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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-04-25 - Orange Coast PilotI J 17 I · Sllarfp fia~ns Conti"~ .I '• Bandit Holds Up Kennedy Family Mesa Savings Denies 'Split' . . -. , ~ . .. f f:DAILY PILOT . . . . :~:-,*··· . . * 10' . . ~\.~ .-* ' * * * . ~· ....;...-~_: .. \.. ........ ,.l TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 25, 1978 VOL. 71, NO. 115, J SIECTIC*I. • ~AO•I ·~..,......... TED'S NEW FLAME? GOING IT ALONE? Skier Suzy Chaffee Joan Kennedy Ted Kennedy, Wife Separation Denied NEW YOl,lK CAP> -Reports that Joan KeMedy, wtre of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, "has de· clded to go it alone" in an apart- ment in Boston were published today In two New York newspapers, but Kennedy fami- ly sources In Washington denied McLean, Va., only once in that lime. • the couple had separated. In the Daily News, columnist Liz Smith wrote that by failing . to appear togelhei; in public or private recently. the KeMedys have done nothing to slow "un- ceasing stories of their great 'apartness' which have been rife ever since lbe Suzy Chaffee bn- t he -s lopes-with-Teddy tales began to emerge." ' L The New York Post quoted un· named friends as saying Mrs. Kenned) has been living in a two-bedroom apartment on Beacon Street for two months and , although she sees her c hildren every weekend. has been at her family's home in Silver Stolen At CM Firm; $11,418 Loss Silver valued at $11,t18 was stolen Monday from a Costa Mesa firm that uses the precious metal lo manUfacture electronic components, police said today. Burglars apparently broke a window to enter Staco Switch Co., 1139 Baker St., under the cover of darkness, early Moo· day. . The suspects left valuable of. flee equipment untouched and moved lnto a rear office area where they took the silver stored ln a cabinet. The loa wa.s reported to pOl.lce by Staco employee Terry Wayne Galloway, 31, of Gard.en Grove. I I Kennedy has been reported as being at Aspen, Colo., in the company or Miss Chaffee, a former Olympic skier, several weeks ago. "It's not true,' Tom Southwick, a spokesman for Sen. Kennedy , D ·Ma ss .. in Washington said when asked whether the couple had separate<I. ·'The apartment is )lis res- idence in Boston. They have not separated. She has been taking courses al Harvard and Lesley <College of Fine Arts> since last fall," Southwick said. Southwick also said "not true" when asked about reports link· Ing Kennedy and Miss Chaffee. Eunice Shriver. the senator's sister, also denied that there was a separation and sald the couple see each other all the tlme and lbat lbe children see her in Boston most weekends. Mrs. Sh.river said Joan was "ln therapy" referring to her drlntlna problem, was doing very well and there was no point ln upsetting that. Jn put years, Mrs. Kennedy bas bad aome emotional and <See KENNEDY, Pap AJ _tore lain Savings Office Robbed A Costa Mesa savings and lo~n association was robbed at gunpoint Monda$' afternoon by a lone bandit who escaped with · . • S2.S38. police reported today. Investigators said the man en- tered the rear doors of .· Brentwood Savings. 1640 Adams : Ave., at 3:40 p.m . and used a .45 caliber handgun to force two tellers to clean out their tills. There were no reported injuries. One of the female tellers told • police she knew she was going to .. be robbed when s he saw the man enter wearing an army fatigue jacket, a wool ski cap and mir· rored ski glasses. The teller activated a bank camera and a silent alarm as he approached her and demanded cash. After cleaning out the till and handing the young bandit the cash. the teller turned her back on the armed man and said she would go into the bank vault to get more money. She stayed in the vault, and the bandit moved to the next teller's station and demanded ' more money from her. The loss B1m-•-4 , •• ,_, from both tills was estimated at ....... ~ &0 a,,I e - $2,538, but officials said this total may go higher when an in- ventory is completed today. Two juvenile witnesses told police they saw a man run out of the bank and across a parking lot before driving away In a light-colored Volkswagen with old-style (gold on black) This may be the first issue of the new Life magazine. re- vived six years after financial problems fo rced it to fold as a weekly. The magazine will return as a monthly photo magazine in October. The reproduction of the CO\· er is a dummy and may conceivably change when the real Life comes out in the fall. ISee story. Page 85.1 California license plates. The bandit is described as be- ing in his early 20s, about five feet nine and weighin g 160 pounds. Protest Baited SALISBURY. Rhodesia <AP> -Rhodesian riot police today stopped a protest march by 200 black university students. BIBOWER R.4PS CO!Vll!SF ROLE JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Minister of Education Daoed Joesoef said. today he is not ln favor of beauty contesll because they could give the lmprt11ion that people worship 1ood lookl. Beatur is relative, he aald, addlna lbat "we should wonhlp God instead.'' Stock Prices Zoom On Runaway Market NEW YQRK <AP> -Stock prices swept ·ahead today in lbe midst of another runaway rally that outstripped some of the trading volume records set last week. The mJd-day Dow Jones average ot 30 Industrials was up 13.68 points to 838. 74 on top of a 13.26-POint jum p Monday. Vofume on t he New York Stock Excbanae totaled lT.58 mllUon shares ln the first hour. breaklne the openln1·bour rec- ord of 17.48 mllllon set only Aprll 17 .• By mid-day turnover came to · 28.14 mlllion •h•rea, runnlng Just a btt -.hy of therufi•ce on April 17, when the ~l day's total was an unprecedented 63.51 million shares. The Dow Jones industrial average has climbed more than 73 points in two weeks In one of the sharpest rallies In Wall !3treet history. Analysts said the spark that Ignited the latest outburst or buying was provided by Eastman Kodak, a long·llme favorite ot Investing institutions. Over the weekend. Kodak re- ported a 50 per ... e6t rise in first. quarter earnings from the com- parable period las\' year . Advances outnumbe red declines by about a 4-&/margln In the broad tally o( ?'few York Stock Exchange listed issues. ~J Wife er Police A Garden Grove liquor store owner was shot and killed Mon- day evening when he apparently moved lo overpower a gunman who was robbing his store. Police said witnesses told them J. H. Black. 58, of Los Angeles. was mortally wounded when the bandit wheeled and fired two shots as 8lack ap- proached him from behind. Seconds earlier, the victim had given the gunman money from his wallet and apparently saw what he thought was an opening when the bandit tumed his attention towards two clerks. Police said the victim was struck in the leg and chest by the bullets fired from a .38· calibe r handgun. Emergency medical tre.at- ment was given the mortally wounded man after he collapsed in the store, Ed Larsen's Liquor. 13lti1 Harbor Blvd., Garden Grove. However, he died within an hour of the 5 45 p.rn. shooting arter being taken to nearby UC Irvine Medical Center. Police said Black's slayer ran from the store and apparently fled from the neighborhooo on <See SLAIN, Page A2l Coast ·w eathe r Partly c loudy with chance of showers tonight. Clearing and mostly sunny W e dn esday . Hi g h s Wednesday in the upper 60s. Lows tonight 52 to 57. Chance of rain 20 percent tonight near zero Wednes· day moming. INRDETODAY Former First Lady Pat Nixon "hated the wharlunnd of politics" because she said the people who lose out are the children. He1' story ap- pears today on Page A7 l•dex Al V-s.nlce All M-~-Cl •NIM lelftlM<ll a 111lll'Miuleol N L.M........ MA•U~ 0 8"9111ftl .... ..... .. c.41....,..a M ._..., ,,_ as a.uittw c:.n Natholal -A•, M CMl!Ct Q IMl'U 81-J cnu..,ni a Slee• Ma.ut1 .. DM• llWIC.M M Ttl..,I'*' 81 •411t..-Ma ~... M t,...1.,, .. ............. UWHt ... r A4 ......... Cl•I .... N._ 44, M \ > \ .. ' .4.Z DiAJl Y PllOT s Waddill J111-y Still · Ponders Its VeFdiet 8)' TOM BA&LEV OltlltOM+tf'llMi ... tt Jury deliberations resumed to· day in the Orange County Superior Court murder trial of Di::. William Baxter Waddill of Huntiniton Harbour. The panel of nine men and three women deliberated for about three hours Monday. after listening to lnstnacUons read by Judge James K. Turner. A motion by the defenae to Se· quester the jury until a verdict is reached was denied by Juqe Turner. Jurors are beln1 al· lowed to go home each evenlna alter being warned to avoid newspaper, radio and television accounts of the trial. Solvers Taxed Problem Becanw Pragmatic SAN DIEGO <AP> -The four gifted students s elected for the third annual World Future Problem- Sol v ing Bowl flew home today from Athens, Ga. The biggest problem, they discovered, was get· ting there in the first place. THE COSTS WERE PAID BV their parents and themselves when San Diego school officials failed to finis h the paperwork needed to use school funds. Then nobody met them at Atlanta after a late- n i~h t flight which saved some money. Mechanicctl problems aborted their 60-mile connecting flight to the University of Ge9rgia. Jn a taxi. they made it within minutes of the competition a nd wound up sixth among 12 teams. THE FOUR -NINA MANZI, Vicki Perez. Ben Decke r and Elena Kosta · -were happy. but not some of the pa re nts who wound up paying the costs. .. It ought to come out of somebody's hide," Albe rt Decker said. referring to school authorities. Baltimore Based Child Pomo Ring Indictments Seen BALTIMORE <AP> -An in- vestigation of a prostitution and I child pornography ring which delivers young Baltimore boys to Massachusetts and California could result in indictments next month, it was reported. A federal grand 1ury here is r e portedly centering its in· vestigation on three men who are considered the ringleaders or the Baltimore-based prostitU· uon and cruld pornography busi· ness, sources told the Baltimore Sun . If the grand j ury hands up in diclments, they would be the first under a federal Jaw s igned by President Carter in February that prohi bits such sex activities involving minor males. Previous laws covered minor females but not boys. One alleged arrangmenl in· vo Ives the trans portation of young boys from southeast Baltimore to private homes in Harrisburg, Pa. The youngsters are then met by men who escort them to Boston, the newspaper's sources said. The second arrangement which involves the youngsters in pornographic films and prostitu· t 1on links Baltimore lo Los Angeles. according to sources quoted by the Sun. "Apparently . the same men who organize the cross-country lrips also have a hand in the pornographic film market, which is really a lucrative busi- ness now." the investigator added. Ma rsha dstrer, an assistant U.S. attorney io charge of the probe here. declined to confirm or deny reports about the in· vestigation. Dale Bible. an FBI agent in Los An geles, said the FBI in Los Angeles and Baltimore served warrants last December to seize film and movie equipment al· legedly used in the tramcking of films involving Baltimore boys. Investigators are reportedly trying to get a number of boys ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT n..0r.,.,. , .. ,, o.u, ~-*''"'""""<""'""" Olo"'tdtnrtHe9' Ptt>" ''°CllU0-1\Htiel0¥tf'w C>~ (H\t Pvot1\l'tl""Q(l)""g.1ft-~.tff>f'Cll'lftll',.,., CNOH"""1 MoNI r '"'°"Qfl F-rtwr lot '°''• ,_..,.. "--oort 9rMP't. "~·~ 61-Atft f:~ ••I" Y•U•• ., •• f\.. S,aoo•et>.A<ll V•llf'y -~ ~ ..... *'"'0•"' ··~#t""Qf'l)Nl.0~ l.ort I\ CNbl•~d S•1wf'0AY' M"O \41nd1v' fhf' =~~~'l.~111~:~.~~)0 ~H\ QA~ __ ,, .. _ Prl'\10.'tt •M P\IOI·"""' , ... " , ...... Vi(r ~.,IOt"t ~nG 0.nt'f'M ~ t._..,,,, •• ..,.. (dilOf T-•A ,...,..._ --·oci~ .... CIWtf+nM '-"' Ill<_,. MAii A\\l\t-"t1 MaM01no f.tl'tor1 OfflcH CO.If W •• J)OWt\I 11<1¥~1._.! l-lltK~ !!M G_v,,~1 ..... 1 Hun-lnQtOtl B••<ft tf1tS 8f41il-,, fJou•.,v.11,a ~fet>6<M Vitll•V "'""°' l• P,u ~4Mld •tS."O•ttofllr.,..,..,. T91epllone ('114)~21 CIH•lfled Advertletnotu-Mn '\edd..,M<"" -..auew """Otho H1 .. ~IO HOM v• c .. _..,. 4t64'00 '"""-'"O<••oo'-""''~' ... &&0-1220 ~.,,.~ ::. o:.:;r. (= .. =.":'~. flJ't:ft•r ., """ltem•ttt' M>tt ift Mey W , ......... , .. •"""""' , .. <••• "'"''"-.. u•~•ltl'•- S.C•"'I '"" ... , •• "' H•d .. CM•• -~ C•hfot1u• ta1tn.c:r1•hoft tty <Mr•t' t 10 fM'l\l~lt tty M.tll ,. \A ~·P\IW ft!WIU ... , ttf'WltktM n .., "*',,.,, from s outheastern neighborhoods to testify before the federal grand jury about adults involved in the operation. Meanwhil e in Bos ton, authorities said detectives visit- ed Baltimore last year "for in· telligence purposes" relating to their investjgations of an alleged boy-sex s cheme in nearby Revere. Mass. Two dozen men were 1nd1cted in that in- vestigation last Decem her. fi'rona Page Al KENNEDY. • drinking problems, attributed by some to the ptieSsures of living with the bearer or the Kennedy family's political legacy. The Post quoted Mrs. Ken· nedy's Criends as saying she has settled mto a "qtftet but enjoya- ble life with a small circle ol friends" far from the Washington social scene. "It just seems that she ls more at home here," the Post quoted the friends. "Teddy bas a brutal schedule." "She has lost a lot of weight and really looks trimmer and younger than she did two years ago. Nobody has seen a drink in her hand," they said. A spokesman at the Lesley school, Jim Blake, said Mrs. Kennedy was taking an indepen. dent study course titled "Music and Sound in the Classroom." He said the cours e is for teachers seeking a masters' degree. There was no immediate com· ment from Mrs. Kennedy. Undertaker Dies on Duty KNOXVILLE, Tenn. <AP) - An undertaker died of an ap- parent heart attack while driv· ing a hearse during a funeral procession. Wilma Mynatt, owner or Mynatt's Funeral Home, said William Payne, 57, died Monday while the procession was on Emory Road after leawing the Sharon Baptist Church en route to Shady Grove Cemetery. Another funeral home alten· dant in the hearse was able to take control or the vehicle and there was no accident, she said. F rowa Paflt! AJ SLAIN ••• foot while carrying an unknown amount of money from the ljQuorstore. The gunman was described by poUce as a Latin of medium build and about 22 years old. Override Fails SACRAMENTO <AP> Backen ol lbe propoled Foot.hUI• Fre ft'IY lft Southern CaUfomil have aaain failed to wln a veto ovenide¥ 1 Jurors ha~ been asked to re- turn one of five possible verdicts: not guilty, murder in the first or second degree or at· tempted murder in the first or 1eeond degree. • Waddill and his wife, Janet. bad breakfast in the courtbouae caftterie t.oday and appeared to be fully recovered from a traffic acoldent Monday that left them shaken but unhurt. Tbelr Cadillac, described to- day 11 1everely damaged, C!Ol· lided with another auto as the W add ills drove to the county courthouse. The woman occu· pant or the other car is listed In guarded condition today at Westmins ter Community ffOS.Pilal. The murder charges faced by Waddill, 42, stem from his aJ. leged strangulation or a newborn infant in the Westminster hospital nursery on March 2, 1977. It is alleged that Waddill panicked wben he realized that the Infant he had tried to abort 12 hours earlier had survived the saline Injection and was fighting for lite in the nursery. The jury was told that Waddill choke4 the baby girl to death while guggesting to another doc· tor four other ways iJl which she could be kill4'd, including being dl~lled in 'bUeket '11 water. It was testified for the pros- ecution that Waddill murdered the baby because be felt she had suffered massive brain damage and would be little more than a human vegetable jf she lived. Judge Turner told the jury in his instructions Monday, "A child's right to medical treat· ment is not diminished by the quality of what tbe child's future life might be." Moro Ten-or .· Film Plamwd ROME <AP> - Avanguardia, an Italian film production company. announced today it will make a movie based on the kidnapping of former Premier Aldo Moro. The mm, to be entitled "Red Brigades," will be directed by Bruno Solaro. an Itallan who bas direct· ed several films with political overtones. Moro was kidnapped March 16 by the Red Brigades, Italy's most feared urban guerrilla gang. State's Center Get,s Showers, Cooling Trend By Tbe Auoclated Press A moderate Pacific cold front was slicing through Central California today, spreading showers in a southerly pattern. Rainfall for the Z4 hours end- ing at 4 a.m. showed Bakersfield had .04, Salinas .06, Paso Robles .07, Ukiah .17, Oakland .24, Stockton .ZT. Crescent City .34. San Francisco .44, Red BlUff .SS. and Shelter Cove . 78. Slightly colder air behin~ the weather front brought the snow level to about 7 ,000 feet in the Sierra Nevada, although sub· stantial snow is stlJI melting below that level, especially around Lake Tahoe. State flood·control authorities in Sacramento have expressed concern about the rapid melting of the snowpack, which Is well above normal for this time of year. Showers were ex~cted to con- tinue sporadically through tonight with clearing expected by Wednesday morning. Fairer weather and warmer tem - peratures are expected Wednes· day afternoon through Friday. Boy Arrested After Attack NEW YORK <AP> -A 12· year-old Brooklyn boy has been charged with beating a 9().year- old woman, kicking her down a flight of stairs and stabbing her in the face before stealing a television set from her apart· ment, police report. Police said the youth, whose nJme wu nOt revealed because of his are, pushed his l~·year-old stater in front or • subway train last February, but ahe was saved at the last rnoment by a Transit Authority police otncer. The youtb•e latest vlctlm, Jen· nto Kelly, waa reported ln HU.factory eoad!Uon today at St. M ""'I Holpltal. -• I t Big Fish Storg Nearly a dozen photographers and a handful of Mission Viejo Company spec:· tators closed in as 5.000 rainbow trout. averaging one pound per fish. hil Lake Mission Viejo through a spigot in one of two fish hate• 'ry trucks. The fis h joined thous ands of bass and red-eared sunfish Monday in the manmadc lake scheduled to open to community homeowners June 3. The lake features swimming. boating and fishing and will be lined by waterfront housing developments. Trash Contract Mulled OC Rubbish Firms Gear for More Violence By JACKIE HYMAN OI tM o.lly ~lleC SU.If An uneasy calm s ettled today over an Orange County trash truck driver s s trike as Teamsters attorneys mulled a new management offer aod rub· bish collection firms geared up to meet the threat or further violence. The strike. which began at midnight April 17, has left more than a million Orange County res idents without rubbi s h collection services. Management representatives reportedly sent a written copy of the new contract offer lo Teamsters Local 396 at 9:30 a.m. Monday. Federal mediator John Courtney said the offer con- taine d "sig nific ant con · cessions," but no details have been released. Drivers had asked for a raise of S4 per hour over a three-year period. They currently receive $4.50 an hour and employers had previously offered an additional Sl.10 an hour over the three years. The drivers also reportedly were seeking revised grievance procedures. dental benefits and five days a year sick leave. Spokesmen at the Orange County offi ces of Local 396 said they have no information about when a s trike vole will take place. A press release issued by the Teamsters office in Los Angeles said the offer Is being studied by attorneys and will be translated into Spanish. The statement said the offer will be submitted to workers before the week is out but that exactly when a vote will be scheduled isn't known. The strike so far has been marred by numerous fires, in· eluding the burning of three Jaycox Disposal trucks and a $15,000 firebombing at Anaheim Disposal. "The threats or. violence are continuing," said an Anaheim Disposal spokesman today. "We had to put on extra guards last night. We armed ourselves like a fort.·· He said drivers he has spoken with seemed restless and eager to see the new contract offer and vote on it. Communities affected along the Orange Coast are Costa Mesa , Fountain Valley, Hunt· ington Beach, Laguna Beach, Lake Forest, northern El Toro. I.;aguna Hills Leisure World, and some indus trial parts of Newport Beach. Tras h m ay be t a k e n by homeowners to any or several sites, with morning hours re· portedly the least crowded. , In Huntington Beach, rubbish can be left at the transfer station at 18131 Gothard Street, near El· lis A venue. ln Irvine. the Coyote Canyon landfill on Bonita Can· yon Road behind UC Irvine 1s open to the public Laguna Beach residents ma~ leave their rubbish in dumpsters a t either of two sites: the Agate Street Fire Station or the city e mployees parking lot across from the F esti va l o f Arb grounds. Crans ton Reports California Military Cutbacks Proposed SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The -Presidio of San Francisco. Defense Department has pro· closure. posed closure or cutback of -Letterman Army Hospital. seven California military in· San l"rancisco, suggested closure s tallaUons. including the with patients and personnel to Presidio of San Francisco, Let-be transferred lo Oakland Naval terman Army Hospital in San Hos pital. u :ller G.;ve Francisco and the San Diego -Alameda Naval Air Station .IU a. R Naval Training Recruitment and North Island Naval Facility, Center. Sen. Alan Cranston's of· San Diego. suggested reduction T ~~ • D • (ice said today. of personnel. ~J e lR C Tl,SOR The proposed cutbacks are -San Diego Naval Training SAN DI G 0 A A among as to be announced in Recruitment Center. s uggested E < P > -d closure of either this installation Superior Court judge has sen· Was hington Wednes ay by the tenced 8 41-year-old Escondido Pentagon. Congressional delega· o r the Navy's Great L akes man to life tn slate prison in con· tions were being briefed on them Na va l Training Center. nection with the shooting of a today. No El Toro or Camp -San IJ1ego Marine Corps teen-ager killed in his pickup Pendleton facilities appareoUy Recruitment Depot, s uggested truck outside 8 church. are involved. closure. Rupert F. Rialubin was sen· -Los Angeles Ai r Force Sta· tenced Monday by Judge Earl 8. The California installations in-lion . El Segundo. s uggested G·11· f h. · · · f eluded in the list of cutbacks, c los ure, f aci l1t1 es to b e 1 1am or 1s 1ury conv1ct1on o transfe-ed to Vandenberg Ai·r rl·rst de'"'ee mu de ·n the de th which the Defense Department • • · ... r r 1 a Force Base or Norton Air Force or Pal Kelly Dugan, 18, of is to study for six lo eight Base. Escondido.~~~~~~-------=m........,.o=n=th=s=·=a=re=:======================================~~ Farmar st}4e Cllasa ·~ ,~ .... , • : ·\ I: • ~. . . " ., .:-l •• f ~ .. 4 • ~.,.-." . ..;i. --.:.lll:";:r!!I' ·"-. Farmer Cheese i1 one of our best melting and cooking cheeses. It's most delectable wtlen served at room tempereture. Cubed Farmer Cheese Ir delicious wtt.n dipped in apple butter. save 101 21' lb. whole piece 5.99 ea . save Ila Off Reg. Lb. Price 2.79 lb . reg. 3. 19 lb. WESTalFF PLAZA f719lttr'f'a.1 tls ..... 1Mdt,._.,.W'7J .,._-Mo "ft t ht. 'Tl 6 S.. 'Tl I MAllMl l 'S VILLAGE-DAMA PolMT \ ... ,. 17 Coast ., VOL. 7t, NO. 115, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANG.E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRtl 25, 1978 Today's Clo lafi N.Y. Stoeks l ? C TEN CENT~ 1tleSa Planners Ni~ Nude Model Studio By IOatAEL PASXEVICB Of .. Delly Pt191-..... Whatever business evenlually occupies the old Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce building on West 19th Street, it's likely the lenants will keep lheir clothes on. In a 4 to 1 vote Monday night, the Costa Mesa Planning Com· mission rejected a plan to tum the second story of the building into a nude modeling studio. Casting the lone vole in favor or the zone exception permit re- quest was the city's ne west plan· ning commissioner , Shirley Price, who didn't condone the nude studio but said Its rejection was ba.sed on assumpUons. The alleged assumptions by the planning staff were based on feelings that the nude studio would do nothing to upgrade an are a already considered "blight· ed, •' planning staffer Doug Clark said today. Clark added that Cecil Ricks, the attorney representing appli- cants William and Paula Engle of Placentia, did not present any evid ence that the nude photo studio would not lead to a law enforcement problem. There are no such studios in Costa Mesa at present and no ci· ty codes that include provisions to a llow them, Clark noted. Jn 1974, a nude photo place known as Sunshine Ladies Modeling Studio opened up on Victoria Street despite a 19'13 municipal ordinance which virtually eliminates nakedness outside or one's bathroom. The Sunshine Ladies, who posed wearing only smiles for S28 an hour. have since moved on. Costa Mesa police Sgt. Sam Cordeiro today said that some massage par lors operating in the city have been known to al· low their employees model on the side but the service ls not ad· vertised. In seeking a pproval for the new nude studio, attorney Ricks said that the s tudio would also include "fashion modeling." He said there has been only one problem with a similar studio the applicants operate in Anaheim but was not specific. Leading the charge against the nude modeling studio were some surrounding properly owners, representatives of a nearby Girl Scout branch and j e weler J .C. Humphries, repr esenting the downtown busi· n essmen's group known as ·'Costa Mesa Tomorrow." The old Chambe r of Com- merce building at 583 W. 19th SL is at the outer edge of the city's downtown redevelopment area. (See STUDIO, P age AZ) Gunman fits Mesa Savings Firni Condos Backed In Mesa Plans to build 111 con· domlniums along Baker Street in north Costa Mesa moved ahead Monday night as the plan- ning commission, in separate actions, approved a zone change and exception permit for .the proje~t. The unanimous decisions now will go before the City Council for consideration. The planning commission ac· lion switched the zoning on the I !·acre parcel between Babb and Baker streets from com· mercial to medium-density planned residential. Concerns over traffic were ex p r essed by a number of homeowners In the area, and traffic engineer Bruce Mattern will meet with representetives of developer William J . Cagney or Newport Beach to find the best solution. There is likely to be one en· trance-exit from the project onto Babb Street and al least two ex- -1ls on Baker Some realignment of traffic signals currently in operation is expected, and planning depart· ment spokesman Doug Clark to- day said a new traffic signal may be required at the intersec- tion or Baker and Milbro Sts. The zone exception permit will allow the developers to extend patios into the 25-foot setback re· quiremenl along Baker. I However, the planned Baker Street frontage of the project un· dulates in such a way that some or the patios or two-story condos will be as far back as 80 feet from the street. The units would be arranged in a series of four circular courts. resulting in a total open space of 57 percent. about l2 percent higher than required by the city P act Rejected BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP> Arab guerrillas, vowing not t.o give up their "sacr ed right to. . . struggle for the liberation of Palestine,'· rejected an agree- ment between Chris tian rightists and Moslem mode rates that would disarm all forces except the Lebanese army Catalina Stuck After Grand Entrance Under tow of two tugs, lhe now retired cruise ship SS Catalina entered Newport Harbor shortl}' after noon lo· day but then late r apparently got stuck...,. Balboa Bay Club Great White Steamer is here to hous-e displays at Lido Villasce Marina boat show when she finally ar· rives. Visitors may go aboard until May~. Silver Haul Stolen F rom Mesa Firm More than 125 pounds of s ilver valued at Sll,418 were stolen Monday from a Costa Mesa firm that uses the precious metal to manufacture electronic compo- nents, police said today. Burglars apparently broke a window to enter Staco Switch Company, under the cover or darkness early Monday. Numerous pieces of valuable office equipment were left un- touched as the burglars moved to a rear office area where the s ilver was stored in a locked cabinet. Costa Mesa police Lt. George Lorton today said the silver was s tored in s mall thin s trips used to produce component parts. More than 2,000 ounces was re- ported 'mis sing b y S taco e mplo yee Terry Wa y n e Galloway, 31, of Garden Grove, when the firm opened Monday. Silver is currently valued at $4.89 per ounce. S i t u ation •Calm' Atto~ys -Pomler T rash Strike Off er By JACKIE HYMAN Of ti• Daily Pilot Stall An uneasy calm settled today over an Orange County trash truck drivers s trike as Teamsters attorneys mulled a new m anagement offer and rub· bish collection firms geared up to meet the threat of further violence The strike, which began at midnight April 17 . .has left more than a million Orange County residents without rubbish collection services. Management representatives reportedly sent a written copy of the n ew contract offer to Teamsters Local 396 at 9:30 a.m. Monday. Federal mediator John Courtney said the offer con· tained "significant con· cessions,'' but no details have been released. Drivers had asked for a raise of $4 per hour over a three-year period. They currently receive S4.50 an hour and employers had previously offered an additional Sl. 10 ao hour over the three years. The drivers also reportedly were seeking revised grievance procedures, dental benefits and five days a year sick leave. Spokesmen at the Orange County offi ces of Local 396 said they have no information about when a strike vote will take place. A press release issued by the Teamsters offi ce in Los Angeles said the orrer is being studied by attorneys and will be translated into Spanish. The statement said the offer will be submitted lo workers before the week is out (See TRASH, Page A2> J arvis Subject Of T alk b y Mesa Mayor Cos ta Me sa Mayor Ed McFarland will discuss the ins and outs of the controversial Jarvis.Gann tax inittalive dur· ing a Wednesday night ap- pearance before the College Park Homeowners Association. The general meeting. open to the public. s tarts at 7:30 p.m. at College Park School at the cor- ner of Villanova Road and Nassau Drive, Costa Mesa. City councilwoman Ar lene Schafer. a College Park resi· dent. wHI also appear and Hank Panian. a director of the Costa Mesa County Water District, will g 1 ve a brief presentation an water supply and quality Following the presentations, the homeowners will select as· sociation offi cers for the next year. Kennedys Deny Split Stock Marloot Volume Rises In 'Runauxzy' NEW YORK {AP) -Reports that J oan Kennedy, wire or Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, "has de· c1ded to go It alone" in an apart- ment in Boston were publlsbed t oday in two New York newspapers, but Kennedy fami· ly sources ln Washington denied the couple had separated. The New York Post quoted un· named fl'lends as saying Mn. Kennedy has been living ln a two·bedroom apartment on Beacon Street for two months and. although she sees her children ever)' weekend, bas been at he r family'' home in McLean, Va., only once in that time. In the Daily News, columnist Liz Smith wrote that by failing to appear together in public or private recently, the K~nnectys have done nothJAg to slow "un· ceasing stories of their great 'apartness' wb1cb have been rife e ver since the ~Y Chaffee OD· the-slopes·wUh·Teddy tales btl4R to emerat." •Kennecb' bu bffn report~ u being at Aspen, Colo., in the company of Miss Chaffee, a former Olympic skier , several weeks ago. "It's n ot true," Tom Southwick, a spokesman Cor Sen. Kenned y, D -Mass., in Was hington said when asked wh e th e r the couple had separated. "The apartment is his res- idence in Boston. They have not separated. She has been taklng courses at Harvard and Lesley (College of Fine Arts> since last fall," Southwick said. Southwick also said "not true" when asked about reports Unk· ing Kennedy and Miss Chafree. Eunice Shriver, the senator's sister, also denied that there was a separaUon and said the couple see each other all the tlme and that the children see her ln Boston moat weekends. Mr:a. Shriver 1ald Joan was "lo tberapy" rererrln" to her drlnldnt problem, was doing verv well and, there was no point <ste DNNEDV, P11e A.I) 'TED'S NEW FLAME? Skier Suiy Chaff•• ........ GOING IT ALONE? Joan Kennedy - NEW YORK {AP> -Stock prices swept ahead today in the m idst of anothe r runaway rally that outstripped at least one of the trading volume records set last week but the advance tapered as the day passed. The closing Dow Jones average or 30 industrials was up 7 .53 points to 833.59 on top of a 13.26-point jump Monday. Atone point today, the Dow had been ahead 19 points. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange totaled 17.58 million shares in the first hour, breaking the opening-hour rec· ord or 17.48 million set only April 17. Turnover came to 55.8 million shares. running a bit s hy of •tie pace on April 17, when the full day 's total was an unprecedented -63.Sl million shares. The Dow J ones industrial average has climbed more than 70 points Int wo weeks in one of the sharpest rallies in Wall Street bis· tory. Analysts aatd the spark that <See VOLUME, P111e A2> \ $2,538 In Loot Taken 1 A Costa "wtesa savings and loan association was robbed at gunpoint Monday afternoon by a lone bandit who esca~d with $2,538. police reported today. Investigators said the man en· ter e d the rear doors of Brentwood Savings, 1640 Adams Ave., at 3:40 p.m. and used a .45 c::iliber handgun to force two te llers to clean out their tills. There were no reported injuries. One of the rcmale tellers told police she knew she was going to be robbed when she saw the man enter wearing an army fatigue Jacket. a wool ski cap and mir rored ski glasses. The teller activated a bank camera and a silent alarm as he approached her and demanded cash. After cleaning out the till and handing the young bandit the cash. the teller tu med her back on the armed man and said Shi! would go into the bank vault to get more money. She stayed in the vault, and the bandit moved Lo the next teller's station and demanded more money from her. The loss from both tills was estimated al $2,538. but officials said this total may go higher when an in- ventory is completed today. Two juvenile witnesses told police they saw a man run out of the bank and across a parking lot before driving away in a li~hl ·colored Volkswagen with o ld -s ty le <go ld on black> California license plates. The bandit is described as be- ing in his early 20s. about five feet nine and weighing 160 pounds. Boy Arrested Afte r Attack NEW YORK CAP> A 12 year·old Brooklyn boy has been charged with beating a 90·year- old woman. kicking her down a fhght of stairs and stabbing her in the face before stealing a television set from her apart ment. police report The youth's latest victim, Jen· nie Kelly. was reported in satisfactory condition today at St. Mary's Hospital. Coast Weath er Partly c loudy with chance of showers· tonight. Clearing and mostly sunny W e dn esday . Hi g h s Wednesday in the upper 60s. Lows tonight 52 to 57. Chance of rain 20 percent tonight near zero Wednes- day morning. I NSIDE TODAY Former First Lady Pat Nuon "hattd the whirhmnd of politics'' because she said the peOJM who lose out are the chlldrtn. Her atot}/ ap- pears today on Page A?. l •tlex AtY-W'ftelt Att .._.. Cl ·""·~-Cl I...,,.... .. l..M..... M .U. UIMtn C2 .......... ....._.... .. C.lltenlf• Al _..., .... lb a .. tlllM C..11 KlltleNI ...... M.1.M CMllU Ci 5-b •l.J CtM•..., a 1teu ~ .. °"ti' NMiaot M ,_..,.. 81 • ......., ..... "' TllMl9« .. •llMf'WI__. .. WMt...-M ~~ C14 WerM ""' M,. Al \ .. DM..VP"tlDT Moro's Death Hoax? ROllE CAP> -A nurry ol anonymous telephone calls an- nouncina tbal ro:rmer Premier Aldo Moro bad been eJCec:uted by his Red 8rt1•dea ktdHp~ was received today by the ltattan newa q~ncy ANSA. 'lbe agency said alf bad been proven boa~ea. The calla were received bl! ANSA ornces In Rome. Turin and Milan. One caller said a communique was ten in a trash basket and a "surprise" In the trunk of a car parked near the ltaltan television production center near the Vatican. But an ANSArt reporter and police ot flcers searched trash recep- tacles and cars on the str~t and found nothing unusual. The calls came in after the government and the ruling Christian Democratic Party on Monday rejected an ultimatum rrom the Red Brigades lo free 13 imprisoned terrorists to save Moro's life. Last week, a communique at· tribuled lo the Brigades claim- ing the 61 ·yectr·old party presi· dent had been executed trig· gered a massive search of a frozen mountain lake northeast or Rome. Officials said that message may have been sent by Moro's kidnappers as a rus~ lo weaken the government's re- rusal to negotiate for his life. Today, crowds of Italians marked the 33rd anniversary of the nation's liberation from fascism by visiting Via Mario F'ani. the Rome street where Moro was kidnapped and his five guards slain March 16. Premier Giulio Andreotti told Journalists on arriving for 3 leadership meeting al Christian Democrat headquarters In downtown Rome that he had .. nothiOR new" to report. ;, The premier on Monday re· iterated the party's no-deal line after conferring with key cabinet ministers. He declared: "All requests ror cin exchange with detained persons were And are unaccep· table because they are directed <.igainst the freedom of all. ugainst the respect which is due to the victims of subversion and cigainst the laws or the Republic " l I Popolo. the Christian Democrats' newspaper. said a handwritten letter found by the newspaper Vita Monday night had been authenticated as Moro's. In it. the five·lime pre- mier begged his party to agree to an .. exchange of war prisoners 1war or guerrilla war. as you prefer>. as is done where Lhe war as on. as 1s done in highly civilized countries .. .. We are nearly al the zero hour. ll is a matter of seconds rather than minutes. We are at massacre time," said the letter. TONIGHT NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOA RD Re~ular meeting, Costa Mesa city council cham· bers, 7:30 p.m .. BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer. OCC Forum, 7:30 p.m. COASTLINE LECTURE - .. Women 1n American Film," Costa Mesa Women·s Club, 7 pm WEDNESDAY, APRIL26 CO LLEGE PARK HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION Regular meeting, Mayor Ed McFarland speaker, College Park School, 7:30 p.m. ORANOI! COAST t DAILY PILOT ._ .. _ Pr•,Hhfllt ... ~'"""" ~·o" ci.n.. ..,~ ...... ,ldrt,.t•lf\d~ .. Mt~ t"°"'UltH•U U•l• ,_, ..... ....,..,... M•~1~E~t0t ~ML-111_1' .. ft "'~""'" M.IMq•"'ll:dllon Orlllt """' '""' -IN NATIONAL ACADEMY UCI Chemist Rowlend A.caOOmy Cites UCI Chemist UC Irvine chemist F . Sherwood Rowland has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences, it was announced to· day. Rowland. working with fellow UCI chemist Mario Molina. pioneered research into the destructive effec t s of fluorocarbons, contained in com· mon propellant aerosols. upon the OZODj! layer Of the upper al· mospbere. 'The academy cited Rowland for his continuing research in hot atom chemistry, radiochemistry and atmospheric chemistry. Founded 115 years ago, the National Academy of Sciences is a private organization interested m the advancement of science: it is a regular adviser to govern· ment. Rowland is a founding UCI faculty member who was chairman of the department or chemistry from 1964 to 1970. In 1977 he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and in 1976 he won the UCI Distinguisbed Faculty Research Award. He is the recipient of numerous other scientific honors. Rowland was the only UCI faculty member to be elected to the National Academy of Sciences this year; 12 other UC scientists also were selected. giving the university the highest number or scientists named to the 1.256-member organization from one institution. Fro• Page A I TRASH ... but that exactly when a vote will· be scheduled isn't known. The strike so far has been marred by numerous rares. an· eluding the burning of three Jaycox Disposal trucks and a $15,000 firebombing at Anaheim Disposal. "The threats of violence are continuing," said an Anaheim Disposal spokesman today. "We had to put on extra guards last night. We armed ourselves like a fort." He said drivers he has spoken with seemed restless and eager to see the new contract offer and vote on it. Communities aUected along the Orange Coast are Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley, Hunt- ington Beach, Laguna Beach. Lake Forest, northern El Toro. Laguna Hills Leisure World, and some industrial parts of Newport Beach. Trash may be taken by homeowners lo any of several sites, with morning hours re· portedly the least crowded. In Huntington Beach, rubbish can be left at the transfer station at 18131 Gothard Street, near El· lis Avenue. In Irvine. the Coyote Canyon landfill on Bonita Can- yon Road behind UC Irvine is open to the public. Owner Of Store Slain A Garden Grove liquor store owner wos shot and killed Mon· day evening when be apparently moved to overpower a gunmctn who waa robbing his store. Police said witQesses told them J . H. Black, 58. of Los Angeles, was mortally wounded when lhe bandit wheeled and fired two shots as Black ap- proached him from behind. SeconCls earlier, the victim had given the gunman money from his wallet and apparently saw what he thought was an opening when the bandit turned his attention towards two clerks Police said the victim was struck 1n the leg and chest by lhe bullets fired from a .38· caliber handgun. Emergency medical treat· ment was given the mortally wounded man after he collapsed in the store. Ed Larsen's Liquor. 13161 Harbor Blvd , Garden Grove However , he died within an hour of the 5:45 p.m . shooting arter being taken to nearby UC I rvine Medical Center. Police said Black's s layer ran rrqm the store and apparently fled from the neighborhood on foot while carrying an unknown a m ount of money from the ljquorstore. The gunman was described by police as a Latin of medium build and about 22 years old. f'rora Page A l STUDIO ... Some small businesses currently oe<:upy the ground floor of the building, just a few hundred feet .from the Downtown Community Center. the Girl Scout facility and the Church of the Nazarene. Lion's Park will one day be expanding towards 19th Street and a new branch Library will be constructed under the redevelop- ment plans. The applicants can appeal the decision to the City Council and ' the Issue will be taken up at the next meeting of the city's re· development agency on May 3. The motion to deny the re· quest Monday night came from Richard Carstensen. vice chairman of the planning com- mission. The motion was seconded by commissioner Chic Clark. The Chamber of Commerce building will retain its com- mercial zoning. long Beach Yacht 'Real' Race Winner ENSENADA-When computer error. and other communication diHiculties were ironed out Mon- day, here are the correct results for the 31st Newport Beach to Ensenada yacht race· -White Lightnin". skippered by Paul McEachern of the Long Beach Yacht Club, wins the President of Mexico trophy. -Capriccio. skippered by Peter Nooteboom of King Harbor Yacht Club, wins the President of the United States trophy. Earlier. because or a com- puter roulup, it had been incor- rectly reported that Jay Lin- derman's Raider out of Balboa Yacht Club had won the Mexico trophy for best corrected time in the International Offshore Rule division. But correctly now , McEachem's White Lightnin", a Class B CF-37 designed and built by Dennis Choate Of Newport Beach. wins it. Solvers Taxed Probl,em Became Pragmatic SAN DIEGO CAP> -The four gifted students selected for the third annual World Future Problem- Solving Bowl flew home today from Athens, Ga . The biggest problem. they discovered. was gel· ting there in the first place. THE COSTS WE RE PJ\.ID BY their parents and themselves when San Diego school officials failed to finish the paperwork needed to use school funds. Then nobody met them at Atlanta aner a late· night flight which saved some money. Mechanical problems aborted their SO.mile connecting flight to tbe University of Georgia. In a taxi. they made it within minutes of the competition and wouncf up sixth among 12 teams. THE FOUR -NINA MANZI, Vicki Perez. Ben Decker and Elena Kosta -were happy, but not some of the parents who wound up paying the costs . .. It ought to come out of somebody's hide." Al~rt Deaker said, ref erring to school authorities. I Love Kills Husband Hill Dead Wi/e 'Was Everything to Him' GAINESVILLE. Fla CAP> -Friends say Nancy and Ray Nealon could not rind enouah time lo the day to be togeth_,r. They were inseparable from lhCJr first date; they even &ot Jobs ln the same s hopping center so they could share breaks and lunch together. newlyweds "He was real quiet and shy. Ap· parcntly, Nancy w{IS Just the world to him." RA Y'S WORLD B EGAN TO crumble a week ago when Nancy'a sports car went out of control and nJpped while she was return· Inc arter vi.slUng her parents. "She was everything to him," said J .c. She died three days later. Alter Nancy's death, Prev•tt aald his 100-ln·law withdrew. Prevatt, Nancy's father. "I never beard them argue, I never heard lhem disagree." NANCY, 22, DIED LAST week from in· juries in the crash of her sports car. She was buried Wednesday. "He didn't wunt to be around anybody," he said. Ray, 24. was burled Saturday beside his young bride. He was found lying beside his burned-out station wagon the day of her funeral, his body burned beyond recognition. Suicide. officials have ruled. Prevatt said he last saw his son·in·law the day of Nancy's funeral. after Ray said he was golng to the bank and then lo order more flowers for hlis bride's funeral. He bad or· dered a large wreath which bore the inscrip· lion, "God, Nancy and Ray." Prevatt believes Ray had decided to kill himself when he ordered the inscription. "I got reason to believe he couldn't be here without he r." said Prev· tt. •·He just sttid he never knew what love was untli he met Nancy" RAY WAS NOT SEEN the rest of the day. P REVATI' SAYS T HE TWO, who were married last July, were inseparable since their fi rst date in August 1976. Ray would often go lo the store where Nancy worked .. and just look ctt her." Prevatt said. Early that evening, the police were notified. The search ended in a wooded area of Gilchrist County. Lo the west of Gainesville. His car was destroyed by a fire that officials believe Ray set. A suicide note was later found in the couple's small apart· ment. It spoke pf his love ror Nancy and God. Friends described Ray as a loner. who was brought out of his shell by Nancy "Shi.' was real easy and sweet to talk to.·· s:.11d Katie Buchwalter. a neighbor of the .. He somehow convinced himself that what was done was the thing to do." Prevatt said. Jury Locked Up Jury Still Ponders Dr. Wad.dill's Fate By TOM BARLEY OI tlle o.ity ,.... S~ Jury deliberations resumed t.d- day 1n the Orange County Superior Court murder trial of Dr William Baxter WaddiU of Huntington Harbour. The panel of nine men and three women deliberated for about three hours Monday after listening to instructions read by Judge James K. Turner. Jud~e Turner ruled todav that the jury will, starting this eve· ning, be sequestered until it has reached a verdict in the Waddill trial. .. I hate to do lh1s," Judge Turner commented s hortly before the deliberating jury was sent lo lunch. "But the tremendous publicity that has been generated an the last 24 hours forces me to take this action." Judge Turner did not com- F rort1 Page A I VOLUME ... igmted the latest outburst or buying ~a s provided b y Eastman Kodak, a long tame (a vorale of investing inst1tut1ons . Over the weekend, Kodak re· ported a 50 percent rise in first quarter earnings from the com- parable period last year. But brokers also said the market was generating its own fu el. attracting "t•atch-up .. buy- ing by investors impresi.ell by the· recent strength 1n ~tock prices As Standard & Poor·s Corp. analysts observed in a recent is- sue or the firm ·s mvestment ad- visory publ1cat1on ''The Outlook · .. Markel strength itself can do much lo bolster sen timent " Advanc e :-out numbered declines by about a 2 1 margin in the broad tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. menl on the nature of the publicity that led to his decision Attorneys for both sides, ap parently warned by the judge, refused to discpss the issue. The decision means thal the 12 jurors and one alternate juror will spend the n"ight at a selected. motel or hotel at county expense until a verdict is reached. Jurors have already been tak- ing their noon meal at a restaurant selected by the coun- ty and they have been kept apart from the pubUc during the noon hour. Jurors have been asked to re· turn one of five possible verdicts: not guilty. murder in the first or second degree or at- tempted murder in the first or second degree. Waddill and his wife. Janet. had breakfast in the courthouse cafeteria today and appeared to be rully recovered from a traffic accident Monday that left them shaken but unhurt. Their Cadillac. described to- day as severely damaged, col· laded with another auto as the Waddills drove lo the county courthouse. The woman occu- pant or the other car is listed in guarded condition today at We s tmins ter Community llospital. The murder charges faced by Waddill, 42, ste m from his al- leged strangulation of a newborn infant in the Westminster hospital nursery on March 2, l977. It is alleged t h at Waddill panacked when he realized that the infant he had tried lo abort 12 hours earlier had survived the saline injection and was righting for Life in the nursery. The jury was told that Waddill choked the baby girl to death while suggesting to another doc· tor four other ways in which she could be kHled. including being drowned in a bucket of water. 1t was testified for the pros· ecution that Waddill murdered the baby because he felt she had suffered massive brain damage and would be little more than a human vegetable if she lived. Mesan Struck By Car, Hurt In Huntington A 33 year-old Costa Mesa man underwent surgery today for cril1cal injuries suffered when he was struck by an auto Uus morning in lluntmgto n Beach. police said. Gary William Dingle of 2184 Pacific Ave. was struck by an auto at 1 :28 a.m. as he was run· ning in the rain outside a crosswalk. The accident oc curred on Brookhurst Street near Hamilton Avenue, polici: ~aid. The driver of the vehicle. Johal Bernard Wheelehan, 29, of 259 S1erks St.. Costa Mesa. was not held. Dingle was rushed to Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. where he was reported in critical condition. The victim was transported to the recovery room at 9 a.m .. where no condi- t 1on report was available. hespital officials said. Fro•Page A I KENNEDY. • in upsetting that. In past years. Mrs . Kennedy has had some emotional and drinking problems. attributed b~ some to the pressures of living with the bearer of the Kennedy family's political legacy. The Post quoted Mrs . Ken· nedy 's friends as saying she has settled into a "quiet but enjoya ble life with a small circle of friends .. far from th e Washington social scene. "It just seems that she is more at tiome here,·· the Post quoted lhe friends. ··Teddy has a brul<1l schedule." ·'She has lost a lot of weight and really looks trimmer and younger than she did two years ago. Nobody has seen a drink in her hand." they said. A spokesman at the Lesley school. Jim Blake. said Mrs. Kennedy was taking an indepen dent study course lilied "Music and Sound in the Classroom.·· He said the course is for teachers seeking a masters · degree. Farmar s~e Cha111 ·--~~~·· ,! :,.1 ·~ \. . ; ' •' ' ~I "" .... ;:... '•• :;$!J'~ Farmer Cheese Is one of our best molting and cooking cheeses. It's moat delecteble wtten served at room temperature. Cubed Fermar Che110 is delicious when dipped In apple butter. llVI 901 2% lb. whole piece 5.99 ea. Savi tac Off Reg. Lb. Price 2.79 II. reg. 3.19 lb. WESTO.IFF PLAZA 11• & '""'e t .. "rt .._. ,.._ •u-otn ........,... 'Tl w. 'Tl' ... 'Tl. ~IJMH'I Ylu.AMOAMA POINT \ \ BJ GA&Y GllANVIUE oe .. ....,,......, So far, burly Anthony "Big Tony" Marone Sr. baa been flit· ting about OD tbe outsklrts of the SL!pben Bovan murder case. 11iJonday, however. a pros· eculor laid It ls likely Bil Tony will become a feature flayer in the bizarre drama tba bas un· folded .ince Bovan last October was gunned down outside a N'ewpor1 Beach restaurant. "I'm seekinC I':. murder con· spiracr, indictment and am hop- ing be U <Big Tony) be indicted May 17," said Deputy District Attorney David Carter. Carter's word.a were spoken from the witness stand ln Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert K11eeland's courtroom. The prosecutor's appearance as a witness came after Bil Tony had told his version of his role in Bovan's sla}'.ing. The testimony came as lawyers for the seven defen· daots already cited in the case continued a long series of pre- trial motions. • Those motions are aimed at hatving the charges against the defendants either dismissed' or reduced before they are made to stand trial. One of those defendants is Bft Tony's son, Anthony ''LHtle Tony" Marone J r. And the al· lt>ged triggerman in Bovu'a murder is a long-Ume Qig Tony ally, Jerry Fiori. According lo Bie Tony's lestimony Monday. he and his etssociates became involved in • the case after being hired as public relations men by the so- called Krishnas. ·'Whal dld you do as a public relations man?" asked Deputy District Attorney Orella Sears. "Oh, we went around ahd tried to sell cookies, six million dollar man cookies." Big Tony answered. "What did the cookies look like?" Mrs. Sears asked. "They looked like cookies," Big Tony replied. .. And what kind or cookies were they?" Mrs. Sears wanted lo know. "Terrible, they were terrible cookies," Big Tony said as be quickly dismjssed his public re· latlons career as a cookie salesman for the so-called • Krishna sect that included 28· year-old Alexander Kulik. It was when Kulik was al- legedly kidnapped by Bovan and two companions that l}ig· Ton,y and his mates became em· broiled in a three-corner en· counter that pitted them, the Krishnas and Bovan•s cadre againstoneanother. Big Tony testified that when SJ00,000 ransom was delivered to an ocean view spot near San Cl emente. he and two others were at the scene to watch Bovan pick up the valise con- taining the ransom money. "We started walking toward the <Bovan's > camper and this guy starts firing al us," Big Tony testified. .. 'Geez.' Rossi yelled. 'Hey, that crazy sonofabitch is shoot· ing at us.• So. we got out of th<'re." . Somehow. 'though, Big Tony and his mates ended up with $70,000 of the $100,000 paid for Kulik's releas e. "Yeah, I got $15,000. Jerry C Fiori) got $10,000. ll was split up like that." Big Tony said. Delly ...... SUff ...... A Putt for Big Brothers David Eisenhower sinks a practice putt as his partner. Tony Vitti. looks on prior to teeing off in Monday's benefit tournament for Bi~ Brolhers of Orange County. The Santa Ana Country Club event r a ised about $8,000 for the group whic h aids troubled boys. New HB Council To Make Changes By ROBERT BARKE R 01 1M ~tly f'llM SUll Shock waves have shuddered through city hall -from the firth floor to the lobby -since the April 11 City Council elec· tions in Huntington Beach. And a blunt meeting Monday has not quieted the situation. Three newly elected council members have made tl clear that they don't have much en· thusiasm for the way the city has been run. One of them took matters into his own hands Mon- day. Probably causing the most jit· ters. and getting the undivided attention or the employees. is the 6-2. 230-pound John A Thomas. Thomas says that citizens have been getting the run· around when they come for help in city hall whlle developers and friends of officials receive special treatment. He has set up virtual full-time office hours ln city hall to try to chattge things around. Before the election, Thomas said that if all else fails. he can get things done with the proper application of his size 12, hlgb. top black workman's shoes. He s ays that unless there is a change in attitude there are go. ing to be changes -period. Among other things. Thomas has taken a dim view o r pingpong games and tourna· ments on the fifth floor of city ·hall. "I don't have time to play pingpong and neither s hould they." he said. "Ir I have to. I'll fold up those tables and send them down the elevator." Thomas put his slze-12 foot to work Monday after a temporary city employee was hired as an executive secretary for Vince bM y f'llet Stiff - 'TIME FOR A CHANGE' New Councilman Thomas Moorhouse. director of harbors and beaches. Thomas gathered City Ad · ministrator Bud Belsito, Assis- tant <;jty Administrator Richard Harlo.w, Personnel Director Ed Thompson. his assistant Don Lewis. atlorney Jim Georges and Moorhouse and told them how things were going to be done. He also invited a reporter to the meeting to prove, he says, that anything he does he does openly and with nothing to hide. Thomas was riled because a temporary employee got the secretary's job over six appli- cants who are working for the ci· ty on a full-time basis . County Judges Judged Banyard, Knight Most Popular With Lawyers llY TOM BAKLEY Of t11t Delly """SIMI A poll conducted by members of the Orange County Trial Lawyers Association and re· leased Monday shows that Judge Robert A. Banyard was the most highly regarded Superior Court judge ln 1977. Judge Baoyard headed a list of 37 Superior Court Judges sUr· veyed by the trial lawyers with a total of 4.34 out of a possible 5.00 -an avera.ge drawn from four .-reas of judicial accompllsh· menl. The same poll conducted among non-member lawyers placed Judge Banyard second to Judge H. Warren Knight of Mis· ••on Viejo. Knight drew 4.39 to Bunyard's 4.30 in the latter rat· lnga. One Superior Court ju4ge hit · the same spot in both tabula. tions . Judge Ja m es H. Walsworth of Newport Beach ranked 31th in both llets-2.~ by OCTLA and 2.81 b.Y non· member bial lawyers. Judge Allcemarie Stoller of Har bor Municipal Court took top apol tor all Orange County Municipal Court Jud&ea in both 1'77 surveya. The pt'ffldlnc Judie of tb• Newport Bead court 1eored C.42 out of s.oo 1n the OCTLA tat.ln,la and 4.37 ln the aurvey conduct*l amona ~ court&.11a.,.,.. Jud.ce Robert C. Todd, wbo was elevated from the Harbor Court to Superior Court shortly after the survey was conducted. rated second in bolb coun(ywide municipal' court surveys -4.38 in the OCTLA list and 4.05 by non·members·or OCTLA. Ranked 36th of 36 municipal court judges on both lists ta Judge John C. Teal of the Santa Ana Municlpal court. Teal drew 2.80 from the association and 2.56 from other lawyers. Any score between 2.00 and 3.00 means that the judge voted in \hat area needs to· improve, according to the association. Judges Walsworth and Teal fall into that category in both surveys. Lawyers not linked to OCTLA determined In their munjcipal court survey that Harbor Court Judges Donald Dungan and Calvin P. Schmidt need to im· prove. Dungan and Schmidt scored 2. 7' and 2. 79 respec- tively. Schmidt climbed out or that cate1ory in the OCTLA survey with a 3.11 ratine. But Dungan remained in the "needs to im- prove" bracket with an even lower 2.08 evaluation by OCTLA mem~rs. The annual survey asks for contrl.butor11' ratings on the basts or four judicial skills· legal 1ktll1, industry. Judicial de- meanor and Judi cl a( integrity. A score or 5.00 is excellent. A score or 4.00 is good, 3.00 is satis factory, 2.00 needs improve- ment and 1.00 is poor. Nine Superior Court judges scored higher than 4.00 in the OCTLA survey. 'fJley are judges Banyard (4.$4). Bruce Sumner. or Laguna Beach <4 .31 ), Knight C4.26), Robert P. Kneeland of Newport Beach and pres iding Judge Byron K. McMillan <both 4.25), Harmon G. Scoville (4.19), Philip E. Schwab (4.15). Frank Domenlcbini of San Clemente <4.11 > and Kenneth E . Lae (4.02 ). Six of those judges made the same grade in the list compUed from non·OCTLA surveys. Judge Sch wab. Lae and Domenichlni fell below the 4.00 mark in the latter list with Judge Raymond Vincent movin1 anto the upper brackets with a 4.28 score -third to Knight and Banyard. Six of Orange County's 36 municipal court judges made the 4 00 cutoff in the OCTLA list: Judges Stotler. Todd. Philip A. Petty, of Newport Beach, John H Smith. James Alfano and Selim Franklin or the Harbor Court. Lawyen not affiliated w1th OCTLA rated only Jud1es Stotler and Tod4'bove the 4.00 mark. f • fUll9dar.Ap1!12S. 1e1a DAILY PILOT A 3 Tass Raps Sente~ce Hanna Called Koreagate Scapegoat By 1be Asaocla&ed Preas Tbe Soviet news aeency Tass criticized today what lt called the "amazingly soft" sentence given to former Orange County Congressman Richard T. Han· na, in the Korean influence· buying scandal. Calling the six-term con· ereHman "a scapegoat," Tass 1ald the six· to »month prison sentence he received io W asblngton on Monday means "the criminal will be at liberty ln a matter of months." The Soviet news agency also pointed out that after two years of investigation into the Korean scandal, only one of about 100 U .$. congressmen said to have received bribes has been brought to trial. Tass said this was the "result of behind the scenes maneuvers." U.S. justice, while "merciless when il comes to malting short shrift of progressive·minded Americans and civil rights champions. displays amazing humaneness when it comes to rea l criminals from among the ruling circles," Tass said. "The ruling circles however have done everything so that even this scapegoat could get off with a purely symbolic punish- ment." the news agency added. Hanna's lawyer called the in· cident "a serious mistake or judgment." Hanna had forgotten the ad· vice given to him many years ago by the former governor or California. After being sentenced Monday Hanna recalled the advice given by Edmund G. Brown, Sr . "Young men have always been advised to go into the world to make their fame and fortune But when you choose politics. forget about the fortune." OCFairWins FalJ Dates For Racing The California Stale Racing Board has allocated a second series of thoroughbred horse racing dates to the Orange Coun- ty Fair next fall al Los Alamitos Race Course. .. The approved schedule calls for 14 days of racing beginning Veterans Day, Nov. 11, and clOS· lng t hree days after Thanksgjv· Ing, Nov. 26. The races wiU be held in con- junction with the second annual Orange County FaJl Fair at Los Alamitos. Kenny Fulk, gtmeral manager of the Costa Mesa·based fair· grounds, said the renewal of Lhe racing dat.es sets a precedent for a yearly meet. State laws allow county fairs up to two weeks or lhrorougbbred horse racing a year. Granting of the 1977 dates, the first ever in Orange County, was opposed by the Hollywood Park and Santa Anita race tracks. The final court decision a llowing the dates was held up until four days before the Fall Fair opened last November. Thal race meet generated nearly $250,000 in revenue to be u s ed in the expansion of facilities at the 160·acre fair- grounds, which will become a year-round cultural and exposi- tion center. The 44th annual conclave of the American Gem Society was held In San Francisco th•• year. Donna BlllCkman. Riek McEl- valne and I attended from our store. During the pa.st year. Donna and Rick have complet· ed the neoeuary requirements to upgrade their titles In the Society: Donna to Cert1lied Gemologist and Rick to Aegistef9d Jeweler. Their tnp to the oonclftt was eponsored by our firm and was our way of saying "thank you" to them for their In~ In lnctMllng their lulOWledge and qualifications In the gemologlcaJ field. The conciav. la a five day meeting of the AGS mem· berthlp from Canida and Unit· ed S~ and NCh 'JMI Is held In a different geographic loca· tlon with the hope that It will al· low memberl In each area an equal oppo11un1ty to an.rid at leeet onoe uch 4th or 5th year. I find theee conclrtee to valua- ble tMt I have only mleeed one llnoe becoming a member of theAGS. The program Is Mt up with five concurrent lab .... ions each day. Special Interest eemtn.,. and cllnlca are con- .,, .......... HANNA: I'll JUST GET IN THERE AND DO MY TIME' Former CongreHman's Sentence Chided by Moecow Ra0ins W on'i Last, Service Predicts Rains dampened the Orange Coas t once again today, but are expected lo give way overnight to clear weather. the National Weather Service says. The forecast is Cor a chance of scattered light showers tonight followed by sunny and warmer weather Wednesday and general faar weather through Saturday. Temperatures should range into the upper 70s, a weather service spokeswoman said. Meanwhile, Orange Coas t rainwatchers continued loggjng amounts of rainfall but noted that this rainy season is falling s hort of the records it once seemed sure to break. Rainy seasons are measured from the beginning or July through the end of June. The county record, measured in San- ta Ana in 1883-84, is 32.65 inches, followed by 32.14 inches in 1940-41. This year. with only .01 inches measured this morning, the total so far in Santa Ana is 28.36 inches. Totals elsewhere were: Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, .01 inches overnight, total 27.92; Laguna Niguel, .03 inches by this morning, 31.02 total; and Hun tington Beach, .02 inches overnight for a total or 25.90 inc bes. St~te Military Bases Face Cuts, Closing SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The Defense Department has pro· posed closure or cutback of seven California military in- s ta 11 a tions. includin g the Presidio of San Francisco, Let· terman Army Hospital in San Francisco and the San Diego Na val Training Recr uitment Center. Sen. Alan Cranston's of· flee said today. The proposed cutbacks are among 85 to be announced in Washington Wednesday by the Pentagon. Congressional delega· tions were being briefed on them today . No El Toro or Camp Pendleton facilities apparently are involved. The California installations in· eluded in the list or cutbacks, which the Defense Department is to study for s ix to eight months, are: @ &EM WISE -Presidio of San Francisco. closure. -Letterman Army Hospital, San 1''rancisco, s uggested closure with patients and personnel to be tranaferred to Oakland Naval Hospital. --Alameda Naval Air Station and North Island Naval Facility. San Diego, s uggested reduction or personnel. -San Diego Naval Training Recruitment Center, suggested closure of either this installation or the Navy's Great Lake!> Naval Training Center. -San Diego Marine Corps Recruitment Depot, suggested closure. -Los Angeles Air Force Sta- tion , El Segundo, suggested closure, f acilities to be transferred to Vandenberg Air Force Base or Norton Air Force Base. dooted by moderators and 10- structOfS with expertise in a particular field of gemology. We have the opportunity to learn the very latest informa- tion and dllClOVGries In the gem world. I find that very exciting and stimul.Ung. PeYhaps the enthusiasm I have for attending the con- claves Is also due to lhe ,.,.rveloua opportunity of get· ting to know so many won· derful people from all parts or the countrt who share my In- le rests 1n the fascinating 9Cience of gemology. We can· not help but learn from MCh other even In the informal dls- cusal ons w e have at t he luncheona and dlnneB oo the IChedula. When we jewelers get together. we talk shop a lot. ,.,.Inly ~use we find our career to Interesting. CHARLES H. BARR I welcome this opportunity each year to reinforce and ln- crease my knowledge of gemology end of the Jewel'Y ln- dultry. Iii eo dOlng, I •m also able to !l8t've my cu.tome rs t.ttet and to continue to de- eeMt the trust and conflclance they have In me and my firm. .......... w ~ ... , ( ! \ , .. A4 OM.Y"OT NATION I WEATHER -• • • • .. • . • ... ... . -. " Senate Testl•ong with~ .lu8t 't:·.· Ccia ting , . Rackets Again • Tom~~\\'.' Marpblne Tied to Ttlnions Kids Keep on Truck.in' l'&ASllY COMPETITION: For much ot Orange Coun ty. lbe rubbish is still piling up today as the Great Trash Strike moves into its second week. But as in most crisis times. some people are making money out of it. WASHINGTON <AP> -~ decadea.~fter a Senate committee laid bare a pattern of tacketeertu in parts of the labor movement. another Senate panel is being tol~ that Qrtant• crime sUll enjoys wide innuence ovel' some unlo~. Justice Department lawyer'l'boruas Puccio told the Senate perma- Over the weekend. it was reported that numerous young men were out prowling around the strike area In pickup trucks. Normally. you would anticipate they would be crujsing to ogle pretty young women. Not so, this time They were out hawking trash services. Some kids would haul away your rubbish at one dollar a barrel or plastic bag. You pay the price and they haul. E~EWHEBE, THE HAUL-AWAY tarriffwas reported to be as low as SO cents per barrel or bag. You have to figure the price depended on the competi· lion from other kids and their pickup trucks and also what -•&<lll~ ... I There'$ Nothing Like a Little Friendly Competition nent inV(!Stigations subto~mit' tee that " . . . many ot tb~ in· . dividuals whose n.ames first sCIJ'- faced durlni those.bearings (jn the late 1950s) are today prin· c1 pal figures in illegal labor ac- tivitie~. now wtdel\invesUgation THE SENATE PANEL was listening today to Labor Secretary Ray Marshall. whose de partment came under attack from some quarters on Monday for not doing enough to help the anti-racketeering effort. Justice Department lawyers said there were not enough specially trained Labor Depart· ment investigators assigned to the organized crime strike forces set up by the Justice Department. And Sen. Sam Nunn. D-Ga .. acting subcommittee chairman. said. "It is apparent that the Labor Department needs more people and they need to have a new attitude and a new spirit." IN TESl'IMONY Monday, tel· Ing Deputy Attorney General Benjamin Civilelti said an esti mated 300 union locals across the country are "severely influenced" by racketeers. with most of the locals affitiated with a handful of unnamed national and int.ernational organizations. There are an estimated 75,000 union locals nationwide. Civiletti told the subcommil- tee the federal government's or· ganized crime strike force pro- gram 0 ls alive and well, and . . . we have lntelU!lfied our ef- forts in the area or labor· management racketeering.·· HE SAID investigators look in· to cases s uch as these: -"Ghost" e mployees. fre- q uen lly organized crime members. paid for doing no work. -Kickbacks to trustees of pension funds in return for loans to shaky investment projects that in turn are looted. -Payoffs to union officials in return for keeping an e mployer's labor costs to a minimum. -Embezzlement from union treasuries. CIVILETTI TOLD THE panel he was satisfied with an agree· menl recently reached by Justice and Labor department officials concerning the con· tribulion the Labor Department will make to the organized crime strike forces. The department will assign 15 investigators full time to the strike forces and will ask lbe Of· fice of Management and Budget for an additional 125 in· vestigators who would be avada· ble as needed. AND THAT'S THE WAY IT IS AT BENEFIT Hugh Carey, Left. Betsy and Walter Cronkite Top Names Drop By To Horwr Cronkite NEW YORK <AP> -Drop any name. John Lindsay. Hugh Carey Robert Wagner. Cliff Robertson and Dina Merrill. Helen Hayes. Richard and Mary Rodgers. Mrs. Dougl~ MacArthur Andrew Young. You name them -they were at the Waldorf Monday rught to pay honor to the Hospital for Special Surgery. to its veteran fund· raiser. Mildred Hilson. and.the man described by Danny Kaye as "lhe anchor that we all hang onto," Walter Cronki\e. IT WAS A LONG and. crowded evening. With 800 guests filling the Waldorf's Grand Ballroom for a dinner each had paid Sl¥t to eat under a huge banner read· ing .. Mildted and Walter -And That's the Way It Is ... the trash·inundaled residents werewllling to pay. Meanwhile. on the professional trash pickup front. late n:ports indicate that the Teamsters Union has been given "a final offer" from management of the refuse companies and the union has one week in which to reply. Coca-Col~ Pepsico Bit Gov.• Carey. accompanied by Anne Ford Uziel It. praised Cronkite as "the most believable man. the most influential and the most decisive," adding THUS IT'S ANYBODY'S guess as to how long tht.' ~trike will prevail. The union could wait the full week and then say no deal. The s trike goes on. Or the labor brass could approve a back-to-work deal within the next five minutes. This seems unlikely. The longer the trash piles up. the ~realer wrn be the pressure for some kind of settle- ment Drink Prices May Fall "But he hasn't had to take thl' blame for anything .. Martin Gabel read a tnbute written by humoris t Art Buchwald. ca lling the CBS anchorman "the tather of u::. all." He said that if anyone were approached by beings from out er space and told to "take me to your leader" there "would be no question" -they would be led strai~ht to Cronkite. It is interesting. however, that when some essential service like trash collection is abruptly chopped off. how some enterprising souls come along to fill the void. In this case, it appears to be young men with the good fortune of owning pickup trucks. WA SHJNGTON <AP> -Soft drink prices may come down as a result of a Federal Trade Com· mission finding that long- standing practices of the Coca· Cola Company and Pepsico Inc. violate federal antitrust law. The commission. in a 2·1 de- cision Monday, s aid the. two giant so(t dri,-ik. cornpanies violate antitrust law by restrict· ing their bottlers to certain ter· ritories. AND 111E PRICE FOR their services may vary wildly here in the early stages of the. strike. If the walkout becomes prolonged. however, you can just bet the per barrel price will level off where the young pickup truckers figure they are turning a reasonable profit m a com- petitive marketplace. Somehow this system of commerce sounds familiar I think they call it free enterprise. r SINCE 1900. Coca-Cola has forbidden its bottlers from sen- 1ng their soft drinks outside specHied territories. Pepsico has had similar restrictions s ince the 1930s. Judge RejectS Claim By Presley Dentist However. both companies promised appeals through the federal courts, which wouJd delay the eff e<1t of the decision. Coca-Cola said, "Our b<)ttler contracts for over 77 years have been on the basis of an economically effic ient and socially des irable business system." MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> -A probate judge has rejected a California dentist's $14,015 claim against the estate of Elvis Pres ley. Or. Max Shapiro or Los Angeles filed the claim Jan. 24, saying he had not been paid for dental work he performed on Presley. a member of his backup band and two women friends. The claim said about $900 in dental work had been done on Presley, who died Aug. 16 in Memphis. Presley's girlfriend. Ginger Alden. and Miss Alden's sister also received some dental care. it said PEPSICO CALLED THE 4e- cision "another example or the government attempting to im· pose theoretical economic con- cepts a nd alter a structure which has been proven in the marketplace." Most of the claim involved work on Shaun Nielson. who sang in a band that opened Presley's shows Shapiro's lawyer. James Irion. said the decision will be ap pealed Both companies sell the syrup and concentrates used to make their soft drinks to independent bottlers. The companies have enforced contracts keeping the Soggy South Sees Sun Rain Forecast From West Coa8t to Great Basin Tettaperaucre• Ml LA l"rc Albu'q .. 1q ~ All..ita 71 SS .0 Bettlrnore 10 ., BolH . , .. Doi.ton .. ., BrowMvlllt •• .. e1111a10 ., » Chf<ev<> u « ~ Cl1><1~t1 .. .. • 01 Clev1t..id ,.. 0.1 Fl Wlh IS SI OllW" tJ •S O.trott ~ u Htl-. , .. .._lulu IS IJ HOU1ton a " J~-··v111t '° ,. l(.tfl'S Oty ., 45 Lu\I~ u •S Liiiie Ro<._ 1S " LMAnetl" n ,. ""-"'""" ~ !! •• Mlarn1 .61 Mllw..,ue S2 ,, Mplt-$1. P .. « ·°' Ha"'vlllt ,. S2 •• NtwOrl..,.. .. .. HtwYOf'll 71 •• Ollla. City " 0 Omttl• .. tO .., ..... o.e...., h ... ln4 MOncllly.f'tlCNy II YoU do noo n•v• l'lllN-llv \lO pm C<lllor!IO<t 1 0 ltl -\'OUf COOy #Ill be °'*'Ye<IO ..atU<Gly tl>CI Su nOt y II 'l'QI> do na< ;.c.¥9 t:' cooy ov 8 .,,, u 11 ~ • m •"41 \'OUf ClOO'f Wiii D9 e1r-...11T ....... MIMI 0onot County AIW' '4Mlll _, HuftlrllOIO<I BNcll _.,,.... .... 116141< 1*1111 • ..,, 0.-• Ca0<11ttn0 8Ntl\ S.. Jv#lfl Clc!ott••no 0-r.ioni Soll!ll LlgUNI l_.......,.. ........ .. ~ ... Cei4 -=== l:infm ,..,,._., o.ct .. ,-4 ---=== 0.l•r>Oo IS 6A PllllM'pllie '1 4S PIMMnla , ... Pllllbll~ll '1 « P'tltnd, ,,,,_, ~ Jt P'lltlld, °" tO ,. St. LOiii• .. . , •• SI. P. Tempe IS 6l Sall ltkl ,, 50 Saft 01'90 12 S7 S.n Fran s• Sl .J7 SUUlt 10 SJ T11lsa 11 •S Wa.tllnQlon n 50 CALll'ORMIA Barstow 12 )) 1111 e .. r " ~ .,,,,,. 11 S9 Catalina 6l SS Et C.ntro .. ~ l.AtktAtr-<14 SS • Long Bttch .. )I .... ~~ .. S1 OftlMIO .. " l"almStwl• .. ~ SMh~no 61 )I S.ntaAna •• s• $ant• Banlera •s n IJ.S. 8•-••'11 SllfttllfM ..,,. .. OY9r -_,, ot llMi I099Y So.Ill! today, 11111 ,,_, OI Ille r19lon "'""'necl under a dr•aty b4anllet Of c-, .itlK , pers11t.nt rain .-tel -~winch Htavv thundtntorms < 101se<1 Al.Oatna -ly tOday On Monday n!Qlll •• IOfllldo IOU<lle<I dOWn " Bayview, -Binnl,...m T,,,te llO<IMs •-dalna9fd. bllt no lnlu<its ... , ... pOt'led. Rall\ wa\ kncatt lllrouQllOul llll clay tn>m Ille Wttt Coast lo tlle Grut 8Hlfl, • Scalllrtd sllowtr\ •nd tllvn . dlrtl'tOWtn pta(jl.lld Ille Orut l.a-H to tlll 01110 Valley. The mlddl• and tovlhtrll Allanllc coa,tal \lalu "''° IWJd rain end cloudy-Iller. The sun covld be -n o....r m11<ll ot ,,.. Plaln1. Ille Ml»tulppl \l•llev •lld Ntw E119land Early mornlnci lem,,.r•luru •rovlld Ille nallon ratl9fld from H In Horii! Platte. Ntb , etld Pl\lllPt ...... 9, Pa .• IO" In IMvtM. Callf caatornla A llQlll rain ltO OVlr mucll of !>out"" n Ctllfomla IOOay t1ow1119 "'\111'0\lr lrtlflc tllgl>tly blll c..,111111 "° mal6r llfeettm' a1111ortti.• Hid Tiie drtnt" -• ooe<ted to con. ttnue lntermlttenllv tllrovgn Wed!Ws· d•Y E•.., fl no more rain tails by Ille lllCI °' Ille r••nf•ll SNS<Jn June JO, Ille Natlonal Wfflher Service w1d ln1s will ~ Ille tllird -llHI ~ ... in LO• AnQelK l'li\lory By I a.m Ille storm had dllm~ .OI of an Inell ol raln on downtown Los A119el~. brlnQ11'19 tile ralntell for Ille SH50n to J3 '6 lnclleS, more then twice t111 _,,..., IJ.IS inchtt for 1t11s .,., . The wettest ~•r on roc;onl wn 1"3 ... wllll JI. ti lncl!H. fol-by 181 .. tO Wltll J4 .. ...., 1~1 ... Ill J2.,.. Coa•tal W~atMr Partly cloudy w1111 cnanu ot st\Ow1r1 toni9hl bKorn1119 mostly svnny WtdnHdly. Llglll varlal>le winds nlgllt end mornlno llOUfs. H1gm Wednuclay 1n tl'9 11pper tOs. Coattat 1_.aturM Wiii ranoe btlween SI and ... Inland lem· peraturu wlll range bet_,, St and ... Thi ... ter ~atun Wiii bl tO. Sam. Moo11, Tide• TUISOAY Stton<llO'# 4:14p.m. 1 ~ SKondlltgll tO·ttp,m. S 1 weONQOAY l'lnllow S.Jh.m 4 ,1 Flnt lllQI\ 12:1~p.trL J • S.Cond 10• s:o111.m. 1.• St<ond hlQll n : 1a p m. S.4 Sun rlM~ s II a.m .. sa" ,,n p,,,. Moon rltH•:S3p.m.,sats7:10a m. S11rl Report Hunllnvton l!eecl\ -OcNn calm a11<1 \mootll wllll 1.J IOot ,,..fls trom !IOlllhWHI Svtflno COlldillons 900d. Weier '-•tuf'• '6 ~. air tempereture u ~ v1.i111111v " "'"" Newpon 8Mcll -SllQN wind Wiit! tOlllllWHI S-11& Of 1•1 l•t. $ut'flft0 fair Wat.. tempe,'ttun '1 det< .... air ~ deQreft Vltlb4111l' fl9'11 mli.\. bottlers from competing with each other by giving each a specified territory. The commission majority said this curtaHs "intrabrand com· petition," or that between the various Coca-Cola brands and between the Pepsico brands. The Coca-Cola brands include Coca-Cola, Sprite. Fresca, Fan· ta. Tab and Mr. Plbb. and Pepsico's brands include Pepsi. Cola.. Teem, Mountain Dew and Patio. ELIMINATING THE 1n - trabrand competition also hurts competition with outs ide brands. the commission said . "Lower prices for Coca-Cola would. in turn. exert enormous downward pressure on the price of interbrand flavored carbonat· ed beverages and. to a lesser degree. on Kool Aid. Funny Face. fruit juices and all other soft drink products which. ac· cording to the bottlers. compete with Coca-Cola." the FTC said. Tell Mom You Love Her WAGNER FONDL V referred to Cronkite as his neighbor dur ing "my 12 unperturbed years at Gracie Mans ion.·· and abo praised Mrs. Hilson This Mother's Day send ~om a greeting a ll the world can -;h.m: on Sunday, May 14th. Express your love in a Daily Piloc Mother's Day Greering. It's easy . Write your message co fie am: of our three convl·ntl'nc s1Lcs and bring it co any Dai ly Piloc office prior co noon May 12. Or. you may mail a clipping of the border wich your message and paymcnr ro Dady Pilot. ~30 W . Bay Sr., Box 1560. Costa Mesa. Ca . 92626 . AJs comt• m three s11.es SI 0. S 15, and S ~ for the sp«aal child's Sile urd. (You must bt: under 12 y~l'1 of age m 4ualtfy fo< the: 111rlesr grttttng> It you wish you may ucate yow own Jc.coratcd ~rcc11ng Using black pen dnw your design m fit one of the dotrtd outl1nn shown here You may fill the cnme space. Only words and Imes drawn w1rhm the doucd hnc will .ippcar m your complcrro Mo1hcr s l:My ad r---------~----~-~---------, r-------------~-------~ r-----------, I I I I ' I I l ________ .,.. __ J L---------------------~-J L--~------~~---------~--~----~ .,_ ... , ......... , ' st() If yl>U wat1t hc(p lomposmg " suuablc l(tl'l'ttn~ or havl' any 4uesuons call 642·'$67K. A f;im<fly Daily PilOf ad·v1ser will ~ ~lad co help you. And. 1f you like you t:an chargl' your Mocher s ()&y .vt. Yoor cttd1t ·~good wtrh w, or you may use your Master Clurgl' or lkan k A rnt.-ncarJ. DAiLY -PiLOT .. • CALIFORNIA Patty to Pri3on? SAN FRANCl 0 <PJ -Patricia tlearst's lawyer la bopLng the U.S. Supreme Court will not be the court of last ~rt in his efforta t.o keep iM newsp{lper h~.ress wt of priSQl_l. Tbe h.igb c:OUrt refused on Monday to review MW Hearst's 1976 bank robbery conviction, and defense lawyer Albert Johnson was to meet here today with U.S. Attorney G. Wiiiiam Hunter to djscuss where the cose can go next. Hunter said he ex· peeled Johnson to discuss the chances of a reduction or Miss Hear~t·a seven-year conviction. JN WA$81NGTON, only Justice William Brennw1 Jr. voted to review the case. saying he would have limi~ ed tbe panel's sludy to the ad. misslbility into trial evidence of re- cordln8S or Mi• tteeht's conversa· lions in Jail. Orrick couJd ~end Miss Hearst to Jail after he rec~ives the official high court decision, or allow her to r e- main free on ball until all legal maneuvers are exhausted. Court rules allow Orrick to modify a sen· tence within 120 days of a Supreme Court decision. T.-cs.y, Apnl 25. 1978 -'Reaso n to B ope' • • Van Houten's : • • Changes Told : DAILY PILOT AS i;OS ANGELES <AP> -A newspaper ex· ecullve testifving for the defense m Leslie Van Houten's third murder trial says he watched her change from a happy-go·lucky high school •..-... ....... ..._ homecoming princess to an incoherent young • • HE R B « woman when sbe was with Charles Manson's cult. ! FRIEDLA ~DF.R « But. Los Angeles Times executive Glenn • IS "AKI SG • Peters said Monday Miss Van Houten. now 28. • GREAT DEALS • began to regain control of herself after the ! FREE « state's death penalty law was overturned m ... « December 1976. ,. « "SHE HAD REASON to hope." said Peters. : 5(),:~;~~ts • adding that he visited Miss Van Houten every • other week while she was on death row "Hope had • ....................................... « been brought back Into her experience... • or CU I. ( 'llA 'i;(, t:S « h ..................... , ... ,_, ... « MfSS HEARST served 14 months behind bars before, during and after her conviction. Out on $1 mUlion bail. she is, under threat or another 1' months confinement before s he becomes eligible for parole. HUNTER TOLD a news conference Monday it would be at least two weeks before any further develop- ments could be expected in the case. Miss Hearst was convicted Maret/\ CfHJI /ti anaa 20. 1976, of joining SLA members in . Defense attorney Maxwell Ke1t 1s trying to • ..... ,. .. ,... ... ,., .. , .. , « show Miss Van Houten WJlS inc:apable or ralidnal • e HONDA e « thought when she was a member of Manson's • 111i.111r,.~.,,• « A "gravely disappointed" Johnson said Tuesday that he would ask U.S. District Judge William Orrick to modify Miss Hearst's sentence lo time served and ask the Supreme Court to reconsider its decision. Such reconsideration is rarely granted. The defense has 25 days to ask for a rehearing. the Sl0,960 armed robbery of a As Hillary the cub ~uts up. ~JS mother Pat- Hlbernia Bank branch. She claimed ty keeps her cool m San Diego Zoo Tues- family. • s.snm •-... m •* * * * * * * * * * * * ~ she was threatened with death unless day. After a ll. a Himalaya n black bear as she participated. su pposed to bear up during tryin g circumstances. The 10-pound cub is named MISS VAN HOUTEN 1s charged in the Aug. 10, RIUMP H -J969. killings or Los Angeles grocer Leno La81an-• MG·T « ca and his wile. Rosemary • e JAGUAR e • THE SAN FRANCISCO robbery a fte r Mt. Everest climber Edmund came two months and 10 days after J'll She was originally convicted of murder and • FIAT LANCIA « conspiracy in 1971. but that conv1ctton was over· • • • turned and a new trial ordered on grounds s he was • s.s1 n~~" • .'!!:~::!:111'!. .• m « denied adequate legal representation after her at-"'* * * * * * * * * * * *« torney died during the proceedings. Her second • e TOY OT A e • trial ended in a hung JUry last year. • •-11;,.-r.,........ • terroris t members of the now-defunct _..:.h.:.;t;.:.:...:a.:.;r~~..:."---------------­ JOHNSON ~O was expected to ask Orrick to reduce the sentence to probation only, as was done with her assault-robbery convjction in Los Angeles. That charge s tem med from a shooting incident at a Los Angeles sporting.goods store while she was on the run with her Symbionese Libera- tion Army kidnappers. ' Bill D e laye d SLA dragged her scrt:aming rrom her Berkeley apartment on Feb. 4. 1974. After a sensationa l two-month trial. a jury of seven women and fivt! men convicted Miss Hearst. Last November. the 9th U.S Circuit Court of Appeals in San Fran· cisco ruJed that Miss Hearst had re· ceived a fair trial and that her sen- tence should stand Crillle Times Scaled Down Spe~ial Session Adjourns SACRAMENTO <API SACRAMENTO <AP> -A proposed incre~e. T h e s p e c 1 a I Funding Rapped SACRAMENTO <AP> -A court ruling grant- ing state Medi-Cal funding for sex change opera- tions would be reversed under two similar bills in- troduced Monday. State Sens. William Campbell, R-Hacienda Heights. and Paul Carpenter, D-Cypress. proposed the meas ures only a rew days after a state appeals court in San Francisco ordered the funding. "The abuse of our Medi-Cal system has finally reached the height of absurruty," Campbell said in a s tatement. "This ludicrous expenditure of tax payers' dollars is perhaps the greatest violation or the public trust since the Medi-Cal system was. first established ... Carpenter said. "tr we are to have sufficient , dollars in the pot to help the deserving people who are ill. we should not waste tax dollars for what is essentially elective cosmetic surgyer " Jt f •• , ..... f.UU•f' $Jl Soflit tc. EARLIER MON DAV, Deputy District Al· •* * * * * * * * * * * "« torneys Dino FuJgoni and Stephen Kay rested tbe1r • )10TORH0)1 E tc case after .ca}ling 20 witnesses dunng 13 days or : SALES & R E~TAl.S • testimony. ,.. RF.SER\'E ~OW ! In conclurung their case. the prosecutors reao ~ Jurors testimony trom the 1ormer Manson ,.. 5:17·77i7 Ext. 500 ~ follower's last trial. in which she testified she _. * * * * * * * * * * -., didn't know if she would kill her own father if • • LEASING • • • u ... " .. ----• .,..._ « asked to by Manson r-Aldfri.-r ... .....,...._ • 537.;11; Ext. 600 • MISS VAN HOUTEN told Kay then that she •* * * * * * * * * * *-.. knew ··Jn a sense" it was wrong to kill the night of ----------the murders of the LaBiancas ··would you kill your own father 1f Manson asked you to'>" Kay a sked. "I don't know.~· Miss Van Houten replied THE FORMER HOMECOMING princess at Monrovia High School testified that she was con- fused when she broke into the LaBianca home with other Manson family members. ( °'ICIK TKUIMl-:HCH) la THOUGHTFUL In the DAILY PILOT in sentences for violent crimes has been sca1ea~gislat1 ve ~ession that down lo meet liberals' objections. and its author is Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. now confident the bill will survive its toughest As called in J anuary on t.be - ~embly committee test. property tax problem is But that lest is being delayed for a week so over without having that all sides can 'study wholesale changes in SB produced a property tax 709. a law enforcement-backed measure by Sen. bill Robert Presley. D-Ri verside. a former Ri verside The ~l·s:.1on ended County undersheriff quietly Monday with i:I Grand .Jury Co nven ed SACRAM.ENTO <AP> -A special grand Jury probing alleged political corruption m the California Legislature has been warned it may take many months to hear all of the evidence col· lected by the FBI. U.S. District Judge Thomas MacBride s~ore ( ST.1 .,.,..'E ) an the 14-man . nine -..... , woman grand jury Mon· ---------day after telling the Jurors that the proceedings will probably Interfere with summer vacations. Oaom ber "Neutra r SACRAMENTO <APl The California Chamber or Commerce says it will remain neutral on the Jarvis property tax initiative because a chamber referendum of members wasn't suJfi. ciently decisive About 56 percent of those responding said the} backed Jarvis, which would cut property taxes about 57 percent. Just over 37 percent were op- posed. Six percent had no position \-'iolenc.-e If its /tlarc.-h LOS ANGELES {API -Seven persons were arrested and two injured Monday during a march in Hollywood commemorating the 1915-1919 Turkis h slaughter of Armenians, police said. Violence erupted when more than 100 police of· f1cers tned lo move the marchers out of the street they were blocking, police said. and proteste rs responded by throwing rocks and bottles. 1·ouih Shot to Death LOS ANGELES (AP> -A 14-year-old Culver City boy was shot to death in a Venice bakery in an apparent accident involving an e mployee of the firm. police said Monday. · The baker, Americo Dela Nuez, 39, was held at the Venice police s tation for investigation in the killing of Jose Delgado. Woman to Stand Trial SAN DIEGO <AP) -A woman identified as one of the 13 wives of fugitive polygamist cult leader Ervil LcBaron has been ordered to stand trial in connection with the June 1975 slaying of a National City, Calif., man. Vonda White, 38, described as a devout follower of LeBaron, was bound over for trial following a closed-door preliminary hearing Mon- day before Municipal Court Judge Kenneth A J ohn. He set arraignment for May 8 and or:dered the woman held in County Jail in lieu or $350,000 bond. Ms. White is accused in the fatal shooting or Dean Grover Vest, 40, a 7-foot-tall follower of Le Baron's Church or the Lamb of God. Authorities allege Vest was shot to death when he tried to leave the polygamous sect . 31 2 Senc.1le vote on an ctdJournment resolulton. A PROPERTY l ctx meC1sure has ne··erthe- less been approved It was SB I by Sen Peter Behr. R·T1buron. But 1t cam e out of the rl'gul ar session that was running concurrently with the special session. Bellr's bi II. wh 1c h would cut homeowner property taxes about 30 perce nt. is to take effect 1f voters reject th e Jarvis properly tax in- itiative, Proposition 13 on the June bC1llol. iind approve Proposition-~. SPECIAL SESSIONS during regular sessions are used for speed Bills passed during sp~cial sessions take effect 90 days after the end o{ the sessions. . Otherwise in regular sessions. a normal bill becomes law on Jari 1 or the following year. un· less passed with an "ur gency c l a use." which requires a two· thirds instead of a sim· pie majority C1pproval Brown Bag Bandit Arrested SAN l"RANC JSCO CAP> -San Francisco bartenders and their patrons were restin~ easier today after the early morning arrest of the man known as the "brown bag bandit." A suspect identified as John Forslund, 40. was taken into custody s hort ly after midnight near Balboa High School by two members of the San Francisco Poli ce Specific Crimes T ask Force. 1n1urence TWO ADDITIONAL YEARS OF GUARANTEED 11NO INCREASE IN PREMIUMS11 Business Packages. Commercial Fire. Condomini~rns and Apartment Packages BOB PA LEY MOITH oc . 546-3205 & ASSOC, INC. soUTHoc .642-6500 · . Save 20% It's a first! Hartmann luggage on sale. Scratch resistant vinyl . . mitered sides .. 3 locks ... wood frames! Men's in brandy, tan. Women's in slate blue, tan. Shown: fashion tote, Reg. $75, 60.80. 26" pullman, Reg. $110, $88. Men's garment bag, nylon/vinyl trim, Reg. $82, 65.60. Not shown: carry-on, Reg. $82, 65.60 24" pullman, Reg. $97, 77.60 Women's garment bag, Reg. $88, 70.40. Selected colors, in Luggage Shop Mon Fri, 10 9 30. Seit 10 6. Sun 12 5 Bullock'! South Coast Pluic1, 3333 Br 1stol Stree1 . Costci MestJ, phone 556 0611 t . ' • OranQO Coast Oa11v Pilot Journalists Need Touch of Civility The phrase "tnvcstlgau ve reporting" has grown so Popular in Journahsm ctrcles that it threatens to obscure the primary purJX>s es or u free press. tnvestlgatlvc reporting and those who practice it ct.t me in ror heuvy discussion over the weekend when the Orange County chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists/Sigma Delta Cha played host to several hundred practicing and buddmg journalists. Even Pullti:wr Prize.winning Clark Mollenhoff, as tough a pro a& ever crac.•ked u corrupt polil1c1an. turned all his attenlion on inve&ligative reporters when he addressed audiences both at UCf and 1:1t the JOurnaltsts' ~ession. Throughout these d1scu~~ions we noted a disturbing trend: ln the eyes of many journalists. the press 1s the natural enemy of anyone in government and sho uld d <.'vote primary cffol'ls to finding scoundrels and exposing them. Now anyone who has followed political affairs m Orange County for the past se\'era l years know~ we've had our share or scoundrels. large and s mall. And the Daily Pilot. along \\1th other county newspapers. has done its share of expo~1ng them . And we'll continue to keep an eye peeled for waste. inefficiency, thievery and ly ing among our public officials. Yes, we do a s hare of investigative reporting. But in the Woodward-Bernstein aura that seem s to have permeated the m edia during the past several year s. \\ c.· 've encountere d frequently among our journalistic colleagues an arrogance and a lack of c ivility in dealing with oftice·holders at all levels · from city police to presidents. And too many be ginning journalis ts sec the magic words inves tigative 1·eporter as a shortcut to fame. fortune and power. Everyone in government 1s a crook. the theme goes: Trap them and expose them E\'en crafts man reporter Molle nhoff seem ed lo be saying that only the corrupt hold office. l\hlylx: we're going against the tide. but w e don't follow that assumption By and lar ge, we find m ore <.lecenl. hones t etnd comm1Ltcd people in government than \\t:' find dishone~l kna,es. Oh. to be certetm. government 1s a wasteful monste r . And most certainly it h as its ~hare l)f dishonest people. inept people and loafers. Wt•'ll ~ubmJt, hO'-H'Vt:'r . that there are no more crooks a nd bums there than m th<' <'quivalent business world. And '4C at the Da tl y Pilot strive in our reporting and <.'diting of the news to assume .1 person is d ecent until he provt:s otherwise whether or nol h e 1s on a government payr oll. Covering the new~ <.H:curnlcly a nd fai rly. that's the media's primw·y goul. IL m<1.\ involve the exposur e of <:orruption, but that i!) p(Jrt of a larger commitment of kl·l'ping the public informed. . Our Battered Families _-Califo rnia Sen:.stors A lan Cranston and S.I. ~ I layaka wa are leading a group of Senators in sponsorship of a bill that s houldn't be necessary in a supposedly tt\'llizcd land -but apparently it 1s. The Domestic Violence Prevention and Services Act introduced by Cranston authorizes the appropriation or $30 m illion a year for the next fi ve years lo e ncour age -;tate and local efforts to prevent domestic 'iolmce and a1ci \ 1ct1ms :\lo:-.l of tlw money would go for grants to locul non-prof it and community agencies. The principal need. sa\'s Cranston. is for more e me rgency s helters for women -un·d children who flee their homes after violent incide nts. One s uch ce nter in California that cared for more th:.sn 900 women and children last year had to turn away I. 77G others seeking a haven. Another reported turning Jway as m any as 400 in a single month for lack of funds anrl s pace. The statistics gathered by a subcommittee studying t hl' proposed federal act are s hocking. T hirty percent of American marriages experience c .•>rm of domes tic violence. t Two million couples have used a gun. knife or · o.m· other lethal weapon on one another in the course of m.1rnage. There are a n estimated 6 million battered wives in tht· lJnited States today. And. as police well know. 20 percent of police olfu:ers killed in line of duty meet their deaths as a result of intervening in family fights. It's a ve ry ugly story. The problem c.an't be solved '-imply by the injection of money. bl;lt money s pent .on t'!"l l.i blis hmg more s helters and helping local agencies dt•\ 1w m e thods of preventing and coping wilh thb '!"dcm1c of domestic violence would be well s pent • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1a invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642-4321. Boyd/Moron, Calif. ByL M.BOYD The town of Taft in California used to be the town of Moron. One Harry • Hopkina was the postmaster there then. He wrote to the Dear Gloomy Gus Why,. ls It that when you run'lnto the market for a pound of hambur1er the lady Rhead or you lo the Expreas Lane Is buying provisions ror the enUre Stxth Army. with an armload or coupons, a check and no check·cashilll card? E.V postmaster general to put his metropolis into the record. but the postmaster gineral said no, Moron was not an acceptable name for a town. Mr. Hopkins mulled OD thla matler, guing al a picture on his wall of the then presl· dent. William Howard Tait. He suggested that name, and the postmaster geoeral ap. proved forthwith. When aerospace sclentlsta realized one of their rocketa was a dud, they named it "Clvll Service," because It wouldn't work and they couldn't fire It. You realize, don't you, that about 6 percent of your body welJhl give or take a percent ls blood? Average down payment on a new house now lf Sl.2,800. The town of Modesto In Calif omia came to be .ao calltd because Its foun'-ers were too modf'l!l to name It ln honor ol themscl ves. t ----~--------=----- T ' RotMtrt H Wffd/Pub111Mr r ~•Y· Apnt 25. 1m NicholaB von Hoffman Disarmament Has LGst Support So far, only the Germans and the real estate Industry havo come oul for building lhe neutron bomb. Thal 's the atomic dovice that. leaves private property alone. while killing the owners thereof. The R1,J8SlaruJ are agalnst It, either because I.bey do4't know how to build o n e yet or be<-ause their slate religion falls lo teach them a prop· ., e r r e spect for fixed as· sets President Carter 1s be· 1ng pulled this way and that on the issue. but tn the end he will probably res ign himself to the pro·bomb pressures and say, "build 1t." Of all the things that he said he wanted to do if he was elected. the president has made the least progress on disarmament. Jn deed. even arms limitation. put Ling a cap on how many more Earl Waters I cannons we will manufacture In the future, seems ~o elude him. ONLY O~CE IN our history did Uie ~ted St.ates negoUate. sign and ratUJy a treaty or dis· armament. th•t is a treaty which speclned elready existing weapon1 were to be melted down and Junked. That treaty came out of the Washington Naval Conference of 1921·22. It specified that England. Japan and the United Slates. the only three globally Important naval powers of the period . destroy tens or thousands or tons of battleships representing hun· c.lreds ol millions or dollars. The men in the Senate 60 years ago were no less apprehensive and concerned about military securi· ty than they are oow . yet they voled affirmatively ror a treaty that was far more sweeping and radical than anything likely to be proposed in our own time One thmg that made naval dis· armamPnl possible was national horror at the recenlly concluded war. Our ~eaders took every op· portuntty to ~xpress that horror They didn't talk in the dull and rltuallied maMtr of the lesding men today who mention peace as a word lo s&y. not an Idea to live IN MA'".', 1921 Preaident Hard· Ing went lo Hoboken. N.J .. there to greet the freighter Wheat.on arriving with the bodies of s.212 or our men k1lled In Europe. The s tyle of Harding's words may be s lightly corny for our tastes, but there were tears in his eyes and those of hJs listeners when be saJd . "l find a hundred thousand sorrows touching my heart, and tbere Is a ringing in my ears. like an admonition eternal. an insistent caJJ. ·u must not be again! ltmustnotbeagain. · .. The President could speak that way because we were a na· lion appalled by war. Highbrow or lowbrow. lhe obsessive foreign policy consideration of the time was that tht! carnage of 1914-1918 must not be repeated. In the mus ic halls. t!nter· tainers like Al Jolson sang ••• • ' ' ' ' .-··~ • • • • •• • ' # • . . ' • • • • • • ~ : . • • ' . •• ... ~ popular songs with lyrl<'!: ~u<'h a:s: "Take .away the ~un/ From every mother·.; scAi/W(' rf' tauJthL by God above/To forgive. lorgct and love/The weary world 1::. waltlng ror /Pe.tC •· forevermore/So takt' way the gun/From evt>ry moth H s son/ And put an end to war." /\ few steps up the cullunll artJ.,t scale. Hemingway was wr1tml( "A Farewell to Arms." wh1d1 was bul one 1t.:m 1n d hi.I~\.. catalogue of war·hattng pro~e ond poetry or the period. THIS WAS also when womt:n first got the vote and 1t wa:. thought that the ::.a me fem1 ruoc zeal and 1deat1s m thiH held culmina ted 1n 0 1.1tlow.tng whiskey would also banish war The country was nfe with anl1 war. anti-armament mamfestJ· t1ons -speeches. pel1t1ons. and prayers. Later that same year. rrom Lhe French village of Chalons sur·Marne. the pme coffin of tht Unknown Soldier was pldct·d aboard the battleship Olymp1J and taken to Wash1ogton to he 111 state in the Capitol rotundd a., 90.000 people passed in respect Several days later on Arm1sllct> Day. 100.000 people attended the burial of the linknowo while Uk ceremonies were carried live by telephone wire lo ten:. C;f thous ands more j.!dthered 10 New York and San Francisco to listen. ' lt was in this atmosphere or furious demand ror peace thdt the N avlll Conference opened here tn the marbled hall or the Daughters of the Amer1c,an Revolution. SECRETAR\' of Stale Charle~ Evaos Hug~. with the backing and assistance or a b1 partisan group or senators. WdS tn d pol1l1cal pos 1t1on to co ml· forward w1Lh a s1 mp1e. \me· qu1vocal disarmament proposetl of such width and d1mens1on that. not only our nation. but the people of others could be caught up in tt and dem<1nd 1ls ap· prov al. President Carter dare not t•mulate Secretary Hughe' P c r s 1 s I e n l. or g <.i n 1 Zl' d a n d clamorous support tor d1sarmd menl doesn't exist and he can t manufacture it. Jrs unimag1n.., ble that the bomb wtli not even tually be made. Anti-smoking Efforts Face Uphi11 Road Bearing an inordinate an- tipathy lo lobacco s moke and spurred by success in fostering anti ·smok1ng ordinances in s ome local juris dictions, crusaders have qualified a Jwte ballot proposition which would bar smoking in almost all places frequented by the public. That such a law from an en· forcemenl viewpoint is most dif· ricult, if not impossible. bothers not the propo · nent s. In those com · munities, where s uch enactments have been made . the altitude of of ficials generally is that they have better things to do Overworked responding to serious crime problems It can be realized that lbe police. district altorneys and Judges have little time for such a law. History has many lessons or the evils or unpopular and hence unenforceable Jaws but none so forceful as the 18th Amendment. Art Hoppe It is beyond all argument that passage or prohibition was the single cause or organized crime as it exists today in America and largely for the widespread cor· ruption of o(ficials and dis· respect for law officers . BASED UPON evidenc .. ad· vanced linking tobacco s mo1c.ing with cancer, and possibly circulator)' disease as well. a case might be made for abolition or tobacco. But there are enough examples of heavy smokers liv· ing well beyond normal life ex· pectancy to prove that smeklng does not necessarily cause death. Best known of those who have indulged in "excestve smok· ing" was Winston Churchill who bved loage90. And it is not love of fellow man and a desire lo protect hlm from his folly which motivates the backers or the ant1·smoking initiative. lf it were they would seek to outlaw the sale of to~ac· co. Rather It is a hate and a smug desire to mold the world lo their own fashion. And while the disdain of non· smokers for the aroma or pipes. cigars and cigarettes Is un derstandable it Is debatable that it should be sufficient to permJt a law so broadly infringing upon the pleasures of multitudes ad· dieted to tobacco. If things of· fenslve to the senses can be out· lawed perhaps the next step would be to bar from public places the unwashed whose body odors curl one's hair. Or those whose food is spiced with garlic. WHILE THOSE backing the anti-smoking initiative probably neither know nor care. this na· tion owes its existence as an English speaking country. and all the culturaJ practices that connotes. to the ''filthy" weed The plant. a member of the potato family. is native to the Americas. Columbus, and the other New World explorers who followed. found the Indians smoking and chewing tobacco. They Introduced it to Europe where it first became popular as a medicine and then for pleasure. By early 16th Century it was being grown commercial· ly In the West lndtes. ll Is the story of the Vi rgirua Colony. settled by the English 1r. 1606, which tells the Importance of tobacco to the way th is coun- try developed. Those early coi onists, knowing lillle ol agriculture. were unable to raise enough food lo s u s ta in themselves. On the brink or failure. they di5covered tobacco was the one crop easily grown and. thanks to Sir Wallt.>1 Raleigh's popuJarizmg its use would provide an exportab'l' commodity to be used in buying goods and food needed by the colony. But for that there is little doubt England would have aban- doned il3 colomal efforts. le<.1v Ing the Amt.•r1c a s l o lht' Spaniards. AS FOR stamping out the use of tobacco. its popularity from the begjnrung was such that the violent criticism of King James r. who publtshed a pamphlet titled "Counterblaste lo Toba<· co"' failed to discourage it~ use Nor have modern day warning ... by the Surf(eon General an<i other-: ai-to its carcinogenic pro pens1t1es served to stem 1t:-. con sumpt1on. 'Jogging Junkies' a New Threat to Society· /\s if we didn't have enough to worry about. the magazine. "Psychology Today." reports a new threat to our tattered social rabrtc "jogging junkies " William P Morgan. a pro· fessor of physical education. says dedicat· c d runners oft('n achieve an "exercise high." during which they disassociate, h311ucln:ite a n d e x perience o t h e r symplon s similar to a drug trtp Eventual· ly . he says, they become "ex· ercise addicts . . who cannot exisl without exercise, whatever the cost." Don't I know lt. 1 hate airina ou. family linen in public. but perhaps the story or what hap. pened to my brother, Berl. will serve as an example to one and all. BERT always was a wild. dev. il ·may-care sort. incapable or ref«sing a dare. We thoueht when he married Peggy and had the two kids. he might settle down. But you know the type. T remember it as though it were yesterday Bert and r were in lhe Legion Smoker "Anyone ror jogging to the corner and baek., .. Simon Bungstarter. a slimy character. asked with a wink "Come on Len try It." Bert pleaded Wlth me, "One little JoR won't hurt " I '11 admit I was tempted. flut I firmly shook my head. All my life I've been tempted by lnvlla t lons to exercise. But I'm blessed. thank Ood. with the backbone tD resist them. Well, you can guess whu hlo· pened. One little Joa led lo a nother and soon Borl waa mainlining 20 miles a day. Oh , he kept promising Peggy he'd quit and learn the names of their children. But you know addicts. The day she found him jogging in place in the closet, she left him NATURALLY, he lost his job. too. as he constantly had to dash out of the omce for a fix. By now, he was but a baa or skin. bones and muscles. a gaunt shadow of hJs former self. And he was reduced to snatchlna purses from the old ladles he Jogged past In order to support his SO·ccnts·a..<fay habit. lleaHn only knows what would have ha~pened to him ll he hadn't lucki been hrt by a truck. Actually, e suffered only u minor concusision. But by the time he came to. wt had-blm Im· moblllted In two leg cast!, a bod)' cQt, an arm slin, and a neck brace We also. after he man11ed lo claLLlr :SO yardl down the ho!>p1t11 I corridor ~hu1 no one wa~ lookmg. hpt h•IT'I strapped tn bed Watching him quit co•d turk._ y was a lt:rrlblt C''<Pt'"r•Lf'I• • "Pleo~e ... he would b r'? drenched tn s\\'eat. "1u51 ont• 1•1 tic push up to e.se I he lll!Of'I y But you have lo bt iou~h w1t'1 lhe5e weak ch<.1rattt rc; And 11 wa~ worth II. In 'I'< \llet.k' t-, had kicked the hLib11 l k ;-11• on 20 pounds. got ht~ JOb and f:Jm1h b 1t C' k . a n d . ·' .. ,1 n v 11 <• (' ,1 American. took .1 ,·ar w•ll'I him everywhert• he "ent THEN, two month.-. .1~0 v.1' were al the Legion Smo'.\ • hoti.tlng a few and w:1tch1n~ • vuy lnt.erntlna hve cultur11! t•• hlblUon llke healthy m a!e.~ w11l. whon lM door foll dowr al'l' thert-wu the Vice Squu<! "Run for It. ~rt "' t <'nee! w1lbout thlnkln1 Wt b•ven't IMn tum alnce ~ I \ \ I \ NATIONAL DAil y P1LOT A 7 Pat Nixon Hated the 'Whirlwind' of .Politics 'It's the Children Who Really Suffer' ByLE8TUDAVID She fooled everybody who dtd not know her intimately, never letting on that she bated the whole thing. Her closest frtend.s knew. But the voters who watched her on a platform, her brown eyes fixed adoringly upon him, her head nodding approval as he spoke, never suspected. Outwardly she put on a wonderful ahow. HER TRUE FEELINGS were sum med up in a profoundly sad remark ahe made to a close friend in February 1960, a few months before her husband was nominated for the presidency: "I've given up everything I've ever loved," Tears filled her eyes. She could not speak for a moment and turned away. When she had once again regained control, she said: "The people who lose out are the children. Any or the glamour or reward in it comes to the g rownups. It's the children who really suffer." IT WAS CONVENTIONAL wisdom in Washington all through Nlxoo's political career to hold up Pat as the paradigm or the uncomplaining wife. Wi ves who were becoming restive in their roles. like Mieke Tunney, Phyllis Dole and EJlen Proxmire, each of whom divorced their senator husbands were compared wlth her. "There are no more Pat Nix· ons around in the wives division," wrote one Washington correspondent. Little did he know. But Earl Mazo knew. .. She didn't want politics ever," Nixon's biographer told me. "lier friends were never political friends. She haled the idea or ever facing another cam- paign. Every time Nixon en· tered one, she was In despair. In 1962. when he decided to run for governor or California. Christ, she could have gone through the floor." SHE HAD BEEN happy that year, out of politics for good, she thought. "Look at this." Nixon told Mazo and other friends one day on the terrace or his California home, following his defeat by Kennedy in 1960. "I'm earning more money the first year out or politics than I made in 14 years an it." Pat threw her hands In the air an d exclaimed joyfully: "Hallehtjah!" Prof. Flora Rheta Schreiber knew. Pat told Prof. Schreiber, BDITOR'S NOTE The following ezcnpt ia adapUd from tM book, "The Lonely Lod.11 of San Clemente: The StOTJI of Pat NU:on," (C) 1973 by Luter David. Reprinted bu permfnion o/ Thomaa Y. CT'11Df!ll Co. The Juli-length book wm be published by Crowell In late sum· meT. her husband's mother's friend, that she never wanted Nixon to run for the presidency in 1968, confiding that she had been through a great deal of "horror" and did not want to go back into what she ca.lied the "whirlwind." WILLIAM P. ROGERS and his wife, Adele, knew. In 1963, after the disastrous defeat for the California governersh1p, the ~ Nixons and the Rogerses went to dinner at New York's • . 2 1 • . r esta urant. They dis - c u ssed Nix- on's political career and even Nixon PAT NIXON agreed that, after 17 years. it had ended once and for all. Reports William Sa.fire, a Nix· on insider who later was to join his White House staff -u Rogers was later lo become his secretary of State: "They all got a little high, and the happiest was Pat -glad to be rid of politics where not even the vie· tories were sweet." And Richard Nixon himself knew only too well. In 1954, only eight years after they had ~ome to Washlngt.on, hel\ loathing for politics had become so intense that she had a long talk with her husband about what it was doing to them and the children. He was then vice president, but despite the high office and the promise of a higher one. she wanted no more. She pleaded with him to leave, and he yielded to her wishes. NEAR THE END of his term two years hence, he would. once and for: all ·Uuie. he promised, divorce himself from politics. He even offered to put the pledge ln writing. On a sheet or paper she brought to him one evening in t heir Washington home, he wrote: "I promise to Patricia Ryan Nixon that I will not again seek public office." He added the date, folded the paper. and placed the pledge ln bis wallet. U. was, of coune, broken. Once. lo 19'8, lo the middle of the Hiss case, he had come home triumphantly with two tickets -reservations aboard the S.S Panama. This one, he told her, would be nothing like their honeymoon on a freighter; this would be a flrst·class trip. Pat was excited but said s he'd withhold her enthusiasm unUl she was safely aboard. On Dec. 2, they ascended the gangplank, unpacked in \heir cabin, and, as the vessel got UD· der way, she watched the disap- pearing shoreline with a sigh or reller. Two days later. a Coast Guard amphibian landed in the Caribbean. The Nixons climbed into a lifeboat and winches lowe red them to the water. Crewmen took them to the plane. which roared off to Miami. A few hours later, he was back in Washington, work- ing on a new "bombshell" in the Hiss case, and Pat was back in her apartment. BY 1950, ALGER Hiss had been convicted of perjury and Nixon set his sights on a seat in the U.S. Senate, opposing Helen Gahaga n Douglas in a memorably bitter campaign. He won. and with their savings and increased salary. then $12.500, they were finally able to move into a modest two-story white brjck house with blue-green shutters the northwest comer or Washington. There was no acreage, just a sms:ll backyard and a screened porch i.n front, but it was lhe firs\ bo~e wilh real space they had sine~ they were married 12 years before. As usual. Pat made aU lhe curtains, draperies and·· slipcovers. Somehow she found time to attend a sewing class in the community, where she learned quilling. So she made a blue quilted spread for the double bed she sbared wilh Dlck. She looked after t~ children, dld her housework, pressed ber husband's pants. cooked the meals, sprinkled the grass in the yard, made hats, and answered the phone, which seemed to ring almost constantly. Once in a while she went to Richard's or. flee and helped the secretarial staff. HER WARDROBE WAS skim· py. She bad four e.v~ng dresses to wear at official functions, several light summer ones. some sweateTS and skirts. At re- c e ptions, her "respectable Republican cloth coat" was Whether you re thinking about t:ruy1ng summer scuba gear or ski equipment for the winter we re the people to talk to Wen tell you abciut Moneycheckr .mi -our special loan plan that tels you barrow money up 10 your available credit limit simply by wnllnq a check 1n the pnvacy of your Bank of Cahforn1a checkbook With Moneycheck you can wnle yourself a loan any time. any place for any puroose And you II be protected against overdrafts. too Thal s convenience Come m and talk to us -you II find that we re some of the best sports around ®THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA Newport Beach Office 1401 Dove Street NewPOrt Beech 92663 (714) 833-3611 • NIXON CHILDREN AIDED 1964 GOLDWATER CAMPAIGN Julie, Left, Chapin Junior, and Tricia, Finch College Freshman usually the only one among a forest of furs in the cloakrooms. She also owned three suits, thanks to a half-dozen ladies in Whittler, friends from her teaching days, who decided dur- ing the 1950 campargn that Pat did not have enough clothes. They knitted lhe three saits for her and presented them when Pat came to Los Angeles. She accepted \hem gratefully. Pat Nixon had been reeling the weight or guilt ever since Tricia was born because she had to be away from her while she cam- paigned; when Julie arrived she wanted even more to stay home. But there were som e ap- pearances she could not avoid, so she hired babysitters, left precise instructions and rushed off, rushing back as quickly as she could. BOTH G IRLS GREW up knowing about their mother's feelings or guilt. Pat told them. Tricia says. When Juij,e and Tricia were small. they would both start to cry as tfiey watched their parents pack for what they knew ~ould be a long trip. Pal would hug them as she said goodbye. They would still be crying as she shut the door and left. Once. when Tricia was 5, she came into her parents' bedroom in the middle of the night. She woke them, saying she was afraid. Pat put her into bed beside her and her husband, reeling more guilty than ever. And things were not about to im- prove. IN THE FALL OF 1953, when the Nixons were about to leave as President Eisenhower's emlaaarlea on a 10-weelc. 45,000.mlle toodwtll tour or the Far East. 5-year-old Julie threw herself oo Ute noor, screaming unc<>Dt.tollably. Hannah Nlxoo, who was to stay with the children, watched helplessly. Nixon begged her: ''Mother . take her In your arms, or something." Hannah picked up Julie and Pat left with her husband. •When the girls were older, Pat took them with her on some campaign trips. They were adorable, and adorable children win as many votes for politi- cians as dogs do. The Nixoos. like some other politicians, had both. Pat liked taking them along even less than leaving them at home. Once, during the 1968 campaign, she was in a corridor or a high school just before the family was scheduled to appear al a rally ln the gym. She tried to fix their clothing so they would look their best. .. THESE GIRLS SIMPLY have no clothes," she said to nobody in particular, "because there's so little time to buy them any." Another lime, in San Antonio, Julie, then almost out of her teens, came down with a throat infection and a 102-degree fever Pat led her into the airport's VIP lounge, where she took her In her arms. Pat sat there mo- tionless. not saying anything. On her race was a look or great sad- ness. fWednesday· The Campa1gnttl 'Fake' Doctor FmedS4,000 BLUE RIDGE, Ga. <AP> -A self-proclaimed doctor who treated patients with water, lemon juice and carrot juice for arthritis and cancer has been fined $4,000 and placed on three years probation. Carey A. Reams. who operat- ed the now-closed Interfaith Christian Church in He ll's Hollow, pleaded guilty Monday before Superior Court Judge Richard Neville to a felony charge of practicing medicine without a license and three mis· demeanor charges. IF IT'S A QUESTION OF PROBLEM ACNE ... Let's Clear it Upl You don't need us to tell you acne's no fun. What you do need Is someone to help clear It up. And. that's where Family Skin Care Centers come In. Family Skin Care Centers-the all natural way to control acne. Come In today to a Family Skin Care Center near you for a FREE SKIN ANALYSIS. g SKIN CARE CENTERS ... Clearing The Way CALL FOR INFORMATION TODAY! Anaheim ne.a180 Fountain Valley 894·7542 Mission Viejo-El Toro 788-4378 Newport Beach 64&-nss I -· ... San Diego 462-4990 Santa Ana 557-0320 Tuatln°0n1nge 839-3913 \ ,1 I Pollee Kept Bopping Suburbanites Report Kangaroo Contingent WAUK~UA. Wli.. <APJ -Ruidents of tht suburban area wesl or Milwaukee. ac- cus}omed to seelng rabbits and squirrels through ~ir baekyard windows, have been res>0rting somewbal larger animals boppint over their hillsides for two weeks - kangaroos. Several sightings of the Australian marsupials have been rep0rted to bewildered authorities, starting April 7. In all t.be re· p0rts. the animals are described as fast· moving, between 3 feet and 5 feet tall, the color of a deer and possessing long tails. LANCE NERO OF BROOKFIELDS was among the s keptics who luughed at a television newscast about a group organizing a hunt for the elusive visitors. But on Sunday morning. while having toast and coffee at his hilltop home overlook· ing a wooded area, Nero, 38. saw two animal~ that looked like kangaroos hop out of a wooded area, across a road. through part or a field and across another road. He ran up· stairs and awakened his wife. Loretta. "Now that I've seen one. I'm wondering if I'm all right." she said after also spotting the animal. T HE WAUKESHA COUNTY Sheriff's Department sent a detective Lo lake picture!> of the tracks left by the animals on a muddy road. The trucks were described as about 6 inches long. narrow and bearing an imprint Deatlu Elsewhere SA.N D~EGO IAP> - M abel G. Hazard, a great-granddaughter of Pres ideJll Ulysses S . Grant. died Saturday in t a hospital. Mrs. lletzard was active in civic ar- ' fairs. and her husband. Bruce Hazard. is presi-- dent of the R. E. Hazard Construction Co. MESSI NA. Sici ly CAP) -P lacldo Glacob· ho, 78. long-time chaur-re u r for mobster Al Capone. wus found dead in the hut whcrt.• he had been living in poverty on th11 outskirts of Messina. 11nlicl' said to<lu~ lndicaling a hird toe In front and softer fl esh in bock. "The only t.hlng we can do when we get a call Is respond to it if there's a unit avalla· ble." U . Alvin Nordseth said. Janet Napientek or 1\1 uskego says she und her husband Gary saw one ot the unimals while driving east of Waukesha ear· ly one Sunday. She thought it might be an i.n· jured deer. ''unUI ll stood up on its bind legs" and then jumped over a ditch and out of sight. "l'VE SEEN DEER BEFOR E. I know what a deer looks like. l know It was a kungaroo," Mrs. Naplentek said. Members of the Haeselich family ol Pewaukee are just as certain. "It was going pretty quick. l~ was hop- ping. We knew it had to be ~garoo," Jill Ha~selich sald after she. her husband, Peter. and his mother. Esther. spotted the animal SO feet from the dining room window OFFICIALS AT T HE MILWAUKEE County Zoo. the only zoo in the area that has kangaroos. says none of them is missing. Ray Holling, zookeeper al the kangaroo house. speculated that the arumals could be wallabies, a smaller member of the kangaroo family that can survive colder weather. But when told of the reported size or the animals. he s:ud. "tr they're that talY.lf s got lo be a kangaroo.·· P A L M S P I<. I N G S cAPI Rob e rt L . Gordon, 74. formt!r ex· l'culive vice pres ident Jnd se nior ad - ministrative officer of the Bank of America in Southern California. died April 13 of a heart attack. He was a former president of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce and u director of the Los AngC'les Dodgers baseball team. Climbi.119 Fittingly Hep Fran Curlton. D Orlando. leads !>l'Crel:mes and mde:-. up lhe 22 flig hts of stairs in lhe capitol al Tallah:Jssee. Fla It"!> part of hl•r daily routim• fbr Pl'ople in thl' ~talt'"' 1:w\·ernment who \hint lo kt•cp in ~hapl· Deafh 1~of ke• HOltH8Alt0Elt BET TV J HOllNBAllC.ER, rHtclenl ot l.•ouna N•-1, C. P&H~ ••O on AOrtl 22. 1918. Beloved wile ot w 1111am H Hornbarver, Iovino mother of Oav1C1. Jame\ at"ld Jonn Hornba'9t''. funf'ral '"'Vite\ Tue1Cl•Y •11 00 PM .. 1 McCorm1tll Mortuarv L&OUna Hill" lnttrmf'nt Et Toro Cf'mr1rry Mr Corm1<1< Mo•lu•rv L•Quna Hiiis 01tt<lon .. COHSIOIHE l.EO CONSIOINE, rt"Oont of \..•Quna t-4111\. C• P11\\f'd •••'f on Aofll 22, 1'71 Bt-•o~d hu.o.lnd OI Mr• LUC1M fol Con~dtnt:>, IOVlnQ fet"er 01 Mrs Rita Tull. steo tetlW'r of Brian l(f't<)41t, al\O \Urvtv~ by hts \15ter Mr\ Anna Humphrty "nd tti1¥0 Q•ano.ons. M1c....,01 •no Patrick Tutt Mr C:on\1dtnit w.-.~ tl or.ct1c1no •l· to...,. , 1n o....,. (.oonty 10< 1S yu" Ro>ary w1tf bf r~<tlfd on TuHday Aortl 1S. lq/8 -M.f\S Of Cllrl\lt.., oun•I ••II ~ Cf'lebf'itfO on WedM\· '"" Aor•• 26. 1n1 "' IOAM. bOlft •• St N1th01A\ C•thOht Church. Lagrun• thll\. C• JrtttrMM"t ••It oe •• t-101y Soo ulther Co,...,l•rv Or•noo. Ca 0 Connor l.4QUl'A Hill\ Mo•lu••Y SMOKING PERJLTOW MOSCOW <AP I I\ popular brand of cigarettes went on sale in c:cntral Moscow with the .,.. arnmg .. Smoking 1s dangerous to your health" printed on the pack for lhc first time 'fhe news pap l'r Vechcrnyaya Mpsk\'a reported the warning was being tried a s an ex- peri menl For sever al years. the government has tried to d1scourag(• smoking by banning it in many restaurants and other public places. 01r~ctor~ ---------- r r4CIFtC VIEW MIMOllAL rAH Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac11tc View Drive Newport Ca1tlorn1a 644·2700 ... cCOIMICK MOITUAl lH Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495· l 776 PUBLIC NOTICE ltl- HOTICI OF TltUSTEE'S SAi.iE OF ltEAI. PaOPEltTY F--•Ne.U1- I ALn.aHGIROH FUMll4L HOMI Cofona del Mar 673·9450 Costa Mesa 646·24'24 NOT'ICE Ii r.e...iiv olYen that on Mey S, 1971, •I Ille l'IOur of II 00 A.M 1n llW lot>Dy ot tne olllc• of TranMm•rou Tl lie lnsurenc:e Com.,.ny ,,_ 830 N M!Un SI., Sent• Ane, C•ld H70t TRAN!>AMEIUC"' TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY • C.lllornl• coroe><ellon •• .,. • ...,, TrUSlff •Ill Mii •t owblit •u<flcn to the hiOf>nt Di-r IO< C&•h tn lnrlul mo<WY ol uw Unll.0 St•t~ ,,.. lolfOWlnQ clH<rlDe<I re.I prooeny ••llMled '" lllP city ol Coste M•••. County of°"-· Sl•lt Of C.lllornle, -oucrlDeO •• lotlOw\, to Wit, l.ot S of Tract No. 1714, es per map recoro.cl In Boo• 68, P89e SO of Ml• c.etteneou1 MePS 1n lllP ofllce ol Ille c.ountv rKorelltr of .. 10 counlv l&LllOADWAY MOITU41Y 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 6"2·9150 SMfTH. TV1'HILL-U ... I WUTCUl'f CHAN\. 4'27 E 17th SI Costa Mesa• 6"6-4888 San1a Ana Chapel 518 N Broadway Santa Ana • 5"7-4131 SAIO wte wlll be~ to wlf•fv the o1>110-t1on• secured by end pur.,...nt to Ille -If Of Sele <onf•necl 1n • cow te111 Offcl of Trust .. e<uted DY G•ry :,,:.~1'!.,., er: .. :-;~~~nt1~:,e,'~'(o Tren••mffic• Tlli. lnSU<an<• Corn p•nv. • CAtUorn1• coroor•Uon, ., Tru\lt<', tor t1'e -"' •nd se<.urlly 01 H•ro10 F. Ruefler. an uftmarrled m•n. H B•netlcl•ry, clAI~ June?•. 191•, and rocor(k-cl ~• Instrument No. 3611• on Jun• H tO•. '" bookne•I 11711. p;iQetlm-JU, of 0t1tu e1 Aetorcl• "' 11\a oltl<• of t1'e County Recorder ol 0re"99 County.St•l•ol C.11lorn•• THAT -IC•Of bre«hof s111000U~ tlon encl elt<tion to Wll Hid rHI p.oper tv ••i record•d •1 fft~trumenl No tOSM on Jenu•ry 10, 1na. I~ ...Cl llOntllS ::!{~~=~~~'= :·~ SMITHS' MOITU41'f ty AecorOtr of Orano-Covnty, Stet• o 627 Main St C.j~~'t'':.1c1..it 1, ""* wll!lolll cov-. Huntington Beach ene"' or ,...,,.,.,., r~rd1no t111t, 636-e539 __ PMMnlon °' encumbreMH. or H lo tn1urebtt11y ot title fHE bef\efl(l.,YorMY-Ptl"WI' ,_ PAMllY or11«\0flt.....,pU1"cl\eH.t,...,,..1. eot.OMAL Alt• .U. OAT E 0 lllls 1'11' dirt of MMc:ll, 1'11 NOMI TAAH5AM£RICA Tlfl.E INSUltANCIE. C()MPAHV ,...,.,. 7801 Bolsa Ave Rey o. ·~· Westminster An't SK .. ..-rv 893--3625 Putlllt"9cl Ot-COHI l)ollly PllOI, , ________ ,,,o.. "''"'" 11. 11 n. ,.,. ' 'Y' SUDlDler Crunp Sign-ups Ope n The South CoHst YMCA has begun registra lion for summer camps. The Y residence camp Bluff Lake lor boys and girls in grades 3 -6 1s i.cheduled Jul> 8 15, July 15 22 and July 22 29 The Catalina Island Y camp Fox for boys and g irls grade 7 · 10 is scheduled July 10 · 17. Eleven week-long sessions of day camp for boys and grits ages 6 -12 begins June 19 and continues through Sept. I. Travel trips for older youths include caravans \11 Canada. Hawaii. waterski1ng. s urfing, houseboatin~. biking and backpacking t-'urther information may be obtained by con- tacting South Coast YMCA at 831-YMCA or ,195-0453. The Y is localed ut 26076 "C" Getly Drive. La~una Niguel Headquarters Work Under Way Saffell & Mc/\dam. lnc , Irvine. has begun construction on the corporate headquarters for L\. l Si ng Enterprises in Irvine. Leasing En- terprises rents and sells construction and homeowner equipment. The one-story. 20,000-square-foot structure is at 17871 Mitchell. lt is being built on three-quarter acre site with an estimated project value or $450,000. This facility will provide general office and warehouse space for the company's 40 employees. Completion is expected in June. Newport Firm Grants Interest Oxoco. an independent oil company head· quartered ln Newport Beach, bas farmed out a 25 percent interest lo Societe Natiooale Elt Aquitaine and Oil Development Co. of Texas. a wholly owned subsidiary of Santa Fe Industries, Inc .• and a 12~ percent interest lo Oakwood Petroleums Ltd .. Calgary, Canada. In its five offshore Seychelles Islands blocks that were awarded in June 197'1. The group is interpreting the results of a joint seismic program that was conducted over these blocks in January 1978. Oxoco retained o 371,\ percent workin1 loterest tn the project. ... OBITUARIES I NATIONAL I PEOPLE Sexy,SF Theater To Stay $23.9 Million in Aid Authorized for Baja SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The Court of Ap· peal has ruled that Easy Street Theater tn San Mateo may remain open ror the time being but. employees are barred rrom "physical contact" with patrons. MEXICALI. Mexico <APl -Mex• lean President Jose Lqpez Portillo has authorized direct federal i.nvest- m en L or S23.9 million in Baja Callronua. ( I NSHORT J "Defendants or their employees or agents are prohibited from making any physical contact with any patron . . . and sitting . . . in areas where patrons may b~ seated or sollciling patrons to sit with employees or agents.·· the ruling said. The new funds bring the total autborl2ed over the next rive years or the current state and federal ad· ministrations to $39. 7 million. Also revealed was a shift ol $14.8 mHllon In state money wlthln the present budget to flood-relief projects. bombs as long as the United States refrains rrom producing the con- troversial weapons. He described President Carter':. decision lo defer production of neutron warheads as a half-measure that d~ not settle the issut!. The new appropriation Includes $7.6 million for immediate indem- nification and a start of housing con- struction for about 1.000 people living in tents south of Tijuana. Many los t their homes in the wake of recent severe flooding . Gat1 IAak Kilb Three OKLAHOMA CITY <APJ -Three underground pipeline workers were killed and a fourth Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. workman was in critical condition following a pipeline accident. 2 /tloved tor Que•tion• PENDING APP EAL. the brief ruling replaces a Jan 18 judgment by Sa n Mateo County Superior Court Judge W. Howard Hartley closing the theater under the Red Light Abatement Act SEOUL. South Korea <AP) -The pilot and navigator of the South Korean airlin~r downed in Russia have been moved to Leningrad for further questiorung about their viola· tion of Soviet air space. a top Foreign Ministry officials said today. Ralph N. Basey. 55. of Oklahoma City. was rushed lo Baptist Medical Center following his attempt to . rescue three co-workers who were overcome by leaking natural ga" Monday afternoon. The San Mateo Dis- trict Attorney charged tn September 1975 that since 1970 the theater. which features porno· Kraphic films and nude dancers. has been us ed .. ro r the purpose or lewdness. assignation and prostitution a nd acts and exhibits o f lewdness." The official. who declined to be named. said the ministry received the mformation from the United States. which 1s negotiating for the Koreans' release because Seoul doe~ not have d1plomat1c relations with Moscow tl fri~a Co•pro•is<-OK ·d CA PE TOWN. South Africa <AP1 Prime Minister John Vorster an· nounced today that South .Africa tia,~ accepted Western compromise pro- posals to prepare South-West Afnca for internationally recognized in- dependenre. Reds Nix Neutron Bo•b• MOSCOW <AP > -President Leonid I. Brezhnev said today the Soviet Union wilJ not build neutron THE APPEAL court Jan. 25 granted a tem- porary stay while 1l con· s1dcred the request for a wrtt maintaining the status quo until 1l de· c1des the appeal The latest order has the ef- fect of continuin~ that slay. It was a practice at Easy Street for scantily clad hostesses who also performed as nude dan- t•e rs lo sit with male patrons. Judge Hartley found 14 orrers lo perform sexual acts had taken place at the theatt•r since 1970 llE HELD T U E thcatt'r had been used for purposes or prost1tu t1on and declared 1t a publi c nuisance and or· dered the sheriff to padlock the building for a year and sell its furniture. '/fie Retire?' Ul'tf ....... 10 Vorster's announcement in Parlia- ment could clear the way for Unt· vers a! suffrage elections m thl' South African-governed territory of 99,000 whites and 722.000 blacks. South-West Africa could becoml' tn dependent by year·s end a~ Nam1b1d, its African name • Mid E'Aut War F eare d BElRUT. Lebanon 1AP1 -King Hussein of Jordan says he fears Israel soon may launch·a fifth Middle East war with 1l lightning attack lo isolate Synan forces in Lebanon and seal the Syrian-J ordanian border In an interview published today by the Beirut news paper An Nahar. Hussein was quoted as saying Israel may strike against Syria and Jordan in .. the foreseeable future I am l'Ven afraid Israel will do 1t now " tht-41 year old mon<1rr h said P~ion Plan Du1t1ped Defendants 1nC'lude Galen Lee Randolph \\ho leases the premises in downtown San Mateo. owns the fixtures and furniture and operates the theater. and Philip ,Joseph M<iita. who is the lessor Dr :'\ormun \'m tl'nl Peak nm\ i9. !>a ~·~ ht':-. nol e\ en think mg about rl'l1ring 'Tn~ got :-.I\ or M'\"l'n 1ob!> ut lhc moment · Ill' :-a~!> WASHINGTON <APl -Pen~ton plans requiring women to contribute a greater portion of their salaries than men because women genera lly live longer lo collect benefits are il - legal. th~ t.: S Supreme Court rul~ today !landing a s1gmficant victory to the women ·~ rights movem e nt. the JUSttccs voted 6·2 in striking down SU<.'h P<'nston plans a:. unlawful Sl'X discrimination Royal Wedding 'Quiet' Princess Caroline Nuptials Strictly Private From AP Dispatches Princess Caroline of Monaco will have a quiet. family-on)y June wedding quite unlike the publicity-splashed entrance into royalty of her mother . GraceKel· ly or p hiladelphia. A palace statement said that the 21-year-old brunette beauty will marry P b UUpe Junot, a 38-year-old French financial ad· viser. in two "strictly private" Ct'rem onies June 28 and 29 at the royal palace -one civil and the other Roman Catholic in ac- cordance with custom. CA1to1.1NE Because of "the private. family character of the ceremonies." no journalists or photographers will be admitted. the statement said. Photographs would be issued afterwards "as soon as PQSSible." • Dennis Wilson, drummer for The Beach Boys music group, was arrested after a 16·year-0ld girl allegedly was found with him in his hotel room. police said in Tucson. Wilson . 32 . was court l'lcrk said. One complaint seeks unspecified damage:. from the Squaw Valley Development Corp .. Inc , tn the deathS of Dean and Jina Wisniewski of Alameda.CaJif. The suit was filed by Wisniewski'!> father. Charles, in behalf or the couple's 5-year-old daughter. The s uit. claiming wrongful death and negligence, seeks exemplary and general damagei. from the defendanL'i. Also named in the suit are Garaventa Corp .. the Swiss company which built the tram. and resort co-owners Alex CUshlng and John Buchman. • The man obviously was lost. He looked around. bewildered. and tried to gel his bearings He was standing at the renter of the Capitol-. the first fl oor. Tourists bustled about him on all sides. Finally. som eone re - cognized the attorney general of the United States and asked. ··can I help you'!" "Ye:.," replied Griffin BeU. ··flow do you get out of here?·· booked and held at Pima(--------.:...] County Jail for investiga-PEOPLE " tion of contributing to the _ An anonymous London e1L1.. delinquency of a minor. banker. bidding by telephone. pealed off SSOO for Police Sgt. Bob Gypsy Rose Lee's mink G-string at an auction tn Sulzbach said Wilson 's arrest at the hotel "ap-New York City of clothing worn and shed onstage parently involved a party with some underage peo· by the late queen of refined strip tease. pie there." The group had performed at the University of Arizona. • The U.S. Supreme Court left untouched a de- cision by the University of Colorado's board of re· gents to ignore administrators' recommendations a nd not hire outspoken Marxist H . Bruce FrankUn as an English pro- fessor. Franklin applied ror a job al Colorado In l973. Only 34 at the lime, Franklin was re· cognized as a reknowned scholar of American literature who had published nine books ""ANtcLIN and numerous literary articles. Franklin previously had been fired from his teaching job at Stanford University after giving speeches at public rallies opposing the Vietnam war • The first suits In the wake of the four.fatality April 1~ tram accident at Squaw Valley Ski Area hove been filed In Placer County Courthouse the • Andrew Gibb, youngest or the four singing brothers known as the Bee Gees, and his wife . Kim, riled for divorce in a New York court. The couple reached an agreement terminating the marriage. Details or lhe agree- ment were not disclosed. The <'Ouple ha s one daughter. Peta J aye, bom in January. Gibb. 20. has had several hlLs. Including last year's "You Are My Everything." • Actor Paul Newman Is expected to be named ll member of lhe U.S. delegation to the special Unit· ed Nattons General Assembly session on the dis- armament. Administration officials said Newman. who would be one of three non-aovemment.t members named by PrulMnt Carter to tbe 10.member U .S delegation, has tong had an Interest In arms con· trot t --- ' ' \ " \ ~-~-- ~ATIONAL Tulldmy. Apttl 25. 1978 DAIL v PIU>T A. Writers Threaten Sesame Street Don't m'sa the BIG BOAT SHOW NEW YORK CAPI -811 Blrd's squawks could be filltDCCd by a wallloul of I.he writeQ tor TV 's ··Stsame Street ... a •ll'llte wbkb completes the traosformatton of lbe Cblldren's Telev ision Workshop from a aell·sacrlf1ctna band of pioneers Lnto a. bud-nosed corporate entity, Bird Bird, Os car the Grouch. Ernie and Kermit the Frog are still on the air, bul lhe six writers who should now be putting words ln their mouths ror the comlng telev1sloo season have been on strlke since March 13. I lT IS THE F IRST STRIKE against Child.ten's Televialon since il was founded a decade a~o by a handful of writers and producers who toiled together like members or a commune. The strike underscores the emergence of a new workshop. one with 225 employees and a $4.7 million annual payroll and which relies less on federal grants and more on revenue from foreign THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keane "Does pork come from porcupines?'- Judge Keeping Abre~t of Art MILWAUKEE (AP > A painting or a bare- chested woman entitled ··Truth," which has hung m the Milwa ukee County Courthouse ror 47 years. has been moved The painting had adorned a wall behind the bench of Audrey Brooks, a Judicial court com· missioner. But several months ago it was covered with a drape after she complained Harvey KloPolic. building superintendent. said the painting had been placed in a vault. and he moved it to the courtroom used by reserve j udges. including Reserve Judge Elliot N. Walstead. "They picked m e as one or the older judges so it wouldn't cause that much of a bother." Walstead said. "Maybe I should cha rge admission." Vessel Sinking Set ATLANTA !AP> -The Henry Bacon, a World War II vessel that sank in Savannah Harbor in 1975 and was raised an 1976, will be sunk again - this tim e deliberately The vessel is scheduled to become part of Georgia's offshore r eefs which provide a haven ror fish o n the cocean floor. said Duane Harris, project leader for the Department of Natura. Resources broadcast rl1bts. toys, books. record5 and maaaiin~ lt.s problems are the problems or s uccess. Like the writers, u number of present and form er employees complain pnvately about the passing or the aood old duys. They say the top o( the bureaucracy lives well. getting rich off the hacks ot the creators. They say 1t is a fat corpora· lion pleading poverty. "MY IMA(;E llAS ALWAYS been o! an enormou.5 pyra m1d balanced on the point -and we're the point." a workshop veteran says. "What bothers me a lot ls that a lot of the revenue goes in· to bureaucracy, overhead and whatnot." In a confidential state ment. the Writers Guild o( America. East. says the workshop's reluctance to share in profits from subsidiary ri~hts is in- tolerable. The writers $let $1 ,750 for a n hour script, or an aver;.1ge of Jbout $40,000 a year. Com· 2Conv i cted Court Upholds Rape Ve rdicts WASHINGTON !A P > The U.S. Supreme Court has let stand lhe 1976 rape convictions ot two California men who claim they .were denied a fair trial by prejudic ial publicity that included a courthouse demonstration by feminists The justices refused to hear Monday the ap- peals of Berl Charles Whitten and Kenneth Weic hman, now slate prison inmates. THE TWO, DESCRIBED in court papers as "bikers," or motorcycle enthusiasts, were charged 1n the rape or an 18·year old Sonoma County girl. After two mistrials. a third trial for the two men began Apri l 26, 1976 The Santa Rosa Press Democrat. described by the two convicts' lawyer as the major local newspaper. published a story about the trial April 25 under the headline "Third Rape Ring Tnal This Week." The story said the two men and co-defendants eventually acquitted had been "linked to 12 as- saults" on women in the area. T H E SAME DAV. THE SAN Francisco Chronicle-Examiner published an a rticle about the case headlined, "The Cry m Sonoma: These Rapes Must Stop.·· News t•ovcragc of the trial was extens ive and a group or some 40 fe minist pickets demonstrated <.it the courthouse tarrying s1~ns with slogans such as "No Mort.' Rape" and ",Jui;tace Por Women." On April 'l:T, both men asked that the lnal be m oved lo another community but the trial judge denied the request. After their conv1c t1ons, Whitten and Weichman based their unsuccessful state appeal on grounds that they were denied a fair tnal because the heavy publicity surroundjng their case prejudicd the jury agamst them I N THROWING OUT THEIR a ppe a California appeals court ruled that "while the press coverage or lh1s trial was extensive, we note that of the 12 pe rsons selected. half of them stated that they had not read anything in the news- paper. heard any news on television or discussed this case with anyone " The appeals court said "the remaining Jurors' exposure to the case was negligible." It ruled the demonstration had not played any significant role because the Jurors told the presid· ing judge they had taken only sc&nt notice of it. Hospital Film Se t The South Coast Com munity Hospital -Men- tal Health Unit will pre · sent two films at 7 30 p.m . Wednesday 1n the South Coast Community Hos pital Auditorium in South Laguna. HIGH SCHOOL TRUSTIES SEEK CANDIDATES FOR BOARD VACANCY The films disc uss behavior in humans . Ad· miss ion is free and r efres hments will be served. Further information may be obtained by call· mg Sandi Cruickshank at the hospital 499·1311, Ext 163. H ighway Sale SACRAMENTO <AP) -Tenants of stat e· owned homes on the route of an a bandoned freeway project in Los Angeles' Silver Lake district will get first chance t o buy the homes. the state Depart· ment of TransPortataon said . S.IH Service Antique •Slot Machines •Plnboll Machines •Bra~s C.sh Registers •AnUque A.read• Eqwpmen ... . -N.M••8'. Su&a Au. CA m11 mum-tt• The Govemiog Board of the Huntmgton Beach Union High School District is actively solicltlng epplicatlOOs from persons interested 1n bemg considered es a candidate for appointment to fil a vacancy on the Board of Trustees This app()lntment 1s to ftll a term which IMll el!Pn on March :n 1979. The vacancy was created when Don MacAllrster was elected to the Huntington Beach City Council on Apnl 1 1. Oeedfine for sobmis6f00 al apc>hcatx>ns is Monday. May 1. 197a no later than 4 00 p.m. Applicetions are available at all district htgti schOols !Edtson, Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach. Menna. Ocean View. Westmnster and Wtntersburg/GUldence Center> and at the Oistnct Education Center 5201 Boise. Huntington Beech. Applicatloos should be 9Ubmttted to Or Leland 8 Newcomer, Advisor, Govemrng Boerd, Huntington Beech Unt0n High School Otstnc~ 5201 Boise A~. Huntington Beach. CA 82647. A Blue Ribbon Screening Committee constating of Steven Burtnett. W dltem Davis, Ruth Ftnley end Steve Smith. end chall"tld by Or. Newcomer. w~I use the application date to eid tn the screening of candidates who may then be further involved in intennews at a Public Hearing. A~er tnterv1ew1ng of candidates ate 6'Jecial Public Meeting, th11 Commtttee win recommend a candidate to the Govem1ng Board. Any person, regardless of se11, who•s 18 years of age of older, a citizen of the state. a resident of the school district. a l't!Qiatered voter. and who Is not d1squaNfled by the Conetiwtion of laWl! of the state from holding a clvll office. ls ehg1ble to be elected or appotnted a member of e governing board of a school d1strtet. Tmeline for selection is es follows· April 26 7p.m. Screentng committee meets with ragresentetives of various groups and ind1Vlduals to get input to develop criten11 let Huntington Beach High Schoon. Folowing in(>ut from reprnen~ of V8l'IOUS groope, 1creeni11g committee win consider cntene for 1craetllng of ac>Plicante' pepers May 1 Oeedline for recetvmg eppltcations May9 5 to 7 p.m. May 12 7 p.m. M-v 12·13 Mey 16 AfUlr continoua ISCt'Mring of IPPlications. screening committee detemunea final number to be mteNl8wed publicly let 018tnct Educa- tion Center!. 8pedel Committee Meeting· Public lnteNiew of CendidMee lat Hun- tington Beech High SchooO. Following public Interviews. aol'99fllng committee melles decision on cendidete to recommend to Govomlng 8o8I'(! lat Huntington Beooh High School end District Education Center!. GoV'tl'nlng Board SPPolntl candidate to fill vecancy on Govemtng Ba.rd For f~~tion. pie .. oomact M1h Eunice Venal, ExeoutiVO Sec:rec.ry co the eo.-d of Tn.i11taes. et 17141896-8711, eat 270 merical television wrtiers can make twice that. The workshop's h1&hesl·pa.ld executive, pro· ducts chief B1U Whalley, made '158.000 in 1877, In· ~ludiog a bonus -voted him alone -tor SS m illion he broughl m selling "Se$amo Stnet" radio' and other such product.a. •• th• ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ec:rou from Olarteyl1nd NOW thru SUNDAY WO RKSH 0 P PRES I DE NT IOA N 0 anz liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;~ Cooney says she sympa~h:eea with the wnters' / desire ror higher pay. But she denJes the organiza· f 1, lion is extravagantly run and justJfles Whalley'.s ~ I'/-'C:I salary by saying his division enables the workshop F \ "We Just wouldn't be able to do this if we ~ to s urvive. L.e ~~c)-? we ren't in business," she malntalrus. ''To say It's been done off their bocks Is errant nonsense." c, Although some insiders on the creative s ide say higher-ups travel too much and too luxurious· ly. Mrs. Cooney says it is necessary to drum up the bus iness essential to survival. MRS. COONEY'S PREDICTIONS or a "very black" future m the race of inflation and a drop 10 federal supf)Ort contrast to the workshop's plush offices and last year 's Sll.000 raise that made her salary S89.000. In her de fense. a workshop source said Mrs. Cooney and the others could triple their salaries in commercial telev1s1on. TRAPPED HEAT Both "Sesame St reel" and "Electric Com· p3 ny." which 1s no longer in production. have been widely praised. but lhe works hop has had limited s uccess an new shows. "Feelin ' Good," ror exam· pie, flopped. •RAISE WATER TEMPERATURE 10°-15° • REDUCE FUEL BILLS UP TO 75% • REDUCE CHEMICAL LOSS T HE 60 EMPLOYEES WHO once turned out the pr ize.wanning ··sesame Street" have s wollen lo nea rly four times that. working on "Sesame Street" and only one other project -a science s how for pre.teens to air 1n lwo years. • FITS ANY POOL •FREE FLOATING-NO TIE·DOWNS • HELPS KEEP POOL CLEAN • LIGHTWEIGHT -EASY TO HANDLE • 2 YR. LIMITED WARRANTY Another source said the workshop had lo absorb unwanted and sometimes unqualified minority.group e mployees to keep grants and con· tracts from the U.S. Office of Education, whose contribut;on has fallen from rouehly half the budget lo $5 million or a total budget ot $18 million last year. • REG. PRICE .47• SQ. FT. NOW ..28• SQ. FT. EXAMPLE: 16•32 SQ. fT. • 'l•U.36 Pl.US TAX SOLAR POOL COVERS 15581 PRODUCT LN. #?5 • 714/893-4472 HUNTINGTON BEACH, CA. 92649 ' Saint Pierre ne from France • IM IChlwMe thlf s peifect With f1stl0f fowll • •t ctlleMtOtklnll pucesl hlth 1.99 ~·· Hand-Blown Stemware from Portugal • our ~lul '*""'9'9 cohctlOrl tr &CH two c:llS!inCIMI hnet lot 1118 1111dlttOl\all•t. rouncMO l)OW1I rlM from llllled tleme 111 a oontempcnty ~ r I i ~ CrltP llQUlred ellllOUentS ... , • rest on stnktng saema Ot .. 37"°' -{. • d'IOOS• .. ,,,., ill goblel. wino, or Chll'lllNIOne llZHI HUNTINGTON BEACH Huntington Center lot es • clowt COf1811tlOn f take OUf CU(el • ~Ille boot to .. c:onlvSIOll with our 18-petr 0\19'"-door r.dl, 115-pwOYtt·rodradl. Of 124-Qltr roll.fboutl • lot tnStanl doset spece. our sturdy steel dot'-..ck. 67" hictl. 38 .. wodund 1a·· °"" •.. r()llnQ on c.AH111 • sllck1n11 oft'~ ·em slral&hl with our neal n llOy 8 tlaek ~ck ro4at1ng h&nge!S SPftnQ·io.ded moun1 kM!>' 11 auspernMcj l)etw-tloor and cloMI rOd' Nm8.99 Rattan Etaaere from Hona Kong • natUf •1 rttllln roun<ls oft into a stnk•nR tnol&-lie< eiagere1 • give •I some cOfner space to Show oH your col1ect1blfl or p4ents' • dllOYl 36'· Uttl, 12'' 1n diameier """'blY requ•red 14.99 Open Mon. ttlrv Set 1N Sun. 1~7 UI 41114-0 hot•ln96® Dl•t•rJI •••Pl..,..,.t • con1a1ns no C::::::.. --2 t1rbohydrates. 'IO~ati•es •nd no S4.1Car1 • .itltron rws. 2. 991 l·lb. t1n J.99 Y~219 Owef-Slnk Cutting Board • choo. choo' • I n O¥eMlnil bcMrd With I ,_ ef1&t.; • 1teinleu steel 1-.y to c:etc:h the CVl111\CS! • nllturtlty llllt1hed. lt"ubou1 2" 11: 1•·· LAGUNA HILLS Laguna Hiiis Mall 3.99 09U41 •I ., I. .~ I!'> b 111 (Id 1:1d en n~ le me. .my 10·2. Jt I fall ~. It and lVt'r '.)101!. cal my 1 tor Wh\0 mful ngc; or >t111e1 c; Ot tht.- 11a1n:-1 tee up ,. ' JO OAll.V PILOT QUEENIE "What's lhis ltem-&ood clean fun?" "Cot a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting the anawer1 and action you need to solve mequtt1es in government and business. Mall your questions to Pat Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coast Dally Pilot. P.O. Bo:r 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. As many letters aJ possi~ wiU be answered. but phoned inquines or letters not mcluding the reader'r /ull name. addreas. and bu/Jines& hours' phone number cannot be considered. Thi& column appears dai· ly ezcept Saturdays." l'ol~ Aul Rqalrs D..e DEAR PAT: A Jan. 15 newspaper story told about the recalJ of more than 200,000 1974-76 Volkswagen and Audi Fox cars by the Transporta- tion Department. The recall was due to a defective .accelerator cable, and our Audi is one of those af. i'fected. Even though we read about this four .,Jnonlhs ago, our dealer and repair shop o_an't ~e­ pair our car because they have not received tn· structions from the manufacturer. We are told we will receive notification through the mail and that no repair can be made until tflen. In the mean- 11 me we feel we· are driving a car with a i1 .. 11g~rous defect and a re powerless to have it cor· re<:ted. M.0 ., lrvine Volkswagen or American regional head- quarters' spokesman says that recall'repalrs wlll be underway in about two weeks. A parts shortage has caused the delay. The National Highway Traf- fic Administration agrees that it takes Ume for let- ters to be mailed to recall car owners and parts supplied to dealers, especially when many cars are involved. NHTSA does not set an Immediate time limit ror repairs to be lnltlated wben a recall notice ls issued, and it appears that patience ls the only solution to yoar problem. The federal agency also expects Volkswagen to have completed ar rangements tor repairs by the end of April. Good luck until then! Ca•pdtes C09tpllterized DEAR PAT: We're new <.:al.lfornia residents. I've heard that reservations for campsites at the federal campgrounds can be arranged. How do I go about doing this, and what areas are available? E.G., Fountain Valley The U.S. Forest Service resumed its camp· ground reservation program April 5 for selected family and group campgrounds in CaWornia. Reservations can be made through any Ticketron outlet located throughout the state, or malled re· servalion requests can be sent with full payment to Ticketron, Box 26430, San Francisco, CaW. 941%6. The selected reservation campgrounds on the Cleveland NatJonal Forest are: El Prado, Horse Heaven, Agua Dulce and Wooded Hill. Reserva· lions for other national forests and the Lake Tahoe Basin also are avaUable through lbe system. Only %7 famlly campgrounds out of 900 located on the national forests In California are In the system. Others are on a flrst come-first served basis. Reservations can be regaested up to 60 clays to advance for national forelt family campgroa.oda and 90 days for 1troop sites. The tJcket outlet will determine if there's a vacancy on the date desired and for camping equipment to be used. U so, the umper pays the fee and ls glvea a ticket wilb validating lnlormatJoa. The camper ls assigned a unit on arrival. Ticket sales begin dally <except Sundays) at 10 a.m. No more than two reservations per person for the sam~ campground and dates are permitted. Consecutive reservations wru not be honored since speclOc stay Omits apply. Old Sol Being SoUfllat DEAR READERS: The California Energy Com mission recently aanounced a aearcb for the oldest solar energy system In California. The wlnnlng Installation will be awarded a commemorative plaque by the state Office of His· torlc Preservation oa Sun Day, the l.olernatlollal "celebratJoa of solar energy," scbeda.led Mar 3. Solar water beaters were common In Soutbe111 California In the first quarter of tills centary, a.n4 many old buildings may bave forgo«en solar In· stallatlom covered over In remodellllg or aD.kaown to new owners. If yoa know of a solar system tllat yoa WU qualifies as oae of the oldest In C&lifonala, write to ''Solar Search," State E11ergy CommJsdoD, 1111 Howe Ave., Sacrameato, Calli., l58ZS. Ir yoa're ltClt sure what to look for, or u yoa bave qDettlou about solar energy or CaUforal•'• solar tax credit, ca ll the Energy Comml11lo• toll-free at 809-852·7511. NEED A LAWYER? &.bw L99al Fee •Divorce • Bankruptcy •Criminal • Wiiis-Probate • Incorporation "Accident-Injury •Eviction • co11ect1ons' 640-2507 ~HA. COHSULTATION-110 • HOMIOWMStS • AUTO .. •.-ce • RABBITT INSURANCE ...... 1114 HAA80ft 8l YD. COSTA•IA f Antennas Limited ForCBs WASIUNGTON (AP> The U.S . Supreme Court has let stand a rul· lng that local govern,· menls may rest..ict the heights of clUzens band and ham radio anten- nas. The Justices dismissed a challenge Monday lo a Cerritos, Calif., or- dinance restricUng an· tenna height, saying the case offered no s ubstan- tial federal question. UNTIL S1J PE~ - seded by some future court action. Monday's order could affect hun- dreds ol municipal laws governing antennas used by some 340,000 amateur <ham> operators and an estimated 25 million CB radio owners. John D. Schroeder, a Cerritos ham operator, contende d in hi s Supreme Court appeal that his city's ordinance banning antennas over 40 feel high is un- constitutional. THE ORDINANCE should be pte-empted by the federal govern · ment's exclusive control over radio operations and also violates his free-speech rights. he contended. Schroeder said Congress, tbrouth J,he , Communications Act of 1934, vested all authority to place limits on radio antenna heigh~ in the Federal Communica- tions Commission A height limit or 70 feet is allowed by the FCC. SCHROEDER WAS cited with two criminal violations of the city's zoning ordinance in 1975 after he erected a 70·foot tower and anterma at his home despite the Cer· ritos Planning Com- mission's refusal of permission. BanGroft never had t ime for me. Thenl said ~notseea Bat\K of America Tru~t Offic.er abour a Livin91rust? Me masre.-ed chess, toot< a G~ Boo'<~ course, inve5h!d in ·a reclining chair. I. A Bank of Ameriai Living Trust can help you save a healthy portion of the usual estate taxes. Add up your assets-home equity, perso081 property, Investments! cars, life insurance. You may find you're worth more than you thought. If you want to make sure Uncle Sam doesn't take too big a chunk, talk to us about a Bank of America Living Trust. You'll also learn about the other managerial and professional services our Trust Department offers. AT rust Officer can give you all the details In just 60 minutes on a confidentic: I and no obligation basis. Send in the coupon or call our Laguna Hills Trust Office at ( 714) 581-3005 for an appointment. Day and night he studied how 1t1 avoid paying ht.tge ~ate tAKeS. Bancroft le:tmedhow 1t15Crle a lotof money on estate taxes and~ immediate benef tb too. Educational T.v. became a ~of life for: him. AT YOUR SERVICE We never w8nt to par rte$, never Vii dancing. lltelatest sh!ps were ~mystery To us. t He smpped studying and retaxed. l ~der ;f Bank.of America!s Ttust Dep:trtment would lii<e to go dancing. ................ --........ -......... . : To: : I T~Burda I : Trust Department • • Bank of ~ca : I 23521 Peseo De Valenoa : • Laguna Hiiis, CA 92653 • • • • • I Plea~ send me information on how to save on estate : I blxes with a Bank of America Living Trust. : • • I Na I : ~ : • • I Clty/Stllle/Zip : i ""°" BANKOFAMERICABl i • Trust Depart~t : I Put your tru\t mu~. : •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • SPEClRACIDE -rHATS IT'~ SNAll.BAIT Roger's recommends "That's It" to take care of snaJls. Easy to apply through shaker top for effective control of snails and slugs. DAILY GARDEN SEMINARS Educatkmal lecturee 0n various plant/ garden topics. Weekdays Uam tpm 3pm Weekends Hourly llam-3pm All purpose lnsedidde to effectively control a wide range of garden pests. INDOOR Pl.ANTS A fantastic selection of unusual Indoor flowering plants. African Violets. Glox· lnia, Orchids, Mums, Cyclamen. Azaleas, Reiger Begonias. Easter Ulies and Oxygen Plus to prevent overwater· ing while promoting growth. BANDINI~ BERMUDA Warm-weather In· sects are prevented plus fertilizes your &awn. BANDINl#3 D~CHONDRA For prevendon of weeds and Insect problems and provides $prtng feeding. BANDINI #5 BLADE~ KiDs btoad-leaf weeds In blade grass lawns and fertlllzes at the same ti.me. MARIGOLD Robust, popular annuals ranging from 6" to nearly 3 ft. tall. Plant In full sun for gorgeous blooms from now through fall tong.lasting for cut Bowers In yellows, golds, orange and bronze.maroon. Spring through Summer color-red. pink, orange, white or vartegated- grows In 61tered sun. Roger's Florist• 640-6n4 DWARF MARGUERITE An Improved, low growing variety of daisy-the popular garden Bower that blooms all summer and Into fall. The Dwarf Marguerite is compact in growth and a very heavy bloomer. 50o/o OFF PRIMROSE ANDVIQJ.A BASKETS Put some brilliant color In your home with our intemationall\o' famous hang- ing baskets. The recent rains have really made the Primrose and Viola baskets spectacularly colorful, now is the best time to buy them. San Joaquin HJUs Rd. et MacArthur Blvd .• Newport eerh (714) 640.5800 • Open dally 9 am to 6 pm. • 1 t .. J INSIDE : •Stocks •Business s t ~~~ ........ ·"' .. O·Y·tes ... ·.T.·.·.·.v~ls.•o.n ...................... T.·• .. dlY •.• Apt1~fa~.·''·n~ ........ ll!!mlDAl .. L.Y~.L.O·Tlllll!I ....... ~~~ ~ ., -- CdM Ends La Jolla Strea o.lly " ......... _., ... lridl 0'0-11 CdM'S LANCE GOOD RETURNS A FOREHAND SMASH. USAC Crash Victims Had Key Indy Roles INDIANAPOLIS <AP> -Even before the initial shock and dis- belief had wom off. U.S. Auto. Club orficials were pondering how they could put together a patchwork staff to take over the duties of seven or their leaders who were killed late Sunday in a plane crash. "The immediate concern was over the sprint and midget races this weekend. They will go off as sc heduled." said USAC s pokesman Donald Davidson late Monday in a telephone in· terview from the club's In- dianapolis headquarters. "Beyond that. we have to start thinking quickly about the ln· dianapolis 500." Behind the scenes prepara- tions were to begin this week ror the May 6 opening o f In- dianapolis Motor Speedway for practice leading up to the May 28 500-mile classic. Four of those killed, Frank DelRoy, Stan Worley, Shim Malone and Ray Marquette, had vital roles in speedway ac- tivities division 1upervi1or and tbe start.er a.t .all t.be championship races except Indianapolis. where he served as assistant to the chief steward. It will be up to Tom Binford. the track's steward, to designate a replace- ment," Davidson said. "Actually the toughest one of the lot to replace quickly will probably be Stan. His job as chief registrar was tough and thankless. "He worked alone mostly. processing the hundreds of USAC licenses, issuing credentials to drivers, crews and omcials. He knew most everybody on a first name basis. ll 's hard td describe the immense responsibilities of his position." Th ere will probably be no replacement for the jovial. wisecracking Marquette whose job as director of public affairs was much more than that. He was generall:v recognized as No. 2 man in the organization to president Dick King. ~ a1 aooEa CABJ.SON Ot .. DllllY ...... ,... Corona del Mar Hiih 's superb tennis machine ended La Jolla Hlth 's winning streak of 185 s traight matches Monday at John Wayne Tennis Club with a 16-12 non·league decision before a crowd of 1.000. Billed aa a classic with the winner given a right to claim the national championship, the four. hour struggle was a study in come-from·behind pressure ten· Cmnpbell Will Play For Oilers HOUSTON <AP> -The Houston Oilers have taken the drama out of next week's Na- tional Football League draft -jt will be Helsman Trophy winner Earl Campbell getting the Oilers nod as the No 1 pick. The Oilers made il official Monday when they dealt tl&bt end Jimmy Giles, along with their first and second round picks this year. to Tampa Bay in exchange for the Bucs' No. 1 pick next Tuesday. Houston also gave up its third and fifth selec· Uons next season. There was little doub~ in Oilers coach 0 .A. "Bum" Phillips' mind about how long it will take Campbell to fit into the • 01 le rs lineup. Asked how soon Campbell could contribute. Phtllips said, "Oh, about as soon as we can hand him the ball." Campbell, who established career rusrung records for the University of Texas and t he Southwest Conference. also was pleased with his selection. "My first reaction was it's great simply because all the speculation about where I was going to play is over." Campbell, of Tyler. Texas. said. "A lot of people don't gel the chance to play close to home their entire career. I feel real fortunate to do so." Oilers owner Bud Adams Jr. announced the acquisition Mon· day and said -the signing or Campbell would be an expensive proposition. but it signaled a commitment to excellence by the Oilers. Adams was right about it be· ing an expensive proposlUon, based op comments by Campbell's agent. Mike Trope. Trope said he 'II ask for roughly the same contract he negotiated for' top draft choices Ricky Bell and Tony Dorsett last spring, which m eans Campbell's services will cost the Oilers about $1.2 million over a hve- yea.r period. Trope said this fi#re would be. for the most P!I,'!· non-negotiable. 'lt stands to reason. and this is what l told Pat Peppler C~llers assistant general manager), that Earl is worth just as much as they were. If Houston wants to make a deal based on last year's figures. wi}:bout haggling over minor de· tails. trus thing will be easy." Trope s aid. Campbell said he would leave all contract negotiations to his agent. DelRoy. the crusty technical director. was In charge of in- specting the entries -· some 92 this year for the Indy 500 alone Chaw Sticks in the Craw for each USAC national cham· pionship race to determine their proper adherence lo rules and safety requirements. He was considered without peer in his Cield. "Jack Beckley, the assistant tech man, is expected to move into that spot." Davidson said. "He bas been working closely with Frankie for several years and is very knowledgeable in the field. He lacks the experience that Frankie had accumulated over many years, of course, but we have great confidence in his abilities. "Shim was our midget BALTIMORE <APJ -New York Yankees pitcher Ron Guidry l eft the ballgame because he had bitten off more than he could chew. The Z7-year-old lefthander was chewing tobacco when he swallowed the juice in the bot· tom of the fifth inning of a game against the Baltimore Orioles. He pitched the sixth and seventh, but that chaw can stick in the craw for some lime. "I told Billy Martin that I didn't know where I'd be In the eighth and ninth, so he'd better take me out. The worst thing that could have happened to me was to throw up on national television." Guidry recorded the victory as the Yanks defeated the Orioles 8·2. The New York lefthander was cruising along on a four- hitter when he leaped in vain to grab a high chopper by Rich Dauer. The misdirected tobacco juice did him more har m than the Orioles. "I didn't keep my mouth closed. and when I grunted, the juice slipped down," Guidry ex- plained. "I didn't gag. but it went down so fast I got queasy in the stomach and a headache when, it got to me." nJs aa the doubles teams or Dan- ny Saltz and Crata Thomas and Greg Washer aod Kendall Young laJd the foundation for the victory with stunning vlc· lorles. Saltz and Thomas staggered Scott Appleby and Hector Ortiz, 7-5. 6·4 at the outset to hand Ap- pleby. a senior and doubles specialist, bis first ever loss In higb school competition. In the end it was Kevin Forbes breedng to a 6-1 win in singles and freshman Anthony Emerson winning a 5-4 tiebreaker to cap. lure a 7~ dtt.lslon that proved the w\nnlng margin. And although Lance Good and Forbes were brilliant with three victories each . along wilh Emer son's upset. it was in doubles wher~ coach Dennis Trout's Corona del Mar Sea Kings won the match. There were big plays all after- noon, but most noteworthy for Saltz and Thomas was in their' tlfr with La Jolla's No 2 unit Mark Scribner and Ket\ Ma Dougall. The La JQlla tande bad a 4·1 lead and the serve an appeared on its way lo payd1 arter Saltz and Thomas ha played so well in whipping A pleby and Ortiz. But the CdM duo batUed bac to lie at 4·4 and when it brok through La Jolla's service agai <it 5·5. simultaneous joy came the Corona del Mar camp See SEA KINGS, Page 8 2 AP- SEA TILE'S JOHN HALE STEALS SECOND BASE AS THE BALL ELUDES RANCE MULLINIKS. Special Night for Meyer Mariners Outlast Ange'ls, 6-5, in 12 By a Daily Pllol Write r' The California Angels take another crack al Seattle's klddie corps pitching staff tonight. bop. ing to Improve on Monday night's result as the Mariners logged a 6-5, 12-inniog victory at Anaheim Stadium. Tonight's pitcher for Seattle. 22-year-old Byron McLaughlin, will be making his first major league start. It was the same story Monday as the Mariners· Mike Parrott, 23, made his big league debut as a starter. The Angels chased Parrott on Carney Lansfor d's two-r_un Aage&Slat~ All 0-.., KMl"C ltM'9 CIMI ""'" 2S SHIU• •I C•Hlornl• 1 2.5 pm Aprll.liSHltleatCalllornl• 1 lSp.m 1411<"11 ,, SNltle •I Qltlfom•• I "p,m. homer m the fifth. Lansford is a rookie rumself and the blast was his first in the majors . But all that did was tie the score. and the Mariners pulled out the see-saw battle in the 12th inning when Leon Roberts singled home Dan Meyer. who had doubled to lead orr the in· ning A graduate of Mater Dei Hi gh !Santa Anal. Meyer got Seattle on the scoreboard with a two-run homer in the fourth inning. Although he leads the club in rbi with 10, Meyer is struggling with a .164 average. "Yeah. it's kind of weird to be leading in rbi and only hitting . 160." Meyer says. "But I 'm coming around. I felt real ~ood tonight. real aggressive." Meyer said he got psyched ror the game. since he was facing Nolan Ryan and the crowd of 13,429 included his parents and a large contingent of former high school friends. "It was extra special. I had a lot of people here. and Nolan Ryan isn't jus t one of your everyday pitchers," Meyer says. For Ryan. it was another study in frustration. He was br111iant at times and struck out 15. but for the fourth straight start. he left without a victory. Ryan has fanned 10 or more batters in three of his four starts to extend his major league rec· ord to 107 performances with 10-plus strike0uts. Cali!orrua overcame Meyer's homer with three runs in the fifth . Don Baylor walked and Ron Jackson s ingled him to second, then t hey executed a double steal, and when the throw went into center field. Baylor scored. One out later, Lansford sm ashed his homer. Bruce Boehle. who was traded by the Angels to Cleveland last seas on. was res ponc;ible for Seattle's third and fourth ruru, Jn the sixth inning he doubled. was sacrificed to third and scored on Meyer 's fly ball to center In the seventh. Boehle s ingled to center to drive in Craig Reynolds from second bast'. Bochte's three singles lirled has average to 329 "Bochte has been hurting us ever since he left ... !>ay'i Angels manager Dave Garcia "lie hit well against us in spring. and he's still doing it." Seattle looked like 1t had wraooed it uo in lhP 11th when Larry Milbourne singled homl' Reynolds. brea king a 4· 1 tie See ANGELS, Page 82 Seaver Struggling Dodgers, Reds Open Series C INCtNNATl <APl -It doesn't figure. The Cincinnati Reds -temporarily down lo a three-man starting rotation - are off to one of their best starts and their best pitcher. Tom Seaver. is offtooneorh1s worst., Cancinnat1. with the best rec· ord in the National League. is I I S -a half-game ahead of the Los Angeles Dodge rs -and Seaver is 0-1 almost three weeks into the season. "ff it was m the middle of tbe season. it'd go practically un· noticed." says Seaver. who has won 20 games five tames during his 10-year career. The problem is technical, not physical. assures Seaver. who goes arte r his rirst victory Wednesday night against the Dodgers. The two-game senes opens tonight with Tom Hume, :? I. facing Reds-killer Tomrtiy John. 3·0, who owns a hfetimt.> 10-2 mark againstCinc1nnat1 · "I'm not pitching well. but I will. It 1sn·t that the sky '" fall. ang. It's JUSt a negative cycle. It has happened to me time and time aga111. 1t will end." Seaver said "I know what I've been domj? wrong and It's strictly techn1eal . Simply put, the lower half of my On T¥ Tonlghf Channel I I af S J • body has been ahead or my tor hair, which is the reason wh\' I '\'e been patching high a lot ·· · i .Jaekson Finally Getting ':Reeognition , A high fastball can be harmfu to a pitcher's ea rnt-d ru average. He's already ~1ven lA six home runs. almost one thi or the total 19 that he yield last season. He has struggled a spring. Seaver. who has a 3 Ql er, after 23 innings. sayc; he can· remember waiting sc Ion~ for ' victory By DAVE CUNNINGHAM • Of .. Dlllty .... SUff Ron Jackson ·knows what it's like to struggle for recognition. He comes from a family of 13 brothers and sisters. So it was nothing new to Jackson that be bad to struggle for recognition with the California Angels. And now, in his ninth year wilfi the organiza- tion. be tblnks be may finally get It. Jackson ls off to the finest start or his career. He's batting .482 and extended bis bltUna streak to •lx games Monday n.labt with a palr of 1ln1lea. He also scored a nm and stole a base. "I'm just continuing over fr. m the spring," Jackson says. "I had a good spring and my stroke ls good. I cut down on my swing a liltle and I'm just trying to make contact." A barrel-chested 24-year-old, Jackson was an outstanding prep football player and turned down acholarshlp offers from the likes of John McKay and Bear Bryant to play baseball. He hit .328 al El Paso In 1974, bot Jackson's career averaae in three major league seasons is just .233. His atuUbg pace may come as a surprise to some, but not to Angels manaaer Dave Garcia. "We always knew rtonnJe wu ·. capable of rutting like this," Garcia says. "He's just doing what we always figured he would do." But when the season began, such accolades weren't expected of the 6·0, 205-pound Alabama native. For the second straight spring training session, Jackson was cast in the role of substitute or platoon player. The media guide said he would battle Dave Chalk for the third base Job, but in- siders said Jackson didn't have a good enough glove to oust Chalk. "He must Improve his fieldiq and, m~ lmportantlY. he n:u•t quit puttlq too moch preuure on himself." Garcia said in ear- ly spring. "But power 1s his big· gesl asset. If Ronnie plays every day, he'll hit close to 20 home runs." He may get a chance to prove Oarcia right. but not because of Improved glove work at third base. Chalk (who was sidelined Monday with a sore right heel> still bas that job, but Jackson's hittinc has been so hot Garcia had to find a spot for him. and that was on the other side of the infield. Jackson platooned at first base last season with Tony Solalia, but Angels brass figured the tpot would be filled by Ron See IACKSON. Pase 82 AON JACKSON A year ago. he was 4·0 1n Apr with the weak-hitting Nt-w Yo Mets. His best outing of the "Pn came last Friday m San frni c1soo. when he do!ed out on two hits in seven innin~" However, young Bob Kneppe fired a three-ttit,3·Cshutou1 Bill Bonham. 3·0. and the Ctt- clnnaU bullpen ha ve bee11 l team's savio" In the early ll f Ing. Bonham fired sever •nmngc: o ( one-bit ball agolnst the Doo~erc: In an 8-2 victory that got tht> Reds of( to a fiym(l st art againi-t their archnvals. Ht: ended up with a five-hatter 1 .. DAil. Y N.OT Benek Gets Five RBI ID 20-7 Win TULSA-Vince Bie nek, a junior outfielder who played at Golden West College, belted a home run. a double and a single. drove in five runa and scored three times In leading Oral Roberts University to a 20-7 baseball victory over Oklahoma City University Monday after· noon here. Bill Springman from San Clemente had a double and tri· pie. scored three times, had an rbl and extended his consecutive game hitting streak to nine. Bruce Helser. a freshman from Los Alamitos. was the win· ning pitcher. working seven in· nlngs an<i striking out nlne. Oral Roberts is now 27-10 with lhe next game Monday against 1\1 issouri Southern. AMe Top• ftff fOll SANTA CLARA -1Arthur Ashe won his first tournament in two years as he defeated Bernie Mitton. 6-7, S.l, 6·2 in the finals of the $50,000 Santa Clara Valley Grand Prix tennis tournament Monday. o.lly 1"'1114 ......... , ~•trk• 0'0-11 TENNIS I BASEBALL ANGELS .•• Continued From Page Bl Reynolds had slqled and stolen 1econd. But California bounced back when Grich singled. was sacrlfie«t to second, took tblrd on Ron Falrly's ground out and scored when Don Baylor nned a double down the third baseline. A II It did was prolong the game, setting up Roberta' game· winning single in the 12th. Before Monday's loss, the Angels had won five or six one· run decisions this season. It is their best-ever start. HAnLa CALIPC>ltNIA J Cn11 JI> SlllllOft t 8o<lll•" s1 ... 1ona11 Mlt0«na11 Au Jon .. tl Meyer lb W Seton )I> Hale rf Robert\ rt lleyMld• U ... -111 I 0 1 O • 0 0 0 ~ 1 3 I 7 0 0 0 I 0 I I • 0 0 0 '1'3 • 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 7 0 I I •7 70 II MIU.,-rl AtllemuMpll Grlcll Jb 90\100<1 Felrlydh Bayle>' II II JKklOfllb Mulllnlk•" L•~lord )I> Humpftrey c l•ncl<HWl pll H•mplClft < !lol•ll• pll Oow1111>9c ...... 5 0 1 1 0 0 0 S I 1 0 • 0 0 1 6000 • I 1 1 • 1 2 0 5 0 00 s 2, 1 2000 I 0 0 0 0000 I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 Tol•h 0 • II • Tol•h 4J ' •• Sulll~ 0110 701 100 011-1 C411t0rn•• ooo ~ 010 o~s E -St•-· H""'l)ft(OY OP-Seattle 2. L08-Sutlle 11, C:.111«•"• • JB-lloclll•, lt.MllW. ~~·~ .~ve80:4 .. ~;.~~·J~~-.'1~'r.,1~~: Ao JaU\On. Aevneta• s Ru J-. eo.toa. SF-M .. .,. P•rrott Todd Romo IW.•.O> "41wley A van LAAO<ll' Herlttlt IL.0 11 II' H It Elt H 50 SEATTLE ... • l l I 1 l I I I 1 0 • • I I 1 , '• 0 0 0 0 0 CALIFORNIA ' I s 1S 1 7 J ) I 2 t I 0 0 The victory was worth $8.500 to Ashe, while Mitton took home $1.250 CRAIG THOMAS RETURNS A SHOT TO LA JOLLA AS PARTNER DANNY SALTZ (RIGHT) WAtCHES. s .... A•wley 111. WP-Ay•n 2 T -J .O . •-•l.•2• Solomon Win• LAS VEGAS -Harold Solomon opened play Monday in the Las Vegas Tennis Classic with a 6·2, 4-6, 6·3 victory over Tim Gullikson and Ken Rosewall scored a 6-4, 6-3 triumph over Paul Kronk. occ Ends . cerritos .Jinx, 8·3 ' In the only other singles match. John Lloyd posted a mild upset with a 6-2. 6·2 decision over Jeff Borowiak. lSC Get• loran LOS ANGELES -Bakersfield College guard Dean Jones, the 1977-78 California JC player of the year. has signed to play basketball at Southern Cal. Tro· jans coa~ Bob Boyd said Mon da). · Jones. 5·10. uveraged 16 points und ntnc assists a game this season for Bakersfield, whil•h had a 33-2 record f 'o s f Pr Big K e y Bobby Smith and Ri ck Woolard had big days on offense and pitcher Kevin Fitzhugh went all the way on the pitching mound as Orange Coast College defeated Cerritos College. S.3, for the first time in 21 games Monday afternoon on the win· ner'iS field. OCC bad 105t 20 straight to the Cerritos Falcons before Mon- day's South Coast Conference till. Fitzhugh had good control all the way and became the second straight OCC pitcher lo com· plete a game. He scattered eight hits and allowed only two earned runs as OCC climbed to within 212 games of first place Cerritos. Smith had two hits. giving him 101 for his two-year career at Orange Coast. lie is the onl} LOS ANGELES Hurdler Greg Foster of UCLA probably B y Lobs ters will run in four events . and 9layer. ever. to get more than 100 for the Pirates. He also extended his consecutive k&me tittling str eak to 19 and brought his average lo .409. He also had a stolen base, giving him 3S for the year. Woolard had four hits in five plate appearances and in the last three games bas raised his balling average from .261 to .327 with 11 hits in 16 times at bat. Orange Coast went in front to stay with a pair or runs in the bottom or the fourth after each team had scored single markers in lwo earlier frames. Ricky Frick opened with a single and Eric Peyton walked. Then, with one out. Woolard belted the only extra base blow of the game. a double to lert. to score Frick. After Joe Nemeth possibly five. when the Bruins ----------- face Southern Cal in a track and 01i c lwd field meet Saturday at UCLA·s ~nnies ~ Drake Stadium ~. ~ · JACKSON ••• Continued From Page Bl f airly this year. Fairly was ob· tJ tned m a trade with Toronto during the off-season. Now Fairly is the part-time player. doubling as a designated hitter or pinch hitter. It's a situation that will continue as long as Jackson continues to prove his worth. .. Garcia hasn't said a nything to m e. but I heard him say on the radio that I'd stay at first as lunl! as I ki-cp hitting, .. Jackson ~a~'> .. I don't know how long I t u:'l keep this pace up, but I 1 .1:.k I can keep making contac~ . :l'' .~eep making a contribu· I •)p Tony Roche of the Boston Lobsters defea t e d Cliff Drysdale. 6-3. in Boston's 30-24 World Team Tennis victory over the Anaheim Oranges Monday night. Boston's Martina Navratilova defeated Rosemary Casals or the Oranges, 7-5. Navratilova also teamed with Greer Stevens to win the women's doubles over Kathy Harter and Francoise Durr 6-4. Boston has a 2-0 record and the Oranges are 0·3 after their first home match, b<?fore 2.798 fans at Anaheim Convention Center . The rinal matc h , mixed doubles, led to the match going into overtime. The Oranges' Casals and Anand Amrllraj de· feated the Lobsters· Stevens and Mike Estep 6·3 Unde r WTT rules the match continues 1r the team that 1s behind wins the hnal set. Boston ended the overtime session quickly when Stevens- Estep won the first overtime game Crom Casals-Amritraj. ....... ,AMIMIMU Women -Navratllov• tBI <Ml C.S•I\ IS. Navralllova-Ste...,s 18 ) def. 1-i•••••·Ourr ~ Man -Aocrw 181 Ol-1 0.YMSel• &-3: e..-..,,,. Ao<lle 181 oet o.v.aai ... eo. 1-6 Mlved C..Wl• ..... mrllra1 (Al <Ml Stev,.,,s· Eillep t-l Overllme Sttvens E1100 181 1. ca .. ls· Amrll••I O • A -2.199 'IV Sports Me nu Tonight on Television 5 p .m. I 1 U -DODGER S BASEBALL -The Los Angeles Dodgers meet the Cincinnati Reds at Riverfront Stadium. AUTO LEASING THE WAY IT AUTO BE! Baseball Standings 1978 AMHIVIUAIY COUGAR LEASIMI AS LOW AS s 12946 Mo + Tax & Lie. Cap cost 16550. Total of mo pymts 1 4680 .158 Ros1dual 13863. 3e moe OAC AMERICAN LEAGUE East Dlvlalon Detroit Boston Milwaukee New York Cle veland Baltimore Toronto W L Pct. GB 10 3 .769 10 5 .667 1 8 7 .533 3 7 8 .467 4 6 7 .462 4 s 10 .333 6 5 10 .333 6 West Division Kansas City 11 2 .846 Oakland 11 3 .786 ·~ Angels 10 5 .667 2 Chicago 5 8 .385 6 Minnesota 6 1\ .353 7 Soattle 6 14 .300 81-'l Texas 3 10 .231 8 -ey'1St- Cle .... land •. Torct1to 2 0e1ro11 •. O..taao 1 NHI Yon •. &.111~~ 1 K•nM' Clty I, Te ... s. MlnllHOla •I ()Ml-.~ , rein s. .. u. '· Otlltonll• '-12 '""'119' r ... , .• o.m.. Cltvtl-CGtrllftd l·Jl Al Toronto (Garvin 1.01 8oston (L.ae >.ot at Mllw8'1U• V.uov1t1,. ).ti, Ill New Y-t9fftU. Ml et 9altlmore (,..!,.,., 2.01."' Oetrotl (Mani$ C>4 or Fklryc:ll 2.01 e4 Otlcaeo 16tr<IO\ \.II, n 1Canw1 Oty ti.-ni NI .. THU (A!*IM Q.11, .. Mln,..sot• Cl""1 t.O""" Gotu t-ll at o.t.1- 1e...-ro J-O end 1AflOforC1 •1t. J. l·n Seattl• IMcOioUll91'1 Ml •t Calltonlle 1aran 0.11." NATIONAi. LEi\GUt; io:a11t Olvl11lon W I. Pf't. GB Montreal II r. fl l:t Chlcn1io K 7 !\!I:. 11, New York ti " 1\2{1 ,,, Phllo<klphiu II 6 !\00 ? Pittsburl(h ii 7 11112 :l' ~ St. Lou111 :'l \0 :lll!I 4'-, Wc11\ DM11ton Cincinnati It n l\M DodgH11 rn 11 .11111 1 ~ San Francisco 7 7 ~oo :1 Houston K n ... 71 31 w San Diego II " -t20 '4 Atlanta :J 11 .2t4 '1 ,..,.., .• 1c., .. MonlrHI \ St Lou" J Plll\l>UtQll •. N•w Yo .. 1 PllllaO.lp/l!a 11, Oll< .... 1 HOUtlOll •. Sen 01990 J, 10 tnnlf19\ Only garnn \C-lea T-y'•O.MH ~I LOul\IUrN>eO.ll atMonlr•al (O.,n OOl C111uoo ll•m1> I 71 el Pllll-IONa lllHI 001 II $an Fr~IKO l&err I 11 al All.,t• (I> Nl•ro O.•> .. P11U1>urgll 10 AOblMWt 0-11 ~I (4t• YOf1' (1'1111trl Ml, n LO• Antel• l.Jtlwl Ml 9' P~ll <........., J-01,n S•n 0 1e90 IA Jo llh I 01 ti Hou1tti1 1Lemon9fll0 I JI, n LEASIM& ••. ALL MAKES ALL MODELS M~ ; ·01 • USID 600 W. COAST HWY.• MIWPOIT HACH• 64M2H wa lked to load the bases, Smith's sacrifice fly got Peyton home. Woote,d .. tf Nemeth. 11> s ..... , ... " SodClt r' lb ~Ol>frlM)r!. U Or-C..•tl•> •D , " rl>O IOISon < S 7 4 I FrKk. dh 4 I I 0 ,..ytClft. ti l o 7 7 8•rnett. 11> • o o t Flb1>uo11. o • I I 0 Tot•I' kOA bf IMl"91 • 0 I 0 4 I J 0 1 I 0 0 4 0 I I 0000 l4 • n s , " e 010 tOO 100-1 I 1 101 110 Oh-1 IJ l * * SOUTH COAST CONFERENCE Cerritos S.n 01e00Mtw Fullerton Or•noe Co.tst Ml. S.n Antonio S.nla An.t Grossmont -.O.y't Stef'e Or •n11• C:O.sl •. c.err110• 3 T eday't o.-. Gronmont •t Orr HO\ Ml S•n 4nlon10 at S..ntd Ana Fullorton •I Sen O•eoo Me\<1 w \. 01 . , • • 111 • s 7 1 \ 71 I b I • ' . ~-., I IJ q sec Splits Twin Bill With Azusa AZUSA-Southern California College or Costa Mesa edged a slep closer lo th'c NA IA D1stnct 3 Southern Division baseball champion.'\hip with a split of a doubleheader at Azusa·Pacif1c College Monday afternoon The SoCal Vanguards won the opene r. 9-4. then dropped th~ nightcap. 4.3_ With eight conference games remaining, SoCal has only lo win three to capture the cham- pionship and a berth in the d is- trict playoffs. The Vangul8rds were at Cal Bapti~t in Riverside for a single Jitame today. 8111 Riddell. a Junior so uthpaw from Costa Mesa. won his third game in lhre<-days, goin~ all the way In the s eve n inning opener He effectively scattered nine hits and the ho!>l school dldn·t score until thc '1xth, adding tt\ree tn I he• st·venth CdM'S DANNY SALTZ PUTS EVERYTHING INTO A SHOT. Riddell had won a complele 1tame decis ion Saturday and took th<' second Jitame m a relier rolt.• Kent M1v ash1ro was the t·omplclc 1otame loser 1n lhe nil(htc·ap Monday when Azusa 111\t'd the home run m the late in nlnl(11 lo score. SEA KINGS ... In the first Jitame. catcher M Ike Scheetz belted a two.run homt•r lo the sixth Inning and Ml voshlro. Stun Thomas and Hoh Stonelake all had doubles as llH' Vunguards scored ri ve tiltlt'S Aft l'r SoCal look a 3-1 lead in ttw firth Inning or the second wurnt·. u two-run homer in the 1't•v,•nth ti<'d 1t und a solo blast in lht• t•h:hlh ft8\le the verdict to tht• hosts f'lnl 0.11"• Sace•O.mt .. ca1 Cttt• "' So<el Coll-IJt etl r. •Ill allrllrbl °'"'·"" • 0 I 0 Cireer. c.t S I 1 0 MIYUhlrO Oii ) l I 0 SIOl'flAkf II S I I 0 Pl•nk " J l I 0 Plt nk . " • 0 0 0 'fllonl••. Ill • 7 1 J ""°"' .. lb 4 I 11 Sc""''· c 1 J J , ScMtt1. c • 0 I 0 11111 ...... lb • 0 I I WlllOll. JO • 0 l 0 Stonel•h.11 J I I 0 "•"° dh • 0 0 0 Oue rr• rt ) 0 0 0 Guerra. rt • 0 0 0 ,.. ...... JI> l 0 0 0 Pelto. JD )000 Rt-11,P 0000 MIY•thtro. p 0 0 0 0 Total\ ,. .. ' To1a11 JI ) ' 7 F1"40.- k.,..lrYI ........ , • e SoC.el Coll19t 010 70S ,_, ' J AIU••l't<lll< 000 001 ) . • t S.C-0.11"• ScMe •Y IMl"lt r • • SoCat Coll199 000 OJO 000-J • 0 AIUW·Patlll< 100 000 Jh I , Continued From Page Bl Kendall Young cul loose with an overhead smash to c linch a second clutch split for his No 2 doubles team on the adjacent court With momentum on the Sea Kings side. Saltz and Thomas proceeded to wash La Jolla away in the next two games to complete their second sweep and the handwriting was on the wall with CdM on top, 13-10. All that was needed were two more singles victories <La Jolla would win on total games if ii ended 14-14 > and when Good cul up David Gill, 6-2. Gill was still faced with a rested Forbes. who already had come through with a 7-6 victory over supposedly un- beatable Roger Knapp 1n singles. Playing with almost effortless tactics. the left·ha,,ded Forbes trimmed Gill with ease and when his final ace sailed past the fallen La Jolla player. the air was punctuated by the response of others as Emerson added icing with his stirring con· quest after trailing. 5-2. Gone was the amazing streak of 18S s traight conquests ac· cumul al t-d O\'tr a n 8 1~-year ~pan. buL Rusi. Lanthorne. the grac ious L:.i Jolla coach. said. .. If ~H' pl:.iyt•d again tom.orrow w e 'ti pl av thl' !>a me lineup "'1 lhout an} changes." Trout's tactics were many- tn clud ing plncing Forbes and Good as No. 3 and 4 singles . to givt' them an added incentive in the latt> goings when all would be on the lint' The Sea Kings countered La Jolla's aggressive tactics with a c h ange of pace. constantly changin~ with lobs and chips. seldom ~01ng all·out for winners. llut 11 Y.a:-. thl' SPa Kings who were coming up w1lh the win· ners all afternoon long and to ac· centuate lhe turning points, a La J olla player commented: .. It never really occurred to us that our No. 1 doubles team or Knapp would lose a game." u Jolla Ctll tm C.W.... -.t Mar ~ Em•rltlll'I CCI 14"1 lo ICN!>P t~; !flt to Giii H def WelloO I •. lost 10 MCon-t>et J4. 411-.i ICI IOSI 10 Giii ... IOSI to Mlon-bel 01. io.t lo W•llll<t O.•. kKI to l(NtPP 0... Forl>et CCI lest to W.lla<t S.I. 0.1KMllCI14. dltl Mlon-1191 M ; dtl Giii l I Good tCI cltf Mton-lltt I .... dltt Wall«e t I, 1011 lo 1(-14, O.f GCll t-11 Dwlll• Sal U TllOftle\ IC) def AOPl~·Of'lll M . M , dtl Str•-· MaCDo<loall Is. 1-S: WW-· Young CCI Sof)411 H , M , 59111 H . k . Coast Area Sports Calendar w.-...y 1""11 HI VolleytMll -t:dtMtl •I NewPOrt Herbor. HulllllllllOI' 8ee<h el YllHlmlMltr. Marina •I l'oun1e111 Valley, INll!f HIQfl •I QJlll!teM Valln 1.11 .. ,1. Ftollet'IClft •I 0.tln9' C:0.11 tr JOI. Don't miss the auttMll-EdllOfl HIQll •• NtW• port Herbor HIQ!I tJ ISi . C:Oron• d•I Mer •I Mlu1., Vitia Cl·UI, C'OSIA Mew., .... Cttmenlt ct ISi. unl~lly Al L_.. &eeth Cl: ISi, 0-HUit •I El T0<0 I>. ISi , lerr•llO et INIM Hltl\ Cl UI. Mel9" 0.1 •• Sl.1'11111 tJ11SI feMlt -(erellt .. I Mar 4tl Ml\ 11011 Viejo, Cnle MeH •I San Clemente, Untvtflil'r et L•ouna 8H<h, 0-Hiiis •t lt Toro 1•11 •I 11; Sen'-et t-Hitfl II. tsl. I r ec ~ -Newport Harbor •I Merine, l.dlltlll'l al HUllll~ ~. Wt\lmlll\ltr ., FOllfll•ln V•llty. CorOfl• del MM et COile ~. et Toro •I MIMIOll VltlO, ~ 9HCll at Unlftrllty, WI~· •I Dane Hllll Cell •I J ISi, c.pl•lr-V•lttY al Irvine Hltl\ ti P..fl\.I BIG BOAT SHOW at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER acroH from Dl1neyland NOW thru SUNDAY AUTO RACING I BASEBALL i HARNESS RACING r~. ~126, 1en DAILY PtLOT 11:1 ______________________________ ..._. _________________ ,.._ ________________________________________ _.:.._;_ ______________________ ;__-==-- .... Checkered Fl•g wmt HOWARD L. HANDY Danny Ongai&, currently of Co8ta Mesa, ls rapidly becoming the favorite ror the lndJanapoUa SOO.mi1e USAC cbampionablp car race over the Memorial Day weekend. Ongala who fi.nisbea fourth In Trenton, NJ Sun· day. moves to Indy for the month of May and au the pagentry. testing and qualifying leading up to the race ltseU on May 28. In three previous races on the championship car circuit this season, be won two or them. ln the other be had mec:barucal problems and was forced to drop out. Hawaiian-born, Ongais started bis career on motorcycles, then moved to the drag strip where he won three National Hot Rod Association na- tional events in top fuel cdmpeUtion. He joined Mickey Thompson in 1968 to cam- paign a Ford funny car and in 1969 won both the NHRA Spriognatlonals and the U.S. nationals. He had ~ther successes on the drag rncing strip before turning to oval and road course competition. Carter Readfl tar l•d11 One of &he more amutai aeries of tbe racing .eason bu to be the comeback of Daaae "Pancho" Caner, &M e.-Bantlagton Beacb resident wbo w111 injured seriously in Pboenls la Dffember. While be hasn't returned to a championship car yel, be bu•• two raees in sprint can In bis first two oatJDgs a~r tberapy for hla injuries that Included a broken pelvis, broken lert arm and broken tallbone. "I'm healing good and feeling good," be says. 0 1•u be la lllape ror bdy after a few more sprint races. Cllamp can are more sophlst.Jca&ed, tbey take more aklll, bat pbyslc:ally, they're less de· ma1dlng. "My reflexes and Umlal are bo&b eseelleat. There were 10me spins and era.shes right in front of me wllell I raced oa tlae weellead and I bad no problems." Caner drove for Dan GQtDey las& year but has swttelJied to the Fletcher Raciag team out or PboeaJL la fad .. be made a switch with Bobby UnserwbolsaowwitllGuneyforaucondt191e. Groat Bas Neac Career Irvine's Jerry Grant bas embarked on a new career even though he is leaving the door open for a ride at Indianapolis if it should materialize. There are many cars ain_ong the rttord 92 en- tered for this year's race without driver Hsign· menls at the moment. He ls hoping to pick up a ride in one of them. Grant was recently aplJ()int"<l public relations representative for the Champion Challenge series, a 15-race program Cor IMSA racing sl«k sedans. Grant once drove sports cars at LeMans, Daytona and Sebring and teamed with Gurney to lead both the LeMans 24-bour and Sebring en· durance races in 1966. Mechanical problems forced them out before the finish in each event. Grant is a 10-year veteran of Indianapolis and holds the race record for 450 miles. He was the first driver to officially exceed 200-mph for one lap in an Indy car when he won the pole position at the 1972 Ontario California 500. Area Drf~ Luted tor''"'• Among the area driven listed to c111ve at ID· cUaa•polla, in additloa to O.,aia ud Carter, are Job Mutlll of ln1De, Dick Slmoa ol Su Saaa Caplaeruo ud S&eve KrlaUlft of Dua ...,.... · ()then Mill eeekial rklH blchlcle Grant. ltkk Matber and perllaps Jolul Ma.Ider. Mather lives In Lagana Beada ud Mabler ls beuer lmown locally as Dr. Jobn of &ellllls fame altholtgb he had a ride at lady lut year. Mi11t 400 Race Set Sat11rday THE GREEN FLAG -Off-road racing shirts to Las Vegas this weekend ror the Mint 400 which drew a record entry of 415 this year. Many Orange County drivers and vehicles will be participating in the event. Plans for the SCORE Baja Internacional to be run in Baja California with Ensenada as a starting point June 8-10 are going ahead despite widespread flooding and devastating mudslides of recent weeks. Drawing for starting positions for the race will be held Saturday, May 6 in Redondo Beach. Other dates on the SCORE schedule this year include the SUverblrd Invitational in Las Vegas. June 22-25; the sixth annual world championship short course event at Riverside International Raceway Aug. 25·28 and the Baja l,OOOKM Nov. 9-12. Girls' Softball Ool-Wtd 111 CO S-e Meflke Golden WttC-1tno11, ss. 2·14-1; MaOclen, rf, >+M; Wl'*l..,iecll, Cl<, l-1·1·1. Gllll91f1, 11l. J.1-M; YGUnO. c, J-0.M, Sectisl, ct, 1~; R.,.,.,,.., 3b, l·O·l·; Medeerl .. Jb, l·l·0-0; vemurn. d·lf, Ji.1.G-4; R-*9ry, P. 2-M.O; NldlolS. p. 14-0.e. Totals· tt-7-S.S. r II • Senta Monlce 000 000 1-1 1 J Golden Wnt 310 Ol1 •-7 5 1 Venlt'I' tnl• "" Ill oa-"" Ocun ~.,. rf, >+t.O; Porlllm. lb, J+O.O; ICwce, If, 2+o.e; -.th, SS,~; C..Ww,p, 1~; Bower, p, 1-0-0-0; TeylOr, t.I, ?-o-o.4; Allen. lb, l+o.e; MlercYtoSltl. lb, t.0.0.0; Luttnl, c, ~; 111om .. 2-, 1.0+4. l~lnt HIQll-l)ur'Ue. Jto, l+o.G; Lot ke, 2b, 0.0-0.0, Dudmen, II, 0.24-1; BOVllt•. Ill. l-J.1-1; Lew, 11, O.O.O.O; Wicker. u, 2.1+2. sn-. c. 2-0-0-0; Aollef11, p J40.t; OvwMn, d , 0.2-0-0; Ml191, '· 1-o-o.4: Letlty, •• 2·1-1-0; Wt91, c, , ..... LeSk,, rf. 1·2·1-0. "*".., ...... , " . Ot.taft View OOIJ 00-0 I 3 l"'lne HIQll lU Ok-10 4 0 ,_.,,, Venltt t"'• m ,., oc.. v... Venlty E4N-cm m .....,.,, N••POf'I Herbor-LltlleJ011n. p, 2·0·0·0: Nlcllols, lb. 1 o o.o. Greyalloclt, SS, 2-o-o.4; .Jolv>sol\, C, l•O·l·O: Herrln9ton, 11, J.o.o.o; 8urbenk, lb, J ·O·l·O; Nolan, lD. 140-4; ~cl.~; Ortlltr9. rl, 1·0·0-0; Hauslon, 2b, 2·0-0·0. Totals: 204>-H, Edison~. u. 4-0-H; Belin, II, 3·1·1·0: Holmen. rl. l ·l·O·O; hktu<hl, 31>. l-J. M ; Berton, 2bo 2..S·1·0; Henderson, lb, 0·1·0·1; Melels, cl, J.1-l·l ; S<llf'elber. c. l-1-1·3; Hotluf, p, 4.o-4-t. Totels: 2s.11+11. s-...., ..... r II • Newport Har1loroot 000 0-0 2 4 Edbon 022 S02 x-11 6 o ,,.,,_ VM'tlty ..... (14)(111......., Venlty MerlN UI Ill l"t11. Valley Fountain Valley-I RernMy, II, l·O.O·O, Key. c, 2 0-0-0. Hare, lo. l+l.0; Cerro!•. p, ~. HouJ ..... a , J.O-o-4; S.Unders, cl, J.1-1-0. Wahon, ss, 2-o-o-t; wauece, tb, 2-0.M; llNOitraY, rf, 2~. Totalt 2J.14-I. ~lne-t,.,ln, u , J.M-0; 8oCll•. p. )..0.4.0; "'-· t., ~. Wiiiiam~. Ill, 2·1-1-0; H\ltter, If, 2-0-0-2; h<ry. 20, 2...0; SclllllelW, t.1, 2-0-0.0. Dnlt.. cl, ~; Olle, rf, 2~. Prep Track ''"'·,.,· ':!:'~1•2·:· II • l"ln Velley 0110 OlO 0--1 J 1 ........_ Merine 200 000 x-1 1 I 0c-vi.w1111•1~--100-1. CllUNl COi 1M; J, WlttMt IOI;>. MoMr COi. 210-1. Motif IOI D t; t. WlelMt IOI; J. CMrMI COi. .-.-1. OWlNm (01Sl•,1 S<uN CO I. l. MMre IOI. H0-1. Merr IOI t :H .4, J . OlfMfleno IOl;J.Setues IOI. Mlle-I. u.. (01 • St I; 2. Tete (01; ). c.i-(01. J-11•-t. Olmef..,,. COi '°'J7 4; 1. Tet8 IOI;> cat......, IOI .,. ,..,ay-()CMll vi.w • 1 Milt '91~ View 3 . .M t HJ-I. a.tyt (01 U . 2 Miiier (GI; J.s.ttl• 101 U -1 ... ,,_ 0 1 ~. 2. Sculle COi, l. DeflllMI IOI T.1-t, "'-IOI a..t; t ......... • !Ot; a.~ COi. PV-1 ... °" IOI M J I, Mtrrlll 1011 l. ....... (01. u -1. nwo <01 M : 1. ,._.., co~~!:.~'~; t!W: t Drill• (0); a. 0......10). Venlty Mllftl. llNdl <ti (S) W..lrnlnUtr Hunllnaton •H<ll-Lellrner. u . 2·1·1 0, Htndenon, Jb, •·l·J I, Mane, Jb, 2·2·1-0; Colemen. <I. ~1.J.J, Hl19t.. rl, ~M-0; w.,.,.,.,,, If, l-0-1.G. V.,.,,.I, p, ._t.1·2; LlllOe 1"11111, ~· 4·1.J.O; I.Ml f'IM , Ill, I M t: MerClner., Ill. 1+o4. T~el•: IS-t·IM. .... ., ........ r II • •n eoo ~u 1 010 020~•1 Badminton Les Alamitos Race Results TMlltD ltACa -One rnlle. P«e. Condll*'" (NW.I). s '9k CM4h. """ dtr. PwwSZ.100 Hoeri-e... IRetcllforcll c;.rrtwld ~I WelJ.elteno (Kuetllerl Tl,,,. -2.QZl/S 1.tllJ 4.00 l.60 l.10 J.20 •.oo A"o rec•d -R•P••I, C•ro Heno••r. ~41< De11b•r. Port 0-• No tcrlllCNI POURTN lllAal -One rnllt Peco. Gondltlofled IMW·Jl. SUiil~ & QelO. l~PvneSZ,AOO IC~f=.I 't"-rry) AndU SltlPPt< 17.00 1.00 1.llO IBlecltrn.,I 11.20 uo F•ll•r Duffy (l(Nftnlnnl S.60 Tlme-ua Lltllllfoot, Slier•*' H ScreCc:Mcl -CMnedefo U l11ecta s.AM" ... & Hur .. "'"-'N, • .,.,.. s•vun" uc• -0ne '"'" • ~ece. Clalml11t Mlldlcee. P\lne 14,tOO (Jlli"tlftl,_ 10.-ltl ll.40 uo ' 10 W!My w.., IOoudrffll> 1.• 2 • Vk a T..-(UGhtfljlll IM Tl--U11/S AltO rec:ed -HOftClo Mystery. Wellllem ....,., EdQitwood Serntllon, Senta Ridge k••tcflell -J JI~ a1•Mnt ltAa -ON mlle ~•o OaCmlftt ~ PurW'3,aoo -fA'*">I Slerc:Mck(~I ...,l.,.(ICuellMrl Tlme -1.m/S 2.eo uo 2.60 S.111 s.• S.00 Also r«M -Sefl4I Bronwyn. Oueilloll A, Setl9ll Lnle, SklOP.,..le, -' J 'I Petten Scretclled-IClwl Amber u •..ne I •v1•te..,. a •ster o.ca. .... PJM NINTH tlAa -One mll•. Peu Cl4ilrnl114 ~. P\lfw M,400 E.V.'1 Pet CGolldrNul ~St­•.Ill S.JO •.OO (V•llMcll ....... I C-1• Monster ,,..,,.,, Time-Ult~ SM J.00 uo Alto receO -ICA!melll. My Dlrecl l(nl4ht, TllrN Step, Netlve Sue, Jemes Gem, 8aron E¥1 S<retclled -.._...Bey U IUde .... V.'t ,.., & 1-Qllffto stnati.~.w ..... ""•""---.. .,, UCLA'S DENNIS DELANY PUTS THE STOPS TO A POTENTIAL ENEMY RUN. AIMI reud -Peclrlc Deuber, Brl4'1tl Bruit, Heclll9r ·~-. Tiie f>laollt, a.rt G*W••· Mlr«le Ectdle Scretclltd-~M-ino. Alamitos Quick Bat Sold Adams u ... a.........,.,. ...... 1· AMys~.,.... ..... Plf'TM ltACa -One mile. PKe. Concllt'-d ICCMI. Pu<wt3,600 Chin Cllln 10.nnlsl Blw TetnPftt ILl4flttlllll uo l.00 ?.60 Racing Entries UO MO uo On Delany's Potential *'9e 8yeyrw (~) Tline -J.o!l/S AlllO reced -Soeclal Elltfll, VI•• Lord, Heuel, JOIMe't Ololce, Tull9 81oSMm Ho.cretcllH SIXTM lllAal -One mlle. Pee&. Cl•lrnlnq ~ Purw SZ.SOO ftwn....y Rnl,..7:15 Pllt5T ltACa -One m11e. Pace. Gl•lrnlno '*>Cllao. MMes 20 ,,. •• ""'. ,._ sz.oao. o.,...1,,. prf<.tt M.OCI0-4..SOO Ian CGf ..... I; My OoolQll CW!lee!er> · l.Uft'lller Pr'eU (L.onfol; Pel M.,.r Fiii• <Pere91nel; TH Off Time (kumelwl; ~ Atllltv IToron· to I; Gus Erll<Son IAnder1on 1. Etft•ll• lllekllfordl; J 8 FedOr 1$11ortl. By ROGER CARLSON Of ... Delly ...... SUff It was on one of those cold and damp nights four years ago at Costa Mesa's Te Winkle Park that Dennis Delany and his Costa Mesa High teammates were in a frustating situation against a tough pitcher with an an excellent fastball. But while Delany and his Mustangs mates were being col· lared in the dim goings, there was something that s tood Delany out from the the pack and Gary Adams was there to recognize it. "Everyone was striking out or swinging late," recalls Adams, the UCLA baseball coa c h . .. Everyone, that is. e xcept Delany. I don't believe he got a hit, but be was pulling this guy with line drives foul. .. His swing wasn't that im· pressive, but he had s uch a quick bat and that's what sold me, his reflexes were so quick. Quick hands, quick feet. every- thing. And I knew of his al· titude from his coach, Jim Hagey." While Delany may have been frustrated that evening, it's ap- parent those times are amidst fading memories. The Dennis Delany of 1978 is a rour·year starter at UCLA, No. 2 for the Bruins in batting average <.353), rbi (33). home runs (5) and doubles < 11 I. And he's No. 1 on the all-time UCLA list for runs scored in a career and as a team leader. Twice the Bruins' captain, Delany has s hown it all with his power. defense. arm and savvy. ··Delany does il all,·· says Adams, who recruited his prize while a coach at UC Irvine, then took Delany with him to UCLA when he moved to the Westwood campus. "He directs the pitchers, has HB's Doyle HoTWred On All-America Five Kathy Doyle. Huntington Beach High School's leading scorer with.a 21.9 average, was selected to the All-American High School llirls bas ketball team as picked by Scholastic Coach. a national magazine for coaches and physical educators. Doyle. a member of the CIF 4-A championship team the past two years, was one or five juniors selected for the team of 32 players from across the U.S. Only two others were picked from the state of California in- cluding Thera Smith of Long Beach Poly and Terri Huff of Notre Dame High in Salinas. Average height of the girls selected is 5-11 . an inch above Doyle's height. There are 13 players at 6-0 or taller with Anne Donovan, a junior fro m Paramus, NJ, the tallest at 6-7. Donovan averaged 35.0 points a game. Area Girl Lauded TULSA-Pam Hammer, a former student at Golden West College, was selected as most valuable player on the women's volleyball team at Oral Roberts University and was honored at an awards banquet Monday night. The Oral Roberts women's volleyball team had a 57-5 rec- ord during the season. Doyle has been the scoring leader each of the two years she has played for coach Joanne Kellogg's Huntington Beach quintet. She has been a starter both years and has one more campaign in high school but will probably be the only starter re· turning next season. Girls Claim Junior Title MORAGA. Calif.-The Orange Cou nty Volle yba l l Club <OCVBCl defeated Portland in the championship game, 15·9, 15-7. to capture the U.S . volleyball association far western junior title over the weekend at St. Mary·s College here. OCVBC, coached by Dale Flickinger, defeated Sacramen- to in the semifinals. 15·5, 15-6 to reach the finals of the 10-team tournament. Members of the OCVBC team include Marie Lundie, Karen Olsen, Kori Pulaski and Kari Rus h from Newport Harbor High ; Dale Keough. Cheryl Johnston and Ail een Semonsen from Corona del Mar; and Kim Bachelder from Mission Viejo· High. soft hands. blocks the ball in the dirt, has a good, quick release and a strong arm. It's every- thing a pro scout looks for. :::~.~~ 25.00 10.20 S.00 M.lybe PrltnrlKe 18ernell UO uo 8-lft9 View IGoWrwul l 00 Tl .... -um/S Alw reotO -Preiri<I Lrn. LYM Cotllnt, T-'O N, T-. Cllltf .. Add the fact he can hit and is pretty fast for a catcher and it is· ObVIOUS Why he's a pro pros- pe.ct . . . and I dor:i •t mean the TritODS mmors, I mean the bag leagues. ··we moved Den.Dis into the starting role al catcher when he Nm· e Wms· wA a freshman when our re· gular catcher got hurt, and it mushroomed into a sort of Wally Pipp-Lou Gehrig situation. "Delany has been there ever since." The Costa Mesa High product, who resides in Marina Del Rey with hls wile, the former Lorene Yarwood, says bis ambition is to play professionally. but at this point his ego doesn't match his flossy credentials . "How UCLA does is the most important thing in my mind," says Delany. •·1 don't want to go out In second place." Those ambitions took a batter- ing over the weekend as USC took a commanding edge over the Bruins with a three-game .. •veep [•1~1any ~iuggea two doubles San Clemente High School completed play in the rain-Oelayed Brea tournament with a 3-2 victory over Valencia High Monday afternoon on the winner's field. San Clemente scored single markers in the first, sixth and seventh Innings to e rase a 2-1 Valencia lead. In the seventh. Phil Russick singled with one away but was forced at second by Scott Llch. Lich then stole second and scored on Dave Law's single to end the gc.cme. and was 4-for·ll in the three· s.a.--m game set with the Trojans. but " ' USC came out on top. Lich. u ·Jb 4 0 1 Dunttlrk, tb UCLA's next shot at nullifying L••. 10 1 USC's btg lead comes May 13 Duchesne, r1·c 0 1 Cer110n. p with another three-game s alvo. Moo••. o o Delany smacked two homers c Ruutck, ss o d Grev. c O an a double in a 22-0 victory wn 11e. cl 1 o over Cal State (Long Beach) re-Ltwts. cf rt ) 0 cently. but he is quick to point ~u:;1~i.11~ ~ ~ out that the Bruins had eight ""-"·lb , o home rWlS as a team that day. Autun, 11 i1 00 H'911lr1t. p Drafted on the ninth round by P. Ru1,.c11, P 1 o 11 ,.. ' 0 0 0 I ' I 0 ' I 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 ' 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l the Los Angeles Dodgers last Tot .. s " > Spring, Delany Says he"S hopeful 5c ... ., ......... r 11 t the Dodgers will take another ~~~~~•nt• ~ : t:; : ~ shot. Gymnastics GlltU OYMlfASTIC$ ....... VenltY The No. 4 hitter in the UCLA attack, Delany has solved the curve ball by going in the other direction, rather than trying to pull the ball. As a cleanup bat· ter. he knows he'll see a lot of breaking pitc hes and is no longer able lo sit back and wait C..H V....., 161.H 1-.JI ....,_ veu1t1114-1 Pee....-. ICI U ; 1. for a fastball. "He was an o uts t anding leader on the field when he was at Costa Mesa High,., ven- tures Adams. "And that quality has carried lhrougi. here at UC LA . Delany is a legitimate Ctltl Bertolino CCI -"' YOV>V (Pl 5.1 Uneven bitrs-1. Pettenon CCI 6.1; 2 Metosslen CCI 6.0; 3. llwlOllno CCI S1 B•I~• .....,._1. Oollldn~ CCI 6.6; , Matoul4w\ (CJ •.O; l. (11•1 Ryen ICI -"" .Jor9t IPI 4.7. Floor tltt!rcl-1. Metoulen ICI s •. J. Oobalns CCI 1.0; 2. Jcwoe (Pl ••• All-ro.--1. MetmJlen ICI 2l.J; 1. Jof99 I Pl tU. J.. Ryen ICI 1' '· S•CC*O ltACa -OM mile. Pece. C•l·bred. S yeer o lds & under. MelO.ns. Pune$2.200 AMys l4-MI CBlecltmenl; u.,.,.. bl• IWllllerns>; And vs Pelnted CG•enU; L..edy erevo (~I: .\JI Th•I Jui ITlsllert; Jo Boro IB•rhrl; Anoo Arny (M11ellerl. Irene's ICl"9 IR•lclllordl; Exec I• M.lry IRltclllel. TMlltD ltAU -One mtle. Trol. Clelrnln9 llenellcap. Pun• u . .oo. Oecmlft4prices18.000.IO,OOO.U,OOO EdQewood Hendo<a IO>Movl; E•ri Oert CTockll; Vern Sier Henowr Nlsllardl; Dire N .. d <Grundy!. Huupoppln IWllHltrl; ICelly'S ICelrnYClt CICutlller I; J M Edd•• 1a.v1eu1; DuU ~ IH..,,.rl. Haf!Pl' Express COvlsel. .. POUltTit Ma -One rnlle. Pete. Ccelmlnt ,,.,,.,lceo. M¥et 20 per . cenl. 4 .,._. -2S PfftJtllt. P\irw 11,JOO. OWnlng prices U.000.S..SOO Patrick ""1t'f lMerll-11: Rose ~ IBNlllY'I; 0Wne 8aclc Diie IColel'nenl, 8111 Rader IS.yleul. Charod IRllcllltl; S••-• Luck IC.ton!; B.,. A••Y CRetclllordl; Slle¥em CToddl; SI'-Butler CCon· nellyl. ~IPTN ltAm -One l'nlle. Pece. FllllM & rMrH. S -oldS & ~. non•lnner of MOO lint -Y' twice. CM llrecls, Jr.as. Pww $1,G Jollns Mqlc MIH 1vo11erot; Annt>ro Trko IRetdlfonll; Ouoo9F Anne IVallencll....,.,I; Ohlllled C&l•Ckrn .. 1; JullM• Bell• (Dun· MOKll I ; J J'I Gfot'Y ( RicllmollCI I ; MIH Seuy 10.nnl\I; Htrll•ll• T oolC e <AcltenNll I. $1XTM llAa -One rnlle. Pece. Cl•lmln9 Nnlllceo. Martt 20 per- ""'. 4 .,.., otdS 2S percent. Purw 14.000. Clelrnlno prlctt SU,CJOO. 13,000 8onaoert• Clllp ~P9rryl; Demont Oron." a«>r IOtnnlsJ; s..ctrn Son +Aublnl: Prudent Jim ISftorll 0.-11• CReldllordl; Sc.ottl\11 Cll•ef N (HIMIH I; PT'ouer's 59frll (TIS· llerl; ThrnnclenCorrn A <Oe.omtrl, North Western CVatlMC!ingllernl. SEVENTH ltACE -One rnll~ Peet. Non-••-· SIS,000 17.71 or $1,7SO In lest s sllrts. Alto t ll<,llble non·wlnner $1.S,000 n -1111 non•lnner In IHI S s~ ""1'1014.700 Time Slreern CGouclr .. ul; New Water C!>emrnwl; Upt-(Oen- "'''; Big S9rinll (Rllcllforcll ; Pllero (Retchfordl; ICe•P Honeu IWllllernsl; J CHeel Cl • .ecosCel. EIOM!"M u a -One mil•. Pece. Clalrnl119 NnOI~. MerM 20 per-Cet'tl. • .,._. Olch H l)ef'Cent. Purte '2,700. Claimt119 prices V,000.1,500 Wlllrtoll Chris CWllll.,.,11; R~ 8uCltr I~>; Glipef Rfcllerd. CAllc h lel; lad yOyrd L &er CICueo1er1; Lumber Pop IHolll • Deli. Olrtel IRatehfordl; Flre tor Ellec t <B.,tontl; Howdy Gu11 I Oelomet" I. NINTH UCI -One mile. Pece. Clt lrnln4 Mndlcep. Purse M,000. -es 20 percent. Oalmlng prlcu s 11.000. u.ooo LI Der et ltd Ledy IGoudreeu 1- Smoll• c:.etl CO'OQl!enl; C-O.ti.r ILOllQOI; JohnOArell (l.Kl .. r); H 1' Br-IWISllenll; Henrys Ofeern l'I. CAublnl; EdQewood °"'"" (V•lland· i"'Jllem>; Miu R-IRetcllfordl, Suri ao.ra I "'"9neftl. All-American candidate." --------------------- FV Cage Duo Sign Mike lsraelsky and Charlie Rieff or the Fountain Valley High School basketball team have signed letters or intent to attend Southern Utah State University. "SlllPIN'" Alan H•I• ln'llta You To The . • • . . . JC, Prep Tennis 5.-...clt (ti (ti CMH.., ,....... Falltr~ ISi clef V.Cle 1·6, •·l, Olton CSI ""' P9ck by cleleulC; Delton !Cl .,.I -11'1 default. FlnltF !SI Clef Po411t0 H . t-1. W, Horn ISi del 5-•1191• .. '· 6-J, Hernro CSI def Ed ~ .. , ..... H1191Ms .... Off IUll'I' .. 1, !Ott te Wltektr 4-t; ......... I I IOlt , ... 2.._ "'°" t-J. M ; ~CUI IOSIM, - .. 3, t-t, M l 0.y CUI IOll M , -M , t-0,t-I. ri • ••rr WIDE AREA • • . • . • . • . • . • • • • . ...... r elCtrrne ..... Gl•rll CSI Cltl Velie· PollKk .~. M ; Ancev-Ohon CSI 001 O.ll011<·5"Mutl• 6-4, .. ,, Hernro- Hor'll 1$1 .. ,..k-Olllletll .. 1. 6·1 Van!" Se• Clemme 11,, Ctll Let111te IM(ll ...... Oowlllflt C$> i.t .. Mldlel-. t-7, Iott '9 Ocld!rt1 t-7, kltl .. Tolll.,.r .. ,, dlol 0.~64; _,b f$l IOSI H. -•4.M.t-1; .... CSI 10$10 &, -.. ,, 64, 4-a; Mlkllell 151 IOtl 0 •. w.a ... wonM. .,...... 01'1111 111111ter IS) def Joh"'°"' ....... ,, ~ ... ~0.•kboft t-2, M, ....... Stsef441t (SI split .... H ; N1411W.H. YenltF • u .. --. ""'' '*"I II!"-..... Miiier II.II i.t 11t Lllteo• M , .. , S o..Mtl Stl'OOl•Waleolt CUI def 0. HllQll!ff- L11ten 7.s, t-2, def HYtltfl-V•koutlt t-J, 6·1, 011¥er-M9Ckln (UI IOll N , H ;$91114"t.1•. .,...,v .... "' Ullll-*Y llf\lt) Cll\'11 •1 T-.... Jtrrttl CE •t '° to Cl.,.l 4o-t. def Slfl'lpson M. .. ~ M . io'tl to ltel4""' U ; a.-ker CEI IOll W , -t-1, .. ,, 6-1: O\llloM CEI l0tt M , won M , W. .. 1; OMlt CEI !Ott M , , .. ,, .. ,, .... ........ Oe•h-F11rme11 IEI 1011 It ~Wllllt H , SI; 941111 •1111 Sclle1111um-tCmpllln I·•· 1·•; C.11 .. Fr.-wKU 1•1 tpllt t-a . S.,; -.Ill 1 ... _ ... __ _ A crowd ot 108,024 aaw the ism Mlchlaan-Ohto State football aame, an NCAA record for • ref· ular HUODCOOtelL ~l~ . • •••• == NO DEPOSIT ON APPROVED CREDIT FREE DAILY PttlZ£ AWARDS! SPECIAL! f 9 Ste our Marine Art Show -._. 0 1''/JA,,.. Watch famous local artists at ~.!.,... .... ~A wOfk et the show ~ lo .m MJ of ~ Show H rs: ~ttund,.. of twfN Saturdays: Sundays! Mon· Thurs! . . .. ( - ., QM. V N.OT •• • . ,.....,, Aclfil •· tm ?lT8UC NO'nCE .-.CMIMIMKt ,.,._,h,.IV, be l\llllv Of • .,.,...,.._, punl" .. Olt \y • tlNI ef Mt incn ll'l9ll UOUO or W Im llfl~ IW Mt "*" ,,_ ti• !ti lfteAlllS or 11¥ llMll WCll llM -Ifft ptlttft~ T ... IMj!OtltlOll of .... t1911tllv '°" Mv ~atlofl w it not •• '""' IM ••ol•tl..., 0t 11erm11 II It «Ml II.-. -ell tueh .. fMll' tNll M ,... ciulrtd to c..-re<I or renwfy tlKll ...... ~ ........ wltlllll • ... _. ••• Umt. •lld wlltn '"'' •lhffWIM ._.citied, MCfl .... 1101 deyC U\tl fll'O 1111111.0 c:Olldltlclftt .... l'Mlnlel""' tMll c-utvt• • .. ,....ti, 9"91\M 1111 f.,. -'lutlM et tllt •llOvt jlefleltv 611111 Mt ....... ",,......,. .... ... W<M ,_JOI _.,lllllllttd CO!ldl• ""''· a.ct ... , ... Velldlly ''Tiit City Coolftcll 01 lllt CHy et CHI• Mtw llttelly .. ,,,, .. ihll WIM My M<llttl, .......... ...,_ l'tlle• ~ _,, ., ""' or•-• or "" CMe ,..,..., .....-. 111 '9tle...ci to• MY reetOfl llO • 111¥eli41. II It IM lnte11t of iM Cllv CWl'ltll «IN City ot CO.It MtM 11\11 II W9Ufd ~ ,.._. tll ..... , "'1'-tA tlllt CM' .. nt110, Ill ....... 111 of h tllMIMl!el\ ,,., .. of Illy tlKll fO(llotl .. m.y .. OKia lllV•lld." ••CTIOM J1 TMt or_.Mf\Ce thtll lellt etlett "'41 lie '" lllll let(e -tf IHI "'ltly UOI....,. I-~ ti ... II• NtHQe, IM lltf9rt I .. t•olratlOfl Of 1111 .. n llSI 4tY' .,, .. Ill 11t•"'9· tMll lie .,...., ..... -· In "" Otetltt t eau Otlly l'li.I • .... ,....., of t•11•••I Cl•twltll•11 t •llll•d and !llllllltlltHI '" '"' Cltv ot eo.11 Mew. lottll"' wllll ltw Mlli.• OI Ille -m· bin OI IM (II; ~II vollnt fOt - .. tlMl lM- ,..,H b •Hf.> AOOPU 0 lhla 11111 .. , of ........ .,. t•-• v. M<~•rllnd M•ytt Of tr. City olC.l•Me•• ATTl" l lleelll"l"fHMey c nv c,_ ot ""cnv of CMllMt•• U Al I 0' CALtrOlllNIA 1 COUNTY Of' OtlAHOI' I ''-Clf Y 0 ' COST• Mll• I I, I IL.IN I', l"lttHHI Y, C.111 Clerk •fld u OllltlO , ........ ""'(lly Councll ol ttw CllY ol Colla ,,,_.H, M rtOY O<lllY INt tllt t~w -IOte@Oll'IQ Ordlfltnce HO II Uw .. trllr-~tftlltllfl'IOefeG ....... ..., by M<t1on" • r.9111., lnffllnt or ..,111 CllyCo<H><llhtlOOfltne >roo.io1o1 AOfll, ltlt ""4 ll••ttHllOf .,., .. , ano ildOl)l •~h .. wll04' •• Arf9\lljW m "ll no 04 MICI (lly CowiW.11 htld Of\ Int lltll dty of AIWll 1t1t 11¥ 1119 1o1-1no <Oii cell vete AYC S COUNCIL MEMIEA,, Mt F •flAllO. Sma llwood, Rut11, 14••1109. ~""'"' HOU COUNCIL MEMBE RS NOiie ABSENT COU NCIL MEMBERS No"9 IN WITHJ'$S WliEREOF, I lltYt IWreby ~I my llttld end t lll••O llw S .. I OI lllt OIV of Colle~ 11'1J 1tl1' d•v or •P<t1, 1m. tSE•LI Elle.n P Pnlnney Ctly Cl•rk <incl u ollktoClffkol t"°' c ty Oluntll of tM Clly olCO\i.~ Reference I• ho!re«>y ~ to l~ble• 1J.301A 111<°'41 D on fllt In tti. Clly Clerk's office l'ut>ti\fWd Or~ Gout 0.lly P1101, ""'" t•. ,.,. 1~..,. PUBLIC NOTICE suitEllllOlt COUlllT 0' TIIE STATE Of' CAUFOltNt• FOil THE OOUNTYO,OlllANGIE Nt.A-tSStl NOT I CE OF H E•RtH(i O F PETITION l'OR PROBATE OF WIL\. AHO LETTER$ TES1'AMEHTARY E\l•le ol LILLIAN M, H•NSEN ak• LILL••H MAE HAH~H. Dena~ NOTICE I~ HEREBY GIVEN ,,.., EVELYN M. HUNT ... S 111«1 ""'*'fl t pehtlon lot Prob&le of Wtll -"' , ... nee ol Lelltrs Tttternentary 10 '"" "-1111oner rel......._e lo wt.left IS m- lor lwrttw< parllc.ul.,.S. -t,..t llW tome and place of -lnq uw ....,. tw11 bftn \ei tor Mev u., 1'7t. et 10 00 a m .. In uw eow1room ot O.i»rtment Ho Jot Yid court, et 700 CMc Cent•r Of'lve WH I, In IM Cltv ol ~·· An•. C.lllom1a. D• led .Allfll 11, 1'79 WILLIAM E SI JOHN. County C.1•<~ JONES AND llllUHO Att-yiML..aw uwi..i.r•w. Atudi•, CAt10'6 Tel. 447-JMI An_. ... ,. fof: Petltl .. er PUOllSl'ted Or~ C:O.St 0.llV Pltol Al>fll u . u , May 1. 197' PVBUC NOTICE SUl"Ellla.t CIDUlllT OfJ THE STATEOf'CAUFOllNI• FOil THE COUNTY OF OlllAHGE Nt.A.ffSJI NOTICI OF H•AlllNG 01" l"ITITIOM F<HI PltOeATE OF WILL APID LETTilllS TESTAMENT•llY. FOlll AUTHOltlZATION TO •D· MI N ISTEll UNDEll fHE INO.P'ENOEHT AOMINISTll•TtON OF ESTATES ACT E i tel• or CHARLES ICEL LY B•LDWIN, OKNMd NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\al JAMES W BALDWIN 11•\ flltO M <t ln t petition 10< P<Cl>.t1• ol Wiii llnd I\ •uance 01 Leti.rs T~•-t•·v 10 ,,,.. PetlllOMr -tor llUlllO<IP llon to M rt)tr>lr.tu -IN! 1~1 •• "'lnhtrallan ot E\IMe• Act reference to .. nlch I\ made tor lwrttt•r Ptrlltultr\, •ncl INll lhr time •nd pt.ce or r>e..,lnv trw wme ,.., t:eH> set IOt Mav 16, 1911. •t IO 00 • m • In IM t ourtroom of 0.PA< lmolll HO. J ol H •O c.ourt, •t 700 Ctv1c C.enter Orlw Wot. In the Cllv ot S.nt• Ari•, C.llto<n•t Dtltd Alltll 21. 1n1 WILLIAM E. St JOHN CownlyOerk THILIN,MAlllllH, JOHNSON 6 lllllDGl!S US Swtll ,,_ Sl,_t Lt• A-1-. CA •11 Tel.W ·llt.S Attor .. v11w· l"eOtl- Publlshed Or-Coest Ot ltv Pilot ADtll 25, n . May l, 1911 BUSINESS County Firms Report Office, Sales, Earnings, Service Announced EINueo Opnu NB 0111~ Ebasco Services Inc. opened lt.a weat office at 130 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Ebuco. lnvolved in the deslp, engtneertnc and construction oC power planta and traosmltai.on faclUUes, will offer englneering and conaultln1 services. EbHco. a wholly owned subsldldary of Enserch Corp. ol Dallas, is a diversified energy ('ompany. It operates a gas utility divialon and. through ita various subsidiaries, engages In et· r.loring tor and developlng, producing and market· ng or oil. natural gas and natural gas Uquid.s; prq- vldes on-shore and off-shore petroleum products and maintenance s ervices; /rovides specialized cniclneering. construction an consulting servl~ primarily to electric utilities; manufactures and markets chemical rertilliers and polyethylene pipe and flUlngs; and furnishings secondary energy aervlcea to vuiou.s lnsLitutions in Texas. lleaClewlleperC•G a l11 Bentley Laboratories or Irvine has reported first quarter rev~nues of S6.~1 .ooo. a 10.S percent Increase over 1977 .. and earnings or $416,000 or 19 cents a share, a drop from the 24 cents reported ror the same period In 1977. As the company h(ld anticipated, sales tor a portion ot the period were production limited due to a rupld conversion to a new product line .. Cotu..-ne Cftltn-~ Orange Coust College. Costa Mesa . has opened a Consumer Resource Center to help solve con· sumer problems. Located at the rear of the Veterans ACCairs t railer . adjacent to the campus caretena. the center is open Mondays through Fridays Crom 9 a.m to l pm. The center performs rour main functions, ac- cording to Janelle Richardson. director. "We pro· vade consumer information. conduct a counseling and referral service. hold weekly workshops and provide an area where students can gain work ex- perience ." The workshops are held every Tuesday from noon until t p m 111 OCC Counseling and Ad · missions room Ill. Th~y are free and open to the public. CM Fi,... Operas Sulnfdl a,.,, Malibu Pools of Calirorrua, Costa Mesa. has eslablished a wholly owned subsidiary. SWlllaver Seminar Ce nte r s On Sales Flbergl&ss Pools Inc. Under tbt Sunsaver name. it will sell one·piece molded, Oberglass pool.a na- tionally. Don KeM' ls president or MaUbu and Sunsaver Ameerd sea. s -..di.,. Amcord. lnc .. Newport Beach, bu announced completion ot the sale of it.s Snowmass Corp. sub- s idiary ror S7 million In cash. complet.l.D8 ~ com- pany '!I planned divestJture of the Snowmas& opera· lion due to Its incompatjbllity with Amcord'it manufacturing operaltons. The purchaser. Snowmass Land Co., Is a group of private investors. DflUloll .... 8 111141 ... Allergan'!! medical plastics division has OC· cupaed a new 100.000·sq..foot manufacturing and distribution facility on Pullman Avenue ln the Irvine Industria l Complex . The shell building and S.tS acres of land were purc hased for nearly $2 mlllloo In a transactJon negotiated by Coldwe ll Ban~r Commercial Brokerage Co. '( The building will be used for the manufacture and distribution of plastic bottles and components for the medical industry. l lll'ntmellC 011~ ~ Jos ephthal & Co .• Inc , a New York. headquartered investment banking firm, has opened an office in Newport Beach. It w ill specialize in the design and adminlatraUon or peoslon funds and tax·advantaged investments and Is headed by Richard A. Adler. a senlor direc· tor at Josephthal. ' Irvine National Bank has reported first quarter net earnings of $81 ,311.00. an tncrease ol 32 percent over the comparable period 1n 1977. Earnings per share for the quarter. weighted ror stock dividends, were 21 cents, a growth of Jl percent. The bank reported an increase in deposits or $1,943.053 and lot.al assets or $29,993,935 as of March 31. Don 't miss the BIG BOAT SHOW a t the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER acro11 from Disne yland NOW thru SUNDAY R ecent c ha nges 1n ~~~~==::=:=:~==~-~,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­s ales manship and sell ing will be t·xammed dur i n g a o ne .da y s eminar a t O r a n ge Coa st College. Costa Mesa. on Saturday The seminar will run from 8:30 a.m. to 3 30 p.m . an the fine a rts hall Pre·registralaon fee 1s SIO a nd tickets arc a vailable in the ticket offi ce in the college's ad· man1st rat1on building The om ce IS open Mon· days through Fridays from 8 a.m . to 10 p.m. and Saturdays from 8 a m . to2 p.m Tickets wall be avails· ble 3l the door the morn· ing of the seminar for $12.SO The fee includes a lun<'heon. Se m inar lecturer is John J "Jac k " Simpson. owner and pre · side nt of the Simpson Co.. a ma rkeling a nd management consulta · lion firm. Exporting Get,s Study We make · your life ins11rance work fora living. ' l Howard R. Lucas Michael W. Mathews "How to Sta rt and Succeed in Exporting," a one -day works hop sponsored by Coastline Community College, will _... ________ 1s_~_.7_•, be held from 9 a .m to 5 PUBLIC NOTICE P . m . M a y fi al l he -----------1 Newporte r Inn, Newport lt·H,61 HOTICS TOCllEOITOlllS NO.A·"9 SUl'EltlOlt C:OUlllT OF THE ST•TE Of' CAl."OllNI• FOR THE COUNTY OF OllANGE tn 111e Metter or the Est••• 01 HAROLD T. SEGERST ROM, Ot H T SEGERSTROM, O• HAROLD SEGERSl ROM. ~tt'9<1. HOii<• Ii heteby 9t¥tn 10 <redllOO llt•l119 cltlm• •Dtlnst '"" Y id d•<e· dent to lilt wlcl c1.ims In the office ol ti.. cter• ol the •forntlcl court °' to g,..wnt them to ltw uncltn19ne<1 •t ltw olll<e o f •RHE s LINOGREH, L•THAM llnd W•TKINS, AllotMyt Al Law. SSS Soutll Flow•r St,.,,el, Lo\ •nttlet. Galllon ue t0071, w!llch lttltr Olll<• It Ille pl.Ct of busl~ss ot the 1111 dtr~ltned In •II mollert .. ri.1rwr19 to H id ••ltle. S11<h <ltlm• wllll In• "9CHNl•V ¥OUCl\eNm~tbellledor IW•· Miii.ci •1 a•esald within lour mon111t ..... , ... flttllMlllC•llGllOf '"''"°""'· OatedAtin!JO, 197' HtfOIOT.~rom.Jr e 111<utor o1111e wi11 ol Mid Decedent LAT MAM &WATIUNI AllNe I. UMDOllEN AtMr•"•IA• NJ SMlll l'lewW Mrwt U..A.i..tA"'11 P\11111-OrA1191 C:O.\I 0.lly Piiot, Apflt1S,tndMtyJ,t,1( 4"t PUBUC NOTICE 'ICTITIOUS IUS)NESS NAMtl STATUMMT T119 loll-"9 .,__., ll dolnQ butl MU •S J .S, AMMIRATO AN D AS· SOCIATl!!!i, .. s Produc tion Pla<t. "'"""'' -..Cll, CA '*1 ~ s.i-""""'••t10. i.on.A Etel'ICantCI. 0.... Pollll, CA m2' flllt ~-II Conclllcted ll'f al\ 11\o dl•idlMll "'°'"" s. Nl'lftllf tto Tillt \l..........W -lli.d wllll IN Covill• Clttll Of 0rllflOll O>llNY on Aprll 20. 1'71 Ftnlt P'*fltltld Or ..... 0.11 Delly l'llol -'Prll U , Mil > •. I•. 191' Beach Lecturer Allan Siposs will discuss identifying and developing fore ign marke ts. international d istribution <'hannels and export financing There 1s a $10 fee for the works hop , whic h In· eludes a lunt•heon and materials. Pre·re~istrauon must be completed by Friday e p11fer WIDE AREA COVERAGE ORANGE ~CO.-L.A. •17.10 •= NO DEPOSIT ON APPBOVED CREDIT .:::·H~ "' Charles C. Miiburn Douglas F. Schnelder At Penn Mutual, we don't think you have to die to get your money's worth from your life insurance. We make lire insurance work for you right now. While you're alive. By saving you 'money on taxes. By providing for your retirement. By protecting your estate. And by paying dividends. If you think your life insurance should work for you, talk to one of our experienced 1nsur· ance professionals. Featured here a re some of our finest agents -members or the preslig lous 1977 Penn Mutual Top Club. Why not give one of them a ca ll? The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, Independence Square, Phlla .. PA 191 72. ~ David L. Roberson, CLU The DAVID L. ROBERSON Agency 3720 Campus Drive Newport Beach 549·9923 r:'IPenn : :.I Mutual ~make life insurance worl<for a living. \ I Business TUl9day,Aprll 2S. 1978 DAIL V PILOT ·~ State's Job Pict11re Brightens Glomar Drills Deeper Roustabouts add another section of pipe to lhe dnll aboard the Glomar Pacific, the first of four drilling rigs to arrive and begin work off the coast of Atlantic City. N .J . The ship, operated by Exxon. Is exploring in the outer con- tinental shelf for oil and natural gas. ByTHOMASD. ELIAS Time and lhe British govern- ment are combining to insure that California's employment situation will be much beUer than the national average for at least the next five years. One development renders ex- tremely unlikely any repetition of the high engineering and aerospace unemployment that bit this state so hard in lhe early 1970s : Lockheed's sale of 12 long-range L·lOll airplanes to American World Airways. TIME WAS A critical factor in that sale and the subsequent de· cision by Eastern Airlines to buy 23 European Airbus jetliners. So were foreign governments. For the bulk of Pan Am's jetliner fleet, like those of most other major carriers. is fast becoming outmoded. The Boeing 707s. 727s and McDonnell· Douglas DC·Ss of the early 1960s are not only wearing out. they are a lso becoming inadequate for growing passenger and freight loads. Their fuel con· sumption is too high in the age of energy shortages. So the simple passage or Lime has made it necessary for airlines to buy new fleets of jets. Most of them will be wide- bodied jumbos like the L-1011, OC-10 and Boeing 747, which carry more persons at a lower cost per passenger mile. T H E L OCKHEED AND Airbus sales show that even American domestic carriers like Eastern will seek out the best deal they can get on those new planes. 'And for Lockheed, that brought the British government tnto the picture Steam Energy Probed Edison Joins 2 Otlwr Firms in Exploration ROSEMEAD <AP > Southern California Edison, Union Oil Co. and Southern Pacific Land Co. have an- nounced lhey will jointly explore lands in the northern part or Im- perial County ror geothermal energy. The agreement calls for four new geothermal wells to be drilled and explored during the next two years near Niland at the southeastern tip or the Salton SeaLsaid Bob Hull, a spokesman ror ,t;dison here. HULL, WHO SAID the re· search phase of the project is ex· pected to cost $9 million. said the Niland geothermal reservoir 1s considered one of the largest known geothermal resources in the state. Geother!Ml energy is derived rrom hot water found beneath the earth's surface. That water ts turned into steam, which is then used to generate electrict· ty. Hull said. Under the three-way agree· ment announced Monday. Union Oil will receive a SO percent in· ll'rest in the land, Hull said. and will operate the production phase or lhe project. UN ION OIL. WIUCH will also provide the clean steam to be used by Edison for the produc- tion or energy, said Hull, is cur· rently operating the world's largest geothermal energy pro- ject in the world. located in Norhtem California. Hull said Edison plans to build [ IN SHORT ) a IO-megawatt commercial elec· trical generating plant powered by the geothermal energy that will be purchased from Mono Power Co .. one of its sub- sidiaries. Rel ...... Trl9mled SAN FEANCISCO <AP> Southern California Gas Co. has undercharged customers $18.S million, but instead of• an in· crease in rates. the money will be subtracted from previously authorized refunds, the state Public Utilities Commission said. The PUC had originally or-' dered a rate increase for the gas company on grounds that it un- dercollected $37 m illion from customers between July 1976 and June 1977 because it paid higher prices to gas suppliers than were reflected In rates. But the commission tater ruled that the money will be sub- tracted from $75 million in pre· viously-ordered customer re· funds. The commission was also ex- pected to decide how and when the refunds will be made and whether all customers of the utility will be affected, the PUC said. Bad Tfllllft Dece'l ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP> 8.503 For the first time since Lhe t 974 · 7 5 recession, more con- sumers expect bad times than good over the next 12 months. according to a national survey. The University of Michigan survey found that 46 percent of the 793 people interviewed by telephone were pessimistic aboul the economy in tbe next 12 months, while 37 percent were lptimistic. Consumers are still in the mood to buy such big-ticket items as cars and appliances. lhe survey concluded. but those open wallets could close. Economists Richard T. Curtin and George Katona, who con· duct the monthly survey. said Monday that much or the buying i pree of the past year was trig· 1tered by anticipation or higher prices. Prices Ma11 Rue WASHINGTON CAP> -There is no prospect for moderation of price increases for single family homes in 1978 and interest rates for mortgages are likely to slightly exceed 9~ percent, the National Association of Realtors said in its outlook report for the current year For the past several years. prices of both new and existing homes have risen between 8 per- cent and 12 percent annually. ac· cording to lhe report issued Sun· day. Last year lhe median price or an existing single family home rose by 12 6 percent and new home prices went up about 12 percent Bahrain Ope ns Energy Expo U .S . GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED PAYABLE MONTHLY BAHRAI N <AP l - "Sol tech '78," described a s t h e· r i rs t so I a r technology exhibition outside the United States and Europe, open ed in thi s sun. drenched. oil producing Arabian slate Monday. GNMA• Mortgage-Backed Certificates are US. Government Guaran- teed on "the timely payment of both principal end lnterest"-the same as a <J.S. Government Bond. Interest and principal will be paid monthly-ideal for those who want current income with U.S. Government safety. Units of $25.000 and up are available. • fto n4empdoa penalty. as is the case with Bank "~ and Sa~ngs & Loan Certificate of Deposit accounts. 'C' } •An opportunity Is available to qualified people ' ror ..,.,,... of tmr.• on interest Income. P ... mona ~a contact Parker Dale. Senior Vice President, et (714) 644-4620 or at the address shown below Inv~ BenMn SIM-. ltJ6 Mrlnbef• Nt'W Yoftl Sc«1t E:JicNnge and 0th« Principe! ~ LO-~· 5drl Ftln(hco· ~ 6eedl •New Voft.• ~ 606 So.Ah ()IM-Stlett. Loe Mgde. ~ 9001• A four-day interna · tional conference on solar energy running concurrently wilh the exhibition has galhered together delegates from more than 20 countries, in cluding the United States and Britain .. A YowD•ltW ~ cen be Recyded. o~c._,.. .... ...._._ ... *C:-• ..... Because the L·1011 uses Rolls Royce engines, Britain guaran- teed the Pan Am financing. Slmllarly, a combine of Euro- pean governments gave the Eastern -Airbus deal a guarantee. The two purchases left Boeing and McDonnell-Douglas stand· ing at the gate In the newest airplane sales race. BUT THEY CAN be expected to join Lockheed in pushing hard Sales of Wide-bodied Jets Help; Ex,.lm Bank May Be ExtenJed for Congress to extend the Ute ot the U.S. Export-Import Bank another five years. Only with the Ex·lm Bank's assist~ce can the American aerospace firms hope to compete equally with Airbus for lul'rative sales to foreign airlines. r SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCU S The extension, supported by the Carter administration, ap- pears almost certain. Life's Rejuvenation Scheduled for Fall And that, together with the Lockheed-Pan Am deaJ, will in- s ure continued large-scale aeros pace employment in California. THE PAN AM sale alone as- sures Lockheed or breaking even on it.s operations through 1981. including the addition of about 500 workers to its assembly line force. It aJso guarantees several years or pr05perity for dozens of subcontractors centered in California. NEW YORK (AP) -Life magazine will return as a monthJy photo magazine this fall. almost six years after financial problems rorced it to fold as a weekly. Time. Inc. bas announced. "The magazine field is generally vigorous. all or our Time, Inc. publications are nourishing and it seems an appropriate moment to bring back one or the great forces in American journalism." said Hedley Donovan. editor in· chief of Time, Inc. Donovan said the new Life wou ld depend mostly on newsstand sales at Sl .so per copy. but s ubscriptions would be available at $18 a year. The first issue was scheduled for October. WITH SAGGING clr~ulatlon and increased malling costs. Life ceased weekly publication in December 1972. Since then. Time, Inc. has published a thick issue of Life annually as a pic- ture history ot the previous year The magazine will retain its large page size -13 118 by 10'!11 inches -and it.s distinctive red and white logo. which will be slightly larger than before. Donovan said. It will have 120 pages. 80 or them for editorial use. and will be printed on SO· pound paper, heavier than before, for better picture reproductjon. "The power of the picture. which the old Life did so mu('h to magnify. has never been greater lhan today" he said . "THE NEW U FE will be pre· dominantly four-color photo· graphs. The tempo will be varied. with black and white ·photography. artists ' illustra· tions and a few articles and col· umns "The new Life will be apply· ing the selectivity of a monthly to spectacular news events; peo- ple, famous and not. captured in memorable momen ts : tht> beauties and mysteries of nature. science. and medicine: the world of arts. architecture, sport and fashion ... Donovan said Time, Inc. ex· peels Life's advertising base to be $700.000 a month, but ad· vertising rates have not been fixed yet. Ov~r The Counte r MASO ListilMJ• Wh e n McDonnell-Douglas makes its first new DC-10 sales, the situation will grow even rosier. since they also are built in California. A !together. Lockheed Board Chair man Roy Anderson ex- pects the next 10 years to bring about $70 billion In airliner sales. He says his firm will get about a $1 billion portion. selling about 230 planes even though it offers only one basic model. ONLY THE AIRBUS, An· derson says, can really threaten the California employment pic- ture. and .now even it can't do much, because or the assured in· come from Pan Am . With almost 10 percent of California's work force directly involved in aerospace. the rosy commercial airplane picture should keep the state's un- employment far below national averages for years to come. . -~ U \1>2''t. llp• a11d DotOIU 11'h 1'V1 s• .• ~ lO 31\1> UPS "NO OOWNS IV. I" NEW .f()RI( IAPI -T1'e lol-lflt "" "-,._ "-' n. O...r • .,,. • Count~ 1'V. 40 "oO• -_,_, INI ~ .. 90"" Ill> ~ l1 LN m<KI --the ..-1 lwlMCI on tt ~ r:(HI~~ ---OI V04- 1• , • ..., No wcur1tfH lrecll"!I below U .,. Incl· IJ ll\fl llOed. Nel -percenl-<'-9H •re I,.. µ,. • Cliffenn<e t.,_ Ille P<"•••""• <MK<l'Q 13* U'llo llld Pl'l<e --y·s last bid P<"lce •I 41 .... S S~ UP'S """ ,,.... ,,._ ust Oto Pct ..... .... 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A rather routine announcement from the New York Stock Exchange describes part of the blnd: Customers owe their bf'Ote.n more money than ever before In b1't.ory. In March the total wu $9.92 billion. · Thal huge amount makes you wonder: Isn't the acquisition of debt supposed to lndJcate confidence tn the future. just as the reparment ol bUls is said to suggest a feehng that tighter times are coming? You wonder. The survey people told us the consumer was a psychiatnc case over the past two years. just this side or despondency. If he borrowed then, what must his desire be for a loan now! But how can he borrow? At the end O( 1977 he owed $211 billion of Installment debt alone or 15.4 percent of his take-home pay. M'ateb that a~a.ins\ fess than 2 percent immediately alt~r World .War II. AUTOMOBILE PURCHASES ACCOUNT ror S80 billion of that debt. The littJe guy likes hls cars. and he's been buying so many or them that au.tomoUve stocks are getting a play these day11. The little guy also wants other good things In Ute for bis family. He's been buying homes at a record rate. Hous. ing starts last year came to 1.5 million units, and 3.6 million existing units were sold. He's a lso been taking out mortgages on homes 'purchased years ago. withdrawing the equity in order to send the kids to college -or per6aps only Jo a take that once·in·a-lifeUme vacation. HOME MORTGAGE DEBT of more than $600 billion has been growing steadily. Merrill Lynch Economics figures it reached 33 percent of household net worth in 1977. a record. as you might have surmised. Ob. lhe lilUe guy still has some liquid funds. lo savings accounts. for instance. but he's been saviog more slowly of late. It's tough trying to get ahead and deal with inflation at the same lime Instead. he cuts back. He pays h.is bills and he tries to rebuild his bank account. He doesn't like to be delinquent and, some bank analysts say. he's coming face to face with that decision any day now. Market Advances At Feverish Pace NEW YORK <APJ -The stock market chalked up another strong gain today in an outburst of activity that broke al least one of the lrading·volume records set last week. . The Dow Jones average of 30 insutrials was up 7.53 points at 833.59 on top of a 13.26·point jump Monday. It had been up as much as 19 points today. St~lul11Tlar Spo1u,,,., NEW YORI{ IAPI· ~~ 4 .. m, P"<e ..., Mt C'*9 ot '"' nn..., most acuve Ntw Yorll Slocll E.«Mn99 i\Wtt. I =·~~lly .t -:.zu: l~ ' .... I EMI Kodall. ... ~.000 SI'• • .. , Gen Eltc. • . • Ul.200 521 • • '• -NU.C 42S.too •I•• • I. I =•IEq • . ... •t•,IOO 4l'1> •I 0 ... .... l'll,100 2Pt. • ""' d • • lit.JOO 32'"" • ~. 1 IBM ••. .. . . . .. J7l,600 1&1•• • 3lo. C.ner "'·. • • Jn.)00 19• 0 • I I OowO>tm • JSS,100 71..., -'"' MldSouUI . • • • . 3"1, 100 ls>• 't .... ~, l&J 200 7s>• ... Ao61M AH.... )4}~ 10 • "• PltosiC.o • • • 331~ ~ 1''1• t ""' Bc»inc;i • • • • • • .. • 331.300 J'I~ i.. 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CJaan11el Lbi Ing• I KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles KN8C(N8G) Los Angeles I KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles KASC·TY (ABC) Los Angeles {I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego e KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles I KCST (ABC) San Otego KTTV (Ind ) Los Aogeies KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles e KOCE· TV (PBS) Huntington Beach • 21TOHIOHT e NEW8CH£CK An lntonnallve c04tec11on of Orange COunty news. government end consumer affairs. people and sport• (I) THE OONG SHOW 1:00 8 (1) THERONAWAYS An ad..,.,,ture cir.,,,. about II boy and 8 leoperd Wf\Oee sep91ate nign1a to freedom bring them together. (At D MANfM>M ATlANTIS "Imp" A mlachleYous elfin -cree1ure't touch C.Ut· es aduJtt to revert to the W«yt of childhood, a coo- dttJon thet brings cilaoa al'd death to the er-of • nuelear submarine. D MOVIE * * * "Harry Black And The Tiger" ( 19581 Stewart GrMger. 8Wb818 Rush. A 1amou1 hunter allftOlt loe- • hlS Ille ~ ot • coward'• acttons. (2 IV'I.) 8 0 HAPPY DAYS "Requiem For A Malph" Relpl\'f prtde ovetshadow• his terror u he enters the bolling ring wrth • tootbell b~ uver the effec11ons ot a ptetty girl (RI G MOVIE Different Lifestyle Ra lph Waite portrays a college president who takes a sabbatical to work as ·a laborer to experience a different lifestyle in "The Secret Life of John Chapman." airing oh GE Theater tonight at 9: 30 on CBS. Channel 2. Hyde Park Revisited By WILLIAM GILLEN NEW YORK <AP > -"Hyde Park," an hour-long look at the birthplace or Franklin D. Roosevelt. explores the cl06ely-woven (abric of small-town ure. The program. which the Public Broadcasting Service is airing at 9 tonight on KCET, Channel 28. lets the people or Hyde Park -builders, de· velopers, planners. politicians, homeowners, farmers -speak for themselves. No narrator has to tell us wbat they believe. . Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., visiting his parents' graves. criticizes brother Elliott for selling .orr ramily holdings across the road rrom the Roosevelt home. A housing develop- ment. a drive.Jn movie and a roadside restaurant now race the Roosevelt estate maintained by the National Part Service. THE INHERITORS OF today's Hyde Park, a town of 18,000 people 90 miles north of New York City. are not the de!lcendants or the wealthy - who once owned large estates along the Hudson River -but mainly the progeny of those families' servants. These latter-day settlers decide how tbe once-sleepy villa1e. the home of the Roosevelts and Van- derblltl, look.a today. Their lack of vision baa betrayed lheir historic en· vlronmenl. According to the philosophy etpouHd by the local chamber or commerce, gasoline 1taUon1 and rut·food tra.acb.iMS that ja.Ue each other aJoaa the town's main street represent free enterprise. Plannlq that would Interfere with suet. roadside blight verges on socillism. INDEPENDENT FILMMAKER Ralph Arlyck shows, with kaleidoscopic e ffect. the farmer whose increasing taxes are forcing him out of business, the glib representative or a fast-food chain that values parking space more highly than pine trees. the shopping center owner who defines the busi· nessman's conception of beauty as a balanced bank account. In a depanure from the usual documentary technique. interviewer Harvey Flad appears on screen throughout. Al one point he engages in a brief debate with one builder who admires Houston because it has no planning. "Hyde Park" illustrates how many seemingly minor decisions over the years undermine the overall environ- ment of a small community, even one with a beautiful geographical set· ting and an interesting history. THE PROGRAM ALSO reflects a peculiarly American attitude: the beUef that we have an inexhausUble supply of land. "It ·u be a long time before It's all used up," says the county sberlft. Arlyck, a former newspaper re- porter, •pent two years di.rectlng, filming and editlni "Hyde Park." The New> York State Council on the Arts provided the primary fUndlng - a ,15,000 arant -for the film. which was Intended lo show how small towns llke Hyde Park make dedslons about lud Wie. Arlyck estimated that the total cost ran about '30.000. A local cWlena' arc>up coolributed about •.ooo. * • • "Run A Crook9d Mlle'' (1Mt.\ Loult J<N/· deri, MatY lyltr ~A l4lllChlt, after dtacoverinQ an yndergrOYOCI Mboeage plOI. beCOIMe lnvolV9CI "'"" lnU(def llnd Intrigue. (2hn.I T UBE TOPPERS T~. April 25, 1978 'fJil DAILY Plldr •7)!! '* • • ''CorwHe K.US" ( flM.1) "8ndOlpn Sclott, ' tJla Allnea. A CaNldlan , • CAAOt. 8UfM!TT AND FRlf.NOS • MOVll KOCE 9 8:00 -Sooner or Later. Motherhood after 40 is discussed in this documentary focusing on singer Nancy Wilson and anthropologist Laura Nader . ~Ider leade e cor- _,. In pertoue --time f#'NG'I ~ (2 Iva. 6 toOit=- ..... "SevlOe wuo.r- neea·· ( 1961) VIOIO• Mll!Ur9, Guy Medlaol\, ""'° trapper•. wOftilng •• ec~t• for tM emiy, '"'""" to ~ • 111 •~ "Omer Kllayyem" (t957)Comel Wiide, o.bre Paget An adventurar IMd9 • grouQ Of nNOluo tlorlariel In tNllf •ttlmPI to Ml up their own SllM. (2 ,.,,.,, NBC D 9 :00 -.. Th e Moneychangers." The conclusion of this three-part miniseries about turmoil in a large city bank. Kirk Douglas, Christopher Plummer and Timothy Bot- toms are featured. ruttNM _ __, from : ; ettacklng IN lndlelte. (~ CBS B 9:30 -GE Theater. Ralph Waite of "The Waltons" plays a college president who takes a construction job lo get close to the people in "The Secret Life of John Chapman... <See photos below.) llre.) • =1= 8:00 MOVll ••• "Adam Hed ,_ 8olW" ( 194,) lrlQf'ld Blrv· men.wwneraut.. • MOYIE ' • I • NATIOHAL ~SPECIAL "Seltdl For The 0.-..t Apea'' A~ of two Intriguing cr•turw. the oranguteri Ind the moun- tain gorllle. (R) Ii> T\JRNA900T "Sooner Of Later" The prot>lem• ol mothef's· amo· er Nancy Wl'-On and •nthropologlat Laura Ned« dllClllS motherf\ood at 40: • teet to ci.termlne abnomlllltlea In a growing fetus. • HYDEPARK G UECIAL MORNING 1ll00 9 lWIUOHT ZONE ** ... "W*d WOfT*\" (1944) Lon cn.n.y Jr.. . • 1:30 8 9 LAVERNE& SHIRLEY "Shirley's Operetoon" All et Shirley ii taken to the hOSpltal lor an -geitey operation. hef' w.lknean- lng friend• rush to hef side -In lull drMs trom en "Alloe In Wonderland" play r.,_UI, (R) • CAC>eS-WfTS 8.!) OVER EASY Debbie A9ynotda r9\INl1 a poaalbla trip to the U.S.S.R.. trouble with insurance clelma: BIN Orlof. Staff 01rec1or. Senate Si>e- ctel Committee on Aging. and Bob WWte<. Staff Olrector, HouM Select Committee on Aging, share lnelgtlta about the polltlca or aging on Ca.pilot Htll. HO D THE MON!YCHANOEM RoaQoe ~ard. linally r9lllizaS the damage he hM done to A'91 Mtireanllle Bank wtMIO the cotlapM ot a cong!Omer9te threaten• the bank'• etebltlty: Miies Eaeton'• Illa 11 In danoer •-0-In on the oerio of credit can! fOrgers. 1P8f'I 3 of 31(R) D O THREE'S COMPAHY "Stanley c .. anova" Only Jaok knowt the truth when Chr1aey, Janet and Mra. Rope!' think Stanley II toot- ing erounO with anothet woman (R) • M!RV OAIFAH Franklin O. Rooaawlt's hol'l*Ollfn In New York State IJ eumlned from polltlcal, historical and 18nduee~. -~ THEATRE "Our Mutual Friend" Mr Ind ...... NlooOemus Sol· tin try to 8'*ld their lnller. It~; Uzzle'a Nfe ctlangM alter Iha ~ In with Jenny. the doll dreasmak· er. (Pert 2 of 7) UO 8 Cl) OE THEATER "The Sec;ret Ute Ot John Ch-.wnal'" A colleoe presi- dent di.:o-a 11\at tempo. rarity cf\englng hlS job sta- tus lead• to a more compeaalonata under· 1tan01og of peoc>le and the wort! they do. (R) 8 0 ABCMOVIE * * "VagaS" Robert Ut1dl, -"-.uy.on. Whan • -cfl for • NNIWllY te.\age girl tume Into a munJer lnveltlgetlon, Den Tanna ttnd• htmMlt play· Ing lot the higheet 1te.1te, hit ttte. 10:001 • NEWS t.ET'1 ~A DEAL ...ct4AEl. JACK80H Of. Ect.orin Krupp, Olrec:tor ot the Grftltth Pllil 01>9r • vetory. dflCUll-the pos. slblllty ot extraterrestrial lite. the aoe ot the uni- end othw element• of ~ study Including llart. bMdt holea. ~· .,~ECK An fnfonnatllle oollectlon of Orange COunty news. goyemment and COMUhlcw affairs, people and 8')0r1S. ~1· HEWS ~/LEHAEA REPORT NBC Readies Fall Schedule Without Fred By JAY SHARBUTI' LOS ANGELES <AP> -It's not true NBC is delaying decisions on its fall program schedule un· til June. when program whiz Fred Silverman. who pushed ABC to first in ratings, starts running third· rated NBC. That's the word from John J . McMahon NBC's West Coast programs chief. He says NBC's prime-time show roster for 1978-79 is being readied now and will be unveiled between May 12 and lS. ABC. which Silverman len to become -on June 9 -president of NBC. says its fall lineup prob· ably will be ready trus week. CBS' new schedule is due out next month, a few days befoTethatof NBC. NBC. McMAHON, ASKED ABOUT rumors NBC is In a scheduling limbo until Silverman arrives to work his magic next rail, said. "I don't think that's true. "I don't see how anybody can say that's true. because our development has been moving along and we are going to get a schedule in May. "If anybody says we're in a holding pattern when we've been working here 18 hours a day the last couple of months, well , it just seems not an ac· curate statement.'· WITHOUT TIPPING THE opposiUon on what shows will air next fall as NBC attempts a re- covery from a sorry season in the ratings, McMahon said two things will be apparent on NBC in 1978-79: -Much more situation comedy, with NBC hop· ing to install al least six half-hour sitcoms, com- pared lo two. "Quark" and "CPO Sharkey," lhat he says now occupy the network's 30-minute chuckles corner. -Less of the program "stunting" and pre· emptions that many industry folk, McMahon in· eluded. feel left viewers puzzled this season as to which series were on and when at night. On Item 2. he says it appears NBC next season will regularly air its miniseries -which caused many pre-emptions this year -on a Sunday- through-Tuesday basis ih the last two hours or prime time each night. "IF WE LOCK THE miniseries' time period into three given nights, and we stick with that, then we'll have less pre-empting or our regular series on the four other nights," be said. "I think we're going to try and do that more so that the audience becomes accustomed to see- ing the mini.series on given nights" on a regular basis during next season. While once-hot "Chico and the Man" won't re- turn next fall, he sald, NBC thinks It has a solid roster of new sitcoms-from which to choose, with 12 screened so far and five more awaiting official inspection. HE SAID NBC HA'S high hopes for two com· ecUes now getting a trial run, "Joe and Valerie" and "Rollergirls." Optimism also abounds for two pUots, Jerry Reed's "Good Old Boys," set In NashvUle, and "Waverly Wonders." starring Joe Namath, the ex-Jet and ex-Ram. As tor pllots for hourly series, he said, two fan· tasy shows aTe afoot, also a stunt-driver show. also a two-lady Western, "Lacy and the Mississippi Queen, .. and a black family show. Also, be aalCI, lhere are tbl"ee ramlly trade out· door adventure pilots, plus an adult indoor adven· lure, "WEB.'' about 1 youna woman who runs a network's daytime programs departmtnt. I "Fiim's ~ Al»" A IOok 11 one of HoflYWOC>O'e moat tamoua sn.it pllota. ~ Talman. 11:001•8 Cl) 0 NEWS LOVE. AMENCAH STYLE "Love And The Hand Malden" Paul Ila a dale with a ....... known nude model. Cl MOYIE *•'I\ "Atlbella"' (19'91 Vlma Uel. J-Foll. A 1an:ienoue woman 1e.1t .. adval'tage of her loou to utn1et money to~ her grandrno!Nr'e bldi tu ... ( t hr .. 55 min.I • THE ODO OOUPt.E o.termlned to trw hi• roommate ot Na ny1ng phObla. Oscar trlee to cure Fellx of hie teer or ltylng so he CM 00\IW a tnai<>t ptlo- t~ Wiglment • MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING~ • DICK CAVETT "Publllhlng: The CrMtlon Of 8eat Sellers'' Ouee1I: Roger Slr8UI. 8con Mere- dith. AoOer1 Gotthb. Rich- ard Snyder. (P"'1 2 of 2) G MACN!ll.. I LBHR REPORT 11:30 8 Cf) C88 LATE MOVIE ** "McCloud: Murder Arena" (19701 Denni• Weaver. Su11n Saint James. Mtlr1NI McCloud tracks down a demented man who llM killed young women 111 Ceotral Perk at night and mufdeted a polloedecoV. (RI G TONGHT au.t h09t: George Carlin, au.ts: Joeac>h Son.nti- no. Mel Tiiis, Kip Adotta. Beu Armatrong, Tony Stone. A 1111111-ttme hoodlum IS killed by the pob tor robbing a IOen comc>MY • MOVIE **'Al "Le1t Man On Eerth" t 19114) Vincent Price, Franca Beltoca. The IOlll ~ of .,, ec>ldem- k: ,_.. tor hll 1"9 wtlefl the bOdlel of the dead leave ttlelr gr..,.. at night to ... hll blood (2 iw..1 12'.30 ·~ * • 111 'I\ "Room Al The TOp" (1959) Laurence Harwy, S#none Slgnor9t. A yolM'll man ~ lo edvance hlmMlf In a MW town by romenduo the daughter of a wealthy lnduatrlellst. (2 hra.. 25 mm.I • M<Mf • * "Little Egypt" (195t) M8fk St-. AhonOa Fleming. An e•otic dancer's gyretton. wioca the crowds at the QllcaoO wor1c1·s Fw. (t hr., 30 min.I 12:16G ISPY "The LOCUS Eater" 1:008 TOfllOMOW Gueata: Mlc:tlMI Hardy• wtte> dedOed to go atrllght ... 15 ~ °' ataallng cer'l llnd doing lobe tor the Mafia; John Simon. New YQl'k Oreme and tum crttle. 1:1• I r KOJAK(TWE APPROX.) ''NufMmalcr' Kofllt muat try to convlnCe a wltMM to a murder to get lnVOIYed becl8uM the muf'Oer ,. the only dull he hM to I.he aouroe of a ..,_ ol guns N9dlirlg the handl of • street geng. (RI 1:659 MOVIE What a Wag to Go ~ AMera. Rleumlng hOml wttfl ,. South SM ......, bride, e young """ • encounters prot>lernl '#1111 • • hie old glrlfl1end. ( f hr.. 25 mln.) •:ooG MOVE • • "San Oamelflo, London" 11943) Walter Fltzglnld. Robert Beelty. • MOYIE • • • "'The LMl o.y. Ot Pomc>ell" (1935) ~ton Folfer. a.. Rathbone. 4:251 NEWS 4:30 MOYIE * *'h "For The Love OI Mike" (1960) Rlcherd ....,_.,Stu&.wi lt'ednndag'• Dagt l •e "'•"I~• MORNING 11:30 ••• •>n ''Hollday" ( 1831) KatMrlne ~. Cary Gret1t. A _,.thy gift'• tatrier Ilea ~ tor her lazy Mura llUsbend. (2 hrl., 20 "*'·' AFTERNOON u.ooe • * ''Sllrnc.w· ( 195'7) JcQ MehoMy. Julie A.demi. A fTl8n beclor"'8 a •tar wttfl the 11a1p of a prwt. ty publlctst, but his dllr«>- ter doaan't develop until a young orphen haippena al9ng. (1"'~30 min.) ~9 "Hondo And The ~·· (1987) Aobar1 Teytor. ( 1 hr .• 30 mm I 3:308 *111~ "Oeelh 0t A Gunfighter" ( 1989) Alctlerd Wldmerk, Lena Home. A llmlllt town 1Mr11\a1, no lol"'9f nMOed t>y the peoclle. ltllt>t>Omly holds onto hll poeltlon. ( 1 hr. 30 "*'I.I Robert Urich. surrounded by a bevy of Las Vegas showgirls. plays a private investigator whose search for a runaway girl threatens his life in the TV movie "Ve~a$," tonight at 9:30 on ABC. Channel7. 'Lou Grant' Sued COLUMBUS. Ohio <AP> -A nuclear consulting firm has filed a Sl.S million libel suit in federal court charging it was defamed and held up to ridicule as the result of a segment or the pas television s how "Lou Grant.' J . Louis Kovach. president or Nuclear Consulting Services Inc. of suburban Worthington, doing busi- ness as NUCON, charged in the suit filed that the television show in- volved a newspaper investigation of an Ohio nuclear company known as Nuckon. KOVACH SAID BOTH his firm and the name or the company used In the television show are pronounced the same. "The Lou Grant show depicted said Nuckon, Ohio, nuclear company as being guilty of gross negligence in the use of nuc l ear mat!rials • • . was guilty or the crimes or covering up ... nuclear accident, murder and bribery or high government officials." The suit contends that because or the identical pronunciation of the two company names, the fact that both companies are in the nuclear busi· ness In Ohio and because the television show conveys the im- pression that stories depicted in it are based on fact, "plaintiff NUCON has been injured in lts good name.. professional reputation and standing In the nuclear Industry and com-· munity." NUCON ISJ\ private firm, founded in 1972, which provides engineering, consulting and testing services to the : nuclear industry. · Named as defendants were CBS, its program director. writers of lhe show, WBNS.TV, the local CBS al- fillate; its program director. and The Dispatch Printing Company, of which WBNS.TV is a subsidiary. OPENING TONIGHT ROBBn & fRfTZI BllNSlllN BURR IN Plus: DtHNER •DANCING · • PRE·SHOW ENTERTAINMENT Preview ~ormonee Apt 25J. 26. 27 • 30 ~12.50 DON'TDRINI< A~ T1'E Dwml ly Aoodemy Award Winner WOODY ALLEN 3503 $, HAIBOR BLVD., SANTA ANA =:..-=::=::=. •laYA110NI (7M) 979•11R \ Break a Leg? ,.,..., .......... That's what happened to Glenda Jackson and George Segal reunited from "A Tou('h of Class" in the movie "Lost and Found" but only for make believe. They play a pair who meet during a ski collision. \\-ilh obvious results. Dirty Dozen Take to Air? By JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES <AP) -It is a motley crew of Skid Row pilots that Marc Norman has assembled for "Fool's Errand," but he says' he has affection for them all. They are rounded up from Panama's bars and brothels to fly 60 crates or unstable dynamite, rapidly turning to nitro. across the Anders Moun- tains in old crates that threaten to disintegrate in midair. • · It is "Mission Impossible." as performed by the Three Stooges. They are led by George Forney; a pilot so haunted by ghosts he hopes to end his misery by wrapping his dynamite-laden plane around a mountain top THAT HE SOON LONGS to complete the journey alive is due in no small part to Ethel Booton, who has hired the pilots and bullies and shames them toward ever more dangerous feats in her frantic effort to get the dynamite to Bolivia. "I love them all ," said Norman. "That may reveal the kind of people I hang around with. I'm very fond of Forney in his fumbling, morose way. I love Ethel for her strength in her wrongness. She's so secure in her confusion. "I like Slovak, who's so sure the whole scheme 1s just a con job. And Queen, who walks around on a wooden leg and makes sex jokes. And Brown, who's a lush, and Kinner the kleptomaniac." THE BOOK, PVBUSHED by Holt Rhinehart Winston at $8.9S. is the fourth for Norman. He is best known for his screenplays for "Oklahoma Crude." "Zandy's Bride." "Killer Elite" and "Breakout." Norman, 37, said it began when he started thinking about Forney. He said, "I wanted to do a story about a man who is touching bottom and tries to get out by going deeper." It opens in Panama in the early 1930s, but quickly leaps to Peru and Bolivia as the pilots push three faltering Ford Trimotors over and around the treacherous Andes. The aviators, made into folk heroes by a wire service stringer , believe they are on a mission of mercy. Ethel has told them the dynamite ls to snuff out a mine fire. But the novel ends in a smashing surprise. "FOOL'S ERRAND" is written in a literary shorthand, much like a screenplay, and presses in· exorably forward like a movie with little time out for philosophizing or background. It is a cracking good yam on its own, but reading it I found myself already picturing Gene Hackman as·Fomey. "My background Is screenwriting," said Norman. "It's a terse form. I settled upon this ~tyle after a few preliminary chapters. I didn't set out to do it this way, but I found it worked well for New A busy week on Orange Coast stages gets un- der way tonight with the first two productions ol a week that will see rour newcomers mounting the boards. Openin& tonight are a pair of comedies -"All Because of Agatha" for the Udo Isle Pl•yers and "Don't Drink lhe Water" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. Friday Orange Coast College will re- vive the ageless opera ''Carmen," while South Coast Repertory gets into lhe act on Saturday with the local premiere of "Comedians." BILL FUCIK IS DI RECTING "Agatha ... a comedy-mystery replete with magic spells, for the Lido Players. C,ast members include Barbara Ross, Bob Cam~ell. Stan Bell, Joan Warner, Mis- sy Beechn~r. Chris. Harwood. Pat Gilchrist, Richard Dalteli n. Alice LaBianca and Lorraine Weinberg. The show will play for five consecutive eve- nings, through Saturday, with an 8:30 curtain at the Lido lsle Clubhouse, 701 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach. Reservations 675-1308 or 673-74S9. At the Harlequin, Woody Allen's "Don'~ Drink the Water'' focuses on a tourist family trapped in the American embassy of an Iron Curtain country. Al Checco, Robert Ellenstein and Frilzi Burr bead the cast. THE SHOW WILL BE ON stage for five weeks, playing Tuesdays through Sundays with dinner at 7 and show at 8, at the Harlequln, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd. just north of Costa Mesa. Reserva- tions 979-5511 . The Five Penny Opera Company at Orange Coast College is producing the venerable "Carmen" for a two-weekend run on Fridays and Saturdays in the OCC auditorium. Joie Bucknam plays the Utle role and Armando Sierra is Don Jose.in the opera, directed by Carol Boelter. Other principals include Mary Hurzeler. Michael McCormack. Felicia Hernandez and Nicolloo Furticella. Performances will be given at 8 p.m . with tickets available at the door. "COMEDIANS," HERALDED BY Newsweek's Jack Kroll as "the best play written in the Last 10 years," opens Saturday at South Coast Repertory under the direction of Marlin Benson. The production will Introduce Hal Landon Sr. -rather of SCR company member Hal Landon Jr .. who alSo perfotms in the cast -to Orange Coast audiences. Others in the cast a re Ron Boussom. Richard Doyle. Jobn Ellington. Charley Hutchins, Michael Keenan, John-David Keller, Art Koustik. Scotty King and Howard Shangra. Curtain time is 8 Can 22 hotel floors, a ..,...,157 cops, 390 bllrrlcades and, 3,000 hystertcal ••• keep these kids from &•ttln& to the Beaties? NOWAY! A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOl.OR" ™EATRES -ORANGE CO SENIOR OTIZENS $2.00 ' SO. COAST PLAZA >411 lril1ll st. ~1711 fl(f,... ''llUGHAM YOUHG,. IPGI OAll.T7:-Jt . ,._.,U .. IJ.lt:<ll t.AT-l 1~71J .. t:H --·-kW-JI SO. COAST PLAZA >41UrlmUlW 7111 llUHllM A4AA--·-T..,-"SATUIDAY MIGHT HVlll" Ill _._,...,,,.. __ ..... , ...... NM-... .,.,, __ , ... ~,,....... SO COAST PLAZA Ill!,_ "AtME HALL" IPGI IA&Tl<JI "'',__ ... ~ •• ..,.ICAH HOT wu· ..... , .... ~ .... ..,.,~ .... CINEMALANO 141Ua.llnlf &uMillJS.1111 fl(IPMUI "HlltotS• IPGt ..... ,.,,. ·-ww AHD THI DIJll DA.MCI KINCH" ...... ,_....,_ CINEMALAND 141Ue. llllW .,... IJS.1111 1111,... -SWIAT& MLS• CRt .... ,~-··" "WHICH WAY IS UPr MAY- the story. ~:::::::::::::~::::~~~!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!~ "It's a nice ehange for me. You have an editor and when he talks to you he says please, which is pretty unique," said Norman, who admits he was not pleased with the way "Breakout" was radical- ly changed from his first script NORMAN IS A PILOT and flying buff who hangs around airports. He has written and is directing an experimental play called ''Ormer Locklear," about a pioneer aviator and Hollywood stunt pilot. ll is adapted from "Locklear: The Man Who Walked on Wings," by Art Ronnie. He is said his first taste of directing was .a whole new experience. He wants to go on arid direct the films he writes. "Directing is more enjoyable. It's your reward for writing," he said. "You get to deal with real human beings rather than just figments or your imagination. It's more enjoyable than writing but not more satisfying." "Fool's Errand" will put you right into the cockpit with Forney and give you a sense of fight· ing the fierce winds of Chimbote Pass. But Norman said he didn't do that much reserach. After her divorce, rlca sot to know ' some~tty interesting people •• , Inducting herself. ca11142-1111. PUt • t .. word• to work for ou. "THAT OBSQJRE OBECTOF DESIRE" (R) ~ sua.nnas "HOUSE CALLS" (PG) MOHIP'l'll-8 00 SA TISU-OIH 6& "'°"""""$-1 -..ao SAT~! .or»» ~ *4-00-l~ID 5 -.go.10.JO "SATUROA Y NIGHT FEVER" (R) MT~taw• I OIM &IO-iijlO----· ALT "RETURN TO WITCH MOUNTAIN" "NEVER A DULL MOMENT" (G) CKO .. l'fllCl.S ~SAT\JADAY NIGHT FEVER" CR) "LIFEGUARD" "ANNIE HALL" "SLEEPER" (PG) "HOUSE CALLS" "~HAMPOO" (R) ''THE FURY" "EVIL" (A) "THE r:uRY" "EVIL'' (R) ALL ORIVC·IN$ ONN '1JIP.M."'6Nn.Y CTllMl U11•et 12 ,.,.. Ufti.t• .. Kkl91e lll'ta'll'tfOUlld ENTERTAINMENT I INTERMISSION I MOVIES o'clock nightly, except Monday, with matinees at 3 on Saturdays and Sundaxs at SCR 's Third.. Ste~ Theater. :1821 Newpor\ Blvd .• Cosla Mesa. Reservations 646·136:1. CONTI NUING THEIR respective eo1a1e· ments on Orange Coast stages are: -"Cbarley's Aunt" al the Laguna Moulton Playhooe.e, eo& LagllJla C•nyon Road, Laguna Beach. Performances at 8:30 tonight through Saturrday. Reservations 494-0743. -"Fiddler on the Roof' at Sebastian's Wesj Dinner Playhouse. 140 Avenida Pico, Sao • Clemente. Performances nighUy, except Moodey. at varying curtaln times. Reservations 492·9"0. • BACKSTAGE -UC Irvine's Drama Workshop will otfer three ooe-act comedies Friday and Saturday at the Fine Arts Little Theater at 8 p.m ..... the triple bill consists of ''Please Don't Go Around Totally Nude." "The Real Inspector Hound" and '·Noonday Demons," all mounted by student directors .. Actresses' Paths Cross in N(lShville NASHVILLE. Tenn. CAP> -Katharine l{ep. burn and Maur een O'Sullivan -apparently-Wl· aware of each other's presence -showed up for a local performance of a Henrik lsben;>lay. The two, attending a performance of "Hedda Gabler" al lhe Advent Theater. were seated in dif- ferent areas in the audience. Neither apparently knew of the other's presence until Martha Ingram; board chairman of the TeMessee Performing Arts Foundation, made the discovery. Seating was rearranged so the actresses could sit together. Miss Hepburn said she attended unannounced to watch ber niece. Katharine Houghton, perform in the play. Miss O'Sullivan said only that she was in N asbville oo business. ---) ctlJllu;,::::.O) .. IC'!ll• _..,,. 1111 eoaeen GMlCNt .................. _ .... CMll .......... lllVUllMI"' 1•1»11 ............ 1141. Ptl. lel. II ,. ... ..._..fACTOS "THI ffOOOIYI ._ .. IPGI ...,.n-.1111a"" WIM'-ttll. a:11. kll. 1'-. ,._,. DUTMIPOIT ""' wa 1LA1T .... ,, .. YIM_. DIAn:t::"' II> LUIM'UTIMI 'Wl,God!".JPG) """" WIN* In p1119 "HEROES" \ ,. 1 INSIDE: •Horoscope •Classified • nn Landers •Comics TUllOly,Aprll 25, 1978 ' OMVP~OT Feotnring Launchbtg Skye Casi~~~ .. I• ....... <· ..... .fl • ,. . ' . .. -~r-~ . .~ . :. ""''·°'·1 ,: ~,, 4 :·., .. ,, , ' By JUDITH 'Qt'SON t il I L •• Th~;;:.~u.~;:~:~; =~lli~:~~~n~g · the Orang6-0J'8L,f. · .. ' i.•-.!.;-.;:· ·: Most ot\ttem :represent a dream.c6$e.true for the owner and when they are launc~d there is much merrymaking.· • • ) • • • 9 f , . •• ~ . } The Skye Castle is decked out for the launching. Such was the case recently when Ronile and Wallace <Stretch) MacDonald of Irvine invited friends to belp them christen their new vessel, the Skye Castle. t ·Helping with the · launch part.y were from left, Roberta Friedson, Ronile Wallace , June Ruisi, Kay Hanson. I JI • t Wallace Mac- Donald shows off the boat to daughter, Diane. The teakwood boat, decorated with Oriental carvings, represents a lifelong dream for Mac- Donald. He was a Navy pilot for 20 years and r ecently retired from McDonnell-Douglas Aircraft Engineering where he worked for 15 years. lie is especially delighted with his Ta-Yang C242 because it has ample headroom for his 6· foot-4-inch frame. More than 30 friends came from as far away as Montana to help the couple "warm" their new boat. While it was not christened with a bottle of champagne, it was toasted with many glasses (it was a rainy, overcast day, loo dreary to be outside). The hostesses, Kay Hanson of Tustin, June Ruisi of Laguna Hills and Roberta Friedson of Lido Isle prepared a sumptuous buffet to ac- company the champagne. The MacDonalds were joined by their daughter, Diane, a student at Cal Stale San Diego. for the festivities. Two of their othe r children (all are graduates or San Diego State> live on the east coast and the fourth was taking entrance ex· ams for a master's degree program al CSUSD. After a toast to the crew, the MacDonalds opened their gifts. They received a Perry Como . tape, ice bucket, kitchen utensils, skillet, mix- ing bowl, matching goblets which light up <"for those romantic evenings on deck"), a nautical tray. mugs and a delicate pelican sculpture. All will be used to make the boat more homelike since the Mac Donalds plan to live in 1t six months of the year while they cruise and fis h the northern waters around Seattle. They will reside in a Leisure World con· dominium the rest of the year. They won't be alone much during their six months of fishing and cruising, judging Crom the response of their friends. Reservations already were being put in for the eight spare bunks on the Skye Castle. The Attendants Here are answers to questions about handling details_ at the church. By ELIZABETH POST This is second in a series on wedding etiquette by Elizabeth Post. The series will continue through Fnday in the Featurmg section. Q. What are the age limits ror nower girls, ring bearers. junior bridesmaids and ushers? A. Flower girls, 3 to 7; ring bearers, 3 to 7; junior bridesmaids and ushers, 10 to 14. These a're approximate ages; size, responsibility and general behavior should be considered in selecting children as attendants. Q. How does one decide bow many bridesmaids and ushers to have? A. To seat people efficiently and quickly, there should be one usher for approximately every 50 guests. There may be fewer bridesma1ds than ushers, but not more. Ideally, the re arc the same number of each. exclusive of the children, in the bridal party . Q. Is the bride's sister always the maid <or matron> of honor? A. Not necessarily. If she is close to the bride in age. and they get along reasonably well, it would be an insuJl not lo have a sister as maid of honor. But there are many situations which are exceptions. Rather than choose one of two sis- ters, the bride may have her sis- ters as bridesmaids and a cousin or best friend as maid of honor. Also, if the sister is much older or much younger, she need not be maid of honor. Q. M~t the bride and groom have each other's close relatives as attendants? A. No. Ir they are friends and contemporaries it is a nice thing to do, and it c reates a good in- terfamily relationship. But if they hardly . know each other, each one's own friends and relati ves take precedence. Q. May a mother serve as a ·matron of honor? A . E ven lh o u ~h g room 's (particularly in the Sou:.h I often have their fathers as their best man, a mother should not he a matron of honor. Brides' "maids .. are traditionally girls or the same a~e who "serve" the bride and enhance the beauty or the wedding . with their youth and freshness. Aside from the fact that most mothers do not Cit this picture, they also have enough to do with their duties as hostess, and the honorable position of ''mother or the bride." . Q. May a bride have both a maid and a rnatron of honor? A . Yes. The maid or honor ~e nerally t akes precedence - walking m immediately before the bride, standin~ beside her at the altar. and sittini: on the groom '!> left at the reception. AT THE CHURC'll Q. Do thf' friends or the bride always sit on the left side of the aisll' and those of the groom on the right, even though there may be Vf>r)' few Of the groom's friends present? A When there 1s a real im· bala nce, l.L'ihers s hould be instruct· ed to say to late arrivals , "Wou ld you m ind sitting on the right'! Then • are much bt'ltcr scats available on th at side .. Q. Why must womf>n guests walk in with an usher, while their husbands tag along bf'hind alone? A That 1s th<' trnc1tt1onal way. but I prd er to Sl'C the husbands and wives walk ln to1H•1hl•r, folio""· ing on usht'r "ho shows them to their scat. <See ATTENDASTS, Page C:?> Cat Stories By STAN DELAPLANE I have h<1d a number or kittens. Finally they grew up to be cats and had a connoiseur's ap- petite fo r a cold bottle and a hot bird. This is ver y hard on the summer quail who hang around th(• house. My first inclination was to peg a rock al them. On the other hand, I am fond or quail myself so who am I to ·cast the first stone. Emo- tion reached for a brick. But reason iold me I should have given them a piece of toast and iced up a bottle of Rhine wine. I think I am a true cal Jover. For if anybody had reason to shy away from cats I am the boy. When I was whillling prose for the dailies I toiled for an edjtor who was daffy about cats. ' Let the day drag without a solid murder or two-alarm fi.re and be would pace resUessly before tbe window. Finally be woa1cl tum &o mo with glowing eyes and demand. ''Think you could get a good eat stor1f'9 He waited for no answer, this eaWnlJ:ll taskmaster. ''Tbousan&c 81.t thol1Sands ~eat loMI.• he would Dllltter. "A good cahtm:J II J111& wbl1 we need:• For thi• gentleman and a pititoJ weekty paycheck. I inler'\'iewed dozens of cats. Wbea the Fire Department was called to haul a• caterwauling cal from a treetop. your cor- respondent was first up the ladder wllb a notebook. I interviewed cats trapped between walls. Cats with killens. Cats who adopted baby aquir· rels. Lost cats. Found cats. Cata who lived - peacefully with a canary perched on their beads. Once I took a rowboat out to interview a cat trapped by the rising tide on a wharf piling. 1 named him Ben Gunn and had him cry: '"I'm mewrooned, I am." Over these and other feline anecdotes, the t?ditor wept , with pleasure. And while he declared it would spoil me to raise my pay, be said he would give me great honors. "From now oni" he said, "you can do all the cat stories. Exe usively." I grew very weary of cats. .1 used to get a great deal or mail from cat lovers when I was writing cal stories. And some supposedly from the cats. They were signed ••puss" and bad paw prints at the bottom. ..__!got a letter from a gentleman in a mental .-r11~taJ. •"D1*1 oa &be envelope "I>a.ssed by doctor." Be 6e"'-!aaec!-'--' tile stated the natloa IOber~ tor a couple ol pases ancl addecl IA a f1Dll peraio p ph • .. Tbe other day I was waMni a1aal the atreet aDd passed a cat who turned and gave me a very significant look. Yours very truly, etc." At the Ume l was very short ol cat stories and had never interviewed a ai1Jl1flcanl looldnl c•t. I called the hospital. The doctor was very nice. He 11ld be re• m embered the Jetter. lie said J could not talk to the patient becaµse the patient wu very busy talking to imaginary cats. He said the patient wu reasonable on all other subjects. ·•Just cats,·· he sald. "ITe ls dart~ on cats." l was very happy to hear Lbal be was salely buttoned up. l was nfroid U he got out ho migbt bavo become a city editor. \ 7 ( I I 1 ) Her Opinion Very Candid By ERMA ISOJIB£CK How 1 envy my be!iil friend. She'is married to a n lmpulsa•e 1 nstamatic-ln·the · s h1rtpocket photo&· rapber who optimistical· ly shoots t.be Grand Ca· nyon through the ear wln· dow goings.5mph. I married a self· destructive Nikkormat with zoom lens who In· sisted I delay the birth of our first chlld until he could get a decent light reading. There Is no ledge too precarious ... no mountain too inaccessi· ble . . . no area too ob· scure . When there is a dog with one ear up, time stands still. The dog-with-one-ear· up s hot is only one of several favorites of my husband. We have two trayfuls of slides of dogs with one ear up that has been known to sedate hyperactive children in which doctors had given up hope. Another "trick" shot that Is a perennial is the state line shot, m which the subject is shown pointing to the sign that .. says, "WELCOME TO INDIANA'' CILLINOIS. COLORADO , NEW YORK , FLO(lDA , TEXAS. and 44 more). For humor . there is nothing that rivals my husband 's r estroom shots. These are little "candids" of the family coming o ut o f the r estroom. frowning, pulling down apparel, checking zippers -and there iB one wonderful one o( me with toilet tis· sue dr~ging on my shoe that I would k111 for the negaliv~ The shots at the zoo are alwa ys run . Es pecially if you're a rump man. My husband feels that it's an artistic side of the ammal that points out lits muscular mobility. ·• I contend it's an opin ion. The zoom lens has done for our marriage what Farrah Fawcett has done for hairnets. I feel that zoom lens es should be registered on· Jy to professionals and never left in the hands of Sunday afternoo n photographers. I don't want to labor the point. but I will only s tate publicly that I have burned the green plaid slacks that from the rear look like a s lipcover for a Buick. Yesterday, I saw a man take an indoor pie· lure with no flas h of six people 1n front or an aquarium ... just after he had droppe d his camera. Now there's a man I could spend the rest of my life with .... ~. Michael Miller. 15, 1s New York 's youngest teacher. Puzzles Addicting By BURT BERLINER NEW YORK CAP> - Palindromes, pangram· mat1cs. rhopa lics - they 're no puzzle to M 1chael Miller. Miller teaches one of the mos t unus ual courses of 1.300 offered a l New York's New Sc hoo l for Socia l Research : "Beyond Crossword Puzzles." 25 to 70. students' pro- fessions range from artist lo market analyst, says Miller, who is get· ting $550 lo head the class. "No one has acted aloof to me because of my a ge," the youth s ays. He first sent in a course proposal to the school, tben met with administrators to dis· cuss details. Since then, he's had two of his own accepted by the Times. The themes were academy awa rd s and Mark Twain. "I did thero in bits and pieces -a half-hour here and there -over three months ," says Miller, whose father is a co nductor with the American Symphony Orchestra. His mother has authored a book on the problems television creates In family life. Boroseope ] WEDNESDAV, APRIL21 By SYDNEY OMARll ARIES <March 2l·April 19): Meditate. Syn· thesize information. More b available Uum mighL be apparent on surface. Cancer. Capricorn figure in picture -and so does the number 2. Journeys. distance. secrets, confiden· tial material -these command personal spotlight. TAVRUS (April 20-May 20): Adapt to changing conditions. Study Aries mesuge. Give full play to Intellectual curiosity. Examine and explore. demand answers Instead of excuses. GEMINI t May 21·June 20): Tempo slows - go with tide. Don't force issues -or people. Be thorough. Check fine print. Contracts, legal agreements, partnership and marriage pro- posals dominate. CANCER (June 21-July 22): You reeelve of· fer -means you take it and leave home base for a time. reject it and hold tight for better position. Welcome change. challenge, sUmuh•· lion. · LEO (July 23·Aug. :!2): Make adjustment with family circle. Be diplomatic. but get de- sires across in meaningful manner. Taurus. Libra figure in scenario. lo matters of specula· lion. s tick with number 6. VIRGO tAug. 23-Sept. 22>: Land, real estate, basic values -find out where you stand and become fully aware of potential. Pisces person is in pictore. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22 >. Message provides encouragement, necessary information, green light. Bring priorities into focus. Don't scatter forces. Relative implores. chides. Key Is to maintain balance. self.esteem and humor. Capricorn. Cancer persons figure prominently. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Financial mat- ter t hat had been "hanging on" is settled. Let go. Give yourself a schance to reaffirm convic· lions. reestablish base of operations. SAGITfAIJIUS CNov. 22-Dec. 21): Take lead , exercise Independence of thought, action. Creativity is highlighted. Stick to your own style, beliefs. Members of opposite sex find you especially attractive. CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Look behind scenes for a ns wers. Older faroily member holds key to security. Know it and don't permit pride to block progtess. AQUARIVS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Romantic in· terlude adds spice to your life. Somtr fond wishes come true. Be flexible. Travel, writing. accelerated social life are on agenda. Populari- ty increases. PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20): Financial bonanza may be in picture. You win by doing what comes naturally. Key number is 4. Break from restriction. tradition, hidebound rules and regulations. Create your own traditions and escape hatch. Pads Back By suzy PATfERSON PARIS <AP> -The French ready-to.wear message for next winter is beaming strong and clear: pad your shoulders like a football player, nip in the waist, slim down the hips. For the avant garde, shorten skirts, cmd show plenty of leg up the side. The general line ap- pears in everything from Star Wars hard chic to Marlene Dietrich vamp, or Garbo tailor· ing. Other ideas include full schoolgirl smocks, and a bellboy in pants, s pencer, or a short jacket, and pillbox. Soft. voluminous dresses are bowing out in favor of constructed clothes. whether strictly tailored or fi gure· hugging feminine. with large shawl collars. outsized blousons, three· quarter coats, men's double·breasted jackets or neat spencers. Many jackets and sweaters have large p l eated cap-sleeve shoulders an bodices with sleeves se well un- derneath: Anne-Marie Berella and J ean- claude de Luca show the giant s ize; Scherrer uses the effect in trimmed·down silk after· noondresses. Smocky s choolgirl dresses or tunics over pants with noppy asc~ bows are most strikin,g at Dior. though other h ouses do mod est versions. The new skirt look Is a s traight knee-length wraparound or s lit vamp, notable at Saifl\ Laurent and Chloe·t oracles ot Paris fashion.\.. However, skirts will bel all lengths, sometimes gathered or pleated, but ANN LANDERS I ERMA BOMBECK For Success, Go by Rules DEAR ANN LANDERS: l am a 20- year·old single female. Over the past few years; l have read many books and articles on bow to have a successful mar· riage. I want very much to have a good life and marriage will be an ex- tremely important part of 1l. Several years ago. I clipped from your col- umn the "Twelve Rules for a Happy Married Life ." I misplaced the clipping and wonder if 1t might be possible for you lo hunt up that col· umn and run 1l again. l would appreciate it so very mu c h . FAITHFUL READER IN PILOT MOUNTAIN, NORTH DAKOTA l)EAll PILOT: I roud the colamn and berewltb repeat with pleasure: TWELVE RULES FOR A HAPPY MARRIED lJFE ( 1 > Never both be ao· gry at once. (2) Never yell at each other unless the house Is on fire. (3 > Yield to the wishes or the other as an ex· erclse in selr-cUsclpllne if you can't thlnk or a. better reason. <4 > If you bave a choice between making you rself or your male look good -choose your mate .• (5) If you feel you most criUche, do so lov- ingly. (6) Never bring up a mistake ot the past. < 7 > Neglect the whole world rather tban eacb other. (8) Never let the day end wltboat saying at least one compUme n· tary thlng to your ure•s partner. (9) Never meet without an affedloaate welcome. (10) Never go CO bed mad. < l l > When you've made a mistake, talk It out and ask for forgive· ness. OZ> Remember, I& takes two to make an argument. The one who ls wrong is the one who will be dolog most of the talklng. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently someone suggested that children be trained not to gawk or ask personal questions o f h a n - dicapped people . I don't agree. lt is normal for children to ask ques- tions. As a handicapped person Can amputee> l am not the least bit up· set when a child asks, "What happened lo your leg?" I simply tell the youngster I bad an acci- dent because l was care· less on a ~Ike. His curiosity is quieted and he learns something. Please expand on this vit-al subject. - E X P ER l E N.C E TALKING DEAR EX: I asked Dr. Henry Betts. Chief o f the Chicago RebabWtatlon lmtltdte, to express his opla.loo oo this subject and tla1a ls what Dr. Beus said: "The malo goal of the disabled ls that they be accepted as indJvldoals -not symbols. As with all pe0ple, tll1s meau understanding and ac· c eptlng their dis · slm llarUles, strengths and weak n esses, positive and negatln traits. To pretend that these features are being overlooked In the dis· abled (they certainly are not overlooked in others) ls to separate the disabled and keep them ou t of the mainstream wbere they belong. "A natural curiosity exists in aU people about all othen. There ls no reason childr e n or adults abould avoid ask· Ing slnttre questions of a disabled person. Man· ners and tact should be guidelines, however, for all people at all times ... Club CoUndar nm.t ~h Wednesday m the Dady PIUJt tlnd contains notice& of women's end service club m.eetmgs end ~s for the following ~ek - Thursday through Wednes· day Send notices to Club Calendar. Deily Ptlot, P.O. Bor 1560. Costa MelC. CA 92626 Be S¥Te to mclude your name end phone number Notices must be m our hands two weeks 1n advance To request a picture. wnte or caU the F'eatures Depm'tment. 642-43'll P1c· ture~ are ltmued to fund· ral!ers open 10 the public ••• Attendants <From Page CU Q. Wllat does "in froat ot t.he rtl>- bon" me,a! A. Al a formal wedding, several front pews on either side are re- served for the families of the bride and groom. The last of these (or som et Imes all> are u sually marked by a bunch of flowers. Arter au guests are seated, a rib- bon is run along the end of the pews from the last reserved pew to the back or the church. That rib- bon is left in place until family members have left the church, so that they are not o.ished or pushed by the other guests as they leave. People who a r e assigned to _ those pews "in front of the ribbon'' are sent pew cards which they show to the usher who escorts them in and then seats them in a reserved pew. Q. Whlc.b ls correct -ror the guests to atand throughout the ceremony, or to be seated after tbe processional? A. this is a matter of church and local custom. In most churches le> day. the guests rise as a sign of respect as the procession enters the church and remain standing only until the clergyman says, "Please be seated ... Q. When the bride's father ls de· ceased, who gives her away! A She is usually ~scorted up the aisle by a brother. an uncle. a god· father or a close family friend If her escort Is not a member of the family, the bride's mother may say, "I do" in answer to the ques· lion, "Who give th thi s woman .. ?" Q . May photographs be taken during tJJe ceremony? A The photographers may take pictures as the bride enters the church and again as she leaves. but picture·taking during the ceremony. with the attendant flashing and clicking, 1s distract· ing and tu1dignified Couples who want pictures taken 10 the church should arrange for the bridal par· ty to return to the altar im· mediately after the ceremony Just before leavmg for the reception ln an aggressive mood, Paris s hows pants with a vengeance. They must be either jod· phur·topped and nar- rowed al the ankle, or altogether slim and s horter, cuffed or not. Short. wide culottes and jogging shapes round out the pants line. not over-full. ------------------------------ Suits have boxy tops Paris fashJon is also in r""':':'~~~~;is:::-~-:::::-~~~~~~:t::~~;---------, a militant mood. from the long tweed Russian army coats at Jean- Claude de Luca to the resplendent toy soldier outfits at Kenzo. "I wasn't s ure If peo- ple would pay $115 each to better their puztle s kills. but here they are," says Miller, who al 15 is the school's youngest instructor out of about 800 teachers. •'It was whimsy at first. I thought I'd have fun teaching." s ays Mille r. who began work· ing the New York Times crossword puzzles - some claim they are among the country's most challenging - when be was 11 years old. "We never did watch i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~· much TV. And the whole A dozen people have enrolled in the course, which meets once a week for 14 weeks. Aged Start Being 1be \\t>man lbu want to Bel Ma~e 19 78 your rurnuio POonl' c.in or come on roe1<1y ror d comp11men1ary ariatys•s and 01gg1am O•scus~1on Joh=" P~RSONAL DEVflOPMiNt A MODEL t~C: SCHOOL~ ORANOE 3 Town f, Country (714) 547·8228 ( S'1DNE'1 HAaauJ) KEEPS YOU ON YOUR TOEI lnth• DAILY PILOT ---~ -. ··~· ... ..-.-.... family's always been in· teresled in word games. You pick up a lot of in- formation that way," he says. YOU .• COULD BE THE NEXT --·---· MI SS ·NEWPORT BEACHI ... CONTACT JOE PARKINSON BEFORE SATURDAY. APAIL 29 We are -"'9 I Ml• N-9 ~ to- ,__ ... Ille ,,.... '"""'°" ._. -°" JiiM 1 ,, '°" .. -..... ....... o.-. -.......... "°° .... ..,. ... -~· '"IOr ll'llWll ............ OOMell -le Newport~ Gala 1& to25 Come In and Sign Up Al NEWPORT DATSUN 888 DOVE STREET 833-1300 Wednesday & Thursday April 26 & 27, JO a.m. to 4 p.m. Camp Naturalwear coordinators Ella Fonda and Jeanne Tyler will be oo hand ror personal assistance ln after-surgery problems. These specially designed suits afford more coverage for all figure types. F>A RK '-'c:>C> MEDICAL MART 4~ ' )<1.'"'' 1° 64l-tl02 351 HOSPtTAlROAO l\fO 111 NEWPOA T BEACH, CA o;i66J "''0\~ from H~ Hosi>•lll Cheese OI rite Week AMBER ELLE Reg. 30' LB.~ s30t $3.39 LB. Off w OFFER GOOD 11-fRU APRIL 30 nit ...., ...._.. Hldiory ..._ a... ...... _.. •ce,tmee ..._ th ....................... lh ............ _.. .................. ,.. ........ c-..... ..., ....... ....,a...~,.. ... . COSTA MESA South Coast Plaza Lowtt Carouttl M&11 Brlttol at S.n Diego f•-•v Open diuly 'Ill 9 p.m Seturct.v ·111 8 p.m . Sunday 12 t o 5 p.m, Phone, 640.8991 COMICS I CROSSWORD MARMADUKE by Bru AnOtnon 800ME R by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson .__-____ 5 ___ 1•_a_._··.i•.···-··.•·.·~-·-· .· ----~--~~~~~ "Hood ornaments aren't supposed to drool over the driver'" ACl.Tt-hJ~ ~ 1ttlEU '1€\~ i p~i~~it 1 -> .. t t.i..~o ' l.\J\\. Cu.t1~ ?) 'fWICi .' ;·v ·~ l ' ~> N·r1 L~~·~ by Mell FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk DOOLEY'S WORLD HOW HUMILIATING! ALL THE ~ IN C:f.;M C1.A5$ ll11NK I'M A CON\PLE.TE KUJTL I CASEY OF CCXJli'~E NOi! ~Ot> ~VER MEANT PEOPLE 70 KISS ! ME<,> GIRl.5! CJJNt OVER HERE HND GET A L.DAO OF 1HIS I -· by Charles Rodrigues DR . SMOCK MOON MULLINS MOTLEY'S CREW How CAN 1 DICl'ER OVER RENT WITH THAT MAN IF l C,AN1T SPEAK ,ARABIC? GERIATRIX : ~IMP\..'I C~NOT SuPmi:.:r :.=-A~ T ~ THE NO&EL. rEACE. PIC:C E WITH "THAT ONE r:.t...AW! ~ TIZuE:, 9ADAT HAS BE~ INTE~VIEWE:O ~ e<AIZ~RA WAL.Tees I ~D MIKE W~\..ACE ~I He'=' NEVER BE:E?N ON THE TON IGHT SHON! $1V1~R7" .. VO.R-'?6 :w:;:m ___ _ DENNIS THE MENACE GORDO TCC'.l..., ~ ~rT 'fLE 2-li:L::- ~ICE \ \.l.C'E" -""' :;"JI l='"::- ,_W[' T~::­ AND T.l.T ff;f<::E. ~'\to.JC' r:.i~-5! JUDGE PARKER TQ:-.JC'lf:5 ~v. ... "-'-v.:"t- 1,, ... ".::-TAt...; ·..1. ~·r :::S!C•H:- GIM\\Ec 1f1r PA\-· \..:HE..'-' 1'-E: 11JA;1c l~EC' (-1~L:-- ''•'\' -.-------.{IF YOU !\.NOW ABBEY £ TOLD JULIAN THAT THE SHE HAS A TENDENCY VVAY ro FIND YOU WA5 TO TO EXAGGERATE, THE l'>ETTER PART Of VALOR WOULD l'>E FOR ME TO REMAIN NEUTRAL AND MAl<E M'f Df PAl{TURE ! THANK YOU FOR THE DANCE ! LOO/\ FOR THE NEAREST MR. KINGSTON! PHONE! rr-:nr----. "I•--.. TUMBLEWEEDS HOW PARE 'tt>O CAJ..L. Me ) A PAMPEREP i'IRANT!? 3 Yf:ARS FOR CONTeMPI OF COUR't: AN'1 SL.ANPERl IAKE: iHt= SCUM AWA'(,SHE:RIFF!! NANCY LE T'S GO OUT -T;=s] YOUR BARN AND PLAY TABLE TENNIS .. HOW COME ~ YOU ALWAYS GET TO PLAY OVER THERE '? by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan AN'7 HURRY E'ACK! 'THWS NO ONE AROUNV 10 Rf:L.IGHT MY Cl<1AR IF 11 GO~S Otrr! TUlldly,Apf\125. 197& PEANUTS NOW, A60Ui THIS REP()'{T 11/\\ DOING FOR SCHOOL ... l'vE BEEN WONDfRINo WHAT '{OU THOUGHT A60UT THE TrrLE ... -SUTGIMM£ JUST ONE ADVMff"A6£ OF BEIN ' POOR! ~ -.. ) OAll.Y PtLOT Q by Ch•rles M. Schult IT'S PROa..\BL I( A LITTLE PRESUMPTUOtb i· t ' ll by Roger Bradfield lTS 1tJEXPENS1VE ! by George Lemont r I j t I • I 1 ; I ' " I RAllNG .· 11 DUMB )' . , SURVf::YS .' : . I I • ~ _ _,,,•;, }1 I I I l ' I 111 I, • t-~vl..;:vv/' I by Templeton and Forman TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE KHU~~ • f ouil Prt h• ,, P.11 , ' 51311" ~2 C '' 1111 "'J' Le•0qth ur·• ,. c11 . '1 Nedi tJ'i • t1.ii1r11• ' •Qt ~ GNIJtO 'ill l'l'l tlr I t?h al nJ ,._,J ,,, '•,' m.tll Or..1n· ~1 H,,,d • t .,._ ~rt I ff jH " h,:• 1,)tr ih ,_..,: J:d~I I ' t l tir ~ "'' 'lh.I• l Druq \I",._.. h"' ' • ~ tf •1 " 1 fi(I "'''!')' Ari Fa~t 1 dt JfL\' ',t,-• Hav•Ml twn •J t JI tit> S~ ,r 'II "'. hf UM 11 t.. 1)8 P1°liq111lt' ()I ii {II fl J"l •Chic~· n ,,,,,, t>~ l • '~ ,, l 5on Of H4 f I t tl1V ~ l>ollw 1t. e;o:. ·: ; ~o. Ano·• , J•ur rod• r I -d•. '"•' Sea~1c~ni:; , q S1d'", I •Jecltn•· wo1 I • Pm I< : WI/Ill'"" :,..,, ~ • U1 11 t i • , "4. 'r.t \flpl # t flatl•"u'" ~11dl· ,, I (fl : l 1 • t.• •• pt ,,, 111 j ~11111 ;~ 4 [r11.11' Adv• rl • • ~Hf t•1tl • But11•<J 0.JOh 1111• · . ' • ,. UNITED Feature Synd•cat" Monday s Pullie Sotveo " ,, ( tll 1 : .. Ar1m ,, 11, : ~ (.(")Q1f'1t .11. • ... \'1 '" ~ I ! IP• I• r I ~"'11 t ~ .: [ \ ll I .; fl 1'' lJ 1•1HlQ ,• b'> 11, nl 'f"f' P1 U'• • ~ flt,1·.". ,mb ,,,. •'(HJ"ll . { t14f+I ti fl • .. '.'(Jlf'• •t , . • ~ • nr t ;• I ; I Sp.Ht 111 ... ~'t T1,11 "'' ldter .,, 1iu•• ''"Pnrn" ... '>~II 'w 111 •' ( iO\ l ..... 11 ... ' .1r11 tw 0 ~If , .. I'• h '.11 ti+ 11 fl jl' : . I ()I' t./ • 0 ... ,. , .. l Squeaky a 'Model' But Sara Jane Prison Troublemaker B)' &lie A.IKJate.d Prea More than two years alter abl wu c&n1ed ahJ"leJdng from the courtroom where she •as seo- ten c e d lo life, Lynette "Squuky"' Frotnmt 1& con sidered a model lnma~ But Sara Jane Moore, who pleaded guilty here 1ayin1 she wanted to make peace with her conscience, Is a troublemaker. Iler former attorney says Mrs. Moore, serving time in a room one floor away from Squeaky's, is "in and out of solitary all lhe time " BOTH ARE IN the maximum "l\'t'Urtty unit of the FederaJ Cor r t.>ctionaJ lnstitulion at Alderson. W \' d • serving liJe terms for al· tr• m pt IOR lo assassinate then· Pre~1dent fo'ord in September 1975 Tht:1r atlempt:. occurred 17 days and 90 miles apart - Squeaky'~ outside the California slate Capitol in Sacramento. where the gun she pulled was wrestled away: Sara Jane's out· side a posh hotel in San Fran· cisco, where the shot she fired wenl astray. MAKING TROUBLE Sara Jane Moore which involves mopping floors and other cleanup duties. Ar WI~ MODEL PRISONER Lynette Fromme "temporary jail•· for inmates who cause trouble. She is there because she refused to move back with the other women and refused to do her job assign. ment. it was learned. "She's having all kinds of dis· cipline problems. She's in and P\JBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUI eutrNHi NAMC fTATSMINT T lie 10111wlf\9 oat .. !\ '' CNln• Du.Wn•nn HATIOHWIOE LIOUIOArOltS. AUCTIONEl!ltl JOeel!ltt. OU """9 V-Ori"' latt CMU Me:M, CA.~ ,,,,...,, c:. "-· J/00 ..... _ Wey. •tlN.S.U~u.CA ~ Tiil• .._ It con9u(led ..., .,, Incl"" ...... .......... ,~ 1"1111 ... ..,_ ... Iliad •ltll trw ~., CJer1I vf Or.-. ~y ... ~ll)G,tf1'. """ PWlllllM Ol'M09 C:O.•I 0.llY PllOt. ~11 •. 11, "·ii. ma PUBLIC NOTICE 11·1· IUflalllOlt COU'fT Of1 TH a ST AH CW CAUllOllHI • POii TMI ClOUlfTV 0f1 OllANQa ......... tu10 NOTICtl OP HIA•IN4> O' f'CTITtoft ~ PllC>eAfa Of1 WILL ANO f'Oll L.lnlltS TESfAMIH• TAaY .\NO 110tt AUTNOttlZATIOH TO AOlitUNISTf!R UNOlilt lHI IMDl .. eNDINT ADMIHISTllATION Ot1 ISTATUACT. Eu•le ol FRANK (; TAlt.MAN, Ill. •ho known., FRANK c; TAL L MAN . a nd·~ l'R4 NK TALLMAN, 0.C..Md HOTl~E IS HERE8V (;IVEN 11\•I lltl/ING M. GRANT ha• 11100 he<alr> • peUllOtl l<K Prol><lt• ol Will dl\O IOI 0 · 5""1\<e 01 t.a11e" Te•tament••v -for AUlllOrlUotiO'I IO A4m1n•\ttr .. ,.,., 11\e 11\dtpenclant AOrnln"l,.llOft ol E\ltlH Act. rtterefl<e 10 wfl•t l'I •I rn.Ck tor fwlher P¥11CUIM5. end 11\fl lllt llrne -pl.Ce Of .... arlllQ Ille wrn. flu l>ffn Hi tor ~Y t '"'-ar tO 00 • "' , In I"' c°"'ttoom Of !Jtpertrntnt No 3 of W•O ~-1. f l ~I/I( C.1111< !K1•e WHI, 1n 1r1t CHy ol $artll An•, Calllornla. oatao April 10, 1111 '#11.LIAAll I . SI Jo+IN. QUnly °""' WILLIS, •UTLl'.R, SCHElf'LY, Ll!YDOll' &OeANT '°' Savtl• °''"'street 20t11 Pi- LI• A"9tl•, CA .0014 AllOrMY•lw: ,_.111- PuDll\l\eO Ortnqt C.0.'I 0.lly PllOI, Aprill'. 2~M<ty I, 1¥18. PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS •Ullltt!U Hit.Ma STATEMaNf T~ lollowlnll PtfllOfl I\ dolnQ bllil· ,,. .. al AIR TA)(l.LTO, 2204 Donnie~ .• ""''*' llMCh, CA '1WO Cenlur11n EnterpflMt, • Htw JffWyCDr-.. lon. Thi\ DuW~S Is conclU<t.a Dy • <or PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE .. ICT1TIOUS eUllNIU NAMI STATIMINT TM t.ilOWlflcl --It _..... IMI• neua. INCRl!Ol&LE tfOOLOG'I' OlllL&. 01STll18UTQR OF H 8, 210 FM,.... tit>, Ntwiiort llNcll. CA'*' John Bartof\. JIO f'tr~ (H, ...__., llNOI. CA '2t61 Tiit\ D\lsln..> ,, CAlll(lliCICKI bv ... In Cllvlowil ~llMton Tiii\ •t•i...-., .. 111«1 wtlfl llW C:-ty Ctert Of 0<1<199 c-ty Ofl NATIONAL PlJBUC NOTICE 1' lc;TI nous MISIM•M MAM4I ST.\TllMln' Tiie 1011-lne lie•-• •re ...... -'"'"" 1/1$.\ l~SINO, .... , IMCAlt- •1..0 .• S..llt JOO, ltvlM, CA tJIU General Ger l ea\•"9 11\c .• • Gttlfw"t•C.or-.... Thia Ol.ltl119't It <GrlOll<Mll lly I<• -"'°" Glowr#l C.. L.ff\lne IP><. R_, G Ftledlnel\ ........... llllt ··-.... llleO ...... , ... Otl.nty Clatll ol Or....-COlultY en ...-1111. ""' Nft1Jt P\IOlll-Clr .. ON" 0.lly Pltat, Atrll ''·is. M.y 2. •. mt U~-11 PUBUC NOTICE P'ICTltlOUI 9USINHS HAMa STATUll&NT flle followlnQ ""°"' •re ~"'" tius1nenu: COllAGE COl'FIE SHOP, S.J w. ,.,,, srreoc. e.o.t.Motw, CA nut P...i MICI May ,...._, 1'2' R.oplds Or., H11nllt1G10ft 8'ecl\, CA~ Hilt bv\lreu I\ condWICKI Dy _, lft. _.VIOIHI. P1ul~ Thil •1<1-1 w"' llled wtlh tlle CoUr\IY (ltr"-of Or•noe (Ovnly et! Aprt1•, ma ,..u,. l>Of'~l'Ofl Cllllurltl\ Ent•rp,.\e\ Karin t Ronde Pr-I ""'" •• ltll. Pvl>ltl'*' ()'-C0.>I 0.Uy PtlOI, 'tftW Al>fll 11, ... u. Moty 1, 1'11 Tl\15 U•~ w.s llled <rlll\ tllt County Cten. ot Orange Counly on Apt 11 JO, ltll '",.. Publl>lled Ortnqt CO.\t 0.lly Pltot Apt1I H , Niiiy 1, 9 16. 1911 PUBLIC NOTICE PUOlls-Or-C:O.sl o.llr pjloC. ~It 11. II, u. N\ay J. "" IUHI PUBUC NOTICE NOTIU TO CllEDITOIU SUPl!lllOll COUltT 0, THI! STATE OI' CAUl•OtUUA ~It THIE COUNTY OlfottAHOI! ......... ..,u Etl•lt QI ROeERT H ATHEllfOH, HOTICI! OF AVAILAalUTY o.~~~~C'e IS HEAEBY (ill/EN 10 .... OF ANNUAL ltl!l'OllT creollors "',,,.-·Mined o.c-..1 P11n114111 lo SKUon 610. hll 01 11>1! !NI •II per-"'°"i"9 <l••rn• ~.irt•I lntern•t Revenue COCI~, notice " ti. W.iO -.,_ ,eq.,tre<I lo Ill<! -,.r•DV Q1,,... NI lllt ..._,., r_..i kW ltwrn with IN ne< .. ..,y •OU<he•• ii'! lllt <•l•nOu ye.r 1•11 ol Bro~ ll>e oflltt ol the cl .. ll of IN! .cove "•n Ml<llHh O>rlstlMI M1UIOfl" • prlv•I• 111..., cowt, or to P<Hetll ,,....,. wllh Joun<l•llon, I• •v.allat>le •I IM lounda-t1'e ,.., .. _y vOU<llef\ 10 '"" \If\· lion'• prlnclll61 olll<• '°' ·-·Ion Cleft~Md •I .,. office of. JOSEPH A. ourlr>O r119ulM Du$1MU "°"" '""" 10 DAVIS, Jl.i) Htr"l>Of 81"". ~··· 313, a.m. lo SP m. by •nY <lllt_., -••· C011• Mn•, CA '161', wlu<ll I• '"" ouet1~ 1 t wllhln llO a.vs •lier tlw Cl.at• 111,..,. ot --• OI rn. -"onN ,,. of lhl• Pllbll<•llon. •II m•lltrl Pef'1411n1n13 to IN! Hl•I• or IJ».11 PUBLIC N&l'ICE STATI OP' CALlfOlllOA DIEPAa"TMaNTO .. MEALTN Cl!llTlfrlCATIEO,Nl!I~ GllANTEO llottce Is l\eroDy 91nn 111a1 Ille O•rtt lor ol IN SIA!• o.c>Mtnwnl Of H•etltl l\tt QI'_.., • Ot<htouto ot N-10 ll\e 1011ow11191tc:1111v. "•<lltrv Ft1M -'Stete H-11•1. )SOI H•r-81..0.. Costa Mew. CA •1•1>1• Pro1e<t O.S.:tlp11on · OoM.re & re- rnover irom ll<e,.,e or 46 •<ut• P'Y<h••l•k (are beets -8' •-1llacl """lnq C¥t btcls •net re<leu1ty ?,. ll<tnM<I s«lllacl nurslnQ btcls 10 ,,.. ltr"modl•le c.re DM\. eu1m11e<1 eos1· Hone. Elle<ltve O•te of Ctrt1ll<•lt Sltl/71 At one time. the)' lived down lht• hull from each other in prison. But Warden Carson Markley said in a telephone in· terv1ew that as far as he knew. they had no relationship .al all. friendly or hostile All the women have private rooms with a bed. dresser. mar· ror. c hair. toilet. sink. wall locker and TV set. Markley said they decorate their rooms with plants and oflen paste pictures on their lockers. out of solitary all the time, for ~·---------­ Tht lounoaoon's ptlnc1pat oltke It •••O oeteOer>I. wilhln tour rnonlll• IOUl•O •I , ... T\lslln Aw .• Cost• titer Ill• first P\IDhcellon 01 "'" MlrM, CA '26V. nollO s .. ...,,, A l'a•.aq. o.1e1 Oflluot Si.1 .... 1« Hedllh Plonn•"ll •no OevelOllC'*'t BOTH BECOME eligible for parole 10 September 1985. Miss From me. acting as her own at- torney. lost an appeal of her con· v1ct1on Mr ... Moore. also repre~enttng herself. filed open· 111g brads 1n the 9th U.S. Circuit Court or Appeals m San Fran· '1sco last month after winning ;q)J>r<>val to proceed as an in· d1~enl , without paying court r t'l'~ The tin), rcd·haired Miss i''rommt'. now 29, spends her time much lake the other 21 wom<.>n in the unit. Markley s~11d . llC'r ;oh assignment is .. genl.'ral m aintenance." he said , "YOU CAN ASSUME 1n Lynetle"s case she would have some Charlie Manson' pictures up.'' he said. But despite her devotion to the convicted mass murderer. who is serving a life term 3,000 miles away at San Quentin. and an oc· casional outburst at her trial, she has been a model prisoner and given authorities no trouble. Markley said. Mrs. Moore. now 48, is another story. The warden would give no details or prison problems wath her. BUT SHE IS KNOWN lo have lived for the past few months in a room apart from the other women. in a unit reserved as u everything," said Peggy Garrity Edwards, a Torrance., Calif., at- torney who represented Mrs. Moore until she quit the case in March because of the distance between California and West Virginia. MRS. MOORE HAS not seen her ll·year-old son sipce her tran s fer la s t s um mer lo Alderson from the Federal Cor· rectional Institution on Terminal Island near Los Angeles, Ms. Edwards said. He is living with foster parents in San Francisco. she said. At Terminal Island. Mrs. Moore spent her lime reading, doing needlepoint and writing for a creative writing class she took there. Ms. Edwards :;aid. All That Goes Up. • • Needn't Come Down in 'Towering Infra Dig' By HUGH A. MULLIGAN AP St*• .. eor..._-1 NEW YORK -"Have they f1µurc•d out how to get those g1 rarres in lo the plane yet? .. Wl'll. the agent for Flying 11ger c:.illed this morning and ... 11cl ir they removed the , •• 11r t·.hc they might be able to t 1 ~• '\ of them standing up in a 1um bo " "THAT'S BETTER TRAN ly· 1ng th em down tran· qu1hzcd. . .the sedation might wc.ir off." If somewhere between the 20th and 40lh floors, your ears have perked up to overhear s uch lntarre conversation delivered in m alter of fact tones. you have ht•••n t•xposed to America's t ·t• "' purlor game: "Towering ' r, ;1 !Jig " also known as 1· •l'\ Jtor elephantiasis. 1\ p<.artncr is required, but tnrN.' or more can play. ·1 he idea as to get a conversa. t1on going as soon as you board the car that will absolutely rivet and startle the other passengers an the c:.ithedral hush that ob- lams in all elevators. Something on the order of: "HARVEY HAS HALTED produtt1on on the Double Bubble H<1by Buggy . . " ·~o ( heard. The pall just k1111c·kl·d the bottom out or the pr jm market. so who's having twin~ anymore" He's cut way 11.1rk 100 on the Snookums ..,nuo1c-Tite Stroller and the rullt•r·bc<iring Cuddly Carriage wath the fringe on top. . . . " It'~ essential that the actors in these turgid high-rise dramas debark from the elevutor before the denouement is reached so all the others are left ~aping with a buzzlang thought for the dav. Groomers Lose Jobs WASfUNOTON (AP> - Special teams no longer will be used in the Air Force to enforce dress codes, Rep. Le5 Aspln, D- Wis . says. He said he was lflformed or the change in a letter from the Air Force. A.s pin had objected to the use or such "groom· troopers." The Air Force said from now on it will consider adherence to dress and •P· pearance standards as an lndivldual or commond reaponslblllty and not the Job of apeclal teams (7Jl~:-) Where are those giraffes go· ing·! HAS THE DECLINING birth rate doomed the baby carnage industry? To achieve this stupefying ef· feet. it is sometimes necessary to alight at an earlier floor than one intended and catch another car. As the name infra d\g im· plies. it is usually beneath another passenger's dignity to cut in with a comment or ques· tion, but there is always the danger or overplaying one's hand and destroying credibility. Keen studeots or the game usually confine their hyperbole between the 20th and 40th noors and find that the \Ip cars in the morning are best, when the ar- riving commuters are sti ll groggy and most gullible. Al mid-morning the final 20-floor run down to the coffee shop can find a recepti ve audience. although fine tuning or the dialogue is required here to in· s ure that enough or the out· rageous message is delivered In the vertical space and time available. For example: "WHEN WE lllT THE reer. that coral tore through 60 root or hull like it was a matchbox. She went down in less than a minute .... " "But fortunately no one drowned, I heard." "No but Gerta ripped up her thigh a bit. and as soon as those s harks s melled that blood, you should have seen the m come streaking.·· Now there's your exit line. when the sharks come streaking In, and it wouldn 't do to be caught on 9 or 10 wailing for a delivery boy with a pile of mail· ing tubes when you should be disappearing through the lobby while the others babble in fright and horror among themselves 10 the coffee shop. POLITICS ANO RELIGION are usually too pro voe all ve for In· nocent byst~nders -even the pltlful drones who r ide the elevators -to ignore, but one might hazard an oc:culonal pre· tenston in the direction or the seat or power without alving the game away to public debaters. To wit: "Whal have you and Laurie· Lee decided to do about that Whlte Houae thing?'' "(don't know. She can't stand Horowtti'a piano playing. Drives her up the waJl, all that heavy left hand. And the last time the draft in the East Room ag. g r :iv:i ted her neuralgia something awful .... " "LINDA·SUE'S BRfNGING A wool shawl. I hope they don't have that damn peanut ice cream again ...... Close encounters on the 33rd floor stir the imagination and gel the creative jwces flowing in the corridors of corporate ennui. Whose soul wouldn't scar from the slave qJ rters or the com· puter bank or the secretarial pool on a day that begins with: "Can you believe Irving at his age chucking it all up for a try· out with the Harlem Globe trotters?" "ER. ER. NO, I WOULD have thought he had certain fun· damentat handicaps there." "Well apparently, it seems the government is .. gelling aft .:r everybody .... Artist Gives Paintings to Girls' Auction Laguna Beach artist Paul Blaine Henrie has donated slx of his serigraphs which be values at more than $2,600 to the Girls Club benefit auction, scheduled Saturday In Laguna Beach. 'T'he colorful artworks include .. View from Hyde Park." "Country French" and a new portrait or Elvis Presley. Another is aptly tilled "The Aue· tioneer.'' In addition to works of art. bidders will find sports equip. menl snd tickets, weekend trips. an evening's use or a bartender. and diMer at home prepared by a Chez Cary chef. Other artists donating their works include Tom Belloni, Ab- by Vaughn. Tom Hicks and Patrick Kelly. Admission Is $1. and the pre· view or auction goods begins at 6 p.m. in the Forum Theater on the Festival oC Arts grounds. Bidding begins at 7 p.m . Rabies Clinic Set In Laguna Niguel /\ tow cost anU·rables vaccina· lion cUn!c tor dogs Is scbeduJed Lonlghl from 7 to 8 :30 lll th e Crown Valley Elementary School, 29292 Crown Volley Parkway. Laguna Niguel. Cost of the vacclnaUons Is $2. PVBLIC NOTICE TM prn1<1pal mtn<tQtr ot lllt loon· O•ted April4 tt/3 OetlOnl\MIC~IC 0.lll'°"De Lo,..11 ~ler ltl!SOLUTIOH • Mlcr...etC.0.&lleetie Euculor ol t~ Wiii Of M A IC I N G A N E GA f I v E PubllU";',f,Or-Coatl O•llV Ptlol. .,.. -· ... nwo Cle<-nl OECl.ARATION RE SANTA ANA. AOrll H . 1 JOH:l•H R. DAVIS RIVER SI~ ~1110 PROVIOtNCi •S•l-18 V .. Ha,.., 9IW. SM. JU FOR NOTICE THEREOF C..I• MeM, CAml' A lttE$0LUTI~ OF THIE SOARDS PUBLIC NOTICE At~....,,.. Eaeutw OF DlllECTOllS 0, COUNTY Publl"*I Or-C:O.tl 0.1ly Pllo4. SANITATIOtl DISTRICTS FICTITIOUS aUSINESS A1><1t II. 2S. _, L •. "" HOS4Al'l0t NAME STATEMENT ISC).7f DFOllANOECOUNTY, The 1011ow11wa persons •rt oo1no CAUfOllNIA DW11M\U\ PUBLIC NOTICE MAttlNOANEOATIVI! S M CO ,990t OiffslOt O.iw. H~· i------------DaQ.AltATIOlll 11"9-llHCI>. CA-llE SAlfTAAlllA lllYl!ll SrpttOH Heml•I• 8. Mtrot•A. '901 Cllltsioo ANO r11ov1011i10 FOii HOTICtE Or1~.Hu(ll•nQlon8H<l\.CA- TllllltlOf' Bh•••I 9 Mtroll•. 190t Olfhlellt TM ~ ol °'-'°'' ol Coune'r Or Ive. H\>lllinqton Be.tel\, CA n .... S.nlUllOn Ohl<kU Not. ) •net • ot Tiii• ~~ ,, cond\Kt"' DY 611 II\· Or•l\M OlllMY. C.tllOrl\I•, dMOU•I 0 0 H E R E II Y It £ ~ 0 l V E , Hemlata B Mtrolla OETf!ltMINE AHOOROf!R· Tiii< u.rt"<M"I w•s 111.0 wllft IN S.<tlOfl , Th•I '"" P<Oi.tl UWIU,... County c1 ... ot O••nQe County Oft 1119 wlll<h lf\IS Cleltrm1MUon ,, rn•ot •P<ll 20 1978. I\ cleS<r I bed .S loltow' f~ t UNTA ANA RIVER SIPHOlf Publl\~ OrM>Qe Coesl 0.Hy Piiot. Se<ll., J. Thal, WhertQ, M l••litl APfll 7S. ,.,_.y 2. '· 16. 1'7t SluOY. wllld1 ~Id '1..0V I\ tllMMCI 1S•~11 t>er•lo •s ElltllDtl .. A .. , of Ille envl,,.... men••t efle<I• Of ~o p.ofe<t n•• Dten \lncletl•ken ....S cornpltltcl Dv tne O•t- l'ICTl11CWS IWSllfUI .. .,.... STATlMIENT Tlle lollOW'nQ -ton '' Cloffl9 M l· MSSI\ CASA PUWA APTS. 102 14111 SI , Hullll11QI011 lle«ll, CA. Ster11no ,...,111~. 3t3 Htmllton, Cott• Mew. CA n.17 Thi> Du.,,..., I• ~le<I Dy"" Ir>· Ol1110u•• 51e<ll"9 P!>llllOS Tiii$ \l•I-W .. 111«1 Will\ l"9 Courl I Y C ltr • Of 0. "'99 C.oUlll y Oft """" JO 1971 "1116 P\IDllStwd 0<"1'QI! Coclll Otlly P1IOI Apfll •.II. II, 7S, 1971 lrl< I'!.. •no ti. retuns 11\efeor 11••• ---,,.,..,,.,,..-~-,.-~-.,--,,...--·-·---------1_1_0_1e bHn revl-bv IMw lloarcb. •nd l'ICTITIOOS a\151Nl!S5 S.ClhMI J. Thal lor lhlt loll-1"9 ,.. NAME STATEMENT PUBUC NOTICE a'>O<ls. •I 1\11..-eDv IO<Jl'ld 1'\tt ~ PfO-Tiie loll-Ing pe"°"' •rt c!Ol"9 -------------iect will nol IMlve a tlQnfllont 111ec1 p.,'""'" ,.,. on lhe 1nvlr_.,r WARREN, McVEIGH. GRll'FIN l•l II l\l,..lln<onllil<I wllhenvlron & SAVAGE. 200 Newporl Cenlu menl•I 0•11n• •no -Is'""' Nv• -n Orlw, N•WJIO<t BNdl. CA 9?'60 ~led Dv ti.. community wttere 111t O•••O Werr1>n. SI 01a1>10 View pro)t<I I\ to~ locatf!O Orlve, OrntO.a. CA IDI II -not .... t.. S\llKt•nll-4 Oonn p M<V••Gh, JIO l•rkln afld Clern-tt.ole .. MllHll< elle<I. SlrHI, s,,,. l'r....CIM:o. CA l<I ti wlll nol ...O.t.,.tl•llY .. IKI a Clyoe c Orlllln. 19347 Sterr• ,.,.. 0< eno...,.., ""cesol .,.1"'4110t Olul• Ro.o, 1rv1...,, CA"2tM R·t'11t SU,EAIOA COUaT OF THE STATE Off CALIFORNIA 1'011 THE COUNTY DI' OAANOE .... A ... 1$4 NOTICE OF Nl!AlllNG OF PETITION fOfl AUT"OlllTY TO ENTEll INTO A LEASE. EU•I• or NORVAL CR •t G Oeuased PuDll1hed OrMIQlt C..sl 0.1ly PllOl. Aprll 2S. 1'178 PUBLIC NOTICE flc:Tmous •USINl!SS HAMIE STATt:MENT Tno tollowlng P"•M><I "' Oo1nq "-'>lnen~. 8 •M F PHARMACY, U19 E W..lelle Aw~ ...-m. CA JfMU J . Brth•ny, Jr , 1131 u.r-10 A ..... Cost•~. Cit ~:i. Th" ......... " <-l>J -· INll""*"el J.,.,..J 11<-..y,Jr Tiii• , .. ,_, w .. •••eo w1111 ~ eo.;nty Cttr11 ol 0r""91 County on Mfr'"~. 197' F'11n PubllJ.lltd Oranvt C08M 0.1ty Pilot ""'" •· 11. 1', u, me PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSINl!SS N4VOIE STATEMENT The toll-lnQ poeuon "OO<nq Du" nen •> THE 'STEI N GROUP 1180 'Sl!Vll6'• Blv<l • t tv•nt. C> <rJl 14 Oavlo f'rMlktyn Stein q Ugunot~. LIQ\lnl BMCfl. CA 91/St Tiii' DvSlneu •• <orctucled Dy '" '" dlvld\ial D•v.O I' Stem This ,, .. .,.._, was filed w1111 11\e ColMll• Ct-ol Drano-Covnly on Aprll II, 1'111. l'ttn:re PuDll•h«I Or-<:.oasl 0.lly Piiot, Aprll 18. 75, Mey 7. 9, 1971 plant,<>< ""Dit .. Of wtll •~<let Kenne!fl J S..v•,.. 11001 Vltlor IOI II does nol c.u• 1..C..tanll•I I~ Strttt, Torr•10. CA 90503 NOTICE IS HEREBV (;IYEN t1'•1f------------1~1· tfrfenrn<t witft thr mowment ol any Tht\ bus·ne~' ·~ <-onovctf'd bY • EDOAR A NATHAN, he• ltlf'o ht'rf1n • pellllon IOI AUlhOrll'I to .nlfr lr\IO. PUBLIC NOTICE rH•O•nt or ""9r•torr -or w110llle QeM••PP¥1,..rS/lip \Pl<t.. Ct't<le C. ~lfflrt L•,..w, r-et9"fte• ta wf'Mch '' m~ tor (------------ It I ti 0oes 1\1)( l:lr9t<h any l>UOll•l'led Thlt \lal-t w"' •1100 will\ ,,.. n•llonar. •Lele<>< loal-ara< relel· Counlv Cieri< or 0«1n~ Counlv °" 1(1910 '°"" WMI• Ot 1111•• c.or11ro1 Apt ti 20, H78 Ill II will -re.ult rn A wl»tenl1•I Fttnt1 Oetrlmer>tel •llt<I 0" ••f or ••I•• Publ·'~ Or.anc;,t co .. 1 O•llV Pllol au•llly. or°"~ no1w level< lor Ae><•l 1S. Mt•?.•. i.. 1.ie ..O(olr>onq .,.as 1\116 18 (QI ti-., NII mvolw IM poulDUolY ··------------! ol c.on1.,.,,1,..1u>q • PuDll< wartr •UPolr >Y>lem .,.. Mlwrwly •lle<l•rlQ Qround PUBLIC NOTICE ""'"'' ""1'<\11 .... -111•1 ..... ,,,,.. enO ot.ac• ol twMln\I ,,,,. ·~m~ ,.., r>ttr> ~• Ill' ,,,.v I. 1q19 "' 'I 00 4 m ,,. t~ t 9U•"oom D4 OeP>trt,_.,t No l of ~·d court •« 100 Ctv•c Cfont•r Drive we,1. '" t"~ C..••T ot S•nt• An• C.lllOfr"t• O•tfd All'•• •A •08 WILLIAM IE '51 JOHN co .... cy Clffl< wa-. ------------l FtSHEllANOWALL 1111 11 COUid riot CMl\e ~l•"'lfl FICTITIOUS BUSINESS .... WtttOI~ el.,.., 1100011\Q, *<"O'lon °' \111,.tlon NAME STATEMENT ...... ,v HIM•. CA'°71 I Ii) II cOIJld nol H~ -··or The IOllOW11>9 lie''°"'••• Oo1nq Ttl; UUl~S4J "'"''"r .. 10 mat<>< Qe<>IOQI< ,..,.,.,, Du>IMU ., A ...... ,. ler: """'-111 It h not '"•IV 10 Qener•1e THE GREEN GROCER. 040 PuOll~ OranQ!' Co.tst Oit1lv Pilot, 9,_,,, Harn II Ion, Hunt1nq1on fkoac11, CA 92-1 •• ..... ~· 1 l•lt 54<11 .. 4. ~I !ht s.<re1arr Dt, •nd Oennl\ J•rnu CampDtll. 2813 Ae>r.t •. u -... ~v · II llereDy autllorltt!d ....S lnslruci.d to Mend01• =O,CD<t.tMu.l.CA92U1> •. __________ u_•7_1_1 Ille a ortllleel <OPY ol lf\11 rttot\lllon W•rn• Harold Hnwn. ll'Oo Pm• end o1111e alorewld lnlllal Shldy at t,.. SI , WHlrnlmt•r. CA 926Sl Olslrl<lt' oltKt to be •••lt•Dlt tor Thi\ Du>'""" •• conductNI by d PUBLIC NOTICE p\IDllc 1n>pe<llon •n<I 'OllYlllQ. Q9(1tr•I partner~1p. FICTITIOUS •USINISS l'ICTITIOUS aUSINllSS NAME STATEMENT The fotio.1nq per\O<I\ •re dOtllQ OU\l""\S •S JEREM\""S HAIR f'ASHt~S 1110 Broo!mu<,t. Four1lt1n Valtev. CA .,,,,. ltRoy t:I c..mooeu. qsr• Rob4r> An . Foun1 ... n V•llf>Y, CA 91108 M••Y E C....OC>ell • .su llolhn ave . l'-leln Valley, CA 92lot Thlt OV.1MU 15 C-..Clild br .,. m dlvlowl U Roy R, CtlnpDell TlllS ,, .. _ wn fltect w11h the Cou'llV C•k of <><•119t CoUllly on Aprof t , 1971. P'tt2SSS Publlll\tcl Or,.nqe Co.a\I O••IY P•IOI Ae>rll 11. ti. H. M.aV1. 1'18 IJlllJ.78 --·----------· PUBLIC NOTICE l!l(HlllT A Oenni<Jerrws CdmOC-tr NAME STATEMENT INITIAL ST UOY Thi\ \lflemenl ... , Ill!() "'''h .,,. T "~ tollowlng p<tr>On$ ... dotnQ FICTITIOUS •U51NE'5S EVAlUATtONOF Co.,nly Cler~ ol O••npe Counly on ou"n~u •-' NAME STATEMENT ENlllRONMENTALIMPAClS APrtl 20, 19711. t:IECREATION USA. 11sn o........ Tiie 1011-•"9 per50n IS Oolng Du>• Tiii• tor"' thfll bl COMPieted 10 FO'J>Ot oort RO • l~ Al-~. CA '°720 IW\\ n . cotnply wllll Iha Guldtllnet PUOll>MC!Or-Co.att 0•11• P1IOI CllMI~• L C.rnoto.11 J r . 11~77 THE wooo SHAPER FINl. 1rnpl1rnenllnQlhtCllilorlllaEnv"on• AP<llU,Mllv7.~.l•."78 O•vtnoort RO , Lo• Alam1101. CA FURNITURE ANO CABINETRY. rntnUI O\lelllp Act ol 1910 At1----------->S86_l-'-!I 00120 J506 W RoOerH Or., SM\la Ane, CA Amended 9nd .. .aoote<1 DV the COun-A~ t.. c:amocie11, 11Sn Davel\-'170. Ir S.nll•llon O.•lfl<h N01 t, 1. 3 S. • PUBLIC NOTIC F. porl llO , LO\ Al.,,,.I°'-CA ~no V¥d tleec-we1i.e 111. 3~ w 1 Ind 11 Of 0r•"91 Counlp, GA1llorn1•, T hll Du\IM>S I\ <ono.Kl•d Dy '" R-<1$ Or •• s.nta ANI, CA '1100 daltO J•n-y I?, "" QtMr•I J>drlne'Slllp. I Ill\ l>INM'> ,, <4nOIKleO by •" In Tll)e •1>11 lOC•lk>rl ol Pro/Kl S.nll• flCTITIOUS •USINIES.S Clltrle L ~·Jr 01vlcl\lfl I 01 I kt ~ • r.-1 A RI NAME STATEMENT ...., 8 W I ~.~n' , -· , -· • na ... r Tiie lollowlnQ ~Min .. OOI~ Duso-Thi\ ... .-wn lllto .. 11 .. '"' v .. u • fllau II ~O.~rlotlon of PnllKI Col\tlruc:llon Miu• .... Co11nr t c1-of 0r""91' Counry °" c:!:, '~~::-:: O,"!n:"°eo:~~' '~~ Of • n·· ,.._aero" ,,.. '-nre ""' p R 0 F E s 5 I 0 ... A l ""'" '· l'7I. _,.. Aptll •• 1'71. 111 1,.., oeo •Dov• Ptclllc Co•tl PERl'0RMANCEMOOELS,l,070San PuDllsNOOr.,.CNttD.ttlyPilOI. ~1 HIQ+.wey ~·~J..1 • Unll 8, f.'ounl.itl Vtlley Aorll 11, 18. U. ~I t. 1•1• Pul>h\hfd Or-(.OHi 0.•ly Pilc11. <iUIOEllNES "'" • .,_ tM-11 Apr1l ll, 18, 7S. Mey 2. 1'11 oo .. Ille pr_..i tc:11¥11Y cwellly •s John S.muel Pettu\. 11010 S.r> a IHOteU n Otll""O 111 Se<llon 71>' Mfl"> SI . Ul\ll 8, "--lfln V.ile•. YH. CA.'27ot 1 Ooo the ot'OrKI -lllY as Tnl\ °"'Int" IS concllKMd .,., ~ II\. •. MlnhlMl.i CS.cllon SI No OMO ... I flCTITIOUS •ustNEH II. E"'trllt'lO ISe<ll"" IJI l>lo. Jollrl s.n,.,.1 """"' NAME STATIEMIENT l'ICTITIOUS aUSIHEU 1»4-71 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ( A ltt!IDillly or ""°'"'"9 1lucty Tl\15 , .. ._nt was filed wllll Ille The loll-1119 persona •rt OOlno NAME STATEMENT ISectlon JH No G11<111tr C•-ot Orer191 Co\11\ly on D\15lneu u . T,,.. ,.,.,_,"9 ~-It -roo Dusi d. GAleQO<ic.llY tJl~pursuantto -«hlO.ltll. FRf!EMANIM<CUE PUllllC ~··•~ Article. of \tit SIAlt• ~IOtllnH IS.<· l'ft04 RELATIONS. fl001 S..)'111r-Clrctt, K c ELECTRONIC co .. 1560 E lion 421 l>lo. Pvb41tlled OrMQll Coesl 0.lly PllOt, Suit• C·J, Irvine, CA '1714 Edlnqer A~ .... C .. Senl• AM C~ •· Involves tnottllr '9tft<Y .wllkh Al>fll 4, 11. ti. U, 1t71 Oouolu L. FruM•tl, 15401 9110S ~l1N1011111n rrw I-ecllMY (Section -----------:'.::2"-:.:..:..'8~1 O..rllourQ.lrvine,CA'l171• K .. onq c11ue Clltuno, 81•6•. ~ Oenlei McOle, 1411 ~ Bty Cir· Belto•d Ave. I.Ix Anoe~. CA '1000 111 ye, !\al bMfl <IW<kecl tor a,,., ol PUBLIC NOTICE eta. H"nllnoton 9ffch. c.co "It.I& Ttil\ Du\l,...s ts conducted Dr •n Ille •bow. Ml Eh..,lrontntfllal •-• • Tiiis b\lslnes> 1 s u1n<lu< 1.0 llY • lnctlvtdu41. AtMumtnllEn•lron""ntel lmPt<I lfATIEMlNTOf' AllA•DONMIENT Qt""'r.al e>art1'er>llto KC. ClleunQ , Report or ~ti.-. Oecrtrallon -°"US« OP OouQltl L Fr..,,,.,. ,T111t \t.renwr>r wd\• llttd wlll\ Ille not Dot p,.._.a, Gamplf'te -<trllfy FICTITIOUS eUSIHl!SS HAMIE fl>lt slal<lmenl "'"' lllf!O will\ 11\e CounlV C.19'k ol Oranqt Covnty or E•hlDll A '" set lorth 1n <iu1dellnH Tiie oer-'""' """' ei.e.. ootno Covnlv Ct••• 01 Or•noe County on Aprll •, 1978. Manual 1 Duslneu es MMm Me<llh•, TOOi -M.trch lO. 1m. ,~ II there ts no •fflrrnallv~ .e<llon to En9lneorlno. • PMtnersr.p, al IU)l Item J •-· ~OMPl•l• I"' toll-•nq, .:.omputor '51~ HuntlnQion Be.ell J. lnlll .. ""'111 ~rtt Calllornl• tlfM~. ·-Y •llendon ~ A. e ........ uno Etlvlrorimtnl•I 11Mofl/\tlllell1iow-. SIQnlll<tnce CSHSl<llonJll Th• ll<llllou• b111ln1H name t Wiii trw prOjatt ,..,.. eny •1on111. stal•"'•nl relatlno 10 111e fl<llllO<ls '4tnl ofle<I on Ille an•lronMenl .s per Du•lneu _.,,. Delno M>endofMo "" tM fOll-11\Q !lied OI\ Aprll 1t, 191', Ir> Or..-91 •·"II In con111<1 .,.,,.•nv1ro,,,.....-Govnty, c.111o<n1a TI>e n-•no tel P'•ns --•• ,,.., ,...,. been rnlO.nco _...," ol IN oeMrt1 .oootod Dv IN umrnunn., _,. 1t>e pertNr• of lllt -'"'""'' ..... PfOICKlt .. obeloC.Meo'Ho. ~H.K"'I 0 Oou II ,,..... • Slil>tt.enllM -... • .... ~Mita laN motltl rfoi. .-.11< .tl«l7 Ho HuntlnglOft Beecll Cellfwnia t . Wiii It ,...._,,.,., eltect •rare R.-rt a. 8-r • 0t el\CMlft991'W -.<!ft ol ""'""' oir ,,.,., ..........,..,.,,., t..tne 1>19111. O< Nltli.I ol wch a -lei t No Hlln41nQlel\ llNdl Qlllfornle 0 Oon II ClliU tub•t•rill•I '" • FM6U terttrence willl !flt mo..,.,...,t of ""' P11blls'*! Oren<Jt Coast DAiiy PllOI retlelent « ""9f•IOIY 11>11"" wllolllt A-II• II It. u ,,,. 1zw.7i ICl9<1 .. ? HO. ~ • • • t . Oo.s ti Dt?CKll _..V PllDUl!lld M tlonel, \lele 0t l~AI st_..,,, rol•ll"ll PUBUC NOTICE to IOlld waste« llllff COl\ln>l P No 1------------ 1. Wiii ti ,.,.,11 In • wt>olanllal "CTITIOUS •U51NESS O.trlmentll •llttl on air 0( ••t•r NAMI STATIMIHT -lllV, orol\ ernOlenl noi• I..,.., tor Tiie 10110Wl119 ,.,_,, .,. Oo1119 tdjOll'ltlQ _,,No INJlneu •• 1''211' P\lblls~ 0t.lll91' Coa\I Dally Pltol . PuDllllled OrM\9' COUI Delly Piiot, April t 1. 18. 7S. M.aY 2. 1•11 Aprll •, ti, II, H. 1n11 tJ:lt.18 11'3 71 ,_ ___________ _ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ,,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE II Ooellll-v•lflll-lllltllyol AMERICAN MORTGAGE ------------l·------------con1arnlN1lnQ • PUllll< Waltf ·~•Y INSURANCE AOENCY. uo ~; p•-• 6'. NOTICE "'~11ouseU11MDS IYll•m or ..,_.,, .tf11Cll!19 o•_,., C.lll•t °''"" •JOO. """'*1 llHch. \JOLI\.. NAMll ST.\TIMl!lfT water? HO. CA. tlMO. Tiie tollowl119 per'llOI\ It delnQ 11. Could II ~ '°*'~I .. lloM-AMElllCAH HOME MOttTGAGE FICTITIOUt eUllMUI llu\lnet\ et: •no.•roslol\orllllellOft?No CORrORATION, • C•lllOtl\I• NAMlllTA'tlMaNT Wf.STEltH LANO .11i.o CATTLE I. Olvld II ttq)Otof people or ttnK· cOtPOtatlOI\, 1)0 New-I Ceflltf The IOllOwlflt --Is Ollll\I Ml. COMPANY: AMllUC.4N LANO ANO lWft IOINl/or flOIOOk ,..,.,.,.,No. Or Ive, e tOO. Newport 9eac11, CA. MU •11 CATTl.I! c;oMrANY, 31t flllrd St •• j, hltllk•lytolllfl'retegrowth?No t'JttO. MISSION HULL CLEANING, Hlil!llnotOllllM<h.CA'2Me 4 •...... ,.. •• no Monlll<Alr>t ·-·al This buslMH l\ <ondll<IH as • t53't1 PCKlllu. Mh1alOI\ Vtalo. CA .,.,s Cllerl•• WOodrow Siio••· 21••t Ml tor111 In lllt<'ll ). • ll\f'oUQll I. • ~<><PM•tlon. Oevld $c;Oll Gr'tU.I, 2'* Vle S.., Pac Ill( Co•\I H•Y • Hul\ll111110n Neo•llv• 0.Clorellel\ 111111 DI P<• AMIElllCAN HOME Juan. MIUIOI\ Viejo, CA ml$ llHtll, CA,,.. tHred fl\ a««lNnea wltll llt'lllllll C oH MORTOAGECO~POltAflOH Thi\ llUlllneH 11-..<Md Oy ... In Tiii• Mr...-II c~Md DY .., tl\OWI\ In lllt ••Ou10ef111et IMC>ll,...nl OEOftOI! M BUllKI!, Olvldll•I ln<ll•l-t. I~ Ille C.lllornle 111\vlr"""''"l•I Viet Prwtldlnt Dew ~I a.rt.t WoodrOw Sllow\ 0...lllyA<ttftmM~... Thlt \Ill-I Wft fHW •1111 tfta Thia ............. -lllef wlltl .,_ fllla , .. ,.,_..•as llled wltll l'1f Data t/11111 cou111y Cler1l Of OtMOa CO\lflly on C-ly Cl.,_ 01 Or•llOt C-ty Ofl Couflt'( Clan ol Of..,.. Coul\ty on Ev_*_ II\' .AMrcl! ao, 1'1'. 4Pfll ._ m,, ~" », ma. °"'"'' M. lt•ld "'"" ""*I """' Pvllll .... Or .. C...I 0..IY Pltv4 ~ltlled Or...-CO.ft O.lty Piiot, PUOllllhM Or .... 0Mfl &»II'( ....... l'WlltllM Or-COlil 0.llr PllOI. ._,II U , 1'11 111>1' "-'11 4,11, 11, U, tt7t Utwt Apt II 11, It, U, May J, I.rt ,,.._,. Ajlflt 4, 11, 1•. U, 1'1' t2't-ll 7 " .. Ti.dey, AptU 26. 178 --htott. I • • • I 000 2999 ~entals . • • . . . . 30()().499 Bvt ntu. lrw•1t11111ftt & flnonclof • • , . . . SOOO.. SCM9 The 81 .... t Marketplace on the Oranp Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADs' Employment & Preparation ••••.. 7000.7199 Announct~nh. '-rionols, lost & Found • SOSO·S.99 S.Vku & lt'PQITT 6000-6099 You Can Sell It, Find It, ( 842 S J One Call Service Trade It With a Want Ad. • 678 -Fast Credit Approval MttchondiM ••.••• 8000-*)99 loots & Marini fqulpCMnt ...•..•• 900().9099 AutomoblJes & other Transportation .•.. 9100..9999 .......... •-•••• .. •• .. •••••••••• House-t For S. Ho.Ms for S. He.Mt,_, Sett ........ For S. ......._Per Sale ..._...For 591 ....._,For~ I .._..'-5* ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002...., .. 1002 GeMNI IOOZ GeMu.t IOOJ eeMr<lll . 1002 Ge•ral IOOZ Gt••.. 1002 Giew• 1002 •••·······•·····••····• ....................... ··•••····•··••·····••·· ..................................................................... . EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ·····•·••········•·•··· ...................... . JASMIMI CltEa Professionally decoral· ed. Beautiful two story- PIMMSULA". Lar1• I bdrm.. 4 bath home. st.eps'to bearh; 2 bdrms. could be locked olf & rented as 4 bdrm. 3 Car 1an1e. Pnced at $260,000 673-3663 6'.2·2253 Eves ,~COATS & WALLACl ~REAL ESTATE . INC. n I Ill -'11 Y OWNI fl 1'0Ml'l\NY ~f RVI NG IHI ~llUIH I Uibl ARE i\ SINCI l'Jt,1 Wlher'• Notlc•: cathedral ceilings. 3 bedroom, family room & All real estate advertised 21;1 baths. Lowest price ln this newspaper 1s sub· llstOO in J asmine Creek. Jecl lo the Federal Fair Outstanding value. For Housing Act of 1968 more information, call which makes il 1lleg:il to COLEOFMIWPORT (; · .associated SLASHED A•AIM -_su.eoo:-Owner has trimmed price again on lovely 2 bdrm lrvine home. Reduced to only $78,000. Call 552·6'61 "DIFRAl!HT-OlfFHEHT" -Would you believe 2 double ovens? Plus air conditioner. Lots of upgrades! ! 4 Bdrm. 2112 bath home on corner lot in a great location in North Tustin. Priced at Sp.9,950. C.., 546-4141 11 II '1 k ( N ' ll f A ' • ' , R S l ul Vlf tl.,•b.iu ' ec., ad":J'rtise "any pre REALTORS ferlhct>, hm1lalion. or 67S.SSl I PYRAMID YOUR EqumEs dlscnnunation based on ---------1 race, color. religion. sex. or national ongUl, or an rntention to make any such preference, lim1lll· lion, or discnmtnat1on." This newsp:ipcr wlll 11ot k.now1n~ly accept any advertising for real estate which Is In viola· lion of lhe law. MEWPOltT llACH Tak.Joi your first step is FOR UNDER often the bardesl If ... O,OOO? you're ready to move up -or start your investmenl with Ulis 2 BR mobile program, but ha ve home. you can live in De become confused with all Aliza. Newport's most the aspects of today's Servirl9 cosfo· ~l'sa'1r''vin£:'· H unt111gtun 00ach N(•wpurt Beach exclusive park complete market. then come to lbe wJpools, jacuuis. & boat expert al QUAIL PLACE G.ner• I 002 G..,... I 002 slips PROPERT£ES, INC ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTCLIFf You ,wiU get soUd. pro· 3 la + IOHUS RM OISIGMID ---------1 Almost 3000 sq. fl of feasional counseling Jacuui immaculate FOR EXICUTIYE fanuly living 4 BR & ab o u l ex c h a n g . Fant.aati. CaU 8 AM t . U"I........_ ERRORS: Adnrtis~~·• shaMld deda their ods daily -,..,ort ~ ron 1,....clately. TIM DA.IL Y PSLOT oss ..... s llcit.IDty fer the fint 1..- cornd iw'..et"'tion only. den, 2 fireplaces & a ing/1nstallmenl sales p c. 0 Y ,.... super yard. Pricedtosell and/or investing toward lO M.968-l37l. This beautifully up· alSJ.85.000. y~ <!OLDEN YEARS (~l''RJfi1ijl!'.lll1! iraded Buccola Home! IALIOAISLAMD Wltbhieb rutureretums. . -A.-... --~-~~ Spacious Living Room 206GAIMET Wctravelt for you. A pro· Real Estate with b ig Fireplace Two 2 BR income units fessiooal ataff of over 30. Large Master Bedroom. on the West e nd of large enou&h to serve. hilJl>IY upgraded with Balboa Island. J"•l re· small enough to care. Al.AMDOMID IY OUT private eratrance to ..... 752-1920 OFST'"TIOW...a•• garden area . Slump ducal $15.000. s"'1s,too "~. stone planleni highhghl ------lllll'l--1 0 lhe room-backyard Hee~ fOf' ~de 4 ff)UAIL Priced SlOOO's below Mesa Verde Lmng at 1lS ;.~··•:•••••,•,•0••0•2• p• .A.CE marttet!Sellerdesperate Best ' $129.000 <.:all _ I.A to aell this rambling 545.2313 •••••••••••••••••••••••': ·&-g • __ 10,-n1:1tr.M.1 3Bdrm .. and fam. rm. ,,., . ,. • ·. JUSTLISTB>!! -:;boa Island Ruh. HAMDVMAM'S =~~~~~!~n~ ~a~1t:J~tiHtU11 NEWPORT HTS. "'""""""'"..-...'" >' DREAM r POOL Do . ~; l;i:\ii,'J; Triplex. two 2 bdrm. un 673-8700 Garage fully fnsulaled or a ! n t pass up t his opportunity 1L"I + penthouse with I Built in work bench. Make an offer today! REAL ESTATE t>drm Large swimming Large lot with RV ac· Hurry' Call847 6010 pool & 6 car parking NEWPORT HTS cess. Newly painted, CJl'fN••'o.1f\1v.,·",~'" 1 SALES Prited nl Sl89.500 . in 3 BR bome ln xlnl area. paneling and wallpaper [9 I Befo re you make u dudingland! Hrdwd floor s, w /w Four Bedroom Home in 1111.lil~il! move- 67J-Jfi6J ~·2253 Eves ~~:~.·gRe~!~~/:::~rt! ~::aal ~~~t~0rT~~.~ . ,., Jifidjf f:t~~ ad~~l: ':te ~:r:c~ .. ~ aS1oc1a·1ed • · lBROK Elf s'-A EA( TOAS "'lQg W 'l elboo •71 Jul & nistuccoed. Ace & rm S46-ZU3 • Propen1es for boat & trlr + double c•11·' ~ • ' ' •• ., • ' 751·3191 Costa Mesa gara~e. Sl09.500 [a I i Ii I MESA VERDE 556-2660 Newport Beach JAC6~~~~LTY ~, 11@jtit Super ~~~T~is one ·~~~~~~TIES bas it all! Pool, spa, 1--------- creeks, tennis courts & It's only 1 yr. old. Pnme Costa Mesa for only 92.~. CALL 751·3191. C:SELECT I PROPERTIES HB.P! A CONVENICNT ~PPINC ANO S£Wl"IG GIJ•OE f"Oll lHE Siii< & FIND" BASKETS Owner has painted in & out , Installed NEW carpeting lhru-OUl AND reduced to $169.~! ! Va· cant 4 Bdrm ·'SOL VlST A" in nice area• As· swne low interest VA. s ub mil your offer' 531-SBOOopeneves. GAL ON THE GO. A Ple~ure! ... , u Metworil ·. CUME 'DI LA CRIME Incredibly beautiful 2 bedroom and den Irvine townhous e on lhe Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course. End unit affords privacy and a view of the golf course and lake. This is a San Joaquin model that has bee n upgraded and air conditioned. The price is a reasonable $124,950. and this is the creme 'de la creme. U~l()Uf ti()Mf§ REAL TORS·. 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway Corona del Mar c1lso 1n M 1•SJ V1·11I•• ,1f r)45 5990 GeMf'Cll I 002 GftWf'el I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• UMIYERSITY $1800 TOTAL CASH PAUIAIGAIM ALL THAT I s Lvly Oxford model w /ap NEEDED' to buy th as prox. 2,200 sq ft of Ii ving beauWul 3 bdrm home 1r luxury Incl bonus rm for you qualify Localed pnvacy plus 3 bdrms & near mar 1 n a a n d din rm. Abundance or beaches. Boat access storage. Call now Lo see • 119.900 Take advantage ~9491 For more 1nformat1on (~IWnl@iji§j c~~l.~167 ' '• '" aou:O&;~,too [ ~ U~l!Jft It's low down and dirty' Looks lake a home where the buffalo roamed! A handyman's pa radise' PaJJll Profit! Sprawling 3Bdrms .. on large lot' Shovel'em out, Paml'um up and you 've ~ot yoursell an estate' Pnce d1rt chea~h1ch seemi. only right! Call Now' 847·6010 l"jl. I• OCEAN VIEW ,4 PLO SIX UNITS ln xlnt rental location in N. Costa Mesa. Btfl layout with large pool a:. added attraction Close to ma1or shopping & bw. ilnes. :>40·8944 BEACH JOGGER Jog to sand & surf from Ul1s gorgeous Cahforn1a Classic ! St e ps from prime cul-de-sac location to parks & schools. Large living room Frple Chef's kitchen & dm1n!( OCEAN VIEW-OHi OF A KIND This is the finest custom built home w e hav e see n 1n Corona del Mar . . . there is nothing else like i.t ! An xlnt family home as well as great for entertaining. Large twin kitchen. accommodates the big, raised formal dining rm. & very large, sunken family rm. Modern elevator services 3 car garage & two upper living levels. $435,000 759-0811 Fiuf 61ut Glut We.at&'Ut 13Ug. ~~:'! •......... ~!~~,~~ .......... ~!~~ \\l ESI YY \: TAYLOR CO. tn:'.'\l.TOHS .. 1111 ,. l!l·H i IHT IUY IM THI l&.UFFS Lovely greenbelt view from this elegant condo with 2 master suites. dining room. 2112 baths & secluded fa m rm with frplc & solid oak paneling. Air Cond. $170,000 incl. the land~ WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., UALTORS 21 I I San Joo.la Hiiis load MEWPOIT CEMTH. M.I. 64Mtl 0 1002 G•"r" 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMYESTMEMT 3 Year old Huntington Beach fourplex in s uper rental location. close to lhe beach Owner's unit 1s separate. with 3 bdrms . 2 baths & 2 frplcs Other units are 3. 2. I ·bdrms. $225.000 'h ux~ Chartie Brown and his new partner Bob Bentson have an empty desk in the office. Glvt.• ~ a call & let ·'I talk about the advantages ur sdling real estate with IEMTSOH & IROWM 1401 DOVE ST. SWte 220 N'pt. Beach IW.TC>aS 133-9781 NEWPORT IEACH NEAR WATER Lge 2 bd. 2 ba units w /beautiful interiors Very atlracl1 ve pecky cedar thruo ul Low maintenance redwood exterior. S21S.000 646-7711 area. 3 VERY spa cious • .....,. ..,....,_-. bedrooms . PLUS den• •---------Clean as a whistle! Just ~n-noo reduced $5000! Anx· MO~AUFYIMG! lous-<:&llfast-752·1700 Easts 1de 4Br .• with ,,,..,, .,. · • '•' "' · wagon wheel charm. C C R R W H A T S 0 H L 8 C A T S K E S E B E C R U S H B L I E B R 0 C E T B R W W E L L S A A E B A S K L R W W L P A B 0 E 0 S W K I RC K.O £ I I C U E I W H 0 S T S S E R E T S R C R W l HS SA I 0 A H 1-K EH SUK EI W S E U A N S B E N E E E 0 S E R R 0 H E B S E S R H N N S 0 H R 0 E 0 H N H L T K I E A B I B T B B W B 0 A E 0 B A I E T P C R A A A A I A E M W N I E 0 P E T R N S B S S S S N P 0 I I T R H N A E H K C K K K K K E E 0 C S H L 0 S E L E A E E E E E R E N 0 K S B 0 R L A T B T T C T 0 T T G T H E A E C E S P H Q N R I S E R N N A P R B S The ras~t draw in the (3WOHJ§i$i§j West a Daily Pilot [~ - . i ~~':1/3~1:~:c°111~:rPJ/. . • tall~. 646+ 7171 Super duplex In exceUent oondilloo. Copper plumb· Ing throughout. Walk to canals. beach and Lido Village. Best duplex buy lo oe Newport Beach. To inspect please ca II 962-T1118. " K€Y Pure pleasu•t-no problem to llP up on y<llJr ww1n& 1Neh1ne. l•P into on sunny d~ys1 II you ,,.sh spice 11 up with n(k rte- on ,oke and pockets Pnnled Pattern 900S Half Site$ 121;. 141;, 161;, 181;, 201;, 22\t. 241; Silt 14\l (bust 31) Ilka 2 318 ,cis 45 1n. Send $1.50 tw eech patWll. AU lSC !of 11(11 ptttenl ftf lnt-dn:l ..... halllillC. S.d ti: IWIM MAITI" Pattern Dept. 442 Daltv Piiot Zlt Wiit 1•11 St., .... '"" IY HO ll. Pn.t UllE. Al). DHSS. DP, SUI 1114 STYU IUMIU. LOOK RICH YOUNG. SMART on a bud&et' Sew new iQft dresst1. toos. skins. pant$ -•11 1n N£W SPRING SUM· MCR PATIERN 1'.ATAlOG free patttrll COilJOll $end 75f ..,,......_ s.N1 ... fl.00 ====1t:= 121-TMftr nu-W $lJI St11ptS ~d ColOI Maas add te•ture lo easy alahan1 II s all knitted 1n 5l11ps- noth1n1 could bt easitfl Use 3 colon ol kn1tt1nr worsted Of yarn remnants. Ii.ls a con trast. crocheted edf'. P1ttern 11 11 eJSY dntthons St.SO IOI mll pattern Add J5c u ch pattern for lust class a1rm11I and h1ndhn& Seftd ID: Nkt lrools Needlecraft Dept. 10S Oallv Pilot ... 16l, 0.d Chtlsta Sii., Ne11 YOI\, IY 10011. ,nlll ll1111t, Mdtat, Zip. httern llumbtr. YAtUl paeMd 1978 NEEDLE· CRAn cataloi Choose from 225 dest&ns.. 3 hee 1nStdt All cratts.i,, Knit. Crochet Send 75t £., lillh 'n' OmllMllts Sl.50 ''"" si.-Otts . s 1.50 Stuff '11' 'uff Quilts Sl.2S Stitch '•' htcll Quilb Sl.2S Croelltl with SQUlfts Sl.00 C.lltt • WerdroM Sl.00 lllftl f1tty Qllilb . Sl.00 ltlppll Cl9Chfl Sl.00 Sew & hit ._. . . $1.ZS ~ ":ol .. : .. l't: .::"= .......... 1.00 IMtllt ClecMt W ... l.00 lastat MIClllM .... 1.00 IMUlt ....., W . ,.. l.00 c..,....'"'.... .. 1.00 Colnplet•i #l4 1.00 urn. 112 1~ Wtfll II ... 15c e, wn ...... 75' lS t.urlS .nc ef II Jffft hp 1lf ~\\~~~ \.. -. . , lnstructloos Hidden worda below lpptlf lorw11d, bllc~ w1N1, up, down or d1'90"1lly Find 1ecn end bo~ tt In :! l.-14N1 ,.llitf Win a.kit A.ti 18'11 W8111Mlbt hmlf11w: A1111 a1tt.M1ke1 • ""ktf 8.U.t1 "' __,IMMI u Qftlltl Ii• Wtefte ... bt S©~4\l~-l/,t,~s· Tliot lnl1iguin9 Word Game witli o Cliudle 14.lle<I "" cu.' •. '°""" 0 ..... ._ .._., ol .... low te-o..l>led worch IMt low o0 lcw"' fov1 1omplo "'°'d' I RY D AT I I I I I I BOXUH I' I I I " s..m1 like o lot of ua wonl . • . . • Ille, liberty ond hoppln.n r--------wllhout too mlldl -. I TUYPIR I ~,.....,, ......... ,..,.;., -,, ...... , -, ~ e c._ ........ (~vt•le qo-.1 • • • • _ • by ltlltllQ lft "'9 MIUlftO _,, ...._..._ _ _._ ....... __.--' vou clrt.loo f.-HP No 3 below I :'~!tt'ttW,~tsmm r r r r I' r I' I • t.f:='· imm '0 I I I I I I I I scaAM-UTS ._ • ..,.."'ca......._ uoo Classified Ad Call Today "' Real Estate 642·5678. 642-5678 DAILY PILOT I YEAR MEW Custom built-3bdrm. 2 bath. family room. fireplace Fully msulal· ed. double gar age Easls1de Costa Mesa. $82.900 ltoy Mccardle 1810 tWwport ll•d. CostoMHa 541.7729 4..pu)( $165,000 Unusual Income Proper ly & Room for additional units Wlth Deluxe Master Swte. Call for Personal ---------Preview. 646-7171 C\f'ft,,•j,e;.n• 'U"'''''"''l'f [elNMI HEB> HS.P? Help yoursell to a Heap1n1 selection or Qualified Hopefuls ln the DAJLY PILOT HELP WANTED ADS MIHl-«AMCH 41R. ftOOL-$66,400 YAMODOWM Ci rcular drive. Large family sized living room. Country kitchen. Dine. Wall of glass view or COY· ered pavtl1on & lush grounds s urrounding H&F freeform pool. Separate wing for hide· away Master Suite & children's quarters 1------~--.. 1 Hurry for this unique A cocord1110 10 C•llfor11I• lluttneu •11d Prole18'ona Code (Sec. I 7900 lo 179301 ell peraon• doing bualnH1 unaer • fkrtttlou1 nem• mu•I 111• • •l•l•ment wltl'I lh• County Clerk e fld l'ltwe II publl1hed lour t i me• In' 11ew1p•per Mtvlng lh• .,., In wlllcll lh• bualnen It ioca1ed. flle tt•t•m•nl It req11lred by lew tnd It 11•c••"">' 111 protecting ro111 lluel11eu flHlle. Mot l ll•t1ll• req111,. ptOOI of n11119 lo Ol)efl ciomflltreltl t«ounlt Tiie OAIL Y PILOT pnlvldH botll llllflt •fld pultllntton -lllqt, W• h•ve •II Ille ""41, .. ,, tor111• •fld 111elntel11 • d•llY .. n le• lo the Or•nt• Cou1111 CounhollM. lnMr \loP lly Ofl • ol our co11ve11le111 offlc•• or flhone tllt Ll!OAL DIPARTMINT MM*21, l•I !112 tor mere fnlorm•IMNI end loml• ban?aln! 963·7881 (')pf N ru >J • I \ t Jr.t ' '1 , "' I ' [eU~llld SELLERS MOVID Desperate for offer • 3 BR. 2 ba .. cuJ de sac. Mesa Verde. IBS.000 A. Johnson Bkr 979·4964 ,.. •• 1/· . \ .. I ""t~ . I ' Businessmen 1 I I '' o u u r f! d n 1 n !I h u .~ttll'.~~ u 11d1•r n . 1''1C·t11 1nu1 ll u11rrtl'H ii "lame uou are required • by low 1 Businru ond ~ Prote:mons C~. Sec ! j 17!Hlfl In 1793111 I<> /Ile a ; i f1c t1trn11s flu1t1nn.1 i I' ,....,amt' Sratf•mtnl and i ha ve 11 publ1ahed /Or i I tour consecutive UX'rk$ i ·W1'7 nt the! DAtl.Y I Pl I.OT t'an help wal/1 I bath Coll tht' t,F.CAl I D 1': I' II f< TM I\ NT o t 6<12·4.1:!1 1':.rt .1.n tor 1 1 turthtr intom1011n n ! __ ..... .... ........ -: 0.t tv fJ J• I It 1fQtlfJ I [®IHllKI OHL Y ONE LEFT Spacious W1lliamshlre beauty with J bdrms. 2 baths. & formal dmmg room Beautiful grounds. Nottung compares w/our low pnce. Ternfic pool, s auna & rec r e.H1on areas. Jus t l a~l ed 646-7711. 31DRM $74,950 YA OR FHA 1 R€ALTORSft NESTIGIOUS Palatial grounds sur round s ingle :.tory 3 bdrm, just redecorated, very top quality. col· orful, 80 x 160' lot in Cameo S h ores a l S228.SOO. Ready to sell! Open Daily al 4S IS Hampden Rd. Bnng of· rers. UMIQUE HOMES 675-6000 All new carpeting' 3 spacious B<trrns. Formal d.uuog room and country lulchen. Covered patio. Immediate occupancy.~~~~~~~~~ lo To qualified VA or FH1\ Buyer' Has RV p a rkin g bp o l l oo' Hurry-<:all now for de· t.atls. 752· 1700 LOXURV TIM.Eva TOWHHOME One o( lhe most beauti.ful townbomes in the area Sunken bving room, with bath. Second level has master suite and family room. Third level has kitchen, dining room. loft and two more bedrooms. 4 IDIM Three pools, clubhouse, etc. etc ... for the Mr. & 21/i IATH Mrs. looklng for the ul· Super attached housing timale in entertaining or In F V. for less than Just plain Uvlng. Call Uus $78.000 PIT1·$468/mo. number for Information. Call BAM lo 10 PM. 54-3-Zll.3 968-3371. Ol'IN Ill O• •I\ II.JN '0~1 lv•(I ' [ .... l'R!'Ji~!!l§ti [•11111 G«Mral I 002 GftWf'9I I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CArTIV A TIMC. Baycrest 4 bedroom home. Warm & inviting fami ly room/kitchen combination with rireplace. Large private yard with covered patio for outdoor entertainment. U77,500. A COUMW.L 1AN111 CO. 644·9080 2111 IAHJOAQUINttlLLaltO . IN~TCIHTU I 1:~, 1ForSclM He>t1>C"•r~Satt •···· ~•h r Sab t"°.:.ur..:>r!..tt 1: ... c,,o, ! ... J ;:.c:_.u~f01"Sc* ~1 /\t I I l:; t~,j ...•.•••.•.••••....•...............•..........•...................... ········•·············· ·•··•••·············•·• ·•·•··•·••••·····•·•··· ..... ~,.,.w. HMMI FwWt c:--.,..._. 1022c.... .. ._. 1022 0...roW 1021w,..INdl 1041 ...... .._. 1o•u.-...-1012 •···············•···•· ••.•..•.•.............. ·•···•··•·••····•··••·· ................................................................................................................... . 1001 G1•rlll IOOZ ER B\JY! Priced re· UDUCB> $1000 duced oo •Br. 2Bll home Lingo Aul&wt OCIAMYllW-STl:PS TO SAND q.ll'f c Lwllu Two a.•u-. w Mita wMi ••••c• ............. .,., ' ........ MW C#pl ..... fw' ... ...,......,..,,,•cn +ll9 *•· ,,.,.,. doon •r•••t to .. .._. dtdr. se.,.. "°"',... .... to .... ....... $215,000. JACUZ.:ZI TIME! TW•.!E*• Corw .. Mar ...... wftt. pool & W.W conldlf' "clt•glllg hr . .._ M4twpori .... to L..g.a IHCe.. Two ........ IM.._ ..... with OM Melt eadl. flricecl low .t SI H.500. OLD CORONA Da Mil Tllis wwll _.talMcl two ._.DOM t.o... + pelt ..... beillg sold by .... ori~ OWHt' ....... of o,,,... sMp ab~-· Cw lff ltt $174,IOO. OCEANFRONT YIUA A la•d•arll 111 La911aa hoch. Thls ipft...._. fl .. ~ hw abomcls in ulq•HHa. dee°""" ad priYDcr. TJtls spac:lom ...... story •Ila Hh a •ClllllClffc mood for grad01111lYillc). St25,000 LA&UMA IEACH CHARMER fw.-......._. I bctttt, wcA to beach. Mule• ,.,..,... Oak floon. fffced ,an1. rertect .... for crifst. writ.r. S ..... , COllple, .......,.. .cl tayOM wlto appreciates LagMH chann. Oalr .$110,000. 644-7020 2123 SAM JOA9UIM HIU.S ROAD NEWPORT IEACH IOJJ Wllft. Wk Way_ p 8c1ous 4 bdrm •. ramaly rm home in original Harbor Vlow with rormal dmtng, pool. jacuzzi AND gorgeous ocean, harbor. Island and night light view. Reduced lo $259,500. Ownr transf'd, 1partlln1 Call~/Altl dean 3 SR. i ba ('OO(jo Frplc. ulll r m . 1ar. carport. lCIWI, PoQI. nr Marina. vu·s. vacant, '19.500. Prio. only. •a4S3. ee1-0.'!84 POOi. DettPtf u1 3 bedroom. 2 beth an qwct cuJ di! sac Ooe ol •everal pool bomoa pnced low at Sl.500. CAl.J.. s:J6.2CIGO. C::SEL.ECT I PROPE RTIES 4M +POOL Lvly private atrium home. well maintained Leas than $135,000 Pre9lip area. Call 8 AM to 10 PM. 968-337 l. ~Walker t lee Real F.st.ate J32Poluetffa South or Hwy. An absolutely charming 2 Bdrm collage wit.b gleaming hardwood noors and TWO separate 2 car garages. Reduced to only $134.500. CaM 644·7211 fOf' detollt "1n HILU. "1n NIGEL UAILL Y f... l11\IL[Y ~. /\~~Ullfl!E5 AS~lJCll\l f ~ FOR SALE BY OWNER ' BR home, l~ 0.. Llv Rm. 2 car gar. re· uonably priced. llUOO 71'~2'40 1 .............. 1040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s&S ReaaJe Speclallsll. 3,• or 5 bdrm models av all. aome w /pool•. ..... Pennlnlrtoo Properties FIRST OFFEIJMG C:-0. .. M• I 022 Coda MeA1 I 024 llACH HOUSI Large 2 bdrm. & den ••••••••••••••••• •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br. 3 Ba, lfe aundeck, 1 home with formal dinJng CottON.A Da MAR New 3 Br, 3ba .• execuUve Y1' ne.w iD rapidlly de· area; cozy frpk .. n\.llny IMCOME bm. Sunken llv rm.. veloplne beach aru. upgrades' Not leased 2 Bdfm. cottage with lwo w /cathedral ceilings. $125.000. 616 20th St. land . xlnt Newport rear units Excellent frpl, lge lam rm. formal _538-__ 11_18 _____ _ netghborbood 1139,500 location. qwet & conve· dining, dream kitchen C f C*5 rtll t l be h & b Lge yard. SUbmit all or 4BR W /POOL . .WI If :a:. si°ss.CX:,c s OP· fers S96.600. Princrpals IY OWHEI lliL TORS 640.00~0 ....._IMS Rm:. .a. 'TY ooly. 642-5548 Aft. 5 """' ~ Lge family rm, Uv rm. TRIPLEX * 494-8057 * E.ASTSIDE·R2 dmrm,2ha. East Costa Mesa. 1 yr $70,000 Pvt cpl 'd patio w llge old; redeveloping area CDM DUPLEX Huge buildable R2 pro· pool. Cstm drps & dee. Spacious 2 BR. 2 Ba. un perty Prime Easts1de. Upgraded. Sll5,000. Pb its w/frplcs. LIVE IN Live m the 3 8R & rent Hurry! 646-7171. ~Bri· 'd D ONE, RENT THE lhe 1 BR lo help w/the ,,.,,,,,,,,.,,,'1"•'''"'· 1 ._... gewater r. Lingo lkAl&tATr EUREKA! I OCIANYIEW Jl'\nd ll ln Ulla 3 BR home wet /bar. court7d w /a bufrleboard fr jaeuul, atone fplc. mat trees fr more. S12A.950 138) -Ourtoo1U119 l...Wnt C•J•• Mwt[ ,. ..... d ..... ~ ............. . lwge lot, foc...t 197,100. SOUTH LAO UNA 499-•~l 497-JHI LAGUNA NlOUEL 495-1720 DANA POINT •93·8812 Mluloll Ylefo I 06 7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltod& lotto. Price M11sl sell. La.Familia .,..... 1044 LA9-1Hdt 1048 3Br, 1~ be. Upgraded .................•••••. ·······················1--S'7S,_.;...800~·-831....;....1328;....;:;:......._~ IN SMOIETIEE!! A super sharp 2 story 3 bedroom home with ramUy room, fireplace ln lhe maater bedroom and in the lMni room. Nicely upgraded and a beaulilul brick patio. Asking SM.500. SWllPIMG VIEW lest "'r .. M.V. BeaatJ!uJ couot.ry setUng La Paz San Lucas model with expansive view of 4br. 2 sty. Red~raled ~ oeean; very qwel & Pr1 ce r e duced t o pnvate. Loads °' ftx·UP $107,900. ~1 Remesa potential yet ext.re.mely Dr. Owner /Bkr. 844 .. 720 comfortable as ts . 21---------.:.... Bdrm. plus large den $121.500. Hewport leocil IO" ().y.() ••••••••••••••••••••••• Large 2 Bdrm .• 2 bath on· DOH"T W ... 11 ly ~ block lo Main "' • Beach. Bright & clean. S89$0. MORIMS REALTY * 494-1057 * OTHERS. $178.000 mtg payments Close to[~ I OpenffouseSUn l·~PM Make 0 r r e r Bk r shopping, churches & ,Jll.il!ilJ CASH 562-0434/836-7624 recreation Jog to the ~£itOAJt beach Really super for l, ~;;::J-~-~-~-~·~·~-~--~~~ For Yow~ RANCH RE.ALT Three Arch Bay. 3br. 2ha the plan ahead mvestor ::: la A Rath! y 9 yr old home. Spec· REALTOR or Realtor Associate. Have need for 1 good ac· live salesperson ROJMcC.-dle 1810 Newport llvd + Jwit plain ruce hvtng. .AnafTION SCO .... R•"'LTY 551·2000 tacular vu, pvt roads, ~!,lfor~ppt.t~s1ee now. IUILDERS& 53•1..•75-33 WOODBRIDGEPLACE beach . security. lo .,.,.:uuse ll won t ast long 1uv"'"'TORS! ... s . I re i maint. carry 2nd. Asking i..-.;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..; ~l72~~ low price of WTSIDE Comly Condo. 3br, 2Y2ba. J:~~Con~r!~~f,:y ~~~ R.'>4,500.499-393J V AUEY 640-9900 IUILDAILE R·l lrg enc Id patio. 2 car gar tached family homes in DELUXE UHITS Costa Me.a 541-7729 ----..................... ~ - Owner bas variance & w/a uto opener, frplc, open. woodsy design. Blk to twn/bcb, Lug Sch ...,_ ---_ plans for duplex behmd blt.ns, upgraded thruout. Just short walk to lake & finest. Super 3 Br -~ immaculate 2 bdrm doll common pool. fn.900, C:::: in Village 01 Wood· owner's unit + 2·2Br un· * JUMIO VA* house. Almost complete· 82.86 Cherrywood Circle. ~;i From Sll5.ooo. its ~ 1 Br unit & lge I work wtlb Orange Co. ly reblt home to live in 1163-8846. By Owner. Prin ---------studio apt. SUper ocean Vets only~ Homes to EASTSIDE $72.000. Super 2 bdrm. 2 bath. Modern h v1ng·d1mng· kitchen combined. Room lo e n large Si ngle garage. Large level lot In best area. while duplex ls under only. GRrrMTDEE!! view. si15.ooo. Forinfocall · construction. New cpt ·--------•I Uftlll %.AHODDCYRLTR VetAgt. $41--0800 •PRJCED REDUCED• raised hearth Crplc. huge Wi'_ .. ___ .. , .. •61 1 2 sty, remodeled. upgrd I H ASSUME LO.AN u~ offered for only -. .,... ~~ exec home. 3 BR 2 Ba . ot. urry! ! 545·9491· Beautiful 2 bdrm, 1 bath $93,900. This large 4 --------• ~~ g:l~~Ln:~~1~J~ {~l\'!1i:JJl,1Jj ~':.· ~~·~~~.e~~ ="!!r~i:,!:si:~~i, CdM $206.950. Brkr. Real F.state take over exist.mg loaA. Owner is anxious!! 759-1288 ---------Super buy. super terms. REHT AL ()It call today for more mfo. M.tGNIACENT OCEAN & CAMYOH VIEW l.AYVIEW Lg 2 br 2 ha mobile home in exclu. BayaJde Vilt Clubhse, pool, Jae., priv. bch. poss boat slip ~7.500. 675-1903673·7848 400L17"~ FOR All l'C~.M;·~~l~l~~u;w~ CHARM l NG 3br, 2ba ,,'5f_ .... -: : _, +guest house Frpl. 2 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! • .:-:----11.. patios, R·2 lot. Pnn only $157,000. Owner. 640-7030. STARTER !IRM~Ci~;ll;M~ 2 miles to the beach. -·-· -----3Bdnm .. completely re· __ •44_71_m_.54_6··--1 Hottest home buy today. Nestled on quiet, pnvate street in the hills of Laguna Beach. 2 Levels · 3 bedrooms . 3 baths · 2 kitchens. Lower level may be rented. Only $185,000 IYOWNlll Mont.ego INH. 4 br 2 ba. fam rm. nu crp&s . Lg yrd, lndscpd, wood deck. Open Sal/Sun 1·5. 19SSI Port Nelson. 75&-0634 'G1Mral I002':Ga•ral •002 OCEAN VIEW. spec- ·•••••••••••••••••••••••·••••••••••••••••••••••• tacular ocean & Newport decorated in and out. Shag carpets. cozy living room. country kitchen New roof. move-in condi· tion. Big yard with cov ered pauo. Separate 2 2 Bcb Hses, 3Br & 2Br. 3 blks to ocn. 72K /92K. Owner. 536--0628. UDO ISLE Newly remodeled 3 bdrm .. family. 2'1-2 baths: l ·story home with attract ive So. patio. S243,000 l.AYFROHT Several rwe bayfronl homes with pier & slips I.ACK l.AY Fine 4 bdr m .. 2112 bath family home on quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool . playhouse, extra s torage. $189.500 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J·l• noy~·tl" Ur•v•· NB 67:'i 6l6l 1002 Ga•ral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Woodbriclge Place Harbor view. Pool . wood Brand new 3 bdrm. 2 decks. 4 bdrms .. 2 ba .. bath home with large skyllghts thruoul. Comp. rooms. atnum. nice size remodeled & updated. yard, earth tones. Call Easy maintenance• 546-5880 $224 .500 Interested & ~HERITAGE REALTORS COUMTRY LIVING 3 BR. 2 BA, seller very anxious & wanlS an offer on this ranch style house m the country. No down VA, low down FHA Of. Cered at $56,000 540.3666 llf ltelc"'lll REAL ESTATE quttlified buyers only. By owner 4M·6468. Courtt>sy lorealtors OCEAN VU.OWNER 2 fantastic buys. llarbor Vu, 3 b r. frpl, must Sl'e 64•·2641 . 644·8722 1114 Whi te Sails Open 1 5. Sat/Sun car garage and a huge l"iM I 044 carport, perfect for boat ••••••••••••••••••••••• or R. V Won "l last. Ca II Now S46-23L3 >I I~ J 1 ·J • ' I I; ''• Woodbrid~e Sycamore $107.000 2 s try hous e. Owner. 4br form. drn rm. 27 Songspa rrow. !>Sl·OZIS ~---=== ............. 1 FACES GOLF WOODBRIDGE CONDO COURSE By uwner mn 2 story end urut. 2Br. 112/Ba. COY· GORGEOUS VIEW! e red patio Includes Lvly 2 story home in xlnt lakes. paols parks & condition. 3 bdrm. lge schls. $67.900·0r offer fmly nn. frml din rm. $67.900/0fler. ~1·390 Truly an executive home ~~~~~~~~~ for graceful entertaining :: & fmly enjoyment Don't --------• hesitate. Call today for appl. 545-M91. RANCH REAL TY 551·2000 •VA $17SK• I work with Orange Co. Vets only. Homes to CD Coldwell Banker 3 lllonatth Bay Plaza Laguna Niguel 496-7222 131.0136 S175.000. Forinfo call: !~~~~~~~~~ Vet Agt. ~HX!OO ~ NiC)l.at I 052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 70 GOOD LO'n.A HOME Rrl~oM~ Former builders model, UW ~ 3 BR. 21,'J BA townhome HUR THE SURF SMELL THE SEA Duplex near the <X'Ja.n. 4 bdrm upper. 3 6drm11 lower. I n he art o r Newport Beach. Hurry. call for appt. lo see• Sl95.000. Get ready for s ummer r e ntals!! 54().Ll!il ~>HERITAGE . • REALTORS Why buyers caJJ Ranch in foothills. Front & buck Realty. We have over patios w /F omanti c seventy homes for you to garden selling. Xlnl I~~~~~~~~~ chose from. in aJl price locatlon ... $77.950. ranges and sires. Some i..,.aNlcJ-f Realty will sell V .A. or FHA 496-2413 49S-5220 CiOLF COUISE terms. Some have pools 493-9494 130-5050 VIEW and many have central l•--------•I Best pnced view home in air For complete in· Newport Beach. Only HAUOI WOODAND GLASS 1------- Reduced to $195.000 Owner w/conslder con tract of sale. seeond TD. you name ll ' Owner must sell 1mmac 3 BR 2 Ba home w /view or ocean & pvt beach ac· cess 516 DeAnza. agt. 67~ZJ11 Notice IRVINE ESTATE FOR SALE formation on homes in Uruque Wood & Glass Sl.20.000 for this 3 bdrm. the lrvme area. give us a Huge expan 5 br. 4 ba. 3 bath. family room call. FR. DR. game rm . home. Huge cul·de-sac HIGt&AHOS Designer qua lily! Mariners school area. 3 Bdrms with large family room, rustic paneling. fireplace, beautifully landscaped. S pecially priced al $123,900. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- .. 642-5200 BYOWMEI 2 attract, well construct· ed homes on lrg corner lot 10 Npt Hts area. Frplcs. 2 car garages, patios. many xtras. l home brand new. Priced to sell al Sl97,500 SC.719 FOURPLEX lOUYBVIEW L oe~ bet•ween Bayfront & Oceanfront and C1lllvenieot to ever- ything. Ao artistic 3· st«y home or newness in and out. Movable skylight and roof for sun- ning. S26S,OOO - WATERFRONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 MINI RANCH near Newpart's Back Bay ! No Qualifying ! Owner will carry 1st ! can RED CARPET 754-1202 Best pnce in North Costa Mesa. All 2 bedroom un· its. Needs a llltle paint -·"'-... ..,..-51•D•E•Fl-X•ll!Jlll--Only $149,900. CALL igwo1 .,... SS6-2ti00 HUGE LOT • SEL ECT Restore & reap SU! Run PERT down mess means big __ P_R_O ____ l _E_S_1 savings! Great area & --------•I priced to sell last . Tree shaded entry. 3 Lar ge Cort&COMFY Oell1btrul 2 bdrm., 2 batba, close to ocean, near part & channel; easy atteSa to Pacific Coast Hwy. Only $139,500 . includ.ini land! bdrma! Natural wood beam ceilings! Much more! Better hurry. Call 64$-0303 .... .., ..... ....... * 675-7060 . FORESTE OLSON ~... .., ,, t ........ ··~-c..._ 1002 GetMrol 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• mecneb/ Irvine realty WXU.Y UVIMCi W /VIEW Plan 6 Jasmine Creek Home. 3 BRs. 2~ baths, formal dining rm. master suite w/library &. frplc PLUS rantastic ocean view. Guard.gated comm. w/lots of privacy + pools & tennis. A low maint. home you can tru ly enjoy. $259,950. Marion FrizzelJ 752-1414. (W·l22) 642-1235 644·6200 901 Dover Drive Harbor View Center lrvln1 •l Glm~ V•ll•Y C:.nter 7~·1414 BACK BAY View• 4 Bedroom. 2 bath and family room• Back Bay and Eastbluff view! RED CARPET 754-1202 ONLY $59,$00 HURRY ON TlllS! 3 BR 1 BA. remod kit. corner lot. Assume FHA loan or get new loan 751 2261 agent. MAKE AN OFFER! Hidden 2 story, 4 BR. formal dining rm. family rm. 3 Ba. cul de sac 1n Mesa Verde. Call 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa Verde beauty. 3 BR. 2 ba customized home LrJ: formal dm'g rm. Cam rm. 3 frplc"s, huge patio w /firepil, beauty lndscpd front & back. Elec garage door opener & much more. $97,500. By owner. prin only 54().7610 -•Li•.k•e•C•hi•.•ck•.,.-c----•I Nearly,,, acre with the ...__,.. executive entertaine rs .. lt couldn'lhurttocall dream yard . Large Chuck Nash about a re custo m po o I a n d warding career rn real spa-1600 sq. t\: or con· estate. Free training If crete patio with "firepit. 111Y~ou~qu~alJ~Cy~.~~~·5~1~o~t.~~I Huge tree; line ttic yard. RANCH REALTY .:... l..ols of green ard for the 55 I ·2000 Eastside2stry, by owner. kids and gardqo. The --------- Xtra lrg lot. ~2·8953, home 1s 3000 sq rt. of de· IY OWHER "Reduced" E/sidc cust. _542_' -666 __ 1 ______ 1 corators deli ght with University Pk !Village formal dining room , ll) Highly upgr aded 2000 2000 sq ft.38r.rarnrm,3 MIGHTYPRIETTY separate ram1ly room . +sq fl. 3Br. 2Ba. car gar. R 2. Ag t den and 5 or 6 bdrms . $113.500 includes land. 646-7171. Decked 111 fresh pamt, Sate cul-de.sac and no 551.3923 dys. 552·3849 eve this family home sPorts Bring Your Bikini En.Joy tb1s 3 bedroom pool bome' Dimng. en· try, family kitchen and fireplace. Huge patio an upgraded kil<'hen. assoc1allon fees. Better n e w d r a p e s a n d hurry. wallpaper Only $79.950 133-3380 fo r th is and three l"iae'1 Only bedrooms with open RB> C.Alt'l'r beam rarruly room Lots1---------1 of SIZE! 752·1920 LIVE IN FABULOUS WOODBRIDGE 8u,.K•11t• Call today• $77,950 BKR, onN 11uLn C811$40-1720 nu .&IL SWIMN>OL We have most every plan lo swl your individual needs and price range. Fl-om 3 bedroom condos pnced at $70,900 lo free standing homes priced at $122,500. For complete information. call US! 17"30..1199Coole!Mw A T ~ 645-9161 9AABB I ~ PLACE lalaooPaftiWlla 1007 1111~'-'m -10,-Tlt:JOP.kt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 # l In Calfornia" 3 BR. 2 ba .• i.-.i blk. lo bay NowS179.500' Marshall Rily 675-4600 P1a :wta Point Newl y remodeled 5 Bdrm, 2 bath. 2005 E. Ocean Blvd. $185,000 A.gt/Owner. 673·3620 Triplex. 3·2· 1 BR: nr elem school. $23S.OOO Marshall Rlly 675-4600 DESERTION Gold fish desertion m sharp3 BR Mesa del Mar home. VA. FHA or con· ventional terms. Adop· lion welcomed. . 754-7800 OPEHHOUSE SAT /SUN 12·5 Freshly painted Mesa de! Mar delight. 3br, 2ba, din rm + ram rm w/beamed cathedral ceiling. lncllXles new no· wax firs. sec. system . fruit trees & playhouse. S84,000. By owner 2858 Drake. !>57·3160 IYOWHER ANDJ.ACUllJ Ea\)oy the good life in this Sunset Pool and enter t.atn your friends under lhe covered patio. You'll enjoy Lhe gas Bar·B-Que. JllSt right for the young In heart and the modified income. Has two BR. great rarm style kitchen. It's clean and 1t 's only S83.900. Hurry on this one' red hill~ 552-7500 flj WOODlllDGE REALTY 551 -3000, l.ACHELORr.AD 6AS7M ~ A11>al htalc In< 4 Br. 2 ha, formal dining. ---------1 UNIVERSITY ,.IC YOUR IYOWHElt Pool Table V i 11. l. m o d i ti e d Fordham twnhse. end sauna Huge swim pool lot with R V acces:. w/Jac. +yard area. Ra· Hurry. won't last! Call diant heat. 3 Car gar. 2 5'6-5880 • Fp. WHAT MOR E COULD YOU WANT? $245.000. Bond Really 831-IMll or 495--4773. EXCEl'TIOHAL QU.AUTY ~,.HERITAGE . • REALTORS LIDO ISLE 2IMJO sq ft, finest qual ~ br + 3 ba. din area. hg Ii v rm. mod. kitchen. ofe set·up, priv bch. serv porch, willo. lg lot S?.S0.000. 675·6259 .. is the trademark or this 4 bdrm., 4i,; bath view home In Niguel Shorel!. Fl"anciscan tile. wrought I-on & walnut panellng grace the elegance of the living. family & dining l·--------rooms. Over 3200 sq. fl. ol superior construction & deUghU'ul setUng. Ask· ing $35(). 000 m~~~ll"& ~Il13u> 499·2800 0. Goff Coww Gate guarded st of Jwc. WESTCUff CHAIMH NeaUy groomed 3 Bdrm. 2 bath with lovely yard. Near s hops. schools parks Asking only Sl52.500 To see call $40-Ll!il 4t:::~~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS ury hms . 4 Br. den --------· $2.19,000. Also 4 Br. 2 ram·rms $242,000. Lagmalffch Panoramic ocn view. 3 Br. Cam·rm, contractors home S2SO.OOO. JayW. Yeah Co 499-2237 Make those go od household Items you're not using available lo some other family by ad vertilling them for sale in Oasslfied. Call 642·5678 BEAUTIFUL MONACO H.V.H .. 3 Br. 2 Ba. It.ii We enl & kit, nr pool & pk, xlntcond. fee. Sl37.~ 640-1440. BIG Canyon 2 BR + dell. "Pinehurst". Fantastic golf course vu. 1195,000. 547 7044: 833-3215 BEACH I ILK 3 bdrm w /fire place. beam ceiling/patio Price $124 .500 Owne r / agt 6:11-0468/957-1900 Newport..... 106' Mewporthoch 1069 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR nr bay. Sm.all but great potential for novel decoration . Secret hideaway. $110,000. EASTSIDE brick frplc. comer lot. 2 car gar 900 Dogwood. $78,500. Phone 751·0774 eves .. will look great in the unit, 4 br, 2'1'1 ha. Open 1111•••••••••••••••1111 'amity room; It's the House. Sat/Sun. 4332 largest Fordham Model Senlsa Way. $106.000 an ViU. I in Unlv. Park. 4 w /SlOOO cash rebate. Bdrms ,, 2"'-ba . A 551 ·0404 or 975·4980 Burr Whit~ H ~all~r 190 t Newpo1! Blv<l N B 171 -ll 675 4630 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPYGLASS Hill 3 Br. larruly room, 2 frplcs, on corner lot Ofi•· model street Cal 640.51 12 l< '•'"'" L ')• < t l'Vll 1• •"-J Y Ill" I, l<i JI JI• ftl'I U•. Be3ltifal Decer 3 & a family room. fplc. 2 Ba. dbl gar, large yard. J&CUUJ Call. won't last ! I Ul'IKAllT I Ol'CN HOutf ll(Al..TY 11'1130..ftOe.CO.!t W..• 645-9161 COLLEGE PARK. BY o..aroW 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Townhome designed for _wn __ dys;....._ ______ 1 lhe active family. LAIEFIOllT Quick sale below mkt. Bn~den All upgrades. 675-5194, owner. OWNER. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath · den. No qualifying. As· DYM-0-MITEDpb View, view. forever view! sume VA or $42,000 LjJe 3 Br owner's unJt. 2 ~523 c.o.,,.,,.~IRVIME ~0~:c~!es.~0t>.ro'~:~r~ Consider 2nd T.D. Total ba PLUS 2 Br, 2 ba ren Plan, 2 " den. 31 La 461 SHU DR. price $87,500. this week l41. Frplcs, big deck, BY OWNER, 3 BR. 2 ba, Serena. S130,000. Call for only 75Hl633 gourmet kitch. 1136.000 Frpk, xlnl toe. below appl 5'4-8258 C or on• HI 1 h I ands . --"--------Agt 7S&-0358 or 494""420 mrlrt at SJB8,900. 6$2-8870 · · private beaches. 4 Townhse,panora.mlcvu,3 OJ>verclale 3 Br .......less Bdrms. 2 baths, fenced tge bdrms. 21,iba .. trpl. 1l{E FASrEST DRAW fN Woodbrid1e Condo Park decorated. adj 'to"'p;rlt, yard, fixer. Price re RM dr opener. all bll·in3. THE West ... a Dally home. 3br. 2ba. UP· pool, tennis. Priced to duced t o $149.000 PaUo"baJcoeySJ05.SOO. Pilot ClassHled Ad. araded. Air. paU08, end sell rut. All 551·'682 Alt/Owner 67~3620 642·~ an. 6 6'2·5678. unit. $811,000. 558-4282 eves cae: 810111 BLlllS aa. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE ONE OF A KIND Owner Has Drastically Reduced Th e Price Of This "BluUs" Townhouse $8000. Your Opportunity To Purchase A LQvely Home W/Spacious Bdrms, 38 a, +Family Room . Patio Overlooks Pool & Ra mada. $149,500. Owner Wiii Cooslder I,.ease/Option. 111 DOvmt DIJVI 631·1• Ottwr-b• &tat1! HoltiH Ur.fwWIMd ··•···················· ...................... . TU911day,Apnl2&. 19'18 OM. V PtLOT C7 o.tof~ .... 1214 p.,~ JSSO ....................... ~u.~ tto.n..U11._..a.d Afalw.ta,_.._, ••••••••••t N 2 br ~...,.. P I •• • • •• • • • • • •••• •• •• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • •••••••••• • • • • ••• ••• • • • • • ....... ._.. A llm.Y WAY ......... 9UAIL •• ••••••••• • ew ,..,......., 00 • IPI vrom 137$. K.lds & pets IMc.lt 3240 ,....,.,.... .. _.. J2" ColleMtM 3724 ,... Place-Ou .... 2&3DEOROOM VA-l'T..A GARDE.NTOWNKOME. 2 car garages. OK. 815-412 Bkr ••••••••••••• •• •• ••• •• • •• ••••••••• ••• ••••••••• .......... •••••••••• •••• T8UVE ~dlema.,nttu tW Cl&I)' • b4a1der WOl.L1d provlde for h11 owo boftle ft-. comroruble f••llY ~ome w1U1 a •outlMC "tJtcben &: a •1:6111\d~at ~. SolaT boa1*l POOi " ~. l•rce lol 1n p,....t11toua BayerHl 12118.00G IMCHAat•lG <*I Sail JI.WI O.p11trano. Atfordabl• LIP · 1t•1n1 dollln."Ainl con dCJIJWuwn 3 Bdnns . l '" baW. c..-pc1.m&. wlndow «mirtnp. bl.llll-&ns. two car aaruge & pauo ay owoet Mon Uv~ Tbun.. tday,. >. ('all 11.46-2158; f'rt. l.bru Sun tda3~ l & C"ven1nu. call <714 > 493·0588 PUC! PROPERTIES, INC. E/Side l BR. v~ry pvt. blc Freshly painted 3 BR. on llG CANYON a Bdrm rum. Respoosible lot . K1d6 /pets OK . culdesac.Wallctopark Luxurious 2 Br. 2 ea. edits only. $2SO /mo '36:>mo t-492-3710 &~boots. 2 car gur. M2S coodo w/wet bar, frpl Ma.aT ORANGE COUNTY PROPERTY SPECIALISTS · mo.968-6588 Nc;w /never lived in.1---------- Pool. Jac1W1, 3 Br. 2 ba, ~ li00/moor1ubrrul~OP· l ... lsegt•.._... 3740 1-433-9924 h" 1·757·1Ul frpl, dbl aar. lrg fcnct<I GORGEOUS 4 br 2 ba. Uoo .... •••••••••••••••• ••• yard. $450. Kids & pt'l& new paint & carpet. WATERFRONT ok.495-1786orS75'"10. fireplace. covered pat.Jo. HOMt.:S RANCH ESTATI huge comer lot w/frwL 631-1400. STUDIO "'Weeltly ..... F\111 kitchen & TV Unens 411 Utilities MJLETOOCl!:A.N E;xcbange up or sell on a tax deferred annwty basis. Whelher you want a uix shelter. a hedge against inflation. a n appr eciation asset or an income dream -Call QUAIL and become one 9-~21 HEAi LAl(f of our pref erred clients. Our oftlce ONLY ""000 CLOSES $.5 to $6 n:Ulllon in escrows -rr .• ................. 64G-HS7 Oon't m!bs tbts rare op-monthly. Call our professional s tarr of P.0'1· Spuc RR, parquet over 30; large enough lo serve, small clln 'g 11re11 , rence'tl enough to care encl11'd 8lirden· -setting. , ~~~~~~~~~I covered patio. 831-8750or You asked ror it-We've got it! --------1 493-2202. l.ASTIWFF Wall Street Real ~lllte Numerous condo investments. 4•-St ll,900. s-toA.no 1010 Many single family That's not a mispnnt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• residence investments. Faces. tenrus courts with So. Cst Plaza Area ~u::,r~~!'}~~ a~'~':. Good tax base4Br, trees price! Vac11nl' ~5~es Lhru Sun JUST ST ARTIHG? .. RED CARPET l OR SLOWING DOWN -645-3474 3Br.bonusrm,Z'caJ'gar ~~~~~~~~I Just painted. $59.800. _ HURRY! 7!H-4544 Spaci~us 4 Bd 3 Ba. Othet-Rffl &t• Jacuzzi In master swte · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 fireplaces · leadud ~ tto..5 g l a~ s w l n d o w !\ • For S• I t 00 micro~ave -all new ••••••••••••••••••••••• kitchen -oak plant fl oors · plush ..:a'tpettng S<a.500 OCEAN VIEW F.ROM EVERY ROOM A s pectacular home, C -"--y of U--~, plush & t!leganl. open rtr AllU( ~;;JI plan, 24x64 Levitt. 1974 JOHNVANTANCO <LK-7343·4 > <.:ountry 631•0900 Club style park for the ---------•Iv~ dulcnmmaun.g. See * ILUFFS * $99,500 your beach 11rea s pec 1ahs l PACI !-'IC • COAST RF.SALES.•tN<.:. 21036 Bruokbursl, HB 963-0091 3 Bdnn End Uml F'rplc, pal10. OwntAgt 833-8551 or fi.U 21-lt4 eve!> Mobtll• Home 1n Sad-dleback lt newest park BetWr than new. Tnple Wide w wet·bar, bonus ut1I room & appliances Own e r bein g transft!rred Make offer RJ7 9491 BlUFFS $123,500 2 Unit duplex 2 Unit duplex 2 Newport Hts 3 Townh,ouses -CM 3 Pride of ownerships 3 ,(House plus duplex> 3 CT.hre~ Br home + two> 1100 & 1300 sq.ft. units 4 Covington Units 5 (Two houses + triplex> (i Units -Whittier G New Townhouses -CM 6 Brand New -Hunt Beach 7 Units -Costa Mesa 7 Under construction 7 Hunt Beach-Nr beach 11 Santa Monica 12 Costa Mesa $70.000 $180.000 $119,900 $125,000 $135,000 $137.500 $141.000 SlSS.000 $188,000 $200,000 $160,000 $314.000 $355,000 swo.ooo $362.000 ~50.000 $371.000 ~.ooo JO Condo Convers1on-GG $1.200.000 Sl .400.000 Orange County 56 Spacious units 117 Units-Six Mo 166 Units-3 Mos Old $3.000,000 752-1920 QUAIL· PLACE PIOPlillTIU. IMC. IOP&t TIL l :JO P .M. J Top localloo townhome ---------Otfwf R o1 Es tot with "MODEL" at-LIVEIM ••••••••~•••••••~•••••• ·~°"" Property 2000 l1IOIJpftere & dttorator'S LAGUNA IE.AC~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEAR AIRPORT Freshly painted 3Br. ZBa, trees, near park & shop· Remodeled open ~am famrm,2cargarage.nr. ,101 $525 mo Avuil. ranch home enveloping Eataftcla High Sehl. 1425 now. "1--0981, 49IHl885 pool, jac & brick p1t10. mo. lat lat +dep. 6.1l-0781l Lovely 2Br +den. 2 ba -IO ACRES, At ZONE New 3 br, 21Ai ba & 2 br. 2 Townhome Tennis. pool -aeodeg view. fenced ba c:oodos. Pool. dbl gar. & blke ta beach, 2 cur gar -1135.000CALLNOW! open beam ceilings. "25. Pb84C>-2323,646-7L75 '7l-46J6 OI008e your carpel.~ ...HWdeR.ElftC & $450. Westblutt Och cotl. 2Br. lBa. 2bl.ks 163lE17lhSt#3.sA VlUage, Victoria & Ca· to ocn, 221 14t h St nyon. 631·2080 $375/mo. 536--0628. ·~ ..... Gro•ft 2700 R_..Galon!! , .... ~°" ....................... S205k1dspetsokgar "-'bow 1242 5.02AC~CH $8995 FULL P'RICE $195 Down l'aytMnt ~ $79. PEI MONTH Near beach and bbat mannas Lake or the Ozarks ~ilssoun Road frontage. New survey by licensed engineer Iron pins. Detailed survey map. Giant oaks and hickory 1n a grassy parklike setting. Much wlld game. Deer, wild turkey, fox. raccoon Year around fishing . Wilderness are<i . Ideal location Good h igh grouod. Pict ure post card beauty Invest in Amenca. This transac· lion can be handled com· pletely by mall. Wnte· TRUSTEE. General Ac cept.ance Co.. Box 329. Osage Beach. Missouri 65065 or call collect 131413~2-3743 Nights. (314 )392·3722 $210 good area lg, more •••••••• •••• •• •• ••• •• •• $270 kids lge yd+ + l'n-level execuuve 4Br. S216S2brk1dsok nice 3ba. b1 g y rd XI n t $3253br2ba luds more s c boo ls S7 00 I mo. lOOO:J more avail now! 840-2118 All areas. all pnct!b tr-... ------3-2-4-4 ()pen 7 days 9 lo 6 KJds. pets welcome• •••••• •••• ••••• • ••• •• •• eom-r'1GWde &lS-4900 t'ee SENSATION1\L 3 BR 2 Ba. w/fplc. DIW. fncd yard Only $435 96.1-4567, agent. no fee Fomtalft v Cllhy 3 2 3 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPER SHARP' 3 Bit ~ Ba. w/bnck lplc. dining area, cpt.'S, fncd yard Only $435. 963-4567. a(,'l. no fee REMTALS 2BR.2Ba. 3BR.2 Ba 4 BR. C!•,ba. 5BR.2~ba SlW\fl.lng 3 Br 2 Ba S4SO lf523 CAMPUSDt·IRVl"E Beaut Enclost.'d Yard Bnck Frplc t6336P > SUPER DUPER! 3 BR 2 BA. + den. fplc. D/W & Huge4 Br. 2 Ua w/Paho cpts. Only $425. 9634567, Near Schools fo'1rcpl;,ice agt no fe<> Extras• $495 !9627P > --------- Rmffmts 631-4555 THE TERRACE. beaut Honor maJ credit cards upgraded Cambridge J -BR. 2 ba. s.525. Ownr/agt, N1CI! t-Jrruly Area 644-5576. 644-4895 Sharp, only $475 4 Br, D t:: E R F 1 E L D ••••••••••••••••••••••• frpl. walk to !)eh ls & TOWNHOUSE 2 Br. den. HousHFwNsMd park Hurry.call9627788 ••••••••••••••••••••••• or549-9568. 2 ba. wood deck. 2 car gar w/elec opnr. mir· ~~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~~.~~~~ ~fs~ :a~~~r~b~~h~I~· CHARMING AT LAST A Rmtal Sertlu YCMtC• FMI Sorry. no pets. $465 &W-0864 or 640· 7072 Large 2-story contem porary home w I 4 Br. !am rm & den. Walk to bay & OCEAN. Open as bright. $950/mo lease. WATERFRONT HOMES 8.lt 1400 lewd Wes Motel 721 Yorktown Blvd Beach Blvd at York\own 536-041 I --------SMALL BEACH llOTEL FOR LEASE 3 Bdrm. ram rm view ROOMS $32.50 Week Apt SUO/mo. 536-7056 home . loc·:Hed In a t...,.llleoct. 3741 private guarded area ••••••••••••••••••••••• with many amenities for 1...AGUNA BEACH MTR lease at SSSO. mo 2125 INN. S6.5/wk & up. Maid Yacht Radiant &erv. color TV. heated l Bdrm runished apt. poo.L !714> 4!H·5294. 985 $ 2 7 5 mo 6 0 5 .,., N Coast Hwy. Marguer1tc 3 Bdrm, den home, local· S'IVDIO w/garage. utJl ed m Spyglass. $900. mo. pd. S275 mo. 1st & last 36 Drakes Bay 4.!n -1236 aft. 6 pm ~ 11 .;i..•t<I \I I\ . . " llll I Co111 H•• Ct1on11k1 lb Furn charming bacb. nr beach, 1 resp empld adlt. No pets. 494-4200 .... pwt leadl 3769 ---------...................... . EASI'BLUFF. 3 br 2 ba, 2 1&2 Br. Adults, not pelb patio. 2,,., car gar, auto Furn or u.nf -yrly. S225 G10 . wshrtdryr/ref & $250. 2421 E. 16th. N $600. 2l.3/698.so21 Hts. 646-1801 I_..,. 0 Delux condo BalllronL 1 fllll1'rQ. cc~cy bdrm expanded ~ista del Near Dover Shor~s in one Lido Pool, security com· of Nwpt Be~ch s finest plete privacy $975. incld areas 3 Br, 2 ba. frplc, utilities673-1020 f r ml din rm . A1--------- Hortlcultunsl 's deli~hl: •---------Cov'd patio. green hous e. courtyard. g1trdener. W ID & refng incl. New cpts & paint. $765/mo lse. Owner 644-4227 Newport Shor~ J BR. 2 ba. sharp home Tennis pool 963-8818 O<'eanrront }.:i..~r older house. Yrly. ~ TSL Mgmt 642 1603 IAYFROMT 2 BR condo. yearly. $650mooth l'UJ(UDO 2 BR. 2 ba, yrly. $425 associated BROKERS -RE A l TORS 101\ W 6otb oa &'l J~td ·----------Hts cottage, s hiny re·IAl..,._ltlt~ model. 3br 2ba. gar w1RV storage. $600 mo. 64S-!H68. 531 1549 •••••••••••••• •• ••••••• ----------Ge .. : al 3102 4 BR 3 Ba. Fam Rm. Con ••••••••••••••••••••••• do. wetbar. fplc, tennis, •IRAMD HEW• uiucl\. Separate family asr. ~ Bonant11, 1964. Afa.:ca t1anh room overlooks lush (DK8210·1 l ). Hills ide for Sole 1100 hanging .itarden. Call ror location near ocean. Ju.-;l ••••••••••••••••••••••• appointment. you 'II be listed Hurry ob tl:\l.s one! New 6 unit apl for !>ale l>y gladyoudld. 645-7221 $24.SOO. Member Calir builder. E 1s1de CM. may 7UMITSC.M. Beautiful brand new 4· I br. loft. f /p 3·2 br. 11 2 ba lownhous e, all bllns, crpts. drps. Hurry, buy now Tom Lee. Hltr. ti42 1603 Open view. 2 bdrms, 2 baths, 2 car carport, sun decks In center o( Tem pie Hills. $525. lease Ready to move into now Super setting for super person A.t HOfllr With WE GUARANTEE pool, nr beach S675 mo Ch erry Creek Adult Charm.mg 38r, 2Ba: spa. 64S-044S AptJi. I & 2 BR, fplc's. we frpl. l'rpts/drps. bltns , Wcstcllff, charming :i BR. h ave la k es. sauna . $525. 546-512016424183. I 'Jo: ba. patio, no pets, Jacuzzi & pool. Located UNIV PARK. S400 lse. 2 BR. pvt yard. fplc, ten· rus. pools, 559-0253 •Widest selection pass Ontu~ MulUple listing service. finance. 631·0303. PACIFIC COAST RESALF.S. INC 963-0991 C:.1•1•tcW +2TriplHH* MAYO CK 380 GtENNfVRE lAGUNA BEPCH ('TM) 494·2148 •In house computer sys •Daily telephone ser vice •Vacancies vcnfied daily •Full staff of counselors •Free to aged 65 & over •Free rental counseling •Open 7 days 8 00-8 00 $.'S25Jmo 646-2389 at 2701 S. Fairview. Just Terrace. Univ Prk. 2 Br. 2 ----------1 S. of Warner. N. or S.D. ba. rrplc. wetbar. Close TNHSE. 3 BR 21"2 Ba. Fwy,SS&-1991. No pets. to pool & Jac Avail May Fam Rm, pool. i:;.ir. fplc, IS. $425. 833-0618 & $475.~·0745: SS7 1046 --------• Properly 16 00 .....•.•.•...•......... Bristol 1LLl_ I U ~ 21 .. Near Lake Park. Min. to!~~~~~~~~~~ San Clem. 2 bldg!>. sch bch 1·4 B~. J ba: l 3 BR. Profess decorated. new 833-7518 THE ILUffS W"tcUff IHfty HAUOAVIEW CA.8Mi.l 3 br. 2 ba. ram rm. din rm, ~ fg <!uFde-~!it'"" fol RV /boat yd. 2006 Port Albans Circle. Own~r Open Sal/S un 1-5 . 644Hl847 HARIORVIEW "CARMEt." WE FINANCE inc.128,800. Nrocean 2~l bu. l 3 BR. 2 ba 5 2Br condo w /ocn vu. MOllU HOMES $300,000. 496-1840 garages, frplcs Sl89.ooo Sum renla0l $1000 /mo for pnvate parties who each 1709 1713 Alabama, Yrly lse sssO 640-8SS8 bu~ or sell a mobile llKomrProperiy 2000 Hunt Bch 536·1718 ----·------ home. ••••••• •• •• •• ••• • • • • • •• Owner N.wpcwt ~och 3169 Mo:::~~:rs HOME + DUPLEX --9"¥-•E•STMiMT-----;_;:;;~~·;~:;:~;·;;: 1664 W. Bmadway JUST REDUCED! Commercial ~g in ~iJr lease SSOO mo Anaheim Ask For P.a.uJ Sharp three bedroom ocean area with secure (714) 635-0822 home with open beamed lease from ~emmenl Ocean front 2br . Ulll pd. ceilings & a separate Agency for 1Sale Eqwly S4.50 mo. S200 week till •S IGNATURE • 1973 24x60 2 Bdrm, 2 bath plus F.R. plus closed porch Asking $29,SOO. Ruth Laune BKR. 646-4380 yard. double detached bwld up and casb on cash June 15 646-2510 T 2 return for ~.000. down garage. wo nice payment Call ror de· HouMsu..tunaished bedroom, one balh apart I.alls ••••••••••••• • •• • •• •• • • men ts on r ear for $141,000.Callusonlhisor MAY 0 CK !:~~!~ .......... ?~.~~ 3248 LOIJllftG 8"ch .........•............. RENTIMES LAGUNA RENT AL For Professional Service Charming older 2 bdrm Call 631 jSSS home. Located in central ~ sectioo or I.he village, 4 OR STOP BY BLKS FROM BEACll & 1936H~ll'fd SHOPPING. Liv. rm < .,_, blk No. or l9Lh St 1 w lfi rep I ace. Separate dtning rm. Lge. kitchen ACalir.Corp. Sm Fee & separ ate service New elegant-2 bedroom porch. Just completely ($5.SO) or 2 bedroom + redecorated. Excellent den ($575) ~ar & wm· rentaJalS47Smootb dow home s Blocks to MISSION REALTY :: ~ ~ ~ e. p ~·:,~ ~ c ~ ~c. ~ ~ ;;.;.;.;.;.;.494-;.-;.-;.07-;._3_1-.-.-.-.-.-. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba .. single sty . early area. Qwel street Clean, fresh & H11:ctnt SS501Mo. 3 Bdrm .• 2"'2 ba , spht· l evel. end On1t DeligbtfuJ view. Avail. now. '6'75/mo AGENT Terrace Apts New 4·Plex bldgs. 2 & :I Br units. pvt community. covered prkg. pvt patios. pool Ii rec rm. Located near bus & shopping in desirable area of S.A 1021 W. Central Ave l ':i mt No. or So. Coast Pl a~a . 644 -2784 or 751·5992 Boat slip, plush 3Br. JBa condo. $750 . SS8-8534/640-4919. eves 1---------· l'rc:st1g1ous Newport l:lcach 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, fam- r m . din rm ,comp'I pnvacy & secluded bnck cust. Jacuul off mstr bdrm. Lauice patio cov ers. A must to set! Only $167,roe>. ()pen Daily 1·5, P.P. 1833 Port Stanhope, 644°1833 YOUNG PEOPLE Want your own borne? any or our over so income listings. Don't forget Wt! also have condo and single family residences HOM EFINDERS Thousands Of Rentals All areas all pnces tamed yard. Adults No pets. lnqwre S2S 18th St <714) 960-63.11 CHARMING Open view, 2 bdrm, 2 Front 1 BR house. pvt ..,_ Peninstllcr 3807 balh. 2 car carports. sun patio. off street pkng. •••••••••••••••••• ••••• decks. $525. lease. Ready 673-6039 PVl twnhse w/beam clgs. DUPLEX (;real location, ,,, blk lo ocean! 3 Bdrm & 2 hrlrm units Double Coty , comfort able trailer for sale. Contact Sue. 642·9965 art 6pm. 30' Trailer, L BR. I BA . kitchen. good tond., $2300/bstofr.586·2500 '72 Viking, the class of available. 752-1920 1r. ,;l' Fuq1ii.hed & .,, for summer rt'n· Nr.i.roo K~HPOltr BEACH mobile homes. 24x60 --------- REALTY 675-1642 +den. 2 BR. 2 ba .. xlnt cond 2 Storage sheds 'Ole Meadows. in Irvine ~~ Fmancmg. Red Hill Realty 552-7500 S.CJ1•11te 1076 SKYUM£ • ••••••••••••••••••• ••• Nearly new 12X44 with FIX & SAVE awning. porch. storage bldg Rent Sl 10 mo. Im $89,500 mac. C.M. adull park View ol oce.an & tulls. w /pool, c I u b house Great fixer wtt.h a 3 BR, Bmgo & B1lhards Onl} I~ .BA, large d1oing $14.975. w/15'7. down family r oom w /dbl CallTnHarbor .fi46..32SS fireplace. +secluded "'--s....a-1200 den, study or 4th BR. Acnoge ~ ...,. Pnced to sell •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• BERTHA HENRY INVESTORS RF.AL TORS New listings. Large For Salt ly Owner ~MEW 6 Urul apt w/rec room. units are all rented $2,400 mo. income 4 3Br. 2~8a studJos., 2 -2Br. LBa. 17091 Elm St .. II B $375.000 848·2655 days. SJ6.4873 cves/wknds SAM CLEMENTE DUPLEX $89.500 Sparkling l BR unll:. with secluded garden patio. PLUS separate guest apt. Zoned C I for add~ potetttta!. 215 Hel Mar 492-4121 parcels -SlOO per acre 5 TRlftLEX San C le mente Cus tm Acres-full pnC1l $15.900. $129,500 hillside home nearing nAc'r;~~~~tKR . supe~ location n ear completion 2,000 sq. rt. 3 OR 522·0530 beach & Dt!I M Ar !!hops 2 bdrm, 2 ba, ram rm, ~rge 1 BR uruls PLUS bre-•kfut nook , fire HORSE n ...... CHES studio. place. wet bar. sun deck, -" BERTIIA fl EN Ry Sample 8 .. 11CH TRIPLEX siso bach beach couage REAL FINO! 3 BR, 2 Ba. W/Cpts, rncd yard. Only $415. 963-4567, agt, no fee to move into now. Super patio & deck. Steps to settingforsuperperson 4 BR. 2 ba. lrg fncd yard. bch. Yrly 2 Br 2'h Ba. CA S1S0 2br hse rncd kids S.. Clemente $300 3br kids garage Walk' to beach or Del LJFETTMESERVICE GRRREAT! 4 BR 2 BA. w/new cplc;, fncd 1yard, kids & pet OK 5'U5 963-4567, agt. no fee M A Y 0 C K 421 Tustin Ave Shown SliOO. 3 BR 2112 Ba. $.550. Sun l·:l. 213/661· I I 16 &'73-2918 &646-1220 Mar'' Shopprn g Qui et ___ 5_5_7_-0_8_2_2 __ _ a rea. w/great 3 BR lalM>ols.lmld 3206 owni?rs unit. Upper 2 BR ••••••••••••••••••• •••. units w /ocean views J ust hsted al Sl60.000. Lovely 3 Br. 2 Ba. frpl. nu BERTHA HENRY crpts, no pets. S62S yrly REALTORS _4_94-_J223~-·--~--- 2lS Del Mar 492 4121 Corona del Mer 3222 -rr ••.•••••••••••••••••••• SUPER DElUXE Renhtfs Galon!! We have tOOO's of houses. dplxs, apts now , all areas, all pnces Save on ree. f flt\l'H ft"'"t 10""' 380 Gi.ENNEYRE LAGUNA SEAOi C7t4)494-214e 3 BR 2 Ba. Fam Rm. pool --------- & Jac. prest1i::e nbrhd 3 Br. 2 ba. Fantastic $600 mo 968·4602 ocean view. Sml dog OK. Penrungton Propt•rt1es $650 lse Laguna Rily LANDMARK CONDO 494-0077 2br, 2ba. upgraded . No Laguna, 2BR, 2Ba. fabulous rec. Sel' S38S beaut. ocean view. May 536-6155 Sept. $1000.mo. 1·544·3657 3 BR 2 BA, !pie, new cpts LGCJllilCI MNJ-1 3252 & pa1nt. uul rm. fncd ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4-PLEXES Probably Lhe biggest and m~ nearly new Units in Huntington Beach. Asking only $225.000 ealh Easy terms. SCOTT REAL TY 536-7533 64>4900 yard. cul de sac. walk t MONARCH TEAR. ~est1T1Jnster Mall. GW 3 Bdrms. & den. family Oceanfront home. yrly College. S4SO mo $250 home. S750 Mo Agt. lse. 3 BR. Fam Rm. 2 sec. 540-3917. 963-4964 499-4591or 494.1177 BA. $2.000 mo.1173-8941 B Condo BE AC H DU PL EX 2 r , · p., ba Newly Sea Terrace No. or PCH, between bay & ocean, CostoMeso 3224 dee. l'rplc, was her. mo to mo Lovely 3 br, 3 rl05etostores TwolBdr ••••••••••••••••••••••• refrig Nr s hops ba in pvt community ms. plus double gar.age. 2 Br. 2 '12 ba Condo $325/mo 96.1 l242 w 1poot. tennis els & plus storage. $129,500. w /bllns. range. d /w. Circle This! beach. $675. 752-9223. Agent. 545-8424 o r frplcs in liv rm & mast $135 lg gar pool rerni.:. Top or hlll locallon. lease OT3-7T.rl br. 2 Car gar. pool & dswh. Pets ok, more ! Sm option considered. n:x- jacuzzJ. Pvl comm local· fee. Share. 645-4900Agt ecullve view home), 3 br. ~ 2 I 00 ed in West Costa Mesa. rountry kitchen, family 1110 Sandi Ln. Call $275 lge 2br kid ok gar room. dining room. frpl 833-0070 exl 220 or lOOO's more avail Fee in living room. close to 64().0818. 64S-4900Agt beach. park. count ry ········~·············· Blful 4Br. 38a. pool, va· eon.a del Mpr 3822 cant, S800/mo Gard & ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool serv inc. 549-2A79 3276 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adult Condo· <summer place> Ocean views from 2 sly, 3 br. tennis. pool. 1acuz1.1. convenient toe.a I.Ion End urut. secunty 77()..2317 3298 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1{-Slz.-:~.~-5; GARDENAPTS CORONA DEL MAR 2 Br Townhouse, frplc Pool. tennis. Some ocean & Cat.alma views. Close to Fashion Island & fme beach. Also 1 Br.644-2611 YOU GOTTA See this smashing 2 Sty. 4 BR. 2 BA w1cpts. fncd yard, F-~ore--ve_r_VJ_·_e_w_o_r_Ca_t_a_lm_a only MlS 96.1"4S67 agent, n..ean Bl & Femleaf 3 no fee v.. Yrs new w/bltn~. 3 Br. 2 R...tal's Galon!! ba. sundeck & frpk. Al We have IOOO's of houses. the top of the stairs lo dplxs. apts now. all Cb.inaCove.availJunel. areas. all pnces. Save on lse, $650/mo. Call owner ree _847~-$i68~-·---~~- 64S-4900 A.flt Ch.arm'g 2 br. 1 ba. frpl. A SUPER 3 BR 2 Ba. patio. no pets/kids. Nr w/cpt.s, fncd yard, kids & shops. $450. 64S-ltl82. pet OK. On ly $395. 963-4567 a.gt, no fee. Costo Mfto 3124 2~ c ar garage. No 4 BR, 211s BA, batn, I REALTORS agents 714 536-6974 or 714 Acre Just reduced to 215 Del M1tr 492.4121 960-4180 S00.500. 3 BR. 2 BA. new. I Acre, fODS"LE IY OW .... ER Buy 20.348 sq rt sprinklered at $26, Irvine Industrial Park. 2712 Dow Ave. Tust.Jn Agt. 714/494-1763, 805/688-<MW 4 Br. patio. bllns. frpl. enc ~huge :lbr kids ok. Lge club. Owner 770-2317 gar S525/mo Call pool, must s ec Fee MissionVi~io J267 ~x" URfllrft 3600 ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LA MANCHA APTS 3 Br, 2 ba Mira Costa fenced, trees. full price Tn ... I "' be "h ~. nr Camino de 965 ·P ex, near ac on Estrella & K-Mart 4n:'°.3BA.SOOOsq.n 2\l:t 42nd St. Nwpt Sl80.000 .,.,., -Great r ent a I . Ca 11 ......_ Acres. Owner anxious. 646-9284 on wkdys art IUY A lfT OP 8KR (714 > 676-5717 6PM/wknds. CdtfonH History OR 522-~ TUSTIN UMITS Ttadillonal 2 Bft ~an ·---------t Eighl2 BR units all have Clemente Casa Ttus 38 •-1 ~.. d ~ r old Spllllltlh home ls SURF M'TUIF pallos .,. enc Oku c m beaut. cond & tnlly San Juan Cairist.rauo! 5 tacbed garages Must reflects the charm It View acres set among see at this pnce, offered at'290.000 hoflpilallty or So. Cnllf several magnificent 54 n.36J.6 bvina. SUl5 .. 000. homes, just 8 minutes .,.. ~ from Dana Point Yac!ht AMCHOtlA&I Harbor: the ideal site tor IHYESTMEKTS the home or your l7l4J 496-7711 dreams. Deflnitelyoneor a kind! '350.000 S..Jilmt c"rmw 1011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• o,...-...., 11·5 We've bOIU!bt another & A Ill\ tr-lofl 111 netd a buyer now. Nice ll11rllor lmt·~tnu .. nt l'o 3Br. UA, 2 Story home., _______ _ Comm pool A RV attesa.1 .... -------- C.U•?m. Have aomethlog you w•nt ta sell! CJas.slfi~'Mt do P!nd wt..t you wanl in It well -Call NOW. Dail1 PUot Claui.tleda 142-5678 IUILDR'S $ALE ALLMIW Duplex-SC:$l54,900 Duplex·SC·SlS9.000 2 blocks to beach, vlew ' Hous&-CB4l29,500 3bl' 2ba. loft. vlh' 2 lot.t·DP $11,000each WW. sm plan, CC appr OJnll.nlClion Investment 731-5606 S.S7-49S4. 645-4900 Agt. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • EASTSIDE CM Large 1,2&3 bedroom Lots for Sa&. 2200 I BR COTTAGE $275 Lovely 3 br Landmark PURCHASE OPTION 3Hrduplex. end gar. garden apts. Dsbwhr. $395 Agt 646-4884 bltns, encl. gar, gas bbq Pool. Gas Pd. 778 Scott ....................... OfffCE ILDG SITE Hunt.Jngtoo Beach 27.000 sq rt lot near Pacifica Hospital, 5 Points Shop Cnlr & Civic Center. SIJS.000 David Bourke Rltr 546-9950 Mcwt•Dnert, R9't0f't 2400 Large Fenced Yard Condo. Upgraded. Close $3953+3 Brand New Child&PetOK t6422Pl to beac h 962·4454 . Encl. Yard (6313P> 842-0163or l/772·2'B5 PURCHASEO....,. 0 Afcw h;allts ,_,.IMd Lovely 2 Bdrm S26S .-a I N ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Beaut Encl Yard Bltns 3 Br. 2 ba, jacuzzi. beaut. M95Steals This lcAoa Isa.cl 3706 Beslarea' (6462P> yrd, nr. bch S495/lse 4Bl".38a (6313P> ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........_, 631-4555 Avad 5/l agl962-636S. R...ti... 63.1-4555 Cbamung & spacious 1 Honor maj. credit cards Family Sized 4Br 2aa Honor maJ. credit cards BR yrly. Reasonable 3 BR 2 BA, rplc. courtyard Lge fncd Yard 2 car Gar Newpcri hoc:Jt 3269 CaU 642-3703 entry. great loc. M75. Frplc$4SO <8420P> ••••••••••••••••••••••• CostoMeso 3724 540-7730 PURCHASE OPTION NO FEE! Houses. rondos. ••••••••••••••••••••••• duplexes Rental ... •••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br, 2 ba house also bach Lovely 3+2 Fncd Y11rd Pavilion. 67~912 Bkr Mammouth Creek Exec apt. Days 642·1334. eves PalloM15 t3816P> $50Wl8tfrUP Studio. t bedroom MaJd service, pool Condo, 2 ·BR + Ion, 2~ 642-6578 a..ti,_. 631 -4555 WG CANYON. Luxurious Ra, compl rum. beaut H j _..t rd 2 Br 2 b t b Spa · dull d 2b onor ma . cr.,..1 ca s . a co n view. never rented. Like cious a coo o. r, do m 1 n 1 u m h ome new. S8UOO. Pr1nc only. 2ba. enclosed 1ar. Bltns DON 'T MISS OUT ON New/never Uved in. Wet Z376 Newport Bl, C. M. 548-9755 or 64$-3967 Pl. 64.2-5073 HEWP,SIDE 3br, 2ba, Townhouse. Up· g raded. Lge palio Children ok. 645-9543 eves. ~days. Larse 3 Br townhouse apt. 2ba, rrplc. patio, garage. Quiel complex. Adults. oo pets. $375. 645-3381 or 67~5949 EASTSIDE 3 Br 2 Ba, no pets. $390. 184 21.at St. S4&.Ql8S 714-S51-Sl89 ~~s. $375. AH 5. TIUS Sharp 3 BR 2 BA, bar/frplc. $600/orlseopl. SACRIFICING lovely 3 -=~rs~cd~::rr c~;t Salisbury R.E. 673-6000 2 B'r·3 Br. 2 ba townboUllc. SUS CASIT AS patio. yard, Crptc. encl. Nicely furnished l bdrm gar. lAundry rm From Closed gar. $230. up. S32S bdrm a story mountain Back Bay area hse ror lse. no ree · ' R..tah Galon!! ~~!·1:::.n~a~e~tft~C:, ~~;~j~~.c~~~· ~::~~ Beach ~alk condo. 3 br-:-2 We have IOOO's or houses, Callr. $48.000. Call 5/1/78. $550 mo. No pets. ba. up1raded cpl8, bltns. dplxa, apt.a n.ow. all Klt"I~ White. 642-7892 2"16 Les P arre W•Y. brick patio, yrly hie. reas· all pnces. Save on Adults, no pllts. 211 O TS!. Mitml 642-UIOO Newport 81 vd or (1)338""59'7 714·544-8011, 71•·~1-S7ll. SSOO. (714)845-1219 o r L~r_ _.900 ---'-------• ext323 (213)439 0281 _...,.. Atl 8un1alow Fplc. maid ~ Employt<I person. non<&mkr. 548 7197 Kona H•wa.li Oceanfront l.nv•lment·P~menta ol interest only. Mon-Thur (714) 546-3000. EASTSIOE 3br, stv. 4 BR. Fam Rm. all bltns. Bhdfa. pan. view. lge. 3 NICE 2 BR.1ood loca\Jon refril •lawn care incld. paUo, fplc, dbl a•r. $475 Br, fam. rm .. ai.t b•. E/Slde Avail Mny I, no Obi gar. 548-3561 642·161M pool.~ Aat. &44--0134 peta SZGO mo 631-3273 2 BR 1 Ba. lndry racll. no pets SMS mo. lst & last t $100. 200 E. 16th Place 644-002. Avl 4/22. L« 2 Br. 2 Ba town.house Nr Fairview Is Baker No pets. 5'S-Ul82 --_-----'!f!'••• ... .~.~ ........ o.c.. ... ... ..... i Hmllllg ~ Mcw'-J ....... JP .... Tie ... .................. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 81aJ~ We Care C&rpet <:lea.om Shp Coven, DrapcnH , LAf'lOSCAPING/Cl.EAN CHEAPEST haula?i an Better Housec:leanlng "Two Men Wtll Move YOVNO MAN. 5 )'rt e1pr CERAMICTILt; TRlP OKllO SW&lm <"In or shampoo bed 1prudl. upbolituy UPS town Fr est.a. Cll AP! De,.~nd treason Xlnt You" We handle lrg • ln wallcove~. P'rco by npert. Call $$'1 8280 Mata. .A Ahlou=ery All work cushions Ir pillow ~ MaiJ\lenance. 1mmodlate 8'2-28S6 or &&S-\.390 re 's Call for est sml movu-otflce & ..... ~711 y aft 3 pm. PauJ 56XD 1151-01• ~ ll IDOW\t Wlll ~ fabnct, lroe etl '6Vicilij. 8'2·8ll0'7 Rubbi sh Haullna . ~1.8. household. Distance & CUSTOM PAINTING. ~ew & remodel. tubi.. t ..... Id I eat, rea1 rates JflfTY'• Int Ottoratora local. alao paclung. • ~l6 --weleomo. 982-41~ VERY I.OW PRICES f\imilure Moving & TNe lmtnacu11te Clean.Ina Co Lowest Je~al rate. 25 yn upr. Interior/ex-showers drainboard.I, & ...................... -Oo Oardeol_n1 Main· Trlmming. Bus, rella-t"or those who deserve Llc/lnlrd Ca T UMM4. Leri or, q ual work '6 mlriea. 61'3-Ml82 •Sa" ~·Onvpa)• .c ..... 91driul 1.enanee Georce 5'9-20u ble. dJ,87 lhebetl. 15" 0317. Pb ICT • 7278' materlala. Richard TrwS..-.lce Pukla1 ot r;fialra • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prol. Japao•e J..andacap. 880-3311 ualeoat . Lie B.CM CABANA lt .. •.-d8tdric Oarbaa• • Tr.,h Jmmed Servlc:e. C¥ll .......... ,,, ....... • •••••••••••••••••••••• St6 AapUlt MHITl. l'\ne c1tonn1. 1111 "<>l'· UcJZ7136 ~4 ~ & &llrdentni. Malnt. MPlCXUP Sally'a Maid Service. We .., ••••••••••••••• 4 •••• PalnliDI. inter fs Oler', Removals, trimming. cuion$ 645-98511. lncl. mowtnc. trtmmtnac. MO-m4 or S0.3311 arriveln lOmln. 642-3494 PETERS PAINTING neat. Ref's. Free eat. prunlw:cf· Free est. U.c'd. C.-,1 ta ELECTRIClAN·Pr1ced 1prayin1, weecfiq. Free Expr'd. Reas Rates. Call Grea it6-5631 IOI . 642·2624 estimates. MS-71n2 ...................... • European Gourmet Chef right-free estimate on th•KIM:lfllg ......... Free Eat. Call Gene ....... /I .. Carp enter Ii' re• for all occastorus 111 )'Our larieor small Jobi. GARDENING 562-04.58 Tree Service. Tree prun-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Ing. removal, topplni,; . esumat.es. Al\Y 11ie Joba home. Andre . 548·7384 Ucensed G73-~! SERVICE Want a REALLY CLEAN Landse1p1nc. Tl'ee trim All PROFESSIONAL Neat palches fl le.lures Lie. l n1. 646-4871. Tony. 84&-llltl6 dya -Custom Electric Ind , 548-8375 HOOSE! Call Gln1ham rnina. Clean-up. 8 yrs Painting. Inter I Extcr. FQllST. ltl-1439 497-4131 Free lance c:arpenter . C.1•.t /COiiJa ele Girl. FreeestMS-5123 exp. Free EiH Jay comm, res. & mlllnt svli. G1ural S..lc" Reu. work guar 842-0386 ltooflllg Wlwdo•C ..... comm'l, res .. No job too ••••••••••••••••••••••• Honest & relJable. Pree ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••lfouseeleanlnl done by Noboru. 848·4043 or small. John. 531-8082 All phases conc:rete & est. 979-8M2 897-2862 Painting. Extr /lntr. Ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• blkWTk. Cstm brkwork HANDYMAN Homes & reliable couple. Refs. tj:'d, honest. neat. reu. ROOFS In.stalled factr.fi Windows deaned. re-c..,..s.mc. lJc'd/Bonded. &42-6894 Comm. lndust.rlal. Rs. apt a. ConsclentJous ~1793 LANDSCAPING c'd964-104S Dave direct. estab 35 yn. Ca I 11onable, buKlnesses. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELECTRICIANS Craftsman. Call ~-0302 Reasonable pnces homes & apt.s. 847-44411 Harold Gunn 549-2961 Carpet Man will lay yours Foundations. retaining Uc. lnsured 842-W20 Gt .. " THE SUMSHIME 968-8783 Aile Exter. Pamting by SELL Idle items with a or minf' Repuars & walls. blocks. pal1os --R. Sinor. St. be .. a.ns. Try u.ROOF FOi USS cl.:ouung t.oo! Guar work M6-8241 Llc'd '-cillg ••••••••••••••••••••••• GllLS Mascnr ~ me. 836-SSSS 24 hrs Comp. shlnale & hot Dally Pilot Classified Ad. Haul, aklploader dump 642-5878. at b11ger savings. Free ••••••••••••••••••••••• Housecleaning & office ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free est. Ca 11894-0'21 e;t, 645-3646 Cement work of all kinds WOOD 1-'ENCES ALL trk. grading, tree wrk, specialists. Spec on apts Bnckwork Small jobs Paint¥ our Cmtle CUtting. blockwork. Free TYPES. Bwlt lo Order. demolitions etc. 831-125'1 & R.E. work. Serv l Newport, Costa Mesa & Specia.li.iiOfl In residen-REPAIR It REROOF. All use THE Shampoo & steam clean. F.6 t. 5.56-07S7 Repam.. 01' Posts s et and H•&fir• •• days wk. Bonded. an-lrvme. 675-3175 eves tial homes. int. & ext. types ·sh1 ngl es · DAILY PILOT Color brighteners. wht you build. 642·2073 sured. $40-9525 --Please check our re-rockshakes compo.tar. COllhodor ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts 10 mln bleach. Clean Muonry Specialists ferences. Lie # 320881 Free est. 541.5930 °FAST liv. din rm, hall SlS. Avg ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTERN FENCE CO Painting. wallpaper, Custom remodellng ton-Wood & Cham link carpentry, gen'I maint. 1'be Moppets, that's lllCIC O .. LY Guar . insrd. Cree est. Tie RISULT" rm $7.SO. couch 110. chr our Fireplac es. pal 10. Ted.636-7085 ts. Guar elim pet odor. ly>. U yrs in area, re· Uc#245·15J SJ6-1837 & repair J . Waugh. 1unne. Cleaning is our • •••••••••••••••••••••• SERVICE veneer, 40 yrs. ex per Lac Cpt repaJr l5 yrs expr. sldentiaJ/comm, intr/ex-8'2-0801 aame. Call 546-2393 Prof painting & pariring. CERAMIC TILE. Special· Do work myself. Refs ter. Un1que & unusual Forwlica & hooded. 6'13·2999 Spring ext. speda Refs. ty: Enlries/Ooors. 2S yn DllECTOltY 531-0101. work welcome. Palombo ••••••••••••••••••••••• H••n!I Floors, carpets. baths, Wbon you need expert 336-4'180. 536-43113 exp. Sml repaira . For Result ••••••••••••••••••••••• walls, patios, windows . ---Const. 962-8314 Formica Counter Tops 1n-service or repatrs. tum 962·1883 Service Call Trude your old :.tutr for stalled to your spec1fica OCC Student. l Ton truck. Spec. price for vacant re· to the Service Directory JJ'S PAINTING. Great new goodies with a Sell things fast with Dally tioos. Latest colors & de-Trash, tree lnm, Ron sidences. in Classified to solve work at greal prices Find what you want In 642·5671 Clusi'fled ad. 642·5678 Ptlol Want Ads . siens. Free est. 675·3118 642-5703, snD-6489 Those Guys 974-0810 your problem. 55'1-1041 Daily Pilot Classifieds. bt.322 - ApCii ......... Ulrfum. Apartmnts Unfur'ft. Apartlftettt• Unfum. ~T .... Offi~R...tal 4400 Mofteytol.oan 5025 ., .. w•••I ~ 5350 Help W-.ct 7 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• oso • •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• , ........ ~./ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Costo M9ICI 3824 ........ °" le«h 3840 ... wport leach 3869 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9lJICKCASH Lolt&F-.cl Sml new office. pr1v Clean. pleaunt & aup-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sing.le garage. storage on-parking, all utd. paid. 151 • •••••••••••••••••••••• portive foster' home care AIR.Ll.NE ly S3S mo. 1916 Wallace. Lost & Fomd 5300 <.:lean 2 Br apt. Refs, no 3Br Condo, pool. near Huge 2+2 View Apt CM.645-5126; 637·5895 Commercial Way, at lllt & 2nd Trust Deed ••••••••••••••••••••••• r()C" athletically inclined SECURITY p e t s 1290 /mo . Adams & Brookhurst, Tennis, Jacuzzl, Pool Nwpt Blvd. CM. 548-3878. loans arranged Tor any U>st or Found a pet! Call lS yr Old high &Cbooi ltU· lsl/lasl+$150 cleaning S39S mo. 962-3519 Plus!! $430 C6441P ) Garaae. $40. a tor age only. after S 548-8116 reason. Credit no pro· dent ln Huntington Ani mal Assistance Beac:h. Write Classified dep. 675-9800; 645-8869 2 BR 2 BA. nr Beach Blvd 32S J , 17th Place. OH Prime OC airport area. 2 blem. Borrow on lhe m LeagueS37-2273, no fee. Ad No. 250, Daily Pilot, AGENTS Elegant 1 Br $360 Santa Ana Ave. Aft creased value of your New 2 BR condo, fplc. trsh & Inter Comm Hosp., A/CJacuui, Pool +' llAM, pvt of cs w /recept area. home Call today for fast. LOST: 7 mo. female P.O. Box 1$60. Costa cmpt.r, darling. UJS mo. fplc, gar. pvt yard. 1st, Lovely View t6441P) 65c sq ft. 7S2-55ll courteous lnlormaUon. German Shepherd. tan Mesa 921128. AIRLINE 641).5546 bt wn UPM last + dep req'd. Adlts ........ 631--4555 Offlc•R...td 4400 w/blk race. Reward! only. no pets IW7·3241 Honor maJ credit cards ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....-Uletlfal 4450 &ATiAj@,,,!rl~ 897-3806 OIVORCE/B1nkruptcy. 3 br. 2b", Lower, new evs1wknds THE EFftCIEMT ·········~············· l50. Legal assist. 12 yn, Help WI make secunty a cpts. drps No pets. Nr. s-c1 ........ 3176 4 oaun OFC·s Lost Olk /Amber Male 0 .C. Act.ion Legal Typ. PLEASANT experience. OCC S299 mo 751-3696 NEW21ge BR, 112 Ba. gar ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALTERNATIVE Licensed "Home Loan Germ. Shep. 1 yr. Vic: i.Jll. 960-5419 Dual roles of secunty ----w opnr, W/D hkup. fplc, Mo. lO mo. rent incl: Cont. rm .. seat 25, all and ael'Vlce to the airline t9r. upstaJrs. nr S. cat. pallO. $355. 545-3604 t Bdrm, 1 bath apt In Tr-Recepl. paneled, sm. whse in re-Brokers serving So. Beacb/Wamer. 842·9103 Slenderwat Club needs traveler. •~ talces a Plaza . no pets. 1240. plex with pool. 3 blks to s er v . , ar. l or 2 yr. lease. Lake Calif. for l'1 yrg. Call our ladles w o are over-cbeerf uJ, courteous, will-persoruwied phone cov. FOUND: Old Huntington, ~ 1219/540-8493. NEW oauxE 2 11 beach. $240/mo. Sandra Forest area. Kent neare s t off ace. 13th & Palm . M weight to train free in i9g and sincere Near beach W/fplc. Harkness 494-1561 erage, coof. rm. mail Harkins. TI4-83'7·3744 d8Jlce.rclse & diet pro-serv , underground prkg shepherd. lg hair . gold. persooality. If you can 2 BR 2 Ba. fplc, encl gar. pauo, encl gar, smoke 714-581-9393 gram. Earn Sl.000. moor ~esa Verde 4 plex, $325. 'tf IN.ti ,.,.shed & more m Newport. 536-3254. meet and gTeet hundreds alarm Adults. $310 mo. more P /T as an as-of important people Rl.'f rl'Q'd 979-689fl evs. 536-2159 0#'~3900 TIIE EXECtrrJVE MARINE CENTER WHEN YOU I"OUND : Mans soaate. 973-9183 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUlTE. 640-5470 Coast Hwy. Newport Bch wnstwatch. al HB. nr every day. you can be INSTANT IN Spacious 2 + 2 S250 THE EXCITING Slim gal. 40's. e nergetic. woridng with us 1n les~ Cenlral loc. 2 Br. Ph Ba EXPANDING 71? Lease 840 Sq ft. Ample NEED CASH, Beach Blvd. 842-3122 alt .than a week. Car and Htd Pool Lg Kitchen PALM MESA APTS. prkng. Marine related 5PM. to identify educated, sporty to con-apl Fncd pauo. gar. Avail May 1st (5368P l MINUTES TON PT Fully serv. ore space bus pref'd. All util & tax· 11der some swin~ as part phone are needed. Fu II S32S. 645·46SS starts at 6&"sq ft in the Ume paeitions. uniforms --BCH. dynamic N. B. airport es paid. Call K. Witzel, CONTACT SCRAM-lETS of a relations Ip. Oo furnished, $2. '17 /hour. Brand new 2 Hr. 2 ba, Charming 1 Br· Nr All Bach, 1&2 BR . bus. area. Space avail: 556-0540 UNION places. Do things. Male. free parking and ex-adulti.. no pets New cpts·Htd Pool from $220 & up 6'. 17S lbs. 51. Reply Box 2085 S'l30 Steals! (892SP) 800-16.000 SQ ft & warehse Corona del Mar on Coast HOME LOANS ANSWERS 175, % Daily Pilot, P.O. cellent benefits package Thurm (btwn Bay &. Adults. No Pets Call or apply in person. Hamilton>. 673·2058 or ReRfhtw1 631-4555 1561 Mesa Dr. sp. ~ sq n. Proj. Mgr Hwy, 1100 sq.ft. Good Union Home Loans ar Unea:;y -Tardy -Box 1560, Costa Mesa, bi3-4M2 llonor maj. credit cards (5 Blks East of Newport Judy Clark, 833·8813 or parking. xlnt frontage. range l<>Anl ror home or Ca.921628 stop by Commerce Park. sum mo. '159-9269 property owners of SJ.000 Buxom -Purity ------Blvd.I 41008lrch. PURSUIT SodalCllbs 5400 BURNS 2 Bedroo m. 1 bath, 3 BR. new d~or. huge 540-9860 lo Sl00.000 or more. And BRANO NEW fourplex, mstr, adlls. no pets. Nr Approx. 400 sq. rt C-2. through Union Home Seems like a lot or us ••••••••••••••••••••••• OFftCE SPACE A/C at 130 E. l'1lh St. want hfe, liberty and WtcwutloMI large grass area. Small shops $350. 963-4196; ROOlllll 4000 Loans y 0 u get TheSingJe's Solution c hildren welcome. 556-500'7 • •••••••••••••••••••••• fOT lease. 2200 sq ft. "II blk $1.SO/mo. Doyle 548-1168 Homeowner Terms. happiness without too D1te by Choice s.::=tc. Westside Costa Mesa. Room w I kitchenette otr S.D. Frwy on Crown which are generally much PURSUIT. Not.Chance 2 Bdrm , l'h ba E/Side C.M. ShOl)l'I. ofc'a, Call Chris or Megan Townhouse. pnme area, Sl50week & up. Valley Parkway. Mission bobby, photo lab. gen much better than finance Found: Genn. Shepherd. CaU Int.rov1ew 752·5411 1175 E. Center St i;.&8.-4143. .., nu to bch. new blue 548-9755 Viejo. 831-2861 use. Fr. SSS. 548-7249 company terms M. Vac . Warner / Anaheim 635-4630 ---0.00.. n. Ternt1 1 Br Cottage S270 C'rpts & drps. $350. mo. Ambassador lnn m Costa 2 adj oles, pvt ent. approx MagnolJa. FV 962-5962 "J:;:L! Equal Opportunity All Ulil Pwd, R&S No pets. 962· 7771 Agent Mesa, 2277 Harbor. Cen· 8x33'. $350/mo. 1827 ..... trial I .... 4500 that fit~ Lost: Friendly lg M. Employer M /F liest Loc:aJe CS4&4Pl trally located. 235 rooms_ Westcliff, N8631-0900 ...... Choe. Siamese vie . QUIET ADULT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MANY Wllh kitchen. FREllEHT! IUILD TO SUIT Heliotrope /Bayside. Sdiaat1 a Charming 2 Br S27S 2 BR 1~ Ba. encl gar, pvt phone & 1V Swimming FULLY AMORTIUD CDM. 673-1527 mEMBl.ERS patio. new cpts/drps. Nr We've gol spnng fever at 5 .000-20,000 Sq fl. .......... 7005 Sunny Patio-Garage bch.$325.960-1279 pool. jacuzzi, and rec. Lido Marina Village. Placentia Ave . C.M. PAJm. Y A.MomDD • •••••••••••••••••••••• /\vailable Now 15482P> room. Daily & weekly IMT&EST OHL Y Found: Austr. Shep mix. SOT1'alnee Assemblers Rettli,_s 631·4555 rates starting from S54 a While It lasts we're offer-WESLEY TAYLOR CO. apx 6 mos. blk/gry mol· Wt.-LeS1on1 Needed Immediately llonor maJ. credJt cards Near Huntington Harbor. week. lng free rent on beaut. of-REALTORS 644-4910 lled.548-0781 EastCM. Your home o r mine. Long &Short Term -sharp owner's unit, 3 br. 84S-4840 face space overlooking '%"' plms in oc-Eleven yrs ex per. Assignments 21'2 b:i, fireplace. ram 2200 sq ft bldg, 2lc ea ft. E,S1de. ~u1el 2 BR H'2 Da, the Bay. Space Crom 290 c • wfth 1tot• Lost: Large tortoise SJ6..9500 3Sh.iils Available. gar. patio, ad Its. no pets. rm. 2 garages Kids & 2 Adjomlng rooms in pvt to 900 sq fl. incl. crpts. three pbue power, 1 yr law. strayed from 412 Costa Must have own trahsp. $325. 337 E 18th St. small pets OK. $445 pr E-Side C.M. hm avail drp s. A /C , 5 day lse. 183.5 Whittier Ave. Mesa St. 548-8130 JobtWa.t.d. 7075 Ceil Today S56-8Sl0 675-6'136 mo. Move m now! Call May 1st. Rms CllJ\ be Ja.rutonal serv. & all util A·l. 71~-6507 U for any reasoo we can-••••••••••••••••••••••• 842· 1328 or 960-5402 Dot arrange a loan for U>st; Large skinny wht & F)-ee. Top Pay. Vac Pay separated for S3S wk. Un· pd. Take advantage of Storap 4550 Mature organized female, M!SAPIHES furn w /Ille kitchen our spring fever ... & free you there will be ao cost brwn dog. Russ ian VJctorT....--ary ••••••••••••••••••••••• orobllgaUon. Wolfhound. Vic : C.M. office wiz, w I over 15 yrs . 1 BR, $285. Pool. jacuzzi, l"IM 3844 prlvJlege's. Must be rent offer. We'll pro· WAREHOUSE SPACE! 95'7-<I'/OO, 646-3532 exper. wants challenaloa Senfcff adults. no pets. 2650 ••••••••••••••••••••••• respon adlt. $200 + cln'g bably come to our senses 1,365 sq ft. $400/mo, lse UNION sf: in your 4-7 person of· Div Walter KJdde & Co llarla Ave:. CM. (Mesa Walnut Square, 2 BR, 2 dep. Call aft 5 pm , by summer. Call or stop or mo. to mo. ss&-1601 Pers.als 5350 f ce. Exper. as office 2082 S. E . Bristol Verde Dt. E. otr Harbor Ba. con<k . AC. pool, no 645-7857. by any weekday bwtn ....................... mgr .. xlnt 65 + typin~, Ste lo Newrrr .ee1ch Blvd > 549-2447 8.30&5:30. New storaae. garages. HOME SplrfWI ..... xlnt spelfer, some b • (Comer of rislOI & pets. Children olt. $375 s. .... , ........ 4200 Udo Morioa VIiiage close to beach. 151 Com-kp 'g, no shrthnd. 1162-1539 Campus behind 2 Iwtrm. Apt. with garage. mo. 675-588l • •••••••••••••••••••••• 181.S So. El Camino Real 3475 Via Oporto mercial Way off Nwpt rflLOANS Carl's Jr> :-lo children No pels. L...-leodt (al Nwpt Beach Blvd) Blvd, CM. RV & boat unit San Clemente. Fully lie. HelpW..t.d 7100 r.iual Opportunity \.225 Roy Mccardle, 3148 GLAMOROUS (714)675-8662 avail. Al I util paid . For appt. 49'l-7296 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mployerM/F ltl tr S48-7'129 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bdrm. 2 Ba in Promon 548-3878; after 5 548-8116 RELAXING MASSAGE AcclAWl ... T ....... -Oceanfront 2 Bdrm apt, in tory Pomt with forever • SICYSUITES * Duplex. 2 br, lrg yard. no true old Med. Villa. VIEW . Dec orator AHAHEf M ~ sq ft storage bldg NatJon 's LaJ'iest Home BobJames-Lic Masseur MacGre1or Yacbta d ogs or c ats . no Trees, secluded. private funusbed. Pool. jacuua. Reasooable, avaU soon. Lowl Brokerage Flrm Outcall 9-9. @4-5111 8'2-6830 Assembly motorcycles. 548-2720 or beach cove No children sauna. tennis. $350/wk. f.roM I SO Sq Ft 20c sq ft. 642·9803 UJ 5PM, BToro 770.3031 MASSAGE TRAINEE 646-8541 or petS. S7SO. mo. yr lse Bank or America Build· ask for Jim Himtldi 141-2225 Acctq Bk.kpo1 ------Ing . 10 stories or RGUUMODELS 497-1897 'R:MPOl.AIY ON THE BEACH Anaheim's finest office R..tals W..ted 4600 ~SEMBLEIS D..aftoW 3826 ESCORTS Register Today ta work . S2SO l Br Cott.age 4 Bdrm home with space. ~Y Fwy access, ••••••••••••••••••••••• iSbort term R. E. SS:S's fut. ••••••••••••••••••••••• UW Paid! Encl. Yard privacy. $1000/wk covered parking All Rm or studio wanted by any reasoo Bill Daven· OUTCAU OHL Y on various ac:couatlng & & PACKERS Dana Point-super ocean Av11lable Now (4971P> WATERFRONT HOM ES service included. Prime Intelligent dog. bas port. 549-980.1 631-llll bookkeeping assign· view. New 1550 SQ fl 2br. Call63H400 location & c:ompelitive human. (UC stdnt 25 > ments. Work close to NEEDED 2'"1ba S450. 644-5742 $320 2 Br W /Patio rates from 60c sq fl. NB /CM area Rick /MEED *SANDY'S* your home. Figure IMMEDIATELY" Clerlt.s to Sr. Accoun AJC. Enc. Yd Htd Pool Hurry while offer last.s. 982-0&90 TOP PAY!!! SU'f'w"'NY Sparkling clean I Much More! (5816P) TWO Summer Rentals. For detaHs. call 774-4671 I MOMEY OUtcall Massage tants needed lhruout All shifts, day, swing & Bdrm. bltina, gar. no R....._1 631--4555 studio apt, spacious. Need 3Br summer rental. 973-0329 ~ graveyard ln clude:t kids or pets. S23S/mo. Honor maJ. credit cards fplc, balcony ove rlooking 250-500 sq. rt deluxe of· 7 /l-9/10. • HaU's wknda. Long & short 493-7231 ocean. $300 wk. 384 Cliff flee W 19th St. C.M. 244-1541 (213). •SHERI LEE• Accountemps Dr. ALSO, 1 BR + studio from 1150. mo. Tom. CRB>ITMO Certified Masseuse SOOS. Main,SteSOl t.erm llSSlgnments. Hoh· Matll1qon leach 3140 Rent May l. lbr, apt. lrg day & vacation pay. couch, kltch. living & 540 2200 PROILEM House Calls -By appt. No. Tower. Union Bank ••••••••••••••••••••••• rooms. canyon vu. May dining area. balcon y .....,_./ln•est/ 2nd & lnf TD loans 838-6838 In The City ol Oranae Hosp1tah :ution plan SHARP, beach, 2 & 3 BR. be seen week of Mon overlooking ocean S300 FULL SEIVICE FlnmtCe 714/835-4103 avail. r rp I. di shwa s her , 24th. $300. lnclds util. no wk. One efficiency apt. DB.UXE OFFICES ••••••••••••••••••••••• 752-5903 FOXY LADY ~ garage, patios, 960·2358. c:hildren, pets. 494-3932 Avail May l. $300 mo + ......... Arranged by •ll-Personal telephone/ re· °'* .. ~ LIVE Near The Beuch ' STUDI O woodsy at -sec. 384Cliff Dr. 497-1303 ceptlonlst , secre t ary, Opp rwlwllty 5005 Coast Ho9'Loc.t1 ADMIN.ASSIST mosphere, fplc, beam ••••••••••••••••••••••• 731·3561 For arowina import rtrm CasacMISol Retthlhto Shore 4300 conference room, coflee 00 YOU NEED CASH? 141C~Drln rJp. 9250 mo. utll inc. & hospitality services. SAN CLEMENTE In Newport Center. Good Beautiful Adult Apu 494.7109 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Excellent location, near Grooming & Pet Shop. 1 8 t . 2nd & 3 rd PREGNANT? Caring, opportunity for bright, 546-4741 Gas & Water Paid •IE SE:LECTIVE• freeways. Retiring alter '1 good homeowner loans ar· confldenllal counseling & ambitious person who CAcross From 2ltl61 Brookhurst. HB 2 br. stove + refrig, Gain a reliable l.Uet CEHTEI years, fine location & ranged fast. Borrow referral. Abortion, adop-has an analytJcal mlnd & Or= Airport) 962-6653 carpets. $350.323 Myrtle. roommate clienlele. '68.500. $1000 • $100,000 • flexible lion & keeplog. enjoys working with rv: Equal Employer (714 )979·2161 t.enns. past credit no ~ro-494-4695. Older only. 645-'14&4. BERTIIAHENRY APCARE 547-2563 pie. Position lovo vea 2Br. children welcome, no •SHARE A HOME• Two prime apot offices REALTORS blem. Cell us -no ob ga-~· computer opera. pets. starting at 1245 mo. ... wport leach 3169 w/your own parking lot. 21.SOel Mar 492.4(21 lion. UMDA & YICICI oos & Iota of telephone ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Home to shr, Irvine, all 3020 Newport Blvd, NB . STERLING FIN. SVCS. o.tc.I M••:ri contact. Prior ex · moll.EIS ...alliCH ftAllC NEWPORT con v 's. j ac, Bill. 630-4i007 Ideal for real estate. re· TRA VB. AC.ENCY '114/BM-1610 <bier> fcrtt..'-of I perience helpful, but not Ir CIVIC cana Bachelors . I or 2 dyS, 551·0196 evs. 546-5120 tall shopa, etc. Call FttAHCHISI BUS LOANS: $10,000 or Serving all Oruie Co. required. St.rt arwod &PACIAGEIS Bedrooms & Townhouses F to share furn 2 bdrm 675-3551 more Alao lat-2nd mtas 83$-Tl13 $800. Contact Terri ORAND NEW. Spacious From $299.SO apt. ln CM $127. + uUI 1be new way to own a Sl0.000·$10,000.000 F Swank, al Tran.smart, Day ahltt aulgnmeols. deluxe 2, 3 & 4 Bl". All .-11MEC.M. travel agency. Travel Scott 633-4434 DANCEOFFUM 6'4-1M2. Good pay, good working bl~ frplcs. gar, lie yd. Spect1cular spa. total S4S-Ca)3 Atl. 6 LOCATIOH Network. Start your own Beaut. nude lirls dance conds. Local jobs. No ex recreation program, ...,.,.... .. Secy saz orttown ·Just West aocial program. 7 pools, 8 Rmmt wanted to abr 2br. Deluxe office & Exp. not required & rap eeuioo. Pvt mlr· per oecess. can Today & ol Beacb Blvd. 536-1718 tennls courts. At Fashion lba Dana Pnt. 1150 mo. warehouse space. Complete aupport & long rored rooms. 10AM to Secretary. mature resp. ltart tomorTOW. NEW XTRA Dlx twnhae lsland, Jamboree & San 661-«mbm. 7511-5288 wrk 1100-6000 sq. fl. Full term service provided Mm~,Trmt 3AM Mon.sat. 12PM to party w /exper ln ~~~o f fice • apt, fnlt1t unit. La 3 Br. J(uin Hills Road. security. 642-4463 or Call Mr . C harl e s .,... 50J5 BPM Sun. Im N. Euclid. architectural dcsl1n LOOkJMGFOI TI4-838-92U ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mab.~ n.nn office procedures. _O overload 21,<e Ba, formal din rm + 714)644.1900 8'2-7604. FREES~IONW/AD 'fypUla •~curacy bksrst rm. fplc, bltaa, AIOOMMATI? COUPL~Eam aut.tan LOWEST W /D hkup, patio. dbl at-Sf.I'll IACH&OR CAL.L HOUSE-MATES 300 sq. fl. ofc In Costa ti al supplement al In· OUTCALL MASSA61 a muat. of flt, 557-0061 Lach gar, $480. ~ at Balboa Bay Club. 832-4134 Mesa, pvt lav. S95. mo. come ln your own busl .............. •7ll..ot31 • ing & nte aywtema. Non 3'723 Blt'ChSt, N.B. Short term r e ntal , The laraest service 646-2130; 679-3709 neu. We help. 536-2403. lttT.D.' .. ~ smoker. $40-2880. Equal Oppor Employer 2 br 2 ba condo. squeaky Furnished $550, unlurn means WAnRYtlW 1.aPM for appt. 2lld T.D. Lo.s.. •Switchboard us.ms• ~Couple Wanted clean, pool, 1reat loc:a· w~. MORE REFERRALS! ANSWERSERV S2WK lion $360. Call Keot. w ............... Professionally Since 19'7 l NB Mariner's Mlle. ap· ~off cc Shop located lntfcro Fal«!ll Terms Atnce UM9 MAIL ADDR&')S S1 WK &o man~ a amau busl· 846-1371 or 847 -3411 prox 900sq n. 2 ore:. conf. t1 bldi. 5 day opera on. s.ttlel' ...... c •. Dell p • wtu not lft. ASSIST. MAMAGY Cll Ul-1400 ~g male elleca. recep rms. PTv ba. uUI t.fere w / Y~rwent s.les It admtnl.stratlon. , 1:30-3, Buy dlrcc:t from '42-2171 HS..061 I •SUZI'S• Sh~ 2 bdrm. t "°' ba Con 3rd rmmole to lnc, t&SO. SU-8678. ownr. 51111MN19 Outcall Mauagf' /::i· Must be I to F\ill Ume only. Apply In do. Ml. to beach. $350. l.JDOBAYFRONT s hare 3 BR hm e In Rlltired ~pl• baa money am. Mr. Halt, Ml-ISM. ~to: Mable Austin. mo. Ask tor Leslie. Redec 1 Br. $.SZS. 2 Br, Turtleroclr. Irv PICMe O.CAllPORT MMeyto"--5011 ta 1a lit Is 2nd TD's IOAM-2AM 731-4462 per'a, Laguna Hills 546-SlllO den, 2 ba, frplc SMs. caU eves. 955-30«9, rent #I LOCATION ••••••••••••••••••••••• A•ml. 1-13'7·3'744 AIR«. CJerll, 10me exper Store. 23121 Moulton Delme PoOblde xtra lae Agent~50t4 SIM mo. Approll.lmato.ly 5500 sq n. lat, 2ad & 3rd T.D ... Classifll!d Ad& are Ute ~ref'd. but not req'd. PaltwlYPl.ua. 2nd 1'nat Deed wanted answer to a 1ucceutul Dt opnr· for alert 2br. 2badi. bl1N, dlhwhr. I BR, 2 Ba, tplc, nr Ueki Sbr II•• Verde hmc. F, Call C714) 91$.0121 LOANS AVAlLABU: SubaUatlal financial prqe or ya.rd a&MI It'• ~· be!Mflta. Cat Nr be• Adlta, no pet.a. Villa1e. ~ mo. yrty noo•moker. UOO/mo. 8El.L Idle ltema wftll a Credlt DO ~lta>. 1tren1tb Call 1ft 6 , • t.uer' wa)' &o lt1J mot'e o Auto Partt. SELL ld1-ltmia wttll a 12.'!0. mo. 53f.8362 1se.-...;Ql.1J28 151.aaoms.141oee11t 1.21. Daily Pilot Cluslfied Ad. llreMr.1lZ..190J ~T822 people! &'ll).Sl50 Dally PUOt C11S111le.11 Ad &U•:w71. , ...... . ... . ... . . 7 Schools and Instruction This Variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow. For rurther information regarding placemem of udvertising In the Daily Pilot Schools and Instruction Direct-Ory CALL 642-5678, EXT. 326 MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES Personal Instructions Complete Selection Microwave Accessories ··1.earn to r ea ll y use your experuuvc investment." We teach ever y phaise or MICROWAVE COOKING Cotnplete 7 lh Rour - 3 Week Course How ..... ,.....,..._ for cJaa ...... ~ I Mor ..... Ullllhd ....... ',...&: I I ........ c ... 7""5011 MICIOWAYE MAGIC COOllMG SCHOOLS -~·Alr Auocl .... Rlthf Sc'-1 • Rrill9 At~ LEARHTO FLY $195. (IHOOOOownl •FAA .,,_OYEO• Course Includes 35 Hours lhght Ume 1n Cessna 150's and Cessna 152's. with 20 hours dual instruction. Individual instruction tailO<ed to YOUR ablllty. 38 Hours Ground School 20 AIRCU fT A YAILAIU AT LOWF.ST lATIS ltol OlAMCH Couttrf L.-. to fty _ _.. ....... fwt! far COlllplrie Detall1 C ... ..OW 9 79-1155 19711 Alrporl Wiry Sowttt -·r-I o.-.c:.-or~ . Tt.mdsy, Apnl 25. 1978 'R Irvine College ~ of Busine ss Independence and COnhdence are )'OY'5 with an 1n1erestino. well paid !Ob' Al fMne we care 400ut YoU about the 90Qd 1o0 that you want 10 have. We II help you 10 get there. T~e YoU' Qholce ot c.reert' SICllTMY • llC!•nottlST MIDICA.WHA1 lllel,Un:Anotf STIHOOIAIHlll • IOOI•..,.. TYP1 .... tMOllTMAMD aauSH.W GIMHAL OMCI AllAITAMT DAY AMO ff8tMO N061AMS A prC>Pef and COffect business environment. located 1n the hub ol tne NewDQ11·lrv1ne Business and tnduslnal Comolell: Job Pleoemtnt Ass11tenoe? M0$1 certainly' 1n the last 15 mon1hs over 400 empl<W9fl htve reouosted '"",,. grldu.tts CellMOW fw.,.mt. lilt•-' ......... 1700 L •AHYAft. SAMTA ~ 9J70I (N'156li'90' Rd I Consider one-to-one ....... 1 ...... -~,,..... •Ac-...cn.r.r Calfof• ,....,.. Credetdl .. ,...,. .......... c .. '119-9969 MOii THAM JUST A JOI BEGIN A CAREER FAOALS & MAKE UP Let R 1chard s Beauty College help YOU start developing new &lolls as a Cosmetician. Atter only 20 weeks you can be earning a good h111ng COSMmelAH CLASSES HOW! llmted Enrollment-Call Now! Top instructors give Help and Guidance Plenty ol Practacal Experience. Too DAILY PILOT C9 W..e.d 7100 a~cal SI. TYPIST 104ctapbooe ISlat .'IBM ExecuUvt l'Repro {TechnlcaJ NEEDED IOEDIATEL Y I.on, &. Short 1'eTm All· sl1nmenta. Holiday & vacation pa y Ho~pltaliullon plan - VOLT • """''! ~ ,_., • ... u., • I 3'41C....Drt•• 546-4741 tAcroiu Froro Orant• Co. Airport) Equal Oppor Employer Clerical ATTENTION! Spedallely ~office ..~ ........ ,...y_.. c .. .-.e ICB.L Y SBVICES 131.0542 All office & industrial akll1s needed. Interest· ing, temporary assign· ment.s waiting for you. Work when you want. Paid vacs. You don't pay, we pay you. NURSES AIDE TRAINING PROGRAM ATTENTION MEN/WOMEN FREE JOB TRAINING we'I ':i r: to.._. Tia S.T.LP. I Skiled 1i ~n .... PwOiJi P tumoM PA YING PIOGIAMS AVAILAILE PLACIMEMT ASSISTANCE MA.HY OPPOaTUMITIIS: • Interesting Work ·Personal S1hslactt00 • Sflcunty.Jobs not lled to economic Sltuahon. OrCalOw "-dlotfiu Hwptlclt 133-1441 Oerical Federaly Fmdecl/CETA • You progress rapidly to become thoroughly CLERICAL: Medical. Legal Secretary, Administrative. Executive Secretary. Accounting . skilled • Self~mployment 0pportunitl9S. STAT TYPIST Classes Start June 1st for 5 weeks. Earn While You Learn A Rewarding Profession. Ma. CHIME SHOP: Tool Crib Attendant, Production Machinist. A/B Trainee. "' • Setup/Operat0<. lnSQeCtor. Machine Operator CAU. "2.UJ I FOi INFORMATION Park Lido Convalescent Center 466 FlaglWp Rd. H•wpcri lh«ll C ast C ommunity Cottege district 2TCffA~I$ BEAUTY COLLECtf Pe rmanent position ava.t.lable immediately m division cootroUer's of- fice for dependable, fast typist capable of typing financial statements rapidly and accurately, Will also type corTeSpoo- dence and petform olber accounting /clera ca I functions, Requires lYP· LD3 speed or 60 wpm and related expenence, pre- fe r ab I y wit h Vydec typewTiter, Excell ent benefit package and WOTking environment. Please call domestic employment manager or apply in penon between 9:00a.m. a.nd4 :00p.m. ~370 ADAMS AVE .. COSTA MESA. CALIF. 92626 642-8044 For FriMr INf...tfoc 171 4J 556-5618 ART CLAS:ES HIWPORT HACH PROFESSIONAL TRAINING PROGRAM ~~Hz.til t lt060• 1 'O d,t' II __ .._. n:~L~~ AGENT ~f Day & Night Classes For Men & Women PACIRC DAV&. SCHOOL 6 10 .... llWls.r..t. s-te~C.tUOI \ WE CAN H ELP •READING • MATH •GRAMMAR •STUDY SKILLS ly lLLIHCI~ CAU. 1714154J.t4t5 SAMTEFE IMTBlMATIOMAL CORPORATION :sooSo. Maln StTeet Orange. CA. 92668 ACTING Cl~SES & GUITAR ,...... .,.... of .................... kMel '11 4 °""' "'""' Poot Gt.di ~A~ Estabhshed 1963 F1nanc1a1 Aid Programs ( 71') SS8-J 300 Ma1nta1n1ng the same degree of 1nstrµd10n from 1ndlvidual lo group & association classes An Equal Opportunity Employer ............... c.-: 11111CASH-0URTH STREH.SANfA AHA 11' 8361800 Accredited By The Accrechling Commtss1on ol The National Assoetahon ol Trade & Tecnn1ca1 Schools. 644-5415 CLERK TYPIST '::===============::::J!:~~~~!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~I Nwpt Bch life Insur. co GIT YOUI PROIUM HMCK.ID HOW! STUD EMT IMPllOVEMBfT CEMTH 901 Do9er. ............ '7141 642-tOll SCATS GYMNASTIC CHAMPIONS _. needs good typist <SO Summer Reading Programs Can Solve Many Student Problems Summer Courses at our Fashion Island Reading School can help your wpm> for gen 'I ofc duties position, Dictapbooe ex- per deslJ'able. SaJ S6SO Good co, ben efits . 833-3450 CALL IMMEDIATELY! I ' ., Olympian Cathy Rigby was a SCAT and now it's your turn !~ THE SCATS ACA DEMY now has openings for beginning gymnasts. Classes for boys & girls 2-5 years also available. youngster achieve good reading skills. . . . Poor spelling, slow reading, lack of comprehension. and d1scour~1ng reP_Ort cards may be stumbling blocks to progress. If you invest n9w. in read1~g improvement. vou have the best insurance vou can buy tor vour child s success m school. Today, reserve class space in a READWRITE Sum~ Cour.se. St~dents from Grades 2 through 12 are eligible. Our computerized d1agnost1c testing assures each student of his or her individualized program. Cle rk Typis l /Recep- taooist. Must be able to answer multi button con· sole phooe. Type 55 wpm & have mce ofc appear, Please contact Wanda. 556-4916. Equal Opp Emplyt' Clerk /typist, 1 ·S. typ. fil · ing. phone. Lovely Nwpt ofc, Opport to learn f1JW1cial bus. 752-8123. CALL 197·7750 UADWllTI ~ Ptotr Bid FASHIOH ISLAHD I HIWPOIT C84TB Or Slop ly, 5822 R"99'Ch Dr. Coddail Waitres1 197.7750 Ute llO. l 303 AYOCOdo A.-Sdlool Call for a brodmrt. 640.1262 HelpWGfthd 7 100 tt.lp Wan~d 7 100 HefpWanted 71 00HetpWClllhd , 7100 tfffpWanted 11 001H.1pw.t.ct 7100 HalpW..ted 7100 HelpWClllhd 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Earn up to $300 per wk. Low tuition. Placement 8SS1St. 751°9194 COMPUTB Of'StATOI ATIENTION! ! ! llOROVB Mo &pet-Hecns Work in oew office Opening in Costa Mesa A U T 0 R E N T A. L Babysitter, wanted for I TRAINEE Oppor. ror ID· c hild w /some lite tell . ., friendly, neat ap, hsekf'Og in a lovely home peanng young man ovr in Newport Bch. Work 4 18.. Prcv exp not req'd. days, 8 :30 to 5 :30 . Start w/lot man duties 543,2825· Advancement avail. to -------- Babysitter. alt school & summer. 6 yr old girl. Own transp. Re rs 556-7248 aft 6PM Man or womao. Work auto rental counter man. w/yOWlg people. Enjoya0 Good driving r eq 'd. ble & interesting work 534-6890, 6:J9..4335. w/rapld advancement•--.... -,..-UT-0-S--,... E-5--oppor in our educational .. ,.. ,...... -------- products division. Age no OPPORTUNITY! Babysitter /housekeeper. barrter if 18 or over. Get set for the peak or Uve,in. mu~t speak Eng. · & haver,, "alary open. Bank mg EXPERIENCED PLATFOIM SECY Must possess xlnt typing sltilJs & like meellng the public. UNITED CalfonllahM 630A Newport Ctr Dr Newport Beach. Contact Robert Vanderstraeten 644-6464 Equal ()ppor Employer Bankmg lldqw /S.C. etcwy IOOIOCEEPH CcllhJtr Cf.oodJ Part time help wanted Stalc•nt & P/time 8-12. Landscape Y n g . a g gr e s s iv e F /Ume. Exper prer'd. Computer operator for architectural firm . Anaheim a cct 'g firlljl' Nights. Newport.er Inn, Data Pomt 1100, Some C.t ~.Cleric ~9444. look.Ing for bookkeepet. 7 14 / 6 44 . 1 7 o o Ca II bookkeeping experience Needed for small In---------1 w r It e . up work . Bart>ara,ext523E.O.E. necessar y. Excellent dependent bank w/xlnt IOOl(J(EEPf.R quart.eTlles & misc ofrc working conditions. benefits. can Marty for duties. Ground floor op-Good company benefits. appt.640-5100. 20~.perwkR ·rTo~andle portunity. Exper req'd. CASHIB/Sal119irl Apply between lOAM & A/P "' A/ or mport TI<l/9:56-7860 Full time employment. 3l"M only. Mission Viejo flnn in Newport Center. --------Men's Retail Clothing J mp or t s. 2 8 7 o I Good opportunity for looldlffPC", F/C Fashion Island Marguente Pkwy .• Mis- person who would lilte to we are ataSt growing 7~1622. lOam toGpm sion Viejo. 831-1740 or work 4 hours per day 1 •--' · s A ~1100 d E company oca..,.. 10 . . ...,.., . MondaythruFri ay. X· __ ... u need F /C CHILDC•RE -------- Mus t have pleasing '78! HOWARD Chevrolet Please call M-F. 1.5 PM, personality. Call betwo lo the Orange County ~13 <oH. l iiiiiiiiiiii _____ iiii 9:30am &2pm. Airport Complex will add -------- Banking EXPERIENCED COMMERICIAL TB.I.ER perlence with IBM ~~eepeenr Yw /good AIR "' C-rlesewch ...,.... Resp. girl needed during systems/32 computer backgTound. Good op-Swnme.r. Harb. Vu Hm IMTaYIEWEllS helpful, but not required. portunity for the right F /tlme, Car & Refs . HOMEMAKERS: 3 for EZ stra1ght sell & lease, Auto experience Babysitter. Mother in --------1 not ~wred but previous need of mature sitter, 645-6514 ~el.ling very helpful. Br, Mon.Jo'ri, owo trans . •AUTO LOTMEM mg ~ of $1500/~o. Children ages ' & IO. F\tU or part·Ume. Learn earnings. Opportunity 84&-0480 the auto business from for advancement, See -------- the ground up! Op-Sales Mgr .. Dove&Quail Bakery Saleseirls . portunity for advance-Sta .• Newport Beach. Mature pref'd. Full & ment. See Mr. O'Neill or ..... _ ...... R&R p/time. Apply at The Mr. Pi~e, HOWARD nu...., •• ansm man. BateSbop, 3444 E Coast OleVTOlet. Dove & Quail F /t" own tools. Exper Hwy,CoronadelMar. St.s •• Newport Beach, prd d 548-2288. Bankmg Atn'OllOTIVE VOH COMMEICIAL WAHTIDlll A BEA LOA.HSICl.nAIY Tune Up Specialist SUCCESSFUL Progressive tndepeodeot Lolboy SALESPERSON bank seelllng bank ex Line Mechanic JUST BEING per"d comm'l loan secy. Immediate open Ines. YOURSELF SANTIAGO IA.HI NI company benefit.a Sell Avon. You don't S3S E. lat.St, TuaUn See Vic Snyder at Vic· need experience because 832~ tory Dodie. 28118 Harbor Avon practically sells Equal Oppor Employer Blvd .. Costa Mesa. ltaelf. Eaminp are ell· 556-4620. c.llent; hours neiuble. For details call 540-7041 UtUe la Biel! Claatfied orZenltb7-l359 ads are really ama111-------- "people to people" aale9 calla tri&.b bl1 l'Udenhip and lq re1u.IU I To pl~ 10Ut' claul.Oed ad, call todaJeG-5m. 'l E ve up the shlp' "Llllt'~ It in claaalrted. Ship to 1hore reaultt! 642$678, What's Your Trade? Sl.62 per o.y That's ll tt.le to pa.y for ao ad ln t.be Daily P1Jot Senlce Dtredor)' that Cati aitabtilh yaur proleuional ideoUty. For more In· fcnnatioft call tGSln8. BANK SENIOR TB.LU Cotto Mesa U .... ITED Start Jaround $5005 ,tCont t, person. Please call for 6'4:70lllSaft6:30pm. Choose the days you "" tact oanne co a app't. m.7090. ------'"---1 wwk. Pt0 time days & C & •• ~ .... ,.. Transmark, 644·7342. CIVIL D~lGN _.._ ... _ Pos·u . ,...,.rv'"" "' c~·Ma~ Wtr,...,,. ............. l 005 In cen· BAMIC ,..._ __ "' w-~_,.... ENGINEER tral &ocalloo test cntr at IOOIOlHPSl To work a vertical com-Subdivision exp. ooly. Westminster Mall. Great W ___ 2220ceanAve. F /Cbg. to assume meTcial camera. C.A. Reynolds Civil hrs. 10,4pm & some •_..cw1ewtty -LlgunaBeacb respoo.albility for client Familiar w/PMT P~ ~.NB. Apply wtinds, No exper nee. lltCJ ft H 1MriHud 494-6546 bkkpnginC.M.CPAofc. cess. Exper. pref'd . !rl9-S893 willtrain.Mustbehischl tHio r teller. The E.0 .E. Mustbaveatroo1 payroll F/tlme. Co benefits, Ap-grad & enjoy people, No r•!fi0teslbllltiH ar• tu ell:})er. Call 546:9316 ply. PeBDysaver. 1660 CLL\NUP selling involved. _... d ( 1-..1 Placeotia,C.M. Need someone for CaJl()(flcel0.5pm •a -a" "c -• . IOOIOC_.. ----------• c I ea nu p w or It In 714/898-0906 Mahttal•l1'9 qood BN~lrf"H.?:~~:J~0~· huaw.e Apley CAI WASH HB.r printabop. WW also tvm t--------C•ttOM•r n latloH .,ue • Growing insurance agen Full or part-Ume. warehousin&, 13 Hr'to COOK h .. dll•g d posits' needs &ood all around cy seeb qualified indlv Metro Car Wash start. Santa Ana area, Exper pref'd . Mostly • • hair stytlat. 499-2221 or to malnta.ln acctng re 2950Harbor81.CM ~ eves, Xlnt beneflt:s . .............. ofMr' •5728 _;___ ______ cords in all ~kkpns CASHIER. dependable. salary open. Apply at flMlidal h MMCtloM. llWMG CLEll res Po o s i bi I i t 1 es · respooslble. AM & Even· CLERICAL JAoilv Ye .Rogers a 1·b203o a ~as~:e. ' ••llt wHlt typll9g Good t yping. 10 key. loaurwe bkid &exper. lo& shifts. Apply in PART-TIMI m-8720 It ,......, H yo. _.. Gen'I secy skills. No ab. ::.a't=.~:d~ penoo Oift Shop. OC 5 lh dally. llAM-4.PM ..-------- W11 elfecl ....... COit-Deborah.M>t066. tent, Cootat't Jan Heu. _Airport-:.-·------. Moa·Fri. Openina for COOICS ftlCt l•-------•1-...a. ,. .. 11r.1.1atea a lert. personable, F\111 or p/Ume. Exper. aate•Y StateMutualSavlnJs ~SR mature tndiv to learn to pref'd. Mesa Verde GlaeALI PmaALSAVIHGS 2300Harbor Boulevard Costa Mesa, CA 928.26 t114) 642-4711 Equal Opportunity Employu M /F /H No ex.per. neceas. MuJJt 4001 MacArthur, NB Marine Hardwant nitall operate .al• followup Ccov. Hosp, 681 Center be dependable le able to i-Eq-=-u.a.t_Oppor..:.;..._E_m ..... p_to ..... y_er_ store seek• catbler. a,.wms for IM.lW c:ar de-Sl.C.M.548-SS85 W\ box• S3 Pet hr + Beach lota, naUonal Co. aler, PoeiUon located in __. co benefit.I, Apply, aood benefits. some c.M, Ute cyplng, Good COOKS. breakfast lun~h .-S C weell:end wort. Call B. ata.rUq sal, adv within •dinner, Ma Barker s. National ystelDI orp. Monilon.645-17U 60 days. Appl)'. Wed 212E. 1'7\.bSt,CM '381 BtrchSt. N.8 , <near April Htb, Nu Orm OC Alrport> Equal Op-UdDp rast wtth Dalb Plana, 31-.c AlrPOrt Ha" ~ to selJ? pomm.tty Emptoyer Pilot Want Adi. Loop Dr. from 9•m·1pm. ClllMllled ads dO It well. .. . .... .,..._... 7 (!.I• OM.V f'll.01 .._.W_.... 7100 ....,W•tH 7100 HtlpW•hd 7IOOIHlfpW-.d 7 l 00 .... W•ted 71 00 HelpW.+ed 7100 ....................... •••··················•• •••·····•··•···•·••···· .••.••••............•...•.......................•...•................ ,Recept1aniat/Secretary t.OT ATTIM>AH'T MUISISAJOES lmmedi.te OJ)ellln¥ tor UALISTAn . ·~r m womens HJ:f Muetl be I or over with l-3 fuJI Ume Exper'd & experienced recept1oni~t SALIS NOPLl aboes Cameo Shoes. So SECRETARY We are! looldo& for 11 qualllled ~ with Uaht book~plna ex pcrlence t.o accompU.h varl!!d office duties M\Ut be well groonwd ln dMdwal. front. otric.e ap pearance Non smok_,r Outstandlna worklna condlt1on.a. Pleue ull Barb:ara Davia . weekdays. for apPo1Dt menl. 642-16216 C.s. OIY ftAIH&S HELPERS for Clunh11 valld Calif drl vers l.nllftees. approved c:ert. to haDd.le buay phones. Q>dt Plua, ~·5'2IU. Art A erefla. l!llt P''r ho.aw!t• •-.:apb i''ull/p 11"'""~" nAnlflt•__r_...,.... ~cram. Ah10, wknd I~ t ..a biUl Loolrlq [or a £N•l placf ~.. ~ tNi c> wo' cu ......... ......, ,. ............. ,.... -v...... ma • )'~ng a Y to work? Before you SAL •"ADY ... "'°'... Ume v•'lltar ..... ~120 ""'" opm to mature stu• '""b t quallficat.ion.s by L d •~· Xlal pay A company •0049 1bedu Apply ~ -~ dent6 Me.a Verde Conv :.U t.o A Law CMp 610 m11ae • ec~•on. c#JI OUTSIQE/P.R. WORK, bcocfu.s. vual)Dlft pay, 1uth C u. 17 3 ~2 Nelpooocitod. Pereoo Fri Al'Pt.YIMPUSOH llc.llp.661Ctln&.erSt.CM Newport Cent er Dr. 540-ll~I and visit with Full lime Sala ry ~ ~. cr\ld.d Anml.nlll&. ln-loe lnr d 1 y , mu 11 t ha v ,. Suite 1220. Newport Dave ~b.re at Henb1.:e s:iQ0.98l>Oipcrmo.. lll&atbe union. CIPP'1 fO#" ~vu Redh.IJJ ~ MacAr\bur 1 tec:n!laria.I ai1la + olfc NURSIS A.IDES Real FA late, Nawport ovN' 21 and penooable. "~' APPb U. pcn.oo !MIO~ m a n a a c m t> n t & O.OEAUl!S Beach 92660 &ach. hnt xlat drtv_io( ~d. IOAM 4Pll. Alpby '1 hmale to t'lean & dctaJl capabiht1tlS Contact ..... """Atilll'l!l!I n..c to elderly pallcmL'> RECEPTION1S1' Car~~ to =-•~llTIHfoun boau fu ll lllDa. •t M2-ll..51 WUl lr&U\lfqualified All Oruter lrvlo~ Crc:<hti•--------•l 8doo233.c/0DallyPilot, •·•-Y-"~~ :'!"'u.a\ Oppty Newpon Beach dealer HOSTUJt flhllta avail. Apply 144~ Union bu imrned. open· R.tltllu.rant MPO BoCax ...,!!!O. Coat a ....... """"" -6S' z.w7 '~ a.perior Av~. NB Ing ror rec•plionlst esa, -· oyer ". Now ~~u.ons.. ~avy phones. lood typ BOB"' FINANCE Apply on Tues It Wed MUISISAIDES Ing. ucell~t benefit ~ SAl"M.+Jlt &flu 3pm. Bob DtlMll u.~ ......... ST/.ft.-, "'xper·d 7.3, Country p•·ck0 de Pie use call ,.._ OfThe Ret.alllwbolesa.r. marloe •Secrebries* COUMYRHB.P L.&ra• R.e11ld'l/Comm'I Restaunnl. Jo'ub1on -~.... --c. c..':. liri . ai..1o ) hardware •tor• needs lOPll t.o CIAM. Wlnchell Swldors/Developer re· lsland Ne Top•GJ Club Conv Hom e _,. · ...,, Y sales~. KDowledtCt! Rttcptlonista $7~$800 Dorwu. ~ E t1lh St.. ~Wrel lndividuJtJ to head --..;..' -· -----Sc&,.up & aflort nm mdl. ~1 RECEPTJONIST TYPIST ~1 ... )1toy ~ura"'n•~ iant ~ boa'~ Ir exper pref'd C.M. (U'Wlce dJv. Strong COD· HCY1'EL lalbe. punch press Gd OFflCIE Need one more slrl to ...... ..b.... • ~--Nat'l co •l&ood benefits. Mu.st typa~a.ccuntely Employers PIU' AU Fees ---------t tacta to develop comm al nx OHi.A TOA opp 0 r t 0 ex p I) n d round out busy office. nearui y lc>UuC?ftS. We re Insur. vacaUoo. Some CUSTODIAN ~ts forprojeet loaos& AM shift. Cootect Mr. w/arowing co 5 Dtly/40 Gen'I duties for person Basic -0mcu skJll•. & qoln,..nol>!!~~exper wltnd won. Beach loc. Ut Reinders Agency 4020 81 rt: h St. Ste 1()4 Newport Beach 833-8100 cau for appt/eatab '64 P time Newpon Beach eqwty capltal. Track re Hannan. Al&porter Inn hr wk Co pd hie/hosp ;::r~r~ tobl~~o:~ pleasant personality a ~~ ~t:i'~ :!~:Sn Ca 11 B. Morr Ison. Ca.U Eves. 673-!890 curd & re(s a must Wnte llotel, 833-2770. uu1 Cole tnstrumt!nt l must' Please call btwn !Hlam 64.5 1711 D T IMflY Vaco Developer•· Inc ---------1 Oorp. <1 14) 556·3100. ~~~~:.'C."~~931~ M 9-l2,fl3l-1700 2:°1..hn/Waltreswa · . . "" A A ..a ,..__ HiP,011_ Box 2949. Laauna HousecleaolngTrull or1 p/t, E.O.E. REC~ •rr ,.--a..•........1.-....--S1Aorl..FES1.:~eatposur1~ti'onwo. Ampap~ ACCDSWMJ_-. "'·92653 own trans. op sa ary ---------Ortbodoruc recept1ocust.-_., • ..--,..._.... '' u... S£CREJARJ fUll Ume position open 642·7430or646-4871 Maid. tive-1n. lovely NO. m a t ure -office ex Needed for Satal ooly. C•Men ly Oerorator Lane. So . .is a video display ••••••••••I home w/pnva~ ruom. 5 perlence necesury. C.U644-M94 7311EclingerHunt8ch CoastPlaiu MO--m7. NEVERAFEE terminal operator for ll FIRST JOI Housecleancrs. Tues·Fr_I, days, wknds off. 'Ena. 644-1405. ---------23952Avenid&dt! la nus interesting SPot of Basic /Four mini llorover 8·3PM. Call, J anice 11 a.peaking preferred. ---------1 Carlotta. Laguna Hills SALESPERSON fers good potent ror IOmputer. Some ex· Coedl..oexpnec RagsedyAruls.&4Sl800 Houlekeepl.ng. cooking. PAREN'TSTEACHERS RECEPTIOMIST' '501CampusDr,lrvine G 0 U R M E 1' p~rs on w /moderuae perienceisdesirable, but Free training, For PIT. Housecleaners needed need own trans Non Unusual opportunity In PIX OPERA TO l54E17th St. c. Mesa COOKWARE SHOP an skil Is. X 1 nt ben es 'illlra10individualwith rewarding career, U& )4ature.Top$$.Carnec smkr 644·-0595 __ interesting educational 9842Adams,Hunt.Bch CdM. Full tame ONLY Marketing bkgd a plw. demonstrated typing ac ,,._.,1.ble lst three days 642-1403 64!i 3439 sal-...,.rk. p,..,1,;_ 'n· PnuaJOpp Emplyr m /f Serious Gour1net Cook Call Chris. 540·6055, cur.icy and speed. Work ........ · MAIDS. exclusive mo~el '"' -v ""....,., • Immediate openmg for a L"'t ~apply Send resum.i Coastal Personnel Agcn 90 pleasant environment Must have own car. Call Housekeeper. ror few hrs in Laguna Beac h volves contact with at eceplionist / PBX & refs to Adll2:l4. Dally cy,2790 Harbor.CM with good company 9 lo Spm. Mo n -Fri aday,forelderlylady& F/tJmeCall494·852l parents of ~eachool '& Operator in our busy Rnt....tM••91" Pilot. Box 1560. Costa benefits inc luding 2 5S8-0442. son. Mus t have car u -ids. top wages P"'d. sd¥>ol·age c 'ldreo. Ex· eJect.rorucs ma.nutattur-Some banq~t exp nee. Mesa,CA92626 SECRETARY to ,match weeks vacation after one 64.S-1553 Apply . T he Inn ... at ceptional income op lngfirm.Thisposihonof· Phoneaft3pm,644-4788 ---"--------1 quality surround10gs or )l'Jr , company paid ·---------i La•wia. 211 No Coast portumtr. ca,· II answe1r-rers variety and public SALE~/time low key real estate an i:roup insurunce. credit Housekeeper II\ e -1n. H.. La Be h ing servtce or appt w lb contact to the right tn· R e s l a u r a n l ALL TIME vestment oCc. Lite bk uruon. ete Apply at FITTER young Newport Beach wy.. guna ac · sales manager. 557·1041 dividual. Mwst have typ. CHANT ECLAI R , Isl The Store ForTIM~X kpg, gd w/numbers. di" ()RAll.ll!.E CO "'ST & SEAMSTRESS family. expcr & ref's re---------· (T30> E.O.E. ing skills or 50 wpm. We class continental is in· Sale:4 &Servit·e pendable typmg. Poi.1 nv "' Full tame only. Apply in q'd. Pref non smkr. Mail Departmenl --,-.-.T-Tl_M_E_O_M_L_Y_ can offer an excellent terv1ewmg ror exper'd 2.<J41S. Mam.S. An3 lion avail 1mmed or DAILY PILOT person to Manager. Ma· 644-4788 TRAINEE ,_ starting salary with Waiters & exper 'd llrf\Jng can be nex1blt.' 330W.BaySt CM ble Austin. Draper's---------WiUtrainbndh•mdiv to Mustnowbe employed& liberal company Busboys.Applyinperson Sales persc>rf. pan Um~. AskforAvis833·3927 betweenlhe hours of WigunoHillsSlore,23621 Housekeeper, live in. ""'.. freet.oworkmmy small benefits Please apply in from 3.5 18912 Mac (or Book Store.:; S.OOAM·5 OOPM Moulton Parkway Plaza must drive. in good operate tnsert1ng apps business of atr person Arthur Blvd.Irvine. Laguna 496-8701 Call for health. free to travel, top machine. Must be depen-treatment equip. M·S Ser vH·e Sta Attend F/llme. Day shifts. Hrly s alary. refercncl'!>, dable & able to hft nuul 6-lOPM & Sal 9:30AM ApPointmentpleasc FoodPnperatioe 495.(il69 bags Apply. National 2::.>PM $300 mo sol. or TREND.AT.A RetilSales 642-4321,Ht277 And Hoste~s. IO-JPM. SysternsCorp.4361 Birch profit sharing. No exp. EqualOpponunily Mon Fr1. Fast food HOUSEKEEPER St. N B. l Neur O.C. nee For mterv. call alt CORP. Standard Memories & Exp Cashier _Employer restaurant.!168·7521 5 Mormngs or S after· Airport) Equal Op-1PM979-3861 Ueclt band & painlcr for noons p /week. 4 hrs portwuly Employer Division AnAppUed Magnetics Co Atlracltve exper 'd for 4o· power boat Full GARDEHB/Mafnt. p/day Mon-Fri or Sun.1--------· ume. 548.3432 or "rt 6 . P1time for Tennis Club Thurs. Housework. laun· . p .. I h o I dry, shopping & errands Maint~nance M,an. erm liT.14274 ask for Jam in I unt Be n Y expr'd ror bus•· pr-0fftssional. posllloa. Starling salary ------ -& mature need apply " <" seoo Lit t Deli•-'enon Mon/Wed/Fr1 only Ca ll Must have own transp & . mo e cons rue· -·' """ oo.,., refs RIO. p iwk. S40·ro60 Uon , gen mamt 12 acre ~·or bu:.) Newport .....,..,.,..,. orr1 c e r omplex 1n Travel Agency. Must ---------lndustnal Orange. Cabf Paid m- huve motorcycle & know GARDENER ILUEJEAH.JOBS sur ance & vacation. freeways Work approx 5 F/time. No exper nee. P1cltup truck helpful. hn. a day Mon Fn. I lrly APP I Y i n Pers 0 n • U---' N--... {W-n Send resume to O.P .A. wage+ mileage. Newporter Inn. 1107 • .,... ... lllTU '"""" 1'1Brookhollow0r.San- 8J3.96l7 Jamboree Rd. N. 8 . See Ii Melt Traiftefl t.a Ana. 92705 ---------• Lmdseybetwn9-3. EOE DetlT~ Penon 'ASSEMBLERS F'1Ume. Freeway Auto General Office Mature PACICAGERS ManagerTn1inees Supply, 26242 Aver y woman w/general omce Parkway at s.o. frwy. skills & ~xccll. tele~hone GEN. LAIOREflS UTQTEM Mlssion Viejo personality for a 1 girl of SOLDERERS ' fice m Nwprt Bch. Hrs INsncTORS Food Stores Clell vcry rnun. early 9-5. Please call ror appl. Day-Week-Mnth or C morning, LA Times _7_52-_732_1______ l\reSeekmg ureer C M H B h looger. it's your decision Minded People For route. · · tg c · G I ffi d l 1st & 2nd shifts "va·' G-... • ... EE MuM have dependable e'!era 0 ice. g ypmg 0 u . MAHA ~"'~I" S ,·or Good pay $46-448l skillsneeded,SOWPM .10 Paid vacut10nll You Haveopenlngs for f/time key by touch. must be don't pay, we pay > ou' & p1t1me clerks on 2nd & Dental Asst. ortho, chr , sharp on details. Ap· CALL OR 3rd slurts. If mlerested. Ne.4~dys. Orthoew& plications bemg taken COMEINTODA)' contact ou r nearest K.0 .A req. 642-2626 714-893-2421 or 531-l725, IEL[~ market or go to ask for Gladys 12442 Lampson G G rv DENTAL Assist. Exper'd ------'-----Mon lhru Fri 9am-5pm rn gen'I prac to work in GENERAi.OFFiCE !:>E t=\v rce rormformationphone fun grow mg prac 3 Day Electronics r1rm in C.M \401 Dove Street 1714 > 537-1840 wknds . early aftns. seeks person w/gen'I ore Ste340 Newport Bob EqualOppor Employer bcnefils. mccnUvt!l>, sal & hte bkkpng exper '•--..:S:;.;:U.~144;;_1 ___ ,,~~~~~~~~~~ open. 493-9311____ lncludes A/P & AIR. Ex I• l ... STRUCTORS Manager for maternity Dental A.ss't-Do you want per'd. reliable. mature ,1 career m ortho using person desirable. Valor :.ill your RUA skills ? Electrorucs.54().9264 __ " shop in Westm inster For health spa. Xlnl op Mall Salary + com Pol'· for young men & mission . 557 5734 for women Knowledge in appt 640-0121 _ _ GENL Ofc. pref lumber exper. AIR & mvoicmg Must ~ good typi~l. St Sl\50. ~. N.B. IX·nt.al Recepl. Desk only Good benefils. H. B IS!l3-5032, 846-3:>40 DENTAL CHAI RSIOE \SSISTANT. xlnl 0 11· vonun1ty. x-ray hcen:.e Mj, 525-64~ _ _ lh'ntal Sec·y bkkpr for Nl:'wport 8(!ath or- thudonl.lst. 642-4612 ----Dental N.s1sl. chair s ide. N B. Pl ea~anl group praclire. Exp pre ('d ti40-IJ.22 health~ nutrition or --------- physical ed ucut1onl•--------- he1pful. Apply in person. MANICURIST Tues & Wed. from 10 3 only . 18030 Magnolia Very busy salon 1s an ~neralOffice Ave. F Valley need of a (abulou-. RECORDSC&.EAK ~alSpalnc. man1cur1s t with all Varied position working skills. Great bcnerits. w/scheduling & collec----------•I pa.id vacation. s uper J>t.'<>· Uon reports. Type 40+ li11t•cmte• Coapmty pie to work walh. For m- wpm. Some accounting has immed. openangs for terv1ew call Terrence exper or training would H.S. grads. Xlnl working Wilson. 17141 644·2800, be helpful. Apply. Na· coods & benefits. ext32S. tional Systems Corp, 4361 Prelllklm Aa.dit Ctk F.qual ()pPor Employer &rcbSt,N.B. <NearOC Lite typi ng . good Airpor t)_ E qua l Op· w/figures. hvy phones. portunl\y Employer Maint. MKhaNc Dental recept1onisl. l l:z ---------days Exp nee Will train in building operations. Exper'd in common hand &c power tools. Must be Oex1ble. M ANUFACTURER Person wanted to work in our producllon dept. fill· ing paint & other related items. Must be playing with al leasl 40 cards oul of a deck or 52 m all areas. No jokers al · lowed. Good benefits, starting pay & working conditions. Apply at 1003 W.AllonS A. 495-6677 Ol~hwashmg & gen dean rng P tT for l'QWP rt.'nl :.Lore l6 20hrs wk 1..is-mso ORAf'TS PERSON Xlnl opport w texpandmg t1rm Subdivision exp on· h <..: A Reynolds C1v1I ~:n~anecnng, NB. Appl~ ~1'79·5893 * DRIVER/F-tirM Neut appearance. ~ood dnv1ng record. over 18. Uchvery of blueprints & ~raphic art products in Newport & Tustin <1rea. $2.65 + incentive Cu II fi.W.8700. GENERAL LABORERS Urgenlly Needed' ' ' Warehouse Stock Clerks Shippmg & Receiving Must huve phone & relia-ble transp. Long & short term assignments. Hoh· day & vacation pay. !-fosp1lalizatioo plan av all. 3148C~Drin 546-4741 11\cross From Orange Co. Airport J Equal ()pPor Employer Apply ln Pel"SOll Safeco lnswmce Co 17570 Brookbursl, F Vly 8.:.>·2 Mon tbru Fri F.qual Opp Emplyr mtr Interviewing. pro· Manufaclunng.general fess1onal Interior factoryworkforSPorting Designers to share de· goods firm. 7.30-4 OOPM. sign studio. call 83C>-6047 540-6142 Janitorialj Gcrd .. ter I t 1 me. ·nt at u re . Retirees OK. 675-6101 Newport Janitors. cpl, Uvang qtrs A p p I y i,,n p e r s o n • Newport Dunes, 1131 Back Bay Dr. NB. --------- MASSEUSSE. 18-21 Call first class legit massage. We w1U tram. Newport lkh. 631-4838 MATURE W O MAN pt llme to wtilcome newcomers & contact merchants. flexible hrs. Need car, hte typing 547·3095. Ollplicatiom Clk Krq's good working knowl~ge or offset & direct 1mpress 1on l.lupl1cat in ~ e qu ip . S747-S926 Appl1cal1on Genera_loffice.Goodtyp. ucadl.lne '4 27118, •PM. mg skUls.1use10 key ad Inquire. Huntlngt(Jn der. Cal 548-7040 ror Beach Union tt.S. Dis-appt. _____ _ KEYPUNCH OPR. lmmed opening for a Fltime keypunch opr 1 Yr min exper. on Univac 1710 req'd. Apply : J ack G. Raub Co. Attn Anne S~venson. 125 Baker St, Cost.a Mesa, 92626. <7l4 > 751-2510 Mature person. Assist Manager. Van's Tenrus Shoes. 581-2090. MEDICAL ASST. lnct, 898-6711 . ext 242 GIRL FRIDAY l::qual 0pPor Employer Sport:;wear mfg. needs """*'r--'c Alsetn. well organized, self LADY ovet 25. live·in to ~ -t rte I nto y co care for 2 yr. old. S Days With front ofc s kills, needed for busy ophthalmologist ore. Ex· per m ophthalmology help(ul. 540-4585 •·~at winder & assembler s a r. nve r n· "" M mt f trol.lyping.phonesales plwk. exper. & refs for Costa esa g. 0 642-3472 Dept 4 675-0286 Medical typlst/recep for delay lines & miruature ------------------Nwpt Center ofc. PIT. trans r or mer s Legal Secretary, min 3 Mon· Fri, 1-Spm. Sal 3400 w Segerstrom b.igh fashion store. Ex- PART ME Santo Ana, CA 92704 per'donly apply Tl <714 > 540-3605 ext 213 APROPOS 29 Fashion island, NB EVENINGS F.quaJ Opportunity Call 644-2652 Employer l'tt/F ~~:;::======~~:!• Adults Wlth out.standing. ~~~~~ "/ attractive personahbes RETAIL SALES who etti<>Y worklng walh RECEPTIONIST ku:b Start al $3.50 per . Fasw-1.a-d hr. Phone 642-4321 11250. Personnel needed part· between3 00.5·00P M Trainee C<>ns1dered t.tme at the new Hickory A.sldor SharOft Farms of Otuo store in Equal Opp ortunity With The Fashion lslond. Ideal for Employer F0Uow111g people who can work Requirements monungs. afternoons o PIX Answer Serv. Sharp Person evenmgs. Experience P lime shifts. Work a Pleasant Appearance not necess. Will train busy switchboard. Day Good Telephooe Apply m person after l sturtsonly. No Sun. EOE. Personality noon dwl,y tNo Phone 546-3333. Good Typmg Slulb Calls> Mo.S..ker \~~ Pf:s we r1ng s ervi ce ~d~~~IJ operator full & PIT Call Call Mrs. Wll1te for an ~~~If-~ 835-3561 terview apPointmc:nl ~ of 01110 PBX OPERA TOR Pc:M Dosier F 1t1me day shift. Apply Assoc. Inc 17 Fashioll lslmd Hotel Laguna. 425 S COSTA MESA tiffwport hach Coast Hwy. Lag Bch 17141 55._7075 F.qual Opportunity 494-1151 Employer Male /Female F.qual Oppor Employer PBX Operator. telephone ~' 'ti answering service. Over 25. w/tram. Days, e ves. &graveyard. 835-3561 PETITIONERS Full/ art-Lime GOOd pay daily. 536-7711_ Pla!>UCS MoldinCJ Machine OPERATORS Further expansion RIECEPT {TYPIST Front office appearance. accurale typist. able to handle heavy phones. w/accurate messages Deal pleasantly w/peo pie .. 1n a proress1onnl manner 8-5PM. 833-3511 ReceptlTypist. aptitude for figures. Exp'd 4-S day week includes wknds. Boat sales orfice. Call 675-3282. 9.5 RMfLVHWbds Night relier. Fringe benefits. 14-45 SU'penor Ave, N 8. 642·2410 RM'Sl2J creates permanent open· 1-.••••••••• mgs for experienced & 1• 7·3 Charge nurse. Posl· l.IOO avrul May IS Good Sal & fnnge benefits. RN 3-11 Medications full or ptl.lme. Xtra orienlat1on time for nurse who has been inactive. Mesa Verde f''ll'lv Hosp. 661 Center St. C. M. 548-SS85 lrainee machine operators on all shifts. Our trauung & mertt re· view procedure assure rapid advancement for all employes who have the basic abill.lly & de- RECEPTIONIST Pushbutton swtchbd, lite typ & cler. Apply Kirsch Co. 17352 Armstrong. lrvme <nr Redhill & Ma~ur>. 540-8503. ROUTE SA.LES Up to $200 wk t.o start P/time avail Car req'd Fuller Brush Co 754-6471 sire. Good pay, rute shill 111!~~~!!!!~!!!!~ bonus & xlnl benefits in. I= Sail M...toct•et s Exper"d hand worker eluding profit-sharing. maJor medJcal & dental iluurance. Apply 8arn-4pm CI MC 0 265 Briggs Ave . (; M lrVIJle lndust. Complex E.O.E Plumber/Helper Dram men trainees. Apply 1337 So Bristol, S.A. PRESSMAN P /T Some exper desirable. Daytime hrs. No. H.B. 898-2628 wkdys. P1t1me student to do maintenance work al Party Rent.al store. App. ly. 2005 NewPort Blvd, CM REAL ESTATE Lie req'd for salaried pos. Som e travel. 11•n68-1222 R.E.Sale Xlnt pay & fri nge "'V"'I" ••LE ... OW benefi ts . Ody ssey •~ ~-. " Sailmakers Inc 2972 2 positions in exciting & c p 1 c M expanding Century 21 Of. en tu Y • · • fice' Call for appoint· _ss_7_-4073 __ ._E_._O_E_. ___ _ ment today & discover: +Why we are better' +Why wear~ growing' +Get your License fast! +Why we tram betler ! +How to earn b i g money! Be glad YOU called! !'79-1050 Century 21 Surf Realty R.E.Sales OPENING For experienced real estate salesp e r son Irvine area. Call Dawn ror interview. 833-8600 SALES DOYOUPUY THE ORGAN? If to, ltMn nmy tM o care•r for yo., at Orga" IE•change. S..eral .,,.n1.p ..,,., avail. Sel llt W4J11 traf. fie .af11. ftrUIOH .... .,... usefal .... we will traM you. Call Mrs. J•tt. C714J 516-7302. Have something you want ~~~~~~~~~~I to seU., Classified ads do It well -Call NOW. Find what you want in 642·5678. Daily Pilot Clsssllleds. ------• Help W..e.d 7100.W, W..ted 7100 REALTOR or Realtor Associate. Have need for I good ac· live aalespeaon RoyMcC_... 1110 Mtwport ..... d. Colla .... 141-7729 .............................................. Ewperienced or willing GIRL FRIDAY yrs exp. OC Airport area. open. send resume to to learn. Valor Elec· Salopen !nS-0200 Bo• •127, Dally Pilot. l•-------- trorucslnc. 540-9264 Unique & outstanding 1 _... r--~ Co.ta Mesa. 92626. •--~----OH-l_S_T __ Opportunities for women in the great outdoors ~-._. .... _.._.. ... _,.-.111 position for an exl!ep· -...-~ uonal. ambitious girl Busy lo~asblon Isl law Medical RECEPT/BKPR P/tJme. S3 hr Pleuant fo,:XecSecy's to S12K who wants variety, good ofc seeks girl friday who tor Radiology Office, slU'T'OUJUllng.s. MUJ1l lype lnsuranceSecy $l2K pay & fine working con-desires resp. Duties in· P /tlme/F /tlme. Peg 11\lo '5 wpm. Reply to C~neral Office $650 ds. Duties include· Lilf' elude Mag Card 1J opera. board syate.01, must be Clauified ad no. ¥43, C/O Mmin Assi!ll St2K + 1SeCretarial. rticeplionist. lion & handling clients. exper an ull types or Dally Pilot, PO Box U60. Re<-eptJonist $700+ pubUc relations & all Xlnt skills o must. mecUcallnsurance.Some CG!taMesa.C.921826 Irvine Personnel Agency around hell'V'r to pnvdte 644-9190 typin&. ~9441 ._._ l'IV9IST "88 E l'TUI Ce>11Ut M eaa "" __. • / ••• Swte224 642·1470 investor . Position re Loana Models & EacOfh We need a sharp lndlv-. ~!II!!!!~~~!!!!!~~ quires very aood educa 1.,..ftEPl!WDR~ u. who ................. "'p-, -: llOll. late mudel car. + ,., m ..... , ...... ,.... .._. v.-.., ..... ""-M ll""t ... _ an1wer pbooes In busy FACTORY POSITIONS Ceramic Casters, alaura. fulishers. day & night shlta. Over 21 , per manent poi1Hlon w /benents. Eicper pre! ferred. Apply in person Vohaon of Callfornha 34215 Doheny Park R6 , CUPoBch. WANT ACTION" Clasa1(ed Ads 6'2-5678 superb grooming, ap LOAM AGENT "'" ooey. ... .... ve salee olc. Mutt it.art Im· pea.ranee & wardrobe Exper 'd Loan Agent ..;c_llJ'_._63_l_·_38_U_____ med. We are look.lng for 542·722'7 needed to aenerate Motel·Frool Desk Oerlt. 1omeone peraooablc. GtlLSHEEDID loao1·tn the Coaet1t l Exper. req·d. Apply. OIUJanie,134-1206. Sandwtch delivery. ~ Or~. a.rea from QualilY Inn, 75$5 &ach ~t/Casb1 r for Days wk.• hl"I day. Own t'~t e.iat!° ~ ~!d· Blvd, Buena Park • weekend " boll~ cov· tr&MP Eam ovr s:uo Contact Nell Boaman. Mullvated wome n . erace 8an\"5pm. Ablll~ hr Ca 11 8 am I p m . <.213) 860-G8'7i or \7'41 scrtou.~ about tmprovln(t t.o deal w/pu_bUc fl nHt 540-8339 -.i.. the family ln~ome tbru appear. req'd. Appt( ln LOSAN(a;LES c.-oncentratrd work w/ person. Ml ss o n SELL idle Item" with o 'f'ED£R.ALSAV1NGS people. part Ume Call Boechcraft. '8741 No. Dally Pilot Cl:11s1ficd Ad. Equal ()pp Eoipt,yr m/f C<!_appt. 4IM ~1G8 __ Al.....:l'POl,_rt_W_•., •• _SA ___ _ If you'd Uke fresh alr, green grass. ond blue !lktea as an omce. we have an opeolog for yO\I. If you quality for traJnlng. here are aome or the openings available: Heavy Construction Equipment Operator. Missile Malnt.enance. Air Traffic Controller, Carpenter/Mason. Helicopter Repair. For adventurous women 1001ung for a st~le career. In the states or abroad. Start at S397 a mooth (before deducUons). Food. boualng, uniforms, medical care are all provided. Cal ArMf OpporMillw1 e .......... s40-1ou lllilfl ........ '62-1421 .......... 761-1251 ' Joht ttlt ,...._ -'o'n ..._.. tM ..,_,. ._..., O,..a:t..ity I ;l1rer Sales. P /T public rela· +comm. Call 673-3320 uons w1rap1dJy growing --------- financial institution. Service Station Manager Salary + comm. Full Trainee, exper·d. Lie llmt! leasing pos1tioo also pref'd. All benefits avail Call aft JPM. Super apponun1ly. APP· 558-9084 ly. 2590 NewPort Blvd. ---------CM Sales person exp'd f It for ------- fine women's ready to Serv1c~ Station Attend wear. Nell's South Coast P 111me eves /wknds Plaza now mterv1~wmg Light mech'I knowled.:t.'. 54.S-0836 Neal appear & handwnt- ----ing. Apply, 2590 Newport SALES Blvd, CM Work 10 home a.r~a Service St~on Allen· P /LI me . Poss 1 ble dants 121• pan & f/tim~. SS0/$100 pt>r day The exper 'd Apply. Carey Slim Gym is back. TV Chevron. 604 S Coasl ~~~r applS We tram Hwy Laguna Beach. . --Service Sta. Atlendanl, Sandwich. Dell ver y. exper'd. FuU or p/time female. 8 .30am·noon Apply, Arco Station. 17th Xlnt pit JOb. 645-014 &Irvine CM betwnJ..4pm ----·------Serv St.a Help needed 1m med. Mu s t he l l! Duytnighl shirts avail Full or p/l. Apply 990 ~ CstHwy.NB SANDWICH SHOP Nr Orange County Airport. 17881 Skypark Blvd, Suite A. Irvin!!. An· thony's Dell 2 shifts Mon lhru Fri. 7 .30·3 30 & 11 . 30·5 . JO. Apply IO person.556-0670 SEAMSTRESS Sailing making ~ exper'd Call 673-2140. Secretary LOAM SECRET ARY With ex per. needed ror small independent bank wtxlnt benefits. Sal com mensurale wtexper. Call Su21, for appt. 640-5100 Secreta.nal P /T help in pro{ ofc Some ex per nee Must havt.' gd phone ab1l 642-6443 Service Stallon Allen dant. exper·d. Day Ill Eves. Full & p/llme. Ap ply. Shell Station, 17th & lrvme. NB Sewtog Operators, over lock-single needle. Good pay. 642·3472. Dept. 3. SGT. PEPP€RON1S PIZZA STORE Now 1-linng for full & ptllme openings al lo<'a t1on near OC Airport. Must be l8orover. Appl~ in pt!rson 2300S. e:. Bnstol Santa Ana Heights S4!*.s674 tNexl to Mc Donalds> F.qual OpPor Employer SECRETARY·lntricat\> S H I P P I N G & ,JOb Xlnt typlSt. No sh RECEIVING pers on Operate or learn to wantedtoosststourshrp operate Mag II. Sm.all pang & receiving clerk law ore. Airport area "'1ust be playm~ wilh at N. B least 48 C.trdsofJ deck of No legal expeneoce S2 in aJI areas. No joker:. Call 833·9982 allowed. Good benefit~. SECRETARY-Super group of architects nec.'C.I exceptional gal w/good slalls for very busy ore Pleas e ea ll betwn 9am l2. 631-1700. SECRETARY st.artmg pay & working conditions. Apply at 1603 W. AJton, S.A. SHIPPING CLERK Write & fill order~. customer relations. Neut bandwnUng, sorne typ- 111g 957-09718:30-4. __ ACCOUNTING ll y~~ ~e~'&"ship procedures. have worked SECRETARY 1n electromcs co before. caJI us for intervw lM M.t::D. GETIMTOUCH We are an equal oµ WfTH portunity employer, of OPPORTUMITY! fer good pay. benefit:.. We arc seeking a growth potent & con· qualified Accounting geoiaJ atmosphere. Secretary possessing DECC 00.65 wpm typing, an ap Irvine ~-47:11 titude for light account mg assignments. and HlStOf'e, Full&p/tclerk ability to use your own for nights. Apply an millative. Working 10 persoo, 28933 Cr own this capacity. you will re V!l11ey Prkwy, Laguna Port to the Controller an _N_•~g;.... ------- Manager of Accounlmg Switchboard Oprs, wall and be ~~Ible for tram. >\pply 250 E. 17th typing fmaoc1al state · St .. CM. Ste I. (upstairs l ments. budgets. and cor 645-819'1 resPoodence. To learn --------- more about this op· TEACHER portlJ!"ity, call Mary Ann Temporary. Secondary Banning at 7t4n52~1 l. Art major speciall2.ing m Exl.243. metal-jewelry. begin· ning tbru advanced stu def' dents. Starting May 1. WI~ $50.0ll/day. Call Laguna 4UOVoo Karman Ave Beach Unified School Newport Beach, CA 92660 Distnct. 494-8546 Equal Opp Emplyr M/F -TB..EPHOME-----5-AU--S- 1be fast.est draw lo the West. . .a Daily Pilot Class1!1ed Ad. 642-5678. Looking for a oot so or dinary-good paying job" Talk to us now. We may heve it ! 531-0842 ....., Wmlhd 7 I 00 twp W.t.d 7100 ········•········••·••· ...................... . SALES-MANAGEMENT THE LOOK i''amous for the finest 1n men's & women·a European clothing hos (2) Immediate o~na.ngs tor 1s111stant managers In both me-n's & women's slof'tlS ut Fashlon Island. Prior f1:1h1on bacqrourul necessary. Sal + comm +profit sbartni . Call for appt. 10am-$pm Mon thru Sat THE LOOK 644-6500, 54M500 ' 7 ~ 0 h s _l c . r Ii b a l.J r1 n ,, a lj t J f ~ 0, t 1' Te nt bi: to vi m th. ff co re tb Tc M• Ct ta Ct bf ot ~-pr $1 Yt . ... !.~~~_. •. !!!~~~!"_*_! 7100 ,_I a ...... !~~.~ !!.•.~.: ... !~ ..... ~!!! ~.~~ .. ~!~! ~!!:-.~ ...... !~~~ 'r~.April25. 1976 DAILY PILOT CJf ~=--~ ,.,,.'lJJ ~ ~.:::...~~:!: WANTED ..:,.':,,:,:.. ~'":°.i:';"~.Y,; 1 ~1 ''" !~~ ........... !!!~ ~!.~ ... .!!!.~ ~ I·-'-.... I part f« ~armer~ lo cbn. l llw rm cbr TOP CASH DOLLAR \. 417-'Ml ev• ....................... SEKI as· li1at 40• Van ~-~'° maru.u-Of\ TZJ.fm. ..,1576 a.ft 4 PAID FOR YOUR lilcMna. must aeu, Bab1 • 1m Hooda SLlU a1ot 501 llllen:iauonal New WE BUY .._. _. .. -p.sn JEWEL.RV. WATCHES. Gnncl Plano. beaut.lrul Bert r • m 3 a R ......_... n-...... ......; wtr -· ee.totr 846-4* "'4 ~ ... .., C ...... pl.u com•1uto• b ~ • ART OBJECTS GOLD. Sacrill~.~ "MOQIOCIH'·. workl ~ QW., .,.,. ....... ,. --__.. -• ._.OJl'lllNI.:.~ m r ~U. COucb IOOd 8lLYgR SEAVICE. Call earCfbOlder at 11 mob ~ IUa. f73-l4'U 11\ "120llC350pickup,1Uck. •TIUCkS ..,... 11 • • ••• • • ..s. twta bed, 'lrarne, nNB FtJRN. • AN· for your old plllDOI SaU 1. ••Pl a. heacf. 2 au~ Ir clw:b, •ooc ~.pbQDe560t WOI • .... c&llttlW Ir bdbrd. old 11~.M5-!200 °*'Mmk o.b lhlw'·Cbev 483 cl "12 J awaS50.llkeou'9ood. mi'a.119-131.oal NMaMn I .... ....,.,. Mf.0211 q. nn.t equip A.lwaya -~ 4111 ml'• aw "unnu.L ._ ______ _. &al'll llMO • mo or~ LU941A&E T ACiS , , t h• r • a crowd MB-Sll3. '71 Ooct&e ~ lAlD VS. a.Int Ttl1'' •S.. H1llA& a*lllc bomu a.t ..... a Birds frocD JOUrbulioestcard. complete w1matchln1 cmd a.totrtrl4W'U. l'IKVDNfT t '#lfll'UI ·.a.T Will trato call Pa9I, dbi brecU200. JavocadO a.al Gilt «rd Cot eacb S.u.lolftiler 1r 1 ton van Miier~ .. , e.u.am ~lllUL •"""'.. 83S-OlmAAabeiUL velvetctintnea.UllOri· tall p1ue ace 1pare we $nM $ Pf'lu S4o.ono C'•JI a..t/SI•+ fl60 --'17-llOl:--O-PU___ ~~~~d, THIS!!!.• ed am! tbla 13/up, misc return permanently SH~~~lNG 2J3 /t12tl 1871 9 t2noon •••-•••••••••••••••••• . Would you lilte • bw.lneu ~bold 25q up .-led attractive t.& " weekda.Y• Rent • um Executive gi,; Shortle step111de , ___ S_4_6-_12_o_o __ _ TI......,... ot )'OW' own• Vou don't -----.-atrap. meeting airline AROUND Motomom~ or Minim Auto. pwr •Ulering, ajr WEPAYTOPDOLLAR ~•k• oeed an olfice tQ atart. Beautltul WalnU\ Ca ... _ ... f.D. requlrementJs Pre· •LOSING TIM£ '71 (Jlaatron , 170 HP mot.or bome·rrom Herb cond Speda l paint, FORTOPUSEDCARS ....__ ... ..__ UIUW\ qnt ION. the.ft! For • "MONEY Volvo ens .. 270 outdrtve Pried1andtt ,.,_II AAV -6 C\lltOm wbeell Ooly 1300 ~ !f'i ..._.. ,... Belin at home. run or for stereo eqwpmeot. penonalised tat eneloee Come• in and aee wby Yer) aoOd coftd moo tbelenwnbe~ _, "' mi Ser Y90814> FOREIGN. DOMESTIC & lf/H-.. l•t_llowe c:~~~m: ~~:a:e:::.r _SJO. 54IMml wallpaper. bbric' or yean from now Yamaha ~-.sorm.502Sevea nW777 Ml" lf~~1~ cleao H •• repa . -ood 646-Wa 21dull5ea 2 endtab1ea ~t>!1c'f.f8tf~ ~= ~~ryearv::.t..18' HORIZON J~ 517.7777 seeusflrst ~ ............ plaere u..... S'UiOeach. •·-Or •-two c .. """-'-!--..I Olds Berkley Jet 8 lrack 12Mlll 75 POID C..tw IAUY IUICK -•• ..... ,. YARD~ 131.0lM -.. , ••""' .....--........ 1-··---100 bn 21.000 mi. 4 1pd .. radio. -H bo 81 d Ho• r I y w o g • + Rent.a.I center baa open· Chrome & 1 dJ back to back. COAST lllWll' ;:""'bo&t a ;. New '1t Royal Coachma~ 18,,. • heat.er (Llc:.1Cl883t) ~ ar r v ""--& 1 n ° s f o r 2 m e n g us .n rm set PRICES lllU~ twto ~ ,...._rry co d nbe 1 u 1 l "" SZtff •••••• S't6MO. Oll5ta Meaa 979 - 2500 -nm• CJllCll"•IMCI Me~hanlcal knowled"e & bar. worth $2000 new. $2 aot3/$5 "'',. n rg us • 0 • ...,m, co••lulo• wlalle belpfuJ. neat handwrtt· ae1J $700 or make oCfer 41;t.aeaSl.fiOea. ll39MewpertllCM lndud.in3tr11ler $42.'!0 or C B Cab air SIC so 38mo $400down includes ...._ ~ Ing nee Weekday off M6-4820 tl/9tap$1.50ea 71.,..46 0171 be11l As k for R1<'k gasiwtr clean p ,p tu & license De f WE BUY USED CARS 968-3Sll4 or 962-91124 546-8366 S-.84 A. P R S18.0 on W It t. & WW tr A I L930 10ormoreS1.40ea. ----•.-.... credit pro-8111 pp y, Kin&aUe bed MO. maple 3 Sales Tax Included WIZARD I S', SO hp _...."' .. ,... flld* for JCML Newport Blvd.(' M drwr chest w tmll"ror $40, NO CARD? Ev 1nrud• + Tra tier FMC. 73 custom bed Grotti ChP•rolf't lllll -.~ll ll•d H~"h""°" l~oell 847-6087 S49-Jll l ff Y09 cm Ml or a.a.e Mis :ll •iilM twinmarb~..:..!1kf e new. 125 · Qraw your own or send ~Medl 11 1093 Goodcood S60t> 645-3646 +all '76 improvemen•·. ....._ ..a...~• to•-~ ~e .. ..,. ee and end dd .. __ •. -... ~ .. -ur.a.o,.. ~. c:-••••••••••••••••••••••• tables $75. pecan coff~ name. a ress. puvnc .,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba . loaded w/everyth1na CALLGARTA Used Car Mgr 540-5830 1011 \SO\ ,\ SO\ • LINCOLN·MEHCunv •attt.b........,. Allttc,11H 8005 t.abl.e SSS. child's 4 drwr we'U make one card ~r Sin&ersew macb & stool Y boat.. l8 Lapslrake 1mmacuJate l.be Rolls 171 41133-8095 ••••••••••••••••••••••• chest S20. di.net~ set, l&&. Add25< each Alf att.ac. Call aft 3PM or Classie· Gray 1'8 Xlnt or rootorcoachea By YOU WON'T FOR SAU! ;::!J~i :!1~t!'i~ ~cbecll or money or wknds 493-2825 ~/~e!_~ owner.6™!08'1 '76 t>a~ PU.-cstm s hell 2626 HARBOR BLVD A beautlrul antique 131> A.II 1 ln PK.OTPRIMTIMG Sin1er Putura II sew " lot AM 1FM cass. COSTA MESA BE partner desk with two _.... _ ... l~Clem'!~~ P.O. Box lSOO macb. Model 920 Xlnl S£A RAY BOATS tm ArrfYW Motor Home. map, blue. 11lnt cond DISAPPOl .._.TE pressed bac~ s wivel ~ QOU&. ~ .. ""' Costa Mesa.Ca 92626 coodS56-4638nighlS n · many xtras Xlnt 56&-1755 " chairs. Call Shirley Moo· -• See WI al tl::.-~,.wport in cood 962-1581 eves &l------- TI1111-Uft day thru Friday at Two comfortable recUoer DOUGH IOY TYPE the water sho~ Demos trtmds '73~ Ford Courter. very Ubrcwies, Inc 831-2880 c b a I r s . f i n e s t POOL J2 x 4. heavy duty ~~.~ ... ~~!~ availabll'. Apnl 'l7 ;,I) -=.'i~:' ~~·~ Eriual Opp<>r Employer ---------naugabyde, l burgundy, llner. filter. etc S75 or 2 prs -skis/boots/poles HARRI SO:~·s T ......... TNY.e f170 MS-'1851 AMERICAN OAK I gold. xlnt cond Reas make offer l 7J!·~9-XIJJt cond. greal buy SU RAY BG1 ~ 75 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ - 't'l::LEPHON.E Largest Selection _557_·7~ _ _ _ __ 559-&416/64.5-4701 3101 C'..oast Hwy I'-iJ 1957 11r Terry Trailer 71 B. CAMI MO APPT SEC'Y i.n0rangf'Coonty Waterworks Waterbed, Mhcel•1011t 831·2541 Slp.i6 SllSO CONQU ISTA Aulo . Pk~:oianl work. •hort St.ew7a.aErtDRolhRAnduS·qAues king u w /pede:.lal W..tad 1011 TV.Redo. ----------Call983-8350evea pwr steer ing 11 1r . " .,., . yer . . . r •. I Lln!ll .,.....___ 1091 AM /FM st ereo tape ho:.irs. top pay. Set •PP\.$ (atNwpt Fwy> 751-8922 rame ... neater 673-l4M ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......,, .......,._ ~is· Tldecraft w/trl & '67 Hollld•Y Trvl Trlr 29· · No i.clling. Tal.Jt towpex ----'---aftSPM Want 3 speed Bike ror •·.~···•.•••••••••••••••• rover. 50bp Jobnlon, [rl sips 6 adlts Rear bath. Ser 405727 ecs. prof Pl'06pects only •MU-•Sl•C-B•O•X•ES-.-P•la•y•e•rl Bedroom, twn beds . handicapped man. not 23 Zenith Black & White hull, canopy Xlot cood fully self/cont Like new $5995 ttouni. 9AM-J2PM. Mon d overl30. 67~5332 Portable TV Good work $3000. 640-6198 M200 Ph963-93SO WEIUY USED "'ARS! We're the new Chevrolet deaJerstup ln the lrvint• Auto Ct>nler We need ;,iour used t·ar' JOE MAC PHERSON CHEVROLET 21 Au.loCenler Dnve lRVINE' 76a.7222 Thurs Mature. exp'd pianos' Nickelodeons! .-ser. etc. Uvlng rm, Ing condition S50 ----------76FOltDPIOOPU woman pref'd S4 hr if Phonographs! World 's sofa, loungers. tables, . 751-4840 lcMlb.R .. / Camping Trailer. com 6..,_'stepelde.Shorlle V8. qualified Call Mr Louis. I a r g est s e 1 e ct io n dinett~ set. refriR. 1 yr Office Fwllltw e Ii Cll.ter 9050 pact. Jr are boll. stove & lspd pwr ateenng. air · 557·1721 after noon Catalogue $3. next 6 is· old Color conaole TV. or llpli,...t 1015 Uoyd's complete stereo ....................... sink. It.wt '9l>O 493-4088 cond Special wheels. Alltos, ltftported SUE'S $15 Also cash re-~ 559-5377 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sysle.~ Slill in box CJulr1er eo· Plush yacbt ----custom paint Low miles ••••••••••••••••••••••• TELLERS EXPER PREFERRED Southwest Bank. Laguna Beach 4!!_1n l for ap~l gisters. mecbanical anti· Movln.I' Knee hole desk. HIYER Sacri;ice 5175 P p Reaa Hourly. dally. AlllotforSale ClF.A!BS811 ' G 1M r _. 9701 ques Visit us' SH the $3S. 211Phol ch rs. $100 ea DUPU 646--495 weekly. Me11co 675·2172 .... ~··•••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••• •• huge o rnate ''Taj Sofa, like ou. S4SO Lazy CATOR 23" Color TV. GE con 34. Sklpjack. fly bndge, lecrtaHoed 74SUIARUWGM Mahal" automatic oriao Boy rechn, S3S 25'. col Model 70 complet~ly re-sole Xlnl wodung cond radio, depth finder bail VetllclH 9530 4 cyl 4 s pd . radu>. reatured rn Los.A.ngelea oredcabTVaet.$250 3S built. used 1 lime Sl25 Sa n Clement e tank Topcond Cali1ln 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• beater tLacl42KXD1 'Times .. and 'Sunsel ~ .. ~ co 0 r tbl. murblrertop. patncpel~d!!,. c1h~~ & ~-PM.673 l l!ill l!m Ford -'• ton truek. $1299 • , $49.16MO. TOOL MAKER Exper'd , ruUy pd benefits. 45.50 hr wk. apply btwn BAM & 3PM al Braxton Mfg. Magazine .. American .. ..., pen to o ers • .-v. · 39.000 ml with 8 ,,,,_ · 24mo $400duwn in<'ludes lnlernational. 1802 D S4tr3Sl9 OfficecbrsfromSl loSlO loah&w.IM loah. Sall 9060 camper. batbrm 6 -9570 tax & license Der Kettering . lrv1oe. CA n,__.r...1.,.;. Wooden & met.at desks l4ul1111al ....................... shower setr contained ........................ Sl.57984 APR $18.251111 1733 Monrovia. Unit Z 92'714 Tel t714)75'-trn ---r-1055 mu orncepartttlon.a ....................... AUi -YAMAHA dual battenea. engine fUU.••_...Otf approvedcredll Open Wed. through Sat ••••••••••••••••••••••• New wooden files 2 loah. M.w DIEALBS air, roor air. camper _ .. Tow T'ruck Drivers ex HOUSEFUL or Furniture drawer $64 ea c E Ecp,....e 9030 Yacht Brokerage 1acks. dual exhaust . big Of I '71 YAMS C.M 77TOYOTAPU W1CAM PE R SHELL per'd Top pay Apply. A---n--------incl Dryer Toys, sml ap. WHOLESALE OFFICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• wungi, Wanted' ures. anti-sway bar & IM STOCK G&WTowtng. 1000 Jf'vine ,..,....cncn 8010 pllances, much more FU RN ITU RE 2044 s· fiberglus dinghy, full ..,_ ...... __ ...__ trans cooler Real clean 22ToChoo8e From Ave, NB642 1252 ••••••••••••••••••••••• misc 326 tl2nd N 8 Placentia, c M 631 -2777 rub ra il oars 5230 _.... ........... $7.995 See at 179 E 18th •Wmdow Vans F RGHT DA MAGED DAILY or631·2S70 67>59.il YachtSales St.CM 548-1487 •V1n Conven11onll ll<Yl'POINT SALE 3308 ----2616Newport Blvd ---------<;argoVan:. W Wamer nr Harbor. Hann 1060 Thermo-fax photo copier. YANMAR dsl eng Also Newport Beach ATV 6-W Dr. lraJler S7SO SEIUS TODAY! ~amee in u1rcraft part store Neut uppearan<'t' required. !>!O 7~ SantaAna.9792921 ••••••••••••••••••••••• goodcondwithSOO sheets ~ Seu Tom Riker . (714!673-9211 SS6 1293 /days 644 --·---HORSIS FOR SALE paper $50. 751-6892 d.lr 548-3561 &1991eves CASH PAID 73 Calllnlbla 34 -------- For Wsbr/DryrstRefng I Reg. AQHAdauahterof Lake new cond DI• 4 'WheelDrh" 9550 Tu NE I N kin ot 957 0133 Mister A.lert & Clabber ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ g or n ..., blood line. Aho half Arab custm intr 7' headroom Washer dryer and Dis· Geldlng. Show or riding. ~ell MoDl main salon. diesel auxl. cos ... uir."'"' h h A di 1737 ........ auto pilot. 'dinghy. furl ''"' -"' To the advantages or was er 1 con lion ......., Jib S r· ·~ •• I $75. each646-S848 ---------• xlras acri l<'e - comm sslon sales m a ------Registered Arabian. 1s ~O· U $27,500 714/531·3S3S #I .. c.lhrM maJor dept s lorc A full· ---------1 hands, well trained -------\()()gals of gas ume opening now exists Washers & Dryen English & Western. must Catalina 27. VHF elec 11!.111111!2. In our Applian<'e. TV & Dlx models, completely sell. 846-U82 start outbd, xlnt cond r'IUI05 stereo area EnJOY free reblt f refinisbed. 1 yr -L H Sl.3.000 8:.> S08S with the purchase of any medical. dental & IJfe m guarantee Your choice th 11holdGoods 1065 ove er newJeepwtththiaad suran<'e as well us paid Sl:J>. Free Delivery ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fui ~~;~~rd;!t.ess OVERSTOCKED! vacauons.prof1t shanng Grand()peningSale Ortho reaul a r s11e sale.thousandsofdollars 82nowav&llable Call& & employee dJscounts rr Extended thru April hideaway bed Xlnt cond fh 1s Mo ther'<, Day 'Send Mom .. below mlct save SU. Ous interests you plea!;e So.Coast Appliances S100 532~ or~ SERVICE AFLOAT COSTA MESA stopmor rall644·J2l2 \7l4)531·3!164or53'1 2542 af\erS.:.>PM ~reertn~ all rbt" world l.an shart' on YACHTS .AMC.JllP The Broadway --JeW9lry 1070 liunday. Ma\' 11 201 E Csl Hwy. NB 2S2'Hart>oc-Blvd Wlurlpool Washer or gas ••••••••••••••••••••••• E I Da 675-3282 COSTA MESA 47 FasWon lstmtd dry _,, K xpress your Ovt· in c1 tly er _., e.nmorf' gas WA...,..ED Col 43 diesel. raceicrwse 17141549-8023 Hewpori a.och dryer S95 Maytag gas "I Ptlo 1 Mmht'r .. Day Greetm~ 9 bags or sails. lauded ---- EqualOppEmplyr M1F dryer$60.Guaranteed& TOP CASH DOLLAR Ads com t' in rhret' SIZl.'S SIO. w/eqwp.PPS56-9133 '77 Laodcr uiser Make delivered.S46-8672 PAID FOR Y OU R -------orr 50,000 m1 warr Typ1sl, PIT for consult Ward's Signalure Stove. JEWELRY. WATCHES. SI' and S ~ for rht-'5~c1al l.htlJ's CATA1JNA27. IU. dmette DESPERATE 556-7465 nnn In SJC. iOwpm + less than 1 yr old S200 or ~Z v0E°i{E~R ~PcL~: ~llt' card <You mus1 ht-under 1 l ~.~t~i\:S1'/~vail 'Tl Jeep CJs. v.a. PIS statii; & report typmg offer ~169 FINE FURN & AN U.700rru $$500 filil 6212. Norge wh_r_e-f.-fr_ee_z_o_n !JQUES.645-2200 -co 4 u .. 1tfy for rht' lmlt'.SI Wttrtnp.) 21 Victory sloop w1smls. 496-8630 Typist. P IT , to assist botm 64" tall 42" W Od Coc.lctail nng, appraised trlr, $2500 Pvt ply C7141 ___ ...::.:..::...=..:;.:..:_ __ _ h ·i.nrh mp.r in active CM cond MS-6819 SlO zoo Sac seeoo 2k 792 " 2218 aft Spm Tl'llCks 9560 • '· '1 111.:mwlt'dgeofofc f\d -. aJ 1 . 122 'd weddl~g· set, appraised .. l'~ reQ n exco nur mpena SI e ...,,..,,.. s 990 c II r • 631 ~)00 by side rP.frig. Sl 75 Or ...,.,.,.,, ac. SI. a a t '74 Ford Van, AM 1FM casa. bed. rndge many was ~ 675-8011 --AlllosW..eed 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEWILLIUY YOURDATSUH PAID FOR OR NO'I' TOPDOUAR FOR TOP CARS BARWICK DATSUN .... lfl 111111 I •• ,.1 .... t1.1ll•• Low m 1l e11 ll.ic lF40M-0 1 $42" $147 /.09MO. 36mo $500 down includ4''> t ax & ltt·ense DPf $5795.24 A P R $18.0 on approved credit Grotti ChP•rolet t 821 I kar.:IJI llTd. H•nh!MJ'Oft h och 847-6087 549-333 1 9705 1978 BMW's HERE HOW! COMPLETf IOOYSHott HOWOPEM EXCB.LBCT SELECTION OF IMWRESALES Bestorrer 1s1 6n1 6PM.67>17J2 __ _ ' • I "~per gl'n from •1..,--•-8020 Mac:hil .. ny l ,••' 1 (<'. 3 dv,1wk .... y..-. r .,rs fo'r1 Sat ~ A nr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··~•••••••••••••••••••• N w p 1 F w v M 1 s BIKES & MOPEDS 14 Cutoff Saw Comet 8078 Baroey Racmg Sabot. sail ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• •5999 Best offer acrept '63 tntem 'I PU Sbort box ed Call 640· l 1~ wkdYlS wht apokt> wh!s. frg knob only b1es. 4 cyl eng Ofr ~183 or 754--0146 Boats. Sllp1/ Doch -------- 9070 ·01 Ford ~ Ton six cyl, 3 s pd steps1dt> Ca ll 831-1375 4~J.JJ7S We may havf' your next Have something '/OU w~nt car ln our inventory Call us today' lo sell" Cla1mfied 1ub do 831 •2040 49,, ,.949 HU'lklns s.58·1ci.J.J New & used. buy. sell. wttrlr Xlnt cond SSOO ' trade Cycle & Co Z488 Call 54S-4984 aft 4 pm UTILITY PERSON Newport Blvd C M MACHIMERY 642·7910 Degr easer . Ph1lllps . One Raleigh Record. 24" 60"x36"x30 .. running 10 s pd. 1 Motobeeane l9" gas, heat Call S46-2901 .u __ 1s..;..pd_._61_3-_1_485_a_ft_s __ ~ IOIO lrt'neral Cleanup of of DOCJS 8040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• f1r1• & manufacturing ••••••••••••••••••••••• . '" t•u'I M 1no r rep a 1 r G . Des1gnen Leftovers Liv llork Minimum 4 hours ~Iden Relr_iever pup-rm Brk!ml $400/ofr Sofa r. r cl .. y llvur~ fle'<1ble pies AKC Field & show tble S6S Lg Ant chair ~·a· .. n1; rJte SJ an hour pct Shots. worm.ed . SJOO. Bdrm furn S,W..$400 Poul Dosier ••IOdates, Inc:.. 3050 Redh1ll Av t> Costa Mesa, !12626 17 141556-7075 r:used w !TLC Xlnt disp Antiques $20 up Hdbrd & (2131 ~1561 spread~ Sleeper sofa Yorkshire temer pups. $1.2S. Sat & Sun 9-S 332 Champ bloodlines. tiny. Eveoin& Canyon Rd shots. 3 lb stud service. _Cd_M _______ _ 5»-5649. 40 channel CB r adio, Dalmatian pups. AKC. beam antenna, pwr mlke &more. $1SO. ~18 F.qual Oppor Employer reg. Champ. lines Call ~~~~~~-~~! aft. tPM. S86·ll8S IAll Ir 2 STOOLS Waitress nreded for DOGTl\AlNING. 839--8437 Pn gmal P1ua, fu ll time Pvt cl~ & boarchng C 111 f . K I n g 3 Pc & P1T SJOO hr +lips John Mart.In S48-0059 Matc hln a . hdbrd . 673 1451 __ Doberman Pups. AKC. for bedspread &i bed bench. Wl\JTRfo:SSF~'\ all shirts sale. 9 wksold. All white velvet Like Aprl>. Stavro's, 5930 w 661·2820 (714> new. S2SO. 673-4565 l' o as l . H w Y. N 8 Free to Yo.i 8045 CASH REGISTER & Ad· ~1 ~ecn 2 Spm ••••••••••••••••••••••• ding Mach ComblnaUon. Wa1trcss 1Comb1oation All whl 6 yr Peekapoo, N.B.C Manual S1SO Pb SrnallcoffeeshoplnN B fem No children _~_....;.,_ _____ _ 5 Days 9-3 Call alts pm, 640-7859. 846-2118 Leather st.eerlog whffl. 13$. lvoryHoTai Buddha M<>-81118. forced sale ~02-----ToyColle nn ..... Wallpaper call 892-0392 ~ pl ~/F. pGleda.sandl. Fret to good home 2 Anyone need any old ar wor • .-rs a ma1azlnes '> Mostly vanct> opp Fastest grow adorable yellow 6 week women '1 homemaking Ing wallpaper t•haln In old kitt.en.<1968--:>486 Issues datin& back to t h e w t r. l I\ p p I y ---1975. Good for nunery Wallpapers lo Gu. 2JOO fwft~ 1050 school cutout.a, acrap II a r b or . C M 1 7 l 4 l ••••••••••••••••••••••• boolu, icbool .,.-oJecta, or fl46.S058. * *I BUY * * JUI\ plain readlnl. Phone Warehouse & vehicle Good used Furnltu~ Ii _845-5213 ___ . _____ _ maintenance. deliveries Appliances-OR I will Mink Stole, A~umn Hue. Guod d r1 v1og record aellorSELL!orYou. aimedium.LlllenewST5 Heavy llfling NON MASTSlS AUCTIOH 646-1881 SMOKER Worlllng bra '46-86•6 & 93s --------~ Sut, 6 3G-3:30 Start 1 ~9625 l Klni Tut uciltl Corr April 13/hr + overtime In-Cl\SH PAID 21th. 2 PM $22 tervlews 3 5. Mon· Thurs For gd used rum, anti· 940-5730 556 6981 Window ques&dr TV'aSS1..SW Oeslgna, 319S D Alrpori -"----------Jenn1 Llod Slmmon• Loop Oti ve. CM crtb/IC&Dtim mau. Xlnt Sellin" anythi,,ci wil.b a con•. MO. New c pt, Sell with EASE' lt'1a BREEZE Classlfied Ads &U-5678 Dally Pilot Cluslfled Ad c\111om wtavo Kabala Is a almple matt.er w.t lN yda for a aq :yd jt.St call 642·~-MH74t I c·~ easy W ntt' your mt"SSa~t' 10 fir the border shown here Bnng 11 co any Dally Ptlo t ofTkt: prior ro noon May l 2 Or. you may mail a clipping of the bordet with your message and payment co Daily Pdo r. ~ m W Bay Sc • Box 1560. Co)ta Mes.1.. CA 92626 For help w1ch your cld or If you h ave any questions. "all 642-~678 A friendly Daily Pdor mJ-v1st:r will ~~lad ro help you And. 1f you lake. you can thilt~e your Mother's Day ad Your c.rcdit 1s ~ood with us. or you may Uk yo ur Mastt'r (.h :H8t' or Bank Am('nc.anJ ( ..... ~. ~ ... -.,. -··· DAILY PILOT "' ·~ ...... t t ·- 642-5678 ... .., ---·-·-~-- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 631·2.0'74 It weU t>42 5678 ~ --------Reward Shp for 44 van tage ya<'hl 12 Beam. Auto•. Hew 9100 Alltos, Mew 9IOO Auto•, Hew 9800 complete ly rest ored. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• bnslOI cond Call Dave, (213)924 7631 or eves (714 )MZ.-2778 or ~9234 Slip wanted for rr· Motor Saller. Nwpt Harbor area reward 75'9·1477 Sllp wanted ror 33' sailboat Call Barb dur ing working h ours. 714-64(}. 7991 9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14' JAVELWN w/trlr No eng $300/or bst ofr 557.7593 482 lnj Chevy, runner bot· tom. all stainless hoees, cust paint. $6500 Call aft 6pm, 963-2051 T1 a111p art11ffoft ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motcwhed .... 9140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• li77 Motobeune Moped, only 360 ml. like nu MOO/bit ofr 631 -2789 Mc£:'.c:'' 9150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Honda JBOCC. u.nder 500 ml .•• saso firm ~a.ft~m HONDA CB500 twin. com· pletel)' stockt d, 4$00 miles. Llke oew SlOOO or offer. &».a437 or 638-1621 '7S Honda 750 Cstm rrnt end. bare, aeat, rear wheel Sl400675-9591 ' '70 Honda CT90. nma well C?SO 67W941 SELL idle 1tema with a Dally PUol Chw1r1ed Ad tlU·5878 "WE'RE WHEELIN' & DEALIN'!!!0 HOURS ON ALL MODELS NOW IN STOCK! BUY OR LEASE YOUR HEW DATSUN TODAY! BRAND NEW 19 &DATSUN 8210 GX HATCHBACK Fully with steel belted rad•al while 1fdew1ll tlrea . AM/FM electric window $12• defrostfJf side moldings. underteal & power asatSted dltc: bfakes 3e month°'*' eno tease EQual monctllypaymenla'82 oe month l)lus l&ll Vehlct• value f.4176 00 Pay only s 170 96 to ' • M 0 take delivery on approved Cfedil Total lene • payment s3131 28 Os:>llon 11 end or lease ......, ... Tl 52311 92 (246916) ..,. Dll.lvaY \ \ .. - I I 7 Brand•• '78 H•DA 5 SPEED CVCC HATCHBACK 1488cc Honda CVCC 4 cytindef' engine, 4 wheel Independent suspension. 4 speed sync~ trans.. rack & pinion steering, bumper guards, Inside hood release. wood gram dash. hinged rear side windows. fofd down rear seat. white sidewall tires. arm rests. day & night mirror, AM radio, 1ear window defroster. (SGC4005294) ( 1026) 1488cc Honda CVCC four cy_t. engine. 4-wheet lndepender.t suspension. 5 speed syncr~ trans. •. rack & pcnlon steering. bumper guards. inside hood release. W?Od pn dasf:l. hinged ~ar side windows. fold down rear seat. arm rest, day/night n:i1rror. AM radio. ~ar windOw defroster. black accented wheels & chrome trim nngs. tachometer .. 011 gauge, heat gauge. wood steering wheel & shift knob. sports fabric upholstery, black accented windshield wipers, cigarette lighter. (SGE4000840) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY (9899) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Autos, l•porW Alltos. a.ported Aallot, •pasted Aallot, ...,_.... Aallot.. IMpOried A11fo1. l•parhd Aallot, Used Aados. Us~d UMCI ..•....••.•........... .............•..•...... ...................... . •.•......•••......................•...•....•. , ...•...•.......•.•.....•.•............................................•..•......••••....••. '720 Mlwu .. ._ 9740..... 9755 Toyota 97'5 ¥a .. w1111 9770 c.mac 9940 ...................... .......••........•..•.. ....................... . .......................................................................................... . IMW ORANGE COUNTY'S * DRIVEA * "1Sllercedes4SOSLC,1un-TISTDllYIOUR IEFOREYOU WEIUY &SB.L -------* LITTLE... * ~!i~ :!.~~~~~!,! -U CAR SB.L YOUR VOLISWA&ENS it : $ urea, $16,500/bs t ofr. OFTHEYEAR.. TOYOTA. ~~ SAVE A LOT 84U425,848--0949 Good inventory in stock. SEE US! In Aral!. "so Sales-Service-Leasing Roy~er.lllc. SHOP le COMPARE '73 2310 , stick, ice blue, HurrywbllMl•eAfbeCLyElast! MAR9lJIS TOYOTA '61 "':ou. $699 clean. Must aelJ! $6:i00. -'MJSSlONVIEJO < > BARWIC K OA TSUt-1 • ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST UNCOLN·MERCURY Dealership ls now OP EN 637·3321. MADA/UHAULT 831·2880495-1210 701UG $199 2150 Harbor Blvd. . (0218£1) """ j 'I 4 1, 1, 1'« • • • • Rolls koyce BMW 1540 J amboree Newport Beach M0-'444 '74 280C, $10,500. Blue, COSTA ll~A l.m Toyota lit.belt SIU. $45,.. .... oc••aa ~~~s:rr~ '"w100 ~d::!r1~':':3: = eonw.-.01, o.A.c .. 831-137S493-3J7S • OVER 100 CADILLACS TO CHOOSE ROM AT ALL TIMES RAY FLADEIOE LlNCOLN·MERCURY 16-lBAutoCenter Dr. CREVIER SB.ECTIOM ...... t756 1~9742 A.P .R. 23.78 percent; IM STOCI FOR 2llD Men::edel Dem. 1l'1S. -·••••••••••••••••••• .., badt-su•.oo m 24 • • ROGER MILLER SAVS, SDFwy-LaJte Forest exit IRV1NE 830-7000 stereo, crulae control, #}DEALER IN U S A 73 Toyota, 6 cyl, 4 dr maatbl. IMMEDIATE CaU 640-1860owner. • · • sedan. very good. $2200. WESTGEIMAM "Low Prius!• LEASIN& &1sr •110AowAv DBJveay ·e4-drsedan Body Im ROY C93-4<a IMPO SAM TA AMA Y 11a • com-CARVER ITS SALES-SERVICE rse.~~~ $4000. '69 Corona. 4911 mi's, 198SHarborBlvd .,C.ll. rwEui.rtMAn~~!!r l PARTS-LrnlNG ~!L~;~~[ auto, nu 'tires. batl & 714/645-4120 '76 4SOSEL, take over _,..., 11Nc1o brakes. $850. 646-3173. -•USED IMW1• leaseorpun:hase. ..._ '72 Corona Mark II. stn WISB.L Mew&UM Nabers Cadillac 494-1131 546-9967 ........ IQ 9952 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 65 Mus tang. gd cond. $850. 548·3140, leave ~Iii·~"~, message ii not home. '71200-Uspd (75310 213-431-8947. CLOSED SUNDAYS wgn, lo mi's, clean, '73 Bavaria Auto mlHR 2600 H.irhrn Blvt.1. C11\t,1 Ml''·' 540-'J I IKI '66 Mustang. body gd cood. $1000/bstofr. '7320024spd36llKBV 21MSHARBOR BLVD. '7445CSL,P/P, tt....1..-9762 $1S75.873-4749. 54CM4 I 0 540.02 I l o1 __. '75530i Auto. t916MTV). · ... -$14,500/best r. V(lKSWAGENS 548-4258 '7S20024spd,SR,137MUK 552-0333 ••••••••••••••••••••••• vo1m-... 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Top Dollar CADILLAC '76 Mustang 11. 4 Spd, i620024spd Air<MOREV 'Tl Datsun 280Z. 2+2, AM· 280C '76 n!ld meta.I orf 'T1320IAS/R 177RSK FM, 4-spd, lOK ml. mint c'ond, all ~t1ras'. C1oMcl0.s..dmys :i~ A /C. $8450. $12,900/B.O. "4-8815 / · 74 Bavaria. nice s _54CHl>55._;_~------• anywhere, reasonable. POl"IClle 9750 213/860-8S49, 714/~l Rat 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• T Aft ova LEASE 'iS Flat 128 Wgn. lllot COO· Poncbe -n. 9UT Targa 1974 BMW Bavaria. good ditioa, lo ml, oew clutch, S.pcl. 3000 mi on rbll cond. 43,000 miles. 1 tram, $2000. 67~ 7875 or eoi. nu clukb, pot"' top. mos on lse. opt. t 642-2000.Dave ~S.:OO/olr.640-0968, purchase. <TI4>8*0931 ...... 9727 -------- BMW '76, 5301, :llnt cond., ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ~ ~e, en: 't:!5 AM/FM, air, pastel blue. ..... Mew 71 oner takes c:.°"~ ~ est. orr. 673-0139 HONDA c-4.Pll.~ ~ 9715 .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• MAMY '86 912 k pd. apoiler, new ,.0 C•a DIM R--1 pal.at. tires, lllnt cood. 72 Capri, lo miles. nu '' --· ~ $llOO/bst. PP131.ol36. brakes. Radio. heater & u11i.11v~ITY clock. Must sell $1400. "AH-POISC .. OWMIRS 581"'543. -Iva'• Fanip car re- 7J Capri. Good cond. New .._... C... • GMC palruowbavoooeolOC ,_..._ County'• best , 911 tires. $2000. 631-4686 aft ,_ mecbaoics. 6PM. 631..JOllOmorn. Collta28$0..!aarbor B~.9640 1985HarborBlvd. - complete aelea and service SUBARU BRAT s9900Dtl"" CM\ --credil LARGE SEl.ICTIOH I_.. DllYlry!! 14 2000cc, 4-spd, AM/FM. Coatallesa66-U82 c lean . $2375. Gary. Accord, '77, 4300 ml, _,, air 1 nrf 17555 Beach Blvd. ~or S40.:i032 S5350. pyt party. •v 911E, , e ec a , 551-5189 AM/Fii ater, mass. Huntington Beach '74 2000. 4-sp. AM /FM ._ 9730 Color ado driven, :llnt 842-0675 ster, xlnt, lo ml. 122()(). _,.... cond. see to appreciate. ______ ..;.___, 675-74.:MaftGPM. •••• .... ••••••••••••••• GS,000 mi'1. $1500. -------- 'G Jquar XKE Classic. 842-7357. Oat.-'720 AM/Fii i track. Excep-•-------- •••••••••••••t••••••••• tioDally clean. $4000/bat. 76 ,_... 54HM07 ism.aua ti ts c-pe ....... '7 ll 5 spd. lo milea. sun.roof, air, AM/FM, alloy Wflls. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• 752-7531 days, 492-2582 mira cle m azd.-.1 ' eves/Wknds '56 Cabri~et. Very &ood cond. Nu top, tires. lmaia, upbol, crvr, etc. S810/bet olr. -..a an ~~~~~=~I~ Mete '41-1700 _u_swtnds __ __.._ __ --------'T5 .Poncbe t14. APPR I { red, AM/FM eaaaette, tmmac.loml, m--0m - llMl»MIWtf71 J ......... '7585 Beach Blvd. Huntington leach 842-G875 '73 vw aqbk, reblt eng, Paid For Used VW's d d $1600 Approx. 2 miles north of SIVIUIS Xlnt trans, '67 2 dr R&H. a /cond. XJnt cond. 1976-1977·1978 Ma.IJbu. Nu en~. paint. $3150 631-1704 Nancy. cass ster, g coo . . South Coaat Piu. 95.5-2367 30 TO CHOOSE seat covers. nms, batt. Mustang 289. Good 69 VW Fastback, good cmd .. must sell. $1000 or bst ofr. Aft 5, 546-7058 COMMONWEALTH 14 4 2 S bP•\H,• FuU power. factory air 531Hl974 PbJI cood. 2-drhrdtop. cood .• stereo tape, C.B.. 8*86S4 en.use control. senlineJ & '66 Capnce. xlnl runrung . auto. dimmer. rear de· cood, xlnt deal. 68 Mustang, 6 cyl, mech '72 Bus, nice cond, clean. fogger, flremist paint. 894~"739. sound, very clean, must runs well. good tlres.1----------wire wheel covers & see Sl800.847-7452 ~ MOTORS,l.TD. "''''• 46 r;2;n reblteng$2600.640-7384 miles as low as 900. 75 Monte Carlo.A/C, P/S, · 9957 ValYo t772 (278NDN). Priced from P/B, tape deck, xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 VW ~us. xlnt. cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ONLY $8995 cond. $4100. 968-2697 $2800. Stick, gd mileage. llfO --------'72 Pinto Runabout, 4-spd, 968-9761. Aft 5pm/wkdys. II YOU IUY ALLE... '67 Malibu 327. new beads. 2000cc. xlnt cood. ~-A USED VOL VO " P tB, P ts. xlnt cond. $850 975-0212 71 Westphalia Pop-Top, s s ' Olds!Cadillac/GMC Firm. 631-2677 aft s. ------ood cond ee us at outhern S.D. Frwy.·Avery Exit 1972 Auto bro Pinto 1 540-47c>1i. ~o:>~ Mesa Orange County's Volvo LAGUNA NIGUEL 'Tl Ma.IJbu Classic. loaded Htchbck. Good cond. --------• Headquarters. 1714149£ L4JO w/xtras, immac cond, SllOO Call 754-9378 btwn '68 Bug, recently over-MA19UIS VOLVO .,... $S2()0. 963-1381 3-5PM, Ask for Becky M, hauled . Must sell ! MJSSlONVIEJO l970Sed DeVUI nn610 • $1250/belofr.673-0105 831-2810495-1210 an e. 73.ooo Ccr¥..tt. 99321-----------------I---------mi. fulJ pwr, AC, new ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9960 '6J VW, ...... ..-.ECOU...,,.. paint. xlnt int. Call •CORVr9'TES ••••••••••••••••••••••• GoodCondiUoo ~ "'' Roger67~; 551·2338 '"' • VOi.VO llGSB.ECTIOH 1974 Ply. Satellite Sta. ____ 646-6 __ 1s_1 ___ , EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO '72 CAD Eldo, xlnt cond. 1963TO 1978! Wag. 9 pass .. PIS. P/B, '74 Super Beetle, xtra r ft-estVolvoDealer Loaded.Allpwr.Lomi's. HOW"'RDCL.--•-" Air, Gd. tires, trans . ._.& $2495 848-3729 ves "" ,..,,..._...... Coole r . air s hock s. sharp, $2SOO. 842.Q82 aft mOrangeCouoty! · e · DOVE &QUAJLSTS. trai.ler hitch, CB Radto 5. BUYor LEASE Cadillac Convertible, <Near MacArthur, Jam· incl. Good Cond. $1.800. 'Tl Beetle silver sunroof DIRECT 1967. full pwr, good cond. boree & Bnstol I 9'l1 S. Orange, S.A. ~~"'°:Be" ot'. ~· ;:.;:, top <Ondi NEW.'i'i'.':s~~CH 1'~~~"::."'p~y~ '72 VW Pop Top Camper, ,,_l~J ~-l •J tion loaded. runs great Co.Jm" 9933 -1653. xlnt thru-out Stereo 2025 S. Manchester PP. ~l ••••••••••••••••••••••• •---------. · ' • '75 Suburban Wgn. full radials, s:nso. 499-1926 _ Anaheim 750 -2011 '73CdV, loaded, xlnt cood, '76XR7. FuUy eqwp d . 400 power, A/C, xlnt cood. -~--· 53,000 ml. $3400 firm. cu In. eng. 35.ooo mi. cruise cont, $2450. Call --------'56 Volvo, 244, 4 Dr. AtC. 213/393-0619 dys, 67~ $4600.673-.5633 aft4pm.549-3112. A Plct1tlou1 8u1lne11 Nelft• Stelelft4lnt filed• wflll Ille CouMy Clerll le nlld IOf ltw JMf9 ltfl9f 'l"lllell 11"'9 contlnulnt blll lM-mutt rem.. ,ubllcldlofl It -••MY only II t11er• u e c11111ge1. Cell IM tAell Oepertment et tlie O A ll.Y Pl&.Of tor 1nrot1111tto11 1 1141 11ee•••"'Y --ld-4321 bl.SU . . .. .. .. . . AM/FM. Standard trans. eva Dodp 9935 9965 =~;.~:Ji ~~.1 '64 Cad 4-dr sedan. Xlnt ! ' ••••••••-••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tool>. '74 Dart Spec Edition. V.S, '70TEMPEST 4.oa Mtot.UMd 646--480l ~Ji~S:~~nrr. s ter . • $29S • ....................... Clnt"solet 9920 631-3760 AMC ttOS ••••••-••••••••• •••••• Ford 994o ·11 Flrebird xlnt cond ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Monte Carlo. cln. sw1v ••••••••••••••••••••••• New Ures. AM/FM ster: 1971 AMC. Sportabout buck seats. AM /FM .PHIL Must sell. $1800. ~Hl921 w~. 31,000 rni. PIS. radio.D).7821.$2SOO. LONG aflerSpm. ~~ ~· Very '74 Chevy Moote Carlo. FORD 1-'72-G-rand...:.--Sa_f_a_ri_Sta_W __ gn-. . . A/C, PIS, P /8 , P /W. 54,000 nu, radials, full Dlk:k 9910 $1100. 645-<r749 pwr. areal buy. $1500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • "' Bu1-i.w lo d..., '63 Nova 370 4·spd. ,g .,.. •ion. 1 ""'• butlt-283. new tires, oab 19,000 ml, $4800. mass. many xtras. m.1709 Eva;•ee '75 Buick Skylark, alr, tDOO. S4S-Mt8 after SPiii. -.. .. ----....... ,# • ve something to seU? Ousifled ads do it well. l ............. ,....o..._.,, .... , •t••~•A•C....._. ,...._ 586-2045 J.96S Pontiac La Mans. rblt eng. Good cond. $4.95. 64&-4924 EU. Idle ii.ems with 11 Dally Pilot Claaaified Ad. 7 J I t ' ' ' t. 0 h st _th ca 17 •m WI in 13 G1 ho an Jr frl fi e fO< ar IJa . po bl• l ( 1 ov tr Tt ne bi! to vi. m. tht rt co re th Tt M• Ct ta ct bt ol !· $1 } wt &~ I Co aal ab tat I Te \ .. Ill tern.On N.Y. Steeb VOL 71, NO. 115, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1978 TEN CENTS Rhythm of '-'if e As if in defiance of civiliiation, sym- bolized by oil wells in the background. this pond in Huntington Beach continues to provide a home for a variety of birds and plants. The pond. which dried up briefly during the drought but has since filled up again. rises and falls depending on the groundwater table, establishing its own rhythm of life. Trash Contract Mulled OC Rubbi,sh FirnuJ Gear for More Violence By JACKIE HYMAN Ol 1,_ 0.oly Pleet St.ff An uneasy calm settled today over an Orange County trash truck drivers s trike as Teamsters attorneys mulled a new management offer and rub- bish collection firms geared up to meet the threat of further violence, The strike, which began at midnight April 17, has left more than a million Orange County * * * residents without rubbish collection services. Management representatives reportedly sent a written copy of the new contract offer to Teamsters Local 396 at 9:30 a.m. Monday. Federal mediator John Courtney said the offer con- tained "significant con-cessions," but no detalla have been released. Drivers had asked for a raise of $4 per hour over a three-year * * * · Mayor Cites Help Of HB Residents The week-old strike by trash truck drivers evidently has brought out the best in ·the peo- ple of Huntington Beach. Mayor Ron Shenkman praised residents "for respQnding in a magnificent way" in letters sent throughout the city Monday. "It has been a grand do-it- yourself effort of people helping th e m se lve s and th eir neighbors," Shenkman said. Shenkman also outlined several steps that residents can take during the strike. lie said that plas tic bags should be used to hold the rub- bish * • * Tips to Cope . With County Trash Strike · Orange County city and coun- ty omcials said today Oley don't believe the week-old trash truck drivers' strike has resulted In any health hazards. The strike has left more than one million county residents without rubbish collection. He said that residents can take the bags to a trash transfer station at 18131 Gothard St., just south of Talbert Avenue in Hunt- ington Beach. It is open to the public from 7 a.m . to 4:30 p.m . Monday through Saturday. Shenkman s aid today, however, that he is concerned about the long wait al the local trash site. A three-hour wait to get to the site was reported Saturday. Shenkman said that large trash containers will be made available if the strike continues. Trash also can be taken to the county dump in Bonita Canyon m Irvine. It is open from 6 a .m. lo 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. It opens at 7 a.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. Sunday. Shenkman also says that resi- dents can reduce the a'mount of rubbish by taking a holiday from trimming and landscaping. ''Mow less and teep the clip- pin gs at home until the emergency is over." he advises. He s aid that newspapers. a luminum and glass can be taken to recycling centers at Marina and Edison high schools. Shenkman adds that newspapers can be given to the youth groups such as the Boy Scouts or to some pet shops. period. They currently receive $4.50 an hour and employers had previously offered an additional $1.10 an hour over the three years. The drivers also reportedly were seeking revised grievance procedures, dental benefits and five days a year sick leave. Spokesmen at the Orange County offices of Local 396 said they have no information about when a strike vole will take place. ~· A press reli Issued by the Teamsters o ace in Los Angeles said the offer is being studied by attorneys and will be translated into Spanish. The statement said the offer will be submitted to workers before the week is out but that exactly when a vote will be scheduled isn't known. The strike so Car bas been marred by numerous fires, in- cluding the burning of three Jaycox Disposal trucks and a $15.000 firebombing at Anaheim Disposal "The threats of violence are continuing," said an Anaheim Disposal spokesman today. "We had to put on extra guards last night. We armed ourselves like a fort." He said drivers he h'as spoken with seemed restless and eager <See TRASH, Page A2> Clnse Green Encounter? RIPLEY . Te nn. CAP> Authorities are asking the State Health Department to examine a 25-pound chunk of green ice that witnesses say fell from the sky. B. V. Hutcherson. chief deputy sheriff of Lauderdale County, said Monday he is keeping the object wrapped in a plastic bag in a deep freeze at the county jail until he can get it to the stale laboratory The ice fell on the grounds of the old Ashport School west or Ripley late Sunday with a roar and a cloud or smoke, according . to witnesses. Changes Promised ·i , New 118 Council 'Making W aveS' ' ' 1 By llOBDT BAUER Of .. Diiiy ..... "'"' Shock waves have shuddered through city hall -from the fifth floor to the lobby -since the Aprll 11 City Council elec- tions In Huntington Beach. And a blunt meeting Monday has not quieted the situation. Three ~wly elected council members have made it clear that they don't have much en- thusiasm for the way the city has been nm. One or them took mellers into bis own bands Mon- day. . Probably causing the ·most jit- ters, and getting the undivid.ed attention of the employees, is the 6-2, 230-pound John A . Thomas. Thomas says that citizens have been getting the run- around when they come for help in city hall while developers and friends of officials receive special treatment. He has set up virtual rull-time office hours in city hall to try to change things around. Before the election, Thomas said that If all else falls, he can gel things done with the proper application of his size 12. higb- top black workman's shoes. He says that unless there is a change in altitude there are go- ing to be changes -period. Among other things, Thomas has taken a dim view of pingpong games and tourna- ments on the finh floor of city hall. ··1 don't have time to play pingpong and neither should they.'• he said. .. lf-l eaa..-..ru fold up thou tables and send them down the elevator." Thomas put bis size·12 foot to work Monday after a temporary State's Center Gets Shmoors, Cooling Trend By The Associated Press A moderate Pacific cold front was sli cing through Central California today, s preading showers in a southe1 ly pattern. Rainfall for the 24 hours end- ing at 4 a .m. showed Bakersfield had .04, Salinas .06, Paso Robles .07, Ukiah .17, Oakland .24, Stockton .ZT, Crescent City .34, San Francisco .44. Red Bluff .55, and Shelter Cove . 78. Slightly colder air behind the weather front brought the snow level to about 7,000 feet in the Sierra Nevada, although sub- stantial snow is still melting below that leve l, especially around Lake Tahoe . State flood~ntrol authorities in Sacramento have expressed concern about the rapid melting or the snowpack, which is well above normal for this time or year. Showers were expected to con- tinue s poradically through tonight with clearing expected by Wednesday morning. Fairer w e ather and warmer tem - peratures are expected Wednes· day afternoon through Friday. o.lty Pli.t S~ff -'TIME FOR A CHANGE' New CouncUman Thomas city employee was hired as an executive secretary for Vince Moorhouse. director of harbors and beaches. Thomas gathered City Ad· ministrator Bud Belsito. Assis- tant City Administrator Richard Ha rlow. Personn el Director Ed Thompson. his assistant Don Le wis, attorney Jim Georges and Moorhouse and lolq them how things were going to be done. He a.mo tnvitecl a reporter to the meeting to prove, he says, that anything he does he does openly and with not.bing to hide. Thomas was riled because a temporary employee got the secretary's job over six appli- cants who are working for the ci- ty on a full-time basis. Thomas said that this wasn't right and also that some perma- nent employees, who contacted him, are in line to lose their jobs if they didn't get the position and if the Jarvis-Gann Initiative passes. Thomas told the gathering that the wrong secretary was hired and that she should come from the full-time ranks. "I've got four City Council voles that want this and this is the way it is going to be," he said. Arter more discu ssion, Thomas came more directly to the point, If possible. ·'The position has to be filled by a permanent employee, I don 'l care who she is. You do what we say or else." The others at the meeting soon saw the "wisdom" of Thomas' thinking and by the end of the day. a secretary was hired from the full-time ranks. Later, Thomas said that tht: oriRinal selection might have be e n made b eca u se of favoritism. He said that in the past employees were afraid to speak out on such grievances. He said they fell they would be history (fired) if they did. "I wouldn't be worth a damn if I didn't fight for these peo- ple." he-said. Thomas said that the session was a butt-kicking session (he didn't say butt>. but that it needed to be done. "We <the City Council) are not going to be told what to do," he said. "We are going to be the tellers." Resisted Bandit. GG Store OlVller Slain in Robbery A Garden Grove liquor store owner was shot and killed Mon- day evenine when he apparently moved to overpower a gunman who was robbing his store . Police said witnesses told them J. H. Black. 58, of Los Angeles. was mortally wounded when the bandit wheeled and fired two shots as Black ap- proached him from behind. Seconds earlier. the victim had given the gunman money from his wallet and apparently saw what he thought was an opening when the bandit turned his attention towards two clerks. Police said the victim was struck in the leg and chest by the bullets fired from a .38· caliber handgun. Eme rgency medical treat - ment was given the mortally wounded man after he collapsed in the store, Ed Larsen's Liquor, 13161 Harbor Blvd., Garden Grove. However. he died within an hour of the 5:45 p.m . shooting after being taken to nearby UC Irvine Medical Center. Police said Black's slayer ran from . the store and apparently fled from the neighborhood on foot while carrying an unknown amount of money from tht: liquor store. · The gunman was described by police as a Latin or medium build and about 22 years old. 01,d Globe Due For Rebuilmng SAN DIEGO <AP> -The Old Globe Theater. destroyed by arson. will be rebuilt along with a la r ger Festival Theater nearby in Balboa Park, fund· raisers say. Restoring the Old Globe, which was destroyed by fire March 8. is expected to cost S2.25 million. The new, 750-seat theater in a c anyon no rthea s t of the Shakespearean playhouse may cost $4.5 million. Coast Weather Orange Coast communities af- fected are Costa Mesa, Fountain Va lley, Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, Lake Forest, northern El Toro, Laguna Hills Leis ure World and some In- dustrial customers in Newport Beach. Richard Robison. assistant county director or environmen· tal health. urged that residents take steps to cut the danger of future health problems. Will 'Big Tony' Be Indicted? Partly cloudy with chance of showers tonight. Clearing and mostly sunny W e dnesday . High s Wednesday in the upper 60s . Lows tonight 52 to 57. Chance of rain 20 percent tonight near zero Wednes- day morning. "Above all, they should u~e their garbage disposal to lls maximum," Robison s aid. He noted that management employees of the firms against which Teamsters Local 396 is striking have been averting the worst danger by collectln1 trub from medical centers and food est a blisbments. "As it goes along though, It may cause a greater problem," Robison said. Other measures residents can take, Robison said, are to cut the bottoms out of cardboard cartons and boxes and alum lnum cans and natten them to lake up less apace. <SeeSTRJ&E, Paae "2) By GUY GRANVILLE Of lllit o.lly " ... Sa.ft So far, burly Anthony "Big Tony" Marone Sr. has been flit· ting about on the outskirts of the Stephen Bovan murder case. Monday, however, a pros· ecutor said it is likely Big Tony wlll become a feature player in the bizarre drama that has un· folded since Bovan last October was gunned down outside a Newport Beach restaurant. "I'm seeking a murder con- spiracy Indictment and am hop- ing he'll <Bia Tony> be indicted May 17," said Deputy Dlatricl Attorney David Carter. Carter's words were apoken from the witness stand in Oran1e Cotmty Supe_rtor Court Jud11e Robert Kneeland'• courtroom Tbe prosecutor's appearance as a witness came after Big Tony bad told his version of bis role in Bovan's slaying. The testimony came as lawyers for the seven defen- dants already clted in the case continued a Jong series or pre- trial motions. Those motions are aimed at having the charges against the defendants either dismissed or reduced before they are made to stand trial. One of those defendants is Big Tony's son, Anthony "Uttle Tony'' Marone Jr. And th al- leged trlggerman in Bovan·a murder ts a long-Ume Big Tony all>', Jerry Flori. Accordln1 to 818 Tony's te1Umooy MOaday, he and Illa uaocl1t.e1 became involved Ln .. 14 I the case after being hired as publlc relaUoM men by the so· called Krishnas. "Whal did you do as a public relations man?" asked Deputy District Attorney Orella Sears. "Oh, we went around and tried to sell cookies, lix miWon dollar man cookles," Big Tony answered. •'What did the cookies look like?'' Mrs. Sears asked. ''They looked like cookies," BiC TOQ)' ttpUed. "Aod what kJnd or cookies were they!" Mrs. Sears wanted to know. "Terrible, they were terrible cooklea," Big Tony said as he quick~ dllmlased hls public re· latlona career as a cookie u leaman for the ao-caHed ~ HCt that included 28- . ' year-old Alexander Kulik . lt was when Kulik was al- legedly kidnapped by Bovan and two companions that Big Tony and his mates became em- broiled in a three-corner en· counter that pitted them. the Krishnas and Bovan·s cadre against one another. Big Tony t.sestitied lhat when $100,000 ransom was dellvered lo an ocean view spot near San aemente, he and two others were at the scene lo "•tch Bovan pick up the valise con- talnin& the ransom money. "We-started walking toward the <8ovan's) camper and this guy starts firing at us," Big Tony testified. " ·oeez,' Rossi yelled. 'Hey, that ~ruy sonofabitch ts shoot- <See MAJlONE, Pafe AU ... . INSIDE TODAY Former First Lady Pat Nuon "hated the whtrhmnd of politics" because she said the peo,U who lose out are the children. Her atory ap- pears today on Page A7. l•tlex AtY-s.Mce Ate ~ a •nM ....,.._ a, .. _,_ .. L.M. .. .,. "' ..., LMflH't a ··-· ............. .. Cloll,.....a AS --.1 hllft as Cl .. un.. C4-t1 Natl9Nt ..... A4, Al ~•u a "-ta 11..a enn..-a se.-M•rtlieb .. °""'..... ... ,........ ., ............ "'n.e..n .. a.--1aaM llWNGw A4 ,....._ (,., .............. ,.. IWLY .... OT Moro a 1 'Hoax' ROME tAP> -A flurry of anonymoua tele&>boM calla aa· nouncing that foc-m~r Premier AJdo Moro hid bem executed by his Red Brigades kidnappers was received today by the ltaUan news •rency ANSA. The agency said al had been proven boaxea.. The calls were received by ANSA offices in Rome. Turin and Milan. One caller ~lid a Dow Jones Takes Uap On Market NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices swept ahead today in the midst of another runaway rally that outstripped some ot the trading volume records set last week. The mid-day Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was up 13.68 points to 839. 74 on top of a 13.26-polnt jump Monday. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange total.ed 17.58 million shares In the first hour. breaking the opening-hour rec- ord or 17.48 million set only April 17. By mid-day turnover came lo 28.14 million shares. running JUSt a bit shy of the pace on April 17, when the full day's total was an unprecedented 63.51 million shares. The 'Dow Jones industrial average has climbed more than 73 POints In two weeks in one of lhe sharpest rallies In Wall Street history. Analysts said the spark that ignited the latest outburst of buying was provided by Eastman Kodak. a Jong-time favorite of investing institutions. Over the weekend, Kodak re· ported a 50 percent rise In first. quarter earnings from the com- parable period last year. Advan ces outnumbered declines by about a 4·1 margin in the broad tally of New York Stock Exchange.lis ted Issues. F ro•PageA I 1RASH ... Lo see the new contract offer and vote on il. Communities affected along Lhe Orange Coast are Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Hunt- ington Beach. Laguna Beach, Lake Forest, northern El Toro. Laguna Hills Leisure World, and s ome industrial parts or Newport Beach. Trash may be taken by homeowners to any or several sites. with morning hours re- portedly the least crowded. In Huntington Beach. rubbish can be left at the transfer station at 18131 Gothard Street. near El-lis Avenue. In Irvine. the Coyote Canyon landfill on Bonita Can- yon Road behind UC Irvine is open to the public. comm~ue was Wt ln a Lruh basket add a "1urprtse" 1n the trunJc ol a car parked near the Italian television production center near the Vatican. But an ANSA reporter and police of· ficers searched t raah reeep· tacles and cars on the street and fourut nothing unusual. 'nle calls came ln after the sovernment and ~he ruHoa CbrisUao DemocraUc .P&11y on Monday rejected an ultimatum from the Red Brigades to free 13 imprisoned terrorists to save Moro's We. Last week. a communique at- tributed to the Brigades claim· Ing the 81-year-old party presi· dent had been executed trig· gered a massive search of a frozen mountain Jake northeast of Rome. Officials said that message may ~ave been sent by IAJekup Denie d Jury Still Pontkrs Dr. Waddill's Fate 8y TOM BARLEY at•o.w, ........... Jury dellberauons resumed to- day in the Orange County Superior Court murder trial of Dr. William Baxter WaddJU of Huntington Harbour. The panel of nine men and three women deliberated for about three hours Monday alter Jl.stening to instructions read by Judgf' James K. Turner. A 11totfon by the defense to se- quester the jury unlll a verdict is rePched was denied by Judge Turner. Jurors are being al- lowed lo go home each evening after being warned to avoid newspaper, radio and television accounts of the trial. Jurors have been asked to re- turn one of five possible verdicts: not guilty. murder in the first or second degree or al· tempted murder in the first or second degree. Waddill and his wife, Janet. had breakfast in the courlhouse cafeteria today and appeared to be fully recovered from a traffic accident Monday that lert them shaken but unhurt. Their CadHlac, described to- day as severely damaged, col· lided with another auto as the Waddms drove to the county courthouse. The woman occu- pant or lhe other car Is listed in guarded condition today at Westminster Community Hospital. The murder charges faced by Waddill. 42, stem fr.om his aJ. leged strangulation or a newborn infant In t he Westminster hospital nursery on March 2, 1977. It Is a11eged that Waddill panicked when he realiied that the infant he had tried to abort 12 hours earlier had survived the saline lnjectloh and was fighting for ure in the nursery. The jury was told that Waddill choked the baby girl to death while suggesting to another doc- tor four other ways in which she could be killed, including being drowned in a bucket of water. It was testified for the pros- ecution that Waddill murdered the baby because he felt she bad suffered massive brain damage and would be little more than a human vegetable lf she lived. Judge Turner told the jury in his Instructions Monday. "A child's right to medical treat· ment is not diminished by the quality of what the child's future life might be.•· 26 Honored in BB Rotary Club Fetes Volt1nteer Workers A group of community service volunteers with a total of perhaps 100,000 hours or unpaid work from making clot.hes for Korean orphans to finding library books, have been honored by the Huntington Beach Rotary Club. The 26 honorees each received an elegant blue parchment paper proclamation signed by former mayor Ronald R. Pal· tinson as one of his last official duties before leaving office. Presentations were made Fri· day at a luncheon in the Hunt- ington Beach lnn and most honorees were present, although one didn 'l dJdn 't want to stand up to be recognhed out or modesty. Neighborhood Watch. No one ls nominated without having expended more than 1.000 hours or volunteer work time lo his or her special or· ganization under rules of the Rotary Club awards program for community service. One honoree, Pearl Cartwright, a 52-year resident of Huntington Beach, has devoted more than 9,000 hours to Red Cross work in addition to more than 1,000 hours to the library. Still another, Vela De Mun· brun, 77. had done volunteer work assisting with library operations in Huntington Beach and previously worked three years for the Santa Ana library and 10 years for one in the state of Washngton. Moro's kidnappers as a ruse to weaken the government's re· rusal to negotiate for his life. Today, crowds of Italians marked lhe 33rd anniversaey ut the nation's liberation from fascism by visiting Via Mario . Fanl, the Rome street where Moro was kidnapped and his five guards slain March 16. Premier Glullo Andreotti told lournallsts on arriving ror a eaderahJp meeting at ChrJSU4n Democrat headquarters in downtown Rome that be bad "nothing new" to report. The premier on Monday re- iterated the party's no-deal line after conferring with key cabinet ministers. TED'S NEW FLAME? Stdet Suzy Ch•ffee ........ 1 GOING IT ALONE? Joan Kennedy He declared: "All requests for an exchange with detained persons were and are unaccep- table because they are directed against the freedom of all. against the respect which is due to the victims of subversion and against the laws or the Republic." Ted Kemiedy, Wife Separation Denied E'ro.tPage AJ S1RIKE .•. Also, he suggested saving newspapers to give lo recycling centers. such as those at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa and Marina High School in Hunt· ington Beach. In addition. Robison said, animal wastes should be buried deep underground. Lawn trim- mings should be reserved in plastic bags, he said. Officers or the Orange County Solid Waste Management Depart. ment sugges ted p ersons hauling their own trash do so during morning hours when dumps are less crowded. As an emergency meas ure. the transfer station at 18131 Gothard Street in Huntington Beach <near Ellis Avenue) is now open from 7 a .m . to 4:30 p. m . Monday through Saturday, with the least ·used dumping time between 8 a .m. and noon, officials said. Also available to the public from 6 a.m. lo R p.m. is the Coyote Canyon landfill site located on Bonita Canyon Road behind UC Irvine. Various city officials are also taking steps and are urgently re- questing residents to keep rub- bish off the streets and curbs. In Laguna Beach. plastic bags are available al city hall and citizens may dump their trash at dumpsters located at lhe Agate Street Fire Station and across from the Fes tival of Arts grounds in the ci ty employees parking lot. Allan Roeder. acting manager of the Costa Mesa Sanitary Dis- trict. said officials there hope lo have heavy trash bags available to the public by midweek. He said lhe city is operating a referral service to put people un· able to haul their own trash in touch with volunteers. He said the city won 't refer people to anyone who charges to collect trash. John Whipple, administrative aide in the Huntington Beach Department of Public Works. said that city Is working on plans to set up locations where citizens could bring trash for ci - ty trucks to haul. NEW YORK <AP) -Reports that Joan Kennedy. wire or Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, "has de- cided to go it alone" in an apart· ment in Boston were published today in two New York newspapers, but Kennedy fami· ly sources in Washington denied the couple had separated. The New York Post quoted un· named friends as saying Mrs. Kennedy has been living in a two -bedroom apartment on Beacon Street for two months and. although she sees he r children every weekend, has been at her family's home in McLean. Va .. only once in that time In the Daily News. columnist Liz Smith wrote that by fa1hng to appear together in public or private recently, lhe Kennedys have done nothing to ~low "un- ceasing stories or their great ·apartness' which have been rife ever since the Suzy Chaffee on· the-s lopes-with-Teddy tales began to emerge." Kennedy has been reported as being at Aspen. Colo.. in the company of Miss Chaffee, a former Olympic skier, several weeks ago. "It's not true ." Tom Southwick, a spokesman for Sen. Kennedy, D ·Mas s .• in Washington said when asked whether the couple had separated. "The apartment is his res· idence in Boston. They have not Mesan Struck By Car, Hurt In Huntington A 33·year·old Costa Mesa man underwent surgery today for critical injuries suffered when he was struck by ~n auto this morning in Huntingthn Beach, police said. Gary William Dingle or 2184 Pacific Ave. was struck by an auto at 1 :28 a.m. as he was run- ning in the rain outside a crosswalk. The accident oc· curred on Brookhurs t Street near Hamilton Avenue, police said. separated. She has been taking courses at Harvard and Lesley <College of Fine Arts) since last fall,'' Southwick said. Southwick also said ''not true'' when asked about rePOrts link- ing Kennedy and Miss Chaffee. Eunice Shriver. the senator's sister, also denied that there was a separation and said lhe couple see each other all the lime and that the children see her in Boston most weekends. Mrs . Shr1V er said Joan was "1n therapy" referring to her drinking problem. was doing very well and there was no point an upsetting that. In past years. Mrs. Kennedy has had some e motional and drinking problems. attributed by some to the pressures of living with the bearer of the Kennedy family's political legacy. The Post quoted Mrs. Ken- nedy's fri ends as saying she has settled mto a "quiet but e nJoya- ble life with a small circle of friend s .. far fr om the Washington social scene. "ll just seems that s he is more at home here." the Post quoted the friends. "Teddy has a brutal schedult'." "She has lost a lot of weight and really looks trimmer and younger than s he did two years ago. Nobody has seen a drink in her hand," they said A spokesman at the Lesley school. Jim Blake, said Mrs. Kennedy was taking an indepen- dent study course titled "Music and Sound tn the Classroom:· He s aid the course is for tea che rs seeking a masters· degree There was no immediate com ment rrom Mrs. Kennedy Bait. Doughnut Shop Burglarized A burglar who kicked the door down to gain entry took fishing tackle and cigarel.les valued at more than Sl.000 from a Sunset Beach bait, tackle and doughnut shop. Laguna Beach residents may leave their rubbish in dumpsters at eilher of two sites: the Agate Street Fire Station or the city employees parking lot across from the Festival of Arts grounds. She felt her volunt~r work was simply what any member of a community with a llUle spare time should be doing and no matter how many hours or years invested. it is nothing lo make a fuss over. E'r ... Page AJ MARONE. Fountain Valley officials said they can't make any promises but are trying to get a rebate for trash collection fees during the s trike period. The driver of the vehicle, John Bernard Wheelehan, 29, of 259 Sierks St .• Costa Mesa, was not held. Dingle was rushed to Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. where he was rePQrted m c ritical condition. The victim was transported lo the recovery room at 9 a .m .• where no condi· lion report was available. hos pital officials said. Orange County s heriff'f of ricers said the break·in was re· ported by operators of R & D Bait Market and Uncle Dougie's Donuts. 16371 Pacific Coast Highway. The theft occurred during the hours of darkness. Override Fails J ewelry, Guit ar Taken by Bur glar A burglar who entered via the unlocked front door took jewelry, a guitar and cash with a total value or $7,623 from a Sunset Beach home. Orange County sherl(('s of. ficers said the theft occurred at the home of engineer Arnold Ralph Mendoza. 53, of 19615 S. Pacific. while he was away al work . DAILY PILOT Categories honored Include health care, charitable work, educational assistance. help for the aged, work with the blind, crimefighting and historical re· search and preservation of the past. Honorees and the agencies with which_ they work and which nominatedt'hernJnclude: Pearl Cartwrtgbt and Veta De Munbrun, Huntington Beach r ublic Library. Tanny Koeppel, South Orange County Women Against Rape. Barbua Ashley, Jeanette Canone, Jean Cowling, Pit Pike. D oris Velum and Modine Whitton, Pacifica Hospital. Saale Newman. Huntington Beach Community Clinic. Carole Trombatore, Mildred Rodrigue&, Cecilla St, Cyr, Dolores Harrln1toa, lhtble Adams, Margaret Parmelee and Arline Sarinana. Ocean View School District. M Ike ltodcen aad Edward Roo1aey, Huntington Beach Senior Citizens' Outreach Pro- gram. J o Ano Ba mpbrey, Edison High School, A llee Rller, Ocean Vlew School. E lalae Conley, Hun llnaton Beach Hl&h School .. SuJe Smidt, White Cappera. Norma Scbeeter and Silvia P•ll, Beach Clues BraiUe CuJld Incorporated. '!Au&" ION Blraler, Pallllne Campbell and CoraeOa Doyle, Aunt Role OraanJiauoa. which hand·ma.ke. clot.f\lna for Korean orphans, nominated by a . ~· valeacenthome. Elalae Craft, HunUn1ton Beach Hlltortal Soc.le~. Dea.e EWU.., president of the police department-sponaored • • ing at us.• So. we got out of there." Somehow. though, Big Tony and his mates ended up with S70,000 of the $100,000 paid for Kullk 's release. "Yeah, I got $15,000. Jerry C Fiori) got $10,000. It was split up like that," Big Tony said. lie denied there was ever a formal contract put out on Bovan as a retaliation for his kidnap and beating. "But the Krtshnas were an-· noyed," Big Tony admitted. In earlier testimony, Big Tony was identified as a transplanted easterner who had come to Orange County under an assumed identity after testifying in major East Coast crhnlnal trials. Among the cues he claimed to have played a role In was the famed New York heroin French Connection caper. Now, Big Tony baa to wall to May 17 to see If Carter will suc· ceed In attaching him to the Bovao defendants. Undertaker Dies on Duty KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP> - An undertaker died of an ap. parent heart attack while driv- tnc a hearse during a funeral processJon. Wiima Mynatt. owner or Mrnatt'• Funeral Home, said WlllJam Pa.yne, 57, died Monday while the proce11lon was on Bmoey Road after Jeavla1 the Sharon Bal)tist Church en route lo Sh"fY Grove Cemetery. In Newport B eac h , a s pokesman said lhere haven't been any major problems re- ported because only a few In· dustrlal customers are affected. SACRAME NTO <APJ Backers of the proposed Foothills Freeway in Southern California have ag<un failed to win a veto override. Parmar style Uha1s1 ..... .. ~-... \ -.. i ,, .•. 1 ' I •. ~J~·--=)1 ,. ~·· Farmer CMeH ia one of our best melting end choking cheeaea. It'• most delectable when served at room temperature. Cubed Farmer Cheese is dellc1ou1 whfn dipped in apple buttor. sava aaa 2~ lb whole piece 5.99 ea. SIVI tac Oft Reg. Lb. Price 2.79 lb. reg. 3.19 lb. WESTalFF PIAZA 11Ht It.,_,,.,., ... .,.. INd ..._. M2.ot7J ~"Tl t ht. "Tl 6 ... "Tl I MAIUHll'S VILLA-.OAHA POINT 1 Totl•y's Closlag N.Y. St~ks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1978 TEN CENTS O.llt PlloC Si.If - UCI ADMINISTRATORS TOAST HONORED SCIENTIST ROWLAND, WIFE Chancellor Daniel Aldrich Jr., Vice Chancellor James McGaugh Celebrate GGStore Man Killed By Bandit A Garden Grove Liquor store owner was shot and killed Mon- day evening when he apparently moved to overpower a gunman . who was robbing his s tore. Police said witnesses told them J. H . Black, 58, of Los Angeles, was mortally wounded when the bandit wheeled and fired two shots as Black ap- 'proach~ him from behind. Seconds ea rtier. the victim had given the gunman money from his wallet and apparently saw what he thought was an opening when the bandit turned his attention towards two clerks. Police s aid the victim was struck in the leg and chest by _the bullets fired from a .38· caliber handgun. Emergency medical treat- ; menl was given the mortally I wounded man after he collapsed in the store. Ed Larsen's Liquor. 13161 Ha rbor Blvd., Garden · Grove. owever, he died within an h r of the 5:45 p.m. shooting a ter being taken to nearby UC Irvine Medical Center. Police saiit Black's slayer ran from the store and apparently Cled from the neighborhood on foot while carrying an unknown amount or money from the lio uor store. · The gunman was described by poli ce as a Latin of m edium build and about 22 years old. l.owyers Study Offer in OC Trash Strike By JACKIE HYMAN Of Ille Dally Pllet l .. ff An uneasy calm settled today over an Orange County trash tru c k drivers s trike as Teamste rs attorneys mulled a new management offer and rub- bish collection firms geared up to m eet the threat of further violence. The strike, which began at midnight April 17, has left more than a million Orange County residents without rubbish collection services. Management representatives reportedly sent a written copy of the n e w contract olrer to Teamsters Local 396 at 9:30 a.m. Monday. Federal mediator John Courtney said the orrer con- l a in e d "sianifica nt con - cessions." but no details have been released. Drivers bad asked for a raise of S;4 per hour over a three-year period. They currently receive $4.50 an flour and employers bad previously offered an addiUona.I $1.10 an hour over the three years. The drivers also reportedly were see.king revised arievance procedures, dental benefit& and five days a year sick leave. Spokesmen at the Orance County olticea of Local 390 aald tbey have no Information about when a atrike vote will Lake place. A press release issued by the TeamatA!ra otti~ ln Loa Aqeles <See TIL\88, Paae AZ> \ UCl's Dr. Rowland Elected to Academy U C Irvin e chemist F . Sherwood Rowland has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences.)t was announced to· day. Rowland, working with fellow UCI chemist Mario Molina, pioneered research into the de s tructiv e e ff ec t s of fluorocarbons. contained in com· mon propellant aerosols, upon the ozone layer of the upper at- mosphere. The academy cited Rowland for bis continuing research in hot a\om c h emistry , radiochetnistry and atmospheric chemistry. Founded 115 years ago, the National Academy of Sciences is a private organization interes ted in the advancement of science: it is a regular adviser to govern· ment. Rowland is a founding UCI fa c ul ty m embe r who was chairman of the department or chemistry from 1964 to 1970 . In 1977 he was elected lo the Am erican Academy of Arts and Sciences. and in 1976 he won the UC I Distinguis hed Faculty R esearch Award. He is t he recipient of nume rous other scientific honors. Rowland was the only UC I faculty member to be elected to the National Academ y of Sciences this year: 12 other UC scientists also were selected. giving the university the highest number of scientists na med to the 1,256-member organization from one institution. Ted Kennedy, Wife Separation Denied NEW YORK (AP> -Reports that Joan Kepnedy. wife of Sen. Edwi:i rd M. Kennedy, "has de- cided to go it alone" in an a part· ment in Boston were published today in two New Yo rk newspapers. but Kennedy fami· ly sources in Washington denied the couple had separated. The New York Post quoted un· named friends as saying Mrs Kennedy has been li ving in a two-bedroom apartment on Beacon Street for two m onths and. although she sees her children every weekend, has been at her family's home in -McLean, Va .. only once in that time. In the Daily News, columnist Liz Smith wrote that by failing lo appear together in public or private recently, the Kennedys have dohe nothing to slow "un- ceasing stories of their great 'apartness' which have been rife ever since the Suzy Chaffee on- t he -slopes-with-Teddy t a les began to emerge." Kennedy has bee"' reported as being at Aspen, Colo., in the company of Miss Chaffee, a TED'S NEW FLAME? Sldw Suzy Chaffee I ~. . .. form'er Ol:r.'Jlpic skier, several weeks~oT ' ' 1 f' s n o t t r u e . ' ' Tom Southwick. a spQkesman for Sen. K e nn e d y. D ·Ma ss .. i n Washington said when asked whether th e couple had separated. ·'The apartment 1s his res- idence in Boston They have not se parated She has been taking courses at Harvard and Lesley tCollege of Fine Arts> since last fall." Southwick said Southwick also said "not true" when asked about reports link· ing Kennedy and Miss Chaffee. Eunice Shriver. the senator's sister. also denied that there was a sepa'ration and said the couple see each ottrer all the lime and that the children see her in Boston most weekends. Mrs. Shriver said J oan was "in therapy" referring to her drinking problem, was doing very well and there was no Point in upsetting that. Jn past years . Mrs. Kennedy has had some emotional and drinking problems, attributed by some to the pressures of living (See KENNEDY, Page A2) AP~ GOING IT ALONE? Joan Kennedy ·v Stocks ~oaring Runaway Rally Nean Records NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices swept ahead today in the midst or another runaway rally that outstripped at least one of the trading volume records set last week. The mid-day Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was up 13.42 points to 839.48 on top of a 13.26-point jump Monday. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange totaled 17.58 million shares in the firs t hour, breaking the opening-hour rec- ord of 1!7.48 million set only April 17. By mid-day turnover came to 41.5 million shares. running College's Budget Probed Budget requests received for tbe Saddleback College 1978-79 budget exceed estimated tax in· come by $13.3 million to $30.9 million. depending on the tax rate used as a district budgeting base. · That fact given to trustees Monday for informational purposes. created quite a stir among some board members . ·:a seems almost wild," Nor· risa Brandt complained. "I think you're just playing around with numbers." Mrs. Brandl criticized college officials for asking for too much in the beginning of the budgeting process. "We are not being realistic from the very be&inning ," she said. ··we should start with more reallslic figurN." Donna Berry agreed. "There's something wrong when some of our departments ask ro.· a third more and some stay the same." she complained. But college administrators in- sisted the $45.4 million in re- quests was merely a starting point toward de veloping a balanced budget. The present college budget is $25. l million. "The budget numbers we're giving you tonight are what the divisions and departments say they need for service over the coming year," District Superin- tendent Robert Lombardi told trustees. He said college officials would begin paring down the requests to present a balanced budget to trustees on May 8. And officials found support for the expensive budget requests amon~ some trustees. "This is a dream list that's a ll we're looking at he r e tonight," William Watts said. "When you ask people what 1s the best then they'll give it to you. "I think we'd want to ask that question every year " "I would think we would want to shoot for the most outstandmg <See BUDGET, Page A2> City Transit Panel Mulls Budget Plans The Irvine Transportation Commission meets at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at City Hall to hear budget requests from two city departments for 1978-79 that ex- ceed cWTent budgets by 38 per- cent and 73 percent. Both respective budgets, of the transportation services and construction services depart- ments, mu.st be approved by the ·City Cowtcil. Trans portation services Manager Les Card as ks that his current budget of $243,000 be increased to $337,000 for next fls- ca I year. The extra money would pay the salary of a new associate engineer, and for up· dating and maintaining the city's traffic analysis program. Construction services Manager John Brown requests an Increase in his department budget lrom $65,000 to $112,000, to double his staff of four and fund extra construcUon support Jobs b.e expects ~he department to tackle. Brown also wlll outllne to commissioners proposed proj- ects for the next five years . ' just a bit shy of the pace on April 17, when the full day's total was an unprecedented 63.51 million shares. The Dow Jones indus trial average has climbed more than 73 points in two weeks in one of the sharpest rallies in Wall Street history. Analysts said the s park that ignited the latest outburs t of buying was provid ed b y Eastman Kodak, a long-time favori6e of investing institutions. Over the weekend. Kodak re· ported a 50 percent rise in first· qttarter earnings from the com- parable period last year. But brokers also said the market was generating its own fuel , aUracUng ''catch-up" buy- ing by investors impressed by the recent strength in stock prices. · As Standard & Poor's Corp. analysts observed in a recent is- s ue of the firm's investment ad- visor y publication "The Outlook": "Market strength itself can do much to bolster sen. timent." Advanc es outnumbered declines by about a 2-1 margin in the broad tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. 1 APWI,_... RELEASE DEMANDED Among the people whose re lease Crotn prison bas been demanded by te rroris ts holding former (talian Premier AJdo Moro a re <top row. from left l. P<1olo ~Iaurizio Ferrari. Augusto Viel <1nd Paol<1 Besuschio: bottom row. Alberto Franceschini. Mario Rossi and Sanle Notarnicola . Moro Death Notices Considered Hoaxes ROME (AP ) -A flurry of anonymous telephone calls an- nouncing that former Premier Aldo Moro had been executed by his Red Brigades kidnappers was r eceived today by the Italian news agency ANSA . The agency said all had been proven hoaxes The calls were received by ANSA offices in Rome, Turin and Milan. One caller said a communique was left in a trash basket and a "surprise" in the trunk of a car parked near the Italian television production center near the Vatican. But an ANSA reporter and police of- ficer s searched trash recep- tacles and cars on the street and found nothing unusual. The calls came in after the government and the ruling Christtan Democratic Party on Monday rejected an ultimatum from the Red Brigades to free 13 imprisoned terroris ts to save Moro's life. Last week, a communique at- tributed to the Brigades claim- ing the 6l·year.old party presi- dent had been executed trig- Pizza Parlor Thief Chased By Custodian An Irvine pizza parlor custo- dian walked in on a burglary in progress this morning and chased a young criminal out or the restaurant. the burglar spiU- ing pll(ered quarters behind him. The janitor , Char l es Carpenter. 38. called police to repo rt the burglary of the Shakey's Puza Parlor, at 14401 Culver Dr1ve. He told them when he came to work he noticed the service door already unlocked and the burglar alarm turned off. He said he opened the door and spotted a youth about 20 who startled, ran out lbe front door. ' The burgl~r bad rilled the coin box of a video game machine, getting about Sl7~ in quarters but dropping another $13.50 I~ change in his haste to get away gered a massive search" of a frozen mountain lake northeast of Rome . Officials said that message may have been sent by Moro's kidnappers as a ruse lo weaken the government's re- fusal to negotiate for his life. Today. cr owds of ltalians marked the 33rd anniversary of the nation's liber ation from fascism by vis iting Via Mario Fa ni. the Rome street where Moro was kidnapped a nd his five guards slain March 16. Premier Giulio Andreotti told JOu rnahsts on arriving for a leadership meeting at Christian Democrat headquarters in downtown Rome that he had "nothing new" to report. The premier on Monday re- iterated the party's no-deal Line afte r confe rring with key cabinet ministers. He declared: "All requests for a n exch ange with d etained persons were and are unaceep- table because they are directed against the freedom of a ll . <See MORO, Page A2) Coast Weather Partly c loudy with chance of showers tonight. Clearing and mostly sunny W ed nes day . High s Wednesday In the upper 60s. Lows tonight 52 to 57. Chance of rain 20 percent tonight near zero Wednes- day morning. INSIDE TODAY F'ormer F'irat Lady Pat Nt~n "hot~ tM whtrlWl nd of politics" beccuu aht aaid tht people who '°" out are the chfldrm. Htr atory ap- peara today on Pogt A 7. l•tlex Al Y-s.nke Alt .._.... Q ...... ~ CJ l111trlllf81111 .. ~·.::r .:: t:~ ~ C.tlf9nll• ., ,..., ,_.. as Ofttlfft41 ~II ........ "-M... M c.Mlct Cl..... •1"' C-w.ff Cl........... " Otalll lllWC.. A.I T.......... 91 .. Jl.rt•I """9 M ftNI'" • .. lllteft. ...... 11""'91ff ¥ ,...... CH WWN Newt M. Al t s s c a 11 n Savings 9ff ice Robbed A Co.ta Mtu sa vines and loan asaoclat.loa was robbed al aunPolnt Monday afternoon by a lone bandit who escaped with $2,538, police reported todlly. Investieators said the man en, lered tbe rear doors of Brentwood Savtnas. 1140 Adams Ave., at 3:-40 p.m. and us ed a .45 caliber handgun to force two tellers to clean out their tills. There were no reported Injuries. One of the female tellers told police she knew she was going to be robbed when s he saw the man enter wearing an army fatigue jacket, a wool ski cap and mJr. rored ski glasses. The teller acllvated a bank camera and a silent alarm as he approached her and demanded cash. After cleaning out t.he till and handing the young bandH the cash, the teller turned her back on the armed man and said she would go into the bank vault to get more money. She stayed in the vault, and the bandit moved Lo the next teller's station and demanded more money from her. The loss from both tills was estimated at $2,538, but officials said t his total may go higher when an in- ventory is completed today. . Two juvenile witnesses told pOlice they saw a man run out or the bank and across a parking l!Jl before driving away in a hght·colored Volkswagen with old-style Cgold oo b lack) Call/ornla license plates. j . T~e b~dtt is described as be· mg in ~s early 20s, about five feet nme and weighing 160 pounds Boy Arrested Mter Attack NEW YORK CAP) -A 12· year-old Brooklyn boy has been charged with beating a 90·year. old woman, kicking her down a ~light of stairs and stabbing her m the race before stealing a television set from her apart ment. police report. Police said the youth, whose name was not revealed because of his age. pushed his 15-year-old sister in front or a subway train last February, but s he was saved. at the last moment by a Transit Authority police officer. . The youth's latest victim, Jen· n1 e Kelly, was reported in satisractory condition today al St. Mary's Hospital. Front Page A l BUDGET ••• prog~am in the country," Board President Larry TaylOI' agreed .. , think that's reasonable and when il (the request> gets to the admir:iisl~alion then they apply pract1cahty and be11:in cutting it. .. :·~ow we'll see how the ad· m1n1 stration proposes to cut these," Eugene McKnight added H ealth Debate Se t for UCI A debate about national health insurance is scheduled al 8 p.m. Wednesday al UC Irvine. in the Mesa Court Gold Room. Principals are Daniel Curtin or the AFL·ClO labor union, Michael Freilich of the Los Angeles County Medical As· sociatlon. and Gerald Sinykin, ucr director or student health. The debate is sponsored by the Student-faculty Colloquia Serles f O"AHOI COAST DAILY PILOT 'flw-~MliQll Coett D.tlty ll'l'Ot _."'wtttc.t.1\<om = ~~'71\q"C~o'!r.t'=" .. ":O:::.~ -1-Mo"4 .. '"'°"vii f'•\Goy '"' ""'• ---rl A.HI> M..m1--~ ,....., t•lf\ V1l1ty '""'"•· s.4HM4Nei. V•fl•y •net ~::=:~;:.~~,~-::r~·;e t:::~~.'..~"M',~:.iz~Ull ,,..., ... ._, ...... '""·-·--·-'"''" °"'" v ... ,.,....,..., • ...,0.-.,..._ n ..... , ..... , , .. ... n::..:.ia,,,, "';t °"""" M. I.Ht "'-"' *" "'""..i1,,...,...1.,.1u11on Office• CO\lolllltu J>o,....-.. ,it-' ~""~ft 11 .. 0l•-l'"St'"' ... .,...,...,..,hoc~ lllH-h'°"'hl'd S-ieb.tc' v ..... t\101 ll ""' "-•• s... Ol•oo ,,_,.., Telephone (114)~:Z1 CIH•lflH Actwenl!Mng 141·5'71 ~,..,.,, v11i., ...._.00,.tt lf1..ato "'--~ .... ...... ~ :.¥ .. c::r::.:r~~~ meft•t •r .._,., Me~t Mtth\ llftey M {:t;=~·· ..... ,., ,.., ... ,. ...... , t.<-CllH "'' ... " .... CIMll ,,. .. come•ftl• htur1e11# •• <•"''' u it ~·u.:~,;' ,,_,,,, Mlm .. , t , TRASH ••• NW lhe after II btiaf 1tudled b)' • ~,:" wlU be traulattd • Tbie .. ..,eat &aid tM wUl be 1ubmltted to ~en Won the week ls CIUl but that exactly when • vote wtU be scheduled Isn't known. The &trike ao far bas been marft!d by numeroas fires, ln-dudl~ the bumln1 of tbreo Jaycox Disposal trucks and a $15,000 firebombing at Anaheim Disposal. ·'The threa.ts of violence are continuing," said an Anaheim Disposal spokesman today. "We had to put on extra auards last night. We armed ourselves like a fort." He said drivers he has spoken with seemed restless and eaaer to see the new contract offer and vote on it. Communities affected aJong the Orange Coast are Costa ~esa , Fountain Valley. Hunt· mgton Beach, Laguna Beach. Lake Forest, northern El Toro, Laguna .Hills Leisure WorJd. and Some Industrial parts of Newport Beach. Trash may be taken by homeowners to any of several sites, with morning hours re· portedly the least crowded. In Huntington Beach, rubbish can be left at the transfer station at 18131 Gothard Str eet, near El· Lis Avenue. In Irvine. the Coyote Canyon landfill on Bonita Can· yon Road behind UC Irvine Is open to the public. Laguna Beach residents may leave their rubbish in dumpsters ~t either; of two sites: the Agate ;:Meet Fire Station or the city employees parking lot across from the Festival or Arts grounds. E're•Pa~A l KENNEDY. . with the bearer of the Kennedy family's political legacy. Th~ P~st quoted Mrs. Ken nedy s friends as saying she has s~ttl~d inl? a "quiet but enjoya. ble hre with a smell circle or frie~d a " far from the Washington social scene. "ll just seems that she Is more at home here." the Post quoted the friends. "Teddy has a brutal schedule." ·'She has lost a lot or weight and really looks trimmer and younger than she did two years ago. Nobody has seen a drink in her hand." they said. A spokesman at the Lesley school, Jim Blake, said Mrs. Kennedy was taking an indepen- dent study course tilled "Music and Sound in the Classroom." He said the course is for teachers seeking a masters' degree . There was no immediate com- ment from Mrs. Kennedy Tilleve s Pick Hinshaw Car Orange County Sheriff's of· ricers are investigating a theft reported at the Mission Viejo home of former Congressman Andrew J. Hinshaw. Deputies called to the home at 22963 Via Cereza, said Hinshaw told them that two hub caps had been taken from a Lincoln automobile owned by his wife. Joan. 43, while the car was parked outside the home. The loss was valued at $110. Hinshaw was recently r e. leased from the county jail after completing a one.year term for offenses committed while he served a term as Orange County Assessor. l.eekup Denie d • Housing· Study TO Be Resumed The Irvine City Council is peeled tonight to resumeexa January when the council quar· study ol city housing conditions reled over guidelines. and ways to encourage low.cost b The guldeUnes are developed housing. Y the state departnJen& of bous- The eowicil meets at 7.30 at Ing and community develop. city hall. · m~nt, which Jn 1976 decided lta . The latest edition or the hous-gu1d~lines should be blndtn1 up. ing element of the city general fn cttiea, which are required by plan , which originall wa aw to adopt housing elemeni.. adopted in 1973 and r~vised h Many cities, Including Irvine, once, in 1975, was deferred in 1 ave disputed the department's egal grounds for making its guidelines mandatory. Trustee Will File Disclosure Saddleback College Trustee Donna Berry has decided to file an economic disclosure state- m.ent, required by district con- fl 1 c t -of· interest regulations rather than resign her positio~ on the board. "I discovered that in the first ~ear you don't have to divulge !~t'ome,." Mrs. Berry said today. And I m not worried about next y~ar because my term of office will be up." She said she probably will not seek re-election in 1979 due to personal bu:;lness commitments. Mrs. Berry said earlier this month she might resign rather than file the nn·ancial disclosure for~s. which she saw as an in· vas1on of privacy. The Mission Viejo trustee's concern sprang in part from a ranch she owns with her husband in Northern California "'!f e fell that ranch was o~r b~smess and had nothing to do with ~he college district." she explained. "Then I found out we're only required to list in- te.rests within the college dis-trict.·· . The district's new conflict-of. interest code requires trustees and management-level college officials to divulge income. in- ~es.tments and assets -but hm1ts the investments to those In the a_rea covered by district bo~ndanes or to those entities doing business within the dis. trict. Some things, such as income need not be divulged in the first year 's financiaJ disclosure state-ment. . ~II trustees and college of. f1c1als are required to file the form by Wednesday at 5 p.m . The next statement will not be due until February. Moro Terror Film Planned ROME <APl - Avanguardia, an Italian film production company, announced today it will make a movie based on the kidnapping of former Premier Aldo MoTo. The film. to be entitled "Red Brigades," will be directed by Bruno Solaro. an Italian who has direct· ed several films with political overtones. Moro was kidnapped March 16 by the Red Brigades. Italy's most reared urban guerrilla gang. The position of those cities is that only the state leslslat"'1"t. or the courts. can decide whether the HCD gwdeUnes should be a.dvisory, as they have been since 1971, or mandatory. In_ January the council split on the issue. and preferred to wait until after the March elections for the new council to take up the debate again. ln th~ ~eantime. the Planning Com m1ss1on, which has held four public hearings already on the housing element, suspended further hearings for lack of a council opinion about how to treat the HCD guidelines. . Irvine Planning Director Ed· die Peabody recommends that the guidelines be considered on- ly advisory. The council has until June, 1979, to adopt the newest version of the housing element. ·rhe element consists of stand· ards and plans for the improve· ~e.nt or housing and for pro- v1s1on of adequate home s ates. It is also supposed to make adequate provision for the housing needs of all economic segments of the community At the time of the latest re- vision of the housing element, the state HCD recommended that the city work harder to meet that latter provision and d.e.velop specific programs and time schedules to do it Stale's Center Geu Showers, Waling Trend By The Associated Press A moderate Pacific cold front was s licing through Central California today, spreading showers in a southerly pattern. Rainfall for lhe 24 hours end- ing at 4 a.m . showed Bakersfield had .04. Salinas 06, Paso Robles .07, Ukiah 17. Oakland .24 , Stockton 27. Crescent City .34. San Francisco 44. Red Bluff .55, and Shelter Cove 78 Slightly colder air behind the weather front brought the snow level to about 7 .000 feet in the Sierra Nevada, although s ub· stantial s now is still melting below that level, especially around Lake Tahoe. State nood-control authorities in Sacramento have expressed concern about the rapid mellir.g of the snowpack, which is well above normal for this time of year. . Showers were expected to con· t1n.ue sp~radi cally through tonight with clearing expected by Wednesday morning. Fairer weather and warmer tem· peratures are expected Wednes- day afternoon through Friday. Override F ails SACRAMENTO CAPJ Backers of the proposed Foothills Freeway il'I Southern California have again railed to win a veto override. 1'Y~ BYE. BIRDIE' -Performers in Ra1n~ho °S;;j~:r; lnter.med1at~ School's spring musical include (front) J.enmfer 9umn an.d Eric Leviton and <back, left to Cghht> Suzanne Whitman. Chris Winther and Stephanie o en. ~ Music's Discipline .Means Daily Switch By .JACKIE HYMAN Of .. 0.11., Plitt $~If During the day. they're normal junior high school stu- den.ts ~ joking around. slumng ~hear: dic~on and generally act· mg hke kids. Al 3:30 p.m .. every weekday, they become disciplined. trained -l'erformers. Most of the 100 students in the musical theater workshop at Ranc~o San Joaquin In · termed1ate School in Irvine had never b~en in a production before they enrolled this year. I~ took them a while to realize the1~ u~ual behavior Just didn't cut at with teachers Dan Trevino and Jane Courtney. "You have to expect a Jot .. said 'f'.revi~o. who also teach~s a~ University High School and dire.els the Irvine Summer Musical Theater. - "At this age level. at first they ~ad trouble with the discipline involved," he said. "But we've been ~amme~g it in every day that 1f they re going to be per~ormers, they have to be dis- c1phned. They've learned " The stu~ents learn stage pres- ence. acting, singing. diction and stage movement in the course, which began this year al the urging or the two teachers This month. the students will present the 1960s musical "Bye Bye Birdie" at 7:30 p.m . Wednes· day through Saturday at the sc hool. Trevino and Mrs. Courtney are directing, with c~oreography by Kurt Fulton and piano accompaniment by Eeho· McNeilly. Sets are by Jim Hill. About 75 o~ the students will perform. wit~ the .others helping out by selling tickets and ushering Trevino said. ' Leading players include Jen- nifer Quinn, Eric Leviton. Suzanne Whitman, Chris Win· ther and Stephanie Cohen. Then, in June, a production of "You're a Good Man Charlie Brown" is planned. Trevino said the musical pro· gram began l~t year when he was asked to direct "My Fair Lady" at Rancho San Joaquin. .. I said, al a junior high school ?" said Trevino, who re· ported being impressed and sur- prised by the amount of talent he encountered This year's workshop was.an outgrowth, with some funding from the school for such extras as a professional choreographer pl us profits from "My Fai; Lady'· going into the production. ~ut although the public may enJOY the performances. the greatest benefit is in the growth s hown b y the s tudents themselves, Trevino said. "Parents have come to re- hearsals and said to us. 'They're so poised and uninhibited. When I was in the seventh and eighth grades. I couldn 'l have done that·." ~ f'ro• Page A I ~~!~.:.t0wh:ch is d~ to th~ victims of subversion and against the laws of the Republic." 11 Popolo, the Christian Democrats' newspaper, said a handwritten letter found by the newspaper Vita Monday night had been authenticated as M!JrO 's. In it, the five-time pre- mier begged his party to agree to a n "exchange of war prisoners Cwar or guerrilla war as you prefer I. as is done wher~ l~e war is on, as is done in highly civilized countries .... "We are nearly al the zero hour. lt is a matter of seconds rather than minutes. We are at massacre time," said the letter "With mine goes the cry of my mortally wounded family. For this reason. for an evident in- compatibility, I request that no state authority or party official s hould participate at m y funeral. .. 11 Popolo said the letter had ··evidently been extorted." It gave the same explanation for the previous letters in which Moro asked the government lo meet the kidnappers• demands. Jury Still Po Dr. W addill's Farmar st\18 Cba111 By TOM BARLEY Ot aw o.i1r ,.,,.. s1.11t Jur~ deliberations resumed to· day ~n tbe Orange County Superior Court murder trial of Or. ~illiam Baxter Waddill or Huntington Harbour. The panel or nine men and three women deliberated for about three hours Monday alter listening to instructions read by Judge James K. Turner. A. moUoo by lbe defense to ae· quester the jury until a verdict is reached was denied by Judge Turner. Jurors are being al· lowed to go home each evening after being warned to avoid newspaper, radio and lelevlsJOn accounts of the trial. Jurors have bee.n asked to re- turn one of flve posslble .verdicts: not guilty, murder In the first or second degree or at. tempted murder In the flrat or second degree. Waddill and hls wife Janet had breakrut in the colirthouse cafeteria today and appeared to be fully recovered from a tratnc accident Monday that tell them shaken but unhurt. Tbelr Cadillac, descrl&ed to- day as severely dama1ed, coJ· llded with another auto as t.hc WtddllJ. drove to the county ('Ourthouse. The woman occu- pant or the other car is listed in guarded condition today at Westmins ter Community Hospital. The. murder charges faced by Waddill. 42, stem from his aJ. leged strangulation of a newborn inrant in the Westminster hospital nursery on March 2 1977. • ft. is alleged that Waddill panicked when he realiied that the infant he had tried to abort 12 hours earlier had survived the saline injection and was fighting ror life ln the nursery. The jW'y was told that Waddtll choked the baby girl to death while suggesting to another doc· tor four other ways ln which she could be killed, Including being drowned ln a bucket or water . It was testified ror the pros. ecullon that Waddill murdered the baby bec!ause be felt she had suffered massive brain damage and would be little more than a buman veaetable If she lived. Judie Turner told the jury In hla ln11trucUons Monday "A chUd'a rtaht to medical treat ment IJ not dhnlnlshed by the quality ot what tbe child'• future life ml• be.'' \ I ~~-~~~-!r~.t~·; ~ . ~ .. ' •• • _,if ·' ......... xs-·.'r · Farmer Cheeie Is one of our but meltlng and cooking chee1es. lt't most delectable when served at room te,mperaturt. Cubed Farmer Che.St is delicious when dipped in apple buteer. ' saw aac '214 lb. whole piece 5.99 ea. smtac Off Rog. Lb. Price 2.79 lb, reg. 3. 19 lb. WESTalFF PLAZA ,,. , .,....... • .. ,... ............ '41.ff72 .......,_.,"II W . '11 6 1-. "Tl I MAalNIA'S VILLAa.DANA POINT ~ 496-2670 Mon.·$11. 'Ul I Sun. 'IU • ' I I 7 I l t l 7 I I l j Laguna/South £oast \ Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 115, 3 SECTION S, 30 PAGES .oRANGE COUNTY. CALIFO~NIA TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1978 TEN CENTS San CleD1ente ool to Get Renovated The swimming pool that Ole Hanson donated to the city of San Clemente 50 years ago will be renovated, due to a unan· imous City Council vote Mon· day in favor of the pool's re· habilitation. The remodeling is expected to cost between $66,000 and $90,000. The pool, located at the .rounicipal beach club, 106 W. Ave. Pico. has been closed since 1976 for repairs. With its closing, Big Fish Story a municipal swlmmlq proaram for children wu also suspended. The citv hired Keisker· Johnson, architectural consult· ants, to make a study or the best use of the valuable beach club property adjacent to the city's North Beach. The consultants' recommen· dations. revealed in the past month to the city's planning commission, included four alternate plans for beach club renovation three of which would call for destruction of the Olympic·size pool. Irate mothers, wanting the pool reopened ror children's swim lessons, launched a peti· tioo campaign to sav~ the pool. Petitions signed by 1,814 area residents were presented to the City Council Monday. Among those to sign the peti- tion was Hanson's daughter, Doris Denison. a San Clemente Nearly a dozen photographers and a h.indful of Mission V1eJO Company spec- ta to rs closed in as 5.000 rainbow trout. "' eraging one pound per fish, hit Lake M1ss1on Viejo throu~h a s pigot in one of l wo fish hatchery trucks. The fish joined lhousands of bass and rcd·carcd sunfish M ondav in the manma de l :.i k~ scheduled to open lo community homeo\\ ncrs June 3. The Jake features swimming. boating and fishing a nd will be lined by waterfront housm~ developments 'Lawyers Study Offer in OC TimhStrike By JACKIE HYMAN 01 1111 O.lly Pl ... St.Ill An uneasy calm settled today ovl'r an Orange County trash tr u ck drjvers s trike a s Tea msters attorneys mulled a new management offer and rub- ' bish collection firms geared up to meet the threat or further violence. I T he strike. which began at m1dn1ght April 17, has left more 4.h an a million Orange County 1'es1dl'nts witho ut rubbish i collection services. I M anagemenl representatives reportedly sent a written copy of the oew contract offe r to Teamsters Local 396 at 9:30 a.m. Monday. t'ederal mediator John Courtney s aid the offer con- tain e d "significant con- cessions." but no details have been released. Drivers had asked ror a raise of $4 per hour over a threc·year period. They currently receive $4 50 an hour and employers had previously offered an additional $1.10 an hour over the three years. The drivers also reportedly were seeking revised grievance procedures. dental benefits and fi ve days a year sick leave. S pokesmen at the Orange County offices of Local 396 said the) have no information .about when a strike vote will take place. College's Budget Requests Pondered Budget requests received for the Saddleback College 1978-79 budget exceed estimated tax in- come by $13.3 million to $30.9 million, depending on the tax rate used as a district budgeting base . That fact. given lo trustees Monday for informational purposes. created quite a stir 12 Paintings, 'IV Set Taken In Burglary A dozen paintings and a television set. with a total va lue or more than S2,000 was reported stolen from a Laguna Beach man's oome sometime last week. William Holl Glenn. 64 , told police someone broke a rear window to bis home at 228 Ledroit St. sometime between last Thursday and Sunday, en- tering the home. The burglars escaped with a black and white television set and 12 paintings, which included watercolors, oils and acry~1cs .. Value of lhe lost artwork and the TV were set at $2,040 by Glenn among some board members. "lt seems almost wild," Nor- ris a Brandl C'Ompla ined. "I think you're JUsl playing around with numbers." Mrs. Brandt criticized college officials for asking for too much in the beginning or the budgeting process. "We are not being realistic from the very beginning," she said . "We s hould start with more reahst1c r1gures .. Donna Berry ag reed "There's something wrong when some of our departments ask for a third more and some stay the same," she complained. But college administrators in- sis ted the $15.4 million in re- quests was merely a starting point t oward develo ping a balanced budget. The present college budget is $25.1 million "The budget numbers we 're giving you tonight a re what the divisions and departments say they need for service over the coming year," District Superin· tendent Robert Lombardi told trustees. He said collc~c officials would begin paring down the .requests to present a balanced budget to trustees on May 8. And officials found s upport for the expensive budget requests amonSl some trustees. <See B UDGET, Page A2) resident, who told the City Coun· ell that. the beach club and pool were donated by ber father as part or bis "dream" for the city he rounded. "My father hoped the swim· ming pool would be kept in re· pair for use by all San Clemente citizens." she said. "He knew it was on a valuable piece of prop· erly. He built It adjacent to North Beach, so ~pie could swim in a safe pool at the same time they enjoy the beach, where it isn't always safe to swim." Wilma Bloom , o f the Capistrano Bay Area League or Women Voters. asked the City Council how the municipal pool had been allowed to deteriorate to such a state. ''How did this ever happen?" she a sked. "Whal are our priorities? This neglect Is a blackness over our community. People are saying, let's do it and let's do it now." Councilman Howard Mushett said the pool repairs have been classified "high priority" for five years. "There shbuld have been ac- tion in September," he said. "The c ity manager was authorized to spend the funds, and not one damn thing has been done . This i s outright <See POOL, Page A2) Stocks Soaring Runaway Rally ~ears Recordi; NEW YORK (AP> -Stock prices swe pt ahead today in the midst of another runaway rally that outstripped at least one of the trading volume records set last we~. The mid -day Dow Jones avera~e or 30 industrials was up 13.42 points to 839.48 on top of a 13.26-point jump Monday. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange totaled 17.58 million shares in .the first hour, breaking the opening-hOur rec- ord of 17.48 million set only April 17. By mid-day turnover came to 41.5 million s hares. running LB Council To Review Panel Plan Laguna Beach city councilmen wi II be reviewing their own design review board when they meet tonight al 6 p. m. The council chided the five· member panel earlier this month for dealing with design matters without the benefit of a set of standards by which to make de- cisions. The nap arose after councilmen approved two requests for lighted real estate signs which had been appealed to the council by the re- a l tors. While admitting the signs werl' "in poor taste." councilmen s aid they were forced to approve them because the design review board never developed standards deal. rn g wilhsigns. At that ttme. Mayor J ack McDowell asked the board to begin working on development s tandards for its a r eas of responsibility. The design review board will meet torught to outline develop- ment standards regarding res- idential structures. Board Chairman Mi chae l Schley said he hopes to engage the council in a discuss ion or long range plans and goals or the new City Council in relation to the de· sign review board. In other action tonight, the council will interview nearly two dozen applicants for positions on the city's new Arts Commission, formed last month to oversee cultural and artistic programs in Laguna Beach. The council will also interview potential members of the Human Needs Committee and the Hous· ing Commmee during the ad- journed council meeting. just a bit shy or the pace on April 17. when ,the full day's total was an unprecedented 63.51 million shares The Dow J ones industrial average has climbed more than 73 points in two weeks in one or the s harpest rallies m Wall !::itreet history. .. Analysts said the spark that ignited the latest outburst or buy ing was provid e d b y Eastman Kodak. a long-time favorite of investmg mst1tutlons Over the weekend. ~dak rt>- ported a 50 percent rise m first - qua rter eammgs from the com- parable period last year. TED'S NEW FLAME? Skier Suzy Chaffee But brokers a lso said the markel was generating its own fuel. attracting .. catch-up" bu}- ing by investors impressed by the r ecent stre ngth in stock prices. As Standard & Poor's Corp. analysts observed m a recent is- sue of the firm's investment ad - v is ory publi t'ati o n "The Outlook": "Mark('t s tre ngth itself can do much lo bolster sen- timent." A d v·a n c c s o u t n u m b tir ed declines by about a 2 l margin in the broad tally of New York Stock Exchange.listed issues. APWI~ GOING IT ALONE? Joan Kennedy Ted Kennedy, Wife Separation Denied NEW YORK (AP) -Reports that 'Joan Kennedy. wife of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. "has de- cided lo go it alone" in an apart- ment in Boston were published toda y i n two New Yo rk newspapers. but Kennedy ram1 ly sources in Washington denied the couple had separated. The New York Post quoted un· named friends as saying Mrs. ·Kennedy has been hv1ng m a two·bedroom aparlmt>nt on Beacon Street for two months and , although s he sees her children every weekend, has been at her family·s home in McLean. Va .. only once in that time. ln the Daily News. columnist Liz Smith wrote that by failing to appear together in public or private recently. lhc Kcnnedys have done nothing to slow "un- ceasing stories or thei r great 'apartness· which have been rifl· ever since the Suzy Chaffee on- t h e -s I opes-w 1th-Teddy la lt'-'> began to emerge " Kennedy ha!. been reported as being at Aspen, Colo , in the company of Miss Chaffee. a former Olympic i.k1er, several weeks ago. .. It 's n o t true.'' Tom (See KENNEDY, Page A2> Or:::Q ,:ast Weather A press release issued by the Teamsters office in Los Angeles <See TRASH, Page A2) Boy Arrested After Attack Will 'Big Tony' Be Indicted? Partly c loudy w i th chance of showers tonight. Clearing and mostly s unny Wednes d ay . Hi g h s Wednesday in the upper 60s. Lows tonight 52 lo 57. Chance of rain 20 percent tonight near zero Wednes- day morning. NEW YORK (AP) -A 12· year-old Brooklyn boy bas been charged with beating a 90·.Year- old woman, kicking heT down a Oight or stairs and stabbing her in the face before stealing a teltvision set from her apart- ment, police report. Police said the youth, whose name was not revealed because of his age, pushed his 15·year-old sister in front of a subway train last February. but she was saved at the last moment by a Transit Authority police officer. The youth's latest victim, Jen· nie Kelly. was reported in utisfactory condition today at St. Mary's Hospital. By GARY GRANVILLE Of 1111 DailJ ..i1et SMlff So far, burly Anthony "Big Tony" Marone Sr. has been flit· ting about on the outskirts or the Stephen Bovan murder case. Monday. however. a pros- ecutor said it Is likely Big Tony will become a feature player in the bizarre drama that has un- folded since Bovan last October was gunned down outside a Newport Beach restaurant. 'Tm seeking a murder con- spiracy indictment and am bop· ing he'll <Big Tony> be indicted May 17," said Deputy District Allorney David Carter. Carter's words were spoken from the wllne111 stand In Orange County Superl01" Court Judge Robert Kneeland 's courtroom. I The prosecutor's appearance as a witness came arter Big Tony had told his version of his role in Bovan's slaying. The testimony came as lawyers for the seven deren· dants already cited in the case continued a long series or pre- trial motions. Those motions are aimed at having the charges against the defendants either dismissed or reduced before they are made to stand trial. One of those defendants is Blg Tony's son. Anthony "Little Tony" Marone Jr. Aod the al- leged triggerman in Bovan's murder Is a long-time Big Tony ally. Jerry Fiori. Accordlni to Big Tony's testimony Monday, he and bla associates ~came Involved ln the case after being hired as public relations men by the so- called Krishnas. "What did you do as a public relations man?" asked Deputy District Attorney Oretta Sears. "Ob, we went around and tried to sell cookies, six million dollar man cookies." Big Tony answered. "What did the cookies look like?" Mrs. Sears asked. "They looked Uke cookies," Big Tony replied. "And .what klod of cookies were they?" Mrs. Sears wanted to know. "Terrible, they were terrible cookies," Blg Tony said as he quickly dismisaed his public re- 1 atloDI career aa a cookie uluman for the so.called Krlehna sect ptat. included 2.8· I " ,,.I • year·old Alexander Kulik. lt was when Kulik was al- legedly kidnapped by Bovan and l wo companions that Big Tony and his mates became em -broiled in a three-corner en· counter thal pitted them. lhe Kris hnas and Bovan 's cadre againslone another. Big Tony tsestWed that when $100,000 ransom was delivered to an ocean view spot near San Clemente, he and two others were at the scene to watch Bovan pick up the valise con· talning the ransom money. "We started walking toward the <Bovan's> camper and this guy starts firing at us," Big Tony tesllfied. " 'Geez,' Rossi yelled. 'Hey, that crazy sonofabltch is shoot· <Stt MARONE, Pa1e AU t INSIDE TODAY Pormer f'rrst l ady Pat Nuon "hated the whirlwind of politics" because she said lhe people who lose out are the children. Her story op· pears today on Page A7. l•d•x AIYMr ..... lt• ··-...-. L.M ... rl SIQI_, C..lll9nll• aaulllM c.MIU Cnlt• .... o .. u. ... ~ Ullert11IP ... •11twu1-..t , ... llf\flt 11, ' A.! DAil v '1LOT Corridor LiDk Si udied • Condemnauon of business bulldinp may be required to lie the controversial Sun Joaquin Hilla Trlll\Sportulaon Corridor to Interstates In the Mission Viejo- Liasuna Niguel area. MeeUng with the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council <SACC > In El Toro Monday. a county spokes man said between eight and 20 businesses could be affected in making way tor Uie proposed interchange at the Academ y Cites UCI Chemist • UC I rvine c h emist F. Sherwood Rowland has been elected to the National Academy or Sciences. It was announced to· day Rowland. working with fellow UCI chemist Mario Molina, pio neered research into the d est ru ctive e rrects of fluorocarbons. contained in com· mon propellant aerosols, upon the ozone layer of the upper at· mospherc. The academy cited Rowland for his continuing research in h ot atom c hemistr y, radiochemistry and atmospheric chemistry. Founded 11 5 yeHrs ago, the National Academy or Sciences ls a private organization Interested an the advancement of science. 1t is a regular advisor to govern· ment. Rowland is a founding UCI faculty member who was chairman of the department of chemistry from 1964 to 1970. In 1977 he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. and In 1976 he won the UC ! Distinguished Faculty Research Award. He Is the recipient of numerous other scientific honors. Rowland was the only UCI faculty member to be elected to the National Acad e m y of Sciences this year; 12 other UC scientists also were selected. giving the university the highest number of scientists named to the 1,256·member organization from one Institution. Two othe r UCI scientists already are members: Howard -Schn eiderm a n , dean of biological sciences: and Richard Thompson. acting chairman of the d epartment of osyc hob1ology From Page A I KENNEDY. • Southwick. a spokesman for Sen. Kennedy , D M ass . in Washington said when asked whether the co uple had separated. ·'The apartment is his res· idencc In Boston. They have not separated. She has been taking courses at Harvard a nd Lesley 1College of Fine Arts) since last fall," Southwick said. Southwick also said "not true" when asked about reports link· ing Kennedy and Miss Chaffee. Eunice Shrwer. the senator's sis ter. also denied that there was a separation and said the couple see each other all the lime and that the children see her in Boston most weekends Mrs . Shriver said Joan was "in therapy" referring to her drinking problem. was doing ver y well and there was no point in upsetting that. In past years. Mrs. Kennedy has had some emotional and drinking problems. attributed by some to the pressures of living with the bearer of the Kennedy family's political legacy. The Post quoted Mrs. Ken· nedy's friends as saying she has settled Into a ··quiet but enJoya· ble lire with a s mall circle of fri e nd s" fa r fr o m the Washington social scene. ORANOI COAST l 'IC DAILY PILOT 0..0r~ (M\t 0•11¥ PltOI """t"WNf f'tl\COl'ft ftll""llMfrffW\ Pfh\ n,CN&fl\hldbylf'lt()t.,..,,.. (;oe"lil ~b'IV'\1"0(~D•~lf S.0.r•ttfird;t'°"'•'" "'°li\MO *t"C.t•f' tl'lreuQh FrtOlf fOf (o,t~ ......... NtwOOft ft~•t"' •fU'f'I•~ 9uctt '"''" t•1n V•U•t It.,'" \•dllt06t\ Y•l•n ""° l~--~l'I ~th (f\ot\t A t.l~~lf'(I. •~ '' OUbh~ \•luro.tn .,_, ~n '"'" t!:!~0,,~~~'1..~lf:;~~\.;:1'))0 WtU &., ·-·-PUUOtftl ANI PvOh\Nlw' JN••( ..... V•t:f"Pt,.,1.,.f'll•f'IOO."""itl~ n..,.., ...... E.OtlOf T ... _, ... _ MA"•O•"°' E•t0t 0-.ftffH I.Mt .,_ ..... n ~'~'tefllt -.ilt•Ql"t ffltor' Leau11e •••cl• omo. n .. OteMf'W'• \ott"9tt 11t ... 11 ....... ,.... p 0 11o .... '1tll omc .. CJttleMt"f JJOwt-.1a.,11rHt M1fflllftQiO'\ IMMf\ lfllS IH<P\loutewerd ~lt.-f~ ~•llt• t\I01 l• ,.._., "9M •I S.n O••oo ,.,.,.__.,, TeltphOM {714)Ml~ CIHtlflff Advertlalng M2-M7t L .. tlfle .. Mii AH o.p.t,,.ntll Telepll011e 4~ "'em .. " C\ltmH!ltf' 4tMIOO 50Uthern l t.tOllOUI or tbe 13 mllt·lont San Joaquin freeway. Fred Pearson. representing Gruen Associates, Inc .. corridor i.tudy consultants, said the busl· ness buildings are along Camino Capistrano a nd Marguerlte Parkway near Avery Parkwaty. County officials are conduct· ing the last round or hearings before public groups and owners before presenting possible cor· ridor routes lo the county plan· o.lly Pllet lt.H ...... IN NATIONAL ACADEMY UCI Cheml1t Rowland mna commisision later this year. Final rout.tng between the Corona del Mar Freeway and the San Diego Freeway through the San Joaquin Hills will be 11elected by the county Board or Supervisors. Pearson noted that there are two po11lble locatlons for linking the corridor with Inte rstate 5 - one north of Avery Pa rkway, the other south of the parkway. The northern lnterchanee could affect up to 20 business s tructures. h e said . The southern interchange, up to eight. Robert Rende, manaaer or the county Envlronmental Manage· ment Agency <EMA> project planning division. said this morning that • 'lhe degree or ef· feet Is open, too." Rende said the Interchange could go .. up and over " much of the business area. "There are ways to mitigate," he said. adding ... more study is needed." Monday night's presentation, the fourth before SACC. brought out four residents of the new Neille Gall Ranch subdivision under development in Laguna Hills by Presley Companies of Newport Beach. Hans Backlund and Mrs. Joan Burt , who grow org anic vegetables. said they were told nolh Ing about the freeway. pro· posed for as near as 500 feet to their trl,lct of homes selling for between $120,000 and $170.000. Backlund told EMA orrlcials t h e homes are considered "equestrian country.I' He Tips Told to· Cope With Trash Strike Or ange County city and coun· ty officials said today they don't believe the week·old trash truck drivers' strike has resulted in any health hazards. The strike bas left more than one million county residents without rubbish collection. Orange Coast communities af· fected are Costa Mesa. Fountain Va lley, Huntington Beach . Laguna Beach, Lake Forest. northern El Toro. Laguna HUis Leisure World and some in· dustrlal cust.omers in Newport Beach. RI chard Robison, assistant coun~y director or envlronmen· tal he!U.th. uraed that residents take steps to cul the danger or future health problems. '"Above all, they should ~se their garbage disposal to Its maximum." Robison said. He noted that management employees of the firms against which Teamsters Local 396 Is striking have been averting the worst danger by collecting trash . from medical centers and food establishments. "As it goes along though, it may cause a greater problem ... Robison said. Other measures residents can lake, Robison said, a re to cut the bottoms out of cardboard cartons and boxes and aluminum cans and flatten them to lake up less space. Also. he suggested saving newspapers lo give to recycling centers. such as those at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa and Marina High School in Hunt· ington Beach. In addition. Robison said. anim al wastes should be buried deep underground. Lawn trim· mings should be reserved in plastic bags, he said. Officers or the Orange County Solid Waste Management Depart· ment s u ggested p e r sons hauling their own trash do so during morning hours when ~ dumps are less crowded. As an emergency measure. the transfer station at 18131 Gothard Street in Huntington Beach (near Ellis Avenue> is now optn from 7 a .m . to 4:30 p.m . Monday through Saturday, with the least-used dumping lime between 8 a .m . and noon. officials said. Also available to the public from 6 a .m. to 6 p.m. Is the Coyote Canyon landClll s ite located on Bonita Canyon Road behind UC Irvine. Various city officials are alsCJ taking steps and are urgently re· questing residents to keep rub· bish off the streets and curbs. In Laguna Beach. plastic bags are available at city hall and citizens may dump their trash at dumpsters located at the Agate Street Fire Station and across from the Festival of Arts grounds in the city em ployees parking Jot. Allan Roeder. acting manager of the Costa Mesa Sanitary Dis· trlct, said officials there hope to have heavy trash bags available to the public by midweek. He said the city Is operating a referral service to put people un· able to haul their own trash in touch with volunteers. He said the city won't refer people to anyone who charges to collect trash. John Whipple, administrative aide In the Huntington Beach Department of Public Works. said that city is working on plans to set up locations where citizens could bring trash for ci· ty trucks to haul. Fountain Valley officials said they can't make any promises but are trying lo get a rebate for trash collection fees during the strike period. In Newport Beach , a spokesman said there haven 't been any major problems re· ported because only a few in· dustrlal customers are affected. Front Page A l 'IRASH CONTRACT. • • said the offer is being studied by attorneys and will be translated Into Spanish. The statement said the offer will be submitted to workers before the week Is out but that exactly when a vole will be scheduled isn't known. The strike so far has been marred by numerous fires, In· eluding the burning or three Jaycox Disposal trucks and a $15,000 firebombing at Anaheim Disposal. "The threats of violence are continuing," said an Anaheim Disposal spokesman today. "We had lo put on extra guards last night. We armed ourselves like a fort.·· He said drivers he h'aa spoken with seemed restless and eager to see the new contract offer and vote on It. Communities arrected along the Orange Coast are Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Hunt· ington Beach, La1una Beach. Lake Forest, northern £1 Toro. l-n1una Hilla Leisure World, and so me Industrial parts or Newport Beach. Trash may b e take n by homeowners to any of several sites. with momlng hours re· portedly the least crowded. In Huntington Beach. rubbish can be left at the transfer station at 18131 Gothard Street, near El· lis Avenue. Jn Irvine. the Coyote Canyon landflll on Bonita Can· yon Road behind UC Irvine is open to the public. Laguna Beach residents may leave their rubbish In dumpsters at either of two sites: the Agate Street Fire Station or the city employees parking lot across from the Festival of Arts grounds. Rummage Sale Set At Laguna Church A rummage sale sPoneored by the Women's Asaoclalion of the Community Pres byte r ian Church or L11una Beach is itcheduled Friday and Saturday rrom 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The .,ale, featurtnc antiques, pl anti, jewelry, 11ft1, bakery iood• and book.I will be held In the church parktn1 lot, us Foreat Ave. Proceed• will to to varlou1 cllartt.y 1rouP1 and the local 8oy and Olrl Scouts t• added, "Everything they <home buyers> are running away from. you are bringing here." Mrs. Burt said her vegetables would die from corr idor developed smog. Backlund said he believtt the county will select the northern freeway route through the south county because or gaps left In development areas for the cor· rldor and because of the need for less grading. The northern route passes closest to Nellie Gall and to Leisure World. which already has protested the possibility of more smog in the reliremenl community. The northern route. other area residents have pointed out. is ·a lso the one favored by Aliso Viejo Co. which plans a 20,000. unit housing development on the Moulton Ranch. F ro• Page A l POOL ..• negligence." Mayor William Walker said a large portion or city parks and recreation funds Intended for the pool repairs and other projects we re d1verted to completion or the city's Bonita Canyon Park in time for the 1976 Bicentennial celebration. "What you put down as a plan doesn't always come to frul· lion," he said. "We must main· lain our Oexibillty." Pool repairs cannot be com· pleted by this summer. city parks Director Arlie Waterman told the City Council, so his de· partment is look ing Into alternate locations ror the municipal swim program. The city may lease a portable pool. like those used by the Los Angeles learn-to-swim program. Wat erman said. 'Another possibility is that the San Clem ente swim program might be offered in private pools local· ed In the city Nigue l Unit Elects Board; Office r s Later The 634 members of the Laguna Niguel Community As· socialion elected 15 of their peers lo the group's board of directors al a meeting held Mon· day night. But the ballot counllng look longer than the homeowners ex· peeled, so appointment of of· ficers will be held over until the next meeting, according to Col. John R. Gill, a director. District representatives elect- ed Monday night include Col. Gill, Clifrord W. Grant. Tom Moody. Phil Caruso. P aul C r amer, Bill Collier, H.T. Chase, Robert Thatcher, Susan Ring and Frank F . Mead Ill. At-large representatives to the 15-member board In c lude Wiiiia m Dennis on, Dennis Devine, Bill Tellman. Gloria Linkey and Hans Ro11.,Pn Airline8 S trik e? MlNNEAPOLIS <AP> Negotiator s for Northwest Airlines and the Air Lines Pilots Association met with a federal mediator today in attempts to settle a contract dispute. The ALPA has threatened to strike at 12:01 a.m. Saturday if agree- ment is not reached. ,.,w ........... 'Doum. Kitty' That's Ted Land under Alex. a nine·month-old lion who sleeps in Land's bedroom and has the run of his home in Scottsdale. Ariz. Neighbors have complained about the freedom given to Alex and his playmat~. a couple of Rengal tigers ....- F ro• Page A I MARONE TESTIFIES. • • Ing al us.· So. we got out or there ." Somehow. though. Big Tony and his mates ended up with $70,000 of the $100.000 paid for Kulik 's release, "Yeah. l got SlS.000. Jel'ry I Fiori> got $10.000. It was split up like that," Big Tony said. He denied there was ever a formal contract put out on Bovan as a retaliation for his kidnap and beating. 'But, the Krishnas were an noyed," Big Tony admiti~d. In earlier testimony. Big Tony was identified as a transplanted east erner who had come to Orange County under an assumed identity after testifying in major East Coast criminal trials . Health Debate Se t Tor UCI .-.. A debate about national health insurance is scheduled at 8 p m Wednesday at UC Irvine, in the Mesa Court Gold Room Principals are Daniel Curtin of the AFL-CIO labor union. Michael Freilich of the Los Angeles County Medical As· socialion. and Gerald Sinykin. UCI director of student health. The debate is sponsored by the Student-faculty Colloquia Serles. S~atps Sch eduled For Kinder garte n Registr ation for fall kin dergarten classes will be held May 22 at El Morro Elementary School. Children must be S years old on or before Dec. 2. 1978. to be eligible, school officials say. Parents or guardians must bnng verification or birth. as well as immunization records signed by a doctor. Among the cast!S he claimed to have played a role in was the famed New York heroin French Connection caper . Now, Big Tony has lo wait to May 17 to see if Carter wi ll suc· ceed in attaching him to the Bovan defendants. F r o • Page A l BUDGET .•. "This i11 u dream list -that\ a ll wt•'rl' look ing <il her~ tonight. .. William Watts said "Wh en you usk pcopll' whal is the best then they'll give it tu you "I think we'd want to ask that question every year." ''I would think we would want to shoot for the most outstanding program In the country," Board President Larry Taylor agreed "I thank that ·s reasonable and when It <the request> gels to the :.idmlnbtrat1on then they apply pract1c:.ility and bc~in cullmg 11 .. ..Now wt•'ll see how the ad m1n1stration proposes to cur I h e s l'. " E u g c n c M t: K n i g h t addl'd P ancake Break.last Planned in Laguna A puncake bre a kfa st sponsored by the Cottage Restaurant und Nolan Real Estate earlier this month, netted more than Sl ,000 to be used by the Laguna B~ach lligh School Boosters Club Harry Moon. owner of the Cot· tage restaurant, donated food for the breakfast and Nolan sales men cooked. served and clt'aned up for the more than 800 people who attended the fund ro1ser. Farmar style maa111 save aaa 2~ lb whole piece 5.99 ea. .... ......... ~.~~.!·\ ..... · •• l .... : save 4Ga . . . '4" t ' ~ ... '· • ~1 ...... -·tl\:,.. ::IJ-.... . Farmer Cheese h one of our best m11t1ng ind cooking cheeses. It's most delectable wtten served at room t1mper1turt. Cubed Farmer Cheese 11 dellc1ou1 when dipped m 1pl)le but11r. Off Reg. Lb. Price 2.79 lb. reg. 3.19 lb. WESTQ.IFF PLAZA 17tll . '""'' "':'r:! ........... 642•0'72 ..... ......... 'Tl w 'Tl ' -. "Tll I MAltMU'S VILLAMOW POtMT I 7 17 Oraage Coast VOL. 71, NO. 115, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORN!A TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1978 T oday's Closing N.Y. Stoeks N TEN CENTS NB Council Eyes $·2@,BOO .for Panels Two citizen committees ap. pointed by the Newport Beach City Council will spend more than $20.000 in the coming fiscal year. according to figures re- leased Monday. City Manager Robert Wynn gave councilmen the fund re- quests from the Citizens Liller Control Advisory Committee and the Arts Commission during tbe council's review of the city's $26.3 million proposed budget. Councilmen will be holding study sessions on the inch·Ul.ick document prior to each of their bi weekly meetings until the budget is adopted on June 26. It wlll go into effect on July 1. The proposed budget is based on a predicted increase of 10 percent in the assessed vaJue of taxable property and includes a Sl.03 tax rate, identical lo the existing levy. Al Monday's meeting, the councilmen reviewed the alloca· lions proposed for the two com· mittees as well as their own and the budgets for the city clerk. the city manager, the personnel department, the city attorney, the finance department, the re- tirement rund ior all employees and the police department. The proposed budgets for the two committees total $13.500 for the Arts Commission and S8,000 for the Utter committee. Neither budget includes any money to hire staff personnel to serve the committees. something both groups have been seeldng in recent years. The arts budget consists of Sl0.000 to finance the upcoming city arts festival. Gerry Bolinl, administrative assistant to the city manager. noted it is the same amount that was budgeted last year and he pointed out that the fesUval returned more than $4.000 of that amount in ticket sales and receipts. The general operations budget or $3,500 covers mailing and printing costs. dues and ex· penses incurred in attending seminars and conventions and operation or the art galleries in city hall ~md at the police sta· lion. The litter budget includes al- locations for a speakers bureau and brochures to be used in the (See PANELS, Pa«e AU Market Soars, Misses Record Savings Office Held Up A Costa Mesa savings and loan association was rob~ at gunpoint Monday afternoon tiy a lone bandit who escaped with S2,538, police reported today. Investigators said the man en- tered the rear doors or Brentwood Savings, 1640 Adams Ave .• at3:40 p.m. and used a .45 caliber handgun to force two tellers to clean out their tills. There were no reported injuries. One of the female tellers told police she knew she was going to be robbed when she saw the man enter wearing an army fatigue jacket. a wool ski cap aJtd mir· rored ski glasses. The teller aclivated a bank camera anct a silent alarm as he pproached her and demanded ash. Arter cleaning out the till and anding the young bandit the cash. the teller turned her back n the armed man and said she ould go into the bank vault to get more money. She stayed in the vault, and the bandit moved to the next tell er 's station and demanded m ore money from her. The loss from both tills was estimated al $2,538. but officials said this total may go higher when an tn· , ventory is completed today. Two juvenile witnesses told police they saw a man run out or the bank and across a parking lot before driving away in a light-colored Volkswagen with old·style (gold on black> California license plates. The bandit is described as be· in~ an his early 20s, about five feet nine and wf>ighing 160 pounds l ! Boy Arrested ' Mter Atta ck NEW YORK <AP> -A 12· year·old Brooklyn boy has been charged with beating a 00-year- old woman. kicking her down a night of stairs and stabbing her in the race before stealing a television set from her apart· ment, police report. The youth's latest victim, Jen- nie Kelly, was reported in satisfactory condition today al St M ary·s Hospital Catali na St~k Alter Graad E n t ra•ce Under tow of two tugs. the now retired cruise ship SS Catalina entered Newport Harbor shortly after noon to· day but then later apparently got stuck near Balboa Bay Club. Great White Steamer is h~re to house displays at Lido Village Marina boal show when she finally ar· rives. Visil~rs may go dboard. She'll be here until May 8. long Beach Yacht 'R eal,' Race Winner UCI Chenllst Joins Science Academy Dureh Artist Goes Berserk, Cms Painting ENSENAOA-When computer error and other communJcation difficulties were ironed out Mon· day. here are the correct results for the 31st Newport Beach to Ensenada yacht race: -White Lightnin'. skippered by Paul McEachern of the Long Beach Yacht Club. wins lhe President o( Mexico trophy. -Capriccio. skippered by Peter Nooteboom of King Harbor Yacht Club, wins the President or the United States trophy. Earlier, because of a com- puter foulup, it had been incor- rectly reported that Jay Lin- derman 's Raider out or Balboa Yacht Club had won the Mexico trophy for best corrected lime in the lntemational Orfshore Rule division. But correctly now . McEacbem's White Lightnin', a Class B CF-37 designed and built by Dennis Choate Of Newport Beach. wins it. UC Irvine chemist F . Sherwood Rowland has been elected to the National Academy or Sciences. it was announced to- day. Rowland. working with fellow UCI chemist Mario Molina. pioneered resear ch into the destructive e ff ects of fluorocarbons. contained in com· mon propellant aerosols, upon the ozone layer or the upper jl· mosphere. The academy cited Rowland for bis continuing research in hot atom chemistry. ralliochemistry and atmospheric chemistry. Founded 115 years ago, the National Academy of Sciences is a private organization interested in the advancement of science; it is a regular adviser to govern· ment. Rowland is a founding UCI faculty member who was chairman or the department of (See CHEMIST, Page A2) 1)91" ...... Sc.ff -IN NATIONAL ACADEMY UCI Chemtat Rowland AMSTERDAM. Netherlands CAP> -A self-portrait by Vin· cent van Gogh was seriously damage<.. today by a distraught Dutch artist who s lashed the painting twice before he was overpowered, officials said. The attack -the fourth act of vandalism agains t European art this month -occurred in the Vin cent Van Gogh state museum. It the second lime this month that a Van Gogh painting has been attacked. On April 5. a 31-year·old Dutchman seriously damaged the painter's "La Berceuse," ex· hibited in the Municipal Museum only about 100 yards from the building where today's attack took place. The 32·year·old slasher, whose Identity was withheld, was being interrogated at Amsterdam police headquarters, a museum spokesman said. Kennedys Deny Split The damaged painting, "Self. Portrait with Grey Hat.'' dates from Van Gogh's Parisian period and was finished in 1887. A museum spokesman declined to say how much the pajntiog was worth. He said regtoration would be difficult and would take a long time. NEW YORK <AP> -Reports that J oan Kennedy. wife of Sen. Edward M. Kennt!dy, "has de- cided to go it alone" jn an apart· ment in Boston were published tod ay in two New York newspapers, but Kennedy fami- ly sources in Washington denied the couple had separated. The New York Post quoted un- named friends as saying Mrs. Kennedy has been livlng in a two .bedroom apartment on Beacon Street for two months and. although she sees her children every weekend, bas been at her family's home in McLean, Va .• ooly once in that Ume. In the Daily News, columnist Lia Smith wrote that by failing to appear together in public or private recently, the Kennedys have done oothinc to slow "un· ceasing stortes or their 1real ·apartness' wblcb have been rile ever since the S~y Cbalf ee OD· tbe·slopes·wltb·Teddy tales be1an to emerse ... Kennedy ba1 boen reJ)Orted u ' being al Aspen, Colo., In the company of Miss Chafree, a former Olympic skier, several weeks ago. "H's not true," Tom Southwick. a spokesman for ~n. Kennedy , D·Mass., 10 Washington said when asked whether the couple bad separated. ·'The apartment is hls res- idence in Boston. They have not separated. She has been taking courses at Harvard and Lesley <College or Fine Arts) since last fall," Southwick said. ., Southwick also said "not ~ when asked about reporta link· ing Kennedy and Miss Charree .• Eunice Shriver. the senator s sister, also denied that there was a separation and said the couple see each other all the time and that the children see her ln Boston most weekends. Mrs. Shriver said Joan was ''in therapy" referrtnt to her drlnklnt probl~m . was dolna verv well aod. there was no point (See KENNEDY• Pa1e AJ) TED'S NEW FLAME? Skier Suzy Chaffee ' ... Cwse Green Enooumer? RIPLEY, Tenn. CAP> Authorities are asking the State Health Department to examine a 25-pound chunk or green tee that witnesses say ren rrom the sky. B. V. Hutcherson. chier deputy sherlrf or Lauderdale County, said Monday be 1$ keeping the object wrapped in a plastic bag in a deep frene at the county Jail until he can get it to the state laboratory. Tbe ice Cell on the grounds or the old Asbport School west or Ripley late Sunday with a roar and a cl<>Ud or smoke, according to witnesses. Ra Hy Tapers Ai Close J ~ . NEW YORK <AP> -Stock prices swept ahead today in the midst of another runaway rally th at outstripped at least one of the trading volume records set last week but the advance tapered as the day passed. The closing Dow J ones average or 30 industrials was up 7.53 points to 833.59 on top of a 13.26·point jump Monday. At one point today. the Dow had been ahead 19 points. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange totaled 17 58 million shares in the first hour. breaking the opening-hour rec- ord of 17 .48 mi Ilion set only April 17 Turnover came lo 55.8 million shares. running a bit shy of the pace on April 17. when the full day·s total was an unprecedented 63.5 l million shares. The Dow Jones industrial • average has climbed more than 70 points in two weeks In one oft he sharpest rallies In WaUStreelhis· toi-y. Analysts said the spark that ignited the latest outburst of buying was provided by Eastman Kodak, a long-time favorite or investing institutions. Over the weekend, Kodak re · ported a so percent rise In first· quarter earnings from the com· parable period last year. But broke rs also said the market was generating its own fuel. attracting "catch·up" buy. ing by investors impressed by the recent strength in stock prices. As Standard & Poor's Corp. analysts observed in a recent is- sue of the firm's investment ad- v i sory publication "The Outlook": "Market strength itself can do much lo bolster sen· timent." BIBOWER ~ OONl'ESJ.' ROLE JAKARTA. Indonesia CAP> -Minister of Education Daoed Joesoef said today he is not in favor of beauty contests because they could give the impression that people worship good looks. Beatuy is relative, he said , adding that "we should ... orship God instead.'' Coast Weather Partly cloudy with chance or showers tonight. Clearing and mostly sunny Wednes day . High s Wednesday in the upper 60s. Lows tonight 52 to 57 Chance of rain 20 per<:enl tonight near zero Wednes- day morning. INSIDE T ODAY Former First Lady Pat Nuon "hated the whirlwind of polUfcs" because s~ said the people who ~ out are the childmi. Her story ap- pears today on Page A7 la•ex At Y-~· AM '"'""-a11 .,_ ......_. a,,...,,,.,...., "-M. ...,,. M AIM l.eNln a11 ...i.t• ........... c.tlf...ia asMlltMl,..,... aJ ClatllflN c,t.U l .. llMal.._ MiiM C-kt Q ..... tt H °"'..,... a&e.-....... ON•~ MT......... 81 allltWla4 ..... M TIIMt... .. aaMrtal-... ...._, M ,,_... a.aw.w ..... .._,.. '• _. CWlVPtLOT • Co11ncil ~ction lo ... MQDCSQ .u,bt. -~ kach City Cowl· en : FlREMEN· Pul off &ction • a oew pay poUcy for hremm wbJcb would be ti.b GM Netatl1 lfailtld policemen -until Ma,-8. APPOINTMENTS: Set May 10 as the deadline for ap· pUcat&ons to &ttVO oa the boards llnd commilslons appoint· 9d b)' the clly eouncll HIGHWAY. Approved the project and tel May !l a1 t.he dewilioe for bids for addl_~J ~ t.h.ird eastbound lane and blc)'Clt> lrall to Wnl Coaat Hiahway from the Sanla Ana River bndge to57th Street. RIVER: Agrffd to a projtet by the county's Envh'OC'I meoLal Maqaaernent Atency &.o widen the Santa Ana River and partially dredge lhe Setneniuk Slough beblod Newport Shores. Multipurpose Court ,4pproved for Park Residents or central Newport Beach, lauded for their patience and n eedled about their persistence. won a small battle Monday night when city coun· cilmen aareed to put a $13.000 multipurpose court into Las Arenas Park. The park. also known as M arinapark for the trailer park located next to it, has been the pe t projec t or the Central Newport Beach Community As· sociation for several years. Association members have cr1t1 c1zed councilmen for mak· mg improvements to parks in other parts or the city rather than upgrading their park. the only public recreational facility on the peninsula. Earlier this year, city council members approved a $115.776 <'Ontract with Pacific Tennis Courts Inc. for the addition of two tennis courts and a parking lot at the park. which ls located on Balboa Boulevard between 18th and 15th streets. i ng excise taxes, a fund e s tablis hed by a s sessing builde rs 20 cents a square foot for all new construction in the city. The bulk of the M arinapark contract is being paid tor with the rents collected from the cllY· owned trailer park. The building excise tax was created to pay for parks. libraries and fire sta·. tions. Mayor Paul Ryckoff. who not· ed he usually hates to spend city money, made the motion to re· instate the court and praised as· sociatlon members for their pa· tlence. M a yo r P.r o Te m R a y Williams. who seconded the mo· lion, wryly noted that r.esidents diaplayed more persistence ~han patience. The measure passed unanimously * * * New Newport -Community association mem· Committee bers were shghtly miffed at the ~ time because coun ci lmen eliminated a multipurpose court Heads p 1·cked from the plans in order to re- duce the cost of the proJect. The court, for which plans we r e r e ins tated Monday. features a backboard and a basketball hoop and a waiting area for people standing In line to use the tennis courts. There are two courts already at the pnrk. Mon day. in a study session with the members or the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Com· mission. the subject or the delet· e d multipurpose court came up and commi~ioner Gary Lovell · asked the council to consider re· instating iL He e J(pJained that the contrac· lor agreed to put the item back anto the contract for the original $13.000 bid. provided the council a cted before construction on other park proJects gets under way Wednesday. Lovell was later backed by his wife. Bobby, who is president or the community association. Councilmen took up the addi· tion at the end of their business meet10g Monday night. City Manager Rober t Wy nn told them money for the addition could be taken out or the buHd· Dayan Plans Arms Protest TEL AVIV. Is r ael <AP> - Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan flew to Washington today after telling reporters he was carry· ing no \lew proposals for peace talks with the Arabs but would protest the Carter administra· lio n 's plans t o se ll US "<lrplanes to Egypt and Saudi Arabia. · · 1 feel it is our right to ex press our opinlon that the sale of warplanes to Saudi Arabia and Egypt will be most dangerous to us." Dayan told a news con· ference at Ben-Gution Airport. fl e s aid the United States should stick to its promises to s upply the Israeli air force without trying to link them to sales to its two Arab allies. ( DAILY PILOT 11-.N-ll'n-ftl•,_.,..,..,_ Joo •~ Vl(•"""'°"ft'•""O._ .. _ .,_ ... ...,.. l!•ll"' .,_, . ...,... ... _ ... ll"'1 .. a..n..11 "'" Ill(_, ..... ...... "''" ~ ""'"' c.tl .... H Paul R yckoff , Newport Beach's new mayor, passed out assignments on the city coun· cil's 28 commjttees to his col· leagues Monday. The assignments are: -City Council Appointments Committee -Ryckoff, Evelyn Hart and Paul Hummel; -City Council Budget Com- mittee -Hummel and Donald Strauss; -City Council Parking Com· mittee -Jackie Heather. Strauss and Hummel; -City Council Legislation and Elhi('s Committee -Ryckoff and Strauss : Proclamation Committee - Ryckorr; -Tidelands Affairs Commit- tee -Ry~koff and Mayor Pro Tern Ray Williams; Unde rgr ound Utilities Coordinating -Hummel; -Water Committee -Don Mcinnis and Strauss, -Revenue Taxation Steering Committee -Mcinnis, Mrs. Heather and Hummel. -City School Liaison Commit· 'tee -Mrs . Hart and Mrs. Heather: -Inter.City Relations Com· milte e -Mrs . Hart and Strauss: -J oint Harbor Comm ittee - Williams and Hummel : -League of California Cities -Ryckoff and Williams; Mayor's City Selection Committee -Ryckoff; -Newport Harbor Convention a nd Vis itors Bureau Liaison Committee -Mrs. Heather and Stra uss; Newpo rt·lrvine Was te Management Planning Agency <N IWA > -R yc kor r and Williams; -Orange County Sanitation Dis trict 5 -Ryckoff, Hummel and Strauss; Orange County Sanitation District 6 RycJcoff and Mcinnis; -Orange County Sanitation District 7 -R yckoff and Williams ; -Orange County Vector Con· trol District -Williams; -Santa Ana River Flood Protection Agency -Mcinnis and Mrs. Heather; -Southern California As· soclatlon of Governments <SCAG> -Ry c k off and Williams; -Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve Develop· ment Committee -Ryckoff and Williams; -Citizens Bicycle T rails Ad· visory Committee Liaison - Williams and Mrs. Hart; -Citize ns Comm unity Oevelopmenl Advlfory Commit· tee Liaalon-Mrs. Heather; -Citizens Environmental Quality Advisory Committee Llaaon -Williams end Mn . Kart; -CiUzent Litter Control Ad· vlsoryCommltteeLlaJson + Mra. Har\; -Cltbens Transportation Plan Advisory Committee - WllllamJ and Melania. Christiam March RALEIGH , N.C . CAP> - Tbou11nd1 of Bible·tot101. bymn·aloaln• demonstutora protested at the Wake County courthouu a1atnat what they consider atate Interference ln re-- li.iloua educaUoo. \ ,,....r-.e J KENNEDY. • ln upetUioa Lbat. Jn p•l yean, Mn. KeDNdy haa had tom• e~otlonal and d.rillkiq problem•, attributed by some to the pressures of Uvlng with the bearer of the Kennedy family's J)OliUcal legeey. The Pot1t quoted Mrs. Ken· nedy's friends as saying s he has settled into a •·qulel but eiUoya· ble Ute with a small clrele of frlenda" far from the Waahlngton aoclal 1cene. . "It just seems that she ls more at home here." the Post quoted the friends. "Teddy has a brutal schedule." "She hu lost a lot or weight a nd really looks trimmer and younger than she did two years ago. Nobody has seen a drink In her hand." they said. A spokesman at the Lesley school. Jim Blake. said Mrs Kennedy was taking an indepen-d~nt study course titled "Music and Sound in the Classroom." Ile s aid the course is fo r teac he rs seeking a masters' degree. There was no immediate com· ment from Mrs. Kennedy. Lawyen Study Offer in OC Trash Strike By JACKIE HYMAN Ot tllt 0.llf ........... An uneasy calm settled today over an Oranate County trash truck driv e r s strike as Teamsters attorneys mulled a new manaaement offer and rub· blah collection firms geared up to meet the threat of further violence. The strike, which began at midnight April 17, bas left m're than a million Orange County residents without rubbish collection services . M anagemenl representatives reportedly sent a written copy of the new contract offer t o Teamaters Local 396 at 9~30 a,m. Monday. Federal mediator John Courtney said the orrer con· tained "signlCi cant con· cessions," but no details have been released. Drivers had asked for a raise of S4 per hour over a three-year period. They currently receive $4.50 a n hour and employers had previously offered an additional $1 10 an hour ove r the three years. The drivers also reportedly were seeking revised grievance procedures. dental benefits and five days a year sick leave. Spokes men at the Orange County offices of Local 396 s aid they have no information about when a slrike vote will take place. A press release issued by the Teamsters office in Los Angeles s aid the offer is being studied by attorneys and will be translated into Spanish The statement said the offer will be s ubmitted to workers before the week is out but that exactly when a vote will be scheduled isn't known CHEMIST ••• che m istry from 1964 to 1970. In 1977 he was e lected to the American Academ y of Arts and Sciences, and in 1976 he won the UCI Distinguished Faculty Research Award. He ls the recipient of numerous other scientific honors. Rowland was the only UCI faculty member to be elected to the National Academy or Sciences this year; 12 other UC scientists also were selected. giving the university the t\lghest number or scientists named to the l.~-member organization from one Institution. E'ro111 Page A J PANELS ••• elementary schools programs. the hirlntl of a team of teen.agers known as the Litter Kids who work durillf the summer to ac· quaint beachgoers with the Utter problem and Utter Awareness Week. Councilmen dJd not object to any pr~ allocations during Monday 1 aesalon. The next re· view on May 8 will cover the fire department, the marine depart- ment, the community develpp· ment departme nl and public works. Health Debate Set for UCI A debate about natJonal health lnaurance la scheduled at 8 p.m. Wednftdly'at UC lrvlno, in the MHa Court Oold Room. Prlnclpala are Oanlel Curtin ot the AFL-CIO labor union, Michael Freilich of the Los Anfeln County Medical As· t1oc aUM, ~ OeHld Sinykln, UC I dl~ of student health. The debate ts aponsored by tho Student.faculty Colloqu11 Series. Love Kills Husliand Hii. Dedd Wife 'Wm Everything ro Him' CAINF.sVILLE. Fla. <AP> -Friends say Na.rtcy aild Ray Nealon could not find enough time in the day to be toatet.her. Th•y were inseparable from their first date. they 6.v~n ,got Jobs in the same thopplng cent~r llO they could share breaks and lunch tocether. newlyweds. "He was real quiet and shy. Ap. parently, Nancy W<AS just the world to hlm." "She was everything to him ... Hid J .C. Prevatt, Nancy's f•ther. "I never beard them argue, 1 never heard them disagree." RA Y'S WORLD BEGAN TO crumble a we ek ago when Nancy's sports car went out of control and nipped while she was r eturn- Ulg art.er visiting her parents She died three days later Arter Nancy's death, Prevatt 111d bis son-ln·law withdrew. NANCY, 22, DIED LAST week from in· juries In the crash of her 1ports car. She was buried Wednesday "He didn't want to be around anybody," be said. Ray. 24. was buried Saturday beside hJs young bride. He wes found lylng beside his burned-out station wagon the day of her funeraJ, his body burned beyond recognition. Suicide, officials have ruled ··1 got reason to believe he couldn't be here without her ," said Prevatt. "He Just said he never knew what love was unur he met Nancy." Prevatt s aid he last saw his son·in·law the duy of Nancy's funeral, after Ray said he was going to the bank and lhen to order more flowers for his bride's Funeral. He had or· dered a large wreath which bore the inscrip· lion, "God. Nancy and Ray." Prevatt believes Ray had decided to kill himself when he ordered the inscription. RAV WAS NOT SEEN the rest of the day. PREVATT SAYS THE TWO, who were married last July, were inseparable since their first date in August 1976. Ray would often go to the store where Nancy worked "and just look at her," Prevatt said. Early th:it evening. the police were notified. The search ended in a wooded area or Gilchr ist Co unty , to the west of Gainesville. His car was destroyed by a fire that officials believe Ray set. A suicide note was later found In the couple's small apart· ment. It spoke or his love for Nancy and God. Friends described Ray as a loner. who was brought out or his shell by Nancy. "She was real easy and s weet to talk to.·· said Kalie Buchwalter, a neighbor of the "lie somehow convinced himself that what ~as done was the thing to do," Prevatt said. Moro Death Notices Considered Hoaxes ROME <AP> -A flurry of anonymous telephone calls an· nouncing that former Premier Aldo Moro had been executed by his Red Brigades kidnappers was received today by the Italian news agency ANSA. The agency said all had been proven hoaxes. The calls were received by ANSA offices in Rome, Turin and Milan. One caller said a communique was left in a trash basket and. a ~·surprise" in lhe trunk of a car parked near the Italian television . production center near the Vatican. But an ANSA reporter and police or· flcers searched trash recep· tac les and cars on the street and County Sets Newport Meet On Corridor Newport Beach city officials and r esidents are being Invited lo a meeting Thursday night with county staff members and consultants to discuss the San J oaquin Hills transportaUon cor- ridor. The 7:30 p.m. meeting is being s pons ored by county planning experts and staff m embe rs from Gruen and Associates. Inc., the firm that is preparing a route s tudy or the roadway The corridor. which was rec· o mmended two ye a rs a go al the conclusion of the Southeast Orange County C irculation Study, would run from the end of the Corona dcl Mar Freeway at Mac Arthur Boulevard and Bonita Canyon Drive along the hills to the San Diego Freeway at about A very Parkway. City officials are pushing con· struct ion or the road a s a means of providing an a lternative for traffic that now uses Pacific Coast Highway. The meeting. which wm be held in the city council cham· bers, will enable residents to ask questions and discuss their pre· rerences on the alignment or the roadway. found nothing unusual. The calla came in atter the gpvernment and the rullng et\rlsllan Democratic Party on Monday reject.ed an ultlmatum from the Red Brigades to free 13 Imprisoned ferrorlats to save Moro 'a life. Last week, a communique al· trlbuted to the Brigades claim· ing the 61-year ·old party pres1· dent had been executed trig· ~ered a massive search of a frozen mountain lake northeast of Rome. Officials said lhat message may have been sent by Moro's kidnappers as a rus~ to weaken the government's re· fusal to negotiate for his life. Today, crowds of Italians marked the 33rd anniversary of the nation's liberation from fas cism by visiting Vi a Mario Fani, the Rome street where Moro was kidnapped and his five guards slain March 16. Premier Giulio Andreotti told journalists on arriving for a leadership meeting al Christian Democ rat headquarte rs an downtown Rome that he had "nothin~ new" to report. The premjer on Monday re· iterated the party's no·deal line a fter conferring with key cabinet ministers. Crash Victims' IDs Released TAHOE CITY. Calif. <AP> - The victims of last week's plane crash in Lake Tahoe have been identified by the P lacer County sheriff's office as four members of a New Jersey family. Sheriff's Sgt. David Rickert identified the victims on Monday as William Klasko. 39. his wife Pa tricia. 38, and their sons Keith, 17. and Robert, 14. all of Sparta. N.J . The names of the victims had been withheld since the crash pending positive identification or the mangled bodies and notifica· tion of relatives, Rickert said. Police Hunt Sniper in San Clemenle A barrage of bullets fired by a sniper hading in high mustard weeds on the north s ide or the San Diego Freeway in Sun Clemente Monday slammed Into a service station and a parked car on the south side of the freeway at Camino de Estrella No one was hurt In the shoot ing incident. San Clemente Police Ch.ief G ary Brown s aid offi cers responded to a report or gunfire at the Gulf station. 590 Cam ino de Estrella at 1 :50 p .m . A service station attendant told police two rounds had been fired. While the attendant was being questioned, two more rounds were fired. officers reported. Another two rounds were fired about 15 minutes later . as police searched the surrounding area for the s niper. Bullet fragments taken from the service station and rrom a car parked In the adjacent K· Mart parking lot have been sent to the Orange County Sheriff's Department crime lab for analvsls. Brown said. The fragments seemed to in dicate that the s hots came from a small caliber gun. but no furl he r identific ation or the weapon was available today. the police chief said. Initial reports placed the gun· man under the large "Sambo's" sign, just south or the Camino de Estrella freeway interchange. Later reports had shots com· ing from just north of the in· terchange, Brown said. The freeway banks m that a rea are d e ns e ly covered with high mustard weeds. he said. which could s creen an adult hiding there A witness told police she saw a man runn1ni;i on Calle Real in the Camino cl Molino area, JUSl north of the Camino de Estrella freeway interchange, shortly after the final two rounds or fire were reported. Farmar style Uha111 \: . .. l ·. ~. ,,,.,.,, .. -o...;·.:.11·~p~ ... Farmer Chttse h on• of our best melting end oboklng chetsts. It'• most delectablt when 1trved et room temperatute. CY bed Fermer Chttae Is dtllclou1 when dipPtd '" apple butter llVI 901 2Y. lb. whole paece 5.99 ea. sna tac Off Reg. Lb. Pnce 2.79 lb, reg. 3.19 lb. 7 I ' I i t . I SBddleltaek Afternoon N. Y. Stoelui \ t ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1978 TEN CENTJ Condemnation of business buildings may be required to tie lbe controversial San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor to Interstate Sin the Mission VleJo- Laguna Niguel area. Meeting with the Saddleback Area CoordlnaUng Council <SACC> ln El Toro ~onday, a county spokesman said between eight and 20 businesses could be aHected in making way for the Big Fish Story proposed interchange al the southern terminus or the 13· mjle-long San Joaquln freeway. to"red Pearson, representing Gruen Associates. Inc .• corridor study consultants, said the busi- ness buildings are along Camino Capistrano and Marsu•rite Parkway near Avery Parkway. County officials are conduct· ing the last round of hearings before public groups and owners before presenting possible cor· ridor routes to the county plan- ning commission later this year. Final routing between the Corona del Mar Freeway and the San Diego Freeway through the San Joaquin Hills will be selected by the county Board of Supervisors. Pearson noted that there are two possible locations for linking the corridor with Interstate s - Nearly a dozen photographers and a handful of Mission Viejo Company spec tators closed in as 5.000 rainbow lroul. averaging one pound per fish. hit Lak~ Mission Viejo throlfgtt-a spigot in one of l wo fish hatchery trucks. The fish joined thou ... ands of bass nnd red-eared sunfish Monday in the manmade' lake scheduled lo open lo community homeowners June 3. The lake features swimming. boatin~ and fishing and will be lined by waterfront housin~ developments. Lawyers Study Offer in OC Trash Strike By JACKI E HYMAN Ol llile 0.llY rllot S!Mf An uneasy calm settled today over an Orange Coun\y trash truck drivers strike as Teamsters attorneys mulled a new management offer and rub· bish collection firms geared up to meet the threat of further violence. The strike, which began al midnight April 17, has left more than a million Orange County residents without rubbish collection services. Management representatives reportedly sent a written copy of the new contract offer to Teamsters Local 396 at 9:30 a.m. Monday. Federal medi'ator John Courtney said the offer con· tained ··significant con· cessions," but no details have been released. Drivers had asked for a raise of $4 per hour over a three-year period. They currently receive $4.50 an hour and employers had previously offered an additional Sl .10 an hour over the three years The drivePS also reportedly were seeking revised grievance procedures, dental benefits and fi ve days a year sick lea~e. Spokesmen at the Orange County offices of Local 396 said they have no Information about when a strike vote will take place A press release issued by the Teamsters office in Los Angeles tSee TRASH, Pa1e AZ) College's Budget Requests Pondered Budget requests received for the Saddleback College 1978-79 budget exceed estimated tax in· come by $13.3 million to $30.9 million. depending on the tax rate used as a district budgeting base. Thal fact, given to trustees Monday for informationa l purposes. created quite a stir Police Probe Jewel The ft In El Toro Sheriff's investigators are following leads in an attempt to recover $40,000 worth of jewelry reported stolen from a bedroom in a home at 24821 Via Prin· cessa, El Toro. The victim, who investigators refuied to identify al her re· quest. was away when the burglary took place, deputies said. A neighbor reported Sunday that a door was open in the home. A deputy responding to the call found the house ransacked. secured the door and left a n..ite. The victim returned home late Sunday night. telephoned in· vesUgators and reported the loss. listed as small jewelry Items of "good quality." Investigators said entry to the Lake Forest area house was made through a window. among some board members. "It seems almost wild." Nor- ris a Brandt complained. ··1 think you're just playing around with numbers." Mrs. Brandt criticized college officials for asking for loo much in the beginning of the budgeting process. "We are not being realistic from the very beginning," she said ... We s hould start with more realistic figures." Donna Berry agreed. "There"s something wrong when some of our departments ask for a third more and some stay the same," she complained. But college admrn1strators in· s1sted the $45.4 million in re· quests was merely a starting point toward developing a balanced budget ' The present college budget is $25.1 million. "The budget numbers we're giving you tonight are what the divisions and departments say they need for service over the coming year." District Superin- tendent Robert Lombardi told trustees. He said college officials would begin paring down the requests lo present a balanced' bud~l to trustees on May 8. f And officials found support. for the expensive budget requests among some trustees. "This is a dream list -that's a ll we 're looking at here tonight." William Watts said. "When you ask people what is the best then they'll give It to you . <See BUDGET, Page AZ) one north of Avery Parkway, the other south of the parkway. The northern interchange could affect up to 20 business structures. he said. The southern interchange, up lo eight. Robert Rende, manager of the county Environmental Manage· m ent Agency (EMA> project planning divi~ion, said this morning that ··the degree of ef· Cect is open. too." Rende said the interchange could go .. up and over" much of the business area. ·'There are ways to mitigate." he said, adding, "more study isheeded." Monday nighe's p°'sentation. the fourth before SACC. brought out four residents of the new Nellie Gall Ranch s ubdivision under development 'to Laguna Hills by Presley Co~panies of Newport Beach. Hans Backlund and Mrs. Joan Burt. who grow organ ic vegetables. said they were told nothing about the" freeway, pro· posed for as near as 500 feet to their tract or homes selling for between $120,000 and S170.000. Backlund told EMA officials the homes are considered .. eques trian country." He (See ROUTE. Page A2) Stocks Soaring Runaway Rally Nears Records NEW YORK CAP> -Stock prices swept ahead today In the midst of another runaway rally th at outstripped at least one of the tradlng volume records set last week. The mid -day Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was up 13.42 point.a to 839.48 on top of a 13.26-point jump Monday. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange totaled 17.58 million shares in the first hour, breaking lbe opening·hour rec· ord of 17.48 million set only April 17. By mid-day turnover came to 41 .5 million .shares. running Trustees ' 'Usurping' ¥oveHit By WILLIAM HODGE Of -DMty ""''-" Claiming Saddleback Valley Un ified School District board members are unwilling to ac· cept criticism of themselves. Trustee Loa Young said today three other trustees are trying to "usurp" the power of Superin· tendent Richard Welte. "The board . . . has become more aggressive in atlemptrng to usurp the leadership role of the superintendent because of petty differences. personality conflicts. ambitious ac.· min istrat i ve cronies and political ambitions," Mrs. Young charged in an "open let· ter to taxpayers." Three trustees -George Henry, Carole Neustadt and Mary Phillips -voted last week to place Welte on vacation status until conflicts between him and the board could be re- solved. The three members did not identify the conflicts. Mr s. Young and felro"w Trustee William Kohler opposed Welte·s suspension. In her letter. Mrs. Young cites three separate studies of the dis- trict administration performed over the last few months She in· sists these studies reach iden- tical conclusions: -·'The board had stepped beyond the bounds of its accept· ed role <as) a policy making body into the role of ad· ministrator and had undermined the authority of the superinten· dent and reduced his effective· ness." -"The board-superintendent relationship is a detriment to the effectiveness of school opera· tion." ·'The community must now al· low our superintendent to be in· timidated by th1s conduct." Mrs. Young writes. "We have become a victim of <a> conspiracy that will destroy a 'lighthouse' school dlstrlct ... " Board President H enrv <See ~LE, Page AZ> JUSt a bit shy of lhe pace On April 17. when the full day's total was an unprecedented 63.51 million shares. The Dow Jones industrial average has climbed more than 73 points in two weeks in one of the sharpest rallies in Wall ~lre .l history Analysts said the spark that ignited the latest outburst of buying was provided by Eastman Kodak. a long-time favorite or investing institutions. Over the weekend. Kodak re· ported a 50 percent rise in first· qUllrler earnings Trom the com· parable period last year TED'S NEW FLAME? Skier Suzy Chaffee But brokers ab:.o said the market was generating its own fuel. attracting "catch-up" buy- ing by investors impressed by the recent l'.lrength 1n stock prices As Standard & Poor·s Corp. analysts observed in a recent •~· sue of the f1rm 's investment Cid· vis ory publication "The Outlook .. : ··Markel stre ngth Itself can do much to bolster sen. t1ment. ·· A d v a n c e s o u t n u m b <' r e d declines by about a 2· 1 margin in the broad tally of New Yodf Stock Exchange-ltst<•d issues. APWl~Ol GOING IT ALONE? Joan Kennedy . Ted Kennedy, Wife Separation Denied NEW YORK <A P> -Reports that Joan Kennedy, wife of Sen Edward M. Kennedy. ""has de· c1ded to go it alone·· in an apart ment in Boston were published toda y 1n two New York newspapers, but Kennedy fam•· ly sources in Washington derued the couple had separated. The New York Post quoted un. named friends as saying Mrs. Kennedy has been living in a two-b edroom apartment on Beacon Street for two months and . although she sees her children every weekend. has been at her family's home in McLean, Va., only once in that time. In the Daily News. columnist Liz Smith wrote that by failing to appear together in public or private recently. the Kennedys have done nothing lo slow "'up· ceasing stories or their great 'apartness' which have been rife ever since the Suzy Chaffee on- l he -slopes-with -Teddy tales beJ'an to emerA<' " Kennedy has bt!tn reported a~ be1nA at Aspen. Colo . in the company of Miss Chaffee. a former Olympic skier, several week'> af{o. "It 's n o t tru e," Tom Southwick, a spokesman ror Sen Kenned y. D -Ma s'>., 1n Was hington said when asked whethe r the coup le had separated. "The apartment is his re!'>· <See KENNEDY, Page A21 Ora nge Coast Weath e r Boy Arreste d Afte r Attack NEW YORK (AP) -A 12· year-old Brooklyn boy has been charged with beating a 90-year· old woman, klcklni her down a flight of stalrs and stabbing her in the face before stealing a television set trom her apart· ment. police report. Will 'Big .Tony' Be Indicted? Partly cloudy with chance of showers toniAht. Clearing and mostly s unny Wedn ec;day . H i~hs Wednesday 1n the upper 60s. Lows tonight 52 to 57. Chance of ram 20 percent tonight near zero Wednes· day morning I NSIDE T ODAY Police said the youth, whose name was not revealed because of bis age, pushed his 15·year-old sister In front or a subway train last February, but she was saved at the last moment by a Transit Authority police officer. The youth's latest vlcUm, Jen~ nle Kelly, was reported In salisf actory condiUon today at St. Mary's Holpltal. ' By GARY GRANVILLE °'"" Delly f'IMt IUff So far, burly Anthony ••Big Tony" Marone Sr. has been flit· Ung about on the outskirts of the Stephen Bovan murder case. Monday, however, a pros- ecutor said it Is likely Big Tony will become a feature playet In the blza~ drama that has un· folded since Bovan last October waa gunned down outside a Newoort Beach restaurant. "I'm seekinl a murder con- apiracy Indictment and am hop- tng he'll <Big Tonyl be Indicted May 17." aaifl Deputy DI.strict Attorney Davtd Carter. Carter's words were spoken from the witness stand in Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Kneeland's courtroom. The prosecutor's appearance as a witness came after Big Tony had told his version of his role In Bovan's slaying. The testimony came as lawyers for the seven defen· dants already cited In the case continued a lon1 series of pre· trial motions. Those tnotJons are aimed at havlna tbe charaea 111tnst lbe defendants either dismissed or reduced before they are made to stand trial. _ One of those defendants is Big Tony's son, Anthony "Little Tony" Marone Jr. And the al· leged trlggerman In Bovan 's murder Is a lona.ume Big Tony ally. Jerry Flori. According to Big Tony's testimony Monday. he and his associates ~ame involved In the case after being hired as public relaUons men by the so· called Kriahnu. "What dld you do as a public relaUons man?" asked Deputy J District Attorney Orella Sears. "Oh, we went around and tried to sell CQOkies. six million dollar man cookies," Big Tony answered. "What did the cookies look like"" Mrs. Sears asked. "They looked like cookies," Big Tony replied. "And what kind of cookies were they""' Mrs. Sears wanted to know. "Terrible. they were terrible cookies." Big Tony said as he quickly dismissed his public re· latlons career as a cookie <See MARONE, P11t AZ) Form~r F'1r!I Ladv Pat Ni:ton "hated the whirlwind Of politics" becotue she send the ~ople who lose out are the chddren. Her story ap· ~ors today on Page A7. ladex At Y• IWlke Alt M-K· Cl &r111• a-a a •~•wmlnleft u L.M ... .,. A• Allfl UMen Cl ·~· ........ vi• .. C:.11-• AJ Mt11 .. 1 ,_ IJ =~·~· t'-g =:•IN9W\ A4,:! C..•WW11 a """ Mertieti .. ON•...._ At "''"""" 11 Hl\Wlel ..... M '*"" .. at1leMa._.,. • w .. tllff Ae ,..IWllll CM Ww~ lltM M, M DM.Y N.Of a 'Hoax' Tennrisb Demandi~ Release of Prisoners ROME <AP> A flurry of anonymous l~lcpbOne calls an· Jiouaclna that form r Prem tr ,Aldo Moro bad been eneu\.ed by his Red Bri&ades kidnappers was received today by tbe ltollao news ageney ANSA. The aaency S&ld all had beeD proven hoaxes. The calla were ree.lved by ANSA offices in Rome, Turin and Milan. One caller said a communique was lett in a trash basket and a "surprise" In the trunk of a car parked near the Ila Han television production center near the Vatican. But an ANSA reporter and police of- ficers searched trash recep- tacles and cars on the st.reel and found nothing unusual. The calls came in after the government and the ruling Christian Democratic Party on Monday rejected an ultimatum from the Red Brigades lo Cree 13 imprisoned terrorists to save Moro's life. Resisted Bandit Laat week, a communique at- ltibuted &o the Bncades claim· tna lb~ ll·1ear-0Jd party preai· dent had boen execuiect trlc· cered a massive aearch of a froien mountain lake northeast of Rome. otnctals aald that m0Ma1e may have beu aent by Moro's lddnappers aa a l"Ule to wealten the aovernment'a re· fusal to negotJate for hla life. Today, crowds of Italians marked the 3ard anniversary of t6e nation's liberation from fascism by vlsillna Via Marlo Fani. the Rome atreet where Moro was kidnapped and bl1 five guards slain March If. Premier Giulio AndreotU told journalists oo arri\llng for a leadersblp meetinJ at Christian Democrat headquarlers in downtown Rome that be bad "nothing new" to report. The premier on Monday re- iterated the party's no-deal Une after conferring with key cabinet ministers. He declared: "All requests for an excban1e with detained peraons were and are unaccep. table because the)' are directed atalnst the freedom of all, a1alnsl the respect which is due to the vicUms of subversion and a1atn1t lhe laws of the Republic." fl Popolo, the Cbrlstian Democrats' news_paper, said a handwritten letter found by the newspaper Vita Monday night had been authenticated as Moro's. In it, the five-time pre- mier begged his party to agree to an "exchange of war prisoners < ~ar or guerrilla war. as you prefer>. as is done where the war is on. as is done in highly civilized countries .... "We are nearly al the zero hour. fl is a matter of seconds rather than minutes. We are at massacre time." said the teller. "With mine goes the cry of my mortally wounded family. For lhis reason, for an evident in· GG Store Owner Slain in Robbery A Garden Grove liquor store owner was shot and killed Mon- day evening when he apparently moved to overpower a gunman who was robbing his store. Police said witnesses told them J. H. Black, 58, of Los Angeles. was mortally wounded when the bandit wheeled and fired two shots as Black ap- proached him from behind. Seconds earlier, the victim had ' given the gunman money from his wallet and apparently saw what he thought was an opening when the bandit turned his attention towards two clerks. Police said lhe victim was struck in the leg and chest by the bullets Clred Crom a .38· caliber handgun. County M11lls Viejo Slide · Repair Plan ~ G eolo1ists studying the massive slide area along Trabuco Road io Mission Viejo submitted a proposal for repair to county Environmental Management Agency CEMA) 0C- ric1als late Monday. The team, composed of coun- ty, Mission Viejo Company and consulting geologists, believes that the 400,000 cubic yards of dirt and rock that fell Saturday and early Monday across the road should be removed and replaced with heavily compact· ed material called a buttress fill An EMA spokesman said, "the geologists believe the slope is stable at this point." Preliminary estimates, he said, indicated cost or the proj- ect will be "in excess of $500,000 as an absolute minimum. We ex- pect more precise figures in a day or two." He said, ··we have asked federal disaster survey teams lo look at it to sec 1f federal funds might be available to offset costs of repair." Securing federal funds would depend on whether rains during the federally declared disaster period. mid-February through mid-March, "significantly con- tributed to failure," he said. Geologists have determined that two water tanks al the top or the 140-foot hill are in no danger. The EMA spokesman said though that it will be several weeks before Trabuco Road is open to the public bet ween Los Alisos Boulevard and Alicia Parkway, the area under repair ~ANOE COAST se DAILY PILOT Tr.°'..,. CfN\t 0.Uy Pltot Wllt"~"ll<O"" ~, ....... W'\ Pf ..... t\OYOllV'lfidh'"-'°".,,... toa\t Pvofl\"'t~(.Of'ftCMl11iy ~ ..... ,..,,,*"f ~11'1'\N Mol1CleY tf'\f'OU~ Fr,Ny .., Ce\te ........ ,.._.00'1 h~" ... vnH"V'O" 9t.Cft'f~ telfll Vettey tr vlf\• \IHI~' Y•t~y •"41 ~ ...... ""'1•t O<l\I A\if191e._loo. tllfW\ ., 11¥0111W'<f ~tvr6•n .,... ~ ttw O"fttlo.1 eubU,.,,lf'MJ ol~t 1, .,. DD Wnl O.• SI,.... (9i\tl Mei\.a (.tllfOl"N•.,.,. ·~ .. -~t'\IOtf\t eftd tarvbt•,,_.,, , .. ,. ~' Vt(t P..•'~"t INI ~ .. MaMtiW Th<M•ll-1 ... , ... -·-~ -·~•"9E .. w CM<tn N '--•k-1' MoM 4Ul\tMI •"-t9•1'9 SeOoh Bacldlebecll Vellft Olftce H~I ~-"•• ..... •I 5"" 0(-,,_., OtflcH c..11 ...... JlO ......... ,. ..... """" ............ ,,,,, ...... _."' i._.... .... ,. 11 .. 0-.,.!l,...1 Telephone (714)142"'321 Cl•ulfled MYentllng Ml-M1I -· v .... , -Otll(• lt1~10 '•-\e•( .. ....,.!t ..... ~''\~:..::. °:.: ~ .. ~:s.= "".r,,, ., ••••''*'•"'•"" Mr••" M•• 111111 n•ro•v<•tl wft'-"t tMCl&t "rmltOM of (. .. ..,.,"',..., I ~~;:,"~~·"s!::!~?;,,:!".:',~!!, -:;~ ,,...'"'" ., ""'•" ,. M flf'l&l't"'I' tfttllt.,. --u•-~•• • I Emergency medical treat- ment was given the mortally wounded man aner he collapsed in the store, Ed Larsen's Liquor, 13161 Harbor Blvd .. Garden Grove. · However, he died within an hour or the 5:45 p.m. shooting after being taken to nearby UC Irvine Medical Center. Police said Black's slayer ran from the store and apparently fled from the neighborhood on foot while carrying an unknown amount or money from the liQ uor store. · The.gunman was described by police as a Latin or medium build and about 22 years old. fi'ro• rage A l ROUTE •.. added, "Everything they (home buyers> are running away from, you are bringing·here." Mrs. Burt said her vegetables would die from corridor· developed smog. Backlund said he believes the county will sdect the northern freeway route through the south county because of gaps left in development areas for the cor- ridor and because of the need for less grading. The northern route passes closest to Nellie Gail and to Leisure World, which already has protested the possibility or more smog in the retirement community. The northern route, other area residents have pointed out, is also the one favored by Aliso Viejo Co. which plans a 20,000· unit housing development on the Moulton Ranch. fi'ro111 Page A I BUJ)GET ... "I think we'd want to ask that question every year." "I would think we would want to shoot for the most outstanding program in the country." Board President Larry Taylor agreed. "I think that's reasonable and when it Cthe request> gets lo the administration then they apply practicality and begin cutting il. .. "Now we'll see how the ad- ministration proposes to cut these," Eugene McKnight added. "' o.ily ~lilt Stan --1 N NATIONAL ACADEMY UCI Cheml•t Rowland Academy Cites UCI Chemist UC Irvine c hemi st F - Sherwood Rowland has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences. it was announced to· day. Rowland, working with fellow UCI chemist Mario Molina. pioneered research into the d est ru ctive ef f ects of fluorocarbons. contained in com· mon propellant aerosols, upon the ozone layer of the upper at- mosphere. The academy cited Rowland for his continuing research in h o t a t o·m c h e m i s t r y . radiochemistry and atmospheric chemistry. Founded 115 years ago. the N alional Academy or Sciences is a private organization interested in the advancement or science; it is a regular advisor to govern· menl. Rowland is a rounding UCI faculty member who was chairman or the department of chemistry from 1964 to 1970. In 1977 he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. and in 1976 be won the UC l,.Dislinguished Faculty Research Award. He is the recipient or numerous other scientific honors Rowland was the only UCI faculty member to be elected to the National Academy of Sciences this year; 12 other UC · scientists also were selected giving the university the highest number of scientists named to the l ,256-member organization Crom one institution. Cranston Reports Calif omia Military Cutbacks Proposed SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The Defense Department has pro- posed closure or cutback of seven California military In· stallations, including the Presidio of San Francisco. Let- terman Army Hospital in San Francisco and the San Diego Naval Training Recruitment Center. Sen. Alan Cranston's of· flee said today. The l)roposed cutbacks are amona 85 to be announced in Washington Wednesday by the Pentagon. Congres.sional delega- tions were being briefed on them today. NO El Toro or Camp Pendleton facUIUes apparently are Involved. The Calilornla ln!\tallaUona In· eluded tn the liat of cutbacks, whJch the Defense Deputment ls to aludy for aix to eiaht months, are: -Presidio of San Francisco, closure. -Lette!man Army Hospital, San Francrsco, suggesloo closure with patients and personnel to be transferred to Oakland Naval Hospital. -Alameda Naval Ai.r Station and North Island Naval Facility, San Diego, suggested reduction of persoMel. -San Diego Naval Training Recruitment Center. suggested <'losure or either this installation or the Navy 's Great Lakes Naval Training Center. -San Diego Marine Corps Recruitment Depot, suggested closu(e . -Los Angeles Alr Force Sta· lion. EJ Segundo, suuested closure. facilities to be transferred to Vandenberg Air Force Base or Norton Alr Force Base. compatiblllty, r request that no state authority or party orricial should participate at my funeral." ll Popolo satd the letter had "evidently been extorted." It aa ve the same explanation for lhe previous letters in whlc.h Moro uked the eovornment to meet the kidnappers' demands. The terrorists said last week they would kill Moro if the gov- ernment falled t.o a1ree to a prisoner awap by Saturday, but the deadline came and went with the government standing firm and no word of his death. The second ultimatum set no time limit but said Moro would be killed ir the government did not agree immediately to release Renato Curcio. a Red Brigades rounder; two other members or the organization on trial with him in Turin; and 10 other im-prisoned terrorists. F ro• Page AJ 'IRASH .•. said the offer is being studied by attorneys and will be translated into Spanish. The statement said the offer will be submitted to workers before the week is out but that exactly when a vote will be scheduled isn't known. The strike so Car has been marred by numerous rtres, in- cluding the burning or three Jaycox Disposal trucks and a Sl5,000 firebombing at Anaheim Disposal. "The threats or violence are continuing," said an Anaheim Disposal spokesman today. "We had to put on extra guards last night. We armed ourselves like a fort ... He said drivers he has spoken with seemed restless and eager to see the new contract offer and vote on il. Communities affected along the Orange Coast are Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley, Hunt· ington Beach, Laguna Beach. Lake Forest, northern El Toro. Laguna Hills Leisure World. and s ome indus trial parts of Newport Beach. Trash may be taken by homeowners to any of several sites. with morning hours re- portedly the least crowded. f'rot11 Page A J HASSLE ... declined to comment on the let- ter today. ··1 don"L think that's part of the problem so I won't comment on it now." he said. "We're only trying to solve some anternal problems.·· Henry said no charges had been made against Welte that might precipitate his removal as superintendent. "There haven't been any charges against him yet," he said. "We're just trying to solve som e problems but they (Kohler and Mrs. Young> don't want solutions." In a statement issued on the heels of his board-imposed SUS· pension last week. Welt e charged the three trustees with circumventing his rights under his contract. "That contract gives to the superintende nt the ·complete freedom to organize, reorganize. and arrange the administrative and supervisory starr which m his judgment best serves the dis- trict ... '," Welle said in the statement. ' -· .. '"' ......... RELEASE DEMANDED -Among the people whose release from prison bas been demanded by terrorists holding former Italian Premier Aldo Moro are ltop row. from left>. Paolo Maurizio Ferrari, Augusto Viel and Paola Besuschio: bottom row. Alberto Franceschini, Mario Rossi and Sante Notarnirola. Trustee Will File Disclosure Saddleback College Trustee Donna Berry has decided lo file an economic disclosure state· ment, required by districg con- flict-of-interest regulations. rather than resign her position on the board. "I discovered that in the first year you don't have to divulge income." Mrs. Berry said today. .. And I'm not worried about next year because my term of omce will be up." She said she probably will not seek re-electiop In 1979 due to personal business commitments. Mrs. Berry said earlier this month she might resign rather than file the.financial disclosure forms. which she saw as an in· vasion of privacy. The Mission Viejo trustee's concern sprang in part from a ranch s he owns with her husband in Northern Californja "We Cell that ranch was our business and had nothing to do with the college district." she explained. "'Then I found out we're only required to list In· terests within the college dis- trict." The district ·s new conflict-or- interest code requires trustees and management-level college officials to divulge income, in- vestments and assets -but limits the investments to those m the area covered by district boundaries or lo those entities doing business within the dis· lricl. Some things. such as income. need not be divulged in the first year·s financial disclosure state- ment. All trustees and c:ollege of Cicials are required to file the form by Wednesday at 5 p.m. The next statement will not be due until February. 01,d Gwbe Due For RebuilcUng SAN DIEGO CAP> -The Old Globe Theater. destroyed by arson. will be rebuilt along with a larger Fes tival Theater nearby in Balboa Park, fund- raisers say. Restoring the Old Globe. which was destroyed by Cire March 8. is expected to cost $.2.25 million. f'roaePage A I MARONE ••• salesman for the so-called Krishna sect that included 28· year-old Alexander Kulik. lt was when Kulik was al- legedly kidnapped by Bovan and two companions that Big Tony and his mates became em-broiled in a three-corner en- counter that pitted them. the Krlshnas and Bovan•s cadre against one another. Big Tony tsestified that when $100,000 rimsom was' delivered to an ocean view spot near San Clemente, he and two others were at the scene to watch Bovan pick up lhe valise con- taining the ransom money. "We started walking toward the <Bovan's> camper and this guy starts firing at us," Big Tony testified. " 'Geez, · Rossi yelled. 'Hey, that crazy sonofabitch is shoot- ing lit \JS'.· So, we got out of there." Somehow. though, Big Tony and his mates ended up with $70,000 or the $100.000 paid for Kulik 's release. "Yeah. I got $15.000. Jerry <Fiori ) got $10.000. ll was split up like that." Big Tony said. He denied there was ever a formal contract put out on Bovan as a retaliation for his kidnap and beating. F rot11 Page A I KENNEDY. • idence in Boston. They have not separated. She has been taking courses at Harvard and Lesley <College of Fine Arts> since last fall." Southwick said. Southwick also said "not true"' when asked about reports link - ing Kennedy and Miss Chaffee. Eunice Shriver. the senator's sister. also denied that there was a separation and said the couple see each other all the time and that the children see her in Boston most weekends. Mrs. Shriver said Joan was "in therapy" rererring to her drinking problem, was doing yery wel~ and there was no point m upsetting that. In past years, Mrs. Kennedv has had some emotional and drinking problems, attributed by some to the pressures or living with the bearer or the Kennedy family's pohtical legacy. The Post quoted Mrs. Ken- nedy's ~riends as saying s he has settled mlo a "quiet but enjoya- ble life with a small circle of fri e nd s " far from tbe Washington social scene. Farmar style Uh1111 sm aaa 2X. lb. whole piece 5.99 ea. ... ., . " ' .. ' . ~, ............ "'(,,. save tac _.._ .. -~: ... Farmer Cheese is one of our best melting and cboking cheeses. It's most delectable whe served at room temperature. Cubed Farmer Cheese is delicious when dipped In apple butter Off Rog. Lb. Price 2.79 lb. reg. 3.19 lb. WESTWFF PLAZA t1ill A 1n"lll1 tkrrr .._.,._. MZ-Ot72 .......... '11 w . '11 • s.. 'T11 I MAllMH'S VILLACN-OANA POINT A ba~Jt ot bu1Wa fired bJ a anlper bld1DI ID bJP mUIW'd weed• cm tbe ilOnb &icM ol tbe San DltlO Preewa1 ln San Cleaiente M~ llammed lnto a service ltlLIGll and a parked car on the ao&tth aide of the freeway at Camino de Estrella. No one wu burt in tbe aboot· lag Incident. San Clemente Pqllce Chief Gary Brown uld offlcera responded to a Teport of &unflre at the Gulf ataUon, 590 Camino de Estrella at -1:50 p.~. A service station attendant told police two rounds bad been fired. While the attendant WU being questioned, two more rounds were fired, officers reported. Anolher two rounds were fired about lS minutes later, as police searched the surroundina area for the sniper. Bullet fragments taken from the service station and from a car parked in the adjacent K· Mart parking lot have been sent to the Orange County Sheriff's Department crime lab for analysis, Brown said. The fragments seemed to In· dicate that the shots came from a small caliber gun, but no further identification or the weapon was available today, the police chief said. Initial reports placed the gun- man under the large "Sambo's" sign, just south of the Camino de Estrella rreeway interchange. Later reports had s hots com· ing from just north of the in· terch·ange, Brown said. The freeway banks in that area are densely covered with high mustard weeds, be said, which could screen an adult hiding there. A witness told police she saw a man TWU'llng on Calle Real in the Camino el Molino area, just north of the Camino de Estrella freeway interchange, shortly after the ftnal two rounds of fire were re1><>rted. WngBeach Ya,cht 'Real,' Race Winner ENSENADA-When computer error and other communication difftculties were ironed out Mon· day, here are the correct results for the 31st Newport Beach to Ensenada yacht race: -White Lightnln'. skippered by P aul McEachern of the Long Beach Yacht Club. wins the President of Mexico trophy. -Capriccio, skippered by Peter Nooteboom of King Harbor Yacht Club, wins the President of the United States trophy. Earlier, because of a com· puter foulup, it had been incor· rectly reported that Jay Lin· derman's Raider out of Balboa Yacht Cl ub had won the Mexico trophy for best corrected time in the International Offshore Rule division. But correctly now. McEachem's White Lighlnin', a Class B CF-37 designed and built by Dennis Choate Of Newport s·each. wins it. Trophies for the official win· ners in the 31st Ensenada race were presented to the official winners at colorful and noisy ceremonies at the Bahia Hotel here Moftday afternoon, after which most of the skippers and crews boarded their yachts for the long uphill grind back home. • o.11, f'llilt IUH ..... A Putt tor Btg Br~tlaers David Eisenhower sinks a practice putt as his partner. Tony Vitti. looks on prior to teeing off in Monday's benefit tournament for Big Brothers of Orange County. The Santa Ana Country Club event raised about $8,000 for the group which aids troubled boys. Jlldges are Judged In OC Lawyer Poll By TOM BARLEY Oft• Dallr l'UetSl.lff A polJ conducted by members of the Orange County Trial Lawyers Association and re- leased Monday shows that Judge kobert A. Banyard was the most highly regarded Superior Court judge in 1977. Judge Banyard headed a list of 37 Superior Court judges Sur· veyed by the trial lawyers with a total of 4.34 out of a possible 5.00 -an average drawn from four areas of judicial accomplish· ment. The same poll conducted among non·m~mber lawyers placed Judge Banyard second to Judge H. Warren Knight of Mis· sion Viejo. Knight drew 4.39 to Banyard's 4.30 in the latter rat· ings. One Superior Court judge hit the same spot in both tabula· lions. Judge James H . Walsworth or Newport Beach ranked 31th in both lists-2.80 by OCTLA and 2.81 by non· member trial lawyers. Judge Alicemarie Stoller of Harbor Municipal Court took top s pot for all Orange County Munlcipal Court judges in both 1977 surveys. The presiding judge of the Newport Beach court scored 4.42 out of 5.00 in the OCTLA ratings and 4.37 in the survey conducted among other county lawyers. Judge Robert C. Todd, who was elevated from the Harbor Court to Superior Court shortly after the survey was conducted, rated second in both countywide municipal court surveys -4.38 in the OCTLA list and 4.05 by non-members of OCTLA. Ranked 36th of 36 municipal court judges on both lists is Judge John C. Teal of the Santa Ana Municipal court. Teal drew 2.80 from the association and 2.56 from other lawyers. Any score between 2 00 and 3.00 means tbat the judge voted in that area needs to improve, accord.Ing to the association. Judges Walsworth and Teal fall into that category in both surveys. Lawyers not linked to OCTLA determined in their municipal court survey that Harbor Court Judges Donald Dungan and Calvin P. Schmidt need to Im· prove. Dungan and Schmidt s cored 2. 74 and 2. 79 respec- tively. Schmidt climbed out of that category in the OCTLA survey with a 3.11 rating. But Dungan remained in the "needs lo im- prove" bracket with an even lower 2.08 evaluation by OCTLA members. The annual survey asks for contributors' ratings on the basis of four judicial skills: legal skills. industry, judicial de· meanor and judicial lntegrity. A score of 5.00 is excellent. A score of 4.00 is good, 3.00 is satisfactory, 2.00 needs improve· ment and 1.00 Is poor. Nine Superior Court judges scored higher than 4.00 in the OCT LA survey. They are judges Banyard C4 .34), Bruce Sumner, of Laguna Beach <4.31 >. Knight (4 .26), Robert P. Kneeland of Newport Beach and presiding Judge Byron K. McMillan <both 4.25), Harmon G. Scoville (4.19). Philip E. Schwab (4.15), Frank Domenichini of San Clemente (4.11 > and Kenneth E. Lae (4.02). Six of those judges made the same grade in the list compiled from non-OCTLA surveys. Judge Schwab, Lae and Domenlchlni fell below the 4.00 mark in the latter list with Judge Raymond Vincent moving into the upper brackets with a 4.28 score -lhlrd to Knight and Ba nyard. Six of Orange County's 36 municipal court judges made the 4.00 cutoff in the OCTLA list: Judges Stotler, Todd, Philip A. Petty, or Newport Bea~h. John H. Smith, James Alfllno and Selim Franklin of the Harbor Court. Lawyers not affiliated with OCTLA rated only Judges Stotler andToddabovethe4.00mark. Love Kills Husband His DeaJ, W ife 'Was Everything to Him' GAINESVILLE, F\11 . CAP) -Friends say Nancy and Ray Nealon could not find enough time in the day to be together. They were inseparable from their first date; they even got jobs in the same shopping center so they could share breaks and lunch together. "She was everything to him," said J .C. Prevatt, Nancy's rather. "I never heard them argue, I never heard them disagree." NANCY, Z2, DIED LAST week from in· juries in the crash of her sports car. She was buried Wednesday. Ray, 24, was burled Saturday beside his young brtde. He was found ly1ng beside his burned-out staUon waaon the day of her funeral, his body burned beyond recognition. Suicide, officials have ruled. "I got reason to believe he couldn't be here without her," said Prevatt. "He just said he never knew what love was until he met Nancy." PREVATr SAYS Tf1E TWO, who were married last July, were Inseparable since their first date in Auaust. 1976. Ray would often go to tho 1tnre •here Nancy worked "and Jimt look at bet," Prevau said. Frienda ct.sorlbed Ray aa a loner, who was broqb.t out ofhla abell by Nancy. ''Sbe WU real tUJ and IT'eet to talk to," Hid Kat.le Buchwalter, a neighbor of \be .... newlyweds. "He WllS real quiet and shy. Ap· parenUy, Nancy was just the world to him." RAY'S WORLD BEGAN TO crumble a week ago when Nancy's sports car went out or control and flipped while she was return• ing after visiting her parents. She died three days later. After Nancy's death, Prevatt said ltis son·in·laW withdrew. "He didn't want to be around anybody," he said. Prevatt said be last saw bis soa-in·law the day of Nancy's funeral, after Ray said he was going to the bank and Ulen to order more flowers for his bride's fUMral. He bad or· dered a large wrealh which bore the inscrip- tion, "God, Nancy and Ray." Prevatt believes Ray had decided to kill himself when he .ordered the loscripUon. RAV WAS· NOT SEEN the rest of the day. ~ Early that evening, the police were notified. The search ended In a wooded area of Gilchrist County, to the west of GaJnesvUle. Hia car was destroyed by a fire lbal officials believe Ray set. A suicide note was later fP.und in the couple's small apart· ment. U spOke of bis love for Nancy and God. "He somehow convlnced himself that what was done was the thing to do," Pr~vatt said. T~. April 25, 1978 s DAILY PILOT ,43 Tass Raps Sentence HlllUla Called Koreagate Scapegoat By'n.eAQocla&ed Pnsa Tbe Soviet news qency Tass criticized today what It called the "amazin&ly soft" sentence given to former Orange County Congressman Richard T. Han· na, in the Korean influence· buying scandal. Calling the six·term con· greasman "a scapegoat," Tass said the six-to SO.month prison sentence he received in W ubington on Monday means "the criminal will be at liberty in a matter of months." The Soviet news agency also pointed out that after two years of investigation intQ the Korean scandal, only one of about 100 U.S. congressman said to have received bribes has been brought to trial. Tass said lhls was the "result or beblnd the scenes maneuvers." U.S. j""'tice, while "merciless wben it comes to making short shrift of progresslve·mlnded Americans and civil rights champions, duiplays amazing humaneness when It comes to real criminals from among t.b~ ruling circles," Tass said. "The ruling circles however have done everything so that even this scapegoat could get off with a purely symbolic punish- ment," the newa agency added. Hanna's lawyer called the in· cideni "a serious mistake of judgment." Hanna bad forgotten the ad· vice given to him many years ago by the former governor of California. After being sentenced Monday Hanna recalled the advice given by Edmund G. Brown, Sr.: "Young men have always been advised to go into the world to make their fame and fortWle. But when you choose politics. forget about the fortune.'' Hanna wt)Q had served 12 years in the House of Represen· tatives when he retired in 1974, appeared stunned when sentence was pronounced by Chief U.S. District Court Judge William B. Bryant in Washington. The judge's terse order came after impassioned pleas for le· niency from the white-haired, 64-year-old defendant and from his lawyer, Charles A. McNells. In a quivering voice, Hanna said: "l apologize to the court, I ap.ologize to the people who elected me to public office ... I hope that whatever years I have left, I can do something to atone for my acts." Hanna's term begins May 8 and authorities said he will be eligible for parole In six months from the federa l prison at Alabama's Maxwell Air Force Base. Tilleves P ick Orange County Sheriff's of· ficers are investigating a theft reported at the Mission Viejo home of former Congressman Andrew J . Hinshaw. Oeputies called to the home al 22963 Via Cereza, said Hinshaw told them that two hub caps had been taken from a Lincoln automobile owned by his wife. Joan, 43, while the car was parked outside the home. The loss was valued al $110. Hinshaw was recently re· leased from the county jail after completing a one-year term for offenses committed while he served a term as Orange County Assessor. The 44th annual conclave of the American Gem Society was hefd In San Francisco this year. Donna Blaci<m&n, Rick McEI· valne and I attended from our store. During the past year, Donna and Rick have complet· ed the necessary requirements to upgrade their titles in the Society: Donna to Certlllect Gemologist anct Rick to ~ed Jeweler. Their trip to the conclaYe was sponsored by our firm and was our way of saying "thank you" to them for their interest in lnctMSlng their knowledge and quallflcatlona In the gemologk:al field. The conclaYa 11 a flya day meeting of the AGS mem· benhlp from Canada and Unit· ed Si.tea Md each year Is held Jn a dlfhlfent geographic loca-- tton wtth the hope that it wlll al- low members In each area an eqt.i opportunity to attend at !eat onca each 4th or 5th year. I find theM cooclavM to valua- ble that I have only mlsaed one elnoe becoming a member ol theAGS. The program it Nt up w.lth fiW concurrent lab ... •Iona each day. Speclal intereat .mnars Md clinice are con· ! u ...... HANNA: 'l'LL JUST Gl!T IN THER!, DO MY TIME' Former Congressman's Sentence Chided by Moecow Sun to Return Rains Won't Last, Service Predicts Rains dam Peneci tfie Orange Coast once again today, but are expected to give way overnight to clear weather, the National Weather Service says. The forecast is for a chance of scattered light showers tonight followed by sunny and warmer weather Wednesday and general fair weather through Saturday. Temperatures should range into the upper 70s, a weather service spokeswoman said. Meanwhile, Orange Coast rainwatchers continued logging amounts of rainfall but noted that this rainy season is falling short of the records it once seemed sure lo break. Rainy seasons are measured from the beginning o ( July through the end of June. 1be county record, measured in San- ta Ana ln 1883-84, is 32.65 inches, rollowed by 32.14 inches in 1940-41. This year. with only .01 inches measured this morning, the total r Chamber t o Host Ronning Events Registration for the women's 10 kilometer run, sponsored by San Diego Federal Savings and Loan Association and the Capistrano Beach Chamber or Commerce will begin at 7:30 a .m. Saturday behind the branch office at 34.206 Doheny Park Road and Victoria, Capistrano Beach. Proceeds go to the chamber. Entry fees are $4 and the run will s tart at 9 a.m. Immediately following the start there will be ·a men'stwomilefun run, no entry fee. @ &EMWllE Mary Barr, Certtned Gerno1og1st so far ln Santa Ana ts 28.30 inches. Totals elsewhere were: Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, .01 inches overnight, total 27.92; Laguna Niguel, .03 inches by this morning, 31.02 total; and Huntington Beach, .02 inches overnight for a total of 25.90 inches. Only Santiago Peak on Sad· dleback Mountain has a clear rec- ord, because measurements at that site began only recently, said John Gietzen or the Orange County Flood Control District. Santiago Peak. the highest • point in Orange County, bas re· ceived 71.1 inches of rain so Car this year. Last year at this time it bad received 1•.2 inches. 'f;ood Turn' IUl/,s Cats MIAMI CAP> -J eer Rudolf says he thought be was being a good landlord when he sprayed the garbage cans behind his apartment complex for flies and roaches. Two ten· ants said. however, ~~ was trying to kill their cats. Rudolf. 28, was sen- tenced to a year's proba· lion after pleading no con- test to a misdemeanor charge that he deposited "poison . . . in any com. mon street, alley, lane or thoroughfare of any kind." One cat did die. but cause of death was not established. Rudolf's at· torney said. ducted by modenltors and in- structors with expertise 1n a particular field of gemology. We have the opportunity to learn Iha very latest inform• tion and diecoverles In the gem world. I find that very exciting and allmulettng. Perhaps the enthusiasm I have for attending the con· clavea la also due to the msrvelous opportunity of get- ting to know so many won- derful people from all parts of the countyy who share my ln- te ra st s In the fascinating ICl8noa of gemology. We c.n- not help but learn from each ottw evef\ In the Informal di• cuaalons we have at the luncheons .,,d dinners on the achedute. When we taweJers get together, we talk shop a lot. mainly beceU98 we find our '*'8er IO lntllre9ting. CHAR LES H. BARR I wetcome this oppcwtunlty .-itl Y9W to reinforce and ,,,.. creua my knowledge of gemology and Of the jewelry I,,,_ dtatry. In 80 doing, I am also able to NfW my ouatomars better Md to continue to de- ~ the trutt and confidence ttiev haYe In ms and my firm. A.co•••• ... ,,. .. ·1 Q ...... ~ Tom~~''·~ M~ldue Kids Keep on Truckin' T•A.SHY COMPETJTlON: For much of Orange Coun· ty, the rubbish ls stUI plling up today as the Great Trash Strike moves into il"I second week. But as in most crisis times, some people are making money out of lt. Over the weekend, it was reported that numerous young men were out prowling around the strike area in pickup trucks. Normally. you would anticipate they would be cruising to ogle pretty young wome.11. Not so. this time. They were out hawking tras h services. Some kids would haul away your rubbish at one dollar a barrel or plastic bag. You pay the price and they haul ELSEWHERE, THt: RAtJL.AWAt tarriffwas reported to be as low as50cents per barrel or bag. You have to figure the price depended on the competi· lion from other kids and their pickup trucks and also what There"a Notrnng Like a Little Friendly Competition the trash-inundated residents were willmg to pay. Meanwhile, on the professional trash pickup front. late r epQrts indicate that the Teamsters Union has been given ··a final offer " from m anagement of the refuse companies a nd the uhion has one week in which to reply. THUS IT'S ANYBODY'S guess as to how long the s trike will prevail. The union could wait the full week and then s ay no deal. The strike goes on. Or the labor brass could approve a back-to-work deal within the next five m inutes. TIMs seems unlikely. The longer the trash piles up. the greater will be the pressure for some kind of settle· ment. It is interesting, however, that when some essential service like trash collection is abruptly chopped off. how some enterprising souls come along to fill \he void. In this case, il appears lo be young men with the good fortune of owning pickup trucks. AND 'J'llE PRICE FOR their services may vary wildly here in ffie early stages of the strike. IC the walkout becomes prolonged, however, you can just bet the per. barrel price will level orr where the young pickup truckers figure they are turning a reasonable profit in a com· petitive marketplace. Somehow this system of commerce sounds familiar. I think they call il free enterprise. 4 Tied WASHINGTON CAP> -Two decades after• Senate committee lald bare a pattern of ract~ng in parts of tbe labor movement. another Senate pine.I is beiog told that orcanl1ed crime still enjoys wide Influence cw•r: some unions. Justice Department law)'.er Thomas Puccio told the-Senate perma· nent inveatlgatlQnS subceitnmit· tee that ·• ... many o( tlte in· ·-~-• divlduals whose names first sur-tee ~he f~ral eovernment s or· raced during those hear:.lag.s (in · ganu:~ •. crime strike force pro. the late 1950s) are tn" J>rin· gram lS alive and . well. and . , . . . • . we have lntenslfied our el· cip_a~ figures lD ~ue,al abor ~c-fort• In the area ot ta bor· tiv1tie~. now an®r investigation management racketeering." THE SENATE PANEL was listening t o d ay t o Labor Secretary Ray Mars hall, whose department came under attack from some quarters on Monday for not doing enough to help the anti-racketeering effort. Jus tice Depa rtment lawyers said there we re not enough s pecialJy trained Labor Depart· ment investigators assigned" to the organized crime strike for ces set up by the Justice Department. And Sen. Sam N\lnn, 0 -Ga .. acting subcommittee chairman, said, "It is apparent that the Labor Department needs more people and they need lo ha ve a new attitude and a new spirit." IN TESTIMONY Monday, act· mg Deputy Attorney G~neral Ben j amin Civiletti s aid an eslimafed 300 union locals across the country are "~everely lnfluenced" by racketeers, with most of the locals affiliated with a handful of unnamed national and international org.aniutions. There are an es\imated 75,000 union locals nationwide. Civ1letti told the subcommit- HE SAID investigators 1o8t in· to cases s uch as these: -"Ghost" employees, fre· que ntly o r g ani zed c rime members, paid for doing no work. -Kic kbacks to trustees or pension funds in return for loans to shaky inves tment projects that in turn are looted. -Payoffs to union offi cials in re turn fo r k eep in g a n e mplo)'er 's labor costs to a minimum. -Embezzlem ent from union trea suries. CIVILETTI TOLD THE panel he was satisfied with an agree· m enl r ecently r eache d by Justice and Labor department officials concerning t he con· tribution the Labor Department w·ill ma ke to the organized crime strike forces The department will assign 15 investigators full time to the strike forces and will ask the Of· fi ce of Management and Budget for a n additio na l 125 in vesligators who would be ava1la ble as needed. Coca-Cola, Pepsif!o Bit. NATION I WEATHER AND THAT'S THE WAY IT IS AT BENEFIT Hugh Carey, Left, Betsy and Walter Cronkite Top NdllWs Drop By To Honor Cronkite. NEW YORK CAP> -Drop any name. John Lindsay. Hugh Carey. Robert Wagner. Cliff Robertson and Dina Me~rill. Helen Hayes. Richard and Mary Rodgers. Mrs. Douglas ~rlhur Andrew Young. You name them -they were a t the Waldorf Monday night to pay honor to the Hospital for Spe<:ial Surgery. to its vetera n fund· rSJSer. Mildred Hilson, and the man described by Danny Kaye as ·'the anchor that we 'all hang onto," Walter Cronkite. . IT WAS A LONG and crowded e vening, with 800 guests filling the Waldorf's Orand Ballroom for .a dinner each had pa id $150 to eat under a huge banner read- ing ''Mil~ and Walter -And That's the Way It Is.·· Drink Prices May Fall Gov~ Carey. accomparue<l by Anne F ord Uz1e lh, praised Cronkite as "the most believable man, the most influential and the most decis ive," adding: ··But he hasn't had to take the bla me for anything." • Martin Gabel read a tribute wri tte n by humo rist Art Buchwald, callin g th~ CBS anchorman "'the fathe r of us all " He said that if anyone were approached by beings from out- er space and told to "take me to your leader" th~re "would be no question" -they would be led c;trah~bt to Cronkite. WASHINGTON CAP> -Soft drink prices m ay come down as a r esult of a Federa l Trade Com· m ission find ing tha t long- sta nding practices of the Coca- Cola Company and Pepsico Inc. violate federal antitrust litw. the commission, ln a 2·1 de- cision Monday. said the two giant soft drink .compa nies violate antitrust •aw by restrict· mg their bottlers to certain ter- ritories. S INCE 1900, Coca-Cola bas forbidden its bottlers from sell · ing t heir soft drinks outside specified territories. P epsico ha·s had similar restrictions since the 1930s. bottlers from competing with e ac h other by giving each a specified territory. , The commission majority said this curtails "intrabrand com petition," or that between the various Coca-Cola brands and b etween the P epsico bra nds. The Coca-Cola brands include Coca-Cola. Sprite, F resca, Fan- ta. Tab a nd Mr. Pibb, and Pepsico's brands include Pepsi· Cola. Teem, Mountain Dew and Patao. ELIMINATING THE tn · trabrand competition also hurts competition with outside brands, the commission said. ··Lower prices for Coca-Cola would. in turn, exert enormous downwa rd pressure on the price of interbrand flavored carbonat· ed beverages a nd, to a l~er d egree, on Kool Aid . Funny Face, fruit juices and all other soft drink products which. ac· cording to the bottlers. compete with Coca-Cola:: the FTC said. Tell Mom WAGNER FONDLY referred to CroAltite as his neighbor dur· mg "my 12 unpertur bed years at Gra cie Mansion." a nd also pra ised Mrs. Hilson. Judge Rejects Claim By Presley Dentisi Ho wever. both compa nies promised appeals through the federal courts, which would delay the effect oflhe decision. Coca-Cola ;;aid. "Our bottler contracts for over 77 years have b ee n on the bas i s of a n economi cally e ffic ie nt and socia lly desirable bus iness system." You Love Her This Mochcr's Day send Mom a g reeting all rhc world can sh..trc on Sunday, May J4 rh. Express your love in a Dai ly Piloc Morher's Day Greering. ' MEMPHIS. Tenn. CAP) -A probate judge has rejected a California dentist's $14,015 claim against the estate of Elvis Presley. Dr. Max Shapiro of Los Angeles filed the claim Jan. 24, saying he had not been paid for dental work he performed on Presley. a member of his backup band and two women friends. The claim said about $900 in dental work had been done on Presley. who died Aug. 16 in Memphis. Presley's girlfnend. Ginger Alden . and Miss Alden's sister also received some dental care. it said PEPSICO CALLED THE de· cision "another example of the government attempting to im· pose theoretical economic con- cep ts and a lter a str ucture which has been proven in the maPketplace .. Most of the claim involved work on Shaun Nielson. who sang in a band that opened Presley's shows. Both companies sell the syrup and concentrates used to make their soft drinks lo independent bottlers. The companies have enforced contracts keeping the Shapiro's lawyer . J ames Irion . said the decision will be ap- pealed Soggy South Sees Sun Rain Forecast From West Coast to Great Basin Tetaperat•rn NI u P'r< Altl<l'qut "~ Atlanta II H ,o S.1Umort 1' 41 Bols.e ., ... 8oi1on .. 4. Bro•n,•111t .... Buffalo •• l) Ollt•OO u 44 .» Ont•"""" .. 4' .Ot Cle••I-,. • 0.1 Ft Wtlt l.S SI Oenvt r '3 0 De troll ,. » -::::· ., 4' lulu l.S 1) Hou$lo<I SJ .. Ja<ll$0Vllle IO '6 Kell'• City " 0 Lu\I_, l.S u Llttlelloo IS 4' LHA1>9elft 1t ,. IO SJ •• Mempl>I• Miami IS U .61 Ml1•81.1kM n 21 111111.-s•. P ..... ... Naiflvtlle 1' S2 .OI Ne•Orl-.... Ht., York 71 4• Olila. City nu Om•lwl 4• • Mir ...... ..., ..... '"' Monelly•Fr.Oly If you dO not .,,... '/OUI -°" 6300"' a11 DfllOte I on\ fnCI YWr coe>v w111 be Cll4- :~...., Sunaty II y0u dO no1 ._ YVV' ~ ov e '"' ce11 oelOt• 10 • "' '°"' -..... .,. ~ ~, ....... Motl Otf!'99 C:O..M\' "'-MMU 1 Hol1"-....,,.,,...on~ nw..i""""., .... llN ~ a...n .. Caoitlflft0 8"ttl ..,.,.,...~••no a-POonl '"' ltlU"a ~"'9191 ._ °''-IS tA Pflllael'pfll• ., 0 "'-nb .... Plt!U111r9ll '2 ... P'llencl, Ma. ~ ,. P'lt• ..... Ore. 60 ,. St. LCHlll .. 47 •• 5(, ft. T""" IS '2 Seit Lelle 11 so San Dll90 72 S1 Sen Pran st SJ .n SHUit 10 SJ T11IM 11 '5 Watlll111,1ton n so CA1.1POllNIA Ban tow ., SS •19 Be1r Sl ,. lllyl!M II n CatatlN '3 u at CM!tro " St L.He ,.,,,,..,.., SS • L.AlftO 8MOI .. S1 """°" lle«ll .. 51 Onterlo .. S2 ~afll'I Sjlt1flOI •• St S...~nanlltll ., SI ~ta AM •• ~ Sallta • .,_, " u 11.s.s .... ,.. lllllSllllW ..,_ _, -l*'lt 01 • Ille IOOO' Sou411 tooe,. ll<lt ,.,_, OI IN region ,....,..nod .,.., a d,..e<y -·1 Of <IOUdy "''"' -Si·-· rein eflCI -lll!lfl wtncts tteew, 11t111HHn torm1 croueci Alebeme _,, IOIMy. On Monday 1110~ a tert\MID toucMCI -ti ea .... -Bl""'""*" Tl"" hOvMt .-Clln'lllged. llU4 llO In 1uri.s .. ,..,..... .... llatn -· IGr9(alt tltnluQllOllt Ille !My frOm trlt WHI CoeSI to IM Great .. 11 ... Scall•rtCI 1110.,ers •nCI 111un· cten llOwe<s Plavuecl Ille Grett Lak~ 10 Ille 0 1110 Valley. Th~ mlcldlt And southern A118"11c coastel ttatK ••so lla4 ... In -CIOYCly _I_ Tiie '"" could lit -n over mu<11 01 the Plelns. U. MlulUlppl Valley ana New E119t.,_, E a rly mornln9 11mpera1u1" M"OUnd 11'4 nation r""91d from tt '" NOftn PlaH ... Net>, -P!>tllpS-9, Pe , to e1 In ytlle, Caltl CaQfonda A 1111111 -.tn t.it ov.r "'IKll or $out,,.rn C.l!Onfa toOo . •-Inv """Itel;( ~~IY but C41U•ln9 "" ma~ . NllOf111et Wlcl Tiie -..1ui. -• ·~ 10 ,., r llnue lnterm.ltonlly 11\rou91t WldMS· day. Ev9ft 11 no more rain tails by tM tnd OI the ra1nla1I ~son June 30, Ille National Wffl1'4r Service Utid tltl\ will be Ille thlrd wettest year In Los AnQelH 111storv. BY a • m tlle storm llad dumlll'd OI OI a n Inell OI f4Mn on CIOwnt-n t.os Anve1.s. br'lnvlnv tile raollfall tor 111~ tHson to ll.i. inches. more titan lwl<• the normal 13 IS lntMS for "'" del~ TM weltnl .,.,., on record w•• 1113-14 w1111 :JI II lntltts. lot-ov .... 'Cl wllll J4.84 and 1940<41 Wtlll 3l ,. ca ... taf w~atller Partly cloudy •1111 <llano 01 sll0wet1 lonlllflt tiecomlnv mostly •""41Y W~y. Llgltl varleOle winds nl91tl and mornlno "°""-Highs w.dnetdO 1n Ille upper .0.. Coestal ltMlll'"aturu will ranve b•twun SI encl ... Inland ttm· peretu,..s wm r-.i.t-nanct 6'. Tiie waler l«nperatW'e wl11 be 60. s...., Moon, Tl*s TUHOAY '>ac:Ond I-4' U p m. 1,S 5econclll'911 10'ttp,m S I WIONISOAY Fl"ll-S:1tA m 0 I First 111911 11: I> p m. ,i • Second'°"' S 01 p.m. 't.• Second 1119" 11: tap m. i 4 Sun rlsesS II• m . s.ets•.np.m Moon rl-t:ll pm , Mtt 1·20 e.m Surf Rqari Huntl"910t1 &each Oce.,, calm AllCI smooth wltll 1.J toot ,,..," '"°"' '°"'""'•' SW!lno conclltlons OOod Weter •-•lur• S6 ~ •tr tt mperat..,. 'l ~ Vlllblllty 20 "'"" Nt wPorl 8Mcll -SOgllt •Ind w1t11 MUl""'9SI ~I• Of 1.J t•l $urll"9 lt lr Weter t..,..retur• 6t ..,_., air M ~-Vlllbllttv •1"'4 m11". It's easy . Wrire your message ro fir one of our rhrec convcnienr sizes and bring it co any Daily Pilor offi ce prior ro noon May 12 . Or, you may m ail a clipping of the border wich your message and payment ro Daily Piloc. B OW. Bay Sc .. Box 1560. Cosra Mesa, Ci. 92626. Ads com<: m thrl'e sa.ct'S S I 0. SI ~. and S \ for 1hc spcc1aJ th1ld's s ize urd. (You m us1 be unclcr 1 l years of age 10 qUjihfy for rhc l111lt:s1 1'\rtttm1t> II you wish you m .. v l rc.ite your own decorated 1>trttUn1( Usmg black pt>n draw your dcs1wi IO fir ooc o( the do11ed uutlmcs shown hert' You may fill rhc C'llllrc space Only words md Imes drawn w1rhm tfx-cloned lane will .&~ar m your complcred Mo1her s Oly ad . ... ] ,,. r--------------------------, I If you wam help composing .1 suu:ililc ,---------------------~ r-----------, I I I I I I I L------------.J L~..------------~--------J I itrccr tnjt 01' han any ~ucsuons call .. 642-~678. A fiimdly Daily P1IOf ad·VISCf wall be ~lad ro help you . And. 1f you ti~ you can chargt' your Mother'~ Day ad. You r cmt11 is good w1th us, or you may Uk your M:u1cr Ourjtc:-or Bank A rmnOll'd DAiLY PICOT L----~----..---------------~~ .. TRANSACTIONS ~ .... """' .... Soiil\ .. Sallt .... ~ .... $doo .... • ,..,ca-C,.. Pl~· ua.,, (l>q "l tlld.• tJow ("Q •fllldi! 0. 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I IM-... Pf. ,. •• • .... .._, I ..:I • "" Mc ; --l'nd ....11 u + " :i ... f t4t , 2jl ;i ~f ~ ~ '-!t ii ~ !F:·~ IF .. ;::. ,J" ·: i e . 'f .11 ::.~ 1r1' iot. t!if:: ·1 'I ·~ ~v.! ~ ~r.1 ~ 1 tt.,ff ~ :t1.10 .~ ~~ m :;al• -= ttk.,r,;: 1 ~!.~ = .J "ft •'t: io t. i:f: ,d J :=1• l''Tf:!iit "'c: ·q:-t .:Jtf~ ·~t° id!,i11f ii-~.~=· i:~ i~ ~ :,~ SL~ I i. :fl~.. , ~ '"1 1f 4 :.~ =~-.t, "!~ a---~ 'U Im:·~ I • 11~ ,., i=I' 'J: i ~ =:."'=I :1, ~u ¥(r.;M .. ' 'f ~"' :m ..... ., +:: =..~ •. 11~ r:t;Jl:; 'I Incl J f m • "- STOCKS I BUSINESS ·-lt'lth 1t'Jaat? 'Little Gu y' ·eursues Stocks a, JORN CtJNNJPv .~ ............ The little IQY ls lettlna itc~ a1atn. You bear bim t.alkinl at U..-lboe&b.IM lt&Dd aod tn lbe elevator and ln lbe bar. He taUr:s about buebl.U, toll -and then about 1tocks. .. .. • • . • • # , . Tbe feeling overcomes him wbeo tbe action •eta hot. Stocks are baet 1n season, be r•. like •Porta and other ~ acUviUes forced frorn his mind during Inclement wulber, meteorological and ffC>nomlc. BtJT TllE&E'8 A HtiUL No mattAlr bow badly he wanta a piece ol the acUo.o, the tiUle cuy might DOt be able to pull it on. He's already in bock for a bome ~aae. He bas ~debts up to bJt ean. A rather routlDe an.nouneemeot ftom lbe New York Stock Excba.nge describes part of the bind: cu.tomen owe lbelrl>rokera m~ money than ever before In b.l.la.ar,. ln Mareb the t.oUl wu $9.92 bUllori. That hose amount makes you wonder·: Isn't t.M acqui5ltion of debt supposed to indicate confidence in the future. Ji.wt as the repayment of bills II said to suggest a feeling that tight.er times are coming? You wonder. The survey people told us the consumer was a psychiatric cue over the past two years, Just this side of despondency. Jt be borrowed lbtn, wha t must his desire be for a loan now? But how can he borrow? At the end °"911"' or um be owed $211 billion of installment debt alone, or 15.4 percent of his take·home pay. Match Chat 11ainst less than 2 percent immediately after World War· U. AUTOMOBILE PURCBAS£8 ACCOUNT ror $80 billion of.lbat debt. The lltUe gu,y Ukes bis cars. and be's been buying so many of them that autoDJotlve stocts are • getting a play these days. • Tbe JiU.le guy also wants other good thlqs in We for his family. He's been buying homes at a record rate. Hous- ing starts last year came to l .S million units, and 3.6 million existing units were sold. Ue's also been taklsig oul mortgages on bomei. · purchased years ago. withdrawing tbe equity In order to send the kids to college \ or perhaps only to a lake tbal once·in·a·lifetime vacaUon. HOME MORTGAGE DEBT 'of more than S600 billion has been growing steadily. Merrill Lynch Economics figures lt reached 33 percent of household net wonb in 1977. a record, as you might have surmised. Oh. Lbe liltle fuY still has some liquid funds, i.o savln&s accounts. for instance, but he's been saving more slowly of late. It's tough trying to get ahead and deal with inflation at the same time. Instead, he cuts back. rle pays his bills and he tries to rebuild his bank account. He doesn't like to be delinquent ~nd . some bank analysts say. he's ri>ming face to face with that decision any day now. So where's the money coming from to finance the litlle guy's venture into the stock market? Always ingenious, he ma_y be able to pull it off, but it'~ hard to see how Noses Must Pay For Steam PoUJer \ GEYSERVILLE CAP> -Etched in the folklore of the rugged Northern California mountain country ls the legend or surveyor William Bell Elliott. who saw mysterlbus vapors drifting from the earth and feared he'd stumbled upon "'the gates or hell." More than 130 years later , Elliott's gates are still steaming. accompanied today by the noise and bustle or power plants, trucks. pipes and people striving to harness the steam as energy to light and powe~ millions of homes THE GEYSERS: AS THE LOCALS call this pictures· que area 90 miles north of San Francisco, is the world's 'argesl geothermal energy facility. The glittering white steam is formed deep below lbe earth's crust by natural radioactive and frictional forces and the hot molten mass called magma churning at tbe earth's core. Described by some as Mother Nature's boi~r. lbe magma is still cooling from the formation of the planet and comes within five to '0 miles of the surface in rare areas ( ENERCY In such places, the ma g ma releas es natural gases and water vapor that mix with water contained in rocks. creating a steam that sliPS to the surf ac:e through fassures. The early lndlans called these steaming canyons north of the fabled wine country "the valley or a thousand smokes." Most of that storybook atmosphere is gone now, yield· ing to a network of drills and pipes which route the steam lo the surface and point it at electrJctty.generating turbines. Drilling is done by Unlon Oil Co. of CallfornJa with support.Ing efforts by Magma and Tbermal Power com· panies. T&e steam removed ltom lbe earth ls sold t.o Paci/ic Gas & Electric Co., which c:oaverts It to eJec:trklty. PGaE SPOKESMAN BARRY C088£Tl'B 11kt the Geysers curreoU.V accounts for 6 percent of tbe uWi.ty's energy output. Plans exist to increue it to 10 percent in lbe 1980s. The firm serves 5.7 million people ln Nortbem and Centtal Callf omia. So far, the price Is rl_ghL Geothermal ls PG&E's least expensive form of p0wer. costing 1. 'I ceats per kilowa.tt to produce. Oil, the most expensive, ~ 4.5 cents for the same lulowatt. Even critics of geothermal energy concede it is one of the cleanest soorces of power available. The major drawback is a strong one -it stinks. Processing the steam causes hydrogen sullide to mix with the aJr, triQering an odor of l'Otten eggs. JAMES GORDON, CllAUtMAN OF the Lake County board of supervisors, said the residents, alnady disturbed by landscape changes caused by the power planta, insist that the smell problem be resolved. ,( .. , Btldaess ~. ~129. 1911 State's Joh Picture Brightens Glonaar Drills Deeper Roustabouts add another section of pipe to the drill aboard the Glomar Pacific, tbe first of four drilling rigs to arrive and begin work off lhe coast of Atlantic City, N .J. The ship, operated by Exxon. is exploring in the outer con- tinental shelf for oil and natural gas. I 8yT801llASD. EUAS Time and tbe Bdtlah iowm- roent are c:omblnta,a to insure that California's emplo1m.t alluaUoo wm be m"cb beael- than lbe national averate for • least the neat five years. One development reoden ~­ tremelY willkely any l'ePClUtiaft of tbe blab engineeriq ud aerospace unemploymeal ~ bit this state so bard in tbe e.uty 1970s : Lockheed's sale of l! long.range L-1011 ajrplanes to American World Airways. TIME WAS A critical factor in that sale and tbe subsequent*- cision by East.em AJrtines to IN)r 23 Eutopean Airbus jetliners. So were foreigo governments. For the bulk of Pan Am·s jetliner neet. like lbo$e ol l1'0St other major carriers, is fast becoming outmoded. 1be Boemg 707s, 727s and McDonnell· Douglas DC-8.1 ol the early 1980s are not only wearing out. ~ey are also becomin& inadequate for growing pasunier and freight loads. Tbetr f~l con· sumptlon is too high ln the age of energy shorta,ees. So the sJmple passage or time has made it necessary for airlines to buy new fleets of jets. Most of them will be wide· bodied jumbos like the L·lOll, DC-10 and Boeing 747, which carry more persons at a lower cost per passenger ~ile. TUE LOCKHEED AND Airbus sales show that even American domestic carriers like East.em will seek out the best deal they can get on those new planes. And for Lockheed, that brought the British government into the picture. • Steam Energy Probed Eduon Joins 2 Other Finns in Exploration ROSEMEAD <AP> - Sou tbern California Edison. Union Oil Co. and Southern Pacific Land Co. have an- no11nced they will jointly explore lands in the northern part of lm· perial County for geothermal energy. The agreement calls for foW" new geothermal wells to be drilled and explored during the next two years near Niland at the southeast.em tip of the Salton Sea, said Bob Hull, a spokesman for Edison here. HULL, WHO SAID the re· search phase or the project ls ex· peeled to cost $9 million. said the Niland geothermal reservoir 1s considered one of the largest known geothermal resources in the state. Geothermal energy is derived Crom hot water found bent!ath the earth's surface. That water 1s turned into steam, which is then used to generate electrici· ty, Hull said. Under the three.way agree- ment announced Monday. Union Oil wiU receive a 50 percent in- terest in the land. Hull said, and will operate the production phase of the project. UNION OIL, WHICH will also .• provide the clean steam to be used by Edison for the produc· tion of energy, said Hull, is cur· rently operating the world's largest geothermal energy pro· ject in the world, located in Norht.em California. Hull said Edison pJans to bu.ild ( INSHORT J a 10-megawatt commercial elec· trical generating plant powered by the geothermal energy that will be purchased Crom Mono Power Co .. one of its sub· sidiaries. Ref_. Tri•81H SAN FEANCISCO <AP) Southern California Gas Co. has undercharged customers $18.5 million, but instead of an in- crease in rates, the money will be subtracted from previously authorized refunds, the stale Public Utililiea Commission said. The PUC had originally or· dered a rate increase for the gas company on grounds that it un· dercollecled $37 million from customers between July 1976 and June 1977 because il paid higher prices to gas suppliers than were reflected in rates. But the commission later ruled that the money will be sub- tracted from $75 million in pre· viously·orde'red customer re· funds. The commissjoo was also ex· pect.ed to decide how and when the refunds will be made and whether all customers of the utility will be affected. the PUC said. Bad l1mes DtM?1 ANN ARBOR, Mich. <AP> 8.50% - U.S. GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED PAYABLE MONTHLY ONMA• Mortgage-Backed Certlflcates are U.S. Oovemment Guaran- teed on "the timely payrii$nt of both principal and lnteresf'-the same as a US. Government Bond. Interest and principal will be paid monthly-Ideal for those who want current Income with U.S. Government safety. Units of $25,000 and up are available. •No Ndempdoa penalty, as is the case with Bank and Savings f, Loan Certlflcete of Deposit nccounts. •An Opportunity is available to qualified people for ........ of tmre• on interest Income. P• ..... ....._., ... cont.act Peri<er Date. Senior Vice ~sident. et (714) 644-4620 or• the MdMe s~ beloll.t ~ .. : For the first time since the 1974·75 recession, more con· sumers expect bad times than good over the next 12 months, according to a national survey. The University of Michigan survey found that 46 percent of the 793 people interviewed by telephone were pessimistic about tbe economy in the next 12 months, while 37 percent were Jptimistic. Consumers are still in the mood to buy such big·licket items as cars and appliances, the survey concluded, but those open wallets could close. Economists Richard T. Curtin and George Katona. who con· duct the monthly survey. said Monday that much of the buying ;pree or the past year was trig- gered by anticipation or higher prices. Prires-/tlGfl llUe WASHINGTON CAP> -There is no prospect for moderation or price increases for single family homes in 1978 and interest rates for mortgages are likely to slightly exceed ~ percent, the National Association of Realtors said in its outlook report for the current year. For the past several years. prices ol both new and existing homes have risen between 8 per- cent and 12 percent annually. ac· cording to the report issued Sun· day. Last year the median price of an existing single ramily home rose by 12.6 percent and new home prices went up about 12 percent. Bahrain Opens Energy Expo BAHRAIN CAP> - "Soltech ·1s." described as the fir st solar technology exhibition outside the United States and Europe, opened in this sun. drenched, oil producing Arabian state Monday. A four-day interna- tional conference on solar energy running concurrently with the exhibition has gathered together delegates from mote than 20 countries, includiQg the United States and Britain .. RE·LEASE MERCEDES • Beeomt the t...iou uaes Rolla Roy~ er11toes. Brftaln ,uara.n- tff'd the Pao Am t1nabcln1. Shnllar\y, a combine of Euro- -peea covernm•nts 1eve th• E••tern·Atrbus deal • taara.cee. Salea of Wide-bodied ]etll Help; &Im Bank May Be Extended TM two p~ left 8oetl\I au MeDaftnell-Douclas stand· tnc M tM cate In tM •"" airpiane sa1 .. race. aUT...n CAN be expected to Jot• Lockheed In pushlnf bard for Con~ to extend tbe life of the U .$. Expoi;Mmport Bank another five years. Only with the Ex·lm Bank's assistance can tbe American aerospace firms hope to compete equally with Airbus for lucrative sales to forelgn airlines. Life's Rejuvenation Sche~for Fall NEW YORK <AP> -Life ma1azine will return as a monthly photo maga~.tbis fall, almost six years after financial problems forced it to Cold ISa weekly, Time, Inc. bas announced. "The magazine field is senerally vi&orous, all of our Time. Inc. pubUcatioos are flourishing and it seems an appropriate mom~t to bring back one of the great forces in American journalism." said Hedley Donovan, editor in· chief or Time, Jnc. Donovan said the new Ure would depend mostly on newsstand sales at $1.50 per copy. but subscriptions would be available at $18 a year. The first issue was scheduled for October. WITH SAGGING circulation and increased. mailing costs. Life ceased weekly publication in December 1972. Since then, Time, Inc. bas publlsbed a thick issue of Life annually as a pie· lure history of the previous year. The magazine will retain its large page size -13'1W by 101,t inches -and Its distinctive red and white logo, which will be sh_gh_tly larger than before, Donovan said. It wnrtiave 120 pages. 80 of them for editorial use. and will be printed on 50- pound paper, heavier than before. for better picture reproduction. ·'The power or the pictw-e. which the old We did so much to magnify, has never been greater than today" .he said. .. THE NEW LIFE will be pre· dominantly four-color photo- gra pbs. The tempo wlll be varied, with bJJck and white photography. artists' illustra· lions and a few articles .and col· umns . "The new Ute wiU be apply· ing tbe selectivity or a moo&hl.Y to spectacular news events: peo. pie~ famous and not,.captured in memorable moments; tb.e beauties and mysteries of nature. science, and medicine; the world of arts, arcbttedure, sport and fashion." Donovan said Time. Jnc. ex· pects Lite~ advertising base to be $700,000 a month, but ad· vertislng rates have not been fixed yet. Over The Counter tWOU..,. SO ERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS The extension, supported by the Carter admlnistraUoo, ap. pears almost certain. And that, together with the Lockheed·Pan Am deal, wtll ln· sure continued large.scale aerospace employment In California. THE PAN AM sale alone as· sures Lockheed of breaking even on Us operations through 1981, including the addition of about ~workers to Its assembly Une rorce. It also ruaranteea several years of prosperity for dozens of s ubcontractors centered ln Calllomia. When McDonnell-Dou1las makes it& first new DC-10 sales, the situation will grow eveo rosier, since they also are built in Calllomia. Altogether, Loekheed Board Chairman Roy Anderson ex- pects the next 10 yea.rs to bring about $70 billion in airliner sales. He says his firm wUJ &et about a $7 billion portion, selling about 230 planes even though it otrere only one basic model. ONLY THE Al&BtJS, An· ftrlon says, can reaJly threaten the California employment pie· ture, and now even it can't do much, because of the assured ln· come from Pan Am. Wlth almost 10 percent or California's work force directly Involved in aerospace, the rosy commercial alrpla_ne picture should keep the state's un· employment far below national averages for years to come. l'<I Off ,. • Off .,, Off 11 s ~ IOS f 10.S 1 10::~ .> u ,. 11 II 1.1 , .. ~f >1 f '·' , " Off • ' ~ H Oli 's Off • J Off u Off H Otf s• MUTUAL FUNDS t