal1 SEAMSTRESS WANTED Ivan for appt, 540 3280. fdr work on canvas pro Siller needed Tues & ducts. Thurs, 7: 30am to 4: 30 64.2·7238 pm. Own transp reqd. S2 ---hr call 67J.8596. TECllNICIAN ELECTRONIC TECHNICIANS We design, develt>p, 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· dersland personal development. career goals and challenging work. At General Dynamics we're loolting for Electronic Technicians at all levels. whether you 're just starting out on a career or you're an ex· perienced pro. CAUUA TIOM SPECIALISTS ELECTIONIC CllCUITIY ELECTRONIC 1.AIOIA TOIY MICROWAVE MISSILE TECHNICIANS RELIAllLITY RESIEAICH & DEVB.OPMENT TEST OPEIATOIS If you want to work where you can learn from the best engineers in the business. use the latest equipment, grow and ta ke pride in achieving technological challenges, get in touch with us right away. Call me, Joe Stelmah SEAMSTRESS for Cam bric Sails. industrial machines, S3.SO hr/start 64.5-7950 E.;;~ (714) 629·5111, Ext. 4711 SEAMSTRESSES needed for Sid clothes mfr. co. CMloc.~ SEC./IECEPT. Neeaecf by 1rvrn:er8a] es late company. Some bkkpg. Call: The Village Keal tors. 552. 7000 p.~~~0i~f~; and let's talk seriously. Or, come in You are the winner of to our Employment Office, Monday TwoFrHTlckeh thru Friday, 8AM·4:30PM. U you to prefer, send your resume to : CIRCUS Y-Allw...~t-UENERAL DYNAMlCS Eomon.a Marcb8lh Division, 1675 W. Mission Blvd., 8:00PM Performance Pomona, CA 91766. The Huntington Cent.er Huntington Beach To claim your tickets, call 642·56'18, ext. 272 *** GDDAL DYNAMICS SECRETARY. P/time for nat'I investment. counseling firm, flex hours·brokeraae up a +. For Interview.· call ---------• POMONA DIVISIOM Mrs. Kelly, 759·1771 betw~n 9am·l2 Noon. People who need People That's what the OAJLYPlLOT SERVICE DIRECTORY is all about! SELL Idle items with a An F.qual Opportun y Employer M/F U.S. CiUienstup Required Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Coming In April llot; pol;pOYPPI That's pot-pour-ri: a confused collection, a miscellaneous mixture, a hodgepodge. • Piiot PotpOurri I• our w•y of observing INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING WEEK by extentilng ••vlngs of up to 50 percent. It's a goOd tlme to clean out and spruce up. APRIL 4th (WM.) tttru APRIL 7th Clet.> • H•ve a GARAGE SALE! • Sell your extra PLANTS & GREENERY! ~ .... _..,..., • Get your neighbors together & have =:==::;:r.., your own SWAP MEETl I I Ada ere tlmlted to mlscelleneous rnerchendlM for ••le onlyl I (No RHI E•t•t•) Write 1 word H eh 'PK•· minimum t&ze ed I• 3 llnH . THERE IS PLENTY OF TIME TO GET IT ALL TOGETHER I Fiii In the H•ndy order bl•nk below -DO IT TOOAYI t I I . NO. OF 4 DAYS WOADS • 12 5.00 16 6.00 20 7.00 24 8.00 28 9.00 -32 10.UU 38 11 .00 r I 40, $12.00 If you need more room '°' your rneHeg• Juet .,,.nt or type 4 words per lln• 1nd edd 11.00 •xtt• tor each addfUon•I ltne. -------------------------------------------------,.. ... -•••• ..., Plot 'atJ111nt .. • Nit AIMI • (W9d.) 11"'9 ._ M (891.)""" M -. ... ., .,, .... ,..... tor ..e, oena111...-.. 111111••• II ""._.. ef wy..., tor Or pttete ctwtrge the ad B&nlcAmertcard, VISA No. • • • • . • • . . . • • • . . . . . . E•pl,.1 •••••••• Masttl'Cha(lll NO .•••• '• ........... '• .. •. • ....••...•• •........ .. •...• E1tplre, ........... . •• OAILYfl'tLOT ~. Merch •• 1811 W..... 7100 ""'W..e.d 7100 ... ················~·· •••••••............•.•. TB.EPHOME SALES Nrw1p.,per aub!I Your phone 4 to 5 hrt1 a day '200 It up comm wk Eicp. ·J'l"r. Over 21. 1.0 . ~~Ent.~. l t.o3PM OnlY. Tow TNck Driven H · ptr'd. Top JI•)'. Apply G•W Towln1 . HOB Otun. Way, C.M. 1142·1252 TRAINEE <>Denin& for lndMduals wllb ballc electronic ft m~duwcal background t.o t.ram for lAILaJJaUon & ll«Vk:e ot banking eqwp- rneot. Wases baaed uJ>On experle~e. United Safe Inc. 751-t380 Truck Dnver owner operator 1ook1n& for ff~/ w&!e or 2 man team for coa.at lo coast produce o pe r ation. 83J.:542. 1YPIST. part tJme, for cbnopractor ofc. will train. Call for appt. 673-6070. WAITRESSES ,peeded Mr. O's Comee Shop 3050 E Cst. Hwy. CdM WAITlfSSES Experienced dinner house wait.mis, night Ir day openings. Apply in per son between 3:5. Mon.-Frt. J . P. MACS. Dinner House. 10142 Adams Ave . H.B. (At Brookburst) E.0.E. WAIDClHIC , ... Tl.,. Assist ouralog dept. l0am-3pm Sat & Sun and 3·7pm o n assigned weekdays . Apply at Newport Convalescent Center, 1555 Superior Ave, NB. WAREHOUSE POSITIONS Full ti• (40 hows) Clltd Par t time 12 5 howsl positfo111 care ava ll ebl e f or w•ehcMIMwort&ers. WORD PROCESSOR· Part Ume eveni.D.I UMi / or w..UDd worri Ex· penenct oo CRT baled equl proent preferred Newport Cenler Law fl\rm, Call Ruth Braur r.;e.aeoo ~ 1040 .,..,..., 1070 Mf1e1l •1•11 I OIO •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brill.al\Y Sparuel M. pu~ w~ nnaa p&aunum • AKC re1. 1100. ctiamoridt, 1il! c ... at total 548-63.W 1Wt, $.'IOO. 541-129 POODLE PUPS. toy·T· cup. s tud service. 541·~ X-ray t.ech Prr s.10 hrs Oki English Sheep Dos. pr wk, ~lc olf1cc, Champion Female , FaltUoo 1-1. NB. M>-'940 P9J)ers, *200. 6'2·9696. ... tt . ... German Shepherd pups, 6 •••"••••••••••••••••••• wk11 old. purebred . ...... , 1005 papers not avail. 840-MlB ••••••••••••••••••••••• n..i.a..... n-tri n •--------""'""""',. nc ever .-uppy. . 7~ wk female . With Antiaue ~us1c Boxes' Papers. Sl80. 840-4706, Slot Machines! Clocks! 6"-&410 JllJGl:~!~JON ,._ --.. -y-----.-0-4-$ l•..HaRal ••••••••••••••••••••••• .r---....r M. Cat, long hair. Fem. ~•a shortha1r spayed cal Open Wed. thruSat. Good w/k.ids ~ 1802Kettering, Irv. (714) 7SM7T7 AK C A u a.tr a I 1 a o --------• Shepherd, 1 yr, Fe m . shota nds good home. Antique Oak reverse S 644--0062 aft s. de1k $950. 642·2164 or --------- 673-0782. 2 BLACK MALE RAB· 1lt •• Shvel,_11 1454.lSavin Ave. Irvine You are the wlnoer of BITS with CAGES ~3765 Puppies mixed Shep/. c.ouie. good w/children, good watch dog. 673-4928. Two ,.....Tlc:bh Austr alian Shepherd to mixed puppies. Aft 6. CIRCUS VARGAS _&12_4!06 ____ _ March 8th Small miniature apricot 8:00PM Performance male poodle. AKC reg. The HUNTINGTON Pvt pty. 644-5742. ,. ..... 1050 Center Huntington Beach To claim your tickets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• call &l2·5678, ext 272 *. * AtiPiClllCft 8 0 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FREIGHT DAMAGED HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 W Warner or Harbor. Santa Ana. 979.2921 **I BUY ** Good used F\Jrniture & Appliances-OR I will sell or SELL for You. ~TBS AUCTION 646-1616& 1 33-9625 CASH PAID 1.00carat round diamond. ID Tiff&QY aetUng. $35'75 1.15 cara t round diamond . .-m. Pvt Ply ~. aanavox 23" TV . AM/FM stereo. phone. tape deck.~-biS-3420. CdorTV. Play11ood. $75 1010i----646-~l-:li25_.~-- ••••••••••••••••••••••• foot hi.lb metal closet. Wllftl.!.. "'ft..E T "''-5 Sliding doors 2 31" wide. .-."'w "'w 3 48" wide·white·somc from your business cant. track Ir hardware S2S or Seod one card lor each otfer 6'2·4321 Exl 210. tac plus one spare We • r eturn perm anently 9iiiltc•••O.S sealed attractive tag ft W..e.cl I OI I strap. meeting airline u ••••••••••••••••••••• l.D. requirements. Pre· Wanted to buy used vent kiss Ir theft! For a etching press 18"x30" or persooalized Lag enclose larger. Palluth, 35597 wallpaper . fabric or Avocado, Yucaipa. Calif "Day Glo" paper & we 9123119. (714)797·6314 wilt~k 4'. trim your--------- tags. Or try two cards MmkGI backt.oback. lwtla:ants 1013 PRICES: ••••••••••••••••••••••• S2eaor3/S5 ibsoo Les Paul deluxe. 4/5tags$1.60ea. · xlnt condition, $450/or 6/9tags$1.SOea. best '55 Gibson L7. 2 lOor more Sl.40ea. p.u.s. SSOO/or best Must Sales Tax Included seU 551·2373 late arLcr NO CARD? nooosl&eves. Draw your own or send•------- name. address. phone & CLASSICALGUITAR we'll make ooe card per s 1 g n e d S A K i\ Z 0 tag. Add 25< each. NAKADE Send check or money or· qtr grained Brazili an der to: Rosewood body · · e:.. PILOTPRIMTING cellent quality". ei<· • P.O. Box 1560 tremely close grained Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 Gi?rman Spruce top. Ha~ excellent playability & O'Neill SUpersuit. Taped tone As king $1800 sea ms . Used o n ce w/case. Call pvt ply doesn'l f1tSllO. ~-0256 TI4-675-9428 ·~-----~--Carpet Mill Closeouts Office,_,. ..... & Nylon Plush $4 .00 & up. EcfllpMtnt 1085 St9-8181/67S.S906 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnl new & used ofc furn, WINDOW SHADES plan files, wk benchei. Woode n shut I er s. C.E.SURPLUS631-27'17 muubbnds. woven woods i----------& window tinting. 20·403 60" wal. dsks, one off all items. 48" wal. dsk. 4 swivel ASPEN 645-8951 arm chairs w/pads, 4 armed side chairs. $1250 11.SHlBA Copy Machine, value for $675. Call Holly BARGAINS-Used refngs, King size bed. inclds. box als o makes offset 955-2274. wshrs, d.ryrs, garur. best spring, mattreu. & masters 714/962·7033 •--------- C~HPAID Ws hr /Dryrs / Re f r igs. working or oot 957-8133 For gd used film. anti· ques & clr TV's 957-8133 buys, weserv. appl. Best headboard.642·2932. ---------Minolta 101 e lectro A&>P'. 536-mll, 536-4330 • * * graphic copy mach1nt-Distress Oak furniture. Mer t Elliott purchased 10/76 scrv1c1• Wash er, drye r s ale. li.k.e new. Divorce. Kg!>£ ~· contract paid thru Completely rebui lt, re· bed. His/Her dresser, 2 1715 Mam l/20/80. Sl.200. Newport finished, year guar. commodes, 6' coffee ta · Huntington Beach F1oorCovering.67S-l636 Delivery. Your choice ble, 2 lg end tables You are the winner of $149 each . Sa le ends 673-0264 aft 6. Two"'" Tickeh " Walnut d«?sk, chair & 317179. So. Coast Ap· bed lO# pad $95. Call Barbara pliances. 537.2542 Must sell new bide·• . CIRCUS v •BG •s ,_955-_227_4 ____ _ ...;;._--------• paid s:IM>. sell $180. Qin ""' " .-:K>'' Magic Chef gas stove deb ver.842-8015 March8th Plfl 1087 CLERK w/digital clock. Harvest ---------8:00PM Performance ••••••••••••••••••••••• gold. l~ yrs old. Sl75. King bed. box sprngs, TbeHunUngton Samoyed, M. J yrs, AKC Waterbed beater $25. matt., steel frame & Center W•ehotlH 546-5433 aft 6. book s helf b d b r d . Hunllngton Beach reg. 552.455 Offi ---------• Sl.50/bstolr.548·7349. To claim your tickets. ce 14 cu n, VERY GOOD call 642-5678, ext. 272 & OnjaM 8090 Le9b1e h..twritiftC) is CONDITION. $1.25. Crib w/match'g 3 drwr * * * •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 1tecesa•ry for this ___ Ca1_1_67_5_·_1058_. ___ 1 dresser/dreas'g tbl. Drk 1---------UPRIGHT pianos $495 to wd. gd cond. $65/bst ofr. N t Be h T n $ 9 o G d f positioa.Mtl•. 14 cu tt, Coldspot frig, C.all675-0734. ewpor ac e n1s 1, S . ran s rom ,.,.._ c.. ltt for Oft w/ice-makerLlkenew.i Cub ~ll Family Mem· S2.250. Rebld'g , r1: dr,S350.67S-7953afterS. Moving Oul·Of·State. bersh ip. 642·0 11 2. fi.rush'ga,tunings. btbt •lew OR Mottdcly 11' G Id f 644.al8'1 Hwry D Oqlll t or W ... aday mun .al• iMet.ri .. 11025 :ihu:!. s~V. l~m :: t Wanted: GOOD J·spd BD>Hamil~Ave~HB 9a...-l l•M or lpm-••••••••••••••••••••••• household items. 352 trans for 1965 Must . 536-8'175 lplR.t: Coooer wiroN , 600 tt •.. !~0 C.tal.inaDr, NB. 546-8965. 549.7741 , New Yemaba CP ~ elec· _DSHMAtfS_ SporfiftCJ Goods 3300 Fairview Rood SAHTAAHA Equal Oppor Empl M/F 'l'UllN. ew, never YOC\A· b'-.. _ 64&0t22 $1 a fl or bst otrr. Med. game ta ""•4 Cun, tronlc piano, Yamaha 67S-'1953 Afters $50. Capbart stereo" re· Paviol stakes 8" to 36" 0 ·50·112 amplifier & · · cord pfyr $50. Wed only. ~ Sc to 25c each or by Reas flanger. Must Sell n..-80 .. -6~ pm. ~ B cb . \be bt1Ddte_ zu Cabrillo Make_olfer.962·9930. ._.,.. .. 661·1631 ) CM -•••••• •• ••. •••......... <rear Spo; ""9 Goods I 09 4 AKC Teacup Poodle pup· SP an Is b d r e s s e r • Lumber rack, 16.S tires, & •••••••••••••••••••••• • ~:S· M/F also Teacup nigbtstan~s. ~ head· whls for ~ ton PU. dr for Hocky Knee & hand pads service.71'/992·2178 board. Kmg-size. Gd S5Fordtruck.truc ktirea S20.catJafter SPM. ---------1 cond.842·3936Eveson1y. •· _ ... ,_ b' k ddl u7 7279 ---------AKC Toy •-Miniature • ........ ig true sa e ' ...., · • ...__ .... ,_bed botto t tan ks . S m relri g , WOODWoaKM Poodles Puppies & uuuwc • m ma · cocktaJl bar. w/2 stools, WANT.ED: Inexpens1n· Growing mfg company adults tress never aaect. '50/bst sm Maytag close dryr baclcpackfng eqwpment n eeds you n g man TI4/761-4265 ofr.'75&-958Z. fir polisher. oak tbl'. for children. ages 5·14. w/mechanlcal aptitude, F 0 r m l c a k i t c h e n Miac. items. 545·9624 l t e m s s u c h a l> full·time woodworking. ll 77 DAY breakfast nook w/4 blk baclq>acks, down sleep· (Will train ambitious • I •r -vill,)'l chrs. Xlnl cond. ,. R.oomt 20x Io· ing bags, hilting bool.8. b.ardad worker). Oppty to at'a &lfy® pay for l200. 982"4'151. 1 yr old. fully insulated, backp'Fken tents • el1: vance. secure future. a 30 day ad ln the cpts & d.rps. Cost $4800. 547·3182' OolY those who are de· 0•11YPILOT lhu11tr1hlehodsl0'5 Sacrifice l1400. Can ar·•-TV--.--------- pendable & desire to ,.... ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• range take down 4t set ~5..___ 1098 learn woodworking need SBVICE AMWAY PRODUCTS up.64S-6585or 67S.9068 "'"• --- apply. Call for appt. ECT & NEUTRILITE •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 645·6777 W a llon DIDORITNOOWRIY Vitamins. For your 19"TV,1.enlthB/W.S28. Fisher 5-00'C. 65 wa tt.. Qirkwood,934W.1'1thSt. Amway Dislrib. Call: Oockradlo $7.Botbplay am/fm receiver, Mint C.M. 64Z..5'71 ~13 good. 646-1525 cond. SlSOCall 759-9367 FREE MARCH 8 thru 13 HUNTINGTON CENTER TICKETS WORTH •11 San Diego Frwy. at Beach Blvd. Find Your Name SHOW TIMES : Tbanday, March 8-8 p.m. F rld•y, Mncb t-4:38 lt 8 p.m • Sa&anlay, Marcb to -1!:30, 4 & 8 p.m. Sanday, Mareb 11 -12:39, 4 & 7:30 p.m. Monday, Mareb 12, -4:30 & 8 p.m. Tuesday, Marcia 13 -4:3t&8 p.m. Call Mt-7877 for Information IT'S EASY! Look for your name in today's elau lfted section. u you find your aa1ne and ad- dress eall M2·H78, ext. 272. We'll arraqe for yoa to pick ap your tleke&a at the nearest office ol tlle . • 1 CJ• MILYPflOT TUN<Ny,Man:hl.1979 ~...,trW n.-.... ..., w _ ;.;:.·~·······;;c;i tM.;S-.. IOtl . . "''O T..U tl60 ........ ••••••••••••••• .... ••••••••••••••••••• ..... •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '14 ........ llOMIO le...ut\al •" l'Olor TV, 2 • CaUOwJltaller 'T7Ra.oc-roGT. ml'talhr _.,. 1f' WTll(y. tree dtllv ry, a:JOO ~Y CS trarui coolrr crrv O •flMd, ate.ft!O, air IUIL -.1-~· <U.t • low mlk!tt !11· ..-3147 _ ~.:,., l.oad d "·* u llent cond It Ion Vldeo SOD)' ft to R. Klte 1111 boat. Good r ond. --t~V> Caamra. Zoom~. TV. llaboO ·• C'Mvy p1c•1.1p, ti cyl • MUSTlllfll all ette1. _, f1$..1Mt 5<9 Z553 auto. clean HOW AID a. ...... MAGNAVOX 2$" Color ......... , I.SJ m4 Oove6~a11Sla TV. CoaloM mockl Ma 0.C.. t070 '79 Ford P'lOO Custom Nf;WP()R'f BEACH ~cab '415/b l otr ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1bor1 1700 ml Sava aJl-tlll t'Oed. MS-m7 a.I AYAAA•I :i,1.;.,~~ 1770 P P '• Aita Romeo Spydcr Sale Tepe rtt"ordc r , YAC Nfowpor1 ~ Nfw paint. lop • t'IUtt'h Soll)', Modol TC 130 UPNF.I! OKD 'tD OwV)' ~ too w/cmpr Ml~Jna •.ooo ml t:ic S te reo ret>I t o rf'f'I In~ 'aiabor •r«a t1lwU.m.-nc.11u1umatlr tm.nety harp •nt.S. =:;-:.r~\cond. '°" ~· s.11boat c aJ1 ~ U:°":a~.,.. t101 LAny 3'8.S flPM /wltnd1 ~·••••••••••••••••••••• Mepavmt AM/t'M radio,, Oo•t owM>ra AU<"ntlon -'IOA.udl 100Ui Rblt en1 a. •ler•o rt<C'ord player Jl:•t lua1v..-yacl\l club '"le~.t"uUy load !d hfMt't Mlc.'twllnradlaJ1 •~ Provloc.'IMI &JOO at-ektnlll tnp qua ht>' w/480l'l\ll. S.U OO l"'4ty very Mood Vl11)'l tM0-1'Mi IX'""• ail boat.a r~ 10 fl112101 root. All radio Nd11 \, d ., R R come fr 0 d u r 1 n a v.. 9570 ttan.sml11iloo. Xlot car t eo ... ooy t o 1 •• " for auwmoUve 1tudent Call)d'a. 1.oo«n lt•a.. TV uer rharh•r ar ••••••••••••••••••••••• or anech ltlOO/~t orr Al~*'> 615 3641 r..n&emt•ol.JI Shpii now -t.11& -av•ll•hl.-23' ff Cell 7' font y,.,.. roov•·r111011 __ .... w.;:-tD1 UIOO tlai. vwr 'llt•MI OK " 'n loot.S 4 ctr. •ulo, good •••• •••••••• ••• • •• ••• • • ....... J:J.,j,j IUifW liJJl.I\ /M'lio>:Ml .......... rt.cl ............ ,194 ........ , ...... .....•.•.•......•...... ...................... . ..................... . .._ 9720 Miaa•a.._ f14CJ v-.,..... 9770 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• \. ~· ' BARWICK OATC,U .... " HJ I I l 7 C, '4Y ] ] 1 7 C, •DATSUMS* LwpSllectto. Of A1Modet1 SAUS·Ll'~ASINO PARTS.SJt;RVIC£ C OSTA MESA DATSUN 284SHAR8()R BLVD 54CM4 I 0 S40.0Z I l .tt'18 Mercedes 2108. VW • llavlq t.rouba. Hll· Pfff~ cood -1... ao.ooo ml. inl YOW' ca.r? Try U1 Top 11uoo ~11W dollar · Paid ror or Notl BriAI your cu to J1m ·n MBZ ....... I owner. Marino Volbwa1eo. like new. 9"1>' tOOll m i. L8TU Beach Blvd .• H1.1nt· 125.800 •776htf6"m. tnatoo Beach • AH for DllAM CAI Frank llarioo or Tom Aikin. Q..~IC '61 ltOD Mi nt cond. Im mar. l.hruOu\. 2 tone: Tobacco brown" tao w/m1tcblng velour lnt. A rHI eye '72 VW Bua. Curtains. carpet, fold out bed . IOdlum valvea. S2000. Doug. 957-8444 ore • ma.oz eves. <'•~her. Muat ~to ap--. .,..-~--,n-u_e_n_0-.-rb_l_t_t:r_a_ft_•, prto('l•t.e Cuttom aound '"' .. "" ayst.em Call. 635·1381 bt nu tire11, SHOO/of fer? 642·3188 aft 5. MOZ 19.W. J.SOSL. Classic. newly restored. . Sl0.500 "JO VW, auto, runs great! or bst ofr 498:01so or Sl%!0.714: 496-3Ui8 dys; 8-0388 493-8571aft5. '76 450SL Milan brn w/MUan bro int. $18.800. 1-.u166. '784SOSLC '88 Bus cnvrtd. AM/FM cass. '77 eog.. rdls, nu mur. gen. bat. $1200. 55747 . '74 VW Thing Lo mi. • ......,UM4 . ............................................ . 9911 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • o....,.~·· ..,, •• c...... • ,..CHASI OILIASI YOUR MEW 1979 CADILLAC NOW! • 9t40 ~~;::· ~ ..,..,_ .. -.... -.. .. ___ ....... '71 FOllD W ..OM ..,._.,~ ... " vs. autosnatle, pwr. 'teerlog, factory air ~ .. AM/FM 1tereo. h11pge rick Ir ONLY 8.000 ml.lea! (l0'1V0Z). $5771 THEODORE I ROBINS FORD $ INt .,,lc w--a-....1 brak~ , &Jr C'l>l\d , radlMI cood1t1on. $1500·orter e .. tO ·ur nut'.~ h01) llto rru111" rontrol. ,.........,,....,.._., -. .. : ..... ••u .. • .'~! _.......... '--'I a AM ... M K l r 11 c k & -..W -f 712 11111""""~ ..... Pi'!~" -..,_.... • rw.tum llHt.-nor what•h lfl 1"'5 hard w get car. f1rusbed 10 silver with black, l/I m lmmaculate cond1t1on . Sold and llel'Vlced by lhls dealer Phooe Len Hutton. Saleis Ma n ager . for a d~ moostralJoo this week Ask for slOCk #~A. Exlra clean S59· 7279/642·6506 66 Camper, xlnl dnve ~~~~~~~~~ : }Of)IJ HAR 6011 f l w 0 (C,\TA Mf ~A ,,.; 1 (HllU * • • Sid tOIO dud"• 1('\•bo:11.. tMbl1· ••••••••••••••••••••••• IH!~~~ .... .,.~~~ t°!"SeZ:ra: ;·~·;;;,~·;:;·;;~· .. :~· fg~iw~':.~: ~:;"~ ~:t ~~ 00 ruat. Cm • o 99 I 7 'T1!2:. clean Ranchero. Col~ Mcu 460 t'ord Pa11tht-r Jf'l lMl<'n(1Ct-at ~ C'ull VouU'\llhewmneror Swtm 1t.-p, bow 1'811 1714) ::isl )t.)ij or 171•> ,._ Prw Tldleh h&hl&. cuvflr t a ndom 637 _. to trlr Xtru i1h11rv CIRCUS y AlGAS 18!1U1alr l'all ooa 2003 Matth 8th Ti 8.00PM P..rformunN 1 a '"'t.affott 'Tl f''ord Wmdow V11t1. JCIOI runn1og tood nu radhlls, la~ & Jrtl, ~I o$.62911 """"-.••••..•......•.•.••... u....., ~~';.'ton MDtorfud lilll•• t 140 '12 Por<t ~ 100. Nu lr11111>, HuoUngton Beach ••••••••••••••••••••••• f\lu e lt>c Mai;::.. (iood To claJm your ticket:.. nlF. MO PF.l>OLER cond Sl900 675 ;j64l calJ64.2·56'18.exl 272 New PEUGEOT MO '77 Mioo luxury cam~r PEDS Reg $469, Now 13 .000 mt. ltcg. j,lul' w.ri• 1299 631-~ $1.S.000 640-~, ,...,.. 9030 --.- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 77 C1matt1, TM ultillMlte 4 J KW, UOVAC. DynaMot.-r Dol.-sn't run' ............__. drtv.• G enerat1ni;: Plant 6'7~3641 w....w Complete $895. Ca ll "16 BIANCHE Mo~ On '978 GMC I 758-9367 l,y 225 m1. Gd cond. Must '°" •• --sdJ $300 S45-7863 ~olut<1ly loaded with CMboard Motor. 5~ hp . t'Verylh1ng 1m 11.iln:i bll• Jobmoo. Gd cond. New t 6DS::C':5/ ( r o m s u n r o ~1 ( l o "ate r pump $200 9150 fu1.zbu.ster Sucker pnrt• &IS-6875 eve ••••••• • ••• • • •• • • •• • • • • ov~r $20,000 421 O>evy four bolt main Must Sac '79 Ya maha 750 AsklJ\ft engine w 1th m ar1 ne Spec • UIOO mi. Sells for S 17,950 equipment. Velva dnvc S3l8S Will sell rot' S2900 or make offer. trans. Wie a nd tunnel 6'5-8594 Even 1! you don't buy 1l ram manifold & Holl) 1972 HONDA Elsmore . youmust see1t! carbs 1714) 371-0743 Eotlre Bike Recently IOI LONGPRE Evenmgs Rebuilt Excellent cond. PONTIAC $1 ,000 Call eves 13600• __ ... ll•d. loah. Power 9040 G4-4747, or see at 462 St. _._.. ·-•••••••••••••••••••• Ann's Or .• Lag una WH..,.Mt.r LAST CHAMCI FOi 197a UCN't SAVI! IUY OttLEASI MOW! 79•, MOW AU.IVIHGI Abo limited oumb<.1r of 1.978 320i's µ111U ll avullu ble cau us todoyl 83 I ·2040 495-4949 OR~I COUNTY'S OLDEST Sales&rvu:<' l.t.•1111ln1o1 Rov C.Vw.lnc. Rolls A.oyce BMW t~Jamboree Newport Be sch 640-6444 .. . ... . .. "We ~tobuy clean · Dal.sun used cars" $ W1JI Pay Top Dollar S COSTA MESA DATSUN ~HARBOR Bl.VD · S4CM4 I 0 540.021 l . '31·1741 M.Lss1on V1eJO Imports Authorized M BZ Dealer MGI t744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1972 MGB Rdslr. xlnt oond. must sell $181.82 PER MO. ,......,, 846- 6463 9747 '77 280% 2 + 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti cyl uulom<it•<' ·1i Pantera FAST & AM/l-'M 8 truck steroo. BEAUTIFUL. $15,000. matt• <Cap <'Cl3t. $85()(), 'C.all640-1278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t newpainL "13 VW Bug: New engtne. '71 Camaro, A/C, P /S, 54.5-2S1S dot cond. 15.000 m1 . YUJ,YI lop. 2 barrel 350, •74 Ford LTD Brougham. 675-7644aft4. new paint. tires &i 4·dr. vinyl top, good '74 VW Perfect Cond •U2. brakes. Car totally re-cond. $2295. 496-3270 art Nol wagoo. 4sp. Rebwlt ~.;:~~ out.i,.....:Cpm'---.------- e og. a /~. new tires. '76 Ford Granada vs. PS. JOmpg. 12.250. 530-3648 ·~maro, needs paint. Au. $.1150. Good cond. aft. 6 ~ 673-0'"" SS&-8799 after 4: 30 ......, 'bi Bug Runs Good W A N T E D : ' 7 1 . 7 3 ~ Q4;; olet 9920 Ranchero Good cond1- ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• taon. S mall V·8 pre- ·mvw Pop.topCampe ------•-•I ~~· Automatic. o e w e ng .. $22 00 . • G.11·3213 tit 994S Qip lfoduttlOll $1500 •onc1w-------9772 l~1t1l!fuul $4000 36 mo. al ..-9750 Yol•o SUU t(l inrl tllX on llP· ••••••••••• • •••••••• • • • ••••••••••• ••• ••• • ••• •• proved c r c d 1 t:. ) n DUS metallic burgun· VOLVO (Ollrt'WPI d,y , sun rf. Blaupunkl llACHLEASIMG Bamberg. 19K. Alter 40l9 Wcslerly. Suite 203 7rM 67~~ Newport Beach *c-,1..,. Editto.• 813-9850 .,,--- SALES. SERVICE AHDLEASIMG OVERSE~ DELIVERY EXPERTS 900 So. C...f Hwy. U,..leoclt 494-1 Ill ••• '76 Datsun 8 ·210 fftcbt·k U176 Targa. 911St class1c ir. ...... ir. l"'E "-old URd1rwood XJ11t ishape. $2.200 Call AMll"M cassette. ex· ~" 206PtgeonLane 7 14 I 5 s 2 -8 0 2 9 o r cellent cond1l1on. gold VOLVO OUNTAlN Valley 213/92(}.6682 Must see to appreciate 1966Harbor Blvd. YouarethewmMrof Work 714 /557 5852, home COOTA MESA T ~Tickets '11 240Z. Silver, classic. 7J4/49'7·1332 646-9301540.9467 WO to ooe owner. Xlnl care & --------- mainte nance S4200 '71 Porsche 914, 2.0 reblt Ol.AMGECOUHTY CIRCUS VARGAS 6'2-7839orS48-7180. eng, Pioneer AM /FM Mateh8th casselt.c, moon roof. wht VOLVO 8 .00PM Performance ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANG I': COUNTY'S MEWEST. UNC:OLN·MERCURY DEALERSHIP RAY FLADEIOE UNCOLN·MERCURY 14>18 Auto Cent.er Dr. SDFwy·Lake Forest exit IRVJNE 130.7000 17' Bayliner Mulln) '78 130 Volvo e ng, under warr. lnclds trlr, bns tol cood. Must sell. 645-1.271 w/blk 1nl, good cond. EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO 'lbeHunUngton 9725 "919-316.1 Largest Volvo Dealer Center "Tl Col. Park 9 pass. wag. 1971 HONDA CT90 18 Ford. fully custom1ud. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.7-3-9-1-15-. -X-·c_o_n_d-. -A-/C-. in Orange County! Huot.mgt.on Beach Wh tte. fully loaded' Beach. 892-6651 636-2500 CR.EVI ER '78 Scarab-330 TS out drives. 85 houn;. Loaded! 65 mph plus. S tored on trailer. Must sell/best of· fer 7ll-1216Ct.ot.t 546-1200Cworkl Ask for Jerry Perkins '78 Mako 20· ctr console. #ll5 & 7.5 Mere engine Roadrunner dlx trlr. eqwpped for all fishing tl@,000. 7S4-0868 --- --tlSED-BOAT5 Se&ed rrom over 100 -ACTION BOAT C714) 536-1891 New top end .. ,.,,, 9 BUY or LEASE .., J l k •· 'V1_. 1 -ooo "'""" "'161 . ..-,. all xtras. $6500. Laguna 1 sf •••OAOW•Y l':a .. l":W, 'IJ mags. N e w palnl. DIRECT •O c aJm your 1c eo..Y, ,u ......... ,.,,,,.., 536-3645 Beach,497-3035 SAMfA AMA IJ6&1&ali $10,900. 497.3374 eves ~~ ~ cal164.2'56'18,e11t 272 •-.---------·~'.'!~w~~ C Good ';!,\';'~ v.~~.',~~~~m,i:~ '"' "'""'"~.!.~!!!,, F=•~=i • ~41;'., • a Fu II , 't:wr.• 19'l1Mon: ~,:. Loaded !ir.'f~~.:.·i.f.~ 7!>9-9'346 new. SS.995. By appl. on--•USEOIMWs•~· 1979ModeJs eqwpped. 1 owner. 6000 ~---~-\: __ ~ A/C. all power good 83J.Jm8 MotorHoftws. sat~/ _l'-y._646-4924 _______ '7320024spd (384JSP) oowarriving nu, btk on blk. $20,500, 2025 s. Manchester cood.$7400731-8970 ·-~------9-9_5_2 Reftf/Stor• 9160 '74 bodge Van. AM /FM. '762002S/h.(497PHJ) ~ ·~CKUSMTSJLELLLER 646-7768afl6 A naheim 750-2011 1966 Chevy Sta. Wagon,••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• NC. 3 SWU'oofs, $2,600/ '77530; 4spS/R (0179) 15"1< , • goodcond. $500 '66 Mustang-Clcan. RENT: Luxul"}' '78 Motor or best orfer. 497.4737 '78633csiS/R (0045) MOTOJtS ·~~n9J~·~i.~r:dn~a~~<'~ 74 Volvo 164E. auto, A/C. 642-9760 Musl see• Home 22' Sleeps 6. Tommy '78320iA,S/R (95SUOS> J20W55. W7~2132r,S.A 5.......,., bestoffr 499-l6lS. AM/f'M s tereo. orig. 492-s92ilaft6 W 1 n t /S um r ale s --.....:..------,Closed S.Jldays ~ owner. $4.100. 751-0946 '63 Wagon: Cood runrung 640-8585. '77 Ford Van Chateau. Fio -~------''----....__...._ 97 '76 TURBO. S engine. ·77 cood. $"100. 751-3176 Aft '6.S Mustang 289. auto, int. A/C, F /M st.er cass --••••••-.--27 totenor .. 72 Reg. ('76 '66 Volvo sln.wgn. l22S 5pm. A/C, PS, PB. Very good For rent 24' 1979 Win-Capt chrs lo mi exc IOI Mc~ AlltEa..11•. •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• Turbo) $l7,SOO. 963-8377 Good Car. Needs TLC. f'WUlJng cond Im mac nebago, fully equ1p 'd , eood. $6100. 673·7s:i'> eve ·---WIY'..,.. • ._Mew •79 $800.642·1256 '770M!veu.e. 4 spd. radio, antenor. 714-496-2299. · sips 5 adlts. S40 per day or957-4094days •77i,..924, blk. AC. AM/FM new tJ.res, slvr on blk, t--------- $250 wk + ftr per m1 • Dod v w ·d . & HONDA Cars cassette. moonroof. bra. "--S.lecfloli Quartzbod llgbta. h31Ms. Xlnt ~ 9955 963-21.35. 74 ge an. 1 e l1res, burglar alarm. Must sell 01" NEW ·79 Y & mec . 2640. ••••••••••••••••••••••• --mags, AM1F.M-8 ult. MAHY i. .. ., ,,. ~J""'s' '· YOl..YOS 75UIOl.9 '770L~DELTA88,spot-26ft Class-A Explorer. shagcpts.Hl·back seat.s. ----roCWseA'owl~ &n.129>' .-.,.,,,~"Ou . k!681Jvuoul.loaded., new tires, gen. CB. crse.. $2500/bstofr. 67~ I llllJIVERSITY lN STOCK '11 El Camino SS454, xlnt $S7'00 · G4-6298 stereo etc 31 000 one 8SON. Beach Blvd. "" ...... 9755 Jmmed.tat.e Del.Ivery! cood. very lo m1. A/C.1---·-------owner miles Like new . ..,_ W.ted 9590 La Habra OldlMabMe ....................... MARqUIS MOTORS PB. PS. AM /FM 8 lrk 1n '79TORONAOO Sl0.500 Exco. raoc . ••••••••••••••••••••••• (AlBeach&Whittier) .,.... C4WS. GMC TESTDIUYEOUll 28802Margue.ntePltwy. dasb.cstmbody&patol. 4M mi. Char grey blk. 541~or644-0782 WEWIU. IUY f714) 52Z.5lll T-1.-M~lON VIEJO 2 sets ol wt-w;els . High Leather, s nrf. loaded. --· YOUR DATSUN ·-tu •u CAR 131-2810 495·1210 perl suspension. Must 8C7-0C98aft6PM . 18' CbrisCraft Cavaher Trailers. TrGYel 9170 Closed Sundays 2850Harbor.Blvd. Of THE YEAR.. see to appreciate. Call •--------- 'Jn l/B w/trlr $2000/of· ••••••••••••••••••-••• PAID FOR OR NOT Costa Mesa 540·9640 '782A4DL. l0,000 mi. SJS.2785. 536-840S. '77 Delta 88 Roy ale, 28.000 u tr~r Boston ·~7fl~~l~~,u!~alli~:r =T~S * .. * '76Accord. A/C. AM /FM. ~~h~re~;f.:~k. $8,~~~ox. WANTED: '71 ·73 El ~iai~l:l6~~~~·o:g~r ~-.........-11J111-~0 Still under warranty. Mt• ... a.E ,,..__,..,. Good ____... ti ,,,_ ,,,..., · 24' Seara.y Ra\. '77 Sun· type. $950. ~ ..... .-.... -...,. ... ......., .. ..,..,.,i ·on. .....,..._, ... -~.-"'·p ... "-any 548.3681 l!i061SoonyClr. 549-9923 dys, 759·0316 MADA/RENAULT ·~u--....1 Small V-8 prefe rred. ,73 C ti S aauo.,.. _,., -v, ... ln1ne eves. 2150Harbol' Blvd. --Automatic. 547·3182. u ass upre m ~-~ictras.. mint cond. trlr Slive r Streak 1978 Youarethew1nnerof COSTAMES'A ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loaded. Must Sell this and/or Npl Bch dock sacnfice to due to rinan· Two~Ticbh ........ 9730 645-5700 ~ 9905 week.$l995.646-6745. availabl1> 645-8146, cial i need s. Sl3,500. WEPAYTOPOOLLAR •-•••••••••••••••••••••••!---------•••••••••••••••••••••••Chrysler 9925 MS-6132 867-2337 for top used cars-foreign ~ Hew 1978 & I 979 ROls Royce 9756 "10 Gremlin. 20 mpg reg ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------domestics or classics. Ii CIRCMUSarcVhAR8th GAS J ... ~u ..... s ··#·····c·A··l·E·R··,·N··u·.s··.1·. •. gas. stick. radials. FM '7.S Brougham, 2 dr. '78 24' Flybrtdgc cruiser. loaded w/eqwp, full can· vas. Must see $1000 + TOP $171 p e r mo 6G-9t01. Can Be Stolen For $1000 your car is ext.ra clean, AW AA A cass, orig owner. $775 or Leather. One owner. cash. This 35' tral~r .. FIRST! S:OOPMPerformaoce XJ6Ls,XJ12Ls ofr.546-5433aft6. S48l0.644·9040/S52·0626, JdeaJ for river. desert or TbeCeffunntetJnr too lr }(JS CouP.Os ROY .. _.. 9910 ,._, 9927 548-0564 Fred. Huntingt.oo Beach imrned..iate delivery. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• const office. Ph one Mart colors ava1Jable for IRR CARVER --- 23' commercial abalone <tiving boat w /trlr & div-rq equipment. Needs won. Make of r. &48·8038 To claim your ticketa, TEST HIVE ROLLS·ROYCC Huntington by the Sea. IMO J•mbOfu 1974 Aljo. -18 ft. self con· call 642·5678• ext. 272 OMI TODAY!!! ,....,... lk•<" t.ai.ned. 8xl2 cabana. ful-#I le 0..-.. c...ey * * * 1.._ __ _. ~ I)'. carpeted on location. 2925 Harbor Blvd. .76 2.002, silver. am/fm, IAUa MOTORS ClOSfO suNoAn OWNER . 1976 J i' f\ybridge Unl01te 235 PiOQ.CaJl536-1637 COSTAMESA Super Clean!. Days .292SHarbor81vd. '59SUver Cloudl 979·2500 557-3657. Eves·Wknds OOST79A2M500ESA $19,000 Jw's OD engs S45,000. AlllosforS. 815-56166 ...................... . ..... y WW aetJ ~ interest IB' Clinks 9520 Lyman w /dork to •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• responsible person . '4&FOROWOODIE Perfect coad. 640-1136. fUUy restored! $13,000 CL ASSIC 26• CHRIS 675-6161 WE BUY CLEAN CARS &TIUCKS CONNELL • C HEVROLET 675<9097 971. 985-4144 BMW S30i '76: A/C, AM/FM stereo 8 Track, new ti.res, 4 spd. moo. 673-:1173 '76 BMW S301, 4 spd, 35,000 mi. AC, AM/f'M cass, SllSOO. 673-2639. 640-7134 CRAFT speed boat, twin Garage for storage, Can- eag. Only 2 ln So CA. nery Village, Newport mm1 Beach 67S-"912Tues-Sat. •ctmSCIAFT• •WB.LCRAFT• •IOSTOM WHAi.a •IVIMIUDI• Mercedes Benz 1950. 170S Con11e rt Mus t see. $15,000 or ofr. Aft s. 61Um ~?< ll.11 t •• r H .. : I I "' I \ \1 ~" \ SU-1200 '74 BMW Bavaria, fair 1 coad. Maroon. $4500 or best O(ler. 494·9882. C'A>mPlete aervice Dept -.C. ... H .. •P&oeulxstoreooly V....._ 9530 Newport Boat Center ••••••••••••••··~·· •••• 1565 Newport Bl v.d. '70 Dodce Camper Van, lJ4 WE BUY USED CARS CALL PAPPY Used Car ~_gr 540-56JO 1011\SO\ ,\SO\ • liNI <>t N M l Pl 111'¥ a.ta Jlesa 7H-MS-8015. too, sink, atove1 lg. refng, 2125 E Apache Blvd elec at gas, lg oeo & lbl. Tempe A rl so o a cabioetsS2600.540-1053 2826 HARBOR BLVD, --~· WANTED Used mini· COSTA MESA ...... IMI/ motor home, io good .r a.II.. 9011 mechanical condition. WllUY wm coD1ider T.O.P . US8>CAISI 0-W-WWT 90' or '1S' 5C7-3112. We'nt tbe new Chevrolet .,...... 1edlL a.NOD•· c--a. a-. dealenbip ln the Irvine Ille ..... daUy, week})'. ......... 9540 Auto Center We need -.nnarm-me ... _•••••••-••••••••• )'<JUI ueedJOlcarl 1111111. W 9060 •• D9tluo Roedle.r 2000. ......... _........... Sapd. Oreatcoad. MAC l'ttBSOM h-:'<>full race nu G1-S2M CHIYIOLIT =---~~=~·· 4-..eo.t ... · 9110 21AutoCeoserOrlve Balm 20: Ready to t8H tH·41tl Ev ... .... Ewa. ' IRVINE 761-71U WANTED! Late model To1otaa, Volvo., ,..ckupl '1 Van.a. Call .. toda,y J f ~ 9715 • •••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Capri. V6. AM/Jl'M 8 track. ac>Occ. Good cond. $2lil0/b8t ofr. 842-1337 atroea 971' 21 IWltor llvcL ! ••••••••••••••••••••••• c..e. ..... ••S-5700 "73 SM. Xlnt COQd, AtC, All/PM lape deck. Lo 8'74 MAZDA RX4 llFOllYOU SRI. YOUI TOYOTA. SEE US! MAa0UtS TOYOTA MlSslON VIEJO 131-2110 495-1210 ml. All pwr. Nu petal. --co•-i '9100. Call832-'1837. ~· v.-'1119 Corona. rblt e ng. 4speed, vl.nyl roof, radio, Great lraosporlatiod . Dlllm 9720 beater Ir radial tlres. Mu.stSell. S700. 875-8407 . ....................... (~). "13 a60Z, AM/FM UH ltereo, air. IJ'H\ cood, $1100. -.all. . SZl71 THEODORE ROBI NS FORD ' >j,\~ll<>A l\lVrJ • · lh I.II'.<\ f,.n OOIO 1 D11nt ing ton Beac h Fountain Valley • 601T IO N Your Hometown Dail y ewHp a p Jr I I t VOL. 72, NO. 65. 3SECTIONS, 28 PAGES t Panic F e ared in WeekendGas-Drough~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA NEW YORK CA P l .:.. Wttkend ervtce 5laUon clostn11 would to be detennmed. and the marketplace." said Eugene Nowak. an This move. known as the .. tilt," aUows refiners to pass more or create lone Un et other um . and could prove the "1>1ycbolo1lcul 011 industry analyst at the Wall Street firm of Blyth Eastman thelr costs to consumers. It is designed to encourage companies to triner needed lo nd prices Into orbit," warns an oll expert. • Ulllon. 'build refmenes, but it also will raise gasoline prices 5.1 cents in Dan Lundbers. In his Wttkly newalett~r. said dtalera c9uld The price increases since Jan. 1 vary by area. Regular.grade the next two years, the DOE estimates. . raise profit marfrlns beyond fedtrally mandated cellln11 If Hl~i. leaded gasoline bought at a full·service station costs an average Prices also will rise soon due to the supply squeeze created by were curtailed by the .rovcmment Th('y would have to get mor~ 76 8 cents per gallon in Chicago, up from 74.8 cents two months the Iranian revolution. Several OPEC members have raised oil return on less gasoline to muke the same amount of money, he ago, the Lundberg Letter said. The.average price In Newark, N.J ., prices on their own to cash in on the tight supply. said. rose from 65.6 cents per; gallon to 67.4 cents. LVNDBEaG IS AMONG MANV EXPE&TS pess1misuc about gasoline prices, which have n sen about two cents a gaJlon since Jan. l. He and other ~nal)!sts predicted Monday that the increase will grow even sharper In coming months, but just how sharp is uncer lain due to continued questions about world crude oil supply. "The key variables lo me are the OPEC price. which bas yet 7 * * * * * * • THE PRICE RISE FOR UNLEADED gas is even more pro- nounced. Motonsts in Omaha pay an average 80.5 cents a gallon, up from 77 3cents an January. Lundberg said the impact of OPEC crude oil price increase, ef· fectlve Jan. 1, is only now being felt. He also said prices will rise as much as a nickel in the next few weeks because the Depart· menl of Energy loosened price controls last week. * * * * • * OPEC COULD DECIDE WHEN IT meets later this month lo raise crude prices even more than the 3.9 percent scheduled April 1. Nowak predicts a lO·cent-a-gallon rise in the price of gasoline by the end of 1979. but said, "If the OPEC price goes higher, that would be a bit conservative." Energy Secretary James Schlesinger said last week that prices of unleaded gasoline could top $1 a gallon in a year or so, with leaded regular up to 75 cents. * * * * * * Algeria Threatens Oil Price Hike -1 Teachers Ask Increase largest Of All High Raises . j I Spatthlg Lindsay Wagn er, 29 , television's Bionic Woman, has been sued for divorce by her husband of two years, Michael Brandon, 33. They have been separated since July. f Injure d Gir l · Said 'St ahle' ' ! In H untingto n ' • I ! f I • I ) I A two.year.old Huntington Beach girl remained hospitalized in stable condition today, two days a{ter she was hit by a car in a driveway near her home at 6551 Peggy Circle. Elizabeth Ann Behar suffered head, stomach and leg injuries in the Sunday afternoon acci- dent, officials said. · No charges have been filed against driver Eric Allen Kramer, 32, of 6502 Peggy Cir· cle, who apparently did ®t see the liWe girl as be was backing bis car out of bis driveway, police said. The victim is unde rgoing treatment at Children's Hospital in Orange. By JERRV CLAUSEN Of -O.Uy l"llet St.tt Ocean View Teachers Associa· lion submitted pay proposals to district trustees Monday night calling for increases that could raise some salaries as much as 34 .4 percent. The bargaining unit also seeks to reduce class sizes from the currenJ 28-30 students to 25. The teachers also seek binding arbitration for grievances and a closed s hop r equiring man· datory payment of fees to OVFA by teachers wbo are not mem· bers. The document. also---0-all f« shortening the required teaching day for kindergarten classes from the current 200 arinutes to 185 minutes. First, second and third grade teacher loads would be trimmed from 270 minutes to 255 minutes, under the proposal. Teachers or grades four through eight who now teach 330 minutes daily would teach only 300 minutes. ~lso sought is a cost-of-living increase tied to Orange County's Consumer Price Index and a fringe benefit package totaling $2,400 a year compared with the current $1,200 annually. Currently, the top scale on teacher salary scales is $21,947 for those with a bachelor's degree and 60 additional units or college credit. Those same t~achers wo4ld earn $26,820 a year under the new proposal, a 22 percent hike. But the OVTA is seeking a new salary step this year which would grant teache r s with bachelors' degrees and 75 units or additional credit a salary of $29,502, 34.4 percent more than the highest wage now offered. Beginning teachers now earn Sll,310. The new scale sought would hike that salary to $12,102, a 7 percent hike. Most of the Ocean View (e lementary> School District teachers, who teach in Hunt· ington Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster, are long·time, experienced personnel, a district spokeswoman said this morning. The package offered by the OVTA bargaining group is weighted in pay benefits toward the long·time teacher. The spokeswoman said formal (See TEACHERS, Page AZ> * * * Mugging tlae Ca111~ra Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau's three boys -Michael, 3 Cfronu. Sacha, 5, and Justin, 7-ham it up with a photog· r aphe r in Ottawa . Natural s howmen . they kept opening and closing the door and making funny faces. Huntington Brawl Suspects Sought Huntington Beach police con· tinued their search today for two men who turned a Friday night party into a str eet brawl before one of the men fired a s hotgun blast into an angry crowd of partygoers , injuring three. One of the victims. 19-year-old Michael Robert Conway of Hunt· ington Beach , remained hospitalized in satisfactory con- dition today at Huntington In· tercommunity Hospital. He, like bis two companions. was bit in the legs by shotgun pellets fired by one of the es~ped suspects . hospitalized. Police were directed to the home at 420 11th Street, but the two SlJ.!!pects had already fled. apparently in a four·wheel drive vehicle. Sgt. Ochoa said the identities of the two men remain unknown. Descriptions from partygoers have police sear chinJ;t for a heavily tattooed man who may be called "Buzzard." He sports a full·beard and dark brown s houlder length hair . A man in his mid·20s, "Buzzard" is about six feet tall and weighs about 190 pounds. His companion is a s limly built six·footer in his 20s, police said. Both men race charges of assault with intent to commit murder. Hearing Due On Crossuxilk Fountain Valley's back,and- forth battle over creation of a mid·block student crossing for Magnolia Street will be back before the City Council tonight. The public meeting is set for 8 p.m. in Fountain Valley council chambers, 10200 Slater A11e. Parents of children scheduled for transfer from McDowell School across busy Magnolia to Tamura School are concerned a 6out the safety of their youngsters next fall. Fountain Valley School Dis· trict officials have asked the city for a marked c rosswalk , a pedestrian activated signal light and a crossing guard. But city council members say they don 't want sc hoo l crosswalks across major streets. School and city officials met last week to discuss the conflict. but apparently have yet to find a solution. . t t • ' \' i Ocean View Staff Gets 5.5 o/CJ Raise The two men, described by police as biker·types, apparently slipped out of their home at 420 11th St. before the police SWAT team surrounded the home for "early three hours Friday night. Sgt. um Ochoa said police found a handgun, shotgun and about a pound of marijuana in the home. However, he said the recovered weaporui were not the ones the suspects used in the shooting. Won't Talk • Huntington Man Held in Slashings The melee at about 11 p.m. ap- Claaifted employees are to re· parenUy wu sparked by the sus· ce1ve retroHtive INlY on their pecta' attempt to crash a nearby April JO dlecb. party on lltb Street. The avera1e Ocean View .Fiahtinl broke out before the teacher's aalary Jumps from • outnumbered trio of bikers about '17 000 to $18 000 as a re· was chased from the house and 1 u I t 0 i t b e t b a w , t b e lnto the street. Sgt. Ochoa said ipok•woman laid • the 8ftll'>' partY1oen continued Top·pald teacb~rs· salaries . the cbae and cauaht one ot the . Jump from about •20.155 to blken. t21,M7 a year for 10 moatb9 ol A• tbey were beating him up, work. U.. 1mpecta returned from their hpt. Dale Coocan '• salary home armed with a •botlWl and mov• from about '40,000 to b-... poUee Nici. ta,000 tnmllllJ, aad prladpall' 8oUl reportedly ftred 1everal aalariel, wtUeb raued between rouncll bU the air befort one ol ,H,toO a•d tai,too, up to tbe m•• lowered bll aim .,_...._.._ .... .,. tow.,.IM .... oltbeerowd. • fte clitrlci ....,.._ ellmlO· laJUNd aloq wit.la Conway tary scbool1 la Huat1a1ton wen Du71 Du llcKo..a, • r.:::s..::-· .. v ... ., aad ::::..f.;::. t:::.-+:; =--~ 87 JllCllAEL PASKEVICll °' .. °"" "" ..... A HUfttinatoa Beach man who alle1edly went on a hatchet· 1la1hln1 rampa1e tbat a.ft three meam 008 MrioUllJ, bu told ce aotb•n1 about wbat Mt bll llclDday IDOl'8iDI out· bunt, ............. said toda1. Robert DUI •artlD. as, ol IZU San Aaselo Drive, hat been booked Into Oran County Jail on Hlplcton ol atte~ed murder: Ball far llarUa, ll emplOJ9d aa a meebaalc in ~----······ llutiD .,.. eae.n .. wed bJ ID· vnt.lpton lloada1 att.rnooa. Tbey described him as un· cooperative In aheddlng any 1t1ht on what drove him to al· te1ec1Jy chop up the clubhouse, and tbe men who tried to atop blm. Tbe 1DOlt aeverely injured of the three mea llarUG aUefedly attacked ln the clubhouse OI tbe HuntlQttoa C..k ApaftmeDta, 36·Y•U'-old Joel Du pree,•waa Uated ID parded ~lion~ at Wea.&mlHter Communlty lbpbf. Autbortti9 Mid be underwent 1Uf1ery ..... ., ~.., .... <lee llATalft, Pase AU NEW YORK <AP> Industry sources said today that Algeria one of OPEC's smallest mem. bers is threatening a 25 per· cent boost in 011 pn ces. The in- crease would be the largest of all the hikes announced by mem· be rs of the oil cartel. Libya, meanwhHe, said that it was doubling -from 5 percent lo 10 percent -the size of the in- creae it announced last week, and Venezuela increased prices on several petroleum products it exports to the United States. There was no immediate in· dication as to what s uch in· SCHLESINGER HINTS AT NEW MOVES-A3 PACT COMPROMISES DETAILEO-A4 JAPANESE SPLIT OVER Oil THREAT--84 c reases -s hould th.ey materialize --might mean to American service station prices Th e Organizat i on of Petroleum Exporting Countries had scheduled total 1979 price hikes in its base price for oil of 14.5 percent. But several nations have taken advantage of the supply squeeze caused by the lraman revolution to impose ad- ditional increases. Most of the ri ses have b ee n i n th e neighborhood of 9 percent. The oil price increases and the cutback in supply already have caused problems for American co ns ume r s . The pri ce of gasoline has gone up by about two cents a gallon stnce J an. l and new government pricing regulations are expected to add 10 cents at the pump over the next two years. Prices for regular, leaded gasoline at full -service stations average about 70 cents a talion although the price varies widely with 19Cation. A federal judge has been asked to halt implementation of the new rules until the govern· ment determine whether they would encourage motorists to use chaper, leaded gasoline which could increase POilution. Coast \leath er Sunny and quite wa rm Wednesday but cooler , near the coast. Hig hs " Wednesday 65 to 69 at • beaches, 75 to 85 inland. 1 Lows tonight in 50s. I INSIDE T ODAY ) £leered o//lciols ore t rt~ to the public de· . t lire of the rmt-control move-; mnt but tenant• muat out· vote tlwlr foe1 . Sto'JI Page · C3. •••• .. a .,. .. M At a lt4 .. ., .,. M M J\% CAIL V PILOT fflF .. MOTOfUSl ITIPS fROfll ITALLl!D CA9' TO ftAUINQ TRUCK IN ELMHURST, lll~Wlrw~ St•• Brace• for ..,_ Flood O.m•ee In Hl81ory; EHt Aleo Threatened ........ -.e ' HATCHET. • hcve pressure on his brain. th rrs ult or a ii1ngle blow to tut. right temple by the hatchet as :.ertedly Wlelded by Martin Apartment manager Harold Thomas Strom, 61 . also un· tler went s urgery for a deep Jaeerataon and fractured right arm. lie was listed in satlsfac. tory condition today at Hunl- i n gt on fnt e rcommunit y Hospital A third man who said he al· tempted to halt Martin's window and door smashing rampage about l a.m. in the clubhouse. 28-year-old Ric hard Douglas Butters, was slashed once under his right eye. police said. He was treated for his inJury at Huntington lntercommunity Hospital and released early Monday. A fourth apartment dweller. Terry Joe Ptjitchell, and an un- 1dentif1cd security guard helped the injured trio subdue Martin police said · Volunteers For Medical Tests Sought UC Irvine Medical Center physicians are seeking volun- teers for a testing program in· volving the treatment of shingles with a recently de- ' c.•loped cream Sufferers from the type of shingles known as herpes zosler must be prepared to undergo treatment fo~ five successive. days at the medical center's di vision of infectious diseases, 101 The City Drive. OranJle. Hospital staff sai'd volunteers must be suffering from erup· lions of less than 48 hours dura· uon There is no charge• for the treatment. Clinic workers said they are I hopefuJ that the as yet unnamed cre,a m wiJl lead to a 1 breakthrough in treatmenf or a disease that has often defied ef- forts to cure or control It. FroaPageAJ TEACHERS negotiations between the school board and OVTA are expected to begin about April 17. The current two-year contract expires June 30. The length of the newly presented contract was termed "negotiable." Stereo, Photo Gear Stolen Burglars took about $5,800 worth of stereo and photography equipment from a Fountain Valley apartment Monday, police reported today. Marine Corps Sgt. William R. Maurice told police the equip· ment was taken from his home at 10135 La Alameda Ave. between 6 a .m. and noon. Police said a sliding glass door was pried open to gain en- tr y. °"-'NOi~ ,.,, DAILY PILOT --.. Floo~ Move East; Cities Threatened By T'k Aaaodated PTes& Floods born in a March thaw and fed by heavy rahu spread into new territory in the East to day and lllinois offic1als were worried that the Rock River may go on its worst rampage in history. Ice jams moving downstreitm c aused floodin& that forced evacuations Jn som e com munilies near Buffalo, N. Y. At Sunset Bay, where flood damage was estimated at more than $1 million. helicopters bombarded a troubleso me jam wllh dynamite in hopes of breaking it loose. More than 20,000 commuters were affected by flooding in Con- necticut that disrupted signals on Conrail's New Haven Line, delaying trains to New York by an hour or more. Streams also were runnin~ brim full in much of Mississipp. and elsewhere. Erie Jones, director of the state emergency services de· partment in Illinois, said Mon- day the Army Corps of Engineers believes the Rock River, in the northern part or the Saudi Arabia 'Kex' to Oil WASHINGTON lAP l - Q_ueslions about whether Sai.iOfArilj1a can conUnue to produce enough oil to meet the needs of the Unit· ed Stales are expected to be raised in a con- gressional report. Sources in the ad - ministration and Congress s ay the Senate Foreign Relations Committee re· port will state that the Saudis' production capaci- ty is severely limited. According to one report, by The New York Times, the study concludes that if Saudi Arabia ,produced 14 million to 16 million bar- rels of oil a day, it would take only six to 10 years for the country's supply to peak. -.tale. may experience the worst flooding in its history Under th~ worst conditions. engineer~ stud. some residential and bu sine ss districts of Rockford, Ill. -the state's second .largest dty with 160.000 populahon could soon be un- der 10 feet of water. The Rock River nows through the heart Of the city. Some businesses, especially those located on or near the river. have already moved ex- pt!nsi ve equipment out or base- ment storerooms. Wildcat Strike Won't Close Disneyland A spokesman for Disneyland said today that the amusement park in Anaheim will remain open despite a non-sanctioned strike by about 530 maintenance workers that began al midnight. The strikers represent 14 of about :.> unions involved in the Disneyland operation that at thi s time of the year employs 4,600 workers. Ironically, the firs t major strike in the amusement park's 23.year history came after the union leadership approved a.,... new contract for the 14 unions. It was the membership on a 457 to 45 vote-that rejeeted t-he oact. Impacted by the strike are operations involving main· tenance or facilities, including such crafts as plumbers. electri· cians and sheet metal workers . The Disneyland spokesman said the park will be able to operate with some management petsonnel' providing ·some ·of J those services. Today, as is customary, the Anaheim amusement center is closed but when it reopens Wednesday there will be pickets In front of the entrance should a settlement with the dissident workers not be reached by that time. <liad Killings Put At More Than 800 N'DJAMENA, Chad (AP> - More than 800 people, most of them Moslems, were believed killed in southern Chad over the weekend in one of Africa's worst communal massacres in recent years, diplomatic sources re- ported today. The Chad authorities, locked. in a virtual civil war and strug- gling for control of the capital, made no official comment on the killings in and around Moundou, 300 miles south of N'Djamena. Diplomats and wltJ1e.sses re- turn.Ing from Moundou said the town was gripped In a suree or uncontrolled violence for three days, leaving local police and troops powerless or unwilling to intervene: Det.alls of the Moundou rioting were still comin1 in from the re- mote aad alsuost laolattd area. but it appeared tbat the local Mo1lem minority . mostly traders and '-heir families, wu virtu~ wiped out. Tbelllnp lharply lncreued the t11reet•thal the Jand·locked nation, a former French coloc\y ... arly ttrice tbe 1ile of Tau, mar dlaintesrate in a bloody conll'OlltllUoa between Koelema alMI U. Chrl•Uu or anlml1t ~ea said the Moundou ldJllnp W'ere •SMrked by rumon amoq tbe ChrtlUan a.ad animilt populetloD of a Moslem COG· IPll'HJ to leile tM entire nation nd '-an Arabte·lllamlc ....... Oanp ~ bleclr J0UtM .. rJ. .. tlarWO llouclo9 ud ................. Jllrtd81, tt-.:>&'=!.n= wu,*9eame9Ml4. TIM J'rillCb ....., e'uut.d , the women and children or the 250·strong European population of Moundou. The refugees ar- rived in N'Djamena Monday un- der army escort and gave r<>- porters· harrowing accounts or the massacre. The latest killings raised the apparent toll of racial and re. llgious rioting a round Moundou since early February to more than 1.000 dead. Several hundred more have died in the fighting further north between the rival forces of Christian President Felix Malloum and Moslem Prime MJruster Hassen Habre. Chad's 4.5 million inhabitants are divided almost equally into Arabic-speaking, light-skinned Moslema ln the nortb and black CbrlaUans and arumtsts in the south who speak French and tribal dialecll but no Arabic. The Moalema form a small but privileged minority in southern Chad, where they control much of the retail trade. Burglar Gets Costly Rings A Fountain Valley woman told police that 10meon.e eat.red her home lloDday and took two diamoad rtnp, valved at a total of tl,• from ber kitchen. a-,t J . Harper Of 10771 La Terrua Aw. aaid lbe wu away from ber NlkleDee for only 45 mlDut. md tbe rt.qi were aone wbea Ille ntumed bome . Pollol uid tile Wef appenat- IJ &a.._. tile boale ~ an ualoelrad door tn &.be attacbed 1ar.,., Bird Toll Exceeds 1,300 By JACKIE HYMAN °' ... o.11• ,. ... , .. " Rel.ween 1,300 and 1 • .00 exotic birds have been destroyed dur· ing the past. two weeks because of an outbreak of Newcastle dis· ease, a U.S. Department of Agriculture spokesman said to· day Dave Goodman said the de· partment will pay about $120,000 for the birds and for contaminat· ed feed and supplies that also are beirti destroyed. The birds are valued at up to $3.000 each. Goodman said The destroyed birds we re primarily in four flocks, Good· man said. He said 550 birds were destroyed Feb. 27 at an aviary in Woodcrest, near Riverside, and 330 more birds on March 2 at Parrot World in Garden Grove. Birds infected with the dis· ease. wruch could devastate the caged bird and poultry in· dus tries ir 1t s preads, were traced to a wholesale firm called For the Birds ln Bell Gardens, Goodman said. He said 44 birds in that faciUty one of several run by the same company bad to be done away with Saturday, along with 375 from a related facility in Bell Gardens called Barry's Burl. Several individual birds in private homes, purchased from the infected flocks, have died of the disease, Goodman said. Ail· ing birds have been located in Paramount, Stanton. Riverside and Mission Viejo. In addition, he said, a Costa Mesa man's bird. purcllased from Parrot World, has been diagnose{f as having the disease but is sh'bwing no signs of ill· ness. "It is a perfectly healthy car ner," Goodman said Viets Agree To Negotiate A.ft,er Pullout BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> Vietnam announced today it is willing to negotiate with China once all Peking's troops have left Vietnamese soil and ended a ..mo.re than two-week frontier war. But a Vietna m ese Foreign Minis try state m e n t said if Chinese leaders were tryinli( a "withdrawal trick" to escalate the war then Vietnam would fight on "in the spirit of general mobilization." The statement said Chinese troops had to withdraw "com· pletely and unconditionally from Vietnamese territory before any negotiations take place." ft also said China was forced to announce it was withdrawing Monday because it found itseJf in "difficult circumstances" - military Josses. support Russia and others were giving Vietnam. and even objections to the war in China. It said any negotiations would take place at the vice foreign ministers' level at a lime and place to be agreed on later. Hanoi radio reported righting was continuing in Lang Son province north of the Vietnamese capital and claimed Hanoi's troops kHJed or wounded more than 700 Chinese in fighting Mon- day in Hoang Lien Son province in the northwest. MEMORY TO BE HONORED The Late Frenk Tellman Aviation Unit ToHorwr Not,ed Flyer The late Frank Tallman. Orange County's famed stunt aviator. will be honored by the Grampaw Pettibone Squadron at a noon luncheon at the Registry Hotel in Irvine Thurs- day. The squadron is a local ar. filiate of the Association of Naval Aviation. Tallman was a me mber. A memorial plaque will be presented in his honor to County Supervisor Thomas Riley. for installation at the Orange County Airport terminal building. Tallman perished April 15 when his Piper Aztec slammed into the side or Santia.go Peak. He was famous for bjs ability lo fly every known kind of aircraft. He restored historical craft and was frequently called upon to do stunt flying for mo· lion pictures. He co-founded Tallmantz Aviation with the late Paul Mantz. SO WIU.t:'S JN A NA.ME? CLEVELAND (AP 1 The Pittsburgh Conference 1s meet 1ng in Cleveland again this year The scientific conference on analytical chemistry and ap- plied s pectroscopy outgrew Pittsburgh's facilities and has met here instead since it left its home city ii1 1968. lnflln~'s Brain Harmed? By KATRV CLANCY Of ... O.llyll'ilet ..... The Dllfsing superviaor oo du ty the night Dr. William Waddill allegedly strangJed a newborn abortion survivor testtried today that the doctor toJd her the in· rant "waa severely brain damaged at birth." Jean Holston. then nursing supervisor at Westminster Com· munity Hospital, testified at t.M 4:1-year-old Huntington Harbour physician 'a murder retrial in Orange County Superior Court that Waddill s uggested that she move on to duties elsewhere aner be arrived at the hospital nursery. "He put hi s hand on my arm and said he was sure 1 had duties elsewhere," Mrs. Holsto.n told the five·man. seven-woman JUry. "And he said I had to realize that the baby was severely brain damaged and it had not djed in the uterus as it was supposed to," Mrs. Holston continued. Waddill is accus~d of stran. gling the Infant known as baby girl Weaver two years ago after she allegedly survived a saline abortion on an lB-year-old unwed mother . Defe nse attorney Charles Weedman has contended the in- fant "for alt practical purposes was already dead." Prosecutor Robert Chatterton has asserted the doctor choked the two-pound, 15-ounce infant fearing the c hild would be severely brain damaged and that he could race a malpractice SUit Mrs . Holston testified today that nurse Pat Olvera told her the baby had cried and was alive. However, she said, that, while she believed Mrs. Olvera, she d\?tected no movem ent in the in· f~nl .except for one sucking mo· lion m the face and the closing of the infant's eyes . Waddill's first murder trial ended la.st May when jurors said they were deadlocked 7-5 in favor of acquittal. Testimony m the retrial has e~tered its second week. The tn.al ls expecled..Ja.lasLlbree .to. four months. Plastic Surgeon Hit In Suit by Actor Embattled Santa Ana plastic surgeon Dr. Ralph Small races a new legal entanglement today in a lawsuit filed by a former pa- tient. Actor Patrick Keane contends in the Orange County Superior Court suit he has been unable to work since Small operated on him to remove a scar on his face. The act.or is seeking an un- specified amount of damage in the civil complaint. S mall was barred by a Superior Court order last month from practicing medicine in the wake of charges of "gross negligence and massive imcom· petence." Judge William S. Lee issued the temporary restraining order that stopped Small's practice based on the charges by the s tale Board of Medical Quality Assurance. The allegations followed an in- vestigation into the death last November of a 33-year-old wom a n who w ent into respiratory arrest while un- dergoing breast implant s urgery at Small's offices at 3620 S. Brlstol St., Santa Ana. Lee's order is to remain in ef- fect until hearmgs on Small's license revocation or suspension can be held by the state medical board. The n11me Rolls·Royoo, thu RoUs·RoYCe 1ad1ator orllle. end tho Sp1111 of l:tsl1,,y hood ornament ere 111 Rolla-Rorco irademo1ks, usod wtlh the approval ol Rolla-Royce Motors I] The most famous motor radiator grille w the world, superbly reproduced as a wrist watch. Eighceen k.arat gold. Exclusive from Corum. . 15 f ASHIQN l~LAf!"O • NE\YPORT IJ.\Of...CALIFOltNIA 9266Q.. ,. 81 DAILY PILOT SHE'S NOW MAS. JIMMY CONNORS. Connors Doesn't Surface For Wedding Comment From AP Dbpatebea ST. LOUIS -The secret wedding of tennis • star Jimmy Connors to forme r Playboy "'-~ Playmate Patti McGuire was confirmed by several sources Monday, but the usually out- spoken Connors was not available for direct comment on it. Connors, whose on-court comments and gestures often get him into trouble, was "away for a rest" arter bis Na- tional Indoor Tennis Championship vict.Qry over Arthur Ashe Sunday in Memphis, a spokesman said. Gloria Connors, the 26-year-old star 's mother, told Memphis radio station WHBO her son had married Miss McGuire "some time ago." The Memphis Press Scimitar said in Monday's editions that the two were wed Oct. 2 near Tokyo. The story also said the couple was expecting a child this summer. Joe Rountree of St. Louis, who handles Connor s' busi- ness affairs, also confirmed the marriage Monday but said he was reluctant to ma ke too much of it. He said he agreed with Gloria Connors' attitude on the subject. "His mother 's attitude bas always been, 'If you're go· ing to get married. do it and don't make a symphony out of it'," Rountree told The Associated Press. "She's very hap- py about it." -----QMoie ol da~ Daw-----.. New Angels' acquisition Bod Carew, when asked -u his-age-tSS) might be slowing hlm down; "There's no reason I can't go another five years at top efficien- cy, maybe more. I take good care of myself." llldia11a State Top• College Pell The Top Twenty teams in The Associated Press col- lege basketball poll, with fi rst-place votes in parentheses and season records . 1. Indiana St. (55) 2. UCLA (3) 3. North Carolina 4. Michi gan St. 5. Notre Dame 6. Duke 7. Arkansas 8. DePauJ 9. Louisiana St. 10. Syracuse 29·0 23·4 23·5 21·6 22·5 22·7 23·4 22·4 22·5 25·3 11. Georgetown. D.C. 12. Marquette 13. Temple... 14. Iowa 15. Texas 16. Purdue 17. Detroit 18. Louisville 19. San Francisco 20. Tennessee 24·4 21·6 25-3 20·7 21-7 23·7 22·5 23-7 21·6 20·11 Cor11eUu Na•ed Ml'P Former Santa Ana Valley High basketball m star Ron Cornelius was named Most Valuable Player in the Pacific Coast Athletic Assn. by con· ference coaches Monday. The 6-9 sophomore led Pacific to the regular season championship and the PCAA tournament title with a 15. 7 scoring average and 9.6 rebounds a game. Other first team players include Art Williams of Fresno State, Fullerton's Calvin Roberts, Long Beach's Rickey Williams, Pacific's Terrence Carney and Dean Hunger of Utah State. The second team consists of Utah State's Keith McDonald and Brian Jackson, Michael Wiley and Francois Wise of Long Beach and Wally Rank of San Jose State. Coach of the Year is Stan Morrison of Pacific. •rd W'lU Plafl Despite T•-· OTRE& SPO&TS -A broken left thumb won't keep All-American Larry Bird of top-ranked Indiana State out of the lineup when the uf\beaten Sycamores play Sunday in the NCAA .llidwest Regional Tournament in AUanta . . . Louisiana State University is busy revampin1 Its starting llneup far the NCAA Midwest Regionals to compensate for the loss of star forward DeWaJM Scales, wbo baa been suspended by Coach Dale aro.. for repeated contacts with a professional player agent and then lylna about it ... Shortstop llftkJ Dent of the New York Yankees may play out his option this season, according to bis attorney. T..,..._,Badfe Following are the mafor sports events on television tonight. Ratings are: 1111excellent;111 worth watching: 'I fair; I fOrget It. • 8 p.m., Channel 5 ./ ./ COi.LEO• aASK•TaALL: ColoradO St. at Nevada <Las Vegas). A....-cen: Chick Hearn and Dennis Hodges. A regular soson flnale for both teams and neither Is heeded for PQlt·SHton play. A down year for Coach Jerry Tarkanlan's Nevada Runnln' Rtbels who toppled 1oth•ranked Marquette SUnday. RADfO: No events SCMdultd. POMONA -Bob Frilbette '9Ccbed a ftft-ldt ~fol' UC lrYtM u "'9 AlltMWI DIDDed ~ Cal .. Po••• .... 1.D • --eolf~ ....u .... . . ....,. f The oalJ naD In tbe 1ame came from lrvlae lD tbe eicMb tnnln1. Wltb one out, Mike N11le 1la1led aDCI waa moud to MHDd oa • n.&der'1 ebolc. bll bJ Ihle Frolaad•r. Jack. ........ tbea ~led to rtlbt 1eo1i111 NacJe tor tb• wtnnlnl ra. Kentucky Players Arrested Lf.XINGTON, Ky . -Elthl tJnivertlty ol Kentucky football players were a r rut ed on ch1r1ea of rape and flrat·detree IOdomy Monday n11ht and re- ltHed tbl1 momlna from the Fayette County Detention Cent.er. Tom Pad1ett, unl verally public safety dl~tor, ldenWied the p.layen u defensive back Venu1 Meaux. Har rodsburg ; fullba ck Randy Brooks. Loul1vllle: fullback Charles J ack10n, Geor•etown; halfback Norman .Gr.ee.o., Martln•buta, W. Va . quarterback Larry McCrlmmon, Tampa, Fla.; halfback He nry Parks, Har· rodaburg; defenaive tackle Earl Wilson, Atlantic City, and of· t ensive tackle Robert Cobb. Sheffield. Ala. Wilson also was charged with flrat-degr ee sexual abuse, Padgett said. It was not clear whether the players posted bond or were re- leased from jail on their own re· cognizance. Carlos Leigh. a watch com-mander at the jail, refused to give details of the players' release. Padgett said the arrests by unlven ity police "came out of warrants by the complainant, .. but would give no further details. The complainant's identity was n ot a matter of publ i c record. he said. "The university police will be investigating the case for the commonwealth's attorney and, lo the interest of his case, we won't release any more informa- tion," Padgett said. Fro. Pqe BJ IJVSEY ••. Livsey said. He said he also shows sports· related films. Some focus on the struggles of individual athletes. inc luding blacks and women. Among the other films be shows ls "Vision.a of Elgh~1" documen- taries by eight diJferent film makers of the 1972 Munich Olympics. IN ADDITION to improving the students' writing and read- ing habits, the course also opens their eyes to many aspects of sports. Livsey said. "Sports are a micr()(_os.Q.l of 1>Ur countn-r'' he. said-"Almost to a student, their ey's are opened to all the things that are happening." But although learning about current topics such as equal funding for girls' physical education is valuable, Livsey noted, some other aspects of the · course may have a more direct personal effect on students. One is an exam.&nation of society's emphasis on winning, coupled with a look at the Protestant ethic. "HALF OF TIIE PEOPLE in the class. because of the Protes· tant ethic and the deHnition of success. think of themselves as railures, .. Livsey said . Despite the unusual subject matter in the classes. be noted, the composition and grammar teaching Is really quite or· thodox. "One young man said, 'I wish I was taught English this way in high school ."' Livsey said. "Well, he was taught English this way in high school. He just wasn't interested in the poem he was writing about. "All I've tried to do is take my shovel and dig it into what they are interested in and bring it in· to the cJassroom." Cypress Stops Rustlers, 2-0 Jeff He athcock scattered seven hits and allowed nothing more than a pair of runs in the bottom of lbe seventh, but be got no support from bis Golden West College teammates, and , Heathcock absorbed a 2--0 loss in Southe rn Cal Co nference baseball Monday on the winner's diamond at Cypress College. The eame wu a make-up for one previoual)t rained out. Golden West. in dropptni to 2·1 conference and 5·7 overall, could manage only four bits behind Heathcock. His record now f alla to 3-2. ._...,,..,.. o.Nltfl ll¥ttll 000 000 ..... ' t ~-000 000 toO-t , I MNlllCIU lfld 0111. Lee.n. -M<Genlly. WP'~.1........,.._00. Pomona tJm seuon for Jrvlne at th• Aatealera won 9-S tn Tbuflda1'• same. Again, It was Friabette wlio ptcked up the vlc· tor)'. On lbe leuon, the Anteawn record now atanda at S-12. ............. uc1m.. • .. ._... t • C81~...... .. -..... ' fir.....-:_..•-· *'-• l"lt.-rtt I.fl •V .... Wfl-f' ...... ~L.._,.~ Wculaington Rough Stuff The Capitals' Jack Lynch <center > takes the puck away from Montreal Canadien Doug Jarvis during their Nation a l Hock e} League game in Landover, Md. J arvis was setting up for a shot at the net when he was h it by Lynch, giving goalie Jim Bedard a chance t o deflect the puck with his stick. The game ended in a 2·2 tie in the onl y NHL action Monday . Dotterer Triples Edison to Victory For the second week In a row. Edison High sprinter Mike Dot- terer has clocked 9.9 in the 100 and led the Cbar..gers to a track and field victory. On Monday his 9.9 easily won the 100 and he added a pair of other victories, winning the 220 In 22.4 and capturing the long · jump with an effort of 19·11. The triple victory sent Edison on its way to an 86·50 win over Saddleback-H.tgtt. - Dotterer, an All -Cl F selection as a running back for Edison's football team. has signed a let· ter or intent to attend Stanford University next year . A teammate of Dotterer's on the football field. Tim Frink, Shollin:s Home Run Paces 2-1 Cd.M Win Corona del Mar High, behind a solo home run by Jim SboWn in the second inning and the five· hit pitching of Steve Leslie and Chris Johnston . dealt host. Capistrano Valley a 2·1 non- league baseball loss Monday in non-league baseball. Greg Cole went 2-for-3 at the plate. Scw.1ty1..,.1,.. ConM'le O.C Mer 010 000 1-1 I l Caplstr-Valley 000 100 o -1 ~ o . LestCe, Jo1'nston 151 •nd H•ll. Cu•'°" And Dunlvln HR-Coro"" del Mir Sf\ohn ~P- JO!lnslon LP-Cui.nw I won the discus with a toss of 132·9. Edison also dominated the dis· lance events. with J on Buller winning the mile <4:36.8) and Michael Lansdon taking the two. mile <9 :J5A 1. Bulfer finished second in the two-mile. £ .. _ ... Se4NMN<ll,. 100-1. OotteAf' Cf I tt; 1. Zel41f\1llM CE I, l Sl•nd•HH\ (SI. 270-1 Dotterer CEI U .4; 1. 51•ntey CSI; l z.1un111., If I. .WO-I Ret~ IEI U.J, 1. R-f'ff 151. 3 H~......-ra ''' 880-1. Hloo CE 11 0-.l ;1. Brent Cf I, 3. Cr-• CSI M lle-1 8'tllff CE I 4 :»I:?. S.nclen IEI, J Stew1rc 151 l Mtle I. LensctC>n CE I t.JU; 1. Butler CE I; l S.nd•rs IEI. 120HH-1 H•"'' lfl 1s•: 1. £\Ir.Sa ISi; J Tuon CSI l:IOLH -1 ·Tutn 1$1 41.0: t , H•rrlf If I. J fslr~a ISi. "'''" , • .,., -1 Edison J :».o. LJ-1 Dotter~ IE I , .. 11 ; 2. Bll<ll ISi. J NlcllOI\ (fl. T J • "· BleO ISi "s. 1 R Btaclr ISi. 3 ~rslEI HJ I R BlaO fSI tr'7 l Wllllams IEI J CiMza CS I PV -1 Gleason cEt 11·6: 2. Knoa CE•. J M•clu C5t SP-I IC.-1tto 151 ft•I , l B Fr411\0ltn ISi J M•<ll CEI OT-I Frinll IE I IJl·t , 1. 1C.•ntll10 (51; 3. S.n 6ov1I Cf I Adecs' V ezie Fired SAN DIEGO (AP > -San Diego State University basket· ball coach Ti m Vezie, whose Aztecs finished the season with a 15· 12 record, was fired Monday a fter five seasons, school of· ficials said. Area Tennis Summaries For Monday Men JUfllO" COLLEGE G<-o>s_...•,Or.111~ C..111 Mf191ft F-rlv 10 1 ~ 81,..,..,,,,, 1-4. l-4, 7-4; Tomei 101 oel. Vvela .... 3-4, I •. M.lrtln CGI 001 Mt C>on.t•o ~1. 1·S •..... Nel!IOf'I 1c;1 oel Smotn • 1 6·2, Parllfr ICil 04!!1 Sal.11ar 6 7. 6·1; Clleuler 101 cMf Ehler .. ,. W . 7·S ~ .. 81rm1ch-V-le IGI de-I F.clderly·T-4 7•, 1 ~. Milr11n.Nel'°" CGI O<!I. Smllh·S.laiar 7•. ... Elster Stml>SOt\ 1c;1 del McOon•ld·o.tHtu I 6, .... M . H IGMSC:MOOL H_I,.._ 8ffcto 11, D•wMY 0 $ ....... Frf:f\Cll IHI def M ey'°". I, def Ft\l'lm•n ..0 Off '°9Y ''°· OPf Hoffc1r 6-3, 801\,t• IHI -... . 60, trl, M. Andr~ CHI won 6·l , 6·f,°'H, .. .. Lel9n IHI-7·S ... 2 ... 2,6·1, ~ WOOIM·~ll,,,..n CH I d<'f S<l!We_IWi,.le" ....... 1. def 1t.Mtr'°"·N.IU1Mn1 6-1, M ; FHJ Cle•Cy-JOM-CHl wonlHl.6 l,won6·l,6·1 ,,.__n~.c..e.Me .. s•~ 51"flft Foy CMI IO'il to Leectty 7 6. df:I. P•l\1•n 6-7, ~I Wolfe .. ,. oef. Ricn.tr~n 6-0; Plqaon CM I llitd .... won 6-1, .... I•; Wit! IM I won , ..... ,, .. ,. lie<! H . Pl.Kl CMI IOsC 2-4. •on 6-7. losl ~.won •·3 Oou114H Cl1ltoQ·E"9"•Y IM I dl!I Mtt•o<>lan·Haft\On 6 ~ ..... ~ .._.,...,..,..,.,..quna ..0. 6-1 . Ptrrv·~\ln IM I -1-4, 7-t, ~t.1 .. 1, losl 1>ya.t1utt. u•...nltr Jt, ltf,.erdtt ,..t., 1 SllMJIH DIV IUI OPf WNlton .. I. O.f. Hanl9M\ tr?, Gel M•IUUS .. 1. Clef O.•• ..o. N•l!oon II.I I won ...... •. 6·0. •·I: Oarll CUI ~· ft.1, 7-4, 6·1, won ... . Merqut11 cu 1 won .. ,. 1·6. 10,1 tr1, wort 4-J. ~ .. Meyer-H•<kell IU I ~, Z~1Mkl·Ot<k•r ... 1·S. Oel Hef'°"-t'l<ll 6-1, 6-1; Slmllfn-Weko41 lU I WOf\ 6'0,6·2, IO'il 3·6, •-6 Women JUNIO" COLLEGE ~lll,Ci1rt1SI Sl119les Well• 151 df'f. kv1locQ"" ft.4. 6·1 ,,.ICIRr 151 def. Tumw IHI, .. 1; Gosl~l\flofer CSI IO\I 10 Oonerh w ... ,. l·•. Mllcne11 ISi oef. Poios.t l>-0. .. l ; SISU ISi o.t ~ 1>-I 6.0. Slffd CSI Gel. HOii-Ml. Ml. o.v-Welll·Ftldllr ISi ~t. 8tvt10<Qua·Totow .. ,, "4; SIK•StMd ISi oet Tur~r-OOl>erlY 3-6, .. l. 6-<I: Mllchell-L.M>Qt 151 def ~n·Holl•nd .. l ... , T ARKANIAN'S DOUBLE IMAGE. • • smooth operator. Some say he cultivates that image. "He protects himself." said one coach. "Re turns bis bead when other people do the dirty work. I like Tark but believe me, he knows everything that goes on." 'E&RY TARKANIAN, bis wife, Lois, and their four children live at 2905 Justice Lane in a beautiful $100,000 two·story Spanish-style home in the residential out · skirta of Las Vegas. The Tarkanians got the house -which has a huge backyard pool - for cost, courtesy of a local builder. TarkanJan is a squat. slope-shouldered Armenian who bas the constant sad-eyed look of a lost beagle. He is 48 but looks several years.older. He s ays his problems with the NCAA bound him all the time. "It's been bard on our family and ex· tremely bard on me," said Tarkanlan, wbo doe1n'f smoke but bas a raspy voice - partlcuJarly during the basket.ball 1eason. When be talu, be often sounds like the world la on bil stooped shoulders. '"The moet amaz· Ln1 tbint l• I don't have an ulcer. Sometimes I sleep and sometimes I don't. ••WffENEVEa THE TEAM travels, I get lt from the rans. They're always on my back. shoutiq thlnJs like 'Hey Jerry, where's your parole officer?' or coune lt bW"ll me ... Ht1 very supportive wife, Lola, can articulate hi• de(ense a1ainat the NCAA, sup· plytn1 anyone Interested wltb reams of papen and 1utement.a that support Tarka- nlan'a polltlon. Taken to bouts of crylllf, Lola rails at the havoc lbe NCAA bu cauaed her · loved Ollll. "Fritndl who haven't teen ua few a while ' ••1 be'• apd a lot." she sald. Paoft.E "80 &.NOW Tarkulu btlt i . , aa1 Ills ODb lntentta are baltetball and bta ' ramily. He loves watching his son, Danny. play basketball for local Gorman High. Dan· ny. a junior, is one of the top guards in the state. and Tarkanlan turned down the Los Angeles Lakers' coaching job three years &JO. partly beca.use ~ro travel would keep him away rrom his son s games. Tarkanian has no hobbies. He had a mild heart attack before the first game of the 1976 season and jogged for one month. But then be stopped. The family used to take August vacations in conjunction with a coaching clinic somewhere. But they haven't taken a trip like tbal ln three or four years. TAllKANlAN DOESN'T dress in three· piece swts like many or his coaching col· leagues. He used to have his hair styled to cover up bald spots but he doesn't bother anymore. • ' "He bad a hairdresser who bad him bruahiDI lt a certaln way," sald Lots. "Bul it kept tett.lnl messed up, so be said it wasn't worth it and be got a crew cut. It's terrible but he really doesn't care about his hair." "Jerry Is one of the most down·to-earth people I've ever met .'' said Dave Pearl, bead of the Lat Vegas Booster Club that wooed Tarkanlan away from Long Beach. "He's not impressed with the glamor of the strip. He'll call you at 3 in the morning to talk basket- ball. That'• all that'• on bl• mind." "He'• a Nalamitb·type person," said former Marquette Coach Al McGuire. "If you want to tel Tark to leave the room, talk about anythlna be1ldea basketball." TA.a&ANIAN SELDOM SITS 1Ull ln h11 1mall otflce ln tbe athl1Uc department. He '1 conatanlly In motlon. cbattlnt with pa11traby. dl11ra.mmln1 plays OD the 8" Td&ANIAN, Pa•• la - . INSIDE: •St~ICS •Comics f • t I • •' . •, . ·:·t • •Movies •Television 81 Tarkalil.Rn: Man With ·B Double Image 1 I { NCAA. Thinks He's the Biggest Bandit Sirice John Dillinger l "''" oJ o 11rrft pllrl ~ ayraEOaOTRBNlll•G .,, ..... ~ LA VEGA; t AP> The Slrip Neon lights and hl1h ex~ctaUons 24 houMI a day. 365 days a )'Hr. The Jln&le·JantJ of 1)0 machlnH and the 1llltcr and 1l1mour of the l'aly In the dt'sPrt Rut tht-re'1 another a 4fo to u1 Vta11 one the tourlals never It' Surprl1ln1b, Ve&H 11 a very rt'llalous, ramlly'Or1ented town with more chur<'hes per raplta than any l•1ty In Amf't'tca And like his udopted city, Jerry Tark nurn ·ull'lO bas a double image. E\'Elt\'ONE AGREES oh one thin~ he's u W1Mer As 8 matte r or fad he'1 got the best winrung J)t!r<'entage Qf any active maJor college basketball coach In the country Most of has fellow coaches and most of has players at the University of Nevada-La!> Vegas are crazy about the man They say he 's 100 percent basketball, an excellent technical coach and a warm, friendly guy fiercely dedicated to has players and to winning. They also say he 'll gave has players the s hirt off his back illegal as that might be but that he's more honest than many coaches. They say it's blatantly unfair that Ta rkaruan has felt more heal rrom NCAA in· vestigators than any body else. The National Collegiate Athletic Assn and much of the media portray a dirrerent Jerry Tarkanian. To the m , he is "Turk the Shark," the biggest bandit since John Di ll · mg e r • THEY PAINT A PICTURE of Tarkanian buying players like they were SS chips al the <.'asino tables, browbeating proressors to get special favors for his athletes and ha rassing and threatening any or has players who at · tempt to blow the whistle on him. f' w ol the Mlleaat on1 could be traced back to Tarkanhm. )'tl Tark 1ol lbe headllnes and tht notoriety The Khool &Ot I lbrtt·)'ear proballon, which bfa•n atter Tarkanlan left for UNLV ln 1973 H HY• M acceptff a better otrer btlfore \he Lona D ach charges surfaced. but th NCAA and Loni Beach Pre11 dent Stephen Horn t.'Olll~nd hu knew what was coming and •klpptd town. THE NCAA THEN FOUND numerous ''tolallwul J&&aln.sl Lu Vqu. sla1uun1 the li<.'11001 with ft two year probation in 1977 and rt.•(·o mmendlng u two-year suspension for Atrafl Ir•• ••• C"e•rf, Tarlca11la11 ••••• all•e••· •h•dttd a11d preOC"C"•ph~d~ ltardlt1 a •••••• operator. So•tt ••fl lttt C"lllfl.,afn •••• ...... Tarkanlan one of the worsl penalties against a coach ever. Tarkanian, Insisting that he never got a fair hearing from the NCAA. won ft court injunction against the suspension but could still lose his job when the appeal is scheduled to be heard this December. The team as suffer ing, too, s ince it as banned from the NCAA tournament that begins Friday. Most of the UNLV evidence implicated J ohn Bayer. Tarkanian·s predecessor , who was fired by the unive rsity. "I can't believe Bayer didn't protect his ass." Tarkanian said when he arrived. lie then stopped weekly payments lo the players. YET TARK GOT the notoriety again "It was a frame-up. They're trying lo destroy me," Tarkanian said. At Long Beach State. where Tarkanian turned a low-budget. basketball program into a national power. the NC AA found numerous violations against rootba ll and basketball. A way from the court, Tarkanian seems absent-minded and preoccupied. hardly a See TARKANIAN, Page 82 TARKANIANS AT HOME Awa~ from the lights and noise of the Las Vegas strip. Coach Jerry Tarkanan a poses .,..r,,... .. with rus wife Lois and oldest son Danny an their spacious hom e Gets Work; '.Andy OK From AP Dispatches 3 PAL M SP RINGS J i m Fregos1 is convinced ir he works Dave LaRoch harder in lhe spring the California Angels re· hef pitcher's work will be better in the summer. Th e Angels' man ager has named the lefthander as one of the four pitchers who will work in Wednesday's Cactus League ; opene r against San Diego. J La Roche worked only nine in· : na ngs all l ast s pring under 1 form er manager David Garcia. l then went on to set a club record '. with 25 saves with 10 victories. ( He lost out on the American 1 League Fireman of the Year i Award when New York 's Rick Gossage picked up a save , against Boston in the American League East title playorf game . t LaRoche app ea r e d in 59 ~ games la sl season , finishing f with a 10·9 record and a 2.81 J E RA. • "I won't have to work as long J as this season now that we have i Jim Barr ," La Roche says. r "He's been a starter in the past ' so he is capable of going four or • five innings if necessary. I'm better if I work frequently, but not for long." The Angels signed righthander Barr as a free agent a fter he played out his option with San Francisco. In another move lo bolster their bullpen. t.he._Angela took. Barr's advice and s igned a second pitcher from San Fran· cisco. right-bander C harlie Williams. That gives Fregosl lwo capa· ble relievers from each aide - La Roche and Ken Bretl from the left, and Barr and Wllllams from the right. A ..... l•Jlreufl'e VERO BEACH -Andy -Messersmith, whom the Los An&eles Dodgers hope will fill the void left by the departed Tommy John, was impreulve Monday in bia first appearance or the sprl.nl. ~ The 33-year-old Messenmitb, signed· aa a free agent by the Dodaen followlnt bl1 release art.er an lnJury filled seuoa with the New York Yankee1, aave up one bU In two inaln11 • wbile strlldna out three durtna an ln· t.er·aqUlld aame at Dodaertown. "He was very lmpreaalve," 11ld llauaer Tom Latorcla. "He tbNw bard and he Ulnw 1 some very aood breaklna \I plte ....... · Tbe Dodier nplan did not fan 10ftll TbeJ loetto a..._ol reHnH U·t. Rookie BUI Swtadd, pt.cbllll( for &be res· alan, .. " up tbNe nlDI Ii &Ill ftftla .... . ~ v .... .,. ....... ~ for-,.U...-rm .. ,_. . o..., ftDmlllloll d ..... ~· ....... fer Ulil 11•rN1''..., ,_ t8 .. ,, .• No Budging Umpires Ready To Begin Strike A ttomey__R1ch1<: Phillips, trv ing to negotiate sepa rate new in· dividual contracts for 51 major l eague umpires. says tha t league presidents Lee MacPha1l a nd Chub F eeney refuse to budge in talks Bas ketball Association otracial. who is guaranteeiJ S45.000 a ler 10 years StEVE YAN HORN DAVID KOEHLER JERRY TARDIE "These are individual con· tracts we 're negotiating but their feeling seems to be if they give in to one umpire, they'll have to give 1n to all of them." Phillips said Monday "And remember. an NBA of· r1c1al is working only 82 game:. O\.-er 200 days. giving htm plenty of tame a t home." Phillips said "In baseball, umpires work 162 gam es within 180 days which mea ns they a r e working or t raveling t>very day for :.1x months .. Two Area Stars Lauded The result. the attorney said. has been a rigid stance by botfi league presidents. "OF ALL THE SI umpires. since we started talking. they of fered one a S500 increase over wh at they o ffe red be rore. ·· Phillips said . "That's all .. PHILLIPS SAID that almost :ill umpires make no more than S2.000 over the minimum set for the ir experience level. He said the three highest paid umpirl's. Bill Haller of the AL and Ed Va rgo and Doug Harvey of the NL. all t!arned SJS,000 I ast year. Sl.500 over their minimum and that all three were offered con· tr acts ror 1979 between $2.000 a nd $2.700 a bove the $39,000 manamum. Van Hom, Koelder Earn First Team Alt.county By ROGER CARLSON Among the 20 selections are five juniors . Because of the s talemate. it appears that local umpires will be pressed tnto ser vice fo r spr ing traimng ga mes which begin Wednesday . All major league clubs have been told lo arrange backup crews. much as they did las t August when the umpires staged a one -day strike Of IM Dally ...... Sl.tH The. Orange Coast area captured 10 of 20 berths on the Daily Pilot's All-Orange County team for 1979, topped by Coach of the Year Jerry Tardie of Mater Dei High. Olivier. who has led Los Amigos to the CIF 3-A semifinals. is .joined by Van Horn on the first learn , while El Toro's Ron Holmes is a second team choice . The attorney also cited Na· tional Football League officials who. he said. earn $800 per game after 10 years. "For 22 Sundays. they earn almost $18,000... he said. "We have some umpires who don't ma ke $18,000 fo r a full season." Aaiong the firs t team picks are Estancia High's St.eve Van Hom and Corona del Mar's David Koehler. while Mater Dei's Sal Gaytan and Randy Heidenreich of Marina were granled second team spots. Tbe Dally Pilot's All·Orance County First Team Player, School Ht. Cl. Avg. Clayton Olivier, Los Amigos 6·10 Jr. 27.6 Clark Guest, Troy 6·3 Sr. 20.9 Gary Heil, Lowell 6·2 Sr. 23.1 Steve Van Horn, Estancia 6·4 Jr. 21.2 Dave Koehler. Corona del Mar 6-0 Sr. 16.0 TAJlDIE'S MONAllCllS upset the dope sheet in the Angelus League to take that circuit cbam· pionship and Mater Del went to the CIF playoffs for t he seventh time in ll_years, Including lhr · ast four straight. - Second Team "They can do whatever they wa nt." Phillips said. "If we're still apart. our guys won't sign contracts. I don't think they <the leagues l care nght now. I 'm dis· a ppointed in Mac Ph ail and Feeney for not supporting guys who have served them." The umpiring m1n1mum salary is $17.500. Mater Dei has chalked up a 187·99 record un· der Tardie in his 11-year tour. Sal Gaytan, Mater Dei Ron Holmes, El Toro Rich Cottrell, Sunny Hills Randy Heidenreich, Marina Steve Buechele, Servile 6·0 6-5 6·2 6·7 6·3 Sr. 19.5 Jr. 21-t Sr. 15.7 Sr. 13.1 Sr. 20.5 Phillips met with Mac Phail and Feeney several times last week. He sees little light in the standoff. Van Hom averaged 21.9 points a game and scored in double figures in 25 of 26 outings with a high of 31and30 points. Al season's slart he scored in the 20a eight stra1g,bl times. Tblrd Team THE CURRENT problem is unrelated to last year's strike. Phillips said. "This is a matter of Individual contracts," he sajd. "That was a question of the un· ion 's collective bargaining agreement." "Mac Phaal says that he agrees with much of what I say but wants the umpires to wait,'' said Phillips. "He says they'll make it up in the future . Feeney says baseball has always been fair with the umpires and believes they are being trealed more than genero u s ly right now ·· Andre Smith, Buena Park 6·3 Jr. 24.4 Pete DeCasas, Mission Viejo 6·2 Sr. 20.3 Truiett Hatton. Marina 6·1 Sr. 12.9 Koehler, an AJJ-CIF guard for the Sea Kings as a Junior, led the Sea Kings to a noasy 21·3 record going into Friday's CIF 3·A quarterfin.fls aatne wltb Los Amigos-the last Oran1e Coast area sur· vivor in the eliminations. Rico 1bompson, Huntington Beach 5·11 Sr. 9.2 Phillips said lhe umpires want to reach parity with officials in other sports. He cited the $12.500 difference between an umpire with 10 years or major league expe rience whose minimum salary is $32.500 and a National Player of the year ls Clayton Olivier, the 6-10 junior who led the Los Amigos Lobos to the Garden Grove League championsbJp. John Saunders, Mater Del FoartbTeam Brian Freeman. Newport Harbor Mike Samuels. Dana Hills Jerr Andrade, Ocean View Mark Baker, Garden Grove Herman Brown, Santa Ana 6·3 6·1 6-4 5·11 6·5 6·1 Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. 19. l 15.6 14.6 19.8 25.8 20.2 And what does Phillips say? "I say neither league is even in the ball park .. Uvsey £o•blnes Athletes, UteratJtre BJ JACKIE RYMAN Of•DMIY,,... ..... Race and aex dlscrtmlnalion ln athletics. Success: does It have to mean winnlna7 Corruption ln sporta. Violence on the play. Ina field. 1 Thoee aren't µ,pica you 're likely to come acro11 often ln a community colleae pby1lcal educaUon coune, and certainly not ln a freshman composition clasa. • At Oranp Coa•t Co1Je1e, they pop up in both. At tbe same Ume. ID "Sport In Amertan ~," ror lnatance (thal'• &qliU lot P.1!. m >. And ''Tbe Plycllalop ot Sport." TllCJ9S aAllD were created because of aa llldlla teadler wltb u unuauaJ at· trtlMM: ... allo. belketbell ~ .. . TIM 1111111 ti 0nnae Comeau ... ·, Herb Lty!i~ w-.o coached the OCC Mak team from 1-.Te and now teulllll fnlllmaa compoatUoa . • • Liv1ey, concerned that many athletes are turned off by composition, lite rature and theater, decided to draw on bls UD· usual background to turn them on. And so, in 1975, was born a class called "Sport ln American Society ... Students slgn up for both English 100 and P. E. 213. "THIS IS NOT a basket-weaving course,'' Llvsey says. "I'm serious about teacbtn1 1Eaall1h literature and I'm serious about the subject matter. "The student came in because of the s ubject matt.er and he's 1oinS to be In · trodueed to wrtUna. The subject matter makn lt Dalatable." Tbe da11 tut book Is ''Winnln t ts Ever~. and Other Amerie1n 11)1.ba." A arammar and composlUoa bcM* ii also uMd. ,\ TYPICAL 1:88A)' 111l1nment ml1ht lnYOlWI deftaiq tbe term• "athlete" .nd "participant" and discussing the d if · ference, Uvsey said. The course ts closely linlred with ls second class. organized three years later with psychology professor Betty Inman. Called "The Psychology of Sport," It's list· ed as both English 140 and Psychology 110 Topics that could come up In either cfa11s include psychological motivation, sex roles-in s. port, exploitation of athletes antJ lhe ex-athlete In society. ONE OF THE R EQUIRED texts In the p1ycholol)' class Is the Pulitzer Prize· wlnnina plav "Thal CbamplonshJp Seaton," wblch ls acted out In clasJ as reader's lhealer. Student.a this 1prln1 •lll allO attend a performance ol the play In Lons Beach. "I had a number or people In the claas 1a1t year who bad never seen • play," See UVSEV, Pase I Z 17 ... I ' . •"1 Your Hometown--·~~ Daily N(•wspaper . i • : .•• ib .. ~ VOL. 72, N0.6S,3SECTIONS. 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI.A TUESDAY, MARCH6, 1979 TEN CENT§ Panic Feared in Weekend Gas Drought~ NEW YORK <AP> -Weekend serv1c~ stat.Ion cloel.n11 would create Iona llnes at other UmH and could prove the "paycholoalcal trigger needed lo send pri«s Ulto orbJt," warns an oil tJCpert Dan Lundber In his weekly ntiw letter. Hid dealers could raise profit marg ns beyond fedt>rally mand•ted reilings tf aale11 were t·urta1led by the iovtmment They would have to 1et more return on lesi. ga21ollne to make the 111me amount of money, he said LUNDBERG I S AMONG MANY EXPE&TS pessim11bc about gasoline prices. which have risen 1&boul two cents a gallon since Jan 1. He and other analysts predtt'ted Monday that the increase will grow even sharper In coming months, but just how sharp is uncer- tain due to continued questions about world crude oil supply "The key variables to me are the OPEC price, which bas yet w be determined, and the marketplace," said Eugene Nowak, an oil lndWllry analyst at the Wall Street firm or Blyth Eastman Dillon. · Th price increases since Jan. 1 vary by area. Regular-grade leadea gasoline bought at a Cull-service station costs an average 76 8 cents per gallon in Chicago, up from 74.8 cents two months ago, the Lundberg Letter said. The average price in Newark, N .J .. rose from 65.6 cents per gallon to 67.4 cents TUE PRICE RISE FOR UNLEADED gas is even more pro· nounced. Motorists in Omaha pay an average 80.S cents a gallon, up from 77 .3 cents in January. Lundberg said the impact or OPEC crude oil price increase, ef. fective Jan. 1, is only now being fell. He also said prices will rise as much as a nickel in the next few weeks because the Depart- ment of Energy loosened price controls last week. This move. linown as the "tilt.'' allows refiners to pass more 9f their costs to consumers. It is designed to encourage companies to build refineries, but It also will raise gasoline prices 5.1 cents in the next two years. the DOE estimates. Prices also will rise soon due to the supply squeeze created by the Iranian revolution. Several OPEC members have r aised oil prices on their own to cash in oo the tight supply. OPEC COULD DECIDE WHEN IT meets later this month to raise crude prices even more than the 3.9 percent scheduled Aprll 1. Nowak predicts a 10-cent-a-gallon rise in the price or gasoline by the end of 1979, bu( s aid, "Ir the OPEC price goes higher, that would be a bit conservative " Energy Secretary J ames Schlesinger said last week that prices or unleaded gasoline could lop $1 a gallon in a year or so. with leaded regularupto7Scents. ~~-~----------~------~-~~ Vietnam Willing To Talk BANGKOK, Thailand CAP> - Vietnam announced today it is willing to negotiate with China once all Peking's troops have left Vietnamese soil and ended a more than two-week frontier war. But a Vietnamese Foreign Ministry statement said if Chinese leaders were tryi~ a "withdrawal trick" to escalate the war then Vietnam would fight on "in the spirit or general mobilization." The statement said Chinese troops had to withdraw "com- pletely anq unconditionally from Vietnamese territory before any negotiations take place." It also said China was forced to announce it was withdrawing Monday because it found itself in ''difficult circumstances" - military losses, support Russia and others were giving Vietnam, and even objections to the war in * * * * * *· * * * New Oil Hikes? Algeria Threatens 25% Rise NEW YORK <AP> -Industry sources said today that Algeria -one or OPEC's smallest mem- bers -is threatening a 25 per- cent boost in oil prices. The in- crease would be the largest of all the hikes announced by mem- bers of the oil cartel. Libya, meanwhile, said that it was doubling -from S percent to 10 percent -the size of the in· crease it announced last week, and Venezuela increased prices on several petroleum products it exports to the United Slates. There was no immediate in· dicalion as to what s uch in- c r eases s hould th ey materialize might mean to American service station prices. The Organizati o n of Petroleum Exporting Countries had scheduled total 1979 price hikes in its base price for oil of 14.5 percent. But several nations have taken advantage of the supply squ~ze caused by the Iranian revolution to impose ad ditionaJ increases Most of the ri ses hav e be e n in th e neighborhood of 9 percent. The oil price increases and the cutback in supply already have caused problerr..:; for American co n s umers. The price o f ga soline has gone up by about two cents a gallon since Jan. 1 and new government pric ing regulations a re expected to add 10 cents at the pump over the next two years. Prices for regul ar. leaded gasoline at full·service stations average 3bout 70 cents a talion although the price varies widely with 19Cation. A federal Judge has been asked to halt implementation or the new rules until the govern- ment determine whether they would encourage motorists to use ISee OIL, Page A2 I Suspect Marcuse Explains China. It said any negotiations ---~···outcrtalre-ptac-e at-the -vice Held in HB Art td Students -8/ashinns------.. .... ,PlllU--•-•osMntM foreign ministers' level at a time and place to be agreed on later. Hanoa radio reported filblinl was continuing in Lang Son province north or the Vietnamese capital and cl~med J{anoi's troops killed or woundtd more than 700 Chinese in fighting Mon- day in Hoang Lien Son province in the northwest. Nhan Dan, the Vietnamese Communist Party newspaper, said Peking's a nnouncement that Chinese troops began pull- (See VIET, Page AZ> BlossomTi•e Joni Galt, 18, clearly has the coming of ~pring on her mind as she is framed in the lush blossoms on a flower- ing plum tree. The humanities major couldn't resist a closer look at the springtime splendor as she made her way across the UC Irvine campus. Pool ~ertified by AAU Heritage Park Olympic Qualifier Site By PIDLIP ROSMARIN o.-. o.6tr PIMtSIMf The Amateur Athletic Union has at last certified the City or Irvine's Heritage Park 50-meter pool for Olympic qualifying ev~nts. Paul Brady, assistant city manager, said an AAU official confirmed Monday , by telepbone.. t.ha.t work done. to streteh the aluminum pool, said to be too short originally by a half-inch, was satisfactory Work on the pool bad been ex· tended an extra eight months when it was determined that it wasn't al uniform length and the AAU withheld certification. Wit.bout certlficaUqn, any rec· ords set in the QOOl would be discredited and no 'official meets could be beJd there. The AAU requires that the eool be uniformly 50 meters, down to 42 inches deep. The contractor, the Ruane Corp. of San Gabriel, initially tried to stretch the pool by bolt- ing back the aluminum struc· ture to supporting struts. The tactic worked, but only to qualify the pool to a depth or about two feet. Last inonth a second efCort 9.'as made, spurred by the fact that the city had withheld a final payment of fl25,000 on the ap- proximately $650,000 contract. This lime Ruane made cuts in the stnactural support material, and pushed back the ends or the pool, rewelded them and recon· oected the structural supports. Alfred Buxton, Ruane Corp. presicteot_ maintained that the pool never was too short, but that the AAU was enforcing a riaoroua requll'ement that is met by probably only a handful of Pools in the country, if that many. "The measurements we final· ly were talking about got down to about 1/16 or an inch," Buxton said. "It's almost impossible to be that precise with any material." Buxton emphasized that the pool never had to be torn up, the possibility or which was report- ed earlier. Brady agreed and said none or the tile surface around the pool was disturbed for the work. Neither Brady nor Buxton could supply an estimate or the cost or the repair work, which Buxton said "We 're swallow- ing." Brady previously had estimat- ed the cost at up to $80,000. Arter repainting, refinishing and refilling, Brady said, the pool will be reopened. The grand opening is scheduled for April Fool's Day. Gay Officers Due in SF SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -, Police Chier Charles Gain says the department plans to hire homosexuals amonc its minority can· dldates during the next three years. "We want the police de- partment to be a reOecUon of the community, and ob- vloualy, San Ftanciaco bas a 1ubltantial gay popwa· tloa," be said a fter a police softball squad was defeated Sunday by a l•Y team, »9. (}\fer the next three ,ean, Gain said, tbe de- partmmt wW hire about • ...., oftleen trom tbe ellilMBtY a.t. Ria toal. be 1ald,1la I~ p_ereent ........... blchlcltq 1a11, ad • P91U1i1l WOllltD. '• --0 ' Of llM O.ity Pllet Slaff By MICHAEL PA.SK EVICH Of tile o.lfy Pli.t Sl41ff A Huntington Beach man who allegedly went on a hatchet· slashing rampage that left three men injured, one seriously. has told police nothing about what set orr bis Monday morning out- burst, investigators said today .. Robert Dale Martin, 35, or 8211 San Angelo Drive, has been booked into Orange County Jail on suspicion of attempted murder. Bail for Martin, who is employed as a m echanic in Irvine, bas been set at $25,000. Martin was interviewed by in- vestigators Monda y afternoon. They described him as un· cooperative in shedding any light on what drove him to al· legedly chop up the clubhouse, and the men who tried to stop him. The most severely injured or the three men Martin allegedly attacked in the clubhouse or the Huntington Creek Apartments, 35-year-old Joel Dupree, was listed in guarded condition today at Westminster Community Hospital. -· l't"rbert Ma rcu s e , oc · togenarian professor of political philosophy who is called the father of the modern youth revolution. addressed a jam packed room or UC Irvine stu· dents Monday, some of them literally gathered at bis feet. His topic, the ' relation of art <m eaning literature> with politics. was abstruse to the point that Marcuse had some trouble understanding the ques- tions or students. and students appeared lo have dirficulty un- derstandin$! the old professor. Marcuse has criticized societies. both capitalist and Communist. that put emphasis on the performance or produc· tivity of an individual as a measure or worth, rather than the intrinsic worth Marcuse believes human beings have. His best known books were 'One-Dimensional Man," a best-selling paperback published in 1964; and his magnum opus. "Eros and Civilization," a 1955 work that was a synthesis of Marx and Freud. and was credited with contributing lo the philosophy or the hippie move- ment or the 1960s. Wrangling Erupts At Maroin Trial LOS ANGELES <AP > - Michelle Triol' Marvin left the witness stand today after her testimony brought an angry con- frontation between lawyers and the judge scolded them for "emotionally wrangling." Mtaa Marvin, who testified Friday as a hostile witness in Lee Marvin's defense case, was questioned only briefiy today by her attorney, who attempted to introduce eVidence that. Marvin bad OMe been arrested. Illa Marvin told of a day in 1965 .tten she was waiUna ror the act.or to pick ber up at her manqer'a apartment. "I wu waillrll for him and I tu.med oa tbe televi1k>a tet and lbere was Lee altUn1 on the curb1" Miu Marvin said. "He WU Dtiftl arrested.'' At that point, Marvin's lawyer. A. Devld Ka1on, 1 .. ped to bis feet and sbout.ed, "I ob- ject." "What doel be object to, put. llDf Ga lM oc.btr' tide ol tbe cta1e?" lboaled 'lliu llant.D'1 attorney, llarvta llltcbellOD. TIM )Mlse tllea haternllt*I and tlarnteDed to rece11 lbe CIM "..W ~ reeGHI' tbelr .......... He ordered tbe teaUmony about an arrest stricken from the record and said Mitchelson could raise It during the rebuttal Portion or the case. Mitchelson explained that Marvin had been in a traffic ac- eident on the same street where Miss Marvin's manager Uved. He said the arrest was coMect- ed to the accident. W ith that tes timony , Mitchel.son sought to counter an attempt by Marvin's lawyer to show that Miss Marvin kept an apartment for herself which was a secret to her lover. ' "The impUcation is a sexist one," 11.itchelson arguecJ, .. that Mlas Marvin had this clan- de,une apartment, that when M~. Marvtn was away on loca· lion she went to this little apart- ment." Mias Marvin said ahe had sl1ned the leue on the apart- ment ooly as a favor to her mana1er, Mimi Marleaux, but aaJd lhe never Uved there. lll91 Marvin, 4$, la •Wat the SS.yeM"dd actor for St.I mlUion, an Mdmated ball of Mar\'ln'a ....u durtnl tbe 1ls yean the two Uwid IGiPtber. Tbe trial ente~ Ill eilblh week today and wu expected to lut aaotber lftO week1. D•llY PllM SUff PM4o SPEAKS AT UCI Herbert Marcuse The Berlin-born Marcuse bas been both an intelligence agent and a scholar. He came to the United States in 1934, and worke d for the Office or Strategic Services. this coun try's first organi zed espionage agency. and the State Depart· ment, from 1941·50. A hero to some students. Marcuse's political teachings .scan.daJized many in con- servative San Diego County when he was teaching at the University or California at San Diego. He was then in his seven- Ues. Jn 1968, at the height or the <See MARCUSE, Pa~ J\2) Cloas t Weather Sunny and quite warm Wednesday but cooler near \,he coast. Highs Wednesday 65 to 69 at beaches, 75 to 85 inland. Lows tonight in SOs. INSIDE TODJ\ ~ Elected of/iciall are relpOfldinQ to the publtc de- aire o/ the rmat-control move- me-nl be&t tnant.t mu.ti out· oote thdr /oe.t. Story Page C3. ··-· At Y-lenotc. AM .............. .. ..,......,... 0 AM&..-. a L.M.-.,. .:; ==~ ., .. ......... IM ~ ................. ... ~ cs °' ..... ClMllY A• ~ C.M LClt,.._.. a Clelltfe• :;:=-~ ,,., 0••••• u ......... NT ....... ., •-.nee ..... M T-....n u .. ......... , .... ., ....... M .......... c1,1 .....,.....,. M ... .. Cl ~ II.I DAIL\' PILOT aJO Die lnC~ Warfare? N'DJAMENA, Ch•d <AP> Mor~ than 800 peoplf', mott ol them M04lems. w re beU vl'd klllt-d in aoulhern Chad over the weekend lo one of Alrtca 's wont comm\lnal muaat're In ~nl years. t diplomatic sourt>f's rtt· ported toda)'. T ht• Ch•d •ulhorlllt•11. IO(kC'd In a vtrtual civil wn and !ltrug ghng for oontrot of Ulf' capital. m adtt oo official comment on lhf kllltn((li In nd 1trou11d Moundou. 300 mtl~ south of N'l>jamt'na 0 1pfomsL'\ and wltneHes n! turmnii rrom MOW1dou s aid \M town wuis .ir1ppt-d tn 1t ~urge of uncontrolled violence for thl'ff days, leaving local pohtt and troops powerless or unwilling to mtervene. Details or the Moundou r1otang were still coming 1n rrom the re- mote and almost isolated area. but 1t appeared that the local Moslem m1 n or1ty , mos tly t raders and their Cum1hes, was v1rtuaJly w1~d out The k11lmgs sharply increased the threat lhat the . land-locked nation. a former French colony nearly twice the size of Texas, m ay disintegrate in a bloody confrontation between Moslemio and the Christian or animist populalJon. The sources said the Moundou killings were sparked by rumors among lhe Christi an and animist population of a Moslem con· spiracy to seize the entire nation and impose an Arabic-Islamic regime. Gangs or black youths s urged through Moundou. and neighboring settlements Friday. Saturday and Sunday, seeking out and killing Moslem inhabi· tants, the sources said. The French army evacuated the women and children of the 250-strong European population of Moundou. The refugees a r- rived in N'Djamena Monday un- der army escort and gave re- porters harrowing accounts of the massacre. . · The latest killings raised the 'apparent toll or racia l and re- ligious rioting around Moundou since early February to more than 1,000 dead. Several hundred more have died in the fighting further north between the rival fo r ces of Christian President Felix Ma lloum and Moslem Prime Minister Hassen Habre. Chad's 4.S million inhabitants are divided almost equally into Arabic-speaking. light-skinned ----m~u::ms iILthe north .and. black, 1 Christians and animists in the south who speak 11rench and tribal dialects but no Arabic. The Moslems form a small but privileged minority in southern Chad , where they control much or the retail trade. Heights Home Group Meets Me mbers of the Santa Ana Heights Homeowner} Associa- tion will IM>st a meeting tonight to discuss the potential .use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station by commercial airlines . Representatives of Orange County's two jet airlines are ex- pected to attend the meeting that gets under way at 7:30 p.m. at the Registry Hotel. Also expected to attend are representatives of the Marine Corps, the City of Newport Beach and the county Board or Supervisors. Death Ordered BAKERSFIELD CAP) -For the second time in a month, a Kern County Superior Court jury bas ordered the death penalty under the initiative California voters passed last year. A seven- man, five-woman panel ruled Monday that Carl David Hogan, 24, should die in the gas chamber for the stabbing and sledgehammer beating deaths or a mother and her child. DAILY PILOT TP\e0r...,_GMll0..lfl'llOl,.ittt .... ltl>lu om- Dl-111<t--• l•P<llMIV.•"f 1"90.-("-"""''"""'OW.-" '--.. •Hit ......... """"--.., '"'°""' ,,, ... , IOr Coli. Me .. , ... _, llH<ll, _,.,,.. ..... 9(,,,,_ •• ,,, ......... .-. ~ 9"<1>1""1!1(.Mt4 • ~·~ r~Mot'-lt-ISllHM!llf .. f t- S-.0fl ,,,. ""'"'-_,.....,. "'"""•• .. no W.ll .. , ....... c..ote-,c;et ............ ._, ....... ""~·--­, .. ,.~ Vtt• l><t>Nltftt -0.-el #ol""fl' ~ll..wll ..... T ...... 1A, ......... MeNtlfltrJ...,. CMntt IUMI .._.,~, .... ........... _....,,,. hllWt . TellPM"I (11•)....., a .. ....,~...._.._. """'teol ~ ...... Nomd11attons Soug•t Awards Dinner Set by LiQns Tbe Greater Irvine Lion Club has scheduled its fourth annual community awards dinner for . April 21, at the Alrporter Inn. has made outstanding contribu· lions toward Improve ment in the lives of blind, deal, mentally re-, tarted or bandJcapped people . -Valor for a member of the communily who has risked his or her life to save another. $12,000 in Balls Ron Keeva Unz. 17, of North Hollywood has won the $12,000 firs t prize in the Westinghouse Science Scholarship contest in Washington. Unz ' project in theoretical physics predicted the presence of a previous- ly undefined force similar to eravitational force. SmaJ,l Girl Ekctrocuted In Bathtub LONG BEACH <AP> -A 4· year-old girl died after she was apparently electrocuted when she pulled a plugged-in electric curling iron into her bathtub, police said today. J acqueline Carroll told of- ficers she left her daughter, Jami, in the bathtub to answer a telephone call Monday night. When splashing noises stopped about 10 minutes later . Mrs. Carroll said, she we nt into the bathroom and found the child ly- ing on her back under 10 inches or wa er Willillfe curllng lron dangling in lhe tub. Sgt. Ronald Dvorak said or. ricers and paramedics sum- moned by Mrs. Carroll were un- able to revive the child, who was pronounced dead at Los Altos Hospital. The officers said wet hand and footprints indicated that Jami bad climbed out of the tub and grabbed the curling iron, which sbort-<:ircuited when it bit the water. Dvorak said an autopsy was being performed to determine if the girl died of electrocution or drowning. Divers Locate S1mken Ship PANAMA CITY, Panama <AP> -Divers from a British scientific expedition, working ln s hark-infested Caribbean waters, have found the remains or the Scottish ship Olive Branch that sank in 1899. "We know there was no gold or silver aboard but the ship cont ai n s a r c h aeol ogical treasures." said Sara Evertt, spokeswoman for the expediUon. She said the ship sank after arriving with a load or pro- visions for the ill-rated Scottish colony of Fort Saint Andrew, in Caledonia Bay, 20 miles from the present Colombian border. F,....PageAI VIET ••• ( ing out Monday. 16 days after the invasion sta rted. was "con- trary to the real situation in the battlefields." China "is stepping up its ag- gression. and its troops are fran· tically destroying Vietnamese villages." said the pa per . Bangkok intelligence sources said they had no evidence of a Chinese pullout, but intelligence reports freque ntly lag behind battlefield events. Some of these sources said China might be following a sco r ched-e arth policy in withdrawing and that this could be the stepped-up aggression Vietnam referred to. Other inte gence sources said it was likely the fighting would not end abruptly but would wind down to s mall-scale border 'Skirmishing. .. Chinese troops crossed the Vietnamese border Feb. 17 with the declared aim or punishing Vietnam for alleged border provocations, and Pe king's Xinhua <Hsinhua > news agency said in announcing the withdrawal that the Chinese had achieved their goal of "dealing devastating blows to Vietnamese armed forces." It also said China reserves the right ''to strike back again in self-defense" if the Vietnamese resumed provocations along lhe 450-mlle border and called for talks "to discuss ways of ensur- ing peace and tranquility. . .and then proceed to settle tbe boun- dary and territorial disputes." Indians Upset SALT LAKE CITY <APl - The Ute Indians s ay they are canceling all water agreements with non-Indians, ranging from participation in a huge federal project to a contract to supply drinking wate r to Roosevelt, pop. 2,000. Ruby Black, chairwoman of the Ute Indian Tribal Council, told reporters Monday the Utes were upset that a proposed compact ouUin- ing the tribe's bunting, fishing, taxation and water rights has been tied up in a legislative committee. Cookie Caper Theater Dropa All Charge• NORFOLK, Va. CAPl -Tbe cookie caper bu crumbled, and wltb lt disorderly conduct cbar1ea agaln•t cookie con- noi1seur Kenneth Harsh. Faced with defendJna lt• ban 011 off ·P"misel food or drink, a local theater dropped the charge durmc • JO.minute court bearln& Monday. Tb• tbeater alto offeNd Banh and ltla wife one nJ1ht•1 tree ad· mlukln. · Harahi....-:h~ •bowed up at General umnct Court 1UU car· ryln1 bll cbocolate cbip cooklea ID • IOIP paper bq, vowed al· terward: "I'm never lolnl to take food lato a t!Mawr aa.In. I dida'l nea do it OD purp0M tJU Ume.h Banllaadldawtfe ...... IM lltlitaq Qrcle......... -........... = itOp •• .... ...,, ........... ... boulht two eooldea. All ..... . \ bent on following a poeted rule acalnst off.premises. food or drink ln the theater, asked blm t.o hand lt over or leave. Hanh left, accoll\pan.led by a police elCOl't a.ft.er he retused to 1urnnder the cookie. He wu re- leated on SlOO bond. Later, Hanb said be agreed with tbe theater'• rule. "But I never intended to eat the cookie there. So I refused to give lt -.p. '' After the bearln1. Hanb, cookie ln band, said be bad talked wttb the theater'• dlltrtct manapr. Pete Glortod, &mday nl1bt and "we aploloctsed to eacb Gttier • ., .ract,. Joeepb JOC'dan Jr. or~ w.4 U. tlleater to pay OOW1 coltl. Al for llM'9b, be lost tlM SlO be peld to a INlll baedlmu. Aede.eooldeT .. ....... to treae tt .. .... tl,.. alf tllne, .. be ukl Bruce Stephenson, club presi- dent. said the Lions are seeking nom inations for the a wards in five categories: -Citizenship, recognizing an individual, not in government, who has demonstrated outstand· ing leadership in civic affairs. stimulating or bringing about cha nges that have contributed to com munily growth and im· provement. ommonity Activities, for someone whose time and effort on behalf or lhe community have resulted in a significant moral and social growth in the city. -Achievement. for one who F,....PageAJ MARCUSE. • student turmoil, the citizens of conservative La Jolla demanded that the university let his year· to-year contract lapse. though the university stood firm. Irt July of that year. Marcuse went into hiding for a monlh because of an anonymous death threat. He has been a man of seeming contradiction, a gentle man who inspired student riots; who loved music and held a n honorary degree from the New England Conservatory of Music; who smoked cigars; who drove an old Peugeot. e nterta ined at s m all parties a nd had a cat n amed Freddie. Today Ma rcuse is stooped but still tall. white-haired. ruddy-f aced. He speaks in a full baritone, with a slight German accent. He talked Monday about the U topi an world or a r t in literature and said that art is a direct factor in the political struggle . The relation between art and politics in the 60s, Marcuse said , was best illustrated at that time by a photograph of barricades on the streets of Paris . In front of the barricades was a man playing a piano. Marcuse s aid art, i~ m•ny respects, is "more real than the real. or ~iven. reality." "Art as ideology," he said, "tears the ideological veil from th e establis hed r ealit y by recreating reality. Art sees re· ality in the light of its essential negativity an~ promise ... Marcuse said that "the work or art that is not beautiful is not a work of art. '' • He said the recent motion pie · lure, titled "Holocaust ," was successful because it dared to be sentimental and tell the tale of the Holocaust through the story of families, and made no at· tempt at "art." Afterward, after his speech, a s tudent· attempted to as k Marcuse a question. "Professor." he began, "J didn't understand one part or your talk." Marcuse leaned toward him. his eyes went wide ·'Only one?•· he asked. -Press Re l ations, for a journafis t who has brought about sig@icant improvement in the quality of life In Irvine throu-g h hi s m e dium !newspaper, magazine . radio or television >. Nominations should include the candidate's name, address and qualifications. They should be mailoo before March 13 to lhe Greater lrvine Lion's Club. P.O. Box 4092, lrvine, 92716, to the at- tention o f the Community Awards Committee. Splittl•9 Lind s a y W a g nt.'r , 29 . television's Biontl' Woman. has been sued for divorce b y he r hus band of two years, Michael Brandon. 33 They have been separated since July Flno<U Move East; Cities Threatened By The Associated Press Floods born in a Mar ch lhaw and fed by heavy rains spread into new territory in the East to· day and Illinois officiaJs were worried that the Rock River may go on i\s worst ~ampage an history. Ice jams moving downstream caused flooding that forced evacuations in some com munities near Buffalo, N.Y. Al Sunset Bay. where flood damage was estimated at more than St million, helicopters bombarded Saudi Arabia 'Key' to Oil WASJllNGTON MP> - Questions about whether Saudi Arabia can continue t-0 produce enough oil to meet the needs of the Unit· ed States are expected to b e r a i sed in a co n - gr essional report. Sources in th e a d - ministration and Congress say the Se nate Foreign Relations Committee re· {!Ort will state that the Saudis p uclion capaci· ty is severely limited. According to one report, by The New York Times, the study concludes that if Saudi Arabia produced 14 million to 16 million bar- rels of oil a day. it would take only six to 10 years for the country·s supply to peak. F,.._P~AI OIL .•• cheaper, leaded gasoline which J could increase pollution. Industry sources, who asked not to be identified by name, said that Algeria -which ac- counts for about 3 percent of tota l OPEC oil produetion - wants to raise its price April 1. Algeria gets about $14.80 a bar- rel for its oil. higher than lhe OPEC base price o f $13.35 because of t h e quality o f Algerian crude and its con- yenienceto major markets. a t roubles ome Jam with dyna mite an hopes of breaking-it •oose. More than 20,000 commuters were affected by nooding in Con. necticut that disrupted signals on Conra tl 's New Haven Lme. delaying trains to New York by a n hour or 1Uore. Streams also were runnin~ brim full in much or Mississapp. and elsewhere . · Erie J ones. director of the state emergency ser vices de· partment in Illinois, s aid Mon da y the Arm y Corps o f 'Engineers believes the Rock R'tver , in the northern part of the state. may experience the worst nooding in its history. Under the worst condition~. engineers said. some residential and business di s t r icts of Rockford, Ill. the state~ second largest city with 160,0011 population could soon be un de r 10 feet or water. The Rock Ri ver flows through the heart of the cit/. Some businesses. es pecially those located on or near thP river, ha ve a lready moved ex pensive equipment out of base me nt storerooms Volunteers For Medical Tests Sought UC Irvine Medical Center physicians are seeking volun· leers for a testing program tn· vol vi ng t h e t r eatment of s hingles with a recently de- veloped cream Suffere rs from the type of shingles known as herpes zoster must be prepared to undergo treatment for fi ve successive d ays at the medical .center's division of infectious diseases. 101 The City Drive. Or ange. Hoseital staff said volunteers must be suffering from erup· lions of less than 48 hours dura· tion. There is no charge for the treatment. Clinic workers said they are hoperul that the as yet unnamed c r eam wtll l e ad to a breakthrough in treatment of a dist!ase lhat has often defied ef- forts to cure or control it. Tho name Rolls-Royce, lho Rolls·RoYce red1a1or grill., and the Sptrtt 01 Ecstasy hood ornament arc all Roll•· Royce 1radema1ks, used with the approval ot Rolls-Royea Motor) 11 'The mosc famolU motor rac:liator grille in the world. iupcrbly rcptoduoed as a wrist watch. Eighteen karat gold. Exclusive from Corwn. 35 FASH.ION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH. CAllrOltNIA 92660 \ 17 • . l l ~g11na /South Coas t EDITION # Your B o ... t o wn Dally New4••er 1 i VOL. 72, NO. 65, 3SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TU ESOAY, MARCH 6, 1979 TEN CEN ... [·Panic F~ared in Weekend Gas .Drough~ ~ NEW YORK <AP> -Week nd rvlce ataUon cloaln11 would to be det rmined, and the marketplace," said Eugene Nowak. an Tbls move, known as the "tilt," allows refiners to pass more of ~ creat' lOl'\l llnet at ot.Mt Um and could prove the "p.ychok>alcal oll industry analyst at the Wall Street firm of Blyth Eaatma.n their costs to consumers. lt is designed to encourage companies to ' trigger need~ to end prices Into orbit," warm an oU e•pert Olllon. build refaneries, but it also will raise gasoline pri~s S.l cents in Dan Lundber1. in hil' weekly newsl tter, Hid dealera could The price increases since Jan. l vary by areA . Regular.grade the next two years, the DOE estimates. j , t f t i • I l I f r l l , I .. I f raise proflt marains bclyond fed~rally mandated ~emn11 if sales leaded gasoline bought at a full·service station costs an average Prices also will rise soon due to the supply squeeze created by wert> curt~Ut>d by tM 1ovet"tlment They would have to aet mc>rtl 76.8 cents per gallon in Chicago, up from 74.8 cents lwo months the Iranian revolution. Several OPEC members have raised .oil return on less gasollne to make the same amount of money, he ago, the Lundberg Letter said. The average price in Newark, N.J., prices on their own to cash in on the tight supply. said rose from 65.6 cents per gallon to 67.4 cents. LllNDBEkG IS A•ONG '"NY EXPEtTS peaaimlsllc ~bout gasoline pnces, which have risen about two cents a gallon since Ja n 1. He and other onalysts p~lcted Monday that the ancrease wilt ' grow even sharper in coming monlbs, but 1ust how sharp is uncer· tam due to continued questions about world crude oil supply. '"The key variables lo me are the OPEC price, whJcb has yet THE PRICE RISE FOR UNLEADED gas is even more pro· nounced. Motorists in Omaha pay an average 80.5 cents a gallon. up from 77.lcents inJanuary · Lundberg said the impact of OPEC crude oil _price increase. ef· rective Jan. 1, is onlr now being felt. He also said prices will rise as much as a nicke in the. next few weeks because the Depart· mentor Energy loosened price controls last week. * * * OPEC COULD DECIDE WHEN IT meets later this month to raise cruCie prices even more than the 3.9 percent scheduled April 1. Nowak predicts a lO·cent·a ·gallon rise in the price of gasoline by the end of 1979, but said, ''If the OPEC price goes higher, that would be a bit conservative." Energy Secretary James Schlesinger said last week that prices of unleaded gasoline could top $1 a gallon in a year or so, with leaded regularupto75cents. * * * * * * New Oil Hikes? Oaapel Still Stands It was the picture of tranquility at St. Mary's Episcopal .Church in Laguna Beach today, despite reports a historic chapel and Harris Hall were to be de- molished this morning. But church of· ficials r:eacbed today said the buildings are still scheduled to be removed, despite efforts by a group of citizens seeking to buy the buildings and restore them. The chapel and hall, built in the 1920s , are part of the church property located at 428 Park Ave. Marcuse Dazzles UCI Assemblage \ . By PIDUP aOSMAa lN Of .. DMty "" ..... . work that was a synthesis of Marx a nd Freud , and was credited witb contributing to the pbi1090Pb1 ol tbe hippie move. ment ol tbe UIOI. Tbe Berlin-born llareuse bu been both an lnt.elli1ence a1ent and a 1Cbolar. He came to the Ua'ited Stat H in 1114, and wor ked for U1e Ofllce of Slra\elle · S. wieee, thla COUil· try'a ftnt arpnlied espionace •1eney~I die ltate Depart· meat, JIU•. A bero to some atadenta, llareuae'• poUUoal teaebinc• acand allHd many in eon- Hnatlve S.n Dl~•o Count1 WMe be WU .. HblDC at lbt Ualventt1 ol Callfornla at Sall Diqo. Ill ...... la Ma ...... u... •• .. Ill tbl ~ at·tbe ••• ....... u.auwo1· COMM, ..... La Jolla ......... tbat dal -~ let bla ,..... .. ,.. ........... ......... ......... m_. .. . .. ,.,., ,...., . .,.. ........... ~ .......... ... ,....., , Smal,l Girl EWctrocuted In Bathtub LONG BEACH <AP > -A 4· year·okl girl died after she was apparently electrocuted when she pulled a plugged.in electric curling iron into her batlltub, police said today. Jacqueline Carroll told of- ficers she left her daughter. Jami, in the bathtub to answer a telephone call Monday night. When splubini noises stopped about 10 mlnutel later, ¥n. Carroll hid, 1he went into tbe bathroom and found the child IY· iq oa her back under 10 inches of water with the curlln1 tron dan1Una tn tbe tub. Sit. Aonald Dvorak said of· ftcer1 and paramedics 1um· moaed by Mrs. CanoU we~ Wl· able to revive tbe child, who 'NU ~ODOUDC'ed dead at Loe Altol oepltal. Tie omeen NJd nt band and footprbU IDdica\ed that Jami bad oll•bld out of the tub and ... ......... c ..... iro. ... ~ -..rt-drealMd ..... lt -tbe ..... Dvaa Mid u autopty •• ~ .......... Algeria Threatens 25% Rise NEW YORK <AP) -Industry sources said today that Algeria -one of OPEC's smallest mem· bers -is threatenJng a 25 per· cent boost in oil prices. The in· crease would be the largest of all the hikes announced by mem· bers of the oil cartel. Libya, meanwhile, said that it was doubling -from 5 percent · to 10 percent -the s ize of the in· crease it announced last week, and Venezuela increased prices on severaJ petroleum products it exports to the United States. There was no immediate in· dication as to what s uch in· 2 Sunnner a~ses , Get Study Capistrano Valley Unified School District trustees voted 6 to 1 Monday to further study two proposed "pay·as·you.go" sum· mer school programs. La Verne University and the American Learning Corporation have offered to conduct s ummer school classes for Capistrano Valley.students. But school board President George White voted against any pri vat ely operated summer school program in the district beoause, "Too many children could not afford the cost." Trustee Edward Westberg argued that the district should "make something available" since it is likely that state funds will not be available again this year for traditiona l s ummer classes. Officials said they doubted s ummer school funds would be available because of Proposition 13 budget cuts. Trustee Willia m Thompson said he believes families in the district could afford the summer s chool costs a nd noted that scholarships might be provided if the board fell it necessary. Thompson. Westber g and Trustee Ted Kopp said they favored the summer school pro- gram offered by La Verne University. Westberg sajd La Verne's tui· lion of $65 for a three ·hour, 24· day elementary school course and as much as $110 for the equivahtnt of a full·year high school Course "is not extremely expensive." American Leaming Corpora· tion officials have offered a pro- <See SUMMER, Page A.2) At!tor Files c r eases -s hould th ey materialize might mean to Am erican service station prices. The Organi z at i o n of Petroleum Exporting Countries had scheduled total 1979 price hikes in its base price for oil of 14.5 percent. But several nations have taken advantage of the supply squeeze caused by the Iranian revolution to impose ad· ditional increases. Most or the ri s es ha ve bee n in the neighborhood of 9 percent. The oil price increases and the cutback in supply already have caused problems for American (;ay Off ice rs Due in SF SAN FRANClSCO <AP> -Police Chief Charles Gaio says the department plans to hire homosexuals among its minority can· dldates during the next three years. "We want the police de· partment to be a renection of the community, and ob- viously, San Francisco has a substantial gay popula· tioo." he said after a police softball squad was defeated Sunday by a gay team, 20-9. Over the next three years, Gain said , the de· partment will hire about 650 new officers from t~e eligibility list. His goal , be sai d , is SO p erce nt minorities, including gays, and 20 percent women. Divers Locate S1mke n Ship PANAMA C ITY , Panama <AP> -Divers from a British scientific expedition. working in s h ark ·infested Ca ribbean waters. have found the remains of the Scottish ship Olive Branch that sank in 1699 "We know there was no gold or silver aboard but the ship co ntains ar c h aeological treasures." said Sara Evertt, spokeswoman for the expedition. She said the ship sank after arriving with a load or pro- visions for the ill·fated Scottish colony of Fort Saint Andrew, in Caledonia Bay, 20 miles from the present Colombian border. Plastic Surgeon Faces New Lawsuit EmbaWed Santa Ana plutic sur1eoll Dr. Ralpb Small faces a new le,aJ ent-...Jement today in a lawsuit filed bl' a former pa. tient. Actor Patrick Keane contends tn tbe OrGle County Superior Court luit be bu been unable to work atnre Small operated on him to remove a 1car on bla face. TIM Ktor la aeetlq a un· 1peelfted amount ol damap lit tbe elvtl complaint Small ,ru barred by a Superior Court order ... , ID08tb from pncttctq m.ctlcllle Ill tbe wall• of ebar1•1 of .. iron ••ua-e. and muaive Lmeam-,etence .•• J\ldp William S. Lee issued tbe &em..JJOl'ary restraining order tbat 1t0pped Small's practice based on tbe cbar1es by tbe it.ate Board of Medical Quality Aa1urance. Tbe aUeciUom followed an in· vestl1•tion tnto the death lut Nov ember of a 33·yeu·old woman wbo went Into reapiratory arrest while un· deraoAnll breut lmplant •urterY at lmall'1 offtce1 at Mao s. 8rlMol St., Suta Ana. Lee'• ..-. la to remain in .t· feet ..W ~ OB Small'1 Ueew nwocaUon or auape•ioD cu r. llllW a., the atate ll*lleal ~ c on s umers . The price o f gasoline has gone up by about two cents a gallon since Jan. l and new government pricing regulations are expected to add IO cents at the pump over the next two years . Prices for regular. leaded gasoline at full·service stations average about 70 cents a talion although toe price varies widely with 19Cat. . A federal judge has been asked to halt implementation of the new rules urtil the govern· ment determine whether they would encourage motorists to use <See OIL, Page A2 I Vietnam Willing to N~otiate BANGKOK, Thailand CAP> - Vietnam announced today it is willing to negotiate with China once aJl Peking's troops have left Vietnamese soil and ended a more than two·week frontier war. But a Vietnamese Foreign Ministr y stat.ement s aid i( Chinese leaders were tryinl! a "withdrawal trick" to escalate the war then Vietna m would fi ght on "in the spirit of general mobilization." The statement said Chinese troops had to withdraw "com· plelely and unconditionally from Vietnamese territory before any negotiations take place." ll also said China was forced to announce it was withdrawing Monday because it found itself in "difficult circumstances" - military losses. support Russia and others were giving Vietnam, <See VJ ET, Page A2 > ~WHATS I IN A. NA.ME? CLEVELAND <l\P >-The Pitts burgh Conference is meet· ing in Cleveland again this year. The scientific conference on a na lytical chemistry and ap. plied s pectrosCOJt Y outgrew Pittsburgh's facilities and bas met here Instead ·since it left its home city in 1968. Coast Weathe r Sunny and quite warm Wednesday but cooler • near the coast. High s .ti Wednesday 65 to 69 at ) beaches, 75 to 85 inland. ' Lows tonighlin SOs. 1 · ? " INSIDE TeD.4 Y .t ~ Elected olficiah are • relpOftdittg to the public ck· · t tire of the Md-control move· ment but ttftantt m\ltt out· uote tlwtr /~•. Story Page · C3. .. a ., .. IN M At CJ .. ., ... -., .. M ... ' \ J\.Z DAILY PILOT L/SC Infant's Brain Harmed? B1 KATHY C'LAN Y Of .... 0.hY f"lle4 SIMI The nunnnA i.u~rvl~or on du ty the nlaht Or Wilham Waddill alleacdly slrensl~ a newborn abortion urvivor tt1:stlf1t'd today that the doctor told twr t~ In r u n t .. w us a c v ,. r l'I )' h r u 1 n duma~t-d ul birth .. · Jean Holston. thl•n nursm1 :;upt-rvisor nt Wl'stmm11ter Com munlty llosp1tL1l. te,ll(1f"d at thl• 4;s.ye3r otd tluot 1nato n II ,arbour physll'llrn's murder retrial Ill Orange County uperlor Cour\ that Waddill :.uM1ested th•t she move on to dutae:. eli.c wher4! after he urrived ul the hosp1ta.J nursery "He put his hand on my arm and said he was :.ure I had du£ies elsewhere," Mri. Hoh.ton told the five man. seveo·woman JUry "And he SJ1d I hud to realize that the baby was severely brain damaged und it had not d1ed tn the uterus us 1l wab supposed to." Mr~. Holston continued. Dana Point Condo Approved Plans for a five·unit con· dominium development on 1.1 acres of land near Dana Hills High School in Dana Point were approved on a 3· 1 vote Monday by the Orange County Planning Commission The commission's approval came despite the objection of surrounding homeowners and over the "no" vote cast by Com· missioner William MacDougall. The five units would be built on the north side of Stonehllls Driv west of Dana Hills High School. M acDougall suggested of. facials of Ford Development Co mpany continue to work on a plan that would be more accept. able to surrounding s ingle· fa mily homeowners Commissioner Charles Ben· nett. who abstained in the ftnaJ vote . suggested that plans be re· worked for four units rather than five. He did not explain why. The proJect had been oµposed by homeowners in the nearby Sunset Hills development and by members of Dana Point Citizens for Act.ion on the grounds that it would be too dense and would devalue nearby property. The project was supported by the Dana Point Chamber or Com· merce Volunteers For Medical Tests Sought UC Irvine Medical Center physicians are seeking volun· leers for a testing program in· volving the treUment of shingles with a re<.'enlly de· veloped cream. Sufferers from the type of shingles known as herpes zosler must be prepared to undergo treatment for five successive days al the medical center's division of infecUous diseases, 101 The City Drive, Orange. Hospital staff said volunteers must be suffering from erup- tions of less than 48 hours dura· lion. There is no charge for the treatment. Clinic workers said they are hopeful that the as yet unnamed cream wi l l l ead to a breakthrough in treatment of a disease that bas ofte n defied ef· forts to cure or control it. DAILY PILOT International Dag Students from a variety of countries spent Friday through Monday with students from Laguna Beach's Thurston Intermediate School. From le ft a re Pojai P<?okakupt, Th a iland. Leslie Coonrad. Tunisia, and M1ch~le Older. ~ew Z~aJand. The students, all taking part m the American Field Service program. stayed with Laguna Beach families over the weekend and told local students about their countries in classes Friday and Mon· day. Oiad Killings Put At More Than 800 N'DJAMENA. Chad <AP l More than 800 people. most or them Moslems. were believed killed in southern Chad over the weekend in one of Afri ca's worst communal massacres in recent years. diplomatic sources re· ported today .. The Chad authorities. locked in a virtual civil war and strug- gling for control of the capital, made no official comment on the killings in and around Moundou . 300 miles south or N'Djamena. Diplomats and witnesses re· turning from Moundou said the town was gripped in a surge of uncontrolled violence for three days, leaving local police and troops powerless or unwilling to intervene. Details of the Moundou riotmg were still coming in from the re· mote and almost isolated area. but it appeared that the local Moslem minority, mos tly traders and their families, was virtually wiped out. The killings sharply increased the threat that the land·locked nation, a former French colony nearly twice the size of Texas. may disintegrate in a bloody confrontation between Moslems and the Christian or animist population. The sources said the Moundou killings were sparked by rumors among the Christian S"'nd anirrust population of a Moslem con· spiracy to seize the entire nation and impose an Arabic·lslarruc.' regime. Gangs of black youths surged through Moundou and neighboring setUements Friday, Saturday and Sunday, seeking out and killing ·Moslem inhabi· tants, the sources said. Tbe French army evacuated the women and ch.ildren of the 250·slrong European population of Moundou. The refugees ar· Wildcat Strike Won't Close Disneyland A spokesman for Disneyland said today that the amusement park in Anaheim wlll re maln open despite a non.sanctioned strike by about 530 maintenance workers that began at midnight. Tbe atrikers represent 14 of about ao unions involved in the Disneyland operation that al this time of the year employs 4,600 workers. I r onically, t he fl r1t major strike in the amusement park's 23-year hbtory came after the union leader1b.lp a pproved a ne~ c!clntnet for the 14 "'nlona. n was the membership on a 457 to '5 vo&e that rejected the \'Act. Japaeled bJ UM Mri.k• are operatlona lavobln1 ,maln- t,Daac. Of faciUU., baehldbul 1ucb crafta u plumben, electrf. t i•• ad sheet metal worken. Tbe Dl!EIM land 1pok .. man ••id tbe will be able to operate ............ . C°DMI provldinl aome of lm'Vic.. TodlJr a ii ~1 tM .... ~ ................ .. d oaed bat wltea lt ....,.., .... ••llt ..... wlU . ........... &L•• • ....... , ... tM ........ ~ .. um.. • rived in N'Djamena Monday un - der army escort and gave re- porters harrowing accounts or the massacre. The latest killings raised the apparent toll of racial and re- ligious rioting around Moundou sinc.'e early Fcbru<.iry to more than 1.000 dead. O.lly Pllet Staff Plleto SPEAKS AT UCI Herbert Marcuse f',....PageAJ MARC USE. • because of an anonymous death threat. He bas been a man of seeming c.'ontradiction. a gentle man who inspired student riots; who loved music and held an honorary degree from the New England Conservatory of Music; who s moked cigars: wbo drove an old Peugeot, entertained at small parties· and bad a cat named FTeddie. Today Marcuse is stooped but ~till talli. white·haired, ruddy-raced. ne speaks in a full baritone, with a slight German accent. He tal.ked Monday about the Utopian world of art in llterature and said that art is a direct factor in the political struggle. The relation between art and polillcs In the 60s, Marcuse said. was best illustrated at that time by a photograph of barricades on the streets of Paris. Jn front of the barricades was a man playing a piano. Marcuse said art. in many respects, ls "more real than the real, or given, reality." "Art as ideology," he said, ''lHra the ideo1o&jcal veil from t he esubllab ed r eality by recreating reality. Art sees re- ality in the light of its easeotial neaativtty add promise ... Mamase a.id that ·'the work ol art &bat ls not beautiful ls not 1 work of ut. '' He llld tbe reeent motion pie· ture, titled ''Holoca ust," was 1uccft1(ul bec1use It dared to be aenttmental aad tell the tale of the Holocaust t!u'oulb the story of fa mWes, and made no at- t.mpt at "art." Afterward, after bis 1peech, a 1tucte at atteml)te d to 11t . Matt\118 a qlltltloa. "PllOleuor," be be1aQ, ·•1 61a'l ~ ODe part OJ JODI' talk.'' Mueme lnnecl toward btm; .... .,.. --wtdt. ''Olal7 .. , •• ....... ..... Trustees Mull Fate Of ROP Trustees from the Capistrano and Laeuna Beach Unified School Districts will meet Wednesday night to determine the fate of their joint Regional Occ.'upational Prollram. The meeting of the rull mem· bership from both boards will begin at 7:30 p.m. ut Capistrano di strict offices. 32972 Calle r e rfec l o In Sa n Juan Capistrano. The two districts are nearing the end of a joint powers agree- ment in the program that pro- vides on-the-job training for high :;ehool students in both districts. The joiht ROP. plagued with administrative problems in the past year. will get a close look by trustees who are looking for cost-saving alternatives in pro- viding work programs for dis· trict youngsters. Trustees will have a series of options open lo them when they meet Wednesday. They could decide to continue the two-district agreement. only with a five.member Regional Occupational Program board of directors. Trustees appear in agreement the four·mem~r board has its problems, but the districts differ f'ro. Page A J VIET ••• and even objections to the war in China. It said any negotiations would take place at the vice foreign ministers' level at a time and place lo be agreed on later. Hanoi radio reported fighting was continuing in Lang Son province north of the Vietnamese capital and claimed Hanoi's troops killed or wounded more than. 700 Chinese in fighting Mon. day in Hoang Lien Son province in the northwest. Nhan Dan. the Vietnamese Communist Party newspaper. s aid Peking's announcement that Chinese troops began pull· ing out Monday. 16 days after the invasion started. was "con· trary to the real situation in the battlefields." China "is stepping up its ag· gression, and its troops are fran- tically destroying Vietnamese villages." said the paper. Bangkok intelligence sources said they had no evidence or a Chinese pullout, but intelligence reports frequently lag beh.ind battlefield events. Some of these sources said China might be following a scorched·earth policy in withdrawing and that this could be the stepped·UP aggression Vietnam referred to. Other intelligence sources said it was likely the fighting would not end abruptly but would wind down to sm~ll -scale border skirmishing. Chinese troops c rossed the Vietnamhe border Feb. 17 with the declared aim of punishing Vietnam for a lleged bor der provocations, and Peking 's Xinhua <Hsinbua > news agency s~i d in an n ouncing the withdrawal that the Chinese had achieved tbeir goal of "dealing devastatingolows to Vietnamese armed forces." It also said China reserves the right "to strike back again in self-defense" if the Vietnamese resumed provocations along the 450·mile border and called for talks "to discuss ways of ensur· ing peace and tranquility ... and then proceed Lo settle the boun· dary and territorial disputes." on who should receive the fifth seat on the panel. Capistrano officials beJieve the flfth member should be from that district because it has 70 percent of the student partici· pants in the Joint program. Thal proposal is opposed by Laguna trustees. Both districts will also con· sider joining Saddleback Com· munity College's occupational pro.gram -either together, or separately. And a third possibility that will be explored by trustees Wed nesday is joining the Coastline Regional Occupational Program CCROPl which cur· rently serves students in fi ve Orange County school districts. Visbeek Plan Topic Of Meeting San Clemente planning com- m 1 s s ioners will consider a specific plan tonight for develop- ment of Visbeek Ranch, a 2.000 acre parcel inland or the San Diego FTeeway. Plans outlining construction or 3,000 dwelling u nits in the sprawling catUe land, were pre- pared for Nu·Wesl Development Corp .. of Canada, developers of the parcel. Plans also call for a com merciaJ.industrtaJ park ana adult residential area. The ranch land is located in t he hillv countrvside of San ClementJ!, running south from Avenida Pico to the San Diego county line. Tonight's public hearing before planning commissioners begins at 7:30 in council cham· be rs. Last month commissioners certified an environmental im· pact report on the project. and San Clemente City Council members will review that docu· ment when they meet Wednes· day night. City officials said today they do not believe the planning com· mission will be ready to forward a recommendation on the specific plan following tonight's meeting. The bearing is expected to be one of several before spedfic planning for the development is approved. The planned community en· visioned by Nu.West developers would be called Rancho San Clemente. C.ars Looted In Clemente Two San Clemente residents told police burglars broke into their autos Monday and took about $1,100 in loot in a p..ar of apparently unrelated incidents. James Waymire. 339 Calle La Veta, told police a thief broke in· to his locked auto altd took a television and $700 in cash. Waymire reported the breakin at 1: 12 p.m. Gregory Yorbrog h . 224 A venida Cabrillo. said a crook broke a window on his auto parked in front of bis home and took a radio-tape deck valued at $89 from the back seat. He re· ported the theft al 1:45 p.m . ...... ,,..,.... Lind s ay Wa g ner . 29, tele vision 's Bionic Woman. has been sued for divorce by her hus band of two years, Michael Brandon, 33. They have been separated since July. E',.._Page A I OIL ... chaper. leaded gasoline which could increase oollut1on Industry sources. who asked no~ to be identified by name. said that Algeria which ac counts for about 3 percent of total OPEC oil production wants tQ raise its price April 1 Algeria gets about $14.80 a bar rel for its oil, higher than the OPEC base price of $13.35 SCHLESINGER HINTS AT NEW MOVES-A.3 PACT COMPROMISES DET A.ILED-A.4 JAPANESE SPLIT OVER OIL THREAT-84 because of the quality of Algerian crude and its con- venienceto major markets. The Algerians reportedly want to push the price to about $18.50 a barrel. Sources said Algeria also wants to cut production by 10 percent to 15 percent, ap- parently because of technical problems in its oil fields. Iran resumed exports Mon - day. sh.ipping its first load of oil since December. E',.._P~Al SUMMER ••• gram calling for $144 in tuition for four·hour classes for 24 days The program would only be available for first through eighth grade st-udents. La Verne officials would offer cf asses for first through 12th grade students. Superintendent Jerome Tbornsley said the La Verne program would be "basically the same" as traditional sum· mer school. T rustees did not rule out either plan Monday. The school board Monday ap· proved a district-funded special summer school program fo r handicapped youn gster s . graduating seniors in need of less than 10 units and communi· ty education classes for citizensh.ip. Trustees also plan to adopt a resolution this month urging the state legislature to fund summer school programs. The name Rolls-Royce. tho Rolls-Royce rad•elor gr111_,, and lho Sp11t1 of Ecllasy hood ornament are all Rolls Rovce traaomarks, used with lhe approval of Rolls· Royce Mo101s. fl Tbt most famow mocor radiator grille in the world, superbly rcprod~ as a wrist watch. Eighteen karat gold. Exclusive from Corum. \ ' T~, March 8, 1979 S DAIL V PILOT h Energy Chief Warns of Oil Shortag~· WASHINGTON (AP > - Ener1y Secrttary Jame R Srhleainaer. warnlna or pro 1on1ed "'orldwtdt' oil horta&H "potentJally more serious than the oll embargo of 1913-74," aa1d today that President Carter w1U soon announce m eM8Ur a to achieve t1* S Ptr<' nt fu I aavtng requtNd by a recent Int ma llonal ag ment Admlnistrahon sourct's uld propond meaauru , l•b.-led "The lranian R ponse," Wf'i. sent to the Whit House and Blaze at Sea were under c-~naldera&lon by Curtf'r'i atatf Tht> M>Urc "· who declined to ~ ldentlfted, Hid th r o ~re LenuUve plana for Carter Lo ad drt>H thfo nation Monday lo urtee 011 <'Onlt!r'VaUoo Howev.,r. thh1 Um~\able may hav ~n 11el b1r k by Carter·a tudd n de· d1lon lo ny Lo th4t Mlddlt! East th\s week, teekln_g a peace ~u ty betwttn Israel and El(ypt Schlt1•n1er. addtesaln& :. mfftlf\I °' the.-N1Uonal WlllUt> of Clues. emphaaai ed a need for voluntaf)' fuel·aavlnt. but pre· dieted an oil culb11ck of a size 1and duration wt\1ch. by previous •dmtnlstra\lon esHmrlles, might well reqwre lmposillon of m n· datory <.'Onl'lervation llr H id the agreement by mt'mber nations or the fnleroa· Ilona& Ener6'}' A1ency to cut 011 l'On•umpUon by ~ percent may r..quire a reduction tis great as a m1lllon barrels a day in U.S. de· mund That f11ur 1s s ubstantially h111her lban lhe ~.000 lo 600.000 Smoke and flames rise from an off shore gas well in the Gulf of Mexico 45 miles southwest of Morgan City, La., ·following an explosion Monday. Two men were killed and six are missing, while another 27 e scaped in a survival capsule. The blade of a Coast Guard helicopter is seen at upper right. Computer 'No Bargain' County Mulh 'Waste; of ComlTUlter Program By aEBECCA HELM Ot•Dalty,..._.Sutf Members of the Orange Coun· ly Transportation Commission aren't sure that giving Com- muter Computer $185,000 a year to match people with cars is much or a bargain. As a matter of fact, com· missioners wonder if lbe $423,000 already spent pairing riders with carpools through the Los Angeles based firm hasn't been something of a waste. One commissioner, county Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, had lbis Lo say about lhe carpooling company; "Have I lost faith in COm· muter Computer? No, I never did have any faith in them." B\lt Commuter Computer President Arthur Schreiber in· sists his company is doing the best possible job for the money. And Schreiber blames the poor marks given his firm on bureaucrats ' lu st for "paperwork." The company president's de· fense notwith:;tanding, the ex· ecutive committee of the Southern California Association of Governments <SCAG) agreed this week to spend $65,000 to find out what Commuter Computer is all about. The company is a non-profit corporation founded in 1974. It em ploys 56 people in a fi ve-couoty area. all but a handful of them in Los Angeles County. Commuter Computer funding in the current fiscal year is $1.56 million, most or il federal grant money funneled throulb local jurisdictions such as the Orange County Transportation Com· mission. In addition to operating chief- ly with public dollars, Com· muter Computer uses Los Angeles city computers . Moreover, the company carpooling signs affixed along Southern California freeways a.re a contribution of lhe state transportation agency. CalTrans. What lhe firm attempts to do is match freeway commuters to form car pools. And the difficulty it encoun- ters centers around how effec-tively il does that job. That was the issue. raised last month wheQ members of the Orange County Transportation Commission talked about spend- ing $560,000 over the next three years to cover Commuter Com- puter operations in Orange County. Before agreeing to spend the federal grant money , com - missioners said they wanted to know bow effective the service bas been in Orange County. According to a commission staff report, here was the answer: "The first response to staff's request (for evaluation) was that Commuter Computer bad established an Orange County office in 1976 with one marketing person and one clerical person, and that a !'JUmber of signs bad been posted along freeways." The report also said the firm's marketing represe ntative bad contacted "a number of Orange County Cirms soliciting their employees to complete car pool questionnaires." The transportation com- mission thought those answers were too vague. Commuter Computer waa asked for more detailed information. This time tbe staff report said: · "It became clear. . . that Commuter Computer was failing , in its retponalbWty to account lot its performance in Orange County reJaUve to the invest· ment Oranie County has made In this organilatk>n." fJZylllla••• .. Roa Kena UDI, 1', of Mmtb HollJwaod .... wuD the tta.llO flnt prise I• tlle We1Ua1ift1e Science Se........., coatett la W~. Um' project ln :-~~=m;!:.~· The third time around, com- mlaslooen asked Schreiber bow much it coeta to put a rider in a carpool. Schreiber said the data needed to answer such a specific ques· tion llo't lvallable. However, be conUnued, Com· mater Computer's results In Oranse County can be measured ln other ways, ln terms of mooey HYed by UMl'I of the Hl'Vice .... eDYiroameatal concerna. Schnltblr lalcl more tbu a,ooo eountr re1ldeat1 have been Dllffd la HI' pooll llnce ()nap tontJ joined tbe Pf'OITUD la lf71.7C. I barrels a day that the Depart· ment. of Energy has estimated could be saved through relative- ly painless voluntary conserva. \ion. And, although Jran has begun to resume oil production, inter· rupted in December In tbe rev· olution which overthrew tbe gov· ernment of Shah Mohammed Reia Pahlavi, Schlesinger held out little hope that the oil shortage it caused would soon be relieved. Schlesinger said, "We doubt U.S. Cash Sought For Buses A proposal to seek federal funds for a $19.5 million sbop· ping li st containing 200 new buses and other equipment was endorsed Monday by Orange County Transit District direc- tors. The board asked district ad· ministrators to prepare a grant application for federal funds to help pay for 105 large coaches. 95 vans, four service trucks, 13 supervisors' autos and other bus equipment. The grant would cover 80 per- cent of the $19.5 million while state and local funds would pro- vide the remainder. The district now has about 400 buses. including 65 new coaches just being delivered. Seventy or the 105 new large buses would be used to expand district service while 35 would replace older coaches. Twe nty-e ight of the vans would be used to increase service while 67 would replace older minibuses. according to a report to directors. District officials expect the large buses to cost $133,000 each while the vans would cost from $25, 100 to $28,000 apiece. The grant application also would include the purchase of 62 two-way radios at a total cost of $221,402; 86 fareboxes for $247,915; 302 bus benches, $68,554; 420 bus Information signs, $30,880; 1,490 bus stop signs and posts, $97,180. In addition it would include the purchase of $98, 700 worth of furniture and equipme nt for OCTD administrative offices. Baggage Man Was Baggage HONOLULU <AP l -That thumping sound passengers heard as a Hawaiian Airlines in· ler·island flight taxied away from Honolulu Airport terminal wasn't a mecbani~al problem. Jt was a worrie d baggage handler who accidentally was locked inside the luggage com· partment in lhe belly of the DC-9 after it was loaded for a flight to the island of Maui, said airline spokesman Tom McGarvey. Fellow workers missed the baggage handler , whom McGarvey declined to identify, at about the same lime the flight crew heard him banging, the spokesman said. The pilot held up lhe flight and the handler was rescued, saving him from what. at worst. would have been a short but dark and chilly flight in the pressurized compartment. McGarvey said. that Iran's production will ever again approach 6 million barrels a day," ils pre-revolutionary level. Instead. he estimated that Ira- nian oil production may peak at about half lhal level, leaving a chronic shorta1e in world pro- duction that would have to be made up by increases In other countries. "Unless production rises Lo that level, we will be in difficul- ty next winter ," ScbJesinaer said. In recent days, he noted. Iran has restored oil production w about 1.7 million barrels a day and began loading Monday lhe first tanker to receive export oil since the shut.down began. But Schlesinger said Iran's new government does not ap. pear strong, and "iL is not clear that central authority un be re- established over the entire coun· try." 'IJaat's (urp) Tastg &PWlr...,._.. Britain's Prince Charles takes a bite of snake meat curry at a jungle survival school in Hong Kong. Before tasting the delicacy, the prince remarked, "Boy, the things I do for England." ~ti-husi11~ llill Pushed by County SACRAMENTO <AP> -An Orange County anti-busing group has state permission to circulate an initiative to stop mandatory school busing for in- tegration in Los Angeles and limit future busing programs. Secr etary of St~te March Fong Eu said Monday the backers have until July 27 to col-lect 553,790 signatures of reg- istered voters and qualify the proposed constitutional amend· ment for the June 1980 ballot. The measure is sponsored by Doris Enderle oi Huntington Beach and Doris Allen of Westminster. Pot for Cancer? SACRAMENTO CAP l -Mari- juana couJd be used lo treat such di sea ses as cancer and glaucoma, under a bill on the Senate floor. SB 184 by Sen. Robert Presley. D-Riverside. won a 7-1 vote of the Senate Finance Commission Monday. @ It wo~d require state courys to follow the 'federal Constitution in school desegregation orders. Backers say this would limit busing lo cases of deliberate segregation by school districts. The state Supreme Court bas ordered districts to take all "rea· sonable and reasible" steps to end segregation, regardless of cause. The initiative is ai me d specifically at ending the busing that started in Los Angeles last fall, and in beading off the possibility that it will spread to o utlying s uburbs because of declining white enrollment in Los Angeles County. But it is uncertain whether the measure would affect Los Angeles because at least one judge has ruled that segregation in the district was deliberate. Sen. Alan Robbins, D-Van Nuys. tried unsuccessfully last year to qualiry a virtually iden- tical measure for the ballot. and has a similar proposal pending this year. One of the services frequently requested In our store Is jewelry appraisal. Many wish to have their expensive jewelry pieces insured against loss. theft or damage. The other major r easo n f or requesting an appraisal 1s estate settlement. These are two very dlfferef\t prooedures. and the value placed on en item will vary for eech. These appralsals are Issued for exclullve purposes and cannot be used Interchangeably. EiEMWllE comment~ the workmanship and type of fabncat1on: and fi nally t he estimated replacement cost as of the appraisal date. An &pPl'lliSll for Insurance purpOtee Is usually performed at the time of l8'e and the purpc>M la to eltabliah the COit of rep**"*1t or recreation of the atttcle. An appraiul tor estate purpoHt will differ because It Is an ...... ment ot the price an li.m will bring from a wtlting t>Yyer eno Mllef without • fon:ect ..... Since thla lype of IPP'lllMI does not Involve replecemant of the artlcle, the 8lleNed value I• u•ually lower than th1t for ln1ur.nce replllCemef'lt value. Marv Batr Cert1hed Gemo1o01s1 A wel..-lllted llPPf•lul wlll Include a oomplete dneriptlOn ot the )ewelry Item and the 09f\'lttonea ~= the ou•llty of cutting, color encl clarity of dl1mond• with evalu1t1on •Y•t•ma Hplalned: 1~111 HARLES H: BARR ' Identifying cf'laract.nsuce of ......,. flf the •tOftM •nd mount ing: ......_._Seelltr • • ....... ' . ., ... , We provide the customer with the original and one copy of the apprafsal signed by one o f the th ree Cert ified Gemollgists on our staff. A second copy Is kept In our fife. The cu9tomer 1s given a full set of photographs of the items mctuded in the appraisal. There is a fee charged for this appralaal service and It is based on the amount of time required for the work. Items tor apprtlsaf must be left at the store' tor the per10d needed to make the appraisal . Our backlog of appraisal work usually runs about ten days to two weellS but of course can vary ac:cording to our worit load. Sometfmet When ft It very heavy we have to suspend lakelns on eppralsal work for thort periOdl. A new I nsurance replacement appraisal should be colltidered ~ two or ttiree Y'Nf'I since tM coata of material and labor change. Alto It Is • good QPPC>ttunlty to h..,. 'f04JK ~ eteaned ancs thoroughly checked. 99, tr YoU1¥e ntiQ6KllCI '°'"' jewelry, you might w.nt to bring it rn ror a new IPPfalaal• ' .., A4 DAIL y PILOT 'Tl.llNdlly. Muctl a. 1171 ~ wltla~ To•~~''·' Marpbln• Telling Secrets 8HllSR, QUIST 6 HUT\JP DICn. -When lbe doora tart t'l0ttlna for ..crTt meetlnf• In the halla of our local 1ovemmtmt.s around here. 10meUmt1 tht rilhl of th tn payers tu ILnow wbal '1 ao1n1 on 1et.a aerved anywty The word Iuka oul Secrecy ltlf punctured. An<J thf'n you <'•n uy 1ood enovah for It The voxauon for tho a~recy advoutea ia that by aol ly , aome people just won't ahut up They JUl l go ahead and tell the pNple what 'a 1otn1 on O\la COASTAL M TaOPOU of Irvine 1 currently a use m point City Manaa r Bill Woollett haa ,lven up on any nolioo ol attret lntervlewa to aele(:t a new rvlne com munlty development director Woollell Ls lntf'rvlewtn1 lM lhrtt fittalt1U for the job Coat o/ Arma for City Counctl• With Secrets tomorrow and the citizenry ls invited to sit in if t.hey want lo At present, or course, the identity of the three finalists remains secret. You might uaume this will get divulged when Woollett opens th& interviews. You have to doubt they will wear masks and be referred to as Mr. X, Ms. Y or Brother Z. Irvine's open approach to the job selection comes not out of an enlightened policy of keeplng the taxpayers ln· formed. Woollett says he's been forced to go public because he can't get the City Council s worn to secrecy. TIDS BECAME CLEAR when word oozed out of earlier secret sessions when the Irvine council was girding to tie the can to its community services director, Eddie Peabody, son of the famed banjo player of yesteryear. Later, the council voted 3 to 2, supposedly in secret, to give Peabody lime to find another job and then quietly re· sign his Irvine post. 'All of this got divulged In this sterling journal because some people in Irvine city government Just won't take the oath of secrecy. THUS YOU MIGHT CONCLUDE that the only times we may be in trouble with secrecy by our school boards or city councils ia when they all are of like clandestine mind. Tbey join hands and swear together, "We Sball Not Tell ... We Won't Be Blabbermouths ... " Then, unless you have a backslider among them who kicks over his vow of silence, the taxpayers may be in trouble. C)early, the record suggests that government tunes most likely to strike sour notes are those that we re secret· ly fashioned and then secretly hummed. ... Idi Ami_n Pledges 'Fight to Last Man' NAIROBI, Kenya <A P ) - President ldi Amin of Uganda exhorted his army Monday to "fight to the last man" in a new drive against Tanzanian in· vaders, Uganda radio reported. Libyan troops were reported airlifted to the Ugandan capital of Kampala to ald ln Its defense. In Washington , a State Department spokesman said Lib· yan troops "recently" had been airlifte d to Kampala. The spokesman, who refused to be named, would not say bow many troops were involved. The spokesman said be had no evidence to indicate Moroccan troops were assisting Amin, as reported by a Nairobi newspaper. The spokesman said Am In has been receiving military aid from Libya for several years. but this Is the first time troops have been pro· vided WORLD I NATION ' - Middle East Issue Pact Coniprornises Told JERUSALEM <AP) -Preald nt Carter's propoaala to break tho lmpua on an 11rael·E1ypt peace treaty lnvolvea two com· proml on th llnkaae laaue and watered·down lan1ua1e In the treaty '1 priorlt)' clause, JaraeU official• Hid today. If F.aypt aare 1 to the three changea, which llrael accepted on Monday, Corter will aUll face an unresolved problem on his visits to E&ypt and Israel thla week: the question of when the two coun- trlt'R each1n1t1 aambasudora after alanlng the treaty. OF.TAIL~ OF CAATEa•s Ideas, whlch have not been m.ade publlr. wl!re given to The. Aasoclated Press by offlclala who saw th.-recommt-ndatlon8 lhaat were rorwarded to the Cabinet by Prlmt1 Mlnll'lter Menachem Uesln. The offlclall'I asked not to bt> ldl.'ntlf1ed AH r<1portcd from Washington that one proposal suneata the . Africa Battle Guerrillas JOHANNESBURG, South Africa <AP> South African troops, aided by war planes. struck early today at black na· llona llst guerrilla bases in Marxlst·ruled Angola, the chief o r the defe nse force, Gen. Magnus Malan, announced. Prime Minl!ite r Pieter W. Botha told Parliament in Cape Town that he had o rdered "limited and reactive" strikes against black guerrillas who operate from bases ln Angola against South African troops in the adjacent territory or South· West Africa, also known as Namibia. There were no Immediate re- ports on casualties or damage. MARXIST·RULED Angola borders on South· West Africa on the north and has been a haven ror guerrillas operating both in South ·W es t Afri ca and Rhodesia, although Angola does not border on Rhodesia. Early last week Rhodesian war planes n ew more than 400 miles across Zambia Lo bomb a guerrilla base in Angola. In fighting jm1ide South·Wei;t Africa, South African security forces reported killing one guer· rilla and wounding two others . Maj. Gen. Jannie Geldenhuys. who commands the security forces, also said today guerrillas had abducted five civilians. United Stales take over lsraell air bases ln the Sinai Peninsula and sign a mutual defense treaty with Israel. The report, quotln1 ln· formed sources, could not be vertrled. A major concession on larael'e part, the officials told The As- sociated Press, was in agreeln1 to a non·bindlng target date on the negotlaUorus to set up PaleatJnian autonomy In tho West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gau Strip. A Similar compromise la offered for a clause In the treaty which now says the pact stands "Independently of any instrument external to this treaty." ThJa, sources said, wlll be modified with language saying that phrase does not contradict the Camp David framework for a general Mideast peace. Again, this adds a measure of "linkage" without setting deadlines or penalties for non·compliance. Hospitals Warne d ' On Costs WASHJNOTON <AP) -Presi· de nt Carter asked Congress lo· day for legislation that would give hospitals until 1980 to con· trol their own rising cost.a or face a mandatory federal celling now estimated at 9.7 percea.t · - considerably below what the in· dustry says is reasonable. But the ad mini s tration estimates that more than half the nation's 6,000 community hospitals would be exempt rrom the measure , and the limit on fee increases could be relaxed if inflation in the health·care in· dustry exceeds expectations. The new bill ls the latest move in a two.year carnpaign by the While House to bring spiraling health·care costs under control, but this year Carter has prom· ised to gave it top priority as the centerpiece of his anti· inOation drive 1 l f THE P R ESIDENT had pla nned to announce the legisla· tion Monday. but developments in Middle East peace negot1a · t1011s prompted postponement untl I today. "'"""'~ Unlike Carter 's earlier pro· posal. the ne w proposed legisla· tion would set a "national volun· tary limit" for hospitals to meet on their own and would invoke mandatory controls only if the industry fails lo achieve the pre· set goal. Mea nwhile, the United Na· tions peace·keeping plan for the independence o f South West Africa. which has been ad · ministered by South Africa since 1920, hit another snag today. Poli~ernan We eps THE NEW m easure also would be fl exible enough to al· low for unforeseen inflation in the "hospital market basket," the cost of goods and services purchased by hospitals com· parable to the cos.t or living for consumers. South Africa says the U.N. plan originally called for its forces to keep the peace and monitor guerrilla activity in Angola. South Africa says the United Nations now has dropped its plans ror monitocfog guer· rllla activity In Angola and also plans to allow Rucrrillas to set up bases 1nsi-de Suuth West- Afrlca before a cease.fire takes place. SOUTH AFRICA reportedly informed U .N . Secretary· General Kurt Waldheim late Monday night that it still ac· cepts the U.N. peace plan, as it was written last December, b~t reject.a any new interpretations regarding Its implementation. South Africa has administered the arid but mineral rich ter· rltory of South·West Africa un· der a mandate from the old League of Nations. But the Unit· ed Nations rescinded the mandate in 1966. A Cincinnati policeman weeps after learning that two fe llow officers were slain this morning when they stoppt'<i a man wanted for questioning in a 1978 street robbery The suspect. Gregory Daniels. 28. died when has cur nashed into a utility pole as he attempted to nee thl' sct.'n(' or the shootings. The slain cops were iden· tified as Lt. Col. Howard Rogers and officer Robert Sief. fert. In a message accompanying the leg1slation. Carter said the measure would be a lest of Congress' seriousness in dealing with inflation THIS COUPON GOOD FOR 103to143* INTEREST ON YOUR SAVINGS. Northwest Gets Rain N[\A/PORT [QUrTY FUNDS /\\ii' 11 llSl\M IN (f '\ 11 H i.•IMV.WJIHnlolllHOOM .~n!f 'II M Wl'(lf(l l}l.A(.11 Ll\l llCll<:\11'\'l/iW If you're not earning at least 10% interest on your money. you should send fo r our free brochure. 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TUESOAY,MARCH6, 1979 Your Hometown Dally Newspape~ c .• • f '.'Panic Feared in WeekendGasDrough 1 r NEW YORK lAP > Wffk~nd se rvjce stat.ton clo ln•s would to bt' dl'termined. a nd the marketplace." said Eugene Nowak, an This move. known as the "tilt,·· allows refiners to pasa more of J create IOl'\lil llnl' at other tlmet and could prove the "p ycholotacal oil andu.~try analyst a t the Wall Street firm of Blyth Eastman their costs to consumers. It is designed to encourage companies to trigger rtt'<"ded tu end prices into orbit." warns an 0 11 t'Xpert. Dillon. build refineries. but it also will ralse gasoline prices 5.1 cents in ' Dan l.undOO rfC. an t\ls weekly newsletter. ll&Jd dealers cou•d The price increases since Jan. t vary by area. Regular.grade the next two years. the DOE estimates. I ra1 e profu marttm~ t>.lyond ftdt-rally mandatf'd ttnlinga if sales leaded gasohne bought at a full-service station costs an average Prices also will rise soon due lo the supply squeeze created by 1 were curta1lt-d by tht• g1>vernment Thty would have to ge\ more 76 8 cents per gallon in Chicago, up from 74.8 cents two months the Iranian revolution. Several OPEC members have raised oil rt>turn on lc~s i.:a oline to make the !\~me a mount o( money, ht< a~o. the Lundber g Letter said . The average price in Newark, N J .. prices on their own to cash in on the tight supply. s aid rot>e Crom GS 6 cents per gallon to 67 4 cents . ' OPEC COULD DECIDE WHEN IT meets later this month to raise crude prices even more than the 3.9 percent scheduled April l. Nowak predicts a lO·cent-a·gallon rise in the price of gasoline by the end of 1979, but said, .. If the OPEC price goes higher . that would be a bit conservative." U JNDBERG I. AMONG MANV EX P ERTS pessimtshc a bout gasoline price . whJch huve n sen about two cents a gaJlon since Jan t He and othl'r ana lysts predicted Monday that the Increase will grow even sharper m coming months, but just bow sharp is uncer . tam due to contmued quest.10ns about world crude oil supply. "The key variables lo me are the OPEC price, which has yet THE PRICE RISE FOR UNLEADED gas 1s even more pro- nounced Motorists in Omaha pay an average 80.5 cents a gallon. up from 77 3centsinJanuary. ' Lundberg said the impact of OPEC crude oil price iocrease. ef· fective Jan. I. is onJy now being felt. He also said pricls will rise as much as a nickel in the next few weeks because the Depart· ment of Energy loosened price controls last week. * * * Energy Secretary J a mes Schlesinger said last week that prices or unleaded gasoline could top $1 a gallon in ll yea r or so. with leaded regular up to 75 cents. * * * * * * 000 Die .In Chad New Oil Hikes? :Warfare? N'DJAMENA, Ch.ad CAP > -! More than 800 people, most of tbem Moslems. were believed · killed in southern Chad over the weekend in one or Africa's worst· 1 communal massacres in recent years, diplomatic sources re· ported today. \ The Chad authorities. locked. ·in a virtual civil war and strug. I gling for control of the capital, made no official comment on the ~killings in and around Moundou, 300 miles south of N'Dja mena. Diplomats and witnesses re- . turning from Moundou said the town was gripped in a surge of • uncontrolled violence for three I days, leaving local police and , 1 troops powerless or unwilling to intervene. ' Details of the Moundou rioting : were still coming in from the re· 1 mote and almost isolated area, ' but it a ppeared that the local ·Mos lem minority, mos tly \traders and their families, was virtually wiped out. The kiUings sharply increased the threat that. tbe land·locked nation, a former French colony nearly twice the si~e of Texas, t may disintegrate in a bloody confrontation between Moslems 17 and th~ Christian or animist population. The sources said the Moundou killings were sparked by rumors among the Christian a nd animist population or a Moslem con· spiracy to seize the entire nation and impose an Arabic·lslamic regime. Gangs of black youths surged through Moundou and ~neighboring settlements Friday. i Saturday and Sunday, seeking lout and killing Moslem inhabi· tants, the sources said The French army evacuated the women and children of the l 250-strong European population ; or Moundou. T he refugees ar· rived in N'Djamena Monday un· . der army escort and gave re-l porters harrowing accounts or , the massacre. !Mesa Police Nab Cyclist ·After Chase . • Costa Mesa police say they Hirst b eca m e aware of ~ motorcyclist John Alan Kelley, ~ 27, when a patrolman spotted him doing wheelies at about 4S t m .p.b. on New90rt Boulevard about 6:20 p.m. Monday. Kelley then a llegedly led motorcycle officer Alan Kent on , a c hase through residential streets at speeds of up to 100 m .p.h. 1 The cb ue continued up and t down Orange A venue and across 22nd Street •nd other small l streets io the area, with Kelley throwinc an occuiooal wheelie l as Kent. and the police be~r tried to flag him cloJm, poll~ • Hid. I The pursuJt ended near 1'1tb Street and Tustin Avenue wben KeUey smubed into the back of a car. tben coatinued drivma in· to a comtruction 1one where crewa have torn up pavement to ' in1tall dtalaa1e p•pe1, police l· laid. l KelleJ then reportedl7 lott eontrol of bl1 bike aad fell. Police Mid M WU arrelt.ed U , lie attempted to wbeel tbe dama1ed motorocl• lat.o a .............. . Blossom Time Joni bait;" 18, ~learly has the coming of spring on her mind as she is framed in the lush blossoms on a flo.wer· ing plum tree. The humanities major couldn't resist a closer look at the springtime splendor as she made her way across the UC Irvine campus. Mesa Woman Struck By Auto Succumbs A Costa Mesa woman who was critically injured early Saturday morning when strock by a car wbiJe trying to help an injured motorist died Monday at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. A coroner's report identified the victim as 22·year·old Jae· queline Sullivan who lived at 1026 W. Ward St., Costa Mesa. According to a California Highway Patrol s pokesman , Miss Sullivan was attempting to aid the driver of a car involved in a two-car collision when a third auto plowed Into the wreckage. A few minutes earlier, the woman bad been a passenger in one of the two a utos that slammed together at 2:30 a.m. on Sui>erlor Avenue north of Hospital Road in the Newport • Gay Officers Due in SF SAN FllANClSCO (AP) -PollH Chief Charles Gala ..,. tbe department plam to bin bomoeexuaJs amoq Ila mlnorlt1 CID· didatet dartq tbe nut three,..,.. · .. We WUl tbe police de· partment to be a renectlon of the community. and oe>. vloub1 la Pranctaco ha• 1 1ubltaDUal l•Y popula· Uon," be 11ld after • ~Med-=.,~.:: Beach·Costa Mesa area . Apparently uninjured ij1 the initial colHsion. Miss Sullivan reportedly went to help the in· jured female driver of the other car. That is when the third auto slammed into the wreckage strewn along Superior Avenue, according to th e CHP spokesman. He said witnesses reported the crash sent the car that bad been traveling at an estim ated 50 mph bouncing off the wreckage and into Miss Sullivan. In addition to the Costa Mesa worn an 's death, the two separate era.shes left five people injured and two women facing drunken driving charges. 'l'he CHP spokesm an iden· lilied the two drunken driving suspects as: -Brenda Powers, 36, of Newport Beach. the i njured driver Miss Sullivan was at· tempting to help. -Ka&lay Mayer, 20, or Anaheim, the driver of the auto that cruhed into tbe wreckage of tb,e ftnt accident. The CHP apokeaman said Mrs. Powen waa driving north on Superior Avenue and attempted to make a left turn ~hen her auto collided w\th a southboUnd car drlven by Dean Shler, 24, of Co.ta Meta. The accident report listed Sbler u bl•melets \n the tra1edy. He wu not. clt.ed. "o:r._..reportildlD .._._ •poltcea.W._-.,.. .............. Kllle7'• &um ..... O•er tbe nest three ,..,.. CWa ...... tbe d• ,....... wlll Mn abollt .,_., ... " ft.-.. 11111111111.Y lilt 11111 ........ t~!~!~. •• t•re••t Her car reportedly s pun around and w• llttlnl ln the middle of tbe roaclway when 1tru~k blr ._ Mayer'• auto. ....... ...... . af.1111 .... An. 11. ailta .......... .11111 ... .., -at , ..... =,,.... ..... . .... ................ . .---. -··-... ,., ... ...... . A ,._ ... ., in Mi• M.,_'a aato reportedly 1uff •r•• a brc*• Wrill bl UM eecoad cal· ............... b, ......... •tu ....... Ud aoae to aid .................. reponed ................ Algeria Threatens 25% Rise NEW YORK (AP> -Industry sources said today that Algeria -one or OPEC's smallest mem· hers -is threatening a 25 per. cent boost in oil prices. The in crease would be the largest of all the hikes announced by mem- bers of the oil cartel. Libya. meanwhile. said that it was doubling -from 5 percent to 10 percent the size of the in· crease it announced last week. and Venezuela increased prices on several petroleum products it exports to the United States . There was no immediate in· dication as lo what such in· Soffer Case Against Mesa Cut By DAVID IWTZMANN OI -o.4fy ...... Staff A federal judge ba s dismissed part of a lawsuit brought against the City of Costa Mesa by old car collector Sid Soffer, but the co l orful Newport B e a c h. restaurate1Jr says he 'IJ be back with an amended complaint . Di s tri c t Court Jud g e Lawrence T. Lydick. ruling on the city·s motion to dismiss Sof· fer's case that stems from a flap over a collection of vintage Cadillacs, removed City At· torney Robert Campagna and Assistant City Attorney Tom Wood as defendants but upheld for trial the rest of Soffer 's suit against the city and zoning in· spector Jim Weir. Campagna ·s and Wood 's names have been dropped from the suit, Soffer c an file an amended compla int within 30 days. ' Soffer is de manding more than $100 .000 in punitive damages for "mental anguish" c aused when the c ity towed three old CadiUacs from in front or bis home at 900 Arbor St. last fall. Soffer is acting as his own at· torney in the case and made his first appearance in Lydick's Los Angeles courtroom Monday. Representing the city was Los Angeles attorney James Tillip· man. Soffer said he was elated that (See SOFFER, Page AZ) Front AA(] c r e a ses -s h ou ld th ey materialize -might mean to Ame rican service station prices. Th e Or ga n i z a ti on o f Petroleum Exporting Countries had scheduled total 1979 price hikes in its base price for oil of 14.S percent. But several nations have ta ken advantage of the s upply squeeze caused by the Iranian revolution to impose ad ditional increases. Most of the rises hav e bee n in t he neighborhood of 9 percent The oil price increases and the cutback in supply already have caused problems for American co ns ume r s . The price of gasoline has gone up by abou~ two cents a gallon since Jan. 1 a nd ne w governme nt pricing regulations are expected to add 10 cents at the pump over the next two years. Pnces for regular, leaded gasoline al full·service stations average about 70 cents a tallon although the price varie~ widely wtth l!)Cation. A federal Judge h as been asked to halt implem entation of the new rules until the govern· ment dete rmine whether they would encourage motorists to us1! (See OIL. Page A2) Marcuse Explains Art to Students By PIDLIP ROSMARIN OI -o.lly f'lleC Sutt Herbert Marc u se. o c · togenarian professor of political philosophy who 1s called lh.e rather of the mode rn youth r evolution. addressed a Jam packed room of UC Irvine stu· dents Monday. some or them literally gathered at bis feet His topic, the relation or art <meaning li t e rature ! with politics. was abs truse to the point that Marc use had some trouble understanding the ques· tions of students. ar\d students appeared to have difficulty un- derstanding the old professor. Marcuse h a s c riticized societies. both capitalist and Communist, that put emphasis on the performance or produc· tivity or an individual as a measure or worth. rather than the intrinsic wor th Marc use believes huma n beings have. His best known books were "One·Dtmensional Ma n." a best -selling paperback published in 1964; and hjs magnum opus. "Eros and Civilization." a 1955 work that was a synthesis of Marx. and Fre ud. a nd was credited with contributing to t.he philosophy of the hippie move- ment of the 1960s. The Berlin·bom Marcuse has been both an intelligence agent and a scholar. He came to the United States in 1934. and worked for the Office of Strategic Services, this coun· try·s first organized espionage agency. and the State Depart· ment, from 1941·50. O.lly Piio. Staff ..... SPEAKS AT UCI Herbert Marcuse A. hero l o some stude nts. Ma r cuse·s political teac hings sca nda li zed ma ny in con· servata ve San Diego County when he was teaching at the University of California at San Diego. He was then in hjs seven- ties. In 1968. at the height of the student tur moil. the citizens of conservatjve La Jolla demanded that the university let his year· to.year contract lapse. though the university stood firm. In July of that year, Marcuse we nt into hiding for a month <See MARCUSE, Page AZ>' Coas t Irvine Pool Gets Olympic Approval Weather Sunny and quite warm Wednesday but cooler near the coas t. Highs , Wednesday 65 to 69 at beaches, 75 to 85 inJand. \ Lows tonight in 50s. ay PIOUP ROSMARIN °' ... ......, ...... , .... The Amateur Athletic Union has at las\ certified the City of lrvlne'a Heritage Park 50-meter pool for Olympic qualifying events. Paul Brady. assistant city · manager. said .t n AAU official confirmed Monday . b y telepbone, that work done to atretcb the aluminum pool, said to be too 1hort orl1lna1Jy by a baU ·Inch, WU 1atllf •ctorY. Work on the pool bad been u · leaded aa extra et1bt montbl wbd i\ WM deWrtnlDed tbat lt .... '\ ol ---....... ud the AAU wlu.Mld ce.rtlftc.UO.. W~ ·..aneaUoa, M1 NC· Ora -... die DOOi would be dweNMld end no oftlclal ,...... cOUld ........ u.re. T'e MU req•lNI ~at the pool be UJitformly 50 meta,.,, down to 42 inches deep. The contractor. the Ruane Corp. o< San Gabriel. iniUally tried t.o stretch the pool by bolt· lng baclc the atominum struc· lure to supporting struts. The tactic worked, but only to qualify the pool to a depth of about two reet. Last month a second erfort was m.ade. spuned by the f a~t tbat the city bad withheld a rtnal payment of $125.000 on the ap· proxtmat.ely '850,000 contract.. Thia tlme Ruane made cut.a tn the atnactw"al auPPOrt materla.I, and ()Ulbed bAek ·Ute endl of the PoOI, rewelded tbem and ...eon· nact.ct tbe llnct•al supports. Alfred Butoa. Raue Oorp. preside&. mal .. a•MCI tbat tbe oOol ......... too abort. but lhat the AAU wu entorema • Cl"1e POOi.. .... Al) INSIDE TODA l:' Elected officials ore . re'J)Ondtno to the public de· lfN o/ Uw Md-control move - mnt but tena:N• mutt out· e>ott their Joea. Storv Page CJ. ··-· • Cl ., .. .. M At Cl 1'4 .. • ., .. M M fed ~ r•a"'• Floods Damage Vietnam Willing To Talk J Midwest, East ., ,,.. A.Neda&ed ...._ Flood.I bora in a March thaw and fed by heovy ratna 1pread Into n••w tfrrltory ln the t:ut to· day and llllnols ortlclaJs were worried that the Rock River may ¥0 on lb worst ri m1nuce In hlittory let Jam11 moving downstream ra uat•d flooding that forced t var u ut1ons 1n som e com muntlwa nur Buffulo. N Y At Sunad Buy, where flood duma~~ was cttUinate<i 1tl more than St mllhon, helicopters bombarded U.S. Funds Sought/or OC Transit Tfaaf.'s (urp) Tastg A propoi.<il to !>eek federal funds for a $19.S million shop- ping llsl contaimng 200 new buses and other equipment was endorsed Monday by Orange County Trnnsil D1strirt direc· tors. Britain's Prtn<.'I:.' Charle!:> takes a bite of i.nake m eat curry at a 1ung le ~urv1va l school in Hong Kong Before tasting the dchcacy. th~ princt-re marked. "Boy, the things I do for England " The board asked district ad- miniatrators lo prepare a grant application for redernl funds to help pay for 105 large coaches, 95 vans, four service trucks, 13 super visors' autos a nd other bus equipment. Disneyland Open Despite Strike The grant would cover 80 per· cent of the S19.5 million while state and local funds would pro- vide the remainder T he dist rict now has about 400 buses, including 65 new coache· juat being delivered. A spokesman for Dis neyland said today that the amusement park in Anaheim will remain open despite a non-sanctioned strike by about 530 mamtenanct· workers that began at midnight The strikers represent 14 of about ~ unions involved in the Disneyland operation thal at tht~ Mr. Corre ia Dead at 83; Rites Slated F une r al se rv i ces ar e sch e duled Wedn esday ror Herman CoM"eia, a Costa Mesa pharm acist who die d at bis home Saturday. He was 83 Mr. Correia worked for the Thrifty Drug Store Co. as a pha r macist for 55 years in Oakland and Costa Mesa. He also was a member of tht' Masonic Lodge, Foothill Lodge 564 and the Elles Legion Post 337 in Oakland. He leaves his wife, Mary Cor· reia, o( Costa Mesa; a brother , Albert Correia , of Oakland and a sister , Cesarina Mar tina, of Westminster. Masonic funeral ser vices will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Chapel of the Chimes in Oakland followed by entomb· m e nt al the Ch apel of the Chimes Mausoleum. Heights Home Group Meets Members of the Santa Ana Heisht.s Homeowners Associa· tlon will host a meeting tonight to discuss the potential use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station by commercial airlines. Repreaentatlves of Orange County's two jet airlines are ex· peeled to attend the meeting t hat get.a under way at 7:30 p.m . a t the Reglat.ry Hotel. Also expected to attend are representatives of the Marine Corps, t he City of Newport 1Beacb and the county Board of Supervisors. ORANOl OOMT c DAILY PILOT ,,,.O•••C-0..l'tl'l .... ••111•"'<"'" .... IHM411lle..,_l'fftt h-l~t,theO.­ (M\I...,.._,.~ ..... .toNil-*'• wtt1.,..f .........., '"'""" "'•' .., c.tl• fllltM .... _.INC",_,.,..... lte<~"- 1-VelleY, 1•-.~-..,_C-A ....... ,........_ ... ,, ....... ~­,_.ft Tllt ~ _.,..... .... It ti Ut w ..... , "'"'· c..441 "'"'8, Cool-·- ' .... = .:a=-It<' a Cof1ilf VIO .... ~ .. fll • ... 0--•IMf-T-r.r:.- ·=:.~-=-cwtet• "-...,..., .... .... _ ... ....,...,.. , ... , ...... en••..., a111•1111,..a111111111~ time of the year employs 4,600 workers. Ironically, the first ma1or strike in the amusement park's 23-year history came after the union leadership a pproved a new contract for the 14 unions It was the membership on a 457 to.45 vote that rejected the oacl. Impacted by the strike arc oper ations invo l v ing main · tenance of facilities, including s uch crafts as plumbers, electri- cians and sheet metal workers . The Disneyla nd spokesman said the park will be able lo operate with some management personnel providin g s ome or those services. Today, as is customary, the Anaheim amusement center Is c losed but when it reopen s Wed nesday there will be pickets in front of the entrance should a settlement with the dissident workers not be reached by that time. Fro.PatJeAJ MARCUSE. • because of an anonymous death t hreat. He has been a m an of seeming cont radiction, a gentle man who inspired student riots; who loved m usic and held a n honorary degree from lhe New England Conservatory of Mus ic ; who smoked cigars ; who drove an old Peugeot , entertained at small parties and had a cat named Freddie. Toda)' Marcuse is stooped but ~till tall:. white-haired, ruddy-f accd . Me s peaks in a full baritone, with a slight German accent. He talked Monday about the Utopian world o f a r t in liter ature and said that art is a direct factor in t he political struggle. The relation between art and politics in the 60a, Marcuse said, was best illuatrated at that time by a photograph of barricade• on lhe streets or Paris. In front or the barricades was a man playing a piano. Seventy of the 105 new large buses would be used to expand district service while 35 would replace older coaches. Twenty-eig ht of the vans wl:>uld be used to increas e service while 67 would replace older minibuses, a ccording to a report to directors. District officials expect the large bu.11\es to cost $133,000 each while the vans would cost from $25, 100 to $28,000 apiece. T he grant application also would include the purchase of 62 two-way radios at a total cost of $221,402 ; 86 fareboxes for $247 ,915; 302 bu s bench es, $68,554 ; 1420 bus in formation s igns, SJ0,880; 1,490 bus stop signs and posts, $97 , 180. In addition il would include the purchase of S98. 700 worth of fu rniture and equipment for OCTO administrative offi ces. Saudi Arabia 'Key' to Oil WASHINGTON CAPl - Questions about whether Saudi Arabia can continue to produce enough oil to meet the needs o( the Unit - ed Stat.ea are expected to b e r aised i n a co n- gressional report. Sources in t h e ad- ministration and Congress say the Senate Foreign Relations Committee re- port will state that the Saudis' production capaci· ty is severely limited. According to one report, by The New York Times, the study concludes that if Saudi Arabia produced 14 mill ion to 16 m illion bar- rels or oil a day. it would take only six to 10 years for the country's supply to pea k. *' * * ,.,....PflfleAJ OIL •.• M arcuse said art, In many respects, is ''more real than the cheaper, leaded gasoline whlch real. or given, reality." could Increase pollution. "Art as ideology." he said , Industry sources, who asked "tears the ideological veil fro~ not to be identified by name, t h e eatablished reali ty by aaid that AJgeritl which a c- recreaUn& reality. Art sees re· counts for about 3 percent of a llty in_ the light of _its ~saentlal total OP EC oll produq~lon negatiVlt.y and promise. wants to raise Its price April t. Marcuse said that "the work Algeria get.a about $1'.80 a bar· of art that ii not beautUul la not rel for ita oU, h11her than the a •ork of art." Ke l&ld the recent motlon ptc· lure, titled "Holocaus t ," was aucceul\al became il dared to be ... umenta1 and ten the tale or tbe Holocaust t.broulb the story or f amWet, and m ade no at· tempt al "a.rt." Att.-ward. after bJ1 speech, a a t•dent atte mpted to ask MarcnaM a queaUoa. .. Prof .. tor,•• lae be1an, "I dtd.n 't understand one part or your talk." Marc:me leaned toward tUm: hll •1• went wide. "Ont~ one?" he .. Md. sat..EllNGeR HINTS AT NEW MOVES-A3 -'Aer COMPROMISES DITML.aD-A4 JAPANIR SPLIT OVER OIL THREA T--84 OPEC base p r ice of $13.85 be cauH of the q11allty of Al1erlan crude and lta con· venl~•to major mark.ta. The Alsert&M reportedly want to pub the price to about tlt.50 I barrel. 8ouf'ffe Hid AJcerla a1IO wall to out produdJGD by 10 ,...eeat to ll penat. ap. par9lltl1 bte1 .. of tedmtcaJ prolll-..... all fteldl . ..... , ....... ,..... .... =-~Int ~., aU • a troubluom e Ja m with dynamite tn hopes or brealtln& It loose. Mo,.. than 20,000 commuters were affected by noocUn1 ln Con· nectlcut that dlarupted signals on Conrail's New Have n LJne, delning trains to New York by un hour or more. Streams also were runnin~ brim Cull in much of Misaiss1pp. and elsewhere. Erle Jones, dJrector or the state emergency services de partment ln Illinois, said Mon· day the Army Cor ps or F.nglneers believes the Rock River, in the northern part of the state, may experience the worst Ooodlng m it.a history. Under the worst conditions, engineers saJd, some residential and business dis tricts of Rockford, Ill the state':. second largest city with 160,000 population could soon be un- der 10 feet or water . The Rock River nows through the heart of the city. Some businesses, especially those located on or near the river. have already moved ex- pensive equipment out of base· ment storerooms. F,....PageAI POOL •.. rigorous requirement t hat is met ·by probably only a handful of pools in the country, if that many. ·~The measurements we final- ly were talking about got down lo about 1/16 of an inch," Buxton said. "It's a lmost impossible lo b e tha t precise with any material." Buxton e mphasized that the pool never had to be torn up, the possibility or which was report- ed earlier. Brady agreed and s aid none of the tile s urface around the pool was djsturbed for the work. Neither Brady nor Buxton could supply an estimate of the cost or the repair work, which Buxton said "We 're swallow- ing." Brady previously had estimat· ed the cost at up to $80,000. After repainting, refinishing a nd refilling, Brady said , the pool will be reopened. T h e g r and ope n i n g is scheduled ror April Fool's Day. Won't Talk oilly .. llelSi..tt- STJLL RGHTING CITY Car Collector Soffer f',....PfafleAf SOFFER ..•. the Judge upheld part of the suit for trial ··My paperwork car ried through," he said ''I'm Just as happy as pie. I've done a lot of s tudying and preparing for this ." The Judge told Soffer he could still show cause why the city at torney's office should be held liable in the suit. Soffer says he told the cit y attorney's office th at the city was acting im properly when it had his cars towed away as a nuis ance. Under city law, the cars could be towed away if not in running order. Soffer said the cars worked just fine. The city had mailed Soffer a letter claiming a neighbor had complained that the 1947, 1960 a nd 1964 Cadillacs were a nuisance. Soffer returned the letter with a request for a public heanng. Howeve r , the letter was de - livered to city hall after the ex· pira tion of a lO ·day period permitted for responding. Ht!> letter was postmarked be~ort• the end of the deadline, Soffer said. T he cars were then towed to the city auto pound. Hearings were held and the city offered to give Soffer back his $127 tn tow· ing and impound fees. He re· fused and riled suit instead. Soffer said the public hearings before the Planning Commission should have been held before the a utos were towed. He also sajd the form letter sent him saying he was violating the city's vehi· cle abatement ordinance was de· ficient. BANGKOK, ThaUand <AP> - Vietnam announced today it is willing to negoUat.e with China once all Peking's troops have left Vietnamese aoal and ended a more than two-week frontier war . But a Vietna mese Foreign M lnlstry s tate m e nt said if Chinese leaders were trying a "withdrawal trick" to escalate the wa r thoo Vietnam would fight on "in the spirit of general mobilization.'' The statement said Chinese troops had to withdraw "com- pletely and uncond1t1 onally from Vietnamese territory before any negoUations take place." It also said China was forced to announce al was withdrawing Monday because it found itself an "difficult circumstances" - military losses, support Russia and othe rs were giving Vietnam, and even obJcct1ons lo the war in China. It said any negotiations would take place al the vice foreign ministers' level at a lime and place to be agreed on later Hanoi radio reported fighting was continuing in Lang Son province north of the Vietnamese capita l and claimed Hanoi's troops killed or wounded more than 700 Chinese tn fighting Mon· day in Hoang Lien Son province in the northwest. Nhan Dan, the Vietnamese Communist Party newspaper, s aid Peking's a nnouncement that Chinese troops began pull· mg out Monday, 16 days after the invasion started, was "con- trary to the real situation in the battlefields." China "is steppmg up ils ag· gression, and its troops are fran tically destroying Vietnamese villages," said the paper. Bangkok mtel11gcnce sourct-s said they had no evidence of a Chinese pullout, but intelligence reports frequt•ntly lag behrnd battlefield events. Some or these sources said China m1~ht b<' following a s cor c hed -earth policy i n wilhdraw1n~ and that this could be the stepped up aggression Vietnam referred lo. Other intelltgencc sources said it was likely the fighting would not end abruptly but would wind d own to s m a ll-scale border sk1rm1s hln2. Volunteers For Medical T est s Sought Huntington Man Held in Slashings UC Irvine Medical Cente r phys1c1ans are seeking volun· leers for a tei;ttng program in· volv ing th~ treatme nt of shingles wilh a recently de- veloped cream. Su fferers from the type or shingles known a s herpes zoster must be pre pared to undergo treatrnent for five successive days at the medical center 's division of infectious diseases. 101 T he City Drive, Orange . By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ol tM DMly f'fttt St.ff A Huntington Beach ma~ho allegedly went on a hat et· slashing rampage that left tti e men injured, one seriously. as told police nothing about what · set off his Monday morning out- burst. investigators said today. Robert DaJe Martin , 35, of 8211 San Angelo Drive, h as been booked into Orange County Jail on s us picion of attempted murder . Bail for Martin, wbo is employed as a m ech anic In Irvine, bas been set at $25,000. Martin was interviewed by in· vestigators Monday afternoon. T hey described h im as un· cooperative in shedding any light on what drove him to aJ. legedly chop up the clubhouse. and the men who tried to stop him The most severely tnJUred of the three men Martin allegedly attacked in the clubhouse of the Huntington Creek Apartments. 35-year·old J oel Dupree. was listed in guarded condition today al Westmins ter Community Hospit.aJ. Hospital staff said volunteers must be suffertnR from erup· t1ons of less than 48 hours dura· t1on. There 1s no charge for the treatment. Chntc worker~ !>atd they are hopeful that the a!> ycl unnamed crea m wtl l l ea d to a brea kthrough in treatment of a disease that has often defied ef- forts to cure or control 1l Tho name Aoll1·Aoyco, tno Rolls-Royce rldll10f grille. ill\d lhe 6plrl1 of Eca1osy hood ornamen1 are all Roll1-Aavco 1radoma1tu.. uG8d Wllh tho IPPIOVll of Roll~·Aoyco Molorn ll The most famow motor radiatt>r grille in the world , superbly reproduced as a wrist walch. Eighteen karat gold. Exclusive from Corum. .. 13w JS rAs9110N ISLAND • NlWPOAT 8£ACH, CALIFOANIA !J2660 4 ' . ....,.cc.._,,_..,, -- --________ __._ l 1 I STOCKS I BUSINESS Tu.cMV. Merch e. tm s DAil. Y PILOT .. ',fax Time i Only a Few Face Audit -By-SYLVIA POttTEK ........ ,,_ Mott people wooder. u they mail their returns, ''What are the odds on my return bel.ng audited?" The reaaaurlq a111wer: statbUcally, very small. According to lat.est IRS figures,.your chances of bav. ing a field or office audit depends on lbe lYI>$ of return and total income. Specifically: If you do not have bualness Income, ror every 100 re- turns tiled. the odds on an audit are at follows: Form 1040. using standard deduction, 0.68 percent; under $10,000. itemiting deductions. 3.45 percent; $10,000 to $50,000, 2.40 percent; $50,000 and over, 11.35 percent. IF YOV HAVE BUSINESs INCOME, your odds . un- der $10.000, 3.12 percent; $10,000 to $30,000. 2.07 perceot; $30,000 and over, 7.36 percent. Chances of being audited also depend on where you live. Jn Manhattan, according to the Research Institute of America. 3.85 percent or returns are audited ; in San Fnn- cisco, the proportion drops to 2.52 percent; in New Orleans. 1.64 percenL Eut even if your re- turn is chosen for ex- amination. that does not mean you have to pay more tax. If you have filed a fully sup- ported return . y ou Money's Worth generally will have onJy the annoyance and aggravation of having to back up your figures. If you disagree with an IRS agent, you no longer have a two.step appeal procedure. Previously , you could appeal the added tax assessme nt to a district conference. in an in- formal get-together to try to settle the dispute. Then you could appeal to the appellate division of IRS for a second opportunity to argue your case. NOW YOU RAVE ONLY ONE chance to argue your case, an appeal to the appellate division. It is less informal than the district conference. The IRS contends this eliminates duplication and permits the first hearing before an agent with full settlement authority. You might feel. though. that a one-shot chance lo argue is rarely as good as a two-shot. Just what determines why the IRS computer picks re- turns for audits is a closely guarded secret. but a major fa ctor undoubtedly is what IRS considers to be an ex · cessive itemi~ed deductio n in various categories may be a valuable guideline. FOR INCOM ~S OF S9,000 TO $10.000. the average re- turn in 1976 showed $896 in medical deductions. $958 in tax- es. $441 incontributions a nd $1,268 1n interest <including mortgage! For incomes of $10 .000 to $15.000: $655 in medical expenses. Sl.129 in taxes. $414 in contributions. $1.378 interest. For incomes of $15.000 to $20,000: $586 in medical expenses. $1.503 an taxes . $472 in contribut.ioos and $1,690 interest. For incomes of $20,000 to S2S,OOO : $487 in medical expenses. St .869 in taxes, $542 in contributions, $1.836 interest. For incomes of $25.000 to $30,000 $442 in medical ex- penses, $2,262 in taxes. $646 in contributions, $1 ,977 in in· terest. For incomes or $30.000 to $50,000: $523 in medical expenses. $3.050 in taxes. $939 in contributions. $2,366 iD in· tere81.. For incomes of 550,000 to $100.000: $100 in medlCal expenses. SS.383 in taxes, $2,015 in contributions, $3,954 in interest. For incomes of $100,000 and up : $1,095 in medical. expenses, $13,296 in taxes. $9,902 in contributions and $9,249 in interest. These are national averages. not official tax tables. You cannot claim them as your deductions. Ner t: Whan Aheoo' * * * * * Taxpayers Inch Toward Deadli·ne WASHINGTON <AP I in filing returns this year Taxpayers are lagging behind That's the latest word from the 27,969 people the gov- ernment has standing by. punchcards an hand. read)' to data proces& tax returns. WHEN TAXPAYERS GET THEIR returns in, five in 100 make math errors. Seven in 10 are eligible for refunds. most because they have had too much withheld from Ulear pay. So far this year. taxpayers who have received refunds got an average of $t97.05. That's $6.73 more than the average refund at this point last year. People with bil re- funds due lend to file early As of last week, the Internal Revenue Service had. re- ceived 30,515,000 tax returns and put 13,620,000 througb its data processing equipment. IRS spokesman Tony Born · bardiere says. LAST YEAR, THE IRS HAD received 2 percent uiore returns at thJs POint. Before the tax season ends (Aprli 16 because April 15 is a Sunday), 90 million returns will have been filed. La~t year. the total was 87,386,000. All told, American la.xpayers wUl pay about $225 billion in personal income taxes this year. These provide about two-thirds of the government's revenue. The rest comes chiefly from corporate taxes; Social security taxes; excise. estate and girt taxes; and import duties. THE LANGUAGE ON THE 1lAX form has simplified. The IRS says a person with an eighth or ninth grade education should understand it. Last year's rorm required a yearortwoof college. Math ml.stakes. round in the initisll examination or re- turns by the IRS. have been showing up on 5 percent of the combined forms, Bombardiere says That was the a.ame error rate as last year's, Beal Estate 'Fall' ~cted by Editor Tbe real mate market may be ripe for a fall. "'lbln are too m&nf 1peeulatorl pu1btn.1 up tbel ertcea "' too few prope..U. to ridlc:u.lous levels. h Hid Arnold G. Rudolf, editor ot Umited Partoera Lettft' of Menlo ,art. ,..,. a.AW LAND TO 80l1ID to thopphlc ceaten, propertlel are betn, boo1bl wttlMM re1ard to cv.rrent ea retum. The bubble m., aat bunt for oae or more JUl'S, but •bin prlcej bead lower, .IDU)' inveaton, espea'•tly the small Oftll and limited putnen, will ION, h• beliHM. ''Neiftomen don't reaU.e that re•1 at.ate la a COCD· plex ud '7dkal balnell wllkll Netul~ ~nble a · · pert llme and .nort ffW lon&-term 1alna, '' be ...... , Umlteel PattMn Litter, a dilest of tu ud lePl·ID· Y ..... , .. publiaMd mOIJ'lbb by Pro&ol\M Prell ...... la a • ....., and CPA wttb uperience ia partnenblp foi'IDadml ......... .... • • OM.YN.OT l MARMADUKE * "Could you hold off dinner? I hcrte to woke him." SUPERHEROES i• , SHOE MOON MULLINS By Bil Keane "Ywre wrong. I ;ust hcM o slight coee of the flu. I am NOT dying of old age." DENNIS THE MENACE •ea..uFE ... f llDIL'1 JNWt. • .. • = PUNKY WINKl9'11AH by Tom latiuk 1ME ~ 16 f/XD, :~~~~~ I ~---~--~-----M'K.-~ MISS PEACH by Pasko, Tuska & Colletta by Jeff MacNelly by Ferd & Tom Johnson GORDO JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS 11 ~p SeeM HIL.~Aft'1 HAMHOCKERS STIL.l.. INWResTI:l7 IN 1lJMEJl..EWE:EPS. NANCY AUNT FRIT~I··· t'M GETTING KINDA A95eNT· MINDED DRABBLE b ~Mlll~fllZE, ll.AS'S. "Oit ~Iii t AU5f Of 1l4f 'fHtRN ~A~s· ~ ~ ~£ ~" li'oMAt.lf;~\s a,mfll!Vf 1l> !1PA~O ~~ fbl&.lf~. DR. SMOC1C MOTLEY'S CREW so )t)(J H.Avaff 51;61J A Df;NTIS'f IN 1'eN YEA~ ~ \I 6el:. VOU HAVe SUCH AN UNCANNY GRASP OF iHe OEJVIOUS. weLL···I WA5 PRl!TTV CLOS!··· by Gus Arreola by-Harold Le Ooux by Tom K. Ryan ~ Emit lusltmllltr J , COMICS I CROSSWORD PEANUTS ~OU SAID, I~ I TOOK PAAT IN THE SPELLING SEE, AU. l'O MAVE 1'0 DO 15 5PEU. WORDS ... .. , w~..a '04f'4 NAMt':O ncE !U4fl • t-IOW Qt 0 'flt c" ~~ l'f" .lll?Jt.Q l.A'Si 1"\C:T"" ~--f(~? by Charles M. Sc9'ull NO, MA'AM ... I CM'T SPELL 1N5CMASL.E ~00 OfON'T ~ I HAO TO SPELL 'EM Rl6HT ! by George Lemont p LZ AO by Templeton & Forman ,. ANO "T'!U. MY Wll=E 1'0 GO ~eAD »C> OIIDE:R 1"EMe~~. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACAOSS 1-f\oefett 50gled t SC>eedS ,, C<lppled 15C.b te Act 17 Dealt! notk:e 18-and cntfta 19 Pivotal 20 Asian mam- mal 22 High degree 24.Atnaaae• 29 Free 11 Marah bird ::~ dalhl" 33Choa• 17 &Muty: Pre- llll 38 lncldent 39 Kind ol fruit 40 Lotto kin 41 Half d)e 42 FOflnll 44 Mapabbf. 46 Seed vessel 48 Hamlet. I()( ene 47 Nethef'llnda •lllaQe fl! Head part Sl Contfne- menl 57~ 58 $we<fllt\ IS- iand 58 lnllrument 61 Cloe* 42 PlrtOMQe &3 Slave 64 Picture 85 Glacia.1 rldOf! MSow 17 1()0.year period•: Abbf. DOWN 1 Congeels 2 ~ 3 Fn.nd: Sp, 4 1nhlbltlng dllng 5GrMll tetter 8 P:abrlc unit 7 Prlllae 8 Rebated I Peace 10 l..0¥•: "· 11 Kind of pop 12C0upd'- '3 Wlltlered 21 R"POnd 23 Alng 2SPo&e • UMTEO Feature SyndQ\e Moooay'a Pullie Sol-led: ,, •• ,,, ... l , ... , 0 l I Y IU , ft I ti ( f O~!fS ~.IT I TUll S •At1TA• ftlO ll l tl • A I a f 11 l A T ( S I M I 0 II & 0 I I I ti-•011-0•l• O r• c A I~ I All I o 0 ' 110 u "' ( 0 0 " ' t -r II ••• I' l I e I" . ' •• s •• . ( ti I ·-0 • ti . ( .. T I • I ' f I • Q ~'l 'a 'A I : ' ' • • U f 0 II rt~ ~ .. l I • ( ti A T " I~ I• l g • • • • 11 l l IT 288aleblU lllta:2woroa lO Hindu prln-ceu ,, AulMn glrl'a name 32 Implement 33 Btlatte 3' Harmlvl 35Penitence Miion l8Pouess1ve word 37 Of movies .0 Fiiieted '2~ '3Pld 45Contldef 47 Thic:t- lledd 48 Hubbub 50Char~ 51 Fruit 52 Plrldl1ea SlCupolt S4 High notes 56 Fluid con- llfne< 58 Not any eo Helde<t