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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-03-15 - Orange Coast Pilot7 1 nland Sewer Break \ I I Feliciano Wins: .Waddill Defense ' -On Conception ) Wife Won't Get PerfOl-mance Fee ·nacked by Mom DAILY PILOT Israel Launches. * * * 10' * * * I I • • -.. • :. .,,. , f • • • • : VOL 71, NO. 74, 4 HCTIONS, .. l'AGES Al'WI ....... Efforts in Vain A mother seal crawls on t op of her already skinned pup and barks to protect it on an ice floe off the coast of \ Labrador during the annual seal hwit. j ·Baby's Mom Backs . ; Wad(lill Defense Bl TO• BARLEY ~!"'belly ............ Prosecution claims tbal Mary Weaver was 31 weeks pregnant wben Dr. William Baxter Wad· dill attanpted to abort her baby were d~ Tuesday by a wit- ~ nets reprded by the defense as the best authority on tbe .lasue- Mll• w.eaver berse~. Tlae ~year-old Huntineton Beach 111'1 took tbe stand a.a a the hospital nunery that the baby must have undergone massive brain damage. Miss Weaver. who has sued Waddill for $17 million in damages in a recently filed Superior Court civil action. was subpoenaed by the defense to testify for him Tuesday. She succeeafully avoided wait- ine newsmen and photo1raphers on ber way to the courttoom by laking the judges• private (See oocroa, PAGE A2) All-out Sewer Break Beaches Shut 2 to 3 Weeks By GARV GRANVILLE OI tlll9 O.lly l'tlM Si.« A broken sewer line that is belching raw sewage into the Santa Ana River and con- taminating Orange Coast beaches won't be repaired for Son Arrested lnSlayings Of Family MONROE, Mich. <AP) Howard and Emma McNee lived through a year of tragedy. Then. along with their daughter Jill, 17, they died of multiple gunshot wounds. Their son , Paul, is charged with their slayings. The McNees were to be buried with their daughter Thursday. Paul, 23, was held without bond in the Monroe County Jail Tues(jay aft.er being arraigned. Besi•s murder, he was charged with three counts of using firearms while committing a felony. The Monroe County sherifrs department said the younger McNee admitted the slayings in a statement Saturday after lead- ing deputies to the bodies of his mother and sister, buried in s now by r oad sides in two southeastern Michigan counties. His father's body had been found in a. third county Friday by deputies acting o n an anonymous telephone tip. Co·workers of Mrs. McNee, 59, (See FAMILY, Page AZ) two or three weeks, a county sanitation district spokesweman reported today. Time needed to repair the shattered sewer pipe means that portions of beaches in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach will remain quarantined during Easter week school vacations. Quarantined by th~ county healUt department Monday was the stretch of state beach run- ning north of the Santa Ana River to Beach Bolulevard in Huntington Beach. Also quarantined was the beach running south or the river to 56th S treet in Newport Beach. Those quarantines a re not likely to be lifted until a few days after the broken sewer line near the Garden Grove Freeway is repaired, county health officer Dr. Morton Nelson said. In the meantime, the county sanitation district today will begin chlorinating the estimated four million gallons of untreated sewage that is being disgorged daily into the river . However, both sanitation and health oCficials warned that the chlorinating process won 't effec· lively relieve the existing health <See SEWAGE, Pa&e A2) Quarantine Cited LOS ANGELES (AP ) - Warning lh~t California could face up to $70 million a year in crop damase losses from the Japanese beetle, the atate has threatened to quarantine airlinen coming from infested states. • daf•nte witneu to tell an Oranae County Superior Court jury that lbe wu no more than 22 weeks pregnant when she en- tered Westminster Community Ha.pltal on &larch 2, 1977. Sbe told prosecutor Robert Cbattertoa that her last menstrual period was on Sept. 25, 1'18, a jtatement which fop-. ports the-defense ar1ument that t he wu 2Z 1Ueka from concep- tioG whe:i lbt 8creed to an abor- Uoo. Laguna Makes P .o.t Haul TM Jll"(JleCatloll alleces that Dr. Waddlll 1tran1led Mlaa WtllV•r'• baby -sf rl alter be · . leamed ~ tbe 1.Une eolat.too • -1ae biJeeteil tDlo her failed to kill I.be klf mil m Ctii womb. Tit• ~-cla.IJM that Waddill, H, of Haat1n1ton .. ffarbOur, thr~\led the c9-Ud ...,. .,..... uot.ber doctOf In vesU1ators, bacl(ed .._P by deteo- U vea from Newport· Beach; followed 1be suspects from Laauna Beach to the South La1~ addreu at about 1 p.m. Tuesd.a) wt.ere tho a.-reata were made. · lnv•U,.tor Mike Slu.aMr lald offlten ·-~vered the baaed mariJ.,aM, valued at about '11.000 GD lM ltteet, malde tM bome, OccUpled by M1. SQYder. Tile lliveatl1atlon bea_u in Lacuna Beaoi. and offloen uktd N"J!Cl(t det*tty~ to .. ' . slat in foUowtng the pair Into Soutb Laguna. Jnveatiaator Bruce Brill• Hld the marijuana la of blJh cauaUty arid would Mil for about $500 a DOUnd on t.be at.rfft. A pound cOulcl be broken down into one ounce packa,es and sold for a,ooo.M-Hkl. Welnhlrpr, l• bel~ beld In Oranse County~_ Jall and Ma. Snyder In the Women•• Jail lD SUt.a "-· Ball hu been Ht at fl,SGO for each. . . Attack Cities Lose . Harbor Tax VENTURA (AP> -In these days or rising taxes, the Oxnard Harbor Dis- trict has taken a novel ac- tion and elminated its lax on Ventura County resi- dents in Camarillo, Ox - nard, Port Hueneme and Thousand Oaks. The district voted Mon· day n ight to eliminate the tax, which is about three cents per $100 of valua· lion, effective July 1. The district s aid the $300,000 the lax brought in was not needed, noting that it has $1.S million in reserve and expects a sur- plus of $100,000 this year. Feliciano' s Wife Denied Singing Fees Blind entertainer Jose Feli- ciano found the judge on his side Tuesday when his estra nged wife tried to force rum to hand over th~ fees he received for performing in Las Vegas and Puerto Rico. · Orange County Superior Court Judge Richard Hamilton refused to issue an in- junction that would have co mpe lle d Feliciano, 32, lo surrender all bi s performance fees to Feli- ci ano En - terprises. fle1.1c1ANO His wife, Janna. is president of tbe com- pany. She filed suit against Feli- ciano on the grounds that he bad broken the contract they drew up in 1975. Feliciano's lawyers suc- ce11fully areued Tuesday that a clause in the contract provided for FeUciaoo to retain his performance fees if hia mar- riage to JaMa failed. Feliciano sued her for divorce last Jan. 9 in a Superior Court P,ellUon that cites "lrrecoocUa· ble differences'' in tbe lJ•year rnarrta1e. The lawault whlcb muat now 10 to trial allelet that l'eUMano a1reed to band over all hll tak- lnJ• to the compAl:ly IA return tor a suarantMd iJlcome of •100.000 a year and 50 oerefllat of ·the compan:y J)l"Oflt.a. Refugee Deaths Mount BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP} - Thouasands of Israeli troops routed Palestinian guerrillas from key bases across southern Lebanon today a nd Israeli warplanes fired rockets thal killed Arab refugees in camps ar ound Beirut, witnesses re- ported. Syrian gunners in Lebanon claimed to have hit one Israeli plane. Across Lebanon, reports of casualties among Palestinian and Lebanese refugees mounted toward SO and there were indica- tions of many more dead and wounded. Israel said the aim of the as- sault was to clear a guerrilla- rree strip along its northern frontier and deter repetitions of the terrorist raid last weekend in which 34 Israelis died. It was believed to be the biggest Israeli attack ever , and the Palestin- ians said 25,000 Israeli soldiers were involved. The Palestinians denied they lost some or the ground wit- nesses claimed they had, and said fighting continued in the (See ISllAEL. Page A2) Coast Weather Sunny and s lig htly warmer Thursday with highs 74 lo 78. Lows tonight 48 to 54. INSIDE TODAY A woman 1Mo counted Mt- WllGUh, noC Pier tnOtWJI, b«· quealMd to htrr claildma and grondc:Mldrm U.. treu and 1hn1b1 that off~ "laavn for Ume• of tendon." A'911 Jin claUdrera •aid, "We're richer." See Page AlO. . . _A.2 DAILY PILOT s Wednnday. March 15, 1978 Pact Change OK'd 2 More Senators Back Ratificat~n WASHINGTON (AP) -Prest· dent Carter agreed today to ac· cept a change in the proposed Panama Canal treaUea ·u two more senators added themselves to the still elusive handful of votes needed to win Senate ratification of the agreement.a. Democratic Sens. Russe11 Long of Louisiana and Dennis DeConctni of Arizona announced they will aupPort tbo agree- Ji'roaaP.,.eAJ ISRAEL ••• border areas 18 hours after lt began at 12:30 a.m. local lime (2:30 p.m. Tuesday PST). In three separate raids, a force f)( at least six warplanes hit Damur, 10 miles soulb or Beirut, and the Sabra, Oz.la and Bourj Barajnsh camps on the edge of Beirut, Lebanese air controllers and witnesses said. Numerous sources said civilian centers were bU. Hospitals at Tyre, in southern Lebanon 12 miles from the Israeli border, said at least 35 persons were killed in naval and air strikes. Other reports from southern Lebanon, 60 miles from Beirut, indicated Israeli tanks and troops were d eploying in a pincer movement -one prong moving north aJong the Mediter- ranean coast and the other west to the sea -to surround the guerrillas in the southemm08t border area. Witnesses said Israeli jets s wooped down in pairs from cloud-filled skies and rocketed the Sabra camp, on Beirut's south edge, home for some 20,000 refugees and base of Yasser Arafat's military com · m and. The Syrians clajmed to have hit one Israeli warplane. Syria's state radio called for the five permanent members of the U. N. Security Council -the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France and China -to "intervene immediately" to stop the l:»raeli assault. Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman said he hoped Syria would not intervene. Welzman and Prime Minister Menachem Begin later visited Israeli troops inside Lebanon, NBC News re- ported from Tel Aviv. Health Minister Ibrahim Sbeilo ordered h os pitals throughout the country to stay open around the clock because of the casualties and appealed for nationwide blood donations. Lebanon's Moslem premier, Salim el Hoss, called the in- vasion "unjustified aggression" and appealed for international intervention to bring it to a quick end. But there was no Im· mediate comment from the country's Christian president, Elias Sarkis. Israeli missile boats and long. range border artillery poured a savage crossfire today on two Palestinian refugee camps at Tyre, a seacoast city 12 miles north of the Israeli border, wit· nesses said. The action came on tbe western flank of the massive Israeli air, sea and land assault against Palestinian positions across southern Lebanon. The 'arullery barrage touched off several fires in the Rashideyh and Bourj el Sh.imali camps, many of whose 22,000 u .N.-registered civilian resi· dents were evacuated in an- ticipation of the Israeli of- fensive. But ambulances with sirens waillng and Land-Rovers driven by guerrillas were seen speedJng out of the camps with full loads or victims, and armed guerrillas were seen commandeering taxis to transport casualties to hospitals in Sidon, 2S miles north of Tyre. ORANOI COAIT s DAILY PILOT menta t-.ming control or the waterway over to Panama by the year~. "We do not own the Panama Canal,.. Long said in jumplng from the dwindling list or un· committed senators ... We have a lease on the property and the landlord la demanding that we get out." At • mid-morning White House meetlni wiLb DeCoocini, TreaJJures Cfui:m Upheld NEW ORLEANS CAP) -Treaswe hunters have been told by a federal ap- peals court they can keep millions of dollars worth of bronze cannons and other artifacts found on a Spanish galleon that sank in 1622 off Florida. The ruling Tuesday by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court order. The federal government challenged the treasure-hunte r s' claim to the wreck of the Nuestra Senora de Atocha. Two Florida corpora- tions -Treasure Salvors In c. and Armada Research Corp. -found the wreck off the Florida keys in 1971, after a six- year. $2 million search. FrOffl Page A J SEWAGE ..• hazard. "We'll be chlorinating to cul down on grease and odors. We simply can't chlori,nate ~no~gh to disinfect ," the s an1tat1on spokeswoman said. County supefVisOrs today or· dered sheriff Brad Gates to in· crease patrols along the 10-mile stretch of river impacted by the sewage. Simultaneously, supervisors ordered health department or- ri ci al s to advise school ad· ministrators to warn children to avoid contact with the river's contaminated waters and sur- rounding environs. The ruptured sewer line col· l apsed Sunday when rain· swelled river waters undercut its foundation Sanitation district officials said materials needed to repair the line will be delivered to the site Monday and what will be a permanent repair will begin. Thal task is likely to take an estimated two to three weeks, according lo officials. Cyclist D uo T rial Slat e d SAN DlEGO CAP> -Two al· leged "prospective members" or the Hell's Angels motorcycle club have been ordered to trial · on charges of conspiring to murder a district attorney's in· vestigator. William Lester Peters, 28, of Santee and Robert Michael Johnson, 31, were bound over Tuesday by Municipal Judge Charles Snell. The investi1ator, Ray Morgan, wasn't hurt. H osp ital Bit Carter said be-would not opl)06e DeConcini's P.roposal that the treaties permit the United States to intervene in Panama to forestall any threat to continued canal operations. Meanwhile, Senate leaders P.roressed optimism that tbe lteaties would draw the needed two-thirds vote. •·I think the votes will be there," said Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd. Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker, also a treaty supporter, said, "I don't think there is going to be rejection." Nonetheless. tbere was in· tepslve acUvity by supporters and opponents seeking last· minute votes. DeCoocini's amendment would allow the United States to use military force even if Panamanian labor troubles or some other internal problem in· terfered with the passage of ships through the canaJ. With the first of two ratifica- tion voles only a day away, there was intensive and frenetic maneuvering by both supporters and opponents. Four other previously uncom- mitted senators were ready to- day to announce their intentions in advance of Thursday's vote. One or two senators are likely to decide the outcome of the vote on the first treaty -a pact to guarantee the waterway's neutrality after Panama as- sumes control. The second treaty, to be voted upon later, would formalJ,y turn the canal over to Panama. The uncommitted senators ex- pected to disclose their positions were Democrats Wendell Ford or Kentuck y and Edward Zorinsky of Nebraska and Republicans Charles Mathias of Maryland and Edward Brooke of Massachusetts. Ford is seen as a probable "no" vote. while Mathias and Long are expected lo support the treaty. Zornisky and Brooke, according to both sides, were "up in the air." FroMPageAI FAMILY .•• a purchasing agent for the city, said she told th.?m Paul had become despondent after the death of his only brother, David, in a January 1977 auto accident. The past year also brought the deaths of Mrs. McNee's mother and sister, and the elder McNee's father. Mrs. McNee told acquain· lances she was worried about Paul, who she said would vanish for weeks at a time without con· ta cling his family. The McNees recently bad to bring him home from Perry, Ga., after he was in a traffic ac- cident. The co-workers said the cou· pie became controversial figures in the community after McNee, a soybean farmer, began using sewer sludge as fertilizer. Several community members complained about the technique. Ttie McNees appeared on the CBS television program "60 Minutes" in 1975 because of lbeir stand on lbe sludge issue. Fire Victim Dies CINCINNATI (AP) -A 165th viclim of the Beverly Hills Sup- per Club fire has died nearly 10 months after the blaze at the Southgate, Ky . club. Lebarwn Rock eted ' By Israe li J e ts BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -The Israeli jet.t bolted out of tbe clouds. swooping in from tbe seulde and releuina,~hat one teen· age girl called "red bot arrows right into our home. The jets were rocketinl Palestinian and Lebanese refug~ camps in the capital. Jn three separate raids, a force of at least six warplanes hit Damour, 10 miles south of Beirut, and the Sabra, Ozal and Bourj Barajneh camps on the ed1e of Beirut, according to Lebanese air-coot.rollen and eyewitnesses. DESPITE ISllAEU Cl.AllWS THAT they were targeting only military objectives, numerpus sources aald clvWan centen and, in one cue, a boepital were hlt. Dr. Fathi Arafat, elder brother of Palestln.lan leader Yasser Arafat, said rocket.a bit a bolpltal uea ln Damour, bouslnt some 10.000 retuaees evtcuict from the delt.royed Tel Zataar camp duri~I the clvtl war. The 53-year-old doetor wu a•minln1 lnjured refufMI at the ••Jerusalem Hospital" just outalde Beinlt'a Sabra nfuaee camp. He led nportert to a ward, polDtJ:nc to a woundtd woman and two whlte adm cootaiDlna COJ'pMI ol two cbllcba. '"DO TilB:a: LOOS UKB military tar1et1 to you,.. Arafat asked, OJMnlDf the 11c:u. "Tbey rocketed the campa ln· Sta r Chatter Actor Jack Lemmon, who will star in the new Broadway play, "Tribute," talks with actress Carol Channing, who's reviving "Hello Dolly'' on Broadway, at a New York restaurant. The occasion was a party celebrating the lhird anniversary of the comedy "Same Time Next Year." FrolRPageAJ DOCTOR ... elevator. Wounded Teen Under Guard Co11ncil TO Vote On P act WASHINGTON (AP> -With th~ coal strike 100 days old, leaders of the United Mine Workers are hoping their UD· predictable barsalninc council a.nd rebellious members will ap- prove a tentative contract con· talning industry concesaiona in two key areas. The 39-member councU, which torpedoed a proposed a1reement a month ago,. was arriving in Washington today to \IOte or the settlement reached TUesdey by negotiators for the UMW and soft coal ind\l.$try. UMW PreliMllt Arnokl Miller, who summoned ·the bargalninl council to vote on the agreemst this evening, said today that tbe contract gives the miners ao much of what they want that be "just couldn't imagine the rank and file turning it down this lime. "There's been some vast im· provements," he said when con- tact e d early today at bis Washington, D.C. area home. The new settlement includes concessions by both sides, but the industry appeared to have given up more -particul~ly in agreements on health care and wildcat strikes, two areas of chief concern to the rank aod file. If it passes ttie bargaining council, the agreement can be put to a vote by the 160,000 miners next week and bring to an end a bitter strike that the Miss Weaver claims in her civil action that Waddill failed to advise her that she was more than 22 weeks pregnant. Had she known the true state of her pregnancy, she adds, she would not h a v~ agreed lo an abortion. WALLED LAKE, Mich. CAP) Carter administration has been -A shotgun-toling t een-ager unable to curb. wbo 1'U wouPded in an abortive ;l'he 1 mtnen ioverwbeh!Dlncly school bus JU.Jack sbould be. • ro5ec~ a p.,,vious ,pact March dtar1ecl d a Hult, uys lustfn $ .-nd have hep J 1norloa a \Vatt .. Wbtte Lake Tovmsbip 'ftfdttal Judge's a.ct.to-work or· ' Pollce Qllef, wbo had ~previous der tnued under the T•ft· But she made it clear in her testimony Tuesday that she was advised at the Huntington Beach Free Clinic that she was about 21 or 22 we6*9 pregnant and went to Dr. Waddill with that un- derstanding. rao•in Wilb the youlb. '• Hartley Act. " Larr, Todd, 15, of \Joion Lake Mlller said the new proposal remained under guard at a P0t1· femoves all Janguaae deslcned tlae b01Pital today, after un-to give Ute mine owners some . dergolna 11\at&ery for two buJ.let control over .,aldcata atrlhs, in-. wounds to tbe stomach. cludin1 penaltles. on absen· Chatterton suggested to Miss Weaver that she told a nurse's aide at Westminster Community Hospital that she was 27 weeks pregnant. The witness denied The bus driver and five atu-teeisp>. Ap,4' be said the eon- clen\a escaped Tuesday'I inci· troversill bealtb. Cal'i: dedUC· dent uni.Qjured. (lblea bad been· removed on h~pital treatm~t. , the suggestion. And Miss Weaver denied un- der prosecution questioning that anyone at the Huntington Beach clinic told her that s he was 28 weeks pregnant. Bombing Claimed CONCORD (AP) -The un- derworld New World Liberation Front bas claimed responsibility for bombing a power substation and knocking out electrical service to about 50,000 Contra Costa County customers. HOW TO ADD AN "ANTIQUE GALLERY,, LOOK TO YOUR HALL? WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB ~~.....+t- BRITT ANY CHEST & MIRROR The first things guests see when they enter your ho me ... this authenticate styled, exquisitely antiqued Hall.~~­ chest and Mirror. How impres- sive the rest must be! Not oply does this beautifully scaled traditional design look elegant, but it also offers display and storage space for your posses· sions. It is silk screened and hand decorated over rich cherry veneers and pecan solids. Visit our Drexel-Heritlge Gallery today and see what the world of home furnishings Is afl about. · , ''The deductibles only apply to doctors now," he said. "It's just a nominal fee .to keep abuse down." Miners would pay a portion of their medicine and doctor bills, but nothing for hospitalization. sources close to the talks said. Initial r eaction from the coalfields varied. Profession-' lnteriof Design ~ Obliglltlon Comfortable P~lng • ConvenlC'llt F'inandng dl•c::U~u tn nmoutl.,. faUpea rualMd ln1o ·the ward earnlq a 17·year-o1d relu1M llrt, bWedinc Pft>fuaely. ·* -· -''Tiie Jewa fell on OW' beacll tiom tbe ab and spurted anon 1514 NORTH MAIN SArffA ANA • 541-4391 of re«bot ·~ ~ lnto our bome, .. •aid .~_~~~ Suad llaJeb. ''Tbey lla1td I• than two "*"'-• dlai~ btllf11 then ume back iDd bit aplD." Tut Wed. Thura.. IM')d Sat.: 9-)() to !5t30 MOOJ 12 lo 9 • f ri.: 9-.)() to 9;00 I ., .. •I : I . • "' ..... _,.... ·Orange Coast EOITlON .. .OL. 71,NO. 74',.tSECTIONS,'6 PAGES ----.... t L r ..... - ORANGE COUNTY, ~ALI FORNI A , Today's Clo Ing N.Y. Stoeks C TEN'.CENTS t srael Grab$ Lebanese Territory ~aimous Vote Ed McFarland .. 'New CM Mayor 0.11, l'llet S\Mt -.. HE'S THE NEW MAYOR Costa Mesa's McFarland esan Nabbed, ~sSeized ln·Lqguna Fifteen pounds of high grade axacan and Colombian mari· uana, stuffed in plastic garbage bags, were seized by Laguna each poHce Tuesday afternoon . nd two Orange Coast residents ere arrested. Booked for sale of marijuana and conspiracy to sell mari· juana were Darlene Olga nyder: 36, of 31562 Sc:cnic Drive ln South Laguna and Robert Charles Weinberger, 24, of 3117 Coral St., Costa Mesa. Laguna Beach s pecial in· vestigators, backed up by delec· ives from Newport Beach, followed the s us pects from Laguna !leach to the South Laguna address al about 1 p.m. Tuesday where the arrests were 1Jlade. Investigator Mike Slusher said officers discovered the bagged m ari1uana. valued at about $15,000 on the street. inside the ome, occupied by Ms. Snyder. The investigation began In L agun a Beach and officers ~ked Newport detectives to as· lSl in following the pair into SQuth Laguna. Investigator Bruce Briggs aid the marijuana is of high quality and )Vould sell for about $500 a pound on the street. A . und could be broken down into -one ounce packages and sold for ,000, he sald. ,. Weinberger ls being held in (>ranjJe County Jail and Miss n)'der In the women's JaU in apta Ana. Coast Two· year city council member Ed McFarland was elected mayor of Costa Mesa Tuesday in a unanimous vote of the fi ve councilmen. Mary Sm allwood was elected vice mayor by her council colleagues. Both Mc Farland and Mrs. Smallwood were elected to the City Council two years ago when longtime councilmen Alvin Pinkley and Robert Wilson re· ti red. The selection of Mct·arland and Mrs. Smallwood came dur· ing a special meeting at which the council's newest member, Arlene Schafer, was sworn into office along with re-elected in· cum bent Norma Hertzog. In a brief address, the newly installed mayor pledged to work as a team leader for the five· member council, coordinating and working with his colleagues. "The five of us will decide what's important and work for those projects," McFuland commented, noting he does not plan to "promote my own proj· ects." Mc Farland, who owns an in· surance agency, said he will convene a study session of the council within the next six weeks for the purpose of setting up a series of goals and, objectives for the city. In a ll&bt.ei-•eto. VcFuland noted that he would be presiding over a council in which women ar~ rn the majority. "I'm going . to have to be very, very careful about bow I describe them," he s aid of Mrs . Hertzog, Mrs . Smallwood and Mrs. Schafer. "But I do feel safe in saying Mrs. Smallwood i! the prettiest vice mayor we've ever had, since we've never had a woman vice mayor before." Nuclear Bomb Detonated By Chinese WASHINGTON (AP) -The People's Republic of China det· onated a nuclear explosion in the atmosphere at its Lop Nor test site in northwestern China Tuesday night, the Department of Energy reported today. Tbe test, the first reported since Sept. 17. was in the yield range of less than 20 kilotons, the department said. The Environmental Protection Agency said it w as activating Its e n vironmental monitoring system to detect and measure radioactive debris that might be c arried over the U .S . mainland. The Sept. 17 explosion also was estimated to have a yield of less than 20 kilotons. Radloac· live debris subsequently crossed over the United States in an air mass at 30,000 to 40,000 feet, but little residual ~leet was report- ed at ground level. ............... Forces Pledged To Stay JERUSALEM CAP) ~ Israel said this afternoon it completed its takeover of southern Lebanon and Prime Minister Menacbem Begin declared Israeli forces ( would remain there until an ar· ' rangement was reached t o guaratntee that Arab guerrillas would never return. "The operation ... was com- pleted today in the afternoon." Begin told a news conference in J erusalem. DR. LOUIS CELLA (CENTER) PONDERS LEGAL STRATEGY IN SAN DIEGO Orange County Physician With Lawyef'9 Robert HanHn (left), Keith Monroe Asked if the troops would re· main until Israel reaches an agreement with the Arabs to keep the gue rrillas out. be replied, "Yes, it is self-evident." Begin said the lsraeU army units reached their objectives and that Israel's long-term aim was to keep the area free of Palestinian guerrillas. Political Ordinance Pondered Or ange County supervisors moved today toward amending a controversial pro.visioq of a political reform ordirymce they enacted two weeks ago. Supervisors instructed County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to pre· pare a new ordinance that would, in effect, take away a rund raisilll advantage of in· cµmbeDtolllce bolclers. 1'hat advantage came when the reform ordinance excluded donati.oGs already received from a Sl,000 an elect.ion limitation. Supervisor PhUlp Anthony suifested today that tbe $1,000 individual donor Umitatloo not go into effect unlll June7, the day aflertheprimaryeledion. Anthony conceded the or- dinance favored "incumbents who traditionally begin cam· palgning and fund rais ing earlier than other candidates." He also acknowledged that, as written, the ordinance appeared to favor one group over another. ·'They <challengers to incum- bents) have a valid concern," Anthony said as he denied there was any intention to favor in· cumbent officeholders in the or· dinance. The Westminster supervisor went on to sugge6t that tbe full ordinance go into effect as scheduled March 30 but the sec· tion limiting the amounts can· didates can accept from in· dividual donors lo $1,000 an elec· lion be held until after the June primary election. Kuyper was instructed on a 5 to O vote to return to the board next week with the amendment delaying the donation limitation. In addition to invoking the donor limit, the reform or· dinance establis hed a county fair political praciices com · mission. Boom Mistaken SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A sonic boom Tuesday was mistaken as an earthquake by people from San JosetoSantaCrua. Cella Renews Bid Jo an opening statement at the news conference, Begin said the attack "was in the fullest sense of the word, the use of the in· herent right of legitimate self· defense." For No _Contest Plea He said the army "was not sent into southern Lebanon for the purpose of staying ther~." adding that Israel would seek agr eements aimed at insuring that "ill all those places : .. from which the murderers have been ejected they should not re. turn to them." By TOM BARLEY Ol I .. DllflY ...... SIMf Dr. Louis J. Cella Jr. bas re· newed his bid lo be allowed to plead no contest to 127 felony coynts on which he will be tried starting Thursday in San Diego County Superior Court. Conceding that "the court will find me guilty and I will be sen- tenced," Cella said today that the purpose ol the new appeal is "to ••ve U'9 ~rs $200.@ lb the toeta ol a u -month trfal and the trauma and tr,mendoUs • personal expense to mjself." The ctoeumeDt •U.& flied to-day ln ltie San Dl910"'lowt con- demn. the oppotltlOA of the Oran1e COUbty Diatdct At· tomey's Office to the no coot.est pleas Cella offered to fUe Tues· day in San Diego.'• Lawyers familiar with the Cella case described bis offer to plead no contest as refiecting Cella 's desire to avoid legal ac- tion that former business partners might take if a guilty verdict is returned in the San Diego trial. A no contest plea is not an ad· mission of guilt but is rather an acceptance by the defeodanl of any penalties arising out of the criminalcbarges. "It is incomprehensible to me why any public official would force this burden on the tu· payers when I am willing, without qualiflcallon, to enter pleas upon whloh I will be round guilty or every charge made," the statement by Cella reads. Defense attorney Keith Munroe made the statement available today in Santa Ana at the time that Celia's law1ers were filing the de>Cument in San Diego. Cella argues in the statement that the continued opposition of the Orange County District Al· tomey's office to a no cont.est is "not rationally explainable." Ass istant District Attorney Michael Capizzi, who beada the Cella prosecution. was not available for comment today. But he commented TUesday ln San Dle10 wblle opposln1 the move by Cella'• Jawyen, "I am holding tight for a guilty plea." Superior Court Judge William Yale ordered Cella, 54, to go on trial Thursday after rejecting the opposed defense offer to plead no contest to charges of . grand theft, fraud and embezzle- ment. Cella was indicted by the Qrange County Grand Jury on 127 felony counts based on al· legations that he defrauded boepitaJs· ~Uecl by him u s ecretary-treasurer of an estimated S2 million. It is alleged that most ir not all of that money was used by Cella to fmaisce political candidates who m• with bis approval. Cella Yiu convicted in Los AngelM Federal Cowt of felony charges related to those same allegations aod sentenced to five years in prison. The Santa Ana physician is scheduled lo begin serving that term April 3 in the San Diego federal facility but will be re· leased during court action for the duration of his Superior COU.-\ trial. Train Roh<led · COSENZA, Italy (AP) -Five masked bandits held up a passenger train near this southern Italian town and made off with all the valuables kept in the postal car, police reported. Asked' if the Israeli attack would impair Middle East peace talks with Egypt, Begin said if "Egypt seriously wants negotia- tions with Israel . . . all the events ol the past few days will not present a serious obstacle to · peace negotiations." Thousands of Israeli troops routed Palestinian guerrillas from key bases ac~ southern Lebanon today and Israeli warplanes 1ired rockets that kJlled Arab refugees in camps around Beirut, witnesses re- ported. Syrian gunners in Lebanon claimed to have hil one Israeli plane. Across Lebanon, reports of casualties among Palestinian and Lebanese refugees mounted toward SO and there were indica- tions of many more dead and wounded. King Ktialed of Saudi Arabia appealed lo President Carter to intervene lo end the fighting in south Lebanon, the Saudi press agency reported. Israel said the aim of the as· <See ISRAEL, Page AZ) * * * Israeli Raid Victim Tells of War Horror BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -"Tbe Jews fell on our beads from the sky and spurted arrows of red·hot fire straight into our homes," a badly wounded 17-year-old refugee girl said. "They stayed less than two minutes, disappeared briefly then came ~ack and hit again.·· SHE SPOKE AS SHE WAS taken into a hospital ward today just outside the Sabra refugee camp here. Outside, in a corridor, a mother wept on the shoulder of Dr. Fatbi Arafat. brother of Palestlnlen leader ·Yaaser Arafat. "Please save my son. His belly ls open, bis arm is cut oft. 1 want him to live, please." · She looked at reporters and aho\lted: "Write, write! Tell the Israelis that l still have two sons! They will grow up Md take re· Wea Cher Sun'y and slightly warmer Thursday "(ith bigha 74 to 78. Lows tonight. lo St. Jtlore Le .. ed tors~ venge!" .J THE ISRAEU JETS BIT refugee camps at Damottr scMh of I A WOtM1 wlao counted fin tMJlth, "°' ,.., f'nOt'lq, be· QWOtled to Mr clttldrtn ond grondchillhn u. tTff• ond Mnlb• tlwlt otfn "ho°"' for tf1n.1 o/ tntfon." And her chUd,.n 1ofd, "We 're rlclwr "In~ AJO. N-M Buses inf or Rep.air Crown, for Crown, for Crown, for Beirut and the Sabra, Oiai and Bourj Barajneh camps on tbe out-· { skirts of the city after Israeli around troops crossed into Lebanon I to attack Palestinian guerrilla stronahotds earlier today. Tbe raids followed a PaJeaUntan auerrilla attack on Israel Saturday in which more than 30 Israeli civilians died. 1 Despite Israeli claims that they sought only military tariets, numerous sources here said civillab centers, including a hospital,-' l were hit. , Da. AMl'AT POINTED TO a wounded woman and to two white aacu coot.ai.Din1 the bodi• ol children. "Do th-.e look like JDilltary tarceta to 70u?" he ubcl. ''Tbeyroek~~camps1Dcl1ammln.tel)', "Mtaid. Panlc.ttrleUn telUcffl acramblecl for ataettu an hour after tbe raid. fu.rtq a new alr attack. Some wandered aimlessly oot· a&de the Sabra~~ A 1'-year~d alrl, craclllna • t.ranstl\or radio, walled, ''Tbe Je.11 k11lecl my motMI'. our hoine WN burned. I bave only tbia radio. 'Where can l Co now?" Nobod1 paid attentloft. • I ·1 •. . , : I .OFFICIALS PONDER NEXT MOVE AT SEWER BREAK Raw Sewage Continues to Flow Into Santa Ana River Beach Ban to Last Tiro to Three Weeks By GARY GRANVILLE Of ... Delly ..... - A broken sewer line that is belching raw sew!ge into the Santa Ana River and con· laminating Orange Coast beaches won't be repaired for two or three weeks, a county sanitation district spokeswoman reported today. Time needed lo repair the shattered sewer pipe means that portions of beaches in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach will remain quarantined during Easter week school vacations. Quarantined by the county health department Monday was the stretch of state beach nm· ning north of the Santa Ana River to Beach Bolulevard in Hunlinlton Beacb. Also quarantined was the beach nmnin1 south of the river to 56tb Street in Newport Beach. Those quarantines are not tikely to be lifted until a few days after the broken sewer line near the Garden Grove Freeway is repaired. county health officer Dr. Morton Nelson said. In the mnanlime, the county sanitation distrfcl today will begin chlorinating the estimated four million gallons of untreated sewage that is being disgorged · dailyintotheriver. However, both sanitation and health officials warned that the chlorinating process won't effec· lively relieve the existing health hazard. "We'll be cblorinatln~ to cut TONIGID' OCC LECTURES -"What's New in Nutrition," Student Center, 7:30 p.m. "Survey of Parapsychology," Flne Arts 119, 7:30 p.m. "'VOLPONE" -South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday. Sunday through Ar>ril 23, 8 p. m. T.litJRsDAY.MARCHlt OCC LECTURES-"In and Ouu of Boat Buytni,' • Fine Aita 119, 7 :30 p.m ... Human Sexuall· ty, .. Science Lecture 2. 2:30 p.m. ~COMT c l •f;1i'1!ll(t1I . ;Ill; down on grease and odors. We simply can't chlorinate enough to disinfect," the sanitation spokeswoman said. • County supervisors today or· dered sherifC Brad Gates to in· crease patrols along the lO·mile stretch or river impae!ted by the sewage. Si.m ultaneously. supervisors ordered health department of. ficials to advise school ad· ministrators to warn children to avoid contact with the river's contaminated waters and s ur· rounding environs. The ruptured sewer line col· lapsed Sunday when rain· swelled river waters undercut its foundation. Sanital)on districf, offiflfl' said ma~rials needel to reJ*jl" the line will be delivered to the site Monday and what will be a permanent repair will be"ln. That t.¥k is Jiiel.Y to take an estimated .two ~ ttirr weeks, according th officials. FroMPageAl ISRAEL •.. sault was to clear a guerrilla· free strip along its northern frontier and deter repetitions of the terrorist raid last weekend in which 34 Israelis died. It was believed to be the biJU(est Israeli attack ever, and the Paleatin· ians said 25,000 Israeli soldiers were involved. The Palestinians denied they lost some of the ground wit· nesses claimed they had, and said fighting continued in the border areas 18 hours after it began at 12:30 a .m . local time (2:30 p.m . Tuesday PST). Io three separate raids, a force of at least slx warplanes hit Damur, 10 miles south or Beirut, and the Sabra, Ozia and Bourj Bar~b camps on the ed1e of Beirut, Lebanese air controllers and witnesses saJd. Numerous sources said civilian centers were hit. Hospitals at Tyre, in southern Lebanon 12 miles from the Israeli border, said at least as persons were killed In naval and air strikes. The artillery barrage touched off several fires in the Rtsbldeyh and Bourj el Sblmall eamps, many or whose 22,000 \J .N .·registered clvlUan real· dents were evacuated in an· tlcipatlon of tbe Iaraell of· fenslve. But ambulances with alrens wailiqg and Land·Rovers driven• by guerrlllas wen seen 11oeedloa out ot the camps with ru11 loadi of vlctlm.s, and armed euerrmu were seen commandeerinl t.uiJ to transport. caaualtlea to hospitals 1n Sldon, 25 mUes north of Tyre. Health Mlnlster Ibrahim Sbelto qrdered ho1pttala th.rouabicM the country to ata.y OP" araund the clock beeause of the ea.ualtt• and appealed for natWfwt<M blood ®•tlona. Lebaoll•1 ll01l•m .pnmler, SaJlm el lloa, called tb• ln· vuloa ·~td,.=~·· llDd a~ for aUoea1 -t!R9nmU. to bml lt to a cau.tck tnd. But u.e wu DO lm· · mtdlate comment from Ul1 eotanut._ Cbl1it4aa .,..idtnt. Ellats..tdl. . . Jaraall m1.;.1e ~ Md 10ftl· ,,_.,....-----~ ... J.lt••ed a ~-.... PaJ u e•pe i1t = ot llflMl~,.!t CM Plan Approval Sought · The Costa Mesa Plannlng Department is seeking City Council approval or a one-year moratorium on general plan amendment requests in order to 1. halt what city planning aides describe as the current ''piec~meal approach" to fily planning. Planning starrer Doug Clark outlined the request during a council study session Monday, saying the time lapse would al· low city staff members to pre- pare two documents including a non·technical "laymen's re· port." The moratorium would oot block rezone requests on in· dividual lots or small parcels, said Clark. It would not be a building moratorium. However, it would eliminate more sweeping general plan change requests for one year B llo A•"G!f beginning June 1 of this year. a ons ...... Requests made before June 1 would be reviewed and acted up· on durinc consideration of the general plan in October. The general plan review pto- gram is an ongoing state· mandated, planningtooL , The traditional approach is to include nine sep14"ate elements including land use, traffic circulation, housing, conserva· lion, seismic safety )Uld J10ise. However, Clark said the staff would like lo combine these ele· ments into a type of environ· mental impact report. ·~In short, Clark said, the first stage or the new general plan should answer the question, ''what .do we have and what do w~ want?" Citizen input would be solicit· ed during the one·year moratorium as well as sugges· lions from all city departments. The process would result in two planning documents. the firs t in a technical format similar to a municipal code. The s econd planning document would include graphics and other visual aids to be more useful to laymen. State guidelines require citizen participation in the ~eneral olan process and city of· ficials are considering an opin·. ion research poll to reach th~ greatest number of Costa Mesa residents. .i A ~iJnilai-poll in the past cost q>e c1(y abC>ut<st,800: • • Clari{ said the city could be accused or "spot zoning" under the current general plan process which g«lerally has been con- fined tQ 9'Cli<Mi& of the city. The lniratbtium ...-olllct allow the city to get a more complete picture of the cily and its future development direction, he said. City department heads will meet March 21 lo consider the moraloriutn request before it goes to the City Council, Clark said. Son Arrested In Slayings Of Family MONROE, Mich. (AP) Howard and Emma McNee lived through a year of tragedy. Then, along with their daughter Jill, 17, they died of multiple gunshot wounds. 'their son, Paul, is charged wiOt their slayings. The McNees were to be buried with their daughter Thursday. Paul, 23, was held without bond in the Monroe County Jail Tuesday after being arraigned. Besides murder, he was charged with three counts or using firearms while committing a felony. The Monroe Coun1y sheriff's department said the younger McNee admitted the slaytngs in a statement Saturday alter lead· Ing deputies to the bodies of his mother and sister, burled in sno'w by roadtldes in two southeastern MJtblgan counties. His father"! body· had been round in a third county Friday by deputies acting on an anonymous telephone tip. Co-workers or Mrs. McNee, 59, a purchasing agent for the city. said she told them Paul bad become 4etk>Ondent after the ddth ol ht. only brother. David1 in a January 19'11 auto accident. The pa.st year also brought the deaths of Mrs. McNee's mother and slater, ao<t .the elder McNee'a father. • Mrs. McNee told acqualn· taocea sbe was worried about Paul, wbo sbe 1ald would vanllh I~ "eeb at a t,lme wttboU\ con· .ta~tln1 b1a fatnlly Tb~ MeN ... z~ently hid tA> brlpf hlm bome · f~~ Perey, Ot .. after be was In a tralflc a~­ cldent. 'l'be co-~en said tbe eou· pl• b•c•~• controveralal ft1utt• 1n the community aft.er KtH••· a IO)'beaa farmer, bef aD UliOi •••er •hldl• ta ftrllllser., Severa) commun.lly mtmbin complUned about the ....... n. )I~ ... ~ OD I.be Cll t•lmaJoa ~ •lto lllltateil" Jll f7S bff HH' of tWratllDd .... ~ ...... f • Members of the Harbor Area Boys Club launch balloons in contest to see whose balloon will fly the farthest. Launching festivities Tuesday at Eastbluff branch of Boys Club in Newport Beach was part of Boys Club Week observance. Tags on balloons ask finder to return the document to club. There's a prize in it for the boy whose b(JUOOn travels farthest from the launch site. Pact Change OK'd; senate'Aye' Nears? WASHINGTON (AP> -Presi- dent Carter agreed today to ac· cept a change in the proposed Panama Canal treaties as three more senators aC!ded themselves to the still elusive handful of votes needed to win Senate ratification or the agreements. Democratic Sens. Russell Long of Louisiana and Dennis DeConcini of Arizona announced they will support the agree· ments turning control of the waterway over lo Panama by the year 2000. They were joined by Sen. Edward Brocke of Massachusetts. "We do not own the Panama Canal," Long said in jumping from the dwindling list of un· committed senators. "We have a lease on the property and the landlord is demanding that we get out." At a mid-morning White House meeting with DeConcini, Carter said he would not oppose DeConcini's. proposal that lh~ treaties permit the United States to intervene in Panama to forestall any threat to continued canal operations. Meanwhile, Senate leaders professed optimism that the treaties would draw the needed two·thirds vote. "I think the votes will be there," said Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd. Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker, also a treaty :;upporter, said , "1 don't think there is going to be rejection.''. Nonetheless. there was tn· tensive activity by supporter~ and opponents seeking last· minute votes. · • DeConci ni 's a mendment would allow the United Stat.es to use military force even if Panamanian labor troubles or some other internal problem in· terf er-ed with the passage of ships through the canal. HOW TO ADD AN "ANTIQUE GALLERY" LOOK TO YOUR HALL? WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB ~~.....- BRITT ANY CHEST & MIRROR The first things guests see when they enter your home ... this authenticate styled, exquisitely antiqued .Hall chest and Mirror. How impres- sive the rest must be! Not only does this beautifully scaled traditional design IOC1k elegant, but it also offers display and storage space for your posses· sions. It is siJk screened and hand decorated over rich cherrY veneers and pecan so lids. Visit our Drexel-Heritage Gallery today and see wtUt the world of ·home furnishings is all about. S. Laguna's Don Niclwls. Deadat76 • t The captain of the 1923 football Wonder Team at the University of California, Donald P. Nichc>ls of South Laguna, died Tuesday after a short illness. He was 76. A right halfback during bis collegiate days. Nichols played three seasons on undefeated t.eams and was in the 1921 Rose Bowl game when California and Washington and Jefferson deadlocked. During 1923. when he was cap- tain, California posted a 9-0-1 record. Nichols, 825 La ·Senda Drive, Three Arch Bay, practiced law in Pomona for 50 years. He is survived by bis widow, Beatrice, a son, Donald Jr., of South Laguna, and a daughter, Anne Storrs of Arcadia, Calif. Funeral services will be private. PrafHSlonal fnterlof Design without ~ Comfortable Pattclng · Convenient Financing 1514 NORTH MAIN SANTA ANA • 541-4391 Tues Wed. Thur\. and SM; 9:.30 to ~.JO Man 12 to 9 • frl.: 9:JO to 9.«> . . . ... WeanesGly, M1rch 15. 1978 J DAILY PILOT A:J ~Newport •osts Grand Pr~ Saturda11 ~..,,....kMI_ BETTY COOK FINISHING LAST YEAR'S RACE Newport Champ Wiii Defend Grand Prtx Title Feliciano' s Wife Denied Singing Fee Blind l'ntertamer Jose f'e ll- c1ano found the Judge on his side Tuesday when h19"111stranged wife tried to force hiWI to hand over the fees he received for performing in Las Vegas and Puerto Ri co OC Approves Projects of . Women's Unit A lis t of projects planned by the Orange County Commission on the Statu~ of Women was en- dorsed in relative sil ence Tues- d ay by Count,y s upervisors The three-month-old panel had been the subject of heated public debate before supervisors in past hcarin~s. but drew little comment at Tuesday's meeting Supervisors voted 4-1 to accept the 17-item list of projects which range from a symposium on child care to topics on employ ment, health, senior women and public service The man most critical of the commission in the past. Supe rvisor Laurence Schmit. cast the only v"te against the list or projects but did so without comment Supervisors Thomas Riley and Philip Anthony praised the com- mission's plan and said it was consis tent with past board direc- tions. Among projects approved by supervisors are a symposium on unmet child care needs, as well as an information list of child care facilities in Orange County. Commissioners also plan over the next 18 months to study job· sharing. in which two persons shure one fulltime position, split- ting its salary and benefits. A ccordinq to a report to s upervisors, the commission will develop a pilot job-sharing proj- ect using fi ve to 10 county gov- ernment jobs, then make the program's results available for possible use by other public and private agencies. Commissioners also hope to develop a statistical profile of Orange County women, main- · lain a list of women who might serve on county committees and commissions and review legisla- tion affecting women In addition, commissioners plan to study special needs or senl<v" women. " Orange County Superior Court Jud~e Richard Hamilton refused to issue an in junction that wo uld havl.' co mp e ll l'd Feliciano, 32, to s urrender a I I h i s performance lees to Feli- ciano En - terprises. His wife. nL1c1ANO Janna, is president of the com- pany. She filed suit against Feli- ciano on the grounds that he bad broken the contract they drew up in 1975. F e liciano's la wyers suc- cessfully argued Tuesday that a c lause in the contract provided for Felic iano to retain his performance fees if his mar riage to Janna failed. Feliciano sued her for divorce last Jan. 9 in a Superior Court petition that cites "irreconcila ble differences" in the 13-year marriage. The lawsuit which must now go to trial alleges that Feliciano agreed to hand over all his lak· ings to the company in return for a guaranteed Income of $100.000 a year and 50 oercent of the company profits. Mrs. Feliciano claims that her husband appeared at hotels in Las Vegas and Puerto Rico in January or this year and later refused to hand over the $80,000 in fees to lhe company manage- ment. Retiree Wins $1,500 Bonus For Suggestion Frederic J. Singer of Santa Ana retired from his Orange County government utilities engineer job more than a year ago. But Tuesday an employee sug- gestion be proposed before his retirement won him a Sl,500 re- ward check and made him the 10th county employee lo win lhe highest cash award offered for cost-saving ideas. S inger . who r ·!i r e d 1n January, 197i, l'UJ(b'-• ,: " s treamlined procedure lur processing utility rclot·o tion service orders lhat wi il s ave about $20,000 a yenr in staff hours. ' . Taz Collector's l'ieaes 81 ALMON LOC&ABEY .,..,, ................ It 'a that time again, mates. Tbt U.me wben tbe throaty roar of more than a score of big oUabore power boat.a bluta the qulet of Newport Harbor and surroundings on their way lo a point off the jetty entrance where they wnt sc.-.~ble for position of the start of the Bushmills Grand Prix race. Blast off lime is 10 a.m . Satur- Baby's MOther Testifies By TOM BARLEY OI .. o.il' l"li.t St.Mi Prosecution claims that Mary Weaver was 31 weeks pregnant when Dr. William Ba.xter Wad· dill attempted to abort her baby were denied Tuesday by a wit- ness regarded by the defense as the best authority on the issue- Miss Weaver herself. The 18-year-old Huntington Beach girl took the stand as a defense witness to tell an Orange County Superior Court jury that she was no more than 22 weeks pregnant when she en- tered Westminster Community , Hospital on March 2. 1977. She told prosecutor Robert C hatt e rto n that her las t menstrual period was on Sept 25. 1976, a statement which sup- ports the defense argument that she was 22 weeks from concep- tion when she agreed to an abor- tion The prosecution alleges that Dr. Waddill strangled Miss Weaver's baby girl after be learned that the saline solution he injected into her failed to kill the infant in the womb. The prosecution claims that -Waddill, 44 , of Huntington Harbour. throttled the child after warning another doctor in the hospital nursery that the baby must have undergone massive brain damage. Miss Weaver. who has sued Waddill for $17 million in damages in a recently filed Superior Court civil action. was subpoenaed by the defense to testify for him Tuesday. She suc~sfully avoided wait- ing newsmen and photographers on her way to the court.room by taking the judges' private elevator. Miss Weaver claima ih her civil action that Waddill failed to advise her that she was more than 22 weeks pregnant. Had she known the true state or her pregnancy, she adds, she would not have agr~ lo an abortion. But she made il clear in her testimony Tuesday that she was advised at the Huntington Beach Free Clinic that she was about 21 or 22 weeks pregnant and went to Dr. Waddill with that un- derstanding. Chatterton s uggested to Miss Weaver that she told a nurse's aide at Westminster Community Hospital that she was 27 weeks pregnant. The witness denied the suggestion. And Miss Weaver denied un- der prosecution questioning that aoyone at the Huntington Beach clinic told her that she was 28 weeks pregnant. day. Bt.ft ttartinl at about 9 a.m. the powerful big racing boats will start a parade from the Balboa Bay Club through the harbor, followed by hundreds of spectator boats and watched by shoreslde spectators lining the beaches of Lido fsle, Balboa Island and the Balboa Peninsula. Thousands more spectators will jam every inch of space along the Corona del Mar bluffs for a brief glimpse ot the sPffdJters as they roar away toward Dana Point on the first leg of tbe.19S-mile race at speeds up to 80 miles an hour. One of the strongest fields of offshore powerboats ever as sembled on Lbe West Coast la ex- pected to participate in the eighth annual Busbmllls Grapd Prix -the third time it t\-.s been held at Newport Beach. Being the finst race of the 1978 Saint Who? City Won't Recognize Pat By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI "'9 o.11, ...... 5UH Centunes of tradition since H1mseU chased the snakes from Ireland will go out the window in Seal Beach, where police in recent years have had to chase St. Patrick's Day celebrants and all their pink elephants out of fown . The 1.978 calendar al police headquarters would leap from March 16 to March 18, if the authorities beleaguered by riots tJ1 the past decade have their way. VEAR BY VEAR, pre- sumably as the attrition rate presented by time, age and the ravages of strong drink take effect, St Patrick's Day in Sea l Beach has tamed down, but 'twas not always so One year. those who are or were Irish , or on that special da y wished they were . s urged up and down Main Street carousing and generally giving the populace and police a bad lime. Police from surrounding cities were summoned to help quell the festiv1ties. if they could be called that. SUCH PUBS as Clancy's and the Irisher, on Main Street near the pier, finally resorted to closing down on St. Patrick's Day to save the premises so they would be usable for another year. Celebrants of St. Paddy's I • Day had a tendency to seek o ut thos e redoubtable establishments each March 17. for some reason, rather than perhaps quaffing at a Mexican canlina. Seal Beach Police Chief Ed Cibbarelli said today he hopes the luck of the Irish will be with bis officers come Friday. .. WE'RE IGNORING St. Patrick's Day this year," he explained. Questioned about Sed Beach's St. Patrick's Day position, police dispatcher Martha McKenzie, a fine Scottish lass, came right to the point. "Ssssshhhhhhhhhh . s he whis pered into the telephone. County Job Total Rises . in. F ehruary Th e State Employment D e velopment Department <EDD> reported today that non- agricultural e mployment in Orange County rose by 4.900 jobs in February. Not included in the EDD re· port was the county's unemploy- ment rate. State officials saJd they have adopted a new policy of reporting employment trends Other job losses were reported m retail trades, a loss attributed lo the layoff in retail outlets caused by the end of post holi- day season promotions. EDD analysts predicted s trong employment gains through June as agricultural, food processing and construction follow normal seas onal up trends. and then ronowing that in a rew ~---.-r Post days with the traditional un· ~ employment rate study. Figures included in the trend rro "enry K? report Indicate that Orange ..I. 4 Ll,i County's unemployment rate plunged in February with the NEW YORK (AP) -Former addition of 1.900 jobs. Secretary of Stale Henry Kiss- Thal increase raised the coun-inger will be named chairman of ty 's employed total to 693,900 the North American Soccer jobs. a gain ol SS.800 jobs over a League. the New York Daily year ago. News reported today. The report said factory Quoting from the first issue of JI' AIL REPOfrrS employment reached an all time the new soccer magazine, Soc-- high or 1~.700 jobs In February cer Express, the News reported RECORD SNOW despite the fact "two factories that Kissinger will serve to closed their doors and relocated enhance the credibility of the 0H1hore powerboat radnt season, the event will draw top dri vera ftom throughout tbe na· tlon, i ncluding the current world champion, 55·year·old a.tty Cook of Newport Beach. She wut be out to dtfend her victory hr the Busbmilla last. year when she actually finished second behind Billy Martin of New Jersey who failed to make the final checkpoint and was dis- quallCled. And Ma(tin will be back. With fire in bia eye -determined to vindicate the ~breaking loss that prompWd bim to Cive up racing. Following the DSQ, Martin flung his racing credentials down ln front of one of the j udges and was 'quoted as say- ing: "l won't be J!eeding these anymore." The Bushmills race launched Cook on her way to a third place in the naUonaJ standings, thus making her eligible for the worJd championship off Florida last fall. She won the cham- pionship race against national point leaders Joel Halpern and Joe Ippolito, thus adding two more rivals who are out for Cook's fair hide. And. there are others who can never be counted out of an off- shore race until the checkered Oag. Foremost among these is Bob Nordskog of Van Nuys. 65 year old veteran of the sport and the granddaddy of the sport on the West Coast. During his 25 year- racing career Nordskog has won more racing titles thap any other one driver. He also owns the world speed record of 90 mph in offshore boats. Anf:f there is also the happy lit- ll e Japanes e restaurateur. Rocky Aoki, who won the Bushmills the first year it was held in Newport. Aoki is re- portedly trying frantically to get a new boal ready Cor Saturday's showdown. ln addition to the 195-mile race for the big open offshore class there will be a shorter race for performance classes stock pro- duction boats, a modified class and s ports class covering about 103 statute miles. And to add to the promotion aspects or the sponsoring Bushmills Irish Whiskey fmn. a whiskey barrel race in the baclc bay will be held for the amuse- ment of the participants who will row the makeshilt craft around Newport Dunes Aquatic Park startln& at about 3 p.m. alter the ~" taoe6 are over. Cities Lose Harbor Tax VENTURA (AP> -In these days of ris..ing taxes. the Oxnard Harbor Dis- trict has taken a novel ac- tion and elminated its tax on Ventura County resi- dents in Camarillo. Ox- nard, Port Hueneme and Thousand Oaks. The district voted Mon- day night to eliminate the tax. which is about three cents per $100 or valua- tion, effective July 1. The district said the $300,000 the tax brought in was not needed, noting that it bas $1.5 million in reserve and expects a sur· plus of $100,000 this year. VAIL. Colo. <AP) -They've out or state... lea ue. had more snow at the top of Vail ----------------------------------------- Mountaln this winter than any previous season -450 inches. The old record of 440 inches was set in the winter of 1973·74. The record was set after 12 inches of snow fell from 7 a.m . Monday to 7 a .m . Tuesday, at the ski patrol headquarters atop the mountain. Gem Talk Beautiful Matching Wedding Bands That Symbolize the love You Share ,, By J. C. HUMPHRIES Cnnolog111 ~ I . Jarvis Reform ~Anarchy' MOR,E JEWELRY FABLES be~ bl/ ancW?lt p.()JM~ In the davs when superstition ruled the thoughts of many men (and women), It was bellelftd lt\at beautlful Jewels had m.glc powers. Of course, gemstones have no curative powers, and cannot really change one's person;:i:l" But. It wouldn't ha1te done m"ch to tell that to some people a few hundred years ago. By GAJtY GRANVILLE OllMDeily ......... , an estlrQated 60 percent off cur- rent property tax bills. Simultaneously, according to Citron's figures, 209 taxlnc agen· des ln Orange County will col- lectively tose $528 mlUlon lD property tax revenue lD tM com· ingliscal year. The county tax collector· treasurer 'aald lD h11 position paper that tt won•t be tbe mautve lou ol rewn'" that wUl be "tbe tDOet. Hrloas reault') ol the Jarvla intU.Uve should it re- eelve voter tn41anemnt. Ctll'on 1na~td lul1ted tb1t lt wlll ~ a re,ultlna lfOwtb Of alate aQC1 federal contrbl over local ccwenn.eell U..t will tit the 1J105t aerlou consequence. It can be ~tfd that the atat.e ;wUJ ~riue aales taxes one percat m ln1 • JO per· cent .....,. • lta&e lDeocn4 taut to Mlpi •• up tot' UM Mt rttf Is '*"9~ "Everyone understands that when federal and state govern· ments send money to local dl•- trlcts they tell the local districts how lo spend that money." be ar1ued. Cltron said one unldentlft«I state lecblator twice told blm tbe legislature ls likely to do away with locallY el.cted boardl of IUpervQora. •·we won't need them <~ IUP9Htlon) to tell tbem bow to 1P41nd •our• money, .. Citron ta.Id the legislator &old }>im. The t•" collector·treaaurtr went on to acott at a auueatJon tha• ftu)DtY lri the stale sun>lus can be ~ to ahoot the lolt revenue aap. '"Tbt St 7 billlon (state) tut· plua was not aceumulated ln cme year," Clttoe ai.lcL "Wbat tbt ata\e would do la aubleq.a.t yHn U the •tlie 1urph• II uted tbe flnt year 11 ~ ... ......,. TM'f l'leld aotl• tn their mouths to ntduce thlrt1 ilnd coot ftvers. In Juices, 99ate wu ~ to control IMMltV. wearing this atone wu said to makt the wfarer more qr"ebte. It elso cuftd "ts '"somnla and brouQht on sweetdrWmst Diamonds were •n entldott for polsonlno tnd wt-* ullld to cu... Jeun. diet •nd OUMr lt11, Oltmondt went worn on the fourtn nnoer Of the ltft t'lend ~st O..erw was • b'tlltf that• vein fed dfrecttv from that fll\gtr to tht 1hHrt. • E ;1 •• : , .. ·-·"'·- c-~ :4.f DAILY P1LOT We<tnedday, Match 15, 1978 NATION /WORLD I Q with~~ More Terrorism. Expected Tom~~'\' ftarphine HOLDING OUR NOSES: Those of us who reside along this best of all possible coasts got a little gift from inland Orange County this week, just in time for spring vacation. The present is raw sewage. This effluent is being disgorged into the Santa Ana River from a ruptili:ed~ 30-inch line in the riverbed about 10 miles inland. The ver mouth dumps out into the sea at the Newport Beach untlngton Beach shoreline. The sewer line b'realt--is in the Garden Grove area. That figures. • Officials have estimated that the untreated sewage is now fiowing into the Pacific Ocean at a rate of up lo S,000 gallons daily. TO MAKE MATTERS WORSE, agents of the Orange County Sanitation District got a look at the break late yesterday after water flow from Prado Dam was slowed down. Apparently the break was more like an explosion. The Thing& Are Always Falling Into a Rivtr line simply came to pieces. It may be weeks before they get it patched up. Meanwhile, of course, the beaches and surfllne have been slapped under quarantine because of the clear danger of mfeclions or disease from the sewage. At this writing. the quarantine area stretches from both sides or the river mouth to &ach Boulevard in Hunt· ington Beach and on downcoast to 56th Street Beach ln Newport. WONDERFUL. THIS little disaster visits us just aa we are about to let our schools out for spring vacation and youngsters will be rushing out on our beaches by the thousands. And you are Jen wondering how far the pollution will spread ii the sewage keeps gushing into the sea at the rate of 5,000 gallons a day. We have an avid surfer in our household and when he learned the news of the ocean quarantine, he asked what seemed to be a very logical question: "Well, why did they build the sewer line in the river in the first place?" Offhand, I can't answer that. But in our region, we don't really take our rivers very seriously. We build roads in them, golf courses and, obviously, sewer lines. THIS IS DANDY when the riverbeds are dry, which most of ours are most of the time. Every once in a while, however, like this season, Mother Nature abruptly turns on the faucet. Then we act like it's a big surprise when our man· made creations start washing away or falling into the roaring river waters. Maybe we need to remember how the riverbed got there in the first place. Woman's Role Probed LUMBERTON, N.C. CAP> -A 45-year-old housekeeper bas been charged with murder in the arsenic-poisoning of a (armer she Teportedly planned to marry. After questioning her, Robeson County Sheriff McLeod said the investigation was broadened to include the deaths of the woman's ASSEN, The Netherlands (AP> -Dutch offidals and mill· tant South Moluccana are wam- lnt of more terrorism to come despite a successful, commando raid that freed '10 hostaaea only 29 hours after three young Moluccans imprisoned them in a five-story government building. "More blood will have to be spilled," said one member of the Moluccan independence move· ment. "The Dutch must rec- ognize our claim to their sup- port '4>r the freedom of our homeland." "THERE'S NO WAY to stop them from batching these plots," said Assen city spokesman Chris van der Veen. ••As long as there are South Moluccans in jail, their com· rades will try to force their re- lease." About 100 marines of the anti· terrorist unit that ended a dou-ble Moluccan siege last year stormed the Drente provinctal headquarters Tuesday afternoon and captured the three gunmeo after they reported falsely that they had begun killing hostages. The terrorists were 19, 20 and 22 years old. "Our decision was determined by the fact that they refused to negotiate with us," said govern- ment spokesman Wim van Leeuwen. NO SERIOUS casualties were reported in the commando as· saull. The Moluccans shot and killed a 40-year-old civil servant Monday, and officials said 11 other persons were wounded or injured. They included four passersby bit Monday by shots the terrorists fired from the win· dows, a man who broke his leg as be jumped from a window to escape from the building, a hostage cut by flying glass as the marines stormed in. The terrorists were local youth15, but leaders of the in· dependence movement among the 15,000 Moluccans in the As· sen area repudiated them. However, the leaders warned or more trouble unless the govern· ment supports their demand for the independence of the South Molucca Islands from lndonesili. 'Swrk Visits' DUmpt Clms, Tea£hers Told ROMEO, Mich. CAP) -Jerry Freeman 1aya be realizes the school board can't legislate tbe birds and bees. But the board member says be wishes female teachers wbo decide to have babies would plan to have the stork visit during summer vaca· ti on. Freeman's suggestion during a recent school board meeting · was met with hoots of laughter. But, be saJd, "people often laugh at things that make sense." He Insisted he's serious -al least when It comes to teachers who plan to return to the classroom after the minimum six-weeks pregnancy leave specified in the Romeo contract. Such t eachers disrupt classroom continuity, Freeman contended. "It's like changing a horse in midstream -twice," he said. "Try as they might, no new teacher's method or goals are Claernicab Burn An explosion and fire at a downtown Steubenville, Ohio, chemical plant sent at least 50 people to the hospital for observa- tion after they inhaled chlorine gas. Two firefighters were in serious condition. Another 263 were treated and released from local hospitals. Tuesday's explosion, cause of which is not yet known, forced the temporary evacuation of about 2,000 people in a nine-block area. Benefit Tax Cut Likely Social Security Complaints Register in House W ASJUNGTON (AP> -Moves are afoot in the House, pre- sumably because of voter dis· content, to reduce the big in· crease in Social Security taxes approved last year to keep the Soclal Security system from go- ing broke. Any such reduction . could mean an income tax cut less than the $2S billion the president says he wants passed in 19'18, e lection year for the con · gressmen. The latest indication of im- pending cuts in the new Social Security tues came Tuesdil)' fror.i House Speaker Tbomaa P. O'Neill, wbo predicted that the House wlll revene itaell and rescind part of the tax increase passed last December. Cftlnrre ., ... UNITED NATIONS (AP) The United States, Britain and three allies abstained as the other 10 members of the Securi· ty Council voted to denounce the agreement between Prime Minister Ian Smith and three moderate black leaders for black majority government in Rhodesia by the end of the year. Britain and the United Stales pledged to continue efforts lo re- concile Smith and the three moderates wlth the guerrilla leaders who condemn the deal signed in the Rhodesian capital, Salisbury, 12 days aco. GI Seela l•'fl HONOLULU (AP> -A soldier who says he waa demoted from editor to reporter on a military newspaper after asking Defense Secretary Harold Brown an ''in· appropriate question" la seeking reinstatement. Attorneys for Spec. S Patrick Bigold filed a formal request Tuesday for review of the ac- tion, and asked Army officials for a response by Friday. The question asked about the rela· tionsblp of .the closing or military recreation facilities and drug problems in the barracks. Red. Ewe War MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet government appeared to be pre· oaring today for the escalation or the war against Erltrean reb· els in northern Ethiopia after (_1_N_SH_O_R_T_) the Ethiopian-Cuban-Soviet vie· tory over the Somalis in eastern Ethiopia. A commentary in the Com· munist Party newsRaper Pravda charged that the secessionists who have been fighting for 15 years lo free Ethiopia's coastal province were aiding "im· perialist designs'' in the Hom of Africa. Girls Panic; Mom lies Dead in Home BOULDER. Colo. <AP> -Two young eirls lived at home and went to and Crom school for several days while their mother's body lay in a second floor bathroom, investigators say. Jean Nicolai, 38, was found dead Thursday by ambulance atten- dants and sheriff's officers called by a ramily friend. The girls, ages 13 and 10, called the friend when they became concerned about their mother who had lain on the bathroom floor since Saturday. officers said. Mrs. Nicholai apparently died Saturday, Detective Sgt. David Alberton said. "ON FRIDAY NIGHT their mother was in bed but ill," Atherton said. "On Saturday they foWld her in the bathroom and they just felt she was un· conscious or ill and they didn't want to bother her. "On Sunday they began to think she was possibly dead and they didn't know what to do. "On Tuesday they realized their mother was dead and they panicked." DETECTIVES WHO talked with nei«hbors and the daughters said Mrs. Nicbolai had been ill for the past week but bad not seen a doctor and was not taking any prescribed medicines. Investigators said they didn't suspect foul play. Cause of death was not immedJately known. Mrs. Nicbolai had been divorced for about two years and the girls' father lives in the state of Washington, officers said. mother and two other persons. ... identical. I think most people ---------------------------------------- McLeod said Velma Margie Bullard Barfield app1nnUy was working as a housekeeper for two other persons who dJed. .. SHE WAS .JUST HELPING OUT with the housework and cleaning when the people got sick and died," McLeod sald. Mrs. Barfield was being held without bond In the Robeson County Jail in the Feb. 3 death of Stuart Taylor, 53, or nearby St.. Pauls. She was arrested Monday night. would agree that such a disrup- tion of the classroom is not &ood." Officials of the Romeo Educa- tl on Association say the teachers' bargaining unit ls not taking the suagestion seriously. Rain Pounds Gulf States Eastern Thaw Slowed by Cooler Temperatures Tem1f)ft"atures s• ,. . " ,, " ... .. " .1t Jt SI M " . .. .. .J:I tO !O .. » ·" :11 JS .01 '° u .. M •• .. 42 .. . 41 •• 10 lt • ,. n f1 " .01 . ., .. ,. ,. .., ., " ;: : IP II .11 M ti •2 • • *' SI ... U ,. ca010 ... 1a em . ., ... , ... IDlll .. , .. ~~.:-. IMut' ..... _ °""""' .... IUDDll ---••• PUBLIC AUCTION SURPLUS ~ ~ HAND MADE ORIENTAL CARPETS AND RUGS Released by overseas warehouses · To be sold to the highest bidder ' Due to our success auctioning our previous container in a short period of time we . have been approachect by. various overseas, wholesalers to auction on their behalf surplus goods. We have accepted only the finest pieces and have stipulated with the parties concerned that these goods will be sold at our discretion. , NOTE TO BUYERS: These rugs are of the highest qualities in all designs, colors, sizes and domains. We offer to the.publi? a ch~nce to acquire the finest Oriental rugs at low auction prices, encluding the following: t~ atfk et1Cj pert allk Oum&. Tab& Tebel Tebf1z'a, ~ Kaahens. Natns. Chin ... c.peta and rugs. Turtclsh rugs Clnefudlng prayer ruosl. Rusei.n c.uca.ians, Ruulan BoUkNra. Soumack Kellm. Balkan Tabriz's. Afghan. Indian and Pakistani pieces . THI AucnGM Wn.L TAKI PLACE THURSDAY, MARCH 16 AT 8 P.M. VIEW DAY OF AUCTION 1 P.M. . AT HUMTIMGTOMIEACHIMM 21112 PACIFIC COAS,HIGHWAY HUNTINGTON IEACH INFO: (213) 99H3.23 c.HOol*=t .. , " ., '.I . . . ' . . . . . • . . . • . • CALIFORNIA Tanker Terminal Nearing? LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ebero Secretary Jamee 6chles· ln1er baa indicated a breakthrough bu been reached ln Standard Oil ol Ohio's three- 7ear fight for California's ap. proval of a proposed Long Beach otl tanker terminal, the Los Angelea Times reported toct.y. "It's a breaktbrougb, but several more are going to be needed," said Air Resources Board Chairman Tom Qullm, who confirmed that Sobio bas agreed verbally to spend $80 million on air pollution cleanup equipment at a Southern Calllcmlla Edison Co. plant. JlaaS..1eaRrs LOS ANGELES CAP) -A man who apparenUy intended to jump from the roof of a downtown apartment complex rll'ed one near-miss shot before ( SI ATE ) quieUy surrendering to police, authorities said. Investigators said Thomas Brooks -s1mmoDS°"; ~. an ac- countant, was booked Tuesday for investigation of assault with a de· adly weapon. Oflfdal lalled SAN DIEGO (AP) -An assis· tant principal at Torrey Pines High School baa been arrested at his home and booked into county jail on two counts ot selling small amounts of marijuana, a Narcotics Task Force spokesman said. Pierre Simon DiGrignon, 44, of Leucadia was arrested Tuesday and was held in lieu of $1,000 bond pending arraignment today 1n Oceanside Superior Court, the spokesman said. Nfllke 1t' a.te E11ed SANTA BARBARA (AP) Gov. Edmtmd G. Brown Jr. says be wants the state Department of Resources to find out exacUy how much radioactive waste is stored in Cali!omia. Brown called {or the 11tudy Tuesday after touring the U.S. Navy base at Port Hueneme, where several thousand tons oC radioactive dirt are being tem-porarily stored. Trial Bill Sfttt. MADEKA (AP) -Madera County has received a $21.396 bW from Alameda County tor expenses in the Chowchilla kidnapping trial. A total of $8,936 of the bill is for Superior Court costs and $12,460 is for costs incurred by the Alameda County .sheriff's Department. ...... .._ ---··-·-· .. -- 'The Fon:' Honored Actor Henry Winkler, star of "Happy Days" and the movie "The One and Only" talks with Mark Goffeney, 8, while attending a Variety Club luncheon in Los Angeles Tuesday. Winkler received the club's Heart Award for "helping to bring joy, happiness and hope to needy and handicapped children." Sniper Illcident 'Probably a Rock' DIAMOND BAR CAP) -An incident ori'1oally reported as a s niper firing at a car carrying an expectant mother has ~n dis· counted because it cannot be proven, sheriff's deputies said Tuesday. "We didn't find evidence of any crime," said Lt. Gus Feederle. "It was probably just a rock... mediately after the car was al· Ttie California Highway legedly hit by gunfire. Patrol had received a telephone report from a woman who claimed she saw a man standing on a hillside with a rifle im· JI' ot,ers Reject Card Parlors INGLEWOOD <AP) - Voters in this Los Angeles suburb overwhelplingly turned down a proposal to legalize card gambling parlors. With all precincts re- porting, the vote Tueeday wu 7 ,581 against the 'Pl"O- posal and 2,262 in favor. City officials said 33,.279 residents were eliiible to vote in the special e~c ­ tlon. · In 1976, Inelewood voters rejected a similar move by a margin of more than 1,000 votes. HOWEVER. investigators were later unable to locate the unidentified woman caller to question her. CHP officer Casey Bos said she had reported that the targets of the alleged attack -i11cludine a pregnant woman -had left because the expec- tant mother was on her way to deliver her baby. The woman caller was the on· ly known witness to the shooting. She said the incident took place on Hiehway 57, which runs between Anah~im and San Dimas, but apparently left before sheriff's deputies ar· rived. They were unable to con· tact her later. A SHERIFF'S special weapons team was flown in by helieopt.er and armed with M·16 rifles to investieate. but the team failed to locate the alleged sni~r durine a 1earcb of the hiJls above the fr~way. "Whether it was a sniper or someone target shooting in the hills who miscalculated bis aim we don't know," said Sheriff's Lt. George Eckels. W'm a Suw Ocean Cruise at Long John Silver's 1. Always use clry string, wood and paper in your kite. 2. Neverwie 1DeW wire or metallic $trlng or cloth.. 3. Don'dly your ldte in the rain. 4. Don'ta'OIS ~r:rceu or hiahways when kite flying. &. Al'""' fly your kite awmy &om TV and radio ancennu. ·I. Ain,. tly your kire far from power ~f Don't rry to zeuieve kJre. caught •n power Un ea I e 60 Grand Prizes! Win one of 60 luxurious aulMs to NDAu and &he Bahama Out Wands -• four-day island holiday for four ~9 Norwegian Caribbean Lines'SM Sunward ll Get an entry form at any pertlctpattng Long John Sdver's, and find out instantly tf you're awtnner. 'Every Entry Form a Valuable Coupon! Even If you don't win a Grand Prize, every entry fonn ls a valuable offer for food or Icy cold C'1\l"A·Cola. llfADEMA9'X e So come on in. You could win the holiday of a llfettme. In addition to !ht CNIM.-wtnnm rwcatve round·trlp elrhne lrlftlPOltlllloft to MIMnl from eeleded cm... anil hcUI ar&b21'11• a dllf!Onl f.f two "'81111 In,,... ptlor to Iha O'\IM ~ Elllllf 81~ 81IJ*lh$&;1 ; 2 IU I -5.t MMf'I 26, 19'1&S••Jl'loli.rai.Md ,.. ... .,.,.can ti.found• ~19l.ong.klhn SD\/9r'• s..lood ~ II Wedneeday, March tS. 1978 DAIL v PILOT A:; Drug Pushers Hit , Doctors ' California <;racks Down on SACRAMENTO (AP) -A state crackdown on drue· pushing doctors was announced Tuesday bf otrtcials who said they thought 90 percent of the state's illegal pill m~ket may come Crom physicians. Richard Spohn, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's consumer affairs director, said the state would seek restraining orders against five doctors Tuesday . , HIS ANNOUNCEMENT came several days after a lengthy ac- count. in the Los Angeles Times focused oo the problem of doc· tors who prescribe dangerous drugs. Spohn said the state also plans legal action soon against seven pharmacies. He declined to naspe them, saying the case was stilDbeing formed. "THOSE DRUG·PUSBING doctors will be nailed and the full force of the law will be brought to bear on them," Spohn told a Capitol news conference be called to publicize the crackdown. Bob Rowland, executive s ecretary of the Board of Medical Quality Assurance, estimated 200 to 300 doctors in California are over-prescribing drugs. Spohn said the state bas 231 drug-related cases pending involving doctors. STATE OFFICIA~ unveiled a 24-member state task force dubbed Operation DOPE -Doc· tors Out Pushing Ejected -and said between 200 and 300 doctors are "bard core pushers." They added that no communi· ty in Califomla could consider Drowned Man Found in Sea SANTA CRUZ (AP> -The Coast Guard bas recovered the body of a 28-year-old man who drowned while on a sailing trip. A Guard helicopter spotted the body of Scott ALies or Capitola floating eight miles off the coast late Monday. Ailes was sailing with a com· panion when their small sailboat capsized. the Guard said. The companion, whose identity was not released, managed to right the boat and return to abore. itself immune from drug. pushing doctors or pharmacies that work with those doctors who over-prescribe. MOST OF THE ILLEGAL pill prescriptions are for stimula· tants and depressants, officials said . Dr. Kash Rose, president of the California Medical Associa· tion, said the CMA supports the effort to weed out those doctors. But he al.so said any estimate of the doctors involved was "just a guess" and added about Spohn: "U he'd quit having news con- ferences and do something about it, we'd be a lot better off." AS EVIDENCE of the need for the project, Spohn said state in· vestigators found that three doc· tors in the first nine days of March wrote nearly 1,000 pre- scriptions for 60,000 tablets. Asked it a 24-member team could have much erteet on the problem, Spohn said be was in part relying on the fact that word would spread that .. the heat was on." THE DOCl'OBS Spohn named as targets of the immediate restraining orders are: La.mar Desmuke ol. Oakland, Franklin Hendricks of San Jose, Chester Hurd of San Jose, Marvin Stem of Cypress and Kenneth Rascoe of Hermosa Beach. He also said an arrest warrant on a manslaughter charge was issued Monday for Dr. Rodney Chamberlain of Santa Clara in connection with the prescription of 5,400 tableta of Alcodeen for a patient who died of an overdose. Rowland said the state hall on, ly seen •'the tip of the iceberg. We want to go out and f"md oui what tbe dimensions are." Woman, 28, Kills Man In Break-in INGLEWOOD CAP> -A 28- year·old woman, alarmed by knocks on her front door, armed herself and opened fire on a man who broke in through her bedroom window, bitting him fatally, authorities said. Police Officer Albert Kemtler said early today the bearded man in his 30s was shot in the chest Tuesday night. He fled from the woman's house but col· lapsed and died on tbe street • few blocks away. KensUer said the man's identi· ty bad not been determined. The identity ol the woman, who lived in the house with her 6-year-old daughter, was withheld. KensUer said early reports in· dJcated the victim could have been the so-called "Pillowcase Rapist," blamed for 158 rapes ill the southwest Los Angeles area since 1975. But investigating officers said later be was not, because "bis height was wrong and bis weight was wrong." Parents Sente1lced In Child Torture LONG BEACH (AP) -Superior Court Judge Ellsworth M. Beam levied sentences of two years in county jail on Randolph and Willie Johmon for imprisoning their teen-aged, adopted daughter in her fllth-ridden bedroom. The Johnsons, who pleaded guilty to cbarge1 of false imprison· ment and child endangering la.5t Oct. 11 bad been due back in court Tuesday. But they were sentenced March 3, following 90 days or psychiatric testing in state pnson. THEY WERE ARRESTED In June 1976 after their natural daughter, Donna, '19, escaped from home and told officials of the plight of her adopted sister, Laura, 16. Officers who broke down the froot door ot the John.son bou.,,e to gain entrance said Laura was autferi.q from bruises, malnutrition and infectiooa and she weitbed oaly 61 pcnmds t.bou&h she was S- feet·2·lncbes tall. SPECIAL EVENTS BEGINNING MARCH 28 Got the fever? Join our Disco Dance Class! In just4 Lessons you11 be Dancing the night away to the current dance craze ... DISCO FREE STYLE. LATIN HUSTLE, NEW YORK HUSTLE, and the 2~TEP .•• Day and evening class!H. available ••• $35 for the session .•• call for registration 556-0611, ext. 371. And don't min our weekly dance d~ ••• Ewer/ 6!'ow is new and different ••• 12:00 to 2:00 pm ••• Saturday, Marth 18 and 8 ••• Dance Shop near Town end Travel Sportswear ••• Middle Level. TO CELEBRATE EASTER •••• THURSDAYS, MARCH 16, 23 and 30 Le CreuMt Cookware Class ••• Our Export, Coll«te Lockett, will take vou on a cooking journey of France• •• 10:30 • 12:30 pm or 2:00 to 4:00 pm ••• Join one cl• or ell three ••• $10 for one, $26 for the oomplete ..alon ••• Regimw in advanoe in Houl8Wlres. SATURDAYS, MARCH 18 8t 25 Storybook Reading for the Children from the delif#ttful Beatrix Potter col· lectlon ••• 11 :00 em and 2:30 pm ••• Children's Area, Upper Level. " 8ATURDAV,MARCH18 lnformel modeling of Duct.. Jufttor Loungaweer ••• 12:00• 4:00 pm ••• Vouno Attitude. THURSDAY, MARCH 23 end SATURDAY, MARCH 26 ••. 12:00 • 4:00 pm ••• Young AttJtudt, • ........ _ ' Wednesday, Ma1eh 15, 1978 Roberl N. Weed/Publisher Thomas Keevl1 tEd1tor Barbara Kreiblch/Edltorlal Page Editor orangeeoas1oa11yP1101 Editorial Page ................................................................. Mesa Freeway Needs Big Push If there's beenia mlssfng element in the 20-year fight to complete the Costa Mesa l'reewaf <Route 55) into the downtown area. it's been'the lack o heavy, visible com· munity support to back the contioaed efforts of city of- ficials and local legislators: . · · · But that situation is ehanging, due largely to the formation of a gr.<JUP known as ''Citizens For Completion of Route 55." Their aim is to submit' 80,000 signatures (from Costa Mesans and residents of other affected cities) to be taken directly to the state Legislature. While some may be skeptical about a "grassroots" movement soliciting signatures from anyone who can hold a pencil, the congested and dangerous traffic situa· lion on Newport Boulevard at the end of the freeway is worth such an eff-ort. Local residents and business interests should gjve full support to the groµp. The state Legislature's inclusion of funds for an environmental impact report in this spring's budget is essential to getting the long-ignored extension under way. It's been .a frustrating experience for Costa Mesans, but we owe it to ourselves to let Gov. Brown and Caltrans chief Adriana Gianturco know we 1efuse to give up. Petitions can be obtained by calling 751-1311. Curhnfg Track Noise SoWld level tests from last Friday night's motorcycle races at the Orange County Fairgrounds are not yet avail able, but apparently some headway has been made in resolving the ongoing battle between the city and the fairgrounds. A first step toward settling the situation came last week when th.e City Council backed away from a threatened lawsuit to test whether the state or the city has authority over sound levels from the races. Even though the race track promoter should have re· quested city permits before going ahead with advertising for the event, the council was hasty in denying the permits. The "test dates" to try out new sound reducing equip- ment are essential in establishing the direction of poten- tial s uit. . They s~ould not hesitate to test the authority of the fair board if the sound test results show that noise ex- ceeds the city standard. It must be remembered that last, Friday's races were toned down in scale (as many as 10 bikes enter a race during the regular season) and that the event reportedly drew only half its normal cr~wd. City officials will soon have firm data to establish what direction should be taken. Tough Line Needed A Costa Mesa city ordinance passed last August sets tough new standards on the conversion of apartments to condominiums. and the City Council has shown worthy restraint in complying with the intent of the ordinance. While conversion to condominiums is an advantage to apartment owners and the r esidents able to afCord the switch to~wnership payments, it a lso for~s many resi· dents to look elsewhere for housing at a time· when the city apartment vacancy rate is below two percent. Two of three conversion requests that have come before the council have been denied, primarily because of parking deficiencies. To allow the conversions would have set a bad preced- ent leading to other apartment owners coming before the council with variance requests. The council should continue to take a hard line on such requests in order to assure high quality conversions and ward off an excessive nqmber of questionable ap· plications. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd I Backwards By L.1'1. BOYD How many compet1t1ve events can be won by moving backwards? Tug·o·war certainly comes to mind. Then there's rowing. And how abdut the backstroke in swimming? Any ot.hers? Q. "What do the big-time modeling agencies charge tc> send you a girl who's willing t o pose for nude pJ:ioto· graphs? A. AboUt $SOI)'-' hour is .the going rate now at the pres- tige outfits. although some lesser known bookers only charge $250 an hour. It's not ~enough just to own your own camera, they aver. You're supposed to be a professional photographer. That keeps them out or trouble with the Jaw. Dear Gloomy Gus Studies indicate that Volvo drivers are nearly three times more likely than .Cadillac dri'Vers to buckle their seat belts. Q. "How Jong has· it been since the word 'obey' was cu stomarily u sed in the traditional m arriage ceremony~" · · · A. Which tradltlo1aal ceremony? Religious sroups have varied ~iderably. io this matter. Take the. U.S. Ptotestant £piscoptl Church •• for Instance. Its bishops deleted .. obet'• ·,,ay back in 1922. Easiest way to sharpen scissors, J'm told, is to cut up a sheet of emery paper. U it doesn't work, though, forget where'°" read lt. Jack Anderson Booze Flows in Washington WASHINGTON -Under abstemious Jimmy Carter, the White llou•e does not serve alcoholic beverages except for wine and beer. 8ut outside the presidential premises. the spirit of W. C. Fields still lives among ofCicials 1or subordimate federal agencies. Indeed, they have developed a s teady flowin g s ource of free gov- ernment booze. Their secret source i s t h e whiskey , vodka a nd other liquors seized by customs agents and tax re - venuers. The General Services Ad- ministration falls heir to this · bottled bonanza, which should ... exceed 30,000 gallons in a good year . An obscure law allows the GSA lo distribute its largesse Mailbox wiUfout charge to government agencies and private groups for "medicinal. scientific" and other appropriate purposes. SUCH PRIVATE institutions as hospitals. nursing homes and even convents. all known for their sobriety. stocked up with t ,300 gallons of liquor between October, 1976. and December. 1977. • One satisfied customer is a Little Sisters of the Poor convent in Illinois, whose spokesinan ex- plalned: "We give it tO the sis- ters when they have• cold." But the U Washington agen- cies that stocked lbelr liquor pantries with nearly 600 gallons of the confiscated hooch made few medicinal claims for their haul. The State Department uses it for diplomatic receptions and dinners. The convivial people at Coast Guard headquarters drank up their s hare at an an· nual picnic. Even the scientists at the National Science Founda- 1 lion preferred to consume their portion than to waste it in the laboratory. THE GREATEST demand is for champagne and foreign wines. confiscated from return- ing tourists who try to sneak ex- tra bottles through customs. Scotch is second on the list. Those who partake of the free government hooch are nervous al;>out President Carter's anti· alcohol attitude, which they view as a quaint idiosyncrasy. But they would prefer not to ad· vertise their access to the con- fiscated liquor. Here's where, nevertheless, the liquor flowed during the 15 months: State Department, 80 gallons; National Science Foundation, 142 gallons; GSA, 76.1 gallons; Air Force Academy, 73.3 gallons: Air Force Foreign Liaison Office. 25 gallons; Coast Guard, 31.2 gallons: Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 55.1 gallons; Marine Corps. 15.4 gallons ; Interior Department, 17.3 gallons; Chief of Naval Operations, 10.4 gallons. and AC- TION. 8.8 gallons. Some 75 privaJ.e organizations also took ad~antage of the free liquor offer. There were 25 nurs· ing born~ 24 hospitals and 15 cooverit.s. . POLLUTED POT -For over two years the United States gov· ernment has been helping Mex- ico control the production of marijuana by spraying fields with a potentially toxic herbicide called paraquat. As a result, the health of millions of pot smokers in this country may be endangered. Paraquat kills marijuana plants within two days. But Mex- ican farmers have been harvest· ing the crop within hours after helicopters spray the fields. Much of the marij143na that is smuggle<Mllto the United States. therefore, i9 contaminated . At the request of Sen. Charles Percy, R:·Ill., the Wh~te House reluctiµ\Uy initiated a study to determine if paraquat-tainted pot is hazardous. A White House report, issued in December. downplayed the danger. But we have learned that many of the findings are disputed by new scientific evidence. THE WHITE HOUSE docu- ment, for example, claimed that the maximum amount of para- quat "likely to be found on plant material is about 500 parts i>er million." Government scientists, however, have determined that the average contamination is nearly four times that amount. The White House also alleged that the United States was not responsible for the paraquat hazard because the ,Mexican government had purchased the herbicide in Europe. But we have seen confidential State Department cables that reveal the l,Jnited States has provided technical assistance for the paraquat program. Will Jarvis Plan Cripple Education? To the Editor: I find it difficult to understand the editorial policy of the Daily Pilot regarding the Jarvis·Gann tax limitation initiative. Infla- tionary values of real estate have increased to a point that many property tax bills have doubled. Homeowners are hurt by the re- sulting excessive taxation. Homeowners are further hurt by paying for the inflated property taxes of the businesses and services which they patronize. It is foolish to think that business owners and landlords will pay tax increases out of profit. Prices rise and the homeowner and/or renter pays the bills. THE STATE legislature offers to refund only a small portion of this recent dramatic tax in- crease and only as a token measure made under duress. After a year of debate over the s ubject it appears that legislators have intentionally at· tempted to delay action on tax relief hoping to keep the windfall tax dollars. ferred to let the private sect.Or have the first crack at catching Bubbles." Nowhere did it state that the Marines refused to help, as you so boldly stated in big black type. The Marine Corps does many good things for our community and country. Unfortunately, the press does not try to promote the positive side. For example. "Mar•ne Copter Crashes," (Fri· day, March 3, page 3). What is wrong with "Marines Attempt Dangerous Res~e?" And put it on pag~l. • MARTHA CALLIHAN ·EllA Jfe ... S•are To the Editor: I a m astonished at Mar¥ Moore's compa.Nson of ERA pro- ponents and Bubbles the Hippo <March 5 Mailbox). Yes. there have been "runaway wif.es" who could no longer cope with a load of ~elSJ>onsibllities without entirely losing their own identi_ty-and men have been exercising the same option for centuries. potential in any area she or he chooses. We can s hare the responsibilities -and have a beautiful timedoing it! , JANE POOLE Coordinator, South Coast Chapter National Organization for Women LegalTlaelf To the Editor: l am so angry at a statement by Huntington Beach City At· torney. Don Bonfa. He said that he was delighted that the transfer tax could not be used against people buying and selling homes in all cities or the state. We are hoping so much for the Jarvis initiative to pass to help us old people live in our homes and the whole thing could be nothing because the state can now call it a transfer tax and legally steal however much tbey want from the homeowner. BETTE CALLE ~ii•• Qllesii..m To the Editor: The recent election or two councilpersons to tbe Costa Mesa City Council represents a problem of ethics. Both received large s ums of monies from builders which I surmise was en· tirely for their election cam- paigns. . committee of ethics appointed by an independent citizens group (Jocal civic organizations> should set up certain guidelines of behavior, moral conduct and professional standards by which town officials must live. Most assuredly. public scrutiny of proposed zoning ap- plica tions . by the prosperous builders who are willing to part with large sums of money to prospective candidates is in or- der. Maybe the now-elected of- ficials should abstain from any voting relative to these particularly generous coffers. Is it any wonder that politics has been looked on by our young adults as a dirty word? Can anyone reasonably assume that our public officials can, on the oae hand, represent taxpayers favorably and also give rational decisions eoncerning certain builders? Let's hope tllat this last elec· tion left us with an education and a rude awakening. We must be cognizant of all the issues and how they affect the taxpayer. We must decipher which can- didates take affirmative stands and not straddle the fence. And, lastly which candidates are supported by big business and which candidates seek communi· ty support.? CONRAD TRIGlLIO Creaillt16-ra To the Editor: •• I Granted that new taxes will be required following the adoption of the Jarvis-Gann initiative, but those taxes will be straightforward taxes which ap· ply equitably to all citizens. Perhaps there will be an overall reduction of state expenditures once legislators get a public .mandate. For certain there will not be a reduction of pub-Uc ex- pense from the Behr Bill, and, under the Behr Bill there is nothing to prevent a recurrence of thts fiasco fu coming years. T HE EQUAL Rights Amend- ment means equal r e - sponsibilities. Proponents of the ERA are working for the day when women are able to provide financtal security for themselves and their loved ones through good job training and equal pay, when men a re able to help hold the family to~ether because their skills in providing direct physical and emotional s upport for others (that's housework and loving in- volveOMlnt) are as highly de· veloped as their skills in business. and when each person is en· couraged to reach for full bum.an Probably this bas been a prac· tice ~mmon to Costa Mesa politics. The time-to consider a study of standards of eonduct and moral judgment seems to be in dire need. A non·political What started out as a co~ plaint about the bike traffic at Te Winkle J unior High School, by me, bas led me to an even more justified complaint. • r, A MOST important point of· fered by the Jarvis-Gann in- • Uiative is the predictable in- creases in future property taxes. The known amount of taxes can be programmed into retirement p lanning and into housebold budgets providing a large d egree of security. Only 'the wealthy can aftord to Uve under the Behr BUI. Jt your opposition to this .Jarvis-Gann lnlUati\!O is cl°' OGl.t to fear for edueaUon qaalltf and pubbc aervicea, rell uaUttd tllal tbenl 9"' JaAris-Oano ad .. vocates ~ho will m.sn uPQll C()ft<o tlnulnl quality all6 and wbo will approve new 411\dtable taxee if required. ·Punch Through a letter from TeWinkle's principal, and my observations, I have discovered that the Costa Mesa schools have no cr ossing guards. Watching the little children try. ing to cross Baker Street in the morning makes me cringe. And we cun't expect our poli~ de~ partm ent to patrol every school every morning and ,afternoon • Many other cities have crossing guards !or their schools. Do we have to rely on the old "as soon as someone gets kWed -something will be done" syn- drome. l ho~ not, for lbe a.ake ot au our children. JACKIE HOOPElt . . . . I Ar Benihano of Tokyo, we prepare great Ameri- can favorites-like prime sirloin, chicken and shrimp . -according to a 1000 year old Japanese recipe. And we prepore them right at your table. So you con watch every move we make. Or at least you con have fun trying. Our chefs ore said to hove the fastest hands in the East. Watching a l3enihono chef in action is porr of the enjoyment of eating here. His flashing l~nife con turn prime sirloin into on oriental masterpiece. His rozorshorp blades slosh through fresh succulent shrimp, zing through ten- der boneless breasts of chicken, clip crisp, fresh - .. -·----------. ·- Wednesday, March 15, 1978 DAILY PILOT A 7 • I bean sprouts, mushrooms and onions into slender mouth-watering slivers. One taste and you'U knbw thot for once in your life, you've chosen the right restaurant. Everythings per- fect. (The Japanese wouldn't have it any other ww,) There are but a few places in the world where you con enjoy the superlative flavors and flare of a Beni- hano of Tokyo repost. And they're all named Benihano of Tokyo. Join us. For lunch or dinner. When it comes to great American favorites. our Joponese chefs really know their onions. BElllHADA al TOHVO (I] . ;. i• •• I I " A• DAIL y PILOT Wednesday. March 15. 1979 QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi ''The boss had one ol those put in his omce. I suspect he crawls in and takes naps." "Got.a ~~Mn write to l?ot Duma. P.at will cut red tcqw, o-1 tM.cml\Dllf'l.mld.actba J10U Med to 1olw fftequities " gowrnmetd. and buanen. Mail your questioM to P.ol Dunn, At Your Snvice, Orange Coast Doily Pilot, P.O. 80% 1560, Cona Mffil, CA 92626. As manu leHers.as possible will be.an.noet"ed, but p/ton.ed inquiries ar letters wt including the reader's full name.Olidreu.and business hours' phone num f1er ccmnot be considered. This column appears dai- ly ezcept Saturdays.•• 0targe Otlt of lofrtt DEA.Jl READERS: Tbe Darua of Aatomoehe Repair reports tltat K·Mart Enterprises of CaWornla has •creed to a •• Mldemeet la a suit dtarglae lt wUJa defraudi., cas&omers by making fabe statemnts and wmeeeaary auto re- pairs. Wlu.at admlttlllC wroqdolne, K·Mart us agreed to speDd $11.4tz for upcradlDi &be educe· tion and tralnlng of employees lD lts auto repair facllltlee throughout the state. The firm also agreed to pay $15,000 to the l.Dvesd&atlq and pros- ecuting agencies. Tbe settlement with K· Mart, which bas 19 state. registered repair sbops, stems from a dvil suit flied by the Alameda Coanty district aUoroey. Tbe com· plalnt charged three K·Mart IAora witla aetna.a aa• needed balljoblt aaembUes. The Bareaa of ADCOIDotiff ltepal.r t.epa Its ln· vesUgaUea after neelvlq awaenas customer complalats. "Uadereo•er castomen" were charged ap to $15' for replacement of brand new ballJolaU. Tlte eomplalnt ara)ast lt-Mari says t\ia\ •hen customers requested a trout end died ol a vehicle at Ute three K·Mart locatlou. an empleyee woald :attach a tool to tlae ball joints aad delDOUtnte bow they wiggled. Cus&emen abo were told the vehJcle would be daqieroos to drive l.D that condl· Uon. It further aDeged that K-Mart used similar tact.Its when a cmtomer loqulred about wlleel alignment. K·Mart also was accused of vtolatlnt Use Automotive Repair Ad by faillDg te ctve ~ estimates of repair work, not reta.rnins old parts to the customer when requested la advaace aad fall· ing to record odometer readlngs oa repair orders. Bureau Chief Robert N. Wiens noted that since filing the original action, tbe bureau adopW trade standards requiring all repair shops &o follow minimum procedures in sale and installation of ball joints. Those who believe tbey have been victims of rraud or questionable repair practices are asked to write to I.be Bureau of Automotive Repair, 3111 Bradshaw Road, SacTamento, Callf. 958%7, or ID ~~~e of emer1enc)' call toll-free (800) 9SZ·5Zlt. ftlrtt f'htaUg Remit• C1Ula DEAR PAT: l ordered six items lut June from Continental Collectors <also known as The Continental Mint>, and enclosed a $ll2.50 check in full payment. Only three or the items were shipped. I've written four letters asking tor the rest or the merchandise or a refund of $53.35. I'm wri~g to you as a last resort. J .A.; El Toro A YS sent a letter or l.Dqulry llDd C!11111es f/l you correspoadeaee to Tile Coatla 1 taJ llbd. AIUloaOI we received DO answer, )'OU wrote tit repon u.e ar- rival of a $53.35 refan4 -aad &Ut11 wut eoaatl! ... - \ JC Penney ~FASHION ISlAND fZ1 NEWPORT CENTER slightly damaged furniture and appliances. Sold as Is. Hurry, quanti~ies are limited. Many one of a kind. BEDROOM . FURNITURE selected pieces; included are chests, desks, headboards and more. Shop early for best selection .. Group 1. orig. $89 -s119 Group 2 orig. s11.9 -s149. Group 3 orig. $158 -s219 Now $55 Now_ $66 Now $99 Quantities limited to stock on hand. Living Room & Dining Room & Dinettes Family Room \ selected pieces; included are tabfes, chairs and more. selected pieces: included are sofas, sleepers and chairs. Shop early for best selection. Now Group 1 $155 orig. s339 -s399 Grouo 2 orig. s34'g. s449 Selected accent tables, from sss. Group 1 orig. $35-S38 Now Group2 s33 orig. s57 -S91 Now Group3 s55 orig. s7 4 -s123 Now ~f g,~~ · s31oNoi188 MA TIRESSES & FOUNDATIONS selected separate pieces (mis-matched) in twin, full, queen & king. Group 1 orig. $74.95 -S79.95 Now $33 Group 2 orig. sae.95 -soo.9s Now $ 44 Group 3 orig. s133 -s19s Now $88 REFRIGERATORS WASHERS & Selected models only.* DRYERS ~r.~~.e .too.95 • I Now s222 ~!~.e-~.95 Now s333 ~r.~.g-~779.95 Washers*, selected models orig. S319.95 -s~29 .95 Now s222 t Dryers•, selected models orig. S229.95 -S259.95 Now $188 •auanti11ea limited to stock on hand. ~, .. :1 ORANGE COUNTY £entral Committees .• ... . . > . . .- County Candidates Seek Posts on Panel,s .. ... ,; ,. By GARY GRANVILLE OI .. o.lty l'li.t IUff ,~ ·~ Newport Beach auto dealer and 1976 state Assembly candidate Jim $lemons is among 13 people in the f4th Assembly District who have (iled nomination papers for lhe coun-lY Republican Central Committee. • Av ailabte to the candidates, five or ~em incumbents, are six seats on ).heir party's county committee. :·MISSING FROM TUE candidates' 'l'Oll call when the nomination cteadline passed was incumbent com. :Qlitlee m ember Willard Voit of ~al boa. •• Voit had taken out nomination . .-apers but failed to return them to :ice registrar or voters• office by the s )'.m. Friday deadline. :· In the same district but on the op- .J)Osite side of the ledger, onetime 'County Democratic Party chief ;aichard O'Neill was among 11 l>e mocratic candida tes to fil e ~om ination papers. . AFTER LEADING the party as its county ch airman for fi ve years, ·O'Neill bowed out of official status, :but not out of an active role, in 1976. Now he's seeking a return to of- ficial standing on the cent ral com- ·nuttee that was his virtual fiefdom m ·the early 1970s. . With O'Neill when he filed his nomination papers was his hand- picked s u<'ccssor , attorney Frank ::Barbaro of Costa Mesa. .. · BARBARO IS AN incumbent can- -c1idate in the 73rd Assembly District, where seven Democratic candjdates are lined up for six available central -committee posts. .NevJ Hoag Aide James E. Haden has been ap- ·pointed assistant administrator at ;Hoa g Memorial H ospital in .Newport Beach . The UCLA ·graduate formerly served as as- :sociate administrator at Hunt- :jogton Me morial Hospital in !>asadena and as assistant ad- .tninistrator at Desert Hospital in Palm Spring. ·. . ·. . ·: Republican candidates in the 73rd turned out in larger number. Among the 12 seeking central com- mittee posts ln the June 6 primary election are three incumbent.a, Mary Ciddio, Evelyn Mayberry and Phyllis Batchelor , all of Huntington Beach. OTHER REPUBUCANS hoping to land 73rd District seals on their party 's central committee are Richard Alexander, Alice Bartlett, Ga r y Jamison. Korleen Bogdanovich, Tony Amador and Dan Montano, alt or Huntington Beach. Also seeking one of the 73rd seats are Joel Bender of Costa Mesa. Michael DaDurka of Fountain Valley and Irene Hajek of Costa Mesa . Joining Barbaro as Democratic candidates in the same district are Kathy Bode, Betty Pharaoh and Wilma Stevens, all Huntington Beach residents. OTHER DEMOCRATIC candidate8 in the 73rd are Fountain Valley resi- dents Betty Mignanelli and Sheila Marcus. Incumbent Jim Bentson of Seal Beach also filed hls nominatioo papers. In the crowded Republican Central Committee in the 74lh Assembly Dis- trict, incumbents George Brokate, Mary Schmitz, Ruthlyn Plummer, Patrick Bonner and Chris Steele filed for additional terms . IN ADDITION TO $lemons, step· ping up to compete with the incum· bents for the six available committee chairs are Lynn Turner of Newport Beach, William Fundenberg Jr. of Balboa, John W. Parker of Mbsion Viejo and Lloyd Lokka, a Corona del .Mar businessman. The list or GOP candidates also in· eludes Peer Swan or Tustin, Corona del Mar physician Don Udall and Newport Beach attorney Joseph Walker. Incumbents Howard Adler of El Toro and Billie Groski of San Juan Capistrano are Democrats, who like o ·Neill. are committee candidates in the 14th. ..._, ALSO COMPETING IN the 74th for Democratic Central Committee seats are Patrick Birkett of Laguna Niguel, Rachel Nelson of Tustin, James Dukette of Laguna Niguel and Virginia Reif of El Toro. The candidate slate is rounded off with Sandy Brisbin of Newport Beach , William Mcbam of San Clemente, Thomas Plante of Dana Point and Lyn Jacobs, an Irvine school teacher. Japanese Classes- To Begin March 30 A beginning conversational Japanese class will begin March 30 at 7:30 p.m. at lhe Japan Cultural As sociation, 1615 N. Bush St., Santa Ana. The course will last 10 weeks and cover pronunciation and fundamen- tal vocabulary. Enrollment la limited to 10 students per class. For informa· lion and registration call 547·1133. COME COLLECT A TREASURE AT THE PANETIA TRUNK SHOW •, ·: .;. ·· .. ... .. .• Thursday -Friday -Saturday A special envoy presents a trunk showing of the finest hand- set fashion jewelry. Each piece Is set exactly in the manner of precious gems, so the only way anyone wlll know they're not Is if you care to tell them. The collection Includes exciting new designs in stickpins, tie tacs, bracelets and earrings. Fashion Jewelry MEET LUBA ELIANOFF, DECORATIVE LINEN DESIGNER The designer of some of the world's most famous and best dressed baths, boudoirs and nurseries wlll be here tomorrow and Friday, 11:30 to 3:30 tn Bath and Boudoir. MEET MABEL JULIANELLI ANDSEEHERNEWESTSHOES • See the spring and summer collectlon Informally modeled 11:30 to 3:30 Saturday In Salon Shoes. BUllOC~5 WllSUIR~ NEWPoAT BEA.CH FASHION ISLAND Wed~. Man:h 15, 1971 OAA.Y PilLOT A9 BEFORE YOU HAVE ANY CARPETS CLEANED ••• Read the advantages of BURTON'S Hydro Steam I "I've been cleaning carpets in Orange County for 7V2 years. A few months ago I gave up the usual heavy equipment and chemicals that I brought Into your home or business. "Now I have the latest in heavy duty truck- mounted cleaning plants. I make the steam and mix the chemicals in my van. I enter your home with only a wand and a hose. "Miracles happen I Three times Ule dirt, way down deep, quickly but gently is e)Ltracted by powerful ~eam. No damage to carpets. Then a strong vacuum on the wand quickly removes dirt and water to a stainless steel tartk on my van. ""=,..___"' "No shampooing, brushing or soaking. No shrinkage or fading. Sterilizes, removes spots and odors. Longer fiber life. No noise. Experienced. Licensed. Llabmty Insurance. Introductory Rates 20% oft." John Burton CARPET CLEANl!RS 327 W. WILSON #60, COSTA MESA S42-5575 Serving all Orange County Paid Political Advertisement These People Want To Keep The Best In Newport Beach They Endorse Lucille Kuehn For City Council. LUCILJ_E KUEHN Incumbent, 6th D11trlct Nancy & John Curci R F Stoessel Bob Miium O. W. (Old() Richard Per Trebler Elizabeth T. Winckler Mr & Mrs. William P. Ficker Nancy Ebsen Rudy Baron Don & Betty Adkinson Jane & Dick Crout Dora & Ned Hill E W Dakin Gordon H West Ray Haas My frlenda end I In th• Weltdlff •rH wm vote for Luclll• Kuehn because ahe la felr and r•tJon•I. VINCENT JORGENSEN Hazel L. Jones Spencer E. Coven. Jr. Louise & Kae Ewing Albert Auer ' Florence Amott Timothy L Strader T. Phillips Morgan Tom & ~Twaddell My frfencle and I In WHt Newport went to re .. leot Luclll• Kueh~ becti••• she dotl .. ., hofMworlc. William C. Ring Jane & Chanes Mosmann Harvey & Peggy Tale Stuart Kras.sner Richard Othmer A nn & Mike Mound Agnes BlomQuist Paul T. Salata William 0. Lusk Or. and Mrs. E. H. Kravse Phil & & Bette Tozer Marjorie Neal Flo & Jay Stoddard Anabel & John Konwiser Sare G. Ramsey Barney Larks David ~ Stelmetz Tom P~enpaugh John Albetian Don C. Hamilton Ron Yeo Betty Dobbs Jack Jakosky Beverly Salata Sharon & Jany King David L & Geri Sandor Robert F. McCurdy Peter Van Schultze Ruth M. Kahn Nancy Zfnsmeyer Otting Barbara & Hany Gart1er Tony & Ginger Allen David Emrnes Tom Casey Barbara Durkee John J. Farmer Nlgel & Betty Balley Taffy Coslow Frank & Mary Jank Jane & Lyman Faulkner Biii & Judy Banning Oona Chichester George J. Jefflres Jeanne Sandor Ruth & Stanley Le Llevre James 0. Ray Val & Carole Skoro Jean & John Macnab Pat & Car1 Nelsser Terry & Carl Kymta Zada Taylor Clyde Zuk:h Alex Sc:hvan NorM1n c. Walker Barbara Aune Ann Sloan Fletcher Guy K. Oaire Clyde E. Johnaon Gloria Walla Seetye Mrs. Cheriea Ullman RObert W. Bein W. O. Hancodc Mk:h .. I J. CMatlan.on .i.mea P. Felton Marge Mderlol'I Sam8amee Chris Heppcw sata a OM Reg1n Jeenl..U. Jtmft M. P1r1* Malty a Lee l.)IOn Mr. ' Mt&. Mir! l(*9t MetonS.n Wiiiard Wide Ralptt O. Ameion G~o....tdlon Anita J, FtfVUtO'I Mr. & Mra. lid (Donna) D.vlne District 6 My frtenda and r 1n the Belboa Pen· nlnaula ••k you to vote for Luclll• Kuehn becauae ahe . help• reduce tex••· -:r01i , t' ~ ' 'h.I ~;J ··~ WILLIAM ACKER Mel Grau John J. Elliott Judith Bland Sally Johnson Richard E. Handy Florence L Cooling Jane R. BoYd George & Edith Friedl Bob & Ruth AM Hyson Frank & Allee Remer ,1 ~ ~ My friends end I on Balbo• lslend wlll vote for Luclll• Kuehn beceuse she ha• such courage. Gary Burrill Mr. & Mra. C. M. Gepfett Or. Gerald S. Spear Nancy L Phelps carter Mc::Oonald Myra & George Brown Ruth & [)IQ( Nelsoo Jeanne & Kent Wanlass Mrs. Henry M. Ullman Jim & Burke Harrington Barbara Brock Lloyd Gregory John F. Grundhofer Mary & George Holstein Kathryn Pat Brann John & Wendy Sindelar Bob Warmington Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Masters Joanne & Robert Roeenberg. M.O. Cart Acl<ennan Hadd Rlno Mre. Oonatd Sloper Anthony R MoilO Donald e. Smallwood Mr. a Mrs. Raymond L. Wat90n Frank L Bret Dennis Harwood Dick Smith Susan B. Morgan Or. & Mrs. Mathew Ross John Hukefl Francia M. Smith Joan Talmage Weiss Harold Voeglin Mr. & Mrs. Char1es W. Hester Mr. & Mrs. Gerald W. McClellan Arlene M. Murray Mr. & Mra. Ernest Beauchamp Syd Hyman Joe Rothman Gerald & Rita White Glenna BtS90nette Mr. & Mrs. Robert Hilchey Lucille L. Demond George Williamson Eula Crawford Grant & Inez Howald Richard E. Satteflee Velma S. Keeler Robert R. Hurwitz Mildred D. Bonds Mary A. Martin Harriette F. Witmer Ron Soderling Alice Roberts Or. & Mrs. Allen Cottle Michael Meade Or. Shlr1ev J. Schaefer Tom & Mary Wolff Jean & Robef1 Bonner Jim Peters Charles Ken Smith lnnell & Bud Oesenberg Rudolph L Kuehn B. James GJavas Del Melhorn Ottve C. Wlggenhorn C. Bennett Jackson. Jr. Mrs. John Humdall S. Shokrian JoM&~Bratt Jim Wood Harriet l Bflf Bemus Suzanne Rudd Stewert WOOdltd Stanley & Connie MumfOfd Leroy P. Studer George Vogel Elaine & Edward~ Nathalie Michlud Clinton M. HOOM, Jr. Marte 8 . Stilllnga Betty & Hal Ooyte Joseph & Wlleeta Philbrick Mrs. James M. Wiiiiama Mr. & Mrs. John G. Miiier BETSY McKENZIE ----------' Virginia Oec::lc Cella Sm6i.y Ron & Jodie Htm>d Lancing & Lure Ebef11nn John E. (Jact<) ~ II ~-''"' A. Jamee Olnton Mt"I. R. P. ;;>nva. eev.rty ~ g:: = Manlfold Gertrude' Ken~ Tom T. Evant Aobef1 F. ~ 8111 & EdM Blurock • Stephen Gavin Marv•• H. CPlttv> Git.on John H. Pof'ter. Jr. \lln & Motl~ Wanda Stinnett Alu Bowfe 8-"Y F Q&tdea Glenn Martin OOrotheaSMety Mary L Rk:hinond Dotffn I Bob Mnhall MllYPlhOn My frtenda and I In Cllffheven eupport Lucille Kuelan becauae •h• h•• prtd• In our dty. TOM HENDERSON Har Pinchln Paul Marx Or. & M,._ NDrmlln Shriftet A . James Olnton Bevertv Murd"tison Gertrude & Ken Snoke Robert F. Newell Harriett & Jim Gage Sally & Haniey Somers Gary's Deli Kathy Miller George Winder Robert E. Harris My frtenda and I In Shorecllffa wlll vOle for Lucille Kuehn beceuae ahe la ex· peri•nced. HARRIETT WITMER Jane & Ointon Rygel Bruce A. Obon Richard Williams Don Clarke Linda & Ed Scheck Jean T andowskY Paula M. Gllaman A. Kenneth Sampson Harry I. Bremmer Alan W. Pettis (A partial ffllJ My frtendl aftd I Ill Corona dee Mar~ port Lucille Kuetin beoau•• •"• a•t• .......... ' . • • • • • . . . • . ..... 'We're Richer' Will Bequeaths 'Calm Haven' GASTONIA, N.C. (AP) Mildred McAndrew Greene didn't have much money to divide among her heirs when s he died, bul she counted her wealth in other things and ap. pa r ently hop e d her family would too. Mrs. Greene. who died in January at age 67, wrote a will in which she parceled out the trees and shrubs in her yard to her relatives .. "I LEAVE TO THE boys my once-beautiful boxwoods, to each grandchild their own rose to tenderly and lovingly care for and with the sweet desire that they will live as pretty as the rose ·'To each of my children and grandchildren. I bequeath one a nd every tree, regardless of how scraggly or twisted. with the thought that they are nature's most beautiful pro· ductions. giving oxygen. cool- ing the air." .. To each of you l beque<1th the trees' psychological effect upon people, lhcir calm as a haven for times of tension and everyday living," Mrs. Greene wrote. "MOTHER WAS A wonderful woman,'· sat:d Mrs. Jewel Norwood, one of Mr s. Greene's three daughte rs. "She left us with som e beautiful things ··our mother was wealth). · agreed Stanley Greene, one or her four sons "And we're all much richer b<'cau!>C she lived ·· Won't See Beatlemania RiRf!o Touts Ringo By JAY SHARBUTT BEVERLY JllLLS (AP > -.You alwa319 start a story about Ringo Starr by noting he's an ex-Beatie You always a!>k him if he favors a Beatles reunion lie says no And is a!>ked why ··Because it's lake a revival, and I don 'l feel l:ke I e\'er died," drawls Ringo HE'S THEN ASKED if he's seen "Beatlemania," a musical in which Bealle Jook·alikes carry on and sing Beatles songs. He says no, he doesn't want to, and adds: "Terry Southern, a friend of mine, had the l}eatest idea. He s ays what we should do is get together and do a parody o n 'Beatlemania.' "That'd be the only way we could get back together and " -an a m used s m i 1 e sTAH commenced .. They won't come ctnd see us, either. Ringo, 37. who left Rory Storme's Hurricanes in 1962 to drum for and make a few bob with the Beatles un- til their. split in 1970, is drumming up. publicity for his first solo special on U S. television • AIRING APRIL 26 on NBC as 'Ringo." it's a rock musical comedy loosely based on Mark Twain's "The Prince and the Pauper." Ringo plays both roles, aided by ex-BeaUe George Harrison. Starr said it's about rock stardom, and "we re-create Ringo as people imagine him, with all the women and joys and luxuries of life -when all he really wants is an hour off." The look-alike pauper is one Ognir ltratz. He, Starr said, makes his way in this world "selling maps to the star's homes. He dreams he'll e nd up some day in one of those mansions." THE INTERVIEW SITE could have fit right in the show: a Beverly Hills bot.el suite, 70 degrees outside, air-conditioning going inside, a blaze in the fU"eplace to maintain at least 70 degrees. But Ringo, clad in a black suit and red sneakers, seemed as serene in such surreal surroundings as in his second movie, "The Magic Chris- tian." a fine, deadpan spoof of the lunacy money can ca use. Possessed of a dry. sardonic sense of humor. Starr spoke of bracing him self for a fresh round of in terviews next month after a vaca· lion-and-business trip lo Europe WHILE THERE, HE said, he'll be touting a new album, ''Bad Boy," then return here for the talk-show circuit to mention both ~e album and bis April special. He a~eed he'll find the circuit crowded. Because the Oscar awards are coming up, he mused, "every actor you've ever seen is on." He grinned and mimicked the average talk-show host: '''Oh. you've got a film , have you ?' · "But it's the game. You have to promote these days. Everyone has lo promote. Nobody is too bi~ not to." INQUl.RJ ES WERE MADE as lo whether he has a nc\\> movie afoot, seeing as how he's been in about seven since leaving lhe Beatles. "We've said yes to one, and we're thinking about another," he said. He declined to elaborate on either for the time being "Movies, you can't talk about," the ex-Beatie s aid, aware future film deals of\en h ave a way or becoming no deals. "You like to.at leist st.art shoot· ing firsL That's the only time you (eel a bit secure." Ex-president Tees Off JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP) -The president is a hacker, says a prominent amateur golfer. Former President Gerald R. Ford met reporters Tuesday after he played in the pr~am event at the Tournament Players Golf Cham· pionsbip and no political questions were allowed. "A golf question, Mr. President." piped up a reporter. "Do you think Jimmy Carter is performing up to par?" Straight-faced Mr. Ford replied: ··1 think he's made a couple of dou· bJe bogeys. And I don't recall any birdies." ,~, '"A Most Unique Place to Shop'' CASUAL JUNIOR CLOTHING * GIFTS FOR HIM ANO ~ LARGE SB..ECTION OF TOPS* AMERICAN OAK ANTIQU~ PEWTER * PANTS AND SKIRTS * HOME AND GOURMET ITEMS DON'T BE SHY . . . . COME SEE OUR SPRING FASHIONS I LAJt•• SBICTioM OP PANTS. I roPs. s•u•rs, JUMPSUITS -I AMO MOll'MIAT TM•~ •C....S ' .. c........,snc1· .. M.u. ... A .. WI,.,._ .. a .. .rett To honor Lillian Carter's civil rights militancv and Peace Cor p s ·work. the Cn1ted ~ations Food and Agricul ture Organization has re- 1 l' as e d gold and ~!I ver medals fealur- 1 n g her as Ceres. Rom an goddess of agriculture. Paramedics SAN DIEGO <AP> - Paramedics will be or· ganized soon in El Cajon and National City as a result of municipal elec- tions. Court Keeps Working Misklken Identity May Eventually Free Man BOSI'ON CAP> -Prosecutor Frances Bums listened to the detectives' story and reared the worst: a classic case or mistaken identity that sent the wrong man to prison for rape. The conviction had bee n routine. A middle-age woman testified that Shon S. Simmons, 25, a con- struction worker, broke into ber apartment, robbed her •nd raped her In June 1&76. He was convicted six months later and sentenced to 10 to 15 yeara in prisen. where he has remained . BUT DOUBTS BEGAN TO surface last ~y after detectives investigating two other rapes 'at the apartment complex round circumstances almost identical to th~e reported in the Simmons' case . Miss Burns recalls: ( ) "The police came by my mrv r ~tr.I ormce and told me that El ~,,.. Simmons' photograph had been picked out by a victim who had said he Jooked like the man who had raped her. So I checked to see 1f Simmons was possibly out on furlough when these new rapes had occurred. We found out he was not." The prosecutor called Simmon's lawyer . William Homan!!. "l told him that I round it disturbing and gave him all the information I had." I N THE MEANTIME, ANOTHER man, Joseph Powell, 23, of Boston, was arrested in con· nection with the two new rapes. He is awaiting trial. Last month, Simmons and Powell appeared at a hearing in Suffolk Superior Court. The victim said s he stnt thought Si mmons was her assailant. But Judge Herbert F. Travers Jr. was struck by the s imilarity ot the two men. On Monday. he ordered a new trial for Simmons, be'1ause "it ap· pears justice may not have been done." TJIE J U DGE SAID. "THE ph ysical.: similarities bcl'.\cen the defendant and the other J person are remarkable In almost ever.y· ... particular, they coincide. Suffice it to say that 1( they were Identical twins, which they are not. U-• would come as no surprise." .. ~ At his trial Simmons maintained that he wai .. l home with his girlfriend when the woman was'( raped. Ir . : Miss Burns said, "The j~ was the one who "} heard the victim and made the decision that her~.; identification was correct. I just presented the~ case 1 had. ·'<\ "BUT WHEN I GOT THAT information, 1t · bothered me I really can't sa.y whether a mistake:~ was macje or not, but there definitely was~ som ething there that h.ad to be looked al " :! PREPARATION OF TAX RETURNS Y..-R~ Ta"-llMJ Marttn 1 Sct>neyer Attorney at Law Ct~•&111io Cf:t11f1t!t1 Public ACf.OOntoVlf M6A rl1dhOf\l M~t"' l')f Li'#\ f T .1iahon1 P.ot~ ot l A• L•w l•eo"-belo.1t US It• r.0u11 •n<I US""'""'""' C0vrt t OO() Wf't'(''I" P! ">•i•h •' :l ,.~ ... rio• ~ a..,. "I (.., 1.·r.,,, 1 833-1164 NEED A LAWYER'? Low L•g•I Fee • Divorce • Bankruptcy •Crim inal • Wills-Probate • Incorporation • Ac cident-Injury • Eviction • Collections 640-2507 ~HR . CONSUl.TATl~-410 GRAND VIN FRENCH WINE GLASSES SWEDISH DISHRACK •CROWN raises its glass to YoU •Oversize slemglass 12~ ounces •8 In a g1ftable box •Imported from France elegant Grand Vm BY' Durand '·' •An old Swedish trad1t1on . dry dishes in 11 wooden rack •Handmade and handsome in genuine hr from Sweden •When not 1n use. fold rt up ... ~:P.!:2.P Salad Spinner Deluxe Hoo•er CONVERTIBLE VACUUM wlttt .... tlNr Kt*! ..-u.:~ ........ ... .............. OHl DllOf' DOIS IT •The kids will beg to dry the salad greens! •Spina out all the water in an instant. •Great for salad. vegetables. fruit. •Elegant loo 10.88 •An unbeetabl• pnce't •A Factory Special CRONN bought 'em atll •Sold nationally at 99 99 2•• •2-speed mot0< headlight llU4099 NEWI Whisks \JP dirt rt'Qm bare floors or dttep pile carpets . Feature s convenient remov!ible dust ~ _.-:::f'1-J pan. Compact-~ size of others. 2330 2 59 12 OL .... FREE TOOLS #4lil01 PORT-A-POWER FUll\9POWER CANISTER VAC. '•Portable ... great for boet and camper •Reaches easily ••. for atalra. landings, Mita •Powerful llttl& euot<er ... ineludea tOOla •Hoov9', of course. I ... -.. . NATIONAL I MUSIC Al"Wlre .... 1• Wednesday, March tS, 1978 , DAIL y PILOT A J I ' 'Don Giovanni' Opera on TV i ~ . • t By MAJlY CAMPBELL i.eason's first "Don Giovanni" waa he meets, Morns made his voice sound ' NEW YORK' (AP> -"Don Glovan· performed on Friday nlgb.t. qullf' enticing and attractive. He also is f nl," which will be telecast Thursday The Donna Anna music flows from tall and handsome amd moves around the J during its second Metropolitan Opera her in a silken stream. It is her father, stagew1lh4'raceandconfidence. l performance tbis se1Son, is a splendid the Commendatore, whom Don Giovan· Gabriel Qacquier was excellent as.the choice for TV. <Channel 28, 8-11 p.fm.) ni kills and her sl.Qlfing about that is Don 's seriant, Leporello. He was in fine I Mozart'IJ mwslc is 1uperb, of coune. very touching. Those who find that Miss voice and'was funny without seeming to The set.a bf Eugene lJerman are far Sutherland's singing doesn't convey work batd· for humor as some do in the from ne,w and look more Ulce Italy and emotion should hear her Donna Anna. part. Russia than 1'7Ua century SevWe, but are among the Mel's most attracUve. JAMES MORRIS, a young American JULIA VARADY. a native of Oradea, ' bass· baritone, ls an ideal Don Giovanni. Ru mania, was makio& her Mel debut as : AND 111E CAST IS splendidly headed His voice is rich and al the same time Donna Elvira. In the first act, her voice ' 'by Joan ~erland and Jama Morris. light. It has real beauty and a bri&ht· wassoli&htlyfoc:useditsoundedbard.ln l Miss Sutherland was singing (or the ness more usual in a tenor voice. As the second act, it was more relaxed and i first time this season at the Met, aa the Don Gl~vannl, who courts every woman sounded much more pleasing. l Stink Raised 1 JONATHAN'S ANTIQUES f Family Kept Slamk CHICAGO (AP) -Despite lhe objections of his human foster family, Wishbone the skunk ls soon going to be Aon his own -sniffin& the posies and amelllna up uie woods at will. Judge George Schaller of Circuit Court bas dismissed a suit that sought to have Wishbone re· main at Lincoln Park Zoo rather ihan release him into bis natural environment. Wholesale to the Trade in Fountain Valley ( Sale Mar. 16th t Preview All Day Till 5:00 Sale Begins 6:30 Featuring .... Brass Items Chairs Desks Roll Tops Showca~es Sideboards Tables I CAST MEMBERS OF 'DON GIOVANNI' TAKE CURTAIN CALLS Joan Sutherland, Richard Boynge. James Morris, From Left THE ZOO AND THE CIDCAGO Park District had been named as defendants in the suit by the William Stanton family. The Stantons found Wishbone in their garage Nov. 20, but conflicting conservation laws prevent· ed their keeping him, freeing h.im or killing him. Display Cabinets Hallstands Lamps Tins Trunks Unusual Pieces Wardrobes Washstands Man Steals $100,000 To Help Dying Wife DtJAlN~ NEGOTIATIONS WITH various agencies, the Stanlons moved the skunk into their home and kept him as a pet. Agreement finaUy was reached for Lincoln Park 1.oo to take custody. Stanton claimed in his suit that Wishbone would be unable to survive the cold weather because be bad become domesticated No Vacancy at Jail SARREG UEM IN ES. France (AP ) Criminals sentenced t.o jail terms in this northeastern French town are beinc placed on bail Leaded Glasl> Mirrors Nautical Gear Best Quality-Best Price 18335 l\ll. Langley, Fountain Valley CLAYTON, Mo. (AP) -Melvin Wagner, convicted of swindling his boss out of nearly $100,000, says he did it to buy nice things for his wife b.ecause '"I knew she was going lo die, and I wanted the last two years of her llfe to be happy." WAGNER, WHO WAS warehouse foreman at the soap products plant, devised a complicated scheme in which he set up a dummy company, A & G Pallet Company. that sub- mitted low bids for wooden casings to the soap firm. By doctoring the until there is a vacant cell, authorities said. ~~~~~~~~.....;;;;;;=:::=:::=--=-_:__..:.;._:_..:.:;:::;:_~~-=--===================- Wagner. 58, convicted Jan. 24 of operating a phony company lo steal $97 ,000 from a soap products plant, ~id he began the. operation aner l~arning m 1973 that his wife, Lea. 'lad terminal cancer ON MONDAY, ST. Louis County ~ircuit Court Judge James Ruddy sentenced Wagner to eight years in prison but then reduced the sentence to five years· probation. ·"There was one reason for it and one reason only : his wife was dy-fog," the judge said or the theft ... He bad worked for the company for 31 years and was honest before bis wife's illness. He stopped the theft "ler she died.·· Wagner said he spent most of the money on his wife. paying for vaca· lions. a luxury automobile and other gifts. The couple had two grown children ~Big Mama' Get,s Prison lnHt;>ldup SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A federal judge bas sentenced a woman police called "Big Mama'' to nine years in prii;on for the $1,688 armed robbery of a Walnut Creek bank Nov . 21. Cathy Erwin. 23, of Pittsburg, who is 5·3 and weighs 155, had been 4ubbed ''Big Mama" by police on the basis or ~ank photos which led lo her arrest. paperwork, Wagner made it appear that the dummy company had gotten the contracts, and then filled the or· ders from the company's regular in-SI-IE I.EIS ventory. Ruddy said that after Wagner's R4'JS DIE wife died, "It appears he was de· sirous or getting caught .. lie later M I A M 1 ( A p ) raised. t~e prices. so the coman.Y Dorothy Tyler, the would reJect the b~d~. I ~uess that s • .elderly widow who at· when they got susp1c1ous. "tracted. national atten· BY THE TIME HE was caught, Wagner: had s pent the entire sum, and was paying the remaining debt on an $8,000 automobile he bought before h.is wife died. Wagner still faces legal action from the company's insurance representatives, who want to regain the stolen money. And the Internal Revenue Service says it wants tax payments on the money Wagner was convicted of stealing. lion this month because of her rat-infested house , is allowing pesticides outside her home. At least a dozen dead rats have been counted on Mts. Tyler's lawn since the extermination began last week, said Miami Rodent COlltrol supervisor Alberto Ross. He said th•t many more rats are probably dead underneath the house. OH GOD! Co Dr. ,...... perfonw lllirecles7 11 hl1 deRtal wottt ••IH7 Fflld .t fw yo.raeff. AJMt _. ._. dowwt-fo.ea th f~ whMe yoe ......., .. .t tt.e.,,., yow d..-tal &m.-.c• llligW ca.,.r tM ~ cost of Dr. Aannr's HrYlc"" Dr. Arnold H. flanzer 370 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 642-0112 ,. • ... • • • ' In Your Best Interest Higher interest than commercial banks pay plus the assurance that your sav- ings are safe, insured by a Federal Agency. A deposit of $1000 or more in a 6 year Investment Certificate yields 8.06% annually. Or, a $1000 Certificate of Deposit Account for only one year yields 6.72%. It's in your best interest to start your savings account today. One minute and one signature is all it takes. INCOME.TAX PREPARATION Join the thousands of Los Angeles Fed~ral Savers who have their personal Federal and California tax returns prepared without charge. All you need to do is deposit $5,000 in a Los Angeles Federal Savings Pass- book or $10.000 in a higher rate Investment Certificate. If your savings are now in a commercial bank or another institution, Los Angeles Federal Savings will make your tax appointment now and handle the details of transfer. Make your appointment early. The sooner you f 1le, the faster your refund can be malled. PLUS 20 MORE SERVICES When you qualify for income tax preparation. there's a long list of additional services you don't have to pay for: a safe deposit box. checking account at a cooperating statewide commercial bank. Travelers Checks, money orders. document duplication. even trust deed and note collection. What you save each month on all these services can be earning additional interest for you. Isn't it worth a minute of your time to start your money rolling up more profit in a Los Angeles Federal Savings account? Annual Yield 8.06% 7.79% 698% 6. 72o/o 5.92% 5 39% INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES Current $1000 OR MORE Annual Rate 6to10years 7¥'% 4years 7Y2% CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT $1000 OR MORE 30 months 6¥• % 12 months 6Y2 o/o 3 months 5.75% PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ANY AMOUNT Day In to day out ALL INTEREST COMPOUNDED QAIL Y Funds prematurely-withdrawn from CerMcate Accounts earn Interest at the Passbook rate, as provided fly Federal regula- tion, for the full term of lnYeatment. less ninety days LOS ANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS Saving• inaur•d to $40,000 ..---....... Newport Beach 3201 Newport Blvd. -across from City Hall • 875-4500 0PtW •8 llC>N.·11MtL • •a "'I. Hffd Office Loi Angel's Ft4ertl S.vlt1gs tnd Loan ~tlOCJll.on Ont W1lll'!ire. Lot Anotlet 9001., • Oltltf omee1111rouol\Out tnt .,.. \ t I A J 2 DAIL 'I PILOT Wednnd9Y, March 15, 19711 Record Finds a Home Congress' Words Ultimately Reach Basic Use ~ From AP Dlapakbel Are back copies of the Coniressional ltecord, with their transcripts of House and Senale de· bates, piling up in your atUc? Rep. Robert Bauman. R-Md., bas a constituent wbo has a use for them. "I have a lillle paper processing plant in the southern part of my district where they produce toilet tissue," Bauman told the House. "I was told by the owner of that plant that one of the best built commodities be uses and which converts best into his product is used Congressional Records which be buys at th~ Gov- e'Jlment Printing Office. "So there may be some just relationship between the words said in this chamber and their ultimate destination." * Elvis Presley's $450,000 estate in the well-to-do ""Chino Canyon section of Palm Springs was the ob· jecl of an apparent attempted burglary, police said . · Burglars tried to . enter the mansion Mon· (,...---------) day night by breaking PEOPLE louvers from a window _ _ on the south side of the ---------- mansion. The luxurious four-bedroom, seven·bathroom home is up for sale, with a price tag of $450,000. * Jn the together-again category: Princess Marguet and boyfriend Roddy U ewellyn. Llewellyn was released from a hospital in Barbados where he had ~en receiving treatment for a gastric uJcer. After suffering an attack last week, Llewellyn was flown there from the tiny island or Mustique, where he and the princess were vacationing. LLEWELLYN hos pitalized. Margaret also came to RMba.dos and stayed with a friend while Lewellyn was * Adeline K. Motrett, who reacted to billionaire John D. MacArthur's eviction order by filing a S200 million s uH, agreed to an undisclosed cash settlement with attorneys of the late ty· coon. Mrs. Moffett, an ex·wife of former Standard Oil Board Chairman James Moffetl, and MacArthur began their feud when she refused to pay her apartment rent after her an- tique furniture was damaged in 1969 by a roof leak in the building owned by MacArthur. MAC urHuit When MacArthur evicted her from the $15().a. month apartment in 1973, Mrs. Moffett s ued, say· mg she suffered from the eviction publicity. Terms of the settlement were dictated by MacArthur before he died Jast January, said a billionaire's aide. Deaths Ehewhere LOS ANGELES (AP) George L. Bagnall, 81, a longtime president of the board of trustees of the Motion Picture and Television Fund died Monday. LONDON CAP> Adm . Sir Henry Ruthven Moore, 91, a navigator at the Battle of J utland in World War I a nd lhf' planner of the British Fleet Air Arm attacks on the German battleship Tirpitz during World War II, died Sun· day. McCORMICK MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hills 768--0933 San Juan Capistrano -495-1776 •ALTZ-UIGllOH FUNHALHOMI Corona del Mar 6 73-9450 .COSta Mesa 646-2424 lfll llOAOWAY MOITUAU 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 Swmt-1\11MU.UMI -WISTCUFF CHAPIL 427 E. 17th St. .,&osta Mesa • ~6-4888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broadway Santa Ana• S.7-<4131 r '1act llOTHllS SMITHS' MOttTUAIY 627 Main St. ttuntlogton Qeach 536-6639 ,_P.AMILY ~LllUNllAL HOMI 7801 Bolta Ave. Westminater 893-3625 , author of some 20 books including a biography of inventor Thomas Edison which was awarded the Francis Parkman Prize in 1960 by the Society of American Historians, died Monday. Death Noti~e• Dlssldettt leader Andrei D. Sa.kJlarov will have to flnd some way other than the telephone to coordinate his activities. Soviet authorities disconnected bis home telephone, the 197S Nobel Peace Pri&e laureate said ln Moscow. Many other dissidents previously bad their phone service abruptly cut-off. The move came one day after Sakharov and his wife joined more than 20 Soviet J ews in staling a demonstration in downtown Moscow to protest Kremlin support for the Palestine Liberation Organization. .. I Despite public outcries, six San Diego City Council members stuck to their guns and approved salary increases of SS,000 for the mayor and $9,000 for all eight city council members. The pay boos t r ecom· mended by the city Salary Set- ting Commission is the third Council pay raise in four years. It came in a 6·3 vote despite warnings by foes that council members voting for it might be recalled. w1uoN M aydr Pete Wilson and council members Maureen O'Connor and Fred Scbnaubelt voted against the increase. Sdmaubelt has vowed he'll reject his. • Two years after he lost a congressional race to Rep. Robert K. Dornan, tiny R. FamlUan sued: · · the Wesl ~1de Los Angeles Republican for $5 million. alleg- ing defamation. The Superior Court suit con- tended Dornan de f amed Familian in a letter in the cur- rent issue o f New West magazine by implying Familian was dishonest. Doman, who is seeking re· election in the 27th oou•N. Congr essional District, is unop· posed in the GOP primary June 6. .. The aUorney for Wiiliam A.H. WUUams. the man twice convicted of extortion in the 1974 abduc· lion of former Atlanta Constitu- tion Editor Reg Murphy, told a federal appeals court in Atlanta that his client should be freed on •grounds of "double jeopardy." . P . Bruce Kirwan told a lhrtt- j udge panel of the Sth Circuit Court of Appeals that the pro- secutor's closing statement to :the jury prejudiced lhe case so .the retrial of Williams placed him io the position of being tried MUlll"HY 'l wlce for the ~ame crime without cause. Williams, a former Li lburn, Ca., contractor. was first convicted in 1974 of extorting $700,000 from The Constitution and was sentenced lo 40 years in prison. The money was later recovered. ~~~~~~~~~~~- PUBLIC NOTICE • OBJECT OF CONGRESSIONAL CUP SAILORS Coveted Kudos Oon•ted by U~S. Congr••• British Introduce Inflatable Dinghy Inflatable dinghies have long been popu)ar as rowboats and use with small outboard power. Because of their ahape and buoyancy they are virtually impossible to capsize and are unsinkable when properly inflated. Avon, the British type innatable, has now come out with a sailing rig that bids fair to make them even more popular. A VON HAS ANNOUNCED a uillng kit for its Redcrest model which includes a leeboard and a collapsible mast. The firm plans a sailing kit for the larger Redseal model in the near future. Like the rowing model, the Avon Redcrest sailer can be deflated and stowed in a bag for transportation in a car trunk or on a larger boat. The sailing rig also is completely collapsible. The 18-fool mast telescopes to six feel, four inches for easy stowage with an aluminum boom. The kit comes with a yellow and white striped 45-square-foot sail and a leeboard -similar to that found on Sabot prams -which can also be easily stowed in a bag. THE END RESULT IS a safe, lightweight sailer that gives unusually good performance and is nearly impossible to capsize. Its simplicity and safety makes it an ideal child's sailer. Avon dinghies are distributed locally by Seagull Marine, 1851 McGaw Ave., Irvine. Pl'Bl.IC' ~OTICE rt·nuc ~OTICE 1 BOATING I PEOPLE I OBITUARIES Turner Opens Congressional CupDefeme ~ By ALMON LOCKABEY I Oel!y .................. Wm Ted Turner successfully defend his Ulle to the Congressional Cup when the prestigioua lo· te.1'1laliooal match racing meet 1eta under way Thursday off Long Beach? U the ubiquitous AUantan accomplishes the feat be will become the f()Ufth skipper to win the crown twt~ and the only one to win lt alter wln- ftlng Lbe Arllerica 's Cup. Last year Turner went in· to the America's Cup defense aft.er winning the Congreaslopal C\.l'p. The only two time winners have been Gerty Driscoll of San Diego, with perfect scores in 1965 and 1966, and Argyle Campbell of Newport Beach, In 1970-72, and Denni~ Conner of San Dieao. 1973-75. TURNER WILL BE UP against two fo~r winners wben the action gets under way Tbursd~. Scott. Allan, formerly of Newport Beach Cnow Severn River, Md.) was the winner with a perfect score in 1B6"t and Dick Deaver of Newport Beads, but sailing for the Los Angeles Yacht Club, w,s the winner in 1916 In a down to the wire duel wfth Turner. Another veteran match racer who has always given the winners some anxious moments will be Tony Parker of Annapolis, Md., who has been in· volved in several ties for the crown, only to be beaten by sailoffs. From a strictly local <Southern California> match race regatta in 1965 the Congressional Cup has grown to be the second most important match racing competition in the world. attractmg crews frQ.m Europe, Canada, Aus tralia and New Zealand. During America's Cup years the Congressional Cup usually draws defender and challengers to sharpen their skills before the big show. IN PAST YEARS, THE Congressional Cup ha~ drawn America's Cup defenders, purportedly to give the l~als a lesson in match racing. But Bill Ficker, America's Cup defender in 1970, was the only one to win the Congressional Cup -and it took him two tries to accomplish lhe feat Congressional Cup competition differs from other forms of m atch racing in that it pits 10 skip pers and crews against each other in a three-day series that involves 45 individual two-boar matches. Each series of five matches start al five· minute intervals, which means that fi ve two-boat races arc in progress at one time Here is the starting hneup, which will answer the starting signal Thursday· T~ TurNr, AU..-ta. Ga .. wlnntr 1n ,,17 OtO 0....,r, ~Anc.fl•• YC. wlnMr"' .,,~. S<oll All..-. Sewrn Rlwr YC, .,,,_, •n , .. , Tony p.,-er, Ann.jlOlls. Md YC. ,...,,.,.up'" 1'1 .. ,, ~oel ROO.M A~lraha. to--• AmHtU'• C.up cl\allMq•r Ptll• Pe1lt'f'°"• S-.i. lormer A..,.rlca \Cugchall_. 8arl\tV Flam. l...onQ lk..:h YC. V<tlf'<an Of nearly tVf!<Y C.ono Cup Rot:>Ole Ha•nl'\, San 01"90 YC. ltrst li"W on Con!! (.up l!IOm•• O'Brien, So!all•• YC, •Mt!Mfr ,,..w<:omer Graham H•H. L..Jrchmont, N Y vetfl' an ot ~"'"' ConQ Cups Pl 'BU(' NOTICE Pl'BLlf ~OTICE • ... HEALTH 1)l£TERS ANONYMOUS ' W8cineed!IV, Meroh 15, 1978 DAILY N.OT ,4JS Try to Ta .he Pounth Off Bit by Bit By DR. PETEK SfEINCBOllN Dor Dr. Stelacrolan: Too much weight has beea my pro- blem since I wu a youngster. Therefore I've tried every diet that has come aloo& the past %5 years. · Ea c b one held out promlaes for an end to my obesity. For a while l became enthusiastic because a diet seemed to be helping. But in the end all failed. Now l have a long shell filled with diet books ln my den. I never open tbem any more becauae each oee bufailed me. Or. have 1 faUed tlltm 7 I don't know. But IQY r-eaon for Writini la this: A question about wliat seems to be the newest 4let aolu· lion: a fasting diet. Jt aeema ao simple to swallow a protein and vitamin·mlneral supple~ent aod Just "fast" the pounds ofL Wbat do you Wnt? -Mn. T. COMMENT: As you say, .. it seems so simple.'' Mrs. T. Therefore, tbere's aood reuon to IUlpect It. ~1G..1n.T....,.~11 .... , ..... '"'" ....... Ao ...... .. l .... -.• -......... . •llGHTID DtAl •24 Ml. AlAIM •llAf NUM.lULS 1'' DIGITAL ALARM CLOCK GMlty....,.. dock lit ••ttM Cllh lilt wlllaper .. , .. ........,, ..,. witll AM •PM ..tMp. 4~?n DUNCAN SINCLAIR SCOTCH WHISKY llG. 1.19 ~-~ DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE ~ ~ These protein-sparing, rapid· actina diets may be harmful. Especially in th,e young wbo need protelll for bone and muacle-bulldlng. This may cause srowtll·llta.ntinc and mm- clo weaJmeea. BUT TBE&E ABE risks for adults, too. I've seen severe depression &mllap ln some peo. pie who went on a do-lt-youraelt fasting diet. Some have de• veloped attacks of gout, and still others developed trouble in tbe lddneya and llver. And uk yourself what hap. pens when the fut is over. You have taken off 10 to 20 or more pounds. What happens then! In moat cases the inevitable result la return to diet habits that put extra pounds on again. The best diet la the slow, not the rapid. diet. Bueeesa in diet,. I ·:::."" ... I 5 ~?. LATCH HOOK RUG KITS A ...... ~ Jll'l elltey. l it 1Mktdt1 ,.._. prilltM C8lnl, eaylc ,.., eay l111trvctiou. -349 REG. 4. 99 YOUR MULTI-DESIGN & ato1cr NOVELTY T-SHIRT T·tlilrtl i. _, celen & ..... wltll f...a " ............ 110% Htt•trC0"911 W.... ~~WU)\!; UNDERPANTY PANTYHOSE ......... ,..., ..... .... ......, ........ J ... 1 1 .... ~W&Jv/\f., CONTIOL TOP PAN'rYHOSE Ing oomee to those who are not ln a blln'J'. To tboM wbo will.lng. l,y ah.lft their food intake to lower levels and are pleased to lose on· ly a~ or pound weekly. PATIENT DIETERS can lose as much as 50 pounds a year this way without insulting tbeir body. Moderate exercise and sensible dieting ls the anawec to the age-old quesUon: ''What's the belt way to take off ex-cessive pocmds? .. Surely, fasting isn't the annrer. 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M111ch 15, 1978 Saclilleback Duels Pange~ous Cerritos ~ By CRAIG SHEFP basketball. And this is the B~l Cerritos' depth doesn't r LONG 0tB• o.ti, "11•UIMI Gauchos' second appearance al Cigure to measure up to Sad· ~C~ -Saddleback a state t.oumey, having lost in dleback's. f College begms its que.st for the the opening round to Santa Gauchos coach Bill Mulligan 1 state JC_ basketball cro"'.n Bat.bara a year ago. Cerritos is will play at least nine players tonight (7.30) when coach Bill 9.4 in state tourney games, hav· early in his revolving-door 1 Mullican•s Ga':1chos take on ing won it in 1968. policy of having fresh athletes I dangerous Cemt.os College at The individual stars are on tbe. lloor for his all-out run• lbe Long Beach Arena. numerous. aml-1un, pressing style. Tb~ winner advances lo Cerritos' top players are The starters will be Tim Thursday's _4 o'clock guardsLorenroRomar(6-l)and Knight (6-7)1 Craig Stahl (6·7), quarterfinals against Pasa~ena Brian Lumsden (6-3) and Arlie Green (6-2), Tim Shaw or City College or ~an Fra.nc!sco rorward David Wilburn (6-3). (6·3) and Rich McElrath (6·1). ~ this 16-team smgle ehrruna-Center Harold Homsher (6-5) And Tom Uoy (6-6), Rennie lion cl.assi,c. and forward Gregg Riphagen Watts (5-8), Ben Bacon (6·5) and Torught s game features two ( 6·4) round out the starting Rodney Miller (5·10) are quick run-and-gun outfi~s. Saddleback lineup. to relieve. aver~ges 107.0 points _per ga~e, The Falcons (22-8) also have a Green is Sadd.leback's leading l~ps in the s~ate. Cem~os ~as its good bench with Willy Sonsma scorer with a 14.8 average, but b1gbest scoring team in history (6-2), Jeff Brewer (6·3) a nd seven teammates are also hit· (90.0). Herb Harper (6-4}. ·ting in double figures. The teams have never met in Saddleback bas used its depth Says Gaillard Hardy Will Play Against Fullerton SAN FRANCISCO -The University of San Francisco Dons and Cal State (Fullerton) Titans went into the NCAA basketball t ournament somewhat undermanned as well as underrated. Both teams used just six players in surprising first-round victories that advanced them to th e W estern Regional semifinals. The USF Fullerton winner will meet second-ra.nJ<ed UCLA or No. 5 Arkansas in Saturday's regional finals at Albuquerque. The Dons should have a seventh man -a magnificent seventh if he's recovered from a broken thumb -r eady by Thursday night, 6-(oot-8 forward 1 ~.lames Hardy. l Coach Bob Gaillard said Tues- . day, before USF lert for Albu- querque, "James is not . physically 100 percent -no : f. But be'• improvin& day by : 1 Grid Coach : Selected l At Marina day and we're just playing it by ear on the question of how much he can play. "He's eager to play. He tore o(C the cast hlmself to prove it." It's unlikely that Hardy will be back in his starting forward spot, where he averaged 16.1 points and 9.1 rebounds over 21 games, for Thursday night's game. But his availablllty for acti~ow USF to ap- proa cti the game differently than it did t he tournament opener against North Carolina. "This week, it won't take an extr eme emergency for us to de- cide to use James," Gaillard said. Hardy was in uniform against Carolina but only ror emergency needs, which didn't arise. None or the six Dons who played in the 68-64 victory suffered an injury or came close to gettinc into foul trouble. "Our game plan was to 1~t a lead and go Into a zone detense. Then, if they slowed things down, we were very wllling to olav a low-scorinl{ l{ame." Gaillard said. USF. highest scoring team re- m a in mg in the NCAA field, :1vcraged 89 1 points a game in the regular ~cason. The top seven player:-. backed up by four! fresh men, scored virtually all: those points. As for Fullerton, 90-85 winner over New Mexico, Gaillard ob· served, "Their game plan seemed to be to go wtib just six men, and it was very effective." USF has climbed to a No. 11 national ranking with IU 23·5 record. Fullerton, 22·8, hasn't cracked the top 20 but, as Gaillard says, "This team is no fluke." to wear down most opponents on the way to a 29-3 record this season and the Mission Con- ference co-championship. And while the Falcons appeu to have the depth and quickness to s tay with the Gauchos. Mulligan is a bit leary Cerritos might slow the tempo con - siderably. "You just never know what a tea{TI will do in a state tourna- ment," says Mulligan. "But Cer- ritos has had a successful fear with its running attack, so why should they change'> ''Cerritos ls a run and press team 'Ibey do a lot of things similar to us. Romar is probably the key guy for them because he handles the ball most of the time, .. says Mulligan. Fttlcons coach Bob Foerster believes his team has tbe depth to stay with the Gauchos, but size may be a factor. ''We're probably the smallest team in the state tournament. We're not very big physically, but we make up for it with good hustle. And we have good shooter5," says Foerster. Knight, Green and Miller had chest congestion or the flu the latter part of la.at week, but are in good condition for tonight's game. AL4 STANDOUT I NIXES PRO PACI' NEW YORK-Ralph Drol- linger, 7 ·2 center for the ~thletes in Action basketball team, told a press conference here today lbat be will remaJn with the AIA and pass up a three-year, $400,000 no- cut contract offered last week by the New Jersey Neu. Drollinger told rep0,rtera he would remain With AIA /t least through 1980. ''UnUl tha . Ume," be said, "my full concentration will be' to make AIA the flnat amateur basketball team in the world." · The Ath.letes in Action is a sports ministey of the Campus Crusade for C~t. DAILY'PILOT ., • ....... l. LONG REACH -Detroit's John Long (51) battles for a rebound with North Carolina State's Tony Warren during first half ac- lion in Tuesday night's second round NIT basketball game at State's Reynolds Coliseum. North Carolina prevailed, 84-77. .. Sports Clipped Slwrt Fullerton Star Cleared NCAA officials have dismissed charges that Cal State <Fullerton) guard Mike Linden should be ineligible for the NCAA basketball playoffs. Accusations were leveled by University or New Mexico athletic d i r ector Lavon McDonald, woo said Linden bad played in a summer league con- trary to NCAA regulations. The question was raised after Fullerton upset New Mexico in a western regional first-round eame. But NCAA official Hal~ McMfnamin says Linden broke no rules, since he played in the league as an amateur when still in jun ior-college, and was thereby not afieeled by NCAA regulations. Gottfried "'·-WASHINGTON. D .C. -Brian Gottfried defeated an erratic Arthur Ashe, 6-4, 6-1 Tuesday in the first round or the Washington tennis tournament. Earlier, John McEnroe defeat- ed To• Gulllkson, 6-3, 7-6, Stan Smlut oUstA!d Butch Walts, 6·2. $-1. PhllDentdefeat.ed Mike Fisb- bacb. S-1. .u : 6-4.. ToQl' Roche ousted Nick Saviano, 8-3, • S-7, 6-4; San. Closente's Bob L\ltz downed Ricatdo Ycaza, 6-4, 7-6, John ewcombe topped Zeljko Franulovic, 3·6, 6-4. 7-5 and M"-nuel Orantes beat Billy Martin, 6-4. 6-4. Evert Gets Scare BOSTON -Chris Evert sur- vived a scare Crom J oAnne Russell and made a triumphant return to the professional circuit Tuesday night, winning a first· round match 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 in a women's t.ouriiament. Two other top seeded players -$vorme Goolagong and ~iJlle Jttan ~ -won tbeit ~ .. round matches Tuesdey. But Mattta Redondo upset fourth- seeded Betty Stove, 6-4, 6-2. Goolagorig topped Brjgltte Cµy pers. 6·3, 6-2, while King ~ased past Regina Marsikova, 6-3, 6-4. Ange&T._.le MESA, Ariz. -Vida Blue. Batry Abraham and Bob Lacey combined to limit the California Angels to six bits Tuesday as the Oakland ). 's won for the first time in this exhibition baseball season, 7-2. B 1 ue outpitcbed Frank Tanana, the Angels ace lert- ha nder, as he shut out the Angels on one bit and a walk over the first four innings. Tanana also worked four in· nings and was ripped by home runs by Tony Armas and Rob Picciolo. Doftfier• 8-5 LAS VEGAS -Spring train- ing isn't even over, but odds· makers at one sports book Tuesd!lY made the New York Yankees the American League favorite and the Los Angeles Dodgers and Cincinnati Reds co- favorites for the National League baseball pennant. The Yankees are 4-S favorites to tak~ the American Leaiue pennant. according to the odds posted at the Hollywood Race and Sports Book. In the National League both Los Angeles and Cincmnati were listed as 8·5. OU.er-; AmerlcM! Le~ue: K•nw1 City. l·I. Tn4t\. •·I; BMIOll, 5-1; C-'ifMnl•, .. 1; Balllmote, 10°1, Oelroll, 12·1; CllvtlM!d, 50-1; Chi~. SG-1, MHw111kH, S0-1; Mi,.,,.sola, 100-1; OMI-, ISO-I; S.alUe.~l;-TotOl'llO,:I00-1. IUllONI lAAQW: PflllMM!pfU, >-I: Plttsllur ... '""l· SI. lo;;o1, 1~1; O!Qoo Culls. 1~1; HousW't. 15-1; Monlreal, ~1; Sin 0M9o, «>-I; S.ft Fran· clsco. 100-1, Atlaftq. 100.1; 1.ftd Ille New Y0<li Mell, 10CH • Dodgers Lose DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Topy Perez stroked a two-nm bosper to Je4.ud Ellis V-1enti.np followed with a solo blast TUes .. day as the Montreal J!:xpos nani: mered the Los Angeles Dodgent 7 -2 in exhibition baseball. The Dodgers took a l·O lead on Bill Russell's solo home run in the first. Barter S1eltc~• STATE COLLEGE, Pa. Dick Harter was a surprise choice Tuesday as new head basketball coach at Penn State, which used second effort to lure him Crom the University or Oregon. Last week, Harter, 47, said after a visit that he'd remain at -Oregon. Harter's assistant, Jim. Haney, is expected to be the new Oregon coach. .RJdgers, 57-58 PISCATAWAY, N.J. -Center James Bailey hit a jump shot with 17 seconds remaining to give Rutgers a 57-56 victory over lndiana State in a National In- vitation Tournament quarterfinal game Tuesday .night. Geergetetml, 71·82 DAYTON, Ohio -Ed Hopkins scored 18 points to lead Georgetown University to a 11-62 victory over Dayton Tuesday in a quarterfinal game of the Na- tional Invitation Tournament. Reef!, Blasts Refs After Lakers Win NEW YORK (AP) -Willia Reed sat in the coach's room beneath the Madison Square Garden st.and$, bis feet propped up on a bii wooden. desk. Ke was an~hing but relaxed. 'lt's totally disgraceful, the Jclnd. of offldaUng we bad oat thete tooilht -a dlagrace to the 1ame of batltetball," Reed , declared ~ watchina hla New o.nr •• ..,.t a.. ..... ,. tteatment" accorded Lakets center Kareem Abdul.Jabbaf, who hid 22 points and l'l ~ bounds. "He was getting away with just about anything,,, contended Reed. "He commits fouls and calls _.,, made, or they live the routs to somebody else. A couple of Umes he jumped into IUJS - no foul . .. Ok91, tben call it tbat way et both ends. But tbey didn't. 'Jbere can't be that~· f'roai one encl of U. floor to the «her. You've fat to call UM same JIU the aamt way • .. Why should tbey be Sa, timldat.ed by Jabbar?0 BM asked. Adrlaa Dantley led. Loa An1elea with 21'po1ntl. · '-OIA~ -...-..,. -.... ......._ .................... ~·,.-:-.-it ~--&T..-:9fNlt& ~ .. ..:1.":..-::=::-t ::.--'!11 ..... t,a..... t.;T.._111 _. .. .... -...... , • ll ,, .... -:..::-~ T.... a a • ,._111 .......... ~'--.......... "· --.4'-tt,Jllt.. r~......_ Y~· 09C11 ' \ . .. . "'2 DAILY PILOT <AIM, Tars Duel Tonight ' ·In Volleyball Newport Harbor Hlgh'a volleyball duel with rival Corona "4tel Mar will be tonight (7) ln the Newport Harbor Hlgh gym. A capacity crowd is anlicipl'lted. The non-league tussle was .Arlglnally scheduled for 'rbu.ra· day evening at Corona del Mar. The Sailors of Newport Harbor are 3·1 for the season, lncludina a victory at Laguna Beach, home of the 1m CIF 4·A cbam· plons. Corona del Mar ls a perennial power ln the South Cout League and in addition to the flavor ot a traditional rivalry. the game is also seen as a test of strength between the Sunset League and the South Coast League. A junior varsity tiff Is slated for 5:30. . . ....... &:::z:t::l\: ....... ---.... WedntS<J•~. Merch 15, 1978 In a marathon match at Corona del Mar High, San Clemente ouUasted the host Sea ,Kings, 12·15, 15·8, 16·18, 15-11, 15-7 ln a South Coast League out· ing Tuesday. Huntington Beach toppled La Quinta in three straight games in non-league action . DMly PllM ........ ff ~.erkll O'~ MISSION V1EJ0'9 JESSE VASSALLO OETS A j uMP ON HIS OPPONENTS. YM'llty Llli!IM• llMch dtf El Toro 15-4, U-3. 1S.t. • Co$I• Mew def 0.nl Hiiis 10.U, IS.ll. tS.tJ, l).tS, tS.tO. MV Dominates Swimfest Minion Vlt)o def University 1 .. u . ._IS, tS.1l, IH. Huntington 8H<ll def Uo OulnlA 1S.1J. IS-7, U·ll. !CllM>n def I Nine, .. ,.. IS.tJ, IMS, fs-11. So. Torr-.i def OcMft VI-tS-6, U4, IS-7 South Coast Finals Set Thursday JW!MrYa~ Legune 8H<tl def El Toro 1S.t, IS.II. O•n• Hiiis Cltf CMI• ~IS.II. IS.S, IS.(!. Mission VleJodel Unl,..rsny IS·1. 17·1S. L• 0.,lftl• .,., HunU1>9lon IH•<ll u U, ' IS. IS II. Irvine def Edl'ICn IS.I, U 1 So Torr.-n« Cltl O<N n "'-IS-)." I) Vanlly Sen Clen.ntt cMf C.Won. del Mer U U, 154, 1 .. 11. tS-11, IS-7 J...,._VaMUy Sen Clemenlt Cltf C.WOM del Mer IS.•, IW. ll•nll'I' C•o•••r-Velley cMf Oceln Vint IS.I], U·l . , .... Juftl« Vwtlt y C.•OISlr•no Velley def Ocun Vie• IS.II, IS-7. Anteat ers Trim UCSB UC Irvine took advantage of 10 walks, including five that led to a three-run seventh inning, to defeat vis iting UC Santa Barbara. 5·4, in a SoutheTn California Baseball Assn. game Tuesday. Jim Dawson drove in a pair of runs with two singles to pace the Anteaters, 2-2 in conference play and 3-8 overall. Pitcher Ken Gutierrez picked up the win, striking out four. Freshman Dan Burns got the save, recording the final out with the bases loaded in the ninth. UClrvlMUI Moore, dll 1 I O 0 Cllerd, )b Hlr•fto, ct • o O 0 M•vuua, 11 Frolender, 1b • 1 t I Heglt, If Waslll"Olon, rf • 1 I O Gullt'1'11, o MuftV'lr, U 4 0 2 0 WIHIO<I" 0 Oew•on, II> • t l 2 BurM, o Wl<k,, ) 0 I 0 Tolltl SC-11>'1' IAnlf\9' •r11..i '0 0 1 ) 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2' s 1 s UC S•nle &.fbare l,IC trvlne ' It • 020 002 OCIO-<I ) , 010 010 ilOM-S 1 Z Mission Viejo High'• Diablos eased through the South Coast League s wim prelims at Marguerite Swim Center Tues- day as expected in a dominating scene with both relay teams and seven o{ tbe eight individual events going to Mission Viejo in the No. 1 qualifying spot. The Diablos return Tbursdat for the fmals at 2 p.m. for an ex- pected breeze as they tune up for the CIF 4-A preUms at East Los Angeles College Tuesday af. ternoon. The only swimmer able to break into the domination of' Mission Viejo was Costa Mesa's Bob Polan, the defending league c h am pion in the 500-yard freestyle. , Dolan, exP,ected to compete for Cal State (Long Beach) in · Kings Spurt Past Pittsburgh, 4-2 INGLEWOOD -Mike Murphy and Bob Murdoch fired in goals 1: SO apart in the first period to lead Los Angeles to a 4·2 National Hockey League vie· tory over Pittsburgh Tuesday night. The Kings are unbeaten In six games against the Penguins this season. The vi1=tory helped the second place Kings move out to an 8· point lead over fourth-place Pittsburgh ln the Norris Dlvls~on or the NHL, and widen the Klnp' lead over third-place Detroit to 4 points. Baseball A c tion Barons Top Vikes; HB, Estancia Fall Westmins ter High School . edged Huntington Beach High, 3 ·2, and took over sole possession or first place in the Sunset League baseball stand- ings alt.er two games Tuesday. In other games played T~­ d ay. Fountain Valley defeated Jltf arina High (Jtuntlngton Beach), 4·0 in a night ouUng at Fountain Valley Recreation Center and ln a Century Leaaue riight affair at TeWlnkle Park In tosta Mesa, Estancia 's Eaglet (Costa Mesa) dropped a 3·1) yerdicttoElModena (Orange). Estancia spotted El Modena three big runs in the first inning and could never qulte catch up. An error, a double and two singles accounted for the markers. The lone run for Estancia came in the bottom or the seventh when Bob Larimer walked followed by singles by Mike Dleza and Erle Robbins. ll ~U) Ver.,..,... ct veneves,d Todd, tll YOUf\9, p ....... , .. , Sctwta,c lt~rt Sand,tl "'-""·rt HerfY,~ .. , .. ,.. J 8 0 0 t 0 0 0 J I t 1 J t t ' oeoo a o t • , g 0 0 f1I .,._., Mrlt.-i •et1111tll.1tl , 0 0 0 Jollnton, 111 2 0 O u "ot!OIM, U • 0 2 t 911Morl.p.1b ~ 0 I 0 ~...,..,.,... • 0 0 0 ~.....-1,c ttt o Wll tlo111t, .. ) 0 f f SMIW.Url4. a ' 0 I 0 Peyen, 111 ~ 0 ti 0 ~lly,~ 0000 ~.11 ttoo the fall, posted a 4:45.43, as com- pared to his winning 4: 44.8 in the '77 league finals. Other defending champions who raced to easy first place clockings Tuesday were Jesse Vassallo, Mark Barber and Paul Kontrimas, all of Mission Viejo. Vassallo eased to a 1:45.95 in the 200 free, Barber was the leader with a 1:02.37 in the 100 breast, and Kontrimas spun a 49. 74 in the 100 free. All are favored to sweep to titles Thurs· day. · Ed Ryder of Mission Viejo was an easy leader in the 200 in· dividual medley (1 :~35) and Charlie Ray led in the SO free (22.34). Vic Vassallo rounded out the MV scene with a 55.36 to fi~ is h atop the 100 ·yard backstroke field. At VUla Park High in the Cen- tury League prellm!i, Estan~ia (Costa Mesa) High's Phil Ohle was the leading Eagles ace with a prellm& best of 22.0 in the so free and 49.4 (third) in the 100 free. Mwltl CIMtt l..Nl'l8 ,..,..,.,...._ 100 mecttey relev-t. Minion Viejo , ... II, , Coron• 0.1 Mir l:•l.71, >. 0.... Hiiis t:U .11;' S.11 c 1emen1e l :,...n ; s. c..i. Mew 1:'7.as, •· Unlwerslly 1:4t..l0. 200 ,,__,, J, Vassallo IMVI 1:'7.tS; 1. Oolan ICMI 1 '6.09; 1 ~enc• tETI 1.4 IO. •· S llarnlcMI (Miil t:4t.JI; S. Ke!Vt (SCI t:4t.S1; 6 9e ..... (MVI 1 .... 7). JOO lnd0-1. Ryder <Miil t:Sl.JS; 2. 0. Bllrftff IMYI 3:01.lt, 2. V. YalMllo CMVI 1 Ol,'3; 4. -CMVI t ·OHI, S. Vemey IOHI J.06.U; 6. Piper CCdMI Z·01 16. SO lree-1. Ray IMV) t1.l4; J. KOtttrl...., (Mii) n .so; ), T-IDHI n .Jl; •• ~ (Miii l2 ... ; 5. H"'11 !SCI zt.t:I; 6. 8enJeml11 IMVI ?l.10 lOO fly-I. J . llHtetlO IMYl S2.60; J M<Oonougll (MVI Jl.09; 1 Vemey (OHi 5'.tA;' Puett ('Cl SI>. .. ; i. IUt,llle (Ell ,.,).J; •· Sinllll (E T) S7.JS. too 1....-1 Konlrl .... > IMVI •• 14; " -· ISCI ~· 12; 3 Hew CMVI 50 OS, 4. Br-.. CMVI 50.31; S -tnl0f9 CCMI jO >'. •· Tellele tETI so ..... SOO lrM-1. OolM CCMI 4 4S.O; 1. ICOIW\ lSCI •·SJ 40; l. M. 1!1¥nH CMVI ' Sl.ll. 4, 9e\NI CMVI 4:Sl.S.S; S ~ (ET) 4:UAll; •· Hell IA4VI 4:S7.li. 100 l>O<l<-t. V. 'VHWllo IMV> SS.2'; I. N9U., tC4MI 57.1$; 1 Pl<Mtt ICMI SIM: '-....,_ COHI St.3'; S. Aey (MVI 1:00.U; 6. '~"'-'°" IETI t ·00.14. tOO ~-t-1. M. a.r11er IMYI t :02.J7; 1. T.Ula IETI l:tlUJ; l. Piper Cc.Ml l:Ols.ti; 4. -l (OH) 1:04.U; S. ,..ters.an ($C) l :OUI; 6. 8c:~ l~~:t.,'::, -t. MIUloft Vle;e ':t ... 2; 1. El Toro 3::12.11; 1 San ci-1e >:nM; •. C°'ll Mesa 3.:16.9'; S. Dena Hlllt ):UM; 6. Laguna 8eKll ):l7. t3 , ........ 100 medley retev-1. Minion Vlelo 1:0 .11; 2. Lagun• llea<ll 1 ;$$."; l . Coton. del Mer 1 :S..•. 200 frff-1. D. Borller IMVI t.lt.U ; 2. D. Eb\' IMVI 1 51.$3; 3. ~ ll81 l:St.5'7. 200 Ind-I. C..ll'lllervwl<r (Miii J:ot.OS; 1 Henson CUI 2:1J.01; a. S.IY9f' tMVI 2:U.13. so lrH-1. M. waw.o IMVI n .ll, 2. Wiiii.ems IMVI 2Ut; J. L-I OHi 24 41. 100 fly-1. R. RoblMan (Miii U.2S; 2. O. El>y !Miii SS.)i; l. &elsei IMVl 1:01 .•. 100 lrH-1. M. Wash (Miii Sl.2S; J. Oetllal .. 1'4MI S1.1t; 1 U-(L81 SJ.63. 100 be<k-1. Me.-11 IL8) 1.00.0S, 2. Haley (Miii 1 '01.40; S./Wl"(er (Miii t:O) 02I. too b,.e.1-1. o. 8erber (Miii 1:05.41; 2. S.lyer t MVI t;OUJ, a. l...ws ti.Ill 1:07.SI. * ,,... retey-t. Mllllon Viejo J· U .40; 2. S... Clemente >:U. t1; s. CorON dtl M.ar l : '1 .tO. Ct-,.~ Ollallfyf ... EltM<le Ollallt lien Venlty JOO lrM-t WUHlllolf , S4 , 11. C..roll I ~ I 100 Ina. ~->. 0on ... 11 l OS.I. 10 llronctw 1 u . •, 12. NerdRrom I ; U I SO lr.-1. OHe tt.I; •. WV•tt ll.1; II 8aldlng U .4; IJ. Orelle 13 '· 100 lly-L OoMefl S4 S; .. Mmun9,. >. 100 lrM-l. Ollle4'A; t. lletdlftO S2 J. soo trw-12 8Klistrum t-tl 1 100 .,.o-_.. Honlstn.m 1.02.7, I. llaronctw 1:05 . 100 l>fHst-• Wyelt I 09.t. 1. Orth 1.09.4; 10 WunlhoH 1 10 4 ,. ...... ~ 100 '""· nwdlev-12. Powis ?.40.J st fret-11 Hurley 216.l. 100 lrw--t. Hurley Sl.J 100111<11-11. Powil1:17 .•. 100 tlf'ent-12. lnldon!I I: 11.S. SWIMMING /TRACK /BASEBALL Track Roundllp ~ Blevins Sizzles In Hurdles Race Troy Blevins turned in the fastest 330 low hurdles time in Orange County and Dennis Cowan improved his county-best mark in tbe triple jump to lead Fountain Valley lngb to a track and field victory over vlsitine Lone Beach Millikan Tuesday. A Junior, Blevins sped to a 38.9 clockin1 ln the lows wbtie turn· inl in bis second triple or the season. He long jumped 22·11 and ran the 440 ln 52.1. Cowan got off a leap of 45·7 in the triple jump, giving him the county's only two marks over 45 feet . Brian Appel won the 880 in 1:59.9 and Kirk Buhler captured the mile In 4:27.9 for other top Barons marks. Huntington Beach Higb's Mlke Gifford ran the 880 in 1:59.0 while Gordon Duff bad Umes of 4:30.4 in the mile and 9:48.8 for two miles in the Oilers' home triangular meet against Ken· nedy (La Palma) and Bolsa Grande (Garden Grove). Steve Davis of Edison (Hunt· in~ton Beach> ~ark.led in the hurdles aa the Chargers lost to Saddleback (Santa Ana). Davis went 15.0 in the 120 highs and 40.3 in the 330 lows. John Gold· stein was a double winner in the m i le (4:37.7) ·and two-mile (9:58.7) for Edison. In South Coast League action, Laguna Beach lost to vi.siting El Toro, 76-fA>, despite a sprint trl· pie by Norman Anderson while Corona del Mar got double vie· tories from Russ Immel and Dave Hanoock to defeat visiting San Clemente, 99-38. Corona del Mar's Todd Kausen threw the disc us a personal best 147·8. l"l'·MfWlcaR Y•nllY f'11bl Y...., (M) U11 l.Mlt .. Kit Mllll""" 100-1. ltornlnt (Fl IG.2; J, -rls (Ml 10.•; ). Gittens t Fl 10.s. 720-1. Manis (Ml tt.1; 2. Warren IMI u.•; J. Romine (Fl 21 ... 440-1. 9MYIM (Fl Sl.t; 2. LllH (Ml S.U; l. EwMs(MISU. lf0-1. AR911 IFI t:ff.t ; 1. Yrllfftet .... I IM) 2:01.J ; l. _ _., "' 2:02.•. Mlle-1. lkllller IFI •:27.t ; 1. LuOMn (M.I 4!11.t ; a . ._ t'l •:JG.1. l·mlle-1 . ...,,.., ('1 10:2J.t; L Smoot (F) 10:13.1; 1 ~ IFI M!~. JJOt.H-t. e-IM IFI JI.ti I. ~ (Pl •t.o; J. Mllcltetl IMI 41. I. UOHH-t. C.Strwy CFI 15.6; 1. OuMMI IFl tS.t, J. AllllOft CM> M.I. U> relay-I. Founl.itl Valley '6.t . Mlle rtl~t. MltllUn 1.».t .• HJ-I, Soelwri9'1l (Ml ..O; J. e.tll~ CFI S.10, l. eoi-lMI S.10. U -t. 91ntM (Fl :12·11; I. EftCI'" (Ml tH; 1 RorYllM (F) 2l-4. TJ-1, C-CFI 45-7; 2. Eftdrn IMl 4H, S. Kotlnelt (MH2"-SP-t. Nllltll (Ml n °1; 1. 11 .. y IMI .._.,..,, l. 8•UOflrnan ( F) 4S.10 ,_.,, Yanity f'11tll'M1MY(fll <• LtlMllllMn 100-1. Johnston CMI tt,4; UO-JelwlttOll CM) 2'-1; <MO-I. ~ Cf') SU: et0-1. TMM°nPtGfl (F) 2:11.t; Mlle-I. caMy (Fl 4:4U; J·mf-1. 5-reltt., IFl lO:IU; »OLM-I._,_ (Fl •2.f; 1211t1tf-1, .,_ (Fl 1t.t; m 440 r• 1ov-t. MllllllM tu: Mild retev-1 • .._,t.i11 Valley $!41.l; HJ-t. P•loe (Ml S-tO; u -1. Friese IMI tf.lO; TJ-1, trr-(Ml «1-11; SP-I. Pi.w CPI G-t. .. ,... ..... """'11t1C11 Mii ...... (10 IN ) All Yellty 10!>-t. WlllllmS (Ml 10.1; 2. Secllff CMI: $. SoWthw..W 11•1. 220-1. WIM._,,. CM) H.O; I. HYlbM CM); J. SH!ff (Ml. ..,_,, H"'98ft (Ml SJ.71 t. R-(,),; l. Oul11lettCFI. --t. nylOr CFI 2:!U ; 2. It-O ; J,°"""t IMI. Mlle-I. St,..._ IFI 4:4._.; 2. Enot (Ml; > liktatllly (Fl. 2·11111e-I. Ev-(Ml; IO::M.t; 2. It-IMI; l. $(t'91-(F). nC>LM-1. S'°"' CMI 42.I; 2. Kleln IMI; l. Miiier CF). UOHH-t. ~(Fl lt.S;J.OwtM (Ml ;S. lt~ll'l. "° ,........_., Mllllltall SU . Miit. ~1. Mllllltall l:Sl.O. MJ-t. MllW tFI W ; f, McElroy CMI, 2. Olwatl (I'), U-1. Mo..a CM> tf.tY.: t. Kleflt IMI; l. WOiie'( CF). TJ-t. C:.-(Fl ,._J\4; 1. Mii• IP); J Welley (Fl, $P-1. s.¥s (Fl 47-1; 2. ~elet (Ml; >. M¥1MllCFl. T rlt.....se. Kl~,,. YtnllY CW-•lillllrl,.llMl .... C.-100-1. t-* tSI 10.4; I.~ CSI ; >. ... -...co. 210-1. I'"'"" \$) tU; t , Fatw•• ICI ; J. 'T°l'Offtas (Cl. •-1. OMN9r CCI SU; I, HoflMttw (Cl; l . °""'"' ($). 1't-I. Oouglts IC) 2:0UI f, °"11..., tCI; J. Wll\,.Nn to. Mlle-I. GltrUn !Cl 4:>U; 1,H-.t!ff CCI;), 0\0• CCI. t·mu-1. Oell89M• to tt:os .. ; 1. <Mtllell tc1;~ • .......-co. , ai0U4,...I. Mett CCI 41,0; 1. ~ (SI; I. ~l:.~c:-t. Smtlfl 10 16. 11 t. SIMM (Cl 1 a. Min ((). "° ,..,..,_.,, c.-• ~ •. ,, Miit "41111-1. OW-_. M« 8:&4. HJ-I• ...... (C) •It I. leftlM (QI L - "'°""lllSI t..J -1. Hen<oO ISi, 10 S; 1. MIU (Cl, l . Fe~tge\ ICI. T J -l. H-• ISi '2·t ll1; 1. W ..... ISi; J.. S.... IU (C). SP-t. Oottwlng IC)~•; J. Rell (Cl; J.. ....... CCI. OT-1. 1(-CC) 147•; 2. Meta (SI; 1 Mew9 (Cl. PV-1. Game IQ 11~; 1.0'Gndy ISi; S. f¥• ,.11 (S) • .--vanity c.t-.•MlrtUtl ,,,, s.aa~ 100-1. ~ IC> II.I; Z»-t. 11..-t (Cl u.s. ·-'· ~ (C) Sl.6; --·· 0-. Mll'Ol (Cl t ;IS.t; Ml-I. z.i.a.1 IC 4:12.6; 1 m11e-1. ~ co n :oo.o; JlOUt-1. l- ISI •St; IJOHH-t. Mertullet CCI lt.t : ..0 ,... l•Y-t . Coronl del Mer '9.Z; Mlle n4..,._I. Coron• Otl -l U.3; HJ -1. Giiroy (C) W : LJ I 11~ ICI 1._7; T J-1. Gllril'\t (0 ~S; PV-1. Oe ... 1 ICI f.O. SP-1. YM;ldl CO •1; OT t. K-1 ICI !Of.II"" • Cweu ~~~:.~SM 0.-.-100 I. llrigllt IC) IO,a; 2. l..,_ (C); 1 F ....... CCI 11 220-1 tltlc!M CCI 2S.2; J. ll~•Y (51; J . Farve ICI. 440-t. A,.,.,_ \Cl 51.S; 2. H~llet tO; l. Oo<191M ISi. ..0-l.MllltrlClt :lU;J.SftydW(Cl;).i...111 CCI. Mlle-I. Scott ICI S:OS.O; 2. Tr•YIOr CCI; 3. COiie ICI. 1·mllt-1. L~ (Cl 11,0; 2. Traylor tel; J. SllY"Otr CCI. llOLH-1. H9'1lel (Cl •7.0; 2, 8,_ ICI ISi; l. Gordon ICI. . t20HH-1, S-t (0 1t.t; 2. llef'~ CO; J. Herbel (Cl. 440 rel•v-1. C.Won. clel Mar '1.7, Miit relay-I. Cotorw 4el W..r 3:,.,0, MJ-1. ~tlloUI 10 W; L Rlao"9 IC>; l Glll.O.rd (Cl. LJ-1, Swwt (C) 1 .. s ;2 ........ CCI 13. wem tCI. T J t , Miii« ICl 3'-S;) Welts \Cl; no third. PV 1. s.. .. u-1 ICI f.O; 2. a.1d0ftl ICI, J Mllll<•n CCI ~P-t, ~CCI 41-1; 2. M£i!ler tCI; l. Pen· O.rgrot CCI. OT-1. OioKVl CCI 11»-e; 2. Kwdkli (Cl. l ~-H9r.t (Cl. BB-Boba..Ke1111ed11 V9"ily HI .. keclt 12Y>, llelw G<-....... K......,., J1 100-1. Our'*" Clll tll.I; 1. YMlic... llU I0.4; l . Wlllft ltll I0.4; 4. ~ IKI n.L 210-t. °"''*'" 181 :ta.t; 2.--(Kl 22.1; 1 l l-Ufft IHI D.t; '-Orey CICI l\.t. ..0-1 . .._, 1111 SU; L Glttwd (HI SU; a. ~V (Kl SU; 4. Reff (Kl M . llC>-1. GHtwd IHI l :ff.O; t. W.-CKI 2:02,I; J.. W-1«11 (HI 2:0U; 4. MMW4 (8111.L Mlle-t. Owl1 IHI •:au; 1 ..... oh •:aM; 1 Em-(II 4:Jl.I; 4. McC:U. (Kl. J-mlle-1. Wwtltl (l(l t :ll.t; 2. Duff IHI t: ... ; a. AUltlrt (ti) ll.I.; 4. T .... ..._ (Kl n.t. 440 '91ey-I. tlolM G<-'4.S; 2. 1(-.oy ...o. Mlle relay-1. Huntington 8u<h J:«l.O; 2. ic .... nedy l '40,I UOHH-1. S.llgman (HI 1$.t; 2. Ri.dle (Ill ,. 0, l. Brummell IHI 1'.4; '· Oi.N IHI n.t. JlOLH-1, Jellrtes IHI «).7; 1. AldcHe (81 41.1; 3. Colberl CHI 41.2; l . 111111,_ llCI n.I. HJ-I. Matlin (HI '-2; 2. Wool ... CHI 6-0; J. lhel Winn 181, T11a<i..n011 IHI S-IO. LJ-1. Unsecum CHI 20-511>; 2. WIM CBI »4; ). 111111<-ll<) lkl'>; •. 8Hlt0fl 18l 1f.~. T J-1. o.-.11 tHI U4; I. ~l' ca1 404; l. 8rvmmett t HI >H; 4. Sr.Mo Oii >t-TV.. PV-1. WllO>ll 1111 IJ-0; 1. Lawis (Ill H .. ; J. Layille (HI tl-0; 4. C:...W..,,._. CH) 10.... $P-1. ltft91• IHI ts-3; 2. HeyW (H> 0-~; l. Gercle ( ICI CH;). AANrl 181 4f.1W.. OT-1. Alwood IKI U6-I; 2 • .._.,,..,CHI tt .. I. J.. Rletle IHI tlMI 4. 8ertow (M) 101-l. ,., ..... Hto. IMdl tl6, K.-.Y JS, ..... Or...-tt. 100-1 ~ (81 10.t; 2. T ........ 110; l. Krl1K (H). U0-1. lltof'Ms (Kl U.O; 1. Krl!K (H); I Roberti 18 1 «0-1 McO-CHI 54.1, J. C..mptMll IHI, l Burl IHI MO-t R McltoOerts CHI 2:09.7; L Mca.-IHI, l . IC rips IHI. Mlle-I. (tit) HtrNndr1. O.IWll, oio.r-CHI 4 5' I 1 mll-1. Hernend«r IHI 10: 1•.l. l lltel O•nlels. Glbenorl IHI 440 t'91ey--Kannedy Jl.4, Mlle Aley--lngten 8NcJo l :•o. . t 20+4 H -I. S. Mc RO!Mrts IWl ,,, S; 1. ""°"" CHI; 3. Gor~ IHI. llOLH-t. S. McR~ (HI '1.1; J. -Ml IHI; l, 8wrt IHI. HJ-I. ~r (Hl ._1MI; L Tayl« CHI; 1. tkll IHI. LJ-1. 8'11 IHI t .. H'lli; 2. Rotlerb (81; l. ~ to)• IHI • TJ-t. ~II CH) 3'"%V1; J. 'r•ytot (HI; l. M•,llil CHI. SP-I. Curr-9 (H) ~; !. wtll.-Cfl (Kl; l. Coflreft CHI. See Track. Pate S.3 Rakhshani LeadsGWC Spike rs Vic Rakhshani led the Golden West College Rustlers to a pair or easy Southern Callfomla Con· ference track and field victories Tuesday as invading Cypress College and LA Southwest were battered on the GWC racility. RakMtian.l tossed tM shot put 52·31~ for a personal best and the second best effort in Golden West history. He also settled for a second in the discus 041·11) and added some icing with a third place finish in the high jump (6--0). Huntington Beacb Jumped 111 Jront of Westmlnsterh2.0, wltb a pair of runs in the Nt inning, then couldn't put any more on the board. The run1 came as a result of ~o errors and a double by awn Cisco. Cf.sco. bad two of , · e •lx Huntmaton Beach hits ; :and on the mound, atruck out • ~our Westminster batten. Mc ...... ~ ..• IC_t.ltly,aV Melda6Mo,lf ..,...,,,, ~1 ... 10 C:.11..wl, tb 1 000 0000 2 000 otoo JflO 0100 2 0 I 0 '0 0 0 ,. .. .... r,N 0000 ~'·" •10• Die .. , cf t t 1 0 ll'oct<ll, rf 0 0 0 0 Tttob 2' t • 0 ·Gapehos, GWC Nbtes Win Dennis Danduran turned In a lifetime best iD the 400-meter in- termediate hurdles with a 54.9 clocking, second to defending conference champion Jeff Boyd or Southwest. Also tum.Ing in a nifty effort was sprinter Perry Johnson with a winning 10.8. a season best for the Rustlers ace. : After tyi.ne the scor• lh Ule : third Oft a two-run 1ln1le by ~ :st.el Morrll, tho Uon1 put the ' wtnnlng marker acrou In the .fourth on a walk to Scotl Can· · tlno. Shawn Skjonaby came on -~a a llnch·runner and stole • •econ , then scored on Fred , Betz' 1quea:e built. ' M arlna out·blt tountaln V1Uey'1 BU()ba, 8-5, but failed ·-~~•cote. i The Bamw a ~ on tbe : rd ln UM K':!t bmlnt OD a wo·bue error, a •at• bJ Mike J •Olnc. a walk to Milt• Empt.lg N.d another ~· by Charlie 'SJcktnu. ~ ln t.be nnb, marten ca.me 1D whea Mark ~ot»erta ·~ leor.d oa • tit· Pl• b1 x.¥ID RotJIJIHI aad thee • twUd pileJa 1ot tb• •flaal ru Cftll. Jim CiiililiMI' ._ au &M .. , . fot F°""8bi VAlteJ I itrWal -aeven. T•bih CMvi1, If *'~·· o.,itllt, Ill lrwll\o• ~~-...... ~ .. ' 0. 0 • '. t k-.llr._.... r II e 3000000-S6 0 ... 000 ,_,. t (0"""'""""" .. , ..... in; tOtO t900 1010 00 .. U I\ ••• 1000 t I I 0 OUt 1600 tl4 ,, r • • ~ .. ........ f I •\ LA..--m , .......... ., ..... .. , .. .., Stt 0 • t t • ••o• ...... d otOO MMletll,• f OOO ,.._,...._,. ··:· ••• •• '. (Mfll,li. ft fO S.-lft,a . ,,, ._.. .. •••o ~,. .......... • ............ c •... ,,...~ ........ ._.. •••• ..... ltlt .., ' .. " • ••• ltJ O . ... ........... -....... , ' . I I GIRLS' SPORTS /TENNIS I MISCELLANY JC,PreP Baseball Standing MISSION CC*,. ••MU ,.....Ot ..... W 0L ~t.tlotcll 2 Soutl\westtm 1 o 5'wl 01-0 ' Palomar O 2 .......... Dlwhl• t:ltrvs ~ l Sa" ea~"° , 1 Cllalfay 1 1 Rlwnlda I 2 . ~.,·.s-.. SedcJltbM:k S, Pa~ 1 Saut-Wn S. Sen Diego 3 5-fl hrMr'dlna1, 0-.~0 CllnAJ,ltl~I TMar'•O.- s.tcldl.-Cll. Sen Ol'90 5ovt........__. PalorNr Sa" Bef_...,. at CllN$ CNffay al 1111..enkle o• , 2 SOUTMaaM CAL CONl'aaUICE W L Ge LAHar-4 O ~"Wnt J Cyprau 1 Sama Monk• 1 RIOH-1 LASoutll-1 O ,,_., 3 4 4yt l..OS .,. ... cc 0 4 s T-*Y'I~ Rlo~7,Cyp .. uS LA Harbor S, LACC 2 Golden Wfost 3. U. Southwe•l 1 T-y'IO- S-la -.le.a 4ll CYIW.U SOUTH COAST COHl'EllaNCE Mt. Sa" MIOftlo •, SM Ot.9o Mew 4 Full ... IOll 3, 5-11• Ma 1 Ora,.9e Cont at Groumont -tponed. wet gtOUnM SUMH!T la.AGUE w Was1mln"ar 7 Hunll"9IOll 8ffcl\ 1 M.arlna 1 Fount.am Vattay 1 EdlllOft 0 NewportH_. o L oe 0 I I I 1 1 111 • 1'·> TWIMy'aS<-Wutmlft6ter l, Hunll"91on 8u<.h 1 F....,tal" V'9fley 4, -Ina 0 T ........ 'tO.- EdlM>n vs. Newport Harbor at Tewl .. kl• Pan. 171 EMl'taE t.aAGUE LosAlaml• Ka.-c!Y Kalella Loar• Satldl.O.C. Cypress W L Ge , 0 , 0 I I 1 0 I , ..... 0 1 IV, 0 2 1 TmMlr(ISC- Ka4alta•.~2 Ke-.ty l, Laara 2 LO$ Al-ID& 4, s-1-1< l ~-r·~ Karena al Seodleb«lc IC._.,·LM At.aml!M at eo-,wn Park LNra·C.,_n •I u P•lm• PUil ANGELUS LEAGUE W L Maltr Del 51. Paul ~, .... Bl)hop Monl90mery Bishop Amal Plua x t 1 0 0 T-y'1 karn M•t ... 0.1 I, 81t.lloe> Amat l SI Paul 3, Servltt 2 0 0 1 1 1 1 BIS/>op Moflt91)tnery 2, PIUS X I l'nUy'aoa- o• '• .,, Mater Otl ac Bisi-Mont,;iom.rv Ph" X·5eN!le at 8ovVfl P•rk Ill e lsllop ArNI •I SI. Paul College, Prip Net Results o.1•1t W"4 1'1 UI llM - $1 ...... T•mmen IERI lief K. Lynort .. 1. ).6, .. l ; C..IK (Ill dltf P .......... 7 6, .. t ; -•• (GI Clef C-lllo ._,,, •~. \lldetto IGI Clef Sand .. 1. 4-4; O. ·--11 IG) dtt ko~• M , , .. , .. ,; UIS~ IGI def !!II"-• M ,H . DeolMeS Tomm~t• IRI dtf IC. l.YflOll· Meek •·l, ... >; O. lYflOIH'•l'Nm IGI Oaf C.tm.,lllo-Ka~ .. 7. 7·S, .. l ; \lldetto-Utt.lar <Gl Clef s.nct-EnrlQIHt ...... 1. ~lftadl ,., CJ) 51111 ..,_. .... ~ Faltennel« IS) Clef Woll H, M ; Oise" ISi Clef~ 1 .. , 6-7, ..O; Dotoy tHI dltf Jones M , ...._ 7-S; Sflavar (Sil) Clef Finley ._., ~. 7 .. ; Fullff (SI dtt 8-7-6, M ; 5'1Nrs CSBI dtt H_.. 7-S, :M, 1..S.. o.Mes F•lterm•l•r·Jones (SI def PHtlrthall·SflaV..-.. 1, .. 2; l"ll'ley. Fuller IS) dtt Fr....-~ W ,S-7, 6·0; OIHll-Hor" 15) del PatUSClft- ()ofly .. 1, W. or...,. CM'* m <•> s.e. AAa Slfllles Feddetly COCCI Clef M. \.Ind ... 3. W , Tomei IOCO det Smltll M , •-1; H•rrls IOCO Clef PM_,. .... 7-S; McDonald IOC:O def Mc~ld .. 1. ..O; R•t>O IOCCl cll't Baur .. > ... 3; -•Ion IOCO def T. Lind .. 1. 0.- l•ull. ~es F-rly·T-1 IOCO Clef 5ml~ Balter 6-3, M ; -Harris IOCC) d•I Palmer-Burchllel 6·4, 7·S; Swedluncl-Rallb (OCC) def T. Lind· Horton 6-2, l>-2. Varsity EalaMla (2SVJ) UV.I El MMetoa SI ..... 5,.ycter IEI de! Younv M ; ,,., Mull 6.0; del G.a~-..O; Oef Wilson .. O; Arredondo IE) -W , ._l, 6-4, 6-2; Ovesler (El -IHI, .. 1 ... 2 • ._l; Kl119 IEl -... 2; lost 6-7; won ... l, .. 2. --PlaHttnll•·Olflore IEI d ef Fran•lln-Santoyo W, H ; def Espre· B.auer 6-3. .. 4; &aket-$.....,...son IE) won6-3, .. 1; SIJlllM,..._ JWIWVanlty EstaltCla (JS) CJ) at ........ s-.... llelyu IE) Clef Minier 6·1; dot Munrl114 ... ,; def JkkmM ..O; def Mu~ .. I; Nldools I El -Ml, M , .. l,M; H911Y9"1El-M.4.J,M, 4-3; Houk IEI -6-2,M ,6-1,M. DMMea Brl9111-Canno" I El del Cross· H.._11 .. 2, W ; 4lel llleya-0.Wld .. ,, H ; HM'l·Wllllarns IEJ IOsl U , U ; ..... 1 ... 2. V.,.ty Wes:IMIM ... O•) Oil Mwt. .._, .. Fl"aftCI\ (HBI~--Stwmlts ( .. ; def Wetll..-.. 2; def ~ W; CMI Younv H ; .....,,. (Hlll -.. 2. lost W; -.. 1. H ; F-rly (H8) lost ••; -H; M, .. 1; Bon.a IH81 WOii 4·•, 7·S; IOIC ._.; won ..0, o..I• Johnson·Johnst-CMBI lost to Hardln9-Kosal 2·6, 4 .. ; def Fell· Mousmotes .. J. "'1; Pa><. .. Slluman IHB) lost 1•, 2 .. ;.,.... ..0,6·3. ~Vanity Westml-t•Vtl (11\'t) M,..t. 8Ncll Sl"91es Hellman IHBI Oef M<Part>an 6-3; lost to Fullbr19ht •·1; def Klrtetl 6-0; def L•lft9 .. I; Pll>oley (H8) ...,.. ... 2; tosl 4-6; WOft..0, .. 1; IAlil!I IHBI"""" •·• .... 2, .. 2 ... 1; R.s11lclc IHB) lost 1·6, 2 .. ; won .. I ; losU ... OeollllOI ~-W ; 5"'1111 (HI IO\t H. -1-6, IOll IM, i.1, Olmsled IHI ..., M , 7 S, IOtt 14, -6-4; Slel'*e 00 - '"· 10$10-6,-6-0, Iott ... OMllel Juli Elmore·J emea IHI d•I kallm•n·Wlltoon 1.s, M , •Pa~ wonv .. 1. 7-i: Jim Elmo.•T'"4fi' (HI lost;Ho .... lost ... ,t ... Venlty 1'111. VM!eY Cttl (II)-. .. SllltlH El .... (M) def Hamllloll .. t: ,,., I.ff 6·1; lost IO Ya•r H ; dllt Sllvtf 7·4; Plvaon IMl -.. I, ..... 7 .. 1 !Ott M ; Foy (M) -M, M ; lolt u ; WOtl W ; Parker (Ml ICIMU, .... 1-4, , ... ~ Soton·Sal" (Ml det Hamllt· kendro ... 2. "'I; dtt 8orVH-Tanv 6-1, M ; TlllotMlftoCrew (M) aptlt .. l. H; ._111 W.W. J...._Vanlty 1'111. v...., 12) <•> Mlnu si..-Cllnon IM> NI Maddo• .. ,; cter Evens 6-0; det Joll-._3; def Rader 6-3; E~ (M) -.. L M, ~ • ..O; Platt (M) -7·S, ._., M, .. 3; Nelson IMl ..,,, .. 2. H; lost.,., 6-7. ~ Wrobol·TMKIWdll IM) Clef Guyot• Noble 6·1, 4·0 ; del Peratu- 1111"9S•orth .. 1, ... 1; -.1s.an-Rou IMI •on 6-0, 1·S, "'°" 6-I, "'3. Venlty Ne"'9'1 USYll 12Yll Etll- 11 ...... S.lar.r <ti> lo&t to Gracia '": lost 10 Otlmpwr 1-6; Clef Blelltff b'f ... tault; lost to O.Mott • .. ; Falltl I El lost w. 1•. 1-6. :M; ""4111111 (£) Iott 0-4, >•. ,_., 2 .. ; Barrie I El !Ott 2_., 1-6, °"'· D-6. o.Ma Oavl•·HUMnOW (E) •Piii wltll Holl•..O.DeWlldt 7·S. 2•; IOI! to v ... tal"·kollna 3•6, 2 6; C•mPb•ll Mickelson (El Iott 1•. 0.6; IOSI H, w. ••Vaf'Slty New.-t (~:.!!\'ti Edi.., 01Mfl (El lost to $111111"91·6, IOSl lo KeoM<ker NI lcKl to Fl•ld1 O•, lost to M<C.rtNy U ; PoweN IEI Iott O..; won ... ,; IOS1 W ; won 7·S, B•t•n· 1vne I El lost 1 ... 1 ... 11, 4-4; S.k,•1 I El loSI 0-6, IM; won M , lost I•. .,.,,.... Leonard-VenSflln<JI• I El lost to Franco-NUNS CM, J.4; Iott to Kurnt· Bernau U , 1•; Corbo-Broou (Et loSI 2-6, U ; ~116..J. IM ....... Sell* .. _,.., 111"11 llfYll u1 .. SlaeHs F. Plroml., (NI def O.muty ~. Clef Jenillft6 .. 2, Clef SMnuellM M , Clef II~ .. 1; Herre INI lost W • -7·S, l•t H, ._.; Bird IHI WOft ... 1. lost .... -.... lo$1 ... ; Tllorl> IN) lost 1_.,0-6,IM,J.4.. 0..... Mend erlcltl-·SMllon IHI def S.POJtved~IOft M, t:t; def RUO-d-Faludl ..... M ; Godbec,Tulley IN) won .. l . 1.s; IClllt J.7, 6·1. ........ ...,. .. _,..(JO m WtilMIMtar Slf'eloa Bird (N) def, Lea<ll 6·?. d~I. Parker 6·2, def Sul •·•, dtr. 9-ow 6-l, Herre INI won 6.0, 4.0, •·3. 6·0: Crnc"" (N) IO>I 1-6, won .... •·I, 6-4, Thorp IN) lost 1-6. •on .. 3, lo.16·7,wonf>.l. l>o'*H Tully·Godber IN) dlll. Callm•n· Wilton H , .. 2. Clel. P•ylon w-6 '· .. ,, Rus .. ll·Ptlerson IN) tP411 I•. 6-3, lost 4·1, s-1. ....... '-" C4M (U) It) 0.... Mlllt loilU A11altef• Kathy Harter of Seal Beach, a graduate of Marina High (Hunt- ington Beach ), signed this week to play for the Anaheim Oranges of World Team Tennis. Also s igning this week was Anand Amritraj. WoIDen's Cage Results WOMEN'S eASKrteALL Ool.__ 1601 U3l ,. • ....._ Gotden West 1<.orl1>9-Banks 11, &tend I , &ors 11, Burrows I, ~ 1, M.artl •• Hallllma. GWC, 32-29. su..sn LEAGUE var1ltl' Fiii. Vatl9'1 0 6) (5') WeslnllMtM' F-taln Valley-Jody Blssln 2•. Jiil Bllllt1 4, u..otet-tl, &e1oen 13, Wyclnowskl •. Bellar•. Havlun 2. SocSa•ane •.~•.Armour 1. w-s. Halftime: RA. Valley, 31·30. MM'IN I~ Clll Edl- Edlson-R•ndall •. Meyer 11. ver1.,1an 7, -4, Mlcllelson ~. El\nl 4, Hansford I. Marina-Breznay 16, Nutter 16, Schlueter 6, Weston lS, Williams 7, Hayata •. lrvln 2. Halftime: Marina, 211-11. Mte. leacll CUI (JI) .._..., Hunlln,;itOll lleacll-Oovle 17. C.d.-u, Town-2, Lockhart 6, Burrows 7,Wat5CW\4. Newporl Harbor-Cathcart 2, E cllltrnach 7, Spangler s, Wolle I, Au1" 4, Horn• Halftime: Htg. Beach, 27-14. ,,......v."tty l"tw, Valley 1661 1111 Wntmlwster Fountain llalley-&lln t , Diiion I. Mar9erum 6, Huhn 6, Masco• •. Armour 11, Klno 1, Port• .t, 5<oort0••r •. JoVCt 12, Tompklm 2. Hallllme: FIA. V•llrt, ll>-S. ~(lt)(h) .... I Pro Scores MMIMMM.cWY ....... St. Louis 1 HY lslaftcaf'S 3 ltlal Atlanta4.~4(tk) Lft ......... Pl~ 2 Harper·Wooten (Hiii wtll wllll La..a .. ~l·Esc-. ,.._ 7-S; Clef 5trorler-Wllfredo M . M ; H•lnll,.._ Yee (Hill ..,,, .. 1,6-2;-... 2,6-l. ~s. W"4.......,11Sl(U) ... 11Ncll SI ..... Lac:-IHI lost t.o SHI U, tosl to Leac:ll .. ,. lost to Pa,._, 2•. clef Fawutl (Cl dllf. McCrery .. O; Armstro1111 IC> def. Strauu 4·1; ICova<k (() 41tf. Slr-W; Gaf'n\MI CCI Geof. McCrery .. 2; Ma" IC) Clef. McCnry M ; ~ ICl def. Slra .. u ..0. o.Me Samr-Hogee,'9 IC) Ciel. Harll,;ian- Entl• W , •t; ~-Port« IC) c1er -'-Y·--r ... l .... I. Ecll--C.-llllO l, Canall 10, \Ion Lu!J-12, RIChardiO<l 6, VA9'111. Marl~rv tt. 8ofwft 14, Burris n , Rk l\ 11, Hutf t, Furlllo •· Bramel 4, Bon•. Hallllma: MartM. J7·1l. c..w.,.u..,. Vanity E•Uttda l•l (CU S-AM Vatter Estancia: Frenty 4, Fratltlltn I. .. ......,. .......... ,._ ...... ..,,_ ICl5, oatrolt .. 8uffM91D. San Artlonlo 11S loll Los A"(llt4tll llS, IMw Y-111 Cle'ftt...., ltt, Kouiton .. War.l>l"910ft 110, SoutUa 1 U Goteftft 51411• 103, Oii~" Mll•allket 121, ,,_Ix 10. H-Ori-1119, PorU-103 Area Baseball ThomP'°" 14, Jami-. 10, Dan ..... 6, Hymes•. Halftlma· S..U -Valll'Y ts-1' .MierV..W.V EltffCla 141'1 (JZ> S... -V .. W, ..... , .......... 1 Clllc.qo (A) 1, Pltutluf'9h S MontrHl7,LosAftOtlH2 8oston ), Toninlo 1 Detn>lt I, Ptllladelphla 2 Hew yon; (NI 1, MlrwwM>ta o 8oltlmon 11. Tu.as I Clnd-1111, St. L.ou4t 10 Atlante 11, New York (Al 1 Oakland 7. Colltomla, San Fr-ltco l , MllWauk" 1 Clllc.a90 INl •· Sffllle4 (11) Cleveland 12., San O'-• )loWtlarVantty Mt9.aucaUl(1) ........... tf' Hunllnvton llH<-llreclll•Y . rf 2-0-1· I; 84Klcle, d S.t-O; AMlra, lb l-4MHI; BollDft, dh 1-,_; 8alllet, lb 2·2·1-0; wau .. r, lb ,._1-0; Selclo, ~s ~2-1;81eftCNl'd, If S-0-0-0; Norris. c t~O; VanT ...... cift1~.Total1 21·3-4·2. Westminster Hnt.llch. r II • 020 000 0-2 • 0 011 000 x-3 • 3 E•i.e (1l (0) .......... N .. port Hortor-Sten, rf, 4-0-0-o; Joh"&on, ct, •+t.O; L'Eclu.a, p, 4-0.1.0: Hotcl>lllss, pr, <M>4-0; ~Illy, lb, 4·0.1.0; Hubbard, 3b, •·0-0-0; Westcotl. ss, •-0-1-0; Jones, 2b, 2·0·0·0; R. Palmer, ?b, 0·0·0-0; Starkm•n, II, 2-0-1-0; Kelln, dh, 3·0·1-0; Culver, c , 0-0-0-0. Tolals: 31.o+G. Edl....-W•lkar, rl, J.+-1-0; 8afllts, Ztl, .-0-1.0; Suffer, H, ~; ICll\MY, ""· 4-o-O.Q; A/:lbOll. p, J.+-1-0; 81• .. ,,, lb, 24M; Olurci..unl, pti, M ·l-0; J-S. c, ~; Y-ne. pr, O·O·O·O; Bradbury, tf, 3·0·0-0 ; Scllaeftf', lb, t-4+4. Totals: ~1-4-0. Sar9tyl ...... Nwpl, Hbr. 000 000 ~ ~ ~ E.dlaon 000 OGO 001-1 4 J PAUL DOUGLAS .. LIASIMG MAMA .... Ctil .............. Aifl.. fl4/141-2221 2U/lt2·146J ~llJllMdtltYd..Hdt:Jf•.._. ... -·~-IS) (I) ....,..n H.,.._ Edlson-Woslnaclc, lb J ·0·0-0; Richard_., pfl ~. Wllllewll. pr 0-0-0.0; t!loY'I. 2b ~; ,. • Mott! lo, lb 4·0·0·0; Ou99an, SS 4·1·2-0; Mvmon, lb 3..().1-1; c:-. p 3..().1.0; Mau.era, cl J.M.O; &elll\, cf o-o+o. Sore,.aon, II 2-0·0·0; Caroua, If O·t·O·O; WHterman, rt J·l·1·1; 8rest>m•"• pr 0-CM>.o; Werdet!, rf 0·0·0-0; s. Morello, c J.1·1-2; Totall-8-.S.7-4, Estanclo: _.., 10. anveu 1. SlmPM>fl 4, -rtt 17, Lon,;ifleld •. Cameron t. ._ •, Aeld 2, Smeller I, Carrl<*l,.2. Hatnlmf'\Est~la "'''· SOUTH~ LEAOUE Vanity DaM Hllll ('4) ( .. ) 5M CletMttta Oen• Hlll~ller ts, PattetWft 4, Feleler JS. N~ 16, &er~trom •· 5'n Clemente Q\Mtos • • .>onmon 6, l,Ulbe 21, klnQ2, RotU-6. HilftlfM: Dena Hiits, 34-26. Ml ..... "'9fe (Ml (JI) e:1 T- • MIHIOft Vl•l-Honhllerver 17, NewPor1 Harbor-slms, "U-0-0, . Saltrt0n 22. 8Nupny JO, Carrell 11, Cramm, Ill\ 1-o+O; Altotlelll, lb MarlMll 7 Hieb 2, Rl\INt' 2, Red- 4-1·2-0; $rl>lltl, " J.+1-1; ,..ttles, ' fern 2. ' 3.0.0-0; Slier, ct 3·0·1·0; Oa" El Tor~r 12 YOlmll 4 Batfl Sauerbrey, lb J.t-t-0; krwlU, ~ 6, w_.1,, Arnett i. • 3·0·0·0: Everl\ardt. P ~-O·O•O, Haltllme: Minion Vie Jo. 59-1. Cl\a lre"za• Ph 1·0·0·0, Oa"e c.M(U) (ti Utllvarslty Sawrbrey, 2bM>+O; Frost, If o-o+o. Coron• del Mar-Tones 2, GoeGV*t Totalt-2'-2 .... 1. 14, Co<N :a. "-I, Klrlc I, ... I_,, 1c;.,._., ,........ 14 E~--~m4. Edison 000 000 S-S 1 Unlvanl~-1...-2 co..nor N4wportHarbor010 010 ._2 4 2.Gonlofll,8alrer2,Klrk1And2. ... .._. m 111 ., • ..,,.. .. Newport: Sims, u 1-0·0-0; Allotlelll, lb 241.0; Stnltlt, rf 2-o-M; Nattln, c ~; o .. s.u.rbrev. P 24-0-0; er.,,.,,,, Ff'I 1-0-0-0; su .... ct 2-1.0.0; Krawltr, di\ 1-1.0.0; Oava Sauerbroy, 2b t·0-0-0; Frost, II 2+ 1.0; E vart'l«t , llfl 1-o-M; Dalllal, lb o-+O.Q. Tot.IS 1•2-1-0. Sar9~1 ...... r II • -stmlnstw ooo ooo 0-4 1 I Newport How11or Q10 000 x-2 2 1 "-' (1) (t) CdM New11ort: Sltns, u •·O·t ·O: AllebelH, 3b ~O; Smlll\, rl -Ml-1·0; Ntttles, ( 4-M-O: Evaf'hart,p :M-o-0; Cr.inm, ptl t-0-0.0; Dan Sauert>l't"f. lb 3.0.0-0: Slier, Cf J.+2.0; krav111. lb 1-4+0; Oava S.ue<tlrt"f. 2b 1-IHHI; Forst,• If t+o-o; L•Oralldeur, pl\ Hl-0-0. Totals Sl·1·4'0. COl'Olle dlll MM: Hn.S. c 2.o+o; ~wrar, c ~; ,.,,.., lb 4-0-1.0; "rvcw. ct J.0.1-0; Saft!-. ,. a.0.0-01 Stlollln, If ~I Mil•, Jb 3..().2-0; aarttt, M s+o.o; tM!ltops, 21> .._..; c.o,er, rf l+M; l.VOftl. • 1-o+o. Totefa~. ............. r " • CIOO oat 001-1 • t OGO 000 oao-o 4 I Hetmme: ~ 33-3. c.M&a ...... U•I IDI u.-a Cosio IMU-l>nrtdaft ll, Yellkll 10, Krlkor.., t. IC~ 11. oi.tze• 11. A-~2, Doyle 2. La9u11a eeacll-Mlnllln 1, lllobertaon s, PaulliOft 3, weual 1. Erlcll-S. Hacllrt n . Halfl-. a.ta~ 17-IS. ~VM"litY SH atfMllle (Ml In! 0.. ttrlh ~ OeM Hlll9-Gaito& 2. Tllomn •• VallQAllS I. l'ersew 4, GooClt 2. Sall C:I~ 2, KUbr I, RMkamp 4. w.tler I, Zoddie& 2. Halflkne: •10. 11199uletloll: :t2·tt. at T.,. Cati 1111 Ml•lea Vi.lo Mltslon \lleto-Murl)l\Y 1, lurgeon 2, Cate 10, UH'lll" 12, Rudder 1. El Toro-lal•v 2. Cipolla 11. GolWtlH 4, Al"rO"fO l, Ellly 12. Helltlme: Mltslon v1e1o. 11-n . ~M C•> US) U•wnlty Corono det Mer-Stlm'" 2, 81akenac '· Stacl<ton •• OHIS 1. OVCle" 2, .. 1,.., 2. SWtens l, Houston '· U11lven~ s, O..lfflltl •· c.rr 2. Miiier t, UO-. 1t, il•llLN L "•HlllM! CdM, 1M. ~----75tlt cAlml1Je1tSa1ty-----... Trad ltlonal Saddle Oxfords. Leather Quarter a tongue linings. cus"ion crepe sole. $.t2.96 Brown with Egg1hell. Slack with Egg1hell. N avy with Ollno. • =--- Wednes<l11y Mdrch 15 1978 DAILY PILOT rttD Wins; Vaqs Fall PREP TRACK. • • Continued Prom Page B-2 OT-1. Cutl'etl (HI 11~1; 2 SIH (H) C.nredl IHI. !'rat- ICl.J Mct<..v1e(EI TJ I T _ _,llll71 2 L..C:•(El.l.CI U:t PY I 9'••-II.I ~. 2. ,.__ OJ, J Con••" Il l \P t Ell" ILi '1•'1. 1 Jack-Ill J Mater Dei lhgh of Sdnla Ana bombed host Bishop Amat (La Puente) 8·3 in the Angelu:. League baseball A~ner Tues day, but Irvine High's Vaquer<>s fell victim lo visiting Don Lugo Hi_gb oC Chino, 10·0, in a non· league encounter. "• le«* tlUl ()) ..... Ora-100 1 Ken1lemen IHI 11I;210-t He'(Cn IHI 1) ~ ~ I Gr-m IH) ,.1, --I R•evle 1141 2 17 7. Mii• 1 wr1g114 (M) S:OI •• J·mtl A- l HI 11. 11.0, 440 rel•'I'-, Hunllnt\9n llffc:ll .. ) Mote ral•y-H1<111lnvton IMKll •·014, l~H I Turner IH) "O; llOLH-1. fujlmore IHI ., ?. HJ-I MOf'rlMy (HI S-0; LJ I, Wllllney CHI 11-~; TJ-1. Wllltney (H) '1·3; PV-1 E-H (HI M ; SP-1, Beaufanl (H) Jt.10\.'t, DT-1, I.ff IHI ti-I. El Toro-~a9una M..O~t ll 1 4i 01 I J"'ab""' IL.I 110 •. J Pa<O> I J Motchell 1£1 &lbo•Sadd~back V•no!IY ,,..__, 1761 U7l Edl- 100 1 Slentund ISi 10.2; :L Mllucliy I El 10ll. J. Sa•MY IE I 10,t /' no-1. Slaft!UNI" (SI 23.0; t. ...... (S) n .l. J Seeney IEI 14.4. 440 t. J-ISi S>.1;'2. Klrtola (El SU; J Remfru ISi SU. The Monarchs of Mater Dei erupted for five runs in the fourth inning to overcome a 3·0 Bishop Amat lead, and added three insurance runs over the next two innings. V•l'Slty 81 T-06) l .. l ....... IHcll 100-1. ,.,_r_, (LI 10.S; 2. Baller IE.I 10.1, $ Honer.., I in 10.1. 2 .. 1. Andltnall IU U.I; 2. A .. llow IEI n t,; 1. St .. le IEI n.t. ....0--1.--. <LI u.•; 2. Coftcar llJ u.1, a 9otler !El SS.I. ate>-1. klrlela (E) J:OU; J, .. lllP (IEJ i :W•: l. Tuln IS) J:Cl.I. ' Mlle-1. Goldstaln !El 4:)7.7; t. Olltill (El •. 43.t; ,_ ~ (5) 4.S..2. 2-mlle-1. Goldstein IE) t :M.7; J••Tlm· mermenJ 151 l\.l.; s. Olllltl 1u 10:at. , 440 relay-1, SMdl-11 ., ... Mlle retay-l!dl-3:'1 .2. •I IZOHH-1. Salullo ISl IU; 2. 0.~ (£) Jjf., Vic Martin was Mater Dei's stalwart on the mound and at the plate. He boosted his record to 3-0 as a pitcher and collected three hits and two rbi to aid his own cause. .,_1, Fl'tftll (El 2·00.I; 2. 0.malrf ... (LI ?:Ot.7; J. Cade tEI 2: 10.0. Mlle-1. NICIOlas IEl •:40,7; 2 Oematr,_.. Ill 4'!IO.O; 3. Rlfto (El 4:S4.0. 2-mlle-1. Demetri-Ill 10.010; 2. Gtloll•• I El 10: 17.l;l.Sllaw(L) 10: 17. S 440 relay~ llHc:h "·'· Mlle rel..,....EI ToroJ:'9 7. UOHH-1 . .,_,IE) 16.S, 2 Miiier Ill 112, J BowlH ($) 16 I. SJOLH-t. Davis (El 40.J; 2. L.llM ISi 41A;a (', H•rrb IE ) 43.0. HJ-I. Tl,,,,,_ (5) .S..10; 2. Jac:UOfl ($') >10 l Harris IE> S.... 1 LJ-1. Hyder IEI l,_t; 2. Tlmmori& ($) ,,.~ .. > Jac•son ISi IM\IJ. T J-1. Jo<i..n ISi o-t; 1. lllactt ($) 4H; ~ Irvine Hlgh was in danger of being no-hit until the fifth in· nfag, when Jim Heil broke the spell with a single. R. Br-n IE> n.L l30l.H-I. Gourdine I El 41.S, 1 Brown (El 41.1; >. M..,,.• IU cu. MJ-1. PNvy IEI M ; 2 • .+olmn tEI •2, J P9tway ILi H . U -t. ·-(E) io.s ..... 2. Marple ILi 1•s. 3 Avilla (El t•2. Latano ISi C>4. 1 PY I. Tl..._ (S) IM; L Little (S) 1¥; l . HOU .. al (Sl 124 SP-I. Road\ (&l -....; t . ICI .. (5) ~; '· Franklin ISi 4+10. OT-1 ...__ ISi 1*1; 2. V~ h i 145-1, l. Roac:ll (El 111~ Irvine loaded the bases in that inning, but couldn't get the key hit: T J-1. Gowdlne (El ..-0; 2. Wu"9r (I!) 110 rnarll; 2. McCOy l&l no mar1'.. 1'\1-1, llabr (l) 12 .. ; 2. Crll'#tonl IEI 12•, l Werner IE) U•. .. ,... .... Ul-(N)C'6l~ J 100-1 Maf'tlnet (SJ 10.t; 2. Doney ($); ~ 1,,.._Hltltlll •rllr91 3 o O o lldln, u 0 0 0 0 Nl<k..,\, rf 1 o o o Pavsay. •f 3 o ~ o Jones, It 3 o o o Heins, If SP-1. MW.,. IU •10; 2. Mllcllell (El 64.o, l . Bln1ey (LI ... 1. OT-I. Mot-IU 1""3: 2. Clerk Ill U•s. J 8 1nley CLI 1»-4. F,....._ ..... El T-l•fUtl ...._. 9'•0 100-1. Mcltafl.tle (El 11.3: 2. EIOrklve tel ; l . NICllOls lEI • no-1. Jack.., tEI 2J.7; 2. Oon•Y C~; J. M•rtlnez ISi. • ~ 1. Hetrera 151 )7.2; 2. Wot"""'°" ~'ti;.,_ Sa...,_I ($1 MO-I. H.,._1ISJ2.15..4; 1. S1111dant&JI'· O..hlg9 I El. • .l Mlle-I. s.nders I El 4:47.S; 2. 8"tler Ce:>; 2. Prl<A, lb O..lrull,?b HalllbeO, :tb S•ancoat. ct Wallns,c Malloy, c Odden, lb Hell, n o o o o Cer>urlclo,p 3 o o o Z-•ncho<k, p I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 t 0 0 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 2000 0000 no 2 o Luca IEI. U0-1 Eldl'IOge IE> 25.0; 2. ~rlno IU; J. Mlller(El. Fr....SenllW9 IEI. o. 7-mlle-t. B11tlet' I El 10136.S; 2. Sanden IE)I l. Cluff (El. oo rel•V'-£dlaon 46.1. 20 10 Tota11 sun .., '""'"'°' 440-l. Jontt (El st.9; 1. Spregue IEI, l . Don lUgO lrwineH1\I\ r II • 501 004 0-tO 9 o 000 000 0-0 1 ' I ..... ,., Del (II Torlgoe IE). 880· t !>lover I E) 1 1• •, 2. Ouval (El, l. 8 T"r~• Ill Mll-1. Gll:ICl6 !El •:SS.2; 2. a .. s (El, J. Fin nalylE) Mlle re1ay-~1eoac• 3·!I0.9. , UOHH-1. EatrecN IEI 17.J; 2. Jordan ('E~. 3. B.arrow (5). • 3'0LH-I. Jordan IEI O .•; 2. Eslrada ISl, 1. C:..rcl• IS). Jollu.11 Hood. lb Oolterer Cl Marll11.P Mucham.u Slwrt,lb •b r h rbl 4 t I t ScllHP«t. c 1t00 Oratb•,pr 4 1 o o Goniates, rt • 1 J 1 L\lmard•, 11> • O t I Aoello, lb •110 Tot•!\ "-~ '""'"" COO Stf lOO 000 4 I 7 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 • 0 1 , 0 0 0 0 l4 • 9. 2 mile -1 Glbtls IEI 11·1••. l leylor IEI l e .. s IEI ••O re-ta't El Toro c<J • Mlle ret•y-Et Toro• OO• l?OHH -1 Tl'K>non l L.1101,2 5."onk lEl,J Mt t<entle CEI. l>OLH-1 _,, (LI .. s 1 ll1orton Ill. ) Spn9n IEI HJ-t. T-'°" (LI S-10 1 Tully (El l Hencll ILi. u -1. w .... r CE) II-SY,, 2. LUU HJ 1, Gari• lSI ~o. 1. Wllll~s CE), J. Metia> (51. u -1. A'HerftlSI 1t-W•. 2. Doney Bl; 3. Nlellol>. IEI PV t. Marlin CEI 11 .. ; 1. Fr•tllt (El; 3. M••llner ISi SP I Mack I El 411"4, 2. C.ntlllo CS); 3. S... dOval ISi OT 1 S--v•I 151 13>-10. 2 Ma .. rs ISi. l. Met il IEI For Area Colleges, Preps Checking Girls' Athleti~ Tet111b UC lrvltle 171 121 UC ..,.uloy """" Morw Ill cll'I Fernbacher 6 J. ) •· 7·4: SIOC~IOll (I) def GrttenllOuM' 1-~. 4·6, 6·1; canon I I) def Bauvhm•n .. I, 3-6, M; R-(8) cll'f Armtl 7 6, .. .... l; 8erfNlft IO def Scllmu11 to-2. .. 3; Pel.,Mll\ Ill def &Mry .. l, •·2 .,.,,..., Morst -Peterson Ill def Greenhou .. ·Fernbac11er •·•. • I , Armel·Bermari Ill def Ben)•mln a.uv11m., .. ,. w,; Barrt-Ree<I 1e1 def AAtl'IOfty·SlMIS J.4, M , ... t °"""°Cent (t) (t) ,.,.... An• SI ..... Von Lut-IOCCJ Clef Gu1lerre1 •-1. 4-0, def Jotwlston (OCCI del C..nada ... 1,W; ~°"""91 (OCC) def Stiles 7-S, .. l ; Mev'er& IOCC:I det Mvlli9aft H , H ; M""" fOCCI Clef Hafdemon ~1. M ; Sierra IOCCI Clef Butcllar .. 1, M . ~ Von Lulrow-Myers IOCCI def Gull err., Mutll-..0, H , Jollnston-M<Oonnel 1oco del c:.naoa-s11tff 6·Z, 6·t ; Meyen-Ward IOCCI del BUICllar•Hardemal'l .. I, Ml. s.MteMdl C•> IJI SOii ..,._.._ """" Le&lntliy ls.di def Avila Avila ($8) Clef Lel'Mky .. 1, • 1, Ochoa tS81 def l(erwln •·2, •·l Hetlln (sad) Clef .....,Mlf'I W, 1•, 1 .. ; (.oflnen ls.di 4lel $tamer .. 2. ... 1; Waltl (Sed) def Nu"o 6·1, 7-5; Gosla,.hot.,. (Sad) def 8•-6-0, .. ,. DMIMn Avlla·Oclloa ISBI def W•lll• Luln&ky •·>. 6·7, 6·4; Conner,. Kerwl" (Sadl dtt Stamer-Nuno "''· ._1; ~GcMlenhoter (Sad) Clef Pearson·Br-... 1, 6.0. WOMaM'S tol'TULL 0r "98 caut m m s.ta A ... Orange Cout-Galdolfo, 3b, 4·1·>1; Walker, tti. 4-1-1.0; Her.era, C, 1·1·0.0; MacDonald, C, 1-0-0-0; ~Mierta, If, J.14-1; Hutchliuon, II, o..+o; c;.i._.r, 2b, M-0-0; Flores, ct, 2-0·0-0, Tomaul, ct, 2·0-0-0, Lt•nc.e. lt-c J-\-2-0; G•bdef, '' 3·1·l·t ; Sew•lk. lb •.0-1.0; Miiier, lb 1-0-1·1; Be.nil, c )-0-0-0; Oell..erl, ct l·l·l.0, TtemutOla, rt l.Q4.0, HOC191t. p ?·I~-•; Otlverer, rl 1-0-4-0; Cor~. JlJn. 2-0-1·0, Total~-U·•·ll-6. E~l•ncl a -Pendley , 3-0·0-0 ; Church, 2-0-0-0, McC..llum, 3·1-1·1, Nisbet, 1-0-l·O: C.moron, J.l·O-t; M.,k, 2-0.t.O; Sloat, l.(MM); Brazell, J·O·O·O; Buvor, 3·0-0.0; Billiards. 1·0.1 0. ~ .. ,, ..... _ ' II e Misti°" Vo•Jo no 000 I 6 I 0 Est•"<•• 000 100 1-2 • o G,,_tuutl~• VenilY s--• 11n.»111M.JSI Mantt• Vaulll"g-1. Lenihan CSl 7.7, Cole (Ml 7.4; J. Kirk (S) 7 4S Uneven -allet -1-1. Grle'JI ISi StS, 2.Curc:llSIS.t;l.Cole(MI S.6S. e.1.,ce __ , Kirt< tS> 6 •• 1 Bray ISi 6 IS; 3. Sc>rltloer IMI S.7. Floor eurc1-I. Nleloef\ (Ml I OS. 2. Toct..r IMl 7.6S: l Cole IMI 7 S All·round-1. NI_, IMI 24.tS. 1 Cole IM) 24,t Traek LA s.vt ....... (II) (11) Gol-Wftl (All rKOI •llCetll retars"' _., 100-1. S...wt IG) 13.0; 2. Anita ($WI 3. Yost ISWl. 200-1. t<eys IOI 26.2; 2. Engle IGl 3. Rotlerts I SWl. 411()-1. ken IGI S9.t; 2. Roberts ISWl J. Pa.,.. IGI. 100-1. Butker IGI t 10.9; 2. Fletcher IGI 3. Youtl\ (SW), IOOLH-1. llueller IGI 20.0; 2. En9le IG1 l. Manning (GI. uo retay-1. Golden West sr.o. M lle rel•y-1. Golden WHt4:ll.3 . HJ-1, 8.1nks IGI S-l; 2. Bwlter IGI 3. no ltllrd. l J -1. SI_.,, IGI 1 ... 2; 2. Ford (SWl 3. Manning IGI. $P-I. Duncan IGl 21·••'>. C.brara IGl 3 no lhlrd. OT-I Ounc•n IGI 60·4'>; 1 C.brara IGI 3. no o.lrd. JT-1. Leon IGI ,, •• .._\~. 2. rt0 sa<ond or third Varsity El Te .. IS.SI (541 La"'M ... ,II 100-1 Slier IEI 12•. 1 Murphy Il l IU. l Gourdine I El 12 •· 110-1. Slltr (El 29.7, 2 l(ilborn CLl 19.•, 3 Fwetl (El 71.4 U0-1. Fwall !El 1:03.6; 2 Pint IEI 1:019, l Jonas I El 1:04.0. N0-1. Frencl1 ILi 2:31.•; z. t..on9 I El 7·:19.3; l Ml-IEl 2:411.4. Mlle-I. Harrym., IL) S:O 4; 7 &erntll I Ll S )8.0, J. Glaller (EI 6.0l.1. 2-mlle-1. Harl'Yf'llan IL) 12:2' 4! 7. eernll\ (Ll 12.S?.S, 3. Lon~ (El u :o1.2. uo relay-Et Toro S4 2. Mlle relay-U,;iuna llMCJI 4 JI 4. llOLH-1. Swatt IU 17.2; 2. Pratley Ill 17.1; S. Gourdine (El IU HJ-1. PYalieY(U 4-7; 1.~an I El ._.; 3. Murpfly IU ~ LJ-1. Murphy (LI IS.2~; 1, Fu-I El I S-0; 3. Mc:Ga\OOCil I U 1 .. -. SP-I, t... Ma,..,,_11 CU ~2; J. H~nl ILl 1'-t; J. Giiiiam CU V"- S1J01....i..,, V•rtllY CdM lttl tl•l ......... 100 m~dley retaY t. Newport Herbor 7 11.0. 100 lrM-1. Lavin• IN) 1 ti 0, 2 Wo119 (N) 2:1S.0. 3 Dal r•ll* ICI 2.16.0 • 200 Ind. medlev-1. Pluo INI 02 30.0: 2. Loom!& IHI 2.41 S, i Valentine ICI 2:4S.4. so lree-1. -rton (NI 11 6, 2. Ha•llltlS ICI 21.S; 3, Newland (NI 29.1 . 01.-1nv-1. A"t 1c1 17s.o; 2. 5Pln- JunlarVanRp M-1 0 4) Im c.M - 700 medley retay-1. Na ...... rt Harbor 1.02.0; 100 tree-I. Fin.Hee IC) 1 11.0; 100 Ind. medley-1, Reid (NI 1.14.4; 50 f,.._1, Cosef'04e (Cl 11.7; so flv-1. Reid CHI )3.7; so b.ck-t. 5c11Hder IC) 14.0; SO bruu-1. K.....i> (Cl 3'.1.1001rtere- ta.--I . N.-1Karf)or2:1M.2. c;y,re1o1 <•I t•l or-..~ 100 rnecnev re1n-c~_2,:~ 100 IM-1. Belardl ICI 2:1U, 7. h ckett (0) 2:43.t; 3. Rkh (.OJ 2:4 .7. so frH-t. Duke ICI u .•: 1. H•t!XOC• (0) V .•; 3. T-..S ICI 27 s. 100 1>ac:•-1. 8elardl ICI l:llS.tf 1. 81alr (0) t:at; 3. 8"1M(0 l :tl.£ 100 breast-I. Smucll (Cl 1;1$,4; L Power 1011·20; J. Rlcll 1011:7''1 JOO free-I. O'llr..., 10 2:1DJ; l. P .. ton (Cl 1:01.1; J. ~ (01 J;: 0;1y-1. Bnlns IC) 31.S;' t Tllomai (0 3l.1; l. IC~ IOI ;M 4 • 01 .. 1nv-t.S.it.I 10). 100 free-I. O'Br.en ICI S7.ll t. HattKoc• 101 5t.4; 3 Kn~r 101 I 01.6 • 100 fly-1. Bevin& (Q 1:10.7, 1 Krvmlde 101 1:27.2. SO baO-t. ~ (0 30.S; 1. 81oor 101 JU; l. 8ec:Mll (0) 32.S. 100 IM-t. 0'8rlefl (0 1:07~ t. Po•er 101 1:11.6; 3. Setwt to> t: 14.S. soo 1.__1. a.tan11 co s:zs.s~ L Fick ICI S:4'.t; 3. &lair IOI 6:13.4. 50 bf-Hit-I. Smuclt IO ».t; 2. O..ke <Cl SU; 3. Poww IOI 37.6. ' JOO .... Nlay-1. c.,,.... 1:50.1. m•n INI 1)4.IS; l. Grant INI Ul.O. -;=~==========' ~,·;: IN) 1 ...... ). v.1 ... 11 ... !Cl Rabbit_ 100 lly-1. Pluo IN) 1:12.0; 1. ~ • 100 lrff-1. Newl...., (N) t·020; 2. - Ast1e11 (NI l:OS.O, 3. Matioer (N) sa9~09 ~· 1.0l.O. soo tree-1.1..ono (Nl 6 01 •; 1. De• ll•lle ICl •·03.0, J. G\11\drum IHI 4 "0 100 ba<~-t lemple (Cl llO time, 2. Morion INI 1.11.s. l. ~·· (NI l;st 0 100 breast I Lavlm (NI I 11 O ? M•rlln ICI 1·19 •. J Ot_, ICI I 23 l 400 lrM retay-1. How-I H•rbo< •.14 0. PlvltM 36-.0Et..,_71_ HOT. C•P co11-U 214..50. E11d _.,. -'2107 2ec TOI• PWmb. - 13107 24; lllt -. ~ -llM .a +•-Ori-..-csran H..._Y ... :::1i_ 1e111--.er-cs &. 142·40• "*IOrBllR. Huber, ss. J.1.1-t , Wallac:ll, rl, -----------------------------------------3-M-o; ~$, dh, M -1-2; u,..1, o. o+M. Totals: V·7+S. ~..., ...... r ... Santa A"a 000 IOO 0-1 2 4 Ora,... Gotit 100 060 •-1 6 0 Erl" Lingel pitched • I-hitter. Oret199COettlsM. 01 llLS SOl'T9ALL Vanity Miu .... vte .. (6) Ill EttMcla Ml»lon V1e)o-Elllot. •2b J-1..).t; J<;:, Prep Gymnastics PONTIAC'S FIREBIRI> ELEGANCE IN SPORTS DRIVING . -.. LEASE DIRECT! 1971 '°9'mAC SUMIJRD COUP! • Cyl •<: tlf•!ed gl•I t • II, Oi• -...... »---I-.... --.. ·-•ouldn 137011 , .. ..,~ .. . ,,. ,_...,_.._ .... ,),. .... ~ _ ... '°' -"°""-$89 1.?o. 1 .. ~ YOU'LL FIND FAIR PRICES, EXCB.LEMT SEIYICE AND PERSOMAILE PERSOMMB. TOSERY! YOU. t . --. . ,, . : .. . . . ill OAJL Y PILOT Wednaday, M.-c:h 15. 1978 Business I 1Religious Books ·sell: Is It Faith or G1111ihility? ~ MILTON MOSKOWITZ · 'Oli ncing at some newsstands iri'b r big ciUes, you might think we were engulfed in a storm of pornography. But did you realize that the Rev. Billy Graham's book, ''How to Be Born Asaln," sold more than a million copies last year? t ;'fW -'i n -~-· ....... Nor was this sale a Cluke. "The Uving Bible'' sold 800,000 copies. "H a lley's Bible Handbook" sold 150,000 copies. "Good News Bible" sold 500,000 copies. "Somebody Loves You" so ld 375,000 copies. The paperback edition of Charles Cotson's "Born Again" sold 440,000 copies. FICTION AUTHORS FIND COMPETITION THE SPRING REUGIO\JS is· s ue of Publishers Weekly, the trade magazine lor booksellers, contains impressive evidence of a deep hlD'lger in America for in· s pirational reading. Religious books have s ales that are right up there with the sales of novels by Harold Robbins and Art.bur Hailey. which may explain the conversion of Hustler publisher Larry F1ynt to a "born again" Christian. He's t rying lo get the best of both worlds. A ranking by Church News Service of "current Christian :n. Harold Robbtna Arthur H•ll•y ,. rCA PI TOLIZE a WI TH .. CAPITOL '1APl fOllZATION MEANS TO . tfniVERT CAPIHl TO CASH . ~" ~-s· OOOloS)()OOOcM"--N. (t-Nrt -' ""',..,,.. "' Of"fof PfOOflrtt rJ.;r .o: •• ~ : ~:"..:.'~.~~ ~1n10•...,,._._._._ I nclly•~ ,, • ' hliiiii ... lli.: 1 · .. I' . Ii ~~~~~!o'e~rr:! • ~·1J Ol'lt Of OV' ~n Cortftntef'ttl~ IO(Ated off~ft IOf ln-t f44;,.h ,I We'd ·1l Really like lo help /,. ~TA MESA 3130H.-8'.c! 714/540-4412 ANAHEIM 7l31W ~1114 714/778-3450 LONG BEACH !t4 74 (. °"' """° 81\od 213/421·9333 ' . J ,, ORDER 1•'1 YOURS 1• It 'rt·• NOW ,., I ~\ft I • ~, • Calif omia Leading In Creation of Jobs SACRAMENTO (AP) -California is creating new jobs faster than the rest of the nation, but the state's un· employment rate also is higher than the national average, a slate official says. Martin Glick, director of the state Employment Development Depart· menl, said Tuesday that since 1974 California has had a job growth rate o( 9.2 percent, compared with 4.9 per· cent for the rest or the nation. Only one of the 10 largest states - Texas -had a higher growth rate, 11.3 percent. although Glick said s maller sunbelt states s uch as Georgia may have had even higher rates. Las t year the state's job growth rate was 5.6 percent, compared with 3.3 percent for the rest or the nation . California's unemployment rate last month was 7.6 percent, however, compared with 6.1 percent for the na· lion. Glick blamed the higher unemploy·. ment rate on the fact that the growth in California's labor force also ex· ceeded the nation's. Nearly 64 percent of Californians over 16 are considered part of the s tate's labor force. The national figure is 61.2 percent, Glick said. Glick contended the figures show that California "is just an excellent place to do business," discounting a recent poll of lop businessmen that was critical of the state's business climate. More Growth ' Eyed for State SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Already the biggest and richest state in the nation, California by 1990 will be wealthier, more populous, have less un· employment but bear a heavier tax burden, ac· cording to an ·econom ic forecast by the Wells Fargo Bank. And because the economic importance of ma nufacturing will decline, criticisms of the slate's industrial climate are invalid, senior vice president Bill Ford said in releasing the report Tuesday. He said California's high wages -one factor industries look at when considering whether to mov.e to a state -are actually a boon. "U we didn't have the highest wages, we couldn't be the richest people in the nation," Ford sald. Stores Report Gahl LOS ANGELES <AP> -Carter Hawley Hale Stores, Inc., has reported record nel income of $50 million on sales of $1.5 billion for the fiscal year ·. ... ... · . -..... . ended Jan. 28. Earnings per share • ·.. ~ lU<·~a:-p ,,,,< ~.:~ • • 1000 ,:~'~BEAUTIFUL ~.STICK-ON • 'Alt LABELS .. • '• STYLISH TYPE ~ .ONGOOO --OUAUTY WHITE ~MMEOPAPER PERSONALIZED EASY TO USE FOR YOU OR A FR IEND • ( J were $2.37 for the year. TAKING compared with $1.97 a STOCK s hare for the previous --------fiscal year, the company said Tuesday. Sales were $1.5 billion, up 9.7 percent from the $1.3 billion re~ ported the previous year . Pre-tax eamlngs were $52.6 billion for the fourth quarter, up 30.6 percent from the $40.3 bWion the previous year. The company operates 72 department.stores in California and the southwest lhrouch its store divisions: -The Broadway, The Emporium, Capwell's and Welnslock's . It also owns 31 special· ty stores, including Nelman·Marcua, Bergdorf Goodman and Holt, Renfrew In Canada. •• , ......... s.,,....- SAN DIEGO <AP> -Sao Diego Gu & Electric Co. offlda.11 say the utility has received word from the Meldcan government I paving the way for an oU·flred electrlcal 1enerating plant. in Baja .California. The plant would aupply power to SDG&E . Tbe "letttt ot Interest" ~ved by SDG&& clears the path for contract neaoUaUons U>d tecbnlcal studles relating to economic feuiblllty, SDG&E president Robert Monil aald. Tbe uWlty will provide up to $5 mUIJon, he saJd, for slep·bY· _ step funding of the studies. classics" s hows that there are 64 recently published books with copy sales of more than a million. Heading the list ls "The Llvlng Bible," whose sales have topped 23 milUon. "Good News P r ol e••o r : '~.-lleHft'esbt E_"9YtM -. • • • • " Bible" has sold more than 10 million. "The Late Great Planet Earth" and Oxford's "New English Bible" are over the nine million mark. Religious publishing has its own book clubs, dating from the start of the Religious Book Club in 1927. Today there are 21 re· Hgious book clubs , operating pretty much the way the regular book clubs operate. The largest is the Catholic Digest Book Club, which has 36,000 members, 66 percent of whom are idenW1ed as "married women." THE U.S. BOOK publishing In· duslry is centered in New York City but the religious publishers are found elsewhere. Abingdon is based in Nashville. Creation House, publisher of the Shirley and Pat Boone books, is located i n Carol Stream, Ill. Eerdmans, the publisher of Malcolm Muggertdge's book, "Christ and the Media," operates out of Grand Rapids, Mich .. as does Zondervan, publisher of two best sellers. "Joni" and "A ~hepherdLooks at Psalm 23." The Christian Herald books come out of Chappaqua, N.Y. Word Books, the Billy Graham · and Ruth Stapleton publisher, is based in Waco, Texas. Judson Press publishes from Valley Forge·,· Pa. The Paulist Press operates out of Ramsey, N.J., Revell is in Old Tappan, N.J., and tbe Theosoph1cal Publishing House is housed in Wheaton, IU. is the incredible story or Earle L. Fitz. who rum the Riverside Book and Bible House In lowa Falls. ta. Fils is a bible jobber, holding an inventory of 3,500 varieties -in alt types, sl&es, shapes and colors. In 1977, be sold $13.2 million wottb ot bibles to bookstores. T HE ltEUGIOUS publishing world even has lt.s alternative wing, represented by such houses as Shambbala <Boulder, Colo.), Dawn Horse Press (Lower Lake, Calif. l, Dharma ( E muyville, Callr.). Sharma Weatherhill <Rutland, Vt.), com· panles that specialize tn books dealing with Buddhism, Hin· duism , Islam and other non· Christian religions. They too are el\joylng •· sales boom. Sbambhala has sold more than 500,000 copies of •'The Tassajara Break Book .. and "Tassajara Cooking, .. both wnt· ten by Edward Epse Brown, head cook of the first Zen monastery in the United States. <Sales will soar if Gov. Edmund G. Brown makes it into the White House.) Mone~· Tree The appetite for religious Detailed in Publishers Weekly books has become so great that the nation's largest publisher, Doubleday, is launching a new imprint, Galilee Books, wblcb it will put on a line or Evangelical titles. Surveying the scene for Publishers Weekly, Martin E . Marty, author and professor of the history or modern Christiani· ty at the-University or Chicago, said that whenever he looks at the outpouring of books from all American publishers, it occurs to him that "Everyone believes in· Everything. Either this is an age of faith or it is an age of simple gulllbilily." ,.,..,,..,..... RELIGIOUS BOOK SALES: NO FLUKE Rev. Biiiy Graham Chart es Colson O ver The Counter NASO UMiftCJ5 llp • and Do.,,,... MUTUAL FUNDS E • #- I STOCKS I BUSINESS Wednesday's Closing Prices ........... -. - -------- NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Wedneeday. March 1!!. 1978 t/N O~ILY PILOT Tough Task 2 Enemiea Fighl Refonn By SYLVIA PORTEil Well planned and widely publicized as Pres~8rrit Carter's efforts t.o reorganize tbe federal governmenl. flf'":4' been, achlevemenls to date have been puny. Moat efforts at reorganization have been cosmetic - 1malJ changes at the top, exposure of only the most start· ling examples of waste, corruption or mismaoaaement. Carter 11 discoverir\s that the obstacles faci.DI h~~ organization drive are formidable. why? OBSTACLE NO. 1: Inefficiency is deeply rooted bureaucratic maze. It defies lts enemies and iJ unto by reorganization at the visible level. ACl"OIS·the· cull never affect it. Bureaucracy cuts muscle·before f OBSfACLE NO. 2: Apart from inefficiency ls the that much of the cost or government consists of "tr tr payments," the benefits going to Americans in the fofS food stamps, welfare checks, Social Security, medi medlcaid, farm subsidies. etc. These benefits are n &f. fected by reorganization. WHAT CAN BE DONE! Plenty -but none of t tacks will be easy and none will be protected from wi ~"~· . ., -Inefficiency could be cut if the cutters were wi to take on the "sacred cows." In the offices of U. torneys, for example. cases are processed with times the speed observed in "normal" agencies. The son: external pressure for results. When there is 1ittle or no external pressure, those in charge delegate more decisions to themselves. More time is spent, mQre expense is incurred, more mistake3- made -simply because the decisions are more r from the action itself. The labyrinth of . steps created by tbe bureaucracy is never blamed for these bloopers. The usual claim is that underlings failed to follow instruc· tions and blame is shifted. Money's Worth TO CUT FAT INSTEAD OF MUSCLE, consider wh happens to an uncomplicated. matter. If the Food and D( Administration, for instance, wants to refer a matter t another agency in the same city, papers must be sef\l: Washington for review, forwarded to the Washington• quarters of the second agency, then sent back lo the tended recipient. Costs climb and delays stretch in weeks or months. Multiply this by myriad agencies. Eliminating this kind of waste will never be done if th cutting job is assigned to the bigber-ups. It would have be done at the levels where the actual work ls done. Better policing of "transfer payments" would bel More programs are being created wher~ A is to provid services or goods to B, but the bill is paid by C. Frauct ists .. AUTHORITY AND RESPONSIBIUTY to police th program should be directed to one reliable source and lfay ments should be stopped when there is evidence of miscoo duct, poor service or fraud. • This is almost never done. The programs go on, ev when fraud is discovered. "Third party benefit" program are woefully managed. Unless Carter's team probes the workings inside lb agencies, the president will be appalled by the pace of hi progress. Shifting Pandora's boxes around will do no good Sometimes, they must be opened to be fumigated. Mide~t Situation Darnpen.s Market ... E • t .. . . . . . • • • \ -DAILYPILOT Television Wed~y. Mwoh 15, 1971 \\ ~ l>'\ESl>A' EVENIMG Bi:!:EWS 8 EMEACM:HCY OHEI A TV dlredor, ~ ha ~ec:1ed a paraicllUUat, requlree help ltom the patMleCIQ. D NBA BASKETllALL Loe Angelee Lak«a ve Ptllladelphl• 76en G) THE BRADY BUNCH Peter u-his dad'a tape rec:otdef to Mveedrop on .w brother& and alatera. • THE AOOKlE8 6!i) HISTORY Of MEXJCO "lnceptlOn Of The C.thollc Chutdl In Atneo1ea'' • ®) NllC NEWS lfl=30 8 MOVIE *** "Paint Your Wagon" (Part 2)( 19891 Lee Marvin. Clint Eastwood. A miner falls In love wttll Ille woman Ills partner bougtll at an auction. ( 1 llr.) • BEWITCHED A· .. '\\ , )i .,, . ., --··--·\ ~ ''TN ~l "'"' • CNQ. IUfMTT NfD"'81)e • MOVll * * "The Naaed Meje" ( 1td) Ava Gardner. Artttlotrl 'r~ The low.~ the ~ of A.Iba and Fran- cltCO 00'(• la lmmoftal\Md In Illa ,.,_,. portrait. (2 llrt.) • l'UTl\IA.L '78 "WllHe ~.. A. RuNltn family •tttmPI• to lntro- duoe a eap\IYe white belt, A.I-a, Into lier natlva Arcuo enlltronm1nt. .OMAT Pr#'OAMAHCES "Count Dtacul1" Alter IMvlnO Landor\, Jonathan H411iter ~tars Count Dracula In 1 cut1e on St. Oeofve'1 Eva. louts Jor. den portrays the lnl.l'l'M>'J• count. (Part t of 3) I:~ 0 PAOTECTOM "A Podt91ful Of Posies" • CA088-WITS t:OO 9 (I) 8AWTE TO HeMY~ I A college g1t1 la l0tced 10 change lier ~ and Darrin Is almoat IOt'Ofld to change his lob aa a rasull of Serena's epells. In 'Nenao' Crew The Atnel'lcen Fiim lnttl- luta, Jane Ala•ander. Luelle Ball, Bette DIYI&. Oo(Ot!IY MoOulra, Gregory Pecll, Batbel'a s~ and~ pay lflbute to a dlltlngulM!ed actor. ~ ,• 1• l ~ DtMEHSIONS IN CULTURE "Plly9lc:al Variation .. Cl) UNTAMED WORLD "Kangarooa" <!JI MERV GRIFFIN Lynda Day George and Mel Ferrer are among the cast members of the TV mov- ie pilot series "The Return of Captain Nemo," airing tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel2. G IUO<SHIEP 8QUA&W)H , :40 fD PLEDGE BAE.AK • •parllbollo curw. Cl) JOt<M'8 WILD t: Regularly adleduled pro-~ grammlng may be delayed .: dua to pledge braelta. 7:30 tJ WHEN HAVOC STRUCK ~:00 0 NBC NEWS " 8 LIARS Ct.U8 • fJ ABCNEWS .; 8) I LOVE LUCY a ~ Ricky mall• a '1tm ·; and ae11$ ft to a p<OCSuca<, Lucy dee1des to gel Into lhe act. • Q) A.OAM-12 i: f1l) MAa.IEll / l.EHRER REPORT , ' ' ~ .. . ~CREATIVE smCHERY Artlstnnttroclor Eleanor van de Water dem~ stratas the straight stitch, satin stitch. fern stitch and "Tiie B.t Alf Fire" For three deya a Ylclou• fire raged In Southern Cellfor· nla Md deatroyed over 500homea. .. SHANANA Gua&t Della R-0 NEWLYWEDOAME fJ MATCti GAME P.M. ... THE 8AAOY BUNCH 9oOby and Olhw, aided t>y their )'OUthlul lmeglnatlona, t>ecome convinced they ata on to a epy plot that IO\IOIVn Mike. • ADA»-12 fli) L.A. INTEACHAHGE "Snapahots" Claa11nel Lbtf 119• 0 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles ~ • t ,. . • • I '!" 8 KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles fJ KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind ) Los Angeles @) KCST (ABC) San Diego 1D KTIV (Ind ) Los Angeles ti) KCOP·TV (Ind ) Los Angeles &> KCET-TV (PBS) Los Angeles I!> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach STARTS FRIDAY! ·DUSTJNllOFPMAft '19 BTAR80AAO "Ski ... And Henderlon" I I 128,000 QUESTION FAMILYF£UD 1:00 Cl) AET\JAN OF CAPTAIN NEMO A r9\'IYad Cepi.ln Memo (JoM Ferrer) ~ '" • t«iM ot lantUllc feud• with Prof-Cunning· ham (Bu'gM& Meredith). lnck>dlng .,. undarMa duel with laMf beams. (Part 2 ol 3) D GRIZZLY A.DAMS "A Gentleman Tlnllllr" Mad Jactc It Illa frustrated victim of an unusually attired. crafty llttle mar1 (W•ll•r Burke) who 11\raal eM to become IOfM!Nng of a nulunce. 8 MOVIE * * * "Fhle MiAlon y..,_ To Eattll" (1968) J- Oonald. Andrew Keir. An ~ time C409Ule contains ~ abou1 a pr.-hiatorlc Martian vlalt to Earth. (2 hrs.) fJ ®) EIGHT IS ENOUGH "Dear Mlse Oinetl" Ttie usually unruffled Tom toe- .. hi• cool when 1111 deughter Ellzabelll Mka hla actllic4I to the '°"9lorn column II Sile al!Ould tail• "The 200 PooJnd Oofllla" Sgt. Artdy MlcllMn CAed w .. n. wtioM '"'Blllt c11a- 1tk• of .. otlloet• Is -11 known, It promoted to wanent olftcer and In Ill• frualratlon. ooe• on • r~.(R) 8 0 CHAAUE'S ANOl1.8 "A.no-I Eleby" In ord« to ctldl. blgttme blade met· ket baby '1ng. Kelly poaea aa an e11pectent unwed mother. l<rl• M a swof- alonal eource of bebiM end Salwlne and 8oaley aa • rich, enogant QOUPte In ..arch of • per1ec:t elllld. Edward Winter, Scott Colomby gua&t 11at. (RI CJ 111.l. V GRAHAM LAS Vl!GA8 CAU8AD€ • MlRV ONmN Oua&ta: J.OC Klugman, 0.-MK&.eod, Jlm Stat· ford, Batbara Matteaon, Vlrglnll Grahem. eGMAT P£AFOAMAHCES "Count Otacuta" Good •net evil wage thelr tlme- lelll battle as Profeaaor Van Helllng, Mina and Jonathan atrugg~ to put en end to Count Dracula'• evn doings. (Part 3 of 3) 6D GA!AT 111 L~ a11cl lt'ar Henry Fonda, who '11 be honored tonight at 9 on CBS. Ch a nncl 2, is s hown in scenes from 10 of his mov- ies. At left he slars with <left to right, top to bottom> Audrey Hepburn in "War and Peace." Bette Davis in ''That Certain Woman," Barbara Stanwyck in "The Lady Eve" a nd Madeline · Carroll in "Blockade." At "i right he's with James Stewart in "The CbeyeMe Social Club:• in "The Wrong Man" and "Twelve Angry Men," with Thomas Mitchell in "T he Immortal Sergeant,'' in "The Longest Day" and with James Cagney in "Miste r Roberts.'• TUBE TOPPERS 11i<OCE 9 8: -"Count Dracula." A three-hour s ci putting together all three parts o the new TV drama about the thirStyTransy vanian. CBSfJ 9:00 -Salute to Henry Fonda. The American Film Institutehonorsoneof Hollywood's outstanding actors <see photos below). KHJ a 11 :00 -"Witness for the Prosecution." Agatha Christie's .courtroom drama splendidly done by Tyrone Power, Marlene Dietrich and Charles Laughton. ~ "Count Oracul5" wliUa Mine worrla1 aboul J0<\81Nn, ane atao notloet that her alatet Lucy has reaumad her hllblt or aleepw1lklng. Fouowlng her to Ille gr11119y1rd. she dlaoo....,, OrlCYla leaning over her. (Part 2 of 3) 10:00 G POUCE WOMAN "SWMI Kllll!Mn" Pepper and Crawley -puzzled t>y the contradlctOfY ...,,.. --that eugoee11 .,., In~ connectlOt'I In a negotiable MCIJl'i1 ... hellt. I • NlWI 0 ITAMICY& HUTCH "DMth In A. Diftetenl P'-" Starlky la ahoctced wn.n a vetetan cop and Iii.long friend la found OMd In a alMzy to... -· and an lnvaatlgallon r-.ta Illa aordtd OOUt>le Ille Ila had be«'! feeding. Don Gordon. Qragory Rozakla, Char1el Piere. gu..t atar.(RI I HONEYMOOHEAS GREAT PEAFOAMAHCE.8 "Count Dracu41" Good Ind 91111 .age llleit ti~ i.sa blltle aa ProfffSOf Van Heiting, Mina and Jonathan •truoole to put an end to Count Dracula'• 9\'11doing.I.(Plwt3of3) 10:06. SUPEMPY The ltOfY of Reinhard Galllen and how lie ~ k"rlloMld In the beglnnlt>g of µie ~ CIA In 1~ 19 recounted. 10'.30 ID e NEWS 11:00. a a Cl) ®J NEWS 8 LOVE, AME~ICAN STYLE "Love And The Legal ~r-nt" II MOVIE * * * "Witness For The Proucutlon" ( 1057) Tyrone Powet, Marlene Oietrieft. Tiie defendent'a wife -loutly harms him With lier testimony In his murdflf trial. (2 llra.) ID THE ODO COUPLE Wlltn Murray'• wife ejecta him lrom their home, Faltll tnvlt• him to snare Illa and Oecar'a lj>al1menl. • L.Er8 MAKE A O£Al fJD DICK CAVETT Oueat: lo'4'etl Thomas (Part 1 of 2), e MACHEll / lEHRER Al!JIOAT 11:30 9 (I) ~WAii FJV£..0 A mentally unatabMI VJet. nam veteran begins fifing on H1wlll1n molorl11a from a Men\lngly Impregn- able lllllllM bunker. (R) 0TONIOHT Hoat: Johnny Careon. GUMta: John Davidson, Sam Btot"•r. Johnny Yune. Jodie Foat.. D LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE "Lova And Thi New Roommele" Sob and Un· da ara married but ptetetld that they are llngle "LO\le And The Athlete" George llaa ~ told t>y 1111 boss to tell 1 women that •lie 14 a man. G (JJ) POLICE STORY "T•t Of Brotllemood" A vetllf'an pollcaman 11 dtarnayed w11e.f Illa younger brother, • rOOkle. bungla& an arresL Edwatd Albert. Oeotge Maharls ~tater.(RI W TliATOIRl "Phantom Of The Ho<Se Opera" ti) GETSMART f& CAPTIONED A.SC NEWS MOR NINO 12:00 9 TWILIGHT ZONE "Wh•l'a 1n n>e Boie'' MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "CLOSE EN~NTERS' OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG1 ' ~"" 1:»10 t6 8AT/T\.IE9 2100<-.1'.»1~11 "ANNIE HALL" (PQ) 1:11 'WORLD'S GREATEST LOVER" (PG) UO·tcHIO "JULIA" (PG) "THE FURY' (A} ~10'.to "SA Rl>AY NIGHT FEV&A" (R} TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS a> M0\11'5 * * "Tiie Night HOid I Terror" (1H5) Jedi Kelly. Hiidy Pal1ce. Hltc:fl-ftikere hold a man and 1111 l8ll\lly ~ r8nl0m whal'I they Ola- -he llaa e -'11\y lather (2 lwa.) • MOVIE * • ·~ "Tha Baille At Apaetla Pua'" (t952) John Lund, .i.« Chandler. An tndlan and • cavalry malor work together to atop Geronimo lrom mell8Cf- lng aettlenl ( 1 llr • 30 min ) 12.10 D MOVIE **'It "01 love And Oe11ra·· ( 1013) Merle Oberon, Stew Coen.an A ....itlly -attampt1 to fea\18 behind her aordld put by marrying the man ene lo\IM. ( 1 hr .. 55 min.) 12:37 8 0 ABC MYSTEAY MOVIE "Tha Spaca-W11ch Murden" (Premiere) Tisha Sterling, Joan Caulfield . The fem1le member ot e apll()Nhlp er-11 tile onty ~ lll\18 wtl4ln Ille ct alt rmik• a lllfa landing on • distant pl-1. 12:~ 9 CJ) KOJAK "Slay Ride" SaYeral men attending the -oon· vwrtlon tall 10 lh9lr deal!\$ and Kojak rerusee to belleYe that al of the men ~ oonwnlt1ad suloide. (R) 1:00 D TOMOAAOW Oueata: ClmMll\ F1lzone, lorrner celtmlte of Slfhan Sirhan: lHlle Fiedler, author of "Fre1kl ... G 18PY "Ullle Boy Lott 1:30 Cl) MOVIE • *' ·~ · Illegal Entry ' I 111•9) Howerd Cutt. Mana Toren An ex-pilot. turned undercover agent. lnlll- 1r11es • amuggllng ring. I 1 hr .• 30mln I 1:501) NEWS 2:00 II fJ NEWS G MOVIE • *' • "Pittsburgh" (1942) John Wayne. Merten• Dietrich. A man loses many friend• In 111• relent- leM drive for ~ In the •tell loduatry. (2 hrs-) G) MOVIE *' * "The Stranger Wore A Gun" (1053) Randolph Scott, Claire Trevor A man. whoM hie is salled t>y 1 bandit. reluctantly joins a con1ptr&ey 10 IOOt the sts· ~oach lines. (2 hrs ) 2:20 U MOVIE *' • *' "Bus Riiey's Back tn Town" ( t965) Ann- Margret. Mlcllael Parks A. YOU"ll Navy man returns 10 find that the girt Mio rejected him In the PMt WWl!e to .. .,, • -, .. tlor*llp. (2 Iva.' 2:25 0 NEWS ~ao 8 MOVIE .; ••• "~d"(196!\ Mietlele Morpn, Hiid• garde Neff. A 8wtndlat charm• lonely women. .....,.,tually rnul'derlng them to COiiect tlltlr lortunee. ( 1 llr . 65 min.) 3:00CD NEWS 4:00 CJ MOVIE * *' \-\ "Unllnl1ll•d Bualneu" (1941) ..._ Dunne. Robert Montgom- ety. A naive young""°"""'- rejec:ted t>y a dlbonalt playboy. marrlea 1111 brother on the rebound. C2 ,,..., ID MOVIE *. "8ei-Midnight And Dawn" (1050) MMI St.-, Edmond O'Bflen. Two youno policemen CAP:: lute a dtngeroue radt ... : aer. Incurring Ille enmity. <t• hr., 30 min.) •! 4:250 NEWS •, 4:30 0 MOVIE ; • * • "Horror Island" ( 1941t: Di<* F-. t..ao C8rllo.• Tiie ~ tor burled 11-: lllfe draws a young man 14• an laoleted llland. ( 1 hr_.; 30mln.) .. , . Tltur•d••'• :; Dayth•e Mo.,lei •• MORNING :• 11:30 G) * *'~ "Tiie Doollnt ~ Oklahoma" (11149) AW dolph Scott, Georg~ Macrucfy Wiien 1141 tcil;o met geng forc:ee him t( resume teadarslllp, ft reformed .outlaw g.vee u( 1111 ltfe rati-than ~ hll wrle any l"'1ner ~ pinna. (2 hra • 20 min.) N=TEANOON • '• 12:00 0 * * * "Tiie 9econd :• Greatest S8ll" ( 195 • Jeanna Crain. Georg Nadlt Women 0 thernae!Yel In an old lofto wllen their hulbar\da art!! con111ntly --v trylno t~ Mtltle a county dispute. ( J• hr'' 30 min.) ~: 3::00 lf1) •• "Wheel Of ;. Fortu"8" (1942) Jolltt: Wayne, Edward ElliL + g1t1'1 lather ts ax;>OMd U: a cr~ad pollt1C1811 by f · young country llwyer. ( i: hr, 30m111 ) • 3:30 fJ * * * "Tiie Opposite • Se•" ( t956) June AltySOn, Oolorft Grey. A happil)i• married woman teavee to-: Reno on lheo adlllce of Ill(· triendt.(Uw.,30min.) •. ... -.· .. • 10 NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS including Best Picture Best Special Effects Beat Sound Best Director -George Lucas ' ' • ' ' I••' ' • ' . NE\\1 P·ORT ( .......... • • • • • • t • • • •• I ~1 • ... .. ... '......--w" .. • • -. . Wedneeday. March 15, t978 DAILY PILOT 8.f ·:Odds on LAS VEGAS (AP) -Bookmakers ; 1'ere routinely lake beta on sPQrtlng evenla, so it should be no surprise they are ottering a belllng line on one . ol the year's blgiest races -the ·Academy Awards. The favorites? "Julia" for the best picture Oscar, Shirley MatLalne as best actress and Richard Burton as : best act.or. • "It the academy members vote the : way people have been 'betting, · BurtOn might as well go pick up his : Oscar right now," said Jim Brann, a : SJ>Okesman for the Union Plaza Hotel ; in the glittering downtown Casino •Cent..-. .. . THE BRmSH ACl'OR, never a 'Julia,' Burton, MaeLaine wioner despite seven previous Academy Award nominations, was a s lim 6·5 choice for hls role In "Equus" when the odds were posted earlier this week. But a ru$h of bel· Ung on Burton dropped the odds to 3·5 by Friday. Brann said. The oddsmakers make "Julia" the movie favorite al 6·5. whlle Miss MacLalne was given 4·5 odds as the favorite to win an Oscar for her role in "The Turning Point.·' The awards are to be presented April 3. Odds for the Academy Awards are given ln the same way as those for any sporting event, Brann said. With BurloJ\ a 3-5 favorite, •·you'd have to lay $5 to win $3. '· IN COMING UP with the belling line, he said, oddsmakers eonsull with two film trtUcs and Iet thetr picks. And they have been olf only once in the two years that beta have been taken. "Last year all the films the odds· makers said would win, did win; and the year before four of the flve won," Bramn said. He said he did not know how much money has been bet this year, buL in the preceding two years "we handled over $20,000 each Ume. That's pretty cood conaiderlng the maximum bet allowed is $200 and the minimum bet ls $5." FOLLOWING BURTON in the belt STARTS FRIDAY 3/17! .. actor category are Rich!lrd Dreyf-uss tor ''The Goodbye Girl" at 1·5 ; Woody Allen for "Anni~ Hall" at 8-5; and John Travolta for .. Saturday Night Fever" at 9·5. Marcello Ma~troianni Is ralod a lo"' &bot at 5·1 for "A Special Day." , Tied for second place for 'best ac- tress. at 6·5 odds, are Anne Bancroft, fo r ''Turning Point." and Diane Keaton for "Annie Hall." Jane Fooda is an 8·5 shot for ''Jul~." while Marsha Mason ls last: at t-1, for "The Goodbye Girl." In the movie cate1ory, "Julia" is followed by "Turning Point'' at S.S. "Star Wars" at 2·1, "Annie Hall" at 3·1 and "Goodbye Girl" at 4·1. ''GI.SELLE'' -I ,,If ·~ ·' 59.e OUVFR REED cl'055 his eyet.f --The Romantic Masterpiece of Ballet! See RAQUEL WELCH cross her legs. See MARK LESTER cross his lngers! See ERNF.ST BORGNlNE. his heart. And see GEORGE C. SCOTI. REX HARRISON. DAVID HEMMINGS and CHARl10N HESTON get double aossed. See the bi991$t cross up of them all ... WITH GUEST AITISn TERRI HA YES & ANTHONY SEUARS . with ............ ...,,c .... C...tplow. C:....O'foole°Km. ........ Slwtlclw ... Presented by: CIVIC BAllET OF SOUTHERN CALIF. a "°" profit corporaH• At: H~ INCh Hlgll ScMof Allditorhn 1905 Male St. SAT. MARCH 18 SUN. MARCH 1°9 l :to P.M. 1:00 P.M. l:OO P.M. edwards CINE CENTER HAllCM AT A.DAMS.COSTA MISA SAVHDICINTIR t7t-4141 DAllY1:1 .. lc .. nu a:eo. ""· ,_ MT-1:11,1:41 1:11, 11<4', llM TICllTS: $2.50-$3.50-$4.50 FOil IHfOIMA TIOM CALL: .. r ...,. •• ,., "".£ I \; l ••• --.... ...... .......,, ~ . . .. .-..... • ..... I ------ "PAIDOM MOM ... Alllr ..,.AU. .... OMDEM.AM WSTMOMI II.ACK SMOr ................. 848-8445 or 846-5152 When ~n Soulhern California visit .. ~~~ BTUDIDll TOUR I • • = ··; ~ve, lauglJter, . goOd guys, bad guys and America's~greatest skateboarders. ... ' NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS Including Beat P1cture Best Actor • Richard Dreyfuss Best Actreas -Maraha Maaon '' ... Nell Simon makes feeling good legal ... GENE SHALIT. fVBC·TV PO) A RAY SlMK PllClOOCT'Oi ~A HEJ!8ERT ROSS Rl>t .. NEJLSM>N'S "'THE GOODBYE GIRI: RICHARD DREYRJ&5 ·MARSHA MASON Edwerd• ScMdule Wed-Thurs 7:15, 9:15. Enda Thurad•y night St.ta Frldey •t EdW•rda Brl1tol Clneme, Fount•ln V•ll•y Twtn •nd Vle)o Cln•m• I C .-,._,, ....... ., 494·1!>14 HmM't~·~YNUll "HEAOEl"CPGJ "SPY WHO LOVED ME" Welll*MJ'• ''PET'B'I DRAGON" t'Cl9 .... '!MIN. -' • t:16 ' ' , I • i • I • I f ,. \· ' . ---1· • .. DAILY PILOT Wedneeday. March 15. t978 !Ill--MANN'S ~._........__,,_ so. COAST PWA "SATIJRDAV NIQHT FEVER"_ (R) 'ci1t1 •111 r 't DAILY l :I0-1:-:IO l'lllnitJI MO'r.rses\' IAT·lt__..1 .... ~!Ill ._ • .....-.....-..... MAH'S CINEIAUND MM St. llwlMf hntl• IU.11tl MANN'S CINEMAUND 1414 St. Ntl\lr ....... US.llfl 1111 ........ "LOOKING FOR MR. 00008AR" (R) 1itl P.M. "KIUER ELITE'' ... P.M. •0tt GOO" IPGt . . .... ,.,,. s.AT~I~ ,. "'WHAM UP, D0Cr ......... UT,..._. Ill "414 .. 1•11 2 Concerts Applauded 0Hnge County music lovers can have no complaints at the quality or the performances that have come our way ln this glit- tering 1977-78 season. We added two more top (light concerts to that unending lis.t of 11uccesses last weekend with the visits ot the Tokyo Quartet and ihe Minn~ota Orchestra under the dynamic Stanislaw Skrowaczewski. The Tokyo group, guests of lhe Laguna Beach Chamber Music Society, qukkly showed us that the many splendid reports whiqb preceded their visit to Califorrua were based on fact and not fan- cy. QUARTETS BY Haydn and Smetana took up the first half of our Laguna Beach Jligh School program and we didn't need more than the first two move- ments of the Haydn to know that the LBCMS bad, inevitably, picked another wlnner. Grand stuff, that first half, but this critic's memories of a ma·gnificent cQncert are cen- tered arollnd the second half proceedings: a ttuly superb reading o( Beethoven's Quartet ln ·cmajor. It was a stirring. utterly flaw. less rendition of a chamber work that has few peers. Many on· lookers tried hard to give our guests a standing ovation and jL'lS a pity thaLthey didn't SUC· ceed. It was richly deserved. HAPPILY, THAT sustained applause brought the quartet back for encores that were just as enthusiastically received: the Music Box pizzicato movement from a Bartok work and an adagio move- ment by Haydn that was full of grace and charm. It was the same story at Santa Ana High School earlier in the weekend where a capacity au- dience gave the Minnesota Orchestra and· maestro Skrowaczewski a rouslng ova- tion. Again, it w-.s the post- interrnission portion of the pro- gram that is best remembered by t~ writer; .a glorious read- ing of Beethoven's Third {the immortal Eroica) under the baton of a man who drew every ounce of expression from that rich, movln& score. WORKS BY BerliO% and Bartok took up the Cirst half of this impressive Orange Counti Pbilbarmonlc Society cpncert and their readings amply deiii· ooatrated to us that a varied repei:toire holds no perils for these "assiduous Minnesotans and their commandin1 Polish director. Our maJor orchestras cowd do worse , than to give Skrowaczewski a spell on their podiums as a guest conductor during the summer season, 1f the Minnesota could spare him. He is worthy of nationwide ex- posure, if only for the Beethoven he so fluently directed. It may be a name that makes typeset. ters mo4n and groan but believe me, Skrowac:_zewski wUi be a very fammar name to music lovers within the next season or so. LOS ANGELES (AP) -R0ck star Peter Frampton makes his television acting debut· ln an episode of NBC's "Black Sheep Squadron" on Thursday, April 13 . Frampton agreed to appear on the show because he is a fan, said supervising pro. ducer Alex Beaton. He pl~s a British coast watcher. Frampton met series star Robert Conrad at the People's Choice Awards and told Conrad of bis liking of the series. Conrad in· vited the rock singer to visit the set and they made a deal. Frampton will donate his acting fee to UNICEF. ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC MEL BROOKS I I • I '· -I INSIDE: •Featuring •Recipes •Club calendar •Ann Landers Wectn.dty, Metch 15, 1178 DAILY PILOT What's Easter without a bunny cake? You don 't need special pans for this one. The Big BUnny What better way to &.aJ Jlappy Easter tbaa with a carrot cake made to look like the Easter Rabbit bimaelfl 11lis light TersiClll of the tndi· tional cUTOt cake, ls a ftttinC finish to any Easter dinner menu. Made with bullet" and natural ingredienu like carrots and pecans, the Easter Carrot Cake will delight taste buds of children and adults alike. And what starts as a plalD sheet cake can be turned into a colorful Easter fantasy with the easy·to·followdirections below. EASTER CA RROT CAKE 1 Cake 1 cup (2 slicks) buUer, softened 2 cups sugar 4 eggs 3 cups all·purpooo flour 2 taeaspooos baking powder 1 teaspoon cinnamon lh teaspoon salt I/.& teaspoon ginger I/.& teaspoon nutmeg 1 cup milk 1 cup shredded carrots (2 large) 1h cup chopped pecans 1 teaspoon vanilla Quick Bultercreem Frosting (recipe below) In large mixing bowl, beat butter and sugar together until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Stir together flour, baking powder, cinnamon, salt, ginger and nutmeg. Add about 1h cup nour mix· ture to egg-butter mixture alternately with 'I• cup milk. Repeat with all fklur and milt. Blenc1 Best Buys Wttb the rain presenUy abating. tbe produce lnduatry ls beginning to return to normal. The rains hampered• the growinC and harvesting of averal crops, but 'Continued fail" weather will help ease the situation. With good weather, tbe prom~ Spring will sooa arri\'e for the In· dustr)'. in.cuata. peeam and vanilla. Pour batter in'° greased, waxed-paper lined 13x9xl-~ babq pan.; • Bake In prelteated 315 degree F. oven unW wooden pick or cake tester ~ in center comes out clean, 45 to 50 m.inufes. Cool com· pletely on wire rack. Leave cake in pan or re·· move from pan to shape Easter Bunny•. Frost with Quick Buttercream Frosting. QUICK BUTTEllCREAM FROSTING 1h cup ( 1 stick> butter, softened 3 cups sifted confectioners sugar ~ teaspoon salt 4 to 6 lablespoons whipping cream 1 If.a teaspoons vanilla · In small mixing bowl, beat butter·until light (See BUNNY, Page CZ> Use plates for pattern and assemble. • . f Whole grain cereals, fruits and vegetables -renectlng concem for good nutrition -were important ingredients in recipes which won the $5,0QO, and $2,000 prizes on the 28tb bake-off con· test held recently in New Orleans. Among the winners were two University students and a scuba diver who is co-author of a book on "The Edible Sea." The three $5,000 winners, all from California, were marlne ex'pert Paul Hill, Long Beach, with .. Tomato Cheese Pie:'"· Kathle6- Lee, an administrative assistant at the J et Propulsion l,.ab in Pasadena with "Chocolate Cherry Jubilees," and Reta Ebbink, a senior secretary from Torrance with "Maple Cream Coffee Treat." CHOCOLATE CHERRY JUBILEES Chocolate fans will love it! A brownie dessert with cherry filling as an added attrac· tion. 2 cups all purpose dr unbleached fiour-9 l 'h cups sugar 2 oz. pre·melled unsweetened baking chocolate flavor or 2 squares (2 oz.) un· sweetened baking chocolate, melted l cup margarine or butter, softened ~ to 1 teaspoon almond extract 4 eggs 21 oz. can (2 cups) prepared cherry fruit filling 3 tablespoons sliced or s1hered almoaba Powdered sugar Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease bottom of 15xl0-inch j~lly rcll pan. (Lightly spoon flour in· to m easuring cup; level off.) Combine nour, sugar, chocolate flavor, margarine, almond and eggs; beat 2 minutes at medium speed. Spread in prepared pan. Using about 1 tablespoon per serving, spoon c,herry filling in three rows of five over batt.e.t. Sprinkle ahtionds over filling. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 to 35 m(Jlutes or until top springs back when touched lightly in centet. (Do not overbake .. ) Cool; dust with powdered sugar. 15 servings. • Self·risi.ne flour not recommended. TIP: Two &-inch square pans may be sub- stituted. Spoon fllling in 2 rows of 3, making 6 servings per pan. 13:d·inch pan not recom· mended. TOMATO CHEESE PIE A dellcate main dish filled with cheese and eggs -it's pretty, too.· If.I cup margarine or butter, softened % cup instant mashed potato flakes :i~ cup all purpose or unbleached flour 1;4 cup grated Parmesan cheese 1;4 teaspoon salt I/• cup waler Fil Ung 111.a cups (6 en.) shredded Cheddar or American cheese 14 cup instant mashed potato Oakes 1 medium tomato, coarsely c)>opped Seggs ' 1A cup dairy sour cream 1 teaspoon chopped chives ~ teaspoon salt 1 teaspooD com flake crumbs, if desired Heat oven to 350 degrees. (Ugbtly spoon fiour into measuring cup; level off.) Cut margarine Into potato flakes, flour, cheese and salt; mix until crumbly. Add water; stir just un- til dough holds together. Press into ungreased 9 -........ Betty Drant of Newport Beach was the people chosen for the Bake-off and she didn't win anything, she says she bad a time.,.. Here's her recipe: SOUPER DILLY DELICIOUS WAti' A molst yeast bread and the title tells it tO~·oz. can condensed cream mushroom soup. I/, cup water 2 tablespoons margarine or butter 3'AI to 4 cups all purpose or unbSea flour 3 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespooo instant minced onion 2 or 3 teaspoons dill weed Y.a teaspoon salt 1 pkg. active dry yeast 1 ege, beaten (reserve 2 teaspoons glue) 1 cup (4 oz.) shredded Cheddar or A cancbeese 1 tablespoon sesame seed In small saucepan, beat first three · dients until very warm (13> -degrees to degreea). <Ulhtb' spoon flour into meas cup; level off.) In large bowl. combine warm uid, 1 cup flour, sugar, onioo!t..~llweed. yeast and egg~ beat l minuf.ell at m speed~ By band, stir ln 'theese and rem flour. On well floured surface, k n dough until smooth and elastic, about S minutea..· Place in greased bowl. Cover; let rise in wana place until light and doubled in size, 60 minutfa:. Generously grease 9x5-inch loaf pan 1or\ 1'1'.a-quart casserole. Punch down dough; sha~ into loaf. Place. in greased pan. Cut diagotta\· slashes in dough, about v, inch deep. Brushi with reserved egg; sprinkle with sesame s . Cover: let rise in warm place un:[ligbt doubled in size. 30 to '5 minutes. _ Heat OYen to 315 dt(rees. 30 te minutes ar until deep golden brown and loaf sounda bollOW" when lightly tapped, · ly rF_move from pan. 1 loaf. • Self·risin& flour n°' recommended. or lO·inch pie plate; flute edge. Prick generously with fork; bake 10 minutes. Reserve Y.a cup cheese; sprinkle rem;iun~• on partially baked crust. Sprinkle v, cup DOt:aU• flakes over cheese. Spoon tomatoes onto fiak top with reserved cheese. Beat eggs, s cream, chives and salt until well blended; over cheese. Sprinkle with crumbs. Bake at 350 degnes for ~to 30 m~· until lightly browned aad knife inserted center comes out clean. Let stand ~ m · before servtag. 6 servinp. MAPLE CB~M f:OFFEE TllEAT Friends and family wiD praise the baJIJlll) who serves this cream filled caramel to11>P1-I"' dessert. · 1 cup rmnty packed·bro,.a sugar Y.a to ~ cup chopped nuts ~cup maple flavored synrp Cll' dst a:11r:111a. syrup 114 cup margarine or butter, melted <See BAKE-OFF, Page CZ> OAILY PILOT Wednesdey, March 15, 1978 TOte a Banana Most people are at wor k eight hours a day. Eatin g d u r ing that period can be something you either look forward to or would rather not think about. Few can af- ford to eat out regularly. so l unch is usually brought in from home. It you'd rather not face the same old sandwich tomorr ow. there's a simple solution right in your kitchen. The most popular fruit in America is available year -round. That's right, you can bring a banana. Not just lo peel and eat. but to Jtllz. up other portable dishes. \.4 cup sliced celery 2 tablespoou aalad 2 tablespoons cider vinl(iar 1 tablespoon chqpped onion t h emselves to this l r e•tme nt. Combine leftoyer chicken, turkey oil or h a m with canned gree n beans and chopped celery. Add the piquant dressing. spoon in to individ ual con- tainers and tote it to work with a banana, and· you'll feast on a truly Por t ab l e Banana Vina igrett e Salad. AgiAin, you slice the banana onto your main course Just before you're ready to serve. PORTABLE BANANA VJNAJGRE1TE SALAD 1 cup ( 1/1 pound) cubed cooked ham 1~ teaspoon dr ied leaf tarragon 14 teaspoon dry mustard 1til teaspoon pepper 2 bananas 1 cup (8 ounces) cut S a I u d s a I s o I end green beans, drained In medium bowl com· bine all ingredients ex- cept bananas. Mix well. Turn into 1 medium or 2 small containers with tight-fitting lids and refrigerate until ready to pack lunch. To serve. peer bananas (1 for each serving), slice and mix With salad. 2 servings. Add herring to a sandwich. Hero Takes a Bow peppers, on to antipasto and now to herring. LARGE CALIF. AYOCADOES 19~· CELLO FOOD Slice • banana Into a salad for a change of pace. LOWER PRICES! SWEET 'M JUICY D'ANJOU PEARS 29! How in the world did a hero ever get to be a bread l oaf? The lctndary hero was a fi re endowed with gr at strength, courage anll ability. The modern hero is the brave central fJgiire in some startling e~t or. otherwise, the m!fn character in a nov- el •t play. It's simply a matter of good taste and the adventuresome eating attitudes of today 's young crowd. If you don't believe that, look at the n u m ber o f variations now offered in pizza parlors of what started as a simple com- bination of cheese and tomato sauce. generous amount of pepper mixture . Replace lop of loaf and 1-...::::~!!!!!!!!!!!!!il!!!!::-~----.....L-~...;::~~-~~-~~ IAG ~ how come he ended up3n a sandwich? l{ven more curious, hQ."W did this hero bee-Orn e a "poor boy" in sopa e sections of the coghtry and a "grinder" in fthers? ()pee the whole cycle started, though, we do k "o w w h y a h c r o s al>dwic h grew from hcun and cheese, to m~tballs, lo veal and To gel back to the herring hero. Maybe the taste for fish in com- bination with peppers and onions and oregano star\ed with anchovy pizza. Or maybe herring sandwiches evolved because fa st food chains butters. Place herring with onions on bottom of loaves and lop with a ~ •• Bunny • ,.... (From Page CU . *Pd fl uffy. Gradually beat in confectioners' (aigar. Add sail. Blend in whipping cream and Nn11la until mixture reaches desJ.red spreading oonsistency. ! •To shape Easter Bunny: Loosen edges of Mke with spatula. Invert cake onto serving tfey or cutting board. Remove waxed paper ft-0m cake. With a sharp knife cut two circles <aJl of cake for body and head (use two different ~ed bowls or plates as patterns). Cul a long, ~rrow triangle from eacb of two corners of the dike for the ears. Assemble pieees to form bun-~. Frost with Quick 8 uttercream Frosting. Cul tt)in. strips from red licorice ropes for the ~hiskers. Use jelly beans to form eyes, nose \6d other desired decorations. • • ··· •• Bake·off started lo cater to a public taste for fish, and developed it further. HE RRINC HERO 1,., cup oil 1 large Bermuda onion. sliced 1 green pepper, lhin· ly sliced 1 red bell pepper, thinly sliced 1': teaspoon oregano Salt 6 individual bero loaves . Soft b u tler or margarine 1 jar (1 I b.) herring party snacks in wine sauce, drained, diced and onions chopped In a skillet, heal oil a nd saute olnion and peppers until wilted and soft. Stir in oregano and salt to taste. Stir over low heat until golden brown. Cool. Split hero loaves lengthwise a nd spread out surfaces with serve at once. Yield: 6 loaves. HERRING EGG SALAD TRIPLE DECKER 4 hard-cooked eggs, chopped 1_,, cup m inced celery Mayonnaise Salt 18 slices white bread Sort b u tter o r margarine Lettuce leaves 12 slices crisp bacon 12 thin tomato slices 2 jars (8 oz. ea.) (F rom PagtfCl) herring salad , 8 oz. pkg. cream cheese. softent d In a bowl, mix eggs 11.a cup powdered sugar and celery wlth enough 2 tablespoons margarine or butter, sof· mayonnaise to make a ed ' thick mixture. Season to V.1 cup coconut, if desired , taste with salt. Spread 2 (10-oz. > cans refrigerated flaky biscuits one side of each slice ot Heat oven to 350 degrees. In ungreased 12x8 bread with buttel', On 13x9-lnch baking pan, combine first four in· buttered aide of 6 of the t'dieots. Blend ,. .. eam cheese, powdered sugar allcea, place lettuce d 2 tablespoona mar1arlne untU 1mootb; 1tir lea ves. Top with •H coconut. Separate biscuit douib into 20 s alad mixture. Add cults; press or roll eacb to a •-filch circle. bacon slices and second n l tablesp000 cream cbeeee aUxt.ure onto alic~ of bread . Place nter of eac;b biacult. Overlai> doulb over ftltini \bmato slices on bread mtqftnger .. b~r0Us.Ptaceroll11eamalde and spread with herrtn1 wn,lnrowaollOoveraf"U)Plixtureinpan. salad. Top with tblrd Bake at 350 degrees for» to ao minui.a or ~lice or bread. Cut • tll deep ,aldlm brown. Cool '3 minutes' tum sandwich into balvea to 1ervtn1 plate or W'axed paper. (Refriprate and serve a t onc e . y leftovtn.) Ito 10.,....m-. Yield: hervll\p. BEEF RIB EYE BONELESS SPENCER SI ~KS2~ .. FOSTER FARM HEN TURKEYS FRESH DRESSED 1c...,. .... ..... ..... ... , J39 au. .... ~ ...... J/11/11 u . JIM'S UNCH RISH EMS GIADl "AA .. ·. LAICH ''oz. CAM BARM BONELESS BONED-N-ROLLED HAM 2'! FOSTER or L\CKY FARMS FRYING CHICKEN PARTS MEATY BREAST LEGS & THIGHS .sra1NGABJ> CANNED BISCUITS SPRINGFIELD SALAD Oil 240Z.IOTTLE 69c . -. . • FOOD It's a festive occasion indeed when this delicately spiced cake is set before the birthday person. Cake is made with that new favorite, -yogurt. Spices Take Cake You can bake a lot of best wishes into this Happy Birthday Cake. "Sugar 'n' spice 'n' everything nice." for starters, as the birthday child puffs out all the candles at once. And "one to grow on," since this cake is made with yogurt, which has become a symbol or long life. Happy Birthday Cake is a two·layer butter cake, easy enough to make "from scratch." The two·way frosting starts with softened cream cheese, one version being a mixture • of chocolate and cinnamon. the alternate a cream cheese coconut topping Oavored with nutmeg and lemon peel. While the basic cake and frosting recipes had better be followed as ac· curately as possible, re- member that spices give exciting variety to life. Change the spicing to suit your t.nste or, better sti II, the t aste buds or your honored guest. You can, for instance, use a quarter teaspoon nutmeg or mace in place of cinnamon and all- spice, or add the flowery fragrance of a quarter teaspoon of ground cloves. Run your eye down the spice sbeJf. What else? Apple pi'e spice, perhaps , or pumpkin pie spice blend in place of one or two in· dividual spices? SPICE D YOGURT CAKE z:"' cups all purpose flour 1 ~~ teaspoons bak- ing soda l 1:i teaspoons ~round cinnamon 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 "' teaspoon salt 11,. teaspoon ground allspice % cup butter or margarine. softened 11,1:1 c up s firmly packed light brown sugar 2eggs 1 112 cups vanilla yogurt Spiced Coconut Lemon Frosting or Cinnamon Chocolate Frosting 2 tablespoons sesame seed, lightly toasted Combine flour, baking soda, cinnamon. baking powder, salt and all- spice; sel aside. In the large bowl or an electric mfxer beat t>utter and brown sugar until light and fluffy. Beal in eggs until well mixed. With the electric mixer set at low speed, alternately s tir in flour mixture with yogurt; beat just until blended. Pour into 2 well-greased and light- ly floured 9-inch round cake pans; spread smooth. Bake in a pre- heated moderate oven (350 degrees) until a cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean, about 25 minutes. Let cakes cook in pans or racks for 10 llJinutes. Remove cakes from pans: cool completely. Spread one-half of the Spiced Coconut Lemon or Cinnamon Chocolate frosting on each layer. Stack one on top of the other. Sprinkle top with sesame seeds SPICED COCONUT LEMON FROSJ'ING 1 package (8 oz.) cream cheese, iOft.ened 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, softened 1 pound con· fectioners sugar 2 teaspoons grated lemon peel ~ teaspoon ground nutmeg 2 teaspoons lemon juice 1 can (31h o z.) flaked coconut ln a small bowl of an e lectric mixer beat cream cheese and butter· until smooth. Gradually add confectioners-sugar, alternately with lemon peel, nutmeg and lemon juice; beat until smooth. Stir in coconut GINNA MON CROCOLA.'l'E F ROSTING Prepare frosting as above but omit lemon peel, nutmeg, ler;non juice and coconut. Stir in 14 cup unsweetened cocoa powder and If.I teaspoon gr ound cinnamon. Shirred Eggs for Sure .~ . ' -- Wednesday, March 15, 1978 DAIL v PILOT C:J POWDEREDORBROWN TAKE YOUR CHOICE AND SAVE! Your Spring baking recipes deserve the pure cane ~from Hawaii And this roupon will save }00 real money on t\W pounds of }WI' lawrit.e Canel H specialty;-Powdered OR Brown in the convenient poly bag. Happy baking! z 0 Q.. °' ::> ... o+ (.>IL wz a:: ' o-1-I/) RE OE EM THIS COUPON AT YOUR GROCER. SAVE20¢ TO GROCER: This coupon Is redeemable tor 20C {plus SC handllnt) lowiwd • 2 lb. bag (or TWO 1 lb. boxes> of C and H Brown Sopr. Get reimbursement by matlln& this coupon to C and H Sugar Co .• P.O. Box 1420, Clinton. Iowa 52734. R~ptlon througtl outside l8l!ftCy wlll not be honored. This otter void In any state or locality prohibit Inf · or tioeoSlnc, or restricting these coupons. Cash value /20 of i e. Offll' expires Au8J,lst 30, 197a FRAUD ClAUSEt My other •pplieatlon of this coupon constitutes fnNd. lrwolc::es proving retail ule, within the last 90 days, of sufficient stock to cover coupons pr& sentad for redemption 111~ be lftlde IVlllable onrtQuest. COUPON GOOD ON ONE 2-lB POlY BAG (OR TWO HB CARTONS) Of C ANO H POWDERED OR BROWN SUGAR. Get a dozen eggs FREe with prbofS of purchase. Buy a dozen eggs and any two bags of Nestle"" Milk Chocolate. Nestle-Crundfi~ Nestle® $100.CJOO® Bar or Nest11§4D Choco'litee Miniature Bars and NestJ6 will refund you the price of the eggs. Just send the price stamp from the eggs and two empty Nestle Miniature bags to Nestle with the form below. Look for the Nestle display in your participating store. Uee ttWs ftJrm to get a reflnd on adman eggs. Mall t.:,.... Ne.ul c .... ....,. hto. P.O.h11141 ._t4NI. Mn•. oana ' ...... s.. .... lllftfl: orlce ,~'"'"'~~°"°empty NeW6 Mnetunt Bags. . . .. ~ ,1111 '" ,'1 ',1 ., .. . ... •·' .••' ·" J ' I ' I \ ~ I J I I , . : Delica essen INOCKWURST Vienna But . . . s 1 cw9 Ft .. s and Polish. too .. 12 •i pach ge Bologna . ; . • . • . . 79e U-.C'ar :\l,l\l'r Brei or Meat -4 8 111 Braunschwt'iger 59 e 0-.rar l\1 1" tr Ge rm:lfl, Rrgular R 07. PLUM C EEK S.Weadable Cheddar s 1 s 9 Sh1rp~ Brandr~ Onion 12 oz package Party Dips . . . . . • 39e f'rn & Quill -R 01 (AVOCADO ••• 49') American $IN(l($ ••• s1 19 Kraft', N•ch ... lt l'ewrapped-12 01. LONGHORN Cowtry Charm $169 lowtr in fat-P'f1 sUn milk-14 oz . Frozen Food .. MEAT PIES Swamon HPt'I. ('h1l·krn. Turkey-8 uz Limeade i2ozw •••• 49c Refreshing l\t rnull' M11icl (6 01 .... 25') Coffee Rich . . . . 29c Rich's rlel11 mu' t·renmer' 16 oz Macaroni S9< & Cheese Van de Kamp'11 big 20 oz pkg Waffles UflmM ••• sse C'hoosc Buttermilk or Original-lOoz Ice Cream Bars . s 129 Chilly R1teR package of 18 bar1> Corn on the Cob 39e Bi rdseye\ Litt le Eari; packa)!e of R Oriental 59 Vegetables ( Green Giant .Japanese, Chinese or Hav.1111an ... 10 oz package ftistlrcl ... ; . . . . 59c French 't· bi the big 24 oz jar i .. .., ......... '. '' .$1l9 i<'•l •nt1Mptk rn 2nunC'e holtle k ROLL-Oii •••••••••••••••• $t.o9 ~nttd 1nti 0p.r~pl.rlnt .,. , • I & 01 rtt , Friday -March 17 -we can all be sons or daughters of Erin and It's a time to enjoy the trlditlonaJ 111111! M. O Rnho gives thoulht to Ill the other days, too. That's the Better Way! I ! di rd ,.,.,, U.S.D.A. CHOICE l/PRIJ I BRISKET. • • • • • • • • • • • • .. As lean AS bri!;kt•I ran J'>Of.siblv be ... and with I hAI !'J'>PC'l,11 flavor ,\.nu izet I rnm El H1rnrho\. 11\• n 111r'f'' Whole or Point Half Cabbage SOLID .•••••••••••••••• II! Crisr> leaves that will cook up just the way you want them to' Ale =-....... s1 75 Irish Whiskey . • s59t Goes with an lrish meal! 12 oz canb No hlarney -save 1.40! Tullamore Dew aNL~~~·l­ TiJp llirlain ·f/;eak°rio~ct~l7l Ret'f at its hec;t. for a memorable feHt! Cen.ler cul from ll.S.D.A. I 'hnice beef loin-Juicy and tender' · Top Sirloin :r . s2si Loin cut of U.S.0 .A. Choice beef Ground Beef r:x~s12t Lean -does not exceed 22% fat CHUCK SOAK Center cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef 7 Bone Roast •• s 1°t Chuck cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef Sausag~ WI FAS*IE • s 1°t Our own blerld, sea&<>ned just right BONELESS ROLLED B~F s 1 a'. ROAST Chuck cut ... Choice shoulder clod 0 Bone Roast •• s 1 1~ Chuck cut of U.S.O.A. Choice beet Chili Beef •••••• s 1 oi Coa~ly ground for a hearty dish ~:~ES 52 1 ~ For Brochettes -Loin cu~. Choice beef . •' lp/4 lroilnrs GRADE ............ ~ ••• II! ~eaty U.S.D.A. C:rade "A'· fryen; that will be a delight hot from the broiler or from the coaltl' Compare quality!<• lfMets) Chicken Breast ::· s24t Stuffed Cordon Bleu style Ham. cheei<e Sausage 11u.mu • s1 5t We make it! ... and with no nitrites MEAT LOAF Our own mix -oven ready with fresh egp WE FEATURE MILK-FED VEAL The real thing ... compare the d ifference Sliced Bacon • • s 14~ I El Rancho's thicker "ranch style" BONELESS i'OiSi $1 4~ Beeton Butt -fresh ltMtm:' pork! Super Fresh Produce! Chicken Breast =·s22t Stuffed with Dreuing, butter, Creah eggs Bratwurst n1MC1101 515t Pork, veal, seaeoning -no n itrites Beef :Rib 89< BONES • Meaty! Delicious! Bake or barbecue Arat:atlas ~~E ......... 1/1! Banana 19 ' c. Squash Thick meated for fine bakini CherrJ 39c Tomatoes . Red ripe little items! 12 oz bskt Red 19c Potatoes · • U.S. No. 1 quality ... all purpOM · .. Chinook $299 Salmon • They'll love it baked! Whole or haJf Salmon Steak •• s35~ Center c\Jl fine Chinook variety Snapper ,ACllC .... s21t Fresh fillets of fresh anapper! Catfish runs ••••• s1 si Delicious fresh.water variety Perch COLOUDO • • • • • 69~. Pan ready! ... net weight 8 oz each FRESH BUTTERHECK s 119 Clams 10011ar • Pure Northweat Quality from Wash. Liquor Dep 't. REDUCED $1.00! 0. RANCHO'S GIN And it's 8till 90 proof! 1.75 liter Canadian uvc 10c •• s399 El Rancho's 86 proof whiskey! fifth Ancient Age •••• s5 99 Straight whi8key N!du<'ed 90c! Quart Ten High ••••••. 5399 Save $1.00 on straight whiskey-fifth Passport ...••.. s549 Fine scotch reduced 50c! Fifth French Wines •. s299 Imported Nectaro&e, Nectar Blanc-5th :::~SON 5279 Burgundy, Chablis or Rose ...• Quart Carafe Prices in elf~ Thur. ~arch 16 throulh Wed. Mdrclt 22 O~n. daily 9 to 9 Sunday JO to 7 No sales to d«il~s The Better Way to Value! ~.!!~~ _l!!.!~~!!e.. ~:,;:. 39e Juice ~ ................. 55e Teuun otrm you •II the aoo<!n-or thou pink Ju;cv,•l•l>H' 46 •• "" I Tomatoes ............... 29< Garden aoodoeee ftom Springfield eelect.ed for quelitv. priced for value! No 303 . Prune Juice • • • • &9c P. &AAI.: s121 ISw.;tnOS •••••• Sunaweet-naturally aood for )'OU! Q}l•rt Col01Ul°ii• &om Sun Oiut-6 "°' 0% Vanilla Extract ~ &9c " FOOD Wodoesda~. Maroh 15, 1978 DAIL y PILOT CG Low sodium diets need not be dull or bland. Unsalted roasted peanuts dress up these rock comish game hens. \ Shaking the Salt Habit? Sometime:"> eating more sodium than we need can create a he alth problem. Exces:o, sodium holds water in the body instead of allow- mg it to be excreted. This excess water puts a s train on the body and prevents it from functioning properly. Wbeo doctors suspect this condition they advise the patient to elimillate or restrict some foods in the diet tllat are hi&b in • sodium. If your doctor recommends a~ diet, slo nol despair. You can ~ •eleious meals with a little imagination aad the laelp of such salt-free preducts which are available at vour local grocery store. Unsalted peanuts add flavor and texture as well as 1good nul!'jtion. Keep plenty around for'nibbling instead of salty pretzels or potato chips. Created especially for those who are trying to shake the salt habit are these three low- sod1um recipes -Glazed Rock Cornish Game Hens with Peanut Rice Pilaf. Nutty Garden Salad, and Peanut Honey Pie. GAME BENS -4 rock comish game hens Cl to 1 'h pounds each) 4 tablespoons unealted margarine 2 tablespoons honey 2 tablespoons orange juice 1 :i cup chopped celery 1'4 cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons chopped parsley I teaspoon grated orange peel 1,. teaspoon rosemary leaves. crushed 1" teaspoon thyme leaves, crushed I ClU> dry roasted unsalted peanuts I cup uncooked rice I 'h cups water 112 cup orange juice Roast game hens at 375 degrees 45 minutes. Melt 2 tablespoons unsalted margarine; stir in honey and 2 tablespooos orange juice. Brush hens generously with honey mixture. Roast 1S to 20 minutes longer, or Until done. . • Meanwhile, saute celery and omon tn re- maining 2 tablespoons unsalted margarine in Salad Adds saucepan unlll tender . Stir m pansley, orlnge peel. rosemary, thyme, unsalted peanuts, rice. water and orange juice. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover a.ad simmer until liquid is absorbed. Serve with game bells. Nt1Tl'Y GAllDBN SU.AD ., ,,"; J cups-. salad greens 1 cap-~-·ttas ~ .. ~~~cuevmherslices ~ ,;:t · V4~81itetlearnat l 1~ gree11 ,epper, cut in 1.4-inchstrips •· 1-'2 cup ~tecl_peanuts 14 cup peuut otl 2 tablespoons elder vinegar 1 teupooo sugar Generous dash celery seed Generous dash pepper Dash garlic powder ln a large bowl, combine salad _greens, cauliflowerettes. caewnber, canot ana green pepper. Chill Ulltil ready to sene. Just. before serving, toss ansafted peanuts With saJM. Cembiae pearrut •ii, vinegar, sugar. celery seei, pepper, ud garlie powder; blend well. Peurover salad and toss. PBANUT HONEY PIE 1 cup unsifted fleUl' ah cup (1 stick) unsalted margarine 3 to 4 tablespoons ice water l cup suiar '-2 cup honey 3 eggs, slightly beaten l t.easPOOD vanilla extract 1 'h cups dry roasted unsalted peanuts Measure flour into a bowl. Cut in~ cup un- salted margarine until mixture resembles coarse meel. Mix in ice water. Form dough into ball. Roll out to fit 8-iocb pie plate. Fit into pie plate and shape edge. Melt remaining ~ cup ansalted mariarine over low beat; mix in sugar and boner~ Blend in eggs aad vaaiDa extract. Add umaJlie4 peaauts. Peur lJrto pie shell. , '" Bake at 350 degrees. about 45 minUtee, or an• lil done. ··Mushrooms HOT IWUSHROOM CHEF'S SALAD 2 quarts lorn iceberg lettuce 1 cup turkey strips 1 cup ham strips 1 CUJ> cubed Jack or •• Cheddar cheese 2 small tomatoes, cut in wedges 1 ounce Cl cup) Japanese Fore s t Mushrooms 4 slices bacon 3 ta~espoons bacon drippinls 14 C!Up a.U~ ~n aolon , Ulbl HID• IQlll' · :. ~~tap~• eotrtL • 1'4 twpoonualt before serving. cover mushrooms with bot water and let stand 10 minutes. Drain. resen· ing liquid; cllp and dis· card stems. Cut mushreowm tnto \<e.flllcb slices, leavtn1 a few of the small ones whole. 1f deslrOO. Cook btteon aptil golden brown 8nd Criafh Remove from pan. Drain off drippings and retw-n 3 tablespoo~ to skillet. Add mushrooms and onion and saute 10 minutes. Combine auger. cornstarch. salt , mustard and paprika. SUr in vinegar and 1 oup m~ water. Add to skillet. <::..t, tttrrtaa ci· tll mlKtun boll• aod thickens. Add bacon. broken._ larl_ ....-. Tum .... '-........ bowl and plate Oii ~· ing tray. Arrant• turkey, bam, cbeeM and tom atoea a.round ...,. ... Pour drwln,.en 1Mtu~ and~. s.v._ et Oltee. Makea4toS ...... ' . TUNE IN TO . _: KE' 'ooo·s STH ANNUAL ;, :n ~; -STICK UP FOR BREAKFAST· . ·~ [ '"" • I CONTEST. -:W, 2000 kids wm win a sears cartrld9e n!le-Cames·svstem. Your chftc2ren can enter Kellogg'S pictured on the coupon. each , new Stick Up For Breakfast Contest. specially marked pack.age conta1n5 They could win a sear'S cartndge an entry blank and complete con-n?le-Games™ system. Hook It up test details. The contest ts open tn easllY to your TV and they can ptay children 14 and under. It ends Pong~ super Pong• and 22 other September 1 s, 1978. Start your· tele-games. Vou can save 1oc. Just Children on the contest tOday. lt'ld dlp the coupon below. ~m it Stlek Up For Breakfast every d1". on arr( one of the Keuogg cereals ·Contest void Where prOhibil!ecllf l ,, I I . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . -. -.. .. ... . . .. ' ., ... 0 DAILY PILOT Wednftday, March 15, 1978 FOOD Italian Idea Zesty EGGPLANT MOMl'BltEY tll bubbly, 2Sto30 minutes. 1 Urse egplut 8d ud pepper TAMALE S-'UCE l WI> ftne dr.J bnlld enmbe th cup tbopl*I onion 2eaa....... Veos'eHtaO 1 garlledove. chopped T .. ale 8auee (Ndpe Mlow) ~ 1 2 tablelpua ollYe oil 8 llle.s .,__.., .1aet *eee 1 caa (15 oz.) Tamales in Cblli Gra97 • Oil eaP'nt a-wile ...., M4Ddl t!lldt 1 cup w9'er deea. SIMoa ~ Mk ad Mflr. Ceat with I eu Cl oz.> .... to snce mm1t.. ..... ell. 1119 mmba again. .. twpoen Nail eratie fDr ao mtaates. 8-t .-. ~-toch ~ taapooa orecano arie lkiDet. ~ .. .,.. l!Jea 1D ell on rn....,.,. Rot Saace ldel unUl teDdv aB4ll pl41en t.rown. Drain Cook caloa _. garlic tn tl!Ye eU W\til ftgbt· . cm paper towels. SJJOOD about th cup Tamale 1y browned. Remove paper from tamales and Sauce into sreuect uallow bakiaa dlah. Ar· .add to onion mixture with water. Cook, covered, range layer ot eggplant allc:es over sauce. Cover . .about 5 miilutes or until tamales are hf:!ated ~th sauce and a layer of cMele slices. Repeat ' tbroutb. Maab tamales wiU. fork. Stir in re· '-Yen ~di.ab~ full Bake at 350 degrees un- -dourmoet U• ting d esserts baye Frucll orieins. EY~n the aames ha•• an eat1dq delicate IOUDd tbat addl to U..lr a .. peal. Souflle. mo .. e1 ~ .,..Jrode ana »Uflil .... all French that live up to 1me1. evea lf " been tra.nalat· tM American style 'of cooking. ... ---.. ,.. - STAW.••OL C-D BRISK.IT Sauce ls blendtldto enhance tlitVOtSol this egg1*nf dish. -..... GROUND llllF ANY SIZE pt(Q. ··~ 69!. MmAT• STIAK ..i;I .. J.~52" For instance. in Frea ch, the word ••J>arfait .. means ·~ect0 and the name ffplies to a delicate ~HD ice made in a lbold. lo the U.S., the P•l'fait 11 a layered dessert. Clftm eea1timtna ice cream, whipped cream, fnl1t. am -JOU •"'me a -la • dea ctaas. It II no less ••perfect" tbaa the deli. 71~ .. PKG. iiim SllAl: ........ u. $191 C •U•LMOllND SJC9 m snu ____ ..... t@ _ ~ .. ?~_ mimmM ... -.... &aatc ~ ~ -·LOel·~--S41t ~. IA. Jiit ............... LI.~ .6 • .... ....... iwCUiii'tn $199 WO•a.:it 'I" IED•-•1• cb .ersion and is -*"'U.i'1n1y eye appealing easy to make. bis Citrus Cookie U'{ait is "Americana" from the word go, layer· ing sections or fresh gapefruil and oranges With pack.a~d chocolate chip cookies , canned cherries and frozen whipped topping. The combination is not only a winner, flavor-wise, but ls an elegant dessert to whip up at the last minute. CITRUS COOKIE PARFAIT 1 can <about 16 ounces> pitted light or dark, sweet cherries 1 tablespoon corn· starch 2 grapefruit 1 orange 114 cups crushed chocolate chip cookies 1 container (4~ ounces> frcnen whipped topping, thawed Drain cherries; re· reserve syrup into com· starc h; cook over medium heat, stirr ing until thickened. Cool L----SNOW CRAB ..................... && J 7•D• -'IT-.r.& •ou• snAK ... L& STATSllll05.•4V~•IUCBI 894 --·-$119 BP•CIMS•l'OT 99• ... ~-• 1" .... ..,_,.. • 159 WNCHEON MIAlS ~~ ..... IA-omERS ~-.... ~ ....... -.u. AllM nuy ___ l& ... ROAST ....... -&& .... SnAK .... L& uuiAGiliNii •U.NG. .... u . $1 69 TURBOTfllUT ................ u. $) 49 auM.'iiOAaT ...... lL •• 1 n sHMDia' .. UT .. u. $1 s• ·-..-. STWC .. u. $1 •• ~~f·SMOllEO.~.AU .. lEf,011 $1 '' OOYERzrSOlE $229 IITTf•IOHUESS .... -·811AUE!j() $179 •U•SlllAUENO s 1 n BEEF SAUSAGE ................. lL ................... l& snw MaAT .......... u. ... ROAST .... -·-···L& ••• SnAK ............ u. .IACllUllAT·~·-$3'' iat.ANo•cKAllaur $2'' -· .. OUN>·-.L.. •17... .,. "•IP'·~·-u• •i•• SHOULDER PKJft(>«.a.CAH .•.• u . .__ ______ ... _ ... _.lL __ _,n• •OAST ............ la.. --•RAK .. -.. u. n• SnAK ............. u. .............................. .............................. .............................. ~ • FAllC'Y • GOLO~ •RIPE 23c LB. CABBAGE FNIC:'I • SOLID• OllEEN HEADS CAKE MIX ·ROYAL HILLS BROS. 1 Y AMTIU • flEG. "'110. Gii GELATIN COFFEE f!lllll tvAllll'l'IH 3-l l • .oz. 1111\M CHOC" LIMON Ofl 129c $939 ..... tFAMILY :::, SCOTT ~. 77c - Y-MnY•M1mv1 \. . . . ...... ...... ~ Cook Up Irish Fare ' The recipes offered today are not just for St. Patrick's Day. they're great at any time of year. lrilh Soda Bread is easy to make and de- llcio}ll to eat at bnakfut. hmcb. dinner or for afternCMm tea or collee. Bollty Bread is not a bread at all In the striet 1e111e, but the hiab idea of wbat to 8el'ft u an aeeompuim• to rout • beef. It resembles Yorkshire Puddlaa la that it • ls baked in a skillet and aerwd wltb sravy. I~ Naturally, potatoes are a major 1qredienl. ~ The third recipe is Lamb Stew of which the ~.: Itlah know many variations. This one is a great stew that you might be invited to share when visiting in an Irish home. It's a good one to serve at your own house. too, as a company ent.ree or for a family dinner any day. IRISH SODA BllEAD 4 cups sifted flour 2 tablespoons sugar 3 teaspoons ba.Jdn& powder 1 teaspoon salt 1 teapoan baking soda Toss a Salad Onto Sandwich tt•s two great meals- s a lad and turkey sandwich lD one. Isn't it amazln1 what people can find to put between two pieces of fresh bread. But if you like salad and sandwiches. you•n love this com· bination. On one piece of bread -(prefer a bly r ye. pumpernickel°" french) slack thin s1i ces of turkey and Swiss cheese. Now in a bowl mix lettuc~. tomatoes, ecallion.s, green pepper, a dasb of salt and pepper. Pour our very own recipe of Italian Dressing over it. Put generous amounts of salad on the cheese and turkey and top your sandwich. You have the Turkey Salad·Sandwich, a full-course lunch in ()n~ mighty handful! SALAD ON A TURKEY SANDWICH -1 cup finely shredded lettuce . 2 tomatoes, finely c11ced 3 aeaWons, finely ebopped 1 gnm pepper, fine-b ehopped Dash of salt and pepper 1h cup Italian dress- ing 8 slices of bread (rye. pumpernickel. trench) Butter I slices cooked breast of turkey 4 slices Swis s cheeses Combine lettuce. tomatoes, scallions . green pepper, salt and pepper in a large ltowl. Pour OD Italian m.atng and tou wen. Prepare s aa4wicltea lty using slicee of your fawrite bread. Spred '"*-' on each aliee. Arraage turkey and 9wiSI eheese on half of the alices, and generously spoon on top a generous portion of the salad. Top with another s lice or buttered bread, a nd e njoy. Makes 4 sa ndwiches. ITALIAN DRESSING: 1/4 CGP. salad oil a,4 cup wine vinegar s.r.. tsp. salt 1,4 tsp. fefPfll" •Atsp.~ 1A tsp. sweet bl8il 1 tsp. supr Combtae and shake wen. New Alphabet Vegetable is a gNOt aoup for kids. They'll ~ love maki"'1 up words with the enrfched alphabet egg ftOOdles. An @.you'll love giving them the .~tender garden vegetables and hearty broth that are in /?3 Alphabet Vegetable. ~ 'Al cup corn oil 1 cup eeedlea raisins 1 tablespoon caraway aeed l cup buUermilk 1eu .eomoU Grease an 8 z lV.. Inch 11181' ~ or cookie Ue8t. Slft tocetber tn a larae Ooar, sugar, Nldlla powder. salt ad bUiDI IOda. Add eom oil and mix with fork or putrJ blender uatll flne crumbe form. Stir tn ra1alna and caraway seed. Mix buttermilk and e11 together. Gradually add to nour mixture. sUiT- inc until soft douab forms. Turn out onto Ooared board; knead 11,iit.ty about 10 times or until smooth. Shape into ball. Place in prepared pan. Flatten slightly and cut a cross on top of loaf. Brush with corn oil. Bake in 350 dep-ee oven about 50 minutes or until brown. Remove from pan and cool on wire raek. Makes 1 <nWncb) loaf. BOXT'l'D&AD 1¥.a eape sifted flour 4 teaspGAI bU:lq powder ~ teaspoon aalt 3 eggs. slllbtlY beaten lcupmilk 'h cup com oil · ~cup cooked, mashed potatoes (about 2 small potatoes> 'A cup drained, vated raw potato (about lmedium) ' · Sift n.ur. baldng powder and salt toeetber. Set aside. Mix heat.en eggs. milk and about~ cup corn oil togetHr. Heat a~ 1 tablespooo com oil In 9-blcll caBt trail skillet in 425 degree ovea. Meuwhlle, witll a spoon. blend mashed potatees Del grat.et potatoes tborouChb'. Mlx in sifted dPr bt«redielltl UJltil mixture forms One cram bs. Stir la llquld mixture to form a smooth batter. Pour late prellleated lkWlt and bake in 425 desne oven alMnrt 40 mlnutel.ar until well browned' on top and crisp aroand atdes, Cut in wedee• and serve hot with rib rout and cravy. Makes I to 8 servings. Note: If desired. bread may be baked in a round (9 ~ l ~-lncb) bakinl diab which has been preheated with 1 tablespocm earn oll in 400 degree oven for 3S mtnutea. IAMBS'l'BW 2 pounds bonelea lamb, cut In l ·tncb Cllbel Fleur ~ cup oara oil l quart dliella broth 2bay leaves 'Al teaspeon salt ~teas~ pepper 1 pound whole white onions (about 10) 2 cups cubed potato 1 cup sliced carrot 1" cup dry white wine 2 table11poons corn starch •/4 cup water 1 Coat lamb with flour. Heat com oil in large s kiJ1et or kettle over medium h1gb heat: add lani'lt .-eook until blv...cl. Mel oblcken ~. 1-y leans • ..it UMI pepper. ••=er..,.. ered aMut '5 mtnutee. Add ~er:•to and carrot:...._ .. ~ llour l_,.. meal and w1etai.t. are teader. AM ...... 9tlr eorn starela ud water wd:ll .. oeda; aM to lamt-mtsture. ~ te w.on. 8'lnbll ~ _. boll 1 mtnule. Malc• 6 to a servtnp. New Gl99le Noodle is another tpedal soup just for~ kids. It's lootled with lots of ~ e~egg noodl• in giggly ~Iii ~ hecms, stars and smtresl Now "\J your kids ex>n giggle their way to the bottom of a aJP of hearty~ chicken soup. '>::7 • Wedwd~. Mwch 15, 1171 Riee 1~ off on one or .. I . . •I. t , .. •• • u(l , )} r.1· )b{;> Hn>t 1:0~1 .,.) - . ' Q DAILY PILOT wlnesday, March 15, 1978 Teenage Boy Athletes' Diets Are Most N~tritions B~DOR0111Y WENCK [ ] as considering expand· thi~. The mailer of the you didn't order the with the Orange County okay for my IAlaballd to h:~h:'9i.::lty ing its definition lo in-unordered merchan• merchandise, don't want Office of Con.sumer Ar-use! Q i-A elude packagea de-dise is prohibited by it,won'tpayforit,and fairs, Sll N~>rth A.No,soysauceisa m,mber least likely to ._, livered to homes by FTC rules from sending that they can come and Sycamore Street. Santa hi&b salt seasoniog -1 need nutritional supple· private delivery firms. you a bill. get it. ~a. CA 9'Z101, telephone teaspoon soy aauce mlnta? If you receive merchan· Since the FTC rule The publisher pro-'71,/834-6100. equals ~th teaspoon salt be answer may sur-di hr gb US ·1 t _,~,. t 1 l Q M b .... d I d ~. .._ · P ise you: it, s the se t ou .. maa current y uud no app Y baby is trying to scarF • y u_.. 1 on a -a~· a p.vuuct 1U1VlDI te~age boy athlete who refused to ac~pt them. unordered merchandise which you did not order, to unordered merchan-you into paying for the low sodlam 'Ce& and ls 8 to l6% lees ealt would '· ls osUy likely to get all I &brew them away since and do I have &o pay for you can treat lt as a gift dise delivm'ed by a books' you didn't order not aupposed &o have still be unacceptably I did.D'& order them and these books? and ~o with lt as you private delivery firm, if and may not carry out any salt or salty season-high in sodium for a th nutrients he needs dida't want them. Now A. The law you 're pleas~. without any ob-you receive s u ch tbe threat of legal ac-lags sacb as IOY eauee. I person on a low sodiwn l' fr the food he eats. I've rttelved two bills thinking of applies only ligation to pay for it. AU merchandise in the tion. However, to ftpt\_ received a free sample diet. Aho, it's not de•r i n athlete has such a d .... _ h ch dis td be be ,.. ~· f b ·r h -n.a.. high need for calories an a letter .... .,atenlng to merchandise sent by sue mer an e must future, lt wou st tect your credit rating, o a soy 11aee t at Is i t e "8 to 18% uu.ayio;r" that he is likely to fulfill to take legal action If I U.S. mail, although the have attached to it a to keep it. Then if the it would be a gooct idea nld to be 8 to 11% actually means less ult. all his needs for protein, doa't pay. Isa'& It Federal Trade Com-clyr and conspicuous company sends you a to file a complaint 'milder than regular aoy or less of tbo f,ermentecl mbaerals, and vitamins ~a_1_a_lD_d~tbe~_1_a•~&o~se~n-d~m_i_s_si_o_n_<_FT~C_>_P_rese-~n_u_y~s-t~~~e_m __ en_t~t-el_l_in_g~y-o_u __ b_1_11 __ y_ou~c-a_n~te+1l~th_e_m~-a-g_a_in_s_t~th_e....,p_u_b_li_s_b_e_r ___ s_a_u_ce_.~w-o_q_J_d~&h_l_s __ be~n-a_v_o_r_. ______ ..._ __ __ simply by 'eating enoqgh food to provide these calories. Of course, this s up- poses that he eats a rea· sooable diet of meat and/or other protein foods (two servings); fruits and vegetables (four servings); milk, cheese, or ice cream .<four servings); breads, cereals, and pasta (four servings). Only in the unlikely event that the athlete's diet consisted mainly of the high calorie, low nutrient snack foods such as soft drinks, can- dy, ehips, cakes, and cookies, would he be in danger of not getting enough of the essential nutrients. Any mother who has to feed a teenage athlete knows only too well what a bottomless pit he can be and what a big dent his food makes in the family food budget. All the more reason th en, not to waste money on unneeded sup- plements. ' At a recent Orange County nutrition sym· posium, Dr. Nathan Smith, pediatrician and s pecialist in sports medicin e at the University or Washington School of Medicine, emphasized that a well balanced diet for athletes is the same diet that everyone else in the family needs - Just more of it. He suggested this Tu le . "First eat what you need, then eat what yo u want." The way the athlete gets the extra calories he n eeds is to eat a larger nu01ber or serv- ings from all the food groups. choose extra amounts of foods with high concentrations of calorics such as peanut butter and other nuts, cheese, ice cream, s ~akes or malteds, pizza. cheesebargers; and finally, ·for addi· tional energy, eat some of the "extra-foods" - the high calorie snacks . that have few other . nutrients. The idea that athletes need more protein, and need to eat extra-large servings of meat or take protein supplements, is inaccurate, according to Dr. Smith. Extra protein does not build muscles, exercise does this. And exercise requires energy supplied by calories in foods. Other notions, such as the idea that extra-large amounts of certain vitamins -E, C, D. or A -will improve athletic performance, a re not based on scien· ti fie fact either. Dr. Smith pointed out. Coaches who recom- mend large doses of these vitamins are doing a great disservice to athletes, Dr. Smith believes. He noted there have been cases ot vitamin A poisoning in football players who took megadoses of this vitamin. A good fluid intake is absolufely essential to the athlete, said Dr. Smith, and thirst can't be relied upon as a measure of fluid nee.cl. He recommended that on competition day. athletes drink at least 6 ounces of water every fO to 90 minutes.. Dr. Smith allo~· mended a1ainlt th uae of 1peclal ••sports drinks" contaln,lna mtneraJa mdl aa IOdtum and potultum (called electrolytel). Theae eteetrol1t.. •H not Dffd9d beoaUM WthW. 1•t plenty of them from food. be~ PJatn water or. fruit . Jal• Sa •t. .· -:-·.-.· .• .-_._ /_. =--:. ._:. Holly Far01s Chicken from Lucky. When It comes to quality and a lower overall price. it can't be beat! / Pardon our humility. We hate to brag, but we wanted you to know that once again our meat buyer has outdone himself. This time he's made an excellent buy on Holly Farms Chicken. So this week, not only will you find a huge selection of this tender, juicy chicken, but we'll be selling it at the lowest overall price in town. Chicken that r eally makes the grade. Holly Farms Chicken is chicken that's labeled USDA Grade A. But did you ever wonder how it got to be that way? Well, in order to be classified Grade A, Holly Farms has to meet some pretty strict standards set by the United States Department of Agriculture. To begin with, the chicken has to be whole, with no parts missing. And the skin must be completely intact with nary a wing clipped. It's got to be smooth too, with no obvious bumps or bruises. Only when it meets all those requirements will Holly rarms Chicken be considered Grade A. Anything less just doesn't make the grade ... or our meat case. And the winner is ... If there was a contest held to determine the prettiest and plumpest looking chickens in town. Holly Farms would always be among the winners. But 11 didn't get to be that way by accident. They don't resort to the use of hormones to fatten their chickens up. Holly Farms doesn't have to They don't believe in that. or in the use of preservatives either. Holly Farm~ uses nothing artificial to improve their appearance. They're grown plump and pretty and shipped fresh . Holly Farms Chicken .. a natural champion and a winner every time. Picky, picky, picky. When it comes down to selecting your favorite c hicken parts, you can afford to be picky. Holly Farms has everything fr9m both whole body and cut-up fryers to parts like breasts, thighs, wings, and drumsticks. Whatever you select, you can be sure you're getting the very best with Holly Farms, USDA Grade A Chicken. At Lucky, giving you the best quality at a low price is what discount is all about. Fresh Meats FRYING CHICKENS 45 Gil.ADE A. WHOLl GOO'f HOUYrAIWS. LG. e CUT·UP FRYING CHICKENS lG .58 C.AADE A HOUl'fAlw.!. FRYING CHICKEN WINGS WOUYJAAMSGllM)( A II .68 LOOK FOR THE MAGNAPAK TAG And save on odd1Uot10I nlckel o povtld on meet In che lo19ttt $Ile pocko;u. DI.ADE CUT CHUCK STEAK ll()l(l(CIOUf • • • • ............. 10 .88 QMAGffAPAAPIUct ....... LG .83 TOP P.OUNO STEAK 80N!UUIONOtOOCtr. ,... • \0 1.88 OMAGHOAK~IC(, •.••. 10.1 .&~ ~Dl!r~.~l.D s!.EAK t& 1.88 C)>MAGlfAPAICP"KE • 10,1.&~ OOMEUSSl.,STEAK IOICUllV llCl..o • • 10 1 , 98 0~PAK~IC( . 10 1.9\> T·DOHE STEAK tClllDal Klf IOIM • ti 2 , 03 0MAGHAPAKHJCC ...... LO t.98 Fresh Meats FRYING CHICKEN OREASTS w1111 run~. 9 8 HOlLYfA~.C.IV\0[ A . lG e CHICKEN THIGHS OP. DRUMSTICKS 11\YIN(, 89 HOU I' fAl\M\. C.fV.1)1 " • IG e Canned & Packag d Canned&Packaged !TOMATO SAUCE r 22 lADYICC 1 ~OZ CA,lf e Household & Pet b HI CLASS DOG FOOD i S • • • i !iC1l ("14 • t ~~DINNERS ~u DA:. 6. 96 Dairy & Frozen Liquor & Wine r GLUE NUN WINE b l~CllM.,..... ""~a 7 .99 OLD SMUGGLER SCOTCH 5 99 -v 60M()()o QI Dll • CANADIAN MIST WHISKY S 99 '"""'°"'~ 601AOO• • .. • i>VMAlll Qo<l.Y • 111()111"'''"1 QUO'\°'" Health & B.r~uty Aids r VICK·s MYQUIL b CaDMlDICll<t • • • •001.l'l 1.69 L ~~~~v~~~~~ .. ~°'·"' 1.19 ~r l' VICK'S DAY CAP.£ " c.alDM[OIC .. ( ....... 100Lll\. 1.89 J; ~~~~~.~~~l Ill. 1.69 . . Proauce J"'MDO SIZE · · ~.1~~'?.~~~£A .• 39 CHERRY TOMATOES 29 LIVENS ANY M(Al 11.t.~fl e ~~'~A~~ISP LG .• 1 0 DOSCPEAP.S Ol (t Vl(IO\I\ .. DOSTON FEP.H 6 !IOI \I .29 . , ... ~.86 ' I l. FOOD Special Diet• By June Roth Roughage ID the Diet Doctors say that we can do somethin;.about the frightening rise or incidents of cancer or the colon as a major cause or death in this country. It can be controlled through our diet. The recommendation is to change our son over-processed food to a selection or coarse bulky grains and vegetables. This will provide a large amount of roughage in the digestive tract to keep the bowel in active working order. The kind of foods to avoid are refined grains, such as farina cereals, and all forms of white flour pasta. Fried foods are also frowned upon, along with all other greasy foods. rich pastries, pies and cakes. Instead, doctors who recommend a high bulk diet want the patient to eat plenty of bran and whole wheat products, along with all vegetables of the cabbage family -including broccoli, Brussels sprouts, and cauliflower. All forms of ~aloes and sweet potatoes' are acceptable, except fried potatoes. Whole grain rice is preferable to white rice. White bread and highly refined cereals should be replaced with whole grain products. This is a diet that should include lots of fresh sa1ad greens and a variety of vegetables. Fruits should be eaten with skins when edible. A whole fresh apple would be preferred to pureed applesauce. Some people have too sensitive a digestive system to tolerate a high bulk diet and should have medical guidance before undertaking a change in regime. Others will benefit greatly by selecting foods with greater natural roughage, to aid in natural evacuation of the colon and prevention of disease. It is said that as little as 3 tablespoons of bran a day could improve the chance for longer life. Try these recipes for a change of taste in high residue foods. , . SAUERKRAUT SOUP 2 pounds fresh sauerkraut I t'an (29·ounce) tomatoes 3 onions. sliced 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 pound beef neck bones 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons brown sugar 1 :. cup white seedless raisins Combine sauerkraut and tomatoes in a large pot. Saute onions in butter in a large skillet until gold e n brown ; add to the sauerkraut. Add beef bones. salt. pepper. and brown sugar. Add raisins. Cover with water. Bring to a boil. then reduce heat, cover pot and simmer for 3 hours. Skim and stir occas.ionally. Makes 8 servings. • ~ BRUSSELS SPROUTS IN LEMON/PARSLEY SAUCE I package (IQ.ounce > frozen Brussels sprouts 1 cup water t:i teaspoon salt 1 ,, teaspoon sugar 1 e teaspoon pepper 1 tablespoon butter I teaspoon lemon JU1ce l teaspoon chopped parsle\ Cut spr°"'ts in half lengthwise and place in a saucepan with water, salt, sugar, and pepper. Cook 5 minutes, or until sprouts are tender but not mushy. Drain. Add butter, lemon juice, and parsley and toss lightly. Makes 4 servings. BRAN MUFF1NS 1 'h cups whole-bran cereal 1 cup milk 1 egg 'h cup shortening l 1h cups flour 1h cup sugar l tablespoon baking powder 1 teaspoon salt . Preheat oven lo 400 degrees. Stir together bran cereal and m1lk ; let stand about 2 minutes until most of the moisture is ab50rbed. Add egg and shortening and beat well. Sift together flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt; add to batter, stirring only until all ingredients are moistened. Fill greased muffin pan cups ~ full. Bake 25 minutes, or until muffins are lightly browned. Serve hot. Makes 1 dozen muffms. COP1"1fhl, mt. Jl#W Roll! Try Muffins For Hot· Tr~at :J'here's nothing better packed brown sugar than piping hot 1A cup chopped homemade bread. And. walnuts or other nuts that's especially true 1 egg, beaten when that treat from the 1 cup milk kitchen is a platter or v. cop vegetable oil Apple Granola Muffins. C om bin e App l e These muffins are de-Granola Cere~l. flour, signed to provide good baking powder. salt, nutrition and lo put back lemon peel, brown sugar some or the food fiber and nuts in medium that's too often missing mixing bowl. Add from the American diet. beaten egg, milk and oil, APPLE GBANOL.\ mixing just unW dry in- MUFnNS g r e d i e n t s a r e % c Up A p p J e moistened. Do not over· Granola Cereal beat. Spoon batter into 1~ cups silted all· 12 greased muffin cups. purpose flour Bake in preheated 400 t table.S*)n beklna de1ree F. oven 2S to 30 powder mlbutee or unW golden ~ teqpoon salt : btOwn. If desired. serve 1 teafPoOft •r•J•d warm with bu~r Hcl lemon peel h o n e y . M a k e s l a Mt cup ltrrpJy. Jl\ulflnl. ... • ..Wednesday. March 15 1978 DAILY PILOT C8 ) Casseroles Bake Up Quick, Hearty , These hear\y casseroles, can be as- sembled so q u1c~ly. even the cook will have time to relax. INDIVIDtJAL BARBECUE ~ CJ\S,SEROLES · h1 pound grqund beef 1 pa~kage (8-oz.) brown and serve sausage links, cut in lfl·inch slices 1h cup chopped green pepper l can <I·lb.) pork and beans 1 can <S.Oz.) tomato sauce '4 cup prepared yellow mustard 3 tablespo<>Jls brown s1,1gar 1 package c tO·oz ' refrigerator biscuits Cook beef, sa1.1s age. and pepper together in large skillet, stirring un- til beef browns. Stir m beans, tomato s auce. mus tard, and brown sugar; heat to simmer- ing. Spoon into 5 or 6 in- dividual casseroles <or one 2-quart casserole). Cut ea~b biscuit into quarters ; scatter over top of casseroles. Bake at 375 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes until biscuit topping is deep golden brown. 5 or 6 servings. SALAD DIPPERS 1 envelope Cl Y.i·-oz.) cheese sauee mix l cup dairy sour cream 1 teaspoon prepared yellow mustard Carrot sticks, caulifiower flowerets Apple or pear wedges, dipped in lemon JUI Ce Stir together contents of sauce mix envelope. sour cream , and mustard. Serve as dip with vegetables and fruit. Makes !1/,. cups dip. • Simple individual casseroles are put together so quickly that even the cook will have time to relax before dinner. HIGH PROTEIN PllClS lffECTIVE WED., MAI. 15 THlU TUU., MAI. 21, 1971. AU IUAJmn llGlf1'S llSllMD. MO SAU TO OUtm M fOl.IWU OI COMMllClll llSI. ;;( LOW CALORIE L1 :n .. 11n•~ '°"''•·"'(! ••~~ 1) ••q .. ntd 10 l!f •rlCll) aull1!>1~ ''" ~•· m t•Lh M11~e1 B~••I )l·~r t •Crot n ~II• nll1td m In» .111 II ,.. oo tun Out QI ill' iO•ril"\l'd otrm . .,, .,,11 olle• •'lol ,ryat \tl"1 ... OI I C .'1111 ti ltll_. tlf 'H wt t-n ltl 1.ib•f' ttt't<.'in& ltl't >a1ftt' ..,.,,,,~or a 1 .. nctwc1' •n1<b .,,11 r111.111' , "' 10 PUltn.11' the '°""'1r.eo .1 ... 111 '' "" .... .,,.,,t')llft ouc ... •1ln1n 30 cU-n T01Al SAtlSfAOIOll HA•A•lllD ........... , .. ...,,""' ......... ·--••t~ ......... ,..... ..... .,,. .... • .. Ufl'WI \lttlt.' ei •llil \¥f\ht•H • ( .... UUU ..... •I • .,..._U )69-.& OI ""'' ,_ • U fll(•ICll .. Otl &Mtltl\iM\ft0 &4 Al l•l "'(tli, ... 1(1 M l, .... ~..._ ..... ,, •t W••...,.U •u• •• '-"• ",.._." nl• .. nurw•• ••ti• 1u,111t u~t ,_.c.u._,.,." ""-"' , ... .,.. Ot •1111• , .... ,.., { I 0 I . : ., rr '•'<:: I t. I ()J 0 DAILY PILO t Wednesday, March 15. 1978 FOOD If Wine Is Not Your Cup of Tea, Try H20 • • • From the Slim Courmet's Fat Mailbag: Q. I never have wine In the house. When a recipe calls for It, what ls a good substitute? Louise M •• Laotana,Fla. A. If you don't care for the flavor of wine, the simplest substitute is an equivalent amount of water so the proportion of liquid is equal. lf you do, add to the water a few drops of brandy flavoring or a couple of tablespoons of grape juice. If a recipe calls for a lot, and wine ls the predominant flavor, then there is no sub- stitute. If you are op- posed to alcohol con- ~um ption.' J you needn't avoid cooktllg with wine, because the alcohol (and 1ts calories) boils off. Q. Please advise where the clear plastic fruit-shaped ripening bowl can be purchased. ll was mentioned in your column on girt ideas. Mrs. 1''eUcia R., Belleville, DJ • . A. U not available in St. Louis area depart- ment stores, you can or- d e r one from the growers' organization: send $10 to California Fruit Exchange, P .O. Box 15498. Sacramento, Calif. 95813 (for s uper- size, send $15.98). Q. Cao you tell me the name of BOme dJet meat books? How to cook meat for one Is the hardest part. Jlelen B., · Newton, N.J. A. The exact book you 're looking for haso 't been written yet, but here arc some sources or inspiration: ''Diet for One. Dinner for All." bv RNyl l\I Martin <S7.9S, Gol den Press>. "You Can Reduce ... by the National Li vcstock and Atcat Board (30 cents, M eat Board . 36 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago. Ill. 60611). Not diet, but interesting recipes you can ad.a.Pl are in "Cook· ing for One is Fun." by H e nry Lewis Creel ($8.95, Quadrangle • N.Y. Times Book Co.). Q. Wiii a a low metabollam keep tbe weight on? wm taking birth control pills keep you from losing weight no matter how much you diet and exercise? Agatha Y., Santa Ana, Calir. A. Yes and no. A ''Slow metabolism" can be detected and correct· ed by your doctor. He or she can also determine 1f "the pill" is contribut· inl'( to water retention or weight Rain, and change th e prescription if necessary. But nothing can really keep you from losing weight if you diet and exercise to the point where your body is using up more calorics than you take in. Q. Please settle a queaUoo -in writing. My married son leaves vegetables in tbe can arter tt is opened, uses batr, puts ltatf ln the refrigerator. I aay pat them In a glass jar, that It's bad lo fene &hem In tbe un. What do you say? Mrs. C.O. Sr., PhUadelphla, Pa. /'t. I say that you should put the vegetables in a glass jar and your married son shoul d leave them in the can. or wherever else he wants! Food ref'rlgerat- ed in opened cans won't harm you, but can take on a tinny taste once ex- posed to air. I put mine in a jar. Q . I would Jt•e te knew ltow....., ealeries In a bepl. WQ don't a~e1 pat It on the package? Dad.a w., St. Ana, Mo. · A . Some do. My . package aaya ta eaeb. That's why I bou&ht It. instead of the btand that wouldn't say. Q. Could 7• pleaM tell me what ll.8G bf I don't IW U IA my boolE •_,....Mrs. Marte •·· ~""' 8pra.1neld, ..... A. MSG (llllClnoeodlum flutamat•~ Ja iiot • spice. ft'& a Dat.rafl1• OCCUITint ntlltaaet U• traded from sea~ widely used In Ori cuisine and as a flavor enhancer in many packaged and prepared foods. Glutamate bas the unique power to in· tensity the flavor of meat, poultry, flsh and other protein foods . . . so that less seems like more. Therein lies its s pecial appeal for dieters. A pinch of MSC can boost the fl avor or lean meat and fat- SH• Gou.-..et By Barbara Gibbons skimmed meal sauces, ·soups or gravies. Farmer John or Dold Shank Portion-Fully Coolttd Smoked Ham per II lb. But MSG contains sodJum, which should be a voided on salt-free diets,. aod cause• al· lergic reactiooa in some people: headaches or a temporary tightening of the neck muscles. MSG became controversial some years ago when medJcal researcher Dr. John Olney fed massive doses to baby mice. causing nerve damage. The debate over its safe- ty continues. Orientals have been using it for centuries, and as an ex· tract for several dec- ades. Glutamate also occurs naturally in many foods, includlng onions, tomatoes and mushrooms. (Perhaps that's why those ingre- dients are so often added to meat . . . as a natural Oavor enhancer. Onions, tomatoes and mu·shrooms make a iiiiiiiiiC'D . PN!Muty C-*J llyte or C ........ c..-1 ••n ButlBI Hdllc Biscuits ,., OL '"'• ..... , ___ _ ... ... , .............. Umil °"' ..... 8lld °"' ~ ... c.-.-. C°'4*I Oldhe Miid\ 1e iw MMll za. ma SUPER COUPOI Anr Size P1c:bg1 Ground Beef ':II AllV...,.. Wesson 011 good "MSG aub6titute" if you'd rather not use It. Sauce pan'? Steamer? Wok'P Pressure cooker? What's the best titenail for cooking frozen vegetables? If you have to avoid f'at and calories (and who doesn't!) our vote goes to the frying p8J1. Frying pan? Not a big blade fry pan full of grease! The fry pan we have in mind Gub IMf Rib-l1rg1 IEnd 49 Ratp,.·D•llcloua R ..... orMlllt Rib Roast Introduces Cream Cheese --:-r; [. s~1-,;m~-<m " · -, .. J~~:£R'\ 1 ·r1ss .. ~ ~., · •• I I I '\ H f{fj( ;. t I -J J \I . !~. I . I ·~ DL!t'(f.'IY'c::c:-;:;:av .-1n:.~-­ Crest Toothpasll '"Y' ~i_ S"'fl.: t. ] I ~ ·.~i:,j .. ·.. ·o · ' ' r I .'\.I ( ,. 'I "' • TM • I I J ::L. ::J· '1 f)~ l' J ttr\... . . 11 ll ~l , • . I. ,/I ··'· .ll •• "41 . · I • ' a.a.-.. A \ ,,,,... ' • I • I ' ' ' ---· . L. • ...! '-.--"'---... --....... __ -.' Ralphs neyt line of food & houlehold products priced 28% lower than national brnil, 14°/o lower than private label bnntl, nl priced lower 18' ,..,, other merchandile surveyed• Ralphs introduces anoth« first to Southern Caltfomia shOppers. •Plain Wrap" IS a new no frills way to help you make ends meet -no fancy packaging -no costly extras -no costly promotions ·no fancy colors or designs GUARANTEED FOR YOUR SATISFACTION "Plain wrap" products are not a repla~ment for national or private label brands. "Plain Wrap" otters you a third allernahve and is an important new add1t10n to Ralphs super selection. Ralphs guarantees your satisfactfen on everything It sells. Try "Plain Wrap" products .. your complete satisfaction is guaranteed. or your money back. is a NONSTICK skillet with little or no fat added. In a flat utensil like a s killet, the vegetables can be spread in a shallow layer and cooked guick· Jy in a small amOllnt of broth or liquid . . . un- covered. The liquid will quickly evaporate into a flavorful glaie that's served with the vegetables ... no vitamin-packed water to drain and discard. But more important, the flavor, texture and color Q. I bave a retlpe wbicb calls for mJ.ao. Wlla& la ml.lo u4 wfaere cu I ba1 ltT A. Miso is a rermented blend of rice, s<>ybeans, and salt. You probably can buy miso in stores • which specialite in Japanese or Oriental foods. O'""' Gi.irt-Whofe Kernel Niblets Com 12oz.11 can VIM·Rfpened Salad Tomaloes per II lb. Western Iceberg lelU:e Are you a menlber of Ralphs Nwnber One Club? lfs.sy to join...jult aik us how. 5WitCh IO Number On8* •• ~ 5witch to • l. OMICS I CROSSWORD ·MARMADUKE by Bract Anderson BOOMER .. Dig It manl He doesn't chase anything under 1 o mph!" X'V& OICIO&O THAT 10C'AY NOE!IOC'Y &N'te~ THlf ~HOOL. WITMOtA,. MY WQTeM PE!~Ml~~ON! FUNKYWINKERBEAN . by Tom Batiuk DOOLEY'S WORLD liHEILOCKHOl.MES, a •••ream ~ MOON MUl.LI NS ...... ,,---:-:-~®il LEND WE1EN DoU.,ARS, I.ORD P. •• IT'LL rl~l.P ME Gt:T TO WORK ! DR. SMOCK MOTLEY'S CREW ~1M'IWl0.(Mq/IS 'tClJ t<NOW, WAS AfANE:C' •'f NI 1M'T11 ~N.~.VHA\11,,tt .. , • .,....,..,~)HAS ~N USI~ rf 10 PAIN'T1li1NeS JJl..AO<. ro ~T6 TO GE> 6uT JN ,....,. ·AWF'"Ut. BLtZZAAP • • by Harold Le Doux mL T>IE roua A60UT rr ! ntEYtL 6E .. ERE SMORTI.Y ! _,,,.,.~_..,..... Wecfnel&y. March 15, 1978 DAIL y Pit.OT Cl I PEANUTS .I f by Roger Bradf.eld • I ; by George Lemont f Ce!~IN&-Y' HOPE! so, 0~1e by Templeton and Forman . TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE } ' ACROSS 45 Having UNITED Feature Syndicate ·~ 1 AnofY one oreat con-T·-""-' Puale ...... .._... J e 0oc11e tro1 ,,_,' .........: ·' 10 NulMflcal 4& C1uH1 to fl flClll 14 WPf!_.. X ......... 49 Menu ffem ""Wm""'4 &O Ma. Faye fanfare 61 Prttalng 15·--need Strmn11cy 62Tht tone G 18 Novelllt-65 Sweetener. ~~&.1111~-Molli Huntlf' 2 words 17 At>Oomlnlt Ge Get peln --t.._· 1as-111no ;;,;- 20 Strew for 80 Bfold conar W:£WCUL:ll~-.:l~~~ drying es Ex1mlned 21 Type~ by touching '*'"'· 92 ~ttont ~.:&.::I i..ia.:.<~ ~1!1.!.IL.::2 Prefix 83 Dry up· Ver , 23 Nervwee~ 64 ExoecJt thet• fro. '!f9 40 Neuter ~ Ing 86AttMt .. '' ~ 41 Old Roman • 24 Fr. atudtnta• 12 Nova Scotia date r milieu c.pe 42 Omen 29 Museum DOWN 13 8ury 4'3 O.trayed ~ maneget 19 Play 1 blnjo 45 Form of wit 281nautflclenef 1 Str11Qht 221M9ol -: 46Mown 30 Something Prefix En;.oounty ~ txlr1 2 Afr. plant 25 Bllllerd rod 4 7 Uplift 31 Roman 3No.Amer. 28Trlte 48Leuertn dtltlt1 plant 27 Miiitary quantity 32 Boundary of 4 Around: group 49 Polltlcll an area Comb. for1ft 28 -foura group 38 Servlceoro, 5 Men of the 29 Repoae 51 Great-or 37 tncnne Obi'-cloth 30 Half orowttt China quely 8 C.ptloft 32 ~Md 53 Frtnkfurra 38 Ho4y Rom. 7 M1lcr1al prajtcta .W Emp. 8 ~........ a3 Occ.aloMI M -"'*'1r. f 39 Requiting ......._. ... aolf;roup y,_,. much attttno tonnaJ 34 Verdant ltle 6e Crett from 42 EllfOSJUn 9 Oocluliey'e 36 C.•tloft Mara(?) ll ~ •preeenr ffolll "°"' Sf Ml. llllt 4420•Nllftlll to~ S78'al11on 590.. ,,... l. -1 t I ... . :::: ' CJ2 DAILY PILOT Wec:tnffday, March 15. 1978 Club Calendar Pot of Gold Mrs . Harry Healey, Jackie Lundhigh and Mrs. Howard Kcigh plan the Pot of Gold Ball s ponsored by the Newport Beach Chapter of 1.0.I. The ball will be held • AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF RETIRED PERSONS: Newport Chapter #121 will meet at 1 p.m . Thursday, March 16. A brown bag lunch will be held al noon. Beginning this month, re- gular meetings w11J he held on the third Thur~ day of each month al the OASIS Senior Citizen Center, Corona del Mar. LA LECHE LEAGUE: The Jrvine group will meet at 8 p.m . Thursday, March 16, at the home of Bonnie Pratt. Irvine. For information. call Sue Carlson, 552-0760. MARIPOSA WOMEN 'S CENTER: Alcoholism and Senior Citizens will be the topic at 2 p.m. Thursday, March 16, at the center, 777 South Main St .• Orange. KAPPA ALPHA THETA ALUMNAE CLUB: A luncheon and fashion show will be held at the Crown House at 11:30 a.m. Thurs- day, March 16. The El Camino club is open to alumnae in south coast area. For information, call Mrs. Haskell. 831-0658. WOMAN 'S CLU B OF SAN J UAN CAPISTRANO: The group will meet al 12.30 p.m . Tuesday, March 21. at the club house. AAUW: The Newport Beach-Costa Mesa Branch will have Bill Quarles as speaker at its meeting at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday March 21. at St. Mark Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. For information, call Roberta Oegern, 838-2911, or Judy Gielow, 645-2665. LAGUNA BEACH MUSEUM OF ART: The Affiliates will meet al l p .m . Tuesday, March 21. at the Museum. ZETA TAU ALPHA: The Orange County Alumnae will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. March 22, in the home of Mrs. William Woods. 1400 Dana Place, Fullerton. COSTA MESA WOMEN'S CLUB: The Junior Club will be honored guests at a luncheon meeting at noon, Friday, March 17, at the clubhouse. COMMUNITY FORUMS HOW TELEVISION INFLUENCES POPULAR CULTURE Wednesday March 29 7:30-9:30 pm Jess Marlow, KNBC Newsman Fountain Valley Community Center 10200,Slater Avenue, ~ountain Valley HEROES AND POWER IN AMERICAN CULTURE Wednesday April 26 7:30-9:30 pm Max Lerner, Syndicated Columnist: "New York Post" Fountain Valley Recreation and Cultural Center 16400 Brookhurst Street, Four\tain Valley ARCHITECTURE: THE ONLY ART WE HAYI! TO LIVI! WITH I Friday Mav 12 7:30-9:30 s:>m ~r:t Seldenbaum, CohJmnlst Huntlngton~ach Ubrar;y 7111 Talbert Avenue, Huntlng\on Beach POCUS ON WOMEN: a.EATIYllY ~ND CAREERS Saturday, March 18, at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel. Proceeds will go to 1.0.l. project Children's Village USA. OASIS SENIOR CENTER: The center will hold an Irish Shindig at 7:30 p.m. Friday. March 17. Price of the party is 17 cents. For in· form a lion, call 759-9471. MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION-,~ An educational workshop will be held from 1 :30 to 3:30 p.m . Friday, March 17, at Garden Grove Community Center. SADDLEBACK CONCERT CHORALE: A wine tasting party and art auction will be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday, March 17, at the Montanoso Recreation Center, Mission Viejo. Proceeds will go to the chorale PROVIDENCE SPEECH AND REARING CENTER: The Mission Auxiliary will bold a monthly luncheon and and card party from noon to 4 p.m . Friday, March 17, in Hammond Hall. St. George's Episcopal Church, Laguna Hills. WOMAN 'S C L UB OF SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO: The group will hold its annual Fiesta breakfast from 7 to 11 a .m . Saturday. March 18, at the club house. Call 768-1294 for tickets. LITTLE MERMAID GUILD: The Hunt· ington Beach group will hold a rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, March 18, at the American Legion Hall, Westminster. BAIDA CORINTHIAN YACHT CLUB: The group will bold a St. Patrick's Day Dinner Dance on Friday, March 17. The pub will open at 6 :30 p.m. with dinner at 7:30 p .m. RANCHO VIEJO WOMAN'S CLUB: The group will meet at 10 a .m. Tuesday, March 21. at the Community Room, Peoples' Federal Bank. Saddleback Valley Plaza, El Toro. KAPPA DELTA: The Newport Harbor Alumnae Association will meet Monday. March 20, for a pot-luck dinner at the Huntington Harbour home of Mrs. Arthur de Heras. For information, call Mrs. Kruse at 644-1409. COURSES Bv NEWSPAPER which to discuss Popular Culture topics and issues. POPULAR CULTURE AS THE MIRROR OF CHANGING Af'1ERICAN VALUES March 21 -"You Picked a Fine Time to Leave Me, Lucille": The Changing Self Understanding of Women in America March 23 -A Close Encounter with Star Wars1 at the OK Corral! Good Versus Evil.in the American Mythos POPU\.AR CULTURE AND THE MUSE Temple Bat Yahm, Newp0rt Beach - through Juhe Sexual Attitudes Through American Literature -lecturer to be announced Popular Fiction : Real and Unreal Images -Robert Ward Guthrie Popular Culture as Reflec:ted In Con- ~el'nporary Art-Maxine Rubenstein 5eelno American Life Through Rock 'n' Roll Music -Larry Rosen LECTURE SERIES AND WORKSHOPS May 3, 10, 17, 24, 31 & June 7 ROdl arid ROU "1u•lc: Mtrroi of ~rtoen Culture Monte Carlo Night Dus t y Wings membe rs Ann Callahan , Cathy Ryan and Tish Orrick prepare for the ~roup's annual Monte Carlo night at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 18, at the Montanoso Recreation Center, Mission Viejo. Proceeds go lo Salvation Army Summer Camp. Mardi Gras Carole Williams. llclen Meidinger. and Genevieve Entringer prepare decorations for the Mystick Krewe of Komus Mardi Gras Ball to be held on Saturdav. March 18 . in tht' Grand Ballroom of· the Dis- neyland llolel m Anaheim. Hors d'oeuvre::. hour 1s fi :30 p.m . followed by dinner. MONDAY MORNING CLUB: The Hunt- mgton Beach group will meet Monday. March 20. al the Huntington Inn. Social hour is at 10:30 . a.m. with luncheon at 11:30 a .m. Make reserva· tions by Thursday noon with Mrs. Ross, 963-8852, or Mrs. Sapp, 960·2122. An Easter Parade of shoes by 8trideRite. White, Red, Black Patent Widths B to EE Little girls will love ge111ng dressed up tor Easter in Stri de Rite shoes. They look so pretty and feel so comlortable. And so many styles to choose fromt In more sizes and widths than any other children's shoes. And remember, mothers. our professionally trained fitters will flt these shoes to your children's feet with custo~ike precision. Kids love the way they look ... Mothers love the way they're made by otrideRite· f/"1tJ;i£tJ 54 '-MOii bltMd • M.wport f-«11 • 644-4Z2l 27 lint MtiM St~ AA_.,. U I Ji 212·3'71 Bank Americard • Master Charge Hemphill Charge COASTLINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE FORUMS ON POPULAR CULTURE ft>RUMS ON POPULAR CULTURE May 9, 16, 23 & 30 Emerging Socio-Sexual Patterns: The Viable Alternatives Apr. 4, 11 , 18, 25, May 2 & 9 Women in American Film: Image and Reality Apr. 6, 13, 20 & 27 You've Come A Long Way, Baby! The Woman'• Movement Apr. 8 Kida, Career•, Chaos: A Survival Kit for the Working Mother OTHER ACTIVITIES, EVENTS RESOURCES The Dally Pilot presents the fift~en­ week Course by Newspaper series, Popular Culture: Mirror of American Life, each Saturday through May 20. A course on Popular Culture: Mirror of American Life is otfered for credit at Coastline Community C.Ollege. Instruc- tor for the course Is Ted Barnes. A popular Culture Fiim SerJes, "Hollywood, The Dream Factory," will be presented at the Huntington Beach Library. Workshops, panel discussionf> and pre-sent•tlont by theatre professionals from across the country will focus on Amerlc•'s Emerging Mirror -The N•• '.ThHtre. This community event Is sc~tor MOnday, May 15, 9 a.m .-5 pzm .• In~~ Beach. FOR MORE INFORMATION: Please Contact: Or. STELLE FEUE RS, Project Director Community CbN Forums Coastline Community College 10231 Slater Avenue Fountain Valley, California 92708 Telephone: 71~/963-0811, extension 256 Call for Times, Dates, Places or Other Program Information The Newport Beach Arts Festival, cos- ponsored by Coastline Community Col lege, will take place May 13-19 at the City of Newport Beach sites and May 20-21 at the Fashion Island Shopping Center. Three additional credit courses on Popular Culture themes and topics - Moral Choices in Contemporary Socie. ty; Best Sellers -Fiction; Future Shock -also wi 11 be offered at Coastline. COMMUNITY COLLEGE COURSES bV NEWSPAPER FORUMS Is a proJect of the AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF COMMUNITY AND JUNIOR COLLEGES and is supported by a grant from the NA TrONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES CO-SPONSORS Huntington Beach Library Information •nd Cultur•I Resource• Center KOCE -TV, Channel 50 KOCM -A•dfo ' Fountain V•Hey Chamber of Qomrnerce Newport Beech Am Commlsak>n Huntington Beach Art• Alllance F•ahlon Island Shopping Center Women If\ Management Newport 8each Library Bark•dttle Foundation Emeritus All•nce Temple Bat Yahm -Ne~port Beach "lJlflQll•JI ,. I t I ••• First Place, Woman In Space. Heady Affair It was a beady af- fair -the recent Bal Masque La Femme sponsored by Damas de Caridad for the benefit of St. Jude Hospital in Fullerton. Nearly 800 attended the ball at the Dis- neyland H ote l , Anaheim. Orange Coast area winner was Ron Francesco ni and Loren Henderson of Flowers By The Sea m La~un a Beach. Their entry, Ziegfeld Showgirl, won fifth place Third place, Leading Lady. Fourth clace, Geisha Girl. Wilbur's Friend Causing Problem DEAR ANN LANDERS: My .m ar- riage is falling apart. It's not another woman. It's another man. I'm .sure these two don't bave anything going ex- cept a close-· friendship, but whatever it is, it's too close for me. Aaa Landers Wilbur works the 2 more to IL A therapist p.m. to JO p.m. shift. can tell you if the sltua- Four nights out of six he tion ls salvageable. I bring"s Orville home can't. It wouJd mean pro- with him. We have only fessional help for you. one bedroom. The living both. I urge you to go at room couch is lumpy so once and talk openly and Orville sleeps on the at length about this freak floor. 1sttuatlon. ·Wi lbur hand s me DEAR ANN : May a Orville's laundry and school bus driver say a says, "Throw it in with word through your col· mine." It's not any ex-umn to the parents of tra work so I've been do· the kids w e drive? ing it. (My sister says Thankyou: I'm crazy.) Then there's Dear Parents: If I the cooking -and the d i d n ' t 1 o v e k i d s I grocery bill. It's out of wouldn't have taken this sight. Besides our din-job, but a little help ner at 10:30 p.m., I have from you would mean a to fix the guy a lunch lot. jus{ like Wilbur's. Even First : I don't mind luncheon meat costs like c l e a n in g up after crazy these tlays. children when they get This routine has been sick and throw up. They going on for a year. can 't help lt. But I Before Orville came into shouldn't have to pick the picture, Wilbur had wads of gum off the another friend. It seems floor and scrape suckers like he always has to from between the seats. have someone else The apple cores, orange around. Is be afraid of peels, grapes and pieces me or what? I need your of cake are other items I advice immediately -can do without. MARRIAGE ON THE Please be paUeot with ROCKS m e l f J a m t a t e . Sometimes the roads DEAR ROCKS: I'm are bad or the traffic is tJPIDI u fast u I can, heavy, or it could be al&boap I doa't know mechanical trouble. wb)' 1• .feel tills l1 aa I have no right to emer1111e1 U It'• been touch your kids if they 10111i oe for a year. mi1behave -and they Otivloaaly a tblrd . know it. So please in· part1'1pneetaeepro&eetl atruct them to b e WUbar from havln1 to ac-courteous and obedient. eepl tM retp1lbWde1 U a cblld throws lhin8s. el a laaabaad. Yoa live aets lo a fiallt on the bus Jllevel')'bWe&ocoon,bwrt· and distracts me, lt 1-. aue t.Mre'a a lot Cduld cause an accident. I would never forgive mysetr if something hap- pened and my kids were hurt ~ even though it wasn't my fault. So please have a little talk with your bus passenger tonight at supper, folks, a nd make my life easier. Thanks a lot. -YOUR CHILD'S BUS DRIVER DEAR DRIVER: I'm aare every school bus driver ln tbe world ap· preclates your message. I thank you In &heir bebaU. CONFIDENTIAL to Nuts to You : Please take your business elsewhere. I haven 't time for any more of y our 25-page letters filled with profanity and obaceoJUes. It sounds to me like the operation was a success but the patient died. Club talendar nma eoch W ednuda11 in the Doily . Pilot and containl notices of womn'• and aervice club mect&IQ• and ftltftU for the follotDit&g toe•k - Thundcqt through WedMI· day. ~ no(iu1 to Club Cale,mr, DaUy J>Uol, P.O. Boz l5a?, Costa Meta, CA 92BM. & fttt to tnclw your nam• and phone number. N~• mt.llt be in our bands two weelca fn advance. To reqaut1t o pfchtte, write or call t1w FHturet Deporlmnt, do...UJ. ptc. turu an Umited to /tmd~ ra'6en opm to the public. ( __ t'_._o_r_o_s_c_o_p_e_....,l THURSDAY,MAROIJ6 By SYDNEY OllARR ARJF.s (March 21-April 19): Good results. indicated from reports, messages, calls, letters. Be active, visit, express yourself. Get rid of burden and any guilt feelings. You can get bet· ter display for your product. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Stress creativi· ty, independence. Money situation is very • favorable. New enterprise proves profitable. Know It and d~e to pioneer. GEMINI <'May 21-June 20): Lunar cycle ii hlgh -stud~ Taurus message. Highlight in· itlative, confidence, creativity, independence. Intuition is on target. Activities expand. You gain broader view as personal horizons open wide. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Diversify, dis· play versatility, deal with Gemini, Sagittarius persons. What you seek is near, but behind the scenes. One confined to home or hospital could provide some surprising answers. LEO (JuJy 23-Aug. 22): Escape valve is available; you are not trapped in any situation or relationship. If you stay, you do so because that is your desire, consciously or otherwise. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Go beyond sur- f ace indications. Deceptive element is present. Challenge exists -meet it by pushing aside groundless fears, doubts. Message will be clarified. Make room for yourself at top. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Use diplomacy to get your way. You receive call or messa1e which provides valid reason for optimism. Ac- cent on travel, publication, vindication of views. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Mystery, gl amour, intrigue capture your personal spotlight. Pisces, Virgo individuals are in- volved. You gain insights, but fint must over· come moods, doubts, rears. SAGJTJ'ARIVS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Bring priorities into focus. Gain access to legal rec· ords. Capricorn, Cancer and Gemini figure promineoUy. Circumstances dictate acUons. CAPlllCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Low key approach now brinp desired results. One who depends upon you turns the tables and does sometblng very Dice for you. AQVAIUU8 (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): ldeu click, puzzle plecea fall into place. Lunar-Jupiter COO· junction coincides now with creativity, chlldren, love, special or inten:slfied relaUonablp. PUCE. (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Follow throuah on ldeu, hunches -have faltb ln your lqtulUve intellect. You can 1et a,curate ap. praJsale and build on IOlld base. If lllarelt H la yon blrtUa1 you are sensitive, introlpecUve and you po1aesa lnte1rl· ty. Thia can be a procluctlve, maDeJ year - September should be your moat alpiflcant month. Vir10t Pll<!ea pereona play Important roles ln )'our lite. \ Wecm.oay, March 15, 1978 DAILY PU.OT CJ3 Second place winner, I Am Woman. USee me for car, home, life, bea1th and busioea insurance~ ,, .. , .. , .. "'"" ... ,....,.., ...... Gli·O\ .................... . MEW a.ASSIS POIMIM& SLENDH SPOON USTAUIAMT 7132 Edinger H~T'OMllACH c:.--... - 8'4-2022 fRANCI~-ORR fine stationery corona del mar MESA UPHOLSTERY ~.,Ji New Shipment ~STOCK FABRICS 50 0/_0* OFF ON AU /C STOCK FABRICS REG. 120 to 135 YD. NOW 1/2 PRICE SALE 20 0/_ * OFF ON· ALL SPECIAL /0 ORDIR FABRICS WHllTIUAd CUSTOM REUPHOLSTERY•CUSTOM DRAPERIES CUSTOM-MADE FURNITU~E Fr-Estimates 642 •9555 Reupholstering At Prices You Can Afford or Visit Our Large Showroom & Factory at: 1645 Superior, Costa Mesa -...,. . .... \ ,, . t . t I . 4 \ I : I . I I I I Light Gl>W>k. For $alaa''ot. Sandwich. . .. BEL·AIR FROZEN CUT GORN Gv;,~:.~8J~~~4 ,, And Sweet. ~ 16-Gz. ~ ~ ... HEINZ KETCHUP • I .. . . . . MAYONNAISE • Nu.Made 9·90 ........ ___ 1-i> °'.:' ...... To~1;:;;~~~39~ ~Battle Mrs. Wright's or Sourdough. FRESH · ASPARAGUS ' Tender, Firm Tips! •MAJORIE JOllSON •RODNEY 8UERINGER TlloUlilld Qllka Inglewood •100 WI"'*' •1 ,000 Wln*tr •MICHAEL CORNWALL • 8HODSIEH SAPlll Yucca Valley •100.w...., •JOHN DOlllNSIU llllto· •z,O(IP. Wlllnlr •IA Ylf IEINIKE .......... ., . ..,. • GUstAlllU•MAN DC I' ~-i> Tomatoes Gardenside ~a-az. ~nc Y-t!t Saluto Pizza M 1• Can ~T -,. Deep Dish Pllg. ~' !~>Rli;e Mixes Mk\ute 7-oz. 3nie 'l'-! Denn·1son Chm eon Came 15-oz. Afte Pkg. .,~ -r With Beans C• -..,~ . ' 1-i·Clblg Peaches ~g~~e 3 't.:" '1 !~·LUC11neYogurt =.7gc ICE CREAM SANDWICHES 5s~~~ $149 ~Pllg. of 12 Efi~ . BABY DIAPERS '".~ · Trul~Flne s3ee . . . "'¢>"~Daytime ~!:.-I PllCll of &O •. H' _ASPIRIN TABLETS ~'!Jr'~:= al 2 s1 .... ~ ·~ 200 For Bottle. Shop Buys! 'Prices Effective In Licensed Saleweys I l • AMC~ATKAVODKA r.. • oist1118d Grain $ 39 9 °.j: 80..Prdof • . T-l:> 750-mL • _,, ~:-~~F~~o~ ...... ;~iso..1111. s3tt 7 Crown %-<? • 49 Seagram's ...................... 7SCMnL 5: 1r1sh Whls1re7 %-7 •~• Tullamore Dew, 8 Proof ..... 750~1. v- Scotch Z-7 ,3,, Winner's Cup, 80 Proof ...... 750-1111. Don't Forget The1e For Eaater! EAStER GRASS f~,eef~~~-~--"'"$211 ~io?~ BEEF Lamb ChoDS $189 ASSURtS YOU Shoulder, Blade.¢ut ~ .•. •· JENDERNESS s11cec1 Bacon . $12a and FLAVOR! ;;;.;,~;9.9c E::J ::.~~~Ii:: Beef or Meat ••••• 1-11. Pllg. IS ... USDA CHOICE . t t , '• ( THE GREATEST ECONOMY PICKUP IDEA YET! SEE AND DRIVE ONE TODAY! MEW '7 . FIESTAS . LJ1."~ _ EVERY FlESTA ~~AMDPIMTO 'Z ._ -?.:~ 'M STOCK NEW'78 PINTOS DISCOUNTS OM FABUtOUS FAIRMOMTS HEW 1978 FAIRMONT FUTURA ZDOOR 4 spd. stk .• front disc brakes. body side moldings. radio. dlx. wire whl. cvrs.. all vinyl bucket seats. tint glass, 878x14 w/w tires. accent paint strps .. and more Savings. Service. Satisfadlm. from U4'tf Piclalps. to ,._.. ay Fours, to Hecn• Daty Cato. RICJS -See Us Before Y Oii luy! '73DODfH 1100 SUVBVAM V-8. automat10 transmfa.ion. power steering, AM/FM stereo with 8 frack. custom carpeting ants paneling, custom paint. mag wheels with wide tires. llc. JJ54336P Stk. I 1570AT. • s3799 '7SFOID GUM T0tttM0 l DL V•8, automatic tranamlaelon. power steerlng, power brakes. rectory air cof1dltloofno. vinyl roof covec. radio. heater. lie. 1550Mlt Stk. tP3281. ANY NEW 1978 CUSTOM VAN CONVERSION IN STOCK NOW PRICE-SLASHED TO COURIER HO CARS HB.D IACKl CHOOSE AMY FIEST A. PINTO, OR STANDARD COURIER PICKUP IN OUR llG STOCkS~1PAY US JUST FIVE PERCENI' ova FACTORY IMVOICE- AMD DRIVE HOME 5 % OVER FACTORY INVOICE All factory 1nvo1ces Include preparation. freight. al1d factpry hold backs. , . IN OUR 'BIG STOCK A IARGAIH! HEW 1971 Fl 50 133 CUSTOM STYLESIDE $5276 Plus LEASE I DIRECTe OUR BIG VOLUME LEASE DEftARTMENT OR:aS COMPlllllVE IATIS OH ALL MODEL CAlS AHD TIUCIS DAILY RENTALS Tax and . L1cpnse Chrome front bumper. full foam se.t. folding seat back. dome tamp, headliner. gauges-ammeter & oll preas.,., exhaust ,ayatem-reduced aound, tranamlulon crulse-cHnatlc. steering.power, Of• tln'-d-all around, cigar lighter, 302 Y-8 engine. •75 FORD ....... GW•4Dr.S.- V·8, automatic trans .• factory air conditioning. power steering. power brakes. vinyl roof cover, radio. mag wheel6. Lie. f697MXC 1711 .TOYOTA \.~ llD PICKUP 4 cyf.. 5 epeed trans .. white spot(e tlms & wide tires. sliding rear window, rad(q, heater. wtth cab-over camper shell. Lie. #101 1075Stk.1421AT. OVER 20 BEAUTIFUL '77 IN STOCK SPECIAL· CLEARANCE PRICES ON -BIRDS -MAVERICKS PINTOS -MUSTANGS GRANADAS -LTD'S • TERRIFIC SAVl•SI n. 1hrMrt1 V-8. auromatlc trans .• f actory air oondltioning, PoWr steering. PoWer disc brakes. pawer windows. vinyl roof cover, tilt sreenng wheel. radio, heater. Lie. 1856SWL Stk. IP3279 4 cyt .• " speed, AM/FM stereo radio with tape, removable roof panel. rallye wheels. Low miles. Uc. f 494T JH Stk. ,P3217 4 cyt., 5 speed transmission. sport pacllage. AM/FM 'radio. heater, rallye wheels. Uc. ,J477POU Slk.1966A ?4 ... CuRY NOMTleOWUI• STAnoM WAeoM V·8, automatic tr1namlaslon. power steering. ~ btakes. roof Clrriet. radio. heater. Low INlea. Lie. t208KBL Stk •863A. • ·- ) I, I l I· l. I, , • I \ I . -' . .. . .. . . . ~- '.' ft DAILY PILOT * Wedn.day, March 15. 1978 • -; ( :..--.. -.-Cf-IT-IOUl--.-U-St-'f-.-.. ---t --TM--.. -'C--,...--':'*'-.. -C------ty-A-,·.i l-~N'.":O:".T::".'l':'Cl:"::TO::":CON::'::'T•:'A':"'CT=:O.::'.:$~- NAMll &TATtM&M'f -ititlell t1wt ..... -lee of CALl.UtO 1'0. al DI t ... to..,...111 ,_,,..It~...,.. -......_ .. ~ .......-• u=o'ft'.:&. ~N AW.A M .. ~; .. CllfNlll ... lc:n 1oe41Md •I n..SA A• ... o P'AtNTINO, ~· ••O "'""' ..... Ori ... i......,.. "'-'· 1111 O.M!IN 2 '° 0 c•oc-p,,, ef 'tf ~. Hunll ........ old\, CM!ht"'• Gt1 ........ _,,, AMllerl will <-•"-"" >Oii\ Nv of-•"· ltll ~ 1we ,_.,~, 7i0Mo fl. PIKt of tlld ~tlPI llS1 l"l•c:tnlla r; I ftt\11 ~ .... ,,.., Ille• ltelnt. 1"\11111 .... cir.. CNK o.lly ....... $Ir .... Coile~ CA m u I ---l"fllll~ c.i........... M.rell 11, .. "·"" 1°'4-ta Prtlt<I '-'~'°" Name· FIAi ' lll_'1"iii1, ....... 11 aNllCtM "1 Aft ,,... P'•OTICTICH 5'rtTDll fOA COM- .,,._,, PU81JC NOTICE """" ~1• ,..,. "-• Pl.ct ,._,. .,, on Iller '21 114\tr •• Thi\ llAll~ W• llltcl Wllll IN ------------SlrMI. (.u M9M, CA tltlt ,~nlr Cltrlj. ef 0r.-(Ounlr ell .,..., NOTICe 1$ HlAEtY 01\llN llWll lilltfCll .l, "11, NOlta TO tatOITOH IM •M-S<llOOI Olatr1<t ti '"'1JJ .... .....,.. Or•ntt C.WW\f. C.lltwnl• ....... ..., P11bll1-Qr ... Caatt Ollty Piiot, Sllftt .. Oll COU•T 01' THI a11d lllreuoi. Ill Oov•rni119 tNrf, rclll,IS.~1'.lf11 I •U·1' SYATaWCAUl'OttlOAflO• ... ,.,,..,,., rtltrrtcl , •• , Til8~0.0ltA ... e "015Tll1CT", wlll r.<tlW .,_ 10. ""' PUBUC NOTICE tr. 111t INt\iW t1111t law•• t1 susie ,,., 111tr "*' 1111 _,..., ... .., o-. : '• ~·j • H, IOYC&, D1cM11c1. .. altCI McM for WW --Of • '41nllect ,• ~------------! Nttltt 11 !lefter 91,,_.. lo credltort l0t l"9 tbO .. IWl>l«I. •• "CTITlout •u111tlH lle¥trit ClallM ~Ml llw laid CIK.. 81d• il\411 -,. ...... In lht pltu NAMI STATSMaNT -.it lo 11 .. s.1c1 cia1m1 lft U. effkt of ldtnltlltf •-. 1t14 &NII be _,,_,, Tnt 1011°"'~ .,..._., 11 CIOlllO ~· 1M CIHll Of Ult ~ c-1 tr IOI -puoflCly retd tloucl of lllt -W· !'if' n : '"Miii -to ttw """""..,..et IN 1l•tttl llf'lle-plect .. ~ JWO ~S. 1'AO Greet l..tflt, effk e Of lrvl119 E. A-. AUW•r et Eao Mtl ""''' COftlorm end be •~·•a. eo. .. ~ca . .,.,, 1. .... nu E. 1lllr1f su-1. lwlte-. rele*l•lw ttlhtCMtractOOWrMnti. " JHt""' ,_ .... AM 0.Carte, ttU °"'""'"· CMlfcnllttOUI. ~ '-"'" EAU\ ""'INll .. tccom.,.,,i.ci"' etrlc ~lilt. C-. Mew. Ca. a.. efll<• Is IN,.., ef llul!Ns1 ti IN -!fie trtc11rlly rtfHr«l IO In ll\t contrect fllll 111111""1 It COlllN<IH llY • dntl9M4 In Wt -ttert i-rtaiftlrit .. dt<urntn".,,. l>Y IN lill of P"OCIOMCI "°"'~.,..llH ~ Hltl ttltlt. S11tll ClelMI wltll ,,,. IUll<..,lreclon. J--" W. 0.C.... M<•l¥f'Y ~ flllltl ... flled tr fl\t 01$TAICT .... "" 11\t rlQlll lo 0-el ,...,_ PNMlll.., u aforeuld wltllln fowr rele<I .,,, or all bl<K or 10 w.iw tft'I' • •T11l1 Ila,_ •• llltf wllll llw -IM efw u. llrit "*lcttlOlt et 1rrevu1.,111 .. ., lnl«rntllllft 111 ..,, -..:.unty Cltrll tf Or~ GOUflty 11111 ....ilc:e. bklt w 1111N ll!Odl119 ~a~ M.rcl\ l. lf71., OtltCI Marcll IJ. 1'71 Tiit DISTRICT ... s _.i,,.., ''°"' .... n. Rlltfl Maxi,. ArM ... ln>ut 11\t Dirt< IOI of lfllt Oeiw••-nt OI In· Publl\l\td 0< ..... COil! O•llY l"llOI E•t<utor Of 11>e Wiii dullrlat R.ietlOlli lllt 9"'tfel Pf•••ll· Mtr ·I , U, 22, 2', 1'11 ...._,. of said o.c-..1 1n9 ,.,. Of ,ar Cll•M ·-• 111 111« PUBLIC NOTICE 1•v1110 I . lllOSa• IOC .. 11'1' In wlltcll this wwk ,. 10 be AtlwMy • .._ per lot Med IOr tech crofl ot type or ------~=~~--mi I . flllnl S--_,,,..,.., -10 ••<ule ltw con· N0f1Cll TOCJISOIT'Otll S.lte.., lrkl. TNM rates .... on Ille ., ..... $UPt•IOllC:OUlnOflTMI o.w-..~.... OtST••Cf efll<t ltuled •• 107 .• STATa Ofl CALl"°"Nllo "°" Ttf: 11111 m.-PIHtnllt llrflll, C.lle Mesa, CA fMI COUNTY OP CHIANG• ...... 1 ...... o--. Cl•nUStir, ....... mu. c..-. """" .. 9111•1"'4 Oft ... .... ~t AiWr<lllS,t:l.!tWAjlttl(tt11 _.,..LA,., tf .,_ .. , .... "'-11 be 1•1•1• of lt08ERT PAUL MARTIN. ~7' o.tlAld at 1t19 job r.tte. .,II., atto l nown H •OBERT p, TIM • ......,,. tcNcM• et ..... dlMI MAllTIN, Dec .. -PVJILIC N011CE ..... Ii.,_ ..-n • -111,,. day of NOTICE 1$ HfREllY OIVEN IO ""1------------t19lll Cll -'-The rttt of M41dey • •crt411orl of ltlt -Mrned ~I flt ___ ,. '""'SINISS Ind owerllme _, lhelt M •I IH~I ••t•t ell --l\t•t"' CIAllN ........ "" "-•.., llme And -·llAll. ..... uld __ , ••• reQllfrM M Ille ...... STATIMalfT II 11\All i. INftdottory.,, tllt ~· , • ~"'· with er,. ftKtU¥Y wowc'-'I, 111 ni. '_04-.... ,.,.... Is CIOltll ...... T•ACTOll to ......... the Conlrect II • '91e office of ... clHk o1 ,,.. •-ntn •. -•nttf. -"'*' eny 141kOntrtctor ,;.. tlllecl '°"''·or lo pni.enl ........ •1111 l.ll'eS'TYLI LANO$CAPI, .., """' lllM. lo .,., Ml '"' It.en lht • ~4he ntceua" vO<I<"'"· lo tt>e .,... Awnlclt~.A,..._.111,CAfZIOl U ICI spullted relet to au won. ...... ' -·~•CJned .. Paul M. KONpelSlly, Jr., ••11•r1 M•rtws Wtrftn, tn ~mplov•d l>Y INll'l In tht tMtClltlOll Of • AJlorney al Law, 17l21 lr'il~ Blvd., A•lllcla Oortlllbt, Anefle4,,., CA fttOJ the con I ra<t. ""' S11l1t F Tu•lln Calllornl4 t2..0 Tl\11 ~II condllCltd by.,. In· No bidder mer wlllldr-1111 bid lot \: wlllth 1t""' pl.tc:e of bull MU ol 11\t llMdu.i. ~' . e 11trltd tf lorty.llw l~l clayi afltf , unot"ICJl'9CI 111 •II ,,..,.lftr's perl•lnl ._, ~ ... W0<den lht dAlt Ml for IN operfllt of bldl. It '"' tilofe ol ,aid dK.O.nl, wllN Tiiis Ila~ wu filed wllll the A .,.,,,,.,,. bOflf .nd a petformenc• • lwr montm •lier IN 11ri1 publlul COUlllJ Cltrtl of Oren .. C:.OUntv 011 bond w llt be rtei'llrtd pri« to uecY. • • of this nollu. ,.\fllt'Y 11, 1'11. lion of IM tontrtct. The ~menl - • 01100 ,.,,.rt., 11, 1'71 ,._. st.ell M In e.. lorM Ml loftlt 111 1111 Roi.1 Paul Martin, Jr. l'vbll\lletl Orarige Coe.at O.ily Pilot contract do<UfNnll. E .. cvtor ol tl\t w 111 or ,.,, tt, M¥.1.1. 1s.1t11 M1 71 OA r E o· M.,c., 11. 1'11. I.- ,._ ..,.... Mmecl Ot<e<lftll Go1'e"""9 8oard PAUL M. llOMAl"eLS«Y, Jr. P UBUC NOTICE o.,oi.., _w., Fl11>1r, CPM. AIWM' M....,. P'urCllASl119 Oll't<.., ""' 1fUt ,,..._ ....._, ..... JI PlllMI,,_ er-.. <:otst l)tjtr Pilot, n.ttHi. ~..... l'tCTtnous a uso1a ss Mate" u, n. 1m ' ......_., ._._... NAME STA'TtM41NT IOll-71 PvtMI.-Orar>91 CMsl o.lly ftttel TM rol'-11111 ...,._ It Oolno llutl· 1------------ ,,,,_rcll u , n. 2'-' ~IS.""..._ ,."T-.;~ TAILWAGGElt. tllO $. C..'4 PVBUC NOTICE -------------1 .. .., .. LA9UN 9Mctl, c.M.....,,..,..,, 1----------'.-:--PUBLIC NOTJ""E •1<1WWd Bt•oro K-rtr. I.SS SuP'elllOltaMJ•TOflTHI \; lllverilff Or., Onlat'IO, ~llletllla ITATI OI' CALll'O•NIA l'O• -------------19171. TMI aMJNTY OI' O•ANOI l'lc;TITIOVI IU~NUS TlllJ buSlness It eondll<tecl t>r tn 1,.. ..._ ...,.,, ........ stATIM•NT diwldllM. r Tiit 10110.,1111 ~are NI"' RkNrd9radlon!ICtmer"' NOTICa Ofl HSA•INO OJI ~ OonlneU .s: Tlll\ U•lement was llltcl wllh '"" P'ITITI~ l'Oll P'lt09ATI 01' WILL STANLtY O. WAI.KEii COM· CO<MIY Cltrll Of Dr•n90 County 011 AHD LITTllll TelTAMINTAllY, PANY. us .......... $1rttl, COlll F•bru.,y u . .,,.. l'Oll AUTHOllUATION TO AD· Mew, Certr""""e mv ,.~ M I N I s T. II " N D • 9'Y T " I TllomH II, Wl<llslrom., Ht E. 2111 P\ll>llilled Or~ COlil D•llv PllOI, INDIP'INOSNT ADMINllTllATIOH Str .. I, Coile Mesa. C.lllornla t:llU1 Marc II I, 8. IS, 22. 1918 11.,_11 OfElllS•TIAeTo~S !frHERINE AONE$ ~' Tl\Omn L. Wlc~stroM, ~l2 Sall " Air Cir< le, Hunlllltlon 8eacl\, ------------FOLEY aka ICA1l41RINE SAl'IGENT I --PUBLIC NOTICE FOLEY, OK .. M<I ~lllorn • ,..,... NOTICE IS Ht!AE8Y Ot\IEN IMI Tllla butl"9H la COndlKted by •1------.,..._,...=~-=---THOMA$ d. l'Olltlltl lltecl htrel" I llMlltcl pert•rv.lp. T~ II. WIOslrOM ~llllon lor Proba ol Wiii .,,., ••. Tiii\ atel..,,.nl '"'" llltll wilt\ tllt suance OI lAll•n TtslanwMary - • lor aulhorllttloll lo ..,,,..,lnlaltr IHlder County Clerk of Or•n .. Count\' on ll'lt ln••.,.ndtnt adrnlnlUratlon Of ... • Merell IO, I'll. l'tlt4' Eslatu A<I, roftrtnce lo wl\ldl It PUtlll\l\td 0r..,.. Coast 0.11, Piiot, ,.,..,. for lurtlltr -tkul•rs, -11\•I IM time Aftll Pl.u ol 11Mrt119 ,,,. .. ,,.,. M.rcn IS, n. 2t, --""11 S, tm lies Ileen ,.. tor Aprll •. ""'· at 10:00 t16o71 •.m .• on"" -'t.nl Of o..ar._1 .. " PUBLIC NOTICE SUl"l•l<Mt CDUllT ~ TMe STATE 01' CAU l'OtlNIA l"Oll THI C:OUHTYOfJOllANOI No. J ol said CD<;rt, al 100 Civic CltnlM Orllre West, In "" City •f Sant• Me, Olllornl._ Oi led -ell ll, 1971. WIU.IAM a. St JOHN, c.ounty Clffll lAJIC, K•SMSI!• & JIOLIY J Wftt ~nflll, Seti• J SoMI• ..,._,,,CA tll1*1 Tel: .... ., .. Atteneyl ,.,: .... .._ l"ulHINltd Or-. Coatl OAlll' P'll« ,,..,, 14, u. 21, ltll 1011-71 PUBLIC NOTlC E l'lc:Tlf10UI MlllNHI NAMS ITATeMtNT Tl\t 1011-1,,. penon1 •r• dal119 lllltl-•l HOL•P'AC OllTAltUTO.S, l .. Jl e1,,.u~c1 L..11., H_ .. ,,.,.,, e,ec11. Cetlltn>I• .... Pl\lllp P'alad .. , 196$2 EIMsl«CI Lii., Hulllll'IO\on ttad•, e.111or11I• 92646 • llOHl'llary P'alac lot , 1tU2 l!tm1tere1 Ln., Hunll,,.ton auc11. C.lllornl•f:lro4' Mtn.,.. "611ful11, 11 It • al\Cloif>ll Ave .. LO\ Anttlff. Ctlllomlt 'OCm l!:ltnt Loya Holtuln, J116 11•11- dolpll Awe •• LM A""IH. Ctlllotnle ' too3t Tl\11 bvll-It COfldv<ltd bv e ..,..rel Ptft11t,...,1P. •-ryPtltem ll\lt llM-Wff llltd wllll Ille Cov111r Cltrll el 0.•"91 C...ntr on Merell tJ. 1'71 "'*',.... ar.,.. c-1 o.ttr i~ MMtll IS, tt. !t tlltl ~I S, lfN 1~7' PUBUC NOTICE .. ,..,, IUfttll°" OOUltT Ofl TMe ITATt CW CAUf'OltMIA flOR TMa COUNTY Ot' OttANOa .... ,f,.ft»4 NOTIC8 0 1' NaAittM• f'OI ....... ,: INT °""" ~ ,,..,, OorHlt .,... G¥cl• Tllll ctMcl\ifl M Tlllt I (OUfll\f C P-wry ... tiled,.,, .. ,,. ol Otenge County tll . ,.,., .. ,.,.. Pu1>111 Or-Cot~• O•llv P'llot Mar. 1, 1, 1 u. 1m 11 .. n " mous lllSIHHS N ll SYATIM«NT TM ftl nt --It CIOlnt bu•I· lltUf~·THtlA COMPANY, , ... , •ollerl L •· H11nl11t9lon ll•uh, CallhWnla 1 $1tP"t4 IPtll<tf $tll>v, 1 .. '1 •01terl Ls: Hu,,ll1191on Beacll. C..lllwlll• Thi a llu. II ctftflKtad 11'1' Ml In- dlw .... t. s..-. ~., S.ll>y T .. IS sl•I-w.s llltd wltll the Collf'll'I' Ctff\ of 0r•"9' Counlr on """" ll, ltl\. l'tUtJ Publ!llW<I 0--C:O.tl O•lry Piiot, Merell IS, 22. Jt-Allr•I s. 1971 ·~11 PUBUC NOTICE t P·-1 NOTICE l'oc•EDITO.S SUl"EAIC>tlCOU•T Of' THE ST A Tl OI' ~LI l'OllNIA FO• THE COONTY 01' O.AHOE ... ......... $,. Esl•I• of icaNNETH NISBET, 0.0Hed. NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN lo the CAdllOrs ol lllli ·-!\tmN tMte<Hlnl IMI ell "'son~ hl!vir>Q c1~1ms •oalnst tn. sale! dtc-nl "'" reciulr•d lo Ille ,,..,m, wllll tne rietnHrv voucner1. In lht Ollrte 01 I"" <IHk of lllf above Mtllted cour1, « toort\e'nl them. wltt\ '"* fttCt\\ary vou<.~r\., to the un- der\IQned •I ""' IM olllce j>I C A. HIGBIE, '29 ,.,,_,lne.A,.nU<t, "°" 01· ll<t Bo• 119. BalbOa Island, Calll0tn1a """· which .. _ pltce ol t>uSIM U or tr.ie unoert.19f'tfd In •II m•tter\ pert•rn· 1119 to Ille ttl•I• ol selo dec..,.nl, "'"""' tour monlhS •'IH Ille '"" publlca1lon ol INs nollte. O•led FH>r"'°ry 21, 1918 JOHNHISBfT E .ClltOI of 111ot Wiii otllltatioor.~ 0oc-...1 C.A.HtOatl mMMtM•. ... o .... m • ...._ ,,...._CAtttU 11141 •'1·1'19 Att.r"ey ltr loecllttr Publlslltd Or•nQO CNll O.ily p,101 l>Mr. I, I, IS. n , 1911 793·11 PVBUC NOTICE cf'.-1 NOTICE TOC•EDITORS SU PllltC>lt COUllT 01' THE STATE OP CALll'otlNIA 'OA THl COIJHTY Of OllANCH ....... Utt EiUlt of ANNA HERAICIC. Oecused. ttlelt of A HERRICK, Oeoued. NOTICE IS HEREBY Gl\IEN to lhl! c,...,llort ol ltle a"°'"' """"'d clP<"denl 111a1 art ,.r"'"1 hnlnc;i c1ar,.,~ <19Ainil 1111 H lcl clt<~I Me ·~red ,. Ill• '"'"'· will\ ""' ne<ouarv ....u<""rs. in ,,,. •Htc• of '"" c1er11 or'"" -... tt1llllH ~.or lo Pfffe<ll lheM, with Ill• nt<•UtrV vouchers. to '"" IHI· derslQMd •I lht I-omu ot THOMAS L LOAD. Sutlt Jll. 2JS11 Pawo Cle \laltn<lt. Laouna Hills, Catrlornra .,.Sl. wl\kl\ Is IN! pl.Ce of tlUslMU ol IM Ull<kri!QM<I In All M4lle" l>"rt•on· ln9 to Ille est•lt ot w ld ~<•dent. within lour months alter t"8 lir•I publt< allot1 ot lhh nolkl. Otltcl F-...,Y 21. 1t71. MARJORIE TALI.MAN E-lltl•• Of lht Wiii of Ille ·-N med de<-\ THOMAS L. LOltO SWlt SIJ =-·\I-le I Mith, Ct. ftW ttt•l Ml.a.t , Attt"'•f ltr luc.trla PullllSlltd Or<lt\Ot C:O.Jt Otlty l"llot """'·I, I, IS, 22, lt71 . "2-11 PUBUC NOl'JCE PUBUC NOTICE f'ICTtTIOUS •ttso .. ss Ml.Me STA~NT TM loll..tltl INntftS er1 cloi119 blls1Mt6 .. I STl•LING SAHTA ANA, 210-A E. OVff llioact, Sall!• Ant. C.lltwrwe •2101 E\IAN$-J0Nf.$, INC .. 2JO.A I . Oyer lload, Stn .. AM, C.llfor11la n101 Tiii& bullnts.f Is concNcted by e Cot• 1>ot•llot1. Ev~s-.JOfltt, I~ IH"'1y J. !VAM, Sec,...,., Tlll1 Mat-... 111911 Wllll IN GolH'llY Cl9f1l ef Ora• C:-11' .,, Marci\ IJ. lf11 "tlJl1 1'111111 aMtl Ortfllll 00.SI Delly llli.t. ~" u. 22. lt,"-'.J. lt11 PUBUC NOTICE 6 4 2 • ·s 6 7 8 iD A I L y p I L 0 T c L . A s s I F I E. D . . . ' . . , ..................... . ....................... • _,.. tOOZ a •• ,~ 1001 ...................... . ..... , •..••••.......... DPli46lMG? SURE ASIUMI $)02.6 I ~ d core room ? nsrer ,OU, pre•ent BET eq ty here & assume V.A. loan-l~l la· '-t-f30'2. ~o .. pa)'I Take paint and cleanser. ....... .....forS. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• G••" 1002 ....... . •.....•...... all. Big 'Iv n1 room. anct elbow 1rease aftd ........., HOMI Brtdt nrepl1ce. Ht&tt uve US! Kodern 3 ..,,,. kitchen-family room. bedroom with flteplace. ._.,.. C. M. Gl&anUc finlshed bonus Near South Coaet Plaza I Builder J111t completed rooml Priced reduced REDCAJU>E'f75'·1202 Wt 2 story' bdrm home. $2500 too! Taite adv an· Features tncJude; vault· tage of super prlct. llDUC• eel ceWnga. 3 car car age terms & space! Call now S 12 000 8 H & RV at.oreae. Hurry, '1S2·1'700. • • EQUAL HOU I G choose your owo carpets. Ol'fN.11 9.,. ~iv" 10111 ,.'<I' Quiet tul-de-sa<' stre«, 0 P P 0 R TU N IT Y' can $46.5880. ',~- 1 ,. adj to Santa Ana COUOtry Oub" tennis Club. DOW ~·a Mottce: "7,!00. S Br 2YI bH, ZJOO All real estate advertised 1qft. ape., house Sal.1·$ In Ulla oewapaper is auf>. ====~:::;::::::::=::; 112 n. Meshn ject to the Federal FaJr~~~~~~~~~I Cftle Housing Act or 1968i.;. WAT9ROHT __ ........__ .. __ ,Est.tu which makes It illegal to COMOOMIMIUM s..--~ RCA! . advertise •·any pre· EAST Pre-sUglous 2 bedroom ----~....;;,. ____ _ ference, llmltatJon. or borne In a total Jeturity EASTSIDE d.lscrimJnaUon based on atmosphere. TbJs adult CUSTOM race, color, rel.Igloo. sex, SIDE condo offeu luxury. Dun.IX or national origin, or an privacy, use of pool, intention to make any j a c u 111 &c sauna . Beautiful owners unit + suc:h preference, llmlta· Cbatmer! 2 bedroom. 2 Beautiful VIEW of tneomet.oo~Doo'twaJt.-· uoo,ord.llcriminaUon.'' bat.bl No common w.U.1 wu.erfroat activity and Ter~a! Tel"8lal Call Freab paint! Jdoderp l!IJabt U1bU. May eon· 641-'lln This newspaper will not kitchen! Double auagel alder l eaae/optlon. Ol'fNt1t'i•11s11.1tJ10111N1C1• knowlnflr accept any Allforool,~1 $239,.500 r ~ t;m1 =~~~~~r~ v~!1!! RED~~,;c;:·\2(Yl WA~JNT tJ~ll~li•J~ $51\900 REAL ESTA~ ...... for Wt ••••••••••••••••••••••• G1111rtll 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESA VERDE Spot.leas, large 2·story s bdrm. home in prime location! Beautiful wallpaper . lovely landscaping, new •P· pllancea. Priced at Sl34.500. By app't. only please. 673-366.1 675-4i77 Eves associated BROii' Ell!. IHll TO R'.; l 1J', V\o lirtlho '1 f. 'I 161') 1 $2, 1 SO e3M400 · NEWPORT HGTS. TOTAL DOWM l~~~~~~~~l For Sale by Owner Winding roadway to I-Secluded 4+ br, dbl pr, soaring 2 story retreat! CHU'8 Newport Beach Hghtl, 2 Private grounds protect THAM st.ory, custom built, eolar secluded entry to lavish l iMTI home. Includes brand living room ! Gourmet Old r~·hk>Md charm " new Sl.S,000 bk yard wlt.b kitchen overlooks sun· .... Malibu fiberglass pool, ah1ne courtyard! Wind· room-Sunkissed ramily diving board, heater. lnl 1talrway leads lo kitchen, c upboards Ciller & all acceu & 11 weep l n g m as t er galore. Three queenMzed a;eparate jacuzzi. (Both bedroom plus child's bedrooms-garden type alsosolarbelllled.> Beam retreat! Hurry, seller ii 1rouod1 with wlsbinc celllngs. lots of -wood. arudous. 847-41010 well & huge cov. patio. used brick frpl, .iiew Ol'l,.,,.9 • .,qUN ro"'"' 1· Look no further. Call carpet., li&ht & airy. • ~?\l', ... ,.~·o•~" sm.ooo. m .ms ., ~'. . ,. j tBJ llll ..:~...::es:....:~"~;_;_oo_MO_down_D_O_~-ym_! _en_t OCEAM VIEW required to buy this $96,500 beauUfal 3 bedroom Mn--home, gourmet kitchen • Hard to find one story ~a.,........,... large living room , ooodow/2 bdrm +. den. 2 In Lusk Realty'1 new fireplace. covered paUo, ba w/comm pool. Jacunl ,..Resale office in Hunt· waterfall, brick BBQ. & sauna. Walk lo be~ch. ington Beach. Confiden-Located near the harbor Our exclusive. First time tial Interviews are now and Huntington marina! being taken ror licensed 1 mile w beach. Priced Real &tale agents or for quick saJe $69,900. soon lo be licensed. Call Take advantage. Call t.ocill)' about the many 963-676'7 CllFf HAVEH Quality view home! 3 Bdrm. 3 baths, private study and breakfast room. Etra parkinl In the cul-de·sac alley. Room for 'RV. Big price reducUan ! $225,000. PEJE BARRETT -REALTY- 642·5200 features we have lo offer. Mr~ 11, 9 • "< ,vNroe1 Ntrt • !Rl&ltll ~ I • ... ... II 11 I ' I I ' 1m ib n ~t H1111t111ftto Beatll Sell ld)e items A CQNOll(NT SMOPP1NO 1' .Wll'f() CUrDC f ()ti 'I<( CAL Of<! THC GO OCEAM,.OMT MACH VILLA Channing 2 BR home; 2 $I 05,000 car garase. Best swim· Protect Dishes Unbelievably low price!! mJng && fishing area, Just blocks from the close to stores & water. Xlftt Newpor reauuranU. rns,0001 . Beath locatJon. Sprawl· lalb9cl 1cry Prop. lnc contemporary home. RHltors Wo•d deck en try. Spacious living area with ~~·~6~75-~7~0~60~•~~ maatlve frplc, rustic1: family room. Open beam l•--------1 tell~ngs & wet bar. Ortular stair leads to fantaallc s un deck. HUIT)' on this one! ! Call today! 646-7171 OPt IH o • ti to • ''" '0 11 Al f • IASTSIDI AXa • 5'7,100 Oldie but ,oodle, hUI• lot I Zcntd A·21 Bou.se need• l'Orkt Slttlna porch edtr)' t Cozy 1Jvi11g I Larae 1tora1e sheds! Better b11rry!I Call 6'5-0.103 F ORE!'iT E OLSON .,.,,,. ,.,,. ... ,. .. MIWPORT IEACH Hlgbly upcraded . 3 bdrm. I amlly && dining roomt, new &l"OWU pluab can>e&a, aparkllnl pool and lotl of extr ... Qt. fered at only $121,SOO. c.llMO.~ -! • HERITAGE . f~l /\l TORS MEWUSTIM& Excltlng custom home. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath on approx 1900 sq ft. Steps to our best beacl;>:· You own the land on thls one. Asking Sl.58,000. •IAYSHOUS • . MM 3 Bdr.-,1.. ! bath ,Se· corator garden hoaie with reatures. complete wit.b all the charm or the area; xJ.Dt inside ioca· lion. Open Thurs. aft.er· noon l ·S. 2792 Circle Drive I AUOAISUMD DUPUX 2 BR. 1 Ba each unit. StepJ to btacb. 20f Garnet. " ~~·-.. llAUTY • md dell or 5 BR, 4 BA, lrS-f amtdin.lDI room 2 ftpt~s. OrHl 1chi1, perfect coiy lamlj,.>' bOme. StJS.000. Dramatic Back! 1 ~ Ho.iH• For S• Houn• For S• Wednesday, March 1S. 1978 * DAILY PtLOT 83 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~!!!~~.~~ ........ ~~~!.~~~ .......... '!'!!!!.~~.~~ ........ ~~:::.~~.~= ........ ~~~~!'! .......... !?.~~ ~~~!'! .......... !~.~~ ~!!!.~~~~ ........ ~4:4!!!:.~~ ........ ~~~ ....... . !:~~!~ .......... !!~ Gfl'ffai 1000.z ~~~~!'! .......... !~~ ~~!'! .......... !?~~ ~~ .......... !~~~ ~.~~ ... !~~.~ ~.~~~ ... !~~~ . . ................... ·----------------- ~ I \VLS I .t-:Y N TAYLOR CO. H.t-::\ 1.TOHS ~1 rn·1· H) Hi PUSTIGIOUS LIHDA tSU Luxurious Stone & wd custom home on 113' bayfront on tip of island with big bay view. Finest of construction without regard to cost. 4 BR suites maids qtrs, 2 pwd rms, fam rm, den, billiard rm, elevator, sauna, unique popl, jacuzzi & boat dock. $775,000 Lease-bold or $1,375,00 Fee. Seller will fmance. By appt only. WlSLIY H. TAYLOR CO .. 1.EAL'tOaS 2111 S. Ju.1111 ... Rood MIWPOIT cana. H.L 644-4910 ~COATS & WALLACE Cc:Jl REAL ESTATE, INC. A LOCALLY OWNEO COMPANY SERVING TH£ SOUTH COAST AREA SINCE 1963 SPA~ -Fireplace in the family room in this beautiful 3 bdrm 2 bath home in Mesa Woods. Close to South Coast Plaza and Freeway access. Spanish tile roof, new on the market at $98,000. Cal 54Ml41. DREAM AWHILE -Why not change your drea ms , hopes & desires to reality and move up to ~0YGLASS? Quality view homes a lable for immediate occupancy. Only $259,000. c .. 640-6161 LAGUNA IEACH 2 BR, 1 BA , Laguna Charmer. Walk to beach, Mex. fire)>lace, oak floors, fenced yard. Perfect home for artist, writer , student, couple, weekenders, and anyone who appreciate~ Laguna ch arm. Only $110,000~ NEWPORT IACK IA Y Quality built John Lyttle home featuring 4 BR, 3 BA, spacious rooms, wood beamed ceilings, wet bar in den, maids quarters. This is a g r eat e ntertaining home on an extra large lot w /complete privacy. $145,000. CAMEO HIGHLANDS This immac. 3 BR, 2 BA + den, not only has room for pool, but is very near pvt. beach. Only $169,900. OLD CORONA DB. MAR This well maintained 2 BR home plus gst. unit is being sold by the original owner. Pride of ownership abounds; come see it. $174,500. EXCHANGE ANYONE? SH SIA ISLAND! D. e l i g h t f u l G r e e n b r i e r p I a n condominium with an incredible view of the Big Canyon Golf Course. This home is currently vacant and located close to the community pool, jacuzzi and tennis courts. Many upgrades and a 2 car detached garage. Presented at $225,000. You should see Sea Island. U~l()UI: li()Mf:S REALTORS': 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar dlSO rn Mesa V1·1111·. Jt !J•l6 5990 ~~~ .......... !?~~,~~!'! .......... ~?~~ NEW 4 BDRM. 3 Baths, family room,' 2-story home ; secluded front courtyard with xlnt view of the lake & park from almost every room! $750 Per month ; also, owner will consider lease/option or sale. 759-0811 FiuL~ Glut Wuuu 'Br.Ag. lliCH RETRU T $64,900.VllW Steps to _pounding surf and crystal sand! Back yard is bay area play- ground. Winding wooded walkways to secluded en- try! Gourmet kitchen. Step-down conversation area plus fireplace! Suns hin e breakfa~t patio. Pool-jacuzz1- volleyball. Garden living at its finest. 847-0010 O'f'' Tll 9 . fl s IU"J ro tU ""'' t ' [~IR&Hil ORIGINAL HAUOl YllW WITH V.W Spacious 4 Bdrm, f amlly rrn home in original Harbor View with formal dining, pool, jacuzzi -AND - Gorgeous ocean , barbor, jsland & night light view. Reduced to $259,500. ~ . SOUTH OF HIGHWAY con••• An absolutel,y charming 2 Bdrm cottage with gleaming hardwood fl oor s a nd TWO separate 2 car garages. Reduced to only $134,500. CaM 644·72 I t for hftlb TURTURO CK .._ Lovel:~~tous 4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~·!!!!!~~~!!!!~~ bdrm with large family = rm plus huge bonus ,.~.L.JM 1022 room 3 car gar age . ~_.. _. Larges t Broadmoor ••••••••••••••••••••••• mod e l. Dec orator COZV 3br, 2ba + guest esaVerde• 1024 wallpaper & dra~s. Xlnt house. Frpf. 2 patios. R-2 Executive co ndit ion Se 11 e r lot. Pnn. o~ $157 ,000. Owner Moving t ransfe rre d Price Owner,640-7 __ Bound for Oregon and slashed $6.000! Ills loss Costo MeM I 024 must sell t.h.i.s spacious 3 -your gain! 646-77ll •••••••••••••••••••-•• bedroom home. Formal (~IWMl5§1$M?i VETS FREE =~e~rid~.r:::,~~:-_ R al F.st t.c Housing. Zero down, zero coratlve wallpaper. e a C06ts. Any city in Orange Atrium le fountain. BJ<.R. MIMI-RANCH 41R. Co. Call WIR VET AGT 540-1120 ~.~o:;~:o ~~SB.LHOW ·--Circular drive. Large College Park 3 br le din- famiJy sized living room. Ing rm, covered patio. i.---------Country 'kitchen. Dine. Terms to suit. $80,500. CL.OSI TO IEACH Wall of glass view of cov-&11·9081 ered pavilion & lus h 2 Bdrm,2bath.Good fix- gr ounds s urrounding EASTSIDE CUTIE er upper. $69.200. ff&F Freeform pool. Clean & sharp 3 b4rm 400E.t~ FORAll Separate wing for bide · starter home nr. ~ilnta u • llllS away Master Suite & Ana Country Club. n~c t.M. . _ ,. •. childre n 's quar ters. bckyrd Possible RV ac- Serving Costa M esa-Irvine Huntington Beach-Newport B each This very nice Corona del Mar duplex w /pool and jacuzzi would consider exchanging for small home, Newport Beach to Laguna Beach. 2 And 3 BR units w/l ' BA each. Priced tow at $189,500. Hurry ror this umqu~ cess. Quid cul-de-sac. t;;;;;;;~~~~;.. bargain! 963-7881 Seller may carry small i: 450 NEWPOH T CEN' ~Ii OHIVE 759 o~: I I '>'!'I "~-II, IUI'< '"111 • ..... f -2nd T.D. investors note! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!~~~~1 1·~1~1fil ~~~~~ .... , :;:J:\~~: 1002 GeMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• llACHVAWES PIJCI REDUCED 5 Bdrm Peninsula Pt. Steps t.o beacll. Sl89,000. Newer Ocean view duplex, Dana PL, Sl4S,OOO. S Bdrm, private beach, Cor o na Hi ~hland s $159,000. World Wide Brokers 673-4545 --- CDMDUPUX South of Highw ay , spac~ 3 bedroom, den, fireplace -each unit. $239,000. 644-7270 GREIHBROOK 4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extrem ely popular CAMELOT mdl. Th.is lovely home located on a cul -de-sac within easy walking distance to So. Coast Plaza. theatres & restaurants. Many out· st anding features in· elude: Custom Draperies Covered patio Decorator Wallpapers throughout Outdoor gas BBQ Auto Gy Door Opener Skylight in Fam. Rm. BY OWNER 979-8123 Prin. Only '109,900. INVESTMENT - ORANGE COUHTY Just completed 22 2 BR, 2 BA units. 100% occupied. Excellent opportunity for the professional investor. O uts t a ndin g l ocation, quality throughout. Phone now to inspect this property & to receive a detailed purchase analysis. 644-7020 2123 SAM JOA9UIN HIU.S ROAD NEWPORT IEACH 1002 Ga•NI 1002 ....................... ....................... $40,500 There's nothing left at llG CANYON 4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully decorated family home with patio views from each room. $l35,000 LIDO ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den , 4 baths, living rm . w /cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. su ite. IAYFROHT Several fine bay front homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bny~•d .. Drovt.>. N .B 6 7S 6161 U4U#I.~ IMVESTOR'S SPICIAL $46,000 Guarded gateway pro- HARIOR VIEW LUSK tects lavish courtyard Thls home has many with pool. Secluded entry t.h.i& price, except this Ge1ttr• I 002 <Mtwr91 I 002 one. 3 BR home, NOT A •••• •• ••• • • • • •••• •. ••.. •• • • • ••• • • •••••••••••• • ~ REALTORS L to executive liviq room. custom featwes. arge Sun 1blne gourmet courtyard . beautiful kitchen overl ooks olive tree and many rose . b u s h e s • B u i 1 t -i n private patio. Sweepmg ClEAM CONDOS bookshelves, formal din-~~=r~~%'!n::~: 2 Bdrm.. custom $50,000 ing room. paneled family anxious. Submit any of- 2 Bdrm., famous Orange room w /parquet floor, fer! S47-«l10 Tree area. Irvine $64,950 huge pool. OPfN 1119· 11 s ruN rotu """ • . ~::::~~ [ttlilfi&lf d Townbome, located just SUMSHIN spa c i o u a 2 B R 1:::::::::=~==~ E afewmlnutesdrivefrom It may be bard to re· s. Coast Plaza. Seller 2 Houses on a Jot near member but you can be wants t.o move quickly. Newport Heights. Great ready in this beauti(ul 754-7100 investment opportunity. home with pool, spa & CaJlM6-5880 au BBQ. Priced right ~.s ~ HERITAGE • -REALTORS $89,900. CALLSS&-2660. C:SELECT T'PROPERTIES CONDO. Call now it woo'tlailt. -540..3666 Wltela11 REAL EST ATE WESTCUFF IEAUTY IY APPOIHTMB4T TRIPLEX INCOME $905. VERY SHARP. PllCE $I 55,000. OWHER/AGT. CARRY 2ND. 2266 MINER. C.M • PH: 541.5777. 4 & den. or 5 BR, 4 BA, i--------•I lr~famity /dining room. JUS .. USTl:ft.I 2 lcs. Great schools. 11 · • -Pe ect cozy family Newport Beach; c~y 2 home. $18S,OOO. bdrm. house with guest 21EDROOM CONDOMINIUM $52.900 Probably the best con- dominium buy m llunt· 1ngton Beach Supe r location, just 10 minutes from beacb. Two twin sued bedrooms. Walk to community pool a nd recreatioo area. For ap- pol n t me o t to view. please call 962-T188. " K€Y 1 1P.€ALTOP.Sii SANTA AHA room; on 30x85 R-2 lot, COUMTRYCl.UI just ~ blk. to ocean! FORMER MODEL Driunatic, beautifully Priced at$1.SO.OOO One year old, 3 bedroom. decorated-new carmel 673-3663 833-0523 Eves 2 bath in executive cpts, 2 sty. SUper home neighborhood. with a w/frplc, wet bar. 3 BR, loog list of extras & e up· delightful patios w/min. grades.. Unobstructable up-keep on cul-de-sac. view of rolling hills. !•--------.---------• 900 Priced for quick sale I oo2 --------. By appt. Sl27• • $134,000. CALL 751·3191. Ga•r .. 1002 Ga•r .. .............................................. ~II. macnab I Irvine ?-realty COUNTIY ATMOSPtal U-sbaped home buiH around flower-filled sunn y courtyard. Cheerful 4 BR, 3 bath home w /beamed ceilings. $295,000. Barbara Winagle 642·823S. CP-128) IA YCIEST -MOVE IM IEADYI Charming, sunny, ·clean hornet 4 BRs, family rm w /fpl, formal dining, gourmet kitchen w /sep brkfst room & So. PaUo. $219,500. Dona Chlebesler 64.2-8235. <P·l.29) 6424235 644-6200 •en OoWr Drive Har"bor v~w Centltt' IAIM Ill~ V .. lty Ctmtr 7524414 To place your message before the reading public. phone 0 «;:SELECT i:!':ii~!s°'!ibaci! T" PROPERTIES : nn.llit..~ it well. 6C2-S67&. Want Ad Results 642-5678 Daily Pilot Classified, 00-5618 ~ Ga..... 1002 Getteral 1002 'Balbioa Island ~ ........... ............ • •••••••••••••••••••••• /l.'Wl~-673-1700 G ... 111 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• &.co1m.-o Banker ~ RESIOENTIAf ~RAGE Ca.'IPANY LOOKING FOil A DWLU This location can't be beat at this price. Tenants can walk to everything. Redone & like new inside & out. Instantly appealing for only $H3,500. A COUMILL MMml CO. 844·9080- cae: 110111 ILlllfS aa. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE MAJOR GIEINIElT Super deluxe -3 BR + dea OR 4 BR. Only 1 owner. Thousands h ave been s pent upirading this home. Deluxe Uled eotry. Delue kitchen. Deluxe carpeting. Deluxe Bob Mitchell wallpapers. Huge deluxe paUo. Eve11 a deluu gara1e. Sl67,SOO. A. "Joy of Newport" Li.IUD&- 181 DOV& DllVI 631-1800 ROSE FAMILY C S E 0 E A R R 0 H T W A N N E C T T T PM NA RV A H·1 E L R A C S H S [ DRSOSY APVOJ PKTERHA HEAAT QIP EELESCH S C W T L I 0 F U I L H Z 8 B A Q T C EEllHEPAOECOMWNHAUA VSMN E PT"NIOAEIA EOKN HTDSQRXIPYRPAWRTAUQ OSPEAURLLBLTTVVJRWF 11£LRAEYOENHL~ATS E O LUD8TAL lUOAMHCCU61 GElCl80MOROLR E AQMAL MRtAClMMllEUNRNCKIG H N C T l t'. Y l l I L H L U I I( I H I S E It E H l a I E A 0 E C 0 L E M L I "'~? --·-. =--~ r~•tm ma am 14?1 ... 848.;_;__(}_1_0 _____ _ COMTIMPORARY Real &tate REDUCED t:RJ-LIVEL MUST SELL HOW $12,000. Executave home in one or Mesa del Mar 3 br, 2 ba, Quiet cul-de-u.c street, our rmest areas. w.al~ to garage cir opnr. Terms t.o ~~~a~~ 2 parks. Frml ~1nmg. suite. $79 900. 831·9081 Huge bonus rm w /wet ---"--..;..' -----1 $&7.500. 3 Br, 2~ bu, %100 bar. 3 car garage. Jm -MESA VERDE aq ft. Open house Sat 1-5. mediate occupancy. Just MIHI EST ATE 112 lM Mosten listed. 646-7711 POOL Ctrc.le Luxurious executives Seashore Real Estate home . 2 story -overlook · 1-----67_5_-5800 ___ _ ing greenbelt on a cor-HEW OFFBIHG ner. 4 bdrms, Cmly rm & LuxUO' Coll. Park condo . HAHDYMAHS din rm, lge lot. Pantastic 2 br ea. with full ba, prof. DREAM pool &. grou.ods. Phone de<.'or. & A/C. Attcbd 2- Garage fully insulated. now .to~ appt! ll's car garage w/opener . Built In work bench. beautiful. 545-949! Ideal for single buyer Large lot with RV ac· (4.--,,.lh#ll ! !a PP with limited savings • cess. Newly painled.--Afi 6'21'JUJJ Low dowo payment. On· paneling and wallpaper ly $69,500. Call now. Four Bedroom Home in __ R_eaJ_E<>___.tf,_te ___ 1-.:.646-;.:..:ss.1..:..:.:.S ____ _ Mesa North. Truly a New Condos, 2 Br, 2~ Ba. ED Great Buy for $76,000. 2 frplc's, ceramic tile SECLUD 546-2313 kit.cbens & bath. Poot&. THREE IEDROOM Jt'f"' 1119 ·"~ '""' J 0 f 11 • 'i spa.67~12Broker Fr es b paint and I®' IH~ltli-·uu-·c·hicbft--·SCMlp---1 ::~~m , -.. It couldn't hurt t.o caU B>.000. Ready for yoo to LET'S MAKE Chuck Nash about a re-move in and start bang-wa.rdlng career in real mg your plants on the A TRADE! estate. Free training ii patio! Centrally located in C.M. you qualify. 540-5101. nr Hoag Hospital. ldea11--------·1 d_ Q'O.AIL m . for owner OCC:llJ>&Dcy. PL.ACE Owner anxious t.o trade E/Side Custlm home. PROPERX'IlCS ror land, commercial or 3Br, huge ram. rm., 3 car -,.00-~~~:.=.o..,. ~ residential. Xlnt invest-gar., on R-2 lot. Agt ment. low vacancy. Sub-1_&16_-1_11_1 _____ --i RIDUCB> $7.000 mit ")'our trade t.oday or VERDE 1 Yr. old East Costa ~urch ase o utrl g bt. MESA Mesa triplex. deluxe un-OUt ol state owner must · /2 bdrms 2 b urry! S4S-949l sell 3 BR. 2 ba.; on cul de its, ea. w •• a .. c~1wfli!\4iilrn?i sac. S&S.000 =~N:ii~~ & _ _,,_,,____ A.JohnsonBkr 979-4964 EVB.YHCOPB.AMD ___ R_e_al_E<>_l_!ll_e__ ~ ;~~;;:.· IEASTSIDE SB2.SOO COSTA MESA RoyMcC_.. ~~~~~~~~I JUST GIVE lT A lllOHewport ... d. LIDO ISLE Beaut. Medil. 3 BR, 4 BA home, xtra wide lot, huge court yard entry w /tile fountain. Udo tsle. $259,500 JACOIS REAL TY 675-6670 MO DOWN HO CLOSING COSTS Any vet can move in w /payments lllte rent. 3 BR family home. walk to everything. Call now. 540..3666 llfltelc .. 11 REAL ESTATE THOUGHT-a duplex CodaMew541·77Z9 with all the extras usual-~~~~~~~~~ ly included in a home-J:- wood burning fireplaces, ·Side Charmer, 2 B R built-in kitchens . 3 w /guest house. dbl gar .. bedroom upper, and 2 nice backyd, tully hied. bedroom lower unil. See t.o appreciate. 428 E. EXCJIANGE "Up''. 18th St., Call ownr COLE OF HEWPOIT 1_54M961 ______ _ REALTORS 67rSS I I stry condo. 2 BR, 2\o'.a ba. ----~-----12·car gar .. all BP· pliances, $69.500. 646-0468 GREEMIROOK DOUBLE YOUR MONEY 4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extremely hUOyears! Ubis\orf re- popuJar CAMELOT mdl. peats rtaelf ill ~the re- Thls lovely home located sale value ol thia approx . on a cul-de-sac wllbin ~ aore Costa Mesa easy walldng distance t.o Ranch will be doub\ed. 3 So. Coast Plaza, theatres ~bf' w/l~ ba, crpts. &restaurants. ManYout-CltJIS. frplc + bathelor atandlna features In· unlt for mddltiollal in- clud eome. Mlibt do a little e: t r a d i n c ! 0 P -CustomDrapcries PORTUNITY. M-a~ Covered patio never return. Doa 't nll5i-.._. P1d1•0 I 007 DecOl'ator Wallpapers tbls ooel OPEN FOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• th.rou,ghout ~ ... ~ON Sa ._ ., .. Nice 3 ar: 2 ba. on Mon-OUtdoor gas BBQ "'"'"'-.. 11 t • ~n 96 000 AUlo Gu Door Opener l·S pm. 222S C.QYoo Rd ~·Rlty SiS-4600 Skylll)ll in Fam. Rm. Costa Kea. Calif. •---'-'----=--BY OWNER 979-8123 McNASH REALTY C:...clalW. 102J Prtn.OnlyS109,900. :::: ....................... --:--::-:---:::--:::--l---===~:.!: • IVllW Ala~ 4.S lout. 4br. 2ba, ......-.. -"'I SUMSITrR ~ pnme loca. 1 ml. -·-Open HouM Dally 1-6. from ~b. lnchcp'd, re-O.PDf SUN lW aotmctouTerrace. decothruoat. 557.2005 *5°"'°n alJll,dfn,rm, view. Byowner4U2~ (pk . * IA$T5'DI. • ram ll1D, ~I 3 BR, 2 ba., trpk. &aper •!lM;: !!2!!i!O;O-• T9 dearlt Nm'° park. -.St ' blO' ln area. f72.!0CU ,.... I 026 STUAIT FINI ·-··••••• .. ••••••••••• l Jchenm yer R .-cit>; 1,,. i,1t. JC/i S '>-4'J.j•81 llALToa Hl-1414 L l I I .. .. . .. • ! • .. • • • • -' DAILY PILOT * Wedneedey. Mw-eh 15, 1978 ~~.~~•~••••••• ~!!.~~~••••••··'~~:::.~~•~••••••• 1-1. ~"'.tt4••"••':':_•5:!:_•••••• ~!:!.~.~••••••• •.•. !!!.~~-~~••••••• ~~••••••••••••!~.~! L..-IHclt 1041 t.-.leach ICMt ~~!.~~••••••• ~!.~~••••••• ~!.':':_.~••••••• • ..;.;_,.... I 026 I ... llwgto. leoctl I 040 lnine I 044 •• -................... ;;.~~;................ a..,..~ I 012 Mewport .._. I 06t ... .,.... ltedt 106f .~;.................. ....................... ....................... $3,900 ....................................... ·-····· ...................... . cc; * * * DEERFIELD, lmmuc 2 IUffS COtlM) D ...... .a. Ur-HTS Br. den, 2 Ba twnhse Sii i M WcsteUff poo& bollMI, 3 BR, ,..._ • o---u __ _.. 2 bl, lmmac cood. coun· -;.&vely 2 Bdrm, 2 bath -.--vn Wood deck pallo, mjr. DOWNI L• MOTIVA11D try ltltchea. OWOT/aft, Owner wW btlp fta..-e Wt a BR. 1IOO ... ft. tow nhome la t b e carefrH Blull1. Wltb lK down. OW'ffr will C8J'l'1 a 1~ 2nd T.D. for a yrs. at lO"At lDwnst payabJe lnternt only monthly. If cub la a pro. blem. call. Fll1l pri• .. ob !omlnlum with mlna I 045 VCllleacla rored wardrobes. elec • Ing 0 Super vMw "' the bills 6314740 ocean view. Iii mile from Coda Meta gar opnr, $83,500. Owner. Brand new 2 BR! Never from U.11 lrf. family -------- .., lJioa Marina. $76,900 You are the winner ol 2 659-5713AM,640-7072PM lived ln townhome, bas Rul&TAn home w/~Bit, 2'h BA, UDOISLI / .,,'Cal64 ... 721 I tlcket.stothe GREIHTREE everything! Pool, lennla, dlatoa area • family Open12•5DatlY. FORDETAILS IUGSIUHHY 3 br 2 ba, A/C, 187,500 Jacuui, sawia! Carefree room. ~k upstairs 205VlaJut•r rJn NIGEL DAILEY & l\SSlJCll\TES FOWES livin&! Enjoy equity oc1:.a. .... VIEW HOMll!. takes full advantage ol Ex-11. 'brm a ba. mod Prin. only. By owner. b~'ld-up & tu shelter ~" Y .. the~and view. Lovely ti at the 494-3436 I h t I I ..._ I _ _...ort ...... •-Lo .. _.... _ _. ........... _..... w/mature kit, 1 'h lot, pa o, nr ten· ANAHEIM --------w ou ma nlenance -xwa .. y c_.. -. ..,. """'" ...,. uurnvuu nls&prtJ,beach. CONVENTION DEERFIB.D worries! Why wait, take leaclt Htfdt ........ wtflt..) '-*•••• 2 trees. 5.iler is moUvat~ SZ4t,5000wner675-&59 a •mart t •-JI the "'•<' -"-calJ• ..... ay ....... 000 CENTER Aspen 4 br 2"'2 ba , ... s ep"' ca ~ '"'••• 2 '-,. mqsaa•d .t.w """ -' ... ....,.., ' For the 500 p · 1 B Personal Service People decks. -~ ~ HICJlll leatly "FA.MIL Y RIM .. WA.a•LDYOU MARCH21st ~.494.~ on y. Y now•! al~ ±afft1._p••~.A ...... , wlMt,::woodl 4tl-t4t4 496-2413 Rumpua1 r1ml. b+l '!mBIRly lyv' si•JIOO. A&.LIY , .... ,,.. •t.s-< VU Performance oy •s -....... -r. ~ w 495-SUO 130.5050 rm. w poo a e. .. • •••• : IEUIVI 1 Call 8'2-5678. ext. 333, to -------• 642· I 30 ldtclt• wltt. 1ecl1Mhd wood off 2V. ba. Walk to beacb, ~,~LEX. 2 Bdrms. l ba claim your tickets. IUILDB'S ~~~~~~~~I ..,.. .. ,. .... sut.500. ~_:.etamlar,ool·y~SSnalf.~t ,-: 14 yrs old. Never * * * 49~ •a .,.,... ... ~ uvy Detore, never aialn at•---------CLOSEOUT Trans!erred-must sell. -. 12 JUSTUSTED! CAYWOODl\EALTY Lovely 2 BR Newport Slo.\,000. 7'9-03:i8Aet. 1--------•I *IM lllVIHE * Woodbridge 2 BR & den, NLAlGGUUNELA LSAOGUTUNHA ~GEUNACHA 3 Bdrm., 2~ bath home, INC. 5'8·1290 Crest C.OOdo, incl. air '" LUSIC USA.LI Only 1 Patio Home left 2 or 3 BR. Form dm'g rm. B close to ecbool & lake: -..1 .. = ~ -~--' 11 in D ~ I l d d 495 1720 499.4cc1 ~"7 -·1 1 IOAT SUI' ........... ... . • •-r-v ~a~ ana ont SPeCIAUST Bdrm+den, 2 baths . a r1um , upgra e . . ~ ..., ....... oewpaint&carpetspus .. y .. u ...... ,....;.;.lb.;...us...;;se.;...__;... ____ _ area, S-4-5 Br, reu e or 3.4. or 5 Bdrm models frplc. re!rigerated air lndi.cpd, $99,950/best ~~!!!!~!!!!~!!!!~~~!!!!~~~!!!!~~ a lar&e yard with mature ""' """~ • J:W"'l·y.Also Income pro-avail. Some w /pools + condlllonlng, mirrored _oe_r_. _ss_1_--068S ______ , -fnlit trees. Priced right au vlew from every wln· T• y_. Q1I~• ~ R. WEBER Condo6. Membe. r Multi· wardrobe doorsh. 2 car MUST souL! l"IM t 044 1 -leach I OU at '91,500 dow ln lh1s eleaant 2 BR 3 Bit or 4 BR oo lease 1 Llstln Se g a r a g e w 1 l a u t o ""-••••• ~ condo, SQ clean you '11 la.od, or own I.be Jaad. Jn REAL ESTATE pe . g rvice. opener ... plus full recrea· Love I Y Ir v 1 n e •••••••••••••••••• ••••••~•••••••••••••••• m1'; think lta new ! A&l , desirable Newport " ain Vf!Mey I 034 . tennis courts, 2 pools and rc:reallon facll. $75,900. Immaculate restoration. ll3©©Ilt}~ •l&.UffS* COlD'11. 1 mt to ~ . 493-77fi6. I 960·4361 • tioo facilities incld 'g 8 Orangetree patlo home. CARDIFF CozyC.,.Cod 'l::ZficBIP& 5."56-(175. Sborea. Pool, tnois .:~··:·~:·_. .. ~.ai~·~·~;;;;......iJllBp ~2l?£?J:~t~:t:: =~~i;g~:~amore THE TiERn RACE ;=··~~::;~~!f~ •99·2aoo ~~~~b!f~~~n':. call: •••• .SUPBIHOME ---------• <Moulton Parkway) just 4br house. Owner. L/R. artist's atudJo. Walle to Labforest 1055 pool.Xtral.rsmstrBR, ~ ltlCIO aq.lt. Aw~ home, 2 sl.J"y 4Br home ln great east of Jeffrey. D/R, upgrades., lndry, beach & acboola. Old •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 835Amfloe Way #9 . te0l. central air cond. location. Jog to be,ach, 989.995 ~~!a~d· aMuto gar doo.r, Ideally priced 2 bedroom charm; move-in condl· •CUSTOM• $114,500. Owner/agt. ~ "' 4i.kd roof, upgrades waJJt to scbls, abopg & CallSSl-l.263 nu. .. cp · ust move in bomelntheideallylocat· tion.$189,500. LAXl:FROH'T 640-4277or640-6500 1mo-we . .... _.~ ... Ready to move bnoe Edison Park. Va· May. $110,000. 27 ed Terrace of Irvine ..... Aa1..,.5••.a.1..v --------645-9161 uu """' .... Songsparrow. SS1.Q238 Features of thia com· """'" lllUil'Uo 1 1 Picture YOW'Hlf in a re· Sellin .. at a loea in. Sl59,900. Will consider cant ready . for Cast oe· 49"'-•057 !axing l ph. · thl • t••dln., for •·Plex. cupancy.Pncedtosellat lURTLEROCK munily include pool, * .,.... * uaiamos , in . 1 $10.000DOWM MONTEGO 4 BR. 2 Ba, " • Siil 900 4 B 2 b th l mil Look•1ng park, and cable TV. Ask· eitcl ve, exec 8· pnme ed fam nn, nr achl • -.. k, ~orlr19-4165 • · r. a , a Y room ingonly $89,500. Hll1k>p Ocean vu 3 br 2 ba, wtrlrontage bm. 3 _8r. 2'h New 3br, guard Jate $1S4, 7 SO. 840•1440, ttcton leach I 040 .r1-R.E. 9L3-7080 r&eadtriw' uomo. dPlusdhe ccakrpe1 ntg&. For A fam rm, deck, lrpl, Prln Ba, hobby rm I Sail from Broadmoor Home. ool 6"·7483 -..,. ~ v only. 536-6263862-53'73 your pvt. dock to your jac, & tennl.s. Comer lot., ________ _ .,.!"••••••••••••"'"••••• $135,000. Ph833·1084 . ..FANTASTIC buy in ~ ~ bch & tennl.s club, Owner wtll carry bal. of $1S,000 Lh~~=us 3~~~f:'f£ic:~r~ 3 n~~~~~m. 2 ~~;~£~:~~[:~~~;~ .~ B~R:~~~af~!~~;~~ ~m~Ti>1eu0aroL~Ln!dE! ~Fun ~~i?,~~~:V~ ~JJ!;~F0pe2B:~~ ~et home in Family PARK PLACE 4 BR frplcs . Prof dee & off lut. with eating art>a. ~ mother·in·law u nit. ~ .,.,.. hOme ln quiet resldenutil '. pvt landscpd. Mu$l sell, open Formal llv. rm. and din. SlO,OOO down and lake *Re. •LTORS * UDO ISLE 87U775 A.cent. area. Lovely upgraded ms!J° swte, entry lutch, house 12·5 Sat/Sun, 3 rm . PLUS cen'lral overpayment.s.673-45"5 &A Newly remodeled, 2 lge HARBOR VIEW. Great with wood and mirrors. atnum, gazebo, owner Pandora (Irvine Groves> atrium for your Jacuzzi, RANCH ltlALTY •586-8SOO• Br, 2 Ba, beaut oak eatec'la.lnment house for ~f~l:f .~!t~~ <;;j'j -~-'-h_e_i~_f•_n_a_nc_e_._B_rk_r_., $114,950/ofr.894·5641 lorooly$126,000 551·2000 LCICJllMIHMI• 1050 Sbr, 3ba. 3000 sq ft, many P&Mling1, atatn8ed glasa, euartive.2story,pool& --------••••••••••••••••••••••• upa.--.. -.cbol-lot.Call beam c ga, Y owner. Ja-·-' •-r-·-a S46-5880Agent. Smoketree Twnbm. 3 Br, O It D G •• ......,,. ""~ "'~• ~r· ~ ... -~· ~ Resale Specialists. ~or S bdrm models 2'h Ba, 21'rplcs, beaut de· W 0 DI I E VILLA PARISA MODEL Bob Jacobsen 752·8321 =· 117 Via Yella. wtw« bar, paal rm & UMDEtl $10,000 corated. Pool, jacum, IEAUTY 3 Br 2 ~deluxe. Many dys,586-1997evs/wltnds ba. Shown by appt. ooly. To assume VA Loan at clbhse.OwnerS59·SS7J. OMLYSl5.500 xtras.FIJ"!lttlmeoflered. IESTIUY 1821 Port Abbey. &y · evall. some w /pools. ' 9llt:4602 8'h'7o no credit, no buys this nearly new $145,000. Agt. 960-1701 or ......_Vlefo 1067 Owner. $195,000. ~2809 qualify, less than 2 mi to LAST CHANCE townhouse . Elegut end 494-5420 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lf you're looking for the orSS&-UOIS . ... ~ h $7" 500 p · a~ ed By ~-er-Lo el 4Br best home In the best --------u.:ac . '• . nnc. To see me before 1 am ~·8600 unit w/uparad cpUna COUMTllY LIVI.HG vwu . v Y , area, th.Ls ia Ill Beautiful MIW ---------• _Onl--'y_._893-_54_7_9 ____ , sold! Tri-level, 4 BR, sep & many other xtras. 2 big 2Ba, 2000lq.ft., 2 blks to ~ennington Properties DIVORCE fam rm, lr& d1ning rm & bdnns, 2 baths, fmly rm. lmmac 3 b,r·,! oooba coodowndo, shl &: sbop'g, nr comm'y }'::;iywi~m~.~r:~ba~~:·. 2·stor)'SSealS '!':~e Y kitchen 2 story S&S co 52 Irvine's best. 759-1501 comm poo • ..,, • PoOl & ten. $95,000. Prin. ·•-vn · · FORCES SALE HoaitWon structl~ nr communl~; If 3 C.utPUSDt:IRVlf(E lo graduated pymts, lo Oniy.&17-6417 i.e. laundry rm., walk·in 4 bnn 3 ba, 2 frpll, pool, ·~. ~e~:.G1~z;!f1~~ -.~ ........ ~~.~~ ~s.t_~r Lo price! •VA 51751(• (~l11$1fi§l!ti§ij ~~dues. Byo=~· Beautiful upgraded El :'!.?.· r~ra~~~~t!~~: ~:~~~i;nP':l!:vf~ f 1 di I 1 WATERFRONT I h 0 C R al '""-tale Dorado 4 br 2 ba on cmr Decorated with shutters, Owner to c~ bal. No or ma n ng, a rge Irvine's Oftly work wit range o. e ~ •~ w arth ton I •-II 15 .. -u:. 1 · 1 BY OWNER SEAGATE V I H 1 --.,....._. 1052 """ arm e es, panel ng "' wa paper. credit. Fu I p•J "'e ...,,., sw mm1ng poo . · Rm CARPET ets on y . om es to ........-• .....,.... mod led kt hn I Larg ti & I h • .. . lfl!rTY & see this great Cu,,tom ,til~ nr & pa~io,, _________ $175,000.For info call: WOODBRI DGE PLACE ••••••••••••••••••••••• red ~ t ell, ~rar l et!:rdo P.;Yl~e $255,000.640-7778 "'f?lmily home at only frplc, 30 slip, water view LARGEST Vet Agt. 541-<1800 Special offering. 3.5 Charming new 3 Bedrm + yr .k tust s$82e .900 oBw or c ren. a to1....:..___; ______ _ $141.500Call540·1151 fmt & b<:k, 3br, 3ba, 3 bdrm. Contemporary de· d 2 b th l . mar e a • · Y park, shops & school. decks, pool, jacu.ui, ten· tached family homes in A~'(; Fre~cb d~~ rp~i Owner. No agts. 23682 $170 000 Newport Crest condo, ··,~~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS · dbl S234 000 SINGLE STORY SUPER open woodsy design. '-t' -· ... yard $1.23• 900 Calle Ganador. 768-7217 7 HEwPoRT IEACH ~Ian 2; 2 bdnns .. 2'h ba, ~:i~~~U/597·Sssl· LOCA TIOM! J~ ~bort walk to lake & Q;;,e~~}.7098' ' . Open Bouse Sat/Sun 12·5. REALTY 6 7S.1642 ~~3 =-~= ~~~~~~~~~ lrviM t 044 IN On the waler of Lake parts in Village of Wood· --------Ne~rt Crest Twnhse, sell! $111,500 Woodbridge. Jt 's new bridge. From $11S,OOO. F.ANTASTIC VIEW Mew-rt leocll I 06' w to i..-acb, ten c ... ·, A•ent67S-S200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~101 'r-• 1.1': ·~ • THE RANCH and bas never been oc· _......-u ________ • Monarch Summlt II de· ••••••••••••••••••••••• WOODIRIDGE I MILETO <>CUM Broadmoor home. 4 BR .. 2 Story 4 bdrm + lam. rm., atrium, pool, separate family room. spa, decking, lndscpd., extra large lot on cul-de fenced. ''The works''. sac. $89,900. Reduced to $125,000 'UJJfif!(~jr:m•emm AGENT 640-5560 A 4 bedroom bome with inside service porch. No assoclatioo fees, Irvine schools and more !or on· ly$9S,900. . d d i l -'-bl Pl Ban-21..· REDUCED pool, jacuzzi. Agl. •-...._ cup1e a n l s UVl&PLAY DU• e an .·a&, ..... 646-7171. -- gorgeous! Great IMWOODlllDGE prof. l.Ddacpd & decor. Newport Crest Condo. C•llfr-1071 bachelor pad or for the Enjoy your brand new 4 $119.500. Owner bought Highly upgraded, hrdwd "BLUFFS" Twnhse, 4 br, ••••••••••••••••••••••• young exec. The up. another & ls motivated. 2 firs, 2 BR. 2'h ba, den, fam rm, xlnt cond, quiet -•UIE grades are numerous. bdrm, 2 bath. Crml din Lockboxes. wrlmn •library. Side · st.reet.Ag\646-7171 . r"N"'5 Owner will lease/option. ~/2~oz~ufrepl~m~%m~~ 494-1035 131-9411 oceaoview. Reduced for --------•I COMMllCIAL . Make an app't. today! 0 ,..,,. to schools, parks, 1257Sc.stHwy, La& Deb lmmed. sale. Owner. LOT 962-44711~546·8103 DEERFIELD 2 BR, 2Y.i Spac 6 Bdrm+fam rm, qulcltsale. 995-3591 -gar, very nice, $73,800 for ~· Cftvered patio. 3000 sq ft. red hill~, .. 552-7500 ....... s128.9so. 642-12•2. s•uoy BEACH private lake & beach. M2-6706 M w/fnry aC'Cel$ near Buf. - S7.SOO worth of upgrades. Swim or boat on private fy's & Avery Part f.rwy Priced at $130,000. IY OWHH beach just 300 feet from ramp. 9.200 Sq. ft., ideal 75&-l.50l Spacious Executive th1a move-In ready home for fast food buliness. home. 5 Bdrm. 4 bath oo quiet end of Lido Isle. SllS,000. BOND REALTY ~ Walker & lee ~~~~~~~~~ ba twnsbse. Frplc, dbl I F..Y. Schls. Comer lot. WOOD BR I 0 GE BY "9,750. 19732 Potomac OWNER, 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. Lane. 962·6776 Broadmoor "Wildwood" 1be fastest draw in the Real F.state arc(' Dover Shores Oil Galaxy Easy UYlftCI! wtvlew lo prestigious ~ ANCHOUM Under market at $97 ,900. RANCH REAL TY West. . .a Dally Pilot 1 _ ..._-.&.. I 0 .. 8 Want Ad Help? 642·5678 559--0092 551-2000 Cluslfied Ad. 6'&2·5678. -,..--,. Great feneed y wtth Dr. 646-2.332 21 IMYISTMINJS covered patio, 3 BR's, ___ C714t 4t6-nl t fireplace & more. Super ---------1---------·1-:.::::.:.::.::.:.::...:..:.=.:..:.:::...::.::.:.::.:~ ••••••••••••• , ••••••••• comer lot alfonb aecuri· OCEAN AIRE •• _., __ ,_ p k 4 br 2 L -.,.. .._.__..__ 1.....1 -.a.-a.... .......,._. ar ' ' .... ly,privacy&ideal enter· DUPLEX --.-._.,.._. greenbelt,view,openhse tainmenl. $115,900 (36) Two up, two down, both · 64C).5357 daily 1·5, 28032 Pueo ·· .. units redone, new!~~~~~~~~~ Barranca, $95.tOO. 1•11--·---··':.1 carpets, etc. Im · Owner'93-7299. :;J**i*Ni:i*Vi**i[jj:f NAME*~ .. J;0~HE i ,_ ii USED TO BE" and .... • ....... •!If•· :f!. SEE BUGS BUNNY COME ALIVE Tuesday March 21 through Thursday March 23. Five '~·· ('.,"' .-• _ 'IJ'uJ y fine f amity ·'?::~;!t:C':~~i!~e ..... ~reatlng all the weJl-loved Warner ~~ros.cartoon • characters. A full ~~o-hour show. Tickets ~ ;if& $4.00 and $5.00 .it nd can be purchased •"at Anaheim Convention • Center Box Office, all . ., icketron Outlets. ~. ~peclal rates ~ r 1roups. 4'erformance You can win tickets worth $10 il oettber ls this B ETI'ER -tc QUALITY DANA PT. « DUPLEX. • •' · • • macu.late. Seconds to the •UJGH'I * s.ta ._ 1 OIO breakers. Good rental. IA YCllST llAUTY ••••••••••••• .. •-••••• Leate bold. $180,000. IY 0-Spad_. 3 br 2'12 at. * ""-* ....__. II a-.. • Lovely redecorated 3Br. Kurr W hit~ Hlalt~r The spacious owner's un· ....--•-, • 2Ba, 11 f amlly rm, .: il bas 3 BDRMS. & 2•-------,... ~ ... ,. wlfrplc, sprinklers &oat • BATHS, HUGE LIV. CAPISTRAMO wH bar • kit~. "back·tate onl' VA }qfJ1 '" w1,n•t Blvd t' B 1,•1 ~I.,;'> 46)1 R M • W I S T 0 N E H.AC .. DA ;TI. ca.. feulw H. Jou or l"' dowa. hall .. FIREPLACE. Well de· Perfect for Jarte family. 2MD HOME 000. ly Ow.er. ?!..'!!. sao.soo. Call ii slped, blll·lD klt.cben. Circular driveway leads _.,,.,, • There la an add1Uooal to tbl1 very large s Minium care, summer or '45. 71J6. Ope 1_.. IOtt : ;~J,&c: i ~ =~p:J~~~::. ~.soo~als-~/ BA ~~~ 1-5. 1200 ............. -•••-• -tr SE PARATE EN · ly room & country HAl.PtHCHIH ~~~~~~~~LEMOMtmeHfS· « TRANCE. kitd)en. SllZS.000 __ _;..R_E....;~_ro __ R __ _. = A I • r. e ,, 0 0 d. d ~ 1be lower level contains FAIULOUS VIEW EQUESTRIAN ZO?QD : l BDRM . APT. " DREAM HOMl!lt lot in lftltiPous area. ... PROVIDES GOOD REN· 3 Mooarch Bay P!aia BEi.OW MARKET Has 3 bed.roOm. 2 bltb • TAL INCOME. Tbe LapnaNlpel CUstom. quality bit, spc. bome, brict '-race, ps larf•r unit is vacant & 4t6-7U2 Ht.OH6 Tastefully decorated & tri-level. •BR, a BA. 3-:~~~\:e"in ~ tewits have treated lt~~~~~~~~~I uparaded S bedroom brick frplc retreat. _. "UNK1NDLY". It'a lnl~ bome comer~ Harbor Absolutely an enter· iDI .,_ ol ._to c:reil· need of PAINT, CLEAN GuanWd beaeb communl· Vlewk'Omea. vt"of Big tainera delight.. Creative lnC .,.._. awtlc brklt UP&MINOR~PAlRS. ty, walk to ocean-beach. Canyon Golf Course. terms avail I! Agt, larPRl!CdlEnJnR1EbyDUCfanUED#TO! WithaL!Tl'l.EPAINT& comm. Jacuui, aauna, <>wneranxiouat 631~ ELBOW GREASE-. you llOOI. tenls, 4 Bdrm. 2 ---· -----t $15C,IOO. will have a "Horse of a ba. 2 patios. comp. Qn1u 'HcfterVlew"-• d different color" Offered furnished. incld. palnt· Ill' I.CAIMI&. W /WA.. ~ IB al lngs, color TV, etc. By ---' J''ll~ Decor'd T/O, a Br, FR, ~,:o-mft-1-:- Sll S,OOO M l'rtc• 3,Pl. only. &4.M67l or !CD I II ~L LR, DR+ much more . ...-.;...,.....,....._. MISSIOMREALTY .7pm,483-8588 Mstalffl•hlh Immac cond . Only•-------- 985S.CatHwy,LaJU.na • M9HILP7 ..,. ._. $173,900. ...._ .. ._, ,.._.494-0731 Helpyounelftoa 6..,-.57 "SOMllSIT" _... IM HeaplJllMlectlooof -ant prof decor'd, 5 Appralul ID. Im. Quallliedffopefula JUMIOV.a. BR. FR. LR. 3 car 1ar, macula•4 8clr'ID '°'9e. in lbe DAD. y PILOr * A* buge brick paUo + many Heart ol 'J\llU.. O... • Sellin& anythlDI with a • Dally PUot Classiftecl Ad • is a simple matter . . . « Juat call ec.51T8. HELP WANTED ADS I work with Orange Co. morextl'u. $219.SOO. For leavlQa.aate.A,aet.Doa Veta only. Homes to persooaJ. preview call: or Helen. 711-4111 or : ~~!:!' ..... ~~~ -..... ~ ••••• !~ • • • .. • • • • • • • • • OVER 60 YEARS OF SEltVICE 1175.000. Forinlocall: PROPERTY ROUSE. m.cme. . Vet Agt. 541--0800 P..ncll T...... ~....;.....;.._ ____ _ Newport Hets 4 + br, pool bme. $11$,000 • t15·29S5 or 645·5'14.4 • Ownt • llM414A61NT '°" IWl'f S °'9111-IW/m 4&>vt.e.•··· .. a Bdrna "Bonlta" pa.. . All one level, new cpb, flcMrtn1 ~ 1buttera. $145,otO. Ownl A•t 13MSStorfM.2l• ..-.. BATMAN: AN» aoa&N • SPECIAL: VllW HOMI TMl.B AICH IA Y So t.tth L aiuo a Arc,h lte~ t Designed. Custom ·Built. 2 Yean Young. Magnlficent 4Br fl Fam •. Rm. Rome With A Forever Ocean Vlew From NearlY Every Rm. A BrlJbt Ir Cbffrful ContempGl'ary W /Vaulted CelJln11. Exqui1lte Decor, Expensive BODQ·Bel1e Cpti. Spleadld U1e Of. OWi • GU£Sr « STA.SI • • • « • ----: Wood. Priced At $311.000. .. • I I. .............. , ... -• • I oet.r le• iltete att..r Reol latete Houu1 llalnd.a.d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••,i•••••~••••;i•t Wednesday. March 15. 1978 * DAILY PILOT ................... .,. ......... , ............... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ t• Vtley 3234 l"llM 3244 .,._~ leoc 6 .Apcrtwi.lth ..... Hwa a..c-,....,.,., 1000 .,.___,. .._. l 169 ••••••••••• •• ••• ••••• •• •••••• •• ••• •• • • • • • •• • • • ••••••••• •• •••••••••• •• ~9"ed ,_ ~ I IO 1 ·,....-. RENTALS 3 Br, 2 ba d1.1plex, ...................... • ••-••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut 3 BR 2 BA hom14, witlk to beach. $425 mu Genet-al 3102 •••cH •1•" Cu ou-.:v -... UDO tSU ma.oy upgrades S47S mo. 3 BR, 2 Ba. . . S.'i..'IO 642·3361 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,.. "' ~ ..,... ~l.5A "" lnclds grdnr. 963-8802 aft 3 BR. 2~ ba • •.. . ~ - SPICl.ALIST Ownermustsell.BestE Own er will lease SPM 4BR,2"'iba ...... $750 Sana.-m 3276 12621 Fluwer Street Sieutrora11yourmobtle sad~ on Ftower St Pno. FURNISHED OR UN· 4~SBa ....•.... ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• <Garden Grov~l LMr£e 1 only trf3..m2evea FURNIS HED MAK.,. $39LS4BRLuxuryHome• 2 BR lit Ba condo 10 bedroom. apts, cl06e lo homes, we spec1al11e in : "' ~•. ""' s happi'n•. LauAdry b h b AN1)11'11'!;~ You bav~ a fleeted P""1'£ + r-rttplat>e Presuttntlal Hgts. new " .. u e11c area omes.EASTS I DE C .M . . DoubleGarage! <9623P) decor,oceanv1ew,bllns. faciUties,ooch1ldren,no PAC IF 1 C C 0 AST DUPLEX. 4 bedroom, J cholce: Large 2 Br +den pets. $195/$250/month RESALES, INC. 21036 bedroom/den, & pool. l and patio $'1~ mo. or 2 $4954 BR+ Alt Bltos' $400. 963-1242 UWlues paid. Call Dt!b Brookhurat H.B. 963·0991 urul new. 1 rebuilt. Rent· Br 2 Ba. larse dec k and u -trSuite +Obi Garage Condo 2 lrg br, 2ba, gar, bte at (714) 636-7343 ed•. ed r ui k I VIEW. $MO mo. Both UO· ..... ...-M: p I d . --------•I ... pnc orq c sa e 1 hi A•-ed Brick ~le' c9621p , rec room,..-> a 1za a •-----e-•-..a 3806 at $132,SOO. Owner I its are res Y p ..... t •. ,., · off ramp. 7l4·633-4720 - - l.AY$1DI builder ls aoxioU6, 80 rail aod carpeted. DRJVE ~I 631-4555 --_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• VILU'iPE now. ~7221. BY S.C~'-- 3278 2 BR. 1 ba. fTpl. ~so will Beautifully improved Cll!ao..ft't•RY2l 111Vlawd0Nord .... ltllMJIORhoch l.240 S2 C ...., • ...-fum.$475/Yrly. double wide coach with 2 '""'1 u and call •••••••••••••••••••• ••• If 3 AMPU5 l>t: IRVl .. E ••••••••••••••••• •••••• Agent S75-4822 bdrms. & 2 bath11; in We1tcllffRHfty WCIMrl,._t HOMts OlrrRAGEOUS2 Br l Ba, --''------- pHme Newport Bcarh 631·1400 AT LAST fplr, D/W. Super area. lc6oaPeMtsula 3807 loclltion. Boat slips avail EASTSIDE Univ. Park. rrcirrace>. 2 $395. 963-4567. Agent, 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'Adult.a only. $311,900 Plus COST.A MESA A R...tal Service BR 2 Ba, walk to shop!>, fee. $395 Yrly 2 br. 2 ba, 2 ta f I DEL U X E WAT E R school, very clean. $<1<10 -......... 2 car encl gar ·~ x. Hard lo Ind 2 un ts, You C• ~ mo. 644-5576 eves Wntmin1tet-3298 s ..... ,,.' · ' South or 16th Street, for FRONT CONDO, Villa balcony, no pets. del Lido. Expanded 1 BR At "°"'9 With ••••••••••• •• •• ••• ••• • • TSL Mgmt 642· 1603 only $82.500 SHARP 3 Br J •.ii Ba. <:pts, ----=--MARIMERS COVE w/be.aut view of 2 turn-WE GUARANTEE Laguna leach 3248 ford yard. kids & pet OK. $190. Nire barhelor. uhl. REALn-646-4463 ing bas ins, pool, ser •Wldeslselect1on poss. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $395. 963-4567 agt. nofet>. pd . No pets Resp . gale, s ub-terranean gar. •lnhousecomputersys. 3 Br, 2 ba, Alnum. bltns, ,..~ • ---adults. 106 E. Bay Ave, TWOllG fo'um., ulil inc. Sl.OSO per •Daily telephone service drps, gar Wallt to brh .....,._,..UIM apt 9 mo.67J.1020agt •Vacanciesverifieddaily !'\am av1til. S500 mo 'lil fvnlish.d 3400 -------A D1v1"011 ot 11.irbor lnvt-... tnw.s1t cl) Nearly new, the best , rucest 4 Plexes in Hunt· tngton Beach. Asking on- ly $225,000 each. Aewtata G~!! •foul! st.arr or counselors JWle. 64().7020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COf"OftO def Mar 3122 •Freetoaged65&over ---\iammoth. frpll·. sJuna, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Bear h l br adlts, ~.500. We have lOOO's or houses. •fo'ree rental counselm.: * * " 1 dplxs, apts now, all ..n......~ d 8 ""8 00 Marft.-J s P5 7 SCOTT REALTY 536-7533 areas. all prices. Save on -~ 7 ays :.,.,.. : 'J'" c:wnits 837·6050 ext S33 fee RENJIMES 10051 li...arltDr. ~tiums 645-4900 Afll "'-Jtlngt0tt hach Unfurnished 3425 For Professional Service You are the winner of 2 ••••••••••••••••••. •••• 6'2·2679 ·(Bi;;,~ N.8. Dbl wide 2 Rr. xlnt C<Jnd. Patio, pool, brh. 1mmed ocpy. Adlts 67S.19S7 Acreage for Sal• I 200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IUILDERS South of Orange County. choice lot & acreage Many to choose from in beaut. areas. Las t or speculative mkt. BKH. (714) 677-5ml ORS22·0530 RB>UCED $7000! Huge Eastside mansion extra rental, present in· come S650. Great starter investment. Now $108.000. Drive by 29.J Magnolia St, then call 642-0282. FULLY LEASED 24,000 sq fl industrial bldg, long term, N.N.N. lease. own er will ftnance. Or . Cty . $295.000. Ca I I owner. MJMI HORSE RANCH 957·0_l44_ - -- 3000Sq. ft .. 4 BR, 21, BA. Pnme Fullerton 4-plexes barn, trees, & etc. One Only $130.000 earh. acre fenced .Jus t re Call Bkr. 714·847·4437 duced. BKR. (714) 676 5717 OR~-2080 C...hryLoh/ Ctypti 1500 ....•••••.............. Westrrunst.er Mem Pk, l lot. DevoUon. al ll•ss than • '· $300or ~ 6-16·4010 1600 ·JUST LISTED! All fully rented. II un ~-1 yr old Encl gar·s Net income S28. l40 Price St2S,OOO Four lJnils· l' l yr:. old Encl gar's-+ 3 spare Net income $11,224. Price $189.500 SURF'LINE REALTY 645-WIO MEDICAL BLDG 2-Bargam 4.Plex <Dnlwn San Clemente> Side by side in great Sale-Lease Trade l'\Jllerton location. New 7RmDenlal&.utes roofs , beaut. wood 8 Rm Medical Suites stungle & rork fencing. J-W. y---Co Only $12S.OOO. Call now! -1' wvn Broker. 558·3327 498-0660 499·2237 ------- ....................... , Call 631-4555 GeMral 3202 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMEFINDERS Thousands of Rentals All areas all prices Sample : $75 Bach. walk to beach tbr. $250 furn, uU pd Bal 3br. $275, kids /pets OK LlFE'tJMESERVJCE 557-0822 ORSTOPBY 1936 Hcrbor Blvd I 1 a blk No. or 19th St . l Acahf Corp. Sm Fee LOVELY 3 BR, 2 Ua w1frpl, DW. crpt, k1d/pel OK. $405. 963-4567 Agent No fee. REAL FIND 4 Br 2 Ba, cpts, fncd yard. $415. llcAoo Island 3206 963·4567 agent. no lee. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Condo, Lrg 2 br, den. Jbr, Hlba older hse on newly decor. Adlts. $385 canal. $500. mo. Alt 6:30pm. 962-3566 640-2019 ---- l br. garaae. leesec Lo p.1y uu I. 2 houses from N Bayfront, avail 4/1 78. no pets. S400 mo yrly 544-4925 NEW 3 BR. den 3 DA. co untry c harm er w beams & leaded gla'!s $850 mo. yrly lse 675-~ COf"OftO def Mar 32 2 2 ......•...•..........•. Spotless. Walk lo bch. 4Br 3Ba Fm rm 2100Sqft Yrly, 509 Acacia 645-7048 2 Br, 2 ba, den, no pets. $450. New pnt & cpts (714) 529-5755 * * * LY"" Lockyer 21111thSt. Huntift9f on Beach You are lhe winner of 2 ucket.:; to the IUGSIUHMY FOUIES atthe J\NAHEIM CONVENTIO~ CENTER Forlhe MARCH2lsl Performance Call 642-5678. ext. 333. to claim your tickets. *** . CHARMING' 2 BR l Ba, 2 Bdrm. I bath opposite wj cpl8, fenced yd, con- park, clean. Avail. lalr venient area . $375. COAdomfnfumajTown-EXTRA CASH? March. $450. 675-3311 963-4567. Agenl, no fee. hoMsflfor cH 1700 INVEST in pnme Long eves. __ _ 1 Reach and South Bay 1 Completely repainted in· ••••••••••• ••••• • •• ••• • area properties Some $525 3 BR Choice Arca , side 3 Br 2 Ba. like new IRVINE WATERFRONT w1lh cash flow ba:.1s Impress ~our ,Friends cpLS, bltns fncd yard. CONDO. 1 br, many up With completion or re· Gourmet Kitch. (S460P 1 patio. 2 car gar. $400 mo. grds, tennis, pools. ~pai. dh 1 menl roJ·e ls 979-.6761 $53,900. 552 5422 or ocve op p r . S3752 BR i::arthy Decor' - 552-7000. your~roNpeorty twilll play Pr 1 va l e Yu rd ' 3 BR. 2 ba. luxury adll you...... w a rea 15 IC Fireplace'. condo. Pool. elr. Up pnres -Call Mike 12131 Large Garage• (6404P l graded. CIOlie to beach 1800 328-84lOAgt. lleftti ... 1 631·4555 No p•ts. S470 m o . •••••••••••••••••••••••Loh for Sale 2200 536·5789, 842-0163. 4-plex. llunt1ngton ••••••••••••••••••••••• CostaMHo. 3224 im2-2695 Harbor area. 3 yrs old. OFFICE ILDG SITE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---. -------- fully rented $230,000 3 Br, 2 ba, 2410 College Funky new 3 Bdrm, 3 848-0822 Huntington Bearh Ave, College Park. Close Ba.gar, 6 blks lo beach, 27,000 sq. fl lol near to schools &c shops $4?5. Jmmed ocr. $510 602 lnca.rroperty 2000 Pacifica Hospital, 5 mo.548-7638 16th St. 848-9585 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• P0tnt.s Stw>p. Cntr & C1v1c ---eves. Center. $135,000. New 3Br. 21)ba. duplex, ------Triplex 2 Bdrm .. 1 bath home 1 with rear units. Sound ID David Bourke Rl tr fireplace. lge back yard. $260 Cape Cod Style' 546-9950 2 car gar. 2 BR w /New Carpets' , vest~nl in Corona del San Clemente R·l level. s.56-6393 Just Remodeled! (4381P) Mar. $175,000. View. Nr golf course, 3 BR 2 BA, (pie, garage, & NORIMS REALlY l e rm s. owner . storage, massive yard. .. , .. eo57 213 935~ no pets. $(2.S. Avail Apr 1. ~: ·* ~ ~ * . · 548-4135, evs 642·0835, SJ9S Best Deal al Beach! 3 BR + brick Fireplace! Double Garage! (8427P) R...tirnu 63 I ·4555 49xl25, will lake 4 units. 646-6423 DUP.LEX behind Hunti n gton -------Exclu. hilltop view, con· Extra sharp 2 BR units, Harbour, $56,500. Agt, College Park 3 Br. 2ba, 2 do, private comm. new 3 both W/prvt pall OS. 631·2740 __ frplcs, xtr~ (am tm, COY· br, 3 ba. +office /den. Owner wil l help finance. BUILDERS !."!d/mpoa.11~~ .. !bl gar. SS.SOmo.962·0778 Income S700 per month. ..,_., .,...,.._,., Red~ed to $134,500. 4 Dana Point ocean view b p 1 -3 BR. 3 ba, cusl. home. 1 Call 640-5112 ...... lots. Zoned R-2. $450,000 . New 2 r condo: oo . spa. blk Crom ocean. cpl only. ..,. 25% down. Balance sub· From $375. Kids & pets No childl'en. No pets. tlckets lo the IUGSIUMMY FOLLIES LOCJWMI Hi111 3250 .•...••....•........... t Bdrm . 2 balh '1ew home. Air cond1lloned. Dana Pt lux condo, 3 Br 2 Ba. (pk, utll rm, gur , pool, tenmi. 498-1453 Hunt ilarbor area. 2 br . fulM11ze patio, nr beach . ~hops, ~<:his, avail Apnl I. $32S/mo. 963·5228 l Br. with '1ew & gJrden near Woods Cuve. nu paint & crpts $290. 49'H401 , 494 6622 fireplace, 2 car carage. Apc:rimlnh Fumished ruce yard & washer and ••••••••••••••••••• •••. dryer ava~lable. Ex lc6oolsland 3706 cellent location; close to ••••••••••••••••• •••••. freeways & s hopping GARDEN J\PTS CORONA DEL MAR 2 Br Townhouse. frplc Pool, tennis. Some orean & Catalma viewi.. Clo:.c to Fashion Island & fine beach. Also l Hr. 644-2611 $575 Watch the Sun:.l•t 2 BR + paneled Den Enrlosed Garage 16i32P) Rftltimes 631-4555 Spectacular View Xlra lrg, luxury 1 br. walk Lo bearh . was h /dry er. frpl c. SS.SO mo yrly Ut1l incl 673-6004 centers. $450/month BOAT SLIP+ I BR furn lease. Available Aprll apt. $400 Yrly lse. 1st. Call own er at 644·<»39,673·5335 CostaMesa 3824 714 /642-0138. a.oa Penin....ta 3707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 bd 2 b II od ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSlDE near new 2 , a, a m . conve· BR 1 B r 1 1 · s c pnv y 2 br, steps to beach. pool. a, pc, enc gar. ruences. pa . ac . $325 pr mo. Til 6. 30 a\.'ail Mar. 15. $.125 p~r $375. mo. Lse. 54Q. l2Sf; 645·CYl2l mo. Ownr tagt. 673· 1181 Laguna Mi«JUel 1252 -••••••••••••••••• •••••• Costa Mesa 37 24 Garden Apt. bus & shops, Beautiful Sea Terrac•e home 3 Bdrm. 3 ba, ram rm. frml dining & living Pvt community w tpool. jacuzzi. tennis & beach $725/mo. Pnss. lse1opl 752.9223 or 499-4611 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. refrig /slv. K1di. M.wport hoch 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO FEE! H<>11ses. condos. duplexes. Renlal Pavilion. 67S-C912 Bkr. MEWSEAVIEW 3 Br 2 Ba, pool, tennis. jac, $84S yrly. 675·0562 $50 WEEK & UP Studio. !•bedroom Maid service. pool 2376 Newport Bl, C.M. 548 9755 or 645 3967 SUSCASITAS Nicely furnished 1 bdnn Closed gar. S230. up Adults. no pets 2110 Newport Bl vd. Rtfttal1G~!! We have lOOO's of houses. dplxs. apts now. all areas, aU pnces. Save on Lease or rent spacious 3 ree. bedroom, 3 bath ron· 6 .. r .. 900 dominlum Newport _ .. _~ __ _ Cre5t. 11100 sq. It with Dano Poft.t 3 726 view. Pool. tennis & walk ••••••••••••••••••••••• to beach. $599/mo. Quail Super neat lbr villa Place Properties. Inc. courtyard, private, $22S'. 7S2-Ul46. Ask for Teddy 496-5293 Mair: ---- -HilntiftcJton hach l7 40 H.V. Homes, carmel: 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrms .• 2 ba. $600. ~STUDIO Agent 644· 7383 ok no pets. $270. 548 72.17 2 Br. 11 2 Ba townhow,e. garage, patio. pool. jacuzzi Adults only S375. mo. 646-2010 Rewtats Galore!! We have 1ooo·s or houses. dplxs, apts now. all areas, all pnres Save on fee. 6.4M900 RESERVE MOW 2 bd apts in quiet setlmf(. close to Harbor /Wilson $290 mo, avail. 413178. 631·3751 Newly deco 2br. lba m quiet complex, slv, garbage disposal. lndry rac, xtra p rk'g. 1970 Wallare. Adults only, no pets. S290 mo. 646-1850, 5'\S-6l5S NEWPORT HEIG HTS .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• •• Adult. 2 bedroom, 1uper 5 loc•lton No p~h l br. •love " r IC S22S/month. 568 w. ~~~ no pe's ). Wilson, tnqwre apt. E. ~Apt Mar. -Lee bachelor apt. cGl>od LA MANCHA .A"S locale. pvt patio. Moib . Larae 2"3 b~droom $195,858W.1JU>St.. .. ,... garden apls. Dsbwhr" _!"'Jtll'# blt..ns. encl gar, gas bbq. AdJta,2 Br.1 Ba, puw, uhl Pool Gas pd. T78Srott Pl pd. $2'15/mo. 32' E . 642-5073 --+-20th.CM. 6'5-476L £1S1de, airy 3 Br. 2 Ba, lBrw/1tove,r bltns. new cpt$, drps, Clo&e tobuaes,s paint. $350. 552·4201 ; Adlta, nope s.'>1 1241 ~18 MES.APIMES l Rr $28S. 2 Br. S3SO. Oma Point '11126 ~me w/garages. Pool, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jacuu.1. Adults, no pets. _..Jfl Open daily. 26SO Hlarla Lovely Z Br, 2 ba l"1!!'cd Ave, c .M. (Mesa Verde yard . S325fmo .• ~all Dr E. off Harbor Blvd). 496--56ooAgt. • M.'>-2447 Duplex, oc:ean view. ~ew NEW e.slo~ USO 5Q.ft. 2 br, ~':"~· $450. mo. 759-0706 ..c 3br, 2ba. Townhouse. Up· •• graded Lge patio Ocean view 2 BR, )...f'a. Children ok. 645-9543 $325 m o. Avail no"'. eves,~ days 541·9219 or SJ0.1919 ---------11 br, clean, fresh paint. LA CAS.A II.AMC.A loch, I l~.A •I How gar, oo pets.,._ 8JO.~aft6PM . .,.._ All ut 11s pd • cpts, drps, t._Kngton hoc .. 31-40 pool, lndry fac's. Adults •••••••••••••••• .... -••• over 35, no pels o r P . beach, 1. t4 J c hildren . Call S u e ; BR, frpl, dishwa•r . ~~g{J., O 7 or II en r y , garage, patios,~· $240 lbr, $270 2 br, refng, pvt PllUO. AdlL'l, no pets 731·BW 18th673·7787 PM TllE SEVILLE 2 Br w gar. adlts. c pls. drps, range, fncd yd w patio. wtr pd $270 2619 'T ' Santa Ana J\ve. 636·4120 l lo 5 Almost new 2 br. 2 ba twnhse w1enrl. gJr. $32S 645-5126; 637 ·5895 New. 2 Br , 2 ba, all bllns, frplc. encl. garage. pat10. lndry rm, $325. TSL Mgmt 642·1603 NEWLY DECORATED 2br , new crpl, wtr pd, $250. 2192·8 Placentia. Cal l blwn 1 ·5 M ·F 636-4120 MESA VERDE, l~e quiet. 2 Br 2 Ba, adlts, no pets $275 mo. 3129 Cmnamon 979-1658 Large 3 Br townhouse apt. 2 ba, frplc. patio, garage Qwet complex Adulti.. no pets. S375 645 3381 or 675.5949 New decor 2Br. lBa. + garage. W. Side, nr srhls. s hopping. $270. S48·9449 IR.ANDHEW ~,. 3 Br aptfcondos, <.'OM'c· nient loc, S units avi;•oo up. 964·1S07, 640-175 - r, children welcoirlti!no pets, starting al $2U1Do. 84&-6007 •• ~1 ------~. Seawind ViUa(t.' New 1&2 bdrm l;rv adult apts in 14 n·s from S270 + pools en· rus, waterfalls. po'"'8' From San Diego flll9:,· dnve North on Beach to McFadden then West on McFadden to Sea).'~i-Pd Village. 1714)893·51~ ** * ,., JodtGo~"' .. 24551 Los s:;¢.§j'u Dr. :•,, You ~eLw:.12 tickets to the • IUGSIUN ..., FOUIES at the --ANAHEIM .: CONVENTION- CENTER •• For the , , MARCH 2lsl 1. Performanrc Call 642·5678. ext. n claim your tickets. • _ * * .... -.. 11.ANDNEW ·" 2 & 3 BR studio "~. huge back yard, cbild'"~o OK. S3SO & S42S. Ofs. * * * 848-26SS; evs 536-481> · • 7~.0.5 .!::4°'a .... ~~. NEAR IEACH• .. "' ... & CIVIC cena LCICJlllMI hach BRAND NEW. Spa&al.; Yctu are the wlnner or 2 deluxe 2. 3 & 4 ~ All tickets tot.he bltns. frplcs, gar, IS Jd IUGS BUNNY 502 Yorktown . JusAVfst FOLLIES of Beach Blvd. 536-17 at the ANAHEIM Beaut. 2 br. 2 ba. dbl tar CONVENTION rondo. Pool, jal'. f,..I, CENTER security. 675·6161. ~ For the Nice 2 BR. nu cp~. · & MARCii 21st paint 8 blks Cr orn 1n ~k Performance , ' · " Call 642,5678, ext. 33.1, lo stores, trans. 536·1286 claimyourtickets. Move in now. 2 s * * * do. 1"2 ba. New •2 Tri•xes• o rd i n a l ed to I oan OK. 675-4912 Bkr Refs. S36-l4S4 Near Lake Park. Mtn. to Art.holer Realty, S48-0040 EASTSIDE. huge 3 Br, 4 br 2 ba, new thruoul. bch..t-4BR,3ba;l-3 BR,OufofCOWtty Fam Rm. Cplc, Just re-prime locat. 17801 ~ be; 1-3 BR, 2 ba. 5 Pt operty 2550 modeled. l23 23rd St $465 Fllnl!!tone. Call for appl. SEAVIEW. 3 Br popular Bar Harbor prime ~n vu 1950. 547-7044 ; 833-3215 4br. 3ba pool home Gardening, pool serv in cl'd. $800. S49·06SS ''WffkJv Rates" fo'ull kitchen & TV Linens & Ul11Jlles MILE TO OCEAN 12 block to shopping and bus. 2 Bedroom. 1 bath duplex unit w {fenced yard. Mature adults only for this lovely country setting. Ca 11 Clyrlc al 891-1013 UNIQUE Park-hke set ling, 2 Br twnhme, (pie. patio. adults. $325 644.4423 coraled. rec Singles welcom pets OK. $340. 557· Farruly Delight 3 garages, frplcs. Sl8S.OOC ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 642--0282 S12·0706 each. 1709-1713 Alabama, ---------•I -----BIG CANYON. Luxunous Hunt. Bch . 536-17111 PartP1oc .. 0c._1ict. R...tah~~!! 2 sly 4 BR, 3 ba classic 2 Br. 2 bat h con SMALLBEACHHOTF:L .Owner. 2 & 3 BEDROOM We have 1000 s of house~. home. Only 3 mo's old. do m i n i u m h o m e ROOMS $32.50 Week Royal Sutt.a Mot~I 727 Yorktown Blvd Beach Blvd al Yorktown 536-0411 7 •~rrsc~. VA-FHA dplxs. apts now. all nu crpl!!&drps.Lrgfam Newtneverhvedin.Wet At$1.SOt moS367056 ..," ,... GARDENTOWNHOME. areas. all pnccs. Save on rm wtrrpk & wet bar. bar f r r PI c . $ 6 7 5 . p ---- S22S Best Deal 1n Town 2 Br+ Builtins• Can't Last! 16464P l $22S I Br ID Great Area Laundry H ookup & Stove. Walk to Beach & OnlyS290 ( ) ~ 1WNHS~. 2 Br l •~ Ba, 2 yrs old. fplc. p\'t patio. gar, new paml, adult'!, no pet.S. $300 mo 646·7027 $245 2 BR GreatL• Rustic Deligil!" $32.S 3 Br 2 Ba upper. Beam Ce1lngs ! (~I Carport. No pets. 1021 Rtfttlmt1 631 .... 115 Valencia, 546·698.S Beautiful brand new 4-1 fee. ~75. mo. 968-6042 Salisbury R. E. 673-6000 1 --leach 37 48 br. Joft, f/p. 3·2 br, 11":1 ba 2 car &•rages. 645-4900 AC)t ~•••••••••••••••• townhouse, all bllns , Ens 1·757-1623 --2. BR. 2 Ba, 2 sty, townhse Bluffs single level 2 Br, 2 LAGUNA BEACH MTR crpt.s, drps. Hurry. buyj~~~~~~~~~~ 3 BR house, beaut ocean & in adl~ com mun w /se.c ba.. best greenbelt I~. INN $65/wk & up Maid now. Tom Lee. Rltr . canyon view yard. giant gate. Pool. Jac u zzi, $575.Agt.644-1133 serv' e<>lor TV healed 642-1603. msl! bdrm, $450 mo. 118Wlll, close to beaches. pool: (714 > 494.Szs4. 985 Triplex I. U. C:osta Mtao 2 br owners unit w I reoced yard Two, 2 br un- ita w /paUoe. $159,000 Call ~lR~ 6UHITS LONG BEACH. Good area and prime Invest· mentp~. Can Mike fordeta.lla. (D3) 128-8410. Aat. +ut.il. MS-3000 $375 mo. 968-6042 oM UDO ISLE N. Coaat Hwy. SUPER 3 BR 2 Ba, fplc, Nice 3 br house near O.,, n er wt I I I ease 1 BR apts, furn, all ulil in· D/W, cpl!!, avail now. beach. S310. mo. incl. FU'RNISHED .oR UN· cl, lndty facil, pvt $415. 963~7. agent, no elect.963-S085orS36·1134 FURNISHED. MAKE park'g, avail April J , for fee. Hlllt~Oft AN OFFER; You have a penn. residents. 250 Clift H.bow 3242 q.ruce: Larae 2 Br +den Dr '97·34!13 Beaut. split level condo near back~. 3 br, 2 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 car garage. No pet!!. H U N T J N G T 0 N and paUo.1750. mo. or 21--· -------~ Br 2 Ba. large deck and S.C.Ch 37 6' VIEW. $650 mo. Both un· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Its are freshly painted $500. 4 bT. 2.,., ba. F.R., pool, tennis, 1ardener. Owner. 640-00<ll 1200 Priced To-Pie~ I Large 2 Bdrm Duplex "I All Util. Pd <5488P > CAN'Tt.AST LONG! HARBOUR brand new end ll&ory, 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, all bullt·in, Jae, pool, etc. Priucy. ssso. 846-4408 and carpeted. DRIVE A.DULTCOHDO BY 2 BR. 2 ba, yrly. S4~ l 11 Via Lido Nord STEPS TO IE.ACM and call MIW Waterfr•t Hwa 3BR, 2ba. bay vu 11050 & IXftA SNCl.Al 6 3 I· I 400 2 BR, 2 Ba .. yrly, S400 Spac u,1 BR condos. I &I~~~~~~~~ 2 sly mdla. Hunt'a Htbr. U(>lrd 'd th~t. Clbbse mG CANYON TOWNJ:lSE It Pl)Ol. $S2:S to S$75, See New 2 BR. 2 ba, crpt d & daily 1.S.pm. 19900 Algoo-drp'd. aped•cu!•r Golf q\jn. A'1 .... 1Jll. Coune "J~e view. sep associa ted 0 "' , ~ ;1 '• JJ : I\ ' (JR S. l 1' Y. I • • ~ • ' ,._' l tar., \OlUUI It p ool. 1_Lse_...;.;t...;..;l#lon.:-_N4-_a._1& __ PROMONTORY PT huce walk·IA clOHta, dinl~ rm. ....... POOi. Aall I« loen or loe Me-1311 ._..~ ... !I Spenacular oceantbay Weai.ve1000'ulhouse1, View. 1 BR, fum apt. No dplH. apt• now. all pet1, no c hild reo. Sa IW>/month • .\yl.11 April ...... allprices. veoa lit. Act, 833·0200 or fee. -~ 64Mto0 A vi..--... ~---...-------1 HAJlBOR VlllW JIOME, 4 l244 BR. t ba. ltt ram rm, ..... &tlloNll We llavt 1000'• ot bou.aes, dptu, •Pl• now . a 1l arua, alJ prk . Snv(' on $115 mo. OO·l·UO. .... .,., fM, '4Mt00 QwetNeighbors (6464P l ReMime1 631-4555 ----'----...--Logma hoc.h 31 lt'Cllld New E-Sld. SJSOSpac. new lnhse, 2 br, •••••••••H•••••••~" Deluxe3Br, den &stody, 1~ ba. frplc. yd; encl. 1 Bdrm Apt. Ocean V!'9' 2 ba, tri-leveJ. frplc. gar,lndryrm,Eastslde. ~blktobeach$290f'\o skylight. deck & patio. TSL Mgmt 642-1600 494·7287 .... $465. No children or pets. C!~n~IMh d I v· -lllO E. 21sl St. 645-9543 Find what you want In ..._......, UJ> ex. '41-• eves 11u" ~"""days Daily Pilot Classifieds beach View. 2Br., •· . -. . lBr $300. 494·7551 , Super clean 1 BR large. crpt.s, drps, relrig, pool. ln sml friendly eomplex. fl.re alarm & dead bolt, DO pets. $250. 548.6885 . 2br, Iba. $265. New paint. lndry fac, no pets. 269·B E. 16th Pl. 644·0452 Eashide Spa n. style dUplx, 3 br 2 ba, D/W, CID, at.ovel )'I'd, beam ffi). %339 g den. '31·3646 aA4:30. + wknd.s. SUS . LGE 2 BR upper, 'riA. new cpts, drps,. Hdr•s to bch .• twn. Hels T Park, MOO. No c~·· pets. 49'7 ·!l 09 ,. U...Fonst ...................... . BR, 2 ba Town~· • fJl>lc. air cond, lot. Lake " club pri •. : 871--.. . ............... ,.-.. .................. ~ ... • ~ . t • '· t I t I I \ I J)6 DAIL V PILOT * Wednndey, March 16, 1919 Lott & ~ 5300 ftwtOMils SJSO Help W..t.cf 7100 '"'£''1. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• E·;"h u..fw-n. ..... to a-. 000 ....-..S t..o.t or 1''ound a pet? Cat.JI W-.cf 7100 IHefp Wcmhd 7 I 00 ............... 0 •••0 •••0 •••u•••u• O,p1rtwelty 5005 Animal Ai.sutance OUTCALLMASSAGE ACCOUMTIMG ~~~ ..... ?!!~ ~ ......................................... . hoch 116'.. l d ••••••••••••••••••••••• LeaaueS372273.noree. •731..0931• CLERICS n oomm• e w a nte . _ _ ____ .......... __ 5 ••••••••••••••• Laauna}Ulla. Sl75'mo -Our ~nveatm enl ad ~-----CIMcaJ MIWPOltT Aft& MJ.3104 Bob 8£ Y1JUR * * • UMDA & YICICI ministration dept Is We w.i 11 tr• In . Baoldn& Ba 1·hel ors . 1 or 2 -• --·---· S~wl11Wlck1 OutcadMaHate seeklnl! an individual lo MacGregor .Yacht Corp, TB.LB/ Jledroom.s&Townhouses M F ahQtt 3 Br. Apt on 21991 lo1AJh,01 ForttM'-oflt! perform accounlinl( l6.11Placenua.CM ll8tlllSENTATIYE Hap1dl) e'(p n nd 1ng mod1l.•I de\1ce munu!Jt tunng c-ompary hw. Im· mt'dlate need for 'l'.!'..' t'rom 1284 50 Bal Perun. $150/mo yrly OWN BOSSI Ml11Son V .. fo Serving nil Oranl(e Co duUelt for II icroup or real Aulst. lldcpr $150 Branch olc aeek1 bond~ mctacul.ir sp.i, total 673-8780 • You are lhe winner of 2 83:5 7313 estate invca.tmenl pro l """' "'"' lo p U &Jlt ble tellerteap1tnl t'l ub recreation program. 1 l.lcketstf!the ----pert.les. The poi.ation re· .,.,,., ... ~ , a P c ... .: representative Plan & see.al program. 7 pools. 8 Ferna e roomate 25•30• to IUGS IUMHY • * * q's I 2 yrs exper. in book· Beach City. Ex~ to~ direct as1oc1at1on day tennla rourts At Fashion share 2 BR. 1 ba duplex Cbooele your own hours. keeping or accountinc. well rewarded in lbls lnpe. Contact Hllda Ter· SR. INVENTORY COMTRQL CLERK <kMnd. Jamboree & San in CdM, $17S + uhl. work aa many hours as FOLLIES Mcrg«re'tCown '67~permo. pleasant a ccountlog ranove, (714)644 72$S J<Jiiqutn Hilla Road. 67S-7B.W desired. malte Bii much at the ll9Z2 El Eftcanto ..... •rH CL., .... 5 de\)t. where all work as a We.st«n Feder1tl Ca ndidate will be responsible for the li t' curacy o f all J C . transactions and reports for computeriied system. Position re quires a work i n g knowledge of KARDEX, J.5 years experience with automated l.C. system (preferrably IBM System Ill), plus t)'pint: skill of S5 wpm. d I d ANAHEIM D p-int -. ~ team. Your backoround "AVtn"• ..(7141644-1900 Supercondo2br,2ba,f/p, mon ey as 81 r e ' ano V'f Oppor.lorlnd1v.whoen· 1• .. A/P •. AIR .~ba-'-""' ..., --• 1 lb'-~ *"""' Mini mum 'pace re· <;ONVENTION You are the winner ur 2 j ~ .,. .,. ..,. 2744E.Goaal Hwy,CdM "~"~ATERFROMT ~M~r. M"!ie.MS:79~o. quired (20x20). Low CENTER tickets to the oy~ math & . problem recs will open lhe door Equal Oppor Employer ., • LIDO ISLE labor cost ( 1 person or For the IUGS IUNMY solv111g. Attention lo de· for you her.,. Call Abigail MARCH 21st tall 8 must. Typing Abbot Peraonnel Agen· , •. :. 64S-SO« i\"enl Offlca 1~....1 .... 00 family). Manufacture a rf FOLLIES helpful. Ple11se contact cy ~"""Camnn• Dr N.8. ,. "" '""u. .... much desired glrlware Pe ormance pel"IOllllel, ,........, r-• IJdo l:slP Ouyfront 2 Dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• line. Sup~allonal Ac· Call 642·5678, ext. 333, lo Ill lht' PACIFtC MUTUAL 557-61.22 Jrnlc. $600. Call btwn 3·ti THE EFFICIENT rounls. lfeQufres a $7~ claim your tickets. ANAHEIM -------- Barmaids-Classy Bikini girls. S4 per hr +. 'Jr to a $8800 Investment, * • • CONVENTION 700 Newport Center Dr Ass't apt. mgr. to relieve PIT'· s73·0'T7~ --AL TERMATIVE which can be recouped + CENTER Newport Beach mgr ol 144 unll apt. com· Port 11. CM. 640-3666 •DELUXE• Mo. to mo. rent Ind: a profit within 120 days. Lost, Puppy-Golden For the Equal Oppor Employer plex, in Hunt. Bch. Must F.:astbluH 3 'br. 2 ba. Re c e pt . s e r v ., Present dealers report Retriever , remale. 4 MARCH 2lst Uveonslte.847-9595 •lllCI STORE• Assist. Manager for Schwinn dealer. Sal $10,400. MuAt have pnor bike mechanic exper. 1n a store. s.s.2·9222. Lease Incl spac master personalized phone cov· ing a net oC $30,000 lo mo's. Vic. Meyer & Sun, Performance :.ui(e, din rm & dbl erage, conf. rm, mall SS0,000 annually. We C.M.~ Call 642-56'78, ext. 333, lo It a rage Auto door scrv .. underground prkg ~a ~ealer in lhl&. area FOUT1d . sml male dog bllt clajm your tickets. .oP.ener av111l. Pool & &~~i~~~~VE 1mmed~ately. This is ~n w/whl paws, 3 collars, * * * __ recreaUon are11 Adullb SUITE, 640-5470 exclusive, SO DON T vie Atlanta, Magnolia. •SUSIE'S• okly No pell>. $425 HESITATE. CALL! 980-4952 '.....,. 86S~m1gos Way _ orr1ceSpace avail, pvt en· ---------1 Outcall Massage ~ n__..al Galor 11 try, 2 suites, reas. 1827 R"POMfY• EcokMJy Found male Germ Shep 10AM-2AM 731-4462 ,.. ft'"" s •· We 11 t c I 1 r f Dr . N B . COf1MH atioft w tcboke chain & F /C vie y /M on the beach seeks We have IOOO's or houses. 631-0900 223 E. Thousand Oaks Bl. loth & Roes, S.A. 543-0573 tun loving arnuenl lady dplxl>, apts now. all --------Su1te421 to heJp him enjoy the area.,,allpnccs Saveon Deluite off ices & 'ThousandOaksCal9l360 Found blk/wht kitten goodlife.673-6884 le. warehouse space w /wbt fe et vi e-=--------- 64$-4900 Aqt 1400·3700 sq. rt. Full CALL TOLL FREE Buchard/lndianpolis. DANCEOFFUN r•,--security 642·4463 or ~28-6050 !le8-878S Beaut. nude girls dant'e '1EWPORT llEIGllTS, 2 st2·760-i O 89 Sml & rap session. lOAM to Accounting CONTROLLER Supervise acclng func· uona for 2 Ne wport Beach d 1 v hlon s of AMEX liat.ed ro's Ap prox IBM in aalea. Req 's CPA w/2, 3 yrs in Big 8 + 2 yrs corporate manage- ment. Salary ran1• $20K to $2JK + itlnl co. benefits. Mail resume to Personnel Director, PO Box 2820, New po rt Br. convenient local1on. ---------SI M 4 Found: blk/lan pup· 3AM Mon·Sat, l2PM to "OH THEW •TER" .PY near Beach & Ellis. ~Its. S'295. 642·0551. A 842 8PM Sun. 62S N. Euclid, j~~~~~~~~~ rl~am1c Ocean \'1cw, 3 Gre:it orrice space. 300 to MoMy to Loan 5025 __ -11_162_______ Anah. 559-6150 Beach. Ca 92663 ....... 1000 sq ft. All sizes & •••••••••••••••••••••••Found: Male Samoyed, FREESESSIONW/AD ACCOUMTAMTS Br 2 Ba in largest , Lido sha pes. some ~ /'!'et. bars I it, 2Jld & lrd T.D. '1 Westcllff Shop'g area. l11le tnplex. Pvt bch. ten· ~ frplcs & temftc views. LOANS AVAii.ABLE S48-4903 Single male, new lo urea, OVERLOAD 1'4-" & yacht clb. $750 yrly ~ ery competitive r ates Credit no problem. ---------seeking Cemale com pa-Offers top pay, a variety J..o;e'. 675-76117 1n Udo Village. You've ~ Found: Red Pomeranian, niooship. Enjoy dancing. of Interesting assign· _ _,__ --rrot to see it to believe it! lrolcer, 75£·5903 Sun afternoon on Back Non·smoker. a.ut..ZS91 menta, serves the entire $300 Beach!ront Location! " -------~=------• Or "'-·-d ~sclBR+bwltms! Call Susie Zaun a t Money Available, many BalyRd.6'!"7486 ange\.NW)tyareaan 't:h11it1es Pd (9634P) (714)675·8662 for a~ sources, all projects. ---------------------1 needs experienced book· appt., or stop by Mon·Fr1 $SOK min 752 6052 FOUND: Toy Collie, Ftn HAPPY keeping and accounting ~'~OreanVu Speclal! 8 :30 to 5:30 at Lido · · Vly at Magnolia & personnel al all levels. • • Windows Ga.lore! Marina Village, 3475 Via '-"UICK CASH Talbert. 3/12/78. 968-2470 BIRTHDAY Call today aJld let us teU lfugeSin"le (9634P) Oport.o.&llte~,N.B. T Found: Class Ring '73. fQXX YOU how to become a " busy, weU paid Accoun· ~""9mu 631·4555 lMOFREERENT 1st & 2nd Trust Deed Marioa HlgbSchool.Call tanls Overload pro--ff Bl d k identify. 642-9814. Lo SanClement~ 3876 arbor v /Ba e r loans arranged for any ----'-------Ye Cess1onal. ••••••••••••••••••••••• area. C. M. 300-800 sq. rt. reason. Credit no pro-FOUND: 3/12. Westchrf & 547-76] I I ?lk unC. $225 1-,.cl gar. Q.iAet neighborhood 192 2134 4<Jt sq. ft. Ground floor, blem. Borrow on the In· Dover. black, fem, THUMPER IOS5No.Maln,Suitel016, xlnt parlung :>40-2200 _ _ creased value or your sheepdog w / gr muzzle. ~~~~~~~~~ Sanu Ana BUSINESS OFFICES. home.CalltodayCorfast. 642-~eves. -Not a public account.a.ng courteous1nformat1on -------Socia1Club5 5400 farm. 3890 I-um or Unfum. Ground FOUND. Coder spaniel, floor, pubhc & pnvate . • 6 mos, black, vie lrvlne& T111tin ....................... --------- •1J,1•·················· '! Ar. 2 ba. frplc. v. asher & \h-yer 1325. mo + dep ~·~·_!ft B pm __ ~ .... Fu"'ished or Uftfurnllhed 3 90 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -'nlE EXCITING PALM MESA AftTS. I MINUTESTONPT BCH. Bach, 1&2 BR. from $220. & up. ... Adults. No Pets • 1561 Mesa Or <~ Blk& Eut oC Newpnrl 11 Rlvd ) 546-9860 Hach Cotta~e. parlly fW"J, 2 blks fr Nwpt Pll'r. preler mature pcr~on, 6i3-3506 _._ RboMs 4000 ........................ entTances. 900 yds So. of !JAYliJBX CO. Br is l o I • J 1 1 J I a m . San Diego freeway on ·n-111 .... cs1.-rl ~ 556-1050. 963-6880 Brookhursl. Monthly Licensed Hom.e Loan , ~ .. REWARD-York·ie from $19S. Avail June B k s ILA"'1• r~ ers serving o . Dog, male w/grn & whl 1st Call 714/536-3133 Cahr. for 17 yrg. Call our stripe sweater. along EXECUTIVE near es l of r i c e • Balboa Blvd on Sun. SUITES 714-837·3744 Pteaee call collect (714) Luxurious offices. eic· Speculators, inveators & _34S-3854 ________ _ ec utive secr etary, owners s hrt term SSLo6t;3/10,6mooldblk& pe rsonal phone cov· avail. fast!. Bill Daven· w h l k It le n . v le : erage, receptionist, con-port549-9803 Brookhurst & Allanla, ference room, xerox, ---------HB. 968-7870 notary. Lease or month --------- lo month. Near So. Coast WHEN YOU Lost: wht Germ. Shep, Plaza, O.C. Airport & Fem, "Shella", nr D.P. Freeways. ea11979.216i. NEm CASH, hi school. 4964492 • * * Lina llue 25 Palos '"-You are lhe winner or 2 tickets to the IUGSIUMMY FOLLIES al the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Forlhe MARCH 21st Performance Call 642·S678, eict. 333, to claim your tickets. Canada Business Center Lost: 6 mo old Norwegian LaJce Fore11t Dr. & San c~·cr Elkhound, slvr/blk, CUC· -------- Diego t-'wy Light In-"'"'A lyUiil .. 846-6061 TheSingle'sSolut1on ••• ACCOUM11MG CLEO We are seeking a person W1th calculator s kiJ ls & an aptitude w /figures. F.njoy xlnt co. bepefita. Apply 9am-noon Moo·P'rl, Peraonnel MAU.Ion HOTa 900 Newport Center Dr Newport Beach Equal Opp Emplyr m/f ACCOUMTIMG Payroll clerk wilb min. ol 1 ye:ir ex:per., 10 key by touch. hte typing. S49-0'71J dustnal 11 ·x.i1r1 '$12.10 UHIOM --Date by choice. not mo Can be divided. HOME LOAMS 1-'0UND. Nr 3rd St. So. chance ACCTG CLERK 72x.24 ' $61S mo lmmcd Union Home Loans ar· Laguna. sm bl cocker Call lntroview7S2·S411 Bis hop Graphics in Oc l' up an r y Ask Co r range loam for home or type dog. 499·2543. ---Irvine haa immed. open. Laura 5819393 or Call propertyownersof$l.OOO FOUND. Male lnsh Set-&~ lngforaharpperaonwho Room w/ kitchcnctl<.' SSl -3218_ -to $100,000 or more. And ter nr Bolsa Chica lb· ,...,.._._, has experience prepar· • $50 week & up 0 1, 1 u '< " 0 1 r 1 c e s through Union Ho me d~. Park. HB. 842_2118 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111g paper work ror com· •UO 97c~ L 0 a n s y 0 u g e l 1-.L.. w--a.......a 7075 putr. Ability to handle __ ~ »-v. ~<'t'rd.inal serv. Nr ---phones t 10.key b Ambassador Inn in <.;ost.1 0 C .\1rport 752·5626 H~~~owner Terir-Found: Fem. blk/brn ••••••••••••••••••••••• touch, t~~ io 4!5WPM~ w It' are gene ra Y Germ. Shepherd, med sz, MAG Card 11 operator heav•yemph"•is ondelJul tfesa, 2277 Harbor. Ceo NI-:\\' n1 ·1LOING OF· muchbetter thanfinance cql)ar.~ legal exp, desires 2().zS & followup. We offer at· ~~l~~oc~~h 2!~[~':.'~. ~~11r~~~· Sl2S mo incl company terms. Found: 8 mos old German hn wkly, xlnt refa. (714) tractive benefits lnclud· ~e & TV. Sw1mmmi.: ------C"=:-z::cTenm Shepherd in Newport ~129or <714) 7Sl-l530. ing denla.I & health In· 5¥'01. jacuzzi. and rec. 1111._: R.-&....1 4450 ... ...._. -....& B e a ch . Female . P,rofessional Photo· surance, 2-wks paid roocn. Daily & weekly DU>tMSI '""u. _....,.,. .....,.. ·Beautiful dog. 845-4$03 grapher wilb reasonable vacalloo a year. Salary rnles sturtmg Crom $<"8 a ••••••••••••••••••••••• rates Call: J oe Whyte commensurate with ex· week. 4DELUXEOFC'S RILLYAM0111%1:D Found:Dog,'hLab,'hSt. 6'75-IM99 sterlence. We are In· 6454840 c r 25 11 p•..,.y "'M-ID Bernard. Has collar. t.ervtewing now. Please ~.:..,.._ · on · rm., seat · a _,., A """4 Vlc: Parsons & Ford, call Susie Auld for an ATTENTION!!! llOROVH Mo•xper.MCHS Work in new om~ Opening in C4st.a Mesa BOOKKEEPER, Full chrg, ex per in &en 'I cac· ct 'g thru f111anclal slate· Man or woman. Work men t a Fam 11 1 a r 1 En. w/operal.ing & budgets. w/young peop e. JOY•· Knowledoe or <.'Om bJe & interestioi work • w/rapid advance~nt puteriied billing system oppor in our educational pref'd. Send resume & products division. Age no requeiit for appt, P 0 barrier if 18 or over. Box 4411, lrv1ne, Calif Must have pleasing _927_1_6 __ _ personality. CaJl betwn 9am&2pm 645-6514 IOOKJ<EEPU F /C 1 Girl ok, M/F. A/P. A/R, payroll , taxes, hnan slate. 11woic\ng. etc. Typing a must. Co pd PRODUCTION CONTROL CLSlk .'I'~ Candidate wa ll be responsible for accuruy of P.C. transactions and reports for compu.teni.ed syste m . Position re· qu1re1 a workin g knowledge of MRP, 6 months to 1 year ex· perience with automated P.C. system (prefer rably IBM System Ill \. plus typing skill of 4S wpm. Excellent compan y benefits and profit shar- ing program. Please call or apply in person •AUTO LOTMAM beatth111ce 1n11. Cole Full or part-time. Learn ~t!,'!ToEntOCEorp. (7l4) the auto business from -----·-·-·-·--- the ground up ! Op-Bookkeeper, expenenced, portunity for advance· w/typlng wa nted Cor SHILEY INC merrt. See Mr. O'Neill or manarement of busy 17600GillelleAve Mr. Pierce. HOWARD denta otrlce. Salar y Irvine, CA92714 Chevrolet, Dove & Quall open. Send resume to (714) 979·0SOO Sts., Newport Beach. Box in, % Dally Pilot. F.qual Opportunity P.O. Box 1560, Costa Employer AUTO MECHANIC Mesa, Ca. 92626 --~~~~~~~~ Exper professional for key poeition in MLuioo BOOKKEEPER-Moullon•-------- Viejo. 499--tm eves. Pl a 1 a Ph a rm a c y . Clerk Laguna H1 lls , Mr A U T 0 R E N T A L Dreyfus 768-3784 TRAINEE Opport. for intelligent, friendly, neat IOYS ·GIRLS appearing young man 12·16 years of ai:c F:ven over 18. Previous e.xpr. ing work. Obtain new not req. Start with lot subscnptions for the Dai· man duties, advance· ly Pllot working with an menl avail to auto rental adult super visor. t;aro counterman. Good driv· $20 to $30 per week or ing req, Call 831-2480 or more. Call (213) 597·0396 e.6330forappt. noon lo 5pm, (213) 498-2473. 5pm-9pm. Call Aulo Repllcar builder Collect. needs motivated, depen· --------- dable helper/part.a run· Boys 16·18 to work morn· ner. VW exper helpful. ings 8·12, lite factory 6.11-2991 betwn 8 & 11 :30 work. 64.5·2702 UTOTEM Convenience Market P051l1ons now avail. 2nd & 3rd Slurts at aU our locations. Start $2.65·$3 hr. Interviews conducted Mon·Fnat: 12442Lampaon, Garden Grove ~-4840 We promote from within Equal Oppor Employer Cocktail Waitress _a_m_. ________ , Carpe t U p ho Is t e r y School cleaner, experienced. Day/eve classes. Place- mu11l have dri ver's ment Asslt. 751.919' So. UCCMe. 640-2700_. __ c a I if C o c k t a i 1 AVON TAKE AVON TO LUNCH CAR WASH HElP Full or part·lirnc. Metro Car Wash Sell lo friends and co-2950 Harbor Bl. C.\1 CASHIEtt workers in your office: - make about $40 on every SIOO you ~ll. You 'll have your own business wit.bout giving up your ncuiar job. To find out Mature woman Cur Thurs. Fri, Sat & Sun CaU Barbara for appl 54().3280 Wait~ses. Irvine. COCKTAJL position open, must be 21. Exper req 'd. Apply Mo n -Thurs , 3 -5PM, Gulllvers Restaurant 18482 MacArthur Blvd. Irvine Cocktoil Waitress Sdtool more, call S40-704l or ----- Zenith 7-1359. C •trHIERS Earn up to $300 per wk -Low tuition. Placement ATOii ftroclmch., Inc F/Tlme. Good P ay assist. 751-9194. Growth co. S Location We train. Co. benefits Compao1on, Ii ve·in. Babysitter immediately METRO CAR WASH hskpng, temp position. my home. 18 mo. boy. 2950H.arborBl,CM CM area. 673-8881; Part-lime. Discuss,._ ________ -831-1388 salary. 847-6629 1• Babysilter·bousekeeper, live-in or out. CdM area. 1child.645-5885 Clerical *Secretaries COOK· Dinner Hae expr Clncut. career minded. Energetic 548-7948 1\e' ~ut rm, pvt b ath. paneled. sm. whse in re· IMTBllSTOMLY Literate, Gregarious cmpld mature lady. Lile ar. l or 2 yr. lease. Lake CMCM. 1969 #A, Parsons, male college grad .... a...::ppt..:..;..;._7_14 .... /_979-8955 ___ • ___ Babywltter, 3 fulJ dye/wk, priy. r efs. Lag Bch, Forest a r ea. Ken.t repayw1tnf plGM ht oc:..1--·-------;~':&idt::pe~l~l::fes& ADMINASSIST our Newport home. Mr. *Typists Ap~~~!'~~ach 494-7346 llarkin;i4·581·9393 co;:;;:ce with 1tote Found: Female Dog. legalarenabasrelocated Pres & VP need you! H ood, 833-2900 o r V.Catfoft Rental5 4250 law. =bl~=P~~~tr!~ to N.B. Looking for opp Busy ore. Typing & sh. -~--1-4-1·------*GEN'L OmcE JIOuse Inn, 33157 Camino Capistrano, SJC. Work for lho agency that ....:.....:_:..:....:..:......:....;.. ___ _ ~·-'••••••••••••••••••• lf for any reason we can· Westcliff area. Call to U30C. & grow w/flrm ~travel. Growth spot. Babysitter, patient person · * .t.LOH.t. * tndilstrialR...tal 4500 DOt arrange a loan for 548-Q1Safler6 PM inthisarea.640-2017. .,.,lleo•n .. en 540-&>0l for 2~ yr old boy. N.B. 1 ' "' "' ... _re will ..__ no "'0°l "" uu Call early morn's or ••••••••••••••••••••••• you u..: "" .. ~ HlfpWClllted 7100 Soellln1atSnellingof .\ WE HAVE CONDOS IUILDTO SUIT orobligatlon. LOST: 2 l& gentle male ••••••••••••••••••••••• N-BeacbAsen.cy eves,~U9 JN HAWAII Shepherds, 1 blk/l tan, 4 .. ~,.... •• lntm'IR.E.Network 5,000·20,000 Sq. rt. UNION 1--yrs-old_._n_r_H_e _P_1_er_3-_12_. ---------4340CampU1Drlve Babygitter bskpr, Wed/· i.N«wportlleightsRlty PlaceoUaAve.C.M. SJS.983l AcctngTIMP<>UBkltpngA --.... -M---.-eou--=-_-1_....J--.. -e-z-.1 Thur/ Fri, 7:30 AM to WF.SLEYTAYLORCO. RY .,. ,.. ..-., •• " SPMLaeNlg '964S27 • .. 645-5044 HOME p'd only. iD malnt. " 1*· • -m, REALTORS 644-4910 l.Grt: Bit Min. Poodle, lS ~ter Today to work kpg, SS u.nlt complex, Babysitter for 4 mo old in· ~No. Lake Tahoe. 3 New6,700' under20'.1810l o yr old, app. l2" bl, in vie. oovarlous aceoun~1 & C.M. C213)86S-385l fant, full time days BR. 2 ba, sleeps a. Avail Redondo Circle unil p • : 1,01ANS . _o_f _M_a_g_n_o1_1_a_1 A_t_i_a_n_ta_. bookkeeping as 11gn· ~76Maft5PM 3-18/3-25 & summer at Hunl BchS42·zs3c ' ~ '!-\ ,. KB. 536-5028 ment.s. Work close lo Architectural ..-Wk. 714/S46-SH6 ~--·-·--·-F o u N D : M a l e your home . Figure •IMTBMelATI• lltl-.a...I-S..... 4100 NEW1830' Units, $36S mo. Doberman. Clerks lo Sr. Accoun· DltAPTSPBSOM "!"'JID to Many xtras. Hnlg Bch. al B Toro 770-lOl I 1 yr old bl/tan taot1 needed thruoul a..-..1R•"-n•-Stle •••'h••••••••••··~•••• Crab&LlbertySt.s. ....ldt 141·2225 approx64S-16Sl: . OrangeCo. . .... ~°:ar~ee W1M. 34, would like single S49-3804 ---------Robert Haus .,...,.1mo +top benenu on divorced woman (1 Lost: one-eyed blac k Accountempa .......,.,~ . 0 E llftild OK> for comp&· ..... W..ted 4600 Mc.tfi!!911, Trust cock a poo nam e d SOOS. Maln,Ste501 Sendru;k::O~~~ · · ulonshlp & to share 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dei4i 5015 "Shultz". SpygJue area. No. Tower, Union Bank p 0 Box 2480 Bdrm. duplex ln Costa Reliable mature coup'e ... •••••••••••••••••••• Generous reward. InThecttyotOran1e N~Beach926G ·5:fs~~ flio~~~ ;!!~~i~t:::=: LOWEST ,=. s1so l~~~1~1~·1~83HJ.~~03~~~ An:;....... $8320 · rent. Prefer N.B./Cd.M, w., .... I-&--••••••••••••••••••••••• °nre hMltl'I Knocb ~r condo 2br, 2ba, l /p, Jun/A\11. area. Ref'5 . -..... v=rrwe lndlv. is soucbt Call collect, Jndlo, htT.o: .. lfso Drtnk.lngproblem? AccountlDJ b~ well .._ __ :UL· to llQl>l. clbhae, $200. mo. .,_.,a TD a __ Call Alcohol Helpline .._....,." JMent.r.&cs.7953 n•1M7-aoe ..-•• ..-. at hnadaya.15-c3830 CUSTOMIR n i re1p. &>OIL eau tsa. Ai'..in Mh••••w P...._tTermulneellN9 .. 1283. Dennis• Den· ·wi· tnhaesp apta, bom• ._.. 4610 Stfllw' Mft. Co. SpirtW IMder A~COUNTIM& nil Personnel Service of .,~~~-5~·A=e •••••••••••••••••••!!••• '4Z.217t 541-06tl 1115So.1CICaminoReal CL.BK ~'Beacb, 18188 ~;&M-li&58 P...tlAI •~ evatt for Retired"""""'"'° bu money San OemeflU. F'ully Uc. At least 1 year of varied ---------am CDtrbm. camper __, ~~-2ndTD' P'orappt.491-7296 accouola recelvable/blll· l•--------1 MMd a R.._te7 lhel1, b6el 6 tl'lr Q to tol~. i.t. • .Ing experience on a c:om· To Prof-.lionall~ Fiod U'. ~&~id• Costa Apot, l.8'J·3'14' RELAXING MASSAGE ....... ri&ed svctem; price ll'l'rullERS L. BobJamt1·LicMu1eur ,...._ ,~ M~ THATRIOHTP RSON Me ... Reuafta •· szo.ooo. 14)~ 2nd T .D. Outcallt·9,494.s111 billings to customers. 50TralneeAuemblers ~-alut.s iJHuMnU> matuNI Dec, 1978. Pr calculate and make ex· Neededlmmedlately {[(t-~~ ~ ••ll1Mj111YHt/ Pbooe•-4134 MASSAGE tensions for jnvolcln1 Looa•Short Tttm °'in.-~ ""••• -4 I •.--..A./ EM""-' .. I MOD&IS purposes, apply pay-Aulpunents •••• .. •-•••••!!•••••••• -•, •·--.. / nwv-. ...., mtnts on account , 3Shl.ftsAvallable. "'3M134Slncellr71 ~ .... _. ISCOITS monUot Ir recoocllt ln-Ku.1Ula•tOM1\.rwp. ,\Uradh''9 apt Newport ~=twltJ 5001 .. ~~.~........ CM'cAU.ONLY t:: w'fi:O:r.:'::: CtlTodwHM520 TELLER RILL-TIMI Immediate openlnlJ for lndivtdual wtt.b previous experience preferred. Excellent salary le ~la. Appl.y la-person: 2S2'1S Marguerite Parkway Miulon Vlejo Crocker Bank f;qual opportunity employer M IF IH turns time into Top $. COOK. exper'd in guest Long & short term as-home weekends, C M signments. Top jobs. Top 646-6716 pay .. You're your own boss COOK F /TIME MO FEES Ex:per'd or will train. Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, LO~ office • 66 1 Center St, C M ~0-, overload _S48_·~-·------ ss1.0061 1------- 3723 Birch St. N.B Clerical 100% FREE ~h $700 Acct.g Ctk fo $750 Chit Office $700 a.gc• 5675 ""'°""' Clk to $700 ~Cll to$675 Secy....... $900 Ww4 PhM: Opt $900 C....,.Oprl70 SfSO COOKS MOW ACCEPTING SUMMER APPLICATIONS! Cooks and counter personne l. Male or female. 1-'ull and part llme. days and ni1hts. Appl y in person 10AM·7PM CARL.SJR. 2092 S. E. Bristol Santa Ana 18032 cut ver Dr. Irvine PIX/Chtl Ofc S650 ~Secy SHO 23002LateForul Enc to $ 1100 ·~~~La.s~un~a~H~ill~$ ~~ ~ t S7001:: ~~~ . I , .......... ACJettCY 2'790 llal'bor ~lvd COltaMesa COOICS I' /TIM! Exper'd. Good salary & benefita. Call Bayview Canv. H05pital, 642-~. &each. M-F yr, round •••• •• ••••••••••••••• "' f 1100 611·1'1 I • ln1 daparttDent and Free. Topl'a.y, VacPay Cooks. Saute at Broiler o.y 4s nite shifts. B•y Marie a.t... Z3'h S. F.1 Camlno Ke.al, San Clem . '200. llt/lut f73..6T71 •"'..a ,..,IMBCTI • 1 1 t•Ft _..,._ ln -u• I Yk:hr lau-· I I er .--....,_ ..... ~-----t o~• Pet SboJ> H••••••H••••••-••••• ---.--"------• ... -... ort r ...... v ns Belanc. ol.d. youJ' week. a.91C4L l ~r.te2bdaptw/samt Retlrf.a1»afttr~ 1.od ** * . *SANDY'S* .......,.ondOlhtt"f•· -W~ Combloo •variety or A ••ri•IY or aonoral CralwlHrt •·7'9a Ill~ No amoke/driftlc yean, nn. loeaUon a aa·w .. llWe. oute~lMuuae !':I:· ~~i:bMfy °t! ..,.~.,&2. ,~co ~~the •Ith the clerical potlllons are Full Umt. Mr. But ..,..M2-Mll elt.altAlle fll,IOO, ISlllJMIDP. '7J.0Sal operate a lO·kt)' stelO N Be1cll ~>w~~~ now avallablt. If you ~-E. Coan PentbotrH at Promoo· B~ ,!!tllY c:er-... w.,. •SHPI LEt• calculator. Ettperienc• COonMr"Of 1to1 • •Week malD&&l.Dina .ooct b .. • a lood t)1)Jq 11tm 1_B_....;.,:;..;•....;..;.._t1'WIOI....;....;.;.;..;..__ td'Y!.l!.arbor new. matr -·~ Yoo .,.. u.. _..._ oL 2 C«Ulled MUNU1e wtu. a teutq eo«nt>anJ Oampbwbebh\d ..__ ,_...,,.,. WbJlc ~T:; .~.:~!:Sc! COUNla..., =::&:rs.;.: = ~-= Uck~~ lkw=y appt. =~·Plea• •PP11 In ~~~ca~r~1~··~J~~>~--~~I fl~;:i_trd~oct~ilt!; =tf;u:,!'. ;:_.,,~ = ~-= =:: .... NeWiiOrttd,_,~ PLANT IOUJU ~DATA 1Wtt1a1 anu ona. atan at IS90 per mo. Fri.SIMl70&rappt. i&::::" • • ---· <hou over •1.000,000 -_Uhe FOXY LADY ASS•• •s =~ntr'p~~O: PIMM CC)fttact pononnel COUMTa ... L ''°"over u 1hare 2 BR. .,..,_. If ff owner rttlr--ANAHBlM 09ite• Meltep CORP <ao) Needtd for teller ~rlenc:. II pre· dept. For drycJ••-'•• plallt. l~ ba, tl.80 mo + utll. lft&.THIETJM~ COMV!:NTION , Ul.JHI Standard Memorl•Dlv ln,_ard. Noapoec:. ftrrccl. Pleue call ,ACIAC MUTUAL t:altbllllf ~ 2547 •J)yl ;U~ua1, Ena; c~ I AnApplltdM••aHUC'ICo Lon&TtnD•l'REE ~. 700NewportOlaterDr. ~ , ·1 .YOUR JN· Pcttbe PBEONANT' Carini, H)OW.51t«et1trom YldwTl .. H•f NawportBeach ~U!bl~U Dr, H.B . Jrnfte':'rto .ba.re ·run. I ~ ~~RCJJ2ltl ~alcouftkllrt1lr San\AAaa.CAta?CM ~ .._..ALl,.11.A.L EqualggPOf'h\ployw Wna' i ba Rt:Kho sa ,.....~ ...... ~I ~Ot"YUou_ to rtltmtl Abott.lon, •dop· ~twJtr --~ &. Brilt°' IAY'IMeS .. _ CR£PA .. DtT0m~~o~ ·.~ .. ~ ~ I illttma: c~ ~~·'!f..t._ __ -&kia•htpiQI; --.... ,. N~Bdl uo=~Dr ca-' ·~ ·-I . .... -. --·· L~ .... ~~~.,•e-. •2•1 1no '"1"11 " ·' -IMdJil)111111r'•tl•~' .APCAJ\B ,u .:C: 641 ~ · 'M/P ·-~ -,; _llMllO .,_ .... ca ... _ ... a nee. Bartell lhriQt &lee- ' .. , .., •• ..,. .1,. I c ~ t•IO'l a(fl,CA_. ()6Aabop.,....,•H8ra, t:rGrl.let,M$-T(M,O -,,_ '-~· ·~ 1.,.,. -• ·• 1..-r.1n1 Maui1 87 ~----T ., MUST Dtuvt:. (et.._t.1-~....;...;.;~_..;...,;., __ ~ ---r". .... ?.: llllflllllll iwui..npltliliNU.... ""•'• ~leiwe~-~:1,...,.. ~,... .w...,, for Rqui~J bllpoaiktantoreCMMOOe SELL 1$ ll~ •Ith• .............. •1.1 lllliltM ... If.II/JI IDr ..... ..., .0.1, ••••••• "41·1111 ..... ,.a~ .. -... ., ...... •ltla • -Kqrfo:Y_;.~ ti ~·· eau n·~~ n.tt1PUolC1.aa11t'41dAd. 1Nata..tMi1Mt, .... '" ean-.-,..,___ ,-. L"·a; .-•·~--J;,.:'. •·., llWlll'l. ...... c LI 0 .,... ...... J/r• Cll'llMllMI-. _ ICNl'Ja. -. ;. • J • . ~ } • ~08~.......:0~A~l~LY.;..;....P~IL~O~T~~-*~~~~-W-ed~ne_sd __ ay~._M_a_~-"~'~-·-'9~7~8 ~· y 1010 "4etpW...... 71f>O o .• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... __.__ ~~~ w~ 7100 Hetp Wut~d 710 Help Wol'lted 7100 •••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WA ...... ED Mite•--101 Office....,....... ~:::::-9030 ."" -::::: ......•........... ······················ ·········•···•········· '* * * .... • ••••••••••••·••••••••• .,.,...... 1oas ............ • ** * * Sut•Atklns TOP CAS H DOLLAR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. -~ *Secretaries* l::mploy~rs Pay AH fee!> l.11. Rcmdcn. AKency 4020 Birch. Ste lM Newport Beach 833·8190 Call fOT Appl/Es tab '65 SECIETA~Y Small COlita Meaa bua1 · oeH firm has 1&n 1m med.late ope.,lng for tft- dlvidual w/excellent typ· 1ng sldlls. Pleasant sWTOUlld.ings & excellent !nnge benefits Must be 11 non·smoker. Call Cathy TEMPORARY omCEJOBS WOMEH&MEH IOLcrtihldeCr+. PAID FOR YOUR GE Re f 20 .8 c u .rt Tb(ee each F~ Bur· W~ra~!:~E~~mar Eam$3400n mo or more Hewportleoch JEWELRY, WATCHES. nofrost, ~-3mo old. roughs Accounting 67,_3475 sl'lhng mobile homes You are the wanner of 2 ART OBJECTS, GOLD, 64&""55 ex.lll/548-418'78 mnch1ne11 , 3 yrs n"w Will train Call Paul, ticltetstothe SILVER SERVICE, Scuba gear. surfboard, Class SOOO addresso-loah,Power 9040 Increase family income, ~(g!2,Anaheim IUGSIUHNY FINE FURN & AN-weULlil.CallafterSpm. graph & class 6400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• be a part of a busy worlc· ~~~~~~~~~ FOUIES TIQUES 64~2200 9'79-Sl75. Dennis. Graphotype rnclud '1 20' Open model Sklpjaclc Ing world. but be rrce to W-_. Procfltor at the storaae cabine\4 & sup· Radio. bait tank. top " work when & where you .wv R1chardFum1ture Designers Somalian plies: P1tney-Bo14•es ma1I cover. 225hp O MC. choose. Sk1llii rusty or Typist. secretarr. Strong ANAHEIM Leq)ard Coat, lib new, inserter. Open to orr~r. walker873·S754 . just begmmn&? Practice SH & typing req d. Apply t:ONVENTION QUIJSI. sz 12. one ol a kind, must Please contact Mn. Fan· --;:.:.;...;;__:......;.... ___ _ inourolflce. in person lo Mr. Fuente:., CENTER try oo. Please call dunng necan at 631-1200 btwn 8 41!£& • & y 21 • • •. ._. ________ , ~3922 _;:_--~-----SECRETARY '·· Rapidly expandlng Irvine based medical de· ~cemanufactunng com­ paoy baa immediate Ta.keTem..,,,raryJobs Robert lkin. William Forthe ol '--·-M Robl led ~ft.A t-----""?r. t ..v · M R~12 R • d f c ,...,...,., rs. n. amtoSpm.w YS '70 H II Id ·71 ~ary / ~ S Increase Your Skills Frost & Assoc 1401 Quail A w Isl emam 8f Q 213-968-°"4, ooce in a lile --~-----u • rege e , Strong typing ai s . App-CALL HETTY St. Npt Bch. __ __ Performance time value'. l'leos & OrcJaM 1090 OMC, 1/0 eng, 210 hp, ly in person to· Mr Call&t25678, ext. 333, to NEW FURNITURE ••••••••••••••••••••••• new canvas, lull cover, Fuentes, Robert Dem. lmm1ed. POIS& 'hltiortnst avail YA.RDMA.H clwmyourtickets Beautiful African Zebra Baldwin organ, walnut. cutty cabin w/bunks . • , need for Secretary to ,. ha n dle busy a nd q\Challenging position re- porting to Regulatory Af- fairs and Q.A. Manage- ment W·1Jliam Fr~t & Assoc., '" ong s 0 crm Rental center has open· • * • sk.in. Tanned & treated. Back Bay slip. Xlnt cond "" · t I t M d synthesizer, au t o 1401 Quail St, N.B. ass1gnmeLOCn 8 cATosleONo I" g:. for 2 m e n . Poodl r ove to Adult sue. Best offer. rhythm, s uper cood. $5:1()(). Frank 759-0941 or your area. ... Mechanital knowledge 3 es, l em, 543-9190 biS-1078 SECRETARY YOURCHOICE. WeOf he~pful, noal"handwrit-2 males.Togoodhome. Repos.i>ssion Center o t 1..:...;._:___,_. ______ $1000.962-7341,636·2576 7 hrs per week. Typing, fer: TOP PAY ... NO FEE mg nee. Weekday o!C. ____ 54_6_·_284.8 ____ 619E. 4th St .. Santo Ana CERAMICS-Figurines, lg Organ. Thomas w/Leslie phonework.545-4610 557-6122 WiU train. Apply, 1930 St, Bernard female. 2 Open9:30.6Sun ll -5 ceramic dogs, plaques, s peake r , 32 pedals . • • • • T-S Newport Bl, CM ~"""' n--.. ~ big yard CREDIT OK also others made to or-Bargain $it2S. 586-8391 Ideal candidate must Service Station Allen--VT" _..,, .. ..,..,. · W-L-e L--..1-..a der. 8'6-8579eves. ha v e 3 5 y e a r l> dant, exper'd. Day & Temporary Div or ots/papen1. 631"3875· _.......,. ~ Upright Piano, $"1~ Xlnl secretariat experience. Eve1>. Full & p/tim~. Ap· Asoobigcail Abbo4.DAgeNn~ ~~~; v':~is":i~s~rh!k~ LAB Ml X-8 week old •Quallty Fumttu...• 1:17~ts,VpWianov. baanby. ileeml :: condition. 30• Sport Asher 1978 SEA RAY typing skill minimum or ply, Shell Station, 17th & 4 ampus r, · · $140wk. 673.2515 pups. Adorable & perftwt •You c• Afford* .. 875-0142 Out.ricaers-VHF radio 65 wpm. s horthand 80 Irvine. NB children's dogs. 644-9664 ,...,_ II Red -' HURRY! 642·3848 Bait tarlk-depl.b sounder nd d b -----------___ vrostico Y tJCeo "192S" oak upright piano. and,.. h M wpm a E ICl~P ~ne ex· Service Sta Night Attend Tow Truck Dnvers ('X· M«-chandls. Hundreds of Siylt:>~ 4 King Tut adlt tickets to t67S. •u'1c ore =~r~nefi~ P~~s :~oh~ 20rS rute~ a wk. Apply, per'd. Top pay. Apply , ••••••••••••••••··.·•0•0•5• ~ ••••••••• ~~.s.~ SP9Cia1Pric~ trade for any evening. 67S-3282ask_fo_r_R_u_dy_ DetROloat. I Only i.hanng. To ensure an ShelJ, 17lh & Irvine.NB G&AveWNTBow642ingl~!~ Irvine AnffqYes r dd d °" Housefula SSl-555 eves. c_,,.;-Gooch 1094 s~1a1 Prite I to> "leW plea•c . ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 51~ t. lonbglcustob m pa . eh F EE Wb . I t rred ~ ~'7 r--ear Y in ,r. ~ Serv Sta Help needed 1m· -----porla e a r w 1 t R DELIVERY t sw1ve overs u ••••••••••••••••••••••• $39 950 l'all or a~ply '"per:.on. 9 med. Full or p/t . Apply. TOW TRUCK DRIVER MUSIC IOXES mult.Jplex tuner, 8 track --:========! chair. tbl & chai rs SCOTT Super lite s lci • ttm.-12am 900 E. Cst Hwy, Nwpt Exp. mech. ab1hty. gd &tumtable·allarebuill w /smoke glass lop boots szA,xlnt cood.$85 HARRISOM'S Bcb. pay+ comm & benefits CLOC«S ins·plus two custom • * * chrome base. Full lngth SS7-~ SEA IA y A.C. Auto Service l 14C Slot Machines. Nickelo· wrought iron bar stools Robert ke4ty mink. bdrm set. 552-5880 N caue Los Mohnos, San deons, phonographs Sharp! 581·7446. 8602 SGb1e . . TV, Rocio. 3101CoastHwy, .B SHILEY INC. .. 17600G11lelle A venue Irvine, CA 92714 (714) 979 0500 SEWING OPERATORS I st & 2nd Shifts Clemente. 492-3805 • World's I argest selec-h Must Sell Antiq English HIR Steno 1098 63 I ·2547 t 1 o n . A I s o g i ft s . **I BUY* * Hwtthtgton leoc hutch 1830's, hand craft-••••••;•••••••••••••••• --------• Equal Opportunity Employer SECRn'ARY We c urre ntl y h ave secretarial positions open and are seeking personable 1nd1v1duals c.-apable of handling a variety of secretarial duues. Xlnl typing & sh reqwred. $750 per mo. PACIFIC MUTUAL 700 Newport Center Dr Newport Beach Equal Oppor Employer TR A 1 NEE -Sale s, rurniture, a ntiques . Youarethe winner of2 ed circular center mir-Btfu12S"COLORTVcon.18' F1berglass. 14' w~ Clerical, Gi ft Shop, American International: Good used Furmture & llcketstothe ror. Mkt valu $3000. bst sole. $1S8 1 yr warran· huU.veryreasooable.No Prerer HB r esident, 1802 Kellenngi Irvine. Appllances--OR l will IUGSIUHHY olr ovr $2500. Must sell ty,l~eedeltv.642-~. trailers. 549-3400 or must drive. Interesting Ope Wed s sell or SELL for You. FOLLIES diam. cluster cocktail 645-9925 Immediate openings for 754-tm. n .-at. .. ..... tTERS •UCTIO... --------1 pos1t1on for someone ~ ,.. " llh ring 1.5.SK. 14K gold & 22" Zeruth Color TV. $100. , . ~~d ~~:i4:ig~~~f0';.!~~ over 30.714-673·2634 or ---------646-8686 & 833-9625 t<NaAH~IM wbt. gold. Mkl valu Runs great.~ Ted 775 L~:~.2~ru-:~.~~~~ri~! growing medical pro-Call 213-430-499'l. SfE~~uR£TH CASH PAID CONVENTION $1400, Bst ofr ovr $850. Shalimar U, eng., 80% restored. Jn ducts company. Mus t be TRAVELAGENT AmericanOakAntiques For gd used furn, anti-CENT EJ\ 493-5345.542-2756· Sansui QRX5001 Quad, water N.B. $1250/ bst of. able to read and follow with e xper. selling &Fine Reproductions ques&clrTV's,957-8133 Mf~~~;lst HOLLYWOODSQRS $1100/bes t o trer . fer.S56-6733dys. _ speclficatibeons. r~xcellep~ c ruises /tours. To p 750 E. Dyer Rd. S.A. p rf WlNNER Des Pe r ate . A fl 5 ; Sacrifice, must sell! l8' company ne i s. pro I benefits. 675-1311 (at Newport Fwy) 1 yr old sofa $110, 2 barrel e ormance MUSf SELL ThermaSol 666-~ Se a c r " ft w / 8"' HP sharingprogram. ---------751-3922 chrs$25ea Call 642-S678, ext. 333, to SSD Hd .. ~ Applyinperson "Plt&VELAGEHT -84G·6049 claimyourlickets. Model 150 me loats&McmiH Johnson, pwr till, aux. or by telephone 1""' * * * ~mbath to P~Y taxes. ~-..+ trolling mtr VHF radio. 9a.m. · 11 a.m 3 yrs minimum--0nly WHOLESALE China Cabinet Medit. ----------1 ~~re~~ 023i •• :;r.r;~-; ••••••••••••• DF, water' temp, bait SHILEYLA.BSIMC needappty.Ph6"4·S373_ TOTHETRADE $300. LEAVING Area. Lillian g · ex Ganeial 9010 tank, Bimini suntop. 17600GilletteAve Tme$7280 Fee Paid NOW QP£N 546-3642 Ballard membership ~ 56· ••••••••••••••••••••••• storage cover, bvy dty I CA 9271• • I trlr. Many extras. Like rvme, .. RECEPTIONIST fWll-a-way bed, 48", $25 price. Includes $20 . Sears E ager 1 18' ree * 111 * new. $ll,OQO. value. A~k <71'1)979-0500 Your sunn)' smile & de-TQ PUBLIC Verygoodcond. t ransfer fee . $150. power mowe r $80. Wl'ft.Prnsey ino$75()().8J7-392'7 Equal Opportunity sire to learn will bnn~ 840-2358 646-6188 a rt 6P M or 644-7367 ~"O Employer success w /busy firm! ! OP EN 7 DAYS wknds MiscelaneOYI -------2629 Harbor ll<td. loah, Rlftt / SECRETARY Call Cand:ice, 848·1288. AWEEK9-6 3PCSect.Ushape,seats KING CAMBRIDGE W.ted 8081 CostaMHa Charter 9050 We :ire currently seek in$: Sewing, industrial. Hot AJso Fee J obs Dennis & SundoWft ~Ltd 10, loose pillows, super W A T E R B E D ••••••••••••••••••••••• You are the winner or 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·• Pe o PI e o r I en led Alr Balloon. No exper re-D c n n i s P e r son n e I 15292 loho Chica comfy, natural tones, w/ultrasonic vibrators & * * * ucltets to the Charter plush 60' yacht. -,coretary w good typing q'd. &t2-354S Service or Huntington H.I. '7 I 4J 89~7509 $700. 67S-4l42 h 3 -1 1 IUGS IUNMY reasonable. hourly 0 1 f• 1 Be b 16168 Bea h • -eater : ra1 s s tee .... -.1.. M....a&..-w• skills ,nJoY x nt com-ac ' c . ~~~~~~~~~I VERY VERY SPECIAL l moc.orcycle trlr: Dyna-_. U1'n'a' • FOWES daily. Newport675-2l72 panybeneriti.. SEWIHGOPRS TYPISTWA.HTED -only, custom-made 8' Gym; Mlnolta SRT 101 , 24005NrnaYlata atthe Apply9um noon EXPER'DONLY BRASS s tereo credenza, 1n wide andle 2x telephoto He--'leedl ANAHEIM Mon Fri Personnel .,,,., 3472 D l 3 CM F 1time position an our LIGHT FIXTURES --o ~,.... • MARRIOTT HOTEL ....,.. · ep · typing dept Xlnt work-00 pecan. solids & veneer. 200tnm. trlpod & case. You are the winner of 2 CONVENTION 900 Newport Ctr Dr SlITER, one 9 yr old girl. ing conds & co benefits. 8AW~RJ" An $1800 vlu, priced at 770-2749 tickets to the CENTER loots. Sail ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9060 Newport&ach Vaned hrs-Aftns, eves, Must be reasonably fast HARDWARE $600 (cabinet only). C f t IUGSIUMMY Forthe .• 1-:qual Oppor Emplyr occas. overnights. Your &accur Apply in person, SULLIVAN'S 581·7909 art 5 or msg. c~~~ o'::ta:!i~uat~~l~e&; FOLLIES MARCH 21st m/f home or mine. Send refs. P e nn Y saver • 166 0 ANTIQUES 836-1234 irregulars. 549-8181 at the Performance FUJI· Y AMA.HA DEALERS Yacht Brokerage Listings Wanted! SITI'ER. P.O.Box 1278, Placentia, CM 1237 So. Maio, S.A. Tbl & chrs, couch & lov-ANAHEIM Cal II 642-567t~' kext. 333, lo SECRn'ARY N.B.92663or cal1 549·5072TYPIST . P /TIM E. N. OpenDaily,541-4174 eseat, qn sz brm set, MM~:r'os:o~~.c~~~n:'s~ CO~~ON caimyou;~:ts. Sollthwestenl Yocht Sales 2616 Newport Blvd. ror West Coast advert is-aft. 6pm. Costa Mesa, afternoons AppliancH 80 IO _842_·_0534 __ . M_u_st_s_e_ll_. __ rugs, antique poker ta-For the 1ng office or N<.'w York Soc. Dance & health club $3.00 hr. Call 979-0433 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blk & Wht breakfast or ble, arcbJt lamp, gultar. MARCii 21st loah. Mainhtlanca/ Newport Beach based publishing com-ndsdirectors. mgrs. etc.---------FRGHT DAMAGED game set w/6 swivel MHll54aft7PM Performance pany located in N.B. Ir P.T. earn while U learn UTILITIES H<YfPOINT -SALE. 3308 chrs. 2 hanging Spanish Call 642-5678, ext. 333, lo Ser-fie• 9020 ___ <1_14_)_6_73_-92_11_-=-j l •••••••••••••••••••••••FOR SA LE OR i<)u are a take charge $2.000 mo. or more. Its COORDIMA. TOR W. Warner nr Harbor, lite fixtures. Beaut. old Wrne Cooler New. Walk in claim your Uckets. person who would enjoy easy. 973-9183 Santa Ana. 979-2921 quilt. Framed seascape. Refr. Cooler $850. Call * * * * * * CHARTER. 1970 S7 ' Robftt Ste•.,.1 Columbia. 67S-207S ma n y diversi ried _...:_ _______ Rapidlyexpandingcable "Ditto" dupli cating 64S-2020lil8PM responsibi11t1es. pl<.'a~e ---------television co. has an im-CASH PAID Exchange 2 Tut tickets I 065 A.dmfts Lido 14, #3422, toP sb:ipe. EC .,.. RY r mach. 2-whl'd steel t rlr. • caJI 759-0831. Xlol com-SR. S Rii;1A med. opening or a For Wshr/Dryrs /Refrjg Wheelbarrow. 551 .1701 _panybenellts. Opportunity at our ulllllies coordinator. The workmgornot957-8133 SCRAM 'ETS May 3 oi:.. May 22 for 1 Costa Meso full racing gear, $1300 . 1. before March 25. 644-8700 You 3re the winner or 2 675-6161. Newport Beach cor-pos1t1on dem ands a SECRn'A.RY porate offices for an ex-highly productive, pro-__ W_ashers __ ,.'if_D_ry_tt"S __ :• NEWPORT BEACH penenced, well qualified ress. indiv. who will , •. 2 gal ore. 4 yrs exp, type secretary with xlnt typ-perform joant fielding Dix models, completely d h $700 ·1 l · · reblt, r efinis hed , yr ;· 65+. 1ctap one, +. mg & shorthand skills to w/ut1 1 y engineering ; &W·46l3 work for our Tax Audit-personnel, secure ex-guarantee. Your choice • mg Managers. Some tax cavaling perm its & $1.30. Free delivery • SECRETARY LEGAL related expos ure d e· maintain data on con· Grand Opening Sale ! Newport Beach s1reable. Position also s t r uction. in Los March 15-31. ! for corporate counsel or requires some statistical Angeles, Orange & No. So. Coast Appliances • major NYSE Corp.head typing. Xlnt benefits. San Diego Counties. AP· ne west s t o r e (714 ) l quartered in l'~ai,hion 11 1. be( IU S31-3964or537·2542 • Isle. Xlnt working cond & Salary open. Please ca p 1cants must am ar =========~ , LJ.Dda Higgins al 640-1900 w /aerial & underground ~ 1 fringe benefits. Looking util. construction & be Hotpoint gas dryer D t Q "d S tickets tolhe --------ecora or ueen s1z" ANSWER Want lo b11v Queen Bed bedspread, W&J gold -IUGS IUHNY SELL idle items with a floral, like nu. Sac. $100. Appeal -Yokel -Mxlnl1 co~d-R~~s6t~lso FOUIES Daily Pilot Classified Ad SOC Evening Star N. B Mince -Lizard -ape trurror • at the 642-5678. Dresser, recliner & Fr DIPLOMA Office fw Rit•t & ANAHEIM Prov. night stnds. xlnt I don't trust m y docto_r. ~...... 8085 CONVENTION He says he has bis ••••••••••••••••••••••• CENTER cood. 830-3119 aft 5pm DIPLOMA on c assette Workbenches. wood & For the Btful Barker Bros tape. metal, glass showcases, MARCJl 2lst fruitwood china cab, ovaJ cash boxes, files $35-85, Performance tbl. 4 cane back chrs You don't need a gun to soUd wood desk $6S. CaU 642-5878. ext. 333, lo w/gold velvet cushions. "draw fast" when you drafting stools, exec. & clalmyourtickets. like new, paid $1800, sell place an ad in I.be Daily sec'y chairs $25-45. ____ *_*_._• ___ _ knocks often when you use re.suit-getting Daily Pilot Classified Ads to reach the Orange Coast markeL Phone 642-5678 ;. for xlnt skills & 1·3 yrs · I $75 : legal exper, corporate ~!.iu!~e~~\:J:S~r~: 96().Q65alterS PM ' p ref'd. Salary com -Swim coach-S.C. Swim bl ...._,_ rr , I e. u.un pos. o ers an Ad . l . d b . d ,, mensurale w ex pe r . Cont. Sml comm. assoc. xlnt s tarting s ol & m1~a s1 e '1 s~ e $900. 548-Sm. PiJot Want Ads! Call now t y p e w r i t e r s & . Ganlgt w. aoss ...:.;;642-56"78;;;;:·-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-::J~c~alc~u1ga:~to~rs~.~63~t~·2'~1'~77~. =::J:CJ:ass:::m:1ect=A:m:::::64:2:-5678:;:~~~~~;;i~~ ····················"·· . l Please call Carolyn May thru Aug. Ms-1143 benefit pkg. Applicant Reing. 3 door & ice . Eadie dys, 548-4213 eves. should forward resume maker. gm. Moving out. C AM~~~NC. orapplyinpersonal: ~~800, sell '300. • Switchboard Opr. Will TM Coiawa•lcatiou l, SECRETARY train. Mus t be avail COAlpmty llcydn • Mort I~ wknds&eves.645-8197. 3303AHarborBlvd ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8020 Bay Shores-antiques, plants, clothes, misc. Sal !H. 2581 Vista, Newport. 110 Cect1 CM All Day Wed 3-IS & 16 Toyota Hilux- Truck, Misc H/H Items. Corne r Dogwood & March 22nd thru 25th ONLY! t . qaqe~ CostaMesa,ca92.626 NEW&USEDBIKES Secretary 1o secondary market administrator or TB.EPHOME Equal Oppor Employer Recoad. Buy, sell, trade. · S •LES Cycle & Co. 2488 Newport a national mortgage in-"' Blvd. c.M. 642-7910 Monrovia, CM. Wed/· ·~~~N~~ Thurs U to3 PM. Wheat, ilot; poGpOUPPi That's pot-pour·ri: a confused collect1on. a miscellaneous m ixture, a hodgepodge. ~~~ ' • surance company in SEA.RS Newport Beach area. Waihn/Waltnuff Cah 1035 Send resume lo Ad#231. Sears, Roebuck & Co. ••••••••••• •••••••••••• D .1 P 'I t Bo 1560 bas lmmed. openings for Must be ~le oriented. PERSIAN. Blue male. I' al Y lo . x • t e 1 e p h o.n "e's ales $4 hr. Vac, sick days, In-CFA reg. 9 wits old. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 representatives. Full or SW' benefits. 644-5404 494-7865 or 499-4816 Julie Secretarial lmmed. open-p/Ume. Xlnt company H I·~· gd sbthand & typina benefits. Pd vacaUon, pd Waitresses, ostesseSos. "-8040 " bolid 1 dis Bay Marie Rest., 2371 . --r s Its A MUSf, ability to ays, emp oyee . · El Camino Real, San ••••••••••••••••••••••• work wll.b figures. Home cnt. Enter a challengmg Clemente«-7962 DOG TRAINING & grinder, assorted freeze dried loods. Ter- rific value, must sell. Muchmore. Garage Sale. Brother con· sole sewing m ach. Rotisserie BBQ. Other junk. 556-3509 8060 & ~ building construction ex-world ol U,lephone sales. Your Place or Mine t per helprul. 546-1161. Apply in person Sears. w A I T R E s s E s . John Martin 548-0059 SHARE HORSE P Roebuck 6: Co. Santa H o S T E S S E S . ---------E'"""". ride to shr ex- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. !iecretary -Brokerage. Ana Central service. 400 BUSGlRI&High quality Beaut yel. Lab pups, 7 -_. t for aggressive yacht Weal Warner Ave. Ap· dinner bse, bas day & wks, $50. Gail Ryan, pense or Appy ma re. ~ sales company. Nancy, plicaUOPS accepted Mon nite openings. Apply The 979-5340 ore. 545-6996 ~~ 0 • Ca r 01 Y n · 673-9211 tbru Sat, 9 am to 4 pm. Wllllamsburg Tavern, home. --------- SECRETARY to W. Coast Equal Opportunity CM. 754-1T16 . L . C Jw1ll 'f 8070 . Emptyr. Spnnser Sparuels, AK .. '•••••••••••••••••••• Marlne 5ales Manager , Waitress H.B. area, p/t. champ. lines, liver/wbt, exper euent~al, x.lnt Tele. ules adv, lull or p/t. Exp. pref'd 9wk.a, shots, 646-7686 • w/fi(tlft'JS, typmg le or· Some sales. S3 hr + Call aG-7212 art 4PM tcanlzaUoaal akilb. Some comm. 835-9692, 835-3861 GERMAN SHEPHERD, ·in·houae uies, good WAITRESS AKC, s wee ks, Xlnt f u ture • b e n e.flts. Part & F /Ume. Exper. quallly. Good watch n~ Teller prer·a '°" private coun-d<>gs. 638-9308. try club. 556-3000 for Secr~tary to realonal pt '* * * s a 1 ea m gr • a d -._......leach ap · Geonp Hagen mlnistrative duties. Full Wanted a few 1 ood 5094 Ct.it w-tti"'4 Lai 'Nig area. Call Wearearapldlyexpand-worker.-, P/Ume & ~_,., _ _...:• di.» OI' nii\it 499-4386 Ina liuaci.al U.UtuUon F /lime, tor cleaning, --""' with an Immediate need 1ardenln1. • 1eneral You are the winner of 2 i SICllTAIY for a Teller io our Ugbt mah1t. Apply In licketstothe ;E>ql9rienced part Um., Laguna Bea.ch branch. penim. 3sm Del Ot>i.apo, IUGS IUNNY typet•hrt.lmd. Newport We are looking tor a Dua ..Point. 8-6P M fOWES Beacb.644·5460 personable, public-weekdaya.49>6222 alt.be Griented indJvldual with .. .., .. 0 EJM SICR.ftAAY /CUC 6 mont.bl-1 year ol cash Wareboase . "' .. "° bandllna experience, Genl warebouae ror ~ON Pft(enbty in a rmancJal m • rl n • hr d w r co. For the ln1tltutlon. Prevlou1 ICMIOO. MARCH 2lat WANTED TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID FOR YOUR JEWELRY. WATCHES. ART OBJECTS, GOLD, SILVER SERVI CE, FINE FURN & AN- TIQUES. 645-2200 Uadtlllery 1078 ....................... LE-Blood 18"d3 ·tapers & tools 12,750. Colchester 14"1'36", $1500. Turret Lathe Herbert , 2·D, 15/8", $2,950. 213-961·3434 Degreaser , Phillips, 60"ll36''x30" runntn1. 1as heat. Mah ofr. ~29()1. : ;:.r1;:e ~f!rd~ WATCHMAKIA Performance 1ood aaJary, excellent To autal •nahaeer ~~C:!.333' to Lathe Handy 15"x30" ..... _.;....;..; ______ , bmlftta (lncJudlll( den· W/denlopmeot. ol do· *' * * w/coUet attach ruoo. ' i~ taJlelunoee)•odampJe ncat....-.lutrumtn·, _________ ColcbHter l7"xH". IGml' ARY opponunJUe. for advazr.. tatJoa for oil fteld. Good Samoyed pupe, btful, 6 ~ (%13) Ml-MM ec.m~ Plalfotm. cement. u you are worklnl coo~•. co w~ old w/papera + (213)33&.aaol or • ~ -·c1. Good = and ~ beneftlt If top pay. EOE. • ......... champfon line aft -======:::::!::::::::::: • • "-":."f! • SetenUnc Drillllll .,..,.., • -• tnlq ibMllia. •1PPlJID~at ,._._,_ N-... h 5crwkndl,"85-04lS. ' . ScNtl1 ~ flW)' In ~""'· .......... c ............. 1010 • CalJ 14/-.-0 IAlllP• Beach. We an PboneSS7·9054 t•Cblb..hua IL, A.KC ••••••••••••-••••••••• " Fw.UJtMnw.Appt an equ•l 'OOportnlty AakforRonLtUle r••·· Hllln1 r eaaon. Rlvtera aota .as. Small iMOM IANI empk)y•, m/f/b. _840-__.fL!______ drve r '50. Ml r ro r llONtWPot\QlrDr, Fnet.Y• 1041 2t'1xH" $15. 641·9043 ?fewpait Blada ..... •••••••••••••••••• Evenlnp °"°"SMp'°'"" ..;:.....;;;;;:;;.:::;;_.~~~- Pilot Potpourri Is our way of observing INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING WEEK by extending savings of up to 50 percent. It's a good time to clean out and apruce up. MAR. 22 (Wed.) thru MAR. 25 (Sat.I • Have a GARAGE SALE! • Sell your extra PLANTS & GREENERY! • Get your neighbors together & have your own SWAP MEET!! I Ada ere limited to miscellaneous merchendlH for HI• only! I (No Real Eatate) Write 1 word Heh space, minimum alz• ad 11 3 llnea. THERE IS PLENTY OF TIME· TO GET IT ALL TOGETHER!! Fiii In the Handy ord~r blank below -DO IT TOD yt t I t NO. OF 4 DAYS j WOADS 12 5.00 6.00 7.00 8.00 9.00 If you nH d tnore fe)9m for your me111g• just print or type 4 word a per line •nd 9dd 11 .00 extf• for Heh •ddltlonal fine • ------------~~--~~-------------~---~----------~--Plea .. aehed\.11• my Piiot Po«pounl ltd to .. run M1rch 22 (Wtd.) "'"' Merc h 25 (Sa1.) with no cttang~ of copy. No reb•t• tor Hrly cancellatlon. EncloHd I• my c"-clk Of money~fc*, ••• , •••••. Or plHW d\a1"9I the ad~ B1nkAmerlcarct, VISA NG ......................... !xplr .. ~ ........ . ....••• , , •..•..... E•olrti... • ••••••. N1mo • , ., , •••••••••••••••••••• , ... , ......................... Pnott• • • ••••• .ArH C~t· •••••.• City •. I' ...... . ~-·--.. ·' I . • 1..:.. ' :· . ·: . ·, . I A..tos, lmporffd Autos, lmporhd Wed'*lday. March 15, 1978 * DAILY PILOT Dt ' • • •• • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• ___ ...;...._ ... , __________ ;_ __ ....;;~-=--=- ...... w 90604~Dri•tt 9550 AMto6W..t.d 9590 Dahm t720 Mercednlea 9740 Volbwegea 9770 Auto1,U1.d Auto~UHd AMtot,Uaed ....................... ····•••·······•·•··•··· ....•.••..••.•............•••••....••••....... ••••••··•········•··••• ···············••4••••• ··•·•·••·••••·····••··· ·····•·••····••••····• ··•••···••••··•••••···· Lldo H traUer, St50. COSTA MESA LEASE WEIUY •SILL C••t0 9917 ford 9940 Mwst-a 9952 Ulman r-.ctni cntrbd ~ AMC-JllP WE BUY IXCILLIMT A.,..... .... 71 voucsw. ~Ibo.ls ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ::; ••••••••••••••• rudder . ....a>O. #I alf SB.ICTIOM u...-~411rOSl.C AW5" 969 Camaro 327, R.S .• "9 C • USED CARS ~--ll' LarseslSeledion P/S, tyB. auto. silver l PHIL Rare find. '7$ ~ Obfa, 4 ?J Caba~ 34 FREE IM STOCK FOR For Immediate JnThoArul 11 landau, nupa1nL66H031 LONG cyl. auto, xlnt cood & ;~k1tto":.w1~i~~· 7D~~ AlrCOIMltioner ~~g~~J: IMMEDIATE Subj~~v~~~rSale WEST GIRMAN "15 Camaro LT, air, FORD llPG.$3000.&47-5'783 beadroom malo salon, on new 1977 & 1978 Jeeps 540-5630 DIUVERY CALL IMPORTS AM /FM 1lereo. ~or a.-1111 9'955 dMlel euxl, auto pUot. Does not include ~~...ill:~~ 975-0440 198SHarborBJvd.,CM bestolr.64G·8762 •••••••••••n••••,v••• dlqy, furl Jlb,/exlraa. Waaoneer !Jouted CJS or L.AHD•SIA•AIA 714 /645-6120 1968 SS396 Camaro. rblt 1* Okla Dyna~ 88 Stn Ui.l~OO /ofr. PP . CJ7. Offer good only on -eng •gpd P~a nu•·res Wgn. Power, I tond m•nu.-as factory air equipped 2626HAHOR ILVD. LEASING '72 Bug. SUNROOF, AM· $UOO~'M2-9e:is"". .. . beat offer. See to ap Santao.a2l';b0\labt a big· vetucles. Offer expires COSTA MESA UIOODoveSt. FM STEREO. RAD· prec.lat.e,640-5397 IC' Santana 4r m\14t tell M0arVc:hER31,Sl97T80C. KED 2845 llARBOR BLVD NEWPORT BEACH DIALS. P owder blue. ••••••••••••••••••!!.~~ l•h• .. -• ...... o.. ....... ,, 77 Cutlass Salon, air thh one . Comp I. WE IUY 540.6410 540-02 ll S1700.49C-039'7, 83S·0202 .... --....c-.. . .. _ cndff control, lilt whl. equipped ~ ready tor WITH JEEPS USll> CARS! '59 Mercedes 22os. gd Baja Bug 1500 cc reblt it AM/FM stereo. 19,()(){t Catalina. Very reason. 549_802 3 We're the new Chevrolet con.:!i S2SOO/ Bst o(r. eng, snrl. new rea~ tires, it "72 Gran Torino wgn, 9-mi, x.lnl. "'°°· Moving prlce.P.P .M2.o563 de11lership in the lrvme 557· dys,675·2463e~ many xlras $900 . .It pus, A/C, P/S, P /B, 631~ , , 2:534 HARBOR BLVD. Auto Center. We need 1964 Mercedes 230SL. !n!l-4000. AM /FM stereo. Dir•--------28 hlande r, 7 S. COSTA MESA your used car ! * maintaine d . $1250 LOADED w/expensive ----JOE metallic silver .. clas:uc '7S Bug, bright yellow, • ~ev1..-s. ""9o t957 crul1ln1/.raclng gear '7S red Toyota L/C, xlnt ltlck. ~. $6900. xlnt cond .• must sell. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Qist"'°°req.)$29,000/1 cond, man y xtra-i MACPHERSON MG 9142 t~642-6441,67S·SOSS • '74FordTorinowiin.Pwr, 4 PintoWa&on,atandoard 8»-5309 67S.S518, 646-JO<l6 CHEVROLET ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'Tr VW Su oof 1 I' . • air, cruise. rark. xtra trana, radio, JllH. xlnl 21AutoCenterDnve "74 MG MIDGET. Xlnt Beautir.uln~ond. G~e~: • Jt-cln.$1995 494-2130 ---~ Tncb 9560 IRVINE cond.28,000m1.Newtop. brwn inter. u 500, • 1976FordGranada .. 6('yl,GasSaver,'71.Nd.sbodv 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 768-7222 AM/FM, 1 owner. Must $48-9725 good ('OOd. Lo ma, fulJ work. 41.000 mL $500/b:-.t ·•••••• .. ••••••• •••••• • FULL SB.EC Tl OH see. ~/hrm. 531-0376 . pwr. $3000. 493-6222 . otr. 557·71ZS aft. 6 OF 1971GMC ~-.&-.. Im_._.. '76280Z, air, f-Spd, mnl(s. dys.AskforLarry '75 VW ''Lo Prt ,.. .,.,, Ford wh·t / ed · W. ~ .._...ED -. ......-.-.~ M FM l d Xlnl d 497 1689 w CH. ""' • a e w r m· By owner. 1S7l Plnto.. auto ~" 1 MOOB.S NOW ••••••••••••••••••••••• A cass, x nt con · MGI 9744 con · • · ter. Super cond. $750/ofr. new pain• ...,.,... tires, lo $300 Finder Fee for Pickups, vans. 4X4'8, General 970 I ~l ofr. S32·326S aner 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• iO VW Fastba('k. Com pl LEASING C&llCberyl. 751·667~-mi. like .. :;;. $1250 permanentslJp. Clean36' Suburbans & Jim mys ••••••••••••••••••••••• 73 MGB . air, wire whls, rbll eng. very good cond. 494-1131 54'99967 '86 Falcon Rancbero, S36-07S7 Trawler, well main· priccdaslow1ts * * * AM /FM stereo 8 trk, MUST SELL TONITI-.:! •--------l.t.lned, tood rererences. 4t .. JSI Rat 9725 Bntlsb Racing Green. $11.25 orofr 64().4076 auto, P IS, w/shell. '73 Pinto. 4 apd, xlnl cood .No parties, no sleeping ~ Vt Art Verdautt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 57,000 mi, xlnt cond. --~--6424653 w Im an Y extra i. 00 boant, 00 kids. lJve 'J B GM C 11 lo n 175 11 Luthet-'72RAT W/talcebstofrexceedl.ng '67VW&g,exce1Jenlcon· •s.-.,.\jl!~•~l.':-i .63 Falcon Sta. Wgn va, $1850/bslofr.646-2902 aft ooUdo.171-2966 paclarp-C5lS889). ,,...,.. 850SPIDER $3000.492-0Sl7 afl6PM dWoo. ~ 289. Vory clean, new 12noon. ---------1 You are the winner ol 2 4 speed, radio, beater, '67 MGBGT Xlnt Cond. 4 S31>-7ZJ8 Ures,$999.499-1904 •-------,-9-60 Side tie, dock. up to28' $90 tickets to the r u n $ s u p e r ap w/overdrlve Blk int. 't» VW BUI. MECHAN. 9950 ~wpon.S46-6299or IUGSIUNMY Lic.#234GNS. $1800/baL ofr morn XLNT, $900. 846·914:S Mercsy FOLLIES $1418 673-~7 before Spm •••••••••••••••••••••• • • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1974 Pl)'. Satellite Sta. Wa«. 9 pass .• PIS. P/U, Air, Gd. tires, lrnnl>. Cooler. air s hock!>, trailer h1U:h, CB Radio incl. Good Cond. Sl .800. 921 S. Orange, S.A. atlhe Seo & S-S..bcru --------1---------ORANGE COUNTY'S ANAHEIM . 1-.u: Beach Blvd. '68 MGB·GT. Xlnt cond. 'Tr VW Convertible, fuel· * * * ...alRUlll!ST 9080 VEN ,.,..,.,, $1700. Days 644·8260 (ext i n j • A M I F M •lfa Mwl....t "111"''" CON TION .Huntington Beach 1.29),eves831·3361 Blaupunkapter cass, " •• ,...... UNCOLN-MERCURY ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOAT SLIPS ·63 lnt.ern'l PU. Short bo'<. CENTER 842 "675 2615 ~ ..... e Deal _ .. , is OPEN f'orthe -v '-sche 9750 SS2SO. S51 ·U6S or -·.....,..A• • e1»1uP now & IOATS whtspokewhla, lrg knob· MARCH 21st ·72 Fial Spyder con\'ert. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~---·---COlta Mesa RAY FLADUOE Performance ~.000 actual ma. Good '7:S~ Poncbe SllS il vw Squareback, looks You are tho winner of 2 LINCOLN-MERCURY 1977 Arrow GT. XI nt Avail al beautiful L11k<' bies, 4·cyl eng. (>fr. Perria Marina, for re. 979-0183 or 754·0146 Call &12·~8. ext. 333. to cond. $1600, b!>l ofr. Must Concoune Condi lion good. runs great, S1200. tickets to the 16-18 Aulo Center Dr. AM/FM sttteo, air, spec: claim your ticket:> sell. 840-4197 Drown body, beige llhr 499-2317 IUGS IUMMY SD Fwy-Lake Forest exil GT pack, pin slra pe. servatlons call Don 11 0 ts . s. pd 1 -M • * * ---ManyManyXlras --------FOLLIES l~VINE $'400. 634-4703 bef 5, or Moore (714) 657-4115 w/cr:pr~hl, !Ide ti~~e~ & -. _ . . 1974 Fant X19, lo mi. xlnl l2,0000rig. ml's. Call i4 XJl2L. Xlnt condition. at the 8 7000 aft 8, 67:M904 ask for "' 74 A t M I cood $3600 Best ofr over S7SOO. ANAHEIM Doo. Sklpjack 20. 1977, Chevy rims. FM, 8-trk, 14K mi. • us an -arina. o 546:298.5e~esorwknds AftlOamrorapptlo 67J.:M64eves urn Mere Montego MX . Vl,.OMC inbrd/outbrd. Tradeforoldtruckorcar nu s.AM/FM.auto.xlnt -----see,6"-0500,5404500. ------CONVENTION Brougham. 4-dr, full '70.Dusterradtire96ryl onlt 40 hrs on en~. Fully & take over payment.; of :!,.~26hke new, $l850. '75 FtAT I 28SL .88 9 T 2 2 bl 72 BaJa Bug, 50.000 CfNT;R pwr, aar, xlnt cond. $1250. auto trans 22 MP-C m tarj)ed, $%00. 499-4764, Sl49.00 mo. Bal. S4.005.97. _ ·--·----4 5,,..,~. radio, heater, 11 • new · • re l. ma, $1600. Call MARoCrHt e2tst Call 493 A7""-town. Ex cond. $J40() C II · 3 "'"~ trans,Konis,Recaro, ... c.J 63J.8l9C a anytlme, 5-i -7372, or AHo Romto 970S rallye wheels. silver col· $4900/beslolr. 673.7399. 642-4680 Performance 540-2029 bestoffer ••••••••••••••••••••••• or.Lic. IJ222N XP '6'VAN Call 642-5678, ext. 333, to 'TT Comet. lo mi's, 4-dr, Ollffclc 996S Ta• 1putation '68 Ford-;:-:f picku; :u;O * * * $2388 '74 BLACK 911 TARGA. Good run'g cond. Best of cla1myourUcket.s. :.~~=k vinyl ..................... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cu in. J.spd, air. $1700 Don Mcmdenhl~ Sea & Sun Subaru SportomJ11liC. Lo mlles, fer.642·3585 * * * '78 P\reblrd, dark green, C .us.Sale/ Call497·1884. 2040S-Dr. 17555 8eachBlvd. idcond.581-3394 '73 Capri Brand new ---cc uto Cull a.;.,. 9120 ----8 .. 2 0675 l!n4 VW Bus. Xlnl '"ond. '76 Laguna V8, auto. air, ' ,,_ 'a ·• power. -' C t M .., • ·-912 · t 17~ ... paint, new Ures. Great many extras, low mal~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·59 ForU 1 z ton PU f'IOO. 01 a Ha ---------1 "" •new pam • """c• Nu brks, shocks. all nu PIS. P/B, extras, 50.000 cond. $1475, Pb 759-0875 new ball., new shocks. FORD SHELL $200. or Short bed. Custom cab. Youarethewinnerof2 •75 Jo'aal X19, A /C. S.spd.mags,&traa.$4800. universal, tinted glass. ml war, $4"00. Mike , Must sell. Best OHer. beet.olferCallaft.er3PM Goodcond.548-9796 llcketslolhe AM/FM. magi, xlnt 87S.l!077eves wknds $."750.494·9541 eves,837-3069. 8'7l-3857 _6'5-_506_1 ______ 68 FlOO F ord Truck. IUFOGSWIUENSHY cond. $3500. 559-1970 '88 Porsbe ,912 red/blk lo .65 VW Bus .• 68 rblt eng. Caprice 9 pass Sta Mmhlnc) 9952 pullman campr. 240 before9amoraftSpm. m I , M 1cbe 11 n 8 , Good d 5650 fl Wgn PS PB air good ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1975 Flreblrd. Xlnt cond. ~ .. ...__, __ ~•u..~ 9 140 3 d $19"0 atlhe Blaupunkl. lmmac. con . rm. -.1'75000' ·. l • e . ..,, Mu~tang, VS, auto, Must7sell. Make offer. _.._._. cu. an. i,p ' " . '7S 128 4-dr s--· xlot 548 7~ aft5PM ._..,,.... • ma. own r. vu o 646-4 500 540-0737 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67>2365 ANAHEIM ...._... · $S750. see to apprec. · $1 600. 893-8342 aft newtires,rebll eng,new r ·------CONVENTION A/C,ater,30mi'a, MUST ........ """"" '76 VW CAMP ER . 5'-•knds bk AM /Fu iu-1~T,.YE SELL! •iaso pp ._, .. ~ ,.., rs. • .. cassette. '77 GrandPr1x ""'" A A '74COURIER CENTER • • · <SPIRIT) Bubble top,i----------67J.8M2eves. ••FULLYLOADED•• Mope4 "9ck Good cond • $2000 For the 892-4878. '77 Chevy Van Custom. Lo fact conversion. fully 19T7 Monte Carlo, clean, 675-7763 Low Mileage '375. Call • 586-6731 • MARCH 21st •72 FIAT mllel, Xlnl cond. Must equipped lncl elec refrig, Landau. air. must see. IS Mustang. very clean, i--------- -.oa83 '62 FORD 'h To-;;-P. U. Performa nee 124 SPORT sell. Beat ofr. 645-6310 A/C, snow tires, etc. $5250. 49S-51Z7 lease up, m\.\St sell. * '73 Cuda t4dorcvdes/ New auto trans • .mlr. m Call 642-5078, ext. 333, to Rack, rallye wheels, 4 t97S Porsche 914, 1.B AP· SS99S. 541-4147 wkdys, NOVA. 36,500 mi, nu * 661·3031 * Mags, lo ml, good cond, Scoet.n . 9150 xlnt cond. Four lg., new clalmy~ i:~Ls. speed, AM/FM. Super PR. S.spd, car cover. 833-2112 ev & wknds. tires. Rill. $1650. 74 Mustang Ghia 11, auto, 1...:..m_a_~_. 8*-0290 _____ _ ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• tires. Shell camper., _________ Sbarp.Lic.#486FBG AM·FMcass. Xlntmi38 Volvo 97721 ____ 67_3-4266 _____ VS, PS, PB. sunroof, 9t70 .,,... u_,o c:...... s $1400 554-4(J77 IMW 9712 $2688 hwy, 26 city. Very sharp, AM /FM 8 track xlnl i.. ... ~a ..... ,,..r port • · all orig. &t ofr takes it. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '69 Chevy Malibu. 2-dr ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSO.Lot:"$12QO.C.llbef ·oo Chevy I Ton, dump •••_•111•·.· .. ·.··.·.•'9'!•,..••.•"•~··w•••• S..&SeaS..baru 7Jl-Ol.B7 IEfOREYOUIUY cust.cpe.P /S,auto.air. cood.968-3089 '65 T·Bird, loaded. BAM, wt'fl 3-5PM, truck. Gd cond. $3500. "", 175M8each8lvd. AUSIDVOLVO, See to appr. $1500/bsl '66 Convertible PIS A/C radials, land au. &46-9'720 JimSmilh494·9733 Huntington Beach Renaiilt 9755 See us al Southern ofr. Must sell. 840-4197 Call: AM/FM, orig int.er in Tri b D .4 .. 0675 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~A Co . v I CAll ...,,.. xlDtabape 661·3031 1971 ump aytona 'Tr Datsun King Cab. 4 sp. .,. VLAnge unty s 0 vo ·oo Impala. Vinyl roor, .,..,,.."""'"' · 500. .f=. or best offer. sbe,I, air lifts. $4095, '7 red TEST DIUV! OUR H~~~UlraS.VOLVO. A~c. PS/PB, 53,000 orig Alltos. Mew 9100 Mew 9100 • ~CMed. • 775 Shalimar, 549-23SOor97J..1606. 4· , l.28SL •u CAR ..._,. N ti ~, .... t. •••··\•···••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••-••••• ,...., sprt coupe, clean OF THE yl!.•R" Mls.5lON VIEJO ~-609et res, ..,_ ""' . '75 Luv Mikado. Air, shell, 64.2.Q296 SA 831 2880 495 1210 Lale '76 Yamaha 250. rack, sport whlu . 1978 BMW•s Good invenwrv in stock. • ·• Monosbock ced ., '74 Xl/9, AM /FM 8-trk, u • ......, hll .i.!... I ~ 5'8-39cionever ra · _S2900 __ 1of_r._SJ6._7_·t66___ HERE NOW! mags, burglar proof. .. .... z M.uC'lEast! ORANGE COUNTY '67 Ford. shell, AMffM m>O. (21.3)695-8983 MA2DA/R&4AULT VOLVO 1:o &lzuki W , xlot cond. cass. CB. big tJres, $USO. COMPLETE Spider 124. new top, mags, 2150 Harbor Blvd. EXCLUSIVEL y VOLVO • 840.(267 IOOY SHOP' stereo, $3450. ,.,__.A yc-<>A Largest Volvo Dealer gg.5012 -----·----""""'& .,..,. in Orange County! Mohr..... Sole/ '72 Ford ~4 ton. new palnl, MOW OPEN 645-3!199 64S.5700 BUY or LEASE Rat/S~ 9160 ~~of~.~~~~ eats. Flat '77, 124 Spyder, 2,500 16 :lint, auto. 4 dr, air DJRECT Rent a 1977 Excutlve Vw .9570 SB.ECTIOHOF clean. USOO /ofr. sound . New paint 1 ·72 Nova, 350 VB eng, 70,000 mi, gd cond, $1450. 968-0785 aft SP M 972 Kingswood Wagon, ne w trans, brakes. loaded. $1500. 962-0562 aft SPM 9925 ••••••-••••••••••••••••---------EXCBJ.!HT ml, AM/FM, 5 spd, cond. Mechanically ~~'M:~~~m M'otorhome or Mini· ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMW RESALES l-819-?US owner. P.P. <LPA306) • • * * * ~an:~. ~u a~;~ ~~:_;:.~d~;~~: ~;::~b!~:i:,.;.~~ '6I ::!;:0~ :... t75' 2025f 25~~1J-::S0r. t.heaenumbers 631-5099 us today! Hoftdcl . 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Anaheim 750-2Q11 Coda Mesa lfl-6777 '76 Chevy aurfer Vao 111·2040 495-4949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• #l DEAUR IN U.S.4. ,..-_ • ._'__. . You are the winner of 2 537.7777 ---Uctet.atothe 12 .... 18 Completely c11 tm. 25M ORANGE COUNTY'S lnmd N.w •77 JR{ IOY ••••••••••••••••••••••• IUGS IUNNY New tires ss.500. 644·0986 OLDEST CARVER GtMral '90 I .., _ .. _ hm i $ HO ..... D • Cars ROLLS·ROYCE ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOLLIES 4.......,. • 1 ps 6, self '77 Dodge Tradesman 100. f"'lll ~ t lb coot. alr, power, many 4 spd. warranty. $S800. • 1 MANY tMOJam_... 'llJ Cad-Broughm $650. '73 ANaAHilM xt.ru. 7Sl-IA3aftS. S4J.0824 aft. 6. To CL----r--t ..,__, Bu<ll Cad 2-dr Seville $3000. '72 co ON -,,-_," v-----'.....,.. Mere Brougham $1800. NVENTI ""DREAMER '72 Ford. Ready for c:amp· Sales·Servlce-Lea~mg UNIVERSITY Cl.OSlO SUNDAYS All loaded & in good c~:eR Mltl MOTOIHOME ing. Fantastic in & out. R~CarYer,lnc. ~illOblle cond. Musl sell, P.P. MARCH 21st CLOSEOUT' I l $2750. Eves, 546-2107 ..... _.._ C GMC XLNT BUY 759-0895 dys. p .1 •• ---------1 Rolls yce BMW .---crs • Sharp '66SllverShadow, enormance 5leftto('boo6e 1968 VW Bus 1600. Good 1S40Jamboree Trucks white. R.R.-Right hand Sbellforfrord.$200orbcst C&ll 642-S67B, ext. 333, to F«informatJoncall Don cood.lt.lon. $750. Aft 6.00. Newport Beach 840-6444 28SOHarborBlvd. dr. Xlnl cond, $14,900. offer. C&ll MS-5061 afler claimyourUckets. HELPf I • We Meed ..,en for al....._ 71 VW1 so we'I mall• It~ ,... wllle to .. at HARIOUR VOLKSWAGBI Al Model& & Colon A• .... PreltcD or Bob Wallace _64.'>-_S_l_'ls______ ColllaMesa ~9640 callPalrick,552·4414 Jpm. * * * °'"9t~'°RD ~~~ .... !~!~ 77Civk,air.Hondamalic, '7S~ComlcheConvert AMC 9905 Cofttlaotatal 9910 ·~~~=:::;..( , .... ir•ie AM/FM stereo. warran· Sllveraandbody. Beige ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1=;;;;~;:~~;;;;;;~~~i.!:=::~~ --WEWILLIUY 0 ly. $4700. Moving. top.Medbrownlealhe" '63 Rambler,6cyl.stick, 1969·1967-1964 I Sf 6 HOAOWAY 631-0563 • ood h .,...,.. Zl' Pace AzTow avaU for YOURDATSUH SANTA AMA Delivered&m&drlven g s ape,_,.,. UMCOLM EaJter°)Yeek. PAIDFORORNOT 8353171 1975 Honda CVCC 5-apd onJyl!OOOml'a.Servlce 642-3S92 COHT1MEHTALS Call556-0149 TOP DOLLAR rH• ULTIMATE DRMtf~ MACHtNt htchbck. Stereo, lo ml. rec. avail. Serious Wck 9910 (193BMX ), (UX 8451) & T~ TNnf 9170 FOR TOP CARS •USED IMWs* Super cln. 892·3768 buyers ~~.1!_!or appt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OOP443>. All priced al .._.... tosee ... ~ lOam. '68BuickSlcylark P/SA/C ONLY $699 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• '73 8avarla4spd494JFS '76 Civic wgn. AM /FM, 644~or540-4500_ 'Clean Good Condition -------- Space avall. for up to '7320024spd369KBV at.ereo,-14,SOOorig. owner r......L. 9760 S585.orbl!ltofr963-0441 ·.,tll\t(tl.it.~~ BdO'. Adulla. Weekly, ·755301 Aµto . (283MCV). mi. Xlnt cood. 768·6209 -u~ ta '-maatblJ -..n3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Skylark, $1195. Runs & ' ~~~·•• · · '7S2002A.Ser.22J6 1<.--GMa 9735 Free IUde-'72 SAAB 96. looksUkenew. _ • ...,,,T• ~SerYlce.~... WE IUY '7&$M>IA AUoya4S2PQN ••••••••••••••••••••••• V4 A Cl i Xint cood & ~ -940 '76200241pdS/R220PQJ) . au c. ___ ca.....;..U_548_·1_4_2S __ -1'75 ~A•, all ....... , leather "'CCfthrMt CllAHCARS "Tf320iAS/lllTIRSK '78 Karmann 01Ua, MK $105. wknd/eve, ....... ,. .. . ..... ••••••••••••••• .. • & TRUCKS Closed 0. Su.....__ ml. lmmac .• radlal11, 648·8486, Days (213} Cadl• 9916 inter, UDW1ually clean: 2 voa.. MD JB, 2: 1 reduc· ,._,. au to. $31 SO I o fr er. soe.GZ9'l ••••••••••••••••••••••• nu Micbelln tires, cn.a.se ~~:rs:~~rebll. .J.--Capri .... '?.I~ 752-l77Sdys. w.. 9762 s · =~.:J~ &;~~ioi~·~ CONNELL ~··••••••••-· • • 1 9 S 8 G h l a c: o u p e • • .. •••••••••••••••••••• &pm. Pvt pty . ........ "'--........ CHEVROLET 73 2600. Nu clutch , Completenuenc,clutch, su•suM ,.~ 9932 ~ .._...., radials. ~t1c084ond. paint. $1005/bat. 4.9'·2130 __.. ........ ....... ••••••••••••••• .....,.. SUIARU ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..._I!•/ 9520 2828Harbor Blvd. Macki 9731 Laree dlac:ovnt. large • •CORVmES Clil._ COSTA MESA Dahult 9720 •• .. ••••-••••••••••••• selectlon. Brats -4 IC>r....-,.__...' ··~-·•••••••••••••••• ___ S_46-_l_J_O_o ___ ,••••••••••••••••••••••• wheel drlvt wagons. 1 5e¥tlt -·r 1 19781 ._.,_Plc:Jni, WEPAYTOPDOI.LAR * DRIVEA * rt.fromSubaru$100.00 Se Cenhr NlCESELECTION! .Bestoft•.146-2276 PORTOPUSEDCARS * LmLE...,. Bulova walch with • HOWARDChnrold li "" C.~!~H of any new OOVEAQUAILSTS. 51 PraMt' "Deluxe I" FO~~f&F.511C SA VE A LOT itii1ioo«btforeApril <Neu MacArthur, Jam· Bo•y 1tral1bt for Uyourcarluxtra clean SHOP•COMPAR£ i::as..... boreeftBtht.ol) =--$1200. Call seeu.sfirat. l'TIOSBeachlJlvd. _NEWPORTBEACH IAUM IUIQ( ·~Bl ch • H•rbOt Blvd. a eo.ta.Meaa 971-2500 M 71 BAR WIC K DA T(,UN I I I I Rll I Jl') 1q; 111•. ~;_:1 1 t I. I ! ~ f 1c\ ' • I fl t 'W I •I\ '~ ' "• ' I "-4 f j f /, • ' : . 11 ( I 11111 'Velte, recond, to =to blk •lblk~ wpd. ..... I.._. CMa-'74"" 76 •.••••• ,.,._ IUtl '7l 4tllCLl1•1ICl"t) 711Alllo.!.sMYMI ..,..---.Ctttf'UU! EASY ON GA& "7l J",......_, ....................... Mltl ..... ~.a.. ...... .,_,-.... .,..,_c-.1...., .,,........, ~ ................... ·•'"' a11t.v;e_·,....a:.h .. a-..,.a..___1ZNAM9I · '67 YW .......................... : •••• SAYI •9".---~ ..... M:attl "71..._ ,,,. .......................... ... t0r ...... ~ .. -(ot1G.UQ .,.,, ..._ ~ ••• ' ........................ DJW, .................... ...,~~ '6fY'W'-T•C-................ 11"9 • ................... -. ..... '*'llOOI 'J~YW.._. ... •·••••••••••••••• ... Sltltl "'-·---~-CMMll:I 71 YW ...... ~_. .• , ....... ,. .... ~ .... tlttl ...... "-"'~---..... t • I ........ =i ' '72 FORD GAU.XIE V-8. automallc. air cond11ioning. power steering. power brakes. radio. heater. whilewall lires. vinyl roof. (285GIS). '77 'LYMOU 4 CYiinder, au12!!. ARROW ,.._ radio. heat ~·-•c. air co :--ic. (196T"PJ. er, Whltewair 1. n'!1t1on1 .... " ires, VIOyj rcX,;: 197 4 TOY OT• S:s COUPI I 600 • cytfnd8", all' conditioning. pawer disc ' brakes. radio, heater. vlnyt roof. mags. (1 89KMW>. FOR FLEET SALE OR LEASE INFORMATION CALL PAUL DEFABllS '74C 4 cylinder 4 HEYY VEGA radio with iape sred. AM/FM stereo rallye wheels. (441~~}: whitewall tires. 1977 BUICK B.ECTU V-8. automatic. air conditioning. pawer steering. pawer brakes. pawe,'ndows, AM/FM slereo radio. heater. ltewaU tires. padded top, cruise cont , pawer door tocks. tilt wheel. (657RY . ?4DATSUN 4 CYiinder, 4 • 1210 SIOAH whitewall tires. to::~o{•dio, heater. s1595 Every Brand New Chrysler and Plymouth. Every Fine Used Car, Red TCICJ Sale Priced with Bonus Savin9s For You! Check out the Fabulous "Buys" now at Atlas Chrysler Plymouth ! "71 DA TSUM PICKUP With camper shell. 4 cylinder. 4 speed, AM r adio with lape, heater (HL620009639). V-8. auto~?4 ~ADlllAC steering. ~~ ~r conditioning, POwer power seats AM akes. POwer Windows tape, heater' !FM stereo radio • 1111 wheer. (Jg;,.~~tall tires. vinyt ,:r, 1974 DODGE DART V-8 automatic. air conditioning, power steering. power br1k&1. AM radio. heater. (617TZSl. Atlas Chrysler pt Service "'f__tnocJth •• •JUUrs· ~nOndoy thru · Friday 7:00 A To 6:00 P M.M. Saturday 8:oO A To 5:00 P.M .. M. '770 6 cylinder. 4 ~!~N 280Z Power brakes AM/FM air conditioning cassette. hearer. (9f2S~:;reo radio with s7195 I 977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA V-8 automatic. air conditioning. power steering. power brakes. pawer windows. radio. heater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof. leather. (266RYM). ss1 .95 '77"' 9 P.Us YAifOUTH FU•Y . V-B, automau .... WAGON steering, C. air OOnd1tlon1n Whitewall t~ brakes. radio g,hPt:>wer s449 S"°·~llr.· ~~-.:--- ----~---._ . -·. ' J 7 Huntington Beach Fountain Valley EDITION t VOL. 71, NO. 74, 4 SECTIONS, '6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1978 Afternoon N.V. Stoeks TEN CENTS" ~ Bonf a Calls Suit a Political SDI ear By ROBERT BARKER °' ... o.u, ~ s~ Huntington Beach City At- torney Don Bonfa said Tuesday 1 that City Councilman Richard ~ Siebert was engaging in a political smear when he filed a class action suit against Bonla last week. J Bonfa. who says he intends lo file a $1 million·plus countersuit against Siebert, said Siebert's. lawsuit is contrived, trumped up and designed to influence the voters. Bonfa's remarks were con· tained in a press release ad- dressed to the citizens of Hunt- ington Beach. The statements were released at a city hall news conference. Bonfa said that Siebert wants him out of olfice. "He is waging a campaign to ~ get me out of office so the city council can have a rubber-stamp city attorney they can control," he said. Siebert denied Tuesday that he wanted a rubber-stamp city attorney. "I want an honest city attorney." he declared. He also contended that if he had raised the allegations for political reasons, he wouldn't have filed suit. Israeli Troops Baby's Mother Testifies By TOM BARLEY Ol IM o.lly Pllet Si.fl Prosecution claims that Mary Weaver was 31 weeks pregnant t when Dr. William Baxter Wad- i dill attempted to abort her baby were denied Tuesday by a wit· ness regarded by the defense as the best authority on the issue- Miss Weaver herself. The 18-year-old Huntington Bea ch girl look the stand as a defense witness to tell an f Orange County Superior Court jury that she was no more than 22 weeks pregnant when she en· tered Westminster Community Hos pital on March 2, 1977. She told prosecutor Robert Chatterton t h at her last mens trual period was on Sept. 25, 1976, a statement which sup- ports the defense argument that s he was 22 weets from concep- tion wbe.n she agreed to an abor- tion. The prosecution alleges that Dr. Waddill s trangled Miss Weaver's baby girl after be learned that the saline solution t he injected into her failed to kill the infant in the womb. The prosecution claims that Waddill , 44 , of Huntington Harbour, throttled the child • after warning another doctor in the hospital nursery that the baby must have undergone massive brain damage. Miss Weaver, who has sued Waddill for $17 million in damages in a recently riled Superior Court civil action, was (See DOCTOR, PAGE A2) ~ Westminster I. Recount Keeps Collacott In Saint Who? City Woq't Recognize Pat By ARTHUR R. VINSEL °' .. 0.ily ...... SCMf Centuries of tradition since Himself chased the snakes fr'om Ireland will go out the window in Seal Beach, where police in recent years have had to chase St. Patrick's Day celebrants and all their pink elephants out of town. The 1978 calendar al police h eadquarters would leap from March 16 to March 18, if the authorities beleaguered by riots In the past decade have their way. YEAR BY YEAR, pre- sumably as the attrition rate presented by time, age and the ravages of strong drink lake effect, St. Patrick's Day in Seal Beach has tamed down, but 'twas not always so. One year, those who are or were Irish, or on that special day wis h e d they were. surged up and down Main Street car ousing and generally giving the populace and police a bad time. Police from surrounding cities were s ummoned to help quell the festivities, if they could be called that. SUCH PUBS as Clancy's and the Irisher, on Main Street near the pier, finally resorted lo closing down on St. Patrick's Day lo save the premises so they would be usable for another year. Celebrants of St. Paddy's Day had a tendency lo seek out those redoubtable establishments each March 17 , tor some reaSOft, r ather than perhaps quaffing at a Mexican cantina. Seal Beach Police Chief Ed Clb bar elli s•ld today be hopes the luck of the lriah will be with his omcers come Friday. "WE'RE IGNORING St. Patrick's Day this year," he explained. Questioned about Seal Beach's St. Patrick's Day position, police dispatcher Martha McKenzie, a fine Scottish lass, came right to the point. "Ssssshhhhbhhhhh .... , " s he whispered into the telephone. Work Crews Clean Raw Sewage Spill A Huntington Beach work crew was called out Tuesday night to clean up a spill re- portedly containing raw sewage 3rd SD Shop Firebombed SAN DIEGO (AP) -A third Winchell's dOughilut shop Wat firebombed earl)' today, causin1 an estimated ~000 damage, an investigator said. No obe WU rewrt.ed burj in t h e I n cident at 28th ind Unl\terslty. t Fire Capt. Claude Bell lfald the namm. cuollne was tbJ»wn by a youna man aimUan In deecrl p U ob to one who firebombed aoot:ber Winchell's shop recent11-tn J>aclfic Beach. At another, ftre wu snuffed out before causing much damage. at Brookhurst and Hamilton Streets in the south side of the city. The spillage was reported lo be from a truck In a police re- port, but no other details were avaiJable. A spokeswoman from the Orange County Sanitation Dls- \r~ct said today there were no ~· ports of a sewage spillage. She said that it ls a practice to haul. solid material from treat-met1t plants in Fountain Valley and Hu ntington Beach to another area for composting. However, she sald there was no lnformation that a truck was involved, how the spUI occurred or how much sewage was in· volved. A public works Cftw and the fire department spent about an hour cleaning up and waabinc down the mess. The splll was reported at 8:27 p.m. * * * "The lawsuit takes matters from political preasures and harassment," he said. "It is now in the hands of the court." Siebert. filed suit as a private citizen last Monday lo recover public money he claims was il- legally and improperly spent by Bonfa. In denying all of Siebert's aJ. legations Tuesday, Bonfa said: -Trips to conferences he took Rout Reform Revision Backed Orange County supervisors moved today toward amending a controversial provision of a Political reform ordinance they enacted two weeks ago. Supervisors instructed County Counsel Adrian Kuyper lo pre· pare a new ordinance that would, in effect, take away a fund raising advantage of in- cumbent office holders. That advantage cam e when the reform ordinance excluded donations already received from a $1,000 an election limitation. Su pervisor P hilip Anthony suggested today that tbe $1,000 individual donor limltetion not go into effect until June 'I, the day after the primary election. Anthony conceded the or - dinance favored "Incumbents who tr adttionaUy be•tn eam- p a i g n Ing and fund raising earlier than other candidates." He also acknowledled that, as written, the ordinance appeared lo favor one group over anotber. "They <challeneers lo incum- bents) have a valid concern," Anthony said as he denied there was any intention lo favor ln- cum bent officeholders in the or- dinance. Tbe Westminster supervisor went on lo suggest that the full ord inance go i nto effect as scheduled March 30 but t he sec- tion limiting the amounts can· didates can accept from in- dividual donors lo $1,000 an elec-' tion be held until after the June primary election. Kuyper was instructed on a s to 0 vote lo return to the board next week with the amendment delaying the donation limitation. In additlon to invoking the donor limit, the reform or- dinance established a county fair political practices com- missidn. In a conversation Tuesday, Anthony said be is anxious for the commlasion lo be formed and for that reason would not propose that the entire or- dinance be set back until after the June primary. VAIL REPORTS RECORD SNOW VAIL, Colo. (AP) -Tber've bad moreaoow atSM top of Vail Mountain this wfnter than any previous season -450 inches. The old record of 440 inches wa• aet in the winter of 19'73-7•. The record waa aet alter 12 incbu of snow fell from 7 a.m. Monday to 7 a .m . Tuesday, at the .ald P-_alrol beadquartert atop the mouDtaiD.. were authorized because they had city council approval at budget Ume. He said more dt'· tailed plans of the trip had been approved by the city ad- ministrator. . -A policy prohibiting deputy city attorneys from opposing him or campaigning against him in elections was not illegal while in effect. He said he later volun- tarily rescinded the policy. -lie was not responsible for hiring an outside attorney lo act in Bon fa 's behalf during a grievance hearing. He said city council rejected his advice to make a report to the public on the action hiring the attorney. -He claims he had no role whatsoever in negotiating his own salary while a me mber of a city employee association. <See BONFA, Page A2) Guerrillas . o.fly .. , ... Sutt - Ne.e Maf10r Dr. Marvin Adler is Foun- tain Valley's new m ayor. He was elected Tuesday by his fellow city councilmen. The 42-year-old optometrist was first elected lo the council in 1972. This will be his first term as mayor. County Job Tally Grows For February The State Employment Development Department <E DD) reported today that non - agricultural employment in Orange County rose by 4,900 jobs in February. Not Included in the EDD re- port was the county's unemploy- ment rate. State officials said they have adopted a new policy of reporting employment trends and then following that in a few days with the traditional un· employment rate study. Figures included in the trend report indicate that Orange County's unemployment rate plunged in February with the addition of 4,900 jobs. That lncre. raised the coun- ty's fmployed total to 693,900 jobs, a gain of SS,800 jobs over a year ago. 1 The report said fa ctory employment reached an all time high of 180,700 jobs in February despite the fact "two factories closed their doors and relocated out of state." Otber job losses were reported ln retail trades, a loss attributed to the layoff in retail outlets caused by the end of post holi- day season' promotions. EDD analysts predicted strong employment gains through June as agricultural, food processing and construction follow normal seasonal up trends. 50-plus Killed In Blitz BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) - Thouasands of Israeli troops routed Palestinian guerrillas from key bases across southern Lebanon today and Is raeli warplanes fired rockets that t killed Arab refugees in camps around Beirut, witnesses re- ported. I Syrian g unners in Lebanon claimed to have hit one Israeli , plane. I Across Lebanon, reports of casualties among Palestinian and Lebanese refugees mounted ~ toward 50 and there were indica· j lions of many more dead and wounded. Israel said the aim of the as· sault was to cJear a guerrilla- free strip along its northern frontier and deter repetitions of the terrorist raid last weekend in which 34 Israelis died. It was believed lo be the biggest Israeli attack ever, and the Palestin- ians said 25,000 Israeli soldiers were involved. • The Palestinians denied they lost some of the ground wit- nesses claimed they had, and ' said fi ghting continued in the border areas 18 hours after it began at 12:30 a.m . local time (2:30 p.m. Tuesday PST). In three separate raids, a force of at least six warplanes, hit Damur. 10 miles south of Beirut. and the Sabra, Ozia and Bourj BaraJnsh camps on the edge of Beirut, Lebanese air controllers and witnesses said. (See ISRAEL, Page A2) HB Council Forum S e t Contenders in the Hunti ngton Beach City Council and City At- torney races will square off at a candidates' night tonighl an city council chambers. Members of the city employeej associations. which are sponsor -, ing the 7:30 p.m. affair, will taket a straw vote on the candidatesf following their presentations. I The top five or six candidates will be interviewed with thtj possibility that t he employeeJ groups will make formal en- dorsements later in the cam- paign. 1 C o ast Weathe r Sunn)l and slithlly warmer Thursday wltb highs 74 to 78. Lows · tonight 48 to 54, · Beaches Ban· Due to Continue INSIDE TOD" Y A woman &dlo coimted 1wr WNlth, noC Mr motte)I. ,,_.. I quntht!d lo~ childrn oJld grondchmhn the •~~ end t •h,,,bs Uaot oJfer "haue11 for f Umet Oft~·• Al'Mt - c hfldr'" •ofd, "We're rfch1r. •· Stt l1'oge .Alo. " I t ordered bulth department of· flciala to advise school ad· mlniatrators to wam children lo a vold cont.act wlth the river's contaminated waters and aur- roaDClinC envlrom. Th• ruptured sewer ~ col· lap u d Sunday wben rain· 1welltd river waters undercut l• fo\&Qdati04. , SanitaUoa dtatrlcJ ofndals eald mal.triala needed to ~ the line wlll be delivered to the 11\te M~ and •bat wlll be •1 perm..-repair will t;iOl. Taal llllk 11 llktly to. Cake an ..Um•t.cl two to W.. weeb. • aeoordia; to ottlcl ' I !\ A.2 OAJL y PILOT H/F Weoneaday, Maren 1~~ Refugee Camps Israeli Raid Hits Lebanon BEJRtrr Lebanon (AP) -The Israeli jets bolted out of the clouds swooping in from the seaside and releasing what one leen· age gi;l called "red hot arrows rigbt into our home." The jets were rocketing Palestin.ia~ and Lebanese refugee camps in the capital. In three separate raids, ~ force of at least six warplanes hit Damour, 10 miles south of Beirut, ~d \be Sabra. Ozai and Bourj Barajneh camps on the edge of Bearut, according to Lebanese air controllers and eyewitnesses. DESPffE ISRAELI CLAIMS THAT they were targeting only military objectives, numerous sources said civilian centers and, in one case, a hospital were hit. Dr Falhi Arafat elder brother of Palestinian leader Vasser Arafat: said rockets hit a hospital area in Damour, housing some 10,000 refugees evicted from the destroyed Tel Zataar camp during the civil war. The SJ.year·old doctor was examining injured refug~ at the ''Jerusalem Hospital" just outside Beirut's Sabra refugee camp. He led reporters to a ward, pointing to a wounded woman and two white sacks containing corpses of two children. .. DO THESE LOOK LIKE military targets to you,'' Arafat asked, opening the sacks. "They rocketed the camps in· dis criminately." . Two guerrillas in camouflage faUiues rushed mto the ward carrying a 17·year·old refugee girl, bleeding profuseiy. "The Jews fell on our heads from the sky and spurted arrows of redbot fire tight into our home," said the girl, Suad Rajeb. '"They stayed less than two minutes, disappeared briefly then came back and hit again." OUTSJDE, JN THE CORRIDOR, a 44-year-old refugee woman rushed to Arafat, wept on bis shoulder and implored "please save my son." ··waJadi, waladi (my son, my son)," said the woman, Nafwa Jabr. "His belly is open, his arm is cut off. I want him to live. please.". Laguna Police Seize Pot, Arrest Two Fifteen pounds of high grade Oaxacan and Colombian marl· juana. stuffed in plastic garbage bags , were seized by Laguna Beach police Tuesday afternoon and two Orange Coast residents were arrested. Booked for sale of marijuana and conspiracy lo sell mari· juana were Darlene Olga Snyder, 36, of 31562 Scenic Drive tn South Laguna and Robert Charles Weinberger, 24, o( 3117 Coral St., Costa Mesa. Laguna Beach special in· vestigators, backed up by detec· ti ves from Newport Beach, followed the suspects from Laguna Beach to the South Laguna address at about l p.m. Tuesday where the arrests were made. Investigator Mike Slusher said officers discovered the bagged marijuana. valued at about $1 5,000 on the street, inside the home, occupied by Ms. Snyder. The investigation began in Laguna Beach and officers asked Newport detectives to as· s1st in following the pair into South Laguna. Investigator Bruce Briggs said the marijuana is of high quahty and would sell for about $500 a pound on the street. A pound could be broken down into one ounce packages and sold for $1 ,000, he said. Weinberger is being held in Orange County Jail and Ms. Snyder in the Women's Jail in Santa Ana. Bail has been set at $7,500 for each. Frone Page Al BONFA .•. Siebert said that he would let his a llegations stand on their merit in court. "I do find lt totally inap. propriate for Bonfa to exploit bis suit while on city time while it doesn't involve the city or Hunt· ington Beach," Siebert said. Dolphin Drive TOKYO <AP} -Fishermen in the lki Island area of southwest Japan have carried out a dolphin drive but did not kill any of the animals because of the furor aroused abroad by the slaughter o! 1,000 of the animals on Feb. 23. O"ANOI COAST "'" DAILY PILOT * * * Fro111 Page AJ ISRAEL ••• Numerous sources said civilian centers were hlt. Hospitals at Tyre, in southern Lebanon 12 miles from the Israeli border, said al least 35 persons were killed in naval and air strikes. Other reports Crom southern Lebanon, 60 miles from Beirut, indicated Israeli tanks and troops were deploying in a pincer movement -one prong moving north along the Mediter- ranean coast and the other wesl to the sea ~ to surround the guerrillas in the southernmost border area. Witnesses said Israeli jets swooped down in pairs from c:loud·filled skies and rocketed the Sabra camp, on Beirut's s outh edge, home tor some 20,000 refugees and base of Vasser Arafat's military com· mana. The Syrians claimed to have hit one Israeli warplane. Syria's state radio called for the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council -the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France and China -to "intervene immediately" to stop the Israeli assault. Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman said he hoped Syria would not intervene. Weizman and Prime Minister Menacbem Begin lat.er visited Israeli troops inside Lebanon, NBC News re· ported from Tel Aviv. Health Minister Ibrahim Sh eito ordered hospitals throughout the country to stay open around the clock because of the casualties and appealed for nationwide blood donations. Lebanon's Moslem premier, Salim el Hoss, called the in· vasion ''unjustified aggression" and appealed for international intervention to bring it to a quick end. But there was no im· mediate comment from the country's Christian president, Elias Sarkis. Israeli missile boats and long· range border artillery poured a savage crossfire today on two Palestinian refugee c11mps at Tyre, a seacoast city 12 miles north of the Israeli border, wit· nesses said. Tbe action came on the western flank of the massive JsraeU air, sea and land assault against Palestinian posit.ions across aouthem Lebanon. F,....PogeAJ DOCTOR ••• 'Victim' Denies Fraud A Kansas businessman carne to Huntlncton Beach Tuesday to deny charges by the FBI and local police that he ls the victim of an alleged $700,000 fraud scheme by his associate, JrviJag Joseph Richards. Neil Murry of Leawoo<J, Kan., said he was "railroaded into working with a Los Angeles Federal Grand Jury that brought an indictment last week 1 agahut Richards, a Huntington Beach resident. on a charge of fraud by wire. · Murry said be did not bring any charges against Richards. "This method was used by the U.S. Attorney aftet" I did not agree to talk to them voluntarily • despite systematic and constant ,, .. _,.,..... Efforts in Vain A mother seal crawls on top of her already skinned pup and barks to protect it on an ice floe off the coast of Labrador during the annual seal hunt. Pact Change OK'd; Senate 'Aye' Nears WASIDNGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Carter agreed today to ac· cept a change in the proposed Panama Canal treaties as two more senators added themselves to the still elusive handful of votes needed to win Senate ratification of the agreements. Democratic Sens. Russell Long of Louisiana and Dennis DeConcini of Arizona announced they will support the agree· ments turning control or the waterway over to Panama by the year 2000. "We do J)Ol own the Panama Canal," Long said in jumping rrom the dwindling list of un· committed senators. "We have a lease on the property and the landlord is demanding that we get out." At a mid·morning White House meeting with DeConcini, Carter said he wouJd not oppose DeConcini's proposal that the treaties permit the United States to intervene in Panama to forestall any threat to continued canal operations. ships through the canal. With the Cirst o( two rati!ica. lion votes only a day away, there was intensive and frenetic maneuvering by both supporters and opponents. Four other previously uncom· milled senators were ready to- day t~ announce their intentions in advance or Thursday's vote. One or two senators are likely lo decide the outcome of the vote on the first treaty -a pact to guarantee the waterway's neutrality after Panama as· sumes control. The second treaty, to be voted upon later, would formally turn the canal over to Panama. The Wlcommitted senators ex- pected to disclose their positions were Democrats Wendell Ford of Kentucky and Ed ward Zorinsky of Nebraska and Republicans Charles Mathias of Maryland and Edward Brooke of Massachusetts. Ford is seen as a probable "no" vote, while Mathias and Long are expected to support the treaty. Zornisky and Brooke, according to both sides, were "up in the air." harassment by detectives of the Huntington Beach police depart· ment directed at both myself and my wife," Murry said. Murry made h.is statements at a Tuesday press conference. Huntington Beach police de- tectives said lhey believe Richards may have asked Murry to make his statements. But MU(!')' said he made them o( his own accord. Police also denied harassment of Murry and Richards. Richards, also present al Murry's press conference, at· tacked the police investigation or him. ''You should print what the facts are and not what the police say." a tearful Richards said. Police arrested Richards and five others last year and charged them with the alleged operation or a tri-county, $15,000 bookmaking ring based in Hunt· ington Beach. "I may be a gambler but I am not a bookmaker." Richards said. . . Richards is scheduled to stand trial in Orange County Superior Court in May on bookmaking and conspiracy charges. He faces a court hearing in April on the federal indictment and a Monday bearing on a federal probation violation, of· ficials said. Fire Victim Dies CINCINNATI (AP) -A 16Sth victim of the Beverly Hills Sup· per Club fire has died nearly IO months after the blaie at the Southgate, Ky. club. Treasures Claim Uplwld NEW ORLEANS (AP> -Treasure bunters bave been told by a federal ap- peals court they can keep millions of dollars worth Of bronze C&DDOOI and other artif acta found oo a Spanish galleon that sank in 1622 off F1orida. The ruling Tuesday by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court oC Appeals upheld a lower court order. The federal government challenged the treasure·bunters • claim to the wreck of the Nuestra Senora de Atocha. Two Florida corpora· lions -Treuure Salvors In c. and Armada Research Corp. -found the wreck off the Florida keys in 1971, after a six- year. $2 million search. Irvine Man Victim on Lost Plane? Authorities i ndicated today that it was an Irvine man who perished Saturday when bis rented small plane plunged out of the sky into the sea off Hunt- ington Beach after a midair col- lision with another aircraft. No Lrace or his body bas been found, allhougb Orange Cotmty Sheriff's deputies recovered about 70 percent of the shattered Cessna 150 which was operated by Shaw Airmotive at Orange County Airport. Serial numbers on a crumpled chunk of fuselage definitely identified the plane and shortly after the crash the airplane ren- tal firm notified authorities one or theirs was missing. The man sheriff's deputies declined Lo identify until human remains may be found was a student pilot, according to dep- uties. A tentative identification oC the victim wru. attributed to the N aUonal Transportation Safety Board, but NTSB authorities were unavailable for confirma· lion. •·we can't possibly confirm it one way or the other until we re- cover a body," said Sheriff's Sgt. Terry Williams. Meanwhile, Senate leaders proressed optimism that the treaties would draw the needed ---------------------------------------- two-thirds vote. "I think the votes will be there," said Sen ate Majority Leader Robert Byrd. Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker, also a treaty supporter, said, "I don't think there is going to be rejection.'' Nonetheless, there was in- . tensive activity by supporters and opponents seeking last· minute votes. DeConcini 's amendment would aJlow the United States to use military force even if Panamanian labor troubles or some other internal problem in· terfered with the passage of Feliciano's Wife Denied Singing Fees Blind entertainer Jose Feli· ciano found the judge on his side Tuesday when his estranged wife tried to force him to band over the fees he received for performing in Las Vegas and Puerto Rico. Orange County Su~rior Court Judge Richard Hamilton refused -.-,.,.· ·-"' to issue an in· junction that would have compelled Feliciano, 32, to aurrender all bl s performance fees to Fell· ciano Eo- lAtrprlses. nuoa.o Kia wife, Janaa. ii president of the com· pany. Sbe filed au1t .,.inat Feli- ciano on the troundl'that be bad broken the contract they drew up In 197G. Feliciano'• lawyers 1uc- ce11fUllY ar•ued Tuead•Y that a cJaUM in the eontract provided for FeU~laao to retala bla ~rformanC.e feea If bl• mar- ria&e to Janna failed. t F.alictuo 1ued her for ctl.wce. ==~:ad~~ bl• cWfcwea'' 1a u. U-)'eal' marn .... Tbe a.W'llldt wtddl m\llt no-. 10 to tr1.al :::• that F.Uetano qreed to over all bl• tak- bap to dae com~ 1D return for a 1uaraatee4 tecome Of '100.000 8 J9M' and IO 911'Cllll al 1becom.l*O pnA&I. M~ Nti..o elalma tUt llilr buabacl apPeued a llotm hi Lu v ............ 8lW • Janutr "'tbll "*" -~..,. ~eel-to had over U..',._000 ia , .... '° tM....,., ...... IDIQ~ HOW TO ADD AN "ANTIQUE GALLERY" LOOK TO YOUR HALL? WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB ~~......- BRITI ANY CHEST & MIRROR The first things guests see when they enter your home ... this authenticate styled, exquisitely antiqued Hall~~­ chest and Mirror. How impres- sive the rest mu st be! Not on ly does this boautifully scaled traditional design look elegant, but it also offers displ ay and storage space for your posses· sions. It Is silk screened and hand decorated over rich cherry veneers and pecan solids. ... Vislt our Drexel-Heritage Gallery today and seo what the world of ·home furnishings Is all about. .. \ 1514 HORTH MAIN SANTA ANA · 541-4391 Tuu.. ~ i~ ~Sol · 9.lO 'o 5:lO ~12to9 •Fri 9J0to~ - I y " r 1 n d v J I t ' ' 1 I l I t { I \ I I I I ' CALIFORNIA Tanker Termi-nal Nearing? LOS ANGELES (AP) - Eneriiv Secretary James Schles· inger bas indicated a breakthrough has been reached in Standard Oil of Ohio's three- year fight for California's ap- prov al of a proposed Long Beach oil tanker terminal, the Los Angeles Times reported today. "H's a breakthrough, but several more are going to be needed," said Air Resources Board Chairman Tom Quinn. who confirmed that Sohio has agreed verbally to spend $80 million on air pollution cleanup equipment a t a Southern California Edi,SOD Co. planL ltlma Sura enHr. LOS ANGELES (AP> -A man who apparently intended to jump from the roof of a downtown apartment complex fired one near-miss shot before ( STATE ) quietly surrendering to police. authorities said. Investigators said Thomas Brooks -~1mmons·,-z:>, an ac- countant, was booked Tuesday for investigation of assault with a de- adly weapon. OffidaJ .Jailed SAN DIEGO (AP> -An assis- tant principal at Torrey Pines High School has been arrested at his home and booked into county jail on two counts of s elling small amounts of marijuana, a Narcot i cs Task Force spokesman said. Pierre Simon Di Grignon, 44, of Leucadia was arrested Tuesday a nd was held in lieu of $1,000 bond pending arraignment today in Oceanside Superior Court, the spokesman said. 1\'llke 1t'cute Eged SANTA BARBARA (AP> Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says he wants the state Department of Resources to find out exactly how much radioactive waste is stored in California. Brown called for the s tudy Tuesday afler touring the U.S. Navy base at Port Hueneme, where several thousand tons of radioactive dirt are being tem- porarily s.tored. Trial BIU Serat MADERA (AP) -Madera County has received a $21,396 bill from Alameda County for expenses in the Chowchilla kidnapping trial. A totaJ of $8,936 or the bill is fo r Superior Court costs and $12,460 is for costs incurred by the Alameda County Sheriff's Department. 'The Fonz' Honored Actor Henry Winkler, star of "Happy Days" and the movie "The One and Only" talks with Mark Goffeney, 8. while attending a Variety Club luncheon in Los Angeles Tuesday. Winkler received the club's Heart Award for ''helping to bring joy, happiness and hope to needy and handicapped children." Sniper Incident 'Pr~bably a Ro~k' DIAMOND BAR (AP) ·4-An incident originally reported as a s niper firing at a car carrying an expectant mother has been dis· counted becawse 1t cannot be proven, sheriff's deputies said Tuesday. "We didn't find evidence or any crime," said Lt. Gus Feederle. "It was probably ju~t a rock." d t ly aft th as al me 11:1 e er e car w • The California Hi ghway legedly hit by gunfire. Patrol h ad received a telephone r eport from a wom a n who claimed she saw a man standing on a hillside with a nfle 1m- Voters Reject <Ard Parlors INGLEWOOD <AP> - Voters in this"i.os Angeles suburb overwhelming ly turned down a proposal to l egalize card gambling parlors. With all precincts re· porting, the vole Tuesday was 7,581 against the pro· posal and 2.262 in favor. City officials said 33,279 residents were eligible to vote in the special elec· lion. In 1976, Inglewood voters rejected a similar move by a margin of more than 1,000 votes. HOWEVER, investigators were later unable to locate the unidentified woman caller to question her. CHP officer Casey Bos said she had reported that the t argets of the alleged attack -including a pregnant woman -had left because the expec- tant mother was on her way tq deliver her baby. The woman caller was the on- ly known witness to the shooting. She said the incident took place on Highway 57, which runs between Anah~im and San Dimas. but apparently left berorc sheriff's deputies ar- rived. They were unable lo con· tact her later. A SHE RI FF'S special weapons team was flown in by helicopter and armed with M-16 rifles to investigate, but the team failed to locale the alleged sniper during a search of the hills above the freeway. "Whether it was a sniper or someone target shooting in the hills who miscalculated his aim we don't know," said Sheriff's Lt. George Eckels. Haw liofly ame safelJ. W-m a ~r Ocean Cruise at Long John Silver's I. Always use dty string, wood and paper in your kite. 2. Neveruse aietal wire or metallic .string or cloth. 3. Don't fly your JQce in the rain. 4 l1 • Don't cross ~ueets or hi_ghways •hen kite flying. 5. AlwaV1 fly your ~te away from TV and pdio antcnnu. I. Alnya tlv yaur ktte far from power Jlnesl Don't cry to ,eoievc k.itea cauaht b power line r ~ ::P ...... QllMs--- 60 Grand Prizes! Win one of 60 luxurious cruises to .t"assau and the Bahama Out Islands -a four·day Island holiday for four aboard Norwegian Caribbean Llnes'SM Sunward IL Get an entry form at any par1iclpating Long John Silver's, and find out instantly If you're a winner . ~very Entry Form a Valuable Coupon! Even If you don't win a Grand Prize, every entry form ls a valuable offer for food or Icy cold Coca-Cola...i. TltAOIMAfll( .ii So coma on In. You could wio the holiday of a lifetime. In tddldon to the cndllif, INtnnen rtC1l11e round·trlp elrllo• ~to Miami fn>m Mlecad cJt1a. end hatal MiCommodatlont r. two ftW* In Miami prtm to the CNIM d~ Ent11rat ~ • YQll llM. Swee~ en<M March 26, 1978. ~-NIM and regulatlonl can ti. bind et paitldplUng Long John Sllvtr'• Seafood Shoppa. Wednesd•y. March 15 1978 DAILY PILOT Aa Drug Pushers Hit California Cracks Down o~ Doctors SACRAMENTO (AP) -A state crackdown on drug. pushing doctors was announced Tuesday by officials who sald they thought 90 percent of the state's illegal pill mB;rket may come from physicians. Richard Spohn, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's consumer affairs director, said the state would seek restrainlng orders against five doctors Tuesday. HIS ANNOUNCEMENT came several days after a lengthy ac- count in the Los Angeles Times focused on the problem of doc- tors who prescribe dangerous drugs. Spohn said the state also plans legal action soon against seven pharmacies. He declined to name them, saying the case was s till being formed. "THOSE DRUG·PUSBING doctors will be nailed and the full force of the law will be brought to bear on them." Spohn told a Capitol news conference he called to publicize the crackdown. Bob Rowland, executive secretary of the Board or Medical Quality Assurance, estimated 200 to 300 doctors in California are over-prescribing drugs. Spohn said the state has 231 drug-related cases pending involving doctors. STATE OFFICIALS unveiled a 24-member state task force dubbed Operation DOPE -Doc- tors Out Pushing Ejected -and said l>etween 200 and 300 doctors are "qard core pushers." Th~ added that no communi- ty in California could consider Drowned Man Found in Sea SANTA CRUZ CAP) -The Coast Guard bas recovered the body of a 28-year-old man who drowned while on a sailing trip. A Guard helicopter spotted the body or Scott Alles or Capitola floating eight miles off the coast late Monday. Ailes was sailing with a com· panion when their small sailboat capsized, the Guard said. The companion, whose identity was not released, managed to right the boat and return to shore. itself immune rrom drug. pushing doctors or pharmacies that work with those doctors who over-prescribe. MOST OF THE ILLEGAL pill prescriptions are for stimula- tants and depressants, officials said. Dr. Kash Rose, president or the California Medical Associa· lion, sald the CMA supports the effort to weed out those doctors. But he-also said any estimate of the doctors involved was "just a guess" and added about Spohn: "If he'd quit having news con- fe rences and do something about it, we'd be a lot better off." AS EVIDENCE or the need for the project, Spohn said state in- vestigators round that three doc- tors in the first nine days of March wrote nearly 1,000 pre· scriptions for 60,000 tablets. Asked if a 24·member team could have much effect on the problem, Spohn said he was in part relying on the fact that word would spread that "the heat was on." THE DOCTORS Spohn named as targets or the immediate restraining orders are: Lamar Des muke of Oaldand, Franklin Hendricks or San Jose, Cheater Hurd of San Jose, Marvin Stem of Cypress and Kenneth Rascoe of Hermosa Beach. He also said an arrest warrant on a manslaughter charge was issued Monday for Dr. Rodney Chamberlain of Santa Clara in connection'with the prescription of 5,400 tablets of Ascodeen for a patient who died or an overdose. Rowland said the state has on- ly seen "the tip of the iceberg. We want to go out and find out what tbe dimensions are." WolWlll, 28, Kills Man In Break-in INGLEWOOD CAP) - A 28- year-old woman, alarmed by knocks on her front door, armed herself and opened fire on a man who bro1ke in through her bedroom window, hitting him fatally, authorities said. Police Officer Albert Kenstler said early today the bearded man in his 30s was shot in the chesl Tuesday night. He fled from the woman's house but col- lapsed and died on the street a few blocks-away. KensUer said the man's identi- ty had not been determined. The identity of the woman, who lived in the house with her 6-year-old d(lughter. was withheld. Ke nsUer said early reports in· dicated the victim could have been the so-called "Pillowcase Rapist," blamed for 158 rapes in the southwest Los Angeles area since 1975. · But investigating officers said later he was not, because "his heig ht was wrong and his weight was wrong." Parents Sente'nc~d In Child Torture LONG BEACH (AP) -Superior Court Judge Ellsworth M Beam levied sentences of two years in county jail on Randolph and Willie Johnson for imprisoning their teen-aged, adopted daughter in her filth-ridden bedroom. The Johnsons, who pleaded guilty to charges of false imprison- ment and child endangering last Oct. 11 bad been due back in court Tuesday. But they were sentenced March 3, following 90 days or psychiatric testing in state pnson. THEY WERE ARRESTED in June 1976 after their natural daughter, Donna, 19, escaped from home and told officials of the plight of her adopted sister, Laura, 16. Officers who broke down the front door or the Johnson house to gain entrance said Laura was s uffering from bruises, malnutrition and infections and she weighed only 63 pounds though sbe was S· feet-2-incbes tall. SPECIAL EVENTS BEGINNING MARCH 28 Got the fever? Join our Disco Dance Class I In just 4 Lessons you'll be Dancing the night away to the current dance craze .•• DISCO FREE STYLE, LATIN HUSTLE, NEW YORK HUSTLE, and the 2-STEP ••• Day and evening classes. available ••• $35 for the session ... call for registration 556-0611, ext. 371 . And don't miss our weekly dance demonstrations ••• Every Show "is new and different ••• 12:00 to 2:00 pm ••• Saturday, March 18 and 8 ••• Dance Shop near Town and Travel Sportswear ••• Middle l evel. TO CELEBRATE EASTER •••• THURSDAYS, MARCH 16, 23 and 30 Le Creuset Cookware Class ••• Our Expert, Collette Lockett, will take you on a cooking journey of France ••• 10:30 • 12:30 pm or 2 :00 to 4:00 pm ••• Join one class or all three ••• $10 for one, $26 for the complete session •• , Register In ldvance f n Housewares. SATURDAYS, MARCH 18 & 25 Storybook Reeding for the Children from the delightful Beatrix Potter col· Jectlon ••• 111:00 en and 2:30 pm ••• Children'/ Aree, Upper Level. SATURDAY, MARCH 18 Informal modeling of Duch• Junior Lo"nglWllr • ~ • 12:00 r 4:00 pm ••• Young Attitude. THURSDAY, MARCH 23 and SATURDAY. MARC~ 25 lnfonn" mod•Ung of Junior ftlhlor. ••• 12:00 • CtOo pm •.• Young Attitudo, Mldda.Lenl. I . t \] I I '\ l l t i ) l I I l ~: .. .. .16 D/F E 1 ... it • I p Robert N. Weed/Publisher Tttom•s Keevil/Ed1tor Orange Coast Dally Pilot .. ona ag.e ________ W_ed·n·nd-"" •• ·M···'·ch-15 •.• 197_8 __________ Ba_rt>a_r.•.K.r·e·ib.lc·h·/·E·d·lt·or·l···· ·P·age-·E·d·i~.or·-· Politics No Game For the Cheap It is a :,humc wh('n the amount of dollars that a can- tlHl:tlt.• <":Ill nlise d<'lcrmines whethe r or not he or s he has .i 1'11:111 <·1• in <·i ty governme nt elections. But t~at 1-. \dial is s haping up in Huntington Beach . Spt'ndang ts already approaching c razy he ights for llw /\pnl 11 t.'lt.tct1on c.and the voters probably h aven't seen .1 11ythang yt'l. C:ail llulton, ;,i <.·andidalc for city attorney, had raised • 111<1 s pt.·rit $7,000 al u lime when the campaign still had six "t.·t.·ks lo go City Count1 l C'andidal c Frank Hoffman. though he h.1d11 't '-P(.'nl ,1 c·1·nt, hud netted $.5,54 1 at the Feb. '1:1 cam- paign fm:.inc·t· <11 sc:losurc date. !-it Ill lo lw n·t·kmwd with is the political war chest of llw <'hHmbL·r· ol Commerce. Officials expect lo hav<.• ..,JU,IH)O to Sl:l,OOO to parcel out to five candidates. 1 Wh<.'n' l hh 1s all leading and whc:rc it wilt end we don 'I k1111\.\. Bul 1l 1s hl'rnrn inf.! ominous wherf more and more 111ont·y 1~ lw111 g s pent :rn<.l fewer and fewer voters arc vol · tllg. We hopt· I h,1t l'Un<iidutcs can't buy elections. Wt• hop<· that popular support und what we've known ;1s lfrrn1>t·1·acy ~till mean som cthini?. . We hopt• that voters don't let the size of the war chest tllf'lllt'n<•(• lht•tr ('hOl l'C. A hovt· a II , Wl' hope th at il is not too nai vc to believe 1 hat vuh·r~ t'<.11\ t•xt·rcisc their privilege and e lect the best rrwn ~incl wom en for o ffice. The buck ~hould stop before it 11•athcs lht ballot booth. A Victory of Sorts Tht· City or l luntin~lon Beach has won a major court '1clory on tht• 1Jl.fatl'd properly Lransfer t ax. Thou~h 1t may not cause the good citizens to take to 1 ht• s tn•cts in cclcbrataon, the s uit should mean good ne ws on a ('OUplc of l'ounts. F1r~l of a ll . the d ecision by the 4th District Court of \ppl1:1l ffi(•ans t axpayCr:i will not have to come up with a l:1 rgl' s um to meet a n adverse finding. Scl'undly, properly owners a re in line to get a s mall r l·duclion in their property taxes next year. Ilad the city lost the lawsuit, it would h ave had to r l'fund $900,000 to those who were charged a levy at the time of purchase or sale of property in parts of 1974 and Hl75. Last year a t budge t ·setting time. the city council approved a scvcn·cent cut in the properly tax rate. It also ~et aside the equivalent of an additional three-ce nt cut an lo a s pt!cial fund in case the city lost the suit. The promise was m a de that the money would be ~1pphed to lower taxes if the city prevailed in the suit. They said they would cut the tax rate three more <·cnls. If the issue s tands up to a ppeal, this is what they :-hould do -cut the taxes. Trimnrlng the Payroll .Fountain Valley School District officials are studying t•utbacks that could mean 40 fewer te achers in the das~.rooms next year. Officials say there are two reasons for the cutbacks: -Enrollment declines; e nrollment dropped by 500 las t year and is expecte d to dip another 2,000 students by 1!182. -A plan to rely less on specialized instructors and provide more funds for teaching basic subjects .. Some of the teaching posts that may be eliniinated in· cluuc m usic, s peech, language. Mentally Gifted Minors program and those specially trained teachers known as ··1carning center coordinators." In othe r words, there will probably be fewer high· powered educational methods and more basic teaching. The question is: Are parents ready to accept the <·hange from innovations to basics? • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642~21. Boyd I Backunrds ByL.M. BOYD H ow ma ny competitive t'venls can be won by moving hac kwnrds? Tug-o-war <·ertainly comes to mind. T hen there's rowing. And how about the backstroke in swimming? Any others ? Q. "What do the big-time modeling agencies charge to send you a girl who's willirt'g t o pose for nude photo· graphs? A. About $500 an hour ls the going rate now at the pres- tige outfits, although some lesser known bookers only C'harge $250 an hour. It's not enough just to own your own camera. they aver. You'r e Dear Gloomy Gus 1'his quote from Hunt- ington Beach Cit)' At· tornoy Don Bonta ts tho ... alooml t news I have heard In yean: .. Now all tbo cities in UJ state can Ule thls ca.«te to sup- port the (rnal estate) trat11rer tax. t •m de· Uahted wllb the dt· cblon." J .C. supposed to be a professional photographer. That k eeps them out of trouble with the law. Easlest way to sharpen scissors, I'm told, is to cut up a sheet of emery paper. If it doesn't work. though. forget where you read it. Q. ••How long baa It been since the word •obey• was customarily used tn Uae traditional marriage ceremon,y?'' A. Which traditional ceremony? Rellglous groups have varied considerably in this matter. Take the U.S. Protestant Episcopal Church, for Instance. Its bishops deleted .. obey" way back in 1922: You 'also can consider yourself a Seasoned Cit.lien II you recall Just which or Fay Wray'a several talents made her so well suited for tho role ~ in ••Ktna Kona." Credit her aeream. So ebllllDJ and tbrlllln1 was Pay'a 1Yrlcal terror that tho movlemaken closed her· up in a aound room after the plcturt wq almost fhaiahed to let hr eeream at WW 10 tJtey U>Wd Splice ln a fW mcin at IMr rtpplo1 punriaaUou latrre and t.Mreanaadltll. Jack Anderson Booze Flows in Washington W ASIIINGTON -Under abstemious Jimmy Carter. the White House does not serve alcoholic bcveraJ{cs except for win<' uncl l>t:cr. But outsulc tllt' presidential premises, the spiral of W. C Fields still lives umon14 omcials or subordlnute fcdcrul agencws . lndt•cd, they have <k vl'lopNI a s l(• ady f l ow 1 n i.: sou rn· or fr ee gov· e rnm e n l boozt.•. Th<' II" secret soun•t• ' s t h t' whi s ke y, vodka ::1n1I other llqum s s •·lzc d b y t' 11 s Lo m s HS{COl~ 111111 t ,1 x r t• • Vl'nU('rS Thi• <it•rwrul SNVH't''i /\d min1i1t ralion full11 ht•1r lo th111 boltl<'d honunzu, w ltfrh shoullf cxct•cd 30,000 i.:11llonH In 11 ~<>'"' yl'ur. An nbl'l'Urt' luw 11llows ll11• (iSA to cll1'lrlhutc lt11 lurgcAM' Mailbox without chari.:e lo government agencies ant.I private groups for "med1dna l, sc icnt1f1c '' anti Cllhcr appro1>riatc puq,oses. SUCH PRIVATE institutions as hospitals, nursing homes and t•vc•n convents. all known for their :,obriety, ~tocked up with t ,300 ~allon:. of liquor between <ktobcr, 1976, and December, 1!.177 One satisfied l'Ustomer is a l.1 tllc Srstcrs of thl• Poor convent "' llll1H11:-., whost: spokesman ex 11lai n<·t.I. "W{• ~IVC It to the 5.IS lt•r>t whm tht•y have a cold " Hut th1· JI Washington agen 1·11·'1 that :-.to1•kcd their lrquor p1111t rH'H with nearly 600 gallon::. of Uw C'Cinrisrutcd hooch madl• fl'W ml'fJ1t·mul du1ms for their huul 'l'tw Stull' l>1•purtmt•nl uses 1t 1111 1llpl11111alw rc·n·pl1ons ancJ 11111 111·1 s Thc c·flnv\vlal people ut I ''' u " l 0 u u r ti h t· u 11 q u art c r :-. drunk up lht•1r ~hu rc ut an an- nual ph-1111· l•;vt•n Ull' sl'ient1sts al I ht• N11l 1111wl Scu:11\·1· .Foundu· lion preferred to consume lhe1r portion than to waste 1t in the laboratory. THE GREATEST demand 1s for c ha mpagne and foreign wines, confisl'ated from return rn~ tourists who try to sneak ex· tra bottles through c ustoms. S<'otch is second on the list. Thdse who partake or the free government hooch are nervous about President Carter's anti· alrohol attitude. which they \ 1ew as u quaint idiosyncrasy. nut they would prefer not to ad 'l'rta::.e thc•ir aeccss to the con f1scated liquor llerc':-. whert', m·vt·rthclcss. tht• liquor flowed during the I!'> months· Sti:lll.' Dt•partment , 80 gullon:-.; ~at1on:il St·1cnt:I.' Foundation. "12 gallons. GSA, 76.l gallon~. /\ir F orce Academy , 73.3 ga llons; Air F or ce Foreign Liaison Office, 25 gallons; Coast Guard. 31.2 gallons: Nuclear Regulatory Co mmission, 55.1 ga llons; Marine Corps, 15.4 gall ons: Inter ior Department. '! 17 .3 gallons; Chier of Naval Operations, 10.4 gallons, and AC- TION, 8.8 gallons. Some 75 private organizations al~o took advantage or the fr~ liquor offer. There were 25 nurs· mg homes, 24 hospitals and 15 convents. POLLUTED POT -For over two years the United States gov- ernment has been helping Mex- ico control the production or marijuana by spraying fields with a potentially toxic herbicide called paraquat. As a r('Su lt, the health of millions or pot :.makers in this country may bl' endangered. P a raquat kills m a rij uana plants within two days. But Mex- 1t.·an farmers have been harvest· mg the crop within hours after he licopters spray the fields. Much of the marijuana that is smuggled into the United States, therefore, is contaminated. Al the request of Sen. Charles Percy, R.·111., the White House reluctantly initialed a study to de termine if paraquat.tainted pot is hazardous. A White House report, issued in December, downplayed the danger. But we have l<'arned that manv-of the findin~s arc disputed -by new !)Clenlrfic evidence. THE WHITE HOUSE docu· ment, for example, claimed that the maximum amount o( para- quat "likely to be fou nd on plant material is about 500 parts per million.•• Government scientists. however. have determined that 1hc average cont'amination 1s nearly four times that amount. T he While House also alleged that the United States was not rt>sponsible for the paraquat hazard because the Mexican government had purchased lhe herbicide in Europe. But we have seen confidenti a l Slate Dcparlml'nt cables that reveal I he United States has provided t echnical assis tance for the paraquat program. Will Jarvis Plan Cripple Education? To lhe Editor: I find it difficult lo understand the editorial policy of the Daily Pilot regarding the J arvis·Gann tax limitation initiative. Infla- tionary values or real estate have increased lo a point that many property tax bills have doubled. Homeowners are hurt by the re· s uiting excessive taxation. Homeowners are further hurt by1 paying for the inflated property taxes of the businesses and services which they patronize. it. is foolish lo think that business owners and landlords will pay tax increases out of profit. Prices rise and the homeowner and/or renter pays the bills. THE SfATE legislature offers to refund only a small portion or this recent dramatic tax in - c r ease and only as a token m easure made under duress. After a year or debate over the s ubject it appears that legislators have intentionally at- tempted to delay action on tax relief hoping to keep t_he windfall tax dollars. Granted that new taxes will be required following the adoption of the Jarvis·Gann initiative, but tho se tax es will be straightforward taxes which ap- ply equitably to all citizens. Perhaps there will be an overall r eduction or slate expenditures once legislators get a publi c mandate. For certain there will not be a reduction or public ex- pense from the Behr Bill, and, ul)ider the Behr Bill there is ndlhing to prevent a recurrence of this fiasco in coming years. A MOST important point of- fered by the Jarvis·Gann in- itiative is the predictable in- creases ln future property taxes. The known amount of taxes can be programmed into retirement planning and into household budge t5 providing a large degree of security. Only the wealthy can afford to live under the Behr Bill. H your opposition to this Jarvla~Gann inillattve is due only to f car fof education quality and pubbc aervtces, rest .-ssut«l that there are Jarvls·Gann ad· vocates Who' wilf tns'5t upon con- tJnuina quality also and who will approve new equitable tues if ttquJ~. 3AMES w. DIFFLEY ferred to let the private sector have the first crack at catching Bubbles." Nowhere did it state that the Marines refused to help, as you so boldly stated in bi g black type. · The Marine Corps does many good things for ou r community and country. Unfortunately. the press does not try lo promote the positive s ide. For example. "Marine Copter Crashes," <Fri· day, March 3, page 3). Wh al is wrong with "Marines /\ltempl Dangerous Rescue?" And put rl on page 1. MARTHA CALLIHAN ERA /ffeaas S•are To the Editor: I a m astonished at Mary Moore's comparison of ERA pro- ponents and Bubbles the Hippo <March 5 Mailbox). Yes, there have been "runaway wives" who could no longer cope with a load of responsibilities without entirely losing their own identi.tv-and men have been exercising the sam e option for centuries. THE EQUAL Rights Amend· m e nt mean s eq ual re- sponsibilities. Proponents or lhe ERA are working for the day when women are able to provide financial security for themselves and their loved ones through goOcl job training and equal pay. when men are able to help hold the family together because their skills in providing direct physical and e motional support for others <that's housework and loving in- volvement> are as highly de· veloped as their skills in business, and when each person is en- couraged to reach for full human potential in any area she or he <'hooses. W e ca'n s har e th e responsibilities -and have a beautiful lime doing it! JANE POOLE Coordloator, SoutbCoastCbapter National Ol'ganlzaUon for Women families Jiving on McFadden have been altered with tht never-ending r umbling of the thousands of speeding cars, motorcycles and trucks "pass· mg through." ACCORDING to city studies, 95 percent of the traffic using McFadden Avenue is completely traversing the area. The Hunt· ington Beach Industrial Park Environmental Impact Report < EIR No. 73·16) predicted the present traffic and safety condl· lions in its recommendation to close the street Crom the in- dustrial park for the health, safely and welfare of the inhabi- tants of lhe residentia l area. We, as taxpayers or the city, have the right to enjoy the peace and quiet or our homes and should not have the constant worry about our children's live!) as they cross McFadden Avenue or play in front of their homes. Your courageous editorial will no doubt co st you some customers from those who give convenience a higher priority than human life and the dev· astating effect on the lives or people so directly affected. R. B.ADAMS 'll•fleara•tr To the Editor: T hank you so much for the editorial in favor or closing McFadden. For those or us who Ii ve on this busy s treet. the problem is almost unbearable. For those not living on McFad· den. I understand how this pro- blem would not concern them at all and they would be upset at being inconvenienced. But in· convenience cannot compare to the life of just one person. We hope no one is kUJed or maimed while the fight continues. Again, we thank you ror taking a stand on this controversial is· sue. MR. & MRS. WM.. R. POWERS Velea S•lleieW rr.llw ·-~·· To the Editor: To the Editor: • I went to the Huntington Your editorial of March 1, con~ Beach Union High School Dis- cerning McFadden Avenue trict•s reautar board meeting for priorities puta into proper tbe first time C1n Feb. 28. In my perspect.lvo lb controversy con.-opinion the board purposely cem ing the street cloaure. The wanted to keep the people from istu la and aJw~1 bas been volcinf their opinions on a Cilr- safety aod weUaro versus taln ia~. convenienc9: We aat. lhl'Ol\p four boura of The>1e peopJo who object to talk waJtln.a for one particular clolins UM .u.t have no coa.-lu\MI, .. Teacher Adviser Pro- cern for ttl• tafety ot tbe ir•m Review." When it finally cbUdr•n who ha•• to (rou came UP~rls Allen started Mc1"eddeft AvenH to atte11d talkin1 • lt. Jt Memed at Boblnwood eltment.aey acboal or thll .PGIOt that UMi ,... of the lo 010 the aewl~ b.tllt tioara ~ iall INfl"tfa....,,. neilb hood cbJldNli'•l .Jerit ~duN abd k.,,& la~ located cm the acbool ~-lier over,::!~ -..m~.Wtt.Oi N ~ft' do Utey undentaDd •w ibe WM t: The ~ , .. Uetll1 .... · uvu"~ot-.ii I .. .. e ...... lor what 8be . . saying. but the board didn't seem to care whal we parents were interested in and con· cerned about. JUST WHEN it should have been opened for public dis- cussion, Mr. McAllister closed the m eeting so the executive meeting could take place after which they would finish the publi c meeting. Who knows what time that would be, as it was alrt-ady past J l p.m. I was appalled by this action. and I feel our elected officials should be more concerned with the views or us. the taxpayers. Doris Allen seemed to be the only one who was genuinely in· tcrcsted in the opinions of the parents or the well·being of our children. OOLOR ES LEE BRA1''T Bece ... tedJZ To the Editor: That letter from Eve Fee < Mail box. March 1 > really upset me. Whal does she mean, "one small accid "I have counted O\'Cr 12 P. reeks under lhe l\1l'adowl keorr, one killin~ two µeo That ' c small accident•• at ' Th a n iving hit first , thf' clcctri wires and pole. then it I hit the roof of a three·story husiness, tearing off tiles on , roofs. It went on to hit anrt damage two new homes being built. Fifty new families will b<' living in this new tract in thrt'e more months. The writer must car e more about parking her plnne than s he does abouL human Life. J OHN RODRIGUEZ Legal 'nteft To the Editor: I am so angry at a statement by Huntington Beach City At· Lorney. Don Bonfa. He said thal he was delighted that the transfer tax could not be used against people buying and selling homes in all cities of the stale. We are hoping so much for the Jarvis inllialive to pass to help us old people llvo ·an (>ur homes and lhe whole thins could be nothing becau."ie the state can now call It a transfer tu and legally steal however much they want from lhc homeowner. BE1TECAUE l I " .... \j I I \ l I j I ! l I ' ' I * I Irvine EDITION I Today's Closing lN.Y. Stoeks ~VOL. 71 , NO. 74, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY1 CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1978 TEN CENTS • t e's Burton Bows Out With Blast Scbinzinger said, "Our fragile j democracy is threatened I whenever such self-proclaimed protectors of public morals employ smear and scare tactics to discredit anyone who does not fit their mold. By PIDUP ROSMARIN OI .. o.llY f'ttell 5Uff In his last act as an Irvine city councilman, John Burton re- ' fused to certify tbe results of last week's council election ~Tuesday, claiming possible cam· paign fraud. I Holding aloft a newspaper , which announced the district at· . torney is investigating allega- tions or campaign law viola· lions, Bwton said that, "in all conscience," he could not vote to permit Arthur Anthony and Larry Agran to succeed him and Gabrielle Pryor to the council. Such investigations, however, are routine and mean only that wrongdoing bas been charged. Burton bimseU is to be the sub- ject of a Fair Political Practices Com mission investigation concerning an inriammatory campaign letter be authored that went to 4,000 voters. Burton was alone in his sym. patbies, and lhe four remaining council members affirmed the election results. In contrast to Mrs. Pryor 's af. feclionate goodbye alter six years on the council, Burton's farewell address became an ex· ct)ange of vitriol with Irvine Tomorrow, a local community action group. Irvine Tomorrow had backed Agran in the election, and with Agran was vilified in Burton's last-minute campaign letter. In other campaign action, Burton had charged that Irvine Tomorrow's expenditure or $1,052 in support of Agran and candidate Ellen Freund violated a city ordinance limiting COD· tribulions to candidates at $2SO per individual donor. That is one or the allegations being looked al by the district attorney. Tuesday Roland Schinzlnger, chairman of Irvine Tomorrow, told Burton. the council and more than 100 spectators, that the city attorney had approved the group's method or spending, as an independent entity not un- der the control of a candidate. Several-weeks o, the Daily Pilot ve 'fied th , through al· torney auss, who wrote the city campaign ordinance. Referring to the Burton letter, "An election eve smear letter and outbursts of petulance on community cablevision <An· thony blasted Agran after he learned both were elected> were (See BURTON, Page A%) ;Israel Grabs Lebanese Territory · Without 'War' V ardoulis Gets Second Term o.lly pt ... $!Mt ,..... HE'S MAYOR AGAIN Irvine's Vardoutls ~ lroine Youth I Found Safe l· In Long Beach 1 I • A four-week search for Irvine High School student Michael Lee Blanco ended Tuesday night when the 15-year-old was found safe in lhe Long Beach area. Orange County Sheriff's of· ficers who went lo Long Beach to pick up the youth said he was in good condition and bas been I returned to his parents who live at the El Toro Marine Corps Air t Station. I OHicers said Michael ran away from home last Feb. 16 "because be got into some trou·. ble at school and didn't want to t hurt his Mom by telling her about it. "He didn't realize the worry he bad caused his parents and the thou.sands or people who looked for him," an investigator said. ''He seems to realize It now and be has expressed re· morse for wbat be did." Officers said Michael "lived off tbe land" for four weeks and made contact with other juvenile runaways who helped him fiD4 food and a place to aleep. "He was never involved In any kind of unlawful acUvlly," an ol· fleer Hid. "He wu picked ~ by Long Beach pollee from be deacrtptloa we clrailated and no crim!u Ofrenle was lnvolvtd in that p." tn ptors in tbe 1berltr1 Juvenile dMsfon aald Michael will u~ extensive counael· lng durlna ihe MJCl few "eeb In which hil parents are ex.pected to parUdpate. "All that matten 11 that •we have him back POne the wone for hit experience,•• an oOlcer u.icL • By PIOUP ROSMARIN OI t .. O.lly ll'llel SIMI Basil ''Bill" Vardoulis, 39, became lhe City or Irvine's first two-term mayor Tuesday, despite his own argument to win the job last year that the posi· lion should rotate among council members. And Mary Ann Gaido, declared Monday it would declaration of war" if the · b were not rotated to her, pub cly buried the hatchet she ight have used to fight it an called for cooperation. 'Tm disappointed," she said, "but I intend to work as part of a team effort to make the Irvine dream com«! true ... Newly elected Councilman ArU.v Anthony was named mayorprotem. Both council votes were the same, 3·2. The other new coun· cilm an, Larry Agran, nominated Mrs. Gaido for mayor and then, when the pair lost there, nominated her for second spot and Jost again. Councilman Dave Sllls made the winnin g nominations . Vardoulis and Anthony provided tie-breaking votes for each of their own nominations. Mrs. Gaido, who took a straw ... poll or councilmen earlier this week and knew she didn't have the votes for mayor, blamed Vardoulis and Anthony for a "stop-Agran" attitude. (See MAYOR, Page A2) Irvine Child Workshop Set A series or workshops, about chjld development from concep- tion to beginning school, is being offered through the Irvine Unified School District's Family Guidance Clinic, beginning March 30. The workshops will be con· ducted by psychologists, speech pathologists and h ealth specialists, at district offices, 2941 Alton Ave., in Irvine. Topics for the five consecutive 7 :30 to 9 p.m. Tbunday sessions include pre-natal care. social and emotional development, language, and child manage- ment- DR. LOUIS CELLA (CENTER) PONDERS LEGAL STRATEGY IN SAN DIEGO Orange County Physician With Lawyers Robert Hanaen (left), Keith Monroe Cella Renews Plea Bid 'No Contest' Would 'Save Taxpayers Money' By TOM BARl..£Y Of I .. 0.11• ll'llel Sl.tff Dr. Louis J . Cella Jr. has re· newed his bid to be allowed lo plead no · contest to 127 felony counts on which he will be tried starting Thursday in San Diego County Superior Court. Conceding that ·'the court will find me guilty and I will be sen· tenced," Cella said today that the purpose of the new appeal is "to save the taxpayers $200.000 in the costs of a six·month trial and the trauma and tremendous personal expense to myself." The document being filed to· day in the San Diego court con· demos the opposition of the Oran ge County District Al· torney's Office to the no contest pleas Cella offered to file Tues- day in San Diego." Lawyers familiar with the Cella case described his offer to plead no contest as reflecting Cella 's desire to avoid legal ac· lion that former business partners might take if a guilty verdict is returned in the San Diego trial. A no contest plea is not an ad· mission of guilt but is rather an acceptance 'by lhe defendant of any penalties arising out of the crimjoalcharges. "It la incomprehensible to me why any public official would force this bµrden on the tax· payers when 1 am willing, without qualiflcaUon, to enter pleas upon which I will be found guilty or every charge made," the statement by Cella reads. Defense attorney Keith Munroe made the statement available today in Santa Ana at the time that Celia's lawyers were filing the document in San Diego. . Cella argues in the statement that the continued opposition of the Orange County District Al· torney's office to a no contest is "not rationally explainable." Assistant District Attorney Michael Capizzi, who heads the Cella ~rosecution , was not available for comment tod&.¥. But he commented Tuesday in San Diego while opposing the move by Celia's lawyers, "l am holding tight for a guilty plea." Superior Court Judge William Yale ordered Cella, 54, lo ge on trial Thursday after rejecting lhe opposed defense offer lo (See CELLA, Page AZ) Aid Non-ineumhent Supervisors Alter Reform Ordinance next week with the amendment delaying the donation limitation. In addition to invoking the d onor limit, the reform or· dinance established a county fair political practices com· mission. No Cont•r111ation In a conversation Tuesday, Anthony said be is anxious for the commission to be formed and for that re~on would not propqse that the entire or· dinance be set back until after the June primary. Pilot in Crash Traced to Irvine? Youth Injured After Irvine Truck Crash A Santa Ana Youth was listed In aatisfa~tory condition at Tustin Community Hospital tQ· day art.er driving his pickup truck bead-on tnto a parlced temitraller in lrv&ne Tuesd.,. Police aald John E. Foat.et"• truck wu jammed undemeal.b th• bed fl tM Hml·traUer by lbe lmpaet. The accident occn1rrecl on Constru(llon Way Eut. IOUlb OIBarranu~ No other people were in·· volved. A police orn.cw ~ to a• the daaecl and bJ""t11a ~Y oat ol the car, but •• ..ab&e &o Clflll tbe l~ked ctoor. JPoetv ~ n, ~tid &be deiaC' WIDHll .,. a '"' IDiAUtel -.,.. ~ to &a ambeel•ee. - Forces Pledged To Stay BULLETIN I METULLAH, Israel <AP) -I Israel said it completed its I takeover of southern Lebanon I today aad Prime Minister 11 Meaacbem Begin d e clared Israeli forces would remain until ! an arrangement was reached to I guarantee tbat Arab guerrillas would never return. ' BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP> - Tbouasands of lsraeli troops routed Palestinian guerrillas 1 from key bases across southern 1 Lebanon today a nd Israeli warplanes fired rockets that killed Arab refugees in camps around Beirut, witnesses re - ported. Syrian gunners in Lebanon claimed to have hit one Israeli plane. Across Lebanon , reports of casualties among Palestinian and Leb8"e9e refugees mounted · toward 50 and there were indica· • lions of many more dead and wounded. King Kbaled of Saudi Arabia j appealed to President Carter to intervene to end the fighting in south Lebanon, the Saudi press agency reported. Israel said the aim of the as· sault was to clear a guerrilla· 1 free strip along its northern frontier and deter repetitions or the terrorist raid last weekend in which 34 Israelis died. It was believed to be the biggest Israeli attack ever, and the Palestin· ians said 25,000 Israeli soldiers ' were involved. The Palestinians denied they ' lost some of the ground wit· nesses claimed they had, and , said fighting continued in the border areas 18 hours. after it 1 began al 12:30 a.m. local time (2:30 p.m. Tuesday. PST>. In three separate raids, a force of at least six warplanes hit Damur, 10 miles south of Beirut, and the Sabra, Oiia and1 ~ourj Barajnsh camps. on the:! edge of Beirut, Lebanese airl, controllers and witnesses said. Numerous sources said civilian centers were hit. Hospitals at Tyre, in southern' Lebanon 12 miles fro m the Israeli border, said at least 3S persons were killed in naval and air strikes. <See ISRAEL. Page AZ) Weather Sunny and allghtly 1 warmer Thursday wlth , hichs 74 lo 78. Lowa tontaht 48 to S4. • IN IDETODAY A euornaa tdao Coeodfd lwr wealth, nol Ila' ~. '-· .. queathtd to lwr claRdMt Qftd grandcliildrft tlw frtt.t cmct ahrvba that o/fw ''lldon /'Or ffmet o/ """'°"-.. A.t hfr c hUdrtta aoid, ••we ·r~ ncMr-... See Poo-AJO. • 1 A.2_DAJL y PILOT I w~ MMch 16. 1en 'Bed-hot Fire' c .. Blitz .VlCtim .Detai/,S Horror BEIRtrr, Lebanon (AP> -"The Je\Vs tell on our bHds from the sky and spurted arrows of red-bot fire atrai1bt into our homes," a badly wounded 17·year-0ld refugee girl said. "They stayed leas than two minutes, disappeared brieOy then came back and hit again ... SHE SPOKE AS SHE WAS taken into a hospital ward today just outside the Sabra refugee camp here. . Outside, in a corridor, a mother wept on the shoulder ot Dr. Fatbl Arafat. brother of Palestinian leader Yasaer Arafat. "Please save my son. His belly is open, his arm ls cut oft. I want '1im to live, please." She looked at reporters and shouted: ''Write, write! Tell the Israelis that I still have two sons! They will grow up and take rt- venge!" THE ISRAEU JETS IDT refugee camps at Damour south of Beirut and the Sabra, Ozai and Bourj Barajoeh camps on the out· skirts of the city after Israeli ground troops crossed into Lebanon lo attack Palestinian guerrilla strongholds earlier today. The raids followed a Palestinian guerrilla attack on Israel Saturday in which more than 30 Israeli civilians died. Despite Israeli claims that they sought only military targets, numerous sources here said civilian centers, includinC a hospital, were hiL DR. ARAFAT POINTED TO a wounded woman and to two while sacks containU\g the bodies of children. "Do these look like military targets to you?" he asked. "They rocketed the camps indiscriminately, .. he said. Panic-stricken refugees scrambled for shelter an hour after the raid, fearing a new air attack. Some wandered aimlessly out· s ide the Sabra compound. A 14-year-old girl, cradling a transistor radio, wailed, "The Jews killed my mother, our home was burned. I have im.ly this r adio, where can I go now?" Nobody paid attention. · REFUGEES WITH CARS WERE loading them with belonc· ings and driving away. Others left with wbat they could carry, often packing children on their shoulders. "People will spend the rest of the day and niebt in shellens," a guerrilla said. "Others left the camps and went to stay with friends and well-to·do r elatives." The Lebanese government formed a committee to set up a tent camp for the homeless. Milanna Grinder Service Scheduled For OC Victim Memorial services have been slated for Saturday for Milanna Grinder, 30, who died with four other people in a plane crash at Mammoth Lakes last weekend. . Miss Grinder, a resident of Anaheim , worked a s a lab Fro.. Page A 1 ISRAEL ... Other reports from southern Lebanon, 60 miles from Beirut, indicated I sra~li tanks and troops were deploying in a pincer movement -one prong moving north along the Mediter- ranean coast and the other west to the sea -to s urround the guerrillas in the southernmost border area. Witnesses said Israeli jets s wooped down in pairs from cloud-filled skies and rocketed the Sabra camp, on Beirut's south edge, home for s ome 20,000 refu~ees and base of Vasser Arafat's military com- m and. The Syrians claimed to have hit one Israeli wa~lane. Syria's state radio called for the five permanent members or the U .N. Security Council -the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France and China -to "intervene immediately" to stop the lsraell assault. Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman said he hoped Syria would not intervene. Welzman and Prime Minister Menachem Begin later visited Israeli troops inside Lebanon, NBC News ~­ ported from Tel Aviv. . The action came on the western nank of the massive Is raeli air, sea and lane! assaU.lt against Pales tinian positions across southern Lebanon. OAANOE caAS'T DAILY PILOT technician al UC Irvine under Dr. J erry Manning in molecular biology. Funeral services are pending today for the two others who have been identified by Mono County authorities. Also listed as killed in the crash of the Cessna 210 are the pilot, Joseph Edward Long, 44, of Tu_,tin and an associate, Billy Ben Hall, 46, or Orange. , Mono County Sheriff's Lt. Bud • Johnson said a fourth person has been identified. but the identity will not be released until next of kin can be notified. The fifth person remains un· Identified, he said. The five died Friday night when the plane crashed into a hillside shortly after take off from the ski area airport. Investigators from the Na- tional Transportation Safety Board said today they have not yet determined the CBUH or the fatal crash. The memorial services for Miss Grinder will be held at Rancho del Rio, 14760 Taft Ave., Anaheim. where she lived. She is survived by her mother, Marie Grinder of Irvine; a sis· ter, Carole Wells of Hawaii and a grandmoth er, Ros a Van Haerlem of Sepulveda. E',....PageA1 BURTON ••• Splitting Hairs Miss San Juan Capistrano Emma Malagon inves tigates city traffic engineer George Alvarez' beard in judging Tuesday for the Hairiest Man in Town contest. Alvarez we nt on to capture the coveted title foliowcd by city engineering a ide Marty Bryant, who was selected for the prettiest beard, and city resident Jim Blanck, who, j udges said, grew the "grubbiest beard." • . Beaches Remain Closed By GARY GllANVILLE Of U. DMlr ,.._.SUH t A broken sewer line that is belching raw sew~ge into the Santa Ana River and con- taminating Oranee Coad beaches "'on't be repaired for two or three weeks, a county sanitation district spokeswoman reported today. Time needed to repair the shattered sewer pipe means that portions of beaches in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach will remain quarantined durt.ng Easter week school vacations. Quarantined by the county health department Monday was the stretch of state beach nm· ning north of the Santa Ana River to Beach Bolulevard in Huntington Beach. Also quarantined was the beach running south of the river to 56th Street in Newport Beach. Those quarantines are not likely to be lifted unW a few days aner the broken sewer line near the Garden Grove Freeway is repaired, county health officer Dr. Morton Nelson said. Jn the meantime, the county san itation district today wUl begin chlorinating the estimated ·four million gallons of untreated sewage that is being disgorged daily into the river. However , both sanitation and Fro.a Page Al MAYOR ••. P Ch 0 health officials warned that the act ange K 'd,• chlorinating process won't effec-tively relieve the existing health hazard. S 'A ' .. We'll be chlorinating to cut Neithtt man was pleased to enate ye Nears? down 00 grease and odors. We see Agranelectedtothecouncil. • 'simply can't chlorinate enough In every previous selection of to d isinfect," the sanitation mayor, the post went either to the W ASIUNGTON CAP) -Presi-lease on the property and the :.pokeswoman said. top votegetter in a recent election dent Carter agreed today to ac-landlord ~ demanding that we Co unty supervisors today or-or by rotation to the next council cept a change in the proposed get out.,. dered sheriff Brad Gates to in- mem berin line. Panama Canal treaties as three Al a mid-morning While crease patrols along the IO.mile Agran was top votegetter 111 more senators added themselves stretch of river impacted by the House meeting with DeConcini, sewage last week's election, and Mrs. to tbe still elusive handful of · Carter said he would not oppose s1·m It eousl 1' Gaido was next on the rotation votes needed to win Senate· u an y, s uperv sors wheel. DeConcini's proposaJ that the ordered health department of. ratification of the agreements. treata·es perm1·t the United States r· · l t d · b 1 d She Claimed that because She acaa s o a vise s c oo a • D S R II to intervene in Panama to · I was associated with Agran and emocralic ens. usse mm straton; to warn children to Lo f Lo · ·an d D · forestall any threat to continued ·d t t ·th th ri • open -space sympathies, ng o ws1 a an eruus avo1 con ac wt e vers D C in1 f Ari ed canal operations. t · ted t and Vardoulls and Anthony con· e one o zona announc con amma wa ers sur-th ill t th Meanwhile, Senate leaders d " · spired toshutherout,too. ey w suppor e af ree· roun mg environs. t t i t I th professed optimis m that the But Sills said the office of m.en 8 urn ng con ro 0 e treaties would draw the needed The ruptured sewel' line col· m ayor has grown loo important wate rway over lo Panama by two-thirds vote. laps ed Sunday when rain- to leave it to such mechanical the year 2000· They were joined •·1 think the votes will be swelled river waters undercut selection procedures. by Sen. Edward Brocke of its foundation. 'T Massachusetts. there," said Senate Majorit;o ' he mayor sets the tone of Leader Robert Byrd. Sanitation district officials tbe city," Sills argued. "He "We do not own the Panama Senate Minority Leader said materials needed to repair coordinates with all depart-Canal," Long s aid in jumping Howard Baker, also a treaty the line wiJl be delivered to the ments of the city. from the dwincUing list of un-!iupporter, said, "I don't think ·t "1 nd and h t ·11 be "And ,week after week. he si e "o ay w a w1 a committed senators. "We have a there is going to be reJ·ection." normanent rep .. ; .. will be""-represeots the city. A mayor _________________ _;;.._.:__ _______ _..;,;..,..;;.....~ ___ .....;..:._..u...._ __ ..:&~ ..... -· _ i;nust know he can speak for the majority. "My opinion bas nothing to do with personalities." Agran countered that rotation was a means of s haring the power of ma y or. "th e ceremonial power and the actual power." "The important principle," he · added, "is one of fairness -to share the power -so that we all here indeed are equal." To do otherwise, he charged .. would mean the exercise of crass political power -if you have the votes , you take the power -and those who don't have the votes are on the outs." Agran s uggested that Vardoulis should have withdrawn from consideration as "an act of statesmanship." Frma Page Al CELLA •.• plead no contest to charges of grand theft, fraud and embezzle· ment. Cella was indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on 127 felony counts based on al· legations that he defrauded hospitals controlled by him as secretary-treasurer of an estimated $2 million .. It is alleged that most lf not all of that money was used by Cella to ,finance political candidates who met witb his approval. Cella was convicted in Los Angeles Federill Court of felony charss related to those same allegations and sentenced to five years in prison. The Santa Ana physician is scheduled to begin serving that term April 3 in the San Diego federal faclllty bul will be re· leased dW'ini court action tor the duration of bl1 Superior Court trial. Wounded T~,:?n Untler Guard, WALLtl> LAKE, Mich. <AP> -A 1bot1un•totln1 toen-aaer •ho wu wounded lb an abortive • HOW TO ADD AN "ANTIQUE GALLERY" LOOK TO YOUR HALL? WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB ~...._...~ BRITT ANY CHEST & MIRROR The first things guests see when they enter your home .•. this authenticate styled, ex quisitely antiqued Hall chest and Mirror. How impres! '"lliiiiili sive th e rest must be! Not on ly does this beautifully scaled traditional des ign look elegant, but it also offers display and storage space for your posses- sions .. It is silk screened and hand decorated over rich cherry veneers and pecan so l ids. Visit our Drexel-Heritage Gallery today and see what the world of ·home furnishings is all ~bout. ' Professional Interior De1i9n wlUI°"' Obligation Comfoit11ble Partclng • COM'tftitnt ~ 1514 NORnl MAIM SANTAANA· 541-4391 Tues. Wed.. Thun.. ond 5.L: ~.30 to~.)() Mon I~ to 9 • F r1 • 9-.30 to 900 ,. t g 'S lr iS '° we by Cll'I· ,• l( .el. •or Laguna/South Coast VOL.71,N0.74,,SECTIONS,46PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA i . WEDNESDAY, MARd-t 15, 1978 Afternoon N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS !Laguna Gazebo CloSed; Bluff Slipping1 t The gazebo adjacent to the wood structure, causing large "The whole hillside is going 1 Victor Hugo Inn along Laguna sections of earth to slide toward out from under it," Wadleigh 1 Beach's blufltop has been bar· the beach, according to city of-said today. He said the city 1 ricaded by the city because a ficials. would submit the gazebo as a I section of the foundation is slip-Ed Wadleigh, park main· federally fWlded project under a ping down the hillside. tenance supervisor, said federal package the city is presenting : City crews placed barricades disaster team officials believe for disaster relief. t around the gazebo, built atop the en~ire structure qualifies as A possible solution to save the t Heisler Park some 20 years ago. ''a permanent restoration project historic structure would be to The heavy rains of January under the recent disaster status pour a new slab further from the and February eroded the bluff awarded Orange County due to blufftop and move the gazebo underneath the foundation of the the heavy rains and flooding. onto it, Wadleigh said. Israeli . Troops, "Most of the (earth) move· ment occurred ln the last week," be said. "But we've noUced cracks in the slab for a few months and the whole gazebo is slowly moving toward the ocean." City oCficials do not know bow much it would coat to move the gazebo, but said the structure will remain barricaded until the transfer. Jets Hailllller. Palestinians 7 Splitting Hairs f Miss San Juan Capistrano Emma Malagol • investigates city traffic engineer George followed by city engineering aide Marty Bryant, who was selected for the prettiest beard, and city resident Jim Blanck, who, judges said, grew the "grubbiest beard." l l Alvarez' beard in judging Tuesday for the ' llairicsl Man in Town contest. Alvarez went on to capture the coveted title • l J i I t f I . I ! , l Walker Wins Efuction as SC Mayor Builder William Walker was unanimous~ elected San Clemente mayor Tuesday rught by city councilmen, who chose newly elected councilman Roy Hamm mayor pro tempore. Walker was elected mayor by the newly formed City Council, after Hbward Mushett , Myrtis Wagner and Roy Hamm -victors in the March 7 council elec· lion -were sworn into of· rice. ••~u M r s . San Juan Selects Friess for Top Joh In a brief, business·like meet· ing Tuesday. continuing Coun· cilman Kenneth Friess was elected San Juan Capistrano's mayor and new Councilman James Thorpe was selected mayor pro tempore. The vole, following swearing in ceremonies for three new council mem· bers , was unanimous in both cases. Thorpe, Gary Haus· dorfer and Phillip Schwartse eacb made short state· ments thank· ,,.,au "My wish is for harmony within the city and the end of the polarization which has existed since 1976," McDowell said in his resignation letter. McDowell would have been the lone pro·development voice oo the council following the elec· lion of three slow growth ad· vocates. Soccer Post ToHenryK? .J I~ I Wagoer nominated Mushett as mayor pro tem, saying be had received lbe hl&hesl number of votes in the council election and WH a logical choice for t.be number two spot. ing vot~n and pledging to con· tinue the city's s low growth policies. Earlier In the meeting, outgo· ine Mayor Yvon Heckscher read a terse statement from resign· iog Councilman Richard McDowell. NEW YORK <AP) -Former Se.cretary oC State Henry Kiss· mger will be named chairman of the North American Soccer League, the New York Daily News reported today. Quoting Crom the first issue of the new Sbccer magazine, Soc· cer Express, the News reported · that Kissinger will serve to enhance the credibility of the league. ' 50-plus Killed In Blitz BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Thouasands of Israeli ·troops routed Palestinian guerrillas from key bases across southern Lebanon today and Israeli warplanes fired rockets that killed Arab refugees in camps around Beirut, witnesses re· ported. Syrian gunners in Lebanon claimed to have hit one Israeli plane. Across Lebanon, reports of casualties among Palestinian and Lebanese refugees mounted towar.S SO and there were indica· Uons of many more dead and wounded. Israel said th., aim of the as· sault was to clear a euerrilla· free strip alons au northem fl'OlltlU, and deter NpeUUons of the terrorist. raid tut weekend in which 34 lsraells died. n was believed to be the biUest Israeli attack ever, and the PaJeatin· ians said 25,000 Israeli soldiers were involved. The -Palestinians denied they lost some of the cround wit· nesses claimed they had, and said fighting continued in the border ,areas 18 hours aner it began at 12:30 a.m. local time (2:30 p.m. Tuesday PST). In three separate raids, a force of at least six warplanes hit Damur, 10 miles south or Beirut, and the Sabra, Ozia and Bourj Barajnsb camps on the edge of Beirut, Lebanese air controllers and witnesses sald. Numerous sources said (See ISRAEL. Page AZ> Trea.sures Claim Upheld NEW ORLEANS CAP) -Treasure bunters have been told by a federal ap· peals court they can keep millions ol dollars worth of bronze cannons and other artifacts found on a Spanish galleon that sank in 1622 ott f1orida. The ruling Tuesday by the 5th U.S. Cirtuit Court of •ppeals upheld a lower court order. The federal aovernment challenged the treasure·hunters' claim to the wreck of the Nuestra Senora de Atocha. Two Florida corpora· Uons -Treaaure Salvors Inc . and Armada Research Corp. -found the wreck off th.e Flprida keys in 1971. after a sill· year. P mlllioo search. I I Mrs. Wilkinson nominated Hamm, who came in third in last week's election, behind Mushett and Mn. Wagner. In a (See WALKE•, Pace A!) J' AIL REPORTS RE.CORD SNOW McDowell New l.B.Mayor o.lty ~ ... Staff -4 GAZEBO LOSING EROSION WAR IN LAGUNA City Crews Barricade Old Structure .Political Ref orlll . ~ Amendment Slated Orange County supervisors moved today toward amending a controversial provision or a political reform ordinance they enacted two weeks ago. Supervisors instructed County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to pre· pare a new ordinance that )VOuld , in effect, lake away a fund raising advantage of in· cum bent office holders. That advantage came when the reform ordinance excluded donations already received from a $1,000 an election limitation. Supervisor Philip Anthony suggested today that the $1,000 individual donor limitation not go into effect until June 7. the day after the primary election. Anthony conceded the or· dinance favored "incumbents who traditionally begin cam· paigning. and fund raising earlier thm other candidates." He also acknowledged that. as written, the ordinance appeared; to favor one group over another. "They (challengers to incum· bents) have a valid concern," Anthony said as he denied there was any intention to favor in· cumbenl officeholders in the or· dinance. • The Westminster supervisor went on to suggest that the full ordinance go into eHect as scheduled March 30 but the sec·' tion limiting the amounts can· d1dates can accept from in· d1vidual donors to $1,000 an elec· (See REFORM, Page AZ) I ' LB Police Seize Drugs; 2 Nabbed Fifteen pounds of high grade Oaxacan and Colombian mari· juana, stuffed in plastic garbage bags, were seized by Laguna Beach police Tuesday afternoon and two Orange Coast residents were arrested. Booked for sale of marijuana and conspiracy lo sell mari- juana were Darlene Olga Snyder, 36, of 31562 Scenic Drive in South Laguna and Robert Charles Weinberger, 24, of 3117 Coral St., Costa Mesa. Laguna Beach special in· vestigators, backed up by detec· tiv~s from Newport Beach, followed.. the suspects from Laguna 'lteach to the South Laguna address at about 1 p.m. Tuesday where the arrests were made. Investigator Mike Slusher said officers discovered the bagged marijuana, valued at about $15,000 on the street, inside the home, occupied by Ms. Snyder. The investigation began in Laguna Beach and officers asked Newport detecllves to as· slat io following the pair into South Leguna. Inv111titator Bruce Briggs said the marUuana is of high ~th Suicide SAN PRANCJSCO (AP) -A m• leaped off the Golden Gate Bridie and hta body was awallowed up ln' the waters below tbe 1pan before anyooe eoWd reach the scene. The Cout Gu.rd suspended ll1 search ifter •bocd. l" houra Tuesday ..... tbey faiJed &o ftnd lbt UD· ldeaUfied Jumper, tbt JHlb biown tufdde rrom tbe 6rtd1• linee lt ~ in 1131. quality and would sell for abou~ $500 a pound on the street. A pound could be broken down intq one ounce p~ckages and sold fo~ $1 ,000, he said . · Weinberger is being held U: Orange County Jail and Ms: Snyder in the Women's Jail in Santa Ana. Bail has been set al $7 ,500 for each.. Coast ~~'"9"""""~~~ ~ Weather \ Sunny and sli.ghtly warmer Thursday with highs 74 to 78 . Lows tonight 48 to 54.. INSIDE TODA 'Y A woman who counted ,...,_ wtalth, not her fl'IOMJI, tie- queatMd to Mr' children and gr11ndchildmt the tNtt and .thrub1 that of/~ "haun for ., timH Of teftlion." And 1an ' children 1oid. "We're \ richer." Stt Page AIO. \ , , ! Cl e e g e 1l 1e .:y (, ot 'E rt ag is· us \ir is as he by •be t/o ate. heel .EN I ij · .. t!! DAILY PILOT use Baby's Mother Testifies , By TOM BARLEY 01 Ille O.lly l'I~ SLtff Prosecution claims that Mary Weaver was 31 weeks pregnant when Dr. William Baxter Wad- dill attempted to abort her baby were denied Tuesday by a wit- ness regarded by the defense as the best authority on the lssu,e- Miss Weaver herself. The 18-year-old Huntington Beach girl took the stand as a defense witness to t e ll an Orange County Superior Court jury that she was no more than 22 weeks pregnant when she en· tered Westminster Community Hospital on March 2, 1977. She told p rosecutor Robert Ch a tterton that her las t menstrual period was on Sept. 25, 1976, a statement which sup- ports the defense argument that she was 22 weeks from concep- tion when she agreed to an abor· lion. The prosecution alleges that Dr. Waddill s trangled Mi ss Weaver's baby gi rl a fter he learned that the saline solution he injected into her failed to kill the infant in the womb. The prosecution claims that Wa ddill, 44, of Huntington Harbour, throttled t he child after warning another doctor in the hospital nursery that t.he baby must have undergone massive brain damage. ~Miss Weaver, who has sued addill for $17 million in amages in a recently filed Superior Court civil action, was subpoenaed by the defense to testify for him Tuesday. E'ront Page AJ WALKER ... secret ballot, Hamm won elec- tion as vice mayor, 3·2. Walker, who succeeds Mrs. Wilkinson as mayor, said one of the chief objectives of his one- ycar term will be to work for preservation of San Clemente's h1slor1cal buildings. Tonight he will propose to Cellow councilmen establishing a f)reservatio n committee, he said, c on sisting of property owners involved, two city coun· cilm en, city staff members and a repr esentative of the San Clemente Historical Society. "Nobody wants to see the city Jo s e the Casa Romantica (former home of city founder O le Hanson ), t he Norm an Wright home on A ve nid a Lobeiro, the San Clemente Hotel on Avenida del Mar and other such historically s ignificant structures.'' Walker said. "Other than trying to save these buildings, l intend to try to keep the ship afloat and moving forward instead of backward," the new mayor said. "I will also try to move through our agendas in a businesslike manner, so we're not still in session al one o'clock in the morning." Utility Asks Hike in Rate SAN DIEC..O <AP) -Higher wholesale prices for natural gas have prompted San Diego Gas & E lectric Co to ask permission to ra.is.e r a tes by nearly $12.5 m1lhon to offset the increases. The request forwarded Tues· day to the California Public Utilities Commission, if ap· proved effective April 1, would boost the average bill for the residential customer using 70 therms monthly by $1.80. . The cost or each therm would increase 2.16 cents. Another rate adjustment total- ing $15.7 million and two general rate increases -for $37 million a nd $106 million -are s till before the utility commission. OftANOIE COAST use DAILY PILOT =~~~.11r.::.1::.:i:.: GN\I _,,,,,,,. C_•..., '"-*""''-M • "*I~ AIWf'lld•Y f~rWff'I FflOllf lor (.4K\a MrW .... _, o .. cft """"~ .,o<Ml'-, .. u, V•H•'f' tr'lf,.. ~ddltW<~ V•Htf •l'MI \.-ko<ft SovlhCN.i A\lftQl•._-'"'11 ,,.., " 11ueo-S••-••• ..-6 _...,.. '"" .. 1"<.lN t ~'"''"°' •ltttt h .t DO ~ fMy "'""c.. ....... C4111i.r,..._ ._ ...... Pt .. klo~l •lld """''- JM-·~ Yk•~ftl•m-0.-•--,._ ....... ...... "::'"~t:t.r::-°'""" .. "--~ ... ,.,,.,,~w~Mlten .&.HUft• ...... OMce ~OttMrtreM,...1 Mottme~•·~o-..._m,. Offtff • CMttMtwo )M'lltt·•l•••fot_.., w....11::r. ... 11 .. c111 ,,.,, .... 11""'1i.•-s... .-.c• ve•i.• ,.,,,. u. , •• , lltOd •I-Cit.-,,_rf T...,._ne(T141~ CJ:x"'IM Acmtttlltnl...,. ~ .. Mt!AtlD"*"""'nw ,...,...,. .. ....... -.... ~ ........ o.lly "' ... S&aff ..__ Sewer Break Beaches Shut 2 to 3 Weeks By GARY GaANVILLE Ol tlll9 OMty Pi ... SUH A broken sewer line that is belching raw sewage into the Santa Ana R ive·r and con- ta m inallng Or,nge Coast beaches won't be repaired for two or three weeks, a county sanitation dis trict. spokeswoman reported today. Time needed to repair the shattered sewer pipe means that portions of beaches in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach will remain quarantined during Easter week school vacations. Quarantined by the county health department Monday was the stretch of state beach run- ning north of the Santa Ana River to Beach Bolulevard in Hunlingtoo Beach. down on grease and odors. We simply can't chlorinate enough to disinfect ," the sanitation spokeswoman said. County supervisors today or- dered sheriff Brad Galea to ln· crease patrols along the U)-mlle st retch of river lmpacted by the! sewage. Sim ullaneousty, supervisors ordered health department of. flcials to advise school ad- ministrators to warn children to .avoid CODN.ct with the river's contaminated waters and sur- rounding environs. The ruptured sewer line col- 1 a p s e d S unday when rain· swelled river waters undercut its foundation. MAYOR JACK McDOWELL HANDS BOUQUET TO OUTGOING PHYLLIS SWEENEY "Never PromlHd You Rose Garden," New Laguna Mayor Quip• at Ceremony Also quarantined was the beach running south or the river to 56lh Street in Newport Beach. Those quarantines are not likely to be lifted until a few days after the broken sewer line near the Garden Grove Freeway is repaired, county health officer Councilman Seeks Record Of Sessions fi'rota Page A J MAYOR ••• Mc Dowell as mayor in a 4-1 vote with McDowell -charac - teristically -opposing the mo· tion. Freshman Councilman Wayne Baglin, who netted the most votes in the March 7 election, was named mayor pro-tempore. s. Laguna's DonNiclwls Dead aJ, 76 The captain oT the 1923 football Wonder Team at the University of California, Donald P. Nichols of South Laguna, died Tuesday after a short illness. He was 76. A right halfback during his collegiate days, Nichols played three seasons on undefeated teams and was in the 1921 Rose Bowl game when California and Washington and J efferson deadlocked. During 1923. when he was cap- tain, California posted a 9-0-1 record. Nichols, 825 La Senda Drive, Three Arch Bay, practiced law in Pomona for 50 years. He is survived by his widow, Beatrice, a son, Donald Jr., of South Laguna, and a daughter, Anne Storrs of Arcadia, Calif. Funeral services will be private. Under coach Andy Smith, the California teams went undefeal· ed in 44 games from 1920 through 1924 and that record brought the Wonder Teams nickname. Art-A-Fair Seeks Works For Jurying Artists and craftsmen who want to participate in the 12th annual Art·A-Fair during the summer art festivals in Laguna Beach, must submit examples or their work by April 1 to be Juried . The Arl·A-Falr is one of three Laguna Beach summer art festiva ls and e.xbibilions scheduled from July 11 to Aug. 27 this year. Delivery of art for evaluation \ should be made between 8 and 11 a.m. April 1 in the Laguna Beach High School auditorium, 625 Park Ave. Applicants must submit three examples of work In each style an.d medium they intend lo ex· hibil. For more information. call 494-t514. Council Eyes Vacant Seat In Capistrano Despondent Texan ' Dr. Morton Nelson said. In the meantime, the county sanitation district today will begin chlorinating the estimated four million gallons or untreated sewage' that b being disgorged daily into the river. Newly elected San Clemente C ity Councilman Howard Mu shett says he will make a mo- tion at tonight's City Council meeting that minutes be kept of council executive sessions that are closed to the public. • Kills Self in Laguna If his fellow councilmen don't approve his motion, Mushett said, he won't sit in on the secret meetings. An Austin, Tex. man, despon- dent over the impending failure of his third qiarriage, sat in the sand near sotne pilings at Picnic Beach in Laguna early Tuesday morning and took his own life with a revolver. Carrol C. Caffey Jr ., a 25-year- old computer operator, came out lo Southern California Monday to kill himself, Laguna Beach in- vestigator Mike Davis said to- day. "He came to Laguna Beach for the express purpose of killing fi'nma Page Al ISRAEL ... civilian centers were hit. Hospitals at Tyre, in southern Lebanon 12 miles rrom the Israeli border, said at least 35 p~rsons were killed in naval and air strikes. Other reports from southern Lebanon, 60 miles from Beirut, indicated Isr aeli t anks and troops were deploying in a pincer movement -one prong moving north along the Mediter- ranean coast and the other west to the sea -to s urround the guerrillas In the southernmost border area. Witnesses said Israeli jets swooped down in pairs from cloud-filled skies and rocketed the Sabra camp, on Beirut's south e dge, home for some 20,000 refugees and base or Yasser Arafat's military com- mand. The Syrians claimed to have hit one Israeli warplane. Syria's st.ate radio called for the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council -the United States. the Soviet Union, Britain, France and China -to "intervene immediately" to stop the Israeli assault. Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman sald he hoped Syria would not intervene. Weizman and Prime Minister Menachem Begin later visited Israeli troops inside Lebanon, NBC News re- ported from Tel Aviv. 'lhree Young LB Artists To Be Cited Three young Laguna Beach artists will be honored by the Ci· ty Council tonight for sculptures and murals they created for display in the Art Colony. An art competition hosted by the Katos Kagathos Founaauon at Laguna Beach High Sc~ re- sulted in three finalists, accord- i n e to foundation president Bruce Hopping. First prize for the sculpture competltlon went lo Kri s Zelarney, 18, or 318 Emerald Bay ror her castin1-plaster ren· derlna of• mountaineer. In the mural competition, John Trautmann, 16, or 580 A1ate St., took tint place honors with 18-year-old Ana Buzan win· nlng second place. Both stucleuts depicted beach tcenes ln tbelr murala . The artlatlc trio wlll receive $100 to create final veraions of th1lr work for dhpl~ at. the Thalia Street beac'b .acceaa ata!rw~, .and at City Bau. Krll_ ~·· 1culpt.ure and Mila Buaan11 mural are slated for exblbltion at tM Ruma Al· I.its J)epu'Unent °"lc:11. whlle Tr~\ltlDaQll'I m"ral will be pallited cm a ret••n•ai ,...0 at ThaUa Slteit. fte lculpCaN ... oi'tlldalb' plQMd ,_ tbe btteb ~ ...... .,.. cl~ OdldU '""" vadall lnljht ni1ll ttw final 'tioft. • himself." Davis said, citing an 11-page diary kept by the victim. Caffey has relatives in Laguna Beach and said in his notes that he remembered visits to the Art Colony as the best part of bis life. "He got ~ere Monday, checked into a motel room and went down to the beach early Tuesday morning," Davis said. Caffey apparently pointed a two-inch revolver at bis chest and fired the weapon, detectives said. The bullet missed all bis vital organs, however, and the victim pointed the revolver at his head and fired again. His body was found shortly after 8 a.m. by a man walking his dogs on the beac;h, police said. •·He had a good job in Austin and was a University of Texas graduate," Davis said. "He got married again two weeks ago • and it appeared that third mar· riage was not working out for him, so he picked Laguna as where be wanted to die." However, both sanitation and health officials warned that the chlorinating process won't effec· Lively relieve the existing health hazard. "We'll be cblorinatinJ to £~t f'ro91 Page AJ REFORM ••• lion be held until after the June primary election. Kuyper was instructed on a S to 0 vote to return to the board next week with the amendment delaying the donation limitation. In addition to invoking the donor limit, the reform or- dinance established a county fair political practices com- mission. In a convers ation Tuesday, Anthony said be is anxious for the commission to be formed and for that reason would not propose that the entire or- dinance be set back until after the June primary. HOW TO ADO•Al'f "ANTIQUE GALLERY" LOOK TO YOUR HALL? WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB ........,.,_.......,..~ BRITT ANY CHEST & MIRROR The first things guests see when they enter your home ... this authenticate styled, exquisi tely antiqued Hall chest and Mirror. How impres- sive the rest must be! Not only docs this beautifully scaled traditional design look elegant, but it also offers display and storage space for your posses- ~ons. It is si lk screened and hand decorated over rich cherry veneers and pecan so lids. Visit our Drexel-Heritage Gallery today ~nd see what the world of ho!"e furnishings is all about. "I am not going to join the re- gime" Mushett said. "I prom- ised this during my campaign. and I 'm not going back on my promise." State Jaw allows city councils and other public boards or com· missions to meet in closed ex· ecutlve session only to discuss specific personnel or litigation matters. During his campaign, Mushett charged that too much city buai· ness was being conducted in secret. "They may go ahead and meet without me," said Mushett, "but at least the city's voters will know where I stand." Mushett has proposed that minutes of executive sessions be held for at least a year, with an agenda showing subjects dis· cussed. Tonight's City Council meet- ing will begin at 7:30 p.m. at Ci- t y Ha ll. PTofe~lom1l lnteriOf Design <Wlttlout ~ Comf<>Nb~ Parking • Convenient Ftnancin9 1514 NORTH MAlrt SANTA ANA· 541-4391. Tuu .. \\\.'<1. Thurs_ and Sat. 9:~ to ~;)() Mon· 1210 9 · FrL 9-JOto900 I , •I' .. :ir E t ,g .S· us \ir is as he by )ft• (' 11 .el. or be e/o le~ I ~I I - CALIFORNIA Tanker Tenninal Nearing? LOS ANGELES CAP) - !:berno Secretary James Schles· inger baa indicated a breakthrough has been reached in Standard Oil ol Ohio's tbree- year fight for Califom.la'a ap. proval ol a proposed Long Beach oil tanker terminal, the Los Angeles Times reported today. "It's a breaklhrougb, but several more are golng to be needed," said Air Resources Board Chairman Tom Quinn, who confirmed that Sobio bas agreed verbally to spend $80 million on air pollution cleanup ~qulpment at a Sou thern California EdiaoD Co. plant. 1'11111S~ LOS ANGELES (AP> -A man who apparently intended to jump fr om the roof of a downtown apartment complex fired one near·miss shot bef«e (....____ST._if_TE_J quietly surrendering to police, authorities said. Investigators said Thomas Brooks ·s1mmons·.-z~. an BC• countant, was booked Tuesday for investigation of assault with a de· adly weapon. Oflldal .lalled SAN DIEGO (AP) -An assis· tant principal at Torrey Pines High School has been arrested at his borne and booked into county jail on two counts or selling small amounts of marijuana, a Narcotics Task Force spokesman said. Pierre Simon DiGrignon, 44, of Leucadia was arrested Tuesday and was held in lieu of $1,000 bond pending arraignment today in Oceanside Superior Court, the spokesman said. ftifllke 1t' aate E ged SANTA BARBARA <AP> Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says be wants the state Department of Resources to find out exactly how much radioactive waste is stored in California. Brown called for the study Tuesday aft.er touring the U.S. Navy base at Port Hueneme, where several thousand tons of radioactive dirt are being tem· porarily stored. Trial BW Salt MADERA (AP) -Madera County bas received a $21,396 bill from Alameda County for expenses in tbe Chowchilla kidnapping trial. A total or $8,936 of the bill is for Superior Court costs and $12,460 is for costs incurred by the Alameda County Sheriff's Department. 'The Fonz, Honore d Actor Henry Winkler, star of "Happy Days" and the movie "The One and Only" talks with Mark Goffeney, 8, while attending a Variety Club luncheon in Los Angeles Tuesday. Winkler received the club's Heart Award for "helping to bring joy, happiness and hope to needy and handicapped children." Sniper Incident 'Probably a Rock' DIAMOND BAR (AP) -An incident originally reported as a s niper firing at a car carrying an expectant mother has been dis· counted because 1t cannot be proven, shenff's deputies said Tuesday. .. We clidn't find evidence of any crime," said Lt. Gus Feederle. "n was probably just a rock." mediately after the car was al· The California Highway legedly rut by gunfire. Patrol had received a telephone r eport from a worn an who claimed she saw a man standing on a hillside with a rifle im- Voters R ej ect Card Parlors INGLEWOOD <AP) - Voters in this Los An geles s uburb overwhelmingly turned down a proposal lo legalize card gambling parlors. With all precincts re· porting, the vote Tuesday was 7,581 against the pro· p06al and 2,262 in favor. City officials said 33.279 residents were eligible to vote in the spedal elet'· ti on. In 1976. Inglewood voters rejected a similar move by a margin of more than 1,000 votes. HOWEVER, investigators were later unable to locate the unidentified woman caller to question her. CHP orficer Casey Bos said she had reported that the targets of the alleged attack -includin1 a pregnant woman -had left because the expec· tant mother was on her way to deliver her baby. The woman caller was the on· Jy known witness to the shooting. !:>he said the incidenl took place on Highway 57. which runs between AnahP.im and San Dimas, but apparently left before sheriff's deputies ar· rived. They were unable to con· tact her later. A SHERIFF'S special weapons team was flown in by helicopter and armed with M-16 rifles to investigate, but the team failed to locate the alleged sniper during a search of the hills above the freeway. ''Wh ether it was a sniper or someone target shooting in the hills who miscalculated his aim we don't know," said ,Sheriff's Lt. George Eckels. HN tiofly aldlie . safely. W-m a...-Ocean Cruise at Long John Silver's ' 1. Always use dry string, wood and paper in your kite. 2. Neverusc metal wire or metallic Mrlng or cloth. 3. Don't fly your ldte in the rain. 4. Don't aoss •tteets or highways when kite flying. &. Always fly your Jette away from TV and radio antenna& 8. Always fly your klte far from power l J.incel Don't cry co retrieve Id tea caught in power Unes t '\ 60 Grand Prizes! Win one o( 60 luxurto1.11 crulees J,o Nassau and the Bahama Out lslllnds -a four·day tsland I holiday for four aboard Norwegian Caribbean Llnes'Uo1 Sunwardll. Get an entry form at any partk:lpeting Long John SUver's, and find out instantly If you're a winner. 'Every Entry Form a Valuable Coupon! Even If you don't win a Grand Prize, every entry form ls a valuable offer for food or k:y cold Coca·Cola . TAAOEMAl'K e So coma on In. You could win the holiday of a lifetime. ln ~to the crulll, wtnnen niaM round·tr1p alrUN tr11nq>Ol1atlon to Miami from •lected cltlel, Md hottl ~adOnt for lwo •IQhes In Maml pltot to the cnilM depenuN. En• U ohn U you like, Su I I~" .ndl March 26. 1978. SweepNkes rules and ~"' Clll'I be low\d • ~-Long John Sllvef'a Seafood Shoppee. . ClongGJo!ui8iJver~. SEAFOOD SHOPPES ....... ~ ...... _ IOtlH.._,ltftl. CMTAMBA .............. hi ......... ,._....,....;- 1311 W. Wllfftllrt llYcli LA HAili Ulllt ............................... ...... Dllft.1'HIU saYICI ••MA•• Wlldnosday, March 15, 1978 bAILV PILOT AS Drug Pushers Hit California Crack s Down on Doctors SACRAMENTO (AP) -A state crackdown on drug. pushing doctors wu announced Tuesday by officials who said they thought 90 percent of the state's Ulegal plll m&;rket may come from physlciana. Richard Spohn, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's consumer a/fairs director, said the state would seek restraining orders again.st five doctors Tuesday. HIS ANNOUNCEMENT came several days after a lengthy ac· count in the Los Angeles Times focused on the problem of doc· tors who prescribe dangerous drugs. Spohn said the state also plans legal action soon against seven pharmacies. Ke declined to name them, saying the case was still being formed. ''THOSE DRUG-PUSHING doctors will be nailed and the full force of the law will be brought to bear on them," Spohn told a Capitol news conference be called to publicize the crackdown. Bob Rowland, executive sec retary of the Board or Medical Quality Assurance, estimated 200 to 300 doctors in California are over-prescribing drugs. Spohn sald the state has 231 drug-related cases pending involving doctors. STATE OFFJCIAlS unveiled a 24-member state task force dubbed Operation DOPE -Doc· tors Out Pushing Ejected -and said between 200 and 300 doctors are "hard core pushers." They added that no communi· ty in California could consider Drowned Man Found in Sea SANTA CRUZ CAP) -The Coast Guard bas recovered the body or a 28-year-old man who drowned while on a sailing trlp. A Guard helicopter spottedthe body or Scott A11es or <;apitola floating eight miles off the coast late Monday. Ailes was sailing with a com- panion when their small sailboat capsized, the Guard said. The companion, whose identity was not released, managed lo right the boat and return to shore. itsett immune from drug. pushing doctors or pharmacies that work wJth those doctors who over-prescribe. MOST OF THE ILLEGAL pill prescriptions ar~ for stimula· tants and depres!ants, officials said. Dr. Kash Rose, president or the California Medical Associa· tion, said the CMA supports the effort lo weed out those doctors. But he also said any estimate of the doctors involved was "just a guess" and added about Spohn: "If he'd quit having news con- ferences and do something about it, we'd be a lot better off." AS EVIDENCE of the need for the project, Spohn said state in· vestigators found that three doc· tors in the first nine days of March wrote nearly 1,000 pre· scriptioos for 60,000 l.ablets. Asked if a 24-member team could have much effect on the problem, Spohn said he was in part relying on the fact that word would spread that ''the heat was on." THE DOCTORS Spohn named as targets or the immediate restraining orders are: Lamar Desmuke of Oakland, Franklin Hendricks of San Jose, Chester Hurd of San Jose, Marvin Stem of Cypress and Kenneth Rascoe of Hermosa Beach. He.also said an arrest warrant on a manslaughter charge was issued Monday for Dr. Rodney Chamberlain of Santa Clara in connection with the prescription o ( S,400 tablets of Ascodeen for a patient who died of an overdose. Rowland said the state has on- ly seen "the Up of the iceberg. We want to go out and find out what the dimensions are." Woman,28, Kills Man In Bre ak-in INGLEWOOD CAP) -A 28· year-old woman, alarmed by knocks on her front door, armed herself and opened fire on a man who broke in through her bedroom window, hitting him fatally, authorities said. Police Officer Albert Kenstler said early today the bearded marJ in his 30s was shot in the chest Tuesday night. He fled from the woman's house but q>l· lapsed and died on the stree~ a few blocks away. Kenstler said the man's identi- ty had nol been determined. The jdentity of the woman, who lived in the house with her 6-year-0ld daughter, was withheld. Kenstier said early reports in· dicated the victim could have been the SO·Called "Pillowcase Rapist," blamed for 158 rapes in the southwest Los Angeles area since 1975. But inve.;tigating officers said later he was not, because "his height was wrong and his weight was wrong." Parents Sentenced In Child TOrture LONG BEACH (AP) -Superior Court Judge Ellsworth M. Beam levied sentences of two years in county jail on Randolph and Willie Johnson for imprisoning \heir teen-aged, adopted daughter in ber filth-ridden bedroom. The Johnsons, who pleaded guilty to charges of false imprison· ment and child endangering last Oct. 11 had been due back in court Tuesday. But they were sentenced March 3, following 90 days or psychiatric testing in state pnson. THEY WERE ARRESTED in June 1976 after their natural daughter, Donna, 19. escaped from home and told officials of the plight of her adopted sister, Laura, 16. Officers who broke down the front door of the Johnson house to gain entrance said Laura was suffering from bruises, malnutrition and infections and she weighed only 63 pounds though she was 5· feet-2-inches tall. ' SPECIAL EVEN TS BEGINNING MARCH 28 Got the fever? Join our Disco Dance Class! In just 4 Lessons you'll be Dancing the night away to the current dance craze .•. DISCO FREE STYLE, LATIN HUSTLE, NEW YORK HUSTLE, and the 2-STEP ••• Day and evening class~ available ••• $35 for the session .•• call for registration 556-0611. ext. 371. And d on't m iu our weekly dance demonstrations ••• Every Show is new and different ••• 12:00 t o 2:00 pm .•• Saturday, March 18 and 8 .•. Dance Shop near Town and Travel Sportswear ••• Middle level . TO CELEBRATE EASTER •••• THURSDAYS, MA~CH 16, 23 and 30 Le Creuset Cookware Class ••• Our Expert, Collette Lockett, will take you on a cooking journey of France ••• 10:30 • 12:30 pm or 2:00 to 4:00 pm ••• Join one d111 or all 1hree ••• $10 for one, $25 for the complete session ••• Registet in advance ln Housewares. SATURDAYS, MARCH 18 & 25 Storybook Reeding for the Children from the delightful Beatrix Potter col· lection •.• 11:00..,, and 2:30 pm •.• Children's Area, Upper Level. SATURDAV,MARCH18 lnfonnll modellng ()f Duch• Junior Loungaweer • ~ . 12:00 ' 4 :00 pm ••• Young Attttude. THURSDAY, MARCH 23 Md SATUhDAY, MARCH 26 lnformll modeling of Junfor felhl\\n. ••• 12:00 • 4:00 pm ••• Young Attftude, \ . ' ' I I ~I ' A& use Robert N. Weed/Publlshtr Thoma$ 1Cee11ll/Editor Orange Coast Oallv Pilot Editorial Page .............................................................. Wednesdsy. Matdt 1S, 1m ~a Krelbfch!Edltorial P199 Editor' Growth Big Issue Before Co11ncils City Council election results in Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano a nd San Clemente last week underline the concerns of the electorate as to the future of growth a nd uses for the land. What to p ut on the land was the theme in all three h otly-contested campaigns. Council candidates in Laguna discussed the future of Sycamore Hills a nd hillside de· velopment. In San Cle mente, the issue of the pier-bowl re· d evelopment was t op on voters' minds. And in San Juan, the electorate seated three slow-growth candidates who support farm land preservation. The issue of growth was so strong in San Juan Capistrano that Councilman Richard McDowell resigned in opposition to the new council's "go slow" philosophy. T he council can appoint a replacem ent within 30 days or l et voters select one at the J une 6 general election. ln the wake of election turmoil, the new City Council members should p ut aside the emotions of the campaigns a nd begin planning for the next four years. Let them remember their campaign promises and st rive to work in ha rmony with fellow councilmen and city st affs. . For the new faces on the councils, a word of advice. It's a wise new councilman who takes the time to learn the ropes, does his homework and learns from the ex· pcriences of those around him. So go slow. It's a long haul to 1982. Schools in Trouble Construction of b adly needed schools without an in· crease in next year 's tax rate was an option los t to Capistrano Unified Schoo l District taxpayers March 7 when a $19.3 million bond issue fell to def eat at the polls. lt was the t hird t ime in t wo years a school construe· lion bond m easure failed in the district. And in each case the bond issue r eceived a majority vote -but not the two·thirds votes needed for passage. While t he failure of the ballot proposal puts a crimp m distri<:l expan~ion p lans, area d evelopers ar e tossing up new tracts of homes in San Clemente, Dana Point, Laguna Niguel and Mission Viejo. Ironically, it was in several of those areas where votes for the ballot m easure were the mos t scarce. As fa mHies move into these new homes in the next five years. enrollment in the district is expected to jump by 60 percent -from 16,000 to 24,000 students. The only feasible option left for res ponsible dist rict ''oters is to support the $27.2 million lease·purchase e lec· lion June 6. If approved by a simple major ity of the di~­ trict 's voters, the agreement will provide fewer new d assrooms than the defeated bond measure and increase the tax rate by 36 cents. But with 8,000 new students anticipated, fewer is bet- ter t han no classrooms at all. Adjustlllent Needed Last week, a major ity of San J uan Capistrano voters s upported keeping the cit y's controversia l 230-acre agricultural preserve. Residents voted against a proposition which would h ave repealed the amendment creating the preserve. The vole was 2.409 to keep lhe preserve, l.941 for r<>peal. Agriculture is indeed a vanishing resource in Orange Coun~. despite an a bundance of rich soils. The open space.aspect of agri~l tural operations is appeali ng, t oo. Ifol the cijy's program is sorely lacking in at least one area: justice to t he farmer himself. The existing preservation program does not set up a mechanis m for city purchase of the farmland. It zones the 230 acres for "permanent agriculture," thus freezing its use without regard to the economics of such operation. In fact, language contained in documents supporting the program says the city does not expect to purchase the land unless it is absolutely necessary to continue farming operations or avoid development or the land. The· purchase of these lands is essential if ~he city declares them "perm anent agriculture." The voters have spoken -they want agricult ural prcs <>rvat1on. The rntcrs should also be willing to pay for il. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Othar .views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-.4321 . Boyd I Backuxirds By L.l\I. BOYD How manj competitive events can be won .by moving back ward s? Tug-o -wa r cert a inly comes to mind. The n ther e's rowing. And how about the backstroke in swimming? Any others? Q. ··What do the big-time modeling agencies charge to send you u girl who's willing to pose ror .nu de photo· graphs? A. About $500 an hour is the going rate now at the pres· tige outfits, although some Dear Gloomy t . Gus Viewing a currently popular movie I was in· tereetecl to note bow much of tbe ·Enalish lan1uage baa been replaced by a ala.ale fout·letia" word J used to tJee ecraW19d on out· house• wbft J wu a k•d . Wbo aeecf11 a V9CllM&ll.l'l tbeM ckya! • '" . 1.v. .... 111,, ............ .... ...... ,., ...... ~ ... =..,~, .... ... ~ .... lesser known bookers only charge $250 an hour. It's not enough just to own your own camera, they aver. You're supposed to be a professlonal photographer. That keeps them out or trouble with the law. Studies indicate th•t Xco1vo drive rs are nearly ~J'ee times more likely than Cadillac drivers to buckle their seat belts. Eas iest way to sharpen s cissors. I'm t.oJd. ts to cut up a sheet of emery plQ)er. It it doesn't worlc, thou&h. foraet wbere you read it. You also can coulder yoarael! a Seuoned ClU1en If you Tecall Just which ot Fay Wray's 1evua1 tat.ob made her so well suited for Ute role in •• Kina KCJna .• , Credit Iler scream. So ehllllna ~d thrillln1 waa Pay'a Jyrtul tenor ~the movlemuen closed her up 1n • aoand room .ttilr t.11111 petgre lirU almott n""Mi' to Jet .... 1tteam • wlll IO tM7 ~ aollce la a~ ... Of -""' rlpptaw~ ._.....,. andthft••••··· Jack Anderson Booze Flows in Washington WASHINGTON -Under abstemious Jimmy Carter, the White House does not ser ve alcoholic b,everages except for wine and beer. But outside the presidential premises, the spint or W. C. Fields still Uves among officials of subordinate federal agencies. Indeed, they have developed a s teady .flowi n g s ource of free gov· ernm e nt booze. Their secret source i s t h e whi s k e y . vodka and other liquors se i z ed b y c u s tom s a gents and t a x r e· venuers. The Gener al Services Ad· ministration rails heir to this bottled bonanza, which should exceed 30,000 gallons in a good year. An obscure Jaw allows the GSA to distribute its largesse Mailbox without charge to government agencies and private 8J'OUps tor ••m e dicin al, scientific" and other appropriate purposes. SUCH PRIVATE institutions as hospitals, nursing homes and even convents, all known for their sobriety, stocked up with 1,300 gallons of liquor between October, 1976, and December, 1977. One satisfied customer is a Little Sisters of the Poor convent in Illinois, whose spokesman ex- plained: "We give it to the sis- ters wben they have a cold." But the U Washington agen. cies that stocked their liquor pantries with nearly 600 g&.llons or the confiscated hooch made re w medicinal claims for their haul. The State Department uses it for diplomatic teceptlons and di nners. The convivial people at Coa s t Gua rd h eadqua rter s drank up their share at an an- nual picnic. E ven the scientists at the National Science Founda- lion pref erred to consuroe their portion than to waste it In the laboratory. THE GREATEST demand is for champaane and foreign wines, confiscated from return· ing tourists who try to sneak ex. tra bottles through customs. Scot.ob is second on the list. Those who partake of the free government hooch are nervous about President. Carter's anti· alcohol attitude, which they view as a quaint idiosyncrasy. But they would prefer not to ad· vertl.se their access to the con· fiscated liquor. Here's where, nevertheless. the liquor flowed during the 1S months: State Department, 80 gallons; National Science Foundation, 142 gallons; GSA. 76.1 gallons; Air Force Academy, 73.3 gallons ; Air Force Foreign Liaison Office, 25 gallons; Coast Guard, 31.2 gallons: Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 55.1 gallons; Ma r ine Corps, 15 .4 gallons; Jnterior Department, a. 11.S gallons: Chier or Naval Oper•Uol)s, 10.4 gallons. and AC- TION, 8.8 &allons. Some 75 private organizations also took advantage of the free liquor offer. There were 25 nurs- ing homes, 24 hospitals and 15 coo vents. POLLtJ'l'ED POT -For over two years the United Slates gov· emment has been helping Mex· ico control the production of marijuana by spraying 'fields with a potentia lly toxi c herbicide called paraquat. As a result. the health of millions of pot s mokers in this country may be endangered. Paraquat kills m a rijuan a plants within two days. But Mex· ican tanners have been harvest- ing the crop within hours after helicopters spray the fields. Much of the marijuana that is s muggled into the United States, therefore. is contaminated. Al the request of Sen. Charles Percy, R.·lll., the White House relu~lantly iniµated a study to deiermine if paraquat-t ainted pot is hazardous. A White House report, issued in December. downplayed the danger . But we have learned that many or the findings are disputed by new scientitic evidence. THE WHITE HOUSE docu· ment, for example, claimed that the m aximum amount of para-quat "'likely to be round on plant material is about 500 parLc; per million." Government scientists. 1 however, have determined that the average contamination is nearly four times that amount. The Whlle House also alleged that the United States was not r esponsible for the paraquat hazard because the Mex ican goverrtment bad purchased the herbicide in Europe. But we have seen confidential State Department cables that reveal the United States has provided t echnical assistance for the paraquat program. Will Jarvis Pl8n Cripple Educatipn? To the Editor: I rind it difficult to understand the editorial policy of the Daily Pilot regarding the J arvis·Gann tax limitation initiative. lnrta· tionary values of real estate have increased to a point that many property tax bills have doubled. Homeowners are hurt by the re- sulting excessive taxation. Homeowners a re further hurt by paying for the inflated property taxes of the busin esses and services which they patronize. It is foolish to think that business owners and landJords will pay tax inc reases out or profit. Prices rise and the homeowner and/or renter pays the biUs. THE STATE legislature offers to refund only a sma ll porlton or this recent dramatic lax in· crease and only as a token m easure made under duress. After a year of debate ove r the s ubject H appears t h a t legislators have intentional ly at· tempted to-delay action on tax relief hoping to keep the wi ndfall tax dollars. , Granted that new taxes will be required following the adoption of the Jarvis-Gann initiative, but tho se t a xes will b e straightforward taxes which ap· ply equitably to all citizens. Perhaps there will be an overall reduction or slate expenditures once legislators gel a public tnandate. For certain there will not be a reduction or public ex· pense rrom the Behr Bill, and, under the Behr Bill there is nothing to prevent a recurrence of Ulla fiasco in coming years. A MOST important point of- fered by the Jarvis·Gann in· Jt1atl9e ls the predictable in· creases in future property taxes. The known amount or taxes can be programmed. into retirement. planning and Into household bud1ets provldln1 a large de1ree of security. Only th~ wealthy can afford to Uve under tbe Bebr Bill. Marines and besides that your article stated. "the Marines prt!· ferred to let the private sector have the first crack at catdung Bubbles." Nowhere did it state that t he Marines refused to help. ·as you so boldly stated in big black type. The Marine Corps does many good things for our commruuty and country. Unfortunately. the press does not try to promote the positive s ide. For example. "Marine Copter Crashes." ! Fri· day, March 3, page 3). What is wrong with "Marines Attempt Dangerous Rescue?" And put it on page 1. MARTHA CALLIHAN ERA /fie.nu S••re To the Editor : I a m astonishe d at Mary Moore's comparison of ERA pro- ponents and Bubbles the Hippo <Ma rch 5 Mailbox). Yes. there have been "runaway wives" who could no longer cope with a load of responsibilities without entirely losing their own identity-and men have been exercising the same option for centuries. THE EQUAL Rights Amend- m e nt 'm e an s e qual r e- spansibilities. Proponents of the ERA are working for the day when women are able to provide financial security for themse\ves and their loved ones through good job training and equal pay, when men are able to help hold the family together because their skills ln providing direct physical and emotional support for others (that's housework and loving in· volvement) are as highly de- veloped as their skills in business, and when each person is en- couraged to reach for rull human potential in any are• abe or he chooses. If your oppo1ltlon to this· • larvls•Gaon lnlti~dvo I• due oalY t6 fear for educaUon quality and puM.lc aervtces, rat •sured that there are Jarvt.Oaan 10. vocatee wbo wm Uil!tt upon eon· U.uJn1 qullty alaO u4 •bo will •tprove new eqWlible taxes lC "fl..ir.L .JAIOS W. DlPFLEY W e c an s har e th e responsibilities -and have a beautiful lime doing it! JANE POOLE Coordinator, South Coast Chapter National Organization for Women LegalT'Mff To the Editor. I a m so angry at a i.tatement hy Huntington Beach City Al· torney, Don Bonfa. He said that he was delighted that the transfer tax could ndt be used against people buying and selling homes in all cities or the state. We are hoping so much for the Jarvis initiative to pass to help us old people live in our homes and the whole thing could be nothing because the state can now call it a transfer tax and legally steal however much they want from the homeowner. BETTE CALLE A...CIM!rDq ••• To the Editor: l was awakened from a deep sleep the morning of Feb. 10th by a close friend not only con- cerned w i th the w ind at. hurricane force but that the electrical power was out. A fire unit arrived within minutes after I had contacted the police department. Nearby a huge tree had uprooted. taking the power pole and lines with it. on its descent to the street.. The 'old mack' (ire truck ar· rived carrying three firemen soaked from the rain. looking for the emergency on tbe unlit street. I ten them arter inquiring about the road conditions from my house to t.be fire station. Ar- riving at the ~lty hall complex I was engulf edt by the. organized ' cha os, and havoc from t he storm. Emergency calls were coming in with relentless repetition. Ever y available city vehicle was dispatched --police and de- tective upits. municipal trucks. lifeguard· Vt'hicles and even the par king control un its. City employees accomplished duties during the emergency with cf· fortless proficiency. I kept the coffee flowing for the m en to help rid the chill. The wind was the only complaint from the fi remen. Before the coffee could do any good , the dispatcher would send them on another call to battle the fires erupting from the downed wires, fallen trees on roadways, or m some cases homes. mudslides. flooding. possible shorting out tra nsformers creatang pole fires. Not fearful for their own safe ty the fi r emen Jeopardized themselves to aid a nd assist others. Certainly it was their duty along with the Police De pa rtment, but . how many people realize the true im· porta ncc of this he rois m ., Perhaps only when a person is in desperate need of help can the tota I realization of fire rescue be understood. The storm abated, e asing tensions and concerns for the welfare of the community. Dawn broke with calls still t inging the switchboard. Clean up jobs lay ahead and much paper work. Another day in the course of duty ... ROS1E L. MICLETTE 'SICM!lc ft•rsdq' To the Editor : The Second Sch weinfurt Memorial Association is looking for any and all s urvivors of Mis· sion 115, 14 October 1943. Th1s mission, flown by the Eighth Air Force from bases In England is recorded in all history books as "Black Thursday" due to the tremendou.' ~looses sufrered by us on that day. We are also interested in con· tact with any other World War H U.S. Army Air Force personnel. whether they were "fly boys" or ground aupport personnel. All other lnh>rmation may be obtained by writing to me c/o P.O. Box. 482, Soutb Gate. California. or I can be c-e1cbed by caJUna (213) S69-3t•G. WILLIAM 0. ALLEN • Ll1:Un from r.odn• en taeb•. TN rio'IC fo cowfnH Wfftrt fo flJ. .,at'f I/Ir HM molt &el " ra11 Dfd. t.itan'I of • '80rdl • ksl au be ,_,,.,,,.,_...._ AU &racn wa&d • di*.....,.,...._, ..... .-ldra:I .. ..... .._ ........... ,.. ....., iitrlllt:Wrtl ftOIOll .. QpJ!lnllt • ,......,, ..... ,.,...,. . ' 11 1 Orange Coast · EDITION Today'!l Closing N.Y. Stocks I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1978 TEN CENTS ~VOL. 71, N~. 14,4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES t,_--~--------------------An Interpretive i ·. Report.------__.... ________ __ fttin·s-weat-ruft Newport Hopefuls • ID By CHARLES H. LOOS Of .. .,..., ..... "'" The road show that is the Newport Beach City Council race clanked into my neighborhood Tuesday night, leaving these impressions: -The Sixth District battle between incumbent Lucille Kuehn and Planning Commissioner Paul Hummel has moved onto the front burner and shows promise or d~­ veloplng into a donnybrook. MRS. KUEHN IS STANDING on her record, which Hummel contends is shaky ground. Hummel's campaign literature claims Mrs. Kuehn votes for high density and big develqpment. Mrs. Kuehn says Hummel's campaign literature is "trash." -The big issue in this year's coun- cil race is density, otherwise described as growth, no growth, controlled growth, phased development, or what the hell are we going to do with all these LOOS cars? Most or the 12 candidates who showed up at the Harbor View Homes Clubhouse C Phase I> appear to be going with the flow on this issue. THE FLOW JN FRONT of the assembled homeowners Tuesday night translated roughly to no more Promontory Points, no more big hotels and routing the traffic around Newport Beach, preferably through Costa Mesa and Irvine. A few or the candidates displayed slight tendencies toward heresy on these matters. None offered any magic ways to achieve the desired goals. But, with all the lofty tallc about density, downcoasl annexation, traffic arterials and other such weighty sub· jects, no one said anythine about the real issue these days in the eastern bill areas or the city. That is, what is the city going to do about odor from the county's Coyote Canyon Dump that keeps wafting over the ridge into those high-priced neighborhoods? SEVERAL CANDIDATES left impressions: -Fourth District candidate Jackie Heather, currenUy chairman of the Planning Commission, seems unable to communicate without a map at band. She admits to being "hung up on maps." Indeed, as Tuesday night's session broke up, there was Mrs. Heather, on hands and knees, a map spread out on the floor in front or her, discussing some problem with two earnest looking gentlemen who also were on their knees. -First District candidate Don Strauss appears to have lost none of the wit that served him so well in his 10 years on local school boards. There's something else about Don Strauss that hasn't changed. He still wears bow lies. -The most conservatively dressed candidate Tuesday night was Charles Larson, who's running aganinst Mrs. Heather in the Fourth District. He has a habit or grasping the lapels of his coat when he talks. You don't see that much anymore. -The least conservatively dressed candidate was Bill Von Esch of the First District. He also smokes cigars. But - you 'II remember that red shirt. -The most noncommittal candidate was Frank Ivens or the Third District. Ivens, who worked in the city administration until he had a parUng of the ways with the present city manager, promised the assembled throng or 75 or so that he would be a leader and "solve your problems." Then he left the dais early in the proceedings. -Peg Forgit, whose husband, Al , once served on the council, dredged up a historical foot.note while answering a question about whether or not the city ought to annex the downcoast area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. If Newport had annexed portions of what is now Costa <See NEWPORT 'ROAD SHOW,' Page A%) I I !Israel Grabs Lebanese Territory i f J f •Donein 'Blr Forces l l: i Coast Highway Bridge Delayed By JOANNE REYNOLDS CM, .. o.lty f'ltet SUtf The new Pacific Coast Highway bridge over Upper " Newport Bay, originally lo have ; been completed by late 1979, won't even be started until , mid-1980, Newport Beach city of- 1 ficials announced Tuesday Sidelined t ~:o~ll!b~S~~ transport students in the t Newport-Mesa Unified ~chool District have been pulled off the road for safety repairs and over· hauls , district officials acknowledged today. Raymond Schnlerer, th,e dis· trict's business manager, described the move as routine and said interest generated in it was ··uxe Shakespeare -much ado about nothing." He said be is not sure how many or the buses have been already re· turned to 11ervice. District ofrlcials have leased two large 79-passenger buses and three smaller vans to transport students while the <See BUSES, Page A!) Coas& Weather Sunny and 1ll1btty warP1er Thursday w1Ul hlgh1 '14 to 78. Lowa \onigbt 48 to 5'. IN81aETODA~ A womma who counted Ian IHOUlt, llOC lwr ~. be· qwotW lo 1wr chUdtira o.ed ,,...,..,...,. ,,.. "'"' ond Mnabt lltd offer "/toMI /or ffma ~ I....._•• Afld Ml' c~lldrt11 Hid, "W•'r• ~." ... ,,..A.It. ''We ~to say 'on the tine in seveaty-nine'," commented Joe Devlin, the city's director or public works. "Now it's 'bope it's done by eighty-one'." The delay came to light Tues· diY during the second in a series of weekly discussions on traffic and the need for reducing future development in the city The announcement was made by Devlin's assis tant, Ben Nolan, who told the SO audience members the latest schedule on bridge construction put out by CalTrans shows the state agency doesn't even plan lo put the seven-lane structure out for con- struction bids until January, 1980. Ron Hendrickson, who serves as co-chairman of the citizen group that has been pushing for the bridge, said he and Bill Ficker, the group's other co- cbairman along with Devlin and Mayor Milan Dostal, will meet with CalTrans officials next week. •'The meeting is not to berate," Hendrickson said to- day.· "We're going to Los Angeles with the idea or asking them what can we do to help ex· pedite." According to Hendtickson. the setback is the result or problems the state agency is having in re- locating businesses to be moved out by the expansion or the in· tersectioos at Bayside Drive and Dover Drive to go along wlth the increased she of the bridge. Neither Devlin nor Hen· drickson were at Tuesday's mHUn1, the second in ·a series of weekly seaslou being helCi to ge\ developers and anti-growth factJoos to1etller to work out re- ductions in the amount or build· ing that will be allowed on the city'• undeveloped land and the timing cf that development. At the meeUna. Nolan also told of the ex~ted progress over the next five years in con· ' atruction of the city's muter plan of roadways. His statement.I that road con- s trucUon and lmfrovements would be slow n coming beeauae of dlflicult,y in obtalninc funda and because of lenlthy permit procedures was noted by Frank Roblnloft, a apokeamati for the MU-development f actloo. <See umes. ••••Ai> o.llY ,., ... SUIH ~" ' JAGGED CONCRETE UNDER RIVER BANK MARKS SEWER LINE BREAK Site on Santa Ana River la About 100 Y•rd1 North of Garden Grove Freeway Beach Ban Remains Areas Quarantined Through Etuter Week Pledged' To Stay JERUSALEM CAP> -Israel " said this afternoon it completed J l"· its takeover of southern Lebanon and Prime Minister Menacbem Begin declared Israeli forces would remain there until an ar-' rangemenl was reached to 1uaratntee that Arab guerrillas would never return. "The operation ... was com· pleted today in the aflernooo," Begin told a news conference in Jerusalem. Asked if the troops would re-I main until Israel reaches an agreement with the Arabs to keep the guerrillas out, he replied. "Yes, it is self-evident." , Begin said the Israeli army units reached their objectives aod that Israel's long-term aim was to keep the area free of Palestinian guerrillas. In an opening statement at the news conference. Begin said the I attack "was in the fullest sense of the word, the use of the in· 1 herent right of legitimate self. defense." He said the army ''was not 1 sent into southern Lebanon for the purpose of staying there," : adding that Israel would seek agreements aimed at insuring' that ·'in a ll those places . . . from which the murderers have 1 been ejected they should not re· turn to them." I Asked if the Israeli attack would impair Middle East peace talks with Egypt, Begin said if .. Egypt seriously wants negot.ia· lions with Israel . . . all the events or the past few days will not nresent a serious obstacle to (See ISRAEL, Page A%> Newport Narcs t Nab40Po A! DAILY PILOT N Wednesday. March 15, 1978 Trial Thursday No Contest Plea Renewed by Cella By TOM BARLEY Ol t• Dall'I l'li.t Slaff Dr. Louis J . Cella Jr. bas re- newed bis bid to be allowed to plead no contest to 127 felony counts on which he will be tried starting Thursday in San D1ego County Superior Court. Conceding that "the court will find me guilty and I will be sen- tenced," Cella said today that the purpose or the new appeal is "to save the taxpayers $200,000 in the costs of a six·month trial and the trauma and tremendous personal expense to myself." The document being filed to- day in the San Diego court con· Fro• Page A J BUSES ••• buses are out of service and they said some of the working buses are being used on double runs. According to Schnierer, five or the buses were taken off the line by the school district for routine maintenance. Those buses are: Bus 24, a 1950 Crown, for engine overhaul. Bus 25, a 1961 Crown, for (!ngine overhaul. Bus 19, a 1949 Crown, for engine overhaul. Bus 47, a 1961 Crown, clutch repairs. Bus 8, a 1972 GMC, steering repairs. However. rive other buses were tak e n out of service this week by California Highway Patrol inspectors who said the vehicles did not measure up to stale safety standards. Those btLses are: Bus 39, a 1956 Ford, sent back to the agency which improperly installed new brakes. Bus 38, a 1958 Crown, radiator leaks. Bus 41, a 1958 Crown, radiator ·leaks. Bus 17, a 1969 Crown, an im· proper clamp on the brake air chamber. Bus 26, a 1951 Crown, a loose air compressor. • · The problems on the first five buses were spotted during the district's regular 30-day safety inspect~ Sc~ierer said. The other f'he roblems were spotted durin the annual CHP inspeetian. He stressed that ''kids are be- ing driven in safe equipment." Fro111 Page A J BRIDGE ••• Robinson emphasized that, if development is to be timed to road improvements, then the lack of road funds is "the real holdup in this system." But speakers for d evelopers countered by saying it was a ."chicken and egg" situation - that highway funds won't be given to Newport unless there is a need shown by the presence of development. Richard Hogan, the city's director of Community Develop. ment, noted that many of the city's ·future road improvement projects are going to be paid for by developers as their buildings are put up. He explained that In those cases, the road work and build· ing would go on at nearly the same time, rather than holding up the building until the road work is done. Fire Victim Dies CINCINNATI (AP) -A 185th victim of the Beverly Hills Sup- per Club fire bas died nearly 10 months after the blaze at the Southgate, Ky. club. DAILY PILOT de mns the opposition or the Orange County District At- torney's Office to the no contest pleas Cella offered to file Tues· day in San Diego." Lawyers familiar with the Cella case described h.is offer to plead no contest as reflecting Cella 's desire to avoid legal ac- l ion that forme r business p"1Jlers might take if a guilty verdict is returned in the San Diego trial. A no contest plea is noi an ad- mission of guilt but is rather an acceptance by the defendant of any penalties arising out of the criminal charges. 1 Campaign Refonn Altered Orange County supervisors moved today toward amending a controversial provision of a · political reform ordinance they enacted two weeks ago. Supervisors instructed County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to pre· pare a new ordinance that would, in effect, take away a fund raising advantage or in· cum bent office holders. Thal advantage came wher. the reform ordinance excluded donations already received from a $1,000 an election limitation. Supervisor Philip Anthony suggested today that tfle $1,000 individual donor limitation not go into effect until June 7, the day after the primary election. Anthony conceded the or· dinance favored "incumbents who traditionally begin cam- paigning and fund raising earlier than other candidates." He also acknowledged that, as written, the ordinance appeared to favor one group over another. "They (challengers to incum· bents) have a valid concern," Anthony said as he denied there was any intention to favor in· "It is incomprehensible to me why any public official would force t.bls burden on the tax- payers when I am willing , without qualification, to enter pleas upon which I will be found guilty of every charge made," the statement by Cella reads. Defense attorney Keith Munroe made the statement available today in Santa Ana at the time that Celia's lawyers were filing the document in San D.ego. Cella argues in the statem~ that the continued opposition of the Orange County District At- torney's office to a no contest is "not rationally explainable." Assistant District Attorney Michael Capizzi, who heads the Cella prosecution. was not available for comment today. But he commented Tuesday in San Diego while opposing the move by Celia's lawyers, "I am holding tight for a guilty· plea." Superior Court Judge'William Yale ordered Cella, 54, to go on trial Thursday after rejecting the opposed defense offer to plead no contest to charges of grand theft, fraud and embezzle- ment. Cella was indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on 127 felony counts based on al- legations that he d efrauded hospitals controlled by him as secretary-treasurer of an estimated $2 million. · It is alleged that most if not all of that money was used by Cella to finance political candidates who m et with his approval. Cella was convicted in Los Angeles Federal Court of felony charges related to those same allegations and sentenced to five years in prison. The Santa Ana physician is scheduled to 'begin serving that term April 3 in the San Diego federal facility but wtll be re· leased during court action for the duration of bis Superior Court trial. f'ro91 Page AJ \ I ISRAEL ••• c~mbent officeholders in the or· peace negotiations." dmance. Thou.sands of Israeli troqps The Westminster super;wlsor • nauted Palestinian guerrillas wen.t on to aqgc~t that~· fuij from k~ bases across southem ordanance ~ tato er ect al Lebanon today and Israeli s.ched~led. March 30 but the s~· warplanes fired rockets that ll?n limiting the amounts c · killed Arab refugees in camps d~d.ates can accept from in· around Beirut witnesses re-div1dual dooors to $1,000 an elec-• tion be held until after the June ported,. . primary election. S.ynan gunners 10 Lebano~ Kuyper was instructed on as claamed to have hit one Israeli to 0 vote to return to the board plane. next week with the amendment Acros.s Lebanon, reports or delaying the donation limitation. casuallles among Palestinian In addition to invoking the and Lebanese refugees mo~ted donor limit, the reform or· t?ward SO and there were indica· dinance established a county lions of many more dead and f · l't' 1 · wounded a.1r .Po 1 1ca practices com· Kin~ Khaled of Saudi Arabia mission. . appea ed lo President Carter to SEWAGE ••• rounding environs. The ruptured sewer line col· lapsed Sunday when rain· s welled river waters undercut its foundation. Sanitation district offlclals said materials needed to repair the line will be delivered to the site Monday and what will be a permanent repair will beJln. That task ts likely to take an estimated two to three weeks, according to officials. intervene to end the fighting in south Lebanon, the Saudi press agency reported. Israel said the aim of the as- sault was to clear a guerrilla- f ree strip along its northern frontier and deter repetitions of the terrorist raid last weekend in which 34 Israelis died. It was believed to be the biggest Israeli attack ever, and the Palestin· laos said 25,000 Israeli soldiers were involved. The Palestinians denied they lost some of the ground wit- nesses claimed they had, and said fighting continued in the border areas 18 hours after it began at 12:30 a.m. local lime (2:30 p.m . Tuesday PST). p,....~..,eAJ NEWPORT 'ROAD SHOW' Mesa when lt bad the chance. abe nld. aound.1n.c 1ttbat was ooco a Forgit famlly tbeme. ''there would be a coast freeway down 18tb Street today.'' Balloons Away • Members of the Harbor Area Boys Club la unch balloons in contest to see whose balloon will fly the farthest. Launching festivities Tuesday at Eastbluff branch of Boys Club in Newport Beach was part of Boys Club Week observance. Tags on balloons ask finder to return the document to club. There's a prize in it for the boy whose ba lloon travels farthest from the launch site. Pact Change OK'd; Senate'Aye' Nears? WASlllNGTON (AP> -Presi· dent Carter agreed today to ac- cept a change in the proposed Panama Canal treaties as three more senators added themselves to the still elusive handful of votes needed to win Senate ratification or the agreements. Democratic Sens. Russell Long of Louisiana and Dennis DeConcini of Arizona announced they will support the arree· ments turning control o tbe waterway over to Panam' by the year 2000. They were joined by Sen. Edward Brocke of Massachusetts. "We do not own the Panama Canal," Long said in jumping from the dwindling list of un- committed senators. "We have a lease on the property and the landlord is demanding that we gel out." At a mid-morning While House meeting with DeConcini, Carter said he would not oppose DeConcini's proposal that the treaties permit the United Slates to intervene in Panama to forestall any threat lo continued canal operations. Meanwhile, Senate leaders professed optimism that the treaties would draw the needed two·lhirds vote. "I think the votes will be there,'' said Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd. Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker, a lso a treaty :;upporter, said, "I don't think there .is going t• be rejection." Nonetheless, there was in· tensive activity by supporter<> and opponents seeking last· minute votes. D eConcini's amendment would allow the United States to use military force even if Panamanian labor troubles or some other internal problem in· te rfered with the passage of ships through the canal. HOW TO ADD AN "ANTIQUE GALLERY" LOOK TO YOUR HALL? WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB "'t-f-l.MMI ....... BRITI ANY CHEST & MIRROR The fir st things guests see when they enter your hom e ... this authenticate styled, exquisitely antiqued Hall chest and Mirror. How imp res-'"lliliiii sive the rest must be! Not only ~ does \his beautifully scaled traditional design look elegant, but it also offers display and storage space for your posses- sions. It is silk screened and hand decorated over rich cherry veneers and pecan so lids. Visit our Drexel.Heritage Gallery today and see what the world of home ktmishings is all abou.t. NB City Clerlf Seu Deadline On Elections Newporl Beach City Clerk Doris George is reminding resi· dents of a series or deadlines connected to the city's April 11 municipal election. Voters who expect to be out of the city at the lime of the elec· lion or who will be unable to vote al their polling place because of a disability have until April 4 to apply for a n absentee ballot. The ballots may be obtained in •person or by mail. She said that, if applying by mail, the request must be signed and must list the vote r 's registered address as well as giving the reason for needing an absentee ballot. Jn order to be counted, the ballots must be returned to the city clerk or any city polling place by the close of polling hours on election dav. Pl'ofesslonll fnterlof Design without~· Comfortabte P.uking • Corwt11ient f1lwidne The Store offainous Nam~s 1514 NOR'fH MAIM SANtA ANA • 54l:.t391 Tl.IU ~ Thl.lrs.. and SM 9 JO to~ Mon.: 12 to9 • F{I.: 9.30 to 9:0t) , Chinlltt'• ~ the nn.1t ftom Drexel. Herii.ge. Henredon. Century. S.k,r. Weiman. Stmnn. &.nton.Coep@r. ~ • ~ Oiiton. ~ 8-dding. $tittle. tii'arbfo. °'4tndler Custom Or.per1C1 £, C•rpttlng u Mii u other famoua namu. CALIFORNIA Tanker Terminal ·" Nearing? LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ebern Secretary James Sehl.es· inger baa indicated a breakthrough baa been reached lD Standard OU of Ohlo'a t.bree- year fight for California's ap. provji ol a proposed Long Beach oil tanker terminal, tbe Los Angeles Times reported today. "It's a breakthrough, but several more are coing to be needed,.. said Air Resources. Board Chairman Tom Quinn, wbo confirmed that Sobio has agreed verbally to spend $80 mlllion oo air pollution cleanup equipment at a Southern California :EdJ.aon Co. plant. •-s~ LOS ANGELES (AP> -A man wbo apparently intended to jump from . the roof of a downtown apartment complex fired one near·mias sbot before ( SI ATE ) quietly surrendering to police, authorities said. Investigators said Thomas Brooks -simmoos-.-2$, an· ac· cowitant, was booted Tuesday for investigation ol assault with a de- adly weapon. otlirial lolled SAN DIEGO (AP) -An assis· tant principal at Torrey Pines High School bas been arrested at his home and booked lnto cot.mty jail on two counts or selling small amounts of marijuana. a Narcotics Taak Force spokesman said. Pierre Simon DiGrlgnon, 44, of Leucadia was arrested Tuesday and was held in lieu of $1,000 bond peodiog arraignment today in Oceanside Superior Court, the spokesman said. 1Wlllll.e 1t' cute E9ed SANTA BARBARA CAP) Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says he wants the state Department of Resources to find out exactly bow much radioactive waste is stored in Call!oro.ia. Brown called for the study Tuesday after touring the U.S. Navy base at Port Hueneme, where several thousand tons of radioactive dirt are being tem· porarily stored. Tried BIU Sertt MADERA (AP) -Madera County has received a $21.396 bill from Alameda County tor expenses in the Chowchilla kidnapping trial. A total of $8,936 of the bill is tor Superior Court coats and Sl2,'60 ls for costs incurred by tbe Alameda County Sheriff's Department. ... 'Tlae Fonz' Honored Actor Henry Winkler, star of "Happy Days" and the movie "The One and Only" talks with Mark Goff eney, 8, while attending a Variety Club luncheon in Los Angeles Tuesday. Winkler received the club's Heart Award for "helping to bring joy, happiness and hope to needy and handicapped children." Sniper Incident 'Probably a Rock' DIAMOND BAR (AP) -An incident originally reported as a sniper firing at a car carrying an expectant mother bas been dJs. counted because it cannot be proven, sheriff's deputies said Tuesday. "We didn't find evidence of any crime," said Lt. Gus Feederle. "It was probably just a rock." mediately after the car was al· The California Highway legedlyhitbygunfire. Patrol had received a telephone report from a woman who claimed she saw a man standing on a hillside with a rifle im- Voters Reject Card Parlors INGLEWOOD <AP> - Voters in this Los Angeles suburb overwhelmingly turned down a proposal to legalize card gambling parlors. With all precincts re.- porting, the vote Tuesday was 7,581 against the pro- posal and 2,262 in favor. City officials said 33.279 residents were eligible to vote in the special elec- tion. In 1976, Inglewood voters rejected a similar move by a margin of more than 1,000 votes. HOWEVER, investigators were later unable lo locate the unidentified woman caller to question her. CHP officer Casey Bos said she had reported that the targets of the alleged attack -lncludine a pregnant wqmao -had left because the expec· tant mother was on her way to deliver her baby. The woman caller w•s the on- ly known witness to the shooting. She said the incident took place on Highway 57, which runs between Anaheim and San Dimas, but apparently left before sheriff's deputies ar· rived. They were unable lo con- tact her later. A SHERIFF'S special weapons team was flown in by helicopter and armed with M·l6 rifles lo investigate, but the team failed to locate the alleged sniper durini a search of the hills above the freeway. "Whether it was a sniper or someone target shooting in the hills who miscalculated bis aim we don't know," said Sheriff's Lt. George Eckels. W"m a S1lpt!l' Ocean Cruise at Long John Silver's 60 Grand Prizes! Win on• of 60 luxwiou1 cruleu to Nassau and the Bahama Out lskinds -a f our·day Island holiday fOJ four aboard Natwegian Cartbbean Une$'™ SunwardlL Get an entry form at any perttdpatlng Long John Silver's, and flndout lnltantly If you're a winner. Every Entry Form a Valuable Coupon! Even tf you don't win a Gnmd Prlze, every entry fonn It a valuable offer for food or ky cold Coca-Cola. TftADUCA"K 9 So coma on in. You could wln the holiday of a llfetfm•. In ~ II> dw CT\lfM, Wl(lnera ~~ round·lrip airline IJ•ljpoitanot'I to~ Iron> ..i.tad dtlu. and "* i<CUillliOdedoe• t. Mo,..~ Miami prtar to ha Q'\llM depettun.~ .. *'-•you •e. S~en<k Match 26, 1978. $l 1 s s I • Nill and NQ\llallonl can be bl..ct at S*~ Lat.o llohn ~•Seafood Shoppe. Wednoeaay, Marc;h 1S, 197!' DAILY PILOT A 5 l):fllg · Pusher$ Hit ' . California Cracks Down on Doctors .. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A state crackdown on drug. pushing doctors was announced Tuesday by olficlals who said they thought 90 percent of the state's mes~ pill ma,ket may come from l>b)'slclaos. Richard Spohn, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's consumer affairs director, said the state would seek restraining orders against five doctors Tuesday. HIS ANNOUNCEMENT came several days after a lengthy ac· count in the Los Angeles Times focused on the problem of doc· tors who prescribe dangerous drugs. Spohn said the state also plans legal action soon aeainst seven pharmacies. He declined to name them, saying the case was still being formed. "THOSE DllVG·PUSDING doctors will be nailed and the full force of the law will be brought to bear on them," Spohn told a Capitol news conference be called to publicize the crackdown. Bob Rowland, executive secretary of the Board of Medical Quality Assurance, estimated 200 to 300 doctors in California are over-prescribing drugs. Spohn said the state bas 231 drug-related cases pending involving doctors. STATE OFFICIALS unveiled a 24-member state task force dubbed Operation DOPE -Doc- tors Out Pushing Ejected -and said between 200 and 300 doctors are "bard core pushers." They added that no communi- ty in CalffiJtnia could consider Drowned Man Found in Sea SANTA CRUZ CAP) -The Coast Guard bas recovered the body of a 28-year-old man wbo drowned while on a sailing trip. A Guard helicopter spotted the body of Scott Alles of Capitola floating eight miles off the coast late Monday. Ailes was sailin8 with a com- panion when their small sailboat capsized, the GWIJ'd said. The compaoioo, whose identity was not released, managed to right the boat and return to shore. itself immune from drug. pushing doctors or pharmacies that work with those doctors wbo over-prescribe. MOST OF THE ILLEGAL pill prescrtpUons are for stlmula- tants and depnaants, officials said. Dr. Ka.sh Rose, president of the California Medical Associa- tion, said the CMA supports the effort lo weed out those doctors. But he also said any estimate of the doctors involved was "just a guess" and added about Spohn: "If he'd quit having news COD· ferences and do something about it, we'd be a lot better oll." AS EVIDENCE of the need for the project, Spohn said state in· vestlgators found that three doc- tors in the fll'St nine days of March wrote nearly 1,000 pre- scriptions for 60,000 tablets. Asked ii a 24-member team could have much effect on the problem, Spohn said he was in part relying on the fact that word would spread that "the heat was on." THE DOCl'OBS Spohn named as targets of the immediate restraining orders are: Lamar Desmuke of Oakland, Franklin Hendricks or Sao Jose, Chester Hurd of San Jose, MarvinStemof Cypress and Kenneth Rascoe of Hermosa Beach. He also said an arrest warrant on a manslaughter charge was issued Monday for Dr. Rodney Chamberlain of Santa Clara in connection with the prescription or 5,400 tablets of Ascocleen for a patient who died. of an overdose. Rowland said the state bas on· 1y seen "the tip or the iceberg, We want to go out and find out what the dimemions are.•' ,.. Wo01an,28, Kills Man In Break-in INGLEWOOD (AP) -A 28- year-old woman, alarmed by knocks on her front door, armed hersell and opened fire on a man who broke in through her bedroom window, bitting him fatally, authorities said. Police Officer Albert Kenstler said early today the bearded man in bis 30s was shot in the chest Tuesday night. He fled from the woman's house but col· lapsed and died on the street a few blocks away. / KeoaUer L$aid the man's idenli· ty bad not oeeo determined. Tbe identity of the woman, who lived in the bouse with her 6-year--0ld daughter. was withheld. Kenstler said early reports in- dicat.ed the vicUm could have been the so-called "Pillowcase Rapist," blamed for 158 rapes in the southwest Los Angeles area since 1975. But investigating officers said later be was not, because "his height was wrong and bis weight was wrong." Parents Sentenced In Child Torture LONG BEACH (AP) -Superior Court Judge Ellsworth M. Beam levied sentences of two years in county jail on Randolph and Willie Johnson for imprisoning their teen-aged, adopted daughter in her fllth·riddeo bedroom. The Johnsooa, who pleaded guilty to charges of false imprison- ment and child endangering tut Oct. 11 bad been due back in court Tuesday. But they were sentenced. March 3, following 90 days of psychiatric testing in state prison. TREY WERE ARRESTED in June 1978 after their natural daughter, Donna, 19, escaped from home and told officials of the plight of her adopted sister, Laura, 16. .. Officers who broke down the front door of the Johnaon bouae to gain entrance said Laura waa suffering from bruises, malqutrition and infections and she weighed only 63 pound& though sbe was S· feet-2-incbes tall. SPECIAL EVENTS BEGINNING MARCH 28 Got the fever? Join our Disco Dance Class I In just 4 Lessons you'll be Dancing the night away to the current dance craze .•• DISCO FREE STYLE, LATIN HUSTLE, NEW YORK HUSTLE, and the 2-STEP .•. Day and evening classe~ available .•• $35 for the session .•• call for registration 556-0611, ext. 371. And don't miss out weekly dance demonstrations ••• E"ary S!'ow is new and different ••• 12:00 tQ 2 :00 pm ••• Saturday, March 18 and 8 ••• Dance Shop near Town and Travel Sportswear ••• Middle Level • .. TO CELEBRATE EASTER •••• THURSDAYS, MARCH 16, 23 and 30 Le Cr.uset Cookware Class ••• Our Expert, CotlGtt• Lockett, will take you on a cooking journey of Frence ••• 10:30 • 12:30 pm or 2 :00 to 4:00 pm • ; • Join ont elm or Ill three ••• $10 for one, $26 for the oompleta seaion ••• Registe• SATU~DAYS. MARCH 18 a 26 Storybook Reldlno for the Chlldren from the detlghtful Beetrix Potter col· ltction ••• 11 :00 mn and 2:30 pm ••• Children'• Area, Upper Level. SATURDAV,MARCH18 lnfonnif mocltllng of Duchelll Junior Loun..., ••• 12:00• 4:00 pm.·'• Y °""' Attitude. , v• • -\6 N E ,_.... • • I .. RobertN.WMd /Publlsher T~s Kee11ll /Edltor Orange Coast Daily Pilot uttonci ..-ag.e _______ •W•e•d•nesd••~•'•M•a•rc•h••15•,•19•7•8------~--·Ba-l"b9-r-•K•r•el•b•ic•h•/•E•d•lt•or•l••l.P•~--E·d•l•to•r-- • If Not Harmony, Maybe Tolerance At the request of the Newport Beach City Council, council and planning commission members and staff are meeting with developers and interested citizens to dis· cuss the future of major undeveloped areas of the city. The meetings are aimed at helping the councU make tlecisions in its review of the city's Gener al Plan. Possible cuts in allowable densities are under consideration. This is clearly a controversial area and one on which two views have been clearly drawn: Developers understandably want a reasonable re- turn on land on ~hich they have been paying heavy taxes for years. -Many residents, on the other hand, are concerned about increasing traffic congestion and the loss of cherished open space and potential parklands. At the first meeting, members of the audience ap. peared willing to at least hear each other out in the in- terest of increasing their knowledge about proposed de- ve Jopmenl. Participants should remember that the point of the meetings is not to reach a compromise acceptable to all; ll is not a bargaining session. Rather, the purpose is to provide information for the City Council, which will then. hold public hearings at which everyone can speak. The council has wisely decided to seek complete in- formation, and so far staff and developers have put in a good deal of work. The efforts of all concerned so far ap· pear to be in the best interests of the city. Surfing Rule Test After :,ever al public hearings and committee meetings. Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation com- missioners have recommended a new surfing plan to the city council. The plan is aimed at solving two complaints: one, from swimmers, that during nonsummer months they have nowhere to swim safe from s urfboards, and one by surfers that on summer afternoons they are forced out of the water and have nowhere to go. , The new plan would leave most oflthe city's beaches under the existing blackball system, which gives lifeguards discretion on when board surfers must leave the water. llowcver, it would designate one four-block area in West Newport as off.limits to board surfers all year. and a second four-block area in West Newport is open to sur- fers at all times. The existing system has worked fairly well and has the added advantage of uniformity. Since numerous beach users come from out-of-town, the posting of special a reas may cause some confusion, and would require ad· ditional li feguard s taffing. Still, City Council m embers might at least consider testing the new plan to see how well it works in practice. Classes • Ill Conflict 1t was probably inevitable that free-wheeling Coastline Community College, would eventually offer courses in conflict with classes already available in the community. Newport Beach officials have complained about the loss of tennis and yoga students to Coastline. The city program, which is self-supporting, charges a fee, while all state community colleges are tuition-free. Coastline officials state that they are required to of. fer physical education. They also said they don't believe the courses are comparable since theirs off er transl er credit. This appears lo be a case where at least two public: agencies both have jurisdiction, so it would be pointless to try to affix blame. Coastline and Newport Beach officials have said they are willing to sit down together and talk about the con- flict. That sounds like a good idea. A little cooperation here would go a long way toward making sure the public's needs are met and trying to shift the cost as much as possible onto those who enjoy the classes and off the taxpayers in general. • Opinions e><pressed in the space above are those C>f the Dally Pilot. Other views e><pressed on this page are those of their authors and •artists. Reader·comment is invited. Address The Ot1lly Pilo\. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd I Backwards ByL.M.BOYD How many competitive events can be won by moving backwards? Tug-o-war certainty comes to mind. The n there's r owing. And how about the backstroke in swimming? Any others? Q. "What do the big·time modeling agencies cbarfITa.!: send you a glrl who's w Dear Gloomy Gu to pose tor nude· photo· graphs? A. About $500 an houris the goina rate now at the Pl'U· tige ollttlts, atthoup some Jesser known booken only charge $250 an hour. tt•1 not enough just to own your own camera, they aver. ,You .. r. suppoHd to be a pro(~~ photo11apber. That keeps them out ti trouble :Wfflt tM law. Easiest way to 1barpen 8ClllOl'I. ·I'm told. 19 to nt ~ • 1beet ti emery paper. U it doesn't wort, UMIU&b. torcet wur• )'OU read It. Jack Anderson .. I Booze Flows in Washington WASHINGTON -Under abstemious Jimmy Carter, the White House does not serve alcoholic beverages except for wine and beer. But outside the presidential premises, the spirit of W. C. Fields still li ves among officials of subordinate federal agencies. Indeed, they have developed a s teady flowing source of free gov- e rnm e nt booze. Their secret source i s t h e whi skey, vodka and other liquors seized by c u stoms agen ts a nd tax re - venuers. The General Services Ad· ministration falls heir lo this bottled bonanza, which should exceed 30,000 gallons in a good year. An obscure Jaw allows the GSA lo distribute its largesse ,,, Mailbox • without charge to government agencies and private groups for "medicinal , scientific" and other appropriate purposes SUCH PRIVATE institutions as hospitals, nursing homes and even convents. all known for their sobriety, stocked up with t ,300 gallons of liquor between October, 1976, and December, 1977. One satisfied customer is a Lillie Sisters of the Poor convent in Illinois, whose spokesman ex- plained: "We give it to the sis· ters when they have a cold." But the 11 Washington ~en­ cies that stocked their liquor pantries with nearly 600 gallons of the confiscated hooch made few medic.in~! claims for their haul. · The Stale Department uses it for diplomatic receptions and dinners. The convivial people at Coast Guard headquarters drank up their s hare at an an- nual picnic. Even the scientists at the National Science Founda- ' lion prelerred to consume lhelr portion than to waste it in the laboratory. THE GftEATiST demand is for champagne and foreign wines, confiscated from return inS tour~ts who try to sneak ex. tro bottles t hrough customs. S<'otch ls second on the list. Those who partake of the free government t¥>och are nervous about President Carlee's anti· alcoho l attitude, which they view as a, quaint idiosyncrasy. But they would prefer not to ad- vertise their access to the con- hsc ated Uquor. Here's where. nevertheless, the liquor flowed during the 15 months : Slate Department, 80 gallons; National Science Foundation, 142 gallons ; GSA, 76.1 gallons; Air Force Academy, 73.3 gallo ns.; Air Force Foreign Liaison Office, 2S gallons; Coast Gua rd, 31.2 gallons; Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 55.1 ga Hons; Marine Corps, 15.4 gallons; Interior Department, 17.a gallons: Chier of Naval O~~Uons, 10.4 gallons, and AC· TION, 8.8 galt9ns. Some 75 private organizations also look adwmlage of the free hquor offer. There were 2S nurs- ing homes. 24 hospitals and lS convents. POU.VTED POT For over two years the Uniled States gov- ernment has been helping Mex- ico control the production of marijuana by spraying fields with a potentially toxic herbicide called paraquat. As a result, the health of millions of pot smokers in ~country may be endangered. P.araquat kills m arijuana plants within two days. But Mex· ican farmers have been harvest· ing the crqp within hours after helicopters s pray the fields. Much of the marijuana that is smuggled il1to the Ubited States. therefore, is ,contaminated. At tho request or Sen. Charles P~rcy. R.-IJJ., the White House reluctanUy initiated a study to determine if p,raquatc-tainled pot is hazardous. A White House report, issued in December, downplayed the danger. But we have learned that many of the findings are disputed by new scientific evidence. ·'l'HE WHITE HOUSE docu· ment, for example, claimed that the maximum amount of para· qua~ :'likely lo be found on plant material is about 500 parts per million." Government scientists. however, have determined that the a~rage conta~ination is nearly four times tb•t amounL The White House also alleged that the United States was not responsible for the paraquat hazard because the Mexican government had purchased the herbicide in Europe. But ~e have ·seen confidential State Departm~l cables that reveal the United States has provided technical assistance for the paraquat program. ~ill Jarvis .P~ Cripple Education? To the Editor: I find il difficult lo understand the editorial policy of the Daily Pilot regarding the Jarvis-Gann tax limitation initiative. Infla· tionary values of real estate have increased to a point that many property tax bills have doubled. Homeowners are hurt by the re· suiting excessive taxation. Homeowners are further hurt by paying for the inflated property taxes of the businesses and services which they patronize. It is foolish to think that business owners and landlords will pay tax increases out of profit. Prices rise and the homeowner and/or renter pays the bills. THE STATE legislature offers to refund only a s mall portion of this recent dramatic tax in- crease and only as a token measure m ade under duress. After a year of debate over the subject it appears that legislators have intentionally at- tempted lo delay action on la>< relief hoping lo keep lhe windfall tax doUars. Granted that new taxes will be required followina the adoption of the Jarvis-Gann initiative, but tho se tax es will b e straightforward taxes which ap- ply equitably to all citizens. Perhaps there will be an overall reduction of state expenditures once legis lators get a public .mandate. For certain there will not be a reduction of public ex· penae from the Behr Bill, and, under the Behr Bill there is notbirte to prevent a recurrence of this fiasco in coming years. ferred to Jet the private sector have the first craclc at catching Bubbles." Nowhere did it state that the Marines r efused to help, as you so boldly staled ill big black type. · The Marine Corps does many good things for our community and country. Unfortunately, the press does not try to promote the positive side. For example. "Marine Copter Crashes;• (Fri- day, March 3, page 3). What is wrong with .. Marines Attempt Dangerous Rescue?" And put it on pagel. MARTHA CALLIHAN EllA /fl~ SJNsre To the Editor: I am astonished at Mary Moore's comparison of ERA pro- po9ents and Bubbles the Hippo (March 5 Mailbox). Yes, there have been ••nmaway wives" who could no longer cope with a load of responsibilities without entirely losing their own identi~y-and. men have been exercising the sameoptionforcenturies. THE EQUAL Rights Amend- m e o t m ean s equal r,e- sponsibillties. Proponents of the ERA are working for the day when women are able to provide financial security for themselves and their loved ones through good job training and eqaal pay, when men are able lo help hold the family together because their skills in providing direct physical a nd emotional support for others (that's tiousework and loving in- volvement) are as hichly de· veloped aa their skills in business. and whe.n each person is en- couraged to reach for f\111 bumap polenUal in any area she or he chooses. W e c a n s h. a ·r e t h e responsibilities -and have a beautiful tlmedolntll ! ~= South CoaRCbapter "N aUonal Or1an1aaUon f«Women ~ All of these violations were in a period of 25 minutes from 5:45 to 6:10p.m. ' SURELY the Newport Beach Police Department is aware of this situation and un1ess they are impressed by the number of expensive cars using the island roads and turn the other way, J suggest they get on the ball and police this situation or remove the ignored stop signs and let the chips fall where they may. Anywhere else in Newport Beach at such ~ busy corner, they would ticket you at lbe drop of a hat. • T h e onl y e nforcement or traCfic laws on the island is for parking violations. Surely we can't or shouldn't wait until a cou pie of these cars come together and a serious accident takes place. Jn tbe interest of all drivers who do try to obey traffic control signs as best tbey can, I believe· some po6itive action should be taken as equftJJy as it is taken in other traffic areas. R. B. MURR EN SR. Be'•h ..... e• To the Editor: I have jusL road lbe editorial "Getting AC(luainted'' on March 8 (about disturbance problems in West Newport). The group or neighbors men· tioned were probably my ex- neighbors wbo successfully peti- tioned to have iny roommates and myself evicted <by lorce of law) last September, l have no ill feelings toward this action s ince they were ju&tified in their complaint and I apOIOgiie for causin1 any disturbance ot their peace. A1 for the Newfort Beach poUee and the ~bOr Municipal Court aystem. I •fl' ennaed. I 'WH ~•rt•tl41d recently on a cbarae of bela• a pqbllc nuisaace stemininc from the above menUoned compllint. u~n a...,vanc. before Juctce Calvin Sdllnidt.. I ••• noWJed that tbe c ... bad been dropped over twr '!'Ot'thl aco. a. of. lefed to tree~lbe it 1 aareed to tbe dlllrlct attomey'a .:})al'taln not to sue tbe court. I Hked wbat would baJ11M1D lf I di4:D!t .,..... and ... ; tOlcl. that l'd ,,_...,.more 4Qa Ill :18.q bttcn I would be auow.ct &o see an attorney. I opted for im· mediate freedom by verbally agreeing not to sue and was SOOD released. · I have since contacted a couple of lawyers and have been told l have a valid case lo sue but that it would hardly be worth their time to lake the case. I hope you print this letter to show the other "Party Time Zoo Area" animals that the "Jaw· abiding ambience" bas the full support of the police and courts of t"e Newport Harbor area. K.JENKINS C.-ril Ddewded To the Editor: As a r esident of Newport Beach as well as an employee or The Irvine Company. it is im- possible to read a letter such as that written by Allan Beek en· titled "Fighting City Hall" in the March 1 issue without reply . What concerns me is that your readers might be confused by Mr. Beek's three charges against the City Council: "cor- ruption," "agreed to all this (de· velopment) without consulting the citizens,'' and .. controlled then and now by The Irvine Com- pany." THOSE CHARGES are ob· viously the opinion of Mr. Beek and those who might be aligned with him in regard lo the past a nd future developm ent or Newport Beach. It is my studied opinion tha~ the Newport Beach City Coll.Dell is one of the most above.board and honest city councils in Southern California. that it is ex· tremely seMitive to citizen in· volvemen~ and that it is com- pletely independe nt of any special interest control In its ac- tions. The cltliens of Newport Beath are· being well served by their el,cted represe11taUves. MARTIN A. BROWER l , ,1 Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks .Saddlebaek EDITION t VOL. 71, NO. 7 4,4SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARiH 15, 1978 TEN CENTS : Supervisors Alter Reform Ordinance f Orange County supervisors cumbentofficebolders. ~ moved today toward amending a That advantage came when t controver~ial provision of a the reform ordinance excluded i political reform ordinance they donations already received from enacted two weeks ago. a Sl,000 an election limllation. Supervisors instructed County Supervisor Philip Anthony Counsel Adrian Kuyper to pre-suggested today that the Sl,000 I pare a new ordinance that individual donor limitation not ' would, in e(fect, take away a go into effect unW June 7, the day J'Und raising advantage of in· after the primary election. t Anthony conceded the or- dinance favored "incumbents who traditionally begin ca~ paigning and fund raising earlier than other candidates." He also acknowledged that, as written, the ordinance appeared to favor one group over another. "They (challengers to incum- bents) have a valid concern," Israeli Troops, ,, Anthony said u be denied there was any intention lo favor in- cumbent officeholders in the or- dinance. The Westminster supervisor went on to suggest that the full or4inance go into effect as scheduled March 30 but the sec- tion limiting the amounts can· didates can accept from in· Jets _ Hannner Palestinians Splitting Hairs Miss San Juan Capistrano Emma Malagon investigates city traffic engineer George Alvarez' beard in judging Tuesday for the Hairiest Man in Town contest. Alvarez went on to capture the coveted title foJlowed by city engineering aide Marty Bryant, who was selected for the prettiest beard. and city resident Jim Blanck, who, judges said. grew the "grubbiest beard." Feliciano' s Wife Denied Singing Fees Eddie Benefits Surf,_ Sounders Play Soccer Eddie Rua -the 12-year-old Laguna Hills boy paralyzed from the waiSt down following a fall last December -will be the recipient of funds raised through a benefit soccer game Sunday at Mission Viejo High School. The game, sp0osored by the American Youth Soccer Organization, will feature the Califomla Surf against the Seat- tle Sounders. Eddie was a mem be1' of the youth soccer or- gan iaation •nd a promising youn9pl~r. The soccer matchup will betin at 2 p.m. Tickets are $2.50 and can be purchased at El Dorado Bank. ~ CabQt Road in Lasuna Ullls; Mission Cob- bler in the VWaae Centet at MargU.rile Parkway and La Pas Jll)ad lo Mialion Viejo; and the Montanoso Recreation Center, 25800 Montanoso Drive in M lssiob Viejo. Proceeds from the game will go toward a van with a hydraulic lift. For further information, phone 581-6030 between 9 a.m. anjl 5 p.m. 636th Suicide SAN l"RANc1sco (AP> -A man leaped off the Golden Gate Bridge and his body was swallowed up in the waters below the span before anyone could reach the scene. Tbe Coast Guard suspended lta sear~h alter about 1~ hours Tue~ when they Called to find the un- identified j1JmPtrr. the 638th kpown suicide from the bridge • since It opened in 1931. . 50-plus Killed In Blitz BULLETIN METULLAH, Israel (AP) - Israel said It completed Its takeover of soatlten Leba1t0D today and Prime Mlabter Menac bem Begin declared lsraetl forces would remala mtll an arrangement was reuhled to guarantee that Arab gaerrlllu would never retun. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Thouasands of Israeli troops routed Palestinian guerrillas from key bases across southern Lebanon today a nd Israeli warplanes fired rockets that killed Arab refugees In camps around Beirut, witnesses re· ported. • Syrian •gunners in Lebanon claimed to bave bit one Janell plane. Across Lebanon, r eports of ·casualties among Palestinian and Lebanese refugees mounted toward 50 and there were indica- tions of many more dead and wounded.,,. Israel said the aim of the as· sault was to clear a cuerriUa- free strip along its northern frontier and deter repetitions of the terrorist raid last weekend in which 34 Israelis died. It was believed to be the biggest Israeli attack ever, and the PalesUn· ians said 25,000 Israeli soldiers were involved. The Palestinians denied they (See ISllAEL, Page A!) Treasures ClnimUpMld NEW ORLEANS (AP> -Treasure hunters have been told by a federal ap- peals court they can keep millions of dollars worth of bronze cannons and other artifacts f0wtd on a Spanish galleon that sank in 1622 off F1orida, The rulin1-Tuesday by the 5th U.S .. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court ordet. The federal govel'nment .cballenced the treaaure·hunlers' claim to tlfe wreck of the Nae•lr• Senora de Atocba. Two Florida C:orP-Orta· Uons -Treasure Saivon Inc . and Armada Research ¢.p. -fouad the wreck o(f lhf F1orida ~e11 in irn. after a s1x- year, $1 mluton search. dlvidual donors to $1,000 an elec- tion be held unW aft.er the June primary election. Kuyper was instructed on a 5 lo 0 vote to return lo the board next week with the amendment delaying the donation limitation. In addition to invoking the donor limit, tbe reform or- Efforts in Vain dinance established a county fair political practices com- mission. In a conversation Tuesday, Anthony said he is anxious for the commission to be formed and for that reason would not pl'opose that the entire or- dinance be set back until after the June primary. A mother seal crawls on top of her already skinned pup and barks to protect it on an ice floe off the coast. of Labrador during the annual seal hunt. County Job Total RWes in February The State Ea>ployment Development Department <EDD> reported today that non- agricultural employment in School Plan Again Doe Before Board Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees will again consider assigping an architect to draw up plans for their fourth intermediate school tonight. D1strict a dminis trators ' recomDHl!Qded last month that an architect·· be selected for the school but the trustees agreed to table the issue until tonighL The district does not have enough building bond funds left to build this school. But the plans, which are estimated to cost $172,000, are proposed to be financed from the remainder in the fund. Trustees also will consider selling bonds totalling $410,000, the amount left from the dis· trict's $28 million in bond (See SCHOOL, Page AZ) Police Probe Jruta Slaying VISTA (AP) -Authorities are Investigating the apparent murder of a young girl whose body was found by paS'Sing motorists ill a naral area about tlarff miles nonb of Vista, a 1berifrs department spokesman aaid. • 1'be sU1 between 18 abd 20 ye•ra old with strawberry blond, hair was clad in l white blouse, blue jeans and shoe soen ~ her body ..... f<>und shortly Uter Mon Tuesday, the ·~~an said. Sile appatently had been clubbM to death, he aald. Sbe carried 80 ldeattitcatlon hd a co~·· ••..ntu satd an autop11 ••• )Inned to cto· lertlllM when Ind boW •he died. O{anie County rose by 4,900 jobs; in· February. Not included in the EDD te-( port was the county's unemploy- ment rate. State officials said they have adopted a new policy of reporting employment trends 1 and tP,en following that in a few days 'with the traditional un- employment rate study. Figures included in the trend .r eport indicate that OranJe County's unemployment rate plunged in February with the addition of 4,900 jobs. That increase raised the coun- ty's employed total to 893,900 jobs, a gain of SS,800 jobs over a year ago. The report s aid factory employment reached an all time high of 180,700 jobs in February despite the fact "two factories closed their doors and relocated· out of state.'' _ _.I Other job losses were report~ in retail trades, a loss attributedl to the layoff in retail outlet$ caused by the end of post holi~ day season promotions. EDD analysts predicte s trong employment gains ' through June as agricultural, food processing and construction follow normal seasonal um trends. ·1 Coast Weatber Suhny and s lightly l warmer Thursday with hlgbs 74 to 78. Lows tonight 48 to 54. I Hex ' I ' A.2 DAILY PILOT SB Wednee4ay, Match 15, 1978 'Iied-het Fire' Blitz .Victim . Detai/,S Horror BEffiUT, Lebanon (AP) -.. The Jews fell on our beads from the sky and spurted arrows ol red·bot fire straight into our homes," a badly wounded 17·year-old refugee girl said. "They stayed less than two minutes. dluppeared briefly then came t>,ck andhlt acam." SHE SPOKE AS SHE WAS taken into a hospital ward today just outside the Sabra refugee camp here. Out.side, in a corridor. a mother wept on the shoulder of Dr. Fathi Arafa~ brother of Palestinian leader Y~sser Arafat. .. Please save my son. His belly is open, his arm is ~ut off. I want him to live, please!' She looked at reporters and shouted; "Write, write! Tell the Jsraelia that I still have two aonal They wW grow up and ~e re· venge!" THE ISRAEU JETS JUT refugee camps at Damour south of Beirut and the Sabra, Ozai and Bourj Barajneb camps on the out· skirts of the city after Israeli ground troops cross~ into Lebanon to attack Palestinian guerrilla stroo.ibold.s ~artier today. The raids followed a Palestinian guerrilla attack on Israel Saturday in which more than 30 Israeli civilians dled. Despite Israeli claims that they sought only military taraeta, numerous sources here said civWao centers, including a hospital, were bit. DL ARAFAT POINTED TO a wounded woman and to two white sacks containing the bodies of children. "Do these look like military targets to you? .. be asked. "They rocketed th~ camps indiscriminately," heaald. Panic-stricken refugees scrambled for shelter an hour aft.er the raid, fearing a new air attack. Some wandered aimlessly out- side the Sabra compound. A 14·year-old girl, cradling a transistor radio, wailed, ''The Jews killed my mother, our home was burned. l have only this radio, where can I go now?" Nobody paid attention. REFUGEES WJTR CARS WERE loading them with belong- ings and driving away. Others left with what they could carry, often packing children on their shoulders. "People will spend lbe rest of the day and night in shelters," a guerrilla said. "Others left the camps and went to stay witb friends and well·to-do relatives." The Lebanese government formed a committee to set up a tent camp for the homeless. Hopefuls fine Up . For Water Boards There will be a five-wav race June 6 for the District 1 seat on the Orange County Municipal Water District's board of direc- tors. But in four districts of three Orange Coas t area wate r boards, there will be no election in June because no candidates filed by Friday's deadline to challenge the incumbents. In two other districts, District 3, of the Coastal Municipal Water District, and District 3 or the Tri Cities Metropolitan Wa t er Distri c t , the filing d eadline was extended until this Friday because the incumbents did not seek re·clection. -District 4, Arthur J . Holmes, San Clemente, appoint· ed incumbent. ...,.. District 5, G,ary L. Ca~michael, San Clemente, fire offrcer; Wayne T. McMurray, San Clemente, appointed incum· bent. Candidates for director of the Coastal Municipal Water Dis- trict are: -District %, James W. Decker, Laguna Beach, appoint· ed incumbent. -Dlstrict 3, DomU A. Mcin- nis. Newport Beach, engineer. -Dlstrid 4, W. K. Patrick, Costa Mesa, incumbent. P,....Page.41 ISRAEL.··. lost tome of the ground Wit-. neuu dalrn~ they bad, and Hid fllbtinc continued in the border area 11 boun after It be1an at 12:30 a.m. local time (2:30 p.m. Tuesday PST). In three separate raids, a force ol at leut six warplanes hit Damur, 10 miles south of Beirut, and the Sabra, Ozla and Bourj Barajnab camps on the edae of Beirut, Lebanese air controllers and witnesses said. Numerou1 sources said civUian centers were hit. Hospitals at Tyre, in southern Lebanon 12 miles from the Israeli border, said at least 3S persons were killed in naval and air strUces. Other reports from southern Lebanon, 60 miles from Beirut, indicated Israeli tanks and troops were d e ploying in a p:ncer movement -one prong moving north along the Mediter- ranean coast and the other west to the se.a -to surround the guerrillas in lbe southernmost border area. Labor Dispute Pickets March ' At Edison Co • A handful of pickets marched for a half hour Tuesday morning in front or Southern California Edison Company's El Toro Dis- trict offices. apparently in sup- port of union demands for wage and benefit improvements. An ·Edison offi cial described the marchers as six or seven In- ternational Brotherhood of Elec- trici I Workers UBEW> union members. However, Mlke Kelly, business manager of the 5,000-member IBEW Local 47, said late in the day be wu un· aware of any picketing. "I'm going to investigate and find out what's going oo," KeUy said. An Edison-IEEW two-year contract expired Jan. 1 •. said Phil Martin, Edison's vice presi- dent for the southeas t e rn division. Re said tJie pickets are marching on their own tlme, between 7:30 and 8 a.m ., and are not sanctioned by the union. M a.rtin aalcl eontraet negotia- tiona have ~ on • one- day·a -week beats since October and are expected to be complet- ed in March or April. The unloo represents approx· imately 80 .ernployea head- quartered ln El :roro and In- cludes "outdoor.. workers 1uch as linemen, cable apllcett and construction workers, a spokesman said. · Laguna Police Seize Drugs; 2 Nabbed While Martµl would not dis· cuss union de~ands or company offers, Kelly aaid bis organiu- tion is seeking a 10 percent pay hike, double·time pay for emergency and call-out work on Sundays and holidays, one addi· tional paid holiday and in· creased allowances for workers shifted from one distrlot to another to meet peak work de- mands. Kelly said Edison· has not made any pay increase counter offers. Fifteen pounds of high grade Oaxacan and Colombian marl· Juana, stuffed in plastic garbage bags, were seized by Laguna Beach police Tuesday afternoon and two Orange Coast residents were a.rrested. Booked tor sate or marijuana and conspiracy to sell mari- E'l'09IPGf/eAJ SCHOOL ••• authorization. Money from this sale ls earmar~ed for the in· termedlate school plans and con· version of kitchens al Los Alisos and La Paz Intermediate Schools to classroooms. In other action. trustees will consider charging $.5 for instnac. tiori'Al swimming classes. In lbe past, lessons have been offered free and the high schools have claimed state aid for partici- pants. But the fee system would provide the district with an estimated $4,000 additional in· come according to ad - ministrators. Trustees also are expected to consider the assignment of sum· mer school principals, a revised policy for student fund·raising activities, a report on students smoking on campus and a re- quest ror. the use of El Toro High School's pool plans. juana were Darlene Olga Snyder, 36, of 31562 Scenic Drive in South Laguna and Robert Charles Weinberger, 24, or 3117 Coral St., Costa Mesa. Laguna Beach special in· vestigators, backed up by detec- tives from Newport Beaeh, followed the s uspects from Laguna Beach to the South Laguna address at about l p.m. Tuesday where the arrests were made. Investigator Mike Slusher said officers discovered the bagaed marijuana, valued al about $15,000 on the street, inside the home, occupied by Ms. Snyder. The · investigation began in Laguna Beach and officers asked Newport detectives to as· sist in following the pair into South Ll:glma. Investigator Bruce Briggs said the marijuana is of high quality and would sell for about $500 a pound on the street. A pound could be broken down into one ounce packages and sold ror $1,000, be said. Weinberger is being held ln Orange County Jail and Ms. Snyder in the Women's Jail in Santa Ana. Bail bas been set at $7 ,500 for each. Nuclear Bomlt Detonated By Chinese WASHINGTON (AP) -The People's Republic of China det· onated a nuclear explosion in the atmosphere at its Lop Nor test site in northwestern China Tuesday night, the Department of Energy reported today. The test, the first reported since Sept. 17, ·was in the yield range of less than 20 kilotons, the department said. The Environmental Protection Agency said it was activating its environmental monitoring system to detect and measure· radioactive debris that might be carried over the U.S. mainland. The Sept. 17 explosion also was estimated to have a yield or less than 20 kilotons. Radioac- tive debris subsequently crossed over the United States in an air mass at 30,000 to 40,000 feet, but little residual effect was report- ed at e.round level. Candidates for Municipal Water District include: -District 1, David K. Jones, Huntington Beach incumbent: Barbara A. Bartol, Huntington Beach, bus inesswoman; James W. (Jim) Edwards, Costa Mesa, industrial developer /consultant; Tim Hatch, Costa Mesa, no oc- cupation listed , and Michael Griffith, Sunset Beach, no oc· cupation listed. Beach Ban to Last Tiro to Three Weeks -District 2, Gerald E. Price, Westminster, incumbent; -District 5, Clem M. McCollocb, Laguna Hills, ln- .cumbent; A. Otto Kutsch, Santa Ana, protective service officer; Wayne A. Clark, Irvine, Irvine Ranch Water District director. Candidates for director of the Tri·Cities Municipal Walter Dis- trict are: -Dlstrid 3, Wade F. (Doc) Lower, San Clemente, retired oral surgeon. Saudi Arms Sale WASHINGTON (AP) -Saudi Arabia has told the Carter ad· ministration it is prepared to go elsewhere for warplanes if its proposed purchase of 60 F -15 jet- figbters ~mes bogged down in Congress, a State Department oCflcial said Tuesday. °"ANGI QOMT sa DAILY PILOT By GARV GRANVILLE CM tM Delly ...... 1UtH A broken sewer line that is belching raw sew~ge into the Santa Ana River and con- ta m;nating Orange Coast beaches won't be repaired for two or three weeks, a county sanitation dhtrict spokeswoman reported today. . Time needed to repair the shattered &eWer pipe means that portions of beaches ln Newport Beach and Huntington Beach will remain quaranUned during Easter week school vacaUons. Quarantined by the county health department Monday was the stretch ol It.ate beach run- ning north of the Santa Ana River to Beach Bolulevard in Huntington Beach. Also quarantined was the beach running south of the river to 56th Stre•t in Newport Beach. Those quarantines are not likely to be lifted untU a few days after the broken sewer line near the Garden Grove Freeway is repaired. county health otncer Dr. Morton Nelson Hid. In the meantime. the eounty sanitation dlltl'lct today wUl be&in chlort.naUn1 the nUmated iour million 1allOlll .of un~a~ed . Speed IJmits • Eyed in Viejo sewage that is being disgorged daily intot.be river. However, both sanitation and health officials warned that the chlorinating process won't effec- tively relieve the existing health hazard. "We'll be chlorinating to cut down on grease and odors. We simply can't chlorinate enough to dis infect," the sanitation spokeswoman said. County supervisors today or- dered lheriff Brad Gatet to in· crease patrols along the 10-mile stretch of river impacted by the sewa1e. Simultaneously, supervisors ordered tJealth department or- f ici a ls to advise school ad- minl1trators to warn children to avoid contact with the river's contaminated waters and sur- roundin& envlrona. The ruptured sewer line col· lapsed Sunday when r aln- ewelled river waters undercut ill foundation. ™Dwrimies Were Patient T•o 1berllf"1 dep\llles re1poodl.na to a 5 a.m. comp1alnt lD San Tuan Caplatl'ano t.hla mornJ.na sot a little lea• than they barlalned for • Tbe calMr 1ald W. men bad ._... lldln.I in a JtaU. •asoa parted an II Camfno l\eal tot ~ least three bows. The caller wu 1usplcloaa. D•l>~ Jrruk Sas-11 ud Bob Neamlt.b antftd on the acene. only to find three dummln, .,..... • Jn4i1n1. APPUtlltl1 •wa1U. UM tD U.. elti'a l'tma cl• IH Ooloadrlaa1 1tore- cleCOrat1q cocMlt cm 'l"tiun411. HOW TO ADD AN "ANTIQUE GALLERY,. LOOK TO YOUR HALL? WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB ~~......- BRITTANY CHEST & MIRROR The first things guests see when they enter your home .•. this authenticate styled, exquisitely antiqued Hall chest and Mirror. How impres- sive the rest must be! Not only does this beautifully scaled traditional design l0<1k elegant, but it also offers display and storage space for your posses- sions .. It is silk screened and hand decorated over rich cherry veneers and pecan sol ids. Visit our Drexel-Heritage Galtery today and see what the world of home fumishings is ~n about .. .~y's Mother Testifies "' By TOM BARLEY CM .. DMlf pt1111 ..... Prosecution claims that Mary , Weaver was 31 weeks preenant wben Dr. WiWam But.er Wad- dill attempted to abort ber baby were denied Tuesday by a wit· ness regarded by lbe defense u the best.authority on tbe iasu.- Mias Wdver berselt. The 18-year-old Huntlniton Beach girl took the 1tand as a defense witneu to tell an Orange County SUperior Court jury that ,abe was no more than Z2 weeb ~ w• she en- tered W~inster c6mmunlty Ho1pltal on March 2, 1977. She told prosecutor Robert Cb a tterton that her last menstrual period was on Sept. 25, 1&76, a statement which 1up- ports the defense argument that she was 22 weeks from concep- tion when she agreed to an abor· lion. The prosecution alleges that Dr. Waddill s trangled Miss Weaver's baby girl after he learned that the saline solution he injected into her failed to kill the infant in the womb. The prosecution claims that W addilt, ~4 . of Huntington Harbour. thr<>Uled the chilO. afler warning another doctor in the hospital nursery that the baby must have undergone massive brain damage. Miss Weaver, who has sued Waddill for $17 million in damages in a recently filed Superior Court civil action, was subpoenaed by the defense to testify for him Tuesday. She successfully avoided wail· ing newsmen and photographers on her way to the courtroom by laking the judges' private elevator • Miss Weaver claims in her civil action that Waddill failed to advise her that she was more than 22 weeks pregnant. Had abe known the true state of ber pregnancy, she adds, she would not hav!! agreed to an abortion. But she made it clear in her testimony Tuesday that she was advised at the Huntington Beactt Free Clinic that she was about 21 or 22 weeks pregnant and went to Dr. Waddill wttb that un- derstanding. 1~14NORTH MAIN ' SANTA ANA • 541-4391 Tue TIMI.. end Set.: 9'.30 '° ':30 ~ 12 to9 · Fr\.:9'.JO to900 Wed~y. March 15. 1978 $ DAILY PILOT A3 Newport Hosts Grand Prix Saturday Deity ...... Miff_ SETTY COOK FINISHING LAST YEAR'S RACE ~ewport Champ Wiii Defend Grand Prix Title Cites 'Disruption' Jarvis 'Anarchy,' Says Tax Collector By GARV GRANVILLE Ol IM o.ilf "'lee $1411f Anarchy was the term used Tuesday by Orange County Tax Collector -Treas ure r Robert Catron to describe what he sees as the potential impact of the Jarvis tax reform initiative. "The Jarvis Amendment is anarchy and will bring a great disruption to government and the necessary services it pro- v ides," Citron said. His doomsday asse~sment of the potential impact or passage of the Jarvis initiative in the June 6 primary election wa,.s in- cluded in a 16-page position paper. If endorsed by the voters, the Jarvis initiative will limit prop- erly taxes to one percent of what county assessors said a given property's full cash value was in 1.975-76. Such a limitation would shave an estimated 60 percent off cur· rent property lax bills Simultaneously, according to Citron's figures, 209 laxing agen· cies in Orange County will col· leclively lose $528 million in property tax revenue in the com- ing fiscal year The county ·lax collector· treas urer said in his position paper that it won't be the massive loss of revenue that will be "the most serious result" or the Jarvis initiative should It re- ceive voter endorsement. Citron instead insisted that it will be a res ulting growth of slate and federal control over local governments that will be the most serious consequence. ll can be expected that the state will increase sale~ U.xes one percent and levy a 20 per- cent surcharge on state income taxes to help make up for Ute lost revenue, Citron said. "Everyone understands that when federal and state govern- ments send money to locaJ dis- tricts they tell the local districts how to spend that money," be argued. Citron said one unldeotifled :Jlate legislator twice told him the legislature is likely to do away with locally elected boards of supervisors. "We won 't need them Ccollllty s upervisors) to tell them how to spend 'our' money," Citron said the legisl,t.or told him. The tax collector-treasurer went on to scoff at a suggestion that money in the state surplus can be used to shoot the lost revenue gap. "The $2.7 billion (slate) sur- plus was not accumulated in one year ," Citron said. "What the state would do in s ubsequent years if the entire surplus is used the first year is prob- lematical." Citron's position paper also las hed out at the Jarvis in- itiative that will appear on the June ballot as Prop 13 for al· legedly: -Giving business and in- dustry two-thirds of the total tax savings while dis persing only one-third of the dollar reduction to the state's homeowners. -Failing to provide a formula for dispersing what property tax dollars will remain to the 209 taxing agencies that receive at le ast a portion of their revenues from proerty taxes -Ignoring the loss of federal and state matching funds that will be lost to local agencies because of a cutback in their available dollars. -Failing to put a limit on gov. ernmenl spending but merely appearing to do so by restricting the a mount of property tax available to local governments. -Overlooking lax relief and, in all likelihood, increasing the tax load earned by non-property owners. 1 Citron's 16-page assault on the Jarvis initiative included praise Cor the recently enacted Behr bill, the state legislature's belat- ed a nswer to the Jarvis challenge. He said Behr wi 11 give homeowners a JO percent reduc- tion in their property taxes while utilizing only $1.4 billion from the state surplus. Citron also praised Behr for providing "that local govern- m ents cannot increase expen- ditures more lhan the national inflation average or a maximum of 8>;!, percent a year." In the process of praising Behr, Citron continued to ham· mer out his theme of disenchant· ment with Jarvis. He denied it Is fiscal con· servatism. And worse than anarchy, Citron said, Jarvis ''is a step towards sociallsm because it ln· creases state control and a furttier loss of local control." Dead Wood, Br.,.la By ALMON LOCKABEY o.11~ "let~ Wf'IMr ll 's that time again, mates. The Ume when the throaty roar of more than a score ot big oftahore power boat.s bluta lhe quiet of Newport Harbor and surroundings ort their way to a point off the jetty entrance where they will scramble for position of the start of the Bushmllls Grand Prix race. Blast oft time is 10 a.m. Satur- day. But starting at about 9 a.m. the powerful big racing boats will start a parade Crom the Balboa Bay Club through the harbor, followed by hundreds of spectator bo~ and watched by sboresitle s~lators lining the beaches of Lido Isle, Balboa Island and the Balboa PenlnsuJa. . Thousands more spectators will jam every inch of space along lhe Corona del Mar bluffs for a brief glimpse of the speedsters as they roar away toward Dana Point on the ri..rst leg of the 195-a:Ule race at speeds up to 80 miles an hour. One of the strongest fields of offshore powerboats ever as- sembled on the West Coast is ex- pected to participate in the eighth annual Bushmills Grand Prix the third lime it has been held al Newport Beach. Being the firs t race of the 1978 offshore powerboat racing sea son, the event will draw top drivers from throughout the na- tion, including the current world champion, 55-year-old Betty Cook of Newport Beach. She will be out to defend her victory in the Bushmills last year when she actually finished second behind Billy Martin of New Jersey who failed to make the Cinal checkpoint and was dis- qualified. And Marun wilJ be back. With fire in his eye -determined to vindicate the heartbreaking loss that prompted him to give up racing. Following the DSQ, Martin flung his racing credentialii down in front of one of the judges and was quoted as say- ing : "I won't be needing these anymore." The Bushmills race launched ' Cook on her way to a third place in the national standings, thus making her eligible for the world championship off Florida last fall. She won the cham- pionship race against national point leaders Joel Halpern and Joe Ippolito, thus adding two more rivals who are out for Cook's fair hide. And there are others who can never be counted out of an off- shore race until the checkered Oag. Foremost among these is Bob Nordskog of Van Nuys, 65 year old veteran of the sport and the granddaddy of the sport on the West Coast. During his 2S year- \ Retiree Wins $1,500 Bonus For Suggestion Frederic J . Singer of Santa Ana retired from his Orange County government utilities engineer job more than a year ago. But Tuesday an employee sug- gestion he proposed before his retirement won him a $1,500 re- ward check and made bjm the 10th county employee to win the highest cash award offered for cost-saving ideas. Singer, who retired in January, 1977, suggested a s trea mlined procedure for processing utility relocation ser vice orders that will save about $20,000 a year in staff hours . According to terms of the two- year-old Employee Suggestions Program, workers offering win- ning suggestions are given 10 percent or the idea's first-year savings, up to $1,500. . 1 Forest Energy So11rce the 1ame energy from ruel oU and $1.41 from coal. "The alight advantage or coal will probably disappear when the curnnt coal strlte is Mt· tied." Szmant said. The demonstration power plant going up in central Micbtaan will generate eOOUlh power. (Or a community ot about 20,000 ~pie and wUl requ!M 100,000 t&.a of wood cblpt per year, Szmant said. That much wood could be eatbered by clearln1 bruah and uawuted arowth rrom about 2,500 acne, bee1Uma\ed1 11Tbe maehlne aoe• ln aDd clean all Ute small Jrowtb, 1111 ~· dead wood and al.loft tbe treea wbleb are ol ecoaomlc lal-1>otimce to arow bl11u, .. Sam ant Hid. "And it'• Cllllm-.. that ,...,... a forett •!.Uijt .ould ~-·UM po• ottal remalDtilC lNlf ~ JW1hl1 • perctn&.'1 Samaat addltd Uaat tbt ,.. =Si[~ racing carffr Nordskog has won more racing titles than any other one driver. He also owns (be world speed record of 90 n1ph in offshore boats. And there is also the happy Ut- t le Japanese. res taurateur, Rocky Aoki , who won the Bushmills the first year it was betd in Newport. Aoki ls re- portedly trying frantically to get a new boat ready for Saturday's showdown. In addition to the 195-mile race Coe the bi& open offshore class there will be a shorter race for performance classes stock pro- duction boats, a modified class and sports class covering about 103 statute miles. And to add to the promotfoo as pect s or the s ponsoring Bushmlll.s Irish Whiskey flrm, a whiskey barrel race in lhe back bay wilt be held Cor UM amuse- ment o( the participants who will row the makeshift craft around Newport DWleS Aquatic Park starting at about 3 p.m . after the blg races are oveT. ,,,. .. ,..,..... OR. LOUIS CELL~ (CENTER) PONDERS LEGAL STRATEGY AFTER HIS PLEA REFUSED Orange County Physician With Lawyers Robert Han1en (left), Keith Monroe WoIDen's Projects Approved Prosecutor Rejects Celia's 'No Contest' A list. of projects planned by the Orange County Commission on the Status of Women was en- dorsed in relative silence Tues- day by _County supervisors. The three-month-old panel had been the subject of heated public debate before supervisors in past hearings, but drew litUe comment at Tuesday's meeting. Supervisors voted 4-1 to accept the 17-item list of projects which range Crom a symposium on child care to topics on employ- ment, health, senior women and public service. The man most critical or the commiss ion in the pas t , Supervisor Laurence Schrrut, cast tbe only vo\,e against the list of projects but did so without comment. Supervisors Thomas Riley and Philip Anthony praiaect.the com- miuion'a plan and said it was consistent wilh past board direc- tions. Among projects approved by supervisors are a symposium on unmet child care needs, as well as an infonnaUon list of chHd care facilities in Orange County. CommJssiooers also plan over the next 18 months to study job- sharing, in which two persons sbare one fulltime position, split- ting its salary and benefits. Accotding to a report to supervisors, the commission wiU develop a pilot job-sharing proj- ect using five to 10 county gov- ernment jobs, then make the program's results available for possible use by other public and private agencies. Commissioners also hope lo develop a statistical profile of Orange County women, main- tain a list or women who might serve on county committees and commissions and review legisla- tion affecting women. In addition, commissioners plan to study special needs of senior women. Dr. Louis J. Cella, facing 127 charges or misuse of up lo $4.8 million in fu.nds from two Orange County Hospitals, w as scheduled to go to trial in San Diego Thursday. • 1 Trial appeared imminent after Orange County Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Michael Capizzi rejected Cella 's offer Tuesday to plead "no contest" to all charges against him. In criminal proceedings, a "no contest" pleading is treated as though the defendant had pleaded guilty, although it can- not be used as an admission of guilt in s ubsequent civil lawsuits. Celia's attorneys attempted today to work out a compromise to avoid trial. The case is being tried in Superior Court ih San Diego on a change or venue. Pro~ecutor Capizzi said be tu med' down Cella 's offer as in· adequate. He said the alleged misuse of Medi-Cal funds alone warranted full pursuit of a conviction in court, lo help recover $1.8 million in taxpayers' money be charges eventually was used for political contributions. Attorneys for Cella said the Vista Nixes ~Gay Rights' VISTA (AP> -Vista says it's not interested in civil rights for homosexuals. The City Collllcil made that reply to a request from San Diego County's Human Rela- tions Commission for a formal vote on rights of the so-called gay community. "They're oddballs and mis· fits ." said Mayor Lloyd Trace, "and we don't want them in our cjty." physician favors the "no con- test'' pleading because the courtroom ordeals have been traumatic. and Cella wants them to cease. On Monday, Cella was sen- tenced in Los Angeles U.S. Dis- trict Court to five years in prison for his conviction on 22 counts of tax fraud. Judge Matt Byrne. who reaf· firmed the sentence originally imposed in 1976, rejected Celia's offer lo provide free medical services to the poor for five years in lieu of prison time. Seal '1.efmes To Go 'Home' In Huntington You can lead a scared, confused baby seal to water, but you can't make him get back into it if be does n't want to, Huntington Beach police said today. One unidentified oCficer was dispatched Monday night to deal with the seal near the city pier because it was out of iL'> element and being bothered by curious human beach strollers. He later radioed back to the watch commander's officer that the baby seal had him buffaloed His watch commander then told the radio dispatcher to in· struct the patrolman to lead the seal back to the ocean and sim ply s how it where it came from and whence it should return. .. Please be advised. this of ricer has been out here for a half hour now and my feel are wet b ut the seal 's aren't." he radioed back Animal control officers finally captured the little foundling for tr ansfer lo a lost and sick seal sanctuary in Laguna Beach. or perhaps to Marineland. Gem Talk Beautiful Matching Wedding Bands That Symbolize the love Vou Share- By J.C. HUMPHRIES Qlmologut MORE JEWELR. Y F' ABLES bdieoed by cmclent peoples In the days whM superstltloti ruled the thoughts of many men <and women). It w•s believed th1t btautlfuf Jewels had maQI' powers. Of ~ourse. gemstones ha¥9 no cur•tlve powers. and ,annot really change one's person=. But, H wouldn't have done much to tell that to tome people a few htmdrtd vurs -VO• TMV held ~t• In their mouths to ntduce thh'st •nd c:oot fevers. ln Julen, agate was supposef:l to controt tnNnl~. WHrlng this st~ WIS .. ,d to ma e tht Wea,.er mm agreeable. It 11 cured hfs lnt0mnJ1 end brought on ~ 1wfft dnMlmsf Diamonds were '" 11ntldot• for poftonlflO 6nd w.te ut9d to cure Jaun· diet and otMt Ills. Diamonds _.. wom on the tourttt flnoer of the ltft hind ~ "*9 was a belief that• ~Na ieetdfrecllv from that flngw to the ihffr\. I • A4 DAlt.Y PILOT Wednffd1v. March 15. 1978 ,... ,~~J with":~ Tom~~\'.' Marphin e HOLDING OUR NOSES: Those of us who reside along this best or all possible coasts got a htlle gift from inland Orange County this week, just ln time fer spring vacation. The present ls raw sewage. This elfiuent is being dlsgorged into the Santa Ana River from a ruptured 30-inch line in the riverbed about 10 miles inland. The river mouth dumps out i!Uo the sea at the Newport Beach-Huntington Beach shoreline. The sewer line break is in the Garden Grove area. That figures. • Officials have estimated that the untreated sewage is now flowing into the Pacific Ocean at a rate of up to 5,000 gallons daily. TO MAKE MA1TERS WORSE, agents of the Orange County Sanitation District got a look at the break late yesterday after water flow from Prado Dam was slowed down. Apparently the break was more lilte an explosion. The Things Are Always Fallmg Into a River line simply came to pieces. ll may be weeks before they get it patched up. Meanwhile. or course, the beaches and surfline have been slapped under quarantine because of the clear danger of infections or disease from the sewage. At th.is writing, the quarantine area stretches from both sides of the river mouth to Beach Boulevard in Hunt- ington Beach and on downcoast to 56th Street Beach in Newport. WONDERFUL. THIS little disaster visits us just as we are about to let our schools out for spring vacation and youngsters will be rushing out on our beaches by the thousands. And you are left wondering how far tbe pollution will spread i£ the sewage keeps gushing into the sea at the rate of 5,000 gallons a day. We have an avid surfer in our household and when he learned the news of the ocean quarantine, be asked wbal seemed to be a very logical question: "WeU, why did they build the sewer line in the river in the first place?" Offhand, I can't answer that. But in our region, we don't really lake our rivers very seriously. We build roads in them, golf courses and, obviously, sewer lines. TWS IS DANDY when the riverbeds are dry, which most of ours are most of the lime. Every once in a while, however, like this season, Mother Nature abruptly turns on the faucet. Then we act like it's a big surprise when our man· made creations start washing away or falling into the roaring river waters. Maybe we need to remember how the riverbed got there in the first place. Woman's Role Probed LUMBERTON, N.C. (AP) -A 45-year-old housekeeper has been charged with murder in the arsenic-poisoning of a farmer she Teportedly planned to marry. After questioning her, Robeson County Sheriff McLeod said the investigation was broadened to include the deaths of lhe woman's mother and lwo other persons. McLeod said Velma Margie Bullard Barfield appsrenUy was wor king as a housekeeper for two other persons who died. "SHE WAS JUST HELPING OUT with the housework and cleaning when the people got sick and died," McLeod said. Mrs. Barfield was being held without bond in the Robeson County Jail in the Feb. 3 death of St4art Taylor, 53, of nearby ~t. Pauls. She was arrested Monday night. NATION I WORtO More Terrorism EXpected ASSEN, The Netherlands (AP) -Dutch officials and mill· tant South Moluccans are warn- ing of more terrorism to come despite a successful, commando raid that freed 70 hostages only 29 houra after three young Moluccans imprisoned them in a five-story government building. "More blood will have to be spilled," said one member of the Moluccan independence move- ment. "The Dutch must rec- ognize our claim to their sup- port for the freedom of our homeland." "THERE'S NO WAY to stop them from batching tbese plots," said Asse n city spokesman Chris van der Veen. .. As long as there are South Moluccans in jaH, their com- rades will try to force their re- lease." Cftenai~als Burn About 100 marines of the anti- terrorist unit that ended a dou- ble Moluccan siege last year stormed the Drente provincial headquarters Tuesday afternoon and captured the three gunmen after they reported falsely that they bad begun killing hostages. The terrorists were 19, 20 and 22 years old. "Our decision was determined by the fact that they refused to negotiate with us," said govern· menl spokesman Wim van Leeuwen. An explosion and fire at a downtown Steubenville, Ohio, chemical plant sent at least 50 people to the hospital for observa- tion after they inhaled chlorine gas. Two firefighters were in serious condition. Another 263 were treated and released from local hospitals. Tuesday's explosion, cause o( which is not yet known, forced the temporary evacuation of about 2,000 people in a nine-block area. NO SERIOUS casualties were reported in the commando as- sault. The Moluccans shot and killed a 4().year-old civil servant Monday, and officials said 11 other persons were wounded or injured. They included four passersby hit Monday by shots the terrorists fired from the win- dows, a man wbo broke bis leg as he jumped from a window to escape from lbe building, a hostage cut by flying glass as the marines stormed in. Benefit Tax Cut Likely I Social Security Complaints Register in House The terrorists were local youths, but leaders or the in· dependence movement among the 15,000 Moluccans in the As· sen area repudiated them. However, the leaders warned of more trouble unless the govern- ment supports their demand for the independence of the South Molucca Islands from Indonesia. WASHINGTON (AP) -Moves are afoot in the House, pre· sumably because of voter dis· content, to reduce the big in· er.ease in Social Security taxes approved last year to keep the Social Security system from go- ing broke. Any such reduction could mean an income lax cut less than the $25 billion the president says he wants passed in 1978, election year for the con- gressmen. The latest indication of im- pending cuts in the new Social Security taxes came T uesday fror.1 House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, who predicted that the House will reverse itself and rescind part of the tax increase passed last December. 'Stork Visits ' Disrupt Class, Teachers Tola ROMEO, Mich. <AP) -J erry ~ fteftuefl Freeman says he realizes the UNITED NATIONS (AP) school board can't legislate the The United States, Britain and • birds and bees. But the board three alUes abstained as the member says he wishes female other 10 members of the Securl- tea chers who decide to have ty Council voted to denounce the babies would plan to have the agreement between Prime stork visit during summer vaca-Minister Ian Smith and three tion. moderate black leaders for Freeman's suggestion during black majority government in a recent school board meeting Rhodesia by the end of the year. · was met with hoots of laughter. Britain and the United States But, he said, "people often laugh pledged to continue efforts to re- al things that make sense." concile Smith a nd t he three He insisted he's serious -al moderates with t he g uerrilla least when it comes to teachers leaders who condemn the deal who plan t o return to t he signed in the Rhodesian capital, classroom after the minimum Salisbury, 12 days ago. s i x -weeks pregnancy leave ~I~-_.·-•olJ speclfied in the Romeo contratt. u ~ • S u c h teach ers disrupt HONOLULU (AP) -A soldier classroom continuity, Freeman who says he was demoted from contended. editor to reporter on a mUltary "It's like changing a horse in newspaper after asking Defense midstream -twice," be said. Secretary Harold Brown an "ln· "Try u they might, no new appropriate question" is seeking Attorneys for Spec. S Patrick Bigold filed a formal request Tuesday for review of the ac- tion, and asked Army officials for a response by Friday. The question asked about the rela· tions hip of the closing of military recreation facilities and drug pr®lems in the barracks. . ~EweWar MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet government appeared to be pre- vari ng today for the escalation of the war against Eritrean reb- els in northern Ethiopia after ( IN SHORT J the Ethiopian·Cuban-Soviet vic- tory over the Somalis in eastern Ethiopia. ~ commentary in the Com- munist Party newspaper Pravda charged that the secessh>nists who have been fighting for 15 years to free Ethiopia's coastal province were aiding "im· perialist designs'' in the Horn of Africa. Girls Panic; Mom lies Dead in Home BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -Two young girls lived at home and went to and from school for several days while their mother's body lay in a second noor bathroom, investigators say. Jean Nicolai, 38, was found dead Thursday by ambulance atten- dants and sheriff's officers called by a family friend. The girls, ages 13 and 10, called the friend when they became concerned about their mother wbo had lain on the bathroom floor since Saturday, officers said. Mrs. Nicholai apparently dled Saturday, Detective Sgt. David Atherton said. "ON FRIDAY NIGHT ~eir mother was in bed but •111," Atherton said. ..On Saturday they found ber in the bathroom and they just fell she was un- conscious or ill and they didn't want to bother her. •'On Sunday they began to think she was possibly dead and they didn't know what to do. "On Tuesday they realized their mother was dead and they panicked.'' D ETECTIVES WHO talked wit h n eigh bors and the daughters said Mrs. Nicholai had been ill for the ~ast week but had not seen a doctor a nd was n ot taking any prescribed medicines. Investigators said they didn't suspect foul play. Cause of death was not immediately known. Mrs. Nicbolai had been d ivorced for about two years and the girls' father lives in the state of Washington, officers said. teacher's method or goals are reinstatement. identical. I think most people _:...:...:.....:...~-----------------------------------­ would agree that such a disrup- tion of the classroom is not good." Officials of the Romeo Educa- tion Association say t h e teachers' bargaining unit is not taking the suggestion seriously. PUBLIC AUCTION SURPLUS '• . Rain Pounds Gulf States HAND MADE ORIENTAL CARPETS AND RUGS Released by overseas ware houses ·To be sold to the highest bidder Due to our success auctioning our previous container in a short period of time we have been approached-by. various overseas wholesalers to auction on their behalf surplus goods. We have accepted only the fine$t pieces and have stipulated with the parties concerned that these goods will be sold at our discretion. , EWJtern Thaw Slmced by Cooler Temperatures _,...,.,.,,. ""'"°" ... "tlOlll• aa1u,..o-. 91sment. ..... ....... "-"•ville atinelo Clltcevo Clfl<IM.ttf Clew I~ 0.1-Ft,Wlh o. ..... r O.tf'Oll Duluth ........ ..... viii ~­IC•ll'• (lly I.MY._. LI" .. "9<11 u..-. ... --·-· ...,, ... .. -..s. ... . .............. NowOfie-ffowYon ill \.e ~ ,. 1' • *' 11 " .01 .. " ... ii 11 .OS 41 ,. • u .n '° 50 4t » ... 11 J3 .01 50 " ... ,. ... .. 0 .. . 41 0 .IO II • • : :! _., '° •a " " " 4J " ,. " " 7t " » JI .Dt M 14 ... a » .u ... .1S .. ~.:5: ~ .. .,.__,, ~ulvff4 IWWI --•SS• CaUfo~fa • NOTE TO BUYERS: These rugs are of the-highest quallties in all designs, colors. sizes and domains. We offer to the public a chance to acquire the finest Oriental rugs 'at tow auction prices, including the following: lephahans. silk and part &Ilk Oume. Ta Tibet TebriR. Ham80ana. KllheM. Nalns. ChlneM C1fP8U and ruga, Tur1<ittl rugs Unc:tudlng prtyer rugs). RUMlli\ cauculans • Ruulan Boulchara. Soumeck Keltm. Balkan Tabl'lz'a. Afghan. lndlan and Pllki1tanl pieces. 'IHI AUC110M WR.I. TAD PLACE THURSDAY, MARCK 16 AT 8 P.M. VIEW DAY ftF AUCTION 7 P.M. """ ~T • HUMTIMGTONIEACHIMM JI 112 PACIFIC COllTHISHWAY HUMTl .. TON llACH INF0:(21$)~ Clll Collect J I CALIFORNIA Tanker ~Tenninal Nearing? LOS ANGELES <AP) - EnerlY Secretary James Sehl• ioaer baa indicated a breakthrough bu been reached in Standard Oil of Obio'a three- 7ear fight for California 'a ap. proval ol a proposed Long Beach oll tanker terminal, the Loa Angeles Times reported today. .. Jt'a a breaktbrougb, but several more are going to be needed," said Alr Resources Board Chairman Tom Quinn, wbo conftrmed &bat Sobio bas agreed verbally to spend $80 ml.Jllon cm alr pollution cleanup equipment at a Southern Calllornia Ediaoo Co. planL 1'111118~ LOS ANGELES (AP) - A man who apparenUy intended to jump from tbe roof of a downtown apartment complex 11.red one near-miss shot before ( STATE J quieUy surrendering to police, authorities said. Investigators said Thomas Brooks ~Simmoni; ~~. an ac· countant, was booked Tuesday for investigation of assault with a de- adly weapon. Olfldal lallecl SAN DIEGO CAP) -An assis- tant principal at Torrey Pines High School has been arrested at his home and booked into county jail on two counts of selling small amounta of marijuana, a Narcotics Taak Force spokesman &aid. Pierre Simon Di Grignon, 44, of Leucadia was arrested Tuesday and was held in lieu of $1,000 bond pending arraignment toda,y in Oceanside Superior Court, the spokesman said. 'Nrdte 1t' aste E,,ed SANTA BARBARA (AP) Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. s~s be wants the state Department of Resources to find out exactly how much radioactive waste is stored in California. Brown called for the study Tuesday after louring the U.S. Navy base at Port Hueneme, where several thoU!iiflDd tons of radioactive dirt ard'being tern· porarily stored. 7rial BW Sftlt MADERA (AP) -Madera County bas received a $21,396 bill from Alameda County for expenses to the Chowchilla kidnapping trial. A total of $8,936 of the bill is for Superior Court costs and $12,460 is for costs incurred by the Alameda County Sheriff's Department. 'The Fon%' Honored Actor Henry Winkler, star of "Happy Days" and the movie ·"The One and Only" talks with Mark Goffeney. 8, while attending a Variety Club luncheon in Los Angeles Tuesday. Winkler received the club's Hearl Award for "helping to bring joy, happiness and hope to needy and handicapped children." Sniper Incident 'Probably a Rock' DIAMOND BAR CAP> -An incident originally reported as a s niper firing at a car carrying an expectanl mother bas been dis· counted because it cannot be proven, sheriff's deputies said Tuesday. "We clidn'tfind evidence of any crime," said U . Gus Feederle. "It was probably just a rock." The California Highway Patrol had received a telephone re.port from a woman who claimed she saw a man s tanding on a hillside with a rifle im· Voters Reject Card Parlors INGLEWOOD CAP> - Voters in this Los An geles s uburb overwhelmingly turned down a proposal lo legalize card gambling parlors. With all precincts re- porting, the vote Tuesday was 7,581 against the pro- posal and 2,262 in favor. City officials said 33,279 residents were eligible to vote in the special elec· ti on. In 1976, Inelewood voters rejected a similar move by a margin of more than 1,000 votes. mediately after the car was al· legedly hit by gunfire. HOWEVER, investigators were later unable to locate the unidentified woman caller to question her. CHP officer Casey Bos said she had reported that the targets of the alleged attack -includina a pregnant woman -had left because the expec· tant mother was on her way to deliver her baby. The woman caller was the On· ly known witness to the shooting. -She said the incident took place on Highway 57, which runs between AnahP.im and San Dimas, but apparently left before sheriff's deputies ar· rived. They were unable to con· tact her later. A SHE RIFF'S special weapons team was rtown in by hehcopter and armed with M-16 rifles to investigate, but the team failed to locate the alleged sniper durine a search oC the bWs above the freeway. •'Whether it was a sniper or someone target shootlng in lhe hills who miscalculated his aim we don't know,·• said Sheriff's Lt. George Eckels. W-m a ... Ocean Cruise at Loni John Silver's 60 Grand Prizes! Win one of 60 luxuriOU11 cru!M6 to Nassau and the Bahama Out Isl.ands -a four-day Isl.and holiday for four aboard Norwegian Caribbean Lines·~ Sunwardll Get an entry form at any partldpeting Long John Silver's. and find out Instantly If you're awtnner. 'Every Entry Form a Valuable Coupon! Even If you don't win a Grand Prize, evfty entry f Of111 is a valuable offer for food or Icy cold Coca-Cola. T"AOEMARK 9 So come on I~. You could Wln the holiday of a ltf etime. \ 1R eddllon to the CNIN. WIMlll ,..,_~airline .-.,....11111or1 to Mlamt from .. i.:..ct c:-. n holieJ .ccoi1oodatl0ntfor twon!Qhtl In Milllllt pdor ID the CNIM ~ f'.intwu*" •YGU bSinapa~c1de Mach 26.197& Sn 1li)ll:Mc• rulee and~ C9" bi.a found at ;~;; .. ~SEAFOOD~·-··-·-­• JOtl H-':,'!:.,._.,....,. Ml_,.._..£s>STA MISA 1311 W. Wlilftlw llftl. LA HAili ............... ~ ....... " ............ ..... w1•~••111·•• ) Wednesday, March 15. 1978 DAILY PILOT .1\5 . Drug Pitshers Hit California Cracks Down o~ Doctors SACRAMENTO (AP) -A state crackdowo on drug- pushin1 doctors waa announced Tuesday by olftclala who said they tbouaht 80 percent of the state's We1al pill ma,rket may come from pbyalcians. Richard Spohn, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's consumer affairs director, said the state would seek restraining orders againat five doctors Tuesday. HIS ANNOUNCEMENT came several days after a len1thy ac· count. in the Los Angeles Times focused on the problem of doc· tors who prescribe dangerous drugs. Spohn said the state also plans legal action soon against seven pharmacies. He declined to name them, saying the case was still being formed. ' ''THOSE DRUG-PUSHING doctors will be nailed and the full force of the law will be brbught to bear on them," Spohn told a Capitol news conference be called to publicize the crackdown. Bob Rowland, executive secretary or the Board or Medical Quality Assurance, estimated 200 to 300 doctors in California are over-prescribing drugs. Spohn 'said the state bas 231 drug-related cases pending involving doctors. STATE OFFICIALS unveiled a 24-member state task force dubbed Operation DOPE -Doc· tors Out Pushing Ejected -and said between 200 and 300 doctors are "bard core pushers." They added that no communi· ty in California could consider Drowned Man Found in Sea SANTA CRUZ (AP) -The Coast Guard has recovered the body of a 28-year-old man w~ drowned while on a sailing trip. A Guard helicopter spotted the body of Scott Alles of Capitola floating eight miles off the eoast late Monday. Ailes was sailing with a com· panion when their small sailboat capsized, the Guard said. The companion, whose identity was not released, managed to right the boat and return to shore. itself immune from drug. pushing doctors or pharmacies that work with those doctors who over-prescribe. MOST OF THE ILLEGAL pill preacnptions are for stimula· tants and depre&Sants, official5 said. Dr. Kash Rose, president of the California Medical Associa· tlon, aaid the CMA supporta the effort to weed out those doctors. But be also said any estimate of the doctors involved was "just a guess" and added about Spohn: "If he'd quit having news con· ferences and do something about it, we'd be a lot better off.'' AS EVIDENCE of the need for the project, Spohn said state in· vestigators found that three doc· tors in the fll'St nine days of March wrote nearly 1,000 pre- scriptions for 60,000 tablets. Asked if a 24-member team could have much effect on the problem, Spohn said be was in part relying on the fact that word would spread that "the heat was on." THE DOCTORS Spohn named as targets of the immediate restraining orders are: Lamar Desmuke of Oakland, Franklin Hendricks of San Jose, Chester Hurd of San Jose, Marvin Stern of Cypress and Kenneth Rascoe of Hermosa Beach. He also said an arrest warrant on a manslaughter charge was issued Monday for Dr. Rodney Chamberlain of Santa Clara in connection with the prescription or 5,400 tablets of Asoodeen for a patient who died of an overdo6e. Rowland said lhe state bas on· ly seen "the Up of the iceberg. We want to go out and find out what the dimensions are." Wonum,28, Kills Man In Break-ill INGLEWOOD CAP) -A 28- year-old woman, alarmed by knocks on her front door, armed herself and opened fire on a man who broke in through ber bedroom window, hitting him fatally, authorities said. Police Officer Albert KensUer said early today the bearded man in bis 30s was shot in the chest Tuesday night. He fled from the woman's house but col· lapsed and died on the street a few blocks away. Kenstler said the man's identi· ty had not been determined. The idenUty of lhe woman, who lived in the house with her 6-year-0ld daughter, was withheld. KensUer said early reports in· dicated the victim could have been the so-called "Pillowcase Rapist," blamed for 1S8 rapes in the southwest Los Angeles area since J.975. But investigating officers said later be was not, because "his height was wrong and his weight. was wrong." Parents Sentenced In Child Torture LONG BEACH <AP) -Superior Court Judge Ellsworth M. Beam levied sentences of two years ln county jail~n Randolph and Willie Johnson for imprisoning their teen-aged, adopted daughter in her filth-ridden bedroom. The Johnsoos, who pleaded guilty to charges of false imprison· ment and child endangering last Oct. 11 had been due back in court Tuesday. But they were sentenced March 3, following 90 days of psychiatric testing in state prison. THEY WERE AllllESTED In June 1976 after their natural daughter, Donna. 19, escaped from home and told officiab of the plight ol her adopted sister, Laura, 16. Officers who broke down the front door of the Johnson house to gain entrance said Laura was suff.eri.ng from bruises, malnutrition and infections and she welehed only 63 pounds thou&b she was S· feet·2·inches tall. SPECIAL EVENTS BEGINNING MARCH 28 Got the fever? Join our Disco Dance Cf ass! In just 4 Lessons you'll be Dencing the night away to the current dance craze ••• DISCO FREE STYLE, LATIN HUSTLE, NEW YORK HUSTLE, and the 2..STEP ••• Day and evening clmses. available ••• $35 for the session .•• call for registration 556-0611, ext. 371. And don't miss our weekly dance demonstrations ••• Eyery ~ow is new and different ••• 12:00 to 2:00 pm ••• Saturday, March 18 and 8 ••. Dance Shop near Town and Travel Sportswear ••• Middle Level. TO CELEBRATE EASTER •••• THURSDAYS, MARCH 16,23 and 30 Le Creuset Cookware Class ••• Our Expert, Collette Lockett, wlll teka YOU on a cooking Journey of France ••• 10:30 • 12:30 pm or 2:00 to 4 :00 pm ••• Join one class or all three ••• $10 for one, $25 for the complete ae11ion .... Register in advance f n HouteWares. SATURDAYS, MARCH 18 & 25 Storybook RNdlng for the Children from the deliS°l'tful Beatrix Ponet' col· lection ••• 11:00 am and 2:30 pm ••• Children's A""t• Upper level. SATUROAY,MARCH18 lnfonnll modelfng e>f Du~ Junior Loungeweer ••• 12:00 • 4:00 pm ••• Young Attitude. .. THURSDAY, MARCH 23and SATURDAY, MARCH 26 lnfonn1I modeling of Junior fllhlont ••• 12:00 • 4:00 pm ••• Young Attitude, Middle t...el. Colst P au, . i_~"'=---- • orangeeoas1oa11vP11 01 Editorial Page ................................................... .f ' 118 SB Wednelday. March 15. 1978 Robert N. Weed/PubU$htr 'TbolM• Keevll/Edltor Blr1>ara Krelblch/Edllorlal P~ Editor A Jerky Start For New Council fhe new Irvine City Council isn't off to the steadiest ol ~tarts. with carping on election night and a silly battle over who should be ·mayor. . Both new councilmen, Larry Agr an and Arthur An- thony, are both cause and effect of the distress in the city stewardship. Anthony offered cable television watchers during election night a tasteless spectacle of an "acceptance .. s peech that in fact was an uninformed blast at Agran, re-1 pealing undocumented innuendoes df an eleventh-hour smear letter. His charge that Agran was elected by outside in- terests was peculiar in t he .light of his own excessive con· lributions by donors who live outside lrvine, but do busi· ness there and conceivably have a special interest in the council. Both candidates, in fact. were top spenders to win the lop seats. The fight for mayor, calculated to shut out top vote- gelter Agran and Councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido, who is regarded as being in his political camp, was absurd. The title is titular and the s truggle ignored the voice of the Jlcople expressed through the election. The council. now fairly well balanced with pro· growth and low-growth advocates, has an opportunity for a s table, healthy debate of issues -if its members can put aside petty personality.clashes. Untidy Situation An apparent conflict of interest has settled around. Saddleback Valley Unified School District Trustee William Kohler. A teacher association leader revealed last week that Kohler, an insura nce agent, had sent a letter to some teachers offering to sell them a t ax sheltered annuity plan . At about the same time at least one or these letters we nt out, he was vigorously opposing a prodosed deferred compensation plan -which offers similar 'Benefits as the tux ::.heltered annuity -for employees. ln addition to publicly trying to persuade other trustees to reject the n~w plan -whicti is a potential loss of business for him -Kohler cast the lone dissenting vote. The trustee says he has done nothing illegal or un- dhi cal. However, we believe his voling on the issue was im· proper. This should b~ checked with the county counsel. In the meantime, Kotraer and a ll trustees should abstain from voting on issues iwhich may involve personal busi- ness. Schools in Trouble Construction of badly needed schools without an in· <·rcase in next year's tax rate was an option lost to Capi~trano Unified School District taxpayers March 7 when a $49.3 million bond issue fell to defeat at the polls. ll was t he third lime in two years a school construe· tion bond measure failed in the district. And in each case the bond issue rt:c•ei ved a majority vote _! but not the t wo-lhirds votes nl'edcd for passage. Wh ile the f a1l1111· of the ballot proposal puts a crimp rn d1 striel cxp.in-..1 11 plans. area developers are tossing up new tract.:; ol homes in San Clemente; Dana Point, Laguna Niguel :ind :\l1 s~ion Viejo. · Ironi call v. it was in several of those areas where votes for thc.hallot measure were the most scarce. As families move into these new homes in the next fi ve years, l'nrollment in the district is expected to jump by 60 pert'cnt -from 16,000 to 24,000 s tudents. The only feasible option left for responsible district \'Oters is to support the $27.2 million lease-purchase elec· tion June 6. If approved by a simple majority of the dis· trict's voters. the agreement will provide fewer new classrooms than the defeated bond measure and increase the tax rate by 36 ce nts. But with 8,000 new students anticipated, fewer is bet· tcr than no cb ssrooms at all. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. ' Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd I Backl«lrds By L.l\f, BOYD ll ow many compet1t1ve events can be won by moving ba c kwards? Tug-o -war c erlainly com es to mind. Then there's rowing. And how about the backstroke in swimming? Any others? Q. "What do the big-time modeling agencies charge to send you a girl who's willing to pos e for nude pbolo- graphs? A. About $500 an hour is the going rate now at the pres· lige outfits, although some lesser knowo bookers only charge $'250 an hour. It's not enough just to own your own camera, they aver. You're Dear Gloomy supposed to be a professional photographer. That keeps them out of trouble with the law. Q . •'How long has l.t been s ince the word 'obey' was customarily used in the .traditional marria ge ceremony?" A . Which tradlUonal ceremony? Religious group~ have varied considerably ~n this matt.er. Take the U.S.' Protestant Episcopal Church, for instance. lls bishops deleted .. obey" wa;y back in 1922. Easiest way to sharpen., scissors, I'm told, is to cut up a sheet of emery paper. U it doesn't work, t.houah. forget where you read it. ' You also ean consider you.raeU a Seasoned Citizen if you recall juat. which of Fay Wr&J'• aeveral talent.I made beT 10 ftlt. IWted for tM role ta "Ktn1 Kooa." Credlt her •~nam. So chllllns and thrUllna WH Pay'• lyrical terror tbat Ute moVSemtten cloHd her up in a tollnd room aft« tbe pteuu. wu •tmo1t nm.Md to Ill lier ecnam at will eo tbei ~d apllce In a few mon ot • rippln1 punctuatloa tien u.d Ulen • Dllded,; Jack Anderso~ Booze Flows tin W ashingt;on f' W ASHJNGTON -Under abstemious Jimmy Carter, the Wblte House does not serve a lcoholic beverages except for wine and beer. But outside the presidential premises. the spirit of W. C. Fields still lives among omciats of subordinate federal agencies. Indeed, they have developed a steady flowrng s ource of f ree gov- ernment booze. Their secret source i s t h e wh iskey , vodka and other liquors seized by c u stoms agents and tax re - venuers. The Genera) Services Ad· ministration rans heir to thls bottled bonanza, which should exceed 30,000 gallons in a good year. An ob5cure law allows the GSA to distribute its largesse Mailbox without charge to 1overnment agencies and private 1roups for "medicinal, scientific" and other appropriate purp~ses. SUCH PRIVATE institutions as hospitals, nursing homes and even convents, all known for their sobriety, stocked up with 1,300 gallons or liquor between October, 1976, and December, 1977. One satisfied customer is a Little Sisters or the Poor convent in Illinois, whose spokesman ex- plained: "We give it to the sis- ters when they have a cold." But the 11 Washington agen- cies that stocked their liquor pantries with nearly 600 gallons or the confiscated hooch made few medicinal claims for their haul. The State Department uses it for diplomatic receptions and dinners. The convivial people at Coas t Guard headquarters drank up their share at an an· nual picnic. Even the scientists at the National Science Founda· tton preferred to consume their portion than to waate il in lbe laboratory. THE GREATEST demand is for c hampagne a ('d foreign wines, confiscate~ from return· ing tourists who try lo sneak ek· tra bottles through customs. Scotch is second on the list. Those who partake of the free government hooch are nervous about President Carter's anti· alcohol attitude, which they view as fl quaint idiosyncrasy. But they would prefer not t.o ad- vcrfise their access to the con· f1 sca.ted liquor. Here's where. nevertheless. the liquor flowed during the 15 months: State Department, 80 gallons; National Science Foundation, 142 gallons; GSA, 76.l gallons ; Air Force Acad e m y, 73.3 g al1ons; Air Force Foreign Liaison Office, 25 gallons; Coast Guard, 31.2 gallons; Nuclear Regulatory Comm ission, 55.l gallons; Marine Corps, 15.4 gallons; Interior Department, 17.3 gallons; Chief of Naval OperaUons, 10.4 gallons, and AC- TION, 8.1 gallons. Some 7S prlvate organizations also took advantage or the free tiquor offer. There were ZS ours· ing homes, 24 hospitals and lS caovents_ POLLtJTED POT -For over two yeau the United States gov· ernment has been helping Mex· ico control the production of marijuana by spraying fields with a pote ntially toxic herbicide called paraquat.. As a result, the beaUh of millions of pot smokers in this counll')' may be endangered. Paraquat kills m arijuana plants within two days. But Mex· ican farmers have been harvest· ing the crop within hours after helicopte'rs spray the fields. Much o( the marijuana that is smuggled into the United States, therefore, is contaminated. At the request of Sen. Charles Percy, R.·Ill., the White House reluctantly initiated a study to determine if paraquat-tainteb pot is hazardous. A W~ite Hou~e report, issued in December, downplayed the danger. But we have learned that many of the findings are disputed by new scientific evidence. THE WHITE HOUSE docu· ment, for example, claimed that the maximum amount of para. quat "likely lo be found oh plant material is about 500 parts per million." Government scieQ.U~ts. however, have determine4' \hat the average contamination is nearly four times that amount. The White House also alleged that the United States was not responsible for the paraquat hazard because the Mexican government had purchased the herbicide in Europe . But we have seen confidential State Department cab1es t hat reveal the United States has provided technical assist ance for the paraquat program. Will Jarvis Plan Cripple Education? To the Editor: J find it difficult to understand the editorial policy of the Daily Pilot regarding the Jarvis·Gann tax limitation initiative. lnfla· tionary values of real es tate have increased to a point that lnany property tax bills have doubled. Homeowners are hurt by the re· sulting excess ive taxation. Homeowners are further hurt by paying for the inflated property laxes of the businesses and services which they patronize. It is foolish to think that business owners and landlords will pay lax increases out of profit. Prices rise and the homeowner and I or renter pays the bills. THE STATE legislature offers to refund only a small portion of this recent dramatic tax in- crease and only as a token meas ure made under duress. After a year o~ debate, over; the subject ft appears that legislators have intentionally at· tempted to delay action on tax relief hoping to kcee the windfaU tax dollars. Gr anted that new taxes will be required following the adoption or the J arvis-Gann initiative, but those taxe s wi1 1 be straightforward laxes which ap· ply equitably to all citizens. Perhaps there will ~ an overall reduction of slate expenditures once legislators get a public mandate. For certain there will not be a reduction of public ex· pense from the Behr Bill, and. under the Behr Bill there is nothing to prevent a recurrence of this fiasco in coming years. A MOST Important point of· fered by 1.he Jarv{s.Gann in· itlative is the predictable in· creases in future property taxes. The known amount of taxes can be programmed into retirement planning and into household bud1eta provid1n1 a large degree or securJty. Only the wealthy can afford to Uva under the Behr Bill. 1t your opposition to thls Jania-Gann inltlatlve is due onlY'to fear for education qaallty and pubUc senlc.. reat ass\11'8d that there are Jarvis·Gann ad· vocalel who will fnsllt upon con· ttnuma quality al.lo and wbo wm approve new equttable tun it ~ulred. IA MES VI. OIFF1.J('f I , Ma rines and besides that your article stated, "the Marines pre- ferred to let the private sector have the first crack at catching Bubbles." Nowhere did it state that the Marines refused to help, ·as you so boldly stated in big black type. The Marine Corps does many good things for our community a nd country. Unfortunately, the press does not try to promote the positive sid e. For example, "'Marine Copter Crashes," <Fri· day, March 3, page 3). What is wrong with "'Marines Attempt Dangerous Rescue?" And put it on page I. MARTHA CALLIHAN ERA lfnng s .. ~ To the Editor: I am astonished at Mary Moore's compar1son ot ERA pro- ponents and Bubbles the Hippo <March 5 Mailbox). Yes, there have been "runaway wives" who could no longer cope with a load of responsibilities without entirely losing their own identi_ty-and. men have ~en exercising the same option for centuries. THE EQUAL Rights Amend· ment means e qual re - spansibillties. Proponents or the ERA are working for the day when women are able to provide financial security for themselves a nd their loved ones through good job training and equal pay, when men are able to help hold the family together because lheir skills in providing direct physical and emotional support for others (that's housework a nd loving in· Pmtch volvement) are as highly de- vefoped as their skills in business, and when each J)4:!rson is en· couraged to reach for full human potential in any area she or he chooses. W e ca n s h a r e the responsibilities -and have a beautiful time doing it! JANE POOLE Coordinator, South Coast Chapter National Organization for Women I Legal Tlaelt To the Editor : 1 am so angry at a staternent by Hu~tington Beach City At- torney, Don Boofa. He said that he was delighted that the transfer tax could not be used against people buying and selling homes in all cities of the slate. We are hoping so much for the J arvis initiative to pass to help us old people Jive in our homes and the whole thing could be nothing because the state can now call it a transfer ta:rc and legally steal however much they want from the homeowner. BETTE CALLE Ti•2 .. 1A91ac To the Editor: Our heartfelt appreciation goes to the D~ly Pilot for its fine coverage of the Irvlne City Council race. Most important was tbe effective demonstration of the indispensable role of a free press in protecUng the American electoral process. or special note was the e>e- cellent investigative reportinf by Philip Rosmarin regarding the malodorous smear Jetter d& veloped at the end of the cam· paign. Democracy is delicate and vulnerable to the obscene perversion of the process at. tempted by that last-minute at- tack on Larry Agran and his many supporters in Irvi ne. Fortunately, your paper shed timely light on the casual con· tempt for facts held by John Burton,\ and co-signers. They could offer no facts to back up their smear. Further, the moral and ethical imbecility shown by that letter offended many voters and probably backfired. COMPARED to the fine work by the Daily Pilot, the se1f· serving pap disgorged by the local weekly freebie paper was glaring in its contrast. Predict- ably. their so-called news reports and editorial joined in the attack, but attempted to duck responsibility by ascribing the scurri1ous innuel\dOS lo unnamed mysterious "critics" and at· tempted no investigative report- ing. We value tbe Daily Pilot's presenceinourcommunity. Itex· emplifies the best tradiUon oC a. free press intensively concerned with local issues. It costs some money, though, to have a truly free press, and we are happy to s ubscribe to your paper. JANET WILLIAMS LOUlSFRIDHANDLER '81-*~> To the &lit.or: The Second Sc)lwelnfurl Memorial Association is looking for any and all s urvivors of Mis- sion 115, 14 October 19'3. Tb.is mission, nown by lhe Eighth Air Force from bases in England is recorded in all history boob as "Blact Thursday" due to the tremendous looses aulfered by us on that day. We are also Interested ln COD· tact with any other World War II U.S. Am\y Air Force porsonoel, whether they were ••flY boys'" or around tupport personnel. All ~/ lnformaUon Jn-.Y be obtal&Md by wrll.ing to me c/o P .o. Bo.x 482. Sou lb Gate: CaU!omla. Ol" I can be re1ched. b1 calliDJ (213) s.NHS, W1LLJAlll D. ALLEN • STOCKS I BUSINESS COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS . • Wedrleldey. March 1 s. 11ms s O~LV PILOT Tough Task 2 Enemie8 Fight Refonn By SYLVIA PO&TD I Well planned and widely pubUclHd as Prestdentc, · enter'• elforta to reorga.nhe the federal 1overnment have been, achievements to date have been puny. MOit efforts at reorge.nizatioo bave been cosmetic -,mall changes at the top, exposure of only the most start· Ung examples of waste, corruption or mlsmanagem Carter ii clis~verlnt that the obstacles facing hi$ or110Jiat:Jon drive are formidable. why? OBSTACLE NO. l: lnefftcleocy is deeply rooted in bureaucratic maze. It defies its enemies and ls untouch by reorganbation at the visible level. Across-the-boa cuts never affect it. Bureaucracy cuts muscle before fat. OBSTACLE NO. 2: Apa.rt from inefficiency ls the faet that much of the cost of government consists of "lransf~ payments," the benefits going to Americans in the form Cf1 food stamps, welfare ch~ks. Social Security, medicate, medicald, farm subsidies, etc. These benefits are not al· feet.eel by reoreanizaUon. WHAT CAN BE DONE! Plenty -but none of the tacks wtU be easy and none will be protected from wild position. -Inefficiency could be cut it the cutters were wiJ to take on the "sacred cows." In the offices of U.S. tomeys, for example, cases are processed with many times the speed observed in "normal" agencies. The rea· son: external pressure for results. When there is little or no e.xtemal pressure, those in_ charge delegate more decisions to themselves. More ti is spent, more expense is incurred, more mistakes are made -simplY because the decisions are more remote from the action itself. The labyrinth or steps created by lhe bureaucracy is never blamed for these bloope rs. The usual claim is that underlings failed to follow inslruc· lions and blame is shifted. Money's Worth TO CUT FAT INSTEAD OF MUSCLE, consider what happens to an uncomplicated matter. JC the Food and Drul( Administration, for instance, wants lo refer a matter to another agency in the same city, papers must be sent to Washington for review. forwarded to the Washington bead· quarters or the second agency, then sent back to the in· tended recipient. Costs climb and delays stretch into weeks or months. Multiply this by myriad agencies. Eliminating this kind of waste will never be done if the cutting job is assigned to the higher-ups. ll would have lo be done at the levels where the actual work i~one. Better policing of "transfer payments" would help. More programs are being created where A is to provide services or goods to B, but the bill is paid by C. Fraud ex· is ts. AUTHORITY AND RESPONSl81UTY to police the program should be directed to one reliable source and pay. ments should be stopped when lhere is evidence of miscon· duct, poor service or fraud. This is almost never done. The programs go on, even when fraud is discovered. "Third party benefit" programs are woefully managed. Unless Carter's team probes the workings inside the agencies. the president will be appalled by the pace of his progress. Shifting Pandora's boxes around will do no good. Sometimes, they must be opened to be fumigated. General Plam t ·Record Budget . • ' , General Telephone or California bas announced it will spend about $400 million in 1978 on new construction and • equipment to meet customer telecommunications require· m~ts. · ·'This figure represents the largest annual capital oul· lay for service expansion and improvement of facilities in the company's history," said Parker Sullivan, president. GENERAL SERVES MORE than 3.S million telepbones. Included in its territory Jre Huntington Beach, Westminster. Laguna Beach, Fountain Valley, Stanton, Midway City, Sunset Beach and portions of Cypress and Garden Grove. _ It gained about 220.000 telephones last year and ex-. • peels to add 200,000 in 1978. Last year's gain was the; • highest such increase ever and the company spent $31&r .. million on new construction and equipment. : Forecasted installation and n!moval of telephones re-; s uiting from this year's turnover is expected to costt General more than $70 million, one of the largest to; ' dividual segments or its coostnlction budgeL The compa~ { also will spend Ut· million on new termitjm equipment, such al telephones, desk lns~­ meots, data lerminu and key sets. : ( TAKING ) ..____TO_CK_ In 1978 Gener-1 , plans to incur gross afJ · dltions of S34 m1llJon In the conversion from ste~by-step to electronic swltcbina in Long Beach. Marina. del Rey. ~ Raacbo California ancfRolling Rills. ' General will spend about $13 mllllon this year tow•rd 1 completion of lta electronic long distance switching centers in Long Be~cb, Ontmo •nd Santa Konica. • IT ALSO WW. SPENO $62 allllion on outside plant, t $18 million oo larce switchboards on customer premises ! and $12 mllllon on land and buUdincs -lnclud.lna a new , central oalce at Rancho Callfomla. aeveral building addi· lions, bulldln« alleraUons, nre ~Oil and suppnssion systems and alt. improvements, In addlt.lon, the comP.&aY wUJ 1pend ts million on new vehlcles. Half ol that will go for SOO new construeUon, ln· staUaUon and repair and pool vebJcles. The other $3 mlllion will be spent lD tbe first of a Ove-year prog?'am almed at repladfta all 384 of the company's heavy con- atnacUoo vehicles. · . . • 1 ... DAILY PILOT Tele1'bion TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTING$ ; • \\ 1 1>"~1·.~l>A \' EVENING 9!00 8 (I) 088 NEWS 18 HEWS OE.AGENCY OHEI A TV dlrect0t, Wf\o haa ml9-dlrectect a petachvli&I, NqUlt9e htlp ITOlft Ille p.lt9lnedlca G H8A BASl(ETBAU. Loa Angelea Ullet• va PNllldelphla 7 6of• • Tl4I! BAADY BUNCH Peter ~ Illa d1d'1 lepe f9COl'det to eavMdrop on t.le brothenl and alttort. ti) THI! AOO+<IE8 f9 HISTORY Of MEXIOO "lneeptlon Of The CathollO cnurdl In Amerk:.I" 9 ABCNEW8 1:308 MOVle *** ·•Patnt Your Wagon" (Pat1 21 ( 19&DJ Lee MaNln, COnt Eutwood. A miner Ida In love with the wom1n hie pa11,_ bQuoht atan~llon (1 ht) • BEWITCHED A COiiege glfl la l0tc:ed to c:Nrlge her lm&Q41 and Damn la aan109C forced 10 ch6nge 1119 Job • a ..ult ofS4nna'espalls. '11) OIMENStONS IN CULTURE "PITyelcal Var1atlon ·· (I) UNTAMEOWORLD "Kangaroo&" t1JI MERV GRIFFIN 8:40 SD PL.EDGE BAEAI( Regularly acneduled pro- gramming may be delayed due to pledge braek& 7:00 D NBC NEWS til LtAR8CLU8 0 A8CNEW8 m I LOVE: LUCY When Ricky makea a fllrn and eella II lo a produoe<. Lucy decides 10 gal Into 11\8 act. Q) AOAM-12 fD MACHEIL / LEHRER REPORT '1i) CREATIVE STITCHERY ArtlSt/lmlructor Eleanor van de Watet domon. S1rBl89 Iha llr81ghl atilcll, Mtln ltltcll, lam 111tch and ''The M "J"> .,t MOV1£ • CA"°'-IURHErT TUBE TOPPERS •• "The Nlghl Hold• AHO....,.,. Terror" (1955) Jade K.ily, • MOW KOC Hiidy p.,., Hllcfl-Ml&r• '** ''The Naktd Ma!&" '! E 9 8:00 -''Count Dracula.'' A llOld a man and hlS 1am11y (1150) An Oardnar1 three·bOur Special putting together all lot r-11tom wMll tMy d ... ~ F'<enao.a. The three parts of the new TV drama about the oo...., t1e hu • wea1t11Y ~:A::=,,!: thirStyTransylvaoian. m"*~a.> oltd>Gaya1t1mmortaltied CBS89:00 -SalutetoHenry Fonda. ••~ "The 81111e "'1 1n 1111 , __ portrait. 12 The American Film Institute honors on&of Apache Pua" 1195~ JOhn fir&.) Lund • .i.11 Chandler. An • ~Al '78 Hollywood's outstanding actors (see 1ne111nanc1aca11&1rymaj(I( "WNla ...,.. A Ruulan h t bel ) work t~her 10 atop fwNly anemp .. 10 tnlro. P O OS OW • Gal'onlmo from rnaaaact· duce1oepuvum1teb88f. KHJ 0 ll:OO _"Witness ror the 1no aet11er1.11hf .. 30mln> All<•, Into her nallYe Arc11C .nwonmeni. Prosecution." Ag a th a Christie 's 12 e ...avie: ID o~r .courtroom drama splendidly done by ••in "Of Love And PERF~NCE.8 T p M 1 Di · h d Daalre" (1D83) Marla "Count Dracula" Altar yrone OWer' ar ene etric an Oberon, 819119 Cochran. A ltaYlng London. Jonatl\M Charles Laughton. wealthy women attempll Harker anoounteni eount to leave behind II« IOl'dld Dracula In a caa11a on 81. PE#oAMANc£8 ProHeutlon" (1951) past by manylng lhe man G--·1 Eve. LOUii JOt· "Count "--•I•" · .l'lla llheloYet.(1ht.,66mln.) -..-..,, ..... ~ wn Tyrone Power, Mari-2 79 ...,. ·-MYSTERY d&n port'8)'9 ~nf&llW)UI Mina worrlae about Oletrlc:t!. Th& delendtnt'• 1 \UP ,..... count. (Part t 3) Jor\a1haft, Ille a110 flOlloM wife Mr1oue1y hOrlN him MOVIE 1:3011 P9'01'~ that her lilt• wey hu With her t11111mony In flit "Tha Spao•·Wetc" "A Poeltatful Ot Poslee" reaumad her habit of murder trial. (2 htl.) Murdarl" (Premlet9) Tltha • ~WTT8 alaepwalklng. followlng ID THE 000 COUPLE Starling, J<*I Caulfield. The femala member OI a 9:00. (() SALUTE TO her to the grr4Y&rd, aha Whan Munay't wife ejects ~ er-la lt1e oniy HENRY FOHOA ~ OrKUI& i.&nlng hllll from their home, Felhc one allva wMn Ille craft The American FMrn lnetl· OYW her. (PIM 2 of 3) lnYllM him to ehare his and makM a aale landlng on 8 Lynda Day George and Mel Ferrer are among the cast members of the TV mov· ie pilot series "The Return of Captain Ne mo," airing tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel 2. tu1e. Jana Alexander, 10:00 D ~ WOMAH Oecar'• apartment. fa dlll9nt p1ana1 l.udlle Bell, 8at1e Devb, "SWMI KathlMll" P9Pper • LET'S MAKE A OEA1. t2 IJ (J) ICOJAK Dorothy MeGuWe. OrOQOfY and C<owtey 111 pualed fD DICK CAvtTT "Slay Ride" s-11 men Peck. Barbara StW1Wydt by the concmlelory avl-Gueat: Lowell Thomas attending lfle -con. and others pay tribute to a «*tee tllat eugoMts en CPart I of 2J. 11'9R1ion lal to their deathl diatlngulebed eetor. lnllde connection In • ~ MACNEIL I LEHRER end KoJak rat111ae to D 11&..Aq< SHEEP negoflable MCUrltlaa halal. REPORT be11aY9 that •II ol the men 80UADAON ID ..WS 11~8 (I) HAWAII FlVE-0 have commhlecl eulclde. parabollO curve. (J) J()j(IR'S WILD 7:30 D WHEH HAVOC STRUCK "The e.i AJr Fire" For thfae daya a vicious fire 1aged In Southern Callfor· nla and daatroyed OYer 500homas. 8 SHANANA GuMt: Dalla RaaM. 0 NEWLYWED GAME 0 MATCH GAMI! P.M. m THE BRADY BUNCH Bobby and 011\/er. aided by their )'OUlhlul lmaglnatlone, become convinced ttiey are on 10 a spy plot that 1n\IOIYM Miiie. m~12 fill L.A. INTtACHAHO£ "Snapthole" '1!) STAA&OARO "The 200 Pound G«llla" OJI STARllKY I A ment.ity unstable Viet· (R) "Skllee And Hendetllon" Sgt. Alldy M!Qlln (Red HUTCH nam veteran begin& llrlng I 1128,000 QUESTIOH WMI). wtlOM Int-di.. "Oaalh In A Outerent on H1Wall1n molorlsta *> D TOMORAOW FAMILY nuo Ilk• of Ill ottloar• I• wall "'-" 8taratcy" lhocll~ from I eaemlngly lmpragn. .,~ au.11: Cannan Fattone, 1:00 (() AETUAH OF known, it prOl'llOted 10 when a \181aran cop and 1ble hlklde bunker. (RJ former oellmate of Slrtlen CAPTAIN NEMO warr1nt olfleaf and In 1111 lllelong lt1end le found D TONIGHT Sirhan; La1lle Fladler, A revtwd Ceptaln Nemo lru11r111on, goes on e ~ In • slauy IOV8 ""1 Holl: Johnny Caraon. author of "Fraaka:· (Joaa Ferrer) angagea In a rarnpaoe. (R) and an lnveat1g1t1on GliMte: John Da\lld1on, D 1 SPY -las of fantaatlo feud• a O CHAMJE'S r-ala the IOfdld double Sam Blolner, Johnny "Little Boy Lost" wllh Pr~ C\11\nlng. ANGELI Ille ha had been leedlng. Yuna, Jodie Fo.111t. '.00 «I) MOVIE him (Burgeu Maredllh). ""'1gel 8aby" In Of'det to Don Gordon, Gregory U LOVE. AMERICAN • * ·~ "Illegal Entry" Including an under-dual creek a blgtlma blaek mer• Roukla, Charles P1eree STYLE ( 19<4DJ Howard Duff, Mane with tuer belmL (Pat1 2 kit baby ting. Kelly poaa1 gunt lier. (R) "Love And The New I Toren. An flll·Pllot, turned of 31 .. -11 ~-11t unwed 4lt HONEYMOONERS Roommat.r'' Bob and Lin· undarco\lllf egent, lnlll· ~ 0,..A_'l2l1 YAOAMST mother, 1911 .. a~~ G GREAT dath'"'ar!_~~!'.'J>'. '~Lovanda ~tratat e amuggRng ting (1 ' A .... nt amen Inker" alonal eour-ce ol .....,_ PENORMANCES •• ~-• -v _ • ...,... hr., 30 rnln.J Mid Jaclc 11 the frustrated and Sabrina and 80019y 81 "Count Dracula" Good ~ The Athlete" George IJ NEWS victim of an unu111ally a rictl, arrogant couple In and 8'111 wage lhelr time-hu been lold by hit boll D O NEWS attired, etafty llttle men aaarch of a parleet dllld. lesA benle u Prol9MOI' 10 1911 1 woman thal she is O MOVIE (W11tar Burka) who Edward Winter, Scott Van HelslnQ, Mina and •man. I • * • .. Pltllburgh" ('19421 thraa1,ne lb become Colomby~Utar. (R) Jonathan elnlggte to put 8 0 POLICE STORY John W1yne, M1rl1rte something of a nulsenoa. O M.J.Y OAAHAM LAS en end 10 Coum Oracuta'e "T•t Ot 8rotherh0od" A Dietrich. A man IONS U MOVIE VEGA8 CAU8AOE 9\111doings.(Part3 0131 veteran pollcamen •• many friend• In htt relenl· ••• "Five Millon Yeera • MEAVOAIFAN ~· SUPERSPY dlemayad when hi• 1asa dr!\19 fot power In the ·:. Chaftnel Luting• To Earth" (1H8) Jamn Gueetl: Jeck Ktugman, 1'le Story of Ralnhard younger brother, 8 rook... steal Industry (2 hll) ·~ Donald, And<IW Kall'. An Gawi MeeLeod, Jil'll Staf• Oehlan and how ha bUng ... in arrest. Ed'#ard G) MOVIE ~ 11 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles unearthed time caotule f0td, Bart>ara Ma~. becarn8 ln\IOl\led In lhe Alber1. George MahaN ••"Th& Stranget Wore A ~ D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles contain& ca-1bout a Virginia Graham. beginning of Iha Amatlcan .,... atar. (R) Gun" C 1D53) Randolph :: I ~~(~~~l~~~e~~~les ~~;:~1anWi110 ~ 10:30i;'e1=:8recounied .. :.,!o;-Tha Horse =~.~~e!'::ci~ Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diogo G OJI EIOHT IS "Count Dracula" Good f:a" a bandll, reluctantly Joins a : .. 1.. 0 KHJ·TV (Ind ) Los Angeles ENOUGH and 8Vll wage ~ time-H:OO 8 8 0 (I)@) NEWS' OET SMART comc>lracy 10 1oo1 the at•· @ KCST (ABC) San Diego "Dear Miu Dlnall" TM .... battle u Prote..or 8 LOVE. AMENCAN CAPTIOHED A.SC ~ hnea (2 hra I ~· 1D KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles li14181ty unNfflad Tom io.. Van Halalng. Mina and STYLE NEWS 2'o II MOVIE . m KCOP·lV (Ind) Los Angeles ea hla cool when hi• Jonathan etruggla 10 put "LOYe And The Legal •••"Bua R1kr{• Back In • 1 f11 KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles daughlet Ell:abelh ask1 an and to Count Oftocula'e Agr-nt" MORNING Town" I tH5) Ann· column If the ~ 18118 ~ GD GN!AT * * * "WI'-For The "What's tn The Box" young Navy man rat urns to find tnat !tie flt1 .ti<> rajaeiad him In the pMt WMla to ltart a -,..._ tlonaNp (2 "" ) 2-.26. NEWS 2:J08 MOW! ***"~d"(I~! Mlcflele Morgan, Hiide. • gatCla Neift, A ~-, cllarm• lonety women,· -~ nuderirlg lflarll • 10 eo11ec:1 "'*ton-er· hr .. 55 min.) a:00 m HEWS · . 4:000 MOV~ ,• *'*"' "Unllnlall•d; Butlne"" (1D<41) nn.t evr-, Robert Mont~ ary. A nal\19 Y°""O wonwt: rajacted by a debol'* · playboy. merrlae 111~. brother on th4I rebOIA'ld. (~ ht•.) G) t.IOV!E -* * "Bltween M~· And Dawn" ( 1850) Mart& 81....-. Edmond O'Brien. Two young pollC9m8rl ~ lure a dangaroue r9dlat~ -. lneurTlng hi• enmity. (t". ht., 30 min.) :· 4:25 U NEWa •: 4:30. MOVIE :· ••"Horror laland" (194 ,., l)IQli F0tan. L.o C.illo: Thi ciu-t '°' burted ~: --. drewe a )ICUnll man t(· en llotaled laland. ( 1 hr.-· 30"*') : Tlaursda•'• ;· Dayd•e Mo,,iei • MORNING • 11:30 m • • ...... "Thi Ooolinl °' Oklahoma" (tMG) R.lr¢ dolph Scoll, Georg• Mac:ready. Whan 1119 tore. mar g1ng forces him tl ruume leadershlp, •: ralormect outl-gl\IM ul• hla Mia relhar than ~: hie w111 My further un~~ plMll. (2 hrL, 20 ml!\.) •, '· AFTERNOON !· 12:00 0 * *. "Th• Second ·: Greetut Sex" (1D56'· JHnne Crain, Gaorgr' Nader. Women barrieed( lhernMlllM In an old t~: w1>an their lluabands ar(- c:onat.antly 9*rJ trying t•: aetlle 1 county dl9puta. lt· ht., 30 min I •: 3:00 9 * * "Wheal Ot •. Fotl une" (19<42) Joh"' Wayne, Edwerd Ell!&. If. gltl'• lllMr 19 ••poead 8'· a crooked politldan by • young counlry lawyer. ( t· hr ,30mlnJ •: 3:30 • * •• "The Oppoalt• •. Sax" ( 1 D5&) June Allyaon, • Oolorel Grey. A ~.; married woman .....,.. fo.• Reno on the adVlce of lier lrlendl. ( 1 hr., 30 min.) :· ~,. e KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunttngton Beach his adllioa to Iha lo\lelorn avll doings. (Part 3 of 3) 0 MOYIE 12:00 g TWJUOHT ZOHE t.Aargret, Mlchael Parke. A t '---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~--------------------------------------:'!"' . .. , ... ... !1 J .. ~ .... ~ • .... s • ... ~ v fJ-m:'.~~~--~~ J.j~i,li,; '~ ..... ,,. ij .. ' STARTS FAIDA Y! DUSTIN HOFFMAN I• L~ fD"' War Henry Fonda. who 'll be honored tonight at 9 on CBS, Chann el 2, is s hown in scenes from 10 of his mov· ies. At left he stars with (left to right, top to bottom) Audrey Hepburn in "War and Peace," Bette Davis in "That Certain Woman," Barbara Stanwyck in "The Lady Eve" and Madeline · Carroll in "Blockade.•• At right he's with James Stewart in "The Cheyenne Social Club," in "The Wrong Man" and "Twelve Angry Men ," with Thomas Mitchell ·in "The Immortal Sergeant.." in "The Longest Day '' and with James Cag n ey in "Mister Roberts." MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD t<IND" (PG' . t¥EYTHVA3/M f:»tO:t& .,. 'IT\IU ~1:11).tO:ll "ANNIE HALI.ft (PG) l;tl 'WORLD'S GREATEST LbVER'' (PG). 1:•10.00 "JULIA'.' (PG) 7~4& PG) NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS Including Beat Picture Beet Special Effects Beat Sound Best Director -George Lucas