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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-03-28 - Orange Coast PilotI I t l Waddill Bei Bomb t , I l . To Close; 3·dal7 I On SD Freeway TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 28, 1978 VOL. 11, HO. P, J SICTIOH5, ll ~AOIS For Patty Hearst Hughes Offered Ransom Pay? SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Papers purportedly from the files of the late billionaire Howard Hughes s how that Hughes considered paying part of the ransom demanded by Pat· ty Hearst's kidnappers. the Univers ity of Utah student lroine Rape ·clues Sought By Hypnosis Hypnosis may provide the clues Irvme police need to track down the rapist who attacked a 22-year-old Orange County in· terior design consultant in daylight Monday at a construe· lion site. Investigator Dennis McNeely said the woman, who was not further injured, will be hyp· notized tomorrow night to recall details of the attack she may not consciously have noted. McNeely said she was working inside a north-central lrvme house under construction , measuring for carpeting and tile, when she was assaulted about Aoontime by a man she didn't know. She described him as in his 20s and wearing blue levis, a blue nylon jacket. a white T-shirt and shorts, and blue deck shoes. She said he was thin. about 140 pounds and five feet, eight inches tall. The case is only the second in which Irvine police have used hypnosis to help solve a crime. The technique was used last Oc· tober in a rape case and drew from the vlcUm recollection of a car license plate number she'd seen for ooty an Instant. "There a.re a lot ol details in a victim's mind she just can't re· call under normal cir· cumstances," :McNeely sald. "'Under hypoosls, ah can brfns ou' other ~dence that mllbt be ln her nilnd. .. If lt. ~ we're aotne to 1et it udwse.Jt" newspaper reports. They also make reference to a "handwritten will." lending credence lo the "Mormon will" being contensted in a Nevada court. the newsppaper. The Dai· ly Utah Chronicle, said Monday. The student publication, in a copyrighted article, said it ob· tained copies of papers original· ly seized by Mexican authorities after Hughes death April 5, 1976 on a private plane en route from Acapulco to Houston, Texas. It said the papers went through a Canadian House of Commons member, to a Hughes legacy enthusiast in the northwestern United States, to an associate in Salt Lake City None of these persons was iden· lilied. The newspaper quoted one memo it said was dictated by Hughes as saying: "HRH wants to know more about the Hearst's problem and has no objections to being of some help so long as 1l can be done without any publici· ty. Can Hearst and his family be guaranteed to hold silence., .. The memo was written Feb. 18 or 19, 1974, the newspaper said. Miss Hearst was kidnapped by Symblonese Liberation Anny members Feb. 3. They asked $6 million ransom be contributed toward feeding the poor. · In subsequent memos f~ Hughes advisers Frank "Bill" Gay and Chester Davis, Hughes was advised not to iet Involved, the Chronicle said. <See HUGHES, Pate A2) Bomb&ar.e ClOsea~ Closes Lanes Did ~ughes COnsider Paging Hearst Ransom. ' TEL AVIV ZOO WORKERS LABOR IN VAIN TO LIFT GIRAFFE TO HIS.FEET Schtomo Never Recovered From Fall De-s>lte Efforts of a Dozen Men Efforts Fail Tel Aviv Giraffe Succumbs TEL AVIV, Israel (AP> - Shlomo the giraffe died early to· day. The 15-Coot-tall beast. in the prime oNife at the age or~. was unable to get to bis feet aftt!r col- lapsing two days ago at the Tel Aviv zoo. bespite efforts or a clozen men who talked soothingly lo him and tried unsuccessfully Mon- day to hoist him to his feet with chains and pulleys suspended from a platform, the animal ex- Plred oo bis bed of straw. Dr. oabe Avram, the direc· tor of the ioo, aaid be would ~rlorm an autopsy to de· mlilli tbe cau.5e of death. T!ie rat • blid fillen a k ago, and t was thoueht be might . have been injuHfltben. • Sex apparently was not Shlomo's undotnl, as it was for Victor, the•ir&f!e who fell dartni an attempt to mate"'last Sep-• tembet in an Enalisb soo and died of a heart attack fourdayalater. too long, it's not good for his heart," Avram said Monday. "Giraffes get weak and can't stand up and they die." UmadianMan Slain; Fian£ee Beaten, Raped HBWoman Faces Charge In Shooting A 37-year-old Huntington Beach woman was charged with attempted murder after s he al- legedly shot her husband in both knees during a spat in a bar Monday Qigbt, police reported today. Arrested was Nancy Evans of 5682 Mangrum Drive. She was booked into Huntington Beach Jail and remained there today in lieu of $25,000 bail. Her husband, Jerry Evans. 38, was listed in stable condition to- day at Huntington Inlercom- munity Hospital with .22 caliber bullet WOllDds in both knees, of- ficials said. Police Sgt. Luis Ochoa 1aid the incident took place in Hi Roy's Bar, 5050 Heil Ave., about. 9:15p.m. . Ochoa said the dispute ap· parently began at the couple's bome. The husband wst to the bar. The wife followed shortly aftetward. When the husband O'eeled his wife and 41pp-.wc:hed heri Ochoa Hid, the woroan reportedly pulled a band.tun and fired twice. Evans aia,gered from the bat Into the partln1 lot outaldo where he collapsed. He wu later rushed to Ute ~pj~~;:"' Mn. Evans wu arrc1n.CIQ by police lri.slde the bar, Ochoa aaid. II ,, Waddill Defense To Close · ._.,TO BA LEY 11:1111-o.Ry ..... S'8ff Dr. William Baxter Waddill's attorneys were winding up the defense today for the Huntington Harbour physician who is ac- cused or murder after an at- tempted abortion. Both of bis lawyers have in· dicated they plan to call no more witnesses after Dr. Akio Melamura finishes testifying. Dr. Metamura, head or the pathology staff at Westminster Community Hospital where the abortion was performed, bas testified that there were errors in the coroner's findings. He told the jury that the verdict of death by manual strangulation was not justified. Prosecutor Robert Chatterton said he int.ends to call rebuttal witnesses after Metamura con· eludes his lestimoov. Chatterton predicted rebuttal will take up at leiut three days. He hopes lo have among those witnesses at least one of three babies which he claims have survived saline abortions of the t:vpe administered by Dr. Wad- dill to a patient at Westminster Community Hospital. w·addill, 42. has arg~d throughou~ the trial that the baby the prosecution alleges be strangled in the nur~ry on March 2, 1977 after attempting an abortion never knew lif'e in (See DOC'rt>R, Page AZ) Oran:.J. Coa~t ~ Weather Late night and momlng tow clouds and local 'fog. Otherwise lair through Wednesday with variable hiah clouds. Lows toolght 52 to S8. Highs Wednesday 63 to nc~ar 70. INSmETODAY K.ntucky OUN tlte NCAA bcWoet'*1 cw. for ltn. bu& DacU 1w err1Md *>Ctcc U's Cl Ubl# fC9ork for 1.979. StmWs. photOI, Pogs Bl. laiex: Visited .. Catter Begins First of 3 Trips • CARACAS, Venezuela CAP) - President Carter arrived in Ve11ezuela today on hi5 rirst state visit to a Lalin American country. He said his Journey shows the United States knows tt1e tmporlance of the develop401 \;Jlatlona in a chan&Jng world. Carter's trip to Latin America and tl\frica ls the first of at least 'three ovetsed jourt\eya b6 plans this year. The president's blue and &liver Air Force One jet touched down in a stiff wind at Slmon Bolivar International Airport. nestled between the Caribbean Sea and the A vita Mountalns. A red. white and blue banner proclaimed "Blenvenldos Presidente Carter y Sra" - welcome President Carter and wile. Sewral !nmdrecl members of a navy honor auard dressed In ' Polling Commissioner? Althou~h Huth 1s a five.year.old hunting dog, she is a certified pollin~ commissioner in a New Orleans suburb. Iler master, Hank Connell, filled out an application for his pct and the paperwork went through without a hitch until officials discovered that "Ruth Connell" was not registered lo vote. I Boy Kills Parents, W otinds· 3 Brothers SPORTSYLVANlA, Va. (AP> A 14·year·old boy shot his parents to death with a shotgun and wounded three brothers ear- ly today at their home near here, authorities said. Spotsylvania County Com- monwealth's Attorney M. R. Ramey said the juvenile was charged with murder. Ramey would not identify the boy because of his age. Short Circuit Umses Outage SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A worker who skipped a step dur- ing routme maintenance worlc was blamed for San Francisco's worst power failure in two dee- ades. Powf'r ror 69,000 Pacific Gas & Electric Co. customers was out for an hour and 42 minutes Mon- day after a worker turned off an electrical circuit at the Potrero power plant for maintenance and did not turn it back on cor- rectly. Other customers had a :;horter power loss. The error Jed to a short circuit about 11:50 a.m. on the three J 15,000 volt cables -knocking television and radio stations off the air, disrupting telephone service. stopping some public transit and darkenin1• traffic lights. DAllY PILOT The bOy cba.fged in the shoot. ing called a rescue squad about 1:30 a.m., Ramey said. Dead were John S. Gavis Jr., 44, and bis wife, Edith. 41. Three sons, Mark; 17, Peter, lS, and Richard, 13, were wounded. The family's four older children Ii ve elsewhere. . ·Mrs. Gavis' body was found in an upstairs bedroom doorway, authorities said, and her husband's body was found down- stairs, at the bottom of the stairway. The injured boys were found upstairs, two in a hallway and another in a bed. Ramey said five shotguns were found in the house but that it had not been determined which. if any, was the weapon used in the slayings. John Wayne 'Feeling Fine' Film star John Wayne, 70. says be expects to end his treat· ment for bronchlal pneumonia ai Hoag Memorial Jlospital Wednesday. The actor, who lives in the Bayshores section of Newport Beach, spent part of last week and the Easter weekend in the medical racility. Monday he was released to spend his days at home. but re· turns to the hospital at night. Contacted at hls bome, Wayne reported he Is feeling One and expected tonight to be hia last at the hospitaL F,...P-.eAI DOCTOR ••• the hlll 1eme ~the term. But a doctor and D\111U who were present in the nursery have t.tifled that the baby glrl bad a heartbeat uil raptntlon and 1DOYed 1everal tlmea whllo , they were trytair to aid wtu~t. they said wu the 111t.&nl't WUo le>t Jlfe. • J>r. Ronald -Cornell11n, a pedtati1ctan, teltlfted that Wad· dill complatned ln tho nuneey tbat It the child was allowed to llve it would 1urter mualve braln dama1e and trl11er, lawsuit.a seeklnl mllllon1 or doll.an ln ctam-a . He told t.bt Jury IQ .Juds• ~am., JC Tbmer'• courtroom Bat Waddill 1u11eat d four Othu w119 1n Wblch tbe baby could be ellinlnated, lnc1"41na drowmi U lD a but et ot water. whale stood at attention in 85- de & ree heal. Other mlUtary guards carried submachine guns. No clvlllan.s were in sight. On his lirst day ln Venezuela, the pmldent arranged to place a wreath at (he tomb of nat1onal hero Simon Bolivar, in the "ave ot the National Pantheon, a ceD· t11ry.0Jd Spanllk re,aiaaw• style church dedicated to the Ho- ly Trinity. Lal.er, ht aOill Pruidepi Carl• Andres Perez set aside more lhan two hours for talks about U.S.· Venezuelan rel•tlons. Topics Included eneray and economic cooperation, human rights. curbin' the spread of nuclear weapons and restraints on arms trade International topics on the Carter-Perez agenda included the impact of oil prices on the world economy end polillca in Africa. Venezuela frovides much or the US. oi supply. Carter wHI visit Africa before returning to WfShington next week. In 5harp contrast to a 1958 vis- it by then· Vice President Ni~on and a 1961 visit by President Kennedy, no anU·Amerlcan dem· onstrations were expected at Carter's arrival, and Venezuelan security measures were comparatively discreet. Nixon was spit upon and his car nearly overturned when he rode into Caracas. The army mob1hzcd 40,000 troops for Ken·, nedy's visit. Carter is ~pular here because of the human rights crusade be has championed durin1 his cam- paign and in the Whlte House. "The oppressed. the poor and even some leftists who once hat· ed us now see Carter with respect," said one U.S. diplomat in Latin America. · Vice President Waller F. Mon· dale, minding the store in Carter's absence, headed a del· egataon of presidential advisers who said farewell at an early morning White House departure ceremony that was televised na- tionally. Accompanying the president on the 1~,57S·mile trek to Venezuela. Brull, Nigeria and Liberia are wife Rosalynn and Secretary of State and Mrs. Cyrus R. Vance. Ten-year-0ld Amy Carter also Is ln tb.e travel party, Hitchhiking Girl Beaten A 17-year-0Id girl was pistol whipped Monday after she ac· cepted a ride at Del Obispo Street and Coast Highway in Dana Point. Orange County Sheriff's of- ficers said a man described as 30 to 35 years old pulled a pi&t.ol on the girl and began whipping her with the weapon. The suspect escaped after re- leasing the girl at Stonehill Drive and Del Obispo Street after driving only a short dis- tance. Deputies said the young woman was treated and re- leased from San Clemente General Hospital. SOMElHING JS MISSING MILAN, Italy CAP) -An ex· hibition of furniture and household g<>o<b is offering a king-sized bed equipped with stereophonic radio, phonograph and cassette deck, telephone. icebox, small bar, espresso machine, psychedelic lighting system, side and celling mirrors and movie camera. The price ls $14,000. Young Love P~incess Caroline of Monaco dances with fiance Phillippe Junot at the Bal de la Rose ball in Monaco. Junot and Caroline plan to be married in June. More Coal Miners Return to Work By The Assoda&.ed Press More union coal miners re· turned to work today as many of the 10,000 mine construction workers removed pickets upon learning of a tentative agree· ment on a contract for them. But ln at l~ast one United Mine Workers union distract - No. 23 in western Kentucky - construction workers expanded picketing and forced many of the area's 50 mines to close. said Joe Holland, district executive board member. Holland said that about three- fourths of the district's 10,000 un· ion miners did not report to work today. The West Virginia Coal As· sociation said about 1.200 to 1,500 coal lll.iners were blocked by Fro91 Page Al HUGHES •.• One document quoted by the Chronicle called the SLA .. a very dangerous, radical group and we are afraid that they might retaliate by trying lo kid- nap one of our executives or even you ... " The newspaper said the issue became moot when the Hearst Corp. and the Hearst Foundation agreed pay part of the ransom. On the will, the Chronicle printed an unsigned, undated memo which it said made ref· erences to Nadine Henley. Hughes' administrative assis· tant for 35 years. The memo said she had sent a note to Hughes about updating his will. .. Evidently Nadine believes the will she has as the true will and she must have been given instructions an the past by you lo keep it secure. If the handwnl· teo will is the real wall , 1t could be that you bad it updated later to the one Nadine has," the memo said. It Iat~r makes reference lo "whoever holds the handwritten will." . The three·page, handwntten ''Mormon will" surfaced after Hughes' death on a desk in Mormon church headquarters in Salt Lake City. Melvin J?um· mar, a beneficiary who claJmed he rescued Hughes from the Nevada desert in 1968, later ad· milted delivering the will to Salt Lake City but insisted a straneer gave it to him. • construction pickets this morn· ing, compared lo 4,500 to S,000 Monday. Of a total of 1,400 manes m West Virginia, tbe only rt:ports of shutdowns came from two mines in the southern part or the state and three in the north. In Indiana,. at least eight mines and one coal shipping operation were again closed by the pickets, who said they ,would not abandon their hne until the tentative agreement was ratified. About 1,800 miners were prevented from going lo w0rk. Mo s t of western Penn· sylvania·s mines were operal· ing normally today, but several hundred miners were idled at a Bethlehem Steel Corp. mine In Cambria County by construction workers who picketed the mid· night shift. Three Helvetia Coal Company m mes that had been closed Mon· day by pickets reopened today an Pennsylvania·s Indiana County. The same report came from two Barnes and Tucker Coal Com- pany mines in Cambria County, where about 1,300 miners were able lo resume work for the first time today. Large numbers of miners went back to work Monday after a contract was signed Saturday ending a 110-day walkout by 160,000 miners. Spot checks in- dicated even more were rePort· ang for early shifts today. New Hepatitis Agent Studied WASHINGTON CAP) -The effort to eliminate hepatitis as a side effect of blood transfusions is being frustrated by a newly discovered form of the disease, possibly caused by an elusive virus. scientists say. Government scientists said Monday they have proved that the infectious agent can he transmitted through blood and 1s distinct from the known viral ca uses of hepatitis. Because a succesdul na· tionwide campaign has decreased the risk of contract· ing post·transfusion hepatitis Crom previously known viruses, the new agent now is responsible for 90 percent of the remaining cases. health authorities say. Members of the Royal Wmnl~I B llet Company p rform a ac••• from Slr•vlnsky'a "Rite •f ilil!lil" nor to its wcek-loni engagement in New York City. The company is tho oldest of its kind In Canada. ~ . Marine Bigotry Detailed WINSTON SALEM, N.C. CAP) -A former Marine says mem· bersbip in the Ku Khu Klan was wideapread ln the Marine Corps and Innumerable in.atances or violence by whites a&alnst blacks went unpunished by authorities. Donald Ray Hunter, a WinatonrSalem native who wu one or 14 blacks accused or an attack on a group of white Marines •t Camp Pendleton. caur. 1ald bo had to 1tt adJust· to "'the radal atmosphere iA the Marines. ·~lt wu very tense,.. be re. caned "lbe rank structure In th• MarlneJ created an at- DlOQ>here where some were con- sidered 1uperior and others fu. ferie>r •• ''When you are expected to ilve. eat and sleep with guys. you cannot have them in the KKK," be said. Hunter said the 14 Marines didn't have violence on their minds when the Incident began. "Our intent in going to the room was to come lo some sort of agreement with them," said Hunter, who" now home here with a bad conduct discharge after a year in the Camp Pendleton bri,. "The majon(y of people want· ed to communicate with the whites," Hunter sa\d. "Also. we wanted to let them know that the Klan should not be rn the Marine Corps. And we were not going to stand by any longer and be harassed." The 14 blacks beueved they were storming an apartment where Ku Klux Klan members 'Were muting. Somehow they got the wrong room and ended up assaulting a group ot white beer drinkers, later reports in· dlcated. But Hunter has a slightly dif. ferent version. "The guys that were in that room were either friends of the Klan or being r<'cruited by the Klan," he said. "l do not believe Wt.' made a mistake." Hunter pleaded guilty to as- sault ::and conspiracy in connec- tion with the November. 1976 at· ta<·k . lie forfeited all pay and al· lowances in addJtion to his time in the brig. Has veteran's benefits have been suspended, dimming his hopes of getting a psychology degree from North Carolina A&T University. He has a job now at a Kernersville furniture plant and hopes to save enough money to go to college. But he believes has career chances will be hurt, even Wllh a degree. "Employers won't stop to aslc what happened or if l was right or wrong," he said. "All they are going lo trunk is that 'you arc a militant, a nuisance to the government'.'' Crash Kills Girl Watcher MADERA CAP) -A Fresno man was killed when a pickup rolled as he flirted with girls while leaving Millerton · Reservoir, the highway patrol reports . Stephen Michael Garza, 22, was hanging partly out of the pickup and hollering at girls in another vehicle Easter Sunday, the CHP reported. Garza was crush('d when the pickup suddenly speeded up and rolled while roundmg a curve, officers said. The driver, An· thony Garcia, 22, or Clovis, was booked for investigation of felony manslaughter and felooy drunken driving. SD Rescinds Council Raise SAN DIEGO CAP) -The City Council raised its own pay by 53 percent over a howl of citiien protest two weeks ago. After thinking It over, it's reclnding the raise. Jn an 8 l vote, the council gave its rules committee authority Monday to consider creatine an independent body able to set salaries. Public approval would be needed. No raise will be given the city fathers until at least 1980. Coun· c1lman Bill Lowery said be was tired of "the incredible hassle.·• Hemth Chief Assm/,s Brown SACRAMENTO (AP) - California'• health director is leavlnf office With a wamtna for Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'1 new health manaiement team and a parting shot 1l the governor. Dr. Jerome Lackn<'r. remoftd by Brown Friday In what the governor lnslst.s was oot a tlrinit. crlticiied Brown's stands on doctors' pay, Medi·Cal eligibility and coat-c:uttlna Mond"Y. Ht also aaid he wished he'd crltlcltcd Brown more ln thl! paat. .. :· •. ,• . • 7 range €oast ORANGE COUNTY, CAL:lFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1978 C TEN CENTS f:City Faring Si~th DOy of Darkness ~ :SPRINGFIELD, Ill. <AP> -tDrivers l"died on courtesy in-• •lead of tramc signals and niany residents left darkened , !Innes to eat at restaurant.s to- . day as nearly half of Illinois• e,apital city entered its sixth day with no electric power. Sunny, 60-degree weather had removed most visible traces or the Easter weekend ice storm that split t rees and snapped ~er ca~les. Officials say the icy blut at lts peak bocked out power to about 700,000 persons in 24 Central llllnoil counties. State disaster agency officials estimated the storm caused al least $3.S million in damages, and power company officials predicted it could be week's end before a majority of the 100,000 customers still without eleclrici- l y get back their lights, refrigerators and beat. For many, the prolonged period without television, hair- dryers and countless items was more inconvenient then crippling. "When I got up this morning, I thought sure the electricity would be on," said Rita Taft, whose husband, Donald, owns 12 smorgasbord restaurants. But power remained out al her white-pillared home. "We're JUSt laking it in stride," her husband said. =Driver Charged_ Crash Kills Two From Coast Arizona authorities said today manslaughter charges have been filed aginst a driver whose pickup truck apparently crossed a highway center line Saturday near Parker, Ariz .. causing a head-on collision that killed two young Harbor Area residents who were on a Colorado River camping trip. Meanwhile, funeral services have been scheduled for Linda Jean Quinn, 19, of Newport Beach and Geor.l?e Thomas Ouellette, also 19, or Costa Mesa Two other Harbor Area youths whose names are not available suffered inJuries in the fatal col· lision on Arizona 95 about 10 mi l es north of Parker, authorities said. A spokeswoman for the Arizona Highway Patrol said the youths were riding in a pickup truck that was struck by a second truck driven by 24-year- old Thomas J . Kolea or Whittier. Kolec and his passenger. 26- year-old Fernando M. Moreno, were treated for cuts but not hosp1tahzed. Kolec is now in custody facing two counts of manslaughter, authorities said. Miss Quinn and Mr. Ouellette were riding in the cab of their truck and were killed. The two unnamed youths who escaped death were riding in the rear of the truck. Officials said Miss Quinn and Mr. Ouellette had been staying with a group or other young people at the Ah Villa campground on the Arizona side of the Colorado River. A prayer service for Mr. Ouellette will be held tonight at 8 p. m at St John the Baptist Catholic Church, 1015 Baker St., Costa Mesa. A Mass or Christian Burial will be held at the church Wednesday at 10 a.m. with burial to follow at Good Shepherd Cemetery. A memorial service for Miss Quinn will be held at 10 a.m. Thursday at Pacific View Chapel in Newport Beach. <See CHARG~, Page AZ> He added that his family, which lost its power Friday, spent ooe night visitine neighbors. .. I don't think we've done that in years," he added. Tart said his restaurants re- opened during the day. and his family would.dine at one or them for the duration of the blackout. "A lot or people say it's a dis- aster, but I don't think it's re.ally that bad,•' said Taft. · His wife said nights are cold, with house temperatures hover- ing near 50. "But we bundle up under a lot or blankets." she said. JeUrey, 15, the only Taft child still at home. said he missed the television and stereo more than anything else Tbe Anthony Nestler f~mily, who live in a small, white-frame · house. had power restored Mon- day evening after three cold, . "'~ .......... PRESlDENT CARTER GREETS VENEZUELAN PRESIDENT Ftrst Stop In e Four-country Tour for Chief Executive Ple~tt• Removed More Miners Ret11rn Journey's End Ken Phillips of Melbourne. Australia, holds his long-lost friend Silky after the cat returned home from a 1,250-mile trip. The kitty strayed away when Phillips was on vaca- tion and took nine months to walk back home. Hughes Eyed Cash For Patty Ransom? SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Papers purportedly from the files or the late billionaire Howard llughes show lb8' Hughes considered paying part of the ransom demanded by ?at- ty Hearst's kidnappers, the Univer9lly of Utah student newspaper reports. They also make reference to a Coast "handwritten will," lending credence lo the "Mormon will" being contensted in a Nevada court, the newsppaper, The Dai- ly Utah Chronicle. said Monday. The student publication, in a copyrighted article, said it ob- t.sined copies of papers original- ly seized by Mex.Jean authorities aft.er Hughes death April S, 1976 on a private plane en route from Acapulco to Houston, Texas. It said the papers went through a Canadian House ol Commons member, to a Hughes ltrgaey entbualast tn the aorthweswn United States, to an asaociate in Salt Lake City. None of tbeso penoos wu iden- tified. Tbe nanpapor quoted one memo it Said was dict.ted b1 Hagbes u ~: uaR.H wante to knO• more about the Heant•1 problem and w no object.Ions to being 1iol somo help IO long as lt can be doe. without any publlci· ty. Can Heant and bis fanilly be auaranteed tc> hold silence?" By The Associated Presa More union coal miners re- turned lo work today as many of the 10,000 mine construction workers removed pickets upon learning or a tentative agree- ment on a contract for them. But in at least one United Mine Workers union district - No. 23 in western Kentucky - construction workers expanded picketing and force<t . many of the area's 50 mines lo close, said Joe Holland, district executive board member. Holland said that about three- foarths o(the district's 10,000 un- ion miners did not report to work today. The West Virginia Coal As- sociation said about 1,200 to 1,500 coal miners were blocked by construction pickets this morn- ing. compared lo 4,500 to 5,000 Monday. Of a total of 1,400 mines in West Virginia, the only reports of shutdowns came Crom two mines in the southern part of the state and three in the north. In Indiana, al least eight mines and one coal shipping operation were again closed by the pickets, who said they would not abandon their line until the tentatlve agreement was ratiCied. About 1,800 miners were prevented from going to work. . Most. or western Penn- sylvania's mines were, operal· ing normally today, but several hundred miners_ were idled at a Bethlehem St~el Corp. mine in Cambria County t>Y construction wor~ers who picketed the mid· nigh( shift. Thre~ Helvetia Coal Company mines that had been closed Mon- day by pickets reopened today in Pennsylvania's Indiana County. The same report came from two Barnes and Tucker Coal Com- pany mines in Cambria County, Assistants Fired REDWOOD CITY (AP) -San Mateo"& County Coroner Paul 8. Jensen, 70, has fired two part.- time assistants who are his op- POnents in the June 6 primary. where about 1,300 miners were able to resume work for the first time today. Large numbers of miners went back to work Monday after a contract was signed Saturday ending a 110-day walkout by 160,000 miners. Spot checks in- dicated even more were report- ing for early shifts today. Mesa Liquor Store Robbed Costa Mesa police said today a bearded man wearing sun- glasses used a handgun to rob a downtown area liquor store of $143 about 6:15 p.m. Monday. Police said there were no in- juries in the armed robbery at Park Avenue Liquor, 1881 Park Ave. The bandit apparently fled on foot after forcing a clerk to fill a bag with money. The bandit was described as a white male aboul 26, with dark brown hair and a beard. Alex, th canine doesn't seem to D\Jnd u ton as Ns master keeps the paco within reason. dark nigbts. ''We were prepared to go t hree or four more days," Nestler said. "1 guess we were one or the lucky ones." Mary NesUer, in her 508, said family members rediscovered each other through games and so n g, instead or merely watching television. "I haven't done that since I wis a child. You don't com- municate with TV." Carter Begim Journey • CARACAS, Venezuela CAP> - President Carter arrived in Venezuela today on the first at.op - or a two-continent trip and, speaking fluently in Spanish, told its people Senate approval of his second Panama Canal treaty would "be a cause for celebration." Surprising those who expected him lo make his arrival remarks in E nglish, the president also declared: "There is no stronger tie than the devotion we share to freedom ." He mentioned specifically individual freedom and human rights. ··Every time the rights or any individual in the world are violated, our own rights are en d<\ngered," Carter said. By speaking in Spanish, the president avoided the embar rassing translation errors that plagued his recent visit to Poland. Carter's statements were broadcast live on Venezuelan radio and television. Ven«maelan President Carlos Andres Perez said in a welcom- in& speech that the U.S. Senate, · in its Panama Canal delibera- tions, is "d eterminine the destiny or he misphere rela- tions." The Senate bas approved a treaty Carter signed guaran- teeing the canal's neutrality and is deli berating ratification of another pact yielding control of the waterway to Panama. Perez warned Carter of •'the concern we have in Latin America" that Senate action might undermine "the Panama Canal initiative." H e said ratification of the two treaties would open "a new e ra or cooperation between Latin America and the United States." Carter smiled at the remarks. He began bis reply by declaring that ratification or the second treaty would "be a cause for · celebration in the United States" as much as it would be a cause for celebration in Lalin America. He said bis journey to Latin America and Africa. the first of al least three overseas trips be plans this year, shows the Unit- ed States is aware or the im- portance of the developing na- tions in a changing world. The president's blue and silver Air Force One jet touched down in a stiff wind at Simon Bolivar International Airport, nestled <See CARTER, Page AZ) School Chief To Li.st N-M Al,t,ematives Newport-Mesa Unified School District Superintendent John Nicoll will outline the distncl's financial alternatives s hould Proposition 13, the Jarvis-Gann property tax initiative, pass this June. Nicoli's presentation will be made durin& tonight's meetin« ot district trustees. It gets under way at 7:30 p.m. in Costa Mesa City Council Chambers. Preliminary discussion of the district's 1978-19 budget has prompted district officials to pre· diet a loss ot nearly $18 million in local property taxes if the Jarvis initiative is approved by Callf ornl.a '•voters June6. Thia would mean a substantial slice out ol tbe overall budget ror next Khool year, esUmated at about $50 million. District ollicials also are COD· cemed about the-potenUel loss of tbe $800,000 commuoUy tervlce &ax that coe. into dis· trtct o atloo ol rec:rHttoo pro- 1ram1 and facillUea used by cili., &nd c:olle&e dbtricts. Lciti ol W1·tund could curtail tecreauon J)l'OCl"aJDa, dlstrlct rA-nclall jid. .. YPILOT ., M~yor : Flays. DistriCt ' r By JACKIE HYMAN • • Ol "9 o.lly .... """ ' Irvine Mayor Bill Vardoulls 'fold directors of the Irvine Rancb Water Di.strict Monday tffat be doesn't think they have a ti.kht to call an election for a $1.6 bllUon bond issue because ho ~oesn't believe the board'a com· 'J>Osition ls comtltutlonal. And even lf it were, Vardoulla said be believes the water board tbas been unduly hasty in its con- t:siderationa and that it hasn't. hakeo into consideration all J F...,.. Page Al CARTER ••. between the Caribbean Sea and the A vita Mountains. ;A red, white and blue banner D~oclaim e d "Btenvenidos P!'esidente Carter y Sra" - welcome President Carter and wife. Several hundred members of a navy hooor guard dressed in white stood at attention in 85- degree beat. Other military guards carried submachine sons. No civilians were lo slaht. On his first day in Venezuela, the president arranged to place a wreath al the tomb of national hero Simon Bolivar, in the nave of the National Pantheon, a cen- tury-old Spanish renaissance- :;tyle church dedicated lo the Ho- l y Trimly. Later, he and President Carlos Andres Perez set aside more than two hours for talks about U .S.-Venezue lan relations. Topics included eneray and economic cooperation human r ights, curbing the spread of nuclear weapons and restraints on arms trade. poleoUIJ elfecta of l\IC a bond Iuu1: IRWD board Chairman L.E. Eberline said ho dlsa&reea with Vardoulis on all counts. However, he ureed to continue the f ubllc beanne on the matter unU Aprll 17 to permit further discu.ssIOQ. The verbal apaninf remained friend.IY durina the exchanee at a public bearing Monday at IRWD headquarters in Irvine Town Center. The subject was a two-part IRWD proposal. One part is lo call a special election - primarily involviftl major land- owners, chiefly the Irvine Com· pany -~ approve a $1.6 billion boqd Issue. The bonds, which would be is- s ued as needed between now and the year 2010, would pay for sewer and water service lo cur- renUy unoccupied land as plans for its development are ap- proved. They would also pay the district's share of a major pipeline from Yorba Linda. Al.lo part ol the election would be to approve 10 new improve. ment districts within the IRWD. Under state law, residents of each improvement district vote only on those bonds that directly affect them. In undeveloped areas, only landowners vote. Mayor Vardoulis repeated the position of the City Council that the IRWD board is unconstilu· tiona1 because only two of its seven members are elected by popular vote. The other five members are appointed by landowners. A state attorney general's opin- ion has been requested by the city OD the matter. IRWD direc- tors maintain that under state law a water board need not be elected unUl its district is at. least 50 percent urbanized. Alto• Vardoull1 11ldi eouncll memben ~ Ute RWJ> ii 1eekln1 a May landowner elec· tlon to circumvent the poaaible effec ts of the Jarvis amend- ment, Propo1lUon 13 in the June 6 prlmary. It would cut property taxes to one percent ot market value. However, Eberllq countered that 1f tbe ll\WD board .Uca to lts acbeduJe of dellberatlons, his continuirt1 the heartnii to April 17 would mean a bond 1aaue ~ tloa eow«n called until.,..,. 11. lfe also said the district won't wal( for the attorney general's opillion on ill conaUtuUonaUt.y to take action. "I don't know when the at· tomey general'• oplnloo la goine to come down and l don't think we can atop doilla buatneas," Bberllna sald. Two other areas were the sub- ject of diaaereement between the mayor and the board. Mayor, Coaneilwoman Tiro Facing Recall Move in Clemente A committee promoting the recall of Saft Clemente MlyOl" William Walker and Coun- cilwoman Donna Wllk:ioaon rea- istered with tho City Clerk'• ol· flee Mooday. Joseph Barton, chairman ol the recall committee sponaored by the San Clemente Homeowners Association, said · his group will present formal charges against Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson at the April 19 City Council meeting. Meanwhile, another new San Cle mente organization, the Citizens Involved for Voter ln·- formation Committee (CIVIC> held its first general mem· bership meeting Monday night lo attack the recall effort. "We have beard recurring ac- cus ations as well as slanders and libelous inferences and in· nuendoea," Boyd Ames, a CIVIC director, told an audience of about 70. "Accusations have run from theft to bribery," said Ames, "none of which has been farther from the true and exemplary ac- tivities of our council members, planning commissioners and ci- ty staff." ·'Our city policies do not need defending," said Mayor Walter, CIVIC's featured speaker Mon- day. Walker said the "innuendoes" of fres hman Coun c ilm a n Howard Mus hett have put a heavy burden on himself and his wire. Mushett, a leader of the recall effort before he was elected to the City Council March 7, bas al- leeed that Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson misrepresented ex- penses on city-related business trips. Polling Commissioner? Although Ruth is a five-year-old hunting dog, s he is a certified polling commissioner in a New Orleans suburb. Ile r master, Hank Connell, filled out an application for his pet and the paperwork went through without a hitch until officials discovered that "Ruth Connell" was not registered to vote. School Site Units Beckoning Parents ... For Irvine Coast "I cannot sit back and see the city destroyed by Howard Mushett," Walker said. "He has used divide and conquer tactics lo get power and take over city government." Walker said that, while attack- ing the two senior City Council members for alleged misuse or public funds, Mushett has asked for an increase in City Council salaries. E ight Costa M esa and Newport Beach schools are in· viting interested parents to special public meetings so that parent representatives can be selected for n e wly formed School Site Councils. Harbor View Elementary in Corona del Mar and Lindbergh Elementary in Costa Mesa will each hold meetings at 7 p.m . next Tuesday in the schools' cafeteria/multipurpose rooms. Status Quo Supported A crowd of about 75 Orange Coast residents told the Orange County Planning Commission Monday they would like to see the Irvine Coast kept just the way itis. I The Irvine Coast is the unin- cocporated, largely undeve~ area between Corona del Mar · and Laguna Beach. Jt belongs to i the Irvine Company. f .&IoncJay's hearing in Irvine was part of the county's elforts to develop a local coastal plan in compliance with the state Coastal Act. The plan would set forth policies on density and land use consistent with &tale policies. Co mmissioners thanked speakers and asked that addi- tional comments be presented at a final hearing at 7 p.m. April 10 at Irvine City Council Cham· be r s. Al that lime, com· missioners said, they will make their recommendation to the 'Orange County Board of Supervisors. Most of the 18 penons who spoke talked about potential land use and said they oppose MesamPlan Faire Vuit The Wanderlust Club or Costa Mesa's Department of Leisure Service plans a one-day trip to the opening day festiviUes of the 16th Annual Renaissance Faire on Saturday,April22, in Agoura. Cost for the bus trip and ad· mission to the Faire is $10 for adults and $7 for children under 12. Renaissance era costumes are optional for all participants. : The Faire is an authentic I ~reproduction of a 16th con- . : iury English countty event in : the hills of the old Paramount ~ ; Movie Ranch in Agoura. For : more lnformaUon or registration ;call 556-5300. I •' .-----------> OMMOI CCMf c: DAILY PILOT heavy commercial or recrea- tional development as destruc- tive to wildlife and the environ- ment of the area. " Already existing problems with traffic also were cited. However, plannlne com- missioners said a lan~-use pro- posal for the area already has been developed. They said they are seeking citizen comments on what poli~ies should be the con- cern of the stale or of the county or of other public agencies. Fem Pirkle, a spokeswoman for the Friends of the Irvine Coast, said she believes poten tial hazards such as grading and erosion are properly the concern ot the state because they could affect parts of the Irvine Coast the state is seeking to purchase as parklands. She also referred to an wi- named congressman whom she said is considering legislation that would lead to federal ac· quisition of part ~f the land. However, Hep. Robert Badbam, R-Newport Beach, who represents the area, said today he isn't considering such legisla· lion because "I feel very strong- . ly about spending federal money that we don't have." But he said it is his un- derstanding that the Irvine Com- pany is working with the U.S. Department of the Interior, the state and groups such as the Laguna Greenbelt to establis h boundaries of areas on which negotiations might take place in the future. Many or Monday's speakers are residents of El Morro Beach Mobilehome Park, located on land leased from the Irvine Company and proposed for purchase by the state for recrea· tional use. One speaker, Barbara Gius Bowen, said she fears heavy recreational use would damage the marine environment and also the wildllf e. lncludlne rac- coons, porcupinea and skunks School Unit Eyes Fotur.e ()t:~ayyiew J The fUture use of' Bay View' School in s.m.. Ana HeJ&hts will be up fOt" public dlscusaloa when lb• Newport-Mesa Unlfled School Diltrtct'a cltlaen ad· vl1or1 couimUtee recouyeon . Tuesday. April<&. Sehool trustees have wted to eloH tbe d11trlct'1 emalleat elementary ac:hool at tho e.aid ol tbla achool year. Truateel will ncelvo a recom· mendaUon from the cltlH»I committee as to the best UM for the vacant scbOol alte followln1 the public bearirip. Thi AJWll 4 meetlDt of the Cltllaa cormnlttee will bealn at 1 ;IO p.m. lD the dlabict'a annex c:onfe room, 1 11th St., . ,.°"*' ae.tb. that she said are allowed by res- idents to wander unharmed through the trailer park. "It's appalling, it's absolutely appalling that you conld con· sider coming through an en- vironment that. beautiful," she said. -. I',.... Page Al CHARGES. • She 1s survived by her father, Richard J .. Quinn , a nd her mother. Mrs. Harry Levy. Miss Quinn was a student at Orange Coast College. . Mr. Ouellette graduated from . Costa Mesa High School in 1971r and was employed as a cabinet maker. He is survived by his parents, Mr. a nd Mrs. Thomas G . Ouellette; sisters, Lisa, Carol and Susan; brother, Michael, all of Costa Mesa, and bis grandmother, Mrs. George Ouellette of Wisconsin. The Ouellette family has sug- gested memorial donations be made to Share Our Selves <SOS>, 1019 El Camino Drive, Costa Mesa. Biken Raise v ~ Cash/orOCC Bike riden wilt tackle an 11-mile course April 9 in Costa Mesa lo raise scholarship funds for Orange Coast College. OCC's fifth annual Bike·A· Thon, sponsored by the Associat- ed Students, aims at raising $10,000. Clubs and other groups are ill· vlted to sponsor riders and can receive 20 percent of the money raised by their riders.. GJ:'OUPS muat register by April 7. Reglstratloo for the event will begin at 8 a.m. April 9. Addi- tional information la avallable by calllng 556-5731. 'IONtGllT NEWl'ORT·MZSA SCHOOL BOARD -R•iUl•r meeUna. Coet~ Mesa clt7 eouncU oJwn.. bon, T:IO p.m. ••BEHIND TB'E HEADLINES .. -Dr. Glios T. Br~wn lecturer, OCC J'orum, T:IOp.m. "VOLPONE .. -South Coast Repertory Theat•r, T~1day­ SundaythrougbApril2,8P.tn. p.m. WEDNESDAY, MAACB It OCC LECTUltZ -"Wbat'a New la Nu riUon, 11 Studeat Cent.er.1:10 p.m • - Mushett denied today that he has ever asiced for an increase in the $217.50 paid monthly to ci- ty councilmen. He said he believes City Manager Gerald Weeks may have told Walker of an inquiry the junior councilman was male· ing into a city ordinance which calls for a 5 percent increase in city councilmen's salaries every two years. •'I was merely afkin1 for clarification of ~hlClfdinance and whether it has been en- forced," Mushett li•i<t, adding that he said he would not op1¥>5e a pay raise in keeplna with the ordinance. Walker also told the CIVIC au- . dience Monday that Mushett pad asked for a police radio in1his home and a list of police on auty each shift. , . "That's so silly." Mushett uid today. "I don't even listen. to AM -FM radio. I never asked anybody for a police raclio In my home -I can't imagillo sayt.ng that even in my sleep." . The councils, composed of equal numbers of sc hool <teachers, aides, ad· ministralors) and non-school members (parents), will help determine school needs under the new School Improvement Program established by AB 65. Victoria Elementary School will bold its initial meeUng this Thursday at 6:45 p.m. in the school's multipurpose room, 1025 Victoria St. Principal Keo Killian wlU ex- plain how the program works and outline state requirements for selecting council represen· tatives. Also on Thursday, Costa Mesa High School parents will meet with the school's Goal Setting Committee at 7 p.m. in the school library to help select three parents to the council. This School Site Council will assume the responsibilities of the Goal Setting Committee. Adams Middle School in Costa Mesa will hold its meeting next Monday al JO a.m. at 2850 Clubhouse Drive. Corona del Mar Elementary has invited its parents to a meet- ing next Wednesday at 10 a.m. Their School Advisory Commit- tee will be restructured lo form a School Site Council. Parents at Paularino Elemen· tary in Costa Mesa are invited to attend a meetine at 7:30 p.m. Aprll.s. • . _ OfilciaIS at Eastbluff Elemen· hwy in Newport Beach and College Park Elementary in Costa Mesa plan similar meet· ings in the next two weeks. Dates will be announced. Rumors a Ploy? WASHINGTON CAP) -White House officials, after days of de- nying rumors that they are try- ing to force Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin from office, now say they believe the reports are a ploy by Begin's backers lo increase his support within Israel. Tel Aviv Giraffe Dies Auropsy kJ Probe Why Shlomo Took Ill TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Sblomo the giraffe died early to- day. The is-root-tall beast, in the prime of life at the age of 8, was unable lo get lo his feet after col- lapsing two days ago at the Tel Aviv zoo. Despite efforts or a dozen men who talked soothingly to him and tried unsuccessfully Mon· day to hoiat him to bis feet with chains and pulleys suspended from a platform, the animal ex· plred on his bed of straw. Dr. Moshe Avram, the dlrec· tor of the zoo. said he would perform an a utopsy to de· termine the cause of death. The giraffe had fallen a week ago, and it was thought be might have been injured then. Sex apparently was not Shlomo's undoing, as it was for Victor, the giraffe who fell during an attempt lo mate last Sep· tem ber in an English zoo and died of a heart attack four days later. Shlomo -the name means Solomon in English -had sired eine male and three femilles in four years and was living con- tentedly with bis mate and two daughters. lie fell oCf a three-foot em· hankment in his pen last Tues- day but got up and showed no m- d1cation or pain. ''Then something happened and on Sunday morning he fell again," Avram reported. He lay on his side and did not get up again, watched by his mate and daughters. "If a giraffe lies on his side too long, it's not good. for his heart," Avram said Monday. "Giraffes get weak and can't stand up and they die ... TU AVIV ZOO WORKERS LABOR IN VAlN TO UFT OIRAl'n TO HIS FEET Schlomo Nev., Recovered From Fan DffP't• lfforta of • Donn Men .. T-ex. March 211. 1978 'J nNL v ... ar · 41 . f . $228 Million FreeWtty Work Proposedi A $221 mlllloo •l•h lllt of friewaT Improvement lncludlnc wtdentn1 the. Saota Ana l"l-..way to etlht lanes throuah Oranc• County, baa been eo- d or 1 e d by the county TranaportaU,oo Commlaalon. But the c9mml11ion'1 u- ecuthe director, Tbomaa Jenkins, said today ft pJ"Obably will be November beforo com- Tourist · u Slain; 2Raped LOS ANGELES (AP> -A 31-year-dd Canadian t.our:lst was· sbot to death and bis flancee and her friend were beaten and rat>ed early today along the stretch of beach near Venice, police said. Harry Denboed. 31 , of Willowdale, Ontario, was shot several limes with a small- caUber pistol as he and the woman apparently fled two ban· dits, said Venice Division ln· vesligator Don Ravens The 29-year old Ciancee, also from Canada, and a 32-year-old Westchester woman were listed in fair condition at Marina Mercy Hospital. .. The victim and bis fiancee ·were going to leave for Canada tomorrow and wanted to take a last look at the beach," Ravens said. "It appeared to be a rob- bery. There's some indication tbe victuns started to run and he was shot when they started to flee." Descriphons of the two men were sketchy, Ravens said, add- ing the men apearently were in their 20s and wearing dark clothing. They confronted the trio as they strolled along a. beachfront bike path at Oock~ler Beach around 2:40 a.m., he said. New Judge In Plotting Trial Nixed LOS ANGELES (APl -Five people accused of plotting to bomb state Sen John Briggs' Fullerton ofhce have lost their bid to get a new lnal judge. Supenor Court Judge Julius Leetham denied motions filed by defendants Judith Emily Bissell, 33; Thomas Michael Justesen, 27; Leslie Ann Mullin, 33; Marc Curtis Perry, 29; and Clayton Van Lydegraf, 62. Leetham also refused to grant any further delays in the lnal, which is to begin Wednesday. The five, acting as their own attorneys, had sought to have Leetham disqualified for prej- udice. When Ltttham denied the request, they tried to have him dismissed peremptorily or without explanation. However, prosecutor Robert Jorgensen argued that each side in a case is entitled to one such peremptory dismissal. He noted the defendants had succeeded last month in having Superior· Court Judge Bonnie Lee Martin dismissed. Miss Bissell and Miss Mullen have been idenUfied as former members or the revolutionary "Weather Underground." They and their codefendants are each charged with two counts of possKsing a destrucUve device In a public place; one count of possessing bomb components; possession or a destructive de- vice with i ntent to Injure, in- timidate and uuse damage; and conspiracy mtaaloners lurn bow much CalTrlDI mooey will be av..Ua- ble for the long-ranae county projects. A 11 told, the Santa Ana Freeway wldftlnl would ~t $113.S mllllon lncludin1 a $35.3 million reeomtrucUo.o project for the SaDta Ana-CO.ta Mesa Freeway toterchanae. . Robert Datel, CalTrans' Southern California reeional ~ctor and an ex-officio com- mJulon IDelJlber, aald h1a omce conaidera the Santa Ana-. Coat. Meta lnterebange amooe top prloriUes for improvement. He auegeated It be listed aeparately aa a top priority •hen the commielon shipe its final ranklnp ott to the st.aw TranapO.rtat.l(Jo Commiasloo. Oelfr ...... ,.... ,,_ KEEPING AN EYE OUT FOR SHADY CAMPAIGNING Alfred Ortscoll of Leisure World on New County Panel Smear Hunter Countian Joins Refonn Effort By WILLIAM HODGE 01 Ult DallJ f'llM Sl.ett Almost two years ago, Leisure World resident Alfred Driscoll tore open a flyer from t.Qe local Republican Slate Assem6ly can- didate. "Liberal Democrat Cordova Charged in $10 Million Massage Parlor Case." blared the headlines of the James B Slemons mailer. Driscoll was repulsed "He (Cordova) was one of a number who were being sued by a worker in a massage parlor," Driscoll recalled. The smear mailer was based on a lawsuit by one of the defcn dants in a case i.n which Cordova was a prosecutor. "That flyer was the crassest thing I ever s.aw," the Laguna Hills resident said. "I was HBWoman Faces Charge In Shooting A 37-year-old Huntington Beach woman was charged with attempted murder after she al legedly shot her husband in both knees during a spat in a bar Monday night, police reported today. Arrested was Nancy Evans of 5682 Mangrum Drive. She was booked into Huntington Beach Jail and remained there today in lieu of $25 000 ball. Her husband, Jerry Evans, 38. was listed in stable condition to- day al Huntington lntercom- munlty Hospit.41 with .22 caliber bullet wound$ in both knees, of· ficials said. Poll~ Sgt. Luis Ochoa said the incident took place in Hi Roy's Bar, 5050 Heil Ave., about 9:15 p.m . Ochoa said the dispute ap- parently began at the coui>le's home. The husband went to the bar. The wife followed sbort.ly afterward. When the husband greeted bis wife and approached her, Ochoa said, tbe woman reportedly pulled a handgun and fired twice. Evans staggered from the bar into tbe parkiD( lot outslde where be collapsed. He was later raahed to the hospital. Mn. Ev~ waa arrested by pollce inside the bar. Ochoa said. shocked. Jl was so crude I couldn't believe it." But the 72-year-old lawyer is now in a position to do something about last-minute smear campaigns. That's because the retired Los Angeles assistant city attorney is the first appointee to Orange County's new fair political prac tlces commlssion. And he plans to work on mak- 10~1ure misleading pamphlets dent ~w up on his doorstep aiain ' "Thal'k the kind of thing we're sbpposC'd lo stop," Driscoll said, referring to the Slemons mailer. "W•'ll be reviewing campaign literature to determine it it con· tdins false or misleading state· ments," he continued. 'Driscoll cited provisions in Orange County's new ordinance which allow the committee to hdld hearings on material they ~ieve qualifies as misleading. Tbe political campaign or- dioance also allows the commit· tee to publicly denounce false statements in political mailers and lo turn over evidence of il- legality to the district attorney Cot possible prosecution. "But the new law, which also limits individual contributions in county camprugns to $1,000 per el~ction. is not without its critics Supervisor Ralph Clark labeled the fa1r political ractices commission a "paper tiger," saying the group had little power to enforce elements of the ordinance ''I realize the ordinance may not satisfy everybody," Driscoll responded "But it's my job to make it work. "If there are problems we'll find that out when we get to use it," he continued.. "We'll flnd out where the bu&S are.'' Driscoll ls equally non- committal about the so-called TLN CUP <Time Is Now, Clean Up Politics) pl'Oposal, touted as an alternative lo the county supervisor.sponsored reform or- dinance "J looked at it, but I haven't really formed an opinion aboutit." hesald. The TIN CUP proposal, which is clrctllaUng 1n the county as an lnlUaUve i*iUon. would place more rt?ltrlctioos on contribu- tions and lobbyist activities. But. regard.lesa 'Of the critics, Driscoll la pleased with his ap- pointment, although be insists he is not a.politi~ a.n.Unal. Apart from a brief stint WOTt- tn1 ln Madan Betg'eaon ',s fUti~ 1971 write-in campalen for the ''ate au•mbly, be tias coo· fined his actlvitles to the Sa4- d le b b ck Area Coo~dinatlne Co~cU and a local hcnneo'°"Ders uaoclaUon. Drla~U bas tined on boP, the $1.CC eiocuU:vl: bo~ and the ·environmental re•ltw com mil· tH:: And lh•t service wu hl• ft.rat CJ)ntad With cbufttY o-.immeot. I •:t WU un•• Uult tbo Plan- ning Comml•l9(l (~ty) th eoant tV · penuon 10 wUliq to llateD to What bad to a.,,'' Dd&coU ieflected. .. ,a LA CouDtJ JOU mle as •11 for1ot u:· be muted: ''Tbere're Just toe> mlllJ' ~ pl .'' l • Commilsiooers plan to place tbe 18-it.em lilt of projects in priority rankinp In May and are bopln1 they 'Will be included. ln a new Relional Transportation Plan befng developed by Lbe stat e Transportation Com- miasion. Other Oran&e Coast projects on the commission's top list in- clude the $59.4 mllllon enensloo o! the Newport Freeway to ~ Street in Costa Mesa and lbe $5.9 mlllio~ ~placement of the Up- per Bay Bridee on Pacific Coast ·Highway. The list also includes wldenlnt Pacific Coast Hithway to aix Janes from MacArthur Bouleva.l'd to Baysld~ Drive and from J)(>ver Dti•e to NewPOrt A venue at a cost of $1.9 mllllon. Another project aJ~ady~i{D state plans is lbG $IO aP1liclo wldenln& of the Sao Dle10 Freeway to ellht lanes &hroaP San Clemenle. , Wltbout provldlDlf eon•~· tion eaUmates, commiPIOD«"J also called tor exteadln1 ~ Corog~--del Mar Freeway to Red Hill Avenue and wtden•~j Laguna Can.Yan Road. Trial Winds Up . ' ~··1 Waddill Defense Rebuttal Pronllsed By TOM BARLEY Of Ille Delly ........... Dr. William Baxter WaddiU's attorneys were winding up the defense today for the Huntington Harbour physician who is ac· cused of murder after an at· tempted abortion. Both of his lawyers have m· dicated they plan to call no more witnesses after Dr. Akio Metamura finishes testifying. Or. Melamura, head or the pathology staff at Westminster Community llosp1tal where the abortion was performed, has testified that there were errors in the coroner's findings. He told the jury that the verdict or death by manual strangulation was not justified. Prosecutor Robert Chatterton said he intends to call rebuttal witnesses after Metamura con- cludes his tesUmonv. Chatterton predicted rebuttal will take up al least three days. He hopes to have among those witnesses at least one or three babies which he claims have survived saline abortions of the type administered by Or. Wad· dill to a patient at Westminster Community Hospital Waddill , 42, has argued lhroughout the trial that the baby the prosecution alleges he strangled in the nursery on March 2, 1977, after attempting an abortion never knew Ufe in the full sense of the term. But a doctor and nurses who were present in the nursery Jolm Wa5'ne 'Feeling Fine' Film star John Wayne, 70, says he expects to end bis treat ~ent for bronchial pneumO!)la at Hoag Memorial Hospital Wednesday. The actor, who lives in the Bay s hores• section of Newport Beach, spent part of last week and the Easter weekend in the medical facility. Monday he was released to spend his days al home, bt.lt re· turns to the hospital at night. Contacted at his home, Wayne reported he is feeling fine and expected tonight to be his last al the hospital. Prison Bill Killed SACRAMENTO <AP> -An Assembly committee killed a bill Monday that would have re- quired the stale parole board to reconsidV extending sentences for about 7,000 prisoners convict- ed before the state's sentencing laws changed last year . • The spring/summer 78 wardrobe emptoya IOta of fabric tor a lootc Of looeenesa and eoltneu. A marked G,,_ and Egyptian Influence Is easily , .. cognlzed In the billowy, .aft fabrics mnd tunic sty!• low necklines and bared wrists llterally beO for fine Jewelry eccenta. Sculptured necklaces with flowing llnn end a-ometnc INpea.. bright bangfH, thick curia. heavy chains mnd teictur.d brllC8tMa provide gleemlng contrast f0t rumpled musllna end muted allQ. The col)tcttv. loott la big thla .. uon. With th• UH of o•ntrou• amounts of cloth, 1mall JNe!ry plac.a get bur1ed -uni ... ttwy .,.. Of'OUped or stacked. A group of thr.. or •~r stlOkpl,,. 91CC«ltt the t•pal of tht MW thapel.. jaokn Sm•ll 1ton•·•tt rll'lga era lt9CIC.ed on the flnotf u .,.. bncat.t. on the arm. have testified that the baby girl had a heartbeat and respiration and moved several times· while they were trylnt to aid what they said was tht! infant's battle for life. Dr. Ronald Cornelisen, a pediatrician, testified that Wad- dill complained in the nursery that if the child was allowed to h ve it would suffer massi•• brain damage and triuer lawsuits seeking mllllons oC dollar• in damages. He told the jury in Judee James K. Turner's c0urtroom that Wadd1ll suegeated four other ways tn which lbe baby could be eliminated, includirtf drownlpi It in a bucket ofwater. BadhaI11 Claims U.S. Spending 'Threat' The runaway s~dinc at the federal level i.s mor:f ot a danger to the United States than the threat of war, Rep. Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, said today. "I'm not as worried about the threat of nuclear war as I am the out·Of·haftd spending," Badham told a group of Orange Coast school superintendel\ts in Newport Beach. ·'There is an attitude of care· less disregard about the money we 're spending," he said about Congress. The meeting, which involved about a dozen Orange Coast school superintendents and representatives of community colleges. was held at lbe Newport-~esa Unified School District neadquarters to bring educators up to dale on federal issues affecting them. &moog the federal spendlng programs discussed was one described by Newport-Mesa Superintendent John Nicoll as ·an alternate school system " He said that. under the Com prehensive Education and Training Act (CETA), a building has been rented in Costa Mesa to hold classes for people 16·21, who are paid $2.65 an hour for attending. "It actually is a competitive school system." said Dr. Nicoll. He said the CETA personnel are asking the district to grant diplomas to their graduates. He said he also is concerned that a proposed tuition tax credit might encourage families to use their ext.ta money to send their children to l)rivate schools. Other superintendents at the meeting said they would support a tax credit. as opposed to a grant and loan program, but pnmanly for higher education tuition Also raised at the meeting was the issue of whether or not teachers and other state and federal employees will eventual- ly be covered by Social Security. which would mean school dis· @ ~EMWl§E tricts would bave to pay the employer's share. "We eventually will have to have universal coverage" under social security, Bad.ham said. "I'm not suggesting that it's go- mg to be easy, but it's going to be necessary " He pointed out that gov- ern mental employees who moonlight or whose spouses are covered by social security may end up collecting social security along with · their government pension. Badham said he believes that, with universal coverage, the social security system could be made secure by the year 2005 "on a program that would not be terribly uncomfortable for anyone'' Pros and cons were voiced by~ superintendents on a proposal~ ~ establis h a separate cabinet· ~ level Department of Educalioo apart from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. ' Those opposed said the)' believe the federal government shouldn't be involved in the public school system. while others said they would prefer to see professional educators run- ning a separate department iP Washington Meeting Set On Fairview The Fairview State Hospital Advisory Board has invited the public to ask questions or air concerns at Its April s meeting, which wiU begin at 7:30 p.m. The meeting will be held in the large classroom at Fairview 2501 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Hems for discwmon should be submitted before the mttting through the hospital director's ofhce. 9S7·5101 Fairview Stale Hospital serves developmentally disabled people who suCCer from mental retardation or physical han d1caps. r • ' Big pieces llt'e back. long ropes of pearls, amethyst, roctt crystal . sculptured neclc p1ecH set with l1p1s lazull, ivory. tiger eye . • cuff br8Celets Inlaid with malachite. onyx. coral • ~lg • !geometric shapes cover the ear-lobes. lustrous loopa dangle from them ' M•IY Barr, Otrtlf~ Gemologlat ~·CHARLES H. BARR •1"• ....... w •• ,, .... ........... w. CMrY the flMft q1Nl1y 1-elry In the~ lat• ~ as wall • the cl81Sic delfgna. We can help you Mlect a beak f1ne Jew9lry wardrobe to match the atytea you llu to ..,.., and to reflect yotJt lndMdual ,..._ Aa trained gemologists Of tM Amwlcon Gem Society we uw equipped to adYf9t you In the .. l8Ctlon of the gemstOMI you wish to include In your new Jewelry vt1uroo.. CotM In~ ... our~ end vaned atook • . . and oonault with f>ur ~ rormed an~~· atalf. Your visit la med t , .. • c I. l .. T~. March a. tt71 Ct with~~ Tom~~'\' Marphiae ·Ridjng the Rocky Road BUMPS AND GRINDS DEPT. -There must ~ something about our County Seat up in Santa Ana that makes it impossible to keep roads in any klnd of shape in that area. This seems to be steeped in the history of the place. Years ago, before we had the whiz·ban1 upansloo of Orange County Airport, Santa Ana's South Main Street used to wander ot.¢ and lillk to MacArthur Boulevard I am unclear whece South Main street eoea .now Anyway, Ln tha.e times. Santa Ana's South Mam Street was affectionately known to the natives of our re· gion as "The Washboa rd " It had bumps in regular waves for about three males The road destroyed more cars than a Tijuana wrecking yard You could figure on rteedlng a new sets of spnngs every s1x months if yot! drove the Washboard daily. THE WASHBOARD JS GONE now, but ats memory lingeraon. U you're an old-timer and yearn for the old Wubboard of South Main, you can get the same treatment by taking a ride on the present·day Santa Ana Freeway. Minor Problem on the Santa Ana Frenoo11 The Santa Ana Freeway today is keeping the spirit of The Wash board alive. The pavement is so beat up that at SO miles per hour it can jar your eye teeth out. It's worth your life to try changing lanes across the bumps and potholes. THUS IT WAS NICE that one Robert Datel, a direct.or for the Callforrua Department of Transportation, talked yesterday about fixing up the Santa Ana Freeway. Datel told members of the Orange County Transporta- tion Commission that he thinks the state can come up with the needed scratch for the job. Additionally at the session, it was noted that. the in- ter change between the Santa Ana and Costa Mesa freeways is the biggest traffic botUtneck around here in the superhighway system. By the way, do not become confused by that name Costa Mesa Freeway. That used to be the Newport Freeway until former Mesa Mayor Bob Wilson led the charge for the name switch. Wi!M>n may want t.o claim the freeway for Costa Mesa but he ought to disclaim any part of the aforementioned in- terchanJ:(e. THEY CALL IT A BOTrLENECK. Menace would be a better word. The guy who designed it must have specialized in torture chambers in previous employment. Anyway, Date! of CalTrans told our county transportation brass that the Santa Aila Freeway could probably get fixed up for about 35 million bucks. That may give you a notion of how ghastly the road really is. And the interchange could get uncorked for a mere $21 milllon. You are left wondering what the Egyptians 1pent on the pyramids. Words Allowed Broatkast Rights Backed WASJUNGTON CAP> -The Justiee Department aays the Federal CommunicaUons Commission does not have the power to prevent radio broadcast of seven words describing sexual and ex· cretory oraans. Earlier, the department had argued the FCC could restrict use of lbe words during hours when children might be listenint. The department's latest position was ln a le1al brief filed wttb the U.S. Supreme Court, which is not expected to hear the cue before the fall. NATION I WORLD Food Prices Rise Again WASHING TON CAP> -Food prices lncreaffd 1.2 percent in F ebruary for the-second con· 1ecuUve month, puahlng overall con1umer prices up 0.6 percent durlnf the month, the eovern· ment reported today. Beef prices led the upward marob In food costs, rising 4.1 percent durtna the month, while hieher prices also were reported for pork, poultry and cereal and baker)' products. Prices of foods sold lo grocery stores lnereased 1.3 percent. THE STEEP RISE in food prices, which started late last .year, has cauaht \be Carter ad· mlnfatration by surprise. It is the major fact.or ln what ap· pears to be a worsening inflation rate in the economy, even though the overall 0.6 percent m· crease an consumer prices in February was down slightly from the 0.8 percent gain in January. If continued for 12 months, the February increase in consumer prices would result in price in- naUon of slightly more than 7.2 percent, compared with the ad· ministration's Inflation target for the year of 6.1 percent. Administration offlcials say food prices may rise as much as 8 percent this year, up from the 6 percent increase projected just a few months ago. IN ADDmON TO food, con- s ume rs also faced s harply hleber prices lo February for fuel and utilities, up 0.8 percent; medical care, up 1.3 percent, and new and used cars, ahead o. 7 percent. and 2.1 percent, respectively. The only signlficant decline in prices during the month was for clothlng, down l percent follow· ine a small ealn ln January. However, apparel services such as laundry and dry cleaning services Increased 1 percent. Transportation costs in· creased 0.8 percent and enter· talnment prices advanced 0.7 percent. Costs of housing were up 0.6 percent, down slightly from the January rise of 0.8 per- cent. THE LABOR Department said Tun Scouting UadersHeld OnSexRaps at.a consumer pnce mdex for au urban consumers in February stood at 188.4 percent or the 1967 averaae of 100, meanln1 that 1ood1 coetlnr $100 11 years Ho had rlse.n ln priee to $1118.40 lut month. The department also said the buylna power of workers' P"f Checks declined ln February Bucket Brigade for the third coasecutlve moath, 1tlthou1th tbe drop of 0.2 percent. was not nearly so bad u the record rooothly 3.1 percent fall ~n purchaaing power in Januuy. Buckets, baskets and other containers are distributed to workers trying to clean beaches on the Brittany coast of France. fouled by 011 spille d from the wreck of the supertanker Amoco CadaL Girl's Skekton Found Psychic Gave Right Clue Almost 2 Years Ago NEW YORK (AP> -Dorothy the FBI and police find 20 climbed into a s haft in the Allison told police that 14-year· ·bodies. shipyard. but turned away when old Susan Jacobson could be "They kept ·saying we need he found 1t was full or water. found In a marshy area, in 1l1ht fa cts, not psychics," said Robert "I WAS WITHIN four feet of of two bridges and an abandoned Jacobson, ratherorthe girl her and I never knew it," he car. and near the letters "M," said. "A" and"R." SUSAN LEFT HOME on the The skeleton was discovered . That was almost two years afternoon of May 15, 1976, in by three boys who were muskrat ago. Susan Jacobson's skeleton search of a summer job. She did hunting in the marsh of the old was found Saturday in a 55· not return for dinner that shipyard. gallon oil drum at the bottom of night, and her family reported "If the police had cooperated a 12·foot sh art In a ·st a ten her missing. as they should have," Ms. Al· Island shipyard, in an area that Police say they figured she hson said, "this family would fits the psychic's description. was a nmaway. The Jacobsons have been reli eved from the long ABOUT zeo FEET from the turned to Ms. Allison, who gave ordeal. It 1~ one of the most shaft, high on a rock, were the them the description of Susan's tragic cases J have ever worked red.painted letters "MAR." whereabouts. The family and on." Susan's parents now say their friends combed the island. The cause or the girl's death police could have saved them and three weeks after Susan's has not been d1sclosed. Ms. Al- montbs ol angui.sb if they bad disappearance they searched the lason would not say wheLher s.ht! • only listened to Ms. Allison, a abandoned shipyard at Mariners could pinpoint a murderer, but WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) -Nutley, N.J ., resident whom Point. said she would visit with the Two voluntffr Boy Scout leaders th lal ab • h lped The girl's f ather said he family on Wednesday. have been arrested on 61 counts __ e_y_s_a_y_c __ m_s __ e ... T_s_e ____________________________ _ or morals offenses involving scouts aged 11 to 14, police said. George MacGregor Jr., 36, and Matthew Roberts Jr., 23, who live at the same Worcester address, were held in lieu of $1,000 ball. They were to be ar- raifned today in Worcester Cen- tra District Court. police said. BOTH WORKED WITH youn•atera in the Mohegan Council ol Boy Scouts of Central Masaachusetta. Both listed their occupalioas u laborers. llacGresor wu charged with five counts ol rape, 19 count.a oC committing unanatural acts with minors and 11 counts of lewd and lascivious acts, police said. They said Roberts was charged with four counts of rape, 14 counta of corrunitting · unnatural acts with mi.Dora and els bt counts of lewd and lasciviOU& acts. rouce said the men were ar· re1ted lalo Monday night after a complaint police received two weeks aao from an unidentified runaway boy. A PRIVATE PROPERTY WEEK TRIBUTE TO THE Rain Showers Northeast ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONALS Most of Nation Enjoys Balmy Temperatures Te._pa-atNres f "' ... ""' •• to Q ·°' 11 41 .w 0 ,,. .. S2 l7 31 ... ,, " JI • J4 ,., 7Z .. .. . IP ft . " .. u 7a .. u ,.. ~ .. .. . G II .. "' ,, .. 71 • ·'' 4S ,, .Ill 6J I) ••• . , . Sf ., .ti n• tf • I t ... .) a on Wedne•d•Y• Aprtl 19, 1978, th• D•lty Piiot wtll publish • 1pecl•I trtbute to the profes9'onal1 of the real eltate lndu1try ,._ the men a"d women who dally mike • maJor contJtbutlon to th• h••tthy Ora nee CoHt economy. Ttt••• specl•I p•ge• wHI honor Private Property Week and will be delivered to over 88,000 home• via the Delly Pilot end Piiot AdvertlHr. Notlcea will be one column by four lnchff each, allowlng room for a photo •ftd de1cr1ptlve copy. Coit of eech. notk:e la onty •11. with a photo yOltproVtde. Thia aalui. to Rnl Eetat• Profnalonal• la an exceptional opportunrty to Introduce new or longtfme aaaoclat•• to tM people of th• Orange Coe1t, or to honor out.taftdlng ..... Of'. nrvlce-ttehlevement1. Don't mlsa being part of thl• epectal edvertl1lng opportunity. Deadlln• for reaervtng apao• a. 5 p.m., Aprtl 17. Celt todayr Or, you may mall your photo and a brief artklle of about 75 word• deecrtblng your background. education, profeulon1l tr1lnlng, award• or other honora. Malt your 1tory and photo to the ClaU!rl9d Depl, Dally Piiot, 330 W. Bey StrMt, Box ueo, Coat• Meu, CA 12128. P'or help oompoatng your aaJute notice, can ...,...,_ end a frt•ndlr ad-vlMr wflJ a atrov. • DAILY PILOT 642~5678 • l } 9ALIFORNIA WRECKAGE OF NA VY JET FIGHTER SPREAD OVER FREEWAY IN SAN DIEGO · $20 Miiiion F-14 Tomcat Crashed Monday on LandJng Approach to Mlrafnar Retmres to Oust Women Rotary Club Dumped . - Tiaedey, March 28. 1978 DAILY PILOT .45 · 3 Navy Jets Crash ~ Officials Stunned; Probe Launched SAN DIEGO <AP> Navy of-careening aircraft. They were also based at Miramar, which ( ' I • l • t ficials were left stunned and puzzled by the crash of tbfee San Diego-based Navy jets in separate incidents within nine hours. Two crewmen were ten. dead, a pilot seriously injured and another crewman missing. treated at the base dispensary fell into the Pac1ric Ocean about 1 and released. The Highway 50 miles west of San Oie10 Dffr Patrol said another motorist San Clemente Island at about whose sedan was struck by fly. 1 30 p m. That plane, too, was Ing debris from the jet apparent· on a routine training flight, a a The first of the tatal events began about 10:30 a.m. Monday' when a $20 million F·lt Tomcat attack plane, one of the world's fastest aircraft, went out of con· trol whlle making a routine touch-and-go landing approach at Miramar Naval Air Station. ly drove away unhurt. Navy spokesman said. , The twin engine jet attached The pilot, Lt. Evan Martin ' to Fighter Squadron l at Chanik, 26, of San Diego was Miramar was carrying 20mm rescued at sea by a Coast Guard cannon shells. ''There was am· helicopter and flown to the mo scattered all over the scene Naval Hospital, where he was out there.'' said a Highway released after treatment for Patrol sergeant. minor injuries. THE SOPWSTICATED swing-THEN AT 7:%3 P.M., tower wing Tomcat came to rest personnel at North Island Naval IT SKIDDED ACROSS a busy across all three northbound Air Station reported hearing a multi-lane freeway, struck two lanes of Interstate 15 about 12 loud explosion at s~a. and vehicles and burst into names miles north of downtown San watched as a large ball of fire about 3,000 feet from the end of Diego. The freeway was dosed disappeared into the waler. the runway, a Navy spokesman for at least three hours in both ll was a Navy S·3A anti- said. directions as emergency crews submarine aircraft attached to Both crewmen ejected, but the worked to clear the charred North Island's Anti-Submarine plane's radar intercept offtcer, wreckage. Squadron 41.' When a Coast Lt. Walt Laskowski, 2S, of A Miramar' spokesman said Guard cutter and a helicopter Cleveland was killed. the the plane was oo a routine train-reached the scene about six ·spokesman said. The pilot, U. ing milslon when it crashed. miles southwest of Point Loma, Brian Shaw, 25, or Garden City, M ark Feldman, a pass ing all that remained wer~ "very N.Y .• was in critical condition motorist, said the jet "was com· small pieces of the airplane after surgery at Balboa Naval ing in aideways, going up and scattered across the water .. and Hospital. d o w n 1 I k e i t w a s d o in g a fuel slick, said a Cbut Guard acrobatics" before it nosed up chopper pilot. TWO CIVILIANS in a truck· into the air, ripped up 75 feet of trailer rig, Kaiser P. Musurlian, chain link fence, and burst into THE REMAINS OF ONE SKOKlE, Jll. CAI'> • The Rotary Club of Duarte has been booted out of Rotar y International because its leaders refused to get rad of female members, a club spokesman said today. 41, and Rodney J. Rodr, 35, both flame. crewman were returned here Arimo P~•t Drount• of San Diego, were treated for late Monday wght aboard the cuts and brwses suffered when THE SECOND CRASH was cutter Point Brower. an official SANTA MARIA <AP) -The Rev. Jitmes their vehicle was hit by the that of an A-4 Skyhawk fiahter, said. l~u1s Bernham of the H~y Fami~ Catholic ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Church in Artesia was drowned in a hang gliding Rotary International spokesman John Gales uld the California ~hapter had until midnight. Monday to oust Its three women. "As ol 12:01 they are no longer Rotary, given that the club has not indicated they are in conformity," Glles said. Giles described Rotary as an international service organization of business and professional men, and noted that the Rotary constitution says membership is open only to men. , "They will no longer be able lo use the namP Rotary and they will lo!>e lhP value of mem bersh1p," he said. AeTO.pa~e Plan l/rged accident in this northern Santa Barbara county community, sherl!f's deputies report. The 33-year-old priest's body was recovered from the ocean ocr Point Sal beach area Monday afternoon. The deputies quoted eyewitnesses as saying a downdraft caught Bernbam's glider and sent it nosediving into the ocean. OAKLAND (AP) -Ralph "Sonny" Barger, a lon,J!-t1me Hell's Angels figure. has been arrested for investigation of parole v1olatJons and he and 41 others have been served with grand jury SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Legi~lature subpoenas. is as kine the U .S. government to revitalize Barger was taken into custody Monday at his California's aerospace industry. home after officers said they found two handguns, The resolution, given final 67·0 approval of the a rifle and some machetes inside. Barger 1s on Assembly Monctay, was introduced by Sen. Nate parole from a narcotics conviction sentence. Holden, D-Culver City. Officers said Barger offered no resistance It says that "despite the layoff of workers when they knocked on the front door of his home caused by cancellation of after climbing over a seven-foot fence to gain th e B·l bomber, the( ) access to the property. s t a t e 's a e r o s p a c e SI' ATE industry has a bright--------- luture." The resolution asks the President and Congress "lo revitalize the California aerospace industry through usage of the state's aerospace economy." ,Park Ac~ A dud CRESCENT CITY (AP) -Widespread timber C'Utting on the 48,000 acres which have been added to Redwoods National Park will prevent public use of the land for several years, a park official says. Timber on much or the land bas been cut and will have to be rehabilitated lbroup the planting of trees and otber programa, Asaoctate Superintendent Homer Leach said Monday after President Carter signed legislation to add the acreage to the park al a cost of $432 million. Only an estimated 1,000 acres of land being added lo the park is virgin redwood. The balance has been logged. Slain Youth Was Rob:bed? SAN BERNARDINO <AP) -Riverside police say they have tenta~ly ruled otrt retaliation as a motive for the murder of the 21-year-old son of a homicide detective 1'lJo bad specialized in youth gang activiUes. -·---------' "It's a possibtlity, bUt track of various youth it's a reinote on~ ... •and motorcycle gangs in hol!1lctde Sgt. JdllD the city, Klein said. Klein said Monday. Leon now works as a tit homicide detective, but : THE BODY of Dqjd Klein said he knew or no ,Leon, son of 17')'ear Sin threats to either Leon or Bernardino poli~e force his family. veteran ~gel Leon, was Klein said robbery found lying race up on was the main motive be· '~ s .. therecf the steps of an aban-ing investigated. The doned school Sunday. younger Leon when last ! SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Police say a man Police officers, sum-seen early S~day in a who admitted to smothering his lover with a pillow moned by a caller who restaurant, had been aller a quarrel has been booked for inveatigation thou1bt lh;e youth was a c a r r y t n g 8 8 m 8 11 of murder. drunk, said he had ap. amount of money which William Littleton, 32, a pasteup artist for a parently been shot in the police did not find on the printing firm, surren~ered to .police at Nort~ern :race with a small caliber body. Station Sunday mommg, saying that he lulled weapon. Leray Thornburgh, 38, because, "He wanted lo continue the relationship. I wanted to end it ... Officers said they found the victim sprawled on bis bed, the pillow at his elbow, ~1th Litlletons's fingerprints much in evidence. .. UNTIL LAST year • Aogel Leon had been • working as a "one-man • gang detail," keeping • 11 WITH GREAT PRIDE WE PRESENT ANTIQUITIES AND COLLECTIBLES FROM THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA . ' Treasurea from beyond the waif, beyond Imagination. From the legendary Ch'lng Dynasty, 1644 to 1911, a collection of the finest procelalns the world has ever known. Plus contemporary Orient al art If acts. The conectlon, from Jade eggs In brocade boxes, $20. to a famine rose Chinese matriarch In ceremonial robes, 24" high, $6.200. wm be with us for a llmHed stay. Meet artist Beckte Lahey aid aee her rwtve the ment art of rice paper stlppllng 11:SO to 3:30 tomorrow through Saturday In the Gift Gallery_ r·, I \" surtoc~5 WilSUIR~ . Set of 5! StmrBmets from Hona Kon~ • the ut ltnrw. ~framOUI' tMlilY ol five! • Mtvral onlt 1(1111 color·wown heucons in• nest In& ttm1ly the smal..,.t is iust~S"the larirnt IJ" Ion& aeto1s4.99 Paper Towel Holder with Ma1azlnt Rack •roll 'em1 ·~•etiidpmp81' low.lflalder pro-Mel .... lor ~ ·~,.p.d 3.99 ,• • SO-Oz. beef stew or clam chowder • 52-oz. chili concarne each U9 • 33.8-ozs. of dellclous 'llquld gofd'! each 2Ji9 •2'·'°·" 6C>wttt ..a.I .. ...,.,.... ~.edl20c 6l99c LAGUNA HILLS Laguna Hiii• Mell ' Orango Coast Daily Pilot Edit ~~~r Pa~~ ...................................... R.obe ... ~.N .. W•HCJ .. '.P.ub·l·''·M·' ... T.hom .. ·.·.K." .. v'.'/.E.di .. lbr U'r..-D. Tue.dey, Maich 28, 1178 S.r~r• Krelblch1Edltorl•I Peoe Edltot • '·Schmit's Claim Overlooks Facts : Count~ Super\'lsor Laurence Schmit has ignited his · re-electlon campaign with the kind or blatant deception that has characterized Orange County politics in recent years . ln his statement of candidate's qualification, Sc:hm1t billed himself as ·•one honest supervisor against the system" and. among other things, said: "I've provided Dist. Atty . Cecil Hi cks with the :-;upport necessary to fight the political corruption and scandals which ha\e hit Orange County and for laws to fight the influence which special interests have on county ~o\ ernment through huge politic al donations.·· In addition to being grammatically unwieldy, that :-.latemcnt 1s lud1l-rous. For one thing. Schmit m 1975 voted in favor of an 111 fated attempt to lake 22 mvestigators away from the DA Later. he was involved m a childish two-supervi!ior 1m·cstigauon of a court-controlled narcotics fond that the proben; tried to pass off as being under Hicks' control. And Schmit has been anything but a bystander in the l'Ounty's contmumg c ircus of political scandals. For l'xample. he failed to report on a disclosure statcmc:'nt that half his 1974 income came from a hospital then controlled by Dr. Louis Cella. When called before a Crand .Jury, Schmit couldn't recall such details of his o.;1x -m onth t..•mploymcnt as who hired him or the name of hi s s uperior Then. ot t·ourse. Schmit accepted gifts. such a!-. free lodging in Hawaii. from lobbyists and subsequently voted fuvorabl~· on issUl'S affocting the lobbyists' financial "C'll·hC'ing. !\Iorcovcr. Schmit f1\'e times made ma101· changes m his 1974 camp:ugn dis<.'losure statement, the last one in l!.177 \\hen he unilaterally disowned a Sll9,000 campaign loan from Cella But us far as "huge poht1caL donallons" are t·oncerned, Schmit 1s an expert. . 'No one in county politics has staged morema1or fund- r,users in recent years than Schmit. Yes, that one paragraph in Schm1t's candidate's qualification statement says a great deal about the <'and id at<· What 1t -.a~:-; 1s that Sthm1t 1s very good al pretend in~ lo hc som<'thmg he is not. ··one honest supervisor agamsl t Ill' ..., 'stem .. Ref orlll Overdue l'nd<.•r contmumg prodding from Congressman Mark l lannaford. I>-Long Beach, the US. Justice Department 1..., movin).! toward some reforms m its Witness Sccurit~ Program. Tt•st1fym~ befon> a Senate Jud1ciai·y Subcomm1tte(' I.i sl \\CCk. Hannaford accused the Justice Department o( · inept management'' of the program under which person~ lt·s tifyin~ .1gainst organized crime activities a r e r l'locatcd, gn en new identities a nd financial support. I mm the government. Three such witnc:>:>cs who had been relocated jn I luntmgton Beach were involved in a murder case last 1all. At Hannaford's insistence, the department placed a one-year moratorium on resettling additional witnesses rn the Los An~eles-Orange County area. Prior to that. witnesses had been permitted to select t ht• locations of their new homes. An influx to Southern <'alifornia T<'Sulted. Hannaford contended that s uc h concentrations increased the possibility that witnesses would renew the11 past alliances with the crime world. Smee it!-. incepti on m 1971, the program has offered protection to more than 2,500 Jndivjduals at an average 1 ·ost of $15,900 a year . A prmripal l'Omplaint is the fact that· witnesses. many of whom ha\'e been involved in organized crime. ;1rl' moved into eommunities \.\ithout the knowledge of local law enfortcmcnt authorities and Ji\'e with little or no :-upcrv1s1on. Under propos~d reforms. the Justice Department. \i,ould establish a c utoff line for financial a ssistance and pro\'ido increased help in locating employment for the relocated witnesses. Hannaford a~ree.s that the witness protection program is a 'aluable aid in the war against crime. but he 1s right in insisting that careless administration can both damage the cooperative witnesses a nd crea~c s uspicion among lhair new neighbors. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily P ilot. Other views e xpressed on this page are those of their authors ano artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Piiot, P 0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd I Buttons BYL.M.BOYD Argument continues as to why women button their clothes from right t~ left white men do so oppositely. A scholar who looked into this matter claims it's becauae men of old dressed themselves, and most being, ri,ght handed, it was easier for them to button up as they do. However, the highborn ladies, those who set the fashions. most often were dressed by their maids, and it was easler for the maids. facin.C their Jod.ies, to button Dear Gloomy Gu • A f cderal iovemment big enou1h to give to a11 (tbrouah federal sranta) mwit allO take all, throuJtb mmonl.- 0ppre11 l v e. con .. lllcatory taxes. , N.M.C,: , up as now women do~ Jn· terestiltg. if truo. .lust as t.be parachute was invented before the airplane, so was the hatband invented be!ore the hat. What other cart· bef ore-bot-se inventions tome to mind? What d1d TV detectives Columbo and Ironside have in common'> Favorltefoodor both was chili. A team ol telephone men in Lincoln. England, were as.. slgoed the chore of running a heavy cable throqh • 30· feet· long tunnel that was only three inches in 'diameter. The:r caught a field mouse and tied a tbifad to its tall and aC4ffCl it through. Then the)' tied a atrtng to tho thr~•d and pulled that through. Then twine to tbo 1trln1. Then rope to the twlnc. ' Thon the cabfe to the tQpe. Hardest part wH catchtnr the mouse, they said. r Earl Water Don't Ask 'How's Business?' llow's busine s? Once a common greeting, the Lrite expression has all but faded, b ei ng re placed ln re l'ent years by e quall y h ack neyed hippie talk such as "Han· a good day " Perhaps it 1s Just as well for were it in use to d ay t h e answers would have no more meaning than the rhetoric on the subJect lhe public is getting from Gov. Jerry Brown Stung far more than he admilb Paul Harvfl:y by tbu i.ncreasln~ image of poor business climate hi~ admtnlstra· ti on has brough upon itself. Brown has reacted by daahln,otrto Mex· aco. Japan and Canada on one night st.and de$l1ned to portray him as the ambassador of busi· ness for his state The trips followed one to New York where, at the very moment he was telling Wall Street moguls bow great California is for industry. the rug was pulled from under him by Dow Chemical's announcement that it was abandoning its three year effort to establish a petrochemical plant in the Bay area. Not only was the governor catching it from business leaders but labor loo was up ln arms over his negative attitude on dam construction, power plant developments, highway buildlng and industrial ex· pansion generally. THE excursions to foreign lands were ju.'lt part. of Brown's scramble to tum things aroU"nd in anticipation of his bid for re· election th.l s year. So fur the Junkets have proved to be mere· ly exercises in futility for nothing more has come of them than any of the other shadow boxing he has engaged in trying to prove be wants to boost the state's economy llo " ever lar gely because Califorrua ba1 alway& been a dynamic land, overcoming ad· versitlea more quickly than most other places. and because of continuing lnllation that has pushed financial statistics almost beyond recognition, the governor is now boasting about. the stute's "healthy business climate " ln January he addressed the Legislature. reciting in glowing terms "the significant advances in virtually every a~ea of economic endeavor · · Jn 1m, over 1976, personal income, he said, was up 12.5 percent. Unemployment fell from 9 to 7.6 percent and "almost" 500,000 new Jobs "were created.'.' Taxa- ble sales rose 2S percent. This all sounds great until ex· aminatlon. Aside from the fact these things happened without aid from Brown and despite his negative business attitude. the figures are not as rosy as they may seem . Personal income may have risen but increases in the cost of living_ and taxes ~roded the benefits to the point people's earnings were buymg l~s:.. than befor<' UNEMPLOYMENT may have been reduced bul 7 .6 is an unac- ceptable rate by anyone's stand· ards A half million new jobs sounds bag excepting it takes tha t much 1ust lo keep un ~ e mployment Crom getting greater than at already is. And much of the rise in sales is not by reason of greater activity but higher prices. And a Harns pall JUSt released reflected California stands 47th 1n attractiveness among more than 500 of the nation's top 1,000 busi ness firm s . Listed high among the aversions to the stale for localion of businesses was the environmental red tape, high tax~s aod volatile labor forces Incentives Can Cut Cost, Increase Pay There •~ a do-1l your:.elf way )OU can increase )Our own pay -from 25 lo perhaps 50 percent -withoot going on strike and wHhout chan~ing Jobs. Industry has found tht' mo-.t product1\C workers in area!'> h e r etor orr oriented lo agriculture Bring .t m a n o r worn an m off the farm and h e 1s ac · <'UStomed to hard work . Much of the industrial n• naassance of the South over the past JO year:. ha:. been powered by this labor pool or human energy. But give the most industrious worker two generations or ~ua.ra nleed , standardized. -.ame-for-everybody wages and h1<i lndividuaJ effort -un · rt-warded -diminishes ' LP TO NOW an~ have hl•t•n able to co 1th eap foreign labor y emp ing machines to cxpedfte p uc t1on : But. for all thcit" soph!!tJca lion. our machines are now.able to increase our per-ma~our product1v1ty only about two per cent per yc·ar. That's not :tugh to keep up with Japa and Germany where' worker arc paid m proportion to wha ·they produce Even Russia has no ognized that the Marxist. of one for-all and all·f doesn't work. Russia now percent of i~ workers 'one-for.one" -with e cent1vo pay for increase put. .. Mailbox ;i Incentive wai:. abu:.ed an the American sweatshops of the lt20s, but now we have over reacted to everybody'c; detri ment AS EACH worker produces less. anything he produces costs more. Thus his dollars purchasf' less and less Until last year, his higher wages were swallowed up by higher prices and higher taxes Edward Luftig of New York University's graduate business school has been trying to resell the incentive philosophy for 20 years He believes he hai. now con \'i nced most Jabor unions that at thus makes sense to knock som<' <'ents back into our dollar But Luftig says he is now en countering opposition from management. IL does n't mak<· sense. ProdUl'tl\'tl} 1ncent1\ei:. JO· \'art ably reduce unit cost.5 THEREFORE. an energetic \\ ork force 1s repaid l wo ways - with incr<>ascd income and JecreaSt.-d price!> \' C't f<'" er lhan 25 percent of American workers are presenUy 1>a1d on a 'piecework" basis. Mr LuftiJ,? is convinced that American industry must gel 75 percent of its workers under pro· duct1v1ty mt·entavcs 1f we are to -;urn ve today's competition of foreign cars and foreign-made appliances. textiles and whatall. i\m(•rtcan farmers are an ex- cellent example of how much more we can produce when we an• paid by the pound or by the hushcl or by the bale And farmero; a re presently pinched by hig her prices . b<'c aust-most everything th<'Y buy was paid for "by the hour." There Are Exceptions to Auto Repair 'Rip-offs' To the Editor· In this day of .. rip offs · I would like to relate a very re· warding experience that my daughter and l had last week. My daughter is 18 aod lives on .her own so' any extra expense ts dUIJcult. She wa& having trouble with the automatic transmission on her cac -it was not shifting. Since we have never had to go have transmission work. performed before we decided to go to the ••world's Largest Transmiasioo Specialists." We were told they would have to test drive the car and it would take approximately lS minutes. The salesman asked us to c:ome- out to the ga.rate area where I found they had tak~n my daughter's car. put it on a rack and drained tbe transmission lhald. He put bis finger into the f'lold and told me it was black due to xnetal particles in the traoamission and that there was definitely a problem w1t)\ the traumiaaion. .. I I UPON LEAVING the ·•world 's largest transmission specialists" we went to General Transmission Exchange on Harbor Boulevard an Costa Mesa. I was met by a genUeman by the name of Ray. I told him Uiat I had just had a quote of $68 to tell me what was WR)l).8 with the transmission and I asked what he would charge. He said he could .drive the car around the bloclt and tell me what the problem was. He did so and said be thought it was the vacuum tube and would have one of his mechanics check it o•t Hia mechanic jacked up the car, got under it and did some work. he also lift· ed the hood and did additiooal work under there. The mechanic spent approximately 20 minutes working on the car. The car was then driven and 1t. had been J'e· paired. 1 asked what the cbar&e woukl be and Ra)' uid t.bcre .-ouJd be no coet. I feel tho owner, Mr. Dal& Tanner, lbould bo exlft1:De.. ly proud ol Uae klnd of service and coun.11 1bo•~ by hls employees. We Americans -..bo are 10 qulek to c01J1plain about poor 1enico should be as quick lo &In prahe to thJs type of company. KARLEEN MONROE because of various problems thus far encountered nnd that county orticials should reex· amine the concept before ex hausttng additional resources I agree with your reexamma t10n recommendation, but wish to offer the following based on in·deptb experience and involve· ment in a great number of gov· ernmental e.fficiency and or· ganization projects. The "Super-Agency•• concept i" a sound one in that it : 1. COMBINES related depart ments and the programs lhey adm.inist« under on., umbrella <adminiarator) which. aids the coordination of these related programs; :t Cuts down on the span-of. control of the Board of Supenisors by having one ad· mlnlstrator manage these telat- ed departments and programs instead of having Dine &etNlfate department beada ~· to tbe board and involvina tbe board ln cll1-to-day proll'&m n - lated decildoas; 3. Makes good sense io coordinate the delivery ot varioua, but 'welfare related, s rvtces to by and large. a com- mon groop of recipient&. The auper-qeocy approach tends to mlolmb:e services overlap and accompall,)'ln waste while, at the ••me time holplng to fm· provo ~v a of govern· mcnt to t.h'a \Otal ne.ds of Ow oeedy. 4. By trilUlnl the vanous 'upport f uocllort1, aucb ... penon aftmlnlalraUorl, Dl L maaa1ement, 101•1. otflc• IUV rell~CI. etc . the savmgs thal can be re· ah1ed arc considerable When New York City's Mayor Abraham Beamc look office 10 January of 1974, he immediately proceeded to dismantle an of the super agencies set up by his pre- d f' c es so r, John Lindsay. Jronicall,y, the only super agen- cy to survive was the Human Set'vices Agency. Tbe 1"asons for its survival were those as outlined above. RICHARD V. HORAN RewttS_...q To the Editor: As elect.Jon tune approaches. 1t JS the time to tell our Congressmen we are fed up with the way the ·rent subsidy pro gram as handled -OC' not handled lt is a disgract-. People who are chgabl& should begin receiving at immediately. We're told the waiting ~ ~ • a year. The program ~hould be funded and handled properly or abolished. It is especialty dasgracef\al in view of the problems of low income people in areH wheT"t there is such a scarcity of low rent property. LOU FOX • U-lttr• from r.odcr& CIT aof'lcom• TM ngh& to condtnM lrttcn to I• ~or tUm'"o'" llbft ii rcwrwd tAttrra of 300 wordl or ka 10iU bt gfom ~fttflCt AU lcttln nws( ~ cl* &tQIWUTC ond ~ oddrat bid t901M• mav bf dMdd '* n · qw.rl ,, auf /icitflt,...,,.,.. "appm ... Podrf 10iU -ti. ,..MIW. ' li YOUR SERVICE I NATIONAL I " ,, Cjfltac a..,. Puz•• ~{ PEAR PAT: I 've seen mail~ advertisements ·i ·for the U.S. Puzzle Chdi. lt looks like fun and there are Jome pretty good prizes offeren. Is this a good .deal? t. C L . Fountain Valley • No, and t~ sta~ attorney general's office • doeaa•& t.blak so either. It recently fUed a lawsuit on I be•alf of penons bewUdered by their lack of win· lllap from Sheldon Helman's "puzzle clubs." Th~ ·t .nit claarces Belman with a number of unfair busl· •t 11eca praet.&ces, Including allegedly failing lo award " au prizes advertised, failing to maintain adequate 'r' recorclt and falling lo disclose the odds on winning tile lball-IOUcltatloo contests. The action further f dallDs Belman violated an uojunctJon obtained in a slmUar lawnlt *f alDst him in 1974 and that he failed :. to pay most of a 13,000 penalty sh!mming from the 112• Jadiment. ,. la addldoa to U.S. Puule Club, Heiman owns , and opentes Money on IY.onday Club, President ' Pazsle <lab and Empire Puzzle Club. 1 i . .j1. ~ Pla11er• N~ver W In 1 • DEAR READERS: The puzzle busi.nesi. can be C ·a ripoff. Deputy Attorney General William S. Ab· '''bey says that operators of the state's approx- ' , imately JO pU1zJe buslnei.sei. first send _Individuals relatively easy puzzles to work out, telling them to ,. send In 10luUons along with eontest entry fees that • may ranee from $3 to $25. Some puzzles consist or several muJtiple·choic<'. fill·in·the-blank sentences in which cpn~stants arc• a!tked to choose the moil appropriate of what Abbey dei.cribei. as three feasible answers. Other punle., require contes· tants io Identify ct-lebrity races that are partially blacked out. Alter the original puulf', participants are sent a series of puzzles for a fee and arc told they can win higher amounts of mone}. In theor). an} one completing the puzzles perfectly would win cash. !t Persons who participated in Helman's t:.S. Puzzle • Club, for example, were told they could receive prizes of $25 to $500 for correct responses lo the en· " try puzzle. . ··-·-· ... ·--- • Ciut o probltm'' Tlwn writ.-to Pal Dunn Pal wdl , ut rf.'d ta~ gt>lttng tht' an!Wt'Ta and action you need tn ,,oh>t' m~u1l1C'.\ m !JU~Mlmtnl ond bu$1ness Moil 11our q~ to Put Vunn, At Your Sennce. Orongt> Coost Dcitly Pilot. P 0 . Bt>Z JSfO, Costa Mesa. CA !11626 As many lette" as pon1ble W11l ~answered. but phoned mquanu or lfUers not inclu.cbng the reader's Jtdl l'ICJmt'. addrtu and bu.mu~as hours' phone numbtorconnot ht considered. Th1&coluntnoppeor1do1· l!I ezc~ Salurda!J•." .. Bonnie Bell 11 fllllnl you onroue order now. Last spring, when this offer was made, BoDDle Bell received nearly ball a mJWon naore reqaests than It could immediately supply. Yoar order must have been lost I• the mall because the firm seat letters of apology and • compUmea&ary lip· smacker to all penons w~ orden were delayed. Letters to this company 1bould be addressed: Bon· nie Bell, Lakewood, Ohio 44101. Clftln /tli~rotDat"~ O~n• Be•t DEAR PAT l bought a portable microwave oven from another individual. I got the instruction booklet, but she told me to be sure to keep the oven very clean. She said, "It's safer that way." I've worried about that remark ever since. Is it impor· 'tant '! If so, why? I'm concerned about radiation leaka~e. B.P., Huntington Beach Crumbs and grime that bW.ld up around door seals of a microwave oven can cause radiation leakage, so It is Important to keep your oven very clean. Preserving the life of a used unit can be helped by never turning on the oven when U is empty. Microwaves can be refiected back Into the heating element and bum it out faster than normal ~hen there iii. no rood or liquid for absorption. Foll also should not be used. The Food and Drug Administration's Bureau or Radiological Health says that when a microwave oven Is used according to manufac· turer's instructions and serviced periodically by an authorized repairman, radiation leakage is not likely. Nor Is there a hazard from stored microwave energy In food or in the oven. ~icrowJve oven radiation is not that much of a problem today. Experts say there have been no documented casH of injury since the o\·en was de· 'eloped In 1950. Since then, especially in the ldSt fiu> years. many improvements have been made. P81refl{lap Edward J. King <above) and Edward F. King, both con servative candidates but or different parties, are running for governor of Massachusetts. At least they can appear in two places at once. Tuesday. Match 29, 1978 TV COmmer lals Loud Message Exaggerated? WASHlNGTON {AP) -Television com· mercials tend to be louder thlUl programs, but not as loud as some complaints charge, the Federal Communications Commission said in a study. The study responded to numerous and long· standing charges that commercials are too loud. lt Ja the first such study since 1965, when the FCC told broadcasters to tone down television advertis· lna. THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF Broad· casters later concluded that commercials aren't loud -they just seem to be bet'ause they're con· cent rated One problem the FCC study noted is that "re· sear chers have attempted to define and meas ure loudness for more than 50 years ... But for most ot us, loudness is a mauer of good common sense .. Last year, the commission used a small group or listeners and electronic rnstruments to test 10 hours of programming taped in Washln&ton, Corpus Christi, Texas. and Batlle Creek, Kalamazoo and Grand Rapids, Mich. They con· eluded· -APPROXIMATELY SO PERCENT OF the com mcrcials were neither louder nor quieter than normal conversation. Approximately 35 percent or the com mcr1c1als were loud. Judgments concerning the loudness or quiet· nc~s of commecrcials were not directly influenced by th<' preceding program matenal Without additional research at as pre· mature to recommend the formulation of speciftc rules or policies. but two possibilities are worth mentioning ··one is to concentrate on development or stand· ards without stipulating the means of compliance The other choice may be to require stations to Storage Stoac• \'ita•ln C install some type or device in the audio hne which DEAR PAT Does orange jwce retain its Freeway Bids will continuously and automatically ad1ust signal , 1tamm Cover a period of lime? levels on the basis of loudness. This device will S.S .. Mission VieJO SACRAMENTO CAP> probably not be approprialc mall cases" \fler two weeks' rt>frlgerated storage ln a cov· -The state has called ~ 01'erdue Lip·•ntG<"kf-r• Daw (•red contalnt-r, reconstituted frozen orange juice for bids for the i:.econd THE STUDY ALSO FOUND THAT "whether a DEAR PA'J' ,\bout 10 munlhs ago I ordered ,u11 retains 9' percent of its vitamin C content. phase or construction of commercial followed a loud program segment or a !.IX hp-smal'kcrs through a special offer from Bon Good vitamin retention also can be maintained in the Simi Valley-San quiet one seemed to have no measurable effect on · B II ll' h bl t J t t d "annt>d.rull-slrengttlorangejuiceUlt'sstoredina Fernando Valley lheperce1vedloudncssofthecommerr1al me e cosm<.>ll<'' ~ pro "' v 00 a e 0 0 ' ed 1 "We also noticed that tf a commercial had • •' anyth1n~ no~. bur I ru •\ t.•r rN·t>1vcd my order I'd cool place. Vitamin C deteriorates fast in cannd • freeway in Los Angboe es suff1'cicnt lo\1d ""'Bk it would be considered loud re· try to t~1kt• t•an• of th1 ' prohl~m m~self but I nu diluted i.ugar-water·Juice products. If you use ry County There is a ut ... ~ . d d DAILY PILOT .A 1 NEED A LAWYER? f Lowut .,.. ~ •Divorce • Bankruptcy •Criminal • Wiiis-Probate • lncorw•tlon • Accldent·lnJurv •Eviction • Collectlons 640-2507 I ' .. : , 1 . \-\HR. CONaut.TATION .... 1t l'lllil_ .. , •·Thumbody" hal joined the fl g b t tot highway safety The symbol of service of Citizens Bank of Costa Mesa i1t re•lured o e bumper i.lrips wluch are ~in~ offered free at all offices of the Barut "'Dbumbody " -a trademarked character f«med of a emilln& race on a lh1.1mborin1 bQdv -I symbolizes C1t1z ens Bank's dedication to serving each customer as somebody special, one·of·a-kand. JUSt hke his lhumbpnnt. According to Paige V. Simpson, Chairman of the Board or Cit1.tens Bank. "We couldn't thin It ol n better way to i.how that each ind1ndual must do his part lo encourage :illfrr driving than by w;lng 'Thumbody' to rail attention to 11 " Tht> Bank 1s placing oewi.paper adi. offering the free bumper strips " h 1 c h p r o l' I a 1 m •·Thumbodv Loves You'' Simpson ·commented. "Perhaps this ~entle remsnder that everybody as important to somebody "111 lead to a hllle more courtesy, and a little more cauU<ln on the road and that nught i.ave some laves•" C1lliens Bank or Costa \ll•l>J had pre"'IOU~I) d•~ln huted thousands of l.ip\'I buttons and poster:-. l'aro1ng "Thumbody's" mt'!>i.agt• dealing wath the 1 m p 11 r l a n 1· c o f l h c tndl\ 1dunl Dumpt•r :.lrq~ art> free for th~· ·1sk1ni: al C1l1ten~ Han!.. m Cn:.l a 1\1 c~a at I lill bur ;ind Baker longer hav<· thl• .td<ln·~' "'hl·n· 1 ~t·nt m) order orange-flavored breakfast drink, store the powder $8.6 million available for gardless of its average level . Music ten c to ~ JU ,Newp~1~,r~t~8~e~a:c~h~~i~n~a~c~o~o~l~,d~a~r~k~p~l~a~c:e~fo:r:_:be:s:t~v~l:ta:m::::in:::sta:::b:il:lt~y~.~~_:_l~he~p~r~OJ~·e~c~t.~~~~~~~m~a~k~e:_:co~m:.:..:::.m~e~r~c~ia~l~s~s~o-u_n_d_lo_u_d_e_r_·_· __ ~--~~~--------------~--~ RCA SONY GE ZENITH SEARS (I\ 1·r .1 lhnu• trl•I 11•· .pl•· ,,l\\ 'IX rltffl'T'!'lll fq' ~h.1,.:un.d, uf 1r p11 fun·, ~1J" h\' ... ult nwv "'"'rt .• ,k. fl Ill pl• k llu ht •I tt\••r •It pu 1urc• I }H 1 I• .1r \\ 1nnt·r"' •~ ~' h ·'""' ~11111·r• .. 1 1\nd 1h.•t nnl .ill on llw 2.• VALUE FROM THE SUPERSO PEOPLE •13" dt<>gnt'H"ll (hro1T1n l•'" "talC\1 p•(• _,,., tut><• •GT l20'• cho'"' 100"-•ol1d tlo'" e $oft..<J11t0 CT Motte'" Sell Ad1u•'"'U (""-" s,.. ..... '""""""I N>lnr par turt' 14ur/ey, ll'le ~upt'ThPt .tul 11 .11:.u11 Th111 .. right s,·tvani11'11 ....,u, ... r .. ,.t hh•I /,,•mlh. HCA. MAROU\'ox l /ua•nr .ind S1·ar11 Th1>Svlv11n1u :o;ul*r~•·I .._,d,· It, 1orll· ~1· lw.1t ttwm nil' ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·:-:·:,.·.·.·.:-: . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... · .·.· : . :·: .: -: . . . . . . ... . ·.·. ·.·. If every dnver on the road remembers that somebody cares about them and about every other driver. too. we might all drive with a little more caution. a lillle rnore courtesy And that might even save some lives. We th ink our "THUMBODY LOVES YOU bumper strips can help. Come on 1n and get one-they're free for the asking You'll see Thumbody, our smiling symbol of ind1v1dual banking service. standing tall on each one to remind each ind1v1dual to do his part for high- way safety. And we also hope that Thumbody will remind you of our dedication to serving each customer as an 1nd1v1dual. somebody special. Stop 1n today for your free bumper strip And drive safely. Because Thumbody loves you 0 ~~z~~~ .~~"~~~~~~~ MESA B~nk1ngHoU Mond,y-ihur'le.lav-')to5 • f"11<i,,y-•)tf'l h • S.~-9to 1 • C .41 DAILY PILOT Tuetday, MllCh 28, 1978 ANALYSIS I NATION I MUSIC A ir Qualitg 'Trades' Act Sparks New Exchanges lJy THOMAS D. EUAS Last year's amendment.s to the federal Clean Air Act appear at first glance to set up barriers · for industries wanting to move into California. But those regulations actually are causing some remarkably creative thinking by local of· ficials in the stale'• largest urban areas. The result. could be easy entry into California tor business and cleaner air !or the big cities. THE MOST IMPORTANT new rule laid down by last year's changes in the federal anti-smog law was a prohibition on new plants in any area with substan- dard air quality -unless the new plants actually improve air quality. $85,000 Bid Rejected The law qwckly produced the concept of tradeoffs, first ap. plied in the case of the Alaskan oil terminal to be built by the Standard OU Co. of Ohio ln Long Beach. Sob1o will have to pay for cleaning up emisaions from several Southern California power planta, cutting down their smog production so much that the South Coast Air Basin will be better off even with the many Lons or hydrocarbons Sohlo will produce. Owner Glen Boydstun of Fort Worth, Tex- as, owner of this 1931 Cadillac, rejected an $85,000 purchase bid for it at an auction at ='Jew Orleans, saying someday he'll get an offer of $200,000. The car is covered with 23-karat gold, its floors are lined with mink and its hubcap., are studded with diamonds. Doctors and Dentists Leading 'I Quit' List Officer Honored THAT EXHANGE WAS or· c hestrated by Tom Quinn, chairman of the stat e Air By Anny Pair Go ATLANTA (AP) -Doctors and dentists, as well as their patient.s, are heeding those "no smoking'' signs in their offices and the number of .smokers among them has decreased significantly the past decade, says a top official or the national Center for lhsease Control. Studies show that only 21 percent or lhc nation's doctors and 22 percent of the denl.Jsts smoke, sa id Dr. John J . W1tlc, m<•dical director of the CDC's Bureau of Health Education. smoke has declined considerably and is well below smoking rates of the general population. ''Actually, only about one-third or the adults in this country now smoke cigarettes," Witte said in an in· terview. T HE LATEST STUDY 5hov.-s that Dentist (MaJor) h_ Charles w. Wakefield, un Board son of Mrs. Mary L. f W a k e r I e l d • 2 3 3 3 5 Two Orange Coast re- Buck land Lane, El Toro, sidents have been elect· was presented the Army ed to the board of Los Commendation Medal at Angeles Beautlful Ins., a Ft. Sam Houston, Tex. non·profit volunteer 34 percent of adults smoke, com-Dr. Wakefield was pared wtth about 42 percent 10 years honored for service with ago. the 766lh Medical group. Two at.hers will serve as honorary direc- tors. D e t a c hm en t i n Named to the board Despite an increase in the adult Baum holder, Germany. are Erwin Newton of populallon from 118 million to about · B h d SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS Resources Board, and it hasn't· quite been completed. Only linancial questions remain, however, and Quinn's idea has spurred imitators. Soon after the planned Sohio exhange was announced, a Northern California official came up with a related idea - new housing near industrial plants to be subsidized by new industry. Alameda County Supervisor Fred Cooper reasoned that set- ting up factories in suburban areas automatically creates large amounts of smog as workers have a new and longer commute. B\lt ff industries set up sub- sidized bousing developments nearby for workers, the net smog from cars in the San Fran· claco Bay Area should drop. Then the mioe reduction from the aborter commutes could be traded olf against new pollution from the factory. COOPEB'S IDEA IS getting consideration from the Bay Area Air Pollution Control District, of which be is a director. A simpler and more systematic approach to tradeoffs u in the works for Southern California, where smog was recently found to be worst in the nation. Officials ol the South Coast Air Ouality Management Di1tr1ct are pushing a ·'Clean Air Fund" to allow lnduatries to buy their way into Southern Caliromla. The diatrtct would maintain a waitine list of larae and small polluters, parceling out money from new buslne.saea as lhey moved into the area and gradually cleaning up existing industriea. The more a new plant would pollute. the more it would contribute to the cleanup fund. A FUND UKE THAT would relieve industry or the need to find tradeoff partners and allow any company to know ahead or time just how much it would cost LQ move into the area. "We have to let business know that aovernment here wa.nta to cooperate with them, " says Los Angeles City Councilman Marvin Braude. an AQMD board member. "This would provide a rational p rocess for choosing and evaluaf.lng smog tradeoffs.'' The fund could cut out. much at lhe red tape and delay that has plagued new Industries like the Sohio plant in the Jut few years .• They also demonstrate that creative solutions can be found for Callrornia's longtime en· vironment vs. industry conflicts. BUSINESS 1n1urance TWO ADDITIONAL YEARS OF GUARANTEED "NO INCREASE · IN PREMIUMS 11 Business Packages. Commercial Fire, Condominiums and A partment Packages l~ 1967, 30 PERCENT of the doc- lon; and 34 percent of the dcnl1!>ls .smoked, he said. . 139 million in this period, he said, the lie is a student at the Huntington eac an total number of cigarette smokers Myrna S. Thom,Pson of .. __________________________ .. Academy of Health CoronadelMar has declined from 49.7 million to 46.9 · Sciences, U.S. Army, Ft. 11 _ .... ~ ks million. Sam Houston. Wi iam Froc:ucnc on Witte said studies also show that Jr. of Balboa and Earle' BOB PALEY HORTHoc -546-3205 more men than women smoke: 39 Dr. Wakefie ld re· V. Grover of Laguna Witte, who will repQrt to the annual ml'eting of the U.S. Public Health Service's Professional Association lh1s week, said he considers smoking "the single most preventable cause of premature death and disability in the United States." percent of the adult men compared ceived a D.D.~. deiree Hills are honorary direc· witb29percentofadultwome~ ~in'.::19~7~l~fr~o~m~u~•~c:·~~~~to~r~s~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .HE SAID TIIAT stud.Jes show that cigarette smoking in the United States is Jess prevalent among persons 20 or older than it was in the comparable age group 10 years ago. & ASSOC, INC. sountoc-642-6soo;· Smokmg is considered a primary c ausc of lune cancer and heart dis· t'a!>e. WITTE WAS ASSISTANT director of the gov<·rnment's Clearinghouse fnr Smoking before Joseph A. Califano ,Jr., secretary of Health, };ducalion and Welfare, moved the $30 m1ll1on no-smoking campaign from Atlanta lo Washinton. Witte said tbe proportion or physi. cians, dcnlisls and pharmacists who Witte said a survey at the CDC shows that of younger physicians en· tering the Epidemic Intelligence Service. only about 8 percent smoke. "This means that many, many pro- fessionals have stopped smoking and that many of them never took up the habit in the tint place," be added. Conductor Hailed Boehm R eturns w New York Baton Ily l\tARY CAMPBELL NEW YORK (AP) -Conduct.or Karl Boehm, making his first ap· pearance at the Metropolitan Opera s mce 1974, was welcomed back with prolonged applause. Many patrons in the sold-out house made il a standing ovation. Considerable applause also greeted the appearance of this Austrian con· ductor, known as an expert in Richard Strauss operas. on hls ap- pearances for acts two and three and, of course, at the conclusion of .Strauss's "Die Frau ohne Schatlen:• THIS OPERA ABOUT a woman without a shadow -unable to bear children -had not been beard at the Met since the 197(>-71 season. It was one o! the big hits -~specially for its Man's Taunts Lead To Hit-run Death FREMONT (AP) -A 51-year-old · San Joee woman bu been bookedf~ investlgaUon ~ murder in the hit.- and·run death of ber boyfriend. Fremont police Monday charged :Mary Merino with the death of John Sills, 56. Officers said his taunt.s led her to run him over Sunday in her white 1965 Cadillac, at Central Parle here. unusual scenery -when the produc- tion was new, in 1966-67, the season the Met opened at its present house in Lincoln Center. In Friday night's performance, Ursula Schroeder-Feiner sang the Dyer's wife for the first time at. the Met. She has a big. lustrous, closely focused voice, shot through with beautiful colors. Her voice sounded. properly Wagnerian here, but one could also visualize her as Carmen. In her acting, she matte the Dyer's wife fiery and full of life. It was easy to see how such a woman would be tempted by promised luxury to give her shadow to another woman who Jacked one. THE DYER, WALTER Berry; the Emperor, James King, and the Em· press, Leonie Rysanek\ all were talc· 1ng the rolee they did m 1970. Berry sounded younaer tban ever, bis baritone sturd1 and warm in the opera's most sympatJH!tic role. ltln1's valce la not u big as moet Wagnerian tenon and bis ainling, whUe nicely atralebtforward. .eemed to lack penonallty on Friday night. Mist Rysanek WU eUecUve but did not have the vocal smoothness beard from her earller this season. The st.rik:iq scenery ls a fairytale setting with people and whole let.I appearing and disappearm, for an opera which combines magic lritb strong humaa Jonstn1s and IOITOW9. ' ,., POfltbl M4••"""' VOTE FORA MEW IEGIMMIMG ~~UL HUMMEi. Apill ft POLITICAL QUtZ: ... DO THESE FOUR WHAT PROMINENT NEWPORT BEACH RESIDENTS HAVE IN COMMON? A. Infielders for the California Angels B. Authors of best selUng books C. Oboe players in the LA. PhHha1111onic ' D. None of the above I ~·•-..ioWM·a:a.-y I Th,eY . are all supporting r NATIONAL I LOCAL Tuesday. March 28, 1978 DAIL y PILOT At ·. Burglar Alarms Set Off Warnings By ''~ Aaaoelated Preu A arowmJt number or Americana :.tro buying .. ho01e burelar alarms and the mcreued Interest In protection has brought ao increaaed and sometimes confusing -array of safety devices One of the first thmg!> to remember, according to the National Burglar and Fire Alarm Associa hon. is that "then· 1s no such thing as a n absolute· ly burglar-proof system and you should not beheve , illOY salesman who tells you be has one." WHAT A BURGLAR ALARM can do is detect and maybe frighten the average thief; It abo can • make you reel more secure Costs for alarm systems vary widely; 1overn ment experts say you can expect to spend anywhere from Sl•veral hundred dollars to more than a lhousautl dollars Monthly service fees range Crom $10 to~ and up ( , , J Rl•:td tht· contract CON.4'l1MER arerull~ Nt•\er sa~n an --;1;,:rl't•ment which does not list the points of pro· teclion or 1tem1ze tht· t•q111pment to be installed Beware of claims for a .. hfctlmc" guarantee ••NO RELIABLE f'IRM V10ULD offer one,' " i1ays the nallonaJ as ... 0C'iat1on. Also beware or pronll~('S b) s..1lesmen who say • installing an alarm system w11J lower your in • surance premiums: the chum may be true, but you will have to check your insurance agent to be · sure .· Tbere arc two kinds of aJarm systems -local and remote. Local systems set off a bell, siren or buzzer right on your property The noise alerts you, if you nre home . ..ind may scare the thief away Remote c;ystcms send a !>lgnal. silently, Lo alarm company headquartns. The company tells police and sends pt•rsonnel to respond. In some cases. alarms can be hooked d1rectly to poLice. but this kind of service geMrally is available only ror businesses. ~ SOME REMOTE SYSTEMS HAV E an •• automatic dialer which, m the event or an alarm. t· sends a pre.recorded message over telephone lines •. to anyone you choose. Do not direct the message to ... police without prior approval. ? No matter what kmd 0£ system you choose, :: you usually can have emergency call buttons ~. sometimes called panic buttons -in~lalJed along ... \\'llh il~ at strategic points throughout the house These buttons IN you trigger the alar m manually Make sure that you have an auxiliary power • <.ource for your alarm system tn case or blackoub • or other electric interruptions. .. THE SUCCESS OR FAILl'RE OF an alarm -may dep<.'nd on Lhe sC'nsor -the part or the unit • "hich detects the presence or an intruder and • sends a signal to the control urut which. in turn, •• :.et s orr the alarm. ; Here is a guide to Coor basic types or sensors •• -MagDelic contacts. 'these are elec tromechanical devices consisting of a maenet m -one sealed enclosure and a switch in another. They are attached to doors, wmdows and other openings and are wired to a control box. When the contact is broken. the signal 1s sent to the control. This type of system is useful for protecUng accesa points, bul it cannot tip you orr to the presence of a bur~lar who has managed to circumvent the con· tacts and get into the• house. . . -Pressure mats. These arc designed to pro lecl specific areas in front of the telens1on set. for example A flat switch hiddc•n under carpeting 1s trigJ.:t•red by th<' pressure of a footstep -Phote>f'lectrlc beams. These sensors proJect Jn mfrart-d hght beam between two poinls and are u:-.eful 1n hallways, rooms. stairwells, etc ·: ReJW F oreca,st: · Sunny, Smiling? R E~O. Nev. c AP> If people In Reno start turning surly, they may want to blame the Reno· • Sparks Convention Authority. Authonty members have voted to postpone ac· tton on a $.10,000 request by the Greater Reao Chamber of Commerce lo underwnte a pro1ram aimed at keeping citizens friendly. THE CHAMBE R THINKS a predJcled &rowth boom in the city will put o lot of burdens on people particularly when it comes to findlng a place to •. hve • The chamber said Reno has a long.established reputation for friendliness thal hassled new resi . dents might not £eel like sharing CHAMBER OFFICIALS WANTED lo start a ' campaign \\hich would mclude dally surveys lo ~ produce a •·rncndhness mdex." ' The chamber would ask radio and television stations to include the index alon1 wt\b other newscast statistics such as temperatures, b:-iromctric pressures and combined pollution In· dcx. Book Publishing ~UCI Course Topic A worklhop in how lo pttbll11h your own book will ' be held May12and 13onthe UC Irvine campus. The UCI Extension course, open to the public for a fee of$35, will be taught by Lachlan P. MacDonald. editor and publisher of Padre Productions. The workshop meets Mayl2Crom7to lOp.m . and May 13from9a.m. to noon a nd ltoSp.m. ln room 180 of lhe Computer Science Building RegjstraUon Information is available by calling • 833·5414. \Bacchus Name 'Upheld' PORTSMOUTH. England <AP> -lahmael Bacchus WH fined $47 st In a Port.mouth magistrates' court for drunkenness. Anythina lnterruptina the beam will Lngger an • d<•rm -Ultrasonic motion deltttors. The sensors fill lht• area with sound waves too high for m06t humans to hear The alarm aa triagered by move mf'nt in the protected area. Animal• m ay be botht•rt•d by the high sound so you should test the syittem with your pet present. The untts should not be Installed where thoy are subject to lou of wind turbulence wbirh could set otl Lba alarm acclden- lally MAINTENANCE OF AN ALARM syst.em ls important. Accordinl to authorities, nine out or 10 alarms transmitted are falae: balf of the tnl•takea are caused by improper opt!raUon or the system by the owner . To prevent problems. follow the&e steps. -When aelivatinR the system. rnake sure pets are remowxi from protected areas and windows are closed. -Do not lreat the system like a toy or ghow It off to friend!. -Do not operate your system on the same e lectrical circuit as kitchen or beaUna or cooling appliances. The cyclic operation of the appliances could touch oft an alarm. -Some sensors ~ave sensitivity adjustments. Do not set them too blah; you could wind up w1lb a continuing senes of alarms. Re-entry Topic of Director Milo Sm1th, director of Displaced Homemakers Center m Oakland, will discuss prob l ems women face returning to a career Friday Crom 9 a.m. to noon m the Sad· dleback College Women's studies center. It will be the third part or a five-session "'Issues on Sexism" series prest'.'nled by the t·ollegt."~ Forums for Learning programs. The series continues April 19 with a workshop on •·Financial Aware· ness. ·· On Mav l, KABC news anchor Christme Lund wlll climax the schedule with a talk on "Women m Media." Windy Warmly Welco..ed Persons who have not pre-registered for the ,., w ... .,..... series will be adoutted for $2 at the door \ ).!rl'' v striped n•bra namt·d ;\lama nuLZl cs hC'r baby, Windy The h.ib\ ".Js born ~l<ireh 12 at '.\larine World 1\fnca USA in RL·dwood t'll,'.\ C•ll 642-56111. Man's Trespass Not Forgiven · CARLSBAD, N M. <AP> A man Wbo is divorcin~ the daughter of a Car~tl pastor was arrested on the pastor's order when b&.\ried to al· tend a church service. Dean Maxwell, 39. was led away and charged with criminal trespassing after he refused lo leave church property Magist"t~ H \i. Linneweh set bond al $400 and set Apnl t f6r a jury trial in dis· tnrt court. ·'This whole thing is ridiculous. A church is supposed to be a sa tuary and 1 don't think going there 1s criminal tr ass," Maxwell said. The Rev Bill Burke thought otherwise Burke charged that axwell had said he wanted to tell the congrc~atl about his father-in-law's ac· lions and attitudes the falling marriage Maxwell called c allegations "absurd." Badge Won by Airman Airman First Class Rose L. Bro•n. da u ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Moltna of 9892 Hot Springs Dnve, Hun· lington Beach. has been awarded the missileman badge at Whiteman AFR.Mo She 1s a m1ss1le main- OCCTeam Wins 2nd Orange Coast College's speech team won second place in the state t..ournament at Moorpark College. tenance specialist with Lhe 35lst OrganizMional Missile Maintenance Squadron. a part of the Strategic Air Com mand. The airman is a 1976 graduate of Edison High School and has s tudied al Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. DR. and Put a few word1 to work for ou. "We are voting for Paul Hummel because we want to see our City Council become more responsive to concerned rns1drnts rather than to the ldrge developers." VOTE FOR A HEW BEGIHHIHG ~AU1. HUMMEi. Aprll 11 P°'d lo< by l'ou1 Hu..,rnel El.ct-Co-. 2'IOO ,...,. A ... eo-a oo Mw .i..nw.n.Ca~C-n The squad. coached by Peg Taylor and Michael Leigh. was 2.5 points behind Santa Rosa Colleae. Tbe OCC squad will compete April 13·18 in the National Speech Tournament in Sacramento PATIO GROUPS• LIVING •d DINING ROOM GROUPS • BAR, BAR STOOLS, etc. Rick Olguin, OCC teom president. won the top speaker award and silver medals in im· promptu speakinf and extemporaneoUJ. WJth Wayne Cody, he wo1t • gold medal in debate. O.er I ,000 0Korator .ct Ac:cnaory It._ "9W Z SHOWROOMS TO SHVI YOU COSTA MESA ORANGE 2959 Fairview Rd. uo M. """" 1/1 ..... s.... .. s..,.... ......,. •·tw-...... c...,... 55'-tlS 1 639·5724 anetno 16550 Ventura Boulevard Suitt 314 Los An..,.. ..m Wiishire Bouleverd L.:aktwood 5203 Lakewood Boulev1rd Huntlftlton IMctt 1101 Newm n SUlte c Sa..ta Ana 2700 N. Mein St., Suite '°2 Slltn DMIO 3033 Bunker Hiii St., Suitt 101 r ' C213) HCMHO (113) '3W767 (211)~-(714) (714) 54 (714) 41).1 fOO Adve111sement Use This Method To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair HOUSTON , TEXAS -If you don't suffer from male pattern baldness, you can now stop your hair loss . . . . and grow more hair. Have you raced th~ fact \bat you hnvr • hair loss problem' Hair Joas occur-. '0 gradually that mt•n and wom~n often ignore 11 Until It's too late Evl'll tbou1h yoo aee voursdf 1n • mirror t'very day, many of )OU won ·1 admit to abnormal hair fall If you think. honestly. that you m1eht be in Uus t'at.egory. look at a pit'lure taken a year a&o -three years •Ko Notice a dlrrerence! If so, now'a the lime to 5top your hair loss. You t'ould be gomg bald If It appears that you arc already losing hair whatever vour daily hair roulln~ 1s. If you t·ont1nue to rollow ll. vour hutr will probabl\ ~radually thin a"•'Y tn nothing But tl dCW!>n'l ha\ t' tu happt•n Often hair rall t!t NOT normal. Now a firm or laboratory coosultanli. has de velope d a treatment that not onlv sl ops hair losa. but aclually grows hair • And you don't even have to take their word for It You can try their treat~ent for 32 days, at their nsk. and 1oe for your!telf. Naturally they wouldn't ort•r thls opportunity unlea!t It worked But It's impoulble t o he lp everyone. The great maJority of ~ases of exc~~sive hair fall and baldness are the beginning and more fully developed s tages of malC' pattern baldness and cannot be helped. But 1f vou arc• not already stick bald. ho" can you ~ sure what " actually causing your hair loss., Even 1f bpldness seems t o "run In the family," it b t'erlatnly not proof or the cause or YOO'R hair los11. tr you have thinning hatr, the Loesch treatment may be the answer for you. If you still have any hiur on top or your head, and would like to st.op halr lo~s and grow 1$lort> hair. do 'omcthlng ahoul 1t betore ti's too J.itc J,oes1·h Lliboraton Cons u ltunls. Inc , w1 II 11upply you with trt'•tment for 32 days · at their n~k -If they belteve the treatment will help you. Ju.st send them the 1nformat1on li sted below. All inquiries are answered conf1den1Jally by mall Adv MO OIUGAT10H COUPON To Loei.ch Laboratorv Consultants. Inc Box 66011. 3311 W~i.t M.im S\r~t Houston, Texa:> 7iOOli I am !-ubm1lltn.I( tht• foll n\\mg information \\1th lh<' undf'r.,tandtn~ that ll "'II be· kept strictl~ conr111ent1al and that r am under 110 11bhgat1on whal:.vevl•r Doe!\ your forcht•11d become 011!-or erc.i~)., llow !.O<>n .1rtt'r washing' Do you h11Vt' dandruff' Dry or v1h • 00ci. your scalp itch' When' How Ion~ has your hair b!!l'n thmnmg'' Does hair pull out easily on top of head., Whal percentai:<' of ha tr rt>mam-. on lop of head' Any thin areas., . Where' Any shck bald areas? . Where., Attat'h any other rnformallon you f~I may be helpful NAME .SEX. ADDRESS CITY . STATE-~ 4i!I P ORDER YOURS NOW • • • 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS STYLISH TYPE ON GOOD QUALITY WHlTE GUMMED PAPER • PERSONALIZED •EASY TO USE • FOR YOU OR A FRIEND . r---------------------1 I Fill in this coupon. cltp and mail with s 1 75 to. I Pilot Printing. Label 01v I Peet Office Box 1560 • 330 W Bay St t COet1 Mesa. Call forn1a 92626 I I I I I I I I Be Sure to Uso Your Zlpooc:te PILOT .PRINTING j I I L-------------------~-J , • A,. DAIL y PILOT Tue.day, March 28, 1978 ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES QUEENIE By Ph il fnterlandi 11--~~L ~-J 1/ ....... ~ ze "1 ht.' lood -. rnt1t•11 Whv gool 1l uµ v.1th good sen let.''"' For the Record ' .. Dl••olutlon• Ot /tfarriag~ FH..S-..Cll1J HAWKES Lind• Jun •nd O•v1d lte JO.eP4'1. OCHOA, ~ 0 .,,., Allo•uo" Pl'EFfER. 51..,,.v •nd Put. BARNES,°""""£ •nd C-.tnr1• J VUACHO, C•< 111• f r•no• •nd Andrew John Wll l I AM~ ""''" ''"" J,·~n. f RA.Mt L.. R°"'1n,.v C 11nd tt,.• tv L CA~T,10 Enr+Qut· dn(J .An•ld HA fHl RI f V ldmt\ A •nd Ruin A , HOUC,,HTON, M:1ni •nd r ... oth11h " OAil U J.u\1 d,,O h ... rn.uo R ~ l U( C:..l•l f'.tut• Md"'" ttncJ J..tn BOW( N :Jo..tn ( tltn .. n,, Wllt1~Ufl ldw 1n Ill 01 l~T Jutl, l dnd C,rt9(»rf' l RO<••l [\'''''" M 'nJ R" hud J ARMS T 110 .. C. l ••'•• A •nd F r4no A °'~1 f(l 8tt11 0 dnd (lf'O l. ~P[N(.(R Pllyll" A •nd Oon•ld ~ ... y WHIT .. £ v J •mo c -l ...,.. M HOOc;~N (hrt\tln-' R 4nd W Ht1em L McCUE. Jonn •nd M•f\h• M , HiOMPSON. J-A .ond S.n1•m1n A . BEC".NOCHE. Fr•nc" A-ti •nd Jo Ann. StMr..QN °"oor.,_ 0ot .. n ""° K•n~tn H<>wd•d C".ALISTEl H M • ,.,. •nG ~ uao• ph John CHANTER lol~M -A•<l\otrd8 l A .. C.l Nf llO. V•l•rt• J •nd C.t••ld A fARACll S..•rt•v •nO k•ll>ft. COURTLAND, Ofollm• ""d lll.L llOADW AT MO ITU AU 1 tO Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 SMITK-'TVTHfU.,.UMI WtsTCUff CHAP& 427 E 17th St. Costa Mesa• S..8-4888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broadway Santa Ana• 547-4131 P1DCI lllOn411S SMmtS' MOITUAaY 627 Main St Huntln<Jlon Beach 53~539 rt& 'AMll.Y COlOHIAl '41MIU.I. HOMI 7801 9olsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 PACIAC YllW MIM(HIAL PAIK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport. C8hforn1a 6-44-2700 McCOllMICIC MOITUAllH Laguna Beech 49'-9415 Laguna Hiiia 798-0933 San Juan C.01strano 496-1710 IALT&.aa• M •AL NOMI Corona dot Mar 973·0460 Costll M 1 849-2424 0 J•<~ Al..,, MONROE, ~99Y A ...,d R•ndY E RODICK. M.>•lln AIYln .tnd O.ni-. Lorra1nt, BELLO, Janu$ A dr>d ll1cn•rd R , STEINHOF ~, P•lriu• Ann •nO l• llOfl O\arlt~. (1(1 Con 1tlt Su\dn -JM Plllll1p, FAALE v, (lttrie •'1<1 E"ll""" P Jr , 8E ANA .. , O•b<1ton .,,., RobPrt M•<IW•I MIN l f Ro.,..rl J <>nd 0"'"" l CON Nl LL &r«ty Jr ond MOf'\d LtJ11on.- •1AMM ONO. AltT'lillf'ltcl M dnO [)on•lo JU~lll.E., M4nttrtnt! M dnd HO•ttr'1W CA f E~ Ot:otor .. ~ M Mtd Tflr#V l N',t((O £..q.nt> 0.tndf"' and N•t•I·• S.toor• OAVIS P•trK1.• ttf'ld P•"' ~ FO,.OREN. 11101 l•• •nd W1t11•m M•t-1 MARKUM. Clo""" M•,1• •n d G1ry W lndtt McCAULEY s.no.. •nd Ja,,.,., M '>TURGIS. A-•t C. -A111i. G FEHAINC".. Wiley Hutchin"'" •ncl lltthard Henry M c K I NLEY Bun•dell• Cl•ire •nd Wll•l•m Edi.on. KRAMER. J•,,.,.s E •nd c .... n ... l CANF1£LO. OMl..,l L -Cyntn•• A POWELL "'1vlll\ •ncl Pltthp t<OICH N .... v Ann •nO ~IVl'I JoM MELVIN. l.4t'ftfM' M 41\d Janw\ W C.ARRElT Artl>ur E -Pe99y " ~ ~~"T'::=:;"~~ Deaths ·.'Elsewhert!a SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -The last surviv· ing child of famed orator William Jennings Bryan is dead al 89. William lenlllnp Bryan Jr. died at a Santa Fe retirement home Mon· day. PASADENA GP) Slmeoa Castleman Draper, 70, CO-Owner of tbe Draper's and Damon•s chain of women's clothing stores, died Sunday at Hunt· tngton Memorial Hospital. LONDON (AP) - Wilfred Pickles, 73. broadcaster who ran the "Have a Go" radio show 21 years for the British Broadcasllnl( Corp., died Monday at his Briebton home. Pickl~ appeared in sevC!ral ftlms Including "Billy Llar." LOS ANGELES <AP> -Lollll B. SUeMer, 81, a ploaocr ln tbc study of earth who wu tbe flnt. dlrector of UCLA'• 101Uhtte of Geopbyslca, died Satur- day IL UCLA edlcal Ceot~r. Jarvis-Gann Effeet Trial Set OCTD Projects Losses In LB Tallied at $25 Million Slaying The Orange County Transit Dis· lrtct < OC'TO> stands to lose as much as $25 million of its projected $31.5 million operating budget for 1918·79 should voters pass the Jarvis-Gann property tax reform meas ure tn June Thal was the report presented Monday lo ml!m~rs of the county Transportation Commission, the year-old agency with review power ovc.•r OCTD flnlin<·es. Arraignment SetforSJC Official's Son Ar"1 it was that report that prompt· ed commissioners to seek new legislation now that mtehl head off the potentlal funding s hortfall for the county bus system THE COMMISSIONER'S executive direc tor, Thomas J e nkins, said OCTD at present operates with only about $3.5 million a year in local pro· perly tax funds However, tht> $3.5 million turned into Jenkins' $25 million loss. estimate t>eeause OCTO officials use local property tax funds lo qualify for :state and federal sub11d1es. IC local property \.ax revenue drops, Jenkins rep0rted, the stale Public Utilities Code requires a shut· of( in OCTD's $8.8 mlll1on &hare ot state sales taxes. And if the state subsidy were lost, he continued, OCTD would be unable to qualify for $12.6 mtUlon in federal transit subsidies. James Earl Scramlin of Laguna Beach has been ordered to fa ce trial Aug. 7 on murder charges filed after he al· legedly battered a re- tired Cof\sl Guard of- fi cer todeathJuly26. Orange Co unty Superior Court Judge John L Flynn Jr. set the trial date for &ramlin 2 1. o f 425 Panorama l>rive A pretrial ap pearance is scheduled for May 26 POLICE who found the body of retired Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Aloort Daniel Willard, 69, in hi s home at 861 C r e s t v i e w 0 r1 v e . Laguna Beach, in· vestlgated the cas~ for' more than four months Drug £barges Two NB Men Given Terms Two Orange Coast men have dra~n Jatl term and a co defendant ha::; been fined after pl~din~ guilty to drug charges !tied by Newport Buch• police. .. Orange County Superlar Court Judge Robert E.! Rickles sentenced Stuart Frederick White, 21, of the defendant pleade~ 4703 1, River Ave. guilty to drug charge Newport Beach. to four stem ming Crom th~ months In the county Jail same investigation and placed him on thr~.­ years probntion \\HITE admitted 1n court that he oHerctl to l>l'll one· \K>Und of highly pro< c.,M'tf marijuana in tht: the form of "Thai st ic b" lo undt·rcov('r of Ctcer-; Judge R1 c·l..l ei. hen lcnccd Richard Corby Jones, 23, of 779 W. Prom o nto r y Point, Newport Beach, to 60 days in jail and three years probation arter • A TWRD ddendant: R ober t Valentine Kalatschnn. 22, of 24463: llighpine St . El Torot- was fined Sl ,000 anlf: placed on three \cars probation after filing a: guilty pica. aoutb coast actonco·op Kevin James Mocahs, the son of San Juan Capistrano City Manager James Mocalis, has been ordered to face arraignment Aprtl 27 in Orange County Supt>r1or Court. IN ADDITION, s ubsidies for bus acquisition, building atld a future rapid transit corridor also would be threatened. b e f o r e b o o k i n g iiiiiii-;;;;w!;tP.~~iiiiiiiiii Scramlin. O"-" hi"' ll'OduCert '""" -'"'"9 "9....,,.. • or-• -...anon ol pt04 ... ..,., .. !lln !!win tan i.. lou"<I "' .,.., .,._ one .....,.,. "' 5ovt,,_,, Cehlo<n•a Mot•alis. 19, of 31281 Paseo Oltvos, fa ct's drug chargC'S related to his til· lt.>gL·d p<>sst•s1nn anti selling of the dru~ PIH.>n(•yrhdinc often known as ·a n~t·I dust .. I le 1s free on SJ0,000 hall L J gun a lfr a di p u I 1 n· J a i I e d \fol·alls <tftl•r hl' ;,illt•gt•dly bold quan· l1t1l'S of th{' druJ! tn undercover of· ficcrs on two occasions. He will be a rr:.11gncd in Judge fl. Warren Knight ·s courtroom OC Judge Sued for Divorce Orange Countr S upe rior Court .I udi.:t· James II Walsworth has been S U(•d for divorce in a court action whtch states that "1r- r econ c ti ab I e dif · fere nces" exist in his marriage to Nancy L Wals worth. The Superior Court petition Sei?ks division of property which includes the couple's home at 2 124 Leeward Lane. Newport Beach However. he noted, those facilities .. obviousl~ may not ht' needed anyway if sufficient fund-. are not a\·ailable Cnr daily operations " Directors suggest(•d that Jenkins draft a possible revision to the state Public Utilities Code that would permit ocro lo collect sub61d1cs In the event the Jarvis measure is ap· proved Police said the nude \-ictim wa::; beaten lo death \\ 1lh what they dt•sc ri~d as the heav; \\-Ooden slatut: of a preg nanl wnman. p1ect·~ of \\ h1ch wt•n· found "l'at tcrt!d around the It\ ing room TJIEY S,\ID Scramhn and the v1cl1m were known to be close friends • RABBITT INSURANCE 548-5554 1914 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA OH PhoMCall One Pay Che-ck C.0Vf"1~ V'""'" tr."'W t'C"ll•~ '..S•hnQ fH ,,"•"•"\ 11 ~ "" f"•lf,J ,, • 11•a1J ..... , 1• .. rJ•f tt1 fu "'°"' U\JQltl {.a i1'°'Q .ti ., ")vt Off~ -. 01 ************ • ::: ,:":: ,:;: ... ~::6.·.,::·~;'! .. J1f-tJ to ••••klilt frof ~ .. , •• NtM. Jt • :,:..-Ot e1t••• All •e••, Jt ************ J7ll llrdi St~.._,_. hec 17141957.0212 ., The Walsworths mar r1ed Aug. 28. 1959 and l>Cparated last Sept 11 They have two children William It . a nd Catherine, 12 -----, SA Father Sues/or Damages Damages to be de- tcrm ine<I in trial court a re demanded by the father of a 10..year-old boy who allegedly was badly shocked when his surf board struck an electrical conduit at a Newport Beach mooring dock. Named as defendants in the Orange County Superior Court lawsuit flied by Loren Hendrix of Santa Ana nre the city o( Newport Beach and property owner J .N . Congdon. It is alleged that Loren Todd Hendrix, 10, suffered severe injuries last SepL lS when his surf board touched ex· posed wiring at a point bet ween tr>8 and 828 Via Lido Nord. The defen- d.ants are accused of negligence. Tour Class Slated by UC lroiIW The UC Irvine Ex· tension may have the tour for you. Traveling classes will ranJ?e Crom "Yosemite tn Winter" ($120 plus trantpartation), March 30-April 2, to •:cu1tul'Jl Jmp•Ct OD M•ntal Relardatlori and Spedal Educattoo tn the OJ1 t" ($2,(81 Plus $UO tuiUoo), Ju.n4f JO.JulJ 23. Abo ottered are .. Jn tbe Steps of ,the Modieyal Pll1rlma" <h,f81 plus Sl.80 tu.dJon), Jul1 so-Aue. Jt: ••areeM: Upda.tJni the Claeal~al Arta't (fl,~ ptu1 t~\loo of $150), May U:June 10: and '"Tb Culture and Socle· tt of Provence" ($1,100 ~pth1\hng lnAtructlon), J' 110-M. Ad lUoaal lnlorma· dDn It H I• int ~.o;mlt.. ' Don't dishwash just the drinks. Wait till dinner is ov~r. Half loads ~ive you a good sock -nght in the pocketbook. Your tights should go out when you do. 'lhey cost you. Little careless habits. \Ve all have thenl. Your open dr)('lr policy c<ln cost you. See the dollars dnp away? )ou're in hot water-in more \\.'3}'S than one. Cooking piecemeal costs as much as a whole meal. But added together, they cost a lot. In wasted energy and dollars. Happily, the cbange from careless to careful is not a chore. It actually simplifies your routine. LQading appliances once is certainly quicker than toting two half loads. Shutting doors and windows is no big deal. That's what they're there for. vVquld yoµ walk around with a hole in your purse? Then shouldn't you zip up on wasted energy? Yes. Yes. I Make ewrv kilowatt count 4 se· Southetn Callfomia Edl8on Art E~ C>opo.1unlty tm~r 'f-- ··--c \ l I I , I t l I , I DAIL V PILOT A J J • • Balanced Savings: Ifs the way we help you keep your savings working as hard as possible. Here's how it works: You decide how much of your savings you really want to r 0ck aw1y ... money you I ave no intention of touching for at least s1i< years Put this money in our 73/4°~ Cr rt f1cc1te Account. Leave .t 3lonc. and 1l :1 e un 8 06°~ e yPLJr !or you. Thul s as high as any savings and loan pays on 11 ured savings. And it's higher than any bank pays. In fo ci. at our rate. you can count on doubling your money In less than nine years. You say you may need some of your savings sooner? We say no problem. Simply select one of our certificate accounts with a shorter maturity date •.. one that comes the closest to the t ime when you figure you'll need the money. Th1t's what our balanced savings service is all about. We help you sprei'ld your savings out to coincide with your lonq-term, m ddle-term and short-term savings go;:il~ In short, we balance your savinqs so that they'll work to your best ndvantagc. A Cono$C Guiil.: \0 savitY.JS Accounts .. 8.06%•7.79%* 6.98"•* 6.72°10• 5.39°10• 6 ~ Cer11flelle 4 year CertMa11 21\ ys c.nr11at1 t ye11 Ctrtit1e11e CO!!Vmtnte Accts. Sl.000 minimum $1,000 minimum SUlOO mrnimum St 000 mrnrmum SS muvmum 73/4% 71/2°10 63/43 61/2°10 51/43 Pw~r PerYnr Per Year Cu•reot rate per yeu •An"' 11 • e :1 'P.~ulls wftlft ~"'"'• ~ • CCl"ftf"l'lt,.."ed '11' "'"<j te•• .. '"'"' ... • • ,.,,,_ v-1• Gowwt'lf"nllffll r~uom '"*t $I.A: .1on1ti1111 pN\.l. '•1' O"I-.. 1., •r1ndt w.4•J frorr ,. •ut c.i•ei What about money for emergencies? That's where our 5'14% Convenience Savings Account comes in. Keep some of your savings in one, where your money will earn interest from day in to day out (again. at more interest than banks pay). When an emergency arises, here's whereto get the money you need. And you won't have to pay withdrawal penal ties to get 11. Meantime, your long-term and middle-term certificate accounts are safe and secure ... and growing in value. Of course, 1f you ever reach the point where you need more money than you have in your Convenience Account, we'll lend 1t to you against your cert1f1cAtes. Why not? It's still your money. ... ..,.,...!"" ................... . •• ,,""c..,,..,... .... ,._ • ., .... ~~·-... ~ ......... ~ -..... ... ~·· u...... ... ,..,...,...,... .. "-.... , ............ '~ ........ ( ...... · """'-..." ..... '~--... ._...~~···~--' ,,...,._, .. f?"'-•• ........... . . ,.. ............. ~ ,.._... .. ... ___ We'll help you find the right balance. That's where we're d ffcrent. We want to take the I me and effort to help you. You'll not only come out money zillead w1tt1 bciluhced sa\1ngs. but you fl also qualify for most ot our otncr f1ntlnc1al services. Mciny of 11 icm arc unique ... :111c1 all of them are designed to llc'p you sa :1c money. Let's get started now. Gome into any or our offices. Bring your pac;c;bol"'k from any other savings institution with you. If you have certificates due to mature soon. be sure to brin:i 1hcm . We'll handle all the transl er details at no chLlrge or inconvenience to you. You'll get a warm welcome. You'll also get a valu;:iblc Travel Planner I ree. It's a handsome folder of feather-like vinyl that has five compartments to hold the road maps we're giving you, plus any other documents you want with you in your car. It's a convenient way to end nlovc compartment clutter. Please bring the cour on below with you. This offer is available to adults only on LI one- per-family basis Sorry ... no phone or ma I reque • • can be accepted . Just for letting us help you with your plans • pie ... prlnt NAME ~--~~----~---~ ADDRESS~---~~------~ CITY STATE _______ ,ZIP _____ _ 0 My Fidelity Federal savings account number is· 0 I do not have a savings account at F1delily Feder.ii. L...-~-------------------1 ... where services make the difference ... SOUTHERN CAl6~NIA OF'FICU o Glendale: eoo No. Brand O aennow.r: Alondra & BellfloMf Btvds O Bio ...., lab: lnterialaln Shopping Center 0 Blue .My: 8IUI .»:-/ MaM 0 Cotta ..... Hewpon llellch: 1855 >qrbQ-Bl>t'd. 0 eutv.r Cltyt RltntlM Pla:le, 10794 .i.tleraon Blvd 0 ,ullelton: 01' No. Hart>or Blvd. 0 Ol~IUN! Coflege c.n1 •. 1173 East Alott• Ave 0 Long""" 621 E• Ooten Blvd. 0 Long heeh Eaet: Bpcty P&aza, 5717 Alelflc Q)ut Htghwly 0 Nofth Holtywood:VelleV Plaza, 6551 lA\n91 Canyon Blvd. 0 Nof'tMdge: Northridge Fashion Center, Pllmmer SL tnd Shlrf-v Ave. 0 S.n Pedn»: 29000 So. W.etMn Ave. 0 a.nu Ane'°'8nte: 2700 No Main Stl9et 0 8'*"'9n 0.ka: 14!!01 Viintura BNd. 0 Stanton-Genlln Growe: 12000 Beach Blvd 0 Tor1Wnc.: 24020 Hftthome ~. II P9clhc Coast Highway 0 Vu Nuyt: 1-C645 Vlctofy Blvd. °'*'Int Soon: Bu.nm Paltl end W.atloaAn9elff • . N ""1cN ~•pf Big S.ar ond SW Jay ... .,_, lrom 10 All to • fltl on S.tu~ Fund• dfpo$1ed by"• 10fl eam from the 1.t ~ held lo qu~r'I 11nd Fldrllltv FednJ S.VI• tnd &.o.1 Aatoeiattan .1 AJ2 DAILV PILOT , ( ~ I • Tuud•y. March 28. 1978 I PEACE OF MIND. SECUHIT~ I CONFIDE~CE. Those are the feelings you get when you know your money is safe at Home Savi11gs ... America's largest savings a11d loan association. Home has retire1nent programs to make yot1r future more secure, friendly people to make your visits more pleasant, home loans to make your dreams come true, and branches throughout Calif omia to make saving more convenient. Old dependable Home Savings. You get the hig~ interest, the security and all the valuable services you'd expect to get at America's largest savings and loan. NEWPORT BEACH 190 Newport Center Dr. near Fashion Island 640-6100 i\coounts are insureo to $40,000. With Multiple Account Insurance, a family of four may eep up to $560,000 fully insured. · Member: FEDERAL Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation Member: FEDERAL Home Loan Bank System Open Saturday, Aprll 8, 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. WESTMINSTER SANTA ANA 6951 Bolsa·Avenuo 1300 North Main Street at Golden West at Washington 897-3515 558--1212 GARDEN GROVE 11922 Brookhurst St. . atChapman 530-5680 I • ., r! ----............. __ _.._ • \ ~tN SI DE: •StOCH .Comics s !"":"~·M~o8v~ie~s:;,;:;:·T;e~·~'~e~v~1s~1ofan~:=J:~~~~==~~:s::::a!!55==~~1111-... .............. ' ............. f!OrtS "Jueeday, Mairch 28. 1m OM. Y flR.OT f 'r;-.--~., •I • 1 Givens' M~gic Show , Too Mucll ·for ,. ST. LOUIS (AP> -The in· ju.slice of wlnmng 29 games and & h earing only cries of "More! > More!" from demanding Ken- tucky fans cvaporgated into the S biggest snule Joe Hall had smiled all week .•. maybe all year "This is what It's all about," the visibly relieved and very ha ppy Kentucky coach told a couple of hundred sports writers squeezed mto a makeshift m terview room With Jack Givens putting on an awesome display of offensive prowess, firing m 41 pamts, m· cludmg his team's last 16 m lhe first half, the Wildcats s ubdued a youthful Duke squad Monday night 94-88. in the NCAA cham· pionship game in St. Louis' Checkerdomc. "I'm more proud of them as p e op 1 e t h a n a s b a s k et ba II players." llall said For Kentucky, ranked No I 'irtually the ent1r(' SC'ason, vie tory was a must. It had to hap pen, Hall 1nd1rated in a Sunday n<'ws c·onfcren1·c. or 1n lhe minds of Kentucky followers the entJrc !>eason would be a failure So, too, presumably, would hav<' \x>en the careers of four seniors -....:ho made up the heart of this Wildcats squa~ Givens, forward Rick Robey, center Mlke Phillips and super. sub James Lee. Those foor were freshmen whep Hall's team lost to UCLA in the 19'15 NCAA finals Tho next y~ar t hey won the Nallonal Invitation Tournament, and last season bowed lo North Carolina in the East Regional finals In between they had won three Southeastern Conference cham· p1onsh1ps and averaged more than~ victories per year ·'This ls what we've been aim inf for," Hall said m the flush of vjetpry. "ThlS 1s what our fans hav'e been wanting." After venllng his frustrations the day before the gam<'. Hall was asked if he might retire to his beloved farm with the Lille in hand. ··I can't answer that right now," he said of the possibility that the pressures of Kentueky basketball might drivt> him out of Lexington. Rut 1t all sct>mcd acadt•m1e a'> the packed house of 18,721 watched Givens perform has magic. The final score was ac· tually deceptive Duke, which s tarted two freshmen. two sophomores and a Junior, led on ly once, when Mike Gmmski ,.,. ftllo .. COACH JOE HALI... KENTUCKY'S WILDCATS CELEBRATE. e .... s·cored the game's first basket. Everybody seemed nervous at the out.set. Each team started with a turnover and with less than three minutes gone Phillips had collected his third foul. But only about six minutes had elapsed when the bigger, stronger more &xperienced Wildcats began taking charge. "We junked our game plan," Hall said. "Hank Iba once told me never to spread your defense from baseline to midcourt; that you would leave a big gap in there around the foul Jine. Duke was coming out and attacking our euards. We flashed Jack In on the post ahd they had to guard Jack one-on-one in that area.'' Gi··~nc:, an articulate 6·fOOl·4 forwaro. tossed in shots from all over the court. He was unstoppa~ ble Ills 16-point salvo in the final :J 52 of the first half sent the Wildcats into mterm1ss1on with J 15 38 ll'ad. With 28 seconds left m the gamt>, riding th.e c rest of an l'1ghl point lead, Hall poured his htlle-uscd reserves onto the court and let the starters retire to lbe bench in &Jory. But Duke kept coming, and 14 seconds later baskets by <;m1nski and Ken Dennard '.-.heed the margin to four. Back onto the court came Kentucky's ~tarters Eight seconds later Lee soared 1n for a stuff that dt•stroyed whatever slim hopes Uuke still had "When it got scary l took 'em out and put the kids back in who had done tl fo r us," said Hall with a v.ide grin. For Givl•ns, the NQ. 2 scorer in Kentucky's storied basketball history, it was the highest point total in an illustrious career. "G Ive credit to the other ~uys," he said with a modesty that sounded genuine. "They gave me some great feeds. I took one s hot that hit the backboard and went in. That was the kind of night I had.·· ··we came very close to play- ing the total game," said Hall "We came very close to break· in~ at e just held back a ltttlt> b1 cause or the foul problem" Givens was not the entire Ken· lucky attack, only about 50 per· cl•nt nf 1t Robey battled Gminski almos t to a dead heat under the boards and totaled 20 points. Kyle Macy had nine and 'lm<in Claytor and Lee eighl · ece m1nsk1. the 18-year-old s homore center who poured in 2 po111ts in Duke's semifinal victory ov<'r Notre Dame, wound u,. with 20 against the Wildcats and Jim Spanarkel, a junior guard. had 21. DUK I flll -8<tl\~S 22. 0.Mard 10, G!l'\IMkl 'O~•rrell •. Soan•r>el 21, !>udd•lh •. ~-I Td91•tt»J08 KlNTVCl(Y no G•••ns •1. Ro~y 10 Phillips •. M.¥,y •. Cl•vlor 8, Loe I, S<nHOtr 2 Wllll•ms 2 Tol•ls 3' I• u ~· H•ilUl'IW K•nlu<~y 0. Duke JI Foul~d oul - 0.~rd, "'"'""" Tot•I IOUIS -OuU 22, IC;t"-'"''Y 7' r.<1>n1tdl Ouk" ~ncl\. A -18 121 * * * Poor Shooting Costly Kenliicky~s Pressure Big Factor-Foster ST. LOUIS (AP) As the seconds ticked away and Ken- tucky's lead loomed ever larger, Duke fans began to look ahead to next year and cha nted, "We'll be back. We'll bo back." "We have a fll'tore.1' ~aid coach Bill Foster of the young Duke team that ca m e from nowhere to Monday night's NCAA basketball finals before bowing to Kentucky 94·88. "I'm not discouraged by the way we played. but we can play better." Duke was unable to put together an efrective fast break and was not hilling from out. side, allowing Kentucky s de· fense lo collapse on 6·11 center Mike Gminsk1 "He hurt us m every way said Foster. "They held people on the low post and flashed Givens to the high post I thought we would be able lo han die it •• but it seemed he scored from every conceivable spot. Obviously, we had a lot of trou· ble with Givens. I don't believe anyone scored that ma.ny points on us this year. "We're disappointed now, but only temporarily. We've got a young club and we hope lo bounce back." "With all of us commg back," he saad, "I feel that 1f we put out fi ve percent more ne*t year, we <.'an ttie 1i0ing .. hat Kentucky did totrigJlk ft : Spanarkel is the only junior in the Blue Devils' starting five Gminski and guard John Harrell are sophomores and forwards Kenny Dennard and Eugene Banks are freshmen. The average age or the starters is 19. Banks contributed 22 points Monday night, una,ware of death threats a gains t him from an a nonymous caller. "I was told of the threats after the game," ~nks said . ''I'm not going to run and hide. If that's what someone wants to do, so be it "l believe in God. and as long as l have that faith, I won't worry about it. r don't need any extra protection ... Aft ....... Garcia : No. 2 No So Bad MESA, Am. (AP) -As a boy, Dave Garcia sold newspapers and worked in an East St. Louis faclory to support his mother and four sisters after his father died. That, the California Angels' ma nager said, was the. Jasl time he had any real wor · ries And thal, he also said. is the • reason he d1dn 't worry this past winter when Angels' owner Gene Autry tried to hire Gene Mauch lo run the club. "I feel hke it's his team and he can do whatever he wants to try to improve it," said Garcia, who has s pent 40 years in, baseball and got his first big-, league managing job when he l r<placed Norm Sherry at the A"'?els' helm last July. 1 "I don't blame Mr. Autry for f going aflcr Mauch. It's just like l rn e .i s a . rnanagl•r , I "ant l o put the be~t ix·o· pll' on tht• fie I cl I I' ..in hnd · Be<i1dc!->. being his No 2 choice as not so bad The runnerup 1n DAVE GAllCIA lhe M 1ss America contest is still a pretty girl " Garcia has been frequently re· ferred to as "Dave Who?" since he got the California job. But although he's been cast as a less-than-charismatic manager, the 57-year old Garcia is in re· al1ty an outgoing, constantly sm11in~ man v.ith a quick wit .• DUKE SCORES PAST KENTUCKY'S INSIDE STRENGTH. The J\ngl'ls' manager said his lal'k of kmper outbursts prob· ably has hud a lol lo do with his image• Sov i e t Proble m? "My fi rst year as a minor leagu<' manager, I was thrown 1 out of <'ight game's in the first two months of the season," Car<'ta rel'alled 'The league president called me in and said. ·Young man, you're not going to make it 1f you don't learn to coo-It Wasn't All Roses In Korbut's Reign t rol your tem per ' So I learned lo control my temper and now I m not colorful enough ··conn1e Ma ck w<1sn't oart1cularly colorful, nor was Walt Alston J ohn ~tcGra" probably tht> greatest manager of all, was relatively unknown dcspitt> all his success " CINCINNATI <A P 1 Gordon Maddux. a commentator for ABC dunng the 1972 Olympics. says the Soviet Un ion would have preferred that star gym· nast Olga Korbut nevensurface. Despite her success. Maddux, who was here on a recent visit promoting gymnastics, called Korbut "lhe biggest problem rn Russia n sports history." Maddux recalled that initially nobody at the Munich games knew her because she was only a n alternate on the Russian team lier presence there came by grace of a teammate's broken wrist, he said. Maddux said she couldn't make the Soviet team outright because "she and her coach decided early on not to gear their per fo rm a n ces for the Judg<'s. but for the au d1ence " The Rus- ot.GA l(OIHUT s i a n g y m . nast went on to become a sensa- llon at the games and as the au· diences in Munich were over· whelmed by Olga, so were the judges overwhelmed by the au· dience. According to Maddux, Korbut received 9.9s for routines less deserving, but the judges didn't want to incite the au· dience's dis pleasure. Her emotions spilled out onto her performances, he recalls. "She was so unpredictable .. so human, it was unreal," he said. "You never knew it she was gonna be up or down, on or off. The only thing you \chew ror s ure was that s he'd eat eight full meals a day . She had a metabolism like a ragmg fire " Maddux said 1976 Olympic gym nas t ics star Nadia Comaneci was the best gymnast ever from a technical standpoint and that Korbut knew 1t before the 1976 Olympics began m Mon treal. "She knew exactl y who Comaneci was and why she was successful," Maddux said. Yet Maddux said television made Korbut look bad al Mon· treal by featuring her falls 1n slow motion and her t ears m close ups "We never saw the standing ovations every time s he entered the arena," he said. "She was stall the star, the one th<'Y camt> to see." Asked If he felt any undue pressu r e lo provide a w1nn <'r . co n side ring Autry!'> determined drive to improve the club b) spending freely for free agents. Carcia smil<'d slightly. "Why should I worry·> Pressure is for managers who know thev don't hav<.• a C'hanr<'." he said. "I know t•\'t'ry manager in baseball ~ays rn the s pring that they'\'e ~ot a great chance to wm 1t all. but we really do. If we d1dn"t havt• good players, then maybe l d feel pressure "And any pressure I mi~ht f~I in baseball still doesn't com pare with lx•1ng a kid and having to support .\'Our famtlv T o Play Base bal l Girl Grante d Okay HOUSTON c AP 1 Houston Wheallr\ Hi gh School baseball coach LuGene Jones s miled thr first lime Linda Williams asked 1f s he could com e out for the all-male team ''I wasn't sure if she was <;erious or not." Jones said. But her seriousness became crystal clear Monday and il was the 18-year-old senior who was s miling. I U.S. Dist. Judge Woodrow Seals issued a preliminary injunction which prevents the University Interscholastic League <ulLl and the ' Houston Independent School District (lllSD> from forbidding her to play on the boys' baseball team. "The court is of the opinion that at tlt1s time the league <UILl is in violation of her constitutional rights under the 14th Amendment - what we call equal rights," Seals said. "Th<'re 1s no real reason why she should not play baseball with the l<.'am " , Jones allowed Williams lo work oul w1Lh the Wheallev team unt.tl 1 March 1 when the UIL ruled she could not participate on the boys team. She filed sull to se<'k reinstatement to tht' team Se~ls stressed his ruling involved one girl at one school and "'as in no way to be considered a class action for all high school girls to C try out for boys' teams. "They 'kept the pressure on UI r eal well," Foster said. "We didn't shoot w:ell. We needed to shoot belt.tr to ol(set somt of our ills. ··we misaed quite a lew shots widerneat.h the bHket early and acatn In tho ecOlld bait. They p robably look bitser now than tMy aduaJlx w c.1• Grand Prix Driver Teach~ Safety .... Duke fell·, behind. 86 So mid way throuah tho a cond halt, then came roartn1 back to pall - •lthln tour hl the c lostnc 11llnules. Kentucky 'torw•td Jaclc Olvens, voted tht ,~, oflt nluabte player, was-Probably a bluer !actor in lho RMM th.tin l>uke'll ~d a~lli acoted •U point.a, lbo ·thlrd·l>est ever lA the .NCAA flnala behind Ill Wal '• ·po .nt frott 42'1>olnt 11me 1 Gall Goon:rtl!D tiolb'of tJCLA£ "Olvens wu 1'ot a he could be." Id l)uke uard J1m $puli'ttt. says. ''Attitude is going to make t.he difference in whether they (t.M atude11ts) drive ¥fely or unsafely. "When I talk with them , I give them three or four apeciric examples and relate tbem t1> what the youne driver can expect on the highway today. I don't say, 'don't do this and don't do that'. "We have an intelligent young communaty today and we have to appeal to their poslll ve tente ol pride." LWlleJ' beeaine lnlerest.ed in the pl"OfJ'aDl to belp blab acbool 1l\ad1nu tbroueb lrvl.ne'• Jerry Grant, • 1001· --- time leader Jn the series of programs to help youthful drivers. "Jerey and I have been friends for many years and 1 went with him o time or two to tlsten to what be told tho students 1n<l became ln· terested myself,·• Lun1er says. "We hit on lhtee key areu in tolklnai to the studenu. Flrtt ls aafety eqoipm•nt. We tell them to c:beck on seal belt• and make aure all equipment. b tunctlonal- tiru, wiper blades, etc. 0 Second wo tell them to bo alert ror a 1ltuaUon whJch may not be evid nl but could ------u ... happen and we draw ex- amples from our professional experiences. ''Third we tell them to drive with a bit of courtesy for the fellow next lo them. There is nothing dumb about being courteous and using turn sienats. etc. "Then we tic all three tocether under one heading of attitude. "The professional attitude we apply to racing activities ••n o a long way toward making them beUer drivers on the hlgbwaya. We 1ener1I· ly find tbct@ la a pretty 1ood See Graad Pri•. Pase B·I JIZ DAILY PILOT Arkansas Nips ND At Buzzer .... ST LOUIS ~ Hon Hrewer's 30-fool Jump shot at the buzzer gave the Arkansas Razorbacks a dramatic 71 69 victory over Notre Dame Monday night in the consolation game of the NCAA basketball championships The Razorbac ks, led by Marvin Delph's 21 points, includ- ing three key foul shots in the Jast two minutes, had pulled into a seemingly comfortable 69·63 Jead before the Irish made u dramatic rally Tracy Jackson scored a field goal with t ·o.t lo go and Kelly Tripucka hit another basket lo trim the Razorbacks' lead to 69-67 w1lh 37 seconds remaining With 22 seconds left, Alan Zahn was fouled by Notre Dame's Bruce Flowers, but missed the front end of a one-and· one free throw opportunity and Flowers grabbed the rebound and passed to Jackson, who lied the game at 69 with a ;umper at the 13-seconrl mark AltKANSAS 1711 Covno, 0.IDI\ 11 !>cl\•11 b. 8rt•tr 200 Mon<•l•I 10. hl\n 10, O~ntW11 1 To••I• U lt-2) 11 NOTlll OAMI (0) Trop.,. .. 10 B•llcn I~ f'1owtr\ 11, 8r6Ml"ll 3, W•ll•tm' I """'"~ ~. L<ttmbffr , J.ac~ ..... 11, WtlCO• 1 W001""9f I To1al\ 11 t>lh9 Htllll..,_ -Ar~tfl,_,\ ~. N~1rt l"•mP :16 TOldl fO\;IS-ArkM\U\ 19, NOhf' fJ•m.11, T~thn1C•I Ar~•n~• bl<ICI\ KfnfP Fall~ 3-0 TORONTO -Left wing Dan Maloney scored one goal and set up another by Larry McDonald as the Maple Leafs ended a five. game winless streak with a 3-0 National Hockey League triumph over the Los Angeles Kings Monday night Goaltender Mike Palmateer stopped 25 shots to record tus fifth shutout of the season. foil- ing rive Los Angeles power plays <.ilong the way. Nolan Shell.-d TUCSON -n rsii.:nated hitter Willie Horton drove 10 four runs wllb a pair or doubles in an eight-run second inning Monday to spark the Cleveland Indians to an 11-6 Cactus League baseball victory over the California Angels. The Indians batted around in the second against California starter Nolan Ryan, the second time the Indian s h ave manhandled the Angels ' pitching ace this spring. J)odgn-• Lo•e VERO BEACH, Fla. -Garry l\t addox doubled twice, singled and drove in three runs to lead Philadelphla to a 5·1 exhibition baseball victory over Los Angeles Monday, snapping the Dodgers' four game winning streak. Steve Yeager's seventh-inning homer orr Randy Lerch account· ed for the only Los Angeles run. -Whee~k De111oted TEMPE. Ariz.-Former UC Irvin<' pitcher Gary Wheelock has been asi,igned lo San Jose in the AAA PacHic Coast. League by the Seattle Mariners. Wheelock, who originally signed with the California Angels, was 6·9 for Seattla in 1977. Oakland to Sta11 NEW YORK -Baseball is terminating its <'ffort to transfer the Oakland A's franchise to Denver and is prepared to play the 1978 season with two franchises in the San Francisco- Oakland area, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn said Monday. ,,.,.,. .... Sotlflltt ATHENS, Ga. -Florida State coach Hugh Durham will be of. fered the he ad basketball coaching job at. the University of Georgia today and probably will accept. immediately or within 24 bours, the Atlanta Constitution said to today's editions. 12-11 Setbaek BASEBALL I MISCELLANY College Baseb all UCI Triumpfu; Vanguards Fall UC Irvine scored two runs In the top of the 10th lnnlna to de· feat host Cal Slate <Domincuez Ht~>. S-3, here Monday ln DOC· conference baseball action. Meanwhlle, Cal State (Hayward) scored three un- earned runs, ail the result ot in· Cleld errors, to defeat vislUng Southern Callfornia Colleae of Costa Meu, 8-1. UCl's designated hitter, Mlke Mayeaux, opened the lotb with a single and stole second. Mike Hirano drilled a Une drive sln1le to left, sendini Mayeaux to third with Mike Nable getting a third straight sin&le to bring the first run home. Arter two outs, Jim Dawson singled to get Hirano bome with an insurance marker. In the bottom of the loth, the UCI Anteaters turned tbelr fourth double play of the 1ame to end a Dominguez Hilts threat. Steve Borowski started on lbe mound for UCI and was relieved in the ninth by Mike Bolden who gained credil for the victory. AU three runners who scored for Hayward reached base on er· rors while the SoCal Vanguards were being limited to two hits. "'~"· .. W...,rf Of'ff~.cr .,,,...,. ... '" ·1c~., S.C•I o.1190* S.C.I C<Ml-111 .,.,_, WllM<I, l9 4 I 0 I • 0 0 0 51-l•kt, 1f ) • 0 0 JIOO Hovle,dll JOOO • 0 1 0 flel4N'•, 2• , 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 ._ ..... ,,, •• 0 0 3 0 1 0 T•l•1' » 1 I 0 k., • ..,, ....... ' " . 000 100 -.-1 ! > C.I ~t•lt ,....,_ .... 002 OIO OOa~ 1 t Blue to Talk With Giants PHOENIX -Vida Blue, no stranger to spring training dls- p u tes, saya he 'll return to Arizona Wednesday, but not neceasarUy to the San Franci.sco Giants trainin& camp in Phoenix.. When he returns, he wa.nta to brlng his money requests up dire<:tJ,y with Giant owner Bob Lurie, Blue said In a telephone .interview with Columbia. Mo., station KBIA from bis home ln Mansfield, La. ARKANSAS' ALAN ZAHN (20) MOVES BILL LAIMBEER OUT OF CONTENTION. The SoCal run came in the fourth inning when Mark Wood walked, Randy Greer singled and Mike Scheetz walked to .load the bases with two outs. A wild pitch got the run across. The tert-hande'd burler said he's "not asking ror the moon," but that he does want more money. J C Format to Continue Bill Riddell, a left-bander, bad four strikeouts white allowing seven scattered bit& ln losing. SoCal is oow 13·5 for the season and will play Spring Arbor, Mich. Wednesday at home (2:30). "They ain't giving up no money, they don't. get. no Vida Blue," be said Monday ... Fair ia fair." Blue was traded from the Oakland A's to the Giants earlier this month, but spent. just one day ln camp before dropping out of sight.. He turned up Mon- day ln bl.a hometown. Cage TolU7leJ Plagued by Poor Attendance Despite poor attendance, the state JC basketball tournament figures to retain it5 16-team form at and return to the Long Beach Arena next year. The tourney drew just 6,500 for the four days (22 ~ames) and ap- proximately 3.5-00 viewed the first day's action, s ays former Oranf!e Coast cage coach Herb Livsey, the tourney's director. "There's no question in my miod that had Saddlcback and Cypress colleges lasted three or four days we would bave drawn well," said Livsey. Instead the Gauchos were ousted in the first round and defending champion Cypress was eliminated in the second game. The Thursday night games were hurt by the NCAA Western Regional doubleheader on TV in- volving UCLA and Cal Slate <Fullerton). And with northern schools in the semifinals and finals, Friday and Saturday night attendance was bad also. But Livsey is optimistic. "We proved we could do it. and we also proved that. through the Shau g hnessy (conference) playoffs, teams can come to the stale tourney at no cost to t.he schools." Speaking of ·costs, $18,000 was spent to produce t.he tourney with the sponsor, Star-Kist, put- ting up $10,000 of that. A quarter of the $16,000 went tor rental fees. Originally, officials bad hoped to stage the tourney at Anaheim Convent.ion Center, but the ren· tal fee was a great deal Jess at Long Beach. Except for the poor altcn- dance and the tourney running an hour late the first day, it was staged very well and officials came away happy in that respect. A total or 21 Division I coaches were in attendance at the state tourney, including represen- tatives from most of lbe Pac-8, PCAA and WCAC schools. Guy Lewis (Houston), Lu&e 01.soo. (Iowa>. Jerry Tarka.Dian CRAIG SHEFF - (Las Vegu), George Raveling <Wasbla&ton St.), Bob Boyd <USC), Marv Barabmall <Wasblngton), Ned Wal k <Arllou 8'.) and Fred Snowden (Arizona) beaded the Hat of coacbn. Four area products-Vince Bleoek, Bill Springman, Tim Richards and Ron Meridith-are currently playing in the Riverside baseball tourney for Oral Roberta U. of Tulsa. Bienek, Richards and Meridith are all Golden West College products, while Spr1ng- ma.o prepped at Dana Hills Hiib before pl a.Ying for Cerritos. Bienek had a .400 average go- ing into Monday's game, while Hot Comer Reader Gives View Roger Carlson · In regards to your March 2S column about Newport Harbor's wish to leave the Sunset Leaaue: I thank God that the Oran1e County principals voted it down 54·1. I was never under the tutelage of Newport's present leader, Tom Jacobson. l un- derstand his first concern is the welfare of Newport. Harbor, but. I don't th1nk leaving the Sunset League ls in that best interest. The Sunset League and Newport Harbor are naturals. The past 10 yeara have wit· nessed the rise to prominence ln all areas of athletics for Newport.. l and many other alumni are part of Ulla era. Wei never operated on the idea or quantity. It. didn't matter bow- many bodiee were out for foot· ball or track or waltr polo (etc.). n maltsed what was in those bodies. Springman was batting .364. Meridith Ls 4·1, but has allowed only one earned run in 31 innings of pitching. And Richards has a 3· 1 record on the mound. Oral Roberts has a 13·2 record and is coached by Larry Cochell, the former coach at Cal Stale (LA). UCl,.....CQ ... , .. ,.. Hlr-,cf S230 M~.- N .. lt, If 4 0 I 1 Jfflll99ft. • Fr .. •-•, llo ) 1 1 1· Ma.,..11a, 91 We"-'nQ1CWI, rf ' 1 1 1 ~I, p 0.WWft, \b • 0 1 I eol*ft, p Wl<ll,.' S 0 2 0 T°'ala 1c .. ..., ....... 3ttO • 0 0 0 '1 • 0 0000 0000 '4511• UC trv1.,. ' " . 000 200 010 t-i 11 0 C1 OomlnQWH Hlltl 000 CIOO OU 0-. • t GRAND PRIX. • • TRIUMPH , . . ; RAY FLA DEBOE BRITI SH MOTOR CAR S 1fi. IB Aulo C~nlC'• D"lll'. ContlnDed From Page 8-1 response. We tell them that people like Steve Garvey lo baseball, Mario AndretU ln racing and others in sportsdoitbecauseofthelratU~ude.'' ing inside the brain of each driver. At t.hls level, you have very few ir· ~=~~~~~~~; respoo.aible drivers, Tbere are too I Lunger is really involved lo the safety program lbat. iJ sponsored by a major spark plug manufacturer. Yet, when it comes Urn.e to go racing, he will be there jast aa eager. Whal is the toughest course.on the Grand Prix circuit? "Right now I'm looking at Long .Beach," be says. "His&or1call~, Long Beach bas been one or the most de. maodlng on the cirt:uil-on Ule cars and on the drivers. · "There ls a Jot or stopping and starting, heavv braking and.1 heavy acceleratine. There is no pla~ where you can relax. "Even on the straightaway on Shoreline Drive. you are turlling as you drive through it.. There Is no question about the fact that.~this Is one of the toughest courses on the circuit." ' The starting line bas been switched this year lo Long Beach fo that st.ralgbtaway on Shoreline Drive. Th~ cars could gel up to 175 miles per hour before comlng to the first tum, a tight hairpin to the right. ''My feeling 15 that. the cbaDge will help," Lunger aays. ''Before, we started on Ocean Boulevard and bad a sharp right-hand turn that im· mediately went. downhill. This made 1t very difficult and lf one guy went wrong, 1t could cause a series of. problems. "What it atl bolls down to is the fact the drivers must stay awake and pay attention. Ir souebody does a stupid thlng, we are all going lo be in trouble. "By stupid, I mean having a driver trying to wln the race In the first cor· ner. U he l1 tryln1 to pass too many people and 1oee slldlnl past the tum- lni;t point, watch out.. Unlike USAC races, we st.art rrom a standing posi· tton. "It all depends on what ta happen• many good ones around and the equipment ls too expeoalve at this level." How loog will Lunger cmUne to drive? "When I achieve what I want to achieve," he says. "My fl.oal ob Jee· tive ls to win the world drtvtn& cbam· pionsblp. But I have interim goals along the way. "First. I wanted to get a tide ln a decent car with a decent team. I think I've achieved this. "Second. I wanted to develop a TENNIS MEMBERSHIPS $150 Annual Limited number. CAPISTRANO RACQUET CLUB 493-7676 competitive edae and I feel I have--------- done this, too. "Third, I want to flnish ln the top six in point ~tandlnp and I have yet. to do this. After I get aome polnta, I want to win aome races. "lt all sounds easy to talk about. but it gets a blt more complicated in reality." In 1974, Lunger drove in the Formula 5,000 ~rtes sports ~ar events for Corona del Mar'• Dan Gurney, then got his big break ln· Grand Pl'ix racing at the end of the 1975 season when a group of East.em businessmen wanted to put an American into t.be Grand Prix series. Is be in~rested in other types or racing? "The Grand Prix circuit takes up a Jot of time and I am committed lo do 18 races thl'I year," be says. "But ii the right situation comes along, I would like lo broaden my experience and drive at Indianapolis someday." For a political science major at Princeton University who spent four years in the Marine Corps, the 32· ---------- year-old Lunger has come a Jong way ..-----------1 n automobile racing In a comf U A CAR part1ve1y short period or ttme. FOR ALL And bis exposure to blgb school studenta on the safety and courtesy REASONS of highway driving may be his bli· gest cont.rtbuUon to society even lr he achlevea the eo•l of winnln& tho Grand Prix drlvln' c~amplonshJp. Pro Scores ~ ESTATE WAGON OCC Blows Lead At Newport that Inner quality w11 pride and the desire to wortc hard. U that meant shaving your bead, no daUna, a curfew and ·being in the weight room every day, we did tt. Newport atW does it. Enrollment doesn't. detennioe quality, only quantity. -JJ7ome n 's Results 1•17.0. 100 lft.nr-T ~ CH) 1:D.Z: F1ttlng "* ~ .. •... ::t'•• apofta cw. Mdln •nd-eot'I .. In OM. Eby go6ng. ~and possl>ty the motl .,,.,..... c. ewir deliltned- EL CAJON-Orange Coast College's Pirates blew an 8·2 Jead and eventually lOlt a 12-11 &ulh Cout Conference bueball declalon to boat Oro11moot Coll••• Mcmday afternoon u er-ron, walka and Groeamont hlta proved. too much. TM wtnn1na nm W'All acONd ln the bottom ot tho ninth when the wlnnert worked a walk with tho ba .. 1 full. Oraac• Cout pltohln1 cave up ulae walkl and allowed Groes· mont•1 No. t hitter nve hit.a and five ruu tn aa many ap- pearances at the plat.e. All ol tbla oe11ted what was otbtrWlH • · 1000 day at lb• plat. f ot" tbt Plratet, who acored nve Um• in the fourth~· to Jump to tbe .. a cuahloa. • rte P.,-'1 truw-nm tiotMt Sn the tCW'tb wu the blj hit for occ. 1" GJun Robertaon had t~o doubles and two singles tn five at-bats and Mike Sodden nroked a double and two alql.es tn the 18-hlt OOC attack. o....e c.tt c:.-... c 1 n .. ,""' Lafl'r-1c J a 11 ~".If .. Mlflfl. 111 ' 0 ' ' HIM!-.,, 11 o 0 0 0 ~.If .. rtltM 6120 '' 1, 1210 Sllll<Ml, p 0 0 0 0 ,_ .. ....,.,a 5 HI •ooo ft I tllluatl. it t o t 0 ... 11111. Ut "*'·" 0000 ...., • Wool•l'\f, p o o o t fl'rtclc, • ,..... 4111 .. .. a.rflett.. ec-w•.-... SI J t "2 0 I 0 1 I r II • ,. • tot on-11 " J 001 toa 011-11 u 1 * * * SOUN m.1111~ _...,,.SNH w \. o• . . -l I h 1 ' , I 1 I ' l ti\ 1 • w, •• 1"9 · Roger. you know that Bill Ba rnett, Bob Halley, BUI PJadc•, and 111 tbe other coaches at Newport "'ill con· Uoue t.o produce t.b.la quality type athlete. Docreued enroll· mentor not! HopefµUy the echool cllltrtct wlll HO t.&o llabt and tlillt up lhno lat1or scbooll. l and many other alumni hope that the COWl· ty prlnclpala wUl conUnue to de· ftat lrfr. Ja~•a propoaal. It lt takes an opposlnt aehool 1,000 or more 1tudonta to beat Newport, lhat•a flne. The Buldch type. tho Mul,oy type, the Albrlttan type, lho Corum tne. and all tho Otbe.r qu.alJty l1J>e aUtletee wlll cqntlall• ~ b6 W: ductd by tbt tradlUoD Uc! coaoblns 1tafl or Newport 11.atbor. ~.,. Brl•n "J'berlot, Alumnus 2. HIU-W 1:2U.; ~ ~ (i) ' ,.. .. .00 ,,. ~. 5-~ 4.!.t.1. Tt:tt It tod9f. litlij "The~llllbtwd: ... DICK MILLER MOTORS tlO W w<lr"',.. 41 M(a~ \cw>h &no \~7.icD ........ )di • ..... "'" ........ CALL 750-2233 flOa f'IOWf mftCI OUTDOORS I HARNESS RACING I TENNIS T~ay. March 28. 1979 What's Doing Outdoors tos Race Results Tlme-1.mtJ P0mM> NmlCE p CN01'1CE ~· al... IUPl•IOlll (OUaT or THI IUl't•tOllC0411tT Of' Tlll ITATI Off CAUf'OaNIA l'O• STAT• Of' CAUflOaMIA f'Oa Tl41 COUtifTY OP OIOJIGI; TH I COUNTY 01' o.AHG• 11M. ....,., NO.,..... NOtlCA Of' INTSHTtCllt TO $11.L NOTICI 01' ......... o tlCC*D lllAL paOl'llTY AT l'alVAT• ANO ,,HAL ACCOUNT AWO $Al.I llel'O•T 01' UCICUTltllt AlfO Ul•I• of ITA .. L.liY A AMI MAN PUBLIC NOllCE ,.a.,,out auuweu ....,..ITATWti\t•T ni. , ............. ,, ........... -"· 08A NOIHHWOOO PLAZA REAL TY not IMtllll Slt•I, ~·· 202. lt¥1ne, c.Mlltfftl• UJU 01v10 ~•I~ Jr , 1000 Port Cortlfl, Ntwl!Orl .. ~h. 1.111101ni• ~ PUBLIC NOTlCE l'ICTITIOUS ausu••n NA.MS STAT I Ml: HT The folio.t,._,_tDll I~ -.1\t b<lw• ,. ... ,~ •Ill.MONT "LASTICS COAi.# l'AkY. 2'1011 MOllnen P•r-w.v. PO. eox im. ~ 1-11111. CA m» \. O•rdner Corpotollon. UO• t' • Moullon P•rll.w•Y. PO, ao~ lttJ. L•tuN Hllh. CA '1Ul JIM NIEMIEC _MIMo., c:-, Tr•• lla•t •1llST •AC:S -One n'41t. P.ce. (IOIMI"' P\;rW ~.200 "''°raced -SlllMS -.... !>.twmlll $01111., Iva llye VktOt CMo H-¥0• krol<Ncl-SCWYs..n l'ITtTIOff flOll In laTTLlaol•l'T, 0•1 ~TA"4LIY A..uAAN, 0.....-. POta .... ~ .. Of' ITATUTOltY NOTI" IS HEllt•Y CllVEN tMI COMMIHIONI AND I'll~ AND C>r1 Ot ofl• ~II 17, tm. 1Uhl ... .,. .... , f'Oll IXTRAO•DINA•Y llt• ol 1(--"" OtQll. Alt-VS •• HltVIC&,, llOll IHUaUCTIOMI, L••• >U> WN CM•t Hltf\woY, S.Ullt llOa Al'f'OIHTMaNT Of' TaUIHI, 401, NtwPOt1 9Ndl, Gll)lornl•, t ... ANO f'O. f'IMAL DHTllllUTIOtl IHIOtfMIMf, Olr«"' M. MllNft, u T1111 ..,.._~ ll ~llKI b'f •11 lft· ........ D...,ld GolWllH Jr 11'h -INU ll lalne nn~t..i tty • ~Qfpor•llon OA•ONE" c.o.-PORATION • I' o o.,.,.r, Pr~°""t • ,l\il lUl-1 lli.d Wiii\ IN CQjjn\'..f. (lt•ll. ol °' .. counw on f-tl>. n. "71. Everyone seems lo be talking about tbt weather and outdoorsmen io Southern Ca1ifomi1 are no exception. All the rain has slowed both salt and fresh water fi8hln~ utmost to a standstlll lor tbe past few months, but the outlook l0t: the re· mainder of the'Spring is good. MtrCrHCI (MOr\welll 31 '° 11'0 • 00 10)0 ... •. tel llJICT" llUICC -One mlte P~t. 0.11111• ~ PwwJU40 ..... .,. .. ondt> l1'11 1-1 "'ft Ill.., Wllh IN Ctunty Cltfll .. Ortnllll '°""'Y on Morch u. lfll. f'IU SltP (~ti #1on191't ll.,rd < Rllcl\ .. ) (AWllll ' 40 s '° , .. UNOI• TMI WIU. , .. ,..,1rtw of lflt Wiii of 1M ol!o,.. bu.i. Of Wll.UMll H. ULMAk. 1111"*9 ~ Wtll sell n prl¥1te •• WILLIAM HOWARO Ill.MAN, Wtlt to tt-N_.,..t .,..s ..... lli*lltf, IU W. H. Set.MAN, tlla HOWARD \Ublect to confirmation bll i•ld Sil.MAH.~. ~lor Oollrt. au f1tl\t, 1n1t. 1n1,,...1 "'"" Pullll.i.d °""99 CO.•t 0.ll'f Plk>I Time 20M/S ,&Ito ra<t<I -Soft90 'Hiide, T1'e Otrweft\ A., M.i>ltr CIOlill. .... LA oder krtt~ -A>Alufn T ...... eo- Fr•nk 0...•tlon A f()'onel t0.10 MO LM~nl \. 8¥ (l(WO!erl • 20 ,,__,014/S Al•,_ -~ RedMY, Ad- ditt ...,, ~ ...... °"" <WI Ont, T~ntt·-Qlrl~ Mor. Jl, 21,~. 4, 11, 1911 IUH• NOT1ce IS HERESY OIVIN tMI 11\d •'1•1• OI Mid Oktdenl"' ow time·------------- ..... otfl~•"' •1c.Mrao.rn-~v·~•-••• ....,.....llMdl,CAtaM Sportflshing boats running out ot Newport and Dana harbors, on calm days, are returnJng to the docks with a mixture of fish, made up mostly of rock cod. John Hass, \\ho runs the f''ury II out of Dana says thal when he ~ets over to San Clemente Island on weekend trips the re is a good bass bite, while Doug n .. rmon, on the Clemente runs a o/4· day boat to local k e lp areas and f1sbes over deep water reefs for rock cod The brut situation has not been very good for local party boats, but should improve as soon as the ocean clears up from the heavy run-off. All the nutrition commg into the ocean should improve the bait situation lh1s season and hopefully bring in lots of big game fish. As spring approaches party boats will start ad· justing their departure times and salt water anglers are encouraged to contact their favorite landing to keep informed of these changes. Down San Diego way there is an off-and-on bite on yellowtail. When the party boats can get out to the Coronados, anglers are averaging almost one big yellow per rod. It is only a matter of lime before the yellows break loose and expec· tations are that we are going to be in for a good year For an update on fishing information and boat scheduling for the San Diego area, phone Fish- erman's Landin~ at222·0391. Would you believe albacore are being caught right now? Lon~ range boats are finding the longf1ns some 120 to 150 miles off Guadalupe Jsland. Last week boats were catching between 50 and 100 fish per day. The water temperature was a steady 59 degrees and conditions. except for swells were good. Baja s~a..ort Sta,.tfng Aoglns returning from resorts below LaPu report that fish.Ing is starting to pick up. Marlin. • dolphin and some swordfish are being caught off the Capt>, while anglers fishing out of Rancho Buena Vista and Punta Colorado are fiDding ~ellowtall and tuna fishing good, with enough roosters, wahoo and dolphin to make for an excll· ing day's fishing. Marlin fl~hing will not get going around Buena Vista untU the last week in April, when traditional· ly. largf' schools of ~triped marlin move ln with dolphin and stay in the area through October. AH So11tltl011d ~a~ FuJI Every f1shable lak<• in Southern Calafornia 1s as full as it will ever be right now. Jn fact, there is so much water flowing into our lakes, that dams have had lo open their gates lo relieve water. Fish- rng in general is extremely poor. The high, mud· dy and cold waler has caused the fish lo be very reluctant to take any kind of bait. As soon as the water clears a bit, probably within the next two lo three weeks (providing we don't have more heavy ram), f1shmg s hould return to normal. All of the San Diego city lakes were closed at different times this pa!>t week, and the opening of Jo:l Capitan, Hodges and Sutherland have been de- la) ed. ... Bo•• Oudook Good U lltcto ~ Cr....a & ....... ''°'· , ... , ........ SICOllO a.aca -°"" mllt. TfO(. (l•Y..•nt ~ """' .. .IDO Dulltf'e .. -CH••P9•) ">• uo too ,. '160 J,"40 JM Eddlt le.1111<1') Bold Slrtoll I ~I T1mt 2 O.JI, AllO rtctcl Fral'ICIS SnowdOn, Kelly's Kolmuck. Vern Star H-r, Dirt Nttd, Abel O..tr S<ralcl'lt<I EIMI 0 Emer- THIRD ttACI! Ol'lt mite Pact. C-tflond CC0-11 ) yUt Old'&. un- Otr P\.lr W '2,700 W•lk•lt•no (IC...Olerl J 00 l 60 1 .0 81110•nc:erl"-tr•I 400 JIO Hoilrte>llS Br...., ( ltalthfordl J 60 T1me-lC1'2/~ AllO ••UO -Ocunblrd, Will~ Won1<1. R-Dlrt<I, AnOyl St.Ip- per, lrtne·i Kl"9 Scral<ll9d-J R Melton, On Ml9'0 ltOUllTH RACE One mllt Pace. Cl•I ming n.nolc..o. PurMt ivoa My Dougl\ CWhtelerl 4 ..0 1 40 2 10 lobuco <Goudruu) 1 IO '" A<oulsl•~e Clt111tbl.,.I 1 ,, Time -2.0. Also ·~"" -E•w Vel¥tl, Alldy'• Dean. D•tmonlt ~tar, Point Purdue '><••ICM<! Paper ·covnt, Loe.al P1tnc1. E•llle TrNwtt U l11<U 2·MY OWt4I & S.T9N•o, ~ ... ., .... '"™ ltACf One milt P•ce. Con<Jlll.,...., ICD 11 Purs,e '3,.00 Jau Feillv•I I Ra1c11t0<dl ll ..0 4 10 J .o K••P Ho"'SI (C.Ordonl J 00 ? .io SI ff PY B ;e Bye I OYM10•" 1 • 10 No Kr at<.llei U IH<ta 1·1.lldl't" H•-.. 2• ._"'"""-'*•u•.• tlVINTif ttACa -OM mll•. Pon. Co<Mlltloneo ,co.1.1. l'wae •'·'°° A·HIH'fl<-.. n!l>Mln CW!Mei.rl • oO 5 00 2 Ml A·$0iper Slrlk.e CO.Ml-> > 00 t Ml N•vllle J-H CSpr•GQil l IO Time -2.004 s Aho r•<ed Total Fr•1g111. J C Hoel, ltlppjng ColOntl 5'rtl<htd -~,.,.,_., A·Jlm Oenntl lf••ned enlty llOHTH llACIE One m1lr. Pao. C4nd1Honed tCO-ll P\orw 'UOCI ........ llloyltUJ 32M> Bit ~1119 CCrogtwnt Gold R""99181Kkl'Mn) Time -um s 1160 700 10.00 4 10 2.60 AllO ra<e<I -Mr 8•no1t, 9old DHlgn, Sue Foyle, TUI"' Blossom, KlllQ Llll'rll>W Sc r•tc1'1d -MUI!. It Time, EOword EOtn U E•HU 2·MUHI t. 4•alt s.ri .... I' oltll S 1,181.SO NINTH ttACIE -One mtlt Poe~. Clelmtnv l\Mtdtcop. Purse M.•00 Oono•OllA (Aubin I 11.60 6111 Btndtr c L.ocoolel No COi \Gordon) Time -l 04 uo l<IO 180 160 120 /.ISO ra<•d -W•se Move 1', Flam lnQO Miu. Deck Hand, ~a l\09t!Y, c;o1cres Scr•tcllfd -S«n11a Lute. B•v fllQl'll $1 Eucto ~Oonev•" A & • 119 ltMer, P•IO $>IJ to /.lltndance -),2tS ELllAll!T'H "ER"Y :.ELMAN •• , a1h1 .. 1 .. 111.-•llrlQbl,llUt,a!Ml ln-PUBUC NOTICE Encvtrlx --Wiii of WILLIAM H. ternt .... ntet• llH acci11•••d by ?~LMAN, ~ M 11~ .. ~t'eln a OC>ttatlon of IM or ot1w1rw1 .. , 01,,., •t•iU -cono .-Id 'lnotl A(uunt .... ".,.,,1 INll °' In .oi:llllan to 11101 of Mid de<.e· of e .. ovbt-,..tllltn ~ ltj Sttll• oenl, In etlCI IO IN( c.ertaln rMl Of-r NOTlctl TO CR IOI TORS IMflt, for All-. ol sa.tutory c.m· I I ff I t11t Ctty al Coste MeM "0· AotC1U m1UIC>n$ ..... --, ... tor£• ~:·of~ .... suiteOI <Allfomlf: ~u~•lllOllaK.lllTOl'TM• lrtOl'dlllll"f Sen!Cft, ftr WltloCllOfls, de•<rll>ed • lpl..,,_, :lTATI °" CALll"OltNIA '°R IOI' Apoqlnl!TWftl ol Tr .. ttt, w !Of' "'" Yndlvlded --II ml••HI •• It Ttte COUNTY Of' O•AHOI Final Dl•lrlllUllOtl undtf 1t1t Wiii, r• Nnl In <onl"*' In .... It Owl -llOn In IN Melt« of IN 1!1t.te of I! ltrtl\Ct to '""'<JI It -'°' l~tlltr OI LOI 21, , .. ,..._ ........... , U.0-LOUISE TOWNSEND .... Ef'FIE pertlculM\, -,,,., .,. time tlld on. m•P recorded In Booll t , ..... JI LOUISE TOWNSEND, OKN~ plKt Ol l\eotlllQ.,. -,,., l>ttn YI of Ml&Ull--Maf)i, rt<Otel• Of Noll<• ,, ~ .i-10 ('r..,llorl tw Aprll 11. tt7' . .i t ·OO • m , In tllt Or•nll• CO<lnty. Cehtornia, more M\;lllO dalml 09tlntl llW "''d O.Ct courtroom of °"1l*fll'Mfll ) of told .,.,ucul•rly -·-as loll-• dent to Ille Mid <-'"'-In IN Olfl<• of COufl, •I 100 O~lc Cefttw Drlw West, BtolMI"' 01 Ille lntet"-llOn ol lht lht derk of Ille olof9SOld court Of' to Son•• A.no, C.lllornl• Ctnltr llnK of ..,,....Im Aw ...... •l'IO p<tMtlt '"""I• V. llNMf'11QMO •I Iha DATED Mare11:U. lt1t H•mllton Str'Mt as Wld oenuo •l'IO ofllc• of M<Kenno ...., Fllllf19, Al· WI LU AM I St JOMN lotnty> ot ~. lAlS Wll""r• 81.0., Cltt" ''•••I •re •llo•n on u1d mop ol S<lltt 2900. LO'J A"991•t. C.lllornl•, ll...-l•C. Lal91 f •lr•l•w F•rms; thence We•ttrl'I' wf\kll l•llolr offl« 1, Ula .i.u ol tKnl· LAZOllaMSWANSOtl •lon11 the(..,,., line OI "'d Homlllon ntU of IN -.IQntd 111 all ......... , A~•s.iuw 51'901• 124 00 feet, tlWftCt Southerly ,.rtol11lno to Yid nlttt. Such c1<11ms • 01ono • llne _..i1.i to sold AMhtim lf·»••«-SC.-t,iwte1a /.¥tnllt, tS.40 IMI, U•llCt EHl.,l'f wltlt lht n«.-Y ¥0UCherl rl\l.lll.,.. '"'°...._CAmtt tlled «.,,_,.,el 010<twld within Ott l tll-1,. OIOft9 • line _ ..... to.,.. Ufll., 11-lour monl~ Oller IJle tint pu1>11u11on -1.-o--. GN1t 0.ll'f Piiot, '::,. '°c~n~t~1'11::' !''~~OO ~:;:. ol this noll<t. MOnllU,211arld"""11 ;J. tf1t Ul .. '8 tl\tn<• elono tlle ce111er ll11t ol Deled Mar<h 11• tti• A11alltlm A-. tS.)11 , .. , 10 lht ~·=:·~ ... cir::;. PUBLIC NOTICE pol"t ol l>eQlmlno. .,. .aid~ The P•-'V II c-•Y llno-M<KIEkNAAMDf'lnlMG •nd rtlWrecl to 111 ~7 M.tl>lt A¥0""9, A NOTICE INVITING •IDS--"°'''Mer.a. Calllornl•. ~:.:'re":vc. ,ubllshlO 0r-. Collt Dan, Pllof, •rch 1, 14, 11, n, 1'11 '°', • PUBUC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS IUSINIEU NAMI STATEMENT T1't fOllOWlnQ ~-•re dol"9 D\1$111es1n· IL 8. PROPERTl•S. 1U • Merlntrs Orl¥O, NewPOrt llHcll, CAllllorn11 t'JMO Tl1t1otlly Pl\elps Heltllnetr, ,,,., Morlntn Drift, N••Pol'1 Beech. c.a11 tornl1 t>WoO Jolepl\ IMHO, 1900 Gall.llY Ori,.., N-Pofl llHcll, C.hlornio t1'60 Tllll bllSIMU II t0ftdueto4 lb'f • .. nerol por'l/'9t'lNP TlmHoMSino-r • T1'1s st.a-I WU llltd w1tll ti.. Counly CIOtll of OrOf\99 CtNl'll'f on Merell 10, W7t. t<•tl•t PubllsMd Or'-Golll O.ily Pllol. Mot<ll 14,21,2tll'ld1'pclU, 1'71 1oi,.7a PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tl\ll n .. \,Ille Is woj.CI to Cllf'ttflt , ...... hil• 1te0 H•ltd prooowi. tor turnl•hlt111 al CO¥t110nl•, ~ltlorls, rnll'lctton>, •• L.n •-••· C.ll"4'nlo ,..10 PICTIT10US8USINU~ lllebor. mattrlels, equtpmen1. serv1t1on\, rlgtll\. riQlllS o! willy, encl Publlshtd Or.anot c.oe.i D•ll'f Piiot, NMllESTAT£MINT tran•porlatton and MKll otlltr 1~11111<11 eaiement>o! r~ol'CI. Maren 21, 2' lrld AP<tl 4. II, ttll The 1011owlng person Is dOtng l>u•I• a• ma v b t t e Cl u 1 r • d tor ll'i f 81ds or ollen are lnvltt!d lor uld 11208 neu" CONSTRUCTION OF STREET IM· pro~rlY end mu\l l>e in writing end i-------------TIFFANYS OF HUHTINC.TON PROVEMENTS FOR BAKER m•y be Of'llVtred to tl1e eJ<eculrlll l-1J.R80R, 16903 Algonquu1, f1unt STREET FllOM ?IS fEET to •SI per">On•llY or lo tile oltl<• of her al· PUBUC NOTICE 1notonHorboul'.CA'11..., FEET EASTERLY OF FAIRVIEW lotnoys, Keene llnCI D,..,, alJ3 WHI Brot11erslnt.Aw,lnc.,<1Calilorn1• ROAD, wlll be rece,...i by the (llV 01 Co.st Hl9llway. Sullt <IOI. N•wport FICTIT10U5 •USINISS corporation, 169CU Algonquin, HVtll• Coil• M•w al Iha office of lht Clly Buell, Celltoml• 9Ml, or may !><! NAME STATEMIMT 111Qtot1 Hertiollr, CA~ Cltrk, 11 F•lr Drl¥e, C.o\I• Moo, lllf<I 1n the o!flce ol 111e Clerlt of llW Th• lollowir19 !Mt\ons •re doing Tho< bustneu Is condll<lll<l l>Y • cor. c111torn1a, """' tiw l'IOUf' of 11 00 em Su~lor Court at .,.Y time ati.r llW bul4MU 11 PoflliOll. on April 11, 197'. al wltlch """' tMy llr\I pubhtdllon ol "'" notice and A M E R I C 14 N L I p 1 O Brotlltn In lAw, In('. woll be opened puC>tl<ly 4Wld ,..., ti-twlor• lhe ~k•no of '"" wle. I.ABO RA TORIE s. 4l• RhlM, CO\ la Larry A. ROI> on '"" Council O>ambe" St•led pro-Th• lerm!o •"" cOtldll•<>n> of sale: Mew. C•hf0<n4a '21r.:I• Tiils slat..,_t was filed wlll\ th• POWIS •hell beer tl\e tlllt of ""' _..... cu1' 0< pen cast\ and part crf<lll, Ille Rlc.,.rd o ~nwood. Ut Rlline, Coun1y Clerlt ot Oronve Countr el\ •nd ,,,. ,,.,.,. of the -r but no ltfMS 01 such credo I to be acupl•blt Costa MeY, C.lllot'llle m21o Mucll 17, 1m. OIMr dlsllngvllhl"IJ maru Any b<d to l ... un<ltfMglW(I -to Ille Slll>er>or Terry W. Oltlom, 639 Rt'lllll'. c;osi. FtlSO.t rect1¥.cl ofler IN "'-""llKI ctOMno Court; ten pucent ( 10'1 ot the Me\.11, ea11tarni.UU6 P11bllslled Or-Coast O.lly PUl>t" time tor the nKtl1)( of bkls sn.11 oa re• emount bid to 1<c_..y lht olltr, Tl\il bu••~• I\ con<llKltd b, 11 Mir.21,:zt.Apr.4.11, 1'78 1066-78 turnf<I 10 tllt Olclde• _,....,, It JllOll •nd Iha bal..Ct to be .,.,cs .,_. con-t)tnerol pertMntllp. be the \Olt ~lb<llty of Ille b'-t 1trm1t1on ol salt b'I' tne SuperiM Ridlanl o. ~ Alamitos Entries PUBLIC NOTICE T .......... Ma,.,..U 111\MH l'lnt "'"'7 ;U FlltST I~ -Ont mllt. Pact. Clalmlng PvfM 12,200. Clolm1119 pr Ice U.000. M.trts lO percent. Bye ave a. ... ceor,.1101. 8fn90' scot (COMOY). Oc•I• Outch C Barker); Stnt)a lA11nn CLa<••YI; Careltu Rodn•Y CL.aCo•ttl, P1nol1nd N I lt•lcMordl; .Jelftr"°' E•P•en IMl\llttlll; LlllOlkld \Grundy). SECOND •ACE One mll<! Pace 5 year old> & under, non-winner of \600 11,.1 .,_..Y twice Pvr .. '3.200 Armt>ro Troco 1Aelc111ordl'-J ;•1 Glory (R1<hmondl; Htbet 14merlcano (Dunt\IOlfl>; Su!Jtr Slam t O..nnl•I ; 8 C Mio> I O.yloul. Wan 1aw1n Ch<b CGoudrt•u); While l•Y I Desomor); Sh•du• ouutor (MarkwrlU THlltD ••Cl Ohl "'"' Trol NOfl wtnMr SlO 000 11·18 Alw ehQ•· lllt non·wl,_.. slS,000 17·11. II non· wlrlaer 01 P.000 flrit rnonev In ••~Is atHt~. "''° •lltlbl• opllonal clalmers, SIS,000 Pww '6.lOO Flnal Cell CDennlU; A Elan D Emereud• 1801\llel, A Love Coast Area Sports Calendar M•chlne <Gouclreaul; Hell~ln 11.•Collel; S H So"9 CRllc1'1eJ Qul<k Pkk N (Olffl; H_., E•IM'nl CCrulseJr.);~CG<'undy). A· -SMlly~au en1ry llOU ltTK .-ACE -One mile. Pact Clelml"ll ,,_lc..c>. Pvrso U.400 Mares lO pettenl. 4 ...-1r oldl 4S per c111t. c 111ml119 pr;ces $>1.ll00-4.SOO. S11cceulul Order CMtrohni, Je¥elon -wit n.act.eyl; AHll• A<llol COt-r); Tim Tyltr tGrvn· dy); fl.,_, Gar°"' ( 8trno0, J B Ftdor (Short). P•I Myer Fiii• I Pt•-...lnel; O>arod IS.ylttsl. FIFTK •ACE-OM mil•. P•u Clalmtng l\lncllcap. Purse $S.400 Clalmln11 prices SU.000.13.000 8oltro CNel C 8/llr~..,I, H T Drool! CWlsherdl: Swift~ CHardle); Prosser' I Sj>irll (Tlsller), Surl Board I GregMyl; Royel YMlt N (,,.,kin». M l\ler Fallacv IAubinl. Sen9• 61Kyrus 1a...11>yt. SIXTH aACE -0... milt. Pece Cl•lmlnv twlndlQC> M .. K 20 ~r­ cent. Pww SJ.000. O•lmt"9 Pl'•<H SS,(l()().S,100. P•trlCk ""4'1' (Oniqmanl • Lucky P1r1dt CW""lerl; G•me Tim• I B•ylenl; Eyre Qu•k• C Ku,l•I. Sktppyella CClllll; SIOf'MY Go•v• I Sllerrenl; S•ndY P1c-(Aublnt SlltUn H•-N (RalcMordl. IEVINTK RACE -OM rn!le "•ct. Hon.winner Sl0,000 11·1' Of' \l,Ull In lost s St.ar1S.. Also tllgibl• non·wlnner i11.soo 11·1t. ti non· •Inner U.000 llrsl money In l•sl S start .. Purse U,300 lowe!Mtllilllicllsrt<el...Olnproper Court. T••H. rents, oper111ng and Thls sUI_. wn flltd wit" lM time. nw1ntenonce •-· •nd p .... m1um1 County Clerk ol Or•nte Co11ftt'1' on 1--------------A Mt OI plans, Spt<l•I Pro.lllOM on 1n1urenee eccep11ble to the MV<I\ 10, 1'18 l'ICTITIOUS 9USINESS NAME STATEMENT and -llHIM to Gonff•I Pn>•lsiom 10 purc.lltM•, W>Oll De prorated n of the "1141 Ille Sl•lldenl Spt<tll<otlCWIS may 1>t GI>-O•lt ol rt<.Ol"dl"fl of <on¥eyan<,.. Said PubllsNd Orlf'99 CM't Oolly Piiot. talned at Ille otflc• ol 11\e City HI• will be m•CM upon lht ui11al Morch u , 21, a-~I•. 1911 ., .. ,. Envl,....r, n Fair 0r1 ... Con• -.... esc1ow 1trms Colll0<nl1 UPOfl non rotuno.blt ....... T~ pro.-rty IS to l>e sold on an ''.K PUBLIC NOTICE ment ot '1 00 An aodlhoNI cl\ .. ~ ot Is" ball" u<ei>t .os lo ttlle • ....., ll'le un· U 00 wlll De m4lde It ,.._tO bV ,.,.,1 der"f1Md r8'ff'lltt the right lo re1ect 1--------------Pltns, lPO<ltlUllom •nd 011\er con any .,.d •II btO$ l'ICTITIOUS •Ui!NESS tract documenh may also t>• ,.. D•l•d AMrcll 15, 1971. "AMI! STATEMENT amlrwd al 11w °''"•of the C.lly Cler~ OorOlhY M. Ahlman, Tht toltowlno P"flOn Is do41'19 bull• ol uw Ctl; of""''•-.. EAKutrt• of the Wiii of E•cll b•d sh•ll .,.. m•d• on 1111 5tantey A. 14htman •U Prope>>OI lot'm, ~•I> P I 1nr0U9h P I SI Miiey Al\lnwn. Dec pro•lded In '"' controcl do<um.tnU, It-• ud o;..,. •nd •h•ll be •C<ompanleo wltn • Attwnoy• at uw certlll•d Of' caih•tr's cl\Mk or • bid J»J W. Coo~I Hlt11wav. Sit •OI bond for not IH• t~n '°' ot llW Newport IN<ll, CA tUU •mount Ol Ille bld, m.o. .,.yeble to lM hi: C110 ~ City ol Co"• ~ No -·· '""II Atl ... Myl lor Eucvtri• De coMldered uni~• accomjMnled by Published Ora,,...e C.O.sl Oally Piiot, neu.•\ REAL ESTATE PROPERTY SALES co ls.&4 ~. fa1•¥1tW Ave .• Sanla Ana. CA 9'170-I Jooph Charin Curolt 1U54 Lel9hton l..lt., Huntington !Moch, CA 9'1646 Tiii$ bUsinHS Is <ondUClMI lly •n In div1du•I JMeP" C¥toll TM f1>t10Wll'l9 per'°41$ ore do1nai DUWntnas SHOWCASE SINGERS, 416 C..nw· lion, Corona<lel ""''·CA 9262S Linde K. 8¥ktr, 411> COrnation, CMDf'I• del ""''· CA 92625 Jolt a"'11.num. nos1 eoro.ro. M"• ~on VltiO. CA Jenlc.tt K,_lton, 16eOW. Tt<lmar, • 22, An.i.tlm. CA nl02 FreO Wlcknlck, JS91 Redwood, lnrlnt, CA9'171' Thi• bUsiness" conducll"<I by •nun· 1ncorPOraled assoc111111on Oll"ter thin .. !WI rtnnshlp. Llrlda IC. Barker T111• suit""*'t w•~ tiled with ,.,.. County Cl•rk ot OranQO Counly o" F tb. 21, 1'71. ._ \UCh ca\h1tr'l Chtek, CHI\ Or bldOer'S Mardi l I, 11. zt, 1~11 llO"d. No bid ..,,.II be comldt<ed UlllHS II 1111 ,. Thll sUll-1 Wal l1lfd wll1' llW Countv Ct•rll. ol Orenge County on Publlstied Or""9't Coast D•ll'I' Pilot. "'°".. Mtr< ti 1, U, 21, 29, 1'78 M.trth J. 1911. Is m•<M on • blMlk lo<m lurnllheel by -l!IO City of eo,ta MH.a end Is m-1n accorclan<e with Ille provllions of t!IO Pr-WI requlro-f>ls PUBLIC NOTICE -------•tMte Eo<1' l>i-r mint l>e tlamwd end also proquolllled H r~rtO Dy I•• Tiie City COun<ll of 11\e CllV of Co\I• Mew rut"'8 !tit ttlllll to reject •ny or tll IMdl • EILEEN P PHINNEY City Cltrlt ot lht Cl ty of CM to Mew Pubh•htd Or.,. Coo" Dally Piiot, "''"" u. and /4p'il J .. ,. •~--------~·~ PUBLIC NOTICE Cl'-'d1 MOTi CE Of' SAl.E 011 a EAL ~aCWER'TY AT PatVATI SALE ......... ,. SU~E•ICl't cou•T OF THE UATEOf'CALlllORNIA FO" THE COUNTYOFOltANGI In the M<ttlW of Ille Estlte o! PAUL H FOSTER. aka PAUL HERSHAL.l FOSTER, ak• P H. FOSTER. 0.CHi.d Publlslled Oran99 C~st O.lly Piiot. Merell I U, ll, 29, 1918 PUBLIC NOTICE "'CTITIOUS aus1 .. 1ss NAMI STATIMENT The totiowtno per sen 1> dOlno but.I tteiS ·~ CHRIS CYCLE CENTER. ,Olt L~una c.nvon RO.CS. UllU'\I e.~n. C.llfornl• '1651 James Grttn, 2'71 Alt. UllU'W Blvd , Lafjljfta Bt~h. C.liforn11 ,,.SI Tiii• bul4••n 1s ~ltd by •n 1n· dlVldu•I J-G<'ttn PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USINESS NAME STATEMENT Th• toll-11'19 Pltr$0ns •re do1n9 bu\tnenas JTOO Bulldinq • L.Jm•t~d P••IMIWp. 1'°' S. Hall..,.y, $.Jn<• Ano. C•hlornt• 97111S Torence A. ard S•llV E. Wthh. GeMr•• Pan~. 1JOf OlllonS Lane, NfWPOtl Be.och, Cahfom1• 'Jlil>O N1<k E •n<J Hora O. C••vlon. G~neral P•"'-· 12931 SIWif19Wood, S.nta Ano, C.hlotnl• 9770S Bass fishinit s hould be very good this spring in all southland lakes, especially for those anglers who like to work Rurface plugs along the shoreline. Shorelines on all lakes have been more than doubled and this opens up a lot of nshable water for spawning bass, crappie and bluegil. This water should produce excellent fishing for years to come. Big Bear Lake will be a good fishing area th.ls y.-ar. probably one of its peak years for both bass and big trout. A good water supply will keep the ......... (Mof'<ll 191•1 lleuball Coron• dtl ,...., •I Lt11un• 8eacn CJ Ul: fl 1ko •t Co•I• Mow ll UI. MIU lon ~lo •I Sot1 Clt,.,,.,.11 CJ UI. U"l .. r'~ly ti Dene Hiiis U 151 Track -L.ulhtt.., 10r..,..1 •I trvlno Hlglt )•IS) Volloyl>tll-OCHn Vltw at io.lwn Cll: Or•nge C.0.•I 11 El Ceml" (ll, I.A Herbot' 11 Golden WHt C'ollellf 17 ;30) Tlme Strotm <R•tchlordl; lkn M.,lne (Desomer); C•¥allor N I K ...,t>lerl; 1t1pu1 Rt<J C Rllchlel . The 1119 W (Gordon); Oanctt COft Mister CWHllot'MI. llOMTH •ACI: -One milt. Paco Clelmlt19 Mndtup M.t•H 10 ~r· ctlll. Purw '3,4Cl0. Cl•imitlQ pritts '4,0G0-6, jl)O, Hello Owney N C"""rollfll: Ed's L•urle CC.rulse Jr I; lt•malll I Ktrm•lerl; Ian CGr-l; Sltefalon N C Llgnll\•111; NOOle Low ( S.,.plrol; Study Goin IC1•ne1; Lordy Boy CH .. dltl. NOTICE 0' INTEHTIOH TO C•IATESICU•ITYINTE.R&IT IStn. •101 ..... 107 U C.C.I Noll<• Is lltrtb'f ,..,.,n to the creditors ol Con11,...,.1a1 GradlrHI ~ Pa¥1ng, Inc .• Otb10<, -t>ustneu add•e"" 17"'1 L. Sll.v P•rl< Clrclt, Cl· 1y of 1rv1 ..... County at Oranoe. Stet• ol Cattlornla, tMI • -Ul'lly lnlU•\l ll abOUI 10 ~ cr""ltod trf Ott>tor •r>d qranted to Soni'-Bonlt. • C.lllOfnlt Corpor1tlon. S.Cur..CS Pa•tv • .,,.., .. bu1lneH eddreu Is 000 CAmpul Ori ... City of ........ port l\HCll, CovnlV of Oranllf, Slat• ot ~hfOf'nl•. Holk• 1s ~tel'f 9lvt'11 lllal tl\O un· ct.nlQned will sell et Pnvete wle, to lllt 11101\nl -DHI -· lUbje<I lo conllrm1t1on of w•d Superior Court. on Of' aller 1111 •t11~of.+,orol,1971 •I tlle olllce of GRISHAM, VANDENBERG, NOTT, CONWAY ~ CANNON. 120 E. OcMn Boule¥tl'd, Su1l• 1000. Lo1'19 Buch, CA tol01, County ol 1.os An11elts, Slalt or Calltornlo, <lit 1111 rlgltl, tlltt end In· INHI of vld de<N~ al lM time of 00111 encl •II 1./19 right. lllle and ln-teresl t1'lll lht osute of wld dMHs.d Tiiis ll•l-1 •H lllfd with tM Counlv Clerk ol Oran99 Countl' 011 Merell 10, lt71. f'tnO Publilll<HI Orenvt eo.nl DlllV Piiot. Morch U,ll,211tndAPtil 4. lq/& 1010.,, PUBLIC NOTICE ::~~~·=-~y ::..Ii~~.·.-.:..~; SUPllllOll COURT Ott THE l ... t of uld dee-, et the time Ol STATE OF CALll'O-NIA 11011 Cl•YIOfl F•m•IY Trust. Genor•I Portner. Earl E and Kl11hu1ne 8 Cl•ylon, Truslws. 19411 S..1nt J..O.. Ot1vt, Santo A(la, C.htomo" q21os Tl•" bu11nn• •s <OftductNI by • llmlled p.ar....,.srup. Term<~ " Weis/I This .i•tem<;-nl .... , toled w11n ,..,. County Cl.,k ol Oran11e Coullly ..., Much J, ltlf. Ft07>t Pubh•l>NI OrartOlf Coas! O•ily Pilot. M .. cll U ll,19,aprt14, 1q1g 101118 • popular lake in prime condition. Large lakes along the Colorado River have not been affected by the rains and are starting to kick out some good largemouth bus, striped bass and trophy·slzed rainbow trout. t'or an UP.date OR fishing the river area give Smitty's Bail and Tackle a call at Bullhead City. Trout Fbhlnfl N~an Oymn1ttlcs-Huntlflgton &a.,:11 at Ed111twood (J• ISi; w .. 1mlt1l':t' •I San Cltmtnft IJI ' Ttnnls-Cot'Of\a dtl Mor et (MUno eeocll. El Tor~ at eosu Mew CJI. Unl¥eralty ti o.tto Hiiis Ul, Mlulon Vlelo et Stn ClttNlllt UI. Hu,.t• lt19lon •H<ll •I La Qllll'llO U U). Seddl•btcll High et lrvlne HIQI\ U 1$), Rl.,.nlOt CllY College Ill~· dllt>ack Goll-ct p.rn.), Artionwis otUClnrlnectpm). C.lrls l>oskotl>all Santo Mofllc• Collt90 ti Golden WHI (.ollege 14 p.m 1, G~ at ~ coast Ctll ... C7 JOI 0 1•1• lofllloNl-1.ot ,.,,.. ... cc •t Golden Wost Collf99 UI, Or•,....e Coast (.ollega at SanU AM (J:JOI, Hunll119ton 9N<h at Un1wn11y Higll UI, OcNft ~ ot (Ap!W-v.i1ev (JI Girl• treclt t.uttwran 1oronoe1 et INIM Hlgtt IJ 1S1 ~,, __ ,., IOMNll-Pe-01 SNdC-11. NINTH aACE -OM mile. Paco. Clelmln11. Pur~ $A,000. Cla1mtn11 prlet SI0,000 Prairie S~hlne CSllorU; Royal A lelt WIV I KU.01..-), V1111.t•s lA<l I Aubin). Vic I Tar C ll11lllllilll ; 6on1porte Ollp CM.trohnl; A·l.lt.bon Led ( OesoMHI; Crap G•mt (LICOlltl; Ser191 Co41)y (GoudtNUI. A·Slt"e O.S-. antnr College, Prep Net Results lht pr-ty, 1n generel. In wlllch tht -:..curllv Interest will be created I• ll•luru, equipment, fu rniture and furnl•111nQS .,. Ott>IM wt.ow buSIMU ts kno•n as (.onllntfll•I Gr.01<>11 & Pa¥1ng, Inc., Ind loc•lod •I 11911 L Slly Park Clrclt, Clly 01 lf¥1nt, C.t1forn1• Tho alot"Ka•d -""''" l••ns«llew1 will i.. '°'"""'""'led on or elltr ,,,. llh d•Y of 4'!rll, 1911 •I Sarlll-&ank, ..,,,_ addrotU ll •700 C.mpus Drl¥O, Ntwpe>rl 64!och. C.llloml• So far es Is .. _.. 10 Ille Secured P•rt'f, ell bu'\lnou nam.s end od dlH\tS "'"".,., ll'te Otblor tor Ille .,.u lhrff veer\•~ ,.,... Oaltd -cl\ n , 1ue SANTIAGO BANI( BY St•~n L Holl>lt•" Vtu PTf'\ldenl & ""-n"~' -:..curtO P•rt; SANTIAGO •ANll CIO!lll\, In end lo all IM corteln reel pro· THE COUNTV Of' OltANGIE petty lltuated lnll'le Olyof 9ulfl0 Perk, NO. A"'514> County ol Orlln9t. Stille of CalllWlll•. NOT I CE Of' H llAlt I NO Of' PUBLIC NOTICE porlleularly clts<rlbed •• loll~. lo PITITION "°" , .. O.ATE Of WILL. wit ANO l'OR LETTERS THTAMEN· l---,,-,-C-T_IT_l_OU_S_t_U_S_l_N_E_S_S __ Loi 104 of Tract No. 2JOS, as sllOWn TARY ANO AUTHOltllATION TO NAMf STATEMENT on a m1p t_.tof re<orded '" Book 103 ADM I N IS TE R U H 0 I: ,_ TN E PalJtS t lo 11 lnclUSI~•. MiKellant....; INDIEPENDENT ADMINIST•ATION bu~rn~\~o!~ow1ng persons are doong Mae>s. reconno! wldOrangt eounw: Of' £STATES ACT. NEWPORT PRO WATERSPORT5 EXCEPTING ANO RESERVING E•l•I• of ALEEM DlJkCAH, EOUI PMENT, 1220 W. Coa\I THEREFROM -41 of .,.., oH. ,., Ond DtceUed. ollltr 1'ydrocarl>on subst1ncu end NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tl\lt =••'I'. Newport ~Ith, Collf°'"',. mlnerel• 1v1no 111 •nd uriOtr wid lend WILLIAM T. KING,..., lllt'd llertln • Ro~rt Jo<oph Mlshica Jr., 11~ or produced and sned lhertfrom petlllon tor ProC)ll• of Wiii tl'IO tor 1()9elher wtlh 1111! rlllllt to ml,.., drlll. L.ellers TPSUlmeniarv 111d Aull\0<11•· Ave Ori RePO~o. S•n Clemen!•, bOfO and r..,_ from be,,...lh lhe sur lion to Aclmlnbtff ...-Ille lftd*pefl· C.lltornl• '16n lao of """' •-· •I any l•vel SOO feet dent AdmlnlJtrotlon 4lf Etlille Act, rt· Ouncan MacGrf90"' Mtln<!. 11/ II bel-IM sur1ace of sold IM>d wt.,_t. leren<• lo Wlllcll Is ...-for furtNr luaro Ad• G.orde<I Grove, <:4111,,.,..1.a IW>•tv•r. anv rigltl to enter 11pon ti•• porllc.ul•••. and 11\al the time and '1604 surlace ol 11\e ,_ orwtlh•n SOO Itel ol pl.ce of -1119ttwwmt1'H bfotn ut Jam\ll;d N. Kiartl, 10811 S•im.....- t!IO surla<• IMfeof as""'"'""' in ck· lor April 1t, 1911, el to am., In '"" L•n•. Huntington 8ra<n, C•ltforn•• f<ls of re<ord courtroom of ~rtmenl HO J of ,..., '1Ut. SUBJECT TO Ccwenanh, condl· court. el 700 Ci.le Ganie<' o..iw Wes\, T111s buslneu is conducted by e lions end rtttrlchoru ar>d rttwrvlnv In U.. Ctty o1 SanU M•, C.lllornl•. ~n.,•I ""''""""'D ttw eesements set for111 in 111.ll cerl•ln D•tld ""'"" U. "" Ja""1l•O N K ,..., 1 O.ClorellOll reconita May "· 1'SI In WILLIAM I!. St JOHN Tll•S \lalemH>I .... , t.l!ld W•lh 1"" bOO~ 4'9S, PllQe 429, Olllclal Record•. CounlY Clert C.ounl,. Cltr~ ol OranQC Counly on In lhe office of lht County Recorder of KINO, c;ASIE & Olf'l'ORO "'·•«h 10 1'11. The area around California Pines should be <'xcellent for trout fis hing come opening day later next month. The North Jo'ork of. the Pit River usual· ly gives up some brown trout in the four to eight· pouod class This season all streams and lakes are in prtme flshm~ condition. For more information o n this area telephone 832·9871. The sprini:t run of steelhead on the Smith River an Northern Cahforma is about ready to break loose. Veteran guide Al Kutzkey says this should b e a good year for the ironheads that run to 20 pounds during their sprm~ migration. Coll-n 301, s.tnt• AM et or ...... (OHi Coll-n . JOI' SPrllll Art>or at S...tNrft C.Htornla Coll-U >Ol. T r1,k-Newport Harbor •t Wt1lmln&tW, Hun41"91on 8etKll at l'ounl•"' Vallt'f, lidl_, ot Marin•, Coron• Oel ~r ot OoM Hiiia, Ml• alon Vl•I• al Lewun• Bet<1', UnlvorJllY et El Toro. S.... Cltrntnlo ot C.tto MeM. .. ._.. ot $al\IO Ano, Francis Peril•• ....S Anny·N.tYl' ot C.plslr-Vellt'f Cell 113· Ill. ArlreN State 1'1 IJI UC 1 ... 11111t ~ Wlllllm\ !II de! SNrt>Kk H, 1·S, L .. ft o. .. n-1 o•campo110t1vo Kow-1 llOadl, CA '1WO Put>llshed O'•noo C.0.SI O•••Y Pilot, Marc1'71, 1m 1110.71 6 •; Sle CASI Ott WOOldr~ 10-1-S., 1------------- 4 4, •-4; WaldnWn (14SI dtf Oldon· 1>ur11 •·2, S.1, ~t . Ander'IOll CASI clel SultlVtll 6•0, .. 2; Sl•ldtr (II lltl Mtrm•11•0t1 , .. , 7-i; Corroulllars PUBLIC NOTICE .alOOr• .... Countv 11tl. f'_St,...I F•ttU •mort c0,,..,._1y kMWn ••· 5119 Lo\ Witt lib Pvhll\ho<I Ora,,.,.. Coast Oallt Piiot. Hitlos,e .... P..0.,CA90620. L.esA"ltl•,CA•IT MarchU,n 21,Ap,.14,1911 C/. 90610 Att-y1 I•: ,.. .. ,_ Ttrms of wile cull rn l•'tlfful money Publlsll<HI o-.,,.,,. CoOlt D•ill' Pltot. ot lht Unllf'd Sl•IH on conllrm111on of More.I\ 27, ll and Af>'ll J, lt71 ule, or p.,l cash and bal•nct Ull '• evidenced l>Y not~ •uu,.O by PUBLIC NOTICE ----NOTICE OP 1011 la Pl'BLIC NOTICE l\filler Tops JC Swim. Clockings Aody Millt'r or Golden West has the fastest 1 .000 freestyle among California Junior college swimmers and ranks second in three other event~. Miller'!> time in the 1,000 free is 9·47.60 while he bas clocked 4:46.SO In •the 500 rree, 2:12.9 for lbe 200 breast end 1:59.90 for tho 200 in• divtdual tDldley. Another Golden West swimmer. Jel( DeMoU, ranks ntlh ln the 100 free ( 43.40) ind alxth in the 50 freo <22.10). Golden Weal al. o h the third best Ume In tho •oo mcdloy Telay (3:42.10). Gym110sllo-Hunllnvtew1 a..<11 ot Morin• (7); Newport Harbor al f'-•••n Vollt'f m \/olleylMlll-Ca9i"'-Voti., et Edlaon 111 TtMl.......santo ......... •t COl'.w Ml Mtr m ; ~Coll• at Ore111• CHU ltll Oold•11 west Collt9tt at Lii ,,.,..._CC (2); Sod- dleM<ll c.i._ e1 Clll'\IS m . Glrla ._..,.ll-4M 0emtnto ot U11lvtnlty UV.-llM<fl llt 0.M Hlllt, l!I T-M car-•I Mar, MIUIOft VlelO ot Colla Mesa, EdlMll •I Wntmi ....... Founi.lfl V•ll•Y at Hunt1ooto11 81ocll. M•rlno el H•Wll9f1 HotW (all ot 11; "-'HI el l!st-i. 0 :IOI; llol .. o.-.-1 et 0<Hfl vi.... (4 •> <;lrl• .-,-tl<.S-Olto Mesa o1 """""''°" IHC1' ()); Co~str­Valln •f $ar\~Ul. CASI dtl AclMM ~2. 7-6. l>Mlll• Woldmon·Slltrbeclt IAS> d•I w1111am1°Stolder •·4, •·•: Sit· Anderson CASI def wooldtldQ•· Mcktm•rt .... ••· •·4; Sulllon· N•9•1 (I) Otf lhflTllnUn• canoutllen .. ,_ .... vanity U•llNnMT ('4\'ll ltMl I._ SI..... . Da'I (U) lolt to SalAlM U , belllnd to Falt?I o.i end mired, dttt11ti.<1 10 PllllllpJ, def to Btrri.: Mllltr IUI lost 4 .. , -~2. w.' I, Mt.,., IU) IOSI 4 .. , 6-1, _, W , !Ml >-4. Pocktr IUI l<Kt ,..,_, s.u.~, ~ Strobl·WOICtll IUI dtf Doi\· Museno• 7.s. '"'· del C.mpbtl\. MlcktlHn ••· 6'0; Hlckall·Oilwson CUI IOSIH,$-7;~1\1 ... U. VA"11TY ut-11t*11 m'll Ul\\1 f'MO!lt 5'tlllat MldltlMll IU 9-t to Wlllt H, ltst to Cllornlltf'lllft M, Oel Mkon M , ;Mt WlltOI# ... ; Oovk!Mft (L) toll 1 ... M, -.. t. •t H; WOfjl ILi I.st t'6, ..._ M. M; T111tlff IU Iott ........... u. ~ 0 .. f,.,..JoflrMft tLI ttllllt with ..._ .......... "'· ... ~ ,......, ~ , .. : , .. ~ (L) !Ott .. 1.U1M.H• ~.,....,, "'-'~rt~)~ ...... ,. ...... ·Dr11111a11 tu ., .. ""'" u. 1ott " OM .... '"1 i. SlonNn s.1, IMt le Oliflft M ; l"lllttlln CU tottM, M , , .. , t .. ; ,.fltA IU .-1 ..._ ,.._ ?•, t-PI ~ (U Mitt,_., W,U,.U. .,_ ftKll•.._. (I.) 141111 wltft ~lth­ lorrtl • ...._ '"'~ Iott to Ou111111f Hllll09"' W, M l ~U (LI .......... , .... ,., IU:g~i;:P~:l~g:TIOtf ~;!9::.d~!i~i>:::=~d PUaLICKEAltlMG Not I<• Is l\ere11y 11lwn INI puriuonl IO be dt~ltdwlt1' .. ct. CNl16 Pur,uant to~ of \lie Callfor111• lo Ille provisions of Stcllon .S..S.14 ol 81dt or olMfs '° ,_ II\ W!'IUOll end NOTICE TO QeDITO•S GNsl•I COMmlsslon, Notice of Pvl>l•c Ill• rulu and re9ultllon\ for tlM wlll be real_.. at tM _._.,.Id otfke ·u~E••--uRT OF TH• Htarln11 Is H<nlrY Given. Said P\IOllC ,,_,. '" """"' llttrlnn IS ~ed Ofl Ille A~ll ). Ftcltral $o¥1ft9j end LOarl Snt•"'· '"" ot any tll'l'IO • .-fN'flrtt pub41utlon STATI OF CAUl'ORHIA f'Oll tt7'. 'Aoendo tor •ppllcoll;,; for Pac II le. F-•· SaVl"llJ encl Loon At lltreOf end lltfott ...... a.... TM. COUNTY 0' OttANOll -rt'l'lll, llumlMt' ....... -s OS sul>ml~ 90<lat1on, Hollywood, c.111om11, II•• D•tacllllls13111NyOfMorcll.tt71. -.•-'tllll ~ ,.. ..... ~ ..... llled an a~kollon with Iha FNar•I VIRAM. llEID ' £St It ef IUA MARii! MARSH by Ml~r .-Id .JoAnna SN!plro. ~ Hom• L-. 8onk tor pennis.ion to 140l'lllnllhtor Wlltttlw Wiii all.a .:ARIE E. MA"S~. OKMMd. ' ~IKI ttCIUHt Is to permltorectlon of HltbllSll o f'911UIM' bl'~ll ltc:llll'f ot ANWllM of tllt Eat• NOTIC• 1$ Hl!.-tlY OtVEN 1tO the a l-POl'ory 7'11"° <ti ~. tU copy the corner of Lincoln Awnuo tnd of Mid~. c..-.tora fl tN ~ 111"*' ~ •rt• Uluml...-cl, "*'-' sl9ft .,.. Giibert StrNI ......... Im, Gellfornl•. ••llMivo\. VAHOl:N•E••· NOTT tl\el •II .,.,_ ""'1nt clolme ooehul ..... 1.1n9 w.i.t"YClll pr.,tln • ., It. r ..... l"•'lon ~. -~11 ~ c:o .. w•v • .............. d 1....,. 1 ..... c...tertlrw on Front~ Ro..s. "" -.,,.. rtd -ver-to 1•"1. :::_-·~ tlll Sii ~ ar1 ~,_to f le wllll <tndltlon Al 16591 .A.dml Oll'f 11\t oltlct of IM Suoervl_., Agenl ot ~ -·-~ tf'4m, wl11' ew M<•MrY _..,...._ '" • ' tM sold boenl loc•llKI at Ille F-11 ~,... ,._ o#fltA., .. cl-"rof 11\t .--W•Y· "unltntton Boacll, C.lllONll•. Homo I.Ml\ &lfllt of s.. FrtllCIKO • .00 '-Mt .. --. oi .-a ttllM <~ .,. to p;_, lhtft\ W"" 'lokl ~ pullll<. -1-wlll (Gm Callfornle Slrttl, S•n Fren<l>eo, A"""'9Y'I ._.......,.._ ,.,. ,,.cent'T vOll<llotn, It ,,;. un· -0 •1t00•"'-onAPfll1 t•lt •1 Calll«nll wllll Wiii --°'"IOMd M tlle leW office of THOMA~ HU11ll1>11I011 llMcll CllV Couftc•I Cl\am• Ally pertOft mo't Ille communlCI· Pul>llSN<I O'-~I Delly l'tlot I.. LORD lnll Po-dll V•ltnel• l>trs, lOOO Ma111 Sir-HI, Hunt1noton llon\, l~llldlno bl'lei,, 111 fe¥or « '" MOr<1' 11. 11, AprllJ, lt71 Sllllf 2u'. Laguna Hiiis, CA 926SJ: BHcll, C1lllon11a, durot111 wlllt1' 11.- prolest 01 1110 IDOll<ttlon at Ill« 11 .. 7' wltltll 11 tt>e pier. of bu~.,.., of 1111 oll personsel~fa¥0f'•"9«-•"Cl •lorH•ld lffl<t of IM S ..... Nl-y undtt1'1Qfttd In 141 mettwl Ptf10onll'IQ I/It appllOtlon ••1111 be hUtd. Attnt wltNn IOcla\'I tor wllllln JO dtYJ 10 II• ntete o1 YIO ~nt, wll/11" P"f!ll~ °'"""'Coan Diill'f Poot II tcMt• ll llled witllln t11t tint 10 dtn PUBLIC NOTICE too-• mon!M tltlll' tN 11~1 IMl!kotlM M•rcll29, lt7' IU?-7• •UlllflO lllOI Mer• llmo Is ne.-to of "'" "Ollct. fllnll•ll ._,,.,.. 1n1ormo11on1 efw cr•n• oe1ec1 FtbrUM\' a . 1'7' tho d• .. of INS DUIMl<•ll .. 9• copl" NOTICll TOC"'IOITOal DONALD Hl!RMAN MAltSH ., ... .,~c.c ... .,..,..IO .. lllM. SUPllUOR cou•TC>f' TKtr AOnllN\lfalorot ... n•t• NOTIC:t: TOa.l!DITORS Tiit •POlk•llon ..... •O cornmunl<• UATE Of' CAUl'O•NIA f'O~ of.,...,.... NMM ••nt SUl'&lllOll cou•T Of' THE llOfla In ,_ Of In Pfot"I tMreof .,.. THOMAS\.. l.O'ID p ............ ~uon ~ .,.., .,.,..,. TN• COUMTYOPOllANG& U1U ,.,_ .. .,_.., .... 11) 5TAT&Of'CAUl'Ot!NIA Ott ol t1'tt 1l1irf\ald tftl<t 11 lllt .... _,.. LAI .... Mtlb.CA'*' TM&QOWITl'Of'OltANGE. ~,_.,,._....,. EUote of BEAHARD WILLIAM Ttl. OH) 911...... -.._...., !"klfk,..,•IS...~ e1ERMAH,D•c.eHeO. .._.,,.. ....... ~ Es••••., f'RAMC:ES o .. ~•c.1.os. kOTIC.I! IS 14tREBY GIVEN ID 11\t Ooc'ff\td. • tMn A\~lottloll '"'°''°""' tllt..,.,. NINCI ~ ""'bllJllHI Qo-11191 C:..st O.Uy Piiot, NOTICE IS HE•E•Y GIVEN to .... "'°''"""' Clrefttt Cloffi l>all'f"""' tll.lt oil ..,,.,.. ,.,,Ing dllt!\1 .... nst Martll J, 14. 21• 1', ltll c...Olton OI ,,. *"" M"'8d dt<»°""t Mllfdl ». 1'71 '*" "" Ml,_ _....... ~ ~fff ., tll• -!1 11\tt ell pe,_ ...,,,"' clalt'ns ... 111n !-----------'"" 11\e"'• ~ N _...,.., ~lltri, Ill PUBUC N,_..CE ,,. ••Id dt'""1t -,...,...., to II .. tMoll~el .. cM-jll ol tlltaltoweOfl• va• IM"'· wllll IN Ill<_., vouclln•, ~ 1111'' o6urt.,,, Ci111r~ ellt"" wl11' tllt OlllCI Of h Cttn OI IM •bo¥e ~· , ______________ • , ...... ~ ~-..... ""' Im-"CTlnOUI IUSlN&SS llli.d (out1. or to pr-1\t lllttm. wl1'\ "CT1T'IOUS8tl&l"UI dtrlltl'W•N"'wtlfletof fHOflMS NAM&aTATIMeNT IM ntc .. Mrv vouclltrs. to lht IM• NAMI STAftMlllT I.. \.ORQ. •t ...... W V•ttncl•, T1't fol-lftl Jtf'MM ert dolnO 1Mnl9110d ot 114 HollywoOCI Wor. Tllo fOllOWl"I pertoft• 0,0 0<01"9 Soiltt 212, IAflHI• Hlllt, CA '202, ""'''~' M. 8u•ll•lll<. Galllorn111, w1'1t?I '' tM llUMnest ... wf\l<'I IS ... pie<• of bUMMH .. '"' L I M I r ' D • 0 I T I 0 H ' plKO .. tMI-OI IN lllldtf'~ '" To I H •I I A It I Que llNll,,l9ned lft Oii Niters.,.,.,..,.,,.... T•At4StHD, 1US 'W1'1111., Avt., 1111 -lt~•-tol11<11Q lo 11\e t.iet• o1 •D'TAUi.AHT, !WI ... "' ........ ,,. ., .. ,. d Mid--·· •ltllfll Yll• M-. u.mn ••Ill ·~-t. w•lhln lour "'°"''"' "UJ1llnt\011 IMtll, CA nM1 ltw "'°""" elttrr IN tlrM !lllllll<ellon ~--rt I.. TllC(I,, ICl8t Vollefo Cir., ofter Ill• flr'll s>ubllt•ll"" ol '"'' VltfMr c: .. ~ H ··-· IM .. "'''notice. OMto M4wCAm» Miik• • Orlftll A,,.,, ., .. , ....._ ...._11, CA Dated f'ltWuorftt, Im. ~I.. AiM~. t9fWllMM« 001• MMdlt, 1tll ...a WIL.UAMA. lllRMAN ,,. ... ,CMte~CA~ ,,_H Riw. Ti.la ~·-, la ~..-.C1'"' .,., • l _._ .. .,.. WUI Of This ... , .... II CtlldU<lef.,.,... .... ._........ .. -INlll or ""'''"~ tNIMot'ltN""'°de<c-t ,_.,..,~ -~-tthr-• ti. ...... M"MdO.C ..... f Nw H. 1(1-TMOMAI L. I.ORO M•lnenlll lllUSStU. iUtO NC>tlas TMI ~ "" fl..., wtlll n. l:nm Pa_ .. ..._i., h 211 lt ..... 1..1'11td ........ .,._.., ~~af::,t"' o..,. c.-1, .-=:..,.::,~ d!::, ·~ :=,:•c::=, ': ~=,..... .,. . ..,., • ......,.~ ., ..... <111',ltlt " ..... ,.~ • Mii.Ni °' ...... ClMtt 0.lt'P ~ • ,,.,,,,_. Or.,. '-1 O.llV l'ti.t, "'nat 1'111111\Mt 0r.,.. ClMU Dlll•y ,....,, ~ u. ...," ~ 11. ,., ,,,_ Mlln:ll 1, ~ 11. a. "111 .,_ P"'911..., a-_,. a..e.t Dall, l'tMtl ~r<ll U,n , •,,.,...1•,1m OMl'I ~\......,"1. ..... t,1'.Jt.•,fo ~q ~ PUBLIC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE I 1M-.. JI.I l)AJLV PILOT T'*lday. Mwch 21. 197' Business Results 'Uncertain' Delay in Lease Means Dual Report for Safari Lion Country Safari, Inc., lrvtne, has reJ>()rted its 1977 results in a dual manner because of conhnwng uncertainty over a previously-announced lease a~recmcnt wathStahl-LacaJ, Inc. Harry Shuster, president and board chairman, said the dual report was necessitated by delays en· countered an implementing the lease agreement, which was to have been consummated Dec. 31 and made retroactive to Oct. l . The company's unaudited results for the year 1977 therefore are reported under both eveo· • Lualities -assuming either success or failure of the proposed lease agreement. Stahl-Lacal has not made a SS0,000 payment due Feb. 28. Two earlier payments totalling $150,000 have been paid to Lion Country Safari by the escrow agent, in accordance with the agree· ment, but Shuster said the propspechve lessee ..---------- has not completed its(oc BV.reolNESSJ financing .for the project ~ and lhere is no assurance , __________ _._ that at will do so. Negotiations. Shuster added, are continuing. A proxy sU.lement was lo be mailed to Lion Country Safari stockholders seeking approval or the proposed lease as soon as financial require· ments have been met. Additionally, Stahl-Lacal must furnish the landlord of the African wildlife preserve and theme.amusement park with further jnformaUon before the reqwred landlord's ap· prov al can be obtained. radio pager WIDE AREA OOVERAGE ORANGE CO.-L.A. '17.18 • lllOlldl &eCal e.t ~o DEPOSIT o~ APPROVED CREDIT Singles' Tax Tips Planned \ free taic and estate planning seminar for sin~les will be presented al 7: 30 p m. Thursday in Clrace Hoag Conference Center at Hoag Memorial Hospital Prc::.bytcrian, Newport RC'ach. The panel will feature experts discuss· mg the special financial problems of single peo· pie regarding laxes, re- ll r cm en l plans. in- surance needs, credit, banking and making -----------wills. Time will be given CAPITOLIZE WITH CAPITOL CAPITOl.IZAllON MEANS TO CONVERT CAPITOL TO CASH IYJ, """°SI 000 lo S~Ot'O U•" '"" ~ C'Jlllil'r'i a ~,,..'Tt ()f ct"W J"f'Or-'I °'"" 1"11 Of" no1 h 1 c..-i nOL H"'Jl LOAN lffJ"'Qe lo CIP.l°'I•• you' '"'l\lllV IMQ I ~ io.t\ "'1n fUI -k..,d,~, ... - Capitol IIome Loan fl"<!"' C.0111 ' l"'V" ,, L ~JhQir.4Ft~•1fm• C••I ~. ot c•\lf ,_., rl)ITWl?•l"lt't I• tt.,J otr11t.•t lot'~ t .. t\. We'd Really li~e lo help COSTA MESA 3130 H-QlllO 714/5"().4~ 12 ANAHEIM 'll 1 w IJtooofn •no 714177~50 LONG BEACH t.474 E. Del"""' 8"4 213/421-9333 for audience questions and answers. The program is one of a series sponsored quarterly by the 552 Club, men's support group for the hospital. The club believes this 1s the first seminar ever presented especially for singles. including un- marrieds, widows and widowers and divorced. PANELISTS WILL be Hank Adler, CPA, Haskins & Sells; Thomas Casey, vice pre· s1dent and trust officer. Firsl American Trust Co.; Michael Chris· tianson, attorney, Raymond Haas, presi· dent, American State Bank; Frank Hall, ex• ec u ti ve director of capital development and management, Hoag M emorlal Hospital Presbyterian. Reservations may be made by calling 642-1463 durmg business hours. Brewer Pleads TACOMA, Wash. (AP) -The Olympia Brewing Co. has asked that a federal lawsuit charging unfair business practices be dismissed, saying other breweries do the i.ame things it's accused of doing. tn an unrelated development, the company has decided to terminate plans to develop a Lion Coun- try Saran park in Japan on a jolnl venture basis. The company bas not located suitable new JU&rtners and is wuablu lo pursue the project oo lu own. Assuming failure or the proposed lease, rev- enues for the year ending Dec. 31, urn, would be $3,168,111, a decline from the $8,237,163 rePorted In 1976. The latter figure includes $1,649,906 from termination or management contracts and $1,294,302 from the Florida operation. If the lease is not successful, operating loss would be $220,048 In 1977, compared with Income of S.S9.486 in 1976. Loss before extraordinary credit would be $220,048, compared with a loss of $2,055.863 m the pr.-vlous year, for a pre-share gain of $2.69, compared with a per-share loss of $1.21 in 1976 . If the proposed lease goes mto effect, revenues would be $2,799,103 for 1977. The operating loss would be $72,397. Provision for estimated wriledown of property under the lease would be $790,000; while operating results would be lm- proved $147,651 over actual results, terms of the proposal require a wrltedown of assets during 1977, causing assets per share to decline by 36 cents, lo $2.33. Loss before extraordinary credit would be $862,397 and gwn on exlinguishment or debt would be $4.964,984. Lion Country Safari had 1,759,716 shares out· slandmg io both reporting periods Agftlcln Lut Nete Cliftlt• The following Oran~e County advertising and public relations a~cncics have announced new ac· <'Oun ts· -Gloria Zigncr & Assoc .. Inc. of Newport · Bc.ich and Los Angeles, has been named public re· lahons counsel for Szabo Food Services. the ex- clusive concessionaire for the Anaheim Convention Center and Stadium. -The Zigner agency also has been named public r<'lations representative for the Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim. The holel, located on 60 acres, of· fcrs convc·nlton and recreation facilities. A sub· <.idiarv of the \\'rather Corp , a publicly-held li1vPr~1fll'ci corporat1on involved in hotel and 1t•lev1s1on opt•rallonc;, the hotel recently completed a Sl.:J m1l11on renovation and refurbishing. -.Jansl·n AssociatC'c;, Inc., Irvine, has been ""leclcd as at1vcrt1srng agency of record by Ht•rkeley Industries, Jn inc, and by Moxon, Inc., Irvine. Thf" flcrkclcy Industries group includes B<'rkelcy Controls, Berkeley Instruments, Telonic/ Berkl'ley, and Berkeley /Te Ionic International. The group is involved in the development, manufacture and marketing or test and measure· mcnt instr'tJm(•nts and electronic components. Moxon is invoh·C'd in the design, manufacture and marketing of d1dtal instruments, character generators, timing ino.,truments and transducers. -·T<'h'X Computer Products, Inc., based in Tulsa, Okla., has selected Jansen Associates. lnC'., I rvmc, as its agenl'y of record. Telex manufac. Lures computer peripheral producLo;. --Stevens Sportml! l.oo<ls hai; selected the Cox & Burch Advertising Co. fl.it:~port Beach. to prt- pare its marketing and adverl1s1ng campaigns. -·Jr..-ine Nallonal Bank, Irvine, has been re- signed by Leland Ohver Co .. Inc., Orange The agency had represented I he independent bank :,.incc its oq:anizat1onal p<'nod five years ago. Leland Ohver, ag<'ncy president, said difficul- ty in communication folio~ mg the resignation of the bank's two pnnc1pal officers prompted the ac· count r<'.s1gnalion dcci~ion. 'Mfnf,.Mfrag~' lntrod~ Mirage Motorhomes, Jnc., C.:osta Mesa, ex· peels to produce and sell more than $15 million worth of "micro-mini" motor homes during its first year of operation. The company is the venture or Jerry E. Weis, a co-founder of Executive Motor Homes, Inc. lls first product is the "Mini-Mirage,·• a self- contained motorhome built on a Toyota pickup truck chasslS. Within a couple of months Mirage plans to introduce a lar1ter motorhome built on a one-ton Dodge van chassis. ll will feature stand-up room in.side and will ~el an estimated 16 miles a gallon, according lo Weis. Lato n,... Ezpa111& Oltlee Stradling, Yocca, Carlson and Rauth, law partners, have leased the entire eighth floor of the Irvine Co.'s Union Bank Building, 610 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. The move, scheduled to take place toward the end of the first quarter or 1978, will almost double the available floorspace for the two-year-old law firm, currently located at 359 San Miguel Drive, Newport Beach. 8.503 Visiton To Get U.S. GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED PAYABLE MONTHLY GNMA· Mortgage-Backed Certlfk:ates are U.S. Government Gu~min­ teed on "the Umely payment or both prindp81 and interest"-th.- same as a U.S. Government Bond. interest and pr1ndpal wtU be paid monthly-ideal for those who want current lncomo with U.S. Government safety. Units of $25,000 ond up are available. • No redemptlo penalt,J. u ls the cese wtth Benk end Sevf nga & Loan Certificate of Deposit G<:counts. •An oppominl\y b avaneble to quallfltd people for defemal of taea on Interest Income. P• ...._ laformadoo contkt Parker Date. Senior Vice ~sldcnt. ot (714) 644-4620 or at the oddress ahown below. Poswrs Customers and vis· ltors to Great Western Savings and Loan As· soclatlon's Newport Beach, Huntington Beach. Laguna Hills and Santa Ana offices can return to the ~ of the Old West reliving .. Great Western letenda" throuth April ao. An autogrepbed poller of Great Western spokesman John Wayne wW be ottered to every )>r~ncb customer and vllJtor. The Newport Beach office ll at ~ Newport Center Drive; Hunt· tngton Beach office, 16141 Beach Blvd.; L11una HJll• offlcet 24100 El Toro Road; ana Santa Ana o.mce. 1418 North Mal.n St. Re1ular bualnus bourt &re t :30 Lm. lo 5 :30 p.m. Monday• tbrou1b Fridays and t:IO a.m. to 3 p.rn. Sat.untan. Glontar Drilb Artist's rendition shows how a semi- submersible drilling rig similar to the Glomar Pacific operates off the New Jersey coast. The rig is anchored by eight huge sea-anchors and the drill support system extends to the ocean floor. The platform rests on pillars attached to two pontoons. as shown in the sketch. The Glomar Pacific, leased to Exxon for ex- ploration, began drilling Sunday. Space Leased . Dag-long Se111lnar Women to Get Business Tips A women's small business aemlnor will be sponsore-d Saturday by the Commwtit.y Investment Cooperative in cooperation with the city of Santa Ana's C.Ommwtity Development Office, the U.S. Department of Commerce's Small Buainesa Ad· ministration, and the graduate dlvlslon of UC Irvine. Melinda Cotton, former CBS-TV producer and a television producer with KOCE (Channel ~>. will be keynote speaker. THE DAY·LONG EVENT, TO be held at the Saddleback Inn in Santa Ana, will feature women who are practicing specialists in their own lleld.s of endeavor. Speaking on legal aspeet.s of golog into busl· ness will be Joanne C. Schwartz. partner in the law firm of Levin &Schwarti, Garden Grove. Letty Bterschank, assistant vice president at. Coldwell Banker, will discuss real esute aspects. SHIRLEY J . MORETl'I, ASSISTANT vice president lo loan supervision at Wells Fargo Banlt, will tell about aspects or banking relations. Shirley Laskin. who formerly developed a 71· store chain In 20 sutes and now teaches record· keeping systems, business language and un· derstanding corporate statements in crash courses in the Saddleback College system, will discuss keeping records. Marilyn Everest, whose Everest Associates Management Consultant firm in Orange em· phasizes training in watching and controlling busi- ness, personnel management and motivation, will address the subject of management skills. Public relations· will be covered by Ann Crowell, owner and president or Crowell-McKay Advertising and Public Relations, Jnc • Newport Beach. SHERBY OUVER TA YLOll, advertising and communications manager for American Telerom- municaUons, Inc., will discuss advertising. ModeraUng the day-long event will be Alva Dellano, con.!tructlon analyst for the U.S. Depart- ment of Housing and Urban Development, who Boyle Engineering Corp.. has leased and is also is a member of the board of directors of Com· occupying the entire second floor or an Irvine Co. munity Investment Cooperative. commercial butlding at 18552 MacArthur Blvd.. The cooperative ls affiliated with the Op- lrvine, a:. its corporate offices. • portunlUes Industrialliallon Centers of America, The engineering firm 1s maintaining Its which has a diviilon in Orange County. 40,000-square·foot facility at 1501 Quail St., NewPort The seminar ls scheduled from 9 a.m. to 4:30 Beach. Acquis1hon of the added floorspace was p.m .. with registration opening at 8:30 a.m. A fee made necessary by the continuing growth of the o( $10 per registrant includes lunch. JnformaUon is multi-disciplinary engineering organization. available al 957-1391. Over The Counter MASO UsfilMJ' MUTUAL FUNDS lfp• a•d Doum. 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UO •• afi =.:. ~ VeEP p11.6& •• Z10 t~ ..... ::~~nil ;: iO 2' 43'11+ "Ml ~0•14 .ll 1 1• ~+ "' Gl\Mllls 1 10 217 27\'>+ ... LFE -Lt-L. .-.. ~ ~IP .1 :: l¥ ~::::: SlerPac 110 ·; 42 ll¥>+ v. ~~~~Ul :· T 104"".""'f\ 8etdwU .IO S 17 ,....._ V. wd l.JO 1 7 10 -V. ~ A.959 S 980 61 '4+ ~ '""'" 1. Jf t• ..... $191MI 1.36 6 111 J:I ... + "° ll t.. Jr" 11e1c1u p12.o. •• 21 ts"--v. "Pn" ;1!} 1; 2~ .. ~! ~ ¥f us .• •• so•n+ .... L.r~ 1nv •• 1~ ~~..... l.? d 1.1 Pto+ ~ SI~ u2 • 174 »14+"" ~·20 :· •t~ 1~+ ,~ ::::~~I .1~11 7~ ~:~.·~ ~Leb :4011 2SJI 2Wo+ Vt pf.20t~o··1oa'012~~ ~ trvA .22t:: 3 101o1t'.,:"~ ld.f11. ::11 1fi~1~ ~:::.rec:drn an~~~-~ 1.311 j .47. ZW.+ V• hllOE 2 16 t 61 Jn.-"' TA .IO l 7 1Jl,I,-\It PU 1.1• 1 1JO 10 -It LTVCp pf S.. t '2lo ••••• wpfA 14 •. 11 o 1 ••+ II. SJmp .. at .so 1J 537 1%'4 ~ -. hl~8 4 so :r_40 S1 Cop pf 1.25 •· 1 18 •••-r .10t •. U 6"<.o-'·• ~Go 1,10 9 S 1'llo-" PpfF 14 •• ISO 11 ">~ ~ S1119tr AO 4 lO 1.-," -W-'#-e. el 72 'i 26 11~+·;c; g:::1no .16 1 10 1114l..... 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Wl1<rA ,...,. • , 2' + \(o ent.Arn ·,.. • 135 ,,,.~"' Coullns •. n I'')-.... Geft\lr I .• 4 1 2,,..:.::i,., LHS# 1 IJ>. 2S Jll4 •••.. Oneld9 ... • 3 171'1..... lllln 1:n .. M SI •'"' .,,. .. 911,, ·" 1 .. 20..-.. .... =::1crr • l 1 1411 ,. + .... COWIH .72b 19 21 11:--... GellUPt 1.10 I• 13 ~. '• LH<llN .72 ' 24 21~+ \lo OrMllltlt 1..44 10 ,. 1~+ 14 liOtr 1 ' 124 """'-"' .,.llM<I I 20 • 23 n -.... BkTr pf 2 50 9 78 •... Co•Bdcl .U 9 •12 3' 11+ ~ GePK 1 10 SSS 24~+ n Lnsona I S I 17\'a-V. ~ .JO ·· f2 "4-V. !oftAIPOnT Al 1S 27 JO._. .. ~ Wltlt.Jm 1.40 • 29' 29'4 .. ,_ l/N OAIL Y P1LOT Jla Carter Woe Fear Outweighs Public's Credit By JOHN CUNIFf' 11/f ...... __,.. The economic r.cord or lbe carter aclminlatnlloo ao far bas been a lot better than UM perform&llce of some othtr recent adml.nl5traUons. But the public doeln'l 5ff lt. that way. Worried about tnnauon. tblY are llvlnl Cart.er 50mo or the worst marks ol any Jft:lideDt In rec:eot years. The Michigan survey of consw:otr at.tltodel. relMMCl Mooda)', sums it up in these words: "IN FEBRUARY 1t78. IVST 12 percent rated the fOV· ernment as doi.na a good Job, and 2S pereeot rated the aov· .,rnment as doing a poor job." These figures, the survoyen 1aJd, represented an eras- ing or confidence galns in aovemmmt economic policy recorded ln early 1'TI. The deterioration ls remarkable tor at least two reasons: First, It sugiest.s people are dislllusioned regardlnc Carter's promises; second, it comes ·am id st a fairly strong economic performance. The job picture in partlcular has improved sharply, with the unemploy· ment rate of 6.1 percent last month representing an almost spectacular cv••"' decline from the 7.7 percent rate just a year earlier . The public is aware or this too. as the Universlty or Michigan's Survey Research Center shows. Tbou&h low. the public's confidence that the job market wUl continue lo improve is rising. FOR SOME REASON, THOOGB. the public doesn't credit Carter. Otherwise. how dou one explain the lowered confidence in his overall economic performance'! Fear oC inflation ls one explanation. The American public bas little faith that tbe administration has the price spiral under cootrol and perhaps even feels the ad· ministration is fueling It by ill acUocs. The mean expected price increase for the next 12 months, as measured in February, wu 7.8 pe.rcen~ .. the highest expected rate or inf1at1on recorded among con· sumers since the recession years of 1'74·1975.'" THE MICHIGAN StJllVEYEJlS ALSO matched the rear of unemployment with fear of inflation and found an increasing e mpbasia on the latter. Sixty-two percent named inflation as the worse of the two fears. One can hardly notice what appears to be a very curious public tendency -a failure to credit the ad· ministration for its accomplishment on jobs. and a tenden- cy to bfame it for expected higher prices. The real problem of the adminiltration, therefore, might be Its inability lo convince the public that it bu a coherent, aggressive plan for dealing with the economy. A matter or packaging, perhaps • TBEPRESIDENTRADSAIJ>bewouldpublldyaddress himself to that mood last week by anoounclog poclUve steps to combat price rises. And then be didn't.. presumably bee a use of hig!l level disagreements. The likely consequence or that failure ta to relnfMc:e the image of an administration without an anti-inflation program, wit.bout a program to deal with what the survey8 show is a big and growing fear. M eanwbile, economic analysts for banks and business and academia, and even for the government it.self, have been slowly Wting their 1978 tnnatioo estimates. from the S ·percent to 6.S percent range lo nearer 7. • And the chances probably have risen too that the oexl survey, for March, will show confidence in tbe govern· ment's ability to combal lnflatioo baa dropped aUU lower. Stock Market Takes Report in Stride NEW YORK CAP) -The stock markel swung upward today, registering some apparent ~llef. over a smaller· than-expected rtse in the coosumerpnce index. . The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, wblch had fallen 20.51 points the lour previous sessions. was up S.63 to 758.84. Sto~lulnTM Spotlight NEW VOAIC !AP)> ~ • p.m. prlu =. netY~Slo:c~lle ~~....:Y1= tredlnQ netionelly •I,,_. -SI Ollcorp • .. • sn.soo 1IM • Yt S.WsAotit • ..... JM,000 l:Jl'I + 14 Pen Am ...... .,, Hol,IOO ~ + ~ 1'-nl C~nt...... 112,tOO 27Yt +1--Comr>ut SCI...... 202,000 10IMI -+ ... Dowo...,.A~ra~ New YlftltM't ANI oo-JoNI-.... STOCKS lO Ind °rsf.n ~.1.h 1~ f:.:+ i13 20 Trn ~ .. 2Gl.7' >OS.as 201.11• 1.11 IS Ull 10S IS I06 n 10S.JS MIS tS+ O.D 6S St 211oS U llM.Xl lM.1• 21W.5' • , H ·~ ............... ...... ,,.,.., ... 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'"Yi : =: ·;,; 1 ";1-. • •:, '"U 4 •ilj ~~ "J=:,~ = ~ t! E::=.~111.r::-::i~:"! :: ~d : ~ I ta ~:· tll.. 1. ~ JP1~. ~ ,,..g~~r ·:~J, 1•;::-~ ! r1111,~,i ii • ~ ., i -;'~ 11'i j ~~... ~~ ~ ~ H 5?;.E:;tr•tr ··=:: llZ··~'·= -t: . !I 1 ...... " fii l: 1 i......... I pf J .. 1 ~ tt '* " ·. J ,, ulf~ft r ' '"~"L 7 _. il. ' 'vnw:Tt:.--"'. "" .,.-. ( tf ji f ,_ ....,.. ~t"~ :'° ;,. ftK11 er IA~~ .... .......,.... " -"'-•tC.._.... :: .. ., ............... .......... u .,; •:,;:a,::::m._ ......... _.. 1 ~ -&A "-=--=:-...,_.... #i::S :-! -~ll ·~:i J!;q 11~! !:. ~1!::j il.l!iliE;i :1 ;:; ..... ~ • ,,j~~ . ~ ~.:: =-·F. § 5 ff ~ -~ :.::.. '1J :i.~ 'a'lD:~.. ~1i~J ~ .-1 ' J ~"Ito-·J. ! n~ J{f:if lm!t A'• : I B EI«~-~ =•t' ~· ~!Si ~ , • DAILY PILOT TlleOCSay. Much 29, 1978 MARMADUKE ''I think this is the 'Mommy Duck' your baby brother told you about, Sherrie!" FUNKY WINKER BEAN CASEY MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX \ I~ ~~y CAN PE~LOP ~CH MASZva.D.J~ ,Al'Tl~ICIAI-COl..C'l2~ AN!? !='L.A\OIZ.'7, WHY NOT ,AJ<T1i:::1c1A1.- CAL.OKIE:, -:f MISS PEACH • i i i Af2rHu~ RfVtEW~ The MOV1£~ ~ > t. · by Wm. F. Brown 1nd Mtl casson WELL, fT'6 St'ff'£R ~ it.4~ !..D'¥t0 kJD w;r I.UH tJeVE~ 1D ~'lg LOv'~C1 A1' ALL . .---"''---- by Tom Batiuk DOOLEY'S WORLD by Mell PEANUTS TOOAI/ WE SMOllLD REVIEW WHAT WE ~OUI ABOUT FIRST·AIO ti COMICS I CROSSWORD by Charles M. Schulz CX.l\IE~, WH~T WCXX.O .. r ~OU 00 IF \/OU Ii.ERE ALDNE • • IN THE FOREST. ANO 'fOU MU~T 'l'~F? ALL RIM, BUT LET'S SAi/ 't'OUR MO™ER COULON'T HEAR '<OV~. ... by Roger Bradfield GOOD H05il.E I "IF.MA l -SO 11-f E WICKED wm:u CAST A 5P£LLON IHE -A~' KIDNAPPED iHE BASY PRINCESS TALK ABOUT GRIMM FAJRY TAL£S ! GORDO 4. (f:. .. SID VtCIC'O'S ANO .JOH/VNV R01iE!Jf by Charles Rodrigues t:y Ferd and Tom Johnson 1HAT~1AkclTFRoM Docs ~:, ) IH~F!£, MYNA·· FORTH' MOON1S 2~ CRAMMIN' <:~,ADE Po~ COLLEGE. REVIEW JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS IF 'it>U fNS1' Sl1TH!:RE: FOR HOURS, 'rn.J (.OLJ/..ll Af l..fASi ee: -rn1NKIN& OF SOMe IMPRoveMENlS 11-IAi'P IJE:N~ITiHE: COMMONl1Y! NANCY • AUNT FRITZI, 1 FOUND A DOLLAR ON THE STREET .. .. \AMOLE TOWN ... DR.SMOCK CHE:F, eve:RYONe AC:SReE!P IHAj'" "f'ON 16Hl'S Slew IAS"f'eP MORE: 1.-IKE! PINOSAUR THAN eee:F.' bJ Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan 'f Ernie Bushmiller by George Lemont NE:VeR euY' YOUR FROZet-J Mf;Ai" FRON\ A HAIRY, NAKec::> MAN CARRY I NC:S A ci..ue> ! by Templeton and Forman • TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 47 Sweet poll to l Ser•oe '49 Want harshly urgenlly 5 Early 50 End1119 for newsreel c .. 11 Of company front IOWound 51P1per cruet money 14 EIQht. Prefix 53 Ornament1I 15 Deck In II,._ \'Hts ery 55 Friend 16 Sutter lou 66 Most recent 17 Relallout-61 Pir1o1the let. 2 words body 19 Rectangular 82 Keep one·s pier held····· 20 Berrecuda ••••• 21 Fool. Prefix 64 Etyilum 22 Russian VIP 65 Grver ot old 66 Ag11nst 23 Preludes to 67 Spanish the flnala painter UNITED Feature ~yndte1te Mond1y's Puzzle Sotved: 7' i"'t 7" 77Prs" c: 0 •• $ Ti" 'O~ ·~ 'I'7' • I . ' . • I I J , u L L Y ( l M I I ' . l ( I I 0 ,. l T A ' I • 0 ' l •• 0. I a ( I I l l. I T 0 ( l T •t• •• ,. 0 M I " . . ' l " f N I Al f -I . ( l ,_l 01• l C AL'• 0 ( C Ail Cp 'I' I " • I IL l ' I ( • ICi [A I I•• e " as I N •1 , .. " f I I •J• •• . ' • 0 01• . ' ( 01 v l • l I 0. ' . 1u I I 'l ~ I• DO ' ( • "is SJ H,Oj :rz2 lnformil 88 COOks by 25 While. bolhng 18 Not 4 t Cecopho~y Prefix 69 Go on etaewhere 46 Feel 1ngry 26 S. conf1· sc>ectllect toward dent DOWN Abbf 48 John l. 30 Resin· 24 Swedish Lewis secreting like followers ineect 1 bF~bduloue 25 Jean---··: 51 Europea11 31 Fashionable " s Fr painter shoe 34 Cerlaln 2 Oull pain 26 Give an 52 Church exama 3 Oliver Har· •dee lo bench 36 Light wave 4 ~~buddy 2 21 8 EPlead 53 Puls Into ampllfler 5 L""hl tint ~Plor9r play 38 ~::---6 w\, 29 B1bllcal 54 Be I horse· 39 Groaa 1Typhoon·2 31 =•n· ~5 '1'1"n ... words • " ,,pa men,~ 8 A bblt • Abbr. Sitng 420rdlnal 1ufflx 43Mockery .. ,General heading 45 P1ye•- oen111 ,.'i.11v:a 32 Plaln plinth 57 Larnenl 9 Sllred et 33 011l1ked 158 Sicily sight 1 O Scheduled 35 Up to~ 2 59 Arranges 11 Form word1. lablewere 12 Movie 37 Lenee• 60 Amm11'1 pooch rllalive gait 13 SuPPOfl .. 0 Ntgative r1-63 Promise 1gonu tolemnty .-.. :·: . "· • . -:· . . . . ,,. • I • JI! I ~" • ) ' , Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS TIMda)'. March 28, 1978 DAILY PILOT 81' • II 'hi>\\ EVEN I NO .. Ii :. NlWI ~OffEI "~"~'­,. oonlldence on h1a f1rat e9ll.. ·~Y8UNCH Cindy le •uner1ng the penge of ti.Ing the ~~ at 11'1 lhll twnlly unlll ~ ditooYerw a MCHt lelmlter. • ftOOt<JU The Rooklle tty to btMll up • r~ img, and '*' ol'llef ~ la an old f1let\d of Aytuw·a I El.f:CTNC COMPANY PiMOMAl FINANC1: "HOUllng -Af1 OvlfVlew" (!)) A8C NEWS 'l:ao 8 MOVIE + ·~ "Night Af1d Dey" (Part I) (19•6) Caty Grant. Ev. Alden. The life and mulic of Col4I Porter 11 brought lo the ~ ( 1 lv,30mln) Bar Barons G COHCEHl'M TIOH • BEWYTa.ED Durln dl•co111r1 th•I ~arrnen can be wor1e thMI mothln-IM- • ~EASY Sen. Thon\aa Eagle10t1 (O- MO.)~ the i.aer.i legitletlon l!teellng OldlW en~. Nanal Devld pr&- ,.,_ • Mohl. delle:IOUI, lnexpenatve meel, Se" Francl1co'1 euece .. ful tenlot center ( arroll O'Connor Cright) ancl Jason \\ m~recn ha\ c an amm<.1tc•d d1'>CU~s1on .tbout hu~ ing Keky 's bar on tonight's episode of .. All m the Fanuly" at 9 on COS, Channel 2. G THE OAOWINO • YfAM ••PfMct1004 Physical Oe11111 opment" (I) UNTAMED WORLD "Ceremon111 Of Man" (l'ar1 2) (11 MERV GRIFFIN 0-ta: Abe Vlgode, Alla Moreno, Alen Suu 7:00 R N8C Nf:W8 UAA8CLU8 I A8CNEW8 IOWUNO fllOR DOlUAS CD 1 \.0VE lUC'f WMn Tet1ne .... Emit Ford wear1 out his welcome, Lucy 11111 to 11e11re him h<>Mo. m At>AM-12 Ottlcll' Malloy apota the pots In e laundromat. m MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT lii) HOME GARDENER "lawn ln1tallat10"" CJ) JOKER'S WILD 7 30 Q CANDID CAMERA 0 NEWL VWEO GAME 0 ®1 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES 0 JOKER'S WILD m ™E BRADY BUNCH Aloce decidM the Bradys no longer nf'ed her and preperes 10 lea"' Q) AOAM-12 Mall<>y Ind Reed cope with Channel Lbt ing• fJ KNXT (CBS) Los Anqele<. 0 KNBC (NBC) LO!. Ang~lns " KTLA !Ind l LO'.i An!Je•es G KABC· TV (ABC) Loo; A11;iele~ Cl) KFMB (CBS! San 011>qo G KH.J·TV(lno I Los An(Jele<\ (1JJ KCST (ABC) ~dn 011'C'lo at KTTV ( lnl1 ) Los AngPlt,.., Cl) KCOP· TV (lnc1 l Los Angel .. .-, fl) KCET· TV 'PBS) Lo'> Anfi.,11·, fl!> KOCE TV(PBS) Hunt1n•11on Bel• n the tack ot holiday !IPlrll on their toor ol duty 8l) L A. INTERCHANGE · lnslOB Straight" lii) NEWSCHECIC A11 1nrorma11ve collocllon ot Orange County news, government and con1umer attalft, PftOPI• and 1port1 ()) THE GONG SHOW 8:00 II ([) SAM Sam and ar--. 11e tempo- rarlly hindered In their -c;lt for tM dogn~1 of a $20.000 chan'lpion snow 000 wlllrl a woman'• purae II -felled and a "1gMW4d girt, hiding In • collap&lng t>ultdlng, nMdt l>elp 8 NeCMCM! "The Cope And Roblll'" (P,..,,...e) ErnMI Sotit- nlne, Mldlaal Stlennon. A P<>lleeman. -'tll the aid of h1a "pertect cop" af1dr01d pert.-. attempt• to pro- tect the deugh1« ot h•I ll•ln lorm« partf1tlf from kldnappe<a 0 MOVIE • • • 'The Desert Rats" ( 1953) Richard Burton, J•mes Muon Tho com· mander ol an Australian d1V1,1on t0<ces 1111 war- w&ary troopa to defend 8 key North Alrlc;efl OUlpotl. (2 !Ira.I 8 111 HAWY DAVI ''My Felt Fonile'' Fonzie lalla lot • ~ eoclellt• ~ ~ btO.,., tlic• Ont loo6I ., 11/m ~ ~II would ti. I OfMI tao to ll'MI• n. FOllZ to a Ir::::: ptllfy. (A) • • "8kutldugo•ey" ( 1970) 8uu" Clerk. Burt ~ .. Anlfln)pOlogleta dlaeoYw YWUebie mlnetll d1po1lla and •P••llke •lllflll'M wfllle on Mlwt lf1 New Guir-.. (2 hra.) • CMOI. 8UAHETT ANO l'AIEH08 °'*'~ Jacll (lWford. e MOVIE • • '°' "Lullaby Of Broad· -'I· 11es l) Oort• o.~. Gelle Nelton. A IUOCMllul 11noer dl10011ar1 her molhet to be .... Ulan ane aapected """"' ~ peys her.~ Yltl1. ,2 11 .. ) 9 NATIONAL QE.OQIW'HIC 8nctAL "The 1'1Uedlllle Mactllne" New tec:h,,iqu. in IMdl- clne and pllot09raphy meke ti powt>le to ellplou• the ltlnermoet ,__of the human body '11) TVAHABOtJT "FMllly Alfeln" An1hro- pol0oltll MafVaret Clatk •f1d Laure Neder talk ab<>vt 11141 Mure ot the famlly I/Id .itemattllw to tile tredlllon•I 11ucteu lamlty. 8:30 tJ (I) SHIELDS & YAAHEl..L Aober1 become• Arthur Cllnkerelll end Lorene. Cha11tllly ~ In a taJ<e-ott ol "H•Pl>Y Dayt", film cllpa trom the Shlelds' wedding In rnltne; qvetllonl and 1n8-t lrOftl the aud1· 9nQI. 09 LAVEANU SHIRL.EV "Thi Pac1" Shirley 1Met1 • man ..no ~ Mr ott hlf ,... but ~de\•· mlnel hie true COloR Md tt!M lo proteot n.r fn.nd from tile rovfng.~ed Loltlslo (o.le Aoblnette~ (R) CD CAOSS--WITS I!) OVER EASY Sen ThomH Ea(llefOft (O- MO ) dlllCUSMI the lederel 1e9111at1on affecting olde< Cltlntla, Narsal David pre- pares • llgl!t, O<!llCIOUI. lnuoensl111 meal, San Francisco s successful MfllOt cien llf. e.OO I) All IN THE FAMILY .. Archie Gets I he Bual~~" Archie d•!cov- e<S l\ISI how much It wtll coet 10 111.,.. Edith .. an TUBE TOPPERS KTLA 0 8:00 "The Desert Rats." Richard Burton and James Mason head the cast of this 1953 adventure drama about World War Il action in North Africa. CBS EJ 10 :00 -CBS: On the Mr. Au· dicnces can play "Name That Theme" tonighl as Alan Alda hosts a trip into nostalgia a s part or a wee.k-long 50th birthday celebration for the network. "equel t1u11neu pertner" ener forging her ,..,.,,. to a contrect to purchau Kelcy'a t>.tr (R) O ®' niREE'S COMPANY • Grourld Aul..," A conltlct 0-lacll Of prtvecy '" ,,_ .CCIII llVM erupts wtlel'I Jlf1lt ant9'111n1 • l>Oy· tr llf1d (0 llY Cookaon) I/Id roommates Jeck •nd Chr1aay have 10 cool llltltr *'' •1 lhe Regal 86agi. pob (RI CD MERVORlfflN GUNI• Abe V\gode, Alfa Mor«lO, Alall Sufl, JI'/ Anaoo, Col WUllem eot.- """ fD SPECIAL "Rudoll Serktn MHter Mualclen" •1•nl1t Serkln I• lntlf'lltewed on hla Ille and VfOf'k 00 Ille OQC .. lon of hi• 16th birthday. QI!> MASTERPIECE THEATRE "Anna Kdl'Mfn•" Socoity .... 11 not IOfQIV& th• K1nd1ll ol \heir 10,,. etfalr when Anna and Vronaky return 10 St. P11or11>urgh (Part 8 ot 10) Cl) RICH W.N, POOR MAN Audy Jord-IO-hit girlfriend af1d a echolar. a hip; Tom tans deeply ifl IO¥e. t:ao a a:ll a~ "Eptaode 25" The Jury reaohes a ...,diet In Jessi- ca Tate'• 11111 f~ mutde<, •nd Corinne and Fath,... nm rMdl • dec;lllOll •t>out their Mure 10:00 8 ()) C88 OH TH~ AIR "N1me That Tll•m• !lolled by Alen Alda w•lh Quell llatl G11ry MC>Ofe and Pl\11 su.,,.,., ""'" ti's\ ""-•· televillOll noot•I· ~·•0111 0 NBC REPORTS "Spying For Uncle Sam · The personal hlll<>ty ol a young American who Joined the CIA 1nd oper1t· ed for 10 )'Mlt .. an undetcover ao-it. UG Ni'WI , 0 JUl4 FAM, M.O. "81.nte WI .. " Julle'e col- lel;I• ,oquelntal\OI, the "Ito<\ ri..ny... Wllllk• her Into the liWOf1d of the ~ tlfvl ~ a young l'l'Mlalc l'fl»Ol\ ll'M lo preaaute hit WIN Into a pregnancy ttlat ,.,.,,,... her. ~ Lee guMI stata. 1!J HONEYMOONERS A mambo lnttructor s ettotta to -Oii Allee and Trilli. teem. Ralptl and Ed a lauon ebout """'ail• fJD MICHAEL JACKSON Oueat· Sclenu fiction euthOr Ray Bredbuty. '1!) NEWSCHECK An lnlormallve cOllec!lon OI Or•nge County -· Qov.fnmlf1t Ind tonl<Jmet 1ntir1, people and sp0r11. QI) ROY CLAAl<'S RANCH PARTY Gue111· Vikki Carr, Freddie Fender, Donn• F aroo. 01krldoe Boye, Mel Tiiiis. 10.30 m m News fD MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT '1!) SPECIAL "Rudolf Serkln· Maller Musician" Plartl•t Ser1t1n la Interviewed on hll Ille and work °" the occasion of his 7Sth b<rthday 11.00 I a a Cl> 9 News LOV£. AMSUCAH STYl£ "Love And Thi Triple ThrNt" S.m la desperate to ler>d ott AIQ a attllfl'!p1$ co rnany Nm. "LOYe And The G1rlfSh Groom Ot11e la w0<k1ng 11111 way througf'I law achoo! 0 MOVIE • • • "Call Nol'tt\slde nr· 11e•e> J-s1-.. art, Helen Walke< A small Id lf1 a person•! columr1 markt the beQl""4no ot a reporllf'I eff0<11 to free an Innocent man from prllOn. 12 hr& I m THE 000 COUPLE 0-, ... Myrnt IN .. ory of """' Fib flea ~ ba-O from Mld1own M-lal HoapltaJ - ltinGI hit deuOl'll .. ". birth Cl) LETS M.4Q A DEAi. • Ota<OAWl'T G.-t· J-WM!, e f~­ mer O.troH narootlce ~I (Pett 1 of 2) CD MACHEll / LEHR!" REPORT 11:~ e CJ) caa ~r• MOVt• • • • "Columbo: Th• Gr11tenllou1a Junol•" ( 1972) ,...., Fallc, Ray MIHlll'ld. In Ol'O« to IUP- POf1 hla ~bby, .... accien-trtc cotlectM of rare I/Id ax~ plentt mv<der• hla Interfering nephew (RI D TONIOHT Hoit: Johnny Ce,.on Guella Su11nne Pleat>etta, Raquel Welotl, Bob Ind Rey. Erm• 8ombeck (R) U LOVE, AMEl'ICAH STYlE LCM! And The Ct.nit" Ralph rMlly doeln I .,.ant to vltlt 1 matllel d1niC "Lo¥e And The Trampled PaMion" C...oone triN to mMI 1 llamenc;o dancer. a o AaCMOVte * * "Oullllr Night Of llle Fainer" ( 1976) MICllHI Jeyst0f1 Whel1 a tallow Brllllh 1ge11t la alaln and the police MW!' IJl\willlng to lnveatlgate, Quiller 511(>1 In and hf1dl hlmtelf In Munich~. 1111 Under• ground con&plracy la aboul to t•k• ovor the Gwman go111rnm-0nt IAI W THATOIAL ·w11a1 Are Your lntenll0t11?" Cll OET SMART fD CAPTIONED MIC NEWS MOANING 12:00 U TWIUGHT ZONE A. dllllngullhed tJul aging act« Is VVUat Into the days of Ille youth. m MOVIE **\.\> "AM&s.,natlon In Rocne" ( 111651 HIJOh 0 8r>- an. Cyd Cllartase A Sflarcl\ tor h1, lonn!'f g1rllriend·s husband le&d$ a man through the 11a11.1n unOerWo< kl (2 tv1 I Cl) MOVIE + *'~ "Revnl011 In Reno'' '1~ 1) Matll 61-s, Peg· gy Dow A tos1er cl\lld tiees to Reno aher her moth41r t>ecome• preg11ent. ( 1 hr , JO mini 12:30 0 MOVIE • • "Mod1aon A\191\ue" ( 1962) Dana Andrews, Eleat>Ot' Part.er Ari une•· pec1ed lurn ol 9Yeflll reveal• 11111 a 111ghly rMpeeled publiC flf'I'•' ~ a dMdly inteat t.o • the nation. ( 1 hr , SS nlll\J 1.00 D TOUOMOW -: : Oueet1 Gatton K.anln and4 hll ...... Ruth Gotdoll, °' ... Frank Reid, -uwmM , I/Id co-noe1 of "Not FOt- Womtl\ Only " D ISPY "One Of Our &ombe .. Mlallog" 1:1e fJ CJ) KO.WC "TM O..t ~ Money Can Buy" Kojel( ~• l\'ldefloe llnlllng • llOfl· gt1eWIQ Widow, a Pf'IV•I• IMtec:llYI end a famoua ctlmlnal ettomey to 1111 deetll Of • judge on the tak1JR) t:ao I CD NEWS 2.-00 Nl!WS MOVIE • •''1 "F11t•n Angel • (IUS) Dana Andrews, Alice Faye. m MOVIE * * ** "Thi Breve Bulla· (1951) Mel Feuer, An\l\Of1f OUINl :usae NEWS 2.300 MOVIE * * "5-clell 01 Tiie Btue , Room" ( li33) Paul Luttu. Lionel Atwill 3 :001) MOVIE ~ * * '\ "Andy ' ( 1965) Norman Alden, Tamara Oayll.arl\ooova · 3:55 0 NEWS •.ooa MOVIE • * • "Ulegnl Traffic" ( 1938) J Carroll Nu1s .. , Mary Carllale. 0 MOVIE * * "• "Hungry Hill' '19471 JHl'I Simmons, Margaret Lockwood. m MOVIE •ft+ 'Macabre'' (1958) Wiiham Prince. Jirt> O.Ckus. Wedne•day•11 Dat1Cime Morles MORNING tt 30 m ••'>"Whet A Women ( 1943) Rosahnd Ru~ll. Brian Aherne AFTERNOON 12:00 0 * * "TM Last 01 The Oadmet'I" I 19!>71 Ge0<ge Montgomery, James Best, 3 00 0~ * + • "T •~u" (19' 1) Glenn Ford, Wiiiiam Holdon 3:30 0 * * "The Despera- do' ' ( 1969) Vrnce Edward•. Jack Palance. · Broadway Producer Maps CBS Bas~~T .. By JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES <AP l -Alexander Jl. Cohen is an affable Broadway pro ducer whose expen ence in television has been mlrumal. lie 1s the man CBS chose to put together tbe network's 50t.b anniversary ccleb.ra· tlon. Elijala'8 Tl' Debut He's produced each or the 11 network telecasts of the Tony awards. and his w1f<'. Hildy Parks, wrote the scripts. On several oc· casions, he produced his own stage plays forTV And that's been abouttl But he got a real bapllsm staging CBS' 50th anniversary in a week·~& ..... ,,. ..... Cher Allman gestures to her director while holding her son. Elijah Blue Allman. on her kn<>e during the taping of an hour-long TV special in Los Angeles. Young EltJah will make his TV debut on the show, which airs next ::\londay. series o( specials called "CBS · On the Air " His wife worked on the tr1?atiye concept and was head ·rtter Th(' sho1o1.s began Sundav and ·IU continue throuJ!h Salurday. ·Each e\'enin~·s !iJX'cial 1o1.11l have hosL., a.s- liOt1ated wilh !hat day of the week. such as Lucille Hall for Monday, ltte W•llons for Thursday, and so on. "YOU'D HAVE TO ask someone at CBS why they picked a producer with a theater background, .. said Cohen. "I don't know the answer. and if I did lt would be highly complimentary. "But I think it's for two reasons. One. to avoid a family fight over who would do it. And two, hopefully because I could bring a broad- minded overview and no prejudices. What I broueht to this project was my own tastes. I have no connections with paat shows, stars or producers." LI ke the other network an· nlversaries, there will De clJ~ from the past 50 years or CBS radio and television as well as new material performed by the network 's biggest stars. The specials wind up next Saturday with a two-hour show In· lroducing 122 stars connected with CBS. "THE WOMEN'S revolution hap- pened in the last 10 years and lt takes television to remind us,'" he sald. "In the early Mary Tyler Moore shows you see that she is hired as an U· soclate producer at a salary lower than ber predecessor, a man "Whal Iltldy has done is place you spec1flcally in lime by discussing the \\Omen's movement. Then 'The Mary Tyler Moore Show' shows you what was going on. "When we show the Westerns. v. e 'II show you "'hy they were impor- tant to us in the 1950s. Instead of say- ing. hey. there were JS Westerns on the air. Hildy places you in time and reminds you why we lived as we did in the 1950!. It's not a documentary, it's entertainment. Bul to deal with it you have to use history." COHEN SAID IT was a unique ex· perience for him lo spend his time in editing rooms poring over film clips and tape. ·~ .,,..,..... PRODUCING SOTH ANNIVERSARY SHOW Alexander Cohen Lured From Broadway "But you don 't take a bow as a pro-the news department. You will see that CBS has ducer for lhls," he said. ''Concep-been the undisputed IC'ader 1 say that with all due tually, we found a way of dealing f hn' al with existing material. It's still 'My respect to NBC, but N RC.: was part o a lee 1c ThreeSons'or'PrlvateSecretary.' empire. CBS went into show business" "I'm the executive producer When NEVERTHELESS, COHEN admits he is not a I produce a play on Broadway I do big fan o( television. the nuts and bolts stuff, but here Lee "What's happening." he said, •·is that ~tiller, the producer, does it. So what television Is forcing people out of their homes and am I? Essentially a cntic. I'm being back into theaters. It's the low quality of the show. paid for my taste, and one would say h a highly overly paid one at that... The theater business is up all oHr t e country, and so are the movie theaters " Cotien said: "'The shows would not But he is a big sho1o1. bus mess fan and was de- be a series of quick fades or wipes or lighted to be interview<'d at the Polo Lounge, flashes from the past. We 're whereHollywoodmects to"'heelanddeal searching for the microcosm ot pro-__ .;._ __ .:.---------------- grams that have been important over ""'n the past 50 years. When we do that .... you wlll see the quality of the pro- gram. You will see the integrity of ~~~~~~" i ---THEATRES-ORANGE CO SENIOR OTIZENS $2.00 CoUrt Gets Cable TV UNA WEllTMULLER'S 11MIGHT FULL OF RAIM'~ 1ai SO. COAST PLAZA MlfMSlllSl,_2111 ruir- ''C.UIM SHA.DOWS" '8f/'MM-t14~~" lool0tl/Tll8-1-lt<H WASID!'ilGTON CAP) -The Supreme Court wUI M livelftbe opportunity to decide whether the Federaf Communications Coinmission may im- pose ruJes requiring cable television companies to make at least four channels available to the public $8Ctor . A federal court has said that the FCC has no basla for a rule which nquired companies with more than 31500 s ubscribers to provide, often without. charie, one channel each for education, local government and the general public. • .. ~ NOTWAX" INI "W.W..,..._ ... ..,. .. • 'U1911LUT'" INI Cell 642-5679. Pul • fe)N words to work for ou "U6Hf UP MY UFI" .... ,~~· .... ~ SO. COAST PLAZA Mlt lrlml St. W.111 f lllU '*"' _ ...... _ .. _,....,,... "SA TUllDA Y MtGff T HYY"lll -~MO,UllS­ t.Af~t~~M-.M, ~,,......,..,. ... _ SO. COAST PLAZA W St•lf•-S4t UU 1111 tAlf.,. ·~-no. "Cl.OSI IHCOUHTHS OFTHITHlaO IUHO" "GI --..1a1WM-t~M._11ttl --,~-, ... lomTMO•M .. ,... "AMBJCAM HOT WA.X" lrGt ~···~ .... ................... ~ ....... ·~ rM>M Fash ion Island Newport ·Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR .... • ' ( ) l .. • • .. -OAIL Y PILOT Tueldlly. M&tc;h 28, 1918 • 'Overtures' for occ Orange Coast Colle&e has chosen its 1978 .-ummer musical and, like "Mack and Idabel" ol last year. it will be a brand new one for Orange County theatergoers. • ••Pacific Overtures," the new show by Steven Sondheim, will be this year's attraction. playing· Aue. 2·5 in the OCC auditorium. Although it's still a bit early, director B1U J>urkiss bu let it be known tbat auditions for ' singers, dancers, actors and musicians wUl be held June 19·21 at 6 :30 p .m. in the auditorium. ''Presenting this musical is quite a coup for us," Purkiss says. "The show is so new that 1l has only appeared on Broadway and in Los Angeles The original cast is the only cast that has presented it it's never been done by anyone else." "PACIFIC OVERTURES" TELLS the story of Admiral Perry's opening of Japan It will be performed in Kabuki style, with elaborate costumes. "Its the best musical to hit the stage • since •Man of La Mancha'," says Purkiss. who also directed that one for bis OCC debut in 1970. Since then, he's been alternating summers with fellow OCC drama mstruclor John Ferzacca,. staging ••camelot" in 1972, "Ohver" JD 1974 and .. Carousel" in 1976. '* FOR THE THIRD TIME in its 412 years of operation, •'Fiddler on the Roof" is opening at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. A moving 11tory. A romantic story. . A story of envy, hatred. friendship, triumph, and love. 1t[p111g pllllt 2 GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS .. IEST PICTURE" ~ SOKM-.<lnoHlt THI OOOOIYI Ot•LIN I 1:JO.J1•s ... 1 s.1,;ao.10:0 OUSllfl MOfrMAH "STUIGHT TIMI" 111 P\ut "1MI •ITI" 1•1 IOICAI-- ..,,. GOOOln Glltl" IP'GI __ ,, ....... SA1.+'-1111oJrlll-4cllo1'.-.M --~­"OH GOD" IP'GI LASllt ILASr' INI .. ~: J~Y ~ nv1r,~ --------· 1m1CK"tll-- .. ~,1 J~-=.:~~' ~~~'t/.Slo\( llUmN ...,,.,.. .. ,,.~~ "STIA~J_IMI .. (IV -~._.;)"c."'-,••;~ ."'THI llTl" Ill WAUD MArnl&ll .. CAMTS SHADOW" !NJ _.,._ "'TOU UIUI W llf urr 1ro1 ' 1 .. OOOOIT om· ,,..1 ·wa~uw 1111 AlfTMOll" !NI ~ ...... "'°' ~~~--~__,U=~~Ull"I ...... "°'"""" "PUtOHr T•" taf ""' "f * llT l" It!. Intermission Tom Titus The popular musical, which bas been playing at Sebastian's second theater in Anaheim's Grand Hotel, will move Ulto the San Clemente showplace toniJ?hl. replacing the Mickey Rooney comedy "Three Goats and a Blanket," which in turn moves over to the Grand. Both will play five-week engagements. "Fiddler" was the second show at Sebastian's, opening in Deeember, 1973, under the direction of John Ferzacca. Dan Verre took over as executive director the folJowing year and mounted a second production of "Fiddler" in Apnl, 1976. Verre also is dlrerting the latest "Fiddler" in its transition from Anaheim to San Clemente. It 'II be m residence through April 30 at 140 A¥enida Pico. and reservations are available by calling 492·9950. * CALI.BOARD -Final auditions for "Twilight Bar," an original musical by Laguna Beach playwright Ian Bernard, will be held Thursday at 7 p . m . at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach .•. actor·singers in the 30 to 60 age group are particularly needed ..• call the playhouse at 494·0743 between 1 ands p.m. for further details . . . ' South Coast Act.,rs Co·op has called auditions for an original musical revue on Saturday at 2:30 ..• singers, dancers and comedians are needed ••• call the CO·OP al 957-0282 for directions .. U NIVERSAL STUDIOS TOUR A~ MCA L'M• ,,,, u• ·, : .. , c~· 1 r• ,~ 1, , ·: "'House Calls' has an incurable case of infectious laughter!" WALTER MATTHAU GUNDA JACKSON ART CARNEY RICHARD BENJAMIN ''House ' Calls''~ 7~ NOW PLAYING STADIUM DRIVE-IN CINEDOME 21 Orange 639 8770 OrJnge 634·2553 EDWARDS CINEMA Costa Mesa 546·3102 1·1t(l <; " tn . c ro . E o · e oo . o oo llZINIVERBAL STUDIOS TOUR ~t.11 MCA ""YPJ.11• "'l'"O~~M ,A.<;JIOUl<J)" "' "~thoroughly infectious comedy ... You don't have to know a nose wheelie from a tail spinner to enjoy Sig's New Star Sylvester Stallone and a ctress Joyce IngaJles cu.ddle for the camera at a New York disco. Mi ss Ingalles co·stars with Stallone in his new movie "Paradise Alley." "FOR PURE EXCITEMENT 'THE FURY' IS RELENTLESS:' ·Covld Ansen. Ne•~-Mooome BRISTOL CINEMAS C ta tvle~a CINEOOME Orongv '..:(") !..!~ OJJ·L5~..) STADIUM DRIVE IN 1...,.range c~" "ei:-: 1 c1nenome ~ scAeen 6JU 2553 c comPLEX CIUPm•n Ava &. S•nl• Ana Freew,y MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "CLOSE OICOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND" lPG1 M O SllH-7 00-4~7 »101$ MON TulS-7JO& 10 16 -House CALLS (PG) WfO·THURS SUN -71~ t~ 16-8 t5 FRC~T -2 I~ ,!Ml t6-8 t>to 15 ~·t\.llS-7 •>11!>0 "CASEY'S SHADOWS" (PG ·skateboard."' • ~----~~~~~~----< The mcMe that deiln fl°'*tl : • ., • m1~1u E:: AlllN 6ARfUlD "'UlKlHN uorn -~ lllf mmr • 11-., II ti lwas Csu1111 Shltu1141t .w., 1 rr AIU• IUIW nmt Adi>~ l .iH!UJl ·M I ll~ha~ 'hlll~q . tJ.a I~~ I I N"' 1· liH. ft~~~~ ~.._,~1!~ .. ••t ~ "' .0-;;:;a.i.k•QllW~·~-ig NOW PLAYING UA ~TY I ANAHEIM DlllVl·ltl el EOWllnll Ordngt 8)4·3911 An.ille1m 879 98!>0 81U8TOl CnlOlll Oll.UIGl MAU •J. SADOUIACK e 1 Santa ARI !>40·7~ Or.Inge 631-oa'I ll TOIO ~1 ·~80 lDWlllOS WUTlllOOI( Cl•IMALAllU U ANntlm 635·7601 G.lrden GrM $30-4401 'SATURDAY NIGH FEVER~(R) "LIFEGUARD" ''THE ON~ & ONLY" "ALOHA BOBBY & ROSE" (PG) "HOUSE CALLS" "SHAMPOO" (A) "THE FURr "THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD" ... THE FURY" (R) • "THE RE!NCARNATION OF PETER PROUD" ALL 09'1VE·INS OPEN 6:10,M.HIGHTl Y Cllll• u11., 12 .,., .. Unlftt • Klddle P1 .. nro1tnd 6tt.nu 350S S. HARBOR BLVD~ SANTA ANA '~~ _____ 77_H4.u __ .,.. _____ RESBRVATIONS (714) 979·5511-----~ -. -,--- ENTERTAINMENT / INTERMISSION 'Centenriial' .Actors Signed LOS ANGELES CAP > Robert Conrad and Richard Chamberlain will star in NBC's 25-hour adaptation of James A. M1chener's "Centennial," about events that shaped the West. Conrad plays that hardy French trader Pa.s- qulnet and Chamberlain is McKeag, the red· bearded fugitive who flees Scotland after killing a lliehland lord ln defense or his sister. The two become partners when the Frenchman rescues McKeag from the Pawnees. The entire production will be filmed on loca- tion in Colorado and Kentucky. It will premiere next season wtth a three·hoW- show, then be followed by episodes of two hours each. Bee Gees Plan Tour LOS ANGELES <A Pl The Bee Gees, who've made hay in the .. Saturday Night Fever" sunshioe with wnling or singing credits on haU ol J>Qp mus1r's Top JO hits, will embark on a massive lOllI' lh1s summer The tour, put together by the group's manager. Robert St1gwood, and promoter Jerry Weintraub. will cover 50 dates across the country. The tour wl11 be called .. Bee Gees Fever '78." • * Including fj~~ ~-11 '"· 'Ilr f ~~T~ ~~ r.J ' 1 ~iut'bli2 30 S•tiSun. * llldudlno etads HUNTillGTOfl .... ....C.•tlUA ... Pldur• ,., .. ,,. * 8Ht l«HnP•Y Ad8pt8tlon (PO) "OH GOO" 11 ... 1o ... hcm. • -lf \l.'\111\1111 1: ~·· '~THEONE ./ , .. ,irAND ONLY •1,. " • I I "INDEX: •Erma Bombe'k •Ann Landers •Horoscope •Classlfled DAILY Pfl.OT ~eatur • ng_._._. _____ 9 Ignacio Lozano . The editor and publisher of La Opinion has just returned from a stint as U.S. Ambassador to El Salvador. • By CHERYL ROMO OI '"' o.itV "1191 Sl.lff The Mexican American community is still racing some major obstacles -even though • conditions have improved in the last few years. The main barriers yet lo be completely re· moved are in the areas of employment dis- crimination, educational opportunities and polltical representation. That was the opinion expressed by Ignacio Lozano Jr .• who recently returned from a stint as U.S. Ambassador to El Salvador. He is also the editor and publisher of the largest Spanish language newspaper in the Southwest. La Opinion. The soft-spoken former ambassador, who has made his home in Newport Beach slnce 1956. said he feels Mexican Americans are no longer discriminated against when securing a JOb, but are still not rece1v1og the same advan· cement opportunities as other persons. He does not feel, however, the answer lies in more govemment·enforced affirmative ac· lion programs: "l have never been a defender of the quota system -and I don't think many employers use the quota system. l believe in equal opportunity and equal parity." The native Texan and second generation newspaper publisher IS 10 favor Of bilingual· education programs in the public school system because it gives the child whose first language is not English a chance to start school on an equal basis w1th other children. "I don't see any disadvantage at aJl to be speaking two languages whether it be Spanis h or any language," he said. "Our country is made up or such a diversity of cultures and there are benefits from bi·culturalism." Film Wateh \ Regarding paliUcal representation for the Mexican American community, Lozano saJd it is imperative that candidates for public office be found within the community. "We are so UD· der represented poUtic~lly, considering our numbers, and there is a great deal to be done in thas regard." · He feels the militant climate which pre· vailed in some barrio areas a few years ago, did not represent the overall political feeling of the Mexican American community. He said the ac· tivists were a small group and Louno labeled the community as a whole neither leftist or ac· tivist, but "fairly restrained in outlook." Even though there is still disparity between the income level of the Spanish·En&lisb speak· ing family and, the m,edian, Lozano said the gap is closing, but he chastised this county for not providing enou&b low,iocome housing: "I don't think Orange County has addressed itself to providing housing for lower income families ... Orange County is developing into an elitist society, and if you don't have ,$200,000 to buy a house you have to go someplace else. "Everyone from a broad cross section should have the benefit of living in Orange County regardless of racial or ethnic back- ground." Lozano, whose newspaper has a 35,000 daily circulation in Los Angeles and some parts of Orange County, also is concerned about the ii· legal aliens. He stressed that the problem is not coo.fined just to Mexicans crossing the border into our Southwestern states, but is a growing problem in many South American countries. "It is the great disparity or our economy and all of Latin America. You hear about the people in poor countries of Latin America enter· fmann (New jlepubllc). Manny Farber (Film Coroment), Gregg Kilday (Loe A.naeles nmea> and French film director Jean Pierre Gorin. a frequent eollaborator with Jean.Luc Godard. .. It looks as promtainl am acltJnl as any we•ve had so rar. '' aaya FNeml:D. '1t._ tbe best line-uJ of speaken and maybe tbe boat line-up of films.•• Bee.use the IVMa ft1ms are lltaJtu In flrlt.:J'Wl movie bouffl, th.,-oft.eD are awlcuJt to rent for campus ahowlDp. And became these 1howmes Will compete with the theaten, dl.1- trlbutoN restrict newspaper publlcaUon of tlUes. 'A complete list of the films, m°"t of hlcb •te~ French and German. la lnCluded in Tho Flli:D Watch procram available at. tbe collect. ... Delty .. tMCf'MMllYLH"•YM Ignacio Lozano Jr. says the Mexican American communffy faces obstacles. mg other countries that are less poor. "We arc not the only country with this pro· blem." he said, adding that in his opinion, those illegal aliens who have been residing in the United States for a number or years and "who have taken roots here and have become good· citizens, sbould be allowed to remain." He does feel, however . that adequate measures should be taken to curb and control people from illEWally crossing the border into this country. The 51-year-old said before his assignment to El Salvador he had not been aware of the number of people outside the United States who suffer from a lack of basic human rights. "It opened my eyes to bow much there is still to be done in giving people around the world an opportunity to share in some of the wealth and to share in some of the decisions their gov· ernment makes in what directly affects them. "And to feel they have a voice in their own affairs and their own destiny." SO· Way Dress By BURT BERLINER NEW YORK CAP) -The SO.way dre6s -it grew out of a T-shirt. Dubbed by its manufacturer as the height of versatility, the silk-like, wrinkle-free fashion was created by Robert Wachman, a Manhattan psyc hologist-tumed-clothes designer. Wachman, who designed the dress for Great Vibes, Inc., of New York, attended Bard College in Annandale-On-Hudson, N.Y., and Columbia University, where he maJored in psychology. "Then I designed a T·shirt for myseir with capped sleeves and everything changed," says Wachman, 30. "People kept asking me where they could buy one." Friends in the fashion field suggested that he market the shirt. "So I took $5,000 and my T·shirt and founded my own company, Robert Truth. m 1973." The concept for multiway clothes emerged early last year when Wachman, his fiancee and his mother were packing for a four·day jaunt to the Caribbean. "I suddenly realized we were filling up way too many pieces or luggage ror such a short trip. I thought, 'This is ridiculous. We need more versatile clothing." . Back in New York, Wachman got out some Qiana, a du Pont fabric made of wrinkle-free nylon. "Once I started draping it on the model, the poss1bihties simply emerged. You can stand in front of the mirror and create style after style to suit your personality and looks for any OC· casion. You make your own statement.'' Machine washable, the drel'is is available. nationally in a variety of solid colors for under $50. "That's less than a dollar a style.'' Wachman says. Instructions for use of the sleeves to vary the styles and the belt to vary the lengths are in· eluded. The sleeves can be worn short or long and can be tied like a sash or hke shoulder straps. Wachman is continuing the multiway con- cept with designs for men's fashions. "People are searching for ways to be re- laxed and flrst class. The multiway story 1s the answer -the look for the '70s." She Wants AChanee By JUDITH OLSON Of .. O...ty ptWSWf Ella Chatterjee is 25 years old and would like lo get on with life. But as a brown Rhodesian, with many op- portunities blocked to her, she finds it almost impossible to do what she really would uke to. In the U.S. for a visit and exploration or what local schools offer, she said she would like to run a social service omce in Rhodesia. The problem ls that without a great deal of education, she cannot compete with tbe whites. 1'1'b.ings are not really open Lbere," she said ... 1 wu a aecret.ey and administrative of. ficer but a lot of Umes I couldn't get a job." Sbe a1lo tra.lned as a bOok.keeper and ap- plied for a Job as a traveling auditor but was told simply that the job was "not open to non· white1.•• ~iat C\'alterjee, who was born ha Malawai, a tiny area west of Rhodesia, has both Oriental and ACrtcan heritage (ber grandfather was born in India) and she considers herself an Afro A1lan. "I follow the Moslem rell(lon, .. she aald. WIBLE TRB BROWN Rbodeshm.1 n-. less dt.crlmina~ aaalnst than the blacts. ~ sUU are considered ecood-dua ~ abe noted. <SeeEUA.ftiltCD - t l r i s f 1 • g '\ \ e •g iO d t• ... \• l"- ~ .. '• r: ,, I .. .....,.. . ._..,,,,,,. .. .. .. ' DAILY Pll.OT Tu.lday, March 28:1971 ERMA BOMBECK I ANN LANDERS ' '· ••• (From Page Cl) Engllsb professor, wbo, like his cbUeacue. teac'hea a fllm-u-llt.eralure clua. Both men bad bffn avid readers or critics ·Andrew Sarra, Kauffmann and Kael who fre- quenUy write about the kinds of film.a OHr- looked by Orange County theaters. .. We knew," says Hoffman, "that there were a lot of people who would like to aee these films. '!bat's when we decided to serve that part .. of lbe county." Adda Freeman: ''Most of the film aeries in Orange County are very spotty. They go to the kinky things or tbe nostalgia things. • ' . "'WHAT HAPPENS IN these film programs is the students take over and it reflects a dif· 'ferent group every Ume. It turns out to be a middle-of-the-road selecllon," The thrust of The Fllm Watch is to offer films of a more "Literary" nature. "Not many people lake that angle," says Horr man. •'Almost by definition that's not going to be a mass media interest." Hoffman and Freeman prepare a list or 15 to 20 film posSJbiUties, igoonog foreign films. such as lbooe by Bergman, which get good ex- posure. ,. ''We want to fill the gap," says Hoffman. We try to be select1ve. We read lots of reviews or the films aDd talce educated guesses." That. accordrng to Freeman, is a "tricky thing to do." Because they haven't seen the films themselves, they must take into con- sideration where each critJc is "coming from." ONE CRITIC, FOR example, may have a pet director and praise his every effort. Another may pan that director's mms, simply because the director is the other critic's favorite. ''You're flymjil by the seat of your pants in choosing these films," says Freeman with a laugh. The list of proposed films is read to the guest speaker who selects the film he or she wants to discuss. Although HoCCman and Freeman must please the critics in order to get them to speak, they don't want to compromise the series purpose. "It's a lot of pressure," says Hoffman. While an O<.'('asional film has turned out to be <i d1!-aslcr, most go over well and the ensuing d1scu s:,,1ons an• of the type which Hoffman descrilx>s as ones that "continue on the way home and into the next week " There arc 325 season tJckets available at $15 Although some 240 so far have been sold Hoffman sayc; then:• usually are about 100 10: dt\Jdual tickets available al the door. \\ i'<klinq 01111 t•nqnqt?m1•nt announct'ments run on ~undm1 m thl' 1Ja1l11 hint. 1-'orms are available at all /Jnrl111"11111 11f/1ct'S ur b11 e<ilhng ttre Feature:r Dt>par!· mc11t. fi42-4:J2 I. 'fo m'Oul disappointment. prospective bndes are Tl'mmt!Pd tn havl' lhnr weddmg storie&, with a black orirl u.•h1te qlo:;Ny uf the bnde or of the couple. to the Features Oc.>partmt>nt 011t' week before the weddmg f:ngagemenl am1n1.1ncemt'1lls, u>ilh black-and- " hilt' qLossv of the future bnde or the couple, must bf' T•'Ce!Vt>d /Jy the 1-'eaturps Departmt>nt su u.>eeks before the weddmgdole. ~o\ ~ .·· ~oW:e~oV . ·o\ ~ M ·1 , SVeC~ 0v.\~ ar1 yn S ~ 1Je Forget-Me-Nots TI·i-i h" l"l"\I' r,"' ,.., r,,.,. ""rl hn.1·1 h?a•1t•/ nmdtrrt! '"'P""'d J 111r'v \,'• 11-. 111 t ~p·r···1k ~ f , h ••I th. '4! prc'<:.ftl( t~ 1·nnl,l1n~ !lw P~«<:>ntMf t> I~ th It 1.1ncJt1th, c;(\fh n ,,,,rj f'flfll h ,h.., it.f..1n 'h·.-v ul•cr • ~· ··r>IJl.'11 J •kin < ,.,,. 111.11 hl'lp,. m.•.ntdJn '"" '"'"'tur1• b1hn<<' (J ••I ""1111.Jrlv th.~1wn1k t• 1 i '"'ll \.'CJU '.. Jk.111·~ • 1uu'\•·r .md mnr<' t..:.&Jt..H ir11t Oemonstratton• Thurad1y. March 30, 1978 I ' .·11 'f't r'1 "tt1 t( 1 IHl--f (N'f!A,1 f 1 I I t/ ,4 I f ft• ti l/ I ,tf r ,...,,. • .-. I I , j •• ' ' .. ., I •h•-y '""" •I , l l1').,1o11o1lt" """''' 100 -~00 pm E••I Blulf Pn"'"'~Y .. I { •'l H "'" I .u N~WJ")f1 8M I\ ,JO.)JOp .... B•Y••~ Pn.rm•cy 1 •r-n.,v·~ 1• rn._e NPwr-<>'1 l\tKh THIN Is In ... Now you can have the best of everything .• dress watch shmness, GP quartz watch ffccuracy. Our collection includes styles for men and women with choice dials and beeutiful synthetic eapphire crystals. Priced from $350. ............... B.D. HOWES and SON FJNEJ[Wf u RS FOR FOliR ca:NERATIONS NEWPORT BEACH 3412 Via Lrdo • 875·2731 LOS ANO LJllM8AOfNAl8AHTA 14AtlAAA PAlM IPRIH(;S~UlU E,...a Boml»e«!k Plugging It In ( Horoseope ] WEDNESDAY, a f amble. Means MAllCHZI bel eve good fortune. By SYDNEY OMAIUl Don't chase your own ARIES <March ~t. luck wllb undue &loom, Aprll lt): Tbtre Is 1ktptJc1am. 4"acapo hatch. Know tt SAGITJ'ARIUS (Nov. and don't despair. Ae· 22·Dec. 21): You can •• .Ella (From Page CU Her m&ln problem now 1s cetunc her viaa extended and 1ettin1 her transcript.a to tbe U.S. BO she can enroll In colle1e. Sbe alao needs money for living expenses and funds for tuition. Many 25-year-old Rhodesian women might be alraid to come alone lo aucb a bit country as the U.S., but M.lsa Chatterjee Ls '"ed to trav~ • by herself. For a .country that ls facing a crisis in energy. we've certainly become small appliance junkies. "I think It's on the top shelf behind the popcorn popper and the electric ice cream maker." cent on l<>111·range view. dlct.ate tenna, but first ealniog confldeotlal know what It la you de· fllea. knowtn1 how to sire. Apparent aetbaclc play cards with dl•CN· boomerangs In your lion -and power. favor. Lunar cycle IK Aquartua. Scorpio, hJ1h; trust younelf. T a u r u 11 fl g u r o I n Shake off fears, doubts scenario. Mes11.ie from ta kt tho rclna. Get otr alal' ls nebulou11 where tldellnea and into th~ She commuted between Malawai and Rhodesia for acboollnit aa a chlld and has vi.sit· ed JtaJy and England alone. She also ls used to supportin1 herself since she bad to drop out of school lo help her six younger brolbers and sisters with tbelr educa- tion I ran across a couple last summer who had an electric coffee maker, blankets that plugged In. can openers, ice makers, mixers, hair dryers, doughnut maker, hamburger fryer. crepe maker. food slicer, krufe stiarpener, slow cooker, e lectric toothbrush, electric broom, hqt eurlers, and an electric Wok. And they were camp- ing. A friend or mine bought one o( those machines that daces, slices, purees, chops, slivers, mixes, and matches and does ever- ything but open mail. She's worried. He r husband is beginning to have feelings for 1t. To attend a party given by a small ap- pltancc Junkie is almost more than the human hody can stand. The other night, a hostess mcsmcra:wd us with her l'lectric ace machine .,.. hi le her small oven toasted hot h ors cJ'ot>uvres, and her rot1sscrae whirled around httle hot dogs. To further astound and ;imazc us, she threw all the ingredients for our drinks into her magic <·lectric blender. Then slie panicked. .. Fred, the electric stirrer that plays, 'How J>ry 1 Am' .•• where d1d JOU put it?" Aaa Laadn-s .. You buried our elec- tric stirrer!" she gasped. When he got it down, she tlirust il into our drinks. Mine immediate- ly frothed over Into my hand causing every handshake thereafter lo become permanent. At this point it boggles the mind to predict what is in the future to satisfy the needs of appliance junkies. It's my guess you should look for ELECTRIC DENTAL FLOSS for people who can be putting on their socks and saving time. AUTOMATIC PAGE TURNER tor people who read in bed and their arms get cold when they're outside the covers. ELECTRIC CAR JACK with an extension cord you won't believe. AUTOMATIC DEFROSTER FOR G LASSF.S when you' re cooking and steam escapes when you take the lid oCC the pan. AN ELECTRIC COOLER TO BLOW ON YOUR SOUP while you engage in conversation with your dinner partner_ And don't laugh .• .I'll bet it's only a matter of time before someonE has a digital sign over their stove that lights ui:: a~d tells you bow many kilowatts you're using a second. Straight Satire D E A R A N N needs to know a few LANDERS: rm enclos-things about people and ing a clipping Crom the how they get to where Readers's Digest. I they are. Can you tell always thought it was a me what makes one fine magazine and am person so much better appa lled to see they than the other when it would print such stuff as comes to wrestling -or this. I'd like your opin· music or math or 1 o n . -0 I S A P -basketball" Is practice POINTED IN MINOT, the answer or do you N.D . have be to be born with HOW TO TELL A talent? Sign me - •. BUSINESSMAN lGNORANf FROM A DEAR FRIEND: We BUSINESSWOMAN; . are ALL Ignorant -on- '' A b~inessman is ag· ly on cllfferent subjects. mean1na 1• concerned. 1ame. HER WORK experience is broad and she Walt! CAPRICORN ( Det". had her eyes opened early to the fact or dis- TAVBVS (April 20. 22·Jan. 19): Much that crlmlnation 10 Rhodesia. "For three years 1 May 20): You are ln occurt la shrouded tn worked for the Rhodesian government•• she thick o( thinas -no Rel· aecrecy. WaAt for com aald. "But non·whites had no scope for better· llng toe wet. It ls all or plele story before la.kJng meat. :nier were given all sorts of blocks. we nothing, hot or cold. It acllon. Cloaed·door couldn t lake c~ uams. This was just ex· playlng games, go to altuaUon dominates. cuaea." kindergarten class. You have eomething or Miss Chatterjee said she found her chances Rhythm of this day llJ value to offu. Know It not much better in England, so she decided the for ke~. Know It and and don't Jump at first U.S. wu where the opportunities were. "Alter a.c t at'cOrdin&ly. It offer. Someone La bold· ~lng ln England I was really angry," she said. smgle, you muy have to ln& out, but will cave In tn England they are clamping down 00 make a commitment. If if you are confident, African students." married, you are held to peralstenl · Belng in the U.S. has been rascinating for a long-ago promise. A Q VA BI US (Jan. the attractive young woman, who dresses with GEMINI <May 21. 20-Feb. 18): l''rleods theflairofamodel. June 20): Marriage, res· oommand attention, She has been driving around in a borrowed i d e n c e c h a n g e • time and energy. Social car and says she finds· streets clearly marked in domestic adjustment, activity accelerates. most Instances. Her friends usually draw a map hard discussion of Keep track or expen-forherwhenshesetsoutforanewdestination. budget -these are ditures. Some people featured. Taurus, Libra around you delight in as-THE FREEWAYS have been another mat- and Scorpio figure in sumlng they can get ter, however. "I was terrified the first time •• your personal scenario. away without paying -she conceded. "But I was told to think aboul ~Y You_r opinion ts sought. at Your expense. own car and not to worry if I missed 8 turn. It's ?n Jewelry, art. lux.ury Gemini, Virgo, Sag it· better to go on to lbe next and come back." 1tem. larius figure in scenario. She has found clothes very expensive here CANCER (June 21· Have fun, but protect and !-he food astounding m its variety. July 22): Avoid confron-self in clinches. 'People shop a lot here," she said ... At lations. Take ring roads. PISCES (Feb. 19· home the markets are full at the end of lbe Libra friend will ex-l\farch 20): You get monthwhenpeoplearegettngpa1d." plain. Low-key approach what you want through She said she likes the casual clothes here is constructive. Check diplomatic maneuver. but thinks ''Italy is the best for smart clothes tendency to throw cau-Your own style, verve and London the cheapest" taoo to win<h. Many look attract favorable atten-Miss ChatterJee also said she is amazed at to you as example. lion. Superior makes how many women wear pants lo work-she Dependents are very room tor you at top. calls them trousers. "Most firms don't allow much in picture. Pet Taurus, Libra, Scorpio them back home." may require special at-figure prominently. Abd she thinks American women are tenllon. If M h -•-. ~lmost too casual with their jeans. "There, even LEO (July 23-A g arc &.• u. your if j 22). If • u . bl rthday you are a ;·ewyoeulryw.~ eans you wear a scarf, a nice top or · y~u re seeking ·natural teach · • easy solutions. persons e.r " ln who are not compllcat· tu it iv~• sen 5 al ave• EVEN TROUGH she and her friends were ed. yolfu 0are Cooling ~~e~~:!ti~e':~~:! denied admission to a disco in Salisbury just a yourse vercome ten· t d to be few days before she came to the U.S. Mi·ss d en C Y .lo be n a i v e • en scattered this Ch • b t eeds aterjee is still a Rhodesian and says she will You're In all the way -~ear, u .s plant~ always be loyal to her country. financially and where 10 1976 will ~ar: !ruat. She is disturbed by the """'est i·n her country i Your moat s1gn1f1cant ..... emot ons are co!'1cerned. month of 1978 .11 be ~ca us~ it .Places limits on how the people can Throw yourself mto rray M A . wt live their hves. "There is no more outdoor life. -give everything. He ay · quarius, Cancer The fighting is so close to the cities that it's vulnerable. By so doing, ard ~apricorn perso'.'s stupid to take chances," she explained. you receive and attract P ay 10:iportant roles 10 . lnstead or gomg to the country to hike or love your life. Health im-bicycle, she plays basketball wilb a club, but viRGO (A110. 23-Sept. prove~ H you P~~ more even th th btl d''f 22) •. oi·c'-.... om-v elUSts ·. attention to nutrition. ere e su e u erence between black ._ " brown and white exists. ' you're drawn in two Clif· ------------...:::.:..:::.:.:..::.:=..:.:=:.:::::.:..:. _________ _ rerent directiorus. Key is to finish one phase of ac- tivity before being com- mitted to another course. Aries, Libra are r;='9==-=:::==========11 part of scenario -and ~~·• so is number 9. What you thought was far into future is now on your doorstep. LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): People who seem'!d Indifferent now warm up to you. Relative who was indifferent leads your cheering section. Leo, Aquarius figure prominently. Get to heart of matters. Don •t distort picture. You are going to be compared to Fashion Island Store Also Harbor Center Store J: res s 1 v e; a bus i. As tor yoar question: negswomao ts pushy. Certain talents can be He's good on details lnberlted -such as a !;he's picky. He loses hJ~ beaatUul voice or temper because he's 50 mualcal abUUy -bat involved with his job· e·nn the gtrted ones she's bitchy. fie follow~ mast work at developtnc through: she doesn't their talents. a great person. know when to quiL His All men (and womea) Judgments are her prej-are not created equal. udlces. He as a man or Some are born with the world. she's been physical eharacterlatk1, around. lie climbed the sacb as size, that equip ladder of succe~s. she them for certain sports slept her way to the top. -for example. the H e ' s a s t e r n superb Jockey, the star taskmaster; she's hard baaketball player, the to work for." terrine football player. DEAR N.D.: I think But even these gifts you'd better 1et some· aren't enoagb to pro• one la Minot te e:a• dace champions. plaln to 10• &be dlf· To acldeve great sac· ferenee betweell a ee11 1D aay fleld re· atralab& pl•ce aad qalfe1 a comblnadoa of 1atlre. na&aral ablllty, di•· c:lpllne, ded.leatlon, de· ienalDatloD, imp(ntlon -and a lot or perspira- tion. • DEAR ANN LANDERS; I'm a hllh 1cbool student who Costa Meaa Barbor Adama 979-8882 SCORPIO (Oct. 23· Nov. 21): Collect. gather and analyze -rlse above apparent ob- ~tacles. Aquarlan plays important role. Avoid turning a sure thing into .Look! We had our picture taken with a TV star! Big Bird! Choose one 5x7 or 4 wallet sizes in natural color, just1.95. Come have your child's pholo taken w11h one of the gang from Sesame Street''·'. Pick 819 Bird. Cookre Monster. or Bert nn(1 ~ rnif' stuffed character~. Select rrom several d1Uerenl poses. Cooies and enlargements avallablo at higher prices. Two or three chlldron (to age 12) in ono photo. 2.98. No appolntmsnt necoasary. Charge tt. Sesame toya and olothss available at JCPenney •ASHIOM ISLAND Wed. March 29 thru Sat., Apr111 10 Lm. -1 p.m. 2 p.m. -g p.m. HAUOR CIMTlll Starts: Wed. March 29 thru Thurs., March 30 10a.m.·1 p.m. 2 p.m.·6p.m. Plx!at JCPenney ; • NATIONAL I CAREERS I PEOPLE ftAF~tTI' Prineess' Friend Ubanon Crooner Vows FJ.ghting ~ ... . 'FrienthJhip' From AP Dlspale!hetl Roddy LleweUyn, Princess Mucaret's 30- year -old crooner boyfriend, says he'll continue to St!e Queen EUubetb's 47-year-old sister despite criticism or their friendship. "l don't care what people say," lhe handsome brewery heir told reporlers al Heathrow Airport as he returned to London from a Caribbean vaca- ti<>n with the princess. "I shall go .on seeing her when and where I \qrnl. Let them all criticize -I don't cure" Resmnes BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -Israeli troops and Palestinian guerrillas clashed today at the K.hardall Bridge across the Lltani River, northern limit of the Israeli ad\'ance into southern Lebanon There were reports or eight Palestinians killed and one Israeli \\OUnded Pl'BLlC NOTICE A letter written by John Adams in 1813 T h e P a I c st 1 n t• C1'4U. NOTICE Of IHTEHTIOff TO CltEATI SfCUltlTY IHTEltlSt I Seu. •ttl •tt7 U C.C I brought $2,600 ln an auction attended by buyers Liberation OrgJntlJt1on from 13 states at the Robert H. Glass Auction said the Israelis made a Galler:, in Plainfield, Conn. dawn tank assault on the NOll(t I\ htreby 9lv~I\ IO lht ~rtdltOt\ ot (;ntfoulhAt c~'""""I lrK db4 C.&W P•o:1t1< Con<ttoffl' 0.btot', .. ..., .. bl.l\I ...... \ .oorK\ t\ 11 .. 1 L Sl<y Par• Ctrtll' City ot lrV1ff, C"""IY ol Or•n9• '.>t•l• ~ C•lllornta, tf\•t • >e<.11r1ty ll\lf<4!\l I\ •tloOut 10 De crHINI bf D•t>lor "'"' 11•...,1.a h> ~•••90 8•n•. • (4!dO'n'• Corpor•t1on S.t 1.u•d P•,t'f whe><\e C>u\tnf'\\ ~ ortu I\ 4/00 C.omou• o..... Clly of NtwPOr 1 lkarn. <ovntv of Oranv-. !>I ale of C•hlorn1• Paul Ricbards, a ( J bridge. 'iolatmg the 'fempleton. Mass .. l'EOPLE Cl'ase-f1re thev declared dealer in historical . six days ago. israel said documents, bought the -·---------its troops were clearmg letter from the estate of Margaret Maxwell mines on approaches to Smith of West Hartford, a <lirect descendant of th e bridge when WtlhamJones,one-timese-cretaryoflheNavy. guerrillas on the heights The collection included letters by Thomas Jef. above opened fire on ft-rson, James Monroe, James Madison, John them. Tf'I• ur0oitrh. 1n Qf"ntr,tt, 1n •"•th ltw)I ~lufll'f lntM"Mt wlll bt' CrflAtf"d i\ t11·ture\ t·Qu1omtnt turnilun• •no furru~h1n9:. OI ~OtOf" whQ.,,,-bu\itl(")) ·~ k.nown "' Crn1e-nnf111• (•mrnl, fnc dl>a C.&W P.c:llir Con<r•I,., "n<I le><•I •d "' 11~81 l S.1 Par~ '""t. C111 OI lrvlnt', C.•lltcwn1d. The •fOff'M•d \,4."(Uttly 1r..tn,,(11(110t\ Wiii be <On\u~ti"d on Ot ''"*"' IM 71n d•v of April, 1971 •I ~•nlldQO fl.>n~ ¥irt\O\t •tkfr~~ I') .6100 (drrlD\f\ 0f!Vt' N•wporl Oft.J<h, C•llforn1.t So tar u I• ~-10 I,,. ~<v•l'd P•rly. all bu\h'~U n .. mf) •no •d .,,_....., uMd by ll'!P 0.1>10< for lrw p.osl t~rt<t year\ •r• »11'14' Oaled M.trcn n. !018 SANTIAGO BANK lh !>l~1tt>n L Holl\t,.in VK<' Prtt10tnt I. M.tn•llf'' wurrd P•rly SANTIAGO aAHIC. lu•O...,_t 41ot Cam..,. Dnw Htw .. rl -... CA '1M4 Publl\twd Or-(.o,t\I O•"Y P1lol M10rl11 ll, 1''1 Pl.Bl.IC '\OTl('t: NOTICE OF SAlE OF PERSONAL l'lllOPEltTY t!>ec 1MI 0111 (.Mt(-) t..io\it e I \ nt'f'tb'f 91ven lh-4tt unOPr ano pu".,."I lo.,.. ta .. m-al\d pro- ••d•d I"" vnd••noQM<I All ~<t •I 11387 T rd\• Ll.frdf<,, Vrov•, C•fifornt•. Wltl \I'll •t pubtlC •vc••on •t M•\tt'f"\ Aue t1c.irt, 107)' . Ntwport, C01t4 Mt'~. •I 1 >O o '<lo<I! pm Ofl tn. 7th d•Y oc Ao,,1 1918 "" 10How1no <lf"l<flMd p.-r\On.tt or~rtv or V> m'-Kn thHN>t ~' may bl6 nfl'(l'\-WrY to ...,_.,lf\fy • tlf'f\ ch.flt• U'w ut'\df'r\tQrwod for t'"'11 dnd 1n 'HlPnttth 1ncurrt"O •t tri .. .ibovfl mttnOon•d ttdd'"''' loq4'H\41r ""''" <O\t\ of tldlff'"rt1\H'9 t1ind f'•Pf'n\of"\ o• ... .,, .. '>of•t. l <; \IO ... <ll"l I ll>I• _,,,<I 'h•tr mi\( 1h t"n\ r•frtQflr•tor [dw•rd J.imt~ 784J Proo.&»< I. N.t hOf"l,.\I (itv.CA ~70)0 A"1ount 01.M' 14\I 00 Octl11td .,,,, 1Jrd LtAY nt M•rc,, ,.,, M•~'""" Au<flO-\ 'V• Koufout4!. St Ct•l•t'y Pub• \~Or t"'Qt (n ,,, Oo1 •v Pilot M11rtP\ 11, lllA "" ,. Pl'BUC ~OTICE LIFE AND ACCIDENT AND Ml[AlTM SYHOPSISOf THE ANHUAl$TATEMENT YEAlt ENDEO DECIEM•llt Jl. nn .. l'ACt,..IC.MUTUAL l"tr IHSVllAHCE COMl'AHY 700 '"-1 C.-Orlve l'.0 .... - '0wp«'I -"· C.litw11I• t2"0 lol•I •<1m1th•h\~I\ $ 1.9S7 .SIO 1~1 Tol•l llltblhll"' l.Ul,'166 l!O Spo•c ••I ~u•t>'"' fund\ 44,73' •l7 Vn•·,\19nM luM~ 18 W ,918 (uHn fro n1 c>p '""(M\\ 1& 411 UJ tnr rr•~ \urp1v-. dv,.no iq17 ln\uf dtH.f '"fore .. N•llonwlde Ac<1dent •nd hl'•llh Ot"•mlum·. ln~uran<e 1n F-oro 13.131.097 11,)) .. 111.000 C.lofornl• e ... ,,,,..~, 4 9~,.,1.~ A«•d~l and """'I" on·m•um< C•l1tor111• Ov"""'\ US.036.'31 We M•.C.V <"'tlfy INI tt>e •bo-. "'"" •rt In 4ttorelanct with IM An nu•I St•t•mtnt to,. ttwo Yf'•r tf'd~ Dt<eml>u JI, 1'17 made 10 t11t t"t\.uranc• Cotnmt\.,.onfr of the St•t,. of (•l1fOtn4.t, P\lf'W•nl to 1aw H T .JcMmlnQ Vt<• Jltt'\tOrnt And (GnltOllf't ~"""'°" T. 0 ~,.,,. ~r .. t~nv l"ublhn..i °'-Co.HI D•••v P 1101, M.trt h 11. )qi, lO H ittl\O Aottl I 1<119 1109 78 Pl HI.IC NOTIC•. ltlOH NOTICF' 011' TRUSTEl!'S SAL( .. oTOU71 On Aprll U . 1•11, al 10 00 A.M RE!. E \trow COm!Mny (K <11.11v •C>l)O•nlf'd 1 ru~I~ u.-, dnd purW.0'11 lo o..d of lrvst d•ll'd AUOV\I l•. 1911 uecull'd by A<Jlon f'ubll\h*''• Inc • tl C.•lllorn•• (O<'porallon and r•<orded !>eplem-I, t~7. n ln<IT ,.o.111t, In book 12J6', 0•11• ~••. of O•ltclal Re<0•d1 In lhl' offk" o4 '"" County R~c ord•r ol Or•no• Counly, C.allfornla. WllL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST 8100£111 FOR CASH !~able at 11.-of'"'' tn l•wful monoy of IM Un1ltd Slal<'•I at !ht ma in •nl••n<• Of lflt RFS Mor19 .. C1• Co•oo• .. llol\, 101 Soult\ B•o•dw•y. !>.>nla Ana, CA '11'01 •II "911t, ti I~ -1ntt'1'\I tonvt'l'f'd lo and n-Mfd by II ""°" Wld o..<I ot T r11U '", ... or_,.. \flu.tltd "' 1'-(1 ty ol N,...-1 s. .... h, In "'111<1 County .. ,,., Stal•.,.....,,,,,..., as lot U 04 Traci No J101, ln tt... Clly of Ht•-1 AH<fl Coo;nty of Onn ... ~l•t• of (alllorn.a, A\ -~ ,. corw<! In -110 ~ 2S lo JO ...- 'tu•IW of Ml-c•ll~ ""-In ~ ofh<t of ttw County 111..:.,,... .. s.ld C.ounly llC4SEHOLDI S.td .... #IH bt ....... IMit wit'*'4 <o-t « _,.,,,,, •""'"' or lm- olie., r~ tllle, ~Nlft. 0t tl\CUft'!lw-. to PO 0.. ffmalflll\D prlMlpel \11m of IM note MCWM by u1d °"" o1Trust.1....i1: ''"·m n. wll" ll\ttrnl trwm Or.-1, 1m ., In wtlel nol• _ .. did. ~MC .. II •ny, "*' IM '9nM of .. Id 0.... oe lTvtl. feH, (fl.,OU and t)(jlotf!W. ti the Trin.I .. ~ .. IN tf\lth C"ffi.cl by Uld 0tH OI Trv\I. Tiie lleMflc!My -W 1111d o.41 of ('uincy Adams, Henry Clay and other notables . * Jane B. Robinson, widow of actor Edward G. Robinson. was in Rochester, Minn ., for a checkup at the Mayo Clinic. What better time to get mar- ried, she and movie director George Sidney said, than now? Olmstead County court officials said the pair were married by Judge Lawrt>ncc Agerter with a Mayo Clinic doctor as a witness. day The couple returned to Beverly Hills the next * 1t was a narrow escape for actress Joan Ben· BEHNIET~ nett. Fire extensively damaged her home in Scarsdale, N Y • but Miss Bennett and her husband of two months. David WUde, escaped from the house v. ithout injury after the fire started, officials said Their unidentified housekeeper, who jumped from a second-story window to escape the blaze, was taken to White Plarns llosp1tal where she was reported in satisfactory condition after treatment for smoke inhalation. * lt was a fine present for a lOOth birthday. Reuben Merrill, making his first trip in an airplane, sat back serenely as the plane circled the house his great-grandfather built in 1808. Merrill, a white-bearded Falmouth man who worked as a carpenter and contractor, is 100 to· dav. Ile 2ot his chance at air travel after a television reporter asked him what he wanted for his lOOth birthday. A ride in "one of those nymg machines," was the answer. Portland lawyer Ke nneth Snltger saw the m· terv1ew and helped arrange the flight by contact- ing the Maine Pilots Association. Its directors agreed to sponsor lhe flight. • Former federal marshal Janey Jimenez says her job with the defense side of the justice system hasn 'l called for much adjust· ment. The woman who escorted newspaper he iress Patricia Hearst during her Sao Fran- cisco bank robbery trial is an intern in San Diego with Federal Defenders, an agency that helps defendants unable lo hire attorneys. "As a deputy marshal, I saw the p ri soners as in-JtM1Hn dividuals, ·· she said Monday. "Thal was my pro· blcm. I never saw them as bad or ~ood but as human beings." * State Supreme Court Justice Stanley Mosk says he will speak at the UC Davis law school graduation despite a protest by a group of minorl· ty students over tbe Bakke dedsion be wrote. The Third World Coalition at the school asked Mosk to withdraw as speaker at the ceremony May 20 and says he can exped a protest de- monstration if he speaks. Mosk said 100 of the 139 students ln lhe graduating class signed a letter saying they would be ''honored" by his appearance. though some di!i· agreed with the decision. * Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas, the RepubJican vice presidential candidate in 1976, admits he 1s considering a bid for the pre· sidcncy in 1980. But when asked about his political future, Dole said he would be inclined to step aside H eithe r former President Gerald Ford or Ronald Reagaa became acti~ candldates for the nomination. Dole told r eporters on NRC's "Meet the Press" that il would be the "height of ln-DOlll gratitude" if he entered the race against Ford. • John Deao, who answered questions in the Watergate hearings five years ago, is now asking questions as a radio joumalisL For three minutes each day on his syndicated radio s how. "The. Right To Know," the 39- year-old onetime adviser to President Rkbard M. Nlxon in· lerviews a famous figure or comments on iss ues in the news. He ta~ his shows l.n the boot·Jlned stucly of the hillside oc.,. tiome be dDd wile Mo bought when tbe1 mo•ea to Loa Anceles from W aahington. W atergatet the subJ~t of bis be•t·aelUng memolr "Blino Ambition,•• has been a recurrlng theme of his tM!o &how. Trv\I, llY ,..,.., of•""°"'" or •tll'lfl * In Ille 01111 .. liont ak..,ttd tMre•v ... rtlofoo tlOICl/Wd _. ......... lo Cot. N nnan V••&baD Just rerUHd to call it '"" _..,*'.,... • -"""' C»(i.r•llon quits • ~.1~·:~.~ .. ~-=~~= A vetenn d Adm. Richard Byrd'• AotarcU.c 1• 00•• "'" ~19Md ..... , """' Ex .... dition in late 1920s y, ....... an '12 vowed P•oc>e•ty 10 wtltf>t Miid ...... tlofla. ""' I ~..:!: 1 • 111(1 ,.._,.,.,..,.,.,. «*•.,,., H •. mr, ·that a spate ot bad luck rt 11"'" ... __. yeart was not ::..~~iv;-.._u;:,:i: ;:~~ aolna to det« blm trom en~nc ~ l,°'9-mU. '"MM t)ttl ..... "'· ...... Offkl•f Jdlt..rod Trail Sled DOI Race uua ty.r. "~o;:·~ u. '"' ff• did~ t!.~ ~ ... ~ ~ ~t two to "'"saci.owCOM~• .. v arrive. ~ u UN. m-111 uiw annual .. ...,T""'11· Ancborae to-Noo:e trek, ~roued tbl flD1lb Une at •• llMf•ll ~........ N a... L • ...o..'.:11.;....:..a.. c... and. bl •w.t...tlK,..Y om•-~ u • ...,..,..., ~ o.ny ,..... 11' bM4: ti , 1' 11 ,,_.."" ,.,.._"· ' ,...,,. mlnul ~lllfJ D~la,,~d TOKYO (AP) - Violl!ncc has again forced postponement of the opening of Tokyo's nl!W internatio n a l airport . throwing airhnt•s and go\'ernmcnt officials into confusion The b1llion·dollar tsirport at Narita, H miles northeast of Tokyo. was scheduled to opl'n Thursday after six years or delays. w1lh flights 1n and out ( __ , N_s_n_o_n_r_) bl!ginning Monday But Prime M101ster Takeo Fukuda decided at a ~pec1al cabinet meeting that the destruction Sunday by militant foes of the airport, who wrecked the control tower and are threatening more "iolence, necessitated another postponement. Planes 11.e~alled WICIUTA. Kan. <AP> Cessna Aircraft Co . citing "several incidents" or en~int• failure, is launchang ;.i program to repair and replace engines for 1977 and 1978 models or 1t~ four-plac'e Skyhawk. Involved arc 3,700 ()f lht' single-engine plane~. the firm's biggest seller. Cessna's action. announced Monday. 1s believed to represent the first major recall of a product by a general &1vialion manufacturer. Unit Bla•ed WINDHOEK . South-West Africa <A P l -Poli<'e and llerero tribal leaders blame the militant South-West /\friea Pe op le 's Organization for the assassina tion of Clemens Kapuuo, the paramount Herero chief and the moderate black president of the leading multiracial political movement. ~tReport~d TYLER. Texas <Al'l Bill Mav test1fiNI Monday that· Mississippi businessman Don Trull "threatened to blow me. himself and the office up" during an alleged kidnapping last August if $1.6 million was not paid to Trull. Trull, 40, a former associate of paroled swindl er Billie SC'>I Estes. is charged with kidnapping May last Aug. 9 and holding him hos tage in the omce ol millionaire Billy Pyron During the incident police said, Trul threaten<'<! to ignite th< oHice if Estes and Pyror didn't come up with th< money. which Trull sa1c was owed to him from ~ land deal Rlllheg Baelced WASHINGTON <APl -The U.S. Supreme Court. ruled today that the federal government 'can prosecut.e acts of exl ortion involving Jnter state commerce 1 without having to show that the alleged crime involv~ "raeketoering. The court unan- \mously reln1tated the conviction of Donald Culbert for atlempted 1ttortion. He was accused of trying to ellort $100,000 rrom lb Bank d Marin tn San Rafael by tbreatenln1 the bank'• pre1ldonl, WUllam MWTay. -OAJL V PILOT C3 Haven for Elderly Old Folks at Home in Florida By HllGH A. Ml'LLIGAN ""~'-''-'~ BOCA GRANl>E, fo'la Stephen Jl'ostcr wrolt! .. Old Folks at llome" without ever i.eemg Florida <Jr lht-Suwannee R1v1:r, wh1eh he spdled wrong, hut 125 yt>urs later he would hu ve been ~nilifit>d lo know he pi<'kl-d the right parl of lhe ooun try for his mu~1cal reverie!> 'l'ht• wintt•r tourist, fleeing from tl\l' snowy North, is im mediately 1mprc!>sed with JWit how at homt· the old folks arc m Florida 011\1 OUR f'IRST day of dming along tht' west coa~t "''-' v.erc <:ut Miss Dubonnet off at the pass, or at leasl de· tained al an intersection, by a ho:iry cycle ¢ang called ''The Moonbeams." who hot rod about lhe area on h1i:h wheeled tricycles lh~t should have become extinct with the penny farthing and the bicycle built for two but somehow didn't Next one is impressed by how many old people arc dnvmg dbout Florida i.n big cars. often. 1t seems. liny. shnH•led-up htlle Pia Zadora 1s shown at a party at New York's Copacabana \\hich marked the start of a S.1 m1lhon ll'kv1c;ion ad campaign for the French apenllf that will !--potlii:ht hC'r as :\11ss Dubonnet. She has been in a number of Hro;.1cl\\ ay musicals. including "Fiddler on the Roof" in which she played Tcvyc's youngest daughter in thl• original C~ISI Poet Gives Advice On Finding Outlet ByJOYCEL.KENNEDY Dur Joyce : Do you have any suggestions about how to havt.- poetry publishC'd? -P .C., Willoughby, Ohio This answer comes from Alfred Milanese. a rising young ~t . writt>r and Nhtor in New York City. M~t poets publish In several magazines before they get their fir">t book published. Research the market of large and little ( htl'raT)) magazines to determine wh1<'h are best suited to your work WHEN SUBMITTING poetry. include a letter introducin~ yourself Send a few poems -typed with your name on every page ~rather than an entire manuscript. J\ stam(>l'<f. self addressed envelope will encourage a response. and retum of your unused ( r ~ 0 rE 04S ) µoe ms. If you rccP1 vc no ~ n ... word after thrt>e months. writt' a letter or inquiry --Althou~h a multiple c:ubm1ss1on of the same poems to Sf•veral magazines 1s tempting. 1t 's inad\i::.able THE fNTt~RNATJONAL Directory of Little Magazines and Small Presses ( Dustbooks. P .O. Box 1056. Paradise. Calif. 95969) ls an excellent reference for literary magazine leads. For larger publications, The Writer's Handbook, Wri(er's Outlet, or Utcrary Markel Place ( LMP) can be found in most libraries. For publishing books of poetry. The International Directory and LMP contain valuable information. Many writers publish their own first book, see The Pubtish·lt·Yourself Handbook: Literary Tradition & !low To <Pushcart Press, P .O. Box 845, Yonkers. N. \'. 10701 l I DON'T RF.COMMEND vanity presses -commercial operation~ you pay to prmt your books. or poetry contest you pay to enter READER SERVICE Poets & Wnters. Inc. Will send <1$Jnnng p<H1.1 a free kit of U3eful 111/orrnatwn. mcludmg more suggeshom /or pubwhang. or obtammg rt'Od1ngs, and a phone number you can call colUcl 1/ JIO" ho tit ~c1ftc CJfU'Shons. Encll>:re a gummed, self-Oddressed mailtng la~I wUh your requeat Jor "Poets & Writers Kit" lo Joyce Lain Kenned11 at thi!t newspaper Priest Fined Pot Sale to Youth Cited PERU, lnd. <AP) -The asaistanl pastor of St. Charles Catholic Cburch here has been fined $100 and sentenced to 40.~ days ln the county JaU aner pleadina 1uill,y to sellina marijuana lo a youth he was counsetllng. Al a hearin' ln Miami County Superior Court. the Rev. Pntrlclc Kohl, 32, was 1)90 1lven 1 yea.r's Jm>b•Uon. Judgtt Bruce Embrey said KobJ must ten'e al Jea.•l 40 days, but adckd he can be released as soon afterward as Bi5bop Jlayroond OaJlaatt r of Lafayette can nod a new aaslrnmont for him. people who c-an barely see over the da!'l hboard. Elderly wom"n seem to outnumber men at least 2 1 on lht• road. and in the restauranl.b and coc:kta1l lounges too. I DON'T KNOW whether these observations are supported by f''lorida census statistics or not. but they certainly are backed up every time you pull inlo a gos station or wait m line for a table at an eatery The tourist adage about eatin~ where the truck drivers cal ne\'er has convinced me. Most truck dri\'ers l e'er met. lnclud- 1n g a team of over-the-road truckers I once accompan11·ct from Canton. Ohio. to Fairbanks, Alaska. !or a story, were dyspeptic Junk food add.Hts who hved on black coffee. ham- buq{l'rs and jelly doughnuts In Florida, stick with the old dame!) They know which n•staurants serve the best :.inc.l biggest portions for the least price and build the most potent martinis. SURVfVAL ON A SLESDER pl..'ns1on or trust fund has imbued these hardy bluc·rinscd bonnes ""antes with a sixth sense about turning up for meals before the prices change ancl spurn10g the fish of the day 10 fa\'or of the chef's special. They can even lead you to places where the tourists ne\'cr go, when~ bingo begins at 4 p.m. followed by an excellent ancl reasonable• church supper. Th...' bingo goec; on all night but you can :llways eut out after thL• second piece or pie. Not only did Stephen Fo!>lcr ne'er get to Florida, he ne\er got to be old. Ile died broke CJt 38 10 New York's Bellevue Hospital with 38 cents m his change pur::.c and the f1\'c penciled words of JO unwritten song -"Dear friends and gentle hearts " EACH DAV THOl'SASDS of dear friends and gentle heart::. from l''londa's C\'er growing re- l ire m ent colonies come to Stcph<.'n Fosll'r Memorial Park on the banks of the Suwannee !liver to nde the old style river boats and hstcn to the carillon strike the notes or how the heCJrt grows Wl·ary longing for the old folks at home. Yet. to this tourist anywa} .• then• 1~ nothing sad or dreary .1l>oul growm~ old in Flond:.i Even more than the rt>Sort operators, the golden agers seem to welcome each sunri::.c as a triumph. \Vh(•n you see them on the beach coilecting shells. buLldinJ.! sand easUes. wading with totlt-r- mg steps out mto the soothin:.:. warming waters of the Gulf. sc•cond ehildhood seems ~~ Int happier than the first. TUE GRF.ED Al'ID conlrart ness of chtldhood. wh<'n hap111 nes~ a lw ays bcckon~rt :-om ('wher(> else• lo be doing 'omc>thinJ! c•bc· or waiting for a playmak or a promised part.\ or an ice <'rC'am sundae. has been n•plac<·d hy the Sl·renity amt c·nnt1.'ntment that onl\· seems to l'Ome with a pacemaker and a lo..,, salt diet and the realizattqn th<it today's playmate or party or sunset m1~ht not be ht'rc tomorrow Al lunch one day at the old hotel at Boca Grande. I O\Cr· he:-ird a snippet of com·ersat1on bet wcrn two octogenarians "ho mo,·cd down from M1<'h1~Jn year<; :tgo ..,,hf'n the 'Pac;sen~f'r train<. tC'rmtnalecl hPre "An rild llml·r around hen•," .;aid on<'. ''" a ft·llo" who r.m rem1.•mhc·r \\hPn WI' <.hnt \\1l1! turkc•yc; m th" :-.t'ruhlands 1.•ao;,t of the• b<'a<'h " •'A"ID i\~ E~VIRO~D1E ~·­ ta11st." replied the other. "1s a follow who 1usl arrived from Michi~an, has bought a con- dominium and doesn't want any more condominiums going up ·• Neither definition had much to do with old a~e. which is pro- ba bly why they laughed so hard to~cther before swapping yarns about their cataract operations "If I hadn't had my cataracts removed." said the former wild turkey h1mkr. ··1 might have fallen for that widow across the t•ourtyard \\ilhout gcttin~ a good look at hC'r She's one heck of a '>ht.1fnl'r · WHICH IX MOO:'llBEAM talk. means one who is adept at shur- neboard rather than adroit at shuffling cards. Florida's old folks at h ome take their pleasures senously as evidenced by the endlf.'SS lists of activities pinned to the bulletin boards of every retirement colony and mobile home park. 1'At our age." explainf'd " chir py senlol' dtiten hurrying off to yoga class on aluminum canes. "We don't have time lefl to worry." Dog Racers Fined SACRAMENTO (AP) -The San f'ranclsco Bay Area Racintt Ass~latlon hu bffn fined $1.250 for t•1Un1 to report that ll raised money to support the unsuc· ceasful 1116 doe raclnc ln· ltiaUve, the FaJr Political Pr-1\c- Ucu Commlsaioo said. ... . ... ' • I t I i: t b e p St tJ v H tc bl cl S( OM.V PILOT PUBLIC NOTl('E P1n1nciu. au .. 11au llAMe .,.,, ....... , '"• ,.,..,.,no ~-" •"4 ..,,, """ ... MAIN l"IPC • SVP"l V tO 110' ~Ill Mal ft~ \.enl• AN (A '1101 J•ll" two l't0 .. 110. 11~ Gl-- C1t< It, '°°""tat" V-41.y, CA tt>el Tflla 1><1a1.-h ~IM 1111' ... "' dl•ldu•I J-1-No.,.olo Tllh al•-1 ••• ltllld wllll Ii. Cou11h CttrW 04 Ora1191 c.-ty on March U, 1'1& ,.~u Publl~ o-..,,.. C.•M"I Oa1ly PllOI, Mart II 21, ~114, II. 11. ltll '*'11 PUBLIC NOTICE -•• " ...... 1U\°M- .. 011a To c••o110•' OP eUl.ll T•ANSlll • Che&. •M14111 U.C.C.I N•ll<t It l>ere4>Y 91,..1110 <tOOllO" ol IM within MmOcl P6rll tfl•t • '"''" traM!Wf It I~ lo Ill> -on ••no11al properly lltrtlnall•• Olt\C•l-TIM l\Omelal ..w:i Du\IM>\ -reu ol \M Intended lr.o<\'°•rorl•I ••• PAUi. JO•OAN. toll! C.O>N••. Hunlll\9tOI' •••<II. '" tHH ll/ITHl.lCN J JOllOAN, ?Olll Goll\AW", H-.111Qt4on llooo<ll CA., .... TM ._._Ill -llu"M•l -ro• Of "'41 In-tr ... S ...... hl •rt C..A. llO~AYYA, OU Ooro11>e• Y .. lloOLINM,CAn... The pr-r'IY perllMnt "4<'910 11 de~rli.. Ill -r•I H ~ltr ••I• _11 ........ ( .......... ""'~ h• ture•, klrfll~ bu~rwu •nd Ol)Odwllt Of TASTEE F•l!Cl -ll lout.cl •I ,,_. lrh'°' Sl,_1. Co\to Mew, CA '1616 TNI IM llOf•ln -crtbod tr ... sftr1 ... Ce lM (_m,,,.ttd WbtKI IO lftt •l>O•t provhlOI\> tt YOUR l!SCROW Sflt\llCE CO INC' tUtJ Mt-Ila •I Htll, W.\lnll1Ul•r, CA 9!MIJ on or tll•r APrll ltll, 1'1'. S.O l•r •• I• •nown to ulO onl-..S T'•n~f•rt"t(\) ,.,o tnt tnd~d Tr•n\ftror(\) u\otd tollowtnQ •odlt1o•I bU\lnr\\ rwmf>\ .tnd 4'10f •\'\of'\ wUhin trw lhr-•• ve•r) '"''' 1)4i\t noo111 D•tod f-•b«><or f IS t~lt C A Oo!>Av•t lnt~n<)t(.1 fr,.;,ntt<tt-\' Ytur E """"' S..vlco Co .• II>< , ,., " .... _, ......... w .. 1ml11•lor, CA n~ Tel 11141 Mt-JOIO Pulllll...., CJr•n<I<' c.,.,, 0•11• P•tot M•r< II 21 191¥ 1101 It PUBUC NOTICE ftCTITIOUS IUSINEU NAME UATlMlNT "Th« tot Owlf\9 per\Ot\" •'~ cto1n9 •uJt.ll"UJ\\ ., MJM SlRVtCt.S. 10131 C•tal'f\•'•" Ln. Hu,,t.1\9tOn Be•<h (•Ill fl .. , M ooty v .. n Pull1•m. 701,1 C•t•m•r•n L.n. HunlU'ICJtOn Bt•(n, Ct lll .,._,, • JUOilh L 0.~1d~ l'OIJ1C411•m•'"•" ll'I , Hunt1notonbrt•<h. l•tlf •16.41 My ltJCtrtl (ombt.. 101)1 t". •t•m,.,•n ~untinioton 8••<"· C••lf qaH T"'' bu,,,.." I\ rnndut t,.d by • ~nier•I p.1r1ner\h1p Molfy \/dl'I Pvl11•m Tht\ '\l.terntnt Wd\ fll('d Wtlh tl'\f" < o~,nty Ch·rk ot Or•nCJ9 Co,mty on M•rcn lJ, l9/e ,..,.m l'uDll""'° O"'"~ '°"'' O•oly Pilot Martt> H, °""" '· I I, ti, t'll 1 l'OJ II PlJBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS l llSINUS NANll STATl!MENT Tnt lollnlll~ per.on\ ue do•no bu1oi ne-\\ ·~ WARMINGTON [Mll[RTON Ill, 1•S92 Hole Aw.,..., Ir.one. CA •H 14 l hf' ROClef'I P W•rmlnqt"" <.o • C•hforn1d corporahon. 1•)91 H••• AlfetF\U1!,. trv1rw1 CA 9''.014 Embfirton 0.W>tO('Jf'nflnt C"orp .t t•lllornl• corPor•ll.,.., 1•5•1 t<•I• A"ettt.W. trvl~. CA t11U Tiii\ Dull.....S U <ondv<t..i 01 • <Of' po<•toOn TM A-t P W•nn1nq1or, (o Aobrrl P W•r1T'•n<,Jton. Prno«IM't 'l h•"' \.l•t"""nl W"1 f•lfd ••1" lht" Cnunt'f (fnk ot Ordn';J(" Co~nty on """" n. ""' FttllS Publl\M<f Or'*"O' CN\I O•oly Ptlol, Mt"l'l 21, -II'· t I, ti, 1911 P CBLJC NOTICF. ~~ -----OllOINANC.C NO. l COSTAMnA COUNTY WATE• IPl5"11CT ltE PEAi.iNG OllOINANCE N0\..1 ANDl. BE IT OAOAINEO BY THE BOARD Of OIAE'tTOR$ OF Tl~E C.0!.lA ME'>A COUNTY WAH.A 015TIUCT A!> l'OLLOM: S.ctlen 1 ORDINANCE NO 1 •nl1 OAOINANCl: NO , ol tN '°''•Mo .. CO<inly W•lt' 01\lrkl rel•hno lo pro- h1bltlMI wHI• ot ..,.,., aurong '"" oroUQl'lt •••hereby repe•led. SKU.,.l. T~ ~al _,,, Is Mr•b~ dlrtt<tld, wUhtn ten 110) <M~ •lier l1n<1I onWQe ol tllh Ordln•nce, 10 pUbt 1,1\ t~ tull t••I of tl>I\ Ot'dln...,cr on• II"'~ II' e ntwic>aper <M .,....ral , 1r<ut•t1on w1th1n the! Olslrtct •r\O ''"" uu .. ....,,. "' "* pcxled '" "'' .. 111 t>Ul>lt< pl.u) In h Olwrtct. ADOPTED: W\ "'° ..... ol Merell, ttJI oy t,.. l•>llowi"9 roll coll vol• AYES OIRECTOllS· Ouranlo. Boo111, a .. _...,,,..,'°"•"" p.,,, .... NOES [)IRCCTOAS· N- -"BSENT OIRfCTOAS. N- ~''° °"'.,,,'"· Prt•ldf<>I •Ht.LI Afl(S1" Cd S<.hn•btl, ~crttery Publl~ Or~ CIM•t 0.ll'f Piiot, Marc II 21. 1911 tn•·1' Pt.:BLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS eUl!NESS "AMI SfATIMllNT i M followlll!I l*'MHI ll dol"9 1>1111 l\vU •~: C.OMM!"CIAL LANOSCAPE ~EIWICE.S, 224S Of<1n91 ...... ~la Mow, CA '1•11 Merk Mo'IOfl F'ltt, 2145 Oran~ Avo .. Colla~. CA '7671 Tllh ~ ll <-lecl by.., In· CllVld\Jel, - Md llMiOf\ FlH 'Thl9 •t.etwnlont -• llled wl11\ Ille COVl'ltv 0«11 of or .... oe County on IM..U 17, 1'71. n1•1 f'ut>lllhlCS Or0flll9 Coast 0.11\1 Piiot -· 21,21...acw •.11. "" 107•·11 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS eUSINIEH NAM& HATUUNT Tt>o fol!OWl"O -ton I\ dol"9 bu~ ,...".' THll Ol.O "40TO CO., '2• Fenti ""•"ue, l.a911ft• llU<h, CAlllornlt .Wf Mk ._. a. I*. 313 E. Urd SIT'oel, Nt~ ~ c.tllomle n..o TIWC'...,_. I,<-DY Ml 111- 411~ M"""91 I . Mo Tht. .... "'""" -fht """' ... Citllf\tf ~of Or.,._ CAuM\I M ~,,,,.,.. 6 4 2. • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ~c:'!!!!.~~~-~~ .....••. ~.~~~!!.~~-~~ ........ ~:~~········I~!!.~.~ ....... . GMeral I 002 G"'4tf"al I 002 G.,..rol t OOZ GeM'NI I 002 Tt. Blu••t Ma1ketpl1u on the OrllllP Coan DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS •..•••.•..•...•........ ···········~·········· ·•··•········•········· ••·•·••·····•··•····•·· You Can sen It Find It. [ 642 5678 ) One Cal I Service Trade It With a 'want Ad • Fast Crecht ApPfOYal lttcil b tah Hou1u Fof' 54* Hous.1 For Sak ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••• •• •• • • • • G.-rat t 002 Cintet"Ol I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• You Woo't Believe Tills! IUSINESS OPPORTUMITY LAGUNA llACH PRICED TO SELL FAST! I'hree bedroom condo Irvine Two bedroom condo. Irvine l''our bedroonsOL~ ... Santa Ana Three bedroom condo ... Fullerton Three bedrocS()\;D)me .. Anaheim Three bedroom hOme ... Anaheim Three bedroom home .. Fountain Valley Three bedroom home ... Brea TRlrLEX 1 Yr old East Costa Ml'Sa, deluJtl' units, ea. wf2 bdrms , 2 ba , d1rung area, laundry & frpk N11w$17ll.OOO EVB. YH COPEL.A.HD REAL TOR 552-0434 Move i:ww to Uus luxury l wnh:le for $3000 down + closing cosls Near freeway & OCC 1''ully decor. 2 bd 2 bo, end uni\ w/altaC'hcd 2 car i::1r $7),000 646 ~945 Owner/8rkr. Populc:r WIM Ir SGltdwlch shop in ~...tr .. LOCJUllO w ; .. toblithed trade. bchui•• wiftH. Xlnt 1tor• for owfter-operotor w /rrM!Ch profit pohwtial. lft'Y~ a fix· ..... ~$34,000. Four bedroom home ... Anaheim Three bedroom home ... Yorba Linda Four bedroom home .. Anaheim QUAIL [ll PLACE EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY WaA to the S..rl! JACUZZI TIME! " PROPERTIES. _ 752-1920 Inc. ~·s Motice: All real l'i.tote adH•rt1wtt In Uus newspaper " "uh Jt"<'t lo lhe Federal 1' Jar Hou~tot Act of )%ij which makl"' It 11lt•J:JI lu adverl1::.t> · an) pre· ference. It m1t1hon. or dlscrinunauon based on race, color. rehg100. sex. or nallonal ong1n. or an mlention to muke any such preference, hm1ta tioo, or dJscnmmallon " HAHDYMAH'S Ra.re plaC'e for i.uch 'n DREAM eleaatit 2 bt.>droom home l :Jrjl:t' fully m">UIJll•tl Are you ready-$83.000 Built 1n work bench. INCLUDES stove, oven l...1r1:c lot v.1th R\' at· dlshwa:.her. trash C'Om l'e:.::. Nev. ly pawtcd. pactor. garbage d16· Jlam•hni: and v.allpapt'r posal. gas fire 101. t•ou.r Bedroom Home 1n w a s b e r • d r y e r . Mesa North Truly a refrigeriilor. pool. Great Buy for $76,000. jacuul. s.iuna, trnn1:. &.joy the moden pool & jociimi. Ir II•• U. OM unit while tM ott.er hct~ .-ke "'-fHl'(- IMfttl. lft this CCMIUftlettHy loc~ c..... del M• duplex. S 189 ,500. 1400 QUAIL ST.NEWPORT BEACH OPEH Till 1:30 546-1313 court, carpelS, drapl's '""·v· ,,. ··• ·. ,. and stained glass wUl· [~. limEJ1 ~';;.\WOW !' C•ll .~~')"f11!1ICI• .,., MESA VERDE [~ - .-.oRTH ·nus newspaper will not knowmgly accept any advert1s1ng for rt!al e11t.ate which 1s m v 10la l1onoflhc law ERRORS: Ad•trilten thould check ta..lr ads daily and NPpOri er· ron lmmedi .. y. The DAILY PILOT auumet IWMllty for ttw fint itt- corttd ins«tfOft Oftly. Spat'IO\Jl> ii lwdrcM1m. 2 balh modl'I with l'l'nlral alrium rourt Th1i. prime 7 yr11r old homr 1:. local· P<! on a lari:t-Jut. on o qwH slr~·t New buyer C'an C'h006l' their own t•1111>t>tmg Pnred ~low market al $96,000 CALL 751 3191. IEACH VALUES PRICE REDUCED 5 Bdrm Peninsulii l'l Steps to tx>iich. $189.000 Newer 01·(•an v 1t•w duplex. Oana Pt . $14.5,000. 5 Bdrm. pnvJlE' be11ch Co r ona Highland :. $159,000. World Wide «;::SELECT I PROPERTIES Brokers 673_4_.54_5 __ _ ~for SCIH DESIGHED • ••••• ••• •• • • • • • •• • •• • • FOR EXECUTIVE OCEA ... FtlOMT Ch.arminl! 2 BR home, :! n r garal!e Rest swam ming & rashing an»•. c I o s e t o s t o r t' " & restaurant.::. $275,000' General I 002 LIVIMG ••••••••••••••••••••••• Thi" beautifully up· DUPLEX J?raded Buccola llome! BALBOA ISLAND SpJC'1ous Living Room Stepstobeach,2Hrt t U\ ~1th b11: Fireplace each urul Older. l>ul v. l'll l.ari.:r Masler St!droom. earl'(! for Slll'> ooo h11:hly upgraded v. ith Balboa lay Prop. Realton 206Garnt'l pra\ alt• entrance to FOR MORE HOUSE i:ardt:n area. Slump • 675-7060 .. :-.tone planters h1ghhght FOR YOUR MONEY the room-backyard. NEWPORT IEACH Try our Wc,tchrr Beau Mesa Verde Living at its ty.4BR + dl'nor5 kit. t Best! $129,000. Call BA. 2 fplc's. t•o1.y family 546-2313 NEAR WATER i home 14~~:~;:'• J.n [ i ' liii'fa1J I .. o -----====='-~ Super duplC'X in ex1.·cllenl condition Copper plumb· ing throughout. Walk to canals, be.1ch & Lido Village. llt-sl duplex buy in Newport Hcach. To in spect ca II 96i-7788. 1 ;J"Jrllt•* IT'S ;Q.. KEY VP..EALTOP.sA Balboa Island Realty , __ "'_'6?£&7orJ'' -\ A ltE\l'TY' SiK !lOll' ~11 I 4BR.-FIXER $56.000! Repos,t--.sed by \. \ !'ee<l" <'Jrt' $.5600 down, S!IOO on ro~t 9'; an· trrrst 111 H·ar S!>0.-100 lo.111 S..li'l ri10 pays all~ 111 RllY' Call 75:?·1700 HEWPORT IEACH v.3 , nonr<>. t11shv..1!-ohrr. ll1J!hl\ upi.:rad1·tl . :1 -.hJk•· r••1r• I Bedroom". bdrm. fam1l) & d1nm.; 2 hath"' 1-0-:u ( AHl'l-:T room ... rll·W bro" n plu'h "i''•I 1:..'11:! 1 :.irpd,.,, "JIJrklml! 111101 and loo of extr.1s Of fered at only Sl~K.:>00. C3US4~1151 CAPE COO $55,000 /$2, 500 TOTALDOWM " 1• ~HERITAGE ..... REALTORS [®Bl W1ndinl! r<>adwav to soanni: 2 !.l<1ry retreat' Pnvalt' ~round prn1t·1·t seduded <'ntry to l:I\ 1-.h AIAHOOHEO!! MIHl~.-.CH 4BR. POOL-$66,400 VAMODOWH Circular clrlvr t.ar,::I' fanuly i.iied hv1ni: room Country k1tch1•n D11w Wall Of glJSI' view Of C'll\' ered pavihon & lush ~rounds surrounding ll&F 1:-'rceform pool Separate wing for hide· away Ma!>tcr Suite & cht ldren '!. q u;1rl1• rs llurrv for this unaqur bargam! 963-711111 ~HERITAGE REALTORS BIG, llG FAMILY ROOM Super fl oor plan Separate big family room wtlh noor to ('Plhn~ wmdOW!I, with Franklin stove & sltdint: glass dooors to woodscy baC'kynrd. Great k1lC'hen with no·wax floors, island cook center. Close to schoo l s & neighborhood shopping. Full price $89.~. CALL 556-2860. CSELEC,- T'PROPERTIES n.i.., ...... 1111y ......... ,...0......- C.C.• .... DlllJPlllt. 642-5678 DAILY PILOT hvm~ room Gourmet fHA-VA TERMS k1trhen m Pr looks '<Un· New 1ist1ni:. Great in i,lunt· courtyard! Wand· vestmenl. 4 bdrm home 1ng sta1rw;1y leads to in good n<'tt;h borhoocl swe<-pm~ ma.,ler hdrm nC'ar Windsor Park. New plu ... 1•hild ·~ retreat! cslm drperies. Jdesl llurry' St!llt-r 1s anll.1ous. :-t.>rt<'r home. Near 11-17 tiOIO srhool$ & s hopp1n~. "• '· "' ' "" 1' r>nn 't m1<.s this one as 1t 's [ ® lilIIJm] P""'' " only $63,900. ll!WWJ (::"j\ tW!4H IJil Find what you want in I Daily Pilot Cla.ss1!1ed~ Real F.state -~lf;\\.aUµ.-~tlr~· Tliol lnfriguing Word Game with a Chuc.He -----f!f .. 4 .. , C\AY a, rOtl&N ~ UN~tA'l.llf ,1.8()V~ Ll ltER:> I I I .::. TO GH AN'WU .. .. . SCR.AM-lETS A.nswen ia Claslfficaffoll SJOO SEEK & FIND. RESTORED VILLAGES S 0 0 H N M A l 0 H S R C A E 0 W B P S G S G E E N T l U R K G l H E A N E T T S G L 0 E E E D N R G U D U E Y U l L R A A P I 0 A R G A E 1 ATEI SUS RtFll EHHIC G t A C A T B D L 0 E Y L A 1 R fCJILVl ASLINHLRNR AHAYLAE EMONEO TDE 0 A M 'R l 1 T G M A F A E T I G OIBIVSOKV ZAllARSE S D E 1 N E U Q A R E [ L E R S M D H R L X R T A H I M 0 C L D L L I T S t 0 U T S W W P E B V A 0 P T l 0 E A T R 0 P A E S C 1 T S Y M l 0 A W A U W S E t M 0 L 0 C A H A M A S M A N httcru<tlcxw Hidden _. below ~ ~. i.ctl· ..,d, ~down Of dl~l'f. Plnd '"" --h In.~ Aw Glef ie Stonofttld Old Sturbrf do• - Old S1le111 lnd11n C1ty "1•ttc Staport ~ Shaler P1onee~1s W1ll1amsburii • Halt fem New Hll'WOl\1 Mlln• ColCl\its Toaiorr1llW: N1W Kami& For Old ,lecet . OCEAN VIEW NEWPORT EMERALD IAY Spectacular •iews from tt.i1 Chri1 AMI de-- slCJM<I wood & gton. l IR, + famHy room cw 4 IR home. You11 feet the ,._...... & cluarM of a mounte111t retreat, bllt Mfoy ftte slc1ht & sound of HM po4MCHllC) Pacific· IWf. $450,000. MEW HOME IM LAGUNA llG CAHYOH 4 BR. fam. rm , 3 haths. Beautifully decorated ram1ly home with paho .-iews from each room. SlJ.5.000 LIDO ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den. 4 baths. hvin~ rm. w /cathedral ceiling Lge. ma:-.ter bdrm. su1tC'. BAYFllOHT Several fine bay front homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 34\ 8oy\1dl•Dt1111!. N .8 67~·6161 1002 Gettttal 1002 Spacious 3 IR ho.-w/oceot1 vJ.w1 from nery rOOfft. This ftew ltCMM 11 .. Jty coHtn.cted w /mt ttte CllMftltf" a t.yer deiaonck. $237,500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• GREDIBROOK DESPITE THE RUMORS.u there's nothing ldl at thl!> price or $-10,500, EXCF.PT th1-; one Thi'> :t BR home NOT A CON DO won't l~t! Hurry, call u:. today. 540-3666 IMVESTMEMT·ORAMGE COUNTY J111t completed tw~·two 2 IR. 2 IA _. ih. I 00°o Occ.upied. Xlnt. opportunity for professional in.estor. OuhtanditMJ loc., .,afity thrv-out. Phone now to iftsped th11 properly & to reui•e a detailed purchase anafysi1. $912,500. Wltelc-.11 REAL ESTATE 4 bdrm. 2 bn F.xtn•mcly popular CAM !-:LOT mdl Th.ls lovely homt: located 1----------- 0 644-7020 2123 SAM JOAQUIN HILLS ROAD · NEWPORT BEACH on a cul·de·sac wtthtn easy walkmg disLance to So. Coast Plu1.a, theatres & restaurants. Many oul· standing fealurrs in· TRIPLE SENSATION elude: MAKE OFFER -ti" ner has moved. This beautiful lmg' 2 bdrm. den home is read)' for you. all for details and sub- mit vour offer. 52-6161 MESi. DEL MAR Great location, close to ~chool. t<'nnis l!ou rts, park and all the good things. A .t bdrm, 21 :! bath home in mrr C'ondition. New on the market ~t ~7.!!00 Cml 546-4141 Serving Cos ta Mesa-Irvine Huntington Beach·Newport B each GtMral 1002 G4PMral 1002 ....................... ••••··••·····••····•··• MEW-NEW bclmi•e Condo Custom bwlt ..Jbdrm. 2 $78,900. both. family room• For the discriminating fireplace Fully msulat· couple. Large master ed. doubt<' ~arai:c suite, formal dining, Easl~1de Costa Me~a. g uest bdrm & bath. SllR.500 er s Better hop Goon:net. kitchen. inv1t· onovrr1) Inf! large living r oom RoyMcCardl~ with gr eat fireplace 1110 Newport Blvd. J?roupi.n~. Secluded and Costa MHa 548-7729 qwet, inside secunlr 1---------1 gates. Pool & rec. hat For appt. call YAMODOWH! Yes. no down payment rt.•qulrt"d to buy this beautiful 3 bedroom home. gourmet kitchen, large Jiving room, fireplace, and covered patio. Locah.'Cl near the Harbor and HwtUngton, Marinal One mlle to beach. Priced for quick sale tm.900. Take advan· tage. CaU 983·6767 400E.17" C.M. ASSUME $50,000- L09-$79,900 3 bedrooms. Located next to central park and beautiful lake. great for fishing and saillng. sur rounded by $100,000 homes. Make this home a great buy! Won't last long. can Sl63-6767 (ftN N 9 • II S fUN 10 8' ,_,.,., ' \I.: THE REAL ESTATERS Get GREEN cash for WHITE elephants with a Class1rit'd Ad Ca 11 &42·5673 1--------i-:=== ca .... , .. 1002 GeMrel 1002 .............................................. OLD <:OaOM4 DEL MAR Oicc:k out this duplex on an 4'xlra wid$ lot. Separate c h arming 2 bedroom front house plus large pnvnt.c 3 bedroom unit over garage. Quiet street, nice yard. $195,000 A COLOWB&...__ CO •• 644·9060 1111 IAM.IOMMN MIU.t "°· l'M lillliEWO«f CDnd C\L"tom J.)rapt'rH'~ C'overNi patio DecoratorWallp:tpers lhroughout Outdoor gas llBQ Auto Gar Door 01><•nt•r Skylight 1n Fam llm BY OWNER 979 Kt:!J Prin. Onl~ $109 !jl)O SUBMIT TRADE Beaut. Medal 3 BR,~ B.\ home, xlra wide lot hu1•1 court yard entry v. \II• fountam. Lido lslt> $259,500 JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 NEW HOME Eattside C. M. Builder just C'omplctcd this 2 story 4 bdrm homr Features mchxk; \':lull· cd cc11tngs. 3 c3r garai:c & RV storage. llurr;.;, C'hoose your own carpeL~ Call 540-5880. Real Estate COLLEGE PARK Real Est.ate ~HERITAGE ·~ REALTORS GARAGE SALE ads in the Daily Pilot brint ---------1 happy results. To plac~ your drawing card. Call 642·5678 phone 642-5678 today. 1002 GeMt"OI 1002 .................................. , .....•..... macnab I Irvine realty llG CANYON IROADMOORS PLAH I on lg. lot w /pool, jacuzzi & outdoor BBQ. Great for cntcrtaininl! -scp. children's wing & maid's qtrs . $425.000 (subj. to back·UP offers on· ly). (S·97l PLAH 2 Spacious liv. rm. w 'sunken con vcrsation area. family rm/kitchen combo. bouqu<'t cyn <>tone fpl + family sized pool Pric<'ci to sell $378.000. CS·9R) PUHl Beautiful view of Spyglass Hill. Fiower gardens surround this 4BR on lg. corner lot w /pool. $369,SOO. (5·99) PL.AH 4 Prof. landscaped & fenced play area. Perlect for outdoor entertain· ing around pool, jacuzzi. & gas fircpit. Open. airy home Just wail· Ing for your imaganaUon. $329,900. CS·lOO l Lynne Valentine 64-1·6200 M2-t23S 644-6200 "' Oowr Orlve HMbor vi.w Center Irvine at Campus Valt.y C.nter 752-1414 f • I t I ti t ' e p s lJ v H t< 8 Toeedav. Merch 28. 1971 DAILY PILOT ·......._ flor U. .._...For Wt ..._.. flor W. Ho.Ma tr.r W. H._ .. ,_ W. ............................•...................•................••••...•.....•.....•....... ~······················ ~ol 1002 G.Mf'• ID02 •ws• 1001 .... ,.. 1001 G.ffol 1002 Ho.tt.1FwW. Hoea.1"°rS. Hone.FwW. Ho.snFe.-W. ...•••.........•...•••. •········•···•··•••···· .••..............•..••. ···············~······· .••..••.•.............. •·······•••·•·········· ••.••....••••.••....••••••............•••....•......••.•.••..•••.•.• 5 IEDROOMS OM THIE WATER Actually, OVER the waler (when the tide is in!), sits this 5 bedroom beach house with funky decor, sunny kitchen, artist's studio and top-0f-the- world sun roof. Don't let the words fool you. this home is soltd redwood' and ad1acent to China Cove beaC'h. l'rulv Unique at $3!J5,000 UNl()Uf: fi()M~S REAL lOAS', 675 6000 :>.MJ L1~t CoaH H111llw.iv. Corona dd Mar .i.,,, 111 M· ,., \' 1·cch 11 ~·tu 5!JQO A-1 RENTALS CORONA DEL MAR 3 Bdrmli., 2 baths. wtlh 3 gal't & wood burning frpks LiJq.!e fam1lv rm & elcl' garagt• doo1 Now val·ant $ti00 ILUFFS CONDO Highly desirable "S Plan" "X Plan" 3 bdrm , family rm , 2 baths & powder rm. & formal dining rm. Greal lota- tion nr. pool & lovf>ly greenbelt. Now vacant. $650. 759-0811 'Fiut .,,_, Glut Wuuu 'Bldg -------c.rc.o .. Mcr 1022 CoraM .. M9r 1012e..t.W... 1024 ~ 1040 ............................................................................................ AXaUPPll MEWttoaT llACH :t Unit.a 04 ~Xl02 lot Owner will ncha~l' for Ari ion• property Sl'JUOO 613*3 833 ~ ~\-0.0, associated tHtO" ERS--11 C l\l TO RS lU /f, \\ 8~1buu f. 1 I J•;. I 31R +OEN POOL + HORSES GorJ(t'OWI ~ acre horse property! Huge hvanft room & den-with fireplac e in earh' F.oonnous farruly room Wet bar. Rambling ranch lutchen. Spac1ou!\ bedroom. Sparkling blue pool. Barn Tack Room & 1033 White S 11 Woy_ Spat'IOU'l 4 bdrm. famtly rm home in ongmal Harbor View with formal din ing, pool. FH'utzt AND goq~eous <X'('cm. harbor . island and ni1::ht light view. Rt:'dured to $259.500. 400 I T opsi• LGH A l'ui;tom1zod 5 bdrm, ~1oglc story. with lovely <'nurtyard entry and a 3 car garage PLUS panoramic ocean and green rolhng hills view. Reduced to $274,500 FEE. c• 644-7211 fCM" detalla /Jn NIGEL Wn NIGEL 01\ILCY b. '11\ILEY & l\SSl:lCIAT ES l\558UATES \'Ol"'rals This one has 11 , all for only S170.000' lcAoaPftlfMula 1007 Coroftodef Mar 1022 •SB••s * 2STO.Y Ln1a& iD N~vada now fnncrow1n Nevada Tenent tne>\'lftl out now 3BR. 2ba.CuJ deuc Mesa Verde. ~.000 A Johnson Bks 979 4964 WOODSTREAM CON DO Nr Bk Bay, 1plt lev~I. 3 Rr, 2 Ba. 3 car 11i1r. :iu~r decor, $94,tOO Owner/agt. Mi-_'1933_· _. __ IYOWHU Open dally. 3 BR + fam rm. Gale for boat or trlr 188.500 229 Princeton Dr. S5&-8674 MIMI-ft.AMT ATIOM Return to yesteryear WmtlOHUS Qwet home In Family home ln quiet r•idcnu1tl area. Lovely uprraded With wood and mtnon. Skyli&ht~ patio covt-r aod wf't·bar. Call 546-5880 A,&mt. MHDST.LC. 3 bdrm flaer upper w/bl~ tmly nn. Wood burning frplc, hardwood floon. blodc wall fencing. Could ~ your dream borne w I n litlle work. 159-1501. 300' Dnve way leadl. to &S Renie Specialists private1 Victorian ltvmg ! 3.4 or 5 bdrm modeb Plllared porch, COLY hv avail, some w/poob . rm w1lh manUed frplc! 968-4602 Hide away parlour ' Penrungton Propert1e-. Workshop ! Hu~c lot ' ----Don •t d~lay <:a II nuw ••••••••• ••• •••••••• • •. • • ••••••••••••••••••• •• I 002 673-8550 Nici' 3 Br. 2 ba on Mon IY OWNER "· 9 • • ' tero Sl!liS.000 BeauUful larce comer Would you believe only PRICED ror quick sale $73.500" Better hurry ' $67, 950 Fii A or V \ C3U M.S-0300 ar. 2ba, gd IOl' G.-ral 1002GeMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BETTER HURRY! NEWPORT BEACH. completely remodeil'd upgraded home new paint in/out, cpta, drps, plumblog, kitrhen & landscaping. 3 Rdrmi;, custom brick frpk. A better buy you won't filt:l Only $114,900. 644-7270 WEST CLIFF ..._wUstiRg Located in prime neighborhood. Hou.se sits well bacll from street on large lot. Den off living room easily converted w 3rd bdrm. Llgbt and airy with encl05ed lanai on mar of house. All this plus a truly formal d111 mg room. $163.500. ~=======~ S~=~~j;;•Bl~;;,··;;~ $155,000. Agt./Owner. FORES T E OLSON ,,,.~ l .... , '' 1••• ··~····················· ···················~:... [ ®11111] ==~~~::: ~~~~ A HAPPY HOMIE harbor view 3 Br 2l~ Ba. _67_3-_3620 ______ _ Would a spotless house pool. Jar. sauna. tennis •NEWUSTING• ~~·~·~~~~-~c_..~~~ ~· make you happy? Well $ 2 3 ~, 0 0 0. 0 M N 1 2 sty. remodel~. upgrd _ this 3 bedroom charmer 714~1-1001 exec home. 3 BR 2 Ba. DUPLEX BkrJownrcau 751·7760or ~- GUHMAR IESTYALUE! LOWEST rRICE $19,500 (FUiiy a1r-cood.) rl'"t«t S..at~ ti-"~ A£ALTOAS PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 6-iM200 HUHTIMGTOM HARBOUR -$399,500 Dock your bout in front of this lovely 4 bedroom home on the water w /55' frontage. Exciting walt'I' Vlf'W frorn mos t rooms Marhk frpl c dct'k w / glass wall <.'nl'losun'. :1 ear gara~l' A real happ) home & fun plLJce lo live ~ Call today for appt 1 SPANISH VILLA -~ --- WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS 21 I I S• Jooquln Hills Rood 11> AC~S7 I, 900 Red hie roof over Spanish arches leads to secluded entry. Oak bcamc.-d ceilings h1ghhte hv. rm. CanUna kitchen plu!' sweeping master bedroom plu:. 2 bedrooms Sprawling lot Selll'r anxious Try $7,190 Total do\lin. Call Qu11:k INVESTOR'S • NEWPORT CENTER, H.I . 644-49 l 0 M7.fi0t0 SPECIAL-$47,950 Guarded gateway pro· GtMr'OI I 002 G.-ral I 002 tec.1.S lavish ground with •••••••••••••••••••••·· ••••••• •••••••••••••••• pool. Secluded entry to execull~e hving room CORHSt PRJVACY Suns hine gourmet A truly warm and mv1t kitchen overlooks ing family home in a private courtyard qualtly res1dentu1l en Sweeping master bdrm v1ronmenl Convenient & dtild's retreat. Owner to Sl'hools and s hopping 20HORSES 1 is anxious Submit any an E:istbluf! Smooth [r®::::::::::-11jiiijiijiij~jjiiiij~ jiiijii~,iiii' vHt·r' SH-6010 flowing 4 bedroom hnm<' t~tdtt • j t I , • •I "I : : I' ~~~~ 15~~/;Je~ iJ ra~~:: _ ----··-·-~ [ ® l!I! formal d1nani: room T.,.,u • patios for t•nlt'rta1ninj.( pennrtted on tlus ocean VJew 5 acre site in add1· t1on to your dream home. pool & whatever One of a kind pnced belm1. com parable properllt"i. at $350,000 People who m,'(•d people and a man• v11:\li $154.900 'hould al"';iys t•hetk the -~t·n1ee l>1rrctorv in thl' llave sometlung to sell~ Wl\TI Hf HONl I DAILY PILOT Classified a<h do 1t well. HOMI '> REAL ESTA.,.E 631-1400 J\ 01 Vl'llJO uf 11.1rhor tnvc~lml•nl Co. DON'T FORGET! van.APRIL I Ith • A PRIVATE PROPERTY WEEK TRIBUTE TO THE ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONALS START BUILDING Ara eqwty• Low Down' VA & FHA Term~• l.:irge Yard! 3 Bdrms $hi Jiii()' REDCARPl':T 7~· 120~ HB.P! OH WATER-VIEW fully funushed mobile home ri1:ht on the waler. Neal view or all the "'ater action. Looks )Ust hke a hol!ll)_ rns1de and j.!n•al o~ pal10 fnr t'nl~ataanini.i C'harmanR one bedroom and d1nani: ro im S67 ,$00 - SALISBURY REAi ESlATf: Balboa 1,ranc:l 673-{:£!()0 TheH apeclal p•gea will honOf Prfv•t• Property Week and wlll b• delivered to over 88,000 horMt vi• the Delly Pilot end Piiot AdvertlHr. Not1o.• wlll be one column by lour Jncht• .. ch, allowing room for e photo and dHcrtptlve copy. Cott of e1ch notlc• I• only S18, with • photo you provide. Thia Hlute to R .. I Ett•t• ProfHalon1l1 la an exoeptJon1I opportunity to Introduce new Of longtlm• Haocl•tH to th• people of lh• o ... nge co,.t, or to honor outat1ndlng ulea or Hrvl<Mt aohlevtmenta. Don't mlu being p1rt of thle 1pedal actvertlektg ~unity. Deadline for rMeMng 1p1ct I• & p.m., Apr1117. C1n today! Or, you m•Y mill your photo end• brt•f artlclt or 1b0ut 76 word• d .. cr1blng your b1e:tcground, educ:atlon, proftaaJonml training, •w•rda or othtt honora. Mill your story end photo to th• Cl11llfled Otpt,, Delly Pllot, S30 W. Bey Street, Box 1HO, Coate Meal, CA 92121. For http oompoalnt your Hlutt nodc9, ~II 142-6871 •nd • frttndly ,cs;VfHr wtll ..... ,you. DAILY PILOT '642-5618 is the answer. Would you OCEAN VIEW den. & deck w /view Choice N_,...,..r't Hei""'ls bke to be moved before towards Catalma In old w"..., .., summer?Call5462313 I QUALITY C'd M. $214,900. Rrkr area:b1gR·2lot.garage Just look what you get! A very sharp 4 bdrm. + den. 2-story home on poolsized lot. Move 1n now' Short escrow. \'.i· rant & wa1hng for you '"''· '. "', " • ' ' CC>tolSTRUCTED 759-1288 ~tre:.sC'd for 2nd story. [®-·, ! DUPLEX Cotto Mffa I 024 Sl~:IMEttS COVE lal>oa Pftdnwla I 0 0 7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IYOWNER 40' From bark door to .beach. preslig 1ous Peninsula Pmnt. Newly remodeled 5 Bdrm. 2 bath. Fee land. $185,000. Agt/Owner. 673-3620 FERHAHDo·s HIDEAWAY I.ari:e 3 nn 2 liJ\ units ••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTY 64'-4463 w IUl'(' CH't'an \ ll'W l 'p lucky buyer! AGENT 640-5560 P<'r urut has bt•arn nil MUST SELL ... OW TTEJoJi V"' • m.:s. J..ot·att'<I in scrcnl' CoUege Park 3 br & dan A1 u ...... AS -.c•tt1n~ tn IH•aut1 ru1 ing rm. covered pat1u Here lS a one ume orrer on Cap's tr an o B ca ch Terms to swt $80.500 for you to purchase a 6'2 HarbOur I 042 Sl59.SOO. 831 9081 yr old. 3br, fam rm, 2ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• AMCHOIAGE I SECLUDlD approx moo down"' ap· BVOWNER-SEAGATt; ~ Mesa Wood.Ii home for WATERFRONT IMVESTMEMTS THR£E IEDROO prox S786 per mo. Great Custom tile nr & pallo, C7 I 4t 49'-71 I I Fr es b Paint and opport for convenUooal frplc. 30' slip, water view buye1 s too Call 00'#. rmt & bck, 3br. 3ba. 3 wallpaper enhance lblS Please, Pr in ooly. ~ks . .....J, jacuzzi, ten- DUPL1':X Sll0.000 Nr RO!>e GJrdens. walk to beach Ownr anxious. i.dl or trade IREN Point R E 71414~5600 Corofta.CMar 1022 ....................... open beam cellulg home. "Lil> .,.,.,., Li _....,,.I Priced under $80,000 .,...._.,.,. c. Aet. nis. db gar. $234,000. Read.) tor you to move m OWMSt/SAVE $$$ TI4/846-4829.213/597-5553 and start han~ing your E . s 1 de 3 b r. 1 ,., b a C9'risti9ct lay plants on the patio' Oversued corner Lot WClltet fi ont 3 Bdrm. I bath house on quiet Peninsula St l.,l ltmc on mark<'l in 17 years A.:t 642 3.l.111 LOWEST PRICE ATIEACH I Crwonade-IMar --------• i Brlrm . 1 halh honw with lwo n•ar unit~ Wdl J_ QUAIL m Pt.,ACE :PHOJ>ER"l 11!",H _• _ 752·1'20 1 n• •-QlMIL Sl • ..-cMT ~CH ()peon TUI 8·30 PM RV access Nu roof & Li.:e 4 BR 3 Ba r11nil11 Ors Very clean CI06e to $250,000 P\t Pt) l'all srhls Pnccd lo 3ell 7 9 :.>AM. 213-5.'Y.! "1118'1 $T7 ,500 646 8025 EXCLUSIVE COMDO 1,...n.e I 044 ·············•··•······ $78,900 2 BR l Ba, nr be~t h,1 \' ~wimm1ng beach Quit'! street, pleas ant neighborhood, $110,000 Burr Whit~ n~alt~r 2901 Ne wport Blvd N 8 . (7 t 4 , 6 75·4630 Sure Success! .i:_- . -. -- 902 4 SIZES 8-20 ~, 11T~i-11T4'.T.- SP""& s BIG m~it is· !.Oft soft \l11rtdreu1nr' This squ~•P armllolf. (M*S thtre, 100) S!)IP IH dehthl lo bt 1n Ind be 1tt" 1n bS}~' Printed Patttrn 9024 Mis~ S11es 8. 10, 12, 14, 16. 18. 70. Sitt 12 (Mt 34) b~n J wds 4~ 1ncll fabric S..d $1.50 '°' .. p.1tt"11. ~ 35' tor .ti ,attn tw finklm •l'ftllil, ~llldllna. .... tk MU(AJI MAm• Petttrn Dept. ~2 Dally Piiot 212 Wat l&tll St., ... Ycd. •Y ICIOll. l'fltlt IWIL AD-DIUS. 21r, Sil( .... mu llUMltll. LOOK RICH. YOUNG. SMART on a bud&•t' Stw ntw 5011 1.,r;tabh.,hl.'d arl!a & wf'll r ared for $175.000 HORIHS REAL TY * 494-8057 * CHARMING 3br, 2ba +guest house Frpl. 2 pallO!I. R·2 lot. Pnn only. $157 ,000. Owner, 64(). 7030. Jiffy-Crochet! i, A6a 'BAbdh Spark cuuat oull1ts with V1b1anlly dashrnr cardigan Crochtl 1n heht and darli col01s Eaw V shtch wOlks up ta~. adds 1nler6t1na des1cn lei I.lie. u~ synthetlt w~ttd tor th1., smart c:a1d1Jan. Palttin 7311 S11M 8 10; 1214 rnrl $1 SO for evh 1ldltt1n _.dd 3~c t"h pattern for first cla\\ a11ma,1 and llandltn~ Stnd lo: Needlt'craft Dept. 105 Dally Pilot (Insert 11a111t of rour paper 1 lo&\U, Ol4 Clltl•' Sla., lltw YO!\, fllY lOOll. rnnt lllfllt, Mdrea, ZIP! htttni llumw. VALUf pacll'd 1978 NHOl E CRAH c:atdlOi Choose from 22~ d~•iins J fr,~ rnsidt. All ,,~Its Knit Ctochet. Seid 75c (asy 'ifts '11' Omaml!Ttt. Sl.SO reuow Show-Offs ......... .$UO St•"··· '"" Qlltts ...... ius Stltdl 111 ritdl Quilts •••• US tioclltt with Squw..... 1.00 CtvchtU Werdfobt. • . • . . UO Nifty fifty Quilts ........ $1.00 lti"'lt C#KIMt .. .. • , Sl.00 S.W l Knit W $1.ZS Ntffltpo1nt 8oc* Sl.00 flOWtf Ctvchtt ... suo HatrJll11 Cnltlltt w $1.00 lntt"'I Crethtt 8ooll . St.90 l11SUlll Mtcrtmt ._. SUO d/es.ses. 1119'-5k_rrts, ~ftls 111 1n NlW SPlllHG SUM MEil PAnERH CATAlOC Frrt pettem coupo11 Send 1 ~ tOH..u.t Sewt.& w.juo ....... ,.... ... 1 00 lOS.hl*lt Cllclll .... 1 00 121-~ ... ~ .. lJI 11\SW!t Mll"1 .. • . 11 ... C..,pkl• ,,ft w . . . 1.00 Complttt AfplM 114 SI.It 12 rntt At~w 111 154 leoll of 1' ~lits II. 75c ....... Quilt 8ooll 12. 7Sf 15 Nb for TNlr ll .. 75' llllet 1' JiftJ bp... 754 MUST SELL MOW Mesa del Mar 3 br. 2 ba, For the discrimanatang •TUHTLE~ROCK * l'l)Uple, trg mstr sutlt>, 3 HK 2 Ba Broadmour. formal din rom. j!ucsl br w1ram rm. din rm, up· +ba.lrgliv r mw/frplc .:rds Avl 1mmcfl. grouping, secluded & $112,900. Lsehld. Ownr/ Rarage dr opnr Terms lo ~111te. $79.900. 831·9081 BEST PRICE qwet. Inside sec gate. _a_l?l_7_S9_·_1288 _____ _ pool & rec hall, nr S. Cst.1--------- Plata. Jo'or app't call 546 7001aft3·30. F.1 Side Custom home 3Br. huge ram. rm., 3 rar l(ar., on R·2 lot. Agt 640-7171 , ______ _ GREEHIROOK 4 bdrm. 2 ha. Extremely popular CAMI-.:LOT mdl This lovely home located on a cul-de-sar within easy walking distance to ~ C-0ast Pla1a. lhealr<.'s & restaurants. Many oul· standrn~ features an · elude. OG1M1 Point l 026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spanbh Mansi°" Unique Dana Point landmark converted to 3 urut!. Perfed ror own('r IX'rupal1on plus income. Ocean view. lmpres:.1ve facade & 1mrt\3culately remodel~ lntenor. HORIHS REAL TY * 494-8057 * IYOWHER Newer ocean view Duplex. quality con i;tru<'l1on. 3 Bdrms and 2 Bdrms. $142,000. Agent/ Owner. 673-3620 BToro 1032 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VACAMT Please submit orrl'r on Uus 4 br now. Askml( on ly $74,000. 968-3371 MEW·IM T..tleRockGIH Patio home in ready to move-in condition Professionally decorated and landscaped. Enjo,• Uus prestigious home 1n a great nei~hbomoo.I 1''ealurcs 4 BR. famal room. formal DR. C.•11 rordetatls red hill ~:.: 552-7500 LARGEST 4 BDRM. . in Village I, Univ. Park 4 Bdrms . 2'_, ba. anil 12x32 family room. Many P.Xtras. Call for morr m· formation Custom Drapencs CoverC'd pahn Deroralor Wallpapers throughout Outdoor gas BBQ Auto Gar Door Opener Skylight in Film. Rm. BY OWNER 979-8123 Pnn Only $10'1.900 EMDU ... IT Super upgrad<'d town home w /covered IJ523 CAMPUSDa·IRVIME patio clubhse. tennas.1-------- W<.'1ght room. !'auna, pool tbls. pang pon~ & more Priced unbelae\ ably at $65.000 754-7800 LOOK Eastside $75,000 3 BR. hardwood Ooor<1, ---- fplr l~c yard Won't Fountain Valley I 034 la.,t' ••••••••••••••••••••••• tUllKAllT'S 01'"1 HOUR lllULTY .~ 171130..no•.Coet•M•M ~ 645-9161 TRADE YOUR RV For this 3 br lvly home in FV. Asklngonly $75,750. 968 3.171. LOVB.YPLACE & seller is despcrat<' New homf' 1s ready. 3 br. ---------1 prime area ror onh **THIS IS IT• * m .950. Submit. 968 3371 4br2 ~a~~~~pery& (~IWN!l!tji!Ji§j crpts Bnck rrpl & slatf' WILLOWS t Bdrm .• 2 ba.: nr. HentaRe Pk. & Jn me J11i:h. $74.000 WALNUT SQUARE 3 Bdrm . sew1n~ !ruin rm . patio, pool nearli' Only $64 ,900 SANTAANA N of 17th, 3 bdrm:. .. 2 ha adult condo; IJ?e . ram rm. w /frpl. overlooks patio. Sharp cond. Onl\· S64.SOO !VB. YM COPB.AND UAL TOR 552·0434 OWNER WANTS OFFERS!! Don't be a oowani! Hert> L" a treat 0PJ19rtunity to steal lawfully. New Woodbndge Rroadmoor "f. ' Plan Will go le3se opllon. assumable VIR at 9'r, imm~iate mm e e n l r y . V a n L u I I Real Estate -an lnctud~ landscapin~ OMEOF THEIEST Priced 4 bdrm In FOun· ta.In Valley Only m.950 968-3371. wallcoverinR!l Stained &lass windows. K1tcht'n prof remodeled w I microwave ovt'n. btchr blk & stainless !lteel. Elec. gar w/cedar panel· Ing Ii work bench. mahiL yrd w/11>rinlders. Fruit & shade \rees. Qtdet sL nr schools & OOC. By Appt. 557 "'368 __ ___;.....;...;;.,;... __ _ or drape allowance. Sub rrut your offer on thl" 2100 sq ft. execut1\• home Call 551.JOOO flj 644-3754 $111,000 8.KANf MAMSIOM WOOOIRrDGE ---l 5 Bedrrn 3 bath ftatutt!\ REALTY ilSUMAILE LOAM untque spiral 1tairoa<> 1------- H1.11e (2000 sq ft l 3br and nool' to cr1Un1t mlr w/l''kc>\. VA asaumahl• l'Ot"I, fanlutlr flobr plan loan. S:Zl.000 dwn & no Truly tlf'C•nt hom• in quallfyu,g. Lor• Just p r f' a t I 1 I o u 1o mm fmm Sa. Cat Pl•ta. aelJhborbood. Ut'tluced 754-7800 ssooo.Callto11eenow1 lJ~;'i&n?!Jlljf!lt:l ~r.i"'i)M6·810l urtle Rot"lr home, hv OWTW'f'. ll BR. 2 be. for dm rm. fam rm. pool II j~11 Sl!l4.500 Prin only, e(.'r lpm. ~tlO, AA Spin. 752-32Se • - ~~::.~.~ ........ ~.~!!!.~~ ........ ~~~.~~.~!~~~ ...... ~~~~.~~ ...... ~:.~~~ ... . s.a..... 107' Saila...wt. 107' llritcon9Pwop«ty zooo -~Estate ,. C.teMeto 3224 ruacs.y. Maten 21. llHI OAILY PtLOl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..................................................................... &~ 2100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••-••• 3 Br, 2 ba. frplc, 2car11r. ........... s. forW. Hoan ..... W. ... ...,....IMdt 1069 ................................................ ~;·~················· ·······••••••••········ ....... I 044 ,.... I 044 ... ....,.. IHcll I 06' f'tllel UDUCTIOHI •••••••••-•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Now onl' of the bellt I OW MAUIT! duplt>.x buys on ftt land IN IRYINE 48R'S ONLY $74,000 WOODBRIDGE 3 'f\R BAL W(R an~ Be11ch Two dnimat.ie !!ASTON, prof I.I\ unit.I un ~102 lot, 11t1·1>-- lndllcpd ~ upgd, pvt l<><' 1 !I l h 11 week. for front beach $12),000. 1 Clearwa\<tr, $139,950. tbouunda who would COAS'f PROPERTlt.:S TURTLEROC'K. cbann like to llve on buut1ful 8T:U4l0 IOATSLir +VIEW VIMTACil SPANISH WITH OCIAHVIEW IMCOME PROPBTY /LOTS CdM Vtf'W Lot 1335.000 2 Untta + Hit• C'U 1137.000 2 UNla C M .$:!Z,OOO LoU C.M .. $150,000 Wlll excbanu sie,000 F.ocl yd. Kld6 ok. $U.\. f'qwty of $60.000 2 BR ~22'74 condo. El Toro. tor home, -dl.IJ)leit, or unit.a Oran10 lbr pauu bome. Nu crptJS. County hno" drp6. No dotes. no UC.IOOD<Y llLTIS 1Udl.$300mo f'h646~ 494-1611 Redlbtcih W..ted --- 2900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Don't raiaa th11 tdt'ally located C.allfomta llom<' on a cul·de·SMC Near !lehool11, park and :.hop ping 1na J DR, w/atrtum & Balboa Island It. <'<>uld xt.r"" 31 Bethany, bet-vt'ry w~ltforyou& $119,900 CRF.ENTREE, your family. C..U »bout 4 8.1< HAMPTON w/IWl· thu presttaious 4 deck. 4331 Brookalde, bl!droom bomejuatstel>!I Sl04,IK>5 i''or preview, from the beach. Patnck Tenore, Agt 552-4414 --- DEERFlF.LD 2 BR, 2th ba, 2 1>ty twnhse. Dbl gar, pool, $72,900. Ownr, 996-~l ~21 .. From this elegant 2 BR condo. So cln, you'll think at.i> new! A iit. 566-4175. BLUFFS? DOYOULIKt: --nr.. ~ 111 .. bath s,-... ..... Wit a. 2 atr.et to stnet kJta wlttt golf CGSM CllCI oc._wlew. Thia l9o.t ii lft ex .. c._. cCMldltlo.. •.•• $225,000. 2HOUSES Wllllted· hou.'lt' or duplex OW'n('r fin .• th..er·upper. 631-4480. Pvl Pty. BeacbCront. dupll'X, tnplex. ur~tinl Nwpt to ONALOT San Clt"m. Omni, 2 aty condo. 3 BR. 2''ll ha, <' r p t ~ , d r p :. • waabr /dryer. refr1 It. dahw:ir. air cond.. Pvt J>MllO +aLrlum, 2·car gar w/door opener. Clubb ouees. pooh. Jacuni 'a, tennis crti., $4.SO lse. Adlts, no pets. 7541309 2 Br Duplex w/gar. mature couple onlY, $1~ +-rent collection. s,32S009. LGfJllllCI IHch 1 048 Mart.ft Real Estat. 640..S357 Oak Parquet F1oor:\ ., tJtal Brick Fireplace., Uabt C.amel Carpel., No Extenor Mamt ·• LAGUNA NIGUEL 49'»-1720 493-8812 SOU'l1l LAGUNA 499-4S51 LAGUNA BEACH 497..ml 3 Bedroom, 2 bath and 2 714 661·1001 bedroom, l bath, two --- blocks fron1 Back Bay. Rentah Reduced to $l07 ,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• RANCH REALTY 551-2000 WOODBRIDGE PLACE Special ofrering J 5 bdrm Contemporary de lached family homes in open, woodsy dei.1gn Ju.st short walk to lake & parlcs m Village of Wood bndge. From $J15,000 5S24101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWHYOUROWM Large 2 Bdrm • 2 bath O Y·O ·~ block to Mam Beach $89,500 r'inanC· mg available HARIOR VIEW MOHTEGO Prof decorated 4 D It. fanuly rm, lols of wood & bra l'k Spu 111~h t 1 h· kitchen S149.500 3 Large Bedrooms'> Eart.bQuake Ina" $136,900W/10% l)n'> We've Got The Anawtir' S. Ctem.nte I 07 6 oet.-Real Estate ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALLSS6-2166G. Houses ....... s!Md C::: SELECT •••••••••••• •• •• ••• • •• • :::J'PROPERTIES ~~ ••••••• ?!.~~ 4 BR, 2 ba. fnl'd yard, cen· tral hl•at, $450. Wkdys: 6.42 6500 Wknds; Mr. Wdhl ~. 552·7138 or 640~ VALLEY 640.9900 VIEW + POOL CASH Fl.OW Retttals Galon!! N~MSREALTY * 494.8057 • IHLUIDBS ~640.5112 '-11 C-Tl\..-LOR C-OMf'l/\l'\I v Rl!.1.\LTOOS fJL.Vlf\..Of·U:n!. IYOWMER Spllc1ous Exeruln c home 5 Bdrm, 4 bath w view in pn·sl1g1ous Dover Shores on G~laxy Dr 6462332 Fun for all Ult-family Spacious 4 BR, dlnmg rm & fam rm wtforever <>e:ellfl new Owner anx lOUS, has bought another $156.500. BER111AH£NRY 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moblle Home U•h"J At Its Rant ls possible oo Uus ten un-We have JOOO's of hou'.'>t'i., it A.l;)ung $290,000. GSI dplxi. Jpli. nuw ,111 guaranteed lo be $28,500 arus, .ti pn~'.\ ~ .. ve on 3Ur th•m·h Quartl'r Con· do,Sl!*!imo S40-2018 91i&3371. ree 645-4900 A.,,.. ~pac1ou.o; $350, 2 Bdrm ..,. Ktds. pell! OK, enc yard LGIJ-ahoch 3 I 48 Part utJls pd. (5481) TURREROCK BROAOMOOR PATIO HOME why not bavl:' a beautiful condo home nght on the beach" 2 W. Oceanfroot4 BR beach Bedrooma, 3 baths. in house. $295,000 Newport Crest Twnhse. REALTORS wnllc lo ~ach, ten cru, 215 Del Mar 492-4121 We have numerou!> & beauUful mobile homes ror sale in established parlta in CM, Nwpt Deb, Huntington Uch , Laguna, El Toro, Fln Vly. Anah eim & WeslmiOJter. In price ran~es to flt most people's pocketbooks. $10,000 lo $<1(),000 We are a:s near as your phone. CAl,IFORNlA PACIFIC ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chai ••lllJ OcHn Vi•w 2 BR, furn w1personal posses1>1ons. 1n North Laguna Walk to beach, Lovely 3 Br, 2 Ba, $430 Landscaped, fenced yard pool. 1acuz.r:1. Act . 646-7171 3br home. wlklns: distance sel'urity gated San MarsballRlly 675·4600 Clemente community. -- Central A/C' (5566) RentiMH 631.,.555 7UHR'SC.M. $155,000 Mr Fashion Island "3BRW/SPA" DE.~rated thruout. bt•uut yard & sunshine bn1:hl "BLUFt'S" Twnhi-.e, 4 hr. to beach, schl, park '192 (l!(ll Beaut.lful brand new 4·1 hr, loft, C/p. ~2 br, l',, ba townhouse, all bltns, crpts, drps. Hurry, buy now. Tom Lee, Rltr, 642-1603. garage + 2 ear apron. For Lease 6Br, 3Ba, pool, and U.'led bnck garden $600 mo. S.56·9799 Wed area. Ready to movl.' in 12-ti Thur 9 6. or anytime Apnl 1 5 mo leu!>t', $660 1 6'79-Ei607 OWNY.:n I~ DESPERATE' Submit your offer on th1i. 3 bedroom 2 bath beauty which includes a huge 3 Monarch Bay Plaza Laguna Niguel 496-7222 831-0836 "5 BR, LARGE" formly nlOm --------- Jo; I e g a n t I y d I:' c o r d lhruout. for m ovie ::.lar enlertainmi.: & hvinl( "JBRCONOO" Exec homl', Europt•an decor'd, 1mpress1ve t'or details· Property llousl', Patnck Tenort•, 552-4411 agl.'fll RA~CH REALTY 639-7000 Co1y Cape Cod This 1s what Laguna 1s all about' Beautifully rl'slor11d charmer. 3 Bdrms . den. library, formal dining room. skyl1l rountry kitchen & ---------· separate artist's studio WISTCLIFf Easy walk lo beach" ex Pnvacy reigns supremt•' cellent ocean views Elegant hvmg al af. $189.500 fordable price! Gracious NORI NS REAL TY livtDg room with view of garden atnum' Formal Cam nn. xlnt cond, qwet '.\lrl'cl Agt 646-1171. BLUFFS 3 Rdrm "Bonita" pl.rn. All one kvd, new <'pls, floorini: & shutt<'rs $145.000 Own •Agt liJ3 8551or644·2148 l•n·~ YIP t BR, family home in prestigious "Can la mar''. A reul pndt· or ownership homf'. rt' dul·ed for 1mmed1all' sale to $149,900 BEH'nlA JU:NHY I REALTUHS HEW 21!> Del Mar 492-4121 :! i.tory Sea Viow hunw I SAN CLEM ENT!" <.::-.lm $I 5,00 OH Hillside home Nt'annl? 4 brm 3 ba. 2 frpls, pool. l'Omplellon. 2.000 :-.q It 3 JaCUZl!·. tennis, ~r~ bdrm, 2 ba, fam rm, gat.l'b. \ 1'.RY pnv. VAC break fas l n u o k , Owner lo c~ bal No fireplace, w~ bar, sun 1·rcd1l. .Full price deck, 2':a car garage $265.000. 751-8775, su5,ooo . No agcnl~ 64().T178 -----7} 4 -5 3 6 6 9 7 4 II I Mobile Home Really 2706 II artx1r. Ste 20A 54~5!t37 PARK Rttn' $97.50 llunlinlo!lon Bch adult p<.'l park ·nus bt!auurul dou· ble wade luxury homl' 2Br, 2Ba w thol & cold rwuun~ F:aster Bunnll'!. l'&n be youn. SeclD~ IS behennl(, but be !lure to bnng your Easter Bon net <MF4655 6) CALIFORNIA PACIFIC ---- SEVEN DUPLEXES SAN CLEMENTE Ot•can views, all 2 Bit, l\~ BA. Less then 1 > r old Walk lo stale bea<'h & park Askin~ onh Sl 1.11,000 each. OfCer on J II or part BERTHA HENRY REALTORS 215 Del Mar; 492-4121 REDUCED $7000! per mo. Supt•r plat'l'. for --a suJ)l.•r Pt"rsun l'oll<'l!e Park 3 BR 2 Ba, 2 (pie's, bltnr.. xtra t'am M A Y 0 C K llm, covcr'd patio. dbl .iar $450 mo. 64o.4656 i. 11111•11" Al I•'' 380 GlENNEYIH l AGUNA Bf ACfl (714)494•2146 4 bdrm 2 ba Fam Room FIP, $460/mo 539·2424 or ~-3575 l'Wwpori hoch 3 I 69 3 BR, ram· rm home m Nn • ••••••••••••••••• • • •• • CM Crtyrd. entrc, frpl. R...tah Galore!! cul de sac. Avail. 4t17, W~ huve 1000'5 Of bouSe'.'> $475 :;.6().7730 dplxs, apls now. all area.s. all pnces. Save on fee. 645-4900 l br. Cenced yrd, n ew ICllcben S27S mo. 642.2639 Smoketree Twnhm 3 Br :!'•Ba. 2 frplcs, beaut de t·orated Pool. 1acua1, clbhse. Owner SS9-SS73 * 494-8057 * dlll·rm, 2 custom frplc's -Lavish i:rounds Much -71~960-4180 Mobile Home Really Z106 Harbor. Sle 208 ~().5937 Huge Eastside man.'!1on extra rental, present an· come $650. Great starter 1nveslment. Now $108,000. Dn-.e by 294 UDO lSLJo. 3 Br, den, Magnolia St. then c .. tll \l.'elbar, patio. 1 ~ blk lo 4 br 2 ba. newly dcCQraled $450 mo be. No pel.I.. 64(Hj600, ~·7138 P1ZAZZZ PIZAZZZ RIVIERA I more. Owner lS packing EXCLUSIVES I Pn<.'e :-"1.11 surpnsc )'OU' I ~ BDRMS., 31'.I baths. i Hurry. Call&45·0303 h<tme w1lh wh.1te waler I • -Chris Abel designed - rh1~ I bedruom t•l( \flCWS $37S.OOO I • • •JUMIOYA• I work with Orange Co \'els only Homes to $175,000 For info t•all Vct Agt 541-0800 FREF.. Sweepml! ocean \.11 g~s w i.pal· 3 sn C'uslm home 2 'ri. nl'w qwl't 'l Sll4,IXlO Ownr w 1 I I h l' I p f 1 n J n 1· <' 492-77 15 l!f17 Skvltne \1obllc Home l agent 642·0282. . beach SOOO mo. L.'>e. Lve 1.2x44. ·One ht.>droom. lo\I. -UNITS msg w I PR 675 6520 r1.•nt 1n <.:osla Me!>a 12 6313471ilflt"r5 30 '•mi.le to beach Thesl' 1-to.aesUnfunrished WlOTEWATER VIEW. 2 won t last al only ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br, 2''> ~.patio deck. $320,000. Great Jnl'Onll' ~ 3202 fr,>I. gar. 5 mm wlk to ----Dana Point 3226 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t't'Ull\l' hom1• m W11od . , · • · hnd.it.• 1s lmui<'d with at I BDRMS ··I ~ balh~. in ~4c---c-.-. Enllrrly upgr.1dt•d with a pnvatl· tWC'antrnnl mm !---------• SF.AVIt:W Port Hoyal 2 Story, 1 Hr, 3 Oa , beaut VICW, l;indsl•apmg, (1nl'~t upgrades. Best buy B\ OWner $279,000 640 bG90 SGI JUClft Capistrano JO' Terry trailer, queen '!-.I 1078 bed. ~:hady i.pot m C M. park $fiWO M\ 4pm. ti45 4562 tradt>·UP from vonr heh & h~trbor. $485. no dupleit or 4·plex Wall'h ••••••••••••••••••••••• empire itrow. c.tll now Onl' ">lury l'al1rorn1a p.'t .... plC'as•• 71"1661-65111 ··········•·••••••·•··· For more info Jtanl'h Sharp, v;H·ant. aft 5 lar~w lot on a 1·ul·dt• !-.•<' mumly $350.00U 'llEW VACANT' Submit vnurnm>r f!j 3 UORMS . 2' · b;aths. lgr yard w maturl' trt>e:. $91,500 H 2 LOT oc·t•J1t \ ll'"' l'IO~l' lo h1~h .,, hool $95,000 TWO R 2 lots ht•arl of * THE ILUFfS * Popular Q-plan. 3 BH, 2 ba. conversalton p1l with 1 frpl. Dnve by 334 V1sla I True ha. call l<> sN• $145,000 CAYWOOD REALTY INC 548·12!Kl •HPT. HTS• BAYVIEW Lg 2 br 2 bu mobilt' homt• m exclu. Rayside Viii Clubh:.e. pool. JBC , pnv bch. pos!> boat sltp S.">7,500 bi5 7903 673 784M LIDO ISLE FIX &SAVE Hl•rc's your 1•har11·t• l11 save hiii $$$ w/1m11gma lion & paint. 4 Spal'. RH Dining room LIVIO!l room . Brick frpll· JIUJ'T)' $73. 000 WALL STREET RF.AL ESTATl-. 831-3750 493-2202 Thto Eastu BWWty Says l':I Morro By Tht• ~CJ Uop into lh1s beautiful homl' by lhe beach with "eu caps & sunsets Kids & J)l.'lS wckome to enJOY lhas 2Br + bonus r m " pn\alc bt•ach CALlt'OR-.:IA PACIFIC 540-3666 dl.'an. larl!e 4 bt.'<lroo~s 3 nn, den. 2' z Ha. ocean $1195 per month la 11 vil:'w l'ooJI. Ja<'utii. Sl:i~ Wltela11 REL\L ESTATE 962·7788 or :>49 95611 mo Omni, 714 661 1001 HOM i-:FIN or:ns Thoui.ands of Renl:il" All an•a>-all pnn·~ Sample SHO Bat•h fum ulll Jlcl $200 2br r m:d >a rd $295 3flr pets fc.>m·t•d ---Fountain Valley 32 34 ......••............... Must !.C'C to bche1;e• llu.:c 4 + 2. htd pool. s:r.1 .• :!«Jr gar. nr all 1962:1 WOODBRIDGE Dana Point Both rnr REAL TY $85,0IXl Clean 2 br & den or 3 br I ba, lg IJv rm. sep dm, re modld )Ut . stamed hdwd floors thruout, llh 15 deck overhanl! front prof ldscpd w spnnk 442 Et ModenJ II) Owner 612 9055 or fl45·1635 Opt.•n llOU'il' Sal1Sun 12 5 l>aah• l'Jll aft 5 p \1 to s ho .... $119.000 Ex 11( ~ brm 3 ba modi kit, 110 lot. pntw nr ten·---------• ******* IMCHARMIHG l\1ob1lr llome Rcall} 2'706 lh1rbor. Stl' 21)1 ~10 5937 New 11 units & older 7 un its on adjoirung lots in CM Take either onc or I both. Exchange or O\I. ner WI II c arTy 540-7766 Lfft.llMlo.:Sl':H\ II I 557-0822 5450 family MIC i + 2 1;.1ruJw. fncd yard, pool _ Btfulfrpl 18936 1 • 551.3000 I n1'> & priv bealh $219.500 Owner 675·6259 8 UNITS Rentlmrs 631-4555 ~..-.v...-..--v m@©Il~v _ ~ __ ---mfi~fiGU'fu IN lloml'S CJrm1·l 3 Bl< + l"am Rm P'l \ard 8al>oa Island 3206 He~l C~1 area -sellln~ ••••••••••••• •••• •••••• old S:in Juan Cap1stran11 A If or d ah I,. u 11 lA~fot Sme nOO •YA SI 75K * 499.2000 I wwk w1lh Oranl!<' l'o Vt'ts only Homt•'> 10370 MO\ NTJ\IN HU $175,000 t'ormfllcall· Sll'p~ lo bedch re Vet Agt !>41·0800 mc:xi!'led Laguna charm -----~ horn<' 2 BR + loft & frpk --..<...U-=-~ ~ & sep "J!uest" studio 5139,9011 152 nGl7 ownr JI!\ Npl Sh11n·' II~ o ... rwr lhr, 2hJ. 2 car gar U~'.\ q;;1 l\:J'75. C'\'S tiJI 5483 stdar~ downslatrs \'UO ••••••••••••••••••••••• dommaum J Bdrms I':• HORSE RANCHtS for less lhan l'omparJ bk Agent64S.110J 'l/EW .I llll 11c·n 'I II\ Hwmfte)ton Beach 3240 touulrv 'h .. 1rmt.·r ••••••••••••••••••••••• w heam., ·& ll'Jd1'<I l!lao,-. ~~ mo Hly l~t· li75 5.10·1 AT LAST LIVE IN I :~~~~ $139.500 ,\gt, Nt:W llOlJSi'; R1\Y\d t Y. Investor's. prospl'Cll\ <' bu)~l"S. J wk left. IJ'.\I June's opl1on pun·haM' pnce. $179,!JOO My loss 1:-. your gam. 2 sly, 4 DR. 3 ba. din rm, den, J frpk'i., pool-sz lol, xlras 2.117 Irvine. 1)45·07.58 $15,000 baths. l'arpt•llnl!. "mdow l'O"enn~. butll mo,. lwo car gara~e & vat111 ll:t owner ~1on thru Thur!- 'day">. call t.11; 21511 OLDIE fn thru Sun <dJ}'l & Larg<> ones, sm:tllt•r ones. new onl'!';, !.l11!hlly u.-.1'<1 on<" & fixer upp<'rs Wehavelhcm all ~R 1714) 676 5717 ~ ORS22·2<M SMAU.MOTEL Long Beach areJ Call for mformalHm BENTSON & BROWM Rffitors 833-9781 \ttracllv1• :1br, :!h.1 1!1•n rrpl ;1dlto; Sli2~ 'rl\ 111~3624 121:11 ~i7 01 'ii 3222 A Rental Sft"Yice YOU C Git feel At HORR W'fttt BUT cH·n1ng::. 1·Jll 111 11 * 16 UHITS * Corona del Mar WE GUARANTEE FABULOUS LCllJllftCI Hllls I 050 GOODIE 493-0588. t Jllk. to ocean. 1 bdrm J-·-·-·-·--~~~~~-----r t; MONTHS NEW' 1'\JLL Y OCCU PIF: D Under $41,000 per unil STUART FINE ·····••••·············· Spotl<'!>s Walk to hfh 4Br 3Ba Jo·m rm 21()()'.qlt Yrly, 50'J Al':tl'l.J l>-15 71~11 •Widest ~election pos~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• WOODBRIDGE :;pac1ous Laguna Village home, offered al Int , •MOB HILL• INVESTORS New listini:s Large part'els $100 per ,crt>. •In houst' l'Ompuler sys •Daily lcll'Phone servin •V Jl'ant'I<''.\ venficd dailv • t-'ull starr of eounselor~ •Free to aged 6.'l & ov<'r Condo, Jbr, 2ba. VICW. Wl' have most every plan A/C. Rec fac. 497·l426 to swt your individual Loguna Hkjutl I 052 nl'(.'<is and pnc·e range ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2nd avail, trade ---~Tom 3 t>roroom rondos1---------· -----pnct.>d al $70.900 to free By owner. $10,000 down. standing homes pnccd al SPECTACULAR VIEW $1170monlhly. 3 Bil. d<·n. $122,500 For rnmplclc o( the rolllng hills & Sad· hld pool. 2 r:tr gar, Jll information, l'all us• dleback Mtns. 3 BR. 21 2 upgrad111g. J '11 Cmancc, WOOOIRJDGE REALTY 551-3000 TOP O' THE TERRACE This hi&bly desirable Cardiff, beautifully d<'· corated in earlhtoncs and lmmaculately main· tained. Available for a proudnewownor. Asking $119,800. BeauUful view or mountain s frofl) secluded park·like loca· tion. BA, formaldirung, famr· no cred1l needed. ly room wtrireplace 759-0WJ. 751-8775 Huge masler s uite w1walk·out deck New NEWPORTIU·:IGllTS carpeting, drapes & tint· Spic 'n Span, rt>ady for ed w1Ddows. C1>mpliment occupanc) 2 br & d<>n, 2 tJus showplace Only ba. 2 car J!arage, frple, $129,500 hardwood floor'.\, clrap•·s LGIJllM Miguel Realty 1 .... e or mo lo mo 642 IJ.14 496-2413 495.-5220 <fays 642 6578 l'' es 49l-9494 130.5050 •••••• LEASEOPTIOH .,.0 PA YMEHTS ONEqUrTY! Thia 1s one of the most tasteful and imaginative homes i n lbe area . Gracious living is offered in this beautiful ex· ecutivc home. Extra large master suite, 2 pleasant bdrms, 2Ba. den ,frplc , gourmet kitchen and many ex tras 'Ille patio & pool areas are ideal for enter· lainl.ng with an outdoor gas BBQ and lush landscaping. $139,000 SI'ANALAND MF.GARGEE REAL T\' (714) 49'1-1744 ....... PRIVATE BAYFROMT COMMUNITY Fee land overlookin~ the bay WJtb seclusion and your own boat 51ip. Up graded two bedroom plus den. d QUA.lL (R PL.AOJll PROP'mR'%'DCS. _ 752-1129 lnn , .. QIMIL ST • ..-..o«r 91.AQf OpenTllJ8·30PM Wbal's Your Trade·• Sl.62 per Day 'Ibat's !JUie to pay for an ad ut the Dally Pilot Service Dtrectory that can establish your pro fessional Identity l''or more informotaon t·all &eS8'18 value, $98,000' NEWPORT BEACH REALTY 675-1642 BLUFFS ''Y .. PLAN 3 bedrooms, 2h bath. & fireplace. Separate fam1· ly room overlooks hang mg gardens Model home atmosphere with pro· fe11s1onal decoralor s touch. Just listi>rl & pnml' ror fast salt· ,1t $123,500 &4!'i 7221 ()ntul); a:Lfrr21 .. We-stdiff RHl+y ---- Duplex, lwo l br furn. nr ocean. 29th St. NB. $139,500. Owner 492 7171 , 492-6172 By Owner. Jnr. fam rm, 1 ba. Nwpt llgbts. Prine. Only. $115,000. 642·9644 GOING OVERSEAS Montego JMI, 4 Br, 2 ba, fam rm, near new crpl,. Lil yd, wood deck. DY OWNER, 759·0634 Westcliff JIR/Det1 Truly a s howplace custom in every detail. Better see th.is one before tt'a gooe 1312 Dover Dr . Nfent.. 642-0758 Mewporl leoc:.h I 069 M.wport leoch I 069 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WOODBlUOOE BROA.OMOOR 3 Br . a\ r l um • MluAoft"'-'-1067 land.sea..-•Jlnnkh.•l"ll, "~ qulal 7.;1 .do·1ac ..... •••••••••••••••••• tto:z.ooo. o-ntr $59-0082. • * IEST * * »EST BUY i n Woo4· llG HOUSI IUY brid e 4 bdr 3 bt. fonn • ~ .t Lonna~ dln atrlum. ONLY 41nloc ~ clubroom+ iui oso. a Oakdale. bonUI room. Gttat loc•· ~Sat/Sun 1·5 Uon. nr La .Pat le ~ )lllfj{uerite. RIGtrl'RULTV t7t.aau tae: llDBll BLllRS aa. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE ME'WPORT 11.ACH J m maculat-e 3 Br Den Condominium With View Of Ocean From 2nd Floor. Close To Pool, JacuiT.i. Sauna And Tenni Courts. Call Us For ore lnformoUoo. Prl~cd Al $129,500 II I DOYB DltVI 631-1800 . . ---... Be the first executive in this elegant hilltop estate. View lhc valley below & enjoy the ocean bree1e . 4 Spal' AR "/pvt mas ler suite Step·down dmmg room Famlly room t oo' SlZ7.500 EIKR I (714) 677·5691 I REALTOR · 631-5454 Costa M~sa 3224 ·········••·•·········· • 1''ree renta I t•ounsehn~ •Open 7 days 8: 00 II 00 WALL STREET REAL ESTATE 831-3750 493.2202 Santa Ano I 080 •·•··••••····••·······• $59,900 Loads of Extras Wood al'cents thru oul lols or Storal(t' HI thlS OR 522·0530 ' TAX IEATE9i1 Now that tax lime 1s hen'. it's too late (Or '77. hut plan (or '78! EnJOY f1r,,l us<>r's tax br~ak on th.ls new duplex. tireat Newport Heights loca· lion. 365 LaPerle Pl , al Tu'.\lln Hedu<'cd lo $1R6,5tl0 Submit ~our term~ super 3 bedroom homl' Cot ·al w 1 l h d 1 n 1 n ~ a n d '*1•rc1 fln>place. Large lot with P'roperty I 600 Bk 540 1 20 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rrwttrees. r . . 7 MEDICAL ILDG Covington 4·plex, l left m Oceanside. $165.000 By Owner/Bkr. 968·3270 UNITS Sm & large uruts Vl•ry large inventor) Loni! Beach & Orange County Pnn only Agt 639-9070 ------* 2 Tripfextt * Near Lake Park M 111 to beh. t-4 BR. 3 ba l 3 HI< 2"'2 ba; 13 BR. 2 ba 5 earagt"S, frpll'S $185,000 each. 1709-1713 Alabama. Hunt Bch 536 1711! Owner ---- SMALLMOTEL Long Beach. area Call for in.Connat.Jon IEMTSON & IROWN RHtton 833-9781 2200 AT LAST A Refttal Ser .. ,ice YouCanFe•I At Home With WE GUARANTEE •W1desl SC'l<'l't1on po<;~ •Jn house l'Omput<>r >.\'.\ •Dally lC'll'phonf' 't'f\ lt't' •\al·Jncws 't·rifll'd 11.111\ • Jo'ull .. taH ul «nun:-.l'lor-. • Jo'rl't.' l<I a!(t'll 65 & "' ••r •Jo'r~ n·ntal n1un~l'lmi.: •Open 7days11 00 H 1~1 RENTIMES For Profes!;1onal St.'r' ire• Call 631-4555 OTt~'TOP UY 1936 Hari>or ll•d <'':I bile No ofl!)lh Sl 1 ACaUr.Cor,>. Sm Jo't>l' --- RENTIMES For Professional ServH'> Call 631-4555 ORSTOPHY 19 36 Harbor II Yd I •::i hlk No of 19th St 1 \ t'ahf Corp '\m t'1·1· I Ikdrunrn 1'lmrlomin1um pool. trnnas. supc•r loc.1 lion S!SO ('al1646-~ii lll~Tl .'WGTO ' 111\HBOl'H hrJnd nt'"' md I !'olory J Hdrm. 2 bJ all hwlt in Jar. paol. et• l'Tl\ a Cy SS.SO. 846 4408 TARBELL (DntwnSan Clemente) Sale Lease-Trade 7 Rm Dental Suites •••••••••••••• ••• •••••• New 2 br rQndo l'ool, spa New-elegant 2 bedroom ($..'SS()l or 2 bedroom ~ den ($575>. Cedar & wm dow home. S Blocks to heach Privalc 2·car j?aragc. Fully main - tained yard Adults No pets. Inquire 525 lllth st (714) 96()..6331 "#I ht Callfontla " 8 Hm Medical Suites OfftCE ILDG SITE t'rOm $375 Kids & pct~ Hl.Dltinglon Beach OK 675 4!H2 Akr JflfW· Yeah Co 498-0660 499-2237 South l.ogllna I 086 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful white watf'r ocean view Condo, 3 br, 3000 Sq f't bid!: on 22.500 sq den. 21..2 Ba. hiJ(hly up fl C I land Xlnt traffic graded $165,000. Ask For <·ounl $160.000 Agent Jt.me Royall Turner As 548-9673 Rftttals Galore!! ---- We have IOOO's of houst>s. Lo,,.cly J br 2 ba homt'. nr dplx!.. apt!I now, ~tit b<'3l'h Suprr vr<: areas 111 pnt'l'' Savc on wtgantnr. $500 mo 1213 Z7,000 sq. rt. lot near - Pacifica Hospital. 5 Points Shop. Cntr & Civic Center. $135,000. David Bourke Rllr 546-9950 llOC 499-4591 o.dexes/ WE PAY CASH FOH Tustift 1090 Onfh Sak 1100 ORANGE COUNTY .,. . • •• ••• •• •• •• • • • •• ••• inrs Call 640-5112 ;·~;~·1~:·~:··i:;~;;;;,:: .JJ~_ 60' OCEAM FltHT townh.ome. Fu II y up o'!.'. 2 rare adjoining 30' lots graded, air cond By R·2mne, exclusive area. owner $68,900 Call $'ZlO,OOOforbolh Ober· 832-089'1 or 833-391R ing Rlty, ()(eans1dc CA. Olherleal&tcih EASTSIDE l·~ ••••••••••••••••• ••• • • • COSTA MESA o.t of CCMMfy Mabile~s JUST G IVE IT A Pl~ 2550 ,_. Sde 11 00 THOUGHT: A DUPLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~••••••••••••••••••••• with ell lhe eictras, usual·._ ________ _ Costa Mesa, 12x'4 ly Included in a home . .... ~. 2&3BEDROOM VA•mA GARDENTOWNHOM F. 2cargara,_ Sky lint', 11.'! yr!I old, Woodbuming fireplaces, cabania, like new, Lo built-In kitchen. 3 rtmt, $1.S,000, flnanclnl(. bod.room. 1 kimt·1lu up· 548-7191 per unit 2 Bedroom lowf'r, eoclO!led private hn 1·757-1623 Vllclna Coach in trvtne's patio in yard. Will ex· fl n est P. Ar tt. "Th • chanStti for 6-8 unit.a Cull~~~~~~~~~ Meadowll '. 2 DR, 1 DA, ror appt. CAPTIVE IDfT AL MAllCET den. Easy Clnaodng. Jted COt.I Of HIWPOlT Hlll 'Real\y ~-RF.ALTORS H011CE 61"'551 t t::. ~~ d~~ c~i; ...... Propsriy 2000. fDl9a8 "11.b J~Ulty ••••••••••••••••••••••• aod lmpad? Our ad1, DUPLD-cM we we proud li> • •>'· ,... 2 F..uuidta an. g111"11. al.l)t ca reswu. Pl sus.ooo 1\ultar. ..wm; ....... st lJNl'l'S.JU rented 48 Furn+ 8 renttd ~,_. MOit '11\its hav~ new paiot &nd n 11x•t.11 All hav new roofll. Call Gf'O Frey at . 542-3456 BENHINKLE RF. fee " ' 489 llM,~I 645-4900 Aq4 a.OSE TO IEACH 2 8dnn hOU'I<' F1repl1tl'I' Double garaie $345 mo 673 20S8 A)(ent 2 8R. fonnal Din Rm 1 -,ly. p.'.lt10 hme, fpk, wet· bar. lenms, pool & ja~ HV storage. $400 9722 Verde )far !Brookhurst I Ham1llonl ~3359 New Twnh~ w 'lranqutl panoramic vu•w J kingsr Bdnns 38a. rrplc. pal10. DYNAMrTE 4 BR Z 'Ba balcony, d1s hwas h<'r. (pie, D W. convenient. trash comp. 2 car l'ar area. $435. 963·4567. w/opnr. Beaut crpt. Agenlnofl"C. drp&. Children OK. $550. -------negotlable. 963-9784 $350. 3 Br. l ba, huge kit, ----1mmac. Nr Beach & El· East.s\de ex.lra sharp 3 br, hs 8121 La Palma Cr. .2 ba, frplc. microwave. Sorry no d()fQties ! wet bar, elec garatte d Gemini Realty 839~ opnr. Gardcn<'r incl. $S1S. mo 548 0063 Lnrge2 Br family home Near 'IChoohl nnd llhop:r; •We.st11lde Coiita Mesa, 2br, 1 ba .• encl gar, patm, wash/dryer area, nu ~/drp8, freshly p111nt ed. Move 1 n rond $325 lino No pC'l ll 646-1246 IFYOU hav~ a strv1c-e lo otfrr or roods to 11f!ll, plact' .n ad 1n thto Daily Pilot Clau.ified ~ct1on • PhOne 642 5678 $325 stl•als' (8480) M11nslon-s1ieci 4 Br. 2 IWI 1';nclO'lt'<i patio and '*"' H~c-frplc~ <4315> ......... 631·4555 R£AL FlNl>, 4 BR 2 Ba, cpl&. Dt W, fned yard. SU$ 963~. aat.noreor. GRRRf.AT 4 br, 2 ba w/C"pta, fncd yd. Moft In todav. $395 963-4HT, Agent, no fe-e. I f t I l ' t t • • ' s tJ v B i - ........... ~ ..,..... .... Uftfwt\. 4000 tue9day. Match 28. H178 DAILY PILOT C7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ......_ U• nf1h rd ~. Unf\lnlilhed '1f tw• ,_...IMd ....................... ······················· ....................... . ROOa\ wt kitc~nctte OHke l..tal 4400 ....... Lost & Fomd 5300 ........ IHcJt 3240 Mwwpofi IHda 126' Coda MeM 3724 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br. Z ba. II• yard NO P'EIU lb.Ma, coodoe I.WI/mo, Jst, lut +dun du p I ca• 1 . R'" au I ._.. Gtlcw-ell int aMa3 P•vt.hoa. 17S-dl.2 Bkr. We bave 1000'1 of houses. lmmat•ul11tr .1 br l'unllo. MIW SIAYll'W dplxs. apla now• •II 21., ba, $4.25 1 .. l' 9t;2-74ti.J 3 Br 2 Ba. pool. lenrus, ru· .u prices S•V~ on Coeh....... 3124 c-....... 1124 .............................................. LA MAMCH~ APTS Lar1l' 26 3 bedr oom Spadous 2 bl' H'I ba pnv 1arden apt.a. Dsb1Wbr, paUO, end • .iar. S2'15 mo. blt.ns, encl gar, ~u bbq. 30.18 f'Ulm()tt'. Pool Gu Pd 778 S<.-oll Pl "2~3 3126 after 5 PM J&c, 184.5 yrly 67~ 0562 ~ ---'4>4900 .Afl Adu.IL Z bedroom. super .,,.._ 3244 SEAVIEW, 3 Br popular loc:aLlon No pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• Duplt!ll. orean vtew N~w 1MO sq.ft 2 hr. 2• • bu MSG. mo 759-0706 ....................... BarHarborpn meocn vu 1Wf114• leeclt 1740 $225 /month. 568 W 11115() ~7·7°'4' 833-3215 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nn•·-l E TURTLEllOCIC · ' n ._..,inqw reap . 1.'iOWff.k & up ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPf a twelty 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sal l?M ••••••••••••••••••••••• -Nwprt lk olhce spuc• 500 Amballaador Ion m Coet.a 11q ft. Gll5 Ind utthU MMa, 22'17 lharoor Ct'n ll'TS-3C71 tnilly located, 235 rooms ------ MANY watb kalc hen. phone & 'N Swimming pool, JaCUUI, and rt'C. room Daily & weekly rat.es slartlni from ~ 1 week. Prime N .B . olf1ce11 w common recepl. art'a, Pvt entry's, 3 oltices + latchen, $"700 mo Airport area 752..8282. ~ 4518 lullnHs llewhll 4450 TIA VB. AGEHCY FRANCHISE LOST· r~rman Short h•Jr pointer. mal~ z yn old. Wl'lllt'/ h ver. Lag Brh 4"4 9()56 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS lMmet -Bylaw - Ounce -Plover - 4br, 3ba pool h ome STUDIO de GLIM Gardening. pool serv in-''WHldv•~.. E/& ' airy 3 Br , 2 Ba, TOWNHOUSE cl'd. SIQ. 549"0655 Full kitchen &TV ~~::'i 0:;;0 cp~;2 ::::: 2 BR. 2 ba, ocean vu, gar • $1'50. Sunny room, EA•tbhtlf•. •••••••••••••• • ••• ••••• lbe uew w•y lo own • tr•v•I •11cncy Travel N1otwurk start your own . exp nol rt'qulrl'd l -Ompltote support & 101111 1.-rm Kcrvlct' provided Call Mr . Charl1:11 714 lf,3R 9242 WALLET To have a i.uccenrul aarden, all you need 111 one thing . a g r tlcn WAU.ET. M0-7309 $150. View, lour bedrooms, BIG CANYON. Luxuriou:; :ilL"Tlo Uoctilli::~ MMa4t . . ' 2,200 square feet Jm 2 Br, 2 bath co n · m aculatcly upgraded d 0 m 1 n i um h 0 me . Royal~ Mohl thru out. Pool, lennii> New /never lived m. Wet 7Zl YOlktown Blvd MESAP1HIS Bach , 1230. Some w /earages. Pool . jacunl. Adults, no peta. Open daily 2650 Harla Ave, C.M (Mesa Verde Dr E off Harbor Blvd). 549-2447 ......... 1eoca. 3140 •••••••••••••••• ••• ••• • Lee sunny room. Ute k1Lch SHARP, beach, 2 & 3 BR, & laundry privllcges. frpJ. d is h w a a h e r , Refsreq. 5'1M372 garage, patios, 960-23S8. 4 DELUXE OFC-S Conr. r m.. aeal 25, all paneled, 1m. whse in re· ar. l or 2 yr. lease Lake Forest area. K e nt Harkins Ideal opportunity for am biuows & crt"ulivei 11tyl11l Exper 1n conventional cutting a must. Cric:ketts H air Design. Laituna Beach 494 1600 P'OUDd' Black Ma le Dox 1e, Fountain Val ley viclnaty call 968·3852-$4150/month . As k for bartrrplc . s675 Be1&chBlvd11tYorklown J 0 1-1 N S 11 E A "-"·bury R E .. """" 536-0411 AV A I LA n t. 1': I M o;>GJ..Li> • • 67~ lJVE Near The Beach' CasadetSol Beautiful Adult Apts G~ & Water Paid 21661 Brookhurst. llB 962·6651 VaeotkMI R...tah 4250 714·581..Qr3 SERVICE IUSIHlSS Nat'I co wall select 11 person who likes lo work w/h1s bands to be 1ls ex dus1vt> service dealer tor thah area. Automotive & comm'!. $500-1750 H · sured wlcly eamm11:s Ac· counts v.a1t1n~ to be --- Found Ma l e/Mi'\ C'rl'rman Shepherd. 3 •H Grll.nd & 17th, Santa Ana !m-7318 MKDIATELY1 L.GrJlllMI lead 3741 ......••. , •.•.......... l.AlllEROR IEAUTYSHOr Successrul loc allun u1 Cost.a Mesa $600 Month Broker 675~6700 d QU.All... CB PL.A.Cl:: PJOLOPlllRTI EH -152-tt'JO lU•' , ... ClaWL ST ~ MM:t4 Open TaJI 8 30 PM OH UDO ISLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 w n er w i 11 I ease LAGUNA BEACH MTR 1'\JRNISIIED OR UN-INN $65/wk" up. Maid FURNISHED MAKE serv color TV. healed AN OFFER. You have a pool (714) 494 5294. 9tl5 choice Large z Br +den N Coast Hwy ---- HEWE-SIDE •ALOHA* WE HAVE CONDOS IN HAWAII lnlm'l R E Network Newport llt>1ght.s Rlt~ 645--5044 1-'ound yng blk Fem .. tJ11 paws, !z hair F airvarw Ln HB 1194-6054 RENTALS 2 8R.2 Ba • 3BR,28a ... J BR, 21'2 ba • 4BR,21.:lbo. 3br, 2ba. Townhouse Up graded Lgc patio Children ok 645-9543 and pat.lo $750. mo. or 2 -Br 2 Ba. large deck and eves. 646-4262 days 2Br. duldren welt'Otrlt' 110 pets. start.mg at $245 mo ~ Beaut 1mmac Ar LEASE Pnme busanci;~ rental, Beach Bl\d, II B 1650' 1147.2547 serviced $7529 invest · L.osT My little girl Blul' rnenl secured by rnven· & Gold McCaw Parrot tory & eqwp C;ill Mr Vic Southeast Hunt Brekken r t>non to 1ogton Beach SSO r e Per,on Collt>ct during ward.962-3806 or962·64fil VIEW $650 mo Both UD tiWwport a.od9 37 69 f hi . led ••••••••••••••• ••• ••• •• $425 New 3 br. 2 ba F. 11.S are res Y pam side, deluxe, encl gar, 11.AHDHEW rowhead home. 3 br 2 ba ant decor 1 blk Lake CdM, Cst Hwy. appro" $2S wkdyi., S90 wknd. lSOO ~ft, ampte 1>ark- SSS-OZA2 in~. 759-9269. $435 $.550 S.195 525 $750 and carpeted. DRIVE l.AYROHT frpk,yard BY TSL Mgmt 642 1603 111 Vta Lido Noni 3 BR, 2 baths. Yrly .SMO --------- 3 BR studio apt.:.. huge back yard, duldren OK MZ:i-Dys, 848-2655. ev!> 53M873 R...tds to Shan 4300 bdastrial R..tal 4500 busrnc~s hri.. !213 I ""9-5252 Lost. Fem A.Jrdale. An .. to Ke-cf. Vic Paulanno school. MS-4001 -.523 CA-..Ptl5Da·IRVIHE lltuv Park. CTerran·l. 2 BR 2 Bu. walk lo shol)l.. school. v<'rY dl',tn $440 mo 644 SS76 CVl'S 3br 2ba condo in Tcrral't'. puuo, comm pool Nr El Ran c h o $450 mo 673~ In Uruv. Pk 2 houst·s nuv. 4 BR + Fam nm. $700 per mo AND 3 RH + ram Rm. $575 per mo 752-0617 aj!t 3br 2ba, rorm din rm. Poplar mod in Wood bndt:e. CrN'k~1dc 1\\a1l 1mm ed Walk lo pool, tennis. park. :.rhb & lake! $495 mo Call a rt 6PM. l 49394114 DEERf'I ELD TWNllSE :.! Hr. den. 2 ba. wood deck. plush crpt, dN' i.:ar opnr. nr pools. parks. ,.,·his Sorry no !>(•ts S465 mo 559 5713, 640 707:! Lease SSllS. Gard<•nt·r rn eluded 4 Bil. 2'~ Ba. •Hr t'OOd. 2 sty Avail now Nt:w home. Woodbndl(e Comm pool & lake K1d:o & pt>t OK O-. nl'r A art ~I "'ew 3br 2ba how.~· Frplc. A C. tennis, Jae -.auna $430 mo 640 11»4 P~1 l.acplno leach 3 2 48 ......•................ a nd call ADULTCOHDO New, 2 Br. 2 ba, all bllns, Wat .. -f1.tHomH 2BR,2ba,yrly.$425 frplc, encl. garage, 631-1400 STEPSTOIUCH palio.lndryrm.$325. 3BR, 2ba, bay vu Sl~ TSL Mgmt 642-1603 HE.ARIEACH & CIVIC CEHTER BRAND NEW. Spacious deluxe 2, 3 & 4 Br. All bltns. frplcs. gar. lge yd. 502 Yorktown ·Just West of Beach Blvd. 536-1718 ---- -2BR.2Ba ,yrly.$400 BIG CANYON TOWNllSE New 2 BR. 2 ba. crpt'd & drp'd, spectacular (~olf Course & lake view Sep i:ar , tennis & pool Lse/option. 644 2416 Rentals Galore!! We have lOOO's of hvus1•s. dplxs, a pts now all areas. all pnce:-; Savt• (In r~ 645-4900 Agt associated BROKERS-RE AL rcqs lOH W Bolboo bn·lbo l Rentals Galore!! Wl• havt.' IOOO's or hou!'leS, dplX!>, apls no w all areas. all pnn'::. sa .. c on ree 6U·4900 CAMEO SHORES 2 BR. monthly lhru June 3Br. lg comer lot, ocean 15 or weekly l hse rr bch View. $1200 mo. 673-2464 213-446-4750. i.w 9220 Almost new 2 br, 2 ba twnhse w/encl. gar. $325. 645-512Ai; 637 ·5895 Large 3 Br townhouse apt, 2 ba. frplc. pauo. garage Qwet (•omplex. Adults. no pets. $375 645 3381 or 675 s.949 2 Br. I• 2 Ba townhou::.c. g arage, patio. pool. Jacuzzi Adulb only $375 mo 646-2010 Rentals Galore!! We have lOOO's or houses, dplxs . apts no w. all areas. all pnces Sa'e on ree 645-4900 --- NEW 2&3 BDRM, 19202 F1onda St, llB 968-8396 or 963 4238 2br. 11'2ba. Condo Pool, adults only $310 9SS·3007 Charnung2Br, den. S260 Part utals pd, k1cb OK D/wsher,gar (4381 1 Bflful $215 1 Br Dpll. Walk to the beach• F.nclO&ed ya rd t5363 > RentimH ' 631-4555 $50() 4 br. 2\z ba, F H 2 BR w pallo, "ll'P'.'> to pool, tenrus, gardener beach. monlhl) or week· Owner. 640..()()M ly l l l 4St h S l N R 2br. Iba $265. New paint. ---546-5684 lndry fac .. no pets ~ B Cool 0Cflln l~z• ILU~SCOHDO . E 16t.hPI 644-0452 2&3 Br & 1&2 BJ , l Story 3 bdrm Close to Bchfmt. lBr. $330 garages, laundry £ac1l school & shopping No New plu.'!h rarl>('t<o . R S I BR new apt. all bltns. Ready now Adult!> no pets $650.Agt 644-7270 Bayv.mdowv1c~ 1!M>J..I > crpt, drpe;, xlnt location pets S250 & $.140 425·A 1767 Orange Avail Apnl 12thSt. Spacious I br. :! ha. +family rm w1rrplc Secluded garden area $.').50 mo mcL gardener Avail April l 410 f:l BtruJ 2 Br on tht• ht·h Klds Ok pnv ~ar Avrul now 15.Ui51 Reftffmu 6 3 1-4555 Moden<1 To '1cw tall On ocean. lwd1 utll 548-WJ9 paid $250 968-3.~ FOR LEASE STEPS TO Bt:AC.:Jl 2 br rum. garagl'. now t1l .July Lovely 2 bdrm, 2 ba up-1 $300. mo. 673-6640 per Apt for rent al S52S mo located at 4291, •-t _.. Be1torua ~ n•'!" 3 Bdrm ram rm , u'"' Unfurnished home, located in a •••••••••••••••••• 3 •• 8.0·2· pr1\'ate guarded area General ""1th many amenities for ••••••• ••••• • • • •• • • •••• I S2160 646·7993. 642-llSS . ---• ---SHARP IBr apl. walk to 1 Brw stove. rerng. beach. $220 mo Call Close to bu.c;es, stores 536· 7330 Adlts. no pets 5'18-6518 $240 lhr. rern~. sl\•. C&D, patio Adlls, no pt?L'> 724 C .Jumes, 673·7787pm 1920 Meyer Pl . nr ne w twnhse apt. 2 BR I'? Ba, fncd patio. gar. $325. 64s.46SS .. 2 BR. I ba. encl l{ar & patio. $245 mo 2210 F B. Rutgers Clll 846-7129 2 Bachelor apL'>. both nr beach,$145 & $180 962-353.1 Laguna le°'h 3848 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LGE 2 BR uppt?r. \'lc.>W, new cpts, drps. l I 2 blk:. to bch., twn, Heisler Park, $400. No children/ pets 497-3100 Btlul I Bdr Dplx, S290 All uttls pd rern.: st Oen vu 0945) l<'ase at S950 mo 2125 12621 f'l ov.l'r Street 3Br. 2ba Mt'sa Verde Yacht Radiant CGan:len liro\ l' 1 LJrt:e 1 ~ mo Call 751 ·"0 00 or 0 h ·-' I I ..,..,., .,....., I nr, pal10 Jpl. h."' poo 3 Bdrm. den home local bedroom. apts. t• o-.e lo m.8S33 A c. enc yard, d v. asher I'd m Sp)glass S900 mo sho pp1n i: L a und r y NrshopsS280 15RJ6 I 36 Drakes Bay facll1t1es. no rh1ldren. no Neve Jecot a BR. 1 BJ. tn R---.: 611-4555 pet:; Sl95 S250 month quiet complex. st .. , garb _&:'Ill_• '!_If_!_ Oct•an 'u homt'. 3br 2' ,ba. 1n pre:.t1g1ous l'nrtahn;i $750 199 11120 '-67S-l411 ~ l'hbltC!j paid Call Oeb· dsi sl, lndry rac. '<lra Mewportleoch 3869 l·~!:~~!1:e~~~~m iMilftfi bie:~;~~:S .. 1 :. ~lr~;:~~~ce :Z~1~~ ... ~~;~~~;;~~; ... homl' Locatedinc·c•ntral Cht.>rry Crel'lt Adult -Bachelor;., I or 2 'l'cttnn of thl' v1llagc. 4 Apts J & 2 BR. rplt' s, we Qwtll 2 br hsc tn lnpl'I(, Bedrooms &Townhouses Bl.KS FROMBEACll&!J\.11omes.Carmel J AR have lake' sau na , r~.adlts,nopels Non-From$2.8950 SHOPPING La v rm + Fam Rm. pvt yard. Jacum & pool lA>t·ated Amkr S250 646-232.1 Spectacular spa, total d w hrf.'placeL. Sc&r~te $65 o mo 7 52 · 061 7 at 2701 s Fair view Just New lri! 3 BR apt. bltn:.. re<'reat1on prol(ra m . & uung rm t ite. 1 c en ownr 'al?l s. or Warner, N of S D. Cl"J~d. 2.car gar. beaut social program. 7 pools. 8 :;epa r a c Sf.' rv 1 ce Fwy, 556-1!191 No pets . ~ term.is courts. At F ashion parch Just eomplctely BLUFFS beaut 3 br. 2'~ ----~!:.-SSIH90I. 631~35.'l!I Island, Jamboree & San redecorated. Excl'llent ba,bayv1ew.S800Mo Bc6oallland 3806 STUNNING IJ!f' 3br JoartuinHllls Road rental at S475 month Al'(ent 644-113.1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• garden apt. Pool'. rec (7141644-1900 MISSION RF.AL TY 3 Br. 2 bath house. 1 blk tn Brand new l br w lfrpl. are:i. S315 710 W 18th St. ------ 494 0731 bch $475/mo inc l tennis park.mg. bll-ms, lit $425 Rentals Galore!! Chai MifKJ O ct'an View & s w 1 m c I u b Ca 11 I~ 2131360-0773 Mes~ Ve':!c 2 bd, nQtu crptl. We have IOOO's or houscc;, 6.113098 R f drapes "'paint. · cu · dplxs. apts now, all 2 °R. rum W/""rsonal . _._e s_req. -d • l pd ~ " r a.oa Ptftlnsulo 3807 e·DBC, wa er _.,,, areas, all pnces. Save on po:.se~s1ons. 1n North NEWPORT TERRACE 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo!498·1936 ree. Laguna Walk Ito bt>ach . Br 21, Ba. Fam Rm. 411!4 00 garage + 2 r<1r apron S475.675--0745or557-H>1fi Sl90 Nace bach apt 2br. lba, erpts. drps,'stvl 6 :r 9 and used bnck j?arden __ ___ _ Resp adults. UlJI pd. No rerngl lndry rm. patio. ------- area Ready lo move in Eleaant 3 Rr • 2 Ba. nnnl peL'i. 106 E Bay Ave. upl S325 yrlyn 745 W 18th 2 BR 2 Ba. Sludto apt. I " .-··· 9 fi73.627S -fplc, xlnl cond 315 E Apnl I. 5 mo e;is1• S66'l ll~e stone rireplace Bay. $395 yrly rental. per mo Super plai·e ror Musl see' $600 •6423 l Corona def Mer 3822 2 Br. l Ba c d. bltins. 962-8847 d super per.;on ••••••••••••••••••••••• i:ar. $250 mo .\J?l Beaut1ru1 2 Br. 2 Ba 838 8081 2 BR, l ba, crpts & dr(l!-. -gar . steps to bch. ) rl) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Back Bay area Twnhse Uolum bdrm. Prtv ba Non !>moker $150 . S48-7223 AVOID INCOMPATIBLE ROOMMi\Tf:S! IUILD TO SUIT 5,000·20.000 Sq ft l.,..ntnw..t Placentia Ave. c M Opportunity 5015 Loc.t : Mon mom, 9 wk blk WESLEY TAYLOR CO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• fem Schn~uter pup. Run R1':ALTORS 644-4910 Want lnVC!>tOr Cor beg. Isl lUlglOn City Bch, St H . Cosmetology Salon an Reward. 963-SSM 4 oHice. 12.000'. renced busy loca N 8 . Good Penonals -Sl SO yard All, or part of profeoMonal refi. Offrr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrvme. 631·2"40 5'1r comm Good xtra in come· 640 8675 H1-,1.M-Mote 811-4134 Takt!ti Tht' Gut•si1work Out of Findanf: 'TllAT RIGHT P l-:RSON San $$ by Shari11q 7,500sq ft warehou!'>e space, xlnl location 540-7063. MoMy to loan 5025 Spiritual Reodef' . 1815So. El Camino Real SanClemente. 1-'ully h l' For appt. 492·7296_ I" lo share 2Br. 2Ba Pk Renhlk Wanted 4600 Nwpl i\pl. nicely rum ••••••••••••••••••••••• St9S + ,, ut1l 64-0 ~2 Apt wanted for qu1N. late G8ln a reliable roommate 645 7464 •SH.ARE A HO~U-:• Fem Park Newport 3br Twnhse $157. Cherie 833-2900 or 640 1673 middle aJ(e cpl ~HIST be downstairs. walk'~ dis· tancetostores $240max 964-2105 Retired exec & w1h• dt•sire lse 2·3 Br Xlnl credit &. banlt'g ref's $..">00·$600. N B . pre£'d BluHs area 644·SSl9 Gay rmmt wJnted to Retired cpl v.ant -.pact' share N B home, with 2 f 24• trvl trailer w hook guy:. 752 llOO upf/July&Aug 646 7876 ----- 4650 Oceanfront NB. :-hr ll!C h.w. p\t bdrm & bath Mlteeft~ $250 + bi3 0378 Rftltah ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fem to shrw same:2hrSJlaCe a\'atl ror sm ape'. $150 8411 Ml4 Carol mtrbm. camper ~hell, 842 2381 boat/trlr up to 12· E·sidc 2 roommates to share h11: C M Ph· 645-~73 3 BR.older. charming NewJ>()rt llts hse Lrg yd lusiM$J/l11vest/ Qwct area SH5 645·96.34 FincMce an 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·····••·········•······ ht, 2nd & 3rd T.D.'i LOANSAVAILABU: Credit no problem lroker, 752-5903 QUICK CASH bt & 2nd Tru;.l Oeed loan:. arrani?t'<i for an) reason Credit no pro· blem Borrov. on the in· crca'\ed \'alue or your home Call today forfast , <-OUrte<lU.'> IOformJtton. tAj~>;C.99.· RELAXING MASSAC E BobJames·L1c Masseur OuteaU 9-9, 494·5111 MASSAGE RGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCALL OHL Y 631-3811 •SAMov·s• Outcall Massage 973-0329 L1t·t•n.,ed Home Loao Hroker!> sl'r vang So -- C"<illf for 17 yrg. Call our nrarrsl nrf11·1·. •SHERI LEE• Certified MHsseuse House Calls· By appt 838-6838 FOXY LADY i l4 8.17 37'14 Outcall Mossa«Je 731-3561 Spt'culator;., 1nvc•ston. & o wners shrl ll'rm $$PREGNANT? Carin j?. avail fasl JMI Daven confidential counseling & port ~9-9803 referral Abortion. adop Businns ,., .............. . Fem rmmt wanted, own Oppcwtunity SOOS lion &keeping. APCARE bdrm & bath Non ••••••••••••••••••••••• s m o ker S14 71mo ~2556 Yng Rt>5p Prof es wmn nds samt• lo s hare Delux dupbt Bl S225 675 1579 e'e 640 :1863da Casual ~etr ·supporltnl? non smoker lo sh quiet S.AH CLEMEHTE Grooming & Pt·t Shop Retirin g arter 7 11.ood years. fine lot•iltwn & chentele $68.500 BERTHA llENHY REALTORS 215 Del Mar 492-\121 hmc w 39 ) r s1ni:le Newport. 2 ex1stang O<'ean male S48 8300 SS6 0697 rront take-out. sit do~n Offiu Retrtal . 4400 restaurants Owner v. Ill ••••••••••••••••••••••• hnance \ Johnson.Bkr 979-4964 THE EFFICIENT ALTBlHATIVE Mo to mo rf'nt incl Re ce pt se r v personall:r.ed phone rnv craice, con! rm. mail serv .. underground prki: & more m Newport. TIIF. EXf:ClJ"flV~: SUITE, 640 5470 Ofhce Space avail. pvt en try, 2 suites. rcas. 1K27 Wes t c iarr Dr NB 6.11 0000 EXP .AMDIMG 7 8? $700WEEK Full Time $250WEEK Part Time Potmtial FAMOUS BRANDS BEEC~HUT GUM IUllLEYUM LlFES.AVERS TICTAC'S & OTHER IRAHD H.AMES WHEN YOU NEED CASH, CONTACT UNION LINDA & VICKI o.tc• MossoeJe Fortt.F.ofit! Serving all Orange Co ~7313 HOME LO.AMS •SUSIE'S• Lmon Homc Loans ar Outcall Massaj?r range loan.11 for home or lOAM·2AM 7'.11·411·:! property owner:. or $1.000 DANCE OF FL "i to Sl00.000 or mort' And Beaut nude girls dan11· throui:h l n1on Hume & rap ..,ession IOAM 10 I. o ._. n ' v 0 u I! 1' ti JAM ~1on-Sat. 12l'M lo lfnmeownH Terms. RPM Sun 625 !'o Euclid whtl'h are i:rnerall~l Anah 5596150 much bt>tter than hn<inr1• FREESK"\SION W /\ll rnmpany ter m' Choost> The Terms that flt your budc)et. Sried FULLY .AMORTIZED PARn Y AMORTIZED IHTEIEST OHL Y loll room Dancinq Partner needed fnr Smi:les Dances 646 25911 •TOUCH OF CL.ASS • ESt:O RT & MODE I. SERVICE Outcall hy Ap J>OIOtment ~·7118 ~nt plans in ac· OUTCALLMASS.AGE cordonce with state * 731-0931 * law. Ir Cor\'a1r Unlimited n· Ir (or a ny re11son w~ ran pair has given you a bad not arrangt• <i loan for deal call Yvonne 631 -2~io \.OU lherl' will lw no ro~l We ha,•e somethinl! 1n ornblJgat1on rommon Wanted' 3 GORG EOl ''\ male escorts for ..,. II Prom IF QUALfffF.0 Sue. aft 5 4~ 81~ MAYO C K ' . 'I' Htd pool. nr shopb. ~25 Great local' 161J'l 1 .-.... 2085 Tltwin Dys 6 40-5650. fo'ves Fully ser" ore space c;tart.s at 64 ~<I rt an lhe dynamic "l n airport bu.s ar1'<1 SpJn' avail. AOO lfi.000 ~'I fl & v. :irehst' sp. JCY sq rt Prop ~tgr Judy Clark Rl.H\1113 o stop hy Commerce I' Jrk. 41008ireh Dispensed through ultra modem eqwpment. re corrls ifidicat<' in a com pelit1ve market thal Bubble-Yum out ;.ells Wngley's, Spearmint Doublem1nt and Jute~ Frwt combined UNION HOME Cl LOANS Socioi Chllbs 5400 JaO GtENNEVQE AGUNA &A01 (114) 4M·214e 3 nR. 3 ba, fanlasltt' Vlt'W home. new. sms. No pets 529-5755, 529 7897 Rentimts 631-4555 Newport He1Rhls. 3 Br. 2 Ba hse. alley access & 11torai:e + gar S600 mo s:n 1549 Laguna HIMs 3250 !~ ...... ••. •• .!~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •POOL HOMF.• Tuslt.n c~ndo. 3 BR: l'"J cA ti 1 4 BR 2 Bn ba, patio, recreational ,.,.,ruia ona • ' facil, ou paint. Nr by w/alr cond. fplc, D/W. schls & sbop'g. 8301000. 11 u p e r a r e a • S 4 8 5 . S36-B4 ~.agent, no re<' ------- -CoftdolMnl-3 u::·p~~c:.°~5 re:~~: ~ 3425 No ls~ 54()..12..4W> ••••••••••••••••••••••• pe H\D"lt. Harbour area. 2 br, Lab ~t 1255 full-size patio. nr beach. ••••••••••••••••••••••• shops, schls. avail Apnl 3 br twnhse, all amemUes. 1. $325/mo. 963-5228. temporary rental 1" 4 bdrm 2 ba condo. pool.2 ~ $275 ~-0469 car gar $425. Owner (()aim) 3 br new homt'. 7511163 Before 10 AM. frpl, club-temporary ren· or Alt. 8·30 P.M lal h prlce $325 Details. Towr•OllM 546-0tQI UnfMmi•d •---1269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NMIMw~ipm...t~~ BIGCANYON ••••••••••••••••••••••• br d 2~ ba l5 ~ll~':°.CS~ GARDEN APTS <.'ORONA DEL MAil 2 Br Townho~e. frpk. Pool, tennis. Some ocean & Catalina views Close to Fashion Island & fine beach. Also l Br. 644 2611 Ma.wailiceol View! Super deluxe lar~e upl>('r duplex, S. of hwy. l br, extras. 673-6004 Brand new 2 Br. 2 Ba 642-5225 frpl. prv patio or bale, OCEAN V IEW. yrly 2 RR adults, no pets xlnl lo<'. 1 BA dplx $450 mo 673-2058, 673-4852 6'4-6780 or 642 363!l 2 Bdrm condo, nr Harbor Blvd & San Diego Fwry Avail. April 15th. S285 mo Kids ok. No pets Call Sue 556-7707 __ _ 1 Br vaews the Sl'a. S330 A/C, tenrus, htd pool R/S, dt.shwasher Huge 2 Br, 2 Ba, vu apt Heated pool, R/S, $430 Must see! (f!.441) Retlff•s 631-4555 2 Br npt. upstrs, enc gar, l aun . bllins, ni<:e grounds. adlts. $250. 751 7522, dys. 673-8364, Nwpt Hgts z BR t BA. eves. beam clgs, patio. gar. no kids, pets S325 645-1682 2 Br, garage. laundry. l(as Classlrit>d Ads sell big paid $360 mo 673 3584 items. small items or or642-2llll any item. 642 567_8_. __ Channing 2 BR 1 BA. gar, ocean view. Steps to beach. $450 )'l"ly. 673-1503 or 213-Z74·3692 3824 Bachelor umts. I block from beach. All ut1I paid. No pell!. $225 mo ••r'.WW.• 201 E. Balboa Blvd Call Sue 556-7707 layfrORt/Udo Isle 2 Br w /frp lc Sandy beach. $300. 673·0770 btwnMpm. "OH THEW .ATER" Great office space 300 t 1000 sq rt All suws shapes. some w wet bars & rrpks & lrrnfi(' views Very competitive rates 1n 1.Jdo Village You've got to see at to believe it! Call Susie Zaun at (714 >675 8662 for an nppt., or st.op by Mon-Fri 11 ·30 to 5 :30 at Lido Manna Village, 3"75 Via Oporto. Suite 205. N B Single lo 3 r oom suite avail In run service big. nr O C Airport, starting at S16S Call 833-3640 EXECUTIVE SUITES Luxunous oHlces. elt eculive secretary. personal ph one cov- erage, recepUonist. coo· ference room. xerox. notary. Leue or month lo month. Near So. Coast Plaaa, O.C Airport & ~ays. can m.m1 ..........•............ The S&ngle s Solution Date by Cho1Cl' "'1at100 's t.arRc.><;l llomc Not Chance Loan Brokerage Fi rm Call lnlroVlew 752·~ 11 BToro 770-3031 ~-~-£&-No investment reqwr<'d "' Not afritialed with Life Hunt lch 848-2225 atiOft Savers. Inc. ,\pphcant ----------i ••••••••••••••••••••••• must be a permanent re Mof+C)C!CJeS, Trust JalK WCl!lted. 7075 sident, available to start DffdS 5035 •••••••••••••••• •••••• • business immediately ••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysitter for wor kmii Company fu rn1 s h c.>i. direct outlet for gum and mint, induslr1 es (1111'!:-l dispensing equipment. lugh traffic locations and company capital for 1''< pans1on purposes Apphcant mu:;t be or sound character a nd have sincere desire to succeed tn business In vestment available upon request. Appbc:rnt mui.l have adequate workmll cal'!t.al. LOWEST parent Live out. ov. n transpor tation . Ref~ 4974754 tWpW.ted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-'aarMt Terms since HM9 l•------•--hwterest Rates lstT.D.'s. obo 2nd T.D. Loms. Accounting Sattler Mtc). Co. 642·2171 545--06 t I Reured couple hall monl'y to lend l~t & 2nd TO s Agent. I 837 3744 -- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5300 PAYROLLCLK Exper'd and1v needl'd for mult1-state t>Om puWriied payroll Req · s 10 key by toueh & lite typ ~· Must enjoy det.atl &t busy atmosphere. Xlnt wor\lng l'OOds Ii hens Apply National Sr.item<. Corp . 4381 Birch St, NB (Near OC Airport) EOE SEAVl EW, 3 br. +"ram k~'.mo.~r r m • 0 ct a n v I e w • --_:...::_;.:;.;._:.-_..;---SolllltU,.. 3116 De l uxe o ff ice s w/aecretarial serv Nr o.c. Airport.. 752-5626 lnSanta Ana c•Mr.F.Smtda Moo, Tues, Wed Only ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost er Found a pel., <.:all ---------· p ool/ t e o n i 11. U7S. Delrnsu..tw. 3600 ZlJ/4'1).11629 ··l······~············· E.ASTSIDE Cll IAYCUST 3 Br Dpb, Cfle 1ar , $."1195, rtnest tocattcn: 3 BR, 2 ~NI caM. bL, frpl, rormatclliJ. rm., t.ut. land.au plna; c:ov ... sl:ai::wl•~ end_.paUo, IJ"(lenhouMd •••••••••••••••••••••••• COUn)'UG ; RU •n er, c:.t9...... 1724 ~·dryer•, nfrl, at. l~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• >~ .. tal'P· pen . •''"' ~ lH••· Owner SIO WllK & UP s.udlo. 1 bfldroom II CA.MYOM MDI c.. pool I Storr ~ 2 Dr, 2371Nt'Wl*t Bl, C.M. 2~,Jh, den w /bar, ~ortd-»r7 ..,.~ = room,•---------- -' crpt.s SUS CA.SIT AS drape1lel.op.cuu:al1r t · l nu. , 1wf 6 la• ClOMd aar. tJIO. Ull. a l1. et~~ etc. , .. ~ Adult.I, no p e&.s. 2110 NC"a'PQl1 llhd ••••••••••••••••••••••• A SIGHT TO SEE Rent tbls 2 BR •Pl w/1orceou oe••n vu. pvt bda, oc:iean aido ot Cit Rwy. $4IO. , ....... or .. TUl DbOfflce~e Call31-tt50 Office space for ftnt an Corona del Mar . Ca II M4~. -----Trad• fOW' old stuff foT new 1oo d les wlth a Cl..itied ad.S42-5111 For Cl tfittd Ad ACTION C.Ua ~Pilot ADVISOR ~ 1714) 135-3051 Anlaul Assutance Acctng Bkkpnii! Phue 11 Corporation ~aiue537·227~ee TEMPORARY 1 Gulf Western Plain, I.Git Coclrat.ic-1, crey/wbt Repel' Today to work NewYork,N.Y.,10023 )'t'0oW head J*ldl face onvanous•ccountb:lg& ONE IN A MILLION. A Meu Verde. RCJwllrd bookk ee plntt assign $48.3785 ment.s Work close to c-IUAic, In c-ool. clean you r h o m e . Fi.:urf' Crestllnc. S acrtlJ, 4 LOST. Fr;endly Albino Clerk• to Sr Accoun welb. 100'11 or pine:<!, or Cockateel, 19th St Nwpt laots needed lhr uout dwd, ? lowly rf'ntals, lkh (714)821 SMO d)"I, Orance Co. stabl tor20honea, bor· 537~0 8.obertffall'a. rest btt around swim· Account.mpa ming pool. t ml 11,rom ~.!.°"1p rikn~ L•hll Brh 500 s. Malo. Ste ~1 t.aJte Grqol"J. am mm nao..,.. ar -•c area ..... -U-'-Bank Y-'-Sllve-_.. just otr 3 /22 eye. Re.,., a rd. ,-., ,._....., -. ,__ n t'VUU fft 'J1'e City ol OrmJce Hw y UI. 244 2218. l ... 11$2.1.elM'l'29l '114/IZM.103 m-1011. Bt °'"*'· fJ'~O~UJzN~Do;=; ~l>D."alat m;;a;iu~o~n~.J ~~~~;;~~~~ Male. Cbafn. ao he Bib GoU Ir Teruua bll$l ... '°' ••l•. 115,000. ~ wpm B Ht-Ziil ldtd.llJ 1 • • l f ...... .. DAIL "f l'tl,,Of TU!ld!y. Mitch U . 18711 ·Schools and ·Instruction · This variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow Call 642-5678 Ext.325 MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES U.... How To U1e Your Hew Chris..,_, '"""' Personal Im.lrucl1oru; <:omplelc Selection M1crowuve Accessories "Learn to really use your expet'uilve investment." We tearh every phase of MICHOWAVfo: COOKING Complete 7~ Hour - 3 Week Course .......... ,....,. ..... tor, ... ....... Mwc• 21st. Ulllllhd .......... ,..,, ............. ....... Cal 768-5011 MICROWAVE MAGIC COOKING SCHOOLS -~Air Auoclmt fflcjM School & RylftcJ A1~ LEARMTO FLY HOS " t~l> 00 Oownl •FAA A,,IOYED • Course Includes . 35 Houro; flight 11me 11\ Ces<ina 150 s with 20 hours dual mstruct1on. lnd1v1dua1 1ns1ruct1on tailored to YOUR a1>1ltty. 38 Hours Ground School. 20 AllCIAFT AVAILAIU AT LOWfST ltATIS IM ottAMCii COUNTY L..,.. to fly 1tow~ -.. .. '-! For COft'Plrie Details Cllll ..OW 979-llSS 19711 Alf'porl W91 ~ ....... , ....... I 8 OnapC..., ...... INTERMA TIONAL MONTESSORI SCHOOLS For cw..en 2112 thru 12 yean *Planned programs *Reading. Writing, Geography, Music, Arts. Physical Ed .. Arithmetic. Language. Science. Independent Study & Social Activities. Summer Program Also Has Remedial Reading. Certified Teachers M•wport leach 979-9241 20221 CYPf'"s St. --IN Irvine College ~ of Business lnduoendunce 11nd Conl1dence a1e your~ with an 1nterest1no. well paid 1ob' Al Irvine we c•r"' ••. <M>out vou dbout the goad 1ob that you want to have. We II help you to oet there. Take your choice ol careers' SlC:lfTAltY • HCIPTIOMIST MiDICAL.UGAL Sl'ICIALl:IATIOtol STIMOGIA,..U • IOOltH•H TY"H•. SHOITHAHO 1aUSH-Uf' GIHllAL OfftCI ASS.STANT DAY AMO IYIHIMG PIOGIAMS \ WE CAN HELP A proper 11nd correct business environment. located 1n the hub of the Newport-Irvine Business and Industrial Complex Job Placement Assistance? Most certa1n1y1 I" the last 15 months over '400 employerr. have r~uosted Irvine graduates Cell MOW for _. lftfontteflOOI aitd llrodlllret. • READING • MA TH •GRAMMAR •STUDY SKILLS 1700 I. GAllY AfL SAKTA AMA U70S ,NPwP-1 F"'l at Over Rd l :>56-11890 CifT YOUI PIOILfM HANDLED MOW! STUDENT IMPROVEMENT CEKT'Ell tOI Do•er, .............. i 7 I 4t 64Z.tOH SCATS GYMNASTIC CHAMPIONS CALL IMMEDIATELY' ' .. Olympian Cathy Rigby was a SCAT and now it's your turn!! THE SCATS ACADEMY now h as openings for heginnm~ ,gymnasts. Classes fur hoy~ & girls 2·5 years <.1lso availalJh•. ~\\\1\~ clrewing \umpinCJ ,.,,,,,,;,,g owoy ~ CALL 897-7750 Or Stop ly, 5822 ReSHrCh Dr. Huntl~ leach TURN YOUR MANIAC INTO WONDER DOG through PROFESSIONAL DOG TRAINING Spec1ahzing in problem solving Puppies from 10 weeks to 10 years In Home Service geared to oersonaltty and temperament of dog Ranging from Baste Obedience (on leash) Long Leash. Off Leash, Protection Training Cal T °"' for Free COdllltaH• di9ft· ~'"g stealinq ""~11,· 1119 bor\l\nCJ 1714t 542°9414 l.tfttw.a A•aUatH What Is A Reading School Doing in Fashion Island? Teaching reading and study skills to students who want to improve 1--.ead1ng speed and comprehension. READWRITE features individualized Reading Programs developed 1fhro~h computerized d1agnost1c testing. Instruction is intensive and results are drama41c. Students from Grades 1 through 12 achieve better comprehension, faster reading speed. and more effective study habits. t Now is the time to inQuire about READWRITE SUMMER COURSES. We promise personal interest and service to each student Your child will recetve back-to-basics 1nstructton with full emphasis on fundamentals. Call for a brochun. READWllTE Edlicaffottm "°9'Clllll FASHIOH ISLAND / HEWPORT CENTER Smt• 110. 1303 A•ocado AY.,.. .. ,, 640-1261 MORE THAM JUST A JOI BEGIN A CAREER FACIALS & MAKE UP MAU GOOO MOMIY Let A 1chard s Beauty College help yoo st art de11elopmo new skills as a Cosmetician Alter only 20 weeks you can be earning a good l1v1n9. COSMETICIAN CLASSES HOW! L1m1ted Enrollment-·Call Now• Top inr.tructors give Help and Gu1danc.e Plenty of Practical EJCpenence Too TUITION PAYING PROGRAMS AVAILAILE PLACEMENT .ASSISTANCE MAHY OrrottTUMmES: • Interesting Work • Personal Sat1slac11on • Secunty-Jobs not lied to economic s1tualion • You progress rapidly to become lhoroughly skilled • Sell~mployment Qppor1unit1t'l> CALL '62.atl I FOR IMFORMA TIOM 1'TCWA~I15 BEAUTY COLLEG'E ...._~s9U·Hll ltHO lo 1 'hint,..._....,.._ leeclt Day & Night Classes For Men & Women rACIRC TRAVEL SCHOOL ·'I 0 hit I 7ti. Strttt, S.t• A-. Ce 9270 I CALL (7 I 4J 543.9495 Establ1<.hod 1963 F1nanc1al Atd Programs Accredited By The Accted1t1ng Commission or . The National Association of Trade & Technical School~ · HefpW.ted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • C1u1caJ TUJHEf •.• Various duties mcludV, • nuna • tit.e typin1 Xti1t wurk1ng cond& & bcrwf1ll {)({lees lOCJll('(l In Caita Mesa. Apply, N11Uonal Sysll'nlS Corp . \361lilrchSl.N1:1 <Nl•ar OC ·\trport l Jo:OE t'l.1-:RK, /\crnunl!\ ltt•l' )>'/lime In bu5y rc·1.111 J1•wclry Store lk•11t•(1b. Mil 1424 CLERK-DRUGS. Girts ll. Cardr.. Exper pref'd NP Call 540.7373. ---- Coclctall WaffrHt School t-:am up lo $300 per "'k. Low twllon. Plact'meot 31'M8l 751 919-1 C'omp;.nton ror eldl'rl ~- 1 ad y. llVt' In, 1111' hsk~pg, meal prt'p~ra lion & TLC Good I?~' Rt'fs n-qu1rro Call l>-At11 ~ IO.\M or 5 30 II 301'~1 ~VJO Comp.in111n-A1d ne('!lt d ror alt' rt lady. 5 d~ !I ,,.. " Bui. Pt·n1n. Heh '" qwred Ll\c in Sat &. Sun off. Phom• ti7J 3078 Con..'lultants wantl'd to i.ell Shm·Gym's, TV learts. Part/full lime. $100 $3(11.J pr wk. Call Mon-l"Ti 842.5267 COOKS full & P/llmc. J.<:xpcr·c.1 nood benefits. llayvic'4 Manor & Con\. Jlosp. 642·350.'i COOKS. Ra rtPndt•r .... Dt'l1vcrv l>riveri. p t1mt• opcnini:s (11r women & men w.out_l:?n· ing personalilles O\'er :!t & able to work en· .... $2 70.$3 to start. Appl~· after 5pm daily, Ml! N F.d:i PiZ7a Parlor, 410 E. 17th St.CM ------Cooks. day s h ift. Reuben "s. IS.SS Adam.., Ave. Appl accepted dai- ly bwtn 8-lOA M & 2-4PM. 5409672 COOKS, EXPER'D ONLY Breakfast .• f(lll\• Roi:er. 400 S Coalol 11'4 ~ La~una Fk'ach COl'NSELOHS Sl'c our act for llou" Counselor. wanll'd O;il.. Tree Homes. 540 4i.>4. Counter Hflp Openings on all shirts full or p/lJme. Jack N The Box, 1205 Baker St. C M Dental receptionis t. Mature, exper. 644·1405 Dental AHistant Ortho offc 842 7775 Ut>ntal Assistant. rh;on.1de. x ray hcenM~ .• C M area 54&-3000 OentJI Cha1r.;1c.lc A:.sist m N B. Pleasant group prac. Exper. nPr Includes alternate S;.st. AM 's &10 1122 --- DISHWASHERS P time. Bayview Con,·. Home, 642-3.'iOS DISPLAY SALES The Ncwporter -Mesa News is i:rowing almol\t faster than the:> area it. serves. If you have ex- J"X'ncnc(' in display ad - vert salrs. rail Terry for Hn appl. 6456111 ~w-~ 7100H~W-~ 7100-------------------------------P~~W~~ 7100~pW~ 7100 ~ut5hop·<ira~y~ -~••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• girl J' thmr ,,\pply, 13.5 E. Accounting Amb1LiowiCoui>leWantcd HEW CLASSES FORMING L!.1!.J 4 POINT PLAN CARPENTERS 17thSt.CM --- .A/RECEIVABLE to manage a small bu.'11· $ VE $7 OO -us Ue; Banking Exelu.si\'C Custom build Electrnn1rs Recent!\· Interesting position r e nessp/lJme.Willnotin· A · ..-.. Diit Tai.HP/TIME ingcontrol'tOr~l>ekstop :;cparated \Cleran.., concilin~ A /Rec ac terlere w/ )'Our present Branch ofc seeks bonda-notch fimsh carpenters (grade 1-;.5 and belov. J rount.s. Lite typing & 10 job. Must be willing to IEGIN YOUR DIET WITH A ble f /time teller. Exper (2) Only hif:hly quahriro an' nredcd to hll current .key aper. Xlnt working learn. Mr. Hall,642-1634. SUNDAE OH US! WOltU pre 'd. Contact Hilda need apply. Cntart .Mr part·llmc ,·acanc1es m ~ conds & benefits. Apply -. . Terranove(n4)&44-725S. Clearydo~640.L39_I __ lhe Costa Mesa Air Na- 'Nabonal Sysle~ Corp, Appliance repairman; Western Federal CASHIERS tmn;il Guard. We need 4361 Birch St. N.B. (Near Washers, dryers, stoves, $ OO had itaLL Savings F/bme. Good Pay. ml'n and women ex· OC A.irport)EOE. rcfrig's. dishwashers WEEKLY FEE ONLY 3. Z144 E CoaslHwy.CdM Growt.hco Slocationc; penenced in t'lectronics -Top pay to right mun F.qualOpporEmployer Wetram.Co.Bent"fitc; rl'pair. tclephonl'' 494-8(8 Slender Spoon Restaurant , Slmpl1 Diet MF.TRO CAR WASH telclype installallon and Accounllng f 2. Succualul B1h1vlor Modlhcahon Banking 2950 Harbor Bl. \"'1 repair. mci.sage center Af r CLHK Apt. Mgr, coople p re ·• t'X· operations. and weather ~ 'd , d d d p'd only, in maml. & bk· 3 Easy llulrlllan 4 Slimming Emclm Ta1.Elt. EXPER'D Expor .n 1v nee e kpa, 55 unit complex, 7132 r&m-, H•ti-1• leacJI u•-t N l Cash1t'rs/counter help forc-caslin~ Here is your w/gen'l accounting or " ~ -..,. o.c ypmg. ea appear 1-·rr ume poc;1t1on avail opportunity to Pam a A/P exper. EDP back· _c_· _M_. _<2_t_J>_865_·385 __ l ___ 1 C• 194-2022 for dais ~ Cootact Doris Mitchell 9 S Mon Jo'r1 Alsop l cl:iv i;uhi«tanhal monthly 'ln· ground helpful, but will APT MAMA.GER UMIOH IAMK position Apply m pcrsnn c 0 m ('. r ct 1 rem en l train bright lndiv. Req's 610NewportCenterDr bl\m 2·4rM l.onit John bent>f1ti., base excban~ lite typing at IO key skills. 32 Unit complex. 1 bllt to BRING THIS AD FOR YOUR FREE SUNDAE Newport Beach Silver·!! Restaurant. 3095 pnvilef(es. and MORF.1 XJnl working conds & bch. Pnme H.B. loca-Expires 4i 14175 558-5280 HarborBlvd.CM.Acroi.~ Formfor111At1ononnpl.'n· benefits. Apply Notional tiaa. Apt. + salary· Call Equal Oppor Employer slret!tfrom Fedro. m~s and quahfirations S t Co 4361 Bi h for Info 540·3535. Cpl I I s I I .yaema fl>, re ...... rd. u.i..Wcmted 7100 Ua&...WCllftd 7100 u.t-Want.d 7100 HetpW•Md 7100 --------ChauHeun wanted for c·a gt Arro 0 • St, N .B. <Near OC r·~ •-.... • ...,.. •....-•••••••• 1 7M·979-T363 or apply a~ Airport)EOE. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• •llKESTORE• g r owing limous ne 26.Sl='icwportBlvd.CM . .ArchffwdMai .ASSEMBLERS AUTO~-~IVE Baby s l t t c r • Ii l <' Banking Aaslst. Manager for sCJ"Vlce. Mus t be mature, ~/Dnrfhlllalt we w l 11 tr 8 in. IMC T'"""'lcJ~ housekeeping, baby 9 FILE CLERK Schwinn dealer. Sal responsible, clean-cut. Electronics assembly & I ActfntlftDlrec:tor SmallerDeslgnPlazaof· MacGregor Yacht Corp We have immediate mo 's old. Ref's req'd lrvineNationalBank $10,400.Mustbavepnor abletoworkdayaonpart WJrepreµpositionsopcn. ~ed. f /time. Metia !ice, N.B. Perm. posl-1631 PlacenUa, CM ' openings! Excellent M2-6JOOJudi Contact SbJrley Sawyer blke mechanic exper. in Ume & on call basis. Small fnendly company V_. eon ... Ho.-p, Ml lion. Shopping centers. ---------1 working conditions&: full 833-3700. E o.E. utore. 552-9222.. 770-2689 bwt.n 10-3, Mon m C.M. Goorl benefits. ~St.CM50-SMS banks, apts, residential ASSISrANT MANAGER company benefits. We Babysitter, my home, 10 Fri. Wllllram. Call Chuck for ~.u::n::w.r-~ projects. lrnmed open-COUPLE also need Lincoln -mo old girl, 3 dys a wk. ~nking IOOtcKEEPElt appt.645-3632 .... _ ....... Int'lB.... .i.ng. 640-8161. lcx-147 unit comptu in Mercury technicians & 631-5294 PROOF OPERATOR Familiar w/A{R, A/P, '""""'~" ...,. Santa Ana Hullband lotmen (front & rear). NCR 775 exper prer'd. i.111ng, payroll. Must be Clerical Electronic technic\an Travel,triUocuatsw< ARCHITECTURAL JR. mustlmow ~alntenance Apply to Bill Light or IAIYSITTUl J:fn 11-7. Contact person accur. typisL Min exper. 100% FREE med. to high end stereo t DcrowSeC'y to$12K DRAFTSMAN Young Mature middle-aced cou Howard McAfee. for 2 yr old. Live in de-neldept. 1·2 yrs. Fut expanding compont'Tlt.s. ~tabhshed .ExecSecret.ary to$12K growing H.B. firm. re-ple only. Rers required. RAY FLADBOE s ired. Refs req. CdM SAMT'l.AGO IAMK electronics mfg. offers expanding sales & .. --.... Personnel ..... ency s1dentia1 t.,... V c--....-,,,.,,_ 1<oac ......wt be -n•-R ~ t SLSO S('rv1ce dealer in CostJ .,.,,..,., ~ . ,,... • .....,_,_.. f700/mo + l Br apt. Call Uncoln Uerc-area . .........,..,, SSSE.lstSt. Tustin •"""pay, n"'~• con-K~r~-s v u~1 1·r. loo ... 'no ror a •Et7thCoslaMesa 3-SPM • bt.--"•-s ...... .....,,. -, oenial atmosphere r-1 ..._ __ ._ $700 '""' ·' "' .. l $abZI& 64.2·1410 _ .. .,.,. . .,..,....,.,., Hc.da&IMC BABYSITTER, f/lime, fm.S200.EOE __ EoE.Callforintervw _.......ce...... competent tethnician r ~..._..... AUI'ORENTALAGENT 16-JaAutoCenterDr. needed immed1atcly!1---------1 DECC Chn10fflce $700 whoenJO)'S working in <l 4 .Air National JC ~ou're ASSEMBLERS Experienced. Apply, IRVINE Mature, exper. sitter DANK Irvine Me-4731 fsc:.row SKy Sl50 friendly h assle·Cret• I ba.tnl•bardtlmefind· ~Tral.DeeAaeemblers 203CQual1St,NwptBch 110..7000 pre{'d.NB.644~1 AcchcJClerli $800 operahon. C31l J o hn t inl •Otllt and are Jn.. .Neededlmrnediatel.y i---------IAuto Parta stock clerk s.MorT.... ~~r. Yng, rapidly Ca llJLI .. Opf-$950. ~~=i~e~5Allan llc &er.ted .ia • career ift Lone ltSbort Term ATl'ENTIONI 1 r M/F, Full time. Willing Banking Profrdllv., tn-L-Hlls growing Co. needs exp'd M.n dt $675 -------- eJec:troDlea, vutber A.ulpment.s llottOVEI. t.otrainriabtpenooFull dependeotbanlt eeekinc --·-~~$Or. Sea•.l•t $1100 F•mal•"""~-·-•, ........ ~1• forecaat1111. or 3Shtft1Anllabl.e. comp. benent1. Aply b&Dtapcr'd ' Gl.mz.'1,9-l OrM-Detlr SISO "' .. ~ .. ,,,.. ....... l'Uuon: .. Ulepboot/lA!ltttype l.n-Muatbav.owsatrusp. Mo..,...MCMS Soutb Coat Auto Supp\y ___.. ..._ .. ~ trnmedlate opportunity uoo-•EPEJt.MOlll no up. nt'c. 646·7U8 llt&UtUonaDdnpctr. ,.. ...... =aMl20 Wontaoewortlco tH Baker st. ex. OC.--=_..olc for an lndlvldul with ~ too AdYwf Aut fo$151S (213)'2&G30ev~. -'"AlrNaUooalGuard _,, •-Openinflnec.talllesa ....,.~ C::experie'DC41u• Plaza Pharmacr. c-.. $700 .J,,_ Pree.Top • Vac:Pa1 -llmWaltB ~C. Jorawir preterrabb' lo new La1uoa Hills. Jilr. _...,,. IEscrowS.c:aet•r Jkic:ndta". W•Daed men Vlchri 'aomr Jim« W010an. Work•-------SAMTIAGOIAMIC eecounta. Dudm lnclude Drezf\!,...,M DhpaldtC. $737 MARINERSSAVINGS =: :::S~1;t10~ S. ~left w/~r:-· EQJGJa· AYON ~ E F\nt St.. Tultfn traln1na tellers. b11ndliQ1 Bookkeeper full cba1"1o 01l I 1 U... to SI I 00 h seeking a qualifit>d tn t.odat'• compeUtlvc-J>lv WaJtcr Kiddo a Co ble le tin& work llZ..5200 c:u1t.on>er tranaactlona, run or pui time for up' COAST AL Dcrow Secy for lts N. 8 . jobmartet.Youcaniet U3S.E.Brist.ol w /rapld advancement TAIEAYON Equal()pport~plOJ"r newu--~~~:':!~:i: hol.ltcry decorating co. P.......tAf"Cy ale. Min 6 mo's escrow free vocati.OUJ ll'atnina StelO NewportBeach opporlnour.SuuUonAI "".. ~ 2'790HarhoT,CM. aecret.arial exper. n!Q'lf. -.with excelltnt pay plua (C«neroflbutoUs ~tadlvhlon.Ac•no TO LUNCH 1n1 1&v1D1a manaaer --------S4M055 Xlnt sat, ~nrklnl( conit" freo medical c0Yera1e C.mpus behind bamcr If 18 or over. QuaUncd •PPll<'anlt call IOYS. GIRLS ~~~~~~~~~ & bencflt<1 includln« ~n and travel. For m0rc in· Ca.rt'• Jr) Mu1t h ue plea1tn1 Sell lo friends and co-00 YOV (114) '1 mi l2·1f years of age. Even I tal Apply at main ofr f()nuUon an °"nlnp J)etlCIDIJlt1. Qill botwn wortren In your olRtt; OFFER A S£RvtC~' lnl work. Obtain new a. IC.AL m.s Wm.cliff Dr NR and quallflcallona call ---------1 -.ina.iprn make About $40 on eVfl")' Let tbe public Imo. ~Lb GlondcH f'otder.. •ublcrtptlon.9 fort.he 0 ,1 Tt>mporary poi. now Or call Persocnel for sarieant Arrollo $10070U1 lL You'll havt an .S 111 tbe Dally Pllot 5-Y• ly Pilot wortinl with an t.hnJ July. MWlt trie so. appointmentM2-4000 '71....,.1'J83 flt •l'Plr at 64UIJ4 your own buaia ea1 Senk9 DiractOl'J. lt caa atm C.Utdela l .O\i.in adult •'*P8J"Yi'°"-Eam Jfrs 1 ao.s. Moo lhru Ft-I. Equal 0ppor Emptoy..-r Z!\MdJOrUllvd,Colta ~ llYin• uc, )'OUI cmt,.. Utile at $1.IS IA uo.llUls, CA sao to $.'I) per week or Pluae call for appl. 1lf more Jar• J:~ ~oo-~of-1 °:! I*' 411. ~ men ... in· man. Call (213) S97419& tMS-SOOO, at DI. ~llinK anythlnt with a • n-.s. 7fU' ol4 tturf fer larmtldlm -.,..u noon to $pm. C 2 U) Dally Pllol Classllkld Acl Jina ..,,.cblnJt to a U? H• _loodlu •llh a fAoi1b'l-18. ntacalU&NITL aall1. Spm..fpm. Call HaYe eom\'Jlhlnt to'•UT ii a simple mattec •• ., a_.Wedadoitwf'I . auain.d d.toa71 AYOll ..... fl.S.C ~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~ OoDocL Oassllif'da&doltwtll J\lltcalllG·SIJil. i ' • J l ' ' f • • J s tJ • . - 1'\Mdlr. ~a t9TI ~ . ~, A•• a.,.n e.,.t s.ntce -· · .. dt1d 11 ~ •ede•'f 1-cllc..._ 1P~ .. ,,.._, ,._ laofltt ........................................... ~ •• ;; ... .:;;;; ................... .;.-;.-: .................................... ·········••••&••••····· .................................................................... . Kia Nin dama.:ed your Shamp00 "iteam clean. o.le W. Philllpa Cement. Pror .1~• Laodscap-Want a REALLY CJ,.EAN LANDSCAPING. • ~asPAINTUCG PaUo covert, redwood ltOOfS IDlhtJed factory ~T Call Ql·Z440 Color brighlenen; wbl Ne> Job too am all. lq .,...nln&. Maint. HOUSET Call Ginabam Reuooablepricel J:•Pl''d, Rea Ratea. decb ~· t.aftdsc~p. d1rt11$;.i&b•ns. Qall lloodld,llc., 1uun.-d <'pl& IOmJnbleach. a.an Lie' /Bonded. 6'1-2113 tncl. mowlq, lrtmm.l.n1. Glrl. ,..._atM5-5123 _ ll68m! 1 ~~£ct. Ci l Gene Ina~· 2-HaroldGllM-.-1 ...... liv, din rm. hall $15. Ava al\$. ~.weed.in,. rr .. HlbaMcleanina done by Landscapt.na Tree trim· OutdoOr Eaviroamtntal D«oOP . ws ....................... rm fl.SO, co1.teb $10, chr BectrtCCll eidm ... M,S.TOT2 reliable couple. Reta. D'UDI-Clean·up. I )'ta All PROFESSIONAL ~.Addlivlol&rta 0o p;ablilil ltbot AlrESyatems. Auto roll SS. Guar elim pet odo.r. ••• .. ••••••••••-••••• a.EAN·UPS/HA'UUNG 5'0-1793 exp. Free Eal. Jay PainUnt~ lat,r/Exter. t.oyourboQM.Allocom Preee&t.Ca01M442l upawninpforlhe motor Cpt reyalr. l5 yra eapr. ELECTRICAL SERVICE PnmlDf Plantln Noboru. l4&·40U or Jleas work ..... .0·0388 ~YoQrpool oupa. home " travel trlr All Do work myself. Reb CALLS W hr "SMALL f\'eeest • w.'WIJO'I lb&so or office cleulnt ., al · Uo'd A bonded. Bob HuntrT roofers need co1or9 • sizes. lmmed. SJl-0101. JOBSM2-ma' · · Dv or Eve. Reference .... _, ~I· Extt/Iolr. Ex· 8tn&le.f71.1D work. S~clalla101 in free bome inslnllal1on c-.t/C~ J~~EGARDENER M.hrJoan~ ....................... fJc~:::So:.; reu ....... /a.. = ~ ·~i:;':'· a.1QAJf •s.1PM ....................... t~ Bectrfc Of' ...., __ c.rounds care Houle/Apt. Cleanlna Brickwork. Small jobs. .. ....... -............ • "· tal3>583-5020 ___ All phases concrete & Uc3Z71311 64~...-r• call Jobn. 25 11'1 exp. 2 Contact Pam. Newport, Costa Meaa & HM Exter. Palntlnl by NeapakllealstexlUJ'H Tret~ blkwrk c. b kw k Hort.· d•&reea. former Irvine 87S.317$evet. R Sinor St be 1m Try ....r15T "J.1439 ••-••• .. •• .. ••••••••• C.,..ter · tm r or · ELECTRICIAN·Priced Wb!te House Gardener. 6'7S.!MT9. . 13S-5MSMt\' . _..,.._ ____ • _____ R l t I I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lle'd/Bonded. 842-61194 ri•ht-tree estimate on Pa1icnaJ aerv i65-&M6 ....__ T_ Mo..a-. me. ni. emo•a I, r mm na, " ' ....---~-. PATCH~ERING = ,..._ •t. Uc'd, Carpenter. Free largeorsmalljobs. VERYLOWPRICES ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••"9•••••U•• Prof paint'( A: paper All typea, Free eo.3llll estimates,Anys1ze1obs. C4ntrodor Llcemed 6'73-0359 on Gerdenlne Main· WoWdn'l you rat.her have ''Two Men Will Mov'-' hao1101. work gua.r. fJStimaU..call~ Sent Tony,646-9866 -••••••••••••••••••••••• B.ECTIU-SHVE ~Georce 541-2015 acert.lfiedpublicaccoun-You" We !ia.odle Ire " Free est. 536·4780, Tree ce. Tree prun CARPENTRY R J.Hutfman "Son, Gen Lant prepare your in· aml moves-otilce " S3S-"3ll3 Patching, tnttext.J found. ing, removal, lopping P Contr. Cuslom Alt & Add, ••More than electricians ca ..... tll S..-.lcH come tax return? l''or an houaehold. Dls~cc Ct ,.-L.& Y-c-........ rpr. Booded. llc'd 1'0807. Uc, lol. -.en. atio, decks & covers. 979-4963 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• local. alao pacll:lna. -.n --fll'll' 19.?>38M • • paneling · d g t pat i o i; . c a b 1 n et s . appt tn your bome call _ Wllridc:r# Ch•• MJ fmiab p'1r' ID • :nu. fonruca. New const. Rea Formica HANDYllAN. ~ome. & 988-8112 Lowei;l legal rut.•. ~iall.JJ.ng in reaiden-DRYWALL ••••••••••"••••••••••• • • P ance ins a & comm'! 645-4644 or apta. Con1c1eotious ---------Uc1insrd Cal T lll-844. U&J homes, lDL It ext. Some elee. & plumbing 548~1 u &bonded ••••••••••••••••••••••• Craftaman Call~ Rlley'sTaxServ1ce Ph847·'7271 Please cbeck our re· Hanet~spray Windows cleaned, re Ji'reeest. Refs. 6'\21738 · c _ Formica Counter Tops in-· 28 Yean Experience ferences. Lie 11 3208$1 Rlcbard. 8SC).1m a1ooable. businessei. Carpd Set-Yiu REM OD ELI MG ~Jed~ your ~pee:~•· Cif'odlRCJ Call 6'2-6442 i;:t·::: ;.!!°:ti~ TG~ ~ \"!r:J • free est. ~ homet 6q&a.147-446l • •••••••••••••••••• • •• •• Custom Room Adds ons. test co ors e· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Able sen· ice & reason local " Ing d.J.&t. Or. Cty ..... .....,.. ._, ••••••••••••••••••••••• tte>W IS Tttl TIME Carpet Man will lay yours Y.binets Countertop; SICJI$. Free est. 67~3118 Haul akiploader dump rat.ea. Se flabla Eapanol Van & St.oraae. PUC Lie YOUNG MAN S yrs expr UOMESI\ Vt:RS. Phimb-'°"Job....,. to clleck· or mine. Repairs & Apt-Office·Comm·A~L Roon trk, 'grading, tree wrk, Manuel J . Murillo Tlll.015. 537-3160 or in wallcovenn1. Free int tlHeat.l.ng, FrH est. tit• D.af1r. Pilot Helf, cleaning tool Guar work CUsto~ Homes & Uruts ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~mo)itions etc. 831-1257 7c.o. ""'""olf , .. " ~,,..., .,....,-3161 est. 6'5-8576 J.R..ly S10 hr. Hooest & rellable w .......... c ---'"ca•'--. f Quality not Quantity . ..-... ..., .. ._...._.. """' '¥"'"' -~ BofA M C 0... ---1UNNJ• uvu llt bigger sav1111ts . .Free WmB.Anderson·Bullder Ftoon: Wood. ceramu~. H I ......_, Bob Foad Palntioa H1Vlee. • I n.. tJ>e job you waat ta nol ,, est.~ Fr~ Fst 631_0361 vinyl & cpts. 27 yrs .. -. '9 ,_:.,,r~ • m.IO&SorN7.Q383 tbere yoa ml1bt con --· -licensed contractor. •••••••••••••••••••••••Classified ads sell big ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cornm'I, lndwr. ... fl rea. alder otterlnc .your Try a Daily Ptlot Room Additions , Cameo lnteriors.S3l-84400CCStudenl.1Tontruck. Items, small ilems or 16yrs. Painting O.C Int/Ext, bonded, full Don'tdroplheballlGeta Mll'Ylces with an ad in QassifiedAdtobuy,sell Remodel. New constr . Ttasb, t.ree trim, Ron any Item. Just call Rea/CommApllorates. liab.tl9J.IOOJUc3'S2l8 ~~tltt~:'i~~~D~a~~ the Job Wanted er rentsometbulg. Llc'd Call Spiro. 548-8250 Classified Ads &C2·S678 642S703, 979·6489 642·5878. Lie/ins 839-1888/499-290~ Want Ads cau 6¢5678 Phone 00-56"78. ~·~·Phone 842-5678 Hdp Want~cf 7 I 00 H.tp Waftttd 7100 Help W...ted 7100 Hef:-,,.,,..fed ~ 7 I 00 Help Wonted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.;~~~~;·?~~~ ~.~~~-~ ..... ~!~ ~~~~ ..... ?!~! ~~;;;:?!!~ Escrow Officer GIRL FRIDAY: HOUS!WIVES MACHINIST J>rogrei.s1ve mdt•pendent P time Vaned ofc work 1-:am xtra cash morns. 5 N.B. co. needs Class A hank has operun..i for t-X wl'>mall mfg of math Day wk . Own trans Machinlstror Bridgeport per'd 1':.'-<'row Orr.rer lt>aching machines Sandwich delivery. MUI & Hardlnge Lathe. w/PR e1b1ht>. Contat·t .i:n 3600 54(}..83J9 Clc:.se tolerance precision pen;onn('I dept. ----work. Exper req'd. Top SAHTIAGO BANK GIRL FRIDAY llsekpr <'ompanlon for benes. E.O E. 557·9051 535 E First St, Tu.sun P rr clencal position w I elderly woman alone on ask for Ron Adams 832-5200 typing & Ille shorthand beach Ul Balboa, must be -E I Op E I skills reqwred. Fashion abletodnve. 673-7447 Jd.Jd. live-in, lovely N B ,qua port. .mp oyer Island. 544.~ M/F. ----home w/private room. S Exec S.Cy/ Adm Aut ---lntericw Decorator days, wknds off. Eng. Beaut. oft. Big name co GIRL.MOH-FRI Estab'I decorating speaking preferred. Ternfic boss. Rush,, Combination customer studio, N.B. area needs Holl!ekeeplng. cooking, 110,.200 :.c.rrn:e. t)ptng, lite bk exper'd de<'orator Reply need own trans Non Ellie O;Bnen ~10 5001 kp'g. Work tn a medium to Clas...,1f1ed ad no. 140 smkr 644--0695 ___ _ , Snelling & Snelling .,r sized ldynamic) growth c,o Daily Pilot. PO Box Molds & Newport. &>ach A.:l·m·y onent.ed company. Coll 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca 4J.W Campus0nH' BudatS40-78008·S 92626 __ ------- f::xpenenced mamcun'>t. knowledRe of !><'Ulptured na1b 675 7888 GIRLS HEB>ED Janitor full time. must Sandwich delivery, 5 have reliable. transp days wk. 4 hrs day. Own ~~·75 hr. Call Dick transp Eam O\'r S3 SO ------ Fast Food hr Call 8am -lpm . Janitor t"\'es. P time. Mature adults, n·t1rl"c·s. 5408339 Hunt Brh or Cerntos Sr. <'ll11eni.! AppltrJt1ons,._ _____ ;;;;_1 Call Alan 11) 526·5511 . now being arc~pkd for1 ---- £ull & Prr pos1t1onc; on GL'ARDS day & evenml{ shift" at SECURITY JANITORIAL Nauglu Drive Th ru OFFICERS Laundry Worictn F1time. (lollday Tnn. Laguna Hills Contact Penonnel 586-5000 MA.IDS& Laundry help. Apply tn person, Ah Baba Motel, 2250 Newport Blvd, CM Maids ; t.op wages paid. Restaurant. Good :.tart 1ng wage, holiday & IMMEDIATE Maids wanted, good pay. vacation benehls. op OPENINGS Harbor IM Motel, 1800 Apply: The lnn at Laguna, 211 No. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. P lime 4 5 hrs mghl 5 Days wk. 17182 Armstrong, lrvane. 540-7813 portunily for advance ~ C t M Jarutonal company n~ w. Balboa Blvd. NB. ment. Apply in person m. OS a Ha expcnenced or qualified 675-3463 Mon-Fri 9AM 11AM . &H.wportleach people. Will train. Top --------- :!PM-SPM, 7PM 12PM ALLSHIF"TS pay. Want men, women Maid wanted. Sucliff 17295 Rrookhur'>l ,\\e AVAILABLE & couples. Call 631-0723 Motel, 1661 So. Coa:.t FV •Condominium-. fi73..4356, or apply at 833 Hwy. Laguna Bch . •Shopping Ct•nters W . 1 7 l b ST , C M , 494-4892 •lndustnal Factoncs 9AM-12 00. --------- MECHANICAL Count.er 1'0m11n to wnte RECEPTIONIST SAUSAGEHT Minot3yrscomt.ruc.e• IHGIHEER contracts an rental WANTED per. Sh 80, typioc 70 Aggressive small 1n center. Must have neat we need a aales oriented Must be familiar w/con dust'! instrument co handwriUn& & be ablt' to With the following re· manor woman to!'letlour tracUccha!lCeorderpro needs growth onented deal w public No exper quiremeots: excloslve calendars and cedura. Salary nego ~lioeer Who wants ex-n«. Apply, 1930Newport Sharp Person an extenslw Une of ad-CallJudy, (Tlt)llS-8AO per. in manuf product de· Blvd, CM Pltssantappearance vertislng ~pecialt1es/ Secretary 'Irr 9-a. Fish velopment marketing. ·--------•I G~..!!!_ealiphot:yne business gifts. If you e-ald-m. Salary based on capabili-..-~.. have a past hi.story of --•~" ,..v,.•- t y . E qua I opp 0 r . PA ftOU CLK Good typing skills wi h t Newport Harbor Cowml Employer.894·5351 Exper'd 1ndlv. needed Mon Smoker sales succeu or. 5 r 0 of Clturcbea. Very busy. be• a career 1n a• es, ,.,....__,,. _ aeoa for mulll-~tale com· yOUcanbenefil CrQm one ... --. ___ v_•-r ___ _ MECHANIC Exper 1n small engines and Pickup trucks. For landscape m.a1ntalnance firm. Call 546·7843. En· vironmental Care In<' 1920So Yale, S A Equal Opport. Employer puterized p•yroll. Req's cau Mrs. White ror in-of the ~ost lucrative SICllTAIY 10 key by touch & lite typ-terv1ew appowlmenl. com~aon structures NEWPORT BEACH ing Mmt enjoy detail & Paul Dosier m OU':' industry. What we 2 &al ok, 4 yrs exp. tYJ>t' busy atmosphere. Xlnt need 1s u m~vidual w.ho 6S+ dlctaphoae $TOO+. working conds & bens Auoc. htc. ran deal directly with 6".4eu • Apply NaUonal Systems COSTA MISA. businessmen who use--------- Carp.,4361 Bm:hSt.N.B C714JS56-7075 calmdars and specialty SECRETARY <Near OC Airport.) EOE. ~ Oppor E.pAoyer items to promote their To manager or adman Medical Recepuonist, ex--·--------perienced, immediate Payroll Supervisor. lm· opening. 636-9850 mediate opening payroll supervisor. Hunltngton MB>ICAL/ltecept Beach Caty School Dis for allergist's oftire. tnct.. $1042-$1298 pr mo Salary according to ex-Apply 73S 14th St, IJB pr. So»SQX> Phone SJ&.8851 ----------1 ----Medic~! A&s't Mu!;t be ex- penenced in drawing blood. 6:30AM·JO·JO AM . Call for appt. Ask for Debby 644>-0140 Men for early AM oewspaper delivery io N.B. & C M. Must have dependable car " be re liable. $350/$400 mo + bonus. 548-1740 PBX Answenne Service Secy. Ex~r. prel'd, Wall train. Must type 3S wpm. Variable hrs. 640-11 to PIX OPEltA TOR own business. This is an services. Exper. in ad- excellent opportunity ror min services/purc:bai.· llCEPT-HosrtT AL yoo to associate yourseU iog. Good typma & &b re- Pl-ume Ev"/Wknds with The Thos 0 . q'd. Ability t.o work un Pleasant, mature. ac-MUJl>hY Co· 8 pioneer in der pressure: heavy curate. Reception, typ the advertising field-work load. Xlnt sal & ing, admissions. varied since 1888 Your in· benefits. Call Jan He..,~. dutie!>. Good working 1tiative and planrun.: wall m.83113 deterrrune your growth St.ate Mutual S&L rond and success with our 4001 MacArthur Bl, NB Apply in person; established company. F.qual Oppor Employer Orangearove Your accounts are pro-Rebab Hosp tecled and repeal orders Secretary wanted fo'. of 12332 Garden Grove BL make money for you. flee mgr. 1 n a video Garden Grove Wnte Ra chard E. Fisher. s er\' Ice co, p hon l' 1 bl.le east of Harbor Bl. Sales Manager. The Thos persooahty, acheduhng. --E.O.E --D. MurphyCo .. ltOS.and booldteepinl.631-1144 llECB'TIOHIST Slreet. Red Oak, Iowa SECURITY PERSON" Immed operdQg for re Sl.S66 capable ol assuming I.. · cept. Dulles include exe<'uting swing shirt Female wanted for ... nme light sN·retanat & pro· dl.l('tion work. Apply al Sea Lancers, 201 E Coru.t llwy, NB. 675 799-t bwt.n 8 30 9.30 AM. Owl. Reuben's & Reuben E Lee Rest > Take this opportunity to . . become involved with an Jarutors part time even- up and growing com in gs 6 ll PM. oftlce pany. w~ provide full cleaning. s days wk. company benefits, un-17182 Armstrong Ave, iforms, insurance. holi Irv. 540-7814 No typing. Woman ovr 40. to receive & fill customer orders by pbooe. Service organ.in· don. WWtrll1.l'f.'40Hl'wk. Eves/wknds Start SJ hr. Call 646-4071 morns or Mail Department MESSAGE CEHTER COUATOR/PAClCH Need person r or _e_ves _______ _ switchboard. Telex, post S~rf &/or graveyud shift 1ng mail & a&s1sting fo' time. Appfy Shern's duties 2 eves per wknd. s«retanal staff. Exper Bakery, 24642 La Plaza Call 642-4783. Alter Spm pref'd, but oot nee. Sal OanaPt.Nophonecalls. ~16or962-2844. ------Gal Friday, organized A/R, A /P , typing. Challenging of<', N B C all Jerry Harri~ 751-8910 ------Gardener, exp'd. for 5S unit apt complex in C 1\1 1213)865-3851 GENERAL OFFfC E JJ you have good figure aptitude & can type 45 wpm, we have an m· teresting po:.. S<'he<luUng prodlJ('tion m our pnnt shop. Xlnt workan~ eonds & benefits Apply. Na- uonal Systems Corp. 4361 Birch St, N B. <Near OC Airport) EOF. General Shop, machining. assembly. shipping, 1mall co. Good advance· rienl for ngbt people. S3 tostart 645-6258. ----· ··- day & 'a cation pay. L_a_d_y_N_i_g_b_t _M_a_n_a_g_e r-. INTERVIEWS Wed Mar 29, 9am-2pm One City Blvd. West ( Rasement Secunty Office) Anaheim (714) 630·1925 S-Upm, T· Burger. 1900 W. Balboa. N.B. 675-2981, ask for Mike. . ..,,, ~ Malift1nd'iv. tteeded for telephone & xerox work. PEST COH'TROL ~:~C:t~~~~eg:~~~ Hrs 7-4, Jllease call for SERVICE MAN. F/Ume. appt. 64S-5000ext SlO So. Orange Co. area. Ana fa cility . Xlnt 83 benefits "working con-Motel expenenced front ~nor 1-102.( ds. Apply Naltonal desk clerk required for Sys~cns Corp. '361 Bircb afternoon slurt. Apply St. N.B. <Near OC Quality lno. 7S.SS Beacb Airport) EOE. Bl. Buena Prk. .. 1 .• commensurate w /ex per ff B I rr Call ·~~1s11 •· le f Sal t t. u t Sec'y, for . • aw o l' _. .. as or es. P ime .... a ure. Legal exper pref'd Pam friendly woman. The Salary commensurate Colfee Been, So. Coast w'exper. Send resume lv Plaza. 549 1766 Oas&fied ad #lS2. Daily .. Sandwich Maker p/time Hn. I lam-2pm Mon lhru Pilot, P.O. Box Box 1560, c.cst.a Mesa, Cal. 92627 Fri Call be( 11 or alt Secy/S.-rTlsor :!pm. 545-4867 For loan origination Seamstrcsse:;, exp'd for dept. of mortgage broker nu bus. w summer wear. firm. Loan background Call Mindy,631""'47116 ~~ Newport Ctr . Seamstres~ Co.r sail loft. -- Exper not req'd. Will Sec'y To $10.000 train. 548-3467 Good typing & S/H req'•l lgirloffc. 751-~ • . CJ• CWLY PILOT T ueec!!y. Man:.h a 1 rm .... MCH 1010 fwnltwe IOSO Jewelry 1070 loafs.rower t040 Trai&.n, Trov~ tl70 ~ WCMhcl '5t0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ............ 7100 ....,w...... 7tOO ....... ' IOOI (C.pehart) cont0le. Dll w .. .......eft 8 im Twry :tS', Uke llOVi. i.9;J'••••••••••••• .... •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••t<t"-••••••••••••• i.t.tni rator. OE, l yr SJ.O: Whirlpool retrtir "'"I~ 197 owner, air. "'tcr('O. mnny Wo klna; Su~n·laor in • l'YEMERSON et~ia.i367~7J~· $lOO. '100: GE 1V, color. l 9': TOP CASH DOLLAR extru.'5450.~ 1'21 ~ r;cbar&• of Solder·leve l • $1$0: Tool chest. brand PAID P OR YOUR SEA RAY ------- proceu. Yual know :,r::J:.::' · ~ 1020 nu 140: other lte ma. JF.WF.LRY, WATCtlES. lO'c-..lessher ~Prowl r 17W t.rau~r. $$$$ BIG MONEY l11dMdilal•sk• Long Df•t. U... H....tyW. .,.... Conniaslon Man P'rodYct leauttt.I Ofc paper work It fi&ur'""" ••••••••••••••••••··~·· 11194-2919. Westmm:.lc.>r. AHT OBJECTS. COLU ~ • n fifif contaln~ Uk«" ncew1 Apply1npen.ooto1"rank lllC.,,S&MOHDS -----~ILVl::K Sfo:RVJCE . Outtlrren-VlU'radio Many xtras ~l al Selby 12BlLo1•n Slc:G • li\nruturefor bale.gas& t'INE t'URN "AN &lttuk·depOuounckr 6'&~ CM ' ' • New ft used. buy, 1etl, eltt dryers. baby furn, TIQUJ-::S.MS-2300 aacUtuch More 1963 16• tr a HI trailer. · tnde CJclo " Co. ~ ~ • phu1L'>. 646-2791. o.... loaf t n.oa.. Would )'OU Uke a buslnap Newport Blvd, C.M. 8S..1PlumerSt, AptC,CM Diamond rinl ll •ecidlng ' __ , 1t.ove. ice box, sips 6 ol your oolwnt! Y(lu don't on"'"'G co 'S fiG.'1910 ..... -··-.. pedestal t;ible band, 1.03 karalA; nnli· Special Price tBSO. ~632 __ ---need an t~ to 1tart nftJ" -•uwou que gold band & ad .tin,, $39 950 Begin at bnme, full or LARGEST Al YOST Cah 1035 + leaf, 4 pine Captain'!> cert. appr1lul of $2200. , Autoafor ~ Pa t t /lime. Ideal ro coup1 ETF.SllOW chain, xlnt cond, $17S t -') ~ ··~t f H"'RRISAM'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• '" • • ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oak ofc de"'k $100 mw. •-....,.,.,or...,.. 0 "" "" husband & wife toum. Apano..amaoltheworld "' for.Ru aal6f4·2<Y71 11!£ ~Race. 646-4.m ol AnUques It\ Onn1e Hi~ayan kitteas. CFA, S<\M561 SSA RAY Rodi '540 ----County's first Glanl f.x· Ricadoro lane, reserve, 4 ~r Det;ign firm sale Miscelaneous 1080 3101 Coa11t Hwy, N.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• YAIDM.AH po.Over llOsele-ctfdun· wks.old,2lcft.S4().1760 So. Amer. weavings, ••u••••••••••••••••••• 631·2547 •AMX '69Clcntlc Rental ce()ter has open uque dealers present lampti, pillows, pictur.•11. WA....,..EI) 1 n ll s r o r 2 m e n . magnificent exhibits of Dogs 8040 fabncs, anliqu~. t71K I "' 16' Fantasy Hydrocran Mechamc:al knowlediae c:ollectio n s (or lht• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SkyparkCir,llC.lrv.6 !1 i·op CAS H DOI.LAH skiboa~.75 1lPE.vinrude. helpful . neat handwnt· soplusticatt'Cf & the ~ DOGTRAINING PM 549-3862 March 30 PAl 0 Jo'O R YOUR elec shift, pwr lift. la•·h, Qimp'ly rrfurb1sht'd m .' out. New cni:. Mui.t bel.' lo b~lleve• 6•122299 vr 646-7756 tnll nee. Weekd ay ore casuinaJcoUectornlikl' YourPlaceorMme ONLY n;wELRY, WATCHES. hour meter, nu cover. Will tram Apply, 1930 Or-.ge ~ John Martin 5411 OOS9 ART OBJECTS. GOLD, trlr. S12.5tl. 751·4007 4 ~ Drhes 9550 Newport Bl.CM __ &...a--.&. Sectional, neulr<tl, $75 SJ LVER SERVICE. lB' HORIZON JETl'F. 455 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Au "_.'J,_._, Golden Retneverpups Fur r~. SlO 31:i' de FINE 1''UHN & AN COST"' MES• YvuHG MAH 118 Fair Dnve in lhe New Whetpe-d 2161'78; AKC corator shelf & brackets. · Oids·Berkley jet. S lrat·k A A \lohh dependable car Product Bldg Coi.l a Males & females $5 TVsland.$5 962-3824 TIQUl-:5.&$~220() tape.LesslhanlOOhrson AMC-JEEP WoriiP/Hrne JJOAMloSAM.Sday~ Mt>Ja <So. W~l of 1n 64'87G2 LUGG"'GET"'GS boat&engine.Newtwm Orf/ffme Jlt'r wf'ek $110 "k tersectioo or S. Diego & -Sect sofa<;, 9' & 6', xlnl "" A tanks. Cherry cond. in #I In Calif. Studtmll> also Cmd it lrlG t.tl3 &673·2SlS Newport Frwy.) Man:h l Yr o Id A I a., k an cond I\~ .,1 headbrd from your busin~s card eluding trailer . $4250 or FREE an 30th tbru April 2nd P.1a l aml!te. female 644·5518 Send orw card for uch best. Aslc tor ll1lk idt'<1IJob Met-chanclse •Thursday, t'riday & spayed, papers, shots -ta, plus one spare. Wf' 968-8534or6469303 AlrConditl0tt« Tll3M3;'.o.'!! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Saturday l to JO pm • Sl00.646 t~af'l2PM F.xqw.site Hed11oood burl return permanently ---onnf'11o 1!177& 19711J••t•ps ..-..ni; .a...AL.-.. Sunday,12noonto6pm • tbls.bascs.root.. ... tmp:.. ~aled attractive tag & '?4-32• Luhrs. single de T>uc• nol 1nclu1h· Ubrari I _,,~1 1005 im. Lab puppies. purf' Finished Lnf1n1shed strap. meeting a1rhne lsel. 185 Perkins TC Wal!Clnl'<'r hmlll'<I CJ5 or -S. nc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SpnngClearanc:e: 10..so•: bred Shots 175 HarrullonCM JO requirement.<;. Pre radar-A/P + man) CJ7 Offer i:•>Od onl) on ~Eq~·~u~a~l~Op=p~F.~.O'l::p~l}~r~r:n~l~r 11·-~~::~::i=:--1 olf ail anuques, sterling, -192·9'113 ~Sal• IOSS vent l~s & theft! For a xtr~ ~J.12_496-7729 ractory ~Ir i•qu1 ppi•d T L, I ...... (> 11 I) N I·. MUSIC BOXES ~~~.tureJ.ad~Je;e:~~oyn,·~~l Shellie pup-. AKC, re ••••••••••••••••••••••• personalized lfal(benclosc 1.5' Glasspar ,\\alon"' 80 vf'h1rlM OHt•r <''Cp1n•s ,. r CLOCKS asonablt>, 9 mo old male. "'all paper, a ri c or HP Mere. Greal ski boat. March 31. 197tl SOLICITOll, l'h'a.,anl Slot Machines. N1ckelo· paintings. d ecorator $75 960 2666 ft tlPM MoVlng Sale·\hd1wwoud "Uay Glo" papt'r & we OVERSTOCkED work. short hr!.. top pay deons. phonographs. items. l2-Gda1ly. Gallery · 3 ---chromt> top stlJ\c, d1mni.: will back & Lnm your xlnl cond. trlr, rruise Ts; &•l appts Nu i.t•lhn~ World's largest selec-One, 1220 N Coast llwy. 10 mo Samoyed pup. fem, room lable. :! ant1q lal(s. Or lr} lwo cards tank. xtras. Sl600 firm WITH JEEPS falktotopext''""·Jlrof'I t1on Also gdts , Lai.:una.4944444 trn'd, to l(ood home. ~~~~~~\·*11~~=1~.er bac:ktobPaR•·,~·t:s ~:St .. :a 9060 549-8023 prospcl'b only llr' furniture, antiques. 6.....a;ClftC~s 8010 Mu~t. m?ove. Ref llam; "' _....., - 9aml2 noon.MonThur /\men canlnlerna tional . ..,..... 549·1!64 scraps o r lumber & ~eaor3~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 252411ARBORlll\I> ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------lywood h lb & Mature, exp woman pn· 1802 Kettering; I rvine. P · w ee arrow 41Stags fL60t-a FUJI. YAMAHA COST<\ MES•\ f'd. $-I hr if you qualify 754 ITI7. Open Wed .. Sat. t' R G llT DA MA G Jo: l> RE'!: is I t>red 2 Yr o Id misc. S27 Centt'r St , C M 6 9 tMgs $1 Slh·a D'"'"' • ...... S Call 9797325 9arn 6pm,l __________ 1 HOTPOINT SALK 3308 (;oldt•n Rtvr Yard too 548-0596 10ol"'hlort>Sl.40ca ~~ '76 l 'hl•\Y t nh k rn 000 or S.'i7 1721 afln noon W. Warnt-r nr llarbor, s1 .. ~ Sacri £ice SIOO . Salt'!> Tax lndudcd Yacht Brokera~e m1 s Xlnl 1·111,ul Fu II Santa Ana 979 2921 979-0075 SeC''y ch, $10 Hikes I NO CA RO? Lu.ungs Wanted' pwr ;ur $1i(l()(I I.ii~' (~llt! CONNELL CHMOLET 282811arbor Bl\'d COSTA MF.SA 546-1200 WE PAY TOP DOLLt\R FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN, DOMESTIC orCL.\SSICS If your car ts extra du•n l\ee u.<1 f1 r..t IAUERIUIQC 2925 Harbor Rl\'d C'osta Mesa 979·~ TOP DOLLAR PAID F'ORCLEA:>J IMPORT CARS ALLMOOElS ~ 18835 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 842· 7781 -540·0442 TB.EPHONE WORK Part l1mt• s ah•s work '>Clhni: rla1;s1Cu•d atls Room for growth & .111 'ann·ment <:all Tt•rn 645til11 WHOLESALE TO'rllE TRl\Dt: CA<'JI PAID man's, 1 ladies', 1 ~irl'i. Uraw your own or send Southw~st..-n l'H'" ''"" Dalmauanpu~.A l\C. t' ., od"""d ..," u Aufo1 l__.....ed .... Ii tn.,ray • ., ~v.. · """'t• name, addrt•i.:;, phone & Y-ht ~ _..,. • "'t"'' ' For Wshr1Dryr11/Rcfng s howquahty Ca rd tbl. $5 3505 .1 d --.... Trucks 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• feh• !ialt•:; ,1d'. full 11r I' t Sumt• :-.al<'li $;! hr 1 t·otMll 1t3S 9'itl2 !US :lll'i 1 TELLER NEW ACCOUNTS ~·'Jl d. perm -clnt ht 01 r11<. ('all J11 ;1n \t .i r' t' I I 1 I !I 3 · !> 1, :; I \lulu.ii !-I.I\ rni.:~ & 1.0.111 1iO t'ammo d1· 1-:-.1n·ll.1. :-..in <:lt·m•'nh' F n E row Trut·k l>n \ 1•r' t'" J>t•r'd Top pa) \pph t;&W Tow mi.:. 1101In111t' \\I'. ~H t;.12 I~ TOWTHt'<'K nrHVEHS '1ust han• low Hll! 1"1.pt·r. mu-.( II\•' C :'11 .1r1·,1 ti<Mi !lli.'IM, 1! ~. Mon Fri 11.el'k nun Tut'l.1Fri S.1t Sa 'j:; h I 'l.1 r I • 7 I I ) ~1•1 03i7 \lc•-.a \'1•r<k c '1111nlr. l lul• TYPIST/CLK .. o ""pm 10 kn h1 lprul fur l!t'n'l ufr & ,\ l'.1V •• ., 'l'>IJnt t' Xl11t 1111• & ht·nef1b 1;.11 ~;•1 TYPIST WANTEO F llmt' pc>'> in our t~ 1>tnl! •lt•pt Xlnt worktnl! 1·ontl-. & rn lwnd1h \tu"I ltt.· n•a-.onahh ra .. 1 & .1rcur \ppl\ IO pt•r-.on, i'1'n· n~ .,,I\ c·r. tf;60 J>l:1t·t•nlla o\'ld' <:. \1 WAITRESS r:x~·r"rl nnly Ap11ty tn pt:r.on . .Jolly Hni:t•r 100 S l'oa:.l llwy. L~1i.:una 111.•ad1 w Jllrc·SSl'S. h()!;tt•'>Sl·S & hartl'nder~ 'f•1k1nl-( ,1p pl1rat1un' nnw t.l"'n I lil'M 1-.-cdU'>l \l n1l1• • lub 11'~3 i\h!11n'lu1n 1111 lluntinJ?ton ll.11 hour \Lill WARD CLERK 1·,1>t•r'd full t11111 \h'..,•1 \\•r•h" l'on' 111 ... p 1'4i1 l'Pntrr "l. CM 54115:'.A:, W\Rl:-:UOl'SE!\1 r:~ H~poru.1blc JX•r-.on for fahn1· warchou't' Cood nppt~ w J?n>wmi.: r•Hn · r a n y Sa I a n 1· o m . mt·n~urall' " ,.,p .. r ::.:in i'll:1 WELDER \ 1 ,. h II r l i Wt' 111 l' r" 0('('{!('<1 for h~httnJ? r1x tun• ro 1\pply. 20:ll S ~: \lain. lrvinl' 546·2!llll WENDY'S Oki Fmhion•d Hamhur9tn Now hiring smihnA facf'S Days. P /l1 mE' or Fiume Applications h<'· mg accepted bctwt•en the hrsof 3-Spm 2640S. Rnslol. Sf\ WOMAMOVR40 W1lhng to lr:irn Will train. PRX l'"<prr helpful. 10 Hr wk Fn.,.; wknds. Start S3 hr l a I I m o r n ~ <' ,. <' ~ b46-4071 Woman lCI <'Iran hou-1r, no prof~~lonal11 673 7421 •••••• WOMEM&MlM t:im $:MOO a mo or more sellln1t mobile homes. Will train. Call .Paul. m01tZ2 Anaheim. NOW OPEN TO PUBLIC OPF.N7 DAYS A WEEK 9·6 Suftdown .Antiques ltd I 5292 lolso Chica H.B. 1714) 8'3-7509 STF.Wi\RT ROTH ,\:-.ITIQl'ES Lar)?csl !>elecllnn of Amencan O;ik m Oran~e County 750 t: l>) t'r Rd S /\ 1.1t -..w11t f'"w} 1751-11922 Jt:STOPENEU 1<:ni:hsh Ma nor Antiques 1125 /\. Yictona CM 6.l2 .t7()3 40' l'Onla1ner just n Vl'll. 'llfit•r 11111·e, ORAND new llonda Ex press. Never ndrtl'n S300 Motobcc:int-10 !>pct.cf $40 Rt>abstic un. der dash cassette ~5 751 7003 f'IRERGLASS Boal 9 Tn-huJI & Evmrudc 4HP t•ng1ne Both t977"s 675 ()10.1 11oorkmgornot9S711133 &t2·11115 St!ashor1?Dr.NR wel makl'Ont•i•ar per 21lt6NewportBhd •••••••••••••••••••••••Audi 9707 I.ii( Add ZS. t'ach Newport Ikat·h Washers & Dry•rs Dix models, complcll•h· reblt, ref1n1sh('d \ r l(Uar<£nl~ Your chOll'l' SU>. l"reedl'11verv Grand Open mi.£ Sah• Mareh 15 31 So Coast J\ppltann·~ lll!Wt'Sl slort· I 711 I 531 3964 or 537 ~2 K e n m o r e M o rl ,. I II 0 O w ~ht•r $l2S blorgt> l(as clr)·er SYS. Sh:natun• 21 ru rt S S reCn~. bottum rreezer $195. Gu aranteed &delivered 546 11672 GE Washer, dryer. like nu cond $200. Will ron~uln trade ror 19' rl'fng. no fn>sl 111 l1ke rontl ('all aft fiPM. 548 1060 SOSO ........••............. **I BUY** Good used Furniture & Appliances -OR I will sell or SELL for You MASTERS AUCTION 646-8616 833·9625 C:f\Sll PAID f'or gd usoo furn. anti ques & l"lrT\'·s, 9~7·8133 Mahog cabrncl. Medil 'ltyle. $85. desk w top book sheU SSO. che'>l of drawers $50, lrg RBQ $.'>O s.i.s. 78.57 Ri>nbl ofr takes Rattan 1iw1vrl rorkcr naug cushion, Bonk ruse cslm made s liding s hl'lve<., nl.'ver mar lop malchm!( sml cabin et Twin folding bf'd like new Redwood p1t'nic tbl bench a nd rhaise lounge l'mbrf'lla 350.'i &•ashore Or NA 673·9367 HAND Crocheted old, never used tablecloth bedspread S495. Old qwll. yellow white $435. SJ6.&li4 Yard Sale. EverylhinA RO· ing. 717 llf'holrope, CO!\t Saturday only 640 8585 ~ 8060 •.••.•..•...••.•••..... Horses boarded Staib a\a1l. 20292 Birch Sl. S1\J L 979-9008, 646 21110 I Pinto gcldmj!. PO\ ~l'ld mi!. 1 Shetland man• Rl•asonabl1• l•l right person Days 91.iO 3!~ or aft6; 842·574"' Household Gooch 806 5 ~nd rhcck or monl.')' or 1714 l 673 !f.!11 derto RILL SELECTION Of 1978GMC MOOELSMOW PILOT ,RIHTING P 0 Rox 15f>O Costa Me<>a. Ca 92626 LEA\'lNG Area Ltlhan &!lard memt>t:r:.h1p ~\ price lnC'ludt•s $20 t r ansrer fl•c $150 6~1> 611111 aft bPM or wknds B'\RSTOOL.S. ~ix·r n1l't' IUDl-:-A llF.D 962 159i !Jdo u $750. Sunfl::.h 13 $395. 21 Sloop $350 Ski hull S9S 559 · 1833 552 8880 10' Class R W1lmmf!\on good rond. Contact Hud Schatz at Wc<;tmonl Coll . Sant 3 lia rba ra 8n5 900 5051 1\quanus zr 1973 9 HP t:\'ln. LHehne. rull t•qu1 p, Pickups. \Jll~. l'\I '-., Suburb<ins & J1mm}' pnct..>d as lo\lo as $4358 :1 sails. \'IU' anten. lrlr. ~~~~~lfo!il~~~ Ownr mu.st sell 661 1086, 751·6063 ••••••• ••••• •• ••. ••. • •• Stained i:lass creations Qn sz matt & box $95 J Let the sun shine thru HOBIE I 6 TRLR oak drcsi.rs $220 for a II in colors -free csl S250 64-t·OJ~ 011ld's Capl. trundlt' bt•<l 1470-900Sor838-4'197 ---'6:J lnll'm 'l Pl' Short bo,., w bll·IO dresser. sips J ~" Tru cut K~hlt•r ~n; 32' Block . lsla.nd Culll'r whl spokP "'hb Ir~ knoh $250 2 pr drapes. hni'll. hkc new SJ?s · LOl'ated m N.B $50,000 bll'S, 4 nl •·11J.! <>Ir linen look ll color 50x84 's.'8 9611 investment. a1>k111J,? 9790l83or7~1 Ollti $60 ror'a11 2 oak S35.000/ofr. 1·6592158, bookl?ase:. 61c.'xJO .. C'ARPl':T REMNANTS. 1~4459 'TT Dat.o;un p \ Sunroor. I h I ...... bo m;1i.: lire·~. c·w;lm 11111•1 w smok(' g ass "•' V•·~ ,,.-unx>ms, dens. ats. ti' Kite w 'trailer F.xcel J\M fo'M '>li•n•o Call Sl8Sea Everyt1un.i t•x vans. etl· sa,·e 50', ~ rood MOO J\ft<'r 6 PM Chns or llarril·t !l'i9 s.i.15. C'<'llent. 831 17~ & up Shores lnll•nors. please 5454188 or eves & w knd~ li73 o:;:!1 ~ J\\'OO, N B 6-12 2?...SS Ftnd what you wanl 111 Daily Pilot Cl.1 .. s1111~i... I \'Yt' l'l\MPF:R TE!l:T Xlnt ronll l..:e Woorll•n school teacher·:. de"k 54(). ~564 bt wn 8 5 14 · Hobie Cal, good c:nncl . $600 bsloffer 675-7357 Boats. Sllps / Docks 9070 )\1n~ or thtt RoacJ lJ rt"'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jlrt·ady msunll'<i. f1l '75 Wan led : Slip fnr 1~ Oat.'n111 Pt! -'~1·7?14 sailboat, 28' ma'>t. Call Baby crif> w ma(t Like 644-0l79 nu. Ht chr. stroOcr, ln· cyclt-, 9M-5128 · 10.spd b1kt't>. goog cond. r;nbl \ery ell·~n. hke nc•w clt•c stove $5!'> ll31412!l 6 llckel.'i to KIN(. Tl 'T Shp needed . pcrm:i m•nl or temporary for J9 s~lboat. call &15·9:.'62 ----- BOAT SIOE Tl E tn :JH' S&5 mo. Call 546-o:!'J'.l or 557-<ll48 for 3131. Jicsl nffl'r Transportation ~·5779 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '62 FORl> • • 'l on P I '.'lt•w auto lr,ins, mlr m \lnl 1•ontl Four h! II•"" 11re .. Sht·ll 1 ;1m11•·1 SI -$CIO 5M lllii ;:1 lland11•ro " <.h1·ll Hhll 1·ni.:. n .. w l1n" \~t f'':0.1 '-l1•r•"' lh ., ~'>7 il"\J.l'\1'5:11 :lti:lll '71i l':I C.tmmo shf'll $.l'ltKl Or tr:1dt' tor Hl.11••r b42 JI~)!! ·~7 F<> H ll I'll l\ l I' Sh o r t h 1· rt S h a r p ' E\rrythml! m•w h.'H "1011 Offlct fournltun & ~. Sol•/ s:.-.a-nt 8085 ••~•eftt••••••••••••••!~.2.~ •;2 C'o11nl'r "' 11t1I lwd ••=-=:-:~-=•••••~•••••• $18011 £l.1d: Ill'" Up Old Oak plan filft'l. rlrsk noor'maL'> 1115. woo<kn dt?sks $65. drarHnR tbls l showcases, fll.es. all 111ze:tl exec~'.i ve & secretory w ch rs Angeles H', 1·a bO\ l'' hol!.lrry Call !tll1 1~111. camper, $300 ttCl (,d 1950 GM<'. )!rf'al motor (·ood.~5~3!:!05 hod\ nt•1·•h wori. .. ill on.iin.il Sli(IO 1;7;, 1111 Camper for s01all 1'11 k11p SIP6 4 Wood panl'l. tahlt ·;s l..(lnl(l>t'tl ·r 11~0t.1, 1 o,p storage. ice bo:ic S4tt0 ~hdl & nu lirt•s xlnl 54-0-7180 cond. b-.t ofr 5-lti 0.1111 ••••....••.•.•......••. 71 J\ud1 Fox. Coco Bm I dr. 37,000 m1. $2500. 7~ 0968 ---BMW 9712 ••...•.........•..•.••• 1978 BMW's HERE HO~ COMPLETE BODY SHOP NOW OPEN EXCELLENT SELECTI0"4 O.F BMW RESALES We m:1)' have your ne'\t r.1rm our mvt'ntnry. ('.ill \J.., lt'lf13)' I 831-2040 495.4949 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST & S.tll's-St'rv1re·Leas1ni.: Roy Cc:rver,lnc:. R11ll~ Ho) l'C B ~l W 1!>10 J amborec !"<t>"port Reach &tO 64.t I CREVIER •USEDBMWs• '71 2002 4 .. pd ( 7531 1' 'i:l H;l\ ana .i spll ~4'1.I ~.., '7.1:.~jjr~ l.,pr1 ~KH\ ·;;,;,J()i \ulo C:!XJ~IC\ 1 ·7:; :.'llU2 \ &r.223li 'i6 !l.'.IOIA Alloys 452PQ.'1; '76 2002 4.spd S H 220P~ l> 'i7 320IA S R ITIRSI\. OBIE Cat tra1l<'r MuM sell. $75 or offer C E. Wbolesal OCftce Furniture 2044 lacen- t1a. C M. 631 2777 or 631·~70 '72 FORD·'• ton< .tmp+'r -9150 ~per1al R•J' 1·.ilto\t'r R\fW Ml'IT CONO 1971 Closed On Sundays 847·6635 ---ULBRANSEN P1<1no Italian provanc1al run sole. Pnc:ed to sell rast • $500 C'all 546·4360 artf'r 5 :l>PM DUPLICATING Mach ••••••••••••••••••••••• camper 96.17~; 2002 t S P D. 1\ 11!. M1mrograph. G~tctner 76 Honda sso I ~S A\1 F\1. 15.'i5l \1\) ~ Xlnl for church 0 Windshield. H11o ~ har, on Vans 9570 5Ati-1Jtl7 fl\1 sl·hl or busant'~C\ h· ~ ~f ex rond. ~'15 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S350 or rail 5411 11611 0 _ 631 ·3i67 ·;1 Cuc;lom l 'ht•\ v \ .111 iii ll \I Y. WO:!. 10•1ded. 5.'170975 '74HO ... DA cu,l<•m p.11nt. <:ol1I lw<.( orf··r O\l'r S.'i:itlO. " \.l·ln·t 1nt .. n11r \\'1111• 1 .. 1 .. 1;; Pianos & Orqans 80901 CB 200 t·rag1·r ... S1%11 •~I:! :i.r.·1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "\c\'tr used. 500 nlil•·'· Baby Spind S600 • &10 tllliO • llt•;ivenly Wurhttt'r or J:an. l.eshf' '>Pk r, m1'lfl ·1602. $995. ·191-737, ;1fl lPM like new Wmdsh11'1t1 roll h:ir. r.·:1r r al'k & rushwn S',.c/J 00:! &-137 I!'! P:inht•ad Xlnt runnml-( ennd Stroker kit. tuts nl 1•hromc Uys 973·0Ji5. "' s f\31 ·5'»\3 71 :!Ull..! .• 11r 'unrf. i7 C'h1•\\ \",1n. h •'\I t•:-. ,\\1 F\1 .. 1.•n·o ,., •. , 1'0 ru.;lnn1. t·;1sh or 1.;3 i'.'ll• Lr;id1• TOP !MO<l ''!~~' .11< 1 C . hl'\f apn '73 l)Odgt• Tr .11l1·-.111.1n 11111 :n11 <>ni~ t'n11 11n1J"' cam1><'r ronH·r<.1on :11 r super rl(·.1n, S:lHO•I 9715 •••••·•·············••· 7:l ( .1pri l.JIJU Xli1L 1·11nd, auto. i\ \.f FM r11dm. :ltr C.1 II art 6prn. 213 5!'2·2.'>~I SportlftCJ Goods 8 09 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 llonda 400 4 Sup..r 8.17·7246 '73 Capri, PP. 41,000 mi. 1\M /FM cass , Good cond S..'>I 0035 Womens 1,..cft llandPd Golf club11 Ram" I I picc1• Never used $90. 8.13·1311 9590 Sport, xlnt cond 9SOO mi. ~-Wanted ~')() 493-~191,496·5932 -----··········· ........... . 9hn3rd raring s kis. brand new. never mount ed. Ne<'<! money, must sell $100 673 2003. 631 32ftO Ask for Joho TY,Roclo. HIR, Sttno 8098 •...•.............•.... Bt!ul ~"COLOR T\' con sole. $158. I yr "'arran- ly, (~ 642-5340 loakliw.iM fqMI,...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~=-9030 . ..................... . WANTED!!! A powcir wtndle-ss for 35 ft. powf!r boat. Ca II Dale at49tt-2'709. ---- MotorHom.s, Sat./ Reont/Storog. 9160 ....•....•.•........... Rent a 19'17 f:"<eculivr Molorhome or M1n1 motorhome rrom Herh Fnedlander. Call any of these number; 898-6777 537-7777 121-8888 '74 motor hm. s11>$ 6, 11elf eont. air, pov.er many lllrU. 751-8683 alt 5 1977 DREAMER MIMI MOTOIHOME CLOSEOUT!!! 3 lef\ to chno!\t> For information c:all Wendell RiC'h o r Dill Pierce only nt PHIL 1.0HG FORD 761-5881 lrlt portablt-t'l'>tn1>reator, und engine & elec tronlc11 itear, s tee l ForSa1e20'Williamscran rutenlnas, desks. moCbfhome on Dodi;?<' I martne pain~. swi>lus Tori fl-ame . G<>o<l root! hardware. 23 sailboat. Below blue bk \\krl)·s broken poftt tools, l"\18 ca1J 142·1163 eves wknrl" ty dWD. etc. See Doua or ICG8T • Pat, Lido blpyard, -- ml-72'72 (ut t draw ln ~ Wat. • .n 011111 Pilot Cla11tn~d Ad. Phone MZ4l7L Ptnplewhontf'd People That ·a what th<: DAILYPJLOT SERVICE DIRF.CTOR Y \I all about! WE BUY USED CARS CJ\1.1 .<i \HTll l '"-d C'.1 r M i:r 540-5630 1w,1mm1&1 2626 HARBOR Bl VD COSTA MESA WEIUY USB> CARS! Wt"rP the new Cht•nt1lt'I dealt'r1tup 1n th1• ln1n•· Auto CE'nlcr Wr 1\1'•'<1 YlXlr used c 3r ' . JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET n AutoCeott'r Onv<' IRVINl': 768-7222 WANTED!!! Good. d•on low Ml1H9ec.-s!!! Call DGYt Slalff. RAY FLADEBOE LINCOLN· MERCURY IRVI NE 130.7000 • • 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *DRIVE A* *LITTLE ... * SAVE A LOT SllOP &COMP..\ RF. BARWICK DATSUN :--.rn Ju.in C.1111!-tr.mn 831·I3 7\, 49 3.3375 EX CB.LENT SB.ECTIOM IMSTOCKFOR IMMEDIATE DB.I VERY SAI.ES-SERVl('F. PARTS J.F.ASISG COSTA MESA DATSUN 2lMS HARBOR BLVD. 540.64 I 0 540-0Z I l -- • . ' ......... ----~-------------. I Brand New '78 HONDA 4 SPEED CYCC IAICHBlCK IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • • • Equipment 1488 CC. Honda CVCC four cylinder engine. 4'-wti.el Independent tu.pension .... peed syncroinesh transm1ss1on, rack & plnlon steering, bumper gu•ds. lnalde hood release, wood grain dash. hinged rear side windows. fold doWn rear seat. white 11dewall hres. wm rests. day/night mirror. AM radio,. rear window defroster & manufacturers aseembty line Int lot CaJlf. 6H. TO CHMSE FROM (9994 'f\llttte SGC 4966..001 (9823 Brown SGC 4'003305). (9e8l IN~lte SGC 40039911 1ee112 eitte sac 4004988) 19784 Red SGC 400078e) 1e11a Iii~ soc •ooaeee1 (1991Sit-er600 ~7661 ( 10024' Red SGC 4'005290) (9980 White SGC <400..125) {9936 White SGC 4003152) 19989 """'''• 660 ~,81) (10032 Red SGC 4'005310) TAKE YOUR CHOICE •••••••••••••• BRAND NEW '78 CIVIC . . . ( 1151) (SGA4511 t89l . ' . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Brand New f978 CIVIC CVCC HONDAMATJC WAGON $ ORDER YOURS TODA YI FULL PRICE $ PLUS TAX. & LICENSE Brand H•w 1978 CIVIC 5 SPEED'S 1•88 CC Honda CVCC lour Cy! ..,gjn•t. ,........, ~--._, , ..,..., ~· .. "' •Id>' -·~1)'11 ..... """"*'~· -"°"" •el-"'°""II'••" O•>h, ""'ll'Od ,_ -""'°°""' told down ,_-la, •"' r-.11 . .,..,,"""'4 "''"°' AM '*"" 6 ,_ .,.,_ oelfoatw. ~ """"- eloo ••ct.-S tMCI< _,.,.., -• --"'"' "-· tacnometer ""' l u.,h•'Y Q-wur1'1 ""'~'"G "'-I & llltft kl>CO llll<W1t IMlnc -<WY bi"'*< flC.Cen•eo-"'"*"'~ ..._,.,.......,..,,.,. ~..,.lell '"'Ca 'I 4 ~TO CHOOSE FROM IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 53977 Autos, IMported Autos, Imported · Awtos. Imported Aldot, ._~ Autos • ..,oded Wos, lwtpor+ed Awtos, lmporled ................................................................................. , ................................................................................. . Oats.. 9720 Rat 9725 He.do 9727 Mercfdn .._ 9740 Porsche . 9750 Rolls Royce 9756 oyota 9765 ..................................................................... ·····r················· .................................................................... . '76 280Z 2 + 2. cop-M 't II '75 cvcc rh6 ...-Z210 '68 911S s 1pd 340 MMJ #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. '72Corona, Wr, A/C, $800 per/beige int ... all extras. '74 Fiat 128 2 dr Sedan. b~:hblc~e40MPG, eii:ceJ. SEDAM. With s unroof, New paint new brakes ROY . orbealolfer. ~m~OO. 968 ~ A.M/FM stereo Gd cond, cood. 963-4816 ~~.:._wrim-:.~~te~ Excel cond. $5100 ~ CARVER 847·9891. ·1~ 280Z, A.M/FM. air. new tires. $1200/bst K Ghi 97~5 C720RLFl. 586-8392 ROUS-ROYCE VolbwOCJlft 9770 ~. tl"er. Ask1n° u:.,CI\ or 494-4635 ._.. a ~ I ' F · C • ,,< • W'll6'S:J66t_...,., ---••••••••••••••••••••••• vao s ore1gn ar 1wtJam~r.. •••••••••••••••••••••• Classic, classy Autos Classified Advertising in the DAILY PILOT ...?~ '-·-· Honda 9727 1973 Ghia, 38,000 mt. Coco 1~75 MIZ 280C ~airs now has Mr. Biii :i= •tll '73 SUPER BUG, orange, J976280Z. A.Jr, Dlaupunkl ••••••••••••••••••••••• bro. lmmac. S2850/oCr. Wllll cruise control, Ke1thtoworkonyour9ll Sl800 'best offer. Hurry•---------------- stereo, maizs. Xtra super Brand M•w "71 644-3291, 642·5378 stereo. pwr. wmdow & &CM9.~;., 11995982 Harbor Bl, CLOSlO SUNDAYS Pvt Pty S48 6'90 __ _ h ..,c<:r. "°" 6578 pwr. door locks-A fine ....,.. y-........ 9765 -.&. • ..1.-a..1 9100 .&. • ..a.... a..1 fl00 ..:c; ape . ......,.,.:. o""· HO ..... DA Cars a· .. _ _._ael (82.SMlT). -,-.a Heavy duty full length __ ._ "ew -.vi."_. ("Ill '73 Karmann Ghia. im· .. ..,.....,.. '70914~. yellow w/blJc Int. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rooC rack for VW Van ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'H Jlatcbback, bm, auto. MAHY mac, 3'K mi's, radials, Alloys, beaut. cond. Mu!.t BEFORE YOU ~ 673-l479 radials, AM/FM, good auto stick, SJ250/ofr. lo972 MIZ 220D sell. 64G-S327 -·------ con<f. $1 700/bs t ofr. ToChoose From! 752-0651or493-152S. Automatic & air cood. SB.L YOUR 'i3SuperbecUc 5455973 UNIVERSITY For the luxury of a '72 914 64,000 mi'!I. TOYOTA, $t!l00 Maida 9738 Meraedes & the erficien· AM/FM,$.1500/ofr. 645-&28 OkkmobHe ••••••••••••••••••••••• of d' I (834ElE) !151·2736 SEE US! -. -------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOftda Cars • GMC ..... "'a"'UISTOYOT"' 67 VW, xlnt running '72 914, 35-40 mpg,. -..,. " cond,r.ewbodv&paint 'i4128, gm, new clutch & "°""HTar~~Blvd. AM/FM cass, all factory MISSION VIEJO Must sell, Aft 6P M valves, lo mi. $.lOOO . eosl:Mesa""" !>40.964-0 cmtomiiedipter&paint, 831-2880 495-1210 . 640-1744 548..QO!ll $3395, best offer. 8»3773 --------1 ·-------- •77. Xl9, loaded, air, Accord'77,silveronblk,S 2150......,.ll•d. '17·450SL,mustseUoow, aft.6. Havesometbingyoowant Don't give up the shlpl AM/FM xl.Dt coodiuon ..,i 3 ooo · $S ~oo lo mi, loaded, very clean, ID sell? Class1f1cd ads du ''Llst" 1t in classified. vss-~' ~9sii mi, ,.. · CotNMna 645-5700 underwmty, pp '99-3613 '76TARGA. Loaded. War-it well -Call NOW, Ship to shore results I • ----------------' eves ranty, xlnt cond. Assume 642-5678. 642-567&. Rat 9725 ~SPIDEii BUY or LEASE FIAT .. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 M'B300D, s un roof, 968-0872 • ' • AAltol, New 9800 Autos, Hew 9100 Autos, Hew 9IOO AMtos. Hew 9100 -Autos. He• 9100 Awtos, Hew · 9800 Autos. Hew 9100 $2SS/mo lse $1S 500 Ph --------I AM/FM, Icon gold pnt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• aux. tank, xlnt cond. '73 Porsche 914 J • 810 4 DOOR "THE WXURY CAR" IT'S OUR END OF THE MONTH' 200SX coun SALEI! $14,000. 645-9530 Wlute with black top & '69 280SE, 40M mi nu. Elegant cond. PS/PB, tpe dck, A/C etc. $6150. SJ6.9993 M.B. Owner sells personal rollectJon; '58 220$, 's& custom ma1s. Super sharp!!! Private party. 078HSC). $3995 or best oCfer 975-0453 219, '77 300 Diesel. Call -.------- for data or demo; t»912. Immaccond. Must 213/8)1-2554 sell. 96650. 832-2266 dya, SM-9538 evs MG 9742 ....................... 19'7S MG Midget. $2700. Lo mi. Xlot cond. 6"-4814 INTRODUCING THE BMW733i. BMWWIL~(Y_EB filJI~ Af8~V.ENIJ~ LUX~Y ~ N-BECA.USE NOONE AT BMW...C.QUW BtARIQ.QBIVE.ONE. If the thought of owning a luxury sedan that's as exerting to dnve as it is to sit in intrigues you, call us and we'll ar· range a thorough test drive for you at your convenience. TNIUUIUrlDIHllGUCIU .. ~an MotD-\\trlls. Mi.Odl. Ge-man;. IN STOCK REVI .. BMW SALES, SERVleE, & LEASING 1S;f.&: BR©ADWA 't, SANTA ANA 835-3171 . . - CJZ DAIL y PU.OT 1973 4 dr, l64E, 6 cyl, leather, P /S, auto transm, air coDd. $299S or $600 & TOP. 4M-2146. '73 Volvo 144, 4 dr stk, $2775 or ofr. Xlnt cood. 963·0254 art 6pm o r wknds. Tuad.y, March 28, 1171 •fi"il~r.J· •,l'Y. -. -~--~·---:----·-· ••. ·~~.·-·· ,..,. ~-'":" ~r.-..~ . ~ . ' •°'Hf'" J ..... r ~ -·~ .... f1 •,._111.. r,~-~·' ~· • , I ~&~-... : •ij. NEW 833-0555 IRAMD HEW 1971 llCi SUR MINl-MOTORHOME . (Vacation lndu1trlu Newest Edition) Completely self-contained and factor; equipped. Range, oven. shower. dual holdino. tanks. rear dinette. Dual wheel chaas1sl Excellent Finance Terms. (Ser., F34BF7V082641) • BIG SELECTION! YEAR BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE! OM APPROVAL OF YOUI CiOOD CREDIT. 197 4 E200 FORD IUllLE TOP CAMPU VAH . VB engme, automatic transmission, power steering. many extras, low rrules. (B74LPE). s5777 1973 FORD 17 FT. SHASTA MIMI MOTORHOME V8 engine, air conditioning, power 1te«ing, automatic tranmla1on, stereo. loaded with Extras. (314HXT) _s5977 1971 DODGE 18 FT. OPEN ROAD MIMI MOTORHOME VB engine. au1oma11c transmission, pqwer steeri~. air conditioning. Loaded with Exlrn. r= 's5577 . · COMPLETE MOTORHOME SERVICE FACILITYlll WE SERVICE ALL CHRY . PRODUCTS AND All RECREATIONAL VEHIQ.E SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS PEN SATURDAYS Tit -~-,z:S:OO P. FOi YOUR CONYIMllMCI.; D1•ntington Beach Fountain Valle~ EDITION * /llternoon N.Y. Stoeks OL. 71 , NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1978 TEN CENTS I Retail Sales Quadruple-------------1 ' ·Huntington: Boointowil-by-the-Beach By ROBERT BARKER Of Ille o.ih ~ ... SUI! The boom in business activity in Huntiogton Beach between 1966 and 1976 has been described as nothing short of phenomenal by a member of the State Board of Equalization. Iris Sankey, who represents the Second Equalization District in Southern and Central California, said retail sales advanced from $54.6 m11llon to $389 2 million in Hunt· ington Beach, an 10crease of 611 percent for the decade. THE CITY'S SALES more than quadrupled statewide sales growth in the same period and is more than double the Orange County trend, Mrs. Sankey sald During the lO·year period, the number of retail stores in Huntington Be~ch grew from 379 to 862. The biggest change occurred in eating and drinking places which in· creased from 86 lo 193 outlets. Home furrushmgs and appliances expanded from 24 to 63 units and apparel stores more than doubled, from 29 to 76. Mrs. Sankey also reported that service establishments and non-retail outlets expanded from 397 to 1,930 u the economy of the clty became more diversified. Chain out· lets grew from 134 and to 429 establishments. BILL BACK, THE CITY'S economic development diredor, said that the busines5 trend continued at an all· tame record pace in the first nine months or 1917. He said there are now 3,213 business ouUets or all type~ in _the clty. Back reports that retail sales climbed $70.3 million for the rtrst three quarters or 19'n cornpared to the same period of 1976 with total retail sales at $403 million. Non·retail outlets were up $13.3 mil1'-on lo total of $47.4 million, according to Bank. Mrs. Sankey said Huntington Beach reflects a healthy. business climate. PER CAPITA TAXABLE sales rose from $822 in 1966 to $2,880 itl 1978, an increase of 250 percent. The population increased 92 percent during this period. She said that the excise tax on ci1arettes generated $514,672 for local government in 1976, an increase of 61 per· cent over the 1966 figures. THE BOARD OF EQUALIZATION returned $4,197,518 to Huntiqtoo Beach in 1976 as tbe city's share of the sales and use tu. an increase ol 649 percent from a decade ago. The assessed value of HunUngtoo Beach property is $710,078.000, more than three times the total in 1966, Mrs. Sankey said. Tbe Board of E~uallzation administers the state's tax programs and provides guidance to county assessors in property tax matters. Attorney Hopefuls Profiled Trial Winds Up Huntington Beach is one of about c half dozen etltes in Call/om1a thal ' elect city attom~ys. In most com· 1 murut1es throughout the state, the city attorney is appointed by lhe c1- • ty council I There are lhret• candidates Jor the l elective post m /lunlmqton /Jeach f: hls year -th.t: mcumbt'nt and two challengers Voter s throughout the city will t>lect a c:1ty attorney for a our·year term Arml 11 at the same ime they are t'lectmg four city councilmen ! Follounng are pr of ties of the three candldatu for city attorney together wtlh their views of the issues. Don Bonfa has served as city attorney of Huntington Beach for 10 years withoul cncountcr- r ing a single election challen~er. • This time around, Bonfa 1s J facing opposition from Jerry f Bame and Ga1l l lutton He says he also thinks that some City Council members .are playing politics in an attempt either to curb his powers or lo cause his defeat. He claims tha t som e City Council members want to make his pos1llon appointive so that he could be brou ght unde r their control. Bonfa a lso alleges that a r ece n t l a w s u i t brou g ht against him IONFA is politically motivated and was filed in an attempt to engineer his defeat. Bonfa maintains that an elect· ed, independent attorney is im- portant and that t he position serves as a check and balance to the needs of the people. He says that his role is to pro- vide legal services to the city. He maintains that he is the at- \orney, not for the City Council. but for the citizens. "My first prior ity 1s to the citizens if the City Council does something wrong," he says. BonCa, of 19721 Quiel Bay, Huntington Beach, is emphasiz. lng bis experience. "I have at- tended something like 300 City Cmmcil meetings where I have been out there oo the firing line. My opponents can't match this," be aaid. (See CANDIDATES·, Page AZ) Bomb Scare Closes405 LOS ANGEL~ <AP> - All southbound lanes of th San t>leso Freeway at uUaollud Drl ve were cloted briefly today after the CalUornta Hl&bway Patrol recolYtd what turned out to be a false re- port or a b&mb In a van. I.he CUP said. Tbe Los Angeles Police Deputmen.t's bomb squad examln d the veblcle, which wu parked on the freeway ehouldor just &0otb a! MWbO\land Drive, PQlice U.. Daa Cooke 1ald. The incld ot cloaed lb sect.loo Of tb Cree•ay dur· . tna lb mdtriing ruah hour. cau1tn1 traffic to be Meted up for mil , Dan Coc*edld. Jo11rney's End Kl'n Phtlhps of Melbourne. Australia, holds his long-lost frien d Silky after the cal returned home from a 1 250·mile trip. The kitty strayed away when Phillips was ~n vaca- lJCm a nd took nine months Lo walk back home. Hughes Eyed Cash For Patty Hearst? SALT LAKE CITY CAP> - Pape rs purportedly from t he f iles of the tale billionaire Howard Hughes show that Hughes considered paying part of the ransom demanded by Pat· ty Hearst 's kidnappers, the Univers ity of Utah s tudent ne wspaper reports. They also make reference to a "ha ndwritten will," le nding credence to the "Mormon will" bemg contcnsted in a Nevada court, the newsppaper, The Dai· JI al,ley Council To Consider .Factory Plan Fountain Valley City Council. m e mbers will consider a German·based corporation's plan to build a 186,000-squa.re- foot, $29 million video tape re· corder factory that could mean about 800 jobs for local resi· dents. The council, actinc as the city's Community Davelopment A&ency, will meet at 8 o'clock tonight at City ff all. BASF Corporation officials 'MU present a proposal to coun- cil members that calll for the factory to be built on the s outheast corner of Talbert Avenue and Ward Street adja· cent to the Sall Dleao Freew•Y· Tbe proposed ractory site falls in an area city otnclal& have targeted for llaht industrial de· velopment.. The dty'11 CommuQity Development AgerteJ tao pro- vide nn nclal aids to the de· veloper ond BASF ofliclals in buUdlnl the proposed facility, Ofl\clals tiald. "W• •uper Jodustrlal de- velop ment, •• aald Fountain VaU01 Mayor a" Adler. City lldu d factory would produce ud conduct. ,... rcb Into Tldeo cwett 1$o cord ... am mated atdwue. I lrop ly Utah Chronicle, said Monday. The student publication, in a copyrighted article, said it ob- tained copies of papers original· ly seized by Mexican authorities after Hughes death April 5, U76 on a private plane en route from Acapulco to Houston, Texas. It s aid the papers we nt through a Canadian House of Commons member1 to a Hutbes le g acy enthuaias l in the northwestern United States, to ao associate in Salt Lake City. None of these persons was iden· lifz ed. The newspaper quoted one memo it said was dictated by Hughes as saying: "HRH wants to know more about the Hearst's problem and bas no objections lo being of some help so Jong as it can be done without any publici- ty. Can Hearst and his family be guaranteed to bold allence7" · The memo was written Feb. 18 or 19, 1974, the newspaper said. Miss Hearst was kidnapped by Symbit)QeSe Liberation Army members Feb. 3. They asked $6 million raMOm be contributed toward feecUng the poor. In subsequent memos from Hughes advisers Frank ''BW" Gay and Chester Davis, Hughes was advised oot to gel involved. <See HUGHES, Pase A2) Police Seek Rapist in RB Wad dill Defense Rebuttal.Promised By TOM BARLEY Of .. o.11, ...... $'-H Dr. William Baxter Waddill's attorneys were winding up the defense today for the Huntington Harbour physician who is ac- cused of murder after an at- tempted abortion. Both of his lawyers have in· dicated they plan to call no more witnesses after Dr. Akio Metamura fmisbes testifying. Dr. Metamura, head of the pathology staff at Westminster Community Hospital where the aborU• -.,.. pet'fbrmed, bn testified lbat there were ef1'0rs tri the coroner's findings. Re told the Jurr tbal tho vtrdlct of~ by tntlllual atran&ulaUoo was not justified. Proseeutor Robert Cbatterton said lie intends lo call rebuttal witnesses after Metamura con· eludes bis testimonv. Chatterton predicted rebuttal will take up at least three days. He hopes lo have among those witnesses at least one of three babies which he claims have s urvived saline abortions o( the t ype administered by Dr. Wad· dill to a patient at Westminster Community Hospital. w·addill, 42 , has argued throughout the lrlal thit the baby the prosecution alleges he strangled in the nursery on March 2, 1977, after attempting an abortion never knew life in the fuU sense of the term. But a doctor and nurses who were present fo the ounery have testified that the baby etrI had a heart!>eat and respiraUon and moved several times while they were lrying lo aid what. HB Collision Injures One, Snarls Autos A three-car crash in North Huntington Beach serious& in, jured ooe woman and caused an hour-long traffic jam Monday morning as one of the vehicles overturned and sheared off a fire hydrant, police reported. Kelly Ann Koren, 18, of S321 Shield Drive, Huntington Beach, was reported in stable condition io Huntington lntercommunlty Hospital's intensive care unit. with injuries she suffered in the 8:25 a .m. crash at Edwards Street and Edinger Avenue, of- nctals said. PoUce bid lllsl !Corm'• com. pact aedan colllded with a van driven by a Wectmlnlt~ rest· dent,EldonJ.JobDson,12.. JobnlOll'• vehicle then went out of CC)hll'Ol and struck • ftre bJ'draot oo the IOUthea.st eomer ol' tbe tat«n•~Uon. Ftrem.n tume4 otf the water. l>Ut tbe now b'Oll) tbo broken bydrut caused some temporary flood· mi. lu Kor •1 auto •tni k a r Haan. but tbe oceu· pl!Q cl thiat veldc lo w not ln· Jurid. pc;&J aa.id. ~Johnson'• M.te, Either, 58.. a pljlieJ~!f', tn the 'VU. luffered lilJaor lnJutf es but waa not bosptUllaad. Johnson was \m>o ha.tt. aUOfdln1 to POllce ac. coan~ ' .. they said was the infant's battle for life. Dr. Ronald Cornetls en, a pediatrician, testified that Wad· dill complained in the nursery lhal if the child was allowed to live it would suffer massive brain damage and trigie r lawsuits seeking millions of dollars m damages. He told the jury in Judge J ames K. Turner's courtroom tha t Waddill s ugges ted four other ways in which the baby could be eliminated. including drowning it m a bucket of water. At Veniee Beaeh Visitor Killed; Tiro Women Raped LOS ANGELES <AP> -A 31-year-old Canadian tourist was shot to death and bis fiancee and her friend were beaten and raped early today along the stretch of beach near Venice, police said. Harry Denboed. 31, of Willowdale, Ontario, was shot BB Woman Faces Charge In Shooting A 37-year·old Huntington Beach woman was charged with attempted murder after she al- legedly shot her husband in both knees during a s pat in a bar Monday rught, police reported today. Arrested was Nancy Evans or 5682 Mangrum Drive. She was booked into Huntington Beach Jail and remained there today in li eu of $25,000 bail. Her husband, J erry Evans, 38, was listed in stable condiUon to· day at Huntington Intercom· munity Hospital with .22 caliber bullet wounds in both knees, of· ficials said. Pollce Sgt. Luis Ochoa aaid the incident took place in H1 Roy's Bar, SOSO Hell Ave., about 9:1S_p .m. Ochoa said the dispute ap· parently began at the couple's home. The husband went lo the bar. The wile followed shortly afterward. · When the husband greeted his wife and approached hel', Ochoa said, the womao reportedly puUed a handgun and fired twice. · Evans &Ukered from the bu Into tbe parklog lot. outside where be collapsed. He was lat.er rushed to t.be boapltaL Mn. Evam wa.." airested by Police lnaJdo tho bar, Ocboa nlda Audiences S~ted VATICAN CITY <AP> -Pape Paw VI, reeovered after a two. week eue ot Wlueua. Mil .hold two aeneral audleiices W • da1, UM VaUcaA aanouct'ed to- dq,. ne avdicneel wtu be held tn Pe.ler'1 Basilica and lD tbe modernistic llall of the Au- dienc• ~ t. to tbe V&Ucan. several times with a small· caliber pistol as he and the woman apparently fled two ban· dits, said Venice Division an· vestigator Don Ravens. The 29-year-old fiancee, also from Canada, and a 32-ycar-old Westchester woman were listed in fair condition a t Marina Mercy Hospital. "The victim and his fianc'*' were going to leave for Canada tomorrow and wanted to take a last look at the beach," Ravens said. "It appeared to be a rob· bery. There's some indication the victims started to run and he was shot when they started to !Jee.'' Descriptions o( the two men were s ketchy, Ravens said, add· Ing the men aeearently were in their 20s and wearing da r k clothing. They confronted the trio as they strolled along a beachfront bike path at Dockweiler Beach around 2:40 a.m .. he said Showers Forecast By The Associ•&ed Press Deep low pressure was expect· ed to develop off the West Coast today and possibly bring some showers to the northwest co~r of California by Wednesday, the National Weather Servlce re· ported. Coast Weather Late night. and morning low clouds and local fog. Otherwise fair through Wednesday with variable high cl~ Lows tonight 52 to 58. Highs Wednesday 63 to near 70. INSIDE TOD~ Y Kentw:lw °'°"' ~ NCAA baketbaU title 1or J971, but °"" hGI anwd ftOhce it'• Cl lilcslJ f aoorW for J97t. Storiea, p#M>to1, Page BJ, •••ex a .. ca .... • l A2 DAILY PILOT H/f fU!lld!y Man:l'I ?$, 1118 l'~P ... AJ CANDIDATES P ROFILED. • • Bon;a claims that be bas .rolled up an impressive reeord whUe city attorney. "1 challenee anyone lo potnl out where the city has lost an Jmporlant lawsuit," he said. Bonfa also said that the city attorney should be tbe most ikillful and experienced lawyer on the staff. "If my opponents are elected, they'll have to go to the depulles for advice and that is like the lail waegjng the dog," he says. Bonfa, 52, has been a lawyer for 26 years. He received degrees from St. Louis Unlvenl· b and Univeratty of Michigan Law School. He is associated with the boys t'lub, Exchange Club, North Huntrngton Beach Rotary Club, coordinatine council, YM CA, League of Women Voters and the lluntingtoo Beach Chamber of Commerce. He and his wife, Ria, have four children ranging in age from 7to16. Forty-three-year-old Jerry Bame, making bis first try tor eleclive office. says the time baa come for a change in city at· torneys. He contends that Don Bonfa, Huntington Beach's city at- torney for 10 years, bas been a source of concern to many because or the way he conducts himself in office and for the "difficulties and frustratioM" in his aepartment. "1 would never have thoughl to challenge llonfa if there were no p r ob· I ems." Bame says. Bame says Bonfa has lost credibili· t y and that there is a lack or pro- fessionalism in the way he conducts his business. "There is a certain abrasive· ness and aloofness. The only hope is for a change," Bame contends. Bame says that a first priority would be lo shore up what he ~ees as deteriorating morale m the city attorney's office. '"The four attorneys are all go- ing their separate ways," he ~ays "Teamwork is not at a maximu m and I can 't un- dl'rstand why not except that the reason 1s Bonfa." Bame likens the city at- t orney's office to a cancer in city hall. "Bonfa is like that cancer and has lo be eliminated at the polls a t election lime," he says. "I am the best one for the cure.'· Bame, ol 9882 Dragon Circle, lfontington Beach, didn't enter the attorney's race until late in January, several months after his two opponents had already committed themselves. lie said he got in at the urging of residents '"and because it's time for a change." Bame has been a member of the uty's charter rev1s1on com mlttee and b active ln the Hunt- ln1ton Beach Rotary and Ex· chanfe clubl and Lbe chamber of commerce. He has been associated with City Councilman Al Coen in law practice for 10 years. He says that he will dissolve bis partnership lf elected. He bas received degrees from Ohio State University and UCLA. He and his wife, Doreen, have two young daughters. Gail Hutton pledges to bring honest, new leadership to the of- fice of Hwitingtoo Beach city at- torney lf elected. "I have no strings and l am honest ••• a Mrs . C ieao Jeans." she savs. Mrs. Hutton, 41, has been a dep· uty city attorney in Santa Ana for the past rour years. ~ne 1s 'Viewing the office in Huntington Beach as a loiical extension of her experience. "It is the next logical step m my career and it will be the lop of my ca- reer." s he s a y s • "l will be 1 0 0 k • i n g n o further." Mrs. Hutton has chided fellow c hallenger Jerry Bame HunoH for what s he calls a lack of municipal law experienct:. She also has lashed at incum· bent Don Bonfa for what !>he terms mcons1stent decisions and a poor track record on lawsuits. She also has criticized the costs of outside legal services chargedtolhecity. Mrs. Hulton, of 16292 Wishingwell Lane, Huntington Beach. claims that attorneys employed by the city should han· die personnel matters and charter revision details which· have been parceled out to out- side attorneys. She says that her own ex· pcriences in the field or re- development also could save taxpayers thousands of dollars. Mrs. Hutton also contends that the city hired an outside at- torney to handle a grievance case brought by a police officer because the council "had no con· fidence m the city attorney " Mrs. Hutton says that the city's attorney's role 1s to advise and represent the City Council and department directors in aJI matters of Jaws and not be a '"watchdog" as Bonfa contends. She says she would try to im· prove morale in the legal de· partment. She says it Is poor now because of the present leadership. Mr,. Hutton has been employed by the City of Santa Ana since 1973. She currently 1s on an unpaid leave of absence while campaigning. She has taught high school and college classes in Orange County. She and her husband, Paul, who is an instructor at Golden West College, have three children who Live at home 11 Atmos phe r e Ten se' Marine Violence, Bigotry Detailed WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP} -A former Mari.De says mem· bershtp in the Ku Klux Klan was widespread in the Marine Corps and innumerable instances of viol ence by whites against blacks went unpunished by authorities. Donald Ray Hunte r. a Winston-Salem nallve who was one or 14 blacks accused of an attack on a group of white Marines at Camp Pendleton, Calif., said he had to gel adjust· ed to ''the racial atmosphere in the Marines. "It was very tense," he re- called. "The rank structure tn the Marines created an at· mosphere where some were con- sidered superior and others in· OftANOE COAIT Hiii DAILY PILOT ferior. "When you are expected to live, eat and sleep with guys, you cannot have them in the KKK." he said. Hunter said the 14 Marines didn't have violence on their minds when the incident beli?an. "Our intent in going tO the room was to come to some sort of agr~ment with them," said Hunter, who is now home here with a bad conduct discharge after a year in the Camp Pendleton brig. "The majority of people want· ed to communicate with the whites," Hunter said. "Also, we wanted lo Jet them know that the Klan should not be ln the Marine Corps. And we were not going lo stand by any longer and be harassed." Carter I.ands in Caracas CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - President Carter arrived in Venezuela today on his first state visit to a Latin American country. He said his journey shows the Uruted St.ales knows the importance of the developing nations in a changing world. Carter's trl9 lo Latin America and Africa Is the ftrat of at leut three overseu journeys he plans this year. The president's blue and sliver Air Force One jet touched down in a stiff wind at Simon Bolivar International Airport, nesUed between the Caribbean Sea and the A vita MoWltains. A red, white and blue banner proclaimed ··Bien venidos Pres1dente Carter y Sra" - welcome President Carter and wife. Several hundred members of a navy honor guard dresaed in white stood at attention ln M· degree heat. Other military guards carried submachine guns. . No civilians were ln sight. On bis fll"6t day ln Venezuela, the president arranged to place a wreath al the tomb of naUonal hero Simon Bolivar, in the nave of the National Pantheon, a cen- tury old Spanish renaissance· style church dedicated lo the Ho· ly Trinity. Later. he and President Carlos Andres Perez set aside more than two hours for talks about U.S.· Venezuelan relations. Topics included energy and economic cooperation, human rights, curbing the spread oC nuclear weapons and restraints on arms trade. International topics on the Carter-Perez agenda included the imp.act of oil prices on the world ~omy and politics in Africa. Venezuela provides much of the U.S. oil s upply_ Carter will v1s1t Africa before returning to Washington next week. In s harp contrast to a 1958 vis· it by then-Vice President Nixon and a 1961 v1s1t by President Kennedy, no anti-American dem· onstrations were expected at Ca rt er's arrival, and Venezuelan security measures were comparatively discreet. Nixon was spit upon and his car nearly overturned when he rode into Caracas. The army mobilized 40,000 troops for Ken· nedy's visit. · Carter is popular here beeause or the human rights crusade he has championed during his cam- paign and in the White House. '"The oppressed, the poor and even some leftists who once hat· ed u s now see Carter with respect," said one U.S. diplomat in Latin America. Vice President Walter F. Mon· da le, mrnding the store in Carter 's absence, beaded a del· egation of presidential advisers who said farewell at an early morning White House departure ceremony that was televised na· tionally. Accompanying the president on the 14,575-mile trek t o Venezuela, Brazil, Nigeria and Liberia are wife Rosalynn and Secretary of Stale and Mrs. Cyrus R. Vance. Ten-year-old Amy Carter also is in the travel party. • . TEL A VIV ZOO WORKERS LABOR IN VAIN TO LIFT GIRAFFE TO HIS FEET Sehlomo Never Recovered From F•ll Deapfte l!fforta of a Dozen Men Tel. Aviv Giraffe Dies Autopsy to Probe Why Shlomo Took Ill TEL AVIV, Israel <AP) - Shlomo the giraffe died early to· day. The IS.Coot-tall beast, in the prime of hfe at the age or 8, was unable to get to his feet a fter col· lapsing two days ago at the Tel Aviv zoo. Shlomo's undoing, as it was for Victor, the giraffe who fell dunng an attempt lo mate last Sep· tem berm an English zoo and died of a heart attack four days later. Shlomo -the name means Solomon in English -bad sired one male and three females in four years and was living con· tentedly with hls mate and two • daughters. He fell off a three-foot em· bankment in his pen last Tues· day but got up and showed no in· d1cation of pam '"Thl'n something happenC'rl and on Swiday morning he fell agam." Avram reported He lay on his side and did not get up again, v.atched by h1~ mate and daughters. "JC a gu-affe hes on his sid1 loo long, it's not good for his heart." Avram said Mondav '"Gi raffes get weak and can\ s tand up and they die." Despite efforts or a dozen men who talked soothingly lo him and tried unsuccessfully Mon· day to hoist him to his feet with chains and pulleys suspended from a platform, tbe animal ex· pi red on h1s bed of straw. Dr. Moshe Avram, the direc- tor or the zoo, said he would perform an autopsy to de- termine the cause or death. The" • Badham Claims U.S . giraffe had fallen a week ago. Spen· ding 'Threat' and it was thought he might have been injured then. Sex _app~r.ently was not Fro111P~AJ HUGHES. • • the Chronicle said. One document quoted by the Chronicle called the SLA "a very dangerous, radical group and we are afraid that they might retaliate by tryine to kid· nap one of our executives or even you .. :· The newspaper said the linue became moot when the Hearst Corp. and the Hearst Foundation agreed pay part or the ransom. On the will, the Chronicle printed an unsigned, undated memo wtuch 1t said made ref. erences to Nadine Henley, Hughes' administrative assis· tant for JS years. The memo said she had sent a note to Hughes about updating his will. "Evidently Nadine believes the will she has ts the true will and she must have been given instructions in the past by you to keep it secure. Ir the handwrit· ten will is the real will, it could be that you bad it updated later to tbe one Nadine has." the memo said. The runaway spending at the federal level is more oC a danger lo the Uruted Slates than the threat of war, Rep. Robert Badham. R -Newport Beach, said today. ·'I'm not as worried about the threat of nuclear war as I am the out-of-hand spending.'' Badham told a group of Orange Coast school superintendents in Newport Beach. "There is an attitude of care· less disregard about the money we're spending," he s aid about Congress_ The meeting, whlcb involved about a dozen Orange Coast school superintendents and representatives of community colleges, was h eld at the Newport-Mesa Unified School District headquarters to bnng educators up to date on federal issues affecting them Among the federal spending programs discussed was one described by Newport-Mesa Superintendent John Nicoll as .. a n alternate school system " He said that, under the Com· pre hensive Education and Training Act <CETA>. a building has been rented in Costa Mesa to hold classes for people 16·21, who are paid $2.65 an hour for attending. grant and loan program, but primarily for hi gher education tu a lion Also r ::used al lhl' meeting" ;1s the issue of whether or nol teachers and other state and federal cmploye<.'s v.111 eventu<AI ly be covered by social secunty. which would mean school di:-. tricts would have to pay the employer's share "We eventually will have to have uruversal coverage" undt'r social security, Badham said 'Tm not suggesting that it's go- ing to be easy, but it's going Lo be necessary_" He pointed out that gov- e rn mental employees who moonlight or whose spouses ar(' covered by social security may end up coll ecting social secunty alon~ with their government pension Badham said he believes that with universal coverage, thf• social security system could bc- made secure b~· the year 2005 "on a program that would not bt' t erribly uncomfortable for anyone.·• Pros and cons were voiced b\. s uperintendents on a proposal to establish a separate cabinet level Department of Education a part from the Department of Health, Educallon and Welfare. Boy Kills Parents, Wounds 3 Brothers "It actually is a competitive school system." sald Or. Nicoll. He said (he CETA personnel are asking the district to grant diplomas to their graduates. He said he also is concerned that a proposed tuition tax credit might encourage families to use their extra money lo send their children to private schools. Other supt>rintendents at the meeting said they would support a tax credit, as opposed to a Those opposed said thev believe the federal govemrnent shouldn't be involved in th£· public !lchool system. ~h1h.• others F>aid they would prefer to see professional educators run nmJ? a separate dC'partment in Washington. Badham said he leans toward supportin~ the propos al but · I would hav<> serious m1sg1v1ngs 1f this were to incrrac;e the alread) runaway bureaucracy " SPORTSYLVANlA, Va. (AP> A l4·year-old boy s hot his parents to death with a shotgun and wounded three brothers ear- ly today at their home near here, authorities said. Spotsylvania County Com- monwealth's Attorney M. R. Ramey said the juvenile was charged with murder. Ramey would not identify the boy because or his age. The boy charged ln the shoot· ing called a rescue ~uad about 1:30 a.m., R..mey said. Dead were John S. Gavis Jr .• 44, and his wife, Edith, 41. Three sons, Mark, 17. Peter, 15, and Richard, 13. were wounded. The fa mily's four older children live elsewhere. Mrs. Gavis' body was found in an upstairs bedroom doorway, a utborities said, and her husband's body was found down· stairs at the bottom of the stairway. The injured boys were found upstairs, two in a haHway and another in a bed. Ramey said five shotguns were found in the house but that il bad not been determined which, If any, was the weapon used in the slayings. ------------------------------------------- Plc!kets Renao1'ed More Miners Ret11rn a, Tbo Amodated Preu More union coal mtnen r~ turotfd to WOfk tocS., ea mQJ ot the 10,000 mtne eonatrucUon workera removed pickets upon !ea~ni ol a t.etltaUve •sree· ment on a contract for them. But in at leut OJ'.lo United Mino Wotktra union dlltrict - No. IS JD watem Kentuen - con1UU:Uon 1r0rken expanded plcke~ an4 foreed muy of the area 1 80 mlDel to close. uJd Joe Holland, dJ.Jtrtct ex9C\rtlvc board member. Holland tald that about three- foUrtba o1 th6 d11trtct'110,ooo un-lon mlAen dl4 not Hport to work todq. , he W Vtratnla co&! ">-t· latJon H1il a t 1,300 to ltGOO coal Jnl n ffU. blocked by construction plckeu this mcm· lng. compared to •.500 to 5,000 Monday. Of a total of 1,400 mines in West Vlrg1nla. the only reporb of ahutd01ml came from two m1Des in the southern part of the state and three in tho north. Jn Indiana, at least el1ht mines and one eoal 1hlppln1 operation were afaln closed by the J)lcketa, who laid they would not abandon tbelr line until the tentative aareement wu ratified. About 1,tOO miners were prevent.td from &oinl to work . Moat of weatern Pea n• 1ylvanla'1 mines were operat- lQf nonnal11 t.ocla:J', ~ teYeral hundted m1Den wen Jdled a Bethlehem St Corp. m.1ne Ill ' Cambria County by construction workera who picketed the mid- mgbl lbift.. Three Jlelvetla Coal Company mines tbat bad been closed Mon · day by pickets ~ned today in Pennsylvania's Indiana County. The same report came from two Barna and Tucker Coal Com· pany mines ln Cambria County, where about 1,300 miners were able to resume wort for the ftrst. Ume today. Lar1e numbers of mlners went back lo work Monday after • contract wu aisntd 1tard1y endl121 a 110-day walkout by 1eo.ooo miners. Spot cbec_. ln· d.lcated even moH were !'Qort· 1n1 for early shift.I today. .. "¥ oung Lov e Prlnceu Caroline of Monaco dances with rlance Phlllippe Junot at the Bal de la Rose ball in Monaco. Junot and Caroline plan to be married in June . ) J ' :_v_o_L_._,_1,_N_o_._e_1_,·3 __ sE_CT ___ 1o_N_s_,_32 __ P_A_G~E-s ____ ..., __ lpmo ______ ..,.. ..... _o_R_A_N_G_E __ c_o_u_N_T_Y_,_c_A_L_1_F_o_R_N_1_A __________ T_u __ e~s~o~A~Y~,~MA.;;..;.;R~C~H~28~,~,~97~8----------~T~E~N,;..;;C~E~N~T~S 1Vardou1is Challenges W~te~ Bond Vote By JACKIE HYMAN Of a. O..ly "'* SUiff Irvine Mayor Bill Vardoulis told directors of the Irvine Ranch Water District Monday that he doesn't think they have a right ~o call an election for a $1.6 billion bond issue because he doean't believe the board's com- position is constitutional. And even if it were, Vardoulls said be believes the water board Journey's End bu been unduly huty in its COO' slderatioos and that lt bun't. taken into consideration all potential effect.a ot auch a bond i.ssue. IRWD board Chl,lrmao L.E. Eberling said he dlaagreea with Vardoulis on all eounts. However. be •creed to continue the public bearint on the matter unUI April 17 to permit further discussion. Ken Phillips of Melbourne, Australia. holds his long-lost friend Silky after the cal returned home from a 1,250-mile trip. The killy strayed away when Phillips was on vaca· lion and took nine months t_o walk back home. Hughes Eyed Cash For Patty Ransom? SALT LAKE CITY CAP) - Papers purportedly from the files of the late billionaire Howard Hughes show that Hughes considered paying part or the ransom demanded by ?at- ty Hearst 's kidnappers, the University or Utah student newspaper reports. They also make reference to a .. handwritten will," lending credence to the "Mormon will" be\ng contensted in a Nevada court, the newsppaper, The Dai- ly Utah Chronicle, said Monday. The student publication, in a copyrighted article, said it ob- t :iined copies of papers original- ly seized by Mexican authorities after Hughes death April 5, 1976 on a private plane en route from Acapulco to Houston, Texas. It said the papers went through a Canadian House of Commons member, to a Hughes legacy enthusiast in the northwestern United States, to an associate in Salt Lake City. I Hitchhiking Girl Beaten A 17-year-old girl was pistol whipped Monday after she ac- cepted a ride al Del Obispo Street and Coast Highway in l>Jna Point. None of these persons was lden· tified. The newspaper quoted one m emo it said. was dictated by Hughes as saying: "HRH wants to know more about the Hearst's problem and has no objections to being of some help so long as it. can be done without any publicl· ty. Can Hearst and his family be guaranteed to hold silence?" The memo was written Feb. 18 or 19, 1974, the newspaper said. Miss Hearst was kidnapped by Symbionese Liberation Army members Feb. 3. They asked $6 million ransom be contributed toward feeding the poor. , In subsequent memos from Hughes advisers Frank "Bill" Gay and Chester Davis, Hughes was advised not to get. involved, the Chronicle said. One document quoted by the Chronicle called the SLA "a very dangerous, radical group and we are afraid that they might retaliate by trying to kid· nap one of our executives or even you .•• " . The newspaper said the issue became moot when the Hearst Corp. and the Hearst Foundation agreed pay part of the ransom. On the will, the CbronicJe printed an unsigned. undated memo which it said made rel- erences to Nadine Henley. Hughes' administraUve usis· <See HUGHES, Paae .U> . Theverbalaparrinaremalned friendly dwina the exchange at a public t.earinc Monday at IR WD beacSquartera In Irvine Town Cent.er. Tbe subject was a two.part JR WD proposal. One part i.s to call a special election - primarily involvin1 m~or land- owners, chiefiy the Irvine Com- pany -to approve a $L6 billion bond issue. The bonds, which would be is- sued as needed between now and the year 2010, would pay for sewer and water service lo cur- renUy unoccupied land as plans for ita development are ap- proved. 'They would also pay the district's share of a major pipeline from Yorba Linda. Also part of the election would be to approve 10 new improve- ment districts witbi.G the lRWD. Under slate law, residents of each improvement district vote only on those bonds that directly affect them. . In undeveloped areas, only landowners vote. Mayor Vardoulis repeated the position of the City Council that the JR WD board is unconstitu- tional because only two of its seven members are elected by popular vote. The other five members are appointed by landowners. A state attorney general's opin· ion has been req_uested by the <'ity on the matter. IRWD direc· tors maintain that under state law a water board need not be elected until its district is at least SO percent urbanized. Also, Vardoulla said, council members believe the IR WD is <See WATER, Page AZ) Carter Visits ·caracaS Journey Hai"ls Emerging Nations' Role CARACAS, Venezuela CAP) - President Carter arrived in Venezuela today on his first state visit to a Latin American country. He said his journey shows the United Stales knows the importance of the developing nations in a changing world. Carter's trip to Latin America and Africa is the first of at least three overseas journeys he plans this year. The president's blue and silver Air Force One jet touched down in a stiff wind at Simon Bolivar International Airport, nestled between the Caribbean Sea and the A vita Mountains. A red, white and blue banner proclaimed ''Bienvenidos Presidente Carter y Sra" - welcome President Carter and New Irvine Building Policy Eyed A proposal lQ refiae the proc· ess by which building projects are approved in 1rvi.De will be debated Wednesday during a special meeting of the city's Planning Commission. The 7:30 p.m. meeting will be conducted in City Council Cham- bers. Development permits current· ly are applied only to residential building. The City Council has directed city officials lo consider similar permits for commercial and industrial development. Planning Direc!tor Eddie Peabody recommends against the extra permit process. Purpose of the permits, which are in addition to normal build· ing permits authorizing con· struction, is to attempt to insure that adequate city services, such as police and fire protection, sewers and water, and other public faciliUes, are available for the development. Peabody's recommendation. a reversal of his prior stance on commercial and industrial permits. was made for several reasons, be said, including: -The residential development permit is intended to phase de- velopment, whereas no timing policy or phasing plan has been developed for commercial or in· du.stria! projects. -Reliable analysis of the availability of public facilities and services for commercial and Industrial developments is dilficult. -Exiatlng procedures can handle service and facility availability concerns for com· men~ial and Industrial uses. wife. Several hundred members of a navy honor guard dressed in white stood at attention in 85· degree heal. Other military guards carried submachine guns. No civilians were in sight. On his first day in Venezuela, the president arranged to place a wreath at the tomb of national hero Simon Bolivar, in the nave of the National Pantheon, a cen- tury·old Spanish renaissance· style church dedicated to the Ho· ly Trinity. Later, he and President Carlos Andres Perez set aside more than two hours for talks about U.S.-Venezuelan relations. Topics included energy and economic cooperation, human rights, curbing the spread of Voung Love nuclear weapons and restraints on arms trade. International topics on the Carter-Perez agenda included the impact or oil prtces on the world economy and politics m Africa. Venezuela provides much or the U.S. 011 s upply. Carter will visit Africa before returning to Washington next week. In sharp contrast to a 1958 vis- it by then-Vice President Nixon and a 1961 visit by President Kennedy, no anti-American dem- onstrations were expected at C.irte r 's arrival, and Venezuelan security measures were comparatively discreet. Nixon was spit upon and his car nearly overturned when he rode into Caracas. The army Princess Caroline of Monaco dances with fiance Phillippe Junot at the Bal de la Rose ball m Monaco. Junot and Caroline plan to be married in June. Irvine Rape Clues Through Hypnosis? Hypnosis may provide the clues Irvine police need to track down the rapist who attacked a 22·year-old Orange County in- terior design consultant in daylight Monday at a construc· tion site. mobilized 40,000 troops for Ken- nedy's visit. Carter is popular here because or the human rights crusade he has championed during his cam· paign and in the White House. •'The oppressed, the poor and even some leftists who once hal- ed us now see Carter with respect," said one U.S. diplomat in Latin America. Vice President Walter F . Mon- da I e , minding the store in Carter's absence, beaded a del· egation of presidential advisers who said farewell at an early morning White House departure ceremony that was t.elev1sed na· tionally. Accompanying the president on t he 14.575-mile trek l<> <See CARTER, Page A2) i City Faces I Sixth Day I I Of Darkness· SPRINGFIELD. Ill. (AP) -· Drivers relied on courtesy in· stead of traffic signals and many residents left darkened homes to eat al restaurants to. day as nearly half or Illinois' capital city entered its sixth day with no electric power. Sunny, 6().degree weather had removed most visible traces of the Easter weekend ice storm that split trees and snapped power cables. Officials say the icy blast at its peak knocked out power to about 700,000 persons in 24 Central Illinois counties. State disaster agency officials ·estimated the storm caused at least $3.5 mUlion in damages. and power company oHicials predicted it could be week's end before a majority or the 100,000 customers still without electrici- ty get back their lights, refrigerators and heat. For many, the prolonged period without television, hair· dryers and countless items was more inconvenient then crippling. "When I got up this morning, I thought sure the electricity would be on," said Rita Taft, whose husband, Doaeld, owns 12 smorgasbord restaurants. But power remained out at her white-pillared home. ''We're jus t taking it in stride," her husband said. lie added that hi s family, (See DARK, Page AZ) Coast Orance County Sheriff's of· nc:ers said a man described as • ·30 to 35 years old pulled a pistol • on the &kl and began whipping her with the weapon. For lrl'lne Coast Investigator Dennis McNeely said the woman," who was not further injured. will be hyp· notized tomorrow night to recall details or the attack she may not consciously have noted. Weather The suspect escaped alter re- leasing the girl at Stonehill Drive and Del Obispo Street alter driving only a short dis-tance. Deputies said tbe youne woman was treated and re· l•ased from San Clemente (k!neral Hospital. ·' C.Oim; Jewelry 74en in Bu~ Jary Stains Quo Supported A crowd of ebool '15 Oranae Coast resldeitta told UM ()raqe County Pluninl Commiaalon Monday they would lib to see the Irvine Cout kept just tbo way lt ia. The lrvtno Coat 11 tbe unin· corporated, larseb' unct.veloped area betweeD Cor<IGa del Mar and Lapna Beacb. 1t. belOQP to th• lntDe Compa117. missioners sald a land-use pro. posal for the area already has been developed. They said they are aeeking citizen comments on what policies should be the con- cern or the at.ate or or the c0W1ty or ol other public a1encies. Fem Pirkle, a 1Poke1wom1n for the Friends of tbo Irvine Coast, aald he believes poten· t.ial huard.s auCb as aradin& and eroslon are properly the coocetn of tho state because they could alftct puU ot the tnlne Coast tho 1tatc 11 •eeklnl to purchase Plf'A.YA~ &he allO ref erred to an t.m· n,med conJfreUlllan whom ab tald l• conaldor'liig legisl~Ucm Q) AJ) McNeely said she was working inside a north-central Irvine house unde r construction, measuring for carpeting and Ule, when she was assaulted about noontime by a man she didn't know. She described him as in bis 20s and wearing blue levis, a blue nylon jacket. a white T·ahJrt and shorts. and blue deck shoes. She said he was thin. about 140 pounds and five feet, eight inches tall. The case is only the second In whlch Irvine police have used h)"pnosis to help solve a crime. The tecbnlque was used last Oc· to~r in 11 rape case and drew from the vicllm recollection or a car llcense pJate number 1be'd n ror only an lnstut. Late night and morning low clouds and local fog. Otherwise fair through Wednesday with variable hi~h clouds. LowS tonight 52 to 58. Highs Wednesday 63 to near 70. INSIDE TODA. Y Kentucky own.r tht! NCAA ba11ketboU tit~ for 1918, but Dvlce hc$ wrurd nolact' .t's a likel11 faoorUe for 1979. storle•, phot41, P• Bl. •••eJC ·r -•:;•····· .. l'!'f .__. ... ers Work Froa P.geAI ~ .. Construction Pact Word HelPs Out 1celdn1 n May ltndo.n\er elec· lion to circumvent the poaaible effects ol the Jarv11 amend- ment, Propos1Uon 13 1ll tbc JW\c 6 primary, By Tbe Associated Preu More union coal miners re- turned to work today u many ot the 10,000 mine construction workers removed pickets upon learning of a tentative ••ree- ment on a <.'Ontract for them. ion miners did not report to work today. The West Vlrginia Coal As· aociation said about 1,200 to 1,SOO coal miners were blocked by construction pickets lhla morn- ing, compared to 4,soo to S,000 Monday. Of a tolal of 1,400 mines ln West Virginia. the only reports of shutdowns came from lwo mines in the southern part of the state and three in the north. But in at least one United Mine Workers union district - .No. 23 in western Kentucky - construction workers expanded picketing and forced many of the area's 50 mines to close. said Joe Holland, district e.xecuUve board member. Holland said that about three· fourths of the district's 10,000 UD· In Indiana, at least eight mines and one coal shipping operation were again closed by the pickets, who said they wouJd not abandon their line until lhe May or, Couneilwoman Two Facing Recall Move in Clemente By ANNE COOPER OI Ille O.lly I'll .. St•ll A committee promoting the recall of San Clemente Mayor William Walker and Coun· c1lwoman Donna Wilkinson reg- istered with the City Clerk's of· fice Monday. Joseph Barton, chairman of the recall committee sponsored by the San Clemente Homeowners Association, said his group will present formal charges against Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson al the April 19 City Council meeting. Meanwhile, another new San Clemente organiz,ation, the C1t1zens Involved for Voter In· formation Committee <CIVIC> held its first general mem· bership meeting Monday night to attack the recall effort. "We have heard recurring ac- cusations as well as slanders and libelous inferences and in· nuendoes," Boyd Ames, a CIVIC director, told an audience of about 70. "Accu~ations have run from theft to bribery." said Ames. "none of which has been Carther from the true and exemplary ac· t1vities of our council members, planning comm1ss1oncrs and ci· ty staff." ~ "Our city policies do not need defending," said Mayor Waller, ClVlC's featured speaker Mon-day. Walker said the ''innuendoes" of freshman Councilman Howard Mushett have put a heavy burden on himself and his wifr Mushett. a leader of the recall effort before he was elected to the City Council March 7. has al· leged that Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson misrepresented ex· penses on c1ty·related business tnps. "I cannot sit back and see the <'itv destroyed by Howard Mushett," Walker said. "He has used divide and conquer tactics to gel power and take over city government." Walker said that, while attack· ing the two senior City Council members for alleged misuse or public funds, Mushett has asked for an increase in City Council salaries. Mushett denied today that he has ever asked for an increase in the $217.50 paid monthly to ci· ty councilmen. . He said he believes City .Man ager Gerald Weeks may have told Walker or an inquiry the junior councilman was mak· in~ into a city ordinance wttich calls for a S percent increase in city councilmen's salaries every two years. • 'l was merely asking for clarification or the ordinance and whether at has been en- forced," Mushett said. adding that he said he would not oppose a pay raise in keeping with the ordinance. Walker also told the CIVIC au· dience Monday that Mushett had asked for a POiice radio in his ORANG! COAST DAILY PILOT home and a list or police on duty each shift. "That's so silly.'' Mushett said. today. "l don't even listen to AM-FM radio. I never asked anybody for a police radio in my home -I can't imagine saying that even in my sleep." F ro.Page Al COAST •.. that would lead to federal ac- quisition or part or the land. However, Rep . Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, who represents the area, said today. he isn't considering such leg1Sla lion because "l feel very strong- ly about spending federal money that we don't have.'· But he said it is his un- derstanding that the Irvine Com· pany is working with the U S Department of the Interior. the state and groups such as the Laguna Greenbelt lo estabHsh boundaries of areas on which negotiations might take place in the future. Many o( Monday's speakers are residents of El Morro Beach Mobilehome Park, located on land leased from the Irvine Company and proposed for purchase by the stale for recrea- tional use. One speaker, Barbara Gius Bo"en. said she fears heavy recreaUonal use would damage the marine environment and also the wildlife, including rac- coons, porcupines and skunks that she said are allowed by res· idents to wander unharmed through the trailer park. "It's appalling, it's absolutely appalling that you could con· sider coming through an en- vironment that beautiful," she said. Other arguments against heavy use of the Irvine Coast In- cluded that It provides a fresh. air corridor to the Polluted Sad- d leback Valley. that marine tidepools below are fragile and should be preserved, and that the coves below are dangerous for inexperienced swimmers. l'rota P age Al HUGHES ... lant ror 35 years. The memo said she had sent a note to Hughes about updating his will. "Evidently Nadine believes the will she has is the true will and she must have been given instructions in the past by you to keep it secure. 1f the handwrit· ten will is the real will, it could be that you had it updated later to the one Nadine has," the memo said. It later makes reference to "whoever holds the handwritten will." The three-page, handwritten "Mormon will" surfaced after Hughes' death on a desk in Mormon church headquarters in Salt Lake C1ty. Melvin Dum- mar, a beneficiary who claimed he rescued Hughes 'from the Nevad• desert in 1968, later ad· milted delivering the wiU to Salt Lake City, but in1i1ted a stranger gave it to him. SD Rescinds Council Raise SAN DIEGO CAP> -The City Council rau.ct its Otto pay by S3 percerit over a bowJ of citfun prot.at two weeu •eo. A(tor thinking U. t>Vtr, lt'I r.clndint theralle. In an 8-1 "°t., the councU gave Ila rules c:ommitt" authority Monday to con.sldor creaOn, an independent body able Lo Ht salaries.: Public epproval would beoeodcd. No nme wW be .a1vm the clty rat.hen unW at Jent 1•. Coun· d lrnu I..oW&Y. aald be was t1rH ot '"t.be 1nuedlb1e •• lentaUve a'reement waa ratified. About 1,800 miners were prevented !rom going lo work. Most of western Penn· 1ylva,Pa'1 mines were operat..- ln• normally today, but several hundred miners were idled at a Bethlehem Steel Corp. mine in Cambria County by construction workers who picketed the mid· night sblft. Three Helvetia Coal Company mines that had been closed Mon- day by pkketa reopened today in Pennsylvania's Indiana County. The same report came from two Barnes and Tucker Coal Com- pany mines in Cambria County, where about l,300 miners were able lo resume work for the first time today. It would cul property taxes to one percent of market vaJue. However. Eberlln1 eOWltered that H lbe IRWD board sticks to Jt:. adledule or deliberations, his eontloutnc the hearing to April 17 would mean a bond issue elec- tion couldn't be called uoW June 13. He also said the district won't wait for the attorney general's u1>inlon on lts constitutionality to tske action. "I don't know when thtt at- torney general's opinion is going to come down and l don't think we can atop doing bwsineu," Eberling said. • Two other areas were the sub- ject of disagreement between the maYor and the board. Large numbers of miners went back to work Monday after a contract was signed Saturday ending a llO·day walkout by 160,000 miners. Spot checks in· dicated even more were report· ing for early shifts today. ' ,.,. ........... PRESIDENT CARTER GR EETS VENEZUELAN PRESIDENT First Stop In a Four-country Tour for Chief Executive Vardoulls said he belleves that the city was not dirtttly nottned of the board's proposed bond ls· sue and that agendas sent lo the city mentioning the proposal ar- rived during City Council elec· lions when council members lacked time to review the voluminous materials they re· ceive from various agencies. He also said he believes a massive bond is!lue by the JRWD would hamper the city and school district's .liabilities to raise 'bonds. Board members said they disagree because they believe property values wouJd rise, permitting greater bonded indebtedness. Corridor Concerns Aired for Planners By JERRY CLAUSEN OI lM 0.llJ l'li.t Staff Despite sniping at exeeutive • board sessions, Saddleback Area Coordinating Council ( SACC> directors pulled their verbal punches Monday night before county planners in discussing the proposed San Joaquin Transportation Corridor. The 11 directors and 14 other area residents appeared re· s1~ned to the eventual reality of a "freeway" cutting through the undeveloped hills between the ocean and San Diego Freeway to link Newport Beach with the Laguna Niguel-Mission Viejo area. Director Irene Puhlm may have best summed up unstated concerns about fears of a growth· mducing freeway late in the session. "l don't want to live in another Los Angeles," she said. "That's why I live in Leisure World. I'll be pocketed between the corridor and the San Dtego Freeway. You move from one place lo another to get away from it. How bad will it be?" John Simon of Laguna Hills, terming himself outspoken and speaking only as a resident, said "That road will be another Newport Freeway. It's just open. mg up the ~a to development.·· ment." But Robert Rende, county En- vironmental Management Agen- cy (EMA> representative, insist- ed the comdor is not to induce growth but to serve the estimat· ed eventual population of 917,000 in the southeast county area, a figure deterauned by the county board of supervisors and reflect- ed in the county general plan. Rende said the area between Newport Boulevard and Sad- dleback College to the south and lying between San Diego Freeway and the ocean even- tually is lo contain 500,000 peo- ple. He said the area currently houses about 250,000. In earlier SACC board sessions, directors representing Leisure World said the retare- ment community is concerned about smog Others indicated that Laguna Niguel homeowners are con- cerned with traffic that will be dumped in their area by the freeway in serving beach-bound motorists. High Srlaool Girl El Toro Marine Guilty of Rape An El Toro Marine accused on arrest of raping two El Toro High School girls pleaded guilty Monday to rape charges related lo one of the victims. Orange County Superior Court Judge H. Warren Knight sen- Parents Killed, Brothers Shot By Boy, 14 SPOTSYLVANIA, Va. (AP) A l4 ·year-old boy shot his pa rents to death with a shotgun and wounded three brothers ear- ly today at their home near here, authorities said. Spotsylvania County Com- monwealth's Attorney M. R. Ramey said the juvenile was charged with murder. Ramey would not identify the boy because or hls age. tenced David Edward Coffman, 19, lo four years in stale prison after rejecting a plea for clemency. Coffman and a 15-year-old boy were arrested by Sheriff's of- ficers Dec. 2 after being iden- tified by two 15-year·old El Toro girls as the pair who kidnapped them at gunpoint in front or the high school and then raped them in a remote location near Mod· jeska Canyon. Deputies said the girls were raped and sexually humiliated by their abductors ano were then forced to leave the car without their slacks. Coffman's mother appeared before Judge Knight Monday in a bld to have the judge Impose a lesser sentence than the slate prison term urged by the pros- ecutJon. Judge Knight rejected the plea for clemency. The other defendant bas been found guilty or rape in juvenile court action. The 15-year-old is serving an indefinite term after being committed to the California Youth Authority. F roaaPageAJ CARTER ••• Venezuela, Bruil. Nigeria and Liberia are wife Rosalynn and Secretary of State and Mrs. Cyrus R. Vance. Ten.year-old Amy Carter also is in the travel party. Marine Corps Racial Bias, Violence Told WINSfON-SALEM, N.C. CAP) -A former Marine says mem- bership in the Ku Klux Klan was widespread in the Marine Corps and innumerable instances of violence by whites against blacks went unpunished by authorities. Donald Ray Hunter, a Winston-Salem native who was one or 14 blacks accused or an allack on a group of white Marines at Camp Pendleton, Calif., said he had to gel adJUSt- ed lo ''the racial atmosphere in the Marines. ''U was very tense," he re- called. ''1'1e rank structure in the Marines created an at- mosphere where some were con· sidered superior and others in· ferior. ''When you are expected to live, eat and sleep with guys, you cannot have them in the KKK," he said. Hunter said the 14 Marines didn't have violence on their minds when the incident bellan. "Our intent in going lo the room was to come to some sort of agreement with them," said Hunter, who is now home here with a bad conduct discharge after a year in the Camp Pendleton brig. ''The majority or people want- ed to communicate with the whites." Hunter said. "Also, we wanted to let them know that the Klan should not be in the Marine Corps. And we were not going to stand by any longer and be harassed." The 14 blacks believed they were storming an apartment where Ku Klux Klan members v. e.re meeting. Somehow they tot the wrong room and ended up assaulting a group of white beer drinkers, later reports in· dlcated. But Hunter has a slightly dlf· ferent version. "The guys that were in that ro0m were either friends of the Klan or being recruited by the Klan," he said. "I do not believe we made a mistake." ' . The April 17 meeting will begin at 6 p.m. at IRWD bead· quarters. F,...PageAl DARK ••• whicil, lost its power Friday, spenl one night visiting neighbors. "I don't think we've done that in years," he added. Tart said his restaurants re· opened during the da), and his family would dine at one or them for the duration of the blackout. "A Jot of people say It's a dis- aster, but I don't think it's really that bad," said Taft. · His wife said nights are cold. with house temperatures hover· ing near 50. Jeffrey, 15, the only Taft child still at home, said he missed the television and stereo more than anything else. The Anthony Nestler family. who live in a small, white-frame house, had power restored Mon· day evening after tb.ree cold, dark nights. "We were prepared to go three or four more days,'' Nestler said. "I guess we were one of lhe lucky ones." Laguna Man Senten ced in Rape Atte mpt A Laguna Beach man who raced trial on rape and kidnap char,es in Orange County Superior Court pleaded guilty to . lesser charges Monday before jury selection could begin. Judge Richard Beacom ac- cepted the plea ot gu11ty to at· tempted rape filed by David PauJ Reumont and sentenced the defendant to 18 months m slate prlSon. Charges of rape :ind kidnap were dropped. Arresting officers said Reu· mont, 28, of 948 Park Ave., sex- ually assaulted a is.year-old girl after invihng her to his rented Balboa Island apartment to dis· cuss her possible posing for nude photographs. Reumont also faced charges ot soliciting lewd acts from teen· age girls, also filed in connection with alleged invitations to young girls to pose for him in the Ualboa apartment he rented for the summer. Hunter pleaded guilty lo as· sault and 'tonspiracy in connec- tion with the November, 1976 at· tack. He forfeited all pay and al· lowances in addition lo his time in the brig. Officers said that at the time ot the alleged incidents last sum- mer, Reumont was on probation from Los Angeles County •Superior Court where he was convicted on charges or selling marijuana. The boy charged in the shoot· ing called a rescue squad about J. 30 a m., Ramey said. Dead were John S. Gavis Jr., 4•, and his wife, Edith, u. Three son.s, Mark, 17, Peter, JS, and Rlcbard, 13. were wound~. College Gets Computers The family's four older children live elsewhere. Mrs. Gavia' body was found lo an upstair1 bedroom doorW11,y, a utborltlu a aid, and ber J'lusband's body wa1 found down· •ta•ra -at the bottom of the stain..~. The lllJured bo)'l tftre round upstairs, two 1.n a hallway and an«her ln a bed. Ramey said flve ahotcuns were found in the bouae but tbat lt had not been determined whJch, lf any, WU tho WHpon used ln lbc llayinp. Home Burglarized A bl.ll'llar brcke throu,b the roar window of IJ1 Irvine bomo at 41 W t Yale Loop Monday and $1,IOO iA bold ~ pllance1-, pollce npe>rteel. • Saddlebac k Com rn unity College I>Utrict trustees agreed lo add two computers to lbeir campus Monday. One, wb1cb t. to be used ooJy tor instrucUon, wlll cost just one dollar but 1n conJunctJo,, wilb re- lated equipment Is velued at about '350.000. The National Cash Re1later computer was purcbued about elabt yeanJ ••o by Craaer Jn dt.lltrles <JI Compton tor about $200,000. Now, t.bt fh'm 19 usina another new computer 10 tbe1'n ottered the older ooo to lb• coUeeo. National Cub Rql1ter'a cert· tral oMtoe bas acreect t.o doclate an addltioft•l fl!,O.ooo worth or eqoJpm L to m e t.b machine operatJonal. · That firm also aubrnllted tho .lowest bld-$88,261-oo a com- puter for the college's business office. "I \bink this is an awfully stranse thing," said Trustee Norrisa Brnodl, referring lo the fact that the donation and bid were both bein& conaidered. Administrators, however, as· aurcd her the two transactions were unrelated. Tbey anld lbe donated equipment wu orterod. to tbe college tieveral rnonths bcforo a data proceulnt com· mlllee recommended that the other machine be pCltthaaed. Bob , a coUere lnstructor w o •bo bu been the dllt.rlct"s computer comultant, aald th• dollatJcm sivo tbe flttna a lood taJt Wrlteotr and are &ood public fi Jatf • He 1ald tho oJll.J lllpoJatJoft 11 that tho eciu!J>meol be used. on11 ror educational purposes. U the college decades to get rid of th_e donated equipment, he added, al mu1t be given back rat.her than llOld. Trustees also agreed to purchase, rather than rent or lease, a computer for the busi· ness office. Although the computer 1nitial· ly will cost the district $86,261, it wlll CMt $141,292 over tive yea~. The rental would cost $175;785 and the lease would cost $1.51,000 in the tame Ume period. Trustee Larry Taylor op])Oled the purchase". He said be p~ ferred another arraniern~nt which would allow the dlllrict to keep ~ _,uJpmcnt up to dat4. .. l don't think we•,. b~ a computer that Tt'e're •otq to want to throw away 1A nve )'Uri," Jtlisa l&ld. I ;7 ' . . Laguna/S~uth Coast A f t e rnoon N.Y. Stoeks f ~OL 71, NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES J , Jouna~y's End Ken Phillipl> of l\lelbournc. Australia. holds his long-lost friend Silkv after the cat returned home from a 1,250-mile trip. The kill) strayed away when Phillips was on vaca- tion and took nmc months to walk back home. BB Woman Held On M urde r Attempt A 37-ycar old Huntington Beach woman was charged with atlcmptcd murdl'r after she al legedly ~hol hl'r husb,tnd in holh knees during a :-.pal in a bar Monday night. police reported I today. Arrested was Nancy Evans of 5682 Mangrum Drive. She was booked into Huntington Beach Jail and remamed there today in lieu or $25,000 bail. Her husband, Jerry Evans, 38, I was hsled in stable condition lo- day at Huntington Intercom munity Hospital w1lh .22 caliber bullel wounds in both knees, of- ficials said. PohC" Sgt Luis Ochoa said the incident took pla(·e in 111 Roy's Bar. 5050 llc1l Ave. about 9.15 pm. Ochoa said the dispute ap parently began at the couple's home. The husband went to the bar. The wife followed shortly afterward. When the husband greeted his wife and approached her, Ochoa said, the woman reporledly pulled a handgun and fired twice. Evans slaggered from the bar into the parking lot outside \\here he collapsed. He was taler rushed to the hospital. Mrs. Evans was arrested by police inside the bar, Ochoa said. LB Slay ing Swpect Can't Be Queried Laguna Deach investigators have been unable to question a suspect they believe murdered a Laguna Beach woman Sunday morning, because the female suspect remains incoherent in UCI Med1ca1 Center Jail ward. Anva Ann Shelton, 31. of Los Angeles. was reported to be in a catatonic state in a restraint ward todav. and La~una Beach pohce said. th<'Y don't know when thev can talk to h<'r l.1 rs. Shellon ts suspected or walking up to a bedroom window al 2553 Glenncyre St early Sun- day morning and hring a shot through the w1ndow, k1lhng Patricia Ann Proferes, 29, an X- ray technician at San Clemente General Hospital. The victim was living with Mrs. Shelton's estranged husband, Donald Joa- quin Shelton, 38. Mrs. Shelton confronted the Laguna Beach couple Saturday afternoon at the Glenneyre Street address, police say, even· tuaJly leaving the home. Police believe she returned at about 1:30 Sunday morning, car- rying a small caliber revolv~r and approaching the couple s bedroom window. Shelton and Mrs. Proferes told officers they heard someone re- moving a window screen. and when Shelton pulled back the curtains, a bullet s mashed throu~h the window and entered Mrs. Proferes upper chest area, killing her. Investigators said today they will wait to question Mrs. S helton to discover a firm motive for the shooting. Mrs. Shelton was detained by her estranged husband Sunday morning until police arrived. I le apparently reached out the broken bedroom window and grappled with the woman for the revolver. Spending 'Threat' The runaway spending at the ~eral level is more of a daneer to the United Stales than the threat or war, Rep. Robert Badham, R-Newporl Beach, said today. ,_.._. •'J'm not as worried about the threat. of nuclear war as I am t bo out-of-band spe11dlnc." • ,JJadbAm told a 1roup or Oranae Cout. school •uporintendenls in }iewport Beach. ••There la an atUlude or care- : ~· dlareaard about the money ~·ro 1pcnd1nl(.'' he aaid about eonaras-The meel11'f, wblcb involved about a dozen Ora111• Coast acboo1 1uperlntendentl and repr esent.Uves of community colleaee. wu held at the Jhnr~rt·M•sa UnlrJod Scbool t.r1ct baadquerten to brlna eacots U{t to date on federal. ;:.o',,,llllUl~ at! Wl t.b °'· Alll federal apcpc11n programs discussed was one described by Newpor t-Mesa Superintendent John NicoU as ·•an alternate school system ... He said that, under the Com· prehensive Education and Training Act (CETA), a building bas been retited ln Costa Melia to hold c)85Se! for people 16-21, who are pald $2.65 an hour for attending. "lt.. actually ls a competltive school syst.tm," 4aid Dr. Nicoll. He aaJd the CBTA perso'ftne) ant ·asking the district to grant diploma.11 to their 1r1duatea. He said bo alao is concomff that a prol)Olfld twUon tu cNdlt mi,ht cncourac llmlU to use their extn mon 1 to send "1clr cbflclren tA> prlYate schoolJ.. Olbtt IU rlntendcm\a at tho m eµill 11 4 they ould •QPPO!ft a tax credit. ~ oppQfed to a ar nt lo&ll prorram. but '8e. RAa,Paa Al) ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1978 TEN CENTS Recall Bid Launched Group Seeks San Clemente Council Owte-rs By ANNE COOPER Ol tlle o.11, ...... ,...,. A committee promoting the recall of San Clemente Mayor William Walker and Coun- cilwoman Donna Wilkinson reg- istered with the City Clerk's of- fi ce Monday. Josepb Barton. chairman of the recall committee sponsored by the San Clemente Homeowners Association, said his group will present formal charges against Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson at the April 19 City Council meeting. Meanwhile, anottaer new San Clemente organization, the Prote ction Of Irvine Coast Eyed By J AcKIE HYMAN Ol 1• O.llJ "11et Sl•lf A crowd of about 75 Orange Coast residents told the Orange Counly Planning Commission Monday they would like to see the Irvine Coast kept 1ust the way 1t 1s. The Jrvine Coast is the unin- corporated. largely undeveloped area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. It belongs lo the Irvine Company Monday's hearing in Jrvine was part of the county's efforts to develop a local coastal plan in compliance with the state Coastal Act. The plan would set forth policies on density and land use consistent with state policies. Cosnmissiooen thanlted speakers and asked that addi- tional comments be presented at a final bearing at 1 p.m. April 10 al Irv' y Council Cham- bers. bat time. com- rnluiortel'S 3ald, they will make ttQir recommendation to the Otange County Board of Supervisors. Most of the 18 persons who spoke talked about potential land use and said they op(>06e heavy commercial or recrea- tional development as destruc- live to wildlife and the environ- ment or the area. Already existing problems with traffic also were cited. However, planning com- missioners said a land-use pro- posal for the area already has been developed. They said they are seeking citizen comments on what policies should be the con· cern of the state or of the county or of other public agencies. Fern Pirkle. a spokeswoman for the Friends of the Irvine Coast. said she believes poten· llal hazards such as grading and erosion are properly the concetn or the state because they could affect parts of the Irvine Coast the state is seekmg to purchase as parklands. She also referred to an un· named congressman whom she said is considering legislation that would lead to federal ac- quisition of part of the land. However, Rep. Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, who (SeeCOAST, PaceA2) · Citizens Involved for Voter In- formation Committee (CIVIC) held its first general mem- bership meeting Monday night to attack the recall effort. "We have heard recurring ac- cusations as well as slanders and libelous inferences and in- nuendoes," Boyd Ames, a CIVJC director, told an audience or about 70. "Accusations have run from theft to bribery.'' said Ames, "none or which has been farther from the true and exemplary ac- tivities of our council members, planning commissioners and ci- ty staff." "Our city policies do not need defending,'' said Mayor Waller, CIVIC's featured speaker Mon- day. Walker said the "innuendoes" of freshman Counc ii man Howard Mushett have put a heavy burden on himself and bis wife. M u.sbell, a leader of the recall effort before he was eleeted to the City Council March 7, bas al- leged that Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson misrepresented ex· penses un city-related business traps. "I cannot sit back and see the city destroyed by Howard At Veniee Beaeh Visitor Killed; 2 Women Raped LOS ANGELES <AP> -A 31-year-old Canadian tourist was shot to death and his fiancee and her fnend were beaten and raped earJy today along the stretch of beach near Venice, police said. Harry Denhoed, 31, of W11lowdale. Ontarw, was shot several times with a small caliber pistol as he and the woman apparently fled two ban- dits, said Venice Division in- vestigator Don Ravens. The 29-year-old fiancee, also from Canada, and a 32-year.old Westchester woman were listed in fair condition at Marina Mercy Hospital. ''The victim and his fiancee were going to leave for Canada tomorrow and wanted lo lake a lasl look al the beach." Ravens said. "It appeared to be a rob- bery. There's some indication the "victims started to run and he was shot when they starled to nee." Descriptions of the two men wne skelchy, Ravens said, add- ing the men 3J?J?arently were in their 20s and wearing dark clothing. They confronted the trio as they strolled along a beachfront bike path at Dockweiler Beach around 2:40 a.m .• he said. Seven Seek Council Seat· in Capistrano Seven San Juan Capistrano res- idents -including two former councilmen and two previous council candidates -have filed applications for the lone C~ty Council position vacated earlier this month by resigning Coun- cilman Richard McDowell. Former Councilmen James Weathers and Dr. Roy Byrnes have returned papers and re- tired businesswoman Marilyn Williams and planning com- missioner Robert Davies also are seeking the vacated position. Mrs. Williams finished fourth in ballohng Jn the March 7 municipal eleclion for tbree council positions. And those four are joined by three others who have also re- turned application papers They include para·legal aide Glenda Guerrero, university instructor Mary Morgan Abe and engineer- ing /design consultant George Vraney. Another eight residents, in- cluding former Councilman Larry Buchheim, have taken out applications but failed to return them to the City Clerk's office. All applications must be filed by 5 p.m. Wednesday. Councilmen are expected lo appoint a new councilman al their April 5 mttting. That appointee would official- ly Join t.he council on April 19 and would serve lo the end of McDowell's term on March 4, 1980. Hitchhiking Girl Beaten A 17-year·old girl was pistol whipped Monday after she ac- cepted a ride at Del Obispo Street and Coast Highway in Dana Point. Orange County Sheriff's of- ficers said a man described as 30 to 35 years old pulled a pistol on the girl and began whipping her with the weapon. The suspect escaped aner re- leasing the girl at Stonehill Drive and Del Obispo Street after driving only a short dis- tance. Deputies said the young woman was treated and re- leased from San Clemente General Hospital. Crash Kills Girl Watcher MADERA <AP> -A Fresno man was killed when a pickup rolled as he flirted with girls while leaving Millerton Reservoir, the highway patrol reports. Stephen Michael Garza, 22, was hanging partly out of the pickup and hollering at girls in another vehicle Easter Sunday. the CHP reported. Garza was crushed when the pickup suddenly speeded up and rolled while rounding a curve, of{icers said. Coins,Jeweley Taken in Burglary An intruder who "lllay have had a key to the premises took old coln1 and Jewlery wlth a total value ol $2,21S fro~• Dana Point home. Orange County 1berur1 of· Deen said tbe bre1k·ln oce at tbe bome of lrnne , park.I 'aa:perintendent Hat"Old F. Greet, .58, or 33181 Chula Vilt.a Drive. Mushett," Walker sa1d. "He has used divide and conquer tactics to gel power and take over city government." Walker S8ld that, while attack- ing the Lwo senior Caty Council members for alleged misuse of public funds, Mu.shell has asked for an increase in City Councll salaries. Mushett denied today that he has ever asked for an increase in the $217.50 paid monthly to ci· ty councilmen. He said he believes City Manager Gerald Weeks may have told Walker or an inquiry (See RECALL, Page AZ) LB Schools Issue lice ' \l-arning By STEVE MITCHELL OI -o.llJ f'llet S..fl When Johnny scratches his head in class, he might not be puzzhng over a test queslion. He might have head llce. Ofhcials in the Laguna Beach Unified School Distrtct have sent not1Cl'S home with the district's 1,200 students. askm~ parents to keep an eye out for pediculosis cap1tus -or head lice on their children. "We've had nine cases or head lice m recent w~eks at the dis- l r i ct' s three elementary schools." confirmed district. school nurse Anne Wagner to- day. And the nursing official does pot see an imtnediate end to the situaUoo. "I'm sure there are more cases I don't know about.. But people are ashamed lo call about iL" Mrs. Wagner said she dis- covered six cases of head bee. and parents reported three more cases. Notices were sent home wilh elementary school youngsters and Thurston Intermediate School students shortly before Easter vacalion in the hopes thal parents would inspect their children's hair and control the situation before school resumed. "lt was more of a preven- tive measure." she said of the notices. More notices went home with the high school students Monday, she said. District Superintendent. Robert Sanchis said, "We just · wanted to alert the parents to the possibilily of the lice exist- ing. It's easier for the parents to check their own children than to go through a screening process at the schools." OHicials at the county's D1v1sion of Communicable Dis- eases said head lice are not un- common dunng the school year. She said kids play together, rub their heads against chairs and wear each others' hats. "We haven't noticed any in· crease," the county o£ficial sald. Man Dies in F all SAN DIEGO (AP) -Aviation apprentice Donald B. Cherry,!?, of Miramar Naval Air Station. tum bled 75 feet to his death off a cliff at the Torrey Pines gltderport. Orange Co ast Weathe r · Late night and moming low clouds and local fog. Otherwise fair through Wednesday with variable high clouds. Lows tonight S2 to 58. }{jghs Wednesday 63 to near 70. INSIDE TODAY Klntucky ~ tM NCAA boa~tbaU til~ for 1978, but O.k~ has w1Wd notice tt'• a Ukel11 fooorUe for 1979. Storie•• phoCo1, Page Bl. l••e At ":I"'. '1: "" -.C.• Q •rwi• a ,_,........ .. t:-~ .:: =-~ .~ Qllf...a N ....., ...... .. ~· 0 ........... M,CI a....... a.,. ClfMMC---, •• Clllillle• -.... ~ ~ ............... . 0... ..._ Ale "'" Wa m .......................... •W'hlk I U4 ....._ M ......... c ... ..,...._.a ' .4% ~YPllOT Two Computers Saddleback Community College District lrusteea agreed to add two computers to their campus Monc:t.y. · One, which ts to be uaed only for instrucUon, will cost Just one dollar but in conjunction with re· lated equipment 1s valued at about $350,000. The National Cash Register computer waa purchased about eight years ago by Crager In- dustries of Compton for about $200,000. Now, the firm is using another new computer so they've offered the older one to the colJege. Irvine Rape Clues Sought By Hwrwsis Hypnosis may provide the clues Irvine police need to track down the rapist who attacked a 22-year-old Orange County in- terior design consultant in dayhght Monday at a construc- tion site. Investigator Dennis McNeely said the woman, who was not further inJurcd, will be hyp- notized tomorrow night to recall details of the attack she may not consciously have noted. McNeely said she was working inside a north-central Irvine house under construction, measuring for carpeting and tile, when she was assaulted about noontime by a man she didn't know. She described rum as in his 20s and wearing blue levis, a blue nylon jacket, a white T-shirt and :.horts. and blue deck shoes. She said he was thm. about 140 pounds and five feet, eight in<'hes tall. The case is only the second In which Irvine police have used hypnosis to help solve a crime. The technique was used last Oc- tober in a rape case and drew from the victim recollection of a car license plate number she'd seen for only an Instant. ''There are a lot of details in a \lictim's mind she just can't re. call under normal cir· ~umstances," McNeely &aid. \••under hypnosis, she can bring out other evidence that might be in her mind. .. If it is, we're going to get it and use It. .. New Hepatitis Agent Studied WASlilNGTON CAP> -The <'ffort to eliminate hepatitis as a side effect of blood transfusions i~ being frustrated by a newly discovered form or lhe disease possibly caused by an eluslv~ virus, scientists say. Government scientists said Monday they have proved that the infectious agent can be transmitted through blood and ls distinct from the known viral c;lUses or hepatitis. Because a successful na· tlonwlde campaign has decreased the risk of cont.ract- in g post-transfusion bepaUUs from previously known viruses the new agent now is responsibl~ for 90 percent of lhe remaining cases: heallh authorities say. Laguna Man's Ring Taken in Burglary A Laguna Beach man told police Monday someone entered his apartment through a ~athroom window, stealing a 4fiamond ring valued at $2,SOO. Nicholas A. Glllesple, 23, of 212 North Cout Highway, said the 1.5 carat diamond ring also contained two rubles. A puka ~hell necklace also was reported stolen by Gilleapie. DAILY PILOT National Cash Register's cen- tral office has agreed to donate an additional $150,000 worth of equipment to make the m achlne operaUonaJ. That firm also submitted the lowest bid -$86,262 -on a com puter for the college's business office. .. I think this is an awfully strange thing," said Trustee Norrisa Brandt, referring to the fact that the donation and bid were both being considered. Administrators. however, as- sured her the two transactions were unrelated. They saJd the donated equipment was offered to the college several months before a data processine com· mittee recommended that t.be other machine be purchased. Bob Bliss. a college instructor who also bu been the district's computer consultant, said the donations give the firms a good tax writeoff and are good public relations. He said lhe only'stipulation is that the equipment be used only for educational purposes. U the college decides to get rid of the donated equipment. he added, it must be given back rather than sold. Trustees also agreed to purchase, rather than rent or lease, a computer for the busi· ness office. Although the computer initial- ly will cost the district $86,262, it will cost $141,292 over five years. The rental would cost $175, 785 and the lease would cost $151,000 in the same time period. Trustee Larry Taylor opposed the purchase. He said be pre- ferred another arrangement which would allow the district to keep the equipment up to date. ··1 don't think we're buying a computer that we're going to want to throw away in five years," Bliss said. Coroner's . Errors Cited By Pathologist By TOM BARLEY OI -O.lly ,, ... MMI Dr. William Baxter Waddill's attorneys were winding up the defense today for the Huntington Harbour physician who is ac- cused of murder after an at- tempted abortion. Both of his lawyers have In· dicated they plan to call no more witnesses after Dr. Ak10 Metamura ftnishes testifying. Dr. Metamura, head of the pathology staff at Westminster Community Hospital where the abortion was performed, has testified that there were errors in the coroner's findings. He told the jury that the verdict of death by manual strangulation was nol justified. Prosecutor Robert Chatterton said he intends to call rebuttal witnesses after Metamura con· eludes his testimonv. Chatterton predlcted rebuttal will take up at least three days. He hopes to have among those witnesses at least one of three babies which be claims have survived saline abortions of the lvpe administered by Dr. Wad· dill lo a patient at Westminster CoD'!munity Hospital. Waddill, 42, has argued throughout the trial that the baby the prosecution alleges he strangled in the nursery on March 2, 1!117, after attempting an abortion never knew llie in the full sense or the term. But a doctor and nurses who were present ln the nursery have testified that the baby girl had a heartbeat and respiration and moved several times while they were trying to aid what they said was the infant's baWe for life. Four Laguna Surfers Win . Four local surf en ~ top awardl ln a aul'flna contest last weekend at Laguna Beach's Tnalia Street. Flrat place winner was Rlc)lal'd Deal, 21, lollowed by Dour BU.ntlnf, 19, wbo took second place honors. Jaa Slark. 25, and J.C. M aell.a.1, alto 25, tllCl for t.b1rd place 1d the comtel~ tpoDICftd by a Laauna ~h 1urf ahop, SOME'JBING IS Mls.9NG MILAN, Italf (.µ») -An U• hlbiUon of furniture and bouteholct \:t' la offtrlllt' a 1ttna .. l1ed equtpped with ater~c radlo, phonoar•ph and c U4 deck, t.tle-phone, letbox, amen bar, eapr1110 machln 1, psyohedellc U1ht1n1 • •11tom, lldo and celllAf mtrron · and movie camera. Tbe ptice I.I $14 ,000. p.._ Pqe,A.J BADHAM ••• primarily for higher educatJon tuition. Also raised at the meeUng was the issue or whether or not teachers and other state and federal employees will eventual- ly be covered by social secunty, which would mean school dis· tricts would have to pay the employer's share. "We eventually wUI have to have universal coverage'• under social security, Badham said. "I'm not suuesting lhat it's p- ing lo be easy, but lt'a goinc to be necessary.·· Ile pointed out that gov- ern mental employees who moonlight or whose spouses are covered by social security may end up collecting social security along with their government pension. Rite of Spring Badham said he believes that, with universal coverage, the social secunty system could be made secure by lhe year 2005 "on a program that would not be terribly dncomfortabJe for anyone.'' Members of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet Company perform a scene from Stravinsky's "Rite or Spnng" prior to its week-long engagement in New York City. The company is the oldest of its kind in Canada. Pros and cons were voiced by superintendents on a proposal to establish a separate cabinet· level Department of Education apart from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Those opposed said they believe the federal government shouldn't be involved in the public school system, while others si.11d they would prefer lo sec professional educators run- ning a separate department in Washington. Badham said he leans toward supporting the proposal but ''I would have serious misgivings if this were to increase the already runaway bureaucracy." Carter Visits Venezuela in First '78 Trip CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - President Carter arrived in Venezuela today on his first stale visit to a Latin American country. He said his journey shows the United States knows the importance of the developing nations 10 a changing world. Carter's trip to Latin America and Africa is the first of at least three overseas journeys he plans this year. The president's blue and silver Air Force One jet touched down in a sllff wind at Simon Bolivar Jnternataonal Airport, nestled between the Caribbean Sea and the Avila Mountains. A red, white and blue banner proclaimed "Bienvenidos Presidente Carter y Sra" - welcome President Carter and \\ ife. Several hundred members of a navy honor guard dressed in white stood at attention in 85· degree heat. Other military guards carried submachine guns. No civilians were in sight. On rus first day in Venezuela, the president arranged to place a wrealh at the tomb of national hero Simon Bolivar, in the nave of the National Pantheon. a cen· tury·old Spanisb renaissance· style church dedicated to the Ho· ly Trinity. Later, he and President Carlos Andres Perez set aside more than two hours for talks about u.s .. venezuelan relations. Topics in<'luded energy and economic cooperation, human rights, curbing the spread of nuclear weapons and restraints on arms trade. International topics on the Carter-Perez agenda included the impact of oi' prices on the world economy and politics in Africa. VoungLo"e F,.._PageAJ COAST ••• represents the area, said today he isn 'l considering such legisla- tion because "I feel very strong- ly about spending federal money that we don't have " But he said it 1s ht:-un- derstanding thal the Irvine Com- pany is working with the U.S. Department of the Interior, the state and groups such as the Laguna Greenbelt to establish boundaries of areas on which negotiations might take place in the future. Many of Monday's speakers are residents of El Morro Beach Mobllehome Park, located on land leased from the lrvine Company and proposed for purchase by Lhe state for recrea- tional use. One speaker, Barbara Gius Bowen. said she fears heavy recreational use would damage the marine environment and also the wildlife. including rac· coons. porcupines and skunks that she said are allowed by res· idents to wander unharmed through lhe trailer park . "It's appalJing, il's absolutely appalling that you could con· sider coming through an en- vironment that beautiful," she said. Other arguments against heavy use of the Irvine Coast in· eluded lhat it provides a fresh· air corridor to the Polluted S~d­ dle back Valley. -th• marine tidepools below are atagale and should be preserved.. and that the coves below are dangerous for inexperienced swimmers:: Bird Watchers . .. Plan Outing .~· Bird watching aficionados can exercise their passion Saturday as the South Coast Audubon Society sponsors its monthly bird outing -on the San Juan Loop Trail through Caspers Park. The walk will originate at 9:15 a .m. from the Ortega Otl<5' Store, 10 miles east of Interst'ate 5 on Ortega Highway. Parking is available across lhe street from the store. Bird watchers also can meet at 7:30 a.m. at the Safeway Market, ~l N. El Camano Real, in San Clemente. The two and one•half mile walk will be conducted by a park ranger. For further ID· formation, phone 498·1813. Princess Caroline of Monaco dances with nance Phlll.lppe Junot at the Bol de la Rose ball in Monaco. Junot and Caroline plan to )>e married in June. , Boy Ki11s Parents, W omids 3 Brothers SPORTSYLV~NIA, Va. (AP) A 14-year-old boy shot his parents to death with a shotgun and wounded three brothers ear· ly today at their home near here, authorities said. 'Hughes Eyed Ransom Help For Hearsts? SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Papers purportedly from the files of the late billionaire Howard Hughes show that Hughes considered paying part of the ransom demanded by Pat- ty Hearst's kidnappers, the University of Utah student newspaper reports. They also make reference to a ''handwritten will," lending credence to the "Mormon will" being contensted. in a Nevada court, the newsppaper, The Dai- ly Utah Chronicle, said Monday. The student publication, in a copyrighted article, said lt ob- t ained copies of papers original- ly seited by Mexican authorities after Hughes death April s, 1976 on a private plane en route from Acapulco to Houston, Texas . It said the papers went through a Canadian House of Commons member, to a Hughes legacy e nthusiast in the northwest.em United States, to an associate in Sall Lake City. None of these persons was iden· tified. The newspaper quoted one memo it said was dictated by Hughes as saying: "HRH wants to know more about the Hearst's problem and has no objections to being of some help so long as it can be done without any publici- ty. Can Hearst and his family be guaranteed to hold silence?" The memo was wriLten Feb. 18 or 19, 1974, the newspaper said. Miss Hearst was kidnapped by Symbionese Liberation Army members Feb. · 3. They asked $6 million ransom be contributed toward feeding the poor. In subsequent memos from Hughes advisers Frank "Bill'' Gay and Chester Davis, Hughes was advised not to get involved, the Chronicle said. One document quoted by the Chronicle called the SLA •·a very dangerous. radical group and we are afraid that they might retaliate by trying to kid- nap one of our execuLives or even you .• ," Spotsylvania County Com- monwealth's Attorney M. R. Ramey said the juvenile was charged wilh murder. Ramey would not identify the bov because of his age. The boy charged in the shoot- ing called a rescue squad about 1.30 a.m., Ramey said. Dead were John S. Gavis Jr., 44, and his wife, Edith, 4L Three sons, Mark, 17, Peter, lS, and Richard, 13, were wounded. The family's four older children live elsewhere. Mrs. Gavis' body was found in an upstairs bedroom doorway, authorities said, and her husband's body was found down- Sta 1 rs al the bottom of the stairway. The injured boys were found upstairs, two in a hallway and anolher in a bed. Ramey said five shotguns were found In lhe house but that 1t had not been determined which, if any, was the weapon used in the slayings. From1 Page Al RECALL ••• I the junior councilman was male· ing into a city ordmance which calls for a 5 percent increase in city councilmen's salaries every • two years. "I was merely asking for clarification of the ordinance and whether it has been en· forced," Mushett said, adding that he said he would not oppose a pay raise in keeping with the ordinance. WalkC'r also told the CIVIC au- dience Monday that Mushett had asked for a police radio in his home and a list of police on duty each shin. "That's so silly," Mushett said today. "I don't even listen to AM·FM radio. I never asked anybody for a police radio in my home -I can'l 1magine saying that even in my sleep." Health Chief Assai/,s Brown SACRAMENTO CAP) - California's health director is leaving office wilh a warning for GO\' Edmund Brown Jr. 's new health management team and a parting shot at the governor. Dr. Jerome Lackner, removed by Brown Friday in what the governor insists was not a firing. criticized Brown's stands on doctors· pay, Medi-Cal eligibility and cost·cuttmg Monday. 'Atmosphere Tense' Marine Violence, ' Bigotry Detailed WINSI'ON-SALEM. N.C. (AP) -A former Marine says mem· bership in the Ku Klux Klan was widespread in the Marine Corps and innumerable instances of violence by whiles against blacks went unpunished by authorities. Donald Ray Hunter. a Winstoo&Jem native who was one of 14 blacks accused of an attack on a sroup of white Marines at Camp Pendleton, Calif., aaid he had to aet adjust· ed to .. the racial atmosphere in the ailartnes. "It wu very tense,"' he re- called. "The rank structure in the M arlnes created an flt• moaphere where somo were con· aidered superior and others in· terlor "When you aN expected to Uve, eat and •~P with 1uy1. you -cunot have them in th• KKK." h Hid. Hunter Hid the 1' Marines didn't bave violence on their miada Wben UM incident be•an "Our inteot ln coin• to the room. wu to eome to some tort. or ngreement with them:• said Hunter, who ls now home here with a bad conduct discbarge after a year in the Camp Pendleton bng. • "The majority of people want· ed to communicate with the whltes," Hunter saJd, .. Also, we wanted to let them know that the Klan should not be jn the Marine Corps. And we were not going to stand by any longer and be harassed." Tbe 14 blacks believed they were storming an apartment where Ku Klux Klan members were meeting. Somehow they sot the wrong room and ended up auaulUnt a iroup of white beer drinkers, later reports in· dicated. Bul Hunter hat a 1U1bU, dif- ferent version. "The '1JYS that WM9 t.n that roGm were either f rlends of the Klan or belng recndted bJ the Klan,'' he aaid. ''l do not belle•e we m•d a miatake." Hunt~r pleaded 1uUty to as· 11 ull ond eonaplracy ln COCUl«- Uon with the November, 1976 al· tack. . .. 17 Ceast l l VOL. 71, NO. 87, 3 SECTlONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1978 N TEN.CENTS l. ~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------...... -------------· \ City Faring Si~th Dou of Darkness f SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) -icy blast at Its peak knocked out period without tdevlaloa, hair-He added_ tbat his !amity. • _Jhs wile said nights are cold, dark ni&l>ts- 1• Driven relied on courtesy in· power to about '700,000 persoos in dryers and count.less Items wu which lost Jts power Friday. with house temperatures hover· "We were prepared to go atead or tratnc signals and 24Cenlra1Illlno11counties. more inconvenient then spent-one night visiting ingnearSO. three or four more days," many resident.a left darkened State disaster aeency offlclals crippllns. neighbors. "But we bwldle up Under a lot NnUer said. "I aueas we were homes to eat at restaurants to-estimated lht; ~t.orm caused at "When I got up this mornlne. I "I don't th.ink we've done that of blankets," she said. one of the lucky Olle:S." : · day as nearly half of Illinois' least $3.5 nullion in damaees, thought aur~. the el~ctricity in years,". he ~dded. .Jeffrey, 15, lbe only Taft child Mary Nestler, in her SOs. said l capital city entered its sixth day and power company orrtcials would be on, said Rita Taft, Tart sllld bis restaurants re-stall at home, said be missed the famlly inembera rediscovered ' with no electric power. predicted it could be week's end whose husband, Donald, owns 12 opened during the day, and his television and stereo more than each other through games ud It Sunny, 60-degree weather had before a m~orl~ of the 100.~ smorgasbord restaurants. famUywouldd.ineatooeo!them anylbingel.se. song, inatead of merely I removed most visible traces or customers sWl wtthout el!'ctriet· But power remained out at her for tbe duration of the blackout. The Anthony Nestler family. watchlllg t.elevllion. / the Easter weekend ice storm ty get back their lights. while-pillared home. "A lot of people say it's a dis-who live in a small, white·frame .. I haven't done that since I that split trees and snapped refrigerators and beat. "We're just taking it in aster, but I don't think it'~ really house, had power restored Mon· was a child. You don't com· power cables. Officials say the For many. the prolonged stride," her husband said. that bad," said Taft. day evening aft.er three cold, municate wilb TV." Journey's E nd Ken Phillips of Melbourne, Australia, holds his long.Jost friend Silky after the cat returned home from a 1,250-mile trip. The kitty strayed away when Phillips was on vaca- tion and took nine mont.M to walk ~k home. Carter Visits Caracas Hails Possible Approval of Canal Treaty CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - President Carter arrived in Venezuela today on the first stop of a two·continent trip and, speaking fluently in Spanish. told its people Senate approval o( his second Panama Canal treaty would "be a cause for celebration.•• Surprising those who expected him to make bis arrival remarks in English, the president also declared: "There is no stronger tie than the devotion we share to freedom.•' He mentioned Man Faces Charges in Fatal Crash specifically individual freedom and human rights "Every tame the rights of any individual in the world are violated, our own rights are en· dangered," Carter said. By speak.mg in Spanish, the president avoided the embar- rassing translation errors that plagued his recent visit to Poland. Carter's statements were broadcast live on Venezuelan radio and television. Venezuelan President Carlos Andres Perez said in a welcom· ing speech that the U.S. Senate. in its Panama Canal delibera· tions, is .. determinrng the destiny of hemisphere rela· lions." The Senate has approved a treaty Carter signed guaran· teeing the canal's neutrality and is deliberating ratification or another pact yielding control of the waterway to Panama. Perez warned Carter of "the concern we have in Latin America" that Senate action might undermine "the Panama Canal inilialive." He said Council Action In action Monday night, the Newport Beach City Coun- cil: BOATS: Gave final approval lo a city ordinance re· quiring permits ror charter party boats. WESTCLIFF GROVE: Approved lbe final tract map for the 21-bome Irvine Company developm.mt near Dovel" and Westcliff drives. ratification of the two treaties would open "a new era or cooperation between Latin America and the United Stat.es." Carter smiled at the remarks. He began his reply by declaring that ratification of the second treaty would "be a cause for celebration in the United States" as much as it would be a cause for celebration in Latin America. He said his journey to Latin America and Africa, the first of (See CARTER, Page A2) Council Hopefuls Profiled ' ' • There are now 12 active can- df datn for four aeatir on the Nnoporl Beach City Counal. The election i8 April JJ. f Election Queried · By Irvine Mayor Arbona avtbariUes &aid today manslauibtet charies have been filed aelnst a dri'rer whose plc:k\lp truck apparently crossed a bll,tlway center Une 5aturday near Parker, Ariz., causing a head-on collision that killed two young Harbor Area residents who were on a Colorado River camping trip. Meanwhile, funeral servi~es have been scheduled for Linda Jean Quinn, 19, of Newport Beach and George Thomas Ouellette, also 19, of Costa Mesa. BUDGET: Reversed the vote or two weeks ago and declined IA> appoint a citizens' budget review committee. SURFING: Declined to follow the recommendation or the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission to set aside some beaches exclusively for board surfing and vol· ed instead to let the existing black ball system stand. ln Newport &ach, condidotes for the 1evm-member council mUlt re--nu in the councilmanic district they hope to reprt1ent. Voteu throvghout the etty CG8I ballot$ for one candidate in each th.strict and the top vote getter in each di8tnct is elected. Following are brief pro/i~s of the thTee active condldates m the Third District, together with their <m11Dtts to quemons about aome of the iuues. The name oJ a Jourlh J>n''°"• Pa&ll "Pablo" Caldwell Will appear on the ballot /or the Thm1 Da1tr1ct, but he ha& withdrawn from the race. By JACKIE HYMAN Of tla O.Uy Pllet Sa.ff Irvine Mayor Bill Vardoulis told directors of the Irvine Ranch Water District Monday that he doesn't think they have a right to call an election for a $1.6 billion bond issue because he doesn't believe the board's com- position is constitutional. And even if it were, Vardoulis said.be believes the water board has been unduly hasty in its con· sideralions and that it hasn't taken into consideration all potential effects or such a bond issue. IRWD board Chairman L.E. Eberling said he disagrees with Vardoulis on all counts. However, be agreed to continue the public bearing on the matter until April 17 to permit further discussion. . The verbal sparring remained friendly during the exchange at a public bearing Monday at IRWD headquarters in Irvine Town Center. The subject was a two.part IR WD proposal. One part is to call a special election -primarily invol'ring maJor land· owners, chiefly the Irvine Com· pany -to approve a $1.6 billion bond issue. The bonds, whlch would be is· sued as needed between now and the year 2010, would pay for <See WATER, Page A2) Corridor Concerns Aired for Pla:nners By JERRY CLAUSEN Of ... Delly,.....,..., Despite sniping at execuU ve board sessions, Saddleback Area ·coordinating Council (SACC) directors pulled their verbal punches Monday night before county planners in discussing • the p r oposed San Joaquin Tra naportaUao Corridor. cy (EMA> representative, insi~ ed lbe corridor is not to indu~ growth but. IA> sene the estimat· ed eventual population o( 917,000 in the southeast county aree, a figure detennihed by the county board ol supervisors and reflect· ed in the county eeneral plan. Rende said the •area between (See ROAD. Pase ,\2) Two other Harbor Area youths whose names are not available suffered injuries in the fatal col· Jision on Arizona 95 about 10 miles north of Parker, authorities said. A spokeswoman ror the Arizona Highway Patrol said the youths were riding in a pickup truck that was struck by a second truck driven by 24·year- old Thomas J . Kolee of Whittier. Kolec and his passenger, 26· year-old Fernando M. Moreno, were treated for cuts but not hospitahzed. Kolec is now m custody facing two counts of manslaughter, authorities said. Miss Quinn and Mr. Ouellette were riding in the cab of their truck and were killed. The two unnamed youths who escaped death were riding in the rear of the truck. Officials said Miss Quinn and Mr. Ouellette had been staying with a group of other young people at the Ah Villa campground on the Arizona side of .the Colorado River. A prayer service for Mr. Ouellette will be held tonight at 8 p.m. al St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, 1015 Baker St, Costa Mesa. A Mass of Christian Burial wlll ·be· tield at the church Wednesday at 10 a.m. with burial to follow at Good Shepherd (See CHARGES. Page Al) fi'or lrrJine Coast Caldwell Announces He 's Withdrawing Newport Beach City Council candidate Paul "Pablo" Caldwell announced Monday he 1s withdrawing from the cam· paign and throwing his support to Evelyn Hart. Mrs. Hart and Caldwell, along with Micbael Gering and Frank Ivens, are all candidates ln the Third District. In a press conference Monday al City Hall, Caldwell said he is pulling out or the race because he considers lt the best thing he could do ror the city. He explained that he and Mrs. Hart agree on every issue and said she is more qualified for the council seat than he is. Caldwell is a Spanish teacher at Newport Harbor High School who has lived in Newport for 26 years. Mrs. Hart, wbo bas lived in Newport for 25 years, helps her family operate Hart's Sporting Goods in Costa Meta and Is a past member or the Newport Beach Parks. Beaches and Recreation Commission. For her part, Mn. Hart said ahe was honored by Caldwell's gesture and added that she would "miss his humor. wit and sincerity al the forums." Caldwell is the third of the 15 original candidates to withdraw. First Distract candidate La Verne de la Cierva withdrew from the race soon after filing closed and last week. Sixth Dis· tract candidate William Dohr pulled out of that race in favor of incumbent Lucille Kuehn. The remaining 12 candidates will be appearing in nine public forums between now and the April 11 election. There are four seats open. School Chief ToListN-M A/Jematives Newport-Mesa Unified School District Superintendent John Nicoll will outline the diatrict's financial alternatives should Proposition 13, the Jarvis-Gann property tax initiative. pass this June. Tbe 11 direct.ors and 14 other area residents appeared re· signed to the eventual reallcy oC a .. freeway" cutting through the undeveloped b1lla between the ocean and San Diego Freewa,v to link Newport Beach with the wcuna Ni1uel·Ml11ion Viejo area. l)l.rector lreue Pu.bl~ may have best summed ue wmated cooeerm abOut f ean or a trowth· tndvetnl tree\Vay late ln tho aeulon. St.atus Quo Supported NicQll's presentation will be made during tonight's meeting of district trustees. It eels under way at 7:30 p.m. in Costa Mesa City Council Chambers. Preliminary discussion or the district's 1978-79 budget bas prompted district ornclala to pre- dict a loss ol nearly '18 mllllon in local property taxea lt tho Jarvis ioltiatlve 11 approv~d by Callf ornia 's voters June 8. ••1 don•t want to lhe In other Lee Anaeles,' • abe said. • t'a ~ I live to Leisure Wor~. I'll be pocket.ect botwocn th comdGr and lh• su D 10 :vnew.,.• You mO\te lrom one ee w anotbu to 1et awa,v m It. How bid 1'111 It be?'" John Shnoo Of LNUD• Hllls, tamlq h1midf outlpoken and aldq aftly U a ttslden~ Hid ''That: rciad will b4t another N~ F,rieway.· ll"a just open-spuptM•~a toclit oprn ° ;/Jl!l~JY!'," iRol~ Rend I ~>' En· 'YltmtllMlatll 11..ae • A c:rotJd ol about 'IS <>ranee Coaat ""'dentl· told tbe O~e County Planning Commlulon onday tb y Wotdd like to see the Irvlne Cout kept Jmt the way ltll. The lrvinci eo..t it the unin- co@.Or~. Jaf{ef y ,uo.ctovtloPed area bel~t ~ CS 1 Mar ~d La~a Buch. It belQPJJ to tbe lrv:tne COIDpany. This would mean a aubist.antlal alice out of the overall bud&et ror next school year, eattmated at about $50 million. District ofncials also are eon· cerned about the potential lolS of the $800,000 CODllllUnltJ service tax that eoes Jnto di.I· trlct operatioo of recNalloD pro-ra ma and f acmuea used by cities and cone1e dlstttcll.. · Lou of UUs tund couJtl eUrtall • recreaUoa vroirams. c!llt.rlCt of· fic.lalaNld. • ---Mlcbael Gertag. 1350 Sussex Lane. is 32, has lived 10 Newport Beach for seven years, holds a bachelor's degree and a law degree from UCLA. An attorney with Virtue and Scheck in Newport Beach, be is vice pl"eSi· dent of the Newport Harbor Chamber o( Commerce. a member of the Orange County Citizens Direction Finding Com· mission and a member of Hoar; Memorial Hospital's 552 Club. Why are yoa qaallfied for the Newport Beach City Council! "I'm will· ing to dig in and work hard. I have a history or gel- ling the job done. 1 don't have all the answers. I may not know as much as t h e o t b e r ""'"° councilmen or other candidates, (See BOPEFUIS, Page A!) Co ast W eathe r Late night and rooming low clouds and local fog. Otherwise fair through Wednesday with variable hlgb cl~. Lows t.oni.&bt 52 to 58. Highs Wednesday 63 to near 70. INSIDE TOD-' Y ICntwclq/ OUN the NCAA baalcdboU tatll for 1m, but DtlU Ml ~ noliet it'• 4 llhlfl /ooorit• /or 1979. StoN«•,p#loloJ, ~Bl. h•ex • ' • 1l% Do\IL Y P1LOT N More Work " Construction Pact Word Helps Out By Tbe Auoclated Presa • Mote uniop coal minen re· turned to work today aa many or the 10,000 mine con1tructlon ..-orken removed pickets upon · 1earnin1 or • tentative a1ree· ment on a <.'Ontract for them. But in al least one United Mine Workers union district - No. 23 in western Kentucky - construction workers expanded pickelinl and forced many of the area's~ mines to close, said Joe Holland, datrict executive board member. Holland said that about three· fourths of the district's J0,000 un· From rage Al HOPEFUIS PROFILED. • • but I'm willing to learn. I'll face the issues rather than continue them." How will you vote on the ,f arvls-Gann lnJUaUve and what :Wowld you do u a couacll ember lf It passes! .. My attitude toward it is changing and I'm beginning to be opposed to it. The problem is that the initiative process ls not a eood form of 1overnment and we shouldn't have to resort to it. I'll probably vote 'no.' "Whether it passes or not, I will advocate zero·based budget· ing where the city wlll start with nothing and jusWy everything paid for. Obviously, we will have to give top priority to services involving the health, safety and welfare of residents." As a council member, bow would you vote If another build· ing moratorium were proposed? "I am opposed to a building moratorium because it would ease the necessity of solving the problems. I have no objection to reduction or density because I want to maintain Newport Beach as a singte-ramlly res· idential town supplemented by the other things we have. I don't think Newport Center is a blight. but I don't want 14 more of them, either." Enlya Hart, 435 Redlands Ave , 1s 47, has lived in Newport Rea ch for 25 years, attended Orange Coast College and UC Irvine. She helps her family operate Hart's Sporting Goods in Costa Mesa, served four years on the Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Com· mission, has been co-chairman •of the Newport·Mesa Unified School District Citizen Advisory Committee since her appoint- ment in February, 1977 and is a I member of. the Board of Dlrec· tors of the Newport Heights Community Homeowners As- sociation. Why are YoU qaaUfied for the Newport Beach City Coancll! .. I have always had a part in com- munity in- volveme nt over many years. The members of the home- owners association f e 1 t t h e y HUT needed good represenlflUon on the councll and requested that I rurr. I know so many people throughout the city - homeowners -and. when they talk, I do listen ... How will you •ote oa the Jarvis-Gana lnJtlatbe and what woald you do a• a coaacil member lf It paau? "I believe I will vote for it, but I don't like what it will do to schools. • "If It passes. I would elimili no more jobs than absol y necea1ary and would explo sharing some services such as helicopters and paramedics with other cities. I would probably continue to sup- port the PB and R programs because they are financially self -supporting. A• a coancU member, bow would you vote If another ltulldlnl moratorlam were pro. poted? ••A moratorium In Itself solves nothln1. I support Don Mcll\l'liS' plan to work wlth developers ' and try to solve our problems. "However, I do believe that I could vote for a moratorium un· DAll.Y PILOT der different circumstances. It's JUSt that, at this time, 1 would prefer not to." Frank Ivens, 1215 Sussex Lane, is 48, has lived In Newport Beach for eight years, holds a bachelor's degree in psychology from the Uruvers1ty of Texas, served with the U.S. Air Force, retiring in 1969 with the rank of major. He served as assistant to the city manager and personnel director for the City of Newport Beach from 1970 until October, 1977. Why are you qualified for the Newport Beach City Council? "There are three basic reason s: . . . '\.,. First, I have experience in managing the city. I think that, if you know how the city operates, you have an G. ~-. ~ .. . a d v a n tag e 1v ... s over the other candidates . Second, I have no conflicts of in· t.erest, so my ability to vote will not be impaired. And third, I have the ability to pursue this job on a full·time basis." How will yoa vote on the Jarvls·Gan.n lnltlative and what would yoa do as a council member ii it passes? "Personally. I will probably vote for it. ··I see several things the city could do, which may result in a lessening of city services while saving money. For rnstance, there are several kinds of main- tenance services performed by the city that might be contracted out to private businesses. We also might consolidate certain departmental functions to save overlap. ··Something I wouldn't do -I wouldn't lay off police or fire employees because those de· partments are the highest priori- ty services in this town." As a council member, bow would yoa vote if another baUd- ing moratorium were proposed? U one were proposed because we were being bullt oul and there was no other way to stop it, I'd be for it. If, on the other hand, there isn't that problem, 1f there is balance in the growth and no adverse effects. then I wouldn't see a·need for one. The answer lies between the extremes of bui Id out and no growth." rl F,.._PageAI COAST ••• that would lead to federal ac· quislUon of part of the land. However, Rep. Robe rt Badham, R·Newport Beach, who represents the area, said today he isn't considering such legisla- tion because "I feel very strong- ly about spending federal money that we don't have." But he said It Is his un- derstanding that the Irvine Com- pany is working with the U.S. Department of the In tenor, the state and eroups such as the Laguna Greenbelt to establish boundaries of areas on which negotiations mi&ht take place in the future. Many ot Monday's speakers are residents ol El Morro Beach Mobtlehome Park, located on land leased from the Irvine Company and proposed for purchue by the atate for recrea- Uonal use. One speaker, Barbara Gius Bowen, said she fean heavy recreational use would damage the marine environment and al.lo the wildlife, includin1 rac- coou1. porcupines and akunks that she aald are allowed by res· tdenta to wander unharmed thtouo the tratler park. .. Ula appallll\6, lt'• abaolutely •PP•lllna that you could con. alder cpmlna throu1h an en- vil'Onment that beautltul, '' she laid. 1 Other araumenta •taln1t hoa•1 use ol the Irvine Coaat. in- cluded that. it providea a fresh· air comdor to the pOlJuted Sad.· dlebaak-~al&•Y· that marln~ tJdc~ below ate fiapte and abollld bo J>NUrVed, .tnd thae lhe e<>Y• below .,.. dan.1erou1 for ln.eQOrlenced awlmmen. Razing Plan Nixed LOS ANGELES <M> -A fedtr•HOdn ·~• won't &c· ctpt a blaMlt u b)' I.be 1tat. l>tp~ ot portaUoo '° ..... -ftC: Mm .. hi the path of the ~ twy rr .. wa, lo l>oWoq. t ion miners dtd nol report to work t.oda.y. The Wel)t Virginia Coal As· sociallon said about 1,200 lo 1,500 coal miners were blocked by construcUon picketl this morn- ing, compared to •.soo to s,ooo Monday. Of a total of 1,400 mines in West Virginia, the only reports of shutdowns came from two mines in the southern part of the state and three in the north. In Indiana, at least eight m ines and one coal shipping operation were again closed by the pickets. who said they would not abandon their line until the t e ntative agreement was ratified. About 1,800 miners were prevented from going to work ............... Most of w es t e rn P e nn - sylvania's mines were operat-· mg normally today, but several hundred miners were idled at a Bethlehem Steel Corp. mine in Cambria County by construction workers who picketed the mJd· night shift. Three Helvetia Coal Company mines that had been closed Mon- day by pickets reopened today in Pennsylvania's Indiana County. The same report came from two Barnes and Tucker Coal Com- pany mines in Cambria County, where about 1,300 miners were able to resume work for the first time today. LITTERLESS CREW -These happy folks are members of the cast and production crew of Newport Beach's anti·litter movie. . They are (back row, from left) Jeff Massnick, Christopher Upham, Jeff and Cindy Houston and Peggy Hlllis. In front · <from left> are Steve Malone, Robbie and Jane Hillis. Author Beeomes a Star • litwrless Virtues Shown In Newport Movie Large numbers of miners went back to work Monday after a contract was signed Saturday ending a llO·day walkout by 160,000 miners. Spot checks in· dicated even more were report· ing for early shifts today. By JO-'NNE REYNOLDS Of Vie O.ily ~I ... StMt Larry and Laura Litterless started out as figments of Cindy Houston's imagination. They ended up as the main characters in a short movie designed to awaken Newport Beach school children to the evils of litter. Man Ar d Mrs. Houston, a Balboa Island reste resident, was less than confident about her brainchildren when In Newport Knife Threat An Anaheim man remained jailed today after a Newport Beach liquor store clerk saw his switchblade and raised him a club. Newport Beach police arrest. ed Stephen Raymond Johnson, • 20, near the Arches Liquor St.ore early Sunday morning on suspi- cion of assault with a deadly weapon. According to investigators. Johnson ente~ the store and demanded that the clerk cash a check. When the clerk refused, Johnson allegedly became belligerent, scattering items from the counter onto the floor. When the clerk ordered hlrn out of the store, Johnson alleged- ly pulled a switchblade knife, threatening the clerk. But police said the clerk pulled a club out from under the counter and chased Johnson from the store while a patron called police. Youths Show SpriiigArt filmmakers pressed her, clad in her red flannel nightgown, into a supporting role in the film. That was two months ago. Now, Mrs. Houston and other members of Newport Beach's Litter Control Citizens Advisory Committee are anxiously await· ing the completion of their film. Last June they managed lo wangle $.1,000 for the film out of a reluctant city counctl. Since then, the committee has been writing and producing the film. They hired local filmmaker Michael Fowlkes and appointed committee member John Shea as project chairman. After that. it waa a lot or bra1nstorming and negotiating to come up with the story of Larry and Laura Litterless and their family and friends. Mrs. Houston; who wa~· pressed into the role was going to be the off.screen mother of ,the star, since her lO·year-0ld" son J eff was selected to play the part of Larry. part of Larry. "It just got very involving:• s he commented noting that she and other committee members, production crew ·members and cast members all had a band in some of the writine and shooting of the story. .. After that first day, I thought to myself 'I'm nol going to be able lo stand this'," she lau&hed. "But once we got going it was really run." Pos ters desi"1!ed by students The shooting was done on from the Newport·Mesa Unified eweekends over a two.month School District will be oo display period. The cast members dls· Saturday at Westcliff Plaza in covered what a tedious, un· NewportBeach. glamorous business making Winners of a contest on the movies can be. theme "Spring" will be an-Jeff, a fourth grader at Corona nounced during the exhibit. del Mar Elementary School. More than 300 students entered. said be usually didn't mind the We stclift Plaza is located at repetitiveness of the process, the comer of Irvine Avenue and although he grimaced while re· 17th Street. calling one 3().second sequence • that took an entire weekend to shoot. Fowlkes, who bas 1Dade educational as well as theatrical films, said working with the kids in the ca.st turned out to be a bonus because .. tbe energy stayed up. Everyone really got into what we were t.ryin& to do." That wasn't the case when Fowlkes was initially hired, he recalled. "They originally want- ed to make an animated movie. You know, the 'Larry Litterless says don't litter' kind of thing.'' he said. But the idea was rejected in favor of using a live action s tory. Mrs. Houston and Fowlkes say they think the film will get the point across because it features things a youthful audience can identify with. There are akateboarding and sailing aequences and a 1tranded sea lion. At one point, Larry steps into a pile of dog droppi.Dp oo tbe beach. Mra. Hottstoo said the younger school audiences will be given game books also prepared by the committee to reinforce the message. The film won't get into the schools until tbls fall, meanwhile, the committee is planning the movie's premiere. $150,000.Disa,ster J ' ' Relief Asked by CM Newport Beach city coun- cilmen told city officials Monday to move ahead with an applica- tion for nearly $150,000 in federal disaster relief to repair storm damage to the city. City Manager Robert Wynn told councilmen the city ls eligi· ble to recover the costa of re· pairing storm damage to city- F,.._PageAI CHARGES. • Cemetery. A memorial sei-vice tor Miss Quinn will be held at 10 a.m. Thursday at Pacific View Chapel in Newport Beach. She is survived by her father. Richard J. Quinn, and her mother, Mrs. Harry Levy. Miss Quinn was a student at Orange Coast College. Mr. Ouellette graduated from Costa Mesa High School in 1976 and was employed as a cabinet maker. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs . Thomas G. Ouellette; sisters, Lisa, Carol and Susan; brother, Michael, all o f Costa Mesa. and his grandmother, Mrs. George Ouel letteor Wisconsin. The Ouellette family has sug- gested memorial donations be made to Share Our Selves <SOS), 1019 El Camino Drive, Costa Mesa. F,.._PageAJ ROAD ••• Newport Boulevard and Sad· dleback College to the south and tying between San Diego Freeway and the ocean even· tually is to contain 500.000 peo- ple. He said the area currenUy houses about 250,000. In earlier SACC board sessions, directors representing Lei1ure World said tbe reU, e- ment community ls concerned about smog. Others indicated that La8'Jlla Nieuel homeowners are con-. remed with traffic that will be dumped ln their area by the freeway tn aervinl beach·bound motorilts. Robert Bllbey, eountJ air quaUty planner, told Monday's tathertng e.a11ed by SACC presi· dent Jame.a Bone to allow a torwn for lotal C(>mplainta1 that frHway1 1enerate leH smog t.hH aurface street.I and their atop·and·Co traffic. owned property because Presi· dent Carter declared Oran~ County a disas ter are,.-in February. Wynn said the city staff pre· pared a "shopping list" of proj- ects to include in the applica- tion which totaJled $486,000. However, he said a team ot surveyors Crom the Federal Dis- aster Assistance Administration visited the city March 17 and in· dicated they would only allow $147 ,000 of that amount. The items for which the city will be reimbursed include re-pairs to parks, buildings, roads and road rights-Of·way. lie said more than $250,000 in slope damage which resulted in slides oo Back Bay Drive were ruled ineli&:lble as were repairs to the slopes at Inspiration Point · and Little Corona Beach. F,....PageAJ WATER ••• sewer and water service to cur'* renUy unoccupied land as plans for its development are ap. proved. They would also pay the district's share or a major pipeline from Yorba Linda. Also part of the election would be to approve 10 new improve- ment districts within the IRWD. Under stale law, residents of each improvement district vote only on those bonds that directly affect them. . In undeveloped areas, only landowners vote. Mayor Va.rdoulls repeated the position oC the City Council that the IRWD board is unconstitu- tional because only two of its seven members are elected by popular vote. The other fi ve members are appointed by landowners. A 1tate attorney genera rs opin- ion has been requested by the city on the matter. IRWI> direc- tors maintain that under state law a water board need not be elected until its dlslrict ls at. least 50 percent urbanlJed. The April 1T meetlnt will begin at 6 p.m. at IRWD head· quarters. F,....P.,,.AJ CARTER ••• at J1a1t three overseas trips he plan• this year. shows the Urut· ed States J1 aware of the 1m- portanee of the developlnf na· lions in a cban Ing world. Th• pnstd nt•1 bluo and allver Afr P'ortt Ono Jet touched down. ln a •tiff wind at Shnoo Bolivar lcternaUonal Airport, ne11lled .,.l,, ... tht Cartbbea.a s.a and thO Avila Mountains. 1 I VOL 71, NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1978 TEN CENTS ·11JinoisCity Has Sixth. Day of Darkness SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) - Drivers relied on courtesy in· stead of traffic sienals and many residents left darkened homes to eat at restaurants to- day as nearly half of Illinois' capital clty entered its sixth day with no electric power. Sunny, 60-degree weather had removed most visible traces of the Easter weekend Ice storm that split trees and snapped power cables. Officials say the Journey's End icy blast •t ils peak knocked out power to about 700,000 persona in 24 Central,Jlllnoil counties. State disaster agency officials estimated lhe storm caused at least $3.5 million ln damages, and power company oCCicinls predicted it could be week's end before a majority of the 100,000 customers still without electfici- t y get back their lig!Ns, refrigerators and heat. For many, the prolonged Ken Phillips of !\Jclbourn1'. Australia, holds his long-lost friend Silky after the rat returned home from a 1,250-mile trip. The kitty strayed away when Phillips was on vaca- tion and took nine months to walk back home. Badham Claims U.S. Spending 'Threat' The runaway spending al the federal level is more of a danger to the United States than the threat or war, Rep Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, said today. "I'm not as worried about the threat or nuclear war as I am the out·or-hand spending," Badham told a group or Orange ' Coast school superintendents in Newport Beach. "There is an attitude of care- less disregard about the money we 're spending," he said about Congress. The meeting, which involved about a dozen Orange Coast -Sc hool superintendents and representatives of community colleges. was held at the Newport-Mesa Uniried School l>istrict headquarter~ to bring educators up to date on federal issues affecting them Among the federal spending Hitchhiking Girl Beate n A 17-year-old girl was pistol whipped Monday after she ac- cepted a ride at Del Obispo Street and Coast Highway in Dana Point. Orange County Sheriff's of- ficers said a man described as 30 to 35 years old puJJed a pistol on the girt and began whipping her with the weaPQO. The suspect escaped after re- leasing the girl al Stonehlll Drive and Del ObisPo Street after driVinr only a short dis- tance. Deputies said the youni woman was treated and re· h~ued from San Clemente General Hospital. programs discussed was one described by Newporl·Mesa Superintendent John Nicoll as "an alternate school system." He said that. under the Com- p re hens l ve Education and Training Act <CETA), a building has been rented in Costa Mesa to hold classes for people 16-21, who are paid $2.65 an hour for attending. "It actually is a competillve school system." said Dr. Nicoll. He said the CETA personnel are asking the district to grant diplomas to their graduates. lie said he also is concerned that a proposed tuition tax credit might encourage families to use their extra money to send their children to private schools. Other superintendents at the meeting said they would support a tax credit, as opposed to a grant and loan program, but primarily for higher educallon tuition Also raised at the meeting was the issue of whether or not teachers and other state and federal employees will eventual ly be covered by Social Secunty, which would mean school dis- tricts would have to pay the (See BADkAM, Page A1) ' period without television, hair· dryers and countless itema was more inconvenient then crippling. "When I got up this morning, I thought sure the electricity would be on," said Rita Taft. whose husband, Donald, owns 12 smorgasbord restaurants. But power remained out al her white-pillared home. "We're just taking it in stride." her husband said. He added that his family, which lost its \)OWer Friday, spent one night visiting neighbors. "I don't think we've done that in years," he added. Taft said his restaurants re- opened d~g the day, and his family wouJ(,l dine at one of them for the duration of the blackout. "A lot of people say it's a dis· aster, but I don't think it's really that bad," said Taft. His wife said nights are cold, with house temperatures hover· ing near 50. "But we bundle up under a lot of blankels," she said. Jeffrey, 15, the only Tart child still at home, said he missed the television and stereo more than anythin& else. The Anthony Nestler family, who live in a small, whlle·frame house, had power restored Mon· day evening after three cold, Carter Tours Venezuela President's First Stop CARACAS, Venezuela <AP> - Pres ident Carter arrived in Venewcla today on his first state visit lo a Latin American country. He said his journey shows the United States knows the importance of the developing nations in a changing world. Carter's trip to Latin America and Africa is the first or at least three overseas Journeys he plaRs this year. The president's blue and silver Air Force One jet touched down in a stiff wind at Simon Bolivar International Airport, nestled between the Caribbean Sea and the A vlla Mountains. A red, white and blue banner Higher Density In Viejo? By WILLIAM HODGE Of, .. Dall, ~ ... Slaff Changing bomebuyer market trends and potential new county zoning policies could require higher housing densities in the remaining developable acres ·or Mission Viejo. That's a possibility outlined Monday by MlBsion VieJO Com· pany's Advance Planning Manager David Celestin before Municipal Advisory Council members. "We 're lookmg at a changing market," Celestin told MAC members during a study session of the company's proposed Planned Community Develop- ment Plan amendment. "We know very few people can afford these (less dense> kinds of•hous- ing " The Mission Viejo planner also cited possible county zoning changes to encourage develop- m ent of so-called "affordable" housing. Such housing usually consists of attached dwellings like con- dom ani um s because south Orange County land values are skyrocketing. And that mea11s affordable housing areas are more dense than the detached single family dwelling areas. And those potentially higher density areas alarm MAC member Gary Stoney, who said the company can increase densities in the community's re- maining 8.270 undeveloped res- iden taal acres without seek- ing MAC approval. (See VIEJO, Page A2) proclaimed "Bienvenidos Presidente Carter y Sra" - welcome President Carter and wife. Several hundred members of a navy honor guard dressed in whale stood at attention in 85· degree heal Other military gua rds carried submachine guns No civilians were in sight. On has. first day in Venezuela, the president arranged to place a wrc>ath at the tomb of national hero Simon Bolivar, in the nave orthe National Pantheon, a cen- tury-old Spanish renaissance- style church dedicated to the Ho- ly Trinity. Later, he and President Carlos Andres Perez set aside more than two hours for talks about U .S.-Venezuelan relalions. Topics included energy and economic cooperation. human rights, curbing the spread of nuclear weapons. and restraints on arms trade. International topics on the Carter-Perez agenda included the 1 m pact or oat prices on the world economy and politics in Africa. Venezuela provides much of the U.S. oil supply. Carter will v1s1t Africa before returning lo Washington next week. In sharp contrast to a 1958 vis· <See CARTER, Page AZ) At Veniee Beach Visitor Killed; 2 Women Raped LOS ANGELES <AP> -A 31-year-oia Canadian tourist was shot to death and his flancee and her friend wec-e bea~D and raped early today aloqg the stretch of beach near Venice, police said. Harry Denh oed, 31, of Willowdale, Ontario, was shot sever al times with a small- cali ber pistol as he and t he woman apparently fled two ban- dits. said Venice Division in- vestigator Don Ravens. The 29-year-old fiancee. also from Canada. and a 32-year-old Westchester woman were listed in fair condition at Marana Mercy Hospital. "The victim and his fiancee were going to leave for Canada tomorrow and wan\ed to take a last look at. the beach," Ravens said. "ll appeared to be a rob- bery. There•s some Indication the victims started to run and he was shot when they started to flee." Descriptions of the two men were sketchy, Ravens said, add· ing the men apparently were in their 20s and · wearing dark clothing. They confronted the trio as they strolled along a beachfronl bike path at Dockweiler Beach around 2:40 a.m., he said. HB Woman Held On Murder Attempt A 37-year-old Huntington Beach woman was charged with attempted murder after she al - legedly shot her husband in both knees during a spat in a bar Monday night, police reported today. Arrested was Nancy Evans of 5682 Mangrum Drive. She was booked into Huntington Beach Jail and remained there today in lieu of $25,000 bail. Her husband, Jerry Evans, 38, was hsted in stable condition lo· day at Huntington Intercom- munity Hospital with .22 caliber bullet wounds an both knees, of· ficials said. PohCP Sgt. Luis Ochoa said the incident took place in Hi Roy 's Bar, 5050 Heil Ave., about 9:15pm. Ochoa said the dispute ap- parently began at the couple's home. The husband went to the bar. The wife followed shortly afterward. When the husband greeted his wife and approached her, Ochoa said, the woman reportedly pulled a handgun and fired twice. Evans staggered from the bar into the parking lot outside where he collapsed. He was later rushed to the hospital. Mrs. Evans was arrested by police inside the bar, Ochoa said. l.nkerGame Trip Planned Mission Viejo Recreation Cen· ters are sPOnsoring a bua trip to the Lakcrs-Portland buketball aame Friday. Tickets, priced at $8.50 tor center members and SU.50 for guests, may be purcbasect at Montanoso Recreation CentAtr. The cost covers game aeats, transportation and bevera1es while en route lo the Los Angeles Forum. The bus is scheduled to loave the Montanoso c4'nler at 8 p.D\. and returu al mldnitht. Cblldren aaed 8 and Urtder must be accompanied by an •dlllt. dark nights. "We were prepared to 10 three or four more days," Nestler said. "I guess we were one of the lucky ones." Mary Nestler, in her 50s, said family members rediscovered each other through games and song, instead of merely watcbln, television. "I haven't done that since I was a child. You don't com· m unlcate with TV." Bomb Scare Cwses405 LOS ANGELES (AP) - All southbound lanes or the San Diego Freeway at Mulholland Drive were closed brieny today after the California Highway Patrol received what turned out to be a false re· port or a bomb in a vart, the CHP said. The Los Angeles Police Department's bomb 6quad exam aned the vehicle, which was parked on the freeway shoulder just south of MuJholland Drive, police U . Dan Cooke said . The incident closed the section of the freeway dur- ing the morning rush hour, causing tra ffic to be backed up for miles, Dan Cooke said. Corridor Concerns Reflected By J ERRY CLAUSEN CM ,,,. Dallt ,.IMC Sutt Despite sniping at executive board sessions, Saddleback Area Coordinating Council (SACC> directors pulled their verbal punches Monday night before county planners m discussing the proposed San Joaquin Transportation Corridor. The 11 directors and 14 other area residents appeared re- signed to the eventual reality of a "freeway" cuttmg through the undeveloped hills between the ocean and San Diego Freeway to link Newport Beach with the Laguna Niguel-Mission VieJO area. Director Irene Puhlm may have best summed up unstated concerns about fcCJrs or a growth- inducing freeway late in the session. "l don't want to lave in another Los Angeles," she said. "That's why I hve in Leisure World. I'll be pocketed between the corridor and the San Diego Freeway. You move from one place to another to get away from it. How bad will it be?" John Simon of Laguna Hills, terming himself outspoken and speaking only as a resident, said "That road will be another Newport Freeway. It's just open- ing up the area to development." menl." But Robert Rende, county En· vironmental Mana~ement Agen· cy <EMA> representative, insist· ed the corridor is not to induce growth but to serve the estimat· ed eventual population of 917,000 in the southeast county area, a figure determined by the county <See ROAD, Page AZ) Coast Weathe r Late rught and morning low clouds nnd local fog. Otherwlse fair through Wednesday with variable high clouds. Lows tonight 52 lo 58. Highs Wednesday 63 to near 70. INSIDE TODAY K~tuclqf own.s tM NCAA basketball tUL« for 1971, bul DtAke hat ttri>N notic• it'a a lik~lJI Javbrat~ for 1979. Stonff, pho(~. Poo-Bl. l•dex A.2 DAILY PtlOT Saddleback Area Coordmatin' Councll CSACC> directors were a1kcd Mnnday night to consider holding closed "executive sessions" on some isi;uci.. Director Irene f>uhlmann, an elected director from Leisure World, pked the board to con- sider the move. "I think we sometimes nlr too much of our dirty Jmen," s he \old fellow ducctor~. Miss Puhlmann uld she also believes that board membera .. hold back" In open dlscuaalooa and would find "executive sessions very helpful" In "talk· ing freely" and "presenUng a much more united board." SACC is an umbrella-type or· eanlution composed ot Sad dleback Valley homeowne.n u- aoc:latlona and "civic-minded" indivlduals and organizations. SACC'• plannin1 ,.view board recom,mendl direction on area proJ•et1 and propoaah 1cheduled for action by cowity government. The privately incorporated or- ganiution was for med in 1968 and, according to a founding board member, held closed ex- ecutive board sessions until about three years a10 . Robert Price, a former presi- dent and board member until early wn , aald executive board session• were opened to the public "about three yean ago." "* * * * * * FroaPageAI ROAD PLANS PONDERED .. board of supervisors and reflect- ed in the county general plan. Rende said the area between Newport Boulevard and Sad- dlcback College to the south and l ying between San Diego Freeway and the ocean even· tually is to contain 500,000 peo· pie. He said the area currently houses about 250,000. In earlier SACC board sessions, directors representing Leisure World said the retire- ment community is concerned about smog. Others indicated that La1una Niguel homeowners are con· c·erned with lralhc that will be dumped in their area by the freeway in serving beach-bound motorists. Robert Bilbey, county air quality planner. told Monday's gathering called by SACC presi- dent James Bone to allow a forum for local complaints, that freeways generate less smog than surface streets and their stop-and-go traffic. SACC dlreclors and the representatives of various homeowners groups from the Saddleback Valley were told Monday that some possible cor- ridor route alternatives have been all but dropped from the overall plan. One route that cuts near the intersection of Laguna Canyon Road and El Toro Road has been abandoned in favor of a route closer to Leisure World. Also to be dropped is a pro· posed routing south of the federal government's Ziggurat at La Paz Road in La~una Niguel. The route probably will be placed north of that facility, planners said. Also ruled out Monday were proposals to link the San Joa- quin Corridor with San Diego Freeway as far north as Oso Parkway. The final route prob· ably will meet the freeway nearer Saddleback ColJege. planners in- dicated. . . Fro.Page Al VIEJO HOUSING •.. 1Jas1cally, the proposed Mis- :.io n Viejo community plan change divides the remaining residential acreage inlo four density classificatiol)s. Those class1ficallons and the number of proposed units in them are: -8,299 medium/low density units. C2 to 3.S units per acre) -15,835 medium density un· its. (3.S to 6.S units per acre) -3,969 high density units. (6.S lo 18 units per acre> -2,280 heavy density units. (18 to 43 units per acre) Those 30,383 units total the number allowable on the re- maining undeveloped residential acreage according to the com- m un 1ty's originally proposed housing limit. But the proposed plan chanae utters the existing planned hous- ing densities for the developable acrcaae. Water Safety Class Slated A water safety instruction class, s ponsored by the American Red Cross and Sad· dleback Valley Unified School District's Recreation Depart- ment, will be held Mondays and Wednesdays from 7 to 10 p.m . beginning April 3 and continulnf through May 10. The course, which wlll meet at the El Toro Hleh School pool, is one or the prerequisite• ror a teaching credential. It Ja open to persons 17 years and older who hold a current advanced lifeuv-ing certificate. Pre-enrollment can be made by calUng the Red Cross at 835·5381. Registration fee ls $5. ORANQ6 COA8T 1• DAILY PILOT ' And MAC member Stoney claims the new planned com- munity text allows the company to s hirt the new densities between the fou r proposed classifications without MAC ap· prov al. "The only limit here is the bot- tom line (30,383 units)," Stoney said. "We're looking for a con· slslent development llke in the past where it's evenly distribut- ed through the area." Stoney is concerned that shln· Ing h o uses between th e classifications and creating higher densities would leave vast open spaces. And that, he says, could cause the open space to be placed on county tax bills to be maintained as parks or greenbeltit, thereby increasing the Mission Viejo tax burden. For example, Stoney reasons, the company could move 200 units from a medium density classification area to a high density area, creating open space where once the 200 units were scheduled to be located. Such a move would create an even higher density area and could possibly leave open space that might have to be main· tained by the county, he says. But Mission Viejo Company's Celestin denied that the pro- posed community plan text change would alJow the com - pany to shift houses between the four proposed density claas1Cica· Uons. "We're tied Into the housing numbers in tboae four (den1lty classification) areas," Celestin insisted followint the meeting. "We can't shirt between those claaslflcatlooa without coming before the MAC for their recom- mendation before golnf to the countl for approval," he said. Ce estln acknowledged , however, that the company could s hift denslliea between planning areas included under one or the four density cla111lftcatiOftS. Each den1lty cla1111flcatlon cateaory b made up of planning areaa including apeclflc acreaae and housing numben. · For example, the company could shift 200 units from one planning area to another without MAC approval if both areas were Included under a medium denalt.J claalftcaUon. But Stoney lmllted tollowinc the 1tudy aeulon that the planned eoir.munlty plen amendment u wriUen doea not tpectncal)1 requtn MAC lnput oa 1tilft1 between dtDIJ\y ctn1lfteat.Son1. "U '• nQt •Tttteo down antwhf,. In tbe ~an that MAC apph>val 1' required to move hou1u between denelt/ (clH1lftcation) aNas," he 111 . .. The countJ bae no way or knowlnt theJ nied our input tor thia kind ot chine• lf Jt isn't written down." MAC membfn wlll aaatn di•· euN the ~eel amendment Qnt more time prtot to Jta 1ub- ml11lon to ciowrt1 planners for ap- l'OHI. Tbt d11cu11lon will occur IODleUme tn Ma). • ' to Policy The sessions were opened, ho &atd, to improve cotnmunlc•· lions, eapeclally through press coverage. Price added. however, lh•t tbt board should hold closed •~11lons, especially on ''internal" i11ues. Cu rrent SACC prealdent J airi es Bone ordered Min Puhlmann and director Mary Cornelius, also of Leisure World, to aet up a meeting with former SACC d.lrectons to diacuaa the or- ganlutlon's purpoaea, previous closed meetings and reaao~ for op~nlng them up. Bone suneated \bat closed sessions would be tn order because SACC is not a govern- ment agency and, therefore, not subject to state Jaws governing open public aessiona. Bone also claimed SACC Is not funded by the county. However, he later adrrulled that the coun- t y furnishes SACC with a federally paid CETA CCom- preh ensi ve Employment Training Act> employe and space at the South County office facility on Moulton Parkway. Board member Harold Beck told directors that generally. governmental bodies may hold closed exeeuUve seulona to con- sider personnel, union or legal issues. Bone said after Monday's session that closed sessions -If authorized -probably would be used lo discuss confllcts between homeowner associations or In- dividuals. F,....PageAJ CARTER •.. it by then-Vice President Nixon and a 1961 visit by President Kennedy, no anti-American dem- onstrations were expected at Cclrter's arrival, and Venezuelan security measures were comparatively discreet. Nixon was spit upon and his c ... r nearly overturned when he rode lnlo Caracas. The army mobllJzed 40,000 troops for Ken- nedy's visit. . Carter 1~ popular here because or the human rights crusade he has championed during his cam- paign and m the White House. lroine Mayor Challenges Plan for Vote By JACKIE HYMAN OI Hit o.lly ...... IUff Irvine Mayor Bill Vardoulis told directors of the trvine Ranch Water Dialrict Monday that he doesn't think they have a right to call an election for a $1.6 billion bond Issue because he doesn't believe the board's com- position ii conatilutional. And even iC It were, Vardoulls said he believes the water board has been unduly hasty in its con- siderations and that il hasn't taken into consideration all potential errecta or such a bond issue. IRWD board Chairman L.E. Eberling said he disagrees with Va rdoulis o n a 11 counts. However, be Rlfeed to continue the public hearing on the matter until Apnl 17 to permit further discussion. The verbal sparrinf remained friendly dunnt the exchanee at a publlc hearing Monday at IR WD headquarters In Irvine Town Center. The subject was a two-part IRWD proposal. One part is to call a special election - prlmarlly lnvolvint major land· owners, chiefly the Irvine Com- pany -to approve a $1.6 bllllon bond Issue. The bonds, which would be Is- sued as needed between now and the year 2010. would pay for 11wer and water service to cur- rently unoccupJtd land aa plans for lt1 development are ap· proved. They would also pay the dl1trlct'1 1bare of • ni.Jor plpellne ftom Yorba Linda. Allo part ot the e1ect1on '">llld be to approve 10 new Improve. ment dlltrtcta within the lllWD. Under 1ute law, re1idenu ot each Improvement dJatrlct vot. only on thole bondl lhat dJr"e(t.ly affect them. In undeveloped areu, oAJ,y landownera vote. lifeaavinl Clase Offered at Sehool Th• Saddltbae'k VaU•1 Unllltd &Cbool Dlatrlct recrea· tl~n department .. oft nu an ad•anced llft1avln1; ~1a .. Tuei.da)'I and Tbundaya from 6 :30 to 9:30 p.m. be1lnn.lns April • throuC}l Hay lL The clau at Jtl T0t0 Hl&h School la open to ~rtona 11 1ear1 o! •a• or older. Pre- cnrollm nt can be mad bJ call-loe S.12:W, ext. m. ' • Young Love Princess Caroline of Monaco dances with fiance Phillippe Junot al the Bal de la Rose ball in Monaco. Junol and Caroline plan to be married in June. . Hughes Eyed Cash For Patty Ransom? SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Papers purportedly from the files or the late billionaire Ho v. ard Hughes show that Hughes considered paying part of the ransom demanded by ?at- ty Hearst's kidnappers, the University of Utah student newspaper reports. They also make reference to a "handwritten will," lending credence to the "Mormon will'' being contensted m a Nevada court, the newsppaper, The Dai - ly Utah Chronicle, said Monday. The student publication, in a copyrighted article, said il ob· ta1ncd c.·opies of papers original· ly seized by Mexican authorities after Hughes ~eath April 5. 1976 on a private plane en route from Acapulco to Houston, Texas. It said the papers went through a Canadian House of Commons member, to a Hughes legacy enthusiast In the northwestern United States, to an associate in Salt Lake City. None of these persona was iden- ti fled. The newspaper quoted one memo it said was dictated by Hughes as saying: .. HRH wants to know more about the Hearst's problem and has no objecllon.s to being of some help so long u tt can be done without any publici- ty. Can Hearst and his family be guaranteed to hold ailenct?'' The memo was written Feb. 18 or 19, 1974 , the newspaper said. Miss Hearst was kidnapped by Symbionese Liberation Army members Feb. 3. They asked $6 million ransom he contributed toward feeding the poor. ln subsequent memos from Hughes advisers 1''rank "Bill" Gay and Chester Davis, Hughes was advised not to get involved, the Chronicle said. One document quoted by the Ch ronicle calJed the SLA "a 'ery dangerous, radical group and we are afraid that they might retaliate by trying to kid· nap one of our executives or even you .•. " Mayor, Councilwoman Tiro Facing Recall Move in Clemente By ANNE COOPER Of U.. O.lly l'tl_. Slaff A committee promoting the recall of San Clemente Mayor William Walker and Coun· c1lwoman Donna Wilkinson reg- Jstered with the City Clerk's of- fice Monday. Joseph Barton, chairman of lhe recall commiltf'e sponsored by the Sa n Cleme nt e Homeowners Association, said his group will present formal charges against Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson at the April 19 City Council meetini. Meanwtulc, another new San Clemente organization, the . Viejo Teens Plan April Fool Show Choc-ellu, the teen-ager's guild of the Chlldrens Hospital of Orange County, Is to present an April fools and fashion show at 11: 11 a. m. April 1 at the Mon· tanoso Recreation Center on ·uontanoeo Drive, Mlaslon Viejo. Admi11ion Is $3, which in· eludes luncheon. For reaerva· tiona call 837-3927 or 837-568'. Citizens Involved for Voter In· formation Committee < CIVlC> held its first general mem- bership meeting Monday night to attack lhe recall effort. "We have heard recurring ac· cusalions as well as slanders and libelous inferences and In- nuendoes," Boyd Ames. a CIVIC di rector, told an audience of about 70. "Accusations have" run from theft to bribery." said Ames. "none of which has Men farth£'r from the true and exemplary ac- tivities or our council member<>, planning commissioners and Ct· ty staff." "Our city policies do not need defending," said Mayor Walter, CIVIC's featured speaker Mon- day. Walker said the "innuendoes .. of f reshman Councilman Howard Mushett have put a heavy burden on himself and hls wife. Mushett, a leader or the recall erfort before he was elected lo the City Cowicil March 7, has al- leged that Walker and Mrs. WUkin.aon misrepresented ex- penses on city.related business trlp1. lVaddill ' By TOii BARl,,EY Of .. o.llf "' ... Matt Or. William Baxter Waddill'• attorneys were wtnd.ln1 up the defen.ae today for the Huntinaton Harbour phyaiclan who 11 ac- cuaed of murder after ao at. tempted abortion. Both or his lawyers have in- dicated they plan to call no more witnesses after Dr. Aklo Metamura ftni1he1 tetti!Yln1. Dr. Metamura, head of the patholO&Y atalf at We1tmlnster Community Hospital where the abortion wH perf<lJ'1ned, baa testified that there were errors In th• coroner'• flndln1s. He told tht jury that the verdict of death by m aoual 1tran1uJalion wu not Ju.ttified. Pro1ttutor Robert Chatterton uid be intends to call rebuttal witnesses alter Metamura con· eludes bis testimonv. CbaUerton predicted rebuttal wlll take up at leaal three daya. He bopea to have 111\001 those wlt.nessea at least ooo of three bablea which he claims have survived saline abortJom of tbe type adminlatered by Dr. Wad- dill lo a patient at Weatminatv Community Holpital. WaddlU, 42, has arcued throughout the trial that the baby the proeecutlon alleps be strangled In the nursery on March 2, 1m, after attempung an abortion never knew file in the full sense of the term. But a doctor and nurses who were present In the nur1ery have tesutied that tbe baby girl bad a heartbeat and respiration and moved aeveral Umea while they were tryln1 to aid what they said wu the lntant'a battle for Ure. Or. Ronald Cornelisen, a pediatrician, \e8llfied that Wad· dill complained In the nursery that if I.be child waa allowed to live it would auffer masaive brain damage and trigger lawsuits seeking mllliont of dollars in damages. He told the jury in Judge J a m es K. Turner's courtroom th at Waddill su ggested four other ways in which the baby could be ehminated. Including drowning it in a bucket of water. • Frot11 Page A I t BADHAM ••• employer's share. "We eventually will have to have universal coverage" under social security, Badham saJd. :Tm not sugE:esting that it's go- 111g lo be easy, but it's going to be necessary." He pointed out that gov· ernmental employees who moonlight or whose spouses are covered by social security may end up collecting social security along with their government pension. Badham said he believes that with umversal coverage, th~ social security system could be made secure by the year 2005 "on a program that would not be terrt bly uncomfortable tor anyone." Pros and cons were volced by . superintendents on a proposal to establish a separate cabinet- level Department of Education apart from the Department of Health, Education and WeUare. Those opposed said they believe the federal government shouldn't be involved in the public school system, while others said they would prefer to see professional educators run- nm~ a separate department m W ashmgton. Badham said he leans toward supportini:: the proposal but "l would have serious misgivings if this were to increase the already runaway bureaucracy." Body Recovered AZUSA (AP) -Sheriff's dep- uties have recovered the body of Fernando Madrid, 22, of El Mont e, who drowned In :SO feet of waler \n Crystal Lake, about 25 miles north or this east Los Angeles County community. College Gets CompUters Saddleback Comm unity Collete District truateea aerted to add two computen1 to thelr campus Monday. Ono, which la to be used only tor tn1trucUon, will coat Ju1t one dollar but in conjunction 'With r.. lated equipment ii valued at about $UO.OOO. The National CHb R•cbter eomrut..-WU PW'Chaaod 1bo\.lt elth yean •Co b)' Cra1tr In· du1tri11 of Compton for a~ '200,000. Now. the""" 11 UIJ.nl· another oew computer 10 they've ottued th• older Oil• to the coJlege. N atlonal Cash Rectster'a cen· tral omce has agreed to dooate u 1dd.iUoo1l $1~.000 worth 0( equlpm l to makl the macbio. oper1Uonal. That ftmt also submlU4M9 tbe lowest bld -'86,282 -on a com· puter tor tbo collete's bullneu office. .. , think thls 11 aft awfully 1tran1e thine," uld Tru1tee Norrlaa Btandt1 Mferrinl to &be fact that the oonaUon and bid were both belna con11deNd. Ad~.lnllttaton. however, U· 1uNd ber th• lM> tranaacUons ••~ un.rtlat-9. They Hid the donated equlpm t w11 offered to th• colle10 aeveral moa\hs before • d•..-Pl">CCUbll ~m· miUH l'IKOmmeoded Uin tbe Other mat bt IMlf'dsued. Bob 811 , a colleae instructor who allO bq beeo th• dl1triet'1 computer conauttant, Hid the donatloos itv• the farm• a 1ood lH w.tlteotl'Ucf &re fOOd public relatJona. He aald th• Gilb' IUpulaUoo lJ that Lbe equipment be used oo.1y ' \ • for educational purposes. If the colleJ{e decides to 1et rid or lhe donated equipment, he added. it must be given back rather than sold. Trustees also agreed to purchase, rather than rent or leaae, ft comput<'r for the bust· ness otnce. Although the computer lnlUal- ly will cost the district $86,262, it wUI coat •141,292 over five years. Thf' rental would cost $1'75,185 aod the lease would cost $151,000 1n the aame Ume period. Trustee Larry Taylor oppo1td the purchase. H• said he pre· ferrtd another arran1ement which would al&ow the dtatrict to keef the ment up to date. " don't nk w•'re b\utin' • compultr that •·•'re lolnt to want to UU-,,w away ln tin yu r1," BUIS aaJd . • ) Tl*d!y. March 28. 1978 s DAILY PILOT A.J . . $228 A U28 million wlab Hit of freeway Improvement lncludinc ·on Freew.B~ Work Proposed: mlsaionera learn bow much CalTrana money will be availa- ble for the lon&·ranae county projects. Southern Calltornla regional dfrector and an ex-officio com- m1111on member, said bis office considers the Santa Ana. Costa Mesa interchange among lop priorities ror improvement. ; wlden1oe the San ta An• Freeway t.o eight. laneg through Oraoee County, haa been en doraed by the co unty Transportation Commission. But the commission's ex· ecutlve director, Thomas Jenkins, said today it probably will be November before com- All told, tbe Santa Ana Freeway widenin& would cost. $113.s million inctudine a $3.S.3 million reconatrucUon project. for tbe Santa Ana·C08ta Mesa Freeway int.erch8J1ie. Robert Datel, CalTran1• Dellr "1111 SUH ,..... KEEPING AN EYE OUT FOR SHADY CAMPAIGNING Alfred Driscoll of Leisure World on New County Panel Smear Ht•nter Countian Joins Ref onn Effort By WILLIAM llODG E Of IM 0..11, Pit.I 5. .. 11 Almost two years ago, Leisure World resident Alfred Drascoll tore open a flyer from the local Republican State Assembly can· didate. "Liberal Democrat Cordova Charged in $10 Million Massage Parlor Case." blared the headlines or the Jam es B. Slemons mailer · DriscoU was repulsed "He (Cordova) wa!i one of a number who were being sued by a worker in a massage parlor," Driscoll recalled The smear mailer ~as based on a lawsuit by one or the deren dants in a case in which Cordova was a prosecutor "That n yer was the crassest thing I ever saw," the Laguna Halls resident said ... I "'as Laguna Man Sentenced in Rape Attempt A Laguna Beach man who faced trial on rape and kidnap charges in Orange County Superior Court plead<'d guilty to lesser charges Monday before jury selection could hegan Judge Richard Beacom ac- cepted tne plea 01 guilty to at· • tempted rape filed by David Paul Reumont and sentenced the defendant lo 18 months in state prison. Charges of rape and kidnap were dropped Arresting oUicers said Reu- . moot, 28, or 948 Park Ave. sex· • ually assauJted a 15 year-old garl after inviting her to his rented Balboa lsland apartment to dis- cuss her possible posing ror nude photographs. Reumont also fac<'d charges of soliciting lewd acts from teen. age girls, also riled in connection with alleged invitations to young girls to pose for him in the Balboa apartment he rented for the summer. Officers said that at the time . or the alleged incidents last sum- mer. Reumont was on probation from Los Angeles County Superior Court where he was "coovi.cted on charges o{ selling snarijuana. ~ . Beach Assault . · Brings Jail A 33-year-otd transient is In ·Orange County Jail today facing assault charges followln1 his al- leged altercatlon Monda¥ wltb a Doheny Beach Stale Park raneer. • Oran1e County Sherlfrs of· ficen 111d John Richard White ~no k001r'D lddNil. approachea two y~ wbo ete col· loctlrt• at. tho beacb and ~ked &be •hells out.Of t.belr r•ancb ~ When hllli attempted to queaUoa Wb.U.e, abei'ilf!• omeen ;aallece. bl ctod up a "in• bot· tie &Dd a&teJQpted to 1t.rtke the ao1er. sho<'ked. It was so crude -couldn't believe it " But the 72-year -old lawyer is now in a pos1t1on to d o something aboul last-minute smear campaigns. That's because the retired Los Angeles assistant city attorney is the first appointee to Orange County's new fair political prac tices commission. And he plans to work on mak ing sure misleading pamphlets don 'l s how up on his doorstep again. "That's the kind or thing we re supposed to stop," Driscoll said, referring to the Slemons mailer. "We'U be reviewing campaign literature to determine 1f it con· tains false or misleading state· ments." he continued Driscoll cited provisions in Orange County's new ordinance which allow the commatttt to hold hearings on material they belteve qualifies <1S misleading The political campaign or· dinance also allows the commit lee to publicly denounce false statements in political mailers and to turn over evidence of ii legality to the district attorney for possible prosecution. But the new law, which also limits individual contributions in county campaigns to $1,000 per election, is not without its critics. Supervisor Ralph Clark labeled the fair political ractices com mission a "paper lager." saying the group had little power to enforce elements of the ordinance. "I realize the ordinance may not satisfy everybody,'' Driscoll responded. "But it's my job to make it work. "If there are problems we'll find that out when we get to use it," he continued. ''We'll find out where the bugs are." Driscoll ls equally non- committal about the so-called TIN CUP (Time Is Now, Clean Up Politics) proposal, touted as an a lternative to the county supervisor-sponsored reform or-dinance. • • J looked at it, but I haven't really formed an opinion about it," he said. The TIN CUP proposal, which is circulating in the county as an initiative petition, would place more restrictions on contribu- tions and lobbyist activities. But, regardless of the critics, Driscoll is pleased with his ap- pointment, although be insists h e is not a political animal. Apart from a brief sUnt worlc· ing in Marian Bergeson's Cut.lie 1976 write-in campaign 'for the state assembly, he ha1 con- fined his activities to the Sad- dle back Area Coordlo•tln' Council and a local homeo'Nners associ.Uon. Driscoll bas served Oil both the SACC executive board ahd the en•ironmental renew commit.- tee. And that service WU his fint contaet with county overnment. •it wu amazed that th~ PJan- nlnc COmmisslon (county) and tbe Bo.rd of Supervilon wore IO t.o Iii~ to what we bad to ..., • ,. Drllcoll reOeeted.. .. lo LA County you ml&ht u well for1et it,•• be. muHd. • ·n.,,.•re Just too many peo. ple." He auf geated lt be listed separate y as a top priority when the commissoo ships its final rankings off to the state TranaportaUoo Commis.sioo. Marine Guilty Of Rape An El Toro Marine accused on arrest of raping two El Toro High School girls pleaded guilty Monday to rape charges related to one of the victims. Orange County Superior Court Judge H. Warren Knight sen- tenced David Edward Coffman, 19, to four years in state prison after r ejecting a plea for clemency. Coffman and a 15-year-old boy were arr~1.ed by Sheriff's of· ficers Dec. 2 after being iden- tified by two 15-year-0ld El Toro girls as the pair who kidnapped them al cunpoint in front of the high school and then raped them in a remote location near Mod · Jeska Canyon. Oeputies said the girls were raped and !.exually humiliated by their abductors aod were then forced to leave lbe car without their slacks . • Coffman's mother appeared before Judge Knight Monday in a bad to have the judge impose a lesser sentence thao the state prison term urged by the pros- ecution. Judge Knight reJected the plea for clemency. The other defendant has been round gwlty of rape in juvenile court action. The IS.year-old 1s serving an indefinite term after being committed t o the Cahfornaa Youth Authority Finn Offers $5,000/or lost Ro/Jot SAN DIEGO (APJ -There's a $5,000 reward out for RCV-150, an underwater robot cousin of Star Wars' H2D2. which was lost al sea 17 males west of Point Loma "h<•n a cable linking it to a control ship mysteriously parted The re~ ard offered by Tetra Tech In c o f Pasadena, manufacturer of the bright orange prototype vehicle de- signed for working seafloor in· stallallons in offshore oil fields, spurred interest in the search by area boaters Monday. Nicholas Boratynski, presi· dent of Tetra Tech, said the robot was los.t Thursday everung at a depth of about 2,000 feet. The machine was built by Hydro Products of Sorrento Valley, a Tetra Tech subsidiary. "We thank there as an ex- cellent chance or recovering it but the fog has been hampering our s('arch." Boratynski said. "It as nearly spherical in shap<·. about four reel in diameter and as <'quipped with a flashing li ght. a sonar pinger and a radio transmitter which will send out a signal if it comes to the surface," be said . Enganrt'~ were mystified by the cahlt failure as well as RCV JS<rs failure to bob to the surface Boratynsk1 said al was designed to become slightly buoy ant in the event of mishap. The little robot is designed Lo inspect sea floor oil lines, tighten bolts and cut cables at depths beyond the reach or human divers. Several oil companies have or· dered copies of the robot.. tr it Isn't found, Boratynski said, "The negative impact on our earnings from this loss Is no• expected lo exceed $100,000." Boy Slain By Playmate MERCED <AP) -A 14-year- old Merced-area boy pointed a pistol at three other ybungsters in tum, then •hot one d them to death for refusing t.o fix lunch, the coroner sald. Jeffery Lewis Janata, 12, <1 Merced, was shot one~ with a .357 mapum.revolver at a home .jo Planada south or here, Coroner ~nnetb Riggs, report- ed MoodAly. The H -year-old was booked in· to joTenlle ball at Merced. . Retrial Jary Set LOS ANGELES (AP) -Aller five week.a of 1elect100, seven women and five men have been chosen as Juron lo Le1Ue Van Houten'• retrial lo connecUon wlth lb• notorious Manson "'family" alJl:ylna1. • Comnilissloners plan to place the 18·1tem Ust of prOJecl$ 1n priority rankings In May and are hoping they will be Included lo a new Regional Transportation Plan being developed by the state Transportation Com- mission. Other Orange Coast proj~ts on the comnusslon's top list in· elude the $59.4 million extension Cattle Car or the Newport Freeway to 15th Street lo Cost. Mesa and the $5.9 milhoa replacement of the Up- per Bay Bridget on P&Cl!ic Coast Highway. Tbe lliit also includes widening Pacific Coast Highway lo silt lanes from MacArthur Boulevard lo Bayside Drive and from Dover Drive to NewPort A venue at. a cost ot $1.9 million. Another proJect already. ii\ state plans is the qp mlW widening or the San Die1~ l<'reeway lo eight Janet throujh San Clemente Without provid.in1 couk\lc tion estimate•, commissioners also called for extending the Corona del Mar Freeway to Red Hill Avenue and widening Laguna Canyon Road. & .. WI ....... Richard Pallerson boul{ht a calf at an auc- tion in Ri verside, then realtied he had to get it home somehow. The solution was to sat in the trunk of this car and hold his new acquisition in his lap. They made it home. Results of Gay Bias Vote Try Debated SACRAMENTO CAP) - Backers of an initiative ai:aUlst homosexual teachers say they are "right on target" to place their measure o~ the November ballot, but foes predict fatlure or the petition dnve Neither side's claims can be confirmed unttl May 2, lhe deadline for filing 312,404 verified ~oter sign1ttures . The proposed statute by state Sen. John Bnggs of Fullerton, a candidate for the Republican nom in a lion for governor, was first proposed for the June 6 primary ballot. But Briggs halted that cam- paign and started over Last No venber arter a drafting error was discovered. The proposed law would re- quire a school distract to fire or reruse to h.Jre a teacher who had engaged in a "public homosex ual act" or had "engaged 10 ad vocatrng, soliciting, imposing, encouraging or promoting or private or public homosexual acts directed at or likely lo come lo the attention of school children or other employees " Foes or the measure charge that Briggs 1s exploiting the is· sue for his campaign for go' ernor, and there lsn 't any prob- lem of homosexual teachers that can'l be handled by existing law. "He's a cheap opportunist. If he thought he could get more votes, he''1 be a proponent or gay rights," said San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk, a spokesman for the ~ay com· munlty "I say that because he doesn't have a history in this area until his gubernatorial campaign " But Briggs says he as con- The spring/summer '78 wardrobe employs tots of fabric for a look or looseness and softness. A marked Greek and Egyptian Influence Is easlly re- cognized In the l>Hlowy. soft fabrics end tunic styles. low necklines and bared wrists literally beg for line jewelry accents. Sculptured necklaces with flowing lln .. end geometric ~ bright bangles, thick cuffs, heavy chains end textured br~lats provide glaemlng contrut fM rumpled muttlns and muted •llk;I. The coUectfve look la big this aauon. With th• use of ganaroua amounts or cloth, small Jewelry ptecea get buried -unrasa they.,.. grouped or . atacbd. A oroup of thrM or lour atlcttplna llCCal'ltl the iap.1 , of the new ahap4M... J.cket. cerned "as a citizen and father of three children" that a 1975 statute repealing most state laws against private sexual con duct between consenting adults opened the door for homosexuals an schools. "As a r esult. avowed homosexuals are now teaching young children in the public schools in this state," he says "lfow can we expect our children to receive proper moral guidance if we alkiw them to be put into classrooms with homosexuals for eight hours every day?" Briggs said in an interview Monday that his petition cam· paign "as right on target. We are over half way there. We have mailed to over one million peo pie all O\er Caltfornaa, and there's just tons of mail m re turn " Chimp Rips Tot's Scalp LAS VEGAS I AP J -An infant whose scalp was partially torn orr by a pet champanzee was r<'· ported an stable condition after undergoing restorative surgc•ry, Sunrise Hospital officials said. Delbert Calhoun J r .. 7-week old son of Mr and Mrs. Delbert Calhoun of Las Vegas, received plastic s urgery ove r the weekend to repair and rf'place a portion of his scalp, which was lorn orr Friday The incident may hav<' oc curred when the child's mother panicked and grabbed the child from the animal, officials said The chimp. reaching to retncve the baby, tore h.Js scalp. @ 6EMWISE Mary Barr. Certified Gemologist New Judge In Plotting Trial Nixed LOS ANGELES CAP> -Five people accused of plotting to bomb state Sen John Briggs• Fullerton office have lost their bad to get a new trial Judge Mon-day Superior Court Judge Juhus Leetham denied motions filed by derendants Judith Emily Bissell, 33: Thomas Michael Justesen, 27. Lesue Ann Mullin, 33; Marc Curtis Perry, 29 ; and Clayton Van Lydegraf, 62. Leetham also refosed to grant any further delays in the trial, which is to began Wednesday. The five, acllllg as their own altorne.vs. had sought to have Leetham d.isquahfled for prej- udice When Leetham derued the request. they tried to have him d1sm1c;sed peremptorily or "1thout explanation However, prosecutor Robert Jorgensen ari:ued that each side an a case 1s enlalled to one such peremptory dismissal. He noted the defendants had succeeded last month in having Superior Court Juclg<' Bonnie Lee Martin d1sm1ssed. Miss Bissell and Miss Mullen have been 1dentif1ed as former mem bcrs or the revolutionary "Weather UJldc rground " They and their coderendants are each t'harged walh two counts of possessm~ a destructive device in a public place. one count of possessm~ bomb components possession of a destructive de- vare with intent to injure, tn· tamidate and cause damage and conspiracy Big pieces are back Long ropes ol pearls. amethyst. rock crystal .. sculptured neck pieces se1 w11h lapis lazuli, Ivory. tiger eye .. cuff bracelets Inlaid with malachite, onyx , coral . Big' geometric shapes cover the ear-lobes. luc;trous loops dangle from them We carry the r1nest quality Jewelry 1n the very latesl sty1es aa well as the cllassic dealgns. We can help you select a basic llne jewelry wardrobe to match the 1tyM$ you hke to wear and to reflect your lnd1v1dual t•te. As trained gemolog19b or the Amflflcan Gem Society we •• equipped to adV1• you In the eelectlon of the gemstones you wish to Include In your new jewelry w.-drobe Come In end ... our wide and varied stock • . • and coneult Wiltt our +n- 1 or mad and gracious staff. Your vl&1t Is W9icomad. Small atone-Ht rings are ttacked en the finger u are b~l•ta on the arm. CHARLES H. BARR ....... e4 ... l 0 .... , . 2 • ' l .. • t A4 DAILY PILOT Tueedlly, MIRh 21, 1118 NATION /WORLD ·~ Just ··":·:: .. ~oasting . ~ wltb"'l~ Tom~~'\' Food Prices Rise Again Marpbine Riding the Rocky Road BVMPS AND GRINDS DEPT. -There must be aomelhinC about our County Seat up in Santa Ana that makes It Impossible to keep road.I in any kind of shape in that area. Thls seems to be steeped 1n the blat.ory of the place. Years aeo. before we had Ole whl1·ban1 expansion of Orange County Airport, Santa Ana's South Main Stffft used to wander out and link t.o MacArthur Boul•vard. I am unclear where South Main Street toes now. Anyway, in those times, Santa Ana's South Main Street was affectionately known to the natives ot our n- gion as "The Washboard." ll had bumes in re1ular waves for a bout three miles. The road destroyed more can than a Tijuana wreckin1 yard. You could fl1ure on needln1 a new sets of sprlnes every alx months 1f you drove tbt Washboard dally. THE WASHBOARD IS GONJ: now, but ltl memory lingers on. If you're an old-timer and yearn for the old Washboard of South Main, you can get the same treatment by takln& a ride on the present-day Santa Ana Pree way. .. .. ·,,. ...,,. ~ ·.· -· . ··. >;.,.:..:.,.;f~ ~ ... Minor Problem on the Santa Ana Fr•ewaJI The Santa Ana Freeway today ill keeping the spirit or The Washboard alive. The pavement ia so beat up that at 50 miles per hour 1t can Jar your eye teeth out. It'• worth your life lo try changing lanes across the bumps and pothole::.. THUS IT WAS NICE that one Robert Datel, a director for th(.' Californ1a Dt!partment of TransportaUoo talked yesterday about fil'1ng up the Santa Ana Freeway. ' Dale! told members of the Orange County Transporta- tion Commission that he thinks the state can come up with the needed scratch for the JOb. Additionally at the session, it was noted that the in- terchange between the Santa Ana and Costa Mesa freeways is the biggest tralrlc bottleneck around here in the s uperhighway system. By the way, do not become confused by that name Costa Mesa Freeway. That used to be the Newport Freeway until former Mesa Mayor Bob Wilson led t.be charge for the name switch. Wilson may want to claim the freeway (or Cotta Mesa but he ought to disclaim any part of the aforementioned in· terchan~e. THEY CALL IT A BOTl'LENECK. Menace would be a better word. The iUY who designed it must have specialUed in torture chambers in previous employment. Anyway, Date! or CalTrans told our county transportation brass that the Santa Ana Freeway could probably get fixed up for about 35 million bucka. That may give you a notion of how ghastly the road really ts. And the interchange could get uncorked for a mere $21 million. You aro Jen. wondering what the Egyptians spent on the pyramids. Words ·Allowed Broakast Rights Baeked WASIIlNGTON (AP> -The Justice Department .. YI the Federal Commwtications Commission does not have the power to pre~enL radio broadcaat of seven word& describinC sexual a.nd ex· cretory organs. Earlier, the department had areued the FCC could restrict Ule of the words during hours when children miJbt be liateninf. Tbe department's latest position was in a legal brief filed with the U.S. Supreme Court, whicb is not expected to bear the cue betore tho fall. WASlllNGTON CAP> -Food prlcea lncreasod 1.2 percent In February for the second con- aecutive month, pu.shine overall consumer prices up 0.6 percent during the month, the aovem· menL reported today. Beef prices led the upward march in food coals, rlslng 4.1 percent during the month, while hi&her prices also were reported for pork, poultry and cereal and bakery products. Prices of foods aold lo lfOCery at.ores lncreaaed 1.a percent. THE STEEP RISE in food prices, which started late Jut .year, hu caught the Carter ad- mlnlatraUon by surprise. It ls the major factor in what ap- peara to be a worsenine inflation rate in the economy, even thouah the overall 0.6 percent ln· crease in consumer prices ln February was down slightly from the 0 .8 percent fain ln January. If continued for 12 months, the February increase in consumer prices would result in price ln· flatlon oC slightly more than 7.2 percent, compared with the ad- mlnlatratlon 's lnflatlon target for the year or 6.1 percent. Administration officials say food prices may rise aa much as 8 percent thla year, up from the 6 percent increase projected just a Cew months ago. IN ADDmON TO food, COb· sum e rs also faced sharply higher prices In February for fuel and utilities. up 0.8 percent; medical care, up 1.3 percent, and new and used cars. ahead 0. 7 percent and 2.1 percent, respectively. The only significant decline in prices durin& the month was for clothing, down 1 percent follow- ing a small gain in January. However, apparel services such as laundry and dry cleaning services increased 1 percent. Transportation costs in- creased 0.6 percent and enter- tainment prices advanced 0. 7 percent. Costs of housing were up 0.6 percent, down slightly from the January rise of 0.8 per- cent. THE LABOR Department said Tiro Scouting Leaders Held OnSexRaps WORCESTER. Mass. (AP> - Two vohmteer Boy Scout leaders have been arrested on 61 counts or morals offenses involving scouts aged 11 to 14, police said. George MacGregor Jr., 36, and Matthew Roberts Jr., 23, who live at the same Worcester address, were held in lieu of $1,000 bail. They were to be ar- raJf ned today ln Worcester Cen- tra District Court. pol ice said. BOTH WORKED WITH youngsters in the Mohegan Council of Boy Scouts of Central Massachusetts. Both listed their occupations as laborers. MacGregor was charged with nve coWtts of rape, 19 counts of committing unanatural acts with minors and 11 counts or lewd and lascivious acts, police said. They said Roberts was chareed with four counts of rape, 14 count.a of committing unnatural acts with minora and el1ht counts of lewd and lascivious acts. Police aaid the men were ar· rested late Monday ru1ht after a complaint police received two weeks ago from an unidentified runaway boy. Rain Showers Northeast Most of Nation Enjoys Balmy Temperatures Te111peratures ... ... ,.,.. .... '° "1 "°' "~ ,.. 4J ·" .. u 21 n .. 37 3t al a M ,OJ 71 .. .. .., 21 n • 29 .. 11 11 .. u ,. n u .. .. •A ... . , n " 77 • ·" .u ,, .. , .. . .. . " 41 Na .Q .,.. . , .. itl c0111umer prtce Index for all urban ClOOlumen ln February stood at 181.• percent of the 1967 averaae of 100, meaning that aoods costing SlOO 11 years aao had rt.sen In price to $188.•0 last month. The department also satd the buying power of workers' paychecks declined tn February Bucket Brigade ror th_, third consecutive month, althouah the drop of o.a perct:nt was not nearly ao bad aa the record monthJy 3.1 percent fall ~n purchasing power l.n January. Buckets, baskets and other containers are distributed to workers trying to clean beaches on the Brittany coast of France. fouled by 011 spilled trom the wreck of the supertanker Amoco Cadiz. ~ Girl's Skeleton Found· Psychic Gave Rig~t Clue Almost 2 Years Ago NEW YORK CAP> -Dorothy Allison told police thaL 14-year- old Susan Jacobson could be found in a marshy area, in sight of two bridges and an abandoned car, and near the letters "M." "A" and"R." . That was almost two yt!ars ago. Susan Jacobson's skeleton was found Saturday in a 55· l'!allon oil drum at the bottom of a 12-foot shaft 1n a Slaten Island shipyard, in an area that fits the psychic's description. ABOUT 200 FEET from the shaft, high on a rock, were the red-painted letters "MAR." Susan's parents now say police could have saved them months of angulsh tr they had only listened to Ms. Alllson, a Nutley, N.J .. resident whom they say claims she has helped A PRIVATE PROPERTY WEEK TRIBUTE . TO THE ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONALS the FBI and police find 20 bodies. ·'They kept ·saying we need facts, not psychlcs," said Robert Jacobson, fatheroflhe girl. SUSAN LEFT DOME on the a!ternoon of May 15, 1976, in search of a summer job. She did not return for dinner that night, and her family reported her missing. Police say they figured she was a runaway. The Jacobsons turned t.o Ms. Allison, who gave them the description of Susan's whereabouts. The family and their friends combed the island, and three weeks after Susan's disappearance they searched the abandoned shipyard at Mariners Point. The girl's father said he C'l1mbed into a shaft in the shipyard. but turned away when he found 1l was full of water. "( WAS WlnDN four feet of her and I never knew it,•• he said. The skeleton was dhicovered by three boys who were muskrat hunting in the marsh of the old shipyard. "If the police had cooperated as they should have," Ma. Al.' lison said, "this famlly would have been relieved from the long ordeal. It is one of the most tragic cases I have ever worked on." The cause of the girl's death has not been disclosed. Ma. Al· lison would not say whether she could pinpoint a murderer, but s aid she would visit with the family on Wednesday. Th••• tpeef•I pqee wlll honor Pl1v.te Prop•rty Week and wlll be ~ellvered to over 88,000 home• via the Dally PUot and Piiot Adve!"IHr. NotlcH wlll be on• column by four lnchtt each, alowlng room for • photo end deacrtptlve copy. Coat of ••ch . notice Is only $18, with• photo you provide. Thi• ••lute to Real E•t•t• Profeallonala la '" exceptional opportunity to introduce new °' IOngtlme aaaoclatea to th• peopl• of the Orenoe CoHt, or to honor outatanclng aalea or. aervloe achievements. Don1 nUI being pert of thla apectal adYertJalng opportunity. Oe•dllne for reHrvlng •pace la & p.m., Apttt 17. Cell todayl 'Or, rou ftMIY IMU your photo and a bftef artlcle of abOut 75 word1 deacrlblng your background, education. Pf0f•tek>n1I training. award• or other honor•. M•ll your atory and photo to th CJa ... fled Dept., Dall1 Piiot, S30 w. Bay Street. Box 1560, Cott• Meu, CA 92128. for help oompoalng your ••lute notice, call M2..u78 •nd a f rlendly lld""lf••t wlll ...... you. DAILY PILOT 642·5878 . . . . . .. . . . .. . . . . . .. .. . . ' -.. .... • KB BUSINESS """' liol .... ~ ~ ~ 11r1 5dft Mlfl ... "' PM SiiK 110+ A<fl, -:~t7H!-f, ... ": ~ .... ~. ..J. 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Credit •1.~~ .. =' The economic record of tbe Ca.riM edmlDlalration 10 far haa been a &ot ~U.er tho \be perfonbal\Ce of some other recent admJnbttat1clrla. But tM public doan't 6ff it that way. Worried about lnllatJon, they are livlnt Carter some ot the worst markJ or any preslde1St in rec.nt years. The Mlchlcan 1urve1 of conaumer atUWda, NltaHd Monday, sums lt up ln thae wonb: ''IN P'BB&UARY &1'18, JU&T 1J pereeat rat.d the gov- ernment u dolnt a eood Job. and at percent rated the eov- ernment as dotna a poor Job." TheM figuna, the 1urv•1•n said, repraent.ed an eras· Ing of confidence saln• In government ; economic policy recorded ln early lt'11. J~ The deterioration ls remarkable for at least two reasons: first. It auieeata people are disillusioned re11rdln1 Carter's promises; second, it comes a midst a fairly strong economic performance. The job picture in particular hu Improved &harply, wilb the unemplo)'· ment rate of 6.1 percent lut month representing an almost spectacular cu lit '' decline from the 7.7 percent tale juat a year earlier. The public is aware of this too, as the University of Michl .. an's Survey Research Center shows. Though low. the public's confidence that the job market will continue to improve is rising. F'QR SOME ltEASON, THOUGH, the public doesn't credit Carter. Otherwise, how does one explain th• lowered confidence In his overall economic performance? Fear of inflation is one explanation. The Amerlcal\ publJc has little faith that the admtnislraUon hu the price spiral under control and perhaps even feels the ad- mlnlstraUon is fu eling it by lts actions. The mean expected price increase for the next 12 months, as measured in February, was 7.8 percent, "the hi&hest expected rate of in!laUon recorded amooa con- sumers since the recession yean of 1974·1975." THE MICHIGAN SURVEYEltS ALSO matched the fear of unemployment with fear of inflation and found an increasing emphasla on the latter. SiittY·two percent named inflation as the worse of the two fears. One can hardly notice what appears lo oo a very curious public tendency -a failure lo credit the ad· ministration for lt.s accomplishment on jobs, and a tenden· cy to blame ll for expected hJther prices. The real problem of the administration, therefore, might be lta Inability to convince the public that U has a coherent, aggressive plan for dealin1 with the economy. A matter of packaging, perhap.~. THE PRESIDENT HAD SAID he would publicly address himself to that mood last week by announclna positive steps to combat price rises. And then he didn't, presumably becauseofhig_h level dlsaereements. The likely consequence of that failure ls to reinforce the Image or an administration without an anti.inflation program, without a program to deal with what the s11.rvey1 ahow is a big and growing fear. Meanwhile, economic analysts for banks and buslnen and academia, and even ror the government ltseU, have been slowly Ullln1their1978 lnllaUon estimates, from the 8 percent lo 6.5 percent range to nearer 7. And the chances probably have risen too that the next survey, for March, will show confidence in the govern· ment'a ability to combat inflation has dropped still lower. Corporate Profit Continues Gain Corporate profits continued lo increase at a faster· than-average pace ln 1977 despite a Jack of perceptible im· provement In profit margins or rate• of return throughout the year, Citibank economists say. Jn the March Issue of the bank's economic letter, lhf' economists say that a pre Ii mi nary tally or Citibank's annual 1urvey of corporate earnings reparts shows manufacturing profits up 11 percent and profits of all corporations up 13 per- cent. THIS IS IN LINE, THEY say, with the 12 percent In· crease in manulacturer's sales and the 11 percent rise In nominal cro11 national product. Included in the pre- Jlmlnary tally are the earnJngs reports of 1,695 corpora· lions that last year had after-tax proflls of 165 billion on sales of more than $1.2 trillion and net worth of SS23 billion. Alter-tax earnings ln the fourth quarter of the year ror some 1,863 corporatlona 1urveyed by Cltibank were 10 per- cent higher than a year earlier. Compared with the thlrd quart~. the Increase was better than seasonal. In terms of r eal profits, fourth quarter 1977 levels were 1llghlJy below the aecond·quarter 197'1 level and about 2 percent short ql their record ln mid·J.97•. In general, finished &ood.a ntanulactur•rs led proflt gains in the fourth quarter. Outatandln1 Increases wer. made by pnnling and publlshina (up A percent), apparel (up 53 percent), tobacco products (up 38 percent) and aerospace (up 35 1>9rcent). THE STEEL INDUS11tY beleaguered by slowing de- mand and import compeUUon, reported a 31 percent d~cllne in after-tax earnlnaa, while rubber dropped 35 per- cent, nonferrous rnetala fell 6 percent and bulldina materials dropped 2 percent Thr~ out of ever)' four corporaUon1 In the pn· limlnary tabulation had hither protlta In 1977 lhan ln the year earlier. Only eight of the 40 Individual indUAtnes In· eluded ln the study had lower earnlnas, with the worst re-. cord that of coal and other nonmttatlic mlnine, where pro-m.a dropped 56 percent, In part due to t.he coal strike. Golden West T e lls Of Quarter's Gains Golden West Homff. Santa Ana, hH rep0rted im· proved Hlell and e1rnln11 tot the thlrd quarter aDd nlnt1 months of fllcal ma. Company dlrecton declaffd a ts een'8 per share ea.sh dividend for OW thtrd qu1rt.r. For h tblfd quarter tlldM Ftb. ti, ntt lncome ho contlnuinl( ooeraUona lncr.utd 11 pse.nt to $1,..0.000. or 85 cents a Iha.re (u a~...ud fGf' the F•bnauy lt'Tt a.ror·I 1t~k split>, com.Panid wttb tMO.D001 or• cent.I. (aclJuated) fn the COITCSpondlnt period I fe&I' a;o. kl• for~ q~er ro•• 6S pettClnl to sie.4:n .ooo. com pal.cl -1th •11.o:n.aoo lut )'eatr. Net ln«>m• from coatlnuln1 open.Uons for the Ont nine month• of tlsoal 1978, Increased M pero nt t.o tc,230,000, or at.ta (a4just..t). eompend wl •·&a.• Oil •cents, (adJ l9d) ln flffa.I J.91'1, Sal• for~ period rc:.t 70 ptrcuit to m, m ,000, eiompared wttb tta,448,000 I )'Ht. , 1'hc dlvidend iJ payable April 211 to atoe of record et the cloM ol bUslneas on Aprils. l DM.YPU..OT MARMADUKE "I think this is the 'Mommy Duck' your baby brother told you about, Sh6'rjel" FUNKY WINKERBEAN CASEY MOON MULLINS 1 ,\. GERIATRIX IF 1l1e'Y Q.N ~~LOP ~CH M.,Cii!va.D.J~ ~ilS::IClAI-aJ\...Dl2S ANC' F\..A\0~5, W~Y NOT PRTIFICIAL- CAl..OKI~~ ~ MISS PEACH I • I I A'2rHu~ Review~ 'Tbe MOV1£~ '»l > by Tom Batiuk by Charles Rodrigues by Ferd and Tom Johnson iHAT2fi.AkE IT FRoM Do~S IT -rHe~~,MYNA·· FO~ TH' MOON1S 2~ CR.AMMIN7 ~~ADE' FDR COLLEGE. ReVIEW ... GORDO TUMBLEWEEDS IF YOU IWJSf SITTiiERe rof{ HOt.JRS, YO<.J C.001.P A1L.MS'T9E 1}l1NKIN6' OF SOME: lMPRQVeMfNTS 1liA1'P ~Ns:f!T1}U: COMMUNnY! l by Mell DOOLEY'S WORLD PEANUTS TOOA'/ WE Sf.IOOLD ~EVIEW WHAT WE KNOW A800T FIR5T-AID "l by Charles M. Schulz . CX.IVIER. ~AT WOVLD • ~oo oo IF 4/oo uae Al.£),£ , IN THE F005T, ANO '{OU MU~ '{OtJGB.F? ALL Rl6M'f. BUT LET'S 5A4/ '(OUR MOTMER c~·r HEAA '(00 ... by Roger Bradfield . . • • • • -SO THE WICKfD wrr~ CAST A SPELL ON ™E -Ml' KIDNAPPED THE 8ASY PRINCESS TALK A130lJT GRIMM fAJRY TAL.ES ! WOLETOWN ... DR .SMOCK CHe:F, eve:RYONe: AGReeP 'T'HA"f" 1"0N IGH"f"'S S'T'eW 1"AS'T'er::> MORE: t..IKE:: DINOSAUR THAN eee:F.' MOTLEY'S CREW by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux WELL, JULIE AND 1 STARTED TO TAU< AND I INVITED HIM TO SEE MY A(T. WM'(H I-IE DID THAT~ NIGHT! 50 WE'D GO FISHING IN THE DAYTIME AND HE'D COME TO SEE ME PERFORM IN Tl1E EVENING ! m:;;_.-_..,... by Ernie Busbmiller l'M VERY PLE~et> TO H6AK YOU SAV THAT--- ( by George Lemont Ne:veR e uY YOLJR FROZEN MeA'T' F~OM A HAI RY, NA.Kee::> MAN CARRYING A ci...ue .' by Templeton and Forman TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 4 7 Sweet potato 1 Scrtpe 49 Want harshly urgently 5 Early 50 Ending lot newsreel caall or compeny lront 10 Wound 51 Paper cruet money 14 Eight: Prefix 53 Ornamental 15 Deel\ In fin-vaaes ery 55 Friend 16 Suiter !oh 56 Moat recent 17 Reta II out· 61 Part Of Ille let: 2 WOfdl body 19 Rectangullr 62 Keep one's pier head -·-· -20 Barracuda -··· 21 Foot: PreltJC 64 Elyaium 22 Ru .. ian VIP 65 Giver of okt ' 66 Ag11ns1 23 Preludes lo 67 Sparuah the llnals· pemler UNITED Feature ~ynd1C.1l1 Monday's Puule Solved -------'I .!:..!.. • .!. , ' cTo ••• ........ ~-I • 0 • • 0 A I 0 I • l • O I s ' , u l l I (' •I o I N ( I •• 0 ( l ' A '" I •a ! 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