Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-04-26 - Orange Coast Pilot. I obil Gets Friday Deadline ~ • King of Spain "Dapper' Gunman ~ Sued by Co-ty Robs Newport Victim's Estate Eatery of $1,600 DAILY PILOT 85 Ranch Acres l t I ' * * * 1oc * * * . . TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 26, 1977 Burn 19 ours • VOl 70 NO "'· l SECTIONS, :JO PAGES Tandena Tour Entertainers Sonny and Cher pose in their d ressing room al th<' Wt•sl bury. N.Y. Music F air. The couple a rc · currently on their first tanckm tour s ince they were divorced. Speculation suggest they will soon l>e getting together again in ..private as well. Cher recently filed for divon ·c from Greg~ Allman. Spanish King Sued In Tenerife Crash The King or Spain has bc~n named as a de~ndanl in a wrongful d eath suit filed on behalf of a Lagun a Hills Leisure World woman who died March Z1 in the world's worst aviation dis- aster. The suit was filed Monday in San Francisco federal court by ~alter Michael Wall. special ad- !9inistrator for the estate of Jean ~ouston, 508C Ave. Sevilla, Leisure World. Mrs. Houston. '¥ho traveled extensively since the death of her husband five ~ear~ ago, was a victim or the Cang Rib Again? LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Beverly Hills jewelry store was robbed Monday by two men who POllce beUeve were part of a gan1 responstble for up lo 10 rob· b~les in the past slx months. ground collision between a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines 747 and a P an Am 747 in the Canary Islands. The suit requests unspecified damages for wrongful death and Joss of property. "His Catholic Majesty the King of Spain and the Kingdom of Spain" and the two airlines arc named as defendants. The s uit s aid the Canary Islands are a province of Spain and the gover nment of Spain o pe rated the international airport facility at Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the Canary Islands, known a s the Los R odeos Airport. It alleges that Spain, through its subjects and employes at the airport and airport control facili· ty "were negligent and careless and otherwise derelict" In their duties in the movement and con- ' trol of the airer alt. Newport Eatery Robbed A rtappl'r gunman conned his \\a\· into t h e Wa r e hou s e Hcs'taurant in Ne\\ porl Beach l'.11 I~ toda~· and then pull c·d a rt'· \tlht•r on thl' n1~hl manager and took $1 ,61..IO rrom the safr Police ~aid lhl' ~uspcc·l made hi!> gcla\\ ay t rom till' res taurant al 3450 Via Oporto aftl'r handcuf fmg 'l<'llm John Sch1rml'r to the Sa( Ctn the rl'Staurant's offtet• In add1t1on to t he evening's re· <'l'IPh. polu·t• said the bandit J?Ot a J!reen lla\\;111Jn pnnl shirt. Del D~t Ken Thompson s aid Sh1rmt'r n•n•1H·d .1 call Jl about 2 a m from .1 man"' ho 1dcnl1f1ed h1msC'lf as Gene Halton. He told th<' manaJ?cr hl· had lost an en- ' l'IOP<' of important papers in the rl'!'.l.1urant S$!l Thompc:;o n said an en· vc·lnpt• "'1th a not 1cl' of late p;iy- mc nl of attorney's frcs apparent· ly hc1d bl'Cn pla nted in the rt•staurant Schirmer told the man he could have 1l 1f he could be at the r estaura nt in 15 mmutt'S Wh en th e man arr i ved , Schirmt•r kept him outside the door until dl'parltnJ! dishwashers opened 1l and the m an came in · side Schirmer said the so-called Ra tton. who was dressed in a gr ay suit with an ope n-neck s ports shirt, discussed the restaurant's banquet facilities before pulling a small revolve~ from his pockel- He directed Schirmer to the safe and warned him that he would kill him if Schirmer failed to do as he ordefed. <See BANDJT, Page A2) SAN DIEGO <AP) -Police s ay they are holding a 24·year- . old man for questioning in the ap. parenUy motiveless slaying of Paul Gregory Nelson, 15, who had been jogging along the sidewalk. WltnesseJ told police an at· tacker be1an stabbini Nelson Sunday night, then followed him into the street. thrusUng a knife into the youth, several more limes before Nelson fell scream· Ing to the pavement. The yough died a few minutes , later in a hospital emergency room. ~ I Instant Movie Polaroid Enm Runwrs NEEDHAM. Mass. (AP> T he Polaroid Corp. introduced a n instant m otion picture system today at its 40th a nnual stockholders meeting. A long-time dream of inventor and company founder Edwin Land. 67. t he movies-in-a-minute system \\as the• s ubject of much s peculation before the announce ment. But the com pany did not an- nounce the sys tem offici<illy befor e today. Wi t h annual sulcs of $950 million last year, Pola roid is far s m aller tha n photogr aphy rival Eustman Kod ak Co.. which got into the insta nt cam er a business for the firs t time about a year ago. But Polar oid announced a .33 percent incr ease in first-qua rte r earnings last week : $14 million or 43 cents per s hare on record sales of $192 million. Kodak reported a 20 percent drop in fi rst-quarter profits. The instant motion picture equipment and fil m sales arc expcct<.•d lo give lhc company a m ajor boost m revcnues. T hose ho pes were r enected in t he s tock market, whe n Polaroid s hares rose 11 s Monday to 33111 Mobil Deadline Foundation Files lroine Sales Papers By TOM.BARLEY QI the OltllY PllOI Slall Docume nts r e flecting the J a mes Irvine Foundation's de- cision lo sell the Irvine Company to an East Coast consortium for $302.9 mill.ion were filed today in Orange County Superior Court. But the new legal action does not prevent the Mobil Corpora· lion from re-e ntering the bidding race which it led until recently with an all cash offer of $281.9 million. An obviously impatient Judge J ames F. Judge quickly denied Monday a move that would have given Mobil 90 days during which the company would have held its annual meeting and reappraised its stand on the Irvine Company sale. Instead, Mobil was given until Friday to lop the bid submitted by a combine headed by Detroit developer Alfred Taubman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto billionaire Henry .Ford II. Backing them ln the bid to ensure that Mobil does not take over the Irvine Company is The further extension to Mobil hy JudJ?e Judge came under fire from attorney Howard Friedman who has represented Mrs. Smith throughout the eight-month trial. Friedman told the judge that Mobil was m ade aware of the consortium's latest offer last April 2 but has made no move lo submit a new bid or even indicate that it was interested in remain· ing in contention. Taubm an -Allen-Irvine has agreed to allow Mrs. Sm ith to buy sufficient stock in the new com- pany which would allow her to re· lain the board seat she now holds on the Irvine Company. Mobil officials have refused to make any such concession to the granddaughter of James Irvine IL Judge Judge made it clear late Monday that he is not compelled to approve the higher offer for (See MOBIL, Page AZ> STREET NAME MOJ'ES MAYOR Jrvlne h~ Joan lrvlne Smith POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. (AP) whose lawsuit stymied • $200 _ Mayer Robert E. Ahmed. una· mllllon sale or the company to ble to enlist clUien s upport t.o Mobil four years ago. Foundalloo attorney Howard change the name of the street on Privett told Judge Judee that If which ho lives, has decided to Mobil bu not submitted an offer mr~~ed lives on Hooker by Friday he will uk the court to A venue, a name he says has e m· approve the TaubmlJll·Allen· · ba rrassed Wm. ,Iniloeoffer. . t. ------------ Breezes Protect Trailers By Pi'nLJP ROSMARIN QI llW O•oly P•lol SUI! A crow, e l ectrocuted on high-tension wires. fell burning into scrub behind the El Morro Trailer Park off Pacific Coast Highway near Laguna Beach Monday and touchl•d off an 85· acre Irvine Ranch brushfire that burned 19 hours before it was out. More thnn 125 fi refighters from t h e Califo rnia Divis ion or Forestry, Orange County Fire Depa rtment, Laguna llea<'h Fire De part ment and the Irvine Ranch fought the fi re. They were CJSsistcd by three twrn -enginc air tankers that dropped more than 6,000 gallons of fire-retardant chemicals on the blaze swept by light winds up the Moro Canyon ridgelines in· land away from the tra il er park. Trailer park residents anxious· ly watched the billows of smoke pour over t he hills closest to the m . One res ident said she wasn't worried , "as long as that wind keeps blowing the other way.'' The firefightin~ was hampered twice by unexpected delays. Two Costa Mesa 17-year-old boys who drove onto the rugged s in gle -lane dirt a ccess road firemen used to gel to the fire cras hed headon into a fire chief's (See FIRE, Page A2) Co ast Weather Variable high cloudiness through Wednesday and chance or some late night · and early morning low clouds. Lows tonight 50 to 56. Highs Wednesday Os at beaches lo mid· 70s inland. I NSIDE TODAY Progres1 threatens the glorious pauoge of a Delaware Bay ferry that may /all victim to the pell·meil · urg~ to gamble in a Jersey casino. Ste Julea Loh's Ammco,Poge 84. •••ex lUY-~e "' Plll.tUtQ .... =~~,._ .. ., M .... ,c.,. CJ Cl ,, ... l.•"'"1'1 Ct l.M.~ ,, .. ,.. .. ,,,.. ., C•llfe • ,, ... , ,..w ... .. CIUtlli.I C..11 .......... , ..... ,,. C•m•o Cl .... '4. CH Crattw-cs '-'h • .,.. OolllM .. k.-,,. T.tni,i.. .. ••itwlel "~ "' T .... ,_ .. .... ,.,_...._ .. Wotllff A4 .A2 DAILY PILOT s Tuesday. April 26, 19n Spray Can W.......-. Approved by FDA • g WASHINGTON <AP) -The r ood and Drug Adm inistratif)n a nnounct•d to<h1y 1t \\ill fl'qlllre a w arning l.ibt.·I on aerosol con· t amers using fluoroca rbon pro- pellants as a first step toward eventuaJ c lim matwn of virtually all s uch produc·ts. • * * * UCI Professor T he Consumer P roduct Safrty Commission said 1n a joint an· nouncement v. ith FOi\ 1l 1s pro posing similar act10n for the µro d ucts it r egulates. The actions cam e in response l o a Natio n a l A cadem y o f Sciences report las t year that the * * * World Action Cited On Fluorocarbons B) llll .. \U\' K i\ \'E Of "'~ 0.tll'I P1IOI St~U Thl• l 'C In 101· ch<·n11\tr)' pro frssor \\ho first w J rm·d the v. orld t h:Jl fluoro('arbons m ay be t·an- cc·r e;.rnsing sa1cl Monday that prcventl\'l' actions t akt•n by this c ountry v. Ill lw ml'anrngll'ss v.1thuut :-.11111h1r :-.tt•p:-. t uken else .... hen· in tht· v. orlll .. T ht• l'l'U('IUI C!Ul'Slllln IS. how qu1t·kly will tht• other countries respond to our m oves?" Jsked Dr. Frank S Rov.lund, ''ho first dl'lcett'd th<' fluorol'ar.bon d a nger in 197·1 \\1th his L'CI laboratory colleagul' Mano Molina ·· EH•ryhod) .., str .ilospht·rc 1s e ' e r ' b o cl ' t· I .., t' . s I f fl uorm·JrlX>n\ ,; n·n l c·011: rollc·d 1 n E uropt'. our stt•ps \\on 'l hl'lp "th<· proft'SSOl'S<tHI Rov.land said hc:'s in fi.lvor of a ll of the prcve ntl\C' actwns now being proposed by the goH•rn· mt'nl. Th.it 1nl'ludc•-. torla:-s Juint an· nountt·nwnt In 1111' Food Jnd Drug Adm1n1;tr.tfwn and lhe Con:-.umt>r Pr•Hluc-t Safl'l.,, Com m1ss1on that a\\ .1rn111g l.tlu•I t''< plaining tlll' fli111rc11 ·,1rbon da111H·r must lit• pl.HTcl on p111d Utt:-. liy Oc·t :3 I Hmd:rncl :tli-n support-. an an- t 1t·1patt•d .1nnoun<·1•rnt·nt by the• Env1ronnwnt.il l'rnt<•ct111n Agt·n c•y <E l'\l p11ss1bl\ nt•"\l wt·l'k lhal \\Ill < ic·.i lt• tho· "d1t•duk to ban .u•rn"''I prnduc l., I h,1t u~·· t l1111ror.11 lt1111 ... ,c, .1 pri1pt•lla11t ·\c·t•t11d111J,! \11 lluv.l,rnd . th<• l-: I'\ mo'll lil..1•1\ \\ 111 "l'I (kt 15 1!17X .1, lht• dat·, m.1n11f.irturl'r'i m u ... t ... top pl 11cl11t·111g nnnt:'l\t'll ti.ti fl11orcw.1rh1111 produ1 h itnd \pnl 15, 1~1,•1 ""' tlw rl,1t1· v.lwn t hc· .1t·rosol pl 111h1t h su< h ;p. cle odc11 .111h rn 1\ "" liin~·t·r 111 t>ld Ill 'ton•-. Ho\\ l.uul .• 11tl Ill' • 111>1 c ••rt Jin :-c•I '' ht·tht•r th•· pr111111..,1•<I han "Ill h1· 111 t1r111• lei prc•\c•nl .i 111;1rl..t•d 11\l rt"I t' nl S~lll t .lllC'< r l'JIJ..,!•d II\ lh1• tl1111rn1·.11l11111\ d1·pll't1ng tilt• c11•111t· 111 tlw "' r Jtm.ph1·r1· "ll "11 111' Ill 11r :!O \•'.II "' 111•(1111• \\l' knov. 11\\t'1·;111L.'hl rt 111 tin ... ht• npl.11n1·d l!el\\land .incl \1rd1n.1 h.1\1• 1·~l 11n :ikd l hat cf llw p1 C' ·•·nl r ,1t1 11f fluon><:.1rl1on p1ncl11111on 111t1 t1nucs. lht•n· \\di 111• .1111·.1,1 ;,o IMWl nc•w r.1:.1•., ut ..,i.,111 • .11111 1 t'.1t'h 't•;.1r · Hem l;mcl 11li-.1·n ··cl I h.1l c ·.111.ul.1 c1nd S\\I dP11 h ,1\1' .1111 .tth plC'clgt•tl t11 tollm\ .i p.ith '1111111r tn lh<il lw111g t.1k1·11 h\ lh•· I 111l1 ii State ... <>th1•1 11111nlr1t ~. lhu11a:l1 ha' l' ni1t \1•t d1·t·111t-d h1 -..,111t Ttw l 't 'I '<"t•·nt 1:-.l Jhtt .... utl 1t ·-. important th.11 111111\ 1tl11.d st.it•'' t•onl 1nu1• lo t n.11 t I ht 11 II\\ 11 h.in ... to go :1l11ng "1th lh•· .111t11·1p.1t1·d f (•dn;il l1.1n "It's d11ul1l1• pr ol 1•1•111111 Fir t It ('\l'rt'SSC'' Jlt'CIJllt• S l>l'lac I• th.it 'ht• h:lllS ,II c• lll'('f'\ .. ,I r\ .ind Sl'l'lllHI, cl qllll'l..h l1r1111\ tlw f I u 11 ro1· .1 r hon "' .11 ~Pl for m;m11 f.1('1111 c•r .... " Hto\\ l:ind point t•tl out Arms SaJes W ant~d WASlllNGTON tAl') Th<.' C artt•r mlrmn isr at1on. re\'lt'w m g U.S wNi pons s;iles po ll<'ll'S, w nnts to S('ll arm s wor th S-138 m illion to J ordan. Is r ael, Saudi Arabia and South h.M·ra ORANGE COAST .,....,.,, 'JI • t 1'~,1• p,,~ t wr. 11 "'"' • r ~,.,.,,..4-. r ... , .. 1\ttwh "",,.,._l,. • .t ( I lf"1h •h .. IJt'"f'~l'U 9 c_., .. ,. , .. 11 r "' 1 tif\ f'l t ,., ••·• it\ ', t•1 t ~ t '''"""'-"'ll0·41" ll1,1f\l ._,t.,...f .... -.1 •.it•"'t Vt•""' ''• • '\tf't'f .. t ' V• , t I l _.,.,AA Mr t f\ "\o\ ·~Co' ' 4 "'04 •ro , , ' '9' n r"" "'1 .. 1• .,.,,. .,,,., """'" ..... f\4' r.i {)"" f>tf I t.,., t •I OI 11) W-0,I tt.tlt 'l•,.-(f (.&111 t ,,,,,,.,. I ( t I ,_, ... l/'llt- lltoMrlN Wf'"cf ,.,.. '"'"'' ~ .. .,, , ... ,.,, J•O II (titt~f V ,. PtP~ ".,t .-1 y..,.,., ti M-.~ ,, .. ,. T~omi1\ tCtt"'U •«tit ~f\01'\I\ • M .,.,....,_ M4""4Qlrt••tMl'lf ('-"'"' H l.•e' •1tfYtd f' "''" A '''\UOI M•l"l•Q+nr1 r fMl'V\ OfflCH '"''"Mfi'it 1inw .. ,1n ... \11,,., \ •!'111'\i\ ftttA• P, 11~' (.l .. "'°"'y,-,, \l•,_.t H ,.,, "'QllW' f\, ,, I'\ 1111' I'll"' ti"'°"'" 1> •'d \..&rtdltOAlt'. V•llttlt 7\701 I -1t f'H """·..i .u '•" Uu·qn r '""""t Tele phone (714)6"2·4321 ClaH llled Advertising 842·S67S "-'dttlf'b"t .. V•H•it NtW\ntt•,. Sl1-6310 f '0"" \.•ft ( lfH••rttl' 49!1-0630 rrfH"f'tofMth0t•r+9flC'~1fflf,(~1•1•\ 540·1220 Cbf"Y' q .. , 1t'1 0'•""""' C"• t r •"""I r,_,,. O*""t "-'-n,.w ''•'••\ 11.,.,,.~ •\ 1"1'•'""' ,.. """'."'' ., .. ..,~''"'"""'"' ....... " ...... ,..,. •f'P'P'1•o ..,, • 'hovt \t"•< ••' l '"" .. ~ of tOO.•oftif\l•w""'•' • S,...-'llfl!oit t ,.,.., •'"'••• fl'• d •I f .. \U ,..,...,. C•• '"""''• \.,.,,, ,., '1-flll t., .,, .• , , '" ,,,."'"'• "• "'• f •• \0 """f'll"I. ,.,. ••• , f .,,,~-~'ti)..,.,,.,.~""'. I UNITED EFFORT STRESSED UCI Prof. Fra nk Rowla nd From Pagp .. t I MOBIL. • • lhl' lr\"lnc Comp;in~ rc·g .1rdlt·-.s 111 '' h1l'h 1·ontl'nd<•1 ..,ubm1ts lhl' h1ght• ... 1 bid lie \\Jrned 1,1\\\t'rs 1111 both ~llll''-lhJl lht•rt• aro· man\ oth1 r ,..,..,11,.~ lo bl· e<ms1tlert•rl ·amon" lht•m the argument that <.i r.!pHlh Jill µrn\ 111g t•t·11nom it 11utl11<1I.. in Or .rnj.!l' <"ount' m 1ght 1111 .in .1 111111· h ht'ltt•r prtt<' for th<· In llll' 1·11111p.tn\ '' 1Ll11n llw n1 ''' ft·\\ ''"'r' \Ir.., o..;m1th h.1 .... 1i.:n·1•tl '"' h t h •• l ... u ::: ~ t' <; I I (\ n ol u r I II !.: ,, .... tlllllll\\ ~h·· lll'lll•\'' th.ti th·· In int• t"11mp.in\ l1>d.I\ ,.., \\/Hiit .ct lo .1 ... t ~.50 ni1l1111n I Ii•· "Jlo· n! tht l1'1111• I .. mp.1n\ 111 •1 .111\1' 111.111d,1l•11 \ \\ 1111 I hf' 11.1-. .... 1Jo:t' 111 th·· I-, 1lo-r.d 'I ,I\ It t' I" r Ill \ 1 t ••I I 'It, •1 l h, 111 '"'"un· l "lllP• I t h.111t.ll1l1· lo11111i.1t1011 ... tn di\,.,, th1•111-.c•I\"' "' pn\ .tt" PHT\p.111' h11ld1n,i..: ... h\ l'l><l \ 1.1 ... t m11111t1· ..,..n .... 111011 .1p I" .crt•d to Ill' 111 tht• mJl..1ng l.111· \11111<1,I\ v.h1·n tt'l1·~1 .im.., f11m1 ,, 11111111.111\ 1d1·nt1t1t·d ,1.., .11•1.ird I >t q ·lupnh Ill I .11111lt·11 '' •·r• ii• I , r1·ol 1 n th• 1·11u rt 11111111 t11 It•\ \t I.., lor IH>lh .,,,j,., .111cl .Judi.:•· .I 11 ti .c'. 111" I Ir Ill I 11fl h••r 11t1•11t 1f11·d c.., .1 1""'"'I111n1 111 ""''"'""m1·n li,1,1•d Ill l'h,l.1<l1•lph1.1 ... 1111111 lht• ,,.1 .. i:r.1m .. lh.tl II IS pr1·1t.1f1·d It• 111\ :tc .• rn11l1011 t111 llw Ir''"' 1 ·,.n1p.111\ H111 h Frw<lm.in .inrl l'ri \•II 1111 1111•<11.oteh n ·1t•dt•d llll' nffr•r ,,.., \\ 111 lhlr"" I h• \ ..,,11d lh•· .lf'r.trd i.:roup 11,,., not pm\ 1•d its <1h1li1 _, lo mt•t•t such .1 r111;in<·1al l'11mm1tment 1n lht• p.1~t tltinn_g ,111 t'.tr ltc •1 .1p prnach to lht• Fo11ndut 11111 lh.il "as not made puhlil' Dental Tests 'Prejudiced' SACRAMENTO (A P > T he San Berna rrlino Sun-T elegr am says stal e 10\'estigator s ha\'(' fou nd some "discrim in ator-. nota tions" on score s heets ro·r slate de ntal h cense exa ms T he s tory, pu bh shed during the '' eekend, says "racial and sex ua l prejudice per sis ted m boa rd pract ices as late as 1976." Som e score s h eet s carried scribbled notations s u ch as "col- ored ," "orienta l boy" and "gal " One with high m arks carried the penciled comme nt: "Hard to believe this is a girl " E'rtna Page AJ BANDIT .•• After being handcuffed lo the s a fe , Schirmer was still able to reac h the telep hone and call police. The s uspect is described as six feet tall. about 170 pounds w1lh a full. neaUy trimmed bea rd He a ppe ared to be in his late 20s or early :r>s. f birmer said. p ropl'llants formally known as c:hlorun uorocar bons rise mto the s tra l ui.pht·rc• and deplell' th e l'arth's 01onl' layl'r, a t hin pro- tl'('llV(' gasl•ous bell that filters h ~1 rm ful ultra\ 1olet radwtion fro In tht• !)Ull The FUA said that a ll food, drug und cosmt•llc containers US· 1ng fluoruc:arbon propellants and :-h1ppl'd 111 111tt.•r\tale com meree must c·arry tht• follov. mg warrung oflt•r (kl :11 'Warntny contains a <'hlorofloorocarhun that may harm the public health and environment by n·cluc1ng ownt' in lhl! uppt'r .at- mosplwn• · A bout 85 pt.•r ccnt of aerosol pro· d ucts containing the che m icals are CO\ ered by t he FDA regula- tion The remaining 15 per cent are n•f!ulatt.•d h~ the Consumer Proclu<:L Sufc•tv L'omm1:-.s1on D•ll'r Pilot P"oto t>y A.{C."•cd Kot-hler SAN JOAQUIN HILLS FIRE NEAR LAGUNA BEACH BURNED 19 HOURS 1 Two of the 125 Firefighters On Brushy Slopes Behind El Morro Trailer Park CPSC or lhe En\'lfOnmental Protcct10n Agency. EPA already r equires a warn- ing label on pesticide aerosols t'onlaining fluorocar bons. and th(• p rodul'l safety comm ission proposal is t•xpt•clcd lo take ef- fect early next Yt'Jr T he F DA a nd CPSC joint an- no uncem ent said details of a m andatory phase-out program for a ll nonessl'nlial aerosols us- ing fl uorocurbons will be an- noun ced shortly ' ThC' lubel warning and ul· t1malc ban v.111 affect almost half tht· 2 .t h1lhon pn·ssunzcd con- laint•rs :-.old in the l'nitt-d States l'<.1ch year,'' the agt-nc1es said .. The other half of such products UM.' otht•r propL•llants " Among thl· products affected by lnd:.l\"s i.l('t ion an• deodor ants, .1nlq>t·r~p1 ranl!>, hair spruys. col· ognt•:-. all regulated by FDA .ind household l'l<•ant•rs 11nd air frt•she ne rs r egu latl·d by lh1• Consum er l'rnduct Saft•ly Com- m1ssll)n F n \ s:.11d 11 :-. orclt•r would not .1pply to 0\1•1 th1· l'<>unter dr ugs 11:-.t·d for inhalation th<:rapy for lironth1al .1-.thma. tontract·pt1\t' '.1g111.1I t11.1ms and eytnlog~ fix Jtl\ t'S "l11ch Jl'l' ml'd1n~I de' in·s 11'-t•d 1n .i l'illlt't•r diagnostic pro <'l'dun· L St' ot lluorocarbons in thost• products 1s essential. the l'l>\s.11<1 1-·ood and l>ru,g C"omm1.,s111ner Onn.11<1 Kt'nnt•d\ ts\ul'd ,, 'llate· 1111 nt \\1th lhl· annnunn mt'nl ·"mg dt•plt'l1on nf !ht· t•arth"s 11111nt• l,I\ 1•1 l 11ulcl 111crl'asl' the 1 n c 1 d 1 • n 1 • l o f .., k 1 n e u n <· 1 • r '' orld\\ 11lt" t'aU:-<' l'hangt''-111 the 1 Ir m ,11 t• .111rl h.I\ 1• ot ht•r und1·,1ra- ld1 f ltt•l h Bu~et Hike Eyed I OS 1\:\G E-:u.;~ (,\l'l L11s \ngl'll•:-. t'11u11ty t.1xpa:-l'r ... \\lit tund .. 1 hudgl'l nl'\t H'•ir that is S:!:!l m1ll1on luglwr thun thl' eur n ·nt on1· 1f lh1· C'ount\ ('h1Pf l\rl· m 1n1..,t r.tll\ 1· Oii 11·1•r'-. JlrtllH>!>i.il ..,t .in<h Tlw l111dg1•t propus.d, lt1t,tlini.: ~1~111111011 \\ ,,., rl'11·a-.,.cJ \!oncl,I\ From Page Al FIRE ... ptl'kup truek. hlot•king thL• ro<.HJ lor a half hour. Wall'r tank t rutks carrying emcrg<'ncy rl'f11ls tu supply the front lllll' f1rcf1ght1·r., \\ t·n· halt ed as count) sht•nff's <kput1t•., worked tn pusn th<' wrecked \ eh1cles off lh<.' ro.ul The youths '' cn· ;irn•::.lcd lor lrespa~:-.ing and 1mped1ng f1r{' equ1pnwnt Tht•y v. t'rl' trcJlt•d for minor 1nJl.Jrtl''-;11 lloag l\I cmon;iJ llo:-.pll •. tl 1n \ 1•\\ port H t· a{' h and n· I t· a~ c d t 1,, th l' c ustod) of their pan·nts .. ~ 1 n· B ~1 l I a I 1 on ( · h 1 t'I II oh Rubl•son. of tht· Or.1ng1· a1 '"' <·ounty st ation. told slwnff's dt· pul1t·s h(· had slm' l·cl h1::. flll'l..up to nc·arly u slop '' hc•n he· sa\\ th1· tecnagl'rs' rt•d \'olksv. a gen hl·;tr ing tlown thC' road. N<•1thn R obc•son nnr h1:-. fhlS:-.i.'llJ.!l'I', l"1n· Capt :Vlih" \.'Jn B1hlwr of Yor 11.1 Land;i. \\ U!> in1ur1·d GwnmoMarx Laid to Rest GLEr\DALE I \P l Wtlh a biller rourt h.1ttl1 · h,ird~ wtlll'd '" l'r tht• t•11st11<h 111 (; rOUl'hu :\LH\. t ht• .igt d 1 nmt•d1J11·., hroth1·r. C:ummo. ha:-hct·n qu1l'l ly la1dt11n•sl Gummo :'11.ir\ H·I. ''a., t•n tombed in a l11lb1d1• m.1u ... 11lt•um Mon <I a\' a ft c-r '' b r 1 l'f fu nrr a I M'r\"tl'e .• 1tt1•nd1•cl 0111\ h' t.1m1h membc·rs and l'lost• lril'ncl; M ar:'( d1t'd ol n.itur;il C'ausi·s la1.l last Thursday 1n a l'al111 Springs hosp1t<1l Gummo's deat h lt'a,·cs the !s6 -vear old (l r oueho. w hosf' f!I\ en name IS .Julius. and Zt·ppo 1Herbcrt 1. 71. ;1c; lhl' onlv sun1\ m g membl'r~ of tht-1.iny M<1rx Brothers com1·<1 v tc·a m Ch1M < L<'nnarrl > dtl'<1 111 I !lfi I .rnrl llarpo 1 ·\rthuri dwd Ill l~lfi·I North Seo Spill 'Blowout Killers' Delay Second Day STA\'A:'\GER. :".orv.ay <API -T he t ea m o f A inerica n "blowout k illers'' seeking to ca p a runaw'Q' oil well in the North Sea today Clectded to postpone.the ope r ation one more day to hft m ore equipm ent onto t he ng Plans to ce1p t he well v.l're postponed Monday by g ale-force winds. M ean while, the N orwegian governm ent a ppOlnted a blue - ribbon pa ne l to investigate t he first blo wout in No rway's of· fsho re Ekofisk 011 field . ThC' hlO\\ out is d1•\'l'lnping into a ma 1ur ls!>U<.' tor lhl' fall g1·nl'r.tl 1·ll•l'l11Jn und ml comµa n11:s \\l'fl' ''orned that the minontv Labor go' ernment \\'OU Id c:.inc~·I plan:-. for ll'st clrtlhn~ off northt•rn :'\on\ J~. v. h1ch 1s to begm rw"l year Since the well ble w Friday, the Ph1lhp~ Petroleum Co. 's Bra\'o ng has been spewing bet we<'n 840.000 a nd 1 05 million gallons a day into the sea. forming a slick s1 x nules "ide and 15 to 20 miles long Al current 011 car tt'I prices. the \\l'll v.as thro\\ing av.ay about $300.000 v.orth of l'rude 011 a day A bout 40 to 60 perc:t'nl of c rude 01 I can be refined into gasoline. "' pl•rts said, meaning the oil lost so lar could run about 2,800 cars for a year. At current U.S. consumption le' e ls. the oil lost by noon today would su pply the e ntire Un1lc<l States for about 24 minutes, an expe rt in Washington said. T he t \\o Am e rican expe rts. Boots Hansen and Ric hard Hat lenorg of the re nowne d team of Tex as oil wl'll fi re fight e r Red .-\da1r . made t he decision to poi.t ponP capping operations aftt•r he1.m.J1ng lhl' ng for the third t1m.c Slnl'l' they arrived on the scene Saturday. F our other m en -two from Adair 's c rew and tv.o from Phillips, a lso in- spc•tted lhe rig today They said they neod morl' time to br ing up sp<·c1al equipment from lht• b<irgc· Choctaw, which is s1ttin~ a longside Ilr avo and ser ving as the ir main ope rational bas('. "We s till fee· I confide nt the leakage can be closed fas t as soon as all equipment is availa- hll' a nrl the• v.or k tan lie.gi n. m.1~ Ill' \\llh111 th1· nt·xt :?I hours," said D.1g i\l a~t·r ll an~l'n, • :-pokl·sman for tht' !'lon,·c·g1a n oil The oil lo•t aeould !IUJJPlfl the entire V.S. for about 2.f ndnute•, •opp one expert. d 1rpc·torall' "The'' or k itself c an be done prc•tty fast. 1n one or tv.o d~l\S" i>ulth oil l'xpcrts who sur· 'c·~ eel thl' :-.lick said they felt s ure lht' spillt-d 011 \\Cluld b reak down IH'forc r('al'hinl! coastlines if the hlo" out k1lll'rs t·an close the lt:akagl' this\\ eek. Six NonH:g1an vessels began 1 °~ ing t wo protective lines of floating booms si'< nautical miles nMth of the E kofi sk field. The \'l'Ssd s ar1• equipped with skim- mc•rs lo lift t he 1111 from the sur- fat•t>. More hooms. skimmers and pumps wen· l'xp ccted on the SCC'ne lalt•r Th<' Norwegian ;\kleorological lnst1tult• said weathl'r forecasts for the n<'\t 24 hours\\ en• favora- blt• for lht• oprratwn Parents Convicted of Abuse · l'Hl"\t"ES~ 1\\'\(';, ~1 rl <A P > I hi' p ;11 c•nts of ot g 1 rl, whosl' mothN sJ1d "';is conceived in J r.1p1· h:i\c• ht•f'n ('nn\tC'tE'rl of l..1•1·111ng lht• child 111 .1 I 111~. dark 1·uh1< l1· t111 mud1 ul lll'f <•1ght }l'ar s .. 1':\'!•ry t1ml' l looked at her. I :;av. 1111• t.11·1· of that man who r a p l' ti m <'. " L 1 n ii il F a \ • · Rur chfield. '.II. tt•<,l1f1NI clunna: the week long I n:il Mrs Burch fic•ld sho\H'd l1ttl!' emot ion l\tond:iv whf'n a 1urv found hc•r guilty nf d111tl ahuw. C'Onsp1raC'y, u:;saull and falst• 1m 4'1"Wl,..""91• COUPLE CONVICTED OF CHILD ABUSE Llf!_a Faye Burchfield, left, Hutliflnd Billy Leave Court p rison ment Her husband. Dilly F loyd Bur chfield, 38, was c·on- \ 1cted by the j udge on the same charges. P a tricia Ann<' Sau nrl<'r'i w<•1ght•d o nly 20 pounds and h.1rl th<' bone :-.truclur« of a <·hilt! lt•<;s than ha lf lwr age wlw n pol11·1• found her last 'iummer in a 2· hy 5 foot c ubic le. accordin g t1> ll'Sl1mo ny in the t rial, w hich was 111o ve d her e from lla ltimon • lil'l' a ust:' of pub I icily. Patr icia. who is now w 1lh a fo:.t<•r family •.rncl reporlt•d doin~ wt•ll . had lighted c1ga r cll<''- placed on her feet and hands ;is punishment. her 11-ycar-old sis lcr Susan testified. Susan told the court he r s1strr \lt•pt and ale m t he dosel and rlHI not go lo school or out to pla; · Som t>times l kl P<iltv out of thr closet \\hen my mother ''as out bov. hng, · · Susan test1f1cfl "1 'd let her play with my st uff .ind v.e'd talk about ever ything." Th<' only h~hl m the closet was the "light that cam e in under the door .'· Susan said. Mrs. Bu rchfield 's a ttorney. Robert Mann. said in his closing argument Monday th at his client was a "sic k wom an" and was not r csponsihle for her actions. Mrs. Burch.field '1never had any re al love -from her slep· parents. lo that 'real win ner .' her hus band, Billy Bur c hfield ." he s aid. She also testified that s he had bee n sexually assaulte d by an un- known man whe n she was 7. Her first marriage lo Harry Saunders w as s tor m y a nd e n d e d 1n divorce, s he s aid. H ele n La isure White, Mrs Bur c hfie ld 's fo ster m o ther. testtfied s he found the child m the f loset for the se<:ond lime last Ju , "1't. Two years ea r lier she had dis· cover<'d Pat nci :i in the closet, s h e Si.lld. hut R urc hf1e ld ma naged to remove the g irl b('forf' a\llhorilles arrived . llalt1morc· ('ountv Policf' L L l.1·1• l'f'lt·r~ :-..1111 v. lwn he found l'.ct r1da, "sht• C'ame lo me im· nll'd1;1lt·lv and I took hC'r in m y ,1 r ms" flt• 1-UHJ she told him she "as hungry ll1•·a ls11 told UH' court t hat pic- tures of thl' chilcl when found .. don 't dl·p1t'l thl'Sm l'll." So mersl'l C1n·111l l'ourl Judge Ll<ivd S11npk 111s :.t>t May 27 for S<'rtl1'11l'IOJ.:. Mr... llur1'11fu•ld had pll'aded inncH't•nl by n•ason of insamty to t he < hargo•s Ile r husband on Mon ti.I\' \\ 1thdrew his earlier pll'.t of 1111101· .. nt lty reason of to· sanity .ind t•ntt•n•d un mnocent pit' a. S 1mpkinc; ('Onviclcd h im an cr a st .1 Ll•mt•nl of f •Jl'h '~as p resented to t he rourl by a n assist a nt ~talc's attorney Brcnvn 'Life' StandLmhed S A C R AMEN TO (AP> - The Senate's Re publican leader cla ims that Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is trying to block ena ctment of a d eath penalty law by pushin g a hfl'·V. 1thout-parole bill. Sen . Geor~e D eukmejian lashed out at Brown und a GOP colleague Monday. co nte nding th al pass age or the lire bill would m a ke it "almost impossible" to override Brown 's prom ised veto or a death penalty m easure. •' t t hink he has set out to de- Ii ber ately kill our death penalty bill," DcukmeJ1an s aid a\ a Capitol n l'"-11 confe ren cj!. 'I _._. __ __ • .. Orange Coast EDITION i VOL 70, NO. 116, 3 SE~IONS, 30 PAGES I • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1977 Today's Closing , N.Y.Stoeks \ c TEN CENTS : H9ineowners. Oppose Gisler .Bridge By STEVE MITCHELL Ol IM O•W, Pll•I Sl•fl A bridge over \he Santa Ana River at Gisler Avenue raises for some homeowners the specter ot increased traffic problems along Mesa Verde residential streets. The bridge would connect Garfield Avenue, the Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley border, with Gisler, bringing eastbound traffic to Costa Mesa~ Gas O.ity Piiot Pl>oto1 b' Rkllaf'd ICMl!lef' LOCAL STUDENTS STRIKE UP THE BAN 0 -Tony Adams of Rea School in Costa Mesa (upper left) awaits his cue on cymbals ' while conductor Charles Yates (upper right) keeps things in time. Rikky Holt of Eastbluff Elementary is the young man on baritone <lower left) and the pretty flautist is Cynthia Koontz,. also of Eastbluff school in Newport Beach. After two months of preparation, Yates a nd his 75-picce Honor Band. made up of fourth through sixth graders from the dis tri ct's 25 e lementary schools, will give a free concert Wednes- day night at Costa Mesa Hi gh Schoo l Ly ceu m. Showtimc is 7:30 p.m. Witnesses For Doctor .Rest Case Defense attorneys for Or. William B. Waddill or Huntington Harbour presented their rinal w1tncs~ today in a hearing lo. detrrmine'f Pthe physician should bdtried#on ch"arces of killing an hour-old Infant. Deputy District Attorney Bob Chatterton said Judge Kenneth M. Smith is expected to decide whether to remand the case to Orange County Superior Court Wednesday. Chatterton said he and Wad· dill's attorneys will present final .arguments in the closed pre· liminary hearing in West Orange County Municipal Court Wednes- day. Waddill, 43, is charged with murder In connection with the March 2 strangulation death or a baby girl at Westminster Com- munity Hospital. The gynecologist·obstetrician reportedly attempted a saline abortion on the mother or the child which later resulted in a live birth, Westminster police al· lege. Waddill is free on $25,000 bail. 6 Wm Settlement SAN DIEGO (AP) -Almost $95,000 is being paid by San Diego to four women and two men in an out-of-court settlement of their suit accusing the police depart- pient of race 6r sex discrimlna· · Uon. A City Council resolution op- posing the bridge was recently sent to county Environmental Management Agency (EMA) of· ficials. ''The last thing we need in this area is a bridge," said Costa Mesa realtor Paul Huber, who lives on Gisler. Huber sent out 1,500 fliers to homeowners in Mesa Verde, out- ,,.. lining a proPoSed $50,000 bridge study, financed by the EMA. Huber says Costa Mesa has lit· lie to gain by the bridge access, saying that most of the traffic generated would be coming from Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley-not the other way around. "The only people going west would be those visiting friends in those two cities," he said. He said condominium and apartment projects in north Hun- tington Beach and in Fountain Valley have increased the populations in those two cities. "Most of the traffic would be pouring into Costa Mesa and those folks wiU be taking residen· tial streets in Mesa Verde lo get to the shopping centers," he warned. . His fears are echoed by Verlin Marth, another north Costa Mesa resident, who sees nothing but trouble with completion of a four· lane bridge over the river. "There's n<> way those motorists are going to drive straight down Gisler to Harbor," he said. "They're going to take shortcuts right through file heart of Mesa Verde." ../ Marth said he didn't Un· derstand why the county would spend $50.000 on a study wben ' Dela·ys. · Plugging of ' ·.~ . . Musicians Motivated Horwr Band to Perf onn in Costa Mesa For conductor Charles Yates and the 75 young members of the Newport-Mesa Elementary Honor Band. Wednesday night 1s their chance to reward the publi c. and themselves, with the res ults of their long hours of musical effort. The band. made up of the best fourth through sixth grade musi· cians in the district, will present its annual free concert at Costa Mesa High School Lyceum start- ing at 7:30 p.m. During the hour-long performance the band will play eight musical selections. ranging from James Oodd's "Mickey Mouse March " to Serge Prokofieff's "The Love of Three Oranges." "They are so enthusiastic and so eager there's been no problem with motivation. They're t aring to go," said Yates. who wiJl han- dle the baton this year after managing the honor band for the past five years .. Each year musical directors face the difficult task of pulling talented youngsters together into ·an integrated performing unit for a one shot presentation. After auditions are held in mid· February, Yates and company have about two months to whip their act together. This lime is broken down into seven two-hour practice sessions held Wednes- day nights at Costa Mesa High School. "The kids have really stuck to it and they've done a good job," said Yates, who has selected material that is melodic and fun to play, but challenging enough lo require many hours of practice .it home. Youn,:( musicians y. ho work the harde!>t have a chance t o per form one number with what Yates calls his "super band," ft'aturing the best mus icians out of a flock of very talented young people. This year's s uper band will play ''Hosts of Freedom" by Earl King during Wednesday's concert. AeeusedSpy Yates sees the annual conert as an important step for youn g musicians. many of whom will move on to perform with middle school and then high school ensembles. And, by drawing students from throughout the dis trict's 25 elementary schools, the concert can mean new pals a nd the chance of developing long·lasting musical friendships. Secret Vllult Fun Related at Trial LOS ANGELES (AP) - Christopher Boyce, accused of espiona)te, took the witness stand in his own defense today and told of drinking parties within top- secret vaults at the defense re- search plant where he worked. Boyce said that a marijuana plant was grown and displayed inside one of the secret com- munications centers at TRW Systems Inc. and one employe used the secure phones in "the war room" to place bets with his bookie. "We used to drink vodka and orange juice in the vault all the ti me." the 23·year-old Boyce said under questioning by his at- torney, William Dougherty. "I'd say I drank with about 10 people ••• there was always a bottle in there behind the teletype link.'' Boyce said. In an eCfort to prove that security was so lax that others might have stolen informaUoo, Boyce told how another employe made Imitation security badges ;which were used by at least one person to walk in and out of the plant. · •'He made a badge with a monkey on it for a joke," Boyce said. He told how a marijuana plant sat in open view on a work table and told of attending a beer party on the day be was briefed about security regulations. •·we had a party at lunch," he ($eeSPY, Pase AZ) • Death Tale Repeated· By Witness LOS ANGELES <AP> -Linda Kasabian, who says she's trying to forget her life with the Charles Manson "family.'' has recited without tears the nightmare de· tails of the Sharon Tate murders. The 27·year-old Mrs. Kasa· bian, star witness or the 1970 Manson trial, retold the grisly story for jurors at the retrial of former Manson follower Leslie Van Houten. She spoke or shootings and stabbings, of bloody victims staggering across the lawn of Miss Tate's mansion and a young man crying out: "Please don't hurt m"." "I couldn't believe it," she said. "It just didn't seem real." Her voice was a monotone and her face blank as she sat in the witness box, a plump mother of four whose past bad come back to haunt her. ''Have you sought to repress memories of your six weeks with Manson at the Spahn ranch?" asked Miss Van Houteo's at- torney, Maxwell Keith, as be began cross-examination. "I don't think about them," Mrs. Kasabian said flatly. She said she h ad read transcripts of the first trial to refresh her memory and "a few polnt.s were hazy." But she remembered the Aug. 8, 1969. trip to the Tate home wjth M ansoa followers Sbsan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkle and Charles "Tex" Watson • county officials know "Costa Mesa doesn't even want lbe damn thing." Councilman Dom Raciti, who introduced the anti-bridge re· solution to the council, agrees. "WhY don't we ask them to use that $50,000 for a worthwhile pro- ject," Raciti said. • But Jim Eldridge. the city's public works director, says he <See BRIDGE, Page A2) Spill Oil Well Continues To Flow STAVANGER, Norway (AP> - A dangerous concentration of gas today forced six American blowout experts to evacuate a platform in the North Sea shortly after they had begun efforts lo cap a four-day-old geyser of oil from a runaway offshore well. Officials said the explosive gas built up after the wind stopped, and the experts decided to postpone their efforts again. A similar calm had blocked cap· ping operations Monday morn- ing: and gale-force winds Mon· day afternoon prevented the 'Americans from getting onto the Bravo platform. The well, operated by the Phillips Petroleum Co. of Oklahoma in Norway's Ekofish oil field, blew Friday during routine maintenance and bas been spewing about 49,000 gallons of oil and gas an bour- sioce. A Phillips spokesman said lhe blowout fighters -two members of the Houston-based Red Adair oil well fire-fighting team and four Phillips technicians - managed to close and repair some valves before they were forced to evacuate the platform. The experts went back to their headquarters on the barge Choe· taw, and then pulled the barge several hundred yards Crom the rig. Meanwhile, the Norwegian government appointed a blue· ribbon panel to investigate the firs t blowout in Norway's. offshore Ekofisk oil field. The blowout is developing into a major issue for the fall general election and oil companies were worried that the minority Labor government would cancel plans for test drilling off northern Norway, which is lo begin next year. (See OU.SPILL. Page A2) STREET NAME MOJ'ES MAYOR POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. CAP) -Mayor Robert E. Ahmed, una- ble to enlist citizen support to change the name of the street on which he lives, has decided to move. Ahmed lives on Hooker Avenue, a name he says has em· barrassed him. · Coast Weather Variable high cloudiness through Wednesday a nd chance of sbme late night and early morning low clouds. Lows tonight 50 to 56. Highs Wednesday Os at beaches to mid· 70s inland. INSIDE TODAY Progre11 threatens th~ glor1ou1 paasage o/ a 'Delaware Bau /my that may /aU viclim to the peU·meU urge to gamble in .a Jersey casino. See Julu Loh'• America, I?• 84. tadex ............... -----------------------1.-----------------------'-----------------------~----------------------~).----------------------.~---- ,4.g DAILY PILOT __.C...__ __ _..T..,Udd ...... ...,.!Y..,. _.Apr!.__l .;;;.2:8;.<1...;.1.;.;97_7 Decision On Bids A.ivaited By TOM BARLEY OI ._ OMl'f l>llM Sl•ll Documents reflecting the James Irvine FoundaUon's de· cision to sell tbe Irvine Company to an East Coast consortium for $302.9 million were Wed today in Orange County Superior Court. But the new legal action does not prevent the Mobil Corpora· lion from re-entering the bidding race which· it led until r ecently with an all cash offer of $281.9 million. An obviously impatient Judge James F. Judge quickly denied Monday a move that would have given Mobil 90 days during which the company would have held its annual meeting and reappraised its stand on the Irvine Company sale. Instead, Mobil was S?iven until Friday to top the bid submitted by a combine headed by Detroit d eveloper Alfred Taubman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto billionaire Henry Ford u. Backing them in the bid to ensure that Mobil does not take over the Irvine Company is Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith whose lawsuit stymied a $200 million saJe of the company Lo Mobil four years ago. Foundation attorney Howard Privett told Judge Judge that if Mobil has not s ubmitted an offer by Friday he will ask the court to approve the Taubman·Allen· Irvine offer. The further <>xtension to Mobil by Judge Judge came under fire from attorney Howard Friedman who has represented Mrs. Smith throughout the eight· month trial. Friedman told the judge that Mobil was made aware of the consortium's latest offer last April 2 but has made no move to t>ubmit a new bid or even indicate that it was interested in remain· ing in contention. Taubman-Allen·Trvine has ~greed to allow Mrs. Smith to buy s ufficient stock in the new com·• pany which would allow her to re· ta in the board seat she now holds on the lrvineCompanv. TONIGHT NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD -Regular meeting, Costa Mesa llJgh School Lyceum. 7:30 p.m. WATER CONSOLI DATION MEETING -Public hearing on mer ging Costa Mesa County Water District into city of Costa Mesa, Council Chambers, 7:30 p .m . ''REJIJND T HE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer. OCC Fon.im, 7:30p.m. OCC LECTURE -"Cycle and Sphere of Womanhood,'' Women's Center. 1·30 p.m . WEDNESDAY, APRIL27 COAST CO MMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Ad ams, 8 p m OCC "OUTLOOK •77•• - .. Yellow Brick Road Shows Children's Theater." Orama Lah 9 :30 and 11 am. "Ecology and the Consumer." Libf'ral Arts II. ll a.m. "New Games Festival" for children, Outdoor Exhibit Area. Noon. "Env1ronmt>ntal Poster Contest Judging." Stu· dent Center, 1 p.m. "UNlCEF Children's Workshop," Child Care Center, 2 p.m. "Yellow Brick Road Show" Drama Lab. 7:30p.m. OCC LECTURE -••save Your Teeth ... Preventive Denta l Care," Fine Arts Bldg. ll9, 1:30 p.m. COASTLINE CC LECTURE- ••ctassics of Early Sound turns," Estancia High School F orum. 7p.m. OflANOI COAST c DAILY PILOT ~:i:.~~=-'T.:=t:::::::: c .... 1'114Ml"''"'c...... ..... Sop« ............. . fM>li~-_.., IM-,.,...., IO< C.0.1• ,....., ..._, .. ~ "......_ ...,.,.._ "''" v.11.,,, ,,,,..,., r...-" vo•in -::::::i~<!"~:::t"~;:; ,. ........ ......,.._..,. p1..,, ,, .. alt ..... f :ltfllt. c.YllleM. c.111-• .-. -"·-~-"'*-.,. ... """"' \IQ ......... __ .. ......, ..,_..!! ..... E ... W . • llOAll o.u,,.,,...,._.... TRAFFIC WOES SEEN GlsJer Bridge Opposed BRIDGE ••• doubts the bridge feasibility study will cost $50,000. .. My opinion is, the county needs to complete the s tudy. They have our opinion on the matter and that opinion should be incorporated in their study." Eldridge said. But, he said, asking the county to save the money on the study would not be appropriate. "We are only one part of the county, only one input. They might study it and find out that, based on all tbe opposition, there is no need for a bridge." "They can't make a decision based solely on our r esolution," he said. "The bridge, after all, is on the county's master plan of arterial highways." His personal opinion? "I think the study will show the bridge is not necessary or desira· ble," Eldridge said. "H so, the county should take it off the master plan.'• The public works chief added that, even if the county approved funding of the bridge, they would have to have city cooperation to complete approaches to the structure. "And we've already said we would do that," he said. Meanwhile, EMA officials to- day would not comment on th~ bridge study, and a spokesman. for Fifth District Supervisor Thomas Riley said he would be discussing the Costa Mesa coun· cil resolution with the supervisor later this week. FromPageAJ OIL SPILL. • Since the well blew Friday, the Phillips Petroleum Co. 's Bravo rig bas been spewing between TM oil lo•t .eollld svpplfl the etttlre IJ.S. tor about 24 •fnute•, sap one expert. 840,000 and 1.05 million gallons a clay into the sea, forming a s lick six miles wide and 15 to 20 miles long. At current oil cartel prices. the well was throwing away about $300,000 worth of cn.ide oil a day. About 40 to 60 percent of crude oil can be refined into gasoline. ex· perts said, meaning the oil lost so far could run about 2,800 cars for a year. At current US. consumption levels, the oil Jost by noon today would supply the entire United States for about 24 minutes, an t>xpert in Washin~on said. FroJR Page Al SPY ... recalled ... and drank a con s1rlnahlt' amount or beC'r." lie• said J>("rhaps eight or nine' pitchers were downf'd bf'fore hf• and other new employC'c; r C' turned for the rest of lhctr bnt•f. 1ng on the oper ation of code machines. Boyce said one or the first things he was told by a CIA technician was that the code equipment had already been compromised to a foreign coun· try. "The Central Intelligence Agency technician said all of the equipment had been com· promised on the Pueblo and a lot or it had been lost in Vietnam," Boyce said. Mike Mathews, a TRW spokesman reached at the tmn's Redondo Beach offices, said ••we're not going to comment while the thing is in litigation. .. Boyce is charged with stealing secrets from TRW in Redondo Beath for sale to the Russlan.s through a Soviet science attache in Mexico. His auomeys have claimed that the government, focusing its attention on Boyce and another defendant. Andrew Daulton Lee, 25, failed to thorougb)y investigate whether others lJligb.t bave sold secret.s.. Peace Talks Start ISLAMABAD. Pakistan. CAP) -Prime Minister Zulfikar All Bhutto has flown opposition leaders here from jails around the nation and will try to start talks aimed at ending a poliUcal lmpasae that hu spawned seven weeks of violent demonst.raUons, sources said today. c Measures Called Limited By HILARY KA YE Oftlle OMIJ f'ltet Sl•ll The UC Irvine chemistry pro- f essor who first warned the world that fluorocarbons may be can- cer causing said Monday that preventive actions taken by this country will be meaningless without similar steps taken elsewhere in.the world. "The cru.cial questJon is, how quickly will the other countries respond to our moves?" asked Dr. Frank S. Rowland, who first detected the fluorocarbon danger in 1974 with bis UCI laboratory colleague Mario Molina. .. Everybody's stratosphere is e v e rybody else's. If fluorocarbons aren't controlled in Europe, our steps won't help.'' the professor said. Rowland said he's in favor of :.II of the preventive actions now being proposed by the govern· ment. Thal includes today's joint an· nouncement by the Food and Drug Administration and the Consumer Product Safely Com· mission that a warning label ex· plaining the fluorocarbon danger must be placed on products by· Oct. 31. Rowland also supports an an- ticipated announcement by the Environmental Protection Agen· cy (EPA), possibly next week, that will create the schedule to ban aerosol products that use fluorocarbons as a propellant. According to Rowland, the EPA most likely will set Oct. 15, 1978 as the 'd ate manufacturers must stop producing nonessen- tial fluorocarbon products and April IS, 1979 as the date when the aerosol products, such as de- odorants, may no longer be sold in stores. Rowland said he's not certain yet whether the proposed ban will be in time to prevent a marked increase of skin cancer, caused by the fluorocarbons depleting the ozone in the stratosphere. "It'll be 10 or 20 years before we know if we caught it in time," he explained. Rowland and Molina have estimated that if the present rate of fluorocarbon production con- tinues, there will be at least 50,000 new cases of skin cancer each year. Rowland observed that Canada a nd Sweden h ave already pledged to follow a path similar to that being taken by the United States. Other countries, though, have not yet decided, he said. The UCl scientist also said it's important that individual states continue to enact their own bans to go along with the anticipated federal ban. "It's double protection. First, it expresses people's beliefs that the bans are necessary, and second, it quickly limits the flu orocarbon market for manufacturers," Rowland point· ed out. * * * Health Alert To Be Placed On Spray Cans WASHINGTON (AP) -The f.'ooct and Drug Administration ~innoun<'ed today it will require a warning label on aerosol con· I amers using fluorocarbon pro- pt•llants as a first step toward l'Vl'OlUaJ l'limination Of Virtually a ll i.uch products. The Consumer Product Safety Commission said in a joint an- nouncement with FDA it is pro- posing similar action for the pro- du<'ts it r<'gulates. The actions cam e in response to a National Acade my of Sciences report last year that the p ropellants formally known as chlorofluorocarbons rise into the stratosphere and deplete the earth's ozone layer, a thin pro· tective gaseous belt that filters harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun. The FDA said that all food, drug and cosmetic containers us· ing fluorocarbon propellants and .shipped in Interstate commerce must carry the following warning :ofter Oct. 31: "Worni71ig: contains .a chl-Oro/luoroca(bon that may hmm the public heallhand environment by reducing ozone an the llPJ>n .at- mQrphere." A bout 85 percent of aerosol pro- ducts containing the chemicals are covered by the FDA regula-tion. The remaining 15 percent are regulated by the Consumer Product Safety Commission - CPSC -or the Environmental Protection Agency. EPA already ~ulres a warn- ing label on pesticide aemsols containing fluorocarbons, and the product safety commission proposal is expected to take ef· lect early next year. The FDA and CPSC joint an- nouncement said detaUs of a mandatory phue-out prolJ"am for all nonesscnUal aef'9Sols U'J· ing fluorocarbona wur be an- nou.nccd aborUy. , • HAPPY TAX VICTIMS-Youngsters who operate a street cleaning and manure pickup business out of Ramona, near San Diego, don't seem too worried here about being hauled before the state Board of Equalization on charges of failure to have Al>Wl ........ a permit to sell m anure. They are (left to right). Richard Cessna, 12, president; Ne- Ne, 9, and Betty Cessna, 12, a nd June Cole. 14. The kids make $3,000 a month in the enterprise. The board had some good news for tl~em today. Kids Granted Permit Horse MalWre Finn Mwt Clwrge Tax SAN DIEGO (A P ) -The California Board or Equalization awarded a seller's permit today to a horse-manure distribution firm run by children who made up to $3,000 a month without col· lecting or paying state sales tax. A senior tax representative of the board made the decision after meeting 45 minutes with the com· pany's officers who range in age from 9to 14 years. The permit, No. 25686734, pro- vides that they must now charge a sales lax on some but not necessarily all the homegrown fertilizer which is sold . Neither tax official Bill Atwell nor an attorney for the children would say if any back taxes must be paid. Richard Cessna Jr., the firm's 12-year-old president, said of the permit: "We're gonna keep this locked up good.'' "We shouldn't be taxed'' he said before the meeting-. ' "We're just kids. Theyougbtto be glad we're out working on our own instead of being out National Group Honors UCI Prof Dr. Richard F. Thompson, UC Irvine psychobiology professor, has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences, the academy announced today. Membership in the academy is considered one of the highest honors given to American scien· tists and e n ginee r s. The academy, headquartered in Washington, serves as an adviser to the federal government in matte rs of science a nd technology. Thompson, of Newport Beach, is the second current UCI pro- f essor elected to the academy T h e other ls Howard Schneiderman, biological sciences dean, who was chosen in 1974. Sixty members were elected to the academy this year including eight from the UC system, bring- ing the total members hip to 1,219. Thompson h:is been at UCT s ince 1967, except for a year and a h alf in 1973 and 1974 when he was in the psychology depart· ment at Harvard University. He previous ly taught al University of Wisconsin and the University or Oregon Medical He is a graduate of Reed Col· lege and earned his master's de g r ee and doctorate in psychology from the University of Wisconsin. Thompson was also the l"eCi· pient of the Distinguished Scien· tific Contribution Award, pre· aelfted by the American Delly 1"114ot Sle" f'tlot• HIGHEST HONOR Richard Thompaon Psychological Association in 1974 for his work in brain function and behavior. The UCI proressor is currenUy working on a research project studying brain functions. He h as received preliminary ap- prov a l from the National Science Foundation for a five- year $1.27 million grant. Planner Action "Monday night the eoSta Mesa Planning Commlsslon ac- tion included: GROUND 8lGN: Denied a variance request for a ground algn for Spires reataurant at 3125 Harbor Blvd. STORAGE: Approved a permlt-wltb coodiUons-for construction or a 5,000-aquare-foot storage building at 331S Fairview Road requested by C.J. Segerstrom and Sous. APARTMENTS: Continued until May 9 a bearing for a 4.2 percent dell$llY variance for seven apartment units at 2677 Orange Ave. ZONE EXCEPTION: Sent to Cily Council with no re- corQmendaUon a requm for an 8.1 percent density variance to build three apartment units in COQjuncUon with a bome at 1996 Anaheim Ave. somepl ace busting windows." The action involved KIDCO. Inc .. a corporation founded and run by the children of Richard Cessn a, who operates the equestrian center at San Diego Country Estates, a planned com· munity in Ramona. Cessna said the children let him sit in at board meetings, but • m ake their own decisions. The firm, whose primary service is selling manure and wood shavings from the stable floors in the form of compost for nurseries and golf courses, in· corporated in the British West In· dies last year to prevent it from being subject to California tax.es. KI DCO contends the taxes are paid when horse feed and wood . s havings are purchased, so there should be no tax on the back end. The slate, however, maintainS the byproduct Is new -compost - a nd the services offered by the youngsters are tangible and sub- ject to sales taxes. KIDCO also sweeps the streets of the community for $1.50 per month, exterminates gophers for $1 each and dabbles in anything else at which a pro!it can be turned. Other officers or the firm. which made $3,000 last October, its best month, are Richard Jr. 's sisters, 9-ycar-0ld Ne-Ne, a vice president : Bette. 11, secretary; and their hal(·sister, June Cole, 14. treasurer. Cal,ifonUans Would Favor Water Ration SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The majority of Californians sur- veyed on the state's waler s hortage said they would favor . statewide rationing If ne~ded, ac- • cording lo Mervin D. Field's California Poll released today. Pollster Field said about four out or five Californians, regard- less of where they live. believe water rationing should not be confined to water-1h9rt counties. He said more Northern California r esidents were COD· cemed about water, but .. even in the south the greatest nurober or people see the water shortage u serious and favor statewide ra- tioning." Field saJd 93 percent of those s urveyed said they were practlc· ing some form of waler con- servation.. Callfomlans said agriculture and health and safety should be given the highest priorities for water, according to the i>oll. They list«! households nex;t and s aid industry and buatneas should be given the lowest priori- ty for water. ·The Caliromia Poll, founded in 1947, is a n independent, non· part.isanpubllcopinton1urvcy. · The poll surveyed 962 adult. Californians lqt month. _,, • Tuesday. April 26, 1977 DAtLVPtLOT AS ·.Ragtinie, Bingo Wlli Trophies.: B1 At.MON LOC'KABEY o.11, l'lltol ..... llt 1e11 ... ENSENADA-Ragt1me, the 65-foot aloop COlikippered by Rill White and Bill Pasquini of Loni-: Beach Yacht Club. was officially declared the wiMer of the Pre~1 dent of the United States trophy as the Performance Handicap Racing F1eet divis ion winner in the 30th Newport to Enscnada yacht race. T h e handicap victory was particularly gratifying to thl' Ragtime crew as they were tht.' first yacht to firus h in one of the slowest races on record. Slurp, Slurp Winner of the President of Mexico trophy for the best cor· reeled time m the Ocean Racing Division was Bingo, a 37 -foot sloop sailed by Dennis Choate. also Long Beach Yacht Club. Only 400 of the 504 starters rinished the race because of ltght wmds that forced many of them to abandon the effort at San Diego or lo finjsh at Ensenada under power. Ironically the winds a t Ensenada were "hipping up a small gale at about the time the trophy presentation got under way, resulltng m several yachts Jennifer. a ~ix -~ car-old English sheep dog rolls her eyes as s he d ig!) into a 'a111lla t('l' cream cone. her fa\'ortte flavo r. m l\11am1. Fla The t L•mpl·ratures have been de- lightful for l'l\JO~ ing till' :-.l:mrncrt11n•• fa\'orit<' Controlled Torque Motor Oil Saver LOS ANGELES CAPI -\San ta Ana electrical en~1nt•t>r hue; designed a mon• eff1C'i,·nt rlP< lrtc motor \\ h1r h h1• ""' s <'t111!<1 save onl' to tY.o million 1».1r rl'I'> 111 oil per du~ 1f it '' put 1nt11 \\ 1<11· us1· CraH•ns V. .1nl.t'' lold ,, "''''' conf1•rpnc·1· \1 111111.1' 11t.11 h1·, "controllt•cl 111111111 111olci1 ""', up to om· third 11''' '""' ,., 1h.t11 most f'11•<·t r11 111111<11' :SI .ti, ... 1 f1l'1als tL•rm1•d tlw n1qt11r .i 111, jor b11l111n dollJr hr l'J"t hr11u;h for energ~ l'OrtM·n .111011 The l'nj.!1nt•1•r s .1111 t ht• n1nlur de' t>IOr>NI in his h11m1· '' 11rbhop uses mon· t'ff11•11·11t v. 11HI anw, .tncl l arj.!l'r l':tpa1·1t 111 s 1·n1 r g\ storing <In 11., . .., t h,t11 1""'1·n t1 on;d rno1 11 r s I'll• l.111 '••1 capal'1trn s .dlo\\ 111011 • 111 1 ;;' l•• b1• stor<'d "1lhin tlw 111t1t11r 1 .. r 11 1 a:. n1·1•<lt•cl ' II snot .111 111" 111us d•· .. 1 .. r1 it l11okti 111-.t· ,1 dumh th1rt~! 1 .. "" W ,1111.ll!S s,11d t:lt•nn B111rl\lu11<t .t •P""'' ,111.111 for Soullwrn l <11af11rn1.1 I-1!1-.1111 (;o, Y.1111'11 t1•<;tPil th1• rt1•\11 1• said, ":'1:11 lln1• t'\ "r th11111!hl .1l•111l doing 1t tlw ".1, 111· il1cl W anl .ts' ..,,11cl 1111 11< \\ 1 1111 or could lw us,·tl 111.11 r 1111111111 •llf'I' swimman~ pool f11l1•1 11111111r,, washin~ 111.1d11111•s .111d ••th• r .1p phann ·s .... "I'll .... 111d11,t 11 J I m achmt•n He ::.;11Ct 11 ""tilcl 1·0 ... 1 .11111111 s,10 t o m od1 f\ a c urr e nt o n t> horSl'llll"'t'r c>le~tnc motor to his d1:S1j.(n Aul he addel( lhal motors 1n :-11na .1pµl1 J nl'I'"· 'uc:h Js rdrtJ.:l'rJtllr!>, Y.ould ht• mo re• d1f Ill lllt ,,, ron\ t•rl lll'l'.1\1" ...... r 'h1·1r '""'"-' ""' • 1 .ii hur\• It 1 ti of t lw motors h,1\• 111·•·11 11• It'd in "1111th1•rn f',11l for111.1 tur 't\l'r.tl 11111nth:-. w .• 111 "" '·".t ( 1r1 1l '·'" •• 1 •• r .... t I '"'<I 1111(.'rJl1on in !-.Jnt J \1on1c 1 ,,11.t lht> 11 mnlors test1·d <tl lht> ,.,, .i hh .. hm t·nt "In('<' F•·hruan r1 ,11l1t•d 111 ,1 ..!ll p1·1 n•11I j)()\\ l'r ... J\lflg:-. W ,1 n l ,1.., , 1•' t 1m .1t 1•' I h .11 l11•t \\I t'll 11111• .111d h"' m ii l1t111 lta1 I t I~ uf 1111 l'llU)d lw 'a' 1•tl l't11•h 1!.1 ~ for ,., f'r\ ~ilKI m ii hnn r11ot or.., I Oil\ l'llt d I ht' l lllll'd St.tll':-0 l •1n~11 m,·~ ll'l 111dlt1111 ll Jrrl'ls of 011 p1·r ""' \ ... 1 urh for t h1• F1•dt•ral ~:nt•ri:" 1 11n1n11"'"" 1 .. -.1 ''"'r founrl lhJt m11r1• th,tn half of ;oil I h1• 1•lt•t•t rtl'I 1 \ 1o:••r11 r .111•d 111 tlll' nJt111n runs d t•1•tnr rnnt11r-. an 1ncl 11\ln t111s1· 111·~-. .11111 h1t1tll''o . Hnl>< 11 B.1111111\ ll'h. d 1a1rman .,( thl• '>lt1L1 · l'ubhc t t1hl1t·-. \om n11s ... 1nn ;incl Tt11 h.1rd \1.iulhn , t ,1 t t' E111 r~ \ ( "111 1111 '"'"" ··h.11rm Jn sa11I lh.11 nPllh1·r th" 1•1·c nnrth1• En1·ri:\ 1·11mn11.,s111n \\ •" 'llllllSlll lllJ,! lltt• nt•\< rn11t111 Hut llJtinn\ I• h -.,11d II v. ,1, tht• 11r't t inw tlw l'l c· h.11t 1•\«'r t1111t 1·tl .in 1•1wri:' "·" 111~ 111•\ 1t 1• dragging anchor in lhe still crowd ed harbor. No ~erious damage was reported . Late Monday afternoon there was an unverified report thal one of the yachts returning from Ensenada had sprung a leiik and was taking on water. The winds forced many of the yuchls returning homeward to face a wet beat to weather before l'eac hing San Diego for the usual customs inspection. Reports thal hundreds of wives and children were stranded here because of the s lowness or the race were err o n eous. J ohn Robinson . president of the sponsonng Newport Ocean Sall ing Association, said accom· modations had to be made for one or two families because their boats did not arrive until hate Sunday. NOSA trophy, first yacht to flnis h. Ragtime. Porter Sinclair Trophy. first s ingle hull yacht lo finish, 'Ragtime . Ne w York Yacht Club trophy, first single hull divided rig to finish, Shamrock, Roy Disney, LAYC. Lahaina Yacht Club Trophy, rtrst PHRF y a chL to f1n1sh. Ragtime. John Callery Trophy, first • PHRF ket~h to nmsh, Karma, Carl Hanson. SGYC. NOFA Special Trophy, last yacht to finish, Aegean Sea, Earl Shultz. LBYC. J eff Deaver Trophy, yacht club with the m ost trophy winners. Long Beach Yacht Club. President of Mexico Trophy (Ocean Racing B>: 1. Bingo 2. So Long 5, Gary Swensen, Ana YC 3. Rainbow, Gittleson and Cundiff, LBYC 4. Tin Woodsman, Gordon Frost, SDYC 5. Crosswind, Gibbs Rooftop Waierbed lrwentor Touts Simple Solar Heat By STEVE MITCHELL OI llw O•llY Ptlol Sl•fl Solar energy pioneer Harold H ay says he h as an energy scheme that can provide 100 pe r· cent of a household's heating and t M lmg needs. lie says his concept. which he calls Skytherm. can do 1t without the use of fans. pumps, gas, fue l o r othe r ·'high technology gadgetry." But the inventor says his con· cepls will never go over big m this country. "It's too efficient." Hay told a science hall full of students anCl \'IStlors Monday a t Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa ' Resides being too efficient. it :. too simple. ' he shrugged. The Los Angele:. '"' t-ntor ':. :.olJr t•nergy CXPl'rtments won award:. from the American Rtt\•olut1on lhcentennial Com· m ission and the Department of llousmg and Urban Development last year In addition lo touting his ene rgy s aving con cepts. Hay challenged the effecti"eness of p::is l programs for energy use, tossed IJl a bit of hi.story . and a lot of quips during the OCC Env1ron- m1:ntal Fair lecture fl 1<; Skytherm system utilizes m Cl ,. a It I e 1 n s u I a t 1 o n a n cl thermoponds huilt into a roof s tructure to provide solar heal· mg and cooling wnh nocturnal radiation The heating process works by opcn1n~ roof panels in order to al· low lhe "ater pond:. to ahsorb heat Then. at night. ins ulation is mO\ l'd over lhe ponds so that Discount Ruh Illegal SAN i'"RA:'\ClSCO li\PI -,\ spt•c1al discount on ut tl1ty hills gran ted to Padfk r.as & Elt•etric Co l' 'I. t• <: u t 1 v es and o th L' r t: m plo) es is unlawful <ind d1sl'ourages conservation. .1 l'Omplamt to thl' Public t lll1t1es Commission l'har.:l'~ Tht• t·omplaint. filed hy Pub Ii t' 1\ cl vo e a lC's I 1H· . :.eek::. to 'oi<I PG&E':-. 25 µt•rt·t·nt aaoss-tht board d1::.t ounl lor g..is and elec- t r 1 r 1 l y g r a n t c d ,1 I I t•mpl O)E':-> us a frin g e benefit. The discount ·unfairly s ubs 1d1zes wealthy eom pany ('Xf'CUt1ves .. ' !ht' romplamt c·harges, hy pru- \ 1<111lg t:ut ratt•s for ''heat· mg s~1mmmg pools in the "1ntl'r 1i.:ht1ng t e nnis c·ourt:. Jnd heat1n~ f1flt.'en · 1 <>Om l\thcrton mani.10ns .1t 75 d<'gret•s ·' Oltly Pilot P"°IO 'IT'S TOO SIMPLE' Solar Booster Hay heat r adiates down into the ho US(' Cooling is accomplishNl hy closing the panels ovl'r the ponds during the day and opening lhl•m at night. "Now. one problem we have 1s that people don t ltke t he 1dett of a ll that water over th<' tr h1:ads ," Hay said. "They d on t Sl'em to min<I s even storn~s of waterbeds over them tn their apartments. however," he grinned. H ay s ays hi s "rooftop waterbt'd" concept is more effl· t•1ent than the b<'st :ur cond1 ti oner on lhl' m arket. He points lo his Skytherm South" est S\'Stem 1n Atascadero as proof. s~ying that clunng a l\\O-ycar test period. thl' indoor tern pcralurc stayt•d b<.'lY. een 6G deg r e es and 7 1 dP~l<'~~ Fahrcnhl'tl t"\ en \\ h<'n thl' '>Ul door tcm1wrat url• n •ur hl•d 100 H ay sa~:o. his cooling concepb come from ancient t1mPS, citing several 1nstanc<'s "hL·re othcr tulturcs u:.C'd solJr hcJtmg and cool mg H e s a id rock dw.-llers in Turkey made sure their windows faced away from the sun. adding that the r ocks also retained heal for the night hours H ay s aid lhe fir::.l lh(•rmo· insulall'd s tructurei. werl' th<' Egyptian pyramub hul ad1kcl ii would c·ost more than SI l11lliun to hu1hl one tndav J\ nil, he sarcl. th(' Chtnc•sc USNI to lin' under g round. "com m i:: up eve ry onl'e m a "htll' to mo"' lhl' Jay. ns " When quest1on<'<I. th<-1 n\'entor admitted to scv<'ral prohlems in his system . inc luding the fact that it is very rhfficult to m· corporate the process in already existing homes. "About 75 percent of homes to· day arc not made for solar heat mg and cooling," he said , citing incorrect orientation to the sun and impr oper cons truction materials as reasons. lie said other areas might have problems with mosqu1tos in the open ponds atop the homes. "but a chemical could take care of that." And. of coun.t'. t hl' recent drought also raises some pro- bl ... ms that llays did not dwell upon. He fh scounls price as a pro- ble m s aying the units art· "cht·aper than putting on a m•" roof " What c an the owner of ex1sl1ng hom es do to µrumote Hay's con- t'L'llts" "Make surl' .tll new hou::.es ar<' built "1lh solar heating and cool· ing. ·· he said. "because all the homes bwlt in the future that u:.c g as ancl electnc1ly arc taking that fuel and power away from your home." Nurse Wins Damage Suit A Laguna Hills nurse was awarded $230,000 in damages Monday for injuries s he suffered m an auto accident four years ago. But Mar~aret Bliss, 59, will r e· ceive only $175,000 of that award. The jury ruled lhat she was 20 percent responsible for the col· hs1on at the Main Street offramp of the Santa Ana Freeway tn San· ta Ana Damages were awarded by the Orange County Superior Court 1ur~ a~amst T ru('lt K Whilmtr<' 11. drner of thl• car\\ h1ch struck Mrs B11~s · aulu and Securities Auto Leasing from whom Whit mire leas{'d the car Mrs. Bhss· laY..\'er asked the Jury to award his 'client $500,000 in damages. He pointed out that s he 1s still disabled as a re· s uit of the whiplas h injury she suffered in 1973. Woman Sentence d To Hanging De ath AM MAN, Jordan CAP) A .J o rdani:m criminal court has sentenced a young woman to dea th by hang ing for murtlenng her mother-in-law and burnin~ her corpse. the government an· nouncc<l . The con\'icted woman. Haya Mahmoud Zoubi, 20. hacked the '1ct1m "1th an ax heforc burning the body ~•th kerosene . War Sparked Interest Our last column on terminology couldn t exola1n all the common terms describing gems so today we II cover a lew more · The term natyral 1s aool1od to a gemstone that wai; creat· @ EiEM WISE OCTD Member Cites Resistance Effons By KATHY C'LANCY OI ,._ OfllY P1lol ~l•tf The public membl•r of the new Orange County Transportation Commission says he became tn· terested in the movement of !><'O pie and supplies while \\ orkmi-: with the Allied Resistance durin~ World War II. Santa Ana businessman Z1ka Djokovich. unanimous ly selecl<'d for the post Monday said Hiller 's Blitzkrie~ war slralcgy and mass movement of troops and materials during the war piqued hls interest He later studied engineenng in Eur ope and has since served as an adviser both abroad and in the United Stal es in areas of public tra nsit. energy conservation, air pollution and engine dc~ign. Djokovich and Newport Beach attorney Ja, Walker were in· · troduced ln public by the other lour commissioners during Mon· day's session. Tbey were finalists fro~ a lJst of 80 county residents whb had applied to represent the public on the new county transit panel Tbe comm.inion. created by · t l <'g 1~lat1on \\ h1ch took effl'cl in .IJnua1\, (s responsible for 1 ransµort:.1t1on planning and has budJ!<'I n·new power over local bus syskms and road-building projel'tS The other commissioners are Fountain Vallev Councilman Al llo ll1nden. Sa.nta Ana Coun- c·1lman Dand Brandt and county Supen·isors Ralph Diedrich and Ralph Clark Djokov1ch. 48. a native of Yugoslavia, is president of Mis· s1on \'1eJO Lighting Co m Santa Ana and chairma n of lhe Orange County Civic Cente r Com m1ss1on. He told commissioners Monday he believed energy truly is a problem but that given incen· tivcs. U.S. industries would de· velop ways to depend more upon coal and coal by-products. He noted during World War JI. for example. only 10 pt-rcenl of the ~rman and ltalittn forces were using gasoline, whtle the rest operated with coal by· product!. Becau.<1e Am~r1can business and industry have not yet needed to develop new energy sourctt, they have not. he said Djokovich sa id South ern Californians may begin conserv- ing use of their cars because of the increasing cost of gasoline. They can be encour aged further. he continued. if local agencies provide convenient low-cost bus service along with transit centers oHering conve· nient parking for travelers. Walker. who 1s chairman of the Orange County Transit District's c1tium advisory committee. said he believed the new panel would have the power "to make or break trans portation In this county." He said its duties would include encouraging bus and carpool use. getting the best use from e~isting bus and freeway networ ks and ta c kli n g s u ch task s as 11ynchronizing traffic signals to reduce fuel consumption. Walker said he believed less than half the Southern California residents believe there is a real fuel problem . •'I am not aure that they are re· ady to admit that the problem is going to affect the way they uso their car," he Hid. ed by nalure The only man· made mod1f1cat1on<> allowed are cutting and pol1-1 h1ng Clarity. depth ot color. hard· ness and permanence are characteristics which make natural gems fascinating In the past 100 years scientists have succeeded in duplicating these desirable qualll1es 1n laboratory soeclmene g1v1ng rise to the Syothellc Move- ment. Am8flca's contribution has beeo significant As ear1y as 1880 chem1sls throughout the world were attempting diamond synthesis but without luck In 1955 General Etectnc successfully synthesized diamond. and although the product was of industrial Quality the breakthr<>uoh was momentous. Since theo G.E. has syn- thesized gem-qu~lty material. but the orocess is still too cost-- ly to proltt the industry. The synthesis of emerald is· another Cl'lalle!'ge met In the United States. Cerrotl Chatham of San Francisco began experimenting In high school and succeeded In creeling a synthetic emerald crystal "' 1935 wt'tll• shll In college 1974 aaw the advent of aynthet1c alexandrite which exhibits a oofor change under different types of llghtlnQ fu,t Mary Barr, Certified Gemologist Acc,...._C.- L ... ...t•'t and Jacobs, LAYC. Secretary of Foreign RelaU<¥ts Trophy (Ocean Racing A); 1. Dog Patch\ Don Ayres Jr • NHYC. 2. RauJer. Jim Lin- derman, BYC. S. Mamie, Mill Smith. CYC. 4. Cadenza. Carl Eichenlaub. SDYC. 5. Briana, Bob Collins, SOY(;. Secretary or the Mexican Navy Trophy (Ocean Racing C): l. Hat Trick, Brown Tanner. SWYC 2. Aquarius, J ohn Hob- day. LBYC. 3. Joaquin Murrieta.. Deardorff and Euler. SBYC. 4. Cookie Monster , Neale, Buck and Ts1rmok1 SDYC. 5. Cohort, Milt and Many Vogel, LBYC. United States Coast Guard Trophy <MORF>: l Vivacious II. Bill von KJein· Smid, BYC. 2. White L1ghtmn, Velthoen and Fa1rf1eld, Ana YC. 3. Hot Spur., Dave K1att, Ana YC. 4. Dinge r . David Dingman, GSLYC. 5. F ancy , Dav id French, DPYC. President of the United States Trophy CPHRFA>: l. Ragtime. 2. Victoria. 3. P egaso. Ben a nd Joan Mc Kesson, S OYC. 4 Mirage, .lal'k LeMaire. PBYC 5. Solana, La rry Amberg, KHYC. U S. Secretary of State Trophy <PHRFB>: 1. Sun ny Side Up, Charlie Gautier, KHYC. 2. Virginia. Den- nis Burnett. SSYC. 3. Easy Rider , Paul Miller, LBYC. 4 Lana Kila, Pat,tl Pearson, SDYC. 5. Sea Lord, Erik Brunskow. SBYC. U S Sccr{'tary of the Navy Trophy (PHRFO l l. Synnovc Ill. Brad Avery,. VYC 2, F elic ity. Me l Otis, LA YC. J . Tai aria. Bob Morns, h.HYC 4. Entasls, Lee Kline, BYC. 5 Lumaran, Bill Rohrs, V YC Governor of BaJa California Trophy < PH RFC>: 1. Commotion, Marshall Beck, BYC 2. Antares, Al an Andrews, BYC. 3. Tomorrow. Kenneth Goldman, PMYC. 4 Inspiration. Tim Holsten. DPYC. 5. Different Drummer. L ewis Spruance, BCYC. Governor of California Trophy ( PHllfFI: 1 Cat'::. PaJamas. Carl Lart. VYC'. 2. Karma. Carl Hanson. SGYC. 3. Kt!mO Sabc.y, Richard Ludlow. LSF. 4. Gandalf, Dave 4 Wht•(•IC'r, Capo BYC. 5 .• Gingerbread , Donald Rossie.· CYC. ; Mayor of Newport Be ach: Trophy ( PHRFE>: . 1. Loki. Joe Smith, Capo BYC. · 2 Ruffian, Ted Zellmer, LSF. 3. : Pussycat, John Szalay, VYC. 4.: ChubaSl'O. Charles Copeland,· Capo BYC. 5 !luff N Puff, Thomas Hill, DPYC. Mayor of Ensenada Trophy < PllRFG) · 1 A\anti, Fred Mas ino, \'YC. 2. Sunshine. Ron M alanosky, OPYC. 3. Plover, David Smith, \or YC 4 Wind Runner. Paul T imon. C apo HY C. 5. Gale, II arold Shaefer. FYC. Ensenada Chamber of Com· merce Trophy (PHRF"H): 1. Trim, Dennis Olsen. BUC YC. 2. Walnello. Compton and Lenvik, SBYC. 3. Wathen a. Don aid C hapman , VYC 4. Gordo. Price a nd Purcell, BCYC: 5. Hexa. Bill Sebastian, FYC. Presidenl of NOSA Trophy CORC >· I . l mua , M ike Lcncman. CRYC 2. Erin. Dowic Houghton. Lahaina YC 3. Allcz Cat, Mike Kane , SSYC. 4. Eighth Day, Rogcr MacGregor. LIYC. 5. Frees tyle. Jerry Welzkr , Capo BYC Serena Trophy (first schooner to finish) Kelp1e. Robert Darnell, Capo BYC. " •he natural gem does Crealfve Crystals of Calllorn1a 1s resPQnslble for this exc1t1ng stone Not all man-mado stones are ~ynthetlcs In ardor to bfl classified as such a stone must have e ssentially the same physical. chemical and optical properties ac; 11'1 natural counterpart The creation ol a true synthetic 1s a d1ll1cull challenge The new synthetics are ·becoming 1ncreas1n91y d1trlcult to d1st1ngu1sh from natural stones There ic; a great differenoe 1n value between the natural and synthetic gemstones so 1t Is wise lo deoend on knowledgeableandwell-tralned Jewelers tor this 1dent1f1cahon. A m1tn·made Slone that does not have essentially the same che m1cat. oPt1cal and physical orooert1es as the natural is called an Imitation, Most com· panles manufaci\Jr:lng such a product use the term simulat· ~ The stones are generally of po()( Quality and lack the beauty, durability and value of the natural or 1ynthetlc atones. One other Item to be aware of Is the substitute. This Is a natural stone that Is passed off as a ~ valuable gem. For example, red zircon 1nd spinel sometimes resemble ruby •nd • could be oused off as such. Here again you need tho advice and exoertl.. of a reliable Jeweler with mem· bef'ltlfl) 11'1 t~ A"*"can Gtm Society. . • A4 DAIL v PILOT .lust • ~ .• -, .. .. .. · .... ~. -··· · Tom arpbiae His Ellipsis Now Cured SAY IT AGAJN: Ron Cordova, our freshma n coastal as· semblyman, has take n some measure of offense at being short-quoted in this space. All this developed some days back when your faithful cor · respondent was reporllng on dis· patches out of Sacra me nto. There was, at the time. a heavy measure before the Assembly. Cordova and his colle<1gues were pondering a bill that would allow persons having sex change operations to also alter their birth certificates to reflect that· change. Our new assemblyman, who has already drawn a Sacramento reputation of being a rather con· servallve Democrat, was ques· tioned by the press on why he balloted in favor of the m easure. Wire dis patches out of the capital quoted Cordova as say· ing, "Government has no busi· ness in that area." T HUS IT WAS that I pondered the brevity of this r eply that was such a dramatic departure from the expected pontifications of a politico, which us ually extend lo infinity on anv Question. A .. Wir-sihOIO Buzz-abouts Debut Electric-powered urban cars paraded down Chicago's State Street for the opening Monday or the Electric Vehicle Exposition. At thl· top 1s Copper Development Association's Town Car. Fiat's Electric City Car is at center. Also shown is Globe Union Inc. 's four -passenger Endura. GM Plan Assailed : I r lllinoi,s Attorney Raps OldS Swap ' J DETROIT <AP> Gen~ral Motors Corp • swamped by con· sumer complaints and mounting legal actioos over the use of Chevrolet engines In other Gftt cars. has worked out a settle· m ent to appease d15grontled owners. But the attorney general for 11· linois. the state where tbe engine flap started, says GJ91 's offer does not go far enough. UNDER THE GM plan. un owner of a new 1977 Buick, Oldsmobile or Pontiac with a Chevy engine may trade that car for a new 1977 model, but must pay 8 cents fo r each mile he drove the original car. Or the owner may keep the car and get a 36.000 mile, 36·month engine war· ranty. Elliott M. Estes, president of the No. l automaker .. said Mon· day that GM was making th<> of fer to .. assure customer satasfac- llon." But Illinois Atty. Geo. Wilham J. Scott, while saying the plan was a step in the right direction, said it allows dealers to mak<' thousands of dollars and still shortchange consumers. SCOTf IS ONE of 10 state at- torneys general to fil e suit agains t GM over the engine switch. The GM offer is pat· terned after an agreement an- nounced earlier Monday by New York Atty. Gen. Louis Lefkowitz. Other suits are pending in Rhode Is la n d, K e nt ucky, Florida, Alabama. Connecllcul. Texas, North Carolina and Louisiana. Scott released correspondence from J. F Mattox, GM general sules manager, to Oldsmobile dealers. It s.Ud that for each car a dealer replaces under the plan, the dealer would be given "un ul low "nee ot$300," SCOTf SAID THAT instead of giving the money to a de'aler who "kept his mouth shut " about Chevy engines, GM should re bate the money to the victimized buyers. Soctt said he would continue to seek fmes Crom the car manufac- turer and its dealers and in· tended to <1sk a U.S. District Judge to require GM to mak~ ad- Justments without cost to the purchasers. The problem be~an two months ago when a Chicago man found his-'-Olds Della 88 came with a Jso·cubic-inch \'8 Chevy engine instead of the widely ad· vertised Olds" Rocket " GM SAID TIIE offer of either a new vehicle or special warranty is good on compact, intermediate a nd full-size Buicks, Oldsmob1les and Ponliacs deJlveud t• <'ustomers on or before April l . The offer expere!J June l , GM said. Under the policy, a customel can : -Return his car to the dealer for a credit toward the purebaso of another 1977 car of the sam~ make with whatever engine is then available on the model selected. THE CREDIT WILL be for the original purchase price -ex· eluding r egistration, licensing or sales tax less the mileage charge. A char ge for removal o( any equipment or damag& beyond normal wear and tear also would be deducted. -Or the owner can keep hiJ. vehicle and GM will provide tree or charge a warranty covering the engine, tra ns mission and re.' ar axle for 36 months or 36,000 m 1 les. "luchever comes first. Normally, those parts are cov- ered by a 12-month, 12,()()().mile ..... warnnty. Moms Sue Hospital • Over Cancer Caus~ WASlilNGTON (AP) -Three mothers, including a former con· gresswoman. are charging in a $77 million lawsuit that they unwitting- ly were given an experimental drug 25 years ago that later was linked to cancer in children. The three say they were among more than 1,000 maternity patients who received the drug DES without their knowledge at the University of Chicago Lying-In Hospital in 1951 and 1952. Alas, it now develops that the abbreivated reply attributed to Cordova was in error. The assemblyman h as in· formed me that he was only partially quoted in what he terms an "enigmatic ellipsis." Civil Defense Boosted P ATSY MI NK , assistant secr etary of state for oceans and international environmental af· fatTs, and two other women filed the suit Monday in U.S. Disln ct Court in Chicago against the un- iversity and Eli Lilly & Company of Indianapolis, maker of the drug the hospital used. matter as or such serious propor- tion that it had to be resolved for the entLre group.'' The suit claims that another group of 1,081 pregnant women received placebos in an experi· ment that lasted 20 months to test whether DES could prevent mis- carriages. Enigmatic E llipsis? Good heavens, that's awful. T HAT SOUNDS LIKE it should be the name of some automobile you bought that turns out to have a Chevrolet engine in it. Or maybe it's some creeping, odious malady you gel between your toes, requiring odoriferous medicat1on that stings. Clearly then, Assem blYll"lan Cordova shouldn't be left with an enigmatic ellipsis JUSt hanging out lhere. Cordova has now informed me that his complete quote on the subject was, "The refusal to al· low birth certificate changes 1s 1mplmlly a n attempt to regulate transsexualism. Government has no business in that area or regulation.·• Further. an a press release. the assemblyman added. "WhlJe I ;1m certainly nol advocating that people change their sex, I believe that government should Aot com· µlacate already complex psycho· m c <I i c a I p r o c e d-u r e w i t h hureau<.·rutic red tape." NOW THERE. That sounds mor(' lake the Ron Cordova l know. True. lh<> <'Omplele statement 1s a few dozen more words than the original enigmatic eltipsLS. Rut then you !lhould leave no stone unturned to get nd of one of those So, fanall:v. I apologize to As- S<'m blyman Cordova fo r only partially quotansc him the first tame around I really should ha\e known better. ft was ju!ll too easy. Sigh WASIIlNGTON (AP) -Action by the House of Representatives would channel an extra $44.8 million into c ivil defense in response to Soviet emphasis on cavil defense. Jn approving a $35.9 b1lhon weapons bill for fiscal 1978, the House boosted the civil defcnsl' budget by 50 percent to..,S134 8 million. The Pentagon had re· quested only $90 million. The action Monday came after Rep. Ronald V. Dellums <D· Calif.), auacked any spending for civil defense as "a waste. -ludicrous, insane. It makes me feel I'm sitting on the floor of tht! House in a dream. ll's the height of insanity. Probe Cont in~• W ASHINGTON <A l» Despite FBI claims of shattered ( I N SHORT J morale. Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell says he'll continue the prosecu· lion of former FBI supervisor J ohn J. Kearney for allegedly U· legal mail-opening and wiretap- ping because it's a matter of principle "What is at s take is the rule of law," Rell s aid Monday after listening for 90 m inutes as FBl Director Clarence M. Kelley and 10 agents compl ained that bureau morale has s uffered hecause of the charges and in· .. est1 gatlon. l ,ff.,.t A•b T i•e WASHI="GTON <AP> -The Amc·ncan Mcchcal Association, 'CanTWnball' Wants Privacy, Publicity WASl-fi!'iGTON <AP> -Even a s<'lf proclaimed "human cannon· ball'' has a nghl to privacy, ),a~s ltugo ZacC'h1n1 , who wants the Supreme Court to d<'c1de that tek' 1s1on news cameras can't record bis 1>5e<'ond act without his perm1ss1on The nation's highest court w11s told Monday that a Cleveland televts1on station should not have been protected by Ill! F1rc;t fll'vt>land lawyer John G. Lan-Amendment right lo g<•lh<'r th~· news when at hlmed ZaC'chm1 ' entire VC'I fnr use· on a nc>"" pro gr am. IN TIIE AfT. ZaC'C'hana as shot from a C'<innon into a net some 200 fot>l a~av His famous carcu'\ family has boasted a "human cannonball" among its meml)(.'r., for more than 50 vears "The news mPd1a can't com1• In and under the gu1sC' of the Farc;t Amendment captu re a performc•r's en lire act.·' drgur<I ca one Ill' c;aid Zat•<.•hini has a "right 10 p11b1Jc1ty" •t cross between propt•rty nght and the right lo Prl\ a C} llNOER OHIO LAW, a performer has a right to ex· du!»1ve control over the publicity ~1ven lo has performance. What I he high court has to decide is to what extent the news media is al· lowt>d to "in vade'' the rwr(t>rmer':c; r ight in pursuit of a li'J:il1mate public interest." Sunshine Covers Nation Some Rain Forecast in Eastern U.S. Tet11~at11~• "'"" Low ~o. AlbUQUt'rQU(t ,. 0 ""'"ltlo •• H Atl•"'d •1 J I Bt\mAr<~ " ,. BcMt •• •• 8<Xlon •• •• 8rownsvOI~ II> M 8ulf•lo ., l& 01 (.llArl@•I"" S (.. 17 " <.n•(•Qo s. ,. 01 C.•nctnn•tt ... JI °' C•n•I-\0 •• lll Dalla. Fl Wcw11t H ~· 0Pnv•r "' 0 0.lroll ., ll ,,. Heh•n• IO l4 Hono•ulu 80 .. Houston ,. ~ Jac~'°nvlll• IO ~ Ju,,.•u b• l4 K•nw•Clly )I ., l.UVtoa' u 0 l •Ult Roe:~ "' d .01 Miami " •• Mliwauhtf' " JI Mnpl~ ·SI P1111I u ., Olly PN.t 011..., ............ MontlllV rro01V II \IOV do "<'! "'"'• ~If l>llH'• l>Y ~ 10 II 111 Ull 0.1<),t 1 pm Ind VQUr COC>v wtH be C*t'i'tlred r..iun\Ay tflff Sunct.y II VO<J 00 ""' Me•titft yo•J' COOV 0V 8 e fft Ult """"" 10 • 111 '"" rour oooY "'"tit •-eci •••• === ~· ., ....... , Oul•ff• IWWI -••a :: Now Ori,_ 79 H•* YO<h City Sil 0ti1ahom.C1ty 71 Om•lla .. Orl•l\do •2 Pllll ade llWll• f 6' PhOtnla U Pllhburqlt U Pe<lland, Ort. 10 Rlclt......cf 11 SI, LOUii •• SI P•••~burq Temoa IO ~tll LOt Cltv U S.n Fr•ncl~Q 61 SHUit 10 $0o••11tt ts w .. 111nq1on ro a \OrAwllftQlllQll """"'" ••\l•m co• •••d Mu<~ ol li'le countrv ,...,..., ,,.,. AD· !>C'IA(ltl•MIMOUQhllil' Roc:•lf\ Mo•I ol Ii."""°" will M "'""' lkJt ..i.n• ,_, wltl tit •otttrf«I o•.- ,1' WHltlnQton 1~ -''-"1 Orfl!On tnto In. norltwrn ~ochftl\ •"IJ '''°"""' '"" .OS nn•r•I end _.,,.,,, Aepe!Atnllfll , " '"° 1~ '-' Oltlo Vallov E•t•l>I IO<' mild l<lfl"Ml'•furt\ In Ftorlcl• •l'MI ll'W' uooe• Or••t lA"-°',. Qlon. coot 19"'otrefurt\ will P'"•&ll o•I of ,.,. Ml\\l\\lpl)I V•llty ltnd ""' nor lll•rt'I pj•lt'I\ lfll0 Int !\Oft,,.rn nAll 10 ot lite Roe••"' Tn. rt•I of'"" n1lt0n ( •n ewwc1 W•"°"•l l•"'IM'•h1n'\ .O& A <Old •ronl In .......... ,.,,._, .. QV\ t1 w lnO\ •nO '"'•'P t•mpfHAturtt '\unnv '*'"' _,. •V~led over MOU 01 lltot ""11ew> wtll\ tool 1-m· -tturtt ~ ,_ ,.,,, U>I 01 lltt clro"' P•ncll•IM Or'CI roKOr'clt'tl Qu\h •tJOve M tnll~ ~' hnvr •nrt An ti d•or-.. ct-c""•"' If\ t•mrw-r.tlurtt wilt'! t~• "''"°* M • ''°""' fl'Of"f W'1U,._,,, 10•"-"~flWlntlQU•l••lxlv• '.Om p It M"'f\\IPltf Rf"fr •'Id I~ I,_ PArll•t No•t wr•. Tiie Nat~ Wf-•llltr S.r .. co u•d tM<IMr \kf•\aftdl10flit w•f'ldit.tO~fll bl""CI 10 _, -(fl\j(f \ 0Vtl Int up~r C.rt91 l4'11., CaUfornla a t lou!l \QOll.r would lt•vto 10 Qtl u11 rt'""" ~~'IV t" ft'IA mom•,,9. or or.-tty 1tl91tlnllw>•~v llll•wee~ Tnt Nallonel WullW!r Servlo ll'i'- dlcti mo~lly wnn• •~~' wec1~e.a.v Tn" °"'V cloud\ \~tel be l••t •t n111n1 or urlv In IM n'IOr1lln<:J wlllt .,.,,,. faint ltlqn wi.ov Wllllt \lull 1n 1110 shy ovtr Ille llMQles T,.l\'\Pfr•t.,,_\ We<• faoe<ted tor• m•I" ••rm w1tl\ ht9h\ r.-n91nq from Ille UOj)O'• ~ •I llt• l>HCllH -lltt> mountAln\. tf'lrf'OU9"1 thf" 10s '" vi1llfly, A"<I coo•l•I plain• encl Into ,,.,. IO• ,,.. lll•OHtfl Coa.tal lt'eatJler V••l•bl" "''1' c•ollcllntn 11trouoh Wt.,,.t\Cl~Y ltqltl vAr14bf• wind• nloltl And morntl'O !tour\ Mlqlt• In tit• UOMf' 60'' ., '"" lloe( ... \ and IYI lho 10. '"'•"° C04\tll tt!motr11urt\ w llt r~n°" b•lwttn S4 1nd '1 '"'•ncl l•m· ~ralu,., will r•t'ICJC' l»IW~ St •M 1l n •• wal•f ltmoeraluro wfll .... u S1111,Mooa,TIM• TUHOAY Stcond "'Oh S 11 om. 3 6 Stcona tow 11 11 p m. 7 s W&ONUDAV f tr'l ltlQ!\ l lll A m 3 I Ftnt•ow 1o :io•m n• ~•ond ltlQll I 1011 m. • 0 ~0-11 14pm It SUIHl ... A 10• m , Mil I 330 m Moonrl\e\!l •om ·~•Illa M . S•rt fktport. Munlll\Qll!n 9'1~11 W•""" J lo• lf'ft MQll wlllt • \aullt ,_1 Surll"O <CW>dl· """' f•I• 10 QOOCS ,._I ~..:11 WnH41•1wltna""1tlt~-• c-df. ,,...,, '"' \ saying it made "an innocent er· ror," wants more time before il has to r eimburse the Postal Service for more than $1 mallton in back postage. . · The Postal Service· said Mon- day the requested two·wt•ek ex tension "probably will be grant .ed." f'igflting Stop• BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -A cease-fire has bee n restored in Beirut after three days of fi ght- ing between Syrian troops a nd Palestinian guerrillas. Palesli.njan sources said more than 80 persons were killed in the wor st battling since Syrian forces hailed Lebanon's cavil war five months ago. The class-action s uit asks $70,000 for each of t he 1,081 women who were given DES and another $2 million in punitive damages. The two other women joining 10 the s uit were Phylis S. Wetherill of Washington aAd Gladys E. Lang ofStonybrook, N.Y. MRS. M I NK, A former Dem ocratic congr esswoman from Hawaii. said she was taking part in the s uit because. "The Tell Mom You Love Her Research in recent years has found links between DES and rare vagina l and cervical can· cers an the daugttlers of women ' who received the drug during pregnancy. The drug also has been tied to sterility and other abnormalities in the sons or some of the women. THE FOOD AND. Drug Ad- ministration told manufact urers inl97ltostopmakingDESandto • halt advertising that c laimed it would prevent miscarriages. Many physicia ns also recom· mend that daughters or women who were administered the drug have checkups twice a year. This Mother's Day st:nd Mom a greeting .ill che world can share on Sunday, May Sch. Express yo ur love 1n a Daily Pilot Mother's D:iy GrL·cring. Ir's easy. Write your message to fie one of our chrcc <.onven i<.:n t sizes and bring it ro any Daily Pilot office p ri or ro noon May 6. Or. you m ay mail a clippins of rhc border wirh your message a nd payment ro D ai ly Pilot, .1.30 W . Bay Sr., Box l 560, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626. Ads come m rhrc:<' ~11e\: SR, SI ~ . .ind .S.2 (or 1he ~pct1<1l child's s11c card (You must be under 12 yt·;ir• n( a~c: w qualify for the lmJosc ~l·ttm,.:). I ( you wish 'you m,1y crrarc: your own dccoratrd ~rl·erin~. U.stn~ bl~ck ptn driw your dMt,!tn rn fir one of rhc Jortl'd outltnl'S \11own here. You may fill rhC' t'OCHl' ~r;icc. Only words 11ncl lines drawn within the .Jc1rrl,I lmc will .1rpt·~r In your complcrtd Mothcr'c; O.iv .i.I ,.---------------------------, --------------------------. t I ;-----------------, f I ' ,,.,, ' I I I I : I • • I I I ' !. - ----- ---------·' ' I I I ' I I I I I • I I I I ---------_..., _____ ------· ' ~------------------------- • . 1 I ~--.~liiiiiii0ii"W52 If rou \\Jnt help compostng I\ suicabk greeting or have any qucsrions c.ill 612-5678. A fri endly Daily Pilot Jd·viscr wall be gl.id to help you. And, if you like you can char~e your Mother's Day ad. Your credit is gO<Xf wirh us, or you may use your M aHc r Charge or BankAmericard. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 ' .. . I Tuesday,Apri126, 1917 DAIL V PILOT A$ Bottle Bill Nixed Panel R ejects Ban o n Throwaways SACRAMENTO (A P > -A Crown Bottling Co .. \'iaid if he En\'ironmental Council, Joh" Califorttia Senate committee has m~rkeled all retur~able con-Gallagher, questioned whether, rejected a ban on no.deposit beer tamers he could c ut prices 15 per· the bit.I would conserve energy, and soft-drink containers despite cent. and said ther.e are better ways to testimony it would help eliminate "No matter where you are. the control Utter. the American "throw-away returnable bottle is the cheapest Voting for the measure were ethic." way to purchase soft drinks," Behr . Rodda, and Sens. Arlen In the face of heavy industry Nortonsaid. _ G_regorio (O:San M ateo); and l abor oppositio n, the But other spokesmen for in-Nicholas Petris (0 -0akland); measure by Sen. Omer Rains (D-dustry and labor unions said the Jerry Smith ID-Saratoga>. Ventura), went down to defeat bill would result in heavy job Opposing it we rt: Sens. Alfred Monday on a 5.7 vote of the losses. Al quist (0-San J ose>; Bill SenateFinanceCommittee. Said Joseph Vanpool, ex-Greene <D·Los Angeles): John Sen . A l bert Rodda (0 · ecutiveofficer~f~he~~assBo.ttlc lfolmda~l lD-Castro Valley)'. Sacramento), the chairman, said Blowers .Assoc1at1on, I am J~St John NeJe~ly ( R-Walnut Creek l. Rains could ask for reconsidera-ahltle btt disturbed about them-Walter Stiern ( D· Ha~ersf1el ): tion. But it seemed unlikely he difference of.,the author to the John Stu_ll ( ~-_Escond1dol ~nd could pick up additional support. need for JO~s . L?u Cusano\ 1c h \ R-Woodland A similar Rains bill was killed The chairman of the Industry H11lsl. in committee last year. Bionic Boo-ooo Lindsay Wagner, who displays her super talents as television 's ·•Bionic Woman," tries her skills as a drum majorette and '1ubs it. She was performing one of he r childhood fantasies fo r a TV s pecial. "Another Side of Me" when s he blew th e scene while trying to blow the whistle. ABC- TV announced Monday that the ''Bioni c Woman" is one of several s hows being can- celed. Modeled after a l andmar k Oregon law. the bill would re· quire deposits of two or five cents on beer a nd soft -drink con- tainers, which supporters said would cut litter and encourage recycling. Rains said, "We have a throw- away ethic in our country right now. We have got lo reject tlfal ethic." Habit Banned Law Ends Smoking Near Food ~ LOS ANGELES (A Pl -Supermarket shoppers can no longer smoke near tomatoes and cantaloupes. Ra~e Your Own Pot? He said the equivalent of l.i billion gallons ol gasoline a yt ar rould be saved nationwide and an estimated $900 million in con- sumer costs if throw-away con- tainers were banned. Under a municipal ordinance that became effective Monday, they may not s moke near any foodstuffs m grocery stores. However. li ghting up is still permitted in areas of the store set aside for serving food and drink, in restroom s and in areas not open to the public. Pane l O k a ys Home-grown Marijuan a Bill SACRAMENTO CAP) -The home-grown mariju:ina bill has won its first test despite a protest that future generations may not be able to handle all the drugs that arc increasingly ••vailablC'. He cited three Oregon studies that showed the bottle law had re- sulted in a small increase in the number of jobs. A POIJCE s pokesman said no complaints w£'re re- ceived about violations of tht' ordinance. which Joi ns those prohibiting s mokini:: i n ele v ators, m ovi£' thl•ater s. auditoriums and hospitals. The bill by A!>semhlyman Willie Brown t D·San Franc1~coJ, was sent to the Assembly floor Monday on a 5·2 vote of the nine· m ember Committee on Criminal Justi ce. BUT AT THE last minute, Brown agreed to cut the six mari- juana plants per person in the bill to three per l'.ousehold. The h1:1 would l'l'duc:e the penally for growini:: three plant!> to a $100 fine, le\ 11.:cl Ill;(• a lr<.Jfflt ttckc•t. The plants \\ould ha\ e to be for thl• ~ ro\\'l'I" s I'\\ n use. ll would also make tl a misde- meanor to cultiva te hctwl'en four a nd six plants. the penalty being a maximum of $500 m fines and six months in jail. ANO IT WOULD allow to stand the presenl felony provis ions for possession of more than six plants, and fo r selling man · juana. But n spokesman for tht> at torney general's office, l\l1chael Franchetti. said there's already a wide range of drugs a\'ailable including alcohol. and "future generations might not be able to handle it." FRANCH ETT I SAI D the growers ··will widen the use anti popular acceptance" because they may grow an excess cheap- ly. becoming small ne ighborhood dealers. A spokesman for the California Peace Officers Association said the bill will be too hard to en- force. inviting indifference on the part of offkers. BROWN SA ID prosecutors prl'St'nlly charge m a rijuana grO\\ us v. ith fdonies. r equiring high bail a nd r es ulting in criminal records. but later tre~t most cases as misdemeanors. He said his bill would merely codify this general practice. Brown also disputed the ton- tention by the attorney general's office that six marijuana plants v. o uld yil•ld up to 18,000 dgaret tes per year. But Franchett1 said researchers told him one of the 13 plants in Mex- 1 co, whi c h will g row in $3 Billion School Fund Bill Backed SACRAMENTO 1 A P l -The fi ve.yPar. $.1-billion school finance bill backC'd by Gov Edmund Brown Jr has scraped through the As- sembly after its sponsor said it would narrow the gap between rich and poor districts This was the first l1mt• either ll'g1!>lative chamber had approved a revamping of Cahforn1a ·s school fmancf' Sy!>lem since the state Sup rt: me Court ruled th1~ year that thi: !-yJ\lem d1scri minated aJ;ainst d1stnc:ts w 1th ltttle ta 'table wealth DESPITE THE 55·21 volt• Monday, one more than the needed two.thirds maJonly, Lhen· was considerable oppos1t1on to the measure. part1(•ularly its efft'ct on d1stncts with high property wealth and m:rny poor p(•ople. like San rranc•1sco The thrt'i.' San Fra nc1s<:o as'>t'mblvmen. and sevf'ral others from outlying areas. voll'd fort he bill rt'luctantly m hopes that the author. Assemblyman Lt•roy l.rt·l·nc., <D Sacram<'nto1. can persuade Rrown to IOtTf'3St' lhl' fund mg AflER THF. VOTE, Greene ~aid that inflation, by mcreasin~ the local shHr1' of school fundm~. wa<. partly rt'sponsiblP for reduc ing the <'Sttmatt·d l'ost of lhl' bill from the on gmal $.1 i billion to $3 billion O\'l'r flvC' years. Thal savings, Green<' said. might be used lo help urban districts pay some "\'ariable" district costs hke insurance, transportation and heatini::. and provide somi> local tax relief "I um optimist1<'. hopefully, we\\ ill ~ct mor e money," he said. Star Exhaus t e d MH 2 Series to End At Season's Close LOS ANGELES (A P) -"Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman," the un· conventional television comedy series created by producer Norman Lear a nd starring Louise Lasser. will end at the close of this season, columnist Rona Barrett said today. The end of the two-year-old. syndicated program is due, in part, to "total exhaustion on the part ol Miss Lasser," Miss Barrett said on ABC's "Good Morning, America" program. There was no Immediate com· mentfrom Lear. The program, centering on the difficulties facin g ""8ry H artman in the town of Fernwood, is run late in the evening in mos t areas because of oc- casional use of profanity and re -. fereoces to _,. sex. ....,,.._ Miss Lasser was arrested last year for possession of cocaine. Tbe charge was dismissed after she completed a drug education program. • 11.iu ~ aafd a talk. show might be spun off fro m the series. Lear is also producer of such prime-time network series as "Maude," "All in the Family" and "One Day At a Time." In ad- dition, he has begun a new syn- dicated series, "All That Glit· ters," which has women playing the roles of corpora te executives while mt>n do house work and work as secretaries. Miss Barrett~ reported that television interviewer David Frost would announce today that the format ot his upcoming syn- dicated, four-part interview with former President Richard M. Nixon would be changed. She said the fourth part of the series. deaUng with Nixon's involve· ment wilh lbe \Vatergate scan· dal, would be moved to the start· ing positlon. • California. could' produce two pounds of manicured marijuana a year. and (•tgarctt l' conll-nt 1s 0.3 to 0.5 grams per cigarette. ... Also arguing for the bill, N. E. Norton. presidenl of the Royal \'iolators face a maximum penalty of•• $500 fine and s ix months m jail. SOMEONE STILL LOVES THEM AND THEY'RE CALLED CAMP FIRE GIRLS Orange County girls from age 6 through high school belong to the Camp Fire Girls for one reason: it's fun. It's fun to know the other girls, to share adven· tures in living with them, and to partictpate in so many wonderful ways of serving other people. Service, the Camp Fire Girl way, is as much fun in doing as it is in receiving, and service to Senior Citizens -in homes, or in Senior Citizen centers-is just one example of the many community service programs of the Camp Fire Girls in Orange County. Next month, National Volunteers' week will be celebrated across the land. There can be no better time for you to volunteer your time or your financial support to the Camp Fire Girls in Orange County.- If you have a daughter who would enjoy being in a Camp Fire Girl group, if you have time to serve as a leader or helper, if you can send a check supporting this happy group of young ladies, call... Mrs. Carol Stone, President Lois Caldwell, Executive Diretor 1616 East Fourth Street Santa Ana, Californra 92701 Telephone: 547-5984 • Number 45 in a series of public service advertisements sponsored by.Avco Financial Services, Newport Beach, California ---/ .1'6 'DAIL PILOT EDITORIAL P :\GE Bus Fare Confusion The public can be pardo]led for heing confused by the way the Orange County Transit D1stricl (OCTD> staff has handled its 1977-78 budget und proposed 60 percent fare increase. Thl!y arc not alone. OCTD General Manager Ed Loriti first presented a $47 million spending package that culled for a Care hike lo 40 cents from 25 cents and a slight property tax rate increase. lie also at first refused to make the budget proposal public. After directors balked at the recommended fare <md tax rate hikes, Loritz unveiled an increased budget of $S2 nullion that miraculously dropped the fare increase and uctually s uggested a property tax rate drop as well. Directors arc still in the talking stages on both the budget and possible fare increase. But citizens' in- terests would have been served better in these initial stages had Lorit.t let them know that new information might be forthcom1nJo! and had he presented his alternatives then Directors h;J\ l' scheduled numerous budget \\ orkshops this year lor both lhe1r own study and public comment. That is good. But Loritz. did litUe to instill public confu.lcncc by his handling of initial budget proposub Dangerous Playground Santa Fl' Huilroad dC'tectives have been trymg to cope with a wor!.ening probltinv -youngsters and others plavrng on or nrar the tracks that run through Orungt• Count~· hou:-tnJ.! lkn.·lopmcnls. Thl' kub rt•portc.•dly throw things al the trains, play "duckl'n" \\ ith :,pceurng c.·ngm('S and place things on lhl' rails like coins to be flattened. Perhaps C\ en wor:->t.'. the railroad officials have re- ported adult:-. \\ 1l h ~onw ~ oungslers doing many of the same things. Thoui:ih :i <·111n 11rnb.1hlr wouldn"t derail a heavy locomnlt\l'. ... ud1 at·lt\'tty. rt'gardlcss of how msignif1 cant it may seem, is :.igainst the IJw anJ can bet:>.· tremely dangerous. The railroaders say it is possible for somebody to be on the tracks huntmg for his flattened coin. only to he injured by another train close behind the first They aJso contend that it 1s difficult to Judge the velocity of a big t>ngme nnd it is even harder for the fast trains to :,top 11\ time to avoid hitting obstruc- tions -or people -on the tracks. Railroad tracks are an understandable attraction to young people:, as they have been for generations. nut the danger is clear Spanking Law Holds California parents and their children apparenlly need not be unduly concerned about the recent U.S Supreme Court opinion that appears to authorize spanking school children. The California law that requires prior written permission from a parent or guardian before a teacher or principal may paddle a student still is in ef- 'f ect. according to Joseph M. Brooks, executive secretary of the California School Boards Associa- tion. And schools must continue to follow the stale hrn until the high court opinion can be studied by the Al· Larney General and perha ps tested in a specific court c use. says Brooks. The Supreme Court failed to uphold the conten- tion that spanking school children is unconstitutional on the basis of the E ighth Amendment prohibition or cruel and unus ual punishment. But until the precise meaning of the opinion is re· solved, California schools must continue to adv1sl' parents that their written permission is required for any application of corporal punishment -and that sc hools cannot paddle youngsters unless such permission is on file. 5?~~~1 WHIPPING l>EVl<ES Tax Laws Endanger Art Works Dear GI001ny Gus Arco Pullout Could Cost 2,000 Jobs ( PA UL HARVEY J Bntain·s Sir Winston Churchill earned millions with his books and paintings but, Oritain's t>State taxes being what they art', his widow had to auction household furnishings lo pay for food, medicine and rent. Doubtless Sir Winston was con vinced that he w.1~ leaving his "darlin g Clcmentin<'" comfort;ihh· f1xecl , bu·t "hat with ta' at ion and in f1.1llon !->he, at 91 , hos no 1n l'Ome bc\nnd a \\ldo"'·' pt•ns1on of $27 ,1 week It can happ('n hcrr. too Last year you saw news photos of the Southwest arl1'>t De Grazia hurning hundreds uf his paint ing!I. The skimpy explanation left the impression that th1!. was an unhecoming dcmoru;trat1on by a ~elfish artist who WU!'. ··,m~ry ;1 hout taxes '' Thal'14 not th••\\ h11l<• nf 11 Should De Gr;111.1 1111". ll',1\ in~ to h11> ht'll' lhow J>Jllltini.::-, tht') "oulct 1mmed1,1tl'I; h1•<•11nw pJrt uf hi!. tJxabl1• t·~1.111• al "'h•llC'\t'r '.ilue thl· ~o\ t•rnnh•l\t ' JP pr:11sers should rie<'rt't' <;oq~mment appra1\N"' t•nulcl '"Y they Wl're · worth S2 m1ll1on · and the heir' wnulcl h_.H. to rnm<' up with more than J m1lllon c:tsh for taxes from i.omr\\ ht•re St•ll the paantmg:.., Logic.ii. ex <'<'Pl lhal to nood tht• market with fh1• paintings of any artl<.l would l'h1•apen them to ti frurt1on or their rl~htful value Wll.DLIFF. A RT IST Larrv Toi.chlk recently dt.•stroH'tl 26 ycar:s of his life's work, fe11rf11I that his widow might oth<.>rw1~e he impoverished hy mhentunce laxes. This grotesque rlt!>tort1on of JU St tC(' d('ri vrs from the Tax Hdorm M l of IU6!1. Lyndon Johnson had donJll<'d hts papers LO .i rnu'>rum. t.ik1ni.: for himself a lar,,it• Jlt'r'>m1.tl in come la'< deduct1on To prevent Nixon from doing the same thin~. the Con~ress hastily slammed shut that tu'( "loophole," but in a manner which includes literary and art works That 15 why the death or art1~l Alexander Calder created con- sternation in the marketplace. I think that is why Ernest Hem- ingway's widow 1s publishing anythlJlg subsequent un<kr her own name. Wicks • 7ellr 11Mrt tlNI Concorde Is noby h /ll'Oalr u.gg.,.r.d. s.n.tol'f' When President Carter and Congress impose the gasoline lax and a uto tax on the rich and poor ahkc, has the new loophole been m:idc yet so the rich will get 1t back on lax write· off'I J H. (i!oom1 Gt1' <.ommtn1' '"' lwbt'n1Utdbv rf"t1dtr' •nd do no1 l"ttf'H"''"" rdlrct '"""' V•PiN'-ot Ht.-n•*\P•C>~' \t'f\d your .-t ~wr-to Gloomy (;u\ O•tly Pt lot I know that 1s why Igor Stra\"tnsky, wh<'n h£' learned his S.1 5 m1lhun gift to Yale would \ wld no tax relief for his heirs. 'cnl those prrc1ous m .inu<;cnpt::. l(• Russi a instead! BE\"OSD the faC't that this 1s anotht•r (Jw which dc,lrO)S in l' t' n l 1' e for prod u <' l' rs the rruelcst .iffront lo the artii;ts themsehes 1s that their estate!l. are taxed out of existence by a government which spends m1lhons to subsidize junk art! Anyway, 1f you hear again and again of bonfires or books or manuscripts or paintings. the world IS being deprived 0 £ those treasures <>nl~ because the widows could otht'rw1se be left deslttUlf" And \et to tw hrard 1<; :1 te"t I <l~t· .llll·~in..-: lh:cl tht• tlrllSL\ bont1r1•' ;1n• "de!>trul'twn of go\ rrnmenl proper!~ Shou.ld that tOml' tu pass, u<> the late .Jrtl't Thomi.1-. Hart Henton onrc said I \\t)Uldn't. dart-paint anothl'r picture New Chemical Plant Casualty? LOS ANGELES -Chances are better than even that sometime this year the Atlantic R1chf1eld Co <Arco> will quit 1rying to w.1dc throu~h California'!> red tap£' and cann·l plans for a petrochemical plant. thereby In· lens1fymg conflict between jobs and the environment That would cost 2.000 perm<1· ncnt Jobs, plus another thousand conslrucllon workers. in a state where thc·re 1 s h 1gh er-than · Jvcrage un rmploymt•nt But lh(• 1m p .1 c l of .1 n Arco \\llh dra\\JI \\OUlc1 C\lcnd \\Cll bc~ond th.it. It \\OUlcl un d\•rm 1111' th\: c·rechh1hl \. of th1• turn ll\ CO\ Edmun<I G Bro"n .Jr a''·'" from no·j?rowth en \ 1ronnwnlahsm :ind toward in- dustrial gro\\ th C"onsequf'nlly many more th.in 2.000 .1ohs are at stake. IN FACT. the Arco case de· monstrat('S that jobs vs. environ- ment transcends Jerry Brown. The chC'm1cal plJnl will probably ht' lo:.t bt.•cr1use of la'>' s. regula- t 10 n~ and an entrenched hun•aucral'Y llwl h:n c given the ('0\ 1ronmcnt lop pr111nt,v no mat· I l'r "hat dl'C ted off1ci ah. or \ otl.'rs now :.<iv Tht• hornfted re- ·•l'l1on hy workers who prefer a little pollution lo unemployment 1s becommg the nation's political issue No I The 1ssu(' t·rystilhzcd for ( EV AN S-NOV AK ) California m .Janu.1n \\hL·n lhl\\ Chemical Co \i!CrlfH'l'd SIU mtlhon alrc.•ally !-o.pcnl h~ ;.ill<m doning plans for a pctroc·lwmil·al pl;.int in Solano County <m th<• Sacramento River north of San Francisco. The n·uson c•n\1rnn mental red tape. Tht> cost 1 000 permanent Jobs tplus anothl·r 1.000 construction workers> The :-.hock wavN; abruptly :illl'n•d Brown's prenous io.tand that lur 1ng business into CJhforn1:t \\ti" none of h1:. busmcss To pohtic1an.; (1nclud1ng !'o.om1• dosr alli<'s of thl' j(O\ l·rn11r '· Bro"•n's nc" conl·t•rn about th .. business l'h mull' 1s hnkNI to Iii-. i978 reelection "This ..., rrallv .Jerry's only pohllC'.11 prolJlt•m and he means to rlo snml•thtng ;ibout 1l early ... <·onf Hlt•cl .1 pro minent Democr<1t1c· bU'.'>I nessman. "l don·t tak<• 1t th<ll seriously, and I don't know anybody who docs. ll 's a h~ pc- job." Fair or not. ;i trst of the AO\ ernor's new altitude is the falC' of the Arco plant which llkl' Dow's is to be located in Sol<mo County and like Dow·~ is mcnaC'C'd by ant1-pollutwn r estrictions. Drown cle:irl~ ''ants no rt•enactmcnt of lhe II<>" pullout: for its part, Arco seriously explores all slate su~ gest1ons (such as locating in l..c..., Angeles instead of the San Fran cisco bay). Yet. hope for the plant slowly fades, partly because cn\11rcm mrntaJ regulations simply do not lake into account the trade-off ''Ith jobs Rather. thr phraM' "tr adc·-off" ton not c:o. the statc i. 1 C'q111rement that 11C''>' pollution n1 ust be rompl'nsatl'cl for with re· dut:l'd pollution in th~· ~IJml' area Seeking a tradc·off. Arco sug gc:.t ed buying thousands of prc·l!li-1 polluling autos around San Francisco to get them off th<' !>lrccts. the idea was rejected. IF ARCO finally builds on the Gulf of Mexico instead of the Pac1f1c, however. the mam re- <1~on probably will be the con· t r:i:.l between cager Lou1srnna offic1als and cold·<'' e<I C:<1hforn1a bureaucrats What is mvoln·1I h1·r<• 1~ descendtng cordiality lo\\ ard business running rrom l•>P tu bottom of till' go\ c·rnml'n- 1 al ~t ructun.• Rrcl\\n clearly "ants the Arco plant Thomas Quinn. ll1·011n·s political advi!>er \\ho 1~ no'>' chairman of the stale air r<' '>Ources board, is perceptibly un- e n thusi aslic about chemical plants but still wants Arco to go <1head . Jt is Quinn·!\ !\Ubordinatt.•!. who combine the environmen- tal 1st 's passion with the bureaucrat's rigidity. "They make 1t clear they <lon"l give a damn whether we c;ohC' our pro· hlems or not," an Arco official told us. These bureaucrats are unaf- focted by the fury of workers .1~ainsl the environmental move- ment and its political allies. When California's Rep. Phillip Burton held a recent hearing al lhe logg1nJ! community of 1:-;ureka on his bill lo protect. more' ~iant redwoods, the San Francisco Examiner reported he ":tlmost i;ot boo('d hark to San Francisco ' In the trade-off lll'l\1 l't'n r<'dwoods and jobs, the lo).lgt·r~ dl•mand JObs. Two days lal<'r while <iov. Brown was <1ddrt'ssing the CorQ· monw<'alth Club in San F'ran- l'l~co, a questioner mentioned lhf Dow :.iffair. then asked why Brown went to Japan pushlni construction in California or .Japanese automotive plants. The governor's ingenious answer sou~hl to satisfy both environ-_ mentalists and workers: JapanCS<' plants would hire ' r C'aliforn1a \\Orkcrs and put . d C'am•r <·ars on the freeways lo , S<'l J good example for Detroit. .. I Fl'\R(;t:TTl~C. his highly de.~ i batabll' claun that J <1p<1nl'se cars are markedlv elc:mcr than !>mall 1 AmC'rtC<in cZ1rs, Brown's trip le>-·' Tokyo 1:. discounted by the bust- ness C'ommun1tv as cosmetid. · • While Brown 1s hoping for a Hon- da motorcycle assembly plant to be followed by auto factories, hard-lwad('(J Japanese bus i· nessmen may wind up wht>re they ,::ct the best deal and the least harassment. Nor will one or two Japanese plants coming lwrc soften the basic choice bC'twt•en a less pure env1ronmcnt ::ind chronic un- C'mployment. Brown cxplajned it lo the Commonwealth Club this way: "If you do one thing, you don't have another thing. This rs a 1ero-sum choice." Even a politician with .Jerry Rrown's · i.k11l must mjkl: h1~ choice some'- day soon. ., The Tangled Trail of Tongsun Park WASHINGTON -Tongsun Park, the Korean-about-town who passed out financial favors lo Washington bigwigs, has no in- tention or returning lo face hribery charges in the United States. The Justice Dept. eon- s1dt•rcd his testimony crucial to malong a case againsL con· J,:ressmen on the take. Another major witness tn the Korean bribery scandal. Korean Embassy de fector Kim Sang Keun. has been una ble to give direct testimony about pay- offs lo con- gressmen. These two develop - ments, according to sources familiar with the investigation. probably will doom the depl 's ef- forts to convict a single ron gressman of bribery. We called attention to Park's operations as far back as Apn l 1, 1974. By July 17, 1975, we wer e 11ble to report for the first t.ime that the Justice Dept. was fn· vest igating charges that the Koreans had tried to buy off con· gressmen. Now we have had acces!' to some of Park's papers. which were saved from the shredder He haR told associat es categorically lhat he won't come buck to the United States. Tbe papers strongly mdlcate he has t ransplanted his base to London: Payroll information, financial details and policy questions have been forwarded f rom b i s Washington headquarters to "Mr. T.S. Park, 44 Green Street. London . WIY3FJ, United Kingdom." The papers also con- tain references to a staff member 1n London. THE KOREAN entrepreneur. with the enigmatic smile and tbe SlOO bills, feted powerful con- gressmen from House Speaker Thomas "Tip" O'Neill on down. As many as two dozen bigwigs have come under the Justice Dept. 's hot-eyed scrutiny. Among them have been such key House members, present and past. as Democratic Whip John J . McFall, D -Calif., John Brademas D.-Ind.. Richard Hanna, o .. Cahf .. Otto Passman, D.-La .• and Louisiana's Gov. Edwin Edwards, a former con- gressman. Som e o f them have even ad mitted accepting payments or favors !rom Park. But they have denied that the envelopes packed w ith $J OO bills, the business deals. the free trips and other tavors constituted bribes. It must be proved thnt the congressmen ~ave important favors In ex- change for these benefits Now lhl"re appear to be no witnesses who can produce the necessary testimony. • This doesn 't mean lbc \ (JACK ANDERSON ) Am erican public will be deprived o( a three-ring Korean circus. The House plans hc:irings, which are expected lo show flagrant breaches or ethics. Uul the odds are against the conviction of nny sitting congressmen or officials. Park's private papers r('veal that lhe Korean influence ped- dler's international economic empire has become a business junkyard. with creditors and lax men fighting over the remnants while his skeleton staff bemoans the confusion. • BY NOW thl' bespeclaclcd. cherubic Park is a pariah 10 Washington The J nlernal Revenue Service claims he owes S4 5 million in back taxes . The taxmen have filed liens against his bank accounts and have seized two of his posh houses. In addition to his impounded property, Park has ten behind the shell of his major business creation. Paclfic Development, Inc. Many or U.'I records have been masticated by shredding machines ln lhc monner of an embattled foreign embassy. but documents which ei1caped the shredders show the side o! Tonasun Park which he tncd to keep hidden for years whUe he wined Md dined his way around .the globe. Th<' documents show Park wus never one to go second class I\ Ir France presented the ~allavanting entrepreneur with a certificate when he crossed the sound barrier aboard a Concorde oo Sept. 30, 1976. But the docu- ments also show that Park had u tendency not to pay for his first. l'lass adventures. The Abu Dhabi Hilton recently wrote Park about his $.5,S80 06 outstanding bill and London ·~ posh Claridge Hotel has sternly demanded payment of overdue bills from November 1976, tor more than 500 British pounds. Other internal memos indicate that Park probably stiffed al least one American hotel. His financial fandangos have also astounded a number of the American banks which~ce welcomed the Korean's bus' e . On June 23, 1975, for ex l('. 1he Riggs National Bank of Washington sent Park u friendly reminder that his account was slightly overdrawn to t he tune of $194,2&.4.44. And the Nallonlll Bank or Washington has sent PDf a final noUce that a $2,246.42 pay· ment Is due on a loan. According lo the not.ice. "Furt.her delln· qut>ncy cannot be ~rmitted." PARK'S PAPE RS lndlc3lc that the American Express com· pany ha., jerked Park's credit· card privilegu. Meanwhile, his Wa11hlngton ala!( ls OOW'ldering, pleadln~ for a "definite chain of command," someone to bring or· der u It Lr1cs lo decide wblcb c reditor to stave off next with a.., .. token payment. Humor sometimes creeps inU> the chaos at Pacific Develop•" ml'nf. A.company official, tor ex· ample, accidf'ntally om itted Ir ' · name from the staff payroll. ltt" explained in n memo. ''ln my hurry to spend the money, (the 1 house and corporate cars h&a'' been taken by Inlernal Revenue . the previous night) J forgot to add the $6.000 for Mr. Lee to the list." ' ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT l<ntwrt N. Wttd, Puhll~tr Th11mo s Ji l'l'rrl. 1o;d11or llart>oro I\ rl'1l>1t II, £d1tor1al Pagr Editor The editorial POJ:P of the Dally Pilot seek! to inform and stimulate readers by presenting on this page diverse commentary on topics of Interest by syndical· ed columnists and cartoonlst.s, by prcvldine a forum for readers' views and by pr<'~entlng this new&paper's opinions and ideas on cun-erlt topi('s. The editorial orilnlona of the D11lly Pilot ari~ar only In lhc C'dltortsl <-olumn al lhe top of the pa1tl'. Opinions t'X· Pl"C'~t'd by lhc columni~i.. and c11rtooni11h and lrtter Wrlh.'f't are their 014 n and no t'ndorst'ml'fll o( lh<'lr vlt14 s by the Diuly Pilot ahould tx-lnferrcd T uC!$day,April26,1977 . ' ( I ) ' 1 . ' MEXICO CITY CAP> -Laelnle, the drug that hu caused a controversy an the United States over l~ UM in ~ancer treatment, ia the subject of a legal d11pute in Mexico where it is made from peach and •Orloot ptta. Tbe Mexican Department of Health banned the dtut lut October after Mexican medical re· S!cben Hid they found no evidence that it was ef · I Uve in the treatment of cancer. An appeal by the f min Tijuana Lbat makes Laetn le has blocked the Heal~ Department order, at least temporarily THE DRUG STILL IS BEING manufactured and exported In large quantities to Asia. the Middle East and Latin America. • Jorge de) Rio Torres, m anager of the CJtopbarma Laboratories in Tijuana, said in a ulepbone interview that the Mexican ban resulted from a misunderstanding. He claimed that the ' aqthorities really intended to ban another of C;topbanna's products. 1 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA> h• banned lhe use of Laetrile in the United States. . ' 1 THE FD.A AND ITS MEXJCAN counterpart •a}' there is no proof Laetnle is efrective in the I treatment of cancer. The FDA has scheduled a hearing on the dru.g in Kansas City on May 2. About ball a dozen U.S. states are consider· ( J ing legisla~lon wbich MEDICINE would allow hnuted use ot _ _ Laetrile, which is m11de · from amygdalin, a chemical taken from the pits of peaches and apricots. Mexican health authorities said they have no idea how many Americans have been treated with Laetrile in Mexico. Del Rio Torres said thousands of American cancer patients take Laetrile in tablet form or injections. Tablets cost SO cents each and the injections are $4 each. ' ON OCTOBER %6 THE MEXICAN Health Department issued orders banning Laetrile and Kemdalin, a similar product manufactured by the Kem Laboratories, also in Tijuana. The makers of Laetrile opted to make an administrative appeal which blocked the department's action until a further study can be made. The Kemdalin makers asked for a permanent injunction against the ban which Federal District Judge Carlos Tnjillo reject- ed in Tijuana on Feb. 22. Dr. Francisco Durazo Quiroz of the depart· ment's food. beverage and drug control section s3ld Cytopharma Labor atories registered Laetrile - also marked as Amigdalina -as an analgesic but later began advertising it as a cancer cure. ''WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE for that ad- vertising." Del Rio Torres said. "The patients are doing it. We do not pay them anything." • quickly so Lhe Health Department can ma.ke a final : ruling. • Cytopharma included in its brief 53 cases in : which the company l'le1imed pahents v. ho used • Laetrile showed relief from cancer. • Jet to family entertainment at Marriott's Great America. He said Laetrile is made tn 22 other countries. The Mexican mvest1ge1t1on of Laetrile started in April, 1976. after Or. Jose Urban Planchet, who then had the job now held by Durazo Quiroz, re· ceived reports of claims the drug could cure cancer. Frequent non-stop service plus discount fares for families and groups. Swi1ager .. p Wtrepl>olO Rodolfo Diaz Per ches, chief of the national anti-cancer campaign, reported June 30 that Laelnll' had ''no specific or curative action'' against l·:.incer_ DR. JOSE NORIEGA UMON, director of the Mexican lnst.Jtute of Cancerology, reported July 9 that "this institution has never used, or does it plan to use. Laetrile," because "there does not ex isl suf fic1ent experimental or cLinical data " Many cancer patients had wntten the institute from abroad asking about the product, he said. ·'All this information reached these patients in a less than serious manner and we feel that lh1s medication should be withdrawn," he said. DEL RIO TORRES SAID IN the interview that the drug had been tested and approved at Mexico City's huge general hospital. The report from Diaz Perches said the drug had indeed been tested at the general hospital several years ago with the conelus1on "that this product does not represent any benefit in the treatment of cancer patients." Fly Air California and make it easy on yourself. AIR . CALIFORNIA We're easy to toke. With the weekend weather in Louisiana not fit for ducks. t his feathered friend found a child's swing a good place to get out of the flood waters that have innundat- ed Denham Sprangs from the cresting Amite River. Cytopharma Laboratories filed its appeal Nov 3. claiming that the 30·day period given to withdr aw lhe proouet from the market was not in accord with previous rules allowing a year for market withdrawal. Coll Easy Information in Orange County, (714) 752-1000: Downey, (213) 924·3313: Laguna, (714) 496-60C(l; Los Angeles. (213) 627-5401; Son Clemente, (714) 496-60C(l; DURAW QUIROZ SAID THE company would be forced to submit any proof 1l has or cancer cures Riverside/San Bernardino. (714) 825-6900. or your local travel agent. Ripped Off by ,,lorris'! DEAR PAT. I fl'cl that I've bcl'n ,·ictimized by a nationally ad\(?rt1Sl•d product and e1llhough thC' amount of money invol\'l'd 1:-. :-.mall. the pnnc1ple rem a ins. I order('(i I wo Morns Cal en dars last Nov cm lwr and 1tnrlosed a SS check. I sl:'nl thr ee lrttd:-. an<i cnp1f'<; of my canccll'd c• hC'ck tot hr po:.t off"''' box in Lombard. Ill. wht>n• I hu<I m ailed my ordt•r I nn er rN·e1,·crl an answer to my rf'quest f11r ... refund Will you lo(Jk tnto lh1:. fnr m···· \, t: co ... t(I '11•<,a Star·Klst t·ood, Inc .• 1.0 .. \nl(f'lt' ... bas Issued a r efund to you. 't''<t tlmt- you a have a delivery probll'm with a product premium orff'r, contact thf' manufacturer of thl' product offering the premium. not thr po'ltal ho"< number to which you Sf'nt \Our ordt>r These ordrr post.al oox ..... · arl' fulfill ment centers. and 1>f'ldom rt'spond to complaints. "Morr!'>" pr<'mlum com plaints have become common In thb column's flll's. Star·Kist alway' r'< plalm1 that tht' dl'mand t''<C('(•df'd tht' supply, but this f'xcuse Is bel(lnnlnit to wear thin. U lnadequatr suppllc>s of &bese premium products continues lo present dl'llvery problf'ms, con 1umers may become just as "rlnlcky" as Moms and dl'cldt' to a void l(f'lllng Involved In rf'spondln/.! to thl'M' pro· moUon8. LUflfJa.ge Lo•• a Wor,,, DEAR PAT: I don't w..:inl to t'Omt· on like a pess1m1st. but my inf';'( 1;,-.1 ,J p•nN•·m., ThA ll"nt,. I Pill {lv"" /'.JI ,, 111 • ''' rrrl f•IJ• l.Wtllnq tM On.Jll'f',. ,,_,a dt tut11 1fi1~ ,.,.,.., h• 11t.,,,,. "• ) .ttt' 1'1 gotf'rnmt"rfl irtd hu. '''' \I ut .,,1ur Wt•"':·•' ,,, l'ct Dt.n'I ~' ' ,,, \.f ,.-u •. nron11• fld IJt;o1'' J~IDf P Cl ffq.z '"""' ( "'') \tn.IJ f \ "·~ Ii h "'4'"'' ,,.,..,, ,., ptt•.,;..:, '111 .,. o"'"" rr-nf I 11 JJ"'"'"" 1 .. 111un.., ,., lf'fh r ...,.., .-.. wJJni.1 01.- '•'U trr t tu.JI "U1no tlffrlr,H 11-.d t .. _.,.,. 4'-.,.. "' rhl·""' •Wf• ""'''0""'•'"" c ,,,. .Jrr-1 11u .Ci.••ar. Jr'f#-'''"lJIJI ~'I ..'{'If <r..1•1,,,j,J'J perience as an air tra\der makes mC' ~orr) I plan to ny to my vacation ciesttnahon this s ummer and ~onder ~hat I should do 1f mv luggage 1s lost A . E .. Laguna Beaeh You'rl' smart to check out lost bag. oge claim proct>dure prior to your fli ght, rather than risking a claim re· jection bttause you didn't know how to handle this situation. Civil Aeronatics Board tariffs require any claim to be madf' In writing within 45 days. but you'll stand a better chance of having your claim accepted U you fill out the aJrUne's "Jogs or damaAe" rf'port immf'dlately. Kl'ep a copy (Dr your ttcords and get the name ot the airline employf' who helps you. Rftaln ynur baggagl' chf'ck and a copy of your alrlinl' tlckf'l unlll the ltl'ms are rf'· cover~ or the claim Is paid. i.lncf' thl1' i'I thf' only proof you have that the bag was chttked. SkinJtfl .Sedt Skipped • OEAR PAT· T ordered a $15 95 ··skinny Suit" from an ad 10 TV Guide on \1arch15. I am start.Jn~ to think my orct1·r was lost in the moil or that it 1s not lwm~ processed. W1 II you find out for me" 1.\.., Newport Beach TV Gwde's customer service df'· partmf'nt reports that up to 1G wttks ls required for delivery ortblsltem. Your order is belng checked, however, and It will be shipped as soon H poalble. For fast relief from that run down feeling ... . "'II u' rir•t '·'"" ,, r ... 1 N.111c •. .,1 Auln Lodn. line! go d11e<1ly 111 vour d<!.sler! Th.sh oll 1lwre I\ to 11 l IP"O .ll"PfO\lal Qf ., 'lmple credit .ipplrrd1tnr1. ""JI 1,_,,n vou up In A0''4> ~ lhf' 11111 cl'la<e P"''' of ''"Y ""IV car ynu chooS41! lnclud· 1ng<K'Cl!S~ ... !~~r-T"~r"'\ And here's• bonui; Since MAIN OFFICE At rhe Plaza in downtown Orange COSTA MESA: Me~ Verde & Adams IRVINE~ Unrverntv Dr & Michelson Dr. .. --... ~ ho's launching a new tax-free bond d? Now you can invest in a tax·f ree bond fund managed by one of the largest life insurance companies 1n the nation. New England Life. The NEL Tax Exempt Bond Fund's Objective is to pro- vide through continuous portfolio management. as high a level of current income exempt from federal taxes as 1s consistent with both reasonable nsk and protection of shareholders' capital The key to a successful bond fund 1s oortfolio man· agement And that's a key reason to invest w11h us As one of lhe oldest ltfe insurance companies in lhe country, New England Life has been managing fixed income secun·4_-~ lies for well over a century ,.. ~ ~ -;, Loomis. Sayles and Co. Inc .. New -' England Life's affiliale. and one of the oldest r investment counsel organizations. also provides investment advice and research to our fund. Thus. our bond fund offers two key ingre· d1ents: New England Life's established reputation'\ rn life insurance and asset management. And Loomis Sayles' 60 years of Investment counsel experience. We are making our bond fund available for an initial period ending May 2. 1977. The minimum investment is$ I ,000. The price per share is reduced on transactions of $25,000 or more. So, set your course for clear sailing with tax-free income. .... LAGUNA HllLS: Ahri.i Parkway & San Diego Freeway --------V - AB DAILY PILOT QUEENIE Tu&5day. Apnl 26. 1977 By Phil lnterlondi County Courts to Note All five Orange County courthouses will be open to the public April 30 as part of a Law Day pro· gram b<C>ed on the theme ··Partners m Justice.'' Headed by Superior Court Judge Betty Lou Lamoreaux, Law Uay chairman. a r ost(•r of Judges, lawyers and volunteers from Lawyers Wives or- ganizations will be available to the public an all Ct ve l0<.•at1on~ AMONG THEM are the Ct'nt rat courthouse on \1\'ic Center Drive, In Stab Death Wolllan Gets Jail Term Santa Ana, Harbor Municipal Court, 4601 Jambor ee R oad, Newport Beach, South O ran ge Countv Municipal Court, 30143 Crown Valley Parkw a)'. Lagun a Niguel and We.st O r a n ge County municipal court. 8141 13th St., We.stminslcr. All five courts will be <>pen to the public from 10 a.m . lo 1 p.m . Pro· grams will include de- monstration trials. guided tours and an OP· portunity of discussing e le m e nts of law with judges and attorneys. bate. consumer fraud. traffic violation, per!>onal rniury and JU\'enite law ··But we want to i::et both adul~ and student~ into the tourl.s and parl1c1pale1ng m thes•· p r o g r a m s . · ' J u d g t' Lamoreaux said THE NEWPORT Beach jurist pointed out lhat Law Day programs are already in progress in 22 high schools in Orange County 'Law Day' county bar·s Law Day obscrvanre will be April 28 when Justice Wilham receive Liberty Be11 awards from the county bar. P C I a r k J r o f t h e 1 __ ...,. .... ..., ... ;;;;;;;;iiiiiliiiilli California Suprt.•mc TffB Court w 111 speak at ,1 ., meeting scheduled for the Newporlt.•r I nn. New Port Beach. I Five Orange Coa.st Tl' !>ldcnts will be amonJ: 10 high school studcnL'i who will receive l'ilizcns hip awards and $25 bonds at the 7 :30 p.m . dinner. And Vice Mayor Juck Hammell of Costa Mesa will be among ninc com· munity leaders who w1ll1 PLUMll"ct HIATIHG •1• co .. o. u-. ...... .,,, __ , ~WVJCft t" Ytkjt At•l--C.H MiSS•ON \11~0 :tt9~1 Cam.no C.tt>t'lllr'nn t • .-o •··w-,. "'••'"'"""'> 495-0401 l0''1TAME5 A t ~.Jb Nt•PD'I Olwd ~\ \..\C. '42•1 75) •217W ~===~~~ "Maybe 11 ·~not me Maybe your glasses are too tight " 1\ woman" ho Jdm1llt'd lhal she slabbed another "om an to death during a dispute between two couples al a Buena Park home has been sentenced to AMONG TIJE TOPICS scheduled by organizers of Orange County's Law Day observance are. crim i n a l law, small claim s, wills and pro- She said more than 9,000 county school stu- dents have been made aware' of Law Day pro· grams through the er forts of more than 150 lawyers and L<iw Day volunteers nine months m OrJnge County Jrul Superior Court Judge William S. Lee ordered the ;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;..;::;;==;;;;;;,;=;;;;;=; Deaths Elsewhere Exchange jail term and two years "' probation for Dorothy Mae Payne, 26, who had earlier pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter. No-Drug Treatment for Your Aches and Pains Thursday, April 28 ,8 p.m. WOODSIDE (AP> Henry Clay Judith, 78, retired former trcasurt•r of Standard 011 of California, died Satur day at h1~ home hl·rc. BRUSSEl-5, RC'lg1um <A P > -Victor Larock, 72, ex.foreign minister nnd a prominent figure or Belgian !>ociah~m in the years afll'r World War 11, died Sunday night of .a heart altad, in :\1 ad rid () 1\ I\ I. \ ;\ J) ! 1\ P I \.ff. Ord" a), M\I, I h1· f1r:-.l 1·ntplOYl' Ill ll l'lll'~ .J Ka1:-.C'r ·~ mdu!>lrl.JI 1·111 pin•. died Thur!-ida' SEATILE <AP I Dr William W. Haggard, S.I, Death Notiee• FESLER MO~ MAfllAN ~ f:EC,l(q r• 1 '1t"f n t M nn v ,,,, (I ,fflr r'I., Pt • J ,1.-.. t'f' "'"ii I t If 1 L t)'f'ln•t 'Iii • 111 ''"'" f (, r l•t I Mt I 11u • I' I 'I ~ ~· r)r V ,, ~ t Y,, ,,, fl "'', • r 14, , '' iNt t"11 1+•'1 I '"'ii It. •'1 ./ti rt fit'' I ~I f I 1 , t 1 • I I ' t f t • • • I I 1 t • i I f ~ I "Ii·•'''''".''''" •''''"""' ,., '"''' ''""' I ! l r f 111 I,,, 1' •!!I•' I flll•,111 M 1tf11,1'f '!+f+·llf1I VONHElMS 1'\HI Vf1"°" Hr I IV\ wd • 1•n1 V 101 H1otrn ,. v u 1• ., • n· n1'hn I +t I\• 11 Ht ,.,...., t'( M1 fl 1 •'., t\fll lt"t HfN ttf M 1tt·1M f fnt•l•,4',, i·r11 "''' ( ,~, OUllf I h f (1 ti U ft f , ., 1' ••I "I l n """"' '"' ( 11 tmn I f 1 • 1 .1# Pl Atifrl \ i tlU \urv.-11 t hlf t·u t• t A11fi'I M ,.,.,,. QM" I I tr\ I nr,.,,-wN R 1vm"''•1 • f P1~tt-R~ l\l tn'1 lnf.•,,,..,nl 'lllrt 'I ti,.. 1n Art I ~ R,1 ·1u I 1n 1 fl I I •n.t.i-N l'fM if'·•''" " 11 1 • 1 r 4\VCRYf A_• I '°'I •A 't I i•y ('Ill •fft I I !l•VMONO \4lfQ'IA'f' IV I AQO Qh'IY. .,0 I •ti ,t I'\ r ·rf'\1"1 f' t 1 f ,,,, I I t , I ""t<I f\r.,i, 1 1 '11 1•" '"'" to w 1• Y.,1 ,t,~rt 111t'jl'l1 • I ' I \ f\d .. ",1n J•t 1'1( lrti 11 fllfl ( ':. lfU I M ''' "'"" --~.n~· 1 ni. 1 V. "" 1ri ,, 1' 1r•t1• h '''""' h1"t~1' I' •t ~ ~'l~"l"t1 I "' t ~ •1 t • J " I I h<)r~ f.,11t \f'• • If r11 f >/•I N""''"""""''''' i tflo I 1 I • w ¥ ,,, j ,. t 11+•; ~ .... II )1-'f I.If I .. , II\ ) , I I U ,, • 1 IN 11( Ht~ 1rt 11 • I 'l" ' II I" ii., I fT'•·""I O, 1' I tf111ly f r1hlH1 II , '"' 11 •l')l I\' ~ ,., H tY •UNDENlll!AO w I 11\Y. I , li"•lH-~HU 14 • ,,. ; t 1! t11lhn• ( tJ '''f"I+ I f"' l "1 f W .t V /\t'lt •J 11 l If I ttl\t., 1'1 !/v• t Tl•n.t, ~"'"' 01•1 ',,.,.,, •• ,,, 11 ~ ,. " " 'h •• ,,. "Ii· ,,,t_, Jf ." "/' If .. \ t "1l..,, I J., ( fl i' f ~ C. tn '11•1.,~r •y(l11f11.,,1 1 tf •nm•""l"'' . " II M t•f I of9,,,1 '"' .,,. .. • tfll~n llll llOADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 SMmt TUTHILL L.AMI WISTCUFf: C HAPIL 4:>7 E 17th SI Co,ta Mesa • 646·4888 Snntn Ana Cha~I 5 t8 N Broadway Santa Ana• 547·41 31 PIUCl llOTHHS SMmt'S MOITUARY 627 Main St Huntinqto"'-aeach 536-6539 'ID FAMILY COLOHIAL FUHllAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave Wes1m1nsle1 893·3525 PACIFfC VllW MfMOllAL ,AH Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac•llc View Drive N eWPort. Calilornta 644·2700 McCOIMICIJf MOaTUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-9415 l19una Hills 7&8-0933 Sa" Juan Capistrano 495-1776 ULTZ-IU•HOH PUMIULHOMI Corona d•I Mar 61'~9450 eo.11 Mesa 846-2424 0 \\ho had bePn president of Western Wa!>hinglo n State Colll•ge 20 years died Saturday For the Record Dl••olut Ion• Of .,.orrfoge F1l•d Apr.11 HA ff'j Ev .. 1-tl"I l n'1 HJrt)fn l M, ( ')Y '>11..irH'J,.' K •f"IO Rot>f"rt O P[ 4~r t:: Q.,r. rl I ,.t\d L1r't11H ~ I Jti ,ioH .)J.. f A_ V trl -'"'1 P.1,,1 f-d'#ifd woo 4ind't>" l .tfllJ J"'"''\ l MOORE Altr .. L•·• dfld t< •m ft.tr~ GATE Qondtd G 0 dnd f1n1r~ C MA•Tfr-4EZ Laur<t 0 tnd J .. ,,, A «;EAVE RT Rtthdro 8ro#n 11 I dfld Gdbf'1 .. llP RICE Kenn.-lh A •nfJ lrf'nit' T Death Notiee• btrq A,f\O \U'YIVP.j bV ... , ·VPn 11r .\nt1r"'*""..-.n S.-," ,,. .. , """''' ,., .. hPld 'r1 AO• I~ "/!'\)PM "lti• f"h'°'p. Int T ur1"l 1 pqj ',I ., 1 , \'1\ r , ; '' 1 r Gl\!l(IA " f I I. ., \I.I( ,, t ., . ""' ,,. f,.,..' '' ., ( II"', l l'I .... HI Families Exte1zded Applications arc still being accepted for host families lo participate in .the British· European Centre's cultural ex - hange pro~ram. Tht• s ludt>nts from France. Spain anc1 llaly will be v1s1t111g Orani::e County thl!-i summt'r dur rng July and August They will attend American cultural study classes m thC' mornings and \'1Slt local Potnls of interest 10 the after- noons. For further anforma lion call 675 5135 Kids Get Documents Mrs. Payne wa s bookcc1 on murder t:hargC's Dec. 1 after Jean Elizabeth Evans, 26. died in an Anaheim hospital from knife wounds inflicted by the defendant. It was argued for the defense that the stabbing was unintentional and occurred at the height of a fracas between four Diabetes Training Slated A four-week training class sponsored by the Chtldrcns Hosp1lal of Orange County will in· strut'! parents of d1abl'l1r young:-tC'r~ on mt•clieal and 1·mot10nal a::.!Jl'l'ts of THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. IRVINE COMMITTEE ON LECTURES PRESENTS DR. FRANK WARREN Psychiatrist and Anesthesiologist .:~:· ...... ·. ·:\·~:· . . .. ACUPUNCTURE AND .ACUPRESSURE .ARE SOME OF THE AREAS DR. WARREN WIU DISCUSS Social Science lecture Hall Use Parking Lot·3 University of Callfornia, •~··:ne For Info: 833-5588 General Admission s 1 00 UCI Students 50' ~MITH unnF4l/\. 'A 1M n 1 ,. , • 111 ·~· r'4• N lllH ! t\ I'" ( )1 ' lfMt.f f• l ' 1 Th'-• El\changl' Cluh of th(• SaddlC'haek Valley ha!'> ,L!l\'t'n a i''r•·Pclom Shrnll'. an {·xh1b1t of 28 rrprodul'11on~ of h1slonc Amt•ncan documents, to the Saddleback \'alley L'n1f1l'd School D1stnct th<.• d1:>t'i1SC Parents art' 1nv 1ted lo -~-"'""'.=-::--=-=~"'""'.===----~====~--------­ I~,.,. "n' I ') ' l\o·I •/I r1 N i' ·' •• ,.., "" ·• . ., ' •• Nt''l'' R• ' ,, t I 1 ''"''' '" "• •• ,,..,,.. l.t+lllhl•. '1•• '" tt t ' 'I M· I (' ir11j l t1tt t J 10 t•I HI II I# I '"'''' (),,. l•"\v•rl t l"·'""''n'•1h , nt '"'"' or •'H1 .">n, N' "" ,,, I l r+ir ~ t I f(J t 1 Mt t 1wl fV11f t-l• f ~ HI It Ill t• ~ ,. U!• • )I W•\1 t-rol t Hn ht•tv., ''' t ,., '/I>,,._ ,,-,n t '' ,. ,, ., ' , .,.,., '" ., ~I\ • I\. \"'I fH y .. ., .... ' " ,. " "'"" L e "' ·' .~,. "I ,,,. " It ., "'' °"' ••4' t ""' I 1 1J h '' t .... <f 1 ' ffl .., C\' ~ t ' • , ., I • • f • • l ·~,·,. .., n "'"' 'T\ • ,, ",, n-w.onv.,.,, '"""I .. M~ II\ .. o ... lt>i ~!W)l!k I"' I JACOBI f "lWA'\10 I 1:\, l")I • "' t I '~ I'' UI ' "1 "' " "' "' I 61 rt QH ,,,.,, 1 '• 4 1 N " ' ThC' (.'Xhib1l. \~hll'h span~ the 325 yt•:ffs from the :\hn no~t'r Compat•t to thl: \\ orl ll \\,tr 11 lnstrumPnt of Surn•nrll'r tn the· l'ar1f1<' "Ill ht• on pt' rm ,11\l'nl dl'•PI." 1n t ht• np~ ch..,tr11 I oHwa·" Brochure Available a It end lhC' Sl'SS IOn S scheduled for 7 p.m. in C H 0 C" s c o n fl' r e n c· e room Mav 3.10,17 and 24 The fee is $10 and will cover costs for m<1tcrials and n 'fre!>hmcnts For reservatio n s c·all 633 fi030 Cookbook Aids Unit Take A $5 Vacation To The Orient ..... !th• cl•>\\ II ant•• 11 .. 1M1ll11ni: J!r nl <Ill' r·.ar I ,1,t .at '" f1111"t En111\· a f,. 1 .. ,, d11 1u r , ,,. ~t.111 .111cl pr .. p.ar• l11r .1 111t·111111,1hlt• d1111nc •'I"'"""•." !\tel 111 1la1· '"" '" <lrw11t.1l tr.1d1t 1011 . I "I' 11 t1tf \'llh J dd1ch1l1al tr11p11 .ii lt111~ .11111 d1'"'" r llaa <>r11111 ·" '1111 ''.int it tn lu· \ 1111r d111111.: pit ·••Ifft' ,, """ 1•1i ..... rt,,.,, .11 '""' .111"Jlll·al1711 • 11 '1 I" • ~ft _.,."-i ... -.1. l ~:~e !~:~/~ -·-·------- 111 \Lit•Arthur ~quare l;.tw('t'!I Rird1 ~I und \lac·Arth11r Blvd. ouALITY· 1n1urance at reasonable prices! AUTO MAllllD OYU 25 ..... · · • COLLIGl STUDlMT • SIHGll OYll 20 • s116. PfaYUI I 5168. "•n•• SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS FOR LARGE BUSINESS PO"ICIES HOME OWNERS $50,000 .Y.~~~~ • $ 17 3. s 100,000 •• Y.~~~~ 5363. no.. lettl9g •• SCITft;p Ir L09I "'"' ,_ ...... ,. ~ paying t.rtoo-IL YACHTS LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS EXTENDED WORLDWIDE CRUISING COVERAGE COMMERCIAL BOATS BOB PALEY MORTHoc-546·320 & ASSOC, INC.souTHOC-642-6500 - CALIFORNIA FIRST BANK QCIOOCIDCIO .... c GOOD THINGS HAPPEN IN CALIFORNIA FIRST COSTA MESA OFFICE ?30 E 1/lh St 71416112·1on0 DANA POINT OFFICE 24671 La Plaza 714/49&129J HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICES 17122 Boach Blvd. 7141847-9681 8899 Adoma A\IO. 71'/962·3377 IAVIN£ OFFICES 17951 M11cA11h11r Blvcl 714/~49·9101 2001 M1chefson 011vc 714 833 3111 LAGUNA HILLS OFFICE 23511 PasootloV111onc111 7141830·3:>00 NE.WPOAT BEACH OFFICES 1090 Boysldo Orivo 7141675·5121 1666 San Miguel Drivo 714/844·8511 396 Superior Avo. 714/642·9~11 1501 Wcstchll Orivo 7141642·3111 SAN CL.EMENTE OfFICE 1001 S El C.m1no Real 714 492·8090 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO OFFICE 31971 Camino Caoastrano 114/493-1141 California First Bank makes good things happen every day-for scores of Californians who need loans for new cars, boats or recre- ational vehicles. And the people at California First will make the task of borrowing money a lot easier for you to handle. There are over 100 statewide offices of California First Bank. Many have extended hours and drive-up tellers. All of them plan to make good things happen. for you M··n1t'"' 11>11 111111 111111 (Ill 11111 111111 111111 llill 1111 1.-1 l,1 lhl ,\1,1 •PM f 10AM -t,f'tJI M · Ti, 9.1\rft. 'iPM F QAIA ·6PM n • • (ft 1 ti P, •,I",!.' 1 Pl,, ~ ij lvllM l)PM M ·Th 10MJ · .,P~JI lr1 M ·Th 8 30/\M • bPM r IOAM • I 30PM e 'e F 8 301\M • I 30PM M·Th 10.AM-5PM ,.,. M·Th830/\M·5PM F IOAV ·I 30Pt.A .··~ 1e F B 301\M • / 30PM ~A·-,, 1Q/\M.JPl.A r 10/iM-lP': 'Ii. l i, 10MJ. [,I'll r 10/\' .A. cP'J M. Th 101\tvl · !>rM f 10/\M·6PM " 111 Th 'IMJ • IOl\M 1PM-'lP'ft n M-F ti 301\M • 101\M M ·Th 10/\M • :-iPM 1f1 M ·Th ti 30/\M • 5PM F 10AM. /.30PM e ~. F 8 30AM • 7 30PM M·Th OAM-5PM F 10AM -6PM M·Th 10AM·5PM F 10AM·6PM M· Th 9AM · 5PM F 9AM· 7 JOPM 1,1 9A'~ iPM T Th10Al\1-5PIV F IOAM • -; 3JPM M Th 10Al"'1·5PM F lOAM - 7 30PM ·rn . • • in • • in: • •• M· Th 8 30AM-5PM F 830AM·6PM M· Th 8 30AM -5PM F 830AM·GPM M • Ttl ti ·'0·\1\11 -!1P'•1 F 8 30AM • I :l1,r>r.1 M . Th R 30/\M ':>PM r 8 30/\M 1 JOPM Orbiter Vldt• Soviet · cos - monaut Valen· tin a Tere- s hk ova, th e only woman to orbit earth, is in the US. on a two. week visit and plans a New York news con· fcrencctoday. UPI l'llolo Scholars Oted AtOCC Thirty.one Orange Coast College students have been selected as state scholars by the California Student Ald Com mission for the 1977·78 academic year . STATE schol arships are awarded to students with academic ability ;;:::=::::;;:=:::::=============;-and aptitude who need REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER - Saddleback Program 70 Promote Careers More than 70 exhibitors, ranging from television networks and real estate flnns to police departments and insutance companies, will be on hand Wednesday at Saddleback College's fU"Sl annual "Career Day." The event will lake place from 9 a.m. to I p.m. on the quad next to the science and mathematics building on the upper campus. STUDENTS AND the public will have a chance to discuss a variety of occupations and job trends, education and training requirements and the particular qualities sought of prospe<:· live employea. A number of companies will also be recruihng during the campus ac· livity, according lo organizers Pat Cassi and Vern Hod1e. "It's an opportunity for students to meet with individuals who are willing to share their experience ln an at· tempt to build rut4res," Cassi said. "We're bringing together persoMel from the world of work and neophytes searching for direction lo impr ove in· d ustries\ and the educational pro- grams that feed into those in· dustries." DAIL y PILOT A•· Goa OR 'NBC has re- newed the con· tract of "Chico ·and the Man," starrin g Jack Albert so n , despite th e January suicide of co-star Fred- die Prinze. ...... ,.,.... • We are 100~1ng for too management personnel with two financial assistance at the college of their choice. The scholarships HtJir Cms range from $150 to $1,500 Talks to Cover Drinking Woe_s APRIL .SPECIAL t' • years or more experience in residential real estate ro manage established office in Huntington Beach Excellent C:Ompensallon. Call Howard Rockoff. Roberts • Realty. (213) 37~527. collect. NEWPORT BEACH IMPORT ANT NOTICE Public Wholesalers, Decorators Dept. Store Buyers. Dealers. Collectors R. ASHER COMMISSIONED AUCTIOt&RS -. ~ ~~Ye~n·~~T~2~ ~ by the principal of shipment #783 Arrived L.A. Apnl 11, 1977 ly lhlppAi.g co. JOHMSOM SCAM STAR Port of loading Tilberry, England Carrier "lenoa" Voyage #29W PUILIC ~LE ORDERED by AUCTION Entire Shipment of 26 bales consignment of 100 handmade 100% wool ORIENT Al RUGS Carpets. Runners. Silk rugs. All will be sold by catalog in one fast session Tonight, Tuesday April 26th at 8:0.0 p.m. 11-A11ett011 WIW Taite Plau At 11- MEWPORTER INN 1&ip1,.. •-1 I I 07 JAMBOREE RD., NEWPORT BEACH Yl•w ,.,._ 7 pa. Day of W. Further Info, Phone (213) 654-5548 The .:Peam: Linda Blue, Doug Sulley a nd Jack Barnes in Newport; Don Herzog and Cort Kloke in Laguna Hills; and Bernie Brown in San Diego. And they all have the same thing in mind: Arranging an Equity Loan for you. Here's an example of a Newport Equity Funds-arranged Equity Loan: Borrow $10,0CXJ for 10 years ea~\e OCC sta t e AiJ, FUnd scholars are: Steve G . Antti · (Newport Beach ), r r Center Richard A. Beardsley, CO Irene Bender, Jeanie L. Bissett, John M. Bonin, Karen N. Bowman, Rebecca L. Byrne, all of Costa Mesa, Stephen Corea (Corona del Mar), Ann D. Densmore and Jean Durant, both of Costa Mesa, Danny L. Eitreim (Huntington Beach), Bob W. Fart (Newport Beach ), Susan R. Gilmore (Huntington Beach). A Mission Viejo hair salon will stage a "cut·a· tbon" May 2 to raise funds for equipment to be · used in Saddleback College"s new child care center when it opens. George Miller's Look· ing Good shop will wash, cut and blow dry the hair of all comers for $5 and donate proceeds lo the day care facility. The salon staff wilJ set up shop in Building C on the "lower campus." Problem drinking will be d~cussed on four suc· cessive Wednesdays in May in a series offered in Mission Viejo by the Saddleback Community Men· tal Health Clinic and South Coast Community Hospital. The programs, schedul ed for 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at Mission Community Hospital, are: -MAY 4: "HOW DO I KNOW If I 'Know ' an Alcoholic?" with Tony Sovern, alcoholism therapist and lecturer at UC Irvine and Cal State Long Beach. , -May 11 : "I Think I'm Living with an Alcoholic -What Do I Do?" with Ann Price, family therapist in private practice. -May 18: "Yikes, My Kid's Drinking!" with Bill Raymond, youth counselor with the Communi· FREE ·cARWASH WITH ANY un1in FILL-UP 1No MINIMUM) Offrr Expjre$ Apr1130, 1971 IN COSTA MESA ALSO, KAREN Grasso <Newp o rt Beach ), Richard S. Hawkins <Garden Grove), Dane C. Hillyard (Newport Beach), Will L. Holladay and John Jacobson, both of Costa Mesa, Della M. Jones <Santa An a), Vic· toria J . Joseph (Hunt· ington Beach), Cr aig R. K e n yon <Fo untain Valley), Brian R . M cCormick (Costa Mesa), Sheree Moritz <Santa Ana), Craig D. Oka and John R. Ornelas both of Huntington Beach . STU DENTS AND ty Counseling Center in San Juan Capistrano. community residents in· ~H_A_M_IL_T_ON~--~~~~a COSTA MESA ::"; AUTO WASH ~--tCD terested in making a con· -MAY 25: "WHERE DO I GO from Here?" tribution and getting a with Bob Schott. community service director for haircut should phone ComprehensiveCareCorporation. 2059Harbor Blvd 645·1039 Miller's store at 495·1724 The hospital is located at 27802 Puerta Real Coran appointment. Highway. Six hair cuUers will Additional information on the series is availa· shear as many locks as ble by calling the Saddleback Community Mental possible between 9 a.m. Health Clinic, 831·9860. and5p.m. y:=::::::~::::::;;;;;:::::::::::;;;;:::;:;::=:=:=:=:;;;;;;-IN FOUNT AIM VALLEY Also. Colleen R. Pal· terson <Costa Mesa>. ~ancy E. Rose <Hunt· l'hgton Beach). Michael B. Rowan and James Il. Schelstrate, both of Costa Mesa, John S. Taylor (Hun t ington Beach) and Linda L. Valentic (Costa Mesa). Appointed Capitol News Service SAC RAM ENTO - Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., h as appointed a San Diego State philosophy professor to the state Board of Medical Quality Assurance. He is Dr. Michael Carella of La Jolla, and will replace Michael Greer of Poway. .. ... at 10% simple annual interest. You11 have 120 monthly.payments of only $83.33 (interest-only) and a final principal repayment of $10,CXX> The Annual Percentage Rate is 11.7%. Call the T earn at Newport Equity Funds. They work together to help you get the money you need. Want " mouse A Dally Piiot Ad-visor 64 ·5678 t nv"tA1 .. VA\_tr,.l 'f .. ,,, .. -· WE HANO WASH RECREATION VEHICLES, CAMPERS & TRUCKS iEla DIR DE laR&IDR IEICH! April 30, 1977 LAGUNA BEACH DAY IN TIJUANA AND AT AGUA CALIENTE! Discover the New Tijuana and Agua Caliente! 1 TM·~ f'll••tW;• 10.,,. ,,_ H.~ CM /4.qYa C..-1 ~ 0-. Qt..i --ii lie 90,.,,,,.,..,, ....,.,_ ,..., _..., Atts & Cnltl Cenve. ' . •• , ... ...._ ~' r-.u~f\l t ~ ttooc:t <"''""'f'' t • Jl".-U•l'f\ Jl'\d ""'•n.•IOvl 'I' '""<bUC>9<1 bou~.lfllt -..., fl(tte•u A Fun Day! A Day in New Tijuana in Old Mexico! Saturday, April 30, 1s Laguna Beach Day in T11uana and at Agua Caliente. Laguna Beach visits Tquana to see the new look of Its ne1ghbor.c1 ty: to spend a fun · day at the new Agua Caliente $16,000.000 entertainment center! You'll be shopping, dining, watch~ ing the thoroughbreds run, eight· seeing, a day or goodwlll, a day. filled with International fellow~hipl All Day, A Fun Day! · Put your own group together, en· joy a one.day vacation visiting your neighbOr in New-Old Mexicol · . Join the Mayor and other Council members. Join ONCORPS Senior Volunteers Service Members, and many other citizens. "' IM C_,,lef ol I glone!I. ll!OftO Ille 8-atd ol 14.-0ft t• 11-. New T-~ . .,,_ '"• IUI Al~.,... PlflOt, IM l ... CI ano prOUCI C-ttmocl • All for S20.00 Round trip bus fare; a delicious Fred Harvey prepared, and served, brunch; refreshments, and more • • refreshments: reserved seating at Agua C.llente, discounts for two fabulous shopping sprees! Make plans now to be wtlh ycu neighbors! Reserved Group Vlstt De1dline April 21.1977 ---------------------~ ~of Ille ••~er•" and •rl-" ,,_mo. .._.of IN AgUI C .. ..n .. Ml' Colftt Cenkt . And You're Invited! Itinerary tor Laguna Beach: 6~.,d buM• .. 9 00 AM. City ~ell ~fft IHllk"'cJ loi Hool111 on ""9'V but A light-Ing tnp "1<0Y9h '"• -T 1Ufl\I 1"11 Yo11" hnd •nJOYall!I tno 111- IOO•!"ll"" l,,.,, ~ t 10 l+.o G'H1 nt!W Hlppodt04'\I ol AOU• C..1""111 Upon"'""'' you II 119 tnleNe•lled Cly M11<14IG .... A "1tol IO Ille ""°'O Dor!llcq -tf'llen •"<I B••nctf lll0W1on••1t lollowt ,.,. MtonlOI. Al o........,a YoU 11 .....,.,.. Cal"'' Coc\11 .. 1-.ioe•""'). l,,fM't \a te>Uf ot lfte lqa C•l1fllnt1t An1 A C•ittft '""'"'· ... ,,, 0·-• 10 ell l19U"• e. .. ,, .... 1 .... lkln:ll-•-11 --"''"'""" ... --and...,.. --ltOtTI IJMI 10 -· <,,....,,IO c-.-10N1•10-11QCllU4-tnd more!S.W. T~ ~ Tt""Jl-- btur1dl ... pr_.o 111'1 ... cNll ol FNd """""i... ~ , OllOwlllO bt1"'Cfl •• .,,... '°' br0Wll"l9o ~ ~"" lllOooGI-""Old lo'ellean V•I·~ (bnft9""" taft'"I). Ille AIU. C•ellt C..... ,.........,.. ""°-• .,..,_,, OtUIC~l""'~lnlM~"""" ,.,,, °' '°"' ,__, ....... llOn! l-• ·-11190.....-... _ _,,,tlVN· '-'9--~aor• . S.-.. ~TrjUl"l-~•tGotjll~"tl De Ot ~ llffc.ll' -... 111 • 9fo'MltHMd MIOCIP'n9 _,., lNfl -'I -10 llo«d our Ill-. -'*"' lol' .. lftl'fll II c.ty llell, !.J1911"1 hechi ' Newport Equity 'Funils Inc. ~ P" ... :AOl....,"L" I RESERVATION COUPON! Return Ihle portion as aoon u P<*lble, along I I wllh )'OtJ' check made payable to Promotora y Productora de Pubtlcldad. to the Deparrmenl of Human Atta1ra Office, 515 Fornt Av•~ Laguna Beach, CA 92651.1 I Enclosed Is our check In the amount of S tor • reservations I I @ $20.00 ptf person for El Dia de Llguna Beach. I Name I~ I Addren Phone I • REMEMBER: DEADLINE IS THURSDAY. APRIL 28th! I ----------------------For 1nformat1on call Dept of Human Atlalra Office 11494·1124 Be· a part of H.... · IEI Dia de Laguna Beach! Acknowledged and endorsed by the Mayor' a office and tile Depart· · ment ol Human Affairs. I d//enfe LAGUNA HILLS 830-5700 NEWPORT BEACH 644-8824 SAN Dlf;GO . 297-7100 r::-- jU• DAil V PILOT .. :mt FAMILY emcvs. B1 Bil Keane ·Stuilent Press • "Whot flavor is this, Mommy? Miss Helen said we're to keep our drawings in a vanilla folder.'' .Lltl.Bogd Men Smarter ·Than Wives Most inen are more intelligent than their' wives, Wait, that's not my notion. A university researcher said it. But it doesn't mean men are smarter generally than women. Rather, women tend to fall for men they can look up to ·in matters of the mind while men are inclined to shy away from ..yomeo who're obviously b r ighter than themselves. Thus· the· ; .matrimonial mates match up in such a man- . ner that the husbands usually have a bit of an intellectual edge on their own wives. Personally, however, I cannot say that I've found that to be true. Not that it isn't true. I just cannot say it and expect a decent lunch. · Curse of professional boxing seems to be the middleweight crown. Why ~ don't know. But world champion mid· dleweigbts have been shot to death, at.age 24, gone to San Quentin for killing a woman and later com·· milted suicide, murdered a wife and likewise then com- mitted suicide, ctied in a plane crash, ctied from rare disease, s uff e r ed alcoholism or drug addic- -lion, been jailed repeated· Jy, and been involved in episodes that brought on dis gr ace and financial ruin. That medicaJ practitioner whose life is. most likely to be threatened by an irate pa- tient is the plastic surgeon. What's your preferred snack food? Fresh . frnit ranks No. 1 nationwide. No. 2 is potato chips. No. 3, ice cream. And to the list of redundancies, please add that sports term "face mask." No, it's not extraordinary for a grownup Kodiak bear to eat 70 pounds of fish a day. Q. "What was lhe national speed limit during World War II?" A. 35. m.p.h. Addrua mail ·lo_ L.M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1S60, C<ma Me10, 92626. ·IOW:Rwe1Gi11 ~ Learn What Makes The Lindora Method So Effective A complete program to insfnxt patients how to lose weight easily. then how to molntaln their lean weight. · Dally therapy. wtth audio and sub-limlnol visual olds to promote motiva tion and encouragement. H.C.G .. a tat mobilizing substance. makes It easier for patients to lose weight without f otigue or excessive hunger. Undoro's very special diet. designed for rapd weQ1t ~ad i"rpoved ~ tmts. Behavior modlflcotton techniques to learn weight control. · Undora's easy-to-follow maintenance program to pevent regaining. The entire program is under the strict supervision of medical doctors, specialists In bariatrlc medicine. , Coll !or lnformotlon Monday tl\ru Friday 9 A M. TO 1 P.M.-2 P.M, TO 6 P.M. NEWPORT BEACH 640-6831 Fati:n lstrd . COSTA MESA 557-1893 Mesa Verde Professional Bldg. son Bernardino• £.Long Beach. MIS$1on Hllf1 Hawthorne • Oronge • Newport Beoch Gorden Gro"9 •long Beach • Posodena lo Haao •Woodland Hiiis • Sherman Ooks West COvfno • FulkHton • Rivenlde • Santa Monica ' Costa Meto •Pomona• Cemtos. Hollywooes 1t,,;;-~OK Uidolo Medlcot Chet°"'~ end~ bV M8dlcbl Doctors • that restllc1 "* i::iroctloe to Barlol!U AU, cir«: Pe!ICIW. Doctors aid~ en. bfW9d bV the State of Cdlfonio. • • ,. .. . . . . Court Backs Editor's 'No' WASIDNGTON (AP) -Tbe U.S. Supreme.. 'Court baa refused to consider whether the editor of · a atudent newspaper at a state university may re· fuae a paid advert.isemept describing counseling and legal aervices offered by an alliance for bomosexuala. ' . . The justices Jet stand Monday a U.S. Circuit Court declaioo upholding the student editor's right to reject the-ad because he objected to the subject matter. THE MISSISSIPPI GAY ALLIANCE, with sup· port from the American Civil Liberties Union, urged· the Supreme Coun to overturn the lower ·court ruling in the case involving "The Reflector," the student newspaper at Mississippi State. The ACLU lawyers argued that the newspaper is an arm of the state because it is published at a ·state-supported school. In that situation, they con- tinued, the newspaper cannot constitutionally ac· cept some commercial, political and social announ- cements and reject others simply because the stu· dent editor found the contents objectionable~ THE LAWYERS ACKNOWLEDGED a recent Supr eme Court decision that the First Amendment . guarantee of a free press gives newspapers the right to refuse to publish whatever its editors re· ject. . "Compulsion to publish is unconstitutional," the high court said in that case. But the ACLU attorneys argued that this case is different because the student newspaper is published by a stale ins titution. · A three-judge panel of the circuit court in New Orleans split 2-1 on the case .. THE MAJORITY SAID TilE STUDENT editor "bad a right to take the position that the newspaper would not be involved, even peripherally, with this off.campus homosexually-related aCtivity." The court noted that Mississippi law makes "unnatural intercourse" a crime. BRISTOL SERIES Superb, cushioned luxwy In new Teica. line fabrics for year round outdoor use -with acrylic lacqu.er highlighting all-aluminum &ames. IMPATIEN BASKETS Roger·s famous color baskets &lied With Impatiens provide bright accents &om now through summer. Easy to grow In full sun, With masses of !lgwers In reds, pinks, violet. orange, while or variegated shades. ROSES Now is the time to p1"nt container roses and Roger's has a classic assortment of "oldft favorites and "new· varieties to choose &om! Roses grow well 1n full sun in coastal areas and Roger's experts Will be happy to advise you on r06e care. SUCCULENT BASKETS For a unique, easy.care accent. Indoors or out. choose a sphagnum moss ba$ket fllled with hardy succulents or cactus &om our large selection! · .. FUCHSIA Popular. showy.flowered Fuchsias bloom from early summer through late fall In partial sun. Available In almost endless color combinations of reds through vio- let, orange and white. Variedes range 'from upright to trailing forms. SALE MOSS WIRE Create your own hanging basket now at discount prices! Save on 14-lnch round wire baskets. regular price S3.25, and one bag of moss, usually $3.25 -a S6.50 value, both for S5.00. On sale Monday thru Friday, April 25-29 • In dissent, Judge Irving L. Goldberg said the ad was innocuous and simply "carried an informative statement with regard to a matter of social con- cern." San Joaquin Hills Rd. at MacArthur Blvd,. Newport Beach, (714) 640-5800 Open Dally 9am to 6pm -247 41 Christanta Drive. Mission Viejo (714) 837 -7811 Security Pacific Bank has always offered the best card. ' '""" / l ,rj _-"')--~ --:::=.;:_::_..:.::.-~ --/ Now we offer the best cards. SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK ,. In 1970, Security Pacific Bank combined Master Chruge Now, we've added the Visa•card and combined it with with Ready ReservAccount and Check Guarantee service to Ready ReservAccount and Check Guarantee as well. So you create one of the most complete bank credit cards in the no longer need to have two banks to have two different cards. world. )bu can use it to charge goods and serv ices, You can get either or lxJth at Security Pacific Bank get extra cash, even guarantee your personal ~~W .Q~~ where there's security in numbers. checks up to a hundred dollars. Y ., -4" SECURITY PACIFIC BANK Thete?s Security in Numbers ' . - TU!lday.April28, 1977 DAILY PILOT aJ ,DB Junior a Jn1np Ahead of :Q.ivals at 6·l03Ja By DA VE CUNNINGHAM 011 ... 0•ll,~1 ... St.lff Five days ago Huntington Beach junior Cary Burt broke the all-lime Orange County high jump record with a soaring 6-10~4. But, just imagine wbat he could have done had he been healthy. All season Burt has been plagued with a linger- ing chest infection and his knees are weakened by tendonitis. He missed two days or practice due to illness during the week he broke the record, and he twisted his right ankle the day of the meet. "We didn't even know if he was going to be a ble to compete." says Huntington Beach coach Carter Lewis. "In fact. we never know from one day lo the next whether he's going lo be at prac- tice." It's been a season of aches. pams and coughs for Burt, but it's also been a season of record- setting performances. The tugh Jump is Just one or the Uungs he does well. He has also proven c apable of running and con- sistently winrung the 100, 220 and 440. Burt added the long jump lo hi.s repert01re on the same day he brokethehighjumprecord. On his first long jump attempt in a dual meet he sailed out to a 22-8 mark. It would have been an Orange Coast area season high, but he fouled on the takeoff. As it was. Burt won with a legal jump of 21·4. But that was overshadowed by his high jump re- cord. "He can do whatever he sets his mind to," Lewis says. ··1 really don 't know what his poten- t1al is. but I've always thought he's capable of 1umping 7-0." I've seen at Huntington Beach m a long time." Burt seems to know that. Coaches and team- mates alike have complained. "He's good, bu( he doesn't seem to th.ink he has to practice like Lhe r est of us." Lewis says Burt thrives on competition, and that can onJy help when he gets to big meets like tl\e league finals and CIF prelims. "If another guy Is with him at 6-10, be11go7-0. He needs someone there to push him. Otherwise he only seems lo jump high enough to win," Lewis comments. • "We never know what he's going lo do," Lewis continues. "He isn't sold on the idea of dedication and hard work yet, but if he ever does start r eally a ppl ying himse lf, he's really going to be something to watch." In his defense, Burt explains, ''The best thing for tendonitis is rest. J jump better if l don't work out a couple of days before a meet. Jn fact, I think I could have cleared 7-0 if J hadn't run the 100 earlierthat day." Before moving into track, Burt d1stinguJshed himself on the basketball court bv averatzlne 14.9 points per game and earning a spot on the All· Sunset League team. As for pure physical talent, Burt seems lo have all the necessary tools. He could-have a collegiate future in either sport, and maybe both. But he's still got a full year of high school left, and a chance to become Orange County 's first 7-0 high jumper. "He's strong as an ox and has spring to spare in those legs," Lewis says. "He's the best athlete O.a11y fl'llot P,...• by 01vt Cunnlrt-•t"'" Solaita Hot Miscues Did It For Halos Ace Tony Solaita kicked away l\\O balls for the Angels Sunday. So he decided to kick himself into gear. The pair of errors enabled Milwaukee to score fi ve un- Allflt!ls Slate AllO•MUft KMl'C 111-4io (1101 'Aorll7&0.tilandatC..l••orn1a 1 15o m. Aoril 17 0.ktanc:t a1 Calllorn1a 1 2S o "'· Aor•l 1'Caf1foirnla•t Baltimore-•?Sp m earned runs and beat the Angels. 10·9. "The second error did the trick." the first baseman decla red Monday night after ac- counting for four runs in a wild, 11·6 victory over Oakland at Anaheim Stadium. Minutes after the errors Sun- day, Solaita hit a two-run homer. He took up where he left off Mon- day. He singled home a run in the first inning. He homered in the fourth inning. Cincy Erupts For 23 Runs He walked and scored a run In the fifth inning. And he singled home another run in the seventh inning. "The errors relaxed me," said Solaita, the only player from American Samoa to reach the major leagues. "1 look a dif- ferent guy since the errors. I now look like myself last year. "I've always started slow. I have to swini: the bat. I knew e\'entually I would come out or st. .. Now the question is when aro the Angels' pitchers going lo come out of it? Frank Tanana was given nine runs Sunday and couldn't win, although he escaped without the loss. Nolan Ryan emerged with his third win Monday night after one o f the poorest games of his car eer . He a llowed 10 hits. walked seven and hit a batter for a total of 18 base runners in ~:s innings. OAKLAMO CALIFORMIA aD r h 01 •0 r h 01 Norin cl 4 1 1 I R~my 1b J I 0 0 R Scoll 1b 4 ~ I 0 "' ,, t\ (., '1 1 1 MCICinnry lb 1 0 0 0 Oona~ rl J100 P•Q~ll . '' ~ fl•vtor di\ 4 1 3 I Alltfl II> ) I 1 I Rurtt It • 1 1 1 L•nlt7b o o on Soltt1t~ 1'1 • 1 ] ' ~~nquillC<'ICll\ • 0 3 2 R0<1\l~c1 , 0 ' 2 c.ro\\ lb 4 0 ' ' CMt•1b Jn 1 ' w1111am\c • U I I Hu'l"ioru·e-v c •O~O M dllorvM ? fl 1 fl Atm4,rf I (I('! 0 P1cc1010~., ' o o o Toi•'' lb I> tl" Total' 'lol It 12 10 0d•l.,nCI 100 OJI OIC>-I> Ct1t1torn•tt lOt 140 ltx-u - CARY BURT OF HUNTINGTON BEACH HIGH IS ON HIS WAY TO HIGH JUMPING SEVEN FEET. ATLANTA (AP) -George Foster drove in sc,•en runs with five hits, including two homers. and scored five times Monday night as the wo rld champion Cin- cinnati Reds erupted from a bat- ting slump with an awesome dis- play of power lo smash the Allan· ta Braves 23-9. ( P"Q". P1rcio10. J toi~rn;in OP-O,klJ11n<t '· (al1forn1d I lOB-<Mkl tntJ I) Califort\t.i 1 18 - Rdytor 2, 8'><111~. P•<I". Alh•n HR-Nortl\ Cll, C.rocl\ 131. 9.,ytor ISi. 5'1•~•1 l Ill. SB-R•mv !>- 8CKhle. SF-Cn.tl~ W•lh<lm \ LA Cleanup Cleans Up Ury-Cre dits Garvey for Batting Success SAN DIEGO (/\ P > Ron Cev is cleaning up as t h1• nt•\\ Los Angeles Dodgl'rs· d<•.inup h1tt!"r He suggests th:it I ast \ l'ar·, cleanup h1th'r. Stc\c Gan i•\. 1~ one orthe maJOr re' a son'> "We."\"e got prt1l<'d1nn in tht· power spots now," said<·<'\ ,1ft1·r his two home' runs and thn•1• run<., batted in IN! the Do<lgc>r!> to .i i :i victory over the San l>1£>go Padres Monday ni$:ht "Last year 1 batted r1flh anrl Bill Russell baltNI lwhind m,. Cey satd "Dill 1sn t a horn1· run threat. so it made• 1t prl.'lt' t1>ugh to do my JOb, "h1ch 1:0. drl\ 1ni: an runs." With Garve} ncr\\ halt1n._ fifth Cey has bcc.>n ha' 1ng .1 h Jll Ills tWO homers gil\l' him S('\t'O (or the season, whalt• his rtu total an creased to 25 Uoth figures an • tor,s in the National L«'agul' 'I look some :static \\ hC'n I f•r'-l said I was going to bat Cey fourth and Garvey fifth." said Oorti::cro; managC'r Tom Lasorda, · Gar\'C') IS a .300 hJlt<'r \\ho always g('ts has 200 hits. but I stall \\ dnted this tt'l be our ordC'r '' That ~'rder looked :t\H•sorn1· Dodgn-• S late &ll~M••°" KAllC 17~1 4D"•' "4 l A.Mp .. di'"'" 0 -.q AO' • J 1 l..,. ,.,,,.,.._ ., '' .._ ""' L ~" ACl"•' l 'tt :"t<\ A""'l"''ll"\ lt \.1"' 0 ""Ql .ij!.11nsl the Pad rt·!>. "ho benime lhr Dod~c>rs" 10th 'll llm 1n thl' I.isl 11 J.?aml'S Ll'fl handrr Rand~ .Jones. last \l'ar s l') 'l ouni? \\\arc! 1!.JMN absorbed till' los<. dropping his rN ord to I 3 R IJ!hl handf'r Ra ck Rhod1•n. I 0 ht.' al the Padrrs for the f1ft h '>tr.11ght lime. bree.t1n~ to h" (1rst complc•ll' gamC' nf the )Nlr If<. struck out e1.i:ht and walkc•fl four Da\C LOP<'S had lhre<' h1ls and Gar\"f.'V J solo homer. helping thf• Dodgl·r~;" IO·hit attack. \\ hile Lakers Try Again Gmne 4 Tonight at Oakland OAKLAND CAP) -Rick Barrv knows how crucial a victory ove·r Los Angeles in tonight's National Basketball Association quarter- final playoff game would be. "That's all that matters now," said Barry, the all-star forward ·o.rvr .. 19 •t O..•ael9at a or the Golden Stale Warnors "We've got lo be ready a nd tum this into a two-of-three series Los Angeles is tough al home but not unbeatable." The Warriors, after losing the first two playoff games 115·106 and ~ ln Los Angeles, cut the Lakera' margin in the Western Division playoff to 2-1 with a 109-105 triumph Sunday. Barry opened with 40 points in the first game and scored 40 a1ain in 1ame three. Only on Sunday, however , did the War· , riors ~me up with adequate of· tensive support, as r eserve Charles John.son scored 28. Sunday Abdul-Jabbar came up with 28 points, 14 rebounds, seven assists and three blocked shots, but afterward the Warriors and Lakers both agreed Golden State had done a good job on defense. "No one can stop Kareem when he gets the ball." Los Angeles coach Jerry West said. "Wh at they did was keep the ball away from Kareem. We had a lot of trouble getting the ball to him so he could go to work.·· "You can only stop so much of an opponenl's game," said coach Al Attles or the Warriors. "With the La.kers you have to concen- trate on Kareem and this often opens up the rest of their game. Swedes, USSR Roll VIENNA (AP) -Roland Eriksson or the Minnesota North Stars or the National Hockey League collected three goals Monday as Sweden topped West Germany 7·1 and r emained un- beaten in the•World Ice Hockey Championships. Dave Winftt'ld l<'d San Di11i::o with two hits . tn cludanc a two·run hom<.'r lOS AMGElE\ \AM DIEGO 'irt•· '" Qy • ' " \,..,.1,.. ., M,1., ,, r-.. v lb <.l(tl''IO V lb M QrH1,._y(1 R-4i.•, tt Ah r ft O• •b r h bt t ' t 'vrn1, If "I 0 0 t) nn1 "''''"V,,,. 'l ?ll i !l 'n W1nt1PIOrf t. 2 1 1 0 n 1 H1tndr1<1l.tf t n I 0 1t?1 t .. ""'''' )Off\ • ) t t )Vi-fb .t 0 ft " 1 ' n On R .1tf,., '" • n o n I) 1 (l"l ~'Tlfl n/h 1Q'll0 .., ... ,.,,,. ' I I ,,,_,,_,,,.nnl'l"t I ' ' • fl I'\ 1•"' P I I Q Jh"I• t> 1 ti 0 0 f"r~ \' bf'r\rt I 0 ) 0 Vllll'~l'""'O"! If') f"I n 9,,.,.,..,,rt ,, 0 l"I,, q-,.,,,,.",,,und~ t "0 n f ')t I'\ t ) 1ft I l t')IAI Jl l 1 1 t \ A"'IJf I..., 'II ('11: ~ fHf) I \,fn "'t ) ' 11'\•I ~I t Qi: 11' 4 r ,_ 1 l Oh l O\ A"'°l"" ,. ~ ,., 0 .. "l )0 C'"' 1 1"•11t')"' H~ (•'II 1 I "'"''•'• W '•I t I •jO\ r tn(J fl ~~ ""'~..,~"'I """""'"" w' IP W R Ell 118 SO , \ • Q " J '""' ' ' r ~,. '> • f ~ 1 4 n o n o ' "''!'!"'' ' 1 I 0 t ' l' I\ )' 11n -'--... ..--....... Connors, Lutz Win in Vegas LAS VEGAS CA P) -Jimmy Connors is past the first hurdle in his bid lo defend his title in the Alan King Tennis Classic. having beaten Sweden's Ove Hengtsenin Use first round 6-2. 5· 7, 6·2. Connors is t op secd<'d in the $250,000 t ournament. which began Monday. The biggest upset in the open· ing round was the elimination of third·seeded Roscoe Tanner, the tournament's 1975 winner. Tan- ner lost lo Mark Edmondson 4-6, 6-4. 6·3. RauJ Ramirez, the No. 2 seed. whipped Jeff Borowiak, 6-3, 6-1, while No. 7 seed Stan Smith beat Be rnie Mitton. 4·6. 6·3, 6·1. E1ghth·l>eedcd Bob Lutz of San Clemente defeated Billy Martin 6·1, 6·3 In other fjrsl round action, Tom Gullikson beat ViJay Amrtlraj, 6-4, 7-6; Bob Hewitt de- feated Phil Deot, 2-6, 6-4, 7-5. The Reds. losers of four in a row and nine of their first 13 ga mes and mired in last place in the Nati'onal League West. scored six runs in the fi rst inning and exploded for 12 more in the fifth, tying a modern National League record and scoring the most runs against the Braves s inc e they moved from Milwaukee to Atlanta in 1966. Foster had a three-run homer in the first inning, a run-scoring double in the second and an rbi single as well as a two-run homer in the fifth. The homers were his second and third of the season. Johnny Bench and Cesar Geronimo also homered as the Reds pounded Atlanta starter · Phil Niekro and three relievers for 18 hits. The Braves, beaten 16-6 by the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sunday. have given up 39 runs and 34 hits in two games. The Reds sent 16 ballers to the plate in the fifth and eight of them got hit!, including two each by Foster and Dan Driessen. who had a three·run double and a run- scoring single. Geronimo's home run with two men on base also came in the fifth. IP H A EA 1111 SO M "01th fL , t 1 " t> \ J J 8-'f'ln\.-f\ 1 I 1 1 1 J Co••m..,. • 1 1 1 J Rvdn IW ) 11 ' ' 10 \ ) 1 • Mo,,q.-. J • l 1 t 1 1 !>•v• -Monq~ I It W P 8ahnHn PB- W 1ll1lm\ HOP By t:°fY"ltn tM ,.llnrv• T 'tS. A _,7~ LA Has Good Shot At 1984 Olympics The Southern California Com- mittee for the Olympic Games has told Mayor Tom Bradley it has "very strong assurances" that Los Angeles could have the 1984 summer Games. Bradley gave City Council copies of a fetter from committee president John C. Argue on Mon- day, asking for hearings on the matter. The committee, which backed a losing bid for the 1980 Games. didn't give the source of its as- surances that Los Angeles could be chosen by the U.S. and In- ternational Olympic commitlees. The committee and Bradley said the Games could. be staged at no cost to taxpayers. The Warriors will be trying lo tepeat Sund•y'a seml·successlul efforts in keeping the ball out ol tbe bands of Lakers center KareemAbdul-J abbar. 'r The Soviet Un.ion, favored to win the title, overwhelmed weak Romania 18-1 in a game without. a penalty. JIMMY CONNORS RE1URNS A TWO.HAND BACKHAND TO OERAT OVE BENGTSON IN LAI VEGAS MONDAY. '12 DAIL y PILOT TIA'sday. Apnl 26. 19n ,South Coast Boasts )CIF's Best Volleyball Nearly everyone around tlw ,South Coast League 1s !.3Ytn~ .. ·they play the best high !.chool _:volleyball in the United Stateb. ;; They just may be right. . f'. CIF championships ha' 1• t·orm• ... :to the South Coast League in each ... 'Of the l ast t wo years. San ~'Clemente won it an 1976 and ·i:t.agunu Beach took 1l home in . '.J.975. Corona del Mar wont undefeat· ed while winning the Inglewood tournament last month. whip- ping some of the toughest South Bay ar~a teams. But in the South Coast League Coron;i dl·I Mar 1:-. locked in fourth place with a 5-3 record. "This is lht! toughc!.t league m 'the United Stall's. w1thou1 .1 doubt," proclaims El Toro co.ich Tom Read. .M 1ssion Viejo coach John Muno thinks both may be right. ''You 'll find no bcller volleyball than in Southel'n California, and I don't thmk vou 'II find a league in Southern California better lban the South Coast," Murio assures. Says Read: '·If they could take five teams to the playoffs from our league, they'd probably finish one-two-three-four.five." . And Read is a man with con- siderable expertise in the game. He toured with the U.S. national team for four years and now he's pl ayer-coach of the El Paso- Juarez Sol, a pro team that com· petes during the summer. Read's El Toro Jligh varsity 1s in last place"' 1th a 1·7 record, but he still believes he has a powerful team. here and there in the res t of CJF, but nnwhere is there anything like the South Coast League, where every t eam is great." M1i.!.1on V1eJO is in thtrd place :it fi·2. Coach Murio says, "P<'rsonally, l feel we'r e one of the top five teams in C IF and it would be a real sham e if we couldn't get into the playoffs. "We could have a very r eal shot at the Cl F championship but we may not even get into the playoffs if they only take the top two teams." San .Clemente~ coach J ack lverson knows what he means. Las t year l verson 's team couldn't wm the league (Laguna Beach dtd) but San Clemente v. e nt on to grab the Cl F crown. ·Tennis .Report ·n:For Area )'' VAllSITY MttlM (19¥al 0\\1M.._9MCll ........ ic: .. 1 ... CMI Get • .,,..,.. .. ,. cltf Ooo •• ,, dtl F•dtltflY ••t. Cltl 1(- • O; Koellef tMI -.. l, •·>. H , •.Or S•IM (M) 10\t .. I. -.~. M . •-4; • !teaton lM)lotU-6,H,-•,a,1 ... '**" l!len·P~ IMI 0.1 Wint~ t<rencn .. t. i.s, Otl C:lmObtll·lt .. Mt '">. "3; Perke,... OllC!t'IOll CMI lettl..,, • •1 lf>lllH ... l. "'"' V•ll•Y OI Its) Nt•-' Sl"'lea Yl\9•' ,,, IO\I to 0.mPWY 1 .•• I• Grocla 36, to Stnllh .... lo Gee .. ,; Su9u1IM IFI I.XI 06. O.•, 2·•· 1-4: Schw•rl1 er' IO\l 1 b, 0-6, 0.6, M ; M<Bridtt ll'l lo\I H. 16, .. 1, .. 1. ~ft Videtto P•rh<1m I Fl iollt wllll Sw.-dlund Dowty • 6. 1·S: ~pllt wltll OtMOlt Blelkfr 4 • 7 ), S1l,..r-Llllltlft V· 1lo~t0-1>, 2 ... 1-1>.•·I. IUIMll IJ:WI) (S\ollW .. ll!llMltf' • ~lft McOoneld IEI oof Roussin '-0. def H•rOv .. , cltl Youn«i H , clef Ko••I • 0, Lynott IEI won ..0, t I, .. z. •I: PnotllPS CEl 1.XH 7, 1_., won .. 2. l>-4; Ft•lll IEH°'U •· 1-4, wan .. 2,l>-1, ONllO!ft H•mot-Sll•l•r IE I Off Fott<h· Wt llter • O, l·S: det Sherm!\· Mou\meule10 ....... I; lkll~~ll Ill won .. 1,IOSl .. 7,_,74,1>-L Univers1lv rn:i1·h l\11k 1> Pl1r1lr is a litlle more c.iutious "The South Coast League is d('f1nikly t h e toughe s t in Soul h1•rn California,•' Puritz :.ays. "You put El Toro into the open Orange County League and we'd 01.· \\inning it. We'd probably do 'cry well in the Sunset League, too," Read says. "There may be a s trong team Laguna ~each, this year's favor ite, has sever al athletes "'ho played on the AAU national championship team last sum- mer. The squad receives unof- f1 c1al gwdance Crom one of the all-time greats in U.S. volleyball history, Rolf Engen. Engen isn't on the faculty and Mike Duncan is the team's real coach, but Engen volunteers in· valuable help. He's a former All- American, played on U.S. na· tional teams and was the first· man elected to the United States Volleyball Association Hall of Fame. · SANTA ANA CC WINNER-Lois Edes (right) won h er f ifth women's club golf championship at Santa Ana Country Club re· cently. Maxine Du~gan was the runnerup. JUNIOi. VAllSITY , H.-t ID I IJI ~ti\. VllW, ~ ...... Hollfncl (NI def Pele" .. 2. def H•m•ltonlt-2,cltl Reed .. 1,clel llo<~s • 1· Otwlloe !NI wan6.0. 7 ... •.J. •·l; Fred IN) WOii ..... •·2, 7·S. l>·I; Sm11J\ (NJ loll 1-6, H , wonl>·2,4·3. ·Energy Source New Motivation Mutual Coast Area 0....ft Stlllln<i·R•vtru•o (NI cMI M•rlil\• CllM •-3 ... l : .,., ICerldrO·Noble b-0, 4.0, F•rmer·Flol~ !NI wan .. 2. •.J; •·J, o-o. . For UC/ Paddlers With men like him h elping build programs around the South Coast League, it's small wonder the circuit is so highly respected. Foe Tabs HBGals Golf Results M.trlN (U) (161 Hi.. heel! Sl"llft Foy !Ml cltl OQden 6·1, lost lo Htllm•n 1>6, clef Gonrelu .. 3, d<lf Pooley •·I, Pt•lt (Ml IOSl 24, .... 1-4, 4·6; Fur\I (Ml lo.I .. 7, '"°" •·l, •·l, • 2, M•rlno CM I lo\t 0-4, H , •·7, 2-4. A UC Irvine eight-man s hell go1. •8n unexpected bonus one SundJy morning 10 the wan mg hours of Jls 24-hour row· a-thon. With a couple of hours to go, the oarsmen were rowing along at a very slow clip, dead tared a nd in extreme pam. But their spirits quickly picked up. A cruiser. heading out for d. Sunday joy rid<', camP along side the weary UC I oarsmen and a pretty young thtng abo.ird un CRAIG SHEFF doubtedly pt>rh.ips trvm~ to i:•'" t he Anteater!. nc·w hf<' promµ! ly flashed her Cod g1 \en upper dimensions. As the cruiser steamC'd past. t he Anteakrs s uddenly p1ckt-c1 up t he pace They probably could have won the lknll'\ Hu' Jl R<'gatta at thJl mom1·n1 "It \\3S the f.t'ttt·~I I "' l'\l'r ::.een lh<'m row, ,,11d I f'I c.:r1'" coach Boh Ne" mun lJ('l'<i top t"o di,tantr 'tar' - Steve Scott and Halph Sf'rna will run in Saturday 's Pen n Relays. Scott will com pel<' in the mih' a nd Serna will race lo the S.000 meters. Scott hiis a hr1-t of :1 ;56.5 while Serna ran 4 :OG.l In the n1il1• recently. Quotable Quote!> F rom Saddlcbark bJ:.l\elbull coach Bill Mulh)(an, ,1ftt•r nn nouncing his award w1ntw1 :. ··w e didn'l havt' ,1ny cJnJ1'1atc;. for a deferu.ive OJWllrd · From OCC IJj:-.t•bJll ~1111 rh Mike Mayne, after a loss to Cer- r1 tos. ··we played not t o Jose .•. we didn't play to win." * * * SKIPPIN'AROUND -Golden West College water polo player Tom Crook, the all-time GWC scorer , has signed a letter of in - l en t to p l ay at UCLA .•. Handsome Roundtret>, a fres hman pitcher at OCC. 1s ac:. t or R ichard R o und t r ee •s· nephew .•. L'C Irvine basketball coach Tim Tift r ecruited a good one 1n Ste,·e McGuir<', J G 5 fon\ ard from Rio Hondo College )1 cGuire averaged nearly 22 points a game m two j ears :il Rio. earning All-Southern Cal Conference first t eam laurels both :.c<Jsons. And it doesn_'t hurt ~o have a Hun tington Beach few players like Chris Allard High School has an ex· CCorona . del Mar •. A~l-Southern cellent chance of upset- Cahforrua as a Junior ), Tom. ting No. !-seeded St. Beard <San Clemente, All·CI F as J o s e p h H i g h o f a Junior) and Kip Engen_ <Rolf's Lakewood Friday night son, a soud All·CIF candidate at in the· Cl F 4-A girls Laguna). basketball championship ''Youhearaboutsomeofthese game at Cal State other teams around here that are <Fullerton) according to ::.upposed to be so good," says Ba r bar a ' Amma n n coach Murio. "Well, Newport coach of the Founla1~ Harbor couldn't do anythi ng in ValleyHigh Barons. our league and Huntington Beach Ammann h as an in. (which is un~ef.eated). is~'t any sight into the cham be.Iler than ~1ss1on VJeJO. pionship game since h<:r fhen. a'> 1f to temper earher Barons played each of !.lateml'nts about the South Coast the title combatants ~!l'1ng lhl' bc~t in the United twice during the year. Stutes. Muno concluded, The Barons lost to Hunt· "There's no doubt that we're the ington Beach twice in :.trongeslleague m Cit'." Sunset League pl ay and WOMEN•SOOLF SltNTAANltCC Crf\\ Cro\\ Tourn•m~nt • C.Mm ... PIOn\ .. ID Fh9"1-I P•ll• Ho'(I, 11'7 2. Intl !>l ..... \CU•Y. 'l'I, l M•<1ne Ouq· g•n. 30 It FhO"I t ~ry Str•clllnQ 1~ 7 Ult I ltbby Foruler. Jun,. Drury. M.,, BumAn.1' 8 FllOJ\l-1 M•rQ• 8er9n•uur 7S"> 7 ~nnl Ford. 1• · l Jaco •e Wh11e. 17''> •. ll<el wand• B•k•r. Glor•• Child Jo.,.. Le\ter.18 C Fhql\1-1 Pnylll\ Jack..,,,, 16. 2. M•rv Hinton 17; l l(•y J°"n\On 15 0 FllQl>t-1 I,_ M(Kerht. 1~ 2. Htlen l~bell ,., 1 Fu .. vo N11ta. 17 Stro~e Ptn Tou"'•mt<11 A Md 8 Fllgllh (GrM\I I Miry Lou 1(1,.r. 'l'I INtll-1 Autll H•mmlll, n. 2. JuM Drury, 11 C end O Fllot>l-1. Pllyllis Jackson, 7•. VI Sm1t,,, I~. HUNTINGTON Sf..t.CLI FF CC M4tCfl v~ P•r Tourn•m~nt Flnt F t•Qht 1 O•dnd ~000!?'. olu\ 1, 1 Ginny Lambert plu• I , J. Mabel C"-ri\ttn\oe'n, fTl•nu't I !>•<ond Fl•Ql\I I 8•vHlv E;.mtr..an. rwn 1 June Ooylr, m1nu) 1 ) JUN• r1tt1n1 m1nu'>) Third Fl111"' I [,lhtr l(n••lana. tV•n 1 111~) Al ••Ila Olrich. VI O'C:.or o. mlnu\ t Warrant Charges· Randle s plit a pair of games with SL Joseph, winning by one pomt in an early sea son game in the Garden Grove tourney and losing in the Cl F semifinals Friday. Fourlh Fl•QM ·I 111,.1 Ntnr ~ Ouacotnbush. Sondy T"omp,on, Oolll• lt~r\On, min~ J. •. Vtra Btnen\lttl\. minus• MUAVf.A DECC LP•\t Pu th Tourn.tm,nt · -. Fllq .. 1-1 0..rl011e Wood ?a 1 ti••) Pel 8amell. Md'I!• H•yf\. Jl. • lh~I M•rl1nn. 8uckl•• c;..lt Br°""' 31 ORLANDO, Fla. <AP) -A v. arrant cbargrng s uspended Texas Rangers second baseman Lenn,· Randle "1th aggravated bat lery m the s pnng trarnrng beating of manager Frank Luc- rhes1 has been issued by local .iuthonties. Randle ts charged "'1th beating Luclht•:.1 1n Orlando a the two were chscussing Randle·~ status v. 1th the h':tm. Lucchesi s pent seven days m a hosp1tal. Lucchesi had no comment on the hlmg of the cnmmal charges .ind also declined to comment on whethe r he would file c1v1l l·harges. "Once agam. I'm saying no ('Om ment." said Lucchesi. · I h.ive two years under the statute of l1m1t at10ns to decide on ~omethtnJ: hke that and l'm not "'orncd jbout it at this time. My only "or ry JS about the Rangers l'I." mi:: v. mnin~ bast'ba 11." lt ;rndle reportedly was angry "\er losing has JO b lo rookie Bump Wills. son of former Los Angeles Dodgers star Maury Wills. Thl' Rang<•r<; 30-d ay sus- pension of R.indlt• ends Wcdnes- da\ Th<' l'lub has been trying to I raclt' Hand It'. "ho they fined Sl0,000 Striking Referees Return to W ork "I trunk they m atch up really Wt!ll and the key for Huntingto n Reach will be to kel'P l\:.ithy Hammond of St Jost-ph off the boards," Ammann says. '"I have a fcclin~ that Huntington Beach 1s go ing to pull Jt out. I hope so, a n yway. I t hink PHILADELPHIA CAP) JoanneKellogg hasdone Turning their attention from the a heck of a job with the bargaining table to the basket-team this year." 6 Fh9t'lt-L ft•") V1tq1n•d V"hj tt M •flOft ~1mon )A 3 (",foor9•• Fdr mn J\ C Fii~"' I Pal (,oll 71 7 q,. 8• I ty C,ony• Oottte MO"•'· Jl. ' Ltld MrHuq" )4 0 Fl1QM 1 ll'l•lmd ~1th II ~ 1 V•tl'l'f (,r ~f,. J>. 3. PhyH1\ 'lohd'""O. 11 ' J°"l"I 0.Yt'\ )S S.t,.Oll t Pt•y Tournctrnf'nl A F•loM ' P•I -11 •l 2 \h•rl•v C•ll•oh•n IJ l ltlel Bell• Ham e, [my Burf-.tf'I. r~ ... rnnr Altmd"I ,. B Fl•')t\t I M•r1nn "\cftult•• ~-1 .c .. 11.,. AcJ•m~ o • l Dotti• Fr"nc•UOf'll 10. ' V1rg1n1• Vt\l•c•. It c:. Fll9M-I Oonlt Joftes. IS,, ,,,., 8elt, Gonv•. Vlrolnla K•dder, 7•. • Sylvl~ Pr...auskl 71 O FllQ>tt-1 ltlel I.. Keeton. Pat Pl~e. H; l Helen Ooody, 16; J, Sopl\10 c:.111.11 11.t.NCHOSANJOAOUIMGC hall court 24 striking National Does Ammann give St. Baskfotball Association referees Joseph an edge in any PH Fou" Tour nam.,nt A • FlloM-1 Ell..,n Yrac~rn. 41 , 1. are ready to resume work in the phase of the title game'! C•thv Pmv.w,.,; J Jac~1e1<ro11, •s. ))layoffs ''l think the Only edge • 9 l'llont-t Cont11eOunl10.U'n. Playl'rs. coaches and the of-they will have will be in Lo~ :::~=~~11.~111 V•uolWn ... ~,; 2· fl,.1· als themsel\·"s sa1·d l\1onday experience and I don 'l 1.o w net 10, the dav-E11een th~cv were rehe~ed the 16·day know if that will be such vr9~,~~';~7r~nm Tourn•m•nt: 4 walkout JS over. a big factor or not. Fltoht 1 C••nv Perry. 110,em••v Unc\er the pact announced "Huntington Beac h !!'~~'.~~· 6s· 1• o;nnv sia,ko, Kav Mnnday, thC' Nnt1onal Associa-has played so well and so e nqni 1 Ellen Mcl(lnltv t1on of Oai.kel ball Refer ees and cool all season and the e.:~~~.:'~~~·70118,',,· 1• 8 •11v the NBA agreed to drop charges pressure hasn't seemed 1 111e1 M.irw• ertqht, s .... ''"'' .arfainSt each Other. to bother them even 01ovew..,..ro1t C:.orwe8.,no1t.71 ~ Lo"' not for tP'!I' d•y -<Athy Perry, ------------------------------------------though I.hey are a young 1l COSTA MESA AMC& JEEP LARGEST JEEP: DIALER IM THE STATE OF CAUFORNIA. 40 NEW JEEPS. IMSTOCI Automatic: powe r ateenng & ~ dl1c brakes. Se~fA7A687C2 194Q1 s4399 Maj or League Standings \~•:RICAN LEAGUE ~~stem Di\•ision W L Pct. GB .. 5 .6'13 '.) f, 600 \~ t 'h It' ;)~t I Kans as Cit' Oakland Minnesota Texas Angelfi Seat Uc 10 7 .588 t'l 10 7 .588 1'1 7 7 .500 2 8 lO .444 :J 7 12 .363 4Y2 E astern J)ivisioo Milwaukee 9 4 .692 Baltimore 7 6 .538 2 NewYork 8 8 .500 2Y.i • Toronto 8 9 .471 3 Boston 6 8 .429 3Y.t Detroit 6 10 .:ns 4Y.t Cleveland 4 9 .308 S """""*"'. O.mtt Cell!Orlll• 11, Oti<l'""d' Toronto•S. llMlon H NtwYorltt,9fltl,,_... ()flly.,_..,_,,..s ToNY't O-tt Oekl..,,., (B1 ... o.11 "'-~llorftl.t IS'-, 1-21 TorOl\to I~ M l •I c11 ... 1-lG«lencl. 0 t> Chlc-t9rf'tt, 2•1111 Owt'91t I Ao-.... , *111•1-.oQue, l~l•t Ml,....._.IZ«lltol, HI • a~ton lwtt1, O.tl 11 Mllweu-.. 1""9ullme: , ti Htw Yor11 ll4olttrn.-, 1~1 et Blltlmore (Mey, 1 JI THll (Pt"Y. HI •I K-.saty (HHSle.-. "'' NATIONAL L EAGU E We~~rn Division W L Pct. GB Oodg(>rS 12 3 .800 Atlantd 8 8 .500 41-: San Francisco 7 7 .500 4 112 San Diego R 10 .444 s1,.~ Houston 6 9 .400 6 Cincinnati 5 10 .333 7 . Eaetem Division St . LoW& 9 6 .600 Montreal 7 6 .538 1 Pittsburgh 7 6 .538 1 Chicago 6 6 .500 lYJ New York 6 8 .429 2YJ Philadelphia 5 7 .417 2Y.i MeMey'J <MftlH Lot"-"" 7, 51., OI-3 ClnclMatl n, AtMM>l•• 51 LOlllUI Oil<41QO. cold °"'•-' KNdllted , .. .,..~ LO• A~ (Sol11DI\, HI et Serl Dl"91t CSlll<Wy, """ H.uftlfl C~lo,. W I M Sift "•M<l-CH•lkkl. Ml St. Lo;,I, IA--., '·11 •I Ollcavo CA. Rell\<1-t. M l P!>llede!P'W• cow111-. Ml •t Pllbllurdl cc.-1.n., 1.01 Clft<l-CI (Al<al•. Ml et Atleftt• INl•Vo.().c?) . MOlltr••' CH1nnelu, t I I •• Nt• Y&rll CK--.MI team." COSTAMIUAOC The Oil"rs start two , Part"'" Comb•~d Pvns TouM•· ~ ""tt\t I M1lt1• HAV1t~. Mitry seniors, two juniors and · wan•m••tr. u 1 111e1 F••n~1" a Sophomore. St. Joseph Ou"' H•IM W•IH"910<>. VI Tl'\fll\, -. Conn•t Nt>~• 66 • Oa1~ BrDW"ninq. has three seniors. one B•1tv Bl•••more. 47: s. Dora J U n l 0 r 3 n d 0 n (' oa..olcl\On. Ell"' SUi>e~ ... , • K•y • Ll'UfWtllf'f' fr•n LatWlJ.64 sophomore m the i.lart· r 1n Whhtt• Tou•n•men1 A I Fllont -1 Ellwn Wll'IOI\ lll. 1 MMV Jng 1neup. 7tmmnmM. "\J J F• .. n-1eOur<t, J1. Does H unti ng t on 4 Hol•n w.-111AQ1onJ1 Beach have the person-8 F•1G111-1. Mmtp H•Y•'· J1: 1. .nel to control the boards ~;:~i:;~:is Von. F•Hvn B•ooh, agal·nst the 5 10 Ham c Ft19n1 -1. °'11 Go\t~•Y :!'I· 1 a••· · · ' tv Bl•ke..-e. 3J. 3 Jun Patrick. )2 mond? -~. c1e1• 0.1..onq, 31 "They are a good re-o F1~1>1-1. P•t K••r, 32; i. "'~' bounding team," Am· Ell•• su.,.,, Mer1 Ken t. Em111e WllQ.n,lO. . m ann says of the Oilers.· MlfAoowu111< CK ' Th all Low °""5, Low Nt1 T oum•mtnl ~ A " ey are t er across ""o"' 10nm1 -1. H•••n Moulton.••. the front line than St. 1N111-1. w1nn1e w1111am1, •t ; 2. J h and D bbl B Olene H-. 11, OSep e e Ur·• B l"llQl>t IGroul-t. Shlrtev Zeller, ·rows (5·9 ) jumps s o 'l: <N•o-1. G1«11 eo1 ... d, n ; 1,. much taller than her list· R";;" ~;::·1~1-1. w.1 B•«r' ·ed height. Krell, wonell• H1rrl1, tot. "I think Huntington IN•t>-1.c.0r...i.••:1 PotHOOd.1'. Beach Is a little more LO• '"' for Ftb ruerv-J•n• Track ·skilled all t he way through. Their forwards and guards are atronger. team wise. . "Of course, you can't oi:~!~~c:x take anything away from • aa-ett> Q11 ,, ... van.., st. J-epb. They pl ay 100-1. "°"9i 1e1 11 •: 1. Hodnlctt """ (I) 1U;l.IMllOll IFI 11.0. that 2·3 U>Oe on defense no-1. Mellon <F> "~; t. M9clllk11 and they are very quick c11u .•;i.eo._, 1F111t •. ..-1.,,..,., (£) l:OU; 1. SIOlft , Up On top. -C"l l:OJ.l ;l. Roctr19uez IEll:OU "They cover a lot or --1• ~ 1E1 1,30 •: 2. w11"' C!l t·ii.11>.erv ... t1"17:3A o. t erritory and make it, Ml1•-'· Ferne 1e1 s:12.s; t • . very difficult to get the ''°""' ,., '·°' o; i. M.K•,.., CF 1 ;ball to the wings. Their •=;~~i1-,. CU1"1'V (El U :SU ; ,, : guards deflect a lot of s.ou1 .... 1a1 u·JO.e: s. Ban1.r. <Fl I d I f I lb t 'IJ:JO.S. . passes an ee a uo LM-4. c.rroo 1F1 u.s; i. "••cs IBammond is taller than 111 n.•:>.Hen4on1E1n•. . "' ... ,..1..,-1. l!dllOft JO 5. :.,-10. Ml .. ...i..,.._1. Edf110"4: 16.S. •• But nun t' ngton HJ-1, l11\1r9er1Jm ('1 J..O: '· .. , •• •Beach l.• tall up front and 1"1 .. 1•:a.11w1v11er ce1 .. 10. I " L.1-,. H.tft40ll (l!I IM'h; 2. HOCS-1Witb Kathy Doyle (S-9) at n1<1t 1e:1 IH:a c:o111trt '""u 'lh .. 1ront of their zone, 111•-1. 9ul1•-cE> ,..,; 1. o...... "' I ('°) IM\.\Jl. k n l"l tM. they are tough." .NMIOtt VAllSITY Both teams like to run ""' v....., <,.> 1 .. 1 ••- with the ball but. Hunt-.. ~t°;1·1~~vr }!!._,'.2~~-1 lDlton Beach doean 1t 11••·•· tto-1 i.ou tFI 2·•1.2. Mll-1, ,_,..... IE) 6:10 o. 1 mt1e-1. employ a preaa.lJ\i-t)'l)C e.<11 1"11•:os o. 110L.H-1, h••1<1'1 defense and could be iset "s •• ,....,_, tdl_,.., Mlle,... and readv for the St. tey-t "-'"'" v •• ...,,.,,.o HJ-I. , So-ti IF) ... U-1 ~t 11') l .. 1~ 11.os~pb_ J esters.., ,_1.1~1C11~11~. Oulht 64 Marcl't-Jtrl !>I••~ U. Pe-rpetu•I troohv wannt'r > fnr MarcP\· A Ftlgh1 W1nn1r W1ll1am\. 11 8 Fhe)hl S>\lrl•Y Ztllt'. 11. C FllQhl -VIV•n Att /0, MESA VE ll OE CC ~Ho\e Pl•Y Tourn•rnf',,1 • ~ F1ir,n1-1 E.ltt tlltson. 11 ) M 1H •dnn_. Bue: ktr\ 13 J E l••nor Alt,.,,-tn 7S. • Arlt!'~ Vtrtur•f'\. 1& 8 FllQl\t I Mar1on Schulle I.I 1 l•••I M••ve Wiiiiam' """ P•I Bon· nt11. n • l.ou•.., llob•n~ 7' c Fl•O"' I l(ay f'•rltY 10 2 lh•I Maov·~ Sm1tn. Oo1t1• Jone>. 1•. 4. M 1m1SmHh 11 0 F ll'Jhl I H•lon Doody 73 7. M af' 81blr 1• 1 J•<'" Ntet, 11, •. RO\f' T dkt!\1Ch1. ti() (rl\\. (rO"': Toun,•m•n' ~ t=t19r11 -t h1~1 SUf' li<:ro:tu\e, (h•,.loUe Wood, )O'~ l 41,. I Vonda Pf>l•r"'" Mary Aat,._.•n l11., \ tt1t') A.rfent \le,.lurU\ 4j,ltolld 'i<.f'll•ul 37 8 F11oi,t ' Mar1on Schullf' ?1 ' V trQ•'ltl V1\\ (,, 28 i LOUt\• Rob1n~on ». 4 Mctrion Simmon\, JO' l'. C F llqht 1 ~imt Smith. 7t.'11:? TV riamanl') JO 'Oott1e Morr1\. 311 4 .. II••> PatC:,111 M•Qo"Smllh lt', 0 Fli9t'lt I Ct1tt) $htt,.on Ou"n• !»off a Ga" 181, l Mara Donkin, J01 J; • E IU~O< N~h•m. l? Strok• Ptav Tourn•m•nl A Flloht (C,rQ\\i l M~rq .. HctV~'• 91 tN,.1 • I M~Cf'tl ""'""-'''u ,, ? Bene H6rnr• 1b J Ptwllt~ Smith.14 8 FllQhl tGro\\I • Georol a F t'"m tr, '6 fN tt • t M•rtOn SCl\Ul\t. .. 1 !11• 1 llut" C:,.,LIQI Pal (,111 11 C Fl1qfl• rc,,,,,,1 ·' J4'n" F .. ,, .. ,,,,,.., O...M.s Puckett·MorrlM>n IMI 'Diii wllll Wooten·~tone .. ,, .. 1. tpllt wHh Shumen-Johnton •·l. •·•: CllOW• VanW1nkl• IXl•Plll .... H ; l·S, l-•. Edlao111mY1l l1YilWntml1111CtJ SI""" Cl't•nev !El llet Bor••I" 7-6,del Felt 6 1 d~I Hooton l>-0, Neorfle •·1: H•nlon tEl ...,,, .. 7 ... ,, 7.s, 7-4; Ou•s I( I "'°" c..1 ..... lost :J.6. won t.OJ M•O•l\00> IEI wan H , lo" ........ -n4·1. °"""" Badalos 84nwell IEI lost t• Dunlap McP.,,ltn ... 6, t .. ; def Har• r•s·Fu111>ri9~t 6·0, 6·1; Cr•mo• C•mpt>ell (Et ~Piii ••. 7-6; won .. ,, •·•. "110SH·S0"H EdlllOftUIYJI (6YJIWntmhttt•r- Baseball JUNIOll VAllSI TV I'll\. Vltlrt ISi 141 IMrln• FOUNTAIN VAl.lEY (Sl -M1roen1m, 11, •+l·O: R•mlret, H ·O. • 0 1·0; B•ac~ley, <, 4+0.0; Sou, 30, 3 I ·O·O: Lung, rl, 2· M-0; Devlen. p, .).I 1 o: Cow•n. lb. J.1.2.1; Sttkrn•n, 2b, 2·0.1·0; lleelt,cl, 2·M ·I. MltRINA 141-0rl •. U, J.1·1-0; .t.ro. "· 000.0; Gran•m. II. 2+1.1. 01\0<\, p, 0.0.0.0; C:.rt\Cl, ?b, J.l·l·I; Ml.,1<e, e>ll, .).0.1-0; Davis, cl. 1-<H>O: Rullu chlltl. dn . .).0.00; Fan>le, lb, 1·1 O·O; McGuire. ll>, 3·1·2·0; !to.llm•n. r1. 2-o+1. S<ore lly 1 ... 1,,., t06 •tiptl 1 •hlf'1'~iwo 71 1 (he:) Frn \l.•lll'y r 11 e 010 OIJ 0-S I 001 002 1-4 7 • Sylvia PtMW\1\-•, Ty Hdn'Mno, 1'1. M•rln. Sof tball Girls Sports '°'ASTG.t.ME Goldtn WHI ()) 171 so Stat• GOLDEN WEST lll-G•l•Ulh, cl. 7·1 NI; Brown, lb •~. Struw. lb, •I ?.O. Wln,ltOI«,, c. 4 0·1 2. Er~I. II 6·0.l·O· Goodl1nd, rl 6-0·0.0. Well'l-ltln. 2b, J.0.0.0, Aosent>ery, P. •·• 7 O; Kno•, "· S-00.0; Nltl'tols, 2b, 3-0 0.0. Tolal• 'J.J.IU. S<o,. b' lnnl1191 r II • 000 200 000 000 00-? • A so S!~lt Gold•n West 001 001 000 000 01-3 • 3 SECOND GAME GoldtnWHI It) 101 SD Stal• GOLOE'I WEST 191-Gllrulh. cl, 7 2 0-0, Brown. lb, 4.1-1.() Slrut>o!. )b, J·l·O.O W1n,ltf)IPCk, ( • l I I Erl•I. 11, l 171. (,r1bb•n. r1, 11.1 2 Nichol\, 1D lb • 0 J.l• Knox.\\ ' I I 0, B••n· "-'" o. ?+?·I. Hor~mfn, II I O·O O; Htbeh, rl I 0.0 0 Tot.\!\ JO~ 12 I. sco .. "' lnn11t9• r II • !:O~l•le 000 000 o~ • l Goldel\W~! 160 010 x-• 12 0 OT a...,. Coast fll COl Chapmar1 ORltNC:.E COAST 18 T'>m•" d, l l·.CM» Hf>frf!'ril c l· t 0.0 C,u•,,...1114, lo 1·•0·0 w.,!>~r. 3n 0000. F,.•nitrtl. \\, J ,., .. ,. SArti.o. '' 0.00-0, A-rh,rl ? 0 I I Rh•re< rt, 2 0 I t; Hul<1•ndtr lit, l I 1 QI Jltk'°" P, ).I In, 8urn' It ) 0 I 0 C:.o•dOlll\ 1b 7 0 0 1, Ao••M, lb, I 00.0. Tol•I• 76 8-8 I S<Ott "' l""'""' r II • Cllapm•n 000 000 O O \ J Or~ng• (Ck'l\I '.IOO 0\0 A e 8 0 V/l>.RSI TY M1l'ln• (I) It) Nt"'POrl MAlllNA i'I Br••nv lb, 4 0·1 O; Nutt••. u. 3 l·' o. W•"•· <, 4·0.1 n, EPP""°"· <•. J 7·J.1. Wllll•ms. •n. 1-0-1-1. Mlrttn. rl, • o.oo; Cole, io • Prep Golf 111 D•l'.tdoHi1111c;.ll TOUf'r•o ITowma.-. 04 CMmltl-. .t.'"11 O THtnSl-"9S 1. Troy t.01), t. 1!1 Dorado 14081, 3. Rio Mos• 11101, •. EU•ncoa al Co.i. "'"'"um. s Clbrillo w11. .... Sc ...... 4. EttMKle IRyen R11tllll11, Br~tt . Ee>an ... MM< VIMS •s. 0••• HOrllnQ IS. John Burel• 116. llob<i••""•' ••I 6. HB Edt'IOI\ (Rick V•n Dyke Ill, o.,.. Mtla11M1n 111. Cl i..t Juhl n. scott C•m•'Wfl 13. Keith zu.,. 9', Jim .Ler><elt clQI. 11. Stll o.n-11 Ulm MtCeflr.v I I, Mlrlt W•l~er n, Marly H•nnlQ•n '°· TonySutl'ltKsltl, A8'1dyM1rU11U, Mlrlt Colll .. '<lql. 7.1.0.0; G1mbuccl, II, 4·0·0-0; M•llOORO.P.>-1·1.() NEWPORT HltRBOR 111-T-. t. )-1-1-0; Gaddl•, JI>, l+M ; Wol ... , "· 3·0·0.0; l( .. flWOrtll'I', cl, 1·0.0.0: Aus11, 11>. >-4-0.0; Ot. Pu•••-1, u, 1·0-0 O: JoMo«I. rf. 1~: Llttteiofln, p, 2·0-1-0; Co. Pulukl, 2b, 2.0. t-01 Horn. ti, 1·0·0.0; H•rrlngloft, rt, 1-0-0·0. r II • M1rln1 001 '?O t-6 I O Ntwoort 000 001 0-1 4 4 .. 1111'1. Vati.. (101 10 Hi., .. K ii FOUNTAIN VALLEY (IOl-o .c, •·O·O·O; W4ll1ce, Cf·U , S·l·O·O; Hou\lon. lb, "4·0·1·1; 801well, p, •·l ).0, H•rt, 3b, 7·1·2·1; lkckltrom, ''-? 1· 0.0. H1~lktr1, rt, 0.0.0.0; Clucl1, 11 O·O·O·I; t.aFelve, II, l·O·l·OI Pollard, rl -<I, 3-2·1·2; Koloper, lb, 4 0 1-1 HUNTINGTON BEACH !0-M6\\t, lb. ~; Cte,..rlnoe. l'f·P. 1 o o.o, Sliva, n. J.M·IO; HNtlt, p, 2 0 0 O. ""'°"• rl, 1-0-0-0: Colwm•n,CI, l 1·> 01 l.acllmer, II, 3-2-1-2; H•n• der\on, Jb, ,., 0 'J; Luc9'ew, 2b, 1 0 0 o. FIM, c.. J~; Mel'tlntl, lb, 2 0 0.0. r 11 • Fin V1llPV 011 3l2 0-~ 1 J Hl9 Bte<ll 010 JOO 0-. 4 6 WHlmlMttr (71 (SI , ..... FOISON ISl-81um, ti, 3-0·0•1: Collins, rl, 140-0; Hoff, rt, O·l-0.1; !.llY•. \\ p, l·l-0 O: ROrla, 3b·U, 3 1 1 7. K•lama, ?b, )-1-t·I; l'leclt, p, 1·1 0 O; Winn, lb, 0.t.().O; S""eks, C. J 0 l>-0' Mano.I. lb. 2-0-0.0; Mol•h. ph, 1·0·00, 8"ktr,cl,1·0.M, S<H•llY llWll ... t r II • W•\lmh>\l,r 001 ISO o-7 S I Edison 000 000 S-S l • "'°'"'" (10 Ol 111_ .. ESTANCIA l?l~rrhlo, p, M-0.0; Oonloen, "· J. HHI; Tllompson, n.. 3·0·7·0; LOl\Olltld. Ill, 4·0•1·1; Plftcll•v. Jb, )40.0; Gwin, c, 1~1 Herrera, t, 1-0-0-0; IChalll, II, ).044; • Hy11es, d , 1-b-OO; Ke.,,.,, ti, t.o+t; Olnorlth, rl, 1~. '""'.., ....... r II • Footllll• m oot t-u 11 1 "''•ncl• 002 oao 0-1 ' • L• OMtl Ill <0 """""''Y UNIVf.RSITY Ill-Tllo-, 2!1, ).o.0.0; Wlllllt, If, ).0.)0; H~, H. ).M-0; Connolly, cl,,.....; ~ .. c. J·O·O-O: Bebe, tf, 1-0 .... ; Ee• clu to11e. ''· 1·0-0-0: Rot!MM, lb. t-1...0; WltllwM, -.-. ...... a.Id. p, 1-0-M;Olt•LJb, I......._ Sc-.~·--r II t Oil lllO ..... 11· ; 000 ''° ...... 1 ~ports Calendar· ........ 1...-i1111 81Mbll~-dtl M•r 11 C.0.te Mt". Mlulon Vltlo I t o .... Hllh,. l.19un• llff<" •I S... Ct1me11te. t!I Toro et university 1111 •I J; 1\1, SoutMr" C.Cllornlt Coll• •t UC lrvl11e l2,ll01. . Treo:_..u11tl11 ttori Buell et l!:dltan. -1 ... •t ,...WPOrl Hertler,. Cotta Mtw It caw-Oii Mtr. Ml, SIOft VltJo•t ii Toro l•ll •ll: ISi. hnmt-<mt• Mtse 111 eo.-cs.I M.,, 0-Hlllt •I Minion Vlelo, Unl,,.1'1ty at £1 T&ro, Siii Clemente Al l•qune Dta<" 1•11 •U• UI Vou..,""'~"' 0.111 E•llftcl•. WtHlml ... ttf' .. £01\0ft, Ntwoo•I H••llO<' •t "-1•111 Vallty, Hu"I 1no1on 1Mctu11~ ... 1•11 •t 71 Olrls ~ttu.-SMI C•t.,.....!t et El Toro. Mhslon v~i. .. Oen• Miiii.. Uftlwr\lty M 0..te ~ f•ll •I \ JOI, Eltln<le et Villa PM' l•I Glrlt ~l'lt~ll MtM •• l!dl\Ofl IJ.JOI 01ro-.i....usc .. uc ;,,,,,. m. 01 rl• •111e1~ """"-'• .. Mtltef' Del, 0r'"91 Celsl Goll ..... LA Htrl>Or, Ool0t11 West C.11 ... •t• l'11lltrl"' <•U ttai•>. DAIL y PllOT BS Tuesday. April 26. 19n Road Signs Go Metric Marsh Work ·s·A'c R A .. &!E NT'O· CAP) -Stale ofncla.ls say they are movinc lo red uce the drouebl·· caused salinity of the. Suiswt Marsh. home for hundreds of waterfowl. Cold Turkey Switcli to Use No English Subtitles WASlllNGTON (AP) -Speed signs along the nation's roads and highways will be convertt!d Lo the metric system next year under regulations be- ing drawn by the Federal Highway Administration milepost and guide signs, such as those designating distance:. to cities. b) .Sept. 30, 1982. ---------- WARl\1NG SIGNS PROWE information on such trungs as divided highways and r ailroad and pedestrian crossings. Regulatory signs arc those ' with messages such as "Do Not Enler ," "No U Turn," and ''No Parking." llVIN ADYANIAOU OUI PAGU OfflH · • • • . .. . There is no plan to print both metric and English figures on signs to ease the famibaritat1on, a hig hway administration official said. . .. . . : . . ... . Jnsteud of 40 m .p.h., for example, a s ign will rt?ad64 k.p.h. (kilometers per hour). Highway administration r egulations in this rase will apply to the size of lhe signs and rarely will numbers be involved. .o • • • • • : tf., J 3< ( ,, , , ti • I II ,. q/" • • lJ ~A I J< .. " I ,Ii Ill ",. ,,, ' J' .. • ~········-··---·-···-#·-····-···-··········· Butterflies Stomped U NDER THE PLAN, mE conversion or a ll :.peed limit signs will take place in a 90-day period ending Sept. 30, 1978 Vertical clearance signs for overpasses also will be c hanged over to metnc by that date The regulations will be published in lhe Federal Register on Wednesday. and the public will have 45 davs to make written comment. • I A block of four 13-ccnl commemorali\·e stamps featuring bul terflies representative of diff crent geographical r egions \\ 111 he 1:-. sued June 6 in Indianapohs, lnd They were designed by "ildlift' artist Stanley Galli of .Kcntf1eld, Calif. Auto makers already are planning to install metr ic speedometers and odometers in new car:.. Speedometers in old models can be changed with a sim ple paste-on layover label. THE NOTICE WILL ADVlSE mE public or the intenl ion to publis h a 1977 addition to the Manual on Um form Traffic Control Devices. The rugh°" ay admin1slrution official saJd the action 1s ln lme with the nationaJ policy or convert· mg to the metric system as outlined in the Metnc Conversion Act of 1975 He said estimates of chang· mg over the nation's highway s igns run as high as $100 mllbon ·that your$ may not! 1 COM,LlTE ORANGE COUNTY COYIUGE l11elll41et: Let•• ...... The official said the plan caJls for converting warrung and r egulatory signs by Sept. 30, 1980, and s .. c ......... M1Mt.11Ylef•. D•• r.u.t, • .. 11 • l ... leoclt mill .-t ef LA. -Hayes' Cadillac on Block MEM PlllS (A P > baa<: H ayes' gold-plated Cadillac will be auctioned Thursday as part of the liquidation of the MC'mphjs entertainer's assets. "I heard he paid a bout $30,000 for the gold-plated Cadill ac," sa id Jasper J ones of Delta Aue· tion Co., who will conduct the auc tion. December. An attorney for the Grammy and Emmy award win nmg singer-composer estim atl'd Hayes' debts may run a :. high a:. $6 million. OTHER ITEMS INCLUDE a four· by-six foot television screen. antiques, ctuna . barbells and ex- t• r rise equ i p men t and 12 "'ardrobes of miscellaneoi.s clothing and furs. H E SAJD, HOWf.VER, he ex· peels the car to sell for between $10, 000 and $15. 000. HAYES, WHO GAINED na- tionwide fame and an Academy Award for "Theme F'rom Shaft," is record mg Cor A BC Records in Los Angeles. He still maintains a Memprus residence, however. U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judgt• Odell Horton order ed the sale of Hayes' assets ··1 would say we're looking at bet ween $30,000 and $50,000 tha t we'll take in on the auction," Jones said . "All the furnishings and cars arc probably worth $75.000 or more." Union Planters National Bank bought Hayes' 8.000-square-foot E ast Memphis home at a foreclosur e sale Jan. 21, for S375,000 In addition. the lnlernaJ Revenue Servi<:<' filed a tax lien against Hayes la:,l September for nearly $464,000 T he 1972 Eldorado Cadillac 1:. eq u ipped with a tclev1s1on. refrigerator and a bar Jon es said t~o othe r automobiles belonging to Hayes a 1971 Cadillac Flcet\\C>Od limousine and a 1973 customized ,. an -also will be a uclwned Hayes and his w1fo, Mignon. filed personal bankruptcy pet1 lion s in fed cral C'Ou rt last Hospital Geu Gift Of Stock A donation vahll'd al $100,000 was presented to the Santa Ana Tustin Community llospital. <JC cording lo hospital board pr es1denl Donuld Chr isteson. The gift, donated b~ Mr . and Mrs Charle:. Wheeler of Corona del Ma r, is in the form of 100 s ha res or preferred s tock in the Jay E ye Corpora tion . said Christeson T he donatmn wall be u~e<I to help the hospital ':. futu re bu1lcting ne<'<b Mrs. Wlll'eler. J?r an<I d a u g ht e r of J .1 m l'., Irvine. founder of th1• Irvine Ran<'h. ~aid tlw dona lion "us J?I\ t•n to rec o g n 11 e th l' m ,, n v \"e ars o f 1-t•n 1('1' t hl· h os pital has g" t•n lo Or angc C'ount~· . Coastal Agency Swamped KeC'pang up "'1th 1h workload "1th .1 tit• c i m at l' d ..., t ,, I f h .1 .... reachc<I ...,ud1 .1 t 11t1r<1I point th1• South ( oa .... t Re~1nn<1l Znn« l ontrnl l'omma ........ 11111 1..., d1•m.1111I 1ni;: hl'lp frnm San FrJn (' 1 sco twnd<a u url t•rs ThC' panl'I has .Jskt•cl the California l 'o,1:.tal Zone Commission for aci d1tional stnrr mcmlH'rs Mel Carpcnt<'r. com m ission £'xccut1vc dircc tor, said the com mission staf( has bet>n depleted by 17 members who ap· parently souRht ht>U er j o bs with u lighter workload. Wi~hoot Winging It Airline Jobs on Line By JOYCE L. KEN!'iEDY Dear Joyce: I've he ard there are many types or jobs with airlines, othn than nying and m echanics. As a 22-year·old single rem ale, the free travel opportunities appeal t-0 me. How can I find out about and apply ror the various jobs? G.S , Albany, NY A ll'\\ hints he~·und '~1111! :rnd '~ rl'nc·h PassengN st·rv ices clerk. "'hosl' ~l·ncral duties at an a irport include .tnswering routine quesl1ons <1bout :-.rhPdulcs .ind lost article!> ma) pay S8. 000· 16, 000 -SALES RE PRESE:\TATI\.'E, "ho calls on tra,el aJ?t'nc1t?s iJOd othl•rs to promote the habit of flying :.in a1rhnl" .... S\ .... tern , may PJ'.' s 111, 000-20. ()()() Tape labrari,an. ''ho mJlntains tapC'd records an1I oµerates tc.1pe cleaning and cert1f1r.it1on t•f!ulpml'nt, may pay $10.000· 13 500 .Junior buyc•r . who .... l'OuL<; .,up pht'r" · m.irkf'ls and as.;1:-ts m j!f'nt•ral purcha:.ing. ma~ pay Sl:l.000 17,tlOO -ArRCR.\FT CLt:A:'\ER. \\ho C'lt•ans pl<in1·:-. hangl'r~ and oth1·r than~"· ma~ pa" SS 30 111•r h11u1 1111n1mum Although JOh 11th•,, <lulu•' pay .in<I frtngt•s '.in ht'I ~ l't'n Jlrllnl'~ .• 1 r11m ( CAREERS J rnon horr1hlc problem for applicants 1s getting through the employment gales Because competition for t he re - latively few entry-level Jobs is fierce. mer ely meeting the requirements for a particular JOb isn't enough. You must acquire s uperior JOb- apphcant skills. such as thoroughly researchinJ? your employment target. refusing to be eas ily discourage<!, and prei>cnting yourself hke an ace in job 1nterv1('\\S A GOOD BE GINNING as to study a nr w book 'The Official 1977·78 Guide to Airline Cur<.'crs." by Alexander \torton Th<' author. "'ho publishes airline 1ndustr} pen od1eals, de:.cnbes not onlv part1rular JOb~. but 50 airlines. 1nl'ludmg travel prl\ 1leges offered b~ each. "'hcther the airline is even c11ns1dertnJ? h1nng n g ht now, and "'lwre to apply for a JOb If your book~ton• doesn't have at. or-oe r fo r $5 95 direct from the publisher Arco Publishing Co .. 219 Park AH• S . New York, NY 10003. Send carerr questwns for posStble ILSe m 11111column10 .luµce Lrun Kennedy at this ni·u·~papt~ S1•rr11. the volume of mail muke.~ per:conal fl'J)/1es impossible Athletic Supporrer Supported PO~'Tl\l' \llt'h t AP1 II c11.stomcr..., d1:il an formation for lht· phone number nf fht• Athl1•t11· Supporter. th1'\ ...,hm1lcl h1' )!l\1•n thP numht•r . .t c1n·u1t rourt has rult•d M 1rh1J?an !It'll Tdt'phonc Co contcndC'd 1t found the sport1n ~ i:oods store's name "dis· tasteful" and refused to list the number with in form alion ope rators. William Berris. owner o( the Southfield stor e. sued the phone company arter at refusf'<1 lo last has hu1;inp<;<; V. ht·n II OIWnf'cl Rern..,·!-suit asked for up to $70 000 in damaJ?<'S for loss of husin<'ss and 'Hll.tt1on of ha !> nJ,?hts un tier ltw 1"1rsl /\mend· mf'nt A :.pokesman for the te!C'phone C'ompany said hc dtd not know 1f Bell would contmuC' to oppose listing of Berns' fi rm . The Oakland County rourt order gave t he utility until May 12 to rl'ply to the restraining order. Take a~Angel to lunch HIGH·RISE VIEWS. On Thurad•y. May 12, C•llfornla Angels Manager Norm Sherry wlll speak at a luncheon at th• Merriott Hotel In Newport Center. 'l LOW·RISE CONVENIENCE. Gateway Plaza in Newport Center. Four new buildings in a garden office community. OUtstandlng views, high Identity, presflge environment. Up to 8,000 square feet per floor. Free adjacent parking. Free space planning. GATEWAY PLAZA 1...onlocl vour broker or B•ll Dolley or Biii Murrell of Matlow-Kennedy Corporation. (714) 644-5165 ~!b. ~ ~.JA:.... -- NEWPORT~jCENTER by 'DE !RylNE CINRWY A beller plOce fOt t>u1•n.,, In o better enw onmenl lor c:ieoot• ( The occatlon I• th• first Harbor Area ••lute to the county's American League team. Sherry It expected to outllne pro..,.ctt for better· Ing the te1m't aucceH record evident tine• Sherry wH n•m•d manager In mld-••Hon, last year. He 'II tallc about t••m personnel •nd atr•ttialH th•t male• hopH for th• ·n •4t-.on the brightHt In Angel hletory. ' • Angel'• luncheon tickets are SI and may be purchHtd at •ny bank or Hvlnga and loan ln Newport Center . Join with the Newport Center Attool1tlon, th• N ewport Harbor Chamber of Commerce and the Dally Pilot In welcom- ing the Angel• to th• Orange Co Ht. • NEWPORT CENTER ASSOCIATION The rt'• never been e better yeu to lunch with en Angell I ' DAILY PILOT The fede ral governme nt will s ha re the changeover co:.t "'ith st ate and locaJ governments on federal use highways, the official said. 2 MONTH TO MONTH HNTAL I.UIS ' 3 NO D"OSIT UQUiHD ON A,,ROYID CHDIT IN MOST CAS ES, HE said, the change can be made by pamtmg an old sign or pastrng or bolling new figures or words over t he old sign. 4 ONLY $17 10 'IR MONTH TOTAL COST Cw•ll111lte4 ,..etl 5 NEW COM,ACT UNIT SIU II ' • I 4 • '!J) The government plans a massive awareness and information program next year lo prepar e the public for the changeover from a way of life with which people are so familiar. 6 VOICE MESSAGE rAGHS Al$0 AU AYAILAILE 7 FULL ~HI .MAINTENANCE Under the new system, the ronversion to a metric figure may be done to the nearest easily re- cognizable number . Thus. drivers may be able to go slightly faster on the highways because the na· tional 55 mph. s pN·d limit tran:.lales to 88.5 k µ h The con~1dcration as to make Uus 90 k.p.h ORANGECOUN'rY RADIOTELEPHONE SERVICE IN{' 17141 835-3305 N eu;port, Tijua1w Plan Day's Trip City officials or Tajuana an• jOlntng offlc1 a ls or the Newport JI ar bor Area Chamber of Commt•rct.• an sponsoring a day in the border city May 7 T he event. "El Dia de Newport P .. a('h" 1s a day-long trip to Tajuana and Aqua "-·enle rnce track. The t1ckC'lS. $20 per person, entitle thl• \'1!>1lor!'> to a round -trip tram ticket from Santa Ana to San Diego, a bus trip into the rac<.• track <.1nd T1,1uana and a complimt'ntary hrunch al the lratk whcrl' re- ser ved seating will be av a ti able T he trip has been plannt'd u:-. a means of pro moling tourism to Bajd Cahfornw. u chamb<.•r spokesman s aid Reservations a rc available at the <.'h am ber of fices. 644-8211 , Call 642-5678 Put a lew words to work 101 ou ., $0 SANTA,,, SANTA ANA lrtM U....u lff<ll, Mtu-Ykle, DIM "91•1 S.1 Cl..,.lftle, 5.., , .. . C1•t1tt1M , ~I T.,.. Oilf ... .... .... )JlJ WHY SHOULD I BUY FROM ALAN MAGNON? It 1u~t rnal\ec:. r,vod sen~" l!Ne s ,1 man who lives in the rommu111tv . li..i<, b('l!n your lriend rmd ne1J.!hbor for upteen yeJrs and NEE.OS YOUR BUSIN[SS. He sells a line product. Pontiac cars He has an excefleol !>election of useo (\ 0~ vehicles .rnd his Srrv1ce Oeparl •'• £.~ c; ,., •. men1 •~ . 1u~I h11rd to beat ~· ~\e; •'·"' Really. Alan M;wno11 1., ,, man you II ~o<' "'<-°! ttJ,.$ !eel comlortable doin~· llu<.1nc~s with ... ~~~o•.> ... ,y-~ T' ~ An inside tip from our paid informers. Here's your chance to get in on For example, if you're an average some big savings. Every day, thousands of people call our 26 paid informers for inside tips on how to save hundreds of dollars in monthly transporta· tion costs. These experts are our Orange County Transit Dis trict inform - ation operators. Th ey're at their ph ones 7 days a week j ust to answer your questions abo ut how to save big money by getting around the county by bus. Maybe you already think of the bus as economical tran sport- ation. But you probably don't realize how economical It can be. Orange County commuter living 20 miles from work, our sources can tell you that you could be saving over $150 a month si mply by taking the bus to work. They'll also clue you in on how easy it is to ride the bu s. They'll give you all th e facts you need to get where you're going. And once you try riding our our clean new air- conditioned buses, you'll see that it's a lot more pleasant than drivi ng your car throug h that traffic. ~o the next time you need inside information on getting somewhere in Orange County, th ink of our paid inform ers, waiting just a phone call away to fill you in on how to get there and save money at the same time. Call OCTD's paid informers at 547-3311 or toll-free ZENITH 7-331 1, 6 AM to 10 PM weekdays, 7 AM to 5 PM Saturdays, and 8 AM to 5 PM Sundays. .. • , .. r t . . .. . .. .. . ... .. Romance Threatened 'Feasible' Bridge May End Ferry's Glorious Trip Across Bay Solar Single-dipper 4' I' WlrtopMto 8> J LES LOU ... S-••• c.-........... ... LEWIS, D el Capt. lh lly Phillips, as seafarers say, 1s keeping an eye aft. Reefs of pro- eress threaten again Capt Phillips pilots a f er · ryboat 16 malt·~ :u:rm.s Delaware Bay belwcl'n Cape M.ty, N.J .. and LcWl'b, l>t·l In the spring bUnshine. or unckr the ~tars, it is a glorious trap, ,m hour and a quarter of seacoast r om ance. THERE'S THE rub. A bridge could shorten the trip to five minutes by car Bridge builders sank Capt. Philltpb once before He re- cognizes the warnm~ sounds as clearly a ... the bellowing of foghorns an the night They are phrases like .. feas1b1hty study" "pracllccil cons1dl:'rat1ons .. "national defcnb«.' " The phrases are coming from the Jerse) shore The Jl'rscy shore is v. here casino gambhng was appro\ed recently Sun setting behind the half .finished water tower in Meri· dian, Idaho, fits into the "cone" like a cool dip of lemon sherbet, highlighting the construction crane with a golden glow. Soon a reservoir will top the structure more practical and less fleeting than the setting sun. "I OOl'li'T REt\LLY know what I'll do ttus time 1f they build a bridge," the capt am said. He peered through the broad windshield of the pilot house at the approaching r<'d buoy mark· ing Crow Shoal and did not mask his sarcasm. "( guess I'd get a job on the bridge.·· Billy Phillips was born m Red Bank on Virginia 's eastern peninsula and for a ll his 42 years has knOY.TI orlly..thc sea. Rate Hike Called At 17 he took a JOb as an or· dmarv seaman on the ferrv that ran from K.Jpt opeke, Va .. across the m outh of Chesapeake Bay to Little Cr eek near Norfolk Refore l ong hl• workt·d hes w ;1y through the ranks to captain Long-tenn Savings "THAT WAS I\ fine fern- c·rossmg The ho<1ts handled nice· ly The water w;1s safe. 1 enjoyed it down there Of course, it was home." LOS ANGELES (AP> -Southern Calirornia Gas Company orftrials b eh e\'C that a rate hike to experiment with sol ar power may wind up sa,·ing money in the long run. The utuity's vice president, Pat Shea, told the state Public Utilities Com mission (PUC) Monday that a proposed $11 million solar energy experiment would ultimately benefit customers. In 1964 lhe Chesapeake Bay Bridge and Tunnel. a true marvel of C'nginel'nng, linked the eastern pcninsul.t to the Virginia mainland at Norfolk. Travel time was slru.hed. So was the ferry "lF SOLAR ENERGY can be pro,·cn to be economically via· ble. all energy consumers wall benefit much the same as an other successful energy supply or conser vation efforts," Shea said more than 300 sol ar energy systems serving 863 r('s1dent1al. commercial a nd industrial customers in Southern and C(·n· tral California. The three superfluous 0ferry boats stt•amcd north and the New Jer se) Delawar e ser vice start· cd. T he· nl·w pl.:.1t:c: v. a~n 't hom e. but Capt Phtlhps found at a f ine frrrv rrossang. too, cspel'ially "ht.>n thC' old Ch<'sapcake boats were replaced 'nllh the three brand·Ol'W \ l'SSl'IS The hearing was called to dis· cuss the experiment's initial 3.3·cent·a·month increase tn im average residential customer 's bill. The ex p erim ent He k s to answer questi ons on sol ar energy, such as how long solar collectors last and what their maintenance problems ar e "We believe our customers de- serve to know as soon as possible. whether solar ener gy can supple ment their cner,::y needs in the foreseeable future," Shea said. Several consumer groups op- posed the rate increase. contend· ing the public should not ha\'e to fund a private corporation s pro- ject. T H EY ARE common1ous boats. 320 fl'l•t long. fiS frl t v.1dl' The tOY.l'lspcoplt• Jl Le\\ <'s and C'ap ~lay gn dov. n to th!' f1•rry slap 1usl to "'''ch thc•m dock The srenc h..1~ somethini:: of the ex c1temt>nt nf a \l 1s!>1~s1pp1 I anding 1n \t.:.irk T\\Jlfi ""'tl·.1mb11JI era THE Pl!C IS cons1denni:: a pro- posed fi vc· Y<'<I r · · 0 pc·rat aon SunrlO\H'r" proJect. consastmg of SHEA SAID THE amount of the rate mcr ease could drop af his company gets money from the f ederal Ener gy ResC'arrh .md De.,.elopmenl Anmin1strat1on to help f inance the l':\P<'rtment 103-123* INTEREST steady, safe, secure. For lhc last 16 years. through booms and recessions. Individual Investors. as well as trust and profit sharing plans. have earned 10% or more on their money, most of the time more. Often as much as 12%0 on short term (1 to 6 years) trust deeds on choice residential properties. with large equity and high security. The title is insured and recorded in your name. In those 16 years, no one has ever lost one cent on their investment at A . A. Ajai< Co. No one has ever failed toe.am 10% or more. No one. We take care of all the paperwork, details and payment collections for you. If you want your funds returned sooner. after two years we will make every effort to reassign your trust deed to another investor at no cost or loss to you. We have never failed to do so. If you want stAsble high interest. and if you have 55.000 or more that you would like to invest. please call or write A. A. Ajax Co. for our complete brochure on trust deed investments. •when a loan Is prepaid before maturity, you receive up to a six month interest bonus on 80% of the loan balance. This may increase the yield up to 12%. (714) 772-6230 Ask for Bob Mayes or Barbara Frenkel 505 No. Euclid Ave. Anaheim, CA 92803 (714) 837-3744 Ask for Sandy Ross Suite 202 Taj M.h;,I Professional Bldg. Laguna Hiiis. CA 92653 Mortgegc broker .. Otlertd 10 Cohfornle realdenta only. ----------------------I I am Interested in trust deed investments. J Please send me rl'lore Information. I I l'f•m• I I l'l'IOl'le l ~reu I I Q(y ~· lip ON" .&..----------------------~~ J Allen G. HerkJmer Jr .• Newport Hearh, has been named vice presidl•nt rm<inn· for Com- prehensive Care Corp., Newport Bl•arh H1· will rP· view CompCare's accountmg prn~r.lm and 1mple· ment an automated accounting "nd manJg1•mt•nt inlormat1on system He has published several trade articles and as the author of ''Concepts in Hospital Financial Management." H e is a faculty 1 membf'r of Un1ver"llY of Southern Cahfornta and i!i cur rC'ntly engaged in a r cscurch proJe<'t. h06p\tal resourc<' unit 1l!R U> syst em , a uniform method for quant1tat1 vt>ly measuring hospital produc· ttv1ty. Before JOtnin$! CompCare. Herkimer workec1 ac; a prannpal of Lavenlhol & Horwath. a na· HE11111Mu tional accountmi;t firm. He aJso served as thl' cor · porate controller for a m ajor chain of propr1C>t.1r y hospitals and as the chief financial officer for several not-for-profit hospitals. He directed the nation's first incentlvt• reim· bursement experiment, funded by the Social Securi- ty Administration and Connecticut Blue Cross. and bas served as co-chairman for the President's cost oC living, National Commission on Productivity's panel on hospital financial management. H<' was a special consultant to four hospital commissions and, to 1975, received the Frederick C. MorRan Award, the highest honor given by the Hospital Financial Management Association. • Charles P. Rowley, Costa Mesa, seni or sub- division consultant for First American Tille ln1urance Company's Orange County title division, has been named manager or subdivision sales, specializing in single-family r esidences. He has more than 10 years of experience in title and escrow work since graduating from Orange ltOWUY Council and directcrs. Coast College. Brfore joinmg the subdivision department, he served as both a title officer and escrow officer. John J. Latz Jr .• vice presi· dent and secretary of First Ameri<'an, and Richard T. Hop· craft, Huntington Beech. will be associated in the new sub· division sales group. Rowley is past first viC'e pre· sident o( the Home Builders a m ember of the council's board of Lutz b as been with First American for the past S4 years. He is a mem bf'r of the Orange County and Southern California M ortgage Bankcr11 ~s~ocla tlons, and past president or director of more than a dozen civic and professional organizations throughout the county Before his appointment to the subdivision de· portment, H opcrafl served as district sales manager for two year~. Pri9r to his service with First American, he wu assocMtted wllh another U lie firm • P.issengers wa1t1ng LO cross wllb their automobues get ln hne early. On a busy day, lalecomers can be crowded off, left betund and made to wail for the next ferry. That would never happen with an efficient bridge Waiting, thl'y park on a spacious blacktop lot. marked with white ltnes in numbered lanes, and get out or their cars and :stretch and chat STYROFOAM COOLERS are lifted from ca r trunk s. Youngsters loss Frisbies. Some travelers sit alt)M with their car doors open and read the paper. Some stroll to the term m a I blUld ing and buy saltwater taffy and post cards and plastic ferryboat modelsforthe kids. With a whistle bl;ist, the ferry arrives. Engines rumble. backing down as 1l eases up to the slip. The hea\'y p1hngs groan against its weight Along a chain lank fence al the harbor's dedgc, a boy ap· plautls. THE BOAT disgorges its load of cars. Then. slowly. backs out. From the wing of his, excuse the expression. bridge, Capt. Bil· l y Phillips deftly works the levers and wheels that turn the boat around in the foamy water. Bertea Declares Stock Dividend Directors of B ertea Corp .. Irvine, declared a 5 percent stock dividend on common stock, paya- ble May 31 to stockholders of re- cord M ay 13 ··The currenl strong rate of sale's and new or dl•rs 1nd1catc- that Bertea Corp. will acha<'\ c n·· cord operat1ong r esults for thl' year 1977, followin~ our r ccor<t first quarter performance." RichCJrd BerlC'a, <:hair man. said. [ __ AM_ERI_et_J the sn3ck bllJ'. and then head for outdoor benches with plates of fried shrimp and glasses of beer. Children pose before lireboats, Cameras chck. At the lee rail a young man'is shoulder edges toward a y oung woman's shoulder. Shoulders touch. They smile. 1 t backs into lhl' slip and takes on its new cargo stern first. A board and parked. passengers rush to the upper deck to find a pl ace at the rail. As the boat pulls away, they call and wave to the people on shore. The people on shore wave lo the people aboard. Strangers wave. Squadrons of gulls fly a farewell salute. "A round trip costs $3.SO for a walk-on passenger," Capt, Phillips snid. ''You'd be sur. prised how many come laongjust for the ride on a nice summer night. It's cool out on the bay and always smells salty." JN TIIE PILOT house. Capt. Phalltps draw::. a mug of coffee from a stainless steel urn. He checks a bank of dtals, scans the sea for traffic. "It's a busy bay. Sometimes pleasure craft can becom e a problem." But a bridge could get you across quicker. At least that's whal a feasjbility study shows. It was sponsored by a dozen New J er sey municipalities and it sh o ws th at f o r somewhere between a quarter and half billion dollars, a bndge could get you across quicker. / He lights a pipe and the first mate takes the wheel. Below, passengers queue up at County Up, State Down in Beef Cost California retail beef prices dropped 1 cent in /\pril, ::iccording to the California Beef Council. Orange County area prices rose 2 cents to Sl.28. April's statewide average price for five popular beef cuts was $1.31 a pound. Compared with same-day prices surveyed by the American National Cattlemen's Associa· tion in 19 U.S. cities, California f ell 6 cents a pound below the na· tional average of $1 37 for the same five cuts. Last m onth's na· tional average was $1.40 per pound. "specials" and "featuring," he said. Rolston predicted low beef prices until mid-summer because or adverse economics due to California's drought and other factors contrabutmg to high beef supply TUE OVER-ALL trend in beef prices conlmues to show minor fluctuations from month to m onth, a ccording to Robert Rolston, Beef Council manager . W i d£>1y varying prices from city lo city are due largely to stor e The council visits markets in 12 m :JJOr California cities and notes the retail prices on ground beef, bone-in round steak, bone-in sirloin steak, T bone steak and se\'en-bonc chuck r oast. Ov~r The Counter NASO Listin9s P"tro•tt Pt•lf•Oon P1t'dml A P1nll.rfn Pint'' Mt8 Phllltn Po'''' co =~~~roNC P 8tnn.i PutO C•o Oval Inn\ R•~n Pr llotldll c Raychm Jl4y'"ftol'S R,.tOQ E'J '1t1dd £• ~Ob•n M s:ttt\,.IC)rt Aou,,. <Iv• Stov '>adlifr Sc•n O•t Su 00' H St•\ Otlt s .. ,,...c_. F \tvf'nVo S"'11 Cp Sn"o rt-~. So1111St x s ca•w•1 SwG\ Co 5wEt 5• St~no.,n ~::,, "~'/.'~ Strrlq Str .t~ •b Slrawb Cl • P4i 1).a&i ~uppr fl , \'> TIM E OC 1(J ?<U• T.-""04• /1 11 1 ff:(_" Pub 2·~ J'. l rcum P I . p , T"'""cl"' ,, .. ?'• T tny Co n , ll '• Tl)· toCo J\'4 t&'•J Ttdn\O 0 1 71, lrltO Pd 1 '" T•lln OG 1 I , lym)nr 14..,, II"' h \On F 111> 1)1 Vn MiG•I 1; •• ~ • ~~ ~~:t. 11 • IS llV~ B•• i1 2l UPPl!fl P l'• -4 Vf.lllt"f (,\ ' • ~~ VanO "'" u •.-, IS V.t,,ce $ i 1 ) Velrro i~ > 11. Vt'nlrOt'I )) '1 V•N Bn• 3 l'• W•d\ Pu l\.-. l'• WV' NO 7~' 1 JI • Wtbb At 16', J11 • WtCf"IOvl )7\ 1 1tll''• WtiQt-.1 W ~·· ~ w~•otrr-. :~:'! : ~:,; :;::1.4~ 1 'P .. 11>'11 W \tn Mt9 2~ • ~~ WO\lmd 11 2n. WtJwrd L 14'4 t\', Wr1qht W 0•1, I Zl0t1VI D , .. ,., 76 '\' • S' • i\'• , • J) ' J , /j .. l!p s and Do..,,.. 1.... ~ NEW YORI( 14'PI -The IOllOWI,., llst ~ JO 1•°"'1 '"" O.,.,r · I,,. · Covn1~r tO" 10'\ •lo<lt' and w•rrltl\I\ lh1t l'l•Yt! qone VO • , -'1• '"' "'°'' itno oown ttw-mou t"1•1ieo on n ... 1'1"> c:MtC.:nt of th•"9f' rt9•rdle\ .. of votume 3' I n• J tor Moncl•y ~ s... No "'<UrlliH lr.tdll>Q ~low n .... Incl· •& • u ua~. Nt • encs Pff'~l~ <"•"~'.,,•he 11' l \4l'4 d•fr•rf'M .. biPtWff'f\ the ~t"vk>us CI0$1fWJ ,;,: !~'.: btd or1c.t-•nd 100..'f' 1-ut b•O ~·ce. n·• 11..,, .,, . ,, .. )()• • )I Ul,.., 11111 ll') 10\, 1 4 .... , '"' • l 43 44 ' •• 10 s .... .... ~ 1) .... to~ I IO 10 • I ... , ·~ q ,., q 'O ,,, ' t1 ~" , . ._ n •'. s 1l ,.... ] " SI Sl\4 IS 1111• 77J.,. ·~ 11' J .. 11 7S 2~ 19 19 10 71 n lJ H H N•""' Tr ~n Cp Vlt.,., En"·'Ol't 8r•f"d tn C•mp IN! A4Mjt'n Pr •nfra Incl TPcnn10 ~ llm&ll Cdym.,, P1v Pak Ar.tt.n YI AAdn Tt'C locom In E••c Nucl o .... £• O\mon+c ~~~M·F l'll'1d 1no1 FAtm MF w~"' C lnl l><l\P Mrtl'I (I lntrtrh!>lll Nn""' c~1nfnl C.t•,11t·ln H•tt•" Ca PRI' Co [INf Atr (,rt c,,,.,_. ABICCO C.u•rd Ch H..rl"" ~;·;~y t Murr Mtq unS..v I.. v .. nnrEn K1nf) tnt O"t""Y ~<rot mt '•'•tlltt All,.rQ.8" YtllfPtllll' F Cronu"\ HyC•" C Jtnv-n llQ Ttn\p Prnct ll u~ ~e'•, .c~ .. 4\. • :a. ' .. '• , .. ~ , .. '• ' . ·~ l ~ • '• 1 t .. '. 10\· • ' , I ·~ ') ·~ •• ,... • 1'1. 3 ••.• 3 • "· 3 ... "• .. ., ... '\. l'• + 1.4 1l ... ' .:111 • "' ,. . . '• l'• ... '· 1\• "t' I f Jh + v. 8 • .,., -4 ..... A' 1 + '1• DOWNS ....... ,, A ' J 1 Chq ''• -'• -.. -.. ' .. -·~ 111. -I'• 1 • 1,. )1,. -'• , ... -''• ""' -s " ,, .. -"· 7'a -'• 7•"1 -•• l•t -'• . -.. , .. -'·• -'• -1~ -1''• -~ -J. ,, ~ Pel Up 1'1 Up tit Up II S Uo I& 7 Uo ltJ Uo u l Uo ll6 Up 11.t Up 104 Uo 100 Up • 3 Up t I Uo • 1 Up •1 Up 8.6 Up I l Up f J Up en UD If Up 7.4 Vp 1 t Up 1.1 Un b 7 Up 61 Vp 6.S "''· 0 11 I) s OH 11 I Oii 11.1 011 11 I Oii 10 ~ 011 10 ) Oii 100 0 11 100 011 10 0 0 11 100 011 •.1 011 • 1 011 91 ()If , I 011 1.7 OH I& OH ll Oii • ) OH 81 011 11 Oii 11 ()fl 7. Oii , • ()fl 7, l .. 1q• t 2)'. .. ,. , .. ... • l -... 0 11 ,, MUTUAL FUNDS NEW Y0'11( '""' ::..1v1n 8UllO(k Ftdtrl11G Fun11'. Inv Guld ~Tl NL MIT 107• ttO• Mt\ 1n •71 969 SoOen 111 10 .. 11,19 l h~ lollowlnq qU<> Elv•IC~ 11U131>1 Am Ulr I 61 t 90 Inv ll•<llC I 49 NL MIG I 01 I 6' Pine t 1011 Nl Sw Inv\ 7.66 8.1' t•tlnn~. lvPO••••J by Candn 7 40 & °' Emplr 18 3' .. . In• 8c" • 81 10 ~ MIO UN\lall Plonetr 1'11nct· Swlfl QI 4 SI •,'4 the N•tlon Dlvld l ti l 14 Four E ,ti l1 , Inv Cou,,,tl MFO ""••tll Fund 1l to IS 09 Sover 111 11,11 11.17 I Monlh 1• IS 16 11 hFrt tl OS Nl C~om 8 Ott 8 It M<:O 12.1>1 1J '1 11 14'11..:l!o s,.clrt F 410 NI. lOll of S.curlllt~ ~~1~,,~ 1~ ~ :~ g~ Flg~~~y G•~'fs' . Ctt>ll 'i s f<I 6.ll MFll ......... PIAI\ ll\V It 0\ ,, OS Stilt llonc!O<: o ••• ,... lroc,, Me CG Fund • 16 • 90 C<IOll 7 ... J'I 1":'6~10~ G;~~"'• ,, ~t11t:; m: t)N~ :::?:~ 1rn ·::.:. %1:' tit N! rn 1~• Pritts •I wtucl'I CG tncm 8 SI • 10 Conlld 107' NI.. 10$ Grt s 11.. Ml. Ady I 00 Nl Price Fund\' Pr09 f ).71 4.11 lllt\e ...Cliflllt' CfD Prn 1 00 Nl Dolly I t 00 NI. IDS n<'1 • 11 • 10 Mid llM .. S 11 S SI Gr wll'I • H ljl StFrm GI une••ll {()Uld II.I•• bo•I\ Con17 "' 10 n 11 16 o,,, .. , • "· .. . . Mull 'n • IJ lt\01\ MU I 00 Nl lntom • •• NL SI" rm II• Ufl.t••ll •ol1' fN.i "'"" ,,,., In• • '° 10 b() £q Inc IS Sl Nl TP.roq. • '~'!, p,o. ~9RNVFo" I~~ uo N &r~ 10 .0 NL $hit SI 41.JJ •1.70 ••111"1 or f)ouolll ::Mrt Fd 13 t1 U.. M-1 n .JO.. .. •E• •, , o ~~ •,. Nl N Horlt H.. NI. SIUdl'lllll FU!'d\• l••lue DI"' w it• llAM Gr Bo\· Mun lld IO 411 NL Sloe-18 JO t• 8' Mui llffl I• '·'° hFr~ tO t1 Nl 4'm l'!d t Jt NI. hMQ•) Mo<>d•Y Fund • 10 HI ,, •• , IS lot 11.11 !>elect • ~ 10 ,~ :: ~ ~~" ~ :: ~ r, ~:~/t~ ,' ;J r\\ •uo F 1.t ~t AGE Fnd ~\1e 8s"T. t:~.:.,c n~ rn ::1~1::; 1~-:l 'rn ln~t~t~ t~~ t t: Mv1v1lol Om.>M Pru SIP t .. ~.82 :>c~·.'! h1 NI. l\corll U U Nl ~OKI S tt S WI lMlll IO 19 NL !\tel 18 &9 t• 11 4'm•r tt M tt 91> Pu1n•m Fund\: ~ltlll ,_.,. 'd\: Adv Inv • 11 NL C"••"'4 tt lS NI.. Trend 10 .. U.>I Ivy P 11 NI. Gr"Wt" 111 4 11 Con• tt .. 11.. llfllf\ 14 tl NL A•tl\d F 6'1 76?1~"•mlcl ~IO 7•) Fll\•n<l•I Proo: JP Ortl> 10711116 lntom •U IO.OJ E,qull .. )0 10?1 <:111 O 140 NL •t1n1 5" 17 ot 11 11 CNAMqemt Fd\ Oyn• 4 '' NL )111\1\ F 16 78 Nl Mut 5'11' 11 )J Nl ~ori ll 0 I<.. $10<1! fl.. NI.. ::~v::i: " : ~ ~t ~:x ~ ; :; ; !! :~~:.: u~ ~t Jo::.:n·ft(~~ • u ~;I~ 1~"" I~~; ~t .~o!.. '~ ~~ ·: ~ tr~y ti ,, H ,; n AIOlll tO JS NI.. S<"•t\1 I. II 7 U Flt lnVfttor'l: llOl'd 1' <2 ll 11 li•I S«ur ~'' lnY11\I 1. 141 I.Al t"'D llW t.00 NL 4'm 111'11'1 9'7 IO SI C:olonlal· Ol\<e> •" S 0 Grwlll S.., HI ll•ltn t 11 t '1 TAE•"' rnt CM> 6 .. tAt Am Eqlly 4.. s JI C11vr1 • u • 7t Orw111 • II • JS Jo"""" "07 Nl Bond • v '•l ,. 07 lS 71 r.., In..., • n 'IO Ol 4'm•rlun Funds· l'uft!f • tJ IO°' lncom I" t Jt ll•m.,.r '"""'· Ol•ld '401 1 JS Vl\11 '5' 10.. r•v l!q • 11 IO pt ~;::,:al rn ~ ~ ?~!: rn rn ,,~=~~" rn •NO~ ?n'c": I~ :J I: ~ gr;•,: ~:: rn II :i~t!.'' t: 04 ll~ :'n'c "Ji Im :t A Mull 9 60 10 ff :;01v Clh II Sl NL F1Mt1DI 10 00 NL MonM 1' 0() NL lt1c1>m S 11 S 1J 11.,.,..,. I= NI.. wM; )II( S 7t NI.. 1101\CJ "., "» i •llll 4'11 .. I 01 fO'tY l'r "17 Nl Mun& 'IO 6S II ·-SI«' • en • ., 11...... s ,, Nl SA" ct , ,. NI. C•P ffd 6 Ol • Sit :r•llh c I ., I.ff Fnd 0111 ) 11 ' 11 • sum"' 10 Oii II 0'1 NE.lilt ,._ S1IK ECll • ., '., S4'4' Inc; 11.. If\. G,...tll l.>11 '11 .o"'O lld I 91 • .0 F-dtrv-h <h 1 01 1,1) Eq<,111 16 7' 11 n S.lt< Gth I 11 :·" tl:S Gov '7r 'tt lncom 160011"'i""'0 ffd 111 771 Grwlll 4JO 410 l tlR •16 1011 G•wlll I SJ •l7 SIPCIP 711 loO l\ll Mut 12' HI, IC4' ll.Sl U 1' .oncord 110 Nl l"COM 17 tt IJ JJ Kent-f'lln<K 11\com tJ '4 IS IS SIPGwl 6" J .. U nlllif'CI -•II N Ptn U.10 1116 i?"' Inv 10 00 10 17 Mutel I 1l t W 4'00110 l '1 1 ti <,1~ 17 1\ tJ 16 S<udSltvC1': Union $~ °'1). WH M 6 &I • 79 .oMl•I G S Sii NL S~CI I 10 t SI Cll\ 81 17 91 II.fl N~ul)trqer IMrm. Intl I'd IJ II' !IL Broad 11 ... U .• 4'mor G.-•I :onl Mui 6 1'I Nl Ft•n• lln GrOUP Cu\ 87 1' 411 11 n EllrOY II W NL MMll 10 )I NI.. NI I In• S ti 6,SJ Cao 8d I 9S -, 7t :try Ce!! 11 70 1111 Brown l ll 3 S• Cut 11< Io • 10 Glll rd 71 IS Nl Mal\ A 10 04 NL U Ceo 10.lt fl.~ C1p Gr l.96 4 33 o .. '" Fd 7 >' NL DNTC 6 411 6 'O Cut 11 I 1 7l 8 H Pertnr 4 •O NL lncom U '6 Nl U11lon 17 10 I~ lncm• ... '°' MV99!1 ,..,,.. G,...111 SOI 540 Cu• KJ sot ~--N•uw Fd 711 Nl Con'I S\ •OI NI. Vn!t.O l'lnh: Ventr 10 t4 11 IS :>tl1w1,.. Or'IND' Utll\ < 1' 4 '4 Cn SI 17 04 It &7 N~,. Wld 10 1' Hl !>O«I t1 SI HI. 4'cc"' 6.i U I Eq °" • ,. '.. 0•01 n 111 tJ '' I ncom 1 IJ 1,17 Cut ~1 • 7S •O 11 N~w1Glll s.<11rlly ""'""; ·-1 "°' Fd 4'm 6 ... I°' D•law ti 01 ll.tO US Gov t IO 10.. Cu\ \3 7., I U 11 ot Nl £q1111 1111 4.11 Con Gr •.• t Q Prov 3., 'eo" Oelcll t )1 t II C11pll , 1'I 1 0 Cu1 SI 3.SI 3.IJ N•wt Inv •.1' Nl l~••\t 11' 7.tl (011 Inc; '· 10°1' 'Im Grtl'I S • S 0.11• 4 lt S. IJ Eqult t 1t l 44 Pol., J 11 ~SI NIChllFd Ultrt • '6 10 JI ftl<Of'I\ t, ~ Am tn111\ 4.'1 SW Olr Clll < 06 4 <4 l'rtln \.fe 16• t .tO i..•lf'Oton Grp: IUI NI.. SeftllMI Grouq: kltfl S. i.tt 4'm In•~ s.. NL Oodt1J ti.ti Nl Fdl' 0. 7.67 Nl (p ld<' u '° IS. Nomuro •.ii 10 0 •o.c 3 ll , 61 V•nJll 4,W J.a 411\Vll\C ll.11 Nl..OodSlt ISlJ Nl "11ndot 1 .. l .10 ln Gr IU t,IO NOt•nl 14., Nl 8•1tn 1'1 8MUnlt5...;1 U • HI,. AmN Gtl'I 2 IS 3 01 Orn Bur 9 U NL Fund In< (i<'p· tu tn 10.t 11 ... NuY11..i t U IO.tO COl'll S 0 11 1J 1S "'•IW I.Int ~I 4'ncl'IOr ~. :lrtVll/\ G'1> Comm e U t 0 n II IU] 1(> 10 Om..-10 J4 10 ~ ~"I 011'1 I 81 8 4' Val ll 6 '2 • '9 O•llY I 00 NL o •• ,. 11 S5 1J.6J lm11K t.11 .... Liit 1111 6.17 1,40 8=' Wm 13.11 Nl S.nl•y , 11.!8 n.tt lncom S.15 ,,,. Qnttll 6.to 6 61 Eqvlt J 20 NL llld Tr 10 '6 11.6' lln<Oln Niii; tner flit: ~•rtllOICleH GI!. ltv c;,, t U t ~ lll<m• 1 7.40 I '9 ltVQ<I IS II 16 SI PllOI l,'7 1.71 !>ti 4'm 6 '4 NI, i111141n 6.06 t 6t 'mtllt UJ 6.JI Spl Sil 1.0!i ,,,. S~tr J 01 4 10 1..lq M 10 01 NI.. GES. S lS U NI. Se ~ ltol NI.. f11<8ft UO t.40 nlrp S °' $.SJ Vt"<• "'"""'I ffd h'IV .,. 7 O' Spf ltl( 7 )1 Nl Gen S.C t.IO Nl 1.CIQfnl\ !..witt; MOfl8 I 00 Nl ltt Fcl SU S ti ln<om IJ.$14." We\11 •• II) IO SI T•Em IHJ NL Grtll ll'td 1._•I NL CHll --lo 00 NL T•l'r• Herllr l,Jt t 2' 11\ ... 11 f,1 J.l't 4uou 711 8 16 Tl'lrd C tt.n 1)t0 H....,lllC)I!; Mui It 14 Nl 10.:lt NL LtQtl 6 ~ 1 11 Com,., 6 6, .. "-'• HOll1)111on. e.o•t Gr ... 10.. fl H04' '"' .... l.Orll 4'bi.11' AIM 9 01 ':' Pt<• 10 'It 11.u SOKI 7. ',., Fn<O 8 111) I 4' IUfo"A_..._ G""I" 6.. 1 ,. Allllld 1.0& I 61 Tim~ 101 7 I Sl'IHf\Ofl ,_,: llalld 0111 u• NI.. 11\C rd \01 '" •• I ... ''° ... Ill<-16"4 •is 8"11db111) 11 1& OTC s.c: 1131 no ·-· 16111'llVeM ltl{ P• loll. Stoo l.h • ,. l'ou" • 10 NI. Ht•I 01'1 10 ,, NL ln(Ofl'I 1 J7 J '° p., .... M 8 '° tu ln<om .... 10 °' VonQv•rd °"-' BLC Gtl> IO°' If ot Orwlll • ,, • ,, .... rl l.•v ',. Nl l Ul ... ••'I k o P•ul ...... s" • ]) ·~ ... u IO 01 10... IE•D" •• t) NI.. llU\ Ill( I IQ loll In<..,, • en ~ .. HtrtlOC t n rund 10 '1 II 11 P•nn Sq , ,. foll ~·o • ,, NI. , lid• 1:1.R NI. l a•s 111• I t0 NL Wt' S.. 6 ·~ Hol~ T• I 00 Nl ln<om • l'I> 10 OS P-Mu .UO NI. .. I'll D lt.17 NI.. 1.,._I 1.Jt NI,, tlCn Hn I IS Nl t I,. •II H&r Mtn II to IS II Mllfll 10 ti II.It PNl1 •.. 1 61 1'111 l'llftCl\l Mor' 10 ~ NI. I.,<., In a.n N1..101•r IVI NI. Ill o,.._ V\ ()0¥ • n 1011 1'116t C. 7 ll I Iii 1111 t I •(It Tru•l I NL ~'f.' °'*-.lfW!\ • ,. HI.. Orwlll • n '" MI UK-CD "'-" fd • " IO,. ........ i IO 171 Wtll\l n NI.. · I rd ... NI,. -1 IO •$ 11 Jt Int om 1 .. 3 It f.'"4 I 09 I IJ PH!<lm Ott Trlltl I t S) Wf'Mlft •ft NI. t If'• •.tt Nl!flwl fr 11 .. NL Tm \It l01'1 II.II --+•1 1)1 Pll "' u~ IUI Vtflt • 10•1 w111. UI NI, .. ,. (• , .... " •lrflcl • 40 IUt r .,, llfl a,. . . . MH\ IUO It.• ..... ,.. • )4 I 7t s• l!Oty • lt 11 Wllldr IO tt NI. 8-J ... u ).It -... , ...... ,_,., '" ..... ~" ,,._,. Mev c; ..,, UI !• ··~ u.o u.11v..-1n 11' 3M , • l I I Tueeday's Cloeins Pl-Ices " ·. NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OW.1•1'-Wh.dl l,....W! llw -v-. M-n. ~Ill( I'll\# eo.1011 O.troll •nd ClM•n,..tt \100 eU'*'Gill-,_.edby IN "'•llOl\41 M-1•1-tf S.C""IW•Or•le" -lfl\lirw1 . .; T\!!day. Apnl 26, 1977 1/N DAILY PILOT ff Excuse Falls Snudl Can DO Sell f By MlLTON MOSKOWITZ .. ' For some time now lbtte have been exp1anaUoaa com· ing from the automotive mark~place that Ame.rtum &till Jove their big cars, the onergy cruacb notwU.batandiq. The explanatlona accompanied reporta that U.S. auto makers were h•V'lnl trouble selling their a mall can. IT SEEMS THAT THE REPORTS are true -but. the explanations may not be. American ~uyera are not rejecting small can, Jull the ones made here. They a.re b~ foreiin·buill small~ ID record numbers. American Moton Corp. <AMC), maker of the llanit&. Gremlin and Pacer, was · expected to benefit tremendously from the emphasis on economy cars. Instead, its sales have eroded so much that the company's sur· vival is once again at ·Money Tree • stake. During the first three mont)ls ot 1977 AJIC solll on!.J 48,000 cars, less than 2 percent of thwmarkeL Ford's Pinto got off lo a great sfart but Us sales are now languishing. The Vega, which General Moton dewelaped lo compete with the Pinto, is being discontinued aft.er the l9Tt model run, as is Pontiac's Astre model. And the General Motors subcompact, the Chevette, has been a ~ disap. Pointment: the sales large~ was 300,000 cars a ye.; adlul sales ha~ been 140,000. MEANWHILE, THE TOYOTAS, Dal.suns, Hoodu and Volkswagens have been rolling off boats and wheeling out of U.S. showrooms in a triumphant procession. In March Americans bought 188,000 foreign cars. That was up 44 percent from the March-1976 sales and represent· ed the biggest month the foreign cars have ever had in the American market. It gave the imports 17.3 percent of the new car market. Nor was the March total some kind of fluke. Theim· Ports captured 17.4 percent of the U.S. market in Ja.ouary and 17.S percentin February. BASED ON SALES IN THE first three months of'tbia year, here are the 10 top imports: Can Sol• 'Toyota Datsun Honda Volkswagen Colt 104,500 80.500 ss_aoo •. Fiat Subaru Arrow Volvo ~ 20.SOO l&.700 16,100 13,300 10,100 Mercedes-Benz 10,100 Toyota, whose U.S. sales are ahead SO percent this year. is ta king 4 percent of the American markeL Toyota. Dauun, HondaandVolkswagenarealloulsellingAmericanMotors.. JAPANESE MODE~ ARE CLEARLY the leaders in the import surge. Of the lop 10 sellers, six -To10ta, Datsun, Honda, Colt, Subaru and Arrow -are made in Japan. The Colt and Arrow are being made in Japan for Chrysler, which needs all the help it can get. lt.s market sh are skidded in March lo 11 percent. There's a chance that U.S. car sales will hit a new re- cord this year. And if they do, small cars will make a major contribution. But when they buy small cars. tbe American motorists appear to have a decided preference for the ones built outside the United States. That may be good news for Ford, which will bring its new min.icar, the German-built Fiesta, into the U.S. mark« at the end of June. One way for U.S. auto makers to beat the imports~ to do their own importing, a move not likely to win friends in the ranks of the United Automobile Workers. Stock Market Aided By Teclmical Rally NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market managed some slight gains in a sluggish attempt at a technical rally today. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks Wllf up 1.02 points lo 915.62. Gainers held a narrow lead over losers among New York Stock Exchange.listed is.sues. Trading was moderate. The Dow had fallen 28 points in three sessions.. clos.iong Monday at a is.month low. Analysts said the depressed prices of many issues bad attracted some cautious buying interest. But they also noted continuing inflation worries and speculation that the Federal Reserve might have begun Lo tighten crediL St~lu 111 'l'he SpotU9•t '\ I . -, :~11=-----..;,;;.;..;...;,;;;;:;..;.,.~~~~~~~~-=-=:::::::z.:.~:.::..::.:.i....:..::..:..;_ -Opry Fin& New Friend ' AP Wire""°'e> 'RHINESTONE COWGIRL' AT HOME AT OPRY Roger Smith: 'It Turned Out to Be love' By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ann-Margret al the Grand Ole Opry may offhand sound as incongruous as Archie Bunker at tbe Melropolltan Opera, but it will happen on the NBC television special "Ann- M argret. . . Rhinestone Cowgirl." The show appears tonight with guests Perry Como, Minnie Pearl, Bob Hope and Chet Atkins, all performing live at Nashville's shrine to country music." (Channel 4, 9 p.m.) "ANN-MARGRET AND THE Grand Ole Opry seem hke an antithesis, and that's why we liked the idea." admits her husband-manager Roger Smith. "It turned out to be a love match. They gave her a s tanding ovation." "l had never been to the Opry before. but I felt right at home immediately," added Ann-Margret. "We went on a Saturday night to get the feel of the place. and 1t was amazing. There are 4,500 seats. and each one was filled. All kinds, from teensy folks to old people. "The action is going on all the time, people get- ting up and walking down the a.isles to get popcorn. A hundred'people on the stage, and the performers s tep up and do a number, . then step back. It's the friendliest group I've ever seen.·' ANN-MARGRET SINGS "THANK God. I'm a Country Girl," duets with Minnie Pearl on "I'm a Little Bil Country," Hope with ''Buttons and Bows," Como with "Your Cheatin' Heart." But the special won't be all grits. Ann-Margret will dance to a medley or Aaron Copland ballet music from .. Rodeo." "Billy the Kid" and ·•Appalachian Spring." 'Dragon' Breathes Mesa Fire Dan Mathews and Tony Anderson head a cast of 23 in "Dudley, the Docile Dragon" which will play at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday al the Community Recreat100 Center on the west end of the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse Jr. is pro- ducing the play Tickets at $1 each arc on sale at the box office. Reservations may be made by telephoning 556-5459 between 1:30 to 6:30 pm. through Friday. Group :rates for 30 or more arc available by making ad- vance reservations through the box offtce. •••• "Norman, Is That You?" will play Thursday through Saturday in the Stud.to Theatre at Fullerton College, 321 E . Chapman· Ave , Fullerton. Curtain time each evening is at 8. The play is being produced by the Fullerton College Aeling Workshop. 0. 0 '* The Fountain Valley Community Theater has ....... •t-531-9580 ...... "~-Her WOOOY AiUN e IMANI .. UOH ANNll HALL '"'°, > ACAMMY AW&IOi "°"" e Dl•ICTOll e IOfTl+.o I OCKY '"'°, tOllU'. NO PAUU -nllf tt.U. -ANO llUUIOfO NIM" IUCIC OM C°'°'1UCT 1 •1 PlllS NASHVILU Gtll t•l M<lll II-+ AN All ST&• t.UTI AtlflOll 77 !l'Ol "''" SWA.IH8UCKH tl'OI _..,,NO P&SHS ,,...., 1 tntliAl'ID AHO 1111111t"T01rc•- ~~ A STAI IS IOIN 1•1 ~31-llUO --, •-••••·•• 11 -f.llONAU .. ;3~) CM09IN IMM e l&HI IONDA NH wmt DCl & MN1 l"OI "'"' W VIOAS WT tNI ttitlOAfaNT MOtlClt OllUHtt" VttOla U r•t.I• m11 ""'" ...... "'Of ..... ru.'"40 NIM'" ILACI OU~ 1•1 P\111 NASMVllU Ml 1•1 W009Y AIU" e IMAM lllt&fOfl AHHll MAU ll'OI '"'' I WIU, I WIU. .. tOI NOW r•I W009f "'''". tMAHI llltA"<* ANNtl HALL (N I ""' I Will. I ftl. .. '°' NOW 1•1 -,"" l"tU<lllN'r THI 'VAN1111 "'"' m•-u'1•1 Intermission Tom Titus announced the dates for its next production, "The Hobbit," at the theater. 18280 Mt. Baldy Circle. Fountain Valley. The play will run May 7, s:· 13 through 15 and 20 through 22 · Ken Shapiro plays the lead r ole of Bilbo Bag. gins. Jolene Osterkamp is Thorin, leader of the Dwarves. Randy Sto~kstill plays the role of Gan- dalf, a great Wizard and Wedny Hetu is Smaug, the Dragon. Ticket reservations may be made by telephon- ing 839-0173. • •••• South Coast Repertory's production of "Equus" opens Friday at the theater, 1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa. The Peter Shaffer play wiH·run Tuesdays through Sundays at 8 p.m . through June 12. There will also be a 3 p.m. matinee on Sundays. ¥ .. ¢ *. Audittons in the "Young A~tist-Music1an Con- test" will be held May 14 and 15 at Orange Coast Colle~e. Costa Mesa. The contest was organized by Orange Coast Community Symphony conductor Joseph Pearlman and Lew Kidder, president of Coast Music Service, Costa Mesa . ON TV AT HOME TlJI 501" wCOMSOAY THURSDAY ....... "'' ...... T-1-0,.. ' OIPol I 00 & 9 OO'M "" ....... ,,.11 ~, ...... • <W;'' 1u1i1, •.-..Jt '" ... T\a ... I o,()~V ""'··· "·-· ..... ·-7~ "''._ ... ,.... ,,.. .... _, .... • ()(f1ll • .IOP~ & •1otll T ef"P"omptw ~• TV l Fer Mott tftfo °" ChaMef z. can 642·3260 ... , ... , ....... .,.... ... , °""' '°Uproarious ... lusty entertainment.' -9o0 Thomaa, AHOCIATl!O PRESS ~a~·PA-ULNEWMAN ~ SLAP SHOT A~ PICT\.lll( • t!ONCOtCllr• IJ!-o:---· "That fits lhe show. too," she observed. "because Copland took folk music and put .t in a symphonic setting. They loved 1t at the Opry The Smiths were back m their Benedict Canyon home. once owned by Humphrey Bogart and Lauren BacaU, and they were enjoying it. . ''Last year we were here one month." Ann- Margret remarked. "I SPENT THREE MONTHS making 'Joseph Andrews' in England. five months,on 'The Last Remake of Beau Beste' in Ireland and Spain." The rest of her year was devoted to the NBC special and appearances in Nevada. Although she 1s enjoying the brief respite at home (she opens May 17 at the Las Vegas Hilton). her zest for work seems more evident than ever "Ann-Margret has changed a great deal in five years," observed Smith. "She has come out of her cocoon. out of the woodwork. She really was a paradox to what her image has.been on the screen. In most of her films she has come on strong -the 'Kitten with a Whip.' But l>he wasn't that way at all." Spokane's 'Cal' Cut SPOKANE. Wash. CAP) -The earthy language of a play by Tennessee Williams ap- parently is too strong to s uit Spokane theatergoers. Firth Chew, a director of the Spokane Ci vie Theater. said a few of the strongest four-letter words would be excised from a production of ··cat on a Hot Tm Roof." "We paid royallit!S and we figure we have the right to change a word or two," he said. Two women left the theater during a performance last week, and actress Dorothy Smith received enough telephone calls about the play's language that she asked the director to de- lete some of the most of- fensive words, theater officials srud. 7:30-9:45 IP'GI S4 l /SIM-I :30-3:40 5:4s-1:00-I 0: IS CINEMALAND U II Sf lbrW h~llt• m 15tl ROHRT SH.AW IRUCE DERN "IL.ACK SUHDA Y" 111 , .... ,.)0 Uf/J~ll IO.> 00.J JM O .. IOJe CINEMALAND ll lH1 NM"' AuU•ilHMll ftU , .. , "' J-FClllld1 Geoi 99 s.C}Ot "FUNWmt DICK & JANE" , ...... '-••10 lAf/SUK-IJ l .. l 1'-4 ~S 0 7111-"0'-IC )I 11SLAP SHOT11 IRJ "TWO MINUTE WARMING" 11NETWORK0 tRJ "SHAMPOO" IRJ "DEMON SEED" C RJ "THE ENFORCER" "WlliRDSu IPGJ "FANTASTIC PLANET' "THE THREE MUSKETEERS" '1"HE FOUR MUSKETEERS" IPG> 0 ROCKY" 0 IURHT OFFERINGS" IPGJ "SILVER STREAK" IPG) ·~uHMEL VISIOH .. "IL.ACK SUMDA Y" CRJ • 00foCE R.EW OVER THE CUCKOO'S HEsr· Pair to Star . In Cop Flick . LOS ANGELES <AP) Elizabeth Montgomery and 0 J . Simpson will star 10 a television movie as police detectives who fall in love. Columbia Pictures has announced the pair as stars o! ''D.H.Q." a TV feature for CBS. ( F~A .. \Al.UIV ---~,H';h~.·. II •• - ~~;:_-~-·; ' iii ~ - nftVU l 10.\ •O·t 00 IOOt4 t 00.t I , .. 7 J\ 'PQ >H THREE ''" MUSKETEE~ 0.11.Y 111C fOlll \~ •t·~~·I 110-\.U ·•H I.. 1\1 . 80 y I) ) INFORMS in lhe DAILY PILOT .A -.'SILYH STILU" V "THE to.Cl ''"P" Ill ''SLACll OAIC ~ COMSPllACY'" V .. THE VAN ... •RI ·~ill DIJYBr '"THREE MUSICET'HllS•' A.. FOUR . V MUSKETEERS" CPGI "BLACK (R) SUNDAY" tRAC[ •OURSCl' 'Oii 11\ .. AC.ll SUNOAV ' '' t~ W11HOUT 00\lll TH( I IHC51 C.SPIOHAOC ,,......,......,..~..,..,.,..~=--w.g;.'·lL t M or RlCLHI YEAl<S• NEWPORT cuwAAs BRUCE o'En~· • • ;c•::o~::;~;::,;,, .. ,.'::;~u:.o AOBEAT SHAW TIIE FARMER PLUS (RI ROHi RT DL NIRO TAXI DRO'EU tht~ "FUN wm1 uu11nel DKX&JANE .. i~Lus-·· (R) (PG) DEMO~ HARBORTWIN SEED WAHOt•fWIUOfil (.0\hW4\ U6-0S71 ••6-11 Tuwday. April 26. 19n DAIL V PILOT • 7 36-footer In Taxes Scrapped PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE nt\\•\ J IMPORTS,. Mounl•ln L•urel Irvin~. CA'71U J•n~ St•n • Mouttt•ln L•ur~I hY•~. C.A..,IU T1>h l>U\iM\' '' condu<t•d by an tn 01v10u•t J-S.••• "'Tf'U~ \l•t_.f1'W9'1t Wd\ •iltd wUI'\ lrMo County Cltn. ot °'"Ot C.OVl\IY on •or d ,, "" PUBLIC NOTICE P:ICTITIOUS BUSI NEU NAMESTATEMEpn Tl•• IOllO*l"O llt'Mln h do1119 b"\'· c ... ,... ,.. .... P:ICTIT10US9UllNISS PLa.NT Pa.ltENTH OOO. 18S•O NAMESTATl.MINT BMCll Blvd .. Hun11t'91on lkt<ll. "' ne loUowlllQ Pt<SOl'I I> 00!119 1>11sl· t2&4' 11th•• T lmofhy d'lt n1t1 Curr y S ll ROA OS END llJO Newport 81vd . J••m111t Coton• Itel AMr. CA '7US Co.I• M-~ .,.,, Thi\ t>u\lneu ,, <OnCIVCle<I by "" In R•Cl\o•cl "'°"' 11M1 Otu11 VI••• clt.lclu•I 1'100. Oro"" L~Bt.•rn.C'I '701 Tlmotlly D CuHy Publh."'4 Or,.,..q.• C.O.\t 04ilV P1tO\. Yrws bv\4ne\\ t\ condutted OW' ,an in. f t'ij• \tith!m~·ni w '1\ rnl"d w•th ttit• Aonl\4,lo,•odMd'fl,10 ,,,, dlv10u•I (Ouf'\lv Ctrr-.ot Or~C.Oun1vonAo,11 I ~71 II Rl<h••d CilbC>S I•. ttl / -------------1 Th•• st•t-1 w•s fllod with Ille ,,4111 PUBLIC NOTICE CounlY Cl•••ot0r.,,9t'COuntyonAor•I Puo1o< .. ·<1 <>"''""'' r,o,1\t 0.1 ly "'OI FIUAI -------------4 1ql) Fl44:1' A pro I 1~ ·-.,no M<•t J, 10, •~II 1 1._71 P)lbll\lled ()rM~ '°"" 00101~ PolOI. F•CTtTIOIJSllU~INESS 'lpfit l•, 16.llndMayl, 10. 1'11 NAME STAT EMENT PllOJ'ESSIOHALESCROW ISJI 17 Tl>< lotluw'"<I po.r\0'1\ ••• clOlllQ bu\I ~~~~~~~\U1llnAvt .. -------------MH,!\ W INfERNATIONAL, 1111 ~"'• A .... CA.'17tl PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Alla L111.-8t"" L•guM 80<~. CA EKrowHo n~tD-DD -------------1'17'SI Pu1>11"""'°'"'~ C<>a'1 °• ly PllOI P:ICTITIOUSIUSINIU "'156 SUNIUOltCOUllTOP:TNI STATaOP:CALl..OlllCIA P:Oll FICTITIOUS BUSINESS TM&CIOUNTYOP:OllANOI NAME STAT EMENT St'""'"" wrll)M lll? All• L.aQU"" April ll "·26·•nc1M•v l. "" ,., •• n NAME STa.TEMENT 81vd . L"llund Ru <" (A 97.St Tll~ •0How1n<;1 "'""'" "dotno bull· He. A·tUa Th~ ro11ow1nq oer'°" " OO•"Q bu>! MU91tnol Wrtq~I Jill All• Laoun.o ..... 81 Qtvd .Laqu04&M" CA 'f'USI -------------1 8 J S PHOTOCOPV SE RI/ICE SACRAMENTO CA Pl -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. wasn't there. liut an Assembly committee gave in lo him and scrapped some tax ln crease proposals out of its maJor property tax relier bill. A 13·1 vote Monday ap· proved the altered legislation. a nearly un· animous, bipartisan pro· duct of the Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation, and sent 1l to the Way:. and Means Comntltlee. The meas ure stlll con l ains $480 million for ( __ st_at_e _) homeowner property tax relief. averaging S2Sl for California homeowners It also has $282 million for rente r s and $10 million for senior citii.cn property ta'C cieferrals A:.sem bl> man W11l1e Brown . Lhe l'Ommittcc chairman, made the sur· prise proposal lo cul new taxes -including local income truces -from lhl' measure and put them into another bill. NOTICI ~NEAIUNO 01' llETITIOOI ,..._ •• 1'011 1'1109ATI 01' WILL ANO 11011 QUI(" (A$H 111 W·lh6m\ A<r l.ETTlllS TESTAMINTAllY AND Hunl"'\qtnn~""' CA ''"~ AUTNOllllATIOtf TO AOMIN"Tlll Htv~" Af>rn Mll<h•ll Ill, lit UHDlll TM E 1 .. 0lf'EHOINT Wlflt•m • Ave , Huntlnq1on 8tath, CA Thi• """"0 ' "tonoutttd Dy •n '" PUBLIC NOTICE •S.) Suo>t•o~r •~ .. Cini. Mew, CA Bill Gains OK , <11v1dull 9U7' s WnQtll 1-------------Maniw l(fY YMb<OUQh, llfA Ord SACR ENTO A p Tiii\ ,,.,.,,,.,.,, ,.., llffd with'"" Ml SI Ntw11<>'1 ~.cn.CA 'l?MJ AM ~ ( ) :~:INISTllATION 01' ISTATfi 91~~8,, bu'""'U ,, c"""" 11•11 bv .. .., ,,, Countv c1er• 010<~9' Cou111y 011 "iP•ll "~~~~!:~!.':C::s .Hm 11u11,,." 11 condu<t•d by an ,,,. -Democratic Gov. Ed· '· " 11 P:HJ7' rh~ '°''°""'"O Pe•MiM ••• dOl"I! 1>uo• d•••clu••~rtlll IC•Y Y••ttrOU<1" mund Brown Jr. 's bill to E•t•t~ of THOMAS J TEAIC14 ••• cll•IOu4I TH OMA S JOSEPH TER ICH Ht-A M•l·IWlllll Publl""°d~•l\9f C<>d>ID•lly Pllol Ot-c~awd Thi\''''' ''lf""' w J· •11•"1 ..... ," '""'-' Ae>r1111 tq lt> .,nc;IMa,1.1•11 NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN IMI County Cit•~ ot O•dllQC County O" Aortl 1411 17 ,.. .. :~ENTWOOD AS!\OCI AfES .i>0 Tl>I\ ,,~, ...... ,,, Wd\ f•hd with '"~ le ngthen some prison Ro\Pow way Pl.t<t"t•• ''"t"'"•• c0""1" c.•~•k ot °' ""oe C.ounh ~,,Ao"· ~entenccs h as cl ea.red its <nuo '4· '""· """1 first committee -with MARY E. TERICH ""' 111,11 )lf'rron ,1 •. 1'11 -------------~tlllon lor Pro«>att ot w111 •nd tor I\ FIOU PUBLIC NOTICE su.,-.c• of Lett.,.~ r..-.1amtn1arv •rut Put>I•\~ <> ...,,~ c,, •. I D•il\I P.iot Jac k H 1••1no 1'.110'/ Jo"UbO•O PuDl•\l\ed <>•noe Cff\I O••IY Piiot h I f R bl" Pt•u , Lo.A••o"'"'· c.11torMI• ~· ""'1"'· 2 •. _ "'4o. 10• '"' e p ro m epu ic an _..thorll•llcM'I to AO<nonl\fer Uftcltr tr>e Aorll tl l9 ?l. ~'IO M.)y J t'7f SUl'ElllOll COURT OP: THE ln<Hpe-.,1 AdmlN\1•4h"" ol E\l•te\ USO II STATE OI' CALll'ORNIA FOii S•tve" c. a .• ., •. s v1~1119 G••Cft. u,. " A t t y G en . E v e l I e Wt\lf)Ot'I Con~< tl(ut 06llO y 4\ct. rttt......:t lo wl\lch "maOt tor -------------1 THE COU HTY OFORANGE Vuryl 1(14\""1 and Vyron 1(1.\.e<l, OUngcr. • p.,lntr\nlo •00 Ro•P•W Wu. P UBLIC NOTICE The 7·2 vote Monday or fur1htr panlcu•ar\, •nd lh•I the llmt No. A·'1Ut •rid ol•te • ot hurlnq lllt \6mt II•• PUBLIC NOTICE No T 1 c E OF HE A 111 NG 0 P: botn \ti tf)r Mav 10 1911 •I 10:00.a m -------------1 l'ITITIOH P:OR llROBATE 01' WILL lnlht•ourlroomot0•11<1•fmH>tNo Jor NOTICETOCllEOITOAS AN O I' 0 R L E TT E R ~ P••<~~';!1;'"~'0'.Z:,~;~ m11 cau•--------------1 the Assembly Cnminal 'v'""' Woodl•nd Htll\ (•hto•noa NOTICE INVITING BIOS J US l 1 Ce C 0 mm j l t e C Nott<t· '' ht·l"fnv t)•ven 1F'l.itt ,,.. .. 80ttf'0 -.10 coun. •I 100 C1v•c Crnter Orov• SU .. ERIOACOUIUOFT"E TESTUllEHTAllY WHI In IM (•IV OI S•nl• An• STATE OFCALI FORNIA 1'011 E l•t• ot C,llA(E I( Ta.LM4GE Ca•ttorn•• l11E COUNTY OF ORANGE Ot«•A't<I ··~~·l\b\>\IM\\l\tlfll\Q<flftdu<l•<l bY• ot Edu<~""" <>I ,,,. lrvonr Un•Htd fo llo w{'d months or c.tnt•4• Partnr•""•o Sc110oi o"'"'' 111 0 ••"Q"' ,..,.,.... negoti ation~ to chant:c ,,,,,.i'~~~~;';~;, .. ,1.,1.,.,6u,,tv ~:;1•:;~':" ':.'.'',~;';.~·~.'.;'~"!:~a,',~~ tht.' s ta te's new fixed· OotedAorlt t8, l~/I No A .0.14 NOTICE IS t~ERE8Y (,11/EN 1"401 WILLIAM E.SIJOHN, E•t •I~ ot ANNA LOU ISE JOHN TALMA(iE WEl'>S h•\ hied Covnfy(ltf'• ROGIN~ON :J• t t\tlNA. LOUISE. P\t're•n•ort•t1ontorProCMff'OfWltl.tnd ClerkotOr-CountyonAp,, .. 1111 .... ~''"'"" .. , •• Qb•O\ ..... .,. (>Ut>l.cht t e rm s entencing Jaw '"'"" opon•d ""0 rt•d •or Typt wri•<t before it tal..cs effect J u· Pubfl~t>od 0-l"QC to<ltl D•lf~ Piiot. S.rv•<• 8°0 tO,...,lt•O<l' Ond ln\lruf JAME~LOYOROGEllS ll OBI N SO•~ ••• AN"IA L toronu""<tOll·Htr\T<\ldm•nt••vto AttO't"tYMUw AOGtN4>()N Or ""',...rt t,,,_ ~t~tiONer ret~renc:f' 11) w"''h I\ MIW.MtlftSl""I NOTICE I\ '4{ ll(UY C•VE N lo ,,,. meat tor ,.,..,,..,, 1><>rt1cul•n. •nd 11\<11 A Pr II 11 19, a , MIO M•y J "" ,,.,,,, at>cl boll IOrM\ mdy ""Ol>t<tlMd •• ly 1. 1•11-11 tht Ot11c•ol Bu••M\\ Suooort ~rv1cu. Al'-•mW4, C..Uffof'"°'''''°1 '-h't.Jtt(lr"t not ,....,.. JboV"' ""'"''" o.tredt\nt thP ttmft' and P'<Kf' of ~•rl"O trt~ s•rnt i------------- Attor"tY •Of' ,.lttU-..,-tn.tt Jll °''"'" .. n 1v11H1 t'I • '"' .)Oain•t n~h bttn wt tor May tO 1.,7, at 10 00 PubHV~d ()r~ (O.t\I 0dllv Ptlr)t 11\e S••d I) r,_,,,.nt 1trl" '" l•J""d to fllt; .:t m , In f"t courtroom of DfoCktrlmeftt PUBLIC NOTICE tt•t Atton ,.,.,..,., Irvin<'. Calltor,,1a Tflt 01\lroct ..... rVI'\ ,,,. r"llll to rejt<I Suit Record •"Y Or .. II t>•tJ\ t'lf 10 W•IV_. •nV If· ACM'll ?S.1•.~May 1 llJll lhf'm ""'"' "* "' '!\ ••v 'I/OU(""''~ '" No J of w •d court at 100 (1"~ Center 1111• II t"" oil" ot Ille c•n• GI II\~ •bO_. en Orlvt Wttt. In Ille City 01 S.nt• An•. NOTICE TOCllEOITOllS SU ll~lltOll COUllT 01' TMI! STATEOP:CALll'OllNIA l'Olt TKI COUNTY OP: OlllANGE ........ 1 .. reou•••ll•ttor1ntorm4!1t1te""anyb1os VISALIA (AP> -A or In'"" 1>10dlt1Q -------------t1tfl"OCourt or loCY~wNt~"'·••lhtrw C•tlfornl• M<r•'8•V "°"'""'~-to'"" undtnlQ~ O•tt<I APfll n, 1'11 111v1NEUN•F1 eo 20.year-old Woodlake SCHOOL oisrRtCT woman diagnosed as in a PlJBUC NOTICE •I II\• oftoct of AOOERT W Wtl.l.IAME StJOHN, ANOE ASON. Allo.,,..v Al L•w. )1)1 COUnty Oerll SUllllllOllCOUllTOP:TMt; Ed\t Colo••Oo 01vc1 Su•t• 101 11081RTE WllU,INC. Esttl• ol NORMA TEWES COLLE V. ••• NOAMa.COLLEY, •\• NORM'I T COLLEY. Oa N T. COLLEY , 0t<Hloed. (it<\• H•rllltlf' Allft1orl1fdA<jent permanent coma has Pu1>11•""'1 ~•not C:O.\I oa•tv 0 ••ot bee n awarded $1.125 ST A Tl cw CAl.1 l'OllNIA P:Oll P•••d-• C.•••0<n1.i •Ifill ..... r .. ,, ns Not1~ 8¥Ut•O SI'"' THI COUNTY Ol'OltANGI Ille ot-.•OI IN\•~\ot '"''"""''"''<l"~d I' O. l•alm He. A•tlJ,. '"•II •11a11e .. oert•ln1119 t~ '"• Ol•I• ot w11t C.YI~. CA t1m lllOTICI Of' HE4\ltlN00' lllTITIOI" w1ct d~<-1'11, w1111ln tou• month\ •H•• hi: IJIJl"1_.., ,011 11110.ATI 01' WILi. AND fOll lht flf\!Out>tocilt•""olfh1snotl(~ A" ......... ~l\t-r NOTtC.E IS MfiR E8Y GIVEN to 1111' <rtdttor• ol t._ _..,. ,......., *<..,.nt a.!1'11 t•. U 1911 I H._11 P UBLIC NOTICE 1.ITTlllSTISTAMlllTAltY D•ltd..,_.,,,,.lO. 1•11 Pu011.-0r-C:O.\I O•"Y Pilot Elhlt •I MAll lAN DALES SHI ALEYANN HUNTE~-a.0111 1' 1014 ,_,, ,.,., •" --.,.vi"*' <l••rn• ~'"" t--------------1 MALH(lllTCH, O • MARIAN 0 lLO'l'OS 8ANIC MA LNf.RITCH . e•• MD E•KllfO<UltowW1flol MALN E RITCH, •U MllS. MARIAN 0 '"" •bov• N .....0 <>tCtclt"I MALNElltTCH. Otc .. ~d. ROBEltTW ANDEllSON NOTICE IS HEREBY C,IVEN lhat Atlorft•Y•ll.ow FltED B MUHS ... \llltd ••t«•n •D"I• IOI IEHtc..i..-Bt•d S111tolU 1100\ tor P..O.t• of w111 efttl tor ,,..,.,.,. P•Wck"" C..lli.n.I• •11t1 ot L.•t\u' Tnt•~'"·tuy to ttw oeh &Her-"t'I •w f tehltOI'\ uo~r reftrtn(4 to *'"'<"" m~f')t tor Pubh\~ Oritnqit Co•'t 0•1•v PHat lu'11\tr p0'1lcu••"· '"'d 111•1 t~ limo Aor.1 ~ U 1• I~ "" •J.Ot " •11d •'-<•of 11t.-111o9111t ••m• l'o•• 1JOo•n -------------~tf•• -y W> 10~ Al 10 OO•M "''"" .. urlr....,. of O._t_.., No. J ol \o•ll P UBLIC NOTICE c.ovt• •I rooc1v1< C."t•t 0,.1.,. Wt\I '" -------------IN C,,, of~ .. ""•· Colllltf'n••· O•t•d AfJ"ll !t t•n. flCTI TIOUS BU"NIU HAM€ STATIMIN T f "'• 'ollow1nq O!• ~ •'f oo•n.o t>v•• f'\4t\,' ,, IS .. 17 PUBUC NOTICE '""' ~•a Otc.f'dlnl •rt rt-quitM 10 fife 1P'lttn, with tN M<H~•rv "°"'llf''\. In IN! otttc~ GI tl>t Clff• ot '"" •l>ow .,,. tllltd C01Jrl or lo P"'W"l l"t!m will\ llW ,_.C~\•ry vouctwr\ to tM ur10e,~•9""t'd •I llW otflc• ot PAUL 4 Ha.NNA, Al FICTITIOUS aUSIHES!> tornn ort \..OW •t °"""' O"-... Su•t• .. AMI: STAlEMIHT n. N ... -1 S.-.h C.lltorn••. t?M>J TI\• I01lrtw1no Ol"f'"c.on •rt ~nq bu\•· Whicf't h tht ottc:t of l>U'\•n~-' Of tf\t vn- M \\ ,., 6er\l9ned "1 •II matter\ pcrt•ll'\ln9 to M .. ( A M L I M I T r n IM ·~••It of \aid cle<-1 wltl\ln l01Jr O'IR TNEll,•<!P 11)0 E•.-1 ~ourtn "'°"'"s•ti.rtnt11'11D<>IJllC•ll""olll>I\ $trtit• ~fft "" • CAltfOf'f'H-•t>O) f"t00(f' c. .. monr ~ A'l\O' ••te\ Two • O•t~Mar<f\lO t•11 C•••tOfft; ..... IWM'.t P,,rtl'Wr~P\1(_'1 :uo Wl\..lf,AM p 800A()(,t (l\t '-ourl" '>lr,.rf 'S•nt.• An4' E11etv10r oftJ\t"Wlllo• (•l•tOrl'\1A.,10\ the•boWMnw<JOe<t'Otf'lt Tl\•\ C>v\•~•\\ 1\ Cl>"H'hi<t.-d Ch,. t1m11 P AUl 4. MANNA f"d H,.IN'\n O Attw.wy .. Ltw CAMPl!Ell AS<,OCIAT (\ ... O..Oron .... w .. n P:ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS NAME STolilTEMINT Th• ro1tow1119 oe•-• are dolt10 t>u••· ntni;,n WARNER 80AT SALES !\OUTH HO lll<ta<•• SI CO\IO Mes. CA tl•11 Tllom.t\ E "'""" 1000 S..rMrd Or FullffiO<'I ca. "lUS C.er••O C F••"~ ~S Lynd Ave . 'lr<41dl•.CA'~ Thi~ bu~lneH I~ conductt<! bv • ~llt .. I PMlne~Np C..••lcl c f' ••nl< lhl• \l•t._..t w•• fllfd with t"" Countv C.•tr~ qt Or""~ County on Ap"I ... "" P:14110 Publl\ht<I Or~ (<MISC O•llY Piiot Aorll 1' 16.•ncl M•v J. 10. 1'11 million in the largest co urt settl e ment i n Tulare County history. T he award on behalf of Yolanda Semanar io of Woodlake was approved by Superior Court J udge N. 0 . Bradley She has been in a coma since un· dergoing anesthesia two years ago at Vis a lia Community Hospital and now is a patient at P o rter v ille State Hospital. Unit OK• Bill WILLIAM I. St JONN, Cou.,tv C•••• VONM ElllEN CATLIN, lllt"IJOHH&CLEMENU All ..... Y••l\..OW tll WuUlrtllStrHUvtltlot 81)0Y OV .. a.M t(~ WHAIAHO\J~IE •UOO &olwCl\IU Ir( "''''"''~'-. C• ..,.,., .J1,,1"•"~ Sr.otcwd ')Ot U tf\ •) Hunt1nqtonll .. <" CA"1..a r .... o N••-1~11.CA'216l "r,-.,...•t P•rtt1•• Ttl 11141 M2.al0; '42·"'9 Tf\1\ \tAt~t ¥11'•' tlif'd w •th "'t AtttirtlllltY..,.ln<vtor C 0 ICE SACRAMENTO <AP) ___ PU_B_LI __ N_T ___ 1 -A husband could be I.•• A ........ '"· ..011 Ttl IJI)) .,...,,. AllOf ... Oi.r l'ttll._ Publl -<>-C.0.0•1 D••ly P1lql ... <111\ 16. _.., Mdf t It/I .. ., " P UBLIC NOTICE c ..... ,., \Ul'•lltOllCOUR TO' THE ST'ITE 01' CALll'OltNlol P:Oll T Hl COUNTY 0"01U"1Gl No A·tllU 4n""ttf' Stodfl ,JOO w•r,.., •,. ~•v,.hMf""&...Cfl\ CA•>•• T" O••''".'' •'-con.out ltd Dv • o•,...,. u r•rtrwo•VMO J·1• ~,~ A, .O•O'd T n• '' n•m•ttf ,,,,. •ti t1 ,.,. • '" '~" (•1ufl'lll ., •'" 11 )" M1•.Jo '-'>""'' ~n Aor ,. ,., ,,,., .. P ~t'I' \,.. 1 f>M't•.,. (#}4U 04 </ p QI &or ii; .IJ .nd\IYtt tO "'' lt.00 II PV~UC' NOTICE N0Tt(E01'Hl!Alltlt001' ,ETITION 1-------------FOll 1'1108ATE 01' WI\.\. AHO 1'011 LITT Eii\ 01' AO""t"l\TRATI ON WITH WILL ANNI XIO ANO AUTHOlllZolilTION TO a.OMINISTlll UHOlll TM( 1 .. 011'1 .. 0lHT AO MINl\TllATIONOf ISYATl~ •CT f.\l•tt Ot WILLIAM 0 IC(NNI Ov Al\O l"'lwn o\ WllLIAM OUtoj(.\N KENNfOY.O.ro • .. tl N0ll(I. IS ••t A£8'1' C.tV(N '""' llOllCAI " l((NNEDY "·" 1tt•<1 t1trt1~ • oottltton lor Prob4tt n• Wiii •M tor f\\U.tM4 of l.,ttt'' ef Aom•nt\f'• 1i:ott w•t" tM w 111 •,,,..•"'<1 to ,,,4' p,.t ,~.,.., •f\d •"'"""'' ''•''"" to • .,...,._,,.,,, .. ,. thrt l \l•ffll \ln6f>t IP'W' lndt~"n.n1 A(J mln•'''•flOfl Ot f\\.tl•\ .-.ct r•ffrf'n<• Cll-SUPERtOll COUllT 01' l11 E STAT[ 0~ CAllf'OllHtA ~011 TNICOUNTYOP:01ta.HG£ ..... "•ns. NOTICE 01' M(ARlltO O• Pf fl TIO .. P:Oll l'tloe-ATl OP: WILL ANO P:O• L€TTlll\ ll\lAM(,.TA•Y ANO AUTHORllATIOI" TO AOMINISTf • UMOI II THI tNOE "INDINT ADMINl$Tt!ATION 01' ISTATI~ ACT E\l 11• Ill • ATHllV" llLAIA !>IM MONS 0-••".cl l<Olt(I t\ HEllE8Y C.IV(N lfl•t JOH*'I ~OC.fll ~1 .,..Ml)NS "• tllrJ hffP•"' • Of'1l•Oll\ to~ Pr,,twt• ot W1" •l'W'f t n w t\lf " ,, "''"~ ft.H r u,11\C'r torf\tU·'"'•ntl,.O•r,f.-,,,.M,.l'\f~,.,tn o•rt1cu••', •nd IPMt t~ tinw •"d 0'•<• 1 l"'t Pet•h Ol"'e,. •nd .tut N>rtl•"~ '" ftf t\t•flnq tnt \dl"l'M f'lt•\ bft.-n \,.t fo,. admlf\1"~ ,,_. ft'iltUr J~' th.fl I'\ Ma"t U ""· •' t0 00 .. m. '" th.., 0-CM~nl Adm1n1\H 1t M Of fo..t.IP c&v,troom Of O.-p..rtm~nt No ) nt "•"' A.<t ,,.,,.,,f'll(, to wf\•rrt h. "'"'~ '"' f OUft .tt tOO(lvfr u,,,,, O•&ye W•\t. In turtn•r t>Art•t ut•'"· ,..,..,, "'•' '"' tlm• ,,,_ r11vo1 \.,.If Anf C~lltor"'•• •ncl O••co n• 1\11.•rl"'l t"' '""' ""' """n O•lto Al>'ll n ... ,, ... l(l' "'4v l 1u1 •I 10 00 "" Wl~l.,IAM f St JO""'· int"" '°''""''""0' OfO<tll_,., N~ Jot Gtwfty Cl.,\ '4•0 co"r1. •t '00 CtvlC' C-,.ntpr Ot '"'"" Pl.UMICITI&lll.U"ICIT1' W•tl. '" Ill• Ctfy Of S•.,1• An• •UOllft Aft., ... O, .. • 1tt C•lotornl• Mtl'"lllfl ...... ._,CA. tlMt D•ttd A6fll U 1'11 Ytl: ,,._........... WILLIAM E StJOHH. AftfflMYt i.r: "9ttti-Gouf>lv o..-'°"""~ O<.,,. Co<i\I O•tly llllot, (lllST. ClttST.Ollt,.P:tTM' ......... It, 11,-M•vt .. ,, all '!' ANT, ICMUU A •tOll.N 1101 11 ly: """" ""· ·--------------H•Hamll..,.A ...... .,0 ... 1. Alie, CA."'* Ttl: lt!Jlatt .... PllBUC NOTICE COuf\Jv ('•'' M 0•1'"0f' Cou,,tv OI\ PubU,;w.ct 0'°"'9t CC>l\f O•ll'f Pilot M•'C" ](I "" '1or11 S. 11 19 H ttn 13'3 11 NOTICE TOCONTRACTOllS !07.0IS ,_____________ CALLI NG fOll ••os "vb' ·"-'i °'•"'I",.,,.,, O•"• P••o• PUBLIC NOTICE \<l\oor Oostro<t Cout Commu,.ttv 4f''·•\ '' '4 '' ••" t\1U 11 · (Ollfl'q,.01,tfkt -------------1-------------Bid 0"8clllftt 10 00 • m Thu••do PL'BLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS BUSI NEU HA,,_f STllTIMEN T Tl'\• •1>l•a.....+l'W) cwr\Of'\ ~,,. dt)1n9 hut.1 (~ ..... , .... ," .. " \UPt•1Gl'COU lll OFTl1E !"£ A(,UN 4 ACf"NCV )IH) HAT( 0,. c.Al•f'Oll,.IA J'OR I •1•1• ·• c ......... Ad L•quno B••CI\, Tl1£COUNlYOJ'OllA"Gl r11 •h I N1 4 •1u1 Uw1t,.., r Fnlw 101\ l.•QurM C~· H0TtCEO,>U a.lltN00'lllT1TIOH nvMA<>•" l •!JUM6-4•h (A •74\t J'O• ,.C>eAT( OF WIL L A"O "0R ... , ••• l'lt•t""¥ 1114, c. •• , AO \.ETTE B\ YISTAMfHTAlt'I' ANO l•1U"•!lo4•h r 4 91•\I AVT"ORIL&TIOH lO ADMIHISTEtl '"" rou ,. , <""~"tltO by " U .. 0 I • T 14 I t H 0 I , I N 0 IN T .11 '°"' •' o.Htntt''iftln AOMIH ISTAAT ION 0, E\TAT I!~ C'>l"1t•v r F""' ACT '"'' \t41~nt .,,., 111""1 wll" •~ J:,.,., .... <l\f rp1t~r1\ fOMN ~tM "'"''(tfr~ •• .Jt .. r C.O\l"ht>,,AO"I ~o~c-i :.· ........ wct ( •1111 flOlO Pul>"'""" t>-Coo• 0 . .,1, Pllol •0•1t II II 1' •nt1M•v l. Mii M~• •1 1911 PIA<• ol flld lltct lot 0111ct ot Purth•'iinq A<r"' C.O«l"t Comm '-'n•tv CoHfQt Ot\1r<t 4.Cln'ttnt\1t~t•or'I 9u1ld "0 1310 AOaM\ A...,llt Coll• Mt•• OrAnq• County c .. 11torn\I Pro1ee1 1ot..,t1ttc fllot1 N•m• CE A4MIC TILE·!>TUOENT HEAL TH Cl'NT ER. ORAN GE CO AST COLLEGE 8t0ND 6U IS Pl•t• Plen\ .,. "" '""' Oll!Ct" of th• 01\trlct Olre<fO< ot Polv .. c•I Foc llllltt, Off•,. .. ot IM .Arcturf"<I (W llll'm ,.,11,.~lt ~t-cl p_.,.,,..,.,, '100 N•WPor1 Aou'• .,,..,ft N'w'"' 1 ijfo1' h C•'-•0'"' -t •7&~1 tllt••IJftlO'l' 11ndl~COtHttU'· flo n M•n•otr \ Otl•ce I E PRY CONHAUCTION INC ••SJ We" 11111 St rttt Ut>f..,Q, c.1 .. orn1• •11-i. NOT (f \ Hrt•f8V Go•llEN '""' JO>iN llOCitll ~IMM()N~ ~~' I'"" t\rftf"•1'114oia'ftt~fl'J' Prob<tlf cttW111 erwt tor 1 u•"<• ol L """'', T,.\fitm11"' .,, v ,., '"" c>,.• I ~., 411'\d .tulhor '"''on ,,, h61 17 "'" '13~ ~· Pl•n• mh f).-Obi•'""" •I •'1"' "11,lc'• '"t •\1.-tp U"°"' f"'-' '" if',,.ivu•nt .A""'·"' ,,,.., ~ 11 F.: t ••r· A(t u1tertft'r 10 1#h• " 1\ m .tdie tl)r h'''"'' ~''''"I"' ~"·1 ff'1•t t._ t•m' •NI OIM.t of ,.,._.,,r\Q thll \AtTW tut\ fl'H'f\ ftt tot Mfty , 1t1' ,, t 00 , '" tn ttw; cowrt,ciotn of ~t,,...f'tt NQ ) ~f \••d C~uft .0 ""(tv•r C...,t.,. O't'I• W•\t '" IM(•'•,., \..itf\•• An·t (-tor"•~ O•t•d 4nt1f H t11H WILLIAM E. St JOMN, f Cou<\IY (1~<0 ClttlT, CRtU. OAI l'l'i.t'HS, lt!Y ANT. SCHULZ 6 BtOllN •• 11-A BI .... U011•mlf...,A ........ P•I• Allo. CA -1 PUBLIC NOTJCE l tw (On\trutUOI' ~"'<tCJf' 'Oltl(t NOTICE IS HEREAY (;IVE'*'I 11 .. 1 th~ l bovt·ft8mtd ')(flOOI 01\lrt•I Of 01,,.,..00 O>untv t11llfn,n1" fC~fnt) av SUPllll~ COURT 01' , f "O lhtOUQI\ II\ Goov.rnlnQ 8n•r0, (olilLtP:OllNta. , ~'•'""""' r•ltrrOd M•< 01\TAICT"' COUNYYOFO•ANOI '' ;~llt\11119 --led bl"' tor t,,.. TOO C1¥1c c;.. .. 1 ... Ort•• Wt1I, ron•trvcttnn Of i... •l>Ow ,..rntd oro StM• All• to<I CASI NUMl'l!ll 0 tOt 4tS TN rt ""'" ... a \IS 00 °"""'" r~ SUMMONS IMARalAGl:I quor•d to •~h M'I 01 bld dll<UC'Mn" lo tn ·~ lllt ""''"DOf' 01 P~1111,,,,.r· QU•rontee ,,,. rotum In CIOOd tt>llclltlon ~U \AN IORO'IN Sll!BERT •nd wilhlt1 l1w Cl.IV\ .ttler lht Dtd _,,lnq Ao oondt"I LEON .. RO ALLEN d•I• SIEBEllT l!ocll bid mu,1 confnrm .ond bt pr osecuted for raping hts estranged wife under legislation on the noor of the California Assembly . T h e bill b y A s· semblyman Floyd Mon ( D· Pleasanton). \\on S· l approval Monday of the Assembly Committee on Criminal Justice BlkeSeeta LOS ANGELES (AP> -lt will probably cos t a n extra five cents to ride Southern California Rapid Transit Distrt('t beginning .Jul> 1, accord· Ing l o the ge neral manager or the S<.:RTD. Jack Gilstrap told a publlC' hearing Monday that the across·the·board rate increase would he hard to avoid unless the district gets financial help. He said the district a faces a $21 million de· flcit in the coming fiscal year. ·•• <••nn1·-A....,...,..., l'tlrtl- NOTIC91 v .. heft --. T'IM ,..,oon,1..,.10111tcontr1Ctc10tu,...nl\ c..-11 _., .... •lfltl .,.., wllhWt E•<h bid ,i.an t.accomoanl•O llY tl>t vo11r Ml.,. -·• •• .. , Y.., ,.,,...., kcurlty ttlefHd 10 In '"" <""''•' •lt111t• IO ..... llettl llM lllf .. m•tlell clowm..,lt end W Che 11\1 ot pr0j!01td ------------- Pubtl"'9d Or-GtMl•I O•llY PllOI. Al'"' •• 10 14 "" • PVBLIC NOTICE Ml-lull< .. lr.<IOf-. AYl\O! u ....... .,._,,.,...... T .... OISTlttCT ,_..,.... , ... rlqllt 10 PUBUC NOTI CE "I""'•',_.. M<'-lf cetlltl UCL 1111 ,.lt<llftVO-tllllldl .. Mw•t.,.•nylr -------------•utlfMCI• • _, -Utl """""" rtOUl•fltlet or lnlonnalllitt In ... ., l>los 410,.,.,. ..... .,. "'" i. l"f .. miKlo'" o•tnlflClblOOll'IO ~u• ,,_, TIW OtSTlllCT llfto!Mal ... o from tr.. "CTIT10US aUSINIU NAME STATIMEHT tllt following "''""' '' dotnQ bll•l- MH H " Pair Finish One-year Sail From AP Dt.pakba A Southern California man and hls 19-year·old son have arrived in Yokohama aft.er completing a ooe·year trans· Pacific voyage lo a 3G·footsallboat . R.M. Hendricks, 47, of Sepulveda said be and his 100 Steven set out rrom !AS Angeles on April 24, 1976, stopping at TahiU, Samoa and other Pacific islands. The sailboat limped Into the U.S. naval base al Yokoeuka and arrived al the lsogo yacht harbor in Yokohama after repairs were complet.ed. .. Former New Jersey deatfl row author Edg.,- Smitb Jr. was sentenced lo life in rison without possibility or parole ror the kid· naplng last year of a local woman. Smith, 43, appeared before Superior Court Judge Gilbert Buel.Iola almost a month after his conviction ·at a nonjury trial or kidnaping for robbery, at· t empted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and attempted r obbery. A request by Smith to be sMtTH certified as a mentally disordered sex offender was denied by Harelson, who said such a hospital com· mitment would "probably seem a reward." Harelson said Smith was an "extraordinarily intelligent man who uses that intelligen ce· t o manipulate people." • Arthur Godfrey and 20 other radio personalities have been inducted as the first members of the new National Broadcasters Hall of Fame. The ceremonies in F reehold, N.J. at the hall, described as containing the only comprehensive collection of radio memorabilia in the country. were highlighted by the appearance of Godfrey, who spoke romantically or a broadcast era when radio shows were live and s lips of tne tongue ofte n went o n the ai r un censored. Recalling one of his first an· nouncing jobs. with s tation WMAL in Washington, Godfrey 00011uY s aid he tried doing a station break for "the National Farm and Home Hour." But il came out as the "National Harm and Foam Hour " .. T he man who made "Duke of Earl" a hit has been convicted in Chicago of selling her oin -to un· dercover federal narcotics-agents. Gene Chandler, 36, was convicted in U.S. Dis· trict Court of selling near · Jy a pound of the drug. He J was acquitted of two ( other charges stemming PEOPLE from sales that the gov· _ ernment said took place --------- May 3 and June 8. · Chandler, still a singer, was most popular in the 1960s after releasing the rock·and·roll hit "Duke of Earl." * When the Columbus (N.D.) Cafe burned last J anuary, the 500 r esidents of the farm town were faced with a serious problem -it was the only restaurant in town and served as the hub of the community. After the owners decided not to reopen the restaurant, 125 residents of Columbus. located about six miles sout h of lhe Canadian border. chipped in $8,250 lo buy and rebuild the cafe, which opened Monday. "It's one of those things you have to have, t o have a community, so we did it,'' said grocer Norbert Kihle, one of five directors of the corpora· lion the residents formed at a community meetiqg to buy what was left of the cafe and oversee the r~· building. • Thirty p<iunds of Color ado beef versus 20 pounds of Oregon salmon . T hose are the s takes Colorado and Oregon gov· ernors are wagering on the Nauonal Basketball As· sociation s emifina l playoffs between the Denver Nuggets a nd the Portland Trail Blazers. Oregon Gov. Robert Straub a nd Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm, whichever loses, is topay our of his own pocket and both governors have agreed the win· ner will donate the pot to a charitable institution. • Prince Charles Is urging ~AMM British youth t.o use their energy and enthus iasm to help people r ather than "bashing each other." The prince is chairman of a fund organized as part of the Silver Jubilee of his mother, Queen Elbabetb n, to benefit community projects for young people. In lnterviews, Charles told reporters that young people should participate in mountain rescue and seaside lifesaving teams instead of brawling. .. Former First Lady Betty Ford's release from Eisenhower Medical Center has been delayed until midweek while she recovers from tests for a pinched spinal nerve, Ford aides said. --------------lo111~i.r: .... 111i-SUNltlOll COVllTO,TME .• IUNltlOlt COUllTOl'TMI Publf"'"9 OreflQa CN\I O•llV Piiot ST ATI 01' CAl.11'-0t!Nlolil l'Olt , ITATaOl'CAl..,OltlllA P:Olt Aorll ... ,.,)ti, "n TMIC:OUWTYOl'OllANGI I loll•"""°"'""' cs. .. tootnolt'l Ol•t <lor ol lht DtD••lrn•nl ot • f ... Otlil~ Mt flleCI • oeiltlon lndU•tri.I lllatlCiofll I .. 9'1MUI pre CO"<trnt"4t VotUI' m•rrl-You m.av v•l11119 t.tl• GI "' diem .., ... , lft 10. t11e•wrt11tnm-w1tlll11J1e.vtot tocetlly 111 wtil<h tlll\ wOf1l It to bt th• ..... , .... ""',_,",.,....., Oii perforft-.d tor H Cll <•ell Or IYO. Of you wl)f~"'"' ~Cl to •QClllt Ille t on· BETTY LOU INTE••O._S, & Wllllowater Or1w , Cor""• OCll M.,, CA '2.U lltlty Lou ConnolfY, I Whlltw•lor Or., CorOMOOI M•r, C'1'767S "Doctora have decided t.o keep her hospitalbed longer than originally expected because the tests were more rigorous and more exhaustive than either Mrs. Ford or her doctors originally anticipat· ed ." said a staff aide. "Mrs. Ford is doing (ine, •• there are no additional medical problems." Mrs. Ford, 59, e ntered the hospital Thursday for what wu planned as two days of tests for a pinched nerve In her n eck. TKICOUHTYOl'ORAHOI ''" 11 .... A .. 1161 He. A·.i•1 -------------1 If OT IC I 0 ft MI A 111 HG 0' ·: tlO TICI OP: KIAllllNO 0' P VBUCNOTICE lllTITION '°" ,llOtlAtl o .. WILl.1 ... TITION f'04t ,.1109ATI 01' Wtl.L A H 0 fl 0 It I. I T TI II S .· ANO~ 1.11n111s TUTAMIN· TISTAM•HTAll1' AND "011 TAll't AMO l'Oit AUTltOlllUTION NOTICITOCltlOITOU AU'nlOllll.flT"IOtl TO AOMllOtfllt TO AOMllUSTllt UNOl ll TMI SUNlllOllCOUllTOl'nll UlfOEll TMIE INOlllllllOllNT ........ NOINT AOMINISTltU IO.. STATIOf'CAL.,OllNIA .. 011 AOMINISTltATION 01' an&TIS Oft I ST A TU ACT l"ltO.Atl CODE THI COUNTYOI' OllANOI ACT llllt09ATI COOi ,.I IT HQI jU I T H OI lff .... ,., E•l•lt of ETH&l. M BLANC.ME. l\11t• of MtLOAE D IOA l(NOST. o!!1::,o1 JACI( CHALOff GORDON. ~~~~I! IS Hlllll8Y OIVSH tflel o:~~E IS MllREIY OIVl!N !NI NOTICE 1$ HEREIY GlllEN IO t~ '-HN W THIEME ""' fllell ...,.,,, • l!OWAllO H, KNOST .... "'"""'"'". c•t4110" Of tM -... ,,._,, Cl•ct .. nl pellllort IOC' Probltt• ()f Wiii -~ ll-oetlllOft fOO' Pl"O!Mlt -1 Wiii •nCI IOf I•· 11"'1 •II ...,,.,nt llevt119 ct•lms Otel"\I •u•n<• 01 L.oilw" T••l•""""•rY to l'lle \VIII<• <ti LAl""9 Tttt•-ltrv lo .... Ille u ld dK-M -requll"fd to lllw pelltlOMr and IOt •ulho,,Ullofl I• Miit~ .... -..,._,,"'°"lo~ INM. wtlll"' MC.etWfT vouc"9rt '" _,,,,,It, '"' ~ .. ,. _, , .. Ill mlftl•te• e.. "'"• ""*' ~ 1-IMft· tM effk• ol ""'''"' ol !ht .lb>..,. en .._..,, Adrn4n1•tr .. 1.., of EJt••et 41t11t ........... .o.n .. ltl•to A<I Ultt41c-1, .. te ....... lf ... M,wltht"" A<I (ll•oNl•C-,.101\eellr•f•-· 4,..,.._ltC.-ftlel ... .,eftr...ce lo ne~•\A'V-lltl'\,loN-rtlfMcl lo wl\I<" I• MIO• tor 1un11er wlll(ll It --f\wh• tN'11(ut•n. at Ille effltt ol Mit.ltDt.0 w NASH. At P*rlltul•"·""" '""""" 11,,.. And PIK• -llhlil tM 11;ne..,.. •I-of "-•rt119 ,_,fl Law. eot ~" Ooll<rn Orlw GI .,..,1,,. ltlt ,.,..,.II•• -" \.t tor "-•-1\Mllleft ...... ,,,...,.,."n. 1 .. MA119tt .. ~"'°'"'•..,.""''°'"Mey 10 1'11." tOOO .,,, 11'1 I ... •I 1t·OO •"'. 1" Ille covrt•!IOn'I of lflt ••.cttf°"'"'"•ollhouncltnlQfttO cou11roe>MO' Oeoer1_,.t No Joi t••d o._.rM'ltfl HO l •f t•ICI c-\, at ieo II\ ell ,,,_.'"..,,.1,.,no101M ul.ot•ol rou rt •• 100(1~1< ~t•• 0<'1 .. Wt\!, In Ovlc Ct'IW Ori .. We•I. 111 Ille CllT -1 .. ,d C!KedWll. wllllln +tll' -1?1\ •fltt ,,,_Cit¥ 61 S...ta An• (;4flt9'n•• ~11teAnt.~11fomle, ~flf"lllllA!llUtlonol 11\luootl<t. Dolt04\0rll tS. •'11 DtltdAOl11tt, 1tl1 DtltdMertfl?t. tt" Wh,l.IAM I $1JOHN, Wll.l.IAMI $1JOIOt, HAtCLAllCf' OOltDON ~' C"'1\ OtlMtYClef'I< ......Wl'llttr.trh ol fflCI C~i.I• TtCMAllNlllANDOOUGl.4' ltlCMAllO'-llU•Tl ..... ~---· All-Tutww ,...,_, .. ..._ "AltOLO'lf.lfASN f WW .. 1,_lllllll"" ... C-.,.,f"MbllA, ... l•I-"*'-"II.aw 0 ..... 1'1.CAt1'40 Ult\ ......... CA,_, lltSMlllOIRllClft..,. ATTN.It I. TSCHAllNlll TM: CU~m.-I.at A .... .,, CA_,. Ttl• (Ill)~$ A.~f ... ..._ Tth ttlllm. .. tr Al'l-ylw ""ltl- ll'llMl""9 Or .... CbiHt Delly l'l .. t A...,.,..Tttr""""lll11T61rtl l"WMl\flH <>-CMll Doily 1111.i, ~ ... " .... ...,a."" ~ ..... C> ... ~ IHll'f 11no1 '"""' ... " .. "11 ' OeHl Altfl t. 12, tt,,., 1'1' 1M4 II Un,, b. II Voll ••II lo lilt I wrMltn rt\OOll•t tr•cl, .,.._.._ 9"111111"' •••• •'"'9• •• \ol!Wln ~ """ ¥041' defaull rnn M •lorlllll'leel It'll ,.,. Stcrt1••¥ oi Lebo< tfll-_ ,.,. <6<>rl "'41Y .. ,., • ludcl• ~ t• IM -1tton\ Of 111• Ou o\ -l C ..... tilllnt ln!tin<fl ... 9' OI-O•• 8•<0ft Act woeQt dt<l$JOl'l -llt4tbl• lor "'" tOM•"""O 01¥1\lon "' or00t'1Y ,,,.OrOIKt toollort TllHe r•ttt .... Oft "'°"<ti ,_,_ <""d cu\lody. <lllld lilt al lllO OtSflltc;T ottlte locettd st 111ooorl, .i1orneY'• '"'· <°'"· •net 1)10 ACl•n'lt "•tt111•. Cott• Mt\-'«" Olllet , .. 1~1 ~ ,..,.Y be •••"tad by Or•l'IQ• Coumy f;AllltoMI• Coolt• m•y ,,,.. (011'1. w!llC>I <1N141 rtWll I"'"' M"le!"*'M,......i A c...,oltlleW .. •llltllMHllol w.,...\.llll"toi-• re1 .. v..1111t-eo•tlNfoO\\lt .. .,._.,., "'°"""''"' ~ 1.....,.,. ~"""11t ., "' IJl..-n C II .,.. ....... ,.._ llte on let..... wtttt ft 11<twe 110011 e WOrtlflQ d•Y of 141-• 111 Ill\ .......... '*" ,...,,. '* tlQfll (ti "°""' TIM r~t• fll' llOlldey T11f' l>u1i""t 1, <onduelt4 bY •11 111 dlvldu•I 8ettv LOOI (Oft~fV Thi' '1•1-t w•• Ill.., with ti"' '°""'" (.tef) ot O< .,..,. County on Aprot }. ,.,, 11'10., Pu1>11-.i OrM19!' CoHt O•l•v ,.1101. olilotll lt,tt,-M.tyJ 10. 1117 PUBUC NOTICE •• pr•m'41• H tt1e1 Vtll• wrllltt1 f"CI ...,.,._ -• ,114111 tit et ltHI _,... .. , 14 M,, _, __ et1tl-. llM•elldont 114111 P:ICTIT10US BUSI NISS D•ltd~ll>I. "" II '"•" '" melldalef1 """ IM NAMISTATEMINT WIU.lt\M I . ltlOWM, Otrll. CONTltACTOll to'""°"" 1'11P contre<t h T"° tollOwtf\9 ot'IO••i •rt dol11911V~I ly H. W. IA1ti, °"""'' _.......,, " -tl'ly wll(Cll'llr<><tor .,.. .. ,. CHAI.I ..,..,hlfll,IO"''""~.,,."'"""'" IUlijW'f oevlll.OPMENT I, 1110 ·Tiit ,.,_ 9ftd •1"9• Ptrrnl1\H \•t<lllte rltt• I• •II w•rkf'nfft N1w11orl Ctl'll•• Orl.,t. !>vii• 100 IM!Wt ll'IUtt M lfl w•Mlllt end In "'* ,,,...._~ w 1.,.,.., hi '"' .. •<ullOfl oi Ntw-t IM.Ch Cellfor"'• '1..a torrn D•••<•lb.d bY ,,,. C•ll•••11te tllt<••ll•tn. I L•n lton l l'ltt•O•hO\ In< Ruin ol °""' ,..,.., '""'' be flltd In N• blcMtr -•It--Mi Md~. ~I .....,,.., .. tto H-l Cel'ltor '"" <wri .... 111.,,. D'OM' •llll'IQ tH •llO ,.,,911 Of fw'IY """ 11n oevt o11f" tllt or1~i-Sufi" 100, Newoo•t l tMll Of'OOf or WVl<t Of•'°"" of N<""' lo•tewtlOC'IM-n1nootblClt C1t1lornte.,MO c-tltlOl'ltr. nit 1111\0 •11t11 • wrnrnon. A pay.,,.... bond .,,cl• oerlOl'm411'1ct Tiii\ bu•'""" I• co•duct•d llY a I• «Wtm~ ~ ort • ,..,,v ,.,.Y v•<Y llOl'ld wlll be 'O<lllirocl "''°"It •*••dot L1m1i.d "•''""'""'D tlf~lftO or. IM ,.,,.,_ 6t S.fYIC• !flt C_.,l'atl nt• IMY-"I bo11<f \Niii for ••tf'nOlt. -C.CP 4U 10 1~rou911 w In '"" 1.,,., Ml tortfl In "" CMltrM.t I.Alf ..O'f l!NTEA,.•tSt S t11.a C)oc.utMnl' IH(. A J llYU CIOASTCOMMs'fNITY .. , .. Cl L. VI"'~"',,.. ... " ttlflKl.•.~M•AH061'11tOOS CXILLl!OIOI AtCT fhl\ ::': • .;,:::,'·.,., tlllftl wil" 1,,.. .,,,..,__,.,_, llOAltDO~.!llU"fEH . C.Vftlv Clf'f'\ of O<•M• Counh o" a.t.a t\iM. Cllll"""••lltt h ....,,,,.., " w.i...,. lll4l u•-1 ~,.,,,.., tolM!Of T•uw·.. M••tll JO. 1tl7 1'1•t • ._., ..,, _,._ ..-~or .... C)N" Oto If "'IOI .... 1111.w Or.a,... c.o.u O•ilY "'IOI hlll!""9 °'.,. ~ O•ll• ,., ... ..._.,11 11.,. ttn 1•1L11 """' s u.1• ,. tt11 1n11 lloO'll S. 17• 1' 111 1'11 li.it 11 • r * Pre:lldeat Carter reversed an earlier decision and chose career diplomat Malcolm U.S. ambassador to Moscow. Toon'a nomination, flrst an· no unced by then·President Gerald a. Ford after Carter WU elected, wu withdrawn by the Carter administration along with other ~ding nominations. But the White House an· oou acement tbat T oon's nomination was beln1 rtloatatcd Indicated the Administration wanted a diplomat with a re-TOON putation of tBklng a hard lino in U.S • ..SOv iet rel•· tlon!I In the Moscow posL • DeWayn.-Vouacblood or Viulla won tbt California Old Time F'iddlcrft Association com~·· tlon ot Fresno for t he second struJ,bl ytar . Youngblood won $250 and a U'oph)' by bcabnl 12 )'C'IU' old J 'ana Ja~b)' OC !teddlng, Oils yea.r'a junior champion and runnerup ln lbc f)nals. I~ -DAILY PILOT Tonight's TV Highlights KCET .@ 8:00 -American Short Story "Soldier's Home" by Ernest Hem- ingway concerns a soldier who returns / home a year after the end of WWI, only to struggle with a per vasive sense of aliena- tion from his tdwn, neighbors and family. NBC t!J 9:00 -SPECI AL -Ann- -M argret ... Rhinestone Cowgirl pays tribute to the world of country and western music from Nashville's Grand 1 Ole Opry. Special guests for the musical hour are Perry Como, Minnie Pearl, Chet At kins and Bob Hope. (Review on Page B6)_ CBS fJ 10:00 -CBS Reports: The Baseball Business. Bill Moyers Hosts this in depth r eport orr the many aspects ·or baseball. (TV DAILY .LOGJ TUESDAY EVENING 6:00 0 U ell (101 ((11.J m) News U Q}) CV(~ (V m Nb$ O Sur Trek IU Gomer Pyle 0 Gunsmoh m Putndce family Q)Adam·12 fl:) Dectnc Cornp1ny ED Dr1mitic Senn Q_lJ M~e Doualas -6:30-0 Din1hl Guests include lortlta l ynn, Ann Ma1eret, and Mac Davos 1 & Andy Gfrlhth no Mm Gnfhn Sllow m hm~y All11r ( 17 {~ ) Gunsmoke ID loom ( 2fi I}') Btw1tched m Town bit 7:00 U U Ofl <V ED m News o wrsClub ( 6 I MJ flllte SoflS 181 To TeQ Ille Truth O Contentr1hon m I Lon Lucy O>The fBI ff) Amenu/brul Jewish Hour ff) M1cNe1l/lehrer Report ( 211 <e ) the P11111d1e F1m1ly 39 Crou-W1ts -7:30- 0 Whit II (R) KNXI 5PPttat takes 6 to 10 year olds on a tanlasy 1ourncv of d1scovf1y onto 1he w111ld ol 1mag1ndt1on 0 C1nd1d C.me11 D Lowe Amtnun Slyle 0 U® !23) lU m Hollywood Squun ' e 1 The Gone Show O The Joker's Wild m (ilf) 1 • )) 811dy Bunch ( 1lJ CV) Nuhwdlt on the lloid ID Chlnntl 21 Ton11ht 391 l11n Club 8:00 O ( 111 r3 ) 4 w11o·s Who o ,,, a m The Golla Show- Why? Chuc~ Bam~ h~I\ a r,lrbroty werst0n of the shllw w11h sra1s •he! ~rr involed lo do lh,ir thint' ~nd l~c• lhe pos~1b1hlv of 1•1t1n~ · • •n~td for lh'lr elfoth AmonR I~• IJrS Appearinv ue CrorR' !tu1ns. Ben Vmen, Ray Uli!lts and A,.lha f rankhn 0 Mowie: IC) (2hr) "The lllU5· 1rattd Man" (set 11) b9-Rod • 1r1~•1. Cldore Bloom Rol.,rt Drrvas 16' MoYOe: {Cl (2hr) "Sptnt11's Mount1in" (do a) 'hl ll•nrv I onfl~ p ( :it1 Ce ) 139 Hippy Dm r Ill f f on11t s ltrro' l'ol\1e savr1 Jon/IP' litP and lru• to lh, t ontdr•lh cod•. I on11e mus I ~r int hom any wish O MOYie: 1c1 (2hr) "Ch1n1e of Habit" (dra) 6q (Iv;\ p,,~ty • 10! htkit Gltnon Speclll m LIJI of tht Wild Q) Alt Thlt Glitters L1nflA ttll~ h,, unusual story lo Ma Cltn eel! an inv1tation •1th 1n Italian prndur,, In 10tn her IOI lunch. l W ~tis A not• from the ~odnappe" and r rhanc• to ~ve the W;lrruncton W .man 8trl gels some woids ol 1cl.ic • lrom ~ very busy Andru fl)NtwS U GREAT FU N FAMILY! * I IS EllOUGH-NEW O (tni LI l Qfl Eitht Is Enouch When Mary's boyfriend 1s hosp1· lahzed with an eaolic illness, lhe 81adlord family os quaranlined by lhe hullll deparlmenl m Merv Grilfift Show fD Musial V1rid-, • rn [spedacul1r 77 -9:30- 0 ((J1J (].)) (.() OM Day It A Time (R) Cone!. Ann makes the lou&htsl deciSlon of her hie, and leains a little more about mother· hood when she hnally come.s face· lo· lace w11h hei runaway daughter. m Mod Sq11H fll) The lest ef (nrit lo.acs 10:00 O The B1seb1ll Bu3ineu t EATON presents Bill Moyers reflections Oft ch1n1es in the pme. 0 ( 1n I ~))({) CBS lteports: Tht Buebln Bininess 8411 Moyers hosts this repo1t Of1 the many as1>«ts of baseball 0 123> ~ CJ'G) m Mat Oavis- Souncls uke Honie Mac and his special guesls-Tom Jones, George Carlin, Dolly Par1on and Donna !>ummer-took back at their begin- nrnrs and tady influ,nces 1n this mu~•c~I h9ur 0 OAews 1 e) Bon.Ina fJ (~Ce ) flt, flmily (R) · Coming of Ape" Kate and Doug Ldwrence a1e d1sappomled 1n 1he11 daughter Nancy's behavior because she has become irresponSlble, rude and lhoughtless, and lhey are paflte· utarlv unhappy when she decodes 10 marry again ID Woman Atiwe .. Men. Women Whal s the 011ference'" Lynn Sherr hO'.lts the proiram which includes a tttt M su doflem1ees. alhludei ,.l~lln~ lo work econom,,., and •mot1on~I varoances m El Bien ANdo -10:30-m mm 11tws 11:00 0 0 1~ 3t flews 0 23 6 m llews 0 ( 2f 8 ) LD'9 AmtntM Style 1 & All TNI Glitters 0 11911S1dt m Miry Hartman, Mary HMtin1n m Tht .._.,,_n ( It 3 ) Tiit 11111<11 Slltw fl:) lltrllO CoftSortig O> £1 D1os de Blrro -11:30- 0 ( 1'7 ~ ) e C1S lite Mowot Cl "M<M~b• & Wlft-Tllt Oudly Curt" o 2i1 ~ f61 m .._., tmon 6 The I'll Club u ( ~ • ) 3tl r uesdly ...... o1 the w.-M1d"'gM Cowbcl{ Q lM Anltflc1n Slylt G)Mtt,_ O> Sci. lllU «D C-.. )4 12:00 .,~ 0 Ml'llt C "ltlwtt• HtHtll 11111 Htll'' 101al t,i, Jlobtrt w,,,,,, m Mtfit "Blow••a W1W" Od•) 1 G~!Y ~, ~rb.,J Su~• Q) MoN: ·The C1P11111's hMt" (Cl ml Ill IMn Ct'f'MI 12:30 O All 1111111 Slit•: "ll111chmll• MoHltr ," "Softs 1114 LO'llll, .. "tnvlSltll et tllt Sawctr Men'" 1:00 D If~ m l'l~ T1MtrT .. 2:00 Gays Get Fountain l'alleg Okay for Meal Program Church Wins Funding SAN BERNARDINO (AP> -City Council has approved the remodeling of a two-story bric k building into a church by '"a p r e dominan tl y homosexual congreia· tion. The approval c um e despite opposition from Counc ilman Willi a m Katona, who cl:vinged his vote when he learned the nature of the church, saying, "I don't think there should be any gay churches." The Re v. Debbie Gen· dron. 25. o f T r 1n 1ty Metropolitan Commum· ty Church. said, "We're a Christian church with an o utr each to t he homosexual commumtv. We also h ave a n ou·t· r each to alcoholi cs and dope addicts." The Fountain Valley City Council has upproved $1,850 to start a meals for home-bound residents program. The progra m is to begin in mid-May Volun· teers are bemg recruited to deliver the meals, said Rich Holmer, city Human Ser vices Department dir ector. HOLMER SAID ANY FOUNTAIN Valley res1· dent is e11gible to purchase the meals. The program will provide two meals, one cold and one hot. which will be prepared at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Price for the two meals 1s $2.25. Holmer said the program is aimed at providing low-cost meals to disabled or handJ capped resi· dents who have difficulty getting out of their homes Another aim of the program is lo lessen lhc neeessity for long hospital stays, sa1d Holmer HOLMER SAID NO ONE who requests thl' meals w1U be turned away. Civic groups are setting up funds to pay for meals for those r esidents who cannot pay. · For more information about the program, t'On lat't Holmer at 963-8321, extension 239 C6J% Hours!&>~~ Surgery Due Sen Adlai E. Stev- enson <D·lllJ, is t o u nd er go surgery Thur s d <.iy a t Bethesda, .Md. ·!'\a\ aJ I Iospital to remO\ c a n od ul e f r om h t ~ thyroid gland. Ph~ st· l' ians ,,;11 not be a bll' to deter mine 1f t he gru"th ~ cancerous until a biopsy is com- plcll·<I. Ramp StiDks Revelers Love It COSBY, Tenn. (AP) -The hollow-dwellers In the Great Smoky Mpuntains have been honoring the legendary ramp for 24 years Although they ate 80 bushels of ramps over the weekend. they s till aren't complimentary when they speak or the wild plunt with roots like an onion, lea\ es like a hly and J reputation for a vile smell and aftertaste MOUNTAIN FOLKS GET TOGETHE R every year at about this time to pay tribute to the · 'stlnkin · weed." w,h1t h is found wild only in hign elevations. To the residents or the area. the appearance of the r amp after the last snow melted off for many ~·ears signified the beginning of spring -and the ' end of winter-long dtets of salt pork and dried beans. More recently. the annual festival sponsored by the local Runtan Club has served as an excuse for beLween 5.000 and 50.000 people to get together, feast. swap ston es and listen to bluegrass and gospel music. SO, EVEN RAI~ ALL MORNING and overcast skies the rest of the d;1y couldn't keep an estimated 8.000 ramp fans away this) ear. The sponsors of the fcsllval now have to go deep tnto North Carolina. a lmost down to the Georgia line, to dig the ramps needed for the feast. ~~~Close~o~ . . ID Amtr1t1n Short Slory l"ld,•1 , Hom'" by £ 1ntsl Htm1ne,.1v. toncerns a sold11'r •ho hH rrlurnl'J homr 1 yw tlltr lht tnd ol W ~Id War t only to \lru~lt w•lh 1 Pfl•a · \IVt ~Mt ol alien11ron lrom hr' town ne1&hbon and l•moly ~Almos! A Man" by Rochard Wi1Rht concer11J a black. leen11e farm wor~tr His pro· lee live p1rtnls. M lon11n1 IOI I cun, and tht mule lhal pulls his plow 11e U Movie: "n1 w.oc .. Norse" 1 Flrst Federal's business hours were made with you. the customer. in mind. We're open Monday through Thursday from 9AM to 4PM. Fridays 9AM to 6PM and OPEN EVERY SATURDAY 9AM to 3PM. You1J find our friendJY tellers are fast and efficient, waiting to We 're just minutes from the San Diego Freeway and only a mile or so from Orange Coast CoOege. Our convenient location at Baker near Harbor makes our Office a breeze to get to. Come in and see us soon! • 111 1nvotvPd 1n his dramatic passace 10 manhood el El Sllow de Ecl111rdo II -8:30- u (<21) Ca)) (>fl lavtr~t tftd Shirl•J (R) "Good lime Gori\'' 'lav,ine and Shuley think tlley 1111 lhr most souaht alter &orls in town when lheor pho"' suddPnly st~rts In ring olf th• hoot but soon find out they are the victims ol 1 pqnk. GJ CrooWib O>~trry ..... fl) ClliMM ~"Pllt Ooclllltftl1ry 9:00 fJ (<Ill (I)) Cl) M1A1S•H (R) Al1tidy eaf\Justed from 24 horn of duty, Colonel Potter and Hawteye respond to 1 dtsc>trate ull from an 1111dennanntd KOfun 1rmy hosJ»t1I • fOf Sllr&eons and supplifS, whteh muns H1w\eye must urry l11s Slllt ·arm IAto tlle blftle ""· e @ ro ru1 m IKLlil All• Mar1rat .. .bi11es1 ... ~lrl Thr Wldt spectf1/fll of counUy m11S1t from Oprfland to Alron Copland s lltllelm lht sub1tet of tbd 191C1tl tJ(*I at th1 Ctalld Ole Opry in ft&stMflt. Guests ar1 hny Cotno, Boll Hope. Cliel Atkins and Minnie -lwL (dr•) '50-ltO Genn, Anthony Sletl . Cl MOflt Daubltf11ture: "TOllCll of b ll," "The S.Crtt Ways" m •111ctrt S11ow: "Html tttt1t," "StfpHt of tllt Nllt" DAYTIME MOVIES m1L z1 !:30 D "Ede• of Ooorll" (mys) '50-0ua Andre•s. hdey Cringer. 11 :00 liJ ~ "l1\l!ldtr lay" (idY) '$3-James Slewart. Joanne Dru, C~btrt RcMlld, 011t1 DUfJU, Jay C. Flippen. lZ:OO GJ "Gil'I Cnzy" (com) '43- MiC•tJ Roonry, Jlldy Garland, Gil Slratton, June Allyson, NallCJ Wilker. 1:00 e •o.cer-u.i. at ht" (COin) '37-Ann Sothtm, )Kk Hilty, fllary Boland, John ~r. 11d1ne, Emrd Cnrtt Horton 2:00 D (t) "Tiii Cllristlut Kiel" (•ts) '67-Jelf Haottr. lours • Haywanl. l:OO [G) cm "AnJ Wt4l11SAl1y'' (com) '66-Jason RCJl)trds, u~ Foncll. • l.:30 • 6l'f1lt Tnatl .. lm" (Q)Cll) '51-0om Day, Richanf w~ Gia Scala. Gi1 Yooni. • E111btlll fraset. KOCE Television (50) .. wdcome you with a smDel ~ ~ ~o~ ~® • ADAMS ORANGE COAST COLLEGE . f ------' , ...................... ~ ......................................................... ... / -..' t - Search Lights Way For Others By BEA ANDERSON Of t• Dal 1.-l>llet Sl.llff It wu no "seventh lnnlng slret.ch" that brou&ht the crowd ol about~ to lta feet. A break in the fut-~aced pro- gam or lectures bad just been called and the time was med in awarding door pmes. So, the standing ovation de.- m o n st r a led lbe colleclive admiration for Florence Fisher, fo under and national president ot ALMA (Adoptees Liberty Move- ment Association). It was obvious she bas been the Inspiration to many attendi.ni the Southern California conference to continue se a r ching when discouragement seemed to be taking over. Jn turn , th e crowd a cknowledged her leadership with rousing applause each time s he criticized agencies and challenged her audience to "let's end it all so no one has to die before completing his search.'' Although a statement from the Child Welfare League, which was r ead earlier, said it no longer OP· posed open adoption records, Mrs. Fisher said. "That just isn't good enough. ''If they will take that last step ( support open records), maybe they 'U right the wrong so we can respect them." SHE ADVOCATED lo those in search "before going to an A Happy Blend aeency °'back to an agency, get support <.from ALMA members). Talk to a group leader." And, &Oe reminded them, ''You· don rt have to take lt when they question why you are 1n search or why you want to know who your blrtb parent.a are." /'. tactJc that abe recommended wu to "ask them why they ask you wby, each Ume they ask." So many adoptees. she said, think they were rejected by their birth mother or parents and they think it again when they begin to search. "You never were rejected," she emphasized. "It's a word that should be detected from your vocabulary. "'1aybe the mother rejected the circums tances ... or responsibility ... or the truth, but s be never rejected the baby. "She did not reject you, but she might have rejected facing what had to be done or the pressure that was put on her. "Reme mber. you are not a re· ject but a gilt." Mrs. Fisher told adoptees that tney have every right to know their "roots." "YOU HAVE EVERY RJGIIT to know everyone you a re biologically related to. No one has the right to take that away from you. "If someone tries lo keep a sur- reptitious r elationship," she warned, "don't be swept under the rug. There ls nothlng dirty about you.J>on 't aUow it.'• Gr anteCl, s he said, birth parents h•ve their rtaht.a too, "but don 'l forget yours . .,• Mrs. Fi.sher talked about her experience with her birth mother and suuested the audience do tbe same it they find themselves in a similar situation. Mrs. Fi.sher has a half brother and sister and she wanted her birth mother to tell them about her. "I gave her four and one-halt ye ars to do the r ight thing." The founder said she probably wouldn't have given that much time but she was Involved in founding ALMA and writing her book, "The Search for Anna Fis· her." One morning, she said, she woke up and bad that gut feeling that she bad given her mother enough time and decided to locate and tell her siblings. AFTER LOCATING both, she discovered her brother worked just a few blocks from her home a nd that her sister was in Houston_ So, she decided lo make con- tact with her brother who was the closest. He was teaching a music class when she arrived at his school. She went in the room, tapped him on the shoulder and asked if he would see her alter class. She New Concept Woven In By JUDITH OLSON OI t"9 Di lly Pilot $111f When the September issue of Vogue magazine hits the stands, another chapter in the fascinat· ing saga or a local company will have been published. St. John Knits, headquartered in Irvine, wall announce to the world that it has turned out another beaultful ·'purl"; woven gabardine pants to go with its ensembles for the fi rst time in its history. "We offer a total concept now." said Marie Gray, the co- founder and chief designer for the company. To understand the importance of the pants, one must go back to the beg:inn.ing and lrace the his· tory of the company, which is a real "yarn" in itself. The most interesting thing about the company is that its fo unders, Bob and Marie Gray, never intended to design and manufacture knits. Their con- cept happened almost by acci- dent and it has been. a long time maturing. Mrs. Gray, in fact, has knit one sweater in her life, which she never wore, one sock and one dress, which was the beginning oflhecomjjany. A FORMER FASHION model and h~tess on the Queen for a Day show, Mrs. Gray tried to think of a way to make money for clothes when she was planning to From the original dress (above), which is worn in photograph by Marie Gray, the St. John concept has matured to sleek, sophisticated ensembles such as Chanel-inspired suit at left. Blouse Dilly l'll<IC l"lloto lly LA• 1>1.,... is included in concept. get married. Always thrifty, she realized she would have to quit her free· s pe nding w ays because s he would have other priorities as a homemaker. "I always liked clothes," she said. "That was one of my big loves. Modeling was sensational. I could wear a lot of clothes and be a lot of people. After two or three weanngs, a garment became a tired. old dress. Her "economy drive" started with knitting a dress to sell to a friend. "I was so bugged because I couldn't do it fast enough," she said. The answer was to buy a $300 knitting machine, which was a total puzzle. But after two weeks of fi guring it out, Mrs. Gray was able to make six dresses for he r fri ends. They were so successful that Gray. who worked in the gar- ment industry. took them to Bullock's Wilshire to see if there was a bigger market for them. "THEY ORDERED SO pieces on the sp0t," Grav r ecalled. Then they asked him the name of his firm and he was stumped. On the spot he called it St. John, using his wife's professional name. Then he went home and figured out that it would take seven months to produce the dresses at their current rate of speed. They hired another knitter and two crocheters and with virtually no money, took off with the line. Both the Grays worked at other jobs unUI St. John finally could support Bob full-time. The first dress, or ordinary four·ply worsted purchased in a department ~lore, retailed for $50. "I could see they could be mass-produced , which would keep the price down," Gray said. For the next 12 ye ars the growth was slow and steady as th e concept c h a nge d and matured. Now, the knits are made of fine special European yarns and retail from $180 to $350. THE GRAYS SEEM almost surprised at the upturn their' business bas taken, but they have known from the beginning what it would take to succeed and they have done accordingly. ·'The name of, the game in creating garments for women is to makei.lbem look young," Gray assertea. "Our garments are basically handmade and we have good quality control." The knits are very carerutlr. also requested to sit in ·on the· • "I told him I didn't think it was lesson. ·r19bt to dump on a brother. "1 kept looking at my brother especially wben I bud just met and waa overwhelmingly filled him." with love. I started to cry and I "He replied, 'That's what dldn 't know bow to stop.'' brothers are for·.·• Later he took her, home and She concluded the conference they dJacovered lbey bad ~n with reading a letter from him. living around the corner rrom ln descrlbitlg their meeting, he eacb other for about 15 months. saJd, "I was surprised at how ''I rett this was meant to be. It natural and right it felt. It's in· was like I bad been with him all teresUna how new this is and yel my lite." It's like it bas been there all the Mrs. Fisher told her brother time. that sbe now needed to let their "It's like somethlng had been mother know that sbe had made missing, s ubtly, and now l feel contact and that she also wanted complete. to set in touch with their si!ter. "Since she has found us, my music has flowered also. ''llE INSISTED on ban(iling "I cannot explain it. Perhaps both. s he has sometbini to do with it." BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tuesday, Aprtl 26, 19n C 1 ~ .. Bob and Marie Gray go over sketch for new line. Company is a family affair with three generations involved. Grays emphasize workmanship and quality. c ons tructe d to pr ev ent "growth," so they can hang in the closet just like any woven · piece. Also, every garment goes out marked with a dye lot so it can be returned for repairs up to six months. Mrs. Gray designs two lines a year with new, beautiful yams as her, inspiration. "She makes what she lhinks is right," Gray said. Because of their simplicity and tbe high-quality material used, most of the knits can be worn year-round in S outhe rn California. They are cons ervative but tasteful. "Though I like new and exciting things I wouldn't con· sider myself a fad follower," Mrs. Gray s aid. "Our concept has matured like a good wine. It has taken us a long time to design a more comprehensive picture." SHE WORKS by sitting down and thinking, "If I were going on a cruise, what would I like to take along?'' · "I might make a few sketches. But It depends on my mood," she added. "I work closely with the research 'and design group. It's total chaos." Mrs. Gray, who at one time planned lo be an opera singer in her native Yugoslavia, said she mentally redesigned many of the clothes she modeled before her marriage. Now, she creates with a certain ~ind of woman in mind. "Our original dress was to be worn for one occasion," she noted. "Now, we have a total concept. The woman who wears our clothes is a woman of good taste who knows what looks well on her . She is not in a ny age bracket. per se. She has a body that's young. She's conscious of her body and s he has some means because they're not inex- pensive." A golf enthusiast who has clubs in every room where she works, · Mrs . Gray is like that typical customer herself. She is slender and attractive and shows ore the knits well. She has come a long way from the day she whipped up a two- .piece dref!s or worsted to make a· little money for her honeymoon. because 400 employes turn out the e xpanding line. Confusion Over Fabric's Hems In Consumers By LOUISE COOK AstKlllM~'"' Wrltff' Americans spend more than $10 billion a year on clothing, but s~oppers may find that selecting the best buy is harder than trying to predict next year's skirt len1ths. A recent s urvey of 2,500 persons by a market research company, showed that American men intend to purchase 133' ·million dress ablrts, 131 million pain of slaeka, 122 mJlUon sports. abirts and 100 million pairs of Jeana thb year. · Women expect to buy 168 mllllon pairs of alacks, ua mWlon dresses, 127 mllllon knit ahlrU, •million aweaters and 79 mlllioa pain or Jeans. . The Conference Board, a busi· IHH •roup, 1ay1 clotbtng purchalel account for about 10 iP.UC• ~all consumer spend .. ing . The variety of fabrics, finishes and styles can tum shop· ping into a confusing experience, however. Do you want a natural fiber or a man-made ooe? Both have ad· vantages and disadvantages: lt depends on whit you 're looking for. Will a preshrunk garment cet smaller after you wuh ltf Yes. What's the difference between woolen yams and wonted ones! The woolens are softer: worstedl are smoother. Her&' a ls a guide to some of the ·terms:. NA TUllAL PIBESS Cot100 ta ablotbent, washable and of medium atAngtb. It wrlnk.les and lbrlw euil1 Wl· lea• treated. lJneo ia cool, •trona and ttisl>-look~ lldocl not plck up llnl lt washes eully, but \&bless treat· ed, it wrinkles and ab.i'inks. Silk ls luxurious, wrinkle resis~ tant and strong, but ls sensitive to sun and prespiratlon and usually is not wuhable. White silk yellows with age. . Wool ls warm, strong, durable, resilient, naturally wrinkle rests· tant and easy to dye. It does, however ,abrink very eully. · 8YNTBrl'IC8 Virtually all the man-made fibora are washable; other· cbar~ca vary. · Aeetat.e la soft and silky, lnex· pen•lve, re1l1tant to wrinkles, moths and mildew, but may clis· solve if you spill nail pollsb or re- mover, perfumes and many other aolventa on it. Triacetat.e bu many of the aame cbarac· teTbtlca. but la leu 1entiUve to. beaL ' . . .~cryllc ls wool·llk• hl textuTe . . and warinth, and tuny tn ap. pearance. It la qulck dryiq and reS"iata wrinkles and sun. Mochcryllc la slmUar, but bu the added quality of belna name reslJtant. Nylon is the strongest of all. It is Ught., dries quickly and doean 't shrink. but it can develop static electricity unless treated. Polyester ls easy to wub and dr7 and auper-realatant to wrinkles. It also bolds pleats and creues well and 11 often blended with cotton for permanent preu, carmenta. Bayon ta IOft and comfortable. htahly ablofbent and cheap. It also i.a durable and euy to dyo. SllUMDNG Except for rayon, 1yntbetica aeneralb' do not ahrink at all. The 1ttuatlon with natural nben varie&. ~·ward ''p~~·· meana· •hat it implies -almost. It does not mean that the fabric has been prabrunk completely. Tbe word frequently will be followed by a 1tatement saying how much more shrinkage ia expectable. II lbere I.a no statement, be pre- pared for ll to shrink at least 3 percent. Sanforized ref era to a patented process to control shrinking of couon IDd linen articles. Acaln, you C!an expect some further abril\kage, but it should be only. one percent or less. If tbes:e ls oo label statement, 'you can expect abrinkqe of about five percent. Knitted, "apped and stieer fabi:tcs will • •brink even more. CA•B TM pbrue .. wub and wear" meaM you 111ioUld be ablo to •Nil an ltem and wear lt wlt.b Ut· .~tor no i.r<IC.lna. but aome 1ar· ments don't live up to the label ·very well. 'rhe product may have achieved Ila wash-and-wear stalus one of three ways : by a re- sin finish added to the fabric to reduce wrinkling (it may still need ironing ), through a , chemical modification or .the fiber or through a mixture or cot· ton and a synthetic which is naturally wrinkle resistant. Drip dry means that the gar.- m e.nt must be hung up to dry .wbU~ wet. The runoff helps re- move t.be wrinkles. . 1f )'OU want· to be able to do. your laundry by machine, look. .for labeb that say "automa\.ic ·wuh and wear," "permanent :preaa, '' or "durable press." Cot- ton and polyester blends lenel'al· :1y are permanent press, malcirig .them easy to care for. They also laro difficult to alte.r, howevel", 1hcaUM bem1 and pleata art\ ·perm~t. ....... ... : . .. • . I £1Z DAILY PILOT Tuesday. Apnl 2'. 1971 Good Lesson to Be Learned· DEAR ANN: Tbe letter about the rotten bebavlor of 1chool kids &Otto me. Tbe main problem is the gut· leaa behavior of the ad ~ minlstra&ors. Last year a teacher ·reprimanded an upper-grude boY' for joggtnc across the lops of the careteria tables. The child's mother pbooed the school and complained to the principal ror· allowin& the teacher to embar· raaa her son before his pe~rs. The principal should have defended the teacher but instead she was roundly cr1Ucb.ed. The mother then called the )eacher at home that evening and Gemini chewed her out. This is just one or . many examples l could relate from my years or tryine to teach. The sad truth ia that the teachers are afraid of' the ad·· ministrators. The admln.lstrators are afraid or the parent.a. The parents are afraid or their children. and unfortunately the children aren't afraid of anyone. : Unfair to the students who want to learn? YES. Gutless behavior? DEFINITELY. So. gutless. in ract. I won't even sign ny name, because -I NEED A. JOBNEXTYEAR · DEAR NEED A JOB: My J'e·· ,Have Fun WEDNESDAY, APRJLZ7 BySYDNEYOMARR • aden tell me uaat eolama llu' bffD widelY cll.Kaued al PJ'A mee&p. ll I ltaned aomdblq' ·tbal taalU ID lb'Ga1er npport for teaichen, I'm dellpied. Bere- · 11 aaOU.. Pola& of view: DEAR MISS LANDERS: This ·is in response to the barrage of letten you received regarding the negativism of students in OW' schools. Since I have never been in their buildings, I am no judge of what goes on elsewhere, but I can speak for the school of which lam the principal. The students in our school are not angels, but they are courteous, reaped.fut both of peo- ple and property, eater to learn, and a pleasure to be with. I like to feel that the reasons behind those positive charac· terBUcs can be traced to the parents, religious affiliaUQnS and the teachers. U the adult society shows respect and love toward our students, we find they re- ciprocate. . I realize there is much in· formation ooe mu.st have before making a judgment, but I'd be in· terested in finding out what the Jetter writers have done to (a) ·create such problems, and (b) al· leviate them. NO Love Lost -~ (Arln. Landers=~ T don't envy anyone having to go to work under the condlUons· described, I wake up each morn- ing, looking forward to another wonderlul day. -ALVIN N. COHEN, PRINCIPAL, WILMOT JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL, CHICAGO DEAR MR. COHEN: I re· ceived a bao.dful of letters similar lo yours, but unfoJ1uaak· ly yoa folks were badJy out· numbered.. DEAR ANN: Ibave a neighbor who constantly .. drafts .. me to take care of her children, ages four and two. She phones and says she's in a jam. l have lwc youngsters of my own and . wouldn't dream or doing this tc anyone unless it was a dire ·emergency. . Last week I was stuck wllb hel' kids four afternoons. How can I Jet her know 1 reel abused wiUlout losing her lriendship? -NAPA VALLEY DEAR N.V.: Let ber know the ume way you Jet me know. 'TELL HER. If you Jose her .. friendship" you'll gain' something more valuable -In· ·dependence and self-respect. PURE BRED ELEGANCE UN BEL DI Lagma'a rr..len ~Goods Ston (Village Faire Mall) . ' .. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Highlighl creativity -accept necessity for change. Emo· lions dominate -you feel, perceive and detect. subtle signals. A relationship is growing more in· tense. By ERMA BOMBECK My kids said the other day, "Mom, good news! We just signed you up for the intramural tennis team at the recreational center." NOW ALSO IH THE HAUOR AIU THHD SETTIMO HAMOIAGS - . - TAURUS (April 20-May 20)' Highlight basic values, standards. Don't veer too far off course Being pleasant to someone does not mean you are to give up your own beliefs, personality. GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): Emphasis on contacts, messages, wllitlen material, relatives. short trips. Be aware of line print, details. Have fun without abdicating responsibilities. · CANCER (June 21-July 22): You gain access to information which can prove profitable. Take notes. Check sources. Aid can be received from group, club or special organization. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): What had been a money or property "misunderstanding" rights itself. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Much that occurs is behind the scenes -you could do well by work· ing within organization. LIBRA CSept. 2a·Oct. 22): Emphasis on de· sire, friendship, romantic interests, attainment of goal. You regain sense of direction. .. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Prestige,. creative endeavors are featured. You get rid of what has been a burden. SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Good lunar asoect .coincides now with education. publishing, commun1cat1on, long journey, spiritual insight. CAPRICORN CDec . 22-Jan. 19 ): Dig beneath superficial layers -insisl on faclual data. Be re· ady for change, travel, variety, intensified rela· tionship. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Emphasis on marital status, cooperative efforts, legal affairs, public relations . PISCEs (Feb. 19-March 20): Low profile gets job done. Accent on details, basic issues, the way you accomplish tasks. Mr. and Mrs. Ertch Mehnert Day Marked Mr. and Mrs. Erich Mchnert of San Juan Capistrano celebrated their 60t.h wedding anniversary with a reception. Married in 1917 in Springfield, Mass. tht' Mehnerts have two sons, Eu~cne and Erich and four grandchildren. They have been residents of California since 1961. "I don't like to play tennis," I grumbled. "Of course you do. Every red-blooded American mother likes to play tennis. Besides, it's good for you. You sit around and watch loo much television and you don't get enough ex· ercise." "How often do I have to practice?" "My goodness, that's no attitude," said my son. "Tennis is fun. You're going to love it. And you're going to win. And we're going to sit in the stands and root for you and who knows, you might even get your name in the paper. Would you like that?" l shrugged and Clipped channels. Practices were a drag. I went every afler- noon to the center and played my heart out ... running to strengthen my legs ... hitting SO gilHon balls and dropping into bed each night exhausted. One night as I was dozing off, my son came in and put a rubber ball in my hand and said, "Keep squeezing, it's good for the old serving arm." The first match was last week. My kids look me aside for last·mlnute instructions. "Okay now, Mom, just relax. This woman serves like she's swatting flies. Just watch her at the net. Don't let her draw you in. Hang back and keep it steady. Play your Evert game. Just keep slammin' 'em in. Got that? Now, we don't want you to get uptight or anything but if you win, there's that water massage shower you've had youreyeon. Go get 'em." The stands were full of vicious kids, all with their eyes on their own mothers, shouting in· structions, calling the line judges names. and screaming, "That turkey foot-faulted. Didn't anyone see her?" On the way home they tried to comfort me. TU VlL TOTH -LUGGAGI ACCESsotlllS TYE DYE SIU( CHIFfOM l'AHCHOS -DllSSIS-Hl-ADWIAl'S SCAlfS M-SO., • Sotwdcry IG-4 369 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA . Ill Wetftlori S... . 646·5533 Before you choose a European luxury coach Tour ••• see this book. It's FREE at our Age.ncy. · 'l"B&irai~a~ •Trafalgar Tours _llUU'IUURft ~ has specialized BllOPE77 in luxury coach tours Topics Offer Variety "Hey, it's just a championship game where you either bring honor to your team or humiliate them. Don't sweat it. You almost gave your best. Of course in that second set, you stood there like you were waiting for a city bus ... "And you could have gotten that corner shot if you'd had your racket back in time, but what the heck . . . Hey, your opponent had 30 pounds on you. We're just going lo have to gel you into better shape. We'll get it all together before next week's match. Besi~s. you had a won· derrut time, didn't you?'' a:iq ~,... of Europe .for over 30 years, and now offers their greatest choice at low, low prices. Pick up a copy . .. . ENVISION II : A dinner and hair style show ing will be presented Monday. ~I ay 2. at the Reg1!\try llotel. TickcL"i are $.SO per couple and all proceeds benefit the United Cerebral Palsy A!>soc1at1on of Orange County Sponsor 1s Joe Forre!>ll'r, Lld. Beauty .Parlour ALUANC'E FRANCAISE: Speech contest winners will be honored and rccei\.·e awards al the mcetmg at 8 p.m. Friday, Apnl 29. in the Harbor View School. Dr. Franco Tonelh, director of the depart ment of French and llahan at UC I rvtne, will be the speaker and present awards. WORKSHOP : l>ei11caled to gOO<l parenting will be un all·dav m1.•etln.-e. beJ:tnntng at 9 a.m. Saturday, April 30. at Callfom•a Stale Universi- ty, Fullerton. Participants may preregister by railing the Office or Continuing Education al 870 26JJ WOMEN'S CAUCUS: Knshne KJstu ts the new chrurper!>on at large for the Western State University College of Law Women·., Caucus Also on the board are S Norman Black. Keith Meyer, Mary Deis mun. Joy Rothke Verna Carey and Cheryl Green COSTA MESA WOMEN : Mr' Ralph Lit n€ttl€?J:CR€€k s ... 0 f Custom Window Treatments NOW 20°/o OFF Our decoralors will help you !>eleci from hundreds ot t atmcs the 1wrfN.t h••tures. cJlors ,1nd des1r.n'> to make your home mor( be.iut1tul. Wn then cuMom make 1>leg,1nt window trf'atments which offer not only beauty but practical use. All this at a 20% savlnp. (Our e•pert installation I available at additional cost ) Browse through our OecoratinR Studio at oor shop~ call tor an I appointment 1n your home. There 1s no extra charge for this ll!Lll::::;;~~= profession1I service Come in or W ..__ n• ,,...,,,..,call no.-1 Sale ends May J. i:'-_23_ras11_1on_111and_. _. N,..twPGt1 __ a.ae __ tt._'4_.,_auo.,...._ ' tlefield "'as named president of the club for lhe coming year at our agency and see for yourself the kind of great values offered. BARKSDALE FOUNDATION : A seminar on self-esteem will be presented from 8-10 p.m. Wednesday. May 4, at the Self-Esteem Center, Newport Beach. The program will be given by Dr. Ed. Harmon, executive vice president or the founda- tion. More information on the free seminar is available from the foundation, 751-1334. I woke up in a cold sweat. What a lousy dream. Jt was a dream, wasn't it? What am I saying? Of course it was. I mean, how many people push their mothers into organized sports? COME 'N' GO TRAVEL f 145 So. Coast Hwy. i..,.a leoch 17 I 4J 497-.2402 DAR: Patience Wright Chapter will hear a talk by Mrs. Netzer E. Luthi, state chairman of the DAR Museum m Washington, D.C., on Our Museum Heritage at noon Tuesday, May 3. The luncheon meeting will take place In the Hotel Laguna. Or children for that matter. CALIFORNIA FEDERATJ..{l.N OF WOMEN'S CLUBS: Awards were presented dur· Ing the Orange District convention in the Dis· ncyland Hotel. Orange Coast clubs taking honors were Laguna Niguel, Capistrano Valley, Irvine, Foun· tain Valley. Rancho Viejo, Midway City, Seal Beach, Costa Mesa, Sao Clemente and Newport Beach. Scholarships were presented to Catherine Jean and James Nevins or Huntington Beach. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY 'wt.Y•W..t ...... 1922 ....... ll•d. Cost• Mele-S41-02H TEENAGE .BEAUTY CLASSES! .. . . HAIR HUNTERS .... Presents The Total Beauty Program REGISTER NOW •.• CLASSES START MAY 4th FOUR 2 HR. SESSIONS• COURSE $50. ee beautiful fOf 1urnrner. Leam how to b8come • mo<• lovely arid confident P9fSOI\. "' LEARN ••• Nail & Hair Care LEAAN ••• Hair Care/Proper Styling LEARN .•• Make Up Techniques/Color ApPlioatlon/Bl'Ow Arching FOR RESfRVATION • 6"-2151 70 FCllNan llland LOOKING AND FEELING GREAT IS WHAT IT'S Al..L ABOfJT! ·.L,dtc,aH. ~~Inquires: HOW DOES YOUR FIGURE RATE? IS YOUlt WAISntMI SUM? THIGHS, ARMS TRIM AHO . SHAl'R.Y? CUIVIS IH Tffl lllGHT l'ROPOITIOH? .. GUH TOMID AHO FlllM? POSTVU COlllCT? CllCULATIOH GOOD7 COWUllOM CL.LU? .... GY UYB. .... H? • Call Now for IF YOUR. Al'i J1'£R I'> "YF.S" OV ALL t'VllNTS YOU HAl-'F. f\OTlllW; TO WOHRY ,Ulfl(;T. If NOT LILLl~tv 8.flL.fRD C..f 'V .'>11orr }'()II I/OW. TO DEJ-ELOP YOI R FrJLLMT Pt>TE\T1'l t>F. BEAUTY. It all begins w1lh your trained figure counselor She will give you a lhoroogh figure analysis lo help YoU set your weight goals. Then show you how our method can help you a0Qu1re your new prooort1on1. Your Complimentary ~ ...... ' ANALYSIS ; 611·2 .... Try Ill w. w.v. ,CMI.. . •• ltl ~' o others hoYt • .f No Stronuous Exercise .f No Shots or Pills ./Nutritional Guidance A f AMf AM ~ ""'9 C:OMPAlllt TO Hl\IMCJ TOTALLY ATIUCTl•a. IP TOVU LIH Menf WOMIM, YOU'U. Mllll $OM1 ._, YOA~IT. .f No Disrobing ./ Supervised Attention ( 10 Years Experience·~ • ·,1,dt«ue B~ . OP1M DAILY ... I SAT.t .. I ' Wedneedar. A?f1121. um DAILY PILOT C1 IOOMER by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson PEANUTS I by C~Cllits M. Schut. 5M~·5 GOI SOMefHING NoN~ m: AflNoiD·s OTHell OATE? HAV'& A 006 NAMt17 SANDY -------.., . • . !' .; ' ; .. INSIDE WOODY ALLEN <,t)U'RE GOl~G 10 MEET A M.AJ.J wm-l A l.OT ~ }J()t-JE"{ ... FUNKY WINKERBEAN DO <.Ol.J K~ A~I~ Asour "THESE BalCES MARKED BAND Clff:)/.) 1HAT ARE STACKED iO 1HE C£1LIN& JN OUR G(JM~ T AMK McNAMARA MAHCY '! ~ ~ f -: £ • ' Q . . l ENJ OYED GOING TO THE MOVIES TODAY ···BUT FROM NO\./ ON--- by Joe Marthen ~ 00 1: Kl-k>W'? vJl-IAT DO :r LOOI( L.I KE - A Ml~D READER? by Tom Batiuk TANK! GOlV LORD NO i NOT A CRlTIC t by Emie Bushmiller ··-LET$ NOT SIT IN THE FRONT ROW MOnEY1S CREW PO>, \).llRV~· MEAN5 "tlW" You HA\JE NO [X;51~S 86CAl..15e AW.. ~XPeC'fATION& HAYE Se~~ REMOV€D FROM YOUR MlND .. DOOLEY'S WORLD MY FOLJ(S HAD A DISCUSSION LAST NIGHT. .. DR. SMOCK ;t'L.L. HAVEa YOU~ ORPE:R RE:Ar::>Y IN vUS,-A MOMGN,-, M~S. e>AR-rON ..• MOON MULLINS DAD THINKS MOM RUNS UP TOO MAN'/ BILLS!... '- ; ___ ...._}~ __ ,,..,,t' 6u:s,,.,. .. ,,. _ __ J TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 45 ••• UNITED Feature Syndicate t !>ay' o Shat>ler 1 K•ndol 5 M ddle boMOI Preti' •16 Rer1u 11d 9 or·~r· Marner' 4 7 Dike•. f l•ot novel 4q Woat~e· 14 Peevfl tn,'\"I '>WO :1 t 5 fl'nt11~ SJ W•'1dSrll• " court ~ • Re'11e~·110: sullace -lQIPAmf''I' 16 Crinkly 511 Helo CIOlh 59 Ca1-1or• ' t 7 Russian city girls name 61 cub 18 Suaoecrers C:ilt>J•PI smell this i' lnlorm.11 wa<ds t'. Mus•c.1 19 Excite 10 o·rec• t,}n '1nger fi3Cea'4'a l :.'O Comes l•¥e closer to n4 Sriir (! 'nMade re" bel·o~r. f~ "'llOl>IM 24 Raises lib Two,,. " 26 L•ooratn 000• 21 P11v f 7 C•1c11 S"l"' <lllE''l'•on t I • '1QO' ,-~"do<S81"'~~t U' ~ .a .. :> J ~".)t'" 10"'"'"1~ wPStl'a"' •r.o t;> So••~ 'le•al n t; r• 4J Qtl~Ptvfld 11 l'•\ \• ~~ 0~e .,.,,0 29 Unriru1c1plPd ·"' R"'' ,., " 111rs c;;ar DOWN min I 8ug1nri1ng mp ,Is 30 Papal namt' I Low JI British 4 7 Co1tPs1x>nC1 33 Thlol<>o•CBI 11umm1ng weaDOnS 48 siow-mov schools aouno 23 ln·bclween .no oerson 37 Made• 2 Petroleum mf!a1, 50 Posts study of well ~5 Br ring· · 5 t Stoo uo 38 Remove, J AQ1Mt1c. .'ll lcJeal oh1ces obstructions grow Ill JO Made loans 52 Full of tall from 4 E,01011ng ~1 Moderate c;;rasses 39 Outer edgo !) Mem of '.l:? Polish river 53 Other 40 Become Le9 3J Bird One ~ aware of A&semblv 34 Formal spouse 4 1 Cause a boll 15 Fronl•l'I law poem 54 Iris la~pr to sound olftcer 35 Ending with 55 ····and file 42 lmllates 2 7 Small case and 56 Olymo•c words person govern Games 44 Oo 8 Aclsa& 36 Pflnl1ng event aometh1ng med11tor 111110 60 Anneit 11 Wl'AT J.AOVI!} TU~T Wl.ltCH DOT~/ E.AIR1Cl-J ~ HAND DI= '<OAIOE"-._ K.Alt~r_? -PA.Arr -:. :PANT,~ .f.7.0 JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH ·~'f S'tHOtH .. ~L~fll~ """""" ArcJt'l.lt.1 ~ . . -----.. :;_<;,tf!1t,LE~ TMANK GOODNE:-55 ~MY AAA5 t<.f HAte··l-IAR-~AIW TO l<EEP A . .51~At€7HT · i=ACE LOOKtf!IG AT RD~'J' 5HE 5 STAVING Wtnl MY MOTHER UNTIL f CAN 6fT ORGANIZED IN MV NEW 106! I Ml55 JULIE VERY 'Y\UCH: THE FARM'S AOOllT tZO MILES FROM HERE ... euT WITH· OUT A CAR I CAN'T Gff ™ERE OFTEN! ~-<£ ---~ ... - ~ire: Heft'; ONe ~'T'&C> Aall1 171~: by Mell 'I i l • I j ' J/.~ "~ 0 1/J ~ ~ J ~ II ~ by Templeton and Formcm. tf'5 l.11<6 BEIN' A C~IC>.60 cu~ FAN! by Rogff Bradfield ·BU'f SH£ SAYS W~EP-J A WIFf. 13UY6 ON CRrorf, SHE:S RrAU.V JUST DISPLAYIN6 UER CONFIDENCE IN HER HlJSfWJD by GeorCJe Lemont .. - • f:4 DAILY PtLOT T U!!day. Apt'!I 28, 1977 PVBUC NOTICE JtOTl"Otl .... ltUUCTitANSllllt \UllCIU<MlCOUltTOllTWI "9c96.,_.tt!J U C.C. I ST ATI Of' C:AU R>ltN IA f'Ott N•llte h ll••••Y ol11t11 to Ille TMICIOUNTYOllC>ttANOI Crecfl"'°' Of PACEMATIC \YSTIMS. Me .... t)tt Tr..,~......._ lllnl_ ecter.-• ls NOTIC:I Oii MI AltlNOOll PCTITIOM 1liMI ~ A-. ~II• 111. t.ltl llOlt ~Tl 011 WILL ANO llOtl lolue, C-ty .. Or..,qe, Stele .. LITTlltS 011 AOMINISTltATION Callfonff, llltll t llllfil .. ...,, ... h .-it WITM WIU.MfNllCIO IOlle ....... JNLINOVSTltlf~INC:., thlete of VICfOlt 0£01t0E' lrt~1...._.....,,....,., _ _,,_,,, JOHHSTOff ~ IM l'°9llft *--· loil ....... °"'' NO'lle5 IS H£R£8Y OIVtN -· loleu. ColHlty Of Or-Mlllt .. VICTOR OIOAGt! JOt4~TOH, JR C.llfoo'lllL ,,."lltCl-t Mtlllontof ,.,_teO' fllt .,._y lo W lY-...cl It.. Wtll olld 10r 1\wontt of Lf'tltt\ ot c.tltel t1 1'60 LoQom ""'"-· "111• 1e111 4'ctMlnh tr41110ft wit!\ Wiii ,..,_ • .,, •• Co>t.t """'-' c.ountv er' Or11191. iltl• • loren<• to """"" '' -tor '"""'' CollfonllL o.rllcul•,. -llWllll'lell,.,.....,111.ct $.olel ~I• fl9oKnllff 111 teMfOI <ti htt•lno lht' wm• ., .. ....., "" lo• .,, All Coct 111 t,_., II.nu,.. .. llQUlpc M•Y 10. 1'11 •I 10 00 t"'. If\ I~ mt11t.,..QOOdwllloft1>at"'°"ufttlut <ooirtrOO"'ol 0.-t.._i No )o• W'd 1119 buSl,_s IUtO-t l PACE MAT IC tourt, •I ICOClvlt c:.tnttr Dri\tOtWHl.I" SYUEMS tnCI ~tel .. '* LOotn tlle CltyolStnttAM ColltO'lll•. 4' .. -. $ullt IOI. Cbttt Meat. Coumv Otteo ACWll 10 19H of~fllQe.5tlttafColllornl• Wll.LIAMll. S1JOMN. T,,.1>111~ trtnJfetwlll w conwmmtt C-IV Cit•~ tclOll Wtftert ... ltleloy01M•v.1•11et MILTOMM. QOl.DaN Mtt lltrl-•ftd Mt<Ftrlfnt. io)O UUWUll!lrtalvd E•tt ftll St-t. Suitt 107, Sent• An•. Sullt n• C..OU..tyofOf-.. Sttlle of C..lltomlt . l n•r11 Hllll. CA. '°111 So ltr llS ~ 10 Ille Tr.,,\ltr-, h i• CJtJl"9-lJll tll IMillnMl N-l ---U\tcl Att-br .... ,._ by Trt11$1tf'or\ IQ< 11\t tllr•t Yt llr\ IHI PuDlltfttd Or-Co<lfl 04ilY PllQi pe1t II dlfftnnl lrom '"" .cio .... ,. ADl'llU,1',andMtyJ,"n 16'~11 H~ 0.teel: Aprll 11, "" .1 ..... 11 ......... 1 .. ~E ...... <e Tr_,..._ Me<•Altl.ANll &MKllAltl.ANll ............ s.ttt• S."'•AM,CAtms PuDf~ Or-C.OOst Otlly Pllo!, AO<ll M. '911 111).n PUBUC NOTICE lllCTITIOUS I USINISS NAMll STATl!MIEHT T.,. tollowlr>Q oerson• trt Oo•n(I bu\i""'\\., PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATl!MIHT Tl\t toOOOflnQ "'"'°"I\~ Du>•· MH•\ PACIFIC HOUSEWARES COM PANY ~~s '°"" Hlo:-av. 5'JnMt 8H<I> CA 'IOl'1 Wllll-Oil••\ 0-... IOU Co<l\1 Hloh••Y ~ .... IH<>eh, CA '010 Th•\ OU\l!W" I\ <ono<leled bv"" 111 dlVtdu•I w1111.-no .... 1s0wert llll\ \1111-••• flllld wtll\ ti\• CounlY Cler~ of Or•not (quntv on M•rcll 11. 1"71 L 0 R I H l A Y L 0 R A N D F7_.. l'llCHARDS AGENCY. 50S Sovlll Main Publl\tw<I 0.ano> C.,.,I 0Aoly Piiot Street Suitt t, Ortnge. Cafltornla 4'0<ll?t,..,..,M<!lyl. 10 II 1017 .,... 1112" LOlll H . TAYLOR 4 HO ------------i Al('HAROS. INC.. " C.lllO'nla (0/ oo••llOfl. ~ Soult> Mein StrO<>t. Su•I• PUBLIC NOTICE 1,0••"'1'! Ca1110'nl•Ol$63 ------------Tiii\ bU>l,,.u Is COllOUtlPd by. cor l'ICTITIOUS llUSINCH porallon ..._ HAMI STATEMENT LORIN, TAYLORatl() Tiit lotlowir>Q ptf'Wn I• OOir>Q DOM· lllCHAAOS.ll'IC ne\\H ' I EldonMN<Mm .... c•lllarv Y El.LOW BRICK ROAD ICE Tl\" •f.tltmen1 •a• llle<J wlln "'' CREAM COMPANY • .OS1 EKUOl!ro county Clerk ot Or.Moe County on or1 ... ll'V!ne, C..lllornla'1714 a.C>l'U 21. 1'17 A-Id Antl\ony Gltlllam ,, . .OS? 0 I l'PU01 l1J E><uOttO OrlY1J, ftYllW, Colltornla Pubt°'htcl ()r-C:0.1t di Y I 0 tl714 410tll 26, ...OMty >. 10. 11 1071 Tnl• blatnM• i• conouctotd bY an 1n !Ill II OIYIOU•I ------------RonGHlhtmJr PUBLIC NOTICE Thi' 1141-t W~I 1110(! '""" ,,,. -----------Ill Covnly Cttrt Of Or.-iQO C:O..nlyon April lllCTIT10US8USIHISS U, "77 ll'Jtt .. HAMIESTATIMEHT Publl"*I Or*'Qt Co<l\I OatlY Pltot, Ti.. tot._l"O llff'I0<1• a••cto•no bO\I· Aorfl 16 • ...,""'Y >. 10. 11. 1971 111•n M"4\ AllllOWMART P"M ARROW\ CE f6108•1>cock (m.talMw CA'7U7 PUBLIC NOTI Fr-rick Pomoeol "°'1100 110601 tewa Rtw r Circle. "oootal'I Vall•y C" flCTITIOUI IUSIN•U onoe NAMESTATSNNT s.,,,.,..1 .,,,..,_., Porotto. I\ Mo... TIM fotlowlno --I• dolno DuM· ,.,.,., (lrtlt Cot°"" do•l MM t1&U MU•• T'11> bu•'""" '' <O'ldu<ttct by • HOLE IN THE SOLE, 11110·A 0t"-rflpart.-r\11lo 8roo kl\ur•I Founl•ln V•ll•r Frf!dPomoell Pon110 C..lllO'nl•t710I S.muet Pomoeh Pon110 ~rtt<I LUU. 11111 Gofdt11 We\1 T ,,,, "•.lemenl W&\ hi"" woth Ill• Apt 41 Hunltnoton B<tttll, ColllorNt ._nunly Clerk Of Or-County on 4Pri1 tlMJ •· 1011 t "" bu\IM\\ I• tondutltcl 11'1 on "' l'JOJl Olvtctuol Pubtl•..-d 0r"'100 Co<!•I 0411• Piiot Gerald L\Az Aorll 11 t9 26an<1Mof) 1011 • TM• \lettf"""' wH tll..S wllll IM t462 " County Clerk ol Ounoe Courltv on"'°'" 2~. ""· PUBLIC NOTICE I/Ga II F74S70 Publl•htd Ortt"IJ<! (.!MUI Dally Pilot Aprl 1 ».and May l. 10. t1. 1077 I It 1 II PUBLIC NOTICE ' SUPClllOlt COUltTOF THE STAT901'CALl~HIAl'Oll TNll COUNTY 01' Oil AH GE Ne A_.USI PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI 0 11 MllARtN G O F lllTITIO-. l'04t Plt094Tll OF WILL ------------IAHO 11011 LETTERS l£STAMIEN l"I TAlt'I' jtJjD FOil AUTMORIZ.ATIOM FICTITIOUS8USINEU TO ADMINISTlllt UMOEll THE N4MESTAfEM•NT fNDll'll~MT ADMINISTRATION 1'1f>tollow1nq0t"•on-.••tdOlnqh11\l· OF llSTATllSAc;T llllt()41ATE COO£ n"' •• S'1 llT SIQI \T4A BOWi 1141 SO Krint1 Allt E\l•lf of AL THI: A VlllC.INIA 41Mh••m CA01Sl• HOltTON,0.CHW<! l•r••I lnlrrn••lt>nA I lnr , I HOTICI! IS MEAEIV C.IVEN ""' «•tllo•nl t '"'""'tloon l•H W•h"4re MARCIA ANlf COX "4-. lllf'O ''"'''" 1 8•vt1 LO,Ano<-•.-.CA~IO Dtlltlon !or Pn1btW ol Wiii •net lor •\ l n1, bu'lt,,,.,\\ t\blflnq CO"Gvf tod bv • \uen<• of \.A'tfil'n T9"'t~t.;,..., -o '""'" 4.0 tOOr•hOf"I oetUt°""'.,.. Jw .vt~U•hon to "~ J6.tf el 1ntttfMflM1Al. tn• mlnht•r t"9 ~• vnd9'r" l"°" I~~., Ell() ... , An ....... P,..\!Mnl d'""I AOmll>f\t•Mlon o• E "•'"' An Tl\I, \Mlv""'"t wl't-. flh'd with thoft u;;·-r,,t'MtP C.odlt Jllt1.-t ~l r•••'"""-• to r .xintv Cler~ Of °'""0-Cou<\lv ~" "°''1 wlll<n I\ -llO< '"' ... ' N rtl<ul•" W, !~II And IMI --on0 Ola<t of 119•""11 1114en I ... ••ll'W ll<K -~ IO• "'"'' I I 1•>1 t~tlleS AIUM,!MI lOSWlltNrtllYll . •1'00 L" ...... , ... CA tOOlt Pu1>11.,,.110<""90 Cl>'tll D••lv Piiot "o•lll& aMM•y) 10.11 IOI "'" n PUBUC NOTICE ' ft 10 00 • m '" ,.,. ,_,,..,.,, Of 09t>art-... ) O' , .. d <-• ... tOO (1¥1( ,..,.,..,. Orh• W••l 1n lhit ,,, .. o• S.nta 4'N C..•1f0tfll\ 0•tt41 Aor" n t'11 WILU AMll \tJOtllf. '-"<tOeo t.AWOlll'l<llSOPTH~A· M WMAUNO ANO JO.LIWI l'OttH l•tM ............ .. -. ...-----.u.-Ttl ,,. •• ....., A""""'"' .... ......._ p.,., .. ...., (>'-"°"" O"'l'f P l"" All' •2• 11 --1 1•11 ,,.,,.. ,, 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T ...... for We ·············•··•·•·•·· ...................... . .......... ....................... G1 .. IOOZ Ge•:.. 1002 1-----------1 ............................................. . IUOR5' A.......... 3 ••• $59,500 MESA vnoE ..W cMdl .....,. .. 'Family sized home locat· JU\ ed on tree lined street. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 cWly cmd ,..,...... ..,.... Tile entry to huge lMna balb home with new ron l-diatlty. TINt room. Country stytea carpeting. drapes and DAILY PILOT ...... kitchen. Lar1e r ear pcint. for Cun and enter incl'SMn Por W. •••••••••••••••••••••• ~.~~ ..... ~~-~.~~ ..... . G ~ IOO GtMI.. IOOZ ... ,.. . ••.••.•.....•......... ................................................................. 9UICK MOVI IM Pride of owoen1h1p Is reneettld throuahout this be•utiCully up~raded 4 bedroom. 1 ~. batbs home. 18000 BTU A/C Wtll keep you cool thii. summer lhrouah. Walk· lnl dist.ance to abopp91 C'tllt.en and parb. T rtreplacea and kltth shelves galore. Cull "-'DI· lect mOSG253S. Geo••.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPfN Jli q • II S '!JN 10"' N I( I ' m 'REAL 1 ATERS 1 -_, hWlty for ... first a.. ~d. Aasumable V.A. taininl a la~e yard wltb c:orftd iwrtto..ty. o1 121';~~ ~:1~!~H1:~ ~~!CJ~~ --·u-0·0·1·su·---c IOOZ for tbLs unique buy. Call 556-2660. IA YFROMT , ~3. 11 \ •IJl>I •ou ., •. ,. t;: SELECT Near new 4 bdrm. + R~ Mtwport CottocJe T'PROPERTtES formal dinmg rm. & up· _...,....... Cute 2 bedroom-freshly [WNIHil :::.~~o E;!~~~u"; ~=~~~~:~ St~~~~~E. ~·1Motkr. All real e11tale advertised 111 lhc. newspaper is sub· jed. Lo the t"ederal Fair Hous ing Act o r 1968 which makes it Illegal lo advertise "any pre· rerence. hm1tatJon, or 4iscrtm1naUon baaed on race. color. relJgion, sex. or nauonal origtn, or an 1.Dlenuoo to make any stJCh preference. hm1t.a· lion, or d.1Scn minaUon." ' Prime Eastside Costa 2~ miles lo the surf with cess. Zoned commerdal. Mesa location! Giant Lawson ll remarkable custom Be st deal in towo ! SOMERSIJ . paneled llv. rm. huae built 3 bdrm + den + $73.500. Call for appt. to 1n Harbot View Homes. fam. rm. host.a massive family rm home de-stt. Newpaint insideandout. brick frplc. Convenient Rutty Company signed Lo maximize the PETE BARRETT Upgraded carpets, wall chef's kitchen . Large Panora m 1 c. h 111 Y -REALTY-covenngs and drapes. 5 secluded master win(. raoclllaod view. Also S Bedrms. lge family room Sliding glass doors to car covered parking + 142·Sll0 wtwet bar. Formal dm-patio & E ·Z care yard room rorcampers. boata . ..__..._..-1111111111.,1111111111~1111111~ Ing room. 2 Fireplaces Possible assumption of -------•--t etc. The corral can ac· View covered patio. low VA loan! Take ad SHELTERED commodale as many nus newspaper will not Somerset model Askmg vantage. call now. horsesasyoucouldever knowingly accept any ooJy $169,950. 644·7270. 646-7171 want with room to spare. advertis ing for real Ol'lNfff9·•"'UN1osrN<f• INVESTMENT OFFERING PR1CE VA MO DOWN ;;;,:;;:~:~·~. l'ldf41 ~.J~~;~,:i."::o~ c.J'i:~z. 1 ·.; Do wn. Ex cellent /Jn NICiEL . il/\ILEY & ASSOCI ATES Several 3 & 4 bedroom homes available. Hurry . Call 540.3660 CioeMf'al I 002 ~~~~~~~~~1 ---------1 <Wpreciation. No out of ••• ••••••••••• •• • •• •••• : COSTA MESA pocket expenses. Gro.5s 1----------- IE YOUR OWM 2 Bdrm .. 2 baths. brand multiplier 6.99. Call for Wflela11 LANDLORD OCEAM VIEW new condo. never oc appt. We have other pro· J ust what the doctor's or-$60,000 cupied: 2 car garage, pert1es ranging from 4 dered · peace. fresh air, Older home, great in· large sundeck /balcony units u . 549·1!655 sunshine. Where inOuen· vestment property or SSS.000 F=13 IJal fam1J1es live. Slidin g start home J ust listed. UPERB doors open lo sunswept View of ocean from front QMES patio. Graceful pJa.nungs terrace. Hurry! Call col-reqwre minimum care. lect (714)~67 Call today, tomorrow C'P!N1r19·<'\•l.Jf'1:n,...,.,.,. f;lfilfj [~Htlld UPPER BAY ATTHEIEACH 17UMITS $410,000 Pnme ocean rental units that generate high m- come Fanta!>llC' summer rentals and permanent tenants. 2 BR's, 1 BR's + Bach's Seller will pat· tern financing lo buyers needs. Hurry for lhis on ce in a lifetime op- oortunilv. Call 963·7881 OIY'' 'II Q • II\''''' ,r-,~1 '' I• 1ee11t1 VIEW-DELIGHT Charmmg 3 Bedroom, 2 bath home Wlth sweeping upper Newport Bay view. luxunous Master bedroom suite, soaring woodbeam cathedral beam ceilings and much more. Only $115.000. fee. Call 644-7211 Exclusive Listin ALL TERMS! associated BRO .. fll', ll!llll'l~S 101·. w 9.i•b ... 1 (\" lb6 I $65 000 ~ Sharp East.1tde. 3 bed rm, 2 bath on quiet corner Room for your boat o motor home. Hurry. woo 'l last. Call ~·5880. "'S.P~ HERITAGE • • REALTORS The BtuH.-Hetp Sales associates wanted f or su mmer rus h . Volume. q ualified walk· m bu1>mess. Top com· rruss1ons paid Confideo· lial mqwnes We need 2 new associates now. Ask for Chuck Colesworttiy & Co. REAL TORS 640·0020 T .... isAnyone? Villa Park 1\1 acrl· Room ______ ......... ~ for tennis court, vool and horses. Quiel t'ountry scltlniz with ham. t•111·ral. nding nng. frwl lrt·cs. Uiplc garage, workshop. 2 Story 2500 sq.ft old Colonial style house. 3 Bcdrm, 2 bath. huge fam rm, rormal dine. tountry k1tcht!n & 2 fireplaces. Call for delails. 546-5880. C-2 Corner Choice Newport Dl vd location with 166' fron· tage. Building and por lion of lot c urre ntly l ease d . Ca ll f o partJculars $125,000. ~HERITAGE :·· REALTORS ANYTIMEi--.................. YOUWOH'T ll:LIEVE THIS 'I• ACRE $64, 990 Cul-de·sac entry to tree· lined pnvate dnve lt!ad~ to separate garage ~ works hop ! Private courtyard +BBQ pal.lo + VOLLEY BALL court + room for POOL! UNBELIEVABLE' Kids fl ayhouse outpost! nslde Is a gourmet kitchen + sep. fam. rm. + 3 Mammoth bdrms ! A never again opportumty' Won't last the weekend Call QUICK 847-6010 •>Pf'• ,,,.,, "~"'' [®IS&Hil EXECUTIVE BEACH TRI-LEVEL ~9,4 00 TOTAL DOWM REAL ESTATE NEED A HOUSE Do you have real est.ate needs? Probably. or you wouldn't be reading these pages. Coats & Wallace 1s a locally owned company serving the Harbor area aince 1963 We'll be happy to asSlSt you In selling your home or purchasing another. Call ........ ~ '. COATS &WALLACE REA~ ESTATE . INC . Country Francia Provincial Garden atrium entrance Focal used brick dble l? executiv~ double door fireplace from Country tile entry.! Step town hv k 1 t c h e n . d In 1 n g to rm + King Henry Vlll beamed ce11tng livln( rormal dine! Gourmet rm 3 bedrm, 2"2 bath. at- galley + toast your toes I tached large beamed fireplace in fam. rm ceiling ranuly room wllh Soar1n" staircase to Swedish rplc. Quiet cul· seperate bdrm complex. de-sac. $111 .300. Sweeptn~ mstr. bedrm Open Wed end Sun 1·5 n;t.reat + 3 MJt1mmoth 384 !'t11ra Loma kiddies bdrms BBQ offlrvmc&Umversity backyard! Truly a c l L A s s LIDO ISLE Don't mti;i. the opportunl ty or con ... 1dcnn.: lh1i. newly listed custom lJl!auty Ln one of our mo:.t exclusive areas A c:barmme beach retreat w pnvacy & seclusion for the busy execulJve. Beller take a look TODAY ! Only Sl!>0,000 &.lb nu. Iii CadLllaca to Go-Carta What.ever the Fad Roll 'em off the market With a Classified Ad Call Now ' 642-5678 VA. FHA or conventional Cor this S62.900 sup~r bargain. 2111 Baths. 400 sq ft. family room, 7800 sq fl. block walled yard with vegetable garden. Dble garagc 531·5800. eves:S43-63S5 WesthaYen Realtors I Inn RE M~orla &~ MESA VERDE FOR OML Y $85,500 •-h Super large 4 bedroom Capistrano -00 home Super large fam t-Custom Duplex $140,000 ly room 20x21. Super ha ndsome showcase 1 400L17"~~ , fOR AU. ca11forpnvatci.howmg1 C.M =::_ uw ~!,~l~~Q'./1 ,,.,.,1,1N •••I 4 . · .. ··::a. [~-Agent, 559 4556 large lot Two s uper Open llouse Sat Sun r1rcplaces at a super ___ J4_s_1_1_v_1_a_V_e_·r_d_l! __ 1 pr1 ce that won't I as t long. 546-2313. LUXURY SUPREME Ol'fN rr1 Q ."~IUN 108/ MCI I [•IHOlld r~~~~;~:·~i~; Oversi zed master bedroom 13x27 with bis _________ .. ,a nd he r c losets & cathedral ce1I.. dining TIME IS MONEY rm. + eating area 1n Don't wait any longer. kitchen. Handsome You can't a fford 11 . slumpswne.brick frplr., Home prices are subject air-cond. Carpets & to change daily. Pick drapes Included at your next home and 116.500 freeze lhe price now. We lc6oa lay Prop. have several new ex-Realtors separated vanity. Plus three spacious Sal bedrooms. c c locatlon on olf\\ c largest lots in are4. Both formal and Informal din- ing areas, vaulted cell· ings and many. many ex- tras. Only 2 years new. 546-2313. oPIN 111 Q • rr \''IN ION M(f ' [tz.&1111 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 SUK&FIND• HERCULES R O R B 0 Q S E T E R C I P 0 8 0 A E T B A A X X R L l U 8 G G P B X R P R S O R I B L A 8 I H N A C A E C E P D E T L Q H A R B 0 H L T T H R E E H Y G t O S H Z N A X Y L S S E S S R 0 H C R t T B 0 A R Y D V E A P P L E S X H M T S t M R T S R Y L P S E L A T S M t 0 L R 0 Y S C A 0 U L 0 0 U G X L A P L L E R £ C E £ E C E S 0 B Y S L S S R I I L I 0 W S T R S 0 S H Y E B L L R B D R N N W T R E l W W A L L I R 0 A R 0 R E X 0 D Y H Y D 0 T 0 B N l ( I R 0 I X 0 0 L P A S S E E A • S G A A ' 0 D 0 ( D A E H E E R H T A C A M M l B L L 8 8 M 0 T E R C Y S C ts 8 QOOd day to acfvertiM kl the Dally Pilot Classified Section. clua1 ve offerings. Priced • 675-7060 • r ealistically fromr·--------• SU5.000 to $1..57,000 Call1-------- today for detailed in· GtMr.. 1002 Gt•ral 1002 formation and appoint· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ment for private vlew- IJ\p. 67~. Ol'fN tu 0 • rl \ 'U'" l(\ft; '''fl [efiiNtll 120 Acres OrmMp County Near Sllverado Canyon. Sl800 per acre. Own a chunk of Orange County at a rldlculoualy low price. Hurry, just listed. ca115'0·W l .. .,.$,.HERITAGE . • REALTORS Don't drop the ball! Get a Job with a low·coat Oal!y Pilot Claulflcd Ad. Phone 642.5678 macnab / lrvtne realty OMI OF A ICIMD OCIAM VIEW HOME Beauti(ully customized 3 BR. 2~ bath family home w/vaulted & beamed ceilings. Separate guest quarte rs for mothe r -in-law or teenager . A truly magnificent "Portofino" $199,500 Loi!i MiJler 642-8235. <QSO> 642·823S 644·6200 901 Dover Drive Harbor View C.mer lrvlne at C.mpus va1i.y C.nttr 7S2-1414 G...-al IOOZ G....... IOQ .............................................. S(C\\.~lA-~t,~s· Tira# fflfri9ui11g Word Gome wit!. o Cltud.le ------..... ""CIAY I.~ .~..._ .. .. ........ ~...-. ... looo IO '°"" ·-........ I OTUTEL I I I r r CE 110111 ILlllS CD . OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE I STOaY UMDA Pl.AM IM1MllWllfl 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths Master Suite. Gated Patio Entry. Wrap-around Rear Patio 4' Dog Run. FullY Alr Conditioned. Electronic Fitter. Re decorated Throughout. New Kitchen. Only Steps To Pool. Near Schools &c Shops. InclUdini Land $158,500. Ill DOfa OllYI ........ S. ....... florS. ....... FwS* MonftForS* HonnforS. "°"'"forS. Tu.!!y.Apri129, 19n OAILVPILOT ('& • •• •• . . . •• ••• . .•• ..••• ••••..•...... ... ... . .• • •..•..•..•. '... .• . . . . . .. . . . . . • . . • •... .•... .. .• . • . . • . • •.• .. .•.•. .•• . . .. . •. . . •• . ..•. .. . . .• ........ ..... s. ....... ..,. s. ........ ....,_ ,. ~- • ••• • I 002 •••r• I 001 •••r• I ooz G1•rtll I 002 ..-.00 Pnw+ I oo.1 ea.ta Meta t DZ4 •••••A•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• . ...••.....•...•..•••. . ~ . ··-···· ••••••••••••••• ....... ••••• ••••••••••• ••• •• • •• • •••••• ••••• ••• ••••• •• • •• • ... .... ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ........ ....._.. t"" ... o • ----.... '04I a ...... .._.. ' ... ~. (ba, wet bar. lormaJ llAUTlllUL • -v-. _,..... -.--.............. . dl.o.rm. dita " ra.m.rm. -••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• - OH WOWI IS THIS A IEAUTI Beautiful, quiet comer lot in a well maintained neighborhood, im· maculate 3 bedroom home loaded with decorator touches that create lasting charm. Lattice covered brick patio and a sparkling free form pool. Oh Wow! Convenient Westcurr location neai schools and stores. Presented at $153,500. It's a beaut! 0,. After 1....., D911y at 1221 S.U.x Drop0..0.... U,_,l()UI: li()Ml:S REAL TORS'>, 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar also 1n Mesa v~rde, at 546 · 5990 ca ... ,.. 1002,Cii•ral 1002 ....................... ···················-···· \,\ l .~1.1 y !\ TAYLOR CO. 1<.1-: .. \ t.Tu I\ s s111t·t· n M <; I P11D1 OF 0 OWNERSHIP-I UMITS Near new quality blt 5 unit bldg in Newport Harbor High vicinity. Gorgeous 3 BR owner's unit w/fam rm, formal DR & 2lh baths. 4 Other units w/2 BR. 2 baths. Atriums & patios. A real prime prop. $295,000. 211 I S-J~Hihload MEWPOIT CIHT!R, H.I. 644-4910 GeMrat I OOZ Getterol I OOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• W9CI Open House 1-5 31 09 Griset pt, Mr So. Coast Pina PRIVACY AND PLEASURE SPANISH ESTATE 3 IR· $69,950 Prime pride or ownership area. Almost new. Dramatic entry to huge family sized living room with crackling fireplace and vaulted INCOME EXCHANGE Absentee owner wants larger units. Offers 7 yr. old, immaculate, Newport Island duplex. 3 Bdrms.. 2 baths.· frplc .. encl. garage, each unit. $172,000. DOVER-SHORES BEAUTY Panoramic view of bay, ocean & Fashion Island; magnificent 4 bdrm .. family nn .. formal dining rm. & 3 car garage. $350.000. 759-0811 4\)0 NEWPOHT CENT[ A DHIVE 759 0811 t I 002 GCMf'Gf 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BA YFRONT. pier & fl oat. lots $185.000 to $325,000. to build your own custom home. Several areas to choose from. PR ESTlG E waterfront homes with pier & float from $385,000 up. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 8oy~1de Drive. N .B 675 6161 $119,SOO. O'fl·S'l28 SANTA ~ PWHGllll COUNTRY CWI 4 •POOL HOME PEMIMDUPUX Upper 3.Br. 2 bit with view or bay & ocean, lower 28r. a bit (both w /trplcs >. Complot.ely redecorated. Upper leased, lower avallbable. Exclnt cond. S168.SOO. C.....-y V1lollt R.E. '213latSt. NB Ask for LOU OSBORN 873-6281 Iii your view rrom this Sunny cou.otry kitchen k>ve.ly tge Z stry bome wtth alld.lnt 1lau doors righl oo 9tb green. Frml 09en.ll1g onto • private din rm, fmty rm, 4 bdrins p&ilo & pool. Vaulte.d & 3 baths Including ceilings with balcony. separate matr 11ulte. overlooking the Uvlna Prolesaiooa.l lnd.acaped. ro o m . De c o r a t o r ~9'91. wallpaper & wood panel Ing. $86.900. Get ready Walkt!r t; l t:t! Real (stale for summer~ Call now 7SM700 OffN I~ Q •II) llJN 10111 '"'Ct ' ec..a..a .. M• I 022 ---~=-..__-············ ........... ---------i IY OWMER HAID TO FIND ~Hf -REitL ' ~l:Jl ESTATERS Spyglass Hill. S>.69.000. S Popular model with 4 ,._,__ .._. _ _.._......._... Br 3 Ba. View. Harbor oversized bedrms, big __ ,__...,_. View Hills, $189,SOO. 4 Br family room. 2 baths. By owner. 3br. 2ba. fam 2 Ba. View. 640·2981 bltns, fireplace and rm, atrium. S961 Fran· (Qualified Buyers Only> shake roof. Grca t loca · mar Circle .. For Appt. to lion nr Park, tennis see, ca II 846·6772, CORONA courts and all schools. 840-2612.847-4766 HIGH' "'o..105 Asking Ooly $81.500. Call -" 540-US.l, By ownr. 2\.'Jyrs old 4br. .. Lingo RlAl&tm CONTEMPORARY UDWOOD HOME -a.aWToPofllw Wortd...aofLallf' Tlne .... a-·Z IM6s. U*9roomwft •••I•• ....... Loft..,.. ...... ............................. .... View cMcb. ........ ..., •• 1 ... :t y.-d ..... for .axl • I wftwt.J pll W both ., ... ,.,,.. • .s I tS.000 SOUTH LAGUNA 499·4551 497-2489 LAGUNA NIGUEL 495-1728 DANA POlNT 493-8812 PAMOtlAMIC 2ba. tge patio. frplc. 1 m,l OCEAH VIEW to bch. rn.soo. Prin onty lrYiM I 044 1""'9 1-044 A delightful 3 Br, 2 Ba. ,_846_-634 __ 7 _________ 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• home with view from ---------1 nearly every window. _________ ,BY OWNER 3 Br I~ Ba, large master suite. wood Glen mar. good toe.. St:artlr Home! beam ceiling and oak FORSALEBYOWNER $182.ll00.540-0St3 Cute 2 bedrm with hardwood floors in 4Br. 2Ba. Elementary & 3 Br 2 Ba cov'd patio 1ge tustom fire place & "walk to pn"vate ""'ach" n .......... "' schl v~ blk away · . · 'nc:n ull i---' f local.l~n . "" s;Q;~st Plaza l minute lot, nice arc:a. $66 • .....,. tastef Y enc 1.-::u roe AND away. Prin only. 556•7224 Brkr. 673-8661 pal 1 o . Yard 1 • a I a n d s c a p e Owner will carry first OPEN SAT· SUH masterpiece! Near com· lrUtil deed. S172,SOO. $78,000 I • 5 PM munity p•r-k and pool Call644-721 I LANDMARK and tenni& court! Souod Mesa Verde lorgain a.ice? Call Red Carpet /.Jn NIGEL GAILEY Ii. ASSUCIAT ES THECOLOt4Y Lovely home, quiet cuJ. Single story 3 bdrm. 2 Realton. 833·3380. de-s ac street. Prize bath 15x21 ~nW! rm ad· 1~~~~~~~~~ peach tree, party patio dllioo immaculate . best r area . 3 Bedrooms. location · hurry! The Terrace 2 Bdrm .. 2 ba. Cardut Model. Cathedral ceil· inP with clerestory win· dows in llv. rm. and din. rm. Bclght. well de signed kitchen and large bdnns. Highly upgraded Ins.Ide and out. Call to see. $78,SOO 2 good duplexes, l formal dining. living 963-5611. Gwrol t 002 GeMrol I 002 w /swim pool & 3 rentals, room fireplace. Deluxe - •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $165.000; l So. of Hwy on kitchen built·ina. Call lo- coroer. $155.000. By day,BK.R540-l720 • .. ~ WANTED-owner.673-6069 ~~ ~~'~re~~~% B~~: LUSK HARBOR VIEW ""'8111!1 I UR A beautiruJ 4 bedroom family home in the 833-8600 Jlfll.,..,,.. highly desirable Colony of beautiful Irvine VlEW or the hills from 11523 C m a s t e r b e d r o o m "' AMPU' DI~ f RVll(E ~ with pnvate rear yard ; HILLS L.ush garden I~ M5A to $400 000 home. Qwel cul·d e·sac "#I In CollfonHa" LAKE & PARK MOTIVATED Ask r~r Claire Morgan st. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Best buy Sharp 2 l;>edroom. 2 bath ASSOCIATES $167.000 Call for address ---------i home tn new area. Close Call for conf1dent1aJ in· t erv1tiw to ~ell Real Estate from our beautiful Newport Beach office. Call 640-9900 C f Colesworthv a/ VA CUSTOM to shopping & beach. nr.\.L.TORS 640-0010 La, y atz; ~ Owner will consider 2nd ~ 4 BR. family & dining t tde ·"" REAL ESTATE 644·6397 rm. w/pool. 3 yrs new, rus t'u . BY OWNER Harbor View Home Phase II many extras. Will sell BY OWNER. Har View V -Hills. Ocean bay view. A. 645 3 .. 74 3bd, ram. rm. formal din, .... I I wood ooams. 2 frplcs. 'II $170.000.Aft6759·™ ~u REALTY INC. COZY CHARMER ·-====--!!9!!11111111!1! 1 P.!=N!8 :.. 714/846-1371 balcony. Qwet cul-de·sac location Near pool. --------- park, lighted tennis WALNUT Sq\JARE courts and shopping 146150VALRD. $95.000. Call for appt. Open Thurs thru Sun. 2 5. 2 BR. dln rm .. 2 ba .. encl. laundry area. This m~at !·owner. nicely decor "C" Model condo 1s in movc·lll cond. Pool & rec area nearby Walk to Irv High & Hentage Park. £18.500 RANCH REALTY EVB. YH COPELAND 551·2000 REALTOR 552-0434 ~------------~1 Awalt you in this spot· less, beauWuJ 3 bedrm. 2 bath home with family room & central A IC lhruoul. For only ~.950. ceiling. Formal dining. ---------- 4br. 2ba Montego wtbeautHul yards & patio. Commun. pool & club house. Walking dis· tance to schools. close to greenbelt & natural park. $168.SOO. By ownr. ~173 Prine. only. Ocean view. expendable .:::::::~·====:.1TAMARACK VILLAGE 2 BR. deep lot. S.124,750. CALLUSFOR Woodbridge Place. HOMES Greenbriar model. 4 Br. 546-4141 . ~···· COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. Sulton up '" euy euual '" coat o.e1 1nr out111 JUMBO Cl!OCll£T1 Use 0111 s1r1nd of 4 ply med1um.we1aM SJnththc 'l>Ott '"" and 7 strands bediprt~ coiton 101 llefld~ome. richly te•turtd lop per Pat 7211 $11~ 8 18 incl $1.25 for each 1>o11tern Add JSt' uch pallern tor l1rst class airmail llld handlrnii. .S.114 lo Alrce Broolls Needlecraft Dept. 105 Oa1lyP1tot Bo• t63. Old Chelsea Sta. New York. NY 10011. Prm1 Name Address. Zip PanMn Number. tQ( thaft ever belort! 20C deslp' p1u1 3 frtt prlottd In· Jidl lf(W 1976 NClOLECRW CAfALOC1 tw ott)tllina, 75< C!Wttt wftll S.111tts $1.00 Ctwelltt I Wllfrok $1.00 ltlfty fifty h ilts $' 00 1W1t cntlltt Sl.00 $tw ~ lllllt IHll $US ... .,.hit .... . $t.DO J1"tr CNCl!tt ltok $1.00 •"9 Crtdltt h tk $1.00 l11atlllt Cncht Itek i1.oo 6ltttHt Mtcn111 .... S1 .00 IUtflt MMty 8'*' ~1.00 c..;tett lift looll $1.00 CMtlttt AfP,.1 :14 \1.00 U ff11t Afp1111 : 12 50c hM tf II Qellts :t 50c Mtl1t• G."11\ '"' :2 • 50c 11 a.Hts ftt Teay !J IOc ... ti H Jiffy hp IOc Garden view kitchen. Family room adjoins lush terrace through wall or glass. Separate wing for hideaway master suite and guest quarters. 96.1-7881. (~'HI flt i •II • ,,1•1 I~), I •J , ' ie•J . . . . .. . . 9315 e.1e '"' 1ff ..._i_ 11f""'-r- Cently aenll'I ll0w tilt h&hl· l•tt1n1 ~ne$• The 1011 tolla• ~ 111 olt by V neckline •fld V ~ dttarl Ve!) Stmple -no •••tr sum• P11nted P1ttt1n 931 S: M1~· Sim 8. 10. 12. 14. 16. 18. S11t 11 (bust 34) takes 2 S18 JllldS 60 111(-l&bflC. S.lld S l.2S tOf NCh 11911trn ~ 3~ IOI nclt petttrn IOI hnt Class 11rn111l. ~nclhna ..... : Marren Marlin Patte<o Dept 442 Oa1tyP11ot 232 West 18th St.. New York, NY 1001 t Pr1n1 NAME ADDRESS. ZIP SIZE and STYLE NUMBER 0. ,., •111w llew le 111 I Jaltlfl tru? SHd llOll itf tw ... fatt·Wlftttr 'att"~ c.tM1-cllp ct1111C1n fRshlt tor "" p1t11r11 11 JOllt CMite so• n, ••' St• · ~t Itel SIU .. stall\ MIHY C11fts $1.0G .. st.Ht fl lllita looll St GO leltllt Stwt .. hell Sl.OC OPEN DAILY 1·3. 412 DanaPoint 1026 $$8,000. HAZEL. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ca.II us about this Sunny * * 2 b;;. $11 5.000. Call $60,000.$70,000 O.S.1105 or 835-0211. Ext HUNTINGTON HALPINCHIN CUSTOM HOM~ built l!br. twnhme. on green BEA.CH REALTORS with care & quality bell with vaulted ceil· In Tustin & l"in• 9582 THE HOMESELLERS 752.Sl53 WoodbridgeS&S Red.wood Model lo..IE"R 11:'."CH 675--4392 thruoul. Hardwood in~. luxunous master "--floor.;, basement & ocean sww. enl'l ratio & much $65 500 CottaMeso 1024 view. Near marina. more. Cu I 644·7211 . • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""' k' Just 2\':i. mile bike ride lo Open 1925 Lanai Dr 5Br. $225,000. .,....,c RED ROCK!! Twnhs, 3 bdrm 2~ ba, You can live on Red w/frpl, nr lake & pool. 1 Rock i( this 3 bedroom blk lo prk Fl.Illy up· home 1n beautiful graded. P tP.$85,SOOWill ocean, in area of more xlnt country clb loc. ANCHORAGE expensive homes M a n y x l r a s ~mpletely redeco~ated S48-86l4/:rt0-20l8 IHVESTMEHTS inside & oul Private ----------(714) 496-7711 1-------------/.Jn NIGEL BAILEY & ASSCJCIATES Deerfield fits you. It has _le_a_se_. S5_l·_577_4 ___ _ yard hosts sparkling. MESA VERDE 3 br. F IR. ========== S&S Resale Specialists. 3. DIR Nice home. Fine SUPER SHARP! 4 or 5 bdrm models avail, neighborhood. close to 4 Br. 2 ba nr Marina & some~/pools.968·4602 schls. shop'g., churches, Dana 11 ,11 HS. Has PenningtonPropert.Jes a super SPA in a com· pletely landscaped yard. Highl y upgraded throughout. $105,000. Call for appl. OPEN HOUSE W-4 I 0:10 to 4 ATTH:R.UOR Ex.e's.& $44,500 Yes. 1t"s .;;u ll poss 1bl..-to gel a roof over your head for under ~.000! Conve nient location for s hop pmg & community pool & Jacun1 av.ulabll' too• Retter check thl!> out TODAY ' 646 7711 $63,000 l.A>vely family home good neqthborhood 3 Bedroom. 2 bath, l>rick f1rt!place, forced air heat, bwluns and much. much more. CALL library & park. ss9.950. Everything! $95,000. FOR SALE BY OWNeR 5 557·9659 9ji2·2194 Br P1• Ba, detached i--------foouttoin Valley I 034 garage. 15632 Alden Ln. DWGHTFULI. •••••• .. •••••••••••••••• N. W. Hntg Bch. $65.900 897 ·5170 or 897 ·8118 Jus t listed. Dramati<' San Joaquin 2 bdrm, 2 bath Townhouse. Ideal for entertaining dients & 4 BR . 2 BA. & POOL HOME. NEAR SOt;TH COAST PLAZA. SN,000 SUPER NICE! i Professionols HEW ENGLAND fnends. f''antasllc view CHARM ER 5 br·$79,950 of h1lls. park & proposed . RAMCH REALTY lake . 1135# Montanas G 1 ant 2 s lo r Y w Ith 551-2000 Elite. Irvine. Please call . balcony. 5 Huge br's, un· S4S 949 Agent 640·5560 7Sl·3191. MESA DEL MAR 5 Br believable entry ha 11.w, __ a_a_.-i __ .ri_dge ___ Arborialt _________ • · 1 Huge entertainment ctr. Brand New Super up· 1111 w/s~tely fplci Ner ie,~ graded 2 br. 2 ba. tux pool home. By owner. . ' plus crptg. east Y y · condo "-n form dt'n , · Assume FHA loan. a. · '-"" • · · cant w /Im med poss. area. Near lake. $lll.SOO. C: SELECT ws.soo call for appt. T'PROPERTIES 546-2142 ----------- ' WAMTROOM?? 1 S48 l688 $6000 Under mitt. Xlnt ---------u-..B"'YVIEW I Zll:S92·28St. t4: . terms. 495·S906 or ---------__ ,..,..'"" ,.. We have a super arge ROll9!0TS RE"'LTY I h f I h F t 4 '"" "' "'""1833byowner. OWHER Will Large spraw mg ranc urru y ome. ca ures --------• ----------_...,,,. ______ ;;__ _____ _ style Needs PA.INT m Br 2 Ba. huge add on HEL.P FtHAHCE side and out + carpel. fanuly room, Cull bltn Classic home. 3br. J:Y.ba • ......._,Oft LARGE FAMILYn Sulimll your down pay Heres .in opportunity to kitchen. fplc, new WW 81.000. 1161!6 Gladstone Hm1MMr 1042 Thismaybethehomefor men l on l ht s v I! r Y decorate to your tastt-cpt.s thruout & clean as a Cr. By ownr. 554·3166 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• you! A 5 be<lroom home populu 3 ~ruom Lin Excellent floor plan for a new pm. Xtra lge rear 833-2:827 MO DECORATOR wtlh a ramily room, din- coln Mod('( townhom~· in family. For appt. coll )'ard w1shaded patio & 9 Ing room POOL and tx>auurul Wrn11Jhr1dg1t 64S-Q30.1. fruit bearing trees. VACATION HEEDED SPA. About 2700sq. rt. of Estat .. ~ llq.:hly up REDCARPET at home this year · this Thi s upgraded 4 beautiful living.'\ truly .iradcd aod ooout1(ull~· REALTORS lovely Fountain Valley bedroom lri·level home executive's home at 1le<wated U(• Lhe h.n.l to 842·5541 home has it all. Huge is already model perfect $129,000. Call for appt. lift this nt.'w exdus1ve or added fmly rm complete thruout. Formal dilling. I errn ~ S!IK . 500 C ll 11 1 Gott Coww Home! w /pool table & massive family room w /wet bar & 673-8550 ••c--c-Recllc~to$105,000. usedbrickfrplc.Opening many xtras. Reduced to ~1 • ·' ' • ' "' ' -----------3 BR w /fantastic view, to great patio area w /gas $139,900. [a lllill! u1! spac home w /~lushy fi.ropit & fantastic pool, ~ ·Jiciji]J have a s~~2~ofrer or ~g &+ ~~o~in . ~~~;~ ~~~~in~w!h~Si>1:~~FV~e1fJ,~ . ----··-··~-good., tD sell. place an ad Agt. ask for Sharon RV · muc more. "" 1 n the D a 1 I y P 1 Io l !163-896! Under $80.000. 968·3371 or llavt! soml:lth1111ot 111 '''" ~ (.1osslflf'{} odt. clo 1t wl'll Clas.,lfied Section . . -----------M6-l754. REALTY INC. 714/846· 1371 Phone&U-5678. LARGE 1111 GtMral 1002 M ••••••••••••••••••••••· ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIX BEDROO ~-------•--------... family home in conve-1---------------1 ON WATER 120'. SS' dock, 4 Br twnlue on point. Pvt, best vu. $265,000. Ownr/Agt. 714-840-1879 •OADMOOR TUITI.EIOCI New listing. HARD TO FIND. Outstandmg 3 bedrm, dining rm, \'aulted ceilings, fabulous paneled family rm. Park like yard. Many upgrades. Model home condition. $U't.?00· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I SIVIN UMIT5-aAJ..IOA Recently reconditioned. Lots or used brick, open beam ceilings, good parking and very low main· tenance. One block to ocean and bay. All for $347 ,500 A COf.DWaL IAMlla CO. 644-1766 21tt IANo\IOAOUIN HILLS 1110 tit NIWPOflT caHT'l.I\ nient area or Costa Mesa. Freeway close, up· graded carpels & drapes, beautiCuJ patio. Squeaky clean. Molher·ln-law suite. lt~s a lo of house! Only $84,900. CALL NOW 752·7315 Ust Your Costa Mesa Property with Charles Quintard F.8tabli.shed 1946 4°/o TOTAL COMMISSION DON'T GO . INSIDE. ••• • t 11 y o u • v e b e e n lrYfM I 044 Ot.rrSIDE. Adp11ctures,· ••••••••••••••••••••••• que para se o masterful brick work Deane Home, University surrounds a custom cor· Park, Kenaington. 4 Br 3 ner bar·b-que in thla Ba , Fam Rm. unique elaborate backyard. ltis kitchen. Upfrades, by artistic masonry sor· owner. P r nc only. tened by lush Collage! $134,SOO. 552-0896 Trµ1y enchanting! Many detlghlful features in this --------• 3 bedroom. 2 bath home-exquisite lighted at.rium with founlainl- near MILE SQUARE PARK-ell encompeued by a stucco wall Cor com· plete PRIVACY! By ap· polntment only. $'98,SOO. GO FOR IT! and you will If you SM this large 5 bedrm + sep. family rm + sep. den and a large dining room! Compare this much bo.me wltb anything elae lD town and It w.Ul make OpenUl9PM. 671-1250 • believeroutol yout E.1t· DOLLHOUSE I'· jGu~ll cellen~::c=. IASTSIDE Place ......... IJj..JJIO 3 Br, newly remodeled. Pl up• ti•• . l•--------Brtck fplc, lndry rm, 2 7S2·1nG NACMi--------- car detached garage. l4000U.\!l$t DIAMATIC L&eencl yard. $73,000. I Wi119• 1Hda I 040 3 LIVB. ••••••••• .. •••••••..... Hl&b 11opina ceUln& in Uv Al M.at As A Pin f:r:t':'1~~~~: I~~ 3br, aba, i,e yard Cor rmtOfn>lc f&TV ln fml1 ~ 1mo..-.c-.-cbtldren & garden. rm. 3 rull baths •• ~ 645-9161 Wallt '8 di&lance to bdrma lncludill& bu1e --------~1 abop'a center. $5S,950, mstr bdrm oo 2 lovol1. • wtSTS18£. w lhl&b eeUlna. MS-Nil. Mesa Verde &aut. 4br 3ba • 2 frplc, entry kit, lam rm, lra lot. 1140,000, A1t. 7$2·1430 eves l£AL TY, llfC. ... 2323 ~ Willkc~·1; I 1rn Rl!al I :;!alt- .. ,.... ___ ,,.#flt~-.......... RAMCH REALTY 551·2000 DMrfletd TwPI• 2 bed, 2\.'i ba, catm abut· t.ers t1tru-outz lint cond. 188.500. Own Aat 59M300 •Wooclbrtda' on Arbor wke Covil\CUon mdl. 2br. 2ba, quick salt. S1Z7 ,000. Ownt. 640-8985. 1'1RTLE ROCK.GLD Juat comple&ld. Pian 1. -•• din. tm, den, atrium, .,tuib CJpl 1. lrlt. \'Mw~ lrt IOl. eompletel)t tncd. Juat tlA!PI away from recrqlioa pvk, ln· cl'd Jr. ()ylcnpt~ pool, lennlt court•. jacu11t wad.ln1 Pl>QI. tot lot • volley baJI •. Sl.31.500. ti IUOl)lin& S&ream. <>weer. ~1Sl'8. tn&-$$23. Open flouNSat/SUn 1·5 RAM CHO SAN JOAQUIN A beauufuJly decoraled San Mateo Model condo wilhtn s teps of golf course. tennis club. poof and jacuzzi, schools and shopping. Some or lhe . other eKciting extras iJ1· elude plush carpeting, drapes and well decoral· ed. Priced to sell at $88.900 red hill~ .. 552-7500 LC11J111M1 leoch I 048 • •••••••••••••••••••••• . . "'' "I' ·r . : -· .. ~ ·' , ... , .. -l· -· _... ... ... Ole EsDGnOI! • Spantab tile enV)'. brktll • beJcony. 11.rildq white • water NOl'th coall vu. I bdrma, 2 ba., frplc ' suuoo M.Beacta.. " .. accea; eqJoy Vldoria ... Beach aun.tlet& from Uda •. cedar i. 1la11 home; Ocon side of hry .. : 1t.alned glass, 2 ffplcl, R·2~ 17 000 ... I . " OI OAJl.YPILOT T~ Ao111a 1m 06M'~....., ..._..Fa 'trd U.fw '' d U.fwW&Md .._...U.---nl?r' hid ........ ~~!: ...... ~ ... r weeane••• .. •••••••••• ........... ,.•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• leeiclt lJ6f .._...,_.W. .-...F«-Wt l"-'"f«'Wt ;._,.. .... ,,., 2000 c.M~ JIZ4 Colto.._ JU41w1ag1.a.eclii lZ40 ~ltec:ll 1141 ..................... .. •••••••••••••••••••••• .................................. , •••••• 4••• .............................................. ·······])····· ...................................................... . L.9-Inell I IMdt I Mt Ml port._. I Mt MTs.uM1T5 COtl•te SIU. tJtU pd Pool Home wtth s bedn:b 2 3 Br. 2 ba Condo. ftl&w un-UDO 3 81' J 811• • 'IT· •••••••••-... ••••••••• ••H••••••-•-•••••• .... _. .... •••••••••••• 7CJ.VAASSUM.A.8l.E ~oow!¥ee bath,% car aar~. tplc, it.Mooarc:bSummb,LaJl lse. ~14 Clubtaouae MoMrclltTlr'NCI Pour Dlex Hurry-woo't llalD llenlaJa, 540-$370 ow euy accen to Ntaucl. Adults ooly. nJd 83HT20or•seu Prof~••lonally wt~{t1S 0000 acbOoh "sbops Nice reQ S4SO/mo on lac.Yrtyt.aewatetfrontbae.4 landscaped. 3 Bedroom. C&.OSE TO ~CH , -' -·-Mlwportleec:ll JIH PRUlEEASTSIDEC.M. ntl.lhborhood. $US/mo. 494-'7262.8toSwtd.a19. er, 3 'Ba, 2800 aq.f\. 2~ bath, family room, Ever want to live wttbm easy walkmg TWO.FOUR·PLtXES •••••••••-.. •••••••••• CONDO 2Br, 2ba, dbl 9U-4S&8 A.gt .• no ree a.,....... JJSO Pool/ten. pvt clubhse. ooeyearold '14.Z,500. dlatance th the beach? tr .SO, we may Huntinctoo Beuh. WUI gar. Brand·apantlo' Lovd 3 br a ba ho ••••••••••••••••••••••• $7$0. Avail May U JAYW. YIATS have just what you've been looking cxchanJe.Callourolfict< IUlffSCOMOO n~w Yrly lae al Fplc~l>W.~.dr-=: 3Br28aCQOdo,aJrcood,1_~ ______ _ RIAl.TOllS 4ff.J2J7 for 3 Bdrms 2 baths Balboa rora.oappotntmettosee Tl'tna model. 3 bdrm, 2-... $3'7S/mo. Call tor appt .. 2 car gar. In Super view. outdoor Uv101 ---------·· • " • thl1 Quall Place ex· bath. frpk. Submll on M.aryort>on el bborbood $395/mo wJout matot. Poot MOO l.oglllG..... 1052 Peninsula Point. $169.000 dlaivel SU'7..500ea. dt1Jdreft ai pet.a. LetM COLIOPMIWPORT ~Ait .. ~fee. · lnclwtr.5'().12:WlatUPN S.= ••••••••••••••••••••••• /..T COSTA "'"IN>•DUPL•• tKSpe.rmo. REALTORS •-.....-us2 c .we 3.J71 ~m hm. The cbeerieat ~.':\~LIDO REA'4Tl" 2 aemo:~ bacbe~ C. f. C&mlriY 67"'5511 ~.Zf:'c! i~e':Om~ ~ ................ ~-:,;-;;;:;;_-~·;::,~~~ graded 3 br, 2~ ba, ram ~~ ~ • wilt. Each wilb priv•tc llALTOltS MO-OOfO ~ec. TI\. 3br, 21>r. rrptc. Ul1 de IH. fene«t lant, Near 8eacb-6ea Ternce Village san Jwaa. PoOi & nft, wet bar, l•und~, 3 (7':J< 3)77 YJa Udo. Newport IHdt yard. fl'l,850. encl patio. pool, clbbM lrplc, 3 Br. 2ba. Ob gar. Garden Home. 2Br + Rec. lnd'd. IDllalde vu. ~J::in~.ar:~·l~ fu~ -f 67J-7JQG SIX UNJTSE.UTSIDE ON THE BE ACK, -4S7S-500B; 8'1J.ZS32 ~:~1"7~~~ :A:r1~ :'1wit~yua~n~a~ s $S7Smo. 495.acf Sl19,000 Lo v • I y p r I d e o 1 Peninsula 4Br. 3Ba. 2 Br. w /tam rm. newly pm 486-4816 C.O& pvt beach pa NBW EXEC. COND9 IOMDllALn ................. 1069Mtwpot"ttffd t069 ownersblpun.it.-o&diM frple. av~ll May l. A!mdl'd. ~ 1 lnlanl, mo.496-'18118 Caff:itn'a mu. aedllded lll•f411 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••but goodloea. Ndear 9.55-Wl day1, 6'13·1291 nopet.g.2192Miller.CaU llulflp Monarch Summit adult hltaldu ~lew. prof. ('-.. --------Wealcllff. rtue at ne1. &:r7"'584S. ,._.,.. 3242 2 BR 2 ba N lndacpng, 2 Br ~ Ba. I IR-eACklA Y t Br. s l>a home on fee SZ05,000 by appolntment 3 B ~ FP ••••••••"•••••••• •••••• ~~~e & Pool. 0c.o:~ wood fplc: hardw91t>d UVE ATTHEIUCH Niguel Shores · ocean s ide of lhe highway. Guarded community. Llving, dining, wel bar, 2 bedroom. den, 2 batlu and uli h ty room . Clubhouse w 1tb tennb and swimming. Walk to the beach. Just listed at $1Z1,000 C] Coldwell Bon~cr HORSES! land. Steps lo bcb. only 2br. n»-mo"" year lae. 1 • r, · • noot cpts ~ bltm . ., .. 2 ... "" ...... 646.104, blk from bch. 1st & last RALECR ·S37S~. l Br. 3 ba townhouse. .$42SMo.6'75-45412 patio·. poo'1. • C•ll Private gated front ~ """ na• ~· de (71~....,~ MZ-2221or~*6 Sparkling new cond. .. ...... -. .. u r.Uo. Tile enlr)'. Huge 631·3900 COSTA w~ + p. .,.,, SHO. Call "Lila··, FANTASTIC VIEW. New Collect, 21~-n~ .....,1. m. rm .. gou rmet TRIPLEX IM&-1371or~eves. exec. patio home, 4 br, 2l3·790-41'4evet. kitchen. New butcher PORTOFIMO ::;,:~~ ~{reoe~e;:,~f.o: ~.'~~~ .... 3 Br. 1 Ba, close lo Cam~, 2?°°t· SQ rt. air, New 3 Br duplex cpl block counter lop. HARBOR VIEW HOMES owners unll wllb -----1-•__. 3206 aboppg, transportation.•-'--3244 wet ,2 fl>C S,oopet.s, drps poo'4 lake~mo: Formal Dine! Separale 2 Sly, 3br, 2inba, FR/ - -Mature aduJt.s only. No .,......_ $495 mo. 49S·S2Gl ... ...,5Us·9'19.t413 Master Suite. Double dJnrm. By Owner, by fireplace. Call for •P· ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets.$300. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 49'7·2864. _,,._,._......;...' ------ vanity mln-ored ward appt. 64-4·5613. polntmenl. Now only 2 Story-a Bdrm, fam rm, IRVlNE LEASE (Pvt> garden New M.Lssk>n Creek home. robes.Plus4morequeen 1130.ooo. 2 frplcs. $750/mo yrly. 38R3Br,2baCollege 2BR.1Ba ...... $325 hme 3 Br 2 Ba siu· 3Br,2ba.famrm.Drps, sizedBRsewingroomor FOURPLEX SalisburyR.E.673-6900 ParkS400 2BR,2Ba.... . SS2S ·d d . l:05 & cpls Pror lnd1cpd, work abop l5 bere too. Br· 2 BR. 2..., ...... S47S1SS2S rg~°en~. t~nnr!s~ ~wlm· sprktrs. patio. Country iog your horses! ThiS PRIDEOF lcAoCIPeMimlla 3207 3Br.2 ba Mesa Verde 38R.2Ba ..... $42St $SSO . beaAh •-sauna atmosphere. $475 /mo. beautiful 4,000 sq. ft OWNERSfficedP r ••••••••••••••••••••••• $425 3 BR. 2h ba. . . $175/550 nuG··~~ ... "' .t • 548-3011 mansion only $179.500. 601 UDO Prime area. Pn or $600.Cbarming2br.1"'1ba 4BR,212Ba .. $S3Sf $SSO ....... gale commuru y. --------- UIO Call for personal preview NEW OCEAN VIEW Qwck sale. 3 Bedroom._ 2 beach hse. Frplc. encl. Roy McC_.. BLUFFS swlable for adults. Small 3 Monarch Bay Plara today! 152-1700 ~ONDO. Secunty, pool, bath owners u n 1 t gar. Block to bell. Agt. Reaffor 111 O H.-.port 4 BR, 3 ba .......... $850 pet OK lfor fee> S>50 mo. LagunaNlguel QPfNr119,11 si1.JNro!llN1Ct• JSCUUJ. sauna. $290,000. w/flreJilace. $165.000. 642·l603 CostoW..0548·7729 BlGCANYON ...;493-..:..:...1:..:6'7_5 _____ _ 496-7222 131-ot361•11~111~1 67S-6900. (Open 19PM). .._kids OK 3BR.2~Da ......... $'700 Miu.ionvt.ie 3267 Q.ulet.abr.2ba.con· · · j ~· $225. 2 °1 • • pets, LAKE FOREST •••••••••••\~•••••••••• do, pool, patio. A/C. S2l6S ;.' 1 Broadmore Seavbiew, pvt 1£ IQ -1 ~ rer. yours now! Ctg. JBr,den •. ramilyhme,lge 3BR,2Ba ...•...... S.S75 CastadelSol.adult.love· mo.531-,:1389or'151-63SO · OPEN ·. ,~ ~ &t view. 4br. 3 a, crtsb • UGI Small ree.845-4900 yard, auto apmklrs 2 car ly 2 BR. A/C, view, club,1----------· """., == pool s . l917 Yee t Plac• ••C ...... rsG-'• gar. nr all levels of pvlg's. $400. 644-1197 o .......... _1!....-1 • ..__. W·-....a.,,_HE-1 ROOMFOllOAT EnC'hantress.Qpenl·6 Pr--"'-· hool ult Id ,,_,...,...._or ftl"' '1 ......--r;:J.;rn,-eapstr.o leach 3218 ~vall sM~y e I .c'$.i~ ~~· 642·0331 ~ 3300 29662Coral Cove Camper too--tn these ~ .,..... l400 OUAtUt HIWfl'OllJ HAC'4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,."·5843 3Br decor ated Condo .••• ~-;~-;-.·;~~j'.-;••••••••• (Nr.Allrla&Seablrd) two new custom homes Two 2 Br units. Jacuzzi "'"" "FOOTillLL"·Posh, Jbr. In Newpor t Hghls. bath ill upper.' 3rd story 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, custom frplc. cul·de·sac. $350 br, 2 ba condo, Hunt· Cam area. 21,-:aba, Br +lge bo!"us rm, 2i,.. c"''d sundeck. Dbl gar 39UMITS build. On the Palisades. 3Br.2ba .. cpts,drps,klds mo.830-4421 inglon Beach. Pool. nh ba f +dll\ rms 2304 ,,. 496-4769 ok Avail May lst. $425. 3"'69 Children. "'-hoo'-. ~Cl\ Tow ome. centr. a /c. • am · Exceptional rentals. By Santa Ana. $600,000 645·2978 Newporl leach , ""' "' _.,., X·Model home. many sq fl, 2 story. lots of owner MIJ.7840 Z1 Bachelor units & 2br, 2ba, newly redec'd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo 536·4596 eves & xtns. $84,950. Own·Bkr wood. $141,000i:a. 12 l·Bdrm. units on quiet street. Pool & 2 bdrm house $400. New 2 Harbor View Homes. 5 Br1_wn_k_n_ds __ . ____ _ 495-6789 3106 & 3112 Broad st. Salt CletMftte I 076 llU GRUMDY golf free. 492·7677 aft bdrm condo $426. 't523 CAMPU5~fRVl .. E Fam Rm. 2 fplc's. $695 LA*•For.st 1055 East of Nwpt& Soor 15lh ....................... REALTOtl 675-6161 Spm. 6754912 Brkr. lse.552-0443 : 7S9·S266 Co..c6a-.W ... ....................... Sl. Open wkdys 1·3 Nr.beach&Pk. New3Br. Coronact.IMcr 3222 lmmac 3br . 2ba. cpl, Yrly lse. $395 mo. 4 Br 2 $4SOMo.Lease.Charming ~sMd l42S LAKEAlOKT wkndsC12a-411.731-lS22 !j· ~~: 1~~4~.Lg~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~nlhs~ ld~e OoonLong :n ~nad's [p~: ~~~~2og~P~; two story hvmg room •••••••••••••-•••••••• Highly upgraded, 3 Br. "'1sfrns Pfo-'vl Choice Broad moor view k.itc °' in rm. ve Y w Ith be a m s and l 2br, 2ba. newly redec'd 00 21-i Ba. pn me lakefront Western Pai:lftc Prop. 554-2078 aft 3 & wknds "' " d . ~ • ,. model. 4 & Fam. 2'hba, 2 yd & patios. fa m rm. ll!M·3484 bedroom + loft. One of a qwet street. Pool & golf Pvt lake view from hv· RING"> We can atn ll or you. frpl pool /prk. Rllr S45o. Refs. 2159 San Brand new twnhme, kind f •""7677 ftSp MEWPORTSHORES RETl · Beach area. Probates. ,, •• 1790• Carlos. 545.7359 or · rtt.-.-· a m. mg, dirung, mstr bdrm. 3 A-$82 ,500 lheo you. must see this bankruptcies. trustee ,...... · 151..-000 Woodbridge. Vacant $550 Mo. On Peninsula. 3 Balcony, pallo. pvt ideal l bedroom. 1 bath sales,forcedsales,under Old Corona, So. of Hwy. 2br,l~ba,Lakebout'g & bedroom,stepstobeach. OELUXE3Br2Baofflsl dock/s undeck. Sun &sail Super sharp Newport home in a beautiful market values. We can Outstanding ocean view. E . S I DE·2Br. 1 Ba , recfadl LseS330. mo. no SS7S Mo. 4 bed + den & Tee L. Nlguel,Cntry Clb. c I u b me m b e rs b I p Shor e s 1 o c a ll o n ! g a r d e n s e lt i n g . JOl. • nt venture. Call World Yl blk to beach. Jbr, 2\'i garage, nice yd, $31.S mo. pets. 644--5.565 & 67S.S448 VIEW. Agent 631-1400 Comm pool, usoc dues S133000 768-0586 Gorfeous "real wood ' F1·repla"e. s paA1·ous 009 ,. •• _,,, pd.Lse.830-9544 ' . w a I e d 4 bdrm ... '" & Wide Brokers, 6'13-454S. ba duplex, 2 frt>ICS, den, S48-~ • .,....."""""' 1be WUlows. pool bome 3 BLUFFS CONDOS LAKEFRONT Home In decorator's delight! rooms, storage galore gardener. Lse. $6SO. NEWBe.autylbr.i\'Jba. Br2Ba,Cplc.$450mo. Leases starting at S4S03Br.l ~'Jba,lauod.inunll. Orange County's finest Cher's gourmet kitchen. ooly$4SBE'ROOOT.HENRY TRIPLEX, Costa Mesa 675--0636 View. 1101 Ridgecrest. •••• Month. Agenl6'4·1133 crpt/drps. refrig, d/w, area. 4 Br. hbrarv, 3 Ba, Private m ... -. suite. 3rd REALTORS u · I p It 3 B 2 dispos Crplc patio 2 '~ ""' All 2 Br. .., 10,000. 25~ rrr. 2 br. k1"ds ok. Wal'-to Unbelievable M.50 ruvers ly ar • r LIDO ISLE yrly $800 ' ' · 3 rooms w /Cplc. Secluded bdrm. can be Just that-.. .... " Ba cul de sac $430 mo. . • · Story condo close lo courtyard. 3000 sq.fl on or den ! New pain l . 215 Del Mar 492·41.2.l dwn. Agt. 540·0555. bearh. Fee Dana Polftt P~I Jac tenm~ 7S2·7847 available June I. 3 Br 2 shop8 & bus. Clbhse, pool the water. By appl. Secluded paUo. CustomLargetri-level,4Br,3 Ba. 7UHITS.IAUOA Mai.nRenlals,S40-S370 .. •••••••••••••••••••• . . . Ba, lge sunny South & jacuzzi. Quiel area S8l·44S6 sundeck.Jogtobeach-Fam Rm·beaut pool Prime area . Gross SPYGLASS BEAUTY. Sparkling 2sty 3Dr 2 RanchS.J 2 Rr+den.oe paUO,G42·S002orG7S-642S Avail May 15th to the MissionViejo 1067 blocks! Call today Primearea.Oceanv1ew. $31,000 +.Offered at Panoramicocean&city ba,cpts.drps.frplc.Rec. C<>lfCoursew/pnmeVia,•Exectwnhs,38r2"'1 Ba. rightcouple._$410.Write ........ ••••••••••••••• 646-7171 Prrnc. only. $122.500 $375,000. or will trade up view. 4 Br, ram rm, 3 Ba. facilities. Nr Manna. ~. 547·7044 patio, pool. jac. nr bch & 8ox824, Tustm, Ca921680. <)l'fN '"9 ""'1.i"1'0 ' 1 '"' 1 493-6476 or down. Owner /Agl. beam ceilings. Lus h Lse S4M/mo. Call Pa 1beRanch,4br,1"4ba, schl.$165 lsc.631-14'15 _832'448 ___ i. _____ _ WOW!WhataV...,_! l•,,,ilJjai;JJI ~-ISSSor63t.()()2() garden, well decorated. Fry,83l·IM32 pool. frt>k. short lease. -TowfthotlM Rambling 2 story, 3 ·) i\[\ii:"J: Salteaph,,_ 1078 TRl.PLEX $1250/mo. BeautifuJ4Br.2ba,patio 540-<>169orG44-84l5 EastblufflayVl•w u.fwalshed 3525 rmw uge nusr ' :... <-'"-In choice Costa Men nc Y ' car gar. Woodbridge OnthePark! bed /h bo m ......__ La % ~ f d d 2 1st t1·er unobstructed ••••••••••••••••••••••• family /dining rm. Over ••••••••••••••••••••••• area w /Owner 's unit. a; e-ttz, 962-2194 3Bdrm, 2aa, House. view of blue water; 3 br, Panora.ma of the Paclnc :n>Osqrt. for only 182.950. MEWl&.UFFS COHDO Owner. 4br, Sunhollow Pure pnde of owner.ship. REAL ESTATE 644 ·6397 •3 Br, l'"" Ba. ca...,./,.~, $475/mo. 642.2978 2•t:t ba, splil·level ond uo· lux 2 Br, gar, sundk, BeslbuyinLagunaHllla. Blooming Delores Patio Home. 2"'2 ba. Up ...,CJ\000 "-··th c t 1 ·~ ........ .,.. il.$6.'50. patio, pool .. Jae. $360. RM c_,.t Model, 3 Br 2~ Ba, end grades lhru out. Lrg •t· · l"Q;" 645.f~ n· 4tn blocks lo beach 61S frplc, yard, $425. TURTI..EROCK 3 Br 2 Ba. Harbor View Knoll San Clem. 552-CT RHlton 586--0400 unit. By owner. 501 back yrd. Community ves men · Marigold. 3br, 2tnba $475 Taylor· Made Really autospmklrs. r ul de sac. Cozy Rockport mdl. "'-I.oxes"""' 3550 - Playa. $126,000. 644-7901 pool. $72,750 493-9756 O..t of Co.tty mo. 644-2405 499-2986 495 5'95 lse 559·5229 wtpatle windows & New ~•••••••••• .. •••••• FAMILY COM FORT tleaut. View / by owner Madnd 640 3 Br & den. Fam Rm, Formal dm mg. Room for PoOI. many xtras. Prior. only '81·9349 ------1 SPAMIUM' MEW Tius never·hved In "La Famtha" model with a ~wt•epmg view of Sud dleback Mountains or ft:n. 3 bedrooms. a huge family room , lush rorpet1ng lhruoul. A '"r<'treat .. orr master bedroom, hutchcr bl~k rnunter tops -many. muny extr as Prime lorat1on S'Tl.000. Open t.11 !H'M. Open House Daily ... __ 1080 ........, 2550 ~tainValey 3234 2 Sly 4er. 3ba, shk roo{ England charm: 2 Br . Balboa Penn, s•mor •br. 1 U.Anm -••••••••••••••••••••••• 2BR top cond. Oen vu, _.A 2 b (n"d pau v,.... -vy f I Ad Its < ••••••••••••• •••••••••• ,..., lot. $490 /mo. 675-1105 ucn, ~; ... · 3ba. on the beach. Avail. U\ AAres Sonoma County patio, rt>. non. . u& 1" k g greenbel KINGS ROAD Exclusive· Panoramic Ocean view overl'g all SUPER STARTER Newport Bay. See boat ra ces. Christmas Neat. older well k.ep~·UP parade, s wuise/sunset. n e 1 g h b or h o o d 2 Walk lo beach. 3Br. 3ba, Bedroom home with that den. wet bar, 2 frplc. 2 big front porch & bltn car gar, cpl 'g, deck. New wood cabinets all over thnH>ut. By owner. Op Large fireplace & new hse, 1721 KtnRs Rd. carpels too' Big Yard, 645-2818 or 645-5146 Big Value Hurry' ALMOST MEW DUPLIX RedC_,.t Realton 133-3310 in e~change ror property smkr>. no pets, ref s. 4 BR. frpl .. 2 baths, patio, orSJS.-0211, ext9582. ~r vO in May tsl. to 31st. $200.wk SSOOl)'rly lse Ownr (.213) gardener pd. Comm """",;, _ _.1 "---" J une $400. Call 955-1331 in So Calif Counties. 2825252 rter6pm swim pool, playground New Woodbridge · -•• _,... ••• n ds 673.1291 eves. S2000taC're. Some ocean · a · Nr. shopping. $700, year· Sycamore PI an 7S2·28380r &44-2542 wk rends. Vtew Own/Agt646-rm,CostoMf.tcr 1224 ly.96J..J7l2Aft.6PM Landscaped, draped, 3 --------- 5499Sl1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• br. 2 ba $475 mo. 551·5294 ~xn Unf8nl 3600 R ..... _ ~ ES VERDE $270. 2 br. kids, pets. d ••••••••••••••••••••••• c.c ....... ~. M A singles Fee Orangelree Lake. a ult CUSTOM 3 bedrm, 2 bath 2 br. 1991 Anaheim. rr Gn>vn 2700 Nice4Br2Ba,FamRm, MalnRentals,540-S370 rondo.2Br,pool,lennls. home on cul·de-sac ~ 979-9849 eves. Do ••••••••••••••••••••••• fplc. bltns, fncd yd, gar clbhse. $345 mo. 833-2290 street. Approx 1900 sq.fl. ;;;t'disturb tenants. FOR SALE 101 Ac res dropnr. $450mo. 752-0759 2 BR. la,<a ba, bltns, encld evs. Q.5/mo. w/2 Br home near Mo· or646-6310 dbl gar. Patio, pool & SUPER LARGE bedrms Cd M 2br. 2ba. 2 blks Jave River. north of lenms area. $350 /mo. GREENTRE.E 4 Br 2 sty, in this 3 br. 2 ba home. shop'g & bch. cpts, drps. ~llver Lakes. fronts $195. 1 Br. 2 car gar, plus Ask for Jean 963-8961 or super patio & yard. $S95fmo. Lge patio, frt>lc.6454533 paved road. New well, more! Nice area! Unt. 554-1412 Corner loc. $495 mo. Ed Riddle Realtor central air. cpts & drt>s. Small fee. 645-4000 S40-7SS9 1>46..t!Sll 2 bdrm 1 ba. Drapes. S!l50 a c re. Owner ••ConlucMnGui• l ... lltqonleoch 3240 DEERFIELDTWNHME ~~~~~~~~~ stove, 1 child OK, no """ """3 • ••• • •• •• • •• • • • •• •• • • • • ... ..,c.J\ mo ••"' ~s R.al &.tote .....,....,, 2 B r U Co d I tbh 2 story, 3 Br 2'1'J Ba, pe .... _, ,.ft.,_,, 3BRupw/2ba., lBRdwn •~ ..... Es......_ $210. r, re• pa o, gar, 4 Br n o, poo • C se. , A-"-pur. Features Fam 2 story Twnhse, 3bdrm, I ILOCI TO IUCH w/lba.,allUledlutcba& •••••••••••••••••••••• -& .. ..:=_ nice! Res. now ! Unl. tennis. playground $350 ~:-'"hobby workshop, boatdocltS650 Spaclous2Br,1Ba,din· baths. bl\ns. inc ls A.cnopfortd. 1200 ---r 2100 Smallfee.645-4900 mo.979-'1888 pvt patio nrpool tol·lol Oceanfront home on ingrm,cpts&drps,lcar d.shwahr. frt>ICS, de<'k & ...................... ....................... ••Cons. ... 1 G.ide 2 br condo, 1 ba, comm. $425 mo. °Kids·n·Pels OK '. lease. 3 bdrm $850 gar, rear focd yd~. Child patio w /buge 4 car RVEAcaES Taf;[ct,e:nRg~· $230.2 Br,ya.rd,reC.bltns, pool, c~rporl . 16684 Refrlg avail. 552·5834 Bayfrnt Condo home, ~~. ~~'c:s~~ 1.e~ garace South of Corona fan Problems solved kids OK. patio. Unl. Arbor Ctr. SJ()(). Oya : eves. 2+den, v1ew $1100/mo. MS--5847 1£ .Qua.~I $165,000 Ucsllc view. F'\111 pnc~ SmaJltee.00-4900 89US7l, ext 210, eves: WaterlrontHomea PlllC9 JACOIS UAl.TY IJ.900 BKR677 ...,.,. F, ner:~:i;~:fs1-48tS ••Ca dd •uW. '!}.!~~. 0&4 5 .. r . ro'MMs~~SIASITEO.... 631-1400 .......... ,. .... ...... a....-• ti-67M670 l'11 4 > .,,_ ..,........_. ~ " HARBOR VlEW HOMES ................ ••••••• ..--. -r7S1•1920 ORm-OSJO Trade super La Qwnta 3 Br. 2 Ba, S28S. Blt.na, Mariner' Qw 2 br 1 ~ We have a large aelec· Exec. s Br 3 ~. Fam ~1'4md l706 MOO ouA1UJ Hf llUCM ~E Option or lease & OMI l'WIARTElt Counlr)' Club Home for patio. + morel Kids OK. 1 end p' ~• t I o n o r co n d. o s • Rm, huge yard oa park ... •••••••••••••••••••• • Lwtunom lW"D condo 2 ..,.... BaJboabome 646-8565 Unt.Smallfee.~ ~~~.c~~ ""'• townhomea and sing! nrschool&pool,640-~ BA\TRONT lbr. Avail • or 3 bedrms fl~ mo A<:al RN blah * •COM-111 W. famlly homes for lease 111 May l lo July l. IDq. 400 640-1751 for your mobile hm or W--t......1 2900 B 2ba f I For lease 4br, 2 ba. $385. the Irvine an:a. Jr yo Nwpt Ht.s area .. lovely J So. Bay1root. apt5. a...L. rtleoch 1069 -bldw ~1tc South of _....,, Large 3 r, . ft>C:, l<Jdsolt haveaneed,g1veuaca br,2ba,famrm. Frplc, l"lltwpol R "STIWFF Corona Ul1l avutl Pull ••••••••••••••••••••••• encl bit yd. College Pk. a ...... 1.... a call. We fill it!! new bltns. No peta. BACH $150 mo.O: eat 6: ·····••········•···•·•• ~ """~ .. PRlMEWATERf'RONT VIEWFROM6ROOMS pnce S12..SOO BKR Private party would llke $i25.646-1757,$49-9Sll moflse. Water pd. bath, rdrig, N eookn1. PROPERTY sbdrm.lglamrm,3bl4 17l4>6T75001 to biay I to U units. 2Br. i v.ea, blto1 . I ~ 1 Rm. 673 ·17Jl 3c:argar, lltraclosets OR$22·2080__ 1131 ~ Z Br. 1 Ba~ .. ln ~· dshwshr, lg yd, cul w ev1 /wknd1, 548·S804 Jean Dales. Agt 64().S* 6'4-01.M New cpt.s. drps, paml, desac, $32S mo. 54&-7tl8Z BLUFFS-4Br. 2\'JBa, 24 days. ----------. _______ Sl80_._ooo_1 'IJ4CREILDGSITE Hae wanted dir.ct fmm pool. S325 mo. 2453 °Viala Hogar, 644-snt or ----------- IACllAY Alt.IA S.view·aro.dmoor. All uul Paved road owner. Npt, Irv area. Orange Ave. CM. SUPER SHARP 67S.S354 lc6oaP1At1ll1 3707 GREAT FAM HOME Platts, 21ty, 4 Br brand Won't lut Terms. BKR. SlOO to $125.000 By pvt &CLEAN ••••••••••••••eu4 .. •u 4br 2~ba. fam. rm, din. MW by oimr. Income <'114)676-5'117 flly.MH~ POOL HOME 3Br, 2Ba Landmark ~ H~p~ 3p: ~· 2 Br, 2 Ba, close to bay & rm. Now $132,S)O, 2m Prop exchie ..-second. OR 522·2080 HEEDS FAMILY home, 1 ~ ml to beach, R.AMCH REALTY • • ,... • ocean. June 18-25, $UIO Ray Farm Pl. Call tM0-08ll6 ......_ Avail. May 15, Pool, yrold,963-6176 SSl·""OOO gar,$37Smo.5$2-1SSO wk. July 2·30, $190 wt. u.1 ,,,_, Bier S aC'res i.ooed R l 65' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 41 Se 90 .. ""._. · · • · a.t---Fwwl•d firepil, BBQ, paUos, 4 Br Nwpt Crest. 4Br, 2..., ba. July 31· pt is. $1 w ... HmiMwVlewC.-BYOWNER per foot in Montcl11r. ~ 2 Ba, cntry"kltch, bltn&, 3Br. 2Ba house. new Tllllrtl9tocllGlett Pool, Jae, tennis crta. 1711 Balboa Blvd. Harbor View H.ome 1138-9894 or 546-9556 eves .............. •••••••••• dahwsbr' close lo all paint, new cpl&, n~~lfl· New aln"le family Inver· SS.0/yrJy lse. 644-80S3 S41·02ll0 . 3 Br. ram rm. uas.ooo. Pbuell llh GsMctl 3102 Kboots, shope, parka & near Goldenw~l e • " fet. PrlnOl\l)t9C!0-5212 4br, aba Montego 300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tennis. Grdnr & pool $38Smo.M7-4&4w ness Model; 4 bdrms., 2 2Br, 1Ba. lg rumpwi rm, OCEANFRONT dlx 3br, ----------. w/boau\lful yards & for Mlle I St h t Looking to . in ld ., ... _ •-._ baths. ramily rm .. 2 frplc, bltns, rm for boat 2ba. no pets. Avail April 3 ••••• 1>9tJo. COmmun. pool & ...................... op ere. ma.ml c . .uua"' pe ... SUPER CLEAN a Br. lge frplcs.i library. Fan· & camper Nwpt Jfat1. 28toJuoe 11. 67J.6e40 Club ......... Walkins dla· . Four P I • x u n It' moveT We prob. have eit· OK. 979-3079or 556-e045 Fam Rm cloee to shops. tasllr ocatlon next to ... Cl\ mo. ••o. ""'""" 4t' mldPool ,_.., 1 t ac.'llywhatyou'relooltlna 83IM397 ' M .,_, ~ Colt.Meta J7Z4 lance to achooll. close to downt.own Hunt nf on for. S.rvt.ng all beach Mesa Verde, 4 Br, 2 Ba, gy-eenbelt. $88S o. • $109,500 1reenbelt a. natural Beach. Prin. ool)'. By areas. ac all Oranae Co. deo, fplc, M60 mo. IN Great Cal C lautc DAVIDD.CAlLSOM Broadmoor Seavlew. •••!'•••••••• .. •••••• .. • Well local41d home In lbe 1>9rk. S118.500. By ownr. owner 536-5008 cau now fof' Into. MH900 IJ79.'1836or W-«188 0 8 'J b b 0 r la 0 0 d . 3 UALTOlt I JJ..9293 Nantucket model. New $40.00 Wl9 Ir UP Upper Back Bay. Juat MCMl173Prt.nc. Onl.Y. Pr-mr llSO ••Ca.c ., W. m...-3 br, 2 ba w/fplc, 8 • r 0 0 m near 2br w/den <could be 3rd •Stud1o"l BRApta llsledaodon'tw•lttocaJI -r-· .......... Maadowlarlt' Golf ai 2 BR. 4c den, 2 ba, ak br) wtatrlum. View. *'l'V"MaldServAvall MS-7221 • MIWPOIT •••••••••••••••••••••• .... ..._.. 3106 rNI, 2 car gar .. plusb aebooll. Only $415/mo. t'Cad.,cpt&drps,comm. Tennis & community ·~eServ.Htd~ CINTUllY 21 HIKfHT'S •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• brown crptc, drp&, nke Call pool. $450 On lease pool. 9800 mo. 840-3SS?, 2316 Newport Blvd, CM WestclfflNlty 3 Br. 1 ba . Frp1c. yard aod nelgbborttood Toba.•...Alu AGENT 759-0226 ~l8.or833-3622 S48·9'15SorMS--388'1' .... ODBID* "A-pletely furn, ~vall fS395ee · 9&3-"589 Agt., no __ ., ......... _ l b th ~ 714/146-1371 Walnut Square Unit D. $150atbeacbl UlUpd,ref, •-21c1rm 4 °"""'""m• \'I • low int r•te. JG0.000. Call May la\ t.hn.i Juoe 20· · 213fse2·282S 2Br, l ba. Pool/parlr.. plus morel Unl. Small ..,. pool adl :2~~i:uJ':a':m (1 )436-M&l 'Eves 673·3088, da11 3bdnn t beth. Avail May A/C. SJ25, 768-9333 days (ee.645-4900 :'::ts w~ ~irn i. . • F.;~ri;-kit~ .a.a /T ~175.5 l. 1991 Anabeim. Do not WaLll to Beach! atK, 3ba, Vicki ••Comnaun~ . · · •Oer1eous modembed ~--~ ino iw.o.P I 1 di 3 io7 ::~stenanta. m-9849 blp!'t .. ~~72 r:~rroo~~; Woodbridge S.S. SBr, u-..A-v•~ Hme, 4 Br 2 lWB/WR ~a~t.1,ldedr.aA!,~J! ..... ..__ ,.._ cabl--'• •••••••••• ..... ••••••• •• I -R r A c CMU""UUI"" ~... "' ....... .....,,..,. ..... """"' w,...... "" .. •••••••••••••••••••••• w/t:lflf!Oef'. Wtr pd. 2\'JBa, F , rpl, I Ba Fam Rm (ned yd. 548--u 6appliancea. CONOOSP£ClAL1ST $275 2 Br. ref. blta1, SBr,~fiojbleror mo. lmmed occupancy. \wohm . $HO /mo . aOmo.lMoniy.MHM .;.mo;;;:.;;.;.·~------ •Newcarpet.a u B c .. ti> VI dsbwer, kldaOll. WClb't respo9lbieleJl&Dl. ~u-0833at\6 Ph:~ ltulW•IHdl 3740 •Room for boat/camper T~uchs~'c\e .. au:. la.ti Smalltee.MS-4800 546-'TMS 5S7-098S --Nwpt Hit•. 4 Br yrly. to ...... ~ ••••••••••••••• A T£RRIFlC BUY AT 88:Ml86'1 ' ••C 10.W. $3$0. 4J br, kids, pell, &..gillNllHdr 3241 ramll,y. Nr. evefl'Wn&, &1cbelotapanm('Jftl ONLY t!M,000. <()pfn tll 3br. lba, frplc, aar. ~ok. Fee •••••••••••n•h••••••• all new palol It super . Walk to Beach. ~~~~~~~ 9PM). /, Ooeanfr'oot 2 Br, avail b1 Eutskk CM. $400 mo. Ka1n Rentala,540-$370 llVllAAUHTALS dean.Aat.6$4-5337 $l.50. mo. (213,..._. = .C. I IOO week or moc\k. S.SH2S5 Mof1ta L • •••••••••••••••••••••• I ~ M V d 3"'-2b l br 1'.H. Kida, pet.a -b J ~ .. -BR CONDO. rrpJt ~ ba, Yf-leliclt 3741 UDO • ... ---l . e1a er c u1 a ck"-Walkto...,ac ; oew .... gar refflg wull(dry ... .. ... ••••-••• -'"'""' wnert_.!!!l· mmu Coralliit .. ..., 3112 home. $425 locl 'a ~Rentals 540-5370 corated 2 bdrm. 2 th nv' arb dtap a. l' ._ .... W'it.hPoolflS.ad)'beac'. dtJplu ~· l levtl, lee. ... •-••••• .... 4•••••• gardener. 3161 Sicily. • bowe oa larse iot will> Nr ·~ s3as 551~' ,P UW pd. Ocean .WW. 5 Br>.•~ baUia. Hrpk:I. oms, OW-.1•ecJbl Ill\· 2 Br 2 a. w/fplc yrty. On 6'5-0838 Sll8. 2 br, tlda, pell, private paUo. SSTS Mo. . . Pee . ~~for$$$0,0()0 ll 3 Br 2 Sa, 0ttJs>l9• lbc beach. $450 mo. ainllesok.rce s.AL.lltma ti.arbor Vtew, Carmel Mam~,MO-DTO ~erin1t, ~f1;:.!1~1f, ---------1 :~ F~~e~:o al!~ $32-3702: 838 1oss. Ive c:f.!'t_3 2.'::a ~yC:-b~ ICain Rentals. 540-SSJO Ne.at 2 Bdtn). apt., ctoa.e model. 3 br, 2 ba, walk to 1 Rm tllcbeftette baeb ~Owner/All8TM1'11 20NlLOT s}'1l~ 2 Brunt. Cpt.s. ma•. Wtr1Grdnr pd. $295 . 3.Bdrm,2baCondo. Bltn.•. t.o1hopptn,1&beach. park/rool. $400 mo. apt.tUS.uWlncld. Walk 2 bdrm, 2 bath, dln rm, drlll bltns, peUo pvt Jd, &O«J68. Jocl Devin pool, paUo. Xlnl ara. Ma. 644-2.M · to Main beach. 9S7-0Z82 £XTllA'fi1lvrm,fpl'lc, 2 dbl pr'f. "drives.+ Yo.a doa' need• •ua to tMO/mo.842·17• Panoramic: OcMn view. ar-.mten. ~YllW WS alfltftft.pka. forboal9f' .. draw f-.t" wbta JOU smtmo. Xncldaaanknw. ....... b boule NWl>l c:.-.t. J&, 2\.11 ba, OC&ANPRONT b.cb • 1 8J Qriruer. Leao/Optloo l bdrm, 1 ba\.b aueat al't-trlr OA col de sac pa.,. &D ad .. tM l>Uq ln Meta Verde. 3 bednni .Brand MW .,..c Ul>Cl"aded. Pool, HllOa, br 1nJ. -UUll pd 'lb -· 4 Br. Appl on17, $l25,000. w Fullertoa, SUS:a. tl\all .. Lo ap· Not Wa& ~r Cd eow I ba\.h 2 fplc1, .val •. 2,,_ be, ulLI rm. Jd, jac. t.ao..u. u. '800. • • • · m.wi, NewpmtffPU..Je.OCMO ....,, mt. st20m.5SIMOal pr.98090...... ~ __, __. .. '· - ' · u.fw1'. · £-1 •u.fwa. caR..W 4400 .... s Reetal 4450 Tuesday.Aprit26.1977 DAllYPILOT CT ,... ...... ,..JM.cl .,.,.,... .. ~ ,.,. ...... _,..... .. ••••••••• ., •• •• • ••••• •••••••••••• •• •• •• • •••• I ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... •••••••••••••• ~ HelpW t.cl ,7,100 .... W•ted 7100 He ........ edl 3769 CodaMeM 3124 c-teMtt8 JU4 ......... a.ecti :ia16t 60' PB S9FT LAGUNA IEACH ~ SOOS ........ ~ .... ~.!~ ....... _ ............... h .. ;";:•";.:.:••;••;••;;•~•;;:~•:•~·i::•:•:i•••••••~·~··········~··,•ji•li•ii•i••~·······················ii•iii•iii•i•il••~•!•~·~··~·~·~· ••••t•••d•••n•••••••• 1&17 WESTCLIPF·NB S-11 • ••••••••••-•• . ~ ____ .._.__ \ AOT. 541·50ll •••••• •• ...... ~~~zr~--...........-2 Br. lJl,a lwc. pt O\W· C-rcJat StON ~'?AURANT·LAGU'N ~e:~~ci;: Sl1flSHIM(j/ ~::tJi;:•i!:l ~=~~~· ~£~1~?,;.~£~ ~~;j:;c~i~fa:t:~~ ASSEMBLERS 2BR.1 ba Wotr S)C)O 1 atl •• llif ~ ()fflQ Space plex, with rustic al · · ..... AWlnnlngcombn on r~ NEWPORT CallonS1teManagt1r roospherc. $160 Mo., util 2 Laundromuts. $47,000, ".~.A:1!!-.. ~!."'-... ofoduttaportmenthomp, Bacbelori;, 1 or 2 (710M2·3Ulexl246 puidbylantllord $1 2,000, termK uvall. aw . ...._ ... Ya._ wtthtuxuryoppolnlments.ond Bedroonu&Townbo~ . -MISSJONH~ALTY 638·9894orS46·9556evt1s. .... ti 1 0 p emlurn.. ~m $249.50 Prime locauon ln Hw1t· 98SS Co t L " supe1urecreo ono r ·~ Spectacular $pa, tL1tal .ington Beach on . as. a,.Wla MoneytoLoCll\ 5025 location. Tennls•gym • lheropy recreation proghm. Brookbunt, 800 square 494-0731 ••••••••••••••••••••••• spo • swimming • bllllords. M>Cl.al program. B pools, 8 feet. Single~ garden type 4 DELUXE OFC 'S I .. , 2nd & Jrd T.D. '• One 6 TWO Bedrooms. One Bath ~ tennis courtB. At Fasblion &l.Ol'O or offtce. Good eit· LOA.NS AVAi LABL~ associated u ~ . ,. ' "·. ".I\' ,. ( ..; <J • ('o I f': ~ • APPLY7AM P-'< Me V~ Wimd Jamboree & Sao po.ure, assigned park· Cont. rm .. seat 25· all Credlt out important ~O. J -·· ~ V-Joaqui'o fills Road. ing. Call Mr. Plummer panclt.'<1. is m. whs<' '"re· 67H883 IJroker :,c;:=;to~no Avt., Costa Mna 751-8995 1714)64tl-lt00 96.U7G1 1;~: ~~ t2 Y: ~ ~e:~e·Ki:~t MoMy want.ct 5030 ~---------~.....---------........-. --·--· eeacbDuptex'iliBtkto OELUXlOfflCES Harkins. •••••••••••••••••••••••H.fpW•hd 7100.H.tpW•hd 7100 3 •• 4 U.-"-leach 38 .. 0 sand. 3Br, frpl, $195/mo Comml & iods~ spa~eii, 1l4·S8l·Q393 EARM 14°/o TO 160/o ••••••••••••••,••••n••• •••O•••••••• .. •••••••• eo.taMeM "' nwn.....-on •••• yrly.640-UM4,955·2!W7 ~ .. ~~2000q .... •,qa. rtN· 1!'Bg: ... ol&w S'fORE·OFFICE-SHOP 2NSADFTER&USSETCDUEREEDDS ~ ••••••eeeee•eeeeeeee••• ••••••••••••••••••• .a~a IL l..t O ""°'" D •• C •THISISIT* ParkLldotri·level Mtss1on Viejo areas. Newport&ooy ent~r SllORTTERMSl·JYRS CLERICAL J..oc:.~1.ysJtogevn, egwarl.brM. adtrpurse, 3B 21 Ba t nhse apt 2 Br, 2 Ba, fplc, pool, Handy to S.D ... ~rwy. ~!-lle25w2port,.~~v2d228, CM G 0 L DEN s TATE GEHERAL omcE adiu. No pets. 1984 B $ 3rs 5 .'' o ~ c~ rated : adult..s, $380. 64.s·S:W Call: 83H400 .,....,. or.,...... (.21.3)966·1711 Anaheim Ave, &15-3229; spacious. b_uilt·ins, lg Nice 2 Br triplex, new EX!CUTIVE THE ~·· Trvat RECEPTIONIST·JYPIST 646 . 3160 :c~~~gp~~l~·. ~~a~!~~ ~: ~'. ~~~lgts. No laPyfnNttn·me • ~alifl.ocen 1 •'omm1.16stosr!010Rc~te·1 1n •• ~~••••••••••!~.~~ SECRETARIES Jrfesa Verde 2 br upstairs. 7891 Stark St. 2 blks s/o L.IV\.. " ~ .. u LOANS 91 1. Qf New crpts. References Edinger, w to Beaeh , __ __... 387L 3388ViaLido,NwptBch Pm1d1UyCircUJ>&front· 72/o TwotoFourMonthAssignments $240. 498·1936 eves. Blvd. Open Sat/Sun 1·5 S. CIW'ln'lftft'e o ~m. or unf. SlSO·s.500 ing on Coast Hwy. in Alto 2nd TD Loan1 Also Daily· Weekly CREA T RE C R'E A· Mgr. 842·2014 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Secretarial serv avail. Lag1;111a. Composed or 3 Fairest Terms since 1949 TION; Swimming, FROM$260 - -2Dr2Ba,2cargar,pool, 250sq.ft. contiguous rms. & loft. c::~ Mt C MANPOWER INC Mature adults only, no $2'lS per mo. 2 Br 1 Ba, walk bch, no pet.s . $350 Ocean or Bay view. Front rm. has fireplace .--rTier CJ. 0 • 1 • :T;;f::d./ !~;~~~li~~t1:d pets. Large 2 & 3 br apts. gar, couple, sml ehLld, mo. 682·8600 (714). lst Month Free An ideal setting for 642-2171 545-0611 645·2043 . teftft;. courts. Pro & pro Dsbwhr • gas BBQ. Gas smJ pet OK. 536-3876 675-5820 wkdys only. software or professional •~--· .._1 }o;qual Opportunity Employt1r •u.... pd. 778Scott Pl. 642·5073 Walk to bch/sbop;. 2 Br, offices. Prime, rustle -•mettn shop, golf driving range, NEW-1,2&3 BDRMS l"'z batwnhse.Ad~ltson· ••CdM dlx 2 rm suite, shoN>ing & prof. com-r~t&r!/._d partyroom. Deluxe2Br2Ba.twnhse, F'romS250to$400 )y, no pets. $235/mo. utilpd,AiC,amplcpkg, ple X'. Will lease lo o..ua rvw1 FUN ACFIVlTJES: Full· Almost new. $'l95. Adlts, 839·9739 833-1193 $155. mo to mo. 67~00. responsible tenant at ••••••••••••••••••••••• Personals 5350 Ht1D Wanted 7100 lime director, free Sun· nopets.645·5126 $4ISMO. Lost&Fowtd 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ~%••••••••••••••••••• day brunch BBQ's, . . I Lge 2 br. 2 ba. poNI , New condo: 2 BR. 2 ba. 2ndMOFREE MISSIOMRo::"LTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Atty's OverloadServ. tri PS part i~s sport Detuie 2 Br apt m lr1p e)C, jacuzzi. clubhouse o F'rplc.; fantastic ·view o( F\JU service, individual IOA l.Alt;l green bike backpack. BEAUTIFUL GIRLS d d toum~~nts~m'ore! allxtras +gar, no pets. kids or .. pets. $250. 19132 ~cean. &. ml~ Sauna, offices, month lo month 494-0731 Contains books. oote have an 4!xciting Exp/t ::~~ec·ysnee e BEAUTIFUL APART· 12llisaLn.S44·lB69 Magnoha9G2·1800 1acuzu.Adulls~~OOMo. rent including: Recep-book s . calculator. message about thetr ...:p_._-_· _____ _ MENTS: Singles. 1&2 New apts, J02 Victoria, 1 OELUX E Condo,2 br. H2 Agl.&33·9293 lion serv, personalized RETAlLSTORf: Reward!545·7414 eves. AnaheimStudio.559-6150 AUTOMOTIVE ·1 1150, + offices 550, bedrooms. Furn. &. un-Br, $265. 2 Br, $325. Come ua. frpl, pool, jacuzzi, phone coverage, mat +storage 1400 sq. fl. Nr. LOST cat, gray & whl •-VICE CASHIER u II R I I d. l h d d male. 3 legged. V1'c Female wanted, 3S to 48 -furn. Models open daily by or call ... u an ea ty. ene. patt0. Malloy R ty. "'-........ L-3886 1spa c • un ergroun N . 8 . p 0 s t 0 r c & BX 'd l G 'I ---,-·-k · 't I All Orange & Santa Isabel. who ~oUld ltke to date, P • exper n " 10 ~o 7. ~o~m~ate 54().2960 963·9771 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~l~~;::i:lo;:On~~r~. Mariners Mile. 64$-3971 CM. Reward. 645·093Sor andbkescampJn~~Q~t· Bookkeeping. CaJI Miss serv~ce ava · 0 ease Easlside, large 2 br & den, 2br, rpts. drps. CbHd OK. Lge, quiet, luxuriw.s, ex· T H E Ex E cu Tl v E aft 4pm S..1!1·2JS3 door sprts. I am 5 9 , 147 &wen 492·8500 Or~wredpe. ;:rry, adults blt.ns, patio. $290. N r Be a ch BI v d & ec. 2 br. 2 ba apt. SUITE 1200 sq.ft. Pnme retail loc F d f I 3 lbs. 750·2298 Automotive y, no · 642-6243 Warner. 7821 Sycamore Elevator to sreruc priv. . 640-5470 on Harbor Blvd Costa oun ema e puppy ·4 New Detail Shop needs 0 -'-ood $240 bcb. Party & game room, M . . . h · , t mo.? Boxer & pitt bull .... w Eastside large 2 br, l ba, · total security. Perfect OFC SUITE for rent, esa m mmi sop. en r. mi x ·1 Li ght brown Social Clubs 5400 help. Garden Apartments frplc. cover 'd patio, Walk to beaeh 2 br, 2 ba. living or wknd retreat for ocean view, lg. balcony, 75Hll60 or 675·9326 w tblaclq muzzle. Wear. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Top wages paid. Engine · garage. 1 story, bltns. No encl. gar S275. 21702 the adventurous adult. upstairs w /gara.gc, $500 Laguna CS, business re· ing hru~ded leather c~l· Lonely? Social Intros 35 Steamers. eng painters. Newport leocll~ 880 Irvine <at 17th ) 645·0550 pets. $305. 642·5466 or ~!:..~~urst.!62·077_8 __ Starting at $515 /mo. mo.SJ&.8834 David D:l'hl sidence. old house being lac . Found in ~ark m Yrs. exp. Meet p~o ~~~~~sr; ~~~~~~e~~: &i5-4483 Brand new 1740 sq fl 2 br 2 499.2835 PRESTIGE remodeled, nr Surf ·n· Cost~ Mesa. &t.2·2249 -fess1onals w /same in check out, pick-up & d~· He1'tport leocll /So.Hi 170016th St (l>over at 16th> 642-8170 ' d Cl Id I t · · 1 Vh terest.s. Ph Clara Lane. E-Side 2 br. l ha. Yrly. ba. 2 frplc duplex. Incl. Apartfllienbf'Umi1hed MEDIC"LOFFICE San Arb l r. ea ant I · FSoumJ · UBeauttfu \ d1tc AnaheimBr991·42.W hvery.Applyat S280 Month. 646·8705 . jacuzzi. garage door OP· orUnflrnished 3900 '"' que us 1ness, ar s, . t l' r n a r · 20S9 HarborBl,CM Avail now. nr. laundry room, etc.••••••••••••••••••••••• In heart of Irvine. 1500 crafts, galle ry or :• Talbert /lleachBlvd ~-..t& 645.1030 Some ocean view. Tel. THE EXCITING Sq. ft.; some furniture & 494-7865 or 494-5873 Hunt. Bt•h 751 -4705 ,..-atl fixtures avail. Prefer ----por on •SUNNY! Mr. Bonnell, 494·7431 or PALM MESA AnS. gen. practitioner. fast Stores for Leas~ Found: Female Irish Set· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 752·1lll,ext 37o MINUTESTONPT occupancy. Near the Pier on"Nwpt ter. Approx 1 yr. Cd M, Schools& "'----Lge 3 Br, l J>a, closed gar. BCH. Blvd. Sat4/23. 675·1669 IMtructiori 7005 C ...... ......,... 3 blks beach. walk to Bach, 1&2 BR. FOUND, 3 ducklings, in ••••••••••••••••••••••• Op.nHouse MovetotheSunSpotat stores /bus.s:uo.960-5131 from$llO.&up. Burr White Realtor the Racq ue t Club . REALESTATE Sat & Sun 1·5 pm Sunflower Apts. Adults, No Pets 559.4101 LICENSE COURS! ~~~~~~~~~~I •No beach traffic/no roi 2 Br. 1 ha. slove, enc. gar. 1561 Mesa Dr. 2901 Newport Blvd. N.B. -•Gorgeous 3 br apts, Small enc. yard. 1 small (5 Blks East of Newport (714) 675·4630 LOST: In \'It'. of Park view A new 5-day program, 2 br, near bay & beach. Pool. Avail to June J()th. 646·1555 or 631·0020 From $285. child ok. 536 ·5006 or Blvd.) Shopng Ctr,lgc Irv .. com compatible with average 536·1407 J im Hutchinson 546 9860 4500 p u r s l' w j cw e Ir y. work schedule. For de· •Se,·eral pools · Industrial Rental Reward 552 3270 tails conlact: •Jacuzzi Water view 2 br condo PREVIEWING ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----Robert J. Uonahuc $138. util pd . Walk lo •Children OK Pool. tennis. wet bar. 2 .... DUHIT For le:ist• 1400 sq tt ot LOST : Long h.a1rcd Thelli tS hool water. Fee •Call now fr p 1 c .' s 3 9 5 / m n . "" IJ5Z3 CAMPU5Da:IRVl"E ficc •warchoust• +-touo Blonde York1c Vic. Buy ecJeft c _M_ai_n Rental_s._54_o~_37o_ 251 t w55. 7 s.._ 4 n 8 fl 0 o 0 wer st. <1 l526·262ti the Beach House sq. ft.' ~tornRe yiird in ~or_:.._N_u. s.t2.5111_ _ 496·950 I Nice office space m Costa Irvine Ind Complex LOST: Di g Black New-WOMEN Bayfront area Sub·lse. New 2 Ur, l bJ. S285. Contemporary&casual Mesa nr. Harbor Blvd in w/avatl key luck ga:. foundland Pup, male G MEN TR"IHFOR 2br, 2ba, pool , slip a_vail. 2 br. l ba. cpts. drps. No Child. sm !JN ok Cpts, The best of Newport's new s hopping center. pump & secy !.crvices. m ont h ~. Rewa rd "' Adlt.s, no pets . Sum · pets. s.!!lS. drp:;, hhns <l lll26 6916 good hfc. Call 557·0825 N11 lwnal Scrvtt•cs Co, 848·3383, (213) 542-7757, IARTEHDIHG mer /wntrratcs.646-6798 557·1694eve 1001 Alabama St. 3 Br 2 •Beamed ceilings -----~i-1011250 11.B. TWOWEEKCLASS N W I •2 pools & rec centers Plato ---------NATION-WIDE JOB Park ewport apt. :.! br, almost new, near So. Ba_. Ava1~ 5 l. $365 mo l •Plushcrpts &drapes 1500 sq. ft. incl. pnv.office LOST · In ,·le-. nf Parkvi.ew PLACEMENT sub·lse for June.July· <.:st Plaza. Children. pets child OK, no pets. Nr •And so much more Executive Suites at 8!25. 1665 B Placentia Shopng Ctr Ir\'. hr1gr ASSISTANCE Aug. ~00/mo. ok. S28S. 556-8789 beach. nr new bldg. Call Thrn. bachelor $230 Office av all. Overlooks Ave, C.M. 646 ... 262 or corn purse .w11e.,..t•lr) GOOD JOB , 759-1093 544·5701aft5:30 Unfum. l br $255 airport & mountains. 646•1164 Reward. 552.,1270 OPPORTUNITI ES ..___._nt E·side 2 br spilt-I vi. coun· HURRY FOR ~Michelson, Irvine. ___ -_ -LOST 4124 miu/sil poo -~.L:.::,.sh'·d try settin g, frplc,2 BR duplex. pvt. yd. 752·0Zl4 lOOOSqt-:t.lnduslrtJl.No di e' vi't: Bus hard / AMERICAN unTVnt .. s kyligh t. 645 ·9543 ; freshly pamted & 1:pt BESTSELECTIOH h' h h d N · BART!HDERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·1164 Paneled hv rm. S255. 1433Superior ~rn Ofc, Bank of Cosl.a tg . az~r . user.~ Garfield. Answ. to Shea SCH.COL IClllboa Island 3806 536-8291 &846-().189 Newport Beach Mesa Plaza, $95 mo. Costa Mesa. 646·751.. Rew. 962·4117 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut 3 Br 2 Ba. cpts. ----646-8453 556-3900 -2000 Sq fl in Koll 'Irvine LOST: Yellow /gold wed 1104 E834. l:llh960St., SA YRL y Attract 1 br Non· drps, fplc, bllns. encl 3 BR. 2 ba. bltns .. 2 ear ---C t S<t25 12 <' t'd d b k• • d k · ·r gar lndrv no ruots <"'>"" gar. No pets or i:hildren WESTCLIFF AREA n r. mo me P ding ban • 4,2-1 •77• 1~ Schools Coast To Coast sm rs, nn ers. re . re-• • · ... ~ · · ,,.,.,.,, --A C offices. Owner at Corona beach Reward q'd.675·0247 644-1103 over l2.5~·!_11_1_ . ·~ NEWPORT BEACH. 751-!1772or644·71:172 551·5383 . L.A. COLLEGE OF Bolboa-P ... •in•"la 3807 Near S hops, 2 8 r New l. 2&3bdrm apt.s. ~ ~-= HOO Sq. ft. two pvt. br s. ------, . . MASSAGE, Low co$t .... ... L~ rn5 -..... ~ $'JOOpermo.642·0200 lL<XM> sf bldg in West Found Ca1r_n Terrae.r. Day.t-ve-Sat Classes io ••••••••••••••••••••••• downstairs apt. bltos, .-.om_, · THl5 s:avruu~·..,..,, Costa Mesa. Call R~ss r cm a 1 c. ~a n Juan Santa"'Ana. 5 .,,.71 .. 1 $3SO. LJtc 2 Bil, t ha, f11l. t•y>t.s. drps. 675·~ 180 !WO~--'.;E~,!.9:;· • •l MO FREE RENT• J ohnson, I ndustri;I Capistrano, 997-1389 ""' • nr. bch. ~ar .. lndry. East llot'hcstcr C M . IRAHD HEW! ~ No leas~ req. Dix. ofcs. Brokers,833-8551 Jobi Wanted, 7075 Chn.~t1ne a...n ""'3·3307 . C 2 & 8 t F' Adj. A1rporter Hotel. Personals 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ • "' °"' 2 Br I Ba hse. 1n ourt I· 3 r ap s. rom f r b ·1d l I l 9 FROM S:MO to $335 f)-om l·r m.RtoA2200T.ESsqf. ti.I 8:000 oMr 10,000V~· : wC L.I ••••••••••• ••••••••• ••• Available full 29. Prac. S210. Ntl'e 1 br, resp .. New cpts, drps, paint, $250 pt: r mo. , 5 Beaut apt plans. avail LOWEST . u. mgs 1ss1on ICJO ~ Drinking problem? N perm. ault. No pets On pool. S325 m o. 2453 Delaware. llB Open 12 5 furn or unfurn. Ba ch, l services. 833-3223 Ttl Russ Johnson, lnduslnal Call Alcohol Helpline urs:94· ·854lext.129 pen1n lC)li B_ay AH· Ornngc A\'e • C~-DPha1I~•'.> 1960M21Alc ,,,to ocean noon Brokers. 833·8551 2-1 hrs a day 835-3830 AUTO PARTS LABORER PERM. FULL·TlME Opp to learn auto parts 3621W.1st S\, SA AUTO PARTS TR.Al HEE COUMTER SALES PERM., FULL·TlME Opp. to advanl·e. 3021 W 1st St, SA Auto Technicians! Lub & Quick Service Busy Chevrolet dealer increasing tub & qukk service dept. Xlnt pay & working conditions in ex- t·iting Orange County Airport Complex-. GM exp. ONLY. Sec Scrvi('C Mgr. at HOWARD Chevrolet, Dove & Quail Sts .. Newport Beach. Avon Reoresentatives J.enrloobd So Good! You will loo, selling world famous products. f1cxible hrs. High earn· ings. Training. Call 5-10-7041 or Zenith 7·1359. ,,..._ ... br, 2 br, 1 ba ; 2 br, 2 ... _, W_......d 7100 Sl5(). lbr dplx marr i:pl :"o -baths. Reamed hv rms, Storage 4550 --......... p ... ,~ children, quiet court Non MEW DELUXE 2 IR dining areas, storage, COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• PREGNANT " · I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysitter needed tor 2 CoronodetMar 3822 smokers only. refs. req Nr beach. w fplc. patio pat 1 o s. decks. PROF.OFf'ICESPACE II Carini::. confid c nt1a Alteration lady. e x· b 'ld M F 8 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9~W17th548·03S8 landscaped grounds. 2850 MesaVerdeDr.E. Sma s torage spaces counscltn~ & referral. perienced,forcute shop. c I ren, . . . _ _ ___ _ __ encl gar. smoke alarm Approx 2000 sqJt. Good :ivatl Costa Mes a F'rom Abo~llon, adoption & Pleasant working cond. 496-5907 San Juan School 1 & 2 Br garden apt. frpl, ~dlts. S?90 mo.1146·3845 ~~·j r~kygb l!~hll~ iensn:sy v1sab1ltty & parking. All $7.50 to $l2.50. 557-1694 keepmg Call 642·1826 afl 4/25 _D_i_s_t. ______ _ P\1 patio, D W, $210 '24S, ~Ofl clubhouse. btlltards, or part. Dean Hadley eve APCARE 547·2563 ---------Babysitter for teacher. nr, I rvine Ind area Mariiiow 1842 s wimming pool, pang Bkr 963-8933 Rentals Wanted 4600 *SHARQllO.l'S* .AMBITIOUS! Grandmother 7:30·3:30. 5S7·2841 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pong, hydro·spa, gym. EXECU'TIVESUlTES ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1"111 Spare time activity with Own t rans. Bo i s a NICE 1 br. pool, adlts. no St~to Apt. "~1,lk. tu ~11ch. Sorry. no pets. Deluxe offices w /secy Mature Widow Wishes OUTCALL MASSAGE super future. For in· Chica/Edinger. 846-3434 CORONA DEL MAR ~ti. 1240 &W·J79S art S2.75 mo . .,Jt. 11127 or Southwest Corner service, Xerox. Near Furnished Apt. in Costa 499·1224 terviewappl644-5391 2 Hr Townhouse, frpk 6PM OC' S48·4757 963-11311 Edinger /Newland O.C. Airport. ?52-5626 Mesa are a. $200 mo. AMWAY DISTRIBUTOR Bobysiffer Wanted Pool. tennis. Someoceeo l"IM 384 4 8400 Edinger. H.B. Qwet with Refs . 536..S280 *KAREN'S* is helping many persons Babysitter needed for 4 & Catalina views Close $175 lbr. 11tovc ref. gar. < 714) 847-9605 COM. Shops, Stores. Of. After6 PM OUTCALL MASSAGE earn money wdrking 2 to mooLh old infant. 3 day •-shoppln<>&finebeach Nr W1 l11on Fa1rv1ew. ••••••:•••••••••••••••• OPEN9-5DA1LY fices & Stornge. f'rom 6PM·2AM 838 l780 h d w h 1 week tn my home. ~.2611 .. Adult..Aft6pm549·3638 wooonrtlDGF. -c mo. ~o.7zc9, CostaDignlfied,healthy elderly · 4 ra ay. ecan e p C 1 '""'. l'IN"..:."A IYfS lOOIM 4000 M'es11 • .,.... Jady.7yrsPasadenaapl. you.673-4786 :~~=·ces please. al 2 bdrm t•1 l>J Cpts, & l. :! & 3 bdrm units. •••••••••••-•••••••••• needs sm. a pt or home MASSAGE ---M----1-1--d-1----------d ....... pat10. walt"r pd Dl'!.t 0 ned like early ROOMS..,.. wk up with DLXOFCJ6</Sq.Ft C·'M. Afford abt S200 FIGURE MODELS Apt. g mt. an Y ·--------Opendaily so.1•2.Jasmme .,... " _, u mature couple to 2 BR. den. 2') ba. wt>l $250. 962 2000 Cultforn1.1 hung:ilows lotchen $.37 50 wk up In CM. Utilities Non·smoker. drinker or ESCORTS manage 16 apts~ 545.0030 BANK bar. 1800 Sq. ft. Beaut \d 1 ~· . 1, $2I• F r o m $ 2 7 O . I 1 S apts. 548-9755 Included. 751-6892 pets. (714 > 831·9997 aft 6 pm. carp. &drpi;. ssoo Mo 1 u ts. over '"" i! >r, . '' l'ane,,lon1• Ole hri1, n 5 30 -OUTCALL ONLY =--------- Scenic Prop fl7S·S7Ztl mo 31l W. W1Ji.on St. l>uil> ATTRACT. rm ,, mi Corona del Mar, large of· lusinffsj1nvest/ 631 •3811 ARMY RESERVE _ . 631 ·2177 5:\2 0400 Crom beach. $28 wk. Ref. fice. $200. Rftance FREE TRAINING Cozy 2 br, lr1>1<'. 11ery tit Cl'. •t \' d C d 2 8 -.... req'd. H.B. 960•3531 Realonom1cs 675-6700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ll .... D • & VICKI Men&. women aaes 17.34 ,,_ r . 1 ...... ,, rsa er r on o. r. 1--leach 3 _ ~ ,. ,. ..,,5 or sing t'. .,..,.., rou-I t e->'>n --..--V .....o..t--R_....al 4250 S II N C ff' Busine11 needed for musicians. 1 67:Mi069 1100 , 11ar, pa 10, ...... v mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ac-.... , 1 ma pl enter o ice. ~-it 5005 Outcall Mass~ pc. SJ6·70M ;673-6616 E Oc• 1 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Balcony. ocean view -rr--·-· y FortL-11!!...noflt'. cooks. clerks, supply, & I l xqws1te canv cw pen p . t M l M t M t 1640-4502 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ..... "' more . Ca 11 Lind a 28r1 Ba,fplc,bln8,S,o BRANDNEW Ul0use2Bdnn 28a den Dana o1.n ar na. o. o o.rena o· 'b t . ServingallOrangeCo. 552·3173.or l213)594·0219 Hwy. $lSOmo. f 1 be ' ·iins ' Rooms kitchen prlv. AMWAY 1str1 u or 111 .,.9•2743 673·3022 mle8ti8'1U ~~·~ ~ ~~rcu:t nlce ))ome. Exclusive C.M. 300 sq rt ofc. 800 sq rt helping professionals & ____ .,. ______ ,,. SSEMILY WORKERS l H •!M-&16\ netctaborbood. &2:50/mo. lndstrl. $125 & $265. others to cam a 2nd inc. RELAXING MASSAGE '"' Ideally located for orn. · Pb 6.'J6..o!YU c , 646-2130: 679·3709 10 Hrs wk. 673-2223. Bob James . Perm pos. F /tirno. OSF.NllO(lDCCITAI~~~i &.GCJlllMIHhJ-1 Jiil l-n-1300 17700~,CM LAUNDROMAT, with Lie.Masseur CallS3l-0700 K 1 ANI 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......... _... Outcalls9-9494·51ll SEMILY 11411.AYLEAF Dl>wl'\town Costa Mes u'Del 2 b 1 rec -·•••,•--•••••~•••.-•••• 500sq.ft.Ba room.+ Agency. Capo Dc h, ----------i AS 1 & 2Bdrm. water pd. w~lk to all shopping. ro:~~Lovc~y ~'From House, to abare, 436 rm w/slnk. redec. Perf $45,000.byOwncr. •SUZI'S*. Fastgrowingskatebo11rd From $2-40 Beautiful. qmet. Oeslgned t? ac· $29() Gas&waterpd Off H•mit~on, CM. $118 for photography studio, 837·6417 manut.ls lookingror u- 11puciouK now apt.a, Pool, comoda1e wheelchairs. C · Valle" 20041 +lrtll. 548-0125 or medical ofc .. $225. , f y "/? Outcall Massage sembly workers. Day & pvt patios. Bachelor $210 rown "· 548.a96 A luslcMt11 or OU JOAM-2AM 731 ·5448 night shirts. Apply, 17932 Costa Me•• 3824 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXPERIENCED PART· TIME COMMERICAL TELLER UHlnD CALIFORNIA IAHK 2750 W. Coast Hwy Newport leach (714, 631 -3200 An Equal Opporturuty Employer Adults, no peta. 1 BR $241 Aloma. 8:1Hl&ST Male /fem room.mete BookltOre Sky Park Cr., Ste 0 , 321lAvocado, C.M. 181E.18th, 642·0856 wanted to share tee 2br .. Offlc •paces bei·ng Drapery Mfg. Co .. CI b 1815SplSoritualEI CRmeoderi'no Real Irvine. l- 8 • .. -..,.,-.... ,•G-----&48-0883 ---------1ti1Hel.ww-mOlllll"trthach 3869 bse In E ·Sido C.M. • e " Dlsco·TeenNight u · a 1---------,... .. nu .. ---------o .... ro1nt 3826 •••• :;;••••••••••••••,• w/neat, non smoking, built on Newport Blvd., Gold/LeafShop SanClemente. Fullyllc.1tm--------• IRVIHEHATIOMAL Foxt.olowVllegie •••••••••••••••••••••••z Bedroom. 2 baths, e .s.t . grad. Min's to ColtaMesa.Inquire Welding&MachineShop Foroppt.492·7296 AasociateRep IAHK 621 W. WUson646·2010 1&2 story d up I exes. carpets, drapes. bullUns. O.C.C. & bch. Call Don, 646-3928,eves673-4577 High School "Pvt'' FE 18 OR OVER l>oslllonsOpen For: FURN OR UN FURN triplexes 4' fourplcxes. 1, fireplace dishwasher. 634-4780 bel 5. 5"8~ aJ\ Ladies·Llngerie THE GOOD U HO EXPER. MIC' TELLER •2brtownhome w /frpl 2 bdrms & den, H'z & 2 Acros.'I from pork ~ar 5. Planl8·Gifts·arts If you 're an attractive, :~d~t!.":Jid~~·f:!!~e baths, fireplace. in the bay&beach.$395month. Share 3 Br house on ~~~W~~~~hroltass ~~ew'~~~\~::~~~~~~ tCor~.o~~~pon~:n\oy~::o~~ p~~ER~~=: !::~u;::Js.b:rj:e~ ,JACOISREALTY Newport Penn. M/F, Foundry-Aluminum sail & lbe good Ure & tinulng your educdtlon. ContactBobCrelghlon •Smallpetok 2 car garages. Close to 675-6670 $13$.675-5161 Bid DeerBar wouldllketomeetalman recently discharged 833·3700.E.O.E. Beaut. new 2br, 2ba in 4-schools shopping & II C R--t R 1.. ted MJf Professional . e on Ask for Sam Crane who does too, p ensc from the "Service or for I~~~~~~~~~~ Plexex. peUo l"uodry o p. 1 H b CJ myonuu mma."'I wan • • TalbertnrMi>anolia Ftn HBS,17160range C.M. ·· .... tn ''r call me about I· bllns' ' .. • ana o nt ar or. 2 br apt oo golf <.'Ourse s~ 3 Br, 3 Ba hsc. CdM. Vly. 300 & 1'60 sq ft. wn " any reason seeklnt tem· BAR GIRL. Attractlve. ,$3aS."2•1603 From $295. mon~ly. llOW&vailable. l!em. w /U yr old 9'>n. Mo/Moorleaae.~7062 714/645-4170 540-00<l8 ~ursel~c)'i:!, Y::;3r poraryorcareeremploy· -tlable P/Umo ar full Qll'Clco apt. 2 br, 2 t>a, Golden Lantern .,. & •Dbhelf·cleanoven ASAP . Pplc •ar, Pll .... TSHOP ams. Be. ·b ex...,......~ mq·~Ot:P, !?"5r.Y1~:c~h11iaea~rl\~· :ti:-r_,. .,.J.,,r:H · den/pat.lo. Matute adult.$ Acapulco. l>ana Point. •Hkuprorwasher/dryer wshrir, <l•hwsbr, ObJy 3300 aq.tt. remain· " Newport ac ' a""""" -,.., v .... , .....,._.._ OGl.J. '13\..st!M. •Al.rcoaditioned front , .PA~~; cornet ina. to bo devtlol>dd for Ne~~r·~~a:'h~n'!en orcall6'TS.986J .......... /W ........ I • .... Mulli'l-~#1 H.tW0111leoch 3840 •Fireplace rum.. +.Mt-Gaal\ youupeclalof.tlreqoire· e.'ltal>Uahed, 29% down. Tennis Club Membership $196PlllWHK &COOitExper'd.Appty %75 &. 16thSt. C.M. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• •2 car aar w /auto cSpnr 6:30. menta. 210Q BroolrbQl"lt, TIME 1$1-1400 for&lJe. Mr. O'•, 3100 J,.iM, N.B. Ul-JOOJ ... TOllACH •l'ullaecurily AYOlDINCOMPATIBLE BB.. 963-7202 llSTAURAMT5 833·3256eve~ ~~~\~ y¥'1u~ iHQWISTHITIMI L-; ~ Lae ~ b~ J ba, rrplc, G44·0S09 RQO_M¥A_T.£S! · G *" ooo ffll&U 1 ns lnceitlvettft • profit 51:c.sura~wie tah d11lwhr. att. 11rage, 2bt, 1 ba. trg llv. rm" QwsE·GlAru~ omceriewlydecorat-•Mexican 1'058, .. a. · ~I sharinabC>illll .. ~lbo)Ob f0tjob~tocbeck •. ~..l~:l~tioN~ encl. )'d. No ds>P· 1703 patio. Across st. rrorn TaJte& tbe O'*!work ed. Prof. blda. Fomt =n aross • $$0,loo. ANSWER'S trahUnc. Tterne12clous the Dally PJlot Help · =·&6331lorll1·tsl7 Alabam11, 538-3465 or beach. Avail. immed. outofllndlnaf t.hal Ave, Laguna iieach. S50 month pot ential to reach Wanted clwillcaUon. Jr ...0-...--------1 536-1718 $550mo,yrly.646-8257 RIGHTROO MATE sql\. SkyUte for planta. -Chin S360000 Outlet-Taboo-11uperv1Bory &c. mat1aKe· 3:r!°~:.:~= LARGEIBrlV.Ba,2sty Deluxepootsldextra tgeN d I 2·3\lr$3SO 832-4l34Sincel971 49'.002arnq.26SForest. yr. ese.gt06S ' .. Tripc -Temrr -mentpo11iUOM,Mustbe otferlna your servkea in triplex Nr 'hops ew up exes ~ I REPEi\ ~ISie & ambitious. _ .. , •• no~ ......... .....; 2br, 2ba, bltns dshwhr. up yrly. Family & pets • 4350 -r.........·R--"-' 4450 •Amer can i:rosa, with an ad int.be Job ...,_, ......... ...,,.........., Nr. bch. Adult., no pef.5, ok. 67~12 fer -_... '8'0,000. yr. Many others TV anJJounccr: "For ppolntmcnt only Wanted catqoey. Phone <71•> $22$/mo.5364362 1 ........................ _ .................... t.ocf'aooe4> {ro01, l!omo In· tholeofYoUwbo&fteaked call tQo.5111 \ FMt Cll Pri lib-• 2Br t EAS'J'BWFF. 2 br, iba, •SJ.nile Meaa ·verde. NWPT BCllSTORE cludlnJ 1\eal Estate. l(lto the kitchen durin 539·1113 wfia.r ·• ClO & iiso' ~':iJ~ou.ck*3 11tudio. Poot. Adultl. No Hart>oriAd•ma. CM .~ aaGAvonS!-.L~_!.llio. TIME '8US1 NE S tho gpon.or'a memip, ~:ar>AM.2PM ll1nd wturt )'OU want Jo ~m.&205~~·~-~·~f7~~~~~~·Jlii~wn.2!~~~· 5~:-::0l!:pe:u:·~l350.=~eco.osa~~==:LlSton~~P~oatt~~--.,,_,~~~·~J;J~eny:!:~wyn;:n~~~,..~ ... ~no1~SA:~L~ES~·~T~s1~.1~•oo~==d~11~1~R~£P~&A~T~lt~no~w~.'~' d~~~~=~~~!:;Oall7::!2~Pilot~·~~c~11uus~w~~~'-~.;ll .. • I Cl DAILY PILOT Hmp W-.ct 710 ...................... BE A Profeotoat& C.oclctaU W:utrcs.. t:nler an nc1tm1. pror1t11bte & slamouroua profe~·· Learn m 40 bra from pro- f ~1onals lhe fine art.~ of wuitrcss tcctuuques. Day or eve sessions, pJace· ment assist .• good job op· ply. Call (714) 761·9194. So. Call(. Cocktail Waitress, lnc .. 17922 Sky l'ark Bl, Ste C, Irvine, Ca 92714 8EAUTICI AN W /F for Newparter inn 644-0661 or 540·8582 IEAUTICl.AH You.og. run am. shop. 609 W 19th, C.M 646-8480. llcauty HAIRDRESSER Lo' cly i.hop w /v1ew. HcnlJI or t·omm. Some t'l1cntclc Call Irene, E' c:.. 5-46 07911 llcauty Opr... in Unisex shop Apply in person. lh-~1:.. So. C:.l Plaza. ~H888 8 EA UT Y ·II a 1 rstylis t wanll'<I for F.l Toro :.11lon Call 83'7.4743. IKKPR fSECRETARY Some exper. req'd. CaU 548·2541. BOAT BUILDER WILLARD Increase in production & new 40' line has created 1mml•<.halc openings for t35) cxjJCrtcnccd person· ncl Fini1h C arputers &per. Carpenters Touch-Up lond&n Engin~ Installation Etectrician1 ~ 75 to S6 SO per hottr h.1~l'<l on quail ricat1ons. <ioo<l IW•nl'f1t;,, 4 D<sy Work Wt·ck,Ovcrt1mc Equal Oppor Employer I 1200 Condor Ave Fountain Valley (San D1e~o lt'rccway Al Euclid Exit> 979-0126 B 0 0 I\ K E 8 I' f: ll Fu II C'hJr~c. lhru financial :.l;item<'nl. sm non pror11 org.1n11ott 111n .... alary rommcn:.ut Jk "' e'J>t.>r. n•m llnnk1.•r wuulcl haH• ,111\ .1nta.,:1· (7 I I) (jjJ :!!ISO F11•d :'t111ll•r BOOKKEEPER F ChR fi-12 6830. BOOK Si\LES ssss Feeling The Pinch? I l:'v1E Lil I l.IBH1\IU1·::-. Ila~ p I 1 rn(• JOIJS in our tell.'phone s<s 11.!S off1c1• r .... o ... 111r1 ... J VJ1l ~ ,kl 2 341 & .I 30 'I :10 ,, d,1)' .1 "'I.. SJlan +-1·nmm t- honuq No i'\J)(•r neLC'SS l't•rmu nL•nt "ork l 'onlJl'l n.-ncc floss• 833-8095 ~;qua I Oppor Employer Cabinet maker. Ew 'd l!J·l-!:13711 \'ur w.1shC't Full lime m 1•r Ill (;o<l<I hour'!. paid "'i'rtl mi· 1\1)11ly w1th111 \ktro C'.tr W."h 29!)( llJrbor Uh d t ·\I l.IJS:.1f11.•tl Newspaper Advertising Sales Thc Oran..:•· Cn.1~1 11:111\ 1'1lnl needs addtlrnn.tl ,,ti••' µ1.•r'"''' lur ..ia ... ~trled & 11ul1Jmut1"' 1111 1'1<1 1' -..de' ... t:dl '''"'"''per da..,!>•h<'•I ;HI \t•rt1'1n~ C''<pt•rll'nt•t· n• qwn'll Apphcont mu:.t hJve ~ood car and IJpm~ skills ~ala ry & rom m1s~1on 1;oo<l opportuni ly f:xrellent compan) h~mertts. l'oaitions mu~l hcfillNI 1mmcd111tcly. Cnll Personnel Dept.. for appoint mcnl 642·43"!l Or~Cocnt Dal Piiot 330 W. y Slreel Costa Mesa Equal Opportunity Employer Clennlng lady wanted Ualbon Isla nd. l day week. 673-2860 Clw:inlng lady, dependa- ble 25·30 h rs w k i n establiahed bus. 540·6996 CURICAL JOI! For n .iht person. Must be good on phone.. Gen 'l typloa ft oHice work. Profit sharing & fr'OUP health. U oyd P est Con· trol, S86 E. Dyer Rd, SA m«l'Zl. CLIRIC.AL Schools and Instruction This variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow F'or furthrr informal ion regard.tng pl.1rement of udvcrt1:.1nl.! 1n the Daily Pilot School:. and ln~trul.'l 1011 Directory CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES STARTING HOW Personal Instructions Complete Selection Microwave Accessories Now offering specialized course~ • Mm can * Party Food1 • l ow Calorie Claues Stcrt Soon * Clas1H For Holidoy Meals ''Learn to really use your expensive invest ment." We leach (!\cry phase or '.\IrCROWA \'E COOKI:'\G Complete 71 ~Hour :J Week Course For Enrollment Information Call 7 68-50 I I MICROWAVE MAGIC COOKING SCHOOLS BEA TRAVEL AGENT Day & Night Classes For Men & Women P ACIFtC TU VEL SCHOOL 61 0 East I 7tt. Stn.t s..ta AMI. Ca 9270 I CALL 17 I 4J 543-9495 Established 1963 F1nanc1al Aid Programs Accredlttld by TM Accred1t1no CommtSs•on of Thfl Nahooal A~oc1at1ori 01 Trade & Technical School, t #~-· ,......, ~ -. ,,.. ~ ...... , ~ '1ano J:e~~onJ ~\ ,-, by ..... lroW'ft 17 Y•ws T•~ bperiwc• Hove You Always Wanted To learn To PLAY THE PfANO? * leom Any Kind of MUSIC •Classical •P~lcr •Church • Improvisation Pri•• or Clem lul: wctloft ... _...M.....,., ·~ .. ., ...... Located e. M ... keo ofCodaM9M Forlwf• ...... ctl' 646-0317 •BALLET •.IAD • G'WM~ \STICH • PaF.-a.\ LI.ET •TAP • 018()8 • TllH I Te R•'WT a M LOOK FOR OUR SUMMER SCHEDULE I NEXT MONTH CHILDREM-TEEHS-ADULTS PLEASE. CALL l-962-544~1 987 1 Yontown An. tta1tLi8"on IHcll Just W. of Brookhursl , next to Sklnny Haven Restaurant CERTIFIED SWIM INSTRUCTO (20 (aars Experience) Specializing In Infant Survival Swimming & Young Children. Also. Classes For Older Children and Adults Your Pool Call 499· I I 14, Joyce, E•es Annds DAY SOtOOl Pre-School Ages 2 thrll 3rd Grade Open 6 :30 AM thru6 PM leglatr.._ Now h lag Ace.pied for G,..,.1 I( ltlli owgh lrd. Hota..c ...... ~ Clrttilrfod H n ... NCll •Neltig & .... $tr.Neel ,..~,,.., ... ~-~ Arh&Crwfta Mink Sports Adfntln Co.e Visit 0.. W..t_. c• For Appal :lwc..t 2110 Thurin Av•., Costa Mesa Phone 646-1444 -6'~©~ e '®-9e DON'T DO IT! DON'T MAKE A CAREER OF JOB HUNTING LEARN TO GET THE JOB YOU WA NT CA LL TODAY FOR FREE BROC HURE (714) 751·3002 ANNOUNCING SECOND SERIES OF CLASSES The First Total Residential Real Estate Educational Program Real Estate "after-licensing" sales development program Every sales person invited to attend. A ward yourself with the program designed to make you more successful' Learn the skills to make real estate a career -not just an "avocation " Ettect1ve -Increase your income ~arts May 2 at Irvine Host Motor Hotel. Irvine • Call for future class schedules T aught by Realtor Michael McGinnis. who has sold over $48 million in ten years A complete 4 0 hour course incruding a special a hour Symposium/Workshop. T u1t1on -S200 00 (Tax deductible) Enrollment hm1ted to 100! CALL "Char" Himes (714) 996--3460 (collect). NEW WORLD DISCOVERY SYSTEMS.INC. A Ll ...-, ~1.-~N CAREER TRAINING Earn BA or MA Degree by becoming an International Montessori Teacher Excellent Career. Can Be Teaching In Little More Than A·Year. FWtanclal Aid a.ROLL HOW Fortt.J .. ClaMJ 2515 W. S-ftowtr, s..to._ Call4MSJI P.O. Box 909 Placentia, Ca. 926 70 FINP O«T.A60UT A ~eWA~PIA/6 CA~&&,e ~N -~~ A5 ~OTN&.Rr5 HA V& .. 1-~r Je'IC#AX!P~ 5HOW YOW-HOW .' ....... ...,._....._ Now offering new cosmetician course featuring instruction In faci als. hai r removal & make·up techniques. For 111torm1tlon l enrollment call: 11YOU CAM TAKE . GREAT PHOTOS ••• and I'll Show You How! .. Fow Fast Pocecl lllfonllatl•• E•eftlnp with IETH KOCH THE EDUCATED EYE A Cnah Cotne For hwyoM Phone for rennatiou BETH KOCH STUDIO 200 Newport c..,....Dri•• Newport IHCh (Next to Muldoon's Irish Pub) PhOM to~ your ,......atlou 644-4332 ................................ ,, • become confused easily • daydream 1n S(;hool •feel lost . • feel like a failure • have ~grades • learn slowly WE SPECIALIZE IN DISCOVERING AN D HANDLING THE BASIC BARRIERS TO LEARNING. we can help THE STUDENT IMPROVEMENT CENTER Call 901 Dover Drive 6 42-9088. Newport Beach International MONTESSORI SCHOOLS For chUdretl 21/2 thru 12 pan •Planned programs •Reading. Writing. Geography. Music, Arts: Physical Ed. Anthme11c. Language. Science , I ndependont Study & Social Activities. Remedial Reading Summer Program Cerlifi9d Teachers Costa MHG 646-21 34 381 Unl .. n lty Ori .. ....wport hach 979-9241 20221 Cypress St. Santo Ana 540-4751 2515 W. s.tflower lreo 529·0321 400 W. Ar Stnet * FAA APPROVED * c-~ .. * . ~1 ,. ~ 35 Hours tllght time In Cessna 150'• with 20 hovrs dual inslruction. Club membership. Free due!. Individual Instruction. tailored to YOUR • " 8blhty. 20 AIRCRAFT AYAH.AIU AT LOWEST IATIS IN Olt.AMGI COUMTY LHni to fly ROlr __ .., ..... '-1 '* S,.CI .. I.tu fOf' CiMIOAC cf .. ·w ln.,_.wtS......._ For Co .... ttt ...._ C• MOW . 979•1I55 19711.'Aar,.tw.,~ ... ....... , ...... .... o,.....~ .... . An opportmtlly to be a part of a progressive ---:-------------------------__.;.:..;... ___ ....:.,.. _______________ ..:..... _________ ....;. ___ _.;_.;.... data processing co. Mu st Ukedetail work le be able to converse on telephone w /customers. Clerical or accounlln.r exper . de · slrable. We will lraaft. lntecrated Dat.a Corp 2283 Falrvtew Rd, CM ' The Bluest Marketplace ori the Orance CoaSt DAILY . PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS . • ·----· . . ,.. .. -' . . . cw ..... -·~ ea.. ... ..... T• Jm ....... Disc ....... D-.ce &tf'CI .. Mnle1IC...., lpeci.1 ..... /1'• CM!Mft.tlo.. Cl•1n ( 2750 HARBOR BOULEVARD. SU ITE 7-B COLLEGE CENTER. COST A MESA. CA 92626 Phone 714-540-5953 .COLLEGE STUDENTS · "Earn A Lot & Learn A Lot" This Summer In Our Lead.nhip Training & Marketing Program. EARN S 800 PER MO. *TrGYel •Must Relocate *Hard WorldftCJ lill For 1-.1ow C_. (4 5ull01d l'VOl11"'"• (714) 638-9636 MifrO' CoroOftt•on• STUDENTS BEING ACCEPTED NOW SES SI OHS ST ART IN: • JUNE, OCTOBER & FEBRUARY LINDENWOOD COUEGE 4 fully accredited individualized study program now ava ilable IN HUNTINGTON BEACH For Moh.Ire CNOtlH. Sett lnltl~. lnqubltiY• S~ lntevate study with work. Programs designed individually for the fully employed. BA, BS, BME. Bf A, MA and MFA programs offered in: ~sdllr. .. ff 11ltb C1r1 Mnkltstratlon ... Educatlon ".Yll1ntary Assodatltn Mmilllstr1tl11L l'llyclloloiy ... Creatlve Arts...&•ontolon .. .Music Socitlon ... PoNttcai Sd111ct._ Tltt1ter fKUlty in Hunlinattn e... 111d nur•y weas. ~ldatt Ille llarllitl nperitnce can lie ml11td wit-ac*'1lk cn•ts f • ldY1ICtd Slllldial. Write or call for ITIOf'8 Information, orientation meeting dates 1n Huntington Beach 1413 flmt ST. SANTA MOIOCA 91481 (21J) 451-41'7 I lroine College _of Business II dt' l .. Ke -.I Ca.ndt• Ce ... ~ wffll • llltwe ...... wtl,... foM At.,...... we an ....... ,.,. ... ._. "9e .._. ,_ tMt r- __,to lilaYe. We'I .... yo. to ........... T• ,_. cWce fJf anent llCHf ARY • ltlc.TIOMST STIHOGIAPHH • IOOIOlma GBlaAL OfffCI ASSISTAHT tielCAUIGAL SNCIALIZATIOH TYPI.._ • SHOltTHA.t4D MUSH-W DAY AMD EVEMIMti PIOtilAMS A..,.... .ct cornet......_ eMtra1111..t, located Ill .. Wt .t tt.e ............ "'•• ...... -.... .,. .. c ....... Job ......... Auhf9c•1 Most ....... ,, .... ..., 15 ..... .,. .. 400 '" .. ., .... IMrfe r .... 1hd lnflllt 9 I *11 lftl. C .. HOW for_... lftforMatl• mid broclwes. 1700 L GAIRY AV. SAMTA AMA 92705 ,...,,,,_. ,.., ... Dy.-'"' 556-8890 REMEDIAL READING PROGRAM T~. Afril 26. 197'7 OM. Y PILOT C9 HelpVf~ 7100 tWpW..ted 7100 W-.CS 7100 ....................... ...............•••••••. . ......•.•.•......•... Codrtal1WaitANes, 1Dalo DISHWASHIEtlS IRL FRIDAY needed Watten, DU-e Jockeys Food P rep. ApJ>IY In for 1a1Jmaker, f\l1J time, M/P Hosteua day Is person. )fuldoon 's hu b 67S 1123 ovc. employment for new Pub, 20a Newport Ctr Or, __ G_Rl_U.--M-.-.... -- dlscotheque re1t•unnt N.B. "'" bacqamrooo club. ForOiatri --. _bu_to_la_tera __ Led_I_ Wanted for Del Taco. appt call Ron, 516-Q161. P / t i n: 0 m • up l ! F /tlme dayS. A~ply in CoUedlon Bureauseekin1 $1000/mo or more + penon. 25252 La u lld, penon to ltaln in s e.neral be n e f i l s . M at u re . Laguna Hills. colled.Jon work. Cont&ct ~639~~~::..· _____ , _______ _ Mr. YounJ3.M30 DONUT Shop, p/Ume. All GUARDS --------1 ni'ht shl1\. No exper. COOi(/ nee. Ai• 25"'6. Woman. wH•JEO •.rslSTAH'I' IMGR. Apply In peraon. Mr. "" -Donut, 13$ E 17Lh St Full & l'art·tlme. All 18-21 Yra of a1e. c M • ' A.reu. AJe 21 & over. App l y In person,-·-·------Mature men pref'd . K.rano 's, 6800 W. Cat DRIVERS Unllorms rurn. No casll Hw y. NB 6'6·0120 Crots-Ceuttrv ouUay.Car&phoneoec. uam.apm. No spec. Uc req ·a. Apply• Cook MacGregor Yacht Corp u.l•enal CJeucut·c:areer minded 1.6.11 PlacenUa, C.M. Protection SerYJce eneraetic. ·548·7948 DRIVERS l226W.SLhSt.S.A. Interviews Mon·FTi. COOK Household furniture 10:30am-nocm For conv. hospita l. moving co. localed la El &1 :30-4 :30pm F/tlme or P/time. Ex-Toro wants drivers w111--------per. pref'd. But will yr expet. w /comm'.I train. Apply Park Lido movint co. Call 830"'926. HOSTISS /CASHllEtl Conv. Ctr, 466 Flagship Exper'd only. Over 21. Rd, NB. 642-8044. DRIVER ·.San Cl~eote, Nights. Apply daUy SPM. Dana Pomt, CapU1trano Ml Casa, 2:96 E. 17Lh St .• COOK. MATURE Beach area. Part Ume Costa Mesa. E 'd 8 . alternoon!i, Wednesday,--------xper · ayview Thursday and Friday, Housecleaners! We need Manor, Sal range $2.7$-$3 and Saturday and Sun· amtbiUous, enthusiastic hr. F /time.~ W. Bay St day mornings. Requires people who take pride in _c_M_ . ....,MZ_·JSOS __ • ____ 1 dependable auto or small their work. 546-0930 CO()t(~ station wagon. Phone HOUSEKEEPER f II 642-4321, ask for Harry • u Exprd. App in person. Seeley charge, Uve-in, spk Eng, Mario's Reataurant. 3301 Eqi:..l Opportunity drive, $550 mo. + pvt E. Coast Hwy. CdM Employer qt.rs. Rel. N .B. 559-1666 COOKS & COUNTER OUSEKEEPER· Help day & eve shifts. ESCROW SEC'Y .l.rooing. mornin&s, Mon· Apply in person, Del Im med · o Pen In I Fri, CdM, own traoap, Taco, 17Lh & Superior, w/eetab'I co. Xlnl fringe rel, 67S·5364 aft SPM C.M. ben efits. Sal com-1----------------1 mensurate w /exper. Ex· HOUSEWORK, S Days Cooks & Waltrftses · per'd onl,y need apply. wk. Own Transportation. Full & Part Ume. Op· 556-6!WO. Newport Bch. 645-1828. ment. Apply 2633 W. ~ "' Sponsored by International Montessori Schools OCEANOGRAPHY SUMMER DAY CAMP portunily for advance· Rviu-SECRET•RY CHS Hrs he'; week, com· Coaat Hwy, Nwpt Bch or To (2) Controllers in piling I lerature and •calJ642.fM?Sor644-6680 Fashion Island R.E . answering telephone for Orm. Exper nee., Manuf.Agenlinhomeof· COUNTER Girl wanted. stat/acc:Ulg typina skills. fice in Corona del Mar. EMROLLNOW- CLASSES LIMITTD 546-4531 979-9241 2515 W. Sunflower Santa Ana 529-0321 400 W. Fir Brea I st & lrd THlclay of each "'°""9 IMgl ~ Tuelclcly, Aprfl 5th Free public service conducted by June Heckman Sponaored by The Rolled Oat .... ~Store 27041 Lo Pa Id. (~Iner a Village) Mis.,_ Vlefo 76a.7610 $ 5 500 Tot~ Cod ,.. W..er lllC6dllgA111.-,, • Skin Diving• Salling • Ooeanograo.I hy Complete Water Activity Day <Amp For Free Brochure or Additional Information Pleaee Call or Write: NEWPORT OCEANAUTICS 504 M. Newport ll•d. Wt. 20J N•wport hodt. CaUfonala '26'3 Ttf.,.._. l714J 64MZt2 ART CLASSES by BJ.EN CREEi.MAN Noted Artist of the 1...,...siOllht Sc:llool (B.A. Univ. of Arlt. Poet Grad) Maintaining the same degree of instruction from individual to group & association classes. ForWo;wta.alt 644-5485 Sandwiches, Mon. lhru Typing 70 wpm, Sh 7~11SO _Fri_._ea_u_:_S5&-07 __ so ___ I 9CHOO. Apply In peraon,,__S_U_R_AN_C_E_·_lm_m_ed_i_a_le Count.er Girl to work Mon· Fri 6:30am·l2:3opm. App· ly In person, Golden Boy Donut Shop, 177tl Beach 81,H.8 . 8 Se lllguel Dr, Ste opening, muat be exper'd 200. Newport Bch. in persooal-commerical EXEC. SECRETARY lines for general In· Work with two Vice surance •&ency. Laa~a Presidenla ln Newport Bch area, salary negoUa· C __ O_U_N_T_E_R.....-H_E_L_P_,1 Ctr ofc. Xlnl shorthand & ble call 49HI008 for appt. OOOKS full or p/t, exp typing skills & pleasanti-------- pref'd. Captain Mike's personality req'd. Must lNSURANCE-AtrrO F'lsh Fry, 815 w. l9lh St, be able to handle wide PERSO ..... "'L range or responalblUlies ""' _C_M_·-------i & work with minimum UNES COURIER & su~rvision., Prerer in· UNDERWRITER dlv1dual with 3·S yrs OFflCI HELPER exp., but will consider l'crt·TIIM e ... can be student with ap· lite exp. with xlnl skills. Laree Oranee Co. aeen· prox. s hours a day to All applicants wlll be cy has lmmcd. openings work. Musl haveown car teated. Gd company for personal lines un· to drive. Hourly wage & benetlls. E.O.E. Call: derwritersw/expcr. mileage allowed. Has to Phyllis for appt. 640-•580. GOOD SALARY be able to type & help In ~...........,... + BONUSES office. Houn ~a n be FEES PAID 963-0945 worked out. Office ex. perience or schooling in Manuf. Mgr to $26K i--------- business a help. Call Exec Secyg/~h seso JANITORS 64().~ between 8 · oo & G JO Stat typist to $775 "' •. p /ti ON · A/PConsltuc to$800 .. en ... women, me 9:30AM LY. Also Fee Jobs eves. Nwpt Bch & Irvine Irvine Peraonnel Agency areas. ~7182 Armstrong • Delivery ot Daily Pilot. 4'.8IJ E 17th Coata Mesa Ave. Irvine. S.0·7811 Large route In South Suite224 6'2·1470 LEGAL SECY Laauna Beach. Suitable ~ Newport Beach Law for a bJeh school or col· Firm. Type 70 wpm lege student. Must have GENERAL OFFICE shorthand. mac card a dependable car with INVENTORY CLERIC exp. desirable. 1 yr or good drl ving record. more legal exp. Xlnt Eami.ogs approximately Hetm.d lmmedJ•ty academic record. Salary S27S mo. Phone SU·4321. No experience commensurate w /exp. Aak for Circulalion leav-64S.Z04l 644·7600 lng your name & phone. Equal Oppor Employer 1-------- Demonstratora P /lime. --------• LEGAL We train for maJo• --------1 SECRETARY ho u a e wares co· & GENERAL Fashion l1land Law firm varioua food producta. desires Legal secretary Work close to home. LABORERS with Clvil UUallllon exp. (7H> 778-33150. Cail Janet Dental Recept. Perio ofc. P /time w /pC)Ssible future expansion ol hrs. Ex· per'd all phases, eepeclally Insurance pro- ceealng. Sal open. Career oppty. H.B. 842-6631. DENTAL Anlsl . Ortho chafralde, exper req'd . RDA pref'd. I'·~ per hr. N.B. 642-262111. 640·1'60 Telephone &Tranaporta· 1 _... lion A Must. Loni & -..-Secy /Asst. short term assignments. For corporat4:' counsel. Holiday, Vacation Pay, Emphaals on hUgaUon & Medical Insurance some corp. exper. Sal Available. commensurate w /ab~­ly, but not neceaaanly Umiled lo traditional ranges. Xlnt working coods & benefits includ· lni hud.lome bonusea for Industrious lndlv. Mary, (7H )7~·1S1L DENT AL A.5SJST ANT Ortbo, part-Ume. Apply Tues-Fri. Dr. Nivlaon, uor Clerk, pm time, 181E.l.8thSt.C.M. OranaeCo.Airport) n ghta. No exp ok ~-==~~~ -~-:--a\t).. ~·$-"===--~~ DENTAL ASSIST -Eq-qual--()ppor-·E·m·p-lo·ye·r-t'_64US37 ___ G_eo_ra"""e----: TEENAGE BEAUTY CLASSES! ORTHODONTIC RDA 0ener.i Offi LVH 11-7 1 ~r extensive chrslde CUSTOMR O'w'ae Nurse. Good aal duti.es req'd. Pref some & fringe benerlt•. 80 Bed front otc abilities, CORRESPOMDEHT S.N.F. Mesa VerdeConv. F /time. FTlnge benefit.a. Applicant mual be able Hoap, 661 Cent« St. C.M. e.2-6"3. to compo1e own letters. $411-5585. Dental cbalraide aasia· tanl. Do you relate well wtLh people? Full mouth reconstruction practice needa efficient team member. Please phone Ne-7tl8 .to arrange cion· fldenU.i interview. DIMTAL/A..tht Experienced, hall time .. alataat needed for friend11 Sant& An• of· flee. X·nY lie req. Uniform, allowance ii pmaioft plan. M&-"44 Type 45+ wpm" bandlel-------- delails. Well estab'tl•------- educatioa.i firm. Good beneflta. Apply National Systems -C9rp •• 4861 Birch St, N.B. (Near 0.C. Airport) E.O.E. MACHINIST Proareulve lnJectloli mold malting co. bas re· located to H.B. 4' needs Mac hinists & EDM Operaton. Min 5 yrs elC· GEMllAL OFflCI per. Xlnt waaca & over- F.ot.ry level pos. sradin1 Llme. Profit 1barln1 " examinations Cor nat 'l other benefit.I. education firm. Req'a SdlMICorp. neat bandwriUng & Ute C714tltl-U31 typtni. Apply National~~~~~~~~ Systems Corp., 43411- Blreb St, N.B. <Naar Maid. Ptr. Exp'd. Apply O.C. Airport) E .O.E. In person Sea1ark Motel. --------• 221CNpL Blvd. Ne-7"5 HAIR HUNTERS ... Prwenta The Total Beauty Program WT AL ASSIST. Ga, Muls:lu•c:e . KAIDS WANTED REGISTER NOW ... a.ASSES START MAY 4th Exper'd Ortbodontte ~ ~:::::.. ~ Top •• ,. paldl Tbe Inn FOUR 2 H~ SESSIONS• COURSE $50. chalnJde. F /Ume. H.B. f'd. ~ at IA(Wla, 211 N. Cout Be beaUtiful fof summer. Learn how to become a more tovely and confident '*"°"" llG:Mm. Hwy., Lat. Bei.. LEARN ••• Nail & Hair Care DENTALA.5SISTANT G•lllAL OfflCI LEARN •.• HalrCaret'ProperStyllng aper, cbalralde, •IX· Expr'd In order taklnl, MAID LEARN ••• Make Up Technlques/Cofot Appll*lonlBrow An:hlng ~I!~ Slut Immediate-lnvolciQI, typl.ng, fllloc, wanted full time for R. FOR ~~aTIAM • .... ~,,2151 175elar7open.ea.ma 10 tty addln1 macb, Be•uty Salon. Tues tbtu ~,,"''"'" _.... l --------1 IQOCl pbone m.._.. ... Saturday. Rlcbard 70 fashion lcinnA ;f. . DINTAL/CHA.flSIDI aenUal. Small mf1 In Ouellette Salon. aoo ...,_,'T !'/time. upr'd. gd ·Ooet&ll .... -.9'00•· N.wportCenterDr.NB • • 11!!!!!!!!!!!1 beneflte. No Se&urdaya peodlng on ••pr. alate_a.nc• man1 well iiiii ;A m.em :::11. btwn 9 am II 12 qualllfled In pool • boat ~-..:.-==;::;;;;;;;;4jj;'"1i;;;a---..~dP~ ... -==r:::::::·!ll·G'Q.·---...,,. • .;.;;;i;:;;:o -...-.... 1.JS'>D:.i.·1-----•111111 DENTALllECEPT. maiot. lluat bo sell EXP&RIEHCllD OJRLFIUDAY 1tarter, Salary com· s..m• . PartUme,Xbl"laweek. meaaurate w /eJCp You can s~111t, 'find It, ( 8 A 2 •58.,8· J Trade It With a Want Ad .. ~ . •1 One Call Service Fast Credit Approval DINTAl.ASST rff't..~: ~=t-sn_.e_~_oo_. ----- For NB Or1bodoaU1t. John.Ion 844-.a ll&lllbettrtlfled ()rlMI~--------~ treinlq dealtecl. iMi aot ._NIDAY nqW'ed. 142.-U NOD amoker. TrPe 41. aaa1em..rtntnee. Tate pllQli8 ordera. keep Ma&ur9 pvaoa. hrn re- l>Dft'AL AISISTANT boob • NCOC'dl • lean pair up. pref'd. Waae a.lrllde.~Npac.. le1a1 ICC')'. $550·up. +~eolnet.Call ·-~ •MOO. t.,;Sli~~'1Rl~,!!lv'.2:ma~t.::._ __ r.---------..._~------~-------------:------a..--------.;;-.;;.._ ______ _....:;,.._ ______ _._~~:::=:::::::.c:::========. I 41 • __ ....,,,..,.. ---. . ·-....... - CJO DAILY PILOT TU!!d!y.Ap!!l 29, 19n Add it ... Build IL.Diaper l t ... Hammer it ..• Carpet SE it ... Cement it. •. Wire tL.Hoe it ... Clean it ... Move lt...Press it...Palnt it. .. Nail it ... Plaster it ... Fi>< it... . . . . VICE DIRECTORY Appl•:•..,. C.ilnp.Acoaffc eo.trodor ' J Gs•cGllStnlcH ~ ,..INgfPcipeMCJ PailctWJ/PaperictcJ ~~ ............. . ........................ ....................... ....................... ........................ ....................... ....................... .•.•..•.••............. ................•...... .. . APPLIANCE REPAIR Ecooomy Acoustics. GERWICK & SON, ainee Full yard maintenance. 23 yrold Student interest· MRS KJNGS CLEANING , .. y Castle Expert PAlnUna Ava.1la· FhL Vtiey Spas SlO~lceCall Qua.l.cetllnga,neworre· llH7. Lie. 3lo&U. •Addi· Beds, cleanup, ne w ed in bousesitUng this & PAINTING CO. "WE CMr ble oowt Free est, reas ManufacturedbyGerico Call<7H>S4&-U22 11~rep.ajn. free esL ~;!!.~l~ans. ~n&. spklra. "1-4763 sRumr me 6 r . July-Sepdt . OOITALL''835-3561 A;~$t~.~~~::S ratee.Cal1Bruce543-~ Sales 962·0960 ~ S3&-MM1 _.._ or """7 pm. e s . . 40·5038 Ar & HOUSECLEANING Prices lq_cl matr1/labor "9sfw }Repair tltvhlo. R..,.... ••••••••••••-••••••••• C-nt,IConcrete SpeciaJi1iag·Bulldia1 Cleanups, Garages, yn:ta, 7am·ll.30pm. la our Busme:ss. Call Gu.ar, •rd. rreeest. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motbt!r will babyllil my••••••••••••••••••••••• Arch Desiga Plans ror hauling. Weekly maiat. HANDYMAN·Homes & Jaruce's Ra&&edy Ana'~ TedSS2-0l34orfl36.708S VERYNEA'l' PATc:H CANOPY TVS~RVICE bome, W. l!tb St., Wun One-man crew. s yrs ex]>r Add. re111dence apt. XlDt '~wrk$48-4883Keo Jr. Apb. Conscleotioull al875-6M3 PETERS PAINTING JOBS&TEXTURF. Ul RATESERVlCE to ooe year, from 6prn. pouring & ftnishlng. Set refs. N.B. 64frl573 . , . craftsman. Pb: 645-0303 .. Expr'd. Reas Rales. Free F..st. 80lH<&39 Al FairPrices960-t633 S!:S per· week. Call Jan your own form$, aav . . Comm 1 & Residential ,_....__ r•• • J &&S-l70S 494 1485 P181l1Wlg. 1'.>e11gn. Constr. Lawn care, tree work. --__, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free Est. Call Gene ~ Tie ,. ----------4 aiooey. • Lie. 331154. Additions, Compl clean up Mike ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fire laces-Planters 5S3-0&S8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.my SenlcH ~ment work or all klnds. newconstr, res. & comm. :>48·2049 Sldploader, dump truck, Brict Concrete Pauo HOMESAVERS. Plumb· CERAMIC TILE. New or -••••u•••••••••••--Reasrates.-Free ests 640-7020 GARD EN .ER I hauling, tree work, grad· Block Walls BBQ Pit.s INTERIOR I E X TR i.o&. & HeaUng, Free est. remodel. Fr est, sml jobs Acrylic nails $35. lst rill 750-5'85 · 7 Bectrical CULTUREGtt'lnO~TI· lni,demo,etc.751·3930 IWfa,Fat.s.~ Painting. Expr'd high SlOhr. Honest&relloble wolcome536-2426aft5. free. Facial, massage, B & D Concrete. All ....................... expr seeks comoierlw u.• tcJ Free Est: Blockwalla, quality work. Super reas service. 8 of A, Mstrchg. CERAMIC TILE T bs m~keup, s kinca re. phases concrete, block CUSfOMELECTRJC maintenance accounts.••••••••••••••••••••••• s lumpstone, brick. rates.675-31B1John 84'7-0383or 7Sl·3150. shower s , kit~he':is : BeauUque. 831·3093 brick work. Free ests, Free est . Comm, res, Quality work, freo est. Hauling, moving, cleanup Res/Comm. Reas, Uc/· R....., Ir R.,_. noors, patios 645·21.29 C.penhr Uc.-&bonded64S-2031 honest & reliable serv. ~.Hampton549-2015 S7/up.Treework.Reas, bond. Btlb 7S0·9354, EXCLNTPAINTlNG ....................... Trww•ice ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .... C :Lie 331201. 751·3UO & ,.~ ~__. fast, freeest842·4597 642-9144 lntr "-E--. Reas. Remodel, add., patio, r e· --... 898-7715 -_........c.. a; AU • 7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~tJH-Repoir ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sonny&Jer. FREE haul· Briclt, blocks, frplcs, Freeest.MS-2706FRED pair. Fr~e est. !162-4i!l OuK'k's TrceSvs. Palms, t;arpentry •. plumbuig, Mother will babysit, my Hubbard Bec:tric Save lime. Save Money ing, cleanu~. tree work slabs, stooework. 20 yrs WORK GUARANTEED Lukay LI · 298ZJ3 olives trimmed, thinned, ceramic:We..540-5560 borne, W. 18th St., mfan Uc 327136 645-6974 BARBARA'S for usable items. Fen· esp/~.586-03.)8 ' lntr/Extr Free &t. 2S RoofWJ prune d• removed Co llege Student to ooe year, from 6pm. SHOPPING ces/bldgs removed Y s E ·642-0295 ••••••••••••••••••••••• M6-9229 an.5 Car Pent e r• AL S2S per week. Call Janet, G«de• SERVICE 540-~ 557-~; S4.3-6768 , r xpr. Repairs. Lie & ins. All ----.----- p u•"ES. oft1~ ,_ 64.S-1705 MJ Buy-Wrap-Deliver Men-Ing Knowle s Painting ty F l W ll Tree Tnrn, re move • .nn.> ~ ""e es ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• MOVING le HAULING, •••••••••••••••••••-•• . · pes. .ree es . a . prune. Reas. Fully iosrd. 673-3658 Reliable Expr Japanese WE DO IT ALL! Free est. anything any where. occ Stud Bl s-. T Inl/Ext, eommer~tal Call anyUme S41·Si930 T 645-S12A _________ ,.__.___..or Ca.U ~ft.,.; • ~,,..,2515 ent. g .,.. apts & res ideot1al ony r-ts.r.lc~ ~ Gardener. Reasonable Concrete, paint'g, ....., ... me....... truck. Trash, tree trim, 831Hl.20 • ~f.Metatlons --.--------,... ••••••••••••••••••_•-•• pri"'"". Free esL '"" ".,.," plumb'g, carpenter, R d --...., LEES 2' yrs exp Xlat. •••••••••••••••••••••• ""'"' ............., UTEHAULING move. an y 131·1528, . ••••••••••••••••••••••• C' Bof .M ·cl.. SPECIALIZING m all Mike roof'g glass electncal MD-l666 J ust interiors You choo6e n: s. A ast 11. & Carpel Man will lay your ~ypes remodeling. u yrs .. tree ;emov~I. garbag~ Free est. Clean & fast. · Alwralioos .. reas. pri.ces, Cash CaU: Lee The Tree ot mine. Re pairs Ul area. All work gu.ar. Expr Hawauan garde.ner d1s p., mar-lite, tile, 673-4646,St.eve p~ •---'INI the color. Neat &rdepen· custom ht ling, Fast 675-5750 cleaning too! Gu:u-wor °"" ...... Yd I _,....,,,.....,... •··~ dable, gd local re s. Ask sometimes while you ---------""'.,..._.4 c ~anups, ?runmg, carptg., scree ns & M...--'--'--•••••••••••••••••••-•• forBrian642-3194 wn;t. Call """·1239 or Wi'-.a....w Ct--i-at bigger savings. Pr lnmmmg, hauJ 6464676 heaL'g "-v'. o '~ .. ....., -...--.. ~ est, 645-3646 LEE M. JARVIS · .,.,.r g. range ••••••••••••••••••••••• Painter. 4 years ex-&12·5334 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AD D I T 1 0 N S -EXPERT JAPANESE Cly. 22 yrs. 7l4•636·65SS Want a REALLY CL'EAN perience. AIJ phases. Has WALLPAPER~G Trade your old stufl ror CB ~indow Washin.g Find what you wanl in REMODELING Gardener· .... r e e HOUSE? Call Gingham own Alr·Less. Call Greg Reasonable, all kinds new goodies with a Se!""1ce. 1'1'ee Esllmateo. Daily Pilot Classifieds. Ph 962·3200, Lie 317856 "El;timates. Call: 962-0858 Want Ads Call 642·5678 Girl. Free ests, 645-5123 at 979-9621. Experienced 644-4192 Classified ad. G42-S67S 84&Q19 after 7pm. ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~~·~.~-... ?!~~ ~~~~ ..... ~~~ ..... ~~::! ..... ?!~~ ~!'!~·~.~ .... _!!.~! ~.~~·!4! ..... ?!!~ ~~!!'::! ..... ?!~ H.tp'Wa.ted 710 Wmrhd 7100 MAHAGEMENTTRME NURSES Raleigh Hills Hosp. In nd RN LVN SALESPERSON ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Young man to work ln PERSONALLJNES of Cul l time h s ekpr Or SALES e--.........aari & growing tool rental busi· URGENT HEW OPEHIH~S Sat /Sun incl 'd. Gd P/time. 11-7. Xlnt bene. Exper'd in residential &. ~ H ness. Must be neat in ap-'\. PerS'onal Lines • benefits pleasant wrk'g Bayview Conv. Hospita l, Ideal P /time cqmmerical lighting fix-Acctng Cllu/Bkkprs pear. & h.ave very neat We have an urgent need cond. Ask for Frank. 2055 Tburin Ave, CM. lures, exper'd in lighting TO $1400 MO. · handwnting. 6 Day wk for a full time RN on our • Underwritff 64.5-5707 8·3 642-3505 Job or furn sales a plus, U z Reinders Agency w wkdy off. Prefer mar· 11·7 shirt. F\Jll·t1me posi· We have immed open-salary commensurate 4020 Birch St, Ste 104 m'<I man ror perm. resp. t1ons alw immediately ings ror exper'd personal RM SupervilOr w1exper, opply Cor ad· Newport Beach 833-8190 position. t:;x""r. not re· available for Licensed h oes underwriters & Real !!:state Sales 11-7. Mesa Verde Conv. Work 6 hrs a day 10 our vancement. Apply Wood Call for Apf>l/Esla b '65 "" Ea ~ H 661 c t St new ore. across from the LJnk•;K Fi t Co 2031 q"d. Apply 1930 Newport Personnel on 3-11 & 11-7 agents. mmgs w osp., en er . 6'""'"g x ure . i---------Blvd C M s luft.s. Excellent salary. $525-SllOOPerMo HY",JOIN C.M.548-5585. O.C. Airport. Earn Top S. East Maio St., lrv.1--------- . · · workmg cond1t1ons a nd Co. benefits include: ~~~~ry, bonus, com· <Corner McArthur & SECRETARY Manicurist wanted for frrn ge benefits. Call Paid health plan, vac, S b H Main) Sol. Prac:titlo....-Laguna llllls Nail Salon Personnel. 714/837-8000. bolJdays. IOCenllve pro-uper omes Sail loat sales. ---------N B h d Exp"d m all phases or BEVERLY u •MOR grams New and used, top pro· The work \:; fun & Salesperson wanted oul· wpt c attorney n s n:nl rare. Clientele pre· ~ CALLDAILY ReaJty? ducer , capable ot perfectly suits people side for small NpBeh expr'd secretary. Top f"d but not nee. 581·2657 CONVALESCENT FOR APPT management.646-2193 who enJQy putung their auto leasing co. Must be S/H & typ111g skills req. HOSPITAL 96 .. A 944 Small office environ· verbol capab1hlles t o s harp. aggressive, & Xlnt position for right •MASSAGE LAGUNA HILLS _,,, ment. Top commissions! work. Stud e o t s, must have professional pe rson. Salary com-Tl'Xfl !-'EM• ._. 10 1----------i OnlheJoblraming. Fast Sal • l 18 r J ho u s cw 1 v es & appear. Great benefits m ens urate W/expr. ro~;.eomm-Guarmin. i:.qua pportunlly startschooltng. We ream-es gir ,over or r. moonl1 ghtcr.!> are all for a bard worker. Tak-752-6611 n.ll'-P T k 'ft l Employer bursC)Ourlicensecosls. Women s <;lothing, welcome. inoapplicau· ...... ., .. n242L1--------- EUTESPAwor 54--;.3;95ri---------Cho1ccorrarm locations Per s ona.lily : ap-._, " ... .....,. SECRETARY PHONE SALES lO Cost.a Mesa & Newport pearance, mtegnty re· Conlal1. Renee Roiis1 _days __ • -------1 For Newport Ctr Law NURSES AIDES MASSA.GE TECH & OrderhL'S, Day shirts. Me:.a Verde Com·. Hosp .• With d~p.loma ror top ~il Ccnt ... rSt. C.M dal>S Ll-.<.ilTIMA rF: :>l):.t - Mr Giarrusso. i52·95til Beach. Call for an appt. ql.llred_for F tr postl!~n. 833-8095 SEAMSTRESSES want· ore. Good typrng sk1lli. Phone Sales peopl<'. now ! SUPEHB HOMt:;S ~pply ID person. The wDd ed. Mustbeexp'd. Call759-043l male or female, 16 to 6S REALTY INC 549·8GSS Glance. 2122 W. Ocean· TIME-LIFE 556-4.142 --------- years of age. Guaranteed!~~~~~·~~~~ front NB. LIBRARIES, INC. SECY/OFFICE MGR wage" or l'omm1ss1om.. SALESMEN WA.HTED Equal OpPor 1':mployer SEC'Y TO $650 Part time -permanent, 250 East 17th Street, R£.•L EST•tE T g g g sml flex hrs . Gd car eer ~ "" Great oppor. for retired --ypin • rowin •-t· 1 M be Su ite 0 , Costa Mesa, ........... "'GER W"' ...... ED ftrm 751 ...,IV\ po""'n 111 . ust sharp, """"""'"' ~""'' m a n i n S i n g c r SaJesmJn exp'd. in stereo · ·<NVV Nwpl B<:h. area. 644-2507 ~n S:OO & 8·30 p.m For well known. expand· Dealership. Prior ex per. sales, home & aulo. Call Secretaries !IPo~s~! Clerks 3848 c...,_ Dri•e 546.-4741 (Across From Orange Co. A1rportl Equal OpPor Employer SECRET A.RY For Irvine PublJc Acct. Ofc. Prefer similar ex- per. F /time. Need re· sumc. Call a nytime MAT UR E WO MAN p ;Lirnc t o wcl<:o m<• Ol'Wcomcrs & t•ontac-t mt•rchanl:.. l-'l cx1blr hr' Need car. Ille tY1llng. 5'17·3095. NURSES AIDE Opcrun~s on da)S & artn sh1Hs Will trnm. E>.per. prcf'd. Pleas ... apply, Park Lido Com·. Ctr, ,lli6 Fl ags h1p Rd. N. B 642-8044. "'~ual Opnnrtunity ang Real Esta le com· valuable. 586-2660. 55&000 Sell idle items 642·5678 Classified Ads 642.5678 ~ ~ pany. Operung a new of. --;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;::;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;:;:.!..;;:;:::::::::::::::;!.;::::::::::::::;;:~~;;::::::::::::;:::;;,J,;:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-;:-:-:-:-:-:-;:-;:;;--t:mployer fice in Costa Mei.-a. Must r 833-3443. Mechanics Helper, some •0•"'•F•~•,C•"·~-----•I t·xp. ncrcss;iry or formal ,. "- have expenence. Salary ______ 1 plus +. All -applications PLANT MANAGER C"Onfldent1al Apply to Ad No 869, Daily Pilot, Extraordmary oppor for {."lai,sihcc'I Adverlising. M· hooll n i:. t\pply an' PERHAPS person. Harbor V11·l4 Shell, ~ San J oaqwn You Should c 'OM Ask for Dell Consider Mf:dical Assistant Back ore. ror 3 Fam An Agency Pr.1c-1 m F.1sh. Isl l\I Whe y IC'ast 1 } r ('\P Send rt• re OU ,.,ume r o .I. Crawforrl Can Make 1101 A\OCJ<.IO, Ste. SOI , ~ N_n._ The Real yowig. ">lronJ!. per:1on.i· :uo W Bay St • Co.!>ta blc, product1\ t· lcadl'r :':letro Car Wash Systems Mesa· Calif 92626 2950 Harbor Bl. RECEPTIONIST ror doc. Costa Mesa 546-al9l tors oCfac<'. will tram. ---Good typist, Sii \'ery Plastics Injection Molding helpful but not esi.enllal. $500 Start 548·0076 MEN ror LA T1m<'s de J1very. Pt>rm., p /llmt• S::75 Lo $350 per mo ~>18-1740 Difference Supervisor Need person exper'd in RECEPTIONIST Small law ore Airport areu N.B. Bright. ac- curate typ1Sl. 833-9983 An An11ncy pbarmaceuucal en\'aron-RECEPTIONIST ':II-rnent to test, setup, & run N.B. <•d agency needs Like high pn•c1s1on molds. ~ood phone voice, heavy MOLD MAKER Netld slrun11. mecbarucal lypUIJ:, front ofc appear. NYSTROM ab1ht) Ask for Myma, 549-8651 l'roi.:rcss1vc anj eC'lion tr you'r e-this µcrson --RECEPT-IONIST molrl mnkml! ro. has ro • ple<ase contJM.. lo<•ntc'<l lll JI B. & ncl'U' ASSOCIATES SchlMfl Plosiics For Newport Cll' Law · :\larhi111st s & 1-:1),\1 C71 4189l·6631 ~arm, Some typing. Start Op1•rators. Mm !> yr.. e' ---------I 1mmcd. 759-0431. IJ\'r. Xlnt Wllj.!c•i. " ovt•r I .. h ff P ..... r1w enoul[ tu o er a ---------• R-.. """'-ist t1ml'. rof1l i.harm~ & wide ranitl' ot rhjllt!ng.l•--------•I w,...-,.,,_,. oth1•rhencr1ts. m1o:c,pponuni!H'' .. Pf....\.')'TICS Young & a tlracttve SchneflCorp :,mall l'nouaih to re MACHIMEOPRS w1pleasant voice. $100. '714189&.6631 cogm7.C your tndl\ldual Openings on swing & w1c.Callt.&odaat~O ~~~~~~~~-I contnbutJon.'I. graveyard sh1Ct.s for ex· _f_or_a_p_pt_. _____ _ NOW RecruilLni; :i;hnrp ;1mb1llous man to ~('I I hardwal"l'. toola "' shop t•qwpmenl to 10dU1tnal .1f'rounts. Avg $2!!0 per ~k. No exper. nee. Call 7:>l !H:J.t. per'd lnJect1on Moldmg --------•I Machin e Operators. RECEPTIONIST Tra111~ accepted also. T-' .....,...., Oppor. for .idvanccment a e.,. .... ~ receptionist & wilim~ w /gr()WIDA co It. typing. Sat. & Sun. Piud medical & lifr in· 8 30 00 5 t5 PM. Contact ~ur i:ood vac ph111 Shift Mrs. Johnson bonw; prrm1um po1d for ---·644-·.9060 ___ _ n 11t ht worlt . Apply &im·5pm RECORD K EEPER - Cdlfontia M u s t h a v e ~ o o d NURSF. ~ion Mo6d"'9 handwrihnJe & typin&. RM Supenisor :ial Ran11e $500-flOOO 265 Rrigi1s. Costa Mesa SS.SO/mo. 673-5972 Day sh1Ct. C /time. for ~ conv. hospital w /active, '~~~ <lrvllle Industrial ~alD"ant·Resp. person Tt."6torauvc nural.na pc-o-. Complex> for day work. Must Ukc gram. Good s al & vn-,...... DiualOpporEmpJoyer fastfoodoperatton.App. lwncftts. Contnc:t Mr11. N' n RVl"I ASc;Q(IAI f ) ---------i ly, HlgJ?er, 16 Fashion Gray, r ark l.iilo Conv. P9f"SONMl"9tncy PRESSMAN lsland,N.B.bctwn9-11& <.:enter. 400 Flagship .Rd. 3723 Birch St .. N R. S1Mll mdependant .shop, _3-_5_·---~---- N.B. 642-8044. 557..0045 A.B. Dick. Experience lt"taurantM.....- NURSES AIDES I OOO/o only. 644·8233 Days, Matur e ind i v . 1131-Z127 Eves. ---------• w/restaurant exper. ln· t)cper·d. liayview Conv. Applic..t FRIE Hospital, 2055 Tburine~~~~~~~~ Ave, C.M. 642·3505. PRINTING t.erested in rest. mgmt. Pl£SS OPBlATOR Call Mark Burnett, Exper pref'd on offaet 8·5pm, Fri thru Wed. machines-Davidson, _.w.. __ Zlll2 __ . ------ ChieflS,SolnaorHanis. Retail Sales, In San Good co. benefits. 4 Day Cemente, approx 15 hrt ~ Apply in penon, Na-per wk to start. lluat be tional. Systems Corp.. avaD, btwn lOAM & 7PM, 4381 Birch St, N.B. (Near Kin wage + bonus App. OfflCEAnEND Wknda 3 :30-midnight. Wed & Thurs midnight to 8. Bayvlew Manor 350 W. Bay St, C.M. 642-3505. NURSES /AIDES '1·3:30, 11-7:30. Hunt· ingtoo Beach Convales· ~cnt Hospltol. 18811 Florida St, Hunt.lniton Bch. Ph: 847·3515 OFRCECUllCS 0.C. Airport) E .O.E. ly al Fotomat Corp S2. 7 S b r . F I t i me . P /lime Opportunity for 492-3950 ' 831·3242. Storer Cable -... ..... u-w--a.- HURSISAIDES TV. 27392 Camino .-..-nun --..... Capistrano, Suite 204. Mon Uam to approx 4pm & ORDl:RUES Laauna Nlruel. .Eq\lal & 8pm to ap)>rox 6am. 7-3 & 11-7. WiU tram jn. 0ppor Employer Tues Spm to approx 4am. terutedindividuals. -----------1 No exper. necas. WlU LidoCoov.Center Painters, w/al lellst 7 yra train. Apply in person, RETAIL CLERKS 1555Superior Ave, NB. exper only. Call 642·2928, Penn ys ave?', 1'660 C&ll646-7784 M.11·12PMOD.ly. P!~Ave,C.11. eo..1.i1_.w.rutt UTOTIM nx Amwer Sen. PVT YOUR ~IUooa open J.st., 2nd .. NuBsEs w 0 r k a bu~ SPAalTIMI 3rd shifts In San RM"S & LYM•s swttchboard. Be a)ert le To work cbe to home. Clemente Ir La1una F,time&P/Umo (lexterous. Mast ha~ a Work W/tbe Jat eat Belcll. Olhera.reuh.ave 7-3&3-ll nice speaking voice, fashions . You choose opeolu&s also. No cxper. LidoC-onv&JesC!et>l Ctr ~ood grammar • J yourh~.Calltorlntervw Nq'd. Apply at any of Ne~8;;:~or~7764 andwriting. Work a.ppt.ApnJ~th&29lhat our=:~Blvd. -.-p/tlme d!'r. or eves&: tb-c BcH Western OostaMeu 642·7702 MURSISAIDE some w nds. Call Capistrano Jnn, 8:30am·1~~~~~~~~!' ~nlnlls on days & aftn 646-3333. E .O.E. 8:30pm, ask for Mrs.1- sblfta. Will t:raJn. Exper. PEOPLE PE'R.SON CJow,4»-5661. pref'd. PleaH apply. Newport Eirec. need ParttLldoCoftv.Ctr.4Gf P /Ume auodate t Try• 01111 Piiot Fla«ablp Rd, N.B. whole.al• aupplJ Cl&Mlfled Ad to bQJ,aell _6G_-to44 ________ _. _rn-__ 22'23_. ______ orrentaomec.htna. People wbo Detd People 11'at'a nat the DA.IL y i'tl.01- SERVICE DIB.ECTORY la all a.bout l \ \ \ • I . I . \ . • • I • . I " ' ... I FREE GROCERIES -9 WINNER_S -ACT NOW! I We wn to hear your aucceta etory. How dkl you UH 11 DaUy Piiot Cl..nled lld to pVt profit In your pocket? Wfn a S60 or $25 gttt cer1fflcale for~ at a leadlng market. Writ• In 50 word• or .... fM)w yOU UMd • Dally PHot.~ ad to put profit fn your pocket. If poMlble, encfoe• • cflpplng of your •UCOMtfUI ed. a renonable feoeJmUe, or a summary Of Ute word• JOU uaed In your ad and man to: Entrla mutt be poetmn.d no,.,., than May 8th to be ellglble. Prtzea wlO be awarded durtng May. Declakm of the judgea I• flnet. Employ ... of th• Orange Coeat Publl1hlng Compt1ny ... not ellgfble. If you wish, uee the handy coupon befow. Send It with a copy of your aucceeeful ctautfled ad end complete the following sentence In SO words or le••· •1 put profit In my pocket ualng a Dally Piiot want ad to ~----------------------------~ ..... ············································.····· . . . ................................................... ~··· CHr •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••• ~"·~············· Along the Orange Co•1t, th•~ pleoe10 bUJ or a.U I~ In the DAILY PILOT ' -~,. -. --,. •• ' Mtlp Wont..d 7100 Http W..t.ct 7100 Do9f 1040 ,_ allu e IOSO Hou11htd Goock IOH Ml.ctlw 1010 ········•·············· •·············••······· ........................................................................................... . Tueeday, April 26, 19n OAIL y PILOT c J I SECRET ARY Tow Truck O,.rator AKCpood.Jepupw .-.1-.c-. Expr'd mec,h. itbUlty. Gd T.Cup&Unytoy _,... """ Al' drlvlng recd. 5'll+~'Om· 530-MSS ll )'OU enjoy resPooalblll· m+beneflt s. '1,• workin1e 111 • lovely A.C Automotive Service, GwckMt s.tftt",.. o.c. 11 e11n ty~ 65 + 1705 N El Camino Ru!, AKC, ldeaJ peta, 4 left wpm, we have an in San Clemente. from oulabndJn& litler teftat1nc position avalla· ---------1 64.2-8327 ble. Good poomJng & A . pleasant phone manne TRAINEE Black Lab Puppies, 12 uro most Important. wk.I, purebred w /papers, Send resume includina ASSEMBLERS shots & records. Adora-11alary requirements to ; ble. C&ll 557-~ Anthony Schools, PO Box Old Engliah Sheepdog 2960, Newpurl Beach, C11 0 p1Pll£RS Puppies. 8 wks old, AKC. ~:~~n. A tt n : M rs a IUlft $?()(). 645-6625. 645· 7&H Long & Short Term ----All1ognmcnts. Holiday, Afghan&, i\KC. pups V-.cation Pay, Medical Dcautiful' Top pedigree. 11\liurance Availuble. Must i.acrirlcc ! $75. 642·58SS or 646·2140 ------ STOREWIDE SAL"E All mw;t So, T\les & Wed. Now •naaed rum. appl'•. Patio aa le , ml 11 ~. mlac. Wll10n'• Bar1aln Holl.Yw4 bed w/bot.tcn. N*. <2 Storea >. 54.S • $15. 1'eaot ratt /aluacot- 81' w. leth, CM. Mio toetble. *·Danish ann &$48-3262 dlalr, SU. t>ulab 1ove aeat a Stereo W>it $3$. 2 **I BUY** earner. w/~ue SlS. Lltd. Good used Fu.mlt " goll club& $60. 3033 AppUances--OR r:.ill Clubhouse Clrele C.M. :1c:llorSELLforYou. ~ 1070 ~TBS AUCTION •••••• ••••••••••• •• • ••• '46-1616 "lll·'625 WANTED Furnl,ure Slrlpped & TOP CASH DOLLAH Refirush\ld by Experts. PA I 0 t' 0 R Y 0 U H 752-SO.S9 dys, 676-2004 ev. JEWELRY. WA TC11 ES, ART OBJECTS. COLO, 2 Piece sectn'I l1' & 4') SILVER SE RVI CE , li me green. X.lnt cond. •FINE FURN & AN· <'Omf~ 'bl Sl2S. 644·4646. TIQUE.S. 645-2200 Secretary full time, good typmg 11k11ls req'd. Op· PoC to expand w /young grow'g fl.rm in l.uguna &h. $55().$650 to start. Call Judy •9'·6536 VOLT AJo'GANS-AKC. 2 male. Drafting tables, exec Gold and Silver jewelry. $150 each. 637 ·4986 desks, wood & metal. created by Greg Rich. Anaheim xlnt cond, c hra. all Call between 5-8 pm. SECRETARY Needed for N.R. Law Firm. Good skills req 'd Catt Kerry, 540·5405 SECRETAltY·POOL Plea s ant person ttMt•lM4/\tfV •,t ~l\..t l' 1eac...,...or 546 ... 741 (1\cross From Oran)le Co. Airport l EquaJ Oppor Employer w ,strong typln" & some --- • "C s 1 11tyles. rnlsc. 631·2570 or 642-9006 nn amoyan ma e pup. 631·2'177 ---------Champ. blood ll.ne, pick Sliver & ~tone jewelry or litter. 552.0444 ' NAUG SOFA. Highback New line from Alber· --chairs, Nylon sofa & lov· querrque. Ls& quan- Free female puppy· 3·4 eseat/earthtont>S. Garne tities. wholesale priC'es. months old. Pt1rt box er/pill bull G-t2·2249 table, coffee tables, sofa Call 552·3179. ---_ t able. King or Qn • sh skills. I" 1time. Apply ave! Agent Ex per out· in person. Robert Bein, side sales travel agent f'Tff to YCMI 8045 Wllllam Frost & Assoc., w 'followin1o:. Benefits & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1401 Qu&il St, N.8 . topcommiss. 644-~3 __ Yel. Lab 7 mos. Jo'ree to gd Bedroom set, wall unit U•estock 8075 bookcases w /matching •••••••••••••• ••••••••• coffee tables, Herc. Reg. Morgan mare. l>roke recliner. Coo<1 condition. to ride & drive. blk ss.l-4760 parade Morgan gelding, TYPIST home. Has shots. 974·11175 art 5:30 Erig. Western (7 H > Xtra lung twin bed s 338·1011 Purebred Irish Sl!tlH w1headboard frames. --------- WANTED Spor&cJGoods lot4 Motorbtdllbs 9140 Trucb 956o. TOP CASH DOLLAR ••••••••••••••••-••••• ••••••••~•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'p A ID F 0 R y 0 UR Custom oa.k pool ,.table. Ve11p1 Ciao, 280 mllOll, 1 3 Ch-=v. t.uv. Xlnt Cund. JEWELRY, WATCHBS.. RegulaUonahe~ slate. tlood cond., pso. Call Planty or xtras. $2200 ART OBJECTS. GOW. lnd. ball & C\ICS. Xlnt IM().lil5, eves or wlmdt. tirm. Ma-9t96. S l L VER SERVI C E oond. Paid $950. Sell $250. Motorcycle / PINE FURN. fc AN: M5·~8 Scooter: 9150 '74 Ranger XLT. 4spd, TlQUES. &u-2200 TV, Raclo, •••••• .. •••••••• ••••• •• =;.F~~~~ ml Wl!..l'J!.. .... GE T .&. n..S HIR, Stffff I 098 '7S Hus.,.~ .. a.1tmcona 250d. c R • --"" ---•••• •• •••••• ••• ••• ••• • • .,.,... '16 Toyota Plclt up from your busineas card. COLOR tv•s Call 548-4402 s Speed Send one card for each 642·6001 t.ae plus one spare. We RCA ZENITH·MACNO '70 y AM.AHA 250 CC. Gd -------- return permanently GoodSelection Guar cond Best offer. Aft. 6 '74GMC.4ic4 :htonP /U. i;ealed attractive tag & Puruables &Consoles call 498·3639 $1.200. strap, mtittti11~ oulinc Sl00lo$2611. ----------• 894-0'l92alt4 1.D. requirement.s. Pre WRIGHTTV ---------- vent loss & theft! For a 84 3 A. W. t 9l b. CM. 7 5'/J Maico 44ct·A W ~ Ford 100, 6 cyl, reblt. peniOOalized tag enclos~ 646·17116 Wbeebmllh up pipe. CB, stereo. s poke whJs. watlp11pt'r. Cal>rlc or loah Ir MariM pegs & cut piston. Foic xlnl cond. $190075J.fi676 "Day Glo" pu~r & wt' s-.. --.. 11hocks. w/accumulators. II b k & l 1 ~,......... Many xtras. Xlnt cond. Vans 9570 wt ~c r 01 your •••••••••••••••• ••• •••. $1200 l536-4lS8 ••••••••• •••• •• ••••• ••• tag:;. ( r try two cardli ._ ....... MaiNI BClltc:~ • back to back --.. 1 • W '66 Chevy Hon step van . PRICES: S..-.k:e 020 1974 KA ASAKl .• 35 '73 engine. Windows all SZ ea or 3/SS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Longhorn orr ·Ht way• around, hydraulic door. 4/5 tags $1.60 ea . Hull cleaning, lnspcction. good cond, 751-8034 Good heater, tires, body_ 6/9tags$1.50 ea. Steve Field, Gen"I Div-MotorcycleLeathers All servic~ r ecords. lOor more $1.40 ea. ing. 544·5997 anytime 2 p1ecu, fair condition, $2000. &15·3269, 646·7698 Sales Tax Included small to medium siie, 073 Dodge lOO. A/C. rims, NO CARD'! 675-2045 Uraw your own or send loots, Marine ----------1 cslm intr, 40,000 mi. name. address. phone & iquipment 9030 MOTORCYCLE Trlr. $3950. Call 5-10·527~ we'll make one card per ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rm. r?r 6 bikes. Sturdy '74 Dodge van. 31$ cu in. t:ig. Add 25< each. 65HP Mere. 0 /8 . .Xlnt bit. $660. PP. 540-5630 · AIC, mags, ster~, cstm Send check or money or· cond. Includes access. 74 Suzuki 750 GT, Fann' g, intr, 34,000 mf. '$4600 dcrlo: S785.CaUS48·7157. PILOT PRIMTIMC. water cooled. 8000 ml, 835-3705, 675-6480 p 0 Bo Boats, Pow.,-9040 super cond. Sl.095 or bst '68 Chevy Van Y.iton. "-pta·M.esa,xClaS60.""""" ofr.492-7296San Clem 60,000 mi, n ew tires ~ D'U~U •••···················· !Service Station Atten- dant, exper'd. Day & Eves. F\11l & p1time. Ap· ply, Shell Station, 17th & lrvmc. NB Morti;ai:e bankms firm seek~ in<llv. to work 10 dol'umenl control dept No pnor exper. rcq·d. but must type SO wpm ac - curately. Newport Ctr location. Good co. benefits. E.O.E . Call Mr. Straw for appt. 640-4580. puppy, 5 mos old, loves Xlnt 1·ond. 673·8593 Machinery 8078 people. 919-r.241 -·····•••••••••••••••••• MATTRESSES -----Pru1twood Fre.~ch Pro,· For i.all!: 2 HP, recondi * * HATTARAS, •53 FBMY '76 Sportster XLCH, xlnt +others. Mus t sell. G M S cond. $2900. 962·5950 . . 8VTI' , '73. Like ---- Service Sta. Allendant. exper'd. Apply, 1251 N. Coast Hwy, Lag Beh. Ser\'icc Sta. Attendant. exper'd. Full or p/Lime. Apply Arco Station, 17th & Irvine, C.M. SewlftCJ Mach Oprs Near O.C. Aic·port. Day & Eve shifts. 540·3684 Male Pu pp). Part l nsh Huff cl Sl 25. 2.1 Color 1:V tioned Debilblss 80 gal. Single Sets $39.50 Seller, 51, mo:. old. ~di. console sso. 5 Pc Med1t 300 lb. tank, w/all con FultSizeS44.SO homes~n._&16·~7 bedrm SJOO. S.'8·4089 trols. llS·230, sngl-phase. B&J Mottress Factory F'ree female puppy. 3.4 Moving' ~ust sell fast. IH2·8245 8·5Pftt Mon·Sat. 838 East ht St. SA months old pL boxer p1tt Antl4ue sofa & tha11·. Cun l>ee al 744 W. 19lh St 547·5636 TYPIST bull. &12·22-19 Electric dryer. quee n s:i. Co:.~ 1'\lt!:ja. ---NEWPORT BCH TENNIS Nc·~·ded full lime. Must bed_. i s m ~l~e sofas. Miscefloneous 8080 CLUB. Limited Mem· l>c accurate w /recep· Fvrnliutt 8050 phau_o urMn_., dt!1~~g7}30bl & ••••••••••••••••••••••• bcrships. 64·1·0050 tw111st background. San· ••••••••••• ••••• ••••••• l' airs. 1sc . .,..,.,. .. or ta Ana Tustin a rea. 646·4871 Must sell' Maytag dryer , GVlTAR $25. 4 wrought S I good condition. Large. ir on barstools S<!5 . a ary commensurat e MOVIMG 5 .&.LE Sof .. abed Good Cond. S65 I · t · r w l exper1cncc. Call "" \' h S20 . eectnc ypewnter, ront 1>15·3269 646·76911 Ship'g&Recv'gclerk,ex· 544·53J'lbl1Anl O·ll/\Mor 9' Custom down filled ,,ingc air .: door. make o'ffter. -' ·----- per. Englt~h speaking 2.3P'.\l sofa 01c1gc toncsi, lhl 673·:.!028 7711·10i6afler7PM AMWAYPRODUCTS Apply in person. ~l aster I amps (so m ,. ,,; u I <l Call 675·6884 Truck. tR060 l':ucltd SI. Waitress & K1lclwn Help. leafed 1 .. 111 ·· ruund Twowhatc:.ofas.xlnt. ~45 Old cast· iron bathtub. Fountain Valley 52.50 S3hr + tips. In· bre:ikfasl tbl" 1 s"11d ea. EIC'aul. coffee table. complete fixtures. claw WOVEM WOODS Equal Oppor Emr>lo~t'r ten ll'IA 3 -!pm. Oriumal chrs. stereo. m1~c item~. s:!OO. 5-lli 1052 · feel. G ll con Ii · $95 · ·' " ---498 3021 & MINI BLINDS ---------1'1u.i, :n:H Balboa Blvd.• Xlnt cond. i5:1 llll 15·0., 1-ht 11 1 \"<·-... tln shiilt•·rs· & null !o,TATION AT'l'ENUfo::il'J'. NB n 1g green l'rl'U 011 ''"'k ~ ., Full·lime. cxper pre ' pm> -sora & chair. XlnL c:ond. 'l'lJB SHOWfo:H H~11~c l>hnds. UptolilJ', off rt' fcrred. Chevron Station \\',1n•h11u~e & Ot•h.-cry, OFC DESK & CllHS .. S?OO. Pair of lamps. 525. Fiberglass. right hand. tail. !J A:\I to 5P:'t1 call J<)()Ofo'a1n•1ew C M. F,t1mt• Mu'>tbco\r2l TYPEWRITER TflL, All 5&wknds .!fi9·lli78 Xlnt. cond. $85. 557~243 &15-8951 aft 7:30PM ---------l•hr1ne !J51·1011 Dll'E'IT~sy:T.675·1_393 r----sat ... -9-055 -WhyBuyaHewS,t? TAXI DRIVERS Commerce Chemical Co. ---r ... Wanted. Must have good lfl( Apt or Mobil home ••••••••••••••••••••••• BOY'S MX llKE Let us recondition your driving record. Call Women wanted to work furn. velvet LR. tapt'. Movmg-PatioSale ~. 642·1520 old set. Guaranteed un !l30·2828or495·1711 for Janicc·s Raggedy rec, stereo, C 'TV. Kit & 2107 Wall:icr NCR 160 ·· der S200 bd Sl995 II '"5 167' . co.mpl. 26 wnghl1'V 6'6·1786 ,\ r111 hvu:.t'rl!( s1•n ice. rm a ·"" · .. Costa ~lel>a s h b k " .. Te a ch ~r-Pre ·School . Sturl 52.50 hr. 11·3 tues . . -c winn t e, new 113-h\W19lhSt.C!\1 certificate or ex per lhru rn 675.6553 King s1.ze '!1attress & spr-MO\'mg salt'. everything lamps hade. dresser · -------·----9am·ll:30am. $2.50 hr in~. $60. l\mg hdbrtl, SJ.O j!oes. Furn, dnthing, mirror wht frm , high Motorcycle Leathers 640'8820 Good d 6461!384 · 2 h · chair, stroller. new in· 2 Piece fair condition ___ .__ ~rchandise cun · · mtsC'. 213 Ana t:im, <.:!'11 sinkerator, hot water s mall 'to med size: Teleph Sollcito" ···~···•••••••••••••••• Large & c:lcgant chrome & 5'18·6806 dlsp pwr lawn mower. & 675·2045 We need 10 girls 10 set up Antt~s 8005 glas.' d1n ·I! ruom ~cl w ll HonM 8060 misc. :'\10VING need to ----- dinner rcsl·n ·atiuns in ••••••••••••••••••••••• uphol ~ll·l«·d t•h.i1rs ••••••••••••••••••••••• scll!9ti2-352-' Two8' sliding glass doors the C\'C. Jlrty wage+ Wonderland tJtl3·61:J5 ll OHSES ll OEl:'d: & \\' framt'. Good condi Want Collcc:tor J\nliq uc: lion SiU t:uch ~-6677 aft nu. L oaded. Owner 642·5248 '67 Hvy Dty t::conolinc 213:476·5268 2 Suzuki l ·'7l, l ·'7Z, 185 Ford \"<1n. n cblt eng . • y h Lowmileage. brks & tires. $1150 St ac t being re· 92 4 furbished, almost new Ph. 962-7460 _4_·_18_5_. ____ _ twin diesel. Many xtras. ••75 Honda 400.4• '73 Chev. ·~ T. Van. 350 cu 70"1: Completed $35,000. Super Sport. 74,000 mi. in mtr. Stk shift. Sharp & Wilt complete for $45,000. Like nu. $800 . Dys f~t. Xtra clean. R&H. 768·5248 aft 7pm. 547.5489, eves 673.0501. air cond. T3n, yellow & 40'Mallhews Cruiser. "Classic", beaut lh·e·a· brd. $8900. Mooring avail, 675-2001 CLASSIC .Y AC HT ANEJ O, 33' w /fresh waler cooled gas eng. Smartly decorated in bristol cond w /full c:OY · ers. She is in exl'ellent Catalina or day cruiser. Hcudy for the l.eason . $10,000. Ph 673·014!1 <!A' OWENS, Mech. OK, hull needs work. must scU. Make ofr. 557 .2337 ----------• blue. Sac $2950. Call Motor Homes. Sunset Bch area (213 l SalejR41ftt 9160 ~1421. ....................... --------- MOTOR HOMES FOR RENT From.$150 wk. 495.4923 '';'4 22' establishment. 1971 Dodge Window Van. Good work 'un A •C. A:\I FM, q1l (;u tire~ $2000 or be:il ofr 493-2951 aft6PM • Steel belted tires, tr • . htch, SO gal fuel tank, 74 Dodi.;e \lln, :118 eng Cr ·s co t I oth P /S. p O. 4t>m CB. ui e n ro • er AM/FM tap~·. t·ust. sur xlras. Lo mi, xlnt cond. fer int., high back seals. $11,500. 642·2152 eves show mags and molded '73 Winnebago 20 U., air, flares, new black paint gen. cruise cont, rf rack, Mus t sell. $4200. Call ladder, sips 8. $9,000. 642·9006 or 548·4987 after 551-3497. ti pm. ~--------C 1 ass i c Bay Boat. 1956 . • CHEVY · · Chnscrafl runabout. All 1976 p1plomat 11 , 25 , fully . Step\ an 30, 17000 n ogany , restored. ~~pped. ~perwk, + m1,lowner. Bn:...->I cond. 675·785_l _ ~.;:4 , ~a:;· summer, 559-1678 ---------'7-1 Ford \'an E -<.'l>O. auto. '73 C?L lf ~SL_~ Trailers, Trani 9170 V·8, air. radio. llvy <IL) Luxunous 6•15 1;>54 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hitch. sill\• "lndows. iu ~Classic Bay &w t. 27' Jloliday Tra\'el Trailer s.ul. p~nl'ls .. :11.uoo mi'~ SealS8.de1s\!lpwr. <197 1>. /\/(;,.Central _~095.645·1ti21 Cc.tll 675·(;1;66 heat, nice shower & bath. Gas I E l c~t. .• refr11~., Auto5 Wortted 9590 bonus. No selling tn Of A . l!ox Sprinc" ll '.\li1ttr~~,., Trimm 1 n g · Ca 11 l'rtl't: for 55 ) r old 5.lJO volved. Call 11ft Jpm . nt1ques.' ''"'" 'l .. X'lnl "C1n·' <:.JU B II rn II I;' r p 0 l I "r ,.,, , .. d I. k "" d • • u ., ,.. • w.rry ,, a.r rouc trun · -.-. . . , . Boats, Sail 9060 540-5464. II Uc.; E w :l r ch o us c Call S.l2 7:300 71-1·64~7~!___ & \\orld \\ ar 1. woodt'n SWl:\G SET. Sears best , ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo, bwlt-10 TV ant. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fully self·cont. Much Tef ..i.... S 1 crammed "'1th over sou -. -Qrtr horse mare 7vrs old Army Chest. 642·4867 gah•.,nu.eu, partly as-1 1 d J6.$46 000 A t e,.... ....... e aes music .ho .. cs. nlrkclo Form ic:i 1110.clt~ !>t't 15.2 hands . Has ht'en :.embled. Sac. $50. ~ij~t.erdiesel , '5 inst~u~ Fast growing c:o. neetls deon p111no-.;, cir<'us or· "', .. ,..t,~anfe&w~Slchoors. l yr old, shown Western. 611G·OR30. 19" T\', RCA Portahlc, ~S366 mcnts, s elf tailing telephone sates people lo g ans , " a 11 l' 10 l' ks. . '":; , _. . . Ask for c~th\ L'J 11", plays guod. S35 work from our Irvine of· grand 1,.111,.,. i·l<ti·ks, l:Ji-3800c\t?S " • 646·1525 ORNAMENTAL winches, pedestal steer- More! Must sell Im· mediately!! 642·2073 231h' Prowler, xlnt cond, loaded, parked in SJC (213) 287-7612 aft 4PM WE BUY CLEAHCARS &TRUCKS ficc. F\Jll & p/time shifts. fascinatm~ •rnliquc~ I~~~~'-~~~'-'~~; Iron Gates ing, Mansfie ld he ad, Earn Sl50 to $350 per wk Ovrr Sl.1~1<1.11w Worth ~ 51 ·· Wide 80" high, r.s" CNG stove. etc. Days CONNELL Top comm puid, ~alary ,\merfr.in lnll·rn:atwn:il I. wide so·· high. 67 .. wide 549·9616, Eves 675-4241. 20' Invader lrlr, comp comfort. Fully cont'd. Stove, refrig, bed, tub, & shower, $-1000. 839-202l while Ir a1n1n,,; l'hruw S40·609l G.iltcnt•s: 1Kll2T l\\•ll••r 80"h1gh SSOeach S fo: A S P R A Y CHEVROLET 1111.: SI Irvine• '1.-1 ~ II M Call646·9016 CATAMARAN. World's 74 Terry, 19.5', loaded, xtras, goo<l cond. 581-8115 ,l~!~~~!~.eE~l~ .. ~r:J ~~ Jt~o~~n~:~a~~tjhr~a~n~·:.'s.!::~u ~liil ~ •: •U L:vme Her li~1~~~~:~ir~1~ ~~1:~~t. ~5!~!~~!dr~i[ ::: ~~~~if i~d. ~·ash ln our circulation w1trlr. Save 20':'~. Cull ---~ales room Jo1exible hrs G !!:. ga,., dryer. like new Doug: 836-6890 Auto Senic~.Parts WE PAY TOP DOLLAR i\M or PM Men. wome11 C \;11:"\t:RY \'ILL.\Gt.-: ~· 25" .Admiral. color 25· Foamy Cat, Rudi Choy & Accessories. 9400 ~1~J'.g~~g~~it.J!'i~ orstudent:s, 18orovr. 25Shopi;toS.-n·<' You TV , Med1t. cabinet $175. design. Race or cruise. 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• or CLASSICS 540-0301 LA T1mec; 422 :list~ Nw~ B1·h ' l628 ~I more a Or. Costa sails, new eng, many VW ENGINES If your car is eiclra clean Telephone s H•!lllop ik!'k Pinc, ~ Mesa xtras. $2900.ofrortrade. USED-REBUILT seeusfirst. Solicitors lx'uut cone! sioo l., Miscetlan.ous Gordon. 646·7956 Der Buggy Shop 530·6940 BAUER BUICK 1;n ;,w1 1·h \1 I · f) 1 '( 2925H bo Need 1 o Imm e rt I h , 11( H..'r ., ,I\ 'l Ill '" om .1 ,t:r<. LI 111,g Wanted 1081 23' Coronado, '73. Sips 4. Complete mechanical ar r Blvd. ""'""SJ so h "'" h k ~ l •· · k t d work Fore 1· g n & Costa Mesa 97!l·250C ...,,.,.,. . r ..., r wee l!Y..!4 HC,\ Yu tor "' 35 r~ I 11 I I I I J ••••••••••••••••• •••••• s ove ex sin , un e m . Work 4.!) pm Ma ttu c. c:mdb O¥.nr<. manu.i l t l ; .l r ll' \\'11r ~ 1.. .tn ' 1.1 n · 1111 ~un .ty, j\ 1.1 \· 8 SSS CASH FOR trlr. $5500. Like new. Domestic. CaU my home TOP UOLl.Alt per man ent job. In <'orrli•at.1lo" Xlnt <'tincl ;; I I I I Good df fl 714·626·3218 forinfoaft6pm.Cheap. l~A tD t · '>!) 'I r" '!'rt'~ \t>llf 11\• 11• 1 )11 ,. !'11 c · use urn/re rgs ---------498""'2Steve crv1ew~ i. •.. pm "on J'I ··.' • nt·t·f 53 ·.,, ; ' ' ' ' • ii '"""' l ... 'tML'DIAT 'I Y I' · 1 k Sh ~ ·' v 1• ~ ' frzrs &stoves 546·0768 14' Hobie Cal. xlnt cond. ----------1 " c. E • 7~\601 '' r · as tina. Ol l l!1t_;;!_-1_1_11~t tiµm ! \lllrltd' 1)1\ \.'.hllltl~ W"NT TO BUY U· d movingmus t seJl.S800or 1968FordTorino.for parl· FORALL ________ _.,. 8 L am pion u11 ci · \ I I Sabol. good cond, around wrecked. 714·675-6595 CALL OR CO M!:: IN -----~1 0 'h J I~ '" -:s c ofr.675-1237 ing out. Rig h t dr FOREIGNCAR~ S~ll s:rno \quarn1m I ( "I '1 t1nc Ill r HCl' "Ill~' '\}(, s I 'I .lllll "2 $100. 751·8034 14' Hobie Cat 1*38 & trlr. __________ , TO Sl':E us TELLER ~w. l).;k t'a:.h rt'Jo:l)lt·1. I I I I !' I ,, l 1547 Orange Ave. C.M. '66 Chevy P .U. rear end. ._.EWPORT IMPORTS P---"TI-s1u i. "''"r. \nt1qm· Sh111 l11r r it· '>l'l1. l.t I. \I ( s Sii<' l.Lr1.. ( t uu lllll'>C w W---" ....... :P• •YHOUSE l800 7312831Af 9 F . "" __,.. ...... tllf'mnlJ -• t pm act posatraction. 4.11 3100 w. Cst l'wy, NB Work 20 hour~ .i wt•i•k tll''.\I Ulh Lf 1..2 c11 iJll.dify tllr rhc lttrkst ,i..:rn·tin.~). f'or my grandaughte gears. Drive & listen. 642•9405 1.1mr1 ~uo, &IO K~~ uft ; j -· · · ~ mu 1nlu 1n1r1 i.: i.:1111 d Jll I. Ca 11 anyli m 23' STAR Needs finish'g. Non. h owler. $150 . --------- "Ubtumcr reh.1llon11 wh~ t· .&.-..tiancet IO 10 s ll4!Vif>54 w /trlr. $700. 16' Canoe 751·6134 TOP 11 an .. ,, d l -rr $175. 547-3417 an 5 u n R r flu ' ' ' . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~cal VW 0 withrlraw11li1 anrt uttwr 1n:nwa:1t \T()f{S Instruments 808 LOWEST SA LLA w A y l~~lore, ~a~ey~fr::.dy to . DOLLAR l.'nane1i.o.I Ir un,.H•t111n~ "'\.';lll":Hs f>RVF.ltS •••••••••••••••••••••• PR. 495.4204 PAID Some ll(ht l)'Ptllto! " re Rt•(·ond1l111n' Rcpri" & Conn Min·O·Matic clcc. N c w H U N T t; R ---------FORCLEAN 4u1rt)rf, a nd 11rt•\'lou~ ~·n,'1 0Am.1J(c-Gullr l>d 25'.27'.30'. 33'. Exp. tclh·r t•x1ierren('r l~ Jll l' 211 \'r:1 '"t>r.1n1<c• l 'n organ. excellent condl yarht salesman wanted. Autos for Sale rerred. Ple11~1· r<lnl.1\'l DU•·u • ••s tion. S600. P.P. 532 1259 M . 2312 N l ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mrs lrcrlalcli42 .1711 "a.Ar-ariner, P · Antf / GLENDALE 1111:. '""110rt HI i '.\1 Grc3l buys on use _!i75·1393 ci?:fcs ~'J FEDER t:.\LI. .>'8 ll80 guitars. Cu~tom mad Boat C'.t' / AL SA VIMG S guitars to order. 548·5277 s, ... ips ••••••••••••• ••• •• ••••• ;i.:mo llnrbor Blvd Kt•nnrnre wnsher. S:!O D«Kkt 9070 1961 Bentley. Sand & Sa· 9520 IRRlS BEA<.:tl BLVO HUNTINGTON UEACH 847 7781 ~·10 M.\J Costa M1•1111, Cl\ W,·11un11huusc elec. 30" Ovation Acoustic Guitar ••••••••••••••••••••••• ble, xlnt cond, sacrif Equal Opporturuty rani•t•, llhl ~elf dn'g nw·n Leg end Md l. Mus SUP WANTED Sl0.500. Owner . 552-9110 IMPORT CARS ALL MODELS 1-:mployt•r ' ~r.i hi 11121~ sacrifice $225. 645·060 for JS' Sportfisher 1•v1' Call <714) 67J.5252 '51For;!4·dr Custom. Orig. pnt. Nice body. TELLER H•w Acc«Mlftb I' /time. Pnrn Typm11 r"q '1I Will · t·on11ltl er lraint•t• C111l for nppt Joou Marselle. 493 5G51 Mutuol Suvings & Loan 570 Camino de Estrell,1 S:in Clemente. Equnl Oppor. Employ1•r Whirlpool rc•fn11c-r.1t111 llun:i LJuod $7!'1 ---- Apt size· rrrn11, upn~ht 11 cu.ft Xlnt cond. 1\skm.: S60 492 :noo Hrnwn <.'oldsPol ltllfnit. 80uc:I t•ond, ~s. tW2·6't"iU evei; llc:ycles 1020 TELLER ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Loan ,roe.I•-Buy·St'll ·Tradc-Us(•d _.. Bikes. Cycle & Co. 2488 Financial insUtullon now Newport Bl. CM 642·79l0 accepting applu·ut 1on~ ----------1 for Dana Point brunch Tour De Prance 10 speed, expansion. used, $'15. Call (1) 686-6060 x 168 551-3497 Equal Opp Emplyr m 1( Camrras &-- E:tcpiiP1Mnt IOJO T!ll.ER ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co•ta M•sa l'olarold Model 320 Land Our C.M. branch has an Olmern. Good Condition. immed. opening for-an ~st oUcr. 551·3497 eicper 'd teller. This Cats 1035 person must be able to ••••••••••••••••••••••• work w ;bank accounlln8 • . & ublc 10 sell bonds fe1n. Siamese: Ma le blk travelers check.ll. money ~mk Persian free to lov· orders & c a s bier ·11 inghome.673·6780 checks. Must be able to wor-ll w /computer rt • DoCJ1 1040 port&. Tbl.s is an xlnt opJ ••••••••••• .. •••••• ... •• par. to arow It ~elol> ln White adorable poodlea. our branch. We otter top toy , A KC le m a lo, :t1n.larioe 4t co. benefita. 7Sl-SS88 Costa Mesa Contact Che ryl, (114) 83$.01.Sl. Goldeft ltfrienn Minority AppUcaats AKC 637-6485 Encouraeed to Apply Equal Oppor EmplQJU' ve somelblnl to 1.U? --------•I Ou.ified ad• do It well. · Jc ~c; t.:.isy \\'ncL \ot1r rnl·~s.1.~t· c1l fir dw h11rllt r '>hO\\ II lllrl· nrin ~ I( I ll .tl1\' D.ul \' Piloc 1>t'tttl' pr111r r 1> nnon i\f.1v. 6 Or. v;1u m.1y mail .1 t l1pp1r1,L: ot rhi: bordtr.w1ch )llllr message: and p.i\rn1.·111 r(\ n.1il~· Ptlm . ~·H) W fla y St . Uox I "1(10. (.(1:-1,t ,\(l',.l. l.A 91626 . I 11r lil'll' "irh \'uur .td Dr ii you h.1\ t .tny t1uc:s r1nr'l"I . t.ill (1 1 2-)(1'~ A frtl'ndlv Daily Piloc 1t<l~vi sl·r will be: ,l!l,td w hc:lp v illi J\n<l, if you 11kt. )llll t.111 l.haq~t· yuur Mother's D<ty aJ. Your tr1.:d1c is ~ooJ, ,, irh u~ \)r you m.1y us1:. rour Master Char~c \Ir B;mkAmcricarJ.. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 .. . - Office hntihlre & Exec needs ~ood slip/side ssoo MG-1090 Equipment 808 tie. New SO Cutter. 1250 •••••••••••••••••••••• finder's fee. Newport to '60 Rambler American Aaju!ltable draftin Oxnard OK. (213) C.ontinental kit, xlnt for board/table w /ln.stru 4594129 restoring, needs trans ment.s. Jo'ine co111l. $175. . , reblt. Bestoffer841..s543 89i!·:S460 aft 1pm o ~~~~~!r8fo~c:C~!s5~f 4WhfffDriHt 9HO w l lo 6 montha ln NB area. •••••••••••••••• ••••••• JPC COPIER. cuts t Please call Bob Miller Jeep,61,CJ6, V8,hardlol>, length , s1so. 675·1311 (714)436-2259 $1700/ofr. 834·5105; WE NEED CLUM USED CARS HOW CALL PAPPY 540·5630 1011\'SO\' & SO\' • LINCOLN· MC HCUHY days. 673-2123 eves. loatt. SpHCI Ii &44-8116 evs/wlc'Odt JRM Exec Typewrit4!r, Sid 9010 '59 Ford Truck wtwlncb, 2626HARIOR BLVD. Mui D, 21-, yr.s. !'ood ••••••••••••••••••••••• all reblt w/new rtms & COSTA MESA cood J\skin1t $500. •REWARD!! tiresl2x16.S.962-U60 · ---- 752·6211 Need 45' to 50' boat slip ln ,4 Toyota Xlilt Cond. Ex· WE Office Furniture. Priced Nwpl, Balboa area, lras, lo mileage. $4.900. NEID tosellquickly Reward substantial tr Pb962-7185 997-3082 YOUR 759.0590 slJp desirable. Contact -----· -----1 ___ Phil Barrett. 714·522~1•4 Trucb 9560 USID CAlt Pianos Ir OnJmtt 1090 ....................... HOW ....................... Trwp1rt9ffottt •73 Ford 1tan1t o r TOPSPAID H'~mmond, Lowery,••••••••••••••••••••••• I XI t eond CALLGORDOM Culbranaen Organs & AWcraft 9110 ~~':f:~~ · Kawai PiAnos. For Your ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA Prtcecall644-9200 NEW Henaara for Jae. UMITED EDITION AMC·JEll' BABY GRANO PIANO Coron~ Alrp0rt. Spec. '76Chevy ~ tonStepside. ~HARBOR BLVD walnut fini~h. $DOO. fuel pnce When complct• 350 V8 4·spd, AM/FM COSTA MESA 96UlOO ed. Call: 714·m..6817 or tape deck. spcc'l pnt & 549-1023 544-3197, 640o-0700 trim + many x l r as . llaby Gta~, plano. Old, C ..,.-.,. S. / tUOO. 645· 7932 CA.I OUTLET d cood. U • $1,295. Dl!I. Rtftt ti 20 '76 El Camino SS. black. Co:sh For C.,., table,tc:n_Tno ••••••••,•••••••••••••• Very goodcond. P.W "°"Or l'ilol 1---------•C.mper shell for Chev. or 559-5935 2t4SHAR80 R Bl.VI> Ramcqood Oraan, lnclud· Ford abortbcd. SIX·PAC .• 60 1,.oa ton Ford PUwfOvr <Karhor & \'l!'tor1:1' lnaLeslleSpkr.llke ncw. Slldo in type with noor & d r . Runs strong . C~'TJ\ MJ-:St\ no.oeeoaftlPM dour. '75 Model. ~or C7SO/F1rm.Call673·0868 642-0651 ._..._ MkNMa IOU bet ofr. &42-2073 h --. . . _...._, f .,,,_ .....,_ f-..oest dHw In t c WANTED! Mnn·d~·· ....... •••••••••••••••• Wdl built cnmr.'r or ~m-""' -· D II Pilot Ben:c An~: Sifttor Sewl!l ~~tft ~~~:. 5J:s~ ~~S:~1ne·: A:. >'Phone 'lllodel UIOor t90 ;\m.~ lta. c ca11631.Jt49aft.5PM 4142-sm. Call :49'.!·~-__ • ...... CJJ DAILY PILOT WIWIU.IUT YOUll DATSUN PAID FOR OR NOT TOPDOU.Ml FOil TOP CARS IWtwte• DATSUN &an Jou Capjatr&DO IJl-ll714tl-ll75 AlfaRot.o i 4 Spider. registered new i6. 15,000 ml, red, Alloy whls. AM /FM radio. 7141992-0148 SADDLEBACK BMW 1971 TOYOTA COROLLA COUP£ A.MC nos Stick shirt. radio & ••••••••••••••••••••••• be a l e r · f o r l h e ---------• 1975 A.MC economically mmded' 'WVW Beetle MA.TA.DOR <873CBQ ). 546-6293 ~6 wkdys. nus car LS extra clean OMLYSI095 ------..;;,_-•with air cond . pwr. '73 Super Beetle. Low steering. automatic & 1973TOYOTA. miles, xlnt cond. $2850. much, muc h more . CORONA SEDA.H 494·1469. lTI8MYM >. Automatic. radio & ---;-3-v-w-4-12---i MUSTSEE heat.er. Less than 34,000 Low mi, must sell TO A.PPRECIA. TE miles & a gas saver too! Call eves. 559-4743 (164.KEJ I --------- Quality and Price Guaranrttd LC'J\ln.lt S1>«1ali\I\ Prcfcrrrd Rah.'\ Largl'\t Srtec11on or Nl'W & U\('d ud1llaC\ '" Ordngc Coun1y • T·Top. auto. alt. full M Olds. ~aood.._.motor. pwr attoma. I ownr, new 6 trans on. -.. en5:. tins. to ml. 1:1.2-8141 xa. v u Y a o o d • us o dys. $3!IOO. Traosm.lu\On llSO. com· 9933 pletecar. 8>015-2021 ....................... ft)unollttt tt•o ()pen Sund.iy Cadillac Masrer Dealer 2600 H.irbor Blvd. i6 Couaiar, 2 dr. gold. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uftoew.fWlyequlp.Blt "15 PLYMOUTH Custom steno. ssaso. 67S.l416 •\try 9-p&SHnler wagon : ,_.. '940 ~ 12.395. Low blue •••-•••••••••••••••••• on thls veblc:le Is Ccxt.i Me~ 540·9 I 00 Nabers Cadillac S3.l00. A good clean or • • but it bu 71.000 miles on '. PLHONGILD It. See In Dally Pilot parking &ot al 330 West Bay Street. Costa Mesa. or caJJ 842-4321 for more <.. Information. A1k for \."t). fttck or Oscar lo neet ·~ ~g~ar_a~g~e_._...;.... ___ _ •eo 1973 Plymouth 9 pass 67 Coupe de VUle, 2 dr, vi.n "'•.. wagon, Sport Suburban . ...,_, tel .. _ tilul 60.000 mi. A/C. P /S. P /B. lop, a\RUtu Y ucau , ... ,_., .. .._a...,.-., radio, rack. radials. xlnl lnslde & out. Must see to .... __ c-·-.............................. 1 I .. _.. ..vuu. -""""· ~ evs. apprec ate. ,.....mg $995. 833-l316days 556-7792 i5 Sliver Granada VB ___ ___;,, ____ _ loaded. new tares. sharp i3 Satellte Regent wgn. C.1a o 9917 S2995 nrm 752.5740 Wood tn m . air. 40.000 •••••••••••••••••••• ••. nu. Have to sell. ~. ).gT() TORLNO 2 dr. PS. 64().-0998 1970 CAMARO, Rally PB. aircond. 351 VS, new1---------sport·V8 .. air. PSPB. pa.Ult. new llres. 751.5664 Plymouth Belvedere '66. radio radials. 492·2195 or 540-93&2 :113 CU. New battery and S.C. slartttr. 1295.00. Call . Ra.re "S9 EDSEL Ranger. 631-3149 after 5PM or see 73 350 A tr· PS, PB, 70.000 ml, 6 cyl. runs at lhe comer of Pomona AM /FM stereo. 8lrk. well. 5'95.M2·6275 &Darrell Costa Mesa. very W Ml. xlnl cond. ----·-----s:noo. bil-2233 or 673-0507 il Ford Mave11ck. '72 Satellite Sebring+. Good condition FUii power. rally whls. ONLY $2295 COSTA MESA DATSUN ·71 Bus. _Tape deck. intr a.~ 9920 493-9614 aft 6 wkdys. Good tires. 25.000 ml. I good cond, New rbll eng. 2845 HARBOR BLVD. ~··••••••••••••••••·~·· i5 Granada pwr steer & owner. S:!lOO. 5:>6·!258 1976 TOYOTA Good deal. SlOOO. S44-0668 540..6410 540.0213 71 El Camano, new paint brakes. Top cond. Silver. PCllltloc 9965 CEUCA. GT 68 VW Bug, good cond. ---------&trans. good tires. Clean lo rru 494.7377 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 speed, AM /FM stereo tape deck .. wide tires. '74 AMC SPORT ABOUT & runs good. S2SOO. . RAND PRIX i7, almost w /tape & only 12.000 mags, movmg must sell ! Deluxe. automatic, 6 631·2092 days or 97i-6247 67 Galax..ie: Looks & rum new. all access. Superb mlles. Sold & serviced by $800/offer 675-1237 <'YI.. new tares. brakes. eves gd. New urea, Fact air. car Pvt. moo. 67:H069 P S P 8 1 c 11 trlr htch S750. Tom•-----'------'-- us. (075!rLKYD>a,,.295 9772 ~.3379 I • a r . a '73 Vega . New clutcb 752-6688, 241\rs. '72 Fi~b1rd VS 350. Air. " ~ VolYo ---------• brtcs. Sl~ or bst ofr. . Pwr. R/H. rally whls. gd i3 Flat 124 Sport, S s pd, MGI 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mdl 9910 675-9448.494·3032 76 Granada, hke new 11res. vnyl top. orig stereo. Xlnt cond. P ••••••••••••••• •••••••• MARQUIS TOY OT A ••••••••••• ••• ••••••••• 14,000 mi's. Must see lo owner S247S Ph 751 2404 COME IM & SH ply. S2200Jofr. Day ...,., MGB conv/HT, sunrf MlSSION VIEJO • d 0 . 7 S Nov a Custom apprec. 548-8813 aft5 . . 957 L337eves646-1438 ,.. 72 Electra 4 r . rag Hatchback. Red, V-8, •73 Grand Prix. Exec THEA.UMEW · · SS,OOO.CaJlaft6pm, 831 -2880495-1210 ownr. air, FM stereo, auto trans. P rS. P /B.Maffricll '9~7 owned performance & 630CSI HOWi 1974 Fial Sedan. xln 494-3032, 67>9448 VolksWCICJ9ft :_d~ xlnt cond, $1990 AtC, r~10. cl°f~· nn: -•••;:•••••lb•;•·~··~··; luxury: 19mpg. S2795. Ph SADDLEIACIC ccmd. 33,000 ml1, AMdJ FIM '68 MGB GT. mecharucal ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires. usl se now . iO w te w ac v ny Mr. Baldwin al Merrill stereo, stee ra ia s, ly sound. Sl800 Or Best '75 BUS l3000 m1, xlnt '66 Burck Spedal Sta As k ing lo* Boo i.. top. Very sharp. 6 cyl, Lynch 540-8121 home VA.UIYIMPORTS ~irm. 646-0486 o olfer.536-9652 cond. $4900. Call . Wgn, PS, PB. AC. runs (714 l540-7622 M·F 8-5 ~~.~~~ond. Only 496-r.5°i. • _8_3_1_·2_04_0_4_9_M __ 9_4_9_ ---------.65 MGB. Comp reblt. 546-6100. 7 JOAM sPM ::c1~eeds paint $375. '721<1nesrord 4 dr Wagon • 9970 Flat 124 Spyder convt good cond S1 000 Call , V d Xlnl cond. New tires. tii4ercury 9'50 u••••••••••••••••••••• 1972. Deep blue, saddle Don 634·4780 b·e r s 60 AN c ustomize ' Codilloc 9915 RIH. air $2000/bsl. pp ....................... 976S Ed I Th Int. AM /F M. 5-spd, c"a""""'aft.5 · s uper me<'h,anical, xlnt. 549-0049 · CREAM PUFF'.... 1 ptt1al rt on un ~ CRE.VI ER .....,.._..... -·--•-N ... $800 ---------•••••••••••••••••••••••• .... er<'ury derb1rd . Fully loaded mags, wile's car. spot· · 'wULUig. cw ra=. "8 .. ...,GE c u..-.y M h 1975 1 4 dr less. Pnced toseU. r><nn. '74 MGB. Xlnt cond OiH4~2QJS ~" 0 "' Codilloc S.vRlff iJ long Chevy Van. 6cyl. onarc ' ... a r. . 16.000 orig. ml. Aft 6pm &I ST 6 H OAOWAY SAMJA AMA _.,.,, VOLVO 3-spd, new eng. SJ.000 elec. pwr. 1 •. soo mi. P1P<71417S0.7823 675-2177. AM /FM radio, mag l97S vw Rabbit 4 dr Eight to choose. All fully 642 3848 $3600 cash. PP. 559·5516 --------- 835·3171 HoRda 9727 whls,$2995.493-6683 air,gd rond .. 's2900: EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO loaded·4 with shadow aft6PM. Vt90 9974 •••••••••••••••••••••••Porsche 9750 213/592·1719 ~rs:n~~~~t~l~r fuush (31921 '74 El Camano. PS. PB. Mltst.IC) 9952 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THI Ul.TIMAT1! DAIY1ND MACHIN!! •USEDIMW'•* '75S30ia HKWT lrmMI Mew '77 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 VW bus, good shape. BUY or LEASE ALLEN ~e~~l· xlnt cond, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 VEGA '76 1960 356 B. orig equ.lp. G<I $2250. Ca ll alter 4 PM DIRECT Olds/Cadlllac/GMC · i4 Mustang 11. Must sell. HA.TCHIACKGT '743.0CpeS/R 746LWB '7116004spd 940MRJ '7520024.spd 764.NJ M CloMdO..~ HONDA Cars cond. $3200. or ofr. 642-2364 r.~1:.,~.~.., .... ~."'t~:r.:i·•,~r.:, .. ~.., .... ~~-S.0 .1''rwy.·Avery Exit i1 Monte Carlo, loaded. Best offer over $2000. D~MO. S speed tr•os .. MAHY 6'2·S67S,o&95-1938 -·-··-------LAGUNAN IGUEL gd. cond. Book, $2,295. SCS-2621artS. 1ttr co nd • e t c T ~L----""---! '68 VW B~. Very sharp. CALL 495-6430 asking Sl,300. Phone, (6505~1. o-nvwt '72914.XlntcoDditlonin/ new pnt JOb. xlnt Ures. 557.6 122.dys. Pal. 66Mustang.PS .. PB.AC. OMLY$3695 UNIVERSITY out. Makeofr. snrl, SllOO. cash 581 9350 2025 S. Manchester 1975 Cadillac. 4 dr Sedan 493-7894,eves. eng overbid. Sl 100. HOWARD Ca.Yf'Olet ORANGE COUMTY'S OLDEST 848-8706 OeVille. Ille blue. 644·7621art5. Oldll!llOble 66 vw B110, $825. Anaheim 750-2011 tut to 1 ded XI t '75 E. Camino PS/PB. air . . Dove & QuailSts. tta.da C... • GMC '62 Porsche 356. Silver, Good 7ond. = i:.~-m~~ hke. ne: cust paint & wheels. Beautiful 1966 Metalll<' NEWPORT BEACH Treks ~.'_:b~~adials. bra. ____ 646-__ 79_1_s ___ 1 1974 VOLVO 1 S7 . s 5 o 8 . s 9 PPMM. ~.ooom1. $4500 496-6476 ::; :~~:=~·d~~k, r~~~ i3 Ve"•· Hatch. radials. 28SOHarborBlvd. . iJ BUG Uke new Only 164SEDA.H 714 979 8141. 6 • Clrplet' 9t2S mec h rond. Sl500. uuto. new brks. shks & Colla Mesa ~9640 n Porsche 911T. good 28000 mt. $2l50 Automatic. a 1 r cond • 714-f40 12:86 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963-6038 alt 6 Sl.295. Ph 64!>-5507 . Seles-Service-Leasmg Rov C.-.er,lnc. Rolls koyce BMW ._ 9730 mecharucal cood. needs 759-0977 pwr steenng & AM /FM •66 Cbrys. ~. N. u Ur.es. .a.~ U--.. .a.-&-. U--.. ..-,--pa.ant, new mags & Ures ____ ......:.. ____ , radio. Local car w /low ----- ••••••••••••••••••••••• Best offer. 661·0636 '76 VW RABBIT, xlnl mileage Im maculale 74 EL DORA.DO ~·=~mbndge Cir .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OVB40 RolsR-. 9756 rood, must sell. $3600. thruout·mech anically CabaretRoof 1540 J amboree Newport Beach 640-6«4 Clean used Tnumpb. •••••••~~;;•••••••••••• 49:2-9859 perfect' (062KTQ>. Exclntcond.ongowner. eon-.... 'tiz Jaauar and MG models DEA ER US A --O .... LY $4995 mustseJI. MakeOfr. ••••••••••••-••••••••• '76 2002 upd .. sunroof. ...::!. on d1Splay. Over 26 •1 l IN · · · '69 VW Bug 72,000 m1 " ,..,_ MAR"'UIS YOLVO '7S Sliver. Bil< Cu.st.om lo· Lene/Buy Plans availa· ROY AM /FM. Gd cond. Grt "" 70 EL DORADO tr. T-top, auto trans. Ful· AM/FM c:ass. In warr $7200. 875-9377 bfe,sens1blepayments. JR{ CARVER trans $1000.termspossi· MJSSIONVIEJO GoodCond ·OngOwncr ly equipped. l owner. ble. by ownr. 675-4723 831-2880 495-1210 Call 840-1070 S8100 or bsl ofr. 640-8368 1974 2002. A tC. AM 1FM a ._. ' ROLLS·ROYCE ~ .. es ---------• or (213)594-0712. d '"'u"" u•J•"'-" ---------•;s Volvo 164E. Leather, stereo. mlnt con .,_,,., .... .-na..u1 64 VW. new motor, good auto. air . /\M /FM Cd ood c.-7291 or"'""' " .. 9 ~ u~ 1970 a • 8 rond., air '67 <ispd, 327. Convert hard ,,,_.. ~ ' ~ Ures, $500 <'assette. 40,000 m1. N.ann. d f II C II ------..,.,.,.., coo ., u power . a top, xlol cond, $4SOO. Dat1Wt 972 CLOUD SUNDAYS ~ Ph645-7388 586-7288. $2200. 675-8618 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uf'l~"''"6~tAQ<AJ\fv•AO•BAt• ---------.......... .,, . '"-n.• *•Pill( LA.NE•* Allto•, Hew 9100 Auto•, Mew 9100 Autos, Mew 9100 AMto.. Hew 9100 DRIVE A LITILE. •• SAVE A LOT XJ6 1972, Bnush Racing MOTOR CA.I CO. ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Green, $165CJO. Pvt party Roils Royce & Bentley 642 331U . 645-9794 serviciNt is our special· SHOP&COMPARE IAAWICIC DA TSUM San Juan Capiltrano •73r,, V12 Rdstr Auto .. stereo, A/C. wires Flaw less' Sl0,9:\0. 644 4579 ty. St.op by our new rac1ll· ty or call for aplJl. 7~A West 17th St. C M 1714 l631~or63 l ·0$46 _1_3_1_-_ll_7_5_4_9_l-_l_3_7_5_........ ,732 ~ ••••••••••• !?~~ NEWPORT DATSUN I ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 J~nsen, 22.000 ml, AM t"M en , xlnt C'Ond SPICIALS Bllt ofr Pvt i>tr 646-184.S m10 4 Dool'. 4 1peed, _aft_s ______ _ radio. <2DPKEl JENSEN Jll::ALEY li'l4 MOW $2195 Blk on b~. lo m1·s. IBIOOVESTREET AM /FM sler tape dk Near MacArthur CB. 831 3654 an 6pm. •Jamboree Roads JenHn '71 lnlerc~ptor ___ e_3_l-_t_3_0_0 ___ 1 Mm but xlnt cond. On it 1975 DA TSUM ownr ISSOO '94·M29 IZIOSIDAH K_._GMo 9735 4 Door. 4 speed. radio, ••••••••••••••••••••••• beater, moldln&s. tinted glau, bucket seats & low 8D Karmann Ohle, IOOd mlle1 . One o wne r . mechcond. Xlntmileage <ZllNKB). SlOOOflrm. 835-7208 (714 ) OMLYSZ7t5 .._.. 9731 Good lbru 4"23-77 COSTA MES.::. DATSUN 211MSHARBOR BLVD. 140-4410 144-02' 3 ....................... mira cl e mazda ( 'T ~p."'lW<>oo .ru'-~J"" __..M._._.,.. 5'11So.~ UI JI l"-4141 11t•I U1·711 I i6SUbaru MIWSUIAaU •$2847• Ser. (937384) 80Uwd&MW 71Sedan383CAO S777 73Coupe 3%.JIL .. St577 7'4Coupe 748Lt4,0 Stb77 76'4x'4 W<71 tl.X1l • $hQ-p \1--\(E\V<>oo £ 11:-'!J ~ t.l~lltMJ;.t.Y..~ u" s.. S4noet 111 >1 ..... .,., 111•1 u1.1111 Toyota t765 i5 2S>Z. AM /FM stereo C-. MeN '41-5700 ••••••••••••-••••••-• tape, A/C, mag whl1. 1976 To)'Ola Celica GT Very ctn. 33,000 ml. $1U.SO 71 IX J MA.IDA WGM AC. silver. blk iilt. under «olr. MO-aulday e.totrer7Sl-6503 wamuity. M915. 918.2288 Mlol.e91... 9510 Amlol.tolllM) 9510 Mloln'... tSIO ....................... ....................... ...................... . SOMETHING FRESH is COMING SOON to 1425 BAKER ST. in COSTA MESA • nakrsdldo~ U!ASINO ALL MAKES •USED CARS 142& Bak« St. Coata Me CA t •• SALES! SERVICE! LEASING! You Can Believe In OPIH 1 DAYS A W8 nu HADOR ILVD. 979-2500 LAST CHAllCEI • l•YEllTORY REDUm• SALE AND NOT ON JUST A FEW SELECTED MODELS IUT EVERY M•L Ill OUR lllYENTORY WILL IE REDUCED 111 PRICE AllD • SAUi 11 1977 BUICKS AMERAS-ELECTRAS.WAGONS.LE SABAES-CENTUAYs-AEOALS-sKYLAAKS.IKYHAWKI BRAm •EW IR111SH LEYLAllD _. S PLUS >, MAN fCMUNO Y t ...,._ .. Ml\ •Mto-9 t• oaia. ~·""9 ...... Ott<.~ .. " ,..,~ ..... ... ....... f1tft ....... •oot -~·'••y-- '°'·~~:-•41<•• .,, (~'ftC.l'+"'Q ..,... \lf'f'f"'t oo-tf IO•W I ..... n _ .. ··-•.OoO J»"l •u• • ...., ,._,,.., .... ..., ........ s.-,.,_,., • ,..,. CMIYllOU1 VIOA • tyl ........ ·---i..ocvo ..... 1'7J VOUCIWAOOH IUt • tyt f \Olt'fd. ~ (Of"01hOfM''1 rt0• ~ •~t• .m.ro ••"• -" tlOJSC 197~ fOllD ""'° ... .... • fVI f ""9d ,....., ..... . • ... w ---· -· IT)H~Y • 197J fOID MrOWMcMii ., ...................... . ,...,. "'°"'"" IAIOltVI ... CHIV , .. ,,....,.., ........ ""--'~ • - ' Bu~tington Beaeh Fountain ~ ey EDI Tl VOL. 70, NO. 116, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1977 Afternoon ·N.Y. St0eks TEN CENT Kids Face Sales Tax Evasion Charge RAMONA (AP) -The 12-year-old president of a company with gross earnings of up to $3,000 month.ly has been ordered to appear before the state Board of Equalization to explain wby the firm bas no permit to sell its product -manure. Richard Cessna Jr .• president of Kidco, Inc .• and his three young co-officers. ages 9to14, also have been accused by the state or failing t.o charge sales tax. THE YOUNGSTERS -RICHARD'S SISTER, Ne-Ne, 9, vice president; another sister, Bette. 11, secretary, and a half-sister, June Cole, 14, treasurer -went into business a year ago with a con- tract to sweep the six main streets of San Diego Country Estates for $150 monthly. They branched out by contracting with their father, who supervises the developments's UO·horse stabt:s. to remove manure and wood shavings. After composting the mixture, tbey seU it to landscapers and the Joe al golf course at prices lower than commerdaJ suppliers. THE YOUNG ENTREPRENEUJlS Al.SO off er a service to kill gophers for $1 each, but that's another story. The contract, which the youngsters wrote, says it can't be can· celed "unless the kids screw up." Cessna's father, Richard, said h~ will accompany them to- day to the hearing in San Diego. "The Board or Equalization says tbey need a permit because it is something tangible and that they have to add a sales tax Cor their customers," the elder Cessna said in an interview. "They may have to pay the state sales tax on their past sales, plus penalties." THERE WAS NO ESTIMATE ON bow much money might be ruled due. . But be and his son believe "the sales tax was already paid when the feed for the horses and the wood shavings to bed down the stables were brought in. _, "The kids think it's unreasonable and they're burned up," Cessna said. If the stale board rules against them, he said they plan to take it to the courts. THEY GROSSED $3,000 LAST October, their biggest sales month, but refuse t.o disclose their average earnings because, the young Cessna says, some of the kids al school try to borrow money. Kidco, said Cessna, was incorporated· in the Cayman Islands in the British West Indies when Cessna paid $1,500 in registration costs to avoid the earnings tax in California. Spill ·unchecked AP Pl>olo HAPPY TAX VICTIMS-Youngsters who operate a street cle aning and manure pickup business out of Ramona, near San Di ego. don't seem too worried here about he ing hauled hcfore the st ate Board of Equalization on charges of failure to have a permit to sell manure. They are (left to right). Richard Ces sna. 12. president; Ne- Ne, 9. and Betty Cessna, 12, and June Cole, 14. The kids make S-1.000 a month in the enterprise. Inf ant Death Hearing Near Completion Defense attorneys for Or. William 8 . Waddill of Huntington Harbour presented their final witnesses todday in a hearing to determine If the physic I an should he tried on charges of killing an hour-old infant. Deputy District Attorney Bob Chatterton said Judge Kenneth M. Smith is expected to decide whether to remand the case to Orange County Superior Court Wednesday. Chatterton said he and Wad- ·tHll's attorneys will present final .arguments in the closed pre- liminary hearing in West Orange County Municipal Court Wednes· day. Waddill, 43, is charged with murder in connection with the March 2 strangulation death of a baby girl at Westminster Com· munity Hospital. · The gynecologist-obstetrician reportedly attempted a saline abortion on the mother of the child which later resulted in a live birth, Westminster police al· lege. Waddill is Cree on $25,000 bail. <AnerLauda . King Hmsein • WASHINGTON (AP) - Jordan's King Hussein, tn his . second day of talks with Presi· .. Alent Carter. sa.vs his habitual caution in assessln1 Middle East peace prospeot.s t. &lvinf'·warto newopdmlsm. . Carter and Hussain met for the fint time Monday tor talh about · the tole o( the PalesUnlan Liberation Orguls.t.ion In aey . new peace efforts in the Middle Eaat. r , IIB' s 'Consigliore' Plans F 011ndation By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL OI ltlo O•llY ~1 .. 1 ~1•11 A Huntington Beach area man who earned his law degree while in prison scored another first Monday. Charles Thomas "Tom " Miller, 33, who was known as The Consigliore to his jailhouse clients of Italian heritage, flew to Sacramento to incorporate his own nonprofit foundation. ''It really got heavy ... ," Miller said in an interview late Monday after his whirlwind fll&bt to the state capital where paperwork was filed creating his Equal Justice and Human Rights Foundation. California officialdom -at least in certain quarters -is skeptical of the longtim~•convict and parolee's motives b1t Miller, an Orange County·based law clerk who plans to become an at· torney, says he is totally serious. He said Sen. Richard J . Alatorre <D·Los Aneelea) and an aide, Daniel Castro, inU!h>ened successfully on bis Sacramento visit to arrange a VIP tour of Folsom Prison, where he once served time. ' Miller says much of his dream plan of creating t he Equal Justice and Human Rights Foun· dation were devised at Folsom, where on Dec. J.2.13, 1975, he passed tbe test for · bis LLB degree. He wu paroled three days later -some ·yean a~er his stretches ln 31 clty, county, state and federal jtll taciUtles began -and last month hla state and lederal paroles ~plred. "The It.alt at Folsom 1fasn't too happy bat they stopped aivinl me tbe nm.around when Ul~y found oUt Sen. Ala:Wrre wu &et· tJn• me into tbe piUon .. aays Mille:r, who 11 buay with moro Otll' f'llot ,...._ FORMS FOUNDA_TlON Ex-Con Tom Miiier work today. He said Gov. Edmund G. Brown. Jr., was out of town and be was unable to arrange an au· dience w\UI him but he presented the governor's office with an honorary membership in the new foundation. Mlller was interviewed at the prison by convict Bob Collins, editor of the Folsom Observer, a n Inmate newspaper.. and J{.~BC·TV newsmen and re.Preaenta.ti9eel of the Sacramen- to' Bee accompanied hlm. MWer aa1d after papen were filed and tbo Equal lust.tee and Buman R!&hta FbundaUon re. celved tu tax·eJtempt status from tho State Franchi.So Tax (SeeMUl.ll!'Jl.PageAJ) • Gale-force Winds Halt W ~ll Capping STAVANGER, Norway (AP) -A dangerous concentration of gas today forced six American blowout experts to evacuate a platform in the North Sea shortly after they bad begun efforts to cap a four-day-old geyser '?_f oil Huntington To Request Water Cuts· Residents of Huntington Beach will be asked to voluntarily cut bacl~ on water consumption by 15 percent to combat ef{ects of a statewide drought. Notices urging conser vation ef- forts will be sent to residents in a bout two weeks. Huntington Beach draws all its water from six wells within the city during winter months, ac- cording to Public Works Director Bill Hartge. In the summer. the city gets 60 percent of its water from wells and buys the remainder from the Orange County Municipal Water District. Hartge said the water supply is generally .. in pretty good shape" but that the water table is drop- ping·slowly. "If we can reduce water use by 15 percent, it will allow us to catch up with the drop in the ta· ble." llartge said. Hartge said if residents con· tinued to use water at previous rates, drastic steps would have to be taken in four or five years. They ibclude deepening wells, buying more water and engaging in extensive efforts to halt salt water intrusion. A resolution unanimous ly passed by the City Council Mon· day urged citizens to take -the following conservation steps: (See WATER, Page A2) * * * Wlifomians Would Favor Water Ration SAN F'RANClSCO (AP) -The majority of Californians sur· veyed on the state's water shortage said they would favor statewide rationing if needed. ac· cording to Mervin D. Field's California Poll released today. Pollster Field said about four out of five Californians, regard- less of where they live, believe water rationing should not be confined to water-short counties. He said more Northe1'n Califonlia resident.a were coo- cemed about water. but "even ln tbe south tbe greatest a.umber of people see the. water shbrtage u serious and favor statewide ra- Uoning." Field said 93 ~rcent of those surve1ed aaid they were practic· int aome form of water con· serva~ ~ Calilomians said 81Jiculture and health Ad aalety abould be given the highest prloriUes for water. a.cco~in to the poll. Tbe1 JJlted ldl uxt Uld said ln4u• y aaa bu1laeu abould be liven U.. iow..t priori- t)' lorwat«. . The poll IUi'Yf!Jed 982 9d\llt Cautorilau lalt month. Tbe C&Utonla Pon. fCRQ>de4 la UM7, ls aA lod~peodent.. DOD• . pll'tihn public op1n1oQ '""°'· from a runaway offshore well. Officials said the explosive gas built up after the wind stopped. and the experts decided to postpone their efforts again. A similar calm had blocked cap· ping operations Monday mom· Dally Piiot PllOlo HONORED FOR SERVICE Trustee Ralph Bauer HBTrustee Bauer Feted By Council Veteran school board member Ralph Bauer said Monday he bas no immediate plans to seek public office after serving 11 years as a trustee in Huntington Beach. · Bauer, 46, was honored Mon· day by the Huntington Beach Union High School District Second!U'Y PTA Council for his service to youth since 1966. The former-trustee, who chose not to nm for reeeleclion to the high school board last month, has also served two four-year terms on the Ocean View (elementary) School Board. , Bauer, a 13-year Huntington Beach resident, served on the Huntington Beach Union High School District Board from 1968 until last month. "l cbole to voluntarily relln· quish power to g'ive someone else a chance to have input," said Bauer. "If one person dominates the school board too long, that weakens it." Bauer said he "left the district in excellent hands" but admitted tlte current board has "sbort- range pbtlosophical dif· ferences." Tbe ·former trustee said he pla.na f.o keep active in volunteer groups &ud\ as Los1Amig0d de Bolta Chica. an environmental group attelllPtlng to preserve the marshlands in northwestern (See TatJSTEE, Page AZ> SIREET NAME MOJ'ES JUYOR . . POUGBDEPSIEA~~ Y. (AP) -llQOI' Robert E. ed, Ulla· ·ble to enlist dlben1 tQpport to chaqe tbe name of them-ton Which be lives. )lu dedd!d to move. Abaaed ll•H on Rooter A•etn1et a name be 1&11 ba tlDl• ·batt8llildblm. ~ Ing; and gale-force winds Mon· day afternoon prevented the Americans from getting onto the Bravovlatform. The well, operated by the Phillips Petroleum Co. of Oklahoma in Norway's Ekofish oil field, blew Friday during routine maintenance and has been spewing about 49,000 gallons of oil and gas an hour since. A Phillips spokesman said the blowout fighters -two members The oil lo•t 1eotdd ...,,,,,. the etatlre IJ.S. tor about 24 •ln•te•, •ClflS Olle ezpert. of the Houston-based Red Adair • oil well fire-fighting team and four Phillips technicians _,..• man aged to close and repair some valveS before they were forced t.o evacuate the platform. The experts went back lo their headquarters on the barge Choc- taw, and then pulled the barge several hundred yards from the rig. Meanwhile. the Norwegian government appointed a blue- ribbon panel to investigate the first blowout in Norway's of· fshore Ekofisk oil field .. The blowout is developing into a major issue for the fall gener al election and oil companies were worried that the minority Labor government would cancel plans for test drilling off northern Norway, which is to begin next year. Since the well blew Friday, the Phillips Petroleum Co. 's. Bravo rig has "been spewing between (See OIL SPILL. Page A~) School Slates Open House An OPen house for parents will be held at Marina High School Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the stu- ·dent cafeteria. Parents and school staff will meet in the cafeteria, visit c l assrooms and return for refreshments. The open house will feature an ' art fair with student designs, tex· ti1'l!, ceramics, leather and jewelry work and other crafts on display. Coast Weather Variable high cloudiness through Wednesday and chance of some late night· and early morning low clouds. Lows tonight so to 56. Highs Wednesday Os at be.aches tomld· 70s inland. INSIDE TODAY. Progr111 thrtaltn1 the glorlou1 pauage of a D1l4Wtft Bou I~ that ·may fo.U victim to the ptU..meU • tlr11t to gamble in . a J eney caafno. Stt Julu Loh'• Am1rico, ~ 84. · •••ex .... Ct Cl es ... _. cw ···~· .. , .. M "' • A.z DAILY PILOT H /F . ,. IJCI Pral . Worldwi<le Ban· .. SpraY~ked . Decision On Irvine Awaite d UNITED EFFORT STRESSED UCI Prof. Frank Rowland Spray Can .·warning Approved WASfilNGTON <AP> -The Food and Drug Administration announced today at will require a warning label on aerosol con- tainers using fluorocarbon pro- pellants as a first step toward ,el{entual ehminataon of virtuaJly all such products. ThC' Consumer Product Safely Commission said in a Joint an· nouncemcnt with FDA it is pro- posing similar action for the pro- ducts 1t regulates. The actions came in response to a National Academy of Sciences report last year that the propellants formally known as chlorofluorocar bons risC' into the str atospher e and deplete the <'arth's ozone layer , a thin pro· tective gaseous belt that filters harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun. I The FDA said that all food, drug and cosmt>llc containers us- ing fluorocarbon propellants and shipped in interstate commerc1c• must carry th(' following warning ofter Oct 31: ··warn1nq ronta1n.~ a rhlorofluoroearbon that ma11 harm the public ht'alth and cn11ironment by reducing ozone m tl1e upper at· mosphere " A bout 85 percent or aerosol pro- ducts containing the chemicals arc• covt'red by the F'DA regula- tion. The remaining JS percent are regulatcd by the Consumer Product Safety Commission - CPSC or the l!!n v1ronmental Protection /\gt•ncy. EPA already requ1rt'S a warn- ing lc1bt'l on pestit-1dt' aerosols contammg rJuorocarbons. and the product s afety comm1ss1on proposal 1s cxpcctt:>d to take cf feet early next year. Tht• FDA and CPSC joint an nouncement s aid dl'ta1ls ot a mandatory phase-out program for all noncs~<>nll.il .1erosols us- '"IZ fluorocarbons \~111 be a n-nounc~ shortly. Parks Committee Sets P ublic Meet The Fountain Vall<'y Parks and Recreation Commission will hold •ca public hennng tonight at 7:30 :on proposed uir;es for lhe city's : ~90,000 in federal revenue shar- : mg. · The meetinJ? will be held in the 'council chambers. 10200 Slater ;Ave. f ORANGE. COAST .. ,, DAILY PILOT , ~~::.~~~:·r.::i::O::"~::..::. ~ (N\t P\14:Ml\l"ll~ tO"'O•ftf ~ ... Mttl.,.\ .,_ I =;~'::-~~~~~r=~J.=6.~ ~::.:_-t••"' V•ll••· ffWIM . S..••·~-v.u., •l'ld i..._. ...... ,-.. , ............ _...,. I ·-It _,,.,,.. S.t..,.,..\ -~ T ... ~~c..:.:~~:1,.r~';!;.::,.."' Wt,, &ey 11 .... 11 ... -,.,..\kttftt ll'CI Prut11t,,., Joctll.c.toT VI( .... ~ ....... _ .. __ n-•-E.i1 .. "=~=-CMl1ftM "-lllt-11'.-AUl\-M.t" ...... Ell-._._ -• 0t_ eevne, Cdl1<1r Hllnttftato11 .. edl oni. ,,.,r ... o-.._... Molll"O •• , .... 11'.0 .... "'~ Othc .. L~t:~:·;;r!~~~-~ltboH V1lltYI tU.11..t .... -··~o._,,_ Teltplton•Cf1•)~ C1H1lfled Advertf91"1 tQ.lf7t ....... -.~o. • ._. CNo!YC.-tllot lt0-11.21 ~ ... ,.,, °'-c.eot "'*'"""" CllMo I l::fi '" .... , "-· '"""' ........ _,,.. ~,..,~.,:;..•:~\•:-:.~·~~~I= '!1 (_...,._, tm:',:,~m,:;:::r.u: .. _,, .. ,~.:,~ ....... ~, •.•• "'.u .... -"'" -~ ......._.,.._"''· ... .,... __________ ~ ' By JO LARY KAYE Of Ille O•llY ll'l .. 1 Sl1ll The UC Irviile chemistry pro- fessor who first warned the world that fluorocarbons may be can· ccr causing said Monday that preventive actions taken by this country will be meaningless without similar steps taken elsewhere in the world. "The crucial question is, how quickly will the other countries respond to our moves?" asked Dr. Frank S. Rowland, who first detected the fluorocarbon danger in 1974 with his UCI laboratory colleague Mario Molina. "Everybody's stratosphere is eve r y bod y else's . If fluorocarbons aren't controlled in Europe, our steps won't help," the professors aid. Rowland said he's in favor of all of the preventive actions now being proposed by the govern-' ment. Thal includes today's joint an- nouncement by the Food and Drug Administration a nd the Consumer Product Safe~y Com- mission that a warning label ex- plaining the fluorocarbon d anger must be placed on products by· Oct. 31. Rowland also supports an an- ticipated announcement by the Environmental Protection Agen· cy (EPA}, possibly next week, that will create the sch eduJe to ban aerosol products that use fluorocarbons as a propellant. According to Rowland, the EPA most likely will set Oct. 15, 1978 as the date manufacturers must slop producing nonessen- tial fluorocarbon products and April 15, 1979 as the date when the aerosol products, such as de- odorants, may no longer be sold in stores. Rowland said he's not certam yet whether the proposed ban will be in time to prevent a marked increase or skin cancer, caused by the fluorocarbons depl eting the ozone in the stratosphere. "It'll be 10 or 20 years before we know if we caught it m time," he explained. Rowland and Molina have estimated that if the present rate of ff\lorocarbon production con· tinues, there will be al least 50,000 new cases of s kin cancer each year . Rowland observed that Canada a nd Sweden have already pledged lo follow a path similar to that being taken by the United States. Other countries, though. have not yet decided. he said. The UCI scientist also said it's important that indiwdual states continue to enact their own bans to go along with the a nticipated federal ban. ·'It's double protection. First. 1t expresses people's beliefs that the bans are necessary. and second, at quickly limits the fluorocarbon market for m anuf::IC'turt'rs. · · Row lnnd point ed out Band Concert Slate d in HB Huntington Beach City I elementary) School District stu dents in a 100-piece orchestra and 150-paece combined band will perform tomght in a fre~ 1ntra- d 1strict music festival an the Sowers Middle School mall. The music v.111 begin at 7 30 p.m. The school as lo<'aled at 9300 Indianapolis Ave , Huntington Beach. The band and orchestra con.c;a!lt of instrumental students from Dwyer, Gisler and Sowers M1d- <He schools under the direction or David Borkenhagen, Marvin Gay and James Martin. The event is public. Park Parking Fee Dropped At JIB Site In tbese times, one wouldn't think that 50 cents makes much of a difference one way or the other; but it did in Huntington Beach. Last September, the city im- posed a charge of so cea.is per ruibt I« each member ot an or- ganized poqp such as Boy Scouts. to cam.P ln tentral Park ln lbo ari.a east ottbe libr ary. Camping attendance nose-- dived by about 90 percent, ae- ~of'dlns c.o Norm Worth¥, recru-tJott and parka department direc- tor. ' • Because of Hie drastic faHoff, t he clt.y coun cil vot ed u n- animously l~t week to remove an fees for ovemlJbt pa.rktrur. Worthy said that be blld re-- ceived crUlclsm from acoul· muten who felf tbere la a fee f« Just about everyth.lnc and de- cided to go C.O other parka where cam ping wu free. A '1 per day fee tor each motor vehlcJ also was rescinded b1 tbe .c:oandl. Low Level Atta~k By TOM BARLEY Oltloe D.ity l'llei Sllll Documents reflectlng the James Irvine Foundation's de- cision tQ sell the Irvine Company to an East Coast consortium for $302.9 miUion were filed today in Orange County Superior Court. But the new legal action does not prevent the Mobil Corpora- tion from r e-entering the bidding race which it led until recently with an all cash offer of $281.9 million. An obviously impatient Judge James F. Judge quickly denied Monday a move that would have given Mobil 90 days during which the company would have hel~ its a nnual meeting and reappraised its stand on the Irvine Company sale. California Division of Forestry planes, flown in from He met 's Ryan Field, clropped about 6.000 gallons of pink fire ~e­ tardant chemicals onto Jn·ine Ranch fire that burned 85 acres in Moro Canyon, between Laguna Beach' and Corona del Mar Monday. The three twin-engined a ircraft used are converted Navy sub- marine detection planes. ~ritical flights were delayed 11/2 hours as planes were committed to San Diego fires. Instead, Mobil was given Wllil Friday to top the bid s ubmitted by a combine headed by Detroit developer Allred Taubman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto billionaire Henry Ford II. Backing them in the bid to ensure that Mobil does not take over the Irvine Company is Irvine heiress Joan lrvlne Smith whose lawsuit stymied 'a $200 million sale of the company to Mobil (our years ago. Fro• Page A l WATER ••. -Find and repair all leaks. -Install low pressure showerheads. -Use discretion in laundry, dish washing and bathing habits. -Jrrigale lawns and landscap- ing sparingly m order to prevent runoff Store drinking water in refrigerators in order to have <'Old watt>r 1mmcd1atcly availa- ble without excessive running of the water tap. Usc waler reduction devices in toilets such as cUsplacemenl objects. -Don't use water for cleaning sidewalks and driveways. In addition, all restaurants are urged to ser ve water t o customers only upon request. Additional s uggest ions on water savings are available at the public mformation office in citv hall. The materials "ill be mailed upon request. Westminste r Seroices Set For CrashDead A mass funeral service for 114 unidentified victims killed in the Canary Islands air disaster will be held Wednesday afternoon in Westminster. Bodies of 100 unidentified /\meracan v1tllms ol the March 27 crash a rrived F'riday at El Toro Marine Air Station. Another 14 bodies were fl own Thursday night to Los Angeles lnterna- t1onal Airport. The bodies were flown in following efforts to identify the v1cllms or aviation's worst dis- aster, which occurred when a Pan-Am 747 and a Dutch KLM 747 coll!ded on the runaway at Tenerafe. kilhng 580 persons. Pan-Am spokesman Brad Dressler said the identifi cation process was halted at Dover, Del., · last week with 204 of the 329 A mencan v1ct1ms named. /\bout tWO·th1rds Of the remaan- tnj( unidcnt1f1ed v1ct1ms have heen deter mined lo be from Southern California, and the rest from other parts of California, Dressler said. /\II 114 caskets were delivered lo Westminster Mem orial Park. which has donated a mass graveslte for the dead. Wednes- d ay afternoon's services will be inter-denominational. Fro• Page Al TRUSTEE ••• Huntington Beach. A technical director for the Amsco Division of Union Oil Company in La Mirada Bauer is used to an active civic life. He served concurrent terms on the Ocean Vlew elementary and htgb Khool boards from 1968 to 1975. Parents oC two chil~. Eric, 18, and Elaine, 15, Bauer and bia wife, Charlene, have been In· volved as volunteers in library and park projects. Bauer also ran unsuccessful Huntlngton · Beach City Council campaigns in 1974 and J976. Bill P 888e8 Bordie SACRAMENTO (AP) -Slate reaulation of aome DNA re- aearch ba J)aUed tu first tat. the Aasembly Healtb Committee, on coodiUon that 1t would not become Jaw l( a &lmilar f edull I aw 11 PlllMd. .. , SpecJ a cular Auto Crash Injures Man A Huntrngton Beach man escaped with moder ate injuries Monday when his powerful sport sedan allegedly rammed one parked car after glancing off another, hurling the second veh1· cle 15 feet air borne. Richard E vands, 34, of 8277 Cape Horn Drive, de.c lined hospital treatment following the s pectacuJar 2:45 p.m . collision on Pacific Coast Highway 500 feet west of Beach Boulevard, police s aid. Motorcycle Patrolman John Hauser said Evans' sporty coupe was a total loss, while one of the two cars it struck was nearly de· molished in the crash. Officer Hauser said the auto owned by Sam Hambro, of 16583 So. Pacific Ave., Sunset Beach. sustafoed major dama~c in the accident that knocked 1t 15 feet into the air and 45 feet down the highway. Investigators said Evans was eastbound on Coast Highway when his car apparentl y sideswiped the first parked auto and then veered into Hambro's car. Valley Police Se e k Woman In Store Heist J\ female bandit tried lo run down a supermarket meat clerk with her auto and stole $73.20 worth of groceries Monday night, Fountain Valley police reported. Witnesses told police the young s uspect left the Alpha Beta market at 8930 Warn er Ave. at about 6 p.m .. going through a turnstyle with a shopping cart paled high with miscellaneous items from the store counters. Stor e m a o aeer De.an K. Christensen a nd meat clerk Vernon D. Underwood pursued the brown-haired wo~an who wore a brown blouse and shorts. U nde rwood told police the woman ttied to ram him with her 1963 Cadillac as she roared out of the market parking Jot. Un- derwood was unhurt. The suspect was described as a ·Caucasian, about five feet, one inc h tall and weighing 120 pounds. 'Rare' Auto Wmdow Stolen A Huntington Beach bookstore clerk bas lost the rear window of h er classic 1957 Ford Thun- derbird hardtop sport converti- ble t o thieves who stole ll In a busy s hopping center in broad dayHght Monday. Dorothy Yohe, an employe or Walden Books, 7777 Edinger Ave., valued the T-Blrd window at $250, according lo police who filed a grand theft report. Investigators note the rear window is one of the most often· stolen components of the classic Thunderbirds. Budget Hike Eyed LOS ANGELES (AP> -Los Angeles County taxpayers wtll fund a bu41et next year that ls $221 million hiaher than the Cut· ttnt one tf the Cou.nty CbJef Ad· &ninlltraUve orncer•1 Pl'OS*al sla.ncb. The buda•t proposal. totau.n, $3.S bllllon. WU released .Mond-.,. , F ro,,. Page A l IIDLLER ••• Board that he bas several goals. "We will generally b e a humanitarian organization," he explained, adding he is c.o!'· cerned with several spec1f1c goals. -I mplementation ot a new system of enforcement and the administration of justice that re- quires prisoners to pay ~es_titu­ tion to their victims or vactams' families. -A strong stand against the practice of abortion of unwanted human fetuses. -Privately financed aid and self-help programs for the elder- ly and the very young and help- less two classes he says are most easi°ty neglected by American society at large. Miller said Dean Aviation loaned the six-place-plane for Monday's trip and G'ary Nagy, of the JG 52 Flying Club volun- t eered his services as pilot for the humanitarian journey. Miller said he was given rus first job and the break he says he urgently needed after his parole from Folsom Prison by noted Santa Ana trial lawyer George H. Chula. F rom Page Al OIL SPILL. • 840 000 and 1.05 million gallons a day into the sea, forming a slick six miles wide and 15 to 20 males long. Al curr ent oil cartel prices, the well was throwing away about $300,000 worth of crude oil a day. A bout 40 lo 60 percent of crude 011 can be refined into gasoline, ex· p erts said, meaning the oil lost so far could run about 2,800 cars for a year. At current U.S. oonsumption levels the oil lost by noon today woutd' supply the entire United States for about 24 minutes, an expert in Washin~ton said. The two American experts. Boots Hansen and Richard Hat-· tenorg of the renowned team of . Texas oil well fire fighter Red Adair made the decision to postp~ne c apping oper ations after boarding the rig for the third time since they arrived on the scene Saturday. Four other men -two from Adair's crew and two from Phillips, also in· spected the rig today. They said they need more time to bring up s pecial equipment from the barge Choctaw, which is sitting alongside Bravo and serving as their main operational base. Foundation attorney Howard Privett told Judge Judge that if Mobil has not submitted an offer by Friday he will ask the court to approve the Taubman-Allen- Irvine offer. The further extension to Mobil by Judge Judge came under fire from attorney Howard Friedman who has represented Mrs. Smith throughout the eight-month trial. Friedman told the judge that Mobil was m ade aware of the consortium 's latest offer last April 2 but has made no ~oye lo submit a new bid or even 10d1cate that it was interested in remain· ing in contention. Taubman-Alle n-Irvine has agreed lo allow Mrs. Smith to buy sufficient stock in the new com· pany wttlch would allow her to re· ta in the board seat she now holds on the Irvine Company. Mobil officials have refused to make any s uch concession to the granddaughter of J ames Irvine II. Judge Judge made it cleat late · Monday that he is not compelled to approve the higher offer for the Irvine Company regardless of which contender submits the highest bid. He warned lawyers for both sides that there are many other issues to be considered, among them the argument that a rapidly improving economic outlook in Orange County m ight mean a much better price for the Irvine Company within the next few years. Mrs. Smith has agreed with th at s u ggestion during testimony She believes that the Irvine Company today is worth at least $150 million. HB Youngster Hurt in Crash A Huntington Beach youth was in stable condition at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital today follow- ing a head-on collision in Costa Mesa which also injured two other youths. Randy Lee Lockhart, 18, of 401 Atlanta Ave., Hu11tington Beach allegedJy ran a red light al Baker Street and Mendoza Drive, col· liding with a car driven by Robert M. Kennedy, 20, of 300 Bucknell Drivt-, Costa Mesa. The crash also in jured Lockhart's passenger, 17-year- o ld Will Curtis Niesley, 9619 Toucan Ci rcle, who was treated by Costa Mesa paramedics and later examined and r eleased from the hospit al. Ke nnedy also suffered cuts to the head, but refused lransporta· lion to the hospital. Police said Kennedy was mak- ing a left·hand turn onto Men- doza when the4:30 p.m , collision occurred. Instant Movie Polaroid Enda Ruman NEEDHAM Mass. CAP) -Polaroid Corp. hes unveiled its long'-awaited instant home moyie c~mera and television·liko viewer that produces films m one minute. Dr Edwin Land Polaroid's 67·year-old founder nnd ch~an, demo~strated the "polavision" system althe company's 40t.h annual stockholders meeting to- .day. 1 Land said the hand-held camera contains a fi m cassette good for 2~ minutes or home movies. The cassette fits in t ho top of the vie wer, which automatically develop$ the film and shows it in color one min'ute later on its 12-inch screen. Land said the camera nnd mm will eventually in· elude sound, but tbe company has not yet been able to develop a ~,..quality sound system. Land s d the camera ahd viewer will be avalla· ble in the all. lie would not disclose the system'• price but said 1t will be compotlUve with "any good borne movie system.'' c .. Irvine EDITION ·1 ~ VOL. 70, NO. 116, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ,· ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today'• Clo lag N.Y. Stoeks TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1977 TEN CENT 1Saddleback Scraps Myf ord-Bryan. Site By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ol t .. D•lly Piiot St•ll After a three and a half hour hearing laced with some bitter audience comments. Saddleback 'College trustees Monday scrapped plans to buy a seco'\,d campus site at Myford Road and Bryan Avenue on the Irvine Ranch. The board then voted 4.3 to begin negot1at1ons ~1th the Irvine Company to acquire an alternative location for the new campus at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. New board member William Watts "joined Trustees Donna Berry and Frank Greinke in op· posing acquisition of the alternate site, even though he had voted earlier to rescind lbe decision to buy Myford-Br-yan. Trustees will meet again May 9 to close the deal on that parcel following yet another hearing to permit the landowner and the public to comment. Tustin Trustee Frank Greinke, a vocal opponent of the Ir-vine Center.Jeffrey site, intimated after the new vote that he would spend the next few weeks seeking leg al loopholes to stall the purchase. "Don't give up yet folks," he told the audience at Irvine's Venado Intermediate School. Most of those attending the session were from a mobile home· park called The Meadows and a housing tract called The Ranch. Both developments are loca~ed near the Irvine Center-Jeffrey site ef\dorsed by the board. Most of the speakers during the hearing voiced concern over lrnf· fie, th e impact on their neighborhoods or an influx of slu· dents, parking and noise. The general attitude appeared to be that voiced by a woman in the audience who said, "We're all for educaUon but we don't want it in our l)eighborhood." Nick Alles of the Meadows As· sociation gav~the most detailed presentation in opposition to the new locatio!l' for the campus, which would start out as a 20- acre sateUlte and have the capacity for crowth up to 100 . acres over the next five years. Alles said the college board had to make a choice of "being fair to many residents in the area or lo government Clhe city oC lrvlne) and private business (the Irvine Company) who shoot credibility to pieces ... He said residents should not. <See CAMPUS, Page AZ) Foundation Files for Ranch Sale VCI Prof j Worldwide Ban On Spray Asked ' UNITED EFFORT STRESSED UCI Prof. Frank Rowland I Heal.th W urning I \To Be Placed t On Spray Cans WASHI NG TON I AP I Thl' Food and Drug Adm1nistrat1on announCl'<i loday 1t will rcquarc a warning lahel on aerosol C'On tamers using fluorocarbon pro pellants as a first stt•p to"url eventucil ehmmat1on of v1rtu.tlly all such produc-l'> The Consumt•r Prndurt Saff•I., Comm1ss1on said in a Joint ;in 1 nounct'mcnt with FDA 1t 1s pro posing s1m1lcir act10n for lht.' pro- duc-ts 1l regulatcs The actions cJmc 1n response l o a National Acadcmy of Sciences report last year that thC' propellants formally known .is chlorofluorocarbons rise mto the stratospher e and deplete the earth's ozone layer. a than pro· • tective gaseous belt that filters harmful ultravaol~t rad1at1on from the sun. ! ByWLARYKAYE Ol IM O•oly Pilot Sl•ll The UC Irvine chemistry pro· fessor who first warned the world that fluorocarbons may be can- cer causing said Monday that preventive actions taken by this country will be meaningless without similar steps taken elsewhere in the world. "The crucial question is. how quickly will the other countries respond to our moves?" asked Dr. Frank S. Rowland. who first detected the fluorocarbon danger in 1974 with his UCI laboratory collaague M.acio Molina. "Every body's stratosphere is eve rybod y else's . If fluorocarbons aren't controlled in Europe. our steps won't help," the professor said. Rowland said he's in favor of all of the preventive actions now being proposed by the govern ment. That includes today's joint an· nouncement by the Food and Drug Administration and the Consumer Product Safety Com· mission that a warning label ex- plaining the nuorocarbon danger must be placed on products by Oct 31. Rowland also supJ>Qrls an an· hc1pated announcement by the Environmental Protection Agen· t'Y < EPAl. possibly next week. that will create the schedule to ban aerosol products that use fluorocarbons as a propellant. According lo fto*land , the EPA most Hkely will set Oct. 15, 1978 as lhe date manufacturers must stop producing nonessen- tial Ouor()('arbon products and April 15. 1979 as the date when thC' at'rosol products. such as de· otlor ants. may no longer be sold 1n stores Ro.,., land said he's not certain yet whether the proJ>Qsed ban "'111 be an lame to prevent a marked increase of skm cancer, caused by the fluorocarbons depleting the ozone in the stratosphere. "It'll be IO or 20 years before we know if we caught it in time," he explained. Rowland and Molina have estimated that if the present rate <See RESPOND, Page A2) i National Group jHonors UCI Prof Dr. Richard F. Thompson. UC Irvine psychobiology professor. has been elected to the National Academy or Sciences, the academy announced today. Membership in the academy is considered one of the highest honors given to American scien- lis ts and engineers. The academy, headquartered in Washington, serves as an adviser to the federal government in matters of science and technology. Thompson, of Newport Beach, 1 ls the second current UCI pro-1 fessor elected lo the academy. t The other is Howard Schneiderman, biological ! sciences dean, who was chosen in 1974. Sixty members were elected to the academy this year includl.ng eight from the UC a)'$tem, bring· tng the total membership to ~19. Thompson bu been at UCI since 1967, except for a year and a half ln 1973 and 1974 when be t • <See DONOR, Pa1e Al> ~. • HAPPY TAX VICTIMS-Youngsters who operate a s treet cleaning and manure pickup business out of Ramona, near San Diego, don 'l seem too worried here about being hauled before the slate Board of Equalization on charges of failure to have APWl'""91o a permit to sell manure. They are (left to right), Richard Cessna, 12, president; Ne· Ne. 9. and Betty Cessna, 12, and June Cole, 14. The kids make $3,000 a month in the enterprise. The board had some good news forthem today. Kids Granted Pern1it Horse Manure Firm Must Charge Tax SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Califom1a Board of Equalization awarded a seller's permit today to a horse-manure distribution firm run by children who made up to $3,000 a month without col· lecting or paying state sales tax. A senior tax representative of the board made the decision after- meeting 4.'i minutes with the com- pany's omcers who range in age from 9to 14 years. The permit, No. 25686734, pro- vides that they must now charge a sales tax on some but not necessarily all the homegrown fertilizer which is sold. Neither tax official Bill Atwell nor an attorney for the children would say ii any back truces must be paid. Richard ~sna Jr., the firm's 12-year-old president, said or the permit: "We're gonna keep this locked up good." "We shouldn't be taxed." he said before the meeting. .. We're just k,ids. They ought to be glad we're c«it working on OW" own instead of being out someplace bu.sting windows." The action involved KJDCO, Jnc., a corporation founded and run by the cblldreo of Richard Cesana, who operates the equestrian center at San Diego Country Eatald, a planned com· muuily in R.aa>ona. Cessna aaJd the children let hlm lit in at board meeliop, but m 1ke thetrotm declsion.,. · The flrm, whose prlmar7 1ervlc1 ls aellinf manure and . wood ahavlqs from the stable Ooon in the form of compQSt loi-nunertes and cotr courses, in- 1 corporated in the British West In· dies last year to prevent it from being subject lo California taxes. KIDCO contends the taxes are paid when horse feed and wood shavings are purchased, so there should be no tax on the back end. The state, however, maintains the byproduct is new -compost -and l.Mservices offered by the youngsters are tangible and sub- ·ject to sales taxes. KIDCO also sweeps the streets of the community for $150 per month, exterminates gophers for $1 each and dabbles in anything else al which a profit can be turned. Other officers of the firm, which made $3,000 last October, its best month, are Richard Jr. 's sisters, 9-year-old Ne-Ne, a vice presiden\; Bette, 11, secretary; and their half·aister. June Cole, 14, treasurer. (;apping Halted Gas Forces Crew To Leave Oil Spill' STAVANGER, Norway (AP) - A dangerous concentration of gas today forced six American blowout experts to evacuate a platform in the North Sea shortly after they bad beaun errorta to cap a four-day-old. geyser of oll from a nmaway oflabore wel.L Officlall said the uptosive gas buUt up atler tho wind stopped, and the experts decided to postpone their efforts again. A similar calm bad bl~ed cap. pin• operations Monday mom. inc. and 1ate-f orce winds Mon· day alt•rnoon prevented the Americans from aettlnt onto the Bravo platform. · · The well, operated by the Phillipa Potrolou.D\ Co. of Oklahoma in Norway's Ekotllh oil field, blew Friday during routine maintenance and bu been spewing about 48,000 gallons of oil and gas an bour aince. A Phillips spokesman said the blowout fighters -two members ot tlte Houstoo-l>asecl Red Adair oU well fire-fl.Ch~ tum and four Phillipa teclinlclan. - manae-ed to close and repair aome valves before they wre foreed to evacuate the pJatlonn. Tbe experts went back to their beadquarten oa Ute bargt C!boe· taw, and then pulled the ~ several bundrecl )'Udl ltOm the 4 Deadline To Mobil: Friday By TOM BARLEY ()j tlM Daily Pllel St•ll Documents re flecting the James Irvine Foundation's de- cision to sell the Irvine Company t"1b an East Coast consortium for $302.9 million were filed today in Orange County Superior Court. But the new legal action does not prevent the Mobil Corpora· lion from re·entering the bidding race which •it led until recently with an all cash offer of $281.9 million. An obviously impatient Judge James F. Judge quickly denied Monday a move that would have given Mobll 90 days during which the company would have held its annual meeting and reappraised its stand on the Irvine Company sale. Instead, Mobil was given until Friday to top the bid submitted by a combine headed by Detroif developer Alfred Taubman, Wall Stteet financier Charles Allen and auto billionaire Henry Ford II. Backing them in the bid to ensure that Mobil does not take over the Irvine Company is Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith whose lawsuit stymied a $200 million sale of the company to Mobil four years ago. Foundation attorney Howard Privett told Judge Judge that if Mobil has not submitted an offer by Friday he will ask the court to approve the Taubman-Allen· Irvine offer. The further extension to Mobil by Judge Judge came under fire from attorney Howard Friedman who has represented Mrs. Smith throughout the eight-month trial. Friedman told the judge that Mobil was made aware of the consortium's latest offer last April 2 but has made no move to submit a new bid or even indicate that it was interested in remain- ing in contention. (See MOBIL, Page A2) STREET NAME MOYES MAYOR POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. (AP) -Mayor Robert E . Ahmed, una- . ble to enlist citizen support to change the name or the street on which he lives, has decided to move. Ahmed lives on Hooker Avenue, a name be says has em- barrassed him. Coast Weather Variable high cloudiness tbroueh Wednesday and chance of some lat.e night . and early morning low clouds. Lows tonight 50 to 56. Highl Wednesday Os at beaches to mld· 70s inland. INSIDE TODAY .ProgT111 threaten• the glorious pauoge ot .a 'Dtlawor• &r/ /trrJJ that moy loll *Im to the pelHrielJ · urge to oamblt In.a Jn"71 ca1lno. Su Julu Loh•• Am~e-.84. •••x •• ,,,..,...w. "' ~ .... ...._ •J "-•'9flt Cl . ,,.... .......oi c.a """ UMitn a L.1111'..... "" --.T-•J ~ Aloltf ,_,,,.. a C~ Q.U ............... ~ ca....... Ct c-.... a...,_ .,.1 • D91119.._.. At T....,ltltR • M ......... ~ .. .,......... .. • ..... ,., .... M WIM9w M • --.-------------------~,, .. A2 DAILY PILOT TUMCilly. ~p!ll 2e, 1917 Espionage Trial Drinldllg Told At TRW Firm LOS ANGELES (Al') - Christopher Boyce, accused or espionage, took the witness stand in his own defense today and told of drinking parties within top- Jecret vaults at the defense re· ~earch plant where he worked. · Boyce tsaid that a marijuana plant was grown and displayed inside one of the secret com· Fro• Pas~ A J MOBIL ••. Taubman·Allen-Irvlne has agreed to allow Mrs. Smith lo buy sufficient stock in the new com·· pany which would allow her to re· lain the board seat she now holds on the Irvine Com panv. Mobil officials have refused to make any such concession to the granddaughter of James Irvine · JI. Judge Judge made it clear late Monday that he is not compelled to approve the higher offer for the Irvine Company regardless of which contend~r submits the · hil!hesl bid. He warned lawyers for both sides that there arc many other issues to be considered, among them the argument that a rapidly improving economic outlook in Orange County might mean a much better price for the Irvine Company within the next few years. Mrs. Smith has agreed with tha t suggestion durin g testimony. She believes that the Irvine Company today is worth at least $450 million. The sale of the Irvine Company became mandatory with the l)assage of lh<j.-. Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969. The measure compels charitable foundations to divest themselves of private company holdings by 1983. A last minute sensation ap· peared to be m the making late Monday when telegrams from a company identified as Jerard Development Limited were de· livered in the courtroom lo lawyers for both sidl's and Judge .Jud ge. The firm, furth<'r identified as a consortium of businessmen based in Philadelphia, said in the telegrams that it is prepared to pay $325 million for the Irvine Company. Both Friedman and Privett im· mediately reJected the offer as worthless. munications centers at TRW Systems Inc. and one employe used the secure phones in "the war room" to place bels with his bookie. "We lfSed to drink vodka and orange juice in the vault all tht: time," the 23-year-old Boyce said under questioning by his al· torney, William Dougherty. ''I'd say I drank with about 10 people ... there was alway~ a bottle in there behind the teletype link," Boyce said. In an effort to prove that security was so lax that others might have stolen information, Boyce told how another employe made imitation security badges which were used by at least one person to walk in and out of the plant. , •'He made a badge with a monkey on it for a Joke," Boyce said. He told how a marijuana plant sat in open view on a work table and told of attending a beer party on the day he was briefed about security regulations. "We had a party at lunch," he recalled, ··and drank a con· siderable amount or beer." He said perhaps eight or nine pitchers were downed before he and other new employes re' turned for the rest of their brief· ing on the operation of code machines. Boyce said one of the first things he was told by a CIA technician was that the code equipment had already been compromised to a foreign coun- try. "The Central Intel11gence Agency technician said all of the equipment had been com· promised on the Pueblo and a lot of it had been Jost in Vietnam," Boyce said. Mike Mathews. a TRW spokesman reached at the firm's Redondo Beach offices, s aid "we"re not going to comment while the thing is in litigation." Boyce is charged with stealing secrets from TRW in Redondo Beach for sale to the Russians through a Soviet science altachc in Mexico. His attorneys have claimed that the government, focusing its attention on Boyce and another defendant, Andrew Daulton Lee. 25. failed to thoroughly investigate whether others might have sold secrets. Irvine Council I • • California Division of Forestry planes, flown in from Hemet's Ryan Field . dropped about 6,000 gallons of pink fire re· tardant chemicals onto Irvine Ranch fire that burned 85 acres in Moro Canyon, between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar Monday. The three twin-engined aircraft used arc converlt.'d Navy s ub- marine detection planes. Critical flights were delayed 11 :i hours as planes were committed to San Diego fires. Merit Pay Supported Irvine Panel Likes-Plan-With Gui<klin& The committee assigned to study alternative pay systems for teachers will tell the Irvine School Board Wednesday that a "merit pay" system might work in Irvine if certain guidelines are followed. Robert Q. Shupe, chairman of the 12·person committee, said to· day his group is not making a re- commendation to the board one way or the other. Instead, the committee has drawn up a list of six guidelines which it believes must be followed for a merit pay system to work in Irvine. The report will be given to the school board at the 7:30 p.m. meeting at Irvine High School. According to Shupe, his com- m 1ttee has spent lhe past six months meeting weekly. study· f'rma Page Al ing various alternative pay systems used elsewhere in the country. .. lt"s a complex and touchy subject and the charge to the committee was simply to give a general recommendation to the board, not provide a model system.·• explained Shupe. an at· torney who unsuccessfully ran for the school board in March. "I guess if they agree to try it, the model will be worked out in negotiations between the teachers and school board, .. Shupe continued. The chairman said the six guidelines "might sound simple, but they"re not." He explained they were gathered from "reams of reports" studied by the com· miltee and were thought to be the best methods to be used in a merit pay system. The guidelines suggested 1n elude: -ldentirying the goal of tht! sy~tem as "recognizing and re· warding superior teaching," nol using it as a punitive measure. -Finding methods lo dist· inguish between good teaching and superior teaching, basing such methods on sound evaJua· lion practices. Also, providing appeal safeguards. Realizing that the system will probably add administrative expense, not decrease the cost of paying teachers. Adopt the system for a trial period only, perhaps three years. Include teacher evaluation as an integral part of the merit plan, using clearly defined criteria and including teachers in the evaluation procedure. Monarch Stred iTi LWDeath The Kmg of Spain has been named as a defend~rnt In a wrongful death suit filed on behaU of a Laguna HUis Leisure World woman who died March 27 in the world's worst. aviation dis· aster. The suit was filed Monday in San Francisco federal court. by Walter Michael Watt, special ad- ministrator for the estate or Jean Houston, 508C Ave. Sevilla, Leisure World. Mrs. Houston. who traveled extensively since the death of her husband five years ago, was a victim of the ground collision between a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines 747 and a Pan Am 747 in the Canar y Islands. The suit requests unSP.ecified damages for wrongful death and loss of property. ~'His Catholic Majesty the King at' Spain and the Kingdom of Spain" and the two6 irlines are named as defendants. The suit said the Canary Islands arc a province of Spain and the government of Spain o perated the international airport facility at Santa Crlh de Tenerife in the Canary lsij)nds, known as the Los Rcfdeos Airport. It alleges that Spain, through its subjects and. employes at the airport and airport control facili· ty "were negligent and careless and otherwise derelict" in their duties in the movement and con· trol of the aircraft. Other suits have been filed in U.S. District Courts as a result of the crash, but none ha\'e named Spain or its King as defendants. * * * Westminster Crash Dead Services Set A mass funeral service for 114 unidentified victims killed in the Canary Islands air disaster will be held Wednesday afternoon in Westminster. Bodies of 100 unidentified American victims of the March 27 crash arrived Friday al El Toro Marine Air Station. Another 14 bodies were flown Thursday night to Los Angeles Interna· - lion al Airport. They said the Jcrard group has not proved its ability to meet such a financial commitment 1n the past during an earlier ap proach to the Foundation that was not made public Ponders Policy CAMPUS ..• SB College Meet Topper For Trustee Letting the teacher who is bC'1ng e\'aluated have the op- porl unity lo provide a self- evaluation and review and respond to others· evaluabons. The school board is not expecl· t•d lo take action on the group·s report, but will apparently take the findings into consideration as negotiations with the teachers proceed. The bodies were flown in following efforts to identify the • victims of aviation's worst dis· aster, which occurred when a Pan·Am 747 and a Dutch KLM i 17 collided on the runaway at Tenl•nfc. killing 580 persons. f'ro• Page A J RESPOND. • of fluorocarbon produc'tion con· tinues. there will be al lC'ast 50,000 new cases of skin cancer each year . Rowland observed that Canada .ind Sweden have already pledged to follow a path similar to that being taken by the United ~tales. Other countries, thouith. have not yel decided, he said. The UCl scientist also said it's important that individual states continue lo enact their own bans lo go along with the anl1e1patcd federal ban. "It's double protection. First. it expresses people's beliefs that the bans are necessary, and second. It quickly limits th~ fluorocartion market for manufacturers." Rowland point· ed out. ' !Voice' Head Fired · WASHINGTON CAP) -The tarter administration has quiet· ~ fired Kenneth Giddens, \he epublican-appolnted director or he Voice of America. ORANQt COAST l DAILY PILOT ~~~~ .. ~~:·r/:..i::.::.::-.::;;.=. CIM\t Pvbll~lf'Wa CoMo•"'1 ,_..,. ... Mi,._."""'" ::~~'='-=~~~':W:,,.;:-l.~ ~!! .. t~,, Valt•Y. lr•I"•· \•Ml ... , Vt H•Y aft(f ~=~~~~~:~::r~·;:. ;;;:l,"~i:.!:'LT:~~,:~ "'"' .. , .. _. .. __ ..... io.-1_ ...... _ JK11•~ ~""""""'·""'-.. __ ~ .. It_ ldllbt ~ ............. .................. O.rll1N,'--"-~-II "~•'1.mMl ........ ldlll<n Off!Ge• CilllaMtu· ,,.Wt~I .. ,~ .-'--':.~:1r.m::r:::..~.11 '9dft .... , ... 1019• "',...,._..,, lllMDM99P,_.., Tet.,hone CT14)t04m Cle:nHled AdVel'lW"I~ ...... , ....... , .... O!tk• Ht.alto . . On Annexation The Irvine City Council \\ill try to decide tonight whether 1l wants to stretch its city boun· daries. and, if so. m which direc· lions. During tonight's 7 ·30 o"clock meeting al city hall, the council will be asked to look <•l tht.• t'1Ly"s annexation policy. Staff members have prepared a report for the council that hsts sax different are<i1s hem(( l'yed for annexation, either mdi\ 1duallv or in various combin11tions "1th l'ach olhl'r F1 vc of the Prr>Posed are.is ar(' in the northern portion of th1• Cl· t). mostly extending the city·~ s phere of influence. The sixth :i llernat1 H' 101.·ludes I he 1·1t) ' s phere of 1nnuence to th<' '\outh the Co}ot1.· Canyon landfill, San J oaq u 1 n Resen·oi r and I hi· northern slopes of the San Joa qum HHls to the ridgeline Once the counhl decides what. if nnything, It wants to annex, 1t must forward that policy to the Local Agency Formation Com· mission tLAFC> for ultimate ap· prov al. Staff membt>rs are askinj.! the council to decide soon because they believe the a nnexation policy must be established prior to any further decision on land use policy. ha'e to put up with "college slu· dents ~pread all over our lawns and berms as 1s the case at UC lrvme." "We don't need a college at this location and we don 't want a col· legc at lh1s location," he con· eluded, to a resounding s tanding ovation from many audience member:.. The Irvine Company has of- fered the site al Irvine Center and Jeffrey for $45,000 an acre "'ith a f1.,,c year option to buy up to 100 total acr es at the samtJ fixed price. unaffected by infla· tion that would increase actual l;1nrl \alu<'s to more than $100,000 during thl' same period. No such growth option was of· fercd on the Myford-Bryan site, "h1ch \\as a flat 20 acres at about S.30.000 an acre, based on the col. lei:?e ·so"' n Jppraisal. The Irvine City Council has en- dorsed the satellite campus site offered by the Irvine Company. The audience listened impa· ticnlly Monday to presentations hy planners for the city and the college district regarding the noise. parking, traffic and other factor~. including the fact that the Myford·Bryan site would be subject to flooding in t he event or maJor rains. San Onofre Site . '"' Saddleback College Trustee Larry Taylor has chaired some wild board meetings in his years as a school official but even he had to admit 'Monday's college board session was more taxing than most. One member of the often· hostile, sarcastic audience in Irvine wanted to know why board members were reconsidering the site for a second district campus when a decision had already been made to buy one of two sug· gested locations. Taylor attempted to justify the action by explaining that three new board members had been elected in March, replacing one incumbent and filling two vacan· cies left by a resignation and the death of another trustee. When confronted with con· tinued derisive muttering over his rationale. Taylor res ponded, "Who knows, maybe I 'll pass away tonight. This is a pretty tough meeting and I've handled some tough ones in 20 years." Arms Sales Wanted WASHINGTON CAP) -The Carter administration, review· ing U.S. weapons sales policies, wants to sell arms wort}\ $438 million to Jordan. rsrael, Saudi Arabia and South Korea. Argo~ Gas Fells Six Stx men were Injured In an in· dustrial accident Monday on lbe construction site or a nuclear re· actor at the San Onofre General· ing Station. l'.he men were all exposed to are01) gas, an inert substance used to displace oxygen wide st.alllless steel pipes Whm they are be.tnlt welded. • I Tbe argon al•o diJPl•tH o1)'ge:o hi bumm Iu.np a~ the men w~re suftocatingl San Clemente Fire Department Ca,~t. · Gary Carmichael said. or tbe six Injured, an but one · were released aft.er emergency treatment at San Clemente Geoeral Hospital. Edward Helf was reported In aatWac:t.ory coadiUon at the in· tensive c.,.., unit today. He bad bttD admitted ln crlUCal condi· Uon. David Barron, a spokesma.a . for the So.uthern Callfornia tim. San Clemente firemen ai~ Edison Company, said the incl· a San Onofte emergency brigade dent occurred in the bottom of in searching for additional ln· the containment sphere of unit 2, jured persons in lhe l abyrinth ~ one or two new reactor housings tunnels at the site. un~ construction at the plant. Capt. Carmichael described it ,.o nuclear material wu ln-as "something out of 2001." volved. The injured were employes or He sojd two men had been Bechtel Construction. the prime I working wllh tbe gas when they contractor ror the $2.3 blllion pro- were stricken. Two other men j~~.l;. or a subcontractor. ran to their assistance and were overcome. Two more men who The men were ldenUfied a.a aided ln the rescue of the others Stewart Burkhammer, 33, of wereinvolveduwell. ·ocieanstdo and James D. San Clemente Fire units and Paulaoo, 37, of Mission Vlejo, ambulance l'Caponded to the both safety engineers; Bruce ~~~~~ :s~~~~r;:t wt~~ ~~':~1!: :. ~~~~ ~ Juries at tho nuclear 1e~aUnc plpefltters: Charle1 Dragamlre, 1 ataUon. 33, of Oceanside, a la~. and ~ Aa lbe amblllanco arrived. a Kfith Ward.an. aco oot. known. of vao CUT)'inai five of the 11\fund the San Fernando VallQ, a'' wu la~ The ambUlan.ce wu abeetmetal worker employed by 1 used to transport one other vie-.• asubcootractor. ~ The committee was composed or representatives picked by the teachers organization and by the school board. Members included teachers, principals and private citizens. Fro• Page Al HONOR ••• was In the psychology depart· mcnl :.it Harvard University. He previously taught at University of Wisconsin and the University of Oregon Medical He is a graduate of Reed Col· lege and earned his master's degree and doctorate 1n psychology from the University of Wisconsin. Thompson was also the reci·. pil'nt of the Distinguished Scien· tiflc Contribution Award, pre· sented by the American Psychological AssociaUon in 1974 for his work in braitl function and behavior. The UCJ professor is currently working on a research project studying brain functions. He has received preliminary ap. proval from the National Science FoW!dation for a five· year $1.27 million grant. Pan·Am spokesman Brad Dressler said the identification process was halted at Dover, Del .. · las l week with 204 of the 329 American victims named. About two·lhirds of the remain- ing unidentified victims have been determined to be from Southern California. and the rest from other parts of California, Dressler said. All 114 caskets were delivered to Westminster Memorial Park, which h as donated a mass gravesite for the dead. Wednes· day afternoon's services will be anter·dcnommational. Brown 'Li/ e' Stand Ltuhed' SACRAMENTO (AP) - The Senate's Republican leader claims that Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is trying to block enactment of a death penalty law by pushing a life-without·parole bill. Sen. George Deukmejlan lashed out al Brown and a GOP colleague Monday. contending that passage of the life bill would make it "almost Impossible" to override Brown's promised veto of a death penalty measure. '' 1 think he has set out. to de· liberately kill our death pf.malty bill," Oeukmejian said at a ~apitol news conference. .. InStant Movie Polaroid Emls Rumors NEEDHAM, Mass. (AP) ....; Polaroid Corp. has unveiled its lon~-awaited instant home movie camera and television-like viewer that produces films in one minute. Dr. Edwin Land, Polaroid's 67-year-old founder and chairman, demonstrated the "polavlsion" system .at the company's 4oth annual stockholders meeting to- day. Land said the hand-held camera contains a fil~ cassette good for 2~ minutes of home movies. nie cassette fits in the top of the viewer, which automatically develops the film and shows it. in color one minute later on its 12-lnch screen. : ,.. " Land said the camera and film will evenrtlB.Uy In· elude sound, but'tbe company has not yet been able to develoP a hlgh.q uallty sound system. • Land said the camera and viewer will be avail•· bte in the ran. He would not disclose th system's · price but said IL will be competitive with "any aood home movie system.'' · ~ ' r --. ., Laguna/South Coast Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks l Ell>ITION VOL. 70, NO. 116, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORN1A TUESDAY, AP.RIL 26, 1977 TEN CENTS !Six Felled by G~s Leak at San .Onofre , Six men were injured In an in- ' dustrlal accident Monday on the construction site or a nuclear re- actor at the San Onofre Generat- ing Station. • The men were all exposed to argon gas, an inert substance used to displace oxygen inside stainless steel pipes when they.... are being welded. The argon also displaces oxyaen ln human lungs and the men were suffocating, San Clemente Fire Department Capt. Gary Carmichaels aid. . or the six injured, all but one were released after emergency treatment at San Clement e General Hospital. Edward Herr was reported in satisfactory condition at the in· tensive care unit today. He bad been admitted ln critical condi· lion. David Barron, a spokesman for lhe Southern California Edison Company, said the inci- dent occurred in the bottom or the containment ~phere of unit 2, one or two new reactor housings under construction at the plant. No nuclear material was in· volved. He said two men had been working with the gas when they were stricken. Two other men ran to their assistance and were overcome. Two more men who aided in the rescue of the others were involved as well. San Clemente Fire units and ambulance responded to the scene originally reported incor- rectly as a structure fire with in· juries at the nuclear generating station. ·As the ambulance arrived, a van carrying five or the injured was leaving. The ambulance was used to transport one other vie· tim. San Clemente firemep aided a San Onofre emergency brigade in searching for additional in· jured persons in the labyrinth or tunnels at the site. Capt. Carmichael described it as "something out of 2001." The injured wcl"e employes or Bechtel Construction, the prime contractor for the $2.3 billion pro- ject; or a s ubcontractor. The men were identified as Stewart Burkhammer, 33, of (See GAS LEAK, PageA2) ~ets • ______..... o un ty Fire 1 Bitter Bearing 1 Trustees Scrap Campus Buy By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 0t ll'lt O•llY Pilot St•lf After a three and a half hour hearing laced with some bitter audience comments, Saddleback Col lege trus tees Monday scrapped plans to buy a second campus site at Myford Road and Bryan Avenue on Ul e Irvine Ranch. The board then voted 4·3 to begin negotiations with the Irvine Company to acquire an alternative location for the new campus al Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. New board member William Watts joined Trustees Donna Berry and Frank Gremkc In OP· _posing acquisition of the , alternate site. even though he had voted earlier to rescmd the decision to buy Myford ·Bryan. Trustees will meet agam May 9 to close the deal on that parcel * * * SaddlebaCk .Sessions ,'Taxing' I • Saddleback College Trustee 1 Larry Taylor has chaired some 'wild board meetings in his years as a school oHicial but even he had lo admit Monday's college board session was more taxin~ than most. One member or the often· hosl1le, sarcastic audience in Irvine wanted to know why board members were reconsidering the site for a second district campus when a dec1s1on had already been madl' to buy one or two sug· gested locations. Taylor attempted to j ustify the action by explaining that three new board members had been elected in March, replacing one incumbent and filling two vacan- cies lert by a resignation and the death or another trustee. When confronted with con· tlnued derisive muttering over bis rationale, Taylor responded, "Who knows, maybe I'll pass away tonight. This Is a pretty tough meeting and I've handled some tough ones tn 20 years." Coast Weather Variable high cloudiness through Wednesday and chance of some late night and early morning low clouds. Lows tonight 50 to S6. Highs Wednesday Os al beaches tomld-70s inland. INSIDE TODAY Progre11 threaten• the glorio111 pauage of a Delaware~ fert'JI that ma11 fall victfm to the r-ll·rruU · urge to gamble in a Jnaey cadno. Su Julu Loh', Amerfco. Page Bf. i••ex following yet another hearing to permit the landowner and the public to comment. Tustin Trustee Frank Greinke. a vocal opponent of the Irvine Center-Jeffrey site. intimated after the new vote that he would spend the next few weeks seeking legal loopholes to s tall the purchase. "Don't give up yet folks," he told the audience at Irvine's Ven ado Intermediate School. Most of those attendine the session were from a mobile home park called The Meadows and a housing tract called The Ranch. Both developments are located near the Irvine Center-Jeffrey site endorsed by the board. Most ot the speakers during the hearing voiced concern over traf· fie, the impact on their neighborhood.I of an influx of stu· dents, parkini and boise. The general attitude appeared to be that voiced by a woman in the audience who said, "We 're all for education but we don't want it in our neighborhood." Nick Alles of the Meadows As· sociatioo gave the most detailed presentation in opposition to the new location for the campus, which would start out as a 20· acre satellite and have the capacity for growth up lo 100 . acres over the next five years. Alles said the college board had lo make a choice or ''being fair to many residents In the area or lo government (the city of Irvine) and private business (the Irvine Company) who shoot cred1b1lity to pieces." He said residents should not have to put up with "college stu- dents spread all over our lawns and berms as is the case at UC Irvine." "We don't need a college at this location and we don't want a col· lege at this location," he con- cluded, to a resounding standing ovation from many audience members. The Irvine Company has of- fered the site al Irvine Center <See CAMPUS, Page A2) Oemente Gets May Hearing on Sewer Ban Lift San Clemente took another step Monday toward resolution of its sewage woes. After a spirited presentation by Vice Mayor WIWam Walk.er, the San Diego Regional Water Quali- ty Control Board voted to bold a public bearing May 23 to de· termlne if the lid on Issuance or sewer con.nectioo permits should be lifted. Since July when the reeional board clamped a ceue and de- sist order on the city -an action taken after numerous sewace spills and other Incidents -the connection permits have been doled out carrot-like to force the city into maklni treatDleot plant. improvements. Without the permits, new con· struction cannot be completed. The ctty hJI .several lar1e tracts waltlnl m the Wini• for rerolu· Uol\ of tbl au.uauoa. Tbe boarc! also promptocl the city tA> reJolA tbe South Eaat Realonal a.tiaatatloa Autborl· ty, a eomort.htm Of ae\feral area waste treatmeht entlUa. The ci- ty bad quit SERRA citing COit overf\lllll tor a regioQal ocean ouUaU. D•lll' Pl,..PMColll'y lllc_ 11. ... ler SAN JOAQUIN HILLS FIRE NEAR LAGUNA BEACH BURNED 19 HOURS Two of the 125 Firefighters On Bru1hy Slopes Behind El Morro Trailer park 85 Acres Of Brush Burned By PIDUP ROSMARIN Of I,_ O•llY P ilolSl•H A crow, electrocuted on high-tension wires. reu burning into scrub behind the El Morro Trailer Park off Pacific Coast Highway near Laguna Beach Monday and touched off an 85- acre Irvine Ranch brushfire that burned 19 hours before it was out. More than 125 firefighters from the California Divis ion of Forestry, Orange County Fire Department, Laguna Beach Fire Department an d the Irvine Ranch fought the fire. They were assisted by three twin-engine air tanke rs that dropped more than 6,000 gallons of fire-retardant chemicals on the blaze swept by light winds up the Moro Canyon ridgelines in- land away from the trailer park. Trailer park residents anxious-..: ly watched the billows or smoke pour over the hills closest to them. One resident said she wasn't worried, "as long as that wind keeps blowing the other way." The firefighting was hampered twice by unexpected delays. Two Costa Mesa 17-year-old boys who drove onto the rugged single-lane dirt access road firemen used to get to the fire cras hed headon into a fire chief's ,. pickup truck, blocking the road for a half hour. CONVERTED NAVY SUBMARINE DETECTION PLANE MAKES IRVINE RANCH CHEMICAL DROP TwlrMnglne Aircraft Otopped Fire Retardant on Moro Canyon Bru•h Fire Monday SPQtnish King Sued in Disaster The King of Spain bas been Islands are a pro•lnce of Spain named as a defendant in a and the government of Spain wrongful death suit filed on operated the international behalt of a Laguna Hills Leisure airport faclllty at Santa Cruz de World woman wbo died March 27 Tenerife ln the Canary Islands, in the world's worst aviation ~known as the Los Rodeos aster. • Airport. The suit was riled Monday in It alleges that Spain, through San Francisco federal court by its subjecta and employes at the Waller Michael Watt. special ad· airport and airport control f acili· ty "were negligent and careless and otherwise derelict" in their duties in the movement and con· trol or the aircraft. Other suits have been flled In U.S. Dlstrict Courts as a result of the crash, but none have named Spain or its King as defendants. mlnistrator for the estate of Jean Houston, 508C A-te. Sevilla, Leisure World. Mn. Houston, who traveled extensively since the death of her husband five years aiou;; 1 as a vicUm of the ground co on between a KLM Royal Dukb Alrlfnes 747 and a Pan Am 7•7 In the Canary Islands. Clemente Man Hurt in Crub The suit requestl unspecified damaiea for wrongful death and Ion oC property. A 22·,ear-old San Clemente man was lDJu.red ln a four-car ac- cldent Monday at 416 Avenida Santa Barbara. · Johnnie Gomales of. 918~ N. El Camino R.ea1 wu tre•ted at the scene by San Clemente tlremen and t.ten by city ambulance to San Clemente Gen~Botpl~al. .. Hia Catholic M_.esty the Kina oC Spain and the Kingdom of Spain" and the tlto alrllnea are namechsdefendants. Oonsale• ti ad stopped The suit said tho Canary breathing and auffored numerous cuta from glasa in bl• face. He was transferred to m\UtlJ')' medical facilities for .further treatment. \ ·A San Clemente Police depart. ment aecldent report is pending, but ofllcera today said Gonliles w aa we•t·bound on Sao ta Barbara when be collided with ane>Jher c.:_ ln h1s travel lane, cal'ffOed into the oppoetnc lue and tollided with two otber vehl~es.. Water tank trucks carrying emergency refills to supply the front line firefighters were halt- ed as county sheriff's deputies worked to push the wrecked vehicles off the road. The youths were arrested for trespassing and impeding fire equipment. They were treated (or minor injuries at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach and released to the custody of their parents. Fire Battalion Chief Bob Robeson. of the Orange area county station, told s heriff's de- puties he t)ad slowed his pickup to nearly a stop when he saw the teenagers' red Volkswagen bear- ing down the road. Neither Robeson nor his passenger, Fire Capt. Mike Van Bibber of Yorba Linda, was injured. The second delay was in get· ting the air tankers to the scbne. Fire Capt. Bruce Turbeville said when the Moro Canyon fire start· ed at 11 :18 a.m., every available firefighting plane was already committed to other fires in San Diego County. Turbeville said the tires ln that county turned out to be ne>Lso serious, and the aitlcrart were re· leased to fllht the Qranee County fire. The delay, Turbeville said, was l lh heurs. Turbeville said it was difficult to position firemen to control the blaze, because of rough terrain, much of which was inaccessible 'to vehlcle traffic. "We just couldn't get vehicles into it," Turbeville said. •'Only about 30 percent of the fire was dr1vable even by bulldoien." The fire was contained by mid· night today, wltb the last of the (See nBE, Paie AJ) SIREET NAME M.dw.s MAYOR · POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. CA.P> • · -MQW Robert E. Ahmed, uita· i blt to enllJt cW&ea aupport to ·change the name of the street on . which be llva., bu decided to move. Ahmed lives on Hooter ·Avenue, a name be aaya baa em-- barruaed blm. -----_.._.. -· - ............ :l:J~~~·, .. .-............................. .-..~~~.._ ........ _. ...... ._ ......... _,~~~--------------------.-..Lr.-....... ..._ .............. ------._.-1t~~~~~·--~·~~-J--~ . . ., • ! AZ DAIL V PILOT L/SC Mobil Answer.Friday Decision Awaited "' ' .. On e Bidding • •.· By TOM BARLEY Of Ille Oalh ~Ii.I SI•" Docume nts r e fle cting the Jam.es Irvine Foundation's de· cision to sell the Irvine Company to an East Coast consortium for • $302.9 million were riled today in . .orange County Superior Court. But the new legal action does not prevent the Mobil Corpora- tion from re-entering the bidding r ace wtuch it led until reccnUy .Gas Forces Oil Team, 'To Leave .. STAVANGER, Norway !AP) :..-A dangerous concentration of gas today forced six American blowout experts to evacuate a platform in the North Sea shortly after they had begun efforts to c ap a fou.r-day-old geyser of 0 11 from a runaway offshore well. Offi cials said the explosive gas built up after the wind stopped, ·a n d the experts dec ided to postpone their efforts again. A similar calm had blocked cap· uini? ooerations Mondav mom-• The oH lo•t ..,oldd supply the ~tire V.S. tor about 24 •l•11tn, sap one e~pert. -~ sng; and gale-force winds Mon· day afternoon prevented the Americans from setting onto the Bravo platform. The well. operated hy the Phillips Pet roleu m Co. of Oklahoma in Norway's Ekofis h oil field. blew Friday during routine maintenance and has heel\ spewin g a bo ut 49,000 gall ons of oil ;md gas an hour bince. A Phillips spokesman said the l)lowout fighters -two members of the Houston·based Red Adair oil well fire-fighti ng team and fo ur Phillips t echnicians - managed to close and repair some valves before they were forced lo evacuate the platlorm. T he experts went back to their headquarters on the barge Choc- taw, and then pulled the barge .several hundred yards from the rt I? Meanwhile, the Norwegian government appointed a blue- ribbon panel to investigate the fi rst blowout tn Norway's of· fshore Ekofisk oil field. The blowout is developing into ,1 major t!lsue for the fall general <'ledton anrl oil companies were "orri<'d that t)tc minority Labor ~ovcrnmcnt would cancel plans for test drill ing off northern Norway, which 1s to begin nexl year Stncc the well hlew Friday, the Philli ps Petroleum Co. 's Bravo rig has been spewing betw~n ,840,000 and l 05 million gallons a day into the sea, for ming a slick i:;ix miles wide and 15 to 20 miles lon g. Al current ml cartel prict>s. the well "as throwtn~ away about $.100,000 worth of crude 011 a day I\ bout 40 to 60 percent or crude 011 c·an be refi ned into gasoline. t"'<- perts said, meaning tht> 011 IMt <10 rar could run nbout 2,ROO cars for • 1 year. FIRE ... f lame extinguished about s·a.m. , Turbeville said thal in the last ~five years, three or four fires ~have b<'en started by flaming /.birds falling off electric wires In· flo brush. ~ --~~~~~~~~~ ........... I LIK Th• °'°"'O" t O•\t 0.-UI' Pl'M witt\WN~ 6t <tlltftoo tM""'ft~N-•\ p,_,, "OVb11U.Otlillr .. 0r~ Goo•l ""OOl"'"'"'-~•.SO-elt __ .,. ~~~~~~~~~~'t::: • .:::.:~ t•U"'1 V•\ltY. ltltlftt, $\Uhto.<\ Vito.., ·~ U.-!lo"'A~~C:O.•l A• ...... -INl-ttorl '' pdl~\Md \•tvtcNV' etW ~...,, .,,.. ll'l"CIPAt INllll"'lllO pl""I I• .. U0 ~II a., ~r~.Coll<IMn• C.lllOT"l4-......... -Ptt\l<lt .. l-Pv4111- JK , •. , ...... vu ""ftlewftl ..... -~-...- T-n IC-Ull« n--.A.....,..... "'-MtHlf l!•w ~ .. l._ -~-­A1t111..,. M.t"""'9 M'°" LaRu11• Be.ell OMoe ""''""' ,,:;~~~c:.~ .... ...,,,, Off Iott ~le~M:JJOW. .. ..,,_ "~"r.~~:!~~~~W10':~~-:"'I •• SW\ 01 ... ,.,_...., wllh an all cash offer of $281.9 milllon. An obviously impatient Judge James F. Judge quickly denied Monday a move that would have given Mobil 90 days during which the company would bave held ils annual meeting and reappraised its stand on the Irvine Company sale. Jnstea\t Mobil was ~iven until Frid ay to top the bid su~tted F,.._PageAI CAMPUS .•• and Jeffrey for $45,000 an acre with a five year option to buy up to 100 total acres at the same fixed price, unaffected by infla- tion that would increase actual land values to more than $100,000 during lhe same period . No such growth option was of- fered on the Myford-Bryan s.ite, which was a flat 20 acres at about $30,000 an acre, based on the col· lege 's own appraisal. The Irvine City Council ha.s en· dorsed the satellite campus site offered by the Irvine Company. The audience listened impa- tiently Monday to presentations by planners for lhe city and the · college district regarding the noise, parking, traffic and other factors, including the fact that the Myford-Bryan site would be subject to flooding in the event or m ajor rains. Mel Roop, an Irvine city plan· ner. said that even if t he college was not built at Irvine Center and Jeffrey, traffic loads on those two roads would still be four to 10 t imes higher th a n p res ent c apacity because or proposed widening and new development. Larry See man, who drafted the college site environmental im· pact report, said the new site falls outside the heavy noise im- pact area or El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and could be shi elded from existing noise. And William Blurock . the architect designing the modular satellite facility thal will house up to 2.000 students. assured the audience that all parking would be '·on site" and that there would be plenty of space on campus for students to "spread out." Fro• Page .4 l GAS LEAK •• Ocean side a nd Jam es D. Paulson, 37. of Mission VieJo, hoth safety engineers: Bruce Bernstein, 30. of San Dieeo and Edward Hess. 30, of Poway. both pipefitters: Charles Dr agamire, 33, of Oceanside. a laborer, ·!Ind Keith Warden. age not known. or t he San Fernando Valley. a !.heetmetal worker employed by :.i subcontrnctor Co11nseling Set for Youth Mary Miles of the Community Counselin~ Center in San Juan Capistrano wall lead a seven· week youth group, bef!innlng at 4 p. m. Wednesday. to discuss pro· hlems faced by 8th through 12th graders. Wednesday's meeting at 32141 Alipaz, Suite B, will be fo r orien· talion. Subsequent meetings, on consecutive Wednesdays from 4 to 6 p. m.. will cover mood· altering drugs and their potential for abuse. alternative methods of communication, uses and abuses of alcohol, current juvenile and d r ug laws, community-based services available to young peo- ple and individual hygiene, fami· Jy plann,jng and m ale·female role etpectations tn our society. Additional information on the youth discussion group, which is free-to unemployed s tudents, Is a vailable by callini lhe counsel- ing center, 493-7333 of 831-0616. Gt1mm0Marx Laid to Rest GLENDALE CAP) -With a bitter court baWe barely aetUed over the custody of Groucho Marx, the aged comedian's brotfm'. Gummo, bas ~en quiet- ly).aldtorest. • -" Gummo Ma~. 84, wu e'n· tam bed in a hillltde mausoJeU.m Monday after a btlef funeral svvlee ·~ Obly b1 f amlly medlbers and, ~lose friends . T.iepllone (714)to-Q2t ClHtlfled Adwtl'tltltll Mt-MTI ~un• .. .ell An DtplltlMMt: Tefepllo1te ......... ,_$eA0.- 4H-OQl 1 ,Marx died of natural causes last ' ~·· Jaet Th.u.rsd•Y in a Palm Sprines • h~Jlal. Gummo's death leaves the 86-year-old Groucbo. wbo1t 1lven name ls Julius, and 7.eppo <Herbert), 74. 11th• on!>' aurvit· ma "~ben of the.., Marx Brotbers comedy team. Chico <Leonard) died ln UIS! and Harpo (Arthur) died in 1964. f I by a combine headed by Detroit developer Alfred Taubman, Wall Streel fin ancier Charles Allen and auto billlonaire Henry Ford II. Backing them in the bid to ensure that Mobil does not take over the Irvine Company is Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith whose lawsuit stymied a $200 million sale of the company to Mobil rour years ago. Foundation attorney Howard Privetl told Judge Judge that if Mobil has not submitted an offer by Friday he will ask the court lo approve 'the Taubm an-Allen- Jrvine offer. The further extension lo Mobil by Judge Judge came unde r fire from attorney Howard Friedman who has represented Mrs. Smith throughout the eight-month trial. Friedman told the judge that Mobil was made aware of the consortium's latest offer last April 2 but has made no move to submit a new bid or even indicate that it was interested in remain- ing in contention. T aubman-Allen-Irvine has agreed to allow Mrs. Smith to buy suHicient stock in the new com- pany which would allow her lo re- tain the board seat s))e now holds on the Irvine Company. APl'Mlo Mobil officials have refused to make any such concession to the graoddauehter of James Irvine JJ. Judge Judge made it clear late Monday that he is not compelled to approve the higher offer for the Irvine Company regardless or whk h contender submils the highest bid. HAPPY TAX VICTIMS-Youngsters who oper ate a s treet cleaning and manure pickup business out of Ramona, near San Diego, don't seem too worried here about being hauled before the state Board of Equalization on cha rges of failure to h ave a perm.it to sell manure. They are (left to right), Richard Cessna, 12, president; Ne- Ne. 9, and Betty Cessna. 12, and June Cole. 14. The kids make $3,000 a month in the enlerpnsc. He warned la wyers for both sjdes that there are m any other issues to be considered, among them the argument that a rapidly improvmg economic outlook in Orange County might mean a much better price for the Irvine Company within the next few years. Mrs. Smith has agreed with t h a t s u g g es t ion d~u r in g testimony. She believes that the Irvine Compa ny today is worth at least $450 million. The sale of the Irvine Company became m andatory with the passage of the Feder al Tax Re fo r m Act o f 1969 . The measure compels ch aritable foundations to divest the mselves of private company holdings by 1983 A last minute sensation ap- peared to be in the making late Monday when telegrams from a company identified as Jerard Development Limited were de- 1 iv e red tn t he courtroom to lawyers for both sides and Judge Judge. Waterbed Set San Juan Fire The Stan Reeder family of San J uan Capistrano hooked up a ga r den hose to drain the ir waterbed while they were out of town but they didn't turn off its heater. They a re coming home to $21,000 fi re. Orange County firemen are at· tribuhng tbe fire Monday to the waterbed heate r , which the Reeders failed to disconnect. The heater apparently continued to heat the empty plastic waterbed · liner , until it became so hot, it lg· nited . The bedroom. at 24651 Paseo San Gabriel, was destroyed by the fire. whic h r equired 15 firemen 28 minutes to control. The Reeders los t their pet parrot in the fire. and have had ex- tensive smoke damage to their condominium. Neighbors, who called firemen about 1 p.m .• were battling the blaze with garden hoses when fi re engines arrived. No one was injured In the fire. Woman Jailed In Car Theft From Laguna The jailing of a woman in Laguna Beach today on a char ge of car theft may lead officers to the ringleaders of a Los Angeles County auto theft gang. polJce said. Watch Comm a nd e r Mik e Slusher said the arrested woman claimed she was paid $100 lo dri\·e a Volkso,yagen from Laguna Beach to Long Beach Debbie Ann Taylor , 22, or Los Angeles, was stopped by a sheriff's patrol car on Pacific Coast Highway in Dana Pomt, after an alert was broadcast by Laguna Beach police. Police said she was apparently headed south for the San Diego Freeway to avoid risking an en- counter with Laguna Beach of· ficers. who were alerted to the theft by the owner of the car, Brian Jenkens of 222 Arch St. J enkens heard his car started as it was parked in front of his home. Slusher said thieves j im· mied the ignition. The officer said police expect to arrest at least two more sus- pects believed operating a pro- fessional car theft group. He credited today's arrest as effective liaison between Orange County police agencies. Miss T aylor was he ld in L aguna Beach city ja il on $1,SOCI bail. 1BIEYES HIT . LORD'S PUCE The Lord's Place, 105 S. El Camino Real, San Clemente was burglarized Monday. I Abraham Mackey, pastor. or the evangelistic mission said $121 in cash was taken. Louvered windows were re· moved to enable entry. Instant Movie Polaroid En& Ruman NEEDHAM, Mass. (AP) -Polaroid Corp. has unveiled its long-awaited instant home movie camera and television-like viewer that produces films in one minute. Dr. Edwin Land, Polaroid's 67-year-old founder and chairman, demonstrated the "polavision" system .at the company's 4oth annual stock.holders meeting to- day. Land said the hand·held camera contains a mm cassette good for 21h minutes of home movies. ·The cassette fits in the top of the viewer, which automatically develops the film and s hows it ln color one minute later on its 12·inch screen. Land said the camera and film Will eveptualty in· elude sound, but the company has nqt yet been able to develop a hlah-qualit.Y sound system. Land sald lhe camera and viewer will be avaUa· ble in the fall. He would not dlaclose the a,ystem'a price but said it will be competiUve with "any tood home movie system." . • 4 Kids Taxed No Permit, State Says RAMONA CAP) -The 12.year-old pre!.1dent of a company with gross earnings of up to $3,000 monthly has bt>C.>n ordered to appear before the state Board of Equalization to ex pl atn "hy the firm has no permit to sell ils product -manure. Richard Cessna Jr .. president of Kidco, Inc .. and his three young co-officers, ages 9 to 14, also have been accu~ed hy the state of failing to charge sales tax. THE YOUNGSTERS -RICHARD'S SISTER, Ne·Nc, 9, vice president; another sister. Bette, 11. secretary, and a haJ f-s ister. J une Cole, 14, t reasurer -went into business a year ago with a con-- tract to sweep the six main streets of San Diego Country Estates for $150 monthly. They branched out by contr acting with their father . who supervises the developments's 110-horse stables. to remove manure and wood shavings . After composting the mixture. they sell it to landscapers and the local goll course at prices lower than commercial suppliers. TIIE YOUNG ENTREPRENEURS ALSO offer a service to kill gophers for $1 each, but that's another story. The contract, which the youngsters wrote. says it can't be can- celed "u.nless t he kids screw up." Cessna·s father, Richard, said he will accompany them to- da y to the hearing in San Diego. "The Board of Equali zation says they need a permit because it is something tangi ble and thal they have to add a sales tax for their customers,'' the elder Cessna said in an interview. "They may have to pay the state sales tax on their past sales, plus penalties." THERE WAS NO ESTIMATE ON how much money might be ruled due. But he and his son believe "the sales tax was already paid when the feed for the horses and the wood shavings lo bed down the stables were brought in. "The kids think it's unreasonable and they're burned up,'' Cessna said. If the state board rules against them, he said they plan to take it to the courts. THEY GROSSED $3,000 LAST October, their biggest sales month, but refu se to disclose their average earnings because, the young Cessna says. some of the kids at school try to borrow money. Kidco, s aid Cessna, was incorpor ated in the Cayman Islands in the British West Indies when Cessna paid $1,500 in registration cost.s:Jo avoid the earnings lax ln California. . Mass Rites Slated For Crash Victims A mass funeT"al service for 114 unidentified victims killed In the Canary Islands air disaster will be held Wednesday afternoon in Westminster. Bodies or 100 unidentified American victims of the-March 27 crash arrived Friday at El Toro Marine Air Station. Another 14 bodles were fiown Thursday night to Los Anaeles lntema- t.lonal Airport. The bodles were nown In following efforta to identify the victims of avlaUon'a worst dis· aster, which oeeurrea when a Pan-Am 747 and a Dutch KLM ~47 colUd.ed on the runaway nt Tenertle, kllllng 5'80 persons. PH-Am spokesman Brad Dresslel' said the ldenUflcatiQn process was baited at Dover. Del.. · IHt weel wttb 20C of tho 329 American vtctlms nam~. About two-lblrdf of t.bo remain· ln1 unidentUJed vlcUma have been determined to be from Sou~ Call.fomla, end t.bt rest from other larta of Califomla,. Drenleraal • • • All 114 caskeu were delivered to Westminster Memorial Park, which h as donated a mau graveslte for the dead. We<lnes• day afternoon's services will be inter-denominational Brmm 'Life' Stand Laahed SACRAMENTO (AP) - The Senate's Republican leader claims that Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is trying to block enactn1entof a death penalty law bf. pushing a Ufe-wllhoul·parole bil . Sen . George Deukmejf an lashed out ot Brown and • GOP colleague Monday, ·contcmding that passaie of the Ufe bW wout• make il "almott 1mpossible0 to override Brown's proml.~ed veto of a death penally meuUfe·. "l th1nk be bu 1et out"to ckS- ·Uberatel.Y ldll our deatb oenahY bUl," DeukmeJlan. uld at 1 Capitol news conference. / Orange Coast -~-· EDITION t VOL. 70, NO. 116, l SECTIONS~ 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 'Newport Bogs Down on Newport Beach c ity coun· cilmen decided Monday to wait another month before reaching a • decision on the fate of the senior citizen center. The continuance, after nearly two hours of debate and testimony, was agreed to in a S-2 vote with Mayor M1Lfln Dostal and Councilwoman. Lucille Kuehn dissenting. They argued I J that a decision not to renew the lease should have been made at Monday's meeting. The already.controversial sub- ject of the school lease and the senior citizen center brought out another large crowd. Most were backers of the center and at times some angrily heckled councilmen, particularly Paul Ryckoff who has faoVTed keeping the school operating at the ex· pense or the'senior center. The conUnuance was suggest· ed by City Manager Robert Wynn aod p~ into a motion by Ryckoff who cited two recent letters sent to the council -one from Thomas Riley, chairman of the county board of supervisors and one from the Los Angeles office of the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development which has given the city the funds to buy the Corona del Mar site and operate the center. Riley's letter, received Friday asked the delllY so that tame could be found for the county to work out the details of the transfer or the administration of the federal grant from the county to the city. The HUD letter, hand de· livered to city officials late Mon· · TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1977 Today's Clos ing N.Y.S toeks N TEN CEt-.tTS f Seniors Site day afternoon, asked for clarification of five points in light of the fact that "the senior citizens project has apparently been elevated to the level of a major controversy in the city.'' The HUD letter asks for ill· fdnnationon: -What has been done to de· velop the center other than purchase of the property at Fifth and Marguerite avenues? -Is the proposed project con· slstent with the needs of the city's low Income seniors? -Whal data ls available that s upports the need for a senior center? -When ls it expected to open? Supporters of the senior citizens believe the city will have no trouble providin& information on the project fulfilling needs <See DELAY, Pa1e AZ> I I Foundation Files for Ranch Sale O•llY Piiot Pl>otu bY RIO•rd l(otfllet' 1 LOCAL STUDENTS STRIKE UP T HE BA ~D -Tony Adams of Rea School in Costa Mesa (upper left) awaits his cue on cymbals while conductor Ch arles Yates (upper right) keeps things in time. Rikky Holt of Eastbluff Elementary is the young man on baritone (lower left) and the pretty flautist is Cynthia Koontz .. also of Eastbluff school in Ncwpart Beach. After two months of prepar ation, Yates and his 75-piece Honor Band, made up of fourth through sixth graders from the district 's 25 elementary schools, will give u free concert Wednes· day nig ht at Costa Mesa H igh School Lyceum. Showtime is 7 :30 p .m. ~warehouse .Robbed ,< 'Of $1,600 r A dapp<.>r gunman conned his ,way into the Warehouse Restaurant in Newport Beach 'early today and then pulled a re· l' volver on the nis.iht manager and took $1,600 from the safe. Police said the suspect made l his getaway from the restaUTant al 3450 Via Oporto after handcuf· I ting victim John Schirmer lo the t safe in the restaurant's office. In addition to the evening's re· l ceipts, police said the bandit got a g'teen Hawaiian print shirt. Del. Dgt. Ken Thompson said I Shirmer received a call at about 2 a . m. from a man who Identified himself as Gene Ratton. He told the manager he had lost an en-f velope of important papers in the restaurant. Sgt. Thomp~on said an en- velope with a notice of late pay· ment of attorney's fees apparent· ly had been planted ln the • restaurant. Schirmer told the ' man he could have it if he co'*1 I be at the restaurant in lS I minutes. When the map arrived. Schirmer kept him outside the door tmW departing dishwashers opened it and the man came in· Stde. Schirmer said the so-called Ratton, who was dressed in a i' gray suit with an open-neck sports s hirt, discussed the restaurant's banquet facilities ibefore pulling a small revolve~ from his pocket. <See BANDIT, Pase AJ) . • Musicians Motivated Horwr Band to Perfonn in Costa Mesa For conductor Charles Yates and the 75 young members of the Newport-Mesa Elementa ry Honor Band, Wednesday night is their chance to reward the public, and themselves, with the results of their long hours of musical effort. The band, made up or the best fourth through sixth grade musi· clans in the district, will present its annual free CQQcert al Costa Mesa High School Lyceum start· ing at 7:30 p.m. During the hour-long performance the band will play eight musical selections, ranging from James Dodd's "Mickey Mouse March" to Serge Prokofieff's "The Love of Three Oranges." "They are so enthusiastic and so eager there's been no problem with motivation. They're t aring to 10." said Yates, who will han- dle the baton this year alter managing the honor band for the past five years... " Each year musical directors face the difficult task of pulling talented youngsters together into an integrated performing unit for a one shot presentation. Arter audiUons are held in mid· February, Yates and company have about two months to whip their act t.ogelber. This Ume is broken down into seven two·bour pracUce sessions held Wednes· day night.a at Costa Mesa High School. "The kids have really sluck to it and they've done a good job," said Yates, who has selected material that is melodic and f\m to play, but challenging enouab to require many hours of practice at home. Young musicians who work the hardest have a c hance to perform one number with what Yates caJls his "super band," featuring the best musicians out of a flock of very talented young people. This year's super band will play "Hosts or Freedom" by Earl King during Wednesday's concert. Yates sees the annual concrt as an important step for young musicians. many of whom will move on to perform with middle school and then high school ensembles. And. by drawing students from . throughout the district's 25 elementary schools, the concert can mean new pals and the chance of developing long -lasting musical friendships. Capping Halted Gas Forces Crew To 1£ave Oil Spill STAVANGER. Norway (AP> -A dangerous concentration of gas today forced six American blowout ~perts to evacuate a platform ill the North Sea shortly aCler they bad begun efforts to cap a four-day-old geyser of oil from a nmaway offshore well. Officials said the explosive gas built up after lbe wlnd stopped, a .nd the experts decided to postpone their efforts a1ain. A aim ilar calm had bloC!ked ecap- plng operations Monday mom· in&. and eale-force winda Mon· day afternoon prnedted the Americana from 1etttna onto the Bravo plaUorm. The well, operated by the Pbllllpa Petroleum . Co. or Oklahoma in Norway's Ekofish oil field, blew Friday during routine roaintenance and has been spewing about 49,000 gallons of oil and gas an hour since. A Phillips spokesman said the blowout fighters -two members ot the Houston-oased Red Adair oil well fire-fighting team and four Phillips technicians - man aged to close and repair some valves before they weN fotced to evacuate the platform. , The experts went back to their ·headquarters on the bar1e Choe· ta\\', and then pulled tbe barge several hundred yarda from the rl1. • (See 00.,SPIU.., Paie AJ) ' ' legal Cost Of District To -Get Eye Deadline To Mobil: Friday By TOM BARLEY OI lite Dally P1lol Stall Documents reflecting the James Irvine Foundation's de· cision to sell the Irvine Company to an East Coast consortium for $302.9 million were filed today in Orange County Superior Court. But the new legal action does not prevent the Mobil Corpora· tion from re-entering the bidding race which · it led until recently with an all cash offer of $281.9 million. An obviously impatient Judge James F. Judge quickly denied Monday a move that would have given Mobil 90 days during which the company would have held its annual meeting and reappraised its stand on the Irvine Company sale. Instead, Mobil was given until Friday to top the bid submitted by a combine headed by Detroit-- developer Alfred Taubman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto billionaire Henry Ford 11. Backing them in the bid to ensure that Mobil does not take over the Irvine Company is Irvine heiress Joan Irvi ne Smith whose lawsuit stymied a $200 million sale of the company to Mobil four years ago. Foundation attorney Howard Privett told Judge Judge that if Mobil has not submitted an offer by Friday he will ask the court to approve the Taubman-Allen· Irvine offer. The further extension to Mobil by Judge Judge came under fire from attorney Howard Friedman who has represented Mrs. Smith throughout the eight-month trial. Friedman told the judge that Mobil was made aware of the consortium's latest offer last April 2 but has made nb move to submit a new bid or even indicate that it was interested in remain- ing in contention. <See MOBIL, Page A2) SI'REET NAME MOVES MAYOR POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. CAP) -Mayor Robert E. Ahmed, una- ' ble to enlist citizen support to By JOANNE R EYNOLDS change the name of the street on 01111e oauv Piiot si.11 which he lives, has decided to Newport Beach city coun·. move. cllmen Monday agreed to find Ahmed lives on Hooker out how much legal advice will A venue, a name he says has em· cost them should they decide lo barrassed him. go ahead with a proposed special ------------district to finance open space ac· qulsition. But at least two council mem· bers -Mayor Milan Dostal and Councilman Don Mcinnis -in· dicated they are not enthusiastic about the proposed district. The action taken Monday nlght to obtain a proposal from the law nrm or Rutan and Tucker came after an afternoon session with the Parks, Beaches and Recrea· tion Commission on the subject or land acquisition. The members of the two... Wies have been discussing the S\JbJ~ since their proposed $7.1 mlllron general obllgaUon bond failed to get the oecesaary two-thirds vote in March. The money would have purchased about 134 acres of open space. The district under considera- tion could be created by C()Wleil ordinance and could issue bonds with only a simple majori~ ap- proval of voters. Slnce the March proposal got about 63 percent favorable vote, it ta eeoerally ~xpected that the special district bonds would bo approved. Coas t We athe r ·variable high cloudiness through VVednesday and chance of some late night. and early morning low clouds. Lows tonight SO to 56. Wahs Wednesday Os at beaches to mid· 70s inland. INSIDE TODAY . Progreu threatens the .olorfuus pauag• of .a Delaware Bay lm'JI tbal may lall oictim to the Ptll·mtll · "rge to oamb«t m. a Jn-11u casino. Su Julo Loh'• Ame~. P.O(lt 84. ia•ei A2 DAIL v PILOT N TU!!S!Y, April 28. 1977 IJCI Prof F.....iP-AJ ~ Worldwide ~an · On Spray Asked MOQIL ; •• Taubman·Alleo·lrvine has ••reedb>allow .MJ:I. Srni1bto~ nm eta atock in tbe stew com·· pany which would allow her to re· tatn the boa.rd seat she now holds on the Irvine Company. .., Mobil officials have refused lo make any such concession to the gr anddaughter of James Irvine II. UNITED EFFORT STRESSED UCI Prof. Frank Rowland By HILARY KAYE Ol 1 ... D•lly l'ilot Sltll The UC Irvine chemistry pro- fessor who first warned the world that fluorocarbons may be can· cer causing said Monday that preventive actions taken by this country will be meaningless without similar steps taken elsewhere in the world. "The crucial question is, how quickly will the other countries respond to our moves?" asked Dr. Frank S. Rowland, who first detected the fluorocarbon danger in 1974 with his UCI laboratory colleague Mario Molina . "Everybody's stratosphere is eve r y b o d y else's . I f fluorocarbons aren't controlled in Europe, our steps won't help," the professor said. Rowland said he's in favor of a ll of the preventive actions now being proposed by the govern· ment. That includes today's joint an· nouncement by the Food and Drug Administration and the Consumer Product Safety Com· Judge Judge made it clear late Monday that he is not compelled to approve the higher offer for the Irvine Company regardless of which contender submits the highest bid. He warned lawyers for both sides that there are many other issues to be considered, among them the argument that a rapidly improving economic outlook in Orange County might mean a much better price for the Irvine Company within the next few years. Mrs. Smith has agreed with that suggestion durin g testimony. She believes that the Irvine Company today is worth at least $150 million. The sale of the Irvine Company became mandatory with the passage of the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969. The measure compels c haritable foundations to divest themselves of private company holdings by 1983. mission that a warning label ex· IJ _ J h IF/ • plaining the fluorocarbon danger ne<Ut "anu11g mus t be placed on products by· Oct. 31. A last minute sensation ap- peared to be in the making late Monday when telegrams from a company identified as Jerard Development Limited were de· live red in the courtroom to lawyers for both sides and Judge Judge. To Be Placed Rowland also supports an an· ticipated announcement by the Environmental Protection Agen· cy <EPA}, Possibly next week, On Snray Cam that will create the schedule to r ban aerosol products that use The firm, further identified as a consortium of businessmen based in Philadelphia, said in the telegrams that it is prepared to pay $325 million for the Irvine Company. WAStllNGTON (A P ) -T he }"ood and Drug Administration announced today it will require a warning label on aerosol con· tainers using fluorocarbon pro· pellants as a first step toward eventual elimination of virtually all such products. The Consumer Product Safety Commission said in a joint an· nouncement with FDA it is pro· posing simil ar action for the pro· ducts it regulates. The actions came in response to a National Academy of Sciences report last year that the propellants formally known as chlorofluorocarbons rise into the s tratosphere and deplete the earth's ozone layer, a thin pro· tective gaseous belt that filters harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun. The FDA said that all food. drug and cosmetic containers us· ing fluorocarbon propellants and shipped in interstate commerce must carry the following warmng ofter Oct. 31 : "Warning : contains a chlorofluorocarbon that may harm the public health and rnt·1ronment by reducing ozone m the upper at · mosphere" A bout 85 pe rcent of aerosol pro· ducts containing the chemicals are covered by the FDA regula· lion. The remaining 15 percent ure regulated by the Consumer l'roduct Safely Commission CPSC or the Environm<'ntal Protection Ag.~ncy. EPA already requires a warn- ing label on pesticide aerosoll' l'O ntaining fluorocarbons . and the product safety <'Ommission proposal is expected to lakt> d feet early next year. The FDA and CPSC Joint un· nouncement said details of a mandatory phase-out program for all •nonessential aerosols us ing fluorocarbons will be an· nounced shortly. ·"Th<' label warning and ul t imale ban will affect almost half the 2.4 bilLion press urized con· tainers sold in the United States <·ach year," the agencies saict. "The other half of such products use other propellants." Among the products affected />Y today's action are deodorants. Jinliperspirants. h air sprays, col· pgnes -all regulated by FDA -- find household cleaners and air fres heners regula t ed by the ~~ns~mer Product Safety Com· p11ss1on. ORA NOE COAST DAILY PILOT •••11N.-Pf'Hldtn1end Pvbll\her J.caa.~ ...... Vk•P,..'""°"'•fldlA"« .. Ma..._ T'lteMo•K-1 felllo< T!lel'lll•ll.M-~""l'"flldilor QIMN.\.eft •-1' ... t ......... ¥fr.at•• £Gilot• .. - l.' ( N fluorocarbons as a propellant. ·According to Rowland. the EPA most likely will set Oct. 15, 1978 as the date manufacturers must stop producing nonessen- tial fluorocarbon products and April 15, 1979 as the date when the aerosol products, such as de· odor ants, m ay no longer be sold- in stores. Rowland said he's not certain yet whether the proposed ban will be in time to prevent a marked increase of skin cancer, caused by the fluorocarbons depleting the ozone in the stratosphere. ·'It '11 be 10 or 20 years before we know .if we caught it in time," he explained. Rowland and Molina have estimated that if the prest.'nl rate Both Friedman and Privett im· m ediately rejected the offer as worthless. They said the Jerard~roup has not proved its a bility to meet s uch a financial commitment in the past during an earlier ap· proach to the Foundation that was not made public. · Tustin Home Hit b y Blaze County fire officials today estimated the damages to a north Tustin area home that caught fire Monday night at $70.000. Frmn P age Al In addition to the structural 1 damage, officials said damage to DELAY the contents of the home at 13361 • • • Kootenay Drive might reach h . h h be .d tr d . .JlS,OOO. w 1c ave e~ 1 en 1 re 1~ a-No injuries were reported in two_. year planning and sun ey the 8: 34 p. m. blaze officials project. . . believe started in the garage But they s ay . the council s area as the result of an electrical already-voted-on intent to renew short the .sch~! lease while giving the M o~e than 300 persons flocked semors Just one r~m on the site. to the fire scene as Orange Coun· may C<;tuse HUD to intercede . ty fi remen battled 37 minutes The interes.t '". th.e. school lease before bringing the blaze under expressed b.Y H~I? 15 the result of control according to a fire re· · ·.r~peated inquiries fror:n. local port. ' c1t1ze~ and county organr zat1,ons The repo rt said the 3,500· regarding ~e perceive~ del~.>s in square-foot. single-stor y house's 1mplem~nting th~ pro1ec~. the roor and garage area were Jetter, signed by d1v1s1on director destroyed Herbert Roberts. Read · F ro• Pag~ AJ Although it appeared from the beginning of Monday's dis· cussion of the sub1cct that it would be continued, nearly 15 BANDIT people rose from the audience to • • • addr«.>ss the council. Thrt'e "ere parents of Carden Sc hool students .,.. ho urged the council to approve the lease <ig reemf'nl T .... o "ere senior c1t11ens \' hn ur.:t•d othC'r elrfrrl~· r<·i.rdt•nts In a~Tl'l' to tht• c-om 1 prom1sC' Jnd share the fa c1hl> for orH' \'ear. The balann• ~poke ajtainst re: nPw rn i: the IC'ase and rn fa\CJr c1f turning the whole site 11v1·r to the s<'nior c1liaens when the school leasC' exp1rC's rn Auitust Opponents of the school lease were greeted with cheers and ap· plausc from audience members in a departure from their usual quiet demeanor. One blind Cor ona del Mar senior. Jim Harrington angrily pounded the podium. '"It is an in· sun to we older citizens for you to suggest that we go up there and play footsie-footsie with a bunch of Httle children in a build· ing that we own," he told the coun· cil. Checkout Pre mature Newport Beach police today are looking for a man who checked his Volkswageo out of a local dealership prematurely. According to a report filed by the Chick Iverson Volkswagen Porsche Audi dealership, the oldeT model red YW was towed into their service department last •eek by a man who gave the name Ron Patterson. He asked them to fix the car and save an address in Orange. Friday, one of the mechanics saw Patterson driving tbe the car . off the lot and a su~eq uent check revealed he assertedly had failed to pay his $131 service bill. 'Voice' B ead Fired WASHINGTON <AP) -Tho Carter admlniat.raUon bu quiet· ly fired Kenneth Giddens, Lbo Republican-appointed director of the Voice of America . He directed Schirmer to the safe and warned him that he would kill him if Schirmer failed lo do as he ordered: A ft er being handcuffed to the !>afe. Schirmer was still able to reach the telephone and call pol1<'t'. The suspect is described as six fcf'l tall. about 170 pounds with a full. ne<1lly trimmed beard. He appeared to be in his late 205 or early 30s, Schirmer said. Dental Tests 'Prejudice d ' SACRAMENTO <AP) -The San Bernardino Sun-Telegram says state investigators have found some "discrim inatory notations" on. score sheets for state dental license exams. The story. published during the weekend, says "racial and sex- ual prejudice persisted in board practices as late as 1976." Some score sheets carried scribbled notations such as "col· ored," "oriental boy" and "gal." One with high marks carried the penciled comment: "Hard to believe this is a girl." Brown 'Life' Stand Ltuhed" SACRAMENTO (AP) - The Senate's Republican leader claims that Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is trying to blOC?k enactment of a death penalty law by pushina a life·without-parole blll. Sen. George DeulcmeJlab lathed out at Brown and a GOP colleaaue Monday, contendlna that pauage of the Ute bill would make it ''almoat.elmposalble" to override Brown's promlled veto of a death penalty meaaure. .. I th.IU M hu Ht out t.o de-- llberate11 kill our death penaJ&,y bill._" O.ukmeJlan &aid at a Cap1tol newa confereneo. ' ' A I' WlrepllolO HAPPY TAX VICTI MS-Youngst ers who o perate a street cleaning and manure pickt.1p business out of Ramona, near San Diego, don't seem too worried here about being hauled before the state Board of Equalization on charges of failure to ha\'e a permit to sell manure. They are (left to right), Richard Cessna, 12. president; Ne· Ne. 9, and Betty Cessna, 12, and June Cole, 14. The kids make $3,000 a month in the enterprise. The board had some good news for them today. ·~Kids Granted Permit Horse Marmre Firm Must Charge Tax SAN DIEGO (AP) -The California Board of Equalization awarded a seller's permit today to a horse-manure distribution firm run by children who made up to $3,000 a month without col- lecting or paying state sales tax. A senior -tax representative of the board made the decision after meeting 45 minutes with the com· pany's officers who r ange in age from 9 to 14 years. The permit. No. 25686734, pro- vides that they must now charge a sales tax on some but not necessarily all the homegrown fertilizer which is sold. Neither tax official Bill Atwell nor an attorney for the children would say 1f any back taxes must be paid. Richard Cessna Jr., the firm's 12-year-old president. said of the permit : ''We're gonna keep this locked up good." '"We shouldn't be taxed," he said before the meeting. .. We're just kids. They ought to be glad we're out working on our ow n ins tead of belng o ut National Group" Honors UCI Prof Or. Richard F. Thompson, UC Irvine psychobiology professor, has been elected to the National Academy of Sc ie nces, the academy announced today. Membership in the academy is considered one of the highest honors given lo American scien· t ists and e n gi nee r s. The academy. headquart ered in Washington, ser.,.es as an adviser to the federal government in matters o f sc ience a nd technology. Thompson, of Newport Beach, is the second current UCl pro· fessor elected to the academy. The other is H owa r d Sc hnei derman . b iological sciences clean. who was chosen in 1974 . Sixty me mbers were elected to the academy this year including e ight from the UC system, bring. ing the total member shi p to 1,219. Thompson has been at UCI since 1967. except for a year and a half in 1973 and 1974 when he was in the psychology depart· ment at Harvard University. Dolly Pilot Stoll P!lol• HIGHE.ST HONOR Richard Thompson He previou s ly taught at Unive rsity of Wisconsin and the University of Oregon Medical He is a graduate of Reed Col· lege and earned his master 's degree and doctorate in psychology from the University of Wisconsin. Psychological Association in 1974 for his work in brain function and behavior. Thompson was also the reci· pient of the Distinguished Scien· tific Contribution Award, pre- sented b y the American The UCI professor is currently working on a research project studying brain functions. He h as received preliminary ap. proval from the National Science Foundation for a five· year $1.27 million gr ant. Council Action In acUon Monday niaht. the Newport Beach City Coun· cit took thelollowing actions: SENIOR CmZEN CENTER: Continued until May 23 a declsion on renewing the lease of the private school which occupies the site purchased for the senior citj~en center. ICE CREAM VENDO~: Accepted lhe Withdrawal or a request b1 two colJe(le students for a permit to sell loe c:team alOtll the ~ean front sidewalk this a~mer / PIE.a : Decided to wait two weeks for further analygi•_ or the two blda received fo-r the concession stand on ~ Newport Pter. PAB.Ja.A.NDS: Oavo final approval to an ordinance in· cre11lq acreage dedicated ror park use lo new develop.. men ta from two aC'fff per 1,000 popuJaUon to five acres. • i . . ! ' someplace busting windows." The action involved KIDCO, Inc., a corporation founded and run by the children of Richard Cessna, who operates the equestrian center at San Diego Country Estates, a planned com- munity in Ramona. Cessna said the children let him sit in at board meetings, but - make their own decisions. T!l~ firm, whose primary service is selling manure and wood shavings from the stable fl oors in the form of compost for nurseries and golf courses, in· corporated in the British West In· dies last year to prevent it from b¢ing subject to California truces. KIDCO contends the taxes are paid when horse feed and wood shavings are purchased, so there should be no tax on the back end. The state. however, maintains the byproduct is new -compost -and the services offered by the youngsters are tangible and sub· ject to sales taxes. KIDCO also sweeps the streets of the community for $150 per month, exterminates gophers for $1 each and dabbles in anything else at which a profit can be turned. Other officers of the firm, which made $3,000 last October, its best month, are Richard Jr.'s sisters, 9-year.old Ne-Ne, a vice president; Bette, 11, secretary; and their half-sister, June Cole, 14 , treasurer. From Page A l OIL SPILL. • Meanwhile, the Norwegian government appointed a blue· ribbon panel to investiJ(ate the firs t blowout in Norway's. off shore Ekofisk oil field. · The blowout is developing into a major issue for the tall general election and oil companies were worried that the minority Labor government would cancel plans for test drilling off northern . Norway, which is to begin next year . Since the well blew Friday. t he Phillips Petroleum Co:•s Bravo rig has been spewing between 'Ille oH lo•t tbe.W ...,;.,. tlle etetlre IJ.S. lot> •hut %4 •l•llta, saponee~rt. --840,000 and 1.05 mllllon gallons a day into tile sea, forming a allck slx miles wide and 15 to 20 miles long. At current oU .. cartel prices1 the well wu throWing away aoout $300,000 worth of crude oil a day. About .4C) to 60 percent of orude oil can be ref"med into easollne, OX• pertuaid. meaning th~ oil.Jolt .0 far could run about 2,800 can for a year. At cwrent U.S. conaumDUon levels, the oll lost by noon today would s~pplY the entire United . Statea tor about 3t mtnutei.. an •expert ID Waablngton said. \ ,.,.,,. \ .. I I ·- Saddlebaek EDITION A f t ernooa , N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 70, NO. 116, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1977 J TEN CENTS ~ .Saddleback Scraps Myford-Bryan Site By WILLIAM SCHREIBER t OI t,_ DAiiy ~llolSt•ll After a three and a half hour I hearing laced with some biller audience comments, Saddleback College trus tees Monday scrapped plans to buy a second •campus site at Myford Road and : Bryan Avenue on the Irvine Ranch. I• The board then voled 4.3 lo , l>egin negoti ations with the Irvine Company to acquire an alternative location for the new campus at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. New board m ember William Watts joine4 Trustees Donna Berry and Frank Gremte in op- posing acquisition of the alternate site, even though he had voted earlier to rescind the decision to buy Myford-Bryan. Trustees will meet again May 9 to close the <leal on that parcel following yet another bearing to permit the landowner and the public to comment. Tustin Trustee Frank Greinke, a vocal opponent of tt\e Irvine Center-Jeffrey site, intimated after the new vote that he would spend the next few weeks seeking legal loopholes tQ stall the purchase. .. Don't give up yet folks," he told the audience at Irvine's Venado Intermediate School. Most or those attending. the session were from a mobile home· park called The Meadows and a housing tract called The Ranch. Both developments are located near the Irvine Center-Jeffrey site endorsed by the board. Most of the speakers during the hearing voiced concern over lraf· fie, the impact on their neighborhoods or an influx of stu- dents, parking and noise. The general "tUtude appeared to be that voiced by a woman lo the au<lience who said, "We 're all for education but we don't want it in our neighborhood." Nick Alles of the Meadows As- sociation gave the most detailed presentation in oppo_sition to the new location for the campus, which would start out as a 20- acre satelllte and have the capacity ror growth up to 100 acre$ over the next five years. Alles said the college board bad to make a choice or ''being fair to many residents in the area or to government <the city or. Irvine) and private business (the Irvine Company) who s hoot credibility to pieces." He said residents should not (See CAMPUS, Page A2) iSpanish King Sued i • Disaster • ID i I ~ D.olly Pilot l l•lf -· TO BE OR NOT TO BE, THAT IS THE QUESTION Counselor Ruth Mader Work9 For Careet' Awarenen ! 'You Can Be' I i 1 T~~l~~~: ~:!~ ~:,~: a~=~a:ndanl School say, CAN BE. The posters speak about his job. say. "I can bC'. lie can be. She Mrs. Mader writes that lack or kanbe. You can be." career awareness o re to a t And the purpose behind the To-··normal maturation process" 'Be-Or-Not·To-Ue word play 1s and s aid the youngsters will Jemphasis on occupational op chan~e as they leave high school f portunit1es not tradil1onally open Can ~. which was formulated tto one or the other of the sexes by a committee or faculty and ~ SophomorC's and Juniors last start, 1ncludes~guest speakers, year responded lo a s urvey on s chool announcements and job career pl ans "When we took a descriptions to whet the students look at the results." said Ruth career interest. Mader , career gu1dancf' c~nselor. "everything seemed to fall in the traditional area " The girls especially favored lhe traditional female occupa- tions: airline night attendant. in erior decorator. nurse. orr1ce worker. social "'orker. teacher and model. Fourteen of the i;iirls said they want to be fashion designers. "That's probably how many fashion designers will be hired in Orange County in the next Cive years." Mrs. Mader said. J Despite the opportunities for ' women today, few or the girls polled planned to enter engineer-! iog, scientific ortechnical fields. I Many girls and one boy showed f Ora nge Co ast We athe r Variable high cloudiness through Wednesday and chance of some late night and early morning low clouds. Lows tonight 50 to S6. Highs Wednesday OS at beaches to mid-70S inland. I NSIDE TODA Y , Progrus threaten1 the . gloriou3 pauage of .a Delatl)(Jtt Bay ferry that may fall victim to tM pelt.melt · urg1 to Qamble i11,o Jrr"1J co1fno. S.e Julu Loh'• America,~ 84. •••ex. .. , ct Cl •• .. A4 Cf•t ·~ .. M G11mmo Marx Laid to Rest GLENDALE (AP> -With a bitter court battle barely settled over the custody or Groucho Marx, the aged comedian's brother. Gummo, has been quiet· ly laid to rest. Gummo Marx, 84, was en- tombed in a hillside mausoleum Monday after a brief funeral service attended only by family- members and close friends. Marx died of natural causes last last Thursday in a Palm Springs hospital. Gummo's death leaves the 86 -year-old Groµcho, whose given name is Julius. and Zeppo (Herbert), 74, as the only surviv· ing members or the zany Mar.< Brothers comedy team. Chico (Leonard) died in 1961 altd Harpo (Arthur) died in 1964. 6 Wm Settlement SAN DIEGO <AP) -Almost $95,000 is being paid by San Diego lo four women and two men in an out-or-court settlement of th.eir suit accusing the police depart- ment of race or sex di.scrim.ins· tion. SIREl:r NAME MOJ'ES JUYOR POUORXEEPSIE. N.Y. <AP> -M t.1f1r Robert E. A.bmed, una· . ble to enllat cltben aupport to chant• the name or tb• 1U'~ on wblcb be lives, bu decided to m,ve. Abm •d llvea o n Hooter Avenue, a name t.. aa11 hu em· barrused blm. Tenerife Victi01 Countian The Kmg of Spain has been named as a defendant in a wrongful death suit filed on behalf of a Laguna Hills Leisure World woman who died March 27 in the world's worst aviation dis- aster The suit was filed Monday in San Francisco federal court by Walter Michael Watt. special ad- ministrator ror the estate or Jean Hous ton, 508C Ave . Sevill a, Leisure World. Mrs. Houston, who traveled ex tensively since the death of her husband five years ago, was a victim of the ground collision between a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines 747 and a Pan Am 747 in the Canar y Islands. The suit requests unspecified damages for wrongful death and loss of property. "His Catholic Majesty the King of Spain and the Kingdom of Spain" and the two airlines are named as defendants. The su.it said the Canary Islands are a province of Spain and the government of Spain o perated the international airport fac1hly at Santa Cruz de Tenenre in the Canary Islands. known as the Los Rodeos Airport It alleges that Spain, through its sub1ects and employes at the airport and airport control facili- ty "were negli~ent and careless and otherwise derelict" in their duties in the movement and con- trol or the aircraft. Other suits have been filed in l' S. D1stncl Courts as a result of the crash, but none ha\'C named Spain or its King as defendants. * * * Wes tminster Crash Dead Services Set A mass funeral service for 114 unidentified victims killed m the Canary Islands air disaster will be held Wednesday afternoon in Westminster. Bodies of 100 unidentHied American victims of the March 27 crash arrived Friday at El Toro Marine Air Station. Another 14 bod.Jes were flown Thursday nig~ to Los Angeles Interna- tional Airport. The bodies were flown in following efforts to Identify the victims of aviation's worst dis- aster. which occurred when a Pan·Am 747 and a Dutch K.LM 747 collided on the runaway at Tenertfe, killing 580 persons. Pan-Am spokesman Brad Dressler said the ldentlficatioa process was halted at Dover, Del., · last week with 204 of the 329 American victims named. About two-thirds of the remain· ing unidentified victims have been determined to be from Southern CaJJfomla, and the rest from other parts of California, Dressler said. All 114 caskets were delivered lo Westminster Memorial Park, which has donated a mass gravetlte for the dead. Wednes· day aftemoon's eervices will be inter-denominational. 'Voice' Head FU'ed WASHINGTON (AP) -The Carter admln.l.at.u.tJon has quiet~ ly find Kenneth Ciddens, lh~ RepubUcan·appointed dlrtttor of · the Vo1ct of Amerlca. Jn a telephone Interview, GJddeH uld bo wu forced to rtslia becau.e "the new admlnJstratlou wanted to put ln lta own man.•• . ... AP WlrtPllOIO Happy Tax Vi«!ti1'1S Youngsters who operate a street cleaning a nd manure pickup business out of Ramona, near San Diego, don't seem too worried here about being hauled before the state Board o f Equalization o n charges of failure to have a permit to sell manure. They are <left to right), Richard Cessna, 12, president; Ne-Ne, 9, and Betty Cessna. 12, and June Cole, 14. The kids make $3,000 a month in the enterprise. Recreation Plan Funding Blasted Kathleen Kelly of the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun- cil <MAC) took strong exception Monday to a proposed $22.571 contribution by county service area 9 lo a school-run recreation program. "I consider this program a dis· service to the taxpayers," Mrs. Kelly said at a MAC study session on the county service area budget. •'I don't know why I 6hould pay for anyone else's children to participate in a recreation program. ''l wou1dn't expect anyone else to pay ror my cblldren. We belone to a re<:rea.tion center." Tony Loechner, vice chairman or the MAC parks and recreation committee, said only 2S percent or Mission Viejo residents belong to the private community rttrea· Uon centers. Residents or the Mission Vlejo planned communi\y can join recreaUoo cent.era for $120 lnia· lion fee and $17 mOC\tbly dues. 1'0f course. people can't afford to l>eloq, to the recreaUon cen· ters, becaUQ their taxes are too blah.'' •a.Id Kn. Kelly. "JI.a far a I am conc.rned, •Al amowit apenl m aach (ta,x-eupported) p.rocra.ma I& tA>O much." Loee!hner Wet \.b4 Saddleback Valley Untfied School Dlltrict contdbutH $114,000 to tbe Hcteatlon procram. wblcb It . 1upena.-Ftvt COWJt..J aervlce are::,:: M,000 toward the rec ~. wlth COUD&I service area 9 (Mission Viejo) paying about $22,000 of the total. Although Mission Viejo resi· dents support only about 20 per· cent of the total recreation pro- gram budget, Loechner said 49 percent of the children who participate in the program live in Mission Viejo. The MAC took the recreation contract allocation or $22,571, re- quested for fiscal year 1977-78 in· to account as part of its study of the Cotal proposed budget for county service area 9 or $1,872,149. The budget sbOOf• a deficit of $137,087. ~ With an estimated 1971·78 tax rate of .4629 for the county service area, the tax rate ror the contributJon lo the recreaUon program would work out to about a cent and a half per $100 or as· sessed valuation, said Loechnel". The MAC ref erred the bodget to its budget an4 flllance commit· tee for recommendaUona. The council.ta Qpect.ed to take action on the budget at its May 9 meet· in1. . Business Complains SOtml LAKE TAHOE (AP) - Several hu.ndred Lake Tahoe bualnaa people complained to a.td .. from California Sen. S. I. Jla.Jakawa'a office MondQ' night about enYironmental controla in t.be SMfta reeort area. Udifomians Would Favor WaterRatwn SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The majority or Californians sur- veyed on the state's water shortage said they would favor -statewide rationing if needed, ac- cording to Mervin D. Field's Califom1a Poll released today. Pollster Field said about four out of five Callfomlans, regard· less of where they live, believe water rationing should not be confined to water-short counties. He said more Northern j California residents were con· I cemed about water, but "even in I the south the ireatest number or l people see the waler shortage as serious and favor statewide ra· tioning." Field said 93 percent of those I surveyed said they were practlc· 1 lng some form oC water con· • servaUon. • . l CaWomlana said a1riculture f and. health and safety ahould be given the highest priorities for 1 water, according to the poll. They listed households next and ' uld Industry and bustness should be given the lowest priori- ty for water. The poll surveyed 962 adult Calltomlans last month. Tho Callfomta PoU, rounded ln 19'_? t ~ ~ an Independent, noo· paruunpubllc oplnloo survey. • , 00.42 DAILY PILOT SB TU!!Clay.Af)rl126, 1977 VCI Prof Worldwide Ban On Spray Asked UNITED EFFORT STRESSED UCI Prof. Frank Rowland Spray Can Warning Approved WASHINGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Administration unnounced today it will require a \\ arning label on aerosol con· l.iiners using fl uorocarbon pro- pellants as a first step toward eventual elimination of virtually all s uch products. The Consumer Product Safety Commission said in a joint an- nouncement with FDA 1t is pro- posing s1m1lar action for the pro- ducts it regulates The actions came m response 10 a National Academy of Scie nces report last year that the propellants formally known as l'hlorofluorocarbons rise into the ~tratos phere and deplete the t•arlh's ozone layer. a thin pro- tective gaseous belt that filters harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun. The FDA said that all food.• drug and cosmetic containers us· ing fluorocarbon propellants and shipped in interstate commerce must carry the following warning ofter Oct. 31 · ·'Warning c ontains a cl1lor ofluorocarbon that may harm Ille public health and ent11ronment t>y reducing nzone 1n the upper at 111osphere " About 85 percent of aerosol pro- ducts containing the chemicals .ire covered by the FDA regula· t1on. The re ma101ng 15 percent .ire regulated by the Consumer Product Safety Commission - ('P8C or the Environmental l'rotert1on Agencv EPA alre.1<1) r1 ·qu1n·s ,;1 \~arn 111g lalwl on 1w:.t1c·1dP ~u·msnl.; t'ont ;11n1ng I l11nr111·..1 rh1111::.. arid lht· J)l't)(lll<"I ..,,if{'(\ (.'tJ01rt11'><\ltl0 proposal t.'. ex IJl'C:tt:<I ttJ t .akt · d lt"t'I. early next year The FDA nnd CPSC Joint an rwum·cm<'nt said <ieli!tlS of .s 111:in1latm·y pha:.e-out pro1i r<1n1 for .tll nonf'!-.M•ntial iw rosols ur-. 1ng flunrncarhnns will ht• :in ll\Hlf11•t•d 'I ho rt I) "The lal>t:I warning und ul tim:ik bun will affr:>1•t :ii most half lh1• 2 I l11ll1nn Jlr<"'Sllrll.E'cl l'OIT 1u1n1·rs Ml)(I rn the l'nited States 1·;1eh yeur." the aAencies ~a11I "'l'ht• otlwr half of SUC'h pr()(ful'f :- us~· othl'r propl'llanb. · · /\ mon~ tht' prodt11·ts affected f Y today's action an• deodorants. ;:inlipt•rspi rants, hair sprays. C'OI· :ogncs --all regulated by FDA -~and household cleaners and air ;rresheners regulated by the :C~ns~tmer Product Safety Com-.rn 1ss1on. • ORANGE COAST 111 BylULARYKAYE OI tM O•lly l'll•t St•lt The UC l rvine chemistry pro- fessor who first warned the world that fluorocarbons may be can- cer causing said Monday thut preventive actions taken by this country will be meaningless without s i milar s teps taken elsewhere in the world. "The crucial question is, how q uickly will the other countries respond to our moves?" asked Dr. Frank S. Rowland, who first detected the nuorocarbon danger in 1974 with his UC I laboratory colleague Mario Molina. "Everybody's stratbsphere is everybody e l se's . I f fluorocarbons aren't controlled in Europe. our steps won't help," the professor said. Rowland said he's in favor of all of the preventive actions now being proposed by the govern- ment. That includes toduy's joint an- nouncement by the Food and Drug Administration and the Consumer Product Safety Com- mission that a warning label ex- plaining the fl uorocarbon danger must be placed on products by· Oct. 31. Rowland also supports an an- ticipated announcement by the Environmental Protection Agen- cy <EPA). possibly next week, t hat will create the schedule to ban aerosol products that use fluorocarbons as a propellant. According lo Rowland. the EPA most likely will set Oct. 15, 1978 as the date manufacturers must stop producing nonessen- tial fluorocarbon products and . April 15. 1979 as the date when the aerosol products, such as de- odor ants, may no longer be sold in stores. Rowland said he's not certain yet whether the proposed ban will be in lime lo prevent a marked increase of skin cancer, caused by the fluorocarbnns depleting the ozone in the stratosphere. "It ·11 be 10 or 20 years before we know if we caught it in time." he explained. Rowland and Molina have estimated that 1f the present rate of fluorocarbon production con- tinues, there will be at least 50,000 new cases of skin cancer each year. Rowland observed that Canada and Sweden h a ve alread y pledged to follow a path similar to that being taken by the United Stales. Other countries , though, have not yet decided, he said. The UCI scientist also said it's important that md1vidual stales continue to enact their own bans to go along \\Ith the ant1c1pated federal ban. .. It's double protection. First. it expresses people·s beliefs that the bans are necessary, and second . it quickly limits the fluorocarbon market for manufacturers," Rowland point· ed out Tustin Home Hit by Blaze County fire offic1 ~'1s today ('St1maled the damages to a north Tustin area horrw that c•1ughl f1rt• Mon<iay night al S70.000. In add1t1on to th1· structur.11 <iam:igr. nfrll'i;1h "i .11cf rlamaj.(1· lo r lw runtt·nh of llw hom e at 1:1:1til Koot1•n;1y D rt\t' might re<ic·h Sl5.1Xl0 \J o m1unt·~ \.\ PrP rt"porle<I 1n tlw R :I I Jl m bla11• nfr1 c1.1h heltr•q • !-.l;1rtt•d 111 thl' ~ar<tgt• .1n·a us thr rt•sult of -0.n electncal 'ho rt :'ff Or<' lhatl 300 prrsons Oockl'd tn tht• firr scC'nc as Or<•ng(' Coun t v firemen battled 37 minutes before brin~ing the bla7.e under control, according to a fire re· port. The report said t he 3,500- square-foot, singlc·story house's roof and garage area were destroyed. Low.l eve l Attac k Delly Piiot Photo by Ric~rct Koehler California Division of Forestry planes, flown in from llcmet's .Ryan Field, dropped about 6,000 gallons of pink fire re- tardant chemicals onto Irvine Ranch fire that burned 85 acres in Moro Canyon, bet ween Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar Monday. The t h ree twin-engined aircraft used are converted Navy sub- marine detection planes. Critical flights were delayed 11,2 hours as planes were com milted to San Diego fir es. Crew Forced From Well Ca/,"" Gales Take Turm Delaying Capp ing STAVANGER. Norway CAP) -A dangerous concentration of gas today forced six American blowout experts to evacuate a platform in the North Sea shortly after they had begun efforts to cap a four-day-old geyser of oil from a runaway offshore well. Offi cials said the explosive gas built up after the wind stopped. and the experts decided to postpone their efforts again. A similar calm had blocked cap· pinJ? operations Monday morn- ing, and gale-force winds Mon- day afternoon pre\'ented the Americans from getting onto the Bravo platform. The well, operated by the Phillips Petroleu m Co. of Oklahoma in Norway's Ekofish oil field, blew Friday dur ing routine maintenance and has been spewing about 49,000 gallons of oil and gas an hour since. A Phillips spokesman said the blowout fighters -two members of the Houston-based Red Adair oil well fi re-fighting team and four Phillips technicians managed to close and repair some \1alves before t hey were forced to evacuate the platform. Decisi on Awaited On Irvi ne Bidding By TOM BARLEY ()j lh• 0•11~ I'll~•~ .. ,. Documents reflecting the James Irvine Foundation's de- cision to sell the Irvine Company to an East Coast consortium for $302.9 million were filed today in Orange County Superior Court . But the new legal action does not prevent the Mobil Corpora· lion from re-entering the bidding race which 'it led until recently with an all cash offer of $281.9 million. An ob\'iously impatient Judge J ames F Judge quickly denied Monday a move Lhat would ha\'e gi\'en Mobil 90 days during which thf' company would have held its a nnual met.'lmg and reappraise<! rts stand on the lr\'ine Company sale. Instead, Mobil was given until Friday to top the bid submitter! by a combine headed by Detroit developer Alfred Taubman, Wall Street finan(•ier Chnrles /\lien and auto h11l10na1n: Henry Ford II Backing them in the bid to ensure that Mobil does not take over t h<" Irvine Company is Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith whose lawsuit stymied a $200 m illion sale of the company to Mobil four years ago. Foundation attorney Howard Privett told Judge Judge that if Mobil has not s ubmitted an offer by Friday he will ask the court to approve the Taubman-Allen- lrvineoffer. The further extension lo Mobil by Judge Judge came under fire from attorney Howard Friedman who has represented Mrs. Smith thr oughout the eight-month trial. Friedman told the judge that Mobil was made aware of the consortium's latest offer last April 2 but has made no move to submit a new bid or even indicate that it was interested in remain· ing in contention. Taubman -Alle n-Irvine h as agreed to allow Mrs. Smith to buy sufficient stock in the new com- pany which would allow her to re- tain t he board seat she now holds on the lrvineCompanv. Mobil officials have ref~sed to make any such concession to the granddaughter of James lr\'ine 11 Judge Judge made it clear late Monday that he is not compelled to approve the higher offer for the Irvine Company regardless of which contender submits the highest bid. 'My Fair Lady' Bows a t El Toro E l Toro High School will pre· sent "My Fair Lady" May 11 , 12, 13, 14 and 15. Lead roles are being played by George -Gilbert a nd Car ole Renick, junio rs. J ay Rayl, drama instructor. is director. Cost of tickets is $1 for E l Toro studenls having an ASB card and S2 for the.general public, and are available now at the school. The experts went back to their headquarters on the barge Choc- taw, and then pulled l'he barge several hundred yards from the rig. Meanwhile, the Norwegian government appointed a blue- ribbon panel to investigate the first blowout in Norway's of- fshore Ekofisk oil field The blowout is devclopmg into a maJor issue for the fall generul election and oil companies were worr ied that the minority Labor government would cancel plans for test drilling off northern Norway, which is to begin next year. Since the well blew F riday, the Phillips Petroleum Co. 's Bravo rig has been spewing between The o U lo•t m oul d s upplfl the entire 11.S. for about 24 Minute s. sap one e.rp e r t. 840,000 and 1.05 million gallons a day into the sea. forming a slick six miles wide and 15 to 20 miles long. At current oil cartel prices. the well was throwing away about $300,000 worth of crude oil a day. About 40 to 60 percent of crude oil can be refined into gasoline, ex- perts said, meaning the oi I lost so far could run about 2,800 cars for a year. At current U.S. consumption levels, the oil lost by noon today would supply the entire United States for about 24 minutes, an expert in Washington said. The two Amer ican experts, Boots Hansen and Richard Hat-· tenorg of the renowned team of Texas oil well fi re fighter Red Adair , m ade the decision to postpone capping op er a tions after boarding the rig for the third time since they arrived on the scene Saturday. Four other men -two from Adair's crew and two from Phillips, also in· spected the rig today. They said they need more time to bring up special equipment from lhe barge Choctaw, which is sitting alon~side Bravo and serving as their main operational base. Fro.Page Al CAMPUS ••• have to put up with "coUege s tu· dents spread all over our lawns and berms as is the case at UC lrvint-." ''Wt' don't need a college at this location and we don't want a col- lel:e at this loC'atioo," he con- cluded, to a resounding standing ovation from muny audience members. T he Irvine Company has of· fered the site at Irvine Center and 'Jeffrey for $45,000 an acre with a five year option to buy up to 100 total acrt-s at the same fixed price, unaffected by infla· tion that would increase actual land values to more than $100,000 during the same period. No such growth option was of· fered on the Myford-Bryan site, which was a flat 20 acres at about $30,000 an acre, based on the col· lege's own appraisal. T he Irvine City Council has en- dorsed the satellite campus site offered by the Irvine Company. The audience listened impa· tiently Monday to presentations by planners for the city and the college district regarding the noise, parking, traffic and other factors, including. the fact that the Myford-Bryan site would be subject lo flooding in the event of major rains. Mel Roop, an I rvine city plan- ner, said that even if the college was not built at Irvine Center and Jeffrey, traffic loads on those two roads would still be four to 10 times high er tha n p r esent capacity because of proi>osed widening and new development. Larry Seeman, who drafted the college site environmental im · pact report, said the new site falls outside t he heavy noise im- pact area of El . Toro Marine Corps Air Station and could be shielded from existing noise. And Willia m Blurock, t he architect designing the modular satellite facility that will house up lo 2,000 students, assured the audience that a ll parking would be ''on site" and that there would be plenty of space on campus for students to "spread out." Secret Vault Parties T old In Sp y Case LOS A NGELES (A P ) Christopher Boyce, accused of espionage, took the witness stand in his ovm defense today and told of drinking parties within top- secret vaults at the defense re· search plant where he worked. Boyce said that a marijuana plant was grown and displayed ins ide one of the s ecret com- munications centers at TRW Systems Inc. ;md one cmploye used the secure phones in "the war room " to place bets with his bookie. ''We used to drink vodka and or ange juice in the vault all th!' time," t he 23-year-old Boyce said under questioning by his al· torney, William Dougherty. ''I'd say I drank with about 10 people ... there was always a bottle in there behind the teletype ltnk," Boyce said. In an effort to prove t hat security was so lax that others m ight have stolen information, Boyce told how another employe made imitation security badges which were used by at least one person to walk in and out of the plant. "He made a badge wlth a monkey on it for a joke," Boyce said. He told how a marijuana plant sat in open view on a work table and told of attending a beer party on the day he was briefed about security regulations. "We had a party a1 lunch," he recalled, ·•and drank a con- siderable amountM beer," He sai~(lep~ '\ight or nino pitchers were downed before he a nd) ot,er new ernployes r e· h lrned for the rest of their brief· ing on the operation of code machines. DAILY PILOT San Onof re ~te "We still f~l confident the leakage can be closed fast as soon as all eq uipment is av'1ila· ble and the work can begin, m aybe within the next 24 hours," s a i d Dag M a y ~I H ans e n . spokesman for the Nbrwegian oil dlrecto.r ate. Boyce said one or the first things he was told by a CIA technician was t hat t he codt• .equipment h ad a lready been compromised to a foreign coun· try. . ~~~~;~~'~'~'.'r,~'~:~.= :::~ :>:.:; (04't Puhli\P'ltt\Q ff)mp~ny ~r,H .. "1ll11Wl\A+,. publl,rH•d Ml'l"d._v tnrnuftt'I Fr1dAv '"' ("''"' Mf'W, "'*•WDOft 8t.t• h, ~IJl'tti"Qle>n a.H"/J(Mli t•tn Vl ll•f, frvlrt", ~IOdltbAlC\ V•llt'I tt""1 ~~ ::~~!::"~:r~:~~ty~ ~i;;:~:··~ ... ~M:IOtf OUbll\~lno P""'' I\ •• )JO Wnt ..-•• Strut. to't~ M"'"· c.i.11t~rnltt.,t1fb ..... ,. ....... Ptn1(hnt and P\lbti~fl J•O It c.,.i., \'lu-Pr!'l~tdfol'lt4~ ("~~fAI M.tlVIOe'f fPl•m•' 4(ft¥U lcJllor- ~~-• -.M_,,. M•n,q1n9 E"''"' ~rletM, lff\ lto<llerof,. IUI! Al\l~•nt ..... •1911111 Edi ... > S1ddleb.ck Valley Ofl~• lUOt LA P•t RoMS "' S." ~I tffWll"f OfflCIH -~1.::::~~,~·.1::.~=-IA...,._ ... <h: 11 .. 0_.,,..._, Tefepllone (714)MMU1 Cl...ifled Advertlelnt ~I $etllttN<• Y•tler-OHq H 1•N 10 '"em\<>flc:•·-495-0630 C.V.lttlt ttn 0<.,.M CN\l l'l/l!llfN"9 c-. -· ,.. ,,..,. "t'ru. -111""'"'-"'""''•• ~;·::;.,~=-A:r:;.~t·-:.~1.~.'1~~~.~~ ~ , . .,,~ ... ,.....,. loK-''"' "~'•r. &tit 11 CM\• MIM c.1111,•••. hbtt • '""ft •v 0,,1., •l 14 =~~-~ :~:.:.~ IMllllUYI mtltlary ...... - ' Argon Gas Fells Six Six men were injured ln an in· dustrial accide nt Monday· on the construction site or a nuclear re· actor at the San Onofre Oener at- ing Station. The men were all exposed to a rgon gas, an inert substance used to displace OX)'gen inside stainless steel pipes wben they are being weldett. The arson also dis place• oxnen in human lunl"• and t.be men we re s uffocating, San Clem ente Fire De partment Capt.. Gar y Carmichael said. Of the six injured, all but one were releued after emer1ene1 t reatment at S.an Clemente General Hos pl tat. Edward Heft was reported fn saUsfactory condition at the In- te nsive care unit today. He had been admitted in critica.l coodl· · lion. David Banon, a apoketman . for t he Sout hern California Edison Company, said the inci· dent occurred in the bottom of the containment sphere or unit 2. one of two new reactor housings under construction at the plant. No nuclear material was in- volved. He sald two men had been working with the gas when they we re stricken. Two other men ran to their usiatance and were tim. San Clemente fire men aided a San Onofre e mergency brigade in searching for additional in· jured persons in the labyrinth of tunnels al the site. · Capt. Carmichael described it as "something out of 2001." The injured were employes of Bechtel Conatruclion. the prime con tr actor for lhe $2.8 billion pro-· jecl; or a subeontractor . ove rcome. Two more men who The men were identified u aided in the toescue of the others .St,ew art .Burkh aminer, 33, of wer einvc;>lved as well. Ocea'1s1do and Jamea D. Ss n Clemente Fire units and Paul.on, 37, of Misalon Viejo, ambulance responded to tho ,r both safety •nalneera; Bruce scene originaJly reported incor· Bt rnltein ~ of San Diego and rectly aa a structure fire wtlh in· Edward Hess, 30, of Poway, both jurtes at the nuclear 1eneraun1 plpefitters; Cb11.rle1 Drac~. station. 33, of ~eanalde, a laborer, and As the ambulance arrived, a Keith tiarden. taae not known, of • van carrying n ve ot tht tnjured tho S111 F e rnando Vallty, a waa luvtn1. The ambulance waa · ahcttmet.al worker emplo7ed bY used to tramport one otbtr vie• . a aubcocrtractor. 'Instant Movie Polaroid En& Rumors NEEDHAM, Mass. CAP) -Polaroid Corp. has unveiled its long-awaited instant home movie camera a nd television·like viewer that produces fil ms in one minute. · Dr. Edwin Land, Polaroid's 67-year·old founder a nd chairman, demonstrated the "polavision" sr stem .at the company's 40th ~nnual stockholders meeting to- day. Land said the hand-held camera contains a film cassette good for 2~ minutes of home movies. The cassette fits in the top of the viewer, which a utomatically develops the film and shows it in color one r:nln .. te later on lts 12-inch screen. Land said the camera and. film will eventually in- clude sound, but the company has not yet been able to develop a hlgh.quaHty sound system. Land said the camera and viewer will be availa- ble in the fall . He would not disclose the system's price but said It will be competitive with 0 any good · 'bome movie system.'• .._------------------------------~~~--------------~~ Tuesday's Afternoon Pricee NYSE COMPOSITE l \fM11 '1H .,N l 11\ti II u rt A'' ,, ,~ , Ill ~ t' tt.t .. • •·f I t> I I "' ,, ... ,,. , "t !l "'' , ti• ,·M • tl ilt, 1, I H '''' , ~'I R. 111 i~'I ( tl'i :: ~':~:~·.1 ~ . '" ,,....,~ 2 u 1 4, '' • A1•1 lit t ,, "' ~ 1 " '~ • t I t ... ,. t\1•! ., ' ... " .. ,. . .... ' . ' .. "' l .. >• u. I <• ......... " ' ,, , t • ,, .. , ,., lit ''"'' "' 1 1 #."I 141 , I • ,,..,,,, f 11' t I' I \tl ,,, ... , ,,, '.,,,, '10 'l\ 141•111·! It 1 \II 1110 • f l}t\l .,f~ ' J . ,,,.,,,,1 " Oh 11 ttQ ~ • ! • H,.,~,.yp I\ 4 • • '• ""\lPrt ., .. ,,., 'I • t•• 1ns11 , • 111 1\ • '• nu)' P\rN!> AO 1t. ft? 19' ~ '. .., ,., . ' '),) •J • ,. . . .. 11rti I -• ,, . , .. 111 ., I • J\ '>1"- 'A I'• .. I • I .... . .. ~ ... • . ' ,., t 1 • •• I~ t o ..... I 1 ..... ,. '' • t • 0 I , ... •4 \ '\lot I -\7 I ' )w 1 ' t \ \ff\ • l"' \ •• . .. , l1• • I•' ... I ' ... I• . ' " . )\ .. II , • ... l tJ!l ., ,, ,,., • t 11 ... ,,,,,,, . ., 11'! .. fi 1' lJ nqf-t ~ f I t q fhlt•'-'•' '"A ~) H ,~ 0 .. 11. ( '1 tt .. l'•ll 11,,• 1' t lt_.,..r\Mt I J I P Jl 1'\ • 1 0""''" ,../\ lll 1 t t• • o-M 1Hv ... HI • n ..... 0•$o1 J M) 1 4 h • " Q1ttrfjl\ \A\ t ti') t\'-. t O••C pl \Ill 1 •I , , 0•1 e 01 1 " 1 11 "'"''' nr ·~ ... ,_, '\'. Ul.\11 rf\ l\,f 6 71 14 I lJh \'' Ali t 11111 I I~ 1(11 • • CJ•f 0101 I\ 1 14' • O"ti:tf'r 1'0 1\ M 111 , O•vlQrq o"' ~ 1• 1 , Ofn, i. H 11 1 11 '1'1 '"'' • Hluf•hrlt , \ 1'1 11}'• • Riv• htrJ 10 ~ 111t \ ,. , OiAlf'lnl !ft ft "'" '1' •• ttonr.1" fH I/ l' -• 011'"1nt JI 1\ 1''•• O••MM I nt • ' ?<\ 01•.,,Sh I 10 • 114 11'11. Rrr,~l,:~'~ ~~ ;r!: ~ fHMnlt\ \)(HI 4 1\1• '' Rl'tf''"" 1 411 ' \ti 1$\~ • "11 JlMW/lt( t flll\ 1 ti Jt"'• 81').,-,,...\n\ \ ' .. .. • • Qo\Ed 7.,10 71 ,,,_,. • '• 8f)"E ot AM r\n •l' t • \ l 8 '1•E or 1 11 ll 17 1,, •• 8ei,EP' 1 4'& 71 t\1 1-t, B••n1ll 14 ~ 111" 4 ., 8•AunCF &0 8 H '16', • 'Ii 8ttQ~lr ~111 ,. 16'• • \0 8•1\IMv 710 IJ 16 ~I 8rt\tM C>f l I\ .0 • • 1 8rUPt1 .l3P10 St• 1S'11 • '" Brh•GI l .0 I 18 J1>•-1 • 8.,yUG 1 IO I • l• • •••• 8wn~~·o JO 1l S I'• . =~~ft,':,~ ,,i ~~-:! 9run\wk fiO fl JOt 11'-' • '-' 8ru.~W 1 1 11 >\1et-1 .. Bury-Er M 12 11• J<I' 1 + ., 8uo<1Co 1 'lQ 4 n JO + • , BllO<ICo&>f S •• llO SI • • • 8uHFo1 «la 6 4 Jl\co-•• 8ulOYA • 6l I' + "-=~~~1"1: • ,: ~k : .. 811n~Ra • 37 10~+ '" l urllllCI I .OC) I 16 H' t + :W 8ur1No 1 tO 7 11316 tt-'4 + V. 8Uf1No pl SS., Ill I' .. + Yo lurllCly ,66 ll I 17'1' , llurrQt\• IO It :J'9 SS'\• Wt 8utlHG0 -l-l"-Ill\,••,. ces 2 lO u1 s1 + ·~ CCI Co(fc U >S S'-'t ~::ti\~,,: ",'. 2it ~-I l! CIH'ln HO e 110 )4'~-t't CLAnl •• 2 • 1' ... . CLA• or Uk.. ,. , ...... . C~I Inv • • 10\r-,,_ CNA F '"' 10 1~ 7•!t •• ,,. CNAI I OU.. t ""··· .. CPC In! 2 50 • 'l "'• • 'l CTSCo 10 7 1) n-•~ CeOOIC 1 «I • 1t ~1'1' C•Mfl<• 4 11 ..... '" l:rn; ., ,.! :. ,_ :: CelPUI I M t ' 11'• • ,. Cellelltt .JSe It H U + \'a Ol •D•O '10 " ,..., .. Olc ~A6 7011 I• I ·~ O•ttAOh., "' tO 0 ,, • ., " ''1 Oittt>old ir.ou ~t "'•. •, g:~:::~!'I U 1 ~ Sil :\~: ~ Olllon l Olll l) S JJ • .. g:~~~frttn 16 ~4 s;: 3~;: .-~~ 01¥r\MIQ • '1 11 • .. 't O•P•OO• 16 u ,,, 17'' OomeM IO It :Jt ""' • 1 • 00,,nett~ M 10 40 7J' .. -' , Oor011Y 19'" \ 10 U • • ~. Oo•••Co tlOtt 10 JI"-~. OowCh 1 ll "It l&'t •. 0owJOf'IT1&U 101 J1'•• • .. O•••o 1 ~10 S4 ,.., • "' Orn\H 8010 m ., ...... Ort•Bd l,. I ll'\ • Or•'(f111 S~ • ' 7''> duPO'lt 114 IU 11' • l dtJl>nl pU 10 l U '' .. O•i~· p I "" 4 ., 7'>'--... Ou\•OI a IO 11)0 101'• • l Ou\• o• • JO r110 .,, • n .... ~ p1 1.. • 10 JO"-'• Oun8rd I 14 IS '' 11'• • '11 OooLtQ 1 7110 ll l''"'· .... Ou<! pf 1 JI.. 1100 ,...., ••• Ouq or 711 .. 100 JO , •••• Ouqol 7.10 .• tlOO • -'< Outch8y • u 10 I 1011\--14 Dymolfl " 7 1' 10'MI .•••. -·---EOi O .:..14 20t ,.,_ °" £Mil.I • !Jt I t -"' + ~ ESv'1UOb7 7 0 •Vi !tQltP ... I 1t 1''141 '1' E•uoCo .11 1 ~J II'•-''' En !Alr • 20t 714, .... [UIO\I' IO H • 1'"• + Y> f;olUll lf>O I I 17''\ •• ,, EoK<l I'°" lt l6J1 tsl'lt • ''t ht•n l t » •t'--" l!<Mll\ .t011 ll U'4+ " liO•tlJ~ 4 11 1' 21•~ ~ t:cll\lro 1 JO • I ,...,_ "' [cl••«H • ) 10 I~ t • l!IPHQ l It t 4MI IS\lt + 1, J:>i""" ... ,, lJ ,: -i.tt l'"""Mcl 7 .. ... • •• E:::~N~t ~: i ~ :r.:::. ~ TRANSACTIONS ' Canada Route Probe Due WASHINGTON CA P )-The Civil Aeronautics Board said it wlll de- termine the need for nonstop air service by U.S. carriers between San Francisco and Toronto and San Fran· ciaco and Mont.real. In announcln1 the start of proceed- ings Monday, the board said it soon will bold public hearing• on the two routes. American and United airlines were made parties io the proceedings. The CAB said that in the near fut11re it will examine the aervlco needs of four other u.s .. canada routes. It aaJd It would betln proceedln,p within slx to nlne montba for the Los Angela-'Montrtal market and wtt.hln U to 18 montba for the Cleveland· Toronto-Moatrtal, Detrott~lloatreal and Houtton-Dallaa·Fort Worth· Torooto-~ontreal.routes. _ • .. _ s DAILV PILOT 85 Excuse Fails Smtdl Can DO Sell By MILTON MOSKOWITZ For some time now there have been explanations com- ing from the automotive marketplace lhlal Amencans sltll love their big cars, the energy crunch notwithstanding. The explanations accomparued reports that U.S. auto makers were having trouble sell.in& their small cars. IT SEEMS THAT THE REPORTS are true -bul the explanations may not be. American buyers are not rejecting small cars, just the ones made here. They are buying foreign· built small cars in record numbers. American Motors Corp. (AMC), maker of the Hornet, Gremlin and Pacer, was expected to benefit tremendously Crom the emphasis on economy cars. Instead, its sales have eroded so much that the company's sur- vival is once again at Money Tree stake. During the first three months or 1977 AMC sold only 48,000 cars. less than 2 percent of the market. Ford·s Pinto got off to a great start but its saJes are now languishing. The Vega. which General Motors developed to compete with the Pinto. is being discontinued after the im model run, as is Pontiac's Astre model. And the General Motors subcompact. the Che,·ctte. has been a maJ(>r disap- pointment: the sales target" as 300,000 cars a year; actual sales have been 140,000. &IEANWlULE. THE TOYOTAS, Datsuns. Hondas and Volkswagens ha\'C been rolling ore boats and wheeling out of US. showrooms in a triumphant procession In March Americans bought 188.000 fon·1~n l'ars. That was up 44 percent from thl· J\lareh 1971) s:.ih's ;ind rl'pres1.'nl· l'd the biggest month thl· lorr1gn cars ha\'l' l'Vl'r had in lh1• American market. It ga\'C the import!. 17.3 percent of the new car market. Nor was the March total soml' kinrl or fluke. Theim· ports captured 17.4 pcrcl·nl of the t; S. ni.Jrkl•t 1n J.rnuJry and 17.S perccnttn Ft•bruary. BASED ON SALES IN THE first three months of this year, here are the 10 top imports. Toyota Datsun Honda Volkswageq Colt Fiat Subaru Cars Sold 104.500 80.500 58,llOO 55.500 20,500 16,700 16,100 Arrow 13,300 Voh·o 10,700 Mercedes· Benz 10.700 Toyota. whose U S sail's arc ahead 50 percent this year, is taking 4 percent of th(' Amcncan market. Toyota. Datsun, Honda and Volkswagen are allouts<.'lltng Amen can Motors. JAPANESE MODELS ARE CLF.ARLY the leaders 111 the import surge. Of the top 10 sellers. six -Toyota. Datsun. Honda. Colt. Subaru and Arrow -are made 111 Japan The Coll and Arrow arl' bf'ing mad(' tn Japan for Chrysler. which needs all the help it can gel. Its market share skidded in March to 11 pcrc(.>nl. There's a chanct' that U.S. car sail's will hit a new re· cord this year. And 1f tht•y do, small cars wi ll make a maJor contribution. But when lhl'Y buy small cars. the Amrrican motorists appear lo have a decide<! prcfcrt'ncc for the ones built outside the United Stat cs. Thal may be good news for Ford. which will bring its new m1nicar. the German-built r1('sta, into tht' U S. market at the end flf June. Ont' w<iy for U S auto makers to beat the imports 1s to dfl their own 1mport1ng, a mo\'e not ltkely lo win friends tn tht> ranks of th(' L'nitl'Ci t\utomobilC' Workers Small Car Foe s Two car salesmen at Clarksnlle, Jnd., demonstral· ed their displeasure with President Carter's plan to e ncourag(' people to buy small cars. John Smith, left. and Don Roark said many motorists waved m sympathy as they passed the dealership, but no one stopped. Business. they ~a1cl. was down. FirnI Reports Gain NEW YORK <AP> -McDonnell Dou~l ns Corp. has re- ported that first.quarter profits were $28 mil hon, or 73 cents a share. up from the $25.3 million. or 67 cents a share, or the previous year. However, sales were down al $759.3 million, compared with $811.3 million for thr {'Om parable period in 1976. The company attributed the earnings gain to sharply re· duced borrowings and interest costs. The company reported a ftrm backlog of orders or $2.93 billion, compared with $2 7 billion for 1976, and a total backlog of $5.89 billion, compared with the $5.48 billion of a year ago. The company said sales declined because of lower de· liveries of commercial aircraft but that this market ap· pears to be recovering. Dividend Hiked Security Pacific Corp. 's directors have declared a reg· '!lar Q'!arterly dividend or 38~ cenu a share on its 21,312,000 c0mmon shares outstanding. The dividend wlJJ be payable May 20 to stockholders or record May 3. Frederick O. Larkin Jr., chairman of the board and chief executive of- ficer, said the new rate repre.sents a 10 percent increase over the prloT 35-cent regular quarterly dividend. . Security pactric also has reported record earn'ings for the first quarter of 1977. Consolidated income before aecurltles transactions for first quarter 1977 totaled $23.9 mUllon or $1.12 a share. That represents an Increase of 40 ~rcent over the $11.0 million, or 80 cents a share. earned in the comparable 1916 period and a JS percent increase over 191t's fourth quarter. Securitie.s gains or lossea were net)lgtble ln both years. .f'tnt quarter 1977 net interest income, on a fully taxable equivalent bull, waa Sl.30.S mllllon, rtprnenting an in- crease of $17.4 million, or 15 percent, over Clrst qu•rter 1976. -·